Indiana University - Arbutus Yearbook (Bloomington, IN)

 - Class of 1975

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Indiana University - Arbutus Yearbook (Bloomington, IN) online collection, 1975 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 504 of the 1975 volume:

lG r977.2 I 2795a 1974-1975 ;i Indiana University. ii Arbutus ML. INDIANA COLLECTION ■£M ?N ' i l ' m ' im«fiT,7. ' ' S ' -IC LIBRARY 3 1833 00094 2653 -Gc 977.2 In2795a 197 -197- Indiana University Arbutus Arbutus 1974-75 Indiana University ' 01-2270 Rick Wood Arbntns 1974 75 1SS5612 The Year in Review 8 Features 126 Academies 202 Athletics 260 Housing 320 Organizations 404 Seniors Underclass 440 •■« ' ' :.c: ' V 8 1974-75 was a most unforgettable year. On the national front we saw Richard Nixon and Spire Agnew re- sign from office and then witnessed the inaugu- ration of their replacements, Ford and Rocke- feller, neither of whom were elected by the peo- ple. We saw Evel Knievel nose dive into the Snake River Canyon making millions of dollars while millions ot Americans lined up outside welfare offices collecting food stamps. Locally, the events were scaled down, but Bloomington had its share of excitement. The Hoosiers got their hopes up for an NCAA championship only to see their number one ranked basketball team defeated in Dayton. The Year in Review is designed to cover both the national and campus events that most ade- quately expressed what it was like to live in Bloomington in 1975. - _ Covering the events of the campus 1 9(| can at best show only a Ifaction of the varied activities and life styles that make up the Bloomington campus. A take-off on Life Magazines A Day in the Life of America, A Day in the Life of lU depicts a t ' pi- cal day on campus. The feature begins with the ringing of chimes in the Student Building at 5 a.m. and ends with Bloomington night life. Interesting places on campus that evervone knows exist but few people take advantage of are explored. Outdoor activities from spe- lunking to skinny dipping at the quarries, dif- ferent styles of meditation, a guide to the local taverns and sundry other features help give a feeling to students and outsiders alike just what lU is all about. f g The final portion of the book consists 11 of the traditional yearbook sections, ' ' ' ' but with a new twist. Not only are the various academic courses covered, but alternate forms of learning including the Independent Study Program and Free L ' niversit} ' are explored. The effect of budget cuts on the quali- ty of education at IL ' as well as the reorganiza- tion of the administration of the university are covered in depth. The Athletics section gives wide coverage to women ' s sports including the controversial Title Nine proposal which could change the complexion on college athletics. A special color section on our Big Ten Championship basket- ball team is included along with a feature on coach Bob Knight. x% i i ■ ' ! .: ' . 1IS? M L e ' k?S ' J ¥ . •. ' V. a m ' ' i %:ii0,. j ,: M ' S ' : ' ' ?fj ■ C f ' , 1 : ' . S ' ««iH «;i  :! ' l ' ?4« .- . K i • • ■ ' ■■ ' ' ' ' jij 3 — - ?a. Rick Wood Rick Wood The Tear in Review August Seiitember And so you return to lU with lofty ambitions of a 4.0 GPA semester, more personal posses- sions than any closet can hold, and the optimism that can only be found at the beginning of the school year. October By October the GPA is down to a 3.0, the personal possessions are still in their boxes and the optimism is a bit more subdued and realistic. November 42 In November, no one talks about grades, the personal possessions have either been auctioned off, or ripped off and the word optimism has been permanently removed from your vocabu- lary. December 56 Sometime in December you discover that fear is the greatest incentive for pulling an all- nighter, your favorite faded blue jeans have fi- nally been returned from the guy down the hall . . . the ones that have been missing for a month now, and the promise of a long Christmas vaca- tion is the one salvaging thought to pull you through finals. January In January, you return once more. A day or two late because of the ice and snow, but you still return. This time you ' re sure that you ' ve hit upon the sure-fire method of studying for your exams, yet at the same time, you ' ve decided that higher education is about the biggest farce around. February 76 Februar) ' brings a new and unique problem. Do you send a funny or romantic Valentines Day card? Do you entrust it to the U.S. mail or deliver it in person? Do you sign it love, sin- cerely, or In God We Trust? And more impor- tantly, what are you going to do if you don ' t re- ceive a card in return? Decisions, decisions. March 88 Okay, so it ' s March. Who cares, you think as you scan the calender. Then the bloodshot eyes focus on the week designated as Spring Break. Now you have a problem. Forget going home. The ' Christmas with the family memories are still too painful. And a glance at the checkbook shows you that thinking of making it to Florida is about as close as you ' ll come to actually get- ting there. So you do the next best thing . . . spend the entire week under the influence oh 100 April brings lots of rain and apathy. The fact that neither has ever been proven to be fatal to mankind is no consolation. So what are you going to do? You could transfer to the Universi- ty of Hawaii, cr} ' alot, or do the All -American thing and fall in love. A word to the wise, how- ever, there is no one more inconsolable than a rain-soaked, apathetic unloved lover. Well, it ' s May and you ' re alternately feeling happy and miserable. I ' he ritual of packing to go home begins to remind you of divorce proceed- ings . . . You take the Pink Floyd poster and the May pin-up. I ' ll take the cactus pLmt and the extra yellow sock. All of a sudden you realize you ' re going to miss the 3:00 a.m. boresses, mid- night donut runs and cokes and sugar cookies in the Commons. On second thought, maybe summer school wouldn ' t be so bad .... Rick Wood In the beginning ... Regardless of whether you Uve in a sorority or fraternity house, a dormitory or apart- ment, the annual move to Bloomington is gener- ally an unforgettable, if not totally unpleasant experience. In addition to the traditional hassels of packing and unpacking, this year there were a few problems the Halls of Residence did not an- ticipate. Nearly 300 students came to lU with the op- timistic assumption that they had university housing. They did not. George Olsen, Director of the Halls of Residence blamed the miscalcula- tion on the large number of students who reserved rooms but then did not show up. In ad- dition, there was a 2 per cent increase in dorm occupancy over last year. Until permanent quarters were found, students found themselves relocated in temporary lodging in floor lounges and at State Law Enforcement workshops. Off campus housing offered a variety of other problems. One student arrived at his promised apartment only to find that it had been leased to a high bidder while another was informed that the entire complex had faulty wiring and she could not move in until the building was com- pletely rewired. Some found that fleas and other insect inhabitants were incompatible room- mates and the students were forced to seek lodg- ing elsewhere. And of course, there are always a few students who decide at the last minute to come to Bloom- ington without first finding a place to live. Some were lucky enough to find immediate housing while others roughed it, camping out in cars and vans or staying with friends. Freshman Nona Schockney lleft) orients herself to the campus with the help of the University ' s maze-like map. Karen Marken and Robert Tom Toth (below) are doing independent study in U-Haul 100. This experi- mental class gives no credit yet demands a minimum of eight hours work. Incompletes will he towed at the owner ' s expense. — August September — Moving possessions into a house is only half the job, Mindy Miller relaxes amid organized chaos before un- packing. V Photographs Dai id i. Registration Fm sorry, but that class is closed. But I need it to graduate. I ' m sorry, but that class is closed. But . Srudent data card. Enrollment Card. Black ink only. Time check. Check list. Trouble table. Residency check. ID cards. Wl 31. Closed. Trouble table. Separate orange and blue cards. Conflicting classes. Trouble table. Fees. Student Conduct Code Handbook. Little Sister rushers. The common term for this event is registra- tion. However, after thwarted attempts to get into necessary classes, creative incentive has made way for more descriptive terms. For some, registration is a simple process. Some are able to go in at the appointed times, breeze through the check tables, pick up cards, pay and leave. Others, however, have a bit more trouble. Unpaid parking fines, unreturned library books and closed classes can sometimes turn what should be a relatively short process into a grueling test of endurance. Everyone is enthused about registration. In fact, peo- ple come from all over the United States to take part in the festivities. Heather Edgerton (far left) likes to start off each semester thts way. Robert DeGroff lleft) is overwhelmed by the exciting events taking place in the fieldhouse. Jim endenhall Rick Wood 13 Beach Boys Eagles Kansas Beach Boy Mike Love sends out good vibrations and gives the audience excitations to which even a Purdue student can dance. What was to have been an outdoor concert in the Tenth Street Stadium had become a somewhat confined indoor concert at the As- sembly Hall. Bloomington monsoons will do that . . . but the audience didn ' t seem to care. They had every intention of having Fun, Fun, Fun or a Peacefial Easy Feeling, or a combina- tion of the two. After a rock n ' roll set by Kansas, two limou- sines made their way to the back door of As- sembly Hall with the Eagles as passengers. Minutes later, another entourage of cars ap- peared carrying the Beach Boys. Bands were treated to a dinner of spareribs, corn and salads before they played. The Beach Boys began their set with Wouldn ' t It Be Nice. And as the familiar organ and guitar notes were buried beneath es- tatic appreciation from the audience, Mike Love made his way to the stage with a mention to no one in particular, They ' re really into this today. J Photographs )im Mendenhall Rush Rush Rush Rush ' What ' s your major? Where ya from? You look nice . . . Rotate! To the rushee, sorority rush is a cram course introduction into the Greek system. The first week-end involves visiting 17 houses and meet- ing a bewildering barrage of faces and names. To the sorority girl it is an exhausting series of parties and skits and memorization of relevant facts about each girl met. After the Friday night parties, with jaws sore from smiling and throats hoarse from singing, representative groups from nearly every house congregate at the Village Inn (bottom picture) to share in some sisterly camaraderie. Cork Rhodes lU over 1 David lay Close to 10.000 people attended the first soccer game of the season, a 1-0 blanking of the visiting University of Mexico team. Steve Burks is smothered by elated teammates Azmil Yassin. John Katstnis. David Freud and Boh Kirchner (upper right) after scoring the win- ning goal making Indiana the first American team to defeat the Mexicans cm Yankee ground. Freshman John Katsinis (upper left I fights for possession of the ball while goalie Cary FeU( right) clears the ball fiom the front of the lU goal. 16 Mexico W ' iF Rick Wood David Jay 17 i Bill Hillenbrand has kept his love for football alive through the years. At the immediate left he is a half- hack on the 1942 lU team. That year Hillenbrand had been voted Indiana ' s Most Valuable Player by the Chicago Tribune and received Life magazine ' s Na- tion ' s Outstanding Player trophy. Out of Indiana ' s 15 touchdowns that year, he had been involved in 14. On the opposite page, thirty-one years later, Hillenbrand has substituted a martini for a football and an Arnold Palmer sweater jor jersey number 44. A pre-game primer for the alumni set Parking Lot Parties Da id IJV The advent of football season invariably brings on parking lot parties. Although students participate in the event, alumni in particular gather outside the stadium during the pre-game hours to prime themselves tor an afternoon of the Hurryin ' Hoosiers in ac- tion. The first ones would arrive around ten in the morning. By noon, the entire outer perim- eter of the Assembly Hall parking lot would be lined with Lincolns, mobile homes, fifth wheels and large station wagons. Relaxing in canvas deck chairs outside their cars, the alumni would sip Bloody Marys and Screw- drivers while conversing about what Corso was doing wrong and what Herman B Wells was doing right. Interest in lU activities does not aluays end with the traditional graduation ceremony. Dr. George Gooliak has attended lU football games every year since 1942. i 19 Hare Krishna Festival Hare Krsna, Hare Krsna, Krsna, Krsna, Hare, Hare Hare Rama, Hare Rama, Rama, Rama, Rain, Rain Monte Hostetler The followers of the Hare Krishna faith met in Dunn Meadow to share a day of faith in song. The festival was organized, one devotee said, so students would have a chance to chant and eat spiritual food. It cleans you out, he explained. Although some students participated in the activities, most stood at the outskirts of the fes- tival, silently eating free watermelon. Later in the afternoon the spirit of the Krishna festival was dampened a little when a twenty minute torrent rained out the meadow. But the spirit of t he Krishna followers was hardly touched as they packed up their tapestries and unused wa- termelons and ran for shelter. 20 Read General Store Student entrepreneurs WIN against inflation and make a profit in the process m j ' iili.: — Amidst the age ot inflation and run away economy, there is a store in Bloom ington selling pop and munchies at 1950 prices. And Read Center General Store even makes a profit that goes back into the center to pay for student activities. The idea came about last spring firom Read Center vice-president Etoug May. May and his fi-iends decided Bloomington rip-off prices had gone far enough. The idea evolved over the summer and in September, the Read General Store opened. With S200 of Read student government funds, the store reaped over S500 in profits the first semester in business. The money goes toward financing films, dances and speakers in the Center. Ye oLde shopkeepers pictured above are Jan Johnson, Laura Stacy, Bill Pierce and Mark Rauch. Rick Wood 21 Everything from a kitchen sink to a forklift University Auction Auctioneer Harold Hancock indicates the next bar- gain, and no. Sue Thacker did not buy all those gar- bage cans. In an institution as large as Indiana Universi- ty, there is a constant flux in materials. Im- provements in any given area dictate new supplies. The old materials are not sent off to a trash pile, however, as most are still in operating condition. At least once a year, these items are auctioned off at the storage center of the university. People from almost every conceivable background come to this auction in search of a bargain. And a bargain they receive. The cliche about the kitchen sink doesn ' t begin to describe the available goods. Every- thing from baking pans to washing machines to a forklift were placed before the public. 22 Pholographs Rick Wood Flea (?) Market Ever wonder how the word, flea got into the term flea market ! ' ' It ' s just one of those things a person can ' t help wondering about. Well, how about a hypothesis? Years ago when people gathered in the streets of town to get rid of various unneeded items, they might have given them away, thus the word free. So tar so good. As the practice caught on in different countries, the accents were changed as a result of the dif- ferent languages. Eventually the word free changed to the word flea when it came over on the boat. Voila, a flea market. Before you react with guffaws, remember that Aristole said that anything is possible. There- fore, the emphasis must be placed upon the probable. Aristode can do anything. At People ' s Park (a grassy field across from Dunnkirk Square) the shoppers, sightseers and the bargain hunters were treated to a variety of items, some used, some new, all inexpensive. The People had their choice of blankets, jew- elry, belts, jeans, albums and just about anything else a person might need ... no fleas by the way. RiiharJ Hickma)! ihelou i giies advice to hh parents. Leo atiJ Dehbie. in the selection of the best bargain. Les Hershelman left ) gives change to a customer under the watchful eye ofVicki Bartholomy - Photographs David lay . and other issues from August September i Nixon Resigns Richard Nixon, in his 37th television appear- ance as President, said in minutes what the world had expected for days. He resigned. Twenty-one months earlier, he and Spiro Agnew had been elected to ofifice. During that time, things just didn ' t go well, or maybe they went too well and that is why they both had to give up. It was historical. It was hysterical. It was also horrible. As more evidence mounted against the President an acidic frustration penetrated the country. For the first time in the history of Time magazine, an editorial appeared asking for his resignation. The conservative Chicago Tribune, among other newspapers, carried editorials asking for a new start. Those who were laughing, did so because they could not cry anymore. When the taped conversation between Nixon and Hunt about hush money revealed the now famous ' For Christ ' s sake, get it, the evidence became too much for Nixon to con- tinue his term. The entire Watergate syndrome had taken on farcial qualities. Thus, on August 9th, at noon, Nixon was out and Gerry Ford was in. Ford Pardons Nixon Most Americans liked Gerald Ford. He had that simple I played football in college charisma. After the events of the previous months, this nice guy from Michigan was a wel- come change in the 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue clientele. On a Sunday in early September, as people centered their interests upon football games, whether or not Evel was going to kill himself and the various other activities that Americans partake in during weekends, Gerald Ford granted a full pardon to Richard Nixon. I cannot prolong the bad dreams that continue to reopen a chapter that is closed, he said in a statement to the American public. Bang. Overnight, Ford ' s popularity went down to comparable levels of his predecessor you-know- who. The White House began to receive the first of 30,000 letters and telegrams in opposi- tion to the action. The Watergate defendants demanded a mistrial and a dismissal of their in- dividual cases. A month later. President Ford went before a House sub-committee to emphasize that there had been no deal between he and Richard Nixon. Somebody got their signals crossed on that last play, Gerry. Uncle Sam Wants You Back In a speech given to the Veterans of Foreign Wars, Ford issued a proclamation of amnesty to Vietnam war deserters and resisters. Ford offered the theoretical 28,000 men a chance of earned re-entry back into the United States. The plan called for a board of four colo- nels to review each case individually and decide upon a time span (not exceeding two years) in which they would perform alternate service. The conditional amnesty was met with ela- tion as well as damnation. People who fought in the war felt they had been used, people who didn ' t fight in the war and resisted induction for moral reasons felt they had been used, and peo- ple who were concerned about future draft situa- tions were concerned about its effectiveness. 24 Evel Knievel If the hero business isn ' t what it used to be — and it isn ' t — there has never been a better met- aphorical statement on its dedine than the loss of innoncence of Evel Knievel. Not only did Knievel fail to jump the Snake River Canyon as promised, he didn ' t even have the decency to die on cue. It was to have been The Event of the Centu- ry, man ' s first attempt to jump a canyon by the so-called last of the gladiators. An estimated 39,000 persons streamed into farmer Tim Quails ' pasture to witness the event, and more than a million more watched worldwide on closed circuit TV. But Knievel ' s Sky Cycle spat out is drogue parachute on takeoff, and the canyon-shot ended not with a bang but with a whimper. The machine, which whooshed off the launching ramp with all the authority of a mooncraft, barely reached an altitude of 1,000 feet before Knievel ' s main chute deployed. As the chute blossomed, the Sky Cycle twisted slowly, slowly in the wind. Then it began its rapid descent, as Knievel struggled frantically with his shoulder harness to bail out. He didn ' t free the harness until the cycle landed on the launch side of the canyon only feet from the Snake River. The crowd at the site, which at first thought the rocket had landed in the river and Knievel had drowned, charged the retaining fences to await the recovery of his body. The closed-cir- cuit replay showed however, that the nose of the rocket ricocheted off a stone ledge and lodged in the mud at the foot of the canyon wall. Knievel never got wet, though he did sustain cuts and scrapes to his face and possible internal injuries. Mr. (Bob) Truax and the other engineers told me that if I saw the canyon wall and not the sky to get out, for chrissakes, grumbled Knievel later. I sat in that thing and gave it my best. I don ' t know what I ' m going to do now. After the immediate outpouring of concern tor his safety, the crowd began to get ugly. Many of the predominately young, predominantly stoned crowd booed Knievel for failing, and only a thousand or so remained at the site after his recovery by a pleasure-boatmg doctor. ' When Knievel threw his walking cane into the crowd of stragglers around the launching ramp, a dozen ot them grappled like savages for the stick. Two people were trampled — though not seriously — in the melee. Las Vegas oddsmaker Jimmy the Greek Snyder was one of the light-weight celebrities that showed up for the jump, and he was one of the few whose skepticism was mitigated by the aborted jump. I thought the whole thing was a joke, said Snyder, but after listening to ABC news com- mentator Jules Bergman and those guys I thought he was nuts. Now I just think he ' s the luckiest guy in the world. If that buggy had drifted just a couple of feet more in either direc- tion he would have either drowned or been splattered all over the canyon wall. Snyder, who refused to give odds on a possible second try because it ain ' t nice to make odds on somebody ' s life, waxed philosophical about the outcome. It was the best thing that could have happened, he said. It showed that the thing was capable of malfunctioning, and that he could have been killed. I imagine he ' ll chuckle all the way to the bank. Knievel stands to gross — an appropriate verb in this case — about $6 million from the live and television gates and assorted souvenir enterprises surrounding the event. That figures out to roughly SI million for every five seconds he was in the air. Knievel refused to speculate on whether he will try the jump again, but the prevailing karma seemed against it. There was too much talk of a rip-off, and not much interest in a Son of Snake River Canyon. Search and Seizure Ah, the evils of vices ... - Is the ' W.T.C.U. influencing Safety? Or is it the Indiana thou shalt not drink on Sunday law being taken to extremes? ' Whatever the reason, it there is a reason, many student voiced disapproval at their being searched for alcohol and drugs outside lU facilities. After purses and personal possessions were searched at the Beach Boys concert, the question on the limits of personal rights was brought up. An IDS cover story went into detail describing how students could go about suing the university for violation of rights. Safety ' Ofticials expressed regret for the searches and Thomas Schreck, Dean of Students, stated the searches wouldn ' t happen again. But the searches took place elsewhere besides Assembly Hall. Outside the gates to football games, students and alumni were checked for team spirit. Parking lot parties were tolerable, but not inside the stadium. Somebody ought to design a Winnebago with closed-circuit television. CHECK fOINTl f r:i;iT_ ' 3 -r- tiT rl, Dan L nch 25 THE g atest He floats through the air with the greatest of ease, that daring young man on the flying trapeze. And once again, the Greatest Show on Earth came to Bloomington. As 31 cars of the Ringling Brother Circus train pulled into town, a parade of 18 elephants, 34 horses, 22 camels, 3 donkeys and 2 llamas marched through the city to Assembly Hall. That night the lights dimmed and the crowd settled back with their cotton candy and balloons to an enjoyable evening with the circus. Both young and old sat wide-eyed in the stands as the tigers roamed restlessly, clowns danced franticaUy and never seen before acts filled the three rings. Photographs David lay — October — Ringling Brothers - Barnum Bailey presents NDIANA ' • MINNESdlA QUARTER DOWN YDS.TOGO BALL 01 i =.. - « i ™JjL , (C: HOMECOMING: We Won One lU finally won its first game. Mrs. Art Trier I left) definately accepts the referee ' s decision. Homecoming weekend was something more than radiant this year. Sunlight finally broke through a bleak football horizon as lU trounced the Minnesota Gophers 34-3. And that wasn ' t the only fun of a weekend faithfully celebrated by students and alumni alike. Fraternities, sororities and residence halls took part in tissue paper creativity. Many con- structed lawn displays or entered floats in the annual Homecoming parade. Chi Omega and Sigma Phi Epsilon walked off with this years float display trophy while the other houses and halls joined in a frantic post-game float destruc- tion. Sigma Chi and Gamma Phi Beta worked together on a fund drive for Cerebral Palsy as their homecoming project. The first aJl-campus formal dance in 12 years was sponsored that weekend by Teter Quad. Festivities were topped-offby the annual Sat- urday night Homecoming Show which featured the Fifth Dimension. Photographs Rick Wood 29 Needmore New Settlers ' Reunion A day of country sunshine 30 A crowd of about 400 enjoyed a day of country sunshine, rock n ' roll and all the beer they could drink at the Brown County Needmore Commune. It was a New Settlers Reunion and the S3-a- head proceeds went to benefit the 70 or so new neighbors in the Brown County Hill communi- ty. Frisbees, dogs and dancers filled the field as others simply sat back and enjoyed watching the action. The weather was good, so were the vibes. And the celebration of the beautiful fall Sunday lasted long into the evening. Photographs S onle Hosteller 31 Cicely Tyson Randy Prangc Cicely Tyson made a movie that changed her. It changed the audience ai well. The Autobiography of lAii!, Jane Ptttman became one of those movies that stays with a person forever. In a free lecture sponsored by the Black Culture Center, Tyson told of those changes, of that movit: and rjf the resulting attitude she has toward life. Anyone who was there came out of the Auditorium a little different, a little more aware. i 32 John far out Denver R ick Wood A man walks into a Bloomington leather shop: says he uants to buy a hat. As he stands in front of a mirror, a customer approaches him and tells him he looks just like John Denier. You ' re putting me on. he says. No, really, you look just like him. she replies. So the man looks at himself in the mirror. After a few minuter he turns and says. h dy. you ' re right. I do look like John Denver. Later that night, the same man walks into Assembly Hall: says he wants to make some music. Everybody there agreed that he looked just like John Denver. He even knew all the words to John Denier ' s songs. 33 ' ? ' ■ Bloodmobile 270 donors contribute 2,303 units of blood in most successful campus drive 1S95S12 Mrs. Dorothy VanShooneveld (left) explains to her son Daniel that giving blood is a painless procedure. Photographs |im tendenhall 35 Gay Alliance Halloween Dance: KSt l-. ' HOtiXtib 36 A Bizarre Bazaar i .;v.f;rdphs Rick Wood 37 Halloween Halloween arrived early this year as witches, goblins and friends who normally parade on the last day of October appeared in flill force the weekend before the traditional evening of mischief Gala costume affairs, frightenmg movies and small Halloween parties abounded on and off campus. Contestants disguised as three sperms and an egg beat out a slew of more traditional costumes in a contest at the MRC Halloween party. As a finishing touch Alfred Hitchcock ' s suspense film Psycho added a touch of horror to the celebration at Foster Quadrangle. As the weekend faded to a close, partied-out Halloweeners unwillingly retreated to reality, anxious to re-appear on the long awaited hallowed eve. Cork Rhodis October 31 Leon Varjian, lU ' s self-proclaimed year round clown, predicted that the Great Pumpkin might visit the Third Street pumpkin patch. But when Halloween finaUy arrived, goblins and partiers who returned to frolic in the eerie night found they had many more places to haunt than Var- jian ' s make-believe pumpkin patch. Pipe organist Dennis James (pictured at left) performed at the lU Auditorium accompanying the silent horror classics, The Hunchback of Notre Dame and the Cabinet of Dr. Caligari. After the flicks, many goblins spooked local bars in every fiendish form imaginable. Everything from sheeted ghosts and hunchbacks (right) to sophisticated apple trees invaded the city ' s streets and dance floors. Even McDonalds got into the spirit of Halloween with McBoo gift cenificates. Kim Hitchcock . . . and other issues from October Bite the Bullet News Item; President Gerald Ford made a major address on the economy this month before a joint session ot Congress, asking the American people to bite the bullet on inflation. Knee-jerk reaction: The President ' s plan has already created widespread price hikes in dental circles. The President couJd be personally responsible tor the destruction ot millions of dollars worth ot bridge work, chortled one den- tist gleefully. If he thinks the economy is in bad shape now, wait until the American Dental So- ciety sends him its bill. Elsewhere on the economic front, reaction to the President ' s address ( 1600 Pennsylvania Av- enue) was mixed in early trading, then fell off sharply at the bell. Market analysts attributed the heavy losses to the discovery of an advanced case ot syphillis in naturalist Euell Gibbons ' hickor}- nuts. The Dow Jones Industrials closed higher than an elephant ' s eye. Sporting goods stores across the country reported panic buying at the firearms counters. ' They ' re buying bullets, bullets, bullets 1 shrieked Benny Boom Boom Jackson, owner ot Jocks Socks Sponing Goods in Sheboygan, ' Wisconsin. It ' s wonderful! These people must be planning to blow up the world ! The experts say we are in the embryonic stages ot an economic recession. A recent Gallup poll showed that 46 per cent of the adults in this country fear a depression similar to the one that brought the U.S. to its knees in the Thirties. - For more than a decade now we have leaped from one new crisis to another, Evel Knievelling our way through the Cuban Missle Crisis, the Bay of Pigs, Vietnam, ' Watergate, the energy crisis, and now the economic crunch. Each new crisis erupts like the burst of a Roman candle, then fizzles out to accomodate still another na- tional angst. Every President of this new era has his own distinguishing crisis — or in Nixon ' s case, crises. Nixon seems to attract crises like a magnet attracts iron filings, and his economic bungling has been the bane of Gerald Ford ' s ex- istence since he assumed otfice nine weeks ago. It is getting very grim. Every time Walter Cronkite mentioned the word economy last week, his fabled eyebrows sagged as if hooked on quaaludes. What ' s bad for Walter Cronkire ' s eyebrows is bad for the country. Unemployment is at an all-time high, yet wages have never been greater. The balance of payments is deteriorating, but fewer Americans are starving than ever before. The President says we must bite the bullet on inflation, yet the vast majority of us don ' t know what that means we must do. So we will continue to watch Walter Cronkite and listen to Ford ' s comments on the economy as we ponder our collective fate. The stock market analysts will tell us what it all means, and then the Dow Jones Industrials will go into the toilet for the umpteenth day in a row. Meanwhile, stick the bullet between your teeth and bite. 40 AH over Foreman That man who floats-like-a-butterfly and stings-like-a-bee did just that and more in the eighth round as Muhammad AJi knocked out George Foreman in Zaire, Africa in a fight that was seen around the world. Besides making himself S5 million, Ali was named the World Heavyweight Champion . . . again. He was formally stripped of the title because he refused induaion into the armed ser- vices. Sideways Waffling Usually a person walking through the library cafeteria could identify a business major by their discussions on Gross National Product, im- port-export figures, price fixing and pie charts. But in October, 1974, many other students joined the business major in contemplating the economy. The Gallup Poll showed that 4l percent of the country saw a depression on the way. A few days after the poll, the Commerce Depanment issued a statement saying the country had an inflation rate of 11.5 per cent and the GNP had declined 2.9 per cent, thus putting the country in its longest economic slump since I960. Some experts say this is a recession. Commerce Sec- retary Frederick Dent says it is sideways waffling. A person just can ' t get a straight an- swer from anybody these days. Lettuce Boycott Byrum Carter looked up from his desk one af- ternoon to find a number of concerned students crowded into his office. The students wanted Carter to take a stand against lU ' s use of non- UFW lettuce in the food services. The Universi- ty had been using the scab lettuce because of its lower cost. The issue began in 1966. At that time, the labor organization had been formed in order to improve or at least humanize the working and pay conditions of the workers. The large lettuce and grape growers responded by firing the workers and hiring scabs to pick the food. While the UFW picketed the growers, the Teamster ' s Union hired heavies to attack the picketers. In 1973, the Teamster ' s (who represent the grow- ers) had still refused to give into the farm workers ' demands for job security, sanitation fa- cilities, drinking water and a S2.85 wage. As a result, numerous campus groups, interest groups and politicians have taken up the UFW cause by supporting the boycott against Gallo wine, iceberg lettuce and non-UFW grapes. Susie Eaton Administrators Byrum Carter. Thomas Shreck. Herb Smith and former IRHA president Paul M ' agner seem less than receptive to David Norton ' s proposal in favor of union lettuce. Wiretapping at lU? There is a mcjunting evidence that a number of students at lU are inclined to partake in drugs, attend rallies tor various causes and en- gage in other escapades of divine decadence. And there is evidence that some officials are out to stop such antics. As a result, a few students have heard clicking noises wtiile talking on the telephone. Wiretapping. ' Just like they do in other places? Bloomington and State officials say absolutely not. They did admit the practice has been us ed before, but for other reasons. TKE ' s Reorganize A few years ago the entire institution of fra- ternities and sororities was in jeopardy. People considered them to be ' trite, or symbols of the establishment, or taxing to one ' s individuality. The majority of Indiana University ' s Greek or- ganizations survived this attitude. And now, one of the few chapters that succumt ed in the early 70 ' s is starting anew. Tau Kappa Epsilon 1 TKE ) is organizing new members and qualifying for membership in the Interfraternity Council. In order to prove they can be a bona fide house, TKE will be required to meet rush quotas for the next year. 41 — November — Will it make a difference? The candidates approached their respective podiums which stood in front oi their re- spective people. They took a quick gulp of ice water, wiped the natural brine from their forehead, put on their I want to be sincere tace, and then spoke into the microphone: Ever) ' one ot you has the power. When you go to the polls you will be exercising this power toward the goal each one of you desire. 1 want to be your servant and if elected . . . The people heard them speak, but they didn ' t listen. Now the experts call this apathy. The voters don ' t care anymore. And if the voters don ' t care then no wonder this country is in limbo. As usual, the experts were right about the wrong thing. The voters in this election weren ' t apathetic; the voters were frustrated. According to a Harris survey released last June, Disen- chantment with the state of the country has reached such massive proportions among Amer- icans that a record high 59 per cent now feel disaffected . . . more than double the 29 per cent who felt that way back in 1966. Marvin Olsen, an lU professor of Sociology now on leave at the Battelle Human Affairs Research Center in Seattle ' Washington, has spent six years studying the phenomenon of po- litical participation. In a paper he recently presented to the ' World Congress of Sociology, Olsen argues that the average man is powerless to effect change: Although the amount of influence any indi- vidual can exert on the national government is severely limited under even the best of condi- tions, political democracy nevertheless rests under the assumption that citizens can collec- tively, if not individually control the govern- ment. Voting for national political leaders . . . has become little more than a public ritual through which people discharge their minimal political responsibilities and grant legitimacy to the existing political system. A lot of people are turned off to the system and I frankly don ' t know who is going to vote in this election. But what people should understand is that their vote can make a difference in this race. Senator Birch Bayh David Jay 43 The Gables Reopens The Gables has always been more than just a restaurant. It has served as a place for conversa- tion, a place to study and a place to get a decent cup of coffee. Years ago, when it was called The Book Nook, it also served as a composing room where Hoagy Carmichael wrote his famous hit Stardust. The Gables reopened this year with the 32- year-old tradition of good food and good spirits. Although the new menu is predominantly Greek food and there has been a considerable change in the interior design, the traditional at- mosphere remains. And there ' s more. On various nights throughout the week, entertainment is pro- vided. Jazz and rock bands, folk singers, classical guitarists and even theatrical productions have appeared onstage. Peter Poolitsan and Spyridon Stratigos, the new owners of the restaurant summed up their feelings this way: We realized when we began this gabled endeavor, that we had placed ourselves in the heart of the Bloomington tradition. The external rebirth of the Gables is our attempt to restore this internal feeling. 44 Jim WndenhalI David lay 45 .uh date . . you match. Hi . . . uh . . . I ' m Tom . know, your computer Hyuck, hyuck, hyuck. My computer date match. This was supposed to be my ideal man? The computer must have short circuited somewhere. A good two inches shorter than I, there stood Neanderthal man re- incarnate at my door. At that moment I lost faith in computers and the entire space age technology. It we were sup- posed to be 99 % compatible in appearances, ei- ther the computer was wrong or I had better do some serious re-evaJuations of myself But I mustn ' t forget my manners. My most polite hostess smile firmly affixed, I invited him in and offered him a seat. My room- mate looked over at me sympathetically, then re- turned to her chemistry lab manual amid muffled giggles. I suppressed the urge to in- troduce her as his date mate and let her cope with this difficult situation. He sat on the couch and crossed his legs as much as his tight pants would allow. He must have gotten them for high school graduation, four years, twenty pounds and three inches ago. I sat on the floor about five feet away. So you ' re Tom. A moment ' s pause. Yup, Hyuck, hyuck. That awful laugh. It was a combination of a hearty chuckle and a choking noise that seemed to be caught in his throat, spasmodically erupting in a nervous hyucking sound. ' What was I supposed to say to him ' ' What can anyone say to a guy who is a dead ringer for a Rat Fink T-shirt? I ' m sorry ? ' With his barrel chest and pot belly constrained by a tight black leather motorcycle jacket, Tom was a perfect caricature. All he needed was a gear shift knob in his hand. But I wasn ' t being fair. My participation in this date match was purely scientific. I had signed up for the match to do a research project on the sociological implications of a specific cul- Computer Dating? This time college kids have gone too far tural phenomenon. Maybe we could relate on an intellectual level. Groping for my notebook I began the interview. ' Well Tom, (flash hostess smile) just why did you sign up for the computer date match? Silence. On the other hand, maybe we wouldn ' t be able to relate on an intellectual plane either. Let ' s try another approach. I mean, do you consider yourself adventurous . . . did you do it as a joke ... a dare . . . did you think it was the in thing to do . . . did the advertising campaign sway you? Surely I had given him enough options to chcx)se from. Still, he just smiled at me. Another muffled giggle from the chemistry book. I started chewing my pen. Then he uncrossed his leg and leaned forward. ' Well ... uh ... I ' d guess you ' d say I ' m adventurous. I signed up the first day you know. Hyuck, hyuck. Then he sat back more relaxed as if relieved that he had answered the question so well. But he was not getting off that easily. Is that the only reason . . . I drifted off Well, I guess I wanted to meet people. Great. Might as well move on to the next question. I nearly cringed as I asked it. ' Well Tom, how do you usually meet the girls you go out with? Classes, parties, around your apart- ment complex, through other friends, at the bars? I thought I ' d better run through all the options to insure a reply. He hesitated before answering. 1 began to feel uncomfortable . . . What if he had never had a date before and here I am asking a question like that. A friend of mine had told me that when she was talking to her computer date on the phone he told her his hair was short, that it just came down to his ear. The girl innocently quipped back You mean you only have one.- ' and he didn ' t answer ... I would hate to hit on a sore spot. I started chewing my pen again. Then like a Pavlov puppy he uncrossed his leg and leaned forward again and said uh . . . through friends and in classes. I had already decided that his conversational repartee would not comprise the bulk of my paper. I looked at my watch. Only 6:15. He had only been there ten minutes but somehow it seemed much longer. We were supposed to go and see a movie at 7:00. Why did I say I ' d go before I even met him? But I wasn ' t giving up. Before the night was over, I ' d get him to say something. When you received your list of names, which figures did you take into account as being the most impor- tant . . . the background of appearances, atti- tudes and values or interests: ' Oh, I didn ' t consider any of them as being any more imponant that any of the others. Hyuck, hyuck. The computer can ' t make a mis- take you know. 46 Maybe not for you, hyuck, hyuck. Now for the final question. Do you see computer dating as a fad, a fun thing to do, or a symbol of a deeper, more significant cultural phenomenom? Do you think the whole society is too impersonal, too computerized You couldn ' t have computer date matches without a computer so I guess it ' s a sign of the times. You know, Tom, you ' re right. Maybe we ' d better take off for the movie . . . Linda looked at me pityingly, as we went out the door. Praying none of my friends would see me, I slid into the red I960 Chevy. A skull and cross- bones dangled from the rear view mirror, and there was an American flag on the windshield. I closed my eyes. This was just too much. It was then that I became aware of a sickeningly sweet, heavy lily-of-the-vally scent. It was Tom. And I hate lillies-of-the -valley. Throughout the movie all I could smell was stale popcorn and Tom ' s lily-of-the-valley cologne. I was strangely reminded of the scene in the Wizard of Oz when Dorothy et al were drugged by the aroma of poppies outside the walls of Emerald City. It was like a hypnotic sug- gestion. I fell asleep. Almost before I knew it, my dream date was over. ;i: :i; :i: sj :|: It was just what lU always needed. At least that ' s what promoter Steve Danzig and co-or- dinator Randy Foster thought. I don ' t want to project the image of computer date matching as something for losers, Danzig explained. I just want it to be another fun thing to do on campus. So it was that computer date matching was to be. Over 4,000 students took their chances with the Cupid Computer. The unanticipated number of applicants delayed the matches, but eventually, CDM day arrived and participants received anywhere from one to fifteen matches. Initial meetings usually took place in the Union. For the few weeks following the receipt of the matches, you couldn ' t sit in the Commons without being approached by some stranger staring inquisitively at you . . . ' Are you my computer date. Even if people didn ' t meet their ideal match through the computer, computer dates were the major topic of conversation for weeks. Rumors of girls receiving girls names, touching tales of couples reunited after the computer deemed them compatible and stories about vacant or un- usual phone numt ers — the Institute for Sex Research.- — were commonplace. The brains behind the operation. Randy Foster, compared computer date matching to skinny dipping. At first only one person has the nerve to be the first person to jump in the water. Then, as soon as everyone sees how much fun he ' s having, more and more people join in. It ' s the same with computer dating. Those who didn ' t participate were left up on shore. At the lUSA Diite Match Dance, people scrambled about in search of their ideal matches . Despite the large crowd, several couples located their dates. Matched through the computer are Glenda Bottoms and Garry Segal. Brad Beech and Cathy Hanson. Debbie Jones. Cliff Hershman and Jane Thomas. Photographs Rick Wood 47 Soviet Jew Demonstration lU Committee for Soviet Jewry protest Russian treatment 48 The demonstration outside the Auditorium one night was not directed toward the per- formance of the Soviet Georgian Dancers. In- stead, the lU Committee for Soviet Jewry wanted to make the university community aware of the plight of Soviet Jews. While other nationalities under Soviet Rule are allowed to develop their own culture and religion, the Jew is comparatively hindered. If practiced at all, Judaism must function in small isolated groups. Soviet Jews are not allowed to concentrate upon their own artistic forms such as theatre, painting and music. They cannot have their own schools, nor are they allowed to study any recent history of their own people. In 1935, thirteen percent of all students enrolled in the universities were Jewish. In 1970, this figure dropped to 2.5 percent. Anyone currently living in the Soviet Union is issued an internal visa stamped with his native country, such as Georgian. But while a Jew may very well have lived in one of these coun- tries all his life, the visa is marked Jew. It is estimated that three million Jews are cur- rently living in the Soviet Union. They have the opportunity to obtain a visa and leave the Soviet Union, as does any other ethnic group. Howev- er, the Soviet Jew faces inevitable harassment if this option is taken. They are usually fired from their jobs as soon as the visa is applied for. It takes around two years for permission to be granted and the cost is tremendous. Not every- body applying for the visa is given permission to leave. In 1974, as many as 35,000 Jews were allowed to leave the country. It is estimated that at least 150,000 are still waiting. Barry Shevitz, president of the lU Committee for Soviet Jewry, says the campus organization has been supporting Aron Zetlin, a Soviet Jew trying to leave the country. In late February Zetlin finally had been granted permission by the government to leave. Shevitz said that by communicating with Zetlin through letters and helping him financially, a certain closeness and personal involvement is given to the cause. Fiddler on the Roof isn ' t just a lot of Hollywood. Photographs Rob Titlow 49 Trivia Tournament Whaf s the original name of the Jordan River? Spanker ' s Branch, of course! Trhia leader Ken McManus (right) poses a perplexing question to the Rollins + 1 team members Roy Smith. Mark Reasoner and Frank Selhy. 50 Trivia is everyone ' s game until you meet up with the experts. A number of teams from all over campus met this year to compete in the Union Board ' s annual trivia shakedown. The semi-finaJists were ready, the tournament was well matched. But then, what was the origi- nal name of our beloved Jordan River? All the hair pulling and fist clenching in the world didn ' t help the Over The Hill Gang come up with the right answer. ' The Gang might have lost anyway, it ' s been said, even if they ' d known that the Jordan River was once called Spanker ' s Branch. The Gang ' s opposing team and eventual winner of the con- test, Rollins + 1 included this year ' s overall high scorer, Mark Reasoner as well as Frank Sports Selby. The losers accepted their defeat graciously, however. As one of them walked back to his seat with a smile on his face and consolation sucker i i his hand he was overheard saying, I ' m gonna cherish this the rest of my life. Photographs Rick Wood David Varner Aerosmith Blue Oyster Cult Even though Wet Willie didn ' t show up as scheduled, there were still two other bands to listen to, Blue Oyster Cult and Aerosmith (pic- tured below). Pre-concert events included a mad scramble for seats once the audience realized that seating was general admission — much to the chagrin of those who bought the higher priced seats. As usual, trisbees got in free — gen- eral admission. The man at left is not pointmg out a common nuisance to the ever present Safety officers but rather trying to out-do the last frisbee fling. Cork Rhodes 51 Rick Wood Plants, pottery, prints and jewelry were available at low prices at the Solarium craft show. Susan Carter irightl keeps company with vases while Ann Woldy lahove) models the greenhouse look. Bobbie Jackson (top right) eyes a Christmas ornament through a glass terrarium. Oscar D ' Esopo (middle) sells some jewelry for his daughter while she takes a break. David jay 52 David Jay Solarium Craft Show Barbara Lund and lome of her close associates obsene the crowds who visited the craft show in search of bar- gains. 53 and other issues from November Democrats Sweep National Election Some people said it was because of Nixon ' s courr tales, others believed it was the result of Ford ' s pardon and his amnesty issue, and then there were those who blamed it on the weather. The Republicans lost . . . bad. Even Earl Landgrebe got beat. In an election that could be the subject of Y- 200 (Current American Topics) for the next two years, the Democratic Party got their ass . . . er, donkey, into just about every legislature in thecountr) ' . The result. The House of Representatives is now composed of 291 Democrats; enough to ob- tain the two-thirds majority to override Presidential vetoes. The Senate is primarily Democratic and thirty-six states have Demo- cratic governors. Birch Bayh defeated Indianapolis Mayor Richard Lugar for the Indiana Senate Race. Bayh was the underdog at the beginning of the campaigning but then people found out Lugar was Nixon ' s favorite mayor. Argentine Firecracker Disrupts Congress There are a lot of actions which are all of the sudden considered unacceptable in Washington. The clientel of Capitol Hill have recendy realized that bribery is not the way they should conduct their business. The fact that one should not bug the opposition ' s telephone was a rude awakening to many top officials. Another faux pas is associating with strippers. You just don ' t do that in politics. Wilbur Mills, former Chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, was not able to resist a platonic rela- tionship with Mrs. Annabela Battistella, a.k.a, Fannie Foxe. Fellow Congressmen were dis- tressed over Mills and his appearances at parties and onstage with the Argentine Firecracker. Eventually Mills checked into Bethesda Naval Hospital (everybody who ' s anybody checks in there) and was proclaimed by doctors to be completely exhausted. As Mills recuper- ated from his fling, Miss Foxe began a national circuit gig as a result of the publicity and is cur- rently making $3,000 a week. Congress will never be the same. Kent State Trial The trial of the eight National Guardsmen in- volved in the 1970 Kent State killings ended this month. Both the jury and the Guardsmen visited Kent State where a number of students were shot while demonstrating against U.S. in- volvement in Cambodia. After re-creating what happened and questioning the former Guardsmen on their roles, the verdict was re- turned by the jury asking for an acquittal. Federal Coun Judge Frank Battisti decided the Guardsmen could have fired for any number of reasons. The trial was unique in that the pros- ecution had to show there was an intent on the National Guardsmen ' s part to shoot the students. In the confusion that occurred during the demonstration, a number of Guardsmen said they fired because they thought an order to fire had been given. Another Ice Age? Until now, human beings were able to take responsibility for the current food shortage. It stands to reason that as more people are added to the Earth (200,000 a day) more pressure is put upon producing food. But now, namre is getting into the act. A recent study by the British climatologist, Hubert Lamb, revealed that the Earth is going into a small ice age. Since 1940, the average surface temperature of the planet has dropped one degree farenheit. Now anybody who was around in 1940 is probably not complaining about being chilly, but a single degree makes a most definite change in crops. For instance, it shortens the season for grain growing by at least one week. Temperature changes affect rainfall as well as wind currents. This is especially felt in the middle latitudes where much food produc- tion takes place. There are some who disagree with Mr. Lamb. Some scientists are currently working on a theory that the aerosol spray can sends chemicals into the atmosphere which, in mrn, affect condi- tions. Others believe that by burning various types of fuel, a dust is sent into the atmosphere which reflects sunlight, thus, not allowing the rays to hit the surface. Sometimes, one wishes nature would mind its own business. 54 Student Access Law Partially Approved Thanks to the Family Education Rights and Privacy Act of 1974, students can see on paper what they knew all along. And even more im- portant is the fact they can do it legally. A student is now permitted to see his or her file in the records office. If there is any disagree- ment over the content of the fdes, the student can contest the information. Also included is the right for anyone to deny their record be turned over to the police or a mail-order company. This law is not absolute however. A student can not see a recommendation written by a professor for this violates the confidential atmo- sphere in which the comments are written. Private medical records, kept by physicians, and any psychological counseling documents are not available ior students to see. So if you think you have suicidal tendencies . . . there is only one way to find out. lU Doubles Coal Supply Besides the usual onslaught ot campus buses, Volkswagens and motorcycles, Bloomington residents saw an increase in those massive, dark and noisy coal trucks. lU was preparing for a long winter. This year ' s coal supply was doubled by the University in anticipation ot a coal strike and a price increase. Coal workers, members of the United Mine Workers, were going on strike for a pay increase and more benefits. Coal compa- nies had tripled their profits in the previous year and the workers decided they should share in part of the earnings. The entire fuel problem became a common issue on front pages of newspapers, m Harry Reasoner ' s commentary, and in Henry Kis- singer ' s travels. Industries were warned their supplies of natural gas might be cut off at any moment, gasoline prices were threatening to increase (again), and the Department of Com- merce began research emphasis on offshore drill- ing for oil wells. Someone once said that the trouble with progress is that there is too much pro in it. O ' Grady Elected IRHA President Denny O ' Grady (right) emerged victorious in this year ' s IRHA election despite the devas- tating competition from the Toilet Tissue Party, the Boogie- ' Woogie Purple Party, and mudsl- inging from opponents concerning Ms. O ' Grady ' s short skirts. O ' Grady received 55 ' f of the vote while members of the TEAM Party won the rest of the IRHA offices. A major goal Denny hopes to attain this year as President is a more lenient policy concerning the SI 50 charge for breaking a residence hall contract. She feels the charge should be removed if the student remains on the Bloomington campus. Rick Wood 55 — December — Madrigal Dinner The Madrigal dinner is one of those traditions that will always remain. Annually, Alumni Hall is trans- formed into an old English courtyard where guests are served wassail and plum pudding and are entertained by jesters and musicians. Court Jester Charles Stan- field (right) emphasizes a joke while Nancy Lehman (above ) misses a note during rehearsal. 56 Photographs David lay Nutcracker Suite Another annual Christmas traJition is the Sutcracker Suite directed b) Madame Marina Sietlota t above . head of the Ballet department. Earl Tucker ilefii per- forms while Julian Lei in anJ ' irginia Williams itopi relax between sets. Photographs David lay 57 Finals Week Coffee, cramming, No-Doze and no sleep After a semester of religiously attending every Happy Hour, kegger or Thursday night dorm party, the inevitable happens. Finals week. Although the syllabus gives fair warning, the weeks of procrastination have taken their toU and even the most serious student is faced with the prospect of cramming a semester of knowledge into one week. Although one would imagine that the entire campus would submerge itself into whole- hearted academia, this is rarely the case. You learn to rationalize. For instance, you decide that it ' s ridiculous to go out in the rain to go to the library. You can study just as well in your room while a party is going on beneath you, your roommate is practicing her theatre skit and the people four doors down are fighting over who ' s going to go down and meet the pizza man. Scott Weber seeks assistance from Don Rogers in ans- wering an ambiguous question in Math 118. 58 The Final Report What a way to ruin a vacation As if taking the exams wasn ' t punishment enough, the anxiety of finals weeks evolves into the interminable wait for the grade reports. Mrs. Joyce Sparks (above) and Mary Blake sort through records and grades to deliver the final verdict. Photographs Rick Wood 59 60 A Tuba Christmas Musicians entertain shoppers; raise money I There ' s something special about t vent ' -tour tuba players dressed in Santa Claus cos- tumes, standing on the town square and enter- taining Christmas shoppers with carols. Head Santa Dr. Harvey Phillips, professor ot music and head of lU ' s tuba department, had some- thing special in mind when he planned the pro- gram. My tuba students and I telt the need for more involvement of university students with the resi- dents of Bloomington so we decided to do some- thing for the community, Dr. Phillips said. In looking for a way to do this, we decided to help out the Firemen ' s Auxiliary program for local children hurt in tires. After performing a torty-five minute pro- gram, the Santas broke into six quartets and en- tered downtown stores and banks playing Christmas carols and asking for donations. ITieir effort paid off — the group collected S215 for the fund. Photographs Rick Wood 62 Indiana Classic SliJhig through Creighton de- fenders, Quhin Buckner I left ' and Kent Benson I far left) go up for an easy score. Buckner modestly accepts the applause oj the audience follou hig his selec- tion as the most valuable player in the Hoosier Classic as coach Bob Knight and President John Ryan look on (bottom i. Rob Til low Just before cruising out to Hawaii to sweep the Hawaiian Invitational and catch some sun, the Hcxisiers invited SMU, Creighton and Nebraska to Assembly Hall tor some gladitorial tare. There weren ' t any lions or Christians, and there wasn ' t much competition, but there were plenty of bloodthirsty fans. Nebraska wasted Creighton, lU wasted SMU and then lU wasted Nebraska. E uring the SMU action, the Hoosier front line of Scott May, Steve Green, and Kent Benson ripped down more rebounds than the entire SMU team. Bob ' Wilkerson must have had an oft day, because he was the only lU starter not to make the All-Tourney team. The fifth all-tourney star was a boy from Nebraska who came off the bench for Nebraska in the second halt and slipped in 10 for 14 against Indiana. It was a nice way to start oft a tradition; the first Indiana Classic. A bit mercenan,- perhaps, but nice. 63 • . • and other issues from December Rockefeller Named VP For some people, having too much money was a real hassle. One person in particular was Nelson A. Rockefeller. Gerald Ford chose him to be his Vice-President a few months ago and Rockefeller agreed. But there was some dissent over Ford ' s choice. It seems that a person with a large amount of money (Si. 2 billion to be exact) could be very influential upon others in getting his own way. So the House Judiciary Committee began the Nelson Rockefeller Confirmation Hearings in an effort to find what kind of a man he really is . . . and was. Many were dubious about Nelson ' s gifts and loans to public officials. But Rockefeller survived the interrogation. The Committee approved his nomination as had the Senate earlier. For the first time in this nation ' s history, a President and a Vice-President will be in office that were not elected by the people. The Economic Crunch Well, if you have stayed with us to this point, it must be obvious that the economy is really gettmg bad. Gerry Ford told us this month that we are in a recession. At least now we know what word to use. Detroit auto makers have laid off 155,000 workers because the public can ' t afford to buy new cars. General Electric can ' t sell its color television sets, nobody is buying new dishwash- ers, mobile homes aren ' t very popular, and John Denver is playing to half-filled auditoriums. ' Walter Kerr, in his syndicated theatre column, reported that Broadway is having one of its better years because people are attending shows instead of going on expensive vacations and buying expensive cars. The publishing industry is doing well as a result of the country staying home more and reading books. The Army so far has had more than 3,000 extra recruits than they had anticipated. It ' s hard for an unskilled youth to find a job when a skilled man can ' t even get one. The Army has even raised its standards of acceptance. The Story Continues This month ' s edition of the Watergate trial, otherwise known as the Great National Whodunit had a number of interesting events. But then, what else is new? Judge John Sirica decided that he really doesn ' t need Richard Nixon ' s testimony. He stated that any information Nixon provided could be obtained from other witnesses. Nixon had been unavailable for testimony because he is recuperating from phlebitis at his San Clemente home. A team of three doctors, personally sent by Sirica, determined that testifying in the Wa- tergate trial could be harmful to Richard Nixon ' s health. John Erlichman ' s attorney still maintains the Nixon testimony is indispensable to the case. The former president, in the attorney ' s thinking, has not given enough information about the actual reason for the cover-up. Middle East Crisis Unless some progress is made, the chances of war are very great. So said Gerald Ford in regard to the Middle East conflict. Both Cairo and Jerusalem are willing to negotiate in an ef- fort to reach a permanent settlement on who owns or should own the Sinai Pennisula. Egyptian President Anwar Sadat appeared on national television this month and said Wash- ington holds the key to peace for the countries. But there are factors involved if one looks at the situation in terms of the United States . . . which happens to be the most popular way of looking at anything these days. Any stand the U.S. takes will affect trade and relations throughout the world according to various theorists. Moscow is also a major factor. TTie Soviet government wants an immediate return to Geneva for talks in order to end the conflict. Henry Kissinger, however, is trying to find a new strategy as a mea ns of reaching an agreement that is satisfactory to both sides as well as the rest of the world. The countries of Egypt and Israel are important to the world because of their natural resources. Moscow is becoming impatient. The rest of the world can only wait. 64 Old Fashioned Holidays For years, Americans have giggled while Walter Cronkite describes the Christmas gift ideas from the Neiman-Marcus catalogue. This year, the suggested present (for one who has ev- erything) was a S3, 500 Mouse farm, complete with stable facilities and whatever else is required to raise mice the Neiman-Marcus way. Nobody giggled this time Walter. Christmas 1974 had to be practical. Mother received a teflon frying pan and a Joseph Heller book. Father found a pair of thermal underwear under the tree instead of an electric shaving cream heater. Joe and Susie Co llege Student were given pen and pencil sets and a new pair of jeans. Department Stores advertised that everybody should have an old-fashioned Christmas. Al- though old-fashioned holidays varied from vaca- tioning at the same old resort to visiting Grandma ' s, Americans stoically survived the holiday season despite the recession. After all, pop corn chains, Charles Dickens, and hot apple cider aren ' t all that bad. Pre-registration Short Circuits Pre-registration is a system designed to ease the frustrations of registration. Usually students will call in their desired courses at a specified time during a three or four day span. Usually, this simple process requires only a few minutes. Usually, it doesn ' t blow out circuits at Ma Bell, connect a student innocently wanting P-101 with the activities desk, or create more hassles than if it had never been initiated. Usually, pre- registration is rather passive, drawing only a few obscenities from a few people. This year it was a zoo; an exasperated student going crazy at one end of the phone, a secretary saying, ' I can ' t hear you at the other end, and an Indiana Bell operator in the middle con- sulting her what to do in an emergency t)Ook. After the last phone line had short-circuited, pre-registration officials decided upon a more personal approach. That being, a student will register by actually appearing. This could be a bad omen. Carter resigns Byrum E. Carter surprised everyone during the first week in December as he announced his resignation from the role as Vice-President of the Bloomington campus. Caner joined the lU faculty in 1947 as a professor of political science. After numerous years in administrative levels, dean of the college of Arts and Sciences, and Chancellor of the Bloomington campus, he has decided to devote as much time as possible to teaching, research and writing. lUSA Car Co-op Anybody elite enough to own a car these days really should know how to perform minor repairs. But when you have dryopithecus complex, Rousseau ' s Theor) ' ot Natural State, functions of Chi-Square and other things that make the world go round on your mind, there just isn ' t enough time to contemplate a dragging resonator. Besides, it ' s considered ver) ' anti-social. lUSA, those wonderful people who brought us Computer Date Matches have now begun an Automobile Attitude Adjustment Shoppe; or to be more earthy. a Car Co-op. With the same purpose as the successful Bicycle Co-op, the Car Co-op will assist students m changing oil, checking brake fluid, and tightening whatever may need tightening. Sometime during the second semester, the Car Co-op will be located on Law Lane with work being done by work-study students. 65 Hungry For Victory McDonald ' s deserves a break David lay ' li yi - m h ■ fi — January — With lU unanimously named the number one team in the nation, McEtonald ' s ini- tiated a shrewd commercial ploy to back the Hoosiers. It Indiana could hold any opponent to fewer than 50 points, McDonald ' s agreed to give every ticket stub holder a free hamburger and an order of fries. The tans ate it up . . . literally. Hamburgers and friesi Hamburgers and friesi replaced the more tradtional cheers at the games when op- posing teams neared the 50 point cutoff In the three hours after the Iowa game ( 102-49), the two McIDonald ' s in Bloomington served a total of 5,760 free meals. John Bowers, supervisor of the two restau- rants, said he would continue to feed the fans as long as lU kept the scores down. If they win it all, he said, we ' re going to do something really special. To receive a free meal then, maybe in addi- tion to showing the ticket stub, fans would have to recite Two all beef patties special sauce let- tuce cheese pickles onions on a seseme seed bun. Ted Vise (abotel of the lU Batid. leads the croud into McDonald ' s after the loua game. Ihor Boyko (top left) awaits his turn in line or a free meal. Pholographs Rick Wood 67 Early Registration Disapproved The things people will do to get inioL141 these days . . . This semester ' s registration became the target of what appeared to be an organized corruption. Either that or there are as many as 135 extra people working the preliminary ritual to classes that the registrar ' s office doesn ' t know about. Sounds like a job for the CIA. It all began with some genius and his ability to copy the early registration approved stamp which is placed on the back of the legit worker ' s registration cards. Upon perfecting this delicate art, he proceeded to stamp anybody ' s card who was willing to pay for services rendered. But the gavel of justice is gaveling. The regis- trar ' s office is checking names and all culprits will have to deal with somebody named Schreck . . . or will it be Kojak? 68 Women ' s Center Closed The Women ' s Center tailed aher tour years as a material structure. But it ' s philo- sophical basis remains as valid as ever. The building on North Park Avenue served as a place for women to meet and talk, drink some coffee before and after classes, and hold or- ganized group discussions. It was a place where a woman could go during times of personal crisis. Although the building receives rent from four tenants, the financial situation is one of rwo reasons for the decision to sell the house. There are numerous maintenance problems plaguing the house at this time. The second reason the ' Women ' s Center is being temporarily discontinued, is that the cur- rent structure is too large for the contemporary needs. The women still interested in main- taining a center are now discussing how the new center should function in relation to the commu- nity, other individual women and other women ' s groups. Rob Tillow 69 Hoosier women lose fast game to Aussie vets The Australian national women ' s basketball team defeated lU ' s team during the Aussie ' s tour of the U.S. The lU team was defeated 77-58 in Assembly Hall on Januar) ' .lO. In addition to lU, the Aussies also defeated Indiana State Universit} ' , Illinois State and Mis- sissippi Q)llege during their tour. The team competed in the ' World University games during the summer in Yugoslavia in order to qualify for the Olympics. lU ' s lineup for the game included guards Debbie Oing and Tara VanDerveer, forwards Tern Winchester and Carol Kegley, and center Shelia Northcutt. lU coach Bea Gordon noted that the Australian team had much more experi- ence since only two members ot the team are stiU students. Although lU concentrated on fast ball move- ment and substituted often to keep players fresh, Australia had an aggressive man-to-man defense and gave the lU team a n unusually fast-paced game. Carol Kegley and Robin Stephenson (right) fight a losing battle uiih a taller Australian leaper in one of the team ' s harder fought defeats. Sue Ramsey offers advice from the bench Hop right) and Carol Kegley (far right) keeps an eye on her Australian counterpart ' s argument with the referee. 70 Photograph David lav «ar3 71 Rick Wood Trojan Women Euripides wrote a play about a tiny island in- volved in the Pelopennesian War. Centuries later, Jean-Paul Sartre did an adaptation of the play that would be both acceptable to the mod- ern ear and yet sufFiciently removed from it. And a few years after that, Howard Jensen directed the play Trojan Women on the Uni- versity Theatre stage. The three of them make a pretty good team. 72 Gordon Lightfoot Technical difficulties mar performance In March of 1974, Johnny Randolph sat in his office of WAKY radio listening to a record called Sundown. After the first minute of the pwpular song by Gordon Lightfoot, Johnny said, This thing is going to go places. I can tell that people who are forty and people who are four- teen are going to like this. Randolph was right. Canadian born Lightfoot has been places before. In 1970 he had a song called, If You Could Read My Mind. And at that same time, people were confusing Lightfoot with another new artist who also had a popular song, Your Song ... a certain Elton John. Photographs, Bob Cohn . and other issues from January A Fresh Start 1975 couldn ' t have come along at a better time. Most people agreed that its predecessor had been unduly callous with the world. As a result. New Year ' s Eve was quite a celebration. In a local cabaret an individual stood upon his chair and took a calculating gulp of spintus fermenti. He then proclaimed to anybody who at the time wished to be proclaimed to: I can ' t tell you where we ' re all going but I can tell you that wherever it is, it is better than from whence we came. Artists have a way with words. On that same night a network newsman had just said ' good night to his television audience after reviewing the year ' s top stories. Unaware that the camera had not yet been turned ott, he proceeded to rip the top stories into shreds. Words have a way with artists too. State of the Union President Ford stood at the microphone before a joint session of Congress as well as a na- tional television audience. I want to speak very bluntly, he said. I ' ve got bad news and I don ' t expect any applause. Yes, he had bad news. Yes, he said it bluntly. And he still received some applause. In his first State of the Union message. Ford told the world that the United States was not in very good shape. Unemployment looks bad with a projected average of 8.1 per cent this year and 7.9 per cent next year and remaining above 6 per cent of the labor force until 1980. Inflation will also remain high in the immedi- ate future, averaging 11. 3 per cent this year, and 7.8 per cent next year. The nation ' s economy will plunge 3.3 per cent overall this year, com- pared with 2.2 per cent last year. Ford proposed increased spending for de- fense, unemployment aid and energy research, but asked Congress to cut other spending by S17 billion. Through the additional spending on research. Ford hopes the country will be self- sufficient in terms of energy by 1985. Ford said that he believes the recession will end at mid-year and that the economy should be increasing at a 5 per cent annual rate by the end of 1976. He also said that consumer prices will increase slightly more than 9 per cent overall in 1975, down from 12.2 per cent last year. While these projected figures present no rosy picture, they forecast the real improvement we expect in the coming months, Ford said. From all Americans we must ask for persever- ance and a willingness to tolerate some painful measures necessary to restore good economic health. Artwork Dan Lynch C.I.A. Tactics Investigated It ' s a ■■Catch-22 type of problem. There are reports that the Central Intelligence Agency has been spying on domestic citizens of the United States. Any attempts to find out if they are acting properly are thwarted because the C.I.A. is a secret organization with a lot of secrets which they want to maintain. Nelson Rockfeller is Chairman of a committee to review this case and find out if the C.I.A. is getting a little carried away in who they would like to know about. William Colby, acting director of the C.I.A., acknowledged the fact that a number of agents in 1967 had been inserted into various anti- establishment circles in an attempt to find any international support for radicals in this country. The Rockefeller Commission will at- tempt to find out why the C.I.A. has the names ol 10,000 domestic citizens in its files, and if it has used illegal tactics in acquiring any informa- tion from within the United States. 74 Senate Vetoes Ladybug Bill A group of third-graders decided to get first hand knowledge of the Indiana State Legislature and how the law-making body works. So they drafted a bill which would make the Ladybug the Indiana state insect. The bill was sponsored by senator Clarence Kelley of Mishawaka. One afternoon the students went on a field trip to In- dianapolis to watch their bill become law. Instead, they observed a number of senators in hysterics. One giggled and asked if the earth- worm could become the state worm. Another chortled as he proposed the fox squirrel become the state animal. A woman in the audience stood and told the children they were wasting the tax- payers money and that they should be in a classroom learning arithmetic. This went on for an hour-and-a-half until one senator asked tor a vote. He said they were wasting time. The senators vetoed this bill because there were more important matters at hand. Pat Carroll said he hoped he would never see the Senate act that way again. Eldon Linquist of Elkhart apologized tor the senators ' behavior. And the children settled for a tour of the Cap- itol. Recession Blues The automobile manufacturers will do any- thing to sell a car these days. They ' ll even pay a person to buy their product. Cash rebates of S200-S600 were being offered to anybody who would invest in a 1975 model car. The entire rebate program was started in an effort to stimu- late business during the latest bout of the reces- sion blues. It worked. By the middle of January, it was reported that auto sales were up -4 1 per cent over the early part of the month. Of course, up until then, auto sales were practically non-existent. Since the rebate system worked so well with automobiles, soon other manufacturers got into the act and rebates were offered on everything from curling irons to cosmetics. Expensive Vices As students returned from vacation and moved back into the atmosphere of academics, part of the real world was waiting tor them. And it wasn ' t very subtle in making its presence known. The price ot cottee and cokes in the Commons and the library cafeteria went up one nickel. Bic pens in the Bookstore went up six cents. Ciga- rettes have increased five cents over a one year period. Vices are getting expensive nowadays. IMUB Elections Only two union board incumbents, graduate student Seth Levin and senior Sally Steurer were re-elected in the IMUB elections. The Straight Ticket party swept the top six seats. Barb Stark, freshman, received the most votes m the election and was pleased at the turnout of student voters. Last year, only ' 00 students turned up at the polls while 1,750 voted this year. Plans for the year revolved around increasing student involvement, obtaining more student ideas and publicizing IMUB committees. 75 76 — February — Fun City, U.S.A. Varjian Announces Candidacy Peter Cold Even after camping out all night on the courthouse lawn to be the first mayoral candidate to register, Leon Varjian was touched out by George Carpenter who registered one minute before Varjian reached the county clerk ' s office. lU LAND will be Utopia Leave it to Leon What inspired you to run for mayor? Now I ' m a citizen of this fine community of Bloomington, Indiana, and there are only a cer- tain number of people that I would consider trustworthy to run our city. I mean, as long as I ' m going to be here I might as well choose somebody I can trust and the person who I con- sider to be the most trustworthy is myself You were born in Hackensack, New Jersey. Why didn ' t you try there first? Hackensack had their chance. In fact, they wrote me a letter asking me to come back but I had to tell them sorry, next time. Let ' s talk about your campaign. Yes, let ' s talk about my campaign. I got it wrapped up already. You know we did a com- puter simulation of the voting trends and it came out: Varjian 64%, McCloskey 12%, Zietlow 6 % , and all the rest are undecided but they ' re leaning toward me. What are your demographic targets? I got that fro??i a book by Bruno in a political science course. The campaign cuts across all demographic lines, all age categories, sex categories (there are more than two, you know), race, creed, color. Everybody wants to have fun. We got a little something for everyone. As soon as they find out I ' m the FUN CIITY candidate, they ' ll all run down and vote for me. If people ask me what I ' m going to do to make this city a good place to bring up their children I ' ll tell them, I ' m going to make this city a good place to bring up your children. They ' ll have to vote for me. What large contributions have been made to your campaign so far? ' Well, this might be a skeleton in the closet, I hate to admit this. We ' ve ' iot It all figured out. Varjian explains to Pat Piper during an intervieio in Dunn Cemetary. 78 Pholographs David lay The public has to know. Yeah, well that ' s true. This was done very clandestinely. This gentleman came by in a truck at about five o ' clock in the morning and he was carrying a wire basket and there were these bottles in the basket. They had a white liquid in them. I won ' t say anything more about it, I did give him a certain list and well, some money changed hands. You ' ll be finding out more about that I ' m sure ... I certainly hope that will be after the election. Can you truthfully remain in office with con- tirbutions like that? I don ' t owe allegiance to anybody. All I owe allegiance to is myself. We ' ll have our plush of- fices. Tell us about what your office will look like. Ah, it will be a penthouse . . . there ' s going to be a dumb waiter, several waiters, servants, plush two-inch thick carpeting on the floor . . . I figure I ' ll just move in down there at the Mu- nicipal Building . . . save some money. I ' m also after that twenty -thousand a year . . . and that parking space behind the municipal building. I think that ' s the classiest thing anybody could get here in Bloomington. What endorsements do you have? Well, I ' ve got endorsements from Tommy Webster — street person. Crazy Eddie — street person, and from Cowboy — also a street person. Everybody ' s endorsing me. They ' re all lined up. In fact a few days ago, John Ryan called up but I had to tell him I didn ' t have enough time to talk to him. What does Frank have to say about all of this? Well, the other day I talked to Frank in his chambers and he sat me down, and he pleaded. He said, Leon, don ' t do it. I had to tell him, Frank, this is the time to pull out. Frank, drop out and maybe we can strike up some kind of a deal. He ' s considering it now. What qualities do you possess that will make you a good mayor? Well, my name is Leon, right? The L is for leadership, the E is for enthusiasm, the O for oleo-margarine, the N is for nepotism. Would you list your current platform? Sure, but it changes everyday. The most dy- namic proposal is for Bloomington to be FUN CITY USA. It ' ll be the eighth wonder of the world. In tact it might be the ninth wonder of the world. I don ' t know how many we ' ve got these days. The biggest proposal is to have the City of Bloomington annex Indiana University. Indiana University drains all of Bloomington ' s resources and it ' s time that stopped. Bloom- ington will take it over and turn it into FUN LAND or lU LAND. Now -lU LAND will consist of ACADEMIC LAND, ■DORM- LAND, and DUNNLAND, and we ' ll have Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck walking around passing out toy diplomas which will in- dicate someone has been here a certain number ot years. We ' re going to change over the currency. Nickels and dimes are worthless trinkets now. So we ' ll use Golden Circle Parking Tokens. The little booths where safety hangs out will be changed into ticket booths; safety will become ticket takers. People will drive up, pay a certain amount of parking tokens and then be able to see actual students at work inside. The transpor- tation system will be changed into a Jungle Safari ride. It ' ll go right through the middle of all the administration buildings. And this will put the administration on the ball. We got a lot of dead wood. With aU these people driving by, the ofFicials will stan to do things. It should double the output of the administration. Another part of FUN CITY is that we ' re going to issue official fake ID ' s to anybody under 2 1 . That way they can get into the bars. The Bloomington square should be turned into a giant Monopoly board and every citizen should be given 20,000 Golden Circle parking tokens to start the game with. Sidewalks should be made one-way to avoid the problem of getting around people coming from the other direction. This should save alot of time. The police cars will be equipped to play fun tunes and all the people will take pot shots at them with play guns shooting signs that say Bangl In order to stay responsive to the people, the mayor and his entire staff will spend a week in each Bloomington resident ' s home, watch TV with them and participate in intimate family ar- guments, because we want our say too. Perhaps the most important aspect of ' FUN CITY, is the way we plan to solve problems. We ' re going to purchase a carpet sweeper to sweep corruption under the rug and a washing machine to launder all the graft money received during this campaign. We ' re going to hire a beautician to beautify the city, a magician to make the cit) ' ' s problems disappear, a juggler to balance all the city ' s books, and upholsterer to chair the Common Council and hire a kangaroo to keep the city hopping. We ' ve got it all fig- ured out. What is your idea of the difference between lU LAND and Utopia? Ahhh, we ' re not after reform. We ' re after Utopia. With lU LAND in Bloomington, lU will be Utopia. How will this afject the basic nature of the human being? Well, we ' re going to start an exchange pro- gram in order to save the rest of the world. We ' re going to send people out and eventually expand lU LAND to Martins ' ille. In fact, were going to buy Martinsville, then Indianapolis. Then we ' ll see what we can do about Purdue and Valporaiso and Terre Haute. You ' re creating a monster. That ' s right. Your children will grow up . . . crazy. Don ' t you think you ' ve set your goals too high? Well, it ' s a natural step forward . . . lose as student body vice president one year, lose as student body president the next . . . They created the post as mayor with me in mind. 79 Frank Williams (belowl leads the crowd in singing the Omega Psi Phi fraternity song while Eric Mullin. William Jordan and John Cowherd demonstrate their dancing skills (far right). It ' s sort of a purist approach to the parry in New Orleans. For the past seven years, the Omega Psi Phi fraternity has sponsored Mardi Gras for the community. And while there isn ' t any dancing in the streets, there is dancing in the Frangipani Room and Alumni Hall. Besides these rwo dances, the fraternity also held a skating party at a roller rink outside of town. Any money raised during the weekend cele- bration is used for numerous activities in which the Omega Psi Phi ' s participate. One plan is to help a child from a broken home this year. The fraternity will buy clothing as well as the non- material help — spending time with him and helping solve any problems. A contribution to the research of sickle cell anemia and the es- tablishment of an Omega Psi Phi scholarship will also be made through the profits. Pholographs John Hopper Mardi Gras lU Sing Make-Belief-Rag ' ' reaps honors The barbershop quartet circa 1975 can still remember the words to Ltda Rose ei en though their hearts are with the Allman Brothers. Lambda Chi ' s Geoff Hay. Boh Kelso. Hank Wenzel and Greg Hines harmonize the lyrics. Members of the Sigma Kappa Sorority and some of the men from Pi Kappa Phi took the audience back to the days when Baskin-Robbins only had two flavors. 82 Photographs Rick Wood When everyone finished singing their songs and dancing their dances and the applause finally died, Jan and Mark Wheeler received the first place trophy for best over-all production in the 1975 lU Sing program. The husband and wife team also won the first place trophy for best small production. The Wheelers, both graduate students, co-authored Make- Belief-Rag, a seven minute skit. Phi Kappa Tau and Kappa Alpha Theta won first place for best large production, MRC won first place for medium-size production, and Alpha Gamma Delta and Theta Xi received the tirst place trophy for mixed choral presentation. In addition to competing for first place trophies, participants and supporters have the opportunity to receive twenty SI 00 scholarships which come from the profits the lU Student Foundation and the Bloomington ' s Young Men ' s Christian Association make from the an- nual event. Ron Groucho Brake of Phi Delta Theta rehearses some of his routines before a run-through. Everybody has a desire for an entree of Duck Soup now and then. Alpha Phi ' s and Phi Delt ' s prepare a skit showing the confusion of human beings in an adverse environ- ment. 83 Marcel Marceau Master of pantomime speaks universal language Alone on a bare stage a man in white flour make-up speaks in a universal language — gesture. And beyond the stage an audience responds in a universal reply — emotion. Be- tween the two is only silence. Yet in that silence exists an understanding. This is the art of pan- tomime. This is the language of a man named Marceau. I have yet to differentiate laughter or tears that were specifically French or German or En- glish or American, 5 1 year-old Marcel Marceau said. When I do pantomime onstage it is beau- tiful because the imagination plays, which gives an emotion. That is the main thing, to give emo- tion to the audience even if my emotion is not the same. When I play anger, I am not in anger but I play the image of being angry. Marceau was introduced to pantomime indi- realy. As a child in Strasbourg, France he became fascinated by the American silent film stars; Chaplin, Keaton, Laurel and Hardy. The young Marceau observed how these men could tell a story only through the use of movement. After developing his mimes under the masters Decroux and Barrault, Marceau toured with a troupe of actors around Europe. At first he was only successful outside of his native country because the French public tended to accept his work as only expressionism. Eventually, the en- tire world, as well as France, realized the value of his work. What I personally see in mime is all theatre — dance, sculpture, rhythm, drama, everything but speech, which is unnecessary. Being a mime has nothing to do with not speaking because it is a concept of playing with your body as if it were a musical instrument in silence. A real mime should not be a mime because he cannot speak but because he loves to work with his body. What is interesting to mime is what is behind what you see . . . it gives a way of think- ing; of consciousness. You will see that what happens on stage happens in real life but you also see the essence of what happens in life. Marcel makes it a practice, whenever he has some free time, to sit in a park or find an area where he can observe people. He watches the way in which they react to a situation; in facial movement as well as limb movement. He listens to words used in specific situations even though his art is silent. People hide behind words because they are afraid of truth and honesty. In order to be honest and true, you have to be true to yourself all the way through life. With words, you can be a gangster; look at the politician. And yet words do have a precise meaning. A person can be honest and sincere with them. From the time when he first saw a Chaplin movie to the present, he has been one of the few human beings who has been able to put an audi- ence in hysterics or tears . . . and not say one word. Photographs David Jay Bob Cohn 85 . and other issues from February ERA Amendment Defeated Again Sam Ervin doesn ' t want it, Bett} ' Ford does. The Equal Rights amendment was dumped by a sub-committee in the Senate. While 32 states have already ratified the 27th amendment to the Constitution, Indiana (as usual) has taken a back seat in the process. Opposition to the bill came trom reasoning such as appeared in a Letter to the Editor of the Herald Telephone saying the measure would conflict with Christian statutes and upset the family structure. Other logic came from various Senators who said they were sick of the amendment. The ERA was introduced and defeated in 1974. The amendment would have the following af- fect: alimony laws would be less demanding upon one spouse; if a state decides two men can get married then it must also allow the same for two women; one state may not impose greater liability ' upon one sex than another state, women would be allowed to volunteer tor military ser- vice just as men may. And if anybody is concerned, the men ' s room and the ladies room would still remain. Protesting the Senate ' i decision. ERA supporters dem- onstrate in front of Assembly Hall before the W- Northwestern Basketball game and at the Indianapolis Capitol Building. tj E Jim Mendenhall Mary Powers 86 Ziegler Cashes In Watergate (not that word again) is still around. But from recent actions by various colleges, many are making a strong attempt to forget it . . . or at least not support any limb of its many aspects. For instance take Ron Ziegler, former press secretary to Mr. Nixon, He did not level with the press or anyone else about what was going on until a Mr. Dean stepped in. No doubt, Ziegler has his own side of the story to tell. And while people may be interested in what he has to say, they are not willing to let him collect a $3,000 lecture fee for telling them anything. Ziegler had an appearance scheduled at Boston University until the student government voted not to give money to a Watergate celeb- rity. The same happened at a University in Michigan. Indiana, however, was willing to give him a chance but the Auditorium was booked during the days Ziegler could have appeared. By the time a day was set aside for the appearance, Ziegler took another engagement. War or Peace: Egypt vs. Israel Things are getting pretty sticky over there m the Middle East. If this continues, the possibility exists that the United States could get stuck in the conflict. Henry Kissinger continues to run around the world, armed with his diplomatic crowbar, trying to pry one country off another. Should Kissinger fail, Egypt might return to collaborating with Moscow and more weapons could begin pouring into the country anytime thereafter. Israel is a stronger military nation but could lose this hold if Egypt receives aid from Russia. This would put the United States on the spot to begin supporting an arms race. Egypt currently has an advantage which is not in the form of weapons per se. They have oil which is an important resource to the world. So whatever happens in the conflict is going to af- fect the rest of the world. It is believed at this time, that any negotiation between Egypt and Israel without a third party, will result in a deadlock. The resulting event is only a matter of time: war. Later this spring, the United Nations ' peacekeeping forces will be removed when their mandate expires. Mr. Kissinger, in the words of Charlie Brown, could be the goat or the hero. Unfortunately, it ' s not that simple. Non-smoker ' s Week That sacred cigarette, that rolled tobacco now on the Surgeon General ' s black list, that in- strument v, ' hich helps the college student get through Academia, that wonderful vice made famous by Humphrey Bogart, is no longer ac- ceptable. A group of students proclaimed a week in February as lU Non-Smoker ' s Rights Week. During those seven days, students were asked not to smoke in class. The Kiva was christened as a place for non-smokers to breathe clean air. And to this day, it is still off-Iimits to those lowly individuals who succumb to that smog to hanction in society. But non-smokers or not, acceptable or not, cancer producing or not, the cigarette will remain. It is a necessity to the human condition. If it weren ' t for cigarettes, the Arbutus staff wouldn ' t have gotten past the introduction to this book. 87 — March — In Preparation for the Race EAST STAND One of the first signs of spring on the campus is the appearance of the Little 500 bike riders and Mini 500 trike riders practicing for the race. Billed as the biggest college week- end on any university campus, the lU Student Foundation sponsors the event which lasts for tour weekends in April. Leading up to the bike race are quals for the race. Regatta, the Mini trike race, a tashion show and the variety show. Some of the best parties of the year in dorms, town, sororities and fraternities round out the Little 500 season. Barring thirty-three bike pile-ups and rainy weather, the two-hundred-Iap race is a test of en- durance, grace and bravery. Afte r the dust has cleared and the teams finishing in the top ten spots have collected their trophies, thoughts turn to next year which will undoubtedly bring a new race. Photographs Rick Wood Prior to the race both bike and trike members spend endless hours preparing for their respective races. Sigma Kappa ' s (far left) take advantage of the llJiWAC parking lot to improve their turning tech- niques. When the weather turns springlike, a myrid of bicyclists can be seen practicing for qualifications {left}. 89 Sam Ervin He ' s that fine southern gentleman with a stor} ' for every situation. Sam Ervin became pop- ular through this story-telling; sort of a modern day Aesop if you will. While testimony in the Watergate probe continued for hours and hours, Sam Ervin could sum up the problem with a few sentences. And when he began his speech to a capacity filled auditorium, Ervin had a story. Somehow, it simplified the entire Watergate mess: One Sunday, after services, a preacher wel- comed his congregation as they filed out of the church. One man approached the preacher. Preacher, he said. I want you to know that was a damn fine sermon you gave today. The preacher responded, Well thank you. But you can refrain from using that language. It isn ' t proper you know. The man thought about it for a minute and said, Preacher, you ' re right. I won ' t do it anymore. Oh by the way, I left a SIO bill in the collection this morning. The hell you say, the preacher shot back. After the lecture. Sam Ervin chats with Leon Varjian. mayoral candidate on the Fun City ticket. Bill Huser Rick Wood 90 F. Lee Bailey He doesn ' t smile much. Some might say it ' s because he has given the lecture before and he ' s becoming tired of the speech. Some might conclude that he would rather be catching some sleep mstead of lecturing to a capacit) ' auditori- um. Or maybe F. Lee Bailey is really concerned about the subject matter. Put your money on the latter. In his lecture, The Defense Never Rests, F. Lee Bailey unremittingly stressed his distress about contemporary law. He asked future law- yers, practicing lawyers and any interested indi- viduals to look at the profession of law as more than a means ot making money. ' When a patient goes into surgery, he said, he must have taith in his doctor. The same goes tor a client with a lawyer and a jury. L ' nforru- nately the client has no anaesthesia to ease the pain. He must watch and remain silent as other people control his fate. Nikki Giovanni In a recent review of Nikki Giovanni ' s ex- tended autobiographical note, Geinini. Time magazine called her one of the most talented and promising black poets. More than five hundred students attended her poetry reading where she recited seventeen ot her poems most of which were tilled with a mixture of humor and memories of her childhood spent in Knox- viUe, Tenn. During the 1960 ' s, Giovanni was a major voice in the Black Power movement, and her writings at that time reflect her strong emotions and feelings. Her first book, published in 1968, is entitled Black Judgement and includes poems such as Ugly Honkie or The Election Game and How to ' Win It. In the poem she wrote, The barrel ot a gun is the best voting machine. However, most ot her work written since her political activism, deals with more personal sub- jects. In her 19 . publication Ego-Trippiiig. she explored teelings ot loneliness, love, nostalgia and black music. Giovanni has edited an anthology. Sight Came Softly, and has collaborated on A Dia- logue: James Baldwin and Xikki Gioianni. She has also recorded rwo albums with the New York Communit) ' Choir entitled, Truth Is the ' Way and Like a Ripple on a Pond. Giovanni studied history at Fisk University where she graduated with honors. She has received numerous awards and grants including an Honorary Doctor ot Humanities degree from ' Wilberforce University, and a National Book Award for Gemini. Giovanni concluded the lU English department ' s lecture series Women and Literature. Bloomington Weather: Partly cloudy today with a high in the mid-50 ' s Chance of precipitation near zero. We all know that Apri l showers bring May flowers. Of course, in Bloomington they can drown them, but that ' s another story. How many of us know what March snows can bring.- ' Only three weeks before, we had shed winter coats, danced in Dunn meadow, and sung hymns to the sun god. Then it hit. It was sneaky, very quiet, and as unexpected as President Ryan lunching in the Commons. One morning we awoke to cold reality in the form of the biggest snow storm of the year. Those in tune with their mind and body ran to the window, yelled, Gosh darn, it must have snowed last nightl and crawled back into bed. A little anti -climatic perhaps, but wise. And there were some who, because of an overwhelming desire to pass a course, hunted for scarves, hats and gloves and bravely sallied forth. If making it to campus wasn ' t fun and thrills enough, you could help push buses, cars and stranded lU operated vehicles out of snow banks. Like snow plows for instance. Trying to find curbs when you couldn ' t even distinguish between sidewalks and streets was exhilaratmg. So was keeping your balance and dignity in six-inch platforms while carefully stepping over those who couldn ' t keep their bal- ance and dignity in six-inch platforms. And let us not forget those wonderful people among us who still retain a child-like fascination for snow . . . who so innocently build snowmen . . . and who so accurately throw snowballs. Photographs Jim Mendenhall While John Tanke does the Shadow Waltz on his unicycle, Joni Hansen and Janet Stout (above) reas- sure themselves that snow is just as slippery for college students as it was when they were younger. Terry Gick {right) is the victim of a sudden ambush. 92 93 Howard CoseU wasn ' t at the ringside, the winners didn ' t receive any sizable mone- tary rewards, and the losers didn ' t demand a rematch in Madison Square Garden. Still, there were bloody noses and bruised limbs. One doesn ' t have to be a professional boxer to feel pain. It was the Crimson Gloves Boxing Tour- nament, the first AAU contest held at lU since 1938. Nine weight classes participated in the event which was held in the cafeteria of ' Wright Quad. The fights were co-ordinated by Steve Jennette and Ferguson House of ' Wright Quad sponsored the tournament. 94 Crimson Gloves Boxing Tournament Ted Zale {left} receives some advice from his manager between rounds. Bloodied, but not beaten. Dave George (below) challenges his opponent while Bud Smith {right) recuperates in the corner. At bottom, Konrad Streaty is getting the countdown. March 22, 1975 The end of the road for basketball 96 Geographically speaking, Dayton, Ohio, does not lie between Bloomington and San Diego. In NCAA basketball, however, it most certainly does. This is not to say lU fans consid- ered the competition in Dayton to be simple, but there seemed to be more talk of that city in California than that city in Ohio. When a team has enough momentum to win 31 straight games by a margin of 23.3 points per game, when a team has been ranked No. 1 for over two months, when a team has a coach as colorful as Bobby Knight and fans across the fruited plains, the entire mass just seemed un- stoppable. It stopped. March 22, 1975. Kentucky - 92, lU - 90. The NCAA All the Way bumper stickers have been torn off cars. The Knight Time posters have been taken out of store fronts. The billboards along the highways coming into Bloomington no longer say Home of the No. 1 Hoosiers. But the vibrations still remain. They should, it was a helluva year. Monte Hostetler John Laskou ' ski ifar left i grimacei as he leaves the court and cheering Kentuckians at Dayton while fans in the IMU trophey room watch the last few minutes of the game in dishelief. Photographs David lay 97 . . . and other issues from March Paraphernalia Law If there ' s one thing that some Indiana state senators can ' t stand, it ' s marijuana. But they are aware of the wide spread use of the cannibus plant. And they are also aware that a large number of votes come from those people who are inclined to indulge in a toke now and then. Consequently, the senators analyze, the only way to win votes is to reduce the marijuana penality. Charles E. Bosma is a Republican State Senator from Beech Grove, Indiana. And he is concerned about what is best for the majority of Hoosiers. And being a State Senator and all, it is obvious that he would automatically know what exactly is best. So in keeping with this heroic goal. Senator Bosma has decided to introduce a bill into the state legislature that would make any device which could be employed in the imbibing of drugs illegal. He asks that rolling papers which have any reference to marijuana in the brand name be outlawed and roach clips, hash pipes and other instruments that force people to in- dulge be taken off the market. There are some people who can ' t understand Senator Bosma ' s clear thinking. Opponents to the bill argue that intent of the drug user cannot be controlled by law. The drug can be outlawed but any whim a person might have to use a drug is not defined as being illegal. But just think of how Bosma ' s philosophy could change the world: In order to force people to stop driving over the speed limit, their speed- ometers will only register 55 m.p.h., people under the age of 2 1 will be arrested if they should mention a desire to have a drink, every weapon available — guns, sticks, rocks, knives, rope, telephone cords, will be unavailable for consumer purchase. Economy in Upswing While many students were getting the famous one week $100 sun-tan, Congress stayed up late one night and approved the larg- est tax cut in the nation ' s history. The entire bill totals S22.8 billion. The first material signs of this legislative move should appear in early May in the form of a government check. President Ford signed the measure with the hopes it would stimulate the flow of money and increase business activity within the country. The stock market reacted favorably to the move. In fact, the economy shows signs of moving away from the earlier stages of rigor mortis. Food prices did increase, but they rose at a slower rate. And there were substantial declines in the price of meat and sugar. Medical fees, rent, and the ever-present utility bills inevitably went up. Economists are predicting a general upswing in the country ' s business during the latter part of this year. More jobs should be available con- tributing to a rebirth of confidence. ©fte, ■ ' B«F aip ,Hi;n AinT V He of ' W Kpw ' AH i-?mrmfiu uu)? 98 Buy-Centennial When the country that is responsible tor the invention of the hamburger stand, Coor ' s beer, the Carpenters, Star Trek, Mayor Daley, and Purdue decides to throw a birthday party, well even Truman Capote is going to be outdone. This is the year in which the bicentennial cele- bration begins. Everybody is getting into the act. After all a bicentennial doesn ' t happen all that often. Esquire Magazine recently ran a contest for the major advertising companies to design a na- tional birthday card. Scholarships have been of- fered to anybody who can write a bicentennial play which will be performed during the year- long celebration. A Bloomington author, Elizabeth Myers notes that most publishers have already begun the circulation of a bicentennial- related material. It ' s going to be a prosperous year for Abe Lincoln. A jingle company for radio stations is currently having much success with a series called The Spirit of America. It features the voice of Tony the Tiger by the way. How much more American can one get? David Baker, local jazz instructor for the School ot Music, has been commissioned to write a number of pieces for the National Bicentennial celebration. Even the design on the passport will have a theme of this country ' s history. A thought for the profound mind; What will America wish for before it blows out the candles? Tuition Increases: Realities of Life The cost of higher education is higher, which proves that everything is relative . . . Seems logical you know; if you read the food stamp article in the column next door, it is obvi- ous that students and colleges who never have enough money to begin with, are really going to feel the existing economic ick we ' re in. And so the tuitions go up. Cornell now costs S. 3,775 a year, even though they could accept a larger proportion of the 18,000 applications tor the 2,700 available spaces. Opponents to the hike are forced to hold their heads in shame while a member of Cornell ' s upper echelon ser- monizes that economic stress will not force a sacrifice of quality. Harvard (or is it Hah- vahd?) has a price of S.i,740 per year. Yale is now S4,050 a year. But some colleges are actually lowering their tuitions. Franklin College in Indiana made a S400 cut in its tuition in an attempt to draw more students and beat the economic problems with larger registration hgures. A similar move was made by Queen ' s College in North Carolina, which lowered their rates by S 1 10. And then there is the administrator within the essence of Academia: Princeton. Rational- izing a S625 tuition increase, he said the univer- sity is experiencing an awareness of the realities of life. A person just can ' t argue with the realities of life. Food Stamps The Food Stamp Program was begun with the poor in mind. 1975 saw the rise of the lower class; in numbers. You see, these days, the middle class American is also a member of the lower class. These days too, it is common to see an Eldorado parked outside the Food Stamp Of- fice. Even Eldorado owners are getting laid off from their jobs. Is nothing sacred? It is estimated that 1 out of every 12 Ameri- cans is receiving Food Stamps. The program has a S4 billion price tag and is extremely imponant to many families. A growing number ot students, by declaring one member a head of the household, are surviving through the Food Stamp Program. Anyone having assets of more than SI 500 is not eligible. A survey by a major news magazine reveals that many people are al- ready digging into savings in order to live. If this trend should continue, though unlikelv, the number of recipients would climb tremendously. Nobody is keeping up with the Joneses anymore. The Joneses are just as poor. 99 April Fool ' s Day It ' s a shame that April Fool ' s Day only comes once a year. Especially since lU just happens to be the home of one Leon Varjian and lUSA just happened to give a salute to him in the shape of the Banana Olympics on April 1. In Dunn Meadow hundreds of people were discovering all sorts of fun things to do with bananas. They were flipping them, floating them down the Jordan River, sticking them in their ears, and quite naturally, slipping on them The Leon Day celebration began with an award ceremony in front of Ballantine Hall, where mayoral candidate Varjian was presented with the key to ' Fun City. Kurt Flock, lUSA president, then gave a presidential pardon to Varjian for the intellectual rape of lU students. At the Brown Bag Testimonial Luncheon held in the Commons, lUSA vice-president Steve Patton, told the gatherers that everyone should learn to laugh at themselves. Unfortu- nately, Patton hadn ' t quite acquired the knack of practicing what he preached. He blushed as the crowd followed his suggestion and laughed at him. The celebration culminated in the Banana Olympics presided over by Varjian. The crowd went ' bananas as the students competed in a banana flip, banana relay, and a belly-to-belly banana throw. One student was overheard shouting encouragement to his banana as it floated down the Jordan River to the finish line in the banana float. The day ended with a pie in the face for Var- jian who said, as he licked the banana cream off his face, ' I am deeply touched, in more ways than one. He should have been — with the price of bananas these days, it was certainly no cheap thrill. lUSA didn ' t stop with Leon; they even managed to fool around with the IDS. Orily they called the April Fools Day edition the Indiana Daily Stupid. And of course you felt pretty stupid yourself alter reading a copy not knowing that it was an April Fool ' s issue assuming it was the regular 100 IDS and believing the headline stating that Bobby Knight had resigned his post as head lU basketball coach. Veal cutlets, a familiar taste treat to dorm resi- dents got quite a bit of publicity. The Daily Stupid ran several articles in which the offen- sive oddities were analyzed, used in research ex- periments, and had been proven to be car- cinogenic. For a minute, the paper almost became credible. April 1 falls between spring break and finals — not the nicest time of the year, but Leon and lUSA made it a little more bearable. All in all, it was quite literally, a day ot fian and games. — April — Despite the Lirge number of conteitaiits with indispu table talents, there could be only one victor in the Banana Olympics flipping contest. It was a tough match, but ultimately one banana landed inside the winning circle. Appropriately dressed in graduation attire. Varjian (below i congratulates the champion. Photographs Rick Wood 101 Hoosefest Dusk ' til Dawn Country music, tug-o-war, craft sliow and flea market round out Union Board activities official i called three reviutches of the tug o war con ten over the Jordan river hefijre the winners were ft nally named. The winning team (above i was treated to a free dinner in the Tudor room. The action was not cofifined to the meadow, however, as a craft show was held in the Solarium. William Henry Young (right I explains the art of hroommaking to an inter ested bystander. 102 what could be better than a back manage to soothe aching muscles and relieve tensions? Robin Bistany s magic fingers ' go to work on Mike Puac (above i. Nearly everyone likes banana splits, but the lAiUB six-foot banana split eating contest was more than most sundae lovers could stomach. Each member of the six man teams had to consume one foot of the con- fection before the next team member could start in. The last member of the forest -t-A team makes a noble effort to finish it off. There ' s a certain style of music called Hoosier folk and the Indiana Memorial Union Board (IMUB) does its best to bring it to the campus communit} ' each year at its Hoosefest. The event ran from noon to evening one Sunday in Dunn Meadow and included a free corn roast and entertainment by local bands Sil- verwings, Comstock Lode, and Lantern. Banjo player Brent Kinser shared the Alumni Hall stage with country blues musician Josh Schurman to add to the celebration. If that wasn ' t entertaining enough, there was a three-legged race, a flapjack flipping contest, tug-o-war preliminaries, and tug-o-war finals. IMUB also sponsored the final Dusk ' til Dawn of the year that weekend. About -4,500 people attended the festivities including a Isanana split eating contest, massage parlor and a flea market. Photographs David la 103 Microlab blaze destroys research project I tr « I 104 Three students and an assistant professor woke one morning to face the fact that three years of research had been ruined. An in- cubator plug created a bit too much heat in the wee hours of the morning and by the time it had stopped incubating, an entire laboratory in Jordan Hall was destroyed. Fire and Safety Engineer Jim Dawson believes the blaze began when the cord to the in- cubator plug got too corroded from other chemi- cals in the lab. The fire lasted for thirty minutes, and caused smoke damage to two other labs in Jordan Hall. The research project by students involved bacteria culture experiments sponsored by the Department of Microbiology. Some duplicated data for the study was also found safe after the blaze was extinguished. A number of expensive, delicate instruments which take months to replace were destroyed in the fire which caused an estimated $150,000 damage. Rick Wood Founder ' s Day President John W. Ryan congratulates the honored students after a series of programs and speeches. Every year lU celebrates Founder ' s Day. Most students think the university should celebrate it more often since it means that all morning classes are cancelled and everyone gets a chance to sleep in. But for some students it means dressing up a little more than usual, making tracks to the Auditorium, and receiving an award for having a 3.3 GPA or better the previous semester. Sometimes it ' s even cause for a family reunion if parents, brothers and sisters, and an assortment of other relatives attend the event. President John ' W. Ryan presided over this year ' s event and vice-president Byrum E. Carter presented the honor students. John Laskowski. senior, spoke to the students during the pro- gram. Afternoon activities included an outdoor con- cert by the lU Concert Band and the annual pil- grimage to the home and grave of Dr. Andrew ■Wylie, the first president of the University. Photographs Rick Wood 105 Art Buchwald He dropped out of high school to join the Marines and fight in the war. Upon re- turning to the United States, he decided to con- tinue his pursuit of education and stood tor hours in a line to enroll in school. After filling out the necessary forms, he realized he had just joined the student body of the University of California. A year later, the University ot California realized he hadn ' t graduated from high school. Somehow, that seems to be a good background for Art Buchwald ' s profession: a syndicated columnist whose humorous anec- dotes appear in over 500 newspapers. Every now and then, he is even published in Russian news- papers: ■Acrually, I work for the CIA and every third word in my column appearing in Russia is a secret message to our agents. When I learned that the papers over there delete and change my words around, that meant they were on to me and must have been trying to ruin the messages I had been writing. Some other profundities from Buchwald: ON THE MIDDLE EAST — The cause of the Middle East conflict is the Harvard Business School. They teach the sons of the Arab shieks how to screw us. Now, if the sons had gone to use, they ' d have learned how to surf ON WATERGATE — It was a Camelot for me. All I had to do was pick up the front page in the morning and it became obvious I coiild take the day off. I wasn ' t needed. ON PRESIDENT FORD — Fords pardon of Richard Nixon did for the justice system what Evel Knievel did for the space program ... 1 worship the quicksand Ford walks on. ON NIXON — I didn ' t want Richard Nixon to resign. As a humor columnist, I needed him. However, as a president, he didn ' t need me. ' Rick Wood 106 Gene Roddenberry STARDATE 1-29-68 The Starship En- terprise has learned ot the NBC Networks decision to remove the television series Star Trek from its Friday night location. An inves- tigation team, headed by First Officer Spock beamed down to the surface and discovered 500 living organisms called students protesting the network ' s plan. Spock comments upon re- turning, that the students were definitely showing emotion, rather than rationale throughout the protest. Spock also says he was invited by a number ol Women trom the Andrew ' s School for Girls in ' Wiloughby. Ohio. to shack up. Our computer banks are currently processing this word in hopes ot finding a uni- versal definition. STARDATE 4-18-75 Gene Roddenberry (the creator) spoke to students ar Indiana Uni- versity about his series, Star Trek. Accom- panying the speech was a pilot film of the series which was rejected at first by N BC Monitoring the lecture with our solar receiver, in quad, we heard the following: Science fiction writers do not see humanity as the superior race within the universe. It will be a centur - before we get over our petty nationalism. ' When this occurs, then we will be able to relax and enjoy the differences between people. Roddenberry added that he has plans to make a movie based on the Star Trek series. Our computer banks show that Roddenberry has had officials from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration edit the scripts used during the successful television run. The Navy has used the Enterprise ' s bridge design in building a communications center. Roddenberry mentioned that every button and light on the Enterprises bridge was functional. This set a realistic atmosphere for the aaors in the series. They were on a believable starship. He said, in an earlier press conference while at lU, his faith in the television medium did go up a notch or rwo when the series was finally ac- cepted. Still he believes, what we see on televi- sion depends on whether or not it will sell deodorant. First Officer Spock believes that deodorant is illogical. )an Housewerth 107 Trash Day Bagging litter, barrel hopping amuse students, clean campus 108 1U saluted the garbage can tor a tew hours during Kurt Flock ' s last day as student body president. These were two separate events by the way. The celebration of Trash Day included a number of trash-oriented activities. The campus as well as parts of Bloomington took on a pure look afirer students gave up studying tor an after- noon to search out any aluminum can that might have been occupying the ground. The main event was a contest to see what team could de- posit the most trash withm a specified time in an area near Woodburn Hall. Other trash bashes gave students an opporm- nity to prove their mastering of such skills as a trash can bunny hop, trash can heave, trash barrel roll and a trash can lid toss. The latter skill required no previous e xperience with the frisbee. In fact, previous experience and affinity with garbage-containing tools was not required. Kurt Flock (below) former lUSA president and master of ceremonies at the Trash Barrel Olympics, takes a break from collecting litter. The trash barrel roll drew Doug Carlson (far left) into one of the small, metal cylinders while Steven Phelps (lower left) dents the bottom of the can while bunny bop- ping. _( • ■ Photographs Da id la 109 lUSA Elections A lackluster coronation The lUSA election day came, and went, and nobody cared too much about it. Student apathy was at its highest and a majority ot students didn ' t even know there was an election going on. However, Jay King was elected lUSA pres- ident and he didn ' t seem too disturbed by the lack of interest. In fact, he has plans to make lUSA (and hopefully next year ' s election) of some consequence and value to the lU commu- nit) ' . King and his vice president, Judy ' Waltz, plan to create an independent advisory board comprised ot representatives from various lU student organizations to review the work of the lUSA Student Assembly. In an effort to cut spending. King said his ad- ministration will be operating under a greatly reduced public relations budget. With communications between lUSA and the student body going as it is, that might not be the wisest way to start a term of office. But then again, with only 51 2 pc cent of the student body voting things couldn ' t get much worse. Newly elected lUSA vice-president Judy Wdtz. pres ident Jay King and office manager Bohhi Maire get settled in their new offices to plan next year ' s activi- ties. 110 Rick Wood People ' s Park A mirror image of DunnKirk Square Man and technology have scored again 1 What used to be called People ' s Park at the corner of Kirkwood Avenue and Dunn Street will soon be a new shopping complex. In- stead of meeting your friends in the grassy field, relaxing and enjoying the sunshine, you can meet them at the bargain counter and enjoy the concrete and steel artistry of a building. Not much of a compromise, but that ' s industrial growth for you. Plans for the new mall include a landscaped courtyard (a bit ironic) offices and clothing and novelty shops. The construction of the building calls tor a wedge-shaped complex, sloping west- ward from tour stories to two, with between 25,000 and .t5,000 square feet of leasable space. That all sounds very nice and impressive and it will bring in money and profit to the businessmen, but there ' s something about the natural beauty of a park that can ' t be reproduced. Editors note: Plans to turn People ' s Park into a shopping complex were dropped in late June by owner Larry Canada. He said protests from students and the community prompted him to drop the proposal. PI JUS to turn Peoples Pjrk into another shopping center met up uith anticipateJ student protest. Paul Nicholls summed up his feelings about the decision to close off the park: They should build a public sauna here instead of another DunnKirk Square. More peo- ple could get together that uay. Ian W ' oodrmg Da !d la Regatta 112 Where the Buoys Are was rhe theme of the 1975 Little 500 Regatta. Buoys as well as cold, rainy weather were in abundance, but the weather eventually won our. Approximately 4,000 persons attended the event, but that number dwindled to about 250 when the weather got the onlookers about as wet as some ot the participants. Phi Gamma Delta ( Fiji) won the paddleboat race and Alpha Omicron Pi won the canoe race. This was the Fiji ' s third consecutive win in the paddleboat competition. Fiji team members Bob Mercer, Scott Miller, Rick Schilling and Mark Needmore along with Gamma Phi Beta steerers Joann Clanc} ' and Suzanne Nicks had a time of 1:12. Alpha Omicron Pi won the canoe race in twenty-five seconds flat. Team members Diane Reinhart, Kyra Matherly, Carol O ' Neal and Karren Gore were the pole-setters in this year ' s quals and defeated Pi Beta Phi and Alpha Chi Omega in the semi-finals. Rick Wood Dave Dotour 113 Pre -race Festivities Introduced as the comedian of the century, Bob Hope topped the bill of lU Student Foundation Little 500 Variety Show in As- sembly Hall. Appearing along with Hope were Dionne Warwick and the Singing Hoosiers. The Hoosiers opened the show with three dance numbers and were followed by Warwick singing some of her popular hits. For the conclusion of her act, Warwick sang her newer songs combining gospel soul with a touch of ma- turity ' that comes with age. Hope was his usual funny self and joked about Congress, pornography, women ' s liberation, air- ports, and among other things, lU. A somewhat older alumni audience listened to barbs about inflation, recession, and President Ford, but no mention was made of Hope ' s old buddy Richard Nixon. Modeling clothes from local stores, students displayed the latest in wearing apparel at the Studen t Foundation fashion show held in the Showalter House. David lay 114 1 S ' . ' S . ' ;: ' s:: . i,--p- ' ? 1- Susie Eaton The Cream squad won the football game m the annual Cream and Crimson intrasquad game in Memorial Stadium. The game is another aspect of the Little 500 festivities and gives Coach Corso a chance to display the poten- tial of next year ' s football, team. Split end Trent Smock and kicker Frank Stavroff accounted for the winner ' s 12 legiti- mate points. Smock got a touchdown and Stavroff was successful on two field goal at- tempts. According to Corso ' s scoring system, points were given for fumble recoveries and in- terceptions so the final score was Cream 25 - Crimson 10. By NCAA standards, the actual score was 12 to 6. Either way, lU won. 115 Mini 500 Delta Gamma ' s edge out Elkin III Photographs; Bob Cohn The Delta Gamma trike team won its first Mini by defeating the team from Elkin III with a time of 41.1 seconds. To advance to the semi-finals the Delta Gamma team consisting of Alberta Valencia, Amy Mc Goiff, Jan Miller, and Lisa Zachary defeated Gamma Phi Beta then ran against Delta Delta Delta and Alpha Chi Omega. Elkin III had the fastest time of the night, 40.5 seconds, during their semi-final races against Kappa Kappa Gamma and Time-Out. In addition to the Mini race, a tricycle race was held between members of the lU basketball team and some members of the Kappa Kappa Gamma Mini teams of 1955 through 1957. Kappa Kappa Gamma won the Mini race those three years. However, history didn ' t repeat itself as the basketball team came out the victors. 116 1 John Laskowski {below) should stick to basketball and leave the trikes to the girls. The DCs show ex- pertise in exchanging trikes {left) a technique that helped them win the race with a time of 41-1 seconds. J.D. Schwalm 117 Little 500 M uch of our success can be attributed to staying out of wrecks and general good luck, said the Phi Gamma Delta (Fiji) bike coach, Bill Shook. The Fiji ' s couldn ' t have asked for better luck as team members Pete King, Charlie Turk, Eric King, and Jay Allardt claimed the first place trophy for winning the 19 5 Little 500 bike race. The Fiji ' s luck might best be described as the Delta Chi ' s downfall. After winning the two previous races. Delta Chi was eyeing their third victory, but instead finished in second place. It was a two team race from the start. The Delta Chi ' s took the lead on the first lap and held on to it through most of the first fifi:y laps until the Fiji ' s took over the lead on lap sixty. The upset came on lap forty-seven when a wreck occurred. The yellow flag came out and track officials penalized Delta Chi ten seconds for advancing their position. While the Delta Chi ' s were in the penalty area, the Fiji ' s got a three quarter lap lead on them. After twenty laps, they had a thirty-nine second lead over Delta Chi and kept increasing it throughout the race. Photographs Jim Mendenhall yy; - ' ■ ' ' Ttiii aii ii S Sli ' i : 119 120 If t Equipped with cameras and coolers, thousands of students and alumni flocked to the 10th Street Stadi- um to watch the Little 500 bike race. Although there were the usual crashes and pile up s to add a morbid touch of excitement to the race, the majority of the au- dience seemed content to cheer their teams on. chat with old friends and drink beer. Post race events are almost as fun as the race itself. The elated Fiji team (below I rush to the victor ' s pool to find that some over anxious fans had beat them to it. I Photographs;|im Slendenhall [; The Grand Finale Pomp and Circumstance, tassels and tradition Photographs David lay 122 It seems as if only those seniors whose parents have an affinity for tradition and tassels are the ones who attend tommencement ceremo- nies. Students don ' t realize commencement is tor the parents. We probably wouldn ' t have commencement if it were dependent on the students, said Frank Jones, chairman of the 1975 commencement committee. Even though Assembly Hall was three-fourths filled with parents, friends, and visitors, only about 1,500 of the eligible 6,770 bachelor ' s, master ' s and Ph.D. Candidates bothered to show up. A tew students admitted that there was some- thing abxjut tradition that gave them the desire to go through the ceremony. However, most students clearly indicated that the desire was on the parr ot parents not themselves. One father summed up his feeling of the cere- mony when he said that he had spent about 512,000 for his son ' s education — And I damned well wanted to see something to show for iti 11 ; ' it single sueephig geiliire. DeJii oj the School of Music Chtirles Webb procLiims his prodigies gVihluLited. Some seniors participate in the ceremony for their parents ' sake, others are obviously move J. Below, three graduates express varying degrees of in terest in the proceedings. After it ' s all over, tradition demands thai pictures be taken of the graduate in the appropriate cap and gown (far left ' . After all. it s a once in a lifetime snap shot. . and other issues from April May Saigon Falls During the final days of April, the Vietnam war ended. The newspapers had another chance to use their ' 2 point headline type and the na- tional magazines had another topic for a cover stor)-. The stock market reacted favorably while most Americans reacted with a dazed glare. The feelings of Americans were not the relieved Gosh, I ' m glad th at ' s over, emotion nor was it a ' Wait until next time, you ' ll see, at- titude. Americans had just been sent to their room without any dinner. They learned, if any- thing, that being the toughest kid on the block doesn t mean they can make the rules. The end of the ' Vietnam war was the grand fi- nale to America s twenty years ot involvement, an involvement which proved futile, an involve- ment that never should have been. The numbers game: 57,000 Americans dead, 900 still missing, and .i03,659 wounded. The cost to the Ameri- can people was S 140 billion. The United States had lost a war. The word humiliation appeared more and more as the conflict moved toward the Viet Cong ' s favor. ' When It became evident the Communists were situated outside Saigon, ready to move in and capture the city, the work humiliation could be found in every opinion page in America. Previously it was used by American soldiers. Now it ' s being used by those Americans con- cerned about their country ' s reputation. Vietnam, like Watergate, had its good points . . . sore points, but for the better. The war in Southeast Asia as well as the events in the White House came through to the American people with the force and impact of a slap in the face. America suddenly realized that their country could make some very grave mistakes. The peo- ple in those 50 states had experienced this helplessness for the past ten years, especially for it was those years when everyone could only watch and wait. The demonstrations didn ' t work, although we learned from them. The electoral process didn ' t work, but still we learned. These years ot frustra- tion have taught us to be cautious in what we get involved in. Today we hear the common reason to stay out of the Mid-east: It could be another Vietnam. Yes, it can be said that we blew it ' with Vietnam. Yes, many human beings lost their lives in what then and now seems to have been an insane war — a war that was never officially declared. And, it seems that if one looks at histo- ry, every generation makes at least one big mis- take when in control of the country. One must wonder, now that Vietnam is over, what kind of mistake our generation is going to make when we get in control. Viet Orphans Adopted After the Communists took over South Vietnam some 2,000 Vietnamese orphans were flown from Saigon to the United States. Most of the children had adoptive parents waiting for them when they arrived. In a way, it was a nice ending to a not very nice war. lU Loses Coach When Howard ' Gooner Brown died of a heart attack early this month, lU not only lost the assistant football coach, but a legend. Brown was associated with lU for almost three decades, had played for lU when he was in college, and was a member of the 1945 Big Ten cham- pionship team. Brown loved telling stories con- cerning lU football teams of the past to amuse and inspire the current football players here. Maybe it was rather hard to believe all the ac- counts of superhuman dedication, but Brown and his stories are going to be missed. 124 Hunger Strike Draws Attention Elena Fraboschi began a hunger strike in December which lasted through the end of March. She believed she had been slighted by the University. Elena resigned her position as an R.A. in Eigenmann Hall after deciding some rules she was told to follow were impractical. She wrote a letter to the Residence Life coordinator explaining her reasons for quitting. Two days later Elena wrote another letter asking to remain on the staft. She received a reply saying her res- ignation had been processed. Out of curiosity, she desired to see what comments and complaints had been made about her by an assis- tant coordinator. Fraboschi was under the impression the Buckley Amendment could be used to gain access to the record of her case. Upon seeing the record, she felt some of the comments were mac- curate. The Director of Residence Life, however, maintained the Buckley Amendment did not apply to the situation. The hearing requested by Elena was denied. As a result of this action, she began the hunger fast and lost a considerable amount of weight. Still, she persisted and brought attention to her case through this action. The Lfniversity finally relented and granted a hearing for Elena in early April. Spreading The Word Along with the blossoming dogwood trees and budding magnolias, the evangelists came to Bloomington lock, stock and Bible to save the souls of lU students. Situated on street corners, perched in the pulpit above the entrance to the Commons or in the soapbox arena known as Dunn Meadow, the multitudes overtook the campus in an ettort to spread the word. But the campus remained indifferent. Stu- dents barely looked up from their books, the Hare Krishnas kept dancmg and chanting and the men in suits on the street corners were cau- tiously ignored. Evidently, the message didn ' t get across. David lav Coach Dave Bliss Moving to Oklahoma lU assistant basketball coach Dave Bliss is moving to Oklahoma — to be the head basket- ball coach at the University of Oklahoma. Bliss helped Bobby Knight coach when Knight coached at West Point, went to Cornell as freshman coach, and came to lU in 19 ' l to rejoin Knight. Bliss is already counting on win- ning the Big Eight title next year, and in basket- ball, optimism always helps. Trustee Bill Passed After years ot student lobbying, the Indiana House of Representatives finally passed the student trustee bill (S.B. 10) which allows a student to be on the Board of Trustees at the four state universities. The Senate had passed the bill in January without much fanfare. Not that the bill will draw world-wide attention, but at least it ' s an advancement tor students in In- diana ' s state universities. 125 126 Monte Hosteller Features fs m- ' } : A Day in the Life of lU 128 .V. ' . • ■-;: ' i ' . -,, ■ ' ' ■. ' .,. 1 , i: ' r. ' ;). :U ' .-fe a, DdMcl Wjiher The Great Outdoors Bloomingtunes Places People 154 166 Peaceful, Easy Feeling 176 182 190 Popular Academics 196 Ho-hum Generation 200 Cork Rhodes A Day in the Life of lU Thursday, April 17, 1975. As most students are still snuggled up comfortably in bed, the first stirrings of life appear as Bloomington awakes to a new dawn. The sun fights its way through the clouds, a bit hesitantly at first as if afraid of forcing its cheerful brightness on a sleep drenched campus. It almost looked as if the notorious Bloomington monsoons would start, but the sun won out over the ominous storm clouds and lU was blessed with a beautiful spring day. All in all, it was a pretty typical day. David Hines (right) performs his daily ritual of heralding the dawn with the chimes in the Student Building at 5 a.m. Don Reynolds from Holland Dairy makes his usual deliveries, peo- ple return from graveyard shifts while others struggle to awaken to a new day. This is the story of one day at Indiana Univer- sity. Although it would be impossible to depict all the activities that would normally occur in any one day or show all the varied lifestyles of the people who make up the Bloomington campus, the pictures were selected in such a manner so that a spattering of each could be included. The emphasis in this feature is not so much on telling a story about that day , but to give the reader a feeling of what life at Indiana Universi- ty is all about. The everyday ordinary events of goifig to classes, fighting the traffic jams and doing laundry are pictured as well as activities that individualize the campus. With photographers stationed all over campus at all hours of the day and night, the Ar- butus has sought to capture the essence of a typi- cal day at Indiana University. 128 David lay Tim Brown J29 Dawn is a feeling The first signs of life are stirring around the city, but at 6: 30 a.m., the campus is still desolate. Even the booths at the entrances to campus where the safety officers keep a vigilant watch over who is allowed to enter (blue stickers only), are absent. As he drove his wife to work at the Union Building, this man ' s truck stalled in front of Woodburn Hall. A quick spray of ether on the carborator got it started again. His wife didn ' t miss work either. 130 Kick (i(tO Rick Wood David Jay Mornings are difficult enough to cope with as it is, but the prospect of having break- fast in the Commons is almost too nauseating to comprehend. But then, there ' s no accounting for tastes. Junior Lawson (left) pours the first batch of scrambled eggs of the day. A more palatable approach to the first meal ol the day can be found at the Vienna Dog House (their Eggs Benedict are highly recommended). Carl Klawitter, a cook at the Dog House, hams,it up and wonders ' I don ' t know where all these turkeys come from this early in the morning. But it is only the elite (or lazy) few who can afford to eat out. The majorit) ' ot students stumble sleepily to their kitchens and prepare less elaborate meals of coffee and toast. Barely awake, Tom Ellison pours some orange juice in the Beta House kitchen (bottom) while MRC residents indulge in last minute studying or a quick reading of the IDS before attempting to go to classes. ' hm: 133 While most students are still stumbling around making breakfast, biking or hiking to campus, or more likely, sleeping in late, there is now a bustle ot activity on campus. ROTC members rarely have the pleasure of sleeping late, but instead arise with the sun for a stimulating work out. Tony Mennick (above) strains to finish the last sit-up with the help of Dave Huddleston. With Gene Roddenberry coming to lU to speak about his creation Star Trek, it was only fitting for confectioner Charlie Miller to create a Starship Enterprise cake in his honor. Elsewhere in the Union, Bryce Stevens (far left) performs Rachmaninoff G Minor Prelude in the isolated North Lounge at 6: 32 a.m. Sweeping up the debris of thousands of students is a daily ritual. Peter Grahmbeek (top) cleans up Gresham Dining Hall after the break- fast crowd. Susie Eaion 135 John Hopper 136 Jim Mendenhall Getting up in the morning isn ' t the best way to start the day, but knowing you have a 9: 30 exam is a very good incentive. If you happen to ride a university bus to class you have time to finish waking up, put in your contact lenses (or take them out, depending on the night before) and run to make the 9; 12. The hardest part of riding a bus is remembering to pull the bell at the right stop. Susie Benner (lower left) demonstrates this skill and if the bus driver hears and remembers she should have no problem. Once in the classroom, good etiquette requires that you remain awake. Professor Brewer (below) seems to have no trouble in maintaining attention in his 8; 30 physics class. He just draws and scribbles profound thoughts, theories and equations on the blackboard. Iav-Pv t, - ii,Kitj V1-4V- i-- LY C ChL- ' ' ' L ' -j- (6C,- ' % = )S« ' 8 ' _ %. 4 , . 0 tiz 0 A-O(l-}.( )„Ki; u:? ' . ).c ISC )ohn Hopper 137 MiHlle H.isti-lli ' r Riding bikes is probably the most common way to get to campus. It ' s quicker than walking, also more expensive. Imagine the feel- ing of going to where you parked your bike before class and then finding it gone when you return. But then again, what could be more heart lifting than finding the stolen bicycle . . . still in one piece? While walking past Woodburn Hall, Dan Adams noticed his missing bike locked to the bike rack. Since he didn ' t have the proper equipment to recover it then, he called on Safety to assist him. After checking the hot list, Of- ficer Bonnie Mosier returned the bike to the rightful owner. John Hopper 138 Mornings are as g(X)d a time as any to have a test. You get it over quickly and it doesn ' t ruin the rest of the day- Business maiors Dave Chesterfield and Laurie Leistikow relax in front of the business building discussing the sense of relief one gets when the final question is answered and the test is handed in. Of course, if you had an early morning test, you probably stayed up all night studying for it. And walking all the way back home can be pretty exhausting. Sue Roehr can ' t seem to make it on her own so she hitches a ride with Jeremy Moore (lett). hm Mendenhall 139 Break Time Photographs David Jay TO the followers of the Krishna faith, every meal is a spiritual experience. While sharing a lunch with Bob Locke, one of the Krishnas explained: Eating food that has been offered to Lord KRSNA makes Him a part of you. It helps you find enlightenment, if not in this life. . .perhaps the next. But Bloomington is an action oriented city and most people catch a bite on the run. lU News Bureau photographer Jerry Mitchell (right) chows down on five inches of a subma- rine sandwich from the Union Deli while Safety officer Greg Stone waits for his check afi:er lunch at the Waffle House. 140 Forever Cool Breeze. LSD. Ken Keasey. Electric Kool Aid Acid Test. Vi owwwwwwwww ! Debbie Scofield dis- covers a new angle for soaring through Tom Wolfe s hestselling novel. Bob Cohn Afternoon David lav E. ' .ilreii b) the btJUtipd spring afternoon. Riu . Urie procLtimed Im j loier of truth and a seeker of liisdom. to the Dunn meadou crowd. 143 144 A sunny spring afternoon brings our the romantic in almost all of us. As if to serenade the loving couples scattered across campus, a non-student known only as Malcom just happened into Bloomington during a cross country hitch-hiking jaunt. Breezing down sev- enth Street, Malcom is playing In a Sentimen- tal Mood, on his way to the meadow. Oblivious to the happenings on Kirkwood, Rich and Denny Hartman (far left) lounge in People ' s Park. A popular place to hang out, play music or hold flea markets, soon the park will be just another shopping center. But the park is still public and Phil Sharp and Carol Waldon (left) find the isolated field between Read Center and Arbutus Hall more conducive to cuddling. i raphs wonie Hosteller There ' s something about a sunny day that at- tracts people to the meadow. It ' s a good place to play f ' risbee, study or cool off in the Jordan River. Of course, with all the frisbees and dogs, it ' s difficult to study, but one can make an honest effort. Marshall Billings ' attempts to read the paper are interrupted by Hare Krishna Audolomi Das who is explaining the true meaning of Karma. Biannually, the Krishnas make a pilgrimage to Bloomington to spread the word of their faith . . . and collect donations for Lord KRSNA. They are usually ignored, but Billings is a little more receptive than some to the philosophy. But with finals drawing near, not everyone has the time to relax in Dunn meadow. Doralee Neal (right) lingers in front of Ballentine before going to her 2:30 class. And then an unexpected trip to the health center is a common occurance, especially on a spring day. Arbutus photographer Jim Men- denhall (far right) took a few hours off from shooting The Day in the Life to play some soccer and found himself in the emergency room after a bad bout with a soccer ball. The two black eyes he received lasted for two weeks. Another spring fever casualty was Katherine Sparks (lower left). She and her riding com- panion Mary Brewster had formed a team for the Little 500 bike race, but when Sparks broke her leg, another member of the team decided the race wasn ' t worth the effort. Thus, the first all women Little 500 team to pass the standards set by Student Foundation didn ' t even make it to the qualifications. Such is life in the Big Ten. Monte Hosteller 146 Monte Hosteller 147 The afternoon is drawing to an end and eve- ning is beginning to set in. The world of Indiana University drifts away as students re- turn home after their last classes and prepare for the night. Dorm residents wait in line for dmner, a choice between veal cutlets and ham hocks. Peo- ple in town scrounge around the refrigerator for something to eat, although all that ' s usually there is a fermenting bottle of week old wine, some oatmeal face mask preparation and left- over macaroni and cheese. Well, one has to make do with what one has. Some students are getting ready for work, others are settling down to study. But then it is Thursday night. And Thursday nights in Bloom- ington is when it all happens. Bar night. Do you procrastinate one more night of studying or go to the bars? Decisions, decisions. . ' Luy)nii(. iihiUJ .iUlI) iIjl iLiy bjiiiig j );u ' ul time. Martha Guynn {above i babysat for nine children. Now it ' s time to go home after an ice cream treat at the Union. Earl Wilkins {right i cleans up the rooms at the HPER building after all the students have left. lim Mendenhall 148 lohn Hopper IDS phorognipher Monte Hosteller (left i sits hi his someubiit iluttereJ office and contemplates all thai has to be done to gel the next day s edition out. Bonnie Brounlee (loner left ' finishes off a load of laundry while Jim Abbilt (helou ' .a mechanic for the IV campus bus system relaxes after overhauling an en ine. Bob Cohn m i ■■|3 ' ' J Wt ' ' w Lil w 4 ' rf P Ifit R - t - Rick Wood 150 The Bluebird is one of the few taverns in town that attracts crowds to such an extent that people have to wait in line to get inside. At 11:30 the line has dwindled considerably, but those still outside seem determined to hear Ebony Funk, at least for the last set. But when the bar scene gets too crazy, sometimes it ' s more fun to get away for a while. Robert Zeihen secludes himself on the top of Dunnkirk Square and watches the action on Kirkwood. For those who don ' t hit the bars on Thursday nights, there are other things to do. Like or- dering a pizza. ' When those midnight munchies hit, one sure fire remedy is a pizza or Strom. Jim Garages handles phone orders in the Gate Piz- zaria. Cork Rhodes Photographs Da id la 151 152 Rick Wood Twilight time. Some people are still savoring the last few drops of beer in their favorite tavern. Others are sitting around their rooms in post-midnight bull sessions or cavoaing in the fountain with Venus and her dolphins. Some, however, are not so lucky. Com- parative Literature TA John Finn (far left) still has thirteen papers to grade for the next day. Time: 2:30 a.m. Ironically enough, the French words on the poster behind him mean Every- thing is going well. Bruce Shoner (below) is in a similar frame of mind. At 4: 15 a.m. he is still struggling over a computer program at the Wruble Computer Center. His only comment was Programs are a bitch. But even the late night early morning hours have a bright spot — the all night donut shops. Although this waitress in the donut shop is no match for Maria Muldaur, she begrudg- ingly takes the order for chocolate eclairs. s David Jay 153 The Great Outdoors I Breathe deep. Fill your lungs with some fresh countr) ' air. Just a few miles away from the sulphurific emissions of the power plant, ever present exhaust fumes from cars and buses and the paranoia producing crowds of the campus is The Great Outdoors. Lakes, open fields, wooded areas and quarries are scattered around the outskirts of Bloom - ington. Whether you prefer crawling nose deep in water in a local cave, waiting for that fourteen inch bass to bite or simply wandering through the woods is immaterial. The beauty of the coun- tryside is only one benefit of getting outdoors. The anxiety related to the post-graduate syndrome and that microbiology final fade into the mist when the cool breeze off of Lake Lemon starts playing with your mind. Escaping into nature is unlike drugs, alcohol or any other Bacchanalian delight you may par- take in. After a day in the country, you always wake up feeling a little better than you did the night before. A few achmg muscles maybe, but no hangover. What are you waiting for? Get away from the collegiate realm of boring books, exams and stuffy dorm rooms and submerge yourself whole- heartedly into nature. The Great Outdoors is waiting. 154 David lay With all the lakes in the Monroe County area, Bloomington is a fisherman ' s para- dise. Early in May the Indiana State Team Invi- tational Bass Tournament was held at Lake Monroe. Over 280 fishermen from around the state participated in the event. Surrounded by an assortment ot fishing paraphernalia, Philip Overton (right) from In- dianapolis didn ' t have much luck. It seems that the fish around here are spoiled by red worms and nightcrawlers. Overton didn ' t catch any- thing using crickets and bits of bread for bait. But whether the fish are biting or not, both young and old get into the sport. Mike Mc- Carthy (far right) a Binford Elementary School pupil uses this seemingly awkward method to paddle his boat back to shore. Ironically enough, he was more successful than some of the more experienced fishermen. Photographs Rick Wood 156 157 Perhaps the most unique feature attracting so many students to lU is the surrounding countryside. An abundance of foothills, most resembling mini mountains, draw numerous hikers and campers to the country in hopes of catching that Rocky Mountain High feeling. However, most student campers settle for countr)-side retreats where they can participate in less strenuous activities such as sailing, swim- ming, drinking and cook-outs. Mark McDowell and his friends (top right) swill a tew beers behind a setting sun while their hotdogs roast over the hot coals. Even animals get into the countr) ' feeling. Helmut Beierke and Chica (far right) cruise the waters out at Yellowood. i 158 Photographs Rick Wood 159 From the first day the temperatures top 70 degrees, sun worshippers crowd to the quarries, lakes and pools around Bloomington. Despite frequent warnings by police officials on the dangers of swimming in the quarries, they still seem to be the most popular place to be on a hot, humid day. The primary reason that students flock to these desolate and sometimes dangerous spots is that the local pools and public beaches frown upon public nudity. And let ' s face it, the only way to get an all-over tan is to take it all off Although skinny dipping is generally the rule of the day, bathing suits are allowed for the more modest. But unless you have the nerve (and the body) the less adventurous should stick to the pools because a bikini at the quarries is about as much out of place as a workshirt and cut-offs in a sauna. 160 (■I I ' I 161 162 ■w n Sit back in your saddle. Look around you. No- tice the foliage, budding flowers and ferns that carpet the woodlands. A squirrel scurries by. Just you and your horse ambling along the trails in a fairyland forest. Open fields. Take off Feel the wind whip your hair around your face as you fly across a summer meadow. The surging energy of the horse matches your own as you grip tightly with your knees and spur the horse on, faster, faster. Whether on the trails or in open fields, horse back riding is an exhilarating experience. Anne Hosford and Maggie (below) head back to the stables after a late afternoon ride at Leisureland Stables, just south of Smithville. Da id Mather 163 Back in the days before we were all grown ups, the gang would get together and see exacdy how much abuse those stingray bicycles could take. Hustling through trails and virgin fields, vou would quickly learn to avoid ill- placed tree limbs and rabbit holes. But once you turned six teen, the stingray was replaced by a brand spanking new motorq ' cle. There are two types of riding available to the experienced cyclist, trail riding and dirt track hustling. The trail rider searches out open spaces and frequently stops to enjoy the sheer beauty of nature, while the dirt rider is content to remain on a relatively fixed dirt track taking jumps and sharp turns as fast as humanly possible. One ele- ment both styles of riding share is that the more incompetent the rider, the more pain he will have to endure. But such is the fate for the sons and daughters of Evel Knievel. 1 H H B HKtgi I IH 1 H H 8 r jf ' L B B H H H H 1 ■ K l mSm HHHi HHBjjjjj H H ■Jp -I ? :., - ' ™ .. . ' ' ' ' ■ ' . ' .■-- .-■-■■- ' ■ ti r _ %. ,. «8 Photographs David Jay 164 ■ ' , ; — :i riR; For the more adventurous, spelunking is a sport recommended only for the hard core outdoors enthusiast. Caves of varying sizes and difficulty are scattered throughout the Monroe County area. Salamander Cave is recommended for beginners, and it you survive beyond the scraped knees, aching muscles and eye strain that accompany this sport and discover that you actually enjoy it, you may graduate to Spelunking 102, Buckner ' s Cave. Located in the Garrison Chapel area, Buckner ' s is noted for its infamous 1000 foot crawl, the only entrance into the main caverns. Another high point of Buckner ' s is the stream that runs intermittently through the cave that also must be crawled through on hands and knees. Caving can be tun, provided you have the right equipment (knee pads and hard hats with lights are a must) along with an experienced guide. Untortunately, there are no road maps along the way. Paul Pinella ■-.. ; JI, -■ ■- 165 Bloomingtunes America — r ' ' ' i 1 ' ' f ' 89 ■■■■• H w ' ) ' r V i ft Bw k f . r Maybe it ' s the common man ' s fascination with the celebrity or maybe the seeing is beUeving philosophy is in control. The per- formance by name musicians will always elicit awe from an audience. But with the price of tickets in these times of how-much-does-it- cost attitudes, an audience is willing to be in awe for only so long. After a second or two of ' gee-whiz, they want something more. There are a number of factors which work against the innocent desire for a successful con- cert. The major one is universal — money. Big name groups such as Led Zepplm, the Stones, the Doobie Brothers, ' Wings, the ' Who, and other established businesses have realized they can demand an outrageous price and still get it. For example: Suppose Band X wants to net a million dollars in a tour. If they have maintained a consistent space in the Top 40 record market and have been successfiil in album sales, the probabilities of a fruitful tour are high. Now, in- stead of playing forty gigs at 525,000, they will play 20 gigs at 550,000. As a result. Band X can get their money in 20 consecutive days of playing and not have to spend months at a time on the road. Bruce Allen, manager of Bachman- Turner Overdrive had the following to say in an interview with Circus Magazine: Now we only play each city once a year. That way you can keep prices up because there is still a demand . . . What is rock? It ' s a business. The result of all this is a decline in the avail- ability of popular bands. Promoters are forced to draw from unknown bands or bands that are on their way out. Many times an audience is not large enough to support the less-popular but just as legitimate group. Another factor which has become increas- ingly nightmarish for promoters is the current sophistry rock bands are going through. Many albums are produced with special studio effects: numerous voice tracks, moog synthesizers and other electronic apparatuses, special sound tracks, and even entire symphonic orchestras in the background. It is obvious a band cannot af- ford to hire the personnel and rent or buy the necessary equipment for these intricate scores, and then take the entire shebang on the road. And if they could, they would find themselves one night in a place like Assembly Hall. Even the simplest of acts, like Gordon Lightfoot, has problems with sound in these huge buildings. Acoustics can ruin performances, frustrating both audience and artist. Daniel Seraphine, drummer for Chicago, always wears headphones during a concert. By doing this, he can listen to the actual beat without the interference of echo — which the audience is listening to. 166 Pat Partington Herbie Hancock The basis of the supergroup has attected the concert scene. Bob Richert, editor of the W ' lUS Tipsheet. says Rock is an old medi- um. The foundation is with the Beatles, Stones, Beach Boys type of group. These bands can still sell out a concen because a stigma of supergroup remains. We ' ll never have a new supergroup with the impact the old ones had and still have. Richert ' s statements can be qualified by look- ing at what concerts were successes at lU during the past year. When Union Board brought Elvis Presley, they made a profit of Sll,631. John Denver ' s concert netted a S5,000 profit. Even Traffic, with the Spencer Davis reputation, made money. It is a given, then, that a supergroup can sell out concerts anj ' where they are booked. This is the prerequisite in having the adjective super affixed to the name. But it has also been es- tablished that the supergroup is not available to most potential concert dates. They are either playing large cities or they are not touring at all. As a result, the promoter must search for a group that will appeal to the characteristics of the market where the concert will be held. The promoter must observe definite move- ment within the market that can be directed toward the acceptance of a particular band. Record sales of a group must be doing well in relation to other bands. Airplay from radio sta- tions is considered and many a promoter will ask to see program request logs to study what bands are being asked tor by listeners. Also important, is whether or not a band will be in the area when a concert date has been decided. Bloomington has been called a bluegrass- oriented market by promoters. The city is within an area with a high interest in country and southern music. Also influential is the increase in southern-inspired rock nationally. When lUSA brought the Marshall Tucker Band, a profit of at least S1,000 was attained. In con- trast, lUSA also brought Shawn Phillips, which turned out to be a near disaster . . . they broke even. For the most part, Bloomington concerts have come off rather well. Both concert-bringing or- ganizations, IMUB and lUSA, have a number of stringent guidelines to follow in bringing a group to lU; 1) The 5 -day rule — no two concerts may be held within five days of each other because most students can ' t afford to attend two con- certs within five days. 2) Approval for a concert must be obtained by majority vote of a Concert Scheduling Com- mittee representing the university. This com- mittee discusses The perceived desirability of the artists to students at lU. Rick Wood 168 Gilfoy Sound Studios Gilfoy Sound Studios, Inc. is located approxi- mately three miles northwest of Bloomington in a converted house. The setting might not be Los Angeles or New York, but the resulting recordings are just as good. The studio specializes in audio sound re- cording and has the capability to do 16 track recording with their sophisticated electronic equipment. Jack W. Gilfoy began the studio to take advantage of the music potential ot the lU School of Music and the local talent, but when that idea didn ' t work out, he shifted the empha- sis and drew his clients from surrounding areas. The studio has built up a steady business from individuals in the Cincinnati and Detroit Symphonies as well as faculty from the lU Music School. Gilfoy has developed a nationally recognized Recording Studio Seminar which serves as an introduction to studio practices for students, musicians, producers, and engineers. The course is offered three times a year. The studio is set up to handle all types of music in the studio, as well as on location, with recording session of 2,4.8, and 16 tracks. The recording studio is surrounded with burlap and carpeting to absorb sound and isolate each per- former. Students who need to make resume and class tapes are charged half price and various groups may rent the studio on a weekly basis. We wish more people would come out and see just what we ' re doing, Gilfov said, ' ' e ' re more than happy to have people wander in, ask questions, and watch the musicians at work. Photographs David lay 169 Bloomiiigloii httn offer ii variety of Jiferstoiit from the pressures of every day living. Some people go to boogie to live bands, others sit back and listen and some just immerse themselves in alcohol and thought. Occasionally one doesn ' t even have to go into a bar to hear a group. Barbershop Quartet BS 4 (right i gave an impromptu concert to the Kirkwood croivd one night during a break from their performance at the Boda Pub. 170 David lay The Bars: Bloomington ' s Bali Hai Like the island of which Juanita Hall sang in South Pacific, Bloomington has its own type of Ball Hai. Within a square mile of campus, there are numerous separate islands ' that offer release from the imperious pressures of academia. They beckon everyone, and their seductive magnetism can be as easily felt in a Swain Hall lecture as a dorm. Offering a place for conversation and refreshment, and an excuse for sleeping late, they take the frustrated and preoccupied orphan of the storm into their arms and give consoling confidence. They have been known at times, to alter minds, and for that matter, get people downright drunk. The contemporary vernacular for these places is the bars. In the same definitive phraseology, the means by which the bistros are patronized is through bar-hopping. A few years ago, a student could make the rounds to every worthwhile alehouse in one night. But to do the same today would require an almost super-human tolerance for alcohol. In addition, the now common practice of de- manding a cover charge to enter most bars, would add up to a small fortune tor the well- seasoned bar-hopper. The increase in the number of local taverns over the past few years can easily be explained in terms of supply and demand. Gone are the days when the thirsty crowds hovered in the cold out- side of The Reg for hours on Thursday nights. The demand was definitely there and it was up to the local entrepreneurs to supply it. Not only does Bloomington have more bars today, but now bars have a personality of their own. As the competition increased, bars became more stylized in order to attract a particular au- dience. Some specialize in live entertainment with dance floors, others cater to the in- telligentsia who prefer to discuss the philosophy of life over a few beers. And then there are some bars that provide game rooms with a variety of pinball machines, air hockey and pool tables tor the soon to be inebriated customer. Prospective patrons can choose the establishment that most suits their present state ot mind, or rather, the state of mind they ' d like to be in. Photographs Rick Wood 171 Bear ' s Place Located across from the Education Building on Third Street, Bear ' s place is one of the more popular taverns in town. Let ' s face it, the loca- tion is what makes Bear ' s business so good. ■What could be more convenient than finishing your afternoon classes and stopping in at Bear ' s to catch Happy Hour? Although people do manage to study there, chances are that the few pitchers consumed during a study break destroy any possibilit) ' of studying the rest of the night. Its a good excuse though. One can camouflage intentions of not studying by saying Let ' s go to Bear ' s Place for just one drink . . . That is if one can ever get a hold of the waitress in her Chicago Tribune Sun -Times apron. The Hopp After a rugby game or during the weekend, the Hopp is usually jammed. This bar is known primarily for its Happy Hour on Friday after- noons in which patrons can drink as much as they want between three and six o ' clock for SI. 50. The Hopp is also known for running out of beer during these celebrations; the most trag- ic being the last day of classes in December. The same horrid experience occurred on St. Patrick ' s Day when they ran out of green beer. As in- dicated by its name, the Hopp is also the place to go if one enjoys singing out of key along with the old Supremes and Beach Boy records on the jukebox. Red Dog Saloon Located in the heart of Dunnkirk Square is the Red Dog Saloon. Upon entering the swing- ing shutters into the bar, one immediately senses the down home countrified atmosphere that makes the Red Dog one of the most com- fortable bars in town. Blue Grass bands frequent the Red Dog and often the foot stomping and hand clapping accompanying the music evolves into a full fledged- hootenanny with as much square dancing and dosey-doeing as the small dance area allows. There are three levels in the Red Dog all fac- ing the stage. When there isn ' t a group, custom- ers can watch television on the huge TV screen. The nice thing about the Red Dog is that there are tables available that are away from the bands if somebody wants to talk. But when they get the Screamin ' Gypsy Bandits or a close facsimile thereof, there is nothing one can do but tap a foot and drink. Any conversation between two people must be written on the cocktail napkin. Photographs Rick Wood Nick ' s Nick ' s is a tradition. This bar began the T.G.LF. ceremony, it is the place to take a prof out for intellectual discussions or for possible bribery attempts, and it is the most strict about carding anybody who dares enter the double doors. Inside are two levels for indulgence in conversation and alcohol. There is no live enter- tainment, thus making it possible for people to converse, relax or even study. Many of the guest speakers at lU go to Nick ' s after their lectures, Truman Capote, Paul Harvey, and William Ruckleshaus to name a few. 172 Being circulation manager of the IDS is a time con- suming and mentally exhausting job. So Howard Swango (right I forgets about neu ' spapers for a while to dance with his sister Beth to the tunes of the String Bean Band at the Red Dog Saloon. 173 The Bluebird Formerly Your Place, the Bluebird is one of the most unique bars around. The Bird, as some say, is well known for the wide variety ot high quality entenainment it provides as well as the wide variety of clientele. Mighty Joe Young. Baron Von Ohluns Jazz Band, Jim Sch- wall. The Bram Sisters and Larry Coryell have appeared on stage in the enormous back room. The audience, which ranges from RCA ' s second shift to those who are inclined to indulge in a 714 now and then, constitute a mini melting pot of the various personalities in Bloomington Frenzied dancing, impromptu strippers and an occasional beer chugging contest add sparks of excitement to the most happening spot in town. Barzo ' s Blitz Directly across the street from the Bluebird is Barzo ' s. The vao bars are as polarized in atmos- phere as they are geographically. Barzo ' s is owned by Carl Barzilauskis, team member ot the New York Jets. The bar has been termed as a hangout for jocks although the un-sports- minded have been known to have a good time. Many of the Greeks patronzie Barzo ' s as well as others who want to take advantage of the longest happy hour in town. Ye Olde Regulator Another Bloomington, tradition, it is almost a ritual, upon reaching the ripe age of 21, to have the first legal beer at The Reg (despite how many illegal drinks were consumed elsewhere). However, the increased competition from other bars has hurt The Reg. They have recently added a dance floor for the live entertainment, but it is still not as prosperous as it once was. 174 Rick Wood 1 l3 Time Out Just down the street from The Reg is Time Out. The primary lure is its large dance floor in comparison to other places in town plus the fact that it stays open until 3:00 a.m. This is a good place to go if two people want to boogie, but that is just about its only redeeming quality. Groups of females are constantly hassled by groups of males. If one is interested in the latest line go to Time Out. I Phologrjphs LOrk Rhodes Bill Wilson. Jitnet MohrmMi and Larry Wright llefii pose benejih the legendary coat of arms of Barzos. Rumor has it thai Carl Barzilauskis. owner, had to wear the cast during his 1974 football season. Ob- I ' iously annoyed with the plaster splint, he broke four casts in one week and chose to hobble around on crutches for the duration. Patrons of the Reg listen to Dead Ringer (above i while waitresses at Time Out wait jor their orders at the bar. 175 A Peaceful, Easy Feeling Meditation can be a fad, an art form, a hobby or a way of life. For many people living in Bloomington, it ' s the latter and they claim they couldn ' t live without it, or at least live peacefully without it. ■ ithin the past few years a new wave of con- sciousness has spread over the country at- tempting to make people aware of themselves and aware of Utopia — that state of mind in which the individual may feel content, peaceful and relaxed. In almost every city, town and mountain resort you can find a group of medi- tators, yogis, or Buddhists striving to climb the path of enlightenment and taking their follow- ers with them. While many people in Bloomington are wor- rying about exams and classes, where to get next month ' s rent, or what to do if it never quits raining, there are some who direct their energy toward meditation and the rewards they reap from it. Over 2,600 persons have been initiated into Transcendental Meditation (TM) at the Bloomington center and there are about 900 ac- tive meditators in the area, with 80 per cent being students. The introduction to TM is a seven step course. There is an introductory lec- ture, a preparatory lecture, an interview, the in- struction, three group meetings and group med- itations. Carol Boiling, the only TM teacher in Bloom- ington, received her training in Spain with the Maharishi. Her goal, as well as the goal of TM, is, To get as many people meditating as we can as quickly as possible so they can enjoy the full benefits of life. Those who have taken the TM course are eligible to attend pot luck dinners, residence courses, and advanced lectures every Sunday night. About 50 people per month are initiated into TM in Bloomington. Those into Ananda Marga Yoga seek a bal- ance between meditation and social service. At least once a week, the members of Bloom- ington ' s Ananda Marga Yoga social spiritual movement came together for a group medita- tion, chanting, and some form of awareness ex- ercise in the practical sphere, be it group en- counter or massage. Their goal is self-realiza- tion and service to humanity. Bloomington has about 25 active members, half of whom are students. Tai Chi is a martial as well as a meditative art and is a physical form of meditation. The princi- ple behind the movements can be used by ad- vanced students against an attacker. Most peo- ple who begin the complex exercises soon drop out, leaving only those with patience, perser- verance and an interest in Tai Chi as an expres- sion of the Taoist religion. Tai Chi involves as- suming a series of slow, fluid, and often physically difficult postures which serve to strengthen the body and clear the mind. Photographs David Jay Ananda Marga is a form of meditation that calms and controls the mind while devel- oping the body through a series of postures. Stu Cooper, an instructor, considers meditation as bemg the process of withdrawing the conscious and subconscious mind, those parts controlling awareness of the outer world with awareness ot feelings into the unconscious mind, creating a reservoir of total peace. It is through meditation that students derive the benefits ot a deep sleep while not actually sleeping. In thi s experience a meditator feels serenin,- and happiness because it is natural; it is not coming from the outside and not completely from the inside. It is ' simply the point at which a wholeness is found in the self To reach this state, students must establish an awareness of every part of their body, from the little toe to the top of the head. The various ex ercises and relaxation periods shown here are means to achieve total relaxation, awareness ot every muscle and complete control over the body. 178 Photographs David lay Tai Chi is a free University class taught by Laura Stone. The class meets bi-weekly in the field alongside the HPER building. The principles of Tai Chi are based on an ancient Chinese philosophical school which maintains that to be stable and harmonious, one must achieve both tranquility of mind and physical strength. Although the movements used in Tai Chi can also be used in self defense, Tai Chi is non-aggressive and the movements are prac- ticed in slow motion. Photographs David Jay 180 181 Places Greenhouse There are no man-earing plants in the Deparrment of Plant Sciences greenhouse on Third Street. There are, however, Venus fly traps, various and sundry cactus plants, palm trees and Kentuck}- Wonder beans. Built rwenty years ago, the greenhouse con- sists of 1 1 smaller greenhouses. Two ot these are closed ro the public and are used as classrooms and for research by the department. The other nine contain mainly decorative and ornamental plants and are open to visitors. Tourists to the greenhouse range in age from pre-schoolers to senior citizens. One advantage in visiting the greenhouse is that when the plants are pruned, the cuttings are given away free. The cuttings can then be sprouted and planted, providing the plant lover with a wide variety of exotic plants at no cost. The Desert Room and The Tropical Rooms contain plants from these different geo- graphical locations. For example, the tropical rooms house orange, banana and papaya trees. They also contain many tropical flowers such as duck weed, the smallest flowering plant in the world. One interesting plant, originally found in Brazil is the Leguminosae mimosa pudica. com- monly known as the Sensitivity Plant. Its highly sensitive widespread leaves close up automati- cally when touched. Most of the plants, like the sensitivity plant, have both scientific and common names. The common names are usually derived from some aspect of the plant ' s appearance, such as the Elephant ' s Ear plant with its large flat wide leaves, or the donkey ' s tail plant which has long slender leaves. Greenhouses are also located on the roof of the adjoining Jordan Hall. These however, are not open to the public and house mainly corn, orchids and other plants used in research. A frequent visitfjr lo the greenhouse, Leonard Lam- bert checks out the new blooms on the various exotic plants. 182 Photographs Cork Rhodes Institute for Sex Research 4( A 11 right class, today is the big day, the xV high school health teacher tittered. We ' re going to talk about it . . . you know, s- e-x. The class yawned and passed notes around about who was pregnant and who just got a prescription for the pill. Of course, that was in 197 1 when sex in schools was still a pretty hush hush subject. But then J and M and Alex GDmfort cut through all uaditional taboos with their explicit how to be good in bed books. lU also seems to be quite liberal in its atti- tudes towards sex. Most dorms have 24 hour open visitation, no one has hours anymore and courses in human sexuality are taught. lU even has the distinction of having The Institute for Sex Research right smack in the middle ot campus. Strangely enough, The Sex Institute was hesi- tant to disclose its findings. No interview was granted and no photographer allowed to enter the hallowed halls of the Institute which is reputed to have the largest collection of por- nography and sexual paraphernalia in the world. It all started in 19. 8 when the Association ol Women Students petitioned Indiana University to inaugurate a course for students who con- templated marriage soon or were already married. One member of that teaching group was Dr. Alfred C. Kinsey of the Kinsey report fame who later founded and directed the Insti- tute for Sex Research at Indiana University. The primar) ' purpose of the Institute is to conduct research on human sexual behavior by gathering data, analyzing it, and making the resulting information available to those who need it. Through publications, lectures, consul- tations, and voluminous correspondence, this needed information has been provided to phychiatrists, legislators, physicians, psycholo- gists, social workers and other professionals con- cerned with human sexual behavior. 184 Kirkwood Observatory Star gazing may not rank first on the list of the top ten things to do while on a date, but it beats sitting around drinking warm beer and listening to a scratched recording of The Greatest Hits of 1966. The Kirkwood Observatory is open to the public to view the stars ever)- Wednesday night that the sky is clear during the regular school year. The observatory was built at the turn of the century and at that time, it housed one of the largest telescopes in the United States. The tele- scope was overhauled in 1966, the first time that work had been done to the telescope and the repair consisted mainly of updating the machine. Besides the telescope, the observatory con- tains a machine shop for the astronomy depart- ment, an- electronics shop and classrooms. The telescope is used for classwork and enjoyment only and no research is conducted in the ob- servatory. Rick Wood 185 Cyclotron A technician (above i Hands on the concrete radioac tive shield overlooking the cyclotron. The ion source of the device is pictured at the right . Hastings Smith (far right I is hetieath phase 11 oj the cyclotron. 186 A cyclotron is a device that makes nuclear particles, neutrons and deutrons to be exact, gain energy. lU first had a small cyclotron in 1938, but then received a grant in I960 from the National Science Foundation in addition to money from private donations to begin plans for a bigger cyclotron. The lU facility is the only one of Its kind in the world. The unique design provides photon beams of greater precision and higher quality than previous cyclotrons. Com- pleted at the end of August, the facility works in a three stage process. A photon beam is created from the ion source (stage one) and directed into the small cyclotron (stage two). The photon beam particles are increased in speed due to opposite polarity, and are then directed into the large cyclotron (stage three) where speed is again gready increased. ■The beam of photons is split up to run dif- ferent experiments. According to Dr. Hastings A. Smith, assistant professor in the Physics Department, a computer center in the building runs the cyclotron. The computer automatically checks everything, gives readings, and is con- stantly monitoring the process. Experimenters plug their experiments into the computer and one experiment can be set up while another is being run. The cyclotron is movable and is surrounded by concrete so that radioactive particles can ' t penetrate the building. Experimental stations are currently being built to measure and map different reactions of the beam on photon par- tides. l ' hoU)t;raphs ' l ).n id a 187 Lilly Library The Lilly Library houses 260,000 ixjoks and 214 rnillion manuscripts in its seven floors. The books and manuscripts are illustrative of significant landmarks in the development of Western Civilization and provide immeasurable research to students and faculty. In 1956, Mr. J.K. Lilly, Jr., of Indianapolis, gave the University his private library that he had assembled over a period of thirty years. His gift was the largest and most valuable of its kind ever made to an American university. The collection is one of America ' s greatest private collections of rare books, first editions, manu- scripts and paintings. Among the historical and literary treasures in the Lilly Library is a fine representation of medi- eval manuscripts ranging from the seventh to the seventeenth century. The library also has the New Testament portion of the Gurenburg Bible, the first book printed from movable metal type about 500 years ago. The Lilly copy is one of 14 copies in American and the only copy to be found between the East and West coasts. Other collections of interest include the origi- nal editions of Columbus ' letter announcing the discovery of America dated at 1493. There are many other originals and first editions de- scribing the conquests of the North American continent and the exploration of America. There is special emphasis on the Revolu- tionary War and the Constitution, including the only copy of the original printing of The Declaration of Independence not on the East coast; a complete set of all signers of The Declaration, the only known copy of the first na- tional Oath of Allegiance, and an extensive collection of literature of the War of 18 12. The collection of English literature begins Photographs David )ay with the first edition of Chaucer ' s Cafiterbury Tales and includes the famous four folio editions of Shakespeare ' s works. The American literature collection is equally impressive ranging from the first novel printed in 1789, through the complete collection of Edgar Allan Poe (including his famed rarity and first book, Tamerlane) down to the original manuscripts of Ian Fleming ' s Goldfinger complete with Fleming ' s own editing and cor- rections. The Lilly Library is a combination library and museum containing some of the world ' s most unique and priceless literary works. lU is fortu- nate to have it and it ' s a shame that more people don ' t take advantage of it and walk through the glass doors to just browse around. Looking at history is a lot more interesting than reading about it. lU Museum Since its creation on July 1, 1963, the Indiana University Museum, located in the Student Building, has served as a center ot general educa- tion for the campus community. Although the Museum is primarily a visual aid and research center tor the Departments of Anthropology, History and Folklore, its collec- tions and other facilities are available for study and research to all University departments, other educational insitutions, and to the general public. Exhibitions are timed with major events oc- curring at the University such as international conferences and the Sesquicentennial Celebra- tion. Some past exhibits have included: In- diana ' s Vanishing Industries, African Ethno- logy, and South America: Its Past Present. In order to display the numerous and varied collections it is necessary to rotate the exhibits. As additional exhibit halls are added, more per- manent displays are planned. CIl.ii- Cixti E L. ' iuiitiir) School chiUren look a fieU trip to the lU Museum. The Eskimo dog sleJ is the point of interest for this youngster while others preferred the skeleton on dispU) in the gjller) on the eiolution o j man. Pholographs Rick Wood 189 People Doug Walters Four miles of country road separate the cheerful, slightly battered house from the highway — four miles of authentic rustic charm. Dandelions scattered over the grassy knolls, sunlight dappling the bright verdant abundant wooded areas, wildflowers crowding out the weeds or the sides of the road. An artists paradise. Inside that house, perched between the winding road and a steep drop-off you ' ll find one artist lucky enough to be in the middle of this pamter ' s heaven. An artist with a slight dif- ference — this artist ' s art is painting signs. As owner of and worker for the Red Martha Sign Painting Company (named after the old red truck he drove before he moved on to a later model van), Doug ' Walters specializes in the aesthetic approach to advertising. His works; elaborate, colorful, featuring ornate lettering and bright hues, grave businesses around Bloomington (Take a good look at the sign in front ot the Greek restaurant, Zeus ' Gyros, or at the board hanging in front ot The Greenery for a sample ot his style). And now that his reputation is spreading he finds work in surrounding towns as well. Building a name has taken time. Although his degree from lU ( A.B. 1970) was in fine arts, he had worked predominantly in design, pho- tography, and drawing during his school years, and seldom went near paints. Years ago his allergy to paint brought on a runny nose, rash and numerous other unpleasantries which made his shy away from that medium. It wasn ' t till he began looking for work, took a job doing silk screen work for an insurance company and even- tually was taken on as a sign painter that he dis- covered the problem was no longer there. He has found certain satisfactions in the busi- ness — it has brought him into high visibility and at the moment it ' s a steadier way of making a living than noncommencal ventures. There are still aspects of the work that bother ' Walters, though. For one thing, he finds the creative process ' is not so much a part of signs as it is of more serious art. For another, It ' s a type of painting that ' s concrete, mainly because it ' s still connected with the community, he says. They don ' t want anything abstract, they want to know what it is. To cater to this desire, ' Walters opts for recog- nizable figures and objects. One of his most am- bitious works of this kind is a mural 350 feet long and 14 feet high, painted on the side of the Nashville (Ind.) Opera House. ' With such a vast space to fill, the objects ' Walters paints must be larger than life. He just finished a 14-foot woman holding a basket full of vegetables, and a 5 -foot sunflower, and the other subjects will be equally large. ' Working with objects that large creates some problems, ' Walters says. One of the major ones is judging what colors and shadings will look like on such a large scale. Standing close to a 12-foot object while painting it provides a totally dif- ferent perspective than viewing it from afar, and so, when it comes to colorings, ' Walters never knows exactly what his project will look like until after he has painted it. Surveying it from the ground he admits with a laugh that it ' s as much a surprise to me as anybody else. Even with such challenges, ' Walters finds mural work the most satisfying kind of sign painting. It ' s more like noncommerical art, he says, the area in which his long-range goals lie. His noncommercial ventures so far have included ink drawings for alternative newspa- pers, wildlite pictures and elaborate fairy tale- like drawings with intricate borders reminiscent of art nouveau. ' When he finally gives up sign work, he says it will be for more ventures into these noncom- mercial experiences — perhaps setting up a small gallery or an exhibition. ' Whether the ven- ture will be in Bloomington is undecided at this point, says ' Walter, who feels at home in In- diana and loves Bloomington summers — but retains less fond memories of winter snow- storms. Not even the picture -perfect country which surrounds him can quite make up for that internal weather. Even an artist ' s Eden, it turns out, can have drawbacks. 190 Rick Wood Dan Lynch For two and a half years, Dan Lynch has been entertaining readers of the IDS with his cartoons. Now he ' s doing his best to entertain clients that come to his free-lance commercial art business. I do a lot of advertising in general . . . because for the most part, the advertising we ' re subjected to around here is pretty bad. I ' d like to make it humorous and enjoyable to look at and watch. In addition to cartoons and commercials, I do mechanical printing for people having various types of brochures and pamphlets printed. That ' s pretty mundane and uncreative but it helps pay the bills. Money has been the main reason Lynch never became a student at lU. I was idly pursuing a journalism major at Western Kentucky Univer- sit} ' when I decided to move to Bloomington ... I still need some general education courses but I ' m not worried about those. I ' m not worried about a degree either, because I don ' t need one right now. I ' m very happy with Bloomington. It ' s the first place I ' ve stopped in long enough to figure out what ' s going on. There are a lot of possibil- ities here for me and I could see myself staying around for a long time. That is, unless someone offered me a ridiculous amount of money to go someplace else or do something different. How- ever, I don ' t think I ' ll ever do anything but this — in fact, I ' m quite adamant about that. I ' d rather starve than go back to doing some of the things I did while I was trying to figure out what I did want to do. There ' s a large number of aspects to this business I haven ' t done yet. Lynch began working for the IDS as soon as he came to Bloomington. I think I ' m in the same culture as the basic lU college student. ' We tend to see eye-to-eye on most things. I ' m not subjected to censorship because I don ' t do mate- rial that ' s terribly outrageous or questionable. Once in a while I ' ll do something that people will disagree with to the point where they will write and tell me about it. That doesn ' t happen too often though. I don ' t know whether it ' s me being non-controversial, or whether everyone just accepts what I do as being okay. My car- toons are based on the news or the current events that affect us. I ' m heading in the direction of commercial film animation. It ' s very resourceful. You can put a reel of film on the projector, sit back, and look at your efforts. I ' d like to give it a new dimension. . . a new flair. Tthink television ad- vertising is starting to get back into animated TV commercials, and that ' s where my interests are going. A permanent fixture in Lynch s office is Irish Setter Chelsea, the dog behind the man. Photographs David )ay 193 Mike Bourne Mv goal in life I suppose, is to yrite the perfect play and cast myself in the role. The only thing that seems to be standing in Mike Bourne ' s way is his doctoral disserta- tion. Bourne is a Ph.D. candidate in Theatre and Drama, and all that ' s left to complete the degree is his dissertation. He graduated with two degrees from Missouri State Teacher ' s College and got his MA degree in Theatre and Drama from lU in 1969. He was also a member of the Indiana Theatre Company from 1968-70. W ' hen he decided to go to graduate school he applied to lU first, was accepted here first, and has been here ever since. I liked Bloomington from the beginning. I did all the usual things like meet people, fall in love, began living on my own for the first time, and I really felt like I started living my own life. I also got my health together for the first time; I lost fifi:y pounds in two months. Maybe someday I ' ll write a diet book. I ' ve finally discovered the secret way to lose weight — you just don ' t eat a bag of doughnuts for breakfast or a pizza every night. Bourne is currently re-writing his first novel. I wrote it too quickly the first time, and I ' ve made some changes. It ' s a detective novel and the story takes place at Haven University (very similar to lU). I don ' t feel pressured by time ' concerning my writing. All my favorite authors were in their forties or older when they finally achieved recognition. I ' ve got a few more years before I ' ll have to worry about it. In addition to the novel. Bourne writes for Plug, a quarterly magazine for musicians, and has had stories published in Rolling Stone and the St. Louts Post Dispatch. He was con- tributing editor for Downbeat for five years and consequently has had articles published world- wide. Three years ago Bourne began working at ' WFIU and now has the station ' s title of critic-at- large. He has an hourly show five days a week and a Saturday night show. Most shows have a theme and occasionally the whole week is devoted to a particular idea. I play all types of music on my show — jazz, classical, hard rock, everything. In a college community almost any- thing is accepted because people are more open to different ideas. The Saturday night show is called Art Beat and Bourne talks about what- ever is on his mind and that can run from Lenny Bruce to professional wrestling. ' When he gets tired of playing the role of informant he switches to critic. I ' ve been a music critic for eight years and every once in a while I ' ll get a call from an irate listener who violently disagrees with something I ' ve said on my show. I like to get angry calls — it gets my energy up and I appreciate it when they ' re right. As a general rule if fifty per cent agree with me and fifty per cent disagree, I feel like I ' m doing a good job. I ' ve written reviews in praise of films or music that I personally hated and vice versa. In any type of art I ' m entertained by new ideas. That ' s what I really like — new dimensions and thoughts and things that haven ' t been done before. I ' ve been working on the idea of making a musical out of Moliere ' s Don Juan. The idea intrigues me. Bourne admits that when it comes to music it ' s impossible to make guesses on why a certain type of music is more popular than others. I re- ally don ' t know why music trends go the way they do. ' When you try to make predictions, in the music business, you ' ll always get disap- pointed. There seems to be an interest in jazz now. Jazz hasn ' t been the same since rock and roll appeared, but now rock and roll is stag- nating and people are getting interested in jazz and other types of music. I ' m not about to say why it ' s happening. Besides listening to and reviewing music, Bourne is also a musician. He has formed a two man band with Mark Bingham, and they call their shows theatrical rock, and themselves ' The Brain Sisters. Bourne wrote half the repertoire for a show entitled ' Hell and is working on other shows with names like Love, Schi- zophrenia, and Going to Bars to Pick Up Peo- ple. We ' re not much of a boogie band and sometimes the audience doesn ' t appreciate that. Some nights are better than others because if the audience is into what we ' re doing, the show just goes better. I don ' t think anyone else in the music business is doing what we are. It ' s com- pletely off-the-wall entertainment. Being involved with so many projects has its advantages. I don ' t feel like I have to work because my work is my entertainment. I even consider reading comic books a part of my work. Bourne has not only read comic books but has used them to completely cover the ceiling and walls of his apartment. The usual question when people see the apartment is Have you read all those? The answer is yes, and many, many more. The advantage of doing everything is not doing just one thing great, but doing everything well. I ' ve been in Bloomington for eight years now and it has become my home. I ' m very sa- tisfied with my life, with Bloomington, and with what the future is going to bring. 194 Neal Smith Warlock is not the proper term for a male witch. It is a Christian term, and there is no distinction between men and women — all are witches. Therefore, Neal Smith is a witch. Smith was introduced to witchcraft by a friend five years ago when he became disillusioned with Christianity. It ' s a way ot life for him, a life that also includes being a Radio and TV major, a member of the Socialist party and living with his wife on a farm outside Bloomington. Witchcraft can be deadly if you don ' t know exactly what you ' re doing, Smith said, and a person shouldn ' t get messed up in it unless he ' s sure that he really wants to. You either learn it, or you die trying. You have to experience things for yourself in the occult because some things just can ' t be explained. That ' s why I can ' t teach witchcraft. It can only be learned. Just like any other religion, witchcraft has its own symbols and tools. The pentagram used by witches closely resembles the Jewish Star ot David. However the pentagram appeared one thousand years before Judaism. The pentagram is a medallion of protection, power and a storage place for energy. Every- thing possible can be seen and interpreted in the pentagram. ' When used in rituals, the way the pentagram is pointing depends on what you wish to do. If the pentagram is lying with two points up, it represents the forces of nature over man, and it resembles the sabbatical goat. 11 it ' s lying with one point up, it represents man over nature, and the form ot a man can be seen. The pentagram is by no means the only tool used in a ritual. Black candles, incense, lamps, quills, pens, wands and staffs are also important. The Book of Shadows or grhnoive. contains rites, spells, and writings and most witches will die to defend the secrecy of the book. The spells and rituals are performed in cere- monies called Sabbats. The Sabbat dates corre- spond to the growth of crops and seasonal changes. The most widely known Sabbat is Hal- loween (All Hallows ' Eve), or the ' Witches ' New Year. During the celebration of Sabbats, extra help is sought from the gods, and sacrifices of burned herbs, meditations, and prayers are of- fered . During a spell, I focus my psychic energy- on one particular point, Smith said. This is the basis of witchcraft. Almost everybody has psychic energy but some people aren ' t aware of it, and some refuse to recognize it because it scares them. There ' s an infinite amount of psychic energy and it just keeps expanding. No- thing dies, it just exists in a different form or on a different level. ■ ho;.-;:jp: l awc las 195 Popular Academics The classical Hollywood musical, gangster films from the forties, horror flicks, Italian Neo-Realism, French New Wave and the cinema of Orson Welles and Alfred Hitchcock are a few of the course topics which drew over 2,000 students to enroll in film courses offered by the Film Studies Program. While the splendor and glamour of Holly- wood and European cinema are obvious attrac- tions for the student who enrolls in these courses, there is a very serious and intellectual side to the study of the cinema and this is emphasized in the Film Studies Program. Film is probably the most important form of media to come out of the 20th century. The cinema presents a mirror image of our culture, nourishes our fantasies and is often first to present us with conaoversial subjects. Film is only 80 years old but its impact on our civiliza- tion is overwhelming. In an attempt to provide students with the opportunity to explore the perplexing universe of the cinema, the film studies program offers a broad spectrum of courses starting with an introductory course for those totally unfamiliar with the celluloid mystique. Other courses deal with film history, theory, aesthetics, specific directors, popular film genres and sociological considerations. Film Study first came to lU in 1963 when professors Harry M. Geduld and Gerald E. Rabkin taught a course on Film, the Arts and Societ). This first course was sponsored by the department of Gamparative Literature under whose auspices Film Studies currently remains. This course was the only film course for 8 years and is still taught as C390. Professor Geduld has continued ever since 1963 as the driving force for film study at lU. There are now about 8 to 10 film courses offered each semester. Most of these are taught within the departments of Compara- tive Literature and English with special courses being offered by such departments as French and Italian, Anthropology, and Slavics. Most evenings during the week are filled with film presentations for these courses. Students who are unable to enroll in film courses may still purchase tickets for these film series and take ad- vantage of an amazing array of films. Among these are such classics as Griffith ' s Birth of a Nn- tion. Porter ' s The Great Train Robber-). Bunuels Un Chien Andalou. Eisenstein ' s Po- temktn. and many other landmarks of film histo- ry. In addition to these older silent films student may see the latest films by such directors as Fellini, Antonioni, Hitchcock and Welles. Profeaon Harry Geduld (top) and Jamei Naremorc I right) relax between claaei. Photographs )ohn Finn The Africa}! Queen Wizard of Oz 197 Mamas and Papas Marriage and Family Interaction, of- fered through the Home Economics Department and taught by Dr. John F. Crosby, IS rapidly becoming one of the most popular classes on campus. As the course name suggests, this class deals with intimate human relationships, but does so firom a psychological, rather than statistical or sweetly sentimental point of view. One third of the course focuses on intra- psychic dynamics, or the internal psychological patterns of the individual. Another third ot the class time is spent on human sexuality while the final third deals with inter-psychic dynamics, or the actual marriage lifestyle (i.e. communal, traditional, etc.). Formerly a clergyman and marriage counsel- or. Dr. Crosby advocates a growth marriage, one which is designed so each individual has a chance to develop his or her own potential. He believes that couples should make a triple com- mitment ' in marriage, first to themselves, secondly to their partner and lasdy to the rela- tionship as a whole. He stresses that it is not self- ish to place oneself ahead of one ' s mate in a rela- tionship. One of the class materials used in the course is a booklet of Suggestions for Structuring and Wording of the Wedding Ceremony. The last line of a poem included in the booklet is indica- tive of the ideas which Dr. Crosby presents in the course. As we share our lives — as we walk through life together, know my love is yours, but not my soul — for it must be free. ' ; --%i; . i,;ivx i i V ' w™i«iiw . Dave Jay 198 Martial Arts With songs like Kung Fu Fighting making the Hit Parade and films of the Billy Jack Bruce Lee genre making millions of dollars at the box offices around the countr}-, it ' s not surprising that the Martial Arts have also caught on at lU. Boasting the largest Martial Arts program in the country, approximately 300 Judo and 350 Karate students enroll each sem ester in begin- ning and advanced classes offered by the HPER department. Director of the Martial Arts Program, Don Burns, holds black belts in both arts and ini- tiated Judo and Karate classes about four years ago. The Martial Arts program now handles more students per semester than any other phys- ical education class. The classes are limited by both facilities and lack of qualified instructors. To remedy this. Burns is trying a new class structure for Karate classes team teaching next fall with 120 students in each section and assigning each TA 30 students. John Finn 199 Enter the Ho -Hum Generation Trying to place American generations in a social chronology is a bit like driving through Indiana ' s Congressional districts; it ' s impossible to know where one stops and another begms because the borders have been gerrymandered to suit the prevailing political rhetoric. One thing seems abundantly clear, however; generations are coming in much more rapid suc- cession then they used to. Once the interval be- tween the birth of parents and the birth of their offspring, the lifespan of the modern generation is wholly dependent upon the shifting sands of ideology. Recently, the redoubtable editors of Time magazine saw fit to label 8.6 million American college students — you and me — card-carrying members of the new Self-Centered Genera- tion. And perhaps they are right, for not since the ' Silent Generation of the Fifties have the nation ' s young suffered so traumatizing an iden- tity crisis. According to Tmie. The old political ac- tivism and revolutionary fervor have disap- peared entirely. The greatest worry among students is that there will be no jobs for them after graduation. The expanded consciousness of the Sixties has been sacrificed to meet the demands of the pocketbook. In an IDS story by Paul Tash, as- sistant dean for student affairs in the School of Business John Porter said, I ' ve had kids come in this summer who graduate (in the humanities) in the spring who are working in filling stations. Not only is our generation watching the job market with a worried eye; we are becoming in- creasingly conscious of grades. Young people are approaching their studies with newfound seriousness, says Time, crowding into college libraries and competing feverishly for grades. So the indictment stands. ' We are apathetic and we are self-centered. ' We are the spiritual brethren of a dormant generation — the folks who brought you ' Vietnam and, inferentially, ' Watergate. The two generations bear comparison. The post-war Fifties was an era of economic prosper- ity and domestic tranquility. Under the benign leadership of Dwight Eisenhower, America looked inward and liked what it saw. Aside from rousting the Commies, there wasn ' t much going on in the nation ' s capital; Ike would take care of things. No wonder so many of us growing up in that decade lacked any conception of the presidency until the Kennedy-Nixon race of 1960. The dawn of the Sixties was a time of unprecedented promise; our handsome young president got the juices going and suddenly we were doing things again. Going places, and with ' vigah. ' We stood at the threshold of a New Frontier, the mere thought of which was an aphrodisiac for our atrophied imaginations. Then as quickly as it had come, the promise was gone. The bullet that ripped through John Kennedy ' s head and splattered his brains along a 200 Dallas street set the tone for the carnage that was to come. The rest of that decade was a gro- tesque blur of staccato sniper fire and exploded cadavers, both at home and in the rice paddies of Indochina. In the political sphere, Richard Nixon in many ways epitomized all that was ugly about the 60 ' s, though he was relatively inactive for half of that decade. The period of our reawaken- ing (from 1960-62) was also the time of Nixon ' s political ruin, and few mourned his passing. But when the nation began to have and to fear its own evil other self, Nixon rose like the phoenix to prey on our festering wounds. Ken- nedy gave us the Promethean gift, Nixon was the buzzard sent by Zeus to rip our innards out. It was not an easy adolescence. The majority of us missed Vietnam, the draft and a sense of social obligation. And when the next wave of ac- tivism comes, I suspect we shall miss that, too; for by then we will be members of the Older Generation. We will shake our heads and wring our hands and wonder what the world is coming to. One thing we will never be — if there is a shred of decency in us — is nostalgic about our youth. The wave of nostalgia that is currently in vogue is symptomatic, I think, of a decade without locus. It is a fine diversion for our parents, even our older brothers and sisters, but what have we got to be nostaligic about. ' The Gulf of Tonkin Resolution? Richard Speck? Kent State? Oswald? Sirhan Sirhan? Those were the days, my friend. We thought they ' d never end. Nostalgia is not my generation ' s long suit. Neither is war or ritual murder. Given a choice, apathy doesn ' t sound like an altogether unac- ceptable alternative. Hi! I ' m Chubby Checker. Do you remember the Twist? Do you remember when rock was Rock n ' Roll? Do you remember puberty? And Clearasil? Well, it you think you had it rough, just look at what today ' s kids have to live with. Then Now Walt Disney Andy Warhol Chicken pox Gonorrhea Penny loafers Earth Shoes The Beatles The New York Dolls Dr. Martin Luther King . The Reverend Ike The Cuban Missile Crisis Watergate The Green Bay Packers . The Chicago Fire TheTechmatic adjustable Trac II Playboy Playgirl Leave it to Beaver The Waltons Buicks with fins Buicks without fins How to Stuff a Wild Bikini . . Deep Throat American Bandstand . American Bandstand Peggy Fleming Patty Hearst Acne Scars The dawn of the Sixties was a time of unprecedented promise. The rest of the decade was a grotesque blur of staccato sniper fire and exploded cadavers. 201 202 lohn Finn Academics Administrators 204 Arts Sciences 214 Business 226 Education 232 Music 236 HPER 246 Optometry Law 250 252 Features 254 Da id l3 203 President John W. Ryan Indiana University President John W. Ryan ' s administrative duties in 1974-75 were unusually demanding and time consummg. Ryan is primarily responsible for the super- vision of lU ' s eight regional campuses and presentation of the university budget to the In- diana General Assembly. This year, he found much of his schedule devoted to personal lobby- ing for the budget and a top level re-structuring of the administration. The re -organization itself was a task but Ryan also had to respond to protests from students and faculty concerning the method surrounding the reorganization. Ryan was appointed president on January 26, 1971 after President Joseph Sutton resigned. Because of what was termed a crisis situation the Board of Trustees made a decision to ap- point Ryan without the normal search and screen process. Although the appointment was criticized for it ' s suddeness and lack of input, an evaluation in 1973, requested by Ryan upon his appointment, showed he had gained support of most universi- ty groups. It was suggested however that he become more accessible to students and faculty. Ryan ' s administrative experience covers a broad spectrum. As vice president and chan- cellor for regional campuses from 1968-1971, Ryan guided the growth of lU regional cam- puses in Gary, Ft. Wayne, South Bend, Kokomo and Jeffe rsonville from the status of extension divisions to semi-autonomous campuses. He also developed a broad knowledge of the central ad- ministration and of the Bloomington and Indi- anapolis campuses. From 1965 to 1968 Ryan was chancellor of the University of Massachusetts at Boston where he was chief academic and administrative officer of the principal urban campus. He was account- able to the President and Board of Trustees for development of academic curricula, preparation Rick Wood of budgets, supervision of expenditures, re- cruiting of faculty and staff, and planning physi- cal growth. In 1963 Ryan was called to Arizona State University at Tempe to serve as ' Vice President for Academic Affairs for 2 years. Before that he was Executive Assistant to the president and university secretary of the University of Mas- sachusetts at Amherst. Ryan has been a research analyst for the Department of Revenue in Kentucky, and a research associate for an lU program in public administration in Thailand. He taught political science and was associate director of the Bureau of Government at the University of ' Wisconsin for four years. Ryan is the author of a number of articles for learned journals and is a former president of the Indiana chapter and member of the national ex- ecutive committee of the American Society for Public Administration. Chancellor Herman B Wells From his college days at lU to his present position as Chancellor, Dr. Herman B Wells has contributed much to the university ' s growth and prestige. Wells was dean of the School of Business when he was appointed acting president of lU in 1937. Less than a year later the University trustees elected him president, an office he held until 1962. EXiring Wells ' 2 5 -year presidential tenure, lU developed from a Midwestern state school to a world-renowned institution, achieving its grea- test growth since its founding in 1820. Student enrollment increased from 10,000 to 29,000 while lU acquired a faculty of interna- tional reputation and expanded its campuses and physical facilities at Bloomington and Indi- anapolis. It also added five regional campuses and two extension centers within the state, and initiated education programs in Asia, Africa and South America. Besides this growth. Wells added to lU ' s world prestige and influence through numerous services in the mternational field. A few ot his accomplishments and services were consultant for the American Council of Education to the U.S. delegation to San Francisco United Nations charter conference in 19-45; advisor on cultural and educational affairs to the American military government ot the U.S. occupied zone in Ger- many in 1947-48, and American delegate by ap- pointment of President Eisenhower to the 195 ' General Assembly of the United Nations. Wells is also a leader in American education. He has served as a member and chairman ot the board of trustees of the Carnegie Foundation tor the Advancement of Teaching; chairman ot the American Council on Education in 1944-45; first president of the National Association ' s department ot higher education; vice-president in 1955-60 and member of the governing board of the International Association of State Univer- Da id la sities Association. Besides these numerous ottlces he has served as an educational consultant for a number of states and several foreign countries. He has received honorary degrees trom rwenty-tour American colleges and universities. After retiring from the presidency, ' ells was made chancellor ot the university and elected president ot the Indiana University Foundation, an independent non-protlt corporation that re- ceives and administers gifts, grants, and bequests for the benetit ot the university. He is now chairman ot the executive committee ot the txDard. Wells continues his active role at lU. ser ' ing as chairman of several all-University committees. And of course the holidav season would not be the same without his annual ap- pearance as Santa Claus at the Chimes ot Christmas pertormance. Chancellor Wells is pictured above with Chin Lin, a graduate student friend. w Board of Trustees Finl Row: Dr. William G. Bannon, Carolyn Gutman, John Ryan, Carl M. Gray ( Vice-President j, Second Row: Charles Harrell (secretary), Richard P. Stoner, Donald C. Danielson (president), Robert Gates, Dr. Joseph M. Black, Frank E. McKinney, Jr. 206 Donald C. Danielson, Dr. William G. Bannon. John Irvine (director of Student Legal Services), and Charolelte Self (above) chat informally before the Student Affairs Committee of the Board of Trustees (below) which took place in the Student Legal Ser- vicesllndiana Public Interest Reasearch Group offices. Photographs Rick Wood 207 Byrum E. Carter Byrum E. Carter was promoted from chan- cellor to vice-president of the Bloomington campus in July 19 4, part of a major administra- tive re-organization of Indiana University. Five months later he announced his resignation to re- turn to that aspect of education he likes most — teaching. Carter said he did not feel he was overly effec- tive as an administrator and wanted to resume teaching political science and conducting research on a lull -time basis. While he was vice president. Carter dealt with campus policies and was responsible for general academic programming. He was also oc- casionally involved in personnel and tenure cases. Carter, a native of Oklahoma, came to lU in 194 as an instructor in the political science department. He was awarded the Frederic Bachman Lieber Memorial Award for distin- guished teaching in 1957. From 1963 to 1964 he sen-ed as assistant dean of faculties and was named Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences in 1966. He held that post until his appointment as Bloomington campus chancellor in 1969. Carter holds an A.B. degree from the Univer- sin- of Oklahoma, and a Ph.D. degree from the University of Wisconsin. Carter is pictured at the right with his wife Beth. 208 Kim Hitchcock Thomas C. Schreck To many students Thomas C. Schreck, dean of students, is the man who deals out punishment when Univetsity rules are broken, but he is also the link between students and the administra- tion. Since he became dean in 1969, Schreck has supervised several programs to help meet the needs ot the students. These student services include residence halls counseling, financial aids, the Student Legal Services, the Activities Office, Veterans Affairs and the Psychological and Counseling Services Center. Schreck is well qualified for his role as dean. He did graduate study in counseling and guid- ance at lU and was appointed director of student activities in 1959 and assistant dean ot students in 1961. During the 1963-64 academic year, he was a visiting Fulbright lecturer at the Universi- ty of Baroda near Bombay, India, teaching courses in guidance and counseling. From 1966 until 1969, Schreck was adviser ot student affairs at Kabul University in Afghanistan. George W. Pinnell lU executive-vice president Dr. George W. Pinnell could be referred to as President Ryan ' s shadow. Because of the similarity in their administra- tive duties. Dr. Pinnell often works in behalf of President Ryan in such things as social func- tions, preparing the university budget, and per- sonal lobbying for budget approval in the In- diana General Assembly. The former lU vice-president and treasurer was promoted to his present position in July. 197-4 when the Board of Trustees approved an administrative re -organization. Pinnell was a dean of lU ' s Graduate School of Business from 1963 to 19 ' l and was also a professor of business administtation. Some ot his noted accomplishments include having ser% ' ed as research director for the Indiana Post High School Education Study Commission and ap- pointment by the late President Kennedy to the Task Force on Area Redevelopment. Pinnell is also the author of A)! A ijl ' sis of the Economic Base 0 EvMUiille. and co-author of a Case Study 0] a Depressed Area. Pinnell is pictured at the left with his wite, Dortha. 209 Administrators During the universit)- reorganization in the heat of the summer of 19 4, one of the men who moved to a vice-presidency spot was Edgar G. Williams. Williams, former executive assistant and head of the School of Business Department ot Per- sonnel and Organized Behavior, took the title of vice-president of administration. He is lU ' s top personnel management man, overseeing all hiring functions of the university system. Special Assistant to President Ryan, George Taliaferro calls the duties of his job all-en- compassing. As assistant to the president, Taliaferro serves as an administrative counselor between students and administration. He is also advisor to Ryan on athletic affairs, and works as a consultant to lU athletic coaches. Taliaferro ' s job includes the recruiting of mi- nority faculty, staff and students to the Universi- ty. In past years, Taliaferro helped design and implement plans for an Affirmative Action pro- gram to serve the entire university. Paul Klinge says he could work more than 24 hours a day if the sun and mocjn would allow it. The title on his door says he ' s assistant to the university president, a task which has multiple facets. Klinge, as a super secretary, writes speeches, sorts and reads mail, as well as representing President John Ryan in pubUc ap- pearances. ' Many people, Klinge said, view the pres- ident ' s office as a supreme court. But in most cases, students have overlooked the direct channels to get the action accomplished. Mostly we refer students to the place where they can get the most effective help. ' The president ' s and my job requires more than 24 hours. There is no truth to the rumor that administrators just float in and out, Klinge said. The man behind all t hose figures is John D. Mulholland, university treasurer. Assistant for financial affairs since 1972, Mulholland stepped up to head the treasurer ' s office in 1974. A Hrxjsier for the greater part of his life. Mulholland was an executive with Mead Johns ' jn and Company in EvansviUe in the 1960 ' s, As treasurer, Mulholland keeps track of fi- nances throughout the university, not only the Bloomington campus, but regional campuses as well. Warren W. Shirey, director of Records and Admissions works closely with individual departments and has very little direct contact with students. In the area of records, Shirey directs registra- tions and scheduling, certification services, is- siiance of transcripts, and storage of all student records. He works in four main areas in admis- sions: freshmen, transfer students, foreign students and he directs processing of graduate school applications. Shirey is on many committees connected with Records and Admissions including the Calendar Committee, Campus Planning, Commencement Committee, Founder ' s Day Committee, and Schedulijig Committee. During registration, Shirey spends the day in the fieldhouse helping clear up questions and problems of students and registration workers. Indiana University Bursar William Walters likes to feel that he ' s accessible to students. Money is one of a student ' s biggest headaches and Walters hopes that he can lend a monetary helping hand or at least an aspirin. His office handles all types of student monies, from fees to bounced checks and even lending and collection of short term loans. Students who get scholarships or are spon- sored students will find themselves in the bursar ' s office. So will errant student drivers who get parking tickets or dorm residents wanting to pay housing payments. We handle anything to do with money, joked one office secretary. 210 The Selling of Indiana University: the story of Claude Rich. Rich is director ot university relations, a job that ranges form coordinating university publications to lobbying in the Indiana legisla- ture for more funds. As lU ' s top salesman, he reports direaly to the president and plays a major roll in policy formulation relating to public relations. I serve as a liason promoting Indiana Uni- versity, Rich says of his job. Each year he goes before the state legislature explaining lU ' s need for more allocation. Also under his direction are lU publications — including the News Bureau and Alumni publications. In 1974, lU administrators decided it was time to take Affirmative Action to provide equal educational and employment opportu- nities for minorities. So the Affirmative Action Program evolved as a remedy to end discrimination against women, blacks and other minority groups. Affirmative Action officer and lU Law School graduate Terry Mumford says her job is two fold, trying to answer complaints on discrimination already existing and to prevent further discrimi- nation in hiring and enroUent. The program monitors the hiring of faculty and staff making sure that salaries, promotion and tenure are distributed fairly. Dr. Phyllis Klotman, assistant professor in the Afro-American Studies department, serves as a resource person and advisor for the program. She is pictured below with her husband Robert. Q sity. uestion: Who has the largest police force in Bloomington Answer; Indiana Umver- The man behind lU ' s Safety Division is Director George Huntington, a man with the prior experience of being head of Bloomington ' s Police Department. Huntington has had law enforcement police- work in his blood for the past 29 years, the last four at lU. With a police scanner constantly at his side, Huntington keeps track of all major criminal investigations, despite the fact his duties are mostly administrative. lU Safety employs 72 officers with about 25 student cadets ' to help patrol dormitories, parking areas and classroom buildmgs. Dr. John Miller wants the Student Health Center to be a student ' s family doctor away from home. As director of the Student Health Services (SHS), Miller coordinates clinic support ser- vices, diagnostic labs, a pharmacy, in-patient care and psychiatric programs. As the major liason between the SHS and the rest of the Uni- versity, Miller coordinates and negotiates health programs with other university agencies. Sports medicine is Miller ' s special interest, and during his clinical practice he serves as team physician. William J. Chestnut, director of counseling and psychological services, coordinates and supervises programs, staff and policies of the services and the dormitory staffs. Students puzzled over a career can participate in the Career Workshop. It has been in opera- tion for one year and over 200 students have participated in the testing and counseling which are designed to help them choose a career. A new program under development in assertive training will also aid students in making decisions. As a personal interest. Chestnut is seeking to give a lilt to physically handicapped students. Chestunt says major accomplishments are increased parking access and modifications in sidewalks, restroom facilities and drinking foun- tains to meet the needs of wheelchair-bound students. Money, or lack of it, ususally determines the qualit}- ot education a student receives at an educational institution. Lack ot tunds sends most students pleading to the Office of Scholar- ships and Financial Aids. Under the direaion of Jimmy Ross, this office offers three basic types of assistance to students: employment, gift-aid and loans. Work-Study, a federally subisdized program designed to increase the availabilit - of jobs, is the most common form of assistance. The 2,000 students enrolled in the program earn between S300- S800 per academic year. Officially Horatio Lewis is Assistant Dean of Universit) ' Division. Unofficially he is dean of Latino Affairs. Within the L ' niversity Division, Lewis counsels, kicks out, and consoles students. He also contacts various department people and ad- ministrators for the students; tor information, counseling and recommendations. As director of Latino Affairs, Lewis is work- ing to increase the L ' niversity ' s awareness of the existence of the second largest American minor- it}-. He ' d like to see the need for Ms job eliminated, but until educational opportunities are equalized for all groups, someone is needed to support disadvantaged minorities. Three years ago, Eva Kagan-Kans was directed on a mission — to establish a climate in which women faculty, students and staff are provided with full opportunities for the development of their abilities. I think we have progressed in some areas, Kagan-Kans, dean of women ' s affairs, said. Under her direction, a women ' s studies program has progressed into an inter-curriculum field of study. But more, the multi-lingual woman sees her- self as an ombudswoman — working to have more women hired, listening to pay grievances, seeing to it that graduate women get equal op- portunities for programs and counseling under- graduate women. The dean came to lU in 1968 as an associate professor ot Slavic languages and literatures. Dean Larry Campbell, Acting Dean of the University Division, says he ' s more than happy to untangle the red tape for the thousands of new students entering lU each year. I suppose you could call me the orchestra leader. ' We at the University Division provide the necessary programs and functions for students before they enter college and the first year that they ' re here, Campbell said. ' providing a wide range of intramural spo ns - programs is a 16-hour-a-day operation, ac- cording to Richard Mull, Intramural Director. lU ' s intramural sports programs include Men ' s and Women ' s Intramurals, Co-In- tramurals, Sprjrts Clubs, including hockey, Judo and jogging clubs and special events. Special events offered by the intramural pro- gram are activities that don ' t fall into the normal catagories of spcjrt and physical activity, Mull said. They include basketball super-shoot, weigh: lifting, water pcAo tournaments and even frisbee tournaments. Mull oversees the administration of the intra- mural programs, working daily on scheduling the use of facilities, and training and supervising student officials for the various sp( jrts. Getting women off the sidelines and onto the playing court is the main objective of Kathryn George, Assistant Director of Intramu- ral Sports. George claims that many women enjoy playing sports but are afraid of the overly com- petetive spirit of basketball and football. But those women shouldn ' t hestitate to join in on in- tramural sports. Clinics are conducted before each sport to give the participants a basic knowledge of the rules and regulations of the game, George said. To help take the competetion out of women ' s sports and replace it with a little more fun, George says intramurals are divided into com- petitive and non-competitive sections to suit the abilities and pleasures of the players. Making sure that Indiana University students know ail about health and physi- cal education is the task of John R. Endwright, Dean of the School of Health, Physical Educa- tion and Recreation (HPER). Getting his wings as dean in 1967, Endwright had been an instructor of physical education for men since 1947. Endwright doesn ' t agree that all play is no work. It is important to be physically fit and healthy — it ' s something we all have to work 212 The Student Activities office serves students in two ways, according to Director Dick McKaig. It is an information clearinghouse for campus organizations. A card file is kept on every student group and interested students are referred to a contact person for each group throughout the year. Second, the office helps student organizations who need advice on their plans, room reserva- tions for scheduled activities or for students who want to start a new organization. Most of McKaig ' s contact with students is through his job as advisor for lUSA. As advisor, he helps with lUSA elections and projects. McKaig also is an advisor for the Student Ath- letic Board. Rrichard D. Blackburn deserves the right of the title: the world ' s largest college inn- keeper. And as director of the world ' s largest college union building, it is his responsibilty to manage over 200 guest rooms, numerous meet- ing rooms, large auditoriums, recreation facili- ties, offices and shops. We try to have everything for the student, Blackburn said. It ' s the second year for Blackburn ' s guidance over lU ' s indoor city after coming to Bloom- ington from Oklahoma in 1973. The ' Volunteer Students Bureau CVSB) works as a placement bureau to match a student ' s interest with a particular volunteer or- ganization, according to director Margo Frey. ' VSB now works with 29 organizations. The major organizations, involving 50 or more students, include the CAP Head Start program, Muscatatuck State Hospital, Indiana Boys School and the Buddy Tutoring program. After placing students, the VSB has a follow- up program designed to evaluate performance and help the volunteers with problems. Frey handles VSB administrative duties and communications with the Student Activities Of- fice and the university administration. She also supervises the student coordinators for each vol- unteer program. George Olsen doesn ' t like being called a landlord. As Director of the Halls of Residence, he feels more like a parent to the 10,000 students living in 10 undergraduate dorms. I want to see that the students are happy, and that makes me happy, Olsen said. Olsen isn ' t new to his job, or Indiana Univer- sity. He has been associated with the university housing system since his graduation from the School of Business in 1950. Olsen landed the re- sponsibilty of keeping track of those thousands of dorm rooms when he was named director in 1957. Coordinating the development of learning experience within the residence environ- ment is the responsibility of Tom Hennessey, Associate Director of the Department of Resi- dence Life. Hennessey says the learning experience goes beyond stocking the dorm libraries with the lat- est periodicals and good reference books. He also works hand-in-hand with the University Division by co-ordinating the Freshman Regis- tration and Orientation Program. Advising the Indiana Residence Halls Associ- ation (IRHA) by encouraging them to co-or- dinate student government programs in the resi- dence centers is also part of Hennessey ' s job. Co-operation with community organizations has led to special dorm programs and even theatre productions in the dorms, Hennessey said. John Irvine doesn ' t believe in courtroom dra- matics, but rather justice for students facing legal proceedings. Each day, Irvine, as Director of Student Legal Services, helps those who can ' t afford high- priced legal fees get the services of an attorney. Most of the cases SLS handles are landlord- tenant disputes and other civil cases. Irvine, serving as top SLS man for the last three years, has seen the orgarnization grow. First located in tiny quarters on Arwater Street, SLS is now located in more expansive quarters at 703 E. Seventh Street. Started as an outgrowth of student govern- ment i ' oui years ago, SLS is now a university- funded organization. 213 214 Marilyn Moor; College of Arts and Sciences It ' s the largest school at lU. With 48 separate departments and 21 ' vr of the student popula- tion, the College of Arts and Sciences ( A S) offers the widest variety of course curriculums. Undergraduates successfully completing their majors are granted either a Bachelor of Science or a Bachelor of Arts degree. The courses are divided into four areas: Arts and Humanities; the study ot Shakespeare to stage lighting to philosophical theory, Social and Behavioral Sciences; anything trom prison reform to why people live in sub-divisions. Bio- logical Science; the study of the human body as well as the effectiveness of talking to plants, and Physical Science; predicting the next San Fran- cisco earthquake to the composition ot Saturn ' s rings. Students must take a spattering of each. These requirements have panicked many a se- nior: its so easy to overlook some ot them, and so hard to fulfill others. Complaints like What does a fme arts major need chemistry for? are frequently heard. But the 18-hour language requirement remains the one most complained about. This year the lU Student Association (lUSA) petitioned for a change in the requirement. They asked that it be reduced to 10 hours saying the present amount is unreasonable. It is hard to justify how foreign language requires three times more credit than math or biology, Steve Patton, lUSA vice-president said. This argument is countered by Rodney Sang- ster, assistant chairman ot Slavic Languages. The present requirement is based on the idea that students have not had a foreign language background in high school, Sangster said. It they have, they may test out of the language. Vernon J. Shiner, dean ot A S is in favor ot keeping ttie requirement because he thinks there is value in learning about different people, their thoughts and culture. He added that he doesn ' t have a closed mind about the requirement, however. There may be other ways for students to fulfill it. The requirement was reviewed by the A S Policy Committee last spring. The Committee also reviewed the relevancy of the other distributional requirements. With the economic situation as it is, students become more career oriented. It becomes harder to rec- oncile spending the time and money on a sociol- ogy course when one is preparing for a chemis- try degree. As interest in job-oriented studies grow, m- terest in the liberal arts drops. Enrollment in A S dropped slightly last semester. What reflects the change more, however, is the trend in the popular areas ot study. Associate dean ot A S, Phillip Saunders, said there is a trend for students to move away trom the liberal arts areas to applied smdies. Some areas that have had increasing interest and en- rollments are journalism, economics, telecom- munications and forensic studies. Saunders said probably no one reason could explain this shift ot interests. Srudents may view these areas as more relevant or think they offer better job op- portunities. lohn Finn The flexible nature of the Afro-American Studies program mtroduces students to empirical research and current thinking in the held of histor} ' and culture of Black Americans. The program also runs the Black Culture Center and sponsors many activities throughout the year. Like the African Studies and Women ' s Studies program, Afro-American Studies in- volves the cooperation and contribution of students and faculty members from all divisions of the university. Unlike them, however, Afro- American Studies is not an interdepartmental program. Pictured below is the lU Soul Review practice in the Basement of the Black Culture Center. Staffing its faculty roster with professors and lecnirers from myrid departments, the Afri- can Studies program focuses upon Africa south of the Sahara. From anthropology to law to fine arts, the program gives students a broad knowl- edge of the ethnography, literature, folklore, his- tory, regional politics and economic develop- ment of this region. Some undergraduate courses are offered in various African languages. The program prepares graduate students planning to specialize in this area as teachers, journalists, businessmen or foreign service per- sonnel. Sociology studies the organization and work- ings of society, communities, families, and other groups of people. It also looks at social problems and the role of the individual in soci- ety. In an attempt to make classes more relevant, the department has several topics courses. Within broad categories students have a choice of several contemporary topics each semester such as poverty, drug abuse and juvenile deliquency. Sociology majors have a wide variety of career choices according to Nancy Brouillard, under- graduate advisor. Many sociology graduates enter business, become teachers or social workers. In the tight job market, students have to really look for jobs she said, but last year those willing to go anywhere had good jobs. I am woman, watch me grow, Helen Reddy belted out her 1974 hit, and true to the song, Women ' s Studies at lU has done just that. It has grown from one course in 1971 to 18 courses in the spring semester. As a shared -department curricula, Women ' s Studies jointly sptjnsors programs on topics such as Wonder Woman and Women in Comic Book Art, to courses such as ' Women and the Law. Women ' s Studies lists its goals as recognition of the need for increased knowledge about women, increasing knowledge of the character, role and contributions of women and encourag- ing research about women. Director Ellen Dwyer co-ordinates lecmres, programs and courses in an attempt to meet these goals. Founded in 1971, the Environmental Studies Program is designed to develop a new kind of professional who combines a knowledge of environmental problems and possible solutions with knowledge of policy formulation and ad- ministration. The program is a cooperative undertaking of the College of Arts and Sciences and the School of Public and Environmental Affairs. It consists of two types of courses, interdisciplinary courses taught by program faculty and courses in other academic departments. Most of these depart- mental courses have been recently developed in response to student demand and the needs of the program. Environmental studies routinely brings in professionals for seminars and class sessions. Why homo sapiens act as they do has in- trigued man for centuries. And that same search for understanding has lured thousands of students into psychology department courses each year. Over 600 students major in psychology, most eventually utilizing their undergraduate degree as background in medical school or other post- graduate training. Besides the traditional rat-lab and lecture courses, lU ' s psychology department offers spe- cialized courses, such as Woman: A Psycholo- gical Perspective, which was instituted this year. 216 sponsored by SO IV organi- zations. Maya Angelou vi- sited the campus high- lighting lU ' s celebration of Black History Week. She spoke at the Shoualter House to a croud of more than 200 on Black Ameri- can Literature: From the Beginning to the Begin- ning. David lay 217 Courses in the French and Italian department develop a deepening understanding of French and Italian culture, literature, and lan- guage, Quentin M. Hope, department chairman said. The department also develops critical thinking, the ability ' to articulate thoughts clearly and intelligently and gives students a sense of the past, he added. French majors can become secondary teachers or go to graduate school. They may also enter a number of other fields that don ' t require a spe- cific major, Hope said, because a good knowl- edge of a foreign language is often sought after by employers in many different fields. ' Next year the French department will insti- tute a new program allowing students to special- ize in culture and civilization rather than litera- ture if thev wish. Sprechen Sie Deutsch.- ' isn ' t the only query to be heard outside the office of Germanic Languages, but possibly; Do you speak Danish or Dutch? Teaching first and second year students needing to fulfill a language requirement is the bulk of the department ' s work. But for their 80 majors and other interested students, the deparment offers courses in the lit- erature of Germany, Austria, Switzerland and Denmark. A new course, German Heritage of America, explores the contribution of Germanic peoples to Indiana and the United States. As its name implies, the department of East Asian Languages and Literatures offers courses in both Chinese and Japanese languages and literatures. It also offers courses studying East Asian culture. No knowledge of either lan- guage is required for these classes. Developed in 1962, the department prepares students for graduate work on a teaching or civil service career in the East Asian field. Students with an M.A. degree often work for industries overseas, Y.J. Chih, department chairman said. A merging of the department with the East Asian Studies program is anticipated within several years. Delving into the cultures of a wide variety of nationalities ranging from the Atlantic to the Pacific, from the Arctic to the Mediter- ranean is the purpose of the Uralic and Altaic Studies department. The small department, one of the few in the country, studies peoples like the Finns, Es- tonians, Lapps, Hungarians and Turks. Often called an exotic field, the department seeks students with above-average ability, stamina and purpx-jsefulness. Specialized experts in this area are in steady demand and may enter public administration or an academic field. The department initiated two new programs last fall. Undergraduates can now take the Uralic and Inner Asian Culture Option or get a certifi- cate in Inner Asian Studies. As an interdepartmental study program. West European Studies does not offer an undergraduate major. Instead it offers courses especially created to help students study West European countries, their cultures and their problems. The program covers an area from Scandinavia to Spain and Italy and from Great Britain to Germany and Austria. Its emphasis is interna- tional, favoring cross-national and comparative interdisciplinary approaches in its teaching and research methods. The post-World War II period is especially stressed although other eras are not excluded from study. The Radio and TV department became the department of telecommunications this year although its format remained basically the same. The major emphasis of the department is on radio, television, cable and film with studies centered around the legal, historical, ethical, economic, programmatic, managerial and social aspects of these media. The A.B. program is a liberal education with little specialized training according to William Kroll, department chairman. Students are en- couraged to work for university and community radio and tv stations to gain practical experi- ence. Despite Kroll ' s prediction of a very bleak job market, the number of telecommunications majors rose 44 % this year. 218 Woodward and Bernstein might have had an influence, The Front Page could have been a slight factor, and maybe that book by Edwin Newman had an added effect in the considerable rise in enrollment in the School of Journalism over the past tew years. Chairman Richard Gray stresses the need for majors to acquire a skill in journalism as well as an interest in other areas. Precise interpretation of an event requires an understanding of the event. As a result, many aspiring journalists add a second major onto their academic program. Despite the increase in the number of jour- nalism degrees being granted and the rather tight job market, the school has been successful in its placement service. Part of this success can be attributed to the journalism placement director. Marge Blewitt. She maintains a large bulletin board filled with job notices and accep- tances. Some are volunteer, some are part-time. others are permanent jobs. Another factor is the school ' s emphasis upon practical experience. Students are encouraged to apply for summer in- ternships as soon as possible. They are also urged to work in one of the campus media. The journalism curriculum offers both prac- tical and theory classes. Students are taught the philosophy of the press and the basics of writing a concise news story. They are taught com- munication law and are introduced to non- verbal communication. Many classes require lab work at WFIU to simulate actual media experi- ence. Students can specialize in newspaper writ- ing, magazine writing, photojournalism, broad- cast news, advertising and teaching. During March of 1975, the School of Journal- ism began to move some production equipment and offices into the partially remodeled Ernie Pyle Hall. 219 The English department is in the process of working out ways to better meet the needs of non-English majors, Betty Miller, under- graduate advisor said. The department gets many requests for expository writing classes and it hopes to meet these requests by next year. At the present time the department has various courses in writmg, literature and film. Miller said a number of English majors go on to graduate school or law school with above average success . She added that there seems to be a tendency for students to get a double major in English and business so they can represent businesses in public relations and community relations. Comparative literature studies the rela- tionships between national literatures by comparing authors, ideas and literary types from different time periods and cultures. It also explores the relationships between literature and the other arts, philosophy, religion and the social and natural sciences. According to Claus Cuever, undergraduate advisor, the department does not prepare students for a profession. He said quite a few majors go to graduate school while others become teachers. Comparative literature majors can go into library science or work for publishing companies. Cuever said majors some- times get government jobs working on national or international cultural affairs. For the first time this year undergraduates had a choice of four options for specialization. They may concentrate on Western Literature, Asian-Western literary relations, film or in- terrelation of the arts. = -?-tTi.1 CjwPOSITIi-s 1 l« ,; 3 30- '  lS i r- ' -.Hat COtPOSlTIJH [ . ' aojo c f 6 30- -J IS 8 30- ) l t- ta F LF4£NTUT C3 tPJSITIilN 1 20018 8 30- ' V 15 e ' ■ Efliar CJ «PaSITI )N 1 JJO S 9 30- 9 1 T-lf ' -TUr CO POSITI ) 1 Z30S1 3 30- J IS 5 £sT .  CC «POSITU-. 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O 30- T 5 1 ? = -: T ST CJ-PJSItn. I 231Sa 0 30- 7 45 ?«-.Ttj ci Pos:Tta-. 1 ;j36 6 5C- T S E e-s -UlT CJNOOSIMO ' . I £-E-.T ;, cn POSITIi . 1 2j371 6 3J- 7 ' .5 a 30- 7 li l-- ' .. F = F T IST CO P?SITIOS 1 ;nq= 6 30- 7 15 =  -.T.=j t ,.:.;Tps 1 , .J4J. ° - M j: . in akidef§h ijl The general purpose of the Linguistics department, according to chairman F.W. Householder, is to train research workers who are investigating the nature and structure of human language. It also trains students who want to do studies of languages or language fam- ilies. Basically the department teaches the methods of analysis and comparison of lan- guages, and looks at the structure and develop- ment of languages. Linguistics majors usually enter one of two main professional areas. The either do graduate work and go into teaching at the college level, or they can work with religious groups. Lmguists often go into primitive societies that have no written language, learn the language and devise an alphabet so they can translate the Bible. IS?? v- !fttl il s = — --- S 5 1 Y -1 Wm % : m — JjT l-fcJrl :- - -«i. , M. ■ ' ' ■ ' ■ — ■ — — -iM Puttmg a new emphasis on the classical cul- tures of ancient times is all within the realm of the Classical Studies Department. Its 25 majors may choose their own odesseys in three different directions. One is to become a professional classicist, such as an archeologist. Another choice is to use classical studies as a background for other post graduate training. Or thirdly, a classical studies major could teach one of the ancient languages, like Latin, on the high school or college level. Placement for those in- terested in teaching is generally successful. The Speech Department doesn ' t believe in boring speeches. A department which teaches hundreds of students how to communicate better doesn ' t stop at speech-making. It also offers a course in public relations and an experimental course; Rhetoric of Social Movements. Most graduates from the speech department work in communication fields, such as public relations or corporate communications. Ptesenting a broad human perspective on the oral literatures and traditional cultures of mankind, folklore is a discipline between the humanities and social sciences, Henry Glassie of the Folklore Institute said. ' Folklore is a way of viewing human experience, he added. Folklore graduates can become teachers or work in libraries or for the government. Many go into museum work, Glassie said, while some students do graduate work in folklore. 220 The history department, according to Irving Katz, associate professor of history, teaches students ways of looking at the whole of past human experiences. In keeping with this goal, the history department offers a wide range of courses dealing with the history of the U.S., both Western and non-Western countries and the history of science. Katz said beneath the myths, legends and stereotypes, history ' uncovers the unexpected complexity of human affairs. He added that his- tory shows issues are rarely black and white or one-sided, and that things are rarely as simple as they seem. A new course. Historical Background of Comtemporary Problems I-II, which the depart- ment instituted this fall, has had phenomenal success , Katz said. Getting in touch with how government works is what political science is all about. Students should educate themselves as best as they can — be alive and aware of the world, ' says Leroy Rieselbach, department chairman. The department teaches its 450 majors politi- cal theories and workings of political systems, but constantly explores other areas as well: poli- tics and women, politics and blacks and politics and the media. Although political science offers no intern program, majors are encouraged to compete for intern jobs in the School of Public and Environ- mental Affairs. As inflation, recession and unemployment become every day words, the interest in economics keeps growing. Professor of econom- ics, Phillip Saunders, said worries about the economy are sending more and more students to economics classes. The number of economics mayors rose from 89 in 19 ' l to 142 last semester. Saunders attributes much of this gain to the philosophy of the deapartment ' s introduc tory courses. These courses attempt to teach eco- nomics as a way of thinking. Although the department does not provide professional job training, an economics back- ground is useful in a variety of occupations such as government jobs, banking and organized labor. Forensics studies majors investigate the types of law violations and the reasons behind these violations and try to become sensitive to the problems in order to promote change, ac- cording to J. ErroU Miller, department chairman. Graduates ususally go on to Law School or work for federal agencies or local criminal jus- tice agencies. Miller said. Physical and Sexual Abuse of Children, the first course of its kind of- fered in the U.S., was added last fall. The religious studies department introduced several new courses this year. Social Ethics, previously an upper-level class, became a freshman course, while Race as a Public Issue, Religion as Biography and several graduate seminars were added to the curriculum. According to department chairman William May, majors study scriptural religious tradi- tions as well as religious phenomena not included in the traditions. Religious studies is inter-displinary studying the views of religion through political science, anthropolog) ' , sociolo- gy and psychology ' . Many graduates go on to medical or law schools, while a minority pursue a graduate religious studies degree or become religious leaders. The philosophy department acquaints stu- dents with the development in the intellec- tual history ot the West. By emphasizing clear and cogent thinking about problems wirhin the Western philosophical tradition and by locating the origins ot these problems and examining proposed solutions, the department contributes to the intellectual training of students. The department ' s curriculum, offering four main areas of study, is designed for ail students, those who plan to become professional philosphers and those who don ' t. 221 The fine arts department offers two different programs. One provides an A.B. with a major in history of art, the other an A.B. with a major in studio practice. The history of art pro- gram acquaints the student with the major dev- elopments in art through different historical periods. The studio practice program ' s basic goal is to develop an awareness of visual expres- sion in the humanist tradition. The department offers various services for fine art students including the Bookstall where students can buy most of the books they need for classes. Periodically the department sponsors an art and crafts sale so students can display and sell their work. Department chairman W. Eugene Kleinbauer says job placement for fine arts majors is very successful. Encompassing the entire realm of the stage and the arts, the department of theatre and drama offers classes ranging from acting to directing to stagecraft. Students may choose a professional mode of study or may seek certifi- cation for teaching. A combination of the pro- fessional training with a double major in theatre and drama and speech make this possible. At the end of their sophomore ye ar, outstand- ing students are eligible for the honors program in theatre and drama. This can be continued through the junior and senior year when superi- or students may enroll in a program of a creative or research nature. 222 David Jay The department of anatomy and physiology investigates the structure, functions and vital processes of living organisms. Courses range from the basic structure ot humans to the specific study of the ear and vocal organs, from the effects of exercise on body funaions to the organ systems m mammals. Because the department is part of the division of biological science, students interested in this area usually get an A.B. degree in biological sciences with emphasis on anatomy and physiol- ogy. With special permission, the A.B. degree is granted within the department. Zoology is a division of biology which deals with the study of animal life and it ' s clas- sifications. As knowledge and interest in biology grows, the delineations between zoology and othet traditional biological areas such as botany, micfobiology and anatomy and physiology become less distinct. The result is a consolidated undergraduate degree in biology. Students may now earn an A.B. degree in biological sciences with an em- phasis on a special area. By special request students may also receive an A.B. degree in the zoology department. John Sinclair, zoology department chairman, empha- sized contact between zoology faculty members and students in order to plan a program that wiU insure optimum preparation for the student ' s particular career objectives. The geology department examines the evolution and composition of the earth- minerals, fossils, water-covered areas, and land forms. The geological structure of Monroe county adds a unique touch to these studies which encompass physical and biolocical aspects as well. Emphasis is in training students for a profes- sional career in teaching at a college or second- ary school level, a laboratory researcher, indus- trial work, or as a participant in federal or state surveys. Honor students have the opportunity to par- ticipate in summer research at the geological field station in Montana for six to eight weeks. A student wanting to majot m biology may specialize in one of many areas: zoology, anatomy and physiology, plant sciences or microbiology. Or he may use the interdepart- mental plan which awards an A.B. in biological sciences for training in all of these major fields of biology. Whether one opts for general degree or spe- cializes in one of the above areas, a biology grad- uate still has good career opportunities in a time when the job market is tightening every day. Phillip Saunders, associate dean, says a bachelor ' s degree in biological sciences is still one of the most successful degrees to have when job hunting. Chemistry brings to mind test tubes, bunsen burners and groans. Considered one of the harder areas of study, chemistry majors usually earn much empathy form their friends, if only for theif ambition, dedication and tolerance. Chemistry curriculum entrance requirements support this view. Before entering, students should have had at least two years of high school algebra, one-half year of trigonometry, one year each of physics and chemistry and three to four years of a foreign language. The chemistry department has a special A.B. program for pre-medical and pre-dental stu- dents and also offers a major in chemistry for those who plan to become professional chemists. Physics department chairman Roger Newton is not related to you-know-who. He likes apples but that is about as far as it goes. The science of natural law is becoming more and more important as technology increases. Thus, research into the many areas of physics becomes necessary. Currently, studies in as- trophysics, biophysics, chemical physics and mathmatical physics are being conducted within the department. The physics department also offers classes for students wanting a physics background as well as non-science students who desire the flilfill- ment of an area requirement. 224 David lay School of Business Like the King of the Hill, the lU School of Business overlooks 10th street and Fee Lane luring ambitious young businessmen through its doors. Inside, students are provided with vocational training to prepare them to take their places within the key social institution of our times ' : the business firm. The School of Business offers undergraduate degrees in many career-oriented areas including accounting, finance and marketing. In addition, a five-year Master ' s ot Business Administration ( MBA ) program is offered. In addition to the business core courses, busi- ness majors are required to take approximately 35 hours in Arts and Humanities and the Social, Biological and Physical Sciences. Therefore, in addition to learning how to become business managers, analysts and adaptors, business majors also have a well-rounded education. More women have been entering the School of Business in recent years. Although women are in very small proportion to the total enrollment, their numbers have been slowly increasing. The popularity of the ' Women in Business organiza- tion is an indicator of this growth. Many students in the university tend to think of business majors as avaricious salesmen who will do anything for a dollar. This stereotype is not entirely true, however. Although money ad- mittedly has its attractions, many business majors object to being classed as money- hungry. One student explained, Because I want a good job doesn ' t mean that I hate art or literature or music. I enjoy them, but I ' m also being practical. Jeati Cunningham struggles with a keypunch machine (above) while a business major checks out the place- ment board {right} in hopes of finding a job. 226 With the country in the longest economic slump since I960, many liberal arts majors are worring about finding jobs. Business majors do not have this same problem, however. The Business Placement Office, one ot the na- tion ' s tops helps busmess majors locate jobs. This year, 300-600 job recruiters visited the Bloomington campus, mterviewmg busmess students. Prospective employees needed re- sumes, good communications skills, and respect- able grade point averages to be considered tor most ot the jobs recruiters ottered. According to Randall PoweU, associate director of business placement, a grade average below 2.5 would probably hurt a student. Students are allowed 20 halt-hour interviews per semester. Nearly 10,000 interviews took place last year, according to Powell. The Place- ment OtTice provides torms so that students can evaluate the recruiters after their interviews. Powell said that students with a Bachelor ' s degree start earning around S773 a month, while those with a Master ' s of Business Ad- ministration (MBA) usually start around Sl,22-t a month. Although there were 12 per cent tewer interviews this year than last year, Powell does not see this as an indication that a business major, too, may have a bleak tuture. Other departments within the university also use the placement otfice. Gary Gardner, also from the Placement OfFice, explained that oc- casionally businesses look tor students with lib- eral arts degrees to till retailing and public rela- tions jobs. Photographs David lay 227 John H. Porter 1 imagine that I spend over fifry per cent ot my time advising students about their aca- demic programs and schedules, says Dean John H. Porter, Assistant Dean of Student Affairs in the School ot Business and associate professor of business administration. When he ' s not talking to students, Porter is performing the role ot academic administrator by checking on the courses ottered by the busi- ness school and matching students with the classes thay need to fill requirements. He also supen,-ises the business department at the fieldhouse during registration. Porter came to lU in 19 7 as an instructor and assistant to the dean of the business school. Subsequent promotions to assistant professor, assistant dean, and associate professor followed. He was graduated from Manchester College with a Bachelor of Arts degree, a nd he holds the Master ' s Degree in commercial science and the Doctor ot Business Administration degree, both from Indiana. He holds professional mem- bership in the American and Midwest Econom- ics Associations, Indiana Academy of the Social Sciences, Sigma Iota Epsilon professional busi- ness management society, and Beta Gamma Sigma scholastic honorary. Dean Porter teaches a class each semester and considers it a very gratifying experience. I love working with students and that ' s the greatest thing about teaching. The people I work with never get old and worn out. There ' s an endless supply of ideas and goals. Change is always present in today ' s society, and the business school must be aware of the changes and educate accordingly. ' What is con- sidered good business today, might not have been twenty years ago, or might not be accept- able two years from now. Most of the ways Rockefeller conducted his business fifty years ago are illegal now, said Porter. ' The reason business is a rapid and a sometime dynamic in- novative system is to keep pace with society. 228 School of Public and Environmental Affairs On January 14, 1972, The School of Public and Environmental Affairs (SPEA) was born at lU. Since then, it has grown considerably and now has nearly 300 undergraduate majors. Jeanne Patterson, chairman of the under- graduate program, attributes SPEA ' S success to the fact that it provides a liberal education with professional orientation. SPEA provides a bal- ance between Arts and Sciences, which is not job-oriented, and busmess which is strictly job- oriented, she explained. SPEA offers the alterna- tive of a liberal education geared toward public service jobs. One of the first ot its kind in the nation, SPEA was designed to meet the urgency of envi- ronmental and public problems lacing society today. Its goal is to train people to cope with such problems as transportation, housing, health care, public safer) ' and the improvement of urban areas. Students receive a Bachelor of Science in Public Affairs after completing the four-year curriculum. Within the school, SPEA majors can choose from several areas of concentration including Consumer Affairs, Environmental Policy, Urban and Regional Development, Poli- cy and Administration, Criminal Justice and Mass Communications. According to Robert O ' Neal, Director of Public Careers Counseling and Placement, the list of jobs SPEA majors are qualified for goes on indefinitely. SPEA graduates can work at the fedetal, state or city level in hundreds of jobs. They can serve administrators and managers in state governments or as stall officers to elect of- ficials. Other possible jobs include becoming program budget, personnel, planning, commu- nity development and management analysis of- ficers with city and countn, ' governments and agencies. Job preparation and placement is a major concern of SPEA. O ' Neal said the school ' s pro- fessional placement ser ' ice tries to find students jobs, besides trying to put students ' career perspectives in order. The school has two main methods ot bringing students and jobs together. It arranges on- campus interviews between students and agencies and also publishes the Public Careers Job Bulletin once a month. The Bulletin lists job openings in cit) ' , county, state and other quasi- government agencies and is distributed to quali- fied college graduates around the state. The Public Careers Placement Office is open to non- SPEA majors also. Besides the practical courses otfered SPEA also has an internship program designed to give students professional practice. Students receive pay and from four to six credit hours for work- ing on a job for a semester. The internships give practical experience as a supplement to aca- demic work, O ' Neal said. SPEA inUiULlur J.C. Randolph is coordinator for the Ohio I ' alley Project, an extensile mapping program in Southern Indiana. 229 In a year with an uncertain economy, many se- niors worried about job prospects. This un- certaint)- was not the case with accountmg majors, though. Leon Hay, accountmg depart- ment chairman, said There are many jobs avail- able for good students, and there is no end in sight. According to Hay, the accounting department prepares students for jobs in cor- porations and government agencies. The depart- ment intern program exposes some students to these ditterent areas while providing a chance to earn academic credit and money at the same time. The number ot women majors in the depart- ment has increased in the last few years. It used to be that about 109? of our undergraduates were women. That figure is at least double now, Hay said. In keeping with the School of Business ' pro- fessional orientation, the Business Education and Office Management departments train students tor work in business at all educational levels. These multi-purposed departments train students to be administrative and support systems managers, administrative assistants, and business education teachers. All of these areas offer good job possibilities, James Crawford, department chairman, said. The department of Business Economic and Public Policy, staffed by professional economists with wide experience in business and government, offers a major in business- government relations at the undergraduate level. At the graduate level, speciality in busi- ness economics, in preparation for simultaneous careers in government and business, is stressed. In preparation for a B.S., undergraduates learn economic tools of anlysis, application of economics in business decision making and in- dustrial relations. Study of government is also conducted in conjunction with the department of Political Science. The majority of those awarded a B.S. continue with graduate studies or law school. A large number of graduate students with a M.B.A. find openings within the banking system and the government at the state and fed- eral levels. Some jobs are also found with oil and automobile corporations and life insurance com- panies. Job placement has been fairly successful for the department ' s graduates despite a drop in demand because of the national economic condi- tions. The department presently has 150 under- graduates, 40 M.B.A. candidates, and five doc- toral candidates. Although the Marketing department offered no new courses this year, one of its older classes is catching on. Consumer Behavior has become popular outside of the Business School as well as with marketing majors. One aspect of the course studies the effects of advertising on consumers. A high percentage of marketing graduates enter the retailing field. Other job possibilities include brand management, marketing research, and selling. Some graduates go into advertising, although the marketing management aspect of the department is stressed. Marketing generally trains students to be business managers. Like other business depart- ments, the emphasis is on professional training. The department of Administrative and Be- havioral Studies encompasses the areas of management and administration, personnel and industrial relations, organizational behavior, and business policy. The curriculum is designed to offer the student either a broad-based background preparing him for managerial positions or spe- cialized training in an area of concentration. At the undergraduate level, the department offers concentration in either management and administration or personnel and industrial rela- tions. Presently there are 650 undergraduate students. Graduate study is also offered fcy the depart- ment at the M.B.A. and D.B.A. levels. Concen- trations are offered in management and ad- ministration or organizational behavior and manpower. The majority of M.B.A. ' s work with industries while D.B. A. ' s enter the teaching pro- fession at the university level. Presently the depanment has 65 M.B.A. students and 19 doc- toral candidates. According to department chairman Donald Turtle, finance graduates usually find jobs in one of three areas; banking, financial man- agement of corporations, or securities. Banking includes other financial institutions such as savings and loans. Graduates entering financial management usually find jobs as treasurers or controllers of corporations. Analysts and brokers are types of positions included in securities. The finance department tries to teach students about what ought to be done in busi- ness, not necessarily what is being done. A firm may not be using optimal methodology, Turtle said. Often, finance students will arrive at the same conclusions as a firm does, despite approaching it from a different angle. 230 The Master of Business Administration iM.B.A. ) degree is designed primarih ' for people who desire careers as business executives. This two-year program can also prepare gradu- ates to pursue a doctoral degree. An undergraduate degree in business is not a prerequisite to enter the M.B.A. program. Over halt of the students in the program do not have business degrees, but did undergraduate work in the liberal arts. Women seeking M.B.A. ' s have increased sig- nificandy in the last tour to five years. They now make up about 14 per cent of the programs en- rollment. The M.B.A. program has an enrollment close to 1000: 565 are fulltime students and about 400 are part-time night school students. The part-time students are scattered throughout Bloomington, Indianapolis and Columbus. The School of Business also otters an honors program for undergraduates which terminates in the M.B.A. degree. This five-year program, which emphasizes mathematics, behavior sciences, and economics, is open to superior students. After comparing his answers to the computer print out, Adel Noviti contemplates his grade. 231 Although still attemptiiig to master the basics of playing a recorder, Diane Firmani (far right) accom parties Frank Zappa with her own interpretation of Dynamo Hum . 232 1 i 1 1 IB m ' Li - ' • i« v- — X ' fj|| Photographs David Jay School of Education It looks like you ' re back at P.S. No. 55. Or any grade school, for that matter. The tiled floors and walls framing dark hallways in the Education building really do give a grade school appearance. There is even a drinking fountain two and a half feet off the ground and a bulletin board boldly asking Can you make a square; A triangle A circle? But the building which once housed the University School has expanded its curriculum and primary-sized desks to cater to the big people in the School of Education. A poster in a professor ' s office defining a student ' s diet as test for breakfast, finals for lunch, grades for dinner states precisely the feeling you get when you walk in the Educa- tion Building. But its not a bad feeling, when you realize how important educating educators is. The School of Education has three main pur- poses in its undergraduate program. Preparing students to teach and serve in elementary, middle, or secondary schools in Indiana is a major emphasis. To make students eligible for recommendation for certification in Indiana in regular academic areas as well as in audio-visual communications, driver education, public health and hygiene, school library work or special classes is another goal of the school. A final stress is placed on helping graduates find placement in the field of education. From this broad scope of educational direc- tion, the School of Education offers a complete span of courses in methods, psychology, and guidance. A major in education follows a diverse path ot requirements. In what other school can you take a class in Equipment and Play Materi- als. ' Students enrolled in education explore various aspects of the realm oi teaching. Courses such as Children ' s Literature (Kiddie Lit) offer a change from the regular reading, ' riting, and ' rithmetic of the college student. Where Did I Come From.- ' and Altce in Wonderland make an interesting contrast to a stack of chemistry, biol- ogy, and political science books. Other courses which require the perser- verance and imagination ot the education student are Crafts and Design and Music Fun- damentals. Figuring out a two-foot color grid for four hours or trying a roommate ' s patience by practicing on a recorder are just a few of the op- portunities education majors exf erience. Student teaching programs in all areas ot ele- mentary, middle and secondary schooling round out the education major ' s background in the tleld of his interest. The building whose wooden-railed stairs carry the wear of passing elementar} ' classes now rings with the sound of even greater education. Student Teaching Whar could be a more important aspect of the school of Education ' s Major program than actual teaching experience. ' ' We believe that the best way to learn to teach is by teaching, said Dr. Merle Englander, professor of education and a director of Field Ex- periments in Teacher Education, one of the numerous student teaching programs offered at Indiana University. F.E.T.E. is a Social Studies and English oriented program for prospective middle and high school teachers. The program involves and intensive 32-week session in two Indianapolis schools. Integrating actual teaching experience and sessions with faculty members provides feedback for the student teachers. Englander also stressed the importance ot the student developing his own style so each F.E.T.E. student selects his own master teacher after working with six to ten teachers. A wide variety of other types of student teaching options are also available. One for ele- mentary education majors exists at Bradford Woods, Indiana University ' s 2,300-acre Out- door Education and Camping Center. Students in this program are involved in a camping, liv- ing, teaching and leadership situation. They serve as outdoor education leaders for half the project; the rest is spent in a more conventional classroom environment. Another program is the Secondary School Mathematics Project. This project is designed to develop highly qualified supervising teachers to work with ten college seniors during the first three quarters of the academic year. Participants also attend a convention of the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics. Students who desire a senior high school set- ting may participate in the Site -Cluster Project. This one-semester combination of college in- struction and student teaching emphasizes in- novative techniques and on-site experience with adolescents with extended supervision by college personnel. The program takes place in Marion County schools. Special programs are also offered to prepare students to cope with all kinds of educational environments. The American Indian Reserva- tion Project is a field teaching experiment on reservations in Arizona and New Mexico. The Latino Project gives experience in multi-cul- tural living for those interested in teaching Mexican, Puerto Rican, or Latino students. The student is also encouraged to be active in com- munity agencies in the area of their assignment. Sites for this project are Arizona and the East Chicago Gary, Indiana areas. Options for students desiring a position in a small town, village, or a consolidated school system serving a rural area, or in an inner -city situation are also available.The Rural Education Center Project and Urban School-Community Project help students grasp an understanding of changes necessary, and help them analyze pos- sible fears and prejudicies. A former program, the Professional Year Pro- gram, is being incorporated into a program called Encore. This field-based program centers around the beneficial aspects of nine full months of teaching and observation. As a poster in the Education Building says, ' Education is a process, not a product. Student teaching is a very intergral part of this process. When Milht AJams walked into the classroom she was no longer just a student, but also a teacher. Al- though the adjust me 2t to a new life style is somewhat disconcerting, the experience is invaluable. Photographs David lay School of Music 236 Texans do everything in a big way, ' tis said. Maybe that explains why Indiana Univer- sity ' s modest little music school experienced such an explosion when The Texas Invader , otherwise known as Wilfred C. Bain, took over as dean. Bain, who came to lU via North Texas State University, began his reign over a school of sev- eral hundred, but his passion for only the biggest and the best brought the enrollment to a hefty 1,500 by the time he retired in 1973 and cur- rently it is the largest music school in the world. This year music school deans from around the country also voted it the best. Activities and ambitions, too, are large-scale. With five orchestras, five bands, five choruses, a Renaissance music group and sundr) ' other en- sembles at its disposal, it ' s no wonder practically every night there is a program in the Musical Arts Center, Recital Hall, or both. And with teachers like concert cellist Janos Starker, pianist Jorge Bolet and Eileen Farrell guiding them, it ' s not suprising that students have gained a reputation for producing quality per- formances ot such orchestral standards as Stravinsky ' s Petrouchka and big-name operas as difficult as Wagner ' s Lohengrin. That lU ' s faculty, numbering approximately 140 in 19 departments, is equal to any in the world is not questioned. Bain was careful to seek and accept only the best; he hand-picked his staff from the major symphony orchestras — Chicago, Cleveland and Philadelphia, to name only a few — and the finest opera companies ot the country. As a result students flocked from around the world — 92 students from 32 foreign countries this year, as well as representation from 49 states — to major in performance, edu- cation, conducting, dance, or in another of the seemingly endless options. The enormit) ' of the figures documenting the School of Music ' s facilities is staggering. 216 grands and 239 upright pianos are used for prac- ticing and teaching. The Latin Music Center library includes more than 2,000 books and scores. Juan Orrego-Salas, director of the Center, says the collection probably is the largest in the world. In the past, the School of Music has staged an average of 00 to 800 concerts a year, including several hundred recitals — sometimes as many as ten in a day, taking place simulta- neously in several auditoriums. Some of the most awe-inspiring figures come from the lU Opera Theatre, the best known part of the School of Music. Since lU ' s first full opera production, Wagner ' s Parsifal in 19-i9, the opera theatre had piled up statistics that would do credit to any professional company: 830 per- formances of 135 operas, including twelve premieres (some ot them by well-known con- temporary composers like Lukas Foss and Gian- Carlo Menotti); an outdoor summer opera series in the old football stadium, attraaing more than 70,000 people; senior critics from such newspa- pers as the Chicago Tribune, the Washington Post and the New York Times have attended a number of opera theatre premieres. Rick Wood lUMAC The house that Bain built Since conscruction was completed in 1972 it ' s been called other names, too, not all ol them complimentary, but the official title is the Musical Arts Center. It ' s in this building, built large!) ' through the persistance of former dean Wilfred C. Bain, that much of the campus music-making takes place. First, the ver) ' impressive, highly publicized facts ... the 511,235,640 Musical Arts Center is second only to the Metropolitan Opera in stage and backstage area; maximum playing area is one-hundred-t ' enty teet deep and the rear stage in itself incorporates a motorized turntable fort) ' -eight teet in diameter. The control console for the lighting system directs one of the most sophisticated lighting contraptions in the country; it can hold preset cues stored by a magnetic memory unit and can recall up to rw, ' o hundred lighting combinations. The set operator works from a booth in the first terrace ot the auditorium, where he has a lull view of the stage and can communicate with backstage control points to give on-the-spot in- structions. Sound in the auditorium, which seats 1,460, is excellent, and is aided by the light fixture- chandelier, made up of 35 gold discs, which also serves as a sound reflector. Technicians can mne the house by moving the discs up or down, changing the acoustical character subtly. A word frequently used to describe the audi- torium is intimate, largely because it is very shallow — only 19 rows deep, which means even someone sitting in the back of the auditori- um is only approximately 80 feet away from the action on stage. Next we come to the inevitable figures, com- piled by the publicity department in attempts (usually successful) to amaze the easily amazed public. There are 22 opera performances, 4 ballet performances, 26 orchestra and six choral concerts, plus 50 other miscellaneous public events (jazz, faculty recitals, etc.) scheduled in the Musical Arts Center each year, as well as in- numerable dress rehearsals. Approximately 1,800 students attend classes weekly in the building, in upper-floor classrooms, and there are also several large rehearsal rooms for large ensembles — orchestras, studio operas, etc. Aesthetically, the Medical Arts Center offers a mixed bag — a sort of combination of medieval stateliness and op art brassiness. Many visitors, fooled by the straightforward dignity of the ex- ternal structure, develop a slightly glazed look when they walk inside and are confronted with the multi-colored foyer, carpeted a bright (though rapidly fading) purple, scattered with electric red, green and blue chairs. The next shock comes when the already-stunned guest enters the auditorium and discovers walls of not one shade, but two — bright orange on side walls, hot pink for the back wall. There are blue and red tweed seats and purple curtains to complete the color scheme. Most concert-goers say the combination grows on them after the initial jolt wears off. But there are some who still get perpetual heartburn. 238 Photographs David lay 240 241 Charles Webb ...v David lay 242 When the time came for Wilfred Bain ' s re- tirement as dean of the School of Music, there was a lot of speculation about who would take his place. The question: could anybody else successfully control the school Bain had built? Charles Webb ' s appointment left many with skeptical eyebrows still raised. Could he, the as- sociate dean who had played second fiddle for years to Bain, take the school and bring new ideas to it, rather than merely serve as a puppet ruler following in the wake of Bain ' s powerful personality. ' ' He could, and he did. Now, nearly two years after taking over, Webb has proved to the doubting Thomases that he ' s neither puppet nor patsy. He ' s fought skirmishes within departments, notably the highly temperamental ballet department, and he ' s come out without a scar. He ' s won over many of the students — There ' s a certain gen- tleness about him, says one admiringly. And he has not only maintained the strong faculty Bain built, but even made a few noteworthy additions to it; the concert violinist James Buswell, for ex- ample. Adding to the faculty, which Webb finds is vastly overworked, continues to be his No. 1 pri- ority. With the bleak budget situation, there are moments when Webb admits he is worried he won ' t be able to retain the profs he has, let alone bring m a new crop. Our salaries are below the University average and well below the national average, he says. I anticipate not being able to hold some of the faculty if this continues. Even just this past year several of our teachers were made offers substantially bener than what they have here. They stayed with us because they say they like the environment here but it would be very dangerous for us to continue on that kind of loy- alty. It is presumptuous on the University ' s part to expect faculty members to stay if salaries aren ' t increased, he sighs, shaking his head. Since he took his post, financial worries have been perpetual, not only because he cannot find adequate money for salaries, but because he heads a school of nearly 1,500 students, many of whom have a difficult time finding a place to play. Practice room space is pitifiilly inadequate and there are no funds for expansion. Currently there are about 215 practice rooms, plus a few holes in the walls — loosely referred to as rooms — in an old army barrack named Linden Hall, several blocks from the music school. When Webb leaves the office he trades ad- ministrative hassles for a whole new set of problems — performing problems. A pianist variously described by music school smdents as incredibly versatile, amazing and outstand- ing, Webb devotes a large part of his non-office time to performing with faculty member Wallace Hornibrook ( they form a piano duo) or accompanying illustrious faculty members. In January he spent a couple of days in New York, serving as accompanist for faculty tubist Harvey Phillips at several Carnegie Recital Hall appearances. Then it was a jet out to Oklahoma, where he and Hornibrook were scheduled to play. And when he got back, the congregation of the First United Methodist Church was waiting for him; he plays organ for their Sunday service. The running around doesn ' t bother him and neither does constant performing, for Webb says to keep in contact with his students and faculty performers, to understand the problems they face, he has to stay a performer himself When the School of Music changed leadership, it didn ' t lose a dean — it gained a musician. The concert stage has had its share of virtuo- sos; it ' s seen its share of Heifetzes, Ruben- steins and Casalses. But it ' s probably pretty safe to say it has never seen the likes ot virtuoso Harvey Phillips before. After all, how many concert tubists could have existed in the years before 1854, when the first tuba concerto (counesy of Ralph Vaughn Williams) was written.- ' There was no solo liter- ature to play. Worse yet, nobody was willing to hawk for the instrument; the bass voice ot the orchestra, which practically everyone thought could do nothmg but play oom-pah-pah. Ev- eryone but Harvey Phillips, that is. But for Phillips, thete has never been much doubt that the tuba was a lot more versatile than anybody gave it credit for. He started out playing it in a circus band, found he could swing on it during the eta of Quincey Jones and Gill Evans when he played in their bands, and discovered a lot about its potential vir- tuosity when he heatd William Bell, tubist of the NBC Symphony under Toscanini, make it sing. So when Bell retired as professor of tuba at In- diana University in 1971, what could be more logical than that his most devoted follower should take his place.- Now, armed with the motto think tuba mscribed on a wooden plaque, Harvey Phillips finds himself firmly ens- consed in his teaching studio, surrounded by the homey debris oi piled-up scores, mutes as long as a forearm and odds and ends like a stray dollar bill and a halt-empty Burger Chet trench try sack. Walls are lined with tuba recital posters because the core of Harvey Phillips ' life is the tuba and giving recitals is the best way he knows to take his instrument to the people. For a month it ' s the Octubafest in lU ' s Recital Hall, then a few weeks later he ' s off for a week of con- certs in New York ' s Carnegie Recital Hall. He knows the tuba ' s possibilities, he remembers how Bell used to make it ting out, he knows it ' s just a mattet of time before he convinces the rest of the world. Though Phillips has since found a number of other musicians he admires — most notably Gunther Schuller, president of the New England Conservatory of Music in Boston and one of the nations most talented composets — Bell retains a very special place in his heart. So in Bell ' s honor, Phillips organized A Tuba Christmas in New York ' s Rockefeller Center. Celebrating Bell ' s birthday, which was Christmas day, 250 tubists gathered to play carols in front of a audi- ence estimated at 20,000. The feedback from the event was so positive, Phillips says, that the pres- ident of the center has asked Phillips to make it an annual event. I ' m anticipating about 500 tubists for it next year; he said, without a trace of a grin, and you not only believe he s serious — you believe he will be right. When somebody believes in a cause as much as Harvey Phillips, the confidence becomes infectious. It ' s that same confidence, that has prompted Phillips to approach any and every major com- poser he could tlnd, in the hope of expanding the tuba ' s literature. I ' ve been cajoling, beg- gmg, pleading asking — any adjective you like — composers, ever since I became aware of its solo potential, he says, and as a result, such big- name composers as Alec Wilder, Morton Gould, Vincent Petsichetti and Schuller have produced solo pieces for tuba. The results spealc for his persuasive powers as weU as they do for the in- stfument ' s potential. To watch Harvey Phillips is to see the powet of positive thinking at work. Harvey Phillips Rick Wood 243 Vera Scammon The door opens into a room that might well fit in with the pictures in a Better Homes and Gardens magazine. But the decorator ' s haven which confronts the amazed visitor is in neither a home nor a garden, but in the austere confines of the School of Music annex. That warm orange and gold room with the tiger-striped settee, the wicker chair and a furr - mushroom stool also masquerades as a teaching studio for associate professor of voice Vera Scammon. Although teaching studios usually tend to be bare, bordering on barren — linoleum floors, empty walls, a few straight-back chairs, a locker and desk — Scammon decided hers had to feel more lived-in if she were to teach properly. So she lined the walls with students ' pictures, and brought in some of the comforts of home because, as she said, If I ' m going to spend most of my time here I might as well be cornfortable. It ' s not only her own comfort Scammon worries about; she ' s equally concerned that her students feel at home. So she insists on an aura of informality — students walk in without knocking and unburden themselves of their problems, while Scammon plays counselor. ' There ' s no time when my students can ' t f come and talk to me, she says. Sometimes my noon hour is pretty much nonexistent, but I don ' t mind. Some teachers don ' t want to get close to their students, but I can ' t work that way. Her concern extends to all her pupils, she says, and her students agree. Every student she has is really crazy about her because they know she honestly cares about them. It is a tremendous influence on us professionally, as well as per- sonally. Being in the right frame of mind has a lot to do with being a good performer and Mrs. Scammon ' s attitude is a fantastic influence psy- chologically upon our singing, one admirer said. If Scammon ' s teaching record is any indica- tion, her psychological theories must have some validity. Nancy Shade, Scammon ' s best known student, has been making a star name for herself since graduating a few years ago and recently starred in a highly-touted Italian production of Puscini ' s opera Manon Lescaut, directed by big-wig movie director Luchino Visconti. Locally, Scammon students bring in a fair share of honors. They have placed in regional, district, semi-finals and finals of the Metropolitan Opera auditions and a year ago, 33 opera theater roles [I went to her disciples. In one opera, all five leads were Scammon students. Being able to sing well isn ' t enough for any vocalist seriously considering an operatic career, says Scammon, who works to instill acting abili- ty and stage presence as well as vocal skill. Drama was my first love, even before music, from the time when I was yeah-high, says Scammon, whose sweeping palazzo pants, and vivid jewelry bespeak her love of the dramatic touch. So when I see some of these self-con- scious kids, I do my best to help them find a way to feel at ease and look good. One of Scammon ' s greatest sources of pride is her relationship with the New York City Opera Company and its director, Julius Rudel. Two of her students are singing with the company right now and Scammon, who sang with it for a while, is confident other students will be singing for Rudel soon. I keep telling Julius I ' m going to send him more. Julius, I ' ve got singers you haven ' t even heard yet, but you will ' I tease him. He just laughs and says you keep sending em, Vera — and I ' m going to, she says con- fidently. w .-f im Dave Baker Photographs David lay It ' s time to reorganize those music history books, folks — at least, that ' s what David Baker says. The d y of recognizing jazz ' s impor- tance is upon us and it ' s about time E)uke Ellington found his place in the annals that list those other sacred cows . . . Beethoven, Bach et al. If anybody can make such an assertion with confidence it should be Baker, a musician of multitudinous talents - — conductor, comjxiser, performer, teacher — who heads and is the sole faculty member of the School of Music smallest department: Jazz. He ' s done just about every jazzy activity imaginable — from teaching a Na- tional Music Critics Association jazz seminar to writing a commissioned piece for the J.C Penney Company. Clearly the man lives, breathes and thrives on jazz. And so he continues to wait for the time when false barriers which he says separate serious and popular music will fall. Already he foresees a time when jazz will be considered as sophisticated an art form as classical music. The musical snobber} ' that used to exist won ' t be able to continue as jazz becomes a part of academia, he says. Already there ' s a more open attitude. The gap is closing because people are caring, and I hope there won ' t be a problem at all in five years, when people are fully aware of jazz as a legitimate form of music. If they teach Brahms seriously in schools, why can ' t they teach Duke Ellington just as seriously: For kids to go through school without understanding Ellington and the people like him is a really narrowing influence, he says. Baker also espouses universities and conser ' a- tories which offer jazz curriculum. Having a degree program at an institution gives jazz credentials, which seems to be important it you want to function in the professional and aca- demic worlds, he says. But until ten years ago, nobody taught jazz, either to youngsters or college level students. And yet. critics and listeners are quick to praise serious composers who use jazz elements in their music, although they eye nonclassical com- posers with disdain. Baker says. ' It doesn ' t bother me that composers like Copland and Gershwin use jazz elements in their music, Baker says, but it does bother me that composers like that get praised tor using pop stuff while people wont accept Ellington and Miles Davis on equal footing with them. So if the cause is to advance, and audiences are to become more liberal in their attitudes, musicians must be prepared to show that all kinds of music can be meshed. Baker says emphatically. Today ' s musicians can ' t play just jazz or pop or classical. The emphasis has to be on the word musician as a person who can deal with the totalit) ' of music, rather than just one form, he argues. And even it you are a special- ist, it doesnt preclude your trying to understand the basics of another musical language. The School of Health, Physical Education and ' Recreation The school of Health, Physical Education and Recreation (HPER) isn ' t drawing the laughs that it once did. It ' s hard to even snicker when recreation graduates are expecting 513,000 or higher for their first year on the job. Unlike the job situation ot teachers or liberal arts majors, majors in the HPER department are facing a growing and expanding job market. ' With the nation considering a four-day work week, organized leisure activities are going to be in great demand. And that means good salaries and the chance tor advancement. We consider ourselves to be in a growth area because unlike other schools, our enrollment has been steadily growing over the past few years, says Assistant Dean James Belisle. Even though the university dropped the freshman physical education requirement a few years ago, more students than ever are taking beginning PE classes. Classes such as tennis, bowling and swimming are in great demand because they are carry-over activities. That is, a person can get enjoyment from them wherever he is or whatev- er his occupation may be. They are family activi- ties and are inexpensive forms of exercise. We ' ve recently had a curriculum revision, Belisle said. This has given the undergraduate more hours of electives and enabled him to choose an area of concentration in addition to his major. For example, a man may decide to major in physical education and choose coaching for his area of concentration. Women ' s opportunities are opening up in physical educa- tion to include inter-scholastic coaching courses. This type of program is generating high interest right now. The HPER department has a good counseling and job placement service. Undergraduates can pre-register for courses so they have no trouble getting requirements when they need them. A required undergraduate meeting is held each semester so the faculty can make announce- ments, describe courses and help students plan their schedules. Kathleen Osting, a senior recreation major, feels that despite the irritation of being called a HPER major, she is very satisfied with her department. It ' s hard work, but as you ' re doing it you can see results and you know it ' s worth it. Recreation majors are expected to have summer park work after the sophomore year and that ' s an invaluable experience. lU ' s department gives you a chance to expand on what you ' re interest- ed in. It ' s very creative and you always have to be alert to new ideas. Unfortunately, many peo- ple think all we do is sit around and plan games. With my degree, I could become director of parks and recreation. This would mean being in charge ot maintenance, training, planning, bud- geting, directing activities and evaluating the program supervision. I would be responsible for all outdoor educational facilities, waterfront ac- tivities, tennis courts, a community center, and I ' d have the responsibility to the people working under me. I think it ' s very important for the department to stress professionalism and enthu- siastic leadership. After all, our job requires us to deal with people in many different social planes. Cou rse revisions and attitudes aren ' t the only changes affecting the HPER department. Wil- dermuth Intramural Center (the old fieldhouse) closed on January 20, 1975 for renovation. It was estimated that the fieldhouse would be closed until late August as workmen laid a concrete floor base with a tartan prefabricated surface. Other repairs included installation of a new lighting system, and cleaning and painting the walls. The project cost 5449,331 and was approved last December by the lU Board of Trustees. Scheduling of classes was taken into consider- ation so everything that the HPER department originally offered was still taught despite the renovation. Although people participating in intramurals and individual exercises in the center had to move to the 17th street fieldhouse, nearly everyone felt the inconvenience was worth the end result. The remodeled fieldhouse will expand racquetball and handball courts, and year-round indoor tennis instruction is planned. Last December the lU Board of Trustees decided it was time for Wildermuth Intramural Center (the old fieldhouse) to get a facelift. The renovation cost $449,331 and is expected to be completed by late August. 246 247 Scott Ferderber Surrounded by a bevy of women, Mark Wheeler (above) performs a dance routine in his modern dance class. Physical Education major Charlene Grant (right) settles down for a long wait until one of the paddle ball courts are free. After a fast game of basket- ball, Doug Carlson (top) is content to sit back and watch the action. 248 249 Optometry The Division of Optometry, currently ranked first among twelve schools nation- wide, offers a diversity of studies and services. The curriculum includes instruction in all the cUnical and practical phases of optometry as well as in the theoretical and more fundamental aspects of visual science. Application of this in- struction results in services such as a clinic, a Community Care Center and various screening programs. Studies are offered in four major areas: op- tometry, graduate studies in physiological optics, optometric technology, and optometric technician training. The Optometry Division accepts 69 students each year out ot approximately 700 applicants. Sixty per cent ot those chosen are Indiana resi- dents. Selection is based on the performance in pre-optometry courses, score on the optometry college admissions test, and reference letters. Satisfactory completion of the two-year pre- optometry requirements and two years of op- tometry curriculum qualifies a student for a B.S. in optometry. An additional two years qualifies the student for examination for licensure as a Doctor of Optometry. A student also may re- ceive a B.A. with a major in optometry by com- pleting requirements of the College of Arts and Sciences. The graduate program in physiological optics, offering a M.S. and Ph.D., is designed to advance knowledge in the sciences related to vision. Career opportunities in this field are in optometry schools, visual research centers, the opthalmic industry, and specialized optometric practice. The optometric technology program serves the person whose principal training and experi- ence are vocationally indentified outside of op- tometry; yet whose effectiveness may depend on technological familiarity with the aspects of op- tometry. The program thus works with students in other fields such as chemistry, physics, educa- tion, business administration, and others. The optometric technician program, in crxjp- eration with the Division of General and Tech- nical Studies, offers a two-year study program open to high school graduates. Students in the program acquire technical and clerical skills that enable them to assist optometrists. In addition to the various graduate and un- dergraduate programs, a large amount of research is carried on within the division of op- tometry. Currently major research is being con- ducted on soft contact lens and a telescopic lens system designed to aid people with poor vision. The Division of Optometry also offers several services within the local community. A clinic is operated with the aid of optometric students. It is open to all university students and local resi- dents, offering complete eye examinations. A separate Community Care Center is operated solely for low income residents in Bloomington. The Center is staffed by final year optometry students and professors within the department and offers the same services as the clinic. Other students periodically visit local nursing homes. Throughout the state, the Optometry Divi- sion operates a screening program within ele- mentary schools. Student teams travel in a mobile clinic to test the children ' s vision and reading readiness. Other programs are operated out-of-state. Some students work in an optometic center in the Detroit inner-city for six-week periods. Other students work with a Milwaukee sight center and a Milwaukee learning disabilities center. Also, last year two students worked in Puerto Rico in cooperation with the Depart- ment of Health. 250 Photographs Rick ood School of Law James R. Cotner. a local attrjrney and part-time lect- urer at the lU Law School discusses trial techniques with his third ) ear class. 252 Photographs Rick Wood Whether it ' s eight o ' clcxrk on a Monday morning, or eight o ' clock on a Friday night, the lU law library is usually crowded. And unlike the main library, everyone in the law library is busy. One second year law student says that a person has to cut back on other activities because law is so demanding of a student ' s time. Like any law school, the lU School of Law is not easy. Students enrolled at the lU School of Law are not soley limited to that particular discipline. Many students seek additional degrees in other areas throughout the university so as to increase job opportunities upon graduation. The lU Law School ' seeks to provide its students with an understanding of the law and the ability to apply that understanding in any place at any time, says Dean Douglas BoshkofF. Admission is just as difficult as everybody claims. It is based on an individual ' s grade average and LSAT exam scores. The Admissions Committee also looks at a student ' s extracur- ricular activities, faculty recommendations, and the entire undergraduate academic background, admissions officer Karen Cutright said. lU ac- cepts about 25 percent of it ' s applicants a year. No specific undergraduate area of study is required to enter law school, although the Ad- missions Committee considers a narrow college specialization undesireable. After 82 hours of study, the law student re- ceives a J.D. degree. Also available is a program with two degrees: the J.D.-M.B.A. degree is of- fered in conjunction with the Business School and the J.D.-M.P.A. degree is offered with the School of Public and Environmental Affairs. In this program, the student is able to earn the J.D. as weU as a Master ' s degree in four years instead of the usual five years. Cutright notes that this program increases a person ' s job opponunities, not only to law firms but businesses. lU constantly reevaluates the curriculum to assure that it meets contemporary as well as traditional needs, Cutright said. Courses such as land use control, natural resources, welfare law, legal implications of computer technology and military law are recent course additions. Ap- pellate Advocacy and Advanced Court Tech- niques were instituted this year. Although traditional academic instruction is emphasized, the school has a number ot clinical programs. The Moot court program, which was revital- ized this year, gives students court room prac- tice. Each member of the program picks a case, writes a brief presenting his team ' s side ot the case and then presents an oral argument to the judges. The students simulate with as much realism as possible a case on appeal, said Maurice Holland Jr., faculty advisor to the program. Students make their final arguments before a panel of practicing judges and attorneys in the state. The judges base their decisions on which side argued its case most effectively, Holland said, not on the merits of the individual case. The program gives students practice in oral ar- guments and in legal writing. Another opportunm- for students to get court room experience is through internships at the County Prosecutor ' s Office. The program provides practical, pragmatic, on-the-job-ex- perience not provided in the class room, said Barry Brown, county prosecutor. When openings exist, the school posts notices. Any law student on work-study is eligible. Applicants should be qualified to handle the work load. Brown said. Interns work primarily with citizen complaints, working no more than 15 hours a week. Students also draft responses to defense- originated motions and attend arraignments and sentencings. Students can also gain experience through other organizations on campus. Many law students are ver} ' aaive in the Women ' s Caucus, the Black Caucus and Student Legal Service. Some Students also work for local firms. Budget Cuts The outcome is critical any way you look at It. The cost of tuition is rising, the quality of education is suffering. Both are results of unending inflation and accompanying cuts in Indiana University ' s budget. Students face a possible increase in yearly tu- ition of SI 59 in the next two years. The student is already paying 32% of the actual cost ot higher education. I.U. ' s rate is one of the highest in the Big Ten. Budget cuts provide a related source of agony in the quality of education. Without appropriate increases in faculty salaries to counteract inflated living costs, I.U. may not be able to maintain its faculty roster of top notch professors and lectures. The original biennial request of 12 % increase in faculty salaries un- derwent two cuts by the Indiana Commission for Higher Education, to 10 % the first year and 8 % the second, and suffered the final blow by the State Budget Agency, which made a recom- mendation of an 8% increase for each year. Other faculty related ways to balance the un- cenainry of I.U. ' s financial situation include fill- ing vacancies made by retirements with begin- ing non-tenured faculty. These members start at lower salaries than the more distinguished faculty, allowing for budget adjustments in other areas. Associate Instructors (AI ' s) on campus are also touched by the economic cutback. They aren ' t receiving adequate salary increases, and are also being restricted in the assignments they may take on, such as tutorial projects. Students have to cope with more than just soaring tuition and a possible decrease in the quality of their education. Limited budgets af- fect residence halls; maid service is limited from last year, and food orders are being decreased. Student services offered by the Student Affairs Division may also be cut back. ' Veterans ' Affairs, scholarships, financial aids, and reading clinic are affected by restrictions in suppUes and em- ployees to staff the division. According to Vir- ginia H. Rogers, associate dean of students, the Student Affairs Division cutback may eliminate residence halls counseling. ' While the budget problem strikes the core of the University, the students, the administration, and the faculty, the academic buildings are crumbling too. A $3 million preventive mainte- nance request was included in the 1975-77 bien- nium, but most likely will be reduced to $2.2 million. This not only adds to the seeming hopelessness of getting cracked sidewalks, leaky steam lines, and loose ceiling tiles repaired, it also puts a discouraging light on funding for new remodeling. An $800,000 cutback in build- ing unintentionally matched the amount of funding needed to complete the remodeling of Ernie Pyle Hall. ' The severity of the finance cuts can be seen at both the level of individual departments and schools. The budget cut is a threat to the mainte- nance of the School of Music ' s status as number one in excellency. It has hampered our efforts to recruit because our salaries haven ' t kept pace with music salaries of the leading competitors and with the salaries of other divisions of this University, said Charles H. ' Webb, Dean of the School of Music. Another problem for the Music School is the lack of adequate practice space. Even though the situation is high on the Bloom- ington construction list, the cutback is halting remedy. Webb also cited affects on programs offered by the school. Professional instruction on the cariUon is no longer offered because salary for a carilloneur was cut out of the budget, he said. The school now has some students who know how to play the carillon, and it is also used by guest musicians. But the magnificence of the in- strument is not being fully utilized since there is no instructor. Gerald Marker, associate dean of the School of Education, said the reduction in I.U. ' s budget has affected the faculty by offering fewer gradu- ate assignments and traveling grants. Since budget proposals are made on a university and not an individual school level, the school doesn ' t know yet how appropriations will affect future programs. The school has already had to let the sponsorship of the Hoosier Courts Nursery School fall into other hands. It ' s more of a question of what it will do to us in the future, Howard Schaller, associate dean of the School of Business, said. Up to this point we ' ve been able to maintain the quality of our programs. But the school is faced with two major problems. The threat of more budget cut- ting imposes a danger of losing faculty members and not being able to compete for or attract fac- ulty replacements. This, coupled with the enroll- ment increase in the school, presents the deper- sonalization of unmanagible class size. ' The in- teraction needed in some courses is not possible in large classes, Schaller said. It is a critical year for the budget. And the outcome is critical anyway you look at it. 254 t. - ' mm I jl i w - p IlmEii Hall 1 MUSIC i • ' ■ . ' j i,. IS- - - ■ ' 255 Alternate Learning Programs The Independent Learning Program began at lU in the fall of 1969. At the time, it was one of four programs in the country that allowed students to pursue independent and self- directed study and graduate with an AB in the Q)llege of Arts and Sciences. The Independent Learning Program ( ILP) is supervised by a com- minee of fifteen faculty members from the Gsllege of Arts and Sciences, three students and Richard David Young, a clinical psychologist who is chairman of the department. The com- mittee IS responsible for granting admission to the program, for reviewing and assessing the progress of ILP students, and for evaluating the final outcome of a student ' s independent study — a senior thesis, project, or other creative ac- tivit) ' . The ILP permits students with special inter- ests or needs — those that go beyond regular programs or those not offered within established departments — to organize their own academic experience and intellectual development in an individualized way. The program serves as an al- ternative to a departmental or interdepart- mental major because it is a major department in itself In lieu of traditional Arts and Sciences requirements, the student, with faculty support and guidance, develops a set of compatable requirements. Whatever program of study is designed, it must be integrated with the inten- sity of work comparable to other degrees in the Gallege of Arts Sciences. In a typical pattern, about two-thirds of the one hundred and ten hours needed for graduation are in regular courses from other departments that are signifi- cant to the student ' s program or liberal educa- tion. The other third of the total hours are spent in individual tutorials with faculty or in in- dependent readings, study, field experience, or research. The tutorials are the base for the pro- gram, and are written contracts between faculty members and students. They specify the area of study, expectations of the course, methods of evaluation, hours of credit given for work, how Rick Uoud often and when the faculty member and student will meet together, and whether credit for the tutorial will be a grade or a Pass No Credit system. Most of the applicants to ILP are either soph- omores or juniors, but in unusual cases students may be admitted to the program as a second semester freshman or at the beginning of the se- nior year. It students successfully complete the introduc- tory tutorial, with the support of a faculty ad- visor, they may apply to the ILP Committee by submitting a description of the proposed under- graduate program as well as a projected specific course and tutorial plan for the following rwo semesters. After an interview with the student and advisor, the ILP Committee will approve, perhaps with modifications, or will reject the application. Natalie Christoph, who counsels each ILP student, believes that the program ' s benefits out weigh the disadvantages. This type of program has been responsible for students staying in school and has given several more the incentive to start college. EXiring the 1974-75 school year. eighty-four students were enrolled in various ILP categories. The number includes those taking tutorial courses, doing field work, finishing senior projects, and attending other schools. It ' s surprising and terribly interesting to watch students design their own curriculum and develop their own interests. One student who graduated last year wrote his final paper on the History of American Word Puzzles to 1860. He was accepted to the Law School of ' Virginia and worked for Penny Press, a puzzle company, in Philadelphia. Another student developed a curriculum for future sex educators and is work- ing in Cleveland General Hospital as consultant to juvenile patients on sex problems. Projects involving music and other art media are popular. One student was the first non-music major accepted by the lU School of Music after presenting his senior project — multimedia electronic music and lights with live music. He had written the music himself and is currently putting together electronic systems and com- posing. Some students work in the Bloomington com- munity while completing their senior projects. One girl worked in the mayor ' s office and with Channel 7 in the graphics department, and is now in the graduate graphic design program in the School of Art and Architecture at Yale Uni- versity. According to Christoph anyone who has the time to present an idea and the desire to work hard is material for the program. FU is a place that ' s geared to the individual if that individual is willing to plan and work on what they want to do; even if it means banging on faculty member ' s doors to ask for help. We ' ve graduated a ventriloquist and a student who ' s final project was entitled Farewell to Erin; An Eth- nomusicological Study of Traditional Irish Music in the U.S. We ' ll help anyone. All that we ask is that they be creative, imaginative, and interested in what they want to accomplish. 256 Besides the hundreds of classes offered by lU ' s six undergraduate schools, the univer- sity also has several programs offering students alternate ways of learning. They also offer new and or exotic topics for study. In an effort to break down the large university classes and make them more personal, three resi- dence halls conduct classes. The Foster Residen- tial Education Program, the McNutt Project and the MRC Living-Learning Center offer intro- ductory courses such as history, speech, anthro- pology, psychology and mathematics for resi- dents and non-residents. The purpose of the programs, according to John Gredy, advisor of the Foster Program is to break down this large University and bring professors into residence halls to develop a closer relationship with the students. Classes in all three programs are sections of regular University courses but much smaller. A typical class averages 25 to 30 students. Every- one knows everyone else really well, Richard McComb, a Foster Project committee member, said. It ' s an advantage because you learn more in that kind of atmosphere. MRC also offers seminars on poetry, creative writing, music and legal techniques. Students must apply to the Living-Learning Center for this project. Participants in the program must also take one experimental course a year. The project is designed to bridge the gap be- tween formal academic education and residence hall living, David Burnett, director of the Living-Learning Center said. Another alternate learning opportunity is of- fered by Union Board. Free University, whose slogan is no fees, no grades, no credit, is designed to connect people wanting to teach or learn with the resources they need. All Free U classes are taught on a volunteer basis, although rooms are provided for most classes. Free stencil and mimeographing services are also provided. All classes are free although students may have to provide their own supplies. Free U, which is in its sixth year, offers a wide range of topics each semester. Courses range from mechanical ones such as Basic Foreign Car Mechanics and Housewiring: A Practical Training Course to theoretical classes such as Design for Joy and Introduction to Socialist Theory . Free U offers a little bit of everything for everybody — Astrology: A Beginning, A Lesbian ' s View of Lesbianism, Appreciation of Firesign Theatre. So whether you want a smaller class with more srudent teacher contact, a class convenient to your dorm or knowledge about some unusual topic, just look around. lU probably has it — somewhere. -.■SBLr S HTs:? Da id lav University Reorganization i Indiana University underwent a top-level ad- ministrative reorganization in 1974-75. The change in the administrative structure was designed to weld together the Bloomington and Indianapolis campuses and to provide a direct Imk berw. ' een the regional campuses and the office of President John Ryan. The trustees aaion June 29 on reorganization caused reaction from several faculty members, and there was a special faculty council meeting called to informally discuss the situation. Af- terward, both the council ' s agenda committee and faculty affairs committee sent letters to lU officials protesting the procedure used for reor- ganization. On July 11, 1974 a special faculty student committee was set up by the Bloomington Fac- ulty Council Agenda Committee to study the issue and implications of reorganization. The committee was chaired by Dr. Kenneth Gros Louis, chairman of the English department. The committee was organized to review the docu- ments peninent to the proposed reorganization of the University, to select and categorize the most important issues for the faculty and students in the proposed reorganization, gover- nance, personnel policies and administration ' recruitment, salary, promotion, tenure), cur- ricular and program, service, library and transfer of credit. In addition, the committee was to ad- vise the Agenda Committee on the best way to submit the fruits of its labor to the first meeting of the Bloomington Faculty Council on Sep- tember 3. The committee submitted their findings through a special report during the September 3, 1974 Faculty Council meeting. These were their recommendations: Motion I The Bloomington Faculty Council, affirming the Legislative Authority of the Faculty as defined in Article rV, Section I6B of the Faculty Con- stitution (I973 Academic Hand- book.) condemns the actions of President John W. Ryan in not seeking proper faculty consultation prior to requesting formal action by the Board of Trustees ot June 29, 1974, on his proposals affecting the structure ot the University with reference to academic matters. Motion II The Bloomington Faculty Council requests that the Board of Trustees take no further action on President Ryan ' s recommendations on June 29, 1974, until appropriate Faculty Council and Student Government Committees, and faculty and stu- dents on the Bloomington campus, have discussed the issues and implications ot the reorganization and transmitted their comments to the President. Motion III The Bloomington Faculty Council, while noting that many specific issues need to be resolved, endorses the organizational and directional principle of the reorganization plan increasing linkages and coordina- tion between the Bloomington and Indianapolis campuses of Indiana University. Motion IV The Bloomington Faculty Council requests that it be permitted to select at least one of its members to represent it at all meetings of the Administrative Committee. Motion V The Bloomington Faculty Council requests that the Secretary of the Board of Trustees send copies of Board agendas to the members of the Agenda Comminee of the Council at the same time copies are mailed to the Trustees themselves; and that the Faculty Council Agenda Committee be granted an allocation of the time at each Board meeting to transmit faculty con- cerns, questions and opinions to the Board. Motion VI The Bloomington Faculty Council requests that the Board of Trustees re-establish a Faculty Affairs Com- mittee ' of the Board to meet with Faculty members at a designated time prior to each Board meeting for the purpose ofdiscussing faculty concerns. As motions were passed and recommended except I, which expressed the Faculty Council ' s disappointment rather than con- demnation with President Ryan and III, which was tabled until more information was made available to the council. The third motion was endorsed at a later Faculty Council meeting. One student perhaps best expressed the common concern among students and faculty that it was not what was done, but how it was done. Glenn W. Irwin 258 Lack of solicited input was also one of the major reasons J. Gus Liebenow, vice president and dean for academic affairs resigned on June 17. Part of the reorganization plan was to elimi- nate his office. Ryan had established a task force on reor- ganization headed by Prof York Willbern. This took place five months prior to his recommen- dations and subsquent trustee action. One expla- nation of the task force suggested their lack of soliciting input into the reorganization plan was the budget and political pressures that forced the administration to move sooner than they had an- ticipated. The administration explained there was pres- sure in the 73-74 session of the Indiana legisla- ture to make lUPUI a separate state university and there was reason to believe pressure would continue in the future. It was also budget making time for the university and therefore im- portant that the new administrative structure be Edgar G. Williams firmly established for preparation of the budget. New top administrative positions were approved while eliminating others. W. George Pinnell became the excutive vice president; two new academic vice president spots were filled by Byrum Carter, Bloomington, and Glenn Irwin, Indianapolis. J.D. MulhoUand became universi- ty treasurer one ot two positions formerly held by Pinnell; and Edgar Williams was appointed vice-president for the administration. Eliminated in the reorganization were two positions for vice president for academic affairs and chancellors for the two main campuses and vice chancellor for regional campuses. The reorganization die has been cast and it appears it will remain unbroken although debate over the administration decision making process continues. Only time will tell whether the reorganization is economically and academi- cally beneficial. Byrum E. Carter. 259 260 John Hopper ■ Athletics Soccer 262 Cross Country 266 Football 268 Gymnastics 274 Wrestling 275 Basketball 276 Swimming 286 Diving 290 Rugby 292 Baseball 296 Tennis 298 Golf 299 Track 300 Women ' s Sports 304 Intramurals 314 ■ Da id lav Soccer Jerr ' Yeagley sat at a hotel restaurant table with a blank stare on his face. It had been a long season for the 35 year-old Indiana soccer coach. As he sat at the table, sipping cup after cup of coffee on that cold, wet December morn- ing, he knew full well that the long season had a good chance of ending in a few hours. After 13 years of waiting, 11 slowly building the lU soccer program, Yeagley had reached his objective — the National GjUegiate Athletic Association ' s post season soccer tourney. The hotel restaurant was a little more than a mile away from the field where in a little more than a few hours Indiana would lose in its first attempt at the national title. The winner in that game was Southern IIlinois-EdwardsviUe by a 2-0 score. A few hours before at the restaurant, Yeagley had said, They could beat us 6-0, or more. Yeagley s knowledge of the Southern Illinois team, laden with Olympic talent, stemmed from the fact he and the Cougers ' coach, Bob Guelker, have been co-owners and operators of a summer soccer camp. Yeagley knew Guelker ' s style, and his players, some who were counselors at the camp and others Yeagley met at SIU during the summer tryouts for the 1976 Olympic team. After the tourney loss, Yeagley with instant replays of the game flashing through his mind, spoke with pride in saying, We showed we could play with the best. We ' ll be back. Yeagley got his team to that prestigious pla- teau after an eventful season which saw Indiana score more goals (73), win more games (15), and chalk up more shutouts (9), than ever before, including its first game of the year, a 1-0 victory over the University of Mexico. As he did 21 other times during the ensuing season, Steve Burks scored the winning goal against Mexico. Burks, only a sophomore, broke the 20 goal mark he set his first year as a Hoosier. But there was more to the 1974 Hoosier soccer team than the scoring whiz from Tor- rance, California. There was a young defense, which recorded nine shutouts to break the total of eight set the year before. All five of the defenders were newcomers, but they showed skilled players can blend easily as they com.bined for a record number of shutouts. The quintet included three freshmen (goal keeper Gary Feld, wing, fullbacks Frank Eichinger and Jim Mercurio) and a pair of junior college transfers (Jim Waldschimidt and Tom Redmond). The goalkeeper usually gets a great deal of the credit for shutouts just as he gets a great deal of blame for the losses. But if credit is paid off in honors, Redmond was the key to Indiana ' s defense. The lanky junior with an uncanny abili- ty to practically leap tall buildings with the proficiency of Superman topped off a season chock full of honors by receiving All-American honors. Redmond also was named the Hoosiers ' most valuable player plus being voted the MVP for the state tourney Indiana won. The defenders were only a part of the numerous newcomers Yeagley had on his sec- ond varsity team. On the front line, freshman John Katsinis scored 14 goals to give the Hoosiers more scoring punch than Burks. At the season ' s outset, another freshman, David Freud, gave Indiana the patience it sorely lacked in its three losses. However, Freud ran into misformne when the University ruled him ineligible, pointing to his attendence at Hebrew University in Israel without proper transfer, a violation of eligibility rules. So Freud was gone after three games and dependable senior Tim McGonagle replaced him. The other forward was sophomore Malaysian Azmil Yassin who suffered through an erratic year. The halfback positions, Indiana ' s Achilles heel for so many years, were anchored by co-cap- tain Bob Kirchner and Gary Fresen, the former being a converted forward and the latter an ex- fullback. They were backed up by the play of another newcomer, Tom Hussey, and Kim Viera, who came off a severe ankle injury to have a fairly good year. Indiana made it into the Midwest Regional of the NCAA tourney, losing to Cleveland State in a game that would have clinched a berth. After long days of fretting, Yeagley ' s 1 3-year dream of returning to the tourney where he played three successive years for ' West Chester State, came true. It didn ' t come without the raised eyebrows of some coaches who looked down on Indiana, saying the Hoosiers played too weak a schedule. With the handwriting on the waU, Yeagley made moves to improve the Hoosiers ' standing in that light with the inclusion of well-respected Akron and national power St. Louis to next season ' s schedule. An additional schedule change with plans for a four-team Big Ten Classic figures to aid in the overall strength- ening of Indiana ' s 1975 schedule. With a more respectable season of opponents ahead in the upcoming season, the return of all but two starters from the 1974 team and the high prospects of another good recruiting year, Yeagley ' s dream for a national title could be realized in the third try at varsity status soccer. Co-captain Bob Kirchner is swamped by elated team- mates after scoring a goal. i(a Rick Wood 263 Juhn Katshiis i above I challenges for a free hall while teammates Steve Burks and Tim McGonagle stand ready to assist. Bob Kirchner (top) chases the ball down the wing. Erv Gross consoles coach Jerry Yeagley i right! after the team ' s loss to Cleveland State. 264 Season Record INDIANA 1, Mexico INDIANA 11, Notre Dame 1 INDIANA 7, Dayton INDIANA 2, Goshen INDIANA 7, Purdue 1 INDIAN A , Ball State INDIANA 2, Wabash INDIANA 10, Michigan 1 INDIANA 7, Cincinnati INDIANA 6, DePauw INDIANA 2, Kentucky 1 Eastern Illinois 2, INDIANA 1 INDIANA 4, MacMurray 1 INDIANA 2, Circle Campus 1 Cleveland State 2, INDIANA 1 INDIANA 5, Earlham INDIANA % Michigan State S.I.U. 2, INDIANA (NCAA) Pholograph Rick Wood 265 Cross Country It is one of the inescapable laws of physics that what goes up must eventually come down. It was Sir Issac Newton who so postulated in the late 17th Century, and the startling events of 1974 have done nothing to disprove this theory. Never before have so many climbed to such Olympian heights, only to sink so low. Richard Nixon ' s comeuppance or comedow- nance, if you please — unraveled slowly, but the end was sudden. Like the perfect punctuation mark to the wrenching affairs in Washington, Evel Knievel provided comic relief in star- spangled metaphore by dive-t ombing an Idaho moraine called the Snake River Canyon. And while perhaps less cosmic, only slightly less surprising was the swift decent from the throne room of long distance running of the lU cross country team. For two years Hoosier runners had dominated cross country in the midwest so completely that opposing teams comf)eted primarily for second place. Indiana had won the Big Ten title two 266 years in a row, and lU Coach Sam Bell figured the third would be charming. But fi ' om the start it was not meant to be. Gone were Bell ' s two splendid Ail-Americans, Pat Manders and Dan Hayes, and as the days passed, gone were their heirs apparent. At season ' s end, the roster of the lU cross country team read like a Who ' s Who of the Chronically Disabled. After two impressive early showings at Southern Illinois and in the six-team Kentucky Invitational, senior Steve Heidenreich suffered a sore knee that hobbled him for much of the remainder of the season. Heidenreich was ex- pected to be the Hoosiers ' No 1 runner, but was once again bitten by the injury jinx that plagued him throughout his college career. Pat Cleary was next on the disabled list with a pulled hamstring muscle, followed in order by sophomore Rich Magley (strained back) and Phil Wysong (old back injury). At the begin- ning of the season I thought we had good poten- tial, Bell said later, but then Heidenreich went, and, well . . . All the injuries put pressure on freshman standout Gary Washington, and he performed admirably. Still, without co-captains Hei- denreich and Wysong, the Hoosiers were without the experience so vital to distance run- ning, where as great a premium is put on strate- gy as on stamina. It was a situation where the two guys who were supposed to be our leaders weren ' t well, Bell said glumly. For freshman Washington the season was a bitter pill to swallow. Every year we heard about how everything went in Indiana ' s favor, he said. This year nothing. Everything came tumbling down. When all was said and done, lU finished with a 2-5 dual meet record, low finishes in all the big meets — including a seventh in the Big Ten meet, and didn ' t qualify anyone for the NCAA finals, which, ironically were run on the lU course. Season Record Southern IHinois 30, INDIANA 25 INDIANA 28, Illmois 27 Miami (0.) 34, INDIANA 21 INDIANA 29, Mmnesota 26 INDIANA 42, Wisconsin H INDIANA 4 3, Quantico Marines 15 INDIANA 36, Penn State 2 1 Kentuck) ' Invitational — 1st Indiana Invitational ith Big State M eet — 2nd Central Collegiate Championships — 6th Big Ten Championships — th n 267 Football Lee Corso is a nice guy. With a big, friendly smile and a twinkle in his eye, he hustles trom handshake to handshake. He slaps a lot of folks on the back and is good at making them smile too. But during the 1974 season his winning smile was sorely tested. A lonely victory did little to encourage fans, as the win-loss record dropped even below the 2-9 performance of 1973. The family concept will work! a poster reads in his Assembly Hall office, But first we ' ve got to bleed. Even after two seasons under Corso, the bleeding is not over, he says. His first year the football team was intimidated and cruelly humiliated on two or three occasions, he remembers, but his second year, despite a dismal record of loss after loss, his team was not blown away in any single game. Despite a worsening record from 2-9 to 1-10, GDrso says his team is vasdy improving, evidenced by the higher quali- ty of the defeats. The defeats will not only get better, G rso promises, but soon blossom into outright vic- tories. You compare the team in 1974 to what it ' s done in the past, he says, they ' ve got pride now, and determination, and they can give any team in the Big Ten a good football game. Just a linle bit better next time, next year, next season. It gives Lee Q)rso great pleasure to talk about the things his team is going to do. After all, 1 come from a 25-2 record at Louis- ville to a 3-19 record at lU, Corso says, sud- denly breaking into laughter. But in two years lU will beat Ohi o State, Corso predicts, admit- ting great admiration for Ohio State Football coach ' Woody Hayes. Susie Eaton 268 David lay Banking on the future Corso continues fighting tradition « 270 In addition to beating Ohio State, Corso also forsees a future when lU will regain the Old Oaken Bucket by beating Purdue. And what will Corso be doing to deserve all this victory? Nothing. We ' ll just be doing the things we ' ve always done, he says. Except losing. The losing stops right now. Corso sees the lU future football team as one experienced as a result of his foresight in playing younger players, and a team enhanced by what Corso thinks are 27 dynamite new recruits. The recruiting has gone so well this year, Corso says, parriy because it is his second year recruiting for the Hoosiers, and like his 18-year- olds, he has gained experience. Not that the going have been all rosy an the recruiting trail, he admits. For one thing, it ' s hard to put together a good section after a 1-10 record. But despite all of it, the caliber of the team is greatly improving. What does a coach like Lee Corso look for in a David Jay high school player? You get yourself a good player with pride, a kid who believes in him- self. To hear him tell it, he ' s got himself 27 proud, confident high school seniors just itching to claw their way onto the astroturf at the lU foot- ball stadium and bleed a little. With all those good things to look forward to, Corso isn ' t as happy talking about the past, but his firs t two years at lU are there to haunt him nonetheless. In 1973 the scores were abyssmal, but at least the attendance was high. Corso says with pride that during his first year at lU he gave the uni- versity its highest season of attendance at foot- ball games. And so what do they do . . . they cut my budget, he laughs. I can ' t figure it. I bring in the crowds, they cut my budget, and then the crowds drop. When they start cutting the budget of revenue sports, there ' s something wrong. The leadership of the 1974 Hoosier football team came from both the young and the veteran players. Denny Thomas (left), freshman linebacker standout, helped from the bench as uell as the field. Veteran Willie Jones (number 15. belowi switched success- fully to the defense, and Denny Cremeens (center left) provided flashes of brilliance such as this run against West Virginia. And the coaches (Corso and Hal Hunter, far left) pitched in for Corso ' s second build- ing season. M And the crowds dropped. The home atten- dance dropped between 1973 and 1974 from 241,981 to 189,756. The team kept losing and the crowds kept getting thinner, Corso says, and he can ' t lure them back because his usual flam- boyance has been checked by a smaller budget. Even the season ' s one shining bright spot did not prove a lasting benefit to the attendance records. The great Minnesota game of 1974, the Hoosier ' s only win of the season, was a smashing, unbelievable, indisputable 34--3 victo- ry over the Golden Gophers of Minnesota. And it was something more. It was the Homecoming game. This meant that out in the stands, watching in red blazers with hopeful hearts, were thousands of alumni and statewide supporters ripe for the plucking. At the homecoming game you want to impress the alumni and, even though he couldn ' t seem to do it again, Corso did so in 1974. The homecoming game is important, espe- cially if it is the only game you win all year, but -i .; r.l -4 — .= ■. Lee Corso above everyone else will admit that the Big One is the rivalry for the Oaken Bucket against Purdue, traditionally the last big game of the season just around Thanksgiving. 197-4 marked lU ' s third consecutive loss. That ole bucket is laying somewhere in West Lafayette, and, by God, Lee Corso means to have it back. A sign above the entrance to his ofifice reads: What have you done today to . . . Beat Purdue. It ' s an old sign, lett over before the last time Purdue beat us, but it reflects what Corso is thinking about. A majority of the time, he says, lU will grab that bucket in the future. In 1974 they lost it, 37-17 before 63,63 cheering Boilermaker fans in West Lafayette. The rest of the scores look equally dismal. lU was skunked by West Virginia 2-i to 0, which was the most spectacular of the season ' s shut- outs, but by no means the only one. In a conference game, the Fighting lllini pranced over the Hoosiers 16 to 0. They were iL Rick Wood bad games, Corso admits, bad failures, bad losses — but they weren ' t humiUating. he quickly con- tends. Against Arizona the Hoosiers went down 35- 20, against Kentucky, a definite psychological rival, they fell 28-22. When Ohio State ( the team Corso intends to beat in rwo years) massacred TU 49-9, Corso simply said, They were just too good for us. He now looks back at those losses, and at the Minnesota victory, with remorse. His eyes open wide and his speech quickens when he talks about the games against Michigan and Michigan State. In both games ILf lost, went down to defeat before thousands of people, whittled their place in histor} ' as the sole holders ot the last place position in the Big Ten in 19 4. But. Corso, says, we lost both of those games, but we could just as easily have won. We came out and played good, hard football both times giving each team a good game, not giving up. Season Record Illinois 16, INDIANA Arizona 35, INDIANA 20 Kentucky 28, INDIANA 22 West Virginia 24, INDIANA INDIANA 34, Minnesota 3 Ohio State 49, INDIANA 9 Wisconsin 35, INDIANA 25 Michigan 21, INDIANA 7 Northwestern 24, INDIANA 22 Michigan State 19, INDIANA 10 Purdue 38, INDIANA 17 Rick Wood 272 Photographs.David lav 273 Gymnastics When the coach of the team says he doesn ' t think his team has the leadership and ma- turity of past teams, one has to wonder . . .But Coach Jim Brown of the lU men ' s gymnastics team said so, and added, We didn ' t expect to have a good season. Not only a judge of his players, the coach was also a psychic. His team had a relatively bad season. The 5-6 Hoosiers were ranked in the top 20 in the nation until Jan. 24 when they lost to Illi- nois State. Coach Brown relented, With the exception of one tragic weekend at Northern Illinois and Wisconsin, it ' s been a better season than antici- pated. One weekend made the difference between a winning season and a losing season. Injuries played a big part in the Hoosier ' s disappointing season. Landy Fernandez and Jack Malmedahl, both seniors, suffered shoulder injuries. Sophomore Dave Frigstad injured his neck at the Ohio State meet. All of the players recovered, but not until the team, sorely missing them, lost three meets that cursed weekend. Fred Harms, senior, was the Hoosier ' s most consistent player, scoring in the high 8 ' s or low 9 ' s every meet. Despite an upward trend in team morale fol- lowing the injuries, the Hoosiers finished fifth at the Big Ten championships in Ann Arbor, Mich, in March. Season Record INDIANA 200.15, Ball State 198.80 Illinois State 209.05, INDIANA 200.95 Northern Illinois 205.75, INDIANA 195.60 Wisconsin 197,10, INDIANA 187.80 Wisconsin-LaCrosse 189.35, INDIANA 187.80 INDIANA 187.80, Wheaton College 166.05 INDIANA 200.10, Illinois 197.45 iMichigan 208.10, INDIANA 198.60 INDIANA 200.70, Ohio State 184.75 INDIANA 202.50, Michigan State 196.95 Indiana State 394.90, INDIANA 354. 15 Windy City Invitational — 12th Big Ten Meet — 5th Landy Fernandez ' rings) champion 274 Mon(e Hosletler Wrestling Bob Cohn W ' ait til next year, just wait until next year. Such words are often heard from an athletic team after a narrowly lost championship or a bad season. It was the latter case for the lU wres- tling team in 19 4- 5. The Hoosiers compiled a 6-20-1 record and tied for eighth place in the Big Ten. The record was better than the 4-22-2 showing in 1973- 4, but the Big Ten finish was a repeat. However, the record doesn ' t tell the whole story. It doesn ' t tell how junior 118-pound John Hobbs missed nearly half the season with a sprained ankle; how lU rarely had a legitimate heavyweight, or that there were only two senior regulars. Hobbs ' injury had a big effect on the Hoosiers, as his ability to get lU started with a win was sorely missed. And, when he finally healed, his competition was at its peak, and he was just getting started — again. It was worse at the other end of the weight spectrum. ' While senior Marry Hutsell set an lU record with 33 wins in the 126-pound class, four different wrestlers could produce only two wins in the heavyweight class. Mark Susmilch, al- though weighing 190 pounds gave it a shot for a while. The freshman little big man gave it 100 per cent, but was overpowered by opponents who occasionally weighed in at more than 300 pounds. Susmilch went O-P at heavyweight, with 12 losses coming via pins. Hutsell and freshman Sam Komar provided most of the smiles. Hitsell placed fourth in the Big Ten at 126 and qualified for the nationals, but went no farther. Komar also qualified for the NCAA by win- ning the Big Ten at 1 34. He lost both of his matches there but finished with a 2-20-11-1 record. Season Record Wisconsin 33, INDIANA 3 INDIANA 22, Kansas State 12 Miami 24, INDIANA 14 Southern Illinois 26, INDIANA 17 INDIANA 30, Tennessee 12 Illinois 23, INDIANA 17 Kentucky 43, INDIANA 3 Cleveland State 36, INDIANA 6 INDIANA 22, Florida International 18 Iowa 44, INDIANA 3 Westchester State 25, INDIANA 12 INDIANA 34, Indiana Central 18 Rhode Island 29, INDIANA 1 1 Northwestern 38, INDIANA 1 1 Michigan State 28, INDIANA 6 INDIANA 23, Alabama 15 Lehigh 33, INDIANA 6 Purdue 28, INDIANA 9 Michigan 27, INDIANA 11 Ohio State 24, INDIANA 24 Montclair State 31, INDIANA 9 INDIANA 19, Ball State 19 INDIANA 22, Eastern Illinois 18 Minnesota 34, INDIANA 7 Southern Illinois 24, INDIANA 9 Big Ten Meet — 8th, 28 ' 2 points Indiana State 31, INDIANA 8 Sam Komar (134) champion Purdue 28, INDIANA 10 Sunshine Open ith 275 Basketball Monte Hosteller C(jach of the Year Bob Knight, although something oj a cheerleader during a timeout rjr halftime, ignores the noise and scratches out a last-minute play while the team stokes up frjr Mideast regional play in Dayton against Kentucky. lU humiliated the Kentuckians at home. 98-74. earli- er in the season, hut when the two teams met again in Dayton. Ohio during the NCAA tournament. Ken- tucky handed the Hoosiers their first defeat of the season, 92-90. erasing the chance for a national title that was expected to follow an undefeated Big Ten season. When lU basketball coach Bob Knight was in his first season as head coach at Army in 1964, Joe Lapchick, the former coach at St. John ' s Uni- versity and of the New York Knicks, took Knight aside and gave him the benefit of his many years of experience. It is a lesson that Knight remembers vividly. He told me that in one respect, coaching is an inevitable failure, Knight recalls. You get through the season and make it into the NIT or the NCAA, which in itself is a great accomplish- ment, and yet, you may not win. The lU basketball team ' s 1974-75 season ended in disappointment with a 92-90 loss to Kentucky in the NCAA Mideast Regional at Dayton, Ohio, but a failure it was not. 276 The Hoosiers produced one ot the most re- markable seasons in the history of Big Ten basketball, running up a 31-0 record, until the loss to Kentucky, and winning games by a margin ot 23.3 points. Including three wins at the end ot last season, lU ' s 34-game winning streak was both longest in the nation this season and longest in the history ot the Big Ten. On January 7, the Hoosiers were proclaimed the No. 1 team in the country by the Associated Press and United Press International, and it was there they stayed for 1 1 weeks, unbeaten and un- bowed. It is somewhat ironic that the resolve that held the streak together sprang from a loss to Michigan for the right to represent the league in the NCAA tournament last year. The Hoosiers were forced to go to the inaugural Collegiate Commissioners Tournament in St. Louis, a tour- nament they described as for losers. It was in St. Louis that lU beat the best of the losers, including Southern California 85-60 in the championship game, and vowed next year would be ditterent. With his starting lineup intact. Knight was able to dictate a more aggressive detense, which he balanced with an alternately running and pa- tient offense. With 6-foot-6 Bobby Wilkerson and 6-foot- 3 Quinn Buckner at the guard spots, the Hoosiers were often able to deny their oppo- nents the luxury ot even passing the ball under- neath to the big men. Looking awesome in its opener Nov. 30, lU ran off a 12-0 lead on Tennessee Tech and coasted to a 113-60 win. Scott May scored 22 points, and the Hoosiers shot 55.4 per cent from the field. Blessed with the most robust comple- ment of shooters in the school ' s history, the Hoosiers would wind up the season shooting a remarkable 50.6 per cent. Only tour days later, the Hoosiers were in a make-or-break battle at Kansas. The Jayhawks bolted to an early lead ( I wasn ' t even sure we were going to be able to stay in the game, Knight said later), but the Hoosiers forced an overtime and May poured in nine ot his 29 pomts in the extra period to win it, 74-70. Season Record INDIANA 1 1 3, Tennessee Tech 60 INDIANA 74, Kansas 70 INDIANA 98, Kentucky 74 INDIANA 94, Notre Dame 84 INDIANA 90, Texas AsM 55 INDIANA 92, Toledo 70 INDIANA 71, Creighton 53 INDIANA 97, Nebraska 60 INDIANA 98, Florida 84 INDIANA 102, Ohio State 71 INDIANA 69, Hawaii 52 INDIANA 107, Michigan State 55 INDIANA 90, Michigan 76 INDIANA 102, Iowa 49 INDIANA 79, Minnesota 59 INDIANA 82, Northwestern 56 INDIANA 89, Wisconsin 69 INDIANA 104, Purdue 71 INDIANA 73, Ilhnois 57 INDIANA 72, Ohio State 66 INDIANA 74, Michigan 48 INDIANA 79, Iowa 56 INDIANA 69, Minnesota 54 INDIANA 82, Northwestern 58 INDIANA 93, Wisconsin 58 INDIANA 83, Purdue 82 INDIANA112,IUinois89 INDIANA 86, Ohio State 78 INDIANA 94, Michigan State 79 NCAA TOURNEY INDIANA 81, Ohio State 71 KENTUCKY 92, INDIANA 90 Sophomore Kent Benson and junior Jim Crews take just enough time to scout the dork and check the score before picking themselves up to polish of] another Hoosier victory. 278 David lay In what may have been the costliest victory of this or any season, lU humiUated Kentucky, 98-74, Dec. 7 in Assembly Hall. Knight cleared his bench with an 88-57 lead and 8:36 to play, but by then the damage was done. It was a disgrace Kentucky could not — and would not — forget. We got com pletely whipped every possible way you can be beat, Kentucky coach Joe B. Hall said. The loss had a particularly salutary effect on the Kentucky players. When Knight and Hall got involved in a heated exchange of words over a cuffing Knight administered to the back of Hall ' s head, Kentucky guard Jimmy Dan Conner fumed. Indiana has a great team, Conner said, too bad they have a kid for a coach. Photographs Rick Wood Bob VC ' ilkersvii labovei tenses i aitticipatioii as an oncoming player threatens to slip past him touarjs the hackhoard. John Laskouski. Bob K ' ilkerson. Scott Ma). Quinn Buckner. Kent Benson and Steie Green {left I enjoy the action from the bench. Scott -AUi strolls after the ball during a break in the action at As- sembly Hall I upper lefti ubile Coach Knight ' upper right! gets into a heated argument with Kentucky Coach Joe B. Hall. Susie Eaton 279 Scott May named AU-American The Hoosiers had an easy time disposing of Purdue at home early in the season. 104-11 ■ When the tables were turned and the squad traveled to West Lafayette, things were different. The Hoosiers won one of the most exciting games of the season 83-82. but lost AU- American Scott May to a broken arm. May was also named Big Ten most valuable player. After that the scores began to get lopsided, even embarrassing, lU beat Texas A M, a team that wound up winning the Stjuthwest Conference title, 90-55. The Hoosiers beat Toledo 92-70 behind Steve Green ' s 29 points, then won the Indiana Classic by beating Creighton, 71-53, and Nebraska, 97-60. In the Rainbow Classic in Hawaii, in late December, lU dispatched Florida 98-84; Ohio State 102-71; and leied back the hometown Ha- waiians, 69-52. The Big Ten season got off to a bizarre start, when at first it appeared the Hoosiers would be without three of their starters for the opener at Michigan State, then 10 Spartan players walked out on MSU coach Gus Ganakas leaving him with only one natural starter. Four lU players. 280 three of them starters, were not at Assembly Hall when it came time for the team bus to leave for the airport, and Knight angrily decided to leave without them. The players were hastily found, and at the airport Knight learned that they had been unavoidably detained and had tried to call him. I learned from that never to get angry before I have all the facts, Knight said later. The Spartan jayvee team was no match for lU, and the Hoosiers won, 107-55 without really trying. Two days later, lU shot 61.8 per cent, got 26 points from Green and 20 more from May and 19 from Laskowski, and beat Michigan at Ann Arbor, 90-76. lU then had the fowa Hawkeyes over easy, 102-49, forcing 36 fowa turnovers and holding the Hawks to 26 percent shooting. The Hoosiers won their next 1 1 games with only Ohio State getting close at the finish, 72-66. On Feb., lU beat Purdue 8.3-82 at West Lafayette to clinch the Big Ten title in what was one of the most exciting games of the college season played anywhere. Steve Green had his first big scoring night since his month-long bout with the flu, hitting 13 of 15 shots and scoring 30 points. But it the Hoosiers won that battle, it was at Purdue that they also probably lost the war. Early in the first half, forward Scott May, who would later be named to four different All- American teams, suffered a broken radial bone in his left arm, and was for all practical purposes lost for the season. May appeared in four more games wearing a soft cast, but lacked the quickness and mobility to be a factor in lU ' s tournament drive. Lest any- one underestimate the significance of his loss, May scored 25 points in the first game against Kentucky; he had two points and was not a factor in the loss at Dayton. The Hoosiers won their last three regular season games without much trouble, thanks mosdy to Green ' s timely scoring and Las- kowski ' s impeccable work in May ' s spot. In the first round of the NCAA tournament, lU sur- vived a shaky first-hall shooting performance and went on to whip Texas-El Paso, 78-53. 281 282 Rick Wood Despite the 23 rebound effort of Benson (far left I. the NCAA regionals at Dayton proved to he the Hoosier ' . last effort. As the time runs out. Coach Knight winces and the bench droops (top). The glum looks and consolation continued as Knight (above) and Green (left) meet their families outside of the arena. Kentucky kills Hoosier hopes of championship At Dayton, the Hoosiers quickly disposed of Oregon State, 81-71, a team that had beaten them a year earlier. Green was his usual self, hit- ting 14 of 20 shots for 34 points. Sophomore center Kent Benson added 23 points and nine rebounds, and Wilkerson chipped in 10 assists. The win set the stage for the long awaited rematch between lU and Kentucky. The regional championship game had all the ear-marks of a grudge -match, and the back-and- forth feud erupted in the first minute — when Green and Kentucky ' s Bob Guyette got into a shoving match during a break in the action. Knight decided to start May, expecting a zone that May would be able to shoot over, but hastily abandoned that strategy when Kentucky opened with a man-to-man defense. May played only the first seven minutes of the game. The Hoosiers struggled valiantly down to the last gasp to shake loose from the pesky Wildcats, but on this day Kentucky was a better team. The Kentuckians seemed unable to miss during the final five minutes, and Buckner was left to lament later, They came up with some great shots in tough times. With one second remaining and Kentucky ' s Jimmy Dan Gunner dribbling the clock out. Freshman Wayne Radford jumped on Conner ' s back and wrestled him to the floor. It was just so frustrating, Radford said sadly later. I had to take it out on someone. For senior Steve Green, who was assessed a technical foul for allegedly slapping an official across the arms (a charge Green vigorously de- nied), the loss was a bitter pill to swallow. ' I ' m not even reflecting on the game now, he said, except maybe the little things we could have done differently to win the game. I guess Til be thinking about those things for the next 34 years. 283 Bob Knight Coach of the Year And the light shineth in darkness: and the darkness comprehe-tided it not. New Testament, John 1,5 There is a remarkable symmetry in the light and darkness that define Bob Knight ' s emo- tional spectrum. But it is an uneasy symmetry — without center — for he eschews no place so vigorously as the middle ground. He is a man unsullied by compromise; a curious hybrid of volcano and vulnerability. Knight ' s special color blindness bathes his world in white and black and erases the ocean of gray into which he sees other men slowly fading. Growing up with Bobby Knight, the enfant terrible of college basketball has not always been easy. Sometimes I do dumb things, Knight says. According to those who know him best. Knight is a 34-year-old man-child struggling to shed his emotional baby fat. His entire life has been an emotional roller coaster, says Fred Taylor, who coached Knight at Ohio State. With him it ' -s all peaks and valleys, and very little in between. Despite his tempestuous past and the reputa- tion that goes with it, Knight had fewer tech- nical fouls in the 1974-75 season than any other Big Ten Gaach. Sure I have a temper, Knight says, But I don ' t think that ' s bad. It ' s when a temper con- trols the person, instead of the person control- ling the temper, that 1 think a problem exists. Christ had a temper, adds Knight. ' Christ destroyed the tables in the temple, so when you start talking about people who have a temper, I think you have to start there. Don ' t misunder- stand me. I ' m not trying to draw any parallels between myself and Christ. What I ' m saying is that ' s one of the things I find somewhat ridicu- lous for people to make a point of If we chas- tised every person in history who was temper- mental, we might have had very little progress. There has to be in each one of us, in order to be successful, a willingness not just to accept those things that we feel are inadequate, but to do something about them. That is ofi:en mis- construed as temperament. I ' ve always felt that it is necessary when trying to reach a particular end, to be emphatic about the means that are to be used to reach that end. Knight is a stern judge of character, and he countenances little deviance from the rigid set of rules that define his own truth. He demands a great deal of himself and his players, and expects no less from others. Often he is disappointed. I don ' t like people very weU, says Knight, because most of them lack intestinal fortitude or they lack integrity. I ' ll tell you something about people — they don ' t like to have anybody to stand up to them. People cannot, for the most part tolerate someone who tells them to go jump in the lake. I ' m impressed with people who stand up to me. When they don ' t, I have very little respect for them. Particularly when they ' re right and I ' m wrong. Sometimes I know I ' m wrong and they ' re right, and I challenge them just because I ' m interested in seeing what they ' ll do. Bob Knight is a man who uses the truth like a blunt instrument. You ' re going to know ex- actly how I feel about most things, he says, and that ' s neither good nor bad. That ' s just the way I am. I ' ve found in my dealings with people, that, for the most part, they really don ' t know how to handle honesty. People are in so many cases so devious themselves that when someone who is basically honest tells them this is the way it ' s going to be, they don ' t know how to handle it. For Knight, controversy has always been the stepchild of success. In less than 10 full seasons as head coach, Knight ' s teams have a combined record of 187-69, giving him an overall winning percentage of .734. At lU his record is even better. His four Hoosier teams have compiled an 85-19 record, which means Knight is batting .817 in Bloomington. Bob Knight loves to lose himself in a good book, and it is a rare occasion, indeed, during the season not to see him with his nose buried in a spy thriller or a Louis Lamour western. Reading is one of the few things that helps me take my mind off basketball during the season, he says. He does not consider the boundary between basketball and the real world impassable, and often makes his point in historical political met- aphor. I can ' t buy winning for its own sake, he says. Do you think anyone wanted to win worse than Richard Nixon? There ' s one of the all-time winners in history. But that guy would do any- thing to win, and I think that ' s been demon- strated. So winning, that ' s not the answer to me. Especially winning at the expense of ethics and morality. It ' s potential that you ' re striving to reach. If Nixon had been thinking about reaching the potential of the colossus that is the American government, we wouldn ' t have had all those problems. When I first started coaching, no one was more conscious of winning than I was. It was win, win, win, with me. Now I take a let ' s don ' t lose approach. I get far more discomfort from losing than I do pleasure in winning. Winning, to me, is simply a matter of having done a good job. You ' ve done what is expected of you, that ' s all. In the past few years. Knight ' s colorful lan- guage had drawn fire from his critics. While he readily admits he is not a religious man, it could also be accurately stated that his is on a first- hand basis with the Deity. I don ' t smoke, I don ' t drink and I don ' t advertise it, he says. I also don ' t go to church, but I think I possess far more Christian virtues than a lot of people who go to church every week. I ' m not 284 proud ot the fact that I use profanities, but my language is my language, and I don ' t apologize for it. If Knight isn ' t a church goer, his loyalt} ' to his players is unswerving, and most of them respond to him in kind. Steve Downing, who is now working for the City of Indianapolis after an un- successful try with the Boston Celtics, was the star of the 1973 Hoosier team that finished third in the NCAA tournament. Downing remembers Knight well. He ' s so intense about winning it ' s unreal, Downmg says. I think what we felt for him was a combination of respect and fear. On one hand I was scared to death ot him both years I played tor him, but at the same time I knew off the court he would do anything he could for me. People are always thinking about how they ' d like to be remembered, says Knight, and when I ' m done coaching and I leave Indiana Universi- ty, whether they ' ve liked me or disliked me, there are going to be two things they are going to be able to say about me. Number one is that I was honest, and number two is that I kissed no man ' s ass. I can ' t mold myself to be what other people want me to be. One thing more. When Bobby Knight wrote his autobiography IS years ago, he concluded on this note: My philosophy of life is very simple, he said. To become a success, you must set a ver) ' high goal tor yourself and be willing to work and give up many things to reach it. It ' s like a man who climbs a ladder. It he keeps his balance he will reach the top, but one misstep and he will fall. Nearer the top now than ever before. Bob Knight has no intention of upsetting the deli- cate balance. Bnh K)iight ' s first IC recruit was Steve Green, whose farewell to Assembly Hall and Hoosier fans was an emotional one. The senior co-captain went on to star in play in post season all-star games before enrolling in IV Dental School. 285 Swimming Tom Hickcox (below) plows down the lane to a victo- ry in the 400 relay at the Big Ten swim meet while coaches Hohie Billingstey and Doc Counsilman (right) check out the scores after winning the Big Ten championship. Photographs Bob Cohn 286 IU ' s varsity swim team won all 12 of their dual meets in the 1974-75 season, extending their consecutive streak to 112. They also won the Big Ten meet for the 15th consecutive year, swamping all their opponents. And they quali- fied a slew of swimmers for the NCAA meet. However, there was a big difference between this season and the one that preceeded it. lU lost the 1974 championship 339-338 to Southern California. In 1975 the Score was 344-274, a margin of 50 points, and Southern California won again. Losing the NCAA takes the pressure oft the team, lU coach Jim Doc Counsilman said. Considered the underdog by some, lU has used this season to get ready for the NCAA meet. Each season, each swimmer has short and long range goals, Counsilman said. Some of the short range goals include making cutoffs for the NCAAs and AAUs. The long range goals include winning NCAA individual events and the NCAA team title. To get that long-range goal of winning the NCAA, Counsilman trained the swimmers dif- ferently from last year. The kids are swimming a little bit harder and we ' re going a little bit farther in practice, Counsilman said. Last year, we got good times in the regular season for a psychological advan- tage; we did this so the other teams would think they ' re too good and they wouldn ' t try to win against us. This year, we haven ' t been doing fast times, so we ' ve got them worried that we ' re capable of doing better. The team cruised through the regular season, crushing the opposition by an average margin of 49 points, despite being flat, as Counsilman said after meets with Michigan and Michigan State, and leaving swimmers at home on many road meets, as against Ohio State and Wiscon- sin, for two examples. Down at Texas (against North Carolina State and Southern Methodist), we were worri- ed about the meet, Counsilman said. It was our only competition of the year. It didn ' t shape up to be too much competi- tion. Although N.C. State was ranked seventh in a pre-season poll by Swimming World maga- zine and SMU was ranked just below the top 10, lU crushed tx5th in a three-way meet Feb. 8 in Dallas, scoring 107 points to SMU ' s 48 and N.C. State ' s 45. At this year ' s Big Ten Meet at Royer Pool, lU rolled through the conference, scoring 583 points. Runner-up Wisconsin was 298 points back with 285. The Hoosiers lost only two swimming events and both diving events and set six meet records. L(K)king back on the season, Counsilman said he was the most impressed with swimmers Rick Thomas, freshman; Charlie Keaton, sophomore; and Bruce Dickson, junior. Thomas did an outstandmg job as a freshman, Counsilman said (Thomas qualified for five NCAA events). Dickson did great in the Big Ten, (he was the only triple winner in the meet, winning the 40(3-yard individual medley and the 500 and 1,650 yard freestyle, along with anchoring the winning 800-yard freestyle relay). Keaton improved greatly over the season (Keaton came back from shoulder surgery in 197.3, won both Big Ten breaststroke titles, and set a meet and pool record in the 200). But it wasn ' t just a three-man team last year. lU ' s depth and versatility also helped. Although all-around swimmer Fred Tyler, junior, did not qualify for every NCAA event as he did last year, due to off-and-on illness, he still qualified for six events for the NCAA. Mel Nash, junior, ably replaced graduate Mike Stamm in the backstro ke events, winning both races in the Big Ten and setting a pool record in the 200-yard backstroke in three straight meets. Sophomore Bill Schulte and se- nior John Murphy also helped. Along with Alurphy, sophomore Jim Mont- gomery, senior Tom Hickcox and junior Ken Knox gave the Hoosiers depth in the treesrj-le races — Montgomery qualifying in all treesn,le races (50, 100, 200, ' and 500). Hickcox, Knox and Murphy added strength in the spirit races. Seniors Duncan Scott and Bob Alsfelder helped in the butterfly events, with Scott adding in the individual medley races. Phoiographs Rick Wood Season Record INDIANA 90, Evansville 23 INDIANA 78, Ohio State 44 INDIANA 87, Southern Illinois 25 INDIANA 95, Illinois 28 INDIANA 74, Michigan 49 INDIANA 80, Michigan State 43 INDIANA 107, Southern Methodist 48 North Carolina State 45 INDIANA 93, Northwestern 19 INDIANA 88, Cincinnati 16 Big Ten Champions Runner-up NCAA 288 289 290 Diving At the end of the pool opposite Doc Coun- silman ' s crew, diving coach Hobie Bill- ingsley experienced the gamut of emotions during the 1974-75 diving season. I was disappointed two months ago, but not now, Billingsley said in March. It was tough at first but we got better. Scott Cranham, junior, who represented Canada in the 1972 Olympics in Munich, broke his left ankle while parachuting in September. Having Cranham hurt is like having Scott May hurt, Billingsley said. He ' s a world class kid; he was third in last year ' s AAU and eighth in the world. ' With Cranham out for the season, Billingsley had to work with predominately sophomore and freshman divers. ' We dove the toughest diving schools in the nation (Ohio State, Michigan, Michigan State, SMU and ' Wisconsin), all in their pools. the coach said. ' We came in cold; we weren ' t used to the diving pools, and that hurts you when they know the pool, and you ' re diving in front of crowds. However, Billingsley said, ' When we dived them here at the Big Ten, we did prert)- well. Brian Bungum and Mark Antonoff, sopho- mores, placed fourth and fifth respectively in the one-meter dive. Antonott and Bungum placed sixth and seventh in the three-meter dive. Billingsley said the change came after the SMU-North Carolina State meet early in the season. I pressed them too hard too early, he said. I lost my composure after the SMU meet. After that, I tried to open the door and see what was wrong. Now we ' ve got our heads together; if I ' m relaxed, the divers will be relaxed. Billingsley was right. At the NCAA meet at Cleveland, lU wasn ' t expected to score many points in diving. But Tom Kenyon. Todd Muckler .ind Bungum placed fourth, fifth and eleventh respectively in the one-meter; while Kenyon placed seventh in the three-meter. Photographs Do td la 291 Rugby 292 The thing about Rugby is that all of the legends about parties and injury and pain are true. Take Myron Webb, a senior wing forward, who had a typically brutal (lethal. ) season in 1974-75. He was out most of the fall season with a shattered collar bone and then ripped his eyebrow open to the tune of 12 stitches in the first game of the spring. Just for perspective, re- alize that he has just healed from a broken foot suffered during preseason conditioning. When the stitches were on the way to recovery, it was a bruised thigh that needed ultra sonic treatments. Then it was a broken ankle in the Gary match. And then after limping through some pick up games in Florida during spring break, Webb ' s stitches were torn open again in the Big Ten Tourney in Iowa City, Iowa. Another thing about Rugby is the way those maniacs party. No lightweights. Ask Myron Webb what the ' 74-75 season was like, and without so much as a moment ' s notice, not even any hesitation, he will say That was the year we won three two-foot trophies for having the best party team at the Midwest Tournament. The injuries aren ' t even remembered. There are lots of good and true stories about lungs puncmred in b ar fights, sure, but the real action, any good rugger will tell you, is m the parties. The lU championship performance came after a letter of challenge was circulated among all of the 17 teams participating in the Tri-state tourney in an unsuccessful attempt to anger ev- eryone else to try to whip the Hoosiers at hard- core partying. Fat chance. You see, many ruggers have this thing about naked chains, sort of like ring-around-the-rosey, but a little more explicit. Well, the Hoosiers did it. Body paint and all, to the doctored lyrics of a hymn you might now call iconoclastic, or even outright rude, there they were — nekkid as all hail. Just outright nekkid. Small stuff you might say. Well they had these three err . . . strippers 1 Photographs Da id ia supplied by the lady ruggers. Still not a cham- pionship performance, close, but not quite. Then all of a sudden, the remaining lady ruggers joined with the men and the body paint and the beer to spell out Indiana Rugby in a couple ot different type styles on their . . . cheeks. Not a bad show. Not at all. Obscene hymn lyrics being sung to strippers with all of that glow-in-the-dark paint on all of those . . . cheeks. So old Myron got tossed up there, scars, freshly healed bones bulging, beer-soaked beard, body paint and all to pick up the trophies. In front of 17 14-man beer swilling rugby teams. Yeah, Myron was to say later, Indy wasn ' t a bad place. I kind of dug it. Oh yes, the Hoosiers won three of four games in the tour- nament for a third place finish. And then there is the way they play the game. Two 40-minute halves, with five minutes at half time. And the only time outs are when someone is hurt so bad he can ' t leave the field under his own power. Then there ' s a two-minute break. Just for conversation ' s sake, the lU ruggers were much improved this year. A stronger back- field and a powerful scrum landed a 5-4-1 mark in the fall, a 5-4 spring record and a filth place finish in the Big Ten Tournament. Something else to think about is the fullback those guys used during the season. He was a 42- year-old law professor Tom Schornhorst. Those lady ruggers are no slouches either. Besides being able to party alongside anyone, they play some mean rugby. In 1974-75, they won tournaments for the Midwest Cham- pionship, the East Coast Classic championship and their own Bovina Bowl. Scored upon only once, the lady ruggers finished the year the East- ern USA champions and made plans to travel to San Diego California in 1976 for a shot at the national title. And some people think that Bobby Knight is tough. 293 Season Record INDIANA 30, Northwestern 3 Kentucky 16, INDIANA 9 INDIANA 25,Terre Haute 24 Evansville 36, INDIANA Indianapolis Reds 47, INDIANA 4 Gary 15, INDIANA 3 Big Ten Championship — 5th ( 1 for 2 ) Evansville 16, INDIANA 13 Kentucky 19, INDIANA 14 Indianapolis Reds 22, INDIANA INDIANA 11, West Indianapolis 4 Tri-State tournament — 5th (2 for 3) Indianapolis Reds 23, INDIANA 7 Purdue 22, INDIANA 18 INDIANA 6, Gary 6 David Jay Fighting for possession of the ball during a line out (roughly equivalent to a jump ball in basketball i. two Hoosier ruggers (above) warm up for the party after- wards with the Indy Reds. The women ' s rugby team displayed a hardline rugby attitude all year long. On the opposite page, a Hoosier puts the whammy on a hapless lllini. Myron Webb in the foreground (top right) watches a scrum closely against Illinois. 294 I ' — §f |im Mendenhall Baseball Season Record Mediocrit)- again marked the lU baseball team in 1975. Despite some team highlights, a weak pitching staff provided a ceiling to the win-loss columns. It ended up a 22-24 season overall, and 7-1 1 in the Big Ten. I thought we could have won more games than we did, said second-year coach Bob Lawrence. There were games this year I thought we could have won, but for various reasons we didn ' t. Lawrence saw pitching as the team ' s primary problem. ' I think our pitching staff needs to improve before we can become a Big Ten con- tender, he said. The only difference between Michigan (this year ' s conference champion) and our ball club was the pitchmg staff The Hoosiers compiled a .261 team batting average for the year. There were two bright spots in the offense — 55 stolen bases and 28 home runs. The stolen bases set a new school record. The home run total came as a surprise to Lawrence who saw his 1958 school record for the most home runs hit in a season broken by Dale Thake, senior, and Mark Laesch, junior, who both smacked eight. One reason for the team ' s lack of success this season, however, is also cause for optimism in looking forward to next year: the program boasts an abundance of youth. Only three seniors formed the 1975 offense; infielders Tim Mc- Gonagle and Dale Thake, and outfielder Dave Wilson, will graduate from the team, while all the regulars from the pitching staff are re- turning. Overall, with the new boys we had, we did fairly well, Lawrence concluded, It could have been worse anyway. I don ' t really look at this season as a rebuilding year; the younger players happened to be the best ballplayers we had. They all learned a lot of baseball, though. Senior Tim McGonagle received the Balfour Award as the season ' s Most ' Valuable Player, selected by his teammates. One of a record-setting 55 biiiti itoleii h) the W base- ball team in 1975, Robin Cox (above i chalks up another as the ball slips from the hand oj the defend- er. Victories in baseball were sometimes sparce. but the one against Purdue (far right t felt extra good. INDIANA 5, Mississippi INDIANA 2, Mississippi 1 Oklahoma 10, INDIANA Oklahoma 2, INDIANA 1 INDIANA 8, E. Michigan 1 INDIANA 6, Morningside Pan American 6, INDIANA 2 Morningside 9, INDIANA 4 Pan American 1, INDIANA E. Michigan 10, INDIANA 1 INDIANA 8, Morningside 6 Pan American 7, INDIANA 2 INDIANA 2, Kentucky 1 INDIANA 12, Kentucky 5 INDIANA 5, W. Michigan 3 ' W. Michigan 2, INDIANA 1 Louisville 2, INDIANA 1 INDIANA 3, Louisville Miami 5, INDIANA 3 INDIANA 11, Miami 5 INDIANA 5, Northwestern 4 INDIANA 6, Northwestern 1 Wisconsin 9, INDIANA 5 Wisconsin 12, INDIANA INDIANA 10, Butler 7 Butler 4, INDIANA 2 INDIANA 14, Purdue 2 INDIANA 13, Purdue 8 INDIANA 13, Illinois 12 minois 10, INDIANA 4 Ball State 6, INDIANA 3 INDIANA 6, Ball State 5 Iowa 10, INDIANA 4 Iowa 5, INDIANA 3 Minnesota 9, INDIANA 8 Minnesota 5, INDIANA 4 INDIANA 8, Indiana State 2 INDIANA 9, Indiana State 8 Michigan 3, INDIANA 1 Michigan 5, INDIANA 1 Michigan St. 7, INDIANA 2 INDIANA 7, Michigan St. 1 INDIANA 9, DePauw 5 DePauw,4, INDIANA 9 INDIANA 3, Ohio State Ohio State 12, INDIANA 9 Big Ten Championship — 7th 296 N onte Hosteller 29 ' ' Tennis The lU tennis team was never expected to win the Big Ten Tennis title. And it didn ' t. Michigan was practically awarded first place before one set was played. But the Hoosiers were supposed to fight for second place. And they didn ' t do that either. They finished a disappointing sixth. No lU tennis player won an individual championship, though Dan Richards went to the number three finals before losing. ■ ' We went into it with five other teams battling for the spot behind Michigan, moaned lU coach Scott Greer. We just couldn ' t win some key matches and the way the draw went for us didn ' t help either. Doug Sullivan pictured at right knew that. Sullivan, lU ' s number one singles player lost a very close first round match to the eventual singles champion, Fransisco Gonzales of Ohio State. The thing is that the Big Ten record typified the so-so- regular season. The team finished 5- in the conference and 12-9 overall. Season Record Rollins 5, INDIANA 4 INDIANA 9, George Mason INDIANA 9, Central Florida South Florida 6, INDIANA i Miami (Ohio) 6, INDIANA 5 INDIANA 7, Illinois State 2 INDIANA 5, Wisconsin 4 Southern Illinois 7, INDIANA 2 INDIANA 5, Notre Dame 4 Wisconsin 5, INDIANA 4 INDIANA 7, Northwestern 2 INDIANA 7, Illinois 2 INDIANA 8, Purdue I Minnesota 6, INDIANA Iowa 5, INDIANA 4 INDIANA 8, DePauw I INDIANA 9, Ball State LNDI ANA 7, Kalamazoo 2 Michigan 9, INDIANA INDIANA 6, Michigan State 3 Ohio State 5, INDIANA 4 Big Ten Championships — 6th iK-||miWB44 tiiS.. Hjl b 1 .JS II ■ 298 Tim Brown Golf After a season of tough national competi- tion, the Hoosier golt team took its third straight Big Ten Championship in 19 5. The goiters won the Northern Intercollegiate Tournament at Ann Arbor, Michigan, and the Malibar Invitational at Melbourne, Florida. Kelly Roberts, junior, took first place in both meets. Roberts wasn ' t alone when he delivered high quality performances for Hoosier fans. I can ' t believe my strongest competition is on my own team, he said before the Big Ten meet. Bob Jackson, probably the strongest ot other lU players (Mike Milea, Gary Biddinger, Bob Ackerman and Tom Inskeep) could win too. When the dust cleared, Ackerman and Bid- dinger were tied for first place and Jackson finished second. Roberts was in 1 1th place. It was a good year, a mighty good year for the Hoosiers. Five of them made the NCAA tour- nament which was held late in the summer. Season Record Malibar Invitational — 2nd Olympia Invitational — 3rd INDIANA 3 9, Notre Dame 399 Kepler Invitational ith Chris Schenkel Invitational — 9th Northern Intercollegiate Tournament - Big Ten Championships — 1st 1st Rick Wood 299 Track The Hoosier trackmen finished the 1975 season with the exciting, if disappointing, Big Ten tourney in Iowa City, Iowa. The Illinois team needed an 11th hour leap from one of those seedy Purdue Boilermakers to bump lU from the championship. The Boiler came through and Illinois won 129-127V2 with the Hoosiers in second place. What lU coach Sam Bell had predicted to be a dogfight wound down to the final, even the very last triple jump. Illinois had first place when lU ' s Doug Vine re-injured a hamstring muscle and pulled out, paving the way for Hoosier John Murphy ' s own personal 1 1th hour jump. Murphy was sick with a virus, but toughed it out and jumped to 4th place, only to be bumped back to fifth by that Boiler. The thing was that the 4th place points would have meant a first place tournament finish for the Hoosiers. Well, that ' s the way things go sometimes, but the Hoosiers did pretty well for themselves in Phil Slapp irighti. ihoun here indoor i. eyes ihe finish line as he qualifies for the NCAA in the high hurdles with an outdoor time of 13.9. Jawn Bauer (far right) steamed up fjr a shot put against anyone in the Big Tourney uho dared face htm. hut did not qualify for the NCAA competition at the summer ' s end. 300 track. Hurdles, the shot put, long distances, the mile and a world record all provided highlights. The 6.7 second record was set in the 70-yard dash by Sophomore Mike McFarland. Mc- Farland peaked early, and had a hard time qualifying for the NCAA finals in the longer 100-yard dash, and was sidelined most of the season with hamstring injuries. lU competed in few dual meets in 1975, preferring to hit the bigger invitationals and relay meets. The record understates the quality of lU track for the year. Before getting into the multi-team meets, the Hoosiers fired a quick and impressive win over Alabama and South Carolina. The meet, scored as two simultaneous dual meets as well as a three way affair, finished with lU on top straight across the board. The Hoosiers finished second in the Louisiana State Invitational a week later and for the remainder of the season participated for the most part in relays that were not scored on a team basis. At the Dogwood Relays in Nashville, Tenn., four Hoosiers put together a school record of 7:26.4 in the two mile relay. Dave Dewitte, Chris Achgill, Al Rosenberg and Ron Hyatt made up the team, which was beaten by ' Villanova ' s timeof 7;22.1. Captain Craig Caudill, called by Coach Bell the toughest kid I ever coached, led lU throughout the season. Caudill ' s times were not record setting, but his consistency was. He stoked the Hoosiers with fine performances and repeatedly brought home more than his share of the gravy, and finished the indoor season with an AU-American rating. Hoosiers that qualified for the NCAA cham- pionship meet were: Steve Heidenreich, mile run; Dean Reinke, three-mile run; Phil Stapp, Charles Jackson and Craig Caudill in the high hurdles; Steve Cobb and Dave Dewitte in the 880-yard run. I Dave Parker 301 Rick Wood 302 iriis cold when the Hnosiers traveled to Wisconsin fur ii dud meet with the Badgers, and the steeplechase runners {left I had it worse than most, John Murphy ihelow I. solid for the Hoosiers all season long, lakes a triple jump fir the record against W isconsin. Murphy ' s jump in the Big Ten meet brought the lU team to within U? points of the championship. Big Ten meets take time to run. and these sprinters (far left I stay in their lane after a heat in the 220-yard dash. Season Record INDIANA 70, Alabama 6 1, South Carolina 48 INDIANA 8 I.Alabama 81 INDIANA 85, South Carolina 60 Wisconsm 75, INDIANA 70 Tennessee 87, INDIANA 67 LSU Invitational — 2nd Big Ten Championships — 2nd L )J o Pjrker 303 Title Nine A new look at women ' s athletics It was, from the beginning, a singularly im- probable piece of legislation. Appended to the U.S. Education Amendments ot 1972, an act called Title 9 specifically forbade discrimination on the basis of sex at any federally funded insti- tution. Not since the suffragettes demanded the vote had such heretical talk been countenanced in Washington ' s corridors of power. Couched in the sort of poly-syllabic bureau- cratic doubletalk that will doubtless obfuscate interpretation. Title 9 declares women at- tending schools that are on the federal gravy train — virtually all major universities and many of the smaller ones — shall receive equal treatment in areas, including finance from the male hierarchies that run the schools. Universities that fail to comply with the letter ot the law will have to deal with special compli- ance teams from the Department ot Health, Ed- ucation and Welfare ( HEW), who will have the power to shut off the flow of federal dollars to the ottending institution. That could be a source ot friction with the tat cats who bankroll men ' s athletics at the college level. To say that the National collegiate Athlet- ic Association (NCAA), an organization run by men for men, takes a dim view Title 9 would be something of an understatement. Tom Hansen, the assistant executive director of the NCAA, for example, says his organization does not op- pose women ' s programs, but admits that he sees Title 9 as an enormous threat to men ' s athletics. Walter Byers, executive director of the NCAA and Hansen ' s boss, is even more succinct of the subject. It would be absolutely ruinous to intercollegiate athletics, he says. While the men who guide intercollegiate ath- letics are to be forgiven for a rather myopic ten- dency to equate men ' s athletics with inter- collegiate athletics, their curt dismissals of women athletes as jocks with a chromosome deficiency go down with greater ditFiculty. Ac- cording to the popular notion, women athletes have their place — in the same sense that incur- able leprosy has its place — and they should stay in it. What worries the NCAA is what it perceives to be creeping parity. That is a bone of conten- tion between women ' s groups lobbying for the bill and men ' s groups working against it. The proposed implementation of Title 9 is of such significant concern to the NCAA that in February it sent an eight-man peacemaking del- egation to Washington. There they discussed the bill with Gwen Gregory, a lawyer who workes out of the Civil Rights Office of HEW and a mover-and-shaker in the women ' s rights movement. Gregory bristles at the misleading tactics frequently used by groups opposed to Title 9. One fallacy concerning Title 9 is that it will require equal expenditures on men ' s and womens athletic programs, she says, and that, of course, just isn ' t so. All we want to do is provide equal opportunity for women. If we tried for equal money we ' d be slapped down so fast we wouldn ' t know what hit us. J.W. Bill Orwig, athletic di rector at lU, and a member of the NCAA ' s executive council, had adopted an admittedly gloomy outlook on Title 9. At lU the men ' s athletic budget runs in excess of S2 million yearly. We ' re preparing for the crunch, says Orwig laconically. Title 9 would hurt a program like ours because we tie up a lot more money in the non-revenue sports (tennis, swimming, golf, baseball, track, wrestling, gymnastics and soccer) than a great many schools. This bill would kill non-revenue sports if it stands. Orwig has reached a compromise with Leanne Grotke, director of women ' s athletics, by agreeing to underwrite the women ' s program at a cost of about $115,000. Though paltry com- pared to the men ' s budget, that ' s a substantial jump from the 544,000 budgeted for women ' s sports in 1973-74. But even that will not be enough when Title 9 takes effect. If it costs us 5600,0 00 to run a football pro- gram, moans Orwig, there ' s no way we can spend 5600,000 to run a women ' s field hockey program if we do, we ' re out of business, Grotke is walking on eggshells these days, careful not to push for too much too quickly but mindful, t(X), of her responsibility to her sisters. ' I feel the women ' s program can enjoy a measure of success comparable to the men ' s at a cost considerably less than the men ' s program, says Grotke. When you talk about Title 9 you ' re talking about equal opportunity, not a 50-50 split of the money. That would be a bunch of malarky. At this junction, Title 9 is awaiting publica- tion, whereupon it will be scrutinized by athletic directors from coast to coast and then subjected to an unprecedented round of HEW administra- tive hearings. The NCAA ' s legal counsel in Washington is already working with HEW on Title 9 to point out its weaknesses and the dam- age it will do, says Hansen. There ' s a great deal of uncertainty yet related to interpretation, adds Hansen. That piece of paper says equality, ' but the way Gwen Gregory interprets Title 9 and the way a federal compliance team interprets it could be greatly different. They ' re going to look at the letter of the law, and that says equalit} ' ' Period. Meanwhile universities across the country are digging in their heels, prepared for the worst. In January, the regents of the University of Arizona gave the okay for 60 women ' s athletic scholarships at the school ' s three campuses. The University of Miami broke ground in that area in 1973 when it offered 15 athletic grants-in-aid to women. I forsee a bleak future, says lU ' s Orwig. I think our only alternative to going broke is for the universities to help support the athletic pro- grams. If they want the program they ' re going to have to face up to the responsibility. 304 a 305 J David lay 306 Basketball Kitty Unthank Dribble. Stop. Look. Shoot. Rebound. Defense. That ' s the way the game is played, and the lU Women ' s Basketball team does it just as well as anyone else — 19-6 well, in tact. But the six in the loss column ot their record is not really indicative of the type of season it was. Four of those losses came in tournament play at the end of the season and one other was at the hands of the visiting Australian National team. But Coach Bea Gorton is by no means sour grapes on the post season shellacking. I felt we had a really good year. I noticed considerable growth from all our ballplayers. The play of our bench was really gratifying. The bench had a lot of enthusiasm both on the court and along the sidelines, Gorton said. But the starting five spelled the real success for the team. They were; Debbie Oing, senior; Tara Van Derveer, senior; Carol Kegley, junior; Shelia Northcutt, senior; and Terri ' Winchester, junior. SuNie Eaton 307 I 308 Field Hockey Kay Burris just couldn ' t say enough about the lU women ' s field hockey team. But that is un- derstandable considering she is the coach and her team was probably one of the finest teams to tie on a pair of cleats and carry those strange lookmg curved sticks around an lU athletic field in a long time. This was one of the most skilled teams we ' ve ever had playing at lU, Burris said. ' But that skill did not necessarily come from experience. This year ' s women field hockey team con- sisted ot a menagerie ot talented freshmen and sophomores. In fact, of the five team members who were selected to the Midwest College South All-Star team, two were freshmen and two were sophomores. Three of those (Chris Archer, soph- omore, Marcia Veale, freshman and Nancy Cubb, Ireshman) were selected to the college Midwest All-Star team. Nancy Cubb, was then selected to the United States Women ' s All-Star team — a rare honor for a freshman. Overall, the team finished the season with a 15-5-2 record, but Burris promised to improve on that record next year. Our record should have been better than what it was, Burris remarks. We lost a lot ot our games to weaker teams, but that can be expected when one is working with practically a brand new team. Although losing their only Big Ten outing this year to Ohio State University 2-1, the Hoosier women will expand their schedule next season to include Big Ten rivals Wisconsin, Michigan and Purdue as well as OSU. Photographs Randv Prange 309 Swimming Being a member ot a swimming ream at lU is a tough tradition to live up ro. Yet during the 19 4-75 season, the members of the IL ' women ' s swimming team met or exceeded all of Coach Don Glass ' s expectations. The Hoosier women swimmers finished first in the Terri Tarbell Invitational meet over 10 other teams, and captured second place in three other tou rnaments. One ot those second place finishes was in the Big Ten conference meet where team members swam and dove to some of their best times and scores of the entire season. In the Midwest regional tournament the lU swimmers finished fourth behind their principle rivals. Bowling Green, Michigan State and Michigan. Individual performances, most notably those by Karren Gore, Anne Gilmore, Karen Sprenger and Kim Smith, took no second seat to the successful team effort. All but two of the team members improved on their previous times during the season. Pholographs David lay 310 Gymnastics The women ' s gymnastics team pulled off a 16-2 season following the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women regional meet in Normal, 111. All of this victory and good news came even after a switch to new coach Carol Bain and a new training sche dule at the beginnmg of the season. At the end of the season. Bain said, I feel real good about our performance this year. The high pomt of the season was the Big Ten meet Feb. 11 at East Lansmg, when the Hoosiers finished second to Michigan State. The Hoosiers were able to pull off the victory with a well-rounded team with a lot of depth. Two of the players, in particular, junior Cindi Nordsiek and senior Louise Gerstung, gave con- sistent performances all season. Cork Rhodes 311 i ,-, r- ' - ♦ 312 Tennis It was an amazing year in sports. Ali regained his heavyweight title from George Foreman, USC stomped Notre Dame in the second halt ot their grudge match en route to a national championship in football and the world witnessed the gestation and maturation of a new type ot big time spectator sport — tennis. The lU women ' s tennis team set records of their own. After a very successful fall semester regular season, the Hoosier women went on to score a string of post-season victories which ended in the women ' s overall state cham- pionship. However, the spring semester season produced records of a different variety. After defeating the University of Notre Dame 8-1 and St. Mary ' s Notre Dame 9-0, the Hoosiers lost a close series of matches to Michigan State University. The team rebounded from this loss however and took an extremely close match from Kalamazoo College 5-4. After this grueling four game season, the lU women ' s tennis team participated in the Big Ten cham- pionship matches and tied the University of Michigan tor sixth place in the rankings. Tim Brown 313 Intramurals For a school with a number one ranked basketball team, the basketball intramurals competition would have to be tough. The pre-season speculation had it that the teams to beat were the Soul Trotters and Sigma Alpha Epsilon. If they both won, it would be a rematch of the 1974 finals which SAE won. They both did win, from a record field of 441 teams. The revenge match was set, and revenge was enjoyed by the Soul Trotters who won the campus title they had lost the year before. The defensively-oriented Trotters were able to control much of the game, and came away with a 55-45 victory. All season they were labeled as playing with a run-and-gun no team offense. In the final game however, the Trotters took a completely different attack, and played an even- tempoed, passing offense that st unned SAE. Supposedly a team of five individual gunners, the Soul Trotters played top notch team ball. Sophomore center Jerome Allen overcame earlier problems which held him to a 2-point per game average to lead the scoring in the first half with 8 points. The Trotters completed their ven- geance during the second half when sophomores Derek Foree and Reggie Holmes scored 12 pomts each. Variations in the intramural basketball pro- gram included the one-to-one and the free throw competition. Jim Pleimar and Dan Pickard met on the court during halttime at the Soul Trotter- SAE game for the finals of the basketball one-to- one intramurals competition. Pleimar took the championship 20-12. Phi Gamma Delta won the free throw team championship when their 11 -man squad sank 170 out of 200 shots in the final match. Members of the team were Sandy Kunkel, Mark Rietdorf, Ralph Jones, Dobby Grossman, Randy Souers, Mark Laesh, Dave Tripp, Mike Sidebottom, and John Wieselthier. Freshman Mike Bryant was the victor in the individual free throw competition missing only one shot out of 20 in the finals. In the prelimi- naries, he made all 20. 314 - ' - r,,,,.. ' ' ' !:? ' ? ? ' ' d ' ' mmi i.l ■ ' :i-- vi ' - ' S sae- J ■■r--M 315 Football Sigma Alpha Epsilon, a fraternity prominent in university intramurals, took the cham- pionship title in the football competition last fall edging out 405 E. 17th street 44-32 in the finals. 2 18 teams from the dorms, greek houses and town participated in what turned out to be one of the biggest attractions ot the intramural program. Tennis Tennis gained a surprising following in 1974, not just with Alan King and Bobby Riggs, but at lU as well. The overflowing mixed doubles competition was toughly fought down to the wire, then won handily by graduate students David Martin and Amy Fremion over Marc Tabereaux and Vicki Lucas, 6-1 and 6-0. The mixed doubles competition proved to be, besides one of the most popular, one of the big- gest crowd catchers. The size of the crowds is often under-emphasized in intramurals competi- tion, but tast rising sports, like tennis, can be de- tected by the crowds they attract. Bowling The independent Martin III-A bowling team couldn ' t hold up against the tough Phi Kappa Psi team. The Phi Psi ' s won the title 2,696 to 2,337 at the bowling lanes in the Indiana Me- morial Union. Scott Foncannon bowled a 534 series and Tim Cummings a 531 to lead the winners. Larry Hodapp led the losing team with a 401 series. The losing independent team had less of a point spread between its members, with a more balanced team. The Phi Kappa Psi team were led by the two top men who set a pace nobody else on the lanes could hope to beat. Women ' s Volleyball The expanding women ' s intramural program had to turn away seven teams for women ' s volleyball, according to Kathy George, assistant director of intramural sports, because she could only schedule 75 teams while 82 teams signed A team packed with graduate physical educa- tion majors called the Superglutes won the all- campus volleyball competition over Kappa Alpha Theta. George said she believes more women are competing in women ' s intramurals because the communication is getting better, and ' women are starting to get a litde confidence in them- selves. Judo Four women and nine men took away indi- vidual judo titles in the intramural competition in November. The women ' s winner in the lightweight cate- gory was Mary Kaye Dezember. Melody Runyon won the middleweight crown, while Helene Page took away the light heavyweight title. The heavyweight winner was Sheila Jo Dow. In the men ' s competition, Karl Monk won the 135 pound match, while Dean Pfeiffer took the 145 pound title. Amal Das and John Toth took the 152 and 158 pound categories respectively, and Robert Strum won the 164 pound crown. In the heavier divisions, Ed Foss and Isaiah Scott took, respectively, the 170 and 178 pound titles. Danny Mullins captured the 205 pound division, while ' William Murphy took the over- 205 category. Photographs )im Mendenhall Handball Independent league champion Tom Davis beat the fraternity league winner Grant Gardis of Phi Delta Theta, 21-8, 21-17, in the handball finals match last fall. The same trend continued in team handball where the independent team of John Smith and John Weiser, from the faculty-staff league, swept away the Phi Delta Theta fraternity championship team of Gardis and Wayne Gasper in two straight sets, 21-9, and 22-11. ' Weiser, 29, is an electronics technician for the anatomy and physiology department. He said the all-campus championship was a simple matter of experience over youth. We ' ve been playing about seven years now, and we ' ve played an awful lot against each other. Handball isn ' t something that you pick up over- night. Since John and I have played against each other so often we know each other ' s moves pretty well and can set up good shots for the other guy, Weiser said. 316 31 318 DaMd )a) On any warm ,pr,ng day. baseball players ouldbe seen in almost every empty field. Wh ' le a ptche, uinds up before the throw, intramural ojficial Ken McManniiS gives the o ' lonle Hosteller 319 David Jay Housing Dorms Briscoe Eigenmann Forest Foster GRC McNutt MRC Read Teter Willkie Wright Forest 6-A Willkie N-6 Bryan 3 Bocobo 1 Harper 4 Harper 6 Elkin 1 Elkin 3 Board ot Governors Greeks Alpha Omega Pi Alpha Sigma Phi Delta Delta Delta Delta Tau Delta Delta Upsilon Kappa Delta Kappa Delta Rho Kappa Alpha Theta Kappa Sigma Phi Delta Theta Phi Kappa Psi Pi Beta Phi Pi Kappa Phi Sigma Chi Sigma Nu Sigma Pi Theta Chi Zeta Tau Alpha Alpha Epsilon Pi Alpha Kappa Alpha Alpha Phi Alpha Chi Phi Delta Gamma Evans Scholars Lambda Chi Alpha Sigma Alpha Epsilon Sigma Delta Tau Sigma Kappa Theta Xi Rick uoJd 2ej-;i Beta Tau Alpha Chi Omega 348 Alpha Phi 350 Alpha Tau Omega 352 Beta Theta Pi 354 Chi Omega 356 Delta Chi 358 Delta Zeta 360 Gamma Phi Beta 362 Kappa Kappa Gamma ■ i(A Omega Psi Phi 366 Sigma Phi Epsilon 368 Acacia 370 Alpha Epsilon Phi 371 Alpha Gamma Delta 372 Married Housing 373 374 375 376 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 -388 389 390 391 392 393 394 395 396 397 Town 398 402 David |a Housing You have to live someplace. And in southern Indiana ' s educational, recreational and cul- tural center, there are four areas in which the prospective habitee may habitate. It is usual practice for students to begin their new way of life in the dormitory. For it is in this building that one becomes accustomed to meet- ing a large amount of people who are ex- periencing the same who-am-I-what-am-I- doing-where-is-Ballantine Hall? feeling. Peo- ple become friends, the maze of the dorm begins to make a certain degree of sense, Ballantine Hall is actually found, and the uncertainty about higher education is forgotten in the midst of floor exchanges, cafeteria jokes, and attempts to sneak a six-pack past the R.A. The dorm is not only a good way to begin learning academics and the art of interacting with other people, but it is also a crash course in growing up. Eventually, one decides to further the self beyond grilled hamburger steak, pennied-in doors, the Paul Anka fan across the hall, and the masses of diverse human beings. Yes, an attempt is made to locate oneself within a more stabilized group of individuals. It ' s called Greek Life. It begins with rush, takes a taxing dive with Hell Week, and comes out with formal dances, Mom ' s Week- ends, Dad ' s Weekends, lU Sing and Little 500. For diversion, there are impromptu parties, keggers, and other social activities. Greek life offers a house you can call home, complete with surrogate mom ' s, dad ' s, sisters and brothers. But for some, living in a faraily that large is somewhat stifling. Formal dinners, mandatory house meetings and social functions can tend to cramp one ' s sryle. So the third type of living situ- ation is applied. Moving into an apartment or house is a step toward life in the real world. It is a chance to tr) ' cooking a cheese omelet all by yourself It is a chance to have a more private lifestyle, along with your own personal bills. Instead of straigh- tening up one dorm room, having a ' work ses- sion in which an entire Greek house is cleaned, the off campus habitation allows one to clean a dish when the will suggests, to sweep a floor when a whim to do so occurs, to take the garbage out when the Lysol can is empty. Letters home begin to focus less on academic endeavors and more on the fact the A P is selling hamburger at 59 a pound. And through the years of socializing it is pos- sible that elements of the Eric Segal book will appear. Some elements . . . not all of them. In that event there is Married Housing. Married students can complete their academic objectives in liveable apartments and at a more than liv- able price. Rick Wood 323 Dormitories 1 Rick Wood Wheti the monsoon season is over and the sun fiJially makes its first appearance, classes are easily forgotten. In order to get a head start on a summer tan. dorm residents flock to the sundecks to catch some rays. Of course if one lives in a dorm tiear the power plant, one is more likely to catch some soot. 324 H ' IS OF Ptt.MENT I, nn MOT lt ;F CASH USE ■g 1 )SITO Y Jf c ) CHECKS ONLY B; ■t... • ■ T I David lay There are eleven buildings on campus whose interiors could resemble an elitist YMCA, if such a structure exists. The carpetmg has the usual cigarette burns, the hallways the usual grafitti and art work. The only noticeable dif- ference between the rooms is the number on the door. The dormitory is a transition from home to independence. Because of its non-permanent status, the occupants rarely feel that much af- finity toward the building. Still, the dorms play a viable role in a person ' s beginning ventures in the direction ot the real world. To a large extent, it fulfills an individual ' s domestic duties while that person is adjusting to new people and a new lifestyle. The dorm, as structured, is a world within two other worlds: the educational one and the one outside. It isn ' t an exit or a detour, but more like an acceleration lane for merging traffic. Peggy Fassete (above) makes a valiant attempt to complete a frisbee pass but fails and jails in the process. The friendly people behind the desks in every dorm are a familiar sight. Alberta Zellers. Patrick Inglefield and Laura Coia stand ready to help students with stamps, change and stuck mailboxes [above). iS arly Lakatos 325 Aiitch Coleman I below) leaps to his feet after placing first in the tobacco joint rolling contest at the Teter Quad Olympics. After receiving the usual congratu- lations. Coleman remarked I ' ve had four years expe- rience in twisting those babies. foe Chomyn (right) spends a leisurely Sunday afternoon outside of Teter drinking a coke and contemplating the spiders on the ceiling, foster residents [far right) try their hand at roulette and blackjack on Casino night. ' . : .  . - .w.-j,i. 9 :x g; , ' . Rick Wood Bob Cohn 327 Briscoe Quadrangle Paulette Camden, Briscoe B-621 Although Briscoe Quad is the farthest dorm from campus it is also the closest dorm to the football stadium, Assembly Hall and the var- sity tennis courts. Briscoe residents recommend their home because of the parties. It is one dorm with over- 21 floors, special floors where all residents are at least 21 years old, and are allowed drinking privileges. The view from the lounges is nice. One can look out of a lounge in one building to check out which floors in the other building are having parties if nothing exciting is happening in their own building. The buildings are divided in blocks of men and women. In A building men occupy the first through sixth floors and women have the higher floors seven through eleven. As do other dorms, Briscoe sponsors movies, dances and floor exchanges. David Jay 328 Eigenmann Hall Don Barrett. Eigenmann 211 Eigenmann, the only exclusive graduate student dorm, towers over GRC and Crosstown Shopping Center. The stereotype graduate student who studies constantly consti- tutes only a minority of the people who live there. Most of the Eigenmann dwellers study hard during the week, and party hearty on the weekends. The wide range of ages and nationalities jus- tifies Eigenmann ' s label as The 2xx) , and some residents hung a banner stating this from the sundeck one football weekend last tall. International Coffee Hours help bring resi- dents together. The Graduate Residence Associ- ation Council and International Committee sponsors other international aaivities. One such program was a South Asian weekend pro- gram which served as a reminder of home tor many South Asians living in Eigenmann and also helped American students appreciate dit- ferent cultures. Da id lav 329 Forest Quadrangle Rhonda Green, Forest 207 330 Sure, It ' s a dorm just like any other dorm on the lU campus. But there ' s one thing that sets Forest apan from any other dorm, all the residents are girls. Besides going to classes, the residents of Forest have exchanges with floors from other dorms, pair off with fraternities for Little 500, and consume an enormous amount of pizza. If you ' re bored with studying and going to classes there are numerous diversions. You can always help move someone ' s bed into the ironing closet or practice crawling through the phone box into your room when you ' ve for- gotten your key. Of course, there ' s a serious side too. Girls help each other through the hassle of courses, ter- minated relationships with the opposite sex, and those days when nothing is going right. On the outside. Forest is just another big dorm. On the inside, it can be a home and a place full of good memories. David lay Foster Quadrangle Terr) Foster. Car} Dai is. Martin 319 With approximately 1200 residents, there ' s always something going on in Foster Quad. Actually, Foster is a small university in it- self. Students can take classes in the dorm, and the lU bookstore has an outlet at Foster. Not to mention Foster ' s participation in intramural sports and Little 500. Foster even goes a step further and has a Little Peoples ' ' Weekend when younger brothers and sisters ot Foster resi- dents are invited to spend the weekend in the dorm. Socializing is important to a well-rounded college education, but so is learnmg how to deal with the people you ' re living with. There ' s no better way to get to know another person than to be stuck with him in Harper ' s elevator, and the bus stop across the street aitords an excellent opponunity for deep philosophical discussions on the meanings ot life. Da id |a 331 Graduate Residence Center Larr) Herhig, JohnHon 112 Lower rates, larger single rooms and lan- guage houses distinguish GRC from other dorms. Freshmen, graduate students and foreign students are scattered throughout the thirteen buildings of GRC surrounded by 10th, Union, 7th and Sunrise Streets. Students in GRC successfully seclude them- selves from sight in their single rooms but peo- ple do come out from behind their doors, usually to eat. The cafeteria seems to be the place for socializing, Occassionally there is a digression to the hall and lounge b-s sessions when living alone gets a little too lonely. Some have said variety is the spice of life. The food at GRC doesn ' t provide much spice but the people there definitely do. David lay 332 McNutt Quadrangle u Susan Kaistr. Dt-lgaJo 135 Q kuincey Phirster just arrived in Bloom- ington. After a week, Quincey decides to write a letter to his friend who ' s still at home — the one who is welding bolt A to nut B for $7.50 an hour. Dear Filmore; The food stinks, my classes stink, and my roommate stinks. But McNutt is fantastic! 1 1 Last night we boressed Dejoya (a girl ' s build- ing). We put live crickets under all their doors. Man, you should have heard those chicks scream! Naturally, they got us back this morn- ing. I still don ' t know how they did it without us hearing them, but they tied all our doorknobs together with string. We couldn ' t get out of our rooms until one dude got wise and slid his jxxrk- etknife out the door to C ' Ut the string. Remember me telling you I was pretty wor- ried about how I was going to meet girls? Well, McNutt has it ' s own get-acquainted system. It ' s called Pull a false fire alarm ever) ' two hours. I ' ve spent more time meeting girls during false alarms than I ' ve spent in class. Speaking of which, I have two of my classes here at the dorm. It ' s called the McNutt Project, and we have regular classes in the seminar rooms here. Really makes it nice since I can ' t read the bus schedules and I ' m not crazy about walking. Well Filmore, I really hope this letter doesn ' t make you feel too bad. ' ou know, you having to stay home and work while I ' m up here having a great time. Maybe you can get away and come up for a visit. I ' ve gotta go now; we planned to tie the guy that lives two doors down to a tree in the courtyard, and I don ' t want to be late. Quincey David la 333 Men ' s Residence Center Cciryn Vog el. Smith 106 334 Some people thought it was a shame when the Men ' s Residence Center (MRC) started moving women into the dorm. Then again, many people thought it was about time. (This hne of thought came from the men already liv- ing at MRC). Last year Brown Hall, located near the Geolo- gy building became a part of MRC and raised the dorm ' s population to approximately 550. This makes MRC the smallest dorm on campus, giving residents the advantage of getting to know each other better. Residents can apply to the MRC Living Learning Center, a project where a group of students get together to work on various proj- ects of individual interest. Classes are also of- fered at the dorm through the program. The Liv- ing Learning Center has a literary journal, edu- cational programs, supervises poetry readings, and even furnishes dinner music in the cafeteria. Could anything be better than eating tuna surprise casserole to the strains of My Blue Heaven? David lay Read Center M rly Likalos. 3-421 At Read, you don ' t have to walk outside to buy crackers, aspirin, pop or candy. There ' s a General Store right in Read with prices below those ot local merchants. Read Center was the first dorm to initiate the idea ot having a store in the center. After reaping profits in excess ot S500 in the first semester of busmess, other dorms quickly followed suit. They even have sales. One night candy bars were on sale at 5 for one half hour, shades of Ayr- ' Way specials. The construction of the dorm is similar to a maze. It is vet) ' easy to lose one ' s way trying to get from one wing to another, especially when people switch the arrows that tell you which wing is what way. Another distinctive characteristic ot Read is that every suite is divided by a bathroom. The fact that the phone is also in the bathroom gives rise to several problems but the benefits ot a private bathr(X)m override the minor inconve- niences. David lav i IH 335 Teter Center 3,11 AJ kins. Wissler2! . There ' s never a dull moment at Teter. Even orientation week is filled with movies, mud-fights, dances and advice fi-om fi-iendly fi-eshman orientation assistants. Every dorm sponsors some sort of activities for the first week of school but Teter works extra hard to make the newcomers feel at home. Teter, the home of the IRHA president Denny O ' Grady, is also the home of the Black Culture Center. They have moved into Boisen Hall, formerly a girls ' closed visitation hall. The Informal Lounge, as always, is the meet- ing place and recreation spot for Teter residents. Pinball machines and card tables lure residents out of their rooms and buildings for hours. In good weather Teter courtyards become mini- meadcjws as residents play frisbee, baseball and football. David lay 336 Willkie Quadrangle Kurt Lohide. Curt Woodworth. Dan Carter. John Owens, Willkie S-301 Some dorms are known tor their parties; some for their location. But Willkie is the only dorm that can boast of a kazoo band. The School of Music doesn ' t offer a major in kazoo, but Willkie ' s kazooers (kazooists?) are the best around. They ' ve even won awards, and band members speak fondly of kazoo practices and kazoo jam sessions. If you ' ve never seen a kazoo and have never found kazoo concertos particularly fascinating, there are plenty of other things to do at Willkie. Like having one whole floor flick room lights oft and on until one whole floor of Forest Quad responds. Or camping out overnight near the tennis courts so you can be assured of a court the next day. Willkie has it ' s share of RA ' s, hamburger steak, and broken washing machines. A various assortment of pizza boxes adorn the mcinerator room, 2:00 a.m. boresses are acceptable, and most residents seem pretty satisfied with their home away from home. Da td Ja Wright Quadrangle .Mr. James McCollum. Mr. Duane B. Grant. Mr Charles H. Jewell. Fergusrjn 210 338 Tnvia Question 47863 ' - What dorm is closest to lU ' s main library, has it ' s own chapel which is frequently in use, can serve all it ' s inhabitants in the cafeteria at once, and has four darkrooms complete with a photography club? Answer to Trivia Question 4786 : ' Wright Quad. No other dorm can offer you the chance to belong to a photography club, develop your own prmts, spend the afternoon studying in the library across the street, and make it to chapel services before settling down to dinner with ev- eryone who lives in the quad. Wright even has it ' s own store where students can purchase school supplies and food for a few cents cheaper than elsewhere. Any excess profit goes back into the quad for activi- ties like movies and dances. For the aggressive students there are inter- mural boxing tournaments. The tournaments started last fall and plans are being made to include other quads for future tournaments. I Dave )ay Forest 6 A Front Row: Deb Marion, Julie Habegger, Margaret Wilson, Teresa Parker, Nancy Johns, Kathy Hulett, Debbie Nies, Jeanne Lawson. Second Row: Mary Jane Cox, Susie York, Patricia Taylor, Cyndi Pinkus, Donna Wahl, Pamela Riley, Jan McCoy, Jan Hagen. Third Row: Pam Harris, Terry Plymate, Cathy Booth, Debbie Kranich, Jan Buechler, Phyllis Wilson, Susie Vea, Connie Kuyoth, Troy Raney, Valorie Brewer, Monica A. Medina, JoEUen Rawlins, Linda Flores, Debbie Wignall, Margaret Haag, Sue Polischuck, Joan Albano. Willkie N 6 Front Row: Cindy Gochenour, Wilma Talley, Nancy Thompson, Jill Salmons, Terri Porter. Second Row: Lisa Sulski, Teresa Albert, Janel Meetz, Nancy VoUmer, Maria Bilella, Karen Rowe, Jeanne Brunnei, Patty Shields. Third Rou : Rhonda Lemonds, Cheryl May, Brenda Zehr, Amy Lindsay, Pam ' ogel, Gwen Beauchamp, Joyce Stout, Kathy McMuUen, Mary Cassidy. 339 McNutt Bryan 3 Front Row: Debbie Weiss, Judy Kent, Anne Utley, Shelley Sinker. Second Row: Debby Gulick, Kim Hickerson, LeAnn Johnson. Third Row: Diane Souder, Gale Schenke, Sharon Leininger. Fourth Rou: Debbie DeSutter, Kathy Williamson, Sue Schilling, Patti Leask. Fifth Row: Pat Lord, Linda Mills. Sixth Row: Brenda Dilk, Colleen Smrt, Suzie Sadtler, RA. Seit-nth Rou: Cindy Harshman, Julie Golden, Debby Strock. Eighth Row: Josanne Pied- mont. Sinth Row: Sue Roehr, Jenny Johnson. Tenth Row: Paula Gill, Karen McClorey, Karen Shaw. McNutt Bocobo 1 Front Row: Mark Van Winkle, Alan Cooper, Skip Baker. Second Row: Phil Glesing, Tony Shaw, Scott Frendt, Dickie Hughes, Carlos Renault, Scott Schaefer, Dale Lawrence, Tim Darden, Skip Erotas. Third Row: Kelly Jrjhnston, Dale Gasaway, Jeff Smith, Mike Deaton, Tom Metro, Mark Pitts, Randy Selig, Ed Abel, Kevin Jowitt. Fourth Row: Jim Jacobson, Vernon Marshal Sttong, Pat Madigan, Steve Duncan, Tim Pieri, Robin Thoman, Malcolm Deweiss, Paul Epson, Brent Shapiro, Wallace Hunter. Fifth Row: Terry Debaets, Dave Wilson, Scott Batkley, Brian Belwood, Chuck Showalter, Carl Snyderman, Ken Hawver, Bob Norton, Larry Mier, Randy Smith, Jeff Walz, Jeff Arbuckle, Mike Camp. Foster Harper 4 Front Row: Marilyn CoUings, Cheryl Robertson, Debbie Hughes, Lynne Ziker, Ingred Lin, Jody Kramer. Second Rou: Nancy Reese, Jane Sroler, Jeannie Rabe, Margie Holstein, Deb Andresen, Linda Tovey, Terry Herrick, Jil Barbre, Fritzi Steiner, Tula Kavadias, Anne Visscher. Third Rou: Sue Por- wancher, Martha Doyle, Mary Morrison, Barb Schlundt, Candy Gates, Linda Larsen, Kathy Bikos, Mary Lee, Joy Tolbert, Bonnie LeMert, Vanessa Eaiy, Ronni Dobkin, Judy Williams. Gloria Coveyou, Linda Johnson, Micki Dardick, Carolyn White. Foster Harper 6 Front Rou: Lee Colsow, Ann Listen, Jane Bren- neman, Cindy Campbell. Second Row: Susan Hoehamer, Ronda Pfingston, Starlene Williams, Mary Anne Eberle, Tina Downs, Jan Erickson, Sharon Otto. Third Row: Vicky Rutz, Kendra Manwell, Debbie Sisson, Michell Wheelock, Cindi Mann, Lynn Eisen- trout, Debbie Jones, Linda Rankin, Linda Miller. Fourth Row: Terri Holom, Paula Epstein, Sandy Gibbs, Barb Brown, Shirley Lipner, Lucyna Bkrupa, Jeannine Lucas, Debra Johnson, Cindy Harris, Monica Janowski, Kathy Griffin. Janie Silverberg. Fifth Rou : Beth Shannon. Shelly Fogelmann. Renee Kelley. Susan Davis. Becky . xline. Karen Menke, Carrie Dickmeyer. , , 3-41 Teter Elkin 1 Elkin 3 Front Row: Terry Irving, Kin Wu, Laura Simonds, Pam Smeltzer, Bertie Reece, Kent Springer, John Miller, Jeannie McCalley. Second Row: Denny Hickle, Viv Howatt, Pam Mitchell, Darla Reed, Lauretta Schuster, Anne Ventresca, Carol Zank, Sid Price. ThtrJ Row: Mark Phegley, Kevin Karns, Ken Reische, Mike Peters, Donna Lipp, Liza Johnstone, Phil Samuels, Kathy Leary, Candy McAdam, Kathy Pappas, Mike Limblad, Kelly Cross, Rob DahiU. Fourth Row: Joe Atz, Chuck Neidigh, Russ Stegall, Ron Smith, Steve Heck, Robin Mogavera, Dave Brown, Mark Grove, Jeff Scering, Terri Jo Ison, Maureen Monahan, Kim Hannon, Cathy Ravencroft. Fifth Row: John Beck, Dave Henson, Greg Sanders, Jay Feagans, Sue Dale, Craig Litchin, Mike Steiner. 342 Front Row: Janet Gabet, Merianne Lamb, Mary Knoblich, Susan Grant. Second Row: Jane Richardson, Sandy Sutherland, Sherry Thomas, Lynn Shelley, Elva Nuckols, Maryann Chisler, Maria Oliver, Laurie Thomas. Third Row: Sherry Lewis, Cathy Bolanowski, Paula Lydick, Kay Hall, Susan Howard, Jane Kay Verble, Dee Degner, Carla Fiscus. Fourth Row: Beth Longo, Kathy Bailey, Frances Fleets, Laura Evens, Jana Drumwright, Joyce Robinson, Pam Walerko. Wright Quad Board of Governors IS Front Rou: George Zundo, Cindy Stone, Sandford Starr i Programming Vice President), Gregg Monaco, Anne Schneider (President), John Powers Executive Vice President). Second Rou: Mar - Beth Peterson, Jom Mooney, Angela Haney, Raymali Mack, Phil Dorn, Virginia Leiter. Ann Sala, Brian Williams, Les Walters iTreasurer). Teter Board of Governors Front Row: John McGuire, President, Rich VanNevU, Treasurer, Mike Badnarik, Executive Vice President, Patty Merk, Programming Vice President. Second Row: Dave Lain, Ann Wilkie, Denise Maines, Brenda Bomber, Candy McAdam, Teri N ' anDerWeele. Chris Cauley. Third Row: Linda Stowe, Secretary, Kevin Karnes, Ellen Tinder, Joe Hogsett, Mike Gobert. 343 Greek Life The past rwo decades have seen drastic changes in college campus and this change has been reflected in Greek life. Although frater- nities and sororities suffered in the late 60 ' s, over the past four years there has been a steady increase in the numbers of Greek houses on campuses all over the country, including lU. Sororities and fraternities and their members were once stereotyped as effervescent, shallow, totally social people. Whether or not it could have been true in the past is a matter of history, but to try to stereotype sororities and fraternities or their members today is impossible. The indi- viduals in Greek houses at lU are as diverse as individuals anywhere. A sorority or fraternity is a place where one can belong to a group, yet retain one ' s individu- ality. There is a kind of bond, yet there is room for independence. One can learn a great deal from the many experiences gained from living in closely knit groups that respect the opinions of their members. One also has numerous opportunities to become involved in campus activities and to de- velop leadership qualities. The responsibilities and nature of house offices vary and provide ex- cellent experience in group leadership. Other opportunities are open to a member through philanthropic projects both at the community and national levels. Scholarship is also important. In all houses a certain grade point average is necessary for membership. Most houses also offer scholarship and financial aid programs. Greek affiliation is not something that ends with graduation, but if a member wishes, one may continue to be an active member through various alumni groups. A fraternity or sorority can give as much or as little as the individual desires and the opportunities are unlimited. Lu Ann Witt |im Mendenhal The Chi Omega ' s and the Sig Ep ' s work on their prize-winning homecoming float (above) while a member of the Alpha Gamma Delta sorority (left) helps a youngster acquire the basic skills of finger - painting. 344 345 Ian Housewerth Acacia ' s spend a leisurely afternoon playing basketball (above) in their parking lot. A couple dances to the music provided at the Omega Psi Phi Mardi Gras right I. As a philanthropic project, the Sig Ep ' s dressed up like gangsters Hop) and kidnaped the presidents of all the sorcjrity houses on campus. The ransom was to donate canned goods to charity. 346 John Hopper Interfraternity Council Steve Kruse i Vice-President), Les Shively ' President). Panhellenic ? ' - « Alpha Chi Omega Alpha Chi Omega arranges the same activi- ties many other sororities arrange, the rush skits, Mom ' s and Dad ' s weekends, the lU Sing acts, and Little 500 activities. They had dances, exchanges and banquets. Although they alter the activities slightly from year to year, these are not the things which make their house special or dif- ferent from the other 16 sororities on this campus. Their 77 actives and 34 pledges combine to encourage involvement in campus activities as well as house functions. They have members who are involved in lU Student Foundation, Student Athletic Board, Campus Crusade, Student Health Center Advisory Board and lU Student Association. They also have members who participate in swimming and volleyball in- tramurals, who are Redsteppers and who are cheerleaders. Their national philanthropy is the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. All the profits from their money makmg projects are donated to this foun- dation. From Row: Ann Ridoux, Jan Dougherty, Melanic ' Wambach, Carol Selb, Maria Ordman, Sara Rodefeld, Eileen O ' Connell, Mary Failey, Mary Zimmerman. Second Row: Joanne Arbuckle, Debbi Miller, Cindi Bushnell, Cindy Ellis, Cindy Lewis, Pam Thomson, Sherri Hawkins, Joan Burton, Carol Weldon, Gail Mulholland, Debbie Johnson, Toni Housakos, Kandee McGill, Barb Kaswell. Connie Stallard, Robin White, Sandy Bumb, Connie Kaloyanides. Third Row: Cindy Hurak, Ann Wilson, Nancy King, Lynn Schacht, Debbie Altherr, Toni Atsaves, Nan Klueh, Brenda Sims, Susan Peck, Stephanie Karlos, Shelly Amor, Nancy Troutman, Ann Zimmerman, Jill Stein- berger, Susy Bol. Fourth Row: Beth Romberger, Barb Bolon, Ann Morrison, Sarah Rogers, Cathy Shade, Terri Zimmerman, Barb Mathews, Cindy Garrett, Paula Hawking, Beth Boedeker, Paula Dooley, Libby Ferrara, Jane Washburn, Jane Jackson, Janet Braun, Diane Frantz, Lisa Hendrickson, Cindy Taylor, Jan Justus, Paula Lester, Kathy Kiley, Kerry Callahan, Linda Hiles, Cathy Eberly, Jill Johnson, Becky Stiles. Kathy Ball, Becky Williams and Kathy Kiley (right) celebrate at the annual spring pledge dance. 349 Alpha Phi n n Ti ' G Front Row: Donna Delone, Jan Morns, Rhonda Becker, Connie Payton, Marcia Richardson, Janet Bishop, Lori Theilmann, Tina Morris, Diane Diethelm, Christie Brunnemer, Anita Hoffman, Marie Bilella. Second Row: Trudy Harlow, Tammy Baas, Debbie Brown, Joyce Jasinslci, Jan Brewer, Sherry Servin, Janie Grigsby, Jackie Marler, Lou Ann Brown, Sherry Brown, Nancy Lytle, Debbie Crawford. Third Row: Sandy Prisco, Linda Gast, Monica Torretto, Pattie Grembowicz, Beth Brusse, Terri Leonard, Linda Hoke, Nancy Hanes, Connie Martin, Nancy Blake, Priscilla Shedd, Linda Golburt. Fourth Row: Mrs. Dorothy Schmitz, Susan Hemmeger, Carol Lafoe, LeAnn Jones, Joy Riley, Vickie Fisher, Renae Skinner, Betty Watanabe, Maria Mannis, Donna Jordan, Jan Stuart, Janet Barile, Leslie Burdsall. Fifth Row: Patti Shields, Connie Delan, Kris Wieneke, Susan Faulkner, Nancy Lanigan, Jo Anna Milto, Ann Martz, Beth Bruggeman, Kathy Goeddel, Kaye Fettig. Sixth Row: Nancy Klump, Janet Mallon, Cathy Pr- zeswor, Bonnie Gibson, Kathy Young, Marilyn Con- stantine, Debbie Kuhlmeier, Marlene Straub, Tammy Williams, Jackie Perrine, Melissa English, Lynne Steinkamp, Kehren Doughten, Debbie Moor, Diane Layne, Lorie Chrusciel, Vickie Ross. Seventh Row: Emmy Newman, Carol Humphrey, Karen Stumph, Carol Corbin, Elane George, Linda Lytle, Karis Kessler, Cheryl Schultz, Gayle Rominger, Sherry Manlove, Sally Thompson, Janice Elliott, Linda Parsons, Vickie Valerio, Marguerite Salzarulo, Becky Walker, Cherrie Feichter. Karis Kessler, Joyce Jasinski and Janice Elliott (top right) portray various degrees of excitement while watching an lU basketball game. 350 The Alpha Phi ' s have been busy this year with many activities including their philan- thropy, cardiac aid. They collected money for the charity on March 9, Heart Day. They also baked and sold heart-shaped cookies to raise money to help the Bloodmobiie. Alpha Phi ' s also participated in lU Sing, Little 500, and the February Sigma Nu Follies, which raised money for the Monroe Count) ' Big Brother and Sister program. Their intramural sports teams competed in several different events, such as tennis, basket- ball and volleyball. Various campus speakers were introduced into the house this year. New programs were formed broadening Alpha Phi member ' s interest in campus, educational and cultural activities. Among other speakers. Associate Dean ' ir- ginia Rogers spoke to the house on the changing role of the sorority and encouraged greater par- ticipation in all campus events. Alpha Tau Omega Alpha Tau Omega is not just a fraternity, it is a way of life. This is one of their mottos which expresses the pride the members have in their fraternity. Every year the ATO ' s participate in the ZBT Dance Marathon. Proceeds from this dance are donated to the Muscular E ystrophy Association. They also sponsor a weekend for the Big Brother Big Sister Program, and take the children on picnics or roller skating. Besides these philanthropic activities, ATO ' s participate annually in lU Sing, Homecoming and Little 500. House activities include informal parties, semi-formal parties with popular bands and study times. ATO seeks to provide members with a well-rounded education. They feel obligated to help incoming freshmen make the college adjustment. 352 Front Row: Tom McHaffie, Man Page, Lynn Frye, Mike Morris, Kent Miller, Stan Gilbert, Mark Brand. Second Row: Jay Justus, Jeff Beaver, Jerry Young, Jay Cain, Mike Sullivan, Buz Blish, Jim Roehrdanz, Chuck Duke, Dave Depoy. Bill Meyers. Third Row: Dave Worster, Greg Bowman, Jeft Roberts, Bill Lindley, Rob Adams, Jim Voelker, Dave Eaton, Bill Hunt, Jim Farnsworth, Bruce Boyd, Jerry Barker, Tom Ford, Mike Pipher, Dave Dann, Rick Hewitt, Fred Swing, Bob Wright, Jim Oldham, Dana Abrahamson, Brian Meek, Pete Cree, K.ieth Reising. Fourth Row: Walt Hiatt, Greg Dunbar, John Groub. 353 Beta Theta Pi Front Row: Tim Monarry, Joel Pratt, Bill Edris, Scott Landis, Bill Mitchell, Rick Rhiem, Jim Cullison, Jim Purky. Second Row. Bob Hetherington, John Wright, Dave Tyree, Tom Campbell, Bob Herdrich, Tom Beck, Dan Scott, Mike Manis, Jim Moran, Steve Krentzfeld, Mike Ryan, Jim Stevens, Mark Nesslein, Tom Stine. Third Row: Jeff Campbell, George Dres- bach, Jim Newcomer, Nick Stanutz, Jeff Parr, John Rhinne, John Warren, Joel McQuaig, Denny Dykhuizen. Fourth Row: Rick Harris, Steve Ensor, Jay Highly, Tom Ellison, Tom Quellhorst, Dave Stiff. Fifth Row: Dave Babcock, Mark Hilderbrand, Gary Meadows, Tom Inskeep, Don GuUion, Tom Black. 354 Beta Theta Pi has always stood for campus in- volvement. After 130 years, their reputation has developed as a collection of diverse mdividuals doing things together. Betas are involved in numerous campus orga- nizations and programs including Union Board, lUSA, Student Foundation, Volunteer Students Bureau, various political groups, campus honoraries. Student Athletic Board and Student Legal Services. They actively participate in all intramural sports, various sports clubs and house several varsity athletes such as lU track star and world record holder Steve Heidenreich. Traditional house activities include the au- tumn Roman Org). the annual Christmas Dance, exchanges with sororities and the Little 500 bike and trike events. While engaging in these activities, the major concern of Beta Theta Pi is the maintenance of the proper environment and attitude for aca- demic excellence. RtinJy Smith entertains Lee Ann Willitj ' top lefti at a kegger. Beta hike team members Tom Frible). Je jf Campbell. Date Babcock, George Dreshach. John Rinne. Tom Campbell I coach i get ready for Utile 500. 355 Chi Omega Sevent) ' -nv ' o girls opened the Theta Beta Chapter of Chi Omega in the fall. After a month of fall rush, the Chi Omegas took a pledge class of 22 girls. In October, a first place trophy and over-all grand champion award in the 1974 Home- coming float contest was presented to Chi Omega and Sigma Phi Epsilon. Chi Omega and Sigma Chi trick or treated for UNICEF Halloween night and collected over S400. The Christmas date dinner was held in the Tudor Room of the Indiana Memorial Union. Entertainment and a visit from Santa Claus followed at the chapter house. The theme of the Chi Omega and Kappa Sigma lU Sing production, Life in the Big Ten won seventh place. The annual pledge dance held in honor of the fall pledge class was April 4 at the Executive Inn. Chi Omega ' s and Sigma Chi ' s teamed up for a busy month in April of Litde 500 activities. From Ron: Barb Bryan, Brenda Conklin, Cindy Clymer, LeeAnn Shafer, Barb Stegnach, Kim Mc- Duffee, Sharon Brammer, Pam DeWitt, Lisa Stucky, Linda Renner. Second Row: Janeen Freije, Marilyn Hrnjak, Kathy Diehl, Cathy Wolfe, Debbie EUibee, Judy Office, Dawn Ferrell, Rhonda Hill, Debbie Peet, Brenda Blackburn. Third Row: Donis Buzzard, Paula Richmond, Vicki Wilhelmus, Barb Hora, Lisa Sen- nc-tt. Party Walker, Jane Bannerman, Kelly Cross, Janna Smith, Gayle Fenton, Nancy Campbell, P.J. Wickman, Deb Marion. Fourth Row: Kathy Kopach, Mary Scheuer, Kathy Kane, Lindsay Goff, Kathy Walsh, Karen Lamping, Diana Thompson. 356 Obvious reasons for joining a sorority are for the social life and sisterhood. But education is a primary goal for most houses. On professors night. Chi O ' s in- vited their favorite profs for dinner and discussions. Kim McManus and Marilyn Hrnjak chat with Dr. Soyka, a professor in microbiology, Chi O ' s bid farewell to a seranading fraternity (top left). 357 Delta Chi Delta Chi began 1974-75 year with a second straight Little 500 victory. The team of Wayne Stetina, Mike Alexander, Mark Dayton and Gary Rybar took the flag with nearly a lap be- tween Stetina and the second place team. Kelley ' s Wake, the annual 1920 ' s dance was kicked off with the murder of Machine Gun Kelley in the Union BiUard Hall. Members of the fall pledge class carried their fallen leader from the Union in a pine box and back to the house to lie in state and emerge from the cofi in to quaff a few brews and other assorted elixers. Old crates and crap tables transformed the sleeping dorm into a Prohibition Speakeasy. In February, the Delta Chi Regional Leader- ship Conference was held at the Indiana chapter. Eighty-seven Delta Chi ' s from Indiana, Wiscon- sin and Illinois attended the conference along with Executive Secretary Dr. Ken Brasted. Men of the Indiana Chapter, headed discussion groups at the convention. This year, Delta Chi tried to revive the old tradition of serenades by singing to all campus sororities. Numerous parties were held over the year including a pajama party and skating party. Jerry Schnarr, house treasurer was elected to the IFC treasurers post. The Delta Chi ' s celebrate their second straight Little 500 victctry (top and middle right) in the spring of 1974- They are practicing their II] Sing skit {lower right) in the spring of 197 ' i. Front Row: Mark Dayton, Dave Tate, Ray Smith, Dick Higginbotham, Rich Littell, Mark Boardman, Mike Farner, Greg Silence, Greg Johnson. John Bell, Kirk Hansen, Steve Carmichael. Second Rou- ' Garry Rybar, Martin Overholser, Dave Holwager, Bill Holwager, Nick Miller, Jerry Schnarr, Dave Saunders, Rick Sowers, Terry Schnarr, Kinnear Powell, Sonny Jones, Jeff Pollom, Bill Van Sensus, Doug Marsh, Joe Marks, Roger Antoniu, Mike Alexander, Steve Swinehart, Jim Navarro. 358 k M 359 Delta Zeta Although completely surrounded by Irater- nities, Delta Zeta girls do have the privacy of their courtyard in which to sunbathe and build snowmen. But the DZ ' s don ' t always isolate themselves in their courtyard. They worked with the ATO ' s in building an award-winning lawn display. And their water-polo team won the Women ' s Championship. The 75 actives and seven pledges spend at least one evening a week in house or chapter meetings where they plan dances, schedule guest speakers and special programs. E)uring these meetings they organize their philanthropic ac- tivities. Every fall DZ ' s sell raffle tickets to raise money for the Indiana School of the Deaf and Dumb. They also hold picnics with children from Stonebelt. The girls can count on at least three dances each year. In the fall they have an informal Fall Fling and the formal Christmas Dance. For the Spring formal it ' s the Rose Cotillion. The Epsilon chapter was the recipient of the Most Improved Chapter Award at their annual Province Convention held at Ball State in March. The award is given to the Delta Zeta chapter who has increased membership, bet- tered their scholastic average, and showed and increase in philanthropies, programming, and house activities. Front Row: Maggie Davis, Barbara Smith, Sally Tip- pett, Becky Stidd, MaryLou Nye, Ruth Horn, Bev Brasich, Patti Elliott. Second Row: Sara Gengler, Mary Jane Drndak, Nancy ' Watson, Melanie Parish, Dannette Sturdevant, Karen Hill, Donna Wahl, Mrs. Estelle Walters, Lisa Comin, Tina Hornibrook, Jen- nifer Henkle. Third Row: Gena Humphrey, LeeAnn Smith, Marti Mainous, Claire Bergbom, Terri Theil, Terry Mahoney, Tui Canonico, Cindy Hawkins, Debbie Johnson, Sherry Walker, Linda Stanley, Diane Bundy. Fourth Row: Joyce Nance, Annie Cowan, Bev Bonge, Krissann Neilsen, Marti Pollard, Kathy Bruner, Beth Baxter, Merry Johnson, Barb Rueter. Fifth Row: Paula Boyd, Val Gunderson, Mitzi Gregory, Cathy HoUins, Karen Botterud, Jan Burnett, Chris Towner, Jan Doerfler, Roslyn Doyle. Sixth Row: Pam Fitzgerald, Debra Fitzgerald, Deb Ankli, Julia Metzger, Janeth Cassle, Deb Barrow, Lucy Sherman, Val Brower, Betsy Colby, Jackie Hawkins, Kathy Bassett, Lori Skirvin, Beth Kraner, Jane Wieselthier, Carla Haflin, Barb Bowers, Ann Duerr, Cindy Brown, Sally Fritzlen, Joy Strieker, Karen McKinney. 360 Eiery month Delia Zeta spomeri a SlaniLird ' s Pro- gram. uhen tht) bring in speakers, projessors anJ people who lecture on special topics. One month a man from Creative Crafts came in to give Jecoupage lessons to the girls in the house. The session also served as a rush function. Before perfomiing at the Rose Cottillion spring dance, members of What ' s it to Ya. ' sang to DZ ' s at the dinner i above i. 361 Gamma Phi Beta In addition to going through formal rush at lU, the Gamma Phi Beta ' s went a step further and traveled to Purdue to establish a chapter there. Purdue now has 89 Gamma Phi pledges. Equall y successful at their own chapter, the Gamma Phi ' s pledged .% girls in formal rush and added another 20 during open rush. This was also Gamma Phi Beta ' s 100th year. On their Founder ' s Day, November 11, they served dinner tor ail the Gamma Phi ' s in Bloom- ington. Two children suffering from cerebral palsy benefited from the joint effort of Gamma Phi Beta and Sigma Chi during Homecoming activi- ties. Their lawn display, a huge thermometer, kept track of how much money they had collected for these children ' s therapy. Their spring dance this year Bon Voyage, was a going away dance for their housemother. Kitt) Turner entertains her date I right) at the spring Bon Voyage dance. Mom Cindy Martin congratulates her daughter Becky Davis (far right I after initiation. l-ront Row. ' Karen Wagner, Maya Bates, Ann Beavers, Debbie ' Witherbee, Kim Nolan, Kitty Turner, Elisa Moran, Deb Rearick, Carole Niegos. Second Row: Debbie Stiles, Terri Hunt, Nancy Thomas, Peggy Myers, Marsha Ridenour, Wendy Massoth, Mrs. Knipp, Maureen O ' Neill, Kim Miller, Angle Bard, Karen Dillon. Third Row: Laura Daggy, Ann Reichle, Debbie Caruso, Sue Holman, Rita McClindoen, Gaylen Decker, Pam Kessler, Cindy Masterson, Tammy Trittschuh, Peggy Vogel, Debbie Ackerman, Jill Craig, Becky Davis, Connie Cheek. Fourth Row: Marty Minx, Angle Robinson. Fifth Row: Nancy Bellendorf, Terri Christenson, Nancy Adams, Mindy Brcx mall, Jan Riley, Cheryl Sayler, Holly Wible, Carol Dabelow, Susanne Nicks, Stephanie Risch, Linda Pearce, Elaine Riggs, Margie Haag, Nancy Kivett, Melody Kolach, Nancy Wever, Marianne Trigg, Donna Calvert. Si. th Row: Susan Roche, Linda Wirts, Cheryl McKinnis, Terri Williams, Londa Roy, Vickie Wendeling, Bonnie Benes, Darcel Stallings, Libby Reynolds, Maureen Kiley, Cathi Richardson, Maryl Nichols, Beatriz Sales, ' Vicki Tal- bert, Julie Short, Jean Tocarek, Kathy Anderson, Myra Risley, Judy Appleton, Linda Berger, Lil Cowles, Linda Fallis. 362 363 Kappa Kappa Gamma Sorority life is an exhausting, but rewarding experience. The bustle t)egan with rush taking up the first four weeks of school. When the dust settled, the Kappa ' s had acquired 30 pledges who wasted no time in becoming involved in the house, and the next major activity. Homecoming. Paired with the Phi Delta Theta ' s, they worked to assemble a lawn display in their front yard, which unfortunately won no honors, but was fun in the making. The Barn Dance and Dad ' s Weekend were rowdy events that took up two fall weekends, and a Christmas dance in honor of the pledges concluded the first semester. Upon returning for the last half of the school year, the Kappa ' s began work on lU Sing with the Fiji ' s, putting together an act on the avail- ability of summer jobs. Monmouth Duo, a bi-annual dance held with the Pi Phi ' s, initiation, the Riverboat Dance, and Little 500 activities with the Phi Psi ' s rounded out the year. After an exhausting round of finals, 74 live-ins and 30 pledges emerged from the hub-bub of coUege life to take advan- tage of a weU earned summer break. With rush being one of the most important social functions of a sorority, much time is spent planning and rehearsing skits. Susan Lucas. Kathy Phillips and Marsha Weil (right) reminisce childhood days as they prepare frjr the Little Kids party. Traditionally, waiters serve meals in houses, but the Kappa ' s switched roles for a night at the annual waiters banquet. Senior Valerie Nelson serves Paula Barclay and Anne Gilmore Itop right). Prior to the intramu- ral volleyball championship match. Lynn Brower and Barbara Burrington I far right) helped fire up team spirit by creating their own mascot. Front Row: Jo Ellen Rawlins, Barb Battelle, Siri Grimstad, Valerie Nelson. Second Row: ' Vikki Vogel, Donna Elzy, Kim Smith, Pam Kohnke, Sue Lyverse, Marcie Barnard, Lynn Hennessy, Betsy Tracy, Jane McMillan, Chris Archer. Third Row: Beth Shannon, Shelly Hoover, Carolyn Post, Katie Marvel, Claudia Weed, Becky Miller, Kathy Mobley, Demmy Mann, Carla Tevault, Cathy Shedron, Janice Querry, Susie Vea, Terri Sanders. Fourth Row: Susie Aron, Lynn Brower, Marsha Weil, Barb Schlegel, Lisa Garrison, Jean Newton, Marilee Parser, Carol Wirth, Mrs. Charles Smith, Barb Burrington, Sally Witwer, Katie Robinson, Jean Merkel. Fifth Row: Nancy Johns, Nita Froelich, Antigone Giannokopoulis, Mib Bramlette, Leslie Phillips, Teri Courtaney, Jane Allen, Jody Newton, Sue Webber, Paula Barclay, Cindy Stewart, Pat Rjley, Lydia Mitchell, Nancy Rappeport, Jeri Sanders, Susie Basanda. Sixth Row: Carolyn Dohrenwend, Carol Diffenbaugh, Pam Mitchell, Ann PoUom, Leslie Meek, Kathy Phillips, Jean Laughlin, Ann Bromer, Anne Crichlow, Susie Kirn, Jane Blemker, Anne Gilmore, Joanie Bell, K.D. Hatfield, Anne Kiely, Kris Nordin, Barb Stock. 364 r ' v |, ' vf 365 Omega Psi Phi From Ron. Dennis Grimes, Ricky Smith, Michael Kemp, Darrell Bunnell. Second Row: John Cowherd, Harold Jones, Ronn Norfleet, Rotha Joanson, Dwayne Malachi, Konrad Thomas. Third Row: Pete Hall, Ezell IVIarrs, Rodney Truttling, Carl Waterford, Eddy Daniels. Fourth Row: Jerry Leftwhich, Gregory Gooch, Paul Brock, Isaiah Scott, Juan Gant, Benny Toller, Greg Haynes, Thomas Ray, Frank Wil- liamson, Wayne Majors. Fifth Row: George An- derson, Gregory Fleming, Reginald Mason, Al Dumas, Michael Phelps, Les Butler, Mickey Jairrels, Trotter Collier, Dwight Ross, Brad Chapman. Brothers Not Pictured: William Wallace, Derrick Puckett, Gary Thurman, Michael Banks, Henry Coaxum, Michael McClendon, William Jordan, Donald Johnson, Arnie Shouse, William Glasper, Ed Smith, Gary Bridgeman, Walter Lowe, William Brodie, Mel Yancy, Eric Mullin. Graduate Advisor, Dr. James P. Holland. Omega Psi Phi Potential Pearls right i: Front Row: Walter Lowe. Second Row: Pinkie McNeil, Naomi Hodge, Karen Johnson, Linda Jenkins, Dawn Ross. Third Row: Kathy Harper, Yvonne Alexander, Lauretta Blackburn, Carol Toler. Fourth Row: Kathy Darden, Jacqueline Evans, Janna Parker, Denise Steen, Darien Richard, Monica Banks, Althea Martin. Fifth Row: Virrither Cooper, JoAnn Reece, Kim Crowell, Wilma Talley, Andrea Anderson, Kathy Hickerson. 366 The major social event of the year for the Omega Psi Phi ' s was the Mardi Gras Extrava- ganza. The annual weekend ot festivities include a skating part) ' and the Twenty- Pearls Ball leading up the Ext ravaganza itself held in Alumni Hall. Admission was charged to each event with proceeds going to sickle cell anemia research and an Omega Psi Phi scholarship. During the summer they also sponsor a weekend Fantasmagoria to raise money for a national scholarship fund. Next November 1 , the Omega Psi Phi ' s will celebrate their 65th anniversary of their charter. In their 6-4th year, they hosted Maya Angelou at MRC after she gave a lecture on Black American literature in the new lU Foundation building. Omega Psi Phi is an international fraternity with chapters in Germany, Africa and Guam. On the third Sunday every March they hold Me- morial Day services for members of Omega Psi Phi who have died. Omega Psi Phi PcJrIs jtij Seophytes: front Rou: Dennis Grimes, Ricky Smith. Michael Kemp. Second Rou: ' Wonne Oaks, JoAnn Mason, Cythia Durrus. Third Rou: Patrice McElroy, Vivian Morrison, Gwendolyn Douglas. Anita Dupee. Fourth Rou: Tamara Thompson, Deborah Douglas, Cindy Rodgers, Debbie Barnett. Fifth Rou : Cynthia Chapm- en, Linda Upshaw, Arlene Collins. ' icky Huft. 367 Sigma Phi Epsilon With 82 members, Sigma Phi Epsilon is one of the largest fraternities on campus. Last fall the house held three major dances, the Sig Ep Ship- wreck, which featured Pure Funk, the Fall Pledge Dance, and the annual Christmas Dance. The spring calendar included their biggest dance of the year, the annual Queen of Heart ' s Dance, held at the Brown County Inn and fea- turing Ebony Funk and Rhythm Revue. The Spring Pledge Dance and the Little 500 Dance concluded the list of 1974-75 dances sponsored by the Sig Eps. Sig Eps don ' t concern themselves primarily with social events, however. Academically, they recorded a 3-19 house GPA last year and the house also placed sixth in the Intramural Frater- nity point competition. In the annual Scrub Bucket Football game, they soundly defeated the Purdue Sig Eps, 28-0. An NCAA basketball victory in Lexington, Kentucky prompted Sig Eps (top left) to toast the team with banner and brew. Sig Eps and Theta ' s joined spirits and formed one large cheering block at the 1974 Regetta. The best part of studying is taking a break. John Nestel. Les Ottenheimer. Mike Jefferson. Jeff Whisler and Andy Orent {lower right i take advantage of an eveening study break. 368 Front Row: Terry Cox, Rich Kautzman, Jay Souers, Dennis Steele, Jeff Mason, Tom Brandon, Lon Grubb, Brad Lear, John Tanke, Bill Talbert. Second Row: Jeff Tenksbuvy, Rick Fisher, Mike Alber, Don Shafter, Jeff Klopfensrein. Third Row: Doug McCormick, Rick Weigel, Paul Peterson, Gary Schiffli, John Bar- nett, Kent Pertigrew, Jim Graessle, Jim Caskey, Dave Criswell, Dave Coates, Steve Bishop, Tom Thompson, Dave Chaddock, Bob Lanham, John Banks, Jeff Whisler, Jim Mendenhall. Fourth Row: Mike Ed- wards, Dick Miller, Rob Hanrahan, Jim Wolfe, Mike Boggs, Tom Bauer, Sergi Traycoff, Don Biggs, Andy Orent, David Rinehart, Jeff Stellhorn, Rick Sniadecki, Ted Briggs, Dan Stanley, Bob Kirtley, John Nestel, Stuart Brown, Chris Miller, Mike Jefferson, Chris Dufour, John Hanrahan, Steve Forgy, Dick Alter, Nick Clevenger, Eric Wyer, Dave Gillrnore. X 369 Acacia This year the men of Acacia celebrated the 25th year of the Acacia Ice Cream Social. Indi- anapolis mayor Richard Lugar, lU president John Ryan and Chancellor Herman B. Wells at- tended and served ice cream and cake to the lU community. Asher Benrubi and Pure Funk along with sev- eral other local bands provided the entertain- ment. Acacia acquired a new mascot this year. E uke, a Great Dane now roams the halls of Acacia. They also revived a long standing tradi- tion of the Night on the Nile dance. A huge sphynx topped off the decorations for the dance which was held Homecoming weekend. An International Tea with Alpha Chi Omega Little 500 with the Tri Delts, and Parents Weekend all helped to make the spring semester an exciting time. As more and more fraternities are having a more lib- eral attitude toward pledgeship. the Acacia ' s went a step further and adopted Duke, a Great Dane, as a 370 Front Row: Bill Buechele, Mark Bloken, Henry Baele, Dave Foyler, Bob Brocco, Jim Zachau, Bud Fennema, Jerry Kaster. Second Row. Christ Drossos, Mark Wroblewski, Terry Ping, Jim Davis, Bill Marsh, Mike Poe, Tim Wood, Mark Baker, Tim Bray, Bud Sirbu, Third Rcjw: Marty Shields, Dave Butch, Chris Veeder, Tom McNees, Mike Plath, Jerry Plath, Jim Dreesen, Don Stump, Mark Hackbarth, Roger Green, Rich Ligman, Phil White, Tom Hammil, Raul Rivas, Rico Domanski, Mike Shelby. Fourth Row: Mark Smith, Tom Spurlock, Mike Smith, Willie Osbach, Dan Stinson, Jay Kolhmeier, Jim Clark, Joe Brockman. Alpha Epsilon Phi During tall rush the Alpha Epsilon Phi ' s suc- ceeded in rushing 34 new pledges and ten more were added in the spring. The pledges and actives worked with the Sigma Pi ' s on a third place win- ning homecoming float, A Tight Hold on Victo- ry. Keggers, a hayride and holiday dance were other activities held during the fall semester. Teaming up with the Phi Kappa Psi ' s the Phi ' s won third place in the large production competi- tion in lU Sing. Some of the songs included in the production were, Off We Go into the Stands on 10th Street, Can Our Bike Man Make It Through, and You ' ve Got to be a Little Five Hero. Later in the semester two actives, Mindy Green- berg and Debbie Rolls organized a food drive for the needy in BkxDmington. On a rainy February day the Phi ' s collected 364 cans of food from the university and Bloomington community. The tood was later distributed by the Salvation Army and Christian Center. Debbie Rolls, coordinator of the Alpha Epsilon Phi food drive, collects canned goods for needy Bloomington resi- dents. Front Row: Polly Dubin, Linda Schottenstein, Flynne Kautman. Jody Birnberg, Sandy Gelman. Second Row. Jill Liebling, Eileen Weinteld, Hedy Gensburg, Lisa Kaufman, Pam Hash, Connie Watkins. Third Row. Sandy Wagman, Nancy Stein, Laurie Cohn, Laurie West, Gail Cohen, Carol Cantor, Debbie Rolls. Fourth Row. Debbie G. Goldberg, Jan Levi, Barb Chernoft, Jill Mayer, Faye Landsman, Linda Prossack, Diane Lutz, Joan Rothenberg, Evy Soltin. Linda Robinson. Fifth Row: Lori Wolt ' son, Cathy Jacoby, Toni Berke, Charlene Schwartz. Kathy Chamberlain, Sylvia Blake, Debbie W ' olinsky, Ciebbie Leviton. Cyndi Schlosser. Donna Thompson, Gretchen Stuart. 371 Alpha Gamma Delta I As most sororities. Alpha Gamma Delta is a place to make lasting friendships and share ex- periences in community and campus activities. This year activities that distinguished this house from other sororities was winning the first place trophy in lU Sing for their Tribute to Judy Garland. Their mtramural volleyball team went 5-0 but their inner-rube water polo team (pictured at the right) sank. The 80 members of Alpha Gamma Delta sponsor various altruistic projects. One of these projects is a party for the children at the Speech and Hearing Clinic. Sprmg semester activities centered around Little 500. AGD ' s ran up and down steps, rode trikes and cheered on the bike teams in between classes and keggars. 372 Front Row: Sue Ferguson, Mary Bergdoll, Deb Bowman, Janna Adams, Sue Easter, Veronica Lau, Mother HoUiday, Diane Brown, Danita Smigiel, Brenda Rees, Jackie Lissey, Jane Bottom, Josette Noonan. Second Row: Barb Whitmire, Susan Herz- feld, Karen Stechman, Peggy Stroup, Sara Blesch, Barb Bucci, Sally Phillips, Leigh Huminsky, Cheryl Davis, Joyce Campbell, Elizabeth Webb, Deb Myers. Third Row: Par Cooper, Julie Hersberger, Deb Baker, Marcia Schackelford, Nina Srrong, Sarah Kite, Vickie Conner, Yvonne Lau, Sue Dabkowski, Kalley Meyer, Cindie Harvey, Jeanne Schramm, Colleen Murray, Karen Dunlevy, Joyce Volakakis. Fourth Row: Suzanne Thomas, Kim Chapin, Kathy Slater, Cindy Davis, Kim Porter, Paula Gray, Sue Novy, Jane Heyde, Barb Schmidt, Val Cook, Cathy Clarke, Liz Reichle, Janet Surface, DeAnna Newton, Ro Hamilton, Karen Cogane, Sue Cleaveland, Lisa Simpkins. Fifth Row: Cathy Pulley, LuAnn Wirt, Donna Eichelberger, Michele Morgan, Kathy Rais, Sue Fine, Deb Nelson, Becky Richardson, Deb Thompson, Lou Corey, Kyle Kelly, Linda Spencer, Laurie Hanway, Marci Reddick, Mary Sue Palmer. k M Alpha Omicron Pi Alpha Omicron Pi opened the year by pledging 36 girls. The next step was the initia- tion of five girls from the half-class on November 9, 1974. AOPi teamed up with Alpha Epsilon Pi to teeter -totter for the Cancer Research Fund and joined Delta Tau Delta to run to Purdue for the Kidney Foundation. For Halloween they joined the DU ' s to trick or treat for UNICEF. They won the Spirit Trophy at the February ' Follies (pictured at the left). In addition to philanthropic activities, the house was active in other areas. Jamie Gordon and Mary Ann McCarty were both Monar Board members while Peggy Butts and Becky Wiggins were both officers of Alpha Lambda Delta, a freshmen women honorary sorority. Other members were redsteppers. Singing Hoosiers and officers in Student Athletic Board and Panhel. Karren Gore, the assistant pledge trainer, came in first on the intramural swim team, and was on lU ' s swim team. Karren qualified for the nationals which were held at Arizona State, March 15. Pledge Betvy Chambers also qualified tor the nationals. IV: Front Row: Debbie Ivagnilio, Dottie Hett, Cathy Rosemeyer, Carol O ' Neal, Kyra Matherly, Janet Pole, Billie Jean White, Kathy Norris, Linda Bruce, Carol Gutzweiler, Portia Abott, Martha Long. Second Rou . Maryan Yacko, Julie Bradley, Lois Bertocchio, Diane Rhinehart, Janet Gilkey, Gina Bertig, Diane Heath, Nancy Samek, Nancy Murphy, Debbie Dison, Debbie Borland. Third Row: Sue McGill, Leslie Cun- ningham, Pam Nortan, Kathy VanStrein, Janet Hoffman, Linda Smeltz, Barb Marvel, Karren Gore, Carol Swakon, Kathy Atkins. Fourth Row: Leslie Westbay, Cindy McGill, Marry Martin, Margaret Binkley, Sheila Pfeffer, Jill Tharpe, Debbie Bowen, Lynne Cory, Mary Weinhold, Lisa Lahrman, Bette Chambers, Cindy Neidhan, Dawn Pierce, Marsha Timm, Susan Robertson, ' icki Seller. Fifth Rou: Jill Kizer, Becky Scmidi, Becky Wiggins. Sixth Row: Vive Bonham. Mary McKinney, Sheran Briggs, Sue Alber, Peggi ' Butts, Kim Kmg. Melissa Tharpe, Diane Young, Abbey Thompson, N ' icky Mooney, Becky Lawson, Debbie Miichel, Leslie Hunt, Ann Visscher. Carol Makielski, Nancy Rutledge, Mary McDonald, Debbie Morris, Kris Hauze, Sally Stegen, Joyce Wagonman. 373 Alpha Sigma Phi One of the youngest chapters on campus. Alpha Sigma Phi celebrated the seventh anni- versary of its charter on February 17. At the 1974 National Convention the house received the province leadership award and the Grand Senior Presidents award for the outstanding chapter of the year. For the past two years, Alpha Sigma Phi has sponsored a Halloween Party for young adults at the Stone Belt center. Last year they placed sec- ond in the ZBT Dance Marathon, raising money for muscular dystrophy. There are 40 active members in the chapter, four pledges and a golden labrador retriever, Hercules. Alpha Sigma Phi was the first house on campus to initiate a non-hazing pledge pro- gram as well as having a non-sectarian attitude towards membership. Charlie Clevenger. president, and Steve Fairchild. scholarship chairman, present awards at the bi-annual scholarship banquet. Front Row: Marty Levy, Mike Stemm, Bob Stewart, Mark Mills, Frank Wahman, Jim Kariya, Brent Kent Rebman. Mark Gill, Jeff Bantz, John Chappo, Mike Lawless, Chris Shoemaker, John Whisler. Sec- Speraw, Gary Moorman. Third Row: Dan Host, Todd Mike Pluris, Jim Burns, Jim Hockerman, Paul Miles, ond Row: Ken Rosiansky, Craig Moorman, Tom Hittinger, Mike Gentry, Charlie Clevenger, Kirk Jim Nicholas. Fifth Row: Joe Adams. Brown, Doug Lynch, Kevin Finley, Chuck Ellison, Ostby, Dan McCampbell. Fourth Row: Larry Nisley, 374 r L Delta Delta Delta Delta Delta Delta is more interesting than its name suggests. Tri Deltas are represented in a myriad of campus activities and honoraries. Jaqe Richardson, junior, served as Panhel president for the 1973- ' 4 term. Many Tri Deltas participate in Student Foundation and Union Board committees. Carol Ried. a Singing Hoosier, tours with the group and has been in productions such as Applause. Ballet majors contributed to the arts with their performances in the Nutcracker Suite and Romeo and Juliet. Tri Deltas also have three members in the academic honorary. Mortar Board. The sorority raises mone - each year on Hoag) ' Day selling sandwiches. The money earned goes for two scholarships offered to any- one on the Bloomington campus. The Tri Deltas placed third in the campus overall division ot the Februat) Follies, a ser -ice project sponsored by Sigma Nu. Profits from the mock Olympics went to Monroe GDunty Big Brother Big Sister Program. Studying isn ' t aluays a painjul process as Linda McVl ' barter follows animal escapades in The Incredi- ble Journey. a a n First Row: Martha Martin, Diane Norwalk, Gloria Finnerty, Sue Schwartz, Teresa Burke, Sally Keith, Nanny Browning, Jennifer Harrison. Second Row: Janet Kosewicz, Pam Ewing, Jan Smiley, Ann Tikka, Michelle Borror, Joan Rhinehan, Chris Jackson. Cindy Endsley, Julie Bennett, Shelley Fronberry. Third Row: Betsy Yarbrough, Jan Smiley, Dianne Tanaka, Amy Miller, Jane Klicka, Barb Chenoweth, Linda McWhorter, Joanne Stonebreaker, Joann Curry. Janine Bonner, Ginny Jove. Fourth Row: Pam Bale, Gale Stewa rt, Cathy Pruitt, Kathy Lamond, Cindy Riegel, Marsh Rockey, Linda Marsio, Jane Hall, Linda Frank, Beth Lorey, Ellie Pfaff, Jane Fields, AUene Burke, Nancy Heazlitt, Pam Pfeifer Fifth Row: Nancy Fueger, Bobbi Kittle, Gretchen Letterman, Cathy Hansen, Barb Lawall, Yvonne Beachler, Jane Richardson, Nancy O ' Neal, Elaine DeHaven, Becky Wilson, Connie Keith, Kris Helm, Beth Finnerty, Liz Hreha, Diane Berger, Bobby Florea, Mrs. Pearson. Sixth Row: Debbie Strom, Connie Kuyoth, Kathy Sagala, Lori Waiss, Gina Gerrity, Trudy Scamehorn, Cathy Chenoweth, Sharon Jones, Deb Cain, Anne Fitton, Jane Wachholz, Kathi Stec, Tina Gott. 375 Delta Tau Delta Far out on the end of the North Jordan exten- sion stands the Delta Tau Delta house. With all the open fields and nearly deserted street at the end of the extension, the Delts decided their corner of Indiana University was the perfect place to have a street dance on one hot August night, one of the first events of the 1974-75 school year. After that dance, the Delts sponsored a Road Rally. Still yearning for the road they ran in the lU-to-Purdue Run for the Kidney Foundation. Following that was the classic Mud-Rain Foot- ball Bowl and then Parents Day. Following a succession of parties and recruiting, the Delts initiated the Beta Chapter of the Delt Little Sisters. Craig Collins Iright) enterlains his parents at the Delta Tau Delta Annual Parents Weekend. 376 Front Row: Mike Eid, Arbor, Craig Collins, Ned North, Kent Carpenter, Second Row: Jim Lienhoop, Scott Brennan, Mike Mast, Ken Glass, Rick Catlett, Greg Frushour, Doug Gourley, Scon Szabo, Dave Jessee, Scott Spradling. Third Row: Scott Stevens, Bob Vivian, Mark DeSalvo, Doug Conover, Tony Wishart, Greg Oliver, Brian Samuels. Fourth Row: Tom Blake, Loren Gabe, Lee Forszt, Dan O ' Connor. Fifth Row: Kent Hill, Scott Brown, Lee Dustman, Mark Kastner, Mike Coy, Joe Ronzone, Dennis Hatt, Brad Pine, Ron Hawkins, Joe Lohmeyer, Dana Jeffries, Dave McRoberts, Max Tilford. . ' « Delta Upsilon 1975 marked the 69th anniversar) ' of Delta Upsilon at Indiana University. Fifty years ago the DU ' s house burned. They claimed the water heater blew up but actually they had stuffed paper in the walls and set their house on fire. The DU house was old and the residents decided to burn it down to collect the insurance so they could build a new house. Since both the fire chief and the msurance curator were DU ' s no one needed to find out the water heater was still intact after the fire. To celebrate the building of the new house and the ridding of the old, every year since the fire the DU ' s have had a Fireman ' s Fling. Delta Upsilon is an international fraternity with 92 active chapters throughout the United States and Canada. Special philanthropic inter- ests include collecting for LTVICEF and the Cancer Drive. .1 r ■ Front Row: Ed Reed. Second Row: Dan Reynolds, George Ball, John ' Vogt, Bob ' Whitman, Jerry Wollam, Georbe Cochran, Steve Jaren. Third Row: Doug Pond, Al Eisner, Dirk Pruis, George Curran, Jim Kerr, Bob Kaplar, Dave Patton, Kyle Landis, Kevin Smith, Randy Wilburn, Bob Lamb, Phil McKee, Tom Burns, Greg Elsen, Skip Elliott. Tim Bell, Kirby Moss, John Mason, Rich Moran. Fourth Row: Al Martindale, Jeft ' Cochran, Brian Arledge, John Brost, Steve Daley, Phil Polus, Rip Pretat, Joe Komins, Jim Farrell, Tad MuUins, Tom Janecka, Rich Gibb. 377 Kappa Delta A house of many activities and interests. Kappa Deltas pride themselves on being their own women. They participated in intramural sports, charity drives, the Februar) ' Follies, Homecoming, Riverboat in Louisville, and Little 500 events with the Delta Chi ' s. House participation was encouraged in Uni- versity organizations and KD ' s were involved in lUSF, Senior Class Council, IMUB, HYPR ref- erees, lU Debate, Student Athletic Board, Alpha Lambda Delta, Singing Hoosiers and Campus Crusade. Kappa Delta ' s special philanthropic interest is the Crippled Children ' s Hospital for under- privileged children, and they often make toys for them. rU ' s Kappa Delta, traditionally a southern so- rority, has the special privilege of being the only KD chapter in Indiana. Statewide alumnae chapters support them in all they do. Terry Bryant and Sue Boardman sing country tunes to Lonnie Herrman. Shannon Tinsley. Retiee Steele. Bartha Hartman and Tern Gtck on Barn Day . 378 I ' ront Ruu ; Karen Brian, Pam Graber, Jan Moldsread, Ann Brockman, Micliele Bremer, Laurie Potter. Sec- ond Row: Meg Hackett, Barb Sadler, Terri Gick. Shannon Tinsley, Terry Bryant, Stephanie Tanke, Lynn Schenck, Leslie Cowan, Delena Woods, Mary Blackwood. Third Row: Pat Otte, Mary ' Victor, Karen Shafer, Sue Sargent, Jane Hoadley, Jackie Stephens, Mary O ' Brien, Sherri Stewart, Mom Young, Robin Johnson, Kris Smith, Libby Bradford, Lynn Christie, Peg Crimans, Ann Kutch, Carol Godsey, Elona Herr- mann, Sue Boardman. Kappa Delta Rho With 26 actives and three pledges in the house, Kappa Delta Rho offers a unique experi- ence which broadens and expands educational and social developments at lU. As a close-knit organization, they help each other academically, emotionally and socially. A house of this size is rare on this campus but small houses do have difficulties. Much ol last year was spent building up the house ' s image, size and funds. While keeping in mind that their primary ob- jective is to obtain an education, KDR had a full range of social activites. They participated in campus events and had a very active Little Sister program. Last year they had 15 little sisters. Front Row. Phil F. Blankenhorn, Mark A. Jones, Bryan J. Taylor, Thomas P. Gorman. Robert F. Nicholas. Second Rou : Stephen A. , lter. James K, Pirrle, WiUiam F. Sharon, Stanley M. Rouse, Brian K. Houlihan. Third Rou: Robert A. Holmquist. Ed- mund A. Schmidtt, Douglas S. X ' okoun, John R. Meyers, Gerald F. Niezer, John J. Gorman. Michael P. iNIcAleavey. Fourth Rou - Bernard -A Xiezer. Kim L. Sayre. Ronald L. Hatft. Kurt A. Wallenstein, Lawrence K. Lahr, John E. Faylor. Fifth Rou: J. Ed- ward Detamore, Willis R. Goble, David P. Fritch, Miguel R. Avila. Kappa Alpha Theta Located on Woodlawn Avenue, the Thetas ' have had a busy year. Between planned and spontaneous activities, there was rarely a dull moment. House events included fraternity exchanges, dinners and parties with pledges, singing at a nursing home, three annual dances. Parent ' s weekend, projects with alumns. Mini and Little 500, and even late night trips to the Etonut shop. They were also involved on campus, receiving the highest honors in lU Sing Large Production and attaining an active GPA of 3.44. They also placed second in All-Campus Intramurals. On an individual basis, there was a wide range of involvement in campus activities and organizations. One member helped produce the University theatre ' s production of Applause and Damn Yankees. Other members were in the cast and stage crew. Thetas ' were also active in scholastic honoraries, Student Foundation, Student Athletic Board, Freshman Advisory Commission, Panhellenic and Union Board. Theta ' s Get Happy during their lU smg production Showalter Follies. Teamed with the Phi Kappa Tau ' s they received first place in the large production divisirjn for their efforts. t  ' ■ . 1 r m. Ji i. . « c 1 i d t- - « f tl s « %L .% T % ' tnc mk i Ma -SS. -- a=5- — — - Front Row: Jackie Detmer, Joan Hilleary, Katie Hall, Barb Standley, Marry Binzel, Beth Miller. Second Row: Pam Iddings, Cindi Heine, Teria Pachard, Jenny Eshbach, Pat Martin, Mrs. Dawson, Lynn Wilson, ' Valli Smith, Debbie Shook, Debbie Black- well, Joni Marshall, Marva Ping, Cindy Carl. Third Rrjw: Nancy Roush, Claudia Draga, Debbie Taylor, Barb Castaldi, Marty Cannon, Anita Cones, Barb Mc- Donald, Marilyn Schumann, Mary Lee Jontz, Kathy O ' Mahoney, Jeannie Horton, Julie Stouthammer, Julie O ' Brien, Joan Burton, Patty Amstutz, Bobi Mettlen, Pat Dillon, Jan Heine, Judy Swanson, Donna Owens. Fourth Row: Jennifer Wertz, Nini Engleman, Chris Lammers, Becky Hicks, Sandy Lyons, Annie Murchinson, Nana Cornell, Judy Thielemann, Lu Doty, Nancy Pritchard, Nancy Marshall, Carolyn ' Woolsey, Nancy Bushey, Diane Cummins, Cathy Roof, Sherry Jesse, Sue Roush, Melinda Hall, Lynn Robertson, Beth Irwin, Mindy Hutchinson, Polly Myers, Susie Richardson. 380 Kappa Sigma Fifteen pledges joined sixty Kappa Sigma ac- tives last year at 1-4 11 Nonh Jordan. With so many men living in the house, the year ' s activi- ties were varied and something was always going on. One of the biggest philanthropic projects for the pledges and actives alike, was helping to raise money for cystic fibrosis. For their efforts, the Kappa Sigs won the Outstanding Sen ' ice Award, and the house was recognized for collecting the largest amount of money of any group helping with the projea. The pledges went to the Kappa Sigma chapter house at the University of Illinois for their walk-out and they were initiated on January 24. The house joined Chi Omega ' s for lU Sing and won seventh place overall. The spring formal, held in April, was a Riverboat Dance in Louisville, Kentucky. Three years ago, the house won the Little 500 race, and the past two years they have placed sec- ond. Front Row: Dave Sup, Randy Meyer, Jim Kayden, Sam Thompson, Gary Smith, Bill Ingrum, Dan Can- field, Bob Dyer, Kim KroU, Ricl Wenzler, Dave Naus, Butch Welbourn, Tim Gaulr, Pete Oren. Stc- ond Row. Scott Lycan, John Lukens, Ron Bates, Kent Cofoid, Larry Henderson, Bob Rothtcoph. EJ Snyder, Mike Ewing, Bill Goldner, Bill Cooper, Steve Horn, ■ ' ogi Hatsen. Third Rnu-: Damon Lamb, Chris Don- nellan. Con Casler, Mike Monroe, Larr) ' Spoolstra, Byron Ermeger, Scott Loux, Wes Tindal, Tom Leader, Pat Criliey, Doug Bachelor, Bill Ruckman, Perry Smith, Ed -Mantel. Steve Ca sidy. Mort Snertle. Steve Koenig. Randy Smith, Mark Monteith. Fourth Rou: Barry Allhands. Ron Joers. Randy Joers. Steve Achors, Turk McGary. 381 Phi Delta Theta Last December 7, Phi Delta Theta celebrated its 125th anniversary of continual existence — the longest of any chapter of Phi Delta Theta, and longer than any other fraternity as well. While the 125th Anniversary Celebration was the focal point of this year, the Fraternity also enjoyed considerable success in other en- deavors. Their intramural participation again seated Phi Delta Theta in the top 10 per cent of all fraternity athletics, with the house grade point average also in the leading 10 per cent. The lU Sing presentation and Little 500 bike team produced equally commendable efforts, and the traditional Phi Delta Theta Community Service Day Project aided the Easter Seal Cam- paign. Front Row. John Dinwiddie, Larry Wielgos, Rick Ryan, Jeff Elliot, Geoff Paddock, Kim Thurston, Jeff Johns, John Bearss, Rich Reisin, Wayne Caspar, Lee Shaffer. Second Row: Kim Heishman, Tom Reis, Dave Rutledge, Art Lacey, Larry Schmitz, Craig Ar- nold, Herb Donica, Mark Woodruff, Milce Renner, Jim Billman, John Krivacs, Greg Morris. T : i( Row. John Wise, Bill Hitch, Pete Cook, Joe Howorth, Marty Calle, Fritz Blum, Ron Tabak, Joe Comment, Bill Bailey, Greg Noland, Mark Starr, Ron Brake, Jocko Connley, Mike Ensminger, Toot Moor, Scott Morgan, Dave Knoth, Mike McCreary. Fourth Row: Jeff Warden, Pat McSoley, Bill Devanney, Tom Henry, Tom Pasqualie, Kelly Roberts, Fred Hendricks, Mark Brooks, John Perdue, Jim Blackwell, Scott Waddell, Dean Waddingron, Al Dunn, Steve Kruse, Dane Hudson, Ken Moeller, Jim Loyd, Mark Sherman, Chuck Coats, Chuck Erickson, Darry Weav- er, Jeff Belt, Jim Etter. 382 Phi Kappa Psi The Phi Kappa Psi ' s started off 19 ' ' 4 by placing second with the Delta Gamma sororit) ' in the Homecoming float display contest. They teamed up with the Alpha Epsilon Phis for lU Sing and brought home the full production third place trophy. They continued to be a strong power in intra- murals and still maintain the first place ranking in overall Little 500 points. Academically, the house wound up with a 3.25 average. Many Phi Psi ' s are involved in campus activi- ties with two members on Student Athletic Board, one on the Union Board, seventeen on Student Foundation and three on the Student Foundation Steering Committee. Socially active, the Phi Psis held eight dances throughout the year. The biggest dances included the Jefferson Duo and the ' River Boat dance which was held on the Ohio River with tour other fraternities. The Phi Psi ' s and AEPhi ' s practice their IV Sing skit which netted them a third place jull production trophy. Front Row: J.B. Carter, Doug Pond, LyJe Robinson, Scott Force, Scott Billingsley, Bill Mutz, Greg Reed, John Scudder, Roddy Stutzman, Chris Monroe, Garry Marquiss. Second Row: Mike Walter, Jeff Gamrath, Brian Burnhorst, Steve Gamrath, Tim Tuerff, Steve Brizius, Dan Mogin, Greg Smith, Pete Wyall, Dave Ziegner, Bruce Saylor, Phil Borntrager, Mark Kraner. Third Rnu: Rich Wiley, Scott Foncannon, Paul Holikamp, JR Sarpa, Kevin Baker, Ed Hervan, Pete Fountain, Dave Lambert, Bob Pell, D.in White, Steve Mather, Dan Delay, Ken Hansen, Howard May, Dave Schlemmer. Fnurth Rou: Greg Tarlman, Brad Lin- dinman, Dan Smith, Rick Quaintance, Keith Mughman, Jack Painter, Rob Carter, Brad Griffith, Jeff Mapes, Dave Rau, Marv Brown, Kent Hol- comb, Mac Fritz. Fifth Row: Jeff Troeger, Mark Bowles, Jim Lynch. 383 Pi Beta Phi The Pi Phis invited 38 girls to live with them at 928 E. Third Street last year. After rush, the moms took the pledges on as overnight to a cabin near a lake. In October the house had a Haymaker Barn Dance in Brown County. The pledges were busy shining shoes for fraternities to make money for their pledge class, and helped the actives raise money for the Arrowmont Set- tlement School in Gatlinburg, Tennessee. Dad ' s Weekend was held in the fall, and in December the girls had a Christmas Date Dinner at their house. The new year brought with it a new social schedule. Mom ' s Weekend was held in March, the pledges were initiated, and the house took 4th place in the Sigma Nu Follies. The Spring Formal Dance was in April and the Pi Phi ' s supported the Sigma Nu ' s in Little 500. The social functions were fun, but it was also a year of work, planning, friendship, and growing. Pt Beta Phi ' s don reindeer gear to seranade the Sigma Phi Epsilon ' s Christmastime. 384 Front Row: Joann Hinchman, Vicki Tarnow. Second Row: Julie Lenox, J.S. Brown, Patti Behrman, Janie Cowles, Betsy Meglemere, Lynn Bannon, Jill Ferris, Brenda Engle, Judi Collings, Kay Campbell, Sari Asher, Jeannie Wood. Third Row: Shawn Ewers, Paula Heil, Party Shuman, Marti Crodian, Melanie Cole, Stephany Lyons, Teresa Westfall, Marilyn Reno, Sandy Caulfield, Peggy Sufana, Marcia Dunne, Connie Clark, Kathy Clark. Fourth Row: Paula Thomas, Pa- trice Chinn, Laurie Winski, Nancy Etherington, Vicki Thurgood, Barb Heine, Linda Bareither, Heather Hunter, Susan Anderson, Mary Mokris, Marianne Grady, Sue Hagel, Beth Shirey. Fifth Row: Mary Gill, Connie Shoup, Karen Costello, Kathy Houser, Kim Retterrer, Connie Covington, Velynda Burnes, Jill Crawford, Linda Terapleton, Carol Nelson, Helayne Jenkins, Jeanie Bollei, Tara Nevin, Charrie Dixon, Vickie Lux. ? m Pi Kappa Phi The Pi Kappa Phi house is a growing frater- niry located at the corner of 8th Street and In- diana Avenue. It ' s a house that operates with a spirit of teamwork while still emphasizing indi- viduality among the members. The Pi Kaps participated in an organized church clean-up program, and were active in the campus wide Marathon Dance Contest for Muscular Dystrophy. In intramurals, the house finished third in their division in swimming, and second in wres- tling. The annual Halloween Dance was held in co- operation with the Chi Phi Fraternir ' , and the Rose Ball Christmas Dance was held last year at the Inn of the Four Winds. The spring formal, the Riverboat Dance was held in Louisville, Kentucky with three other fraternities and four sororities. Besides dances, intramurals and philanthropic activities, the Pi Kaps were also busy redecorating their house, adding a new parry room and library. Pi Kappa Phi hike team members Mike Shirley. Tony Schlichte, Terry Lewis (captain), John Leonard and Jim Hunt qualified 33rd for the Little 500 race with a time of 2:31 98. Front Row: Jeff Harvey, Gary Ashton, Charles Gatley, Joe Lingenfelter, Terry Manley, Kevin Doler, Mark Warner, Marty Manich, David Shook. Second R ow: Tim Knutson, Mark Burns, Gary Ashton, Scott Brin- dage, Terry Lewis, Paul J, Cooley, Mark Becker, John Dudley, Chuck Seeley, Paul Wickland, Gary Schlichte. Third Row: Dan Muckerheide, Jim Hunt, Bruce Paterson, Jim Crews, Don Gaines, Alan Yusko. Fourth Rou: Russ Lindsey, Tony Schlichte, Mike Shirley, Nick Gragg, John Leonard, Norman Bastin. 385 Sigma Chi Traditions, friendships, learning and broth- erhood are all elements of a fraternity. Although college life may be the same from class to class it is not from fraternity to fraternity. While other fraternities were constructing homecoming lawn displays with chicken wire and paper flowers, Sigma Chi was initiating an annual fund raising campaign. The project, in- corporated inro the homecoming festivities, provided for the treatment of two children from the lU Speech and Hearing Center. In addition, the social traditions remained. Sorority exchanges, serenades, dinner ex- changes, lU Sing and Little 500 provided oppor- tunities to gain friendships. The White Cross was painted as a souvenir on several sorority sidewalks. .■ : ' ,m-Xi 386 Front Row: Wayn Bopp, Bob Taylor, Kevin Ford, Mark Kaminski, Dave Farr. Second Row: Dan Meek, Rob Wicssert, Art Fisher, John Shipley, Larry Becker, Jeff Reed. Third Row: Steve Porter, Rob Darmer, Jeff Ray, Rev Taylor, Tim Davis, Jim Hamblin, Steve Maxam, Fred Shirley, Kurt Brace, Dave Busch, Dave Waite, Ron Hattin, Mike Fowler, Dan Chase, Tom Reynolds, Ted Wise, Chris Tucker, Mike Burroughs, Mike Atkins, Terry Graessle, Dave Shymkus, Roger Donely. Fourth Row: Dave Straw, Jack Gardner, Glen Gardner, Chuck VanMeter, Bob Peacock, Walt Beebe, John Wiethoff, Mike Boswell, Neil Sinclair, Steve Mahan, Bob Fox, Carson Smith, Greg Ault, Jack Wade, Tim McDaniel, Rich Maddox, Jim Kaellner, Jim Rhoades, John Pigg, Jeff Tonner, Dave Win- strom. Sigma Nu i ■ • Hl ' ' J A, Si . , ' ■ M - - . .: l -? -v i? 4 . «L I F ( BBE nt 5 .1 - i P - ' g T ■1 4 Z) On Februar) ' 16, 1975 the Sigma Xu ' s spon- sored the Februar} ' Follies , a day of races and field events between competing sororities. The event, won by the Delta Gammas, was held to raise money for the Monroe County Big Brother-Big Sister Program. Through dona- tions, ticket sales, and local businesses who con- tributed a dollar a point tor a given sorority, well over S800.00 was donated to the charity. Several Sigma Nu ' s participated in mter- collegiate athletics. Super-Sub John Laskowski, Tom Abernathy, and freshman Jim Wisman all saw aaion for the Big Red powerhouse. Mike Winslow, Tom Buck, Mike Glazier, Bill Brusse, Chuck Grifith and Mike Rose all played foot- ball, while Dennis McGuire, Dan Cysenski, Craig Mann and Mike Sheehan all wrestled. In the intramurals, the Sigma Xu s captured the Crimson division traveling trophy, winning the 1973- ' 4 season by about 200 points. Sigma Nu is well represented on the IL ' Student Foundation and other campus activities. Steering committee member Dan White heads the list with nearly all ot the juniors and seniors in the house active on one committee or another. . : T K .JL .J ' ■■nnrid M i HPOg St VtiK ' fe - :: ■ emm J P Ml. ddttj HH Tv 38 Sigma Pi EHiring the Homecoming game fans looked to the sky as a Sigma Pi alumni welcome helicopter flew over the stadium. It was the Sigma Pi ' s 50th year at lU. Their homecoming float won 3rd place. They had a 3.2 house GPA for the fall semester, and initiated 30 new pledges. They won the C-Division in football and they had two basketball teams in the intramural playoffs. Other fun, formal and informal activities started with the homecoming weekend hayride following a dmner at the Inn of the Four Winds Every year they all go to Indianapolis for the Orchird Ball. And in spring there was the Emerald Isle. In keeping with the fraternity tradition of ieranading sororities, the Sigma Pi ' s entertained the Gamma Phi Beta ' s. Front Row. Stan Serwatka, Dan Eubanks, Dave Lock- wood, Mac Ford, Lady, Kevin Laster, Dave Peritz, Ryan Cummins. Second Row: Mark Harmon, Gary Grossman, Mark Harp, Vince Carunchia, Sam Sisler, Dan Coulter, Rob Wook, Don Puluer, Randy Fisher Bruce SoUiday, Stan Keneipp, Dan Wasowski, Gary Adams, Nick Elish, Kevin Thompson. Third Row: Larry Christ, Dave Stombaugh, Pat Gorbitz, Bruce Metzger, Dale Arlman, Kevin Hinkle, Jeff Beck, Tom Buting. Fourth Row: Greg Thorsky, Bruce Albrand, Jim Stires, Joe Glaser, Tome Barker, John Brunson, Terry Atz, Steve Gripp, Geoff Scott, Randy Ruckle, Bill McCutchen, Carl Hawks, Tom Cummins. Fifih Row: Steve Spaulding, Carl Kalinka, Jay Hittinger, Scott Musser, Kevin Rafdal, John Speas, Jurgen Voss, Carey Carrington, Mike Foster, Dave Franch. Sixth Row: Marty Phoenix, Joel Gerbers, Clint Brown, Dan Cougill. 388 f.l! Theta Chi The highlights of the year for the Theta Chi ' s was the weekend all the Theta Chi ' s and Delta Gamma ' s from Wisconsm came for the lU- ' W ' is- consin game. They chartered a bus for the trip and brought along 13 kegs of beer. In addition to that rather impromptu extrava- ganza, Theta Chi ' s do have normal size dances and exchanges. During the tall semester they have a Barn Dance and a Christmas formal. In the spring the pledges plan one dance. This year the theme was Gentlemen ot Pleasure and La- dies ot the Evening. The second weekend in April, Theta Chi ' s went formal at the Dream Girl dance. This was the first year their bike team went to Florida to practice. Their six team members went to West Palm Beach, far from other Theta Chi ' s in Lauderdale and Daytona to practice for the race over Spring Break. Front Row: Steve Townsend, Steve Strickler, Dave Himebrook, ' Warren Hoffman. Second Row: Brad Cooper, Steve Campbell, Terry Diskey, Mike Smith. Jim Shoemaker, Kevin Boxberger, Dick Tetrick. Third Row: Tom Knox, Rick Miller, Dean Teagno, Amal Das, Cal Sparrow, Mick Matthews, Bubba Hines, Gary Walker. Fourth Row: Ron Henkey, Bill Gonas, Steve McMahon, Dan Martin, Steve McGar- rect, Tony Piazza, Pat Megroin, Steve Click, Spencer Romine, Ed Free, Him Herman. Fifth Row: Jett Thieman, Lance Houser, Tokyo Joe, Wally Romine, Dave Walker, Gary Price, Ronald McDonald, John Ellett, Brian Burton. Ken Gray, Skip Myers. Ststh Row: Jim Trotsos, Mike Lennington, Big Bill from Evansville, Knute Kneller, John Cull, Fred Scheiber, Scotty Recocaine, Randy Smith. Jim Ewer. Abbott Chapman, Thad Jennings. Zeta Tau Alpha Fifty actives currently live in the Zeta Tau Alpha house and there are 29 pledges. As a service project, the pledge class worked with the Union Board Bloodmobile to procure blood for two people with lukemia. The house as a group sold light bulbs for the National Associ- ation of Retarded Children. ZTA ' s placed second along with the Sigma Chi ' s in lU Sing in the mixed choral division. They also received the steering committee Co- operation Award this year. In the tall they paired with the DU ' s for Homecoming and in the spring they followed the Phi Delt ' s Little 500 activities. Pledges Stacey Turk and Lisa Schwtnghammer prepare to donate blood at the Union Board Blood- mobile. All ZTA pledges and nearly all the actives participated in the project. Front Row: Leigh Hitch, Linda Wheeler, Shiela Harris, Chris Lord, Marian Gallagher, Sandy Sweet, Stacy Turk, Sue Thiiman, Jan Zubak, Terry Ber- nardic, Carol Brown, Sue Peters, Marcia Hitch, Kith Taber. Second Row: Pam Wilde, Lee Ann White, Cecily Axsom, Connie Millberg, Peggy Holinga, Barb Anderson, Pat Lusher, Kelley McLaughlin, Lisa Smith, Laura Ihnen, Kathy Crane, Sherilyn Reynolds, Sue Clifford, Lisa Schwinghammer. Third Row: Beth Brescher, Berry Walters, Candee Edkew, Melanie Hillman, Cindy Hanes, Bobby Murphy, Cindy Neff, Nancy Kilijian, Debbie Crittenden, Janet Schmidt, Jill Salmons Gail Miller, Barb Schlundt, Bonnie Chas- teen. Fourth Row: Marcia Ruf, Geri Kleeman, Pam Deal, Sandy Smiley, Mary Beth Kovach, Janet Wiley, Mary Browne, Deb Nowak, Ann Huston, Paula Gill, Bobby Okey, Joan Hartung, Terry Mensch, Karen Rariden, Barb Moore, Connie Kurtz, Liz Alhand, Vicki Schulteis. 390 k m Alpha Epsilon Pi Front Row. Robert Nemo, James Jacobs, Alan Oren- stein, David Kanter, Jeremy Mishkin, Phillip Lande, Gary Tabakin, Earl Wolfe, Gerald Cauldron. Second Row: Michael Richman, Robert Brateman, Steven Schull, David Palmer, Joseph Csillag, Ronald Bezahler, Barry Weiss, James Schwarz, Robert Sil- verman, Scott Pollack. Third Row: David Goldsmith, Paul Abramson, Steven Rosen, Robert New, Ivan Crash, Lawrence Wilk, Ken Levin, James Weinberg, Garry Weiss, Michael Langer, Mark Epstein, Seth Elerin, Steven Saltzman, Richard Gubitz. Fourth Row: Richard Grossman, Todd Emoff. Gary Miller, Jeff Berkowitz, Alan Feldbaum, Daniel Kadetz, Rich- ard Pass, Martin Katz, Jeffrey Gubitz. James Lipton, Lawrence Micon. Alpha Kappa Alpha Front Row: Jennette Rayford, Anita West, Marilyn Armstead, Veda Jairrels, Sheila Dufor. Second Row: Evelyn Bushrod, Patricia Earns, Iris Gordon, Bonnie Tyler. Third Row: Audrey Porter, Lisa Gibson, Joanne Bailey, Blandette Jackson, Aletha Jackson, Desiree Tate, Quensetta Williams, Marcia Brown, Terry Barnett. Roni Looper, Athena Jonnson. Fourth Riiu : Patrici,! Shipp, Sharon Garnett, Shirley Stenatd. Juanita Day, Donna Rogers, Janice Moss. Kathy Moore, Sheriee Ladd, Lisa Bryant. Fifth Rou: Laurietta Jordan, Bo nita White, Gwen Verner, Michelle Ligon. 391 Alpha Phi Alpha Front Rou . Robert Admas Askew, Jr., Kenneth L. Galvan, Hector Hspinosa, Alan Presley, Leland A. Landrum, Jr., Phillip Burks, John Owens, Jon Thead- LaNIarr, Rendall Thomas, Lester Clancl. Gerry Jones, Wayne Carter, Joe Arrington, Winston Nunn, ford, Allen Faucett. Hargrove, Keith L. Smith. Second Row. George Marlon Laron Strong. Third Row-. Warren G. Chi Phi Front Row: Alan Goshert, Rex Kruge, Joel. Second Row: Billie Krandis, Julie Gango, Dave Albright, Dan Bowden, Ed Malek, Dave HiUery, Mike Ernst- berger, Lisa Gouliack, Dean Glesing, Jamaican, Mike Murphy. Third Row: Mary Noblic, Denise Duncan, Phil Stern, Rick Rankin, Gary Goldblatt, Jeff Amonette, Gary Myers, Gary Nelson, Steve ToUe. Fourth Row: Dave French, Brad Hart, Rich Mackey, Toby Switzer, Mike Shanahan, Milt McQjnnell, Steve Philbrook, Bob Paris, Chris Pappas. Fifth Row: Jim Burgess, Bill Baker, Chuck Baines, Russell King, Gary Burks, Cheeba, Rick Doan, Mike Denson, Jay King, Mike Haller, John L. Sullivan, George Fuller. Delta Gamma I-ranl Row: Ann Jenkins, Kathy Baker. Mickey Powrie, Janet Morgan. Second Rou: Suzi Hill, Laurie Bell, Barb Beck, Karen Widaman, Krista VC ' idaman. Third Rou: Julie Bell, Lori Click. Sue Smeltzer. Marsha Fritz, Sarah Torian. Nelson, Paula Joiner, Marcie Susan VanBenton. Fifth Row. Cron, Ann Beard, Dana Longstreth, Laurie Seidholz Sixlh Rou: Lisa Zachery, Kathy Kennedy, Kim Hopkins, Libby Clark. Leslie Smock, Marybeth Fee. Sandy Reichert. Seienth Rou: Tina ' Welecher. Terry Kimmerling. Beth Brenizer, Gina Small. Susie Morrow, Laurie Jump. Jan Miller. Fourth Rou : Diane Sanders, Ellen Ford. Amy McGritY. Cathy Front Row: Steve Bjelich. Second Row: Jim Bogusz, Phil McMahon, Steve King, Jon Plotkin, Vince Welch, John Matovina, Tim Matovina, Jeff Goffo, Ken Kasprzak. Third Row: Monte Franke, Rich James, Mike Ekiof, Keith Precourt, Scot Madson, Mike Kiesle, Dave Mielcarek, Bruce Ganger, Greg Urban, Tony Saliba. Fourth Row: Tom Diggins. Gary Noonan, Bob Hermes, Tony Bruscato, Bob Olah, Vince Sheehan, Steve Cass, Pat Mitchell, Tom Rock, Paul Binder, Thad Bartosz, J.D. Hull. Fifth Row: Paul Kapus, Pete Goehring, Joe Rotunno, Mark Flanigan, Marr ' Faitak, Chuck Starcevich, Ken Marnocha, Chuck Potucek, Pat Conley, Tom Spartz, Pete Murphy, Steve Colnitis, Jim Burke. Warren Hollen- bach. Sixth Rou: Tom Kiesle. Glenn Zayner. Larry Kenny, Chuck Adamson, John Ply, Gary Matula, Bob Dykstra, Mike Hulse. Evans Scholars 393 Phi Kappa Tau ' Mfi Front Row: Lorin Kitch, Teri Smith, John Bagan, Debbie Allendorf, Craig Mitchell. Second Row: Peggy Webb, Sue Piunti, Thorn Young, Mike Swisher, Ed Prikzczlkow, Dick Luchtman. Third Row: Jim Carrwright, Kenny Lewis, Mary Jane Craig, Bill Clark, Joe Herr, Linda Dougherty, Darrel Davis. Fourth Row: Ben Barnes, Frank Parry, Howard Klein, Chris Witman, Mike Buker, Greg Young, Brian Labelle, Ken Haering, Mitch Bonta. Lambda Chi Alpha Front Row: Darrell Lee, Gary Howerton, Steve Lackowiec, Dave King, Steve McCartin, Curtis Sprague, Bill Ferrell, Hank Wenzel, Geoff Hay. Sec- ond Row: Rich Conner, Maurice Haywood, Tim Prill, Hank Petersen, Pete Crecelius, Tom Connors, Tom Petri, Kurt Kraft, Andy Ward, Super Joe, Jim Leahy. Third Row: Graig George, Rusty McQuiston, Burt Corum, Jon Kemp, Dave Crichlow, Jim Harris, Lou Brock, Paul Denesuk, Steve Gohmann. 394 .a Sigma Alpha Epsilon n Front Rou: Tom Bondus, Mike Motter, Scott Grantham, Tom Hofbauer, Mark Newell, Bill Garret. Second Row: Mark DeRoo, Jeff Sheets, Jim Office, Mike Kinzer, Jim Conrad, Marce Gonzalez, Dan Lane, Dick Noe, Mark Adams, Gerald Hardy, Kim Quaco, Shawn Woodward, Gary Clark, Steve Conrad. Third Rou: Jim Young, Dave Shoudel, John Rose, John Brackulis, Brian Touhy, Denny O ' Connell, Peter Crumpacker, Mike McClure, Ted Bankhart, Steve Waters. Fourth Rou: Barney Quinn, Tom Clancey, Tom Easterday, Jay B. Monroe, Jim Barsemian, Skip Hopper, Rick McGuire, Barry Close, Chris Hollon, Richard Hults. Steve Gibson, Lantz Mintch, Jeff Simmons, Ken Ramsey, Bob Nelson, Pat Murray, Gary Beasly, Maury Monserez, Terry Miles. Terry Schowie, Chink Malasto. Sigma Delta Tau Front Row: Patti Barrett. Second Rou-: Jann Hausen- bauer, Laurie Fisher, Sara Ofengender, Sara Cohen, Sheryl Finkelstein, Cindy Miller. Third Rou: Jody Cagen, Amy Bussian, Nancy Niebur, Mary Bastian, Jackie Grode, Donna Schuchman, Kathy Horvath, Meryl Gelber. Fourth Row: Susie Kiser, Sarah Dahlkamp, Ann Vosha, Carol Bastian, Bev Yacko. Anna Stojkovich, Lisa Shchigan. Fifth Rou : Debbie McMahan. Judy Schecter, Sue Lewin, Janice Rjngger, Debbie Cohen, Marie Burkhart, Bobbie Kramer. Mindy Weisman. Rickie Cornfeld. Chris Biddle. Lynn Bercu. Patsy Kahn. Michelle Shepp, Susan Martin. Sixth Rou: MiTie Feitlinger. Lori Peltin. Eileen Sch- wartz. . nne Fitzgerald. Karla Snavely, Nancy Turich. Lauren Swirsky. Nlaggie Hensle. Susie Hubert. Carol Coleman, Mary Murillo, Carlotta Stillo. Sigma Kappa Frofit Ron: Diane Tebbe, Chrib Bunkt-, Juaiinu Williamson, Sharon Ballard, Joanne Talbert, Chinita House, Christy Bures. Second Row: Ann Kasting, Melinda Duncan, Carolyn Dupin, Joni Miller, Cece Andrew, Meg NX ' ilsun, ' alerie Sipes, ' icki Kneisel, Jeni Sipes. Third Row: Susan Bandy, Janet Andre, Becky Sannes, Nancy Yates, Joanne Earl, Charlene 1 hobe, Janice McAtee, Com Drysdaie, Wendy Baldwin, Carol Gunnip, Deanna Howard, Joy Myers, Kristin Prince, Patty Solt, Beth Commers. Theta Front Row: Bill Wilson, Mike Woolery, John Grew, Stan Griner. Second Row: Walt Pagel, Phil Adams, Dave Garriot, Kevin McLeish. Third Row: Scott Terhune, Kim Smith, Dave Martin, Ray Cool, Dan OHern, Dennis Withered. Fourth Row: George Deal, Kirk Demaree, Dick Powell, Brian Kramer, Rick Mummey, Dave Strughn, Dan Bastin, Bill Demmon, Jeff Curtis, Don Holden, Jeff Swingley. Fifth Row: Dave Pilcher, Chuck Adams, Charley Cross, Jim Edwards, Vince Marler, Dave Sheptak, Andy Kitchener, Roger Sporre. Sixth Row: James Gierhart, Andy Clawson. Brothers not pictured: Kurt Lorey, Fred Philips, John Jakes, Mike Mcdowell, John Carlo, Mike Johnston, Tom Stone, Ken Pavelka. illL Zeta Beta Tau a 2 ■J, Front Row. Poker Goo, Master Cone, Bubba, Mule, Dome, Dick, Hans Lefkowitz, Yarmo, Curwin, Mickey Adler, Lips, Second Row: Pom Pom Paul, Fred Astaire, Bert, Tom L14I, Groucho, Ace, Ted Sax, Baby Huey, Kung Fu Spitz. Third Row. Krelb, Mole, Perko-Pacers, The Web, Joey, Psycho, Brad Alexander, D.D.S. Fourth Row: Clay-Clay, Markelan- gelo. Squirrel, Ignats, Lerch, Barry Schitt, Asst. Squirrel, Crow, Crispy, Springs, El Presidente, Doc, How Ya Doin.- ' 1 397 Yf - W ' ' •Ki ' Ji. ■ ' « ' .., J4 .. ' ; r .-; 398 Town Living An introduction to the real world Ot all the modes du habition available to the universit) ' communit)-, the cultural phe- nomenon known as town offers the largest degree of variety. The reason is simple: one is allowed more independence through this life- style than in any other abode. The townie ' is on his own and receives a thorough education as to what the real world is like. They begin to understand that an organiza- tion calling themselves Public Service Indiana does not send a monthly letter just to say hello. They also learn that Indiana Bell isn ' t kidding when it sends a disconnect notice. In tact, the only contact with civilization comes from the mail, the telephone, and the Girl Scouts selling cookies. All other communication is the result of the townie ' s effort. They become wordly through this experience. They develop the art of transforming four walls, a floor and a ceiling, into a reasonable facsimile of a home. The most common st}le of interior decoration is technically called early auction with a definite influence of used-Sears Roebuck and modern K-Mart. Another means of furnishing a room is through the process ot junking or trashing. This is ex- ecuted by simplv walking down alleys and picking up concrete blocks and planks ot wood and whatever else mav be available to the poten- tial consumer. Other exotic pieces can be ob- tained from Railroad Salvage, grandmothers attic and garage sales. All these methods usually lead to the sought-after theme of tack -, a blend of philodendren plants, orange crates, sotas up- holstered in baby blue naugahyde. lamps with a base in the form of Napoleon in Pepto-Bismal pink color, and folding chairs with St. Marvel Church stamped on the back. Scarsdale. New York it isn ' t. Practical it is. Rick Wood There ' s something jbout a spring jfiernoon thai nukes it hjrj to stuJ) . SiOtt Hudson ifjr left i tries to finish up j pjper Jue thjt jfiernoon uhile sunning himself on the roof. Another jpprojch is just to forget chsses for J while. George Forsyth. Chris Morgjii jnj Gus spend the djy Uzing on the front porch. 399 Nancy Watson, a resident uj Dunn Hill apartments, spends a Saturday afternoon on her balcony reading a book and listening to some tunes on her headphones. Ned Sherman. Ronny and David Matthew (top) romp around the front yard while an unconcerned friend nonchalantly blows bubbles in the background. After the students leave in the spring, apartments and houses must be rejuvenated for the next tenants. At right, a student paints windows. 400 .1 The individual residing in the town of Bloomington becomes learned in the art of cooking. Upon mastering the abilir)- to boil water, fry an egg, and other intricate practices, the townie then must acquire a taste for what he has created. Gourmet dishes such as Vegeta- bles du Schlock, Macaroni a la Kraft and Turbot du Turbot ' are served. Julia Child and Graham Kerr it isn ' t. Practical it is. For the newcomer to this way ot lite, there is a definite cultural shock. Waiting for a coffee pot which can only function allegretto on a Monday morning in a test. (Of course Monday mornings are a test to begin with.) Realizing that a room- mate, who in the outer world is a pretn good person, requires two hours in the bathroom, is a trying experience. Turning on the tana ' two- speed garbage disposal and then realizing that it is disposing a Bic Pen is common. Yes, it does take a while to accept and get used to the new technology. And still, some people consider this mode of living as absolute chaos. Living in the real world necessitates the individual to make adjustments. It is a compromise between one s sell and the price ot hamburger, the phone company, the landlord, a roommate ' s unorthodox habits and the bathtub ring. Chaotic? Yes. Practical? Yes. Cabaret? . . . almost. Photographs Rick Wood 401 Married Housing Just because you decided to get married before you completed your degree and are living in lU married housing to save money, does not mean you are content to spend your evening eating popcorn and watching Police Woman. There is more to a married student ' s life than just existing for their better half and classes. Floor exchanges wouldn ' t be an ideal solu- tion, but most married housing residents would welcome the oppfjrrunity to at least get to know their neighbfjrs. As one Everman resident put it, 1 could accept the transition from being single to being married, but I ' m finding it very hard to accept the transition from being sfxially active to becoming Sfjcially isolated. Out f 1,460 university owned apartments, 1,459 were occupied during the spring semester of ' 75. That ' s a large enough number of people 402 to demand the university ' s attention and consid- eration toward housing problems. Problems include the omnipresent cockroaches, uncarpeted hallways that amplify noises, and washers and dryers that have a sub- conscious desire to eat clothing, that is when they are in working order. One of the biggest problems facing the resi- dents of the Redbud housing complex occurred last fall. Despite strong opposition from Redbud residents and local conservationists, the univer- sity approved the construction of a water tower near the Redbud complex. The Married Student Q)uncil (MSC) drafted a letter to Thomas Schreck, dean of students, calling for the con- struction of a recreational facility to compensate for the area lost to the water tower. Married students with children have an added interest and welfare to consider. Family outings and picnics are planned, but more activities that include the whole family are needed. One student parent who has three young sons would like to see programs that organize and supervise children ' s activities on a regular basis. One married student said that she felt the uni- versity could do more in helping married students cope with economic pressures and problems. She suggested the university or MSC start a co-op grocery store just for married students and issue discount coupons. Of course, the big advantage of living in lU ' s married housing is the price. ' When you ' re going to school, paying bills, and supporting a family, you can ' t expect the Hilton complete with doorman, gold-plated bathroom fixtures, and a Spanish-speaking French maid. Representatives from nearly eiery major campus orga- nization attended lUSA ' s Getting Acquainted bar- hecuc for married students. Barb Zuicker ' left ' from Union Board succumbs to an avalanche of children. A young judo student ' abovei prefers orange juice to the more traditional apple cider sen ed at the Union Board Halloueen party for the children of lU faculty and staff Redbud residents play in the uooded area behind the apartment complex ' top lefti. Despite community protest, a ualer tower was built in the former recreational area. Phouigrjphs ' David la 403 Rick Wood Organizations lU Foundation Student Foundation Alumni Association Senior Class Council Union Board Oceanides Cheerleaders 406 410 412 417 419 420 Student Athletic Board Fellowship of . Christian Athletes 421 f IDS WIUS 422 426 Women in Communication 429 LaCasa 430 Delta Sigma Pi 431 Mortar Board 432 Phi Beta Kappa 433 Sports Club Federation 434  : i ' I Hockey Club 435 Tae-kwon Do Club 436 Judo Club 437 Air Force ROTC 438 Rifle and Pistol Club 439 Rick Wood Indiana University Foundation Indiana University Foundation, the Universi- ty ' s non-profit, fund-raising organization, moved into its new offices on Road 46 By-Pass in September, 1974. And by Homecoming time, it was evident that a ready hospitality toward University, alumni, student, and community groups would characterize Showalter House. Named for benefactress, Grace M. Showalter, the building is warm, colorful, nicely equipped, well located, and accomodating to groups of all sizes. With the opening of Showalter House, said President William S. Armstrong, we have entered a new era in our history, an era of ever greater service to the University. A highlight among early events was the 1974 Telefund in the Big Red Room in November. About 360 faculty, staff, and students made more than 5000 telephone calls to lU alumni who pledged 5176,05. .27 in gifts for the benefit of Indiana University. Last spring, Indiana University Foundation invited the public to Festival Fortnight, April 14-26, a series of events to christen Showalter House and herald the 25th anniversary of the Little 500, lU ' s unique bicycle-built-for-students weekend. On Saturday morning, April 26, large numbers of reunion-minded Student Founda- tion alumni, former Little 500 participants, community and university friends and students gathered for the Showalter House dedication. Speakers included Mike Sidebottom, current president of the Student Foundation; Jill Ruckelshaus, vice president of Student Founda- tion in 1958; Chancellor Herman B Wells, President John W. Ryan and Mr. Armstrong. The conferral of the honorary Doctor of Laws degree upon William M. Elmer, chairman of the board and chief executive officer of Texas Gas Transmission Corporation, and the unveiling of plaques memorializing Mrs. Showalter and honoring the builders and designers of the building, capped the ceremonies. The Indiana University Foundation reports that 17,620 gifts of nearly S8 million total were received in 1974 for the benefit of Indiana Uni- versity. All contributions supplement, not replace, state support and provide for lU a margin of excellence. The Showalter House (below) ts the new home for both lU Foundation and Student Foundation. Located on the 46 by-pass, the bui lding was named after benefactress Grace M. Showalter. Bob Hope ' s appearance at the Variety Show and the Little 500 hike race added to the festivities of the World ' s Greatest College Weekend. lU Foundation President William S. Armstrong accompanies Hope around the track during the race (right)  i il J ll i WJiii  ' ,i ' fM ' ' ' WW ' «Ki ' - ' Pholographs Rick Wood 406 f 407 Seated: Virginia Barr, research director. Standing: E.G. VonTress, director of special projects; Bob Stebbins, director of alumni funds; Dr. Harold Lusk, legal associate; Rosemary Lewis. 408 Rosemary Lewis, director of publications: Richard Beard, real estate manager: Thomas McGlasson. legal counsel: Richard Searles. associate director of alumni funds. PholographsjRick Wood 409 Student Foundation This year marks the biggest celebration in the History of Indiana University Student Founda- tion. The Silver Anniversary of their Little 500 shares top billing with the dedication of Showalter House, the S1.2 million home for both lU Foundation and Student Foundation. The combined efforts of these two organizations have provided the community and lU with ser- vices unequaled in the past. The Student Foundation, comprised of ap- proximately 700 juniors and seniors, is led by a 26-member Steering Committee. Their work and dedication has generated over 510,000 in scholarships this year from the proceeds of Little 500 activities and the Dr. Arthur R. Metz Schol- arships. The activities began in the Fall with the lU Foundation Teiefund which brought students and faculty together in a joint effort to raise money for this year ' s Foundation programs. The combination was obviously effective as they brought in a total of 5176,000, far exceeding last years pledges. February brought the lUSF sponsored Red Carpet Days and Group ' 75, giving high school students the opportunity to become acquainted with the lU campus. Bloomington area children were able to attend an lU basketball game and were guests of honor at a banquet following the game, thanks to the lUSF sponsored Big Red Exposure. lU Sing celebrated its 46th anniver- sary with a weekend of student-produced musical entertainment. March saw the Toy and Clothing Drive and the Heart Fund Drive in which Student Foundation members became in- volved in community service projects for the Bloomington area. ' With April came the Little 500 events and an all-out effort by the entire Student Foundation to see these activities run as smoothly and ef- ficiendy as possible. The qualifications, style show. Regatta, Golf Jamboree, Cream Crimson, Mini 500, Little 500 and the ' Variety Show required a lot of time, patience and coop- eration from the lUSF members. 410 Steermg Committee: Front Row: Cfiarlie Walters, Dave Shook, Ed Herran, Tom Scfiwoegler. Second Row: Mark Albertson, Anne Mason, Janna Parsons, Debbie Kuntz, Linda Lyon, Kathy Richardson, Jay Matchett. Third Row: Nancy King, Jill Mendenhall, Carey Thielemann, Beth Barnhorst, Sheila McCauley, Lori Skirvin, Janet Roark. Fourth Row: Curt Hill, John ' Westfall, Mike Sidebottom, Scott Billingsly. Dan White, Tom Cummins, Allen Easter, Dan Cougill. H Photograph Rick Wood Jeff Hughes and Angela McFarland (top left) prepare the backdrops for the Mini 500 trike race. Elated AOPi ' s greet the members of their winning canoe team (top) at the Regatta race, another lUSF spon- sored ei ' ent leading up to the Little 500 race. Bloom- ington area youngsters were treated to a basketball game and a banquet on Big Red Exposure day (above). 411 412 Alumni Association Like no other source, the Indiana Universit)- Alumni Association is the life-line berw. ' een the school and its alumni body. The association is system wide. ' repre- senting all eight lU campuses, with offices on each to serve the entire alumni family. Through two dozen publications, including the Indiana Alumni Magazine, regional campus and athletic newsletters and Your University. the Alumni Association provides com- munication links berween the University and its alumni. The association is dedicated to ser ' ice. operating more than 100 Alumni Clubs around the world. It provides services to members ranging from programs for constituent societies to continued education in summer camps and back-to-campus retreats. The Alumni Associa- tion offers low-cost group life insurance to its members and provides a travel ser -ice to various places around the world. On assignment by the Universit)-, the Alumni Office keeps official records of the more than 200,000 living Indiana Universin alumni. An lU alumni need never feel out ot touch with old friends, or with the Universin ' . The Alumni Association pledges itselt to keeping alumni informed and to ottering them a role in continued ser ' ice to lU. Keeping track of the more than 200.000 lU alumns is not an easy task. Frank B. Jones. Alumni Secretary (above and at the left): Max E. Skirviii. Assistant Alumni Secretary: Bruce Temple. Director oj Alumni Publications: Arthur M. Lotz. Assistant Alumni Secre- tary: and Jodi Hollowitz. senior secretary find it a full time job. 413 The Alumni office annually keeps current records of over 200.000 lU alumni. Naomi Halstead labovej is in charge of microfilming all the records. Janis Shep- herd I top I and office secretaries (right) are working to keep the files up to date. 414 415 Pegge Euers. Assistant Alumni Secretary, discusses an upcoming Alumni trjur with her secretary Elinor Rogers. In addition to coordinating tours and projects for alumns. the Alum?ii Association also has an lU Marching Hundred Alumni (right). 416 Cork Rhodes Senior Class Council Front Row: Claudia J. Varus (vice president com- mittee) John R. Stewart (vice president public rela- tions) Barbara C. Jones (vice president trash activi- ties) Kathleen T. Osting (secretary). Second Row: Ron Barr (treasurer) Paul Bender (vice president special projects) Fred B. Williams (advisor) Kent Emswiller (president). The Senior Class Council, sponsored by the lU Alumni Association, is a student service or- ganization composed of 75 to 125 members ot the senior class. Functioning as a student branch of the Alumni Association, the Council provides for student participation in various alumni projects and initiates several student oriented projects ol its own. The Autumn highpoint for the Senior Class Council is homecoming, when the council hosts the 50 year 1-Men banquet, the lettermen ' s breakfast, and the Marching 100 luncheon. Other fall activities include Big Red bus tours, high school visitations and Red Carpet Days. In the Spring, the Senior Class Council sponsors the annual Senior Recognition Ban- quet, where awards are presented to outstanding teachers and students. Funds tor the Council come from the Alumni . ssociation. Home- coming button sales and two T.G.I.F. nights at local bars. 417 Union Board 418 The film series is one of the most popular activities sponsored by lUMB. Debbie Rons. Seth Lei ' in. Charla Blacker and Julie Wallace (lower left), reminisce the early ' 60 ' s prior to the Union Board premier of Amer- ican Graffiti. Other films included Serpico. Camelot and Last Tango in Paris. Originator of the television series Star Trek. Gene Roddenberry (left) came to lU as part of the Emphasis lecture series. A PARAMOUNT RELEASE OINO DE LAURENTIIS presents AL I CINO SERPICO Ij. Color by TECHNICOLOR A Paramount Release ee 99 Original Soundtrack Album on Paramount Records and Tapes Winner of 3 Academy Awards! CLaufidosaCiOT The Indiana Memorial Union Board i IMUB) is the largest student programming board on campus. The IMUB pro% ' ides a broad base of ac- tivities to meet the interests and needs of the In- diana University communit) ' . The Union Board sponsors a wide varietj ' of activities and pro- grams, including Dusk till Dawn. Hoosefest, film series, concerts, canoe trips and Emphasis lectures. This year ' s Emphasis lecture series brought novelist Truman Capote, columnist Art Buchwald, actress Cicely Tyson and Gene Rod- denberr) ' , creator ot the T series. Star Trek. The IMUB is responsible for many campus wide activities centered in the Indiana Memori- al Union and also for policy affecting students within the Union Building. Shen Barron. Keith Curras anJ Dunn Thomas (above) act out a scene in the play Applause. 419 Cheerleaders From Rou: Terri Zimmerman, Mary Latham, Barb Marhews, Laurie Maxfield, Connie Clark. Second Rou: Tom Lepucki, Pat Whistler, Jeff Pierce, Steve Katzenberger, Jerry Young. Oceanides Front Rou : Cindy Agress, Sue Marie Mulligan, Margi Walters. Second Row: Julie Stouthamer, Jennifer Taube. Third Row: Nancy Bushey, Deb Pearson, Bev Baker, Marilyn Schumann, Lynn Huber, Harla Harvor, Ginger Johnson, Michele Cousins, Barb Roman. 420 Student Athletic Board Front Row: Rick Smith, Pam Liston, Julie Hers- berger, Kent Holcomb. Second Row: Butch Wel- bourn, Shawn Woodward, David Schlemmer, Joel Pratt, Kent Davis. Not pictured: Deb Meyer, Sherry Amor. Front Row: Karren Gore, Valerie Thompson, Annie Buergler, Micki Wiessler, Robin Roberts, Denise Nozrik. Second Row: MaryAnn McCarty, Dee Hughes. Third Row: Don Luft, Lorin Kitch, Zane Nevils, Chuck Swenson, Mike Batuello, Steve Cambridge, Tom Uwils, Mrs. Don Loft. Fourth Row: John Vankirk, Ben Blakely, Greg Bell, Bruce Weeks, Brad Winters, Steve Sickbert, Phil Wysong, Kent Benson. Fellowship of Christian Athletes 421 Indiana Daily Student During the sprmg iefnester Linneu Lunnon was editor-in-chief of the IDS and Paul Taih was manag- ing editor I above) while Jim Adams and Mike Camp- hell I right) edited and managed the paper in the fall. Other upper echelons at Ernie Pyle include Men ' Hendricks, assistant to publisher Jack Backer (upper right) and Don Cross, advertising manager (jar right). All This year, for the eighth consecutive semester, the Indiana Daily Student IDS) was named AU-Amencan by the Associated Collegiate Press. The newspaper received Mark ot Distinc- tion ratings for coverage and content, writing and editing, editorial leadership and physical appearance. A staff ot 1 0 produces the paper, which is published six times a week, with students work- ing not only in the news department, but also in circulation, production and advertising. The IDS is the largest college newspaper in terms of number ot issues, average number ot pages and column inches ot ads and news, and has a circulation ot 14,500. This year, tor the tlrst time, the IDS used a magazine format for its Saturday morning paper. Called Weekend. Saturday ' s paper is composed mainly of feature and entertainment stories rather than hard news. The move from its foster home in the Journal- ism House, 80 E. Seventh Street, back into newly remodeled Ernie Pyle Hall, was another high point for the IDS this year. The paper ' s next venture will be going elec- tronic, which IDS publisher. Jack Backer, antici- pates in a tew years. 423 Campus Staff: Front Row: Mary Powers, Linda Abrahams, Craig Webb. Second Row: LuAnn- Witt, Bill Wilson, Nancy Scudder, Mary Webster, Susan Herzfeld, Kathy Rais, Mary CoUings, Denise Pattiz, Kate Parry, Marilyn Moores. Third Row: Kathy Kopach, Bob Deitell, Carole Huber, Russell Tarby, Allen Cone. Magazine and City Staff: Front Row: Marsha Parker, Brenda Huttie. Second Row: E)an Barreiro, Barb Milanovich, Tom Watson, Ron Alsop, Scott Fore, Nancy Waclawek, Sherman Goldenberg, Amy Boyle. 424 opinion page staff: Vicki Carter, Dave Ziegner. Jim Adams, Chris Morris, Jae Berry, Cathi Knolinski. Sports staff: Front Ron: John Moliror sports editor . Mark Montieth, Tim Strickland. Second Row: Marcia Schmelter, Mike Siroky, Jerr ' Moore, Tom Martella, Rick Bozich, Bruce Newman. Sot Pictured: Mel Bracht, John NX ' hisler, Phil Tatman. Mark Conway. Mark Savage, Bill Kauftman. EHiane Chattin. 425 WIUS The jingles were put away, the disc jockeys stopped their top 40 hype, the music came primarily from those big records with the little hole in the middle instead of the little records with the big hole, and jazz, folk, rock, and any- thing else became valid. There ' s more to music than Elton John. It was a progressive year for WIUS. Bill Baker, program director, devised a new format from the results of a survey taken of the potential audience. On this campus, he said, people are so busy with so many things, that radio becomes a background medium. The survey we took in November indicated that peo- ple want a mature approach to music and not the automatic hit machine stuff you get out of Indianapolis. The role of radio is changing because people ' s attitudes are changing. ' WIUS began the year with the National Lampoon Radio Hour and then started using the King Biscuit Flower Hour which is a taped program of concerts. The music wasn ' t the only offering ' WIUS had for listeners. Besides Tony Bruscato and Al Richards doing a play-by-play commentary of lU basketball games, the station carried the Big Red Network lU football games. The news department continued to win honors in As- sociated Press awards. Greg Barman won a first place for his coverage of feature material. The WIUS Tipsheet expanded in size and circulation with continuous coverage of the music industry, interviews with rock stars such as Johnny Winter, Marc Bolan and the Isley Brothers. Front Row: Kevin Mart. Second Row: Al Ciccone, Tony Bruscato, Karen CoUeran, Bill Baker, Sara Lee Hymen, Jim Mischler, Marilyn Friedman, Rich Hoffman. Third Row: Herr Howard Howe, Ray Mclnerey, Johnny Randolph, Doug ' Weedman, Bob Skafish, Judy Firestein, Scott Warren, Sid Shroyer, Gordon Rothman, Walt Furber, Linda Weygrn, Brent Speraw, Jan Hoff, Cheryl Miller, Mike Morris, Rick Domanski, Wayne Greenwald, Neal Smith. 426 42- Photographs Bill Huser Art Lacey, Cheryl Miller, Rich Hoffman and Marilyn Friedman prepare for the 6. ' 30 expanded newscast while Al Cicconi {above) relaxes between his daily tasks of keeping program logs and supervising sales. 428 Women In Communications Women in Gammunications ' WICI) is a na- tional society for women in all fields of the com- munications industry. lU students who join the campus chapter of WICI are automatically eligi- ble for membership in a professional chapter after graduation. Programs for WICI student members this year included a panel of foreign journahsts and a panel of professional communicators who talked about the many interesting and varied aspects of journalism found throughout the world. A WICI sponsored reception and tour of the remodeled Ernie Pyle Hall facilities gave all journalism students an opportunin to aquaint themselves with the new facilities and their numerous functions. The second floor of the building is still waiting to be remodeled and Women in Communications is working on a Put Ernie Pyle Back in Style fund drive for its completion. A display arranged by ' ' ICI in the toyer of the remodeled Ernie Py-le highlights female lU alumna who have been outstanding in the field of journalism and was dedicated to the former WICI advisor, Gretchen Kemp. Carol Sutton, managing editor of the Ix)uis- viLle Courier-Journal was the guest speaker at the WICI Matrix luncheon where members of both the Bloomington and the lU campus chapters gathered to celebrate International Women ' s Year and award rwo student scholar- ships. Conflict of Interest was the topic of a debate scheduled by ' ' ICI in cooperation with Sigma E elta Chi for journalism students and the uni- versity community. VC ' ICI also helped to bring the humorous columnist rt Buchwald to lU this spring. Another VC ' ICI service to the Bloomington communit)- was a sports booklet highlighting all women ' s sports on the lU campus. Ron Alsop. president of Sigma Delu Chi. and Jane Vi ' ashbum. president of VC ' omen in Communications I left) discuss tour procedures amidst a pile of cookies and snacks. The tuo journalism honoraries sponsored a da) uhen journalism students and their parents uere iniiled to tour the neu ' facilities at Ernie P le Hall (above I. 429 La Casa The La Casa Latino Center concerns itself with the social, academic, and cultural activities of lU Latino students. Although the main em- phasis is placed on the U.S. Latino (U.S. Mex- ican, U.S. Puerto Rican and U.S. Cuban), the La- tino Center caters to all Latinos — South and Central Americans, Europeans, and those of any Latino Islands throughout the world. Social activities are no different than any other organization except that they are influenced by Latino cultures and traditions. Ac- ademic activities range from inviting advisors to the center to speak with students to Spanish tu- toring. Cultural aspects of La Casa include showing documentaries, sponsoring Latino Awareness rap sessions and holding meetings with local civic organizations informing them of the many types of Latino cultures and traditions throughout the world. Many of the La Casa La- tino Center activities are open to the general public. 430 Delta Sigma Pi Front Row: Steve Myers, Nick Ball, Perry MauU, Ji m Perschbacher, Mark Davis, Tim Wells, Larry Cole, Marry Sohovich. Second Row: Dale DePoy, Fred Perner, Mike Stemm, Bill Miller, Phil Grossman, Rich Rough, Steve Reiber, Darryl Thompson, Dave Cleveland, Don Luecke. Third Row: Brad Marting, Bill Hranchak, Allan Boggs, Randy Johnson, Ed Mill- er, Randy Dalton, Tom Schulthise, Roy Dickerson, Tom Kruse, Dave Hanes, George Walters, Mike Lewis, Alan Baker, Terry Irving, Mike Purbaugh, Tom Blignaut. Front Row: Howie Deutsch, John Jasinski, ' an Ziegler, Greg Martin, Dick Brown, Tom Beck. Sec- ond Row: Chris Ottermann, Keith Slater, Ken Hal- verson, Don Ross, Robert Francie Libere (President), Shelby Standford Stevens, Jr., Rick Meek, Joe Blum- berg, Dave Anderson, Barry Mangus. Third Rou Dwight Wiggam, John Powers, Ben Olsen, Larry Spoolstra, Paul Tracey, Dave Babcock, Larry Brewer, Bob Lewis, Brian Robb, Dave Swider, Bill Read, Jeff Morrell, Merlyn Jarman. 431 Mortar Board Front Row: Marilyn Hrnjak, Donna DellaRocca, Judy Appleton, Jana Leichtman, Sara Dunbar. Second Row: Diane Howland, Cindy Boldebuck, Belinda Shaw, Bonnie Gibson, Sandy Jones, Nancy Watson, Paula Hoch. 432 Phi Beta Kappa January Graduates Beal, Paul G. Duell, Sheila J. Fineberg, Elizabeth Gaffney, Margaret M. Garrison, Jeanne L. Gunning, Jeanne L. Gustin, Helga Karge, Stewart Kaufman, Lisa N. Kubley, Jon Lahaie, Martin J. Langhammer, Robert Mahoney, Maureen E, Matthews, Windell C McWilliams, Beth A. Milanovich, Barbara A. Raber, Ann Roshon, Steve Sacks, PhyUis D. Smerk, Mary Ann Straw, Ann L. Taylor, Judine A. Tonkin, Melonie F. May Graduates Alsop, Ronald J. Bain, Robert G. Belcher, Margaret E. Boyd, Gordan R. Boyko, Orset B. Brewster, Christine C. Canrwell, Paige H. Carroll, Glenn R. Chaney, Jean M. Chin, Ping Yan Church, Dennis L. Cobine, David L. Corey, Nicholas G. Dall, Mark E. Deal, David C DeWitte, David B. DiPietro, Jon G. Drompp, Michael R. Durrell, Charles A. Ill Dykstra, Robert A. Falchook, Aronold S. Paris, Rickie L. Fink, Pamela J. Furlong, Lucy E. GiUis, Robert P. Girvin, Rebecca J. Given, James T. Glick, Alice J. Glover, William III Goode, Michal A. Goran, Debra A. Haag, Mary E. Hayes, Nancy L. Hogan, Robert D., Jr. Hollis, Martha L. Hubbard, Judith G. Jaffe, Amanda J. Johnson, Susan K. Kasting, Peter A. Kaufman, Eileen Kaufman, Peter D. Kearney, Rachel B. Keen, David M. Kiechle, Julie D. Koenig, Phyllis L. Kuhlenschmidt, Duane H. Kuhn, Theodore F. Lambeck, Dennis W. Lehman, Nancy K. Lew, Robert A., Jr. Link, MicheUe A. Linn, Gary A. Lokke, Rolf E. Lowrance, John D Ludwig, Thomas E. Lyverse, Elizabeth S. Maddox, Richard L. Martin, Jeffrey C. Mathews, Dennis E. McGonagle, Timothy K McHenr) ' , Walter A. Messner, Daniel K. Miller, Cindy MiUer, Jeffrey E. Misko, Thomas P. Moore, Jeffrey K Moser, Thomas L. Mulhall, Sheila R Newton, Marc A. Palmer, Robert L. Pascuzzi, Robert M. Pipino, Laura Potter, Virgmia A. Proctor, Robert N. Quinn, Peggy A. Reed, Oliver M. Jr. Rush, Jack D. Ryan, Margaret B. Sacoolidge, John C. Sargent, Thomas D. Savich, Michael Seller, Vicki L. Selzer, Kathy S. Sembroski, Robert E. Small, Carol D. Smith, Linda J. Stamilio, Nancy N. Stapp. Timothy J. Stastny, Linda J. Steinmetz, Marc A. Sullivan, Douglas W. Stucky, Mitchell B. Swift, Teresa A, Swing, Susan K. Tabakin, Deborah M. Taylor, Karla T. Trusner, Douglas E. Lrbelhor, Mark S. Vannatta. Bruce E. ' elkoff Michele A. Waters, Cherri D. West, Steven R. Wild, George Posey. Ill Wolf. Randall K Wolfson, Margaret Gail Zaring, Alan K. 435 Sports Club Federation Organized rwo and a half years ago, the In- diana University Sports Club Federation is comprised of eighteen individual clubs, each ac- tively devoted to a particular sport form. The overall membership of the Federation is approximately twelve hundred, with individual club memberships ranging from 21 to 205 students, faculty and staff The purpose of the Federation is to unify its member clubs and to assist them in meeting common needs. For the most part, each club has the responsibility of developing its own pro- grams, budget, rules and competition schedule. Presendy administered by the Division of In- tramural Sports and Sport Clubs within the School of Health, Physical Education and Recre- ation, the Sports Club Federation is funded by a grant from the lU Athletic Department. The activities of the clubs cover a wide range of student athletic, recreational, intramural and cultural interests. With programs such as Sports Fairs, clinics, training sessions, lectures, demon- strations and the Special Olympics project, the Sports Club Federation seeks to promote com- munity service and a sense of responsibility to the university. The Federation strives to generate an appre- ciation of the principles of fair play and compe- tition and to emphasize the cultural value of sports. The eighteen clubs within the Federation include Aikido, Badminton, Fencing, Hockey, Judo, Karate, La Crosse, Racquetball, Rifle and Pistol, Rugby, Scuba, Soccer, Tae Kwon D(j, VoUeyball, Water Polo, Weightlifting, Hand- ball and Team Handball. Club officers pictured at the right are Jim Heersma (vice-president), Evan Williams (sec- retary) and Tom Wolvos (president). Front Row: Donna Jones, Duncan Scott, Jim Heersma, Roger Jones, Cathy Jo Keifer, Alan Baker. Second Row: Evan Williams, Farouk Abdelwahab, Gle nn Mailer, Tom Wolvos, Tom Dalton, Frank Burger. Third Row: Gary Mitzler, Steve Suer, How- ard Cosell, Einar Jensen, Kerry Blanchard, Don Rawson. 434 I Hockey Club Despite a 4-2 victory over Purdue in the Purple Puck Trophy Contest, this season ' s record for the lU Hockey Club proved to be a disappointment to many ot the players. But the 7-7-2 record does not illustrate the fact that five of those games were lost only by a single goal. Injuries headed the list of problems the team faced this year enroute to a third place finish in the Big Ten Club Tournament. Only a handful of players returned from the previous year ' s team to provide leadership, but a host of freshmen complemented the lineup and pro- vided a much needed stimulus to the program. Over a dozen returning lettermen should be present next fall when practice begins again. On defense, lU will lose the outstanding services of veterans Dick ' Williamson and Art Clark, but steady performers, Craig Dearden and Ted Hartzler can be counted on to provide a solid nucleus. Consistency in the goal next year and solid defense may prove to be the winning margin that eluded the Hoosiers when the clock ran out in the third period this year. Though forwards Ed Foss, Bill Coughlin and Doug Schultz are leaving and academic commit- ments may keep Bob Ravensberg and Rob Perry from playing during their senior years, next year should see a multitude of returning forwards. Greg Petro, Andy Freyer and Captain Dan Vass should be leading scorers next year, with Club President Greg Jordan ' s scoring ability also helping to improve upon the .500 perform- ance of the 1974-75 team. An expanded schedule for the 1975-76 season will include Ohio University, University of Cin- cinnati, Kenmcky Blades, lU Fort Wayne, lUPUI, Indianapolis Warriors, Illinois State, and Big Ten rivals, Purdue and Illinois. Listed as possible opponents for next year are Chicago State, Hilsdale, Universit) ' of Ten- nessee, Wabash and Miami of Ohio. The possi- bility of a 20-game schedule with only three road trips is something Coach Rob Jackson is trying to perfect. The prospect of more games in Indianapolis as well as Louisville and Columbus is being explored. The 19 4-75 season awards were presented to Dick ' Williamson, (Most Valuable Player and All Tournament first team); Craig Dearden. (Most Valuable Player of Pruple Puck Game) and Ted Hartzler, (Most Improved Player and Rookie of the Year). Front Rou.- Paul McGuan, Bob Ravensberg, Keith Berman, John Beck, Don Rawson, Andy Freyer, Craig Collins. Second Row: Glen Schleibaum, Dick ' Williamson, Bruce Hill, Craig Dearden, Ed Foss, Jon Bragalone, Dan Vass, Art Clark, Bill Coughlin, Rob Perry, Butch Talliant, Coach Rob Jackson. Third Row: Greg Jordan, Pete McCampbell, Ted Hartzler, Doug Schultz, Greg Petro, Brian Harris. 435 Tae-Kwon Do Club The lU Tae-kwon do Club offers both begin- ning and advanced students the opportunity to learn and apply the Korean style of Karate. Tae- kwon do differs from other styles of Karate in that it is composed of 80 per cent leg move- ments and only 20 per cent hand movements. The art consists of the techniques of body move- ment, executed with maximum power, speed, accuracy and balance. The club meets twice a week and is staffed by volunteer instructors from Mr. Lee ' s Karate School m Bloomington. Students in the club are taught the basic kicks, blocks and punches, as well as the more elaborate combmations. These skills are then applied in free sparring sessions. Next year the club plans on selling gi ' s to students in the Martial Arts classes offered by the HPER department to raise money to buy safety equipment for members and to finance trips to tournaments. They plan to participate in two tournaments a month. Front Row: Robert Burns Jr., Janice Fritz, Elizabeth Lasley, Ronda Fleck, Joe Dewig, Sandra Garriott, Julia Brown. Second Row: Doug Helmbrecht, Chuck Snyder, Robert Amove, Chip Crawford, Donna DeMunbrun, Karla Alexander, Helen Bonhomme, Richard Bower. Third Row: Don Burns, Advisor; Karen Lair, Instructor; Joe Maire, Instructor; Michael Bonavenrura, Instructor; Dexter Grove, Instructor; David Gibson, Instructor; Jeff Greenwald, President; Bob Sturm. 436 Judo Club Front Row: Rob Sutherland, Margaret McKnight, Cindy Feldman, Debbie Barn, Kathie Nidlinger, Patsy Rodewald, Edward Murray. Second Row: Mike Haller, Lee Nelson, Charlie Haley, Tony Krizman, Kerry Blanchard, Chuck Coffin, Scott Berner, Tim Nook, Michael McClendon. Third Row: John Kammer, John Jurasevich, Barry Elias, Dan Pyhtila, Phil Levene, Carlos Crespo, Jose A. Gonzalez, Dale Horn. 43 Air Force R.O.T.C. Indiana University has hosted Air Force Of- ficer Training programs every year since 1947. rXiring 1974-75 the Qjrps of Cadets averaged 95 students. The growth of the freshman class marked the first increase in class size in several years. David W. Sipe served as Corps Com- mander during the fall semester while Robin M. Rogers was spring semester commander. Major projects for the year included the Band Day, Toy Drive, Ohio Valley AFROTC basketball tour- nament. Dining In and the President ' s Review. The Color Guard performed at the NCAA Cross Country Championships, gymnastics meets, Big Ten Track Championships and Indianapolis Pacer games. The Arnold Air Society had an exceptional year. Projects included paper drives, blood drives and the reinstatement ot the Military Ball. The Correll Squadron won the Maryland Cup for Area D-2 and the Mantel Trophy for ac- ademic excellence. Front Rou: David Powell, Daniel Flippo, Scott Glanzman, Carl Whicker. Second Row: Sally Evans, Anne Murray, Terry Ogle, Mark McKinley. Third Rou: Bryan Edwards. Pam Deleu, Laura Bluemle. 438 Front Row: Paul Creech, Barry Winkle, George Whicker, Robin Rogers, Ron Paige, Sam Sisler, Gary Cravens. Second Row: Vandy Gillespie, Darryl Thompson, Marilyn Lythgoe, Virginnia Bell, Gary Dilk, Mike Lasley, Richard White. Third Rou: Mike Turner, Don Grajiam, David Sipe, Dave Kremer, P.J. Barnert, James Kasler. I Angel Flight Front R(,u: Letitia Dillon. Second Roil: Nancy Drybread, Laura Bluemle. Third Rou: Ann Murray. Rifle and Pistol Club Rand) Rudecki. Terry Diske) and Kath) Foxuorrhy. members of the IV Rifle and Pistol Club, compete in the Big Ten Championship at Ohio State. The Club placed third in the Big Ten behind Ohio State and Wisconsin. The overall record uas 1 ' ' and 16 for the third consecutive winning season. 439 Rick Wood Seniors Underclass Freshmen Ashland, Elizabeth A. Nursing Alloy, David A. Biological Sci. Austin, Jenny A. University Div. Bara, Michele L. Biological Sci. Bell, Timothy J. Biological Sci. Bobbitt, Brian D. Accounting Boner, Daniel J. Accounting Bottom, Jane E. University Div. Broglin, Mai N. Marketing Caleaterra, Robert G. Organ Carr, Bonnie L. Sociology Chaney, Bobbie G. Biological Sci, Choate, Douglas M. University Div. Coats, Charles W. Biological Sci. Coveney, Eugene J. University Div. Cross, Susan C. Journalism Darmer, Robert A. Business Demuth, Michael A. University Div. Dillon, Patricia R. Psychology Evans, Sally L. University Div. Evard, Marcie A. University Div. Folk, Greg J. Business Gibson, Reid G. Chemistry Grose, John M. Business The Indiana Memorial Union is the largest student union in the world. One seventh of a mile long, the building encompasses a hotel, post office, auditorium, bookstore, four dining facilities, a bakery, deli and sweet shop, pm-ball machines, a bowling alley, pool room and a T.V. room . . . to mention a few. Luis Guille suns himself on the steps to the entrance of the Commons, a popular place to relax between classes, play music or talk with friends. 442 - 443 Harbaugh, Jeffrey A. Hi story Harshman, Cindy J. Spanish Henderson, Gayle C. Dental Hygiene Hidy, Carol E. Public Administration Horton, Belinda Psychology Hudelson, Maureen A. Physical Ed. Hudson, Julie A. Business Hunt, Mary M. Music Johnson, Traci L. Theatre Kahle, Beverly S. Mathematics Kaplar, Robert A. Chemistry Karklin, Steve A. Business Keehn, Sherri A. University Dir. Klees, William J. Business Kosman, Ann D. University Oiv. Lamb, Merianne Nursing Lannon, Gerald M. University Div. Levatin, Gail L. University Div. Levitt, Joseph D. Music Livingstone, Robert T. Chemistry Madawick, Steve T. Business Mertz, Max R. University Div. Meagher, Thomas R. Fine Arts Meinke, Gretchen M. Music Myer, Florence C. Spanish Xelson, Bobbye L. University Div. North, Dawn L. Psychology Philips, Frederick P. Biological Sci. Plonski, Jfeffrey L. University Div. Porter, Kimberly L. Medical Tech. Pullen, James R. History Reische, Kendall T. Music Rothschild, Peter A. Chemistry Scott, Linda L. Kursing Shirley, Paul N. University Div. Shook, Kenneth C. University Div. 444 Showalter, Douglas J. Umtersity Dit. Simpkins, Lisa A. Malhemalia Souder, Diane L. Sursing Stalcup, Mindy G. Sursing Stechman, Karen R. Music Stickler, Jill M. Education Thompson, Gayle A. Vnti ersiry Dn. ' an Deusen. Iarv C. Ballet Vent, Kathy SPEA X ' hlttenberg. Elizabeth A. Businea Ed. Williams, Kimberly S. Allied Health Williams, Mary A. Sursing Williams, Micheal L. Journalism Winkler, Jacqueline E. Allied Health Wishart, Laura L. Sursing Yacko, Be ' erly J, L ' niiersity Dn . i - -J - Si,  s : ' ' «e« Sophomores Banks, Carolyn L. Biological Sci. Bergdoll, Mary K. Recreation Bluemle, Laura K. Biological Sci. Bond, Connie L. Business Cooper, Clarinda Political Sci. Degner, Dee A. Russian Derrick, Heidi L. Forensics Ferguson, Susan K. Physical Ed. Flores, Linda Sociology Friend, Sracey Physical Ed. Gill, Mary C. Greiner, Cherj ' l L. English Hackney, Brenda L. Physical Therapy Hamilton, Rosemary L. Fine Arts Hoggan, Greg K. Chemistry Hood, Bryan Business Ibarra, Joni L. Fine Arts Madawick, James L. Journalism Markey, D. Milton Telecommunications McKinzie, Joel P. Business Meadows, Lana J. Fine Arts Mourer, Diana L. Optometric Tech. Myers, Robert F. Mathematics Newkirk, Frank E. Political Sci. O ' Rourke, Patrick K. Business Richardson, Jane E. Allied Health Robb, John S. Telecommunications Roberts, Judy E. Accounting Roberts, Susan J. Psychology Robinson, Joyce F. Home Economics Scott, Susan Nursing Shoup, Mark A. T elecommunications Smith, Garry W. Forensics Sommers, William S. Accounting Strong, Valerie P. T elecommunications Tantillo, Laura L. Music 446 Rick Wood TiUinger, Katherine A. Telecom mumcjtiotis Verble. Jane Kay Elementjry EJ. Winslow. Roseman ' S. Special EJ. ' ilson, Larime Finance 447 Juniors Ballard, Michelle S. Elementary EJ. Bankoff, Nancy L. Musw Bannwart, Stephen D. History Barnette, Larry D. Music Batten, Brenda A. Journalism Boulware, Beverly J. Elementary Ed. Bullock, Diane L. Brockman, Peter C Music Bursky, Jay J. History Chappell, Brantly K. Finance Dailey, David A. Psychology Drybread, Nancy E. Nursing Friend, Shelley E. Sociology Georges, Richard J. Business Goedesky, George G. Optometry Green, Kathryn A. Biological Sci. Green, Sandra S. Psychology Hague, Karen S. Business Hargis, Toni S. Fine Arts Hayes, Paula G. Elementary Ed. Hoffman, Warren E. Business Jairrels, Veda M. Political Sci. Krebbs, Michael E. History Neville, Constance M. Optometric Tech. 448 David lay Oing, Barbara J. Optometric Tech. Pearson, Debby L. Biological Sci. Perry, Norman C Fitie Arts Resler, Deborah E. Librjry Sci. Robinson, Mary E. .iccounting Rogers, Judith K. Anthropology Shoup, Constance M. Elementar) Ed. Stauffer, Edward C Accounting Stogsdill, Robert L. Telecommunications Stowell. Susan L. Journalism Sulski, Lisa A. Spanish Tiek, Robert B. Philosophy Tilcka. Ann M. Political Sci. Vogele, Sally J. .Music Walker, William J. History West, John M. Telecommunications Ziegler, N ' an R. .Mjrketing m EP 7 -- ' jj p M E|| _ w r , i ■ ; lfl ll m P 1 1 1 S-2 Rick Wood 449 Seniors Ackerman, Linda L. Fine Arts Ackerman, Robert W. Business Adams. Frank T. Psychology Adamson, Jane E. Accounting Ahlf. Charles E. Marketing Alper, Laura S. History Alstelder, Robert F. History Altherr, Deborah S. German Akman, Nancy B. Speech and Hearing Amick, Tom D. History Amor, Shelley A. Physical Ed. Anderson. Carolyn G. History Anderson. David D. Accounting Andreas, Gerard S. Chemistry Andrews. Stephania Education Anfield, Betsy S. Chemistry Aranoff, Laurie S. Physical Ed. Armbrust, Stephen R. Journalism Armstrong, Verena K. Medical Records Administration Arnold, Maureen E. journalism Atkerson, Jeanetta K. Elementray Ed. Atsaves, Antonia C. Finance Atz, Catherine E. English Aughinbaugh, Vicki A. Business Austrin, Debra R. English Baas, Tamara A. Elementary Ed. Babcock, Walter E. Finance Backus, Marilyn M. Radio and T.V. Baerveldt, Calvin L. East Asian Studies Bailey, Kathleen M. Education Bailey, Scott L. Social Studies Baird, Ruth E. Spanish and English Baker, Barbara K. Home Economics Ball, David A. Music Ball. Steven I. Optometry Banks, David L. Psychology 450 I t. Rick Wood 451 Bannon, Lynn E. Spanish Baran, Carol S. Elementary Ed. Barefoot. Steven T. Biology Barfell, Lana K. History Barge, Chansse L. Elementary Ed. Barker, Kathy A. Physical Ed. Barker, William iM. English Barkes, Duane 1. Business Barlow, Phyllis I.. Journalism Barlow, Richard A. Finance Barlow, Robert J. Biology Barnard, Marcie C. Speech and Hearing Barnes, Gary R. Business Bates, Maya A. Germanic Studies Baugh, Thomas L. Chemistry Baumgartner, Martha J. Elementary Ed. Baughman, Cynthia J. Special Ed. Bayly, Robert W. Biology Beach, Sara L. Journalism Beaulieu, Barbara J. Business Beck, Vicki L. Biology Becker, Rhonda R. Biological Sci. Beeler, Cecelia Y. Piychology Bell, Kathleen E. Medical Records Bell, Laurie F. History Bell, Virginia A. Astrophysics Bembenista, Danuta A. Political Sci. Benn, Brooke M. Medical Tech. Bennett, Bryce H. Finance Bennett, Gary D. Economics Berger, Linda A. Speech Berger, Susan L Educaticm Bernazzani, Maria G. Music Bertig, Gina L.Real Estate Admm. Bertocchio, Lois A. Accounting Bertsch, John D. Optometry I J liktf 452 Beuder, MelindaC. Forensic Studies Biggins, Kenneth E. Accounting Bintord. Anne G. Journalism Birk. Krezlyn M. Biological Sci. Bissell, Charmaine K. Journalism Bitner, Gerry B. Marketing Bixby, Stephen E. Telecommunications Black, Carol A. Psychology Black, Michael W. Accounting Blackwood. Mary Anthropology Blakely, Martha D. Business Bleck, Laurie Elementary EJ. Blizek, John R. Telecommunications Blumstein, Ken Accounting Bock, Robert C. Accounting Bogardt, Anne H. Anthropology Boggs, Deborah K. Journalism Bogle, Carolyn J. Elementary EJ. Bol, Susan K. Speech anJ Hearing Boldebuck, Cynthia L, English Boll, Charles R. Management Bondus, Thorn B. Accounting Bonkowski. Pam L. Marketing Bonsett. Tan M. Psychology Borders, Joni C. Mathematics Born. Marilyn S. Special EJ. Botert, loan .M. Etc mentary EJ. Bottortt. Deborah A. Elementary EJ. Bowen, Richard J. Recreation Boyd. Paula J. Recreation Bozich, Richard A. Journalism Bradlev. lulia .V Home Economics Bradtmiller. Bruce P. Anthropology Brames. Tanice M. Business Branitt, Elizabeth ].Art EJ. Branyon, Linda A. Spanish 453 Brateman, Robert K. Biological Sci. Brawley, Don R. Economics Braxton, Chuck F. Political Sci. Briiigewater, Montina Education Bringwald, Dianne B. Elementary Ed. Britt, Joanne Marketing Broadus, Eric N. Health and Safety Brock, Sandra L. Education Brockman, Ann E. Early Childhood Ed. Brodt, William E. Forensic Studies Brown, Alma R. Sociology Brown, Darryl C. English Brown, Deborah G. Accounting Brown, Jacquelme J. Elementary Ed. Brown, James R. Accounting Brown, Jill A. Speech and Hearing Brown, Joseph L. Accounting Brown, Marcia C. Physical Ed. Brown, Melissa R. Anthropology Brown, Richard W. Social Studies Brown, Ronald R. Elementary Ed. Brownlee, Susan I. Mathematics Brownlow, Deborah Education Bruce, Deborah S. Microbiology Bucky, Phyllis S. History Buergler, Ann M. Recreation Buksar, Carol J. Criminal justice BuUoff, Steven M. Political Sci. Burch, Donald E. Business Burden, Debra S. German Burgette, Gerald S. Health and Safety Burnam, Anita L. Sociology Byer, Lindsay E. Elementary Ed. Calkins, Carla S. Modern Dance Cameron, Pamela D. Therapeutic Rec. Campbell, Mary C. Political Sci. 454 Campbell, Randy L. Social Studies Casich, Caren L. Engliih Chadwick, Stephen A. Finance Chaney, David E. Business Chaney, Jennifer C. Spanish Channell, Cheryl S. Dance Chattin, Duane W. Journalism Childers, Craig A. Rtal Estate Childress, Lynn D. Geography Chin, Ping . Chemistry Chow, Margaret K. Speech Pathology Chow, Yvonne Y.M. Marketing Christenson, Dana L. Mathematics Christmas, l nal i ' .Ctrmanic Languages Chute, Eleanor, E. Journalism Claus, Xano ' L. Journalism Clayton, J. Andrew Etit ironmental Policy Cleveland, Coralee Elementar y EJ. Cleveland, David Vi . Finance Click, Steven E. Telecommunications Cloud, Walter B. Journalism Cockrum, Linda Si. Elementary EJ. Coggeshall, Kathnn A. Theraputic Rec. Colin, Beverly A. Psychology Collins. Denise J, Therapeutic Rec. Comin. Alisa J. Telecommunications Commers, Raymond R, Distributive EJ. Conder, lames 1. Business . lanjgement Cones. Diane L, Fine Arts Constantine, Marilynn Biological Sci. Cook. David . L Political Sci. Cook, Ierr ' R. Sociology Cook. Liesbeth E. Sociology Cook. ' alorie J. .Marketing Cooper. Iris . . Journalism Corley. Wayne L Accounting 455 Coudret, Catherine L. Elementary Ed. Coughlin, William A. Political Set. Coulis, Paul T. Transportation Coulter, Moureen B. English Cowles, Jane C. Education Crane, Katherine E. Speech and Hearing Cravens, John M. Transportation Crawford, Sandra K. Psychology Creager, Earlaine L. Fine Arts Cree, Peter N. Financ e Crider, Curt A. Theatre and Drama Critchlow, Robert L. Geology Crockett, Terri L. F rly Childhood Ed. Crossen, Janet S. Piano Crouch, Tamara L. Clarinet Crum, Michael R. Transportation Crumly, Roy L. History Curry, Michael J. Political Sci. Curson, Deborah A. Health and Safety Curtis Linda L. Elementary Ed. Curtis, Camelot Mead Nuclear physics Custer, Michael H. English Dalton, Randall L. General .Management Darmer, Robert A. Davidson, Patricia A. Speech and Hearing Davis, Bonira J. Therapeutic Rec. Davis, Cathy L. Elementary Ed. Davis, Susan E. Optometry Day, Jacqueline C. Piano Day, Rhonda F. Psychology Dearing, Teresa E. Political Sci. DeBeck, Suzann M. SPEA Dehn, Ingrid U. Elementary Ed. Delancey, Jane E. Psychology Delaney, Richard C. Economics DelFavero, Nancy R. journalism 456 Delia Rocca, Donna M. histrumental Music DePoy, Dale F. Accounting DeRoo, Linda X. English Detert, Mark R. Biological Sci. Detmer, Jacquelyn L. Biology Devillez, Rebecca A. Elementary EJ. Devrouax, Darlene K. Sociology Dewirr, Thomas M. Radio and T.V. Delone, Donna M. Sociology Dick, Mary J. Biological Sci. Dickey, Sheryl M. Spanish Diehl, Kathleen A. Health and Safety Dilk, Gan- W . Marketing Dillon, Peter K_ Biology Dodd, Bette J. Journalism Dodds, Deborah A. Elementary EJ. Donnelly, Cathleen F. Journalism Dooley, Mary A. English Doty, Denise J. .iccounting Doyle. Rosalyn S. Business .Marketing Drinkut, Terry L. Psychology Drndak, Mary Jane A. Real Estate Druker. ' alerie J. Slat ic Language Duckworth, David E. Biological Sci. Dudley, Ruth F. Rccrealion Therapy Dutour, David A. Journalism Dunn, Diana L, Biological Sci. EKi-yer, Dru A. Journalism Dyer, Robert C. Elementary Ed. Dykstra, Elizabeth A. French Eaks, David G. Biology Easley, William X. Geology Eberly, Reed H. Business Edel, Robert D. Rtcrealion Edwards, Janet R- Economics Edwards, Mark M. Radio and T. I 457 Eikenbary, Robert N. Marketing Eilers, Marsha J. French Eisele, Mark J. instrumental Teaching Ellibee, Debra A. Cellcj Ellison, Paul H. Political Set. Ensminger, Michael P. Biological Sci. Erdmann, Richard G. Optometr) Etchison, Patricia A. Elementary Ed. Etchinson, Paula L. Recreation Etzler, Joseph S. Management Fairringer, Elizabeth A. Recreation Fallis, Linda A. Spanish Farr, James A. Accounting Faulkner, Susan E. Journalism Faust, Richard P. Mathematics Feldhaus, Sheila J. Sociolog] Fawcett, William Optometr) Ferguson, Stanley R. Business Management Fernandez, Juanita L. Elementary Ed. Ferrell, Dawn M. Political Sci. Ferns, Jill A. English Fields, Pamela S. English Fifer, John R. B iology Finkel, Sondra J. Theatre and Drama Fishman, Randall L. Finance Fleming, Margaret R. Speech and Hearing FoUmer, Sheila A. Education Foncannon, Scott K. Real Estate Fordice, Jenny J. Marketing Fore, Scott E. Journalism Fosler, Steven R. Optometry Foster, Jacqueline A. Elementary Ed Franke, Monte L. SPLA French, Michael W. Chemistry Fried, Eric J. Violin Friedlander, Lois H. Fine Arii 458 Friend. Gregory ' J. Marketing Fuchs, James J. Accounting Gabbard, Samuel R. History Gachaw, Gabra S. Biology Garland, Laymon G. Accounting Garvey. Rita M. Psychology Gentry, Jane L. Oplometric Tech. Gast, Linda K. Home Economics Gibbs, Devon C. Accounting Gibson, Bonnie K. Political Sci. Gilkey, Janet E. Accounting Gill, Carolyn L. Spanish Gillis. Robert P. B.-ological Sci. Glaser, Joseph E. Biological Sci. Glassco, Charmaine R. Elementary EJ. Glassmeyer, Laura Education Glesing, ' illiam E- .Marketing Glick, ¥. Ann P:ychology Goad, Charles L. .Accounting Goad, Tawna L. Physical Ed. Goldblatt. Arlene B. Business Goldstein. Jan S. EJucation Goode, Richard G. Physical EJ. Goode. N ' alerie L. Social Sert ice Goodwin, Dallas T. Chemistry Gorden, Olevia A. Business Gordon, Jody R. Economics Gorsuch, Lindsey G. Fine Arts Gossman, Edward L, Forensic Studies Gratman, . llan 1. Slavics Graham. John F. Music Gray, Charles E Psychology Gray, Michael J. Biological Sci. Greenhouse, Kenneth E .Music Gregor ' . Joseph J. Eniironmental Polity Grittin, David P. Forensic Studies 459 Griffin, Mary K. English Grimm, Karen L. Sociology Grooms, Lloyd W. Vrhan and Regional Planning Grossman, Philip R. Accounting Gutknecht, Janet K. Psychology Gucciardi Lea L. Physical Ed. Gulden, Nancy A. Elementary Ed. Gulick, Douglas H. Political Sci. Gurevitz, Susan J. Journalism Gurnik, Maryann L. Psychology Guyer, Vicki L. English Haag, Margaret A. Business Hackett, Susan E. Fine Arts Hakl, Pamela J. Music Hale, Roger C. Accounting Haley, Teresa A. Spanish Hamilton, Rosemary L. Fine Arts Hamilton, Susan E. English Hammett, Patricia J. Elementary Ed. Hammond, Kim A. Elementary Ed. Hammond, Ronald L. Biological Sci. Hamner, Richard E. Biological Sci. Hancock, James D. Elementary Ed. Hanig, Rose S. English Hankins, Donald M. Elementary Ed. Hansen, Josephine Music Hansen, Michael V. Microbiology Harden, Sue A. Elementary Ed. Hargrove, Gerry L, Biological Sci. Harian, Victoiis.M. Journalism Harlow, Trudy A. Sociology Harmon, Scott W. Accounting Harrell, Larry L. Medical Tech. Hart, Georgia L. Music Hart, William D. Marketing Hartley, Judith A. Recreation 460 Hartung, Joan L. Mathemalia Harvey, Sandra J. Speech and Hearing Haskel, Jonathan I. Accounting Hasten, Kim ?. Journalism Hauk, Candi H. Education Hay, Bill R. Recreation Haymond, Linda K. Social Studies Haynes, Amariah A. Afro-American Studies Healy, Robert E. Business Heath, Elizabeth D. Elementary Ed. Hetty, Thomas X. Psu ' holog) Heiny, Sharon S. Art Ed. Helm, Kristen M. Ps)cholog) Hemmeger, Susan E Biological Sci. Hemmerle, Patricia A. Chemistry Henderson, JoAnne Office Management Henderson, William P. Athletic Training Hene, Lois J. Journalism Henkle, Robert M. Theatre and Drama Hennig, Thomas E. Biological Sci. Henry, James ' . Radio and T ' Hensel, Oawn K. French Herran, F. Edward Finance Hess, Marilyn J. Psychology Hew, Paul D. Optometry Hiatt, David A. Finance Hickman, Mark E. Sociology Hicks, Nancy . . Political Sci. Higginbotham, David J, Psychology Hill, John C Political Sci Hill, Lucinda B. English Hill, Rhonda L. Finance Hill, Robert K. Astronomy Hill, Suzanne E .Music Hillearv, Joan C Elementary EJ. Hiner, Sl ' ichael A. .Marketing 461 Rick Wood Hitch, Kathleen M. Home Economics Hittle, Susan J. Elementary Ed. Hmurovic, John M. Journalism Ho, Chi-hung A. Biological Set. Hobbs, Susan L. School Library Hoch, Paula A. Mathematics Hochgesang, Nancy A. Home Economics Hodges, Linda J. Economics Hoeferkamp, David H. Buisness Hoffman, David A. Business Holland, Alicia J. Forensic Studies Hollingsworth, Alma S. Elementary Ed. Holloway, Frank B. Philosophy Holloway, Kevin A. Political Set. Holm, Jan C. Business Holm, Julie A. East Asian Languages Horn, Ruth E. Elementary Ed. Horn, Susan D. French Hornlein, Jon M. Instrumental Ed. Horstman, John E. History Hosford, Anne K. Journalism Hostetter, Carol Psychology Housewerth, Janet D. Fine Arts Houston, Cindy J. Physical Ed. Howland, Diane L. Elementary Ed. Hrnjak, Marilyn E. Political Sci. Hubbard, Tony J. Microbiology Hubert, Charlotte A. Music Hughes, Daniel P. Biological Sci. Humphrey, Gena L. Speech Hunt, Pamela L. Sociology Hunter, Mary J. Theraputic Rec. Hurdle, Carol E. Secondary Ed. Huxhold, Ethel L. Health and Safety Huybers, Richard B. Business lUing, Susan J. Recreatirjn 462 lies, Debbie C. Sociology Jacks, Michael R. Biological Sci. Jackson, Blanderte Home Exonomics Jackson, Elizabeth L. Elementary Ed. Jackson, Terri L. Sociology Jacobs, Marianne Special EJ. Jacobson, Mark Chemistry Jacobson, Janice A. Sociology Janowiak, Lucenre M. Medical Tech. Janowski, Monica Louise .Marketing Jarrett, Roben M. Elementary EJ. Jasinski, Sophia M. Marketing Jay, David A. Anthropology Jettries, Syl via C. Elementary EJ. Johnson, Chenl D. French Johnson, Marita A. Elementary EJ. Johnson, Susan K. History Johnson, William M. Political Sci. Jones, Leland A Fine Arts Jones, Pamela L. Psychology Jordan, Evelyn M. EJucasion Judkins, Cheryl A. Radio and T. I ' . Judy, David L. Biological Sci. Julian, Diane L. Social Studies Jump. John G, Urban Studies Kalb, Bryan E, Optometry Kalk, Michael S. Psychology Kapouralous, Diana M. Business Karlos, Stephanie Education Kaske, Betty G. Elementary Ed. Kaulnian. Eileen Psychology Kauiman. Lisa N, Sear Eastern Lang. Kaufman. Vicki L. Fine Arts Kcomt. Angel T. Chemistry Kearney, Rjchel English Keaton, Kristen S. Biological Sci. 463 Keene, Susan L. Elementary Ed. Kelly, Judith B. Marketing Kelly, Kyle P. Therapeutic Rec. Kendall, Cynthia A. Finance Kennedy, Madeleine M. Linguistics Kennell, Pamela K. Psychology Keno, Paula L. Elementary and Special Ed. Kent, Kenneth L. Real Estate Kenter, Karen A. Psychology Kessler, Karis G. Marketing Kessler, Pamela C. Elementary Ed. Key, Bradley V. Biological Sci. Kimble, Kathleen R. Music King, Bradford, S. English King, Christine M. Elementary Ed. King, David W. Biology King, Jacqueline E. Therapeutic Rec. King, Rayford L. Elementary Ed. King, Susan E. Elementary Ed. Kinn, Karen A. Art Ed. Kinsella, Arlene R. English Kirts, Randall B. Finance Kitzman, Katherine M. Flute Klee, Thomas M. Speech Pathology Kleindorfer, Susan J. Elementary Ed. Klemme, Cathy J. Elementary Ed. Klueh, Nancy L. Marketing Knispel, Pamela G. English Komanetki, Juliana Accounting Kotulak, E)avid B. Religious Studies Krapesh, Patricia A. Journalism Kroeger, Jackie L. Percussion Krulewitch, Ellen R. Spanish Kruse, Stephen K. Chemistry Kuebler, Donald R. Biology K uhn, Susan J. Speech and Hearing 464 Kundrat, Linnea J. Home Economics Kutch, Ann Journalism LaFon, Donald E. Journalism LaiMarr, Kenneth L. Marketing Lamberson, Jerr - B. Optometry Lammert, Stephen A. Chemistry Landes, Lance M. Management Landsman, Elyse S. Ballet Lane, Denise K. Political Sci. Lang, Harold W. Psychology Lanigan, Nanq- Education Lapin, Andrew ' Economics Lass, Marilyn Elementary Ed. Latham, Mary V. Education Lauer, Kathleen P. Cuotechnology Lauer, Linda A. Education Ledger, Karen L. Elementary EJ. Lee, Cynthia L. Accounting Lehman, Nancy K. Music Lehman, Steve W. Accounting Lehrman, Roy E. Biology and Chemistry Leichtman, Jana C. Special Ed. Leistikow, Laurel J. Siarketing Leman, Paulette S. Economics Lemke, Ann E. Forensic Studies Lerner, Andrea B, Psychology Levay. Zoltan G. Astrophysics Leviton, Debbe S. .Music Theory Lewis, Herschel C. Finance Lewis, Michael E, Personnel and Industrial Relations Libera, Robert F. General Management Light. Frank ■. Accounting Light, Judy M. English Lindenmeyer, Susan Special Ed. Linderman, Elaine D, I ' oice Linne, Janice R. Fine Arts 465 Lorotzky, Claudia A. Journalism Love, Barbara J. Elementary Ed. Lowe, Joyce E. Elementary Ed. Lowe, Walter W. Business Ed. Lucas, Debra K. Social Studies Ed. Luce, Cynthia C. Ballet Luit, Lorrie C. Marketing Luke, Debra K. Journalism Lundin, Julianna M. Music Lytle, Judith L. Home Economics Lytle, Linda J. Real Estate Madden, Robert L. Psychology Magiera, Alan P. Art Ed. Magrane, Jean Physical Ed. Majors, Deborah D. Sociology Makris, Bessie Political Sci. Mallah, Gina E. Recreational Therapy Manijak, Pamela A. Multicultural Ed. Development Manlove, Sherrie L. English Ed. Mann, David L. Biological Sci. Manolas, Tom J. Eorensics Studies Manuel, Thomas E. Accounting Markey, Patricia J. Physical Ed. Marsh, Ann E. Political Sci. Marshall, Mary H. Biological Sci. Martin, David D. Forensic Studies Martin, Karen L. Computer Sci. Martz, Brenda J. Elementary Ed. Masin, Marc L. Finance Mathews, Edward J. Math Mathews, Sara D. French and Theatre Mathys, Laura L. Elementary Ed. Mattheis, Connie J. Business Marketing Mattingly, Nancy S. Political Sci. Maxwell, Nancy A. Sociology May, Teresa A. Math 466 David Jay I Mayer, Kevin S. Microbiology Mayerson, Lynn S. Marketing McCain, Laura J. Psychology McCarty, Charles J. Telecommunications McCauley. Sheila J. Spanish McClain, Karen E. French McComb, Cheryl L. Biological Set. McConkey, Chris G. Special Ed. McConnell, Jacalyn S. Physical EJ. McConville, Karen J. Sociology McCormick, Peter C Journalism McDonald, Bruce H. Accounting McDowell, Dean A. Rudio and T.V. McGillen, Timothy H. Optometry McGonagle, Timothy K. Biological Sci. McGrath, Marinel D. French McHugh, Colleen A. Elementary Ed. McKernan, Regina M. Voice McKnight, Rhonda M. English McLaurin, Joyce S. Er,fliih McMurtrey, Lon J. Finance McXamara, Dara L. Education McQuilkin, Cann .Marketing McQuillan, Mike J. Journalism .Mc ' 3 . Gary R. P Jitical Sci. Medina, Monica . Speech Pathology Meek, Richard .■ . Business Meelemre, Betsv I. Spanish Meltzer, Sydnie D. Physical EJ. Mendelovitz, Marsha J. Radio and T. 1 Merritt. Sandra G. English Metcalf, Catherine L Ballet Merzger, Jerry .M. .iccouruing Michette, Denyse . . History Middleton, Stephen D. Physical Ed. Mikesell, Mary P. English ' 467 Miles, Brenda K. Rjdto and T. V. Miles, Cynthia Sociology Milhon, Candace L. Education Milibern, Robert D. Business Administration Miller, Barbara L. Secondary Ed. Miller, Catherine G. Journalism Miller, Cindy K. Forensic Studies Miller, James K. Accounting Miller, Janey F. Health and Safety iXIiller, Joklene Spanish Miller, Marilyn S. Business Ed. Miller, Michael A. Economics Miller. Susan L. Forensic Studies Miller, Vicky L. Forensic Studies Miller, Walter P. Afro American Studies Miller, William A. Ecrjnomics Miller, William J. Accounting Mills, Deborah S. Physical Ed. Mishler, James L. Radio and T. V. Missman, Susan E. Sociology Moberg, David A. Sociology Modesitt, Melinda G. English Mohler, Lynne J. Biology Moll, Melinda Business Administration Monnier, Elizabeth J. Physical Ed. Montague, James D. Political Sci. Moore, Barbara E. Elementary Ed. Moore, Brad A. Accounting Morjre, Gerald J. English Moore, Judith L. Elementary Ed. Mordoh, Gilbert S. Real Estate Morgan, Myra F. Elementary Ed. Morgan, Suzanne Forensic Studies Morris. Jan E. French Morris, Jospeh A. Finance Morris, Thomasena V. Telecommunicaticms ' 468 Morris, William H. Marketing Morrow, Anne M. Biological Sci. Moss, Dale W. Political Sci. Mostes, Mark M. His!C r) Motley, Glorietta L. Home Economics Mouhourtis, Elaine Physical Ed. Moutoux, Martha Jour?ialism Mrzlock, Nancy M. Elementary Muhn, Melinda A. Sociology Mulhall. Sheila R. Chemislr Muller, David P. Speech Mundy, Deborah J. Special EJ. EJ. Munk, Joan M. Home Economics Murillo, Mary E. Physical EJ. Murphy, John P. Business Myers, Daniel C. Psychology Myers, Linda J. Journalism Myers, Robert E. Recreation EJ. Myers, Steven L. Finance Myres, ' Wendy A. Speech Pathology and Audiology Neal, Carrol D. Elementary EJ. Nelson, Marilyn K. Sociology Nevins, Gwen K. Special EJ. New, Jettrey B. Business Management Newcomer. James N . .Warketing Newcomer. ' irginia M. .Waihematics NewlanJ. Cynthia K_ Physical EJ. Newman. Bruce B. Journalism Nielsen. Jan .■ . Elementary EJ- Niequist, Pamela A. Telecommunications Nikolich. Tony Business NikoU. Patti L. Special EJ. Nix, Susan E. Mathematics Noelker. James E. Marketing Nunn. Jen History Ober, Kachr n L Forensic Studies 469 ,..rr .1 -,- Rick Wood Office, Judith M. French O ' Hanlon, Margaret L. English Ohl, Jeffrey M. Journalism Oing, Debra M. Recreational Therapy Okey, Bobbie K. Spanish Olinger, Jeffrey A. Biological Sci Oliphant, Rebecca L. Elementary Ed. Opalak, John D. Accounting Oriji, Chidi Chemistry Osting, Kathleen T. Recreation Owens, John A. Business Painter, John W. Business Palmer, Mary S. Accounting Palmer, Thomas W. Accounting Parcels, Kenneth A. Forensic Studies Parnell, Nancy L. Recreation Parness, Richard A. Accounting Parry, Conne M. Elementary Ed. Parsons, Janna L. Merchandising Patrick, Amy L. Physical Ed. Patton, Cynthia Dance Patton, Richard B. Accounting Patton, Stephen R. Political Sci. Payne, Michael Marketing Payton, Connie J. Marketing Peck, Susan L. Journalism Pedigo, Richard C. Business Peet, Debbie S. Psychology Pendleton, Janet L. Biology Perkins, Janet C. Music Perrine, Jackie M. Education Peterson, Elizabeth S. Biological Sci. Peterson, Sara C. English Pfleeger, Deborah P. Music Phegley, Sharon A. Library Science Phelps, Tommy J. Biological Sci. 470 i ' kiM mi M ' wM ' Phillips. Delene I. Red Estate Phillips, John B. Hutory Phillips, Sally D. Anthropology Pierce, Jeffen ' M. Elementary EJ. Pinkins, Janice Elementary EJ. Plummer, Pamela Business Poehler. Leonard X ' . AcLOunting Pohl, Courtney A. Music EJ. Pomerantz, Elise S. Home Economics Powers, John R. .Marketing Pran, Stephen X ' . Instrumental .Music Presley, Alan . Business Econ. Pressley, Wendy A. Graphic Design Prisco, Cassandra M. Elementary EJ. Proper, Lauren J. Forensic Studies Purbaugh, Michael J. .Accounting Purdy, Dale R. Chemistry Purvis, Larry D. Business Quandt. Herrold, H. Elementary EJ. Ralstin. David NL Biology Rariden, Karen L. English Rasche, Barbara J. C ' -mputer Sci. Rasmussen. Brian R. Ps cholog Ratkovich, Paul W. Radio and T.V. Rausch, Judy A. Physical Ed. Reber, Steven S. .Marketing Reed, Duane . . Journalism Reed, Oliver NL Bi:,log: Reinke, Dean A. Physical EJ. Renfrew. Rodney J. Sociology Rendon-Gomez, Orlando .Management Renner, Terri L. French Replogle. David W. Psychology Ress. Jeanne E. Biological Sci. Richardson. Kacherine A. Biological Sci. RiddeU. Lin da S. Recreation EJ. 471 Ridoux, Elizabeth A. Journalism Rinehart, Diane K. Advertising Ringer. M. Susan Recreation Risley, Myra J. Political Sci. Robb, Brian E. Marketing Robb, Carol C. Accounting Roberts, Lome J. Journalism Roberts, Patricia S. French Robinson, Ann E. Marketing Robinson, Phyllis M. Elementary Ed. Robinson-Long, James D. Radio and T. V. Roehrdanz, James W. Finance Roland, Sandy L. Speech and Hearing Romeu, David L. Marketing Rominger, Gayle E. Elementary Ed. Rose, Joel E. Marketing Ross, Marilyn J. Business Roth, Alan I. Biological Sci. Rothblatt, Arthur M. Accounting Rcthgeb, Jeanne C. History Rothger, David L. SPEA Rough, C. Richard Jr. Business Ruark. Walter R. Health and Safety Rudd, Martha L. Journalism Rudder. Sheryl A. Home Economics Rush, James L. Health and Safety Rusnrjck, Linda J. Optometry Russell, Annette Office Management Saag, Barbara K. Education Sabel, David M. Accounting Sachs, James A. Business Sacoolidge, John C. Biological Sci. St. John, Mark W. SPEA Samek, Nancy E. Accounting Samithianan, Suchart Marketing Sandlin, Donna R. Psychology All Schaerer, Darlisa K. Finance Schatter. Nana ' L. Elemenlary EJ. Schall, Stephen P. Biologka! Sci. Scharbach, Deborah J. Psychology Schenck, Lynn L. Business Scherer, Brian G. Painting Scherrer. Joseph P. Business Mgl. Schevtchuk, Ehzabeth . Journalism Schmieman. Ann P. Marieting Schift ' , Joel Finance Schlensker. Man A. Marketing Schmidt. Barbara S. Journalism Schmit, Philip L. Chemistry Schmirt, Stanley A. History Schneider, Judy K_ Sociology Schneider, Susan L. Telecommunications Schreckengast, Steven R. Business AJm. Schultz, Cher l L. Elementary EJ. Schunk, Arthur M. Jr. Psychology Schutzman. Xancy D. Psychology Schwartz. Andrew B. Jaz: Schwartz. Charlene R. Theatre and Dram. Schwartz. Susan J. English Schwenk. CTlenn R. Jr. Biological Sci. Scott. Michael T. Forensic StuJies Scott. Shelley S. Elementary EJ. Scudder. xnc ' JnurnaJism Scurlock Selma A. Psychology Seely. Charles L. Speech Seketa, Jayne A. French Sells. Michele D. Journalism Selzer. Kathy S. English Seright. Marilyn K. .Marketing Shanahan, Hester C. EJucation Sharp. Jerri L. English Shaw, Suzanne K. EJucation Shearer, David P. Aicounting Shearer, Mary J. Music Sheets, Charles D. Accounting Sheetz, Valerie C. Early Childhood Ed. Shelton, Sheryl E. Journalism Sherfick, Larry G. Physical Ed. Sherman, Leonard G. Accounting Sherman, Lucy Modern Dance Shields, Danny K. Elementary Ed. Shilts, Perry D. History Shimasaki, Jinx H. Organ Shipp, Patricia A. Speech Siemens, Teresa V. Biology Simpson, William Business Sims, Brenda M. Elementary Ed. Sisler, Samuel L.J. Biological Set. Sisson, Pamela J. Latin Skinner, Ava S. Theatre and Drama Skinner, Donald K. Accounting Skirvin, Lori A. Office Management Slamkowski, Daryl S. Recreation Slathar, Daun C. Education Slater, Keith W. Marketing Small, Steven A. Accounting Smith, Christopher R. Geography Smith, Gary L. Marketing Smith, Herbert N. Journalism Smith, Jacqueline Psychology Smith, Jamie M. Physical Ed. Smith, Lindsey A. Forensic Studies Smith, Mark C. Psychology Smith, Melanie A. Telecommunication Smith, Melissa J. Forensic Siudi: Smith, Raymond L. Marketing Smith, Sara J. Elementary Ed. Snapp, Debbie A. Elementary Ed. 474 Snell. John C. Political Sci. Soliman, Jean M. Business Ed. Solotkin, Evelyn E. Murkeling Sparhawk, Brenda M. English Sparhawk. William F. Physical Ed. Sparks. Carol A, Polilscal Sci. Spencer, Gordon J. Physical Ed. Spencer, Lisa L. Biology Spiehler, Susan P. French Spurgeon. Knstine E. Elementary Ed. Stamps, Denisee G. Psychology Standley, Barbara A. .Mjth Stapleton, Carl D. Accounting Stebing, David G. Social Studies Stemm, Michael X . .Marketing Stephens, Jill A. Physical Ed. Stephens, Peggy L Physical Ed. Stevens, Richard K. Accounting Stevens, Shelby S. Business Stewart. John R. Real Estate Stoner, Rebecca L. Anthropology Stout, Jaymie L. Fine Arts Straub, Marlene H. German and French Straughn, David D. Economics Straw. Robert K. Tileconimunicalions Streater, Alicia A. Physchology Stricklin, Fay L Chemistry Stromer, Georga D. Psychology Stueber, Charles F. Physical Ed. Stultz, Roben D. Phtsics Stunkard, Christine . . Elementary EJ. Sullivan, Thomas W. . Urketing Sutter, Robert L. .Marketing Sutton, Susan J. Economics Swinehart, Karen . . Education Swinehart, Stephen D. Physic J Ed. 4-5 Szymczak, James C. Business EJ. Taliaferro, Renee A. Political Sli. Tancey, Mark S. Philosophy Tang, Conna Accounting Tanke, Stephanie J. Elementary Ed. Tarnow, Vicki L. Pine Arts Tatum, Melanie M. Marketing Taube, Jennifer A. Biological Sci. Tavormina, Anna M. Biological Sci. Taylor, Richard A. Mathematics Taylor, Winslow B. Art Ed. Tengsico, Maerose F. Biology Tharpe, Melissa J. Education Thomas, Laurel J. Folklore Thomas, Patricia A. Biology Thomas, Rendall V. Radio and T.V. Thompson, Joanna R. Elementary Ed. Thorelli, Thomas H. Economics Thorne, Deborah L. Home Economics Tincher, Paula J. Physical Ed. Tippy, Faye E. French Tipton, Bonita L. English Tokarek, Jean Marketing Tolbert, Joy R. Journalism Tolley, Lynn J. Speech and Hearing Torretto, Monica K. Journalism Trakimas, Richard F. Sociology Troutman, Nancy A. Physical Ed. Tufford, Daniel L. Biological Sci. Twyman, Cheryl D. Psychology Twyman, Lee H. Audtology Tyler, Melody G. Physical Ed. Tyrie, Carole L. Forensic Studies Ustonik, Roderick W. Mathematics Vanderploeg, Mary E, Biological Sci. Van Horn, Jack E. Marketing 476 Vasilak, Susan M. Journalism Vaught, Linda J. Elemenlar) EJ. Veal, John D. Biological Sci. Vega, Gregory A. Accounting ' elkott, Michele A. Journalism Verner, Gwendolyn K. Fine Arts Vickrey, Rhonda L. Elemenlar) Ed. Vieira, Kim T. Physical Ed. ' ine, Douglas P. Biological Sci. Voelker, Angela M. Art Ed. Vogelgesang, Philip E. Biological Sci. Vogt, Karen P. Journalism Wade. Marsha A. Political Sci. Waggoner, Carol J. Elementary EJ. Wagner, David J. Economics NX ' aible, Fred P. Music Wakefield, Pat A. Physical EJ. Wales, Cynthia R. Physical EJ. Walke, Man- L. Phy ileal EJ. Walker. Xancy J. Business Transportation VC ' allace, Paul J. .Accounting Waller. Mar - K. Elementary EJ. Wallis. John E. .Music Ed. Walsh, Douglas B. Geography alters, Charles R. Biology -liters, Leslie A. Psychology Wandersee, Belinda M. Elementary EJ. X anio. Patricia . . Physical Ed. Warner. Fred M. RaJ ' io and T.V. X ashington-Bailey. Joanne A. Afro-American Studies Watson. Richard L. Journalism Watts. Carolyn D. Sociology Watts. Gregory A. History Waye, David J. .Marketing Weas. John S. Bus.-Gott. Relations Weher, Mary C Accounting Weddle, Joyce A. Elementary Ed. Weeks, Walter, W. History Wehrenberg, Dan Economia Wehrenberg, Suzanne Biology Weimer, H. Edward Political Sci. Weinberger, Lisa Biology Wendling, Victoria E. Elementary Ed. Westtall, John E. Biological Set. Wesrfall, Susan J. Optometry Whaley, Barbara Sociology Whaley, Ellen M. Elementary Ed. Whalin, Wallace T. Journalism Wheatley, Joanne L. Special Ed. Whisler, Larry E. Finance White, Daniel E. Biological Sci. White, Easter, M. Business Ed. White, Mona M. Home Economics White, Richard R. General Mgt. Whitiock, Linda S. Elementary Ed. Whitney, Lisa C. Sociology Wiessler, Margaret M. Recreation Wiggam, Jerry D. Accounting Wildman, Michael L. Business Adm. Wildridge, Timothy E. Forensic Studies Wiley, Kevin P. Marketing Wiley, Michael L. Business Wilhelm, Nancy J. Accounting Wilke, Michael P. Religion Wilkinson, Rex E. Spanish and French Willey, Pam S. Business Williams, Glen W. Musi- Williams, Quensetta D. Marketing Williams, Raymond Marketin,;, Williams, Sandee Forensic Studies Williams, Tamara A. Physical Ed. Williams, Terri S. Elementary Ed. 478 Williamson, Thomas J. Fine Arts Willis, Russell A. English X ' ilson, Gayle A. Elemenlary Ed. Vi ' ilson, Gregory D. Elementary Ed. Wilson, Rebecca R. Biological Sci. Wingo, Debra A. Special Ed. Winter, Esther L. Elemenlar; Ed. Winters, Brad M. Physical Ed. ' ise. Susan E. Accounting Witte, Richard S. Accounting Wira ' er, Grace Journalism Wicwer, Kathryn A. Elementary Ed. Wojcik, John M. Accounting Woinicki, Cheri A. Physical Ed. ' olt, Harvev M. Special Ed. X ' olfberg, Debra L. Physical Ed. Wolte, Catherine E. Education WoUner, William B. .Music Ed. Wood, Jeanne A. Dance Wood house, John A. General Management Woods. Delena A. Psychology W oodson, Russell T. Business Wray, Linda J. Accounting Wray, Robert J. Accounting Wright, Lanita M. Therapeutic Rcc Wyand, Elizabeth A. English ' acko, Marian C. .Marketing ' aru5, Claudia J. Forensic Studies Yocom, Laurel B. Chemistry Young, Teresa A. Sociology Youngstafel, Mar E Biology Yuraitis, Kenneth M. Fine Arts Zachau, James H. Fiiunce Zellmer, Karl F. Finance Zent, Dennis J. Biology Zimmerman, Ann M. Sociology Zimmerman, Deborah A. Home Economics Zurek, Karen L. Biology Buel, Vickie L .Master ' s. Physical Ed. Simmons. John W. .Master s. Ma:henuiics 4-9 Index Aughinbaugh. Vicki 450 Ault, Gregory 386 Austin, Jenny 442 Austrin, Debra 450 Avila. Miguel 379 Axlinc. Rebecca 34 I Axsom, Cecily 390 Adelwahab, Farouk 4 34 Abel. £d 340 Abo!i, Portia 373 Abrahams. Linda 424 Abrahamsen. Dana 35 3 AbrajTison. Paul 391 Achors, Steven 38 I Ackerman. Debra 362 Ackerman, Linda 450 Ackerman. Robert 450 Adams. Charles 396 Adams. Frank 450 Adams. Gary 388 Adams. James 425 Adams. Janna 375 Adams. Joseph 374 Adams. Mark 395 Adams, Millicent 2 35 Adams. Nanq- 364 ' Adams. Philip 396 Adams. Robert 356 Adamson. Charles 393 Adamson. Jane 450 Adkins. Bill 94, 3 36 Agress. Cynthia 420 Ahlf. Charles 450 Albano. Joan 339 Alber. Michael 368 AJber. Susan 373 Albert. Teresa 339 Albertson. Mark 4 10 Albrand. Bruce 388 Albright. David 392 Alexander. Karia 4 36 Alexander, Michael 358 Alexander, Yvonne 366 Alhand, Elizabeth 390 Allen. Jane 364 Allendorf, Debra 394 Allhands. Barry 381 Alloy. David 442 Aiper. Laura 450 Alsfelder. Roben 450 Alsop. Ronald 424 Alter. Richard 368 Alter. Stephen 379 Altherr. Deborah 450 Altman. Nancy 4 50 Amick, Tom 450 Amonette, Jeffrey 392 Amore, Shelley 348, 350 Amstutz, Patricia 380 Anderson, Andrea 366 Anderson. Barbara 390 Anderson. Carolyn 450 Anderson. David 450 Anderson, George 366 Anderson, Kaihryn 362 Anderson, Susan 384 Andre, Janet 396 Andreas, Gerald 450 Andresen, Debra 34 1 Andrew, Cynthia 396 Andrews, Stephanie 4 50 Anfield, Betsy 450 Ankli. Debra 360 Anioniu. Roger 359 Antonoff. Mark 291 Appleton, Judith 362, 432 Aranoff. Laurie 450 Arbuckle. Jeffrey 340 Arbuckle. Joann 348 Archer. Christina 308 364 Arfman. Dale 388 Arledge. Brian 377 Armbrust. Stephen 450 Armstead. Marilyn 391 Armstrong, Verena 450 Arnold, Craig 382 Arnold. Maureen 450 Aron. Susan 364 Arrington. Joe 392 Asher. Sari 384 Ashland. Elizabeth 442 Ashton. Car - 385 Ashton. Gary 385 Askew. Robert 392 Atkcrson. Jeanetta450 Atkins. Kathryn 373 Atkins. Michael 386 Atsaves. Antonia 348. 450 Atz. Catherine 450 Atz. Joseph 342 Atz. Terry 388 Baas. Tamara 350. 450 Babcock. David 354 355 Babcock, Walter 450 Bachelor. Douglas 381 Back. Jeff 388 Badnarik. Michael 343 Bacrveldt. Calvin 450 Bagan. John 394 Bailey. Joanne 391. 477 Bailey. Kathleen 450 Bailey. Kathy 34 3 Bailey. Scott 450 Bailey. William 382 Baincs. Charles 392 Baird, Ruth 450 Baker. Alan 434 Baker. Barbara 450 Baker. Beverly 420 Baker. Debra 372 Baker. Kaihryn 393 Baker. Kevin 38 3 Baker. Mark 370 Baker. Skip 34O Baker. William 426 Baker. William T. 392 Baldwin. Wendy 396 Bale. Pamela 375 Ball. David 450 Ball. George 94. 377 Ball. Steven 450 Ballard. Michelle 448 Ballard. Sharon 396 Bandy. Susan 396 Bankhart. Ted 395 Bankoff. Nancy 448 Banks. Carolyn 446 Banks. David 450 Banks. John 368 Banks. Monica 366 Bannerman. Jane 356 Bannon. Lynn 384. 45 Bannon. Dr. William 206 207 Bannwart. Stephen 448 Baniz, Jeffrey 374 Bara, Michele 442 Baran, Carol 452 Barbre. Jilayn 341 Barclay, Paula 364 Bard. Angela 362 Barefoot. Steven 452 Bareither. Linda 384 Barfell. Lana 452 Barge. Charisse 452 Bariie. Janet 350 Barker. Jerry 35 3 Barker. Kathy 452 Barker. Thomas 388 Barker. William 452 Barker. Duane 452 Barkley. Scott 340 Barlow. Phyllis 452 Barlow. Richard 452 Barlow. Robert 4 52 Barn. Debbie 4 37 Barnard. Marcie 364. 452 Barnes. Ben 394 Barnes. Gary 452 Barneit. Deborah 367 Barnett, John 368 Barnett, Paul 438 Barnette, Larry 448 Barnhorst. Beth 4 10 Barnhorst. Brian 383 Barr. Ronald 4 17 Barreiro. Daniel 424 Barrett. Donald 329 Barrett. Patricia 395 Barrow. Deborah 360 Barsamian. James 395 Bartholomy. Vicki 23 Bartosz. Thaddeus 393 Basanda. Susan 364 Bassett. Kathryn 368 Bastian. Carol 395 Bastian. Mary 395 Basiin. Danny 396 Bastin. Norman 385 Bates. Maya 362, 452 Bates. Ronald 38 I Battcllc. Barbara 364 Batten. Brenda 448 Batuello. Michael 421 Bauer. Thomas 368 Baugh. Thomas 452 Baughman. Cynthia 452 Baumgartner. Martha 452 Baxter. Beth 360 Bayley. Robert 45 2 Bayly. Robert 452 Beach. Sara 494. 452 Beachler. Yvonne 395 Beard. Ann 393 Bearss. John 382 Beaslcy. Gary 395 Beauchamp. Gwendolyn 339 Beaulieu. Barbara 452 Beaver. Jeffrey 35 3 Beavers. Ann 363 Beck. Barbara 393 Beck. John 435 Beck. John 342 Beck. Thomas 354 Beck. Vicki 452 Becker. Lawrence 386 Becker. Mark 386 Becker. Rhonda 350 452 Beebe. Walter 386 Beeler. Cecelia 452 Behrman. Patricia 384 Bell. Greg 421 Bell. Joan 364 Bell, John 358 Bell, Julie 393 Bell, Kathleen 452 Bell, Laurie 393, 452 Bell, Timothy 577, 442 Bell, Virginia 438, 452 Bellendorf Nancy 362 Belt, Jeffrey 382 Bclwood. Brian 340 Bcmbenista, Danula 452 Benckart, William 395 Benes, Bonnie 362 Benn, Brooke 452 Bennett, Bryce 452 Bennett, Julie 375 Benson, Kent 278, 279 283 Bercu, Lynn 395 Bergbom, Claire 360 Bergdoll, Mary 372 446 Berger, Diana 375 Berger, Linda 362, 452 Berger, Susan 452 Berke, Toni 371 Berkowitz, Jeff 39 1 Berman. Keith 4 35 Bernardic. Terry 390 Bernazzani. Maria 45 2 Berncr. Scott 437 Berry. Jae 425 Bertig. Gina 32 3. 452 Bertocchio. Lois 373 452 Bertsch. John 45 2 Beutler. Melinda 45 3 Bezahlet. Ronald 391 Biddle. Christine 395 Biggins. Kenneth 453 Biggs. Donald 368 Bikos. Katherine 341 Bilella. Maria 339, 350 Billingsley, Scott 383, 410 Billman, James 382 Binder, Paul 382 Binford, Anne 45 3 Binkley. Margaret 373 Binzel, Martha 380 Birk, Krezlyn 45 3 Birnberg, Jody 371 Bishop, Janet 350 Bishop, Stephen 368 Bissell, Charmaine 45 3 Bistany, Robin 10 3 Bitner, Gerry 45 3 Bixby. Stephen 45 3 Bjelich, Steven 393 Bkrupa, Lucyna 34 1 Black, Carol 45 3 Black, Dr. Joseph M. 206 Black, Michael 453 Black, Thomas 354 Blackburn, Brenda 356 Blackburn, Lauretta 366 Blackwell, Deborah 380 Blackwell, James 382 Blackwood. Mary 378 45 3 Blake. Mary 59 ' ' Blake. Nancy 350 Blake. Sylvia 371 Blake. Thomas 376 Blakely. Martha 45 3 Blakely. Benjamin 42 1 Blanchard. Kerry 4 34, 437 Blankehorn, Phillip 379 ' Bleck, Laurie 453 Blemker, Jane 364 Blesch, Sara 372 Blish, Terrance 353 Blizek. John 45 3 Blocker. Mark 370 Bluemle. Laura 4 38. 446 Blum, Keith 382 Blumstein, Kenneth 45 3 Boardman, Mark 358 Boardman, Sue 378 Bobbitt, Brian 442 Bock. Robert 453 Boedekcr. Beth 348 Bogardt. Anne 45 3 Boggs. Deborah 453 Boggs. Michael 368 Bogle. Carolyn 45 3 Bogusz. James 393 Bol. Susan 348, 453 Bolanowski, Catherine 343 Bodebuck, Cynthia 4 32, 453 Boll, Charles 45 3 Bollei, Jean 384 Bolon, Barbara 348 Bomber, Brenda 343 Bond, Connie 446 Bondus, Thom 392, 453 Boner, Daniel 442 ' Bonge, Beverly 360 Bonham, Vivian 373 Bonhomme, Helen 436 Bonkowski, Pamela 45 3 Bonner, Janine 375 Bonsc-tt, Jan 45 3 Bonta, Mitch 394 Bonventura, Michael 436 Boone, Jeffrey 389 Booth, Catherine 339 Bopp, Wayne 386 Borders, Joni 45 3 Borland, Deborah 373 Born, Marilyn 453 Borntrager, Phillip 383 Borror, Michele 375 Boswell, Michael 386 Boterf Joan 45 3 Bottom, Jane 372, 442 Bottoms. Glenda 47 Bottorff. Deborah 45 3 Boulware. Beverly 448 Bowden. Daniel 392 Bowen. Deborah 393 Bowen. Richard 453 Bower. Richard 436 Bowers. Barbara 360 Bowles. Mark 383 Bowman. Deborah 372 Bowman. Gregg 353 Boyd. Bruce 35 3 Boyd, Paula 360, 45 3 Boyko, Ihor 67 Boyle, Amy 424 Bozich, Richard 425, 453 Brace, Kurt 94, 386 ' Brackulis. John 395 Bradford. Elizabeth 378 Bradley. Julia 373, 453 Bradtmiller, Bruce 45 3 Bragalone, Jon 435 Brake, Ronald 382 Brames, Janice 45 3 Bramlette. Mary 364 Brammer. Sharon 356 Brand. Mark 353 Brandon. Thomas 368 Braniff Elizabeth 45 3 Branyon. Linda 453 Brasich. Beverly 360 Brateman. Robert 391, 454 Braun, Janet 348 Brawley, Don 454 Braxton, Charles 454 Bray, Timothy 370 Bremer, Michelle 378 Brenizer, Beth 393 Brennan, D. Scott 376 Brenneman, Jane 34 1 Brescher, Beth 390 Brewer, Janis 350 Brian, Karen 378 Bridgewater, Montinia 454 Briggs, Sharon 37 3 Briggs. Ted 368 Bringwald. Dianne 454 Briit. Joanne 454 Brizius. Steven 383 Broadus, Eric 454 Brocco, Bob 370 Brock, Paul 366 Brock, Sandra 454 Brock. Steven 394 Brockman. Ann 378, 454 Brockman. Peter 448 Brockman. Wilfred 370 Brodt. William 454 Broglin. Mai Nuong 442 Bromer. Ann 364 Brooks. Marc 382 Broomall. Mindy 364 Brost. John 377 Brower, Lynn 364 Brower, Valorie 339, 36O Brown, AJma 454 Brown , Barbara 34 1 Brown, Carol 390 Brown, Clinton 388 Brown, Cynthia 360 Brown, Daryl 454 Brown, Deborah G. 454 Brown. Deborah J. 350 Brown. Diane D. 372 Brown. Jacqueline J. 454 Brown. James R. 454 Brown. Jill A. 454 Brown. Joseph L. 454 Brown. Julia A. 4 36 Brown. Lou Ann 350 Brown. Marcia C. 454 480 Brown. Marcia R. 591 Brown, Marvin 383 Brown, Melissa 454 Brown, Ronald 454 Brown. Scott Y. 376 Brown. Sherr ' L. 350 Brown. Stuarr A. 368 Brown, Thomas L. 374 Browne. Mary 390 Browning, Nanette 375 Brownlee. Susan 454 Brownlow. Deborah 454 Bruce, Deborah 454 Bruce, Linda 37 3 Bruggemann. Elizabeth 350 Bruner. Kathy 360 Brunnemer. Christie 350 Brunner, Jeanne 339 Brunson. John 388 Bruscaio, Anthony 393. 426 Brusse. Elizabeth 350 Bryan. Barbara 356 Bryant. Lisa 391 Bryant. Teresa 378 Bucci, Barbara 372 Buckner, Quinn 279 Bucky. Phyllis 454 Buechele, Billy 370 Buechler, Janice 3 39 Buel. Vickie 479 Buergler. Ann 421, 454 Buker. Thomas 394 Buksar. Carol 454 Bulfock. Diane 448 Bulloff. Steven 454 Bumb. Sandra 348 Bundy. Diane 360 Bungum, Brian 291 Bunke. Anna 376 Bunnell. Darrell 366 Burch. Donald 454 Burden, Debra 454 Burdsall, Leslie 350 Bures. Christy 396 Burgess, James 392 Burgette. Gerald 454 Burke. Allene 375 Burke. James 393 Burke, Tersa 375 Burkhart, Marie 395 Burks. Gai} ' 392 Burks, Phillip 392 Burks. Steven 16 Burnes. Velynda 384 Burnham, Anita 454 Burnett, Janice 360 Burns, Don 436 Burns, James 374 Burns. Mark 385 Burns, Robert 4 36 Burns, Thomas 377 Burrington, Barbara 364 Burroughs. Michael 386 Bursky. Jay 448 Burton, Joan 348, 380 Burton. Scott 389 Busch, David 386 Bushey, Nancy 380. 420 Bushnell, Cynthia 348 Bushrod. Evelyn 391 Busse. Jonna 494 Bussian, Amy 395 Butch, Dave 370 Buting, Thomas 388 Butler. Les 366 Butts, Peggy 37 3 Buzzard, Etonis 356 Byer, Lindsay 454 Cagen, Mary 395 Cain, Debra 375 Cain, Jay 35 3 Calcaterra. Robert 442 Calkins, Caria 454 Callahan, Kerry 348 Calle, Martin 382 Calvert. Donna 362 Cambridge. Stephen 42 1 Camden, Paulette 328 Cameron, Pamela 454 Camp. Michael 340 Campbell. Cindy 341 Campbell. Jeffrey 354. 355 Campbell. Joyce 372 Campbell. Kay 384 Campbell, Mary C. 454 Campbell. Nancy 356 Campbell. Randy 455 Campbell. Tom 354. 355 Canel. Lester 392 Canfield, Daniel 381 Cannon. Martha 380 Canonico. Tui Ann 360 Cantor, Carol 37 1 Carl. Cynthia 80 Carlo, John 396 Carlson, Douglas 109 Carmichael. Stephen 358 Carpenter, Kent 376 Carr. Bonnie 442 Carnngton, Hearst 388 Carter. Byrum E. 208 Carter, Daniel 331 Carter, John 38 3 Carter, Robert 383 Carter, Susan 52 Carter. Vicki 425 Carter, Wayne 392 Cartwright. James 394 Carunchia. Vincent 388 Caruso, Deborah 362 Casich, Caren 455 Caskey, James 368 CasIer, Conrad 38 1 Cass, Stephen 393 Cassidy. Mary 339 Cassidy, Steven 381 Cassle. Janeth 360 Casialdi, Barbara 380 Catlett, Richard 376 Cauley. Christopher 343 Caulficld, Sandra 384 Caludron, Gerald 91 Chaddock, David 368 Chadwick, Stephen 455 Chamberlain, Kathleen 3 ' ' Chambers. Bette 373 Chaney. Bobbie 442 Chaney. David 455 Chaney, Jennifer 455 Channell, Cheryl 455 Chapin. Kimberly 372 Chapman, Bradford 366 Chapman, Curtis 389 Chapman, Cynthia 367 Chappell. Brant 448 Chappo, John 374 Chase, Daniel 386 Chasteen, Bonny 390 Chattin. Duane455 Cheek. Constance 362 Chenoweth. Barbara 375 Chenoweth. Catherine 347, 375 Chernoff. Barbara 371 Childers. Craig 455 Childress. Lynn 455 Chin. Ping Yan 455 Chinn, Patrice 384 Chisler. Mar ann 34 3 Choare. Douglas 442 Chomyn . Joseph 326 Chow. Margaret 455 Chow. Yvonne 455 Christ. Laurence 388 Christenson, Dana 455 Christenson. Tern 362 Christmas. Donald 455 Christ ' . Linda 3 ' 8 Chrusciel. Lorraine 350 Chute. Eleanor 455 Ciccone. Albert 426 Clancy. Joanne 1 1 3 Clancy. Thomas 395 Clark. Arthur 4 35 Clark. Constance 384. 420 Clark, Elizabeth 390 Clark. Gar ' 395 Clark. James 370 Clark. Kathleen 384 Clark. William 394 Clarke, Catherine 372 Claus, Nanc - 45 5, 494 Clawson. James 396 Clayton. J Andrew 455 Cleaveland. Sue 3 ' ' 2 Cleveland. Coralee 455 Cleveland. David 455 Clevenger. Charles 374 Clevenger. Nicholas 368 Click. Lorie 393 Click. Steven 45 5 Clifford. Susan =-90 Close. Barr - 395 Cloud Walter 45 5 Clvmer. Cynthia 54 Coats. Charles 392. 442 Coats. David 68 Cobine. AI 168 Cochran, George 3 ' 9 Cochran. Jeffrey 3 Cockrum. Linda 455 Coffin. Churck 43 Cofoid. Kent 381 Cogane, Karen 2 Dave lav Coggeshall. Jack 94 Coggeshall. Kathryn 455 Cohen. Deborah 395 Cohen. Gail 3 1 Cohen. Sara 395 Cohn. Laurie 37 I Coia. Laura 325 Colby. Bets - 360 Cole, Melanie 384 Coleman. Carol 95 Coleman. Mitchell 326 Colin. Beverly 455 CoUeran. Karen 426 Collier. Trorter 66 Ceilings. Judith 384 Collings. Marilyn 41.424 Collins. Arlene 36? CoUms. Craig 3 ' ' 6, 435 Collins. Denise 455 Colnitis. Steven 393 Comin. Alisa 360, 45 5 Comment, Joseph 382 Commers. Beth 396 Commers, Raymond 455 Conder, James 455 Cone. Allen 424 Cones. Anita 380 Cones. Diane 455 Conklin. Brenda 356 Conley. Judith 382 Conley, Patrick 393 Conner. Richard 394 Conner. Vickie 3?2 Connor. Thomas 394 Conrad. Jim 395 Conrad, Steve 95 Constantme. Manlynn 350. 455 Cook, David 45 5 Cook. Jerr - 45 5 Cook. Liesbeth 45 5 Cook. Peter 382 Cook. Valori 455 Cool. Raymond 396 Cooper. Alan 340 Cooper. Bradley 389 Cooper. Clarinda 446 Cooper. Iris 455 Cooper. Patricia 372 Cooper, Virrither 366 Cooper. William 381 Corbin, Carol 350 Corey, Marilou 372 Corley. Wayne 455 Cornell, Nana 380 Cornfeld, Rickie 395 Corum. Delbert 394 Cory. Lynne 373 Coslow. Lee Ann 34 1 Costello. Karen 384 Cotner. James R. 252 Coudret. Catherine 456 Coughlin. William 435. 456 Coulis, Paul 456 Coulter, Moureen 45 6 Coulter. Daniel 388 Courtaney, Teri 364 Cousins, Michele 420 Coveney. Eugene 442 Coveyou, Gloria 3-4 1 Covington. Constance 384 Cowan. Anne 360 Cowan. Leslie 78 Cowherd, John 180, 366 Cowles, Jane 384. 45 1 Cowles. Miriam 362 Cox. Mar - Jane 339 Cox, Terry 368 Coy. Michael 376 Craig. Jill 362 Craig. Mary 594 Crane. Katherine 390, 456 Cranham. Scott 291 Crash. Ivan 39 I Cravens. Gary 4 38 Cravens. John M. 456 Crawford. Charles 4 36 Crawford. Deborah 350 Crawford. Jill 384 Crawford. Sandra 45 1 Creager. Earlaine 456 Crecclius. Peter 394 Cree. Peter 35 3. 456 Creech. Paul 4 38 Crespo. Carlos 4 37 Crews. James R. 278. 385 Crichlow, Anne 364 Crichlow. David 394 Crider. Curt 456 Crilley, P atrick 381 Crimans. Margaret 378 Cri swell. David 368 Critchlow, Robert 456 Crinenden. Deborah 390 Crockett. Tcrri 456 Crodian. Martha 384 Cron, Catherine 393 Cross. Charles 396 Cross, Kelly 542. 556 Cross. Susan 442 Crossen. Janet 456 Crouch. Tamara 456 Crowell. Kim 366 Crum. Michael 456 Crumly, Roy 456 Crumpacker. Peter 395 Csillag, Joe 591 Cubb. Nancy 508 Cullison. James 354 Cummins. Daine 380 Cummins. Thomas 388 Cummins. Ryan 388 Cummins. Thompson 4 10 Cunningham. Leslee 375 Curran. George 377 Curr ' . Joann 375 Curry. Michael 45 6 Curson. Deborah 456 Curtis. Jeffrey 396 Curtis, Linda 456 Curtis, Mary 456 Custer, Michael 456 Dabelow, Carolyn 362 Dabkowski. Sue 372 Daggy, Laura 62 Dahiil. Rob 342 Dahlkamp, Sarah 395 Daiicy. David 448 Dale. Susan 342 Daley, Stephen 377 Dalcon, Randall 456 Dalion, Thomas 434 Daniels. Eddie S66 Danielstin, Donald C 206. 207 Dann, David 35 3 Darden, Kathryn 366 Darden. Timothy 340 Dardick. Michelle 341 Darmcr. Robert 386, 442, 456 Das, Amal 389 Davidson, Patricia 456 Davis. Bonita 45 6 Davis. Cathy 45 6 Davis. Cheryl 372 Davis. Cynthia 372 Davis. Darrel 394 Davis. Gary 331 Davis. James 370 Davis. Kent 42 1 Davis. Margaret 360 Davis, Rebecca 362 Davis, Susan 456 Davis, Susan M, 34 1 Davis. Timothy 386 Day, Jacqueline 456 Day. Juanita 39 1 Day. Rhonda 456 Dayton. Mark 358 De Baets, Terrence 340 De Beck, Suzann 45 6 DeGroff. Robert 13 DeHaven, Elaine 375 DeLone, Donna 350. 457 DeMunbrun. Donna 436 DePoy, Dale 457 DePoy. David 5 3 DeRoos, Linda 457 DeRoo. Mark 95 DcSalvo, Mark 76 DeSutter. Debra 340 DeWitt, Pamel a 356 DeWitt, Thomas 457 Deal. George 396 Deal, Pamela 390 Dearden. Craig 4 35 Dearing. Teresa 45 6 Deaton. Michael 340 Decker. Gaylen 362 Dcgner. Dee 34 3. 456 Dehn. Ingrid 456 Deitel. Robert 424 Delan. Connie 350 Delancey, Jane 456 Delaney. Richard 456 Delay. Daniel 383 Delia. Rocca Donna M. 432. 457 Demaree. Jason 396 Demmon. William 396 Demuth, Michael 442 Denesuk, Paul 394 Denson, Michael 392 D ' Esopo. Oscar 52 Detamore. James 379 Detert. Mark 457 Deimer. Jacquelyn 380, 457 Derrick. Heidi 446 Devanney. William 582 Devillez. Rebbeca 457 Devrouax. Darlene 457 Deweiss, Malcolm 340 Dewig, Joel 456 Dick. Mary 457 Dickey, Sheryl 457 Dickmeyer, Caroline 54 1 Dickson. Bruce 287 Diehl. Kathleen 356, 457 Diethelm. Diane 350 Diffenbaugh. Carol 364 Diggins. Thomas 93 Dilk. Brenda 340 Dilk. Gary 438, 457 Dillon. Karen 347, 562 Dillon, Leti[ia438 Dillon. Patricia 380 Dillon. Patricia R. 442 Dillon. Peter 45 7 Dinwiddle. John 382 Diskey. Terry 4 37 Dison. Debbie 373 Dixon. Charrie 338 Dixon. Jeffrey 389 Doan. Richard 392 Dobkin, Ronni 341 Dtidd. Bette. 457. 494 Dodds. Deborah 457 Doerfler. Janet 360 Dohrenwend. Carolyn 364 Doler. Kevin 385 Domanski. Richard 370, 426 Donnellan, Chris 381 EX nnelly. Cathleen 45 7 Dooley. Mary 45 7 Dooley. Paula 348 Dorn. Philip 343 Dory. Denise 457 Doty, Lu Ellen 380 Dougherty, Jan 348 Dougherty. Linda 594 rXaughten. Kehren 550 Douglas. Deborah 367 Douglas, Gwendolyn 567 Downs, Tina 34 1 Doyle. Martha 34 1 Doyle. Rosalyn 360, 457 Draga, Claudia 380 Dreesen, James 370 Dresbach, George 354, 355 Drinkuc, Terry 457 Drndak. Mary 360, 457 Drossos, Christ 370 Druker. Valerie 457 Drumwright. Jane 345 Do ' bread, Nancy 458. 448 Drysdale. Constance 396 Dubin, Polly 371 Duckworth, David 457 Dudley. John 385 Dudley, Ruth 457 Duerr, Ann 360 Dufor. Sheila 391 Dufour, Christopher 368 Duke, Charles 35 3 Dumas. Albert 366 Dunbar. Gregory 353 Dunbar. Sara 432 Duncan, Denise 392 Duncan, Melinda 396 Duncan, Steve 340 Dunlevy. Karen 372 Dunn. Allen 382 Dunn, Diana 457 Dunne. Marcia 384 Dupee, Anita 367 Dupin, Carolyn 396 Durrus, Cythia 367 Dustman, Lee 576 Dwyer. Dru 457 D ' er. Robert C. 318, 457 Dykhuizen, Dennis 354 Dykstra, Elizabeth 457 Dykstra. Robert 393 482 Rick Wood Eaks. David 457 Eaiy, Vernessa 54 1 Earl, Joanne 96 Easfey. William 45 7 Easter, Allen 410 Easter, Sue 372 Easrerday, Thomas 395 Eberle, Maryanne 54 I Eberly. Cathy 348 Eberly. Reed 457 Edel, Robert -4 5 7 Edgerton. Heather 13 Edkew, Candie 590 Edris. William 354 Edwards, Bryan 438 Edwards, James 396 Edwards. Janet 457 Edwards. Mark 457 Edwards. Michael 368 Eichelberger. Donna 347. 372 Eid. Mikel 396 Eikenbary. Robert 458 Eilers. Marsha 458 Eisele. Mark 458 Eisentrouc, Lynn 341 Ekiof, Michael 393 Elias, Barry 4 37 Elish. Nick i88 Ellerm. Seth 591 Ellibee. Debra 356, 458 Elliott. Howard 377 Elliott. Janice 50 Elliott, Jeffrey 382 Elliott. Patricia 360 Ellis. Cynthia 8 Ellison. Charles 4 Ellison. Paul 458 Ellison. Thomas 133. 354 Elsen. Gregory 377 Eisner. Allen 377 Elzy. Donna 364 Emoff. Todd 391 Endslcy. Lucinda 75 Engle, Brenda 554 English, Melissa 350 Ensmingcr. Michael S2. 458 Ensor. Stephen 354 Ep5 n. Paul 340 Epstein, Mark 591 Epstein. Paula 54 1 Erdmann. Richard 458 Erickson. Charles 82 Erickson, Jan 4 1 Ermeger. Byron 81 Ernstberger. Michael 92 Erotas. Edward 40 Eschbach. Virginia 80 Espinosa. Armando 94 Espinosa. Hector 92 Etchison. Patricia 458 Etchison, Paula 458 Etherington. Nanc - 384 Etzler. Joseph 458 Eubanks. Dan 388 Evans. Jacqueline 366 Evans. Sally 4 58, 442 Evard, Marcie 442 Evens. Laura 54 3 Ewer. James 389 Ewers. Shawn 384 Ewing. Michael 58 1 Ewing, Pamela 5 ' 5 C ( Failey, Mar - 548 Fairchild. Stephen 5 ' ' 4 Fairringer. Elizabeth 458 Faitak. Martin 595 Fallis. Linda 562. 458 Fans, Robert 92 Farner, Michael 558 Farnsworth, James 55 3 Farr, David 386 Farrell. James 377 Farris. Patricia 391 Parser. Marilee 364 Fassett. Margaret 34 3 Faucert, Allen 392 Faulkner, Susan 550. 458 Faust, Richard 458 Fawcett. William 458 Fayh r. John 3 9 Ft-agans. Jay 542 FcL-, Mary 593 Feichter. Cheryl 350 Feitlinger. Marse 95 Feld. Gary 16 Ft-ldbaum. Alan 91 Feldhaus. Sheila 458 Feldman. Cynthia 437 Fennema, Bud 370 Fenton. Gayle 556 Ferguson, Stanely 458 Ferguson, Susan 575, 446 Fernandez. Juanita 458 Fernandez. Landy 274 Ferrara, Elizabeth 548 Ferrell. Dawn 556. 458 Ferrcll, William 94 Ferris. Jjll 584. 458 Fcttig. Kaye 550 Fields. Jane 575 Fields, Pamela 458 Fifer. John 458 Fine. Susan 5 ' ' 2 Finkel. Sondra 458 Finkelstein, Sher -| 595 Finnercy. Beth 3 5 Finnert ' . Gloria 3 ' 5 FiFL-stein, Judith 426 Firmani. Diane 2 52 Fiscus. Carla 4 5 Fisher. Arthur 86 Fisher. Lori 95 Fisher. Randy 588 Fisher. Richard 68 Fisher. Vicki 50 Fishman. Randall 458 Fitton. Anne 5 ' ' 5 Fitzgearld. Pamela 560 Fitzgerald, Anne 4 . 595 Fitzgerald. Debra 360 Flanagan. Mark 593 Fleck, Ronda 4 56 Fleets. Frances 343 Fleming. Gregor - 66 Fleming. Margaret 458 FlippcT. Daniel 4 S Flock. Kurt 109 Florea. Roberta 3 5 Flores. Linda 59. 446 Fogelman. Rochelle 54 1 Folk. Gregory- 44 2 Follmer. Sheila 458 Foncannc n. Scott 38 . 4S8 Force, Scott S Ford. Ellen 0 Ford. Mac 88 Ford. Kevin 86 Ford. Thomas 5 5 FordiCe. Jenny 458 Fore. Scott 424. 458 Forgy. Steven 68 Forszt. Lee 6 Fosler, Stevtn 4 ' 8 Foss. Edward 4 5 Foster. Jacqueline 4 8 Foster, Michael SS Foster, Terr - 5 I Fountain. Pete 8 5 Fowler. Michael 386 Fox, Robert 86 Foxwonhy. Katherin 439 Foyler. Dave 3 0 Franch. Dave 588 Francisco, Richard 389 Frank, Linda 375 Franke, Monte 593. 458 Frantz. Diane 348 Freije. Janeen 356 French. David 392 French. Michael 458 Frendt. Scott 540 Freud. David 16 Freyer. Andrew 4 35 Fribley, Thomas 355 Fried. Eric 458 Friedlander, Lois 458 Friedman, Marilyn 426 Friend. Gregor ' 459 Friend. Shelley 448 Friend. Stacy 446 Fritch. David 379 Fritz. Janice 4 36 Fritz. Mac 383 Fritz, Marcia 393 Fritzlen. Sally 360 Froeiick. Nita 564 Fronberr . Rochelle 5 ' 5 Frushour. Gregor - 3 ' ' 6 Frv-e. Lynn 55 3 Fuchs, James 459 Fueger, Nanc - 5 5 Fuller. George 592 Furber. Walt 426 Gabbard, Samuel 459 Gabe. Loren 5 6 Gabet. Janet 54 3 Gachaw. Gabra 4 59 Gaines. Donald 585 Gallagher. Marian 390 Galovic. Robert 592 Gamrath. Jeffrey 583 Gamrath. Steven 385 Ganger. Bruce 593 Gango. Julie 392 Gant, Juan 566 Gardner. Glenn 586 Gardner. Jack 86 Garland. Lavmon 459 Garnett. Sharon 391 Garrett. Cynthia 348 Garrett. William 395 Garriott. David 396 Garriort. Sandra 4 36 Garrison. Lisa . 64 Garvey. Rita 4 59 Gasaway. Dale . 40 Gasper. Wavnc 82 Gast. Linda =150. 459 Gates, Cing ' 4 I Gates, Robert 206 Gault. Timothv Sl Gelber. Monl ' = 95 Gelman. Sandra 1 Gengler. Sara 360 Gensburg. Hcdy Gentr -. Jane 450 Gentr -. Michael 4 George. Craig 394 George. David 95 George. Elaine 50 Georges. Richard 448 Gerbers. Joel 388 Gcrrit -. Virginia 5 Gianakopoulos, Antigone tH Gibb. Richie ' Gihbs. Devon 4 59 Gibbs. Sandra 4 1 Gibson. Bonnie 50. 432. 459 Gibson. David 4 6 Gibson. Lisa . 9 1 Gibson. Rcid 442 Gibson. Steven 95 Gick. Tern 92. = 8 Gierhart, lames 06 Giltby. Jack 169 Gilbert. Stanlev 5 3 Gilkev. lanet . 459 Gill. Carolvn 4 i9 Gill. Mark 4 Gill. Mar - S4. 446 Gill. Paula = 40. 390 Gillespie. Vindv 4 S Gillis. Robert 45 ) Gilmore. Anne 10, 364 Gilmore. David 68 Glanzman. Scott 4 38 Glaser. Joseph SS. 459 Glais. Kenneth 6 Glassco. Charmainc 459 483 - M Glassme ' er. Laura 459 Glesing. Dean 92 Glesing. Phillip UO Glesing. William 459 Glick. PriscilU-+59 GoaJ. Charl es 459 Goad. Tawna 459 Gobert. Michael S4 3 Goble. Willis 379 Gochenour, Cindy 339 Godse ' . Carol 3 8 Goeddel. Katherine 350 Goedtsky. George 4 48 Goehring. Perer 93 Goff. Lindsay 356 Goff. Tina 375 Goffo. Jeffrey 393 Gohmann. Stephan 394 Golburt, Linda 350 Goldberg. Debfjrah 37 1 Goldblatr. Arlene 459 Goldbl art. Gary 392 Golden. Julia 340 Goldenberg. Sherman 424 Goldner. William 81 Goldsmith, David 91 Goldstein, Jan 459 Gonzalez. 437 . Gonzalez, Marc 395 Gooch, Gregory 366 Goode, Richard 459 Goode. Valerie 459 Goodwin. Dallas 459 Gorbitz. Patric 388 Gorden. Olevia 459 Gordon. Iris 39 I Gordon. Jody 459 Gore. Karren 1 1 3. 310. 373, 42 1 Gorman. John 379 Gorman. Thomas 379 Gosherc, Alan 392 Gossman. Edward -i59 Gouliack. Lisa 392 Gourley. Douglas 376 Grabcr. Pamela 378 Grady, Marianne 384 Graessle. James 368 Graessle. Terry 386 Gragg. Lawrence 385 Graham, Donald 438 lim Wendenhall Graham, John 459 Grant. Duane 338 Grant, Susan 34 3 Grantham, Scott 95 Gray. Carl M. 206 Gray, Charles -459 Gray. Michael -459 Gray. Paula 372 Green, Kathryn 448 Green, Rhonda 330 Green, Sandra 48 Green, Steven 283 Greenhouse, Kenneth 459 Greenwald. Jeff 436 Grccnwald. Wayne 426 Gregory. Joseph 459 Gregory, Melissa 360 Greiner, Cheryl 446 Grembowicz. Patricia 350 Grew, John 396 Griffin. David 459 Griffin, Kathleen 34 1 Griffin, Mary 460 Griffith, Bradley 383 Grigsby, Janie 350 Grimes, Dennis 366, 367 Grimm, Karen 460 Grimstad, Sin 364 Griner, Stanley 396 Gripp, Stephen 588 Grode. Jacqueline 395 Grooms, Lloyd 460 Grose, John 442 Grossman. Eric 391 Grossman, Gary 388 Grossman, Philip 468 Groub. John 35 3 Grove. Dexter 4 36 Grove, Mark 342 Grubb. Lon 368 Gubitz. Jeffrey 391 Gubitz, Richard 391 Gucciardi, Lea 460 Gulden, Nancy 460 Guille. Luis 442 Gulick. Deborah 340 Gulick. Douglas 460 Gullion, Donald 354 Gunderson, Valerie 360 Gunnip, Carol 386 Gurevirz. Susan 460 Gurnik, Maryann 460 Gutknecht, Janet 460 Gutman, Carolyn 206 Gutzweiler. Carol 373 Guyer, Vickie 460 11 Haag. Margaret 339, 362. 460 Habegger. Julia 339 Hackbarth. Mark 370 Hackeit, Margaret 378 Hackett, Susan 460 Hackney. Brenda 446 Haering, Kenneth 394 Hafft, Ronald 79 Haflin, Carla 360 Hagel. Susan 384 Hague. Karen 448 Hakl. Pamela 46O Hale. Roger 460 Haley. Charles 4 37 Haley, Teresa 460 Hall, Jane 375 Hall. Katherine 80 Hall. Kay 34 3 Hall, Melinda 80 Hall, Peter 366 Haller, Michael 392, 437 Hamblin, James 386 Hamilton, Rosemary 372. 446. 460 Hamilton, Susan 460 Hammett. Patricia 460 Hammilg. Tom 370 Hammond, Kim 460 Hammond. Ronald 460 Hamner, Richard 460 Hancock, Harold 22 Hancock, James 460 Hanes. Cynthia 390 Hanes, Nancy 350 Haney, Angela 343 Hanig, Rose 460 Hankins. DonaJd 360 Hannon, Kimberly 342 Hansen. Catherine 375 Hansen, Joni 92 Hansen, Josephine 460 Hansen. Kendall 383 Hansen, Michael 460 Hanson. Cathy 47 Hanway. Laurel 372 Harbaugh, Jeffrey 448 Harden, Sue 460 Hardy. Gerald 395 Hargis, Toni 448 Hargrove, Gerry 392, 460 Harian. Victoria 46O Harlow. Trudy 350. 460 Harmon, Mark 388 Harmon, Scott 460 Harms. Fred 274 Harp. Mark 388 Harper. Cathy 66 Harrell, Charles 206 Harrell. Larry 460 Harris. Brian 435 Harris, Cynthia 341 Harris, Jim 394 Harris, Pamela 339 Harris, Richard 354 Harris. Sheila 390 Harrison, Jennifer 375 484 Harshman, Cindy 40. 444 Hart. Bradley 392 Hart. Georgia 460 Hart, William 460 Hartenfeld, Jeffrey 494 Hartley. Judith 460 Hartman. Bartha 378 Hartung. Joan 390. 461 Hartzler, Theodore 435 Harvan. Marva 420 Harvey, Cynthia 372 Harvey, Jeffrey 385 Harvey. Sandra 461 Hash. Pamela 371 Haskel, Jonathan 461 Hasten, Kim 461 Hatfield, Kae 364 Hatsen, ' ogi 38 1 Hatt, Dennis 376 Hattin, Ronald 386 Hauk, Candi 461 Hausenbauer, Janice 395 Hauze, Kris 3 3 Hawking, Paula 348 Hawkins. Cynthia 360 Hawkins. Jacalyn 360 Hawkins, Ronald 376 Hawkins, Sherri 348 Hawks. Carl 388 Hawver, Kenneth 340 Hay, Billy 461 Hay. Geoffrey 82, 461 Haynes, Amariah 461 Haynes. Gregory 366 Haywood. Maurice 394 Healy, Robert 46 1 Heath. Elizabeth 373. 461 Heazlitt, Nancy 375 Heck. Stephen 342 Heersma, James 434 Hefty, Thomas 461 Heil, Paula 384 Heine. Barbara 384 Heme, Cynthia 380 Heme. Janelle 380 Hemy. Sharon 461 Heishman. Kim 382 Helm, Krisren 375. 461 Hclmbrecht, Doug 4 36 Hemmeger. Susan 50, 461 Hemmerle. Patricia 46 1 Henderson, Lawerence 381 Henderson, Gayle 444 Henderson, Jo Anne 461 Henderson, William 461 Hendricks, Fred 382 Hendrickson, Lisa 348 Hene, Lois 46 I Henke, Ronald 389 Henkle, Jennifer 360 Henness -, Mary 364 Hennig, Thomas 462 Henr -, James 462 Henry, Thomas 362 Hensel, Dawn 462 Hensle, Margaret 395 Henson, David 342 Herbig. Larry 332 Herdrin, Bob 354 Herman, James 389 Hermes, Robert 393 Herr, Joseph 394 Hcrran. Frank 462 Herrick. Teresa 34 1 Herrmann. Elona 378 Hershberger, Julia 372, 42 1 Hershelman. Les 23 Hershman, Clifford 47 Hervan, Ed 83 HL-rzfeld. Susan 372, 424 Hess. Marilyn 462 Hecheringion, Robert 354 Hett, Dorothy 7 Hew, Paul 462 Hewitt, Richard 353 Heyde, lane S72 Hiatt. David 462 Hiatt. Walter 353 Hickcox. Tom 286 Hickerson, Kathy 366 Hickerson, Kimberly 340 Hickle, Dennis 342 Hickman. Debbie 23 Hickman. Leo 2 3 Hickman, Mark 462 Hickman, Richard 2 3 Hicks, Nanc - 462 Hicks, Rebecca 380 Hidy, Carol 444 Higginbotham, David 462 Higginbotham. Richard 358 Highley. Jay 354 Hiles. Linda =.48 Hill. Bruce 435 Hill, Curtis 4 10 HiII, John C. 462 Hill, Kent 376 Hill, Karen 360 Hill, Luc!nda462 Hill. Rhonda = 56, 462 Hill, Robert 462 Hill, Suzanne 393, 462 Hiileary, Joan 462 Hillery, David 392 Hillman. Melanie 390 Himebrook, David 389 Hmchman. Jo 384 Hiner, Michael 462 Hines, Greg 82 Hines, Robert 389 Hinkle, Kevin 388 Hitch, Kathleen 462 Hitch, Leigh 390 Hitch, Marcia 90 Hitch, William 382 Hittmger, Norman 388 Hiriinger, Stewart 374 Hittle, Susan 462 Hmurovich, James 462 Ho, Chi Hung 462 Hoadley. Jane 378 Hobble. William 94 Hobbs, Susan 462 Hoch. Paula 432. 462 Hochgesang. Nancy 462 Hockerman. James 374 Hodge. Naomi 366 Hodges, Linda 462 Hoeferkamp, David 462 Hoehamer. Susan 341 Hofbauer, Thomas 95 Hoff. Janet 426 Hoffman, Anita 350 Hoffman. David 462 Hoffman, Richard 426 Hoffman, Warren 389, 448 Hoffman, Janet 373 Hoggatt, Greg 446 Hogsett, Joseph 4 3 Holcomb, R Kent 383. 42 I Holden, Donald 396 Holinga. Margaret 390 Hollingsworth. Alma 462 Hollins. Catherine 360 Hollon. Christopher 395 Holloway, Frank 462 Holloway, Kevin 462 Hollowtiz. Jodi 4 1 3 Holm, Jan 462 Holm, Julie 462 Holman. Susan 362 Holmquist. Frank 379 Holom. Teresa 34 1 Holstein, Marjorie 341 Holikamp. Paul 383 Hoi wager, David 358 Holwager. William 358 Hood, Bryan 446 Hood, Mark 168 Hoover, Shelley 364 Hopkins, Kimberly 393 Hopper, John 395 Hora, Barbara 356 Horn. Dale 4 37 Horn, Ruth 360, 462 Horn, Stephen 38 1 Horn. Susan 462 Hornibrook. Christina = 60 Hornlein, Jon 462 Horstman. John 462 Horton, Belinda 444 Horcon, Jeanne 380 Horvath, Kathenne 395 Hosford. Anne 462 Host. Danny 374 Hostetter, Carol 462 Houlihan, Brian 379 Housakos. Antonia 348 House. Chinita 346 Houser, Kathleen 384 Housewerth, Janet 462 Houston. Cynthia 462 Howard, Deanna 396 Howard, Susan 343 Howat. Vivian 342 Howe, Howard 426 Howerton, Gary 394 Howland, Diane 432. 462 Howorth. Joe 382 Hreha, Elizabeth 75 Hrniak, Marilyn 356, 357. 432, 462 Hubbard, Anthony 462 Huber, Carole 424 Huber, Lynn 420 Hubert, Charlotte 462 Hubert. Susan 95 Hudelson. Maureen 444 Hudson, Dane 382 Hudson. Julia 444 Huff. Vickie 367 Hughes. Daniel 462 Hughes, Dee 421 Hughes. Richard 90 Hulett. Kathryn 9 Hull, Jerome 393 Hulse. James 9 Hulls. Richard 395 Huminsky. Diane 372 Humphrey. Carol 350 Humphrey. Gena 360. 462 Hunt. James 385 Hunt, Leslie 73 Hunt. Ntary 444 Hunt. Pamela 462 Hunt. Terri 362 Hunt. William 353 Hunter. Heather 384 Hunter, Mary 462 Hunter. .illace ' 40 Hurak. Cynthia = 48 Hurdle. Carol 462 Huston. Ann 390 Hutchinson. Melinda 380 Hutsell. Martin 275 Huttie. Brenda 424 Huxhold. Ethel 462 Huybers. Richard 462 Hymen. Saralee 426 O LJ Ibarra, Joni 446 Iddings, Pamela 380 Ihnen, Laura S9O lies. Debbie C 463 llling, Susan 462 Inglefield. Patrick 325 Ingram. William 381 Inskeep. Thomas 354 Irvine. John 207 Irving. Terry 342 Irwin. Elizabeth 380 Ison. Teresa 342 Ivagnilo. Debbie 373 Jacks. Michael 462 Jackson, Aletha 391 Jackson, Blandette 391. 463 Jackson. Bobbie 52 Jackson. Christa 3 ' ' 5 Jackson. Elizabeth 463 Jackson. Jane 348 Jackson. Robert 4 35 Jackson. Terri 463 Jacobs. Marianne 463 Jacobson. James 340 Jacobstin, Janice 463 Jacobson. Mark 463 Jacoby. Cathy 37 1 Jairrels. Mickey 66 Jairrcls. Veda 391. 448 Jakes. John 396 James. Richard 393 Janecka. Thomas 3 ' ' Janowisk. Lucette 463 Janowski. Monica 34 t , 463 Jaren. Steven 3 ' ' 7 Jarrett. Robert 463 Jasinski, Joyce 350 Jasinski. Sophie 463 Jay. David 46 3 Jefferson. Michael 368. 369 Jeffries. Dana 376 Jeffries. Sylvia 463 Jenkins, Ann 393 Jenkins. Helayne 3S4 Jenkins. Linda 366 Jennette. Stevenson 94 Jensen. Einar 4 4 Kesse. Cher l 380 Jessee. David 6 Jewell. Charles 338 Joers. Randall 3S 1 Joers, Ronald = 8 1 Johns. Jeff 82 Johns. Nanc - 39, 64 Johnson. Athena 91 Johnson. Cher l 463 Johnson. Deborah R. 348. 360. 494 Johnson. Deb ra A 34 1 Johnson. Ginger 420 Johnson. Gregory ' 358 Johnstm. Janice 2 1 Johnst in. Jennifer 40 Johnstin. Jill =-48 Johnson. Karen 366 Johnstm. Le Ann 40 Johnson. Linda 4 1 Johnson. Marita 463 Johnson. Merr - 60 Johnston. Michael . 96 Johnson. Robin i S Johns ,in. Rotha = 66 Johnstm. Susan 463 Johnson. Tracie 444 Johnson. William 463 Johnston, James 340 Johnstone. Elizabeth 342 Joiner. Paula 34 3 Jonas. William 589 Joanes. Barbara C. 417 Jones. Debra 4 ' ' Jones. Donna 4 34 Jones. Frank B. 4 I 3 Jones. Harold 366 Jones, Leann 350 Jones. Leland 392 Jones. Mark 379 Jones. Roger 4 34 Jones, Sandra 4 32 Jones. Sharon 375 Jones. Willie 371 Jomz. Mary 347. 380 Jordan. E)onna 350 Jordan, Gregor ' 435 Jordan. Lauretta 391 Jordan. William 80 Jove. Virginia 375 Jowitr. Kevin 380 Jump. Laura 393 Jurasevich. John 437 Justus, Jan 348 Justus. Jay 353 Kadetz. Daniel 391 Kaellner. James 386 Kahic. Beverly 4 44 Kahn, Pzisy 95 Kaiser, Susan 333 Kalinka. Carl 388 Kaloyanides, Constance 348 Kaminski, Mark 386 Kammer. John 4 37 Kane. Kathy 356 Kanter. David 4 1 Kaplar. Robert 3 . 444 Kapus. Paul = 4 3 Kariya, James 3 ' 4 Karklin, Steve 444 Karlos. Stephanie 348 Karns. Kevin 42. 34 3 Kasler, James 4 38 Kasprzak. Kenneth 393 Kaster. Jerome 3 ' ' 0 Kasting. Patricia 396 Kastner. Mark 6 Kasell. Barb mS Katsinis. John 16 Katz. Martin 9 1 Katzenbergcr. Steven 420 Kaufman. Flynne Kaufman. Lisa 3 1 Kautzman. Richard ! 6S Kavadias. Tula 4 1 Kayden. James 3S1 Keasey. Ken l42 Keehn. Shc-rri 444 Keene, Susan 464 Keglcy. Carol 30 Keifer. Cathy 4 34 Keith. Constance 3 5 Keith. Sally 5 Kellcy. Rcnec 4 1 Kcllv. fudith 464 Kellv. kylc 2. 464 Kciso. Roberts 2 Kemp. Jonathan 94 Kemp. Michael 66. 6 Kendall. Cynthia 4( 4 Keneipp. Stan SS Kennedy. Kathkx-n 93 Kennedy. Madelemc464 Kennell. Pamela 464 Kenny. Lawrencir 393 Keno. Paula 4 64 Kent. Judith UO Kent. Kenneth 464 Kenter. Karen 464 Ken -on. Thomas 291 Kerr. James Kessler. Karis 50. 464 Kessler. Pamela 62. 464 Key. Bradlc - 464 Kicinski. Mar ann 494 Kiely. Anne t 4 Kiesle. Michael =i93 Kiesle. Thomas 93 Kile ' . Kathenne 34S Kiley. Niaureen 362 Kiliiian. Nanc - 390 Kimble. Kathleen 464 Kimmerling. Ten -- King. Bradtbrd 464 485 King, Christine 464 King. David 94, 464 King, Jacqueline 464 King. Jay 392 King. Kimberly 37 3 King. Nancy 348. 410 King. Russell 392 King. Stephen 393 King, Susan 464 Kinn. Karen 464 Kinsella, Arlene 464 Kinzer, Michael 395 Kirchner. Andrew 396 Kirchncr, Robert 16 Kirn, Susan S64 Kirtley, Robert 368 Kirts, Randall 464 Kiser, Susan 395 Kitch. Lorin 394. 42 1 Kitt. Sarah 372 Kittle, Bobbie 375 Kitzman. Katherine 464 Kivett. Nanc - 362 Kizer. Jil! 373 Klassen. Teresa 4 5 Klawitter. Carl 133 Klee, Thomas 464 Kleeman. Geraldine 90 Klees. William 444 Klein, Howard 394 Kleindorfer. Susan 464 Klemme, Cathy 464 KJicka, Jane 375 Klopfensiein. Jeffrey 368 Klueh, Nancy 48, 4(54 Klump. Nancy 350 Kneisel. Vicki 346 Knight. Robert 276 Kmspel. Pamela 464 Knoblich. Mary 34 3 Knolinski. Catherine 425 Knoth, David 382 Knox, Thomas 389 Knutson. Timothy 385 Koenig, Stephen 381 Kohlmeier, Jay 370 Kohnke, Pamela 364 Kolach. Melody 362 Komanecki. Juliana 464 Komar. Samuel 275 Komins, Joseph 377 Kopach, Kathleen 356, 424 Kosewicz. Janet 375 Kosman. Ann 444 Kotulak. David 464 Kovach, Mary 390 Kraft, Kurt 394 Kramer, Barbara 395 Kramer, Brian 396 Kramer, Joanne Ml Krandis, Billie 392 Kraner. Beth 360 Kraner. Mark 8 3 Kranich, Debra 339 Krapesh. Patricia 464 Krebbs. Michael 448 Kremer, David 4 38 Kreutzfeld. Stephen 354 Krivacs. John 382 Krizman. Anthony 437 Kroeger, Jackie 464 KroU. Kim 381 Kruge, Rex 392 Krulewitch. Ellen 464 Kruse. Stephen 347. 382. 464 Kuebler. Donald 464 Kuhlmeier, Debra 350 Kuhn. Susan 464 Kundrat, Linnea 465 Kuntz, Deborah 416 i Kurtz, Connie 390 Kutch. Ann 378. 465 Kuyoth. Constance 339. 375 n 3 LaFoe, Carol 350 LaFon, Donald 465 Labelle, Brian 394 Lacey. Arthur 382 Lachowiec, Stephen 394 Ladd, Sheriee 391 Lahr, Lawrence 379 Lahrman, Lisa 373 Lain, I avid 34 3 Lair, Karen 436 Lakatos, Joseph 335 Lamarr, Kenneth 342, 465 Lamb, Damon 381 Lamb. Marianne 343, 444 Lamb. Robert 377 Lamberson. Jerry 465 Lambert, David 383 Lammers, Christina 380 Lammeft. Stephen 465 Lamond, Kathy 375 Lamping. Karen 356 Lande. Phillip 391 Landes. Lance 465 Landis. Scott 354 Landis. Kyle 377 Landrum, Warren 392 Landsman. Elyse 465 Landsman, Faye 81 Lane. Danir-I 95 Lane, Denisc 465 Lang, Harold 465 Langer, Michael 391 Lanham, Robert 368 Lanigan, Nancy 350, 465 Lannon, Gerald 444 Lapin. Andrew 465 Larsen, Linda 34 1 Laskowski, John 97. 279 Lasely. Elizabeth 436 Lasley. Michael 438 Lass, Marilyn 465 Laster, Kevin 388 Latham, Mary 420, 465 Lau, Wei Chue Veronica 372 Lau, ■ ' ee Chue Yvonne 372 Lauer, Kathleen 465 Lauer. Linda 465 Laughlin, Jean 364 Lawall. Barbara 375 Lawless. Michael 374 Lawrence. Dale 340 Lawson, Jeanne 339 Lawson. Junior 133 Lawson, Rebecca 373 Layne, Diane 350 Leader, Thomas 381 Leahy, James 394 Lear, Bradley 368 Leary, Kathleen 342 Leask, Patricia 340 Ledger, Karen 465 Lee, Cynthia 465 Lee, Mary 34 1 Lee, Darreil 394 Leftwich, Jerry 366 Lehman, Nanc ' 56. 465 Lehman, Stephen 465 Leichtman, Jana 432, 465 Lcininger. Sharon 340 Lcistikow, Laurel 465 Leiter, Virgmia 343 Leman, Paulette 465 Lemert, Bonnie 341 Lemke. Ann 465 Lemonds, Rhonda 339 Lenox, Julia 384 Leonard, John 385 Leonard, Terryl 350 Lepucki, Thomas 420 Lerner. Andrea 465 Lester. Paula 348 Lerterman. Gretchen 375 Levatin, Gail 444 Levay, Zolran 465 Levene, Philip 437 Levi, Jan 37 1 Levin, Julian 57 Levin. Kenneth 39 1 Lcviton. Debbe 371.465 Levitt. Joseph 444 Levy, Martin 374 Lewin, Susan 395 Lewis. Cindy 348 Lewis, Herschel 465 Lewis. Kenneth 394 Lewis. Michael 465 Lewis. Sheryl 343 Lewis, Terry 385 Libera, Robert 465 Liebling, Jill 371 Lienhoop, James 376 Light. Frank 465 Light, Judy 465 Ligman, Richard 370 Ligon. Lora 391 Limblad, Mike 342 Lin. Ingred 34 1 Lindemann. Brad 383 Lindenmeyer. Susan 465 Lenderman, Elaine 465 Lindley. William 353 Lindsay. Amy 339 Lindsey. Russeil 385 Lingenfelter, Joseph 385 Linne, Janice 465 Lipner, Shirley 34 1 Lipp. Donna 342 Lipton. James 39 1 Lissey. Jacquelyn 372 Liston. Ann 34 1 Liston. Pamela 434 Litchin, Craig 342 Lmell. Richard 358 Livingstone. Robert 444 Lockwood. David 388 Lohide, Kurtis 331 Loymeyer, Joseph 376 Long, Martha 373 Longo. Beth 34 3 Longstreth. Dana 393 Looper, Rom 391 Lord. Christine 390 Lord, Patricia 340 Lord. Stephen 89 Lorey, Beth 375 Lorey, Kurt 396 Lorotzky. Claudia 466 Lotz. Arthur 4 1 3 Loux. Stephen 381 Love. Barbara 466 Lowe. Joyce 4 66 Lowe. Walter 366, 466 Loyd, James 382 Lucas, Debra 466 Lucas, Jeannine 34 1 . 466 Lucas, Susan 364 Luce. Cynthia 466 Luchtman. Dick 394 Luft, Don 421 Luft, Lorrie 466 Luke, Debra 466 Lukcns. John 38 1 Lund. Barbara 5 3 Lundin, Julianne 466 Lusher. Patricia 390 Lutz, Diane 371 Lux, Vickie 384 Lycan, Scott 381 Lydick. Paula 343 Lynch, Douglas 374 Lynch, James 383 Lyon, Linda 4 10 Lyons. Sandra 380 Lyons, Stephany 384 Lythgoe. Marilyn 438 Lytle, Judith 466 Lyde. Linda 350. 466 Lyde, Nancy 350 Lyverse, Elizabeth 364 C Y ' ) m Mack, Raymali 343 Mackey, Richard 392 Madawick, James 446 Madawick. Steve 444 Madden, Robert 466 Maddox, Richard 386 Madigan, Patrick 340 Madson, Scot 393 Magiera, Alan 466 Magrane. Jean 466 Mahan. Mark 386 Mahoney. Theresa 360 Maines, Denise 343 Mainous, Martha 360 Maire. Jeffrey 4 36 Majors, Deborah 466 Majors, Wayne 366 Makielski, Carol 373 Makris, Bessie 466 Malachi, Dewayne 366 Malasfo, Steven 395 Malek. Edward 392 Mallah, Gina 466 Mailer. Glenn 434 Mallon. Janet 350 Malmedahl, James 274 Manich, Martin 385 Manijak, Pamela 466 Mams. Michael 354 Manley. Terrence 385 Manlove. Sherrie 350, 466 Mann. Cindi 34 I Mann. David 466 Mann. Elizabeth 364 Mannis, Maria 350 Manolas. Thomas 466 Mantel, A. Edward 381 Manuel, Thomas 466 Manwell, Kendra 341 Mapes. Jeffrey 383 Marie. Rita 14 Marion. Deborah 339. 356 Marker, Karen 10 Markey, David 446 Markey. Patricia 466 Marks, Joseph 358 Marler, Jacquelyn 350 Marler, Vincent 396 Marnocha, Kenneth 393 Marquiss. Garry 383 Marrs. Ezell 366 Marsh. Ann 466 Marsh. Douglas 358 Marsh, William 370 Marshall, Joni 380 Marshall. Mary 466 Marshall, Nancy 380 Marsio, Linda 375 Mart. Kevin 426 Martella, Thomas 425 Martin, Althea 366 Martin, Constance 350 Martin. Daniel 389 Martin, David D, 466 Martin, David M. 396 Martin. Karen 466 Martin. Martha 375 Martin. Marty 373 Martin, Patricia 380 Martin. Susan 395 Martindale. Allen 377 Martz, Ann 350 Martz. Brentia 466 Marvel, Barbara 57 3 Marvel, Katharine 364 Masin. Marc 466 Mason. Anne 4 10 Mason. Jeffrey 368 Mason, Joann 367 Mason, John 377 Mason, Reginald 366 Massoth, Wendy 362 Mast. Michael 376 Masierson. Cynthia 362 Matchett. Loren 4 10 Mather. Steven 38 3 Matherly, Kyra 1 13, 373 Mathews, Barbara 348, 420 Mathews, Edward 466 Mathews, Sara 466 Mathless, Lori 347 Mathys. Laura 466 Matovina, John 393 Matovina, Timothy 393 Mattheis, Constance 466 Matnngly, Nancy 466 Matula, Gary 393 Maxam. Steven 386 Maxfield. Laura 420 Maxwell, Nancy 466 May. Cheryl 339 May, Douglas 23 May. Howard 383 May, Scott 279 May. Teresa 466 Mayer, Jill 371 Mayer. Kevin 467 Mayerson, Lynn 467 McAdam, Mary 342. 434 McAleavey, Michael 379 McAtee. Janice 396 McCain, Laura 467 McCalley. Jeanne 342 McCampbell. Dan 374 McCampbell. Peter 435 McCartin. Gary 394 McCarty. Charles 467 McCarty. Mary 42 1 McCauley, Sheila 4 10. 467 McCIain, Karen 467 McClendon, Michael 437 McClindoen, Rita 362 McClorey, Karen 340 McClure. Michael 395 McCollum, James 338 McComb, Cheryl 467 McConkey, Christine 467 McConnell, Jacalyn 467 McConnell, Milton 392 McConville, Karen 467 McCormick. Douglas 368 McCormick, Peter 467 McCoy. Janelia 3 9 McCrery. Michael 382 McCutchan, William 388 McDaniel, Timothy 386 McDonald, Barbara 380 McDonald, Bruce 467 McDonald, Mary 373 McDowell. Dean 467 McDowell, Michael 396 McDuffee, Kimbarlee 356 McElroy. Patrice 367 McGary, Roger 381 McGill, Cynrhia 37 3 McGill, Kandace 348 McGill. Susan 373 McGillen, Timothy 467 McGoiff. Amy 1 1 6 McGonagle, Timothy 467 McGrath, Marinel 467 McGriff, Amy 393 McGuan, Paul 4 35 McGuire, John 343 McGuire, Richard 395 McHaffle, Thomas 35 3 McHugh, Colleen 467 Mclnerney, Raymond 426 McKee, Philip 377 McKernan, Regina467 McKinley, Mark 4 38 McKinney, Frank 206 McKinney, Karen 360 McKinney, Mary 7 3 McKinnis, Cheryl 362 McKinzie, Joel 446 McKnight, Margaret 437 McKnight. Rhonda 467 McLaughlin. Kelley 390 McLaurin, Joyce 467 McLeish, Kevin 396 McLinden. Rita 347 McMahan, Debra 395 486 McMahan. Steven 89 McMahon. Phillip S9 McManus. Kennech 50. 318 McManus. Kim 357 McMillan, Jane 64 McMullen, Kathleen 339 McMurtrey. Lon 467 McNamara. Dara 467 McNees. Thomas 90 McNeil. Pmkie 366 McQuaig, Joel 354 McQuilkin. Caryn 467 McQuillan, Mike 467 McQuiston, James 94 McRoberts, David i76 NtcSoIey, Patrick 382 McVay, Gar - 467 McWhorter, Linda 375 Meadows. Gary 354 Meadows. Lana 44.6 - Meagher. Thomas 444 Mtdina, Monica 39, 467 Meek, Brian 35 3 Meek. Daniel 386 Meek, Leslie 364 Meek. Richard 467 Meetz. Janet 339 Meglemere. Bets ' 384, 467 Meinke, Gretchen 444 Meltzer, Sydnie 467 Mendelovitz, Marsh 467 Mendenhall, Jill 4 10 Mendcnhall, Jim 368 Menke. Karen 341 Mensch, Theresa 390 Mercer. Robert 1 13 Merk. Patricia 343 Merkel. Jean 364 Merko, Tom 340 Nterrirt, Sandra 467 Mertz. Max 444 Metcalf, Catherine 467 Mettlen. Bobbie 380 Metzger. Bruce 388 Metzger. Jerry 467 Metzger. Julia 360 Meyer. Kalley 372 Meyers, John 379 Meyers. Skip 389 Meyers, William 35 3 Michetre. Denyse 467 Micon. Larr - 391 Middlecon, Stephen 467 Mielcarek, David 393 Mier, Larry 340 Mikesell. Mary 467 Milanovich, Barbara 424 Miles. Brenda 468 Miles. Cynthia 468 Miles, Paul 374 Miles, Terrance 395 Milhon. Candace 468 Millberg, Constance 90 Millbern, Robert 468 Miller. Amy 75 Miller, Barbara 468 Miller. Beth . 80 Miller. Catherine 468 Miller. Cheryl 426 Miller. Chris 368 Miller. Cindy 395 Miller. Deborah 348 Miller. Gary 391 Miller. James 468 Miller. Jane 468 Miller, Janettc 1 16. 393 Miller. John 42 Miller. JokJene 468 Miller. Joni 396 Miller. Kent 35 3 Miller. Kimberly 62 Miller. Linda 4 1 Miller. Marilyn 468 Miller, Michael 468 Miller. Mindy 1 1 Miller. Nicholas 58 Miller. Rebecca 64 Miller. Richard 68 Miller. Rick 89 Miller. Scott 113 Miller. Susan 468 Miller. Vicky 468 Miller, Walter 468 Miller, William A. 468 Miller. William J. 468 Mills, Deborah 468 Mills. Linda UO Mills. Mark -t Milto. Joanna 350 Mintch. Lantz 395 Minx, Martha 364 Mishkin. Jeremy 391 Mishler. James 426, 468 Missman. Susan 468 Mitchell, Craig 394 Mitchell. Deborah 37 3 Mitchell. Lydia 364 Mitchell, Pamela 364 Mitchell. Patrick 342. 393 Mitchell. Bill 354 Moberg. David 468 Mobley. Kathryn 364 Modesitc. Melinda 468 Moeller. Kenneth 382 Mogavera. Robin 342 Magin. Daniel 8 3 Mohler. Lynne468 Mohrman. Janet 175 Ntokris. Mary 384 Moldstad. Janet 378 Moliior. John 425 Moll. Melinda 468 Monaco. Greg 343 Monahan. Maureen 342 Monnier. Elizabeth 468 Monroe, Chris 83 Monroe, Jay 395 Monroe. Michae l 381 Monserez, Maury 395 Montague, James 468 Montieth. Mark 381, 425 Mooney. Victoria 373 Mooney. James 4 Moor. Debra 350 Moor. Gary 382 Moore. Barbara 390. 468 Moore. Bradley ' 468 Moore, Judith 468 Moore, Katherine 391 Moore. Jerome 425 Moorcs. Marilyn 424 Moorman, Keiffer 3 4 Moorman, William 374 Moran. Jim 54 Moran. Richard 377 Mordoh. Gilbert 468 Morgan, Janet 393 Morgan, Scott 382 Morgan. Michele 372 Morgan. Myra 468 Morgan, Suzanne 468 Moriarry. Timothy 354 Morris. Christine 425 Morns. Debra 373 Morns. Gregory 382 Morris, Jan 350. 468 Morris, Joseph 468 Morris. Michael 35 3, 426 Nforris. Thomasena 468 Morris. William 469 Morrison. Ann 348 Morrison, Mary 34 1 Morrison. Vivian 367 Morrow. Anne 469 Morrow. Susan 393 Moss. Dale 469 Moss, Janice 391 Moss. Kirby 377 Mostes. Mark 469 Mo[le ' . Glorietta 469 Motter. Michael 395 Mouhourtis. Elain 469 Mourer. Diana - 46 Moutoux. Martha 469 Mrzlock. Nanc - 469 Muckerheide, Daniel 85 Muckler. Todd 291 Mudd. Larry 94 Mughmaw. Marilyn 383 Muhn. Melinda 469 Mulhall, Sheila 469 MuIhoUand. Gail 348 Muller. David 4 69 Mulligan. Su - 420 Mullin. Eric 80 Mullins. Tad 377 Mumme -. Richard 396 Mundy. Deborah 469 Munk. Joan 469 Murchison. Julia 80 Munllo. Mary 395. 469 Murphy. John 28 Murphy. John 469 Murphy. Michael 392 Murphy. Nancy 3 ' 3 Murphy. Peter 393 Murphy. Roberta 390 Murray. Anne 4 38 Murray. Colleen 3 2 Murray. Edward 4 3 Murray. Patrick 395 Musscr. Scott 88 Mutz. William 383 Myer. Florence 444 Myers. Daniel 469 Myers. Debra 3 2 Myers. Gar - 39- Myers. Joy 396 Myers. Linda 469 Myers. Pirggy 62 Myers. Polly 380 Myers. Robert 469 Myers. Robert 446 Myers. Steven 469 Myers. Wendy 4 69 53 Nancy. Joyce ! 60 Naus, David 381 Navarro. James 358 Neal. Carrol 469 Needmore. Mark 1 1 3 Neff. Cynthia 390 Neidhart. Cynthia 37 3 Neidigh. Charles 342 Nelson. Bobby 444 Nelson, Carol 384 Nelson. Debra 72 Nelson, Diane 393 Nelson. Gar ' 392 Nelson. Lee 437 Nelson, Marilyn 469 Nelson. Robert 395 Nelson. Valerie 364 Nemo, Robert 391 Nesslein, Mark 354 Nesrel. John 368. 369 Neville. Constance 448 Nevils. Zane421 Nevin. Tara 384 Nevins, Gwen 469 New. Jeffrey 469 New. Robert 39 1 Newcomer, James 354, 469 Newcomer. Virginia 469 Newell. Marquis 395 Newkirk. Frank 4-t6 Newland. Cynthia 469 Newman. Bruce 425, 469 Newman. Emily 350 Newton, De Anna Kim 372 Newton. Jean 364 Newton, Jody 364 Nicholas. James 374 Nicholas, Robert 3 9 Nichols, Maryl 362 Nicks, Suzanne 1 13. 362 Nidlinger, Kathie437 Niebur. Nancy 395 Niegos, Carole 362 Nielsen. Janet 469 Nielsen. Krisann 360 Niequist. Pamela 469 Nies, Debra 3 39 Niezer. Bernard 379 Niezer, Gerald 379 Nikolich, Tony 469 NikoU. Patti 469 Nisley. Larry 374 Nix, Susan 469 Noe. Richard 395 Noelker, James 469 Nolan. Kimberiy 362 Noland. Gregory 382 Nooiic. Mary 392 Noonan, Gary 393 Noonan. Josetie 372 Nordin. Kristin 364 Norfleet, Ronnie 366 Norris. Kathy 373 North, Dawn 444 North. Ned 376 Northcutt, Sheila 307 Norton, David 4 1 Norton, Pam 373 Norton. Robert 340 Norwalk. Dane 375 Novy, Susan 37 2 Nowak. Debra 390 Nozrik. Denise 421 Nuckols, Elva 343 Nunn. Jen 469 Nunn. Winston 92 Nye, Marylou 360 OMahoney. Kathleen 580 O ' Neal, Carol 113. 373 O ' Neal. Nancy 75 ONeill. Maureen 362 ORourke, Patrick 446 Oaks. Yvonne 367 Ober, Kathryn 469 Offengender, Sara 395 Office, James 395 Office. Judith 356. 470 Ogle, Terry 4 38 Ohl. Jeffrey 470 Otng, Barbara 449 Oing, Debra 307. 470 Okey. Roberta 390, 470 Olah. Robert 393 Oldham. James 35 3 Olinger. Jeffrey 470 Oliphant, Rebecca 470 Oliver, Grtgory 376 Oliver, Maria 34 3 Opalak. John 470 Ordman. Maria 48 Oren, Peter 381 Orenstein, Alan 391 Orent. Andrew 368. 369 Oriji, Chidi 470 Osbach. William 370 Ostby. Krik 374 Osting, Kathleen 417. 470 Otte. Patricia 378 Otto, Sharon 34 1 Overholser. Martin 358 Owens. Donna 380 Owens, John 470 Owens. John M. 3 31. 392 Packard, Teria 380 Paddock, George 382 Page, Matthew 35 3 Page!, Walter 96 Painter, John 383. 470 Palmer. Mary 372, 470 Palmer, Thomas 470 Pappas, Christopher 392 Pappas. Kathleen 342 Parcels. Kenneth 470 Parish, Melanie 360 Parker, Janna 366 Parker. Marcia 424 Parker. Teresa 339 Parncll, Nancy 470 Parness, Richard 470 Parr, Jeffrc-y 354 Parry, Conne 470 Parry, Kate 424 Parsons, Janna 4 10 Parsons, Linda 350 Pasquale. Tom 382 Pass. Richard 39 I Paterson. Bruce 385 Patrick, Amy 470 Pattiz. Denise 424 Patton, Cynthia 470 Patcon, David 377 Patton, Richard 470 Patton, Stephen 470 Pavelka, Kenneth 396 Payne. Michael 470 Peacock, Robert 386 Pearce, Linda 362 Pearson, Deborah 420 Peck. Susan 348. 470 Pedigo. Richard 470 Pect, Debra 356.470 Pell. Robert 383 Peltin, Laurie 395 Pendleton. Janet 470 470 447 O ' Brien, Julianne 380 O ' Brien. Mary 378 O Ojnneli, Dennis 395 O ' Connell. Eileen 348 O ' Connor, Daniel 376 O ' Hanion. Margart 470 O Hern, Daniel 396 488 OA it lay Perdue, John 382 Peritz. David 388 Perkins, Janet 470 Perrine. Jacqueline 350. 470 Perr ' . Francis 394 Pern-. Norman 449 Perr -. Robert 435 Peters, Michael 342 Peters. Susan 390 Petersen, Nancy 39 Peterson, Elizabeth 470 Peterson, Mary 34 3 Peterson, Paul 368 Peterson, Sara 470 Petro, Gregory 4 35 Petry, Tom 394 Pettigrew, Kent 368 Peyton, Caroline 45 Pfaff, Eloise 375 Pfeffer, Sheila 37 3 Pfeifer, Pamela 375 Pfingston. Ronda 34 t Pfleeger. Deborah 470 Phegley. Mark 342 Phegley, Sharon 470 Phelps, Michael 366 Phelps. Stephen 109 Phelps, Tommy 470 Philbrook. Stephen 392 Philips, Frederick 396, 444 Phillips. Delene 471 Phillips, John 471 Phillips, Katherine 364 Phillips, Sally 372. 471 Phoenix. Martin 388 Piazza, Anthony 389 Pierce. Dawn 37 3 Pierce. Jeffery 420, 471 Pierce. William D, 21 Pieri, Tim 40 Pigg. John 386 Pilcher. David 396 Pine, Bradley 376 Ping, Marva 380 Ping, Terry 370 Pinkins, Janice 47 I Pinkus. Cynthia 339 Piper, Patrick 78. 494 Pipher. Michael 353 Pirtle, James 379 Pitts. Mark 340 Piunti. Susan 394 Plath, Jerry 370 Plath, Michael 370 Plonski, Jeffrey 444 Plotkin, Jonathan 393 Plummer, Pamela 47 1 Pluris. Michael 374 Ply. John 393 Plymate. Theresa 3 39 Poe. Michael 370 Poehler, Leonard 47 1 Pohl, Courtney 47 1 Pole. Janet 37 3 Polischuck, Sue 339 Pollak. Scott 391 Pollard, Martha 360 PoUom, Ann 364 Polus. Philip 377 Pomerantz, Elise 47 1 Pond, Douglas 38 3 Pond, Douglas R. 377 Poolitsan, Peter 45 Porter. Audrey 391 Porter, Kimberly 372, 444 Porter, Steven 386 Porter, Theresa 339 Porwancher. Suanne 34 I Post. Carolyn 364 Potter, Laurie 378 Potucek, Charles 393 Powell, Andrew 358 Powell, David 438 Powell. Richard 396 Powers, John 343, 471 Powers, Mary 424 Powrie. Michan 393 Pratt. Joel 354.421 Pratt. Stephen 47 1 Precourt. Keith 393 Presley, Alan 392, 471 Pressley, Wendy 471 Pretat, Richard 377 Price, Gary 389 Price. Sidney 342 Prikaszczikow, Edward 394 Prill, Timothy 394 Prince, Mary 396 Prisco, Cassandra 350, 471 Pritchard, Nancy 380 Proper, Lauren 471 Prossack, Linda 371 Pruis, Dirk 377 Pruitt, Cathryn 375 Przesfwor, Catherine 350 Puac, Mike 103 Pullen, James 444 Pulley, Catherine 372 Pulver, Donald 388 Purbaugh. Michael 471 Purdy, Dale 471 Purky. James 354 Purvis, Larry 47 1 Pyhtila, Daniel 437 Quaco, Kim 395 Quaintancc. Richard 38 3 Quandt, Herrold 47 1 Quellhorst. Thomas 354 Querry, Janice 364 Quinn, Barney 395 Rabe, Jean 4 1 Rafdal, Mark 388 Rais. Kathleen 372. 424 Ralstin, David 471 Ramsey. Kenneth 395 Randolph. Johnny 426 Raney. Troy 339 Rankin. Linda 3-4 1 Rankin, Richard 392 Rappeport, Nancy 364 Rariden. Karen 390, 471 Rasche, Barbara -i I Rasmussen. Brian 7 1 Ratkovich, Paul 471 Rau. David 38 3 Rauch, Mark 2 1 Rausch, Judy 471 Ravencrofr, Catherine 342 Ravensberg, Robert 4 35 Rawlins. Jo Ellen 339, 364 Rawson. Donald 434, 435 Ray, Jeffrey 386 Ray, Thomas 366 Rayford, Jennettc 9 1 Rearick, Deborah 362 Reasoner. Mark 50 Reber, Steven 471 Rebman. Kent 374 Reddick. Marci 372 Redmont, Josanne 340 Reece, Joann 66 Reed, Darla 342 Reed, Duane 471 Reed, Edsel 377 Reed, Gregory 38 3 Reed, Jeffrey 386 Reed, Oliver 47 1 Rees. Brenda 372 Reese. Nancy 34 1 Reichert, Sandra 393 Reichle, Ann 362 Reichle, Elizabeth 372 Reinhart. Diane 1 13 Reinhart. Joan 375 Reinke, Dean 471 Reis. Tom 82 Reische, Kendall 342. 444 Reisin. Richard 382 Reising, Keith 35 3 Renault. Filho 340 Rendon. Gomez 47 1 Renfrew, Rodney 4 1 Renner, Ernie 45 Renner, Linda 356 Renner, Michael 382 Renner, Terri 47 1 Reno. Marilyn 384 Replogle. David 471 Resler. Deborah 449 Ress. Jeanne 47 1 Retterer, Kim 384 Reynolds, Elizabeth 362 Reynolds, Sherilyn 390 Reynolds. Thomas 86 Rhiem. Rick 354 Rhinesmith. Diane 373 Rhinne, John 354 Rhoads. Jim 386 Richard, DarJen 366 Richardson, Catherine 362 Richardson, Jane 375 Richardson, Jane 343, 446 Richardson. Katherine 416. 471 Richardson, Marcia 350 Richardson, Rebecca 372 Richardson, Susan 380 Richman, Michael 391 Richmond. Paula 356 Riddell. Linda 47 1 Ridenour, Marsha 362 Ridoux. Elizabeth 348, 472 Riegel, Cynthia 375 Riggs. Eliane 362 Riley, Janet 362 Riley, Joy 350 Riley, Pamela 339 Riley. Patricia 364 Rinehart, David 368 Rinehart. Diane 472 Rinne. John 354, 355 Risch. Stephanie 362 Risley. Myra 62. 472 Rivas. Jose 370 Roark. Janet 4 10 Roberts, Lorric 472 Roberts. Kelly 382 Roberts. Patricia 472 Roberts, Robin 42 1 Roberts, Susan 446 Robertson, Cheryl 34 1 Robertson, Linda 380 Robertson. Susan 37 3 Robinson, Angela 362 Robinson, Ann 472 Robinson, Joyce 343. 446 Robinson. Katherine 364 Robinson. Linda 371 Ri.biny.n, Lyle 383 Robinson, Mary 449 Robinson. Phyllis 472 Robinson-Long, James 472 Roche, Susan 362 Rock, Thomas 393 Rockey, Marsh 375 Rodefeld. Sara 348 Rodewald. Patricia 437 Rodgers, Cindy 367 Roehr, Suan 340 Roehrdanz, James 353. 472 Rogers. Donald 58 Rogers. Donna 391 Rogers, Judith 449 Rogers, Robin 4 38 Rogers, Sarah 348 Roland. Sandra 472 Rolls, Debbie 371 Roman, Barbara 420 Romberger. Mary 348 Romeu, David 472 Romine, Robin 384 Romine. Spencer 389 Rominger, Gayle 350, 472 Ronzone, Joseph 376 Rose, Joel 472 Rose, John 395 Rosen. Steven 391 Roslansky. Kenneth 374 Ross, Dawn 366 Ross. Dwight 366 Ross. Marilyn 472 Ross. Victoria 50 Roth, Alan 472 Rothblatt, Arthur 472 Rothenbcrg, Joan 371 Rothgeb. David 472 Rothkopf, Robert 381 Rothman, Gordon 426 Rothschild. Peter 444 Rotunno. Joseph 393 Rough, Charles 472 Rouse, Stanley 379 Roush, Nancy 380 Roush, Susan 380 Rowe. Karen 3 39 Roy, Londa 362 Ruark. Walter 472 Ruckle. Randy 388 Ruckman. William 381 Rudd. Martha 4 2 Rudder, Sheryl 4 2 Rudecki. Randall 4 39 Rueter, Barb 360 Ruf. Marcia 90 Rush. James 472 Rusnock. Linda 472 Russell. Annette 472 Rutlcdge, David 382 Rutledge, Nancy 37 3 Rutz. Vicky 34 I Ryan, John W. 105 Ryan. Michael 354 Ryan, Richard 382 Rybar, Garr ' 358 Saag. Barbara 4 ' ' 2 Sabel. David 4 ' ' 2 Sachs. James 4 ' 2 Sacoolidge, John 4 2 Sadler. Barbara 378 Sadtler. Mary 340 Sagala, Kathleen 375 Sala. Ann 343 Sales. Beatriz 362 Saliba, Anthony 395 Salmons, Jill 339. 390 Saltzman. Steven 391 Salzarulo, Marguerite 350 Samek. Nancy 3 ' ' 3. 4 2 Samithianan. Suchart 4 2 Samuels, Brian 3 ' ' 6 Samuels, Phillip 3-t2 Sanders. Gregory 342 Sanders. Jen 364 Sanders. Marcella 393 Sanders. Teri 364 Sandlin. Donna 472 Sannes, Rebecca 396 Sargent, Pamela 378 Sarpa. JR. Nicholas 383 Saunders, David 358 Sayler. Bruce 383 Sayler. Cheryl 362 Sayre, Kim 379 Scamehorn, Gertrude 3 5 Scering. Jeffrey 3- 2 Schact. Lynn 348 Schackelford, Marcia 3 ' ' 2 Schade. Kathryn 348 Schaefer, Robert 340 Schaerer. Darlisa 47 3 Schafer. Nanc - 473 Schall, Stephen 4 ' 3 Scharbach, Deborah 473 Schecter, Judith 95 Scheiber. Fred 381 Schenck. Lynn 378, 47 3 Schenke, Gale 340 Scherer. Brian 4 ' 3 Scherrer, Joseph 47 3 Scheuer. Marv- 356 Schevtchuk, Elizabeth 4 3 Schidler, Tim 389 Schiff. Joel 473 Schiffli, Gary 368 Schilling, Richard 116 Schilling, Susan 340 Schlegel. Barb 364 Schleibaum. Glen 435 Schlemmer, David 383. 421 Schlensker. Mar - 47 3 Schlichte. Anthony 385 Schlosser. Cynthia 1 Schlundt, Barbara Ml, 390 Schmelter. Marcia 425 Schmidt. Barbara 3 ' 2. 4 3 Schmidt, Janet 390 Schmidt, Philip 4 ' 3 Schmidt. Rebecca 373 Schmieman. Ann 473 Schmitr. Edmund 379 SchmifT, Stanley 473 Schmitz, Lawrence 382 Schnarr. Jerome 358 Schnarr. Terrance 358 Schneider. Anne 343 Schneider, Judy 4 ' 3 Schenider, Susan 4 ' 3 Schottenstein. Linda 3 1 Schowe. Terrance 395 Schrage, William 94 Schramm, Jeanne 3 2 Schreck. Thomas C 4 1 . 20 Schreckengast. Steven 4 Schull, Steven 391 Schulte, William 2S Schultz. Chervl 350. 4 3 Schultz, Douglas 4 35 Schumann, Marilyn 80. 420 Schunk. Arthur 4 3 Schuster. Lauretta 342 Schutzman, Nanc ' 4 3 Schwartz. Andrew 4 3 Schwartz. Charlene 3 1. 4 3 Schwartz. Eileen 95 Schwartz. Susan 3 ' 5. 4 3 Schwarz. James . 91 Schwenk, Glenn 4 3 Schwinghammer. I,isa 90 Schwoegler, Tom ' 4 10 Scofield. Debbie l42 Scott. Dan 54 Scott, Isaiah 66 Scott. Linda 444 Scott. Michael 4 3 Scott, Duncan 4 34 Scott, Shelley 4 3 Scott, Susan 446 Scudder. John 383 Scudder. Xanc - 424. 4 3 Scurlock. Selma 4 3. 494 Seely. Charles . S5. 4 3 Segal. Garr - 4 Seidholz. Laurie 393 Seketa. layne 4 3 Selb. Carol 348 Selby. Frank 50 Self. CharoletTe20 ' Selig, Randal 40 Seller. Vicki 3 3 Sells, Michele4 3 Selzer. Kathy 4 3 Sennett. Lisa 356 Seright. Marilyn 4 3 489 Ser ' in. Sherr ' 350 Serwatka. Stanley 388 Shafer. Karen 378 Shafet. Lee Ann 356 Shaffer. Lee H. 382 Shatter. Donald 368 Shanahan. Hester C. 473 Shanahan. Michael 392 Shannon. Beth 341. 364 Shapiro. Brent 340 Sharon. William 379 Sharp, Jerri 473 Shaw. Belinda 452 Shaw. Karen 340 Shaw, Suzanne 473 Shaw, Tony 340 Shearer. David 474 Shearer, Mary 474 Shedd, Priscilla 350 Shedron. Cachy 364 Sheehan. Michael 393 Sheets, Charles 474 Sheets, Jeffrey 395 Sheetz. Valerie 474 Shehigian. Lisa 395 Shoemaker, James 389 Shoemaker, Christopher 374 Shook, David 385. 410 Shook. Debra 380 Short. Julia 362 Shoudel. David 395 Shoup. Constance 384, 449 Shoup. Mark 446 Showaiter, Charles 340 Showalter. Douglas 445 Shroyer. Sidney 426 Shuman, Patricia 384 Sickbert. Steve 42 I Sidebottom. Michael 4 10 Siemens, Teresa 474 Silence. Greg 358 Silverberg. Carol 341 Silverman. Robert 391 Simmons. Jeffrey 395 Simmons. John 479 Simonds, Laura 342 Simpkins, Lisa 372. 445 Simpson, William 474 Sims. Brenda 348, 474 Sinclair, R. Neal 386 Smigie Smiley Smiley Smith. Smith, Smith. Smith. Smith, Smith. Smith, Smith. Smith. Smith, Smith. Smith. Smith. Smith, Smith, Smith, Smith. Smith. Smith. Smith, Smith, Smith, 1, Danita 372 , Janice 375 , Sandra 390 Barbara 360 Bud 95 Carson 386 Christopher 474 Daniel T. 383 Garry W. 446 Gregory H. 383 Herbert E. 4 1 Herbert N. 474 Jacqueline 474 Jamie 474 Jeffrey S. 340 Keith 392 Kevin S. 377 Kim W 396 Kimbcrly 364. 370 Kristin 378 Lee Ann 360 Lindsey 474 Lisa 390 Mark C 474 Melanie 474 Sniadecki. Richard 368 Snyder. Charles 4 36 Snyder. Edward 381 Snyderman. Carl 340 5 oliman. Jean 475 SoUiday. Bruce 388 Solockin. Evelyn 371, 475 Solt, Patricia 396 Sommers, William 446 Souder, Diane 340. 445 Souers, Jay 368 Sowers, Richard 358 Sparhawk, Brenda 475 Sparhawk, William 475 Sparks. Mrs Joyce 59 Sparks, Carol 475 Sparrow, Calvin 389 Spartz. Thomas 393 Spaulding, Steven 388 Spees, John 388 Spencer, Gordon 475 Spencer, Linda 372. 475 Speraw, Brent 374. 426 Spiehler. Susan 475 Spoolstra, Larry 381 : i i t mii ' ilk Shelby. Michael 370 Shelley. Lynn 343 Shelton, Sheryl 474 Shepp. Michelle 395 Sheptak. David 396 Sherfick, Larry 474 Sherman, Leonard 474 Sherman. Lucy 360, 474 Sherman. Mark 382 Shields, Danny 474 Shields, Martin 370 Shields, Patricia 339, 350 Shilts. Perry 474 Shimasaki, Jinx 474 Shipley. John 385 Shipp. Patricia 391. 474 Shirey, Mary 384 Shirley, Frederick 386 Shirley. Michael 385 Shively. Leslie 347 Shockney. Winona 10 Sinker. Shelley 340 Sipe. David 4 38 Sipes, Jennifer 396 Sipes, Valerie 396 Sirbu. John 370 Sisler. Samuel 338. 438. 474 Sisson, Debra 341 Sisson. Pamela 474 Skafish. Robert 426 Skinner, Ava 474 Skinner, Donald 474 Skinner, Renae 350 Skirvin, Lori 360. 410. 474 Skirvin, Max 4 1 3 Slamkowski, Daryl 474 Slater. Kathleen 372 Slater, Keith 474 Slathar, Daun 474 Small, Virginia 393. 474 Smeltz, Linda 342 Smeltzer. Pamela 342 Smeltzer, Suzanne 393 Smith, Melissa 474 Smith. Michael 389 Smith, Michael G. 370 Smith, Neal 426 Smith. Otha 94 Smith. Perry S. 381 Smith, Randall L. 389 Smith, Randolph 340, 381 Smith, Randy 355 Smith. Richard L. 42 1 Smith. Ricky 366. 367 Smith. Ronald E. 342 Smith. Roy M. 50 Smith, Sara J. 474 Smith. Terry L. 394 Smith. Valli 380 Smock, Leslie 393 Smrt, Colleen 340 Snapp, Debra 474 Snavely, Karla 395 Sneli, John 475 Snerrle. Mort 38 1 Spoore, Roger 396 Spradling. Scott 376 Sprague, Curtis 394 Sprenger, Karen 310 Springer, Kent 342 Spurgeon, Kristine 475 Spurlock. Thomas 370 St. John, Mark 472 Stacy. Laura 2 I Stalcup. Mindy 445 Stallard, Constance 348 Stallings, Amy 362 Stamps. Denisee 475 Standley, Barbara 475 Stanfield. Charles 56 Stanley, Daniel 368 Stanley. Linda 360 Stauntz. Nicholas 354 Stapleton, Carl 475 Srarcevich. Charles 393 Starr, Mark 382 Starr, San ford 343 Susie Eaton 490 Staufer, Edward 449 Stebing, David 475 Stec, Kathleen 375 Srechman. Karen 372. 445 Steeb. Dennis 368 Steele, Renee 378 Steen, Denise 366 Stegall. Russell 342 Stegnach, Barbara 356 Stein. Nanc ' 347, 37 I Steinberger. Jill 348 Steiner. Fredrika 341 Steiner. Mike 342 Steinkamp. Lynn 350 Stellhorn, Jeffrey 368 Stemm, Michael 374. 475 Stenard, Shirley 391 Stephens, Jacqueline 378 Stephens, Jill 475 Stephens, Peggy 475 Stern. Philip 392 Stevens, James 354 Stevens, Richard 475 Stevens, Scott 376 Stevens, Shelby 475 Stewart, Cynthia 368 Stewart, Gale 375 Stewart, John 4 17. 475 Stewart, Robert 374 Stewart. Sheri t78 Stickler, Jill 445 Stidd. Becky 60 Stiff, David 354 Stiles. Debra 362 Stiles. Rebecca 348 Sfillo, Carlotta 395 Stine. Thomas 354 Scinson, Daniel 370 Stires, James 388 Stock. Barbara 364 Stogsdill. Robert 449 Stojkovich. Anna 395 Stoler. Jane 34 1 Stombaogh. David 388 Stone. Cynthia 34 3 Stone. Greg 140 Scone, Richard 206 Stone, Thomas 396 Stonebraker, Joann 375 Stoner, Rebecca 475 Stout, Janet 92 Stout, Joyce 339. 475 Scouthamer. Julie 380, 420 Stowe, Linda 34 3 Stowell. Susan 449 Stratigos, Spyridon 45 Straub, Marlene 350, 475 Straughn. David 475 Straw. David 386 Straw, Robert 475 Screater. Alicia 475 Strear ' . Konrad 95 Strieker. Joy 360 Strickland, Timothy 425 Stricklin, Fay 475 Strock, Deborah 340 Strom. Debbie 375 Stromer, Georga 4 75 Strong. Elenma 372 Strong. Valeric 446 Stroup. Peggy 372 Strughn, Dave 396 Stuart. Gretchen 37 1 Stuart. Jan 350 Scucky. Lisa 347. 356 Stueber, Charles 475 Scultz, Robert 475 Stump, Donald . 70 Stumph. Karen 50 Stunkard, Christine 475 Sturdevant. Danette 360 Sturm. Bob 4 36 Stutsman. Roddy 8 Sue. David 81 Suer. Stephen 4 34 Sufana. Margaret 384 Sullivan. John 92 Sullivan, Michael 35 3 Sullivan, Thomas 475 Sulski. Lisa 3 39. 449 Surface, Janet 72 Susmilch. Mark 275 Sutherland. Robert 4 37 Sutherland, Sandra 343 Sutter, Robert 4 75 Sutton. Susan 475 Svetlova. Madame Maria 5 7 Swakon, Carol 73 Swango, Beth P2 Swango, HoTA ' ard 172 Swanson. Judith 380 Sweet. Sandra 390 Swenson. Charles 42 1 Swinehart, Karen 475 Swinehart. Stephen 358, 475 Swing, Frederick 353 Swingley. Jeff 396 Swirsky, Lauren 395 Swisher, Michael 394 Switzer. Toby 392 Szabo. Scott 376 Szymaczak, James 476 n CJ Tabak. Ronald . 82 Tabakin, Gary 39 1 Taber. Kith 390 Talbert, Joanne 96 Talbert. Vicki 362 Talbert. William 368 Taliaferro, Renee 476 Tallani. William 435 Talley, Wilma 339. 366 Tanaka, Diann 375 Tancey. Mark 476 Tang. Kwok 476 Tanke, John 94, 368 Tanke, Stephanie 378 Tannebaum, Andrew 347, 476 Tantillo, Laura 446 Tarby, Russel 424 Tarlman. Greg 383 Tarnow, Vicki 84, 476 Tate. David 358 Tate. Desiree 39 1 Tatum. Melanie 476 Taube. Jennifer 420. 476 Tavormina, Anna 4 6 Taylor. Bobby 86 Taylor. Bryan 3 9 Taylor. Cynthia 48 Taylor. Debra 380 Taylor. Patricia t 9 Taylor. Rex 386 Taylor. Richard 476 Taylor, Winslow 476 Tegno, Dean 389 Tebbe. Diane 396 Temple, Bruce 4 1 3 Templeton, Linda 384 Tengsico. Mae 476 Terksbury. Jeff 368 Terhune. Scott 396 Tevault. Caria 364 Thacker. Sue 22 Tharp, Jill 373 Tharpe. Melissa 37 3. 476 Theadford. Jon 392 Theil, Terri 360 Thellmann. Lori 350 Thielemann. Carol 410 Thielemann. Judith 380 Thieman, Jeffrey 389 Thiiman. Susan 390 Thobe. Charlene 396 Thoman, Robin 340 Thomas. Dennis 271 Thomas. Jane 47 Thomas, Konrad 366 Thomas. Laurel 373, 476 Thomas. Nancy 362 Thomas. Patricia 476 Thomas. Paula 384 Thomas. Rendall 392. 476 Thomas, Richard 287 Thomas. Sherry 34 3 Thomas. Suzanne 372 Thompson. Abbey 373 Thompson. Deborah 372 Thompson. Diane 356 Thompson, Donna 37 1 Thompson, Gayle 445 Thompson, Joanna 476 Thompson, Nancy 339 Thompson. Kevin 388 Thompson, Sally 350 Thompson. Sam 38 I Thompson. Tamara 367 Thompson, Tom 368 Thompson. Valerie 42 1 Thomson. Pamela 348 Thorelli. Tom 476 Thorne, Deborah 476 Thorsky. Gregor - 388 Thurgood, Vicki 384 Thurston, Kim 382 Tiek. Robert 449 Tikka, Ann 3 5, 449 Tilford, Maxwell 376 Tillinger, Katherine447 Timm, Marcia 373 Tincher, Paula 476 Tindal. Wesley 381 Tinder. Ellen 343 Tinsiey. Shannon 378 Tippett, Sally 360 Tippy. Faye 4 6 Tipton. Bomta 476 Tokarek. Jean 367. 4 6 Tolbert, Joy 34 1. 476 Toler. Carol 66 Tolle. Stephen 392 Toller, Benny 366 ToUey. Lynn 476 Tonner. Jeffrey 386 Torian, Sara 393 Torretto, Monica 350. 4 ' 6 Toth. Robert 10 Tovey. Lynda 34 Towner. Christine 360 Townsend. Steven 389 Trac Elizabeth 364 Trakimas. Richard 4-6 Traycoff, Sergei 68 Trier. Mrs. Art 29 Trigg. Marianne 362 Trittschuh. Tamara 362 Troeger, Jeffrey 383 Troutman. Nanc - 348. 4 6 Trurtling, Rodney 366 Tsotsos, James 389 Tucker. Christopher 386 Tucker. Earl 5 ' Tuerff , Thomas 383 Turtbr d, Daniel 476 Tuohy. Brian 395 Turich. Nanc - 95 Turk. Scacey 390 Turner. Kirt 362 TwTman, Cheryl 476 T ' Aiman. Lee 4 ' 6 Tvier. Bonnie 9 1 Tyler, Frederick 28 Tyler. MeIod - 4 6 Tyree, D id 354 Tyne. Carole 4 ' 6 Rick Wood rr KZJ Lipshaw. Linda 36 LVban. Gregory 393 491 Ustanik, Roderick 476 Ucley, Anne 340 Uwils. Tom 42 1 Valencia, Alberta 1 16 Valerio. Vicroria 350 VanBenten, Susan 393 VanDer, Weele Teri 343 VanDerveer, Tara 307 VanDeusen, Mary 445 VanHorn, Jack 476 VanMerer. Charles 386 VanNevel. Richard 34 3 VanSenus. William 358 VanSchooneveld, Mrs. Dorothy 35 VanStrein, Kathy 37 3 VanWmkle. Mark 340 Vanderploeg. Mary 476 Varjian. Leon 78, 101 Vasilak, Susan 477 Vass, Daniel 435 Vaught, Linda 477 Vea, Susie 339, 364 Veal. John 477 Veale, Marcia 308, 370 Veeder, Garrett 370 Vega, Gregory 477 Velkoff, Michele 477 Vent, Kachy 445 Ventresca, Anne 342 Verble, Jane Kay 343, 447 Verble, Mary Kay 342 Verner, Gwendolyn 391, 477 Vickrey, Rhonda 447 Victor, Mary 378 Vieira, Kim 477 Vine, Douglas 477 Visscher, Ann 341, 373 Vivian, Robert 376 Voelker, Angela 477 Voelker, James 35 3 Vogel, Caryn 334 Vogel, Margaret 362 Vogel, Pamela 339 Vogel, Victoria 364 Vogele, Sally 449 Vogelgesang, Philip 477 Vogt, John 377 Vogt, Karen 477 Volakakis, Georgia 372 VoUmer, Nancy 339 Voss, Juergen 388 Wachholz, Jane 375 Waclawek, Nancy 424 Waddell, R. Scott 382 Waddington, Dean 382 Wade, James 386 Wade, Marsha 4 77 Waggoner, Carol 477 Wagman, Sandra 371 Wagner, David 477 Wagner, Karen 362 Wagoner, Paul 4 1 Wagonman, Joyce 393 Wahl, Donna 339. 360 Wahman, Frank 374 Waible, Frank 477 Waiss, Lorraine 375 Waite, Dave 386 Wakefield, Patricia 477 Walkerko, Pamela 343 Wales, Cynthia 477 Walke. Mary 477 Walker, Nancy 477 Walker, Patricia 356 Walker, Rebecca 350 Walker, Sherry 360 Walker, William 449 Wallace, Paul 477 Wallenstein, Kurt 379 Wallingford, Ralph 389 Wallis, John 477 Walsh, Douglas 477 Walsh, Kathleen 356 Walter, Michael 38 3 Walters, Betty 390 Walters, Charles 410, 477 Walters, Mrs. Estelle 360 Walters, Leslie 343, 477 Walters, Margaret 420 Walz, Jeff 340 Wambach, Melanie 348 Wandersce, Belinda 477 Wanio, Patricia 477 Ward. Andrew 394 Warden, Jeffrey 382 Warner, Fred 477 Warner, Mark 385 Warren, John 354 Warren, Scott 426 Washburn, Jane 348 Wasowski, Daniel 388 Watanabe, Beay 350 Waterford, Carl .366 Waters, Steven 395 Watkins, Connie 371 Watson, Nancy 360, 432 Watson, Richard 477 Watson. Thomas 424 Watts, Carolyn 477 Wa tts, Gregory 477 Waye, David 477 Weas. John 477 Weaver, Darius 382 Webb, Charles 123 Webb, Craig 424 Webb, Elizabeth 372 Webb, Peggy 394 Webber, Susan 364 Weber, Mary 477 Weber, Scott 58 Webster, Maty 424 Weddle, Joyce 478 Weed, Claudia 364 Weedman, Douglas 426 Weeks, Bruce 421 Wehrenberg, Daniel 478 Weigel, Richard 368 Weil, Marsha 364 Weimer, Harvey 478 Weinberg, James 391 Weinhold, Mary 373 Weiss, Barry 391 Weiss, Debbie 340 Weiss, Garry 39 1 Weissert, Robert 386 Weissman, Linda 395 Welbourn, Barton 381, 421 Weldon, Carol 348 Welecher, Tina 393 Wells. Herman B, 205 Wendling. Victoria 362, 478 Wenzcl, Richard Hank 82, 394 Wenxlcr, Richard 381 Wertz, Jennifer 380 West, Anita 391 West. John 449 West, Laurie 371 Westbay, Leslie 37 3 Westfall, John 4 10, 478 Westfall, Susan 478 Westfall, Teresa 384 Wever, Nancy 362 Weygrn, Linda 426 Whaley, Barbara 478 Whaley, Ellen 478 Whalin, Wallace 478 Wheatley, Joanne 478 Wheeler, Linda 390 Wheelock, Michelle 341 Whicker, Carl 4 38 Whicker, George 438 Whisler. Jeffrey 368. 369 Whisler. John 374 Whisler, Larry 478 Whistler, Pat 420 White, Billie 37 3 White, Bonita 391 White, Carolyn 341 White, Daniel 4 10, 478 White, Daniel G. 383 White, Easter 478 White, Lee 390 White, Mona 478 White, Richard 478 White, Robin 348 Whitlock, Linda 478 Whitman, Robert 377 Whitney, Lisa 4 78 Whittenberg, Elizabeth 445 Wible, Holly 362 Wickland, Paul 385 Wickman, Margaret 356 Widaman, Karen 393 Widaman, Krista 393 Wielgos, Lawrence 382 Wieneke, Kristin 350 Wieselthier, Jane 360, 478 Wiessler, Micki 421 Wiethoff, John 386 Wiggam, Jerry 478 Wiggins, Rebecca 373 Wignall, Deborah 339 Wilburn, Randy 377 Wilde, Pamela 390 Wildman, Michael 478 Wildridge, Timothy 478 Wiley, Janet 390 Wiley, Kevin 478 Wiley, Michael 478 Wiley, Richard 38 3 Wilhelm, Nancy 478 Wilhelmus, Victoria 356 Wilk, Lawrence 391 Wilke, Michael 478 Wilkerson, Robert 279 Wilkie, Ann 34 3 Wilkinson, Rex 478 Willey, Pamela 478 Williams, Brian 34 3 Williams, Frank 80 Williams. Frederick 417 Williams. Glen 478 Williams. Judy 341 Williams. Kimberly 445 Williams, Mary 445 Williams, Michael 445 Williams, Quensetta 391, 478 Williams, Raymond 478 Williams, Rebecca 347, 348 Williams, Sandra 478 Williams, Starlene 34 1 Williams, Tamara 350, 478 Williams, Terri 362, 478 Williams, Virginia 57 Williamson, Frank 366 Williamson, Joanne 396 Williamson, Kathleen 340 Williamson, Richard 435 Williamson, Thomas 479 Willis, Russell 479 WiUits, Lee 35 5 Wilson, Ann 348 Wilson, Bill 175 Wilson, David 340 Wilson, Gayle479 Wilson, Gregory 479 Wilson, Larime 447 Wilson, Lynn 380 Wilson, Margaret 3 39, 386 Wilson, Phyllis 339 Wilson, Rebecca 375 Wilson, Rebecca R. 479 Wilson, William 424, 494 Wilson, William 396 Winchester, Teresa 307 Wingo, Debra 479 Winkle, Barry 438 Winkler, Jacqueline 445 Winski, Lauren 384 Winslow, Rosemary 447 Winstrom, David 386 Winter, Esther 479 Winters, Brad 421, 479 Wirth, Carol 364 Wirts, Linda 362 Wiscomb, John 382 Eise, Susan 479 Wise, Ted 67 Wishart, Anthony 376 Wishart, Laura 445 Witherbee, Debra 362 Withered, Dennis 396 Witman, Christopher 394 Witt, Lu Ann 372, 424 Wittc, Richard 479 Witwcr, Grace 479 Witwer, Kathryn 479 Witwcr, Sally 364 Wojcik, John 479 Wojnicki, Cheri 479 Wokolin. Douglas 379 Woldy. Ann 52 Wolf. Harvey 479 Wolfberg. Debra 479 Wolfe, Catherine 356, 479 Wolfe, Tom 142 Wolfson, Lori 371 Wolinsky, Debra 371 Wollam, Jerry 377 Wollner, William 479 Wolvos, Tom 434 Wood, Jeanne 384, 479 Wood, Richard 494 Wood, Timothy 370 Woodhouse, John 479 Woodruff, Mark 382 Woods, Delena 378, 479 Woodson, Russell 479 Woodward, Shawn 395, 421 Wook, Rob 388 Woolery, Michael 396 Woolsey, Carolyn 380 Worster, David 35 3 Wray, Linda 479 Wray, Robert 479 Wright, John 354 Wfight, Larry 175 Wright, La Nita Maria 479 Wright, Robert 35 3 Wrobleewski, Mark 370 Wu, Kin Ling 342 Wyall, Peter 38 3 Wyand, Elizabeth 479 Wyer, Eric 368 Wynn, Phill 45 Wysong, Phillip 421 Yacko, Beverly 395, 445 Yacko, Marian 373. 479 Yarbrough, Betsy 375 Yarns, Claudia 417, 479 Yassin, Azmil 16 Yates, Nancy 396 Yocom, Laurel 479 York, Susan 339 Yosha, Ann 395 Young, Diana 373 Young, Gregory 394 Young, James 395 Young, Jerry 35 3, 420 Young, Katherine 350 Young, Teresa 479 Young. Thomas 394 Young, William Henry 102 Youngstafel, Mary 479 Yuraitis, Kenneth 479 Yusko, Alan 385 Zachary, Lisa 1 16, 393 Zachau, James 370, 479 Zale, Ted 45 Zank, Carol 342 Zayner, Glenn 393 Zehr, Brenda 339 Zellers, Alberta 325 Zellmer, Karl 479 Zent, Dennis 479 Zeigler, Van 449 Zeigner, David 383, 425 Ziker, Lynne 34 1 Zimmerman, Ann 348, 479 Zimmerman, Deborah 479 Zimmerman, Mary 348 Zimmerman. Terri 348, 420 Zubak, Janet 390 Zundo, George 343 Zurek, Karen 479 492 lim MendenhjjM ' 1974-75 Arbutus Staff Front Row: Selma Scurlock, secretary; Nancy Claus, co-editor; Debbie Johnson, assistant housing editor; Maryann Kicinski, secretary; Rick Wood, co-editor. Second Row: Pat Piper, copy editor; Sara Beach, hous- ing editor; Bette Dodd, academics editor; Bill Wilson, sports editor; Jetfrey Hartenfeld, advisor; Jonna Basse, seniors and organizations; Jeff Richardson, sec- retary. Not Pictured: Dave Jay, photo editor; Jim Mendenhall, photographer; Bill Huser, photographer; Pat Head, secretary. Contributing writers: Anne Hosford, Dru Dwyer, Marty Moutoux, Bruce Newman, Gretchen Letterman, Marnie Maxwell, Marcia Gettlefinger, Mary Gib- boney, Vicky Harian, Steve Grimmer, Rick Lyman, Tim Strictland, Lois Henderlong, Jae Berry, Phil Bloom. Contributing photographers: Monte Hostetler, Bob Cohn, Rob Titlow, Susie Eaton, John Hopper, Randy Prange, Kim Hitchcock, Cork Rhodes, Jerry King, Tim Brown, Scott Ferderber, John Finn. Also J210, J363 photojournalism classes. Artwork: Scott Harris, Dan Lynch. Graphics: Jeff Ohl, Judith Adams. 494 The staff of the 1974-75 Arbutus has at- tempted to make this year ' s book one that is a little different from most college yearbooks. We realized at the start of this monumental ven- ture that it would be impossible to create a book that would appeal to everyone or could com- pletely cover every event of interest. But by using a different format in the book and including both traditional and non-traditional events, we hope that we have succeeded in having a little something for everyone. This book could not have been completed without the assistance of our advisor Jeffrey Hartenfeld for his graphic assistance, Jack Backer for financial advice, super-secretary Maryann Kicinski for her untold hours of volun- teer work and the Indiana University Founda- tion for making the color section in the book possible. In addition to those highly visible people who helped put out the book, there were people and places behind the scenes, without whose help the book would never have been finished. Special thanks goes to the Attitude Readjust- ment Staff of Diane Firmani, Linda Lutes and Connie Pacay for understanding the strange and varied moods of their missing roommate and keeping one co-editor in a semi-rational frame ot mind during deadlines. Also, recognition goes to the friendly stranger who made staying up 48 hours straight editing copy and retouching photographs a little more bearable. The management of Nick ' s deserves credit for providing an ideal location for late night brain storming sessions and relaxation. And most of all we musn ' t forget the Campus Mail Service for helping us make all our deadlines. Now as this is the final editorial statement m the book, the staff felt that journalistic objec- tivity could be ignored for a paragraph and a little editorializing was allowable. Although we must thank those who helped put out the book, our consciences require that we also mention those who hindered us. So to those people in the School of Journalism who would rather see the yearbook out of commission (you know who you are), we can say with a smile that we completed the 82nd volume of the Arbutus in spite of your efforts. Another source of irritation were the safety officers who stubbornly refused to see our departmental passes, ticketing and towing our motor vehicles with frustrating frequenc)-. The book was printed by Hunter Publishing Company in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. Again another thanks is in order to our repre- sentative Phil Sutton and to the staff at Hunter who showed us the typical southern hospitality ' when we visited the plant. Eight) ' pound dull enamel paper and black ink was used. Body copy was set in 10 point Garamond solid, captions in 8 point garamond italic and headlines in Times Roman and Times Roman Bold. Letraset press type was used for the opening section and divider pages. The total press run was 5,200 copies with a total printing budget of 523,000. Senior and underclass portraits were taken by Stevens Studios of Bangor, Maine and group shots were taken by Chadon Photogra phers of Bloomington. a. 495 lull Kichardson 496 i I


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Indiana University - Arbutus Yearbook (Bloomington, IN) online collection, 1974 Edition, Page 1

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