High-resolution, full color images available online
Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
View college, high school, and military yearbooks
Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
Support the schools in our program by subscribing
Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information
Page 28 text:
“
i -- I p«PBBRB?W«» ' » ir ■« fc : ' . .m 7i - . • Ti iB J- - i rs r np
”
Page 27 text:
“
telligence reports said the killers entered the country through Cana- da, but Gaddafi claimed that all of the reports were vicious lies. Closer to home, Reagan was more worried about a deepening reces- sion and a rising unemployment rate in this country. As merchants geared for the Christmas rush, the only bright spots in the economy were falling mterest and inflation rates. The unemployment rate kept rising, reaching 8.9 percent, the highest it has been since 1975. Reagan still defended his supply- side economic program. He insisted that the second-stage income-tax cut of 10 percent would help lower infla- tion, as well as unemployment and interest rates. Our administration is a clean-up crew for those who went on a non-stop spending binge and left the tab for us to pick up, Reagan said. Hi Ligh national unemployment rates nit Indiana especially hard. In December, Indiana reported the fourth highest unemployment in the nation. One reason for Indiana ' s problems was that cities like Koko- mo, Marion, Anderson, and New Castle depend heavily on the ailing auto industry as sources of employ- ment. Ford, Chrysler, and General Motors, the big three auto makers, reported that 1981 sales had drop- ped more than 30 percent from 1980, making it the worst sales year in the past 20 years. Auto industry analysts blamed the sluggish sales on the continued high interest rates. In response, the automakers offered their own fi- nance plans with interest rates as low as nine percent. The big three also offered rebates up to $1,000 on some cars. As the automakers sputtered, the space shuttle Columbia was flying high around the earth. Though a dead fuel cell cut the second voyage of the Columbia to only 54 hours, astronauts Joe Engle and Richard Truxly still accomplished many of the tests which they set out to per- form. One of the tests was checking the shuttle ' s mechanical arm to make sure it functioned properly. It did. Scientists were pleased with the performace of the shuttle, noting that it lost less than a dozen of its 300 heat-resistant tiles. The first trip of the shuttle was plagued with tiles falling off. I n sports, the Hoosier football team finished the year with a dismal 3-8 record. One of the few bright spots of the season was the Hoosiers ' 21- 17 victory over Purdue. The win re- turned the Old Oaken Bucket to lU for the first time since 1977. In basketball, one of the stars of lU ' s 1981 NCAA championship team, Landon Turner, made his first appearance in Assembly Hall since bemg injured in a car wreck in July. Before lU ' s exhibition with the Yugoslavian national team. Turner was brought out to midcourt in a wheelchair. The crowd gave him a five-minute standing ovation as he held his fists up hign. Turner was paralyzed from the waist down after suffering a broken vertabrae in the accident. In soccer, lU ' s nationally ranked team made it to the NCAA quarter finals before losing, 0-1, to Phil- adelphia Textile. It was the sixth straight season that the team had reached the NCAA finals. Senior Armando Betancourt received the Hermann Award, given each year to the nation ' s top college soccer player. A Ldam Allerhand, chairman of lU ' s Department of Chemistry, alleged that the chemistry building was a health hazard to students and faculty. He said laboratories were poorly ventilated and designed and chemicals were improperly stored, causing a potentially dangerous situation. Inaction by the state caused Allerhand to resign his position as chairman. (See page 84.) In another development, the State Student Assistance Commission of Indiana discovered that it had failed to award $3,143,135 set aside for stu- dent aid. The money was later re- turned to the state ' s general fund. Kick DelVecchio Space shuttle landing
”
Page 29 text:
“
Solidarity — crushed O, ' n the cold, clear morning of Sun- day, December 13, the ugly right arm of martial law seized its left and crushed — like a vise — the free- doms that the Polish workers ' move- ment. Solidarity, had struggled to obtain for two years. Tanks rolled down desolate streets. Mail was cen- sored. All communication was res- tricted. Poland ' s leader. General Wojciech Jaruzelski, appeared on Polish tele- vi sion to explain the crackdown, which was spurred by the Soviets. By halting Solidarity ' s increasing de- mands for freedom, the 21 -member Polish junta was hoping to keep the Soviets from directly intervening in Poland ' s domestic problems, which included worker unrest and a mis- managed economy on the verge of collapse. Jaruzelski ' s government issued more than 20 separate orders sus- pending rights, mcluding freedom of speedi, press, and assembly. The orders imposed restrictions on travel and communications. Immediately, Polish troops arrested and detained hundreds of Solidarity activists. Among the first to be placed under house arrest was the cnarismatic, uncompromising Lech Walesa, leader of the 10 million Solidarity members. Storms of vio- lent strikes broke out throughout the troubled nation, especially at coal mines in the south, and at Gdansk, the northern city where Solidarity was born. An unofficial estimate reported 200 killed in the clashes between troops and workers. The govern- ment reported only 17 deaths. In Bloomington, some five thousand miles away, a small hand- ful of worried faculty and students watched the first reports unfold with much more of an emotional interest than most Americans. The impact of the crackdown was felt immediately by Professor Jerzy Bobryk, an ex- change researdi assistant from War- saw University. Bobryk, 32, was scheduled to return to his wife and daughter in Poland on December 13. The night before, however, news of the crackdown came during a farewell party thrown by some of nis colleagues. ' On Sunday, it was clear to me that I couldn ' t go home, he said. All flights were cancelled and Bobryk was allowed to stay another semester at lU. Bobryk said he intended to return to Poland at the end of the spring semester or sooner — if his depart- ment decided to call him back. In the meantime, he received a long- awaited letter from his family. Wojciech Wierzewski, 40, a pro- fessor in the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures, was at Bobryk ' s farewell party. He is also an exchange professor from Warsaw University. Unlike Bobryk, Wierz- weski has his family with him and they intend to remain in the U.S. — at least for now. We would like to return to Poland, but not to this reg- ime, he said. Wierzewski said that many of his colleagues at Warsaw University had been arrested and a military commander was now in charge. Classes were cancelled to prevent students from assembling and orga- nizing protests. Joanna Karwowska, 32, a compu- ter science graduate student, and Ayesha Hajjar, 22, a senior majoring in religious studies, have family and friends in Poland. Each received let- ters from family saying that they were all right. The envelopes, they said, had been opened, stapled, and stamped by Polish authorities. Jan Jaworowski, 53, a math profes- sor and former Polish citizen, said he was worried about old friends and relahves still in Poland. One piece of mail he received from an old friend was just the envelope — the letter had been seized. Wierzewski said the letters he re- ceived were neutral in comment be- cause of the censorship. One letter from a journalist friend, however, was written in metaphorical lan- guage. He described being detained by authorities, released, and then watched as going to the doctor, being released, but remaining under doctor ' s care. Though Poland is an Eastern Bloc nation, it had been an exception to the Soviet system. The people had more freedoms with Solidarity ' s broad social and political force than in other Bloc countries, Wierzewski said. But the crackdown demon- strated that Poland was an exception not to be tolerated. Bobryk said that although the situation remained unclear, ne felt martial law was a governmental mis- take — it did not change the prob- lems or the people ' s attitudes to- ward Solidarity. Almost a third of Poland ' s 36 million people were members. To show support for the Polish people. President Ronald Reagan denounced martial law and imposed sanctions on the Polish and Soviet governments. The sanctions, however, were symbolic more than anything, and met with mixed reac- tions. The NATO allies, on the other hand, offered no concrete support at all. Through all the complicated eco- nomic, social, and political turmoil, Jaworowski said that Solidarity ' s message to the West was simple and poignant: give any possible support you can, and don ' t forget us. As the months progressed, some rights were returned; but it was ob- vious that martial law was not going to let up as soon as many had hoped. Speaking at lU on February 15, a for- mer U.S. ambassador to Poland, Richard T. Davies, said that U.S. policy had not been strong enough. Davies said, however, the respon- sibility to solve the crisis would re- main with the Polish government. Martial law will not solve Poland ' s problems, he said. Sooner or la- ter, the Polish leaders will have to find the way out of the blind alley that they have herded the Polish people into. Richard Biever
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.