University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS)

 - Class of 1967

Page 1 of 551

 

University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS) online collection, 1967 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 551 of the 1967 volume:

FALL 1967 JAYHAWKER MAGAZINE YEARBOOK II FALL ISSUE THE 1967 JAYHAWKER MAGAZINE YEARBOOK TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction 1 Schools of the University 50 New Students 3 University Life 81 Administration 37 Advertising and Index 95 MR. TOM YOE, Advisor; BLAKE BILES, Editor; STEVE MEYER, Business Manager; DAVE GRAVES, Art Director; RAY NIEMEIR, Head Photographer; BRENT WALDRON, Copy Editor; CINDY McCAMMON, Editorial Secretary; JO ANN MEYER, Business Secretary. ART DEPARTMENT: Jo Lee, Dave Stone, Production Managers; Paul Davis, Advertising Art Director; Julie Pittenger, Art Assistant. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT: Dick Grove, Advertising Manager; Joe Godfrey, Gary O ' Neal, and Tim Vaughn, Advertising Staff; Janice Mendenhall, Sales Manager; Stu Barrier, Scott Brown, Beverly Dreier, Carol Eubank, Barbara Gyulavis, Richard Jones, Judy Long, Roby Ogan, Bill Porter, Rick Shaffer, Suzanne Steuri, Sharon Watson, and Connie Zenor, Sales Staff; Gary Gribben, Distribution Manager; Gordon Allen, Capper Grant, Distribution Staff; Sheila Wiseman, Organization Pix Manager; Diana Javellana, Ann Kaiser, Susan Paproth, and Jeanne Small, Organi- zation Piz Staff; Suzanne Saffels, Living Groups Pix Manager; Gwen Beamer, Patti Hiller, Bill Kissel, and Linda Put- nam, Living Groups Pix Staff; Sallie Lillard, Senior Pix Manager; Lynn Frankie, Susan Hayes, Susan Saindon, and Jack Weiss, Senior Piz Staff; Charlotte Bartlesmeyer, Kansas Union Pix Manager; Gordon Allen, Brian Bauerle, Susan Diehl, Punky Hemphill, Patti Hiller, Leslee Huttie, Nancy Ketchum, Sandy McAllister, Nancy Morgan, Donna Moritz, Mickey Pasano, Sandy Schutte, Mary Lou Smith, Andrea Tobin, and Susan Trottman, Kansas Union Pix Staff; Tom Simpson, Pictures Scheduler; Karin Spaulding, Pictures Secretary; Kathy Bentley, Sherril Cooper, Liz Cupp, Sue Kol- man, Debby Pfautsch, and Kathy Strayer, Office Assistants. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT: John Casady, Associate Editor; Tricia Haggart, Judy McGhee, Features Editors; Margy Brown, Connie McLain, Theatre Editors; Bev Gray, Index Editor; Larry Fogleman, Sports Editor; Rob Sturdy, Party Piz Editor; Ted Gardiner, Doug Mackey, Chuck Stewart, Jim Robertson, and Hank Waeckerle, Assistant Copy Editors; Nancy Beck, Shelley Bray, Patty Jeserich, Loretta Jones, and Linda Kerby, Editorial Assistants; Drew Anderson, Tina Beggs, Bob Butler, Mike Cairns, Diane Childers, Renetta Engles, John Gillie, Graham Hatfield, Mike Homer, Evarold Hosein, Karen Howse, Fred Meier, Barbara Newsom, Larry O ' Neal, and Rusty Wells, Wr iters; Kay Adams, Kathy Alexander, Susan Bumpass, Suzy Coffman, Susan Diehl, Jane Doll, Mickey Edell, Susan Farley, Judi Greenwood, Marsha Grothusen, Linda Harrington, Janet Kipfer, Cheryl Lasley, Pat Logan, Paula Logan, Karen McCarthy, Leslie McElfresh, Sherry McGowan, Joy Miller, Sandy Millsap, Linda Parton, Janet Pruden, Carol Schoenbeck, Rosemary Shields, Paula Siebert, Sandy Siglar, Michelle Stafford, Judy Stout, and Diane Walter, Secretarial Staff. PHOTOGRAPHIC DEPARTMENT: Mike Bower, Charles Buck, Mike Dillingham, Randy Leffingwell, Tom Tschappat, and Rick Wrigley, Assistant Photographers; Estes Studio, Jayhawker Photographer; Orval Hixon, Special Portraits. An autumn sun, sinking behind the stately outlines of the Daisy Field Residence Hall Area, casts shadows over parts of Mallott Hall, Murphy Hall, and Allen Field House. -.z ---.. co 8 ' 5, co Pz . ,.., FOREWARD As the University enters its second century of existence, the emphasis everywhere is on inno- vation and change. It is fitting, then, that the 1967 Jayhawker reflects this change in presenting the story of KU ' s 101st year. The growth and expansion of the University—both as a physical unit and as an academic institution—receive recognition in the Jayhawker, but not as a set theme. Instead, these are stressed as those aspects of KU life most often associated with its broadly defined objectives and programs throughout the 1966-67 school year. Reflecting the excitement and color of a Jayhawker football game, students wave another touch- down onto the scoreboard. Mixed colors near Green Hall create a serene stillness southeast of the Campanile. Seen from the towers of New Fraser, red roofs and fall browns tower above Jayhawk Boulevard. NEW STUDENTS 3 PrievH(; Twelve years have passed since the Office of Ad- missions and Records established a summer program to facilitate new students ' transition to KU. Now an established institution, the KU Previews program has grown from its 1954 beginning when 28% of entering freshmen attended to this year ' s Previews when over 80% of the freshman class attended. Composed of ten three-day summer orientation sessions, Previews provide the entering student an advance opportunity to complete several enrollment prerequisites. Scholastic placement exams and phys- ical examination evaluations fill the basic schedule. To augment the orientation process Previews include time for meetings with representatives from each aca- demic department, the offices of the Dean of Men and the Dean of Women, and with undergraduates from the Student Advisory Board. Previews serve an important function in KU ' s annual venture to orientate and enroll several thousand new students. The weeks intervening between placement exams takenat Previews and September enrollment allow time for placement score evaluations to be made before students select courses in September. Simi- larly, physical examination evaluations at Wat- kins Hospital help distribute students more evenly and comfortably in the enrollment process. Administration of Previews is overseen by Registrar James K. Hitt and coordinated by Max F. Fuller, As- sistant Director of Admissions. Previews ' help to new students eases September orientation and enrollment. The program also serves to help new students to acquaint themselves with their prospective classmates, the campus, and the spirit of life as a Jayhawker. FROM THE FIRST Previews session in June until the end of Orientation week in September, numerous informal dances intro- duce entering students to the lighter side of KU life. 5 New Students Rush Scholarship, individual achievement and service to the University were among the major emphases of 1966 men ' s rush. Increased pressure from the draft and increasingly rigid Universi ty scholastic requirements found KU fraternities stressing their roles as college service organizations based on enhancing, rather than detracting from, a man ' s educational experience. Through the Interfraternity Council—the student governing body of fraternities—open rush during August and formal September rush provided over 600 men an opportunity to evaluate the offerings of the 27 KU fraternities in context with their educational re- quirements. Spring and summer rush parties, visits by fraternity men, and other rush functions designed to acquaint the rushee with KU and its fraternities re- sulted in 331 men pledging before the end of August. Formal rush, September 6-9, brought rushees three days of concentrated decision-making. Train date din- ners casual parties held by each fraternity on the eve of rush week—were the first of a series of organized rush functions which filled rushees ' days. Each of the two and one-half days of formal rush con- sisted of a series of two-hour visits at fraternities of the rushees ' choice. At Templin Hall, the KU rush week dormitory, counselors helped answer rushees ' questions about fraternities and KU life. By the end of rush week 241 men the pledge class openings which remained from August, bringing 89% of those participating in rush into fraternities. Nineteen sixty-six women ' s fall rush began the sec- ond year of separate upperclass and freshman rush. The fall system helps sororities fill their houses from the beginning of the semester and also relieves some of the numerical problems posed later by mid-year freshman rush. This year 173 women participated in the four-day rush period, September 10-13. Teas, dinners, and skits served as means to acquaint rushees and members of the 13 KU sororities. Visits completed and decisions made, rushees signed preference cards and anxiously awaited pledge class announcements from the Dean of Women. Three yell-ins held by groups of KU sorori- ties formally introduced the 55 new pledges to the campus. DURING FALL RUSH, members of the Phi Psi house explain various aspects of fraternity life to prospective pledges. 6 WITH THE CONCLUSION of formal rush week, a new pledge is drawn into KU fraternity life by a warm handshake from an upperclassman. FRAMED BY A SPRAY from their fountain, Chi ' Omega ' s serenade fall rushees after one of several organized parties. 7 PART OF THE FIRST CLASS of KU ' s second century traditionally passes by the Campanile to the Induction Ceremony in Memorial Stadium. ABOVE, LEFT. Upperclass rushees group in front of the Gamma Phi Beta house while sorority members meet briefly inside to discuss the next party. RIGHT. During the annual SUA Activities Carnival, KU-Y officers answer questions about their organization. 8 New Students Five days of campus activities, students completing the yearly move back to school, and the semesterly melee of registration and enrollment . . . Separately these events are components of KU orientation week, September 13-17; combined they mean a fast-paced beginning to university life. The New Student Convocation and Induction Cere- mony in Memorial Stadium started the annual week of advisors ' conferences, enrollment, and parties which also earns the yearly title of Country Club Week. The Cwen picnic for freshman women at Potter Lake, SUA ' s Activities Carnival, and the Traditions Rally and street dance rounded out activities. A total enrollment of 14,605 on the Lawrence cam- pus saw 3,200 freshmen, 2,900 sophomores, 2,700 juniors, 2,450 seniors, 178 special students, 3,080 law and graduate students ply the awesome course of numbers and arrows through the IBM-land of fall semester enrollment. By the week ' s end a weary stu- dent body fondly contemplated the comparatively less- hectic schedule of next Monday ' s classes. —Chuck Stewart FOLLOWING HIS SEMESTERLY ENCOUNTER with the maze of enrollment lines, a student in the crowded Book- store stops to re-examine his textbook needs. 9 New Students Freshman Scholars 10 TOP. Carol Shapely, a Presidential, National Merit, and Watkins Scholar, from Wichita. BOTTOM, Donald Jenkins from Kansas City, recipient of Scholarship Hall and Educational Opportunity Grants. Freshman scholastic honors are of two kinds: the financial or invitational. scholarships, and membership in the Honors Program of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Both provide students of marked ability with op- portunities for intellectual achievement of the highest distinction. The Summerfield and Watkins Scholarships represent the highest aca- demic honor the University can offer a Kansas high school graduate. This year seventy-eight men received the Summerfield Scholarship, and thirty- nine women, the Elizabeth M. Watkins Scholarship. The other scholarships include the University of Kansas Honor Scholarship (101), the Greater University Fund Scholarship (59), the Emily V. Berger Scholarship for women (29), the Jennie M. Donnelly Scholarship for graduates of Lawrence High School (17 ), the U. G. Mitchell Scholarship in Mathematics (27), and the Edwin Emery Slosson Scholarship in Science ( 16). Invitations to participate in the College Honors Program are extended to students who reach the final selection test for the Summerfield, Watkins, and National Merit Scholarship competitions, and who have indicated their intention to study in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. The program began in 1955 with thirty-one freshmen, and, using increasingly rigorous criteria for selection, it has grown to 192 in 1966. According to Honors Pro- gram Director Aldon Bell, several students come to KU specifically because of the program ' s benefits. —Diane Childers New Students Ton: Pat Hutchins, promising freshman linebacker from Swartz Creek, Michigan, goes high to block a field goal attempt in the Missouri game. BOTTOM: Julio Meade from New York, and Roger Kathol from Wichita, both nationally ranked high school tracksters. A strong, fast backfield highlights the freshman football squad this year. At the Quarterback position Wichita ' s John Mosier and Bartlesville, Okla- homa ' s Jim Ettinger are described by their coaches as having lots of potential. Emery Hicks, linebacker from Nowata, Oklahoma, and punter and kicker Bill Be ll from Falls Church, Virginia, give added strength to the speedy backfield. Tackle Frank Kozicky of Godfrey, Illinois, guard Dan Cott of Wichita, and Atchinson end Larry Vanek are expected to form the core of KU ' s big line in years to come. The freshman basketball team, under the direction of Coach Robert Mul- cahy, is looking forward to a fine season lead by four standouts from Illinois. Richard Bradshaw, a 6 ' 3 high school All-State, All-American for- ward from Chicago, heads a team that Coach Mulcahy says has definitely fine prospects. The tallest of the cagers is Jim Hoffman, a 6 ' 7 center from Chicago. Chester Lawrence, a 6 ' 4 guard from Vienna, and Carl Janis, a 6 ' 1 guard from Chicago, complete Coach Mulcahy ' s list of standouts. Speed is the best word to describe this year ' s freshman track squad. Speediest of the speedy is Glen Cunningham, who, like his famous father, set high school records by gaining the Kansas mile championship. Another speed demon is Julio Meade of New York, first in the nation in the quarter mile. New York ' s Mark Ferrel was one of the nation ' s top high school half- milers, while Roger Kathol was the Kansas ha lf-mile champion. Dashers Randy Julian of Bolsa Grande, California, and J. W. Johnson of Wichita round out the team of freshman tracksters. —Bob Butler Freshman , I ' 7 _I 11 New Students Cen The threshold of a new century was marked by edu- cational innovation at KU with the initiation of Cen- tennial College, a new venture in undergraduate education. KU is the first to experiment with an actual college within the college, a small living and learn- ing unit for liberal arts underclassmen. The basic goal of Centennial College is to provide a new dimen- sion in University life—the overlapping of social activity and academic endeavor. With the assistance of a three-year grant of $288,000 from the Carnegie Corporation of New York, the Administrative Committee brought Centennial College out of its long planning stage and into reality. The program itself was the culmination of many hours of work by the student College Intermediary Board, the Faculty Advisory Committee, and the Chancellor ' s Faculty Committee on Objectives for the Second Century. Private support of Centennial College was approved by the Council for Progress which met on the University campus in April of 1966. The Carnegie grant will go toward meeting the $18.6 million three- year goal adopted by the Council for Progress. Pioneering as director of Centennial College was Jerry Lewis, assistant dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Sharing with him the exciting task of meeting the organization challenge were Kala Mays Stroup, assistant dean of women; John Meyer s, assistant dean of men; and Gilbert Dyck, assistant registrar. Centennial College brought together 450 randomly selected Liberal Arts freshmen who shared the same teachers, advisors and dormitories. Centennial College men occupied three floors of Ellsworth Hall and 225 Centennial. College women moved into new Oliver Hall where office headquarters for Centennial College were established. Students studied together in such classes as history, English, science, speech, anthropology, mathematics, psychology, philosophy, sociology, political science, languages and Western Civilization which were taught by some 25 faculty members who also served as academic advisors for their students. Bouyant spirits and favorable opinion characterized student reaction. In general, the word for Centennial College was great, according to its student partici- pants. More specific comments ranged from enroll- ment was surprisingly easy to the Centennial College really does give an added sense of belonging. Centennial College is not an isolated attempt at educational advancement for the undergraduate; it is part of a master plan. If carried out according to pres- ent expectations, by 1968, all freshmen and sopho- mores in the College will be enrolled in one of the colleges within the College, and perhaps students will at last be able to bid farewell to the frustrating, dis- tant and indifferent world of IBM cards and student numbers which so often exists at the multiuniversity. —Barbara Newsom 1 2 ABOVE: With an enrollment of 180, Dean Aldon Bell ' s History 11 class meets in the informal atmosphere of the Oliver Hall dining room. area. BELOW: Coffee breaks between classes typify the program ' s focus on both the social and academic sides of student life. 13 Freshman Women ' s Residence Hal Vs Corbin North, First Floor 15 Corbin South, First Floor 15 Corbin North, Fourth Floor 15 Corbin North, Second Floor 15 Corbin South, Second Floor 16 Corbin North, Third Floor 16 Corbin South, Third Floor 16 Corbin South, Fourth Floor 17 Corbin North, Fifth Floor 17 Corbin North, Sixth Floor 17 Corbin North, Seventh Floor 18 Gertrude Sellards Pearson, Crossbar 18 Gertrude Sellards Pearson East, Ground Floor 18 Gertrude Sellards Pearson East, First Floor 19 Gertrude Sellards Pearson West, First Floor 19 Gertrude Sellards Pearson East, Second Floor 19 Gertrude Sellards Pearson West, Second Floor 20 Gertrude Sellards Pearson East, Third Floor 20 Gertrude Sellards Pearson West, Third Floor 20 Gertrude Sellards Pearson East, Fourth Floor 21 Gertrude Sellards Pearson West, Fourth Floor 21 Oliver North, Third Floor 21 Oliver South, Third Floor 22 Oliver North, Fourth Floor 22 Oliver South, Fourth Floor 22 Oliver North, Fifth Floor 23 Oliver South, Fifth Floor 23 Oliver North, Sixth Floor 23 Oliver South, Sixth Floor 24 Oliver North, Seventh Floor 24 Oliver South, Seventh Floor 24 Oliver North, Eighth Floor 25 Oliver South, Eighth Floor 25 Women ' s Scholarship HaIlls Miller . 25 Sellards 26 Watkins 26 Fraterniilies Acacia 26 Alpha Epsilon Pi 27 Alpha Kappa Lambda 27 Alpha Tau Omega 27 Beta Theta Pi 28 Delta Chi 28 Delta Sigma Phi 28 Delta Tau Delta 29 Delta Upsilon 29 Kappa Sigma 29 Lambda Chi Alpha 30 Phi Delta Theta 30 Phi Gamma Delta 30 Phi Kappa Psi 31 Phi Kappa Sigma 31 Phi Kappa Tau 31 Phi Kappa Theta 32 Pi Kappa Alpha 32 Sigma Alpha Epsilon 32 Sigma Chi 33 Sigma Nu 33 Sigma Phi Epsilon 33 Tau Kappa Epsilon 34 Theta Chi 34 Triangle 34 Men ' s Scholarship Halls Battenfeld 35 Jolliffe 35 Pearson 35 36 14 CORBIN NORTH, FIRST FLOOR. Top row: Nancy Alexander, Shawnee Mission; Kathy Kryston, Western Springs, Ill.; Robbie Starr, Chattanooga, Tenn.; Vera Varner, Atlanta, Ga.; Christine Eaton, Tribune; Ann Dreher, Salina; Connie Reed, Prairie Village. Second row: Nancy Walsh, Prairie Vil- lage; Barbara Musser, Salina; Arlene Binda, Leawood; Pat Lally, Overland Park; Pat Arnold, Kansas City; Cindy Greer, Vandalia, Ill. Bottom row: Donna Proffitt ( senior assistant), Kirkwood, Mo.; Margaret Garber, Sabetha; Anita Swager, Colby; Sue Edmunds, Shawnee Mission; Carol Delker, To- peka; Anita Ross, Topeka. CORBIN NORTH, FOURTH FLOOR, AND SOUTH, FIRST FLOOR. Top row: Lynn Moore, Tulsa, Okla.; Susan Gresham,Topeka; Fran Finney, Bartlesville, Okla.; Martha Fowler, Osawatomie; Nita Crawford, Ottawa; Janet Warner, Ottawa; Carolyn Engstrom, Toronto; Deborah Bulmer, Wichita; Margaret Fowler, Osawatomie. Third row: Nancy Kaiser, Paola; Marlane Shanker, University City, Mo.; Candy Finney, Shawnee Mission; Ce- leste Cody ( counselor), Kansas City, Mo.; Joanne Watland, Kankakee, Ill.; Cass Perry, Bartlesville, Okla.; Paula French, Atchison; Mary Driski, Junction City. Second row: Connie Dearing, McPherson; Nancy Norman, Des Moines, Iowa; Andrea Stanley, Lawrence; Marla Babcock, Ottawa; Sally Anderson, Shawnee Mission; Susan Whitlock, Kansas City; Becky Balding, Chicago, Ill. First row: Marsha Miller, Shawnee Mission; Sally Stead, Glen Ellyn, In.; Peg Stephenson, Ottawa; Jill Duguid, Shawnee Mission; Lauren Roberts, Rockville Centre, New York; Nancy Pratt, Tulsa, Okla.; Debbie Waltz, Quantico, Va. CORBIN NORTH, SECOND FLOOR. Top Lyn DuBois, Shawnee Mission; Carrie Anderson, Shawnee Mission; Jeanne Safford, Boulder, Colo.; Leslie Bowles, Appleton City, Mo.; Sharon Wahlmeier, Hugoton; Janie Thayer,: Hutchinson; Chris Walker, Shawnee Mission. Third row: Jacque- line Ambler, Springfield, Mo.; Nancy Watson, Kansas City, Mo.; Susie Dent, St. Louis, Mo.; Susan Diehl, Ft. Scott; Vicki Neighbors, Kansas City; Kathy Anderson, Kansas City. Second row: Linda Dufek, Hutchinson; Sharon Katzeff, Prairie Village; Donna Bennett, Kansas City; Annette Adams, St. Louis, Mo.; Jane Donald, Shawnee Mission; Janey Frost, Wichita; Linda Tate, Shawnee Mission. Bottom row: Susan Weinlood ( counselor), Hutchinson; Sharon Le- Masters, Hugoton; Diane Logan, Lawrence; Karen Humphreys, Ashland; Judy Krocplin, Elmhurst, Ill.; Kathy Dickens, Kansas City; Linda Thompson, Shawnee Mission. 15 CORBIN SOUTH, SECOND FLOOR. Top row: Susan Young, Topeka; Paula Gibbons, Dwight, Ill.; Pat Finley, Atwood; Karen Guese, Clay- ton, Mo.; Susan Harris, Halstead; Barbara Wilson, Wichita; Carolyn Harbert, Overland Park. Third row: Sue Perry, Overland Park; Trudy Zimmerman, Overland Park; Linda Wiley, Lakin; Cherlene Hodges, Anthony; Gloria Johnson, Shawnee Mission; Valorie Parrish, Shawnee Mission; Marilyn West (coun- selor ), Lawrence; Molly Glover, Overland Park. Second row: Charlene Godwin, Hutchinson; Karen Frick, Overland Park; Pat Hildreth, Shawnee Mis- sion; Anita Habiger, Overland Park; Marilyn Keith, Topeka; Kathy Grove, Winfield; Mary Ellen Gerrity, Overland Park. Bottom row: Jan McDaniel, Prairie Village; Pam Harris, Topeka; Gail Gilbert, Atlanta, Ga.; Nancy Gatch, Hope; Jan Gross, La Grange, Ill.; Jane Hardy, Streator, Ill. CORBIN NORTH, THIRD FLOOR. Top row: Regina Warshawski, Kansas City; Shelley Bray, Bartlesville, Okla.; Sheila Slabotsky, Dallas, Tex.; Sandy Andersen, Kansas City; Linda Filby, Junction City; Sue Paffenbach, Kansas City. Second row: Kathy Snodgrass, Wichita; Linda Cooper, Shawnee Mission; Christina Arutunoff, Bartlesville, Okla.; Connie Fabac, Lawrence; Pat Cunningham (counselor ), Topeka; Pam Lundgren, Julesburg, Colo.; Me- linda Waind, Leawood. Bottom row: Linda Brubaker, Florissant, Mo.; Kathy Brenk, Overland Park; Janet Tharp, Wichita; Jane Fiebach, Wichita; Susan Long, Leawood; Deanna Fiddler, Junction City; Sara Lonnecker, Kansas City, Mo. CORBIN SOUTH, THIRD FLOOR. Top row: Tamee Worman, Topeka; Vicki Henderson, Osborne; Ann Herring, St. Louis, Mo.; Jeanne Haw- ley, Leawood; Barbara Wood, Bartlesville, Okla.; Cece Starnes, Wichita. Third row: Connie Zenor, Dighton; Karen Kittrell, Shawnee Mission; Laurie Terrell, Shawnee Mission; Barbara Linde, Wichita; Allison Coles, Junction City; Cathy Johnson, Leawood; Carol Shantz, St. Louis, Mo. Second row: Jan Lohoefener (senior assistant), Liberty, Mo.; Elizabeth Hofmeister, Claflin; Marilyn Nance, Barrington, Ill.; Mary Womack, Kansas City; Mary Horton, Seattle, Wash.; Lydia Kimbrough, Lawrence. Bottom row: Coleen Tucker, Des Moines, Iowa; Sherri Heaney, Overland Park; Judy Patrick, Shawnee Mission; Janet Kipfer, Leawood; Verla Zimmer, Chappell, Nebr.; Linda Quackenbush, Kansas City, Mo. 16 CORBIN SOUTH, FOURTH FLOOR. Top row: Candy Kane, St. Louis, Mo.; Pam Snook, Amarillo, Tex.; Beth Dechant, Valley City, N. Dak.; Linda Schreiber, Topeka; Lynne Prouty, Newton; Sue McCue, Hutchinson; Judy Johnston, Topeka; Nancy Cox, Topeka; Betsy Strode, Bryan, Tex. Third row: Carol Iddings, Huntsville, Ala.; Brenda Miller, Ft. Leavenworth; Loraine Metcalf, Overland Park; Lynn Neudoerffer, Leawood; Sandy Cornett, Tulsa, Okla.; Joella Scott, Newton; Mario Hirk, La Grange, Ill.; Barbara Nash, La Grange, Ill. Second row: Sharon Kay Kirk, Mission; Gloria Edwards, Lawrence; Linda Phelps, Hinsdale, Ill.; Donna Jahn, Leavenworth; Jan Koenig, Shawnee Mission; Paula Siebert, Topeka; Charlotte Trowbridge, Basehor; Michelle Stafford, Topeka; Marilee Millett, Stanley. Bottom row: Jacquelynn Cordill, Kansas City; Andrea Tobin, Western Springs, Ill.; Jan Johnson, Marysville; Kathy Tompkins, Gardner; Pamela Crow, Topeka; Jackie Van Eman (senior assistant), Shawnee Mission; Connie Holford, Hutchinson; Sandy Johnson, Watertown, S. Dak.; Priscilla Krebs, Kansas City, Mo. CORBIN NORTH, FIFTH FLOOR. Top row: Adrienne Martasin, Shawnee Mission; Cindy Bartlow, Kansas City, Mo.; Susie Watkins, Leaven- worth; Susan Campbell, Albuquerque, N.M.; Mary Sonneborn, Lawrence; Carolyn Morrison, Salina. Third row: Kathy Hird, Lawrence; Linda Smith, Chicago, Ill.; Diane Ruga, Leavenworth; Jan Olsen, Topeka; Vicki Black, Hiawatha; Elise Biery (counselor), Kansas City; Candie Heavin, Overland Park. Second row: Jane Borel, Falls Church, Va.; Barbara Begley, Wilmette, Ill.; Vivian Barber, Leavenworth; Jaryl Ambler, St. Louis, Mo.; Margaret Milam, Overland Park; Carol Blankenship, Lenexa. Bottom row: Stephanne Stone, Overland Park; Sally Miller, Midland, Tex.; Celia Read, Overland Park; Judy Marr, Park Ridge, Ill.; Debbie Ransom, Kansas City; Kathy Binns, Lawrence. CORBIN NORTH, SIXTH FLOOR. Top row: Rachel Lee Ochs, Hoisington; Linda Briery, Topeka; Pamela Law, Ft. Leavenworth; Linda Parton, Mullinville; Rosemary Luthi, Topeka; Judie Severtson, Billings, Mont.; Cam Vinz, Shawnee Mission; Linda Bruning, Robinson. Second row: Linda Boone (senior assistant), Seattle, Wash.; Jan Rogoff, Kansas City; Nancy Riss, Shawnee Mission; Sara Pyle, Kenton, Ohio; Rita Bower, Shawnee Mission; Ann Mc- Gough, Wichita; Jan Carson, Derby. Bottom row: Susan Poley, Wichita; Jo Ellen Price, Kansas City, Mo.; Linda Lemons, Topeka; Janet Nothnagel, Kansas City; Becky Herold, Great Bend; Julie Reed, Omaha, Nebr.; Brenda Bounous, Wichita. I CORBIN NORTH, SEVENTH FLOOR. Top row: Donna Schafer, Wichita; Kathy Richey, Erie; Paula Schmidt, Little River; Cindy Craig, Prairie Village; Ginger Ross, Wichita; Barbara Russell, Wichita; Pam Castor, Kansas City; Carol Schoenbeck, St. Louis, Mo. Second row: Barbara Chapman, Fort Belvoir, Va.; Dale Simons, La Grange, Ill.; Sue Snowden, Atchison; Linda Kay Riedel, Jackson, Mich.; Sandi Smith, St. Louis, Mo.; Jan Merritt, Leaven- worth; Jennifer Nilsson (counselor), Chicago Heights, Ill. Bottom row: Mary Somogyi, St. Louis, Mo.; Sarah Dale, Garden City; Terry Ryan, Medicine Lodge; Shari Rich, Sioux Falls, S.D.; Kathy Dawson, Russell; Tresia Ramsey, Russell; Ellen Tyler, Kansas City. GERTRUDE SELLARDS PEARSON, CROSSBAR. Top row: Ruth Ellen Hunter, Great Bend; Janice Horigan, Prairie Village; Tammy Dutton, Colby; Sara Beagle, Boulder, Colo.; Kathy Pirtle, Wichita; Tanya Lewis, Kinsley; Kay Bozeman, Akron, Ohio; Marsha Taylor, Prairie Village. Second row: Sue Mellgren, Leawood; Mary Taylor, Kinsley; Nancy Kingry, Kinsley; Dayle Bower, Chicago, Ill.; Rose Marie Boyns, Kansas City; Esther Tis- hauer, Prairie Village; Astrid Lemme, Overland Park; Jo Ann Wooden, Chicago, Ill.; Harriet S. Loney, Kansas City. Bottom row: Margery ( Mardy) Lodwick, Ft. Madison, Ia.; Mary Lillard, Salina; Beth Lindquist, Wichita; Beth Oakley, Salina; Molly Melhorn, Ft. Madison, Ia.; Joanne Bos, Evanston, Ill.; Lucy Hiltabrand, Bloomington, Ill.; Kaylene Blythe, Uniontown. GERTRUDE SELLARDS PEARSON EAST, GROUND FLOOR. Top row: Cynthia J. McCuen, Winnetka, Ill.; Jennifer Clader, Winnetka, Ill.; Susan Whitehill, Marshalltown, Ia.; Nancy Wilson, Mission; Pat McNinch, Shawnee Mission; Terry Knowles, Bloomfield Hills, Mich.; Laurie Davies, Park Ridge, Ill.; LeAnn McGee, Dodge City. Fourth row: Susan Meyer, Shawnee Mission; Charlotte Moss, Burden; Nancy Hardin, Lincoln, Nebr.; Jane Howard, Prairie Village; Donna Robinson, Topeka; Cathleen Richards, Shawnee Mission; Nancy Crawford, Ogden, Utah. Third row: Margaret Gille, Prairie Village; Pook Coolidge, Omaha, Nebr.; Jan Fenner, Wellington, Mo.; Kathy Fewin, Kansas City; Anita Mishler, Sabetha; Tricia Haggart, Sa- lina; Kay Vratil, Lamed; Kathy Ackerman, Lamed. Second row: Joyce Dimick, Atchison; Cathy Carver, Kansas City; Linda Allbritten, Prairie Village; Sandra Cornell, Lincoln, Nebr.; Judy Chaffee, Salina; Gloria Moss, Shaker Heights, Ohio; Pain Cook, Kansas City. Bottom row: Barbara Deetjen, Clay Center; Patricia Cooke, Billings, Mont.; Pamela Matthey, St. Louis, Mo.; Carol Chambers, Shawnee Mission; Jane A. Fieser, Clearwater; Fiona S. Cowan, Shawnee Mission. 18 GERTRUDE SELLARDS PEARSON EAST, FIRST FLOOR. Top row: Joan Oroke, Wichita; Janis Ogrizovich, Kansas City, Mo.; Sandi Os- good, Prairie Village; Diane Deffenbaugh, Belleville; Diana Anholt, Independence, Mo.; Judy McGee, Raytown, Mo.; Janet Naylor, Longmont, Colo.; Ann Stolte, Ludell; Linda Van Compernolle, Topeka. Fourth row: Cindy Morgan, Kansas City; Mary Penny, Garden City; Pam Ferguson, Alton, Ill.; Shery Huegel, Wellington; Diane Wiksten, Topeka; Pans Donhowe, Prairie Village; Ruanne Farley, Leawood; Barby Thomas, Pryor, Okla. Third row: Diana Lynn Perdue, Austin, Tex.; Nancy Capper, Ottawa; Sue Ashmore, Sioux City, Ia.; Lair MacLean, Shawnee Mission; Denice Warden, Tecumseh, Nebr.; Debra DeMoss, Wellington; Linda Kay Croman, Shawnee Mission; Dian Deutsch, Hoisington; Pam Fankhauser, Lyons. Second row: Judi Diebolt, Atchison; Janet Pappas, Prairie Village; Judy Pankratz, Marion; Jeannie Lane, Anthony; Linda Lu Antenen, Basine; Susie Paproth, Edwardsville, Ill.; Cindy Miller, Florissant, Mo.; Doris Jean O ' Hara, Independence, Mo. Bottom row: Georgi Anna Veail, Wellington; Sandy Arbuthnot, Belleville; Linda Karen Miller, Kansas City; Claire Ellen Ditchfield, Florissant, Mo.; Julie Anne Vering, Casper, Wyo.; Beth McBride, Topeka; Nancy Strafer, Evanston, Ill.; Renetta Engles, Ottawa. GERTRUDE SELLARDS PEARSON WEST, FIRST FLOOR. Top row: Joanne Gebhart, Salina; Judy Handley, Shawnee Mission; Kathy Reeder, Shawnee Mission; Norma Showalter, Tucson, Ariz.; Vashti Winterburg, Merritt Island, Fla.; Nancy Taylor, Lawrence; Mary Holman, Shawnee Mission; Jan Nichols, Shawnee Mission. Fourth row: Gail Skaggs, Pratt; Carol Hoover, Mission; Martha Hodson, Leawood; Joyce Goering, Moundridge; Carol-Ann Seaton, Gary, Ind.; Marilyn Goldberg, Shawnee Mission; Janice Gold, Shawnee Mission. Third row: Susan Wagner, Webster Groves, Mo.; Barbara Mize, Atchison; Anne Putnam, Salina; Donna Marie Holmes, Overland Park; Cathy Zimmerman, Kirkwood, Mo.; Belva Boxum, Great Bend; Cindy Hartzell, Houston, Tex.; Sharon Hildebrand, Lorraine. Second row: Glenna Johnson, Lawrence; Patti Henmi, Kirkwood, Mo.; Joyce Brollier, Moscow; Jane Goch- nauer, Prairie Village; Claudia Harsh, Prairie Village; Carol May, Mission; Deborah Aitken, Kearney, N.J. Bottom row: Judy Hardman, Salina; Janet Hopmann, Webster Groves, Mo.; Andy Armbruster, Glendale, Mo.; Kayzene Harris, Wichita; Janet Dreiling, Seneca; Sheryl Wilson, Great Bend; Diane Meyer, Hutchinson; Judy L. Hobson, Sunnyvale, Calif. GERTRUDE SELLARDS PEARSON EAST, SECOND FLOOR. Top row: Eileen Morris, Sheridan, Wyo.; Cindi Willis, Overland Park; Sue Prince, Shawnee Mission; Susan Elliott, Liberal; Sherry Roy, San Francisco, Calif.; Louise Montre, Topeka; Bekki Harris, Overland Park; Judy Jarrell, Prairie Village; Laura Kennedy, Jacksonville, Fla. Fourth row: Jan Bachrach, Omaha, Nebr.; Trilla Reagor, Bartlesville, Okla.; Joan Sandell, Manhattan; Annette Simkins, Overland Park; Sherry Schroeder, Inman; Rene Bartcher, Hutchinson; Debbie Doak, Overland Park; Wendy Berg, Shawnee Mission. Third row: Kathy Finholm, Prairie Village; Cindy Stanion, Pratt; Elyse Winick, Hollywood, Fla.; Bobbi Bergman, Lebanon; Juliann Mann, Beloit; Mary Lippitt, Wichita; Marcia Wartman, Bremerton, Wash. Second row: Lynne Horwitz, Topeka; Darby Nelson, Bartlesville, Okla.; Barbara Bailey, Bartlesville, Okla.; Peggie Early, Kirkwood, Mo.; Jennifer Riley, Evanston, Ill.; Cynthia Sinclair, Lawrence; Terry Rohey, Salina; Carol Young, Parkville, Mo. Bottom row: Donna Rhodes, Madison; Pamela White, Winfield; Muriel Lee Wood, Pittsburg; Gaynelle Vansandt, Harrisonville, Mo.; Nancy Elder, Topeka; Marsha Rhodes, Overland Park; Dianne Duncan, Omaha, Nebr. 19 GERTRUDE SELLARDS PEARSON WEST, SECOND FLOOR. Top row: Joyce Ann Kanning, Lancaster; Elizabeth Ann Barnes, Kenilworth, Ill.; Judith Ann Dellinger, Wilmore; Kay Kauffman, Kansas City, Mo.; S uzie Bear, Wichita; Marcia Kay Sutter, Effingham; Mary Beth Lees, Kansas City, Mo.; Nancy Witherspoon, Kansas City, Mo. Fourth row: Susan Leckband, Salina; Karen Hacker, Huntington, N.Y.; Sandy Hoyt, Kansas City, Mo.; Susie Ashline, Keokuk, Ia.; Sue Robertson, Kansas City, Mo.; Donna Lindsey, Liberal; Leslie Jennewein, St. Louis, Mo. Third row: Judy Arline Winsor, Perry; Barbara Korff, Kirkwood, Mo.; Jo Hatter, Linn; Connie Baker, Kirkwood, Mo.; Elizabeth C. Riggs, St. Louis, Mo.; Peggy Hundley, St. Louis, Mo.; Sherry Miller, Salina; Charlotte Bentley, Tulsa, Okla. Second row: Pat McCall, Raytown, Mo.; Suzie Wilson, Overland Park; Cheryl Koch, Liberal; Tanya Black, Tucson, Ariz.; Gigi Kelley, Mission Hills; Peggy Kuhn, Russell; Francie Horton, Wichita. Bottom row: Toni Garcia, Overland Park; Mari- lyn Murphy, Topeka; Peggy Ashland, Rogers, Ark.; Pam Heyman, Ulysses; Judy McBride, Overland Park; Mary Willingham, Kirkwood, Mo.; Cindy Kreuzberger, Overland Park. GERTRUDE SELLARDS PEARSON EAST, THIRD FLOOR. Top row: Lucy Renard, Prairie Village; Shirley Stegge, Independence, Mo.; Sandy Symons, Onaga; Mary Madge Evans, Baldwin, N.Y.; Faye Pincus, Shawnee Mission; Billee Kirkland, El Dorado; Carol Foster, Dodge City; Karen Jean Kinnan, Caldwell; Linda Lea Kerby, Leawood. Fourth row: Karen Lyerla, Overland Park; Harriette Stallworth, Hartselle, Ala.; Julie Boutross, Lea- wood; Peggy Petersen, Leawood; Cathy Tucker, Wichita; Nancy Flint, Kwajalein, Marshall Islands; Sharon Setser, Kirkwood, Mo.; Mary Ann Moore, Sa- lina; Becky McLaughlin, London, Eng.; Paula Payne, Prairie Village. Third row: Dee Folbre, Sharon Springs; Becky Miles, Hill City; Twila Johnson, Cimarron; Naomi Smith, Horton; Shari Kast, St. Louis, Mo.; Sherry Kelly, Prairie Village; Mary Ann Boyle, Great Bend; Anne Jordan, Kansas City; Susy Bohn, Overland Park. Second row: Carol Pishny (senio r assistant), Blue Rapids; Karla Kolins, Hobbs, N.M.; Judy Farley, Leawood; Linda McHenry, Kirkwood, Mo.; Michele Forster, Salina; Alice England, Topeka; Pam Gorsuch, Wichita; Sharon Staples, Omaha, Nebr. Bottom row: Nancy A. Her- rick, Northfield, Ill.; Gracie M. Nelson, Topeka; Shari A. Tarbet, Leavenworth; Beverly Snedecor, Rhodes, Ia.; Barbara Blee, Kansas City; Joan Finlay, Wichita; Patricia Theno, Bonner Springs; Sue Strejc, Raytown, Mo.; Beth McRo bbie, Topsham Air Force Station, Me. GERTRUDE SELLARDS PEARSON WEST, THIRD FLOOR. Top row: Cynthia Raley, Liberal; Diane K. Morrison, Cheyenne, Wyo.; Jeraldine Hansen, Raytown, Mo.; Eileen Brewer, Valentine, Ariz.; Gloria K. Nelson, Overland Park; Gayle Burrow, Haven; Nancy Brown, Oak Park, Ill.; Tish John- son, Kansas City, Mo.; Cathy Brown, Tulsa, Okla. Third row: Julee Cornelius, Overland Park; Nancy Childers, Topeka; Susan Brown, O ' Fallon, Ill.; Linda White, Kansas City, Mo.; Connie Eller, Olathe; Betsy Varney, Leawood; Eugene Pfvetze, Shawnee Mission; Cheryl Mathews, Winfield. Second row: Joyce Brownlee, St. Louis, Mo.; Ruby Frank, Clarendon Hills, Ill.; Nancy Lee Pierson, Topeka; Pidge Rogers, Kansas City, Mo.; Barbara TenEyck, Lea- wood; Sarah Brumback, Butler, Mo.; Kathy Myers, Overland Park; Nancy Roberts, Chanute; Linda Davies, Lebo. Bottom row: Ellen Holtsberg, Wil- mette, Ill.; Karen Elledge, Mason City, Ia.; Nancy Bishop, Wilmington, Ohio; Judith Hubbard, Overbrook; Chris Prather, St. Louis, Mo.; Maureen Murphy, St. Louis, Mo.; Nancy Pennington, Chanute; Mary Martin, Overland Park. 20 GERTRUDE SELLARDS PEARSON EAST, FOURTH FLOOR. Top row: Ruthanne Hennessy, Hannibal, Mo.; Carol Kraybill, Liberal; Marsha Groom, Overland Park; Lynne Scheufele, Prairie Village; Karen Krivo, El Paso, Tex.; Cynthia Lingelbach, Carthage, Mo.; Ann Brenner, Overland Park; Becky Brackett, Prairie Village; Anita Markley, Lawrence. Fourth row: Veda J. Monday, Kansas City; Mary Garvin, St. John; Susan J. Gilbert, Overland Park; Sharon K. Jantz, Copeland; Linda Ingram, Bonner Springs; Karen Burcham, Bonner Springs; Cheryl K. Burnet, Oklahoma City, Okla.; Dana Chris- tine Brekke, Prairie Village. Third row: Susan Plimpton, Kansas City; Regina Markillie, Jacksonville, Ill.; Claudia Hamlin, Shawnee Mission; Pam Brown, Independence, Mo.; Cathy Lehman, Glencoe, Ill.; Laurie Thomas, Wilmette, Ill.; Margaret Ann Machir, Independence, Mo.; Barbara Haglund, Raytown, Mo.; Marli Eisler, Davenport, Ia. Second row: Penny Lamb, Hutchin son; Libby Hull, Lubbock, Tex.; Brenda Yoshimoto, Kekaha, Kauai, Ha.; Paula Fujisaki, Kansas City; Sue Foster, Cincinnati, Ohio; Debbie Foster, Prairie Village; Linda Jennings, Overland Park; Virginia Lynn Godfrey, Lombard, Ill. First row: Anita Herrmann, Wichita; Leslie Layman, O ' Fallon, Ill.; Judy Frey, Topeka; Kathy Brockman, Raytown, Mo.; Sue Carroll, Prairie Village; Mary Westerhaus, Marion; Pat Hall, Great Bend. GERTRUDE SELLARDS PEARSON WEST, FOURTH FLOOR. Top row: Ilene Cederberg, Manhattan; Pat Machholz, Chillicothe, Mo.; Ja- niece McMillan, Erie; Mary J. Tudor, Shawnee Mission; Jane Cline, Iowa City, Ia.; Cindy Stuart, McPherson; Uraina E. Sewell, Kansas City; Patti Spen- cer, Overland Park; Maggie Foran, Arlington, Va. Fourth row: Chris Carmain, Topeka; Molly McCray, Shawnee Mission; Susan Reed, Chicago, Ill.; Ginny Longley, Chicago, Ill.; Buffie McCoy, Winfield; Cheryl Nusbaum, Kirkwood, Mo.; Betty Wilkinson, Frontenac, Mo.; Pam Woodward, Overland Park. Third row: Donna Coleman, Shawnee Mission; Zandra Sommer, Kirkwood, Mo.; Vicki Solberg, Shawnee Mission; Dana Smith, Shawnee Mission; Floren Polis, Westchester, Ill.; Susan Carson, Shawnee Mission; Brenda Cole, Langdon. Second row: Vickie Burleigh, Wichita; Terri Shire, Richmond; Linda Lundberg, Manhattan; Claudia Cassity, Rushville, Mo.; Carol Buckman, Exeter, Calif.; Marilyn Collier, Tulsa, Okla.; Donna Shrader, Salina; Cheryl Whitsitt, Prairie Village. First row: Sally Sue Mauk, Douglass; Pamela Budd, Emporia; Linda Loyd, Ottawa; Linda L. Carr, Sugar Creek, Mo.; Cheryl Ann Mansur, Frontenac, Mo.; Rebecca Massey, Olathe; Suzi Teegarden, Overland Park. OLIVER NORTH, THIRD FLOOR. Top row: Linda Lee, Overbrook; Sandy Millsap, Kansas City; Linda Ryan, Prairie Village; Cynthia Meier, Kansas City, Mo.; Anita Macek, Shawnee Mission; Vina Conklin, Kansas City, Mo.; Debby Begel, Shawnee Mission; Alice Berggren, Sabetha; Margaret Linton, Leavenworth. Fourth row: Betsy Bill, Wichita; Valerie Cook, Shawnee Mission; Janet Bass, Topeka; Mary Mills, Topeka; Bonnie Miscevich, Kansas City; Patti Murphy, Conway Springs; Vicki Anderson, Russell; Cathie Muell (counselor), Des Moines, Ia. Third row: Susie Dupre, Lawrence; Beth Afton, Denver, Colo.; Theresa Zellers, Kansas City; Pam Withers, Kansas City; Linda Arbuthnot, Kansas City; Candy Allen, Philadelphia, Pa.; Joy Allen, Newton. Second row: Christy Bell, Shawnee Mission; Judy Barsky, Kansas City, Mo.; Cynthia Desilet, Concordia; Dianne Cargill, Great Bend; Lee Ann Spivey, Wichita; Alice Townsley, Russell; Marion Lippincott, Mulvane; Cindy Van Slyck, Topeka. Bottom row: Pam Smith, Ottawa; Meridee Phillips, Overland Park; Suzie Voege, Alton, Ill.; Phyllis Wetmore, Wichita; Mary Diepenbrock, Shawnee Mission; Marla Vantzelfde, Clearwater; Jane Foss, Great Bend. 21 OLIVER SOUTH, THIRD FLOOR. Top row: Marilyn Bowman, Merriam; Linda Pilliard, St. Louis, Mo.; Jane Waldron, Colby; Diana Kohr, Sa- lina; Kathi Walden, Hoxie; Cindy Heldman, Overland Park; Marsha McRae, Wichita; Bobbie Doner, Baltimore, Md. Fourth row: Anne Pearse, Nevada, Mo.; Vickie Mahan, Prairie Village; Ruby Betty, Hazelton; Laurie Macdonald, Winnetka, Ill.; Loni Sumpter, Tulsa, Okla.; Mary McNew, Overland Park; Pat Tidwell, Tulsa, Okla. Third row: Kathy Hill, Ottawa; Becky Owen, Lawrence; Paula Forsyth, Medicine Lodge; Vicki DeShon, Denver,Colo.; Carol Warnock, Wellsville; Judy Larson, Topeka; Mary Pat Carson, Demarest, N.J.; Linda Rainbolt, Prairie Village. Second row: Lynne Birncy, Miami, Fla.; Kathy Norman, Overland Park; Pam Poynter, Clinton, Mo.; Pam Azzolin, Oak Park, Ill.; Patricia Truskett, Lakin; Sheri Irwin, Vandenberg AFB, Calif.; Evie Masterson, Paola. Bottom row: Shaiy Maben, Wichita; Connie Mason, Arkansas City; Delrayne Shaw, Arkansas City; Lyn Haydon, Kansas City, Mo.; Linda Sands, Kansas City; Susie Wassenberg, Topeka; Susan Baimacombe, Kansas City, Mo. OLIVER NORTH, FOURTH FLOOR. Top row: Mady Grigg, Lawrence; Halina Pawl, Topeka; Chris Collister, Lawrence; Millie Young, Topeka; Shannon Hyten, St. Louis, Mo.; Kathi Fueyo, Omaha, Nebr.; Vivian Piper, Topeka; Cache Seitz, Leavenworth. Fourth row: Cheryl Tongish, McDonald; Sandy Kopetz, Kansas City, Mo.; MeeMee Senecal, Wichita; Joey O ' Neill, St. Louis, Mo.; Phyllis Culham, Junction City; Jeanne Worthington, Tecumseh; Sara Allison, Topeka. Third row: Linda Sue Moss, Wilmette, Ill.; Heather Ann Joyce, Topeka; Patti S. Robinson, Shawnee :Mission; Toni Mee, Shawnee Mission; Kathryn Kempthorne, Manhattan; Annette Westermann, Kansas City; Mary Ellen Pitts, Shawnee Mission; Kathy Delp, Topeka. Second row: Mary Hockcr, Manhattan; Jerry Kay Boggs, Basehor; Suzan R. Akers, Ft. Scott; Janet Sadauskas, Prairie Village; Cushi Sorrentino, Manhasset, N.Y.; Alice Brown, Great Bend; Linda Hambleton, Overland Park. Bottom row: Carol Vernell Ehrhardt, Webster Groves, Mo.; Coly Jeffers, Caseyville, Ill.; GeGe Gordon, Wichita; Kristi Kloehr (counselor), Coffeyville; Mary Harmon, Wichita; Marty Barry, Bonner Springs; Jodi Kunkel, Ft. Leavenworth. OLIVER SOUTH, FOURTH FLOOR. Top row: Carole Elliott, Shawnee Mission; Mindy McNaughton, Wilmette, Ill.; Pat Walker, Prairie Village; Kim Freshwater, Ridgefield, Conn.; Belinda Ross (counselor), Shawnee Mission; Linda Hinsch, Piqua, Ohio; Ginger Light, Liberal; Suzanne Cherot, In- dependence; Linda Hybarger, Independence. Third row: Pam Haynes, Abilene; Debbie Robertson, Prairie Village; L. Anne Smith, Topeka; Kathy Schiavo, Prairie Village; Karen Lea Mawby, Kansas City, Mo.; Kris Cross, Ft. Worth, Tex.; Cathy Dunaway, Topeka; Mary Goddard, Overland Park; June Mitchell, Clay Center; Linda McCrerey, Washington, D.C. Second row: Betty Malone, Lyons; Jane Fraser, Overland Park; Marilyn Baltz, Millstadt, Ill.; Susan Sheldon, Leavenworth; Martha Sortor, Kansas City; Nancy Corbin, Overland Park; Karen M. Uplinger, Syracuse, N.Y.; Pam Pratt, Topeka; Sally Viot, Leawood. First row: Sharla K. Strait, Topeka; Vikki Valentine, Clay Center; Janet Hetherington, Winfield; Judy McConnell, Lawrence; Sami Haskins, Leawood; Harriet Franks , Kansas City; Cindy Barrett, Ft. Leavenworth; LeAnn Stuewe, Lawrence; Betty Correll, Tulsa, Okla. AIM 22 OLIVER NORTH, FIFTH FLOOR. Top row: Janie Clements, Harper; Pat Mullen, Shawnee Mission; Terry Jungbluth, Shawnee Mission; Connie Finch, Bartlesville, Okla.; Lauren Clark, Wamego; Minnie McDaris, Kansas City; Janice Wittmeyer, Ottawa; Anne Smythe, Goodland; Peggy Hoins, Leavenworth. Third row: Ann Johnston (counselor), Shawnee Mission; Camilla Nesselrode, Kansas City; Cathy Meredith, Overland Park; Mary Kay Knief, Garden City; Cynthia A. Smith, Lamed; Rebecca Susan Barrett, Sewell, N.J.; Mary Knabe, Mission; Deanna Goad, Junction City. Second row: Barbara Gille, Kansas City; Judy Underwood, Lawrence; Candy Caruthers, Kansas City; Peggy Fulton, Shawnee Mission; Sally Fleeson, Ft. Bragg, N.C.; Carol Wagner, Shawnee Mission; Marcia Jones, Raleigh, N.C.; Carolyn Wingate, Topeka; Jean Evans, Shawnee Mission. Bottom row: Teresa Mather, Prairie Village; Trisha Harms, Kansas City; Joyce Sorensen, Wichita; Stephie Stephens, Arlington Heights, Ill.; Cynthia Fields, Prairie Village; Patricia Scott, Topeka; Rose Owens, Lamed; Barbara Kane, Topeka; Cindy Mullen, Leavenworth. OLIVER SOUT H, FIFTH FLOOR. Top row: Doris Diver, Chanute; Joanie Nuessen, Quincy, Ill.; Tish Ferraro, Topeka; Connie Leveritt, To- peka; Nancy Oberg, Clay Center; April Walstad, Joplin, Mo.; Sally Ormsby, Emporia; Nancy Gillespie, Overland Park. Third row: Ann Graham, Em- poria; Sara Gehlmann, Western Springs, Ill.; Connie McCullough, Kansas City; Lynda Mikuta, North Riverside, Ill.; Nancy Miller, Shawnee Mission; Debbie Spurck, Shawnee Mission; Vi-Ann Tate, Omaha, Nebr.; Ramona Terry, Shawnee Mission; Ann Butterfield, Clay Center. Second row: Karna Ostrum, Shaker Heights, Ohio; Joyce Jacoby, Topeka; Jane Ann Reece, Scandia; Kathy Turner, Gardner; Diana Timbelman, St. Francis; Kathy Hampel, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Gail Tanigawa, Lihue, Hawaii; Diane Beyer, Lyons. Bottom row: Jan Flanagan, Kansas City, Mo.; Kris Peterson, Brooklyn, N.Y.; Cristi Smith, Wichita; Bev Ruliffson, Western Springs, Ill.; Ann Ayers, Seattle, Wash; Marilyn Newell, Palo Alto, Calif.; Kathy Redenbaugh, Gardner; Maybette Zupko, Yonkers, N.Y. OLIVER NORTH, SIXTH FLOOR. Top row: Becky Besse, Overland Park; Cathy Stone, Galesburg, Ill.; Karen Anderson, Hays; Linda Thome, Lawrence; Judy Mendelsohn, Prairie Village; Jea Spade, Zenda; Nancy Ryger, Beresford, S.D.; Carla Morgan, Shawnee Mission. Third row: Gloria Strue- bing, El Dorado; Glenda Sowders, Kansas City, Mo.; Sara Waxman, St. Louis, Mo.; Suzanne Leone, Oxon Hill, Md.; Carol Eubank, Shawnee Mission; Mary Ellis, Rapid City, S.D.; Harriet Shultz (senior assistant), Overland Park; Cheryl Walker, Wichita; Marcia Alderson, Lawrence. Second row: Carol Spetner, St. Louis, Mo.; Pam Russell, Iola; Marcia Skahan, Columbus; Rita Jo Argabright, Topeka; Cindy Brocker, Prairie Village; Linda Walker, Minne- apolis, Minn.; Bonnie Hodges, Pottstown, Pa.; Doris Franzmeier, Albert City. Ia. Bottom row: Emily Foster, Concordia; Linda Caldwell, Olathe; Peg Sleight, Kingston, N.Y.; Patti McGill, El Dorado; Valerie Streb, Chicago, Ill.; Leslie Ann McElfresh, Osage City; Carol Leek, Ft. Scott; Nancy Gjengdahl, Leavenworth. 23 OLIVER SOUTH, SIXTH FLOOR. Top row: Linda Kay Farris, Kansas City; Rita Zimbelman, St. Francis; Joan E. Irvine, Roslyn, N.Y.; Susan C. Hayman, Wilmette, Ill.; Zetta C. Jones, Kansas City; Pam Reinhardt, Kansas City; Pat Hubbard, Wichita. Third row: Jodi Berry, Leavenworth; Kackie Baer, Lawrence; Nancy Ruppenthal, Topeka; Sue Menke (counselor), Webster Groves, Mo.; Vickie Adams, Wichita; Ellen Vance, Short Hills, N.J.; Aggie Norris, Bartlesville, Okla.; Paula Connett, Lawrence. Second row: Jerrie Rea, Kansas City, Mo.; Dinah Aureli, Topeka; Cindy Penney, Topeka; Lissa Hyndman, Alton, Ill.; Meg Williams, Quincy, Ill.; Blythe Huston, Wichita; Lannette Lansrud, Leavenworth. Bottom row: Becky Phillips, Lakin; Rose- mary Shields, Salina; Gaila Folk, Lawrence; Mary Oakley, Salina; Pans Wilson, Topeka; Gaye Lynne Northrup, St. Francis; Rosalyn Janet Hooks, Shreve- port, La. OLIVER NORTH, SEVENTH FLOOR. Top row: Julie Stark, Kansas City, Mo.; Heather Heaton, Winnetka, Ill.; Phyllis Eidson, Kansas City; Gail Martin, St. Louis, Mo.; Pam Jones, San Francisco, Calif.; Nancy Knox, Lawrence; Sally Stark, Lawrence; Judy Bowker, Bonner Springs. Second row: Barbara Burton, Syracuse, Marti Stewart, Vancouver, Can.; Nancy Harmon, Wichita; Cheri Salomon, Wichita; Melinda Keeney, St. Louis, Mo.; Diane Mayes, Kansas City; Sherry Foote, Wichita. Bottom row: Aileen Akin, Shawnee; Marty Meschke, Garden City; Shirley Watson, Wichita; Nancy Southern, Ellinwood; Gretchen Woodward, Kansas City; Hellen Herbel, Lyons; Onnallee Zimmerman, Dodge City; Sherry Darling, Scottsdale, Ariz. OLIVER SOUTH, SEVENTH FLOOR. Top row: Gloria Constantine, Ames, Ia.; Betsy Norris, Colorado Springs, Colo.; Carol Sackett, Mission; Marcia Westfall, Halstead; Laurie Inncs, Warrensburg, Mo.; Mary Ann Heimann, Overland Park; Nancy Schoenbeck (counselor), St. Louis, Mo. Third row: Kathie Applegate, Huntington Beach, Calif.; Jan Houser, Topeka; Sherri Holtke, Wichita; Kathy McConnell, Kansas City, Mo.; Kris Kessinger, Junction City; Julie Banning, Brookfield, Mo. Second row: Wanda Winemiller, Kansas City, Mo.; Cindy Trotier, Belleville, Ill.; Faith Kuhns, Overland Park; Jenny Ainsworth, Colorado Springs, Colo.; Karen Vineyard, Marysville; Margaret Laidig, Chatham, N.J.; Kathy Hinckley, St. Joseph, Mo. Bottom row: Carol Hinshaw, Wichita; Sheri Spivey, Wichita; Margie Hummer, Hinsdale, Ill.; Barbara Sutherland, Atlanta, Ga.; Susie Curteman, Olathe; Mary Lou Wiles, Topeka; Jo Dunnick, St. Louis, Mo. 24 OLIVER NORTH, EIGHTH FLOOR. Top row: Jann Sween, Bonner Springs; Martha Burchell, Wichita; Ruthe Baugh, Hutchinson; Linda Robeson, Galena; Vicki Pyle, Kingsdown; Marilyn Buller, Lawrence; Gwen Sutphen, Yakima, Wash.; Irene Dunavan, Overland Park. Fourth row: Sheila Lane, Salina; Barby Fisk, Salina; Julie Pittenger, Manhattan; Vikki Potts, Aurora, Colo.; Cindy Goossen, Topeka; Evelyn Hogue, Topeka; Marquis Ozias, Denver, Colo. Third row: Francie Feinberg, Shawnee Mission; Carolyn Snook, McLouth; Niki Wissman (counselor), Washington, D.C.; Susan Adams, Wichita; Paula Taylor, Kansas City; Shirley Noble, Topeka; Tommye Collier, Lawrence; Kay Replogle, Lawrence. Second row: Glenna Stinson, Kansas City, Mo.; Bronna Leibowitz, Shawnee Mission; Janice Kessler, St. Louis, Mo.; Pat O ' Bryan, Parsons; Francie Hall, Kansas City; Sharon Briery, Topeka; Julie Yukimura, Lihue, Hawaii. Bottom row: Sandy Herrelson, Galena; Reagon O ' Neill, Overland Park; Deb Mathis, Wichita; Joyce Olson, Prairie Village; Vicki Wil- loughby, Overland Park; Kathy Sheppard, Lawrence. OLIVER SOUTH, EIGHTH FLOOR. Top row: Janet Barewin, Leawood; Judy Booker, Wichita; Dianne Bloomer, Collinsville, Ill.; Criss Pettie, Shawnee Mission; Marti Dodge, Shawnee Mission; Meredith Vincent, Kansas City, Mo.; Debbie Youngstrom, Des Moines, Ia.; Jean Hadley, Prairie Village. Third row: Barbara Lauter, Lawrence; Cheryl Morgan, Wichita; Debbie Young, Council G rove; Beth Fontron, Topeka; Cinde Shultz, Des Moines, Ia.; Dea Unruh, McPherson; Paula Logan, Alton, Ill.; Sally Doane, Lawrence; Kathy Cavert, Tulsa, Okla. Second row: Judy Peltzman, McPherson; Sue Spalding, Bonner Springs; Teresa Dull, Overland Park; JoAnn Schmisseur, Belleville, Ill.; Dixie Underwood, Lawrence; Pat Calahan, Garnett; Sharon Carter, Gar- nett; Candy Bonebright, Leawood. Bottom row: Sheila Williams, Tulsa, Okla.; Mary Marshall, Topeka; Karen Cochran, Wichita; Karen Bowers, Bon- ner Springs; Sue Lohoefener, Overland Park; Patricia McKenna, McPherson; Pat Lukans (senior assistant), Wichita; Jane Doll, Shawnee Mission. WWI ■wor 11•••• 11•111111, ■11■11111••■ VOW MINIIIIIMIM■ MILLER. Top row: Harriet Dunn, Overland Park; Peggy Sears, Rose Hill; Becky Wallower, Shawnee Mission; Melody Johnson, Paola; Mary Torrence, Topeka; Judy Lemley, Dwight. Third row: Delores Shafer, Caney; Cindy Grant, Leavenworth; Mary Thrapp, Independence, Mo.; Carolyn Watson, West Plains, Mo.; Catherine Weir, Wichita; Peggy Englebrake, Kansas City; Marilyn Rule, Ottawa. Second row: Donetta Skeens, Osawatomie; Dana Nelson, Belleville; Cinch Wicinski, Kansas City; Pamela Norris, Las Cruces, N.M.; Virginia Juergensen, Ellinwood; Karen Persinger, Lyndon. Bottom row: Kay A. Johnson, Council Bluffs, Ia.; Sandy Peavler, Topeka; Barbara Benskin, Wichita; Marilyn Whitesell, Shawnee Mission; Ruth Kolarik, Caldwell. 25 SELLARDS. Top row: Kathy Stevens, Kansas City, Mo.; Rose McClanahan, Parsons; Cecelia Wenger, Ontarioville, Ill.; Janet Byer, Hamlin; Janie Roberts, Coffeyville; Connie Traylor, Great Bend. Second row: Valda Aviks, Wichita; Janice Spellerberg, Raytown, Mo.; Linda Clark, Derby; Susan Kan- gas, Overland Park; Elizabeth Butler, Ottawa; Margaret MacDougall, Prairie Village; Nancy Simmons, Lawrence. Bottom row: Grace Ann Dexter, To- peka; Toni Ilefling, Haven; Suzanne Schardein, Great Bend; Kathy Brandes, Cheney; Jane Hoskinson, Oskaloosa; Nora Lowery, Mulvane. WATKINS. Top row: Susan Shaffer, Kinsley; Shirley Lyberger, Coffeyville; Marcia McMullen, Overland Park; Mary Ladesich, Shawnee Mission; Su- zanne Jouvenat, Columbus, Nebr.; Dixie Hiett, Haven; Linda Butler, Coffeyville; Aileen Anderson, Salina. Second row: Nancy Paschal, Wichita; Linda Johnson, Wichita; Marilyn Hommertzheim, Garden Plain; Margaret Holder, Guyana; Amy Gilliland, Overbrook; Doris Soden, Great Bend; Arlyss Baker, Ot- tawa. Bottom row: Hazel Henderson, Colony; Keryl Booth, Augusta; Phyllis Johnson, Salina; Jane McLaughlin, Wichita; Ruth Rademacher, Arkansas City; Virginia Austin, Parsons; Kay Rothenberger, Leavenworth; Jan Wagner, Richmond. ACACIA. Top row: Paul Jorgensen, Overland Park; Jack Hull, Liverpool, N.Y.; Paul R. Getto, Lawrence; Chris Berry, Colby. Second row: Nicholas Eliopoulos, Prairie Village; David Flora, Kansas City, Mo.; Jim Robertson, Independence; Terry D. Jones, Overland Park; Alvin J. Wright, Pawnee Rock. Bottom row: Larry Broockerd, Overland Park; Robert Parkison, Overland Park; Steven B. Tippit, Paola; David Hiatt, San Bernadino, Calif. 26 ALPHA EPSILON Pl. Top row: Marvin Cohen, Prairie Village; David Nemon, St. Louis, Mo.; Roger Fallek, Pr airie Village; Joseph Goodman, Over- land Park; Steven Press, Overland Park. Bottom row: Lawrence S. Deutch, Mission; Jonathan Ophir, Haifa, Israel; Oscar Mark Bassinson, Creve Coeur, Mo.; Bruce M. Fiman, University City, Mo. Not pictured: Howard Seigal, New York City, N.Y.; Mike Grand, New York City, N.Y.; Stephen Bresler, Ellenville, N.Y.; Les Cohn, Overland Park. ALPHA KAPPA LAMBDA. Top row: Larry McGuire, Lawrence; Rick Mundis, Overland Park; Gerry May, Shawnee Mission; Les Miller, Prairie Village; Craig Larson, Shawnee Mission; Doug Ward, Hutchinson; Doug Hacker, Leawood; Leland Engelbrecht, Trenton, N.J. Third row: Chad Lawton, Lawrence; Michael Sarras, Kansas City; Dave Gaughan, Independence; Jim Hower, St. Joseph, Mo.; Steve Cochran, Leawood; Steve Dumler, Russell; Larry Quinlan, Independence; Mike Litwin, Independence; Richard Jones, Leawood. Second rose: Stewart Birse, Huntington, N.Y.; Al Clinton, Lawrence; Russ Alderson, Prairie Village; Mike West, Lawrence; Paul Rocereto, Topeka; Jim Rose, Shawnee Mission; Don Walker, Shawnee Mission; Mike Orindgreff, Wichita. Bottom row: Randall Leffingwell, Wilmette, Ill.; Jeff Baxter, Great Bend; Dale Peterson, Topeka; Dave Dysart, Wichita; Steve Craig, Belton, Mo.; Bob Hudspeth, Leawood; Robert Richardson, Topeka; Ray Chandler, Kansas City, Mo, ALPHA TAU OMEGA. Top row: Phil Higdon, McPherson; Bill Resnik, Potwin; Mike Haggans, Nevada, Mo.; Richard Low, Wichita; Scott Brown, Wichita; Norm Fisher, Wichita; Bob McCulloh, Overland Park. Third row: Dick Hvale, La Grange, David Laney, Topeka; Arch Jones, Kansas City, Mo.; Dean Pearce, Mission; J. Kent Longenecker, Shawnee Mission; Tim Buckley, Wichita. Second row: Dave Hueben, Shawnee Mission; John Clark, Bartlesville, Okla.; Raymond Hagerman, Iola; Jim Nourse, Shawnee Mission; Michael P. Dickerson, Atchison; Douglas A. Meeker, Garden City; Dave Phelps, Lawrence. Bottom row: Bill Hertzler, Wichita; Steve D. Stone, Wichita; Burk Thompson, Wichita; Jack Bagby, Prairie Village; Michael B. Rugh, Abilene; J. Scott Weir, Glendale Heights, Ill.; Charles Miller, Overland Park. 27 BETA THETA Pl. Top row: Herbert A. Hartman, Jr., Lawrence; Russell E. Meier, Kansas City; Edward S. Murdock, Shawnee Mission; Dave Swift, Leavenworth; Mike Geiger, Leavenworth; Kirke E. Larson, Wamego. Second tow: Lynn Snelgrove, Tulsa, Okla.; John Nelson, St. Joseph, Mo.; Mark Scott, Topeka; Bob Floersch, Galesburg, Ill.; Jon Byers, Bartlesville, Okla.; Mike Hein, Merriam; Randy Page, Shawnee Mission. Bottom row: Christo- pher P. Hays, Prairie Village; Stan Pippin, Kansas City; John Mosier, Wichita; Steve Carmichael, Mulvane; Robert Colwell, Neodesha; George Jackson, Marion. DELTA CHI. Top row: Wally Buck, Wichita; Boyd J. Inman, Kansas City; G. Douglas Phillips, Parsons; Rusty Leffel, Prairie Village; Stephen Rob- bins, Parsons; William Colvin, Raytown, Mo.; J. D. Spencer, Hill City; Milton Gillespie, Hugoton. Second row: William Belobrajdic, Arma; David Hi- daka, Wichita; Jack Lucas, Lakin; Garry Eastwood, Kansas City; John Langley, Wichita; Bill Birney, Hill City; J. 0. Hughes, Kansas City. Bottom row: Bill Lorimer, Independence, Mo.; Gregory G. Gruber, Kansas City, Mo.; Greg Nicolet, Cimarron; Phillip T. Kraft, Salina; Gary A. Corner, Kansas City; Bruce A. Hocking, Salina; Brian A. Lane, Shawnee Mission; Fred W. Vaughan, Kansas City. Not pictured: Mark A. Hantla, Shawnee Mission. DELTA SIGMA PHI. Charles R. Boyd, II, Lawrence; David H. Carter, Overland Park; Jon K. Lowe, Topeka; Richard D. Haire, Kansas City, Mo. 28 DELTA TAU DELTA. Top row: John L. Wolfe, Roswell, N.M.; Stephen Smith, Lamed; Fred Abbott, Raytown, Mo.; Jerry Jeserich, Overland Park; Bob Nielson, Littleton, Colo.; Doug Gibson, Salina. Third row: Jim Hayes, Atwood; Richard Jerome Nininger, Nickerson; Richard Dummermuth, Marys- ville; Chuck Chowins, Leawood; Jim Morgan, Overland Park; Joe E. Grojean, Jacksonville, Ill.; Richard K. Bornkessel, Mission. Second row: Jim Pfeffer, Pratt; Bob Bowen, Leawood; Pete Combs, Leavenworth; Hal Goss, Leawood; Steven Holm, Prairie Village; Taylor Webb, Russell. Bottom row: Roy Askren, Junction City; Will Schubert, Great Bend; Mike Holder, Kansas City, Mo.; Steve McGiffert, Oklahoma City, Okla.; Bernie Shaner, Kansas City; Mike Waring, Wichita. Not pictured: David Porter, Kansas City. I DELTA UPSILON. Top row: Shay Bickel, Wichita; Brad E. Schulenberg, Leavenworth; Philip C. Feaster, Wellington; Roger G. Kathol, Wichita; J. David Nutt, Baldwin; Dale Evans, Russell; Larry B. Spikes, Garden City. Third row: John Keen, Shawnee Mission; Bill Woods, Salina; Chris Saricks, Lawrence; Mark Miller, Salina; Tom Poos, Salina; Andy Brandt, Wellington. Second row: Michael L. Knaub, Lincoln, Nebr.; Larry E. Scott, Emporia; Larry L. Rader, Greensburg; James D. McLaughlin, Wichita; Michael L. Graham, Great Bend; Richard L. Morrison, Salina; Don Farrington, Oswego. Bot- tom row: Steve Joyce, Ulysses; Randy Long, Salina; Dan Cott, Wichita; Ted M. Gardiner, Garden City; Mike Reeves, Concordia; Broc Blair, Oswego. KAPPA SIGMA. Top row: James Wilson, Salina; Mark Jarvis, Salina; Tom Hornbaker, Lawrence; Bill O ' Meara, Hartington, Nebr.; Tim Richardson, Salina; G. L. Patzowsky, Kiowa; Gary Davenport, Wellsville. Third row: Ron Woelk, Tribune; Bill Fischer, Valley Center; Phil Lovett, Wichita; Bill Bene- fiel, Downs; Bill Knox, Colorado Springs, Colo.; Chris Redmond, Wichita; Steve Brown, Cimarron; Terry Milberger, Russell. Second row: Don Hind- march, La Grange, Ill.; Chuck Smiley, Norton; Jeff Loyd, Kiowa; Steve Hollis, Fredonia; Hal Herd, Coldwater; Steve Neill, Clay Center; Bob Lohse, Prairie Village. Bottom row: Jay Longabach, Barrington; Mike Callahan, Prairie Village; William Killough, Ottawa; Mike Bishop, El Dorado; Lee Greever, Amarillo, Tex.; Hank Waeckerle, Salina; Jim Gilhousen, Norton. Not pictured: Daryl Klitotein, Prairie Village; Darold Longhofer, Marion; Phil Har- mon, T ulsa, Okla.; Mike Hageman, Tribune; Bob Williams, Garden City. 29 LAMBDA CHI ALPHA. Top row: Rodney Coday, Overland Park; Peter Roth, Lawrence; Vernon Jobson, Kansas City; Steven Nordstrom, Prairie Village; Ralph Carl, Prairie Village; Al Schoeneman, Sioux Falls, S.D.; Bill Tuley, Leawood; Chris Randall, Wichita. Second row: Stephen L. Twaddell, Shawnee Mission; Ralph Topham, Shawnee Mission; Larry Clark, Kansas City; Gerald M. Korsten, Mission; Dennis Comstock, Leawood; Donald G. Gibbs, Overland Park; Curt Byard, Salina. Bottom row: Dan Lynch, Little Rock, Ark.; Joe Welch, Anna; Ed Stephenson, Shawnee Mission; Robert L. Shiffman, Prairie Village; Quin C. Hostetler, Herrin, Ill.; Robert L. Nitschke, Kansas City. PHI DELTA THETA. Top row: Don Trotter, Bartlesville, Okla.; Bob Stoddard, Shawnee Mission; William W. Deter, Hays; Greg Knap, Olathe; Bob Clendenin, Shawnee Mission; Bob Pfanmiller, Shawnee Mission; Bob Arthur, Manhattan; Tony Dustman, Springfield, Mo. Second row: Bill Hicks, Kansas City; Doug Douville, Overland Park; Tom Jones, Topeka; Michael Doyle, Bartlesville, Okla.; Stephen Aldis, Fort Scott; Jim Sleeper, Alden; Bill Read, Coffeyville. Bottom row: Rick Durrett, Prairie Village; Robert McManan, Quincy, Ill.; David Awbrey, Hutchinson; Jon W. Tilton, Salina; David Ross, Arkansas City; Bo Darrah, Wichita; Steve Lukert, Sabetha; Lonnie Lee, Wichita. PHI GAMMA DELTA. Top row: John Robinson, Wichita; Robert Wasko, Kansas City; Richard T. Dawson, Wichita; John S. Tomson, Topeka; Buz Lukens, Wichita; Steve Nelson, Concordia; Eric J. Wisdom, Wichita; Harry James McLaughlin, Jr., Manhattan. Third row: Paul Miles, Wichita; Gregory Wait, Kansas City; Eddie Bryan, Topeka; Bruce M. McPherson, Topeka; Terry L. Clark, Bartlesville, Okla.; Bill Lupton, Wellington; Dennis Bar- ritt, Hutchinson. Second row: Sam D. Campbell, Lawrence; James A. Wise, Shawnee Mission; John D. Zongker, Wichita; Philip D. Patterson, Topeka; R. Edward Brausa, Topeka; Stephen C. Gans, Salina; Ken Clark, Salina; Sterling Farber, Kansas City, Mo. Bottom row: Galen L. Holston, Topeka; James R. Fritz, Kansas City; Robert L. Elkins, Oklahoma City, Okla.; Robert W. Harris, Lawrence; J. Michael Sutton, Bartlesville, Okla.; J. Ruttenfield, Pitts- burg; Jeff Davis, Topeka. 30 PHI KAPPA PSI. Top row: Craig Wilson, Shawnee Mission; Jim Newstadt, Kansas City, Mo.; John T. McNeill, Wichita; L. Larkin Billick II, Des Moines, Ia.; Tom Moreland, Bartlesville, Okla.; Spencer Kissell, Bartlesville, Okla.; Jack Paradise, Leawood; Tom Hyde, Kansas City, Mo. Third row: Bob Royer, Leawood; Mickey Allen, Lawrence; Mike Brady, Prairie Village; Jim Harrow, Mission; Jim Clancey, Prairie Village; Stephen Bubb, Topeka; Bill Gray, Chanute; Bill Bigsby, Omaha, Nebr.; Scott Barnes, Overland Park. Second row: Jack Rowlett, Paola; Pete DiGiovanni, Overland Park; John Smith, Hays; Milan Chilla, Hinsdale, Ill.; Steve Allen, Leawood; Bill Evans, Kansas City; Rodney Oelschlager, Marion; Steve Cushing, Hutchinson. Bottom row: William A. Newman, Bethesda, Md.; Donn M. Stevens, Overland Park; Roger Bain, Clarendon Hills, Ill.; Thomas M. Sinn, Fort Scott; Timothy Owen Scanlon, Kansas City, Mo.; James L. Gast, Paola; Rodrick H. Taylor, Hutchinson. PHI KAPPA SIGMA. Top row: Andy Chapman, Shawnee Mission; Dave McIntire, Paola; Jerry Ogilvie, Holton; John Schultz, Lawrence; Warren W. Wear, Raytown, Mo.; Dick Olsson, Shawnee Mission. Third row: Cliff Stewart, Emporia; Thomas Fotopulos, Wichita; Robert Turner, Shawnee Mission; Bill Graybill, Elkhart; Christopher Strong, Port Chester, N.Y.; Sam Cook, Sabetha; Tom Burdine, Shawnee Mission. Second row: Stephen Rush, Overland Park; Michael Watkins, Columbus; Steve Strahm, Sabetha; Michael Dempsey, Kansas City; Russell Sifers, Kansas City, Mo.; Dale Fisher, Tulsa, Okla. Bottom row: Mike Blake, Moberly, Mo.; Alan Purvis, St. Louis, Mo.; Mrs. Mildred Tinker, housemother, Great Bend; Art Olson, Leavenworth; Duane Betty, Emporia. PHI KAPPA TAU. Top row: Gaylord A. Frank, Russell; Terry L. Harvey, Kansas City; Gil Brown, St. Joseph, Mo.; Paul Baker, Kansas City, Mo.; Ted Graheck, Liberty. Second row: Bruce Broder, St. Louis, Mo.; Larry Walters, Newton; Kent Schell, Beloit; Larry Fencyk, Overland Park; Bill Crable, Overland Park; Lee C. Alloway, Hampton, Va. Bottom row: Jim Gencur, Shawnee Mission; Robert G. Hodle, Kansas City, Mo.; Steve Robinson, Shawnee Mission; Harold Fosmire, Shawnee Mission; Benjamin Harrison, Jr., Wichita. 31 PHI KAPPA META. Top row: Charles Anderson, Topeka; John Cady, Beloit; Dave Aggson, Larned; Micheal Tidwell, Mission; Michael Williamson, Overland Park; John Gillie, Bartlesville, Okla.; J. Stan Sexton, Topeka. Second row: Bob Hartman, Mission; Thomas Strutz, Leavenworth; Bill Van- Hecke, Kansas City, Mo.; Michael Welch, Independence; Michael Lafferty, Mission; Michael Giessel, Lamed. Bottom row: David Greenamyre, Leaven- worth; Jack O ' Connor, Leavenworth; Ronald Thies, Shawnee Mission; Kenneth S pain, Leavenworth; John Heinson, Kansas City. PI KAPPA ALPHA. Top row: Glenn A. Pool, Belleville, Ill.; Jack M. Paul, Liberal; Thomas E. Gleason, Ottawa; Robert W. Sneed, Henderson, Ky.; Larry W. Streib, Lawrence; Roger L. Davis, Prairie Village; Jim Cordonier, Kansas City; Paul Allan Jones, Beattie. Second row: Tom Smith, Lawrence; David Edgington, Olathe; John C. Moore, Omaha, Nebr.; Rollie Hoffman, Leawood; John Trees, Wichita; Richard W. Campbel l, Overland Park; Dale Tre- main, Lawrence. Bottom row: Rich Luthy, Leawood; David Huntress, Leawood; Arthur Aenchbacher, Hampton, Va.; Robert Black, Lawrence; Robert Johnson, Shawnee Mission; Larry L. Strahan, Lindsborg; Thomas Bradley, Jr., Topeka; David Hicks, Bartlesville, Okla. SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON. Top row: Lee Hales, Kansas City; Craig Wolfe, Kansas City; Tommy Ball, Manhattan; Jim Davis, Kansas City; Thomas J. Hickey, Scotia, N.Y.; Jon R. Keller, Great Bend; John F. Tyson, Florissant, Mo. Third row: Mark Bedner, Emporia; Craig Smith, Liberty, Mo.; Bill Barrow, Kirkwood, Mo.; Gary Krause, Great Bend; Ted Steiner, Kirkwood, Mo.; John B. Cotter, Hutchinson. Second row: Royce Nelson, Belleville; Kenneth Harden, Topeka; John Geissal, Prairie Village; Rick Galles, Albuquerque, N.M.; Bob Treanor, Kirkwood, Mo.; Steve Gibbs, Topeka; Phil Benson, Tulsa, Okla. Bottom row: Gary N. Dickerson, Shawnee Mission; Robert M. Bork, St. Marys; Clyde V. Stutzman, Prairie Village; Scott B. Curry, Kansas City, Mo.; Larry A. Vanek, Atchison; Rich C. Thomas, Dieterich, Ill. 32 SIGMA CHI. Top row: Rick Shaffer, Hutchinson; Dennis Bosley, Dighton; Bill Aeschbacher, Salt Lake City, Utah; Larry Cates, Prairie Village; Nick Michalski, Kansas City; George Milleret, Lawrence. Third row: Louis Ballivan, La Paz, Bolivia; Jim Armstrong, Abilene; Jake Klaver, Kingman; John Shurson, Abilene; Dennis Hill, Kansas City; Stu Barrier, Wichita; Jim Sherar, Paola. Second rose: Mike Good, Fort Scott; Scott Martin, Coffeyville; Carl Haas, Kansas City, Mo.; Granville McCutcheon Bush, IV, Lyons; David 0. Finkenbinder, Western Springs, Ill.; Steve Stanton, Iola. Bottom row: Bruce Wesley Dickson, III, Kansas City; Lew Lewis, Pueblo, Colo.; Van Markwell Hartman, Hays; James Andrew Nelson, St. Louis, Mo.; Allen Cameron Belot, Lawrence; James Frederick Buescher, St. Louis, Mo. SIGMA NU. Top row: Kenneth Guest, Coffeyville; John L. Fredenburg, Council Grove; Mark P. Grissom, Syracuse; James Laughead, Des Moines, Ia.; Steve Goertz, Hiawatha; James F. Hatfield, Mt. Prospect, Ill.; Thomas J. S chumm, Prairie Village; Gary Welch, Olathe; David E. Hill, Leawood. Third rose: Tons Veatch, Wichita; John Stuart Hetlinger, Emporia; Eric Soder, Wichita; Jon Martin, Shawnee Mission; Howard Forsythe, Shawnee Mission; Skip Cahal, Shawnee Mission; Steven B. Moon, Chanute; Gary Duncan, Winfield. Second row: John B. Edwards, Wichita; Ovie C. Palmer, Syracuse; Tim Reynolds, Des Moines, Ia.; Don Albon, Omaha, Nebr.; Bob Matejka, Omaha, Nebr.; Larry Parker, Merriam; Mike Boyer, Olathe. Bottom row: James Schneider, Salina; Hank Royer, Abilene; Bob Butler, Prairie Village; John Jaax, Conway Springs; Kent Augustson, Galesburg, Ill.; Steve Brighton, Coffeyville; Mike Freeland, Des Moines, Ia. SIGMA PHI EPSILON. Top row: Jeff Hallquist, Overland Park; Michael E. Johnson, Courtland; Jim Dorsey, Prairie Village; Frank Jenkins, Overland Park; Steve Hinkhouse, Olathe; Harold D. May, Kansas City. Third rose: Steve Rasmussen, Overland Park; Bill Wilt, Kansas City; Bob Latimer, Ottawa; Dennis Driscoll, Wellington; Marvin G. McDonald, Jr., Wellington; Larry Kelly, Prairie Village; Lex Holmes, Bartlesville, Okla. Second row: Carey Wayne Borum, Coffeyville; Ned N. Walters, Coffeyville; F. Steve Schneider, Shawnee Mission; Craig Morey, Shawnee Mission; Frank Sheldon, Ottawa; Lanny R. Burdick, Shawnee Mission. Bottom row: John W. Gibbons, Kansas City; Joel V. Hawley, Valley Center; David W. Howard, Kansas City; Randy Glick, Neodesha; Matt Jordan, Jacksonville, Ill.; Jim Breckenridge, Louisburg, 33 TAU KAPPA EPSILON. Top row: John Richard Morrow, Kansas City, Mo.; John Snyder, Wichita; Michael Martin, Overland Park; Michael Hick- man, Overland Park; Alan Mast, Kansas City, Mo.; John Waldron, Mankato; Thomas Von Lintel, Hays; Drew Furney, Russell; R. Brad Ellis, Leawood. Fourth row: Bruce Long, Prairie Village; Larry Lee, Topeka; Louis Pryor, Bucklin; Charles Buck, Prairie Village; Hal Peterson, Salina; Bill Johnson, Olathe; David Chipman, Shawnee Mission; Joe Lundy, Shawnee. Third row: Wayne Mills, Merriam; John Pettit, Mission; Tim MacArthur, Mission; George Wombolt, Mission; Steve Dickerson, Shawnee; Jim Huggins, Prairie Village; Keith Hiatt, Prairie Village; Brian Bauerle, Harlan, Ia.; Rick Freeman, Prairie Village. Second row: Stephen Haynes, Emporia; Dave Myers, Overland Park; Spike Lynch, Leawood; Phil Wentworth, Winfield; Mike Knisley, Coffeyville; R. A. Owens, Shawnee Mission; Randy Stevens, Wichita; Michael Khoury, Overland Park. Bottom row: Chuck Cook, Independence, Mo.; Mike Stephenson, Yates Center; Jim Mayes, Shawnee Mission; Jim McMahon, Hinsdale, Ill.; John Bellman, Manhattan; Bruce Barley, Shawnee Mission; Roger Theis, Arkansas City. Not pictured: Charlie Olson, Newton; Don Hanna, Dighton. THETA CHI. Top row: Jim Banks, Lenexa; Stephen Blair, Topeka; Thomas E. Brown, Leavenworth; Lawrence Phillips, Shawnee Mission; Thomas Wilson, Shawnee Wilson; Fred McCracken, Honolulu, Hawaii. Bottom row: William Penney, Overland Park; James Davis, La Grange, Ill.; Dennis Nes- bitt, Overland Park; Rick Hilleary, Kansas City; Tim Theurer, Kansas City. TRIANGLE. Top row: Stewart Hall, Shawnee Mission; Jim Coffelt, Shawnee Mission; Rick Gilbert, Ft. Benton, Mont.; Bennie Harding, Turner; Dave Hill, Nevada, Mo.; Dan Goering, Shawnee Mission. Second row: Steve Dexter, Ft. Leavenworth; Rick Bond, Shawnee Mission; Steve Campbell, Turner; James Rush, DeSoto; Rich Siebenlist, Kansas City. Bottom rote: Phil Bozarth, Raytown, Mo.; Donald Huggins, St. Louis, Mo.; Mark Corder, Highland; Gary Orscheln, Moberly, Mo. 34 BATTENFELD. Top row: Doug Jydstrup, Las Vegas, Nev.; Tom Rayl, Shawnee; John Brown, Hoisington; Alan Hermesch, Seneca; Xavier Williams, Guayaquil, Ecuador; Peter Foley, Wichita. Third row: James Hindman, Minneola; J. Michael Cairns, Leavenworth; Richard Marolf, Topeka; Paul More- house, Topeka; Richard Wilson, Eureka; James Thorp, Topeka; John Dagenais, Wichita. Second row: Myrl Duncan, Paola; David Miller, Hays; Robert A. Gaddie, Wellington; Gary Walls, Macon, Mo.; Richard Ramsay, Dodge City; Michael Blasberg, Shawnee Mission. Bottom row: William Basow, Wichita; Mark Ficek, Trenton, Mo.; Lester Sutton, Goodland; Lewis Thompson, Hutchinson; Walter Laws, Shawnee Mission. JOLLIFFE HALL. Top row: John Call, Mulvane; Bill Hutchinson, Chanute; William Spray, Lawrence; Larry Robinson, Wichita; Bill Nye, Prairie Vil- lage. Second row: Stephen Davis, Shawnee Mission; Donald Sloan, Topeka; Jim Reaves, Shawnee Mission; Bob Howland, Mankato; Luis Gardella, Lima, Peru; Ted Johnston, Wichita. Bottom row: Jim True, Americus; Stuart Brune, Lawrence; Robert Cochrane, Hoisington; Ben Franklin, Kansas City; Mike Weber, Hutchinson. PEARSON HALL. Top row: Gaylord Swan, Wichita; Donald Crook, Wichita; Ric Rasmussen, Jetmore; James Ratliff, Douglass; Mark Gleason, Wich- ita. Second row: David Van Pelt, Scott City; Kirby Kemble, Wichita; William Kritikos, Lyndon; Tom Liley, Topeka. Bottom row: Robert Hayle s, Wich- ita; Jim Moore, Leavenworth; Gary Trammell, Chanute; John Platt, Shawnee Mission; Don Myhrherg, Shawnee Mission, 35 STEPHENSON. Top row: Carl Krehbiel, Moundridge; Melvin Stapleton, Pat Metroy, Norton; Darrel Reed, Leawood; Jay Sims, Newton; Ken Iles, Kansas City; Tawn Keeney, Pittsburg. Third row: Tom Simpson, Orrington, Maine; Rick Wrigley, Kansas City, Mo.; Pete Mason, Salina; Ray Niemeir, Hutchinson; Duncan Work, Topeka; Dan Zemke, Salina. Second row: G. David Bevan, Parsons; Stan New, Norcatur; Don Jarrett, Jacksonville, Ill.; Robert Moose, Kansas City; David Allen, Newton; John Fisher, Independence; Bob Hamilton, Hutchinson. Bottom row: Tony Randle, St. Louis, Mo.; Peter Pauzauskie, Coffeyville; Fred Meier, St. Louis, Mo .; Gene Ramirez, Kansas City, Mo.; Lawrence Trickey, Leavenworth; Mike Callaway, El Dorado. Lidents 36 ADM IN ISTRATION 37 W. Clarke Wescoe The beginning of the second century of academic pursuits at the Univer- sity of Kansas reflected the complex, interdependent nature of University en- deavor. Education, research, and state service—major involvements of higher education—challenge the University ' s propentisy to innovate and create in step with the surrounding world. Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe has emphasized that the academic process must adapt and grow through constant planning for the future. He indicated that two distinct forces work within the University to promote success in institutional planning: The first, a dissatisfaction with mere adequacy; the second, a determination to provide the best in higher education for Kansas and the region. The U niversity created for change is based on trust—trust that given a proper share of the nation ' s wealth, it will create change respon- sibly, and make for a better society. Continuing evaluation of academics and of the relationship of the student to the growing University are major concerns of the Chancellor. In evaluating the educational function of the University, Dr. Wescoe has stated it is wise on occasion to consider what an institution must be if it is to own its soul, what an educated man must be if he is to own his. To this definition, steady re-evaluation of Univer sity academic offerings is important for future plan- ning, as are the tangible considerations of providing both adequate facilities and an outstanding faculty to meet the student needs in the face of increas- ing enrollment. Fulfillment of strength and resource in the educational process of Univer- sity planning is also emphasized by Dr. Wescoe. To help the student best fulfill his educational opportunity the University must provide more service. The Centennial College exemplifies such progressive planning. Similarly, fulfillment is further developed by the objectives of the Program for Prog- ress, the vision of which includes more graduate fellowships, increased stu- dent financial aid, and additional endowed professorships. Research, another function in academic fulfillment, is important in KU growth. University research is important not only as a scholastic venture, but in service to government, industry and individual welfare. Add to the mix of objectives, evaluation, and planning the visions and enthusiasms of KU alumni and friends, and the future is correspondingly strengthened. Dr. Wes- coe has demonstrated that the quest for fulfillment requires, beyond the an- 39 Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe nual operating budget, substantial private support. To this end, then, nearly 300 alumni, friends, and faculty, seek—as members of the KU Council for Progress—an immediate three-year campaign fund goal of $18,617,000 to be specifically used in developing Program for Progress pursuits. Significant to the future of the University is Dr. Wescoe ' s wide experience in academic organizations. Executive committee member of the National Association of Land-Grant Colleges, president of the State Universities Association, member of the National Commission of Accrediting, and mem- ber of the board of directors of the Midwest Universities Research Associa- tion are several of the Chancellor ' s commitments to the educational com- munity. Because of his outstanding promotion of an exchange program be- tween KU and Costa Rica, the Wescoes were invited to a dinner with Presi- dent Johnson and the President of Costa Rica. Since 1963, KU has partici- pated in a cultural, student, and faculty exchange program with the small country. Through the program, over fifty Peace Corps volunteers have served in Costa Rica. In addition to his involvement with the University, Dr. Wescoe also is active in the medical field, in industry, and in service organizations. A form- er director of the KU Medical Center, he has served as supervising physician for the Red Cross blood donation program. A fellow of the American Associa- tion of Advancement of Science, he is chairman of the AMA ' s Council on Medical Education, and serves as a trustee of the China Medical Board and of the Mayo Foundation. Involved with industry, he is a member of the hoard of directors of the Trader ' s National Bank of Kansas City, Mo., Hallmark Cards, and Phillips Petroleum Co., and is Advisory Director of Businessmen ' s Assurance. In ser- vice organizations, Dr. Wescoe is a member of the board of directors of People-to-People and a member of the National Council of the Boy Scouts of America. He also serves on the Board of College Education and Church Vocations of the Lutheran Church in America. Chancellor Wescoe ' s concern for the University ' s endeavors, combined with his interest and involvement in outside activities, indicates the complex- ity of the program of fulfillment he faces in terms of planning, objectives, evaluation, and enthusiasm. .f Administration. As KU begins a new century of existence, many capable administrative officials are fulfilling the duties necessary for the efficient maintenance and advancement of the University. Their duties are more difficult and varied than those of their predecessors who regulated a small university of 195 students a century ago. James R. Surface, Provost and Dean of Faculties, serves as co-ordinator and supervisor of the KU academic program, regulating it to meet the needs of the ever-growing University. As Dean of Faculties, Dean Surface supervises classroom operation. Aside from these activities, he is often called upon to act in Dr. Wescoe ' s stead in times of the Chancellor ' s absence. Laurence C. Woodruff, as Dean of Students for the past 13 years, handles problems with housing and health for approximately 15,000 students. Having served KU in varied positions for the past 34 years, Dean Woodruff assumes an increasingly complex task as University enrollment continues to swell in its second century. Two other administrative offices direct and correlate the academic activi- ties of KU students—the Offices of the Dean of Men and the Dean of Women. Together, they attempt to provide a proper atmosphere and en- Miss EMILY TAYLOR, Dean of Women; DONALD K. ALDERSON, Dean of Men; LAURENCE C. WOODRUFF, Dean of Students. 42 vironment for the extra-curricular betterment of all KU men and women. Heading the former is Dean of Men Donald K. Alderson. Active in many roles, he attempts to help students avoid academic or social problems, and participates in various scholastic, disciplinary, and orientation committees. Last year an extension of the office was instituted in McCollum Hall to provide closer contact with KU men. Dean Alderson ' s work is also aug- mented by that of the Assistant Dean of Men, Clark Coan, who advises the students partaking in KU ' s international program by orienting and super- vising foreign students. Dean Emily Taylor and the staff of the Office of the Dean of Women assist KU women in their- activities, advise the women ' s rush programs, and sponsor numerous other women-oriented endeavors on campus. Dean Taylor herself is active in Mortar Board, the House of Representatives and the Senate of AWS, and Cwens, and serves on the Watkins Scholarship Committee. Raymond Nichols, Vice-Chancellor for Finance and Executive Secretary of the University, and Keith Nitcher, Comptroller, handle the bookkeeping and great financial responsibilities of operating so large an institution. KEITH NITCHER, Comptroller; JAMES R. SURFACE, Provost and Dean of Faculties; RAYMOND NICHOLS, Vice-Chancellor for Finance and Executive Secretary; W. J. ARGERSINGER, Associate Dean of Faculties; FRANCIS H. HELLER, Associate Dean of Faculties. 43 Administration Directing the entrance of students into the University is the responsibility of James K. Hitt, Registrar and Director of Admissions. He is assisted by William L. Kelly, Assistant Registrar, and Max Fuller, Assistant Director of Admissions. In the field of research, W. J. Argersinger, Jr., Associate Dean of Faculties for Research, directs the various university programs. James Gunn, Adminis- trative Assistant to the Chancellor and head of University Relations, cor- relates the public relations at KU. In a similar capacity, Tom Yoe, Director of the University News Bureau, reports University events and policies to the public. Serving as Vice-Chancellor for Institutional Planning, George B. Smith also holds the offices of Dean of the University and Director of the Summer Session. Expansion and maintenance of University building are supervised by Keith Lawton, Vice-Chancellor of Operations. Working closely with him is Mr. J. J. Wilson, Director of Housing, who supervises the University residence hall system in both its day-to-day and long-range operations. The Associate Dean of Faculties, Francis H. Heller, aside from assisting Dean Surface in his responsibilities as Dean of Faculties, is also responsible for coordinating the University ' s international programs. Dick Wintermote is Executive Director of the Alumni Association, also acts as the treasurer, and edits the alumni magazine, thus keeping the alumni up to date on the various activities of KU. Also working in the area of alumni relations, the University Endowment Association under the direction of Irvin Youngberg raises the funds neces- sary to support the University ' s building fund and scholarship programs. The subsequent distribution of these scholarships and loans to KU students is directed by the office of Robert Billings, Director of Aids and Awards. JAMES GUNN, Director of University Relations and Administrative Assistant to the Chancellor; Tom YOE, Director of the News Bu- reau; GEORGE B. SMITH, Vice-Chancellor for Institutional Planning and Dean of the University; KEITH LAWTON, Vice-Chancellor of Operations; J. J. WILSON, Director of Housing. 44 DICK WINTERMOTE, Director of the Alumni Association; IRVIN YOUNGBERG, Director of the Endowment Association. CLARK COAN, Assistant Dean of Men; ROBERT BILLINGS, Director of Aids and Awards. MAX FULLER, Assistant Director of Ad- missions; JAMES K. HITT, Registrar and Director of Admissions; WILLIAM L. KELLY, Assistant Registrar. 45 Athletic Administration Wade Stinson opened his second year as Director of Athletics at the Uni- versity of Kansas, after leaving a Chicago insurance firm last year to return to his alma mater to accept this job. Jack Mitchell began his ninth campaign as KU ' s football mentor, with Ted Owens resuming the cage reins for his third season. Leading the track team again this year were Bob Timmons, head track coach, and John Mitchell, assistant track coach, both new to KU last year. Additions in the athletic administration reflect the progress and expansion of KU ' s athletic program. New men in the athletic administration department were Jay Simon, Wil- liam Schaake, and Charlie Strong. Simon, a 1940 graduate of the University of Kansas, assumed the position of Sports Publicity Director, vacating his post as sports editor of the Daily Oklahoman. He replaced Phil Dynan who held this job last year. William Schaake, a former all-conference end at the University of Kansas, was added to the football coaching staff. Charlie Strong, one-time Oklahoma State sprinter and broad jumper, was named as the addition to KU ' s track coaching unit. Keeping pace with the demands of an ever-expanding student body, a block of 6,500 seats was added to the Kansas Memorial Stadium during the summer preceding the 1966 football season. These seats on the east side of the stadium between the goal lines were paid for by an increase in stu- dent ticket prices, and boosted the capacity of the stadium to 51,500. In addition, a weight room to be used by cross country, track, and football men was also added under the east stands. WADE R. STINSON, Director of Inter- collegiate Athletics. 46 The largest innovation, New Robinson Gymnasium, was completed in the spring of 1966, providing the University of Kansas with adequate and modern physical education facilities. Robinson Gymnasium and Natatorium is part of a foresighted plan to increase physical education and recreation facilities for men and women of KU. The structure houses the Department of Physical Education and Recreation, a segment of the School of Educa- tion. Physical education majors, students in physical education activity classes, students participating in intramurals, varsity gymnasts and swim- mers, members of sports clubs, including fencing, soccer, and cricket, and the women ' s organizations of Tau Sigma ( dance ) and Quack Club (swim- ming) will all reap the benefits of this long-awaited improvement and expansion. These expanded facilities include the following: two large gymnasia, 98 feet by 102 feet, each containing two basketball courts, three volleyball courts, and eight badminton courts; three four-wall indoor handball courts with spectator galleries; five classrooms; a wrestling room; a gymnastics room; a weight training room; and a swimming pool in the adjoining Natatorium. This T-shaped pool complies with both NCAA and AAU meet specifications, for it has six lanes for either the 75 foot or twenty-five meter length, as well as having a spectator seating capacity of 700. The pool features underwater lighting, underwater sound, an underwater observation window, and an outdoor patio. It has two one-meter diving boards and one three-meter board. —Ted Gardiner LEFT. JAY SIMON, Sports Publicity Director. RIGHT. NICK ROACH, Athletic Ticket Manager. •■■ 47 UA Administration. As the KU student population continues to expand, the Kansas Memorial. Student Union appears in bulging dimensions. Rendering 9,000 services each day, the Union will need to expand proportionally to the student growth in the coming years. Frank Burge, manager of the Union, announced plans for an enlargement of the union facilities probably to be finished by fall of 1967. The Union has now reached the saturation point, and we cannot provide room for all of the services we would like to give the students, Burge said. From 10 to 800 persons participated in the 7,781 organized activities at the union last year and more activities are expected this year. A passageway improving accessibility to the northeast area of the union is planned, which will extend from zone X parking lot to the northeast area of the union. In addition to giving seclusion from the weather, resulting additional room area will be made available to students, class officers, and alumni. A large forum, seating approximately 650 pupils, exemplifies another planned improvement in the facilities of the union. Plans are under way for a satellite Union south of Allen Field House. Tentatively, this building will be finished by winter of 1968. It will stay open late at night and offer students the essentials they want most. Food service, music and browsing lounges, recreational areas, and study areas will be available. Students also will have both a new book store, consisting mainly of paperback editions, and a reading room in which to glance through books before making a selection. A student union should appear meaningful to a student body, and we hope that these additions will profit the students, related Burge. —Sandra Millsap ALWVE. A LCOVE K A NSAS ALCOVE JAYHAW ALCOVE ALCOVE OUN( O ' 011F MI 01, RELKAØ 72 Imo Geouth Tom • boosioi Rocs Cita Elm Aoviotim Stamm Mum Co Heat PAU FOiall SUA CR Cmas Hun PTFP Patti Howl AAUW FRANK BURGE, Director of the Kansas Union, and NIBS. KATHERINE GIELE, Activities Director. 48 University Extension Over the past year approximately 39,500 people participated in a myriad of programs conducted by University Extension. Under the direction of Howard Walker, President-Elect of the National University Extension for the current year, the extension program regulates all correspondence courses offered by the University. In addition, all conferences and institutes sanction- ed by KU are guided through University Extension. The Higher Education Commission of Kansas for Community Develop- ment this year awarded the extension service a grant of $44,235 to be used in cultural development of various communities throughout the state. Children ' s creative drama, music, and visual art are the focal points of the program. Approximately 150 conferences and institutes are held annually on the University campus. Over 300 planning groups work to choose speakers and program formats for the various meetings. It is University Extension ' s re- sponsibility to provide the participating public with the most modern and accurate facilities and information possible. University Extension is also often used as a coordination agency by various organizations. The Federal Penitentiary at Leavenworth and the Armed Forces use the service to co- ordinate courses for inmates and enlisted men so that they may further their education while completing their obligations. Lynn Davie, assistant director of University Extension, commented, The overall purpose of University Extension is to extend the resources of the University to people other than 15,000 students in the 18 to 25 year old range enrolled on campus. —Hank Waeckei ' le HOWARD WALKER, Director of University Extension. 49 The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences 50 The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences serves a different function for each of the over 6,800 KU stu- dents encompassed in its programs. For those who will spend only two years in the College, it serves as a stepping stone to their fields of specialization. These two years are spent acquiring a liberal education at the university level. Students receive a sound back- ground in the physical and biological sciences, the so- cial sciences, and the humanities before advancing to their field of concentration. At the same time, the field of study for many stu- dents may lay within the confines of the College, clas- sified under one of the three major categories listed above. Many pursue these areas of undergraduate academic specialization at the graduate level. For others, the College ' s Liberal Arts Degree is used as a background for graduate work in related areas of academic specialization. They continue their education by entering a professional school such as a school of law or medicine. The remainder proceed di- rectly into employment in their area of academic con- centration. Thus, the College is faced with the perplexing task of satisfying the needs of students with many diverse programs of study and far-ranging goals. Of the 6,800 students in the College, only 1,750 are juniors or sen- iors as three-fourths of the students u se its liberal education as an intermediate step to a goal. Dean of the College George R. Waggoner feels the College has been equal to this challenge. Meeting this responsibility with expanded and flexible programs of study has been the answer. Much of this responsibility has been delegated to the student who is allowed a high degree of flexibility in planning his course of study to meet his needs. Again, as in past years, an expanded curriculum and faculty met the increased enrollment and work to keep KU ' s College of Arts and Sciences updated. Ninety new faculty members joined the College faculty to face the challenge imposed by the 6,800 students for the 1966-67 school year. OPPOSITE PAGE. GEORGE R. WAGGONER, Dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. BELOW. The College Intermediary Board serves as an important medium for the exchange of information and ideas between students and faculty. 51 The newest solution to this problem of serving mul- tiple purposes to the students is the system of Col- leges within the College. This innovation, termed the Centennial College, encompasses about 700 of the 3,200 KU freshmen. The Centennial College is hope- fully a preview of continued revolution in the first two years of university study, designed to assist in giv- ing the individual student an effective liberal educa- tion with his goals in mind. All of next year ' s freshman class will be divided into smaller colleges with the ulti- mate goal of the program being to divide all freshmen and sophomores into these smaller groups. Dean Waggoner pointed with pride to the fact that although the enrollment has grown to about 7,000 stu- dents from 2,500 here twelve years ago when he was named Dean of the College, the faculty has grown at an even faster rate. Our average class size of about 20 students is probably smaller than that of any other state university in the nation, stated Dean Waggoner. He added, The real existence of the College is in its forty departments, thirty of which are larger than some of the other schools in the University. In viewing the student body after twelve years as Dean of the College, he noted the sharply increased quality of the students. He pointed to the increased national and international representation on Mount Oread. Waggoner stated, Along with the sharp rise in the quality of students the standards of education of the College have also greatly risen. There have also been marked increases in the percentages of students going on to graduate school or some professional school, and a corresponding increase in the honors awarded to KU graduates, continued Waggoner, in noting changes in recent years. He stressed the great contributions of the Honors Program which is utilized by about ten per cent of the College ' s students. He also added that increased bene- fits were being drawn from the continued expansion of KU ' s foreign institutes, including the numerous summer programs for study in Europe and the junior year abroad program. He pledged continued support of these programs and expansion where possible. —Brent Waldron TOP. With language requirements a major part of the general College curriculum, students become all too familiar with the Blake annex sound labs. BOTTOM. Two freshman members of the Honors Math Program study a complex calculus proof fol- lowing class in. Strong Hall. 52 College of Liberals Arts and Sciences ) During the American Chemical Society ' s Midwest Regional Conference, attended this fall by a majority of KU ' s chemistry staff, four participants discuss one of fifty industrial booths set up in the Kansas Union Ballroom. BOTTOM. The many faces of Dr. William Bass ' s 800-student Anthropology 1 class reflect the diverse and often impersonal nature of a large College lecture section. 53 KENNETH ANDERSON, Dean of the School of Education. SCIAoo Mk due at lo 54 IN AN ART METHODS CLASS students learn how to teach fun damental handicrafts to elementary school children. The quality of teachers is or should be of the deep- est social concern, for the country risks its entire future if it entrusts the training of its children to men and women who are not informed, not skillful, not devoted to young people—that is to say, not competent in their own profession, according to Dean Kenneth Ander- son, Dean of the School of Education. It is the goal of the School of Education to see that the state is provided with competent teachers who will answer the call of society for quality professional educators. The School of Education feels that education should be based both on a responsibility for teacher education to be centralized, and on the premises that the school is a social institution and that there should be an emphasis on the professional aims of teachers. Expansion has been greatest in the field of special education. This program is concerned with the instruc- tion of children who are physically or mentally handi- capped, or who are exceptionally gifted. Highly spe- cialized courses, clinical observation, and supervised student teaching highlight this special program which begins in the junior year. On the graduate level com- plete training for teachers of retarded or gifted child- em is obtained. Periodically, the School believes, all teachers should return to college for graduate work in their areas of teaching. Such studies include advanced work both in research and with the improvements in education techniques in their various fields. The School feels that this is necessary in order to insure that all teachers will be kept abreast of the latest educational facts and techniques. Tr ' ) 55 New Robinson gymnasium, providing adequate modern teaching facilities for physical education was opened in August. Located on the southern edge of campus, New Robinson is to be used primarily by students in physical education classes. The structure houses the offices of the physical education depart- ment and all of the facilities necessary for the efficient operation of the department. It is equipped with a T-shaped swimming pool and two large gymnasiums, and there arc future plans to add additional gymna- siums, squash courts, handball courts, and to enlarge the locker room facilities. By the year 2000, the number of students preparing for teaching positions will more than triple what the figures are now. This is partially due to the increase in science, mathematics, and foreign language majors as a result of federal programs in these areas. To insure that only the best-qualified teachers reach the nation ' s students the School of Education recom- mends only those who have passed and completed the planned programs and who have shown that they are professionally competent by practice teaching. Dean Anderson assured that the School will continue to produce quality teachers by stating, The School of Education will continue to recruit the best available staff so that in the year 2000 the production of capable teachers and school service personnel will continue unabated; the development of new and sounder knowl- edge about the educational process will be forthcom- ing; and consultative services to school boards and teachers will be available to the end that Kansas schools may be improved. —Hank W aeckerle BETWEEN AFTERNOON CLASSES IN BAILEY HALL, home of the School of Education, a coed pauses on an empty staircase. 56 ' he School (01 Education LEFT. Members of a science methods class, learning techniques of teaching various scientific concepts, watch another student ' s dem- onstration of an experiment. RIGHT. A student in KU ' s Visual Aids department inspects a film after its use by an education class. 57 The School of Engineering and Architecture 58 Under the direction of Dean William P. Smith, the School of Engineering and Architecture provides a combination of two closely related fields of study. Architecture stresses provisions for society ' s shelters, which it must have to work and live, while engineering emphasizes public works and technological problems. For this reason an engineer must be acquainted with human behavior and the interaction between society and the sciences. Professor W. Eugene George, chairman of the de- partment, stated, The ambition of the Department of Architecture and Architectural Engineering at the university is primarily to educate young Kansans as responsible and contributing members of society who can think in a versatile way in order to meet the prob- lems of life as they occur. Secondarily, the department wishes to train students to be resourceful members of the architectural and engineering professions. Recently a new program has been initiated between some of the departments to add versatility to the students ' learning procedure. This program entails the combination of various departments such as busi- ness and engineering and architecture, giving those enrolled an opportunity to work with people from different media. Thus it enables them to better under- stand more aspects of business and industry than their particular field alone. Although the KU School of Engineering and Archi- tecture is housed in six buildings on campus, with the rapid increase in the number of undergraduates— five percent per year—construction of new facilities is near. Immediate plans are for the remodeling of the mechanical engineering department and its labs. —Hank W aeckerle OPPOSITE PAGE. WILLIAM P. SMITH, Dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture. THIS PAGE. An engineering student works with a dual trace oscilloscope in one of the ground floor labs of newly renamed Learned Hall. 59 The Schools of JoutriaaJ4sm WARREN K. AGEE, Dean of the School of Journalism, 60 Indicating an enrollment increase of one-third was the William Allen White School of Journalism. There were 196 students registered in the School with the increase occuring chiefly in the area of advertising. Majors are offered in news-editorial, advertising, and radio-tele- vision-film. Flint Hall is the home of all journalism facilities except those of KUOK and KANU-FM which are located in Hoch Auditorium. Dean Warren K. Agee, having served as Dean for one year, is looking to the future when all facilities will be under one roof, that of Flint. As has been the case for many years, the Uni- versity of Kansas Printing Service utilizes an area of Flint. Work is scheduled to commence in the spring on a new building for the Printing Service to be located in the Daisy Hill area. New curricula offered this year included a course in international communications and a public relations course. Joining the faculty were Perry Riedle, a To- peka newspaper photographer, and James Overbay, af- filiated with the news staff of a Kansas City television station. Malcolm Applegait also joined the staff as an administrative assistant to the dean and adviser for the University Daily Kansan. The UDK, as it is commonly referred to, is a publica- tion which is service-oriented to the University. It is governed by the Kansan Board which makes editorial selections and allows the staff freedom. The UDK is not censored. An area not to be overlooked is the William Allen White Foundation which contributed over $6,000 to modernize the library and establish the Kans as News- paper Hall of Fame Seminar Room. In commemoration of Mr. White ' s contribution to the Journalism School, future plans are being formulated for the William Allen White Centennial year in 1968. —Jim Robertson LEFT. A pressman inspects a copy of the student-managed UDK as the press in Flint Hall rolls off more. RIGHT. Fleeting in Hoch Auditorium, a television lab class presents a mock-up production of a television firogram. 61 The School of Dr. Howard E. Mossberg, Dean of the University of Kansas School of Pharmacy since June 1, 1966, seeks to build the undergraduate program in pharmacy to meet the requirements of the state. Our enrollment held its own this year, but it ' s not what it should be, said Dr. Mossberg. There were 46 seniors enrolled in the three-year program this fall. The School of Pharmacy, the only facility of its kind in the State, offers the B.S. and, on the graduate level, the M.S. and the Ph.D. degrees in Medicinal Chemistry. In order to be a registered pharmacist in the State of Kansas, one must pass an examination administered by the State Board of Pharmacy. Therefore, undergradu- ate training prepares the student in the areas of selling, research, and manufacturing, as well as the profes- sional practices of pharmacy and pharmacology, the latter being the study of how drugs act upon the body. In addition to work directly on the KU campus, the School ' s objectives have extended beyond the graduate level to statewide programs. The School has sought to keep the practicing pharmacists in the State well- informed by providing them with continued education. For this program of re-education, faculty members of the School travel to four cities in the state, covering general subject areas in the field of pharmacy. Of about 1,500 active pharmacists in Kansas, 200 have attended the seminars. A course in public health was the only addition to the curriculum this year. However, the future holds many alterations for the School. A regents professor, or specialist in his field, will join the faculty next year. Realized in 1967 will be a pharmacy graduate research laboratory to be financed by the University and built in the Daisy Hill area. This will relieve the pressure on Malott Hall, home of the School, which is not adequate on the graduate level. —Jim Robertson OPPOSITE PAGE. HOWARD MOSSBERG, Dean of the School of Pharmacy. ' THIS PAGE. A student in dispensing learns the art of com- pounding a prescription as part of the School ' s fifth-year program. 63 41111111k The KU School of Fine Arts opened its 76th year at the University with 35 different areas of specializa- tion. Eighty-three full time faculty members super- vised fine arts students in the two primary divisions of the School, music and art. Dean of the School of Fine Arts, Thomas Gorton, said of the present pro- gram: From our vantage point we see the profes- sional program in the arts at the University of Kansas as having made remarkable progress. The university has national stature and has made new and imagina- tive contributions to the arts in higher education. We still have much to accomplish with respect to the involvement of the general student body in aesthetic matters. Our program in the performing and visual arts will not be successful until such time as each graduate of KU has had a series of important contacts with the arts during his campus life, so vital that he will seek this cultural enrichment regularly as he takes his place in post-collegiate society. Dean Gorton feels his school serves as a cultural center for KU and the surrounding communities by bringing outstanding individuals and groups to the ABOVE, LEFT. The campus provides a limitless supply of sub- ject matter for the design student. Lawrence campus for performances and exhibitions. These visits along with performances by artist faculty members and campus organizations, plus exhibitions of noted works of art, lend to the cultural develop- ment of the university community. The Fine Arts School highlighted its 64th year of the University Concert Course with the Los Angeles Philharmonic after the Moscow Chamber Orchestra had opened the season. The 1966-67 musical season was also given an international flavor with four attrac- tions in the Chamber Music Series: The Aeolian Quartet, the Soni Ventorum, the Bartok Quartet and the Weiner Solisten. One of the key faculty changes saw Dr. George Lawner taking over the leadership of the orchestra and opera activities. He comes to KU after 15 years of professional experience in major city opera com- panies. The Organ and Theory Department was separated, with James Moeser heading the Organ De- 65 partment and Dr. John Pozdro leading the Theory De- partment. After four years as KU ' s assistant choral director, James Ralston organized the large choral program this season. Murphy Hall, home of all music departments except music education, houses three production areas for music and drama. The University Theatre contains a 42-foot turntable stage, two lighting boards, 1,188 seats, and scenery and costume shops. Swarthout Recital Hall, acoustically designed and seating 396, provides excellent facilities for chamber music and student and faculty recitals. The Experimental Theatre, with a stage constructed on three sides of the audience, places the audience in closer contact with the per- formers. The Art Department occupies the third floor of Strong Hall with drawing and painting in the east wing and design in the west. In addition to Strong Hall, select areas of the department are housed in a number of other buildings on campus. Art History is located in the Museum of Art while Fine Arts educa- tion courses are held in Bailey Hall. —Drew Anderson AN INSTRUCTOR in a printmaking class explains the basic funda- mentals of preparing an etching. 66 UNDER THE DIRECTION OF DR. GEORGE LAWNER, the 71-member University Symphony Orchestra pauses between numbers during its fall concert in University Theatre. The School of Fine Arts 67 The School of Business A V kV t t ' ' IM41 V %IA VktiV f , 68 OPPOSITE PAGE. JOSEPH W. MCGUIRE, Dean of the School of Business. THIS PAGE. Working with KU ' s new G.E. 625 computer, business school students learn to apply quantitative methods to business problems. The sweeping changes found in our diversified society are reflected in the continued modification and expansion of KU ' s School of Business. Under the guid- ing hand of Dean Joseph W. McGuire, KU ' s Business School opened the 1966-67 term with i mprovements and expansion in faculty, curriculum, research, and organization. Following intensive study by the faculty, expanded programs of study were added at both the undergraduate and the graduate levels. The newest innovation is the addition of the Ph.D. program in business, designed for persons planning to join college faculties, desiring to join research projects of large organizations, or aspiring to become well- qualified business executives. Expansion is also the keynote in the one-year graduate programs. Along with the traditional program in accounting, and spe- cialties in finance, operations research, and marketing added last year, two new areas of concentration are being implemented this year. Manpower management and organization, and administration are the newest specialized fields. Following major revision in 1965, the MBA program is still geared for the student who receives an under- graduate degree in some area other than business. This is a two-year program designed to give the stu- dent a broad education in business rather than special- izing him in a narrowed field of application. A sound foundation in mathematics, economics, and the be- havorial sciences is established before the student delves into the legal and social environment of busi- ness. His advanced study consists of accounting and controls, and the policies and functions of business. Future plans include a continuance of two programs, the Traveling Seminar and a seminar of semester duration on business management, initiated last year to facilitate the business community in the Lawrence region. Both of these programs are also to be broad- ened. Dean McGuire was elated by the receipt of two distinguished professorships by the School of Business to attract top business professors from around the country to come to KU. He feels these grants will greatly facilitate him in his recruiting of additional top business professors to meet the school ' s rising enroll- ment which now stands at 550. Five new assistant professors brought the size of the school ' s professorial faculty this fall to 28. The first endowed faculty chair, the Edmund P. Learned Distinguished Professor of Business, and the second, donated by Authur Young, should enable Dean McGuire to obtain scholars of national renown to add to his faculty. Two grants were recently received by the school. One of ten General Electric grants for $2500 was awarded to the KU School of Business. The other was a $1000 Phillips Petroleum grant. All these are reasons why Dean McGuire feels that KU ' s School of Business is rapidly becoming one of the best schools of business in the country. I feel we have a much younger, more energetic, and more scholarly faculty since my arrival at KU four years ago, Dean McGuire stated in viewing the progress which the school has made since he became Dean. —Brent Waldron 69 The Schoo of Religion. OPPOSITE PAGE. WILLIAM J. MOORE, Dean of the School of Religion. THIS PAGE. With the construction of the School ' s new facil- ities underway, Rev. John Macauley ' s Religion 51 class, The Life and Teachings of Jesus, meets in the Methodist Student Center. Of unique importance this year in the Kansas School of Religion is the ground-breaking on a new $380,000 edifice, a facility to be used solely by the School. This new building, which is expected to be completed by the fall semester of 1967, will replace old Myers Hall. Myers, a KU landmark since 1886, showed signs of deterioration for several years and became inadequate for the needs of the School. To be paid for by private contributions, the two- story structure will rise directly across from the Kan- sas Union upon the site where Myers stood for 80 years. While awaiting the new building, the School will be temporarily housed at the Wesley Foundation Cen- ter, the Methodist Student center on campus. In connection with the expansion of facilities, a graduate study program will be initiated at the on- set of the 1967 spring semester. The program will offer master ' s degrees in Bible History and Theology. At the present time, with the curriculum of the School including 25 credit hours, there is no undergraduate major offered. A unique part of the curriculum this year was Protestant-Catholic-Jewish Dialogue, offered only to upperclassmen. It was taught in dialogue form by representatives of the three faiths. The religious groups which cooperate in the pro- gram of the School include the Jewish, Catholic, Prot- estant, and Reformed Latter Day Saints churches. According to the plan adopted by the Board of Direc- tors, each member denomination makes an annual contribution to the School on the basis of the number of students it has enrolled in the University. The Disciples of Christ through the Kansas Bible Chair is a large supporter. Thus, the School of Religion is financed entirely by contributions from various church sects, organizations, and private sources. Representing these faiths this fall were seven full- time and six part-time professors. They taught approxi- mately 340 students, with 200 of these enrolled in night classes which met in Blake Hall. According to Dr. William J. Moore, Dean of the School of Religion, the purpose of the School is to provide courses in religion to complement the teach- ings of the University in an area which, at most state universities, is generally forgotten. Our program pro- vides a student with the proper background to do graduate work in a seminary. Our program is an aspect of a general liberal arts education program, stated Qr. Moore. —Jim Robertson 71 raduate Sel-loo7 WILLIAM P. ALBRECHT, Dean of the Graduate School. 72 Once again the Graduate School functioned under the leadership of Dean William Albrecht, as strength- ened entrance requirements and liberalized master ' s degree requirements keynoted proposed revisions. Plans were made for the doctorate program to be enlarged while several of the newly-proposed graduate programs were approved. Those that were approved include: American studies; business; musicology; music arts, including piano, voice, organ, and violin; and music theory. The proposed doctoral curricula encompasses linguistics, developmental and child psy- chology, pharmacology, and toxicology. Continued improvement was also made in the financial area of the school. Two new fellowship pro- grams were introduced: the Prospective Teacher ' s Program, for those instructors working on their Mas- ter ' s of Arts in teaching, and the Experienced Teacher ' s Program, for those instructors working on their doc- torate degrees in their discipline. These two-year fellowships were offered in the fields of English, Ger- man, physics, mathematics, and social studies. They provide $2000 grants the first year plus dependent and summer payments, and $2200 the second year. These fellowships are part of the long-range plan to attract more highly qualified students. Another fellowship program, the Graduate School Honors Fellowship Program, was initiated last year and once again served graduate students at the Uni- versity. This fellowship, awarded for four years of study leading to a Ph.D., consists of a teaching fellow- ship for the first year, teaching assistantships for the second and third years, a disse rtation fellowship for the fourth year, and three summer fellowships. Sti- pends are above those of the new scholarship programs and range as follows: teaching fellowship, $2300; teaching assistantship, $2400 to $2600; dissertation fellowship, $2700; summer fellowship, $400 each sum- mer. National Science Foundation grants and National Aeronautics and Space Administration grants are examples of other fellowships available. —Ted Gardiner LEFT. With much of their time concentrated on thesis work, many graduate students nearly become residents of KU libraries. Ricwr. For two of over 150 graduate students in chemistry, study places heavy emphasis on individual contributions to research. L 73 V .D. In each of the past four years the School of Law at the University of Kansas has had the highest per- centage increases in enrollment of any school within the University. In the fall of 1965 there were 278 stu- dents, exactly double the number four years earlier. This is appreciably higher than the largest total ever enrolled in the law school, including post-war peak enrollment periods. Early indications showed that the number rose again this fall and will rise next fall, bar- ring dramatic changes in Selective Service policies, to a probable total of approximately 320 students. According to Dr. James K. Logan, Dean of the School, We have reached our capacity and certainly have exceeded the numbers we can handle comfort- ably. The School is limiting enrollment, accepting a first year class of approximately 130 students only. We are trying to obtain more accurate data on prospective enrollment to aid our admissions work by requiring a $35 deposit to hold an admittee ' s place in the class. We did not seek this surge in enrollment, but we have desired to accommodate qualified applicants who wish to obtain their legal education here. During the past year, two significant developments took place in the school ' s program. In August, the Schowalter Foundation of Newton established an an- nual $500 scholarship in the law school, to be known as the Schowalter Foundation World Peace Through Law Scholarship. At the same time a new project was instituted in which students provide legal assistance to inmates of the federal penitentiary at Leavenworth. This latter program was developed in cooperation with the United States Justice Department, prison of- ficials, and the Leavenworth Bar Association. Unlike other legal aid projects this serves persons already convicted of crimes. As an important phase of the proj- ect, advice is also provided on the civil matters which frequently arise in the disruption of a person ' s life when he is sentenced to prison. Of major importance in the School ' s attempts to accommodate a larger student enrollment is the fact that one of the few buildings included as a principal objective of the University ' s Centennial Fund Drive is a new law center. The School will be seeking the con- tributions of alumni and friends of the University to help build a structure which will accommodate up to 500 law students and permit the use of the latest instructional techniques. With the $750,000 being sought to finance that building, the School will be eligible for an additional $375,000 in federal matching funds, and thus will be able to build a $1,125,000 physical plant, exclusive of the land already available through the Endowment Association. —Jim. Robertson OPPOSITE PAGE. JAMES K. LOGAN, Dean of the School of Law. THIS PAGE. Late at night the corridor joining Green Hall and the law library forms the setting for a discussion between three law students. 75 itary 76 As A PART of the Army ROTC program ' s weekly two-hour drill session, an officer inspects a cadet ' s rifle. New faces mark the Military Science Depar tment at KU as additions were made to all three ROTC divi- sions. Lt. Colonel Charles F. Brown, Jr., became the Professor of Air Science in charge of the KU Air Force ROTC program. A 1949 graduate of West Point, he received his master ' s degree in Aerospace Operations from the University of Southern California in 1966 after completing his latest tour of duty at Sembach Air Force Base, Germany. Captains Lee J. Forbes and Ronald Meyers were also added to the staff. Captain Forbes was the new freshman instructor having com- pleted a year of duty at Anderson Air Force Base, Guam. Captain Meyers was the junior instructor hav- ing served a year at Bien Hoa AFB, Viet Nam. Special emphasis in the AFROTC is placed on practical leadership training. Sophomore students serve as leaders for the freshmen, and in turn, fresh- men lead participation in their own groups. A more intensive study of the political control of the military was added to the course. Last February 1, Colonel William A. Brinkerhoff became the Professor of Military Science in charge of the KU Army ROTC program. He graduated from the University of Nevada in 1947 and served for five years at 4th U.S. Army Headquarters directly preced- ing his move to the University. Two men new to the University of Kansas, Major Don Haas and Captain William Silvey, assisted him. Major Haas, who had just returned from one year of service in Viet Nam, taught sophomore and junior courses; Capt. Silvey, a 1963 graduate of West Point who also just returned from a year of duty in Viet Nam, taught freshman and sophomore courses. The Army four-year ROTC was continued without any changes; likewise, the two-year program, beginning its second year at KU, was not altered. Two new Navy instructors were also added to the ROTC faculty. Assisting Captain Eslinger were Lieu- tenants James McAllister and Paul Hunt. Lt. McAllis- ter came to the University of Kansas from Brunswick, Maine, where he had completed a tour of duty; Lt. Hunt, an Annapolis graduate, joined the staff after his tour of duty aboard the USS Monmouth County. Cap- tain Eslinger stated, Now, approximately thirteen per cent of the graduating ROTC class will go on to graduate school before serving their active duty. The Navy ROTC program, like that of the Army, was not changed. —Ted Gardiner LT. COL. CHAS. F. BROWN, Jo., Air Science; COL. Wm. A. BRINKERHOFF, Military Science; CAPT. ROOT. ESLINGER, JR., Naval Science. 77 The School of Medicine Today, important and interesting changes are occur- ring that mean rapidly increasing interaction and interdependence -between the Lawrence and School of Medicine campuses, some forty miles apart. Although it began as a hospital which supplied clinical training of medical students, the Center has grown and diversi- fied so that now only about 450 of the 1,200 students are medical students. An inter-campus faculty committee supervises mas- ter ' s and doctoral programs in audiology and speech pathology; and a major portion of the graduate students in special education, under jurisdiction of the School of Education, are based in the Children ' s Rehabilitation Unit at the Medical Center. Another important example of inter-campus activity is develop- ment of programs resulting in a recent federal grant of nearly two million dollars for establishment of a center for research in mental retardation and human development. The grant is for construction of facili- ties at KUMC, at Lawrence, and at Parsons. In 1965, changes were made in the administrative organization of the University in recognition of con- tinuing growth of the two major campuses, and in order to establish a chief officer for each campus, to be known as provost. Chief administrative officer for DR. GEORGE A. WOLF, Jo., of the Medical Center and Dean of the School of Medicine. 78 the Medical Center was Dr. C. Arden Miller, who became provost of the Medical Center and Dean of the School of Medicine. I n September, Dr. George A. Wolf, Jr., succeeded Dr. Miller, who was appointed Vice-Chancellor of Health Sciences at the University of North Carolina. Dr. Wolf came to Kansas from Bos- ton where he was executive director of the Tufts-New England Medical Center and Vice-President for Medi- cal and Dental Affairs of Tufts University. As he began his administration, Dr. Wolf empha- sized that computer and chemical tests are helpers but not substitutes toward greater precision in the work of the modern physician. His philosophy is one which places emphasis on compassionate, birth-to- death attention. Computers can diagnose, he stated, but medicine becomes a profession when you take action to help a patient. The action may be to do nothing, but the physician does not abandon the patient. And the job does not end with the individual. His family must be dealt with as well. The University of Kansas School of Medicine ' s home care unit is one that reinforces that doctrine. It has drawn national attention to the School as a program that adds new dimensions to medical education. Members of the first-year class are given opportunity to participate electively in the experimental program. The Kansas program is unique because it includes first-year students and uses a multi-disciplinary ap- proach in which teams of medical, nursing, occupa- tional therapy, physical therapy, dietetics, and social work students visit outpatients in the ir homes, usually with a staff physician. It has proven beneficial in reinforcing learning of the basic sciences and in de- veloping humanitarian attitudes towards patients as well as co-workers on the health team. In the fall, the School of Medicine welcomed the largest first-year class in history, 125 students. They entered following the graduation of the class of 1966, the first to complete all four years at the Medical Center in Kansas City. First-year students moved there in 1962, as learning in basic sciences had tradi- tionally been on the Lawrence campus. Presently the fastest growing group of students at KUMC are those in graduate programs such as anatomy, biochemistry, or dietetics and nutrition. As health needs grow, first- year classes of 150 members are envisioned. The number this fall on the faculty of the Medical School was about 700. This figure included physi- LEFT. With stethoscope-in-pocket, a trademark of the second-, third-, and fourth-year classes, a student takes time out for lunch. in the Medical Center ' s student cafeteria. RIGHT. A child enrolled in the pre-school for the deaf of the Children ' s Rehabilitation Unit holds on to a Christmas decoration during a class party. 79 clans, basic scientists, and nurses, 250 of which devote full time to the institution. In addition, there were some 300 resident physicians in specialty training programs and 23 interns. Some 450 professionals, scattered throughout the state, were on the clinical faculty. These primarily are physicians who are in practice and who donate some of their time to teach- ing programs. Studies made in 1964 reveal that the staff-student- employee population of KUMC is anticipated to in- crease fifty per cent by 1974, and sixty-six per cent by 1984. Currently there are 2,700 on the payroll and 1,200 students. Hospital admissions are 20,000 annu- ally, with outpatient visits numbering more than 225,000. We need more land during the coming dec- ade, Dr. Wolf stated. Our present campus is crowded with buildings, and we are faced with an increasing lack of parking spaces. Flexibility that additional land will provide permits us to plan an orderly expansion of education, health care, and re- search facilities. Broadly, the Medical Center has a tight central area devoted to the hospital complex, with other ac- tivities peripheral to it, including basic sciences, residences, and the Children ' s Rehabilitation Unit. New amidst the 20-building complex is the Spencer Memorial Chapel, designed for use by all faiths. A gift of Mrs. Kenneth Spencer, the chapel is the only one in the Midwest wherein Catholics, Protestants, and Jews use the same hospital facilities for service. Enlarging the central core of the Center is the D laboratory which this year added 70,000 square feet in seven floors faced to the D corridor. The $1.7 million facility, financed by state and federal monies to aid construction of teaching facilities, expanded most central supportive services in this teaching hos- pital. Overall long-range plans are underway to ex- pand the campus by some twenty acres, to almost double its size. While the Medical Center ' s plan for growth calls for dispersion to new buildings, much of its growth continues to be up as well as out, as it finds itself circumscribed by urban areas. The next major build- ing project will be a three-story addition for new pediatrics facilities atop the Clendening Library. Funds are assured for a two-floor addition to the present Children ' s Rehabilitation Unit, and for addi- tion of a new wing to the north which would mean four new floors. A TECIINICIAN WORKING IN A RESEARCH LABORATORY is a common sight at KUMC, as about one-fourth of the Medical Center ' s operating budget is devoted to research.. 80 UNIVERSITY LIFE r 81 82 LAURA KITCHEN, Queen of the 1966 Student Union Activities Carnival. Again this year, the Student Union was alive with the excitement and activity of the SUA Carnival. Fea- turing booths and skits produced by KU living groups, the Carnival was based on a theme of That Was the West That Was. According to Dave McClain, Carni- val Chairman, nearly 6,000 students and parents at- tended the Saturday night festivities. The highlight of the evening was the crowning of Miss Laura Kitchen as the 1966 SUA Carnival Queen. Miss Kitchen, a sophomore from Shawnee Mission, represented Delta Delta Delta. Her attendents were Patty Gilliland, Chi Omega, and Sheila Murphy, Gamma Phi Beta. The queen and her attendents were chosen from over twenty coeds nominated from KU women ' s living groups. Winning booths and skits were chosen by an SUA committee and judged on the basis of originality and on the number of tickets collected. Chi Omega, with their booth Leap Frog, won first place in the women ' s division. Second place in exhibits was awarded to Delta Gamma ' s Messin ' With the Maidens, while third place was won by Sigma Kappa ' s booth Pool Your Gold. Triangle captured the blue ribbon in the men ' s division with their booth Outdraw Big Irving. The runner-up spot went to Tau Kappa Epsilon for their entry entitled Jail, with third place honors going to the Delta Tau Delta booth Play Your Hunch and Shoot. In skit competition Watkins Hall excelled in wom- en ' s division with their presentation of What ' s New, Cat Ballou? followed by Alpha Omicron Pi ' s The West is Yet To Come. In the men ' s division Delta Chi ' s How the West was Wanton took first followed by the Sigma Chi ' s with Snow White and the Magnifi- cent Seven. —Connie McLain LEFT. TKE ' s hold KU outlaws captive in their Jail. RIGHT. Julie Turtle, part of the attraction at Kappa Alpha Theta ' s KAT Ballow 83 f Lionel Bart ' s Broadway musical, Oliver, was pre- sented by a twenty-four member cast as the University Theatre ' s first major fall musical production. The musi- cal is an adaption of Dickens ' Oliver Twist and takes place in a nineteenth-century English setting. Primary characters included Oliver Twist, Fagin, and Mr. Brownlow, portrayed by Sam Gabhart, Kip Niven, and Richard Kelton respectively. A group of fourteen children doubled as workhouse orphans and Fagin ' s pickpockets. All were accompanied by a six- teen member chorus-ensemble and the orchestra. The production opens with several starving or- phanage children waiting to be released from their cell and allowed to eat dinner. Oliver, who dares to ask for a second helping during the meal, is thought to be too impudent. He is therefore sold to a mortuary by Mr. Bumble, played by Lance Roy Hewett, who is in charge of the orphanage. Oliver ' s new job is that of boy coffin-follower —he is to mourn during children ' s funerals. It is in the funeral home that he sings Where is Love? Unhappiness finally forces Oliver to run away from the mortuary and start towards London. On his way he meets The Artful Dodger, characterized by Nicho- las Eliopoulos, who introduces him to a gang of pick- pockets headed by Fagin. Oliver becomes a pickpocket himself, and is finally caught in the act. He is taken to live with Mr. Brownlow. Though he is kidnapped by Nancy, portrayed by Pat Royse, who is in love with one of the members of the gang, he is found by Brown- low and the police and returned home safely. While staying at Brownlow ' s home, Oliver sings the exuber- ant Who Will Buy. With Brownlow he finally seems to have found love and a home. Problems which faced the cast included learning both the Cockney accent and how to maneuver on a revolving stage. The turntable gave the effect of the characters traveling great distances. Positions of minor characters were frozen at times, to point up more significant action and details. The musical was presented six nights, opening Nov- ember 3 and closing November 12. It was staged by Jack T. Brooking, with musical direction by George Lawner, choral direction by James Ralston, and set- tings by James Hawes. Chez Haehl designed costumes, and Joan Colwell managed lighting. —Judy McGhee 84 OPPOSITE PAGE. Kip Niven, as Fagan, and the boys sing You ' ve Got To Pick a Pocket or Two. THIS PAGE. Nancy, movingly por- trayed by Pat Royce, tells the orphans that It ' s a Fine Life. 85 The KU Experimental Theater held its first Fall Repertory Festival from October 10-15. Five plays which had been presented by KU ' s new summer repertory company in July were repeated. One pro- duction was given each night with performances of Romanoff and Juliet, The Adding Machine, Stop the World—I Want to Get Off, She Stoops to Conquer, and The Rehearsal included in the series. fhe thirty members of the summer repertory com- pany were selected last April with members ranging from freshmen who had not yet enrolled at KU to graduate students. Faculty members hope that some of the undergraduates will enroll in the pre-profes- sional training curriculum leading to an invitation to become members of the resident acting company. Each company member performed in two or more plays this summer and was responsible for helping with staging and mechanics. An eight-hour academic load was carried by each freshman. The company re- hearsed during the first three weeks of summer school with performances spotlighting the remaining five weeks. This fall, all productions except The Rehearsal were shown in the Experimental Theater. To add unity to the four Experimental Theater plays, tights and leotards were used as the basic costume. Set pieces were the only suggestion of period and style. The week was dedicated to Allen Crafton, the founder of the University Theater, who died July 22, 1966, after serving the University for forty-three years. —Judy McGhee eito )a-71 1 SUE TISDALL and Jack Hurley react with amazement to Kip Niven ' s gestures in the Festival ' s presentation of She Stoops to Conquer. Oh SEAN GRIFFIN, the Count, and Kip Niven, the lover, woo Countess Julia Callahan. V711, The University of Kansas Fall Repertory Festival opened with The Rehearsal, presented on October 7, 8, 14, and 15. A product of France ' s modern master of the theater, Jean Anouilh, The Rehearsal mixes Louis the Fifteenth costumes with modern immorality to pro- vide a vivid picture of seven people who live a life of constant play-acting. The story revolves around the rehearsals of an in- formal play to be presented by a French count and his household at a dinner party. The actors include the Count ( Sean Griffin), his mistress ( Jo Anna Schneider), the Countess ( Julia Callahan), her fop- pish lover ( Kip Niven), a drunken playboy ( Dennis Dalen ), a beautiful young nursemaid ( Linda McDon- ald), and her godfather ( Bob Bettcher ). Until the ar- rival of the nursemaid, the lives of the players have been teetering in equilibrium, the Count and Countess well aware of each other ' s amorous adventures while remaining a charming couple to the outside world. But with the nursemaid ' s presence established in the household, a great change comes over the Count: he falls in love. The equilibrium broken, the other mem- bers of the household conspire to destroy the new love; a mistress was one thing, a lover is quite another. Under the direction of Yugoslavia ' s Georgij Paro, The Rehearsal bridged the gap between real life and the play. Servants of the household moved scenery under stage lights. There were no curtains and at times actors who were waiting for their cues merely stood in the winls in full view of the audience. —Bob Butler 87 ,77- 7) 0 -K) 7 J IN GRANADA, Spanish Institute students Susan Weinlood and Connie Shaver visited the world-famous Alhambra palace and its Patio of the Lions. SUMMER ANGUAGE 114STITUTE As in previous years, the University of Kansas con- ducted a series of summer language institutes in Europe. More than 85 German, French, and Spanish students from the University took advantage of this unique opportunity to study a foreign language in a country where it is actually spoken, and at the saim-, time to enjoy and absorb a part of the culture of the respective countries. Members of the German Institute, headed by Dr. Francis Lide, spent most of the summer living with German families in the Bavarian village of Holzkir- chen. Weekends were punctuated by frequent trips into nearby Munich to see the opera or to visit the world-famous Gofbrauhaus. Highlights of the eight- week stay were a two-day mountain climbing expedi- tion, a five-day visit to Vienna, and another week-long trip to Berlin. Mr. John Williams guided the French students on a tour through northern France before they reached their destination—the student quarter of Paris. In addition to studying, they frequented the theater and opera, took weekend trips through France and neigh- boring countries, and participated in the street danc- ing and festivities of Bastille Day in Paris. Miss Cherrie Soper and her Spanish Institute group spent approximately ten days both at the beginning and at the end of the summer touring Spain. They visited such landmarks as the El Escorial Palace near Madrid which has housed all kings and queens of Spain since the 1500 ' s, and the caves of Altamira where the world ' s oldest paintings (18,000 years old) are still preserved. Barcelona was the headquarters for this Institute during the remainder of the summer. 88 Hit )1P 71-1111womp Th -rya The term Hilltopper is bestowed on a student who not only has established for himself an outstanding scholastic record at KU, but also has shown an unselfish, responsible leadership in non-academic areas of campus life. Granted that there will be many in any graduating class that might qualify as a those chosen for recognition here have displayed a Hilltopper ' s characteristics and abilities tently, and with excellence all through their college career. Any senior may apply for this recognition, or another student or faculty member may submit his name. These letters of recognition are reviewed by the newly-established Jayhawker topper Selection Board, composed of four faculty members and five students closely associated with all campus organizations. It is the Board ' s task to draw the thin line between above-average and excellent. The result of these selections are the six students who appear on the following pages. They, and the 18 Hilltoppers to follow in later Jayhawker editions, are the leaders and movers of KU ' s class of ' 67. In like manner, certain teachers deserve special recognition. These we call Hillteachers, and they, like the Hilhoppers, must show special characteristics. One such characteristic is a firm command of the subject matter of their courses. Another quality that is usually found in Hillteachers is an undefinable something that makes their students want to earnestly pursue their work. However, the most important char- acteristic is their devotion. The old-fashioned adage of teaching for teaching ' s sake—for its satisfaction—is no out-dated, meaningless idea to them. The student can find an uncommon understanding and willingness to help in the Hillteacher. Outside the classroom, these instructors often serve on one or more University committees to assist in the betterment of some aspect of KU. The two teachers on the following pages, and those that follow in later sections of the Jayhawker, have the knowledge, the devotion, and willingness to sacrifice. They deserve to be called Hillteachers. 4 ' ) Dip 4n. Stu. kotaad, In 1958, on the invitation of the University, Dr. Marilyn Stokstad visited KU to look over its Art History Department. I accepted their invitation only because I had never been this far west before and could not imagine what a large university would be like in a place called Lawrence, Kansas, stated Dr. Stokstad. The feeling of freedom I found in my three-day stay was exciting. It was an excitement that ranged from the wide-open spaces of Mount Dread to the free intellectual pursuits of its student body, and they blended so well that I fell in love with it all. Dr. Stokstad is a native of Michigan, born and raised in Oakemos. She spent her college days first at Carleton College where she graduated with distinction, majoring in painting, sculptor, and art history. While at Carleton she was also a member of Mortar Board and Phi Beta Kappa. The next years were filled on the campuses of Michigan State and the University of Michigan, where she received her Masters and Doctorate degrees. Spanish Sculpture and Architecture of the 11th and 12th Centuries describes the field of work for which she has won several research fellowships. Most of her summers are spent in Santiage de Compostela, Spain. Recently she completed work on a book to be published this next fall entitled Rennaissance Art Outside Italy. Presently Dr. Stokstad is Chairman of KU ' s Art History Department and Director of the Museum of Art, both of which are widely known for their unique synthesis of esthetics and education. 90 410 F71 Lix,3466aeher ][3i. Harry Shaffer One of the main tasks in teaching introductory economics is to make the sub- ject interesting, said Dr. Harry G. Shaffer, associate professor of economics. As business school statistics indicate, Dr. Shaffer has succeeded in making Eco- nomics 10 interesting, for there are 360 students now enrolled in the two sections he teaches. There are 27 additional students taking Economics 130 under his direction. Dr. Shaffer ' s past is filled with travel, experience, and determination to stand up for what he believes. Born in Vienna, he served in United States Army Intelligence before taking up his studies at New York University. Prior to coming to KU in 1956 Dr. Shaffer held two other teaching jobs: one for over a year at Concord College in West Virginia, and another for six-and-a-half years at the University of Alabama. His career at Alabama was cut short when he resigned in protest of the board of regents ' s action in expelling Autherine Lucy, the first Negro girl to enter the university. During his ten years at KU, Dr. Shaffer has not been satisfied merely to teach his subject—he lives it. Specializing in Soviet and Eastern European economics, he is the editor of two published texts, The Soviet Economy and The Soviet System in Theory and Practice, and of the upcoming work, The Communist World. Although he has no plans to leave, he wants to travel to Munich and continue his research in the Soviet and Eastern European economy, with perhaps a visit to Communist countries. 91 HILLTOPPER GLENDA HORD Recognition of Glenda Hord as a KU Hilltopper comes as a fitting climax to four years of active leadership in several phases of KU life. Scholastically she has proven herself by being secretary of Cwens, a Watkins scholar, a member of Mortar Board, and by maintaining a 2.73 C.P.A. Demonstrating leadership in social affairs, Glenda has ser- ved as pledge class president and secretary of Chi Omega, and is now president of Panhellenic Council. She has also served as a Panhellenic counselor during rush. Active in other areas, Glenda has been a member of the AWS Senate, numerous SUA committees, and Chi Delphia, auxiliary to Delta Chi fraternity. During her freshman year she was a floor chairman in GSP and a member of GSP ' s Hall Coun- cil. This year Glenda was appointed to the Dean ' s Advisory Board and serves on the Human Relations Committee. After graduation in June, Glenda plans to teach, putting to use her experience and her major in common learnings and secondary education. HILETOPPER GARY GREGG Academic honors and activities have keynoted the college career of Gary Gregg, a Phi Beta Kappa from Coldwater. With a GPA of 2.78, Gary belongs to honorary frater- nities of both his majors, history and political science. Presently he is vice-chairman of the College Intermediary Board, editor of the University Review, and secretary of Sachem. He also serves on the University Disciplinary Committee, on the administrative committee of Centennial College, and as an assistant instructor of Western Civiliza- tion. Prior to his senior year Gary was secretary of Owl Society, chairman of the Rock Chalk Revue Publicity Com- mittee, and president of the Men ' s Scholarship Hall Coun- cil. As a resident of Stephenson Hall, he has served as scholarship chairman, as captain of the KU College Bowl Team, and as a member of the Big Eight College Bowl Team. Having received a 1966 National Science Founda- tion Undergraduate Research Grant in political science, Gary plans graduate work in English history. 92 HILLTOPPER KAY ORTH While carrying a triple major in English, Russian, and Slavic Area Studies, Hilltopper Kay Orth has gained rec- ognition for her achievements in nearly every facet of university life. An overall 2.70 GPA led Kay to election to Cwens, Mortar Board, and Phi Beta Kappa, as well as reception of a Watkins Scholarship. Pursuing inter- national studies abroad, Kay participated in the KU- CU Russian Summer Language Institute. Kay ' s interest in student government is typified by her performances in AWS as a member of the Standards Board and as treasurer. She has also served on the College Bowl Committee, as secretary of the Council on Student Affairs, and as a mem- ber of the Chancellor ' s University Centennial Committee. As an ASC representative from her sorority, Kappa Alpha Theta, she has been executive secretary, chairman of sev- eral committees, and delegate to the Big Eight Student Government Conference. After graduation, Kay plans to further her work in Soviet Area Studies at graduate school. HILLTOPPER RICK HARRINGTON Spreading his talent among numerous endeavors, Rick Harrington has met each self-imposed challenge with ex- cellence. Since receiving the Veta B. Lear Award for top freshman scholarship, Rick has maintained a 2.92 overall GPA, with a 3.00 in his majors, international relations and Slavic Area Studies. In conjunction with these majors, he attended the 1966 Russian Language Institute at Moscow State University, and plans to attend law school after graduation in June. Active in his fraternity, Delta Tau Delta, Rick was chosen rush chairman his sophomore year and as an ASC fraternity representative his junior year. As a junior, he was also selected for membership in both Owl Society and Pi Sigma Alpha, and was chosen the outstanding junior man in political science. Further qual- ifying Rick as a Hilltopper are his previous obligations both as SUA vice-president and as a member of the Union Operating Board, and his current membership in Sachem. 93 HIE TOPPED, KAY PAT TE RSON Since transferring from Northwestern University, Hilltop- per Kay Patterson has compiled an exceptional record of achievement as a student at KU and as a member of her sorority, Kappa Kappa Gamma. Combining capable leader- ship with high scholarship, Kay has served on the Dean ' s Advisory Council, the Council on Student Affairs, the University Review Editorial Board, as chairman of the College Intermediary Board, and as a Freshman Residence Hall Counselor. Also present on her long record of achieve- ments are such accomplishments as KU Previews Coun- selor, ASC Student Communications Board membership, and participation on her sorority ' s College Bowl team. While maintaining a 2.50 GPA, with a 3.00 in her Soci- ology major, Kay has earned many scholastic awards, in- cluding a National Merit Scholarship, a National Science Foundation Undergraduate Research Grant in Sociology, a Watkins Scholarship, and a tap from Mortar Board, of which she is now president. Kay plans to continue her studies in social work in graduate school next fall. H I LET OPPE R DAVE WA X S E With a double major in economics and international re- lations, Dave Waxse plans b oth to acquire a Master ' s in business administration and to enter law school next fall. Maintaining a GPA of 2.00, Dave has been honored with membership in Owl Society and Sachem. He is cur- rently president of Student Union Activities, after having served as chairman of People-to-People. Other related activities in which Dave has proven himself a leader in- clude the University Review, the Dean ' s Advisory Council, the Kansas Union Executive Board and the Union Operat- ing Board. He has likewise served his fraternity, Delta Upsilon, as pledge trainer. Indicative of the fact that Dave is one of the most diversified leaders in the 1967 senior class is his membership in K-Club. He began playing football and basketball his freshman year, and subsequent football and academic performances gained him an hon- orable mention on the Academic Big Eight team and a nomination for Academic All-American. 94 ADS INDEX 95 PIP7P4E .0 OVIT ' S GAIIT3 VFW@ , - A Abbott, Fred 29 Ackerman, Kathy 18 Adams, Annette 15 Barewin, Janet 25 Barley, Bruce 34 Barnes, Elizabeth Ann 20 Barnes, Scott 31 Barrett, Cindy 22 Bower, Dayle 18 Bower, Rita 17 Bowers, Karen 25 Bowker, Judy 24 Bowles, Leslie 15 Caldwell, Linda 23 Call, John A. 35 Callahan, Michael Thomas, II 29 Callaway, Mike 36 Adams, Susan 25 Barrett, Rebecca Susan 23 Bowman, Marilyn 22 Campbell, Richard 32 Adams, Vickie 24 Barrier, Stu 33 Boxum, Belva 19 Campbell, Sam D. 30 Aenchbacher, Arthur 32 Barritt, Dennis 30 Boyd, Charles 28 Campbell, Steve 34 Aeschbacher, Bill 33 Barrow, Bill 32 Boyer, Mike 33 Campbell, Susan 17 Afton, Beth 21 Barry, Marty 22 Boyle, Mary Ann 20 Capper, Nancy 19 Aggson, Dave A. 32 Barsky, Judy 21 Boyns, Rose Marie 18 Cargill, Dianne 21 Ainsworth, Jenny 24 Bartcher, Rene 19 Bozarth, Phil 34 Carl, Ralph 30 Aitken, Deborah 19 Bartcow, Cindy 17 Bozeman, Kay 18 Carmain, Chris 21 Akers, Susan 11. 22 Basow, William M. 35 Brackett, Becky 21 Carmichael, Steve 28 Akin, Aileen 24 Bass, Janet 21 Bradley, Thomas, Jr. 32 Carr, Linda L. 21 Albon, Don 33 Bassinson, Oscar M. 27 Brady, Mike 31 Carroll, Sue 21 Alderson, Marcia 23 Bauerle, Brian 34 Brandes, Kathy 26 Carson, Jan 17 Alderson, Russ 27 Baugh, Ruthe 25 Brandt, Andy 29 Carson, Mary Pat 22 Aldis, Stephen 30 Baxter, Jeff 27 Brausa, R. Edward 30 Carson, Susan 21 Alexander, Nancy 15 Beagle, Sara 18 Bray, Shelley 16 Carter, David 28 Allbritten, Linda 18 Bear, Suzie 20 Breckenridge, Jim 33 Carter, Sharon 25 Allen, Candy 21 Bedner, Mark 32 Brekke, Dana Christine 21 Caruthers, Candy 23 Allen, David 36 Begel, Debby 21 Brenk, Kathy 16 Carver, Cathy 18 Allen, Joy 21 Begley, Barbara 17 Brenner, Ann 21 Cassity, Claudia 21 Allen, Mickey 31 Bell, Christy 21 Brewer, Eileen 20 Castor, Pam 18 Allen, Steve 31 Bellman, John 34 Briery, Linda 17 Cates, Larry 33 Allison, Sara 22 Belobrajdic, William 28 Briery, Sharon 25 Cavert, Kathy 25 Alloway, Lee C. 31 Belot, Allen C. 33 Brighton, Steve 33 Cederberg, Ilene 21 Ambler, Jacqueline 15 Benefiel, Bill 29 Brooker, Cindy 23 Chaffee, Judy 18 Ambler, Jaryl 17 Bennett, Donna 15 Brockman, Kathy 21 Chambers, Carol 18 Andersen, Sandy 16 Benskin, Barbara 25 Brocler, Bruce 31 Chandler, Ray 27 Anderson, Aileen 26 Benson, Phil 32 Brother, Joyce 19 Chapman, Andy 31 Anderson, Carrie 15 Bentley, Charlotte 20 Broockerd, Larry 26 Chapman, Barbara 18 Anderson, Charles L. 32 Berg, Wendy 19 Brown, Alice 22 Cherot, Suzanne 22 Anderson, Karen 23 Berggren, Alice 21 Brown, Cathy 20 Childers, Nancy 20 Anderson, Kathy 15 Bergman, Bobbi 19 Brown, Gil 31 Chilla, Milan 31 Anderson, Sally 15 Berry, Chris 26 Brown, John 35 Chipman, David 34 Anderson, Vickie 21 Berry, Jodi 24 Brown, Nancy 20 Chowins, Chuck 29 Anholt, Diana 19 Besse, Becky 23 Brown, Pam 21 Clader, Jennifer 18 Antenen, Linda Lu 19 Betty, Duane 31 Brown, Scott 27 Clancey, Jim 31 Applegate, Kathie 24 Betty, Ruby 22 Brown, Steve 29 Clark, John 27 Arbuthnot, Linda 21 Bevan, G. David 36 Brown, Susan 20 Clark, Ken 30 Arbuthnot, Sandy 19 Beyer, Diane 23 Brown, Thomas E. 34 Clark, Larry 30 Argabright, Rita Jo 23 Bickel, Shay 29 Brownlee, Joyce 20 Clark, Lauren 23 Armbruster, Andy 19 Biery, Elise 17 Brubaker, Linda 16 Clark, Linda 26 Armstrong, Jim 33 Rigsby, Bill 31 Brumback, Sarah 20 Clark, Terry L. 30 Arnold, Pat 15 Bill, Betsy 21 Brune, Stuart 35 Clements, Janie 23 Arthur, Bob 30 Billick, L. Larkin 31 Bruning, Linda 17 Clendenin, Bob 30 Arutunoff, Christina 16 Binda, Arlene 15 Bryan, Eddie 30 Cline, Jane 21 Ashland, Peggy 20 Binns, Kathy 17 Bubb, Stephen 31. Clinton, AI 27 Ashline, Susie 20 Birney, Bill 28 Buck, Charles 34 Cochran, Karen 25 Ashmore, Sue 19 Birney, Lynn 22 Buck, Wally 28 Cochran, Steve 27 Askren, Roy 29 Birse, Stewart 27 Buckley, Tim 27 Cochrane, Robert 35 Augustson, Kent 33 Bishop, Mike G. 29 Buckman, Carol 21 Coday, Rodney 30 Aureli, Dinah 24 Bishop, Nancy 20 Budd, Pamela 21 Cody, Celeste 15 Austin, Virginia 26 Black, Robert 32 Buescher, James F. 33 Coffelt, Jim 34 Aviks, Valda 26 Black, Tanya 20 Buller, Marilyn 25 Cohen, Marvin 27 Awbrey, David 30 Black, Vicki 17 Bulmer, Deborah 15 Cole, Brenda 21 Ayers, Anne 23 Blair, Broc 29 Burcham, Karen 21 Coleman, Donna 21 Azzolin, Pam 22 Blair, Stephen 34 Burchell, Martha 25 Coles, Allison 16 Blake, Mike 31 Burdick, Lanny R. 33 Collier, Marilyn 21 Blankenship, Carol 17 Burdine, Tom 31 Collier, Tommye 25 Blasberg, Michael 35 Burleigh, Vickie 21 Collister, Chris 22 B Blee, Barbara 20 Burnet, Cheryl K. 21 Colvin, William 28 Bloomer, Dianne 25 Burrow, Gayle 20 Colwell, Robert 28 Babcock, Marla 15 Blythe, Kaylene 18 Burton, Barbara 24 Combs, Pete 29 Bachrach, Jan 19 Boggs, Jerry Kay 22 Bush, Granville M., IV 33 Comstock, Dennis 30 Baer, Kackie 24 Bohn, Susy 20 Butler, Bob 33 Conklin, Vina 21 Bagby, Jack 27 Bond, Rick 34 Butler, Elizabeth 26 Connell, Paula 24 Bailey, Barbara 19 Bonebright, Candy 25 Butler, Linda 26 Constantine, Gloria 24 Baimacombe, Susan 22 Booker, Judy 25 Butterfield, Ann 23 Cook, Chuck 34 Bain, Roger 31 Boone, Linda 17 Byard, Curt 30 Cook, Pam 18 Baker, Arlyss 26 Booth, Keryl 26 Byer, Janet 26 Cook, Sam 31 Baker, Connie 20 Borel, Jane 17 Byers, Jon 28 Cook, Valerie 21 Baker, Paul 31 Bork, Robert M. 32 Cooke, Patricia 18 Balding, Becky 15 Bornkessel, Richard 29 Coolidge, Pook 18 Ball, Tommy 32 Borum, Carey W. 33 Cooper, Linda 16 Ballivian, Louis 33 Bos, Joanne 18 C Corbin, Nancy 22 Baltz, Marilyn 22 Bosley, Dennis 33 Corder, Mark 34 Bandle, Tony 36 Bottenfield, J. D. 30 Cady, John 32 Cordill, Jacquelynn 17 Banks, Jim 34 Bounous, Brenda 17 Cabal, Skip 33 Cordonier, Jim 32 Banning, Julie 24 Boutross, Julie 20 Cairns, J. Michael 35 Cornelius, Juice 20 Barber, Vivian 17 Bowen, Bob 29 Calahan, Pat 25 Cornell, Sandra 18 98 Cornett, Sandy 17 Cott, Dan 29 Cotter, John B. 32 Cowan, Fiona 18 Cox, Nancy 17 Crable, Bill 31 Craig, Cindy 18 Grail, Steve 27 Crawford, Nancy 18 Crawford, Nila 15 Croman, Linda Kay 19 Crook, Donald 35 Cross, Kris 22 Crow, Pamela 17 Cuiham, Phyllis 22 Cunningham, Pat 16 Curry, Scott B. 32 Curteman, Susie 24 Cushing, Steve 31 D Dagenais, John 35 Dale, Sarah 18 Darling, Sherry 24 Darrah, Bo 30 Davenport, Gary 29 Davies, Laurie 18 Davies, Linda 20 Davis, James E. 34 Davis, Jeff 30 Davis, Jim 32 Davis, Roger L. 32 Davis, Stephen 35 Dawson, Kathy 18 Dawson, Richard T. 30 Dearing, Connie 15 Dechant, Beth 17 Deetjen, Barbara 18 Deffenbaugh, Diane 19 Delker, Carol 15 Dellinger, Judith Ann 20 Delp, Kathy 22 Demoss, Debra 19 Dempsey, Michael 31 Dent, Susie 15 De Shun, Vicki 22 Desilet, Cynthia 21 Deutch, Lawrence S. 27 Deutsch, Dian 19 Dexter, Grace Ann 26 Dexter, Steve 34 Dickens, Kathy 15 Dickerson, Gary N. 32 Dickerson, Steve 34 Dickeson, Michael. P. 27 Dickson, Bruce W., III 33 Diebolt, Judi 19 Diehl, Susan 15 Diepenbrock, Mary 21 DiGiovanni, Pete 31 Dimick, Joyce 18 Ditchfield, Claire Ellen 19 Diver, Doris 23 Doak, Debbie 19 Doane, Sally 25 Dodge, Marti 25 Doll, Jane 25 Donald, Jane 15 Doner, Bobbie 22 Donhowe, Pam 19 Dorsey, Jim 33 Douville, Doug 30 Doyle, Micheal 30 Dreher, Ann 15 Dreiling, Janet 19 Driscoll, Dennis 33 Driski, Mary 15 DuBois, Lyn 15 Dufek, Linda 15 Duguid, Jill 15 Dull, Teresa 25 Dumler, Steve 27 Dummermuth, Richard 29 Dunauan, Irene 25 Dunaway, Cathy 22 Duncan, Dianne 19 Duncan, Gary 33 Duncan, Myrl L. 35 Dunn, Harriet 25 Dunnick, Jo 24 Dupre, Susie 21 Durrett, Rick 30 Dustman, Tony 30 Dutton, Tammy 18 Dysort, Dave 27 E Early, Peggie 19 Eastwood, Garry 28 Eaton, Christine 15 Edgington, David 32 Edmunds, Sue 15 Edwards, Gloria 17 Edwards, John B. 33 Ehrhardt, Carol 22 Eidson, Phyllis 24 Eisler, Marli 21 Elder, Nancy 19 Eliopoulos, Nicholas 26 Elkins, Robert L. 30 Elledge, Karen 20 Eller, Connie 20 Elliott, Carole 22 Elliott, Susan 19 Ellis, Mary 23 Ellis, R. Brad 34 Engelbrecht, Leland 27 England, Alice 20 Englebrake, Peggy 25 Engles, Renetta 19 Engstrom, Carolyn 15 Eubank, Carol 23 Evans, Bill 31 Evans, Dale 29 Evans, Jean 23 Evans, Mary 20 F Fabac, Connie 16 Falleck, Roger 27 Fankhauser, Pam 19 Farber, Sterling 30 Farley, Judy 20 Farley, Ruanne 19 Farrington, Don 29 Farris, Linda Kay 24 Feaster, Philip 29 Feinberg, Francie 25 Fencyk, Larry 31 Fenner, Jan 18 Ferguson, Pam 19 Ferraro, Tish 23 Fewin, Kathy 18 Ficek, Mark A. 35 Fiddler, DeAnna 16 Fiebach, Jane 16 Fields, Cynthia 23 Fieser, Jane 18 Filby, Linda 16 Fiman, Bruce M. 27 Finch, Connie 23 Finholm, Kathy 19 Finkenbinder, David 0. 33 Finlay, Joan 20 Finley, Pat 16 Finney, Candy 15 Finney, Fran 15 Fischer, Bill 29 Fisher, Dale R. 31 Fisher, John 36 Fisher, Norm 27 Fisk, Barby 25 Flanagan, Jan 23 Fleeson, Sally 23 Flint, Nancy 20 Floersch, Bob 28 Flora, David 26 Folbre, Dee 20 Foley, Peter 35 Folk, Gaila 24 Fontron, Beth 25 Foote, Sherry 24 Foran, Maggie 21 Forster, Michele 20 Forsyth, Paula 22 Forsythe, Howard 33 Fosmire, Harold 31 Foss, Jane 21 Foster, Carol 20 Foster, Debbie 21 Foster, Emily 23 Foster, Sue 21 Fotopulos, Thomas Eugene 31 Fowler, Margaret 15 Fowler, Martha 15 Frank, Gaylord A. 31 Frank, Ruby 20 Franklin, Ben 35 Franks, Harriet 22 Franzmeier, Doris 23 Fraser, Jane 22 Fredenburg, John L. 33 Freeland, Mike 33 Freeman, Rick 34 French, Paula 15 Freshwater, Kim 22 Frey, Judy 21 Frick, Karen 16 Fritz, James R. 30 Frost, Janey 15 Fueyo, Kathi 22 Fujisaki, Paula 21 Fulton, Peggy 23 Furney, Drew ( Woody) 34 G Gaddie, Robert A. 35 Galles, Rick 32 Gans, Stephen C. 30 Garber, Margaret 15 Garcia, Toni 20 Gardella, Luis 35 Gardiner, Ted 29 Garvin, Mary 21 Gast, James L. 31 Gatch, Nancy 16 Gaughan, Dave 27 Gebhart, Joanne 19 Gehhnann, Sara 23 Geiger, Mike 28 Geissal, John 32 Gencur, Jim 31 Gerrity, Mary Ellen 16 Getto, Paul R. 26 Gibbons, John W. 33 Gibbons, Paula 16 Gibbs, Donald G. 30 Gibbs, Steve 32 Gibson, Doug 29 Giessel, Michael D. 32 Gilbert, Gail 16 Gilbert, Rick 34 Gilbert, Susan 21 Gilhousen, Jim 29 Gille, Barbara 23 Gille, Margaret 18 Gillespie, Milton 28 Gillespie, Nancy 23 Gillie, John 32 Gilliland, Amy 26 Gjengdahl, Nancy 23 Gleason, Mark 35 Gleason, Thomas E. 32 Glick, Randy 33 Glover, Molly 16 Goad, Deanna 23 Gochnauer, Jane 19 Goddard, Mary 22 Godfrey, Virginia Lynn 21 Godwin, Charlene 16 Goering, Dan 34 Goering, Joyce 19 Goertz, Steve 33 Gold, Janice 19 Goldberg, Marilyn 19 Gomer, Gary 28 Good, Mike 33 Goodman, Joseph 27 Goossen, Cindy 25 Gordon, Goge 22 Gorrell, Betty 22 Gorsuch, Pam 20 Goss, Hal 29 Graham, Ann 23 Graham, Michael 29 Graheck, Ted 31 Grant, Cindy 25 Gray, Bill 31 Graybill, Bill 31 Greenamyre, David A. 32 Greer, Cindy 15 Greever, Lee 29 Gresham, Susan 15 Grigg, Mady 22 Grissom, Mark P. 33 Grojean, Joe 29 Groom, Marsha 21 Gross, Jan 16 Grove, Kathy 16 Gruber, Gregory G. 28 Guese, Karen 16 Guest, Kenneth 33 H Haas, Carl 33 Habigcr, Anita 16 Hacker, Doug 27 Hacker, Karen 20 Hadley, Jean 25 Hagerman, Raymond 27 Haggans, Mike 27 Haggart, Tricia 18 Haglund, Barbara 21 Hales, Lee 32 Hall, Francie 25 Hall, Pat 21 Hall, Stewart 34 Hallquist, Jeff 33 Hambleton, Linda 22 Hamilton, Bob 36 Hamlin, Claudia 21 Hampel, Kathy 23 Handley, Judy 19 Hansen, Jeraldine 20 Hantla, Mark 28 Harbert, Carolyn 16 Harden, Kenneth 32 Hardin, Nancy 18 Harding, Bennie 34 Hardman, Judy 19 Hardy, Jane 16 Harmon, Mary 22 Harmon, Nancy 24 Harms, Trisha 23 Richard 28 Harrelson, Sandy 25 Harris, Bekki 19 Harris, Kayzene 19 Harris, Pam 16 Harris, Robert W. 30 Harris, Susan 16 Harrison, Benjamin 31 Harrow, Jim 31 Harsh, Claudia 19 Hartman, Bob 32 Hartman, Herbert A. 28 Hartman, Van M. 33 Hartzell, Cindy 19 Harvey, Terry L. 31 Haskins, Sami 22 Hatfield, James F. 33 Hatter, Jo 20 Hawley, Jeanne 16 Hawley, Joel V. 33 Haydon, Lyn 22 Hayes, Jim 29 Hayles, Robert 35 Hayman, Susan C. 24 Haynes, Pam 22 Haynes, Stephan C. 34 Hays, Christopher 28 Heafley, Sherri 16 Heaton, Heather 24 Heavin, Candie 17 Hefling, Toni 26 Heimann, Mary Ann 24 Hein, Mike 28 Heison, John 32 Henderson, Hazel 26 Henderson, Vicki 16 Henmi, Patti 19 Hennessy, Ruthanne 21 Herbel, Hellen 24 Herd, Hal 29 Hermesch, Alan 35 Herold, Becky 17 Herrelson, Sandy 25 Herrick, Nancy 20 Herring, Ann 16 Herrmann, Anita 21 Hertzler, Bill 27 Hetherington, Janet 22 Hetlinger, John S. 33 Heyman, Pam 20 Hiatt, David 26 Hiatt, Keith 34 Hickey, Thomas J. 32 Hickman, Michael J. 34 Hicks, Bill 30 Hicks, David 32 Hidaka, David 28 Hiett, Dixie 26 Higdon, Phil 27 Hildebrand, Sharon 19 Hildreth, Pat 16 Hill, Dave 34 Hill, David E. 33 Hill, Dennis 33 Hill, Kathy 22 Hilleary, Rick 34 Hiltabrand, Lucy 18 Hinckley, Kathy 24 Hindman, James E. 35 Hinmarch, Don 29 Hinkhouse, Steve 33 Hinsch, Linda 22 Hinshaw, Carol 24 Hind, Kathy 17 Hirk, Mario 17 Hobson, Judy 19 Hocker, Mary 22 Hocking, Bruce A. 28 Hodges, Bonnie 23 Hodges, Cherlene 16 Hodle, Robert 31 Hodson, Martha 19 Hoffman, Rollie 32 Hofmeister, Elizabeth 16 Hogue, Evelyn 25 Horns, Peggy 23 Holder, Margaret 26 Holder, Mike 29 Holford, Connie 17 Hollis, Steve 29 Holm, Steven 29 Holman, Mary 19 Holmes, Donna 19 Holmes, Lex 33 Holston, Galen L. 30 Holtke, Sherri 24 Holtsberg, Ellen 20 Hommertzheim, Marilyn A. 26 Hooks, Rosalyn Janet 24 Hoover, Carol 19 Hopmann, Janet 19 Horigan, Janice 18 Hornbaker, Tom 29 Horton, Francie 20 Horton, Mary 16 Horwitz, Lynne 19 Haskinson, Jane 26 Hostetler, Quin C. 30 Houser, Jan 24 Houtman, Cindy 22 Howard, David W. 33 Howard, Jane 18 Hower, Jim 27 Howland, Bob 35 Hoyt, Sandy 20 Hubbard, Judith 20 Hubbard, Pat 24 Hudspeth, Bob 27 Hueben, Dave 27 Huegel, Shery 19 Huggins, Donald L. 34 Huggins, Jim 34 Hughes, J. 0. 28 Hull, Jack 26 Hull, Libby 21 Hummer, Margie 24 Humphreys, Karen 15 Hundley, Peggy 20 Hunter, Ruth Ellen 18 Huntress, David 32 Huston, Blythe 24 Hutchison, Bill 35 Hvale, Dick 27 Hybarger, Linda 22 Hyde, Tom 31 Hyndman, Lissa 24 Hyten, Shannon 22 99 SEM BANK OF LAWRENCE 4T4 I AMID INa,3 ACCA USETTS LAWRENCE. KANSAS VI 3-0152 IDINIIMP-111N1 K AT 9TH AND TENNESSEE ST. II EDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION I- ' A VEL AGENCY - MAIN BANK illIMMEN1111111.111_ [4 ' -3 -3 Kolins, Karla 20 MacDougall, Margaret 26 Mc Kopetz, Sandy 22 Macek, Anita 21 Iddings, Carol 17 Korff, Barbara 20 Macholz, Pat 21 McBride, Beth 19 foes, Ken 36 Korsten, Gerald M. 30 Machir, Margaret Ann 21 McBride, Judy 20 Ingram, Linda 21 Kraft, Phillip T. 28 MacLean, Lair 19 McCall, Pat 20 Inman, Boyd 28 Krause, Gary 32 Magma, Vickie 22 McClanahan, Rose 26 Innes, Laurie 24 Kraybill, Carol 21 Malone, Betty 22 McConnell, Judy 22 Irvine, Joan 24 Krebs, Priscilla 17 Mann, Juliann 19 McConnell, Kathy 24 Irwin, Sheri 22 Krehbiel, Carl C. 36 Mansur, Cheryl Ann 21 McCoy, Buffie 21 Kreuzberger, Cindy 20 Markillie, Regina 21 McCracken, Fred 34 Kritikos, William 35 Markley, Anita 21 McCray, Molly 21 Krivo, Karen 21 Marolf, Richard G. 35 McCrcrey, Linda 22 Kroeplin, Judy 15 Mar r, Judy 17 McCue, Sue 17 Kryston, Kathy 15 Marshall, Mary 25 McCuen, Cynthia 18 Jaax, John 33 Kuhn, Peggy 20 Martasin, Adrienne 17 McCulloh, Bob 27 Jackson, George 28 Kuhns, Faith 24 Martin, Gail 24 McCullough, Connie 23 Jacoby, Joyce 23 Kunkel, Jodi 22 Martin, Jon 33 McDaniel, Jan 16 Jahn, Donna 17 Martin, Mary 20 McDaris, Minnie 23 Jantz, Sharon 21 Martin, Michael 34 McDonald, Marvin 33 Jarrell, Judy 19 Martin, Scott 33 McElfresh, Leslie Ann 23 Jarrett, Don 36 L. Mason, Connie 22 McGee, Judy 19 Jarvis, Mark 29 Mason, Pete 36 McGee, LeAnn 18 Jeffers, Coly 22 Ladesich, Mary 26 Massey, Rebecca 21 McGiffert, Steve 29 Jenkins, Frank 33 Lafferty, Michael 32 Mast, Alan G. 34 McGill, Patti 23 Jennewein, Leslie 20 Laidig, Margaret 24 Masterson, Evie 22 McGough, Ann 17 Jennings, Linda 21 Lally, Pat 15 Matejka, Bob 33 McGuire, Larry 27 Jeserich, Jerry 29 Lamb, Penny 21 Mather, Teresa 23 McHenry, Linda 20 Jeter, William 30 Lane, Brian 28 Mathews, Cheryl 20 McIntire, Dave 31 Dobson, Vernon 30 Lane, Jeannie 19 Mathis, Deb 25 McKenna, Patricia 25 Johnson, Bill 34 Lane, Sheila 25 Matthey, Carol 18 McLaughlin, Becky 20 Johnson, Cathy 16 Johnson, Glenna 19 Johnson, Gloria 16 Johnson, Jan 17 Johnson, Kay A. 25 Johnson, Linda 26 Johnson, Melody 25 Johnson, Micheal E. 33 Johnson, Phyllis 26 Johnson, Robert 32 Johnson, Sandy 17 Johnson, Tish 20 Johnson, Twila 20 Johnston, Ann 23 Laney, David 27 Langley, John 28 Lansrud, Lannette 24 Larson, Craig 27 Larson, Judy 22 Larson, Kirke 28 Latimer, Bob 33 Laughead, James 33 Lauter, Barbara 25 Law, Pam 17 Laws, Walter 35 Lawton, Chad 27 Layman, Leslie 21 Leckband, Susan 20 Mauk, Sally Sue 21 Mawby, Karen Lea 22 May, Carol 19 May, Gerry 27 May, Harold D. 33 Mayes, Diane 24 Mayes, Jim 34 Mee, Toni 22 Meeker, Douglas A. 27 Meier, Cynthia 21 Meier, Fred 36 Meier, Russell E. 28 Melhorn, Molly 18 Mellgren, Sue 18 McLaughlin, Harry James McLaughlin, James 29 McLaughlin, Jane D. 26 McMahan, Robert 30 McMahon, James 34 McMillan, Janiece 21 McMullen, Marcia 26 McNaughton, Mindy 22 McNeill, John T. 31 McNew, Mary 22 McNinch, Pat 18 McPherson, Bruce M. 30 McRae, Marsha 22 McRobbie, Beth 20 Johnston, Judy 17 Lee, Larry 34 Melody, Pat 36 Johnston, Ted 35 Lee, Linda 21 Mendelsohn, Judy 23 Jones, Arch 27 Jones, Marcia 23 Lee, Lonnie 30 Leek, Carol 23 Menke, Sue 24 Meredith, Cathy 23 N Jones, Pam 24 Jones, Paul Allan 32 Jones, Richard 27 Jones, Terry 26 Jones, Tom 30 Jones, Zetta 24 Jordan, Anne 20 Jordan, Matt 33 Jorgensen, Paul 26 Jouvenat, Suzanne 26 Joyce, Heather Ann 22 Joyce, Steve 29 Juergensen, Virginia 25 Jungbluth, Terry 23 Jydstrup, Doug 35 Lees, Mary Beth 20 Leffel, Rusty 28 Leffingwell, Randall 27 Lehman, Cathy 21 Leibowitz, Bronna 25 LeMasters, Sharon 15 Lemley, Judy 25 Lemme, Astrid 18 Lemons, Linda 17 Leone, Suzanne 23 Leveritt, Connie 23 Lewis, Lew 33 Lewis, Tonya 18 Light, Ginger 22 Liley, Tom 35 Lillard, Mary 18 Merritt, Jan 18 Meschke, Marty 24 Metcalf, Lorraine 17 Meyer, Diane 19 Meyer, Susan 18 Michalski, Nick 33 Mikuta, Lynda 23 Milan), Margaret 17 Milberger, Terry 29 Miles, Becky 20 Miles, Paul 30 Miller, Brenda 17 Miller, Charles 27 Miller, Cindy 19 Miller, David R. 35 Miller, Les 27 Nance, Marilyn 16 Nash, Barbara 17 Naylor, Janet 19 Neighbors, Vicki 15 Neill, Steve 29 Nelson, Dana 25 Nelson, Darby 19 Nelson, Gloria 20 Nelson, Gracie 20 Nelson, John 28 Nelson, James A. 33 Nelson, Royce 32 Nelson, Steve 30 Nemon, David 27 Nesbitt, Dennis 34 Nesselrode, Camilla 23 Linde, Barbara 16 Miller, Linda Karen 19 Nesselrode, Cathy 23 K Kaiser, Nancy 15 Kane, Barbara 23 Kane, Candy 17 Kangas, Susan 26 Kanning, Joyce 20 Kast, Shari 20 Kathol, Roger 29 Katzeff, Sharon 15 Kauai, KeKaha 21 Kauffman, Kay 20 Keen, John 29 Keeney, Melinda 24 Keeney, Tawn 36 Keith, Marilyn 16 Keller, Jon R. 32 Kelley, GiGi 20 Kelly, Larry 33 Kelly, Sherry 20 Kemble, Kirby 35 Kempthorne, Kathryn 22 Kennedy, Laura 19 Kerby, Linda Lea 20 Kessinger, Kris 24 Kessler, Janice 25 Lindquist, Beth 18 Lindsey, Donna 20 Lingelbach, Cynthia 21 Linton, Margaret 21 Lippincott, Marion 21 Lippitt, Mary 19 Litwin, Mike 27 Lodwick, Margery 18 Logan, Diane 15 Logan, Paula 25 Lohoefener, Jan 16 Lohoefener, Sue 25 Lohse, Bob 29 Loney, Harriet 18 Long, Bruce 34 Long, Randy 29 Long, Susan 16 Longabach, Jay 29 Longnecker, J. Kent 27 Longley, Ginny 21 Lonnecker, Sara 16 Lorimer, Bill 28 Lovett, Phil 29 Low, Richard 27 Lowe, Jon 28 Lowrey, Nora 26 Miller, Mark 29 Miller, Marsha 15 Miller, Nancy 23 Miller, Sally 17 Miller, Sherry 20. Milleret, George 33 Millett, Marilee 17 Mills, Mary 21 Mills, Wayne D. 34 Millsap, Sandy 21 Miscevich, Bonnie 21 Mishler, Anita 18 Mitchell, June 22 Mize, Barbara 19 Monday, Veda J. 21 Montre, Louise 19 Moon, Steven B. 33 Moore, Jim 35 Moore, John C. 32 Moore, Lynn 15 Moore, Mary Ann 20 Moose, Robert 36 Morehouse, Paul 35 Moreland, Tom 31 Morey, Craig 33 Morgan, Carla 23 Neudoerffer, Lynn 17 Neustadt, Jim 31 New, Stan 36 Newman, William A. 31 Newell, Marilyn 23 Nicolet, Greg 28 Nichols, Jan 19 Nielson, Bob 29 Niemeir, Ray 36 Nilsson, Jennifer 18 Nininger, Richard 29 Nitschke, Robert L. 30 Noble, Shirley 25 Nordstrom, Steven 30 Norman, Kathy 22 Norman, Nancy 15 Norris, Aggie 24 Norris, Betsy 24 Norris, Pamela 25 Northrup, Gaye Lynne 24 Nothnagel, Janet 17 Nourse, Jim 27 Nuessen, Joanie 23 Nusbaum, Cheryl 21 Nutt, David 29 Nye, Bill 35 Khoury, Michael 34 Loyd, Jeff 29 Morgan, Cheryl 25 Killough, William S. 29 Loyd, Linda 21 Morgan, Cindy 19 Kimbrough, Lydia 16 Kingry, Nancy 18 Lucas, Jack 28 Lukens, Buz 30 Morgan, Jim 29 Morris, Eileen 19 0 Kinnan, Karen 20 Kipfer, Janet 16 Kirk, Sharon Kay 17 Kirkland, Billee 20 Kissell, Spencer 31 Kittrell, Karen 16 Klaver, Jake 33 Kloehr, Kristi 22 Knabe, Mary 23 Lukens, Pat 25 Lukert, Steve 30 Lundberg, Linda 21 Lundgren, Pam 16 Lundy, Joe 34 Lupton, Bill 30 Luthi, Rosemary 17 Luthy, Rich 32 Lyberger, Shirley 26 Morrison, Carolyn 17 Morrison, Diane 20 Morrison, Richard 29 Morrow, John Richard 34 Mosier, John 28 Moss, Charlotte 18 Moss, Gloria 18 Moss, Linda Sue 22 Muell, Cathie 21 Oakley, Beth 18 Oakley, Mary 24 ()berg, Nancy 23 O ' Bryan, Pat 25 Ochs, Rachel Lee 17 O ' Connor, Jack 32 Oelschlager, Rodney 31 Ogilvie, Jerry 31 Ogrizovich, Janis 19 Knap, Grey 30 Knaub, Michael 29 Knief, Mary Kay 23 Lyerla, Karen 20 Lynch, Dan 30 Lynch, Spike 34 Mullen, Cindy 23 Mullen, Pat 23 Mundis, Rick 27 O ' Hara, Doris Jean 19 Olsen, Jan 17 Olson, Art 31 Knisley, Mike 34 Knowles, Terry 18 Murdock, Edward S. 28 Murphy, Marilyn 20 Olson, Joyce 25 Olsson, Dick 31 Knox, Bill 29 Knox, Nancy 24 M Murphy, Maureen 20 Murphy, Patsi 21 O ' Meara, Bill 29 O ' Neill, Joey 22 Koch, Cheryl 20 Musser, Barbara 15 O ' Neill, Reagon 25 Koenig, Jan 17 Maben, Shary 22 Myers, Dave 34 Ophir, Jonathan 27 Kohr, Diana 22 MacArthur, Tim 34 Myers, Kathy 20 Orindgreff, Mike 27 Kolarik, Ruth 25 MacDonald, Laurie 22 Myhrherg, Don 35 Ormsby, Sally 23 102 30 Oroke, Joan 19 Orscheln, Gary 34 Osgood, Sandi 19 Ostrum, Kama 23 Owen, Becky 22 Owens, R. A. 34 Owens, Rose 23 Ozias, Marquis 25 p Paffenbach, Sue 16 Page, Randy 28 Palmer, Ovie C. 33 Pankratz, Judy 19 Pappas, Janet 19 Paproth, Susie 19 Paradise, Jack 31 Parker, Larry 33 Parkison, Robert 26 Parrish, Valorie 16 Parton, Linda 17 Paschal, Nancy 26 Patrick, Judy 16 Patterson, Philip D. 30 Patzkowsky, G. L. 29 Paul, Jack M. 32 Pauzauskie, Peter 36 Pawl, Halina 22 Payne, Paula 20 Pearce, Dean 27 Pearse, Anne 22 Peavler, Sandy 25 Peltzman, Judy 25 Penney, Cindy 24 Penney, William H. 34 Pennington, Nancy 20 Penny, Mary 19 Perdue, Diana Lynn 19 Perry, Cass 15 Perry, Sue 16 Persinger, Karen 25 Petersen, Peggy 20 Peterson, Dale 27 Peterson, Hal 34 Peterson, Kris 23 Pettie, Criss 25 Pettit, John 34 Pfanmiller, Bob 30 Pfeffer, Jim 29 Pfuetze, Rogene 20 Phelps, Dave 27 Phelps, Linda 17 Phillips, Becky 24 Phillips, G. Douglas 28 Phillips, Lawrence C. 34 Phillips, Meridee 21 Pierson, Nancy Lee 20 Pilliard, Linda 22 Pincus, Faye 20 Piper, Vivian 22 Pippin, Stan 28 Pirtle, Kathy 18 Pishny, Carol 20 Pittenger, Julie 25 Pitts, Mary Ellen 22 Platt, John 35 Plimpton, Susan 21 Poley, Susan 17 Polls, Floren 21 Pool, Glenn 32 Poos, Tom 29 Porter, David 29 Potts, Vikki 25 Poynter, Pam 22 Prather, Chris 20 Pratt, Nancy 15 Pratt, Pain 22 Press, Steven 27 Price, Jo Ellen 17 Prince, Sue 19 Proffitt, Donna 15 Prouty, Lynne 17 Pryor, Louis 34 Purvis, Alan 31 Putnam, Anne 19 Pyle, Sara 17 Pyle, Vickie 25 Quackenbush, Linda 16 Quinlan, Larry 27 R Rademacher, Ruth 26 Rader, Larry 29 Rainbolt, Linda 22 Raley, Cynthia 20 Ramirez, Gene 36 Ramsay, Richard 35 Ramsey, Tresia 18 Randall, Chris 30 Ransom, Debbie 17 Rasmussen, Ric 35 Rasmussen, Steve 33 Ratliff, James 35 Rayl, Tom 35 Rea, Jerrie 24 Read, Bill 30 Read, Celia 17 Heagor, Trilla 19 Reaves, Jim 35 Redenbaugh, Kathy 23 Redmond, Chris 29 Reece, Jane Ann 23 Reed, Connie 15 Reed, Darrel 36 Reed, Julie 17 Reed, Susan 21 Reeder, Kathy 19 Reeves, Mike 29 Reinhardt, Pam 24 Renard, Lucy 20 Replogle, Kay 25 Resnik, Bill 27 Reynolds, Tins 33 Rhoads, Marsha 19 Rhodes, Donna 19 Rich, Shari 18 Richards, Cathleen 18 Richardson, Robert 27 Richardson, Tins 20 Richey, Kathy 18 Riedel, Linda Kay 18 Riggs, Elizabeth 20 Riley, Jennifer 19 Hiss, Nancy 17 Robbins, Stephen 28 Roberts, Janey 26 Roberts, Lauren 15 Roberts, Nancy 20 Robertson, Debbie 22 Robertson, Jim 26 Robertson, Sue 20 Robeson, Linda 25 Robey, Terry 19 Robinson, Donna 18 Robinson, Larry 35 Robinson, John 30 Robinson, Patti 22 Robinson, Steve 31 Rocereto, Paul 27 Rogers, Pidge 20 Rogoff, Jan 17 Rose, Jim 27 Ross, Anita 15 Ross, Belinda 22 Ross, David 30 Ross, Ginger 18 Roth, Peter 30 Rothenberger, Kay 26 Rowlett, Jack 31 Roy, Sherry 19 Royer, Bob 31 Royer, Hank 33 Ruga, Diane 17 Hugh, Michael 27 Rule, Marilyn 25 Ruliffson, Bev 23 Ruppenthal, Nancy 24 Rush, James 34 Rush, Stephen 31 Russell, Barbara 18 Russell, Pam 23 Ryan, Linda 21 Ryan, Terry 18 Ryger, Nancy 23 Sackett, Carol 24 Sadauskas, Janet 22 Safford, Jeanne 15 Salomon, Cheri 24 Sandell, Joan 19 Sands, Linda 22 Saricks, Chris 29 Sarros, Michael 27 Scanlon, Timothy 31 Schafer, Donna 18 Schardein, Suzanne 26 Schell, Kent 31 Scheufele, Lynne 21 Schiavo, Kathy 22 Schmidt, Paula 18 Schmisseur, JoAnn 25 Schneider, James 33 Schneider, Steve 33 Schoenbeck, Carol 18 Schoenbeck, Nancy 24 Schoeneman, Al 30 Schreiber, Linda 17 Schroeder, Sherry 19 Schubert, Will 29 Schulenberg, Brad 29 Schultz, John 31 Schumm, Thomas 33 Scott, JoElla 17 Scott, Larry 29 Scott, Mark 28 Scott, Patricia 23 Sears, Peggy 25 Seaton, Carol Ann 19 Seitz, Cache 22 Seneca], MeeMee 22 Setser, Sharon 20 Severtson, Judie 17 Sewell, Uraina 21 Sexton, J. Stan 32 Shafer, Delores 25 Shaffer, Rick 33 103 ,t0) tek 41% ' , - ' Ark J . n IV Th. --(1)-Lr. ) ( r) CAMERA STUDIES 19th. Street From corner of 19th. and Massachusetts Streets go East one mile to Harper Street, turn to the right and. go about 1 4th. a mile to Orval Mixon ' s Room on the right ' hand side of the road. 104 105 Shaffer, Susan 26 Shaner, Bernie 29 Shanker, Marlane 15 Stephenson, Mike 34 Stephenson, Peg 15 Stevens, Donn M. 31 Tucker, Cathy 20 Tucker, Coleen 16 - Tudor, Mary J. 21 Weir, J. Scott 27 Welch, Gary 33 Welch, Joe 30 Shantz, Carol 16 Stevens, Kathy 26 Tuley, Bill 30 Welch, Michael 32 Shaw, Delrayne 22 Stevens, Randy 34 Turner, Kathy 23 Wenger, Cecelia 26 Sheldon, Frank 33 Stewart, Cliff 31 Turner, Robert 31 Wentworth, Phil 34 Sheldon, Susan 22 Stewart, Marti 24 Turrell, Laurie 16 West, Marilyn 16 Sheppard, Kathy 25 Stinson, Glenna 25 Twaddell, Stephen L. 30 West, Mike 27 Sherar, Jim 33 Stoddard, Bob 30 Tyler, Ellen 18 Westerhaus, Mary 21 Shields, Rosemary 24 Stolte, Ann 19 Tyson, John F. 32 Westermann, Annette 22 Shiffman, Robert 30 Stone, Cathy 23 Westfall, Marcia 24 Shire, Terri 21 Stone, Stephanne 17 Wetmore, Phyllis 21 Showalter, Norma 19 Stone, Steve D. 27 White, Linda 20 Shrader, Donna 21 Strafer, Nancy 19 U White, Pamela 19 Shultz, Cinde 25 Strahan, Larry L. 32 Whitehill, Susan 18 Shultz, Harriet 23 Strahm, Steve 31 Underwood, Dixie 25 Whitesell, Marilyn 25 Shurson, John 33 Strait, Sharla K. 22 Underwood, Judy 23 Whitlock, Susan 15 Siebenlist, Rich 34 Streb, Valerie 23 Unruh, Dea 25 Whitsitt, Cheryl 21 Siebert, Paula 17 Streib, Larry W. 32 Uplinger, Karen M. 22 Wicinski, Cindi 25 Sifers, Russell 31 Strejc, Sue 20 Wiksten, Diane 19 Simkins, Annette 19 Strode, Betsy 17 Wiles, Mary Lou 24 Simmons, Nancy 26 Strong, Christopher 31 Wiley, Linda 16 Simons, Dale 18 Struebing, Gloria 23 V Wilkinson, Betty 21 Simpson, Tom 36 Strutz, Thomas 32 Williams, Bob 29 Sims, Jay 36 Stuart, Cindy 21 Valentine, Vikki 22 Williams, Meg 24 Sinclair, Cynthia 19 Stuewe, LeAnn 22 Vance, Ellen 24 Williams, Sheila 25 Sinn, Thomas 31 Stutzman, Clyde V. 32 Van Compemolle, Linda 19 Williams, Xavier 35 Skaggs, Gail 19 Sumpter, Loni 22 Vanek, Larry A. 32 Williamson, Michael 32 Skahan, Marcia 23 Sutherland, Barbara 24 Van Eman, Jackie 17 Willingham, Mary 20 Skeens, Donetta 25 Sutphen, Gwen 25 Van Hecke, Bill 32 Willis, Cindi 19 Slabotsky, Sheila 16 Sutter, Marcia Kay 20 Van Pel t, David 35 Willoughby, Vicki 25 Sleeper, Jim 30 Sutton, J. Michael 30 Vansandt, Gaynelle 19 Wilson, Barbara 16 Sleight, Peg 23 Sutton, Lester P. 35 Van Slyck, Cindy 21 Wilson, Craig 31 Sloan, Donald 35 Swager, Anita 15 Vantzelfde, Marla 21 Wilson, James 29 Smiley, Chuck 29 Swan, Gaylord 35 Varner, Vera 15 Wilson, Nancy 18 Smith, L. Anne 22 Sween, Jann 25 Varney, Betsy 20 Wilson, Pam 24 Smith, Craig 32 Swift, Dave 28 Vaughan, Fred W. 28 Wilson, Richard 35 Smith, Cristi 23 Symons, Sandy 20 Veail, Georgi Anna 19 Wilson, Sheryl 19 Smith, Cynthia A. 23 Veatch, Tom 33 Wilson, Suzie 20 Smith, Dana 21 Vering, Julie Anne 19 Wilson, Thomas M. 34 Smith, John 31 Vincent, Meredith 25 Wilt, Bill 33 Smith, Linda 17 T Vineyard, Karen 24 Winemiller, Wanda 24 Smith, Naomi 20 Vine, Cam 17 Wingate, Carolyn 23 Smith, Pam 21 Tanigawa, Gail 23 Viot, Sally 22 Winick, Elyse 19 Smith, Sandi 18 Tarbet, Shari 20 Voege, Suzie 21 Winsor, Judy Arline 20 Smith, Stephen 29 Tate, Linda 15 Von Lintel, Thomas A. 34 Winterburg, Vashti 19 Smith, Tom 32 Tate, Vi-Ann 23 Vratil, Kay 18 Wisdom, Eric J. 30 Smythe, Anne 23 Taylor, Marsha 18 Wise, James A. 30 Snedecor, Beverly 20 Taylor, Mary 18 Wissman, Niki 25 Sneed, Robert W. 32 Taylor, Nancy 19 Withers, Pam 21 Snelgrove, Lynn 28 Taylor, Paula 25 w Witherspoon, Nancy 20 Snodgrass, Kathy 16 Taylor, Rodrick H. 31 Wittmeyer, Janice 23 Snook, Carolyn 25 Teegarden, Suzi 21 Waeckerle, Hank 29 Woelk, Ron 29 Snook, Pam 17 TenEyck, Barbara 20 Wagner, Carol 23 Wolfe, Craig 32 Snowden, Sue 18 Terry, Ramona 23 Wagner, Jan 26 Wolfe, John 29 Snyder, John H. 34 Tharp, Janet 16 Wagner, Susan 19 Womack, Mary 16 Soden, Doris 26 Thayer, Janie 15 Wahhneier, Sharon 15 Wombolt, George 34 Soder, Eric 33 Theis, Roger 34 Waind, Melinda 16 Wood, Barbara 16 Solberg, Vicki 21 Theno, Pat 20 Wait, Gregory 30 Wood, Muriel Lee 19 Sommer, Zandra 21 Theurer, Tim 34 Walden, Kathi 22 Wooden, Jo Ann 18 Somogyi, Mary 18 Thies, Ronald J. 32 Waldron, Jane 22 Woods, Bill 29 Sonneborn, Mary 17 Thomas, Barby 19 Waldron, John 34 Woodward, Gretchen 24 Sorensen, Joyce 23 Thomas, Laurie 21 Walker, Cheryl 23 Woodward, Pam 21 Sorrentino, Cushi 22 Thomas, Rich C. 32 Walker, Chris 15 Work, Duncan 36 Sortor, Martha 22 Thome, Linda 23 Walker, Don 27 Warman, Tamee 16 Southern, Nancy 24 Thompson, Burk 27 Walker, Linda 23 Worthington, Jeanne 22 Sowders, Glenda 23 Thompson, Lewis J. 35 Walker, Pat 22 Wright, Alvin J. 26 Spade, Jea 23 Thompson, Linda 15 Wallower, Becky 25 Wrigley, Rick 36 Spain, Kenneth W. 32 Thorp, James H. 35 Walls, Gary 35 Spalding, Sue 25 Thrapp, Mary, 25 Walsh, Nancy 15 Spellerberg, Janice 26 Tidwell, Michael 32 Walstad, April 23 Spencer, J. D. 28 Tidwell, Pat 22 Walters, Larry 31 Y Spencer, Patti 21 Tilton, Jon W. 30 Walters, Ned 23 Spetner, Carol 23 Timbelman, Diana 23 Waltz, Debbie 15 Yoshimoto, Brenda 21 Spikes, Larry 29 Tinker, Mrs. Mildred 31 Ward, Doug 27 Young, Carol 19 Spivey, Lee Ann 21 Tippit, Steven B. 26 Warden, Denice 19 Young, Debbie 25 Spivey, Sheri 24 Tishauer, Esther 18 Waring, Mike 29 Young, Millie 22 Spray, William 35 Tobin, Andria 17 Warnock, Carol 22 Young, Susan 16 Spunck, Debbie 23 Tompkins, Kathy 17 Warrier, Janet 15 Youngstrom, Debbie 25 Stafford, Michelle 17 Tomson, John S. 30 Warshawksi, Regina 16 Yukimura, Julie 25 Stallworth, Harriette 20 Tongish, Cheryl 22 Waltman, Marcia 19 Stallion, Cindy 19 Topham, Ralph 30 Wasko, Robert 30 Stanley, Andrea 15 Torrence, Mary 25 Wassenberg, Susie 22 Stanton, Steve 33 Townsley, Alice 21 Watkins, Michael 31 Staples, Sharon 20 Trammell, Gary 35 Watkins, Susie 17 Zellers, Theresa 21 Stapleton, Melvin 36 Traylor, Connie 26 Watland, Joanne 15 Zemke, Dan 36 Stark, Julie 24 Treanor, Bob 32 Watson, Carolyn 25 Zenor, Connie 16 Stark, Sally 24 Trees, John 32 Watson, Nancy 15 Zimbelman, Diana 23 Starnes, Cece 16 Tremain, Dale 32 Watson, Shirley 24 Zimbelman, Rita 24 Starr, Robbie 15 Trickey, Lawrence 36 Waxman, Sara 23 Zimmer, Verla 16 Stead, Sally 15 Trotier, Cindy 24 Wear, Warren 31 Zimmerman, Cathy 19 Stegge, Shirley 20 Trotter, Don 30 Webb, Taylor 29 Zimmerman, Onnallee 24 Steiner, Ted 32 Trowbridge, Charlotte 17 Weber, Mike 35 Zimmerman, Trudy 16 Stephens, Stephie 23 True, Jim 35 Weinlood, Susan 15 Zongker, John D. 30 Stephenson, Ed 30 Truskett, Patricia 22 Weir, Catherine 25 Zupko, Maybette 23 Accommodations, goods, and services advertised in the Jayhawker are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. 106 Official Jayhawker Photographer WINTER 1967 JAYHAWKER MAGAZINE YEARBOOK ,4 _ OPPOSITE PAGE. Uncle Jimmy Green impassively stares ahead through the snow and icicles of a January blizzard. THIS PAGE, LEFT. One of two parachutists drops to the ground north of the Campanile, temporarily diverting the attention of KU and Nebraska Homecoming spectators in Memorial Stadium. BELOW. A week-night study date takes a casual appearance in the lounge of a hall. On Their Way to 7:30 Classes, McCollum residents brave a north wind and sub-zero temperatures. WINTER ISSUE THE 1967 JAYHAWKER MAGAZINE YEARBOOK TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction 111 Residence Halls 155 Athletics 113 University Life 209 Building and Expansion 139 Advertising and Index 223 MR. TOM YOE, Advisor; BLAKE BILES, Editor; STEVE MEYER, Business Manager; DAVE GRAVES, Art Director; RAY NIEMEIR, Head Photographer; BRENT WALDRON, Associ- ate Editor; CINDY McCAMMON, Editorial Secretary; JO ANN MEYER, Business Secretary. ART DEPARTMENT: Anne Pearse, Production Assistant; Jerry Moore, Covers and Design Consultant; Tom Staebler, Divider Pages Consultant; Paul Davis, Advertising Art Director. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT: Kathy Bentley, Sherril Cooper, Liz Cupp, Lynn Frankie, Diana Javeliana, Ann Kaiser, Karin Spaulding, Kathy Strayer, and Nancy Winkler, Office Assistants; Gary Gribben, Distribution Manager; Gordon Allen, Capper Grant, Distribution Staff; Joe Godfrey, Advertising Manager; Gary O ' Neal, Tim Vaughan, Advertising Staff; Janice Mendenhall, Sales Manager; Gordon Allen, Brian Bauerle, Scott Brown, Susan Diehl, Beverly Drier, Carol Eubank, Susan Earley, Lynn Frankie, Barbara Gyu- lavics, Susan Hayes, Punky Hemphill, Patti Hiller, Leslee Huttie, Diana Javellana, Richard Jones, Ann Kaiser, Nancy Ketchum, Judy Long, Sandra McAllister, Nancy Morgan, Donna Mortiz, Roby Ogan, Susan Paproth, Mickey Pasano, Susan Saindon, Rick Shaffer, Jeanne Small, Mary Lou Smith, Suzanne Steuri, Andrea Tobin, Susan Trottman, Sharon Watson, Jack Weiss, and Nancy Winkler, Sales Staff; Tom Simpson, Pictures Scheduler; Karin Spaulding, Pictures Sec- retary; Sallie Lillard, Senior Pictures Manager; Sheila Wiseman, Organization Pictures Manager; Suzanne Saffels, Living Groups Pictures Manager; Gwen Beamer, Capper Grant, Patti Hiller, Bill Kissel, and Linda Putnam, Living Groups Pictures Staff. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT: Doug Mackey, Copy Editor; Judy McGhee, University Life Editor; Bob Butler, Theatre Editor; Bev Gray, Index Editor; Larry Fogleman, Sports Editor; Rob Sturdy, Party Pix Editor; Drew Anderson, Shelley Bray, Renetta Engles, Linda Kerby, George Livingston, and Anne Pearse, Editorial Assistants; Tricia Haggart, Nancy Pinet, and Chuck Stewart, Assistant Copy Editors; Tina Beggs, Mike Cairns, Gra- ham Hatfield, Randy Hodges, John Hoppe, Mike Homer, Chris Katz, Leslie McElfresh, Barb Newsom, Reagon O ' - Neill, Kay Patterson, Jim Robertson, Rusty Wells, and Nikki Wissman, Writers; Jama King, Patsy McConwell, Index Assistants; Kay Adams, Susan Diehl, Jane Doll, Susan Farley, Janet Kipfer, Pat Logan, and Judy Stout, Secretarial Staff. PHOTOGRAPHIC DEPARTMENT: Charles Buck, Billy Jump, Ray Kopsa, Randy Leffingwell, Steve Tarver, Tom Tschappat, and Rick Wrigley, Assistant Photographers; Dave Young, Special Work; Estes Studio, Jayhawker Pho- tographer; Orval Hixon, Special Portraits. Surrounded by trees and shrubbery heavy-laden with snow, a coed leaves Bailey Hall following an exam dur- ing final week. A Coed Momentarily Dozes Off while booking, a sight common in most university libraries and lounges. Between Classes Jayhawk Boulevard ' s infamous beaver bar draws KU males outside, in spite of freezing February weather conditions. ATHLETICS The Cellar Kansas football fortunes for 1966 rested largely on the shoulders of a group of promising, yet inexperienced, sophomores. For the Jayhawks to improve on their 2-8 record of good seasons were needed from rookies such as Don Shanklin, Thermus Butler, John Zook, Junior Riggins, Bill Hunt and Bob Douglass, as well as from experienced lettermen Bob Skahan, Mike Sweatman and George Harvey. The Big Blue opened their season with three non-conference games, against Texas Tech at home and Arizona and Minnesota on the road. Also on the schedule were Big Eight powers: Oklahoma, Colorado, Missouri, and defending champion Nebraska. Kansas thus began its 77th football campaign with high hopes, in spite of a great deal of inexperience and a rugged schedule which included only four of ten games to be played at home. nsas 7 deck 23 With hopes resting largely on a promising group of sophomores, KU opened its 1966 season at home with a 23-7 loss to Texas Tech. The Jay- hawks led the Red Raiders in first downs ( 21 to 16), rushing yardage ( 254 to 102), and passing yardage ( 152 to 150 ). However, costly errors of pass interference and fumbles enabled the more seasoned Texans to cash in a victory. Tech took the opening kickoff and marched to paydirt in seven and a half minutes, covering 73 yards in 15 plays. Quarterback John Scovell hit Jerry Lovelace with a 9-yard pass for the touchdown. Neither team was then able to generate an attack until KU penetrated to the Tech 15 early in the second quarter. But, on fourth-and-two, Don Shanklin lost two yards on a pitchout from quarterback Bobby Skahan. Taking over from that point the Raiders went on to their second score a 12-yard pass from Scovell to Larry Gilbert. However, the key play in the drive was a pass interference call. On a crucial third-and-sixteen on the KU 28, rookie defensive back Billy Hunt interfered with Mike Leinert on a Scovell pass, giving the enemy a first down on the KU 13. Later, spurred by Shanklin ' s 49-yard run, Kansas was able to drive to the opponent ' s 20 before losing the ball on downs. The score stood 14-0 at the half. A Shanklin fumble on the KU 23 in the third quarter set up a Tech field goal for a 17-0 count. The gap was closed to 17-7 when Skahan scored on a keeper from 18 yards out with 13:43 to play. Dave Bouda kicked the extra point. Texas Tech ' s final score came on a one-yard run, with the key play being an interference call on the KU four. With time running out, the young Hawks fought to the Texas Tech six before losing the ball on downs near the end of the game. Th) (C-DVTEA Bouncing back from dropping the season lidlifter, the Jayhawks travelled to Tucson to defeat Arizona with a 35-13 come-from-behind rout. Arizona drew first blood early in the second quarter for a 7-0 lead. After inter- cepting rookie Bob Douglass ' pass on the Arizona 34 and returning it to the KU 11, the Wildcats ' Mark Reed hit flanker Jim Greth in the end zone on the next play. With six minutes remaining in the first half, coach Jack Mitchell sent in third-string quarterback Dave Bouda who previously had played just one offensive play. Immediately Bouda got the offense rolling, driving 76 yards in 12 plays to score. Bouda passed to Don Shanklin for the first Big Blue TD. Shortly thereafter, Larry Dercher recovered an Arizona fumble just 17 yards from the goal line. Six plays later, John Jackson scored from the one. Again KU struck in a hurry with Shanklin scooting 69 yards to paydirt. With 1:56 to go in the half, back Billy Hunt intercepted a Reed pass and raced 47 yards for six points. In just five minutes and 47 seconds, KU had exploded for four touchdowns with the inexperienced Bouda at quarterback. The halftime rest seemed to have no cooling effect on the red-hot Jay- hawks. With less than two minutes gone in the third quarter, Shanklin galloped 71 yards to the Arizona six. Two plays later he scored from the one. The stubborn KU defense then took over and preserved a final 35-13 victory under the lights. TOP. Jayhawk receiver Tom Anderson goes high for a pass as two Oklahoma defenders close in. BOTTOM. In KU ' s home opener, sophomore Don Shanklin is tripped up by a Texas Tech Red Raider following a short gain. TOP. Against Texas Tech, Kansas quarterback Bob Skahan (13) prepares to fake a hand-off to Don Shanklin (48) into the line. MIDDLE. As the enemy defense closes in and he is hit by a Tech tackle, Skahan pitches out. BOTTOM. Halfback John Jackson (28) hauls in the pitchout and prepares to head down field. Nt Kansas ' third opponent was Minnesota, and the Jayhawks upset the Gophers 16-14 at Minneapolis. KU scored ten points the first two times they had the ball and had a long scoring drive in the third quarter, in spite of being 13-point underdogs. Dave Bouda, hero of the Arizona game, directed the first two scores and was 3 for 3 passing for 51 yards. Holding after the kickoff, the Hawks marched 89 yards in 11 plays to their first TD. Don Shanklin was the workhorse, getting 36 yards on eight carries. How- ever, the big plays in the drive were Bouda ' s 22-yard run and his 23-yard pass to John Jackson. Shanklin went over from seven yards for the tally. After holding the Gophers again, KU scored on a 26-yard field goal by Bouda, to increase the Big Blue ' s lead to 10-0. Minnesota had a real scoring opportunity in the second quarter when they recovered a fumble on the KU twelve. But three runs netted only six yards, and Curt Wilson ' s fourth down pass was intercepted by Tommy Ball. Following KU ' s subsequent punt, the Gophers drove 59 yards for a TD with Larry Carlson passing the final nine yards to Ken Last. Carlson replaced Wilson as Minnesota quarterback on this drive. Carlson hit his first 11 passes and 15 of 19 for 147 yards for the afternoon. However, he was thrown for 75 yards in losses by George Harvey, John Zook, Mike Sweatman, Bruce Peterson, and Jerry Barnett. In the third quarter, KU ' s 10-7 lead was threatened as Minnesota gained possession on the KU 48 on a punt and wheeled to a first-and-goal on the 8. But, KU ' s defense stiffened: after a 1-yard gain, Carlson was thrown for a 6-yard loss by Harvey and a 9-yard loss by Sweatman and Barnett. The Gophers ' field goal try was wide. Evidently the solid defense brought the offense to life. KU swept 80 yards for a 16-7 lead engineered by Bob Skahan and Bob Douglass. Thermus Butler smashed over from the one and Bouda ' s conversion failed. With virtually all of the final quarter remaining, Minnesota drove 64 yards after the kickoff to pull within two. KU ' s stubborn defense almost held again. After a first down on the ten, a pass was good for eight yards. Then a pass was incomplete and a run got nothing. Finally, Carlson passed to Chet Anderson for the TD although Bill Lynch deflected the ball. Min- nesota had the ball four more times in the game, b ut the KU defense preserved the 16-14 upset. [ 11 -1 _I CE-2_1) 1 6 L 4 LI e) Kansas opened their conference season on the heels of two straight wins with a 24-7 loss at Ames to Iowa State. It was a miserable day for the Jayhawks. After yielding only 155 yards rushing in the first three games, KU permitted the Cyclones to amass 276 yards on the ground. Their quarterback, Tim. Van Calder, completed 7 of 13 passes for 88 yards, while KU was 4 for 16, good for 50 yards. Iowa State ' s Larry Carwell carried back two interceptions for 123 yards and a Big Eight record. The first nine and a half minutes was give-away, with the ball chang- ing hands five times on four interceptions and a fumble. Kansas threatened first when Don Shanklin returned a punt 24 yards to the Cyclone 34. However, Carwell picked off Bobby Skahan ' s third down pass and returned it to the KU 4. On the next play, Van Galder scored. A 70-yard punt by Dave Morgan put Iowa State on their 5 late in the first period, but they moved to the KU 18 where the defense held them to a 36-yard field goal by Dave Spealier. Again Iowa State struck. After holding KU, they drove 73 yards to score, for a 17-0 halftime lead. Late in the third quarter Carwell returned a punt 24 yards to the KU twenty-three. Four plays later Van Galder scored from the six for a 24-0 lead. Following the kickoff, the Jayhawks drove for their only TD a march of 68 yards. Thermus Butler scored on a 9-yarder on his first offensive play of the day. Dave Bouda added the extra point his only action of the afternoon in spite of his distinction in KU ' s two victories. 1 - - - -- (C12,_ ) (c7. Returning with a 2-2 record, KU opened its home conference season against Oklahoma, previously undefeated in three conference games. The powerful Big Red roared to a 35-0 victory before 41,500 fans in Memorial Stadium. The Sooners marched up and down the gridiron throughout the afternoon with amazing proficiency on third down plays. Oklahoma took the opening kickoff and went 80 yards in 16 plays, with Ben Hart scoring on a 9-yard pass from Bill Warmack. In the second quarter, Eddie Hinton scampered 12 yards around end to give OU a 14-0 halftime lead. Kansas stayed in the game until 8:25 left in the third quarter. On a fourth- down play, Sooner Gene Ross blocked David Morgan ' s punt on the 11- yard line. The pigskin rolled into the end zone where Bob Stephenson fell on it to give OU a 21-0 edge. A long drive of 66 yards and a 20-yard push after a Bob Douglass fumble let Oklahoma smash Kansas 35-0, the worst defeat KU had suffered since the Sooners ' 43-0 shutout in 1958. (,__, : F - -,,:,__ --------) 1 ,) [ Following the rout at the hands of Oklahoma, Kansas travelled to Still- water to meet Oklahoma State. The Jayhawks fared little better however. Not only did they lose by a disappointing 10-7 score, but they also lost senior quarterback Bob Skahan for the remainder of the season. In the first quarter, Skahan directed a 48-yard drive to a 7-0 lead in 11 plays. Sopho- more Thermus Butler smashed over the goal line from three yards out. However, in the second quarter, Skahan retreated to pass near mid-field and was hit hard to the ground by Cowboy end Doug Cathey. After the game it was revealed that Skahan had torn ligaments in his right leg and would be out for the rest of the year. Oklahoma State drove 57 yards following a quick kick to knot the score 7-7 at halftime. Throughout the game, KU was unable to move the ball. The Cowboys picked off three Jayhawk aerials, and the Crimson and the Blue missed Skahan as replacements Dave Bouda and Bob Douglass could not get the offense rolling. Late in the third quarter, Oklahoma State returned a Dave Morgan punt from their 28 to their 40. With a fourth-and-fifteen on his own 35, Ronnie Johnson, who had scored the TOP. Don Shanklin speeds around end for a short gain as five Texas Tech defenders give chase. BOTTOM. Scrambling against a Red Raider rush, Bob Skahan looks for an opening on a quarterback keeper. LED BY ACADEMIC ALL BIG EIGHT CENTER BILL WOHLFORD (69), defenders Bill Hunt (18), Bruce Peterson (87), Mike Sweatman (81) and George Harvey (extreme left) gang tackle an Oklahoma back. Cowboys first touchdown on a 3-yard run on fourth-and-goal, scampered 28 yards around end for a first down. From that point Oklahoma State drove to the KU 21, and on fourth-and-eight Craig Kessler kicked a 38- yard field goal for the deciding three points. Kansas never threatened the rest of the way and sustained their fourth loss of the season. After the game, coach Mitchell expressed disappointment with the offense but com- plimented the outstanding work of All Big-Eight linebacker Mike Sweatman who was in on 13 tackles, linebacker George Harvey who went on to rep- resent KU in the East-West Shrine Game and who had 19 tackles, and end John Zook who had 10 tackles. Kansas Kansas State Meeting arch-rival Kansas State at Manhattan, the Jayhawks pulled out a last minute 3-3 tie. With a mere eight seconds remaining in the contest, Thermus Butler spoiled the Wildcats ' hopes of snapping its 17- game losing streak by kicking a 38-yard field goal for a 3-3 deadlock. Butler ' s tally came on his first field goal attempt of his college career. Even coach Mitchell later stated, I had no idea he (Butler) could kick or not. Butler ' s chance came after KU gained possession with less than a minute to go when Bill Lynch hit quarterback Bill Nossek of K-State and forced a fumble, with Billy Hunt recovering on the Wildcat thirty. Quarterback Bob Douglass then ran a keeper out of bounds to stop the clock. On the follow- ing down, Douglass hit Sandy Buda on the 21, good for 12 yards. With the clock running and KU out of time-outs, Douglass passed out of bounds to stop the clock. Then Butler and holder Tommy Ball rushed in for the field goal. The conversion equalized Tom Barnes ' 36-yarder for Kansas State which had come with 6:02 remaining in the initial quarter, set up by a KU fumble on the fourteen. Three times earlier in the game KU had threatened inside the Wildcat 20. In fact, the Jayhawks had been stopped short of a first down at the K-State seven with a little over two minutes to play when they shunned a field goal attempt which, if successful, would have knotted the count at three-all. It was on this particular drive that the most explosive offensive display of the afternoon was unleashed. Starting on their 30, KU swept to the Wildcat 15 in just three plays. Douglass carried twice for 12 and 21 yards, and Don Shanklin scampered for 22 yards. After Douglass managed seven yards in three tries to the eight, Shanklin got the call for a first down attempt on fourth down. However, Shanklin was driven out at the seven a yard short. Taking over, K-State was unable to move the ball and was forced to punt with the ball on the 16, but a roughing-the-kicker penalty gave the Cats a first down and a chance to run out the clock. However, on the third play, Nossek fumbled giving KU its chance for the tie. The Jayhawk defense was outstanding in the second half, allowing only one first down other than the roughing penalty, and holding K-State to only 38 yards rushing after giving up 96 in the first half. Shanklin was the game ' s leading ground gainer with 114 yards on 22 carries, thus outrushing Wildcat Cornelius Davis who managed 80 yards on 26 trips. Davis was ranked as the number four rusher in the nation at the time and ended the season as the Big Eight rushing champion. Kansas Nebraska 24 1 Sixth ranked Nebraska spoiled KU ' s Homecoming as the powerful Big Eight Champs defeated the Jayhawks 24-13. The bowl-minded Cornhuskers blitzed KU for an 1 8-0 halftime lead, with a stubborn defense holding KU to three yards total offense (-14 rushing, +17 passing). It was strictly a battle of defenses in the first quarter with neither team scoring, but in the second quarter Nebraska garnered three six-pointers by Ben Gregory, Bob Churchich and Harry Wilson of 3, 27, and 2 yards respectively. The second half was an entirely different story as KU outscored the Cornhuskers 13-6, outpassed them 100 to 39 yards, and led in first downs 13 to 11. The Hawks narrowed the spread to 18-7 late in the third period. George Harvey set up the drive by recovering a fumble on the NU thirty- six. The Jayhawks moved to a first down on the twenty-two. Don Shanklin gained two and then Bill Fenton was thrown for a 2-yard loss. On third down, Fenton passed to Halley Kampschroeder in the end zone. The KU flanker and the Nebraska defender went up for the ball and it was de- flected to Junior Riggins. Dave Bouda added the extra point. Despite extending their record to 8-0, the Cornmen were unable to penetrate the KU defense for another tally until the final minute when Wilso n caught a 9-yard pass from Churchich. Not to be outdone, KU soared 78 yards in four plays to score as time ran out. Kansas returned the NU kickoff three yards to the 22. Fenton then got the Jayhawks rolling. He hit Sandy Buda with a pass for 13 yards and then completed a 38-yarder to Kampschroeder. With the ball on the NU 27 and 15 seconds remaining, Fenton dropped back to pass but was forced to run. He scrambled to the 12. With just three seconds left, Fenton pitched to Shanklin who ran right and passed to Kampschroeder in the end zone. Fenton ' s pass on a 2-point conversion attempt was incomplete. This was indeed a game filled with everything. KU ' s homecoming queen, Cynthia Dickson, was crowned. Quarterback Fenton, starting and playing his first game of the year, had 105 yards passing. A parachutist landed on the hill below the Campanile during the game. Coach Jack Mitchell made his halftime remarks emphatic by smashing a hole in a blackboard. And KU found mighty Nebraska ' s big weakness conversions--they failed on all four attempts. (Kansas 18 olorado 35 Kansas finished its home season by falling to Colorado 35-18 on Band Day. Neither team had trouble moving the ball, but KU experienced difficulties inside the Buffalo ' s 20, settling for two touchdowns and a field goal on six penetrations. However, Colorado always had a comfortable lead after scoring on its first two possessions. The Buffs took the opening kick- off and marched 72 yards in 18 plays with Bernie McCall diving over from two yards for a 7-0 lead. Kansas countered with a drive to the CU 20 but Bill Fenton fumbled on the twenty-two. A clipping penalty set Colorado back to its nine, but they proceeded to go the distance in 11 plays, with McCall passing 30 yards to Larry Plantz for the tally at the start of the sec- ond period for a 14 0 margin. Again KU came right back. Led by Junior Riggins ' 22-yard gallop and an 18-yard pass from Fenton to Dick Bacon, the Jayhawks moved from their own 22 to a first down on the Buff twelve. After netting only two yards in three plays, Dave Bouda booted a 27-yard field goal. Kansas threatened again just before the half, driving from their 30 to the CU fourteen. After an incompletion, Don Shanklin fired a pass to Tom Anderson on the five. Colorado then stiffened up and threw Shanklin to the nine on a sweep. Bouda ' s 16-yard field goal try was wide, sending the teams to their dressing rooms with a 14-3 count. TOP. Surrounded by Nebraska ' s converging defense, shifty halfback Don Shanklin maneuvers for running room. BOTTOM. As tackle Harold Montgomery (73) and the rest of the KU line form protection, Bill Fenton fades back for an aerial against the Cornhuskers. 4 DAVE MORGAN COMES UP FROM HIS DEFENSIVE back position to halt the progress of Tech halfback Alike Leinert. Colorado picked up a gift tally i n the third quarter when a high center snap got away from punter Dave Morgan and he was thrown back to the KU six. Wilmer Cooks ' three line drives resulted in a 2-yard TD. Late in the period, behind reserve quarterback Bob Douglass who replaced the injured Fenton, the Jayhawks covered 86 yards in 11 plays for their first touchdown. The tally came on a 19-yard heave from Douglass to Biggins. The score only aroused the Buffs as they promptly went 73 yards in 11 plays for paydirt, led by William Harris ' 37-yard run. McCall went over from three yards for a 28-10 lead with 12:31 to play. On KU ' s first play after the score, Douglass ' pass was intercepted on the Jayhawk 35 and returned to the seven. Kansas held as Colorado went for a field goal from the fifteen. Billy Hunt rushed into block the kick, picked up the loose ball on the 24, and sped 76 yards for six points. Shanklin ' s pass to Sandy Buda was good for two points and a 28-18 score with 10:13 remaining. However, Colorado stamped out any KU hope for victory by going the distance of 62 yards in seven plays, with Cooks racing over for the final seven yards. Kansas ' Bill Wohlford was voted Big-Eight Lineman of the Week for his outstanding defensive work. Kansas Wissouri For the final game of the season, Kansas travelled to Columbia to play arch-rival Missouri for the 75th time. Despite their poor record, the Jay- hawks could salvage something out of the season by coming up with a victory. However, the Tigers had different ideas and defeated KU 7-0 on a long 54-yard pass. Both teams featured tough defense when the other threatened. Missouri had 248 yards total offense, but other than their scoring play, c ould not get closer than thirty yards from the goal line. Like- wise, Kansas had 239 yards total offense but was inside the Missouri thirty- six only once. Nine plays after the second half kickoff, Tiger quarterback Gary Kombrink dropped back from his own 46-yard line on third-and-eight and hit a wide open Earl Denney who raced down the sideline 54 yards for a touch- down. Bill Lynch and Tommy Ball pursued him to no avail. Bill Bates added the extra point and the Tigers had all the points they needed to win as they shutout the Jayhawks. KU made its only scoring threat late in the third quarter, driving from their 20 to the MU 9 in 11 plays. Thermus Butler gained a yard, but Bill Fenton lost one, and Don Shanklin was hit for a 3-yard loss on a pass. Dave Bouda attempted a fourth down field goal, but it was blocked. Footb ci66 Final Stat The 1966 KU football season marked the end of an era. For the first time since 1954 a Kansas team failed to win a conference game and finished in the cellar. The Jayhawks managed to post only a dismal 2-7-1 record, the lone tie being with arch-rival Kansas State. This was the first time since 1955 that the Jayhawks were unable to tame the Wildcats. The 1966 season also brought an end to Jack Mitchell ' s coaching career. Mitchell was replaced by Frank Pepper Rodgers on December 16. In spite of the poor team showing, there were nevertheless outstanding individual performances. Linebacker Mike Sweatman was an All Big Eight selection and Honorable Mention All-American. Halfback Don Shanklin netted 732 yards rushing the second best in the conference. Punter David Morgan was one of the nation ' s leading punters with a 42.4-yard average on 46 punts. Linebacker George Harvey represented KU in the East-West Shrine Game and the Hula Bowl. Prospects for 1967 are encouraging with a new coach and some promising freshmen. Defensive standouts Sweatman, Bill Hunt, John Zook, and Bruce Peterson all will return. Graduation will claim only one offensive stand- out Bobby Skahan. But Skahan was out with an injury for over half of the 1966 season, and KU ' s top three rushers, Shanklin, Junior Riggins and John Jackson, will all be eligible again. Also returning will be punter Morgan. However, the Jayhawks will face stiff competition in the Big Eight, and the going will not by any means be easy. BUSHING T. C. Net Ave. 182 732 4.0 61 246 4.0 60 202 3.4 44 115 2.6 72 105 1.5 30 95 3.2 12 14 1.2 21 72 3.4 18 44 3.4 0 0 0.0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0.0 PASSING Att. Comp. Yds. 2 47 38 175 17 271 47 28 15 93 7 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 RECEIVING SCORING No. Yds. 5 42 18 89 12 8 95 6 1 1 6 2 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 15 2 25 0 0 0 21 18 278 6 16 161 10 15 124 0 4 60 0 Shanklin Riggins Jackson Skahan Douglass Fenton Bouda Bacon Butler Kampschroeder Buda Elias Anderson 71 0 0 0 0 0 13 6 23 299 DEFENSE Solo Assist Total Kansas Opponents Sweatman 47 69 116 152 166 Harvey 29 63 92 506 486 Hunt 32 45 77 1508 1495 Barnett 18 54 72 162 172 Zook 30 39 69 81 103 Dercher 13 46 59 909 1294 Peterson 24 33 57 668 663 Lynch 24 32 56 2517 2789 Wohlford 15 36 51 OFFENSE First Downs Rushing, Carries Rushing, Net Yardage Passing, Attempted Passing, Completed Passing, Net Yardage Total Offense, Plays Total Offense, Net Yardage 129 1966 E LEFT TO RIGHT: DON SHANKLIN, Sophomore Halfback from Amarillo, Tex.; JOHN GREENE, Junior Guard from Duncan, Okla.; GRANT DAHL, Sophomore Tackle from Glencoe, Ill.; LARRY WHITE, Senior Guard from Colby; BOB SKAHAN, Senior Quarter- back from Columbus; BILL WOHLFORD, Senior Center from Geneseo. LEFT TO RIGHT: JUNIOR BIGGINS, Sophomore Halfback from Centralia; DAVID BOUDA, Junior Quarterback from Omaha, Nebr.; BRUCE PETERSON, Junior. End from Prairie Village; KEITH CHRISTENSEN, Sophomore Tackle from Concordia; JOHN ZooK, more End from Lamed; TONI DIBIASE, Junior Fullback from Omaha, Nebr.; BOB DOUG- LASS, Sophomore Quarterback from El Dorado; BOB KREUTZER, Junior Center from Garden City; MIKE SWEATMAN, Junior Linebacker from Kansas City, Mo.; LARRY DERCHER, Senior Tackle from Kansas City; BILL GREENE, Sophomore Tackle from Ottawa; ORVILLE TURGEON, Sophomore Guard from Valentine, Nebr.; THERMUS BUTLER, Sophomore Halfback from Columbus, Ga.; KEN WERTZBERGER, Sophomore Guard from Lawrence; STEVE HECK, Junior Guard from Lawrence; FRED SHAWGER, Junior Tackle from Tulsa, Okla. ' 1111.1.111.111 111111T 4 4 LEFT TO RIGHT: ROGER RAWLINGS, Junior Tackle from Marshall, Mo.; TOM BALL, Soph- omore Safety from Manhattan; KEN JOHNSON, Senior End from Goodland; TOM ANDER- SON, Sophomore Halfback from Topeka; MICKEY DOYLE, Sophomore Linebacker from Kansas City; JOHN JACKSON, Sophomore Halfback from Memphis, Tenn.; BILL LYNCH, Junior Defensive Back from Hutchinson; SANDY BUDA, Senior End from Omaha, Nebr.; J. C. HIXON, Senior Defensive Back from St. Francis; RICK ABERNETHY, Junior Defensive Back from Kansas City, Mo.; BILL HUN T, Sophomore Safety from Hackensack, N.J.; HALLEY KAMPSCHROEDER, Senior Halfback from Lawrence; BILL PERRY, Senior Guard from Lawrence; JEFF ELIAS, Senior End from Miami, Fla.; DAVID WAXSE, Senior End from Oswego; HAROLD MONTGOMERY, Senior Tackle from Wichita. 1966 TE 131 Jack FL Jack Mitchell was Kansas ' 28th football coach and, with the exception of Dr. A. R. Kennedy who was 52-9-4 from 1904 to 1910, was the winningest mentor. Mitchell succeeded Chuck Mather on Thanksgiving Day of 1957. With a 44-42-5 record, he remained as head coach for nine seasons--longer than any other football coach in Jayhawk history. For his 14 years of college coach- ing, Mitchell wound up 74-59-7. While at KU, he sent several players to the professional ranks: Curtis McClinton, Fred Hageman, Bert Coan, Mike Johnson, Brian Schweda and All-Americans John Hadl and Gale Sayers. Mitchell is a native of Arkansas City where he was a prep star in football, basketball, and tennis. Following graduation, he attended Arkansas City Junior College and Texas University before entering the military service in World War II. After the war, Mitchell attended Oklahoma University where he was an All-American quarterback. Graduating in 1949 with a psychology major, Mitchell then assumed his first coaching post at Blackwell (Oklahoma) High School. In 1950 he became an assistant at Tulsa University for one year and then moved to Texas Tech for two years, also as an assistant. Mitchell first became a college head coach at Wichita in 1953 and 1954, com- piling a 13-5-1 record. His next post was at Arkansas in 1955-57 where he was 17-12-1. Taking over the reins at Kansas in 1958, Mitchell had two so-so sea- sons (4-5-1 and 5-5). Then in 1960, he coached the Jayhawks to a 9-0-1 record and their first clear-cut conference championship since 1950. Later, two of these games were forfeited because of an eligibility ruling. In 1961, the Hawks were 7-3-1 and subdued Rice in the Bluebonnet Bowl 35-7 for the first KU bowl victory. In 1962-64, in spite of the presence of the great Gale Sayers, Mitchell had seasons of 6-3-1, 5-5, and 6-4. Because of the poor showing of KU teams in these years, KU fans became disenchanted with Mitchell. With opposition to him growing, Mitchell ' s teams slumped to 2-8 and 2-7-1 seasons in 1964 and 1965, and his resignation was announced this December. 1110 da.Q, 001401N. HvaAk Pepper Rodgers On December 16, Frank Pepper Rodgers was named as Kansas ' new head football coach, his first such assignment. Throughout his football career, the 35 year old Rodgers has been associated with nothing but winners. A former Georgia Tech quarterback and an advocate of wide-open offensive football, Rodgers gained a reputation for developing imaginative attacks during his nine years as backfield coach for Tommy Prothro at UCLA, Ray Graves at Florida, and Ben Martin at the Air Force Academy. Among the top names he helped develop are Heisman Trophy winner Steve Spurrier of Florida, Larry DuPree of Florida, Rich Mayo of Air Force, and both Gary Beban and Mel Farr of UCLA all of them All-American selections. During his last two years at UCLA, the Bruins won seventeen games while losing only three and tying one. Rodgers has participated in seven bowl games, three times as a player and four as a coach. Of the seven games, his team has won six and tied one. Pepper played under Bobby Dodd at Georgia Tech from 1951-53 when the Yellow Jackets amassed a 30-2-1 record, including three bowl victories. In his final game as a player, Rodgers was voted the most outstanding player in the Sugar Bowl. He threw three touchdown passes and kicked four extra points and a field goal in routing West Virginia 42-19. Coach Rodgers selected for his coaching staff Jack Green, former Army All- American guard and head coach at Vanderbilt, defensive ends and linebackers; John Cooper, another former Prothro assistant, defensive backs; Dave McClain, former assistant at Cornell and Miami of Ohio, defensive interior linemen; Don Fambrough, a KU assistant for 15 years, offensive tackles and tight ends; Larry Travis, former All-Conference guard and assistant at Florida, offensive guards and centers; Charlie McCullers, former assistant at Tampa, Wichita, and Parsons ( Iowa ) College, offensive backs; Dick Tomey, former Davidson assistant, fresh- man coach and varsity aid; Floyd Temple, also KU ' s baseball coach, varsity aid; and John Hadl, former KU All-American and starting quarterback for San Diego in the AFL, recruiter and coach for passers and receivers in the spring drills. li The 1966 KU Freshman football team compiled a record of one win and three losses. The young Hawks went into their opener against Oklahoma without their top three quarterbacks, Jim Ettinger, John Mosier, and Bill Bell, due to injuries. Although down only 14-13 at the half, the frosh were defeated 28-13. Spencer Kissell scored both of KU ' s touchdowns on runs of one and two yards. A week later, the KU freshmen were shut out by Kansas State 9-0. It marked the first time since 1957 that the Wildcat frosh were able to defeat KU. Next, the frosh dropped an 18-10 decision to Nebraska. KU had a 10-0 lead late in the third period, but the Huskers struck late for three touchdowns and netted 231 yards rushing for the after- noon. Bell did all of the Jayhawk scoring with a five yard TD run, an extra point, and a 38-yard field goal. Kansas rallied in their final game to beat previously undefeated Missouri 14-13. Missouri struck fast, scoring a 92-yard TD on the opening kickoff. However, KU scored two second quarter touchdowns, the first on an 80-yard romp by Kissell and the second on Steve Lukert ' s 36-yard run. The second score was set up by the passing of Ettinger, making his first start at quarterback. Bell converted both extra points. KU held on in the final period for the victory with John Curley stopping an attempted two-point conversion after the Tigers ' final tally, 1 OPPOSITE PAGE. Back John Mosier from Wichita hauls in a pass over the hands of a Missouri defender. THIS PAGE. KU ' s defense holds late in the season finale, and preserves a 14-13 victory over the Missouri squad. Mike Bollettino spilling a MU runner for a four yard loss on a fourth-and- inches play on the KU 5, and a field goal attempt falling short from 32, yards with 30 seconds remaining. Kissell, a 193-pound fullback from Bartlesville, Oklahoma, was the rush- ing and scoring leader on the squad. A son of former KU basketballer Max Kissell, Spencer netted 227 yards on 52 carries for a 4.4 yard average and scored three touchdowns. In the season ' s finale, Kissell gained 173 yards on 29 carries, leading KU to a one point win over Missouri. Other leading ground gainers were Lukert ( 193 yards and a 3.9 average) and defensive standout Emery Hicks ( 80 yards and a 4.7 average ). Bell of Falls Church, Virginia, led the frosh in two departments passing and punt- ing. He completed 30 of 74 passes for 373 yards and punted 23 times for a 36.3 average. Larry Vanek of Atchison was the top pass receiver with 14 catches, good for 172 yards. Kansas 13 Oklahoma 28 Kansas 0 Kansas Stale 9 Kansas 10 Nebraska 18 Kansas 14 Miss8uri 13 135 PRIOR To THE START of the State Federation Meet, Head Coach Bob Timmons pauses while members of the KU team adjust meet numbers. Head coach Bob Timmons guided his cross country squad through a busy eight-meet schedule opening October 1 with a six team gathering at Stillwater, Okla- homa, and closing November 24 with the National Federation Meet at Wichita. During the course of the season the Jayhawks extended their dual victory string to 28 with a tight 37-38 triumph over Southern Illlinois. Sensational sophomore Jim Ryun ' s time of 30:59 placed him second in that dual behind only Southern Illinois All-American Oscar Moore. The loss of 1965 NCAA Cross Country champion John Lawson was felt in the season opener as KU placed third, only three points out of first. Ryun again paced the Jayhawks with a seventh place jog. A week later So. Illinois nipped KU 43-37 for the Jayhawk Invitational title, but Timmons ' crew were quick to avenge the home loss with their 37-38 triumph. Kansas State successfully defended its Big Eight Conference title in the loop meet in Ames, Iowa. Tom Yergovich and sophomore Mike Petterson paced the Jayhawks with their eighth and ninth place finishes, respectively, as KU slipped a notch from their runner- up slot in 1965. CROSS COUNTRY 136 LEFT. Participants from 56 schools head out in the NCAA Cross Country Championships, run this year over the Lawrence course. RIGHT. CLOCKWISE FROM EXTREME LEFT: Gene McClain, Jim Ryun, Dave Mansfield, Curt Grindal, Mike Kearns, Larry Woelk, Tom Yergovich, Mike Hayes, Mike Petterson, and Mike Sheahon. Lawrence was the site of the 1966 NCAA Cross Country Championships as Timmons ' thinclads raced to a 16th place finish. Mike Petterson, Tom Yergovich, and Curtis Grindal were the only three Kansans in the top 100 finishers over the six mile course. KU closed the season at the National Federation Meet in which Yergovich captured thirteenth place. The loss of super-sophomore Jim Ryun after the dual victory over the Carbondale, Illinois, layout hindered team finishes in the remainder of the cam- paign. In cross country when you lose your number one boy and have to replace him with your sixth best runner it ' s really a big loss, Timmons explained. Ryun was the top KU finisher in both meets in which he ran. We ' re looking forward to a very fine season next year with the return of five varsity lettermen and a great freshman squad, Timmons stated. This is understandable as juniors Curtis Grindall and Mike Hayes return along with sophomore standouts Mike Petterson, Mike Kearns, Mike Sheahon, and Jim Ryun. CROSS COUNTRY 137 INTRAMURAL FOOTBALL PHI Gamma Delta vs. Delta Tau Delta. 138 This year marked the 36th season for the intramural football program on Mount Oread. Over twelve hundred participants on 63 teams played to decide which teams were to be the 1966 champions. The A league championship game saw Beta Theta Pi meet the Laws after both had shown their superiority in their respective division playoffs. The Laws ' only playoff contest was against McCollum. The weather was cold and windy, but the Laws ' superiority was quite apparent. McCollum had great difficulty in moving the ball while the Laws were hampered only by errors at certain times. The Laws ' first tally came on a 15-yard pass from Clark Mandigo to John Woolf. The extra point attempt failed. The second touchdown came on an eleven-yard, Tom Hamill-to-Bill Cham- bers pass. Again the extra point was missed. McCollum was held scoreless as the final score was 12-0, and the Laws were in the title match. In both fraternity A divisions, three-way ties resulted. In one division Beta Theta Pi, Delta Upsilon, and Delta Tau Delta tied, while in the other Phi Kappa Psi, Phi Delta Theta, and Phi Gamma Delta were knotted. In the semi-final games the Betas and the Phi Gams defeated the Phi Delts and the Delts respectively and advanced to the fraternity championship. In a very closely contested battle both teams held the ball about the same amount of time, with the Betas moving the ball a little better although plagued with interceptions. The Fijis ' only touchdown came on a 20-yard pass from Dave Hinshaw to Don Welch. The Randy Cordill kick was suc- cessful. The Betas ' lone touchdown was on a 55-yard pass from John Grantham to Dennis Prater. The kick was good. The score at the end of regulation play was 7-7, so the game went into overtime, with the winner to be decided by which team could make the most yardage in four plays from scrimmage. The Phi Gams had the bail first, and their first three plays were incomplete passes. On the fourth play the quarterback was caught for a 7-yard loss. The Betas had only to fall on the ball four times for a net loss of 2 yards to win the game and the right to play the Laws in the championship. In the championship game the Betas scored once in each of the first two quarters. The first score came on a John Grantham-to-Dennis Prater pass for 9 yards. Bill Tankersly ' s kick was good. The second score came on a 15-yard pass from quarterback Grantham to Richard Slicker. The kick was successful as the Betas took a 14 point lead into the halftime. The defensive rush of the Betas and blocking on offense had successfully thwarted the Laws. The Laws ' only touchdown came in the fourth stanza on the 40-yard runback of a pass interception by Larry Winn. The kick was missed. With the final score of 14-6 the Betas won their ninth straight Hill championship. In the fraternity B championship Phi Kappa Psi met Beta Theta Pi No. 1 in a closely fought contest. The Phi Psis finally won 15-14 in overtime. Green Wave No. 2 met Navy ROTC in the Independent B championship with NROTC winning 32-0. In the Hill championship game the Phi Psis scored first on a 45-yard pass from Tom Morgan to Jamie Clancey. Jack Brown put the ball through the uprights, and the Psis held a seven point lead. NROTC soon evened the score on a Pete Shepard-to-Rich Hall 9-yard pass. Stan Graham kicked the extra point to tie score. The score remained 7-7 and neither team could mount a successful drive in either of the final two regulation stanzas. In the overtime NROTC lost two yards while Phi Psi gained two yards, winning their third overtime of the playoffs and the B Hill championship. Mike Horner UNIVERSITY EXPANSION 139 ud!ng One of the most important planning and operational functions of a university is the maintenance of its campus and physical facilities in respect to overall university growth. To contain a university within a rigidly-fixed campus leads to failure in several areas of collegiate operation. A progressive, future-oriented campus plan, however, means success in a university ' s attempt to provide the best possible environment for educational growth and attraction. The ever-changing campus of the University of Kansas stands as an example of KU ' s success in meet- ing the physical demands of a growing enrollment. Long-range administrative plans for fulfilling the con- stant need for more classroom and office space com- bine with substantial financial support both public and private to answer the challenge of future years ' growth. The Kansas State Legislature, the Coun- cil for Progress, and accompanying Program for Prog- ress together representative of state and alumni aid are important components of KU planning. To this year ' s graduating senior the KU campus has defined itself as a dynamic entity. And when the class of 1970 graduates, the present 1967 campus will re- main only as a fleeting memory in the continuum of university growth. Building projects, detours, new landscaping efforts, and traffic re-routing all vivid in the student ' s daily consciousness will fade as the campus rejuvenates itself year by year. With this issue the Jayhawker therefore chronicles current building completions, construction, and future plans, as the University of Kansas keeps pace with the demands of the academic world. University EituAllajng Expansion Beyond the annual appropriations of the Kansas State Legislature, the growth and success of the Uni- versity of Kansas is built on a long-standing tradi- tion of generous private support. Credit and apprecia- tion for endowing this tradition go to a long list of dedicated, interested KU alumni and friends. Mrs. Elizabeth Watkins, Mr. Solon Summerfield, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph R. Pearson, and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth A. Spencer are but a few of those persons whose names will long be remembered as KU donors. Private finan- cial support would not continue, however, without a fund-raising body to administer and plan for future needs. It is this function that the KU Endowment Association serves. In pursuing its task, the Endowment Association works in conjunction with the Council for Progress . a body of 300 alumni and friends which was created to promote the university and to seek the continuation and expansion of its tradition of private support. Coun- cil for Progress membership is national in scope and includes a board of regional chairmen who organize committees and area activities to generate interest in KU. The immediate project of the Council is the Program for Progress, a three-year plan which at its conclusion in 1969 will have collected over $18,600,000 to promote various areas of KU endeavor. The plan provides $4,100,000 for additional support for student aids, $5,892,000 for faculty development, $6,225,000 for development of projects on the Lawrence campus, $1,400,000 for support of Medical Center plans, and 142 University Brii Id ing Expansion $1,000,000 for an unrestricted opportunity fund. Through the $6,225,000 for support of resources on the Lawrence campus several projects will take form. Included in these plans is $750,000 for a new building for the School of Law; $1,000,000 for facilities for the college-within-the-college program; $1,000,000 for a new art museum; and $300,000 for an outdoor theater to be located near Potter Lake. The $18,617,000 fund goal of the Council for Prog- ress is a comprehensive effort to insure and enhance the academic excellence and physical adequacy of the University of Kansas. In cooperation with the Endow- ment Association, the Council for Progress assures the State of Kansas a healthy future for its university. OPPOSITE PAGE. Workmen hoist a slab of marble up the sides of seven-story Fraser Hall. THIS PAGE. Members of a demoli- tion crew watch as a radiator from the second floor of old Myers Hall falls to the ground below. 143 UniversLi Buiidring Expansioini Fraser Ila4 I New Fraser Hall, said Chancellor W. Clarke Wes- coe, provides a remarkable combination of both the traditional and the functional. New Fraser and nearby Blake Hall have been designed with great care, be- cause for many they will represent the physical image of the university. They will occupy the crowning lo- cation on a magnificent campus site. When the master plan for the east end of the campus is completed, the view of the campus and its red roofs will be more splendid than ever before from every aspect, and the campus will acquire a new open and spacious appear- ance. The new building, with 96,000 square feet of floor space, has more than twice as much research, tech- nology, and office accommodations as those provided in old Fraser. Within its seven stories are 29 class- rooms, departmental and faculty offices, and labora- tories for psychology, anthropology, and sociology. Other departments holding classes there are French, English, German, human relations, and western civili- zation. The estimated cost of the structure was $2.2 million, with $1,750,000 having been appropriated from the state educational building fund, and $450,- 000 coming in grants from the National Institutes of Health and the National Science Foundation. New Fraser has a broad, central east-west corridor, with several doors and many windows. Although its roof rises higher than that of old Fraser, it has the same familiar twin towers on top. A small parking lot, accommodating 32 cars, was built on the new site to serve the needs both of those on campus and those coming to the Psychology Clinic. BELOW. In early February, the entrance to New Fraser receives finishing touches as the March 6 date for occupancy draws near. 145 Undver tly BuJIMIlding Expanskft) clner ()) Construction began this December on the $3.5 million Spencer Research Library, a T-shaped struc- ture which will overlook Potter Lake and Memorial Stadium. The research library is a resource recom- mendation of the KU Council for Progress and was made possible through a gift to the university from the Kenneth A. and Helen F. Spencer Foundation of Kansas City. To serve undergraduates, graduates, and professors alike, the research and study library will be matched in utility and existence by few places in the United States. Thomas R. Buckman, director of KU ' s libraries, said, The Spencer Library is not solely for graduate students; undergraduate students who have a serious interest in, and the ability to use ma- terials housed in the new library will be welcome to use it. The structure, scheduled for completion in the spring of 1968, correlates in design to that of Strong Hall. It will tower four stories high with 350 seats in the seminar rooms used for classes, study rooms, staff rooms, and research studies. Space-wise, the new building will hold 850,000 volumes, consisting of pub- lic books, study areas, and staff research works. Spe- cifically, the facilities of the library will house older materials used in advanced research in the humanities and social sciences. Research materials, journal files, governmental documents, and new monographs will also be stored in its confines. In order to help pre- serve rare books, the entire edifice will be air condi- tioned and humidity controlled. The temperature will. always be 70 degrees while the humidity will be main- tained at 50 per cent. FOLLOWING The RAZING of several barracks behind Strong Hall, work begins in January on the new library facilities. 146 University Muir, II d thim Expansion !!7,ers Hai! Expansion is the word that characterizes the Kansas School of Religion this year. In September, 1967, students will step into a new building which is an intrinsic part of an expanded program of religious study. Construction began in mid-November on the site of old Myers Hall, adjoining the KU campus east of the Kansas Union. The oldest building on the campus since the razing of Fraser Hall in 1965, Myers housed the School since 1923 when it was converted from an old farmhouse to a place of learning. The new facilities will more than double the number of class- rooms, and provision for enlarged staff and increased religious education services has been made in office and work space. Included in the plans are a domed classroom and office wing, and a library wing which will form a T-shaped structure faced in cut stone. A 15,000 volume library will afford private study for three times as many students. The $400,000 edifice is being financed through the support of eleven religious bodies, including the Ro- man Catholic and Jewish faiths, as well as by the gifts and pledges of interested individuals. A statewide million-dollar fund drive has been launched to provide both for the building and for the school ' s expanded program, which promises the maintenance of a full- time faculty and increased curriculum to offer a master ' s degree, and in two years, a Ph.D. degree. The new building will thus make possible a religious study program which will demonstrate significantly that religious education of a high order, meeting with the standards of other disciplines, can be realized in connection with state institutions of higher learning. Ix EARLY FEBRUARY, foundation work proceeds on Myers Hall across Jayhawk Boulevard from the Kansas Union. 147 Fa. L_1 In the past year well over $2,000,000 has been spent in the expansion of KU ' s athletic facilities under the guidelines of the Program for Progress. These new facilities not only continue KU ' s prominence in ath- letic programs for major universities, but also offer the student body many modern and complete services both as spectator and participant. For the fall of 1966, 6,500 more seats were made available in Memorial Stadium with an addition to the east stands, bringing the total capacity to 51,500. This expansion, which was made possible by a hike in student ticket prices, also included a weight room under the stands for the use of the cross country, track, and football men. However, the most significant re- sult of the expansion is that students can now sit be- tween the goal lines, no longer having to view a game 4 University u.N1k).1[11A;j At Expansion from the end zone as was the case in recent years. New Robinson Gymnasium and Natatoriam also opened this fall. For the first time in many years modern athletic facilities were thus made available for student participation in almost any field of ath- letics. Costing approximately $1.5 million, the build- ing houses the Department of Physical Education and Recreation. The structure ' s five classrooms and eight- een offices are air-conditioned and isolated from the noise areas of the building. In addition to three four-wall indoor handball courts and two large gym- nasia, there are also five other multi-purpose rooms, each occupying approximately 2800 square feet. The natatorium provides a T-shaped pool which meets both AAU and NCAA standards, and a spectator area accommodating 700 persons. LEFT. The Sunnyside Avenue entrance to New Robinson Gymnasium. ABOVE, TOP. Robinson ' s pool, seen from the spectator area. MIDDLE. One of two gymnasia, used for both classes and intramurals. Borrom. The east side of Memorial Stadium, with the student-financed 6,500-seat addition. 149 ) With the completion of Oliver Hall this past sum- mer construction of new university housing facilities will come to a temporary standstill, as emphasis turns to maintenance and renovation within existing struc- tures. According to J. J. Wilson, Director of Housing, no new halls will be constructed probably for at least two years, as enrollment figures continue to increase, but at a rate significantly lower than in recent years. Long-range plans call for two new halls to be built west of Oliver, bringing the total of large halls oper- ated by the university to eleven. University housing including large halls, scholar- ship halls, and Stouffer Place operated at 90% capac- ity this year. Insured at a value of $22.4 million, the entire system houses students representing every facet of university life single and married, male and fe- male, freshman and graduate. Financial requirements for new housing are met through the sale of Board of Regents revenue bonds, which are then paid for from the income of individual halls. At the current time, it is not anticipated that the Council for Progress will play a significant role in the system ' s present and future maintenance and expansion. Several projects either in the planning stages or being implemented include renovation within the Stouffer Place apart- ments, the construction of new all-purpose courts ad- jacent to three halls, and additions to parking lots in the Daisy Field Area. Among the 41 fraternities and sororities at KU, three have moved into new houses within the past three years, and two have recently completed expansion work. Two basic problems face Greek living groups wishing to remodel or build the current tight money situation makes it difficult to finance such expendi- tures; and competition both from residence halls and apartments make it difficult at times to maintain house numbers near capacity figures. Thus, no soror- ities plan new construction within the next two years, while four of the twenty-eight fraternities will build and another six will remodel or expand. CONSTRUCTED IN 1963, the 88-man TKE house was one of the original Greek houses built in the South Flats area east of Iowa Street. 150 University Building Expansion ABOVE. The $350,000 Alpha Gamma Delta sorority house features French Provincial architecture and was first occupied in early October. BELOW. New Oliver Hall was home to over four hundred freshman women this year, and housed the offices of the University ' s Centennial College. 151 BWIlding Expansion THE NEW PHARMACEUTICAL CHEMISTRY LABORATORY, built for KU ' s first Regents Professor, Dr. Takeru Iliguchi, will be located in a biological science area, west of Iowa Street. The Stu re A graduating senior returning to his alma mater in 1977 would probably be amazed on his initial trip along Jayhawk Boulevard with the extent of the re- facing of Mount Oread. These changes will be the result of a farsighted plan for the orderly growth of the central portion of the university campus. Some of them are part of the KU master plan announced February 28, 1962, by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe. Others are outlined in the recommendations of the KU Council for Progress as part of the $18,617,000 goal for private giving to the university in the next three years. Initial phases of the program are already in action, as shown by the completion of Fraser Hall and construction on new Myers Hall and Spencer Re- search Library. But the overall developmental plan for the main campus is only in its infancy with the erection of these buildings. Included in the immediate five-year plan is the construction of the $3.5 million, eight-story Experi- mental Biology and Human Development Building, ,....e - 152 University 1:1(t,u [(I ' m A l :xpansion WITH ONE LEVEL BELOW GROUND and three above, the Spencer Research Library will have stacks for 670,000 volumes of KU ' s growing special collections. scheduled to begin this spring. Target date for the completion is fall, 1968. Departments of microbiology, comparative anatomy, biochemistry, physiology, hu- man development, and family life will be housed in this edifice. An entire wing will be dedicated to child mental retardation study financed by the National Institute of Health. According to Keith Lawton, vice- chancellor of operations for KU, about one-third of the construction will be financed by the Higher Edu- cation Facilities Commission. This building will be located east of Summerfield Hall on the former site of Old Robinson annex and nearby tennis courts. Two other science buildings will also be constructed to meet growing educational and research needs. A new pharmaceutical chemistry laboratory will be built this summer. This structure will be KU ' s first labora- tory building designed primarily for a single sci- entist: Dr. Takeru Higuchi, known throughout the nation as the father of physical pharmacy, will train graduate students and work with analytical processes that are of primary interest to the pharmacy world. Also included in the five-year plan is a $4 million pro- gram calling for the erection of a new Physical Sci- ences Building and the remodeling and air-condition- ing of Malott Hall. The Sciences Building will be built east of Malott, where temporary surplus barracks now house other miscellaneous departments. In the immediate future, phase one of the new $3.9 million Humanities Building is to be built follow- ing the razing of old Robinson Gymnasium this sum- mer. The second phase will consist of the removing of Haworth Hall and subsequent expansion of the new humanities facilities. A three-story addition at the southwest part of Watkins Hospital is also planned. This annex, containing diagnostic and clinical rooms, is priced at about one-half million dollars. The increasing demands of a growing student body on the Student Union are to be met with a two-fold program. One part calls for a two-story addition to the present Kansas Union, while the other provides 153 University Bud Ildi Er g Expan on FACING SUNNYSIDE AVENUE on the south slope of Mount Oread, the Experimental Biology and Human Development Building will provide 137,000 square feet of floor space for several of KU ' s science departments. for a satellite Union to be built near Allen Field House. Supplementary recommendations of the Council for Progress for the next five years range from a new Law Center to an art museum and an outdoor theater. The new Law Center ' s proposed site is on the south fringe of the central campus at the intersection of Indiana Street and Sunflower Road. The art museum is to be located west of the main Kansas Union, while the outdoor stage will be molded in the banks of Potter Lake. In addition to the construction of these new build- ings, the long-range rejuvenation of Mount Oread calls for renovations of existing structures, additions to buildings now in use, and construction of still others. An annex for Lindley Hall, to be used by students and faculty members in earth sciences, is planned. To be situated near Learned Hall is a building for the graphic and creative arts. Other measures include construction of a new building for use by University Extension, a central services building on West Fifteenth Street, and renovation of Marvin Hall and Green Hall. 154 UNIVERSITY RESIDENCE HALLS ) ( ) 1 1 11 1 L ) _ I (0 (cirn r_ I_ __I :5 -1 1 J AimptcoAroamlfr (00 idk 1201 160x(IV 31 v(om iiji to:Folii v oidi(V;;; rd `, kOlcoom itodHs mny ,(,11,0160t(g oblajimi,fio)m fikor 14(:1101, 1141(e?-1`m 0.01(8.4(fo )1(oW 101(4, (0)-r d ' oxo)oo iLl ' m c S (osomiiiitilodkom Pl w(oir 1p)4.11(it: coif (0)((m)(am(641. 1O0o0iwoi%1Er (0)(Riroo,, Rizircit i Adblor it(olo) iW1UiXdb stminiktd (or 4 fliorrg04t(e)O) 1091 titom Imod1jimo (0){11 1t40)11 v(0)Miltr %AilodkoS :gc141 vA0k6)5 id ' ow oAtrorikor iptovSkaa lo-komih (wir 160.011(d6olg,;; ot(elo111: 2,,o0-0(o)000lli: (coif i(10) (oldie AvoiNborp; itilow wil ' axo) (lowolpikae. ;zlitw ipuoiipIoM (1)411iiroO11.!i .ifibmin it(o) iiiiKe mo)11 ' roYoldhl EeUOI whij(exettii vw (0) V(eliVikolvAv (OW (z)ii ibifirovor (41 (fie)[60.0%. idol ,Ailio1(61(c)01i6 mem 01.1(OmmeTd[ I [0)0.6 (it; 1E( (6 (ill e r iDOl o r (46(:Yo1 (VoYo)t{ (o)i ' 1601 iirow Olar, 14401%, orrny (oktcooi ccibM0iic5d1, 14 ex, as five - women s, three men ' s, ' and two coed halls comprise this category. Among the scholarship halls, five claim male occupants, and four, women. The three men ' s halls Joseph R. Pearson, Templin, and Ellsworth have a combined capacity for housing over fifteen hundred students. While freshmen pose the highest percentage of this number, no tablished university policy requires a segregation by classes. Thus, a wide diversity of age groups ranging from freshmen to graduate students is found within each living group. Facilities available to members in the individual halls are basically the same, as are university policies concerning student- responsibilities and rights. University-financed McCollum and privately-owned Naismith are both coed halls. An innovation in KU ' s system, coed occupancy of McCollum became a neces- sity when Hashinger and Lewis halls were unable to provide adequate space for a rising number of class women. In addition to its unique male-female composition, McCollum also has the distinction of being the largest of the university ' s residence halls, capable of housing over one thousand students. smith provides a synthesis of some of the best aspects of university halls and apartments. The opp ortunity offered by Naismith for more independence, privacy, and exclusive living resulted in its occupancy by over 275 men and women in this its first year of operations. Of the five large halls for women, three are for freshman women and two are for upperclass women. All university women who are not 21 years old and are not seniors must live in approved university ing. The upperclass women ' s halls Hashinger and Lewis thus bring together several different classifica- tions of students and are more independent in spirit than their male counterparts, comprising as they do women who have not pledged sororities. The man halls Corbin, Gertrude Sellards Pearson, and Oliver are unique in that they are the only type of residence hall occupied. by but one level of the dent body. Virtually all of KU ' s freshman coeds live in these facilities, as they are required to do so unless they live either at home with their parents, or in scholarship halls. As a rule they are also regulated STEPHENSONITES SHARE COOKING RESPONSIBILITIES, an aspect of KU residence hall life unique with the nine scholarship halls. 158 Residence Halls more strictly than students in other halls in such matters as dress codes, closing hours, and attendance at floor meetings. The only freshman women who may live with upper- class women are those who have received scholarship hall awards to live in Douthart, Miller, Sellards, or Watkins. The values of such awards range up to three hundred dollars per year, and are given to students to help defray expenses for room and board. The men of Battenfeld, Grace Pearson, Jolliffe, Pearson, and Stephenson likewise receive scholarships to live in these halls. Within each hall, the residents are re- sponsible for carrying on most of the day-to-day opera- tions necessary for the maintenance of the halls. On the average, students are expected to work seven hours per week, preparing their own meals and clean- ing the physical facilities. As living groups, the halls are alive with tradition and spirit. They function much like most fraternities and sororities, actively participat- ing in almost all university functions. LEFT AND RIGHT. A couple in the lounge and a caller at the main desk are scenes synonymous with life in the large residence halls. 159 Residence Halls Residents Over 4900 of the 14,605 students studying this year on the Lawrence campus live in a university-endowed residence hall. Of this number approximately 2500, or slightly over 51%, are men, and the remainder, women. Another 325 men and women reside in Naismith Hall and various apartments, which although privately-financed, are fully approved by KU. The student population of the system as a whole is weighted heavily with freshmen and sophomores. Among the men, 41% are freshmen, 26% are sopho- mores, 17% are juniors, and only 9% are seniors. The other 7% are enrolled as either graduate or special students. A larger percentage of the women residents are freshmen about 46% with a gradual reduction in percentages, similar to that recorded for KU males, taking place with regard to upperclass women. Several factors account for the diversification of these numbers, among them, financial and personal reasons. However, university policies and regulations, especially with regards to women, play the most pre- dominant role in maintaining the total hall popula- tion at a high percentage of the capacity. All fresh- NUMEROUS FOREIGN STUDENTS from around the world add an international flavor to life in most halls. 160 Residence Halls man women, e xcept for those living with their parents in Lawrence, are required to live in one of KU ' s three freshman women ' s halls. Upperclass women who are not seniors or who are not 21 years old are also re- quired to live in university-approved housing. As only about 50 of these women live in approved apart- ments, the remainder numbering over twelve hun- dred live either in a large residence hall or a schol- arship hall. In order to give upperclass women greater freedom within the system, an innovation introduced in 1966 now enables individuals to choose both the rooms and halls which they will occupy in the spring, with assignments being given on a seniority basis. For the men, no university regulations exist with regards to where they must live. With the exception of a select group of varsity athletes, most KU males are free to choose their residences, insofar as par- ticular living groups ' policies permit them to do so. Thus, the large men ' s residence halls are open to all men, while the scholarship halls maintain certain grade requirements for their members. ENGROSSED IN A SPONTANEOUS CARD SESSION, several McCollum women typify the informal week-night atmosphere in large halls. 161 Residence Halls Administration Under the supervision of the Offices of the Dean of Women and Dean of Men, a university-financed administrative system assists students with their prob- lems, implements university policies and programs, and acts as a reference intermediary between KU ' s administration and the student residents. All large halls have a resident director ( or directors ) who is usually a graduate student. It is ultimately this person who is responsible for the administrative organization and overall student operations within each hall. Within each large living group, a set of senior assistants, staff assistants, and or counselors comprise the resident director ' s staff. These persons ideally provide a per- sonal approach in helping individual students solve their academic and social problems, although the ac- tual effectiveness of their work usually varies with each staff member ' s interests and attitudes. The nine scholarship halls are directed by university-paid house- mothers, whose duty it is to receive guests, preserve etiquette, be responsible for certain financial aspects of hall life, and generally maintain order. Proctors assist the housemothers by organizing work schedules and performing other functions. COUNSELORS IN THE LARGE HALLS, themselves graduate students, constantly work with individuals and hall committees. 162 Residence Halls TOM SIMPSON Or STEPHENSON gingerly handles an egg during the All Hall Fall Ball Egg Toss contest. Social Each residence hall offers facilities for socializing and sponsors functions throughout the year to insure that the residents are able to supplement their aca- demic and extracurricular pursuits with social ac- tivities. In the large residence halls, students may cluster in front of the television sets or get together in the floor lounges, snack b ars, living rooms, cafeterias, and music rooms. Each floor usually allots a sum of money for social functions; and in addition to floor and wing parties, large halls sponsor full hall parties, mixers, and formals. Various types of gatherings such as hootenannies, street dances, and Halloween, pizza, and Christmas tree decorating parties are also frequent among the large residence halls. In scholarship halls the majority of social activities take place between the different halls. Hour dances, exchange dinners, and Christmas and spring formals are common during the year. All of the halls have Sunday dress dinners, and occasionally a dress dinner is held during the week to which a speaker or faculty member is invited. The most distinctive scholarship hall function is the All Hall Fall Ball, an anuual event with games, con- tests, trophies, and a street dance. The entire hall system also participates in various AURH-sponsored events, such as periodic Whatchamacallits and the annual Spring Fling. 163 Residence Halls Residence halls have their share of varsity athletes the majority of men attending KU on athletic schol- arships who do not live in fraternities are required to live in a hall. Thus Templin counts the track squad as residents, while Joseph R. Pearson houses football and basketball players. JRP is also the home of the athletic department ' s special training table. Aside from their varsity jocks, most residence halls are represented extensively in both team intramural sports such as football, basketball, softball, and bowling, and individual sports. Participation in the large halls ' ac- tivities is usually organized by hall or floor commit- tees or by word of mouth. In the scholarship halls, which form their own intramural league, an athletics chairman is generally elected for this purpose. The scholarship halls hold an annual track meet and award a trophy to the house scoring highest in all of the intramural activities. Both men ' s and women ' s schol- arship halls also compete with residence halls and Greek houses, as most hall activities are under the supervision of the university intramural program. Athletics INTRAMURAL TEAMS ARE USUALLY ORGANIZED at the floor level, and form their own Independent leagues within the university ' s programs. 164 Residence Halls Scholarship The ever-present problem of making grades is left largely to the individual student in the residence halls. Most halls have small libraries to ease the problem of distance to the university ' s libraries and provide quiet areas, such as the cafeteria, which in the evening are set aside for study. Study conditions on the floors vary, depending on the counselor ' s in- terest in keeping noise down and the students ' gen- eral proclivity towards studying; there seems to be a correlation between noisy floors and low floor GPA. Large residence halls, which provide generally rep- resentative cross-sections of the student body, are fairly close to the all-university GPA. However, high scholastic achievement is probably the foremost iden- tifying factor of the scholarship halls. This fact is due to the quality of the students admitted into the system: scholarship halls claim a high number of students attending KU on academic scholarships and in the honors program. As residents must maintain a minimum 1.50 overall GPA, scholarship halls rank highest scholastically of all. KU living groups. TOP. An upperclass woman and her date study late at night in the Lewis Hall cafeteria. BOTTOM. Battenfeld ' s College Bowl entrants ponder a question during competition, won for the fifth consecutive year by a residence hall team. ) ) 165 Residence Halls A ativi -den Participation in activities within residence halls is usually limited to governmental offices and commit- tees. In outside activities, numerous individuals par- ticipate and hold positions of responsibility. How- ever, proportional to their numbers, the large hall residents are much less a part of the activity aspect of university life than are their counterparts in the scholarship halls or Greek houses. While the nature of the large hall system allows for a great deal of in- dividuality, a student who wishes to succeed in ac- tivities is at a disadvantage in obtaining guidance and in befriending upperclassmen influential in campus life. The smaller scholarship halls also participate in nearly every activity found at KU. While most schol- arship hall activities were in the past organized by each independent student unit, a new organization, the All Scholarship Hall Council, was formed this year to promote and coordinate intra-hall activities. On the group level, all of the halls share in such events as the SUA Carnival, .AURH functions, queen con- tests, KU-Y activities, and the College Bowl compe- tition. Keen competition is annually provided by the halls in the annual homecoming decorations contest, the Men ' s Independent Residence Trophy having been won by the same men ' s scholarship ball for the past three years. ON A SUNDAY EVENING, Templin ' s Spring Sing choral group practices in the lounge for the upcoming AURH-sponsored competition. 166 Residence Halls MEMBERS OF THE LEWIS SENATE, chosen in floor elections, discuss hall policies and future programs at a weekly meeting. 167 Residence Halls Residence hall government throughout the univer- sity system is basically uniform in structure; each floor generally elects officers, who compose an all-hall council or congress. Particularly in freshman women ' s living groups, this council is a policy-forming body which determines such matters as dress regulations and quiet hours. However, the main purposes of hall gov- ernment are to plan social functions and to appropriate money allotted from. hall fees for them. Quite often a disciplinary committee, which includes representa- tives from various floors, judges residents who have been acting against counselors or causing undue dis- turbances. Committees, appointed by the hall council, may plan social activities, or supervise the hall library, intramurals, hospitality, and homecoming decorations. Somewhat similar to other small campus living groups, the scholarship halls ' internal government is based on parliamentary procedure. Each has a constitution, elects officers, and holds regular house meetings to de- termine the activities, expenditures, and policies of the hall. The newly-formed All Scholarship Hall Coun- cil provides a communications link between the hall residents and the university administration. Inter-Residence Council Supplanting the work of individual hall govern- ments, the Inter-Residence Council is composed of representatives from each floor of the upperclass women ' s residence halls and one representative from each women ' s scholarship hall. Its purpose is to pro- mote interest and communication among the inde- pendent women and to relate them to university life. To carry out this objective, the IRC this year spon- sored a scholarship tea for outstanding women and a reception for faculty members and student leaders. The organization also distributed Survival Kits during finals to raise money for the student loan fund in each hall. In the spring, the IRC organizes the Spring Sing during Spring Fling activities. A branch of IRC, the freshman orientation committee, seeks to help fresh- men adjust to their new environment. Among the com- mittee ' s projects was the Introduction to Daisy Hill last fall, at which time freshman girls were guests in upperclass halls. Two new projects were also added to IRC activities this year: a booklet is being planned to describe life in upperclass and scholarship halls; and working with AURH, IRC was in charge of hospitality and entertainment for the national AURH conference held at KU during spring break. Top row: Ginny Phelps, Russell; Sharon Lyons, Kansas City; Saundria Fletcher, Kansas City; Lynn Manos, Independence, Mo.; Mary Carol Ledell, Mc- Pherson; Jan Fergus, Kansas City; Chris Miller, Kansas City, Mo. Second row: Jessica Barron, Belle Plaine; Diane Wilfong, Mason City, Ia.; Sharon Snyder, Haven; Shirley Middleton, Kansas City; Linda Hejtmanek, Wichita; Linda Ellis, Clay Center. Bottom row: Beth Lallier, Piper; Margo Crist, McDonald; Kay Plumlee, Wichita; Kay Adams, Tulsa, Okla.; Stephanie Sampson, Salina. 168 Residence Halls Assocla Top row: Ralph F. Chambers, Pennsville, N.J.; Bill Morton, Phillipsburg; Larry Geiger, Shawnee Mission; Keith M. Wood, Pittsburg; Ed Roscher, Law- rence; John Kohl, Kansas City. Second row: Kelley Hayden, Atwood; Karen Hall, McPherson; Sharon Snyder, Haven; Clif Conrad, Bismarck, N.D.; Llona Marshall, Fort Scott; Janet Murphy, Topeka; Jim Imbeau, Galena. Bottom row: Rosemary Vieux, Dodge City; Kay Plumlee, Wichita; Lucia Weir- ich, Council Grove; Beth Roeder, Burlington; Cheryl Lunday, Ft. Madison, Ia.; Barbara Nottage, Kansas City, Mo. University Residence Ha Functioning in co-operation with IRC and hall gov- ernments, the Association of University Residence Halls co-ordinates information and activities of resi- dence ha lls and provides programs and social events for hall members. The AURH ' s first project this year was a leadership conference at Rock Springs, attended by AURH members and fall officers. Having become a member of the Lawrence Jaycees, the organization now works on several projects with them. Cultural events initiated by AURH this year included the pres- entation of art exhibits, a chamber music series, and hi-monthly KU Kicks Band concerts in the various halls. To increase communication among the halls, an AURH social council was formed, composed of all hall social chairmen. Social events planned by the council included the annual Spring Fling and numer- ous Whatchamacallits. The most important AURH activity was the National Conference of the Associa- tion of College and University Residence Halls. Held over Spring Break on campus, it was hosted by the KU chapter and attracted delegates from colleges and universities throughout the United States. AT A SATURDAY MORNING MEETING, AURH officers discuss ideas and suggestions concerning the KU-sponsored National Conference. 169 Residence Halls Advantages The large residence halls at KU provide more than just a place to hang the hat. The fexibility in large hall organization allows a student a great deal of freedom in deciding when to eat, study, socialize, and otherwise spend his time. Each floor is a social and governmental unit in itself, in which a student may retain his individuality without succumbing to an- onymity. In each hall such facilities as stereo rooms, darkrooms, and libraries for resident use add to the personalization. This year ' s use of McCollum as a coed hall has proved to be a successful experiment. According to Assistant Dean of Men Fred McElhanic, the intermingling of the sexes has resulted in a buildup of spirit and hall unity unusual for a hall of McCol- lum ' s size and newness. The student-operated news- paper, the Tartan, also helps to unify this small com- munity. While there may be safety in numbers, other students prefer the small scholarship halls. The stan- dard appeal, says Assistant Dean of Men John Myers, is that they are small organized houses that offer a unique work-study arrangement. For intellectually- inclined students possessing widely diversified in- terests, the scholarship halls combine a loosely-orga- nized social framework with the opportunity for in- dividuality. By providing an effective social and academic integration, the smaller halls typify some of the best aspects of university life. TOP. Templin ' s stereo room is occupied throughout the day by men listening to records, studying, or just relaxing. BOTTOM. Ralph Dobyns, editor of McCollum ' s Tartan, prepares the mock- up of a stencil for a forthcoming issue of the newspaper. 170 A LONE Conn TALKING ON THE PHONE brings life to the otherwise Mt- personal nature of an empty hall. 171 Problems The residence hall system, like all human institu- tions, is fallible and possesses several inherent short- comings. It cannot provide the broad spectrum of freedom that many students would like, though several seem also to appreciate some restrictions. The basic problem in the large halls seems to be that of com- munication to keep students informed and in touch with the mainstream of university life, and to make them aware of such activities as AM-I-sponsored pro- grams. One of the purposes of the counseling pro- gram is to break down this communication barrier. Among the new halls, a recurrent problem is the lack of a sense of identification among the students: the living groups have not been in existence long enough for a tradition to have been built up. It is felt among some administrators, however, that the college-within- a-college program may help alleviate the need of students for social and intellectual contact with one another. Another problem, cited by Dean Aldon Bell, is the instability of freshman women ' s halls caused by the unnecessary and artificial concern about grades, sorority pledging, class choice, and social adjustment. He believes they are created by a lack of contact with upperclass women, and that in the ideal system all halls would be coeducational and include every level of the undergraduate student body. The scholarship halls, which are small, organized living groups, have problems of a different nature. Most of these halls are old and the need for physical alteration and im- provement is often acute. Other problems occur with the lack o f space in the halls, especially in the living quarters. What Assistant Dean of Men John Myers calls a trend towards unorganized living sometimes means a high turnover of students from year to year, making it more difficult to achieve unity and spirit. Top row: Julie Lacy, Garnett; Ginger Theimer, Colby; Sonja Carlson, Independence, Mo.; Nancy Mosher, Plainville; Carol A. Anderson, Shawnee Mission; Marietta Mundinger, St. Louis, Mo.; Leslie Burtner, Kansas City; Linda Keeler, Salina; Pat Pruitt, Topeka; Kelleen Stein, Topeka. Fourth row: Linda Carney, Lewis; Diana Bossemeyer, Hutchinson; Cheryl Azamber, Kansas City, Mo.; Mary Jane Rambo, Cedar Vale; Eeva-Liisa Niinioja, Helsinki, Finland; Lynn Laughlin, Englewood, Colo.; Jo Anne Ferrell, Valley Falls; Janet Shambaugh, Paola; Louise Bednar, Topeka; Carol Shapley, Wichita; Martha Kop- per, Wichita. Third row: Janet Bare, Wichita; Ruth Rohrer, Fort Scott; Chestine Kurth, Offerle; Joan Fisher, Prairie Village; Barbara Musgrave, Cof- feyville; Rita Matousek, Cuba; Betty Mattingly, Lindsborg; Jo Ann Houts, Bartlett; Edith Lord, Kingman; Janet Ringer, Hutchinson. Second row: Debby Danielson, St. Paul, Minn.; Marilyn Cathcart, Manhattan; Maria Lin, Hong Kong; Joan Holmes, Leoti; Cindy Delich, Kansas City; Karen Booker, Au- gusta; Carol Fraizer, Oak Park, Ill.; Kathleen Loehr, Wellington; Kathleen Bendowsky, Broken Bow, Neb. Bottom row: Mary Margaret Higley, Law- rence; Lynda Hutchison, Chanute; Jean Tanner, Gypsum; Mrs. Lorraine Mooney, housemother; Mary Ann Miesse, Bonner Springs; Melissa Case, Over- land Park; Judy Worl, Kingfisher, Okla.; Sandy Hunt, Kansas City, Mo. THREE RESIDENTS INFORMALLY COMBINE to decorate the Christ- mas tree before the hall ' s Christmas dinner and formal. Do u thart Hall Established in 1954, Douthart is a co-operative working and living unit in which each girl participates to maintain the upkeep of the house. Honors mark the college careers of Douthart ' s 48 members. The hall is home to a Phi Beta Kappa and members of the professional honoraries of journalism, education, and German. Five recipients of National Science Foundation Grants live in Douthart, as do two Watkins Scholars, a Presidential Scholar, and a National Merit Scholar. Well-traveled Douthart girls in- clude nine veterans of summer language institutes and two who spent their junior years in Germany and France. This year an exchange student from Finland is a Douthart resident. Individual honors have not kept Douthart scho- lars from contributing to the overall activities of KU. The president of SNEA, vice-presidents of IRC and AURH, a member of the Frosh Hawks Standard Board, and the chairman of the AURH Culture and Education Committee all live in the hall. Douthart is the current Women ' s Bowl- ing League Champion, and a resident was selected as a Big Eight All Star Team member. In addition to activities and honors, Douthart residents annually enjoy their barn parties, sandbars, and Christmas dinner and formal. A Mothers ' Weekend and a Parents ' Day also are a part of the social agenda. 172 Top row: Sue Kasper, Wilson; Marilyn Whitesell, Shawnee Mission; Terri Hammond, Hoisington; Barbara Anne Benskin, Wichita; Ruth Kolarik, Cald- well; Becky Wallower, Shawnee Mission; Sandy Peavler, Topeka; Jinny Sloan, Sioux City, Iowa; Cynthia Knocke, Wichita. Fourth row: Marilyn Rule, Ottawa; Judy Johnston, Independence, Mo.; Janice Moore, Kansas City; Roberta Fisher, Auburn, Nebr.; Melody Johnsen, Paola; Harriet Dunn, Over- land Park; Jean Northway, Ottawa; Shelley Halstead, Mankato; Mary Carol Ledell, McPherson; Mary Ann Torrence, Topeka. Third row: Cheryl S. Mitchell, Madison; Cinda Wicinski, Kansas City; Karen Hunter, Topeka; Cindy Grant, Leavenworth; Grete Ravn Omdal, Oslo, Norway; Judy Lemley, Dwight; Peggy Englebrake, Kansas City; Catherine Weir, Wichita; Barbara Davidson, Allen. Second row: Dana Rae Nelson, Belleville; Vicki Hecke, Kansas City; Donetta Skeens, Osawatomie; Pans Morris, Las Cruces, N.M.; Virginia Juergensen, Ellinwood; Karen Persinger, Lyndon; Elaine Grunder, St. John; Fredell Boston, Abilene. Bottom row: Mary Lou Knipp, Onaga; Suzanne Sears, Pauline; Susan Taylor, Wichita; Sheila Beaman, Indepen- dence, Mo.; Mrs. Carl Carter, housemother, Lawrence; Ilyse Sauer, Kansas City, Mo.; Ruta Valdmanis, Wichita; Martha Selfridge, Wichita; Linda Gilna, Manhattan. UNUSUAL GIFTS are the key to happiness at Miller ' s annual Christ- mas gift exchange. Miller Hall Miller Hall, constructed in 1938 as a sister hall to Watkins, was modeled after the same living program, including two- and three-girl study rooms and a sleeping porch. With recently improved facilities, seven girls in each of seven kitchens cook all of their own meals and perform other housekeeping tasks. Miller girls arc active in several aspects of campus life. With residents carrying some of the highest CPA ' s on the Hill, the hall is represented in such activities as Pi Lambda Theta (honorary education fraternity), Mortar Board, Cwens, KU-Y, Frosh Hawks, the summer language institutes, and the newly-formed All Scholarship Hall Council. Under the auspices of the ASHC, Miller participates with other scholarship halls in dances, spring picnics, and the All Hall. Fall Ball. Further honors include queen candidates for the KU Relays, Per- shing Rifles, and the Engineering Exposition, members of Angel Flight, and several Watkins Scholars. At the same time, a foreign student from Norway has brought an in- ternational flavor to the hall this year. In November, Miller distinguished itself by taking second place in the Women ' s Hall Division of Homecoming Decorations. The fifty residents also sponsored a Student-Faculty Tea, and a Fathers ' Tea is planned for this spring. Other social functions include a Christmas party and a spring formal. 173 Top row: Kathy Brandes, Cheney; Suzanne Schavdein, Great Bend; Solveig Eggert, Reykjavik, Iceland; Toni Hefling, Haven; Margaret Gotti, Culver; Alice Cox, Wellington; Gracie Dexter, Topeka; Mary Beck, Council Grove; Margo Crist, McDonald. Fourth row: Chris Haefele, Topeka; Jane Roberts, Coffeyville; Gerry Marion, Oklahoma City, Okla.; Janet Byer, Hamlin; Neva Bender, Luray; Jane Hoskinson, Oskaloosa; Cherie Shuck, Atchison; Cecelia Wenger, Ontarioville, Ill. Third row: Sandy Broderick, Sioux Falls, S.D.; Gay Benjamin, Garnett; Linda Beurmann, Shawnee Mission; Sue Callaway, Milton; Jeanne Yenni, Glasco; Rita Jones, Louisburg; Linda Ellis, Clay Center. Second row: Valda Aviks, Wichita; Karen Hall, McPherson; Linda Selig, Clay Center; Susan Kangas, Overland Park; Margaret MacDougall, Prairie Village; Nancy Simmons, Lawrence; Janet Herpich, Manhattan; Barbara Wiley, Basehor. Bottom row: Sheryl Rickard, Lyons; Linda Curtler, Kansas City; Frances Shrader, Great Bend; Mrs. Bruce Ramsay, housemother, Dodge City; Cheryl Parmely, LeRoy; Judy Beeman, Oxford; Lorilea Jaderborg, Lindsborg. SELLARDS WOMEN AND THEIR DATES enjoy a round of singing during the annual Christmas Party. Sellards Ha Founded in 1954, Sellards Hall boasts many of its fur- nishings from Europe, including an original Renoir paint- ing. In this setting may be found the president of IRC, the secretary of the Dean ' s Advisory Board, an AWS sen- ator, an ASC representative, the chairman of Spring Sing, and presidents of Chi Delphia, Sigma Alpha Iota, and the Christian Science Organization. Other members find time to be active in Frosh Hawks, Jay :lanes, Cwens, and several honoraries, and one was a finalist this year in KU ' s Best-Dressed Woman contest. Activities, however, have not kept Sellards women from maintaining the highest GPA among women ' s halls for three semesters. Housing three Watkins scholars, one Presidential Scholar, four KU Honor Scholars, and 15 members of the Honors Pro- gram, the hall has won the Women ' s College Bowl cham- pionship for two years. With five participants in the junior year abroad programs in France and Costa Rica, and nine participants in the summer language institutes, Sellards residents present a cosmopolitan atmosphere for visitors. Like most KU undergraduates, they fill much of their time with parties and functions. Among their annual social affairs are a fall barn party, a Christmas party, a spring formal, and both Mom ' s and Dad ' s Weekend. 174 1 Top row: Virginia Austin, Parsons; Beth Roeder, Burlington; Suzanne Jouvenat, Columbus, Nebr.; Chris Ligush, Fort Worth, Tex.; Barbara Phillips, Harrisonville, Mo.; Kay Rothenberger, Leavenworth; Marsha Decker, Lincoln; Linda McDonald, Great Bend; Janice Graham, Wichita; Jan Wagner, Rich- mond; Margaret Thorsell, Chanute. Fourth TOW: Paula Hoffman, Shawnee; Dixie Hiett, Haven; Ruth Rademacher, Arkansas City; Aileen Anderson, Salina; Mary Ellen Thompson, Fredonia; Linda Butler, Coffeyville; Janice Loveland, Wichita; Phyllis Johnson, Salina; Keryl Booth, Augusta; Hazel Henderson, Colony. Third row: Doris C. Soden, Great Bend; Dorothy Sloan, Norton; Susan L. Shaffer, Kinsley; Shirley Lyberger, Coffeyville; Patsy Booth, Concordia; Arlyss Baker, Ottawa; Linda Knackstedt, Little River; Marcia McMullen, Overland Park; Mary Ladesich, Shawnee Mission. Second row: Constance L. Poff, San Antonio, Tex.; Nancy Paschal, Wichita; Amy Gilliland, Overbrook; Sharon Snyder, Haven; Rachel Hall, Bonner Springs; Linda Marlene Johnson, Wichita; Marilyn Hommertzheim, Garden Plain; Margaret Holder, Georgetown, Guyana. Bottom row: Jane Zimmerman, Fort Scott; Pam Coleman, Mulvane; Nancy Hull, Sedgwick; June Sutton, Princeton; Mrs. McElhinney, housemother, Lawrence; Becky Rogers, Topeka; Susan Stoker, Shawnee Mission; Sue Hubert, Leavenworth; Mary Ann Sutherland, Prescott. Not pictured: C. Ann Richards, Miami, Okla, As PART OF THEIR introduction to organized life at KU, Watkins freshmen are escorted by upperclassmen to the hall ' s council room. 175 Watkins Hall Supported by the Endowment Fund, Watkins was the first scholarship hall to be built at KU. The Pearson and Watkins families built Watkins in 1906, and Miller Hall was later copied from the same plan. Twenty-seven of its present 49 residents have won scholarships, including National Merit and Watkins, the highest awards given to entering freshmen at KU. Outstanding Watkins Hall stu- dents include a managing editor of the UDK, the honorary commander of Pershing Rifles, the president of Kappa Phi and members of Mortar Board, Cwens, and journalism and education honoraries. The chairman of the Constitu- tion Committee for AWS, and two members of the Student Advisory Board join with members of Frosh Hawks, Jay Janes, and WRA to represent the hall. Watkins also houses seven music majors, and individuals have performed in Honors Recitals for the past four years. In this year ' s SUA Carnival, residents took top honors in the Women ' s Skit Division. The hall employs a unique dining service plan: seven girls are assigned to one of seven kitchens, where they plan and prepare their own meals. In social activities, Watkins girls entertain their mothers during a specially- designated weekend. Other functions highlighting the calendar include the annual Christmas tree-trimming party and the.Spring Crystal Dance. L Top row: Terry Laws, Shawnee Mission; Linton Bayless, Shawnee Mission; Mark A. Ficek, Trenton, Mo.; John Tibbetts, Leavenworth; Jim Clapton, Pratt; Bill Basow, Wichita; John E. Brown, Hoisington; Paul Sutton, Goodland; Jim Berr yman, Hutchinson; Lewis Thompson, Hutchinson. Fourth row: Alan L. Hermesch, Seneca; Laurence R. McAneny, Godfrey, Ill.; George Livingston, Plainville; Thomas A. Rayl, Shawnee; John Louden, Kansas City; Xavier Williams, Guayaquil, Ecuador; Douglas Jydstrup, Las Vegas, Nev.; Peter J. Foley, Wichita; James Hindman, Minneola. Third row: Bruce Carr, Salina; J. Michael Cairns, Leavenworth; James Vigil, Shawnee Mission; Paul Morehouse, Topeka; Richard Marolf, Topeka; Richard Wilson, Eureka; M. Robert Harshaw, Fredonia; Stephen M. Schirmer, Bonner Springs; Frank H. Kittrell, Paola; Keith Dougherty, Westmont, Ill. Second row: Jim Cook, Topeka; Jim Thorp, Topeka; Michael Blasberg, Shawnee Mission; John Dagenais, Wichita; Richard Ramsay, Dodge City; Gary Walls, Macon, Mo.; Dave Miller, Hays; Larry Friesen, Clay Center; Myr]. Duncan, Paola. Bottom row: Don McClain, Kansas City; Don C. Gordy, Hutchinson; Charles Yockey, Lyndon; Mrs. Patricia Campbell, Topeka, Housemother; Jim Harris, Belleville, Ill.; Mark McLelland, Pratt; Jerry Clemetson, Holton; Gene Stubbs, Prairie Village. PRIOR To ROCK CHALK REVUE, Battenfeld men entertain their dates in the hall ' s living room. Battenfeld Hall Opened in 1940 as KU ' s first men ' s scholarship hall, newly- remodeled Battenfeld Hall began another year with a distinguished assortment of scholars and students active in campus life. Among its occupants are the past president of AURH, a football and a basketball manager, a varsity tennis player, and the information officer for Arnold Air Society. In addition to its four Summerfields, six honor scholars, a Woodrow Wilson nominee, and a National Merit Scholar, are recipients of scholarships from General Motors, the Whitehall Foundation, and the KU math de- partment. Two Battenfeld men also participated in the KU German language institute last summer. In athletics, Battenfeld men have been quite active and this fall cap- tured the scholarship hall football championship. Last spring they tied for first place in the scholarship hall track meet. Similarly active in social activities, Battenfeld held hour dances, barn parties, wiener roasts, a Christmas party, and a Homecoming dinner, and participated in the scholarship hall spring formal. As a group, the hall initiated a series of dress dinners this year, honoring dis- tinguished faculty members. Battenfeld also raised more money than any other small organized living group last year for the Community Chest, and participated in the Toys-for-Tots drive. 176 Top row: Mike Walter, Hutchinson; Ken Larson, Caldwell; Donald Jenkins, Jr., Kansas City, Mo.; Verlyn M. Peterson, Conway; Joe L. Whitaker, Norton- ville; Mark Osborn, Stockton; Mike Banks, Topeka; Todd Stevenson, Leawood; Gary McClelland, Topeka. Fourth row: John Mauk, Conway; Daryl Dennis, Topeka; R. Allen Jamison, Lindsborg; Bill. D. Maddox, Wichita; Jon Paul Hauxwell, Stockton; Art Duston, Washington; Tom Scamman, Tarisio, Mo.; Richard Whitley, Lawrence; Gary R. Walter, Kansas City; Richard T. Horn, Kansas City. Third row: John E. Holcomb, Cunningham; Telis K. Menas, Wichita; Conrad Yumang, Leavenworth; Richard Johnson, Overland Park; Gerald Rork, Horton; Hanan S. Bell, Prairie Village; John Braum, Holton; Steve Keller, Kansas City; Scott Cunningham, Caldwell. Second row: Robert Breddle, Winchester; Anan Chankhunthod, Korat, Thailand; Rod Lovett, Neodesha; Donald R. Nevin, Horton; Phillip R. Craft, Topeka; Craig Cassidy, Kansas City; Fred R. Reber, Emporia; Bob Taylor, Plainville. Bottom row: Tom Stevenson, Leawood; David Diepenbrock, Shawnee Mission; Mike Geitz, Horton; Gary Towslee, Topeka; Marietta Jackson, housemother, Newton; Steve Schaefer, Wellington; Ed Robertson, Kansas City; Robert D. Middewdorf, Humboldt; James Whitaker, Nortonville. THE MEN OF GRACE PEARSON break the mid-week St114 routine with an hour dance. Grace Pearson Hall Once a year, the front lawn of Grace Pearson explodes in flashing lights, while a sound system blares and mechan- ical Jayhawks and other devices jog about. The efforts Grace Pearson men have taken to rig up this annual elec- trical extravaganza have paid off well this year they retired the Grand Sweepstakes Trophy for homecoming decorations by winning the award for the third con- secutive year. Grace Pearson has distinguished itself in other ways as well, most notably in the scholastic achieve- ments of its individuals. Among its 47 residents are nine Summerfield scholars, a National Merit scholar, and recipients of NSF and Ford Foundation grants. Scholar- ships earned by individuals in the hall carry a wide variety of titles: General Motors, Hallmark, Skelly, State of Kansas, U.S. Government, and U. G. Mitchell. Recogni- tion for their efforts has come to several men in the form of Sachem, Kansas Relays Committee, and Univer- sity Review editorial board memberships, and a B. Lear award. Grace Pearson residents also distinguish themselves socially at their Christmas and spring formals and occasional barn parties. Not to be bested in athletics, the hall boasts two varsity athletes (fencing and baseball), and last year captured the all-sports trophy for men ' s scholarstip halls, winning firsts in softball and football. 177 Top row: Scott Blackard, Riverside, Calif.; Bill Morton, Phillipsburg; Gary Grube, Scott City; Peter Maier, Emporia; Mike Weber, Hutchinson; Frank Joyce, Shawnee Mission; Mike Meyer, Mankato; Robert Cochrane, Hoisington; Robert H. Campbell, Topeka; Don Potter, Chanute. Fourth row: Jack E. Salyes, Dodge City; Ray Verrey, Findlay, Ohio; Mel Grazda, Kansas City; John Brockway, Ottawa; Bill Nye, Prairie Village; Keith Culver, Shidler, Okla.; Hugh Bailey, Emporia; Larry E. Robinson, Wichita; Dan Cole, Kent, Wash. Third row: Robert Verrey, Findlay, Ohio; Theodore E. Johnston, Wichita; Dean Youngberg, Chanute; Larry Shannon, Kansas City; Rod Taylor, Plainville; Charles Shoup, Scranton; Michael Atwood, Kansas City; Rock Woodward, Topeka; Bill Hutchinson, Chanute; Jim True, Americus. Second row: Stephen Davis, Shawnee Mission; Jim Reaves, Shawnee Mission; Donald E. Sloan, Topeka; Robert C. Howland, Mankato; Byron Cotter, Wichita; Ronald Kilgore, Wichita; Luis Gardella, Lima, Peru; Karl Musick, Concordia; Jim Liebert, Coffeyville. Bottom row: Ben Franklin, Kansas City; Lauren Welch, Axtcll; Norm Fahrer, Lindsborg; Mrs. Lilly Strand, housemother, Burdick; Leon Graves, Ottawa; Robert L. Poley, Wichita; Russell B. Merrill, Lawrence; Charles E. Whited, Wichita. Not pictured: Sam Henry, Concordia; Dan House, Topeka; Harrell Wright, Piper; Dick Lichte, Raytown, Mo. AN UNIDENTIFIED Jolliffe man finds himself bogged down with paper work prior to mid-term exams. Jolliffe Hall Having begun the year with a newly-remodeled living room and thirteen new men, Jolliffe Hall houses an assort- ment of students as diversified as the hall ' s history. It was built in the 1920 ' s as a sorority, subsequently served as a faculty club, a fraternity house, and a women ' s resi- dence hall. Seventeen years ago it became a scholarship hall, and since then the residents of Jolliffe have main- tained a balanced social and academic life, with active participation in many campus activities. Presently living in Jolliffe are the co-vice president of KU-Y and the Kansas district chairman for the YMCA-YWCA, two members of the debate team, the AURH first vice-chairman and spring fling chairman, and an executive officer of Pershing Rifles. Jolliffe was instrumental in starting the All Scholarship Hall Council, and has two members. It won the All Hall Fall Ball this year and placed second among men ' s scholar- ship halls in football. Further indicative of Jolliffe ' s bal- anced program is its 2.21 overall GPA for the fall semester. It houses eight Summerfield scholars, and members of the honorary fraternities in chemistry, political science, German, and journalism. Jolliffe social functions include occasional parties at the Shanty, and an annual Reno party which reproduces the iniquitous atmosphere of a Nevada gambling den. 178 Top row: Hugh D. Quinn, Tulsa, Okla.; Steven C. Frisbie, Fulton; Jim Moore, Leavenworth; Gary Trammell, Chanute; David McDonald, Garnett; Robert Nelson, Herington; Robert Hayles, Jr., Wichita; Ken Gray, Ulysses; William A. Lathan, Atchison. Fourth row: David Crook, Wichita; Jon Blevins, Wichita; John Platt, Shawnee; Richard Harrison, Hays; Mark Gleason, Wichita; Ric Rasmussen, Jetmore; Daniel F. Herrington, Penfield, N.Y.; Mike Rasmussen, Lawrence. Third row: K. W. Kemble, Wichita; Kelley Hayden, Atwood; Evan Watkins, Wichita; William Pitsenberger, Topeka; Les- lie Lynn Thompson, Osage City; Steven Dedalus, Shawnee Mission; James Ratliff, Douglass; Tom Liley, Topeka; Gaylord Swan, Wichita. Second row: David Van Pelt, Scott City; Kenneth Norland, Mulvane; Steven Dando, Prairie Village; Dan Keene, Arkansas City; Richard Fenske, Wichita; William Kri- tikos, Lyndon; Mike Mcllvain, Cunningham; Gregg Gleason, Wichita. Bottom row: Robert Farney, Wilson; Robert Schubert, Shawnee Mission; C. James Kifer, Scott City; John Shapley, Wichita; Mrs. Irby Keen, housemother, Lawrence; John Lathan, Atchison; Robert Holmes, St. Louis, Mo.; William L. Burnam, Wichita. IN SPITE OF THEIR NUMEROUS ACADEMIC PURSUITS, Pearson men still find time to gather in front of the tube after Saturday lunch. Pearson Hall Unity and individualism describe the atmosphere of Pear- son Scholarship Hall. While Pearson ' s men work and study together, special emphasis is placed upon individual effort and scholarship. The results were shown last year when Pearson won the Scholarship Trophy for the highest average CPA among men ' s scholarship halls. Eight Sum- merfield Scholars, two Phi Beta Kappa ' s, a Paul B. Law- son award winner, a member of Eta Kappa Nu engineer- ing honorary, and an Eaton Scholar number among the hall ' s fifty-one students. At the same time Pearson men participate in a wide range of campus activities: the co- chairman of the KU-Y Operation Tutor Match and the president of the undergraduate chemistry seminar are hall residents. Pearson won the overall participation trophy for a small hall in the 1966 AURH Spring Fling. In KU intramurals, Pearson men won the Scholarship Hall A Basketball League championship last year, placed second in the C league, and won the Men ' s Scholarship Hall Council ' s ping pong tournament for the third year in a row. Social functions during the year include hour dances and exchange dinners with the women ' s scholarship halls, Christmas and Spring parties, barn parties, and the annual men picnic. r 179 Top row: Pat Melroy, Norton; David S. Kirk, Pittsburg; Tawn Keeney, Pittsburg; Robert Satake, Fort Scott; Ken Iles, Kansas City; Paul Bock, Dodge City; Dennis Tobin, Kansas City; Lance Fromme, Hoxie; Fred Bryant, Independence, Mo.; Larry Trickey, Leavenworth; Mike Callaway, El Dorado. Fourth row: Douglas Mackey, Hutchinson; Dan Zemke, Salina; Bob Hamilton, Hutchinson; Duncan Work, Topeka; Joe Ruddick, Mission; Joe Jones, Emporia; Mel Stapleton, Lamed; Ray Niemen:, Hutchinson; Carl Krehbiel, Moundridge; Darrel Reed, Leawood. Third row: Robert D. Moose, Kansas City; Rick Wrig- ley, Kansas City, Mo.; Tom Simpson, Orrington, Maine; Dave Vander Staay, Leavenworth; T. A. Cox, Deerfield; M. J. Penner, Guadalahara; Steve Carl- son, Topeka; Gary Gregg, Coldwater; Richard Kerns, Kinsley. Second row: G. David Bevan, Parsons; Stan New, Norcatur; Steve Davis, Lyons; Don Jarrett, Jacksonville, Ill.; Paoping Chang, China; David R. Allen, Newton; John Fisher, Independence; Leslie M. Johnson, Wilsey. Bottom row: Billy Mabie, Parsons; Tony Randle, St. Louis, Mo.; Paul Snodderley, Howard; Fred Meier, St. Louis, Mo.; John Pauzauskie, Coffeyville; Gene E. Ramirez, Kansas City, Mo.; Andrejs Megnis, Sao Paulo, Brazil; Jack Nuzum, Hutchinson; Stan Vestal, Tulsa, Okla. Not pictured: Ray Kopsa, Mulvane. FOREGOING THEIR USUAL ACADEMIC ACTIVITIES, Stephensonites engage in a spirited game of volleyball. Stephenson Hall Honors and activities mark the record of Stephenson Hall ' s contributions to campus life. Among its 47 residents are two members of the College Intermediary Board, the treasurer of the All Student Council, the president of the Accounting Society, the commander of Air Force ROTC, and two varsity debators. Academically, nine Stephensonites are Summerficld scholars, two are Phi Beta Kappa ' s, and one is a winner of the Zeta B. Lear award for outstanding freshman scholarship. But the list does not end here, as one Owl, three Sachems, two Woodrow Wilson finalists, and a Rhodes finalist also call St ephen- son their home. The combined result of such scholastic honors was the hall ' s 2.03 overall GPA for the fall se- mester. Stephenson men are active in Hill publications among them are five Jayhawker staff members, including the photography and copy editors, and the editor and three editorial board members of the University Review. Having won the KU College Bowl four of the last five years, the hall houses the general chairman and the arrangements chairman of the College Bowl Committee. Augmenting the many hours of scholastic and extracurricu- lar work, organized social functions this year began with a barn party, and included the annual Stephenson-Douthart sandbar party, and both Christmas and spring formals. 180 HASH INGER SENATE. Top row: Judy Bednasek, Ellsworth; Jeaneane Officer, Robinson; Judy Dillon, Ft. Leavenworth; Tharon Hornberger, Rich- mond; Bev Messick, Oak Park, Ill. Second row: Jan Bukovac, Kansas City; Pans Kenny, Fremont, Nebr.; Carolyn Johnson, Overbrook; Bari Robinson, Kansas City, Mo. Bottom row: Joyce Johnson, Treasurer, Houston, Tex.; Lilly Perlaky, Vice President, Topeka; Jane Francis, President, Kansas City, Mo.; Margaret High, Secretary, Topeka; Diane Lindgren, Social Chairman, Topeka. LIBERTY ( RIGHT ) and Death (left) prepare for Hashinger ' s Hal- loween Party. Hashinger Hall A combination of public service activity and group social functions highlights organized hall projects for Hashinger Hall, an upperclass women ' s residence hall housing 400 KU coeds. For Thanksgiving the hall raised money by charging the residents for wearing grubby clothes to dinner. The money accumulated, over thirty- six dollars, paid for turkey dinners for two local families, one of eleven people and the other of three. Heading the social calendar was the hall Halloween Party, featuring skits from each floor. Next came the Christmas Formal with the men of Templin Hall. Other social functions in- cluded a little sister ' s weekend, a mother ' s weekend, a street dance, a formal reception with campus dignitaries, and special dinners for the holidays. Hashinger also houses women who are outstanding on the Mount Oread campus. Notable among the individuals are the AID secre- tary, a member of Mortar Board, two of the ten finalists for homecoming queen, and one of the ten finalists in the AWS Best-Dressed Girl contest. One of the buildings in the Daisy Field complex, the hall is governed by student officers kind is advised by the Dean of Women ' s office. 181 HASHINGER , FIRST AND THIRD FLOORS. Top row: Saundria L. Fletcher, Kansas City; Bari Robinson, Kansas City, Mo.; Barbara Benton, Salt Lake City, Utah; Shari Morey, Lawrence; Jane Francis, Kansas City, Mo.; Susie Peterson, Kansas City; Nancy Redman, Topeka; Janet MacDougall, Prairie Village; Barbara Phegley, Gardner; Kristy Sarazan, Prairie Village. Fourth row: Carolyn Coughlin, Shawnee Mission; Effie E. Volkland, Bush- ton; Janet Morgan, Pryor, Okla.; Carolyn Schmitt, Scott City; Jeanne Cohorst, Marysville; Sharon Kampmeier, Kansas City; Carol Curry, New York, N.Y.; Sheri K. Krone, Olathe; Jeanne Van Sickle, Topeka. Third row: Karen Kruenegel, St. Louis, Mo.; Marcia Noel, Wichita; Sylvie Johnson, Topeka; Kathy Wilson, Elmhurst, Ill.; Renita Blankinship, Independence; Alice McCart, Milan, Mich.; Carolyn Shaffer, Goodland; Joyce Jaeger, Mound City; Hilda Rodriguez, Cuba; Linda Drake, Westhope, N.D. Second row: Anita Gillett, Kansas City; Jane Woodburn, LaCygne; Heather Graham, Kansas City; Judy Ann O ' Connor, Kansas City, Mo.; Connie Crawford, Hiawatha; Judy Reece, Medicine Lodge; Barbara Nottage, Kansas City, Mo.; Judy Hereford, Colorado Springs, Colo.; Mary Andrus, Shawnee Mission. Bottom row: Jennifer Dunbar, Shawnee Mission; Heidi Schutte, Fort Madison, Iowa; Nancy Lorenz, Omaha, Nebr.; Barb Reichmann, Omaha, Nebr.; Tharon Hornberger, Bichmond; Marsha Irvin, Wichita; Barbara Moffat, Shawnee Mission; Joyce Johnson, Houston, Tex. Hashinger HASHINGER, FOURTH FLOOR. Top row: Linda Showalter, Ottawa; Mary Bolton, Abilene; Rhea LeClaire, Overland Park; Ruby Downs, Ray- town, Mo.; Semantha Fuller, Topeka; Pat Linneberger, Goodland; Kay Plumlee, Wichita. Third row: Carolyn Blalock, Lawrence; Carol Rhoades, Em- poria; Gail Anne Belcher, Brookfield, Ill.; Bobbie Taggart, Pompton Lakes, N.J.; Patricia Barr, Williams Bay, Wise.; Terry Coons, Wichita; Carol Stos- kopf, El Dorado; Corki Cummins, Topeka. Second row: Judy Beneda, Goodland; Patricia M. Foster, Abbyville; Celia Ann Krehbiel, Moundridge; Dena Keplinger, Garnett; Joyce Lancaster, Sabetha; Dorothy Purdy, Butler, Mo.; Bula Patz, Omaha, Nebr. Bottom row: Marilyn Asklund, Topeka; Sandra Johnson, Hutchinson; Carol Negley, Syracuse; Lucia Weirich, Council Grove; Nancy Ketchum, Tulsa, Okla.; Linda Sayers, Independence. 182 HASHINGER, FIFTH FLOOR. Top low: Ruth Kava, Overland Park; Roxy Gilbert, Kansas City; Mary Jane Eggleston, Wichita; Jeaneane Officer, Robinson; Sandra Steele, Lawrence; Jan Huebner, Shawnee Mission; Diane Lindgren, Topeka; Susan Fleming, Ottawa. Fourth row: Dianne Pettit, Gales- burg, Ill.; Phyllis Bousman, Shawnee Mission; Janice Bulleigh, Wichita; Kate Gilcrest, Ester Park; Sue Sedlock, Leavenworth; Cheryl Wait, Mission; Pat Crawford, Cedar Falls, Iowa. Third row: Nancy Pinet, Lawrence; Margo Smith, Topeka; Anne Geiss, Ottawa; Ann Miller, Shawnee Mission; Mary Ann Ferree, Kirkwood, Mo.; Susan Dennis, St. Joseph, Mo.; Chris Gelpi, Prairie Village; Jacqueline Lee, Denver, Colo. Second row: Cheryl Campbell, Ottawa; Leslie Edwards, Great Bend; Georgia Lyn Shirlaw, Thornburg, Iowa; Barbara Hughes, Ottawa; Kathy Penny, Garden City; Sue Fisher, Bartles- ville, Okla.; Mary Konarik, Marion. Bottom row: Marilyn Zook, Wichita; Donna Davenport, Oak Park, Ill.; Bev Messick, Oak Park, Ill.; Emily Rein- hardt, Elmont, N.Y.; Celia Gilmore, El Dorado; Cris M. Lytle, Elmwood Park, Ill.; Melody Bradley, Hartsdale, N.Y.; foxy Lennard, Ottawa. Hashinger Hall HASHINGER, SIXTH FLOOR. Top row: Marian Streator, Oskaloosa; Barbara Kost, Oakley; Cynthia Smith, Parsons; Diane Herbranson, Kansas City, Mo.; Libby Meador, Overland Park; Karin Hayes, Kansas City, Mo.; Miriam Barth, Pairie Village; Karen LaDuex, Russell. Fourth row: Carolyn Holm, Dayton, Ohio; Anne Spink, Shawnee Mission; Barb Stein, Prairie Village; Janet Meyer, Atchison; Judy Messina, Kansas City, Mo.; Linda Buck, St. Louis, Mo.; Suzanne Steuri, Great Bend. Third row: Linda J. Frank, Overland Park; Mary Thul, Lee ' s Summit, Mo.; Dorothy Scott, Salt Lake City, Utah; Rebecca Mullane, New Orleans, La.; Mary Ann Stout, Winter Haven, Fla.; Marsha Morgan, Shawnee; Mary Daniels, Cimarron; Patsy Newman, Shattuck, Okla. Second row: Debbie Lane, Oklahoma City, Okla.; Jeannie Thornton, Oklahoma City, Okla.; Jane Hoover, Salem, Ill.; Val Nelson, Overland Park; Jessica Shellman, St. Joseph, Mo.; Jan Bukovac, Kansas City; Mary Jeannine Kerwin, Kansas City, Mo. Bottom row: Elaine Heit- schmidt, Natoma; Brenda Brenner, Princeton; Kathleen Schick, Gardner; Kat Young, Houston, Tex.; Ruthie Laughlin, Chico, Calif.; Kayleen Lee, Neola, Iowa. 183 HASHINGER, SEVENTH FLOOR. Top row: Paula Myers, Kansas City; Jacqualyn Campbell, Hiawatha; Carol Stoffel, Oak Park, Ill.; Colleen Hanshaw, Mt. Prospect, Ill.; Debbie Lask, Western Springs, Ill.; Barbara Belden, Topeka; Barbara Benz, River Forest, Ill.; Karen Alumbaugh, Topeka; Karen Haake, Leawood. Third row: Susan Edelbrock, Kansas City; Barbara Rueb, Salina; Gwen Cardwell, Wichita; Kathy Jewell, Lawrence; Carolyn Johnson, Overbrook; Jan Keightley, St. Louis, Mo.; Sandy Barber, Shawnee Mission; Sarah Ann Puck, Rigby, Id. Second row: Judy Halverson, St. Jo- seph, Mo.; Dale Ann Hermanson, Wheaton, Ill.; Nancy Sawyer, Topeka; Nancy Lloyd, McPherson; Ginzy Schaefer, Webster Groves, Mo.; Linda Sue Edwards, Lyons; Candy Gorrill, Wichita; Pat Lewis, Shawnee Mission; Mary Ann Glaeser, Prairie Village. Bottom row: Donna Moritz, Tulsa, Okla.; Martha Moore, Evanston, Ill.; Carol Garlock, Des Moines, Iowa; Jo Corrigan, Powbattan; Jan Schwartz, Paola; Caroline Bowdish, Reno, Nev.; Marilyn Shalz, Colby; Patricia Lane, Leawood. Hashinger Hall HASHINGER, EIGHTH FLOOR. Top row: Karen Jolley, Elkhart; Jane Branson, Ulysses; Klauclia Zacharias, Dodge City; Joan Anderson, Hills- boro; Janet Carol Mesigh, Topeka; Jeanne Donnan, Webster Groves, Mo.; Barbara Whealy, Anthony; Gail Lowery, Mulvane; Carole Brandt, Overland Park; Carol Brown, Chanute. Fourth row: Rochelle Griffith, Hoisington; Frances Zortman Sigley, Fowler; Anne Marie Hudson, Mission; Merry Sue Clark, Wichita; Linda A. Werkley, Philadelphia, Pa.; Barbara Sleeper, Alden; Margaret Nordin, Manhattan; Mary Sue Peters, Godfrey, Ill.; Margaret Ehrich, Fayette, Mo.; Marilyn McBride, Enid, Okla.; Suzanne Puckett, Neodesha. Third row: Colleen Agin, Kansas City; Mary Bea Lane, Hoisington; Marta Gomez, Topeka; Ann Knouft, Topeka; Pam Kenny, Fremont, Nebr.; Sally Hilton, Willow Grove, Pa.; Mary Chandler, Holton; Jane Salyer, Dodge City; Pat Kelley, Kansas City; Peggy Lehman, Kansas City. Second row: Helen Marlene Cox, Wichita; Linda Marshall, Vienna, Va.; Debbie Anderson, Leawood; Helen Jacobson, Manhattan; Sherry Long, Humboldt; Myriam Desjardin, Salina; Ann Kennedy, Lyons; Terry Hardman, Newton; Anne Peter- son, Washington. Bottom row: Pam Cain, Overland Park; Mary J. Stanley, Wichita; Judyth K. Dillon, Ft. Leavenworth; Cheryl M. Boelte, Shawnee Mission; Melissa Burash, Siloam Springs, Ark.; Melinda Burash, Siloam Springs, Ark.; Melody Burash, Siloam Springs, Ark.; Margaret High, Topeka. 184 LEWIS, SECOND FLOOR. Top row: Sandy Hughes, Kansas City; Cindy Vail, Overland Park; Patti Slider, Lyons; Sally Richardson, Denver, Colo.; Elyse Blatt, Southfield, Mich.; Jennifer Newsom, Jackson City, Ia.; Peggy Stone, Wichita; Leslie Spannuth, Prairie Village; Linda Vinckier, Chanute. Third row: Linda Sutton, Houston, Tex.; Helen Hennier, Shawnee Mission; Susan Abbott, Kansas City, Mo.; Carol Coble, St. Louis, Mo.; Jill Wright, Brentwood, Mo.; Pat Gaughan, Shawnee Mission; Leslie Sisman, Knoxville, Tenn.; Linda Kindred, Bonner Springs. Second row: Bev Marple, Smith Center; Jan Wathen, Las Vegas, Nev.; Melanie Faust, Prairie Village; Dorothy Barnhart, Coldwater; Cathy McCormick, Kansas City, Mo.; Cheri Petty, Prairie Village; Ginger Littrell, Smithville, Mo. Bottom row: Sherry Hughey, DeSoto; Patricia Stone, Overland Park; Kendall Her- rick, Shawnee Mission; Judy Wheat, Sunnyvale, Calif.; Lisa Neevel, Kansas City, Mo.; Joyce Reckart, Kansas City, Mo.; Sara Harvey, Overland Park. LEWIS WOMEN celebrate their latest achievement a champion- ship in intramural basketball. Lewis Hall Lewis Hall, one of the two large upperclass women ' s residence halls, houses 430 women this year. Lewis resi- dents combine scholarship and activities to produce several campus leaders and numerous social, service, and sports activities. Now living at Lewis are the vice-chairman and two representatives of the ASC, members of Mortar Board and OVENS, a member of the Model UN Steering Com- mittee, a Homecoming Queen attendant, the president of Gamma Alpha Chi advertising sorority, the president of Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority, a co-ordinator of the Soph- omore Class program Happiness Is, and the social chair- man and the National Convention Chairman of AURH. Lewis women ' s work paid off when they won third place in Homecoming decorations this year, and at Christmas they sent a Christmas tree and stockings to Vietnam. Lewis is represented in the world of sports, too, with three members of KU ' s Women ' s Basketball Team. In- dividual floors also captured first, second, and third places in intramural basketball competition, and one floor won second place in kickball. Lewis is not lacking in social events. A formal with the theme of Midnight Frost was held in Lewis at Christmas. The spring formal, The Oriental Ball, will combine the efforts of the women of Lewis with those of the men of neighboring Templin. 185 LEWIS, THIRD FLOOR. Top row: Margaret A. Spalsbury, Lawrence; Jan Fergus, Kansas City; Dorothy Rutherford, Webb City, Mo.; Ellie Lync, Salina; Donna Miller, St. Joseph, Mo.; Mary Beth Jenks, Prairie Village; Becca Blanding, Shawnee Mission; Ponchita Miller, Mission Hills; Beverly Heath, Huntington, N.Y. Fourth row: Nancy Bengel, Independence; Janice Furnish, Louisburg; Gloria Evans, Satanta; Diana Smith, Russell; Veronica Hem- mersmith, Kansas City; Alyson Nicklas, Ridgefield, Conn.; Judy Engstrom, Junction City; Denise Shea, Kansas City, Mo.; Linda Mann, Valley Center; Judy Wonn, Independence. Third row: Pat Simmons, Erie; Catherine Ruhlen, Beaumont, Tex.; Donna Reid, Godfrey, Ill.; Linda Pinkston, Indepen- dence; Kathy Finch, St. Louis, Mo.; Carol Wilkins, Junction City; Gwen Revels, Salina; Kristin Fowler, Independence, Mo.; Donna Nutt, Kansas City, Mo. Second row: Jane Calvin, Wichita; Diana Lee Lutz, Eudora; Cindy Beard, Meade; Janie Poleyn, Great Bend; Diana Javellana, Kapaa, Kauai, Hawaii; Karen Steiner, Goodland; Gwenna Steffen, Hutchinson; Marty Crump, Pittsburgh, Pa. Bottom row: Carol Peterson, Reading; Jane Noyce, Over- land Park; Joan Van Oosterdiep, Kansas City, Mo.; Sharon Hill, Sioux Falls, S.D.; Sue Myers, Kansas City, Mo.; Janice Brown, Kansas City; Yvonne Doolan, Houston, Tex. Lewis Hall LEWIS, FOURTH FLOOR. Top row: Ginny Phelps, Russell; Barbara Roberts, Leawood; Judith Myers, Overland Park; Peggy Poston, Shawnee; Tranne Gregory, Lawrence; Betty Peterson, Wichita; Judeth Christianson, Marshall, Minn.; Sallye Boyle, Shawnee Mission; Jai Jackson, Robinson. Fourth row: Barbara Scanlin, Wichita; Linda Howard, Wichita; Janet Murphy, Topeka; Gloria Boldman, Kansas City; Ramona Miller, Froid, Mont.; Patricia Moran, Avon, Conn.; Mary Hoppe, Webster Groves, Mo.; Margie Languille, Kansas City. Third row: Cheri Ball, Olathe; Sue Krack, Augusta; Karen Olson, Minot, N.D.; Susan Saindon, Zurich; Jeanine Woodcock, Kansas City, Mo.; Sherry Krepps, Winfield; Gail Owen, Concordia. Second row: Barbara Bracke, Topeka; Cindy Ruvalcaba, Wichita; Norma Groom, Shawnee Mission; Marla Thompson, Medicine Lodge; Gail Strothmann, Kansas City; Lynn Nicholas, Savannah, Mo.; Carole Roberson, Prairie Village; Sheryn Wilt, Wichita. Bottom row: Marcia Arehart, Rose Hill; Diane Munroe, Web- ster Groves, Mo.; Pat Samuels, Webster Groves, Mo.; Martha Soss, Shawnee; Joan Yates, Shawnee; Joyce Rooney, Leawood; Janet Brown, Olathe; Audrey Browning, Salina. 186 LEWIS, FIFTH FLOOR. Top row: Linda Sneegas, Olathe; Pamela Behrends, Kansas City, Mo.; Mary Mcllrath, Hugoton; Linda Yowell, McPher- son; Winnie Peterson, Kansas City, Mo.; Barbara Branch, Kansas City; Candy Moberly, Lincoln, Nebr.; Rosemary Vieux, Dodge City; Rosalind Eckstrom, Prairie Village. Fourth row: Nancy Schmidt, Kansas City, Mo.; Anne Peltier, St. Louis, Mo.; Lois Lord, Arkansas City; Carolyn Bollinger, Dodge City; Linda Goodwin, Edna; Barb Toussaint, Kansas City; Kaye Metzler, Arkansas City; Pam Prather, Alexandria, Va. Third row: Michelle Wheatley, Lewiston, N.Y.; Overland Park; Linda Livesay, Greenwich, Conn.; Cookie Gers, St. Louis, Mo.; Janice Sachen, Kansas City; Barbara Holman, Great Bend; Jo Dee Jackson, Olathe. Second row: Dede De Soto, Kansas City, Mo.; Linda Haney, Sterling; Nancy Thompson, Burlingame; Susan Duggins, Shawnee Mission; Ruth Murdock, Prairie View, Tex.; Deann Zuibleman, St. Louis, Mo.; Regina Pearl, Olathe; JoAnna Shipley, Kansas City. Bottom row: Julie Pinkerton, Wichita; Mary Pat McQueeney, Paola; Barbara Crow, Wichita; Suellen Sappington, Atchison; Penni Johnston, Mc- Pherson; Mary Riedmiller, Glasco; Eilene Chipman, Dodge City. LEWIS, SIXTH FLOOR. Top row: Binky Bogart, Centralia; Claudette Justice, Merriam; Nancy Young, Prairie Village; Gail Frcicrmuth, St. Louis, Mo.; Judy Koch, Overland Park; Allison Mackie, Pittsburg; Pat Dye, Goodland; Jan Allen, Park Forest, Ill. Fourth row: Connie Winer, Kansas City; Phyllis Schofer, Wichita; Patty Baldwin, Prairie V illage; Diann Barnes, Hutchinson; Kaye Anderson, Hoxie; Virginia M. Ellis, St. Charles, Mo.; Carolyn Drury, Wichita. Third row: Lynn Cole, Kansas City, Mo.; Linda E. Smith, Leavenworth; Bev Werden, Mattoon, Ill.; Sherry Gragert, Kansas City; Mary Crimmins, Prairie Village; Pam Morse, Shawnee Mission; Virgie Flakus, Ellinwood; Carol Siebert, Emporia. Second row: Susan Helton, Satanta; Nancy Ward, Manhattan; Sharyn Young, Overland Park; Jill Brackbill, St. Louis, Mo.; Beverly Cleveland, Kansas City; Betsy Siegel, Washing- ton, D.C.; Peggy O ' Bryan, Parsons. Bottom row: Susan McCarty, Sedalia, Mo.; Joyce Beard, Shawnee Mission; Linda Neelly, Topeka; Janie Choice, Leavenworth; Cindy Caignon, Chicago, Ill.; Janet Anderson, Prairie Village; Stephanie Caple, Ft. Monroe, Va. LEWIS, SEVENTH FLOOR. Top row: Karen Stroh, Ft. Morgan, Colo.; Susan Maier, Emporia; Betty Corkill, Valley Center; Deedie Lewter, Leawood; Donna Hills, Mankato; Kathy Crownhart, Kansas City, Mo.; Judy Kenny, Leawood; Barb Boekelman, Elmhurst, Ill. Fourth row: Elaine Ca- cioppo, Overland Park; Karen Keisker, Warrensburg, Mo.; Janice Dresnick, Kansas City, Mo.; Nancy Hoelzel, Kansas City, Mo.; Deanna Thompson, Kansas City, Mo.; Ruth Jackson, Parsons; Linda Roscoe, Salina. Third row: Sandy Attaway, Hotchkiss, Colo.; Terry Bilderback, Albuquerque, N.M.; Feryl Cauble, Mt. Hope; Susan Curtis, Kansas City; Barbara Dewey, Lincoln, Nebr.; Toni Morton, Shawnee Mission; Jane Edgar, Shawnee Mission; Cheryl Munday, Shawnee Mission. Second row: Sharon Caps, Tullahoua, Tenn.; Candy Miller, Overland Park; Lleanna Lewick, Lincoln; Susan Pen- darvis, River Forest, Ill.; Elizabeth Barnes, Dallas, Tex.; Marilynn Conley, Kansas City; Shirley Middleton, Kansas City. Bottom row: Debby Hedlund, Minneapolis, Minn.; Margaret Mekwney, Great Bend; Cathie Wiehe, Farley, Mo.; Linda Cabeen, Galesburg, ill.; Beverly Gray, Peculiar, Mo.; Marty Heuduck, St. Louis, Mo. 187 A SEEN THROUGH a Tartan camera, members of McCollum ' s coed arrangement enjoy themselves during Thanksgiving dinner. McColl lum Hall McCollum is the only university-endowed residence hall in which men and women live together in separate wings. This unique arrangement has enabled a combination of residents ' efforts and abilities to earn McCollum many honors in a wide range of activities. Last year when Mc- Collum was exclusively a men ' s hall, its residents collected several honors in Spring Fling and an honorable mention in Rock Chalk Revue. In November the hall won second place in Homecoming decorations competition. Among campus leaders who now inhabit McCollum are a 1966 Veta B. Lear Award winner, two UM( editors, the sopho- more class vice-president, the Angel Flight pledge class president, and the National AIA secretary-treasurer. In addition, the men of McCollum have distinguished them- selves in the realm of sports, capturing championships in intramural basketball and tennis last year and reaching the football play-offs this year. Representing McCollum in varsity athletics are bowler Mike Conklin and golfer Woody Spies. The coed arrangement also offers both oportunity and incentive for parties. This fall the men and women combined efforts for a Thanksgiving dinner, a barn party, and a Christmas party in Kansas City. Highlighting spring activities will be another barn party, a spring formal, and several floor parties, sandbar parties, and woodsies. 188 McCOLLUM SENATE. Top row: Tim Vollmer, Men ' s President, St. Louis, Mo.; Jon Howell, resident director, Kansas City, Mo.; Robert Stewart, Social Chairman, Sharon Hill, Pa.; Bill Heist, Shawnee Mission; Allen L. Harp, Jefferson City, Mo.; William R. Sutton, Intermural Chairman, Good- land. Third row: Richard Simmons, Wichita; Tom King, Librarian, Kirkwood, Mo.; Fred Sidebotham, Rochester, N.Y.; Bob Messman, Wichita; Roger Barrows, Secretary, Jefferson City, Mo.; Robert Quagliano, Hoboken, N.J.; Ralph Dobyns, Men ' s Vice President, Kansas City. Second row: Fred Schone, Topeka; Elaine Weispfenning, Women ' s Treasurer, Winchester; Susie Schaefer, Women ' s President, Kirkwood, Mo.; Julona Powell, Kansas City; Carl Ricketts, Ness City; Jimmy VinZant, Wichita. Bottom row: Ann Thompson, Topeka; Barbara Mealpin, Nashville, Tenn.; Kathy Donahue, Prairie Village; Mary Quinn, Kansas City; Kathy Gaughan, Shawnee Mission. McCollum Hall McCOLLUM, SECOND FLOOR. Top row: Mike Starkweather, Wichita; Mike Goodrick, Overland Park; Philip B. George, Salina; Bill Heist, Shawnee Mission; Boley Andrews, Shawnee Mission; Melvin Shoesmith, Parsons; Bob Garrett, Junction City. Third row: Leonard Cuddy, Osawatomie; Frank Zilm, St. Louis, Mo.; John Bowden, St. Louis, Mo.; Christine Childress, St. Louis, Mo.; Julie Brewer, Wichita; Julona Powell, Kansas City; Don Starn, St. Louis, Mo.; Jack Humphreys, New Providence, N.J. Second row: John Balton, Kansas City, Mo.; Linda Culbertson, Coffeyville; Norma Ke- nagy, Kansas City; Gaylen Jennings, Washington, D.C.; Karen Plisky, Leawood; Barbaralee Horejsi, Ellsworth; Tom Shoemake, Kansas City. Bottom row: Patty Meg, Great Bend; Cathy Gibson, Kansas City; Nancy Keith, Overland Park; Kay Adams, Tulsa, Okla.; Carla Rupp, Moundridge; Joan Skiw- wer, Kansas City, Mo.; Marilyn Selack, McPherson. 189 McCOLLUM, THIRD FLOOR. Top row: Michael Stipanov, Hoboken, N.J.; Bob Hickson, Overland Park; Bob Quagliano, Hoboken, N.J.; Kenneth Dickson, Topeka; David Baltzer, Topeka; Robert Miller, Leavenworth; Robert Skaggs, Shawnee; Melvin W. Gain, Wathena; Stephen W. Smith, Arkansas City. Fourth row: jay Youngblood, Parkville, Mo.; Charles Bard, Palisade, Nebr.; Edward J. Sweaney, Lee ' s Summit, Mo.; Dennis Hendershot, An- thony; Dale Pippitt, Twin Falls, Idaho; Kenneth Dietz, Kansas City, Mo.; Gary Mitchell, Independence; Darrel Corson, Paola. Third rote: Edward Ruby, Bonner Springs; Richard Martin, Topeka; Mike Miller, Leavenworth; Carl Reinhardt, St. Louis, Mo.; Dave Adkins, Kansas City; Kevin Barr, Los Angeles, Calif.; Simon Igielnik, Kansas City, Mo.; Jorge 0. Dengo, San Jose, Costa Rica; Morihiro Arasalci, Koza, Okinawa, Japan. Second row: Michael Honld, St. Louis, Mo.; Marie Scoggan, Beloit; Carol Perkins, Fort Worth, Tex.; Marsha Cromwell, Wichita; Ann Marshall, Dodge City; Jessica Barron, Belle Plaine; Susie Rogers, Burlingame; Carmelo Monti, St. Louis, Mo. Bottom row: Tommie Jo Caruth, Prairie Village; Mary Jane Tarr, Newton; Claudia Gripp, Smith Center; Fred Fedorowich, Brooklyn, N.Y.; Vicki Watts, Prairie Village; Ann Kroeker, Newton; Susie Schaefer, Kirkwood, Mo.; Dianne Leone, Oxon Hill, Md. McCollum Hall McCOLLUM, FOURTH FLOOR. Top row: Ken Cunningham, Overland Park; Randy Hodges, Independence, Mo.; Riley Bishop, Overland Park; David Wylie, Humboldt; Keith Apsley, Liberal; Chuck Huerter, Seneca; RodoIfo Elizondo, Durango, Mexico; Doug Taylor, Hutchinson; James R. Chap- pell, Augusta. Fourth row: Larry D. States, Logan; Sarni A. Saeed, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia; Dave Kral, Overland Park; Jim Engler, Hinsdale, ill.; Jon D. Brown, Huntington, N.Y.; A lex Thomopulos, Lagos, Nigeria; Ralph Dobyns, Kansas City; Gary Zimmerman, Tonganoxie; John Thatcher, Fair Haven, N.J.; Ray Richardson, Kansas City. Third row: Glen Burdue, Chanute; Ming Sai Lai, Hong Kong; Carl Ricketts, Ness City; Ron Turner, Raytown, Mo.; Smith, Leawood; Steve Reynolds, Parsons; Phil Kemery, Overland Park; Dave Sandstrom, Plano, Tex.; Barry Kern, Overland Park. Second row: Susumu Katekaru, Nakazatu-son, Okinawa; Michael Philip Ingardia, Greenwich, Conn.; Donna Fox, Bartlesville, Okla.; Karen C. Reynolds, Pough- keepsie, N.Y.; Doris Eissenkrandt, Iola; Bob Sink, Wichita; Bob Hansman, St. Louis, Mo.; Richard K. Irwin, Cochituate, Mass. Bottom rote: Barbara MeAlpin, Nashville, Tenn.; Sharon Nichols, Iola; Kathy Coughlin, Topeka; Chris Miller, Kansas City, Mo.; Norma J. Norman, Topeka; Burma Hurter, Newport Beach, Calif.; Margo Habiger, Overland Park; Laura Zirkle, Topeka. 190 McCOLLUM, FIFTH FLOOR. Top row: William R. Sutten, Goodland; William A. Conklin, Wichita; Roy C. Nicholls, Joplin, Mo.; Ronald Koelling, Newton, Ia.; Rick Stone, Katonah, N.Y.; Steve Butner, Topeka; Lynniel Q. Van Benschoten, Topeka; John Burke, Kansas City, Mo.; Paul Mace, Ray- town, Mo.; Nicholas Gerven, Wilberforce, Ohio. Fourth row: Stanley A. Winchester, Hutchinson; Richard Hendrix, Coffeyville; Don Weiner, Overland Park; Bob Russell, Prairie Village; Larry Zimmerman, Kansas City; Steve Gerding, Kirkwood, Mo.; Andy Russell, Prairie Village; Karl Grimes, Mission; Armando G. Domingez, Leoti; Steven Elcock, Leavenworth; Tim Grojean, Overland Park. Third row: Pete F. Weiss, Merrick, N.Y.; Mike Swafford, Hugoton; Robert G. Smith, Monett, Mo.; Bruce Schiefelbein, Tinley Park, Ill.; Herbert Ho, Wichita; Bob Messman, Wichita; Darryl L. Lamberd, Kansas City, Mo.; John M. Haight, Jr., Kansas City, Mo.; Rob E. Noland, Kansas City, Mo.; Stephen B. Parker, Rochester, N.Y. Second row: David Murrow, Topeka; June Downing, Parsons; Rita Ravens, Wichita; Karen Biles, Hutchinson; Elaine Weispfenning, Winchester; Nancy Small, Halstead; Penny Mc- Mahon, Oswego, N.Y.; Michael D. Conklin, Wichita; Walter A. Woronick, Jr., Shawnee Mission. First row: Judy Turner, Independence, Mo.; :Mary MacQuiddy, Omaha, Nebr.; Jane Finch, Parsons; Connie Johnson, O ' Neill, Nebr.; Diane Ramos, Overland Park; Cynthia Seymour, Overland Park; Palle Nebgen, Bern; Paula Nicolaisen, Mitchell, S.D.; Sophie Ziomek, Spring Hill; Elizabeth Arming, Coffeyville. Not pictured: E. Gregious, Haysville; Jeff Ohmann, Overland Park; Don Pyle, Kansas City. McCollum Hall McCOLLUM, SIXTH FLOOR. Top row: Leland C. Helmle, Johnson; Orville G. Kolterman, Onaga; Howard M. Marden, Yonkers, N.Y.; Dennis L. Reed, Madison; Karl F. Kerr, Wellington; Chet White, Independence, Mo.; Tom Bishop, Salina; Dan Harden, Garnett; Bob Stuhlman, Brooklyn, N.Y.; Larry W. Sayre, Southwest City, Mo. Fourth row: John Cox, Leawood; Bob Scribner, Salina; William Woerther, St. Louis, Mo.; John Moenius, Kansas City, Mo.; Henry Dale Martin, Wewoka, Okla.; Jonathan Ophir, Haifa, Israel; Paul Graether, Kansas City; Allan Graham, Evergreen, Colo.; Michael Walby, Brooklyn, N.Y. Third row: Thomas Toporowski, Warrington, Pa.; Rick Daly, St. Louis, Mo.; Frank Goodwin, Hiawatha; T. L. Vocke, Downers Grove, Ill.; Larry K. Hancks, Kansas City; Dwight Kamm, Hope; Ronnie Gossage, Kansas City; Ravi Bhasker, Topeka; Chuck E. Tidwell., Jr., Santa Clara, Calif.; James Rims, Sullivan, Mo. Second row: Leroy Woods, South Hutchinson; Philip Perez, Lamed; Carolyn Eubank, Shawnee Mission; Pa- tricia Logan, Lombard, Ill.; Margaret C. Morriss, Salina; Luella Penner, Whitewater; Stanley J. Ring, Topeka; Michael M. Sayler, Topeka; Dennis C. Urban, Lamed. Bottom row: Pat Writt, Park Forest, Ill.; Karen VanDerbur, Kansas City, Mo.; Trinka Reddie, Westmont, N.J.; Maryanne Gottschall, Kansas City; Judy Carr, Topeka; Linda Lies, Colwich; Sharon Lyons, Kansas City; Jeannie Nordstrom, Topeka. 1%_ 191 McCOLLUM, SEVENTH FLOOR. Top row: Alexander Moayedi, Tehran, Iran; George Santarpia, Ottawa; Kent Harmony, Osawatomie; Jay Thomas, Shawnee Mission; Greg Darner, Prairie Village; Robert Stewart, Sharon Hill, Pa.; Ray Duggan, Overland Park; Joseph W. Hewitt, Osawatomie; Mike Linley, Liberal; Robert Peebler, Chase; Mike Lichty, Wichita; Dave Wells, Kansas City, Mo. (not pictured). Fourth rote: Larry Hahs, Kansas City, Mo.; Jeffrey Schnabel, Fairway; Khalid Nahas, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia; Nick Teroovie, Kansas City; Javier Cassinelli, Lima, Peru; Eel Halldran, Silver Lake; Tom Short, Bartlesville, Okla.; Dan Walker, Leavenworth; Rex Culp, Olathe; Larry Sallee, Shawnee. Third row: Brooks Spies, Jr., Bartlesville, Okla.; Thomas L. Courtroy, Fairhope, Ala.; James Zakoura, Osawatomie; Gary Needham, Kansas City; Mary Niemann, Montville, N.J.; Linda Rand, Wil- mette, Ill.; Christine Elliott, Kansas City, Mo.; Whitney Vinzant, Wichita; Mark Vinzant, Wichita; Richard Simmons, Wichita; Laurence E. Wightman, Jr., Ottawa. Second row: Joyce Christensen, Shawnee Mission; Sara Payne, Kansas City; Jane Grothusen, Ellsworth; Judy Kalcic, Kansas City; Lynne Pray, Kansas City; Kathy Hamilton, Kansas City; Judy Hook, Kansas City; Mary Creech, Troy, Mo.; Ginney Morris, Shawnee Mission; Leslie Thornton, Lee ' s Summit, Mo. Bottom rose: Beth Lallier, Piper; Barb Gist, Kansas City, Mo.; Patricia Behan, Yankton, S.D.; Joy Ratterree, Wellington; Marcia Hamill, Prairie Village; Rosemary Maturo, Leawood; Judy Newton, Shawnee Mission; Kathy Rogers, Burwell, Nebr.; Eileen Puett, Concordia. McCollum Hall McCOLLUM, EIGHTH FLOOR. Top rote: Jim Basel, Arlington Heights, Ill.; Mark L. Winters, Lawrence; James Zeller, Colby; John Krisman, Kansas City; Bill Vaughn, Leavenworth; John Wohlgemuth, Overland Park; Harry Cornelison, Upper Marlboro, Md.; Robert Haase, Mt. Prospect, Ill.; Allen L. Harp, Jefferson City, Mo.; Greg McMillan, St. Louis, Mo. Fourth row: Robert Hillman, Independence; Dave Dittemore, Topeka; Dave Breiten- bach, Belpre; Stephen Kraft, Coffeyville; Sanford Edson, Northfield, Mass.; Howard Welch, Independence, Mo.; James K. Thornton, Independence; Ken- neth W. Spencer, Prairie Village; Kenneth E. Nevins, Overland Park; Edward K. Ellington, Washington, D.C. Third row: Rudolph Vap, Atwood; Ste- phen Willis, Leawood; Mark Willis, Leawood; John Fox, Ellsworth; Michael Seyfrit, Piqua, Ohio; Frank M. Starkey, Clovis, N.M.; Gregory F. Breck, Kansas City; Ralph E. Chatham, Chagrin Falls, Ohio; Walter F. Riker, New York City, N.Y.; Mark M. Wendleton, Kansas City. Second rose: Barry May- hew, Trousdale; Ted Wilch, Tecumseh; Margueriti Tariel, Blois, France; Diane Wilfong, Mason City, Iowa; Karen Wayman, Emporia; Patricia Gordon, Webster Groves, Mo.; Carolyn Tucker, Wichita; Dana Clarke, Omaha, Nebr.; Bob Wilch, Tecumseh. Bottom row: Lois Orth, Bushton; Barb Baumgartner, Shawnee Mission; Gayle Merrick, Shawnee Mission; Kathy Gaughan, Shawnee Mission; Diana Kivett, Kansas City; Peggy English, Eureka; Pam Weinberg, Hiawatha; Charlotte Pinter, Kansas City. 192 McCOLLUM, NINTH FLOOR. Top row: Robert L. Hartzler, Hutchinson; Thane Palmberg, Topeka; Patrick Dixon, Hutchinson; Michael D. Mur- rell, Springfield, Mo.; Herbert W. Treger, Topeka; Bill Bethea, Neosho, Mo.; Tons Dawes, Columbus, Ohio; Wm. Ray Sellers, Glen Ellyn, Ill.; John A. Sanford, Bartlesville, Okla.; R. Bruce Hartnett, Ensign. Fourth row: Richard Waller, Shawnee Mission; Terry Rouse, Olathe; Thomas Dunne, Chicago, Ill.; Robert Cook, Anthony; Steve Dulaney, Hutchinson; William G. Phillips, Overland Park; Steve E. Smith, Shawnee Mission; Navnit D. Patec, India; Tom Bishop, Kansas City, Mo.; Robert Feighny, Ft. Riley; Ron Achilles, McPherson. Third row: Lim Chu Fatt, Sandakan, Sebah, Malaysia; Alfred I. Kimmi, Everest; Jim Thomson, Ottawa; Fred Schone, Topeka; James Donoho, Springfield, Mo.; Jerry Pomrenke, Coffeyville; Phil Schuler, Kansas City, Mo.; Douglas A. Hood, No. Tarrytown, N.Y.; Craig Grant, Shawnee Mission; Mike Brown, Topeka. Second row: Mike Randall, Atchison; Nancy Hall, Lincoln, Nebr.; Susan Holt, Independence, Mo.; Connie Wurster, Shawnee Mission; Sherry Dolinar, Kansas City; Joyce Masterson, Piper; Virginia Master- son, Piper; Mary L. Henley, St. Louis, Mo.; Charles A. Warnock, Uniondale, N.Y. Bottom row: Kathy Donahue, Fargo, N.D.; Gloria Galecki, LaGrange, Ill.; Valerie Courter, Topeka; Eloise Sewell, Kansas City; Josephine Johnson, Kansas City; Mari Ann Noll, Highland; Cheryl Groseclose, St. Louis, Mo.; Margo Campbell, Coffeyville; Cheryl Decker, Mission; Stephanie Sampson, Salina. McCollum Hall. McCOLLUM, TENTH FLOOR. Top row: David Royce Christensen, St. Francis; David Ascher, Salina; Eric R. Petersen, Poughkeepsie, N.Y.; Ronald Downs, Leoti; Larry Geiger, Shawnee Mission; Jerry Cash, Overland Park; John Neighbors, Kansas City; Raymond Dennis, Kansas City; Gene Johannes, Newton; John Kohl, Kansas City. Fifth row: Gary M. Hines, Gardner; Fred Sidebotham, Rochester, N.Y.; Tins Vollmer, St. Louis, Mo.; Don Stanley, Topeka; Roger Barrows, Jefferson City, Mo.; Charles Henesy, Kansas City; Siegfrid Brudevold, Topeka; Robert C. Brown, Kansas City, Mo.; Stephen R. Cathey, Kansas City; Bill Anderson, Brunswick, Mo.; Larry Black, Plainville. Fourth row: D. Richard Foster, Jr., El Dorado; John Edward Rising, Kansas City, Mo.; Kim Jones, Wichita; Robert Betz, Kansas City; Rick Stevenson, Kansas City, Mo.; Greg Thrasher, Topeka; Stephen H. Allen, Topeka; Gary Cook, Junction City; Tom King, Kirkwood, Mo.; Richard Juarez, Wichita. Third row: Cecil S. Cole, Jr., Richmond, Va.; Bill Kornfein, Mission; Seig Siegele, Scotch Plains, N.J.; Sandra Carney, Shawnee Mission; Valerie Sidney, Russell; Margo Brace, Prairie Village; Dianne Goff, Topeka; Mike Lim, Semporna, Sabah, Malaysia; Joe Lim, Semporna, Sabah, Malaysia; Mike Williams, Independence, Mo.; Ralph Hellman, Raytown, Mo. Second row: Brenda Blanton, St. Joseph, Mo.; Linda Hejtmanek, Wichita; Marcia Perry, Wichita; Dood Elkan, Bartlesville, Okla.; Ann Winters, Wichita; Maureen Pat- terson, Rolling Meadows, Ill.; Deanna Haning, Otis; Aileen Ogata, Pahoa, Hawaii; Dolly Clark, Mayfield; Terry Browne, Kansas City. Bottom row: Cheryl Haller, Leonardville; Marsha Olbin, Overland Park; Barbara Stone, Leonardville; Sue Dellva, Kansas City; Mary Quinn, Kansas City; Karin Marya Tiansek, Wayne, N.J.; Sharon Gardess, Kansas City; Laurel Haney, Albert Lea, Minn.; Lesley Powers, Salina; Barbara Hudson, Denver, Colo. 193 NAISMITH, THIRD FLOOR. Top row: Mary Lynn Lewis, Kiowa; Chris Katz, Shawnee Mission; Suzanne Sandlin, Overland Park; Nancy Crum- packer, Wichita; Jan Kunkle, Leawood; Sandy Schneider, Fort Worth, Tex. Second row: M. Elizabeth Ibarra, El Dorado; Suzanne Mueller, Shawnee Mission; Joyce Lynch, Leawood; Diane Milberger, Russell; Peggy Fields, Raytown, Mo. Bottom row: Cathy McCullagh, Independence; Monica Flinner, Manhattan; Karen Kirk, Sycamore; Billie Pumphrey, St. Joseph, Mo. Naismith Hall Named after Dr. James Naismith, KU alumnus and the inventor of basketball, Naismith Hall opened this year as the first privately-owned coed residence hall at KU. Although operations are directed by a manager and an assistant manager, rather than by a university-salaried residence director, Naismith is approved by the univer- sity. The 111 men and 162 women enjoy two distinctions as residents of the hall: they are separated by floors rather than by wings, and theirs is the only coed resi- dence hall government on the Hill. In addition to their steak dinners every Saturday night, members enjoy buffet dinners at Halloween, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter. They also participate in several hall social activi- ties, including an open house each Sunday, an outdoor steak party, a Valentine ' s Day Party, and a Las Vegas Party. Although new on campus as an organized living group, Naismith is nevertheless the home of several in- dividuals who are active in life. The chairmen of the ASC Campus Chest and the sophomore class service com- mittee, a Pom-Pon girl, and several Jay Janes all live at 1800 Naismith Drive. Naismith also is the home of the All-American co-captain of KU ' s varsity swimming team, and usually houses several of the varsity athletes during vacation periods when university housing is closed. NAISMITH RESIDENTS enjoy come-as-you-are parties, particularly at Halloween, when anything goes. 194 NAISMITH, FOURTH FLOOR. Top row: Joan Payton, Belle Mead, Ill.; Linda Hoff, Hinsdale, Ill.; Mary Sitter, Elmhurst, Ill.; Katie Lewis, Great Bend; Cammy Clowes, La Grange, Ill.; Pamela Crocker, Indianapolis, Ind. Third row: Joan Berol, Wilmette, Ill.; Jane McSwain, Winnetka, Ill.; Pat Merkel, Topeka; Molly McCarthy, Great Bend; Starr Foster, Dodge City; Anne Woster, Maracaibo, Venezuela; Pam Sayler, Marysville, Mo. Second row: Joan Ruff, Clay Center; Leslie Rohr, Kansas City; Nancy Lyon, Wichita; Cindy Armacost, Kansas City; Patti Bell, Salina; Sandee Lenihan, Mission. Bottom row: Ann Engleman, Salina; Cathie McClure, Wichita; Janie Newman, Washington, D.C.; Jean Lindberg, Wilmette, Ill.; Judy Gerling, Wilmette, Ill.; Mary Bramble, Prairie Village. Naisrnith Hall NAISMITH, FIFTH FLOOR. Top row: Sarah Beck, Topeka; Bobbie Ling, Santa Clara, Calif.; Sue Bell, St. Louis, Mo.; Kay Lamer, Junction City; Jean Elliott, Shawnee Mission; Claudia Jeffrey, Bartlesville, Okla.; Linda Leisher, Shawnee Mission; Linda Knight, Neodesha. Second row: Carolyn Payne, Salina; Sydney Mitchell, Dodge City; Linda Schilling, Wichita; Marty Deason ( resident assistant), Great Bend; Susan Hoyt, Topeka; Carol Cos- grove, Council Grove; Madilyn Houseworth, Topeka. Bottom row: Marcia Bruce, Hillsboro; Nancy Kopek, Shawnee Mission; Janet Whalen, Wichita; Jane Limpp, Marshall, Mo.; Margaret Sampson, Topeka; Judith Collins, Dallas, Tex. 195 NAISMITH, SIXTH FLOOR. Top row: Linda Lou Robinson, Kansas City; Kay Ellen Carson, Kansas City; Patricia Jeannie Kleinhammer, Prairie Village; Rita Barrett, Osawatomie; Diana Berg, Leawood; Didi Greiner, La Jolla, Calif.; Cheryl Barker, Kansas City; Mary Kay Barket, Kansas City, Mo. Second row: Rebecca LaMar, Alma; Marva Taylor, Broken Bow, Nebr.; Marla Dunlap, Newton; Jo Ann Marinelli, Wichita; Cille Resnik, Whitewater; Susan Smith, San Jose, Calif.; Susan Farley, Kansas City, Mo. Bottom row: Lynne Durham, Omaha, Nebr.; Linda E. Boone, Kansas City; Sue Morrison, Huntington Beach, Calif.; Cindy Cosgrove, Kansas City, Mo.; Nicky Deramus, Kansas City, Mo.; Judy Zook, Kansas City. NAISMITH, SEVENTH FLOOR. Top row: Steve Sebree, Salina; Errol Wahl, Valley Center; J. Stanley Hill, Hutchinson; Ed Davis, Kansas City; Les Jordan, Topeka; Frank Parrish, Prairie Village; Roy Pugsley, Youngstown, Ohio. Second row: Vibul Ruchirat, Thailand; Maniea Khaliefeh, Saudi Arabia; Raymond Kirk, Worth, Ill.; Wallace F. Slusser, Marion; Kiehl Rathbun, Houston, Tex.; Farouk Akhdar, Saudi Arabia. Bottom row: Bob Calvert, Overland Park; Kent Dannen, St. Joseph, Mo.; John M. Burgess, St. Joseph, Mo.; Rex Agler, St. Joseph, Mo.; Raymond M. Carter ( resident as- sistant ), Springfield, Mo.; Ted Harding II, Overland Park; Mike Chiarottino, St. Joseph, Mo. NAISMITH, EIGHTH FLOOR. Top row: Steve Weeks, Bonner Springs; Gary Ochs, Hoisington; David Whitney, Topeka; Earl Budke, St. Louis, Mo.; Jim Baxter, Pomona. Second row: Gerald Matross, Buffalo, N.Y.; J. D. Rees, Amarillo, Tex.; Roger McConchie, Independence, Mo.; Don Atkin- son, Bird City; J. Bob Brown, Raytown, Mo.; Michael Moore, Ottawa. Bottom row: Bobby Waddail, Newton; Jack Lukeman, Jacksonville, Ill.; Fred Cameron, Leawood; Dennis Weller, Great Bend; Terry Modlin, Topeka. 196 ELLSWORTH, FIRST AND THIRD FLOORS. Top row: John R. Horn, Galena; Stephen D. Wilkin, Independence; Dick Dutton, Prairie Village; Wayne Montgomery, Shawnee Mission; Ronald Carpenter, Weiser, Idaho; Jim Haley, Nashville, Tenn.; Chuck Davis, Prairie Village; Bill Gahnstrom, To- peka; Bob Funk, McLouth. Fourth row: Eugene Brault, Jr., Topeka; Jim Akers, Shawnee Mission; Douglas C. Dickson, Davenport, Iowa; Gary Dundee, Tulsa, Okla.; Ed Rosenberger, Prairie Village; Dan Giamario, Alexandria, Va.; Gary Waldron, Sydney, Australia; Bruce Karlson, Shawnee Mission; Eugene Wheeles, Erie; Curtis Jones, Overland Park. Third row: Arthur Black, Kansas City, Mo.; Steve Berline, Mission; William F. Hillix III, Birch Tree, Mo.; Bonn Looney, Kansas City; Mike Wilson, Des Moines, Iowa; Warren. Dieffenbach, Glenolden, Pa.; Bill Heasom, La Grange, Ill.; Hary Goldberg, Kansas City, Mo.; John Bheinfrank, Omaha, Nebr. Second Pedro Flores, Trujillo, Peru; Jim Holroyd, Kansas City; Steve Conroy, Simsbury, Conn.; Robert Loth, Queens, N.Y.; Michael J. Goldberg, Brooklyn, N.Y.; Luis Jauregui, Trujillo, Peru; Greg Thomas Briguglio, Kansas City; Chamnong Prai- yamkhae, Bangkok, Thailand. Bottom row: David L. Winegarduer, Atchison; Paul Banzet, Bartlett; Ron Jnhnke, Kansas City; J. G. Barnes, Tulsa, Okla.; Richard Bowers, Council Grove; Fred Hadley, Kansas City, Mo.; Gary Lee Wright, Wichita. CINDY COLE AND JERRY BEAN take a break during the hall ' s Christ- mas Formal, held this year in the Kansas Union ballroom. Ellsworth Hall Constructed in 1963 and named in honor of Fred Ells- worth, former executive secretary of the Alumni Associa- tion, Ellsworth Hall once again serves as home for 520 KU men. Last year it housed upperclass women, while two years ago it was a men ' s hall. The diversity of its residents is shown by the fact that freshmen, upperclass- men, and graduate students live together, along with several international students. Ellsworth is also the home of male participants in KU ' s Centennial College. Social functions range from Christmas and Spring Formals to the annual barn and sandbar parties. Numerous hour dances and exchange dinners with women ' s residence halls complement such hall functions. The ball also pro- motes various AURH projects, including the annual Spring Fling. Scholastically, Ellsworth boasts four Woodrow Wil- son nominees and several men with 3.00 CPA ' s. Several leaders in campus activities likewise are members of the hall, including the editor of the Kansas Law Review, the president of the professional advertising fraternity, and co-editors of an education magazine. The chairman of the ASC Human Rights Commission, three members of the ASC, the student body vice-president, a member of the College Intermediary Board, and past chairman of the AURH also reside in the hall. 197 ELLSWORTH, FOURTH FLOOR. Top row: John Gant, Wichita; Thomas Bashaw, Wichita; Klaus Zerralm, Schleswig, Germany; Martin Gufler, Kansas City; C. H. Duncan, Jr., Kansas City, Mo.; Arden Carr, Prairie Village. Third row: Richard H. Ray, Topeka; Bill Bashaw, Wichita; Angelito Bu- hisan, Ft. Leavenworth; Charlie Hoke, Prairie Village; Curtis Yessen, Overland Park; Larry Rhea, Prairie Village; Lee Hubbell, Eureka. Second row: Lloyd Bell, St. Louis, Mo.; Garver Johnson, Independence, Mo.; Vernon Bartels, Lincoln; Jerry Bean ( counselor), Abilene; Dave Anderson, Clifton; Marlin E. Gher, Leawood. Bottom row: Jay Morton, Shawnee Mission; Douglas Balcombe (counselor), Parsons; Herman Mosley, Kansas City; Niea- nor Garcia, Ft. Leavenworth; Joe Bly, Arkansas City; Whitney Knox, Prairie Village. I-alsworth Hall ELLSWORTH, FIFTH FLOOR. Top row: Richard C. Schneider, Raytown, Mo.; Joe Timmons, Wakeeney; Ralph F. Chambers, Jr., Pennsville, N.J.; Don H. Shoop, St. John; John A. Bouie, Newark, N.J.; Raymond Harjo, Jr., McDermott, Nev.; Jim Basgall, Hays; Ronnald Popp, Hays; Richard Jacobs, Hays. Fourth row: Reed White, Houston, Tex.; Ernie Bauer, Clay Center; Phil Stewart, Park Forest, Ill.; Charlie Roberts, Kansas City; John Pratt, Paris, France; Rex Lynd, WaKeeney; Jerry J. Jones, Overland Park; Richard Davis, Raytown, Mo. Third row: Doug Brown, Iowa Falls, Iowa; Phil Stout, Garden City; Jorge Estenssoro, LaPaz, Bolivia; Tim Pryor, Scammon; Don Mullikin, Springfield, Mo.; Ronald Carroll, Atchison; Mike Fred- erick, Wichita; George Burgland, Galesburg, Ill.; Jim Schippert, Great Bend. Second row: Ron Urban, Oakley; James Young, Wichita; Harold Aiken, Jr., Sedan; Dan Randel, Horton; Ken Rothenberg, St. Louis, Mo.; Robert Scott, Wellsville; Bob Pahlka, Oklahoma City, Okla.; K. David McVey, Apple Valley, Calif. Bottom row: Bill Collier, Garden City; Gordon A. Jones, Pittsburg; Carl W. Struby, Leawood; Bruce R. Garrison, Upper Darby, Pa.; Jim Gort, Chicago, Ill.; Mike Coulianidis, New York City, N.Y.; Rick Garvin, San Rafael, Calif. 198 Hall Fi,llswort ELLSWORTH, SIXTH FLOOR. Top row: Jim Bachnick, Kansas City; Rod Wiley, El Dorado; Russell More, Kansas City; Royal J. Field, River- side, Calif.; Robert II. Franke, Bird City; Robert B. Morley, Jr., Evanston, Ill.; Gordon Grow, Overland Park; Jack Kenoff, Topeka; David Logan, Shawnee Mission. Fourth row: Michael Dix, Hutchinson; Court Martin, Topeka; Gregory J. Farren, Brooklyn, N.Y.; Larry Franklin, Overland Park; Guy A. Davis, Cato, N.Y.; Stanton Jay Rosenthal, St. Joseph, Mo.; Robert Bailey, Jr., Wichita; Michael Gunther, Kansas City, Mo. Third row: Donald Hazen, Hutchinson; Bob Rollins, McLouth; Mark Green, Jersey City, N.J.; Timothy Whyte, St. Joseph, Mo.; Phillipe Desjardin, Lille, France; Terry Bates, Kirk- wood, Mo.; Roger Maxey, Kansas City. Second row: Jim Sullivan, El Dorado; Bill Smith, Overland Park; Bob Filippone, Waterbury, Conn.; Isidore Nyaboya, Bujumbura, Burundi; Bob Neuman, Norwood, Mass.; Walt Jennings, Kansas City; Bruce Coleman, Bonner Springs; Robert Brill, Bonner Springs. Bottom row: Hector G. Roz, Caracas, Venezuela; Mike Wiley, El Dorado; Jim Morley, Evanston, Ill.; Luis Johnson, Medellin, Colombia; Al- berto Saldarriaga, Medellin, Colombia; Norm Quinn, Kansas City; Bud Duncan, Tulsa, Okla.; Kirk Schnack, Tipton, Ia. ELLSWORTH, SEVENTH FLOOR. lop row: David A. B. Wilson, Monrovia, Liberia; Dave Meagher, Oklahoma City, Okla.; Tom Holloway, Overland Park; W. C. Paleen, Alexandria, Va.; Perry W. Lankford, Shawnee Mission; Richard Grainey, Spokane, Wash.; Dave Griggy, Akron, Ohio; Doug Loheofener, Overland Park. Third row: Javier Azcui, Bolivia; Edward Pfeiffer, Princeton, N.J.; Alan Hansherry, Overland Park; Steve Avis, Topeka; Michael Crummett, Leawood; Mark Moriarty, Topeka; Orville Darnaby, Arcadia; Delbert Dean McNaught, Wellington; Marvin Bredehoft, Independence. Second row: Barry Stuart Mordin, New Haven, Conn.; Dennis Martin, Wellington; Tony Turbeville, Honolulu, Hawaii; Jeff Renard, Independence; John Geer, Kansas City; Marshall R. Peterson, Bangkok, Thailand; Tom Kinne, Los Angeles, Calif.; Bob Hendricks, Overland Park. Bottom row: Bernard F. Meader, Chillicothe, Ill.; Bruce T. Groff, Topeka; Lance F. Eckels, Prairie Village; Torn Nelson, Overland Park; Steve B. Sorenson, Shawnee Mission; Roger Banbury, Haviland; William Keith Whiteman, Lyons; Steve Drewry, Neodesha. 199 ELLSWORTH, EIGHTH FLOOR. Top row: Dave Kikel, Bedford, Ohio; Jim Bogner, Leavenworth; Bruce Janssen, Holyrood; John Gorman, Ora- dell, N.J.; Pat Harris, Hope; Ken Peterson, Enterprise; James Coker, DeSoto. Third row: Eldon L. Gray, Holcomb; jack Singleton, Emporia; Roderick Hardy, Tokyo, Japan; Steve Bredehoeft, Overland Park; Lawrence R. Fry, Madison; Gary Messecar, Shawnee Mission. Second row: Robert L. Owens, Wes- kan; Edward M. Aten, Overland Park; Marty Johnson, Mission Hills; John Bjurman, Overland Park; Ray Coover, Barnard; Rick Dinkel, Palatine, Ill.; Harry E. Warren, Fort Scott. Bottom row: Bruce E. Barker, Lawrence; Michael Roberts, Edwardsville, Ill.; Cortland E. Berry, Olathe; Alan II. Simons, Kansas City; Franklin G. Kolsky, Saratoga, Calif.; Michael Lynch, Fort Leavenworth; Pat Fernandez, McLouth. ELLSWORTH, NINTH FLOOR. Top row: Larry Smith, Independence, Mo.; Jerry Colbert, Overland Park; Thomas J. Meier, Superior, Nebr.; Don Devins, Salina; Danny Cates, Overland Park; Gregory Doggett, Prairie Village; Michael Greene, Cranbury, N.J.; James Cassing, Merriam; Allin Herring, Overland Park. Fourth row: Robert Bryant, Prairie Village; Dan Clutch, Lawton, Okla.; David Michaelson, Sante Fe, N.M.; Richard Isaacs, Kansas City; Robert Marvin, Waldwick, N.J.; Robert Goltra, Fort Scott; Richard Hoover, Des Peres, Mo.; Brad Payton, St. Louis, Mo. Third row: Leonard Short, Jr., Bladensburg, Md.; Steven Sparron, Bedford, Mass.; Larry Yackle, Paola; Neal Fackler, Salina; Mike Granger, Olathe; Tom L. Ferrell, Great Bend; Jeff Hartman, Shawnee Mission; Bob Fast, Atchison; Michael Patterson, Wellington. Second row: Kenneth Lee Johnson, Kansas City; Carl Gale, Kansas City, Mo.; Gary Gortenburg, Kansas City, Mo.; David Poison, Great Bend; Steve Eller, Overland Park; Robert A. Slentz, Leawood; Daniel Skelton, Wichita; Bryce Jeffries, Cheney. Bottom row: Christopher DeMond, Los Angeles, Calif.; Gary Mark Kaiser, Wellington; Terry Philip Franklin, Humboldt; Kent Hannah, Bartonville, Ill.; Kenny Terrill, Roanoke, Va.; Kenneth Harper, Kansas City; Steve Woodbury, Prairie Village; James Zimmer, Plattsburg A.F.B., N.Y. ELLSWORTH, TENTH FLOOR. Top row: Rockne L. Grauberger, Deerfield; Ken M. Gire, Wichita; Robert J. Spencer, Shawnee Mission; Arthur G. Mar, Junction City; Larry M. Fencyk, Overland Park. Second row: Joel Langvardt, Junction City; Hudson L. Whitenight, Jr., Westfield, N.J.; Thomas E. Jennison, Jr., Prairie Village; Carl R. Goode, Kansas City, Mo. Bottom row: Steve Sorenson, Kansas City; Orlyn Lockard, Jr., Raytown, Mo.; Richard Ruh Henderson, Mount Prospect, Ill.; Bob Harper, Charleston, Mo.; Floyd Irwin Biggs, Wichita. 200 I JRP ' s SIXTH FLOOR LIBRARY provides residents with a quiet study atmosphere within the confines of the hall itself. Joseph R. Pearson Hall Varsity football players and basketball players, freshmen athletes too numerous to mention, an ASC member, two Summerfield Scholars, the president of Tau. Beta Pi, and two recipients of large corporation scholarships all are included in the 315 men housed in Joseph R. Pearson Hall. More commonly referred to as JRP, the hall houses all varsity and freshmen gridders and cagers not living in fraternities. JRP is also the location of the KU athletic department ' s training table. However, the hall is distin- guished not only by its varsity athletes, but also by its scholars and student leaders. Both Carl Brainard, recipient of a Boeing Aircraft Scholarship and Charles Hastings have been honored with Summerfield Scholarships. Sher- man Stimley, president of the KU honorary engineering fraternity, also possesses a Western Electric Scholarship. As a group, usually on the floor level, JRP is traditionally active in KU ' s intramural programs. A Go-Go Christmas party, featuring a rock-and-roll band, a go-go girl, floor show, magician, and folk-singers highlights the social life of JRP. In service to the university, the hall donated $100 to the Christmas Fund for Children sponsored by the Salvation Army. Current plans call for the construc- tion of a new all-purpose recreation court near JRP with facilities ' for basketball, tennis, handball, and volleyball. 201 JOSEPH R. PEARSON, FIRST FLOOR. Top row: John Heeyer, Kansas City; Lanny Uden, Great Bend; Mike Weiss, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.; Rich- ard Hamill, Shawnee Mission; Bruce Furber, Wayne, N.J.; Ron Almquist, Overland Park. Third row: Dennis P. Wilbert, Pittsburg; Douglas L. Lindsey, Anapolis, Md.; Young Bae Kae, Pasadena, Calif.; Mark Lord, Shawnee Mission; J. Roger Courtney, Effingham; Jim Keith, Kansas City, Mo.; John A. Krug, Wichita. Second row: Martin Youngberg, Wilmette, Ill.; John Partin, Prairie Village; John Bell, Prairie Village; Tim J. Maher, Paola; James Simms, Clarendon Hills, Ill.; Gary Graber, Pretty Prairie. Bottom row: Bob Shepherd, Hallowell, Maine; Roger Siegrist (counselor), El Dorado; Chris Wells, Ft. Knox, Ky.; Cordell D. Meeks, Jr. ( assistant resident director), Kansas City; Gregory M. Nazaruk, Huntington, N.Y.; Ling Fong, Taipei, Taiwan. Josep U. Pearson -la 1 JOSEPH R. PEARSON, SECOND FLOOR. Top row: Victor J. Barry, Wichita; Larry Svoboda, Shawnee Mission; Jim Hoffman, Liberal; Thomas H. Kamenski, Marietta, Ga.; Craig R. Killmer, Leawood; Abdul II. Said, Buraidah, Saudi Arabia; Robert Rouse, Deerfield, Ill. Third row: Ralph B. Madden, Springfield, Mo.; John Rollheiser, Kansas City; Mike Farmer, Kansas City; Michael G. Rubin, St. Louis, Mo.; Michael. B. Mankin, Wash- ington, D.C.; Charles A. Smith, Newkirk, Okla.; Michael Orlich, Shawnee; Dave Shelley, Westminster, Colo. Second row: Gary J. Jones, Newton; Saley Arfaj, Buraidh, Saudi Arabia; Garry Gammon, Leawood; Patrick Malone, Kansas City, Mo.; Ken Mitchell, Great Bend; Jack Prim, Overbrook; Enrique Lande, Aguascalientes, Mexico. Bottom row: El DeForest, Wichita; Don Houghton, Portland, Ore.; Narendra Khilnant, Bombay, India; Daniel Olson, Clifton; Larry Newgaard, Prairie Village; Van Miller, Wichita. Not pictured: Bob Kreutzer, Garden City; John Zook, Lamed; John Munkrcs, Oklahoma City, Okla.; Jack Perkins, Carthage, Mo.; Mike Sweatman, Kansas City, Mo. 202 JOSEPH R. PEARSON, THIRD FLOOR. Top row: Dave Brinkley, Scarsdale, N.Y.; Alvin Beers, Jr., Hoisington; Jim K. Judd, Kansas City; Larry Wilhr, Liberal; Chucis Keil, Lee ' s Summit, Mo.; Steve Wolcott, Rochester, N.Y.; Phil Fussman, Humboldt; Thomas J. Austin, Parsons. Second row: Ron Carter, Wichita; Ward Harkavy, Bartlesville, Okla.; James Dean, Tyler, Tex.; Thomas L. Hunt, Salem, Mo.; Luis Fernando Santos, Bogota, Colombia; Damon W. Lashbrook, Kansas City. Bottom row: Jim Johnson, St. John; John P. Hastings, Topeka; Thomas E. Weast, Kansas City, Mo.; Bill. Schildberg, Shawnee Mission; Maurice Cougher, Wichita; Dan J. Dannenberg, Salina; Chris J. Stark, Bartlesville, Okla. Joseph R. Pearson Hall JOSEPH R. PEARSON, FOURTH FLOOR. Top row: Stephen E. Moore, Gardner; Arden L. Gray, Phillipsburg; Robert Daniel, Bartlesville, Okla.; Leo Meier, Denver, Colo.; David Shuffer, Carlisle Barracks, Pa.; Allan Shanks, Denville, N.J.; Robert Bibb, Shawnee Mission; Jerry Thomas, Los Alamos, N.M.; Gene Wright, Blue Mound. Third row: Bruce W. Baker, Springdale, Ark.; Craig R. Carver, Kansas City; Gary Slentz, Leawood; Gary Linus Lied, Prairie Village; Alan Ray Hamilton, Stillwater, Okla.; W. E. Langdorf, Topeka; Gary K. Murrell, Independence; George W. Mertz, Jr., Fort Scott. Second row: Vadisirisakdi Vanich, Thailand; A. Paul Mercurio, Buffalo, N.Y.; L. Ferriso, Valley Stream, N.Y.; Jack Casper, Prairie Village; Roger Emerson Wood, Eldon, Mo.; Bill Chapline, Kansas City, Mo.; Stan Harrington, Kansas City. Bottom row: 0. R. Armstrong, Alpine, N.J.; Duane Bailey, Osage City; Harvey Schwartz, New York, N.Y.; Ed Roscher, Lawrence; Don Hennenfent, Galesburg, Ill.; John K. Koetting, Prairie Village; Greg Thomas, Ft. Sheridan, Ill. 203 JOSEPH R. PEARSON, FIFTH FLOOR. Top row: Chris Willoughby, Kansas City, Mo.; Dale Rupert, Salina; Mike Weaver, Kansas City; Don Naylor, St. Louis, Mo.; Douglas Hamilton, Salina; Lee Lemke, Bartlett, Ill.; Jim Moore, Spartanburg, S.C.; Richard Wier, LaGrange Park, Ill. Third row: Gary Neitzel, St. Francis; Mike O ' Neill, Tacoma, Wash.; R. Edwin Mort, Grosmont Alta, Canada; Dave Clark, Kansas City; John Fowler, Over- land Park; Daniel Wilson, Kansas City; Bill Woods, St. Louis, Mo.; Kent Sinning, Holton; Bruce E. Johnston, Wilmette, Ill. Second row: Michael Woeh- ler, K-Town, Germany; Douglas Betsworth, Hugoton; Hugh Hensleigh, Winchester; Jim Orr, Topeka; James D. Standen, Shawnee Mission; Michael T. Kennedy, Topeka; Harlan D. Hobbs, Salina; Jorge Correa, Quito, Ecuador. Bottom row: S. Scott Sturgeon, Lee ' s Summit, Mo.; David Narr, Indepen- dence, Mo.; Jay K. Hudson, Overland Park; T. Scott Hines, Overland Park; Richard Tatrn, Creighton, Pa.; James McCreight, Viola, Ilk; Robert Naylor, St. Louis, Mo. Joseph. R. Pearson Hall JOSEPH R. PEARSON, SIXTH FLOOR. Top row: Allan Northcutt, Wichita; Rusty Niver, Chanute; Ed Callaway, Overland Park; Rick Whitson, Des Moines, Iowa; Lewis Williams, Bristol, Wisc.; Kenneth LeCounte, Caldwell; Mark Connolly, Salina. Third row: Tons Washburn, Topeka; Michael D. Isom, Smith Center; John Kelley, Overland Park; Carroll Verhage, Geneva, Nebr.; Charles Hastings, Topeka; Barmy A. Lentz, Silver Spring, Md.; Tommy L. Sodders, Shawnee; Carl Brainerd, Shawnee Mission. Second row: Laurence F. Taylor, Scott City; Don Juett, Shawnee Mission; Bob Juett, Shawnee Mission; Randy Stearns, Wellington; Nick Vandervoort, Orange, Tex.; Nick Calapodas, Athens, Greece; V. Lawrence Grantham, Kansas City. Bottom row: Gary Boldt, Ulysses; Richard V. Porto, Independence, Mo.; Alan Middendorf, Topeka; Rick Frazee, Wellington; ' Mike Koskan, Kansas City; William E. Lewis, Paola. 204 11111111111111 1111B1111111111 Row= 1111 NMI! INN! WITH THE ASSISTANCE of a Templin resident, a youngster assem- bles his toy during the annual Children ' s Christmas Party. Templin Hall While probably best known as the home of the KU track team, Templin Hall, with its 425 male students, houses individuals outstanding in many other campus activities. However, the varsity athletes seem to receive the bulk of publicity. Most notable of this group is Jim Ryun, world record holder in both the mile and half-mile. One of the nation ' s leading pole vaulters and two members of the record-setting four-mile relay team also reside in Templin. The first of five large residence halls to be constructed on Daisy Hill, Templin houses the sophomore class president; several All Student Council representa- tives and committee chairmen; the president of Vox; and members of Owl Society, Sachem, the Student Advisory Board, several honorary fraternities, and the engineering school council. The president of the Student Labor Organization, the AURH vice-president, and a UDK city editor also are Templin residents. Group awards received include the Spring Fling trophy for the best all-around hall, first place in Spring Sing in both large and small men ' s ensembles, honorable mention in homecoming deco- rations, and second place in KU College Bowl competition. The social calendar is highlighted with the Christmas Formal, Oriental Ball, Hairy Buff Party, and the annual Children ' Christmas Party for local children. 205 4 TEMPLIN, SECOND FLOOR. Top row: Kamran Sarmad, Tehran, Iran; Rod Heffley, Bonner Springs; Donald Shirk, Independence, Mo.; Mau- rice Shapiro, Jr., Overland Park; William Teel, Columbus; Ron Newcomb, Wichita; Richard H. Benton, Turner; Paul Rogers, University City, Mo.; Mark Creamer, Glassboro, N.J. Fourth row: Gabriel J. Alcala, Topeka; John David Palmer, Omaha, Nebr.; Chester Paul Syzdek, Amsterdam, N.Y.; Larry Fritter, Kansas City; Reza Farhad Hooshmand, Iran; Bill Pitcher, Carmel, Calif.; Tom Rhoads, Arlington, Va.; Ronald Chatfield, Kansas City. Third row: Mike Kearns, Van Nuys, Calif.; Dave Putman, Leawood; Paul Meiers, Fairway; Dave Waterloo, Lombard, Ill.; Larry Huffman, Erie; Roy Gee, Savannah, Mo.; Arnoldo Nieto, San Jose, Costa Rica. Second row: Lane Rolland, Wakeeney; Dana Blair, Overland Park; Bill Donaldson, Kansas City, Mo.; Larry Miller, Jr., Roanoke, Va.; Mike Horan, Ho-Ho-Kus, N.J.; Lonnie McDougal, Lane; Marty Schirn, Shawnee Mission; Salvador Madero, Mexico City, Mexico. Bottom row: James McHugh, Wichita; Charley McCauley, Bill City; Chuck Banta, Overbrook; James E. Kegerreis, Shawnee Mission; Gregg Kinney, Omaha, Nebr.; Philip Carter, Kansas City, Mo.; Greg Lauver, Aberdeen, S.D.; Richard W. Martin, Coffeyville. Templin Hall TEMPLIN, THIRD FLOOR. Top row: Hank Horn, Monett, Mo.; Gary Leach, Independence, Mo.; Daniel J. Peresko, Kansas City; Frank Lill, Emporia; Steve Smallwood, Overland Park; Keith Eyer, Everest; John Doughty, Oelwein, Iowa; Brian J. Barker, Virginia Water, England. Fourth row: Dan Breitenstein, Kansas City; Jeff Foster, Santa Barbara, Calif.; John Jewell, Strawberry Point, Iowa; Terry A. Johnson, Kankakee, Ill.; George Labesky, Kansas City; Stan Craven, Bowie, Md.; Jerry Barre, Prairie Village. Third row: Doug Donor, Nutley, N.J.; Dick Hedden, Prairie Village; Jay Parker, Ton- ganoxie; Dennis Kortman, Colby; Arnie Lerner, Overland Park; David Rhea, Yates Center; Terry Exstrum, Grand Island, Nebr.; Chris Castaneda, Junction City. Second row: Gene McClain, Salina; Norman Karr, LaCygne; Sergio Guzman, Chinandega, Nicaragua; Joe Kaiser, Paola; Jim Braun, St. Louis, Mo.; Larry Fogleman, Overland Park; Gary Warner, Boulder, Colo. Bottom row: Dick Welshimer, Boulder, Colo.; Paul Taylor, Shawnee Mission; Jim L. Kelly, Atchison; Norm Lader, Arlington, Va.; Scott McMoran, Wichita; Jim Travis, Mulvane. 206 T TEMPLIN, FOURTH FLOOR. Top row: Richard McCaughey, Fort Dix, N.J.; Eugene Wee, Wichita; Clyde W. Toland, Iola; Gaylord Scott Throckmorton, Wichita; Michael Latimer, Springfield, Mo.; David Deeken, Wathena; Alan Reeder, Caldwell; Robert Donavan, Denver, Colo. Fourth row: Pete Mason, Salina; Keith Rawlings, Salina; Mark Ziser, Wichita; Gary Moser, Topeka; John Schaffer, Hyattsville, Md.; Gary Turner, Independence, Mo.; John A. Stine, Shawnee Mission. Third row: Dave Mannsfield, Yuma, Ariz.; Howell Johnson, Junction City; William Clutz, Rochester, N.Y.; Gene Peck, Prairie Village; Robert Hassler, Washington; David Cockrum, Independence, Mo.; Russell Driskill, Fontana, Calif.; Dale Schlottach, Owens- villa, Mo. Second row: Kirk Rensmeyer, Lenexa; Jim Burke, Gove; Kwong Ching Li, Hong Kong, China; Don Wade Vest, Stillwater, Okla.; Coburn 0. Jacob, Reading; Frank L. Agron, Kansas City, Mo.; Gene McClain, Salina. Bottom row: Donald Butler, Kansas City; Mike Petterson, Wichita; Charles Pauls, Inman; Ken Reeder, Caldwell; David Knapp, Oxford; Dick Bird, Ramstine, Germany. Templin Hall TEMPLIN, FIFTH FLOOR. Top row: Bob Maynard, Overland Park; Dave Wilson, Overland Park; Paul S. Buxton, Ransom; Scott Starling, St. Louis, Mo.; Goodarz-Salehi, Rasht, Iran; Craig Crago, Overland Park. Third row: Dick Metcalf, North Fort Myers, Fla.; Richard A. Horwege, St. Fran- cis; Gailen D. Musgrave, Winfield; Julio N. Mendez, La Paz, Bolivia; Harold G. Whalen, Wichita; Richard G. Bergmann, Beloit; Stan R. Miller, Con- way Springs. Second row: Randy Schultz, Overland Park; Chuck Duncan, Kansas City; Alan Cameron, Cedar Rapids, Iowa; Thomas Tucker, Winter- set, Iowa; John Young, Shawnee Mission; Charles L. Alfonso, Havana, Cuba; Mike Huffine, Munich, Germany. Bottom rote: Larry Weeda, Leavenworth; Phil Fredricks, Mission; Ron Rowland, Elkhart; Larry Marcum, Prairie Village; Howard Plein, Leavenworth; Terry Doden, Springfield, Mo. 207 41) 4 TEMPLIN, SIXTH FLOOR. Top row: Percy C. Myers III, Kansas City, Mo.; Mike Sims, Clovis, N.M.; Bob Holder, Kansas City, Mo.; John Mc- Cann, St. Joseph, Mo.; John Hoover, Marion; Fred Krebs, Shawnee Mission; Douglass Wallace, Topeka. Second row: William E. Wagner, El Paso, Tex.; Sher Singh, Sonoma, Calif.; Ampelio Villalba, Asuncion, Paraguay; William R. Lenz, St. Louis, Mo.; Alfred Butler, Clinton, Pa.; Jim Imbeau, Galena. Bottom row: John Reese, Hiawatha; David Walters, Kansas City; Keith M. Wood, Pittsburg; Charles F. Arndt, Mission; Mike Putman, Leawood; Curtis Grindal, Carbondale; Thomas H. Wickstrom, Kansas City. Temp 11 Hall TEMPLIN, SEVENTH FLOOR. Top row: Al-Salem Fouad, Kuwait; Michael C. Foster, Topeka; Keith F. Van Horn, Burlington; Paul Mattingly, South Haven; Mark A. Williard, Atlanta; Martie Floyd, Johnson; Hubert Bird, Baxter Springs; Stephen Charpie, Kansas City, Mo. Third row: Thomas M. Stephens, Topeka; Rene A. Puig, Dominican Republic; Richard Irwin, Johnson; Wayne Smith, Kansas City, Mo.; Art Boyer, Wichita; Steven H. Sal- vay, Shawnee Mission; Dennis Roberts, Kansas City. Second row: Steven Kubin, McPherson; Dave Goode, Coffeyville; Ishii Makoto, Tokyo, Japan; Barry Criner, Overland Park; John Donaldson, Valley Stream, N.Y.; Rich Leiszler, Clifton; Chris Thomas, Shawnee Mission; Mike Vessels, Shawnee Mission. Bottom row: Roger Simmons, Hugoton; Dave Sindelar, Howells, Nebr.; Allen Russell, Scottsbluff, Nebr.; John Denney, Leavenworth; Steven L. Stanton, Dodge City; Bill Settle, Tulsa, Okla.; Gordon E. Wood, Pittsburg. 208 UNIVERSITY LIFE 209 210 HOMECOMING The 1966 Homecoming marked the first in KU ' s second century, and the success of the weekend of November 4 and 5 can be attributed to the enthusiasm and hard work of many KU students. With over 2,000 students participating, a Wednesday night torch pa- rade opened the activities. The parade gathered at the bonfire site behind Strong Hall where general chairman Torn Rader introduced the three Home- coming Queen finalists. Following Rader, coach Jack Mitchell gave a short pep talk and introduced the senior football players who would be tackling the Nebraska Cornhuskers on Saturday afternoon. Chan- cellor W. Clarke Wescoe then appeared and con- gratulated the students for their spirit. Friday afternoon KU students inspected the living groups ' homecoming decorations sprouting up all over campus under rain-drenched plastic tarps. Grace Pearson Scholarship Hall captured its third consecu- tive win in the men ' s hall division of the decorations competition. Pearson also received the sweepstakes award for the highest overall accumulation of points. McCollum and Joseph R. Pearson were the second and third place winners in the men ' s halls division. Douthart Scholarship Hall won first place in the women ' s hall division with Miller Scholarship Hall and Lewis taking second and third place. Chi Omega took highest honors in the sorority division followed by Sigma Kappa and Kappa Alpha Theta. The decora- tion winners were announced during half-time Sat- urday, and trophies were presented to the winners Sat- urday night at the intermission of the Al Hirt concert. Saturday afternoon ushered in the Kansas-Nebraska football game during which Kansas Governor Wil- liam Avery and Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe crowned OPPOSITE PAGE. Throughout the week preceding homecoming festivities, work continued long into the nights on most of the living group displays. Tams PAGE. Cindy Dickson, 1,966 Home- coming Queen, and Governor William Avery, after her crown- ing during halftime of the Nebraska game. a 211 HOMECOMING I Cindy Dickson 1966 Homecoming Queen before a record-breaking crowd of 45,000 Jayhawkers and Cornhuskers. Cindy, a Leavenworth senior, repre- sented Pi Beta Phi. Her attendants were Connie Myers, a Chanute senior, competing for Gamma Phi Beta, and Jackie Settles, a Lewis Hall junior from Garden City. After a short photographers ' session, Cindy ' s attendants joined her in the traditional con- vertible ride around the field followed by Governor Avery and Chancellor Wescoe riding in a 1931 Model- T Ford. The fans witnessed much unexpected action during the fourth quarter of the game, including the dropping of two parachutists near the field. A cider and doughnut reception followed the game at the Student Union. A 260-pound, bearded gentleman named Al Hirt climaxed the weekend ' s activities with his New Or- leans ' trumpet style, in a two-hour concert sponsored by SUA and organized by chairman Bill Brooner. Hirt ' s repertoire included such specialties as Java and Cotton Candy, old favorites When the Saints Go Marching In and Nancy, and new numbers The Shadow of Your Smile, Monday, Monday, and Yesterday. The audience laughed at and applauded Hirt ' s clowning with his clarinet player Pee Wee Spitelera, and sat spellbound as Frederick Staehle played a ten-minute drum solo during Hirt ' s jazz ver- sion of Take Five. The sell-out crowd broke into spontaneous applause as Hirt blew Sugar Lips at the close of his concert, and they kept on applauding until the man with the golden trumpet left the stage and disappeared into the shadows of Allen Field House. Reagon O ' Neill THIS PAGE. In spite of a 24-13 loss to highly-rated Nebraska, the homecoming game featured hard-hitting action and few Jayhawker fans left disappointed. OPPOSITE PAGE. Al Hirt and members of his six-man combo perform before a sell-out crowd of over nine thousand people in Allen Field House. ( 212 213 _ heater USA KATHY MELCHER, JACK WRIGHT, AND LINDA MCDONALD present a scene from the hit Broadway play Any Wednesday. The University Theatre Experimental Series opened its season October 27, 28, and 29, with Theatre U.S.A., a medley of scenes from various American plays. The performance featured the University of Kansas Inter- national Touring Company, composed of six actors. Each performed in one or more of the seven scenes which were taken from present and past Broadway shows and from those productions now considered classics of modern American theatre. The play excerpts and performers in the first part of the show consisted of: The Subject Was Roses, Sue Tisdall, Jack Wright, Ken Marsolais; A Thousand Clowns, Sean Griffin, Jack Wright, Ken Marsolais, Kathy Melcher; and three numbers from the recent Broadway musical production Mame, featuring the entire company. The second half of the show was comprised of scenes from Mark Twain Tonight, with Sean Griffin; and Any Wednesday, with Kathy Melcher, Ken Marsolais, Jack Wright, and Linda McDonald. The final scene of the evening was cut from Tennessee Williams ' play, The Glass Menagerie. Performed by Sean Griffin, Sue Tisdall, Ken Marsolais, and Linda McDonald, the cutting, in the words of director James Hawes, . . . ends with a note of finality. It comments on the world of today; a good-by to the past. The State Department-sponsored group toured for two months behind the Iron Curtain. Visiting uni- versities in four countries, the company performed and demonstrated various classroom techniques that are used here in the United States. Drew Anderson 214 SURROUNDED BY THE SEVEN DWARFS, Snow White (Parmalee Bates) lies in a deep sleep in the first Children ' s Theatre production of the year. The University of Kansas Children ' s Theatre was designed for the entertainment of the younger set, and this is exactly what it provided during December when Jessie Braham White ' s Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs was presented both in the University Theatre and on tour. Throughout five on-campus per- formances eager crowds of open-mouthed youngsters cringed in fright at the rage of the wicked Queen Bragomar ( Shirley Potter ), or laughed at the antics of Snow White (Parmelee Bates ) and her seven dwarfs. Between parent-led safaris to the restroom the small fry enjoyed the age-old story of Snow Wh ite ' s escape from the Queen and her reluctant Witch Hex (Gail A. Beggs), to find happiness in the cottage of the seven dwarfs: Buick ( Wayne Shahan ), Flick (Kay Habenstein), Glick ( Carolyn Mages), Snick ( Dorothy Barnhart ), nick ( Carol Pishny ), Whick ( Dorothy Kirk ), and Quee ( Melanie McCoy ). In the meantime the Hansom Prince ( Jack Hurley) pined, and Berth- old the woodsman ( Jerry Koellsted ), who helped Snow White escape, eluded the Queen ' s soldiers. For the kids there was an abundance of action, laughs, and flashy costumes; for their parents the play provided an absorbing array of trick effects and special lighting and sound techniques under the direction of Jed Davis. After the show the cast mingled with their young patrons in the lobby, patting heads and posing with the junior set for picture-taking parents. A notable exception to this was the nasty queen, whom the children ' avoided like the plague. Bob Butler e 215 AS FOR You, hon. CRICKET, you are now going to see what administration really can do, dictates the bishop (Clayton Crenshaw) to John Cricket ( Steve Grossman). The modern morality play, Rogues ' Trial, was the KU Experimental Theater ' s December production. In- tended by its author, Ariano Suassuna, to attack rural life in contemporary Brazil, the play depicts the trials of various townspeople. All are rogues and all are waiting to be sent to either Heaven or Hell. Both Satan (Paul Hough) and Christ (Horace Bond) ap- pear to bid for the townspeoples ' lives, while the Virgin Mary (Carol Wilcox) acts as an intercessor for Christ (called Manuel in the production). Though the play begins on earth, much of it takes place in Purgatory. The audience is introduced in the beginning to several characters, including the baker ( Bob Krusemark), his wife ( Cheryl Burnet), and the bishop (Clayton Crenshaw). All are killed by Sever- ino (Richard Brady) and his colorful group of ban- didos who sweep into town. John Cricket ( Steve Grossman) is the only one of the townspeople who is later permitted, after pleading with Mary, to re- turn to earth to begin life anew. He was formerly the epitome of a rogue, an intelligent, easy-going manipulator. His sidekick, Chico (John Morgan), was the only character not killed by the bandits. The play was intended by Suassuna to show justice defeated by mercy, and to depict a man (John Cricket) who like all other men, could be redeemed only by mercy. One of the great accomplishments of the production was the recreation of the atmosphere of a small Brazilian town. The set was simple and largely symbolic, with the gate to Heaven, the church door, the door to Hell, and the ring which symbolized the town square. Judy McGhee 216 SIR PETER TEAZLE (Tom REA) resists Lady Teazle (Sue Tisdall) as she pleads, Come on. You promised me. The University Theatre presented R. B. Sheridan ' s Restoration comedy, The School for Scandal, February 8-11. Directed by Jack Brooking, the production satirized the England of Sheridan ' s times, and fol- lowed the entirety of Sheridan ' s original script. Set- tings by James Hawes and costumes by Chez Haehl took the audience back to the eighteenth century for an enjoyable look at one of the great comedies of all time. Sir Peter Teazle (Tom Rea) has married a young country girl (Sue Tisdall) who feels that it is only fashionable to deceive him and become involved with other men. Joseph Surface (Dennis Dalen) and his brother Charles (Richard both plot to win Maria (Linda McDonald), though Joseph is primarily intrigued by her wealth. Lady Teazle professes to love Charles, but feels Joseph is pursuing her. Sir Oliver Surface (Clayton Crenshaw ) returns from his travels to determine whether Charles or Joseph shall inherit the family fortune, although he does not reveal his identity at first. Gossiping sessions are frequently held at Lady Sneerwell ' s (Sylvia McConnell) house to discuss the latest scandals. Lady Teazle, Maria, and Mrs. Candor (Julia Callahan) are regular par- ticipants. The play has been described as an adult game of skill and chance all dressed up with wit and ruffles and executed to a minuet beat. Actually, it is a study of certain members of the London society set, and of their various plots and involvements with one another. Throughout the production, plots become entangled, and the play builds to a hilarious climax. 217 to ._}ear Aldon D. A former Rhodes scholar, Dean Aldon Bell enjoys both the study and teaching of European history. His enthusiasm, insight, and erudition make his courses among the most stimulating and worthwhile at the university. Coupled with his devotion to teaching, he has also done research in British radicalism and urban development, and this spring the Oklahoma University Press will publish his book, London in the Age of Dickens. As an assistant dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Dr. Bell has combined outstanding classroom teaching and research with an interest in educa- tional innovation. His efforts as director of both the College Honors Program and the Senior Independent Study Program have made evident his desire to improve the quality and increase the flexibility of undergraduate education at the University of Kansas. Dean Bell ' s great interest in creating a better atmosphere for learning has also made him a moving force in the institution and development of the college-within-the-college system. He has constantly been receptive to student ideas concerning education and has endeavored to create new outlets for the ex- pression of responsible student opinion. Instrumental in the founding of the University Review, Dean Bell continues to serve as its advisor. He has also advised the College Intermediary Board for the last two years. In addition to his work at KU, Dean Bell has participated in many professional committees on education, including the National Research Consortium on Undergraduate Education and the Committee on Teaching of the Kansas chapter of the American Association of University Professors. 218 Hill LLeakehelP Associate Professor Jo 4n Talleur In 1955 John Talleur was looking for a job after having spent what he calls the most miserable two years of my life as a commercial artist in Chicago. He admittedly reveals, I had to look for Kansas on the map in order to have any idea where I was going when I accepted this job. Professor Talleur, born in Chicago in 1925, grew up there and attended the Art Institute where he received his Bachelor of Fine Arts in 1947. In 1951 he was awarded his Master ' s from the State University of Iowa. Under a Fulbright Fellowship to France, he studied in Paris at Beaux Arts under Jourdan from 1952 to 1953. However his education does not stop here, for he has achieved both national and international recognition for research, publication, and creative work in several printmaking processes. His works have been exhibited in Italy, France, Belgium, England, Switzerland, and in major cities in the United States. His prints have been purchased by the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the Institute of Contemporary Art in Boston, and the Deanne Collection in London. Mr. Talleur loves to teach, especially freshmen, whom he says are much smarter than a decade ago. His dedication to the student has been typified for years by his providing informal off-campus seminars at his studio and his making available for study his private collection of rare prints and art objects. As one of his colleagues has said, John Talleur ' s outstanding teaching, inspired creative art work, and service to the community, state, and nation are all of the highest order. 219 HILLTOPPER PAM 13AYLE SS Versatile Pam Bayless has achieved the success of a Mortar Board membership and a Woodrow Wilson scholar- ship nomination through the College Honors Program and a full extracurricular schedule. Maintaining Dean ' s Honor Roll status, she holds both SMOP and KU Honor scholar- ships. Pam has served Chi Omega as activities chairman and rush chairman, and the Panhellenic Council as sec- retary. Now secretary of the SUA Board, she has also been SUA Hospitality chairman and chairman of the SUA Presidents ' Brunch. As a junior Pam was a freshman coun- selor and a member of the Student Advisory Board. Also active in AWS, she has been a nominee for the AWS senate, a member of the Freshman and Roles of Women steering committees, and a High School Leadership Day committee member and hostess. Participation in the French summer language institute and membership in Sigma Delta Pi Spanish honorary coincided with her majors of Art History, French, and Spanish. Pam plans to return to Europe to study next year. HILLTOPPER JIM PRAGER Hilltopper Jim Prager has been a leader in a wide range of activities during his four years at KU. In addition to maintaining a 2.00 overall GPA, with a 2.20 in his political science major, Jim has served three terms as an All Student Council representative. During this time, he has been a member of several ASC committees and has worked as co-chairman of the Elections Committee and chairman of the University Traditions Committee. Last spring he was elected chairman of the council, following his previous service as vice-chairman. Beyond his ASC work, Jim has been a member of the University Centennial Committee, the University Human Relations Committee, and the Collegiate Young Republicans, and as a junior was president of his living group, Stephenson Hall. Among numerous awards which he has received are a Scholarship Hall Award and a summer language institute scholarship. Jim is also a member of Pi Sigma Alpha political science honorary, and was elected this year to Sachem. 220 HILLTOPPER DICK WARNER Hilltopper Dick Warner ' s consistent combination of scho- lastic excellence and campus leadership have led to his membership in Owl Society and Sachem, both of which he has served as president. Beyond academic pursuits, Dick has participated in Student Union Activities pro- grams throughout his four years at KU. The result has been his selection as vice-president of the SUA Board as well as Director of the 1967 Festival of the Arts. At the same time he has served in various capacities as a member of several university committees the College Intermediary Board, the University Disciplinary Com- mittee, the Union Operating Board, the Dean ' s Advisory Board, and the Student Advisory Board. In spite of his numerous activities, Dick has maintained a 2.71 GPA, with double majors of English and art history. Serving his fraternity, Alpha Tau Omega, he has been scholarship and activities chairman. In the future, Dick plans to attend graduate school and continue his English studies. HILLTOPPER NANCY GALLUP Accelerated activity has enabled Nancy Gallup to keep ahead in the classroom and on campus, and to graduate in three years. As a member of the freshman-sophomore College Honors Program, a Woodrow Wilson nominee, and a Watkins scholar, she has maintained a 2.81 GPA in her German and English majors. The diversity of her interests is demonstrated in her academic and musical endeavors. For her sorority, Kappa Alpha Theta, Nancy has served as Greek Week Sing leader, and she is a member of the KU Concert Choir. At the same time, she serves on the Uni- versity Review Editorial Board, the Student Advisory Board, and the College Intermediary Board. She has been a member of Cwens, and a Previews counselor. Now AWS senator in charge of the recognition committee, she was a freshman representative to the AWS House from Carruth- O ' Leary, and AWS Senate secretary as a sophomore. After graduate school, Nancy plans to teach English and German comparative literature on the college level. 221 HILLTOPPER TED HAGGART Hilltopper Ted Haggart is graduating with majors in economics and mathematics and a 2.69 overall GPA. Ted came to KU with Summerfield and KU Honor Scholar- ships. During his four years of study he has also earned the U. G. Mitchell Scholarship in Mathematics, a Na- tional Science Foundation Research Grant in Mathe- matics, and membership in Pi Mu Epsilon, math honorary, Owl Society and Sachem. Beyond his outstanding scho- lastic record, Ted has demonstrated his leadership qualities in both his living group and campus activities. In his fraternity, Delta Upsilon, he was pledge of the year, has since served as scholarship chairman, pledge trainer, vice-president, and is now president. On the hill, Ted has worked extensively on the KU Relays Committee, the Stu- dent Advisory Board, the College Intermediary Board, and the ASC Social Committee, of which he presently is chairman. After graduation, Ted plans to do graduate work in economics at one of the Commonwealth Uni- versities in the British Isles. HILLTOPPER BRUCE WARREN Bruce Warren began his academic career at KU with the aid of a Summerfield Scholarship, the first of many such honors received by this Hilltopper while at KU. He has been particularly active in SUA and fraternity affairs. Last year Bruce served on the SUA Board, and he is now SUA treasurer. In his fraternity, Phi Delta Theta, previous work as alumni secretary and as a member of the Standards Committee culminated in his election this year as president. This latter position also earned him a place on the IFC Presidents ' Council. A 2.60 political science major, Bruce has shown active interest in student government as an ASC representative and as chairman of the ASC Student Rights Committee. He has been a mem- ber of the People-to-People Board, the University Home- coming Committee, and the Union Operating Board. In addition to his activities, Bruce has maintained a 2.86 overall GPA, and has been selected for membership in Owl Society, Sachem, and Phi Beta Kappa. 222 ADS INDEX 223 A Barth, Miriam 183 Bowden, John 189 Campbell, Robert H. 178 Basel, Jim 192 Bowdish, Caroline 184 Caple, Stephanie 187 Abbott, Susan 185 Basgall, Jim 198 Bowers, Richard 197 Caps, Sharon 187 Achilles, Ron 193 Bashaw, Bill 198 Boyer, Art 208 Cardwell, Gwen 184 Adams, Kay 189 Bashaw, Thomas 198 Boyle, Sallye 186 Carlson, Sonja 172 Adkins, Dave 190 Basow, Bill 176 Brace, Margo 193 Carlson, Steve 180 Agin, Colleen 184 Bates, Terry 199 Brackbill, Jill 187 Carney, Linda 172 Agler, Rex 196 Bauer, Ernie 198 Bracke, Barbara 186 Carney, Sandra 193 Agron, Frank L. 207 Baumgartner, Barb 192 Bradley, Melody 183 Carpenter, Ronald 197 Aiken, Harold, Jr. 198 Baxter, Jim 196 Brainerd, Carl 204 Carr, Arden 198 Akers, Jim 197 Bayless, Linton 176 Bramble, Mary 196 Carr, Bruce 176 Akhclar, Farouk 196 Beaman, Sheila 174 Branch, Barbara 187 Carr, Judy 191 Alcala, Gabriel J. 206 Bean, Jerry 198 Brandes, Kathy 173 Carroll, Ronald 198 Alfonso, Charles L. 207 Beard, Cindy 186 Brandt, Carol 184 Carson, Kay Ellen 196 Allen, David R. 180 Beard, Joyce 187 Branson, Jane 184 Carter, Nelle 174 Allen, Jan 187 Beck, Mary 173 Brault, Eugene, Jr. 197 Carter, Philip 206 Allen, Stephen A. 193 Beck, Sarah 195 Brawn, John 177 Carter, Raymond M. 196 Almquist, Ron 202 Bednar, Louise 172 Braun, Jim 206 Carter, Ron 203 Alumbaugh, Karen 184 Bednasek, Judy 181 Breck, Gregory F. 192 Caruth, Tommie Jo 190 Anderson, Aileen 17.5 Beeman, Judy 173 Breddle, Robert 177 Carver, Craig R. 203 Anderson, Bill 193 Beers, Alvin 203 Bredehoeft, Steve 200 Case, Melissa 172 Anderson, Carol A. 172 Behan, Patricia 192 Bredehoft, Marvin 199 Cash, Jerry 193 Anderson, Dave 198 Behrends, Pamela 187 Brenner, Brenda 18:3 Casper, Jack 203 Anderson, Debbie 184 Belcher, Gail Anne 182 Breitenbach, Dave 192 Cassidy, Craig 177 Anderson, Janet 187 Beldon, Barbara 184 Breitenstein, Dan 206 Cassinelli, Javier 192 Anderson, Joan 184 Bell, Hanan S. 177 Brewer, Julie 189 Cassing, James 200 Anderson, Kaye 187 Bell, John 202 Briguglio, Greg Thomas 197 Castaneda, Chris 206 Andrews, Boley 189 Bell, Lloyd 198 Brill, Robert 199 Cates, Danny 200 Andrus, Mary 182 Bell, Patti 195 Brinkley, Dave 203 Cathcart, Marilyn 172 Arming, Elizabeth 191 Bell, Sue 195 Brockway, John 178 Cathey, Stephen R. 193 Apsley, Keith 190 Bender, Neva 17:3 Broderick, Sandy 173 Cauble, Feryl 187 Arasaki, Morihiro 190 Bendowsky, Kathleen 172 Brown, Bob 196 Chambers, Ralph F., Jr. 198 Arehart, Marcia 186 Beneda, Judy 182 Brown, Carol 184 Chandler, Mary 184 Arfaj, Saley 202 Bengel, Nancy 186 Brown, Doug 198 Chang, Paoping 180 Armacost, Cindy 195 Benjamin, Gay 173 Brown, Janet 186 Chankhunthod, Anan 177 Armstrong, 0. 11. 203 Benskin, Barbara Anne 174 Brown, Janice 186 Chapline, Bill 20:3 Arndt, Charles E. 208 Benton, Barbara 182 Brown, John E. 176 Chappel, James R. 190 Ascher, David 193 Benton, Richard H. 206 Brown, Jon D. 190 Charpie, Stephen 208 Askland, Marilyn 182 Berg, Diana 196 Brown, Mike 193 Chatfield, Ronald 206 Aten, Edward M. 200 Bergmann, Richard G. 207 Brown, Robert C. 193 Chatham, Ralph E. 192 Atkinson, Don 196 Berline, Steve 197 Browne, Terry 193 Chiarottino, Mike 196 Attaway, Sandy 187 Berol, Joan 195 Browning, Audrey 186 Childress, Christine 189 Atwood, Michael 178 Berry, Cortland E. 200 Bruce, Marcia 19.5 Chipman, Eilene 187 Austin, Thomas J. 203 Berryman, Jim 176 Brudevold, Siegfrid 193 Choice, Janie 187 Austin, Virginia 175 Bethea, Bill 193 Bryant, Fred 180 Christensen, Joyce 192 Aviks, Valda 173 Betsworth, Douglas 204 Bryant, Robert 200 Christianson, Judeth 186 Avis, Steve 199 Betz, Robert 193 Buck, Linda 183 Clapton, Jim 176 Azamber, Cheryl 172 Bergmann, Linda 173 Budke, Earl 196 Clark, Dave 204 Azcui, Javier 199 Bevan, G. David 180 Buhisan, Anzelito 198 Clark, Dolly 193 Bhasker, Ravi 191 Bukovac, Jan 181, 183 Clark, Merry Sue 184 Bibb, Robert 203 Bulleigh, Janice 183 Clarke, Dana 192 Biggs, Floyd Irwin 200 Burash, Melinda 184 Clemetson, Jerry 176 B Bilderback, Terry 187 Burash, Melissa 184 Cleveland, Beverly 187 Biles, Karen 191 Burash, Melody 184 Clowes, Cammy 195 Bachnick, Jim 199 Bird, Dick 207 Burdue, Glen 190 Clutch, Dan 200 Bailey, Duane 203 Bird, Hubert 208 Burgess, John M. 196 Clutz, William 207 Bailey, Hugh 178 Bishop, Riley 190 Burgland, George 198 Coble, Carol 185 Bailey, Robert, Jr. 199 Bishop, Tom 191 Burke, Jim 207 Cochrane, Robert 178 Baker, Arlyss 175 Bishop, Tom 193 Burke, John 191 Cockrum, David 207 Baker, Brian J. 206 Bjurman, John 200 Burnam, William L. 179 Cohorst, Jeanne 182 Baker, Bruce W. 203 Black, Arthur 197 Burtner, Leslie 172 Coker, James 200 Balcombe, Douglas 198 Black, Larry 193 Butler, Alfred 208 Colbert, Jerry 200 Baldwin, Patty 187 Blackard, Scott 178 Butler, Donald 207 Cole, Cecil S. 193 Ball, Cheri 186 Blair, Dana 206 Butler, Linda 17.5 Cole, Dan 178 Ballou, John 189 Blalock, Carolyn 182 Butner, Steve 191 Cole, Lynn 187 Baltzer, David 190 Blanding, Becca 186 Buxton, Paul 207 Coleman, Bruce 199 Banbury, Roger 199 Blankinship, Renita 182 Byer, Janet 173 Coleman, Pam 17.5 Randle, Tony 180 Blanton, Brenda 193 . Collier, Bill 198 Banks, Mike 177 Blasberg, Michael 176 Collins, Judith 195 Banta, Chuck 206 Blatt, Elyse 185 Conklin, Michael D. 191 Banzet, Paul 197 Blevins, Jon 179 C Conklin, William A. 191 Barber, Sandy 184 Bly, Joe 198 Conley, Marilynn 187 Bard, Charles 190 Bock, Paul 180 Cabeen, Linda 187 Connolly, Mark 204 Bare, Janet 172 Boekelman, Barb 187 Cacioppo, Elaine 187 Conroy, Steve 197 Barker, Bruce E. 200 Boelte, Cheryl M. 184 Caignon, Cindy 187 Cook, Gary 193 Barker, Cheryl 196 Bogart, Binky 187 Cain, Pam 184 Cook, Jim 176 Barket, Mary Kay 196 Bogner, Jim 200 Cairns, J. Michael 176 Cook, Robert 193 Barnes, Diann 187 Boldman, Gloria 186 Calapodas, Nick 204 Coons, Terry 182 Barnes, Elizabeth 187 Boldt, Gary 204 Callaway, Ed 204 Coover, Ray 200 Barnes, J. G. 197 Bollinger, Carolyn 187 Callaway, Mike 180 Corkill, Betty 187 Barnhart, Dorothy 185 Bolton, Mary 182 Callaway, Sue 173 Cornelison, Harry 192 Barr, Kevin 190 Booker, Karen 172 Calvert, Bob 196 Correa, Jorge 204 Barr, Patricia 182 Boone, Linda E. 196 Calvin, Jane 186 Corrigan, Jo 184 Barre, Jerry 206 Booth, Keryl 175 Cameron, Alan 207 Corson, Darrell 190 Barrett, Rita 196 Booth, Patsy 175 Cameron, Fred 196 Cosgrove, Carol 195 Barron, Jessica 190 Bossemeyer, Diana 172 Campbell, Cheryl 183 Cosgrove, Cindy 196 Barrows, Roger 189., 193 Boston, Fredell 174 Campbell, Jacqualyn 184 Cotter, Byron 178 Barry, Victor J. 202 Bowie, John A. 198 Campbell, Margo 193 Cougher, Maurice 203 Bartels, Vernon 198 Bousman, Phyllis 183 Campbell, Patricia 176 Coughlin, Carolyn 182 226 Coughlin, Kathy 190 Coulianidis, Mike 198 Coulter, Valarie 193 Courtney, J. Roger 202 Courtroy, Thomas L. 192 Duggins, Susan 187 Dulaney, Steve 193 Dunbar, Jennifer 182 Duncan, Bud 199 Duncan, C. H., Jr. 198 Fry, Lawrence R. 200 Fuller, Semantha 182 Funk, Bob 197 Furber, Bruce 202 Furnish, Janice 186 Habiger, Margo 190 Hadley, Fred 197 Haefele, Chris 175 Hates, Larry 192 Haight, John M. 191 Cox, Alice 173 Duncan, Chuck 207 Fussman, Phil 20:3 Haley, Jim 197 Cox, Helen Marlene 184 Duncan, Myrl 176 Hall, Karen 173 Cox, John 191 Dundee, Gary 197 Hall, Nancy 193 Cox, T. A. 180 Dunlap, Marla 196 Hall, Rachel 175 Craft, Phillip R. 177 Dunn, Harriet 174 G Halldran, Ed 192 Crago, Craig 207 Dunne, Thomas 193 Haller, Cheryl 193 Craven, Stan 206 Durham, Lynne 196 Gahnstrom, Bill 197 Halstead, Shelly 174 Crawford, Connie 182 Duston, Art 177 Gain, Melvin W. 190 Halverson, Judy 184 Crawford, Pat 183 Dutton, Dick 197 Gale, Carl 200 Hamill, Marcia 192 Creamer, Mark 206 Dye, Pat 187 Galeeki, Gloria 193 Hamill, Richard 202 Creech, Mary 192 Gammon, Garry 202 Hamilton, Alan Ray 203 Crimmins, Mary 187 Garcia, Nieanor 198 Hamilton, Bob 180 Criner, Barry 208 Gardella, Luis 178 Hamilton, Douglas 204 Crist, Margo 173 E Gardess, Sharon 193 Hamilton, Kathy 192 Cristensen, David 183 Garlock, Carol 184 Hammersmith, Veronica 186 Crocker, Pamela 195 Eckels, Lance F. 199 Garrett, Bob 189 Hammond, Terri 174 Cromwell, Marsha 190 Eckstrom, Rosalind 187 Garrison, Bruce R. 198 Hancks, Larry K. 191 Crook, David 179 Edelbroek, Susan 184 Garst, John 198 Haney, Laurel 193 Crow, Barbara 187 Edgar, Jane 187 Garvin, Rich 198 Haney, Linda 187 Crownhart, Kathy 187 Edson, Sanford 192 Gaughan, Kathy 189, 192 Haning, Deanna 193 Crummett, Michael 199 Edwards, Leslie 183 Gaughan, Pat 185 Hannah, Kent 200 Crump, Marty 186 Edwards, Linda S. 184 Gee, Roy 206 Hansberry, Alan 199 Crumpacker, Nancy 194 Cruddy, Leonard 189 Eggert, Solveig 173 Eggleston, Mary Jane 183 Geer, John 199 Geiger, Larry 193 Hanshaw, Colleen 184 Hansman, Bob 190 Culbertson, Linda 189 Ehrich, Margaret 184 Geiss, Anne 183 Harden, Dan 191 Culp, Rex 192 Eiler, Steve 200 Geitz, Mike 177 Harding, Ted II 196 Culver, Keith 178 Eisenbrandt, Doris 190 Gelpi, Chris 183 Hardman, Terry 184 Cummins, Corki 182 Elcock, Steven 191 George, Philip B. 189 Hardy, Roderick 200 Cunningham, Ken 190 Elizondo, Rodolfo 190 Gerding, Steve 191 Harjo, Raymond, Jr. 198 Cunningham, Scott 177 Elkan, Dood 193 Gerling, Judy 195 Harkavy, Ward 203 Curray, Carol 182 Ellington, Edward K. 192 tiers, Cookie 187 Harmony, Kent 192 Curtis, Susan 187, 189 Elliott, Christine 192 Gerven, Nicholas 191 Harp, Allen L. 189, 192 Elliott, Jean 195 Gher, Marlin E. 198 Harper, Bob 200 Ellis, Linda 173 Giamario, Dan 197 Harper, Kenneth 200 Ellis, Virginia M. 187 Gibson, Cathy 189 Harrington, Stan 203 D Englebrake, Peggy 174 Gilbert, Roxy 183 Harris, Jim 176 Engleman, Ann 195 Gilcrest, Kate 183 Harris, Pat 200 Dagenais, John 176 Engler, Jim 190 Gillett, Anita 182 Harrison, Richard 179 Daly, Rick 191 English, Peggy 192 Gilliland, Amy 175 Harshaw, NI. Robert 176 Dando, Steven 179 Engstrom, Judy 186 Gilmore, Celia 183 Hartman, Jeff 200 Daniel, Robert 203 Estenssoro, Jorge 198 Gilna, Linda 174 Hartnett, R. Bruce 193 Daniels, Mary 183 Eubank, Carolyn 191 Gire, Ken M. 200 Hartzler, Robert L. 193 Danielson, Debby 172 Evans, Gloria 186 Gist, Barb 192 Harvey, Sara 185 airmen, Kent 196 Exstrum, Terry 206 Glaeser, Mary Ann 184 Hassler, Robert 207 Dannenherg, Dan 203 Eyer, Keith 206 Gleason, Gregg 179 Hastings, Charlie 204 Darnaby, Orville 199 Gleason, Mark 179 Hastings, John P. 203 Darner, Greg 192 Goff, Dianne 193 Hauxwell, Jon Paul 177 Davenport, Donna 183 Goldberg, Mary 197 Hayden, Kelley 179 Davidson, Barbara 174 F Goldberg, Michael J. 197 Hayes, Karin 183 Davis, Chuck 197 Goltra, Robert 200 Ilayles, Robert, jr. 179 Davis, Ed 196 Fackler, Neal 200 Gomez, Marta 184 Hazen, Donald 199 Davis Guy 199 ' Davis, Richard 198 Faber, Norm 178 Farley, Susan 188 Goode, Carl R. 200 Goode, Dave 208 Heasom, Bill 197 Heath, Beverly 186 Davis, Stephen 178 Farmer, Mike 202 Goodrick, Mike 189 Hecke, Vicki 174 Davis, Steve 180 Farney, Robert 179 Goodwin, Frank 191 Hedden, Dick 206 Dawes, Tom 193 Farren, Gregory J. 199 Goodwin, Linda 187 Hedlund, Debby 187 Dean, James 203 Fast, Bob 200 Gordon, Patricia 192 Heeyer, John 202 Deason, Marty 195 Fall, Lim Chu 193 Gordy, Don C. 176 Heffley, Rod 206 Decker, Cheryl 193 Faust, Melanie 185 Gorman, John 200 Hefling, Toni 173 Decker, Marsha 175 Fedorowich, Fred 190 Gorrill, Candy 184 Heist, Bill 189 Dedalus, Steven 179 Feighnay, Robert 193 Gort, Jim 198 Heitschmidt, Elaine 183 Deeken, David 207 Fencyk, Larry M. 200 Gortenburg, Gary 200 Hejtmanek, Linda 193 DeForest, El 202 Fenske, Richard 179 Gossage, Ronnie 191 Hellman, Ralph 193 Delich, Cindy 172 Fergus, fan 186 Gotti, Margaret 173 HeMlle, Leland C. 191 Dellva, Sue 193 Fernandez, Pat 200 Gottschall, Mary Anne 191 Helton, Susan 187 DeMond, Christopher 200 Ferree, Mary Ann 183 Graber, Gary 202 Hendershot, Dennis 190 Dengo, Jorge 0. 190 Ferrell, Jo Anne 172 Graether, Paul 191 Henderson, Hazel 175 Denney, John 208 Ferrell, Tom L. 200 Gragert, Sherry 187 Henderson, Richard Ruh 200 Dennis, Daryl 177 Ferriso, L. 203 Graham, Allan 191 Hendricks, Bob 199 Dennis, Raymond 193 Ficek, Mark A. 176 Graham, Heather 182 Hendrix, Richard 191 Dennis, Susan 183 Field, Royal J. 199 Graham, Janice 175 Henery, Charles 193 Deramus, Nicky 196 Fields, Peggy 194 Grainey, Richard 199 Henley, Mary L. 193 Desjardin, Myriam 184 Filippone, Bob 199 Granger, Mike 200 Hennenfent, Don 203 Desjardin, Phillipe 189 Finch, Jane 191 Grant, Cindy 174 Hennier, Helen 185 DeSoto, Dede 187 Finch, Kathy 186 Grant, Craig 193 Hensleigh, Hugh 204 Devins, Don 200 Fisher, Joan 172 Grantham, V. Lawrence 204 Herbranson, Diane 183 Dewey, Barbara 187 Fisher, John 180 Grauberger, Rockne L. 200 Hereford, Judy 182 Dexter, Gracie 173 Fisher, Roberta 174 Graves, Leon 178 Hermanson, Dale Ann 184 Dickson, Douglas C. 197 Fisher, Sue 183 Gray, Arden L. 203 Hermesch, Alan L. 176 Dickson, Kenneth 190 Flakus, Iiirgie 187 Gray, Beverly 187 Herpich, Janet 173 Dieffenhach, Warren 197 Fleming, Susan 183 Gray, Eldon L. 200 Herrick, Kendall 185 Diepenbrock, David 177 Fletcher, Saundria L. 182 Gray, Ken 179 Herring, Allin 200 Dietz, Kenneth 190 Flinner, Monica 194 Grazda, Mel 178 Herrington, Daniel F. 179 Dillman, Robert 192 Flores, Pedro 197 Green, Mark 199 Hendrick, Marty 187 Dillon, Judy 181, 184 Floyd, Martie 208 Greene, Michael 200 Hewitt, Joseph H. 192 Dinkel, Rick 200 Fogleman, Larry 206 Gregg, Gary 180 Hickson, Bob 190 Dix, Michael 199 Foley, Peter J. 176 Gregory, Tranne 186 Hiett, Dixie 175 Dixon, Patrick 193 Foster, D. Richard 193 Greiner, Didi 196 High, Margaret 181, 184 Dobyns, Ralph 189, 190 Foster, Jeff 206 Griffith, Rochelle 184 Higley, Mary Margaret 172 Doden, Terry 207 Foster, Michael C. 208 Griggy, Dave 199 Hill, J. Stanley 196 Doggett, Gregory 200 Foster, Patricia M. 182 Grimes, Karl 191 Hill, Sharon 186 Dolinar, Sherry 193 Foster, Starr 195 Grindal, Curtis 208 Hillix, William F. III 197 Domingez, Armando G. 191 Fouad, Al 208 Gripp, Claudia 190 Hills, Donna 187 Donahue, Kathy 189, 193 Fowler, John 204 Groff, Bruce 199 Hilton, Sally 184 Donaldson, Bill 206 Fowler, Kristin 186 Grojean, Tim 191 Hindman, James 176 Donaldson, John 208 Fox, Donna 190 Groom, Norma 186 Hines, Gary H. 193 Donavan, Robert 207 Fox, John 192 Groseclose, Cheryl 193 Hines, T. Scott 204 Dorman, Jeanne 184 Fraizer, Carol 172 Grothusen, Jane 192 Ho, Herbert 191 Donoho, James 193 Francis, Jane 181, 182 Grow, Gordon 199 Hobbs, Harlan D. 204 Donor, Doug 206 Frank, Linda J. 183 Grube, Gary 178 Hodges, Randy 190 Doolan, Yvonne 186 Franke, Robert R. 199 Grunder, Elaine 174 Hoelzel, Nancy 187 Dougherty, Keith 176 Franklin, Ben 178 Gufler, Martin 198 Hoff, Linda 195 Doughty, John 206 Franklin, Larry 199 Gunther, Michael 189 Hoffman, Jim 202 Downing, June 191 Franklin, Terry Philip 200 Curtler, Linda 173 Hoffman, Paula 175 Downs, Ronald 193 Frazee, Rick 204, 206 Guzman, Sergio 206 Hoke, Charlie 198 Downs, Ruby 182 Frederick, Mike 198 Holcomb, John E. 177 Drake, Linda 182 Fredrichs, Phil 207 Holder, Bob 208 Dresniek, Janice 187 Freiermuth, Gail 187 Holder, Margaret 175 Drewry, Steve 199 Friesen, Larry 176 H Holloway, Tom 199 Driskill, Russell 207 Frisbie, Steven C. 179 Holm, Carolyn 183 Drury, Carolyn 187 Fritter, Larry 206 Haake, Karen 184 Holman, Barbara 187 Duggan, Ray 192 Fromme, Lance 180 Haase, Robert 192 Holmes, Joan 172 227 harwoods meats p ? MON LTH ,,,111.111W111.7411111141111110 ,4.11111411.614 0E-41ai ' CAME A STUDIES J H 19th. Street From corner of 19th. and Massachusetts Streets go East one mile to Harper Street, turn to the right and go about 1 4th. a mile to Orval Hixon ' s Camera Room on the right hand side of the road. 0 229 Holmes, Robert 179 Holroyd, Jim 197 Holt, Susan 193 Hommertzheim, Marilyn 175 Honold, Michael 190 Hood, Douglas A. 193 Hook, Judy 192 Hooshmand, Reza 206 Hoover, Jane 183 Hoover, John 208 Hoover, Richard 200 Hoppe, Mary 186 Horan, Mike 206 Horejsi, Barbaralee 189 Horn, Hank 206 Horn, John R. 197 Horn, Richard J. 177 Hornberger, Tharon 181, 182 Horwege, Richard A. 207 Hoskinson, Jane 173 Houghton, Don 202 Houseworth, Madilyn 195 Houts, Jo Ann 172 Howard, Linda 186 Howell, Jon 189 Howland, Robert C. 178 Hoyt, Susan 195 Hubbell, Lee 198 Hubert, Sue 175 Hudson, Anne Marie 184 Hudson, Barbara 193 Hudson, Jay K. 204 Huebner, Jan 183 Huerter, Chuck 190 Huffine, Mike 207 Huffman, Larry 206 Hughes, Barbara 183 Hughes, Sandy 185 Hughey, Sherry 185 141111, Nancy 175, 177 Humphreys, Jack 189 Hunt, Sandy 172 Hunt, Thomas L. 203 Hunter, Burma 190 Hunter, Karen 174 Hutchinson, Bill 178 Hutchison, Lynda 172 Lams, James 191 Ibarra, M. Elizabeth 194 Igielnik, Simon 190 Iles, Ken 180 Imbeau, Jim 208 Ingardia, Michael 190 Irvin, Marsha 182 Irwin, Richard 208 Irwin, Richard K. 190 Isaacs, Ricard 200 Isom, Michael D. 204 Jackson, Jai 186 Jackson, Jo Dee 187 Jackson, Marietta 177 Jackson, Ruth 187 Jacob, Coburn 0. 207 Jacobs, Richard 198 Jacobson, Helen 184 Jaderborg, Lorilsa 173 Jaeger, Joyce 182 Jamison, R. Allen 177 Janssen, Bruce 200 Jarrett, Don 180 Jauregui, Luis 197 Javellana, Diana 186 Jeffrey, Claudia 195 Jeffries, Bryce 200 Jenkins, Donald, Jr. 177 Jenks, Mary Beth 186 Jennings, Gaylen 189 Jennings, Walt 199 Jennison, Thomas E., Jr. 200 Jewell, John 206 Jewell, Kathy 184 Johannes, Gene 193 Johnsen, Melody 174 Johnson, Carolyn 181, 184 Johnson, Connie 191 Johnson, Garver 198 Johnson, Howell 207 Johnson, Jim 203 Johnson, Josephine 193 Johnson, Joyce 181, 182 Johnson, Kenneth Lee 200 Johnson, Leslie M. 180 Johnson, Linda Marlene 175 Johnson, Luis 199 Johnson, Marty 200 Johnson, Phyllis 175 Johnson, Richard 177 Johnson, Sandra 182 Johnson, Sylvie 182 Johnson, Terry A. 206 Johnston, Bruce E. 204 Johnston, Judy 174 Johnston, Penni 187 Johnston, Theodore E. 178 Jolley, Karen 184 Jones, Curtis 197 Jones, Gary J. 202 230 Jones, Gordon A. 198 Jones, Jerry J. 198 Jones, Joe 180 Jones, Kim 193 Jones, Rita 173 Jordan, Les 196 Jouvenat, Suzanne 175 Joyce, Frank 178 Juarez, Richard 193 Judd, Jim K. 203 Juergensen, Virginia 174 Juett, Bob 204 Juett, Don 204 Juhnke, Ro n 197 Justice, Claudette 187 JYdstrup, Douglas 176 K Kae, Young Bae 202 Kaiser, Gary Mark 200 Kaiser, Joe 206 Kalcic, Judy 192 Kamenski, Thomas H. 202 Kamm, Dwight 191 Kampmeier, Sharon 182 Kangas, Susan 173 Karlson, Bruce 197 Karr, Norman 206 Kasper, Sue 174 Katekaru, Susumu 190 Katz, Chris 194 Kava, Ruth 183 Kearns, Mike 206 Keeler, Linda 172 Keen, Mrs. Irby 179 Keene. Dan 179 Keeney, ' Fawn 180 Kegerreis, James E. 206 Keighticy, Jan 184 Keil, Chucis 203 Keisker, Karen 187 Keith, Jim 202 Keith, Nancy 189 Keller, Steve 177 Kelley, John 204 Kelley, Pat 184 Kelly, Jim L. 206 Kemble, K. W. 179 Kemery, Phil 190 Kenagy, Norma 189 Kennedy, Anne 184 Kennedy, Michael T. 204 Kenny, Judy 187 Kenny, Pam 181, 184 Kenoff, Jack 199 Keplinger, Dena 182 Kern, Barry 190 Kerns, Richard 180 Kerr, Karl F. 191 Kerwin, Mary Jeannine 183 Ketchum, Nancy 182 Khaliefeh, Maniea 196 Khilnant, Narendra 202 Kifer, C. James 179 Kikel, Dave 200 Kilgore, Ronald 178 Killmer, Craig R. 202 Kimmi, Alfred I. 193 Kindred, Linda 185 King, Tom 189, 193 Kinne, Tom 199 Kinney, Gregg 206 Kirk, David S. 180 Kirk, Karen 194 Kirk, Raymond 196 Kittrell, Frank II. 176 Kivett, Diana 192 Kleinhammer, Patricia 196 Knackstedt, Linda 175 Knapp, David 207 Knight, Linda 195 Knipp, Mary Lou 174 Knocke, Cynthia 174 Knouft, Ann 184 Knox, Whitney 192 Koch, Judy 187 Koelling, Ronald 191 Koetting, John 203 Kolarik, Ruth 174 Kolsky, Franklin G. 200 Kolterman, Orville G. 191 Konarik, Mary 183 Kopek, Nancy 195 Kopper, Martha 172 Kornfein, Bill 193 Kortrnan, Dennis 206 Koshan, Mike 204 Kost, Barbara 183 Krack, Sue 186 Kraft, Stephen 192 Kral, Dave 190 Krebs, Fred 208 Krehbiel, Carl 180 Krehbiel, Celia Ann 182 Krepps, Sherry 186 Krisman, John 192 Kritikos, William 179 Kroeker, Ann 190 Krone, Sheri K. 182 Kruengel, Karen 182 Krug, John A. 202 Kubin, Steven 208 Kunkle, Jan 194 Kurth, Chestine 172 L Labesky, George 206 Lacy, Julie 172 Lacier, Nosm 206 Ladesich, Mary 175 LaDnex, Karen 183 Lai, Ming Sai 190 Lallier, Beth 192 LaMar, Rebecca 196 Lamberd, Darryl 191 Lamer, Kay 195 Lancaster, Joyce 182 Lando, Enrique 202 Lane, Debbie 183 Lane, Mary Bea 184 Lane, Patricia 184 Langdorf, W. E. 203 Languille, Margie 186 Langvardt, Joel 200 Lankford, Perry W. 199 Larson, Ken 177 Lashbrook, Damon W. 203 Lask, Debbie 184 Lathan, John 179 Lathan, William A. 179 Latimer, Michael 207 Laughlin, Lynn 172 Laughlin, Ruthie 183 Lauver, Greg 206 Laws, Terry 176 Leach, Gary 206 LeClaire, Rhea 182 LeCounte, Kenneth 204 Ledell, Mary Carol 174 Lee, Jacqueline 183 Lee, Kayleen 183 Lehman, Peggy 184 Leisher, Linda 195 Leiszler, Rich 208 Lemke, Lee 204 Lemley, Judy 174 Lenihan, Sandee 195 Lennard, Roxy 183 Lentz, Harry A. 204 Lenz, William R. 208 Leone, Dianne 190 Lerner, Arnie 206 Lerwick, Lleanna 187 Lewis, Katie 197 Lewis, Mary Lynn 194 Lewis, Pat 184 Lewis, William E. 204 Lewter, Deedie 187 Li, Kwong Ching 207 Lichty, Mike 174 Liebert, Jim 178 Lied, Gary Linus 203 Lies, Linda 191 Ligush, C hris 175 Liley, Tom 179 Lill, Frank 206 Lim, Joe 193 Lim, Mike 193 Limpp, Jane 195 Lin, Marcia 172 Lindberg, Jean 195 Lindgren, Diane 181, 183 Lindsey, Douglas L. 202 Ling, Bobbie 195 Linley, Mike 192 Linneberger, Pat 182 Littrell, Ginger 185 Livesay, Linda 187 Livingston, George 176 Lloyd, Nancy 184 Lockard, Orlyn, Jr. 200 Loehr, Kathleen 172 Logan, David 199 Logan, Patricia 191 Loheofener, Doug 199 Long, Sherry 184 Looney, Ronn 197 Lord, Edith 172 Lord, Lois 187 Lord, Mark 202 Lorenz, Nancy 182 Loth, Robert, 197 Louden, John 176 Loveland, Janice 175 Lovett, Rod 177 Lowery, Gail 184 Lukeman, Jack 195 Lutz, Diana Lee 186 Lyherger, Shirley 175 Lynch, Joyce 194 Lynch, Michael 200 Lynd, Rex 198 Lyne, Ellie 186 Lyon, Nancy 195 Lyons, Sharon 191 Lytle, Cris M. 183 M Mabie, Billy 180 Mac Dougall, Janet 182 Mac Dougall, Margaret 173 Mace, Paul 191 Mackey, Douglas 180 Mackie, Allison 187 Mac Quiddy, Mary 191 Madden, Ralph 202 Maddox, Bill D. 177 Madero, Salvador 206 Maher, Tim J. 202 Maier, Peter 178 Maier, Susan 187 Makoto, Ishii 208 Malone, Patrick 202 Mankin, Michael B. 202 Mann, Linda 186 Mannsfield, Dave 207 Mar, Arthur G. 200 Marcum, Larry 207 Maiden, Howard M. 191 Marinelli, Jo Ann 196 Marion, Gerry 173 Marolf, Richard 176 Marple, Bev 185 Marshall, Ann 190 Marshall, Linda 184 Martin, Court 199 Martin, Dennis 199 Martin, Henry Dale 191 Martin, Richard 190 Martin, Richard W. 206 Marvin, Robert 200 Mason, Pete 207 Masterson, Joyce 193 Masterson, Virginia 193 Matousek, Rita 172 Matross, Gerald 196 Mattingly, Betty 172 Mattingly, Paul 208 Maturo, Rosemary 192 Mauk, John 177 Maxey, Roger 199 Mayhew, Barry 192 Maynard, Bob 207 Meader, Bernard F. 199 Meador, Libby 183 Meagher, Dave 199 Mealpin, Barbara 189 Meeks, Cordell, Jr. 202 Megnis, Andrejs 180 Meier, Fred 180 Meier, Leo 203 Meier, Thomas J. 200 Meiers, Paul 206 Melroy, Pat 180 Menas, Telis K. 177 Mendez, Julio W. 207 Mercurio, A. Paul 203 Merkel, Pat 195 Merrick, Gayle 192 Merrill, Russell B. 178 Mertz, George Jr. 203 Mesigh, Janet Carol 184 Messecar, Gary 200 Messick, Bev 181, 183 Messina, Judy 183 Messman, Bob 189, 191 Metcalf, Dick 207 Metzler, Kaye 187 Meyer, Janet 183 Meyer, Mike 178 Michaelson, David 200 Middendorf, Alan 204 Middewdorf, Robert D. 177 Middleton, Shirley 187 Miesse, Mary Ann 172 Milberger, Diane 194 Miller, Ann 183 Miller, Candy 187 Miller, Chris 190 Miller, Dave 176 Miller, Donna 186 Miller, Larry, Jr. 206 Miller, Mike 190 Miller, Ponchita 186 Miller, Ramona 186 Miller, Robert 190 Miller, Stan R. 207 Miller, Van 202 Mitchell, Cheryl S. 174 Mitchell, Gary 190 Mitchell, Ken 202 Mitchell, Sydney 195 Moayedi, Alexander 192 Moberly, Candy 197 Modlin, Terry 196 Nloenius, John 191 Moffat, Barbara 182 Mog, Patty 189 Montgomery, Wayne 197 Monti, Carmelo 190 Mooney, Lorraine 172 Moore, Janice 174 Moore, Jim 179 Moore, Jim T. 204 Moore, Martha 184 Moore, Michael 196 Moore, Stephen 203 Moose, Robert D. 180 Moran, Patricia 186 Mordin, Barry Stuart 199 More, Russell 199 Morehouse, Paul 176 Morey, Shari 182 Morgan, Janet 182 Morgan, Marsha 183 Moriarty, Mark 199 Moritz, Donna 184 Morley, Jim 199 Morley, Robert 199 Morris, Ginner 192 Morris, Pain 174 Morrison, Sue 196 Morriss, Margaret 191 Morse, Pam 187 Mort, R. Edwin 204 Morton, Bill 178 Nyaboya, Isidore 199 Peebler, Robert 192 Powell, Julona 189 Morton, Jay 198 Nye, Bill 178 Peltier, Anne 187 Powers, Lesley 193 Morton, Toni 187 Pendarvis, Susan 187 Praiyamkhal, Chamnong 197 Moser, Gary 207 Penner, Luella 191 Prather, Pam 187 Mosher, Nancy 172 Penner, M. J. 180 Pratt, John 198 Mosley, Herman 198 0 Penny, Kathy 183 Pray, Lynne 192 Mueller, Suzanne 194 Peresko, Daniel 206 Prim, Jack 202 Mullane, Rebecca 183 O ' Bryan, Peggy 187 Perez, Philip 191 Pruitt, Pat 172 Mullikin, Don 198 Ochs, Gary 196 Perkins, Carol 190 Pryor, Tim 198 Munday, Cheryl 187 O ' Conner, Judy Ann 182 Perlaky, Lilly 181 Puck, Sarah Ann 184 Mundinger, Marietta 172 Officer, Jeaneane 181, 183 Perry, Marcia 193 Puckett, Suzanne 184 Munroe, Diane 186 Ogata, Aileen 193 Persinger, Karen 174 Puett, Eileen 192 Murdock, Ruth 187 Olbin, Marsha 193 Peters, Mary Sue 184 Pugsley, Roy 186 Murphy, Janet 186 Olson, Daniel 202 Petersen, Eric 193 Puig, Rene 208 Murrell, Gary K. 203 Olson, Karen 186 Peterson, Anne 184 Pumphrey, Billie 194 Murrell, Michael D. 191 Omdal, Crete Ravn 174 Peterson, Betty 186 Purdy, Dorothy 182 Murrow, David 191 O ' Neill, Mike 204 Peterson, Carol 186 Putman, Dave 206 Musgrave, Barbara 172 Ophir, Jonathan 191 Peterson, Ken 200 Putman, Mike 208 Musgrave, Gaileen 207 Orlich, Michael 202 Peterson, Marshall 199 Musick, Karl 178 Orr, James 204 Peterson, Susie 182 Myers, Judith 186 Orth, Lois 192 Peterson, Verlyn 177 Myers, Paula 184 Myers, Percy III 208 Myers, Sue 186 Osborn, Mark 177 Owen, Gail 186 Owens, Robert 200 Peterson, Winnie 187 Petterson, Mike 207 Pettit, Dianne 183 Quagliano, Robert 189, 190 Petty, Cheri 185 Quinn, Hugh 179 Pfeiffer, Edward 199 Quinn, Mary 189, 193 Mc Phegley, Barbara 182 Phelps, Ginny 186 Quinn, Norm 199 MeAlpin, Barbara 190 McAneny, Laurence 176 McBride, Marilyn 184 McCann, John 208 McCart, Alice 182 McCarthy, Molly 195 McCarty, Susan 187 McCaughey, Richard 207 McCauley; Charley 206 McClain, Don 176 McClain, Gene 206, 207 McClelland, Gary 177 McClure, Cathie 195 McConchie, Roger 196 McCormick, Cathy 185 McCreight, James 204 McCullagh, Cathy 194 McDonald, David 179 McDonald, Linda 175 McDougal, Lonnie 206 McElhinney, Madge 175 McHugh, James 206 Mcllrath, Mary 187 Mcllvain, Mike 179 Pahlka, Bob 198 Paleen, W. C 199 Palmberg, Thane 193 Palmer, John David 206 Parker, Jay 206 Parker, Stephen 191 Parmely, Cheryl 173 Parrish, Frank 196 Partin, John 202, 204 Paschal, Nancy 175 Patee, Navnit 193 Patterson, Maureen 193 Patterson, Michael 200 Patz, Bula 182 Pauls, Charles 207 Pauzauskie, John 180 Payne, Carolyn 195 Payne, Sara 192 Payton, Brad 200 Payton, Joan 195 Pearl, Regina 187 Peavler, Sandy 179 Peck, Gene 207 Phillips, Barbara 175 Phillips, William 193 Pinet, Nancy 183 Pinkerton, Julie 187 Pinkton, Linda 186 Pinter, Charlotte 192 Pippitt, Dale 190 Pitcher, Bill 206 Pitsenberger, William 179 Pittemore, Dave 192 Platt, John 179 Plein, Howard 207 Plisky, Karen 189 Plumlee, Kay 182 Poff, Constance 175 Poley, Robert 178 Poleyn, Janie 186 Poison, David 200 Pomrenke, Jerry 193 Pang, Ling 202 Popp, Ronnald 198 Porto, Richard 204 Poston, Peggy 186 Potter, Don 178 R Rademacher, Ruth 175 Rambo, Mary Jane 172 Ramirez, Gene 180 Ramos, Diane 191 Ramsay, Mrs. Bruce 173 Ramsay, Richard 176 Rand, Linda 192 Randall, Mike 193 Randel, Dan 198 Rasmussen, Mike 179 Rasmussen, Ric 179 Rathbun, Kiel 196 Ratliff, James 179 Ratterree, Joy 192 Ravens, Rita 191 Rawlings, Keith 207 Ray, Richard 198 Rayl, Thomas 176 Reaves, Jim 178 Reber, Fred 177 McKinney, Margaret 187 McLelland, Mark 176 McMahon, Penny 191 McMillan, Greg 192 McMoran, Scott 206 McMullen, Marcia 175 McNaught, Delbert 199 McQueeney, Mary Pat 187 McSwain, Jane 195 McVey, David 198 N Nahas, Khalid 192 Narr, David 204 Naylor, Don 204 Naylor, Robert 204 Nazaruk, Gregory 202 Nebgen, Palle 191 Needham, Gary 192 Neelly, Linda 187 Neevel, Lisa 185 Negley, Carol 182 Neighbors, John 193 Neitzel, Gary 204 Nelson, Dana Rae 174 Nelson, Robert 179 Nelson, Torn 199 Nelson, Val 183 Neuman, Bob 199 Nevin, Donald 177 Nevins, Kenneth 192 New, Stan 180 Newcomb, Ron 206 Newgaard, Larry 202 Newman, Janie 195 Newman, Patsy 183 Newsom, Jennifer 185 Newton, Judy 192 Nicholas, Lynn 186 Nicholls, Roy 191 Nichols, Sharon 190 Nicklas, Alyson 186 Nicolaisen, Paula 191 Niemann, Mary 192 Niemcir, Ray 180 Nieto, Arnoldo 206 Niinioja, Eeva-Liisa 172 Niver, Rusty 204 Noel, Marcia 182 Noland, Rob 191 Noll, Mari Ann 193 Nordin, Margaret 184 Nordstrom, Jeannie 191 Norland, Kenneth 179 Norman, Norma 190 Northcutt, Allan 204 Northway, Jean 174 Nottage, Barbara 182 Noyce, Jane 186 Nutt, Donna 186 Nuzurn, Jack 180 231 DAIRY QUEEN ROYAL COLLEGE SHOP Offs Reckart, Joyce 185 Reddic, Trinka 192 Redman, Nancy 182 Reece, Judy 182 Reed, Darrel 180 Reed, Dennis 191 Reeder, Alan 207 Reeder, Ken 207 Rees, J. D. 196 Reese, John 208 Reichmann, Barb 182 Reid, Donna 186 Reinhardt, Carl 190 Reinhardt, Emily 183 Renard, Jeff 199 Rensmeyer, Kirk 207 Renz, Barbara 184 Resnik, Cille 196 Revels, Gwen 186 Reynolds, Karen 190 Reynolds, Steve 190 Rhea, David 206 Rhea, Larry 198 Rheinfrank, John 197 Rhoades, Carol 182 Rhoads, Tom 206 Richardson, Ray 190 Richardson, Sally 185 Rickard, Sheryl 173 Ricketts, Carl 189., 190 Riedmiller, Mary 187 Riker, Walter 192 Ring, Stanley 191 Ringer, Janet 172 Rising, John 193 Roberson, Carole 186 Roberts, Barbara 186 Roberts, Charlie 198 Roberts, Dennis 208 Roberts, Jane 173 Roberts, Michael 200 Robertson, Ed 177 Robinson, Bari 181, 182 Robinson, Linda Lou 196 Robinson, Larry 178 Rodriguez, Hilda 182 Roeder, Beth 175 Rogers, Becky 175 Rogers, Kathy 192 Rogers, Paul 206 Rogers, Susie 190 Rohr, Leslie 195 Rohrer, Ruth 172 Rolland, Lane 206 Rollheiser,, John 202 Rollins, Bob 189 Rooney, Joyce 186 Rork, Gerald 177 Roscher, Ed 203 Roscoe, Linda 187 Rosenberger, Ed 197 Rosenthal, Stanton 189 Rothenberger, Kay 175 Rouse, Robert 202 Rouse, Terry 193 Rowland, Ron 207 Roz, Hector 189 Rubin, Michael 202 Ruby, Edward 190 Ruehirat, Vibul 196 Ruddick, Joe 180 Ruch, Barbara 184 Ruff, Joan 195 Ruhlen, Catherine 186 Rule, Marilyn 174 Rupert, Dale 204 Rupp, Carla 189 Russell, Allen 208 Russell, Andy 191 Russell, Bob 191 Ruthenberg, Ken 198 Rutherford, Dorothy 186 Ruvalcaba, Cindy 186 S Sachen, Janice 187 Saeed, Sarni 190 Said, Abdul H. 202 Saindon, Susan 186 Saldarriaga, Alberto 199 Salehi, Goodarz 207 Sallee, Larry 192 Salvay, Steven H. 208 Salyer, Jane 184 Salyes, Jack E. 178 Sampson, Margaret 195 Sampson, Stephanie 193 Samuels, Pat 186 Sandlin, Suzanne 194 Sanford, John A. 193 Santarpia, George 192 Santos, Luis Fernando 203 Sappington, Suellen 187 Sarazan, Kristy 182 Sarmad, Kamran 206 Satake, Robert 180 Sauer, Ilyse 174 Sawyer, Nancy 184 Sayars, Linda 182 Sayler, Michael M. 191 Sayler, Pam 195 Sayre, Larry W. 191 Scamman, Torn 177 Scanlin, Barbara 186 Schaefer, Ginzy 184 Shanks, Allan 203 Skiwwer, Joan 189 , er ae c Shannon, Larry 178 Sleeper, Barbara 184 Shf Steve 177 Schaefer, Susie 189, 190 Shapiro, Maurice J. 206 Slentz, Gary 203 Schaffer, John 207 Shapley, Carol 172 Slentz, Robert A. 200 Schavdein, Suzanne 173 Shapley, John 179 Slider, Patti 185 Schick, Kathleen 183 Shea, Denise 186 Sloan, Donald E. 178 Schiefelbein, Bruce 191 Shelley, Dave 202 Sloan, Dorothy 175 Schildberg, Bill 203 Shellman, Jessica 183 Sloan, Jinny 174 Schilling, Linda 195 Shepherd, Bob 202 Slusser, Wallace F. 196 Shipley, JoAnna 187 Small, Nancy 191 Schippert, Jim 198 Schirmer, Stephen 176 Shirk, Donald 206 Smallwood, Steve 206 Schirn, Marty 206 Shirlaw, Georgia Lyn 183 Smith, Bill 199 , Shoemake, Tom 189 Smith, Charles A. 202 Schlottach Dale 207 Schmidt, Nancy 187 Shoesmith, Melvin 189 Smith, Cynthia 183 , m c Shoop, Don H. 198 Smith, Diana 186 Shitt Carolyn 182 192 1 Jeffrey eff J , l e b na ch S Short, Leonard, Jr. 200 Smith, Larry 200 Schnack, Kirk 199 Short, Tom 192 Smith, Linda E. 187 Schneider, Richard C. 198 Shoup, Charles 178 Smith, Margo 183 Schneider, Sandy 194 Showalter, Linda 182 Smith, 190 Schofer, Phyllis 187 Shrader, Frances 173 Smith, Robert G. 191 Schone, Fred 189., 193 Shuck, Cherie 173 Smith, Stephen W. 190 Schubert, Robert 179 Shuffer, David 203 Smith, Steve E. 193 Schuler, Phil 193 Sidebotham, Fred 189, 193 Smith, Susan 197 Schultz, Randy 207 Sidney, Valerie 193 Smith, Wayne 208 Schutte, Heidi 182 Siebert, Carol 187 Sneegas, Linda 187 Schwartz, Harvey 203 Siegel, Betsy 187 Snodderley, Paul 180 Schwartz, Jan 184 Siegele, Seig 193 Snyder, Sharon 175 Scoggan, Marie 190 Siegrist, Roger 202 Sodders, Tommy L. 204 Scott, Dorothy 183 Sigley, Frances 184 Soden, Doris C. 175 Scott, Robert 198 Simmons, Nancy 173 Sorenson, Steve B. 199 Scribner, Bob 191 Simmons, Pat 186 Sorenson, Steve 200 Sears, Suzanne 174 Simmons, Richard 189, 192 Soss, Martha 186 Sebree, Steve 196 Simmons, Roger 208 Spahiny, Margaret A. 186 Sedlock, Sue 183 Simms, James 202 Spannuth, Leslie 185 Selack, Marilyn 189 Simons, Alan II. 200 Sparron, Steven 200 Selfridge, Martha 174 Simpson, Tom 180 Spencer, Kenneth W. 192 Selig, Linda 173 Sims, Mike 207 Spencer, Robert J. 200 Sellers, Wm. Ray 193 Sindelar, Dave 208 192 Settle, Bill 908 Singh, Sher 208 Spies, Brooks Spink, Anne 183 Sewell, Eloise 193 Singleton, Jack 200 Staay, Darrel 180 Seyfrit, Michael 192 Sink, Bob 190 Standen, James D. 201 Seymour, Cynthia 191 Sinning, Kent 204 Stanley, Don 193 Shaffer, Carolyn 182 Sisman, Leslie 185 Stanley, Mary 184 Shaffer, Susan L. 175 Sitter, Mary 195 Stanton, Steven L. 208 Shalz, Marilyn 184 Skaggs, Robert 190 Stapleton, Mel 180 Shambaugh, Janet 172 Skeens, Donetta 174 Stark, Chris J. 203 187 Skelton, Daniel 200 Starkey, Frank M. 192 MSEPPPE a- 233 Starkweather, Mike 189 Starling, Scott 207 Starn, Don 189 Thomson, Jim 193 Thornton, James K. 192 Thornton, Jeannie 183 Wait, Cheryl 183 Walby, Michael 191 Waldron, Gary 197 WilHard, Mark A. 208 Willis, Mark 192 Willis, Stephen 192 States, Larry D. 190 Thornton, Leslie 192 Walker, Dan 192 Willoughby, Chris 204 Stearns, Randy 204 Thorp, Jim 176 Wallace, Douglass 208 Wilson, Daniel 204 Steele, Sandra 183 Steffen, Gwenna 187 Thorsell, Margaret 175 Thrasher, Greg 193 Waller, Richard 193 Wallower, Becky 174 Wilson, Dave 207 Wilson, David 199 Stein, Barb 183 Stein, Kelleen 172 Throckmorton, Gaylord 207 Thul, Mary 183 Walls, Gary 176 Walter, Gary R.. 177 Wilson, Kathy 182 Wilson, Mike 197 Steiner, Karen 186 Tiansek, Karin Marva 193 Walter, Mike 177 Wilson, Richard 176 Stephens, Thomas M. 208 Tibbetts, John 176 Walters, David 208 Wilt, Sheryn 186 Steuri, Suzanne 183 Tidwell, Chuck E. 191 Ward, Nancy 187 Winchester, Stanley A. 191 Stevenson, Rick 193 Timmons, Joe 198 Varner, Gary 206 Winegardner, David L. 197 Stevenson, Todd 177 Tobin, Dennis 180 Warnock, Charles A. 193 Winer, Connie 187 Stewart, Phil 198 Stewart, Robert 189, 192 Stine, John A. 207 Stipanov, Michael 190 Stoffel, Carol 184 Stoker, Susan 175 Stone, Barbara 193 Toland, Clyde W. 207 Toporowski, Thomas 191 Torrence, Mary Ann 174 Toussaint, Barb 187 Towslee, Gary 177 Trammell, Gary 179 Travis, Jim 206 Warren, Harry E. 200 Washburn, Tom 204 Waterloo, Dave 206 Wathen, Jan 185 Watkins, Evan 179 Watts, Vicki 190 Wayrnan, Karen 192 Winters, Ann 193 Winters, Mark 192 Woehler, Michael 204 Woerther, William 191 Wohlgemath, John 192 Wolcott, Steve 203 Worm, Judy 186 Stone, Patricia 185 Stone, Peggy 185 Treger, Herbert W. 193 Trickey, Larry 180 Weast, Thomas E. 203 Weaver, Mike 204 Wood, Gordon E. 208 Wood, Keith M. 208 Stone, Rick 191 True, Jim 178 Weber, Mike 178 Wood, Roger Emerson 203 Stoskopf, Carol 182 Tucker, Carolyn 192 Wee, Eugene 207 Woodburn, Jane 182 Stout, Mary Ann 183 Tucker, Thomas 207 Weeda, Larry 207 Woodbury, Steve 200 Stout, Phil 198 Turbeville, Tony 189 Weeks, Steve 196 Woodcock, Jeanine 186 Strand, Mrs. Lilly 178 Turner, Gary 207 Weinberg, Pam 192 Woods, Bill 204 Streator, Marian 183 Turner, Judy 191 Weiner, Don 191 Woods, Leroy 191 Stroh, Karen 187 Turner, Ron 190 Weir, Catherine 174 Woodward, Rock 178 Strothmann, Gail 186 Weirich, Lucia 182 Work, Duncan 180 Struby, Carl W. 198 Stubbs, Gene 176 Weispfenning, Elaine 189, 191 Worl, Judy 172 Woronick, Walter A. 191 Stuhlman, Bob 191 Sturgeon, S. Scott 204 U Weiss, Mike 202 Weiss, Pete F. 191 Woster, Anne 195 Wright, Gary Lee 197 Sullivan, Jim 199 Sundstrom, Dave 190 Sutherland, Mary Ann 175 William R. 191 Sutton, June 175 Sutton, Linda 185 Uden, Lanny 202 Urban, Dennis C. 191 Urban, Ron 198 Welch, Howard 192 Welch, Lauren 178 Weller, Dennis 196 Wells, Chris 202 Wells, Dave 192 Welshimer, Dick 206 Wright, Gene 203 Wright, Jill 185 Wrigley, Rick 178 Writt, Pat 191 Wurster, Connie 193 Wylie, David 190 Sutton, Paul 176 Sutton, William R. 189 V Wendleton, Mark M. 192 Wenger, Cecelia 173 Svoboda, Larry 202 Swafford, Mike 191 Swan, Gaylord 179 Sweaney, Edward J. 190 Syzdek, Paul Amsterdam 206 T Taggart, Bobbie 182 Tanner, Jean 172 Tariel, Margueriti 192 Tarr, Mary Jane 190 Tatrn, Richard 204 Taylor, Bob 177 Taylor, Doug 190 Taylor, Laurence F. 204 Taylor, Marva 196 Taylor, Paul 206 Taylor, Rod 178 Taylor, Susan 174 Teel, William 206 Teroovie, Nick 192 Terrill, Kenny 200 Thatcher, John 190 Theimer, Ginger 172 Thomas, Chris 208 Thomas, Greg H. 203 Vail, Cindy 185 Valdmanis, Ruta 174 Van Benschoten, Lynniel Q. 191 Van Derbur, Karen 191 Vandervoort, Nick 204 Van Horn, Keith F. 208 Vanich, Vadisirisaudi 203 Van Oosterdiep, Joan 186 Van Pelt, David 179 Van Sickle, Jeanne 182 Vap, Rudolph 192 Vaughn, Bill 192 Verhage, Carroll 204 Verrey, Ray 178 Verrey, Robert 178 Vessels, Mike 208 Vestal, Stan 180 Vieux, Rosemary 187 Vigil, James 176 Villalba, Ampelio 208 Vinickier, Linda 185 Vinzant, Jimmy 189 Vinzant, Mark 192 Vinzant, Whitney 192 Vocke, T. L. 191 Volkland, Effie E. 182 Vollmer, Tim 189, 193 Werden, Bev 187 Werkley, Linda A. 184 Whalen, Harold G. 207 Whalen, Janet 195 Whealy, Barbara 184 Wheat, Judy 185 Wheatley, Michelle 187 Wheeles, Eugene 197 Whitaker, James 177 Whitaker, Joe L. 177 White, Chet 191 White, Reed 198 Whited, Charles E. 178 Whiteman, William Keith 199 Whitenight, Hudson, L., Jr. 200 Whitesell, Marilyn 174 Whitley, Richard 177 Whitney, David 196 Whitson, Rick 204 Whyte, Timothy 199 Wicinski, Cinda 174 Vickstrom, Thomas H. 208 Wiehe, Cathie 187 Wier, Richard 204 Wightman, Laurence 192 Wilbert, Dennis P. 202 Wilch, Bob 192 Wilch, Ted 192 Y Yackle, Larry 200 Yates, Joan 186 Yenni, Jeanne 173 Yessen, Curtis 198 Yockey, Charles 176 Young, James 198 Young, John 207 Young, Kat 183 Young, Nancy 187 Young, Sharyn 187 Youngberg, Dean 178 Youngberg, Martin 202 Youngblood, jay 190 Yosvell, Linda 187 Yumang, Conrad 177 Zacharias, Mancha 184 Zakoura, james 192 Zeller, James 192 Zemke, Dan 180 Zerrahn, Klaus 198 Zilm, Frank 189 Thomas, Jay 192 Wiley, Barbara 173 Zimmer, James 200 Thomas, Jerry 203 Wiley, Mike 199 Zimmerman, Gary 190 Thomopulos, Alex 190 Wiley, Rod 199 Zimmerman, Jane 175 Thompson, Ann 189 w Wilfong, Diane 192 Zimmerman, Larry 191 Thompson, Deanna 187 Wilhr, Larry 203 Ziomek, Sophie 191 Thompson, Leslie Lynn 179 Waddail, Bobby 196 Wilkin, Stephen D. 197 Zirkle, Laura 190 Thompson, Lewis 176 Wade, Don 207 Wilkins, Carol 186 Ziser, Mark 207 Thompson, Marla 186 Wagner, Jan 175 Williams, Lewis 204 Zook, Judy 196 Thompson, Mary Ellen 175 Wagner, William E. 208 Williams, Mike 193 Zook, Marilyn 183 Thompson, Nancy 187 Wahl, Errol 196 Williams, Xavier 176 Zuibleman, Deann 187 234 hotograph ' Y of Quality. Official Jayhawker Photographer SPRING 1967 JAYHAWKER MAGAZINE YEARBOOK I Spring on Mount Oread features variety in activities, parties, athletics, and people. At the end of Spring Break, students return from Colorado ski slopes to the routine of unpredict- able Kansas weather and overdue term papers. 235 A silent vigil for peace in Vietnam takes place in front of Watson Library during a weekday noon hour. 235 SPRING ISSUE THE 1967 JAYHAWKER MAGAZINE YEARBOOK TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction 235 Athletics 357 Greeks 237 University Life 375 Organizations and Activities 301 ROTC 347 Advertising and Index 395 MR. TOM YOE, Advisor; BLAKE BILES, Editor; STEVE MEYER, Business Manager; DAVE GRAVES, Art Director; RAY NIEMEIR, Head Photographer; BRENT WALDRON, Associ- ate Editor; CINDY McCAMMON, Editorial Secretary; JO ANN MEYER, Business Secretary. ART DEPARTMENT: Anne Pearse, Production Assistant; Jerry Moore, Covers and Design Consultant; Tom Staebler, Divider Pages Consultant; Paul Davis, Advertising Art Director. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT: Kathy Bentley, Sherril Cooper, Liz Cupp, Lynn Frankie, Diana Javellana, Ann Kaiser, Karin Spaulding, Kathy Strayer, and Nancy Winkler, Office Assistants; Gary Gribben, Distribution Manager; Gordon Allen, Capper Grant, Distribution Staff; Joe Godfrey, Advertising Manager; Gary O ' Neal, Tim Vaughan, Advertising Staff; Janice Mendenhall, Sales Manager; Gordon Allen, Brian Bauerle, Scott Brown, Susan Diehl, Beverly Drier, Carol Eubank, Susan Farley, Lynn Frankie, Barbara Gyu- lavics, Susan Hayes, Punky Hemphill, Patti Hiller, Leslee Huttie, Diana Javellana, Richard Jones, Ann Kaiser, Nancy Ketchum, Judy Long, Sandra McAllister, Nancy Morgan, Donna Mortiz, Roby Ogan, Susan Paproth, Mickey Pasano, Susan Saindon, Rick Shaffer, Jeanne Small, Mary Lou Smith, Suzanne Steuri, Andrea Tobin, Susan Trottman, Sharon Watson, Jack Weiss, and Nancy Winkler, Sales Staff; Tom Simpson, Pictures Scheduler; Karin Spaulding, Pictures Sec- retary; Sallie Lillard, Senior Pictures Manager; Sheila Wiseman, Organization Pictures Manager; Suzanne Saffels, Living Groups Pictures Manager; Gwen Beamer, Capper Grant, Patti Hiller, Bill Kissel, and Linda Putnam, Living Groups Pictures Staff. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT: Doug Mackey, Copy Editor; Renetta Engles, University Life Editor; Bob Butler, Judy NIcGhee, Theatre Editors; Bev Gray, Index Editor; Larry Fogleman, Sports Editor; Rob Sturdy, Party Pix Editor; Drew Anderson, Ted Gardiner, Linda Kerby, and Anne Pearse, Editorial Assistants; Shelley Bray, Barb Newsom, Maggie Ogilvie, and Larry O ' Neal, Assistant Copy Editors; Tina Beggs, Scott Brown, Bill Brun- ing, Diane Childers, Bill Coughlin, George Fletcher, Tricia Haggart, Mike Horner, Lynn Johnson, Fred Krebs, Larry Lee, Sandy McAllister, Karen McCarthy, Ron Sable, Hank Waeckerle, Chuck Waldron, and Rusty Wells, Writers; Jama King, Patsy McConwell, and Judy Stout, Index Assistants; Kay Adams, Susan Diehl, Jane Doll, and Janet Kipfer, Secretarial Staff. PHOTOGRAPHIC DEPARTMENT: Paul Bock, Charles Buck, Ray Kopsa, Randy Leffingwell, Mike Okun, Toni Tschappat, and Rick Wrigley, Assistant Photographers; Dave Young, Special Work; Estes Studio, Jayhawker Photog- rapher; Orval Hixon, Special Portraits. Resisting the temptation to cut class on a rainy morning, a coed crosses deserted jayhawk Boulevard. Victorious Jayhawk basketball players cut down a net while Porn Pon girls lead an ex- uberant crowd in cheers following the victory over Louisville in the NCAA regional playoffs. Frosh Hawks stimulate pre-game enthusiasm before the KSU contest in Allen Field House. GREEKS 237 iNt ' s 44:.sit S1 -4:, lyxf, ' 4, x A ,i At ' k ' . -. - 7.T., ' ,V-+ ,,ti..1-r. )-...k ..--.?. , :,0 ' :!? .,:..:-: ..., .C. :1.s;4. ' 4 f,...;,4tic;t:, ., .....:,.: s?kti.:4--4,1.4.:-4kifie ' ' 4 % %; : I+ IX fc.1 ' ,,`,:es.7-A!v4,-,..-,t,= ' Iv:to ' i4,!._. Si.4. 4 :.:.et ' i.E..V ,,,, ,,,Iit tt-: ,i:-..-)1 , -;$:.v ' ' ' W:,:1 7 1 ' i . A 1,...,-.1. ' -,r,.. ,... : ; -.ri .31. l4 ' 7t4. y .t_,r,,, ? ' ..i ' - .r; ' s ' . - ' ' 4 q,I,V,r--1 kti...7 ;. ; ' !.!,Z A ' ' ' ' it. ;- ' ' 1.A:441;s ie. ' f .f.1, A:1144T, 41. 4 N, s.. ' ' ...;;; .. ' ; ' , ... ,, . .- ., ., ' CP :. . .. . , , , . f;t:Z,v,,,,,,. ... . , .., 241 4 ' ' r.-ii-11-1 . ' ,. ,, Greeks AT A STEAK-AND-BEANS SCHOLARSHIP DINNER, Alpha Chis talk about grades, steak, beans, and clothes. 240 Greeks Fraternities and sororities operate as total living groups. As such they attempt to integrate the scho- lastic, social, and functional aspects of university life, while encouraging the participation of all members in house operations and activities. Fraternities house freshman and upperclassmen alike, with the former constituting the largest number of members. Because freshmen and upperclassmen alike, with the former as a rule comprise the largest single group of active Greek women. Both groups count a higher percentage of senior members than do most other types of or- ganized living groups on the Hi11. All houses are privately owned corporate bodies associated with a larger national organization. Al- though they come under the social regulation of the University, their affairs are basically their own re- sponsibilities. Periodically, however, houses may ask KU for help, and it usually has been recognized as desirable to maintain close contact with KU officials in the major areas of Greek endeavor. MEMEL= FILECLLI , LiJIZL PLUG LEM. =IL ,ELLLEZZILLLELE LULL =LULU RELECEELEZENE LEFT AND RIGHT. A Monday DU chapter meeting and a Wednesday evening Pi Phi dress dinner are parts of the weekly Greek schedule. 241 Residents Members of fraternities and sororities comprise only a small percentage of the over 14,000 students at KU. Approximately 1,800 of the nearly 9,000 men on the Lawrence campus are associated with the Greek way of life. An even smaller proportion of the KU coeds are affiliated with the system, as about 900 women are housed in sororities. Twenty-seven national fraternities and one colony dot the Mount Oread layout. While the percentage of men who are Greeks has been a fairly constant 18% over the past few years, this effects considerable numerical growth due to the continually increasing KU enrollment. Most fraternity houses are maintained at full capacity throughout the school year, with groups ranging in size from the smallest of 20 members to the largest of 108 affiliates. The average fraternity house size is a 65-man capacity structure. The chapters annually fill vacancies arising from the graduation of seniors through their extensive rush- ing programs. Men become Greeks only through a mutual-choice system, that of a man choosing the fraternity he wants most to join and the men of that fraternity inviting him into membership, first as a JOHN REED CONGRATULATES pledge Pete DiGiovanni at the Phi Phis ' September Yell-In. J 242 Greeks pledge and then as an active. Last summer and fall prospective KU freshmen were approached by frater- nity members and given the opportunity to choose their fraternity membership. Over 400 were pledged during summer rush activities. Of the 632 rushees participating in September formal rush, 200 were pledged by the 28 houses. Approximately 15% of KU ' s undergraduate women belong to the 13 sororities. Although rushing in a more restricted time period with procedures differ- ing considerably from the fraternity pledging methods, sororities likewise pledge members through a mutual- choice arrangement. Two large formal rush sessions were held this year during which sorority women made bids to prospective sisters. Nearly 300 fresh- man women pledged during the large spring rush period, while only 70 accepted pledge pins in the fall rush session. In the future, sorority rush procedure will restrict rushing during the academic year to trans- fers and upperclass women. Freshman women will no longer participate in rush; rather, sophomores will be pledged prior to each fall semester. DELTA TAU DELTA and Gamma Phi Beta pledge classes take advantage of a warm March evening to hold a woodsie function. 243 Both fraternities and sororities come under the reg- ulation of the university in all phases of their opera- tions. The Dean of Students, through an assistant to the Dean of Men, works with individual fraternities and the Interfraternity Council to promote harmony between Greek men and the administration. Although the IFC is the governing body for fraternities, the uni- versity acts as the overall supervisor any action taken by the IFC requires ultimate approval by KU officials. The Panhellenic Council, while primarily concerned with promoting co-operation among the thirteen sorori- ties, likewise works with an advisor from the Dean of Women ' s staff to uphold university policies. A housemother within each living group performs a variety of functions, planning menus, hiring waiters and cooks, helping to organize social functions, man- aging certain financial operations, and in general over- seeing the activities necessary for the day-to-day opera- tions of the house. Housemother selection is an internal function of each chapter, although ultimate approval is retained by the Dean of Students. The Deans of Men and Women both meet periodically with house- mothers for guidance and counseling, and the dis- cussion and solution of house problems as they arise. DURING ONE OF SEVERAL CARD SESSIONS held weekly, four Greek housemothers concentrate on their bridge game. 244 Greeks Scholarship Fraternity and sorority overall GPA ' s consistently rank above the all-university averages for several reasons. To pledge a sorority, a woman must have a 1.20 GPA. While fraternities generally do not es- tablish minimum pledging requirements, they, like sororities, do set academic standards for initiation purposes. Most fraternities introduce their younger members to KU academic life through pledge training systems which emphasize a program of study hours. Sororities, which do not house freshmen and thus do not face the problem of helping members adjust to university academics, do not maintain as rigid a study program. A scholarship chairman in each house is responsible for motivating the entire group, both to maintain a study atmosphere of quiet hours within the house, and to spend more time individually on the books. Scholarship committees and file systems often are available to augment the chairman ' s work. The re- sult of such efforts are significant for several groups five fraternities last year ranked number one in their organizations ' national competition. Sigma Chis Dave Peters and Dave McClain go through house files, an integral part of the scholarship programs in many Greek living groups. BOTTOM. Linda Gill, Mary Lou Paulsen, and Alice Henry compare study notes and ideas at the Theta house. 245 Activities KU Greeks have traditionally played a significant role in the area of extracurricular activities, in spite of the fact that they constitute a relatively small per- centage of the total student body. The strength of such representation in activities is largely due to the fact that, while the various Greek organizations differ radically in many respects, they are unified in their support of participation in extracurricular activities. Most houses elect or appoint an officer whose job it is to provide information about activities to members and to encourage their participation. Nearly all major campus activities draw on Greek organizations for members and leaders, including Student Union Ac- tivities, student government, student publications, and special activities such as Rock Chalk Revue. Greek influence is likewise evidenced by the fact that al- though Greeks remain in the minority of the student body, as a whole they can boast a disproportionately large number of members in KU ' s three general honor societies Owl Society, Mortar Board and Sachem. Following an Easter Egg Hunt for underprivileged children of the Lawrence area, Pi Kappa Alphas and Alpha Delta Pis take the youngsters for a ride on the Pike fire engi ne. BOTTOM. AKL ' s and Alpha Chi Omegas warm up before their final Rock Chalk Revue dress rehearsal in Hoch Auditorium. 246 Happiness and surprise accompany the formal announce- ment of a double pinning at the winter DU Trophy Girl party. Burium. Tri Delts interrupt dinner at the Phi Delt house to announce their spring barn party and to present favors. Social The Greek concept of togetherness is carried into its social life through frequent parties. Themes range from Thanksgiving buffets, pledge class yell-ins, Turkey Pull, and Plantation Ball, to Fiji Island, Red Dog Inn, and Pinafore. Large parties, how- ever, form only the skeleton of the full body of Greek social life. Filling it in are pinnings and the accom- panying lakings, serenades, and parties; pledge class hour dances with hall floors and sorority pledge classes; Christmas tree-trimmings, caroling, and or- phans ' parties; and the usual woodsies, barn parties, and sand bars. Numerous fraternity-sorority func- tions feature football, softball, and roller skating; beer- and-eggs breakfasts; and exchange dinners. Many houses have honorary little sister organizations which assist during rush, alumni, and social functions. A social chairman in each house is responsible for scheduling and organizing such events. Either ap- pointed by an executive council or elected by the chapter as a whole, this person is assisted by members of a social committee who attempt to obtain a house consensus on what kind of activities to plan. The social councils of Panhellenic and the IFC coordinate the work of individual chairmen between houses, establishing a general set of rules to be followed in carrying out most Greek social endeavors. 247 Greeks Athletics Athletics are an integral part of Greek life at KU. Most fraternities boast a number of varsity athletes, and all are represented extensively in the University ' s intramural programs. For sorority women, the oppor- tunities to participate are naturally limited, although coed activities with Greek men plus several intra- mural programs for women mean that they too take home their share of trophies. An intramural chairman within each house is re- sponsible for organizing teams, taking care of equip- ment, insuring that technical and health requirements for individuals ' participation are fulfilled, and keep- ing members aware of team standings and future events. While A teams are generally composed of the most outstanding fraternity competitors, all men are encouraged to take an interest in intramural ac- tivities. The result is twofold: Greeks consistently win a high percentage of Hill championships awarded each year; and the teamwork necessary for such com- petition establishes a unifying sense of competition and brotherhood which goes beyond the tangible facts of trophies and championships. PARTICIPATING IN THE FRATERNITY DIVISION of intramural volleyball competition, Delta Chi Dale Graham makes a return while teammate Charlie McCauley watches. 248 Greeks KAPPA SIGMA ACTIVES discuss house business at a chapter meeting, in a scene repeated each Monday evening in all Greek houses. 249 Governm The basic structure of the governing organizations of Greek living groups is the same, with slight varia- tions in each individual house. All initiated members compose the active chapter the legislative organiza- tion which meets once a week. Out of this group the officers ' Executive Council is formed to discuss policy matters and suggestions for the betterment of the house. Officers serving on this council usually in- clude the president, rush chairman, pledge trainer, treasurer, and other elected representatives. From the executive structure, some sort of committee system de- velops, with each committee in charge of an impor- tant phase of house activity. A Judicial Council or Disciplinary Board is also an integral part of most houses, enforcing the rules of its individual chapter. Each house is governed both by a set of bylaws established by its national organization, and by rules and regulations determined by the chapter itself, which more directly pertain to its particular needs at KU. All fraternities are members of the Interfraternity Council, and all sororities belong to the Panhellenic Council. The governmental and committee structures of these organizations are somewhat similar, and each deals with the problems concerning all Greeks. TOP. Meeting at the Delta Gamma house on a Monday evening, new DC pledges listen while an active discusses future AWS in- terviews and elections. BOTTOM. GREEK WEEK COMMITTEE. CHAIRMEN. Standing: Greg Milam, Kansas City; Jane Porter, Reading; Susie Langston, Springfield, Mo.; Mike Nail, Shawnee Mission; Dick Elliot, Shawnee Mission; Jim Nichols, Belle Plaine; Mary Lou Paulsen, Shawnee Mission; Sallie Lillard, Kenilworth, Ill.; Pat Davis, Colorado Springs, Colo. Seated: Dave Harrington, Shaw- nee Mission; Dave Ingalls, Marblehead, Mass.; Pam Lebo, Leawood; Charlie Hays, Albert; Jim Renier, Overland Park; Jerry Barney, Calgary, Alta., Canada; Deanell Reece, Scandia; Bill Jackson, Shawnee Mission; Carol Walker, Shawnee Mission; Pete Woodsman, Shawnee Mission. Not pictured: Sharon Mahood, Springfield, Mo.; Patty Jeserich, Shawnee Mission; Doug Malcolm, Springfield, Mo.; Sarah Turner, Wheaton, Ill.; Sheila Pullen, Lawrence; Diane Seaver, Prairie Village. 250 Greeks Panhellenic Council EXECUTIVE BOARD. Ann Allsbury, Wichita; Trish Cowan, Junction City; Jo Lee, Kansas City; Christi Lee, Florissant, Mo.; Terry Beach, Hays; Glenda Hord, Kansas City; Vicki Mathews, Leawood; Jami Wilkerson, Overland Park; Sharon Wells, Winfield. Not pictured: Deanell Reece, Scandia; Shirley Bruce, Gardner. The Collegiate Panhellenic Association, representing the University ' s thirteen sororities, strives to maintain fraternity and interfraternity life on a high plane. It works with KU ' s administration to promote under- standing among students and serves as a forum for discussion of problems of sorority women. It also pro- motes high standards of scholarship and establishes policies concerning rush, pledging, and initiation. Pan- hellenic is composed of seven councils, comprised of the presidents, pledge trainers, rush chairmen, schol- arship chairmen, standards chairmen, social chairmen, and pledge class presidents of each house. The principal action of Panhellenic this year was to change to a sophomore deferred rush system, with only one major rush period each year. Other ac- tivities included the establishment of a new colony, Alpha Epsilon Phi, and Panhellenic ' s representation on several Greek Week committees. Officers also at- tended a Big Eight Panhellenic convention in Boulder, Colorado. PANHELLENIC PRESIDENTS COUNCIL. Top row: Diane Steed, Hutchinson; Vicki Mathews, Leawood; Anne Bounton, Franklin, Ohio; Anne Jennings, Wichita. Second row: Gwynn Jennings, Bartlesville, Okla.; Linda Maher, Hinsdale, Ill.; Glenda Hord, President, Kansas City; Judith Faust, Memphis, Tenn.; Jean Evans, Bartlesville, Okla. Bottom row: Sherry Buchanan, Topeka; Sharon Wells, Winfield; Jeanie Burgardt, Des Moines, Ia.; Marcia Bunn, Bartlesville, Okla. Not pictured: Jami Wilkerson, Overland Park. 251 Interfraternity Council COUNCIL EXECUTIVE OFFICERS present a $3,000 check from the IFC to Frank Burge, Director of the Kansas Union, to be used in financing the modification of the Union ' s Centennial Room. For years, fraternity critics have forecast the death of fraternities because of their inability to adapt to a changing educational world. Yet, it has been this very ability to adapt which has distinguished KU ' s fraternity system, and which must continue if frater- nities are to stay a healthy and vital part of the uni- versity community. The Interfraternity Council, as the governing body of KU ' s 28 fraternities, has the responsibility for laying a foundation for this growth. Its diverse activities, therefore, fall within the two primary goals of fraternity leadership: to maximize the educational experience for each fraternity member, and to perpetuate the system. Activities of the IFC may be loosely categorized EXECUTIVE COUNCIL AND COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN. standing: John Van Speybroeck, Wichita; Chip Rouse, Shawnee Mission; Pete Woodsrnall, Shawnee Mission; Jim Renier, Overland Park; Chuck Stewart, Shawnee Mission; Bill Bruning, Shawnee Mission; Charles Waldron, Kansas City, Mo. Seated: Dave Robinson, Leawood; Martin Holmer, Wichita; Ken Whitenight, Lawrence; George Fletcher, Sylvania, Ohio; Ron Sable, Kansas City, Mo.; Bill Coughlin, Wellsville; Bob Swinney, Bartlesville, Okla. 252 Greeks HOUSE PRESIDENTS AND IFC OFFICERS discuss fraternity affairs over Sunday evening dinner preceding a Presidents Council meeting. into three broad functions. The first is the service function, which includes such activities as organizing and supervising rush and Greek Week. The IFC also appoints committees to examine various fraternity ac- tivities, sense out problems, and report back to the council. The second main function is communica- tions. This includes work not only between fraternities themselves, but also between the university, the corn- munity, and the various national fraternities. The third major function is research. It is the IFC ' s responsibility to keep up with changes within the fra- ternity and educational institutions, to evaluate them, and to suggest adjustment accordingly. To this end, the IFC restructured itself this year, setting up a Presidents Council separate from the Representative Council to deal with these problems. ON-CAMPUS Rusn CHAIRMAN PETE WOODSMALL reports to house representatives while Denny Taylor listens attentively. 253 A dvantages Although figures and honors proclaim KU Greeks to be among the best in the nation, such facts alone do not establish and perpetuate an outstanding. Greek system or chapter. The benefits of Greek life are often intangible to the individual who has not experienced them. Fraternities and sororities primarily attempt to bring a small living group atmosphere to academics. They therefore provide the individual Greek man or woman with an opportunity to build up close personal relationships with other students while identifying with a small homogeneous group. Composed of per- sons from. all walks of life and headed in all directions, the houses present their members with the chance to develop leadership qualities academically, athletically, and socially. For the most part the undergraduate actives carry on the chapters ' day-to-day operations. As a result, the often-heard terms of brotherhood and sisterhood define a sense of unity which, in. many ways, is unique with Greek houses. Within each group are students whose interest in each other goes beyond the world of university studies. Members share a desire to better both themselves and their chapter, and thus are less apt to acquire an overspe- cialized education emphasizing a one-sided approach to university life. MEMBERS OF KALLAY FILLEEANS, Alpha Kappa Lambda ' s little sister organization, conclude a Saturday morning function in Cen- tennial Park by awarding prizes to deserving AKL ' s. 254 Problems While each Greek chapter faces situations unique to its size, financial status, and membership orientation, several general problems face the Greek system as a whole. For fraternities, the rise of apartments and the advantages of both material facilities and freedom of conduct to be found therein mean that most houses must offer Greek men intangible reasons for living in. At the same time, the extreme diversity of in- terests interests which broaden as students grow older require chapters to liberalize their programs and policies. For upperclass Greek women who, for the most part, live in a house for three out of their four years, a failure to meet this challenge often results in an apathy towards sorority activities. Junior and sen- ior fraternity men, on the other hand, may choose the aforementioned apartment life, thus draining their houses of experienced leadership in future years. In functioning as total living groups and there- fore requiring the active participation of all members in a wide variety of chapter activities, fraternities and sororities are challenged to effectively integrate themselves with the academic side of university life. An apparent failure to do so, however, is often over- emphasized by critics of the Greek system who, for the most part, may view it as being socially oriented. Thus another very real problem facing Greeks is found in such an image while attempting to develop and better themselves from within, they must demon- strate to non-Greeks that their uniqueness as living groups is not to be found simply in a preoccupation with social and extracurricular activities. DISTANT APARTMENT COMPLEXES contrast with Greek houses whose upperclassmen are often attracted to the conveniences of apartment life. Spring Rush 1967 marked the beginning and an end: for 272 new pledges, it marked a beginning of a lifelong sorority affiliation, while for the KU Panhellenic Association it represented the final freshman deferred rush period. Rush actually began October 28-30, as KU ' s 13 sororities opened their doors to 793 rush registrants. This open house period benefitted both sorority members and rushees by decreasing the amount of time necessary for rushing between semesters, and by providing the opportunity for each to become acquainted with the other. On February 1, approximately 400 women began the invitational process. Three days of invitational parties culminated February 4 with rushees signing preference cards. All that was left was the evening of February 6, when pledge announcements were made. Pledging ceremonies the following night offically added 272 new members to the Greek System, compared with last year ' s 298. Sorority members had rushed with the knowledge that the next major rush period would not take place until fall 1968, one and a half years away. In the weeks prior to Spring Rush, the Panhellenic Council voted to adopt a program of Sophomore Deferred Rush, in the hopes of creating a stable rush system. In actuality, Sophomore Deferred Rush had been in practice 10 years previously at KU, and was discontinued as the university experi- enced enrollment increases and ensuing housing shortages. Now, university conditions permitted a return to the former rush system. Fall 1967 will again see a short Fall Rush for transfers and previously unqualified KU upperclasswomen, but there will be no formal rushing activity during the academic year. The 1968 Fall Rush will incorporate as rushees both transfers and KU upperclasswomen, the majority of whom will have just completed their freshman year. Through this process, the Pan- hellenic Association hopes to decrease rushing during the academic year, facilitate an integral pledge education program, and thereby establish a more stable rush procedure for KU women. ALPHA CHI OMEGA. Top row: Pook Coolidge, Omaha, Nebr.; Shirley Noble, Topeka; Pat McNinch, Mission; Claire Ditchfield, Florissant, Mo.; Vikki Valentine, Clay Center; Linda Rinsch, Piqua, Ohio; Susan C. Hayman, Plymouth, Mich.; Betty Correll, Tulsa, Okla. Second row: Lee Aim Spivey, Wichita; Kathryn Jean Hill, Ottawa; Pain Lundgren, Julesburg, Colo.; Kathy Richey, Erie; Toni Mee, Overland Park; Betsy Varney, Leawood; Cheryl Walker, Wichita. Bottom Cheryl Mansur, Frontenac, Mo.; Julie Reed, Madison, N.J.; Delrayne Shaw, Arkansas Rebecca Massey, Olathe; Sue Lohoefener, Overland Park; Vicki Willoughby, Overland Park. Not pictured: Sherry Roy, San Francisco, Calif.; Susan Elliot, Liberal. 256 ALPHA DELTA Pl. Top row: Mary K. Knabe, Shawnee Mission; Anne Jordan, Kansas City; Susan K. Leekband, Salina; Susan Brown, O ' Fallon, Ill.; Cece Starnes, Wichita; Vickie L. Randazzo, Shawnee Mission; Suzanne Cherot, Independence; Mary Lees, Kansas City, Mo. Second row: Karla V. Kolins, Hobbs, N.M.; Cheri A. Salomon, Wichita; Connie Baker, Kirkwood, Mo.; Joey O ' Neill, St. Louis, Mo.; Mary P. Carson, Demarest, N.J.; Susan Plimpton, Kansas City; Melinda L. Waind, Leawood. Bottom row: Cheryl Kay Burnet, Oklahoma City, Okla.; Linda Hybarger, Independence; Linda Robeson, Galena; Cindy Kreuzberger, Overland Park; Sue Strejc, Raytown, Mo.; Susie Wassenberg, Topeka; Peggy Ashland, Rogers, Ark.; Jane Doll, Shawnee Mission. Not pictured: Mary Marshall, Topeka; Peggy Hundley, St. Louis, Mo. ALPHA GAMMA DELTA. Top row: Becky McLaughlin, London, Eng.; Cinde Shultz, Des Moines, Ia.; Paula French, Atchison; Pam Fankhauser, Lyons; Nancy Flint, Kwajalein, Marshall Islands; Sharon Wahlmeier, FIugoton. Second row: Suzan R. Akers, Fort Scott; Pam Gorsuch, Wichita; Judy Larson, Topeka; Francie Hall, Kansas City; Jaryl Ambler, University City, Mo.; Linda Arbuthnot, Shawnee Mission; Nancy Kaiser, Paola. Bottom row: Nancy Cox, Topeka; Nancy Pratt, Tulsa, Okla.; Anne Walker, Independence, Mo.; Kaylene Blythe, Uniontown; Dianne Bloomer, Collinsville, Ill; Pam Smith, Ottawa. Not pictured: Wanda Winemiller, Kansas City, Mo.; Mario Hirk, La Grange, Ill.; Zandra Sommer, St. Louis, Mo. ALPHA OMICRON Pl. Top row: Linda Louise Brown, Raytown, Mo.; Catherine Lehman, Glencoe, Ill.; Camilla M. Vine, Shawnee Mission; Car- olyn Anne Morrison, Salina; Sharla Strait, Topeka. Bottom row: Karen Sue Elledge, Mason City, Ia.; Margery G. Lodwick, Ia.; Ann Dunlap, Kirkwood, Mo.; Sheryl Wilson, Great Bend. 257 ALPHA PHI. Top row: Janet Nothnagel, Kansas City; Kim Freshwater, Ridgefield, Conn.; Dana Brekke, Leawood; Cathy Johnson, Leawood; Heather Joyce, Topeka. Second row: Susan Somers, Shawnee Mission; Sandra Cornell, Lincoln, Nebr.; Marcia Alderson, Lawrence; Sandy Cornett, Tulsa, Okla. Bottom row: Eileen Morris, Sheridan, Wyo.; Becky Herold, Great Bend; Irene Dunavan, Shawnee Mission; Nancy Herrick, Northfield, Ill. Not pictured: Debbie Robertson, Shawnee Mission; Cille Resnik, Whitewater; Carol Elliot, Kansas City; Diane Byer, Lyons; Julie Boutross, Shaw- nee Mission. CHI OMEGA.. Top row: Cindy Bartlow, Kansas City, Mo.; Laurie Davies, Park Ridge, Ill.; Joyce Goering, Moundridge; Rosemary Shields, Sa- lina; Lyn DuBois, Leawood; Kathy Reeder, Overland Park; Jane Fiebach, Wichita. Third row: Debbie Spurek, Shawnee Mission; Linda McCrerey, Washington, D.C.; Susan Diehl, Fort Scott; Nancy Oberg, Clay Center; Janet Merrick, Shawnee Mission; Marquis Ozias, Denver, Colo. Second row: Sally Viot, Leawood; Sue Reese, Lawrence; Karen Kittrell, Kansas City; Christine Cook, Glen Ellyn, Ill.; Lydia Kimbrough, Lawrence; Karen Vineyard, Marysville; Linda Dufek, Hutchinson. Bottom row: Cache Seitz, Fort Bragg, N.C.; LeAnn Stuewe, Lawrence; Carol Leek, Fort Scott; Sherri Heafley, Overland Park; Jodi Kunkel, Ft. Leavenworth; Pamela Matthey, St. Louis, Mo.; Pat Tidwell, Tulsa, Okla. Not pictured: Karen Bowers, Bonner Springs. DELTA DELTA DELTA. Top row: Charlotte Bentley, Tulsa, Okla.; Donna Marie Holmes, Overland Park; Susy Bohn, Overland Park; Paula Gibbons, Dwight, Ill.; Carol Schoenbeck, St. Louis, Mo.; Bekki Harris, Overland Park; Judy Johnston, Topeka. Second row: Judy Farley, Leawood; Judy Chaf- fee, Salina; Ann Graham, Emporia; Theresa Zellers, Kansas City; Virginia Wulfkuhle, Lawrence; Tommye Collier, Lawrence. Bottom row: Leslie Lay- man, O ' Fallon, Ill.; Becky Brackett, Leawood; Susan Long, Leawood; Judy Handley, Shawnee Mission; Susan Harris, Halstead. Not pictured: Patty Spenser, Overland Park; Beth McBride, Topeka; Judy Frey, Topeka; Nancy Strafer, Evanston, Ill. 258 0 DELTA GAMMA. Top row: Vickie Adams, Wichita; Barby Thomas, Pryor, Okla.; Pam Snook, Amarillo, Tex.; Ginny Longley, Chicago, Ill.; Kathy Delp, Topeka; Ellen Vance, Short Hills, N.J. Second row: Dian Deutsch, Hoisington; Paula Payne, Prairie Village; Sandy Andersen, Overland Park; Barb Linde, Wichita; Connie Zenor, Dighton; Meg Williams, Quincy, Ill.; Dale Simons, La Grange, Ill. Bottom row: Joyce Olson, Prairie Village; Karen Sehlapper, Prairie Village; Kathleen Davidson, Evanston, Ill.; Debbie Waltz, Quantico, Va.; Leslie Ann McElfresh, Osage City; Leslie Page Jenne- wein, Webster Groves, Mo. Not pictured: Elyse Winiek, Hollywood, Fla.; Joyce Brownlee, St. Louis, Mo. GAMMA PHI BETA. Top row: Linda L. Rainbolt, Prairie Village; Patricia L. Arnold, Kansas City; Lair MacLean, Mission; Patsi Murphy, Con- way Springs; Paula Cornett, Lawrence; Pam Castor, Kansas City; Linda Hughes, Western Springs, Ill. Second row: Christy Bell, Kansas City; Pam Poynter, Blairstown, Mo.; Ann Willems, Lawrence; Alice Townsley, Russell; Jane Gochnauer, Prairie Village; Paula Forsyth, Medicine Lodge. Bottom row: Mary J. Tudor, Shawnee Mission; Reagon O ' Neill, Overland Park; Meridee Lynn Phillips, Overland Park; Cathy Gibson, Kansas City; Barb Blee, Bonner Springs. Not pictured: Barbara Nash, La Grange, Ill.; Kathy McElroy, Wichita; Linda Walker, Edina, Minn.; Brenda Miller, Ft. Leavenworth. KAPPA ALPHA THETA. Top row: Nancy Miller, Shawnee Mission; Mary Mills, Topeka; Debby Begel, Shawnee Mission; Karen Cochran, Wich- ita; Mary Holman, Leawood; Kackie Baer, Lawrence; Kathy Dawson, Russell. Second Karna strum, Shaker Heights, Ohio; Karen Frick, Over- land Park; Susan Sheldon, Leavenworth; Connie Miller, Wichita; Nancy Hardin, Lincoln, Nebr.; Loni Sumptee, Tulsa, Okla. Bottom row: Linda Lemons, Topeka; Connie Mason, Arkansas City; Debbie Youngstrom, Des Moines, Ia.; Judy Jarrell, Shawnee Mission; Sue Paffenbach, Shawnee Mission. Not pictured: Cindy Houtman, Shawnee Mission; Laurie MacDonald, Winnetka, Ill. 259 L KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA. Top row: Sandy Hoyt, Kansas City, Mo.; Suzy Coffman, Stockton; April Walstad, Joplin, Mo.; Karen Humphreys, Ashland; Janie Thayer, Hutchinson; Jane Lindquist, Kansas City; Cindy Barrett, Ft. Leavenworth. Second row: Marti Stewart, Vancover, Canada; Molly Glover, Shawnee Mission; Pans Pratt, Topeka; Mary Senecal, Wichita; Jeanne Safford, Boulder, Colo.; Anne Putnam, Salina. Bottom row: Carol Hinshaw, Wichita; Susan Brimacombe, Kansas City, Mo.; Diane Wiksten, Topeka; Jennifer Cladcr, Winnetka, Ill.; Jeanne Hawley, Leawood. Not pictured: Beth Lindquist, Wichita; Nancy Elder, Topeka; Kathy Pirtle, Wichita. PI BETA PHI. Top row: Rogene Pfuctze, Overland Park; Cathy Lee Zimmerman, Kirkwood, Mo.; Linda Briery, Topeka; Lynn Moore, Tulsa, Okla.; Beth Fontron, Topeka; Ann Dreher, Salina; Sara Allison, Topeka; Sally Stark, Lawrence. Second row: R. Lynne Birncy, Miami, Fla.; Pamela Russell, Iola; Donna Jahn, Leavenworth; Barbara Mize, Atchison; Judy Underwood, Lawrence; Linda Tate, Shawnee Mission; Tricia Haggart, Salina. Bottom row: Elizabeth A. Barnes, Kenilworth, Ill.; Christine Walker, Shawnee Mission; Nancy Southern, Ellinwood; Diane Meyer, Hutchinson; Nancy Wither- spoon, Kansas City, Mo.; Gay Gordon, Wichita; Jane Foss, Great Bend. SIGMA KAPPA. Top row: Judy Winsor, Perry; Carol Shantz, St. Louis, Mo.; Janet Kipfer, Leawood; Carol Hoover, Mission; Cindi Willis, Over- land Park; Terry Knowles, Bloomfield Hills, Mich. Second row: Gloria Moss, Shaker Heights, Ohio; Jennifer Riley, Evanston, Ill.; Cheryl Miller, Salina; Carol May, Shawnee Mission; Cindy Miller, Florissant, Mo.; Cindy Van Slyck, Topeka; Kathy McConnell, Kansas City, Mo. Bottom row: Pamela Budd, Emporia; Barbara Deetjen, Clay Center; Janet Hetherington, Winfield; Suzie Bear, Wichita; Harriet Franks, Kansas City; Kay Kauffman, Kansas City, Mo. 260 Alpha Chi Omega Alpha Chi Omegas found time for campus activities and scholastic honors, in addition to making plans for their new house to be constructed next summer. Alpha Chis donated toys to underprivileged children during a Christ- mas tree-trimming party, and they sponsored a foreign exchange student from Chile. Teamwork with Alpha Kappa Lambda won the 1967 Rock Chalk Revue for Just Clown- ing Around. The women also found time outside such group efforts to be active in AWS, as a fashion board representative and the House of Representatives treasurer; on the ASC as a secretary and as a sorority representative; in the KU-Y cabinet and as a co-editor of the KU-Y Jay- hawker; as a member of Mortar Board; as Panhellenic treasurer; and as a rush counselor. Alpha Chis played different roles at the Dog-Patch Party, at a barn party in November, and at the Pink Champagne Formal in May. Christmas and Thanksgiving banquets and mothers ' and fathers ' week ends likewise helped make the year com- plete. Athletic Alpha Chis bowled their way to a first place bowling team trophy in the spring of 1966. For the third consecutive year, the KU chapter won the Lyre Trophy, an annual Alpha Chi Omega Award given by their national magazine. Next year members hope for continued success in their new chapter house to be built on Emery Road in West Hills. A SIX-PACK OF ALPHA CHIS recuperate after their Christmas banquet. Top row: Pennie Hutton, Lenexa; Cheri Thomas, Salina; Kathy Sanders, Lawrence; Sue Meredith, St. Joseph, Mo.; Linda Bell, Atchison; Arlette Klaric, Independence, Mo.; Linda Urba, Leawood; Julie Belsaas, Western Springs, Ill.; Leslie Martyn, Clay Center; Loretta Jones, Plymouth, Mich.; Nancy Jones, Pittsburg. Fifth row: Ginny Dow, Omaha, Nebr.; Joni Robertson, Bloomington, Ind.; Jeanne Hathaway, Louisville, Ky.; Kathy Carmitchel, Shawnee Mission; Nancy Bell, Colchester, Ill.; Lucretia Noyes, Deerfield, Ill.; Valarie Aeschleman, Hoisington; Clara Hartley, Atwood; Nancy Sanders, Lawrence; Linda Bauman, Kansas City, Mo. Fourth row: Pamela J. Butterworth, Wilmette, Ill.; Mona Hobson, St. John; Mary Ann Weaver, Webster Groves, Mo.; Linda Brainerd, Independence, Mo.; Kris Ledford, Columbus, Ohio; Linda Panrosa, Liberal; Cindy Karp, Kansas City, Mo.; Candace Sue Cole, Coffey- ville; Cindy Brewer, Mount Hope. Third row: Barbi Brooks, Leawood; Janet Marshall, Atchison; Joyce Lowry, Great Bend; Barbie Clarke, Clarendon Hills, Ill.; Jaye, Grist, Wichita; Mary Kim Buckley, Atchison; Rosie Burns, Caldwell; Susan Trottman, Kirkwood, Mo.; Lynn Jerner, Kirkwood, Mo.; Janice Kay Gray, Springfield, Mo. Second row: Tanzy Roberts, Leawood; Jennie Rector, Lawrence; Mary Lou Cowan, Springfield, Mo.; Nancy Ma- loney, Lawrence; Lorna Tripp, Bella Vista, Ark.; Nan Sois, Wichita; Jean Wright, Ottawa; Carol Gurley, Kirkwood, Mo.; Laurie Streib, Lawrence. Bot- tom row: Joy Chatlain, Shawnee Mission; Gini Bliesner, Lawrence; Bev Goodfellow, Cincinnati, Ohio; Bonnie Stenzel, Ness City; Mrs. G. D. Darnell, housemother, Great Bend; Jami Wilkerson, Overland Park; Jessie Lyon, Alton, Ill.; Donna Naylor, Kansas City, Mo.; Linda Lueders, Independence, Mo.; Beverly Braun, Mission. 261 Alpha Delta Pi After winning the mixed division of Greek Week Sing, Alpha Delta Pis put up homecoming decorations, and at- tended teas to welcome their new housemother, to introduce the house ' s new pledges, and to celebrate Christmas. ADPi ' s joined, participated, and presided in Hill activities honor- rary societies such as Mortar Board, the AWS Fashion Board, Angel Flight, Mu Phi Epsilon, Pi Lambda Theta, Gamma Alpha Chi, Theta Sigma Phi, and Delta Phi Delta all counted ADPi ' s among their members. Scholas- tic activities included participation in language institute programs, and several women received academic scholar- ships. ADPi ' s were members of such organizations as Ski Club, Gun Club, Tau Sigma, and the little sister or- ganizations of TKE, AKL, Lambda Chi, Triangle, Phi Kappa Tau, Theta Chi, and Phi Kappa Sigma; and three were finalists in the Miss Lawrence pageant last year. The Model UN secretary-general this spring was an ADPi as was a Pom-Pon girl, an honorary executive officer of Per- shing Rifles, the Panhellenic vice-president, Quack Club ' s president, a Best-Dressed Coed finalist, a Greek Week co-chairman, and the top woman bowler on the Hill. The ADPi ' s were likewise busy with their social activities: the Frontier party, the Christmas buffet, and the Black Diamond dinner and dance. CLEVERLY DISGUISED AS AN ADPI and her date, this couple crashes the fall Frontier Party. Top row: Berta Banyard, Hutchinson; Ann Sullivan, Phillipsburg; Connie Sexton, Lawrence; Nancy Kapp, Leawood; Vivian Friesen, Hutchinson; Nancy Walters, Wichita; Marilyn McAmis, Kingsport, Tenn.; Sherry Hogan, Hutchinson; Diane Lindgren, Topeka; Dianne Tudor, Shawnee Mission. Fifth row: Shirley Gossett, Overland Park; Carol Sparnroft, Wichita; Laurel Lutz, Kansas City, Mo.; Susan Russell, Kansas City, Mo.; Kathy McDaniel, Overland Park; Louise Biller, Kansas City, Mo.; Jan Huebner, Shawnee Mission; Lois Jeanne ,Merkel, Webster Groves, Mo.; Roxanne Griesel, Shawnee Mission; Barbara Bruner, Shawnee Mission; Linda Smithmier, Prairie Village. Fourth row: Nancy Tramp, Kirkwood, Mo.; Nancy Atkinson, Caldwell; Sharyl Lee Keller, Prairie Village; Floy Ann Lambertson, Fairview; Cathy Boomer, Cornwall-on-Hudson, N.Y.; Sherry Monroe, Great Bend; Janet Ryan, Wichita; Nancy Obley, Junction City; Barb Oswald, Kansas City; Lynda White, Salina. Third row: Judy Cable, Cedar Vale; Ruth Unzicker, Omaha, Nebr.; Linda Straub, Kansas City; Janet Haley, Overland Park; Tessa Reese, Kansas City, Mo.; Lynn Frankie, Overland Park; Elaine Moore, Hays; Camille Ebaugh, Lindsborg; Penny Miles, Phillipsburg. Second rote: Joyce Anderson, Kansas City; Susan Wynne, Upper Saddle River, N.J.; Pattee Cahill, St. Louis, Mo.; Linda Harmon, Wayne, Mich.; Sharon Cockrell, Houston, Tex.; Sara Gosney, Kansas City; Candy Crawford, Russell; Twila A. Griffee, Kansas City; Carmen Ervin, Wichita; Cydney Clutter, Lamed. Bottom row: Ruth Hatch, Davenport, Ia.; Mary Allan, Ralston, Nebr.; Sherry Knox, Omaha, Nebr.; Mary Lou Wood, Overland Park; Mildred Newsom, Topeka; Vicki Mathews, Leawood; Carol Hamm, St. Louis, Mo.; Kathie Heitz, Alton, Ill.; Diane Seaver, Leawood; Marilyn Mouden, Prairie Village. Not pictured: Sarah Turner, Wheaton, Ill.; Jayne Simon, Wichita; Joyce Dav is, Prairie Village; Marsha Baxter, Harrington; Sharon Mahood, Springfield, Mo. 262 Alpha Gamma Delta Following a year housed in an apartment complex and two months together in a residence hall, the Alpha Gamma Deltas moved into their new house at 2005 Stewart in October. After only two years on the KU campus, the sorority boasted participants in almost every hill activity. House members prominent in campus activities included the AWS House vice-president, an Angel Flight com- mander and the drill team captain, the secretary of the junior class, Cwen officers, the assistant business man- ager of Rock Chalk Revue, SUA and People-to-People committee chairmen, the treasurer of Phi Chi Theta, and a finalist in the Best Dressed Coed at KU contest. Alpha Gams also worked with International Club, the Jayhawker staff, the KU-Y, the ASC, AWS committeees and the Standards Advisory Board, the Panhellenic Executive Council, Kappa Phi, and the Physical Therapy Club. Their annual shoe shine put a large contribution in a fund for a retarded childrens ' center. The real team spirit was seen as the Alpha Gams got their tricycles in gear to win the Phi Psi 500 for the third consecutive year. Also quite active socially, the house was represented in six fraternity little sister organizations. The Christmas Yule Log Hunt, the Pledge Formal, and the spring Bar-B-Que highlighted house social functions. JEANNIE ROGERS PLAYS SANTA CLAUS at the Alpha Gams ' Yule Log Hunt. Top Mary Kaye Dial, Waco, Tex.; Martha Jones, Prairie Village; Barbara Lang, Tulsa, Okla.; Margaret Sampson, Topeka; Sandy Eisele, Lawrence; Jane Eager, Topeka; Laurie Hallock, London, England; Kay Pool, Kansas City; Sue Moore, Atchison. Fifth row: Pam Peterson, Moline, Ill.; Jane Roehrig, Leawood; Donna Mayfield, St. Joseph, Mo.; Sandy Medema, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.; Melinda Loin, Shawnee Mission; Gretchen Van Landingham, Excelsior Springs, Mo.; Nikki Cooper, Overland Park; Jo Ann Warrell, Kansas City; Nancy Middleton, Kansas City, Mo.; Nedra Hoy, Webster Groves, Mo. Fourth row: Jeannie Padden, Holton; Sharon Smith, Ottawa; Pam Achey, Paola; Eileen Ireland, Kansas City, Mo.; Pam Paton, St. Louis, Mo.; Marty Oliver, Kansas City, Mo.; Sherry Zarker, Topeka; Nancy Winkler, Kansas City; Gail Logan, Jacksonville, Fla. Third row: Ginger Purtle, Fort Scott; Barb Ma- chain, Shawnee Mission; Nancy Ridenour, Wayzata, Minn.; Mary Lee Adams, Kirkwood, Mo.; Nancy Brown, Arcadia; Sue Popkess, Sabetha; Mary Kay Edmonds, East Moline, Ill. Second row: Dianne Walter, Moline, Ill.; Mary Lou Smith, Parsons; Cathy Wilson, Lawrence; Patti Murphy, Shawnee Mis- sion; Nancy Diehl, Fort Scott; Mary Sampson, Topeka; Ann Kaiser, Hillsboro, N.C.; Kerry Glover, Chillicothe, Mo.; Julie Borel, Falls Church, Va. Bot- tom row: Beth Gast, Paola; Jennifer Speer, Wichita; Janis Haley, Topeka; Gwynn Jennings, Bartlesville, Okla.; Mrs. Esther Ament, housemother, Denver, Colo.; Barb Larson, Topeka; Sharon Lee Cobb, Garden City; Lynn Johnson, Des Moines, Ia.; Barb Erickson, Urbandale, Ia. Not pictured: Sherri Coleman, Prairie Village; Jackie De Voto, Kirkwood, Mo.; Jan Withers, Shawnee Mission; Sally Cannon, Birmingham, Mich.; Ann Kobler, Hill. City; Jeanne Spilker, Normandy, Mo.; Karen Gerred, Marshall, Mo.; Sandy Graham, Kansas City, Mo.; Jeanie Rogers, Hays; Maureen Crilly, Kansas City, Mo.; Sue Norris, Topeka. 263 Alpha Omicron Pi The Phi chapter of Alpha Omicron Pi celebrates another year through scholastic achievements, active participation in campus organizations, and social events. AOPi ' s dis- tinguish themselves with honors such as Phi Beta Kappa, Jay Janes, Kiwanis Club and U. G. Mitchell Mathematics scholarships, Mortar Board, National Science Foundation Research Grant, and Campus Talen t ' 67. Several members have been selected to go abroad to the German, French, and Spanish summer language institutes. The AOPi ' s this year are also hosting visiting Fulbright Scholar Heidren Eckert. Members active in campus organizations include the Panhellenic president, the Physical Therapy Club president, the Mu Phi Epsilon rush chairman, the UDK assistant managing editor, the president of Alpha Sigma Phi journalism honorary, and vice presidents of Sigma Alpha Iota and Gamma Alpha Chi. In campus activities the AOPi ' s won the first place trophy in the Campus Chest Fund Drive and second place in skits in the SUA Carnival. Their chapter philanthropic projects include Frontier Nursing Service and a money-raising project for Christmas kits to send to Marines in Vietnam. Social events for this year are the spring The Ruby and The Rose formal; the Fall Swinger, a combination picnic, hay- ride, and barn party; and the annual Christmas formal. Two COUPLES WELCOME AN OLD MAN with a long beard and funny-looking clothes who has suddenly appeared at the AOPi Christmas formal. I Top row: Elaine Patchin, Merwin, Mo.; Dianna Perry, Cabool, Mo.; Sherry Ralston, Shawnee Mission; Cherryl Hand, Phillipsburg; Sandy Bonacker, Lincoln, Nebr.; Carolyn Gile, Delphos; Yvonne Sutter, Leawood; Patricia Landaker, Kansas City, Mo.; Sue Bradon, Oklahoma City, Okla. Fifth row: Barbara Anderson, Kansas City; Carolyn Pike, Wichita; Heidrun Eckert, Wiesbaden, Germany; Carolyn Cunningham, Tulsa, Okla.; Linda Torcom, Evanston, Ill.; Dotty Ammon, St. Joseph, Mo.; Dance Ferguson, Chicago City, Minn.; Anne Perry, Coffeyville; Melba Jean Brine, Yates Center; Susan Pa- tricia Corson, Shawnee Mission. Fourth row: Nancy Johannsen, Kansas City; Sandra Moore, Olathe; Patti Hiller, Kansas City, Mo.; Janet Pruden, Hope, Ark.; Marilyn Becker, Leavenworth; Gloria Haut, Chicago Heights, Ill.; Linda Knight, Neodesha; Jeanene Wingate, Pretty Prairie; Peg Roller, Monmouth, Ill. Third row: Sandy Charvat, Wichita; Harriet Hickman, Arkansas City; Denyce Gammell, Liberal; Patricia Smith, Lawrence; Donna-Marie Viene, Shawnee Mission; Ronnie Nelson, Hinsdale, Ill.; Carol Sahlberg, Western Springs, Ill.; Janice Brenner, Parsons. Second row: Carolyn Mages, Ottawa; Suzanne Reid, Shawnee Mission; Connie Cooper, Lawrence; Suzanne Lee, Yates Center; Barbara Oughton, Winnetka, Ill.; Cheryl Simons, Topeka; Rita Rosander, Shawnee Mission; Shirley Williams, Olathe; Beverly Dreier, Kansas City. Bottom rose: Jane Walker, Hutchinson; Sara Bly, Arkansas City; Anne Lockhart, Wichita; Judith Faust, Memphis, Tenn.; Mrs. D. L. Anderson, housemother, Topeka; Janet Schlenker, Kansas City; Carolyn Givens, Kansas City; Barbara Springer, Shawnee Mission; Susan Moebus, Emporia. 264 Alpha P Whether working together or individually, the Alpha Phis have attained positions of leadership in a variety of campus organizations and activities. Last spring the Phis won the women ' s first-place trophy in Greek Week Sing, and later received national recognition for scholastic achievement. In the fall the chapter combined efforts with the Sig Eps in the Heart Fund Drive, and this spring they entered Rock Chalk with the Delta Chis. The chapter had representatives in the AWS Senate, on the AWS Fashion Board, and on the People-to-People, Angel Flight, WRA, and KU-Y Ski Club executive boards. Phis have also served as AWS and SUA committee chairmen, on the Greek Week Steering Committee, and on the Jay- hawker staff. The chapter included members of KU ' s varsity debate team, Jay Janes, Tau Sigma, Quack Club, KUOK, and six fraternity little sister organizations. Others were selected as Cwens; for art, music, and education honoraries; and for an NSF research grant. Last year an Alpha Phi was KU Relays Queen, and this year a member is KU ' s Best-Dressed Coed. The fall social calen- dar included Father ' s Night at the Red Dog, a High School Harry party, and a Christmas Dinner. Spring parties ranged from the Alpha Phi Fi Fo Fum, to the formal at the Muehlebach in Kansas City. ALPHA Pm HIGH SCHOOL DOLLIES rise head and shoulders above their dates at the fall High School Harry Party. Top row: Pat Coleman, Holton; Lorenda Powell, Coffeyville; Elaine Roberts, Topeka; Karen Nothnagel, Kansas City; Sarabeth Jones, Joliet, Ill.; Robin Coyner, Kansas City; Judy Taylor, Topeka; Jane Laughlin, Garden City; Deette Viseardi, St. Louis, Mo.; Janet Will, Memphis, Tenn. Fifth row: Myrna Watts, Kansas City; Dee Davis, Norman, Okla.; Lynn Goodwin, St. Louis, Mo.; Judy Lindsey, Kansas City; Donna Reese, Salina; Linda Weeks, Shawnee Mission; Joyce Tinkler, Gypsum; Nancy Wheeler, Lawrence; Marlea Zimmer, Chappell, Nebr. Fourth row: Marsha Grothusen, Ellsworth; Janet Ross, Arkansas City; Tobi Jones, Ashtabula, Ohio; Marilyn Murphy, Dighton; Peg Rowans, Goodland; Valeree Carroll, Prairie Village; Sally Smith, St. Joseph, Ill.; Suzie Dowland, Jacksonville, Ill.; Cheryl Downing, Seneca; Susan Bumpass, Coffeyville. Third row: Meg Davis, Bellaire, Tex.; Dorothy Davis, Bel- laire, Tex.; Pam Lebo, Leawood; Cricket Appel, Webster Groves, Mo.; Nancy Hover, Overland Park; Linda Pedlar, Parsons; Judy Stout, Shawnee Mission; Judy Burr, Prairie Village; Emily Freeman, Troy, Ohio. Second row: Judy Kline, Wichita; Kay Mueller, Red Oak, Ia.; Pamela Dutt, Lawrence; Charlotte Bartelsmeyer, Fort Scott; Peg Haydon, Western Springs, Ill.; Carol Hays, Brisbane, Australia; Cille Resnik, Whitewater; Cheri England, Minneapolis, Minn.; Sharon Coberly, Dighton; Lanna J. Hentsch, Lawrence. Bottom row: Cecelia Jeanne Pollara, Oberlin; Beverly Rindt, Fredonia; Janet Fraser, Lamed; Diane Steed, Hutchinson; Margarette Tillotson, housemother, Norton; Carol Paul, Miltonvale; Marianne Tinkler, Gypsum; Terry ' Pippin, Prairie Village; Alice Rice, Kansas City. Not pictured: Marge Kratdchvil, Jefferson City, Mo.; Kathy Hutton, Mount Hope; Jody Longley, Chicago, Ill.; Linda Elliot, Greensburg. 265 Chi Omega The Chi Omegas combined house and individual campus activities with social functions and service projects in their sixty-fourth year at KU. They won the sorority booth division of the SUA Carnival and the sorority division of the 1966 Homecoming Decoration competition. Combin- ing with the AKL ' s, they won last year ' s presentation of Rock Chalk Revue, and thi s year entered with Sigma Phi Epsilon. Recognition to KU ' s Best Dressed Coed, the Out- standing Woman in Political Science, and the Outstand- ing Senior Woman, plus the Veta B. Lear Award, were all granted to members of Chi Omega last spring. Chi O ' s this year served as presidents or chairmen of the follow- ing organizations: Panhellenic Council, the KU-Y, the AWS Fashion Board, and the SUA Carnival. In addition, members were active in the Jayhawker, Mortar Board, Cwens, Little Sisters of Minerva, Angel Flight, and the Students Abroad Program. Rounding out their busy sched- ules, they participated in several social functions the fall Pirate Party, the Christmas Buffet, and the spring Bum- Bum party. Other special functions were held for the Chi Omegas ' families, including a Fathers ' Weekend, a Mothers ' Weekend, and a Brother-Son Banquet. The Christmas Orphan Party, an annual event for local underprivileged children, was their featured service function. EVERYONE BUT THE BUDWEISER DISTRIBUTOR gets into the act at the Chi 0 Bum-Bunt Party. Top row: Deedra Lucas, Chanute; Sally Thompson, Calgary, Alberta, Can.; Sally Ann Martin, Tulsa, Okla.; Sherrie E. Wales, Miami, Fla.; Helen Schwie- sow, Germantown, Wisc.; Mary Pringle, Kansas City, Mo.; Karen Howse, Prairie Village; Betina Beggs, Salina; Linda Metzler, Delmar, N.Y.; Jincy Young, Salina. Sixth row: Jane Porter, Miller; Connie Shaver, Lawrence; Karen Kemmerling, Hinsdale, Ill.; Mary Lynne Smart, Lawrence; Dianne Ratchford, Prairie Village; Sue Patrick, Shawnee Mission; Susan Weinlood, Hutchinson; Betty Hatton, Salina; Diana Thompson, Ballwin, Mo.; Kathy McCabe, Shaw- nee Mission; Collette Alley, Wichita. Fifth row: Virginia Hyndman, Wichita; Janet Friesen, Bubler; Jodi Leonard, Topeka; Linda Harrington, Terre Haute, Ind.; Gayle Carden, Kansas City; Pat Alloway, Fort Monroe, Va.; Kay Harris, Shawnee Mission; Nancy Keplinger, Overland Park; Joy Miller, Alma; Cilla Eichhorn, Galesburg, Ill. Fourth row: Missy Hills, Waterford, Conn.; Mickey Edell, Smith Center; Kathy Alexander, Pratt; Dai Edelen, York, Nebr.; Jayne Stickney, Dodge City; Bonnie Beisecker, Topeka; Patty Jeserich, Shawnee Mission; Alice White, Wichita; Judy LeBlond, Wichita. Third row: Sarah Bagby, Coffeyville; Janice Mendenhall, Wichita; Jennifer Nilsson, Chicago Heights, Ill.; Barb Hansen, Glen Ellyn, Ill.; Laurie Wedell, 0 ' - Fallon, Ill.; Cindy McCammon, Glendale, Mo.; Elizabeth Jensen, Kansas City; Lynne Kavina, Glencoe, Pat Leone, Lawrence; Ann Gallaher, Denver, Colo. Second row: April Phelps, Lawrence; Sheila Pullen, Lawrence; Dona Flory, Wichita; Linda Krell, Sioux Falls, S.D.; Laura Ruble, Leavenworth; Shirley Bonney, Leawood; Cindy Harris, Chanute; Beverly Lingenfelter, Prairie Village. Bottom row: Linda Few, Lyons; Pat Goering, Moundridge; Pam Bayless, Shawnee Mission; Carol Uhlig, Kansas City; Linda Maher, Hinsdale, Ill.; Mrs. Edwin Lowe, housemother, Chanute; Patty Gilliland, Hutchin- son; Glenda Hord, Kansas City; Barbara Hines, Olathe. Not pictured: Dena Smith, Shawnee Mission; Jurahee Lain, Springfield, Mo.; Parmelee Bates, New York City, N.Y.; Cindy Brown, Lawrence; Judy Wilder, Wadsworth, Ohio; Jeannie Opperman, Skokie, Ill.; Marnie Mohs, Shawnee Mission; Vicki Secrest, Colby; Julie Bocell, Kansas City; Dawna Adams, Great Bend; Jan Johnston, Dallas, Tex. 266 11 )e to Delta Delta This year the women of Delta Delta Delta won SMOP, mathematics, journalism, NSF research, and summer lan- guage institute awards. A member of Mortar Board, five Cwens, the senior class secretary, and the sophomore class treasurer headed a list of hill leaders which also in- cluded two ASC representatives, a freshman counselor, anti the presidents of Junior Panhellenic and Delta Phi Delta. Three Angel Flight members were officers and another was KU ' s Area Little Colonel nominee. Tri Delts presided over three fraternity little sister groups, and held memberships in five others. A Best-Dressed Coed finalist, the Sigma Chi Derby Day Queen, an Engineering Expo- sition princess, the Collegiate Young Republicans Queen, the SUA Carnival Queen, and the National Honey Queen also were Deltas. As committee chairmen, they organized the SUA reception and the Activities Carnival; the AWS SMOP and High School Leadership Day Programs; and ASC, senior class, College Bowl, and Rock Chalk activities. Others were active in the KU-Y Cabinet, the AWS Fashion Board, the Jayhawker, the Greek Column, Gamma Alpha Chi, Tau Sigma, Quack Club, the Model UN, Jay Janes, and People-to-People. A barn party with Gamma Phi Beta began the year socially, one filled with the Christmas Buffet, the Spring Square Dance, and a spring formal. TRI DELTS AND THEIR DADS build a father-daughter pyramid during a Fathers ' Weekend in October. Top row: Kay Willard, St. Louis, Mo.; Laura Kitchen, Shawnee Mission; Marsha Keller, Prairie Village; Tammy Foard, Prairie Village; Barbara Gist, Kansas City, Mo.; Boxy Lennard, Ottawa; Mary Lane Ladewig, Leawood; Julianne Bryant, Arkansas City; Pam Wilkinson, River Forest, Ill.; Jan KiPP, Dallas, Tex. Sixth row: Judy Long, Leawood; Maggie Ogilvie, Kansas City; Marti Elsen, Leawood; Ann Perry, Shawnee Mission; Jane Paddleford, Oak Park, Ill.; Judy Alleman, Bartlesville, Okla.; Elizabeth Cupp, Kansas City; Claudia Fincham, Pratt; Deena Fawcett, Neodesha; Nancy Swartz, Lawrence; Linda Wulfkuhle, Lawrence. Fifth row: Kathy Prewitt, Wichita; Carol Sue Stevenson, Leawood; Jean Larson, Salina; Jeanie Handy, Emporia; Gayle Kreutzer, Leavenworth; Karen Clingenpeel, Lawrence; Judy Sauls, Bartlesville, Okla.; Nancy Beck, Independence, Mo.; Lou Gossett, Glendale, Mo.; Marty Stitt, Prairie Village. Fourth Bambi Buck, Wichita; Virginia Treece, Lawrence; Beverly Gibbs, Kansas City; Jan Riley, Ft. Worth, Tex.; Linda Ewing, Independence; Marsha Griffith, Prairie Village; Sandy Schutte, Wichita; Kathy Bohn, Overland Park; P at Blackburn, Lagona Beach, Calif. Third row: Joanne Beal, Denver, Colo.; Janie Pine, Leavenworth; Mary Keswick, Clarendon Hills, Ill.; Cynthia Erhart, Lawrence; Joyce Yeck, Wichita; Judy King, Wichita; Georgia Thomas, Tucson, Ariz.; Kathy Bentley, Tulsa, Okla.; Jan Biggs, St. Louis, Mo.; Kitsy Waggoner, Kirkwood, Mo. Second rose: Nancy Ulmer, Lawrence; Jan Tureski, Camden, Ark.; Judie Ericson, Leavenworth; Nancy Matthews, Neodesha; Karen Vokracka, St. Louis, Mo.; Layne Dwyer, Raytown, Mo.; Annie Hamilton, Shawnee Mission; Andrea Sogas, Prairie Village; Clare Davis, Covington, La. Bottom row: Ruth Roberts, Kansas City, Mo.; Kathie Gardner, Atchison; Martic Mullen, Kalamazoo, Mich.; Jo Lee, Kansas City; Mrs. E. W. Wuthnow, housemother, Kansas City, Mo.; Anne Jennings, Wichita; Judy Stitt, Shawnee Mission; Spring Stidham, Park Ridge, Ill.; Lynn Payer, Wichita. Not pictured: Becky Wall, Kirkwood, Mo.; Marsha Golub, Kansas City; Sharon Davis, Salina; Jodi Loyd, Newton. 267 Delta Gamma Serving the community as well as participating in campus activities, Delta Gammas ' philanthropic projects included a party for blind Lawrence citizens, contributions to the Kansas School for the Blind in Topeka, and a multiple sclerosis drive. In campus activities Delta Gammas won second place for their SUA Carnival booth, and house intramural teams captured runner-up positions in Hill volleyball and basketball competition. DG ' s in top Hill positions were members of Mortar Board, Pi Lambda Theta, Sigma Delta Pi, Theta Sigma Phi, Cwens, the AWS Fashion Board, and the Student Advisory Board. The sophomore class treasurer, the secretary of the AWS Senate and a representative to the AWS Standards Board, the chairman of the Panhellenic social committee, the chair- man of ASC fall elections, a freshman residence hall senior assistant, and a Pom-Pon girl were all Delta Gammas. Two Watkins scholars and a recipient of a Carnegie Re- search Assistanceship paced house scholars. Socially, the DG Pinafore Party, at which the women wear little-girl dresses and give their dates hand-decorated sailor hats, high- lighted the spring calendar. Other social events for the year included a Christmas formal, a Halloween party for children of alumnae, and special weekends for mothers and fathers. READY To SET SAIL as Delta Gammas, new pledges don DG sailor hats and anchors. Top row: Sherril Cooper, Leawood; Nancy Morgan, Kansas City, Mo.; Nancy Richey, Denver, Colo.; Donna Giffin, Lawrence; Kathy Horton, Joplin, Mo.; Mary Parker, Des Moines, Ia.; Beverly Horton, Joplin, Mo.; Sue Dickens, Webster Groves, Mo.; Sue Kolman, St. Louis, Mo. Sixth row: Char Bowman, LaGrange, Ill.; Ann Appleton, Topeka; Barb Blattner, St. Louis, Mo.; Sharon Watson, Emporia; Nancee Coard, Albuquerque, N.M.; Marilyn Carter, Cleveland, Ohio; Micki Pasano, Kansas City, Mo.; Georgia Willard, Webster Groves, Mo.; Marta van Engelsdorp Gastelaars, Groningen, Holland; Carolyn Rainbolt, Prairie Village. Fifth row: Linda Putnam, Emporia; Beckie Fabian, Kansas City; Jana McDermott, Excelsior Springs, Mo.; Debbie Walcher, Wichita, Margie Porter, Shawnee Mission; Mimi Larson, Bartlesville, Okla.; Jan Vandeventer, Raytown, Mo.; Liz Harris, Lawrence; JoAnne Johnsmeyer, Mount Hope. Fourth row: Sara Lentz, Paola; Margo Grutzmacher, Onaga; Jayne Quimby, Shawnee Mission; Jill Silverman, St. Louis, Mo.; Linda Man- ley, Kansas City, Mo.; Diane Diven, Boron, Calif.; Judy Ferguson, Hutchinson; Donna Dietz, Kirkwood, Mo.; Jo Durand, Bartlesville, Okla.; Jan Maxwell, Columbus. Third row: Susan Hayes, St. Louis, Mo.; Gail Simmons, Glen Ellyn, Ill.; Carolyn Solum, St. Louis, Mo.; Debby Groves, Hiawatha; Peggy Fortenberry, Leawood; Paula Waxse, Oswego; Kathy Wyckoff, Kansas City; Barbara Shaeffer, Moberly, Mo.; Nicki McGuire, Chanute. Second row: Mary Dahl, Miami, Okla.; Jacki Kirk, Wichita; Marsha Grutzmacher, Onaga; Sandy Roberts, Lyons; Linda Morton, Lawrence; Nita Dilworth, Joplin, Mo.; Sue Tilton, Salina; Leslee Huttie, Shawnee Mission. Bottom row: Debby Pfautsch, Dallas, Tex.; Donna Polster, Wichita; Betsy Petering, St. Louis, Mo.; Anita Royer, Leawood; Mrs. Roger Blessing, housemoth er, Minneapolis, Minn.; Jean Evans, Bartlesville, Okla.; Judy Cady, Beloit; Vici Kampschroeder, Wichita; Ginny Harris, Pratt. Not pictured: Shani Wooton, Emporia; Mary Schorr, Normandy, Mo.; Pat Ireland, Overland Park; Bobbi Martin, Lea- wood; Diane Attebery, Kirksville, Mo.; Karen Poos, Chanute; Ann Allsbuty, Wichita; Barbara Collins, Shawnee Mission. 268 Gamma Phi Beta Living near the core of the campus, Gamma Phi Betas are to be found in the midst of campus activity. Scholas- tic success came when they won their national sorority ' s conference scholarship award for initiating the last two pledge classes, and when individuals received a Mortar Board position and Woodrow Wilson nominations. The Gamma Phis won Sigma Chi Derby Day for the third consecutive year, placed third in the Phi Psi 500, and took an honorable mention for Homecoming decorations. Soldiers in Viet Nam received Christmas kits from them, and underprivileged children ' s summer camps were fi- nanced partly through their contributions. Gamma Phis worked as the president of Pi Lambda Theta; as an ASC sorority representative; as a member of the Dean ' s Ad- visory Board; and as AWS senators, committee chairmen, and fashion board members. Others belonged to profes- sional sororities Sigma Psi, Theta Sigma Phi, and Alpha Sigma Phi or were Panhellenic rush counselors and ex- ecutive board members. A KU Best-Dressed Coed finalist, and queen finalists for the SUA Carnival, the Jayhawker, and KU ' s Homecoming also brought honors to 1339 West Campus Road. A barn party with the Tri Delts, caroling with ROTC, a kiddies ' party and a formal at Christmas, and a spring square dance likewise found them in the middle of KU life in this case, socially. DONNA SWOPE, KAY HOUSE, AND ELLEN WINKLED sing out at the Gamma Phi-Tri Debt November Barn Party. Top row: Bev Nelson, Great Bend; Jan McEwen, Kansas City; Valerie Bolton, Overland Park; Connie Myers, Newton; Anne Payne, Kansas City; Jan Baum, Dodge City; Sue Bailey, Whitewater; Jane Lukeman, Jacksonville, Ill.; Chris Conway, Las Vegas, Nev.; Susan Roper, Lawrence. Fifth row: Gay Curtiss, Hiawatha; Shan Robleder, Tulsa, Okla.; Linda French, Leawood; Carol Webber, Kirkwood, Mo.; Gale Griffin, Kansas City, Mo.; Valerie Hughes, Western Springs, Ill.; Jo Ann Lee, Watertown, Corns.; Susan Fischer, Kansas City; Sandy Rasmussen, Park Ridge, Ill. Fourth row: Sheila Murphy, Carmel, Calif.; Phyllis Alieksaites, Shawnee Mission; Ann Miller, Platte City, Mo.; Connie Carney, Mattoon, Ill.; Cindy Cole, St. John; Lorraine Boring, Wichita; Polly West, Chappaqua, N.Y.; Jane Waggoner, Lawrence. Third row: Linda Morris, Ulysses; Vickie Anderson, Kansas City; Barb Elliott, Over- land Park; Linda Krogh, Lawrence; Dana Franklyn, Kansas City, Mo.; Becky Wilson, Kansas City; Penny Stebor, LaGrange, Ill.; Marti Leeson, Barring- ton, Ill.; Marty Wilson, Newport Beach, Calif. Second row: Carolyn LaBelle, Shawnee Mission; Marcy Sauer, Sioux Falls, S.D.; Gail Blackwell, Garden City; Stephanie J. Spyker, Lawrence; Ellen Winkler, Webster Groves, Mo.; Judy Bailey, Moline, Ill.; Karen Webb, Russell; Barbara Read, Bloomington, Ill. Bottom row: Julie Fisher, Wichita; Joanne Emerick, Murray Hill, N.J.; Patty Mills, Topeka; Anne Boynton, Franklin, Ohio; Mrs. Ralph Park, house- mother, Lawrence; Jacquelyn K. House, Kansas City; Pat Barker, Wellington; Ginger McAnany, Kansas City; Donna Swope, Shawnee Mission. 269 Kappa Alpha Theta Again this year, the Thetas played a significant role in many aspects of university life. Boasting three members of Mortar Board, three Hilltoppers, a Phi Beta Kappa, six Cwens, and two Woodrow Wilson scholars, Kappa Alpha Theta excelled in academic endeavor. The AWS vice- president and treasurer, as well as a senator, represent- ative, and various committee chairmen were Thetas, as were several ASC committee chairmen. Four Fashion Board members, one of the ten Best-Dressed Coeds on Campus, two Pom-Pon girls, the Sweetheart of Sigma Chi, and the Sigma Nu White Rose Queen also counted among Theta membership. Other Thetas were members of Rock Chalk committees, Sisters of the Maltese Cross, Chi Del- phia, Little Sisters of Minerva, the Greek Week Steering Committee, Pi Lambda Theta, Theta Sigma Phi, Tau Sigma, and Quack Club. They also worked with the Col- lege Intermediary Board, the Student Advisory Board, the Concert Choir, the KU-Y, Delta Phi Delta, and the Jay- staff. Theta versatility was further demonstrated last fall in a football victory over the Pi Phis. Rounding out the Theta year was a full social calendar with the an- nual formal, a Thanksgiving Buffet, a Christmas tree-trim- ming party, and Mothers ' and Fathers ' weekends. The annual spring barn party ended the year with a picnic, kite flying, and square dancing. THETA SENIORS STAGE A SIT-IN 011 the Beta porch during fall initiation activities. Top row: Susie Carr, Junction City; Julie Turtle, Prairie Village; Diane Oliver, Newton; Jane McGrew, Wellington; Doris Lanning, Lawrence; Linda Gill, Junction City; Jennifer Hanna, Lawrence; Kay Lee Orth, El Dorado; Linda Sollenberger, Hutchinson. Fifth row: Ann Kane, Bartlesville, Okla.; Dianne Eddins, Bakersfield, Calif.; Nancy Gallup, Lawrence; Martha Ziegelmeyer, Shawnee Mission; Karen Larson, Kansas City; Mary Lou Paulsen, Shawnee Mission; Julie Franz, Shawnee Mission; Suzie Van Slyke, Wichita; Peggy Vratil, Lamed; Jeannie Pirtle, Wichita. Fourth row: Judy Dixon, Excelsior Springs, Mo.; Cheryl Lasley, Mission; Jane Williams, Kansas City, Mo.; Pat Grayson, Overland Park; Emily Benson, El Dorado; Joyce Bond, Kirkwood, Mo.; Alice Henry, Omaha, Nebr.; Martha Lanning, Lawrence; Susan Shears, Hutchinson. Third row: Janie Griffey, Leawood; Barbi Mills, Topeka; Jani McConnell, Bartlesville, Okla.; Kathy Leo, Prairie Village; Debra Sheppard, Smith Center; Pam Held, Kansas City, Mo.; Carol Ray Crane, San Diego, Calif.; Judy McGhee, Overland Park; Pat French, Prairie Village; Rena Olson, Omaha, Nebr. Second row: Gloria Chadhorn, Kansas City; Tish Rutherford, Chillicothe, Mo.; Cheryl Holton; Diana Bruner, Newton; Mary Grove, Newton; Suzanne Saffels, Garden City; Sally Kohl, Kirkwood, Mo.; Madilyn Houseworth, Topeka; Jeanie Mueller, Kirkwood, Mo. Bottom row: Cecily Pitts, Shawnee Mission; Ginny Thomas, Marysville; Mary Jane Eckhoff, Leawood; Carol Evans, Fremond, Nebr.; Mrs. John McCuish, housemother, Newton; Marcia Bonn, Bartlesville, Okla.; Patsy Nac- Shawnee Mission; Trisha Cowen, Junction City; Kathy Strayer, Mission Hills. Not pictured: Kathie Phillips, Bartlesville, Okla.; Patty McGrew, Lawrence; Anne Beeson, Prairie Village. 270 Kappa -Kappa Gamma Kappa Kappa Gamma was represented in a unique variety of KU activities this year. Two ASC representatives and a Traditions Committee member, a representative and com- mittee members in AWS, two members of the College In- termediary Board, and chairmen and members of various SUA and KU-Y committees were all Kappas. The Dean ' s Advisory Board, the Student Advisory Board, COSA, the Jayhawker, the Chancellor ' s Homecoming committee, and the Pom-Pon squad also boasted Kappa participation. Still others were on the Festival of the Arts steering com- mittee and were Rock Chalk In-Between Acts dancers. At the same time, Kappas received their share of KU honors: the presidents of Cwens and Mortar Board and two other members of each group, a Hilltopper, a National Merit scholar, and a Military Ball Queen attendant lived at Gower Place. Swimming champs for their division, the Kappas likewise took first place in last fall ' s soccer- baseball tourney. On their teams were the vice-president of Kahper physical education honorary, and two officers of KU ' s women ' s physical education majors ' club. Scho- lastically, the KU Kappas held the Standards Cup among all national Kappa chapters for general excellence. The social season at Gower Place began with a Swiss party am. was followed by a Christmas Buffet, a spring pledge formal, and the traditional Monmouth Duo with the Pi Phis. JUNIOR KAPPAS AND THEIR DATES say cheese at the Swiss Party. Top row: Diane Machunze, Berkeley, Calif.; Annie Craven, Kansas City, Mo.; Judy Frizell, Lamed; Candy Williams, Lawrence; Liz Ranney, Wichita; Barby Burnett, Parsons; Nancy Soderstrom, Wichita; Susan Penny, Emporia; Patsy McConwell, Shawnee Mission. Fifth row: Terry McCluggage, Law- rence; Linda Hites, Shawnee Mission; Kristin Utz, Independence; Candy Walters, Lawrence; Karen Cutler, St. Joseph, Mo.; Susan Littooy, Hutchinson; Cynthia McNown, Lawrence; Patricia Ford, Coffeyville; Pam Zwink, Lawrence; Martha Dalton, Wichita. Fourth row: Connie Stuckey, Lawrence; Bar- bara Newsom, Wichita; Sally Wilcox, Shawnee Mission; Linda Bair, Kansas City, Mo.; Jane Donaldson, Wichita; Nicki Connell, El Dorado; Ruth Bangs, Wichita; Judy Bernhardt, Lawrence; Barb Rice, Topeka. Third row: Janice Coleman, Wichita; Patty Kuhn, Lawrence; Nancy Stuckey, Hutchinson; Lyn Widick, Atchison; Judy Conyers, Kirkwood, Mo.; Linda Zey, Abilene; Terri Turner, Colby; Kaye Roepke, Waterville. Second row: Mel Grable, Shawnee Mission; Debbie Johnson, Hutchinson; Kittie Williams, Pittsburg; Jill Johnson, Shawnee Mission; Connie Aitken, Wichita; Mary Rabe, Topeka; Judy Ander- son, Washington, D.C.; Connie McWilliams, St. Joseph, Mo. Bottom row: Sarah Williams, Sioux City, Ia.; Anne Penny, Emporia; Sallie Lillard, Salina; Sherry Buchanan, Topeka; Mrs. Cletus E. Mason, housemother, Lawrence; Jo Dallam, Shawnee Mission; Cheryl Costa, Wichita; Sherry Fitts, Topeka; Christi Lee, Florissant, Mo. Not pictured: C. C. Waller, Girard; Lyndy Grant, Wichita; Debbie Fowler, Topeka; Beth Ballard, Kansas City; Nancy Miller, Topeka; Judy Whitaker, Topeka; Kay Patterson, Newton Square, Penn.; Candy Cantrell, Yates Center; Ginger Corsini, Pittsburg; Jane Barrier, Wich- ita; Penny Kennard, Hutchinson; Sue Katcham, Kansas City; Terry Hoyt, Kansas City, Mo.; Sheri Romeiser, Salina; Sally Viola, Abilene; Sue Tisdall, Winnetka, Ill.; Lyle Fleming, Tucson, Ariz. 271 Pi Beta Phi For the tenth consecutive year KU Pi Phis were named by their national sorority as one of the ten outstanding Pi Beta Phi chapters in the nation. Pi Phis serving the uni- versity this year were AWS president, Gwen vice-presi- dent, chairmen of the Panhellenic Board of Standards and Rush Council, the AWS House-Senate liaison, and repre- sentatives to the ASC. Others were members of the Dean ' s Advisory Board, the Student Advisory Board, the KU-Y Cabinet, and numerous AWS committees. Individuals held KU honor scholarships (two), Woodrow Wilson nom- inations (three), a graduate scholarship in speech ther- apy, and the KU nomination for the Harvard Math Award. Throughout the year, four also donned the black and white of Mortar Board, four others the red of Cwens, three the red and blue of Pom-Pon girls (including head Pom-Poner), and five more the blue of Angel Flight (three wearing officers ' ranks). For six there was the crowning touch of reigning as queens of Homecoming, the Military Ball, the American Royal, and Pershing Rifles; as the Kansas Cherry Blossom Princess; and as Miss Lawrence-KU. Social functions included the Pledge-Active party, the Christmas Buffet, the Monmouth Duo with the Kappas, the Christmas Party for needy children with the Phi Gams, and the Spring Formal. PI PHIS AND SIGMA CHIS line up at the fall Pledge-Active Party. Top row: Kathryn Honig, Kansas City, Mo.; Jennifer Gordon, Wichita; Pam Gardner, Wichita; Lu Surface, Lawrence; Alison Heath, Salina; Marsha Fare- well, Norton; Judy Strunk, Abilene; Mary Cloud, Salina; Pam Ransdell, Shawnee Mission. Fifth row: Diane Childers, The Hague, Holland; Adrienne Childers, The Hague, Holland; Cheryl Coffman, Whittier, Calif.; Susie Stucky, Hutchinson; Martha Emerson, Bartlesville, Okla.; Jane Fothergill, Kansas City; Mary Ann Petefish, Lawrence; Jennifer Kost, St. Joseph, Mo.; Karen Dunaway, Lawrence; Janice Whelan, Topeka. Fourth row: Susie Selders, Shawnee Mission; Donna Woodard, Webster Groves, Mo.; Marita Miller, Salina; Sabra Bradshaw, Abilene; Patty Claasen, Newton; Cindy Hardin, Lin- coln, Nebr.; Sidney Ashton, Shawnee Mission; Sue Tyler, Bartlesville, Okla.; Cyndi Burcham, Kansas City, Mo. Third row: Barbara Norton, Wichita; Barbara Edwards, Kansas City; Dee Dee Davis, Shawnee Mission; Nancy Hageman, Shawnee Mission; Mary Lynn Miller, Hastings, Nebr.; Barbara Hodge, Kirkwood, Mo.; Sandy Johnson, Highland Park, Ill.; Mary Mark, Topeka; Sandee Glenn, Shawnee Mission; Karen McCarthy, Leawood. Second row: Heather MacDonald, Hutchinson; Punky Hemphill, Mission; Joan Gilpin, Iola; Cheryl Campbell, Kansas City; Carol Walker, Shawnee Mission; Janice Burquest, Wichita; Betty Kastner, Salina; Ann Johnston, Shawnee Mission; Lea Layman, Hinsdale, Ill. Bottom row: Andrea Speer, Kansas City; Susie Langston, Springfield, Mo.; Jeanie Burgardt, Des Moines, Ia.; Mrs. J. R. Traylor, housemother, Lawrence; Kathy Mize, Salina; Terry Beach, Hays; Judy Tietze, Shawnee Mission; Sherry Milford, Kingman. 272 Sigma Ka ip pa Creative Sigma Kappas designed a winning KU Relays float, The Run of the Century ; a third place SUA Car- nival booth, Pool Your Gold ; and a second place home- coming decoration, From the Field to the Fire. The na- tional convention cited the Xi chapter for improvement in its standards program. Members displayed athletic ability by winning first place in the bowling intramural program. Active in extracurricular activities, women were the KU-Y co-vice-president, the social chairman of Jay Janes, the co-chairman of the Mum Sale, the Gamma Alpha Chi his- torian, the president of Quack Club, the Sigma Psi public relations chairman, and the secretary of Panhellenic. One was a member of Pi Delta Phi, French honorary, while several others worked with various ASC and Greek Week committees. A Sigma Kappa was also the Lutheran Stu- dent President and a delegate to the national convention. The Sigma Kappa social calendar was full of parties and public service projects. A Christmas Party at which time children ' s toys were collected for a Maine Sea Coast mis- sion, and a tea for retired faculty members were both undertaken by the sorority. House parties throughout the year included a fall picnic, the annual Founder ' s Day pro- gram, the Crystal Ball formal, a spring formal, and Mothers ' and Fathers ' weekends. FOUR SIGMA KAPPA ' S pose for the Seventeen magazine photographer following completion of work on their Homecoming display. Top row: Ann Cushing, Downs; Candy Lester, Wichita; Susan Jose, Carthage, Mo.; Kay Netson, Topeka; Sheri Wolfe, Houston, Tex.; Lynda Goodyear, Au- burn; Janet Guinn, Dodge City; Yolanda Adele Raffo, Rosario de Santa Fe, Argentina; Anne Rankin, Kansas City. Fifth row: Cathleen Coleman, Boise, Ida.; Patty Maxwell, Topeka; Margaret Michael, Wichita; Janelle Brandt, Kansas City; Sandy Marshall, Lenexa; Lynn Cooksey, Iola; Betsy Brazee, Kirk- wood, Mo.; Peggy Spencer, Wichita; Dianne Johnson, Lawrence; Francis Haldeman, Hutchinson. Fourth row: Nancy Polson, Great Bend; Larren Ben- nett, Prairie Village; Jeanine Ninemires, Shawnee Mission; Kathleen Sowers, Wichita; Carolyn Weatherbie, Iola; Karen Rhea, Paola; Byra Babb, Forest Hills, N.Y.; Vicki Koch, Shawnee Mission; Jan Nelson, Prairie Village. Third row: Penny Mann, Independence, Mo.; Carolyn Reichard, New Canaan, Conn.; Marsha Barth, Leawood; Emily Cooper, Hinsdale, Ill.; Barbie Tucker, Mobile, Ala.; Sandi McAllister, Leawood; Susan M. Hubbard, Oklahoma City, Okla.; Mari Morgan, Toronto, Canada; Valerie Lewis, Prairie Village; Sally Corlis, Ottawa. Second row: Juilane Paulsen, Springfield, Mo.; Jane Winchester, Leoti, Betty Stratman, Salina; Linda Boor, Kansas City; Marcia Miller, Overland Park; Patty Huff, Kansas City; Dona Porter, Ottawa; Susie McGinley, Beaumont, Tex.; Sonya Silknitter, Wichita. Bottom row: Loneta Wilson, Ferrelview, Mo.; Penny Prill, Kirkwood, Mo.; Linda Schmitz, Kansas City, Mo.; Sharon Wells, Winfield; Mrs. H. R. O ' Harra, housemother, Lawrence; Connie Schroder, Hutchinson; Barbara Meyer, Evanston, Il l.; Andrea Evans, Chanute. 273 Acacia KU ' s Acacia chapter was nationally recognized this year for its ranking above all other Acacia chapters in scholastic improvement. Their alumni news and publication won them runner-up awards at the national convention last summer in New Orleans. House intramural teams reached the playoffs in basketball and volleyball, and also partici- pated in football and tennis. A golden gloves boxing cham- pion, a varsity bowler, and three varsity baseball players topped Acacia ' s athletic roster. Also distinguishing Acacia was Chuck Stewart, IFC Secretary and editor of the 1966 IFC Rush Book. The house displayed academic prowess by placing among the top ten KU fraternities scholastically for the fall semester. Among individuals in the chapter were two Rock Chalk staffers, three NROTC scholarship winners, three members of Alpha Phi Omega, a member of the chemistry honorary, and a lead from Oliver!. The social program began in the fall with a gingham-and-jeans Western Party. A Friday night grubby dance, a Saturday afternoon picnic, and a Saturday night formal in Kansas City were all part of their Ivy League Weekend, during which the men moved out of the house and their dates moved in for a night. At Christmas the Acacians opened their house to orphans for an annual party, and in the spring they held their Protest Party. AN ACACIAN KISSES His DATE right on the navel of her orange during the house ' s Protest Party. Top row: Robert Haas, Leawood; David Hiatt, Barstow, Calif.; Steven B. Tippit, Paola; Glenn Jewett, Wichita; Bob Parkison, Overland Park; Rich Hall, Overland Park; Larry Broockerd, Overland Park; Mark Jorgensen, Overland Park; Robert Moffatt, Dumas, Tex. Fourth row: Alvin Wright, Pawnee Rock; Paul Jorgensen, Overland Park; Bill Hamilton, Topeka; Paul Getto, Lawrence; Kent Harmony, Osawatomie; Chris Berry, Colby; Jack Hull, Liverpool, N.Y.; Don Brewer, Bellingham, Wash.; Walter R. Ross, Leawood; Richard S. Shrout, Kansas City, Mo. Third row: Gary R. Jones, Uniontown; Larry Sallee, Shawnee; Bill Flora, Kansas City, Mo.; Gary C. Davis, Prairie Grove, Ark.; Ronald C. Mick, Merriam; Cole Stimson, Great Bend; Tom Bishard, Uniontown; Gary Chance, Kansas City; Steve Bridges, Overland Park. Second row: Terry D. Jones, Overland Park; Nicholas Eliopoulos, Prairie Village; Jim Robertson, Independence; Gary L. Comstock, Fort Scott; Tom K. Moore, Overland Park; David F. Flora, Kansas City, Mo.; Bob Daly, Overland Park; Mike Horan, Ho-Ho-Kus, N.J. Bottom row: Stephen D. Cranston, Winfield; Larry L. Teel, Shawnee Mission; Chuck Stewart, Westwood Hills; Mrs. Rae Howe, housemother, Overland Park; Larry Donahue, St. Louis, Mo.; David L. Flint, Osawatomie; Dave McClellan, Topeka; Charles L. Curry, Monticello, Ark. 274 Alpha Pi The only predominantly Jewish fraternity on campus, Kappa Upsilon Chapter of Alpha Epsilon Pi represents the largest Jewish fraternity in the nation, boasting over 25,- 000 members. The KU chapter, established in 1949, this year had seventeen actives and pledges living at 1209 Ohio. Among its members were Mike Davis, the president of Hillel Counselorship, and Hillel vice-president Bruce Fiman. A E Pi social events were held throughout the year, and were highlighted by the Transylvania Tea Party, a costume function; a mixer with Epsilon. Phi, which is to become a colony of Alpha Epsilon Phi sorority in the near future; rush parties in Kansas City and at the Co-Ed Den; and an alumni dinner to celebrate the fraternity ' s 18th anniversary on the KU campus. Alpha Epsilon Pi maintains a program of study hours for both actives and pledges, in order to instill an atmosphere conducive to study in the house. This encourages each man to study and learn to the best of his abilities. It also enables the house to attempt to live up to the goals of the national organization, which ranks as one of the top fraternities scholastically. Upsilon Chapter gave awards for the out- standing pledge, and another for the man in the house with the highest grades each semester. Jonathan Ophir was the fall semester winner with a 3.00 GPA. AN AEPt ADNIINISTEIIS BENEDICTION to three brothers, or something like that. Top row: Steve Press, Overland Park; Kambiz Khadavi, Tehran, Iran; Les Cohn, Overland Park; Oscar Bassinson, St. Louis, Mo.; Bruce M. Fiman, University City, Mo. Second row: Stephen A. Bresler, Ellenville, N.Y.; Michael Grand, New York, N.Y.; Michael Davis, Overland Park; Michael Schoenberg, Gloversville, N.Y.; Harold Greenbaum, Kansas City, Mo.; David Nemon, St. Louis, Mo. Bottom row: Lawrence S. Deutch, Shawnee Mission; Jonathan Ophir, Haifa, Israel; Celia Samuelsohn, Kansas City, Mo.; Kenneth Weinstein, Wheaton, Md.; Alan Stempleman, Kansas City, Mo. Not pic- tured: Roger Fallek, Shawnee Mission; Paul Kaufmann, Kansas City, Mo.; Larry Rigler, Highland Park, Ill.; Howard Siegel, New York, N.Y.; Jerry Tilzer, Overland Park. 275 Alpha Kappa Lambda Located in a new $310,000 home, Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity is characterized by outstanding activities and achievements, a tradition upheld again this year. As a group they received first place for the Alpha Kappa Lambda National Scholarship Award and were presented the National Executive Award for general excellence. Again this year they combined their talents to win several tro- phies, including best skit, in Rock Chalk Revue. Individual activities are in keeping with the group ' s excellent work. Individual AKL ' s were the president of the Business School Council, the Rock Chalk In-Between Acts Chairman, the business manager for the Greek Column, members with various scholarships, People-to-People participants, a mem- ber of Scabbard and Blade, the vice-president of the Young Republicans, the president of KUPA, and the KU-Y membership chairman. In athletics, they boasted two var- sity swimmers and were represented by freshmen in basket- ball, swimming, golf, and track. This past year a women ' s auxiliary organization, the Kallay Filleans, was founded and now includes 25 members. The social part of AKL life is full of parties, and included the Senior Party, which seniors give for the entire house; the Revival Party; the Go to Hell with AKL fall party; and the Spring Formal in April. AN AKL AND His DATE( S ) at the Co To Hell Party prepare to do just that. Top row: Dale Peterson, Topeka; Steve Craig, Belton, Mo.; Mark Retonde, Kansas City, Mo.; Randy Leffingwell, Wilmette, Ill.; David Dysart, Wich- ita; Jeff Baxter, Great Bend; Wes Payne, Shawnee Mission; Ron Nolan, Lawrence; Bruce Eklund, Medicine Lodge; Barry Elvin, Wichita. Seventh row: Brian Cederlind, Shawnee Mission; Frank lender, Topeka; Don Miller, Russell; Fred W. Cunningham, Topeka; Earle Dumler, Russell; Roger H. Lewis, Russell; Ray Chandler, Kansas City, Mo.; Dick Russell, Shawnee Mission; Bob Hudspeth, Leawood; Lonnie Feagan, Shawnee Mission; James Hamlett, Wichita. Sixth row: Robin Richardson, Topeka; Todd McCluggage, Lawrence; Gerry May, Shawnee Mission; Larry McGuire, Lawrence; Doug Hacker, Leawood; Les Miller, Prairie Village; Dave Mikesic, Kansas City; J. Dawson Crumpler, Sharon Springs; Bruce Levitt,. Kansas City; Richard D. Ring- strom, St. Louis, Mo. Fifth row: Greg Bangs, Leawood; Craig Larson, Shawnee Mission; John Parkison, Kansas City, Mo.; Stephen Reed, Wichita; Bruce Coffey, Winfield; Keith Johnson, Leawood; Mike Litwin, Independence; Doug Ward, Hutchinson; Rick Jones, Leawood; Richard J. Mundis, Overland Park; Tom Pate, Chanute. Fourth row: Wallace R. Scott, Jr., Kansas City, Mo.; Steve Dumler, Russell; Chad Lawton, Lawrence; Bill Ludemann, San Francisco, Calif.; Stephen Cochran, Leawood; Andrew W. Fisher, Bartlesville, Okla.; Larry Quinlan, Independence; Roger Coffey, Winfield; John Studebaker, Haven; William P. Coates, Jr., Topeka. Third row: Mike Orindgreff, Wichita; Jerald R. Long, Humboldt; Alan Alderson, Prairie Village; Archie Sullivan, Topeka; Ron Decker, Shawnee Mission; Jim Rose, Shawnee Mission; Michael Sarras, Kansas City; Robert D. Payne, Jr., Lawrence; Dave Gaughan, Independence; Bill Sampson, Topeka; Jim Hower, St. Joseph, Mo. Second row: Steward Birse, Huntington, N.Y.; Rick Hornsby, Law- rence; David Carson, Wichita; Russ Alderson, Prairie Village; Al Clinton, Lawrence; Jeff Stone, Overland Park; Mike West, Lawrence; Larry NI. Glenn, Silver City, N.M.; Paul Rocereto, Topeka; Don Walker, Shawnee Mission. Bottom row: Martin Tancreti, Carroll, Iowa; Robert L. Meredith, Bartlesville, Okla.; Robert Detter, Haven; Bill Taylor, Chanute; Cranston J. Cederlind, Shawnee Mission; Robert E. Sears, Kansas City; Bob Jacoby, Topeka; Jim Rumsey, Lawrence; Richard Wulf, Humboldt; Frank Hummer, Topeka. Not pictured: Kent Dickinson, Shawnee Mission; Mike Dickerson, Prairie Village; Richard Douglas, St. Joseph, Mo.; Duane Drake, Alden; Dave Booth, Lawrence; Lee Engelbrccht, Trenton, N.J.; Jim Harris, Chanute; Leonard Heller, Topeka; Tim Reed, Darien, Conn. T 276 Alpha Tau me a Alpha Tau Omega, the largest fraternity on the hill, is the home of over one hundred men who have continually distinguished themselves in all forms of campus life. In their traditional style the Taus were represented in campus activities by such men as Dick Warner, president of Sachem and vice-president of SUA; John Casady, past Jayhawker editor and a member of the ASC Publications Committee; Tom Sullivan, chairman of the SUA Carnival; Bill Bruning, a member of the IFC Social Committee; Brent Waldron, Jayhawker copy editor; and Don Chubb, president of UP and a member of the ASC Social Com- mittee. Another aspect of campus life that the Taus take seriously is their social life. This year began with the usual fraternity parties and was highlighted by the Playboy Party; the Iron Cross Party, where a live alligator danced to the cheers of the crowd; and the Apache, at which time the Taus combined their civic duties with their social life by inviting the senior class from Haskell to a party. The Sisters of the Maltese Cross, an auxiliary organization of the ATO ' s, work closely with the fraternity by serving as hostesses during rush weekends, social exchanges, and dinner events. Bill Wohlford typified the athletes in the house this year, being voted All Big Eight, KU Player of the year, and Scholastic All. American. TAUS AND DATES RIDE HIGH during a barn party drink-in. Top row: Scott Brown, Wichita; Jack Baghy, Prairie Village; Michael B. Rugh, Abilene; Greg Barker, Topeka; Dwight Rickman, Joplin, Mo.; Dick Grote, Alton, Ill.; Gary Taylor, Wichita; Bill Hertzler, Wichita; John Langworthy, St. Petersburg, Fla.; John Leary, Mission Hills. Sixth row: Joe F. Widler, Abilene; M. W. Borders, Prairie Village; K. Brent Waldron, Denison, Iowa; Eric Stinson, Chesterfield, Mo.; Alan Joseph, Potwin; Steve Schultz, Junction City; John Scott Weir, Glendale Heights, Ill.; Norm Fisher, Wichita; Burk Thompson, Wichita; Terry Wright, Iola; Matt Harper, Shawnee Mission. Fifth row: Richard Low, Wichita; Mike Haggans, Nevada, Mo.; Charles Miller, Overland Park; Phil Paden, Lawrence; Jeff Rockwell, Wichita; Steve Vormehr, Junction City; Bob McCollum, Overland Park; Don Chubb, Topeka; Steve C. Johns, Wichita; Bill Ward, Wichita. Fourth row: James D. Portwood, Roeland Park; Greg Dean, Stockton; Torn Novak, Ellsworth; Rick Davis, Salina; Bob Wagnon, Wichita; Dean Pearce, Mission; Phil Higdon, McPherson; James Kent Longenecker, Fairway; Tim Buckley, Wichita. Third row: John Clark, Bartlesville, Okla.; James C. Nourse, Shawnee Mission; Dave Hueben, Shawnee Mission; Dave Phelps, Lawrence; John Lundstrom, Atchison; Lee Johnson, Caldwell; Dick Hvale, LaGrange, Ill.; Archie Jones, Kansas City, Mo.; Dave Laney, Topeka; Bill Resnik, Potwin. Second row: Michael P. Dickeson, Atchison; Raymond Hagerman, Iola; Douglas Meeker, Garden City; Joseph E. King, ' Potwin David Thomas, Bartlesville, Okla.; Chris Barteldes, Lawrence; Jim Scott, Stockton; Bob Ward, Wichita; Roger Mock, Belleville. Bottom row: Paul A. Davis, Des Moines, Iowa; Lary Robinson, Iola; Larry M. Sewell, Fort Scott; Nick Brocker, Prairie Village; John Casady, Wichita; J. David Holt, Prairie Village; Dick Brown, Arlington Heights, Ill.; Tom Sullivan, Wichita; Stephen R. Arnold, Wichita. 277 Beta Sigma Psi To exist as a social fraternity and also to maintain certain group ideals have been among the major goals of fraternal organizations since their beginnings. Gamma Eta Colony of Beta Sigma Psi, since its founding in 1964, has en- deavored to establish and to reach these defined ideals. Indicative of their success has been a continually in- creasing membership and higher scholastic averages. Housed at 1115 Tennessee, the colony exists as a unit that works together, studies together, and even attends church together. The result has been a group of men who not only maintain a high scholastic record of achievement, but who also unite socially for various parties. Social func- tions such as the Fall Barn Party; the Tree Trimming Party, held in the house at Christmas; and the Gold Rose Formal, held in the spring and at which time the men ' s sweetheart is crowned, bring the twenty-eight men of Beta Sigma Psi together for party merriment. Their unity extended this year to their pledge class who gave a Christmas party at the Nily Home for Children in Kansas City. One member was also active as a member of the KU marching band. Thus, the men of Beta Sigma Psi, a national fraternity of Lutheran men, continued the chap- ters ' ideals of fraternal study, work, and worship. Tins BETA SIGMA PSI either has his eyes closed or his mind is an other things. Top row: Bob Costello, Shawnee Mission; Richard Schneider, Raytown, Mo.; Ernest M. May, Oberlin; Mike Adams, Lawrence; Terry Moran, Shawnee Mission; Gary Wanamaker, Kansas City. Second row: Gary Handel, Kansas City; Bob Laskey, Shawnee Mission; Mike Denney, Leavenworth; Marvin Bredehoft, Independence; Mike Johnson, Miami, Fla. Bottom rote: John Gilbertson, Kansas City; Vern Stigge, Washington; Bill Hamm, Muskogee, Okla.; Jim Beachler, Overland Park; Ed Kettner, Shawnee Mission; Roger Buck, Ottawa. Not pictured: Irvin Thiele, Frankfurt. ) 278 Beta Theta Pi Having finished number one in scholarship among all KU fraternities for the previous year, the men of Beta Theta Pi both actives and pledges received the IFC scholar- ship cups last spring. At the same time they captured first in the men ' s small ensemble division of Greek Week Sing. This year, for the second straight year, Betas won the runner-up trophy in Rock Chalk Revue, combining with the Delta Gammas. Individually, Betas were president of the student body, members of Tan Beta Pi, and the chairman of the KU Relays committee, as well as Woodrow Wilson and Rhodes Scholarship nominees. To round out the picture, Betas served on the SUA board, as ASC repre- sentatives, and as IFC officers. The house was also well represented in Owl Society and Sachem, with four Betas in each honor organization. The diversification of mem- bers ' activities was attested by the eleven Beta varsity athletes. In intramurals, teams placed first last spring in A Hill basketball and B volleyball, and captured the team intramurals badminton trophy. The traditional Christmas formal, the Turkey Pull; the spring Beta German; the Miami Triad with Sigma Chi and Phi Delta Theta; and the exchange barn party with the Kansas State Betas are proof enough that the Betas ' social sched- ule fully augments their academic and intramural life. ONE BETA DEMONSTRATES that the Butts take a well-known campus saying rather seriously. 7 l Top row: Andy Edwards, Loomis, Calif.; Mike Geiger, Leavenworth; Dave Swift, Leavenworth; Kirke Larson, Wamego; Chris Hays, Prairie Village; Bruce Peterson, Prairie Village; John Coyle, Coffeyville; Bobby Douglass, El Dorado; David Wood, Wichita; Stan Pippin, Kansas City; Gail Habluetzel, Clay Center. Fourth row: Michael Hein, Shawnee Mission; Randy Page, Shawnee Mission; Dwight Holm, Dayton, Ohio; Durwood McKee, Topeka; Russell E. Meier, Kansas City; Edward S. Murdock, Shawnee Mission; Steve Ridgway, Lawrence; Steve Lucas, Thorntown, Ind.; Terry Gill, Shawnee Mission; Ken Long, Salina. Third row: Bill Tankersley, Norman, Okla.; Mike Riepe, Mt. Pleasant, Iowa; Mike McCormick, Bartlesville, Okla.; Max Jackson, Marion; Sam R. Mellinger, Emporia; Bruce Patterson, Lamed; Al Martin, Shawnee Mission; G. T. Harrop, Topeka; Richard Slicker, Tulsa, Okla.; Roger Jackson, Kansas City, Mo.; Herbert Hartman, Lawrence. Second row: Lynn Snelgrove, Tulsa, Okla.; Bill Byers, Bartlesville, Okla.; Alan Voos, Russell; Chuck H. Foster, Bartlesville, Okla.; Douglas Keller, Lamed; S. Warner, Leawood; Nick Arend, Kirkwood, Mo.; Bob Floersch, Galesburg, Ill.; Jon Byers, Bartlesville, Okla.; John Nelson, St. Joseph, Mo. Bottom row: Robert Colwell, Neodesha; George Jackson, Marion; Rudy Belton, Pratt; John Vratil, Lamed; Ward Coleman, Boise, Idaho; Mrs. Russell A. Myers, housemother, Salina; Torn Edgar, Bartlesville, Okla.; Alan Hitt, Lawrence; Everold Hosein, Trinidad, West Indies; Steve Carmichael, Mulvane. 279 Delta Chi Delta Chis were active in numerous phases of campus life. Positions held by members ranged from General Chairman of the Glenn Yarbrough Concert to members of Owl Society and the Jayhawker and Rock Chalk Revue staffs. A past Greek Column editor, the IFC treasurer, chairmen of SUA committees, the Greek Week and Engi- neering Day chairmen, a Woodrow Wilson nominee, the Senior Day chairman, and members of various honorary societies likewise belonged to the fraternity. Scholastically, awards were received for significant scholarship ranking from the national chapter and for pledge class scholastic achievement. Other awards included a first place in the SUA Carnival skit competition this fall and the Hill Cham- pionship in bowling last spring. In other intramural sports the Delta Chis boasted the Hill Championship in tennis, won both last spring and this fall. Varsity athletes in- cluded two gymnasts, two football players, and a baseball player. On the social agenda were various schoolhouse parties, barn parties, and woodsies, in addition to the usual functions and exchanges with sororities. The Five Scamps party, the Tom Jones party, and the White Carnation Ball highlighted the formal social life. Chi Delphia, an auxiliary little sisters organization was com- posed of thirty women representing twelve KU sororities and three residence halls. DELTA CHIS AND THEIR ALPHA PHI Rock Chalk partners put finishing touches on their skit, The Eyes of Taxes Are Upon You. Top row: Greg Nicolet, Cimarron; Phillip T. Kraft, Salina; Robert S. Swinncy, Bartlesville, Okla.; Stephen W. Worford, Wichita; Bill Lorimer, In- dependence, Mo.; Ronald Ruffe Wallace, St. Louis, Mo.; Mark Hantla, Kansas City; Bob Liddle, St. Louis, Mo.; Gregg Kalbfleisch, Kansas City; Doug Crandall, Baton Rouge, La. Sixth row: Chip Farley, Leawood; Chuck Shaw, Cheshire, Conn.; Gregory G. Gruber, Kansas City, Mo.; Brian A. Lane, Shawnee Mission; Bart E. Eistclder, Kansas City, Mo.; Robert R. Nash, Bartlesville, Okla.; Donald M. McFarland, Mac City; Gary Gomer, Kansas City; David Langston, East Wichita; Dwight Wallace, Wichita; Fred Vaughan, Kansas City. Fifth row: Jim Renter, Overland Park; Steve Robbins, Parsons; J. D. Spencer, Hill. City; Gary L. Price, Osborne; Rick Lucas, Lakin; Miles Sweeney, Pittsburg; Butch Gillespie, Hugoton; Jim Mullen, Leavenworth; Bob Montgomery, Springfield, Mo.; Bruce Hocking, Salina. Fourth row: Wally Buck, Wichita; Boyd J. Inman, Kansas City; John M. McGee, Cleveland, Ohio; Rusty Leffcl, Shawnee Mission; Doug Phillips, Parsons; Gerald A. Riley, Kansas City; Gene G. Russell, Independence, Mo.; Michael R. Fallcy, Topeka; William H. Colvin, Raytown, Mo. Third row: Garry Eastwood, Kansas City; Troy Rinacke, Independence, Mo.; John Langley, Wichita; Charles F. Rouse III, Prairie Village; Leroy Mendenhall, Kansas City, Mo.; J. 0. Hughes, Kansas City; Jerry D. Barney, Calgary, Alta, Canada; Ernest Chambers, Wichita; Bob Pearson, Kansas City, Mo.; Grant R. Dahl, Glencoe, Ill. Second row: Wayne Shields, Wichita; Bill Belobrajdic, Arma; Greg Milam, Kansas City; Burt Mitchell, Shape, APO 55, N.Y.; John W. Huey, Wamego; Jack M. Lucas, Lakin; John F. Kobertson, Bartlesville, Okla.; David M. Hidaka, Wichita; Bob Baptist, Kansas City. Bottom row: Michael V. Vance, Parsons; Robert T. Becker, Independence, Mo.; Richard L. Ensminger, McPherson; John K. White, Springfield, Mo.; James D. Brenner, Parsons; Tom Swale, Prairie Village; John A. Segerson, Topeka; Frank Schaffer, Hyattsville, Md.; Ronald George Young III, Dallas, Tex. Not pictured: Jack Stevry, Springfield, Mo.; Al Brightman, Leawood. 280 Delta Sigma, Phi Although the twelve members of Delta Sigma Phi moved out of their chapter house at 1233 Oread in February, the fraternity was in the process of reorganization dur- ing the spring semester of the year. However, even though they did not live together, they did gather socially through- out the year. The Apache Party, a French underground costume affair; the Founders ' Day Christmas Formal; the informal Sailors ' Ball, with a shipwreck theme and com- plete with an island; and the Carnation Ball, held in the spring, compromised the busy social calendar of the Delta Sigma Phis. Yet amid the difficulties of reorganizing their local fraternity, their national fraternal organization awarded Michael O ' Brien its Outstanding Active Award for 1966-67. In addition to this award, members captured first place in their B division volleyball competition in the spring of 1966. Realizing that a fraternal organization cannot long survive with members separated in different housing, the executive leadership was trying to form a close-knit group to formally colonize again next year. The men of Delta Sigma Phi hopefully look forward to next year for a reunited, organized brotherhood under one roof. DELTA SIG SENIORS CELEBRATE the aclrent of their last year at KU with the help of an ex-Playboy bunny. Top row: Harold L. Hladky, Topeka; James Geitz, Mission; Dave Carter, Overland Park; Donald Bions, Lawrence; Tim Jacobs, Milwaukee, Wisc.; Jon Lowe, Topeka; Lynn Teasley, Glasco. Second row: Gary Burge, Lawrence; Richard Harre, Kansas City, Mo.; Doug Weiss, Shawnee Mission; Michael Smith, Wamego; Rick Lee, Mission; Earl Evans, Topeka. Bottom row: Mike O ' Brien, Shawnee Mission; James Esler, Mission; Mrs. Frances Gustafson, housemother, Brewster; Greg Surbaugh, Shawnee Mission; Bill Bloemker, Leawood. 281 Delta Tau Delta Delta Tau Delta has maintained its tradition of high standards by qualifying for its national fraternity ' s Top Ten Award for Chapter Excellence. It also recorded the highest Delt chapter grades in the nation this past year. The Delts boasted the presidencies of five major campus activities in George Fletcher of the IFC, Dale Sprague of KU and National People-to-People, Jim Perkins of the KU-Y, Harry Wiles of the senior class, and Steve Morgan of the junior class. This record was supported by numerous other top recognitions at KU such as the People-to-People secretary; the sports editor of the UDK; the most out- standing student in the School of Journalism, and the political science and radio-TV departments; and three members of Sachem, one of Owl Society, and three of Tau Beta Pi. The house also actively participated in fra- ternity intramurals, this year having won first place in their A and B team divisions in football as well as their A team division in volleyball. Their athletic ability was demonstrated by members of the varsity football, base- ball, and track teams. In addition to these many activities, the Delt calendar was filled with several unique parties the Paddle Party, the Orchid Formal, the Pajama Party, and the Christmas Party for orphans and underprivileged children. ROLLA CARREL AND PINMATE SUE MEREDITH caught following her selection at the Orchid Formal as Delt Sweetheart. Top row: Fred Heidinger, Jacksonville, Ill.; Steve McGiffert, Oklahoma City, Okla.; Pete Machin, Overland Park; Dale M. Sprague, McPherson; J. Michael Holder, Kansas City, Mo.; Will Schubert, Great Bend; Ron Hanson, Shawnee Mission; John Naramore, Wichita; Roy Askrew, Junction City. Sixth row: Patrick Crilly, Kansas City; Bill Pitner, Glasco; Terry Harper, Scott City; Mike Waring, Wichita; Doug Gibson, Salina; Jerry Jeserich, Shaw- nee Mission; Bob Nielson, Littleton, Colo.; Dave Porter, Kansas City; Bernie Shaner, Kansas City; Richard Bomkessel, Shawnee Mission. Fifth row: Chuck Curry, Pratt; Stephen Morgan, Wichita; Dick Wetzler, Marysville; Dale Hurt, Leawood; Chip Weisert, Glendale, Mo.; Steve Rodd, Wichita; Bob Starcke, Shawnee Mission; Bob Dotson, Webster Groves, Mo.; Jim Perkins, Shawnee Mission. Fourth row: Chuck Chowins, Leawood; Rex Hall, Phar- macy, Maine; D. John Shultz, Leawood; Jim Hayes, Atwood; Jim Morgan, Overland Park; Joe E. Grojean, Jacksonville, Ill.; Fred Abbott, Raytown, Mo.; Stephen Smith, Lamed; Roger Luke, Spokane, Wash.; Ed Benson, Kansas City, Mo. Third row: Steve Holm, Prairie Village; George Semeniuk, Brook- ings, S.D.; Richard Nininger, Nickerson; John Meek, Hiawatha; Torn Allison, Darien, Conn.; Bob Gustafson, Watkins Glen, N.Y.; Tom Beller, Topeka; Bill Deschner, Leawood; John Pro, Leawood. Second row: Taylor Webb, Russell; Hal Goss, Kansas City; Dan Chilcoat, Spartanburg, S.C.; Teny Tarr, Bartlesville, Okla.; Pete Combs, Leavenworth; Bob Bowen, Leawood; Jim Pfeffer, Pratt; John Hendrickson, Munster, Ind. Bottom row: James Kern, Webster Groves, Mo.; Sid Smith, Lamed; Jim Huntington, Bartlesville, Okla.; Mike Hurt, Leawood; Mrs. Kenneth C. Johnson, housemother, Kansas City, Mo.; Stan Garlick, Denver, Colo.; Cliff Best, St. Louis, Mo.; Rolla Carrel, St. Joseph, Mo.; Randy Corbet, Kirkwood, Mo. 282 Upsilon Winning the 1966 Greek Week Sweepstakes Trophy for the third consecutive year, Delta Upsilon added to its long list of achievements and awards. Academically the DU ' s ranked third on the Hill as their pledge class took spring semester pledge class honors among all KU fraternities. Five juniors in Owl Society and three seniors in Sachem paced the DU ' s in campus activities. Members chaired People-to-People, Collegiate Young Republicans, the KU- Y Ski Club, and the ASC Social Committee. Other indi- viduals served as president of Student Union Activities, as editor of the Jayhawker, and on the College Inter- mediary Board, the University Review, and the Business School Council. Twenty DU varsity athletes competed for the university in :football, baseball, swimming, and track. In addition, Hill championships in C basketball, A softball, and tennis doubles were won by DU teams. Socially they held five major parties: the fall Pledge Class Yell-In; two barn parties, held with other fraternities; the Trophy Girl winter formal; and the famed three-day Spring She-DU. In national competition the Kansas chap- ter won two of Delta Upsilon ' s three national awards the Scholarship Trophy and the Sweepstakes Trophy. Plans were announced in December for the construction of an addition to the house, expanding the present capacity from 65 to over 80 men. JUNIOR DU ' s STACK Ur to celebrate the announcement of a brother ' s engagement at the winter Trophy Girl formal. Top row: Charles D. Newbery, Colby; Broc W. Blair, Oswego; Michael M. Reeves, Concordia; Arthur H. Baum, Dodge City; Rick D. Utermoehlen, Arma; Ted M. Gardiner, Garden City; Dan Cott, Wichita; Allen R. Slater, Kansas City; Randy Long, Salina; John Carter, Kansas City. Sixth row: Dale Evans, Russell; Robert Myers, Hinsdale, Barry Eghert, Dighton; Steve Joyce, Ulysses; Larry B. Spikes, Garden City; Charlie Pohl, Lawrence; Joe W. Goering, Moundridge; Steve Walsh, Salina; Tim North, Emporia; Pat Davis, Kansas City; Jim Pankratz, Salina. Fifth row: Jim Keen, Kansas City; Kent Whealy, Wellington; Roger Kathol, Wichita; Jeff Eckles, Dodge City; Philip Feaster, Wellington; Philip A. Shontz, Kansas City, Mo.; John Hoppe, Ottawa; J. David Nutt, Baldwin; Andy Harris, Mission; Ted Coffman, Salina. Fourth row: Donald Ewing Beahm, Great Bend; John Garvey, Wichita; Charles Harrison, Colby; Michael J. Schulz, Great Bend; Michael E. Ryan, Shawnee Mission; Shay Bickel, Wichita; Richard Harris, Pratt; Bruce Eggert, Hinsdale, Ill. Third row: Chris Saricks, Lawrence; Bill Woods, Salina; Thomas Poos, Salina; Brad E. Schullcnberg, Leavenworth; Mark Miller, Salina; Larry Ross, Great Bend; James K. Blakely, Topeka; Leif Ostergard, Vasa, Finland; Richard L. Stratton, Green River, Wyo.; Andy Brandt, Well- ington. Second row: Don Farrington, Oswego; John R. Keen, Kansas City; Rich Morrison, Salina; Mike L. Graham, Great Bend; Larry L. Rader, Greens- burg; Charlie Cram, Lamed; Thomas L. Hiebsch, Wichita; Chris Jeter, Wichita; Larry Scott, Emporia. Bottom row: Richard Yerger, Lamed; Jay Combs, Dodge City; Dave Bouda, Omaha, Nebr.; Mrs. Norma Peterson, housemother, Fairway; G. Gipp DuPree, Oklahoma City, Okla.; R. Gary Gribben, Parsons; Blake Biles, Hutchinson; Lee Bittenbender, Lawrence. Not pictured: Bo Harris, Lawrence; Ted Haggart, Salina; Jeff Elias, Miami, Fla.; Halley Kampschroeder, Lawrence; Bob Hammond, Wichita; Jim Roberts, San Rafael, Calif.; Jim McLaughlin, Wichita; Dave Waxse, Oswego; Terry Hammons, Oswego; Jim Brink, Wichita. 283 Kappa Sigma The spirit of the Kappa Sigs is not to be underestimated, whether it be in a pledge ' s efforts to find a red head twenty-four hours before the Red Hear! Banquet, or in the leadership ability of chairing a campus organization. This was demonstrated in numerous Kappa Sig activities this year. Kappa Sigs held such influential offices as chairman of the IFC Judiciary Council, IFC General Rush Week chairman, IFC scholarship chairman, president of Owl Society, student chairman of the Union Operating Board, assistant managing editor of the UDK, station manager of KUOK, and the art editor of the Jayhawker. In addition, they were active in ASC committees, Sigma Tau engineering fraternity, and Alpha Kappa Psi busi- ness fraternity, as well as being yell leaders and members of the KU marching band. A Woodrow Wilson nominee, an ASC representative, and the sports editor of The Greek Column also called 1045 Emery Road their home. Athletic standouts were Charlie Hays, runner-up in the intramural golf championships, and KU varsity basketball player Phil Harmon. After the traditional fall woodsies, the Red Dog barn party formally kicked off the house ' s social functions for the year. The Red Head Banquet, the Black and White Formal, and the Stardust spring semi- formal then followed, along with numerous sandbars and functions with sororities. PSYCHEDELIC KAPPA SIG SOPHOMORES and others at the October Red Dog Party. Top row: Rich Stone, Evansville, Ind.; Dan Erni, Tulsa, Okla.; Mike Hageman, Tribune; C. R. Brandt, Prairie Village; Mike Smith, Bronxville, N.Y.; Mike McClanahan, Wichita; Stan Grigg, Eudora; George C. Carter, Great Bend; Hank Waeckerle, Salina; Darold Longhofer, Marion. Seventh row: Michael Norris, Wichita; Thomas C. Tucker, Marion; J. J. Williams III, La Jolla, Calif.; C. L. Patzkowsky, Kiowa; Gary Davenport, Wellsville; William S. Killouga, Ottawa; Michael Callahan, Shawnee Mission; Jay 0. Longabach, Topeka; Darryl J. Klippsten, Prairie Village. Sixth row: Bill Benefiel, Downs; Chris Redmond, Wichita; Jim Wilson, Salina; Mark Jarvis, Salina; Tom Hornbaker, Lawrence; Bill O ' Meara, Hartington, Nebr.; Lee Greevcr, Amarillo, Tex.; Jim Gilhousen, Norton; Jon Carper, St. Joseph, Mo.; Ron Quenzer, Osborne. Fifth row: Patrick Hershey, Ellinwood; Harve Truskett, Lakin; James Mackenzie, Eudora; Philip R. Sturgis II, Wellington; Steve Brown, Salina; Terry Milberger, Russell; Bill Fischer, Valley Center; Rusty Wells, Portland, Ore.; Jim Davis, Leawood. Fourth row: Ron Woelk, Tribune; Phil Lovett, Wichita; Bill Knox, Colorado Springs, Colo.; Charles Hays, Albert; John A. Callaghan, Prairie Village; Charles Gaynor, Ottawa; Richard Graglia, Hawthorne, N.J.; Larry Mellinger, Wichita; Bob Montgomery, To- peka; Michael LeVota, Kansas City, Mo. Third row: Steve Hollis, Fredonia; Carl Williams, Wichita; Hal Hend, Coldwater; Ron Odegard, Great Bend; Gil Riedel, Kiowa; Fred Noll, Overland Park; Bob Lohse, Prairie Village; Dennis Tuggle, Cimarron; Steve Neill, Clay Center. Second row: Robert H. Worley, Jr., Salina; Mike T. Bishop, El Dorado; Bob Williams, Garden City; Jeff Loyd, Kiowa; Don Hindmarch, La Grange, Ill.; Charles W. Smiley, Norton; Jack L. Ingram, Russell; John Bondon II, Kansas City, Mo.; Court Worley, Severy; Brent Domoney, Downs. Bottom row: George Leiszler, Clay Center; G. L. Johnson, Lakin; Alan Mulally, Lawrence; Mrs. Edna Stewart, housemother, Kansas City; Paul D. Budd, Topeka; Raymond Bengston, Tribune; Fritz Clark, Wamego; William C. Mauk, Overland Park. Not pictured: Douglass Bass, Marion; Alan Schueler, Bartlesville, Okla.; Dick Caskey, Sikeston, Mo.; Dan Austin, Salina; Ron Sable, Kansas City, Mo.; Mike McNally, Bartlesville, Okla.; Bob Funk, Bartlesville, Okla.; Larry Vaughn, Kansas City; Jim Hershey, Ellinwood; Phil Harmon, Tulsa, Okla.; Wally Pockets, Salina. 284 T ,aincthda Sf A ) cia Numerous campus activities and social functions high- lighted the Lambda Chis ' year. Some of the active house members were Pete Smith, an ASC representative and vice- president of the Accounting Society; Jack Harrington, a member of Sigma Delta Chi, editorial editor of the UDK, and also an ASC representative; William Weisenborn, the president of the Engineering Council; Steve Adams, a member of the Business School Advisory Board; John Carter, Rock Chalk art director; and Don Buckholz, member of Scabbard and Blade. The Lambda Chis were justly proud of their outstanding swimmers and divers. Don Pennington is an All-American swimmer and the holder of three Big Eight records. Don Buckholz is a three-year diving letterman and Mike Woollems is a first- year varsity swimmer. Group athletic achievements in- cluded the fraternity ' s second place award in their intra- mural football league. Again this year the Lambda Chis held their softball game with the Crescents, the house ' s little sisters organization. They also won second place for their KU Relays float. Their calendar of social events included a sorority housemother kidnapping, with the ransom money being donated to a worthwhile charity. House parties were the Christmas Formal, the spring White Rose Formal, and the Alphatraz, a costume party. IN A FRENZY OF ANTICIPATION, Lambda Chis and their dates watch another thrilling intramural game get underway. Top row: Quin Hostetler, Herrin, Ill.; Bob Crow, St. Louis, Mo.; John V. Jones, Brussels, Belgium; John W. M. Carter, Overland Park; Robert L. Shiffman, Prairie Village; Ed Stephenson, Shawnee Mission; Sheriff Cole, Wellington; Joe Welch, Arma; John Allen, Liberal; Dan Lynch, Little Rock, Ark.; Dick Montgomery, Leawood. Fifth row: Herb Gwaltney, Norton; Ralph Carl, Prairie Village; Roger Browning, Shawnee Mission; Jim Miller, Hutchinson; Jim Bronhard, Bunker Hill, Ind.; Don Pennington, Prairie Village; Mike Woollems, Wichita; Robert Nitschke, Kansas City; Mike Denton, Hutchinson; Bill Tuley, Leawood. Fourth row: James Hall, Raytown, Mo.; Bob Bryant, Overland Park; Chris Randall, Wichita; Steve Nordstrom, Prairie Village; Bill Gibbs, Overland Park; Bob Austin, Eskridge; Al Schoeneman, Sioux Falls, S.D.; Fred Dunn, Leawood; Rue Chagoll, Garden City. Third row: Philip Agee, Prairie Village; Steve Button, Wichita; Curt Byard, Salina; Rick Hanson, Sioux Falls, S.D.; Randy Jackson, Yuba City, Calif.; Rodney Coday, Shawnee Mission; Jim Bunn, Prairie Village; Pete Roth, Lawrence; Vernon Jobson, Kansas City; Bob Barry, Leawood. Second row: Stephen L. Twadell, Shawnee Mission; Ed Gilbert, Bonner Springs; Larry Clark, Kansas City; Fritz Seeber, Shawnee Mission; John Cukjati, Arma; Ralph Tophan, Shawnee Mission; Don Gibbs, Shawnee Mission; Dennis Comstock, Leawood; Gerald NI. Korsten, Mission. Bottom row: Steve Schuyler, Shawnee Mission; Spencer Smith, Shawnee Mission; Martin Bauer, Prairie Village; Pat Michaelis, Iola; Steve Adams, Leawood; Stephen. Smith, Shawnee Mis- sion; Lynn Weis, Cambridge, Mass.; Dan Troup, Kankakee, Ill.; Jim Kinerk, Prairie Village. 285 Phi Delta Theta The eighty-four men of Phi Delta Theta have brought many honors to 1621 Edgehill Road this year. Placing first in grade point average among fraternities at KU during the spring of 1966, the Phi Delts were also named the top scholastic chapter of their national organization. Several individuals achieved membership in honorary or- ganizations four Owls, five Sachems, two Phi Beta Kappas, and five Summerfield scholars were Phi ' s. In addition to academic awards, the fraternity fielded varsity athletes in football, basketball, track, swimming, and golf. Other chapter members captured intramural cham- pionships in A-team football, basketball, and track; C-team basketball and football; co-ed volleyball; and badminton. The Phi Delts also took fraternity championships in swim- ming and Greek Week track. Their busy year of athletics and academics included a similarly active social schedule, with fall and spring barn parties, a paddle party for the new initiates, the Southern Mess Spring Formal, and the Miami Triad with Sigma Chi and Beta Theta Pi. The fraternity aided the Lawrence community by sponsoring a Christmas Kiddie ' s Party for underprivileged children, by cleaning local Martin Park, and by collecting money for the Multiple Sclerosis Drive. PHIS AND DATES MAKE MERRY while the moon shines on their fall Harvest Party. Top row: Richard Paegelow, Shawnee Mission; David Ross, Arkansas City; Joe Jeter, Hays City; Sam Pestinger, Beloit; Jon Tilton, Salina; Greg Knecht, Wichita; Tom Shawver, Shawnee Mission; Tom Sheahan, Topeka; Bob McMahan, Quincy, Ill.; John Kelly, St. Louis, Mo. Sixth row: Bait Ruby, Muncie; Drue Jennings, Kansas City; Tony Dustman, Springfield, Mo.; Jim Davis, Hutchinson; Mike Hurtt, Shawnee Mission; Bo Darrah, Wichita; Steve Lukert, Sabetha; Jim Coughenour, Overland Park; David Awbrey, Hutchinson; Rick Durrett, Shawnee Mission; George Yarnevich, Kansas City. Fifth row: Bill Daniels, Shawnee Mission; Junior Biggins, Centralia; Tuck Sifers, Shawnee Mission; Bob Clendenin, Shawnee Mission; Bob Dalton, Wichita; Mike Kirk, Kansas City, Mo.; Bob Arthur, Manhattan; Stephen Blaylock, Wichita; Bob Peanmiller, Shawnee Mission; Lonnie Lee, Wichita. Fourth row: William Deter, Hays; Bill Read, Coffeyville; Pete Woodsman, Shawnee Mission; Bill Hess, Kansas City, Mo.; Bob Stoddard, Shawnee Mission; Don Trotter, Bar- tlesville, Okla.; Douglas Lonergan, Webster Groves, Mo.; Arthur R. Johnson, Wichita; John Banman, Newton; Patrick Gravitt, Tulsa, Okla.; Greg Knop, Olathe. Third row: Jim Smith, Wichita; Binder Stapleton, Fort Scott; David DeTar, Dearborn, Mich.; Tom Hitchcock, Overland Park; Jim Sleeper, Alden; Stephen Aldis, Fort Scott; Jay Allen, Wichita; Jim Merchant, Shawnee Mission; John Dillon, Hutchinson; Ron Goates, Hays. Second row: Michael Doyle, Bartlesville, Okla.; Gregory Durr, Eskridge; Thomas Jones, Topeka; Fred Magerkurth, Topeka; David Pitts, Wichita; Barry Wood, Wichita; Edward Gordon, Fort Scott; Douglas Douville, Overland Park; Bill Hicks, Kansas City. Bottom row: Bob Lutz, Prairie Village; H. W. Knapheide III, Quincy, Ill.; John Green, Kansas City; Michael Cann, Russell; Bruce Warren, Emporia; John Stinson, Topeka; Steve Lightstone, Coffeyville; Henry Russell, Galesburg, Ill.; Roy Holliday, Kansas City. 286 Phi Gamma Delta This year the men of Phi Gamma Delta counted a number of achievements in all areas of KU life academic, social, service, and athletics. Outstanding Fijis included Curt Heinz, a member of Owl Sociey and the All Student Council, and business manager for Rock Chalk Revue; Bob Boyd, president both of the Business School Council and of Phi Beta Lambda business fraternity; Kit Caldwell, IFC rush counselor; Alan Purvis, House Manager for Rock Chalk Revue; and Mike Maloney, a member of the KU Relays Committee. Highlighting the Phi Gam social cal- endar were the Orphans ' Christmas Party, held with the Pi Phis, at which Santa distributed gifts to the children; the Christmas Tea to entertain university officials and in- structors; the Norris Pig Dinner at which time each Fiji ' s date traditionally kissed the snout of the pig; and the in- famous Fiji Island Party. Service projects included care packages for Viet Nam, Heart Fund contributions, and clothing and blood drives. In sports the Phi Gams were runners-up in their fraternity A football division, and varsity football letters were awarded to Steve Heck, Ken Wertzberger, Rich Brewster, and Wally Hinshaw. Letters in other sports were awarded to Mark Mcisinger, Marty Nohe, and Steve Brooks in swimming, to Jack Clevinger in golf, and to Steve Straight in track. JOHN MARTIN AND His KAPPA PINMATE, Nancy Miller, celebrate nothing in particular over a bottle of Ripple wine. Top row: William K. Jones, Alexandria, Va.; Bob ,McMurty, Leawood; James R. Fritz, Kansas City; Ned Valentine, Clay Center; Stephen L. Waters, Kansas City, Mo.; J. Michael Sutton, Bartlesville, Okla.; Rowe McKinley, Lawrence; William Schutte, Wichita; Tom McLaughlin, Manhattan; Jerry Bottenfield, Pittsburg; Jeff Davis, Topeka. Sixth row: Mark Meisinger, Topeka; Steve D. Nelson, Concordia; Harry James McLaughlin, Jr., Manhattan; Galen L. Holston, Topeka; Robert Elkins, Oklahoma City, Okla.; Douglas Malcolm, Springfield, Mo.; Mike Maloney, Wichita; Rabhitt Hyter, Hutchin- son; John Martin, Ft. Worth, Tex. Fifth row: Gregory E. Wait, Kansas City; James P. O ' Neill, Shawnee Mission; Peter W. Stauffer, Topeka; Kent W. Wcltman, Great Bend; Dennis D. Barritt, Hutchinson; Robert M. Wasko, Kansas City; Richard T. Dawson, Wichita; Buz Lukens, Wichita; Eric J. Wisdom, Wichita; John S. Tomson, Topeka; Robert W. Harris, Lawrence. Fourth row: John Robinson, Wichita; Mal Anderson, Leawood; Ken Wertz- berger, Lawrence; Kevin J. McCreevy, Paola; Jerry Ricksecker, Nickerson; Chuck Dunagin, Topeka; Randy Cordill, Topeka; Sandy Jones, Lake Lota- wana, Mo.; Terry L. Clark, Bartlesville, Okla.; Bruce McPherson, Topeka. Third row: Philip D. Patterson, Topeka; Thomas Miller, Paola; David Ward, Topeka; Edward Brausa, Topeka; Stephen Gans, Salina; Ken Clark, Salina; Marc R. Ryan, Salina; Van Filet, Wichita; Jack Clevenger, Topeka; Bill Harris, Newport Beach, Calif.; Eddie Bryan, Topeka. Second row: James A. Wise, Shawnee Mission; Sam D. Campbell, Lawrence; Jay Breidenthal, Kansas City; C. C. Caldwell, Prairie Village; Jim Hoganson, Columbus, Nebr.; John Zongker, Wichita; George Brown, Wichita; Paul Miles, Wichita; Sterling Farber, Kansas City, Mo.; Marty Nolte, Kansas City. Bottom row: Mark Kirkpatrick, St. Louis, Mo.; George Wait, Prairie Village; Allan Fries, Topeka; David S. Ingalls, Marblehead, Mass.; Mrs. Dorothy M. White, housemother, Kansas City, Mo.; Curt Heinz, Topeka; David L. Marden, Liberal; Richard W. Hoener, Prairie Village; Wally Hinshaw, Wichita. 287 Phi Kappa Psi. Phi Kappa Psi has one of the richest fraternity traditions on the KU campus. Founded in 1876, it is the second oldest fraternity on the Hill. The men of Phi Psi this year worked in many positions in campus activities as chair- men of SUA committees, as the junior class vice-president, as members of the Jayhawker staff, and as high ranking NROTC officers. From the Phi Psi Shield, the national fraternity ' s publication, the chapter received the Best Newsletter Award, and their entry in SUA Carnival skit competition captured a third place trophy. In intramurals, Phi Psis boasted the Hill championships in B division football and in the team competition in golf. Varsity athletes included four football players, one basketball player, and one each in baseball and in tennis. On the lighter side of chapter life, social functions included the fall Pledge Class Yell-In, the Pledge-Active party, the in- famous Shipwreck party, a Christmas Buffet, the annual Beer and Eggs breakfast, the Spring Formal, and numerous barn parties. The traditional Phi Psi 500 was again one of the unique house productions of the year. Held on the Saturday morning of the Kansas Relays, this tricycle race involved representatives from each sorority and each of the women ' s residence halls. The winning team was awarded a trophy and a queen contest also took place. Two COEDS WHEEL THEIR TRICYCLES through the mud of the final curve during the Phi Psi 500 . Top row: Donald Snoddy, Kansas City, Mo.; Rodrick Taylor, Hutchinson; William A. Newman, Bethesda, Md.; Roger D. Bain, Jr., Hinsdale, Ill.; John Maichel, Kansas City, Mo.; Timothy Owen Scawlon, Kansas City, Mo.; Dennis House, Goodland; Jay Clancey, Prairie Village; Mike Homer, Kansas City; Donn Stevens, Overland Park; Bruce Sloan, Kansas City, Mo. Fifth row: Ray Conley, Tonganoxie; Ad Kellogg, Overland Park; Steve Hedtke, Spring- field, Va.; Tom Arbuckle, Hutchinson; Lark Billick, Des Moines, Iowa; Steve Evans, Hutchinson; Jim Gast, Paola; Jack Paradise, Leawood; Tom Hyde, Kansas City, Mo.; Spencer Kissell, Bartlesville, Okla. Fourth row: Mark Edmonds, Lawrence; E. W. Johnson III, Prairie Village; Tom Morgan, Lake Minnetonka, Minn.; Jim Clancey, Prairie Village; Jim Neustadt, Kansas City, Mo.; John T. McNeill, Wichita; Larry Frost, Wichita; Bill Bigsby, Omaha, Nebr.; Tom Moreland, Bartlesville, Okla.; Phil Watkins, Shawnee Mission; Peter Kissell, Bartlesville, Okla. Third rote: John T. Smith, Hays; James E. Harrow, Mission; Jim Dickinson, Coffeyville; R. L. Mullins, Leawood; Bill Gray, Chanute; Steve Allen, Leawood; Jack Rowlett, Paola; Milan Chilla, Hins- dale, Ill.; Craig Wilson, Shawnee Mission; Dean Strella, Hutchinson. Second row: George Elliott, Pittsburg; Greg Akers, Fort Scott; Bob Willis, Chil- licothe, Mo.; Tracy Leonard, Kansas City, Mo.; Mike Kline, Hutchinson; Pete Di Giovanni, Prairie Village; Bill Evans, Kansas City; Scott Barnes, Over- land Park; Mickey Allen, Lawrence; Mike Brady, Prairie Village; Steve Cushing, Hutchinson. Bottom row: Michael Maloney, Hutchinson; Mason R. McIntire, Oregon, Mo.; Jim Wart, Parsons; John Reed, Hutchinson; Doug Winn, Leawood; Mrs. Beulah McDonald, housemother, Sabetha; Robbie Kline, Hutchinson; Tom Helling, Leawood; Thomas V. Murray, Lawrence; Timothy M. Vaughan, Wichita. 288 Ph Kappa Sigma The newly-painted playground equipment and the bright blue jet airplane in. Centennial Park this year were the result of Phi Kappa Sigma pledges ' efforts. Another house project was displayed last spring in the KU Relays Pa- rade, when the Phi Kappa Sigmas won a trophy for their first place float, Run of the Century. This fall, their homecoming decorations topped those of all other KU fraternities. Adoption of a Korean child became another project of the group. Several members wore letters for their ability on the gridiron, with the fencing foils, and on the gymnastic bars. Among fraternities, the house was its division champion in volleyball, baseball, and football. One Phi Kappa Sigma was a member of Owl Society, and several consistently ranked on the Honor Roll. Other activities included chairmanships and memberships in the Sophomore Class Head Start Program, the IFC, and the KU-Y. More room was provided by adding an annex to the house this year, so that more social functions could be held there. Parties outside the house were held at sandbars and barns. A local hotel was the scene of the Black and Gold Formal, while the Dream Girl Formal was held in Kansas City. AT CHRISTMASTIME, a Phi Kappa Santa distributes presents to underprivileged children. Top row: John W. Schultz, Lawrence; Mark R. Shidelcr, Shawnee Mission; Rick Moderow, Tulsa, Okla.; Scott Guyon, Upper Darby, Pa.; Mike Blake, Moberly, Mo.; Charlie Knox, Topeka; Steven W. Spears, Shawnee Mission; Alan R. Purvis, St. Louis, Mo.; John Christiansen, Shawnee Mission; Warren W. Wear, Raytown, Mo. Fourth row: Glenn D. Anderson, Minneapolis, Minn.; Richard Keeler, Kansas City, Mo.; S. Van Buchanan, Chicago, Ill.; Christopher Strong, Port Chester, N.Y.; Dave McIntire, Paola; Bob Wolhuter, Leawood; Sid Ellison, Seattle, Wash.; Dave Freeman, Fort Scott; Jerry Ogilvie, Holton; Tom Burdine, Shawnee Mission; Russell S. Sifers, Kansas City, Mo. Third row: Thomas E. Fotopulos, Wichita; Cliff Stewart, Em- poria; Phil Bohlander, Delavan, Wisc.; Darwin Eakins, Emporia; Robert Turner, Shawnee Mission; Sam Cook, Sabetha; Nub Youmans, Hinsdale, Ill.; Bill. Graybill, Elkhart; Andy Chapman, Shawnee Mission; Brad Schwartz, Overland Park. Second row: Ignacio M. A. Bonet, Huesca, Spain; Mike Wat- kins, Columbus; Jack Manahan, Lawrence; Steve Strahm, Sabetha; Dale Fisher, Tulsa, Okla.; John Swife, Mission; John James, Wichita; Michael Demp- sey, Kansas City; Steve Rush, Overland Park. Bottom row: John Hill, Prairie Village; Robert Givens, Glendale, Mo.; Pete Edmunds, Dearborn, Mich.; Dave Sagerser, Shawnee Mission; Mrs. Donald C. Tinker, housemother; Rich Casupin, St. Joseph, Mo.; Steve Swift, Mission; Pierce, McPherson; Steve Hall, Prairie Village. 289 Phi Kappa Tau The members of Phi Kappa Tau started off the year in new surroundings. While they were preparing for their new fraternity house to be constructed on Stewart Avenue, the Phi Kappa Taus moved last summer from their old home on Louisiana Street to Ridge Court. Their temporary quarters consisted of an apartment building housing the Phi Taus in the traditional fraternity style. This year some of the Phi Taus ' honors and achievements included three Woodrow Wilson scholarship nominees, an All Stu- dent Council representative, and a member of the All Student Council University Events Committee. The Greek Week Music Supervisor and a member of both the Sopho- more Class Congress and the ASC Academic Affairs Com- mittee also belonged to the fraternity. Highlighting the many social functions held throughout the year were the Lost Straw Party, a barn party held at the Little Black- out Club; the Waterfront Wobble, a spring costume party; and the Fall Formal held in November in Kansas City. The Dream Girl Formal, at which the Phi Kappa Tau Dream Girl was selected, took place later in the year. Phi Tau teams were also active in a wide variety of intra- mural sports. In bowling they captured a team trophy for first place in their intramural bowling league. A PHI KAPPA TAU BRANDS HIS DATE with the fraternity ' s Greek letters at the Last Straw Party. Top row: Duane L. Fager, Topeka; Richard M. Smith, Lawrence; James A. Gencur, Shawnee Mission; H. Larry Smith, Lenexa; Robert G. Hodle, Kansas City, Mo.; John Gliessman, Galesburg, Ill.; Harold Fosmire, Shawnee Mission; Richard L. LeClaire, Leawood; Paul V. Stark, Jr., Washington, Ill.; Thomas E. Wilson, Garden City. Fourth row: Ted Graheck, Liberty; Harald Freybe, Fort Myers, Fla.; Arthur R. Cressman, Jr., Prairie Village; Jeff Davis, Evans- ton, Ill.; Mike Sevier, Wichita; Dennis E. Mourning, Clearwater; Gilbert Brown, St. Joseph, Mo.; Jim Haney, Miami, Fla.; Steve Blackford, Overland Park; Kent Haub, Leawood; Benjamin Harrison, Jr., Wichita. Third row: Larry Fencyk, Overland Park; Bill Crable, Overland Park; Kent Schell, Beloit; Gaylord Frank, Russell; Chuck Blount, Independence, Mo.; Lee Alloway, Hampton, Va.; Mike Wilson, Glen Ellyn, Ill.; Paul Baker, Kansas City, Mo.; Terry L. Harvey, Kansas City; Steven Roth, Fanwood, N.J. Second row: Hudson L. Whitenight, Jr., Westfield, N.J.; Larry M. Klopfenstein, Lawrence; James Day, Arkansas City; Bruce A. Broder, University City, Mo.; Kent Saylor, Morrill; Ed J. Ellis, Athens, Ga.; Tim Dalbom, Clearwater; Bob Kapp, St. Joseph, Mo.; Larry Walters, Newton. Bottom row: Keith Edwin Johnson, Leawood; Charles C. Curry, Wichita; T. William Wallace, Ottawa; Bruce L. Osborne, Kansas City; Mrs. Sebonia S. Hancock, housemother, Independence, Mo.; Perry M. Toll, Kansas City, Mo.; Clayton Sutton, Olathe; Guy Davis, Prairie Village. Not pictured: Richard C. Pierce, Fredonia. 290 Phi Kappa Theta With the number of private residence halls and apartment complexes in Lawrence rapidly growing, the Greek living groups have realized the necessity of constructing newer facilities for their members. Typical of this expansion will be the construction in the near future of a new Phi Kappa Theta house on Stewart Avenue, expanding the present 60- man house capacity to 80. The second place Homecoming display began a year of social activity for the Phi Kaps. The Moonshiner ' s Brawl, at which couples masqueraded as hillbillies and revenue agents; the Christmas Semi- formal; the Gangster Bang, with a speakeasy theme; and the weekend Sweetheart Formal in May, which featured a pre-party Friday night, water skiing Saturday afternoon at Lake Shawnee, and the sweetheart crowning Saturday night all made for a busy, fun-filled social calendar. On their athletic roster were a varsity swimmer and a wrestler. Phi Kappa Thetas also made their mark in campus activi- ties, as a Vox Executive Council member, the vice-presi- dent of Young Democrats, a production manager of the Jayhawker, and an associate managing editor of the UDK all belonged to the fraternity. Chairmen of both the Senior Tea Committee and the Sophomore Class Service Com- mittee, and members of the IFC Standards Committee, the varsity debate team, the Model UN steering committee, and Freshman Model Senate also were Phi Kaps. PETE McCooL AND WENDY BERG reflect the spirits of the season at the annual Phi Kappa Theta Christmas Party. Top row: Kenneth Spain, Leavenworth; Allan M. Pinne, Prairie Village; John Gillie, Bartlesville, Okla.; J. Stan Sexton, Topeka; Jack O ' Connor, Leaven- worth; Gary Fenner, St. Joseph, Mo.; Austin McMillan, Woford, England; Greg Bell, Topeka; David Greenamyde, Leavenworth. Fourth row: Mike Bader, Shawnee Mission; Pat Giles, Leavenworth; Steve Hill, Lawrence; Jerry Hertach, Lamed; Steve Lutgen, Beloit; Joe Fix, St. Joseph, Mo.; Mike Wil- liamson, Overland Park; Dave Stone, Shawnee Mission; John Strutz, Leavenworth; Tom Suwalsky, Leavenworth. Third row: Bob Hartman, Kansas City; Mike Hennessy, Parsons; Burditt Zackary, Shreveport, La.; Charles L. Anderson, Topeka; Dave A. Aggson, Lamed; Doug Irmen, Shawnee Mission; John R. Cady, Beloit; M. K. Tidwell, Shawnee Mission; Jerry Bell, Lamed. Second row: Fort Zackary, Wichita; Michael Grissel, Lamed; Bob Harrington, Springfield, Ill.; Michael C. Lafferty, Mission; Michael W. Welch, Independence; William A. VanHecke, Kansas City, Mo.; Peter M. McCool, Leaven- worth; Thomas F. Strutz, Leavenworth. Bottom row: Steve McDaniel, Shawnee Mission; Everett Saverinu, St. Joseph, Mo.; Robert Lastelic, Kansas City; Ronald Creary, Quebec City, Canada; Dan Kasper, Shawnee Mission; Vance P. Hubbell, Topeka; Clifford C. Seitter, Shawnee Mission; Rick Walsh, Prairie Village. Not pictured: Mike Gallagher, St. Joseph, Mo.; Tom Lindmark, Topeka; John Benzivenga, Brooklyn, N.Y.; Steve Russell, Topeka; Bob Miller, Leavenworth; Bob Smykle, Lawrence; Dave Greenburg, Topeka; Ron Thies, Shawnee Mission; Tom Dwyer, Shawnee Mission; Sam Wood, St. Joseph, Mo.; John Cahill, Kansas City; Mike Dyerly, Pratt. 291 Pi Ka 10Pa Alpha Pi Kappa Alpha is a fraternity whose membership selec- tion is based on scholastic achievement and character development. Residing at 1145 Louisiana, the PiKA ' s en- courage their members to participate in extracurricular activities. On the social scene for the Pikes this year were the Twelfth Street Brawl, the Christmas Tree-Trimming Party, the Christmas Semi-Formal and Open House, and the Dream Girl Formal. In the spring they held the Dixie Party, in addition to several sandbar parties, barn parties, and woodsies. Beta Gamma Chapter, founded in 1914, housed a diverse group of organizations ' members. Pikes were found on the Jayhawker staff, the varsity fencing team, ASC committees, and the bowling and gymnastics teams. In addition, the house had a Summerfield scholar. The Pikes were active in campus intramurals and this year took the fraternity division championship in bowling. They also participated in service projects: they aided in the elections by driving cars for University Party, and also held an Easter Egg Hunt for underprivileged children with the women of Alpha Delta Pi. The Pikes ' famous old-time fire engine again carried loads of children for excursion rides through Lawrence, and appeared in the Homecoming and Christmas parades. THE PIKE RESCUE SQUAD saves a brother ' s date from a bathtub full of Purple Passion at the annual Twelfth Street Brawl. 4 Top row: Al Toma, Deerfield, Ill.; Terrance Gaffney, Shawnee :Mission; David Hicks, Bartlesville, Okla.; Tom Bradley, Topeka; Robert Black, Law- rence; Larry L. Strahan, Lindsborg; John A. Russack, Mullica Hill, N. J.; W. Michael Shinkle, Des Moines, Iowa; H. Weston Roodhouse, Oklahoma City, Okla. Fourth row: Bob Sneed, Henderson, Ky.; Don Reynolds, Shawnee Mission; Bob Jensen, Kansas City, Mo.; Chuck Hewins, Rockville, Md.; Gregory McCluney, Kansas City, Mo.; Jim Cordonier, Kansas City; Gary J. Luscombe, Kansas City; Paul Allan Jones, Beattie. Third rote: David E. Edgington, Olathe; Dick Campbell, Overland Park; Jack Martin Paul, Liberal; Glenn A. Pool, Belleville, Ill.; Thomas E. Gleason, Ottawa; Glenn E. Casebeer, Kansas City; Rob Sturdy, Quincy, Ill.; Larry Streib, Lawrence; Roger L. Davis, Kansas City. Second row: Paul Perez, Topeka; Tom Smith, Lawrence; Theodore G. Riggs III, Belleville, Ill.; Clint Richards, Kansas City, Mo.; John C. Moore, Omaha, Nebr.; Rollie Hoffman, Leawood; Dennis Martin, Wellington; Robert Brill, Bonner Springs. Bottom row: Walter H. Wulf, Jr., Humboldt; Charles D. Huntress, Leawood; Larry S. Johnson, Hutchinson; Gertrude M. Schenck, housemother, Lawrence; Roger D. Hill, E. St. Louis, Ill.; Jack J. Lowe, Colby; Richard H. Sindel, Webster Groves, Mo. Not pictured: Dennis Pruitt, Lenexa; Ron Nick, Kansas City, Mo.; Buck Walters, Lincoln; Mark Paris, Atchison; Tom Rollert, Richardson, Tex.; Dan Hornbeck, Kansas City; Jim Langford, Louisville, Ky.; Tony Croman, Shawnee Mission; Ron Gustafson, Kansas City, Mo.; Kevin Mercier, Valley Falls; Greg Sipe, San Lorenzo, Calif.; Tim Weeks, Kansas City; Paul Dinovitz, Kansas City, Mo.; Bob Johnson, Kansas City; Jack Aenchbacer, Richmond, Va. 292 Sigma Alpha Epsilon The Sig Alphs had another busy year full of activities, sports, and social functions. Group projects included their underprivileged children and orphan parties and their participation in the Multiple Sclerosis drive. The members participated in many campus organizations and activities. Outstanding leaders included an ASC fraternity district representative, four Yell Leaders, a member of the ASC traditions committee, the co-chairman of the ASC elec- tions committee, a member of the IFC Executive Council, and a member of the Student Advisory Board. Other SAE ' s were involved in several SUA committees, Collegiate Young Republicans, the Rock Chalk Revue staff, Owl Society and Sachem, the Jayhawker staff, and the Fellow- ship of Christian Athletes. Among the honors h eld by individuals were Summerfield, U. G. Mitchell math, Na- tional Merit, and Navy ROTC scholarships. Another SAE field of endeavor was varsity athletics, as the house was well represented by nine men playing KU football, four in basketball, three in track, two in golf, and one each in tennis and fencing. The Sig Alph social year began with the Sleep and Eat pajama party which was followed by the Protest Party. A Parents ' Day Open House and Bar- B-Que, the Shanghi Gobbler for new initiates, the Plan- tation Ball, and the Violet Hunt, a sandbar hunt for the flower of SAE, were other highlights of the year. SIG ALPHS ARE SIDE-TRACKED from a display of brotherhood and sisterhood at a barn party. Top row: Denis Dietz, Kirkwood, Mo.; Thomas Hickey, Scotia, N.Y.; Kyle Craig, Joplin, Mo.; Ron Wagner, Rock Hill, Mo.; Clyde Stutzman, Shawnee Mission; Larry Vanek, Atchison; Pat Davis, Colorado Springs, Colo.; Roger White, Aurora, Colo.; Richard Thomas, Dieterich, Ill.; Robert Bork, St. Marys; Brent Daggett, Winfield. Sixth row: Bill Lee, Topeka; Eric Kane, Dallas, Tex.; William Fox, Wichita; Bowen White, Shawnee Mission; Bob Kroeker, Great Bend; Bob Bennett, Springfield, Mo.; Craig Wolfe, Shawnee Mission; Jim Davis, Kansas City; Larry Ferree, St. Louis, Mo.; Harlan Everett, Fairway; Scott Curry, Kansas City, Mo. Fifth row: Charles E. Waldron, III, Kansas City, Mo.; Ted Steiner, Kirkwood, Mo.; Dave Robinson, Leawood; Steve Woodard, Kirkwood, Mo.; Vic Hildyard, Denver, Colo.; Steve Scruby, Indianapolis, Ind.; Jim Fisher, Shawnee Mission; John Cotter, Hutch- inson; L. Roy Bruce, Gardner; Lee Hales, Shawnee Mission. Fourth row: Jim O ' Connell, Hutchinson; Jack Rowe, Kansas City, Mo.; John Willman, St. Louis, Mo.; Martin Nolterieke, Kansas City; Jerry Turley, Los Angeles, Calif.; Doug Markley, Ft. Collins, Colo.; Larry O ' Neal, Prairie Village; Bill Bar- row, Kirkwood, Mo.; Torn Berryman, Ashland; Gaiy Krause, Great Bend; Craig Smith, Liberty, Mo. Third row: Gary R. O ' Neal, Shawnee Mission; John L. Beck, Kansas City; Joseph F. Waeckerle, Kansas City, Mo.; Steve Gibbs, Topeka; Bob Treanor, Kirkwood, Mo.; Rick Galles, Albuquerque, N.M.; Torn Anderson, Topeka; David L. Gast, Kirkwood, Mo.; Dan Johnson, Shawnee Mission; Dennis M. Taylor, Rancho Cordova, Calif. Second row: Jim Olson, Kirkwood, Mo.; John A. Geissal, Prairie Village; John Chaloner, Topeka; Nick Steph, Palestine, Tex.; Ken Harden, Topeka; Gary Warner, Boulder, Colo.; Royce Nelson, Belleville; Mark Bedner, Emporia; Ray B. Lancaster, Alexandria, Va. Bottom row: Jon R. Keller, Great Bend; Bruce Mommsen, Hinsdale, Ill.; John F. Tyson, Florissant, Mo.; John F. Strandmark, Shawnee Mission; Mike E. Nail, Shawnee Mission; Gary N. Dickerson, Shawnee Mission; Phil Stratemeier, Leawood; Jaye Ediger, Hutchinson. 293 Sigma Chi This fall Sigma Chi dedicated a new addition to its chap- ter house, increasing its capacity from 64 to 92 men. Among those living at 1439 Tennessee were an ITC vice- president, Summerfield scholars, the Jayhawker business manager, and members of the Kansas Relays Committee, Owl Society, and the College Intermediary Board. Others chaired such organizations as Kansas Collegiate Young Republicans and the SUA Carnival. Besides being active in Hill activities, the Sigma Chis excelled in scholarship --twelve men in the house were on the Dean ' s Honor Roll first semester. Last year Sigma Chi and Kappa Kappa Gamma placed third in Rock Chalk Revue, and this fall the pledge skit took second in its division in the SUA Carnival. This summer the KU chapter will host the Sigma Chi Leadership Training Workshop, to be attended by representatives from 138 chapters across the nation. The social calendar was amply filled: the Yell-In and fall barn parties began the year, and were followed by the Christ- mas Formal, the Sweetheart Party, and Derby Day, a pseudo track meet with the fairer sex. Sigma Chi athletes included five varsity football players and three golfers. In intramurals Sigs claimed Hill championships in slow- pitch softball, golf, and volleyball. They also took a second in handball and two seconds in basketball. SIG STEVE ADAMS FIGHTS VALIANTLY to save his black derby on Sigma Chi Derby Day. Top row: David T. Peters, Kansas City, Mo.; James F. Buescher, St. Louis, Mo.; Hub Meyer, Independence; Bill McElfresh, Osage City; Steve Adams, Bartlesville, Okla.; Van Markwell Hartman, Hays; R. Michael Baxter, Topeka; Michael Collins, Garden City; Lew Lewis, Pueblo, Colo.; Jim Gilliland, Hutchinson. Fifth row: Christopher N. Shears, Hutchinson; H. R. Braley, Philadelphia, Pa.; Scott T. Post, Wichita; Joseph P. Fallin, Oklahoma City, Okla.; Werner Fruetel, Germany; Rick Shaffer III, Hutchinson; Larry A. Cates, Prairie Village; Allen C. Belot, Lawrence; George R. Milleret, Law- rence; James Andrew Nelson, St. Louis, Mo.; Terry Greer, Pueblo, Colo. Fourth row: Granville M. Bush IV, Lyons; Dennis 0. Bosley, Dighton; Nich- olas J. Michalski, Kansas City; Mark Merriweather, Smith Center; Chris Robe, Arkansas City; Roger Wilson, Downey, Calif.; Mike Patton, Shawnee Mission; Joe McNeill, Wichita; Steve Olsen, Abilene; Paul Becker, Wichita. Third row: James M. Armstrong, Abilene; Luis Ballivian, La Paz, Bolivia; Dennis Hill, Kansas City; David Oliver Finkenbinder II, Western Springs, Ill.; Stu Barrier, Wichita; Steve Stanton, Iola; Jim Sherar, Paola; Charles Peffer, Wichita; Max Foote, Paola. Second row: Jeff Crosier, Memphis, Tenn.; Charles Fisher, Prairie Village; Steve Lovette, Kiowa; Mike Good, Fort Scott; Jake Klaver, Kingman; Scott Martin, Coffeyville; Chick Keller V, Kansas City, Mo.; Jim Good, Fort Scott; Carl Haas, Kansas City, Mo.; John Shurson, Abilene. Bottom row: Dave McClain, St. Joseph, Mo.; William C. Walker, Eskridge; Charles H. Warner, Wichita; Terry Post, Wichita; Don Smith, Overland Park; Gary Cullor, Fort Scott; Bannus Hudson, Fort Scott; Ken Whitenight, Jr., Lawrence; Bill Porter, Topeka; Bruce Wesley Dickson III, Kansas City. 294 Sigma NUL The Sigma Nus enjoyed another year with the initiation this fall of their eighty-third year at the University of Kansas. Following in their traditional style, the Snakes were represented in Hill activities by such men as Kirk Flury, ASC Social Committee member Ron Meek, adver- tising manager for the UDK; Larry Rouse and Gary Schaub, editor and business manager of the Kansas En- gineer; and Tom Black, president of Vox Populi. Despite the time spent in the power struggles of campus activities, the Sigma Nus still found time for the extracurricular ac- tivities exemplified by their steady social life and their participation in all types of intramural competition. The Snakes ' social calendar included three barn parties, the White Rose Formal, the Hi Rickety Initiate Formal, and the Toga Party; and the year was climaxed with the spring Prohibition Party. In. KU varsity athletics, the house was represented in four sports: the Sigma Nu ' s alone fielded four football players, two basketball players, and nu- merous other men in swimming and gymnastics. Rodger Bohnenstiehl was picked by national officers to be on Sigma Nu ' s All-American Athletic Team. Next fall, Sigma Nu plans to move into a new $300,000 addition, which will include a new chapter room, kitchen, and dining room. SNAKES SPREAD CHEER AND OTHER GOOD THINGS at their October Western Party. Top row: John Hoverson, Seattle, Wash.; John Jaax, Conway Springs; Edgie Ranney, Wichita; Bob Butler, Prairie Village; Steve Brighton, Coffey- ville; Mark Michael, Wichita; Jim Schneider, Salina; Bill Meyers, Prairie Village; Rodger Bohnenstiehl, Collinsville, ill.; Layne Creason, Leawood; Charles Cobb, Baba, Calif. Sixth row: Jim Alley, Wichita; Dell Paschal, Hutchinson; Mark P. Grissom, Syracuse; Gary Welch, Olathe; George Kasten, In- dependence; Ron Meek, Mulvane; Mike Ashley, Chanute; Kent Augustson, Galesburg, Ill.; Mike Boyle, Salina; Jerry Jaax, Conway Springs; Jim Hatfield, Chicago, Ill. Fifth rose: Skip Cahal, Shawnee Mission; Tom Schumm, Prairie Village; David Hill, Leawood; Bob Deuben, Des Moines, Iowa; Mike Freeland, Des Moines, Iowa; Dick Fortier, Bemidji, Minn.; James Lavehead, Des Moines, Iowa; Robert Gerner, Bartlesville, Okla.; Gerald Baker, Kirk- wood, Mo.; Roger Ash, Wichita. Fourth row: Bob Fortier, Bemidji, Minn.; Steven B. Moon, Chanute; Kenneth Guest, Coffeyville; Bernie Bialek, Kansas City; Gary Duncan, Winfield; Chuck Dennis, Olathe; Robert Livingston, Coffeyville; Torn Black, Hiawatha; John Fredenburg, Council Grove. Third row: Tom Veatch, Wichita; Skip Moon, St. Louis, Mo.; Jim Askins, Wichita; Ray Thompson, Des Moines, Iowa; Tom Bowser, Coffeyville; Jon Martin, Leawood; Eric Soder, Wichita; Howard Forsythe, Shawnee Mission; John Hetlinger, Emporia; Bob Manley, Chanute. Second row: Donald R. Albon, Omaha, Nebr.; Bob Slipper, Leawood; Tim Reynolds, Des Moines, Iowa; Ovie Palmer, Syracuse; John Edwards, Wichita; Larry Parker, Kansas City; Bob Matejka, Omaha, Nebr.; Tim Henry, Fort Scott; Tom Weinbera, Coffeyville. Bottom row: Gary M. Oyler, Chanute; Gary Schaub, Coffeyville; Gary Carrels, Neodesha; Frank Bower, Shawnee Mission; Mrs. Violette Holwerda, housemother, Lindsborg; Larry Rouse, Kansas City; Bob Schumm, Kansas City; Bill Brooner, Summit, N.J.; Jean Owen, St. Louis, Mo. 295 Sigma Phi Epsilon Due to the variety of interests and abilities of its members, Sigma Phi Epsilon ' s calendar is filled with campus ac- tivities, sports events, and social functions. Sig Ep ' s hold such positions as manager of KUOK, senior class committee chairman, KU-Y Children ' s Hour chairman, officers in honorary fraternities, and chairmen of various phases of Greek Week. Sig Ep ' s also excel scholastically, counting among their members a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship nominee, a Summerfield scholar, a National Merit finalist, an Owl Society member, and a Sachem member. The fraternity participated in the Heart Fund Drive, the Campus Chest, the KU-Y student tutoring program, and this year teamed up with Chi Omega for Rock Chalk Revue. Sigma Phi Epsilon boasts varsity athletes in track, football, baseball, gymnastics, and tennis, and claims the fraternity division bowling championship. Rounding out the Sig Ep calendar are social events, beginning with the pledge yell-in and followed by the Bowery Brawl, an annual costume party based on a modified Roaring Twen- ties theme. At Christmas the Sig Ep ' s entertain under- privileged children of Lawrence at a Kiddie Party. The year closes with the annual Sig Ep Pajama Party, and the Spring Formal, at which time the Sweetheart of Sigma Phi Epsilon is crowned. PRACTICING F011 UPCOMING INTRAMURAL COMPETITION, a Sig Ep athlete takes careful aim at a window. Top row: Matt Jordan, Jacksonville, Ill.; Warren Massey, Jacksonville, Ill.; Murray Lull, Smith Center; Phil Rolf, Kansas City, Mo.; Dennis Delozier, Prairie Village; David Howard, Kansas City, Mo.; Joel Hawley, Valley Center; John Gibbons, Kansas City; Bill DeBaun, Leawood. Fifth row: Randy Glick, Neodesha; Chris Bishop, Leawood; Harold May, Kansas City; Sam Gill, Sterling; Frank Jenkins, Overland Park; Jerald Nelson, Overland Park; Jack Westerhoff, Milwaukee, Wise.; Stephen Hinkhouse, Kansas City; Jim Breckenridge, Louisburg; William Thomas Trotter III, Raytown, Mo. Fourth row: Jack Kilroy, Prairie Village; Jeff Hallquist, Overland Park; Jim Nichols, Belle Plaine; Mike Johnson, Courtland; Larry Johnson, Overland Park; Charles D. Parden, Louisville, Ky.; Alexander Holmes, Bartlesville, Okla.; D. William Jackson, Mission Hills; Jim Dorsey, Prairie Village. Third row: William Wilt, Kansas City; Lanny Burdick, Overland Park; Steve Rasmussen, Overland Park; Bob Latimer, Ottawa; Dennis Driscoll, Wellington; Larry Kelly, Prairie Village; Marvin G. McDonald, Jr., Wellington; Roger Nelson, Overland Park; Al Stoike, Topeka; Robert Chalmers, Topeka. Second row: Carey Borum, Coffeyville; Ned N. Walters, Coffeyville; Craig Doc Morey, Leawood; F. Steve Schneider, Overland Park; Richard Sands, Overland Park; Steve Beasley, Prairie Village; Ted Olson, Jacksonville, Ill.; Dick Elliott, Fairway; Bill Brady, Prairie Village. Bottom row: Mike Burdick, Overland Park; Robert G. Elliott, Fairway; Ermon L. Higdon, Kansas City, Mo.; Mike Spencer, Overland Park; Mrs. Eula Dickey, housemother, Wichita; Terry L. Wilson, Kansas City; Kenneth Lee Derrington, Prairie Village; Tom Roth, Ellinwood; Ted R. Wilson, Independence, Mo. Not pictured: Chuck Beucher, Overland Park. 296 Tau Kappa Zipsilon Since its founding at Kansas University in 1940, the Alpha Phi chapter of Tau Kappa Epsilon has ably represented the largest social fraternity in the nation. This was evident in the construction of its rambling, ranch-style house on Stewart Avenue in 1962. In addition, the chapter has excelled in campus life. TKE leadership was seen this year as members held the offices of chairman of Col- legiate Young Republicans, secretary of Collegiate Young Democrats, president of KU-Y, circulation manager of the UDK, a member of the Model UN Steering Committee, as well as the IFC Rushbook editor and vice-president of the freshman class. TKE ' s were active in the KU-Y Cabinet, SUA. committees, the KU Relays Committee, the varsity debate team, and the Jayhawker staff. They were also members of such honorary fraternities as Delta Sigma Pi and Scabbard and Blade. TKE ' s participating in all intra- mural sports not only won their B team basketball di- vision championship, but also the horseshoes doubles and singles championships. In the spring of 1966 with Alpha Delta Pi sorority, TKE ' s won first place in the Greek Week Sing Mixed Chorus division. Socially, in addition to the traditional Roman party held in the fall, there was the semi-formal winter Red Carnation Ball and the spring Southern Plantation Ball. BEV GIBBS PREPARES to give Daryl Willey the shaft at the TKE Roman Party. Top row: Francis Wainwright, Syracuse; Kenneth McElhaney, Great Bend; John Waldron, Mankato; George R. Watson, Jr., Kingman; Dennis Jacobs, Kansas City, Mo.; Don Seyb, Pretty Prairie; Roger Theis, Arkansas City; John R. Bellman, Manhattan; Jim Mayes, Shawnee Mission; Jim McMahan, Hinsdale, Ill. Seventh row: Thomas VonLintel, Hays; Woody Forney, Russell; Jerry Gartin, Wichita; John F. Jorgensen, Mt. Hope; John A. Van- Speybroeck, Wichita; Dave Weber, Overland Park; Capper Grant, Hinsdale, Ill.; Chuck Cook, Independence, Mo.; Steve Milhollin, Decatur, Ill.; Mike Stephenson, Yates Center; Bob Crum, El Dorado. Sixth row: Michael Martin, Overland Park; James H. Jorgensen, Mt. Hope; John H. Snyder, Wich- ita; Robert J. Cowden, Shawnee Mission; Brian Bauerle, Harlan, Iowa; Brad Ellis, Leawood; Alan Mast, Kansas City, Mo.; Mike Hickman, Overland Park; Sam Jordan, Wichita; Jerry Wible, Wichita. Fifth row: Keith Hiatt, Shawnee Mission; James Hess, Wichita; Gerald Lindberg, Great Bend; Bill Johnson, Olathe; Bruce Lang, Prairie Village; George Boyle, Wichita; Larry C. Hargreaves, Solomon; Richard Pasley, Ames, Iowa; David Chipman, Overland Park. Fourth row: Larry Lee, Topeka; Richard Myers, Coral Gables, Fla.; Louis Pryor, Bucklin; Ben Marriott, Ft. Walton Beach, Fla.; Rick Freeman, Prairie Village; Charles Buck, Prairie Village; Joe Lundy, Shawnee; Don Hanna, Dighton; Hal Peterson, Salina; John Morrow, Kansas City, Mo. Third row: Mike Pechar, Overland Park; John Hutton, Kansas City; Randy Stevens, Wichita; John Pettit, Mission; Steve Dickerson, Shawnee; George Wombolt, Mission; Tim MacArthur, Mission; Rick MacArthur, Mission; Jim Huggins, Prairie Village. Second row: Philip Wentworth, Winfield; Michael K. Hoary, Overland Park; Michael G. Knisley, Coffeyville; Bob Owens, Kansas City; Wayne D. Mills, Merriam; Keith R. Finger, Powhattan; Spike Lynch, Leawood; Stephen C. Haynes, Emporia; Jeffrey R. Guenther, Quincy, Ill.; David R. Myers, Overland Park. Bottom row: Keith Kinyon, Greensburg; Don Evers, St. Louis, Mo.; Don Hineman, Dighton; Don Hunter, Abilene; Chuck Weinstein, Overland Park; Curt Kinney, Garden City; Dave Dickensheets, Welling- ton; Daryl Willey, Wichita; Butch Conover, Satanta. 297 Theta Chi Athletic, scholastic, and social endeavors were all part of Theta Chi life. Chartered at KU in 1954, the chapter ' s membership has consistently grown both in size and in accomplishments. Extracurricular activities ranged from membership in Vox Populi, senior committees, Alpha Kappa Psi, and several Student Union Activities commit- tees, to work as an All Student Council fraternity represent- ative. The fraternity also housed a Woodrow Wilson scholarship nominee. Last year the Theta Chis received the Interfraternity Council award for having shown the greatest improvement in fraternity scholarship. This year the men sponsored a roadside clean-up project. In athletics they participated in intramural basketball and football competition. Two sophomore lettermen, in swimming and fencing, were also Theta Chis. Socially, an awards dinner was held to recognize outstanding members of the house. The party of the year was the Bogus Brawl, a costume party with the men ' s dates spending the night in the house and, of course, with the men moving out. During the Christmas season, the annual tree-trimming party was held. The Dream Girl formal ended the year, and a fra- ternity sweetheart was chosen to reign over the dance. A THETA CHI AND His DATE come alive at the annual Bogus Brawl. Top row: Dennis Nesbitt, Overland Park; Ken Muller, Lake Quivira; Stephen C. Meredith, Shawnee Mission; Bill Penney, Overland Park; James Freet, Kansas City, Mo.; James W. Lula, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Norm Magnuson, Waukegan, Ill.; Terry A. Vogt, Charlottesville, Va. Fourth row: Wayne Fiske, Flushing, Mich.; John Lancaster, Junction City; Cush Miller, Winfield; Robert Wilson, Wichita; James Davis, La Grange, Ill.; Rick Hilleary, Kansas City; Roger Rieder, Lenexa. Third row: Timothy A. Theurer, Kansas City; Thomas E. Brown, Garden City; Thomas Tschappat, St. Louis, Mo.; Cary Seem, Mission; Steve Shriven Kansas City; J. D. Kelley, Shawnee Mission; Mark C. Powers, Wichita; Tom Blair, Topeka. Second row: Fred McCracken, Wichita; Ted Bell, New York City, N.Y.; Jim Banks, Lenexa; Stephen Blair, Topeka; Tom Wilson, St. Louis, Mo.; Frank Robbins, Wichita; Larry Phillips, Overland Park. Bottom row: Rich Bolack, Winfield; Bill Weber, Wichita; Bob Lynn, Overland Park; David Kleier, Oxford; Mrs. Louise Reed, house- mother, Detroit, Mich.; Michael Martin, Wichita; James Rueff, Overland Park; Michael Farley, Leawood. Not pictured: Tom Stanion, Pratt; Bob Hoffine, Overland Park; Eric Yould, Salina; Ken Rucff, Overland Park; David Evans, Turner; Stan Graham, Winfield; David Church, Lawrence; Ray Clark, Lawrence. 298 Theta Tau Theta Tau, founded in 1912, has shown not only a long tradition at KU, but also a characteristic very unique in fraternal organizations. Combining a social fraternity with an engineering organization, Theta Taus attempt to instill in each member a professional attitude through their pro- fessional development program. To maintain and fulfill these principles, their projects this year included the Engineering Exposition Archway, the Engineering Train- ing Seminar, and the Women ' s Engineering Banquet. Members were also active in the Engineering Council and the All Student Council, and as the advertising director of the Engineering Exposition. Their past strength and future plans were seen as the chapter completed final plans for a new 48-man house to be built on Stewart Avenue. Although they combine professional with social principles of organization, Theta Taus did have a Casino Party, a steak fry, and an unusual Christmas Party at which toys were exchanged and then donated to underprivileged children. Athletically, men in the house won a singles tennis division championship and placed third last year in the Greek Week Chariot Race. Individuals also repre- sented Zeta Chapter in several other sports, participating actively in soccer, fencing, and rugby competition. THETA TAUS MEET FOR FUN AND GAMES at a local speakeasy, namely the chapter room of their house. Top row: David Dwyer, Shawnee Mission; Bob Paulette, Muscatine, Iowa; John Zimmerman, Kansas City, Mo.; William Ege, Overland Park; Steve Corson, Shawnee Mission; Robert Bibb, Shawnee Mission; Ron Bowman, Council Bluffs, Iowa; Wayne Patchin, Merwin, Mo. Third row: Ronald D. Miller, Topeka; Ken Nied, Prairie Village; Conrad D. Wagenknecht, St. Joseph, Mo.; Rich Banker, Overland Park; John Trewolla, Shawnee Mission; Steve Wolcott, Rochester, N.Y.; Paul T. Hetherington, St. Louis, Mo. Second row: David R. Woolsey, Overland Park; Myrl R. Wear, Arkansas City; Phil Estes, Overland Park; Arnie Bard, Roosevelt, N.J.; Don Qui, La Paz, Bolivia; Robert Rosander, Shawnee Mission; Alfred F. Burkle, Kansas City; Paul E. Berger, Kansas City, Mo. Bottom row: Jeff Brann, Overland Park; Roger Arnold, Oskaloosa; Steve Burr, Hays; Mrs. Mary Belle Chappell, Ottawa; Gary A. Pratt, Topeka; John Schroeder, Lyndonville, N.Y.; Robert Weaver, St. Joseph, Mo. 299 riangle Triangle fraternity primarily pledges architects, engineers, and math and physical science majors. The past four years have seen continual advancement with increased partici- pation in campus activities and improved grades. In spite of the requirements of the studies they pursue, the Triangles still carried on with activities normal to a fra- ternity, such as intramurals, singing, and parties. They placed sixth on campus among fraternities for spring, 1966, in grades, with a house GPA of 1.68, an improve- ment of .36 over the previous semester. At the SUA Car- nival, Triangle pledges won first in the Men ' s Booths competition. On the national level, the KU Triangles re- ceived tenth place for overall chapter performance. As for individuals ' activities, men were members of SUA, Vox Populi, and the KU-Y, and one was a varsity letterman in tennis. In addition to a Woodrow Wilson nominee, a Veta B. Lear Award winner, and numerous scholarship recipients, the house included members of such honor- ary organizations as Pi Mu Epsilon, Sigma Tau, Tau Beta Pi, Sigma Phi Sigma, and Eta Kappa Nu. The Little Sisters of Areta were organized this year, and they partici- pated in several Triangle social functions. First semester the ho use held a barn party and the White Pine formal. A spring formal, held in Kansas City, and another spring party rounded out the year ' s social functions. WHILE SEVERAL BROTHERS LOOK ON, one Triangle experiences all the joys of a laking. ri Top row: David Bower, Shawnee Mission; Dave Brueggeman, St. Louis, Mo.; Mark Corder, Highland; Roger Little, Kirkwood, Mo.; Donald L. Hug- gins, St. Louis, Mo.; Phil Bozarth, Raytown, Mo.; Pete Youngberg, Lawrence; Gary Orscheln, Moberly, Mo.; Jim Young, Independence, Mo. Fourth row: Jim Keller, Russell; Rick Gilbert, Ft. Benton, Mont.; Dan Goering, Shawnee Mission; Ron Nadvornik, Kansas City; Bill Lightstone, Coffeyville; Larry Fagan, Kansas City; John Beaumont Shumway, Overland Park; Dave Hill, Nevada, Mo.; Benton Altimus Harding, Jr., Ceadar Lawn; Terry Howard, Kansas City. Third row: David Hof, Kansas City, Mo.; Rich Siebenlist, Kansas City; Dean Eaton, Leawood; Rich Holmes, Barrington, Ill.; Bill Kissel, Overland Park; Mike Steinmetz, Waterloo, Iowa; Stewart Hall, Shawnee Mission; Craig Ourslcr, Kansas City; Jim Coffelt, Roeland Park. Second row: Carter Burns, Kansas City; Steve Dexter, Fort Leavenworth; TOM Frye, Shawnee Mission; Ralph Burrell, Overland Park; Steven Campbell, Muncie; Rich- ard Bond, Shawnee Mission; Michael Bower, Shawnee Mission; James Rush, DeSoto. Bottom row: Bob Corder, Jr., Highland; Edwin Coleman, Kansas City; Dave Pack, Wichita; Mrs. H. P. Ramage, housemother, Lawrence; Richard Andrews, Kansas City; James Drebelbis, Offutt A.F.B., Nebr.; James Craig, Newark, Ohio; Bob McIntyre, Ralston, Nebr. 300 ORGANIZATIONS ACTIVITIES 301 University Or nizat ions Student Government 303 Collegiate Young Republicans 307 Associated Women Students 308 Class of 1967 310 Class of 1968 311 Class of 1970 311 Business Students Association 312 Engineering School Council 313 Vox Populi 314 Cheerleaders 314 Jay Janes 315 Frosh Hawks 316 Student Union Activities 31.8 KU-Y 320 People-to-People 321 University Daily Kansan. 322 KUOK 324 Debate 325 Delta Sigma Rho 325 Alpha Phi Omega 326 Campus Chest 327 Bowling Association 327 Ski Club 328 Cricket Club 328 Parachute Club 329 Quack Club 329 Mortar Board 330 Sachem 331 Tau Beta Pi 332 Owl Society 332 Sigma Tau 333 Sigma Gamma Tau 333 American Institute of Architects 334 Scarab 334 Petroleum Engineers 334 Eta Kappa Nu 335 Phi Mu Alpha 335 Mu Phi Epsilon 336 Sigma Alpha Iota 336 Phi Chi Theta 337 Women ' s Recreation Association 337 American Pharmaceutical Association 338 Rho Chi 338 Pharmacy Wives 339 Gamma Alpha Chi 339 Tau Sigma 339 Alpha Delta Sigma 340 Alpha Kappa Psi 340 Sigma Psi 341 India Club 341 Pakistan. Students Association 342 Mu Epsilon Nu 342 Secret Seven 342 Kappa Eta Kappa 343 Chi Delphia 343 Crescents 344 Little Sisters of Minerva 344 Sisters of the Maltese Cross 345 Sweethearts of Sigma Chi 345 Kallav Filleeans 345 LittleSisters of Areta 346 Societyof Pachacamac ______________________________________________ 346 aric_ Acttvit1 es 302 ASC AND STUDENT BODY OFFICERS. Top row: Jim Pr ager, ASC Chairman, Fullerton, Calif.; Rosie Burns, ASC Secretary, Caldwell; Brian Barker, ASC ' Vice-Chairman, Virginia Water, Eng. Bottom row: Janet Anderson, Student Body Vice-President, Prairie Village; Al Martin, Stu- dent Body President, Shawnee Mission; Bob McAdoo, ASC Treasurer, Lawrence. 303 Student Government A central student government with the purpose of benefitting the interest of KU students is institution- alized in the Associated Students of the University of Kansas. This association is composed of all students regularly enrolled at the university. Often referred to as the ASC All Student Council it is, however, much more. The government is divided into the three tra- ditional branches of executive, legislative, and judicial operations. The lawful purpose of the Association is to unite in a single self-governing body the students of the university, to coordinate student activities with the programs of the faculty and administrative govern- ing bodies, and to thus promote the highest interests of the university and to cultivate loyalty to the univer- sity among it students. The method of accomplishing these ends is left to the discretion of the Association by the power delegated to it by the Chancellor, the University Senate, and the State Board of Regents. Elected in the spring of 1966, Al Martin student body president and Janet Anderson student body vice-president guided the executive throughout the year. In an effort to overcome the fraternal nepotism which had stymied an effective committee system, these student leaders began their terms by appointing ALL STUDENT COUNCIL. Top row: Curt Heinz, Topeka; Jackie Van Eman, Overland Park; Joyce Snapp, Wichita; Monti Belot, Lawrence; Pete Smith, Shawnee Mission; :Frank Joyce, Shawnee Mission; Zu Zu Duhaiby, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia; Mike Cann, Russell. Third row: Farouk Saad, Sudan; Rosie Burns, Caldwell; Kathy Prewitt, Wichita; Allen Russell, Scottsbluff, Nebr.; Kyle Craig, Joplin, Mo.; Mike Kirk, Kansas City, Mo. Second row: Jim Prager, Fullerton, Calif.; Patty Mills, Topeka; Linda Tate, Mission; Gay Gordon, Wichita; Brian Barker, Virginia Water, England; Cheryl Parmely, Leroy; Rusty Wells, Portland, Ore.; Nancy Miller, Topeka. Bottom row: Guy Davis, Prairie Village; Marti Mullen, Kalamazoo, Mich.; Dennis Moore, Wichita; Ken Nied, Prairie Village. 304 only those who would insure good work. They also began a campaign to reduce the committee structure in order to make it an effective, efficient system. Martin and Anderson saw success come their way as per- sistent efforts led to administrative decisions to expand the Union, to eliminate the English Proficiency Exam, and to recommend a two-week final schedule. The political atmosphere so often associated with student government is basically centered in the All Student Council the legislative and deliberative branch of the Association. This year the political ac- tivity got off to an unusually fast start with state- ments of shocking morality the Kansas University Progressive Alliance had arrived. With this new de- velopment came much internal criticism, and the result was the lowest total vote in the annual fall elections in the past ten years. During the fall, living district representatives were elected to the Al l Student Coun- cil by the outmoded Hare system: a proportional representation system which is modified to determine the number of elected representatives by the number of people who vote, using a first, second, third, etc., marking procedure. With the scarcity of voters on election days came a small ASC which included only twenty-seven new representatives. Under the guidance of ten representatives already serving (members elected in the previous spring ' s election to represent the nine schools of the university), the new council members began their careers as student politicians. Perhaps the most significant event for the ASC during the year ASC COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN. Jim McNish, Topeka; Roger Oelschlager, Clay Center; Mac, Lawrence; Ted Haggart, Salina; Mike McNally, Bartlesville, Okla.; T. A. Merritt, Wichita; Candy Gambrell, Kansas City; Dolph Johnson, Wymore, Nebr.; John Casady, Wichita; Margie Porter, Prairie Village; Carl Struby, Leawood; Denny Taylor, Rancho Cordova, Calif.; Brian Barker, Virginia Water, England; Curt Heinz, Topeka; Jeannie Rogers, Hays; Rusty Wells, Portland, Ore.; Fred Krebs, Shawnee Mission; Patty Mills, Topeka. 305 STUDENT COURT. Back row: Martin Meyer, Newton; Lee Sorter, Wichita; Jim Hubbard, Olathe; Doug Delsemme, Lynbrook, N.Y.; Bill Cham- bers, Prairie Village; John Lorenz, Prairie Village; Bud Meyer, Washington; John Woolf, Wichita; Robert Jenkins, Kansas City, Mo. Front row: Bill Mills, Topeka; Chuck Zarter, Leavenworth; Floyd McHenry, Newton; Bob Barker, Leawood; Pat Roark, Kansas City, Mo.; Carl. Kelly, Cedar Vale; Wayne Zuck, Merriam. was a proposal presented by Martin and Jim Prager, ASC chairman. The proposal suggested a reduction in the size of the council and the placement of ASC members on those administrative committees which actually make decisions. This idea, made in an at- tempt to encourage student government to represent an overall student interest, prompted interested coun- cil members to create an active representative body. The judicial branch of the Association is the Student Court. Composed of from five to seven student jus- tices and chaired by a Chief Justice, it is given juris- diction in the following areas: interpretation of the legislation of the All Stud ent Council; all cases of any nature arising among students or student groups; cases, controversies, and disputes arising in violation of the Constitution and Bills of the Associated Stu- dents; and appeals from students regarding parking violations. The court may render judgment and assess penalties for any infraction listed. Chief Justice Brian Grace began his term by initiating a rotating judge system, whereby the great number of traffic ticket appeals could be heard efficiently and justly. CHIEF PROSECUTION COUNSEL. GENE. WHITE, a second year law student, makes a point to the bench during a Tuesday evening session. 306 CYR OFFICERS. Bill Porter, Topeka; Bob Miner, Great Bend; Nancy Sramek, Oswego; Jim Merrill, Osawatomie; Steve Friesen, Russell; Gary Ascanio, Cherokee; Doug Balcornbe, Parsons; Bob Sears, Kansas City. Young Republicans Providing students with an opportunity to gain ex- perience in practical politics is the purpose of the KU Collegiate Young Republicans. KU CYR ' s sponsored monthly meetings on campus with top Republican guest speakers such as Senator James B. Pearson, Kansas Republican National Committeeman McDill Huck Boyd, Congressman Larry Winn, and Gover- nor William H. Avery. Directing the activities of the club were its officers: Steve Friesen, chairman; Gary Ascanio, first vice-chairman; Bob Sears, second vice- chairman; Doug Balcomb, third vice-chairman; Jim Merrill, treasurer; Nan Sramek, recording secretary; and John Sharp, corresponding secretary. Social events and public service projects kept the 860 members busy working. This year CYR ' s ac- tively supported Kansas House Bill No. 1329, a bill which provides for the sale of cigarettes on state college and university campuses. The Young Repub- licans circulated petitions gathering student support for the bill and also testified in support of it before the Kansas House State of Affairs Committee. Connie Meyers, Gamma Phi Beta, was selected KU CYR Queen and later was chosen State CYR Queen at the state contest in Hutchinson. She will represent Kansas both in the Midwest CYR Queen contest in Chicago and later in the national contest in Omaha. OFFICERS BOB MINER AND DOUG BALCOMBE greet Congressman Robert Dole upon his arrival in Lawrence for a speech. 307 AWS SENATE. Cheryl Parmely, Leroy; Sarah Paretsky, Eudora; Sue Menke, Webster Groves, Mo.; Chris Walker, Shawnee Mission; Nancy Pinet, Lawrence; Jo Durand, Secretary, Bartlesville, Okla.; Deanell Reece, Scandia; Kay Orth, Treasurer, El Dorado; Andrea Speer, Kansas City; Linda Klein- schmidt, Bartlesville, Okla.; Terry Beach, Hays; Cecily Pitts , Vice-President, Merriam; Dorothy Sloan, Norton; Susan Weinlood, Hutchinson; Cindy Hardin, President, Lincoln, Nebr.; Nancy Oberg, Clay Center. Associated Women Students One of the largest and most active groups on campus, the Associated Women Students of the University of Kansas works with every aspect of a woman ' s college career in mind. Through its programs and policies, AWS emphasizes the importance of women ' s effective participation in all aspects of university life. Goals include the encouragement of intellectual and cultural curiosity, and increased awareness of the need for educated women. Acting as a source of communica- tion and a channel for interaction among women stu- dents, AWS considers any matter of concern to women students, offers a means of consultation and action, and formulates and administers regulations and poli- cies pertaining to KU women students. Innovation is the word that best described AWS activity this year. In order to become a more effec- tive organization, AWS ratified a new constitution which was to go into effect immediately. A more AWS HOUSE. Top row: Mary Beck, Dwight; Linda E. Boone, Kansas City; Martha Emerson, Bartlesville, Okla.; Ann Cushing, Downs; Beverly Gray, Peculiar, Mo.; Susan Brimacombe, Kansas City, Mo. Third row: Elaine Moore, Hays; Karen Humphreys, Ashland; Ginner Morris, Shawnee Mission; Mary Beth Jenks, Prairie Village; Sue Kasper, Wilson; Anne Wooster, Maracaibo, Venezuela; Melinda Lohr, Shawnee Mission. Second row: Betsy Siegel, Washington, D.C.; Ginger McAnany, Kansas City; Nancy Matthews, Neodesha; Barbara Mize, Atchison; Shawnee Mission; Marsha Cromwell, Wichita. Bottom rose: Mona Hobson, St. John; Mary Kay Edmonds, East Moline, Ill.; Cecily Pitts, Shawnee Mission; Terry Beach, Hays; Gail Davenport, Minneapolis, Minn. 308 AWS FASHION BOARD. Diane Seaver, Prairie Village; Peggy Haydon, Western Springs, Ill.; Karen Renstrom, Omaha, Nebr.; Joyce Tinkler, Gypsum; Peggy Vratil, Lamed; Parmelee Bates, New York, N.Y.; Nancy Miller, Topeka; Martha Lanning, Lawrence; Mickey Pasano, Kansas City, Mo.; Jan Monsees, Leawood; Pam Ransdell, Overland Park; Cris Conway, Las Vegas, Nev.; Kathy Strayer, Mission Hills; Sally Martin, Tulsa, Okla. flexible and workable document than its predecessor, it provides for change in structure that includes a Council and Forum. Another aspect of the AWS pro- gram this year was the work of the KU Commission on the Status of Women. Patterned after the President ' s Commission on the Status of Women, this commission studied issues of particular concern to KU women, conducting surveys and presenting panel discussions. The High School Relations Committee also expanded its program to include visitations to high schools to stimulate interest in KU, in addition to holding its annual High School Leadership Day. The annual Honors Night, planned by the Recog- nition Committee, was a spring event highlighting the year ' s activities. AWS work also covered such areas as student-faculty relations, job opportunities, regu- lations, and money-raising projects for memorial schol- arships. Cwens, a sophomore honorary which devotes itself to the freshman orientation program, was another group sponsored by the organization. CWENS. Top row: Peggy Vratil, Lamed; Barbara Lang, Tulsa, Okla.; Helen Schwiesow, Germantown, Wisc.; Beth Ballard, Shawnee Mission; Judy Strunk, Abilene; Linda Sollenberger, Hutchinson; Mary Lou Knipp, Onaga; Roxy Lennard, Ottawa. Fourth row: Elaine Greenock, Quincy, Ill.; Marsha Griffith, Prairie Village; Kay Harris, Shawnee Mission; Linda Davis, Topeka; Karen Curler, St. Joseph, Mo.; Sheryl Richard, Lyons; Gayle Carden, Kansas City. Third row: Jan Riley, Ft. Worth, Tex.; Gayla Webb, Salina; Barb Hansen, Glen Ellyn, Ill.; Linda Ewing, Independence; Judy LeBlond, Wichita; Lynn Goodwin, St. Louis, Mo.; Carol Sue Stevenson, Leawood; Marcia McMullen, Overland Park. Second row: Judy Halverson, St. Joseph, Mo.; Barbara Hughes, Ottawa; Susy Gilbert, Springfield, Mo.; Nancy Pinet, Lawrence; Sandy Hunt, Kansas City, Mo.; Debra Sheppard, Smith Center; Carol Walker, Shawnee Mission. Bottom row: Laurie Hallock, Treasurer, London, England; Andrea Speer, Advisor, Kansas City; Martha Dalton, Presi- dent, Wichita; Susie Stuckey, Vice-President, Hutchinson; Sue Beth Mothersead, Secretary, Raytown, Mo.; Linda Gilkerson, Rituals Chairman, Mattoon, Ill. Not pictured: Janie Griffey, Shawnee Mission; Jo Durand, Bartlesville, Okla.; Linda Kleinscbmidt, Bartlesville, Okla. 309 Harry Wiles, President, Topeka; Tom Yergovich, Vice-President, Kansas City; Gayle Kreutzer, Secretary, Leavenworth; Bill Walters, Treasurer, Fort Col- lins, Colo. Class of 1967 Following the election last spring of four class offi- cers, fourteen senior committees were established to plan and carry out this year ' s Class of 1967 activities. Returning from summer vacation, seniors received their traditional sweatshirts at their first coffee, late in September. Senior day for the Oklahoma football game and a party with the Flippers at the armory highlighted other fall social activities of the class. The annual senior calendar, free to all dues-paying mem- bers, was distributed in December. Spring activities began with another party, this time held prior to Spring Break at the Red Dog Inn. Late in April a second coffee was held in the Union, during which graduation plans were discussed, the annual HOPE Award winner was announced, and the selec- tion of a class gift to the university was made. A third party, featuring a TGIF function at the Stables followed by another dance at the armory, took place in ' May, giving seniors an opportunity for one last fling before finals and graduation. Throughout March, April, and May, the sale of class rings and graduation announcements was carried out by class committees in conjunction with the Kansas Union Bookstore. The traditional breakfast, held the day of graduation, was the last official class function of the year. In addition to coordinating senior activities, the four officers served on the Board of Class Officers, establishing long-range financial policies aimed at minimizing class dues and activity expenses. Early in May they entertained the new 1967-68 senior class officers and committee chairmen at a dinner. 310 Barb Larson, Secretary, Topeka; Mike Maloney, Vice-President, Hutchinson; Terry McCluggage, Treasurer, Lawrence; Steve Morgan, President, Wichita. Class of 1968 Leading the Class of 1968 this year were President Steve Morgan, Vice-President Mike Maloney, Secre- tary Barb Larson, and Treasurer Terry McCluggage. Junior Class functions began in November, with a class Class of 19 70 The 101st class to enter KU was the largest in the university ' s history over 3150 students were freshmen. Elected last fall as officers were Randy Long, presi- dent; David Logan, vice-president; Lyn DuBois, secre- tary; and Candy Allen, treasurer. Working with other party at the Red Dog Inn. Attendance for this event was so great that enough money was raised to finance a second party in the spring. In addition to organizing these parties, the officers also served on the Board of Class Officers, working on several projects in an effort to make the year an enjoyable one for as many juniors as possible. members of the Board of Class Officers, they estab- lished a financial policy whereby a certain percentage of each year ' s class funds will be carried over to the following year, thus progressively lowering future class dues. A class party with the Flippers at the Red Dog Inn free to all dues-paying members was held after Spring Break. Randy Long, President, Salina; Dave Logan, Vice-President, Shawnee Mission; Candy Allen, Treasurer, Springfield, Penn.; Lyn DuBois, Secretary, Leawood. 317 UNDERGRADUATE COUNCIL. Standing: David Walthall, Salina; Joan Gilpin, Iola; Randy Viot, Leawood; Mike Hurtt, Shawnee Mission; Dean H. K. L ' Ecuyer, Advisor, Lawrence; Steve Adams, Leawood. Seated: Bob Boyd, Hutchinson; Ron Manka, Wichita; Gary Ascanio, Cherokee; Jack Wilhelm, Independence; Sheila Wiseman, Treasurer, Hastings, Nebr.; Heather MacDonald, Hutchinson; Kent Powell, Chairman, Wichita. Business Students Association The purpose of the Business School Association is to increase the students ' knowledge of the advantages and opportunities offered in the School of Business, and membership is open to all students enrolled in the School. Orientation programs formed a major part of the association ' s program this year. One was on the freshman-sophomore level, and centered around an effort to explain the various programs and courses offered, and the value of a business degree. The other, on the junior-senior level, consisted of explanation of graduate programs and a placement service. Other ac- tivities included the sponsoring of several afternoon speakers on business and related topics, and featured leading Midwest businessmen. Tours were conducted through the Federal Reserve Plant in Kansas City and the BOP Plant, with free transportation provided. Busi- ness School Day was another highlight of the activities planned by the association. In the spring, plaques were awarded to the outstanding undergraduate stu- dent, graduate student, and teacher in the School of Business. GRADUATE COUNCIL. Tom Lee, Independence; Paul Schmucker, Hutchinson; Gary Schugart, Hoisington; Walter Higgins, Washington; Bill Roth- enberger, Topeka. 312 ENGINEERING QUEEN CANDIDATES. Louise Sorrentino, Mahasset, N.Y.; Peggy Vratil, Lamed; Laurie Wedell, O ' Fallon, Ill.; Donna Mitchell, 1967 Engineering School Queen, Lawrence. Not pictured: Lynn Neibarger, Tonganoxie; Cheryl Shuck, Atchison. Engineering School Council With a 1966-67 membership totaling 25 members, the Engineering School Council is the student govern- ing body of the School of Engineering and Architec- ture. Coordinating the activities of several professional and honorary organizations, it acts as a liaison between students and faculty. Officers were Gene Bollin, pres- ident; Will Bolton, vice-president; Jim Bunn, record- ing secretary; Bill Gibbs, corresponding secretary; and Jim Renier, treasurer. Activities were designed to meet the objective of stimulating interest in engineering programs among the engineering students. The princi- pal spring activity was the sponsoring of Engineering Day and the Engineering Exposition. Taking place in April, these events featured student and depart- mental displays, and included the exhibition of original student work and university equipment. Selected earlier in the spring from a group of KU coeds, an En- gineering School Queen reigned over the weekend activities. Later in the year, an Awards Banquet was held at which prizes were given to honor outstanding individuals in the School. ENGINEERING STUDENT COUNCIL. Top row: Elizabeth Mellinger, Topeka; Frank Gordon, Hutchinson; C. B. Hagar, Dodge City; Frank Dolecheck, Wilson; Chip Weisert, Glendale, Mo.; Marvin C. Beadnall, St. Joseph, Mo. Second row: George Puig, Houston, Tex.; Chet McLaughlin, Bethesda, Md.; Bob Wakeman, Wathena; Ed Barton, Colby; Larry W. Rinne, Gardner. Bottom row: Bill Gibbs, Overland Park; Will Bolton, Vice- President, Leawood; Gene Bollin, President, Raytown, Mo.; Mike Spengel, Nokomis, Ill.; Jim Bunn, Secretary, Prairie Village; Ken Mathiasmeier, Ar- kansas City. Not pictured: Jim Renier, Treasurer, Overland Park; Pao Ping Chang, Jackson Heights, N.Y.; Phil Shontz, Kansas City, Mo. 313 VOX GENERAL ASSEMBLY. Clockwise from left: Ken North, Chairman, Shawnee Mission; Allen Russell, Scottsbluff, Nebr.; Tom Black, Hiawatha; Ron Creary, St. Foy, Quebec, Canada; Cheryl Parmely, Leroy; John Wooden, Lawrence; Kathy McCabe, Shawnee Mission; Doug Irmen, Shawnee Mission; Bill Kissel, Overland Park; Guy Davis, Prairie Village. Vox Populi This was a housecleaning year for Vox Populi, one of three campus political parties. Laying the ground- work for structural changes with a new constitution, members proceeded to eliminate the party ' s executive council, substituting a general assembly as its decision- Yell Leaders Nationally recognized by Sports Illustrated, KU ' s Pom-Pon Girls made numerous appearances through- out the Midwest. In addition to their regular home performances at major athletic events, they traveled to Big Eight schools for Jayhawk football and basketball games; entertained at the Big Eight Football Kick- making body in an attempt to eliminate smoke-filled room politics. The assembly was composed of repre- sentatives from the twelve Vox-affiliated living groups. Vox ' s purpose was to reinstall student body respect in campus politics, to revitalize student government through strong emphasis on student responsibility, and to provide students with a vehicle for university reform. off Luncheon in Kansas City, and at a state-wide Chamber of Commerce meeting in the Kansas Union; and were featured twice during the annual Big Eight Basketball Tournament in Kansas City. Likewise pro- moting school spirit at KU athletic events were the six members of the all-male Yell Leaders squad, who led cheers at both home and away games, and ap- peared at several pep rallies. POM PON GIRLS AND YELL LEADERS. Top row: Kyle Craig, Joplin, Mo.; Karen Renstrom, Omaha, Nebr.; Bowen White, Shawnee Mission; Dee Dee Davis, Shawnee Mission; Diane Attcbery, Kirksville, Mo.; Dave Holt, Prairie Village. Second row: Shirley Gossett, Overland Park; Nancy Miller, Topeka; Joe Waeckerle, Kansas City, Mo.; Karen Dunaway, Lawrence; Cindy Dickson, Leavenworth. Bottom row: Jim Davis, Leawood; Parmelee Bates, New York, N.Y.; Pepper Solberg, Mission. 314 Top row: Barb Bruner, Shawnee Mission; Susan Stoker, Shawnee Mission; Linda Torcom, Evanston, Ill.; Margaret Kratochuil, Jefferson City, Mo.; Mary Kay Barket, Kansas City, Mo.; Linda E. Boone, Kansas City; Marcia Bruce, Hillsboro; Cathie Wiehe, Farley, Mo.; Lynne Durham, Omaha, Nebr.; Janet Guinn, Dodge City; Barb Moffat, Shawnee Mission. Fourth row: Janice Dresnick, Kansas City, Mo.; Mary Fisher, Falls Church, Va.; Carol Miller, Bethlehem, Penn.; Judith Collins, Dallas, Tex.; Valerie Sidey, Russell; Caryne Dockery, Glenwood, Ill.; Darice Ferguson, Chicago City, Minn.; Babette Kramer, Hutchinson; Toni Lutz, Ft. Leavenworth; Cathleen Coleman, Boise, Ida. Third row: Sherry Krepps, Winfield; Linda Ellis, Clay Center; Carol Stoskopf, El Dorado; Gail Anne Belcher, Brookfield, Ill.; Sue Bell, St. Louis, Mo.; Dorothy Sloan, Norton; Ruth Unzicker, Omaha, Nebr.; Janice Sachem Kansas City; Linda Knight, Neodesha. Second row: Jane Calvin, Wichita; Vicki Hecke, Kansas City; Anita Sloan, Kansas City; Carol Cosgrove, Coun- cil Grove; Sydney Mitchell, Dodge City; Donna Reid, Godfrey, Ill.; Peggy Fields, Raytown, Mo.; Sandy Charvat, Wichita. Bottom row: Barbara Holman, Great Bend; Linda Livesay, Greenwich, Conn.; Pamela Patz, Wahoo, N.J.; Gorki Cummins, Treasurer, Paulton, S.C.; Beth Stukenberg, President, Des Moines, Ia.; Janice Kay Gray, Springfield, Mo.; Jennifer Nilsson, Secretary, Chicago Heights, Ill.; Carolyn Reichard, New Canaan, Conn.; Rita Jones, Louisburg. Not pictured: Barbie Clarke, Chicago, In.; Jo Anna Shipley, Advisor, Kansas City; Marty Deason, Great Bend. Jay Janes The seventy members of Jay Janes, an honorary upperclass women ' s pep and service club, provided enthusiastic support and attendance at home football and basketball games throughout the year. The pur- poses of the organization are to promote the principles of good sportsmanship, to encourage student body spirit and enthusiasm, and to advance the welfare of the university through service. Each school year, Jay Janes sponsor Frosh Hawks and determine the or- ganization ' s membership through interviews at the be- ginning of the fall semester. They also select outstand- ing Frosh Hawks who are honored at a spring picnic. This year ' s activities included an initiation banquet, an informal dinner at the Pizza Hut honoring new members, and a pep club booth at the Activities Car- nival. Jay Janes worked with the Campus Blood Drive and ushered for All Women ' s Night, at which next year ' s officers were presented. A Mum Sale at Home- coming financed two Jay Janes scholarships covering tuition for the spring semester, awarded to Sandra Charvat and Barbara Taggart. A new feature of the organization this year was a Public Relations Com- mittee, formed to promote the Jay Janes on campus. OFFICERS. Top row: Linda Livesay, Mum Sale Chairman, Greenwich, Conn.; J. K. Gray, Scholarship Chairman, Springfield, Mo.; Barbie Clarke, His- torian, Clarend on Hills, Ill.; JoAnna Shipley, Frosh Hawk Advisor, Kansas City; Barbara Holman, Frosh Hawk Advisor, Great Bend. Bottom row: Carolyn Rechard, Social Chairman, New Canaan, Conn.; Carrine Cummins, Treasurer, Topeka; Beth Stukenberg, President, Des Moines, Ia.; Jennifer Nilsson, Secre- tary, Chicago Heights, Ill. 315 Top row: Alice Brown, Great Bend; Cindy Bartlow, Kansas City, Mo.; Rebecca Susan Barrett, Sewell, N.J.; Sara Allison, Topeka; Debby Begel, Shaw- nee Mission; Diane Deffenbaugh, Belleville; Linda Filby, Junction City; Jane Fiebach, Wichita; Fran Finney, Bartlesville, Okla.; Connie Finch, Bartles- ville, Okla.; Judy Booker, Wichita. Fourth row: Dian Deutsch, Hoisington; Pam Fankhauser, Lyons; Mary Madge Evans, Baldwin, N.Y.; Ann L. Butterfield, Clay Center; Doris Diver, Chanute; Jean Evans, Shawnee Mission; Christine Eaton, Tribune; Beth Fontron, Topeka; Linda Briery, Topeka; Susan Diehl, Fort Scott. Third row: Diane Beyer, Lyons; Sharon Carter, Garnett; Jaryl Ambler, University City, Mo.; Ruby Betty, Hazelton; Kathy Delp, Topeka; Sally Anderson, Shawnee Mission; Martha Fowler, Osawatomie; Pam Brown, Independence, Mo.; Carole Elliott, Shawnee Mission. Second row: Cynthi a Brocker, Prairie Village; Valda Aviks, Wichita; Cathy Carver, Kansas City; Jane Borel, Falls Church, Va.; Suzan R. Akers, Fort Scott; Pam Azzolin, Oak Park, Ill.; Pat Calahan, Garnett; Arlene Binda, Leawood. Bottom row: Dianne Bloomer, Collinsville, Ill.; Cindy Barrett, Ft. Leaven- worth; Sandy Arbuthnot, Belleville; Peggy Ashland, Ozark, Ark.; Sue Carroll, Prairie Village; Joan Finlay, Wichita; Marty Barry, Bonner Springs; Linda L. Carr, Sugar Creek, Mo.; Barb Blee, Bonner Springs. Frosh Hawks Over three hundred Frosh Hawks promoted pep, school spirit, sportsmanship, and general pride in uni- versity athletic programs throughout the year. An honorary freshman women ' s pep club, Frosh Hawks is composed of women selected by Jay Janes at the beginning of the year. This year over seven hundred applications were made for membership. Chief re- sponsibilities were regular attendance at home football and basketball games. Several members also travelled to Manhattan for the KSU basketball game. Frosh Hawks made the hoops which basketball players ran through at the beginning of home games, were re- sponsible for the signs at football games, and helped distribute the Jayhawker. Officers included Harriett Merrill, president; Nancy Elder, vice-president; Ginny Longley, treasurer; and Kathy Hill, secretary. Top row: Ginny Longley, Chicago, Ill.; Mary Holman, Leawood; Cindy Houtman, Overland Park; Mary Tudor, Shawnee Mission; Marti Dodge, Shaw- nee Mission; Rosemary Luthi, Topeka; Jane Cline, Iowa City, Ia.; Linda Loyd, Ottawa; Joanne Gebhart, Salina. Fourth row: Vicki Harris, Wichita; Sharon Hildebrand, Lorraine; Susan Leckband, Salina; Jerri Hansen, Raytown, Mo.; Anne Jordan, Kansas City; Sally Stark, Lawrence; Nancy Knox, Lawrence; Pam Jones, Mountain View, Calif.; Terry Jungbluth, Shawnee Mission; Judy Jarrell, Shawnee Mission. Third row: Peggy Hundley, St. Louis, Mo.; Peggy Kuhn, Russell; Francie Horton, Wichita; Kathy Hill, Ottawa; Marcia Jones, Raleigh, N.C.; Jeannie Lane, Anthony; Virginia Godfrey, Lombard, Ill.; Elyse Winick, Hollywood, Fla.; Pam Gorsuch, Wichita. Second row: Mary Horton, Seattle, Wash; Lynne Horwitz, Topeka; Charlene Godwin, Hutchinson; Barbara Gille, Kansas City; Marilyn Keith, Topeka; Donna Jahn, Leavenworth; Karen Kittrell, Kansas City; Pat Henmi, Kirk- wood, Mo. Bottom row: Shannon Hyten, Glendale, Calif.; Linda N. Hinsch, Piqua, Ohio; Irene Dunavan, Shawnee Mission; Nancy Herrick, Northfield, Ill.; Carol Leek, Fort Scott; Janet Hopmann, Webster Groves, Mo.; Pat Harms, Kansas City. 316 Top row: Ellen Tyler, Kansas City; Janice Wittmeyer, Ottawa; Lynne Scheufele, Prairie Village; Norma Showalter, Tucson, Ariz.; Vikki Valentine, Clay Center; Sheryl Wilson, Great Bend; Debbie Youngstrom, Des Moines, Ia.; Leslie Ann McElfresh, Osage City; Sheri Spivey, Wichita. Fourth row: Betsy Varney, Leawood; Freshman Dolly, Corbin; Lynn Neudoerffer, Montvale, N.J.; Brenda Miller, Ft. Leavenworth; Connie Waetzig, Topeka; Laurie Tur- rell, Shawnee Mission; Annette Westermann, Kansas City; April Walstad, Joplin, Mo.; Diane Wiksten, Topeka; Sharla Strait, Topeka. Third row: Gloria Strucbing, El Dorado; Karen Uplinger, Syracuse, N.Y.; Martha Ellen Sortor, Kansas City; Jo Ann Wooden, Chicago, Ill.; Catherine Weir, Wich- ita; Carol Wagner, Shawnee Mission; Judy Underwood, Lawrence; Sandi Smith, Webster Groves, Mo.; Gail Martin, Webster Groves, Mo. Second row: Marti Stewart, Vancouver, B. C., Canada; Marcia Skahan, Columbus; Jo Ann Schmisseur, Belleville, Ill.; Patricia Truskett, Lakin; Susan Sheldon, Leavenworth; Kathy Turner, Gardner; Dixie Underwood, Lawrence; Susan Wagner, Webster Groves, Mo. Bottom row: LeAnn Stuewe, Lawrence; Anita Swager, Colby; Susanne Smith, Onaga; Susie Wassenberg, Topeka; Mary Somogyi, St. Louis, Mo.; Vicki L. Willoughby, Overland Park; Patrici a A. Scott, Topeka; Kathy Sheppart, Lawrence. Frosh Hawks Top row: Shirley Noble, Topeka; Susan Prince, Prairie Village; Jan Nichols, Holmdel, N.J.; Sue Paffenbach, Shawnee Mission; Mary Marshall, Topeka; Pam Smith, Garnett; Janet Nothnagel, Kansas City; Marty Meschke, Garden City; Shari Rich, Sioux Falls, S.D. Fourth row: Rita Matovsek, Cuba; Bonnie Miscevich, Kansas City; Patsi Murphy, Conway Springs; Marilyn Rule, Ottawa; Cindy Morgan, Kansas City; Janet Merrick, Shawnee Mission; Nancy Oberg, Clay Center; Pat Mullen, Shawnee Mission. Third row: Claudia Harsh, Shawnee Mission; Barbara Mize, Atchison; Camilla Nesselrode, Kansas City; Margaret Ann Machir, Independence, Mo.; Kathy Richey, Erie; Jan Merritt, Leavenworth; Barbara Rice, Olathe; Diane Morrison, Cheyenne, Wyo.; Cass Perry, Bartlesville, Okla. Second row: Dana Nelson, Belleville; Karna Ostrum, Shaker Heights, Ohio; Jane Ann Reece, Scandia; Pam Russell, Iola; Gloria Moss, Shaker Heights, Ohio; Mary Ellen Pitts, Shawnee Mission; Pam Pratt, Topeka; Connie Miller, Wichita. Bottom row: Kathy Reeder, Overland Park; Harriett Merrill, Kansas City, Mo.; Diane Meyer, Hutchinson; Reagon O ' Neill, Overland Pack; Patricia McKenna, McPherson; Linda Mil- ler, Kansas City; Rebecca Massey, Olathe; Gaynelle Vansandt, Harrisonville, Mo. 317 SUA BOARD. Standing: Dave Waxse, President, Oswego; Dick Warner, Vice-President, Lawrence; John Hoppe, Ottawa; Katherine Giele, Advisor, Lawrence; Cheryl Kloesel, Advisor, Lawrence; Bruce Warren, Treasurer, Wichita; Bruce Peterson, Prairie Village; John Green, Kansas City, Mo. Seated: Torn Sullivan, Wichita; Pam Bayless, Secretary, Shawnee Mission; Sallie Lillard, Kenilworth, Ill.; Linda Maher, Hinsdale, Ill.; Torn Swale, Prairie Vil- lage; Jennifer Speer, Wichita. Student Union Activities From a small but interested Forum audience to the large excited crowd at KU ' s Homecoming activities, Student Union Activities programs provide the basis for much of campus life. Similarly, the Kansas Union is the community center of college life for students, faculty, administration, alumni, and guests. The var- ious boards, committees, and staffs work to provide a cultural, social, and recreational program, aiming to make free time activity a factor cooperative with edu- cational study. SUA membership is open to any KU student, en- couraging self-directed activity and maximum oppor- tunity for growth in individual social competency and group effectiveness. It is the responsibility of the SUA Board to plan and organize the activities that SUA offers, and it is assisted by numerous chairmen and committees, as well as by faculty advisors. Three particularly important people this year were Mrs. Katherine Giele, Miss Cheryl Kloesel, and Mr. Willie Fawbush who worked in the SUA office. Forums included the Poetry Hour, the Last Lecture series, the Hyde Park program, feature speakers, and faculty speakers. Topics ranged from humanities, modern books, and religion, to science, current events, and majors and careers. Entertainment was a popular area encompassing the SUA Carnival, various dances, the Popular Film series, and Relays and Homecoming activity. The Quarterback Club, Chess Club, Bridge DR. RAVEN MCDAVID or THE UNIVERSITY or CHICAGO lectures to an afternoon Coffee Forum audience in the Union ' s Jayhatck Room. 318 Club, and several tournaments were part of the Recre- ation program which also featured bowling, billiards, and table tennis. Hospitality included various recep- tions, open houses, and recognition dinners, while Arts and Exhibits planned the Designer Craftsman Show and several displays. European group flights, game bus trips, and the travel display board were among the areas handled by the Travel committees. Finally, a new feature was added to the SUA schedule in the area of Music and Drama: KU ' s first Festival of the Arts, a week-long celebration of the arts, more than rounded out a year full of activity. PLAYWRIGHT EDWARD ALBEE speaks in. Hoch Auditorium during the first ailment SUA-sponsored Festival of the Arts. 319 KU-Y CABINET. Top row: Tom Hanna, Lawrence; John Garvey, Wichita; Jerry Cochran, Harper; Ward Coleman, Boise, Ida.; Rick Utermoehlen, Pittsburg; Don Hineman, Dighton; Mike O ' Brien, Shawnee Mission. Second row: Lynn Payer, Wichita; Don Beahm, Great Bend; Judie Ericson, Leaven- worth; Becky Peterson, Highland; Ruth Hatch, Davenport, Ia.; Rick MacArthur, Shawnee Mission. Bottom row: Jim Perkins, Prairie Village; Carol Kollmann, Lawrence; Dave Dickensheets, Wellington; Don Potter, Chanute; Tom Moore, Lawrence. Not pictured: Joe Goering, Moundridge; Ann Gal- laher, Wheatridge, Colo.; Paul Consolver, Wichita; Anne Penny, Emporia; Barbara Musgrave, Wichita; Larry Hargreaves, Solomon; Mike Martin, Wich- ita; Joy Chatlain, Prairie Village; Mary Kim Buckley, Atchison; Mary King, El Dorado; Jan Tureski, Camden, Ark.; Betty Stratmann, Salina; Tom Roth, Ellinwood; Bob Sears, Kansas City; Karen McCarthy, Leawood; Will Price, Wichita; Curt Heinz, Topeka; John Latham, Atchison; Jeanne Mueller, Glendale, Mo.; Joyce Snapp, Wichita. KU-Y The primary purpose of the KU-Y is service both to the university and to the community. Three of its thirteen programs the Children ' s Flour, School Re- source Volunteers, and Special Activities provided year-round opportunities for communication between students and the residents of Lawrence. The Fresh- man Camp, held in October, was a recreational camp, a study group, a guidance counseling session, and a freshman orientation program. In December, Fresh- man Model Senate participants gained experience in the legislative process. Also in December, the Na- tional Student Assembly of the Y was held in Chicago, with several local members in attendance. Rock Chalk Revue then provided three evenings of entertainment for the university. The Model United Nations was held in April, with KU students and those from other universities participating as delegates. Operation Tutor Match, the Ski Club, and Youth Friendship were other activities operated under KU-Y sponsorship. KU-Y OFFICERS AND STAFF. Anne Penny, Secretary, Emporia; Paul Consolver, Treasurer, Wichita; Don Potter, Co-Vice-President, Chanute; Tons Moore, Executive Program Secretary, Overland Park; Carol Kollmann, Assistant Program Secretary, Denver, Colo.; Ann Gallaher, Co-President, Wheat Ridge, Colo.; Dave Dickensheets, Co-President, Wellington. Not pictured: Barb Musgrave, Co-Vice-President, Wichita. 320 PEOPLE-TO-PEOPLE BOARD. Standing: Frank Hummer, Topeka; Steve Ridgway, Lawrence; Dale Sprague, McPherson; C. J. Pollara, Oberlin; Nancy Ulmer, Lawrence; Pam Held, Kansas City, Mo.; Halley Kampschroeder, Lawrence. Seated: Sam Pestinger, Beloit; John Garvey, Wichita; Bruder Stapleton, Fort Scott. People-to-Peopl e In 1961 the first People-to-People chapter was founded at the University of Kansas, starting a trend which spread quickly among American university cam- puses. Today, the KU chapter is active on the national level and one KU member, Dale Sprague, was this year ' s National President of College People-to-People. The goal of the organization is to promote interna- tional understanding, and all activities are designed to meet that purpose. Approximately 150 American stu- dents and 500 foreign students participated in a va- riety of programs which included current events dis- cussions, social parties, exchange dinners and private home dinners. Hospitality was highlighted by a for- eign student picnic, a Christmas party and bus trips to the American Royal, the Truman Library, Swope Park, and Lansing State Prison. English in Action and various seminars were special projects, while the Job Placement program worked to find summer jobs for foreign students. Publicity was strengthened by a newsletter, Jaypeople, a hi-monthly feature. AT A FALL PICNIC FOR KU FOREIGN STUDENTS, co-sponsored by the KU P-t-P chapter and its Lawrence Life community affiliate, stu- dents from around the world get acquainted both with each other and with American hot dogs. 321 NEWS STAFF. Back row: Pres Doudna, Overland Park; Will Hardesty, Wheat Ridge, Colo.; Barbara Phillips, Harrisonville, Mo.; Emery Goad, Junc- tion City. Front row: Dan Austin, Salina; Jackie Campbell, Hiawatha; Carol DeBonis, Kansas City; Linda Sleffel, Norton; Joan McCabe, Lawrence; Steve Russell, Topeka. University Daily Kansan The University Daily Kansan, KU ' s student-op- erated newspaper, is a product of the School of. Jour- nalism. Published throughout 77 of the University ' s 101 years, the Kansan provides journalism students with the opportunity to gain working experience in the production of a newspaper, while receiving credit in School academic requirements. Over 65 students worked under the direction of Professor Mel Adams, Kansan advisor, in publishing the paper. Innovations in layout, copy, and photography were all made by this year ' s editors. In addition to includ- ing more theatre and movie reviews, the UDK fea- tured a greater use of both editorial columns and bylines than in past years. Multiple columns, vari- ADVERTISING STAFF. Tony Chop, Kansas City; John Lee, Ottawa; Ken Hickerson, Des Moines, Ia.; Howard Pankratz, Bartlesville, Okla.; Joe Godfrey, Topeka; Gayle Schooler, Saratoga, Calif.; Bob Basow, Wichita; Steve Dennis, El Dorado; Don Hunter, Council Grove. 322 323 ations in typography, and more photography were also new to Kansan pages. In expanding on-campus news coverage, four editors met weekly with Chancellor Wescoe to discuss university policies and programs, and upcoming events. The editorial staff included 21 reporters and 14 copy editors, thus making possible a greater empha- sis on the beat system of reporting than in previous years. Students filling the newly-created poistion of assistant copy editor were responsible for copy assign- ments and deadlines. As recognition for outstanding work, awards were presented each week to individual editors and reporters. The Kansan is financed almost through the sale of business advertising. Students in J-school retail advertising classes solicit ad space both locally and nationally, although approximately 75% of the ads are sold locally. A staff of five students primarily directed the paper ' s business operations this year, while another sixteen were responsible for the sale, artwork, and copy layout of ads. Daily press runs numbered approximately 9200 copies, which were delivered to several new all-weather pickup boxes lo- cated on campus and Daisy Hill. MAL APPLEGATE, NEWS ADVISOR, looks over page forms with Managing Editor Joan McCabe before going to press. PROFESSOR MEL ADAMS, University Daily Kansan business advisor. FALL STAFF. Standing: Linda Pedlar, Parsons; Bob Wilson, Hutchinson; Jo Anna Shipley, Kansas City; Dan Bishop, Lawrence; Gary Trout, Kansas City; Willie Waller, Prairie Village; Wally Biddle, Leavenworth. Seated: Bill Hamilton, Overland Park; Mike Spencer, Overland Park. KUOK KUOK is a campus radio station with a threefold purpose: to give experience to radio-television-film majors, to allow other interested students to become familiar with radio broadcasting, and to provide KU students with a student radio station. Increasing the listening audience and adapting programs to suit the KU student were KUOK ' s major concerns this year, resulting in a Top 40 program, two hours of jazz, two hours of easy listening, and an hour of folk music each day. Special programs included Broadway Beat, featuring soundtracks of Broadway musicals; The After Nine Show, with interviews by Gary Shivers; the presentation of Handel ' s Messiah for the Christmas audience; and Walt Biddle ' s Stop and Think, editorial comment on campus happenings. Bill Hami lton ' s Sport Personality became a regular fea- ture, and KU athletic events football, basketball, and baseball were often broadcast. Perhaps best known and remembered by KUOK ' s audience was its promo- tion, The Prize Peddler, which awarded prizes to many hall listeners. A look to the future was taken as KUOK began work on a production center to be located in the station ' s studios. Investigation was also made of the possibility of establishing a hook-up with KANU, to provide for the rebroadcast of KUOK pro- grams over KANU. SPRING STAFF. Standing: Steve Westrup, St. Louis, Mo.; Gary Trout, Kansas City; Bob Wilson, Hutchinson; Bob Dotson, Webster Groves, Mo.; Mike Reardon, Kansas City, Mo.; R. Allen Pieratt, Shawnee Mission; Dennis McClatchey, Des Moines, Ia.; Willie Waller, Prairie Village. Seated: Lauren Johnson, Hays; Bill Hamilton, Overland Park; Don McClow, Hudsonville, Mich.; Jo Anna Shipley, Kansas City; Linda Pedlar, Parsons; Dan Bishop, Law- rence; Ben Harrison, Wichita. Not pictured: Fran Weidner, New York, N.Y. 324 VARSITY DEBATE. Standing: Phyllis Schofer, Wichita; Ruth Hatch, Davenport, Ia.; Sharon Mahood, Springfield, Mo.; Judson Briegel, Kansas City; Chuck Cook, Independence, Mo.; Patty Baldwin, Prairie Village; Larry Gregg, Topeka; Bob McColloh, Overland Park; Phil Higdon, McPherson. Third row: Paul Falzer, Topeka; Debbie Hedlund, Fridley, Minn.; Jim McNish, Topeka; Bill Sampson, Topeka; Bill Gahnstrom, Topeka. Second row: Susan McCarty, Sedalia, Mo.; Walter Stromquist, Charleston, Ill.; Jeanne Worthington, Tecumseh; Nancy Wood, Wichita; Doug Jydstrup, Las Vegas, Nev.; Jim Van Ors- dol, Topeka. Bottom row: Phyllis Culham, Junction City; Hanan Bell, Prairie Village; Jim Klumpp, Coffeyville; Bob Campbell, Topeka; Carolyn Watson, West Plains, Mo. Not pictured: Bill Ward, Wichita; Bob Ward, Wichita; Everold Hosein, Trinidad, West Indies; Bob Ertman, Pittsburg; David Jeans, Inde- pendence, Mo.; Jim Kotas, Lawrence; Ken North, Prairie Village. Debate Speaking ability alone is not all that is required of a successful debater. This year ' s thirty members of KU ' s Varsity Debate team spent many hours of re- search, thought, and effort, as they prepared for over fifty tournaments in which they were entered. Travel to such schools as Texas Christian University, the Uni- versity of Nebraska, and both Redlands and Stanford in California were highlights of the season. Major accomplishments included a first place finish at Ne- braska and first place in both divisions of the Mc- Pherson tournament. KU also captured third place at the SMU tournament and fourth at TCU and the Heart of America tournaments. The freshman squad accumulated an outstanding record, winning over seventy per cent of their debates, and Varsity Debate as a whole qualified several teams for the Tournament of Champions. Working closely with Varsity Debate was Delta Sigma Rho, an honorary organization with membership open to juniors and seniors in debate. Serving to or- ganize the squad, it sponsored such social functions as a fall party for all debaters, a Christmas party, and a spring picnic, and formed a debaters ' intra- mural basketball team. The members also participated in other forensic events, such as oratory and extem- poraneous speaking. Near the end of the year, a banquet was held to honor outstanding members. DELTA SIGMA RHO. Standing: Bill Sampson, Topeka; Judson Briegel, Kansas City; Sharon Mahood, Springfield, Mo.; Bob Campbell, Topeka; Susan McCarty, Sedalia, Mo.; Phyllis Schofer, Wichita; Jim Klumpp, Coffeyville. Seated: Ruth Hatch, Davenport, Ia.; Nancy Wood, Wichita; Jim McNish, Topeka. 325 Top row: George Moore, West Chicago, Ill.; Greg Gutting, Ft. Leavenworth; John Burgess, St. Joseph, Mo.; Cut Conrad, Bismarck, N.D.; Robert Bunch, Fredonia. Bottom row: Don Potter, Chanute; Gordon A. Jones, Pittsburg; Keith M. Wood, Pittsburg; George W. Edman IV, Leawood; Robert W. Haas, Leawood. Not pictured: Mike Fisher, Lawrence; Charles McLean; Sher Singh, Independence, Mo.; David A. B. Wilson, Monrovia, Liberia; Fred Hack, Lawrence. Alpha Phi Omega Alpha Phi Omega is a national service fraternity organized to help its members, the university, the com- munity, and the nation in any way possible. The Cam- pus Blood Drive, Toys For Tots, the Model United Nations, and KU ' s University Testing Service were only a few of the many projects with which Alpha Phi Omega members worked. Several others assisted area Boy Scout troops, and the organization as a whole sponsored an Easter Egg Hunt for the children of Lawrence. Fun was the word for the canoe race from Topeka to Lawrence with other Midwest schools, and the new informal hootenanny program was equally enjoyable. Finally, in celebration of its 35th anniver- sary, the KU chapter honored Vice-Chancellor R. Keith Lawton by naming a pledge class in his honor. HELPING LOCAL MARINE CORPS RESERVISTS with their annual Toys-For-Tots campaign, Charles McLean, Gordon Jones, and Keith Wood load toys from a campus pick-up location. 326 p Top row: Joan Ruff, Clay Center; Carolyn Cunningham, Tulsa, Okla.; Jane Roehrig, Leawood; Gerald M. Korsten, Shawnee Mission; Debbie Young- strom, Des Moines, Ia.; Pam Smith, Ottawa. Bottom row: Bob Hartman, Shawnee Mission; Sherri Heafley, Overland Park; Bobbie Ling, Santa Clara, Calif.; Chris Shears, Hutchinson; Gregg Kinney, Omaha, Nebr. Campus Chest Campus Chest is an ASC-sponsored project which promotes, administers, and directs the annual solici- tation of funds from KU students, thus giving them an opportunity to contribute to a charitable project. This Bowling Association One of the many intramural activities at KU is the Bowling Association. It is open to anyone who wishes to participate and during the past year had a member- ship of 350. At the end of the fall semester, each of year ' s money was presented to KU ' s Program for Prog- ress. Individual living groups participated in their own fund-raising activities, coordinated by their Cam- pus Chest representatives. Headed by Chairman Barb Ling, Secretary Debbie Youngstrom, and Treasurer Greg Kinney, the drive was held during February and March, with a goal of 100% campus participation. the eleven leagues awarded its champion a trophy. Spring semester competition also featured several leagues. From March 18-23, the association sponsored the annual Campus Handicap Bowling Tournament. Following this, the Hill Championship Team. Tourna- ment was held, at which time the Hill Bowling Cham- pion was announced. Standing: Steve Wolcott, Rochester, N.Y.; Rod Heffley, Bonner Springs; Steve Smallwood, Overland Park; Kay Coder, Lawrence; Bob Epstein, Kansas City; Stan Heffley, Bonner Springs; John Denney, Leavenworth; Elaine Weispfenning, Winchester; Gloria Edwards, Lawrence. Seated: Bill Walker, Kansas City; Julie Lacy, Garnett; Ron Mick, Merriam; Marilyn Mouden, Prairie Village; Dick Groner, Overland Park; Gail Edwards, Lawrence. I 327 Gary Gribben, Publicity Chairman, Parsons; John Coyle, Vice-President, Coffeyville; Kay Mueller, Secretary, Red Oak, Ia.; John Garvey, President, Wichita; Nick Ard, Treasurer, Wichita. 4 Ski Club Nearly 200 KU students have the opportunity to practice their snow-skiing ability due to the efforts of the KU-Y Ski Club. The purposes of the club are to provide the most economical trips to the finest ski areas, and to promote skiing and the friendships that Cricket Club Cricket Club, founded at KU in 1961, was reinsti- tuted this year after three years of inactivity. Com- posed of an A and a B team, each with eleven players and an extra, the club practiced every Sunday go with it. This year the club sponsored a Christmas trip to Vail, Colorado, and another trip during spring break to Aspen, Colorado. To prepare for these trips, free instruction and orientation sessions for beginning skiers were provided at meetings. To carry out the friendship-promoting purpose, parties were given by the Ski Club during and after the ski trips. in the fall and spring. A match against a Kansas City cricket team highlighted April ' s activity, and a St. Louis match was held on May 6 and 7. Planned also were matches with. other midwestern teams. The club ' s purpose is to promote the sport of cricket at KU. The year ' s officers were Zafar H. Israili, president; Shafiq Naz, vice-president; and Alex Thomopulos, secretary. Top row: Dadbhawala Kirit, Bombay, India; Jitendra Patel, Bombay, India; Bharat Kamdar, Bombay, India; Jayanti D. Patel, Mufulira, Zambia; Suresh Bhana, Johannesburg, South Africa; Navnit Patel, Mufulira, Zambia; Narendra Khilnani, Bombay, India. Second row: Syed H. Abid, Karachi, Pakistan; Gautam Mehta, Ahmedabad, India; Narendra 0. Shah, Secbad, Andhara Pradesh, India; Pokar Kabra, Bombay, India; Bhatti A. Rashid, Karachi, Pak- istan; Javed Rasheed, Karachi, Pakistan. Bottom row: Murli Tolaney, New Delhi, India; Nayeem U. Ahmed, Dacca, Pakistan; Zafar H. Israili, Morada- bad, India; Onkar S. Phalora, Punjab, India; D. S. Shivananda, Chickmagalur, Mysore, India; Arun Heble, Aden, Aden. Not pictured: Shafiq Naz, Lahore, Pakistan; Alex Thomopulos, Lagos, Nigeria; Arun Sharma, Kathmandu, Nepal; Rab Malik, Pakistan; Ahsan Habib, Hyderabad No. 4, India. 328 Standing: Bob Petering, Clayton, Mo.; John Koenig, Rochester, N.Y.; Roger McDaneld, Osborne; John Zook, Lamed; John Munkres, Oklahoma City, Okla.; Steve Snow, Wichita. Seated: Alan Wurtz, Mound City; Jon Peterson, Shawnee Mission; Frank Wippel, Highland Park, Ill.; Jim Herrington, Cof- feyville; Dennis Sackman, Wichita. A Parachute Club Enjoyment of an interesting pastime was the con- cern of the Parachute Club this year, especially on the weekends and during the spring. The club ' s pur- pose is to promote the sport of parachuting at KU and around the Eastern Kansas area, as well as to Quack Club Girls interested in learning and performing stunts in synchronized swimming can exercise their abilities as members of Quack Club. This year 25 members were chosen by tryouts which followed clinics to teach the stunts to prospective members. Bimonthly provide training and equipment for KU students and staff members. Officers were John Zook, president; John Munkers, vice-president; Roger McDonald, club safety chairman; John Koening, treasurer; and Pam Banfa, secretary. With this leadership KU ' s 25 mem- bers encouraged the growth of parachuting as a col- lege sport while supporting the Parachute Club of America. meetings and extra weekly practice sessions paid off with two aquatic shows. The club performed several numbers at the Robinson Gym Open House program and presented another show in December. Also planned were a session with a guest speaker and the annual picnic in May at which the new officers for next year will assume their duties. Top row: Joyce Anderson; Kansas City; Toni Mee, Kansas City; Kathy McElroy, Wichita; Lauren Bennett, Prairie Village; Jayne Simon, Wichita. Bottom row: Dianna Johnson, Lawrence; Priscilla Krebs, Kansas City, Mo.; Carol Mill, St. Louis, Mo.; Nancy Redman, Topeka; Peggy Spencer, Wich- ita. Not pictured: Karen Larson, Kansas City; Nancy Hover, Overland Park; Bambi Buck, Wichita; Connie Mille r, Wichita; Nancy Crumpacker, Wichita; Lynn Trombold, Wichita; Mary Allan, Prairie Village; Linda Lemmons, Topeka; Marti Leeson, Barrington, Ill.; Joanne Stantesky, La Grange, Ill.; Jodi Leonard, Topeka; Collette Alley, Wichita; Linda Matassarin, Wichita; Jane Hardy, Streator, Ill. 329 330 Mortar Board Top row: Kathy Axe, Pain Bayless, Cathy Beagle, Sherry Buchanan, Marcia Bunn. Fourth row: Jean Burgardt, Joy Chatlain, Louise Clovis, Trisha Cowen, Joanne Emerick. Third row: Linda Gilna, Pat Goering, Jean Hardy, Glenda Hord, Susie Langston. Second rote: Jo Lee, Vicki Mathews, Kathy Mize, Kay Orth, Kay Patterson. Bottom row: Becky Rogers, Sue Sorem, Andrea Speer. Not pictured: C. C. Waller. 331 Sachem Top row: Paul Bock, Mike Cann, John Casady, Torn Edgar, Bill Emott. Fourth row: Gary Gregg, Ted Haggart, Dave Hall, Richard Harp, Rick Harrington. Third row: Alan Hitt, Martin Holiner, Bob McAdoo, Larry Meeker, Boyd Pearce. Second row: Jim Perkins, Jim Prager, Will Price, John Stinson, Carl Struby. Bottom row: John Vratil, Dick Warner, Bruce Warren, Dave Waxse, Jim Whitaker. Top row: Richard Holmes, Kansas City, Mo.; Leland Johnson, Wichita; James M. Eller, Leavenworth; James R. Drebelbis, Omaha, Nebr.; Richard Leamon, Shawnee Mission; Sherman Stimley, Jackson, Miss. Second row: Jerry Nusbaum, St. John; Michael A. Duncan, Olathe; Pao Ping Chang, China; Stan Carlick, Denver, Colo.; Gary M. Hines, Gardner; Carl Brainerd, Shawnee Mission; Sam Love, Pittsburg. Bottom row: K. Bruce Goebel, Columbia, Mo.; David Ganoung, Memphis, Tenn.; J. Lance Fromme, Hoxie; Mitchell A. Brown, Lawrence; Thomas 0. Maser, Dodge City; James D. McGee, Protection. Not pictured: Chuck Stoffer, Overland Park; John Prim, Overbrook; Edward Benson, Kansas City, Mo.; Willard Bolton, Leawood; Marion Clark, Lamed; Thomas Edgar, Bartlesville, Okla.; James Gossett, Glendale, Mo.; Callaway Hagar, Dodge City; Larry Meeker, Garden City; Charles Sapp, Hepler; Terry Tarr, Bartlesville, Okla.; William B. Anderson, Waking Surrey, Eng.; Terry N. Faddis, Phoenix, Ariz.; Richard L. Frazier, Well- ington; David L. Hanz, Albuquerque, N.M.; James L. Hewlett, Springfield, Mo.; Douglas C. Isely, Minneapolis, Minn.; Charles E. Long, Buhier; Paul E. Love, Springfield, Mo.; Richard F. Oberchain, Pittsburg; Jayanti 0. Patel, Mufulira, Zambia; William H. Prelogar, Grandview, Mo.; Richard W. Shaw, Hiawatha; Michael J. Shonyo, Mountain Home, Ark.; Alan G. Thomas, Mountain Grove, Mo.; Thomas E. Weast, Leavenworth; Gary L. Wright, Wich- ita; Roger V. Bruegger. Tau Beta Pi The attempt to become a more active chapter by performing worthwhile services within the School of Engineering was the basic concern of Kansas Alpha Chapter of Tau Beta Pi, national honor society for engineers. Two requirements are necessary for mem- Owl Society Members of Owl Society are junior men chosen to be honored for their exceptional records in scholarship, activities, and service to the university. This year twenty-seven members were selected at the end of their sophomore year, and seven more were added last bership distinguished scholarship and exemplary character thus emphasizing the fraternity ' s purpose of encouraging and recognizing superior scholarship and leadership achievement. In keeping with the spirit of the honor society, Kansas Alpha updated the display in Marvin Hall of the KU engineers who are listed among the Who ' s Who in Engineering. fall. The purpose of the group is to promote among junior men the qualities of character, scholarship and service to KU. This year Owl Society members served as hosts for the Principal-Counselor-Freshman Confer- ence held in December and were ushers at the New Student Convocation in the fall. Top row: Blake Biles, Hutchinson; Al Martin, Shawnee Mission; Bill Ward, Wichita; John Hoppe, Ottawa; Bob Dotson, Webster Groves, Mo.; Curt Heinz, Topeka; Lance Fromme, Hoxie. Third row: Jim Merchant, Shawnee Mission; Steve Swift, Mission; Stan Garlick, Denver, Colo.; Bill Coughlin, Wellsville; Thomas G. Rader, Greensburg; Charles E. Waldron, III, Kansas City, Mo.; Frederick A. Krebbs, Shawnee Mission; Ed North, Clinton, Ia. Second row: Robert Ward, Wichita; Ed Gordon, Fort Scott; Dennis M. Taylor, Rancho Cordova, Calif.; Gary Ascanio, Cherokee; Bruder Stapleton, Fort Scott; Randy Jacobs, Leawood; Marc Carlson, Lawrence. Bottom row: P. Lawrence Peterson, Newton; Dave McClain, St. Joseph, Mo.; Kent Powell, Wichita; Lary Robinson, Iola; Jim McCalla, Lawrence; Bruce Peterson, Prairie Village. Not pictured: Jack Wilhelm, Independence; Allen Russell, Scotts- bluff, Nebr.; Robert Harrop, Topeka; David Bonda, Omaha, Nebr.; Jack Lindsey, LaGrange, Ill.; Tom Swale, Prairie Village. 332 Top row: James M. Eller, Leavenworth; James D. McGee, Protection; John H. Kartsonis, Hutchinson; Charles Long, Buhler; Thomas 0. Maser, Dodge City; R. F. Swartzendruber, Kansas City. Second row: James Patrick Florez, Kansas City; Michael Allen Duncan, Olathe; Hal Marshall, Hollidaysburg, Penn.; Bob Redford, Leavenworth; Bob Funk, Bartlesville, Okla.; Jim Renier, Overland Park; Gary M. Hines, Gardner. Bottom row: Robert Gar- rett, Lawrence; William R. Spangler, Leawood; David Ganoung, Memphis, Tenn.; Calvin 0. Hodge, Kansas City, Mo.; Frank Dolechek, Wilson; James Gibson, Overland Park; Michael J. Shonyo, Ellinwood. Not pictured: Marvin Lamount, Ottawa; Delbert Moore, Topeka; Phillip Shontz, Kansas City, Mo.; Allan Mula lly, Lawrence; Sherman Stimley, Jackson, Miss.; Rich Andrews, Kansas City; Robert Holmes, Florissant, Mo.; Darl Hughes, Waverly; Le- land Johnson, Wichita; Richard Leamon, Shawnee Mission; Paul Love, Springfield, Mo.; Raymond Suffron, Lawrence; James Summa, Marysville; Larry Black, Plainville; Jim Cole, Kent, Wash.; Jim Cook, Topeka; James Drebelbis, Woodland Hills, Calif.; Dave Hanz, Albuquerque, N.M.; Thomas J. Jannetta, Wichita; Sans Love, Pittsburg; David Nye, Leawood; Gary E. Temanson, Merced, Calif.; Gary Wright, Wichita; Richard Wulf, Humboldt. Sigma Tau The purpose of Sigma Tau, honorary fraternity for engineering students, is to honor those students who show promise of professional attainment. Total mem- bership this year was thirty-nine, with James McGee serving as president, and Philip Shontz as vice-presi- Sigma Gamma Tau The national honor society for aerospace engineering students is Sigma Gamma Tau, organized to recognize and honor individuals who have been a credit to their profession through outstanding scholarship, integrity, and achievement. Membership is open to juniors and dent. Other officers included Gary Hines, correspond- ing secretary; Bob Redford, recording secretary; Alan Mulally, Pyramid secretary; Sherman Stimley, trea- surer; and Robert Funk, historian. Activities were high- lighted by a fall Initiation Banquet, and the Na- tional Conclave which was held at KU in March. seniors with a minimum GPA of 2.00, set by the As- sociation of College Honor Societies of which the group is a member. In February, members traveled to the University of Illinois to attend the national con- vention. Spring semester was devoted to attempting to get the Henry Gould Award posthumously awarded to the late professor Costas J. Choliasmenos. Top row: Charles W. Sapp, Hepler; Carl Brainerd, Shawnee Mission; Vincent Muirlead, Lawrence; Larry Wisler, Topeka. Bottom row: Richard HoIms, Kansas City, Mo.; Will Bolton, Leawood; Dennis Cannon, Lawrence. Not pictured: Tom Aiken, Lawrence; Mick Summa, Maryville, Mo.; Terry Tarr, Bartlesville, Okla.; Terry Faddis, Phoenix, Ariz.; Richard Frazier, Wellington; Royace Prather, Walnut Hill, Ill. 333 AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS. Top row: Bill Buck, Louisburg; Norm Steinman, St. Louis, Mo.; Dennis Jacobs, Kansas City, Mo.; Robert Gould, Mission Hills; George Course, Overland Park; Gordon Wood, Pittsburg; Bennett Bishop, Miami, Mo.; Dennis Degginger, Kansas City, Mo. Fourth row: John Hull, Liverpool, N.Y.; Randy Hodges, Independence, Mo.; R. Bruce Hartnett, Ensign; Mark Oldham, Columbia, Mo.; Ron Dixon, Kansas City; Mitchell A. Brown, Lawrence; Norm Lader, Arlington, Va. Third row: Jane Pollock, Kirkwood, Mo.; Wayne London, Valley Stream, N.Y.; Ed- ward Alexander, Brooklyn, N.Y.; Ronald Logan, Kansas City, Mo.; Tom Novak, Ellsworth; Joyce Harrell, Lawrence; Torn Walshan, Kansas City, Mo.; Mer- rick B. Fredman, Kansas City. Second row: Jennie Rector, Lawrence; J. Fernando Martinez, Tegucigalpa, Honduras C.A.; Fred Chan, Hong Kong, China; Roy Forssberg, Logan; Herb Looney, Overland Park; Maryanne Gottschall, Prairie Village; James Watts, Chicago, Ill. Bottom row: Brent Porter, Bolivar, Mo.; Denis R. Anderson, Kansas City; K. Bruce Goebel, Treasurer, Columbia, Mo.; Donna :Mitchell, Secretary, Lawrence; Ronald Davidow, President, Shaw- nee Mission; Kurt Eric Youngstrom, Vice-President, Shawnee Mission; Arnold Lee Lerner, Overland Park; Ronald Everly, Independence, Mo. Not pic- tured: Skip Hirst, Moberly, Mo. SCARAB. Top row: Lynn William Schwartzkopf, Lamed; Ronald Davidow, Shawnee Mission; Rick Snodgrass, Wichita; David Mourning, Okla- homa City, Okla.; Hank Herschman, St. Joseph, Mo.; Tieh-Chun Chen, Taiwan, China; David Evans, Overland Park. Second row: Don Morris, Kansas City, Mo.; Ed Baskett, Sabetha; Gary Engel, Lawrence; Dick Obenchain, Pittsburgh, Penn.; Randall Middleton, Normal, Ill.; Terry G. Wilson, Con- cordia. Bottom row: Terry Johnston, Kankakee, Ill.; Robert Gould, Mission Hills; Roger Vonder Bruegge, Affton, Mo.; David A. Jlougland, Olathe; Lynn F. Richards, West Plains, Mo. PETROLEUM ENGINEERS. Top row: Gary E. Folmnsbee, Great Bend; G. H. Welsh, Youngstown, Ohio; Floyd W. Preston, Lawrence; Richard S. Walsh, Annapolis, Md.; William Weisenborn, Tulsa, Okla.; Jack Mitchell, Ioa. Second row: Charles F. Weinaug, Lawrence; Ben-Omran Abdelhay, Devna, Libya; James A. White, Norfolk, Va.; Jerry N. Crane, Great Bend; George W. Mertz, Jr., Fort Scott. Bottom row: Jack Evers, Green River, Wyo.; Glenn Taliaferro, El Dorado; L. G. Bud Johnson, Burden; Paul E. Smith, Liberty, Mo.; Roger H. Elliott, Jr., Overland Park; Don W. Green, Lawrence. Not pictured: Shehzad Sadig, Lahore, Pakistan; Yusef Mamedov, Baku, U.S.S.R.; Leoncio Gaz zaneo, Caracas, Venezuela; George Skladal, San Antonio, Tex.; Frederick March, Baltimore, Md.; George W. Swift, Lawrence. 334 Top row: Gene Ward Wester, Mankato; James M. Eller, Leavenworth; James D. McGee, Protection; Mike Hurt, Leawood; Don W. Schoeneman, Roch- ester, N.Y.; Pao Ping Chang, China. Bottom row: Gary Lee Wright, Wichita; R. F. Swartzendruber, Kansas City; Phil Shontz, Kansas City, Mo.; Thomas 0. Maser, Dodge City; James P. Floret, Kansas City. Not pictured: Dr. Dale Rummer, Advisor, Lawrence; Earl Ellis, Kansas City, Mo.; Leland Johnson, Wichita; Delbert Moore, Topeka; Alan Thomas, Mountain Grove, Mo.; David Haile, Albuquerque, N.M. Kappa Nu Eta Kappa Nu is composed of students and engineers who have conferred honor upon themselves and the University of Kansas in the field of electrical engineer- ing. A study aid program was initiated by the chapter Phi Mu Alpha Since its founding 69 years ago, Phi Mu Alpha, a professional music fraternity, has grown to over 260 chapters nationwide. The wide divergence of Sinfonia musical personality is exemplified locally by KU ' s own Woodrow Wilson Fellow, Larry Salmon. All this year to provide those enrolled in electrical en- gineering with assistance from members of the chap- ter. The study aid program was made available to all students by the posting of a course advisor list in Learned Hall. The Society also maintained a display in Learned Hall, presenting information concerning the latest developments in electrical engineering. members have a common bond expressed in the fra- ternity ' s purpose: To advance the cause of music in America. The men of Xi Chapter performed with such world-renowned groups as the Brass Choir, Cham- ber Choir, Symphony, and Concert Band, and the KU Marching Band. They also formed a Wind Ensemble with Mu Phi Epsilon and Sigma Alpha Iota, and pre- sented their first concert this spring. Top row: Charles A. Rader, Jr., Kansas City, Mo.; Robert Benton, Des Moines, Ia.; Gary Cook, Junction City; Kent Sinning, Holton; Clifford D. Manning, Lawrence; Dennis Alexander, Copeland; Roger Sprecher, Fort Scott; Doug Maxwell, St. Louis, Mo. Second row: Paul D. Gray, Windsor, Mo.; Larry K. Maxwell, Salina; Garry L. Maxwell, Salina; David E. Kay, Topeka; Martin Grogan, Oberlin; Mike Brown, Topeka; Rick Connor, Delweln, Ia. Bottom row: Thomas E. Wilson, Garden City; Donald E. Russell, Galena; Gale L. Dillehay, Kansas City, Mo.; Cecil S. Cole, Jr., Richmond, Va.; Thomas R. King, Kirkwood, Mo.; Robert K. Entriken, Jr., San Francisco, Calif.; James E. Zimmerman, Topeka; Duane L. Eager, Topeka. Not pictured: Richard Ray, Topeka; Charles Eberline, Bartlesville, Okla.; Larry Salmon, Winfield; Dave Murrow, Topeka; Perry Toll, Kansas City, Mo.; Dennis War- ing, Memphis, Tenn.; John Owen, Scott City; John Braum, Denison; Ed Ellis, Kansas City; Frank Reed, Coffeyville; Mike Latimer, Mount Caroll, Ill. 335 Top row: Joyce Back, Mt. Hope; June Sutton, Princeton; Janice Loveland, Wichita; Carolyn Schmitt, President, Scott City; Carolyn Drury, Wichita. Second row: Patty McCall, Raytown, Mo.; Cheryl Campbell, Ottawa; Jane Woodburn, La Cygne; Celia Ann Krehbiel, Moundridge; Celia Ann Richards, Miami, Okla.; Feryl Cauble, Mt. Hope. Bottom row: Nancy Hitt, Lawrence; Carla Rupp, Moundridge; Mary Riedmiller, Glasco; Janet Miller, Russell; Shelley Halstead, Mankato. Not pictured: Cindy Brown, Lawrence; Becky Rogers, Topeka; Jan Johnston, Houston, Tex.; Shirley Williams, Olathe; Kay Kauffman, Kansas City, Mo.; Tacy Weidman, Lawrence; Linda Friekey, Oberlin; Virginia Sloan, Sioux City, Ia.; Mary Westerhaus, Marion; Barbara Stone, Lubbock, Tex.; Patricia McGrew, Lawrence; Mary Lou Paulsen, Shawnee Mission; Mary Lou Wood, Overland Park; Mrs. Martin Bubb, Wichita, Chapter Advisor. Mu Phi Epsilon The goals of Mu Phi Epsilon, professional service sorority for women, include the promotion of Ameri- can music and high standards of musical excellence, as well as the giving of service to school and com- munity. Membership selection requires an overall GPA of 1.80 and either a major or minor in music. Xi chap- ter realized the purpose of its organization through various projects. Mu Phi ' s 24 members ushered at University Concert Courses, held receptions for recital performances, participated in music therapy projects, sent music and texts to foreign countries, and assisted with KU ' s Symposium of Contemporary Music. Sigma Alpha Iota Regular monthly meetings were the basis for ac- tivities of Sigma Alpha Iota, professional fraternity for women music majors or minors who have main- tained a 1.80 GPA and who demonstrate sufficient musical ability. Projects were often carried out in cooperation with the Lawrence alumnae chapter, and included a Musical Tea to raise scholarship money and ushering at Concert Course events. Members also supported the national fraternity project to send in- struments to orchestras overseas, and established con- tact with other Kansas chapters by sending delegates to State Day held at Bethany College in Lindsborg. Top row: Carolyn Cunningham, Tulsa, Okla.; Beth Roeder, Burlington; Heidi Schutte, Fort Madison, Ia.; Kay Johnson, Council Bluffs, Ia.; Shirley Potter, Mendon, Mo.; L. Suzanne Jouvenat, Columbus, Nebr.; JoAnne Ferrell, Valley Falls; Karla Norton, Lawrence. Second row: Bonnie Hodges, Pottstown, Penn.; Rita Matousek, Cuba; Nancy Watson, Kansas City, Mo.; Linda Drake, Westhope, N.D.; Frances Bradley, Kansas City; Carol Bohnsack, Brookfield, Mo.; Susie Dent, St. Louis, Mo. Bottom row: Darlene Stevens, Kansas City, Mo.; Donna Nutt, Kansas City, Mo.; Janice Kay Gray, Springfield, Mo.; Geraldine Marion, Oklahoma City, Okla.; Caroline Bowdish, Reno, Nev.; Cheryl M. Boelte, Shawnee Mission. Not pictured: Kay Bethea, Advisor, Lawrence; Susan Millard, Kansas City; Leslie Martyn, Clay Center; Selina Davis, Chicago, Ill.; Clara Hartly, Atwood; Judy Carter, Joplin, Mo.; Marlea Zimmer, Chappell, Nebr.; Linda Selig, Clay Center; Julie Finlayson, Omaha, Nebr. 336 Top row: Elaine Allen, Lawrence; Karen Webb, Russell; Sheila Wiseman, Hastings, Nebr.; Joan Gilpin, Iola; Nancy Wood, ' Wichita; Sherry Krepps, Winfield. Bottom row: Diane Keetzmeier, Iola; Mary Anne McBride, Lawrence; Beth Gast, Paola; Karin Hayes, Kansas City, Mo.; Mary Jeannine Kerwin, Kansas City, Mo. Not pictured: Heather MacDonald, Hutchinson; Linda lmmenschuh, Rossville; Judy Holden, Basehor; Pat NalIs, Tulsa, Okla.; Gwynn Jennings, Bartlesville, Okla; Bonnie Morey, Overland Park. Phi -xi Theta The promotion of higher ideals for women in busi- Wiseman. Money-raising projects were a feature of ness education is the goal of Phi. Chi Theta, a national the group ' s program. The fraternity also sponsored panhellenic fraternity for women students of business several speakers who appeared before all women in and economics. KU ' s chapter totaled eighteen mem- the School of Business, and worked with other student bers this year, and was headed by President Sheila groups to promote several activities. Recreation Association The Women ' s Recreation Association is open to all women students at KU, with the purposes of provid- ing an organized intramural program and promoting good sportsmanship and fellowship. WRA represent- atives reported tournament schedules to their own living group teams. In the fall, soccer-basketball, ten- nis singles, and badminton singles were offered. Win- ter sports included volleyball, co-rec volleyball, co-rec badminton, basketball, and swimming; while spring- time brought softball, tennis, and badminton doubles. Awards, sports days, and a High School Play Day were also organized by WRA. Top row: Gretchen Hausmann, Washington, Mo.; Pans Zwink, Lawrence; Donna Reese, Salina; Barb Bock, St. Louis, Mo.; Doris Lanning, Lawrence; Joanne Dunnick, St. Louis, Mo. Second row: Carole Roberson, Prairie Village; Connie McWilliams, St. Joseph, Mo.; Loretta Russell, Kansas City; Chris McLain, Independence, Mo.; Sally Smith, St. Joseph, Ill. Bottom row: Beverly Gray, Peculiar, Mo.; Linda Lemons, Topeka; Ann Evers, Odessa, Tex.; Marty Heuduck, St. Louis, Mo. 337 Top row: John Patton, Oregon, Mo.; Dennis Hendershot, Anthony; Francis Wainwright, Syracuse; Robert Miller, Leavenworth; Ronald Magathan, Sa- lina; Harvey Hollingsworth, Belle Plaine; Jim McCreight, Viola, Ill.; Jim Wheatley, Garden City; James Stoneking, Kiowa. Fifth row: John Montfoort, Richland; Bill J. Bond, Bonner Springs; Larry L. Cole, Lakin; Sam Garbo, Garden City; James R. Chappell, Augusta; Wayne Schulte, Hugoton; David Weaves, Wichita; Larry Koett, Hays; Charles Breithaupt, Lawrence; Ken Horst, Abilene. Fourth row: Orville Montague, Hiawatha; Robert G. Smith, Mo- nett, Mo.; Don Sonderegger, Garden City; Artie Hall, Dodge City; Eric Hoffman, Belleville; Gary R. Hilyard, Wichita; Jim Heim, Hoxie; David Branine, Wichita; Darrell Corson, Paola. Third row: Stanley Byrne, Centralia; Thomas H. Phillips, Wilson; William Armbruster, Hutchinson; Robert E. Emerson, Columbus; Jay Johnson, Liberal; Danny McCue, St. Joseph, Mo.; John R. Ohnemiller, Conway Springs; Dr. Carlton K. Erickson, Lawrence. Sec- ond row: Louie L. Barney, Pittsburg; Doug Heiser, Centralia; Mickey Myers, Cedar Vale; Jan Milam, Overland Park; Linda Simmons, Manhattan; Berta Banyard, Hutchinson; Bob Nyquist, Wichita; Gary Fincham, Marysville; Winston Hodges, Wichita. Bottom row: Mary Alice Schwarz, Onaga; Hieda N. Rodriguez, Havana, Cuba; Kaye Metzler, Arkansas City; Gail Lowery, Mulvane; SuzAnn Wheatley, Hutchinson; Nanthana Pruckkumvong, Bangkok, Thailand; Maxine Brock, Wichita; Diana Smith, Russell; Ann Marshall, Dodge City. American Pharmaceutical Association The American Pharmaceutical Association is a pro- fessional organization, established in order to provide members with the opportunity to become better ac- quainted with students and faculty in pharmacy. Monthly meetings were the foundation for the club ' s program, which included feature speakers from major drug companies and discussions on such topics as Medicare. Social gatherings included a pizza party in the fall and a Christmas formal sponsored with the Pharmacy Wives. The 147 members also attended the annual Senior Recognition Banquet, and delegates were sent to regional and national conventions. Rho Chi The advancement of the pharmaceutical sciences through encouragement and recognition of sound scholarship is the purpose of Rho Chi, national honor society for pharmacy students. Membership is com- prised of fourth- and fifth-year pharmacy students who are in the upper one-fifth of their class. Yearly projects of Rho Chi included the sponsoring of a speaker to appear before the Pharmacy School, and the prepara- tion of display cases for High School Science Day in the fall. An initiation banquet for new members high- lighted spring activities. Top row: T. Lee Gruen, Abilene; Mark S. Fixley, Osawatomie; James A. Whitaker, Nortonville; Richard Snyder, Jr., Lincoln; Gary S. Chappell, Law- rence; Winton D. Jones, Lawrence. Second row: James W. Ayres, Twin Falls, Ida.; Zafar H. Israili, Moradabad, India; Robert E. Emerson, Columbus; Frederick Kautz, Atchison; William Armbruster, Hutchinson; Eugene Coats, Lawrence; Arthur Ramsey, Lawrence. Bottom row: Robert Robinson, Rome, N.Y.; Larry E. Hare, President, Osawatomie; James K. Stoneking, Vice-President, Kiowa; James Wheatley, Garden City; Patrick Hanna, Lyons; David R. Allen, Norton. 338 PHARMACY WIVES. Top row: Mrs. Gary Vratil, Lawrence; Mrs. Ken Horst, Abilene; Mrs. Hoyt Kerr, Manhattan; Mrs. David R. Allen, Norton; Mrs. Kurt Sundelin, Idaho Falls, Ida.; Mrs. Larry J. Koett, Hays; Mrs. Ronald G. Hansen, Scott City. Third row: Mrs. John Patton, Oregon, Mo.; Mrs. Loren Hedrich, Pocatello, Ida.; Mrs. James Ayres, Idaho Falls, Ida.; Mrs. James Stoneking, Kiowa; Mrs. Darrell Sumner, Kansas City; Mrs. Darrell Miner, Lawrence; Mrs. Mickey Myers, Cedar Vale; Mrs. Roger Reynolds, Ottawa. Second row: Mrs. Kathy Borne, New Orleans, La.; Mrs. Thomas Phillips, Wilson; Mrs. Jim Wheatley, Hutchinson; Mrs. Robert Nyquist, Wichita; Mrs. J. Winston Hodges, Shawnee Mission; Mrs. John E. Leech, Topeka; Mrs. Scott Parish, Cambridge. Bottom row: Mrs. Harry Zielke, Jr., Dodge City; Mrs. Sam Garbo, Secretary, Garden City; Mrs. T. Lee Gruen, Treasurer, Abilene; Mrs. Morris Faiman, Faculty Advisor, Lawrence; Mrs. E. E. Smissman, Lawrence; Mrs. Harvey Hollingsworth, President, Belle Plaine; Mrs. Stan Byrne, Vice-President, Centralia. GAMMA ALPHA CHI. Top row: Ronnie Nelson, Hinsdale, Ill.; Donna Miller, St. Joseph, Mo.; Cecily Pitts, Shawnee Mission; Dotty Ammon, St. Joseph, Mo.; Connie Krstolic, Kansas City; Beverly Heath, Huntington, N.Y.; Diane Nicholson, Shawnee Mission. Second row: Deanna Feldman, Kansas City, Mo.; Cydney Clutter, Lamed; Beverly Werden, Mattoon, Ill.; Marsha Barth, Leawood; Karen Wayman, Empor ia; Gayle Schooler, Law- rence. Bottom row: Candace Smith, Odessa, Mo.; Anne Payne, Shawnee Mission; Pam Wilkinson, River Forest, Ill.; Mary Lane Ladewig, Leawood; Boxy Lennard, Ottawa; Lynn Buckholz, Shawnee Mission; Marsha Montague, Wichita. TAU SIGMA. Top row: Roxanna Creitz, Lawrence; Cay Curless, Hiawatha; Bob Wittsell, Uniontown; Cydney Clutter, Lamed; Barbara Anderson, Kansas City; Leif Ostergard, Vasa, Finland; Sherry Monroe, Great Bend; Kathy Keller, Los Altos, Calif.; Mona Hammam, Potsdam, N.Y.; Pat Baur, Pittsburgh, Penn. Second row: Zandra Sommer, St. Louis, Mo.; Valorie Frame, Merriam; Mike Falley, Topeka; Mike Vance, Parsons; Kathy Leo, Prairie Village. Bottom row: Alex Brown, Lawrence; Diana Javellana, Kapaa, Kauai, Hawaii; Debra DeMoss, Wellington; Barbara Rice, Olathe; Sandy Hotch- kiss, Shawnee Mission; Jill Perry, Lawrence; Matt Frazier, Lawrence. 339 Top row: Joseph E. Hustein, Kansas City, Mo.; Mark R. Shideler, Shawnee Mission; Roger W. Myers, Garnett; Stephen Singer, Prairie Village; Robert H. Campbell, Topeka. Second row: Lyle V. Duer, Hutchinson; Dave Anderson, Clifton; Mark A. Bernstein, Overland Park; David B. McClain, Law- rence; Terrance Fitzgerald, Topeka; Mike Pretzer, Garnett. Bottom row: Jerry Bean, Abilene; Gray Montgomery, Mission Hills; Robert R. Basow, Wich- ita; Tony Chop, Kansas City; Joe Godfrey, Topeka. Not pictured: Steve Straight, Shawnee Mission; Steve Fitzgerald, Liberal; Gary Wright, Wichita; David Clutter, Lamed; Richard Grove, Westminister, Calif.; Eric Litsey, Belleville, Ill.; Warren Massey, Jacksonville, Ill.; Jim Nichols, Belle Plain; John Pepper, Lenexa; Cole Walker, Topeka; Carl Williams, Wichita. Alpha Delta Sigma Alpha Delta Sigma is a national professional ad- vertising fraternity for advertising and commercial art majors. The organization ' s purpose is to permit mem- bers to come in contact with advertising professionals. Alpha Kappa Psi As a professional business fraternity, Alpha Kappa Psi ' s activities this year emphasized the purposes of the organization to further the individual welfare of its members and to foster scientific research in fields of commerce, accounts and finance. The fra- An advertising workshop in the fall, Creativity Un- limited, featured presentations by noted national and regional professionals, as did a spring Advertising Day on Campus, which emphasized the business aspects of advertising. Pledges provided the organization ' s revenue by wearing sandwich board signs around campus for advertising purposes. ternity ' s forty members attended monthly meetings which centered around an instructive program featur- ing speakers from such business concerns as a bank savings and loans corporation, the telephone company, a management consultive firm, and a dry goods organi- zation. Alpha Kappa Psi delegates also attended na- tional and regional conventions. Top row: Mike Maloney, Wichita; David Langston, Wichita; Pat Davis, Colorado Springs, Colo.; Mike Nail, Shawnee Mission; John Haase, Salina. Second row: Jack Clevenger, Topeka; David Morris, Wichita; Jim Renier, Overland Park; Rick Hyter, Hutchinson. Bottom row: David S. Ingalls, Fitch- burg, Mass.; Prof. Knapper, Lawrence; R. A. Edwards, Kansas City; Wally Hinshaw, Wichita; Bob Nash, Bartlesville, Okla. Not pictured: Chuck Waldron, Kansas City, Mo.; Dwight Wallace, Wichita; Allan Lovery, Lawrence; Doug Markley, Fort Collins, Colo.; Mike McNally, Bartlesville, Okla.; Bob Liddle, Crestwood, Mo.; Bill Weber, Wichita; Gene Russell, independence, Mo.; Mike Smith, Wamego; Don MacFarland, Shawnee Mission. 340 Top row: Tom VanSlyke, Wichita; James W. Volkman, Wichita; Vincent Knight, Ponca City, Okla.; Peggy Dietrich, Lawrence; Doug Winn, Leawood; William Hardie, Binghamton, N.Y.; Chuck Huerter, Seneca; Mike McGibeny, Marble Falls, Tex. Second row: Linda Elliott, Greensburg; Marilyn McBride, Enid, Okla.; Anne Boynton, Franklin, Ohio; Peggy Stone, Wichita; Karen Bessmer, Great Bend; Susan Corson, Shawnee Mission; Mary Melton, Marion. Bottom row: Ginger McAnany, Kansas City; Judy Bailey, Moline, Ill.; Vicki Koch, Shawnee Mission; Rick Noble, President, Independence, Mo.; J. W. Drury, Advisor, Lawrence; Mason R. McIntire, Vice-President, Oregon, Mo.; Mike Starkweather, Wichita; Rita Rosander, Shawnee Mission. Sigma Psi The third Sigma Psi chapter in the nation was es- tablished at KU this year with 26 members. The pur- poses of this personnel. administration majors ' frater- nity are to upgrade the goals of education in this area India Club To foster social and cultural activities with other clubs is the goal of the India Club. Membership is open to any interested KU student, but the majority of the club ' s fifty members this year were Indian stu- and to serve as a bridge between the practice and theory of personnel administration. The year ' s ac- tivities included a banquet in Kansas City, and a chartering ceremony at which the regional vice-presi- dent of Sigma Psi was a speaker. Officers included Richard Noble, president; Mason McIntire, vice-presi- dent; and Vicki Koch, secretary-treasurer. dents. Headed by Suresh Bhana, president, India Club ' s activities were many and varied. The fall pro- gram included the showing of Indian movies, and a celebration party at the Lawrence Community Build- ing. India Club also presented a musical performance to Rotary Club and international Club, participated in the International Festival, and held a spring picnic. Top row: Arun Heble, Bombay, India; S. V. Parthasarathy, Bangalore, India; Aky Hasham, D ' salaam, Tanzania; Kirit Dadbhawala, Treasurer, Bom- bay, India; Jayanti D. Patel, Mufulira, Zambia; Suresh Bhana, President, Johannesburg, South Africa; Navnit Patel, Mufulira, Zambia; Narendra Khil- nani, Bombay, India. Third row: Kabra Pokar, Bombay, India; Mahendra Shah, Ahmedabad, India; Bhanuvadan Mehta, Patan, India; Raj Prithvi, New Delhi, India; Herb Friedson, Shaker Heights, Ohio; Jitendra Patel, Bombay, India; Much Tolaney, New Delhi, India; Marja van Engelsdorp Gastelaars, Groningen, Holland; Bharat Kamdar, Bombay, India. Second row: Narendra 0. Shah, Sec ' bad, India; Gautam R. Mehta, Ahmedabad, India; Zafar H. Israili, Moradabad, India; T. Devanathan, Cuddalore, India; D. S. Shivananda, Chickmagalur, India; Hasmukh Shah, Bombay, India; D. C. Mehta, Bombay, India; Kirit Contractor, Ahmedabad, India. Bottom row: Dr. Harbans Lal, India; Ute-Barbara Protzer, Wurzburg, Germany; Nitina Parekh, Rajkot, India; Padma Sundart, Jamshedpur, India; Kastoor Bhana, Durban, South Africa; Crete Ravn Omdal, Oslo, Norway; Charles F. Weinaug, Lawrence. 341 PAKISTAN STUDENTS ASSOCIATION. Top row: Syed H. Abid, Karachi; Shehzad Sadiq, Karachi; Javed Rasheed, Karachi; Azhar Habib, Karachi; Ahsan Hafeez, Karachi. Bottom row: Mrs. S. Sirtajuddin Ahmed, Karachi; S. Sirtajuddin Ahmed, Karachi; Naycem U. Ahmed, Dacca; A. Rashid Bhatti, Karachi. Not pictured: Shafiq A. Naz, Lahore; Rah N. Malik, Sargodha. MU EPSILON NU. Top row: William Hanis, Kansas City; Bany L. Kaufman, Baton Rouge, La.; Larry R. Routh, Chappell, Nebr.; Don Vsctecka, WaKeeney; Dan Atkisson, Wichita. Second row: Steve Haught, Lawrence; Donald Bailey, Dodge City; Mike Mcllvain, Cunningham; Jerry Barney, Lawrence. Bottom row: Stephen Morgan, Wichita; Forrest D. Cooper, Iola; Daniel R. Leonard, Lakin; Virgil L. Jackson, Jr., Kansas City, Mo.; Michael D. Griffith, Marysville. Not pictured: Dr. Hoeltke, Advisor, Lawrence. THE SECRET SEVEN. 342 Top row: Milt Jaehnig, Kansas City; Richard Lapple, Alliance, Ohio; Jim Hake, Lawrence; David S. Kirk, Pittsburg; Steven O ' Neal, Wichita. Bottom row: Rong-Show Shyu, Taipei, Taiwan, China; Javed Rasheed, Karachi, Pakistan; Greg Millican, Overland Park; J. Donald Pauley, Boulder, Colo.; B. Fan, Hong Kong. Not pictured: F. Ghafarizadeh, Teheran, Iran; Scott Gaulding, Hopkins, Minn.; Charles Colver, Princeton, N.J.; Robert Haralick, Westburg, N.Y.; Ben Kowing, Lawrence; Richard Lee, Leavenworth; Jeff McCaa, Kansas City, Mo. Kappa Kappa Kappa Eta Kappa is a professional electrical engi- neering fraternity open to any student in the field. A cooperative living group, the organization provides a great deal of contact between students and teachers, Chi Delphia Members of Chi Delphia are chosen primarily for their interest and loyalty to Delta Chi fraternity. Last summer at the Delta Chi National Convention, Chi Delphia was expanded to a national sister organiza- tion affiliated with all chapters of the fraternity. The who are often invited to the house for dinner. The fraternity this year had ten members who did their own cooking and performed assigned tasks, in addi- tion to helping each other in courses. They also worked together on a project for the Engineering Exposition involving an analog computer. Social activities in- cluded a Hobo Party in October and a spring party. KU chapter this year entered its fourth year of ser- vice and numbered 30 members. Activities began with a welcoming party for new pledges at the Delta Chi house. Among the organization ' s other projects were decorating for parties, helping with rush, pre- senting a Christmas dinner, and giving a breakfast and skit before final week. Back row: Steve Chinn, Prairie Village; Marty Oliver, Kansas City, Mo.; Nancy Winkler, Kansas City; Barb Blattner, St. Louis, Mo.; Pam Flaton, St. Louis, Mo.; Theresa Zellers, Bethel; Bev Gibbs, Kansas City; Linda Kleinschmidt, Bartlesville, Okla.; Ann Perry, Shawnee Mission; Berta Banyard, Hutchinson; Susie Langston, Springfield, Mo.; Jayne Simon, Wichita; Mrs. Libby Peck, Henrietta, Okla.; Beth Lallier, Piper; Marty Eisen, Leawood; Ann Johnston, Independence; Linda Curtler, Kansas City; Jennifer Clader, Winnetka, Ill.; Cheryl Lasley, Mission. Front row: Nancy Beck, Independence; Nicki Wissman, Parsons; Francie Hall, Kansas City; Pam Poynter, Creighton, Mo.; Joanne Beal, Denver, Colo.; Karen Vokracka, St. Louis, Mo.; Lynne Birney, Miami, Fla.; Sara Gosney, Kansas City; Judy King, Wichita. 343 L Top row: Jaci Babcock, Overland Park; Karen Van Derbur, Kansas City, Mo.; Betsy Brazee, Kirkwood, Mo.; Sue Shipman, Shawnee Mission; Mary Mac- Quiddy, Omaha, Nebr.; Cheryl Munday, Prairie Village. Second row: Carolyn Bauer, Lenexa; Carol Norton, Shawnee Mission; Jane Edgar, Prairie Vil- lage; Bobbi Roberts, Leawood; Carol Webber, Kirkwood, Mo. Bottom row: Kathy Vaughan, Lawrence; Jan Gates, Prairie Village; Elaine Cacioppo, Overland Park; Gail Freiermuth, St. Louis, Mo. Not pictured: Linda Weeks, Shawnee Mission; Louise Miler, Kansas City; Sara Turner, Wheaton, Ill.; Janet Anderson, Prairie Village. Crescents Crescents is the little sisterhood of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity. Purposes of the organization are to assist the Lambda Chis in rush activities, to participate in chapter functions, to assist the Mother ' s Club, and to develop closer friendships with the fraternity ' s Little Sisters of Minerva Founded at KU in 1961, Little Sisters of Minerva of Sigma Alpha Epsilon was the first women ' s auxiliary organization for a fraternity at KU. The goals of the organization are to show loyalty and special interest members. This year Crescents sponsored a money- raising bazaar, a spaghetti dinner, and surprise break- fasts for the fraternity. They also hostessed for rush functions and served refreshments during finals and holidays. A big brother and little brother program plus functions with the pledge class rounded out the many Crescent-Lambda Chi activities. in the fraternity by assisting the chapter in various activities and, in general, promoting it on campus. A pledge son program established stronger friendships with the fraternity ' s new members. Such activities as rush week-end skits, early morning breakfasts, remem- brances during holidays and finals, and assistance with money-making projects were also carried out. Top row: Claudia Fry, Shawnee Mission; Susie Selders, Shawnee Mission; Dee Dec Davis, Shawnee Mission; Linda Hites, Shawnee Mission; Susan Lit- toy, Hutchinson; Dianne Eddins, Bakersfield, Calif. Second row: Andy Leek, Mission; Mary Ann Ferree, Kirkwood, Mo.; Judy Conyers, Kirkwood, Mo.; Judy Whitaker, Topeka; Punky Hemphill, Shawnee Mission. Bottom rote: Karen Dunaway, Lawrence; Patty Mills, Topeka; Linda Bair, Kansas City, Mo.; Sue Patrick, Shawnee Mission; Donna Hills, Mankato; Mary Domrese, Kirkwood, Mo. Not pictured: Becky Wall, Kirkwood, Mo.; Mary Dowell, Greens- burg; Patty Gilliland, Hutchinson; Kathy Strayer, Mission Hills. 344 SISTERS OF THE MALTESE CROSS. Top row: Gayle Kreutzer, Leavenworth; JoAnne Johnsmeyer, Mt. Hope; Mimi Larson, Bartlesville, Okla.; Barbara Rice, Topeka; Sabra Bradshaw, Abilene; Cindy Hardin, Lincoln, Nebr. Third row: Clare Davis, Covington, La.; Trisha Cowen, Junction City; Lyn Widick, Atchison; Tarn McDaniel, Overland Park; Nancy Einsel, Wilmore; Carol Mill, St. Louis, Mo.; Ann Kane, Bartlesville, Okla. Second row: Linda Voorhees, Mission; Suzanne Saffels, Garden City; April Phelps, Lawrence; Cille Resnik, Whitewater; Cindy Brocker, Prairie Village; Deanell Reece, Scandia. Bottom row: Sherry Buchanan, Topeka; Linda Gill, Junction City; Kathy Jenks, Lawrence; Gay Gordon, Wichita; jacki Settles, Garden City. Not pictured: Terry McCluggage, Lawrence; jama King, Lawrence; Terri Turner, Colby; Carole Cour, El Dorado; Karen Renstrom, Omaha, Nebr.; Connie McLain, Leavenworth. SWEETHEARTS OF SIGMA CHI. Top row: Karen Chaudoin, St. Louis, Mo.; Mary Mark, Topeka; Shani Wooton, Emporia; Cecily Pitts, Shaw- nee Mission; Joan Gilpin, Iola; Wendy Raymond, Prairie Village. Bottom row: Candy Hibbard, Kansas City, Mo.; Karen Cochran, Wichita; Nancee Coard, Albuquerque, N.M.; Jennifer Kost, St. Joseph, Mo.; Pam Ransdell, Shawnee Mission. Not pictured: Lindy Grant, Wichita; Annie Craven, Kansas City, Mo.; Carol Crane, San Diego, Calif.; Sheila Murphy, Conway Springs; Mary Plucker, Kansas City. KALLAY FILLEEANS. Top row: Liz Harris, Lawrence; Leslie Spannuth, Prairie Village; Kit Peuter, Mission; Joan Ruff, Clay Center; Eileen Ire- land, Kansas City, Mo. Second row: Sherry Long, Humboldt; Susan Fisher, Bartlesville, Okla.; Linda Krogh, Lawrence; Susan Ault, Kirkwood, Mo.; Mary Sampson, Topeka; Linda Maher, Hinsdale, Ill. Bottom row: Janet Guinn, Dodge City; Jane Laughlin, Garden City; Margaret Sampson, Topeka; Susan Pierce, Kankakee, Ill.; Janet Miller, Russell; Susie Sheldon, Kansas City, Mo. Not pictured: Bunny Chubb, Lincoln, Nebr.; Karen Clingenpeel, Law- rence; Judy Howell, Hinsdale, Ill.; Mamie Mohs, Overland Park; Diane Ratchford, Prairie Village; Sharon Stokes, Marysville. 345 Carmen Ervin, Wichita; Judy Cable, Cedar Vale; Cindi Wicinski, Kansas City; Lawrie Anderson, Reston, Va.; Kathy Fewin, Kansas City; Sally Smith, St. Joseph, Ill.; Vicki Hecke, Kansas City; Janet Riley, Fort Worth, Tex.; Nancy Tam, Des Moines, Ia.; Kathy Hutton, Mount Hope. Not pictured: Shirley Middleton, Kansas City; Alice Townsley, Russell; Jane Williams, Kansas City, Mo. Little Sisters of Areta Little Sisters of Areta, the auxiliary women ' s organi- zation of Triangle fraternity, was formed in the spring of 1966. During the group ' s first year on campus, the twenty members devoted themselves to showing spe- vial interest in the fraternity by giving advice to Tri- angle and by participating in social functions. Ac- tivities included a box supper, a slave sale, and holi- day remembrances such as Christmas favors, valen- tines, and Easter baskets. The little sisters also helped with preparations for several Triangle functions, in- cluding the spring formal. Society of Pachacamac The Society of Pachacamac, although unknown to most persons, plays an active, positive role in stu- dent life and affairs at the University of Kansas. The Society believes that the greatest goal a man may achieve at the University is his fullest intellectual and social development. For that reason, the Society of Pachacamac devotes a great deal of its time and energy to aiding the University in achieving its goal of ex- cellence in all fields. Pachacamac also feels that the fraternity system, because of its inherent characteristics of interdependence and cooperation, provides the best and most efficient means of achieving this personal development, 4nd strives to develop, promote, and maintain high standards of fraternity leadership and influence at the University. The fraternity system must grow and expand. The Society therefore works to promote the necessary re- finements in the fraternity system from within the system itself, for only through individual, responsible action can any group retain its integrity and its basic rights. It is the leadership necessary for free, uncoerced development that Pachacamac strives to provide. Fra- ternity men who have proven themselves in academic and extracurricular accomplishments comprise the membership of Pachacamac. Pachacamac is not an organization that exerts its power through coercion or force, but instead is a society which, because of the quality of its members, believes that its aims can be achieved through influence and persuasion. Although an organization of fraternity men dedicated to strength- ening the fraternity system, Pachacamac expends most of its time in service to the University. Pachacamac was at one time a political party, but disappeared from the political scene in 1954. The Society now remains an active, organization whose aims have remained the same. There is today no affiliation or undue concern with campus politics; the Society has divorced itself from those interests. Identities of the members of the Society are kept secret for one reason: a group free from outside pressures is more likely to attain its goals than one in- fluenced by the external, and often personal, motives of others. The Society of Pachacamac remains today a dedicated, vibrant organization striving only for the highest of goals those of excellence for the Univer- sity and for the fraternity man. 346 R OTC 347 NROTC BATTALION STAFF. Top row: Monty Eugene Nelson, Lawrence; Thomas A. Toporowski, Warrington, Penna.; Michael P. Sullivan, Leavenworth; Charles P. Shaw, Cheshire, Conn.; Joseph J. Broadhead, Indianapolis, Ind. Second row: Dana Ray Blair, Overland Park; Peter A. Shep- ard, Edwardsville; Howard R. Foster, Cedar Vale; Stanley S. Graham, Jr., Winfield. Bottom row: James T. Lewis, Batavia, N.Y.; Timothy J. Reed, Norwalk, Conn.; Jack E. Steury, Springfield, Mo.; A. Michael Lewis, Youngstown, Ohio; Paul D. Budd, Topeka. Navy ROTC The Kansas NROTC program offers the Midship- men much more than classroom and drill field learn- ing. They acquire organizational skills and responsi- bilities by running their own battalion activities. A comprehensive physical fitness program consists of intramural and intra-battalion team competition, physi- cal fitness tests each semester, and a three-mile run in the spring. All Naval ROTC students come under the name of Midshipmen. Encompassing about 75% of the total number of students in the program, the regular Naval ROTC program provides for financial assistance for four years. For successful completion of the program and commission as either an Ensign in the Navy or a Second Lieutenant in the Marine Corps, each partici- pant is required to take one naval science course each semester and a lab drill period which meets for two hours each week. In addition, all Midshipmen wear the same style uniforms and insignia, enroll in the same naval science classes, and receive identical mili- tary training at KU. Apart from the hours spent in the classroom and on the drill field, Kansas NROTC members participate in several extracurricular and social activities. The big social event in the fall is the Military Ball, followed in the spring by the Navy Weekend. For this latter event, a Navy Color Girl is chosen by the midshipmen to reign over the Navy Review and the formal Ring Dance, both patterned after similar ceremonies at the U.S. Naval Academy. NROTC SENIORS. Top row: Bill Lightstone, Coffeyville; Dick Obenchain, Pittsburgh, Penn.; Myron Reed, Mapleton; Michael P. Sullivan, Leaven- worth; Charles P. Shaw, Cheshire, Conn.; James P. McHugh, Wichita. Second rose: Dana Ray Blair, Overland Park; Peter A. Shepard, Edwardsville; Howard R. Foster, Cedar Vale; Thomas A. Toporowski, Warrington, Penn.; Joseph J. Broadhead, Indianapolis, Ind.; Melvin R. Redford, Jr., Leaven- worth; Larry W. Rinne, Gardner. Bottom row: Monty Eugene Nelson, Lawrence; James T. Lewis, Batavia, N.Y.; Timothy J. Reed, Norwalk, Conn.; Jack E. Steury, Springfield, Mo.; A. Michael Lewis, Youngstown, Ohio; Stanley S. Graham, Jr., Winfield. 348 NROTC JUNIORS. Top row: Jim Eagan, Suffern, N.Y.; David Upchurch, Tucson, Ariz.; Dan Cole, Seattle, Wash.; Ronald L. Wagner, Rock Hill, Mo.; J. D. Metzger, Salina; Bob Mall, Clay Center; Don Snoddy, Kansas City, Mo. Third row: Roger A. Lake, Spokane, Wash.; David A. Kikel, Bedford, Ohio; Rue Chagoll, Garden City, N.Y.; Raymond M. Carter, Springfield, Mo.; Waldo C. F. Potter, Salina; George H. Baldwin, Philadelphia, Penn. Second row: Fort Zackary, Wichita; Dan Aldridge, Olathe; Robert Petering, Clayton, Mo.; Bob Shepherd, Hallowell, Me.; John West, Cedar Lake, Ind.; M. D. Allen, St. Louis, Mo.; Chuck Waldron, Kansas City, Mo. Bottom row: Mike Nail, Shawnee Mission; Tom Reid, Leawood; Roy S. Belcher III, Louisville, Ky.; Mark S. Brothers, Cherryvale; Robert S. Foster, Kansas City; Bernard G. Hollenbeck, Kansas City. NROTC SOPHOMORES. Top row: Robert M. Bickel, Tulsa, Ok la.; Harald Freybe, Fort Myers, Fla.; Gregory M. Nazaruk, Huntington, N.Y.; James Haney, Miami, Fla.; Bob Wilson, Wichita; Donald C. Brewer, Bellingham, Wash.; Richard P. Hall, Overland Park; James R. Falkner, Coffeyville; John A. Russack, Mullica N.J. Third row: Mike Miller, Leavenworth; Richard Holderman, Lawrence; Alden R. Carter, Eau Claire, Wisc.; Claude E. Tidwell, Jr., Santa Clara, Calif.; Chris Randall, Wichita; Richard Pasley, Ames, Ia.; Richard Beamgard, Atwood; Ronald Adams, Cheshire, Conn. Second row: Richard House, Arlington Heights, Ill.; William W. Broach, Bowling Green, Ky.; Ray Lancaster, Alexandria, Va.; Jeff Renard, Indepen- dence; Bill Morris, Keystone, Ind.; Michael D. Conklin, Wichita; John D. Casko, Dutnam, Conn.; Stephen J. Dreiling, Hays; Michael J. O ' Neill, Ta- coma, Wash. Bottom row: John Nelson, Overland Park; Michael Weiss, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.; Robert M. Baxter, Topeka; Stephen J. Craig, Belton, Mo.; John Hoverson, Seattle, Wash.; Dwight Rickman, Joplin, Mo.; Greg Barker, Topeka; Ray Davidson, Lufkin, Tex. NROTC FRESHMEN. Top row: Donald E. Mullikin, Springfield, Mo.; Daniel S. Oram, Shawnee Mission; James Keith, Kansas City, Mo.; Rich- ard H. Benton, Turner; Robert M. Wasko, Kansas City; Reed White, Houston, Tex.; John M. Lavelle, Pensacola, Fla.; Ronald G. Carpenter, Weiser, Ida.; Donald J. Westerhaus, Marion; Robert L. Nitschke, Kansas City; Brad E. Sehulenberg, Leavenworth. Fourth row: Franklin T. Dunn, Salisbury, Md.; Kevin G. Crouthamel, Riverside, Ill.; J. 0. Hughes, Kansas City; Ken Guest, Coffeyville; Robert Kinne, Sun Valley, Calif.; Torn Pletcher, New Orleans, La.; William Knox, Colorado Springs, Colo.; Tony Robson, Alexandria, Va.; W. H. Fischer, Valley Center, N.Y.; Terry Clark, Bartlesville, Okla. Third row: Terry Exstrum, Grand Island, Nebr.; Richard Bond, Shawnee Mission; Steve Rasmussen, Overland Park; Scott Barnes, Overland Park; T. L. Vocke, Downers Grove, Ill.; John Foy, Ellsworth; Dick Metcalf, Ft. Myers, Fla.; Steven Monthey, Topeka; H. Ken Clark, Salina; Ralph E. Chatham, Chagrin Falls, Ohio; James H. Thorp, Topeka. Second row: Pete Combs, Leavenworth; Steve Krug, Prairie Village; Mike French, Ramsey, N.J.; Anthony Tur- beville, Waianae, Hawaii; Philip Patterson, Topeka; Charles Smiley, Norton; Daniel Hedman, Stockholm, Maine; Dave Myers, Overland Park; Bruce Hawes, Topsfield, Mass.; Steve Getter, Shawnee Mission. Bottom row: James A. Zimmer, Plattsburgh, N.Y.; Raymond J. Salsbury, Pittsburgh, Penn.; James S. Sexton, Topeka; Michael P. Callaway, El Dorado; William S. Killough, Ottawa; Robert L. Shiffman, Prairie Village; David A. Pickett, Law- rence; Phillip XI. Connor, Detroit, Mich.; John M. Pauzauskie, Coffeyville. 349 ARMY FACULTY AND STUDENT STAFF. Top row: Ho An-Lwun, Taichung, Taiwan; Eric R. Petersen, Poughkeepsie, N.Y.; Miles Sweeney, Pittsburg; Larry M. Sewell, Fort Scott; Bruce E. Cavitt, Kansas City. Second row: James Simms, Clarendon Hills, 111.; Ralph Burrell, Overland Park; Norman Scheffner, Topeka; Herbert Drezins, Lincoln, Nebr.; Kenneth Hatfield, Wichita; Thomas T. Hewitt, Topeka. Bottom row: Major Merrill Steele, Leavenworth; Major Donald A. Haas, Los Angeles, Calif.; Col. W. A. Brinkerhoff, Sparks, Nev.; Major R. T. Wise, Atlanta, Ga.; Captain William J. Silvey, Kansas City, Mo. Army ROTC The young college man of today who enrolls in the Army Reserve Officers ' Training Corps ( AROTC ) and earns his officer ' s commission becomes a part of one of America ' s oldest and noblest traditions the tra- dition of training for leadership and, when needed, bearing arms in the defense of home and country. He joins the ran ks of countless distinguished leaders who trust accorded him as a lieutenant. If he chooses an army career, he will have the satisfaction of knowing were ready in time of crisis and rose to greatness in the service of their country. ROTC-trained officers presently comprise almost three-quarters of the Army ' s active officer corps. When the young Jayhawker whose face appears on these pages finishes ROTC and is appointed by the President of the United States as a second lieutenant, he has reached an important milestone in his life. Thoroughly trained in leadership throughout his career as a cadet, the KU man is well-prepared to assume the that he is prepared for a life of dedicated service to his country. Years from now, having fulfilled his obligation of service the ROTC graduate will then move naturally toward positions of leadership in the 350 AROTC CO. A. Top row: Steven M. Church, Warrensburg, Mo.; Chad Falk, Keansburg, N.J.; Mike Geiger, Leavenworth; David Standage, Okla- homa City, Okla.; Thom West, Leavenworth; Dennis Weller, Great Bend. Second row: David L. Lane, Heideltson, W. Germany; Ken Lieber, Allen Park, Mich.; Rick Dinkel, Palatine, Ill.; Roger Barrows, Jefferson City, Mo.; Michael G. Rubin, University City, Mo.; Bob Stoddard, Shawnee Mission; John P. Hawkins, Florida, Mo. Bottom row: Ken Reeder, Caldwell; Bobby Waddail, Newton; Norm Lader, Arlington, Va.; Paul Banzet, Bartlett; Eric R. Petersen, Poughkeepsie, N.Y.; Thomas J. DiBiase, Omaha, Nebr. community. If he pursues a civilian career, he knows the when he is needed in time of a national emergency, he will be equipped to contribute his special talents as a commissioned officer. The course of instruction is broken into two phases, and only the best qualified from KU ' s basic AROTC course are selected to attend the advanced ( junior- senior years ) course of instruction. At this level, the principles of leadership are pressed home through in- tensive classroom work and leadership laboratory periods, culminating in a six-week summer camp session at Fort Riley. Cadets may be selected for membership in one or more of the honorary and service organizations re- lated to the ROTC program: Scabbard and Blade, Pershing Rifles, and the Rifle Team. The annual Military Ball, drill meets held throughout the year, picnics, and other similar activities likewise round out a cadet ' s life, and prepare him for graduation and a career in the United States Army. AROTC CO B. Top row: Roger Raider, Lenexa; Bill Penney, New York City, N.Y.; John Blee, Bonner Springs; Chris Stark, Bartlesville, Okla.; John H. Plump, Jr., Prairie Village; Michael Roberts, Edwardsville, Ill.; Greg Thomas, Ft. Sheridan, Ill.; Allen L. Harp, Jefferson City, Mo.; Albert Groke, Jr., McPherson; Armando G. Dominguez, Leoti. Fourth row: Gregory King, Kansas City; Tom Brown, Garden City; Roger D. Hill, East St. Louis, Ill.; Dick Mellinger, Emporia; Ted Graheck, Liberty; John Gillie, Bartlesville, Okla.; Douglass Wallace, Topeka; Chris Wells, Ft. Knox, Ky.; Duane L. Fager, Topeka. Third row: John Fisher, Independence; Gregory Farren, Brooklyn, N.Y.; Alex Dumond, Portsmouth, N.H.; Kent Schell, Beloit; Richard Simmons, Wichita; Harry H. Brubaker, Casper, Wyo.; Tim Theurer, Kansas City; Bill Guilfoyle, Abilene. Second row: Gary K. Wolfe, Springfield, Mo.; Ron Urban, Oakley; John Candler, Jr., Johnstown, Penn.; Temp Snyder, Leavenworth; Robert Weingart, Atchison; Rich Taylor, Kewanee, Ill.; Frank Robbins, Wichita. Bottom Alan Schueler, Bartlesville, Okla.; Frank Jenkins, Overland Park; Bill Gerhards, Lawrence; Don Smith, Overland Park; Miles Sweeney, Pittsburg; George C. Fields, Leavenworth; Donald E. Willoughby, Hutchinson; Robert Puffer, Howard. L 351 AROTC CO. C. Top TOW: Timothy R. Bechler, Allen Park, Mich.; Bruce Dauphin, Arkansas City; Ernest M. May, Oberlin; Stephen C. Meredith, Shawnee Mission; Jay Morton, Shawnee Mission; John Anderson, DeSoto; Dan J. Dannenberg, Salina; Jack O ' Connor, Ft. Leavenworth; Gene E. Ramirez, Kansas City, Mo. Fourth row: James Hess, Wichita; Kenneth Peterson, Enterprise; Michael Canella, Leavenworth; Cush Miller, Winfield; Tom Bishop, Kansas City, Mo.; Daniel Peresko, Kansas City; Jim Basgall, Hays; John Westerhoff, Milwaukee, Wisc. Third row: Walt De Bonde, West Sayville, N.Y.; Niell P. Peterson, Whiteman AFB, Mo.; Richard Low, Wichita; Wally Buck, Wichita; Larry Elmquist, Lindsborg; Lee C. Alloway, Hampton, Va.; Walter H. Wulf, Jr., Humbolt. Second row: Randy Mallonee, Olathe; John Huey, Wamego; John Geer, Kansas City; Thomas D. Washburn, Leavenworth; Larry Huffman, Erie; John A. Callaghan, Prairie Village; Greg Gutting, Ft. Leavenworth; Barry G. Albin, Mayetta. Bottom row: Norman Scheffner, To- peka; Jerry Pearson, Lawrence; Karl Musick, Concordia; Robert C. McNay, Sterling, Colo.; Robert Starcke, Prairie Village; Larry Black, PauIs Valley, Okla.; Gary Towslee, Topeka; P. J. Davis, Belleville, Ill. Army ROTC AROTC CO. D. Top row: David Jeans, Independence, Mo.; Philip Dunbar, Ft. Leavenworth; Randy Moore, Wichita; Donald L. Huggins, St. Louis, Mo.; James Edgar Roscher, Lawrence; Bruce T. Groff, Topeka; Terence L. Toler, Baldwin; Karl B. Lohmann, Topeka; Richard J. Bowers, Coun- cil Grove. Fourth row: William Weaver, St. Louis, Mo.; Rick HiHealy, Kansas City; Allin Herring, Overland Park; Carl Krehbiel, Moundridge; Henry C. Berry, Bridgeton, N.J.; Thomas J. Lavin, Izmir, Turkey; Terry Phillip Franklin, Humboldt; Ken LeCounte, Caldwell; Robert Ertman, Pittsburg. Third row: Mike Gravitt, Topeka; Angel Buhisan, Ft. Leavenworth; Jerry Holly, Leavenworth; Martin J. Mittelstadt, Monterey, Calif.; William J. Mittelstadt, Monterey, Calif.; Jack Singleton, Stuttgart, Germany; Bob Clancy, Falls Church, Va.; Mike Shoemaker, Minneapolis, Minn. Second row: J. L. Peters, Kansas City; C. E. Ruby, Bonner Springs; Thomas P. Argubright, Overland Park; William Radcliffe, Lawrence; Leonard Short, Bladensburg, Md.; Bill Peltzman, McPherson; Rick Daly, St. Louis, Mo.; Craig S. Newby, Kansas City. Bottom row: Steve Dexter, Ft. Leavenworth; David Sindflar, Howells, Nebr.; Ron Kimzey, Topeka; James Simms, Clarendon Hills, Ill.; Al Monshower, Ft. Bragg, N.C.; George Lohmann, Topeka; Michael Isom, Smith Center. Not pictured: Burt Mitchell, Shape, N.Y.; Bill Satriano, Leavenworth; John Vivian, Ottawa; Frank Vivian, Ottawa; Jeffrey Boyer, Leavenworth; Norm Lader, Arlington, Va. 352 NESEP JUNIORS AND SENIORS. Top row: Roy E. Morrow, Stevenson, Ala.; Stephen J. Brasher, Hawesville, Ky.; Douglas D. Hoople, Buf- falo, N.Y.; George L. Townsend, Pittsburg; Robert A. McCurry, Udall; Michael J. Shonyo, Ellinwood; Stephen V. Fotovich, Jr., Kansas City; Don R. Yockel, Longmont, Colo. Second row: Hal Marshall, Hollidaysburg, Penn.; Steve Gilliam, Pratt; Fred E. Fare, Minneapolis, Minn.; Lawrence W. Scott, Hutch- inson; Larry A. Sandberg, Newton, Ia.; Richard D. Jensen, Rockford, Ill.; George T. Wyckoff, Manasquan, N.J. Bottom row: Michael G. Ralston, Genoa, Nev.; Phillip R. Spruiell, Vilonia, Ark.; Jerry D. Ramsey, Topeka; Michael F. Spengel, Nokomis, Ill.; James R. Kennish, Utica, N.Y.; Lairy A. Johnson, Mulberry, Ohio. Not pictured: Douglas C. Isely, Minneapolis, Minn.; Thomas F. Green, Tucson, Ariz.; Lynn T. McNall, Richardson, Tex.; William P. Marquis, Paris, Ill. NES 1-11JP NESEP is an acrony m for Navy Enlisted Scientific Education Program. Participants in the program are United States Navy and Marine Corps enlisted men serving on active duty. They major in the sciences or in engineering and participate in campus activities. Competition for the NESEP program is very keen, and only top applicants qualify. Upon receiving their diplomas from KU, NESEP ' s qualify for commissions either as Ensign, United States Navy, or as Second Lieutenant, United States Marine Corps. NESEP FRESHMEN AND SOPHOMORES. Top row: Charles W. Miller, Jr., Atlanta; Richard Douglas Graham, Old Bridge, N.J.; John Stanley Cameron, Key West, Fla.; Richard Frank Avila, Chicago, Ill.; Michael James Pisani, Syracuse, N.Y.; Martin Edward O ' Malley, Minneapolis, Minn.; Donald Francis Rist, Hannibal, Ohio. Second row: John R. Lieurance, McLean, Va.; Dan A. Siegel, Cincinnati, Ohio; Crichton C. Roberts, Oberlin; Daniel L. Amoroso, Akron, Ohio; Kenneth H. Delano, Mt. Vernon, Ore.; Richard D. Barrows, Nassau, N.Y. Bottom row: Walter E. Foster, Kansas City; Leroy T. Pittet, Caladonia, Mich.; Hubert C. Connolly, Saugus, Mass.; Gerald A. Kimble, Cleveland, Ohio; Robert W. Walsh, Hampton Bays, N.Y.; Robert A. Erwin, Farmington, N.M.; Tommy R. McFalls, Corinth, Miss. Not pictured: James A. Boardman, Glen Ellyn, Ill. 353 Top row: Joyce Tinkler, Gypsum; Ann Sullivan, Phillipsburg; Diane Walter, Shawnee Mission; Kathy Honig, Kansas City, Mo.; Karen Howse, Prairie Village; Jacki Settles, Garden City; Diane Seaver, Prairie Village; Jincy Young, Salina. Third row: Mary Kay Edmonds, East Moline, Ill.; Nancy A. Stuver, Leawood; Sidney Ashton, Shawnee Mission; Judy Sauls, Bartlesville, Okla.; Janice Whelan, Topeka; Dianne Ratchford, Prairie Village; Sue Kasper, Wilson; Marsha Kresge, Salina; Jane Roehrig, Leawood. Second row: Layne Dwyer, Raytown, Mo.; Lynne Pray, Kansas City; Norma C. Romano, Oruro, Bolivia; Karen P. McCarthy, Leawood; Niki Wissman, Parsons; Judy Etherington, Salina; Sheila Beaman, Independence, Mo.; Maggie Ogilvie, Kansas City. Bottom row: Sharon Smith, Ottawa; Jeannie Padden, Holton; Eileen Ireland, Kansas City, Mo.; Chris Ligush, Ft. Worth, Tex.; Judie Ericson, Leavenworth; Sherrie Wales, Miami, Fla.; Cheryl Campbell, Kansas City. Not pictured: Lorcnda Powell, Coffeyville; Judy Tietze, Shawnee Mission; Marianne Tinkler, Gypsum; Valerie Carroll, Prairie Village; Charlotte Bartlesmeyer, Fort Scott; Karen Nothnagel, Kansas City; Laura Ruble, Leavenworth; Diane Steed, Hutchinson; Terry Tippin, Kansas City; Sharon Robertson, Kansas City; Sharon Stokes, Marysville. Angel i ' cillight Pert young women in Angel Flight attire were a familiar sight on the KU campus as they conducted campus tours, ushered at university events, main- tained a drill team, and participated in social func- tions with Arnold Air Society. Their goal as an honor- Arnold. Air Society Arnold Air Society is an honorary service organiza- tion which dedicates itself to the promotion of the Air Force ROTC program. Membership is extended to cadets who have shown outstanding ability in the ROTC program and this year numbered approximately ary and service organization is to support and pro- mote interest in the Air Force ROTC program. Travel included a trip to Forbes Air Force Base and attend- ance at the Area and National Conclaves. Awards and honors were many: Pershing Rifles ' honorary commander and executive officer, Homecoming at- tendants, the Kansas Cherry Blossom Princess, Military Ball queen candi dates, and KU ' s Best Dressed Coed. forty men. Conducting Saturday morning tours of cam- pus for KU visitors and assisting with opening night performances at University Theatre were two regular service projects. Social functions also formed an in- trinsic part of the society ' s program, and included. parties with Angel Flight, a supper at Forbes Air Force Base in Topeka, a pizza party, a banquet, and a spring picnic. Top row: Martin Grogan, Oberlin; Nub Youmans, Hinsdale, Ill.; Daniel F. Ilarrington, Penfield, N.Y.; Leman Turrell, Shawnee Mission; Joe Philipp, Hiawatha; Glenn Anderson, Minneapolis, Minn.; David S. Kirk, Pittsburg; William A. Gaither, DeSoto; Herbert A. Hartman, Jr., Lawrence. Third row: Tom M. Reeves, Kansas City; G. Ted Dalziel, Silver Spring, Md.; Ronald E. Kilgore, Wichita; Allen Purvis, Topeka; Steven Fryer, Arkansas City; James H. Lindshield, Lindsborg; Ray Suffron, Lawrence; Charles Yockey, Lyndon. Second row: James W. Van Kirk, Louisburg; Dallas T. Lum, Hono- lulu, Hawaii; Kirk R. Rensmeyer, Lenexa; Ron Lyle, Overland Park; James D. Simcox, Jr., Kansas City; Steve Van Sickle, Madeira Beach, Fla.; Charles D. Beach, Hickman Mills, Mo. Bottom row: Bruce Hogle, Lawrence; Roger Wingert, Shawnee Mission; James E. Kunce, Shawnee Mission; John E. Sut- ton, Princeton; Bill McElfresh, Osage City; Gary ,Moser, Topeka; Arthur Aenchbacher, Hampton, Va. Not pictured: Leslie Johnson, Wilsey; Gary Appel, St. Louis, Mo.; Jim Brandt, Shawnee Mission; Jerry Tilzer, Prairie Village; Capt. Lee J. Forbes, Lawrence. 354 Top row: Steven M. Church, Warrensburg, Mo.; Henry C. Berry III, Bridgeton, N.J.; David K. Shuffer, Carlisle Barracks, Penn.; Philip H. Dunbar III, Leavenworth; Terence L. Toler, Baldwin; Bruce T. Groff, Topeka; Donald L. Huggins, St. Louis, Mo.; James Edgar Roscher, Lawrence. Second row: Edward Ruby, Bonner Springs; J. L. Peters, Kansas City; Burt Mitchell, Paris, France; Craig S. Newby, Kansas City; Rick Daly, St. Louis, Mo.; Bob Clancy, Falls Church, Va.; Thomas J. Lavin, Izmir, Turkey. Bottom row: Stephen Dexter, Ft. Leavenworth; Karen McCarthy, Leawood; James Simms, Clarendon Hills, Ill.; Karl Musick, Concordia; Ann Sullivan, Phillipsburg; Jerry Pearson, Lawrence. Pershing Rifles Pershing Rifles is an honorary military society for ROTC cadets of the Army, Navy, and Air Force. Through its programs, the organization attempts to develop brotherhood among cadets of these three branches, emphasizing leadership and training skills. Scabbard and Blade Scabbard and Blade is a national tri-service military honorary for outstanding cadets in the Army, Navy, and Air Force. To promote better interservice re- lations, to foster military esprit de corps, and to raise the level of military education are the purposes of the organization. Scabbard and Blade strives to develop The KU Pershing Rifles exhibition drill team partici- pated in a full program this year, appearing in the Leavenworth Veterans Day and the KU Band Day parades, and sponsoring an invitational drill meet. A KU team also competed in the University of Illinois Invitational Drill meet. To raise money, the cadets ushered at KU basketball games and parked cars at football games. good leadership qualities in its members, who must have a 1.50 overall GPA and place in the top ten per- cent of their academic military science classes. The winter Military Ball and the spring Field Day, which featured interservice competition, were sponsored by Scabbard and Blade. Officers were President Larry Rinne, Secretary Pete Shepherd, Treasurer Howard Foster, and Pledge Trainer Larry Black. Top rose: Larry Black, Pauls Valley, Okla.; Dan Cole, Seattle, Wash.; Larry Sewell, Fort Scott; James McHugh, Wichita; Timothy J. Reed, Norwalk, Conn. Second row: Dave Dickensheets, Wellington; Ralph Burrell, Overland Park; Bob Redford, Leavenworth; Bob Starcke, Shawnee Mission. Bottom row: Eric R. Petersen, Poughkeepsie, N.Y.; Peter A. Shepard, Edwardsville; Larry W. Rinne, Gardner; Howard R. Foster, Cedar Vale; Daniel F. Har- rington, Penfield, N.Y. 355 SUE TYLER, Queen of the 1966 Military Ball. Military Ball Christmas trees, tinsel, and snowflakes contributed to the theme of Christmas at the annual Military Ball, sponsored by Scabbard and Blade and held in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Cadet Charles Whited com- manded preparations for the ball, and Midshipman First Class Mike Sullivan headed the steering com- mittee. During the intermission Sue Tyler, represent- ing Army ROTC, was crowned queen by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe. Her attendants were Susan Lit- tooy, Kappa Kappa Gamma, and Lu Surface, Pi Beta Phi, both representing Navy ROTC. Sandy Gresham arranged, directed, and starred in the half-time show a review featuring musical skits, a song-and-dance team, and comic and romantic songs, performed by a group of twelve. The show was followed by dancing to a band from Fort Leavenworth until midnight. 356 ATHLETICS . 357 358 359 Basketball Coaches Ted Owens and Sam Miranda opened the 1966-67 basketball campaign on the heels of a highly successful 1965-66 season in which the Jayhawks were 23-4 overall, Big Eight Champions, and runner-up to na- tional champion Texas Western in the Lubbock regional. Graduation had claimed 6-11 All-American Walt Wesley and lettermen Al Lopes, Delvy Lewis, Riney Lochmann, and Fred Ghana. The only returning starters were second semester sophomore Jo-Jo White and senior Ron Franz. Also re- turning were lettermen Rodger Bohnenstiehl and Bob Wilson. Despite losses to graduation, it was generally felt that the 1966-67 squad could win the Big Eight title provided there was good effort and the development of promising sophomores: 6-8 Vernon Vanoy, 6-4 guard Phil Harmon, 6-5 guard-forward Bruce Sloan, 6-7 forward Howard Arndt, 6-2 guard Rich Thomas, and 6-5 guard Jaye Ediger all products of an unbeaten freshman team of 1965-66. Kansas started the season with a 73-57 victory against their traditional opening opponent Arkansas, at Fayetteville. Senior forward Ron Franz scored 16 of his 18 points in the first half, helping KU to a 38-23 halftime bulge. Junior Rodger Bohnenstiehl came off the bench to net 25 points and to become the game ' s leading scorer. The Jayhawks ' next two games were convincing home court trouncings of Xavier, 100-52, and Ohio State, 94- 70. In both games, Coach Ted Owens had four men in double figures and was able to empty the bench. KU ' s pressing defense was instrumental in the victories, causing a great number of enemy turnovers. Ohio State, entering the contest without the services of 6-7 Bill Hosket, fell to Kansas ' defense and hot shooting despite Jeff Miller ' s 26 points. Kansas defeated its two Sunflower Doubleheader opponents, Florida State, 62-48, at Manhattan, and Baylor, 68-56, at home. Against the Semi- noles, KU shot only 36% from the field and defeated them in a second half spurt led by Bohnenstiehl, Franz and 6-3 sophomore guard Jo-Jo White. Against Baylor, the Hawks managed 41% from the field despite Franz ' s 6-of-21 and White ' s 2-of-14, as sophomore center Vernon Vanoy hit 6-of-10 and Bohnenstiehl shot 8-of-13. Vanoy ' s performance was particularly im- pressive as he scored 12 points, grabbed nine rebounds, blocked several shots and harassed Baylor ace Darrell Hardy. Before embarking on the eastern road trip for the Christmas holidays, the Crimson and the Blue downed a fine University of the Pacific team, 70-54. Pacific later went on to finish second in their regional, bowing to national champion UCLA. In spite of the Tigers ' Keith Swagerty ' s 25 points and 17 rebounds, and the loss of the 6-7 Franz and 6-8 Vanoy on fouls midway LEFT. All Big Eight guard Jo-Jo White adds another KU point with a free throw. RIGHT. White (15) and Howard Arndt converge to apply double team pressure to KSU ' s Bob George (22). 360 in the second half, the Jayhawks rolled to their sixth consecutive victory. The 6-6 Bohnenstiehl scored 22 and hauled in 12 rebounds, 6-5 sophomore Bruce Sloan added 11, and White poured in 12 points while holding Pacific ' s fine guard, David Fox, to a mere 6 points. Kansas carried a perfect 6-0 mark to Chicago to meet defending national champion Texas Western in a grudge battle. It was to the Miners that the Hawks had lost a double overtime, one-point battle in the regionals at Lubbock the year before. However, the Miners again came out the victor, winning 71-67 in overtime. After falling back to a 24-12 deficit in the first half, the Texans closed the gap to 39-37 at halftime. White led KU ' s first half surge, totaling 17 points in the opening period. In the second half the Hawks lost center Vanoy on fouls with three minutes left to play, and with him, much of their backboard strength. With 90 seconds remaining, Western finally caught the Jayhawks. The Miners ' Willie Cager took a jump ball and drove in for a basket, deadlocking the count at 61-61 and sending the game into overtime. At the start of the extra period, Western ' s 6-7 Dave Lattin fouled out and 6-7 senior forward Bob Wilson ' s two free throws put KU ahead, 63-61. However, Cager again tied the score and Willie Worsley put the Miners ahead to stay, with Neville Shed adding five more points down the stretch. Travelling on to Brooklyn, Kansas suffered a nightmarish drubbing, 68-44, at the hands of St. John ' s and 6-8 Sonny Dove. Dove poured in 27 points and grabbed 16 rebounds. Kansas was unable to get rolling, with White ending as high scorer with a mere 12 points. The Hawks were without guard Phil Harmon due to his being struck by a car prior to the trip. RIGHT. Senior forward Bob Wilson nets two of his twenty-one points against Oklahoma as the Sooners ' Don Sidle watches helplessly. 361 Kansas then returned to familiar territory in Kansas City and won their third consecutive Big Eight Tournament crown Coach Owens ' third title in as many tries. On their way to the championship, KU disposed of Colo- rado, 72-54; Oklahoma, 86-73; and Iowa State, 63-57. White led the team against Oklahoma, scoring 25 points, while reserve guard Harmon ' s 19 points sparked them against the Cyclones. The Hawks also played the entire second half of the championship game without Bohnenstiehl, who left the game late in the first half with a ruptured blood vessel in his right knee. For their part in helping KU to an unprecedented third straight crown, White and Bohnenstiehl were named to the All-Tournament team. The Hawks opened Big Eight play at home against Oklahoma, without the services of injured Bohnenstiehl. Nevertheless, KU rolled to a 97-73 win with five men hitting double figures. Bob Wilson, who started for Bohnen- stiehl, took scoring honors with 21 points. Next, KU whipped Missouri at Columbia, 70-60, led by a balanced attack of Wilson, Bohnenstiehl, White, and Franz. In Boulder, Colorado handed KU its lone conference setback, 62-59, as the Buffs scored their winning three points in the last five seconds. Colo- rado pulled off the upset victory over the then No. 7 nationally-ranked Jayhawks without two of their starters, Lynn Baker and Chuck Williams. The loss temporarily pushed Kansas out of the conference lead, one-half game behind CU. Trailing by 57-50 with 7:50 left, KU started its comeback on Vanoy ' s tip and Bohnenstiehl ' s 15-footer. With 2:57 to go, Bohnenstiehl hit again to draw the Hawks within one. The Buffs ' Pat Frink hit 2 free throws ending a CU five-minute scoring drought, but with 2:11 left, Bohnen- LEFT. Bruce Sloan (31) stretches his 6-5 frame for a rebound against Baylor in the Sun- flower Doubleheader at Allen Field House. RIGHT. Big Eight Sophomore of the Year 6-8 Vernon Vanoy wins the tip of a lump ball with Colorado ' s Steve Rowe. 362 stiehl countered with a 3-point play for a 59-59 tie game. At this juncture, the Buffs went into their delay, but Frink missed a free throw with 1:54 left. Then, it was the Jayhawks ' turn to stall, hoping for the final shot. However, with 56 seconds left, Bohnenstiehl was whistled for travelling. Colorado then played for the final shot and Steve Rowe was fouled in the lane by Bohnenstiehl with only 5 seconds remaining to be played. Rowe hit the first free throw and Bob Bauers tipped in his errant second effort for a final 62-59 score. KU next reeled off two straight wins over Iowa State, runner-up in the Big Eight Tournament. Led by Bohnenstiehl ' s 23-point output, Kansas de- feated the stubborn Cyclones 73-65 at Lawrence, even though Don Smith shot home 30 points. Kansas had an easier time at Ames, winning 68-50 and being paced by White ' s 23-point night. Although the Hawks lost Bohnen- stiehl when he sustained a gash in his forehead, they were able to play the entire squad and win handily. KU ' s defense was superb with Smith being the only Cyclone to hit more than two field goals. Smith hit ten fielders and totalled 27 points, while his teammates managed only a total of seven fielders. Returning to Lawrence, the Jayhawks ripped Nebraska 84-58 to move back into first place in the conference race. The Cornmen were expected to be the prime contenders along with Kansas and Colorado for the Big Eight crown. KU ' s shooting and defense were outstanding. They hit 33-of- 64 from the field for 52%, while holding NU to 19-of-65 for 29% and forcing them into 16 turnovers. The visitors jumped to an early 7-1 lead, but it was Kansas the rest of the way, finishing with five men in double figures. RIGHT. The scoring machine, Rodger Bohnenstiehl (35), goes to work against Don Kruse (23) of Houston in the NCAA Midwest Regional finals. 363 Arch-rival Kansas State was the next team to fall to the Kansas round- ball express, losing 60-55 at Manhattan. Both teams were tight at the start of the contest and two minutes elapsed before either team scored. K- State ' s Roy Smith finally broke the ice with a lay-up in Kansas ' basket after a jump ball, putting KU ahead 2-0. Encouraged by Smith ' s charity, KU rolled to a 22-8 lead, but the Wildcats fought back to lead at the half, 36-33. However, Kansas featured consistent shooting and a stiff defense in the second half for the win. All five Jayhawk starters hit double figures as KU hit 40% from the field. K-State, bogged down by KU ' s stubborn defense, hit just 31%. KU continued its path to the Big Eight championship by downing Okla- homa State twice, and both Oklahoma and Missouri once. Kansas had little trouble with the slow-down Cowboys, winning 52-39 at home. Actually the Hawks drubbed 0-State worse than the score indicated. With the reserves playing the final six minutes, KU managed to score during that stretch only on Pat Davis ' free throw and Rich Thomas ' goal from behind mid-court at the buzzer. Oklahoma, led by Don Sidle ' s 22 points, forced the Jayhawks to come from behind for an 82-74 win at Norman. The game was nip-and-tuck in the first half, with the Sooners taking a 44-42 lead into the dressing room at halftime. Steals by Franz and White broke a 52-all tie early in the second half, giving the Hawks a lead they never surrendered. Kansas ' offensive punch was directed by Franz ' s 22, Bohnen- stiehl ' s 20, White ' s 16, and Sloan ' s 11. Two days later, Jo-Jo White led KU to its seventh straight win, 60-50, over Oklahoma State at Stillwater. The brilliant White led all scorers with 22 points, grabbed 8 rebounds and LEFT. Senior forward Ron Franz (11) scores inside against Nebraska ' s Willie Campbell (34), as Vernon Vanop (32) looks on. RIGHT. Phil Harmon, sharpshooting sophomore guard, launches a jumper from the top of the circle against Iowa State. 364 held his defensive assignment, Bill Fisher, scoreless. The surprising Cow- boys kept even with the Hawks in the first half, but Bohnenstiehl ' s ten straight points helped the Big Blue pull away in the second half. Return- ing home, KU clobbered Missouri 90-55, after a slow start. The Jayhawks as usual were sparkling on defense, holding MU ' s leading scorer, Ron Coleman, to 13 and not allowing any Tiger to score more than 4 field goals. KU ' s powerful offense was led by White with 20, Bohnenstiehl with 18, Vanoy with 17, and Franz with 16. KU took a big step toward the conference trophy as they defeated Nebraska, 64-57, at Lincoln, breaking the Huskers ' two-year home court winning streak. The victory clinched at least a tie for first for Kansas, with the final two games of the season to be played at Lawrence. KU jumped to an 11-2 lead but the game became closer after the Huskers rallied to trail by only 15-11. With just 2:04 remaining, KU led by only two, 59-57, after Sloan had given the Hawks the lead. On their next possession, Coach Owens signalled for the delay game and after KU had killed a minute on the clock, the Nebraska bench was charged with a technical foul. White sank the charity toss and hit a 1-and-1 just 23 seconds later for a 62-57 lead. Franz added two more free throws near the end of the game for the 64-57 win. In a rugged battle in Allen Field House, KU avenged their earlier loss to Colorado, whipping the Buffs 66-59. The victory gave Kansas a berth in the Mid-West NCAA regional to be played on their home court. Colorado gave the Big Eight champs a run for their money, led by Pat Frink ' s 27 points. Bruce Sloan was outstanding on defense with 5 steals and a blocked RIGHT. Jo-Jo White (15), 6-3 guard, battles for a rebou nd with Houston giants, 6-7 Melvin Bell (55) and 6-8 All-American Elvin Hayes (45). Others identifiable are Ron Franz (11), Vernon Vanoy (32), and Rodger Bohnenstiehl (behind Hayes). 365 shot, in addition to leading all KU rebounders with 8 caroms. Rookie Howard Arndt grabbed 6 rebounds and added 6 points. Vanoy, who sat out 16 minutes in foul trouble, accounted for KU ' s final 7 points in the last 3:21. Besides these sophomores, reliables Bohnenstiehl, Franz, and White played important roles, being high scorers with 21, 12, and 11 points re- spectively. Kansas wound up their regular season play by belting Kansas State, 74-56. The Jayhawks stretched their home court winning streak to 21 games and finished in conference action. Hitting 52% to K-State ' s 27%, KU built a 38-20 halftime margin. Wildcat coach Tex Winter ' s threats of beating KU seemed to bother the Big Eight champs little as they rocketed to a 60-30 lead with 11:14 to play. KU emptied its bench against the Purple and White for the last seven minutes of action, finishing with an 18-point victory that put the Jayhawks ahead in the KU-Kansas State all-time series, 102-57. In the opening round of the NCAA regional at Allen Field House, KU ran up against tall and talented Houston. The Cougars had been 24-3 through the regular season and were led by All-American Elvin Hayes, a 6-8 for- ward. They also featured guard Don Chaney, an all-Sixth District selection. Houston ' s opening line-up included two 6-8 men, one 6-7 man, and the 6-5 Chaney. Their top two reserves were 6-9 and 6-7. Against the Hawks, Houston sported a tough zone defense which stymied KU the entire evening. Hayes was tough, but it was Chaney who was a thorn in Kansas ' side. While Hayes popped in 19, Chaney scored 20 and made several steals. The Cougars dominated the boards over the smaller KU team, with a 34-25 LEFT AND HIGHT. In scenes synonymous with Jayhawker basketball games, Coach Ted Owens emphatically stresses a point to a KU player and questions a referee ' s call. 366 advantage, although Vanoy did grab 9 boards, The No. 3 ranked Hawks trailed No. 7 Houston only by 3 points at the half, but fell behind 40-31 after four minutes of the second half. Trailing 55-45 with 6:30 to go, Jo-Jo White aroused Kansas ' hopes. White deflected a pass to Sloan who re- turned it to Jo-Jo for a lay-up. Fifteen seconds later, he again stole the ball for another lay-up. Fifty seconds later, he shot in a long set from the side and KU trailed only 55-51. After this, however, the Hawks went cold and fell back. Desperately trying to get the ball, KU gave Houston two easy baskets and three free throws in the last ninety seconds, for a 66-53 victory a score not indicative of the closeness of the contest. Kansas wrapped up a third place finish in the regional with a 70-68 win over Louisville, the Missouri Valley champions. Louisville featured All- American 6-8 Westley Unseld, and Butch Beard, an All-Valley selection. Vanoy, Harmon and White were the Kansas stars. Vanoy scored 10 points and grabbed 10 rebounds, several coming in the final minutes of play. Harmon came off the bench to hit 13 points, and White was both a de- fensive standout and high scorer with 22. KU rode to a 70-67 lead on Harmon ' s jumper with 3:55 left, and White ' s steal and lay-up with 1:39 to play. The Cardinals ' Fred Holden scored a foul shot with 42 seconds left, narrowing the gap to three. With half a minute left, Holden missed a short jumper, Harmon pulled off the rebound, and was fouled by Unseld. Harmon missed the free throw with three seconds left, but Louisville was unable to get off a shot before the horn. The victory was particularly satisfy- ing since Louisville entered the regional 23-3 and ranked No. 2 in the nation, the spot immediately ahead of Kansas. RIGHT. Assistant Coach Sam Miranda (left) and Head Coach Ted Owens (right), 63-16 in their three years together at KU. 367 Conclusion The 1966-67 KU basketball season was a rousing success. Despite losing many players from the previous year to graduation and 6-7 senior Bob Wilson at the semester break due to low grades, the Jayhawks won their second straight Big Eight championship, recorded an unprecedented third straight Big Eight Tournament Championship, finished third in the NCAA regional, and ended the season 23-4 overall with a No. 3 national ranking. Hopes for 1967-68 KU basketball fortunes are extremely encouraging. Graduation claims only starting forward Ron Franz and reserve guard Pat Davis. Returning will be 6-8 Vernon Vanoy, a vastly improved ballplayer and Big Eight Sophomore of the Year; Jo-Jo White, an All-Big Eight and All-Fifth District pick; Rodger Bohnenstiehl, All-Big Eight forward and KU ' s leading scorer; sharpshooting Phil Harmon; quick and agile 6-5 guard Bruce Sloan; and reserves Rich Thomas, Howard Arndt, Jaye Ediger, George Yarnevich, and Ron Lang. The top prospect from the freshman team is former high school All- American, 6-3 forward Richard Bradshaw. Others given a chance to make next year ' s varsity squad are guards Chester Lawrence and Carl Janis, center Bob Tyus, and forward Jim Hoffmann. Also available will be 6-8 Greg Douglas, a former high school All-American at Keokuk, Iowa, who was scholastically ineligible to compete this past season. Even with this encouraging outlook, Kansas will list just two seniors on next year ' s potential roster, in Bohnenstiehl and Yarnevich, although White will become a senior at the semester break. Kansas 73 Arkansas 57 Kansas 73 Iowa State 65 Kansas 100 Xavier 52 Kansas 68 Iowa State 50 Kansas 94 Ohio State 70 Kansas 84 Nebraska 58 Kansas 62 Florida State 48 Kansas 60 Kansas State 55 Kansas 68 56 Kansas 52 Oklahoma State 39 Kansas 70 U. of Pacific 54 Kansas 82 Oklahoma 74 Kansas 67 Texas Western 71 Kansas 60 Oklahoma State 50 Kansas 44 St. John ' s 68 Kansas 90 Missouri 55 Kansas 72 Colorado 54 Kansas 64 Nebraska 57 Kansas 86 Oklahoma 73 Kansas 66 Colorado 59 Kansas 63 Iowa State 57 Kansas 74 Kansas State 56 Kansas 97 Oklahoma 73 Kansas 53 Houston 66 Kansas 70 Missouri 60 Kansas 70 Louisville 68 Kansas 59 Colorado 62 SHAWNEE MISSION INDIANETTES perform before Red, Blue, and 12,500 other fans during halftime ceremonies of the Oklahoma game. 368 G FG Pct. FT Pct. RB Ave. PF TP Ave. Bohnenstiehl 26 167 .514 92 .724 176 6.8 57 426 16.4 White 27 170 .409 59 .819 150 5.6 60 399 14.8 Franz 27 133 .404 68 .667 185 6.9 99 334 12.4 Vanoy 27 82 .429 60 .674 175 6.5 113 224 8.3 Harmon 25 65 .478 27 .711 59 2.4 52 157 6.3 Sloan 27 53 .482 39 .698 94 3.5 51 145 5.4 Wilson 16 45 .378 39 .661 80 5.0 24 129 8.1 Arndt 25 21 .368 19 .514 55 2.2 23 61 2.4 Thomas 17 7 .413 5 .454 3 0.2 4 19 1.1 Davis 16 4 .250 3 .300 11 0.7 8 11 0.7 Yarnevich 12 2 .250 6 .750 13 1.1 3 10 0.8 Ediger 13 2 .250 0 .000 11 0.8 5 4 0.3 KANSAS 27 752 .434 417 .684 1221 45.2 499 1921 71.1 OPPONENTS 27 577 .376 453 .681 1123 42.0 466 1607 59.5 369 LEFT TO RIGHT: BRUCE SLOAN, Sopho- more Guard from Kansas City, Mo.; JO JO WHITE, Sophomore Guard from St. Louis, Mo.; VERNON VANOY, Sophomore Center from Kansas City, Mo.; BOB WILSON, Senior Forward from St. Louis, Mo.; How- ARD ARNDT, Sophomore Forward from Republic, Mo.; PHIL HARMON, Sophomore Guard from Tulsa, Okla. LEFT TO RIGHT: RON LANG, Soph- omore Forward from Leavenworth; JAYE EDIGER, Sophomore Forward from Hutchinson; RODGER ENSTIEHL, Junior Forward from Collinsville, Ill.; RON FRANZ, Senior Forward from Kansas City; GEORGE YARNEVICH, Junior Forward from Kan- sas City; PAT DAVIS, Sen- ior Guard from Topeka; RICH THOMAS, Sopho- more Guard from Dietrich, Ill. 370 oor rack The 1967 indoor track season saw KU extend its string of dual meet victories to thirty-four in a row over a seven-year period. Gary Ard in the long jump and Bob Steinhoff in the pole vault highlighted a balanced squad in the field events. In the running events, George Byers and Lee Adams in the hurdles, and Jim Ryun, Tom Yergovich, and Ben Olison in the middle distances led the way to several victories. Outstanding individual performances of the year included both an NCAA record-setting 3:58.6 mile, and a new world record of 1:48.3 in the 880-yard run by Ryun; the bettering of the word record in the 60-yard low hurdles by both Byers and Adams; vaults of over 16 feet by Steinhoff, with a 16-6 mark at the Albuquerque Invitational; and a win in the 1000-yard run by Yergovich at the Big Eight Championships. The Jayhawk tracksters opened with a 91-21 win over Southern Illinois. Easy victories over Oklahoma and Oklahoma State of 80-42 and 85-33, respectively, plus strong individual performances in both the State Federa- tion Meet and the Michigan State Relays came prior to Big Eight and NCAA championship competition. At the Big Eight Indoor Championships in Kansas City, seven KU firsts in fourteen events led the Jayhawks to their thirteenth title in eighteen championship bids. Ryun paced the team with record-setting clockings in both the half-mile and mile events. Victories by Yergovich in the 1000- yard run, Olison in the 440-yard run, Adams in the 60-yard high hurdles, and the mile relay team, plus Byers ' national record-breaking 0:06.6 timing in the 60-yard low hurdles combined with Kansas ' depth in all events to give the Big Blue a total of 64 points, more than double Missouri ' s second place team score. The following week, the champion Jayhawks captured third place in the NCAA Championships in Detroit, Michigan. Again it was Ryun who led the Hawks, setting a new meet record in the mile and placing second in the 880-yard run. Other individual performances included Ard ' s second place in the long jump, Yergovich ' s fourth place in the 1000-yard run, and Olison ' s fifth place in the 440-yard run. 1967 INDOOR TRACK Kansas 91 Southern Illinois 29 Kansas 80 Oklahoma 42 Kansas 85 Oklahoma State 33 Big Eight Championships First Place NCAA Championships Third Place 372 Pole vaulter Bob Steinhoff soars over the bar. RIGHT, TOP. World record holder Jim Hi1un sprints on his way to a victory in the mile run. BOTTOM. Freshman track team members Glen Cunningham from Augusta, and Pat Hiller from Weiser, Idaho. 373 Intramural lasketball The 1966-67 intramural basketball progam featured over 1600 men bat- tling for division, league, and Hill championships in 18 Greek and 15 Independent divisions. Phi Delta Theta teams dominated play, capturing the A and C Hill championships and the B Greek title. In addition to the Phis, several other groups each fielded many outstanding teams. The Betas added six division awards to their trophy case, one each in A and B competition, and four in C play. Delta Upsilon won three division titles, one in A and two in C . Among the Independents, the Laws re- turned as a perennial power with an A league title and two C division titles. Templin Hall continued to grow as an intramural power, by sending four teams, one B and three C , to the play-offs. The Phi Delts advanced to the Greek A finals by upsetting a highly favored Delta Upsilon quintet. In the championship game, the Phis de- feated Beta Theta Pi, semi-final winner over Sigma Chi, by a score of 64-59. The Laws easily won the Independent A title with impressive victories over Grace Pearson, 66-42, and the Blackhawks, 74-53. Meeting the Greek victors, however, they lost the Hill title game, 42-41. The Gunners handily won the Independent B title, blasting the Swahilis, 45-29, and edging the Scholars, 38-32. Top teams in the Greek B division were Delta Tau Delta, Beta Theta Pi, Tau Kappa Epsilon, and Phi Delta Theta. The Phi Delts scrambled to the Greek championship by nipping the Betas, 34-32, before falling to the Gunners, 34-31. In C competition, the Phi Delts won their second Hill championship. Phi No. 1 earned the Greek title with victories over Phi No. 2, 29-23, and DU No. 2,29-17. In Independent C competition the KC Kids were literally head-and-shoulders over all opponents. After routing Templin ' s Group, 42-17, they wrapped up the title with an easy 45-26 win over the Group. Phi Delta Theta ' s Greek winners then came from behind late in the Hill championship game to win, 36-34, and take home the C trophy. DELTA Upsilon vs. Beta Theta Pi. 1=11 374 375 UNIVERSITY LIFE ) Rock Chal k Re vue Over 250 students participated in the production of the 1967 Rock Chalk Revue. Marking its seventeenth year of existence, Rock Chalk ' 67 was dedi- cated to the memory of Allen Crafton, originator of the KU speech and drama department. Will Price, producer, and Curt Heinz, business manager, directed seven student staffs in organizing the show. Work began in early fall, with would-be performers writing, rewriting, and polishing potential Rock Chalk scripts. Four finalists, chosen before semester break, then began the seemingly endless task of rehearsing and revising. Building sets, sewing costumes, adapting music, and selecting performers were only part of the myriad preparations facing Rock Chalk finalists. Never Trust a President With His Polls Down and or The Eyes of Taxes Are Upon You began the show. Produced by Alpha Phi and Delta Chi, the skit spoofed American politics and the War on Poverty. Members of Chi Omega and Sigma Phi Epsilon then journeyed through a slightly modified version of Lewis Carroll ' s wonderland in ALICE, or Can a KU Coed Find Happiness in Wonderland? An intolerably terrible toy tyrant Rock Chalk Revue OPPOSITE PAGE. Cindy Earp, Wes Payne, and Bruce Eckland perform their roles of Raggedy Ann, the Clown, and the Professor in the Alpha Kappa Lambda-Alpha Chi Omega winning skit, Boobs in Toyland or Just Clowning Around. THIS PAGE, ABOVE. Whimpena and Whimp (Jacki Kirk and Chuck Kraemer) confess their collegiate love affair in Table Eight: Nirvana in the Wilderness, the Beta Theta Pi-Delta Gamma skit. a WILL PRICE, Director of the 1967 Rock Chalk Revue; and Curt Heinz, Business Manager. 37 MR. CATERPILLAR ( MIKE SPENCER) LISTENS as Alice (Jurahee Lain) shouts that she wants to go back to Kansas in the Sigma Phi Epsilon-Chi Omega skit, ALICE, or can a KU Coed Find Happiness in Wonderland? ruled the stage during the Alpha Chi Omega-Alpha Kappa Lambda winning skit, Boobs in Toyland or Just Clowning Around. Satirizing enrollment and freshman orientation was Table Eight: Nirvana in the Wilderness, produced by Delta Gamma and Beta Theta Pi. Alpha Kappa Lambda and Alpha Chi Omega swept the awards, taking six top prizes: best female per- former, Cindy Earp; best choreography; best original script; best sets; best ensemble singing; and best costumes. Beta Theta Pi and Delta Gamma, second-place winners, won awards for the best original song and best male performer, Chuck Kraemer. College customs received a satirical blow riot only in the skits, but also in the In-Between Acts entertainment, directed by Bruce Levitt, who was assisted by Linda Edwards, music adviser, and Sharon Herowitz, choreog- rapher. A song parody on lavaliering and a go-go routine featuring the Flunkies drew knowing chuckles. Jazz dances, some with fluorescent costumes, also added to the total effect of Rock Chalk ' 67. For the first time, two MC ' s officiated. Parmelee Bates and John Newlin entered Hoch on a tandem bicycle and provided humorous continuity for the program. Rock Chal k Revue 378 ABOVE. The Delta Chi-Alpha Phi presentation of The Eyes of Taxes are Upon You gives Annie Poverty (Sue Pierce) a chance to explain the meaning of status to the Mayor of Beaverpatch (Burt Mitchell). BELOW. Drew Anderson and Sharon Herowitz, two of the In-Between Acts performers, on stage at the close of Rock Chalk ' 67. Rock Chalk Revue 37, FEST p IT The 1967 KU Festival of the Arts was the first of its kind in the Midwest. Directed by Dick Warner, the week included events and exhibits concerned with all phases of the fine arts, including jazz, poetry, drama, films, and art. The idea of such a festival was initiated last year and developed through the work of SUA. Attendance at the programs, scheduled during the week of March 19-25 in Hoch Auditorium, averaged approximately 2600. Twenty- six students and four faculty advisors coordinated the activities. An exhibit of student art from six prominent art schools was presented in the Union. March 19, brought jazz pianist Bill Evans to Hoch. Evans per- formed four standard examples of popular jazz, one composition of Miles Davis, and three of his own. A composer as well as a musician, Evans is trained in both classical music and jazz. He first attracted attention in 1958 when he played with the Davis Sextet. That year he was voted the New Star pianist in the Downbeat Critics Poll. Since 1962, Evans has been recog- nized in an international poll of best jazz pianists. His Conversations With Myself won him a 1964 Grammy Award. ' dole a 11AE 380 Sharing the spotlight with Evans, classical guitarist Hey de la Torre, pre- sented a program of classical guitar stylism. He demonstrated such classical art as Bach and performed variations on the work of Mozart. His examples of Spanish composition were greeted warmly by the large audience. A master of his instrument since the age of ten, de la Torre made his debut in Barcelona at sixteen. His speciality is modern Spanish and Latin-American music; he discovered the guitar compositions of Hector Villa-Lovos and other contemporary composers. Lionel Rogosin lectured Monday, March 20, discussing his controversial film, Good Times, Wonderful Times. The British entry to the 1965 Venice Film Festival, the film has drawn complimentary criticism from analysts everywhere. A gripping indictment of the indifference and inhumanity of Western societies, it centers around a London cocktail party whose partici-. pants are prosperous pseudo-intellectuals. The realities of war and its effects are discussed and reflected upon by what Rogosin calls re al people. Fol- lowing a showing of the film, he answered questions from the audience per- taining to its subject matter. His astute comments on the art of film-making expanded the concept of realism in twentieth century art and its future. 381 O With animation becoming a vital part of modern cinema, Chuck Jones is, according to KU ' s Dr. Richard MacCann and others, the real successor to Walt Disney. An Academy Award winner for The Dot and the Line, Jones is head of the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer animation and visual arts de- partment. For his presentation on Tuesday, March 21, he first showed some of his best short subjects and experimental reels. The fact that these were almost void of dialogue was a point he strongly emphasized. Later in the program, he explained some of the technical skills necessary for certain special effects and, with a panel of two students and two instructors, dis- cussed the future of the art of animation. C FS 382 The author of one of this decade ' s most controversial and exciting plays was the Festival ' s mid-week offering. The author: Edward Albee. The play: Who ' s Afraid of Virgina Woolf? The movie version of Virginia Woolf won five Oscars in 1967, adding to Albee ' s collection of theatrical and literary awards. He lectured on the present state of the arts, garnishing his commentary with wit and dynacism. The young (39) playwright com- mented on topics ranging from the origination of Virginia Woo title to his opinion of Marat:Sade, and discussed the state of contemporary criticism and its effect on live audience. He also entertained several questions from the audience, answering them with intelligence and blunt brevity. EDWARD ALIJA 383 N EVR F Robert Frost, one of America ' s finest contemporary poets, was immor- talized by the of Michigan Professional Theater Company on Thursday, March 23. The program was based on and included the poems, life, and conversations of Frost. Will Geer, playing the poet, has been hailed as an exemplary replica of Frost in mannerisms, speech, and appearance. Originally brought to the stage at Michigan, the production was such a success that arrangements were subsequently made for its presentation in New York City. The response of the audiences and the enthusiasm of the critics there then led to the current three month tour of seventy- five American colleges and universities. 384 Drawing the largest crowd of the week, the Count Basic Orchestra and Odetta presented a two-part concert as a Saturday evening finale to the Festival. Basic, whose musical beginning was in Kansas City, has one of the most established big bands in American jazz today. His group has played before audiences throughout the world, including a command per- formance for Queen Elizabeth and an appearance in New York City ' s Carnegie Hall. During Basic ' s KU concert, the band presented several of the numbers which have made it famous, with a four-man rhythm group setting the tone for outstanding reed and brass sections. Odetta followed Basic, singing standard and contemporary folk songs and blues, and rendi- tions of various types of music. She began her career in Los Angeles where she was introduced to music, particularly folk music, at an early age. Since that time her appearances have included concerts at both Carnegie Hall and the Newport Folk Festival. Working in Hoch with bass, piano, and drums, she presented her wide range of vocal selections with an enthusiasm which often found the KU audience joining in to sing. ETA 385 Murphy Hall ' s Experimental Theatre rang with the laughter of delighted audiences and the sounds of battle as Charles Chilton ' s musical satire of World War I, Oh What A Lovely War, was presented dur- ing the period of February 16 to 25. The show was such a success that two additional performances were scheduled to accomodate the crowds. The cast was composed of Kip Niven, Phil Grecian, Pat Royce, Richard Brady, Andy Brown, Ken Mar- solais, Lance Hewett, Shirley Williams, Holmes Os- born, Sheri Romeiser, Jack Oblak, Richard Harrison, Judy Howell, Pat Hough, and Larry Riglar. Char- acter changes in each scene represented the scores of nationalities and dozens of different personalities who planned and fought the lovely war that took ten million lives. Basic white costumes were draped in capes, helmets, rifles, parasols, and shawls to create images of soldiers, profiteers, priests, generals, and lords and ladies. Director Jack Wright expertly moved his actors around the Experimental Theatre ' s semi- circular stage to give the viewer the impression of actually being involved. The play ranged from the hilarity of a drill sergeant introducing his troops to bayonet practice, to the horror of a patrol of mud-soaked soldiers discussing the un- fortunate change of wind that poisoned the British with their own mustard gas. Throughout the play the irony and pathos of war was emphasized by projec- tions of World War I photographs on a screen, and an electric newsboard reporting casualty figures. h i a Jove Wilr SHOULDER ARMS, You hollers the drill sergeant (Ken Marsolais) to new recruits, in the third Experimental Theatre production of the year. 386 THE BLOOD BUCKETS are dumped into the well after the execu- tion scene on the guillotine. Marat Sade Marta-Sade, produced on March 19, 23, 24, and 25, provided an example of the concept of Total Theatre, a combination of several theatrical elements mime, dialogue, music, comedy, dream, philosophy, and history. Peter Weiss ' contemporary play, actually titled The Persecution and Assassination of Jean-Paul Marat as performed by the Inmates of the Asylum of Charenton Under the Direction of the Marquis de Sade, was directed by Dr. Lewin Goff. The produc- tion is a play within a play depicting the essence of the French Revolution. The two principal characters are the Marquis de Sade, who wrote and directed many plays for the in- mates of the asylum, and Jean-Paul Marat, a leader of the Revolution. Richard Kelton and Sean Griffin, members of the Resident Acting Company, portrayed the roles, respectively. Linda MacDonald, also a mem- ber of the portrayed Corday, a violent opponent of Marat. Sue Tisdall became the Herald as she introduced characters and furthered the con- tinuity of the play. Whether or not the play is political has been much discussed. Certainly it is not polemic in the sense that it does not prove a case or draw a moral. Its prismatic structure is such that the last line is not the place for the summing-up idea. The idea of the play is the play itself, and this cannot be resolved in a simple slogan. It is firmly on the side of revolu- tionary change, and yet is painfully aware of all the elements in a violent human situation. 387 The March Experimental Theater production, An Evening with Dylan Thomas, was entirely the work of KU students. It was a presentation of Thomas ' work, with scenes from Sidney Michael ' s play, Dylan, and was designed to present a biographical sketch. Though the production did not actually have a plot, it moved somewhat chronologically through Thomas ' life from birth to death. Since many of his works were auto- biographical, the reading of them gave a picture of the man himself. The last part of the play showed Thomas as he was approaching death from alcoholism. It was at this time that he was receiving great acclaim in this country for his work. The eight-member cast included John McGuinness, John Morgan, Jack Hurley, Cheryl Burnet, Parmalee Bates, Gwenna Steffen, and Steve Shumway. All played many different roles as they read Dylan ' s poems, stories, essays, and several scenes from his play, Under the Milk Wood. Among the poems that were read were And Death Shall Have No Dominion, In My Craft or Sullen Art, and At Poor Peace. The prose included Reminiscence of Childhood, A Visit to America, and Return Journey. The costuming, by Chez Haehl, was simple and allowed the characters to change roles for the different scenes without having to change costumes. All men wore identical shirts and ascots, and women wore blouses and skirts. The set, designed by Ada Mc- Allister, was also simple, and was suited to the great variety of scenes which were presented. It consisted mainly of platforms and several nondescript set pieces which represented numerous objects. DURING THE COCKTAIL PARTY SCENE, Dylan Thomas (John McGinnis) expresses his opinion of American poetry. Joemng ith - Aelgiza 388 FI H ,EniPEA.CHER Assoc !ATE PROFESS- 01E, NATALIE CALDERWOOD In 1920, Mrs. Natalie Calderwood graduated from Carleton College with a BA. A year later she received her MA at Columbia University and proceeded on to Greencastle, Indiana, where she started her teaching career at DePauw Uni- versity in 1921. Two years later she went to Minnesota State Teachers College in Mankato, staying there till 1928 at which time she went to their Duluth campus. In 1942 she took up her teaching career at KU. Throughout her years of teaching on Mount Oread, she has contributed much to the University and its programs. She was instrumental in developing English 66, Literature for Children, into a model course of its kind with a very large enrollment. In addition to serving on numerous university and departmental committees, including most recently the Centennial Committee, and making numerous off-campus appearances at professional meetings, she is president of Kansas Alpha of Phi Beta Kappa. Mrs. Calderwood has also published several articles and book reviews, is co-author of a textbook used for many years in the freshman English courses here at KU and. elsewhere, and was nominated for the HOPE award in 1966. The chairman of KU ' s English department, Professor George Worth, has said, Ultimately, one has to know this grand lady in order to appreciate fully her contributions to the University over the years: I am sure that most of the thousands of students whom she ha s taught would warmly applaud her selection as a Hillteacher.- 389 HIE _ATEACHEIR, PROFEsson STUHL In his own words, Professor Raymond Stuhl likes teaching more than anything else in the world. He began teaching in 1930 after five years of study in Berlin, Germany. Joining the University of Kansas faculty in 1935, he became an associate professor in 1950 and a full professor in 1966. There ' s never a boring moment, says Mr. Stuhl as he conducts his daily classes in chamber music, cello, and bass. He played with the Kansas City Philharmonic in the first years that it was inaugurated, and toured West Germany on a six-week lecture-recital tour in 1954. He has appeared in many concerts in Kansas, before civic groups, high school and college audiences, and local public concerts. With the late Dean Swarthout, he started KU ' s Chamber Music Series. His former students have appeared as soloists with such symphony orchestras as the Kansas City, Amarillo, St. Louis, Oklahoma City, and Des Moines groups. Professor Stuhl is well known for his efforts to encourage students in the strings and is known as an unusual recruiter of good students. Indicative of this is the fact that he has been cited by the Kansas Federated Music Clubs as the man who has done the most for strings and chamber music in Kansas in the past 25 years. Recently recognizing the lack of string instructors in the Johnson County public schools, he organized string classes for approximately 200 students in that area, with the help of several of his advanced students. In continuing his teaching career, Professor Stuhl approaches his work with a desire to leave a situation better than I found it. 390 HILIATEACH ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR DON GRE A native of Tulsa, Oklahoma, Professor Don Green graduated in 1955 with a B.S. in Petroleum Engineering from Tulsa University. He spent the next eight years at the University of Oklahoma where, in 1959, he received his Master ' s Degree in chemical engineering. Four years later, having received his Ph.D., also in chemical engineering, he became a research engineer for the Continental Oil Company. However, this work was short-lived, for in August, 1964, he took on an assistant professorship at KU. In the area of research and publication, Dr. Green has excelled. He is presently the principal investigator on a research project, and is Acting Director for the Kansas Water Resources Research Institute. He also has seven publications to his credit. Serving the University in several other capacities, he helped in pro- moting KU ' s Chemical and Petroleum Engineering Department throughout the state, and has been a driving force in the establishment of a graduate fellowship program for foreign students. He likewise has worked on three School committees, and is now secretary of the School faculty. As a Hillteacher, however, it is his teaching ability that has distinguished Dr. Green. One of his colleagues has summed up his contributions to the University by stating, In an age of fantastic technological successes we tend to forget the role that personal commitment, strength of character, and clear vision play in directing those with ability to produce these accomplishments. Don has these personal traits in full measure. He merits our highest recognition for excellence as an engineering educator. 391 HILLTOPPER COWEN Trisha Cowen ' s recognition as a Hilhopper is the result of her outstanding accomplishments in both the social and scholastic areas of university life. Since her freshman year, Trisha has been involved in a whirlwind of activities. As a freshman she belonged to Frosh Hawks and Junior Pan- hellenic, and served her living groups as president, both of her hall and of the Kappa Alpha Theta pledge class. She has also served as a Panhellenic Rush Counselor, as Panhellenic Standards Board Chairman, as Hospitality and Homestay Chairman of the People-to-People Board, and as president of the Little Sisters of the Maltese Cross. Majoring in. German and International Relations, Trisha has maintained a 2.57 GPA. As a result of these activities and scholarship, many honors have come her way. She was elected to Cwens and Delta Pi Alpha, the German honorary fraternity. Furthermore, Trisha was tapped last year for Mortar Board, which she now serves as vice- president. For the future, Trisha plans to work with an international business firm after graduation. HILLTOPPER PAUL BOCK Hilltopper Paul Bock, a senior from Dodge City, has been an academic leader of the class of 1967. His 2.87 overall GPA, with a 3.00 and a 2.87 in his chemistry and mathe- matics majors respectively, has led to his future plans to do graduate work in chemistry and then. teach at a college or university. Active throughout his four years at KU in his living group, Stephenson Hall, Paul has been scholar- ship chairman and president, and a member of the Men ' s Scholarship Hall Council. He has also served as a member of the University Review editorial board, the Search edi- torial board, and the HOPE Award Committee; as chair- man of the College Bowl program; and on the campus chest. As a result of his academic achievements and these other activities, Paul has received numerous honors in- cluding membership in Owl Society and Sachem, a Summerfield scholarship, a U. G. Mitchell Honor Scholar- ship in mathematics, and selection following his junior year to Phi Beta Kappa. 392 HIBLETOPPER BECKY R(C'GERS Majoring in music therapy and music education with a minor in violin, Becky Rogers ' outstanding scholastic and musical accomplishments have distinguished her as a Hill- topper. Becky belongs to Pi Kappa Lambda, honorary music fraternity, and to Mu Phi Epsilon music sorority, serving the latter as both president and rush chairman. In addition to musical activities such as the Dean ' s Honor Symphony, she has also worked on the Peace Corps Com- mittee and the Student Advisory Board. As a result of her high scholastic standing and her activities, Becky has been the recipient of a Watkins Music Scholarship, a State Legislature Scholarship, an Elks Scholarship, a Rose M. Ise Scholarship, and a SMOP Scholarship. As a freshman counselor, song leader, and president, Becky has also been a leader in her living group, Watkins Hall. In addition to such impressive scholastic and social credentials, she was a Cwen as a sophomore, and is now a member of Mortar Board. Upon graduation, Becky plans to pursue her ed- ucational interests in graduate school. HILLTOPPER TOM EDGAR Academic honors and extracurricular activities have high- lighted Tom Edgar ' s four years at KU. In his fraternity, Beta Theta Pi, he has served as rush chairman, scholar- ship chairman, assistant treasurer, and as a member of the Betas ' Rock Chalk casts. Also quite active in university organizations, Tom has served on the SUA Oread Jazz Festival steering committee, as a KU-Y freshman pro- gram advisor, and as KU-UCCF treasurer, University Party caucus chairman, and IFC scholarship chairman. As the engineering school ' s representative to the ASC, he has also been a member of its Student Advisory Board and Athletic Seating Board. However, Tom ' s extracurricular activities are topped by his many academic honors. His 2.88 overall GPA has earned him membership in Tau Beta Pi, engineering honorary; Phi Lambda Upsilon, chemistry honorary; and both. Owl Society and Sachem. He also holds an NSF scholarship and grant, a Greater University scholarship, a Marcy engineering scholarship, and a Universal Oil Products scholarship. 393 HILLTOPPER TERRY BEACH Hilltopper Terry Beach has received continuous recogni- tion both from her major department and in campus ac- tivities. Maintaining a 2.45 overall GPA with a 2.70 in her German major, she has attended a summer language institute and as a sophomore received a departmental award for outstanding undergraduate achievement. Her scholastic endeavors have brought her membership in Delta Phi Alpha and Cwens, and a Woodrow Wilson nomination. A leader in many campus activities, Terry was floor chairman in GSP and a member of the Hal] Council. She has served her sorority, Pi Beta Phi, as pledge class treasurer and scholarship chairman, and has held both a chairmanship and an Executive Council position in Panhellenic. Terry has also served on the All Student Council and the Athletic Seating Board. In the AWS House and Senate she has served as Chairman of Student- Faculty Relations, Regulations Chairman, House-Senate Liaison, and a member of the Standards Board and the House Executive Board. HILLTOPPER BILL AVOIll ILF0 ERD For combining scholastic excellence in the field of politi- cal science with outstanding athletic desire and ability on the football field, Hilltopper Bill Wohlford was selected Scholastic All Big Eight this spring for the second year in a row. Bill, who has maintained a 2.14 overall GPA, has continually excelled in all fields of college life. As a member of Alpha Tau Omega he has served his fraternity as pledge trainer and rush chairman. This year at the annual Football Awards Banquet, Bill turned the evening into a one-man show by walking off with three of the top four awards. He was voted Most Valuable Player for 1966 and Best Lineman of the Year by the KU coaches. Bill also won the coveted Art Weaver Scholarship Award for maintaining the highest GPA on the football team. Bill ' s teammates elected him co-captain for 1966, and the coaches of the Big Eight elected him almost unanimously to a berth on the All Big Eight team. For the future Bill has not decided whether or not he will play professional football, but he does plan to continue his education at graduate school next year. 394 ADS INDEX 395 8 9V2 3 4 71 8 ... feCN M, 5. - 3`. ' 1% ir, 6 1` ' ' 513 .. !. 011 50 -11 . 5 %t4 - N 9 NI: 1 c)(., b,31 ,1$ .3, 61 1131-d MCIXSOnE1,. MCCrOrY ) ' cilte z t X , me dc0 ) if14515, .0, -1 ,.3. 1. , l ' Me syl l S ' ,x ' e5 . ' ' , mi! , % ,, ' ' ' , 1 9,S - 1 ' 10 4 ' 0 s N X01 x I- Nt R 5 ,40 M wt Pt A Pt 13 .10h .28 1 fnl 33 7 1,r1 611- 51 ' 5 8 onanzaA r 1 1k ?), PV .. v%:? .01.stnrIgs c C rt e t% polU C ' ' ; . rt. c. ' ' it ' , , ' N -.0 i) c,0 NP ` ' , %. 4, )It c4 ' 1 0 CP p 151 ' ' Z ' N , CI c% .01, 1, ,p,` x, ' ' ' ,1%. 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' ' 151 . 5 . :1 ( ' ) n 511, s 25 5 23 65 8 6 6 a 5 6Wa 4 7, 1 R6 v`P %; ' ; % -gaI -r ` ' ; 5155 k!,1 5 ). z 29p - 0L i 7 55 8 ... lane 76 21.1 4 37 8 15 8 3 101 4 1 21 27 Technical Tel A SI9 Tele TelePro dtto amt Telev I Terme)! er xP C ) ( C,) (0 V---- I .(cCi-2_;))) ) K )6----) liA ' r-(MKIN, NYANIS C-3 A Augustson, Kent 295 Beehler, Timothy 352 Bolton, Will 313, 332, 333 Ault, Susan 345 Begel, Debby 259, 316 Bonacker, Sandy 264 Abbott, Fred 282 Austin, Bob 285 Beggs, Betina 266 Bond, Bill 338 Abdelhay, Ben-Omran 334 Austin, Dan 322 Beine, Melba 264 Bond, Joyce 270 Abid, Syed 328, 342 Aviks, Valda 316 Beisecker, Bonnie 266 Bond, Richard 300, 349 Achey, Pam 263 Avila, Richard Frank 353 Belcher, Gail Anne 315 Bondon, John II 284 Adams, Mary Lee 263 Awbrey, David 286 Belcher, Roy 349 Bonet, Ignacio 289 Adams, Prof. Mel 263 Axe, Kathy 330 Bell, Christy 259 Bonney, Shirley 266 Adams, Ronald 349 Ayres, James 338 Bell, Greg 291 Booker, Judy 316 Adams, Steve S. 294 Ayres, Mrs. James 339 Bell, Hanan 325 Boomer, Cathy 262 Adams, Steve T. 285, 312 Azzolin, Pam 316 Bell, Jerry 291 Boone, Linda 308, 315 Adams, Vickie 259 Bell, Linda 261 Boor, Linda 273 Aenbacher, Arthur 354 Bell, Nancy 261 Borders, M. W. 277 Aeschleman, Valerie 261 Bell, Sue 315 Borel, Jane 316 Agee, Philip 285 B Bell, Ted 298 Borel, Julie 263 Aggson, Dave 291 Ahmed, Nayeem U. 328, 342 Ahmed, S. Sirtajuddin 342 Ahmed, Mrs. S. Sirtajuddin 342 Aiken, Tom 333 Aitken, Connie 271 Akers, Greg 288 Akers, Suzan 257, 316 Albin, Barry 352 Albon, Donald 295 Alderson, Alan 276 Alderson, Marcia 258 Alderson, Russ 276 Aldis, Stephen 286 Aldridge, Dan 349 Alexander, Dennis 335 Alexander, Edward 334 Alexander, Kathy 266 Alieksaites, Phyllis 269 Allan, Mary 262 Alleman, Judy 267 Allen, Candy 311 Allen, David 338 Allen, Mrs. David 339 Allen, Elaine 337 Allen, Jay 286 Allen, John 285 Allen, Mary 329 Allen, Michael 349 Allen, Mickey 288 Allen, Steve 288 Alley, Collette 266, 329 Alley, Jim 295 Allison, Sara 260, 316 Allison, Torn 282 Alloway, Lee 290, 352 Alloway, Pat 266 Ambler, Jaryl 257, 316 Ament, Esther 263 Ammon, Dotty 264, 339 Amoroso, Daniel 353 Anderson, Barbara 264, 339 Anderson, Charles 291 Anderson, Mrs. D. L. 264 Anderson, Denis 334 Anderson, Glenn 289, 354 Anderson, Janet 303 Anderson, John 352 Anderson, Joyce 262, 329 Anderson, Judy 271 Anderson, Lawrie 346 Anderson, Mal 287 Anderson, Sally 316 Anderson, Sandy 259 Anderson, Tom 293 Anderson, Vickie 269 Anderson, William 332 Andrews, Richard 300, 333 An-Lwun, Ho 350 Appel, Cricket 265 Appleton, Ann 268 Arbuckle, Tom 288 Arbuthnot, Linda 257 Arbuthnot, Sandy 316 Ard, Nick 328 Arend, Nick 279 Argubright, Thomas 352 Armbruster, William 338 Armstrong, James 294 Arnold, Patricia 259 Arnold, Roger 299 Arnold, Sandy 343 Arnold, Stephen 277 Arthur, Bob 286 Ascanio, Gary 307, 312, 333 Ash, Roger 295 Ashland, Peggy 257, 316 Babb, Byra 273 Babcock, Jaci 344 Back, Joyce 336 Bader, Mike 291 Baer, Jackie 259 Bagby, Jack 277 Bagby, Sarah 266 Bailey, Donald 336, 342 Bailey, Judy 269, 341 Bailey, Sue 269 Bain, Rodger 288 Bair, Linda 271, 344 Baker, Connie 257 Baker, Gerald 295 Baker, Paul 290 Balcombe, Doug 307 Baldwin, George 349 Baldwin, Patty 325 Ballard, Beth 309 Ballivian, Luis 294 Bangs, Greg 276 Bangs, Ruth 271 Banker, Rich 299 Banks, Jim 298 Banrnan, John 286 Banyard, Berta 262, 338, 343 Banzet, Paul 351 Baptist, Bob 280 Bard, Arnie 299 Barker, Bob 306 Barker, Brian 303, 304, 305 Barker, Greg 277, 349 Barker, Pat 269 Barket, Mary Kay 315 Barnes, Elizabeth 260 Barnes, Scott 288, 349 Barney, Jerry 280, 342 Barney, Louise 338 Barrett, Cindy 260, 316 Barrett, Rebecca 316 Barrier, Stu 294 Barritt, Dennis 287 Barrow, Bill 293 Barrows, Richard 353 Barrows, Roger 351 Barry, Bob 285 Barry, Marty 316 Barteldes, Chris 277 Barth, Marsha 273, 339 Bartlesmeyer, Charlotte 265 Bartlow, Cindy 258, 316 Barton, Ed 313 Basgall, Jim 352 Baskett, Ed 334 Basow, Bob 322, 340 Bassinson, Oscar 275 Bates, Parmelee 309, 314 Bauer, Carolyn 344 Bauer, Martin 285 Bauerle, Brian 297 Baum, Arthur 283 Baum, Jan 269 Bauman, Linda 261 Baur, Pat 339 Baxter, Jeff 276 Baxter, Michael 294, 349 Bayless, Pam 266, 318, 330 Beach, Charles 354 Beach, Terry 272, 308 Beadnall, Marvin 313 Beagle, Cathy 330 Beahm, Donald 283, 320 Beal, Joanne 267, 343 Beaman, Sheila 354 Beamgard, Richard 349 Bean, Jerry 340 Bear, Suzie 260 Beasley, Steve 296 Beller, Tom 282 Bellman, John 297 Belobrajdic, Bill 280 Belot, Allen 294 Belot, Monti 304 Belsaas, Julie 261 Belton, Rudy 279 Benefiel, Bill 284 Bengston, Raymond 284 Bennett, Bob 293 Bennett, Lauren 273, 329 Benson, Ed 282, 332 Benson, Emily 270 Bentley, Charlotte 258 Bentley, Kathy 267 Benton, Richard 349 Benton, Robert 335 Berger, Paul 299 Bernhardt, Judy 271 Bernstein, Mark 340 Berry, Chris 274 Berry, Henry 352, 355 Berryman, Torn 293 Bessmer, Karen 341 Best, Cliff 282 Bethea, Kay 336 Betty, Ruby 316 Beyer, Diane 316 Bhana, Kastoor 341 Bhana, Suresh 328, 341 Bhatti, A. Rashid 342 Bialek, Bernie 295 Bibb, Robert 299 Bickel, Robert 349 Bickel, Shay 283 Biddle, Wally 324 Biggs, Jan 267 Bigsby, Bill 288 Biles, Blake 283, 332 Billick, Lark 288 Binda, Arlene 316 Binns, Donald 281 Birney, Lynne 260, 343 Birse, Steward 276 Bishard, Toni 274 Bishop, Bennett 334 Bishop, Chris 296 Bishop, Dan 325 Bishop, Mike 284 Bishop, Tom 352 Bittenbender, Lee 283 Black, Larry D. 333 Black, Larry 352, 355 Black, Robert 272 Black, Tom 295, 314 Blackburn, Pat 267 Blackford, Steve 290 Blackwell, Gail 269 Blair, Broc 283 Blair, Dana 348 Blair, Stephen 298 Blair,Tom 298 Blake, Mike 289 Blakely, James 283 Blattner, Barb 268, 343 Blaylock, Stephen 286 Mee; Barb 259, 316 Blee, John 351 Blessing, Mrs. Roger 268 Bliesner, Gene 261 Bloemker, Bill 281 Bloomer, Dianne 257, 316 Blount, Chuck 290 Bly, Sara 264 Blythe, Kaylene 257 Boardman, James 353 Bock, Barb 337 Bock, Paul 331 Boelte, Cheryl 336 Boring, Lorraine 269 Bork, Robert 293 Borne, Mrs. Kathy 339 Bornkessal, Richard 282 Borum, Carey 296 Bosley, Dennis 294 Bottenfield, Jerry 287 Bouda, David 283, 332 Bowans, Peg 265 Bowdish, Caroline 336 Bowen, Bob 282 Bower, David 300 Bower, Frank Bower, Michael 300 Bowers, Richard 352 Bowman, Char 268 Bowman, Ron 299 Bowser, Tom 295 Boyd, Bob 312 Boyle, George 297 Boyle, Mike 295 Boynton, Anne 251, 269, 341 Bozarth, Phil 300 Brackett, Becky 258 Bradley, Frances 336 Bradley, Tom 292 Bradon, Sue 264 Bradshaw, Sabra 272, 345 Brady, Bill 296 Brady, Mike 288 Brainerd, Carl 332, 333 Brainerd, Linda 261 Braley, H. R. 294 Brandt, Andy 283 Brandt, C. R. 284 Brandt, Janelle 273 Branine, David 338 Brann, Jeff 299 Brasher, Stephen 353 Braum, John 335 Braun, Beverly 261 Brausa, Edward 287 Brazee, Betsy 273, 344 Breckenridge, Jim 296 Breidenthal, Jay 287 Breithaupt, Charles 338 Brekke, Dana 258 Brenner, James 280 Brenner, Janice 264 Bresler, Stephen 275 Brewer, Cindy 261 Brewer, Don 274, 349 Bridges, Steve 274 Briegel, Judson 325 Briery, Linda 260, 316 Brighton, Steve 295 Brill, Robert 292 Brimacombe, Susan 260, 308 Brinkerhoff, Col. W. A. 350 Broach, William 349 Broadhead, Joseph 348 Brock, Maxine 338 Brocker, Cindy 316, 345 Brocker, Nick 277 Broder, Bruce 290 Bronhard, Jim 285 Broockerd, Larry 274 Brooks, Barbi 261 Brooner, Bill 295 Brothers, Mark 349 Brown, Alex 339 Brown, Alice 316 Brown, Dick 277 Brown, George 287 Brown, Gilbert 290 Brown, Linda Louise 257 Brown, Mike 335 Brown, Mitchell 332, 334 Brown, Nancy 263 Ashley, Mike 295 Ashton, Sidney 272, 354 Askins, Jim 295 Askrew, Roy 282 Atkinson, Nancy 262 Atkisson, Dan 342 Bechler, Tim 352 Beck, John 293 Beck, Mary 308 Beck, Nancy 267, 343 Becker, Marilyn 264 Becker, Paul 294 Becker, Robert 280 Bohlander, Phil 289 Bohn, Kathy 267 Bohn, Susy 258 Bohnenstiehl, Rodger 295 Bohnsack, Carol 336 Bolack, Rich 298 Bollin, Gene 313 Brown, Pam 316 Brown, Scott 277 Brown, Steve 284 Brown, Susan 257 Brown, Thomas 298, 351 Browning, Roger 285 Brubaker, Harry 351 Attebery, Diane 314 Bedner, Mark 293 Bolton, Valerie 269 Bruce, L. Roy 293 398 Bruce, Marcia 315 Brueggeman, Dave 300 Bruner, Barbara 262, 315 Bruner, Diana 270 Bryan, Eddie 287 Bryant, Bob 285 Bryant, Julianne 267 Buchanan, Sherry 251, 271, 330, 345 Buchanan, S. Van 289 Buck, Bambi 267, 285, 329 Buck, Bill 334 Buck, Charles 297 Buck, Wally 280, 352 Buckholz, Lynn 339 Buckley, Mary Kim 261 Buckley, Tim 277 Budd, Pamela 260 Budd, Paul 284, 348 Buescher, James 294 Buhisan, Angel 352 Bumpass, Susan 265 Bunch, Robert 326 Bunn, Jim 285, 313 Bunn, Marcia 251, 270, 330 Burcham, Cyndi 272 Burdick, Lanny 296 Burdick, Mike 296 Burdine, Tom 289 Burgardt, Jeanie 251, 272, 330 Burge, Gary 281 Burgess, John 326 Burkle, Alfred 299 Burnet, Cheryl 257 Burnett, Barby 271 Burns, Carter 300 Burns, Rosie 261, 303, 304 Burquest, Janice 272 Burr, Judy 265 Burr, Steve 299 Burrell, Ralph 300, 350, 355 Bush, Granville 294 Butler, Bob 295 Butterfield, Ann 316 Butterworth, Pamela 261 Button, Steve 285 Byard, Curt 285 Byers, Bill 279 Byers, Jon 279 Byrne, Mrs. Stanley 339 Byrne, Stanley 338 C Cable, Judy 262, 346 Cacioppo, Elaine 344 Cady, John 291 Cady, Judy 268 Cahal, Skip 295 Cahill, Pattee 262 Calahan, Pat 316 Caldwell, C. C. 287 Callaghan, John 284, 352 Callahan, Michael 284 Callaway, Michael P. 349 Calvin, Jane 315 Cameron, John Stanley 353 Campbell, Bob 340 Campbell, Cheryl A. 272 Campbell, Cheryl R. 336, 354 Campbell, Dick 292 Campbell, Jackie 322 Campbell, Sam 287 Campbell, Steven 300 Campin, Rich 289 Canella, Michael 352 Cann, Mike 286, 304, 331 Cannon, Dennis 333 Carden, Gayle 266, 309 Carl, Ralph 285 Carlson, Marc 332 Carmichael, Steve 279 Carmitchel, Kathy 261 Carney, Connie 269 Carpenter, Ronald 349 Carper, Jon 284 Carr, Linda 316 Carr, Susie 270 Carrel, Rolla 282 Carroll, Sue 316 Carroll, Valerce 265 Carson, David 276 Carson, Mary 257 Carter, Aldon 349 Carter, Dave 281 Carter, George 284 Carter, John 283, 285 Carter, Judy 336 Carter, Marilyn 268 Carter, Raymond 349 Carter, Sharon 316 Carver, Cathy 316 Casady, John 277, 305, 331 Casebeer, Glenn 292 Casko, John 349 Castor, Pam 259 Cates, Larry 294 Cauble, Feryl 336 Cavitt, Bruce 350 Cederlind, Brian 276 Cederlind, Cranston 276 Chadborn, Gloria 270 Chaffee, Judy 258 Chagoll, Rue 285, 349 Chalmers, Robert 296 Chaloner, John 293 Chambers, Bill 306 Chambers, Ernest 280 Chan, Fred 334 Chang, Pao Ping 313, 332, 335 Chance, Gary 274 Chandler, John Jr. 351 Chandler, Ray 276 Chapman, Andy 289 Chappell, Gary 338 Chappell, James 338 Chappell, Mary Belle 299 Charvat, Sandy 264, 315 Chatham, Ralph 349 Chatlain, Joy 261, 330 Chaudoin, Karen 345 Chen, Tieh-Chun 334 Cherot, Suzanne 257 Chilcoat, Dan 282 Childers, Adrienne 272 Childers, Diane 272 Chilla, Milan 288 Chinn, Steve 343 Chipman, David 297 Chop, Tony 322, 340 Chowins, Chuck 282 Christiansen, John 289 Chubb, Bunny 345 Chubb, Don 277 Church, Steven 351, 355 Claasen, Patty 272 Clader, Jennifer 260, 343 Clancey, Jay 288 Clancey, Jim 288 Clancy, Bob 352, 355 Clark, Fritz 284 Clark, John 277 Clark, Ken 287, 349 Clark, Larry 285 Clark, Marion 332 Clark, Terry 287, 349 Clarke, Barbie 261, 315 Clendenin, Bob 286 Clevenger, jack 287, 340 Cline, Jane 316 Clingenpeel, Karen 267, 345 Clinton, Al 276 Cloud, Mary 272 Clovis, Louise 330 Clutter, Cydney 262, 339 Coard, Nancee 268, 345 Coates, William, Jr. 276 Coats, Eugene 338 Cobb, Charles 295 Cobb, Sharon 263 Coberly, Sharon 265 Cochran, Jerry 320 Cochran, Karen 345, 259 Cochran, Stephen 276 Cockrell, Sharon 262 Coday, Rodney 285 Coder, Kay 327 Coffelt, Jim 300 Coffey, Bruce 276 Coffey, Roger 276 Coffman, Cheryl 272 Coffman, Suzy 260 Coffman, Ted 283 Cohn, Les 275 Cole, Candace 261 Cole, Cecil S., Jr. 335 Cole, Cindy 269 Cole, Dan 349, 355 Cole, Jim 333 Cole, Larry 338 Cole, Sherm 285 Coleman, Cathleen 273, 315 Coleman, Edwin 300 Coleman, Janice 271 Coleman, Pat 265 Coleman, Ward 279, 320 Collier, Tommye 258 Collins, Judith 315 Collins, Michael 294 Colver, Charles 343 Colvin, William 280 Colwell, Robert 279 Combs, Pete 282, 349 Comstock, Dennis 285 Comstock, Gary 274 Conklin, Michael 349 Conley, Ray 288 Connell, Nicki 271 Connell, Paula 259 Connolly, Hubert 353 Connor, Phillip 349 Connor, Rick 335 Contractor, Kirit 341 Conover, Butch 297 Conrad, Clif 326 Consolver, Paul 320 Conway, Chris 269, 309 Conyers, Judy 271, 344 Cook, Christine 258 Cook, Chuck 297, 325 Cook, Gary 335 Cook, Jim 333 Cook, Sam 289 Cooksey, Lynn 273 Coolidge, Pook 256 Cooper, Connie 264 Cooper, Emily 273 Cooper, Forrest 336, 342 Cooper, Nikki 263 Cooper, Sherril 268 Corbel, Randy 282 Corder, Bob 300 Corder, Mark 300 Cordill, Randy 287 Cordonier, Jim 292 Corlis, Sandi 273 Cornell, Sandra 258 Cornett, Sandy 258 Corsom, Darrel 338 Corson, Steve 299 Corson, Susan 264, 341 Cosgrove, Carol 315 Costa, Cheryl 271 Cott, Dan 283 Cotter, John 293 Coughenour, Jim 286 Coughlin, Bill 332 Cour, Carole 345 Course, George 334 Cowan, Mary Lou 261 Cowden, Robert 297 Cowden, Trisha 270, 330, 345 Cox, Nancy 257 Coyle, John 279, 328 Coyner, Robin 265, 343 Crable, Bill 290 Craig, James 300 Craig, Kyle 293, 304, 314 Craig, Steve 276, 349 Cram, Charlie 283 Crandall, Doug 280 Crane, Carol 270, 345 Crane, Jerry 334 Cranston, Stephen 274 Craven, Annie 271, 345 Crawford, Candy 262 Creary, Ron 314, 291 Creason, Layne 295 Creitz, Roxanna 339 Cressman, Arthur 290 Crilly, Patrick 282 Cromwell, Marsha 308 Crosier, Jeff 294 Crouthamel, Kevin 349 Crow, Bob 285 Crum, Bob 297 Crumpacker, Nancy 329 Grumpier, J. Dawson 276 Cukjati, John 285 Culham, Phyllis 325 Culler, Gary 294 Cunningham, Carolyn 264, 327, 336 Cunningham, Fred 276 Cummins, Gorki 315 Cupp, Elizabeth 267 Curless, Cay 269, 339 Curry, Charles C. 290 Curry, Charles L. 274 Curry, Chuck 282 Curry, Scott 293 Cushing, Ann 273, 308 Cushing, Steve 288 Cutler, Karen 271, 309 D Dadbhawala, Kirit 341 Daggett, Brent 293 Dahl, Grant 280 Dahl, Mary 268 Dalbom, Tim 290 DaIlam, Jo 271 Dalton, Bob 286 Dalton, Martha 271, 309 Daly, Bob 274 Daly, Rick 352, 355 Dalziel, G. Ted 354 Damond, Alex 351 Daniels, Bill 286 Dannenberg, Dan 352 Darnell, Mrs. G. D. 261 Darrah, Bo 286 Dauphin, Bruce 352 Davenport, Gail 308 Davenport, Gary 284 Davidow, Ronald 334 Davidson, Kathleen 259 Davidson, Ray 349 Davies, Laurie 258 Davis, Clare 267, 345 Davis, Dee 265 Davis, Dee Dee 272, 314, 344 Davis, Dorothy 265 Davis, Gary 274 Davis, Guy 290, 304, 314 Davis, James 298 Davis, Jeff A. 290 Davis, Jeff W. 287 Davis, Jim 286 Davis, Jim E. 284, 293, 314 Davis, Linda 309 Davis, Meg 265 Davis, Michael 275 Davis, Pat 293, 340 Davis, Patrik 283 Davis, Paul 277 Davis, P. J. 352 Davis, Rick 277 Davis, Roger 292 Davis, Selina 336 Dawson, Kathy 259 Dawson, Richard 287 Day, James 290 Dean, Greg 277 Deason, Marty 315 DeBaun, Bill 296 DeBonde, Walt 352 DeBonis, Carol 322 Decker, Ron 276 Deetjen, Barbara 260 Deffenbaugh, Diane 316 Degginger, Dennis 334 Delano, Kenneth 353 Delozier, Dennis 29 6 Delp, Kathy 259, 316 Delsemme, Doug 306 DeMoss, Debra 339 Dempsey, Michael 289 Denney, John 327 Dennis, Chuck 295 Dennis, Steve 322 Dent, Susie 336 Denton, Mike 285 Derrington, Kenneth Lee 296 Deschner, Bill 282 DeTar, David 286 Detter, Robert 276 Deuben, Bob 295 Detach, Lawrence 275 Deutsch, Dian 259, 316 Dexter, Stephen 300, 352, 355 Dial, Mary Kaye 263 DiBiase, Thomas 351 Dickens, Sue 268 Dickensheets, Dave 297, 320, 355 Dickerson, Gary 293 Dickerson, Steve 297 Dickerson, Michael 277 Dickey, Eula 296 Dickinson, Jim 288 Dickson, Bruce 294 Dickson, Cindy 314 Diehl, Nancy 263 Diehl, Susan 258, 316 Dietrich, Peggy 341 Dietz, Denis 293 Dietz, Donna 268 DiGiovanni, Pete 288 Dillehay, Gale 335 Dillon, John 286 Dilworth, Nita 268 Dinkel, Rick 351 Ditchfield, Claire 256 Diven, Dianne 268 Diver, Doris 316 Dixon, Judy 270 Dixon, Ron 334 Dockery, Caryne 315 Dodge, Marti 316 Dolecheck, Frank 313, 333 Doll, Jane 257 Dolly, Freshman 317 Dominguez, Armando 351 Domoney, Brent 284 Domrese, Mary 344 Donahue, Larry 274 Donaldson, Jane 271 Dorsey, Tim 296 Dotson, Bob 282, 324, 332 Doudna, Pres 322 Douglass, Bobby 279 Douville, Douglas 286 Dow, Ginny 261 Dowell, Mary 344 Dowland, Suzie 265 Downing, Cheryl 265 Doyle, Michael 286 Drake, Linda 336 Drebelbis, James 300, 332, 333 Dreher, Ann 260 Dreier, Beverly 264 Dreiling, Stephen 349 Dresnick, Janice 315 Drezins, Herbert 358 Driscoll, Dennis 296 Drury, Carolyn 336 Drury, J. W. 341 DuBois, Lyn 258, 311 Dufek, Linda 258 Duhaiby, Zu Zu 304 Dumler, Earle 276 Dumler, Steve 276 Dunagin, Chuck 287 Donavan, Irene 258, 316 Dunaway, Karen 272, 314, 344 Dunbar, Philip 352, 355 Duncan, Gary 295 Duncan, Michael 332, 333 Dunlap, Ann 257 Dunn, Franklin 349 Dunn, Fred 285 Dunnick, Joanne 337 Durand, Jo 268, 308, 309 Durham, Lynne 315 Durr, Gregory 286 Durrett, Rick 286 Dustman, Tony 286 Dutt, Pamela 265 Dwyer, David 299 Dwyer, Layne 267, 354 Dysart, David 276 399 E Farley, Chip 280 Fryer, Steven 354 Gossett, Shirley 262, 314 Farley, Judy 258 Funk, Bob 333 Gottschall, Maryanne 334 Eagon, Jim 349 Farley, Michael 298 Furney, Woody 297 Gould, Robert 334 Eakins, Darwin 289 Farren, Gregory 351 Grable, Mel 271 Earp, Cindy 261 Farrington, Don 283 Grogan, Martin 354 Eastwood, Garry 280 Faust, Judy 251, 264 Graglia, Richard 284 Eaton, Christine 316 Fawcett, Deena 267 G Graham, Ann 258 Eaton, Dean 300 Feagan, Lonnie 276 Graham, Mike 283 Ebaugh, Camille 262 Feaster, Philip 283 Gaffney, Terrance 292 Graham, Richard 353 Eberline, Charles 335 Feldman, Deanna 339 Gahnstrom, Bill 325 Graham, Stanley 348 Eckert, Heidrun 264 Fencyk, Larry 290 Gaither, William 354 Graheck, Ted 290, 351 Eckhoff, Mary Jane 270 Fenner, Gary 291 Gallaher, Ann 266, 320 Grand, Michael 275 Eckles, Jeff 283 Ferguson, Darice 264, 315 Galles, Rick 293 Grant, Capper 297 Eddins, Dianne 270, 344 Ferguson, Judy 268 Gallup, Nancy 270 Grant, Lindy 345 Edelen, Dai 266 Ferree, Larry 293 Gambrell, Candy 305 Gravitt, Mike 352 Edell, Mickey 266 Ferree, Mary Ann 344 Gammell, Denyce 264 Gravitt, Patrick 286 Edgar, Jane 344 Ferrell, Jo Anne 336 Ganoung, David 332, 333 Gray, Beverly 308, 337 Edgar, Tons 279, 331, 332 Few, Linda 266 Gans, Stephen 287 Gray, Bill 288 Edgington, David 292 Fewin, Kathy 346 Garbo, Mrs. Sam 339 Gray, Janice 261, 315, 336 Ediger, Jaye 293 Fiebach, Jane 258, 316 Garbo, Sam 338 Gray, Paul 335 Edman, George 326 Fields, George C. 351 Gardiner, Ted 283 Graybill, Bill 289 Edmonds, Mark 288 Fields, Peggy 315 Gardner, Kathie 267, 343 Grayson, Pat 270 Edmonds, Mary Kay 263, 308, 354 Filby, Linda 316 Fiman, Bruce 275 Gardner, Pans 272 Garlick, Stan 282, 332 Green, Don 334 Green, John 286, 318 Edmunds, Pete 289 Finch, Connie 316 Garreh, Gary 295 Green, Thomas 353 Edwards, Andy 279 Fincham, Claudia 267 Garrett, Robert 333 Greenamyde, David 291 Edwards, Barbara 272 Fincham, Gary 338 Gartin, Jerry 297 Greenbaum, Harold 275 Edwards, Gail 327 Finger, Keith 297 Garvey, John 283, 320, 321, Greenock, Elaine 309 Edwards, Gloria 327 Finkenbinder, David 294 328 Greer, Terry 294 Edwards, R. A. 340 Finlay, Joan 316 Gast, Beth 263, 337 Greever, Lee 284 Edwards, John 295 Finlayson, Julie 336 Gast, David 293 Gregg, Gary 331 Egbert, Barry 283 Finney, Fran 316 Gast, Jim 288 Gregg, Larry 325 Ege, William 299 Fischer, Bill 284, 349 Gastelaars, Marja 268, 341 Gribben, Gary 283, 328 Eggert, Bruce 283 Fischer, Susan 269 Gates, Jan 344 Griesel, Roxanne 262 Eichhorn, Cilia 266 Fisher, Andrew 276 Gaughan, Dave 276 Griffee, Twila 262 Einsel, Nancy 345 Fisher, Charles 294 Gaulding, Scott 343 Griffen, Gale 269 Eisele, Sandy 263 Fisher, Dale 289 Gaynor, Charles 284 Griffey, Janie 270, 309 Eisfelder, Bart 280 Fisher, Jim 293 Gazzaneo, Leoncio 334 Griffith, Marsha 267, 309 Eklund, Bruce 276 Fisher, Julie 269 Gabbart, Joanne 316 Griffith, Michael 336, 342 Eliopoulos, Nicholas 274 Fisher, Mary 315 Geer, John 352 Grigg, Stan 284 Elkins, Robert 287 Fisher, Norm 277 Geiger, Mike 279, 351 Grissel, Michael 291 Elledge, Karen Sue 257 Fisher, Susan 345 Geissal, John 293 Grissom, Mark 295 Eller, James 332, 333, 335 Fiske, Wayne 298 Geitz, James 281 Grist, Joyce 261 Ellet, Van 287 Fitts, Sherry 271 Gencur, James 290 Groff, Bruce 352, 355 Elliott, Barb 269 Fitzgerald, Terrance 340 Gerhards, Bill 351 Grogan, Martin 335 Elliott, Carole 316 Fixlev, Mark 338 Lerner, Robert 295 Grojean, Joe 282 Elliott, Dick 296 Fix, Joe 291 Getter, Steve 349 Croke, Albert 351 Elliott, George 288 Flaton, Pam 263, 343 Getto, Paul 274 Groner, Dick 327 Elliott, Linda 341 Flint, David 274 Ghafarizadeh, F. 343 Grote, Dick 277 Elliott, Robert 296 Flint, Nancy 257 Gibbons, John 296 Grothusen, Marsha 265 Elliott, Roger 334 Floersch, Bob 279 Gibbons, Paula 258, 358 Grove, Mary 270 Ellis, Brad 297 Flora, Bill 274 Gibbs, Beverly 267, 343 Groves, Debby 268 Ellis, Ed 290, 335 Flora, David 274 Gibbs, Bill 285, 313 Gruber, Gregory 280 Ellis, Linda 315 Florez, James P. 333, 335 Gibbs, Don 285 Gruen, Mrs. T. Lee 339 Ellison, Sid 289 Flory, Dona 266 Gibbs, Steve 293 Gruen, T. Lee 338 Elmquist, Larry 352 Foard, Tammy 267 Gibson, Doug 282 Grutzmacher, Margo 268 Eisen, Marty 267, 343 Flomnsbee, 334 Gibson, James 333 Grutzmacher, Marsha 268 Elvin, Barry 276 Fontron, Beth 260, 316 Gibson, Cathy 259 Guenther, Jeffrey 297 Emerick, Joanne 269, 330 Foote, Max 294 Giele, Katherine 318 Guest, Kenneth 295, 349 Emerson, Martha 272, 308 Ford, Patricia 271 Giffin, Donna 268 Guilfoyle, Bill 351 Emerson, Robert 338 Forssberg, Roy 334 Gilna, Linda 330 Guinn, Janet 273, 315, 345 Emott, Bill 331 Forsyth, Paula 259 Gilbert, Ed 285 Gurley, Carol 261 Engel, Gary 334 Forsythe, Howard 295 Gilbert, Rick 300 Gurtler, Linda 343 England, Cheri 265 Fortenberry, Peggy 268 Gilbert, Susy 309 Gustafson, Bob 282 Erhart, Cynthia 267 Fortier, Bob 295 Gile, Carolyn 264 Gustafson, Francis 281 Ensminger, Richard 280 Fortier, Dick 295 Giles, Pat 291 Gutting, Greg 326, 352 Entriken, Robert 335 Fosmire, Harold 290 Gilham, Steve 353 Guyon, Scott 289 Epstein, Bob 327 Foss, Jane 260 Gilhousen, Jim 284 Gwaltney, Herb 285 Erickson, Barb 263 Foster, Chuck 279 Gilkerson, Linda 309 Erickson, Dr. Carlton 338 Foster, Howard 348, 355 Gill, Linda 270, 345 Ericson, Judie 267, 320, 354 Foster, Robert 349 Gill, Sans 296 Erni, Dan 284 Foster, Walter 353 Gill, Terry 279 H Ertman, Robert 352 Fothergill, Jane 272 Gille, Barbara 316 Ervin, Carmen, 262, 346 Fotopulos, Thomas 289 Gillespie. Butch 280 Haas, Carl 294 Erwin, Robert 353 Fotovich, Stephen 353 Gillie, John 291, 351 Haas, Major Donald 350 Esler, James 281 Fowler, Martha 316 Gilliland, Tins 294 Haas, Robert 274, 326 Estes, Phil 299 Fox, William 293 Gilliland, 266, 344 Habib, Azhar 342 Etherington, Judy 354 Foy, John 349 Gilpin, Joan 272, 312, 337, Habluetzel, Gail 279 Evans, Andrea 273 Frame, Valerie 339 345 Hacker, Doug 276 Evans, Bill 288 Frank, Gaylord 290 Gist, Barbara 267 Hafeez, Alson 342 Evans, Carol 270 Frankie, Lynn 262 Givens, Carolyn 264 Hagar, C. B. 313, 332 Evans, Dale 283 Franklin, Terry 352 Givens, Robert 289 Hageman, Mike 284 Evans, David 334 Franklyn, Dana 269 Gleason, Thomas 292 Hageman, Nancy 272 Evans, Earl 281 Franks, Harriet 260 Glenn, Larry 276 Hagerman, Raymond 277 Evans, Jean 251. 268, 316 Franz, Julie 270 Glenn, Sandee 272 Haggans, Mike 277 Evans, Mary Madge 316 Fraser, Janet 265 Glick, Randy 296 Haggart, Ted 305. 331 Evans, Steve 288 Frazier, Matt 339 Chessman, John 290 Haggart, Tricia 260 Everett, Harlan 293 Frazier, Richard 332. 333 Glover, Kerry 263 Hake, Jim 343 Everly, Ronald 334 Fredenberg, John 295 Glover, Molly 260 Haldeman, Francie 273 Evers, Ann 337 Fredman, Merrick 334 Goad, Emery 322 Hales, Lee 293 Evers, Don 297 Freeland, Mike 295 Coates, Ron 286 Haley, Janet 262 Evers, Jack 334 Freeman, Dave 289 Gochnauer, Jane 259 Haley, Janis 263 Ewing, Linda 267, 309 Freeman, Emily 265 Godfrey, Joe 322, 340 Hall, Artie 338 Exstrum, Terry 349 Freeman, Rick 297 Godfrey, Virginia 316 Hall, Dave 331 Freet, James 298 Godwin, Charlene 316 Hall, Francie 257, 343 French, Linda 269 Goebel, K. Bruce 332, 334 Hall, James 285 French, Mike 349 Goering, Dan 300 Hall, Rich 274, 349 F French, Pat 270 Goering, Joe 283 Hall, Steve 289 French, Paula 257 Goering, Joyce 258 Hall, Stewart 300 Fabian, Beckie 268 Freshwater, Kim 258 Goering, Pat 266, 330 Hallock, Laurie 263, 309 Faddis, Terry 332, 333 Frey. 358 Gomer, Gary 280 Hallquist, Jeff 296 Fagan, Larry 300 Freybe, Harold 290, 349 Good, Jim 294 Hally, Jerry 352 Fager, Duane 290, 335, 351 Frick, Karen 259 Good, Mike 294 Halstead, Shelley 336 Fager, Jane 263 Friedson, Herb 341 Goodfellow, Bev 261 Halverson, Judy 309 Faiman, Mrs. Morris 339 Friermuth, Gail 344 Goodwin, Lynn 265, 309 Hames, Bruce 349 Falk, Chad 351 Fries, Allan 287 Goodyear, Lynda 273 Hamilton, Annie 267 Falkner, James 349 Friesen, Janet 266 Gorden, Frank 313 Hamilton, Bill 324 Falley, Michael 280 Friesen, Steve 307 Gordon, Edward 286, 332 Hamilton, Bill 274 Falley, Mike 339 Friesen, Vivian 262 Gordon, Gay 260, 305, 345 Hamlett, James 276 Fallin, Joseph 294 Fritz, James 287 Gordon, Jennifer 272 Hamm, Carol 262, 343 Falzer, Paul 325 Frizell, Judy 271 Gorrell, Betty 256 Hammam, Mona 339 Fan, Bunsen 343 Fromme, Lance 332 Gorsuch, Pam 257, 316 Hammerli, Cheryl 270 Fankhauser, Pam 257, 316 Frost, Larry 288 Gosney, Sara 262, 343 Hancock, Sebonia 290 Farber, Sterling 287 Fuetel, Werner 294 Goss, Hal 282 Hand, Cheryl 264 Fare, Fred 353 Fry, Claudia 344 Gossett, James 332 Handley, Judy 258 Farewell, Marsha 272 Frye, Tom 300 Gossett, Lou 267 Handy, Jeanie 267 400 o tii ogeein : C atetitF ofjkinkticy. ,cicyci ., nna.c`Pras, ' Si.t. - (S-401_14,tr ftir .01.141rL, , Antuef..,sa, c,;to an$ Al !soar ritnacrtng% It Tr,. isizarqtietzt lini ratty,1: -,itzkIsmskatOsne pcs: 110 frolr_stCe e Talse hA Iffitprsr4ty, of. 0:Tress,; s ' ,?re rt. Olektbat,l ' apr,-P ahld iet ,:stialtatgnste c ' icktY Pei?) C nv ltn ' tr liegiferz Cianifiat. .s:Cro t.ou- FratE9n Any:: s 4:gca3oR liyi cgs _ go4et,CF 4 4%-, at le ' r ,i31- 45i op.eeln,.., it of AmTs ' i.c..- eicycl seea IcSIii,P11_14.`gb Chi4r,k, j:Intlretsa - pi .7vatrilacrs:nel: Mtirqtietzt lin ratty. .n a irti linctict ' Ari tfitle a; kAyGkv:9.1.,e tsQ frots ' tG, Wu Ursiv t 3(.. gcz:=e.:Dtk, C:che rt. lreta-Crad.s.Cligit. rty z IqektItat,l ' a iter ,tlakithqpl .te vef tirii Al_cktYCOr (rx intatt :Cto ,,u- qlielrit159n rer icw, .1-bit.j.. ' eat fae .taswit:ny. Ling Later al) s gooak tf-,44ve- 4 ' oTet,rP3A.611..., ogte0. t it nee C,b1-peatd.);)q:tof:111nO ic,L, e ,Sri,p. nnick-sPr_Osi ' Stk.. tar .0112.1., - 3:intarefsa, ;tot Nittrceiette firstty11. ' ham ' pc0 1.2) ' 12 hi Cfp. DO (he Otlekliatz,i ' afer hi dirt ollaitIctgti .toe vefting kgetIcy--3 rriike P6 Czi ' r ne,. tedifea , u s :11r.-. Hti gra t .m tic eafr.tif.nglaterf.a1,1.s A o lc - la f-.:..Aqtre- _ o4etzt. rogeeirk . ats-Ines? ' egacePr,....0 si`Si.k. Ch.1.4r.z. - cit.titiftc,,toitan,)t At I It. Marqtiette -n y.t.s. M.s..gasOsne 56-CiAyGKS14,,,E;r ' ' frolfzrs ::-D ctWiond ,-ost Wu Ursitr4ty, c154, gcz: ' Presse DOT Cche Olektitthier,P (Wild lilt ctgh ' iktY tn .tr egiferz ra ' -e14, icvt- agptelBlinglial,_erlaLls d:go iioak . 1 2 abitS342 41.1141241.,..41c0.41,0 411.1PAIW CAMERA STUDIES 19th. Street Massachusetts Streets go East one mile to Harper. From corner of 19th. and Street, turn to the right and go about 1 4th. a Orval mile to Orval Hixonos Camera Room on the right Nixon ' Ft hand side of the road. 23r Street No. 10 Highway ERA ROOM AT RESIDENCE VI 3-9358 402 Haney, James 349 Haney, Jim 290 Hanis, William 336, 342 Hanna, Don 297 Hanna, Jennifer 270 Hanna, Patrick 338 Hanna, Tom 320 Hansen, Barb 266, 309 Hansen, Jerri 316 Hansen, Mrs. Ronald 339 Hanson, Rick 285 Hanson, Ron 282 Hantla, Mark 280 Hanz, David 332, 333 Haralick, Robert 343 Harden, Ken 293 Hardesty, Will 322 Hardie, William 341 Hardin, Cindy 272, 308, 345 Hardin, Nancy 259 Harding, Benton 300 Hardy, Jane 328 Hardy, Jean 330 Hare, Larry 338 Hargreaves, Larry 297 Harmon, Linda 262 Harmony, Kent 274 Ilarms, Pat 316 Harp, Allen 351 Harp, Richard 331 Harper, Matt 277 Harper, Terry 282 Harre, Richard 281 Harrell, Joyce 334 Harrington, Bob 291 Harrington, Daniel 354, 355 Harrington, Linda 266 Harrington, Rick 331 Harris, Andy 283 Harris, Cindy 266 Harris, Bekki 258 Harris, Bill 287 Harris, Ginny 268 Harris, Kay 266, 309 Harris, Liz 268, 345 Harris, Richard 283 Harris, Robert 287 Harris, Susan 258 Harris, Vicki 316 Harrison, Benjamin 290, 324 Harrison, Charles 283 Harrop, G. T. 279 Harrop, Robert 332 Harrow, James 288 Harsh, Claudia 317 Hartley, Clara 261, 336 Hartman, Bob 291, 327 Hartman, Herbert 279, 354 Hartman, Van Markwell 294 Hartnett, R. Bruce 334 Harvey, Terry 290 Hasse, John 340 Hasham, Aky 341 Hatch, Ruth 262, 320, 325 Hatfield, Jim 295 Hatfield, Kenneth 350 Hathaway, Jeanne 261 Hatton, Betty 266 Haub, Kent 290 Ilaught, Steve 336, 342 Hausman, Gretchen 337 Haut, Gloria 264 Hawkins, John 351 Hawley, Jeanne 260 Hawley, Joel 296 Haydon, Peg 265, 309 Hayes, Jim 282 Hayes, Karin 337 Hayes, Susan 268 Hayman, Susan 256 Haynes, Stephen 297 Hays, Carol 265 Hays, Charles 284 Hays, Chris 279 Heafley, Sherri 258, 327 Heath, Alison 272 Heath, Beverly 339 Heble, Arun 328, 341 Hecke, Vicki 315 Hedlund, Debbie 325 Hedman, Daniel 349 Hedrich, Mrs. Loren 339 Hedtke, Steve 288 Heffley, Rod 327 Heffley, Stan 327 Heeke, Vicki 346 Heidinger, Fred 282 Held, Pam 321 Heim, Jim 338 Hein, Michael 279 Heinz, Curt 287, 304, 305, 332 Heitz, Kathie 262 Heiser, Doug 338 Held, Pam 270 Helling, Tom 288 Hemphill, Funky 272, 344 Hend, Hal 284 Hendershot, Dennis 338 Hendrickson, John 282 Henmi, Pat 316 Hennessy, Mike 291 Henry, Alice 270 Henry, Tim 295 Hentsch, Canna 265 Herold, Becky 258 Harrick, Nancy 258, 316 Herring, Allin 352 Herrington, Jim 329 Herschman, Hank 334 Hershey, Patrick 284 Hertach, Jerry 291 Hertzler, Bill 277 Hess, Bill 286 Hess, James 297, 352 Hetherington, Janet 260 Hetherington, Paul 299 Hetlinger, John 295 Heuduck, Monty 337 Hewins, Chuck 292 Hewitt, Thomas 350 Hewlett, James 332 Hiatt, David 274 Hiatt, Keith 297 Hibbard, Candy 345 Hickerson, Ken 322 Hickey, Thomas 293 Hickman, Harriet 264 Hickman, Mike 297 Hicks, Bill 286 Hicks, David 292 Hidaka, David 280 Hildebrand, Sharon 316 Hiebsch, Thomas 283 Higdon, Ermon 296 Higdon, Phil 277, 325 Higgins, Walter 312 Hildyard, Vic 293 Hill, Dave 300 Hill, David 295 Hill, Dennis 294 Hill, John 289 Hill, Kathy 256, 316 Hill, Roger 292, 351 Hill, Steve 291 Hilteary, Rick 298, 352 Hiller, Patti 264 Hills, Donna 344 Hills , Missy 266 Hilyard, Gary 338 Hindmarch, Don 284 Hinman, Don 297, 320 Hines, Barbara 266 Hines, Gary 332, 333 Hinkhouse, Stephen 296 Hinsch, Linda 256, 316 Hinshaw, Carol 260 Hinshaw, Wally 287, 340 Hitchcock, Tom 286 Elites, Linda 271, 344 Hitt, Alan 279, 331 Hitt, Nancy 336 Hladky, Harold 281 Hobson, Mona 261, 308 Hocking, Bruce 280 Hodge, Barbara 272 Hodge, Calvin 333 Hodges, Connie 336 Hodges, Randy 334 Hodges, Winston 338 Hodges, Mrs. Winston 339 Hodle, Robert 290 Hoener, Richard 287 Hof, David 300 Hoffman, Eric 338 Hoffman, Rollie 292 Hogan, Sherry 262 Hoganson, Jim 287 Hogle, Bruce 354 Holden, Judy 337 Holder, J. Michael 282 Holderman, Richard 349 Hollenbeck, Bernard 349 Holliday, Roy 286 Hollingsworth, Harvey 338 Hollingsworth, Mrs. Harvey 339 Hollis, Steve 284 Holm, Dwight 279 Holm, Steve 282 Holman, Barbara 315 Holman, Mary 259, 316 Holmer, Martin 331 Holmes, Alexander 296 Holmes, Donna Marie 258 Holmes, Rich 300 Holmes, Richard 332, 337 Holmes, Robert 333 Holston, Galen 287 Holt, Dave 277, 314 Holwerda, Violette 295 Honig, Kathy 272, 354 Hoople, Douglas 353 Hoover, Carol 260 Hopmann, Janet 316 Hoppe, John 283, 318, 332 Horan, Mike 274 Hord, Glenda 251, 266, 330, 343 Hornbaker, Tom 284 Homer, Mike 288 Hornsby, Rick 276 Horst, Ken 338 Horst, Mrs. Ken 339 Horton, Beverly 268 Horton, Francie 316 Horton, Kathie 268 Horton, Mary 316 Horwitz, Lynne 316 Hosein, Everold 279 Hostetler, Quin 285 Hotchkiss, Sandy 339 Hoagland, David 334 Homy, Michael 297 House, Dennis 288 House, Jacquelyn 269 House, Richard 349 Houseworth, Madilyn 270 Houtman, Cindy 316 Hover, Nancy 265, 329 Hoverson, John 295, 349 Howard, David 296 Howard, Terry 300 Howe, Mrs. Rae 274 Howell, Judy 345 Hower, Jim 276 Howse, Karen 266, 354 Hoy, Nedra 263 Hoyt, Sandy 260 Hubbard, Jim 306 Hubbard, Susan 273 Hubbell, Vance 291 Hudson, Ban 294 Hudspeth, Bob 276 Hueben, Dave 277 Huebner, Jan 262 Huerter, Chuck 341 403 Huey, John 280, 352 Huff, Patty 273 Huffman, Larry 352 Huggins, Donald 300, 352, 355 Huggins, Jim 297 Hughes, Barbara 309 Hughes, J. D. 280, 349 Hughes, Daryl 333 Hughes, Linda 259 Hughes, Valerie 269 Hull, Jack 274, 334 Hummer, Frank 276, 321 Humphreys, Karen 260, 308 Hundley, Peggy 316 Hunt, Sandy 309 Hunter, Don 297 Hunter, Donald G. 322 Huntington, Jim 282 Huntress, Charles 292 Hurt, Dale 282 Hurt, Mike 282, 312, 335 Hurtt, Mike 286 Hustein, Joseph 340 Huttie, Leslee 268 Hutton, John 297 Hutton, Kathy 346 Hutton, Pennie 261 Hybarger, Linda 259 Hyde, Tom 288 Hyndman, Virginia 266 Hyten, Shannon 316 Hyter, Rick 287, 340 Hvale, Dick 277 Immenschuh, Linda 337 Ingalls, David 287, 340 Ingram, Jack 284 Inman, Boyd 280 Ireland, Eileen 263, 345, 354 Irmen, Doug 291, 314 Isley, Douglas 332, 353 Isom, Michael 352 Israili, Zafar 328, 341 J Jaax, Jerry 295 Jaax, John 295 Jackson, D. William 296 Jackson, George 279 Jackson, Max 279 Jackson, Randy 285 Jackson, Roger 279 Jackson, Virgil 336, 342 Jacobs, Dennis 297, 334 Jacobs, Randy 332 Jacobs, Tim 281 Jacoby, Bob 276 Jaehnig, Milt 343 Jahn, Donna 260, 316 James, John 289 fannetta, Thomas 333 Jarrell, Judy 259, 316 Jarvis, Mark 284 Javellana, Diana 339 jeans, David 352 Jenkins, Frank 296, 351 Jenkins, Robert 306 Jenks, Kathy 3 45 Jenks, Mary Beth 308 Jenneweir, Leslie 259 Jydstrup, Doug 325 Jennings, Anne 251, 267 Jennings, Drue 286 Jennings, Gwynn 251, 263, 332 Jensen, Bob 292 Jensen, Elizabeth 266 Jensen, Richard 353 Jerner, Lynn 261 Jeserich, Jerry 282 Jeserich, Patty 266 Jeter, Chris 283 Jeter, Joe 286 Jeter, William 286 Jewett, Glenn 274 Jobson, Vernon 285 Johannsen, Nancy 264 Johns, Steve 277 Johnsmeyer, JoAnne 268, 345 Johnson, Arthur 286 Johnson, Bill 297 Johnson, Bud 334 Johnson, Cathy 258 Johnson, Dan 293 Johnson, Debby 271 Johnson, Dianne 273, 329 Johnson, Dolph 305 Johnson, E. W. III 288 Johnson, G. L. 284 Johnson, Jay 338 Johnson, Jill 271 Johnson, Kay 336 Johnson, Keith 276, 290 Johnson, Lairy 353 Johnson, Larry 296 Johnson, Larry S. 292 Johnson, Lauren 324 Johnson, Lee 277 Johnson, Leland 332, 333 Johnson, Lynn 263 Johnson, Mike 296 Johnson, Mrs. Kenneth 282 Johnson, Sandy 272 Johnston, Ann 272, 343 Johnston, Judy 258 Johnston, Terry 334 Jones, Archie 277 Jones, Gary 274 Jones, Gordon 326 Jones, John 285 Jones, Loretta 261 Jones, Marcia 316 Jones, Martha 263 Jones, Nancy 261 Jones, Pam 316 Jones, Paul Allan 292 Jones, Rick 276 Jones, Rita 315 Jones, Sandy 287 Jones, Sarabeth 265 Jones, Terry 274 Jones, Thomas 286 Jones, Tobi 265 Jones, William 287 Jones, Winton 338 Jordan, Anne 316 Jordan, Matt 296 Jordan, Sam 297 Jorgensen, James 297 Jorgensen, John 297 Jorgensen, Mark 274 Jorgensen, Paul 274 Jose, Susan 273 Joseph, Alan 277 Jouvenat, Suzanne 336 Joyce, Frank 304 Joyce, Heather 258 Joyce, Steve 283 Jungbluth, Terry 316 K Kabra, Pokar 328 Kaiser, Ann 263 Kaiser, Nancy 257 Kalbfleisch, Gregg 280 Kamdar, Bharat 328 Kampschroeder, Halley 321 Kampschroeder, Vici 268 Kane, Ann 270, 345 Kane, Eric 293 Kapp, Bob 290 Kapp, Nancy 262 Kartsonis, John 333 Kasper, Dan 291 Kasper, Susan 308, 354 Kasten, George 295 Kastner, Betty 272 Kathol, Roger 283 Kauffman, Kay 260 Kaufman, Barry 336, 342 Kautz, Frederick 338 Kavina, Lynne 266 Kay, David 335 Keller, Richard 289 Keen, Jim 283 Keen, John 283 Keetzmeier, Diane 337 Keith, James 349 Keith, Marilyn 316 Keller, Chuck 294 Keller, Douglas 279 Keller, Jim 300 Keller, Jon 293 Keller, Kathy 339 Keller, Marsha 267 Kelley, J. D. 298 Kelley, John 286 Keller, Sharyl Lee 262, 343 Kellogg, Ad 288 Kelly, Carl 306 Kelly, Larry 296 Kemmerling, Karen 266 Kennish, James 353 Keplinger, Nancy 266 Kern, James 282 Kern, Mrs. Hoyt 339 Kerwin, Mary Jeannine 337 Keswick, Mary 267 Khadavi, Kambiz 275 Khilnani, Narendra 328, 341 Kilgore, Ronald 354 Killough, William 284, 349 Kilroy, Jack 296 Kikel, David 349 Kimble, Gerald 353 Kimbrough, Lydia 258 Kimzey, Ron 352 Kinerk, Jim 285 King, Gregory 351 King, Joseph 277 King, Jama 345 King, Judy 267, 343 King, Thomas 335 Kinne, Robert 349 Kinney, Curt 297 Kinney, Gregg 327 Kinyon, Keith 297 Kipfer, Janet 260 Kipp, Jan 267 Kirit, Dadbhawala 328 Kirk, David 343, 354 Kirk, Jacki 268 Kirk, Mike 286, 304 Kirkpatrick, Mark 287 Kissel, Bill 300, 314 Kissell, Peter 288 Kissell, Spencer 288 Kitchen, Laura 267 Kittrell, Karen 258, 316 Klaric, Arlette 261 Klaver, Jake 294 Kleier, David 298 Kleinschmidt, Linda 308, 309, 343 Kline, Judy 265 Kline, Mike 288 Kline, Robbie 288 Klippsten, Darryl 284 Kloesel, Cheryl 318 Klopfenstein, Larry 290 Klumpp, Jim 325 Knabe, Mary 257 Knapheide, H. W. III 286 Knecht, Greg 286 Knapper, Prof. Arno 340 Knight, Linda 264, 315 Knight, Vincent 341 Knipp, Mary Lou 309 Knisley, Michael 297 Knop, Greg 286 Knowles, Terry 260 Knox, Bill 284 Knox, Charlie 289 Knox, Nancy 316 Knox, Sherry 262 Knox, William 349 Kohler, Ann 343 Koch, Vicki 273, 341 Koenig, John 329 Koett, Larry 338 Koett, Mrs. Larry 339 Kohl, Sally 270 Kolins, Karla 257 Kollmann, Carol 320 Kolman, Sue 268 Korsten, Gerald 285, 327 Kost, Jennifer 272, 345 Kowing, Ben 343 Kraft, Phillip 280 Kramer, Bobette 315 Kratochvil, Margaret 315 Krause, Gary 293 Krebs, Fred 305, 332 Krebs, Priscilla 329 Krehbiel, Carl 352 Krehbiel, Celia Ann 336 Kreider, Karen 343 Krell, Linda 266 Krepps, Sherry 315, 337 Kresge, Marsha 354 Kreutzer, Gayle 267, 310, 345 Kreuzberger, Cindy 257 Kroeker, Bob 293 Krogh, Linda 269, 345 Krstolic, Connie 339 Krug, Steve 349 Kuhn, Patty 271 Kuhn, Peggy 316 Kunce, James 354 Kunkel, Jodi 258 L LaBelle, Carolyn 269 Lacy, Julie 327 Lader, Norm 334 Ladewig, Mary Lane 267, 339 Lafferty, Michael 291 Lahore, Shehzad 334 Lake, Roger 349 Lal, Dr. Harbans 341 Lallier, Beth 343 Lambertson, Floy Ann 262 k.)% ' AIM stromt.,n, A p-- 4:- N z:, nty.....F5,-Ar ' -..%-24-r,s(L...9 L j 41,...---r- 0 A er -N71 .. t.--ir- (.,,-- I p 47%, ,-- , ' `.. SIL 0.....y ) 1 .. W 6, 1,..., ..) AEA 1 %4) IA . -. - ' ' ' ' , .., A i 1 IT ' , (At I (71 -.....-- let ,:smottti c . ' .. a ...- 1 : , _ .s. . Nilie - - - - - - 41 ' -1 , IbL, 404 Lamont, Marvin 333 Lancaster, John 298 Lancaster, Ray 293, 349 Landaker, Patricia 264 Lane, Brian 280 Lane, David 351 Lane, Jeannie 316 Laney, Dave 277 Lang, Barbara 263, 309 Lang, Bruce 297 Langley, John 280 Langston, David 280, 340 Langston, Susie 272, 330, 343 Langworthy, John 277 Lanning, Doris 270, 337 Lanning, Martha 270, 309 Lapple, Richard 343 Larson, Barb 263, 311 Larson, Craig 276 Larson, Jean 267 Larson, Judy 257 Larson, Karen 270, 329 Larson, Kirke 279 Larson, Mimi 268, 345 Lasley, Cheryl 270, 343 Lastelic, Robert 291 Latimer, Bob 296 Latimer, Mike 335 Laughlin, Jane 265, 345 Lavehead, Tames 295 Lavelle, John 349 Lavery, Alan 340 Lavin, Thomas 352, 355 Lawton, Chad 276 Layman, Lea 272 Layman, Leslie 258 Leamon, Richard 332, 333 Laery, John 277 LeBlond, Judy 266, 309 Lebo, Pam 265 LeClaire, Richard 290 Leckband, Susan 257, 316 LeCounte, Ken 352 L ' Ecuyer, Dean H. K. 312 Ledford, Kris 261 Lee, Bill 293 Lee, Christi 271 Lee, Jo 267, 330 Lee, JoAnn 269 Lee, John 322 Lee, Larry 297 Lee, Lonnie 286 Lee, Rick 281 Lee, Richard 343 Lee, Suzanne 264 Lee, Tom 312 Leech, Mrs. John 389 Leek, Andy 344 Leek, Carol 258, 316 Lees, Mary 257 Leeson, Marti 269, 329 Leffel, Rusty 280 Leffingwell, Randy 276 Lehman, Catherine 257 Leiber, Ken 351 Leiszler, George 284 Lemons, Linda 259, 329, 337 Lennard, Roxy 267, 309, 339 Lentz, Sara 268 Leo, 270, 339 Leonard, Daniel 336, 342 Leonard, Jodi 266, 329 Leonard, Tracy 288 Leone, Pat 266 Lerner, Arnold Lee 334 Lester, Candy 273 Levitt, Bruce 276 LeVota, Michael 284 Lewis, A. Michael 348 Lewis, James T. 348 Lewis, Lew 294 Lewis, Roger 276 Lewis, Valerie 273 Liddle, Bob 280, 340 Lieurance, John 353 Lightstone, Bill 300, 348 Lightstone, Steve 286 Lillard, Sallie 271, 318 Lindberg, Gerald 297 Linde, Barb 259 Lindquist, Jane 260 Lindsey, jack 332 Judy 265 Ling, Bobbie 327 Lingenfelter, Beverly 266 Liguish, Chris 354 Lindshield, James 354 Lindgren, Diane 262 Little, Roger 300 Littooy, Susan 271, 344 Litwin, Mike 276 Livesay, Linda 315 Livingston, Robert 295 Lockhart, Anne 264 Lodwick, Margery 257 Logan, Dave 311 Logan, Gail 263 Logan, Ronald 334 Lohoefener, Sue 256 Lohmann, George 352 Lohmann, Karl 352 Lohr, Melinda 263, 308 Lohse, Bob 284 London, Wayne 334 Lonergan, Douglas 286 Long, Charles 332, 333 Long, Jerald 276 Long, Judy 267 Long, Ken 279 Long, Randy 283, 311 Long, Sherry 345 Long, Susan 258 Longabach, Jay 284 Longenecker, James 277 Longhofer, Darold 284 Longley, Ginty 259, 316 Looney, Herb 334 Lorenz, John 306 Lorimer, Bill 280 Love, Paul 332, 333 Love, Sam 332, 333 Loveland, Janice 336 Lovett, Phil 284 Lovette, Steve 294 Low, Richard 277, 352 Lowe, Mrs. Edwin 266 Lowe, Jack 292 Lowe, Jon 281 Lowery, Gail 338 Lowry, Joyce 261 Loyd, Jeff 284 Loyd, Linda 316 Lucas, Deedra 266 Lucas, Jack 280 Lucas, Rick 280 Lucas, Steve 279 Ludemann, Bill 276 Lueders, Linda 261, 343 Luke, Roger 282 Lukeman, Jane 269 Lukens, Buz 287 Lukert, Steve 286 Lula, James 298 Lull, Murray 296 Loin, Dallas 354 Lundgren, Pam 256 Lundstrom, John 277 Lundy, Joe 297 Luscombe, Gary 292 Lutgen, Steve 291 Luthi, Rosemary 316 Lutz, Bob 286 Lutz, Laurel 262 Lutz, Toni 315 Lyle, Ron 354 Lynch, Dan 285 Lynch, Spike 297 Lynn, Bob 298 Lyon, Jessie 261 M MacArthur, Rick 297, 320 MacArthur, Tim 297 MacDonald, Heather 272, 312 MacFarland, Don 340 Machala, Barb 263 Machin, Pete 282 Machir, Margaret Ann 317 Machunze, Diane 271 Mackenzie, James 284 MacLean, Lair 259 MacQuiddy, Mary 344 Magathan, Ronald 338 Magerkurth, Fred 286 Mages, Carolyn 264 Magnuson, Norm 298 Maher, Linda 251, 266, 318, 345 Mahood, Sharon 325 Maichel, John 288 Malcolm, Douglas 287 Malik, Rab N. 342 Mall, Bob 349 Mallonee, Randy 352 Maloney, Michael 288, 311 Maloney, Mike 287, 340 Maloney, Nancy 261 Mamedov, Yusef 334 Manahan, Jack 289 Manka, Ron 312 Manley, Bob 295 Manley, Linda 268 Mann, Penny 273 Manning, Clifford 335 Mansur, Cheryl 256 March, Frederick 334 Marden, David 287 Marion, Geraldine 336 Mark, Mary 272, 345 Markley, Doug 293, 340 Marquis, William 353 Marriott, Ben 297 Marshall, Ann 338 Marshall, Hal 333, 353 Marshall, Janet 261 Marshall, Mary 317 Marshall, Sandy 273 Martin, Al 279, 303, 332 Martin, Dennis 292 Martin, Gail 317 Martin, John 287 Martin, Jon 295 Martin, Michael G. 297 Martin, Michael L. 298 Martin, Sally Ann 266, 309 Martin, Scott 294 Martinez, J. Fernando 334 Martyn, Leslie 261, 336 Maser, Thomas 332, 333, 335 Mason, Connie 259 Mason, Mrs. Cletus 271 Massey, Rebecca 256, 317 Massey, Warren 296 Mast, Alan 297 Matassarin, Linda 329 Matejka, Bob 295 Mathews, Vicki 251, 262, 330 Mathiasmeier, Ken 313 Matousek, Rita 317, 336 Matthews, Nancy 267, 308 Matthey, Pamela 258 Mauk, William 284 Maxwell, Doug 335 Maxwell, Jan 268 Maxwell, Garry 335 Maxwell, Larry 335 Maxwell, Patty 273 May, Carol 260 DAY OR NIGHT 405 May, Ernest 352 Michael, Mark 295 Mills, Mary 259 Morey, Bonnie 337 May, Gerry 276 Michaelis, Pat 285 Mills, Patty 269, 304, 305, Morey, Craig 296 May, Harold 296 Michalski, Nicholas 294 344 Morgan, Cindy 317 Mayes, Jim 297 Mick, Ronald 274, 327 Mills, Wayne 297 Morgan, Jim 282 Mayfield, Donna 263 Middleton, Nancy 263 Miner, Bob 307 Morgan, Mari 273 Medema, Sandy 263 Middleton, Randall 334 Miner, Darrell 339 Morgan, Nancy 268 Mee, Toni 256, 329 Mikesic, Dave 276 Miscevich, Bonnie 317 Morgan, Steve 282, 311, 342 Meek, John 282 Milam, Greg 280 Mitchell, Burt 280, 355 Morgan, Tom 288 Meek, Ron 295 Milam, Jan 338, 343 Mitchell, Donna 313, 334 Morris, Bill 349 Meeker, Douglas 277 Milberger, Terry 284 Mitchell, Jack 334 Morris, David 340 Meeker, Larry 331, 332 Miles, Paul 287 Mitchell, Sydney 315 Morris, Don 334 Mehta, Bhanuvadan 341 Miles, Penny 262 Mittelstadt, Martin 352 Morris, Eileen 258 Mehta, Gautam 328, 341 Milford, Sherry 272 Mittelstadt, William 352 Morris, Ginney 308 Meier, Russell 279 Milhollin, Steve 297 Mize, Barbara 260, 308, 317 Morris, Linda 269 Meisinger, Mark 287 Mill, Carol 329, 345 Mize, Kathy 272, 330 Morrison, Carolyn 257 Mellinger, Dick 351 Millard, Susan 336 Mock, Roger 277 Morrison, Diane 317 Mellinger, Elizabeth 313 Miller, Ann 269 Moderow, Rick 289 Morrison, Rich 283 Mellinger, Larry 284 Miller, Brenda 317 Moebus, Susan 264 Morrow, John 297 Mellinger, Sam 279 Miller, Carol 315 Moffat, Barb 315 Morrow, Roy 353 Melton, Mary 341 Miller, Charles W. 353 Moffat, Robert 274 Morton, Jay 352 Mendenhall, Janice 266 Miller, Charles D. 277 Mobs, Marnie 345 Morton, Linda 268 Mendenhall, Leroy 280 Miller, Cheryl 260 Mommsen, Bruce 293 Moser, Gary 354 Menke, Sue 308 Miller, Cindy 260 Monroe, Sherry 262, 339 Moss, Gloria 260, 317 Merchant, Jim 286, 332 Miller, Connie 259, 317, 329 Monsees, Jan 309 Motherse ad, Sue Beth 309 Meredith, Robert 276 Miller, Cush 298, 352 Monshower, Al 352 Mouden, Marilyn 262, 327 Meredith, Stephen 298, 352 Miller, Don 276 Montague, Marsha 339 Mourning, David 334 Meredith, Sue 261 Miller, Donna 339 Montague, Orville 338 Mourning, Dennis 290 Merkel, Lois Jeanne 262 Miller, Janet 336, 345 Montfoort, John 338 Mueller, Jeanie 270 Merrick, Janet 258, 317 Miller, Jim 285 Montgomery, Bob 284 Mueller, Kay 265, 328 Merrill, Harriett 317 Miller, Joy 266 Montgomery, Dick 285 Muirhead, Vincent 333 Merrill, Jim 307 Miller, Les 276 Montgomery, Gray 340 Mulally, Alan 284, 333 Merritt, Jan 317 Miller, Linda 317 Montgomery, Robert K. 280 Mulally, Laura 343 Merritt, T. A. 305 Miller, Marcia 273 Monthey, Steven 349 Mullen, Jim 280 Merriweather, Mark 294 Miller, Marita 272 Moon, Skip 295 Mullen, Marti 267, 304 Mertz, George 334 Miller, Mark 283 Moon, Steven 295 Mullen, Pat 317 Meschke, Marty 317 Miller, Mary Lynn 272 Moore, Delbert 333 Muller, Ken 298 Metcalf, Dick 349 Miller, Mike 349 Moore, Dennis 304 Mullikin, Donald 349 Metzger, J. D. 349 Miller, Nancy E. 259 Moore, Elaine 262, 308 Mullins, R. L. 288 Metzler, Kaye 338 Miller, Nancy S. 304, 309, Moore, George 326 Monday, Cheryl 344 Metzler, Linda 266 314 Moore, John C. 292 Mundis, Richard 276 Meyer, Barbara 273 Miller, Ronald 299 Moore, Lynn 260 Munkres, John 329 Meyer, Bud 306 Miller, Robert 338 Moore, Randy 352 Murdock, Edward 279 Meyer, Diane 260, 317 Miller, Thomas 287 Moore, Sandra 264 Murphy, Marilyn 265 Meyer, Hub 294 Milleret, George 294 Moore, Sue 263 Murphy, Patsi 259, 317 Meyer, Martin 306 Millican, Greg 343 Moore, Tom K. 274 Murphy, Patti 263 Meyers, Bill 295 Mills, Barbi 270 Moore, Tom W. 320 Murphy, Sheila 269, 345 Michael, Margaret 273 Mills, Bill 306 Moreland, Tom 288 Murray, Thomas 288 406 Murrow, Dave 335 Musick, Karl 352, 355 Myers, Connie 269 Myers, David 297, 349 Myers, Mickey 338 Nail, Mike 293, 340, 349 Nails, Pat 337 Naramore, John 282 Nash, Robert 280, 340 Naylor, Donna 261, 343 Owen, John 335 Owens, Bob 297 Oyler, Gary 295 Ozias, Marquis 258 Phillips, Meridee Lynn 259 Phillips, Mrs. Thomas 339 Phillips, Thomas 338 Pickett, David 349 Pieratt, Allen 324 Myers, Mrs. Mickey 339 Naz, Shafiq A. 342 Pierce, Mike 289 Myers, Robert 283 Nazaruk, Gregory 349 Pierce, Susan 345 Myers, Richard 297 Neill, Steve 284 P Pike, Carolyn 264 Myers, Roger 340 Nelson, Bev 269 Pine, Janie 267 Myers, Mrs. Russell 279 Nelson, Dana 317 Pack, Dave 300 Pinet, Nancy 308, 309 Nelson, James 294 Padden, Jeannie 263, 354 Pinne, Allan 291 Nelson, Jan 273 Paden, Phil 277 Pippin, Stan 279 Mc Nelson, Jerald 296 Nelson, John B. 279 Paddleford, Jane 267 Paegelow, Richard 286 Pirtle, Jeannie 270 Pisani, Michael James 353 McAdoo, Bob 303, 331 McAllister, Sandi 273 McAmis, Marilyn 262 McAnany, Ginger 269, 308, 341 McBride, Beth 358 McBride, Marilyn 341 McBride, Mary Anne 337 McCaa, Jeff 343 McCabe, Joan 322 McCabe, Kathy 266, 314 McCall, Patty 336 McCalla, Jim 332 McCammon, Cindy 266 McCarthy, Karen 272, 354, 355 McCarty, Susan 325 McClain, David B. 332, 340 McClain, David S. 294 McClanahan, Mike 284 McClatchey, Dennis 324 McClellan, Dave 274 McClow, Don 324 McCluggage, Terry 271, 311, 345 McCluggage, Todd 276 McCluney, Gregory 292 McColloh, Bob 325 McCollum, Bob 277 McConnell, Jani 270 McConnell, Kathy 260 McConnell, Patsy 271 McCool, Peter 291 McCormick, Mike 279 McCracken, Fred 298 McCreevy, Kevin 287 McCreight, Jim 338 McCrery, Linda 258 McCue, Danny 338 McCuish, Mrs. John 270 McCurry, Robert 353 McDaneld, Roger 329 McDaniel, Kathy 262 McDaniel, Steve 291 McDaniel, Tam 345 McDermott, Jana 268 McDonald, Beulah 288 McDonald, Marvin, Jr. 296 McElfresh, Bill 294, 354 McElfresh, Leslie Ann 259, 317 McElhaney, Kenneth 297 McElroy, Kathy 329 McEwen, Jan 269 Nelson, John H. 349 Nelson, Monty 348 Nelson, Ronnie 264, 339 Nelson, Steve 287 Nelson, Roger 296 Nelson, Royce 293 Nemon, David 275 Nesbitt, Dennis 298 Nesselrode, Camilla 317 Netson, Kay 273 Neudoerffer, Lynn 317 Neustadt, Jim 288 Newbery, Charles 283 Newby, Craig 352, 355 Newman, William 288 Newsom, Barbara 271 Newsom, Mildred 262 Nichols, Jan 317 Nichols, Jim 296 Nicholson, Diane 339 Nicolet, Greg 280 Nied, Ken 299, 304 Nielson, Bob 282 Nilsson, Jennifer 266, 315 Ninemires, Jeanine 273 Nininger, Richard 282 Nitschke, Robert 285, 349 Noble, Rick 341 Noble, Shirley 256, 317 Nohe, Marty 287 Nolan, Ron 276 Noll, Fred 284 Nolterieke, Martin 293 Nordstrom, Steve 285 Norris, Michael 284 North, Ed 332 North, Ken 314 North, Tim 283 Norton, Barbara 272, 343 Norton, Carol 344 Norton, Karla 336 Nothnagel, Janet 258, 317 Nothnagel, Karen 265 Nourse, James 277 Novak, Tom 277, 334 Lucretia , oyes 261 Noyes, Nusbaum, Jerry 332 Nutt, Donna 336 Nutt, J. David 283 Nye, David 333 Nyquist, Robert 338 Nyquist, Mrs. Robert 339 Paffenbach, Sue 259, 317 Page, Randy 279 Palmer, Ovie 295 Pankratz, Howard 322 Pankratz, Jim 283 Panrosa, Linda 261 Paradise, Jack 288 Parden, Charles 296 Parekh, Nitina 341 Paretsky, Sarah 308 Parish, Mrs. Scott 339 Park, Mrs. Ralph 269 Parker, Larry 295 Parker, Mary 268 Parkison, Bob 274 Parkison, John 276 Parmely, Cheryl 304, 308, 314 Parthasarathy, S. V. 341 Pasano, Mickey 268, 309 Pasano, Micki 268 Paschal, Del 295 Pasley, Richard 297, 349 Patchin, Elaine 264 Patchin, Wayne 299 Pate, Torn 276 Patel, Jayanti D. 328, 332, 341 Patel, Jitendra 328, 341 Patel, Navnitlal 328, 341 Patrick, Sue 266, 344 Patterson, Bruce 279 Patterson, Kay 330 Patterson, Philip 287, 349 Patton, John 338 Patton, Mrs. John 339 Patton, Mike 294 Patz, Pamela 315 Patzkowsky, C. L. 284 Paul, Carol 265 Paul, Jack 292 Paulette, Bob 299 Pauley, J. Donald 343 Paulsen, Juliane 273 Paulsen, Mary Lou 270 Pauzauskie, John 349 Payer, Lynn 267, 320 Payne, Anne 269, 339 Payne, Paula 259 Payne, Robert 276 Payne, Wes 276 Peanmiller, Bob 286 Pearce, Boyd 331 Pearce, Dean 277 Pearson, Bob 280 Pitner, Bill 282 Pittet, Leroy 353 Pitts, Cecily 270, 308, 339, 345 Pitts, David 286 Pitts, Mary Ellen 317 Pletcher, Tom 349 Plimpton, Susan , 257 Plucker, Mary 345 Plump, John Jr. 351 Pohl, Charlie 283 Pokar, Kabra 341 Pollara, C. J. 265, 321 Pollock, Jane 334 Poison, Nancy 273 Polster, Donna 268 Pool, Gleen 292 Pool, Kay 263 Poos, Thomas 283 Popkess, Sue 263 Porter, Bill 294, 307 Porter, Brent 334 Porter, Dave 282 Porter, Donna 273 Porter, Jane 266 Porter, Margie 268, 305 Portwood, James 277 Post, Scott 294 Post, Terry 294 Potter, Don 320, 326 Potter, Shirley 336 Potter, Waldo 349 Powell, Kent 312, 332 Powell, Lorenda 265 Powers, Mark 298 Poynter, Pam 259, 343 Prager, Jim 303, 304, 331 Prather, Royace 333 Pratt, Gary 299 Pratt, Nancy 257 Pratt, Pam 260, 317 Pray, Lynne 354 Prelogar, William 332 Press, Steve 275 Preston, Floyd 334 Pretzer, Mike 340 Prewitt, Kathy 267, 304 Price, Gary 280 Price, Will 331 Prill, Penny 273 Prim, John 332 Prince, Susan 317 Pringle, Mary 266 Prithvi, Raj 341 Pro, John 282 McFalls, Tommy 353 0 Pearson, Jerry 352, 355 Protzer, Ute-Barbara 341 McFarland, Donald 280 Peck, Mrs. Elizabeth 343 Pruckkumvong, Nanthana McGee, James 332, 333, 335 McGee, John 280 Oberchain, Richard 332, 334, 348 Pechar, Mike 297 Pedlar, Linda 265, 324 338 Pruden, Janet 264 McGhee, Judy 270 McGibeny, Mike 341 McGiffert, Steve 282 Oberg, Nancy 258, 308, 317 Obley, Nancy 262 O ' Brien, Mike 281, 320 Peffer, Charles 294 Peltzman, Bill 352 Penney, Bill 298, 351 Pryor, Louis 297 Puffer, Robert 351 Puig, George 313 McGinley, Susie 273 O ' Connell, Jim 293 Pennington, Don 285 Pullen, Sheila 266 McGrew, Jane 270 O ' Conner, Jack 291 Penny, Anne 271, 320 Purtle, Ginger 263 McGuire, Larry 276 McGuire, Nicki 268 McHenry, Floyd 306 O ' Connor, Jack 352 Odegard, Ron 284 Oelschlager, Roger 305 Penny, Susan 271 Peresko, Daniel 352 Perez, Paul 292 Purvis, Alan 289, 354 Putnam, Anne 260 Putnam, Linda 268 McHugh, James 348, 355 Ogilvie, Jerry 289 Perkins, Jim 282, 320, 331 Mcllvain, Mike 336, 342 McIntire, Dave 289 McIntire, Mason 288, 341 McIntyre, Bob 300 McKee, Durwood 279 McKenna, Patricia 317 McKinley, Rowe 287 McLain, Chris 337 McLain, Connie 345 McLaughlin, Becky 257 McLaughlin, Chet 313 McLaughlin, Henry 287 McLaughlin, Tom 287 McMahan, Bob 286 McMahan, Jim 297 McMillan, Austin 290 McMullen, Marcia 309 McMurty, Bob 287 McNall, Lynn 353 McNally, Mike 305, 340 McNary, Robert 352 McNeill, Joe 294 McNeill, John 288 Ogilvie, Maggie 267, 354 O ' Harra, Mrs. H. R. 273 Ohnemiller, John 338 Olander, Frank 276 Oldham, Mark 334 Oliver, Diane 270 Oliver, Marty 263, 343 Olsen, Steve 294 Olson, Jim 293 Olson, Joyce 259 Olson, Rena 270 Olson, Ted 296 O ' Malley, Martin Edward 353 Official, Grete R. 341 O ' Meara, Bill 284 O ' Neal, Gary 293 O ' Neal, Larry 293 O ' Neal, Steven 343 O ' Neill, James 287 O ' Neill, Joey 257 O ' Neill, Michael 349 O ' Neill, Reagon 259, 317 Ophir, Jonathan 275 Perry, Ann 267, 343 Perry, Anne 264 Perry, Cass 317 Perry, Dianna 264 Perry, Jill 339 Pestinger, Sam 286, 321 Petefish, Mary Ann 272 Petering, Betsy 268 Petering, Robert 329, 349 Peters, David 294 Peters, J. L. 352, 355 Petersen, Eric 350, 351 Peterson, Becky 320 Peterson, Bruce 279, 318, 332 Peterson, Dale 276 Peterson, Hal 297 Peterson, Jon 329 Peterson, Kenneth 352 Peterson, Niell 352 Peterson, Pam 263 Peterson, P. Lawrence 332 Pettit, John 297 Q Quenzer, Ron 284 Qui, Don 299 Quimby, Jayne 268 Quinlan, Larry 276 R Rabe, Mary 271 Radcliffe, William 352 Rader, Charles 335 Rader, Larry 283 Rader, Norm 351 Rader, Thomas 332 Raffo, Yolanda Adela 273 Rainbolt, Carolyn 268 Rainbolt, Linda 259 McNinch, Pat 256 Oram, Daniel 349 Peuter, Kit 345 Ralston, Michael 353 McNish, Jim 305, 325 McNown, Cynthia 271 Orindgreff, Mike 276 Orscheln, Gary 300 Pfautsch, Debby 268 Pfeffer, Jim 282 Ralston, Sherry 264 Ramage, Mrs. H. P. 300 McPherson, Bruce 287 Orth, Kay Lee 270, 308, 330 Pfuetze, Rogene 260 Ramirez, Gene 352 McWilliams, Connie 271, 337 Osborne, Bruce 290 Phalora, Onkar 328 Ramsey, Arthur 338 Ostergard, Leif 283, 339 Phelps, April 266, 345 Ramsey, Jerry 353 Ostrum, Karna 259, 317 Phelps, Dave 277 Randall, Chris 285, 349 N Oswald, Barb 262 Philipp, Joe 354 Randazzo, Vickie 257 Oughton, Barbara 264 Phillips, Barbara 322 Rankin, Anne 273 Naccarato, Patsy 270 Oursler, Craig 300 Phillips, Doug 280 Ranney, Edgie 295 Nadvornik, Ron 300 Owen, Jean 295 Phillips, Larry 298 Ranney, Liz 271 407 Ransdell, Pam 272, 309, 345 Rasheed, Javed 328, 342, 343 Rashid, Bhatti 328 Romano, Norma 354 Roodhouse, H. Weston 292 Roper, Susan 269 Rosander, Rita 264, 341 Rosander, Robert 299 Russell, Steve 322 - Russell, Susan 262 Rutherford, Tish 270 Ryan, Janet 262 Ryan, Marc 287 Scheffner, Norman 350, 352 Schell, Kent 290, 351 Scheuck, Gertrude 292 Scheufele, Lynne 317 Schlapper, Karen 259 Rasmussen, Sandy 269 Roscher, James 352, 355 Ryan, Michael 283 Schlenker, Janet 264 Rasmussen, Steve 296, 349 Rose, Jim 276 Schmisseur, Jo Ann 317 Ratchford, Dianne 266, 345, 354 Ross, David 286 Ross, Janet 265 Schmitt, Carolyn 336 Schmitz, Linda 273 Ray, Richard 335 Ross, Larry 283 S Sch neider, F. Steve 296 Raymond, Wendy 345 Ross, Walter 274 Schneider, Jim 295 Read, Barbara 269 Roth, Pete 285 Saad, Farouk 304 Schoenbeck, Carol 258 Read, Bill 286 Roth, Steven 290 Sachen, Janice 315 Schoenberg, Michael 275 Reardon, Mike 324 Roth, Tom 296 Sackman, Dennis 329 Schoeneman, Al 285 Rector, Jennie 261, 334 Rothenberger, Bill 312 Sadie ' , Shehzad 342 Schoeneman, Don 335 Redford, Bob 333, 355 Rouse, Charles III 280 Saffels, Suzanne 270, 345 Schofer, Phyllis 325 Redford, Melvin Jr. 348 Rouse, Larry 295 Safford, Jeanne 260 Schooler, Gayle 322, 339 Redman, Nancy 329 Routh, Larry 336, 342 Sagerser, Dave 289 Schroder, Connie 273 Redmond, Chris 284 Rowe, Jack 293 Sahlberg, Carol 264 Schroeder, John 299 Reece, Deanell 308, 345 Rowlett, Jack 288 Sallee, Larry 274 Schubert, Will 282 Reece, Jane Ann 317 Royer, Anita 268 Salmon, Larry 335 Schueler, Alan 351 Reed, Frank 335 Rubin, Mike 351 Salomon, Cheri 257 Schugart, Gary 312 Reed, John 288 Ruble, Laura 266 Salsbury, Raymond 349 Schulenberg, Brad 283, 349 Reed, Julie 256 Ruby, Bart 286 Sampson, Bill 276, 325 Schulte, Wayne 338 Reed, Louise 298 Ruby, Edward 352, 355 Sampson, Mary 263, 345 Schultz, John 289 Reed, Myron 348 Rueff, James 298 Sampson, Margaret 263, Schultz, Steve 277 Reed, Stephen 276 Ruff, Jean 327, 345 345 Schulz, Michael 283 Reed, Timothy 348, 355 Rugh, Michael 277 Samuelsohn, Celia 275 Schumm, Bob 295 Reeder, Kathy 258, 317 Rule, Marilyn 317 Sandberg, Larry 353 Schumm, Tom 295 Reeder, Ken 351 Reese, Donna 265, 337 Reese, Sue 258 Reese, Tessa 262 Reeves, Michael 283 Reeves, Tom 354 Reichard, Carolyn 273, 315 Reid, Donna 315 Reid, Suzanne 264 Reid, Tom 349 Reider, Roger 351 Renard, Jeff 349 Rumsey, Jim 276 Rupp, Carla 336 Rush, James 300 Rush, Steve 289 Russack, John 292, 349 Russell, Allen 304, 314, 332 Russell, Dick 276 Russell, Donald 335 Russell, Gene 280, 340 Russell, Henry 286 Sanders, Kathy 261 Sanders, Nancy 261 Sands, Richard 296 Sapp, Charles 332, 333 Saricks, Chris 283 Sarras, Michael 276 Saner, Marcy 269 Sauls, Judy 267, 354 Saverino, Everett 291 Saylor, Kent 290 Scanlon, Timothy 288 Schmucker, Paul 312 Schutte, Heidi 336 Schutte, Sandy 267 Schutte, William 287 Schuyler, Steve 285 Schwartz, Brad 289 Schwartz, Mary Alice 338 Schwartzkopf, Lynn William 334 Schwiesow, Helen 266, 309 Scott, Jim 277 Renier, Jim 280, 313, 333, 340 Russell, Loretta 337 Russell, Pam 260, 317 Schaffer, Frank 280 Schaub, Gary 295 Scott, Larry 283 Scott, Lawrence 353 Rensmeyer, Kirk 354 Renstrom, Karen 309, 314, 345 Resnik, Bill 277 Resnik, Cille 265, 345 Retonde, Mark 276 Reynolds, Don 292 Reynolds, Mrs. Roger 339 Reynolds, Tim 295 Rhea, Karen 273 Rice, Alice 265 Rice, Barb 271, 345 Rice, Barbara 317, 339 Rich, Shari 317 Richard, Sheryl 309 Richards, Celia Ann 336 Richards, Clint 292 Richards, Lynn 334 Richardson, Robin 276 Richey, Kathy 256, 317 Richey, Nancy 268 Rickman, Dwight 277, 349 Ricksecker, Jerry 287 Ridenour, Nancy 263 Ridgway, Steve 279, 321 Riedel, Gil 284 Rieder, Roger 298 Riedmiller, Mary 336 Riepe, Mike 279 Biggins, Junior 286 Riggs, Theodore III 292 Riley, Gerald 280 Riley, Janet 267, 309, 346 Riley, Jennifer 260 Riller, Louise 262 Rinacke, Troy 280 Rindt, Beverly 265 Ringstrom, Richard 276 Rinne, Larry 313, 348, 355 Rist, Donald Francis 353 Roark, Pat 306 Robbins, Frank 298, 351 Robbins, Steve 280 Robe, Chris 294 Roberson, Carole 337 Roberts, Bobbi 344 Roberts, Crichton 353 Roberts, Elaine 265 Roberts, Michael 351 Roberts, Ruth 267 Roberts, Sandy 268 Roberts, Tanzy 261 Robertson, Jim 274 Robertson, John 280 Robertson, Joni 261 Robeson, Linda 257 Robinson, Dave 293 Robinson, John 287 Rob inson, Lary 277, 332 Robinson, Robert 338 Robson, Tony 349 Rocereto, Paul 276 Rockwell, Jeff 277 Rodd, Steve 282 Rodriguez, Hilda 338 Roeder, Beth 336 Roehrig, Jane 263, 327, 354 Roepke, Kaye 271 Rogers, Becky 330 Rogers, Jeanie 305 Rohleder, Shan 269 Rolf, Phil 296 Roller, Peg 264 408 Scott, Patricia 317 Simms, James 350, 352, Spangler, William 333 Strandmark, John 293 Scott, Wallace Jr. 276 355 Spannuth, Leslie 345 Stratemeier, Phil 293 Scruby, Steve 293 Simon, Jayne 329, 343 Sparnroft, Carol 262 Stratman, Betty 273 Sears, Robert 276, 307 Simons, Cheryl 264 Spears, Steven 289 Stratton, Richard 283 Seaver, Diane 262, 309, Simons, Dale 259 Speer, Andrea 272, 308, Straub, Linda 262 354 Simons, Jane 343 309, 330 Strayer, Kathy 270, 309, Seeber, Fritz 285 Sindel, Richard 292 Speer, Jennifer 263, 318 344 Seem, Cary 298 Sindflar, David 352 Spencer, J. D. 280 Streib, Larry 292 Segerson, John 280 Singer, Stephen 340 Spencer, Mike 296, 324 Streib, Laurie 261 Seitter, Clifford 291 Singleton, Jack 352 Spencer, Peggy 273, 329 Strejc, Sue 257 Seitz, Catherine 258 Sinning, Kent 335 Spengel, Mike 313, 353 Strella, Dean 288 Selders, Susie 272, 344 Skahan, Marcia 317 Spenser, Patty 358 Stromquist, Walter 325 Selig, Linda 336 Skladal, George 334 Spikes, Larry 283 Strong, Christopher 289 Settles, Jacki 345, 354 Slater, Allen 283 Spivey, Lee Ann 256 Struby, Carl 305, 331 Semeniuk, George 282 Sleeper, Jim 286 Spivey, Sheri 317 Struebing, Gloria 317 Senecal, Mary 260 Sleffel, Linda 322 Sprague, Dale 282, 321 Strunk, Judy 272, 309 Sevier, Mike 290 Slicker, Richard 279 Sprecha, Roger 335 Strutz, John 291 Sewell, Larry 277, 350, 355 Slider, Patti 343 Springer, Barbara 264 Strutz, Thomas 291 Sexton, Connie 262 Slipper, Bob 295 Spruiell, Phillip 353 Stuckey, Connie 271 Sexton, James 291, 349 Sloan, Anita 315 Spurck, Debbie 258 Stuckey, Nancy 271 Seyb, Don 297 Sloan, Bruce 288 Spyker, Stephanie 269 Stucky, Susie 272, 309 Shaeffer, Barbara 268 Sloan, Dorothy 308, 315 Sramek, Nancy 307 Studebaker, John 276 Shaffer, Rick III 294 Smallwood, Steve 327 Standage, David 351 Stuewe, Le Ann 258, 317 Shah, Mahendra 341 Smart, Mary Lynne 266 Stantesky, Joanne 329 Stukenberg, Beth 315 Shah, Narenda 0. 328, 341 Smiley, Charles 284, 349 Stanton, Steve 294 Sturdy, Rob 292 Sharer, Bernie 282 Smissman, Mrs. E. G. 339 Stapleton, Bruder 286, 321, Sturgis, Philip 284 308 Smith, Candace 339 332 Stutzman, Clyde 293 Shaver, Connie 266 Smith, Craig 293 Starcke, Bob 282, 352, 355 Stuver, Nancy 354 Shaw, Chuck 280, 348 Smith, Diana 338 Stark, Chris 351 Suffron, Raymond 333, 354 Shaw, Delrayne 256 Smith, Don 294, 351 Stark, Paul 290 Sullivan, Ann 262, 335, 354 Shaw, Richard 332 Smith, Jim 286 Stark, Sally 260, 316 Sullivan, Archie 276 Shawver, Tom 286 Smith, John 288 Starkweather, Mike 341 Sullivan, Michael 348 Sheahan, Tom 286 Smith, Larry 290 Starnes, Cece 257 Sullivan, Tom 277, 318 Shears, Christopher 294, Smith, Mary Lou 263 Stauffer, Peter 287 Summa, James 333 Sheppard, Debra 270, 309 Smith, Richard 290 Stempleman, Alan 275 Surface, Lu 272 Sheppard, Kathy 317 Smith, Robert 338 Stenzel, Bonnie 261 Sutter, Yvonne 264 Sherar, Jim 294 Smith, Sally 265, 337, 346 Steph, Mick 293 Sutton, Clayton 290 Shideler, Mark R. 289, 340 Smith, Sandi 317 Stephenson, Ed 285 Sutton, J. Michael 287 Shields, Rosemary 258 Smith, Sharo n 263, 354 Stephenson, Mike 297 Sutton, John 354 Shields, Wayne 280 Smith, Sid 282 Steury, Jack 348 Sutton, June 336 Shiffman, Robert L. 285, Smith, Spencer 285 Stevens, Darlene 336 Suwalsky, Tom 291 349 Smith, Stephen 282 Stevens, Donn 288 Swager, Anita 317 Shinkle, Michael 292 Smith, Stephen 285 Stevens, Randy 297 Swale, Tom 280, 318, 332 Shipley, Jo Anna 325 Smith, Susanne 317 Stevenson, Carol Sue 267, Swartz, Nancy 267 Shipman, Sue 344 Smith, Tom 292 309 Swartzendraber, R. F. 333, Shivananda, D. S. 328 Smithmier, Linda 262 Stewart, Chuck 274 335 Shoemaker, Mike 352 Snapp, Joyce 304 Stewart, Cliff 289 Sweeney, Miles 280, 350, Shontz, Carol 260 Sneed, Bob 292 Stewart, Edna 284 351 Shontz, Phillip 283, 313, Snelgrove, Lynn 279 Stewart, Marti 260, 317 Swife, John 289 333, 335 Snoddy, Donald 288, 349 Stickney, Jayne 266 Swift, Dave 279 Shonyo, Michael 332, 333, Snodgrass, Rick 334 Stidham, Spring 267 Swift, George 334 353 Snack, Pam 259 Stimley, Sherman 332, 333 Swift, Steve 289, 332 Short, Leonard 352 Snow, Steve 329 Stimson, Cole 274 Swinney, Robert 280 Showalter, Norma 317 Snyder, John 297 Stinson, Eric 277 Swope, Donna 269 Shriver, Steve 298 Snyder, Richard 338 Stinson, John 286, 331 Shrout, Richard 274 Snyder, Temp 351 Stitt, Judy 267 Shuffer, David 355 Soder, Eric 295 Stitt, Marty 267 Shultz, Cinde 257 Soderstrom, Nancy 271 Stoddard, Bob 286, 351 T Shultz, John 282 Sogas, Andrea 267 Stoffer, Chuck 332 Shumway, John 300 Sois, Nan 261 Stoike, Al 296 Taliaferro, Glenn 334 Shurson, John 294 Solberg, Pepper 314 Stokes, Sharon 345 Tam, Nancy 346 Shyu, Rong-Show 343 Sollenberger, Linda 270, Stokes, Susan 315 Tancreti, Martin 276 Sidey, Valerie 315 309 Stone, Dave 291 Tankersley, Bill 279 Siebenlist, Rich 300 Solter, Lee 306 Stone, Jeff 276 Tarr, Terry 282, 332, 333 Siegel, Betsy 308 Solum, Carolyn 268 Stone, Peggy 341 Tate, Linda 260, 304 Siegal, Dan 353 Somers, Susan 258 Stone, Rich 284 Taylor, Bill 276 Sifers, Russell 289 Sommer, Zandra 339 Taylor, Dennis 293, 305, Stoneking, James 338, 339 Sifers, Tuck 286 Sonderegger, Don 338 332 Stoneking, Mrs. James 339 Silknitter, Sonya 273 Somogyi, Mary 317 Taylor, Gary 277 Silverman, Jill 268 Sorem, Sue 330 Stoskopf, Carol 315 Taylor, Judy 265 Silvey, Captain William 350 Sorrentino, Louise 313 Stout, Judy 265 Taylor, Rich 351 Simcox, James 354 Sorter, Martha Ellen 317 Strafer, Nancy 358 Taylor, Roderick 288 Simmons, Gail 268 Southern, Nancy 260 Strahan, Larry 292 Teasley, Lynn 281 Simmons, Linda 338 Sowers, Kathleen 273 Strahm, Steve 289 Teel, Larry 274 Simmons, Richard 351 Spain, Kenneth 291 Strait, Sharla 257, 317 Temanson, Gary 333 IMUJIVAII ' ; R ONE RENCE 1Tii J, 04 ' I N11 I 0 IM K010 LA OF LAWRENCE It AWRENCE, KANSAS VI 3-0152 RANWAL!-IINI (c,9111 AND TENNESSEE ST. 1: ' ,11W,11:11 I:7 1:1,101=1:1 ..N, INSURANCE CORPORATION V H Y - MAIN BANK 327 Shears, Susan 270 Sheldon, Susan Sheldon, Susie 259, 345 317 Shepard, Peter Shepherd, Bob 348, 349 355 Smith, Michael 281, 340 Stebor, Penny 269 Summa, Mick 333 Smith, Mike 284 Steed, Diane 251, 265 Sumner, Mrs. Darrell 339 Smith, Pam 257, 317, 327 Steele, Major Merrill 350 Sumptee, Lord 259 Smith, Patricia 264 Steiner, Ted 293 Sundart, Padma 341 Smith, Paul 334 Steinman, Norm 334 Sundelin, Mrs. Kurt 339 Smith, Pete 304 Steinmetz, Mike 300 Surbaugh, Greg 281 409 Thayer, Janie 260 Van Slyke, Tom 341 Theis, Roger 297 Van Speybroeck, John 297 Theurer, Timothy 298, 351 Varney, Betsy 256, 317 Thomas, Alan 332 Vaughan, Fred 280 Thomas, Barby 259 Vaughan, Kathy 344 Thomas, Cheri 261 Vaughan, Timothy 288 Thomas, David 277 Veatch, Tom 295 Thomas, Georgia 267 Viene, Donna 264 Thomas, Ginny 270 Vineyard, Karen 258 Thomas, Greg 351 Vinz, Camilla 257 Thomas, Richard 293 Viola, Sally 343 Thompson, Burk 277 Viot, Randy 312 Thompson, Diana 266 Viot, Sally 258 Thompson, Ray 295 Viscardi, Deette 265 Thompson, Sally 266 Vocke, T. L. 349 Thorp, James 349 Vogt, Terry 298 Tidwell, Claude 349 Vokraka, Karen 267, 343 Tidwell, M. K. 291 Volkman, James 341 Tidwell, Pat 258 Vonderbruegge, Roger 332, Tietze, Judy 272 334 Tillotson, Margarette 265 Von Lintel, Thomas 297 Tilton, Jon 286 Voorhees, Linda 345 Tilton, Sue 268 Voos, Alan 279 Tinker, Mrs. Donald 289 Vormehr, Steve 277 Tinkler, Joyce 265, 309, Vratil, Mrs. Gary 339 354 Vratil, John 279, 331 Tinkler, Marianne 265 Vratil, Peggy 270, 309, 313 Tippin, Terry 265 Vsetecka, Don 336, 342 Tippit, Steven 274 Tolaney, Murli 328, 341 Toler, Terence 352, 355 Toll, Perry 290, 335 W Toma, Al 292 Tomson, John 287 Waddail, Bob 351 Tophan, Ralph 285 Waeckerle, Hank 284 Toporowski, Thomas 348 Waeckerle, Joe 293, 314 Torcom, Linda 264, 315 Waetzig, Connie 317 Townsend, George 353 Wagenknecht, Conrad 299 Townsley, Alice 259 Waggoner, Jane 269 Towslee, Gary 352 Waggoner, Kitsy 267 Tramp, Nancy 262 Wagner, Carol 317 Traylor, J. R. 272 Wagner, Ron 293, 349 Treanor, Bob 293 Wagner, Susan 317 Treece, Virginia 267 Wagnon, Bob 277 Trewolla, John 299 Wahlmeier, Sharon 257 Tripp, Lorna 261 Waind, Melinda 257 Trombold, Lynn 329 Wainwright, Francis 297, Trottman, Susan 261 338 Trotter, Don 286 Wait, George 287 Trotter, William 296 Wait, Gregory 287 Troup, Dan 285 Wakeman, Bob 313 Trout, Gary 324 Walcher, Debbie 268 Truskett, Harve 284 Waldron, K. Brent 277 Truskett, Patricia 317 Waldron, Charles III 293, Tschappat, Thomas 298 332, 340, 349 Tucker, Barbie 273 Waldron, John 297 Tucker, Thomas 284 Wales, Sherrie 266, 354 Tudor, Dianne 262 Walker, Anne 257 Tudor, Mary 259, 316 Walker, Bill 327 Tuggle, Dennis 284 Walker, Carol 272, 309 Tuley, Bill 285 Walker, Cheryl 256 Turbeville, Anthony 349 Walker, Chris 260, 308 Tureski, Jan 267 Walker, Don 276 Turley, Jerry 293 Walker, Jane 264 Turner, Kathy 317 Walker, William 294 Turner, Robert 289 Waller, Willie 324 Turner, Terri 271, 345 Wall, Becky 344 Turrell, Laurie 317 Wallace, Douglass 351 Turrell, Leman 354 Wallace, Dwight 280, 340 Turtle, Julie 270 Wallace, Ronald 280 Twadell, Stephen 285 Wallace, T. William 290 Tyler, Ellen 317 Walsh, Richard D. 291 Tyler, Sue 272 Walsh, Richard S. 334 Tyson, John 293 Walsh, Robert 353 Walsh, Steve 283 Walsham, Tom 334 Walstad, April 260 U Walter, Diane 354 351 Ron , an b r Walter, Dianne 263 Urban, Walters Bill Uhlig, Carol 266 Walters, , Cand3y 10 271 Ulmer, Nancy 267, 321 Walters, Larry 290 Underwood, Dixie 317 Walters, Nancy 262 Underwood, Judy 260, 317 Walters, Ned 296 Unzicker, Ruth 262, 315 Walthall, David 312 Upchurch, David 349 Waltz, Debbie 259 Uplinger, Karen 317 Ward, Bill 277, 332 Urba, Linda 261 Ward, Bob 277, 332 Utermoehlen, Rick 283, 320 Ward, David 287 Utz, Kristin 271 Ward, Doug 276 Waring, Dennis 335 Waring, Mike 282 Warner, Charles 294 V Warner, Dick 318, 331 293 G Warner, Valentine, Ned 287 Warrell, JoAnn 263 Valentine, Vikki 256, 387 Warren, Bruce 286, 318, Vance, Ellen 259 331 Vance, Michael 280, 339 Wart, Jim 288 Van Derbar, Karen 344 Washburn, Thomas 352 Vandeventer, Jan 268 Wasko, Robert 287, 349 Vanek, Larry 293 Wassenberg, Susie 257, 317 Van Eman, Jackie 304 Waters, Stephen 287 Van Hecke, William 291 Watkins, Mike 289 Van Kirk, James 354 Watkins, Phil 288 Van Landingham, Gretchen Watson, Carolyn 325 263 Watson, George 297 Van Orsdol, Jim 325 Watson, Nancy 336 Vansandt, Gaynelle 317 Watson, Sharon 268 Van Sickle, Steve 354 Watts, James 334 Van Slyck, Cindy 260 Watts, Myrna 265 Van Slyke, Julie 270 Waxse, Dave 318, 331 Waxse, Paula 268 Wilson, Mike 290 Wayman, Karen 339 Wilson, Roger 294 Wear, Myrl 299 Wilson, Sheryl 257, 317 Wear, Warren 289 Wilson, Ted 296 Weast, Thomas 332 Wilson, Terry G. 334 Weatherbie, Carolyn 273 Wilson, Terry L. 296 Weaver, David 338 Wilson, Thomas E. 290, 335 Weaver, Mary Ann 261 Wilson, Tom 298 Weaver, Robert 299 Wilt, William 296 Weaver, William 352 Winchester, Jane 273 Webb, Gayla 309 Wingate, Jeanene 264 Webb, Karen 269, 337 Wingert, Roger 354 Webb, Taylor 282 Winick, Elyse 316 Webber, Carol 269, 344 Winkler, Ellen 269 Weber, Bill 298, 340 Winkler, Nancy 263, 343 Weber, Dave 297 Winn, Doug 288, 341 Wedell, Laurie 266, 313 Winsor, Judy 260 Weeks, Linda 265 Wippel, Frank 329 Weinaug, Charles 334, 341 Wisdom, Eric 287 Weinbera, Tom 295 Wise, James 287 Weingart, Robert 351 Wise, Maj. R. T. 350 Weinlood, Susan 266, 308 Wiseman, Sheila 312, 337 Weinstein, Chuck 297 Wisler, Larry 333 Weinstein, Kenneth 275 Wissman, Nicki 343, 354 Weir, Catherine 317 Witherspoon, Nancy 260 Weir, John Scott 277 Wittmeyer, Janice 317 Weis, Lynn 285 Wittsell, Bob 339 Weisenborn, William 334 Woelk, Ron 284 Weisert, Chip 282, 313 Wolcott, Steve 299, 327 Weispfenning, Elaine 327 Wolfe, Craig 293 Weiss, Doug 281 Wolfe, Gary 351 Weiss, Michael 349 Wolfe, Sheri 273 Welch, Gary 295 Wolhuter, Bob 289 Welch, Joe 285 Wombolt, George 297 Welch, Michael 291 Wood, Barry 286 Weller, Dennis 351 Wood, David 279 Wells, Chris 351 Wood, Gordon 334 Wells, Rusty 284, 304, 305 Wood, Keith 326 Wells, Sharon 251, 273 Wood, Mary Lou 262 Welsh, G. H. 334 Wood, Nancy 325, 337 Weltman, Kent 287 Woodard, Donna 272 Wentworth, Philip 297 Woodard, Steve 293 Werden, Beverly 339 Woodburn, Jane 336 Wertzberger, Ken 287 Wooden, Jo Ann 317 Wescoe, Barbara 343 Wooden, John 314 West, Joh n 349 Woods, Bill 283 West, Mike 276 Woodsmall, Pete 286 West, Polly 269 Woolf, John 306 West, Tom 351 Woollems, Mike 285 Wester, Gene 335 Woolsey, David 299 Westerhaus, Donald 349 Wooster, Anne 308 Westerhoff, John 296, 352 Wooton, Shani 345 Westermann, Annette 317 Worford, Stephen 280 Westrup, Steve 324 Worley, Court 284 Wetzler, Dick 282 Worley, Robert Jr. 284 Whealy, Kent 283 Worthington, Jeanne 325 Wheatley, James 338 Wright, Alvin 274 Wheatley, Mrs. James 338, Wright, Gary 332, 335 339 Wright, Jean 261 Wheeler, Nancy 265 Wright, Terry 277 Whelan, Janice 272, 354 Wulf, Richard 276, 333 Whitaker, James 331, 338 Wulf, Walter Jr. 292, 352 Whitaker, Judy 344 Wulfkuhle, Linda 267 White, Alice 266 Wulfkuhle, Virginia 258 White, Bowen 293, 314 Wurtz, Alan 329 White, Dorothy 287 Wuthnow, Mrs. E. W. 267 White, James 334 Wyckoff, George 353 White, John 280 Wyckoff, Kathy 268 White, Lynda 262 Wynne, Susan 262 White, Reed 349 White, Roger 293 Whitenight, Hudson Jr. 290 Whitenight, Ken Jr. 294 Wible, Jerry 297 Wicinski, Cindi 346 Yarnevich, George 286 Widick, Lyn 271, 345 Yeck, Joyce 267 Wiehe, Cathy 315 Yeager, Richard 283 Wiksten, Diane 260, 317 Yergovich, Tom 310 Wilcox, Sally 271 Yockel, Don 353 Wilder, Joe 277 Yockey, Charles 354 Wiles, Harry 310 Youmans, Nub 289, 354 Wilhelm, Jack 332 Young, Jim 300 Wilkerson, Jami 261 Young, Jincy 266, 354 Wilkinson, Pam 267, 339 Young, Ronald George III Will, Janet 265 280 Willard, Georgia 268 Youngberg, Pete 300 Willard, Kay 267 Youngstrom, Debbie 259, Willems, Ann 259 317, 327 Willey, Daryl 297 Youngstrom, Kurt Eric 334 Williams, Bob 284 Williams, Candy 271 Williams, Carl 284 Williams, Jane 270 Williams, J. J. III 284 Williams, Kittie 271 Zackary, Burditt 291 Williams, Meg 259 Zackary, Fort 291, 349 Williams, Sarah 271 Zarker, Sherry 263 Williams, Shirley 264 Zarter, Chuck 306 Williamson, Mike 291 Zellers, Theresa 258, 343 Willis, Bob 288 Zenor, Connie 259 Willis, Cindi 260 Zey, Linda 271 Willman, John 293 Ziegelmeyer, Martha 270 Willoughby, Donald 351 Zielke, Mrs. Harry 339 Willoughby, Vicki 256, 317 Zimmer, James 349 Wilson, Becky 269 Zimmer, Marlea 265, 336 Wilson, Bob G. 298, 349 Zimmerman, Cathy Lee 260 Wilson, Bob H. 324 Zimmerman, James 335 Wilson, Cathy 263 Zimmerman, John 299 Wilson, Craig 288 Zongker, John 287 Wilson, Jim 284 Zook, John 329 Wilson, Loneta 273 Zuck, Wayne 306 Wilson, Marty 269 Zwink, Pam 271, 337 410 KANSAS UNION f A 0,3011ft. . ,phy of Quality Official ' Jayhawker Photographer COMMENCEMENT 1967 JAYHAWKER MAGAZINE YEARBOOK .TE PAGE. Members of Phi Gamma Delta sift the smoldering ruins of their house, destroyed by s than two weeks before finals. THIS PAGE. night, two Stephensonites find open-air relief Buggy spring weather in the yard outside their hall. Following Jim Rynn ' s record-breaking mile performance in the Kansas Relays, nationally-known- photo-journalist Rich Clarkson dashes to photograph the sophomore speedster. Participants ponder psychedelic art, the Campanile, and each other during an April Be-In on the slopes of Potter Lake. COMMENCEMENT ISSUE THE 1967 JAYHAWKER MAGAZINE YEARBOOK TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction 411 Seniors 457 Athletics 413 Index 511 University Life 433 MR. TOM YOE, Advisor; BLAKE BILES, Editor; STEVE MEYER, Business Manager; DAVE GRAVES, Art Director; RAY NIEMEIR, Head Photographer; BRENT WALDRON, Associ- ate Editor; CINDY McCAMMON, Editorial Secretary; JO ANN MEYER, Business Secretary. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT: Kathy Bentley, Sherril Cooper, Liz Cupp, Lynn Frankie, Diana Javellana, Ann Kaiser, Karin Spaulding, Kathy Strayer, and Nancy Winkler, Office Assistants; Cary Gribben, Distribution Manager; Gordon Allen, Capper Grant, Distribution Staff; Joe Godfrey, Advertising Manager; Gary O ' Neal, Tim Vaughan, Advertising Staff; Janice Mendenhall, Sales Manager; Gordon Allen, Brian Bauerle, Scott Brown, Susan Diehl, Beverly Drier, Carol Eubank, Susan Farley, Lynn Frankie, Barbara Gyulavics, Susan Hayes, Punky Hemphill, Patti Hiller, Leslee Huttie, Diana Javel- lana, Richard Jones, Ann Kaiser, Nancy Ketchum, Judy Long, Sandra McAllister, Nancy Morgan, Donna Mortiz, Roby Ogan, Susan Paproth, Mickey Pasano, Susan Saindon, Rick Shaffer, Jeanne Small, Mary Lou Smith, Suzanne Steuri, Andrea Tobin, Susan Trottman, Sharon Watson, Jack Weiss, and Nancy Winkler, Sales Staff; Tom Simpson, Pictures Scheduler; Karin Spaulding, Pictures Secretary; Sallie Lillard, Senior Pictures Manager; Sheila Wiseman, Organization Pictures Man- ager; Suzanne Saffels, Living Groups Pictures Manager; Gwen Beamer, Capper Grant, Patti Hiller, Bill Kissel, and Linda Putnam, Living Groups Pictures Staff. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT: Doug Mackey, Copy Editor; Bob Butler, Theatre Editor; Bev Gray, Index Editor; Larry Fogleman, Sports Editor; Rob Sturdy, Party Pix Editor; Drew Anderson, Shelley Bray, Linda Kerby, and Anne Pearse, Editorial Assistants; Ted Gardiner, Assistant Copy Editor; Scott Brown, Diane Chil- ders, Tricia Haggart, Mike Homer, Jim Huntington, Ken Mathiasmeier, Larry O ' Neal, and Norma Romano, Writers; Judy Moseley, Index Assistant; Susan Diehl, Renetta Engles, and Janet Kipfer, Secretarial Staff. PHOTOGRAPHIC DEPART- MENT: Paul Bock, Randy Leffingwell, Mike Okun, and Rick Wrigley, Assistant Photographers; Lawrence Journal-World, Dave Young, Special Work; Estes Studio, Jayhawker Photographer; Orval Hixon, Special Portraits. ART DEPART- MENT: Anne Pearse, Production Assistant; Jerry Moore, Covers and Design Consultant; Tom Staebler, Divider Pages Consultant; Paul Davis, Advertising Art Director. Chancellor Wescoe and commanding officers of the three ROTC divisions stand at attention while ROTC units pass in formation during the annual Chancellor ' s Review in Memorial Stadium. This Page Intentionally Left Blank ATHLETICS 413 THIS PAGE, ABOVE. National long jump champion Gary Ard soars in Kansas Relays preliminary competition. THIS PAGE AND OPPOSITE PAGE, BELOW. Junior Lee Adams and more George Byers (left and center) race to fourth and second place Relays finishes in the 120-yard high hurdles. OPPOSITE PAGE. Super-star Jim Ryun is surrounded by photographers following his Relays mile run. 414 TRACK KU ' s outdoor track squad regained the Big Eight crown this spring, following a second place finish behind Nebraska in 1966. Taking top honors for the thirteenth time in sixteen years, Coach Bob Timmons ' team showed considerable depth in winning the con- ference title. Outstanding individual and team per- formances throughout the year resulted in eight school and two world records set during the season. The track men opened spring competition with a dual meet March 25 in Los Angeles with defending NCAA Champion UCLA. In spite of an 88-55 loss to the Bruins, KU ' s Ben Olison and Tom Yergovich were both clocked with impressive times in their respective events Olison in the 100-yard dash ( :09.6) and the 220 ( :21.2 ), and Yergovich in the two-mile run (9:01.4 ), a career best. Other winners were Jim Ryun in the 880 (1:48.1) and the mile (4:05.1), and Gary Ard in the long jump (24 ' 11 ' :2 ). The following weekend during the annual Texas Relays in Austin, a stacked team of Ard, Olison, Ryun, and Dwight Peck turned the sprint medley relay in 3:15.2, breaking the existing world record of 3:15.5. A 3:09.5 mile relay performance established a school rec- ord. The Hawks also won the four-mile relay (16:45.4), and the long jump (Ard-24 ' 10 ). After a week of training in Lafayette, Louisiana, KU swept the Southwestern Relays, winning five team and four individual events in the annual meet. George Byers set both meet and school records with a :13.8 120-yard high hurdles performance. Ard in the long and triple jumps (24 ' 41 2 and 50 ' 41 2 ), and Steve Ashurst in the 440-yard dash ( :48.0) likewise won their events. In relay competition, Jayhawk runners tied the meet record in the 440-yard relay ( :41.2 ). They also took top honors in the 880, mile, sprint med- ley, and distance medley relays, and placed second to a record-tying Tulane group in the two-mile event. Following a most successful Kansas Relays program (pages 418-421), the thinclads traveled to Des Moines April 28 and 29 for the annual Drake Relays. Anchored by sophomore Ryun ' s 3:55.6 mile, the distance medley relay team (Curt Grindal, Peck, Yergovich, Ryun) established a new world mark with a 9:33.8 timing. The 480-yard shuttle hurdle relays group (Byers, Dave Stephens, Ken Gaines, Lee Adams ) likewise turned in an outstanding performance, tying the existing world record of :57.4. With the conference meet just three weeks away, the Hawks then prepared for a May 13 dual with Okla- homa. Besting the Sooners 74-71 in Memorial Sta- 415 ' 611-01iI%Mimp ABOVE. Sophomore pole vaulter Drew Hamilton grimaces in his approach to the bar. 416 dium, team members set school records in the 440-yard dash (Peck :47.0) and the high jump ( John Turck 6 ' 8 ). Firsts in eight of the sixteen events led to the KU victory. Climaxing the outdoor season, a 21-man squad cap- tured first in the Big Eight Championships, held May 19 and 20 in Norman, Oklahoma. Although plagued by injuries to several key performers, the Jayhawkers ' depth enabled them to score in thirteen of the seven- teen events, including four firsts and two seconds. Lacking strength in weight competition, the Big Blue were nevertheless paced by national champion Ard in the long jump ( 26 ' it ), Byers in the 120-yard high hurdles ( :14.1), and double-winner Ryun in the mile (4:08.5) and 880-yard run (1:49.1 ), all of whom won their respective contests. Bob Steinhoff ' s 15 ' 8 pole vault and Ard ' s 48 ' 11 triple jump also added valuable points to the KU column. Olison, competing in four events; Adams in three; and Gaines, Byers, and Peck each in two, likewise contributed to the win over strong Nebraska and Oklahoma teams. THIS PAGE AND OPPOSITE PAGE, LEFT. Ace distance runner Tom Yergovich sprints past KSU ' s Conrad IV ightengale to register a 4:02.5 mile and to anchor a Jayhawk distance medley relay victory. ABOVE. Sophomore George Byers gets set in the starting blocks for the first leg of the 440-yard relay. 417 Jim Ryun, Kansas ' premier miler, stole the show in the 42nd annual Kansas Relays. The world record holder in the mile, Ryun won the main event, the Glenn Cunningham Mile, in a quality time of 3:54.7. Running before a final day crowd of 23,700, Ryun surpassed both his own Kansas Relays mark of 3:55.8 and the National Collegiate record of 3:56.4. On the way to his record-setting mile, Ryun posted quarters of :58.6, :59.8, :60.2, and :56.1 respectively. On the first day of the annual track carnival, ex- Jayhawk John Lawson won the open 10,000-meter run with a time of 29:55.4. The second day of activities saw Kansas State win the four-mile relay over defending champion KU, the Wildcats ' first relay win at the Kansas Relays in thirty-one years. Three records were also broken on the second day: Texas Southern set a new 440-yard relay mark of :40.2; Olympian Oscar Moore of Southern Illinois ran the 5,000 meters in 14: 19.2; and Stan Whitley of Hancock Junior College set a new mark of 46 feet, 7% inches in the triple jump. Ryun ' s record mile highlighted the final day of action, during which eleven records were broken and four tied above the high school level. Individually, Steve Herndon of Missouri won his third straight Kansas Relays high jump competition with a record seven-foot leap; Fred Burton of Wichita State set a new pole vault record of 16-7; and Chris McCubbins of Oklahoma State had a record 8:46.6 in the 3,000- meter steeplechase. The oldest mark on the books 418 5- Zrr211. 7.---- ,ai ' ' ' ' . 1 _, .. i ri I tIMENIL.1.111:b13 1 1.1 LP KANSAS RELAYS OPPOSITE PAGE, EXTREME LEFT, AND THIS PAGE LEFT, TOP AND BOTTOM. Athletes compete in the 3000-meter steeplechase, the women ' s 440- yard relay, and the high school 330-yard interme- diate hurdles three of twenty-seven events in which new meet records were established this year. BELOW. Distance runners round a turn in the 5000--meter contest. 419 was tied by Jim Hines of Texas Southern with a :09.4 in the 100-yard dash. Texas Southern set three records in winning the 440-yard, two-mile, and 880-yard relays. Their 1:22.8 in the 880 was only two-tenths of a second off the world record. Arkansas A.M. and N. set a new record of 3:07.5 in the college mile relay. Rice won three relays in the university competition. KU had been ex- pected to provide them with their toughest competi- tion, but Jayhawk Ben Olison was unable to compete. Rice set a new mile relay mark of 3:06.6, tied the 440 relay mark of :40.5, and won the 880 relay in 1:23.5. KU won the medley relay in 9:41.6, with Tom Yergovich overtaking KSU ' s Conrad Nightengale on the final lap to win by twenty yards. Yergovich ran a 4:02.5 mile following Curt Grindal in the half mile, Dwight Peck in the quarter, and Gene McClain in the three-quarters. THIS PAGE, ABOVE. Texan David patina breaks the tape steps ahead of Missouri, Arkansas, and Kansas runners, clinching the Longhorns ' two-mile relay win. RIGHT. T racksters bunch up in early minutes of Friday ' s 10,000-meter run. OPPOSITE PAGE. World record holder Ryun completes his quality 3:54.7 timing in the Glenn Cunningham Mile Run with a :56.1 final quarter. 420 1 421 4+44.C.1,44 It $4.7 4 .4 4.4 t Otit ' 1 44:1. 44ii mo, s fre.t As ' r 4 Nft 41% %411.1 A .441.44. abAltAttl ir Vo::::,41:444ta 041 14444Ct 1444;;i4i t $$ 41, Ors 71 4, 0 $4%0441447444 ;W44 NW 4444 44 4. e A. A+a, A4. ,04 , 2;i4tWt00-4410444 % 4 4 4 fy 4 4 ; . 04 OA A IA win% 0 AM ViStoot4 .. tioo tom: % 4 4 4 44444 444.44 4 4. VA k h , ti I le Akt 1 _ The1967 Track Tear ' . LEFT TO RIGHT: DWIGHT PECK, Senior from Woodcliff, N.J.; GARY Ann, Senior from Modesto, Calif.; LEE ADAMS, Junior from Bakersfield, Calif.; GEORGE BYERS, Sophomore from Kansas City, Mo.; STEVE MOON, Junior from Chanute; DREW HANI- ILTON, Sophomore from Valley Center; MIKE HAYES, Junior from Centralia; BEN OLISON, Junior from Bakersfield, Calif.; BOB STEINHOFF, Sophomore from Downey, Calif.; ALLEN RUSSELL, Junior from Scottsbluff, Nebr.; DICK BORNKESSEL, Sophomore from Kansas City. 422 :, S $ . %::::. : i:,7414.21 4 o - 0 $ Woo, i :st n4444 A-r4 s ' ,4 14vi% pipv 1 lik A ktf kr 04 t .441 ' V, ,160 we,. .4.4 .:14 ?. to . AI n VAle ,+ 0..4 1 ,A4 %OA At.,drA k $44 it 4 4 4 $$V4 e 4f4 4 40 gedlaSitt..$441)A1 4$4.4465:43fi LEFT ' f0 RIGHT. MIKE BTJRDICK, Senior from Overland Park; JOHN TURCK, Sophomore from Wichita; CURT GRINDAL, Junior from Carbondale; GENE MCCLAIN, Junior from Salina; DAVE MANSFIELD, Senior from Yuma, Ariz.; STEVE ASHERST, Senior from Newark, N.J.; MIKE PETTERSON, Sophomore from Wichita; MIKE KEARNS, Sophomore from Van Nuys, Calif.; STEVE SILVERBERG, Senior from Mission; JIM RYUN, Sophomore from Wichita. 423 THIS PAGE, ABOVE. Freshman standout Julio Meade completes a record-setting 3:12.7 mile relay effort in the freshman-junior college division of the KU Relays. RIGHT AND OPPOSITE PAGE. Clarence Haynes passes the baton to a sprinting Randy Julian at the halfway point of the 440-yard relay contest. 424 FRESH MAN TRACK Paced by several outstanding performers in both sprint and distance running events, the freshman track squad posted four school records this spring. Seventeen members of the team were awarded frosh numerals by coaches Bob Timmons and John Mitchell. In Kansas Relays competition the young Jayhawkers swept five firsts and two seconds, placing in twelve of the sixteen events. Taking first in the mile relay, KU speedsters Dean Pearce, Mark Ferrell, Randy Julian, and Julio Meade were clocked at a record- setting 3:12.7. Likewise establishing new Relays records in both the two-mile (Carl Nicholson, Roger Kathol, Paul Mattingly, Ferrell-7:35.8 ) and four-mile (Pat Miller, Kathol, Mattingly, Glenn Cunningham- 17:24.2) relays, the freshmen demonstrated a depth which should considerably strengthen KU ' s varsity team in years to come. Another first was recorded in the sprint medley relay ( Clarence Haynes, Meade, Julian, Ferrell- 3:28.4 ); while the 880-yard team ( Julian, J. W. John- son, Haynes, Meade-1:26.1 ) finished number two to a record-setting North Texas State group, and the distance medley squad finished second to Texas. Individually, Meade came back from his relay per- formances to win the 100-yard dash contest with a record-tying :09.7 timing. Other individual showings included John Oliver, second in the pole vault, and George Seaman, second in the discus. Dominating the State Federation Meet in Man- hattan, the frosh team won eight of the seventeen events. Meade ' s :21.0 first place timing in the 220- yard dash set a new team record. Coupled with his other win in the 100-yard dash ( :09.7) and Julian ' s 440-yard dash victory ( :48.2 ), the Hawks thus swept all three dash events. Kathol and Mattingly finished one-two in the mile run with 4:10.9 and 4:11.7 respectively. Mike Geiger in the 120-yard high hurdles ( :15.3) and George Seaman in the discus (142 ' -8 ) also took top honors in their events. In relays competition, the 440-yard and the mile teams both took first over KSU squads. Seconds by Geiger in the pole vault and Charles Falk in the high jump also contributed to the fine overall team showing in Federation competition. 425 Golf KU ' s golf team posted a 5-11-1 record in dual meets this year, finishing seventh in Big Eight competition. Sophomore Bill Hess and junior Bob Wells led the ten-man squad as low men in varsity competition. Other standouts were sophomore Chuck Peffer, junior Jack Clevenger, and senior Bill Southern. In tournament play, the Jayhawks placed fourth in the Oklahoma Intercollegiate Meet, and fourteenth in the Pikes Peak Invita- tional. In spite of their lower division finish in conference play, the golfers lose only Southern to graduation this spring. Prospects for improved play in 1968 are thus bright with the return of several lettermen plus a number of promising freshmen. 426 Tennis KU ' s tennis squad, coached by former Jayhawker net man Jim Burns, finished second in the Big Eight race. Led by sophomores Bill Debaun, Sid Kanter, and John Towner, and senior Bill Terry, the team opened the season with three consecutive wins. Following a defeat at the hands of Big Eight Champion Oklahoma, the Hawks went on to compile a 13-5 dual meet record prior to the conference tournament. The conference title this year was awarded on the basis of points won in dual meets with con- ference opponents plus matches won in the Big Eight tournament. Losing only one man to graduation two-year letterman Terry the young net men anticipate another strong season in 1968. LEFT To RIGHT. Jay Shramek, Prairie Village; Jim Keller, Russell; Mike Borders, Prairie Village; Jack Kilroy, Prairie Village; Bill DeBaun, Leawood; Sid Kanter, Leawood. NOT PICTURED. Bill Terry, Hutchinson. 427 Swimming. Following this year ' s second place Big Eight finish behind a tough Iowa State squad, the KU swim team looks forward to a promising 1968 season with a predominantly senior team. Losing All-American Don Pennington and captain Torn Van Slyke, the Jayhawks look for new depth to come from a 1967 freshman team which compiled a 4-0 record in dual meet competition. Varsity swimmers posted an 8-3 dual record, setting fourteen team records in the process. Capturing 114 points in the conference struggle the most KU has ever scored Jayhawks placed first, second, or third in sixteen of the eighteen events, but lacked the additional depth to take first place honors. TOP Row. Tom Bowser, Coffeyville; Chris Jeter, Wichita; Marty Nohe, Kansas City; Jim Askins, Wichita; Jim Merchant, Shawnee Mission; Roy O ' Connor, Philadelphia, Penn.; Hugh Miner, St. Joseph, Mo.; Jim Boyle, Omaha, Nebr.; Bill Hutchings, Wilmette, Ill.; Mark Meisinger, Topeka; Robert Livingston, Coffeyville; Bob Wilson, Wichita. BOTTOM Row. John McPherson, Emporia; Steve Fisher, Hillside, N.J.; Mickey Fleskes, Prairie Village; Mark Allen, Wichita; Don Pennington, Prairie Village; Tom Van Slyke, Wichita; Bob Daniel, Bartlesville, Okla.; Mike Woolems, Wichita; Greg Bell, Topeka. NOT PICTURED. Jim Coughenour, Overland Park, Bill Griffith, Wichita; Jim Kent, Wichita. 428 Gymnastics The 1967 KU gymnastics team finished third in the Big Eight Conference behind NCAA regional champion. Iowa State and powerful Colorado. The Jayhawks finished with a 6-4 record in dual competition, defeating Wichita State twice; Central Missouri, Kansas State, Oklahoma, and Colo- rado State each once; and losing to Iowa State, New Mexico, Colorado, and Nebraska. Kansas sported two men who were nationally ranked Gerry Denk on the trampoline and Wayne Dixon on the high bar. During the year six men scored 9.0 or better ( out of a possible 10.0) in their respective events at least once. The future for the squad appears bright. This season KU had eight sophomores, including Denk and Robert Pierson KU ' s best all-around performer and six juniors. STANDING. Jim Worcester, Lombard, Ill.; Steve Pyle, Baton Rouge, La.; Jim Gillispie, Lawrence; Doug Buethe, Glen Ellyn, Ill.; Greg Estes, Lawrence; Stan Rood, Lawrence; Dick Martin, Topeka; L. R. Dad Perry, assistant coach, Lawrence; Gerald Denk, Park Forest, Ill.; Robert Lockwood, head coach, Lawrence; John James, Wichita. SEATED. Wayne Dixon, Olathe; Wayne Shields, Wichita; Richard Hemphill, Lawrence. 429 IMt aseba I HURLER RANDY STROUP takes time out to discuss pitching strategy with catcher Cole Stimson. Coach Floyd Temple ' s 1967 Jayhawker baseball team compiled an overall mark of 12 wins and 15 de- feats, a conference record of 7-12, and a seventh- place finish in the Big Eight race. After a start of five victories in their first six games, the Hawks slumped to only one win in the next nine contests, before reeling off four straight wins. Unable to get rolling again, KU lost five straight, and finished 2-6. The Hawks featured good pitching but lacked hitting. KU had a .207 team batting average while their opponents managed only .200. Gary Ascanio was the team ' s leading hitter with a .284 average, and Tom Shawver with a .267 was the only other KU player to bat higher than .250. Jayhawk hurlers, how- ever, compiled a team earned run average of 2.56, led by Tom Bishard, 1.17 in 23 innings; Junior Riggins, 1.69 in 11 innings; and Randy Stroup, 1.71 in 47 in- nings. Other pitchers included Roger Jackson, 3-3 with a 2.60 ERA; Richard Slicker, 2-1 with a 2.81 ERA; and Bill Maddux, 2-4 with a 3.46 ERA. Stroup and Jackson were the winningest hurlers with three wins each. Other team leaders were Riggins with 23 hits and 3 homers, Randy Cordill with 17 runs batted in, and Maddux with 48 strikeouts. In spite of this year ' s losing season, next year ' s outlook is promising. Only two regulars graduate and the entire pitching staff will return. If KU ' s hitting improves, the Jayhawks should be able to move up in the standings next sea- son, improving on this year ' s second division finish. 430 ABOVE, LEFT. Sophomore Stroup, one of three KU pitchers with sub-two point earned run. averages, delivers one to the plate. RIGHT . Two-year letterman Bob Skahan takes a cut during a home game at the Hawks ' Quigley Field. ROW. Bill Maddox, Wichita; Randy Cordill, Topeka; Roger Jackson, Kansas City, Mo.; Steve Walsh, Salina; David Wood, Wichita; John. Adams, Shawnee Mission; Robert Moffatt, Dumas, Tex.; Randy Stroup, Webster Groves, Mo.; Sandy Buda, Omaha, Nebr. BOTTOM ROW. Cole Stimson, Great Bend; Richard Slicker, Tulsa, Okla.; Gary Ascanio, Cherokee; Alan Stoike, Topeka; Robert Evilsizer, Kansas City; Bob Skahan, Columbus; Tom Bishard, Uniontown. 431 BETA Tau vs. Navy. Since its inception in 1920, the KU intramural program has yielded com- petitive experiences to all men enrolled at the University of Kansas. This year ' s program, under the direction of Bob Lockwood and supervisors Bob Harper and Oren Ward, sponsored 10 sports with a total of 25 division championships. A record 6595 men ( including repeats ) participated in intramural athletics, surpassing the old mark of 6500 set in 1948. Participa- tion in touch football ( 1202 ), basketball ( 2016 ), and softball ( 1330 ), reached an all-time high, and volleyball ( 1079 ) recorded its second highest figure in IM history. Beta Theta Pi made a clean sweep in volleyball by capturing the A, B, and C division championships. The Betas also won the A champion- ship in softball by defeating the Laws in the Hill championship playoffs, 8-1. On their way to the finals, the Betas disposed of the AKL ' s for the Fraternity A title, and the Laws defeated the Scrocs in the Independent division. Sigma Chi won the B Hill championship by defeati ng Newark Bears, 3-2. The Sigs beat the Delis for the Fraternity crown while the Bears defeated Biophysics in the Independent B playoffs. Other spring intramural team champions were Phi Delta Theta in Swimming, Lie Wan- Leng in badminton, Kappa Sigma in golf, the Spoilers in handball, Beta Theta Pi in horseshoes, and the Withers in tennis. Spring Intramurals 432 433 UNIVERSITY LIFE . .. well, it ' s too windy to stack bricks. might as well work on the book . . . one of the good things about working on the Jayhawker is that the job has lifetime security . . . you meet lots of interesting people while working on a major university yearbook staff. like the midnight-to-eight janitorial staff in the Union ... the student body: How much do you have done on the third book? the editor: The holes are all printed. . . . the Jayhawker Magazine-Yearbook is published by the undergraduate student body of the University of Kansas. and thirty of his friends . . . the UDK makes a press run once a day. the Jayhawker staff only has to run four times a year. plus once more for senior class elections . . . the photography staff: Well, we can always fake it. . . . accommodations, goods, and services advertised in the Jayhawker are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. including members of the UDK staff . . . sure we ' ll add seventy pages to the book. sure we ' ll finish it May I. June I. August I. Merry Christmas .. . i (I_ 434 STANDING. DAVID GRAVES, Art Director; CINDY MCCAMMON, Editorial Secretary; RAY NIEMEIR, Head Photographer; STEVE MEYES, Business Manager; Jo ANN MEYER, Business Secretary. SEATED. BLAKE BILES, Editor. 435 STANDING. Liz CUPP, Office Assistant; KATHY BENTLEY, Office Assistant; KATHY STRAYER, Office Assistant; SALLIE LILLARD, Senior Pictures Manager; SHERRIL COOPER, Office Assistant. SEATED. JANICE MENDENHALL, Sales Manager; SUZANNE SAFFELS, Living Groups Pictures Manager. STANDING. BRENT WALDRON, Associate Editor; BEV GRAY, Index Editor; SHELLEY BRAY, Assistant Copy Editor; GARY GRIBBEN, Distribution Manager; ROB STURDY, Party Fix Editor; PAUL DAVIS, Advertising Art Director; LARRY FOGLEMAN, Sports Editor; JUDY MCGEIEE, Theatre Editor. SEATED. DOUG MACKEY, Copy Editor; ANNE PEARSE, Editorial Assistant. 436 BACK Row. BOB BUTLER, Theatre Editor; MIKE OKUN, Assistant Photographer. MIDDLE Row. LINDA KERBY, Editorial Assistant; DAVE YOUNG, Special Work Photographer; RENETTA ENGLES, Editorial As- sitant. FRONT Row. DREW ANDERSON, Editorial Assitant; RICK WRIGLEY, Assistant Photographer; JOE GODFREY, Advertising Manager. 437 Candidates for Jayhawker queen were chosen from their living groups sororities and scholarship halls each nominated one candidate while large women ' s residence halls chose three each. The candidates were then interviewed individually by a panel of university students and administrators. From these interviewees a group of ten finalists were chosen on the basis of beauty, poise, and Hill activities. Photographs of these finalists were sent to Mr. Hugh Hefner, editor and publisher of Playboy magazine. On the basis of these pictures, Mr. Hefner selected the queen and her four attendants. Jayhawker Queen Jan Monsees is a Leawood junior majoring in design. A member of Pi Beta Phi, she was previously chosen as Miss Lawrence-KU in the annual beauty pageant. Active in A VS, Jan was a freshman senator and a member of the fashion board. She has been a member of the concert choir. r ayhawker en 438 ,garitilM- MI %11 111111%111111MIF 11111111 IIM111111111117. ) I 0 attendants Lynn Scheufele, a freshman from Prairie Village, was elected social chairman of both her floor and her living group, Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall. She was a member of Frosh Hawks, and her major is elementary education. Majoring in occupational therapy, Kit Peuter, Mission sophomore, represented Naismith Hall, As a freshman she was secretary of her class, and a member of the Centennial Committee. This year she worked on the blood drive and was a member of Kallay Filleeans. A sophomore from Shawnee Mission, Margie Porter is majoring in business administration and advertising. President of her Delta Gamma pledge class, she was activities chairman for the house this year. Honored as a Greek Week Queen attendant, Margie will serve as treasurer of the junior class next year. Shawnee Mission senior Jo Dallum was vice-pres- ident of her sorority, Kappa Kappa Gamma. As a freshman she was one of the ten best-dressed KU coeds and a Jayhawker queen attendant. She has also been a member of the American Students Abroad for People-to-People. Lynn Scheufele 441 MODEL UNITED NATIONS versity students from KU and numerous other schools A unique learning experience for college and uni- was offered by the 1967 KU-Y-sponsored Model United Nations program. In session April 13, 14, and 15 in the Kansas Union, over four hundred students representing eighty-five delegations participated in MUN activities. A great amount of substantial debate marked the KU MUN as unique among the five hundred similar sessions held across the United States. Each section of the session proved to be active in its own area of responsibility. Providing an oppor- tunity for a close examination of the economic and social difficulties affecting world peace, the Economic and Social Council passed resolutions concerning birth control, narcotics and drug addiction, land reform, and disarmament. The Security Council dealt with issues on Viet Nam, Arab-Syrian border clashes, and the Cambodian-Thailand border dispute. True to actual Security Council tradition, a majority vote was secured in addition to recess votes to pass only one resolution. LEFT AND RIGHT. During the three-day MUN session, the Kansas Union Ballroom is the scene of General Assembly pro- ceedings and informal discussions among individual delegates. 442 443 The Kansas Relays annually attract thousands of persons to Mount Oread each spring. A three-day track program which traditionally features some of the most outstanding athletes from across the United States, the Relays posted new one-day attendance records of over 23,700 spectators in this, their forty-second year. With the widespread interest and publicity given the Relays and thus the University itself other KU organizations have through the years found it desirable to plan their programs and activities in tion with Relays weekend festivities. Just as the Relays weekend has come to include parades and queen contests directly related to the track program itself, so also has it meant the tion of KU ' s Engineering Exposition and various other events. The annual International Festival and the forty-seventh edition of the Exposition complimented Relays activities this year, with a large number of visitors and students attending more than one of the three attractions of April 20--22. ABOVE. Chancellor W escoe congratulates Karen Renstrom, 1967 Kansas Relays Queen, formally opening Saturday afternoon activities in Memorial Stadium. Jayhawker Mike Hayes clears an obstacle in the 3000-meter steeplechase contest. _LAYS AILKFN RIGHT AND BELOW. Visitors study a student ' s puter demonstration and peer at a NASA space capsule, two of the presentations featured in this year ' s exposition. T1 .1 e011 r_ X 0 OS ' t[ii[ ' ir With a look at both the present and the future, the 47th annual Engineering Exposition featured exhibits throughout Learned Hall of original student work prepared by organizations within the School of Engineering and Architecture. Based on the exposition ' s WE ' LL DO IT! theme, these displays treated such subjects as laser technology, air pollution, urban transit, and structures of the future. In addition to student displays, there were commercial exhibits, and demonstrations of university equipment and facilities. Of particular interest to most of the estimated 8000 visitors to the exposition was the Mercury Spacecraft 9, loaned to KU by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Under the direction of student chairman Will Bolton, the April 21 and 22 exposition activities were concluded Saturday evening with the 1967 Awards Banquet. Bearing the title, A Learned Miss, Donna Mitchell was selected earlier in the week to reign as queen of the exposition, with attendants Laurie Wedell and Lynn Neibarger. 444 445 For the past fourteen years, KU faculty and students have taken a spring trip around the world during the annual celebration of the International Festival. This year, more than three hundred foreign students presented the program in the midst of a colorful background. A kaleidoscope of jewelry, paintings, fabrics, and pottery from different lands served as the frame in loch Auditorium for the evening show of April 22. The mood ranged from the flamboyance of a Venezuelan dance to the fragile move- ments of Haag Bhairon, a Pakistani dance accompanied by citar; from the power of an African tribal dance to the subtlety of Chinese humor shown in The Red Cap, a short play. A panel composed of Lawrence citizens, KU faculty, and students selected the most outstanding performances of the pro- gram. This year ' s award for the best entertainment went to Japan, with Tur- key classified first in the exhibit program. A judo demonstration, a solo dance, and a group dance composed the Japanese first-place presentation. .The Turkish booth exhibit featured a structure of classical Turkish architecture. r or AYS W[L LEFT AND BELOW. KU ' s foreign students entertain their Hoch Auditorium audience with a skit satirizing life in various European countries. A week-long celebration focused on intra-hall social- izing and competition, the fourth annual Spring Fling featured several ,changes from previous years ' pro- grams. The AURH-sponsored event was directed by chairman Scott Blackard who worked with a steering committee of four. Over seven hundred members of KU ' s residence halls participated in the activities. New to the agenda was a Spring Fling Queen con- test. Early in the week three finalists were chosen by a judging committee from a group of women rep- resenting each women ' s and coed residence hall. Fol- lowing voting by male residents, held throughout the week at the information booth on campus, Queen Connie Kingry was crowned during the Friday evening Whatchamacallit, and reigned over Saturday ' s games and Sunday ' s banquet and Spring Sing. As most activities were based on a pairings system SPR N FL Nto matching men ' s and women ' s floors for competition, Monday and Tuesday were filled with exchange din- ners, dances, and other social functions. These were designed to encourage the interest and participation of individual residents in upcoming events. Formal activities then began Wednesday noon with a parade down Jayhawk Boulevard another new addition to the week ' s schedule. Each living group was invited to enter a float; and a band, ducks, and the three queen finalists were also present to kick off the festivities. A Thursday evening hootenanny, one of the high- lights of the week, attracted two hundred and fifty people to the Lewis Hall lounge where students them- selves provided more than two hours of musical enter- tainment. The following night, two hundred and fifty people attended a dance in the Templin Hall lounge, the first of several weekend functions competing for the attention of Flingers. Throughout both days Friday and Saturday a carnival operated west of Memorial Stadium near Potter Lake. The traditional games began Saturday morning with a tug-of-war contest between teams of five men and five women each. At the same time and through- out most of the day a Gymkhana in the Templin and Lewis Hall parking lots drew contestants and spec- tators alike, as drivers maneuvered their sports cars through a course set up by the KU Sports Car Club. A picnic at noon was followed by the migration of over five hundred students to the Potter Lake area. For most of the afternoon, the Bod and Marathon races, Egg Toss and Pie Eating contests, and Duck Race pro- vided everyone interested with a chance to win a Swingin ' Flinger ' 67 button for winning an event. The annual Recognition Banquet was one of two Sunday events. Spring Fling chairmen, AURH and residence hall officers, and members of the NACURH staff were honored during a dinner in Lewis Hall. Spring Sing then climaxed the week ' s activities. Pre- sented in the Kansas Union ballroom that evening, it was coordinated by the Inter-Residence Council. Entrants competed in several categories for trophies presented at the end of the show. 4::?2:07.02rodr_rodr. WITH THE ASSISTANCE OF THREE MEN, a coed participant in the Duck Race cautiously removes her entrant from its cage. 446 FIVE MEMBERS OF A Boo RACE TEAM stumble across the finish line, well of their nearest rivals in the traditional event. 447 ) 11, RESIDENTS OF LEWIS AND TEMPLIN HALLS combine their talents in a Negro spiritual to take top honors in Spring Sing competition. 448 GAMMA PHI BETAS AND SIGMA CHIS pause between numbers during their part of the Greek Week Sing program in Hoch Auditorium. WHILE THEIR MALE COUNTERPARTS CHEER THEM ON, Greek women pull to a standstill in the Friday afternoon tug-of-war. 1 1 11 VI Hai PINE AND ATO CHARIOTEERS strain to reach the tape in the final seconds of their heat. From the Queen ' s Tea on Sunday, April 23, to the track and field events on Saturday, April 29, Greek Week 1967 brought KU Greeks together to socialize and to compete. Co-chairmen Jim Renier and Sharon Mahood organized a staff of twenty-four Greeks to present a week ' s program of varied events. Sunday ' s Queen ' s Tea presented the thirteen so- rorities ' candidates to be judged according to ac- tivities, poise, beauty, and charm. Monday and Tuesday offered socializing while eating. Monday ' s exchange dinners opened each house for guests from other houses. Tuesday night the Kansas Union Ball- room housed the Greek Week Banquet. A record at- tendance of over one thousand gathered to eat, to vote for the queen candidates, and to hear Stanley Learned speak. Queen Tricia Cowen, Kappa Alpha Theta, and Attendants Margie Porter, Delta Gamma, and Diane Seaver, Alpha Delta Pi, were chosen to reign over the week ' s marathon of events. Mike Nail, IFC vice-president, presented a donation of $606 from KU ' s Greek houses to the Ballard Community Center for Underprivileged Children. Housemothers filled twenty tables of the Union ' s Kansas Room Thursday afternoon for bridge competition, with Alpha Chi Omega Mom Eleanor Darney taking first place. Greeks then surged into the final two days with a competitive spirit. Friday ' s All-Star Football Game pitted players of the East against the West in a tag football game which featured rough blocking and continuous passing. The East downed the West, 25-13. Immediately following the game, fifteen men from the West Hills cooled the East ' s victory spirit with splash- ing revenge in a tug-of-war across Potter Lake. East and West girls shied from the water and came to a mighty draw. Later in the evening, musical talents were matched during the Greek Week Sing in Hoch Auditorium. Alpha Tau Omega and Pi Beta Phi com- bined to win the mixed division, while Kappa Alpha Theta and Delta Tau Delta took top honors in the women ' s and men ' s divisions respectively. Saturday ' s events closed the week ' s activities. A leadership seminar with four representatives from each house met Saturday morning for brunch and discussion of the Greek system. The afternoon featured the Chariot Race and Relays at Memorial Stadium, both won by Phi Delta Theta. Saturday evening, during intermission of the SUA Spring Concert, Alpha Tau Omega and Pi Beta Phi were awarded trophies as over- all participation winners of 1967 Greek Week events. 449 The accent was on change and variety as Student Union Activities presented its 1967 spring concert April 29 in Hoch Auditorium. As a fitting conclusion to a week of Spring Fling and Greek Week activities, the concert featured a diversified program of musical talents. Adopting a theme for the first time, the Spring-A-Long also presented three separate groups rather than the usual one. The first performers were the Sandpipers, currently popular recording artists. The three male and two female members of the group sang a variety of modern songs, including Louie, Louie, and their own Guan- tanamaro. Following intermission, the Four Fresh- men changed the mood of the concert, as the estab- lished jazz vocalists sang several of the older songs with which they have become associated. The Mitchell Trio then set yet another pace for the evening with their satirical songs and folk-song entertainment ap- proach. Presenting a repertoire which included such numbers as The Bills of Rhymney, Governor Lura- leen, and the amusing Lucy Barnes, they brought the concert to a close at 11:30, in spite of the au- dience ' s continued enthusiasm. 450 451 Opera came to the University of Kansas on April 21, 22, 28, and 30, as University Theatre and the School of Fine Arts combined their talents in Wolfgang Mozart ' s The Magic Flute. Stage direction was pro- vided by Tom Rea, musical direction by George Law- ner, choreography by Yen Lu Wong, and choral di- rection by James Ralston. James Hawes, Chez Haehl, and Charles Lown were in charge of scenery, cos- tumes, and lighting, respectively. Mozart wrote The Magic Flute in 1790 at the age of thirty-five, just a few months before his death. He never took a liking to comic opera such as The Magic Flute, and wrote this work only so that he would have sufficient funds to finish his Requiem before death overtook him. Ironically, The Magic Flute is prob- ably his most popular opera. The plot is a combination of political satire, the symbolism of Freemasonry, and nave humor all set against an Egyptian background. Although a good deal of the satire and symbolism is unfamilar to audiences, the fanciful plot is more than enough to carry the show. Tamino (Bruce Gardner ), a prince in a foreign land, and Papageno (David Holloway), a bird-man, are commissioned by the Queen of the Night ( Marva Lou Sneegas ) to seek out the palace of Sarastro (Mike Riley), a ruler who is supposed to have kidnapped the Queen ' s daughter, Pamina ( Shirley Williams ). A twist in the plot reveals the Queen as the real villain: Tamino and Pamina fall in love and Papageno, the comical bird-man, gets what he wants out of life a girl friend with feathers. P7 THREE SPIRITS OFFER to protect Pamina from her mother, the Queen of the Night. 0 we 452 THE FOUR COOKS SCHEME to steal the recipe for gray soup from the Count. ?es The Theatre of the Absurd was the order of the day during May as the Experimental Theatre witnessed eight performances of the year ' s final dramatic pro- duction, The Wicked Cooks. Written by Germany ' s Gunter Grass, the play is based on the idea that . . not even the happiest of men can remain free when the wicked cooks do not wish it so. Delving into the wild world of the Theatre of the Absurd, the players of The Wicked Cooks wore masks and white or black costumes as they performed on the Theatre ' s curved stage. All scenery was done in purple and orange, and sound effects a trademark of the Experimental Theatre were used throughout the performance. The plot revolves around the attempts of five cooks to steal, in any way they can, a recipe for gray soup, known only by the Count. Four of the cooks are rotten to the core, but the fifth, Vasco, is a tortured, self-conscious individual who feels that his life de- pends upon the recipe, as if in it he can find salvation. The Count remains steadfast in retaining his secret, and when he falls in love with Vasco ' s girl friend, Martha, he forgets the recipe entirely. Having found his happiness, he leaves the wicked cooks behind to ponder their own salvation. The precise meaning of the play was the question which faced KU audiences leaving Murphy Hall. In a review, the University Daily Kansan praised the play for its religious symbolism. On the other hand, more than one theatre graduate student expressed the belief that Gunter Grass had written the play one night just to see how many people would actually try to produce it. 453 I frEACHER ASSOCIATE PIALIFESSOL FRED VAN VLECK Since coming to KU in 1962, Hillteacher Fred Van Vleck has been an out- standing contributor to the university ' s mathematics department and its pro- grams. Although his special field of research is differential equations and con- trol theory, his contributions to the mathematics department go beyond these two fields. He helped in developing two math courses, math 11 and 12, both requested by the School of Business to meet the math requirements of a business student. He also is co-author of two books, one the text used in math 11, Linear Equations and Matrices. After receiving both a B.A. and an M.A. from the University of Nebraska, Associate Professor Van Vleck studied at the University of Minnesota, where he received his Ph.D. in 1960. His next two years were spent as an instructor at MIT, from which he came to Mount Oread. In service to individual stu- dents at KU, Hillteacher Van Vleck has supervised four master ' s theses, a spe- cial distinction because the selection of a supervisor is a personal choice of the candidate. Several students in his math honor courses have taken honors in William Lowell Putnam Mathematics Competition. He has also published papers on both differential equations and control theory, two of which have appeared in the American Mathematics Monthly. Looking back on this experience at the university, Van Vleck states, I feel professors are here to work with the students, and I ' ve found the students here at KU very hard working. 454 RAI1L,HTEACHER, ASSOCIATE M ROFES001-1 DE BERT AN EL Dividing his time among his administrative duties as assistant Dean of the College, his research on the genetic effects of radiation, and his teaching assignments as Associate Professor of Microbiology, Hil ' teacher Dr. Delbert M. Shankel lends proof in his endeavors to the adage, variety is the spice of life. I enjoy all three areas and hope to continue working in all three capacities, Shankel notes. As if to add more variety to his work in these fields, Dr. Shankel will participate in yet another area next year. He is headed for Edinburgh, Scotland, where he will do research on mutations as an invited research associate on sabbatical leave from the university. Prior to coming to KU, Associate Professor Shankel received his B.A. from Walla Walla College, and subsequently was awarded a Ph.D. with a bacteriology major from the the University of Texas. He also served in a teaching capacity at both of these institutions and at San Antonio College. Special positions in which Dr. Shankel has served extensively while at KU include advisor to SEARCH for the past five years, director of the KU Science and Math Camp for four years, and director of the Microbiology UGRP program for three years. He is also a member of both the KU-Y Advisory Board and the American Society for Microbiology Education Committee. Reflecting his philosophy towards teaching, he feels that the key to teaching is to interest students and to show them the excitement available in what they are studying. 455 HIE ,TEACHER hE E YOUNG Hillteacher Lee Young, instructor of advertising and teacher of an honors West- ern Civilization section, was a successful businessman who gave up his career to return to school and to teach. In the years after he got his B.A. in American Studies from Syracuse University in 1950, Mr. Young was production manager for a publishing house, an engraving company, and an advertising agency; an account executive for an advertising agency; and general manager for a veterinary medicine publishing company. In 1964 Mr. Young came to KU as an assistant instructor and began work on his B.S. in journalism, which he hopes to get in 1967. He would like to continue his graduate work in journalism, ultimately earning his Ph.D. With the Burton K. Wasser Agency Fellowship he obtained in 1965, Mr. Young had a summer affiliation with an agency in Kansas City. Through an educator advertiser fellowship from the American Association of Advertising Agencies he worked with the Marsteller Agency in Chicago in 1966. Mr. Young is now doing independent research on the attitudes of consumers toward advertising. Having carried out his investigations on the high school and college level, he now plans to begin research on the general public. Mr. Young is described by Warren Agee, dean of the school of journalism, as a personable young man who is concerned with other people ' s problems. An active church member, Mr. Young is well-liked by his students and his colleagues. He is firm, says one of his students, but he is a good communicator; you can always feel him encouraging you. 456 SENIORS . ) ) 457 -11-1 HOPE The HOPE Award is given annually to an outstanding educator selected by the graduating class. HOPE stands for Honor for the Outstanding Progressive Educator. This year, seniors nominated thirty-five faculty members as candidates for the award, chosen on the basis of the individuals ' success in stimulating, challenging, and working with students; devotion to profession; and contribu- tions to the general cultural and intellectual life of the University. From the applications submitted, a committee of seven seniors selected Dr. Aldon. D. Bell, associate professor of history and assistant dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, as 1967 recipient of the award. Previously honored as a 1967 Jayhawker Hillteacher, Dr. Bell ' s services to the University and the community are described on page 218 of the Winter edition. 458 HILLI7OPPER MARCIA BUNN Hilltopper Marcia Bunn ' s university career was capped with her nomination to Mortar Board last spring. While earning a 2.10 overall GPA in the college, Marcia has participated in a variety of living group and hill activities. As a freshman, she was secretary of GSP Hall, and a member of the hall council. Elected president of Cwens during her sophomore year, she later worked with fresh- man girls as a Cwens advisor. During her sophomore year she also served on the Deans Advisory Board, and the following year was a member of the AWS Senate. Culminating three years of service to her sorority, Kappa Alpha Theta, she led the house this past year as presi- dent. At the same time, she represented the Thetas on the Panhellenic Presidents Council. Majoring in secondary education with a special emphasis on English, Marcia has received membership in Pi Lambda Theta, honorary education society, and this fall plans to commence teaching. HILLTOPPER JOHN CASADY Hilltopper John Casady has amassed an outstanding record of scholastic excellence and extracurricular activities in his four years on Mount Oread. John, who carries majors in English and advertising, has been on the Dean ' s Honor Roll and a member of both Owl Society and Sachem. His activities on the Hill have included the chairmanships of the 1965 SUA Activities Carnival, the Jayhawker Liasion Committee, the publications and publicity committee of University Party, and the ASC Student Publications Board. Working on the production of the Jayhawker since his freshman year, John served as copy editor, party pix editor, and historian, and in 1966 he edited the yearbook which won All-American ratings. In addition to these activities, his record includes several offices held within his fra- ternity, Alpha Tan Omega: secretary, rush chairman, pledge trainer, public and alumni relations chairman, and alumni newsletter editor. L 459 HILLTOPPER CHERI BALL Academic achievements and participation in several ac- tivities on the Hill have marked Cheri. Ball as a valuable asset to KU and earned for her the title of Hilltopper. During her freshman year she served on the steering committee of the KU-Y Freshman Model Senate. Her service to the University has included work as a staff assistant in Lewis Hall and as a summer school freshman counsellor. Cheri ' s main area of interest, however, has been her work with the Association of College and Uni- versity Residence Halls. During this past year, she served AURII as its social chairman on the KU campus and attended the National AURH conference. Asa result of such work, she was elected to the National Residence Hall Honorary. Academically, Cheri is majoring in design in which she has maintained a 2.20 overall GPA. Be- cause of her scholastic achievement, she was awarded an American Business Women ' s Scholarship for this year. After graduation this spring, Cheri plans to do graduate work in art education at KU. 460 HILETOPPER JOHN HILL During his four years at KU, John Hill has demonstrated a broad interest in the student life and activities of the University. As a resident of McCollum Hall he was floor president, a member of the Hall Senate, and Elections Committee chairman. In Ellsworth Hall, he has likewise been chairman of the elections committee, and was a member of the Constitution. Steering Committee. He has been vice-chairman, chairman, and a cabinet member of AURH, and has been second vice-president of this organ- ization ' s Midwestern Association. As a result of this work, he has served as a delegate to the National Con- ference three times and as the campus chairman when the conference was held at KU this past spring. As College Man representative to the ASC, he served on both the Student Regulations Committee and the Com- mittee on Committees. Other KU activities for John have included participation in Dean ' s Advisory Board, College Intermediary Board, and Heart Fund Drive activities. HILLTOPPER JEANIE ITURGARDT Recognition as a KU Hilltopper for scholastic honors and numerous activities culminates four rewarding years for Jeanie Burgardt. An overall GPA of 2.40, with a 2.35 in her major of speech pathology and audiology, has brought Jeanie membership in Cwens, Mortar Board, and Pi Lambda Theta; a Pi Beta Phi award among eight chap- ters for her contributions to the sorority; and selection as the outstanding Pi Phi woman. In a whirl of campus activities since her freshman year, Jeanie has been active in Frosh Hawks, People-to-People, and several Greek Week programs, and was a Previews banquet speaker. She also was a delegate to the AWS Regulations Con- vention, and worked on the Panhellenic Presidents Coun- cil, the AWS Constitutional Revision Committee, and several SUA committees. As a contributing member of her sorority, Pi Beta Phi, she has been president of her pledge class, corresponding secretary, and representative to the executive board, and this year was elected presi- dent of the chapter. HILLTOPPER DAVID HALL Academic excellence, leadership in a variety of activities, and numerous honors have marked David Hall ' s KU record. He has been a member of the ASC Facts and Statistics, and Hosting and Hospitality committees, and this year served on the University Disciplinary Committee. He worked on the Jayhawker staff as a sophomore and junior, has been a member of the KU Relays Committee since his freshman year, and served this year as chairman of the Senior Gift Committee. A leader within his fra- ternity, Phi Delta Theta, Dave was scholarship chair- man, chorister, and president. He has also been the Phi Delts ' IFC representative and during this time served on the Civil Rights and Expansion committees. This con- tinuous record of leadership and service coupled with Dave ' s 2.76 GPA in his chemistry and political science majors have earned him membership in Owl Society, Sachem, and Phi Lambda Upsilon, and both U. G. Mitchell and Summerfield Scholarships. 461 Outstanding Seniors Bob Sears majored in political science and graduated with a 2.40 overall GPA. A member of Pi Sigma Alpha and Scabbard and Blade, he held an Air Force Scholarship and was awarded the Professor of Aerospace Studies Gold Medal as outstanding junior cadet. President of his fraternity, Alpha Kappa Lambda, two terms, he was in the Rock Chalk cast for three years. He was vice-president and treasurer of the KU Young Repub licans and attended Leadership School in Washington, D.C. In the KU-Y he was president of the Freshman Model Senate, cabinet member three years, Freshman Camp Counselor, and Mem- bership Chairman. Majoring in English and secondary education, Chi Omega Linda Maher carried a 1.70 overall GPA. In her house she was secretary of her pledge class, skits chairman, model pledge, president, Standards Board representa- tive, and a member of the 1966 Rock Chalk cast. Before chairing the SUA Hospitality Board, she was hospitality chairman for the Mancini Concert and chairman of the SUA Carnival Skits and Booths and of the Presidents ' Luncheon. Also active in the AWS, Linda was a hostess for High School Leadership Day and member of the Honors Night committee. She was a member of Kallay Filleeans and served on the Panhellenic Presidents Council. Graduating with a 2.9 overall GPA, Chinese major Alan Hitt spent the summer of 1966 in Taiwan studying on a KU grant. A Phi Beta Kappa, he was also a member of Owl Society, Sachem, and Pi Mu Epsilon math hon- orary. Both Summerfield and National Merit scholarships were awarded to Alan, who was elected treasurer and then secretary of his fraternity, Beta Theta Pi. He also served on the Col- lege Intermediary Board and the Stu- dent Advisory Board for two years. Alan was second in his freshman Army ROTC class, and first in both his soph- omore and his senior ROTC classes. 462 With a concentration in Spanish and Portuguese, advertising major Chuck Stewart will begin work at KU on his master ' s degree in public relations, hoping to work with a corporation with affiliations in South America. Rush chairman and president of his house, Acacia, he was elected Out- standing Senior by his chapter. As a member of the Interfraternity Coun- cil, Chuck was rushbook editor, sec- retary of the Executive Council, and delegate to the National IFC Con- vention held in New Orleans in 1966. He was the Souvenir Program Chair- man for Rock Chalk ' 67, and was a feature writer for the 1967 Jayhawker. With an overall GPA of 1.88 and a 3.00 in his journalism major, Phi Gamma Delta Eric Morgenthaler was outstanding junior and outstanding senior in the J-school. Secretary of Sigma Delta Chi journalism fraternity, he won a Kansas City Press Club Schol- arship. On the University Daily Kan- san staff Eric was editorial page edi- tor, assistant managing editor, and executive reporter. He was on the Jour- nalism Dean ' s Advisory Board, the Dean ' s Advisory Council, and the Council on Student Affairs. In 1966 he won the J-school ' s award for the best news story. He also won two cash awards in the William Randolph Hearst national writing competition. Carrying a 2.50 overall GPA, journal- ism major Judy Faust graduated with distinction and was voted the out- standing senior woman in news-edi- torial. Assistant managing editor and executive reporter for the University Daily Kansan, she was president of Theta Sigma Phi, women ' s journalism honorary. Judy was president of her sorority, Alpha Omicron Pi, and a member of the Panhellenic Presidents ' Council. In her house she also served as chairman of the delegation to the AWS regulations convention, as phil- anthropic chairman, and as director for the Rock Chalk skit. Other activi- ties included membership in Cwens, the AWS House, and Mortar Board. 463 When Phi Beta Kappa Steve Gross- man graduated magna cum laude after three years, he held a 2.80 in his majors, theater and psychology. Re- cipient of several awards in speech, theater, and psychology, he also held two undergraduate assistantships under Dr. Jack Brooking and Dr. Jed Davis. He taught art classes and did theater work as a volunteer at Osa- watomie State Hospital. Having per- formed in such KU productions as West Side Story and Marat-Sade, Steve used this experience in Creede, Colorado, where he founded, pro- duced, and directed a summer reper- tory theater. Next year he will serve with the Peace Corps in Malaysia. Majoring in journalism and specializing in advertising, Cecily Pitts has main- tained a 1.75 overall GPA. As a freshman she was chosen floor presi- dent and outstanding Corbin Woman. She was a member of Cwens, pres- ident of Gamma Chi advertising sorority, and Sweetheart of Sigma Chi. Social chairman of her house, Kappa Alpha Theta, Cecily received the Class of 1913 Scholarship Award. An ac- tive member of the Associated Women Students, she was AWS freshman rep- resentative; secretary, vice-president, and president of the AWS House; and vice-president and a member of the standards board in the AWS Senate. Majoring in international relations and human relations, Bill Robinson graduated with a 1.80 overall GPA.. As a member of the ASC he was on the Little Hoover Commission and the Committee on Committees, was Fresh- man Leadership Chairman and Big Eight Student Government Coordi- nator, and was regional chairman of the National Executive Council of As- sociated Student Governments. Bill was also active on the University Centennial Committee, the Dean ' s Advisory Council, and COSA, a nd served as student body vice-president, Previews assistant, and both residence hall counselor and director. 464 Outstanding Seniors Andrea Speer held a 2.50 overall GPA with a 2.71 in her major of mathematics. As a member of AWS she was senator, Cwen advisor, and served on both the High School Leader- sh ip Day Steering Committee and the Board of Standards. She was a Frosh Hawk and a member of committees in both the SUA and the ASC. Dur- ing her senior year Andrea served as treasurer and member of the executive board of her house, Pi Beta Phi. Re- cipient of a four year KU honor schol- arship, she was on the honor roll five semesters, and was elected to Mortar Board, of which she was treasurer her senior year. In 1966 she attended the advanced German Institute, in Eutin. Pi Beta Phi Cindy Hardin was a member of Pi Delta Phi French honor- ary and attended the Bryn Mawr Summer French Institute in Avignon, France in 1966. A participant in the honors program, she was, as a fresh- man, AWS Senator, member of the All Hall Council, and most outstanding woman in her living group. President of both Cwens and AWS, she was also a member of Mortar Board and Phi Beta Kappa. In her house she was president of her pledge class and on the scholarship committee. She served on the Dean ' s Advisory Board and the Council on Student Affairs. Cindy was chosen. Jayhawker queen and Ameri- can Royal princess. Kappa Sigma Mike McNally was awarded one of the National Leader- ship-Scholarship Awards by the na- tional fraternity. Active in his house, he was rush chairman and treasurer, and he served as delegate to several national fraternity conferences. He was chairman of the All Student Coun- cil and member of the Vox Populi Advisory Board, the Dean ' s Advisory Board, and the Chancellor ' s Univer- sity Human Rights Committee. In the fall of 1964 he was the chairman of the Greek Week Project, the Mus- cular Distrophy drive. Mike, who will enter KU Law School this fall, was also treasurer of Alpha Kappa Psi professional business fraternity. 465 SENIORS ADAMS, STEPHEN T., Leawood Indust. Ad Min. Lambda Chi Alpha, intra. chm., rush, chm., pres.; honor roll, two sem.; IFC, Pres. Coun.; AICHE; Bus. Sch. Undergrad. Bd.; Faculty and Course Excellence Comm., chm.; Sr. Day Comm.; UP. AHLBRANDT, JOEL ALLAN, Prairie Village Ed., Lang. Arts AIKEN, THOMAS NORTHCOTT, Lawrence Aerospace Engineering Honor Roll, four sem.; Sigma Gamma Tau; AIAA, sec.- treas.; National Merit Scholar.; Douglas Summer Fellow. AIZER, ALYAZAR YAQUB, Baghdad, Iraq Honor Roll, one sem. ALCALA, GABRIEL JOSEPH, Topeka Pol. Sci. Washburn Univ.: Sigma Pi Sigma. Univ. of Kan.: Newman Club. ALDIS, JOHN W., Fort Scott Microbiology Honor Roll, two sem.; CYR; MISUK; KU Underwater Sports Club; Vox. ALEXANDER, PATRICIA ANN, Junction City Ed., Sp. Path. Lewis Hall, fr. mien. comm.; AWS, hostess, High Sch. Leadership Day; CRC; KU-Y; Sr. Year Traineeship Fellowship. ALFONSO, CARLOS L., Leavenworth Templin Hall, libr. comm., jud. coup. ALLEN, DAVID RALPH, Norton Pharmacy Honor Roll, three sem.; Amer. Pharm. Assn.; NSF grant. ALLEN, DONNA LOUISE, Clayton, Mo. Art History Honor Roll, five sem.; AWS; College Bowl; Kansas Engineer staff; Woodrow Wilson Fellowship Nominee. Transfer, Univ. of Missouri: Dean ' s List; films comm. ALLEN, GEORGE JEFFREY, Bethel Zoology Grace Pearson Hall, treas.; Inter-Varsity Christian Fel- lowship. AMSDEN, TIMOTHY LEE, Wichita Psychology, Eng. ANDERSON, CAROL ANDREA, Shawnee Mission Microbiology Douthart Hall, treas.; Honor Roll, five sem.; College Bowl; KU-Y, tutor; P-t-P, English-In-Action Comm.; MISUK; NSF undergrad. research assistanceship; Schol- arship Hall Award; Honor Scholarship; Watkins Finalist; Woodrow Wilson Nominee; KU-CU Russian Summer Lang. Inst.; Germ. Dept. Scholarship Award. ANDERSON, JUDITH ANNE, Washington, D.C. Spanish Kappa Kappa Gamma, song leader. Transfer, Pine Manor Jr. Coll., Wellesley, Mass.: choir, pres.; Offbeats; Candlelighting Service; Dean ' s Award. ANDERSON, WILLIAM WOODROW, Brunswick, Mo. Music Ed., Voice McCollum Hall, counselor; Honor Roll, one sem. ANGEL, JOSEPH WILLIAM, Kansas City, Mo. Bus. Admin. Honor Roll, one sem.; Newman Club. Transfer, Kansas City Jr. Coll.: Current Events Club. ANGELL, JUDITH DIANE, Marshalltown, Ia. Elem. Ed. Transfer, Ottawa Univ.: Honor Scholarship; Sigma Iota Psi, soc. ohm. ANGELL, ROYCE VAN, Plains Architecture AIA. ANNING, ELIZABETH JANE, Coffeyville Elem. Ed. McCollum Hall; KU-Y. APPEL, GARY STEPHEN, St. Louis, Mo. Advertising McCollum Hall, Tartan, ed.; Honor Roll, one sem.; AFROTC, info. off.; Arnold Air Society; International Club. ARBOGAST, NAN LAURETTE, Paola Campus Crusade for Christ. Special Ed. ARMSTRONG, MIKE FRANK, Abilene History McCollum Hall; Honor Roll, one sem.; Rock Chalk Revue; Vox; CYR. ASHER, KENNETH LEE, Effingham Pharmacy KU-Y; Spring Fling; Statewide Act. Assn. ASHURST, STEPHEN FREDERICK, Newark, N.J. Advertising Varsity track; UDK, adv. dept.; Jay Janes, capt. 1967 466 1967 SENIORS ATKINSON, NANCY LOUISE, Caldwell Microbiology Alpha Delta Pi, pl. class pies.; AWS, Reg. Comm.; Gk. Wk. Sing; Jay Janes; SUA, Hosp. Comm.; MISUK. AULT, SUSAN JANE, Kirkwood, Mo. Microbiology Alpha Delta Pi, Jr. Panhell. Rep.; Frosh Hawks; UP; Kallay Filleans, pres.; MISUK. AXE, KATHRYN, Bartlesville, Okla. Eng., Philosophy Lewis Hall, staff asst.; Hodder Hall, pies.; Ellsworth Hall, floor pres.; Honor Roll, six sem.; AURH; AWS, Roles of Women Comm.; College Bowl, rapt.; Frosh Hawks; IRC; Mortar Board; Woodrow Wilson Nominee. BABCOCK, JACQUELINE, Overland Park Elem. Ed. GSP Hall; Lewis Hall; Ellsworth Hall, staff asst., Outstanding Woman; Honor Roll, two sem.; KU-Y; Crescents, pros.; SUA, Hosp. Comm.; UP; Cwens; Crescent Girl of Lambda Chi Alpha. BACK, JOYCE ELLEN, Mount Hope Music Ed. Transfer, Kansas State Univ.: Alpha Chi Omega, leader; Dean ' s Honor Roll; K-State Players; Woodwind Quintet; band; orchestra; A Cappella Choir; My Fair Lady; The Visit; Madrigals. Univ. of Kansas: Carry Nation; Mu Phi Epsilon; MENC; Pi Kappa Theta; Chamber Choir. BAILEY, DONALD LEE, Dodge City English Templin Hall, fl. soc. chm.; Mu Epsilon Nu, treas.; Univ. Symphony Orch. BAILEY, ROBERT JR., Wichita Econ., Pol. Sci. Ellsworth Hall, jud. coun., counselor; Honor Roll, one sem.; Woodrow Wilson Nominee. Transfer, Kansas City, Kan., Jr. Coll.: Phi Rho Pi, v.p.; Phi Theta Kappa. BAIRD, JUDITH M., Topeka Business AWS; UP; CYR; NEA; Phi Beta Lambda; NBEA. BAKER, BUDDY DAVID, Iola Pol. Sci., Hist. Templin Hall; Honor Roll, one sem.; Campus Crusade for Christ; CYD; Bar Assn. Scholarship. Transfer, Allen Co. Coll.: student body pres.; CYD, pres. BAKER, DEBORAH FAYE, Munich, Germany Comm. Art Chi Omega; Golden Hearts of Sigma Phi Epsilon; P-t-P; Rock Chalk Revue; Student Directory, art dir.; Sigma Phi Epsilon Sweetheart Attendant. BALDWIN, LELIA HEFFNER, Lawrence Mathematics BALL, CHARYL LOREE, Olathe Design Lewis Hall, house comm., campus rep., staff asst.; AURH, hall rep., soc. chin.; NACURH, conference ohm.; KU-Y, fr. model sen. steering comm.; res. hall summer fr. coon.; Jayhawker Hilltopper. BARENBERG, MARLENE ROSE, Omaha, Nebr. Occupational Therapy Watkins Hall; AURH; Newman Club, soc. chin.; Stri- dent Occupational Then Assn.; VRA Grant; United Cerebral Palsy Scholarship. BARTCHER, DEANNA LEE, Wichita Elem. Ed. Honor Roll, one sem.; SNEA. Transfer, Hutchinson Comm. Coll. BARTLETT, DOROTHY, Moran Int. Design, Weaving Hashinger Hall; Honor Roll, three sem.; AWS, hall fl. rep.; AID, treas. Transfer, Kansas State Coll. at Pitts- burg: Alpha Gamma Delta; AWS, corr. sec.; Cwens. BASFORD, NANCY LORRAINE, Jackson, Mich. Zoology :Ellsworth Hall; Honor Roll, three sem.; Frosh Hawks; Jay Janes; CYR; Kappa Phi, chaplain, Alpha Kora pres., corr. sec., honor initiate; NSF grant. BASOW, ROBERT RICHARD, Wichita Advertising Honor Roll, one sem.; College Bowl; UDK, promotion mgr.; Alpha Delta Sigma, treas., v.p., pres.; Home- coming of the Century pub. rel.; Scholarship Hall Award. BATES, JAMES L., New York, N. Y. Architecture Delta Sigma Phi, sgt.-at-arms, chaplain, honor pl., song leader; Honor Roll, one sem.; IFC; Scarab; AIA. BAYLESS, PAMELA JEAN, Shawnee Mission Art Hist., French, Spanish Chi Omega, rush chm., act. chin.; Honor Roll, three sem.; ASC Student Adv. Bd.; SUA, sec., Hosp. Chm.; Jayhawker; Mortar Board; Sigma Delta Pi; KU Honor Scholarship; SMOP Scholarship; fr. counselor; French Summer Lang. Inst.; Jayhawker Hilltopper. BEACH, NANCY K., Louisburg Elem. Ed. Vox; SNEA; Kappa Phi; Scholarship Hall Award. BEACH, TERRY KISTLER, Hays German Pi Beta Phi, pl. class treas., sch. chin.; Honor Roll, five sem.; ASC, rep., Athletic Seating Bd., Sec. Comm.; AWS, rep., Student-Faculty Rel. Chm., House-Senate Liaison; College Bowl; Frosh Hawks; Panbell., Exec. Bd.; UP; Cwens; Delta Phi Alpha; German Club; Woodrow Wil- son Nominee; Ger. Summer Lang. Inst.; Jayhawker Hilltopper. BEADNALL, MARVIN, St. Joseph, Mo. Elec. Engr. College Bowl; UP; IEEE, sr. class rep. Transfer, Grace- land Coll., Lamoni, Ia.: football; wrestling; student senate; Honor Roll, two sem. BEAGLE, CATHERINE ANN, Boulder, Colo. Eng., Psychology Hashinger Hall, v.p., standards bd.; Honor Roll, one sem.; AWS, hall rep., sen., Reg. Comm. Chm., High Sch. Leadership Day, Comm. on the Status of Women; SUA Carnival; Mortar Bd.; Pi Lambda Theta; SMOP Scholarship. Transfer, Colo. Univ.: Kappa Alpha Theta. BEAGLE, MARILYN L., Boulder, Colo. Elem. Ed. Hashinger Hall; CYR; Pi Lambda Theta; SNEA; fr. counselor. Transfer, Colo. St. Univ.: Kappa Alpha Theta; AWS, sec., v.p.; Panhell., sec.; Spurs, pres. 467 SENIORS 1967 _BEAHM, DONALD EWING, Great Bend Chem., Spanish. Delta Upsilon, corr. sec.; fr. class v.p.; KU-Y Fr. Camp, co-chm.; ski club; CYR; Wesley Foundation, exec. coun. BEAL, RICK, Denver, Colo. Bus. Admin. Phi Kappa Psi, corr. sec. BECKER, MARILYN ANN, Leavenworth Art Ed. Alpha Omicron Pi, chaplain; Delta Phi Delta; Newman Club; SUA. Transfer, St. Mary Coll.: Honor Roll, two sem.; Dramarians. BEEMAN, JUDY CAROLE, Oxford Spanish, Psychology Sellards Hall, aux. off., new student counselor; AURH, Whatchamacallit bd, rep.; AWS, rep., Job Oppor. Comm. Chm., High Sch. Leadership Day Hostess; MUN; Spring Sing; CYD; Am. Assn. of Teachers of Span. and Port.; Scholarship Hall Award; Jr. Yr. Abroad Scholarship; Jr. Yr. Abroad, Univ. of Costa Rica. BELCHER, GAIL ANNE, Brookfield, Ill. Spanish West. Ill. Univ.: el. off.; Campus Leader Award; Fr. Cl. Personality; St. Union Bd.; Span. Club, sec. Univ. of Madrid, Madrid, Spain. Univ. of Kansas: Jay Janes. BELLEW, BRIDGET ANNE, Olathe French International Club; UP; Jayhawker; Newman Club. BENSON, DAVID ALFRED, Manistee, Mich. Anthropology BENSON, EDWARD A., Kansas City, Mo. Engineering, Physics Delta Tau Delta, pl. class pres.; Honor Roll, four sem.; Vox; CYR; fr. track team; Tau Beta Pi; Sigma Pi Sigma; Student Adv. Bd.; IFPC, sec. BERGER, MICHAEL E., Springfield, Mo. Music Hist. and Lit. Honor Roll, two sem.; Summerfield Scholarship; Presser Foundation Scholarship; Jr. Yr. Abroad, Bordeaux, France; Fr. Summer Lang. Inst.; Univ. Brass Ensemble; Univ. Concert Band; Univ. Symphony Orch.; KU March- ing Band; Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia. BERGER, PRISCILLA PORTER, Topeka Elem. Ed. Alpha Chi Omega, treas.; SNEA. Transfer, Baker Univ.: Concert Choir; Soph. Class, treas.; P-t-P; Pep Club. BESSMER, KAREN SUZANNE, Great Bend Personnel Admin., Int. Rel. McCollum Hall; Ellsworth Hall, staff asst., standards bd.; Best-Dressed Girl Candidate; Lewis Hall, standards bd.; Douthart Hall; AWS; Sigma Psi; AAUW Scholar- ship; Scholarship Hall Award; St. of Kan. Scholarship. BEST, CLIFFORD E., St. Louis, Mo. Bus. Admin. Delta Tau Delta, asst. treas., treas. BIDDLE, WALTER H., Leavenworth Radio-TV-Film. Templin Hall; Bowling Assn.; Spring Fling; CYR; KUOK, program dir.; varsity bowling; KLWN Summer Internship. BIERI, PETER V., Seneca History Honor Roll, three sem.; Vox; CYR. BIERY, MARY ELISE, Kansas City Elem. Ed. Corbin Hall, counselor; KU-Y; Spring Fling, Inv. Comm., Banquet Comm.; SNEA; Quack Club; NCAURH. Trans- fer, Grinnell Coll.: White Caps; Grant in Aid Scholar- ship. BLAIR, DANA RAY, Overland Park Sociology Templin Hall, fl. soc. chm., jud. corm. rep.; NROTC; Hawkwatch; Scholarship Hall Award; NROTC Scholar- ship. BLIESNER, VIRGINIA CHRISTINE, Lawrence English Alpha Chi Omega, pl. class pres., pl. trainer, song- leader; AWS, Fr. Orientation Steering Comm., High Sch. Leadership Day Comm.; Panhell., Pl. Trainers Coun.; Rock Chalk Revue; Frosh Hawks; Greek Week; SUA; UP; KU-Y Children ' s Hour. BLOEMKER, RUSSELL WILLIAM, Lawrence History Delta Sigma Phi, sgt.-at-arms, v.p.; WC rep.; P-t-P; ski club, mem. chm.; Vox. BOCK, PAUL LOUIS, Dodge City Chem., Mathematics Stephenson Hall, MSHC rep., sch. pres.; Honor Roll, six sem.; College Bowl, chm.; CIB; Owl Soc.; Sachem; Alpha Chi Sigma; Search, Ed. Bd.; University Review, Ed. Bd.; Phi Beta Kappa, jr. yr.; Summerfield Scholarship; KU Honor Scholarship; U. G. Mitchell Honor Scholarship in Math.; NSF Undergrad. Research Grant; Scholarship Hall Award; Ger. Summer Lang. Inst.; Undergrad. Chem. Sem., v.p.; Summerfield Finals Stu. Comm., chm.; HOPE Award Comm.; Jayhawker Hill- topper. BOEHM, BARBARA FRANCES, Western Springs, Ill. Elem. Ed. Frosh Hawks; MUN; P-t-P; UP; CYR. BOELTE, CHERYL M., Mission Elem. Ed. Hashinger Hall; Frosh Hawks; Sigma Alpha Iota, corr. sec., sgt.-at-arms; SNEA; Univ. Symphony. BOGART, DOUGLAS B., Centralia Comp. Biochern., Physiology Grace Pearson Hall, sec.; Honor Roll, six sem.; Alpha Chi Sigma; Phi Lambda Upsilon; General Scholarship; Albert Hendy Scholarship. BOHNSACK, CAROL ANN, Brookfield, Mo. Piano International Club; AWS, High Sch. Leadership Day; Sigma Alpha Iota, rush chin. BOLDMAN, GLORIA LEE, Overland Park Occ. Therapy Lewis Hall; AURH; Spring Fling. Transfer, Kansas St. Univ.: pep club. 468 Jai 1967 SENIORS BOLLIN, EUGENE L., Raytown, Mo. Aerospace Engineering Delta Chi; Engineering Sch. Coun., treas., pres.; Engi- neering Queen Chm.; IFC, rep.; AIAA; Engineering Dean ' s Adv. Bd. BOMHOFF, BARBARA ANN, Atchison Physical Ed. Lewis Hall; Spring Fling; ski club; Physical Ed. Majors Club; KU Playday, chin.; WRA; Midwestern Music and Art Camp, coun. BOND, BILL J. Bonner Springs Pharmacy Am. Pharm. Assn.; John Dargavel Scholarship. BONNY, BEATRICE HELEN, Topeka Sociology Lewis Hall, fl. v.p.; UP; Spring Fling. Transfer, Oberlin Coll.: residence hall senate, standards bd., fl. pres.; Young Repub. BOSSEMEYER, DIANA V., Hutchinson Math Ed. Douthart Hall; rifle club; SNEA; Pi Lambda Theta; Scholarship Hall Award. Transfer, Hutchinson Comm. Coll.: drill team, capt.; SNEA, pres.; Phi Theta Kappa, sec. BOWER, BEVERLY B., Lawrence Mathematics Alpha Chi Omega, treas., rec. chin.; Honor Roll, five sem.; KU-Y, cabinet, tutor service; Pi Lambda Theta; Pi Mu Epsilon. BOWER, DAVID LEE, Shawnee Mission Mathematics Triangle, rec. sec., corr. sec.; KU-Y; MUN; Vox; CYR. BOWLUS, JAMES ALAN, Iola Psychology Rugby Club. BOYD, DWIGHT R., Moran Philosophy Jolliffe Hall, sec., int. chin.; AURH, rep.; College Bowl; MUN; P-t-P; Scholarship Hall Award; Ger. Summer Lang. Inst.; Undergrad. Research Asst.; Phi Beta Kappa, jr. yr.; Woodrow Wilson Nominee. BOYD, LEONARD ROBERT JR., Hutchinson Business Phi Gamma Delta, pl. cl. pres., house mgr.; Bus. Sch. Conn., bd. member, pres.; Bus. Stud. Assn., undergrad. bd. pres., joint comm., speakers chin., organization comm. chin.; UP; SUA; Phi Beta Lambda, pres. Transfer, Hutchinson Comm. Coll.: Union Op. Bd.; SUA; stu- dent council; commissioner of finance; yearbook staff. BOYD, REBECCA MARY, Iola Elem. Ed. Hashinger Hall, fl. off.; Jay Janes; Spring Fling; UP; SNEA; AWS, Rules Cony. Del. Transfer, Allen County Comm. Coll.: student coun.; cl. off. BOYNTON, K. ANNE, Franklin, Ohio Personnel Admin., Pol. Sci. Gamma Phi Beta, rituals chm., corr. sec., pres.; Honor Roll, two sem.; ASC, Host. and Hosp. Comm.; AWS, High Sch. Leadership Day Comm.; Panhell., Pres. Conn.; SUA; Sigma Psi; Cwens. BRADEN, SUE CAROLE, Oklahoma City, Okla. Soc. Studies, Hist. Alpha Omicron Pi, stand. chin.; MUN; Panhell. BRADLEY, FRANCES ELIZABETH, Kansas City Piano, Music Ed. Lewis Hall; AURH, Hous. Comm.; AWS, High Sch. Leadership Day Prog. Comm.; CRC; IRC, treas., v.p.; Spring Fling, Sigma Alpha Iota, treas.; SNEA; MENC; Scholarship Hall Award; Cerf String Scholarship; Louise 0. Wiedemann Scholarship; Alpha Kappa Alpha, soc. chm., rush treas., pres.; Univ. Symphony; Univ. Chorus. BRADLEY, CLAUDIA LOUISE, Bartlesville, Okla. English Hashinger Hall; SUA, concert comm. sec.; Vox; CYR; Pi Lambda Theta. Transfer, Okla. St. Univ.: Pi Beta Phi; Orange and Black Quill. BRADY, MICHAEL F., Kansas City, Mo. Chemistry McCollum Hall. BRANINE, DAVID ROYCE, Olathe Pharmacy Honor Roll, two sem.; Am. Pharm. Assn. BREEDING, MICHAEL HUGH, Blue Rapids Accounting Stephenson Hall, soc. chm., ath. Honor Roll, one sem.; Acc. Soc.; Delta Sigma Pi; Spring Fling; CYD; Boeing Scholarship. BRENNER, JAMES DONALD, Parsons Int. Rel. Delta Chi, pl. trainer, exec. coml. v.p., pres.; Honor Roll, six sem.; ASC, Campus Chest Comm.; IFC, sch. comm. chin., rep.; MUN; CYR; Sr. Day, chin.; Vox; Woodrow Wilson Nominee. BRETZ, WILLIAM EDWARD JR., Hillsdale, Ill. Bits. Admin. CYR; Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship. BRINK, JAMES EASTGATE, Wichita French, Hist. Delta Upsilon, asst. treas., rush chm.; Honor Roll, three sem.; Peace Corps trainee; ski club; French Club, pres.; SUA, Dread Jazz Festival; CYR; University Review; Jr. Year Abroad, Grenoble, France. BROCKER, NICHOLAS N., Prairie Village Fine Arts Alpha Tau Omega, Worthy Keeper of Annal, house mgr., soc. chin.; ASC Blood Drive Comm., chin.; Stu- dent Adv. Bd.; SUA, Arts and Exhibits chm., exhibits comm. chin., spring concert pub. comm., homecoming dance chin. BROCKMAN, RONALD EDWIN, Raytown, Mo. Advertising Beta Sigma Psi, treas., first v.p., rush IFC; KU Marching Band; Gamma Delta; UDK, adv. dept. BROOKS, MARK, Lawrence English Honor Roll, one sem. 469 SENIORS 1967 BROWN, ANITA LOUISE, Kansas City, Mo. Advertising Lewis Hall, fl. soc. chm., fr. orientation comm.; Angel Flight, second lieut.; CRC; KU-Y; UDK; Kansas City Bd. of Ed. Scholarship. BROWN, CYNTHIA ANN, Lawrence Voice Chi Omega; Honor Roll, five sem.; Frosh Hawks; P-t-P; Mu Phi Epsilon; Campus Talent ' 67; USO tour; Metropolitan Opera dist. audition winner. BROWN, FRED CHARLES, Shawnee Mission Zoology Sigma Phi Epsilon, rush chin. sch. chin., sec.; Honor Roll, three sem.; AROTC; Gk. Wk. Sing, co-chin.; IFC, Pub. rel.. cousin.; student opinion comm.; UP; Delta Sigma Pi; NSF grant; Woodrow Wilson Nominee. BROWN, JACK RAY, Kansas City Social Studies Phi Kappa Psi; Campus Crusade for Christ; Gk. Wk.; Peace Corps; Rock Chalk Revue; rugby club; Vox; CYD; varsity football; varsity track. BROWN, JON DAVID, Huntington Station History Phi Kappa Sigma, sigma, theta, upsilon; AFROTC; Arnold Air Society; MUN; Pi Epsilon Pi, pres.; UP. BROWN, MARCY, Topeka Spanish, Lang. Arts Pi Beta Phi, asst. pl. trainer; AWS, senator, communi- cation chin.; fr. cl. steering comm.; SUA; Jayhawker, theatre editor; Gamma Alpha Chi, v.p.; Cwens. BROWN, NANCY R., Arcadia French, Spanish Alpha Gamma Delta, v.p.; Honor Roll, seven sem.; In- ternational Club; KU-Y; MUN; Panhell.; P-t-P; Gen- eral Scholarship; Outstanding Soph. in French; Ful- bright Nominee; Jr. Yr. Abroad, France. BROWN, SUSAN TODD, Girard Music Therapy Hashinger Hall; AURH; Nat. Assn. for Music Therapy; Kappa Phi; Concert Band; KU Music Therapy Organ. BRUNE, DANIEL CHARLES, Lawrence Botany, Chem. Honor Roll, four sem.; NSF research grant. BRUNING, WILLIAM L., Shawnee Mission Bus. Admin. Alpha Tau Omega; Honor Roll, two sem.; IFC, rep., stan. coon. chin., mem. comm. chm., expan. comm.; SUA, Pop Films Comm. Transfer, Davidson Coll., Davidson, N.C.: Honor Scholarship. BRYANT, ROBERT LEE, Overland Park Bus. Admin. Lambda Chi Alpha, corr. sec.; KU-Y; Rock Chalk Revue, adv. comm.; SUA, ticket sales comm.; UP; CYR; Alpha Delta Sigma; Marketing Club. BUCHANAN, SHARON GALE, Topeka French GSP Hall, pres., best-dressed girl; Kappa Kappa Gamma, jr. personnel, pres.; Honor Roll, four sem.; AWS; Sis- ters of the Maltese Cross; Panhell., Pres. Coon.; SUA, Carnival Jesters chm.; UP; Pi Delta Phi; Cwens; Mor- tar Bd.; Jayhawker, index ed.; KU Relays Queen At- tendant; Homecoming Queen Comm. BUCKALOO, BECKY, Parkville, Mo. Social Work Hashinger Hall, staff asst., senator; Honor Roll, three sem.; ASC; AWS Scholarship; Fr. Summer Lang. Inst. BUDA, SANDY C., Omaha, Nebr. Soc. Studies, Phys. Ed. Sigma Nu, chaplain, Stubby Soc.; jr. cl. pres.; Bd. of Cl. Off.; varsity football scholarship; varsity football; varsity baseball; Community Chest, fr. cl. project comm. BUDD, PAUL DOUGLAS, Topeka English Kappa Sigma, pl. trainer; Honor Roll, one sem.; MUN; NROTC; Rock Chalk Revue; Scabbard and Blade; NROTC Scholarship. BUNN, MARCIA BETH, Brussels, Belgium English Kappa Alpha Theta, pres.; AWS, senator; Panhell., Pres. Coon.; Cwens, pros.; Mortar Board; Pi Lambda Theta; Jayhawker Hilltopper. BURGARDT, JEAN, Des Moines, Ia. Speech Pathology Pi Beta Phi, pl. cl. pros., censor, corr. sec., exec. bd., Sr. Honor Pin, pres.; Honor Roll, two sem.; AWS, const. rev. comm., reg. del.; soph. cl. sec.; Frosh Hawks; Gk. Wk., banquet comm.; Gk. Wk. Sing; Bd. of Cl. Off.; Jr. Panhell., soc. chin.; Panhell., Pres. Coun.; P-t-P; SUA; UP; Cwens; Mortar Board; Pi Lambda Theta; Jayhawker Hilltopper. BURNAM, WILLIAM L., Wichita Comp. Biochem. Pearson Hall, sec., jud. coon.; Honor Roll, five sem.; Peace Corps; Alpha Chi Sigma; Phi Lambda Upsilon; NSF research grant; E. T. Hackney Scholarship. BURNS, FRANCES, H., Houston, Tex. Speech. Therapy Lewis Hall; Honor Roll, one sem.; CRC; College Bowl; Gk. Wk.; Alpha Kappa Alpha, sec.; Baptist Student Union; SNEA. BURRELL, RALPH WILLIAM, Overland Park History Triangle, rush chin., maintenance chm.; AROTC, coin- Pany cmdr.; SAME; AUSA; Scabbard and Blade; Mil. Ball, pub. comm.; IFPC; IFC, rep., rush wk. coun., faculty comm. chm.; Gk. Wk.; KU-Y; MUN; Peace Corps; P-t-P; ski club; SUA, pub. rel. comm.; Vox. BUSS, BONNIE MAE, Udall Pharmacy Lewis Hall, stan. bd.; AURH, hall rep.; Frosh Hawks; Vox, exec. coon.; Kappa Epsilon, pres.; General Schol- arship; Campus Chest; Am. Pharm. Assn. BYLER, RICHARD MEYER, Wellington Pharmacy Alpha Kappa Lambda, pl. cl. pres.; Honor Roll, one sem.; UP; Am. Pharm. Assn.; Span. Summer Lang. Inst. BYRNES, JANE T., Wichita English CAMPBELL, CHERYL ANN, Ottawa E Elem. Ed. Pi Beta Phi, pl. cl. soc. dim., act. chin., stan. bd., exec. bd., sch. comm.; Honor Roll, three sem.; Angel Flight; UP Children Pi Lambda Theta; SNEA; Kan. Soc. for Crippled Scholarship; P-t-P. 470 1967 SENIORS CANN, MICHAEL, STERLING, Russell Mathematics Phi Delta Theta, pl. cl. pres., sch. chm., alumni pub- lications chin.; Honor Roll, six sew.; ASC Student Adv. Bd., chm.; KU-Y; SUA, Friday Flicks Comm.; Owl Soc., treas.; Sachem; W. J. Baumgartner Scholarship; Elks National Scholarship; May Landis Scholarship; U. G. Mitchell Scholarship; Greater Univ. Fund Scholar- ship; fr. basketball; German Summer Lang. Inst. CARDER, NANCIE ANNE, Shawnee Mission Design Ski club; Spring Fling. CARL, LINDA SUE, Prairie Village Social Work KU-Y. CARMICHAEL, KATHLEEN, Pratt Sociology Transfer, Baker Univ.: Alpha Chi Omega, house mgr., asst. treas.; Honor Scholarship; P-t-P; Pep Club; WAA. CARRITHERS, DAVID WESLEY, Shawnee Mission Physics Honor Roll, one sem.; AFROTC; CYR. CARROLL, JAMES HUBERT, Kansas City Accounting Triangle; Vox; Turner Lions Club Scholarship. CARTER, JOHN W. M., Overland Park Fine Arts Lambda Chi Alpha, hist.; KU-Y; Rock Chalk Revue, prog. comm. art dir.; RORC; rugby club; UP; C-Club; IFC, rush counselor. CARTER, STEWART ARLEN, Oxford Music Ed. Jolliffe Hall; Honor Roll, six sear.; KU Kicks Band; MSHC; MUN; Pi Kappa Lambda; MENC, v.p., pres.; KU Honor Scholarship; Summerfield Scholarship; Henry Gaddis Foundation Scholarship; Scholarship Hall Award; Concert Band, pres.; Univ. Symphony Orch.; Cham- ber Choir; Concert Choir; Brass Choir; theatre orch. CARTER, WALTER CHARLES, Kansas City German Honor Roll, one sem.; German Club; International Club; MUN; UP. CARUTHERS, BERTRAM JR., Kansas City Zoology Alpha Phi Alpha, treas., pres.; Honor Roll, two sem.; IFC, rep., jud. corer.; Scholarship Hall Award; Public Health Service Grant. CASADY, JOHN L., Wichita Advertising, Eng. Alpha Tau Omega, alumni rel. off., alumni newsletter ed., rec. sec., pl. trainer; Honor Roll, one sem.; ASC Student Publications Bd., chm.; Kansan Bd.; SUA, Ac- tivities Carnival Fr. Brochure ed., Bridge Tour. chm.; UP, publications and pub. chin.; Jayhawker, writer, party pix ed., copy ed., editor; Owl Soc.; Sachem; State of Kansas Scholarship; Pachacamac; Jayhawker Hilltopper. CATLIN, JERREE JOHNSON, Lawrence Secondary Ed. Kappa Kappa Gamma, soc. chm.; AWS; Frosh Hawks; Panhell.; P-t-P; Cheerleader; KU-Y; SUA; UP; Jay- hawker; Student Nat. Coun. for the Social Studies. CAVITT, BRUCE EDWARD, Kansas City Physics Templin Hall; AROTC; Karate Club. Transfer, Ripon Coll.: radio club; ski club; CYR; fr. football. CEDERLIND, CRANSTON JAY, Shawnee Mission Zoology Alpha Kappa Lambda, sec., v.p.; Honor Roll, two sem.; Gk. Wk.; IFPC; IFC, rep.; KU-Y; MUN; Rock Chalk Revue; SUA; UP; CYR. CHAFFEE, THEODORE M., Prairie Village History CHAMBERS, ERNEST R., Wichita Bus. Admin. Delta Chi, pl. trainer, v.p.; Honor Roll, one sew.; ASC public rel. comm., v.p.; Sr. Day Act., co-chm.; Bus. Sch. Assn., Publications Comm. IFC, public rel. comm.; KU-Y; Rock Chalk Revue, public rel. dir.; SUA, fall concert pub. chin., spring concert pub. chin., Tradi- tions Dance chin. CHANDLER, LUCINDA W., Holton Social Work KU-Y, Current Events Comm.; CYR; Social Work Club. Transfer, Monticello Coll., Alton, Ill.: Phi Theta Kappa, Dean ' s Honor Roll, Monticello Christian Assn. CHANG, PAO PING, North Taiwan Engineering Stephenson Hall; Honor Roll, three sem.; Engineering Sch. Coun.; Student Adv. Bd.; Eta Kappa Nu; Tau Beta Pi; engineering school scholarship. CI-IATLAIN, JOY ANN, Shawnee Mission Sociology, Psychology Alpha Chi Omega, asst. chaplain, asst. treas., sch. chin.; Honor Roll, two sem.; AWS, Roles of Women Comm., Reg. Steering Comm.; Panhell., Sch. Conn.; KU-Y, tutor service co-char., v.p., regional officer; YWCA; Psi Chi; Mortar Board; Student Interfaith Corm.; KU Honor Scholarship; Woodrow Wilson Nominee; under- grad. research asst.; univ. homecoming decor. comm. CHAUDOIN, KAREN LEE, Florissant, Mo. Elem. Ed. CHOP, ANTHONY THOMAS, Kansas City Advertising Kansan Board; UDK, adv. mgr., bus. mgr.; Alpha Delta Sigma, treas.; Oscar Stauffer Scholarship. CHURCH, MARYRUTH, Rockville, Md. Mathematics Watkins Hall, v.p.; Honor Roll, six sem.; SUA, Hosp. Comm.; Pi Lambda Theta; Roger Williams Fellowship, v.p.; SNEA; Scholarship Hall Award; U. G. Mitchell Math Scholarship; Key Club Scholarship. CIOCHON, MARY BYLER, Wellington Education Conceit Choir; Chamber Choir; CYR; Carrie Nation; MENC. CLARKE, BARBARA FOSTER, Clarendon Hills, Ill. Fashion Illus. Alpha Chi Omega, list.; Honor Roll, one sem.; Women ' s Bowling Assn., sec.; Frosh Hawks; Gk. Wk., pub. cousin.; Jay Janes, hist.; Rock Chalk Revue; Student Communications Bd.; Vox; CYR; Gamma Alpha Chi. 471 SENIORS 1967 .GLOVIS, LOUISE, Salina Delta Gamma, Honor Initiate, act. clan.,., Soph. Key; Honor Roll, four sem.; ASC soc. comm., sec.; AWS, High Sch. Leadership Day Comm., All Women ' s Wk. Comm.; Gk. Wk., service project comm.; Panhell., rush counselor; Pi Lambda Theta; SNEA; Mortar Bd., sec.; sr. asst., GSP Hall. CLUGSTON, MICHELE SUZANNE, Jacksonville, Ark. Spanish, Portugese Honor Roll, two sem.; Frosh Hawks; KU-Y; MUN; P-t-P; UP; Washburn Univ. Sem. in Copenhagen. COCHRAN, JERALD R., Harper Econ., Pol. Sci. Honor Roll, one sem.; KU-Y, Fr. Model Senate, Fr. Camp chin., v.p., alumni relations; COSA; YMCA; Wesley Foundation, coun., pres.; engineering scholar- ship; Scholarship Hall Award; Rockefeller Foundation Fellowship Nominee. COFFMAN, WAYNE EDWARD, Overbrook Elec. Engineering Kappa Eta Kappa, pres.; radio club; IEEE, v. chin., rec. sec., corr. sec., soph. cl. rep., jr. cl. rep.; Jones Medical and Educational Trust. COLLIER, HAROLD WILLIAM, Garden City Comp. Biochem. and Physiology Ellsworth Hall, counselor; Spring Fling; Vox; CYR; Bausch and Lomb Honorary Science Award. COLLINS, FIARRY E., Devon, Penn. Chem. Engineering Sigma Alpha Epsilon, chronicler, sch. chin.; Honor Roll, two sem.; IFC, rep., sch. comm.; NSF grant. COLLINS, PATRICIA L., Latham Occup. Therapy Chi Omega, pl. cl. soc. stan. bd., Model Initiate; AWS; Frosh Hawks; Gk. Wk.; P-t-P; Rock Chalk Revue; SUA; UP; Omega Tau Iota; KOTA; CEC; AOTA. COLLINS, THOMAS B., Lawrence Chemistry UDK, photog. Transfer, Westminster Coll.: Phi Kappa Psi, treas. COLVER, CHARLES, Princeton, N. J. Elec. Engineering MUN, steering comm.; CYR. COLWELL, JOAN E., Lansing Music Ed. Oliver!, tech. asst.; Bebe Fenstermaker, tech. asst.; Na- tional Defense Scholarship; Midwestern Music and Art Camp, counselor. COMSTOCK, NANCY ELIZABETH, Wichita Musk Therapy Ellsworth Hall, fl. off.; Vox; CYR; State of Kansas Scholarship; Gratis Boyle Scholarship; educational oppor. grant. CONATEH, SWAEBOU S., Gambia, West Africa Journalism Templin Hall, Obsercor; International Club; Interna- tional Festival, steering comm.; KU-Y; MUN, off-campus pub.; KU African, managing ed.; African club; The Literary Society; Wm. Randolph Hearst Foundation Scholarship. CONTRACTOR, KIRIT M., Ahmedabad, India Mech. Engineering India Club. COOKSEY, LINDA ANNE, Iola Elem. Ed. Sigma Kappa, soc, chin.; Honor Roll, one sem.; Gk. Wk; P-t-P; Vox; CYD. Transfer, Iola Jr. Coll., Iola, Kan. CORN, JOE BILL, Garden City Hist., East Asian Studies, Oriental Lang. and Lit. CORREA, JORGE ESTUARDO, Quito, Ecuador Math On atics Templin Hall; International Club; MUN; soccer club. COSTA, CHERYL ELIZABETH, Wichita Pal. Sci. Kappa Kappa Gamma, asst. registrar; Honor Roll, one sem.; AWS; P-t-P; MUN; CYR; Rock Chalk Revue, Best Original Song; SNEA; Miss Eudora-Douglas County; Miss Kansas Pageant, Pepsi Cola Scholarship; Miss Kansas Scholarship Pageant, semi-finalist. Trans- fer, Lindenwood Coll., St. Charles, Mo.: fr. cl. v.p.; Young Repub.; A Cappella Choir. COUR, CAROLE ANN, El Dorado Psychology Kappa Alpha Theta, sch. chin.; Honor Roll, five sem.; Stu. Adv. Bd.; AWS; sr. cl. gift comm., chin.; Frosh Hawks; Sisters of the Maltese Cross; Panhell., sch. corm.; College Bowl, pub. comm.; Cwens; General Mtrs. Scholarship; KU Honor Scholarship; undergrad. research grant; psychology research asst. COWEN, Patricia M., Junction City German, Int. Rel. Kappa Alpha Theta, bus. rush chin., stan. elms.; Roll, five sem.; Frosh Hawks; Jr. Panhell.; Panhell., stan. Conn. chin., exec. corns.; Sisters of the Maltese Cross, pres.; P-t-P, hasp. chm.; MUN; Rock Chalk Revue; Cwens; Mortar Bd., v.p.; Delta Phi Alpha; Woodrow Wilson Nominee; Jayhawker Hill- topper; Germ. Summer Lang. Inst. CRANSTON, STEPHEN DOUGLAS, Winfield Chemistry Acacia, sec., sell. chin., pl. trainer, v.p.; Honor Roll, three sem.; Alpha Chi Sigma. CRAWLEY, DAVID BRUCE, Shawnee Mission Zoology Transfer, Regis Coll., Denver, Colo.: Rho Chi Sigma; ski club. CRILLY, MAUREEN ANNE, Bethel Elem. Ed. Alpha Gamma Delta. CROSSEN, CHARLES RICHARD, Overland Park English Sigma Chi; Honor Roll, one sem.; Gk. Wk., entertain- ment; Rock Chalk Revue; CYR. CROUCH, CAROL ANN, Shawnee Mission Math., English Gamma Phi Beta, treas., v.p.; Honor Roll, five sem.; AWS, communications comm.; ASC Univ. Disciplinary Cumin.; Cwens, treas.; Honor Scholarship. 472 1967 SENIORS CROW, BARBARA ANN, Wichita Math., Psychology Lewis Hall; McCollum Hall, counselor; Honor Roll, five sem.; AURH, hall rep.; College Bowl; KU-Y, Children ' s Hour, Fr. Model Senate; AWS, Rules Cone. del.; Spring Fling; Campus Ministry Bd.; Woodrow Wilson Nominee. CRUMPLER, JAMES, Sharon Springs Accounting Alpha Kappa Lambda, sec.; Honor Roll, three sem.; Bus. Sch. Cozen., pres.; SUA; Beta Gamma Sigma; Ac- counting Soc.; Delta Sigma Pi, chancellor; Goodyear Foundation Scholarship; VFW Scholarship; Dean Paul B. Lawson Scholarship; KU Endowment Scholarship. CUDDY, LEONARD W., Osawatomie Music Ed. McCollum Hall; Concert Band; Marching Band; Univ. Symphony Orch.; Little Symphony; Brass Choir; Per- cussion Ensemble; MENC; Kicks Band. CULBERT, CYNTHIA ANN, Lamed Art Education Lewis Hall; AURH; IRC, sec.; Scholarship Hall Award; varsity bowling. CUNNINGHAM, FRED WALTER, Topeka Business Alpha Kappa Lambda, int. mgr., Athlete of the Year, Honor Roll, one sem.; AROTC; Gk. Wk. Sing; Rock Chalk Revue; Pershing Rifles. CURRIN, BRENDA, Rockville, Md. Thea tre, Drama Honors Acting; USO tour, Eastern European Tour; Peter Peter Pumpkin Eater; Peter Pan; The Music Man; An American Medley; Bedbug; Marat Sade. CURRY, CHARLES THOMAS, Wichita Advertising Delta Tau Delta, asst. rush chm., pl. cl. treas., sch. chm., intramurals; Honor Roll, five sem.; AFROTC; ASC Stu.-Faculty Calendar Comm., chm.; bowling assn., team Capt.; SUA, bowling comm.; UDK adv. sales; Educational Oppor. Grant; Theodore P. Alford Scholar- ship; Henry Schott Memorial Prize. DALLAM, JOANITA SUE, Shawnee Mission Education Kappa Kappa Gamma, asst. house chm., v.p.; P-t-P, Am. Students Abroad chm.; Jayhawker Princess; Best- Dressed KU Coed Contest, finalist. DANAHER, THOMAS, Atchison Phys. Ed., Bio. Sci. Alpha Tau Omega; UP; CYD; Phi Epsilon Kappa; Newman Club. DANDO, STEVEN BRYANT, Prairie Village French Pearson Hall; Concert Band; Univ. Symphony Orch.; Brass Choir; Scholarship Hall Award; French Summer Lang. Inst.; Jr. Yr. Abroad, Bordeaux, France. DARVILLE, RICHARD T., Shawnee Mission Sociology Ellsworth Hall, hall congress, Ellstcord, pres.; McCollum Hall, Tartan, constitution comm.; ASC, rep.; AURH, hall rep., exec. cabinet, leadership cony. chm.; NACURH conference del.; MRA; College Bowl; MUN; Vox, plat- form comm. chm., exec. bd.; KUPA, exec. bd.; Univ. Disc. Comm.; Previews staff. DAVIS, MARGUERITE ELIZABETH, Bellaire, Tex. Sociology, Social Win. Alpha Phi, asst. rush sch. comm.; Honor Roll, two sem.; AWS, High School Leadership Day Steering Comm.; KU-Y; Panhell.; SUA; Vox; fr. counselor. DAVIS, PATRICK, Colorado Springs, Colo. Bus. Admin. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, alumni rel. chm., int. chm., v.p.; Gk. Wk. Banquet, chm.; SUA; Alpha Kappa Psi; varsity basketball; Outland Scholarship. DAVIS, SHARON L., Salina Art Education Delta Delta Delta; ASC Stu. Leadership Comm.; AWS High Sch. Leadership Day; KU-Y Children ' s Hour; Vox; CYR; Art Education Club. DEASON, MARTHA, Great Bend Soc. Studies, Hist. Naismith Hall, res. asst.; ASC Trad. Comm.; AWS High Sch. Leadership Day Steering Comm.; Jay Janes, pres.; Frosh Hawks, adv.; Spring Fling. DRAY, FREDRICK D., Lawrence Civil Engineering Honor Roll, four sem.; CYD; Phi Theta Kappa; Am. Soc. of Civil Engineers. DEACKARD, DEE ALAINE, Council Grove Social Studies Hashinger Hall; Honor Roll, one sem.; Nat. Conn. for the Social Studies; SNEA. DENNEY, JAMES, Hutchinson Indus. Management CYR; Engineering Club. Transfer, Hutchinson Comm. Coll.: Circle K Club; Engineering Club. DENTON, BRUCE B., Denton Radio-TV-Film Ellsworth Hall, wing soc. chm.; McCollum Hall, soc. chm., Tartan; KU-Y; Vox; International Club; CYR; Spring Fling. DICK, JACK M., Caney Pharmacy Am. Pharm. Assn.; Kan. Pharm. Assn. DICKSON, CYNTHIA ANN, Leavenworth Speech Path. Pi Beta Phi, pl. trainer; Honor Roll, three sem.; Frosh Hawks; Panhell., Pl. Trainers Corm.; ASC Trad. Comm.; Porn Pon Squad, head porn pon girl; Pi Lambda Theta; Homecoming Queen; Military Ball Queen Finalist. DIECKMAN, DAVID, independence Interior Design Am. Inst. of Int. Designers; W. W. Nash Scholarship. DIEPENBROCK, DAVID WALTER, Shawnee Mission Spanish, Hist., Lat. Am. Studies Grace Pearson Hall, sch. chm.; Honor Roll, eight sem.; KU-Y; MUN; Vox; Univ. Review, ed. bd.; The Sun- flower, ed.; Summerfield Scholarship; Alumni Assn. Grant; NSF grant; summer lang. inst.; Jr. Yr. Abroad, Costa Rica; West. Cis ' . asst. inst. DOLL, JIMMIE DAVE, Carl Junction, Mo. Chemistry Jolliffe Hall, v.p., pres.; Honor Roll, six sem.; MSHC, hall rep .; Phi Lambda Upsilon; general scholarship award; NSF undergrad. research grant. 473 Lid SENIORS 1967 DONAHUE, LARRY ALBERT, Southwest City, Mo. Comm. Art Acacia, soc. rushbook ed., Sentinel; bowling assn.; Vox; CYR. DONNELLY, RUSSELL L., Garden City Bus. Admin. Marketing Club. DORAN, SANDRA L., Omaha, Nebr. Social Studies International Club; P-t-P; CYD; Pi Sigma Alpha. Transfer, Northwestern Univ., Evanston, Ill.: Alpha Gamma Delta, membership chin.; Honor Roll, three sem.; MUN; CYD; Spanish Club; Int. Student Comm. DOWNEY, THOMAS RAYMOND, Lawrence Architecture Scarab; AIA. DOWNS, RUBY, Raytown, Mo. Social Studies Hashinger Hall, senate, library ohm., staff asst.; Honor Roll, two sem.; SNEA, first v.p. DOZIER, MARCIA MARY, Topeka Theatre, English Honor Roll, one sem.; Resident Touring Co.; Theatre for Young People; Univ. Theatre house mgr.; Speech I Potpourri winner; Pen-Women of Topeka Scholarship. DRAKE, DUANE WESLEY, Alden Accounting Alpha Kappa Lambda, rushbook ed., Kallay Filleans pl. trainer, sr. rep., pl. cl. pres., v.p.; IFC; P-t-P; CYR; YMCA; Delta Sigma Pi; AIESEC, pres.; Spanish Sum- mer Lang. Inst. DRURY, CAROLYN SUE, Wichita Journalism Lewis Hall, Gold Seal Off.; Honor Roll, one sem.; Spring Fling, banquet comm.; Theta Sigma Phi; Mu Phi Epsilon; Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship; UDK, copy ed.; Pi Beta Phi Ed. Foundation Scholarship. Transfer, Wichita State Univ.: Alpha Phi, hist.; Honor Roll, four sem.; Honors Club; AWS; Mu Phi Epsilon, hist., alumni sec.; Nat. Music Educators Conf. DUNCAN, CHARLES HENRY JR., Kansas City, Mo. Asian int. Ellsworth Hall, pres.; AURH, 11. rep.; Spring Fling; Rock Chalk Revue; UP; Newman Club. Transfer, Wilmington Coll., Wilmington, N.C.: Dean ' s Honor Roll. DUNCAN, MICHAEL ALLEN, Olathe Elec. Engineering Honor Roll, four sem.; Tau Beta Pi; Eta Kappa Nu; Sigma Tau; IEEE; Electrical Indus. Scholarship Award. DUNCAN, REBECCA LYNN, Nickerson Elem. Ed. Hashinger Hall, fr. orientation comm.; Honor Roll, one sem.; CYR; SNEA. DUNN, JUDITH IRENE, Kansas City Art Education AWS, hall communications comm.; art ed. club. Trans- fer, Kansas City, Kan., Jr. Coll.: P-t-P, pres. DUPREE, G. GIPP, Des Moines, Ia. Pol. Sci. Delta Upsilon, soc. chm., exec. corm., pres.; Honor Roll, one sem.; WC, rep., Big Eight Rep., soc. comm.; P-t-P; CYR, first v. chin.; varsity football; asst. fr. football coach; Pachacamac. ECKHOFF, MARY JANE, Leawood Occup. Therapy Kappa Alpha Theta, pl. trainer, first v.p.; Honor Roll, four sem.; Panhell.; P-t-P; Rock Chalk Revue, pro- gram comm.; CYR; Occup. Therapy chm.; Stu. Adv. Bd.; Delta Phi Delta; Christmas Vesper Scholarship. Transfer, St. Olaf Coll. EDGAR, THOMAS FLYNN, Bartlesville, Okla. Chem. Engineering Beta Theta Pi, rush chm., sch. chin.; Honor Roll, six sem.; ASC, School rep.; IFC, sch. chm.; SUA, Dread Jazz Fest.; Stu. Adv. Bd.; UP, caucus chm.; NSF grant; Tau Beta Pi; Phi Lambda Upsilon; Owl Society; Sachem; Jayhawker Hilltopper. EDMONDS, WILLIAM 0. JR., Prairie Village Commercial Art EDMONDSON, GAYLE A., Kansas City, Mo. Pol. Sci. Honor Roll, two sem.; College Bowl. Transfer, Kansas St. Univ.: French Club; varsity band. EINSEL, NANCY, Wiimore Mathematics Alpha Phi; Honor Roll, one sem.; ASC, sorority rep.; Sisters of the Maltese Cross; P-t-P, membership ohm.; Panhell., stan. corm.; AWS, Rules and Reg. ski club; German Summer Lang. Inst. EISELE, GRACE L., Eudora Elem. Ed. Honor Roll, one sem. EKEY, CAROL ANN, Spring Hill Zoology Sellards Hall; Honor Roll, five sem.; KU-Y; Search, student ed.; Roger Williams Fellowship; NSF undergrad. research grant; KU General Scholarship. ELIAS, JEFFREY P., Miami, Fla. Phys. Ed., Biology Delta Upsilon; AFROTC; Gk. Wk.; IFC; P-t-P; ski club; Vox; Phi Epsilon Kappa; fr. basketball; varsity football. ELLIS, ED J., Kansas City Lang. Arts Phi Kappa Tau, rush rim., corr. sec.; P-t-P; Vox; CYR; Phi Mu Alpha. EMBREE, LYNDA LORRAINE, Chicago, Ill. Int. Rel. Honor Roll, five sem.; International Club; UP; NSF undergrad. research grant. EMERICK, JOANNE M., Murray Hill, N. J. Elem. Ed. Gamma Phi Beta, act. chm., sch. chin., Honor Pledge, Outstanding Scholar; Honor Roll, four sem.; ASC, Campus Chest Comm.; AWS, rep., senator, SMOP comm. chm., reg. adv. bd. ohm., High Sch. Leadership Day Steering Comm., Stan. Bd.; Sisters of the Maltese Cross; Frosh Hawks; Panhell., rush counselor; SUA Carnival, sec.; Vox; CYR; Mortar Bd.; Pi Lambda Theta, pres. 474 475 1967 SENIORS EMERSON, ROBERT E., Columbus Pharmacy Honor Roll, four sem.; Rho Chi; Am. Pharm. Assn. EMERY, PENNY SUE, Kansas City Elem. Ed. Lewis Hall, soc. chm.; IRC, pub. chm.; Spring Fling. EMMOT, WILLIAM WALTER, Independence Chemistry Alpha Tau Omega, Mt. chm., exec. noun. chm., rush ohm., pies.; Honor Roll, six sem.; IFC, Pres. Conn.; rugby club; Phi Lambda Upsilon; Owl Society; Sachem; Outland Athletic Scholarship; football. ERICSON, JUDIE ANN, Leavenworth Elem. and Special Ed. Delta Delta Delta, house mgr., serv. proj. chm.; Honor Roll, one sem.; Angel Flight, admin. off.; Jay Janes; KU-Y, cabinet, Sch. Resource Volunteers chin.; ASC, Campus Chest, Host, and Hosp. chin.; SUA, reception chm.; Conn. for Exceptional Children, sec.; SNEA; Schol- arship Hall Award; Military Ball Queen Attendant; AFROTC Area Little Col. Cand.; sr. cl. announcements comm., co-chm. EVANS, CAROL SUSANNE, Fremont, Nebr. Elem. Ed. Kappa Alpha Theta, second v.p.; Honor Roll, seven sem.; Frosh Hawks; Jay Janes; MUN; Pi Lambda Theta; SNEA. EVANS, JEAN ANN, Bartlesville, Ok la. Spanish Delta Gamma, pres.; Honor Roll, five sem.; AWS, Roles of Women Steering Comm., High Sch. Leader- ship Day comm.; KU-Y, tutor service; Panhell., Pres. Conn.; SUA, Carnival tickets comm.; Vox; CYR; Jay- hawker; Sigma Delta Pi; Pi Lambda Theta. Transfer, Lindenwood Coll.: Alpha Lambda Delta. FAIRBROTHER, JO ANN, Great Bend Education Lewis Hall, soc. comm.; Ellsworth Hall, senate; AWS, rep. FARBER, JANET LYNN, Prairie Village Spanish Chi Omega, treas.; Honor Roll, six sem.; Rock Chalk Revue; SUA, for. rel. comm.; Golden Hearts of Sigma Phi Epsilon, pres.; ATENEO; Woodrow Wilson Nom- inee; Sigma Delta Pi. Transfer, Coe Coll., Cedar Rap- ids, Ia.: Alpha Lambda Delta. FARLEY, MICHAEL HART, Leawood History Theta Chi, asst. treas., sec., soc. chm.; MUN; rifle club; YMCA; German Summer Lang. Inst. FARMER, KENNETH KEITH, Fort Scott Geology Honor Roll, one sem.; KU-Y, tutor service; Sigma Gamma Epsilon; Chevron Scholarship in Geology; Key Work Clothes, Inc., Scholarship. FARRINGTON, RUSSELL F., Wichita Social Studies Joseph R. Pearson Hall; Honor Roll, one sem.; Pi Sigma Alpha. Transfer, Friends Univ., Wichita. FARRIS, RICHARD G., Edson Accounting FEARNOW, MICHAEL THOMAS, Arkansas City Bus. Admin. Honor Roll, two seen.; Pi Epsilon Pi; CYR; intramural swimming. FERGUS, JANICE K., Kansas City Psychology, Hist. Lewis Hall; Ellsworth Hall, house comm.; IRC, hall rep., sch. recognition chm.; Vox; CYR; German Club. FINCHAM, GARY L., Marysville Pharmacy CYD; Am. Pharrn. Assn.; Kan. Pharm. Assn.; Josephine T. Berry Scholarship. FINFROCK, KAREN ANNETTE, Lawrence French Pi Beta Phi; Honor Roll, five sem.; P-t-P; Pi Delta Phi; le Cercle Francais; Outstanding Jr. in French; Woodrow Wilson Nominee; French Summer Lang. Inst.; NDEA Summer Lang. Inst., France. FISHBURN, STANLEY WAYNE, Overbrook Bus. Admin. McCollum Hall, counselor, Tartan; CYD; UP. FISHER, JAMES W., Shawnee Mission Pol. Sci. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, chronicler, sec., v.p.; IFC, pub. comm. chin., guide comm. chm., office mgr.; SUA, spring conceit pub. comm. FISHER, JULIE ANN, Wichita Elem. Ed. Gamma Phi Beta, soc. chin., rush chin.; AWS; Gk. Wk.; Panhell.; Rock Chalk Revue; SUA; CYR. FITZGERALD, BARRY EDWARD, Topeka Bus. Admin. CYR; intramurals; Marketing Club, pres. FITZGERALD, STEPHEN MURRAY, Liberal Advertising Delta Chi, pl. cl. sec.; Honor Roll, one sem.; Alpha Delta Sigma. FLANDERS, LYNN, Hays Elem. Ed. Alpha Chi Omega; Honor Roll, one sem.; AWS; Frosh Hawks; P-t-P. FLEMING, WILLIAM H. III, Memphis, Tenn. Zoology Alpha Phi Alpha, soc. chin., sec.; Honor Roll, one sem.; AFROTC, drill team; IFC, rep.; Marching Band. FORD, CAROLYN SUE, Wichita Education Delta Gamma, corr. sec.; AWS; Gk. Wk. Sing; SUA, ticket comm.; Vox; Jayhawker; SNEA. A 476 SENIORS 1967 FOSTER, JIM B., Birmingham, Mich. Bus. Admin. Sigma Nu, Mt. chm., hist., soc. chm.; Gk. Wk.; Vox; Delta Sigma Pi; fr. baseball. FOUST, CLYNE E., Lawrence Psychology Phi Kappa Psi, chaplain, gov. comm.; Campus Crusade for Christ; IFC, fr. rep.; Rock Chalk Revue; CYR. FRANCIS, ELIZABETH JANE, Kansas City, Mo. Comm. Art Hashinger Hall, senator, pres.; AWS, Rules del. FRANKLYN, DANA LEE, Kansas City, Mo. Elem. Ed. Gamma Phi Beta, asst. soc. chin.; P-t-P; Rock Chalk Revue; Vox; CYR. FRAZIER, TONI DOUGLAS, Sacramento, Calif. Lang. Arts AWS; SNEA; Air Force Aid Soc. grant. FRENCH, LINDA JANE, Leawood Art Education Gamma Phi Beta, art chm., nit. chm.; Honor Roll, one sem.; Angel Flight; Sisters of the Maltese Cross; Rock Chalk Revue. FRIESEN, STEVEN JOE, Russell Bus. Admin. Tau Kappa Epsilon, sec., rush chm.; CYR, v. chm., ohm.; Delta Sigma Pi, v.p.; pres. FRITTER, LARRY D., Bethel Pol. Soc. Templin Hall; varsity bowling. FRYE, THOMAS KELLER, Shawnee Mission Bus. Admin. Triangle, pl. cl. pres., house mgr.; Honor Roll, two sem. FUNK, ROBERT E., Bartlesville, Okla. Chem. Engineering Kappa Sigma, sec.; Honor Roll, two sem.; SUA; Vox; Sigma Tau, hist.; AICHE. FUSELIER, RICHARD A., New Orleans, La. Elec. Engineering IEE. Transfer, Tulane Univ., New Orleans, La.: Sigma Pi, rush chm.; sailing club; IEEE. GALLAHER, ANN L., Wheat Ridge, Colo. Art Education Chi Omega, hist.; AWS; KU-Y, co-pres.; ski club, co-pres.; CYR; YWCA. Transfer, Lewis and Clark Coll., Portland, Ore.: Young Repub.; May Fete Queen Nominee. GALLUP, NANCY JEAN, Lawrence German, English Kappa Alpha Theta; Honor Roll, five sem.; AWS, rep., senator, senate sec.; College Bowl; CIB, rep. to Cen- tennial Coll. Bd.; Frosh Hawks; Gk. Wk.; Stu. Adv. Bd.; University Review, ed. bd.; Cwens; Delta Phi Alpha; Watkins Scholarship; Schlegel-Carruth German prize; Fulbright finalist; Woodrow Wilson fellow; Jay- hawker Hilhopper; Previews counselor; German Sum- mer Lang. Inst.; French Summer Lang. Inst. GALT, CHRISTINE LOUISE, Chanute English Ellsworth Hall, senate; Lewis Hall, communications comm., senate; Honor Roll, one sem.; UP; Spring Fling; Newman Club; AWS High Sch. Leadership Day Hostess. GAMMELL, DENYCE G., Liberal Lang. Arts Alpha Omicron Pi, rec. chin.; AWS; SUA; Kappa Phi. GARDNER, KATHERINE DIANA, Atchison Bus. Admin. Delta Delta Delta, asst. treas., treas., sponsors chm.; Frosh Hawks; Chi Delphia; Delta Chi Sweetheart. GARDNER, MICHAEL DENNIS, Wichita Psychology CRC; International Club. Transfer, Wichita St. Univ.: Psychology Club, pres.; Philosophy Club; AFROTC honor drill team. GARRETSON, GERALDINE ANNETTE, Greendale, Wisc. Eng. Psychology Sellards Hall, pail; Honor Roll, seven sem.; Interna- tional Club; Law Wives; Summer Honors Inst.; Wat- kins Scholarship finalist; General Mtrs. Scholarship; Scholarship Hall Award; Woodrow Wilson Nominee; KU Honor Scholarship. GAST, MARY BETH, Paola Bus. Admin. Alpha Gamma Delta, stan. elms.; ASC, rep.; AURH, hall rep.; AWS; KU-Y; Panhell., Stan. Coon.; Vox; CYD; Univ. Reg. Adv. Bd.; Phi Chi Theta, treas.; Paul Landis Bus. Scholarship; residence hall scholar- ship. GATES, JANICE LEE, Prairie Village Advertising Lewis Hall; Ellsworth Hall, fl. soc. chm.; ASC, ball rep.; Crescents, pres.; UP; UDK, adv. staff. GAUGHAN, KATHY M., Shawnee Mission Elem. Ed. McCollum Hall, staff asst., fl. pres. Transfer, Avila Coll., Kansas City, Mo.: soph. cl. treas., jr. v.p. GEDLEH, FARAH HUSSEIN, Lasmod, Somalia Pol. Sci., Sociology Soccer club. GEIGER, LARRY DWIGHT, Mission Accounting Joseph R. Pearson Hall, sec., hall coon., Relays float comm., const. comm. chm., elections comm. chin.; Mc- Collum Hall, counselor; ASC, hall rep., stu. flight coor., stu. adv. travel bd. chin., traffic and safety comm., finance and aud. comm., stu. health comm., blood bank comm., athletic seating bd., Big Eight Stu. Gov. Assn.; AURH, treas., housing comm., cabinet; NACURH Conf., treas.; Vox, Gen. Assembly, caucus; UP campus coun., nom. bd., adv. bd., const. comm.; Spring Fling, steering comm.; Jayhawker; Delta Sigma Pi. GERRED, KAREN KAY, Marshall, Mo. Elem. Ed. Alpha Gamma Delta, pl. trainer; AWS, rep.; KU-Y, cabinet, Sch. Resource Volunteers ohm.; Little Sisters of Minerva; Frosh Hawks; Panhell., Pl. Trainers Conn.; P-t-P; SUA; UP. 1967 SENIORS GIDUDU, JOHN G., Jinja, Uganda Econ., Int. Rel. International Club; MUN; KU African, circ. mgr. GILBERT, EDWARD LEE, Bonner Springs Geography Lambda Chi Alpha, song leader; KU-Y; MUN; SUA Carnival; UP; CYR; Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia, treas.; Concert Choir; Chorus. GILKERSON, NYLA M., Lawrence Spanish Honor Roll, five sem.; Sigma Delta Pi; Kappa Phi; Spanish Club; French Club; Summer Inst., Mexico. GILLETT, ANITA RUTH, Kansas City Bus. Admin. Hashinger Hall; P-t-P. Transfer, Kansas City, Kan., Jr. Coll.: P-t-P, treas. GILLILAND, PATRICIA, Hutchinson Speech Therapy Chi Omega, corr. sec.; ASC, Elec. Comm.; Little Sis- ters of Minerva; AWS; Rock Chalk Revue; SUA; SUA Carnival Queen, second runner-up; sr. cl. coffee, chin. GILLISPIE, JEFFERSON, Lawrence Accounting Accounting Soc. GILLMAN, JON EDWARD, Topeka English Honor Roll, one sem.; CRC; International Club; KU-Y, Folksinging Club co-chm., Eng. Style Debate comm.; MUN. GILNA, LINDA, Manhattan Speech Correction Miller Hall, sch. v.p.; Honor Roll, two sem.; KU-Y, handicapped children comm., mein. comm., Children ' s Hour co-chm.; Cwens, hist.; Mortar Bd., quarterly ed.; Pi Lambda Theta; Am. Speech and Hearing Assn.; Coun. for Excep. Children; Scholar- ship Hall Award; Spanish Summer Lang. Inst.; speech potpourri winner. GILPIN, JOAN ELIZABETH, Iola Accounting Pi Beta Phi, soph. rep., censor, rec. sec.; ASC, cam- pus chest; AWS, communications study group; Business School Council, sec.; Frosh Hawks; UP; CYR; Phi Chi Theta, pres. GLENN, LARRY M., Silver City, N. M. Bus. Admin. Alpha Kappa Lambda, pl. cl. pres., asst. treas., asst. soc. chm., jud. corm.; Rock Chalk Revue; UP; CYR; Delta Sigma Pi. GOERING, PATRICIA JO, Moundridge Pol. Sci. Chi Omega, soc. chm.; Honor Roll, four sem.; ASC, stu. communications bd., social comm.; AWS, house rep.; Reg. del.; Cwens; Gk. Wk. Sing; KU-Y Fr. Camp, sec.; MUN; Panhell., soc. coon.; Rock Chalk Revue; Vox; Mortar Bd.; Jayhawker Princess. GOLUB, MARSHA JO, Kansas City Elem. Ed. Delta Delta Delta; Frosh Hawks; Vox; SNEA. GONZALEZ, ALFONSO, Kansas City, Mo. Spanish, Lat. Am. Studies Transfer, Metropolitan Jr. Coll.: chess club. GOODFELLOW, BEVERLY R., Cincinnati, Ohio Elem. Ed. Alpha Chi Omega, first v.p.; Frosh Hawks; MUN; Panhell.; P-t-P; Rock Chalk Revue. GORDON, FRANK EDWARD, Hutchinson Mech. Engineering Honor Roll, four sem.; ASME, chm.; ASTME, v. chm.; Pi Tau Sigma; Kansas Engineer, contributor; Scholar- ship Hall Award. GOULD, KAREN WIGHT, Tulsa, Okla. English, Hist. Pi Beta Phi, asst. rush chin.; Honor Roll, two sem.; AWS Fashion Bd.; Pi Lambda Theta; Best-Dressed Coed at KU; Engineering Queen Attendant. COULD, ROBERT E., Shawnee Mission Architecture Kappa Sigma, house mgr.; Scarab; Stu. AIA; Tan Sigma Delta, most promising student; homecoming dec- orations judge. GRADY, MICHAEL JOHN, Leawood Int. Rel. Delta Upsilon, pl. cl. pres., alumni rel. sec., Honor Initiate; Honor Roll, six sem.; ASC, Fr. Leadership Comm. Eval. Bd., Elec. Comm.; KU Relays Stu. Comm., pub. chin.; P-t-P, exec. bd.; Vox, exec. bd.; CYR; Owl Soc.; Athletic Corp. Bd.; speech potpourri win- ner; Univ. Review. ed. bd.; Woodrow Wilson Nominee; KU academic scholarship; Pachacamac. GRAHAM, MARGARET, Kansas City, Mo. Mathematics McCollum Hall; International Club; Peace Corps, sec. GRAHAM, SANDRA CAROL, Kansas City, Mo. Elem. Ed. Alpha Gamma Delta, rec. sec., pl. trainer; IRC; Panhell., Pl. Trainers Coon., rush counselor; P-t-P, hosp. chm., stu. ambassador to Europe; UP; CYD. GRANT, CRAIG FRANKLIN, Shawnee Mission Social Studies McCollum Hall, counselor; AURH; MRA; Rock Chalk Revue; Spring Fling; Vox; CYR. GRAVES, DAVID EDWARD, Media, Penn. Comm. Art Kappa Sigma; Yell Leader Squad; Jayhawker, Art Director, BED of the year award; outstanding fr. in comm. art; outstanding soph. in comm. art; outstanding sr. in comm. art; speech potpourri finalist. GRAVES, GARY E., Ottawa Social Studies Delta Chi, rep. to house corp.; CYR; Nat. Coon. for the Social Studies; intramurals. GREEN, JOHN, Kansas City, Mo. Bus. Admin. Phi Delta Theta, soc. chin.; Gk. Wk. Queen Comm., chin.; SUA, homecoming dance chin., summer flights to Europe chm., bd. member. 477 SENIORS 1967 GREENBAUM, HAROLD N., Kansas City, Mo. Entomology Alpha Epsilon Pi, exchequer, sch. chm.; Honor Roll, two sem.; KU-Y, tutoring serv.; Hillel; Ent. Soc. of Am.; Central States Ent. Soc.; Lepidopterists Soc.; Kan. Academy of Science; NSF undergrad. research grant; Scholarship Hall Award. GRE GG, GARY E., Coldwater Hist., Pol. Sci. Stephenson Hall; Honor Roll, seven sem.; CIB, chin.; Univ. Review, ed.; MSHC, sec., treas., pres.; Rock Chalk Revue, pub. chin.; Owl Soc., sec.; Sachem, sec.; Phi Beta Kappa, jr. yr.; Phi Alpha Theta; Pi Sigma Alpha; NSF undergrad. grant; French Summer Lang. Inst.; Western Civ. inst.; Rhodes Candidate; Woodrow Wilson Fellow; Jayhawker Hilltopper. GRESHAM, SANDRA K., Prairie Village Speech and Drama Lewis Hall, outstanding woman, senate, counselor-at- large, soc, chm. comm.; Rock Chalk Revue, In Between Acts dir.; Spring Fling, entertainment dir.; AURH; Jay Janes, song leader; KU-Y; Vox; Little Mary Sunshine; Music Man; My Fair Lady; Oliver!; USO tour; Hap- piness Is. Transfer, Ottawa Univ.: fr. cl. sec.; soph. cl. sec.; cheerleader; Zeta Pi Omega; Phi Delta Kappa, sec. GRESSER, MICHAEL JOSEPH, Rossville Chemistry Honor Roll, four sem.; Phi Lambda Upsilon; Alpha Chi Sigma; French Summer Lang. Inst. GRIBBEN, R. GARY, Parsons Economics Delta Upsilon, treas., exec. cone.; ASC, pub. rel. comm.; sr. el. gift comm.; Gk. Wk., pub. ohm.; ski club, pub. chin.; SUA fall concert, pub. chin.; Jayhawker, dist. mgr.; Vox; CYR; stn. comm. bd. GRIFFITH, MICHAEL DEFRAIN, Topeka Eng. Concentration Honor Roll, four sem.; KU-Y; MUN; P-t-P; Rock Chalk Revue; Showcase Prod.; SUA; Mu Epsilon Nu, treas. GRIFFITH, SARA ELLEN, Neodesha Bus. Admits. GROSSMAN, STEVEN GARY, Glencoe, Ill. Theatre Psychology Honor Roll, six sem.; Allen Crafton Scholarship in Speech; undergrad. research assistanceship; Woodrow Wilson Nominee; Fulhright Nominee; summer theatre in Colo., founder, dir.; vol. art teacher and theatre dir., Osawatomie St. Hosp.; Jayhawker Outstanding Senior. GROVE, RICHARD H., Westminster, Calif. Advertising Honor Roll, two sem.; CRC; Jayhawker, adv. mgr.; UDK, photographer, adv. staff; Alpha Delta Sigma. GRUEN, TIMOTHY LEE, Abilene Pharmacy Jolliffe Hall, v.p., pres.; Honor Roll, five sem.; Rho Chi; Am. Pharm. Assn.; NSF grant. GRUVER, BARBARA IRENE, Oak Park, Ill. Social Work Sigma Kappa, sr. rep.; Frosh Hawks; MUN; P-t-P; Vox. GUNNERSON, SARAH JANE, El Dorado Social Work Lewis Hall, sch. comm. rep.; KU-Y, comm. for handi- capped and underprivileged children; P-t-P; Lutheran Stu. Assn.; Social Work Club. GURPINAR, TAHSIN, Adapazari, Turkey Civil Engineering Honor Roll, six sem.; International Club; Sigma Tau; ASCE; full scholarship from the Turkish government. GURTLER, LINDA LOUISE, Kansas City Biology Sellards Hall, sec., soc. v. chin.; ASC, campus chest comm.; Spring Fling; AWS; Reg. Adv. Bd.; IRC, treas., v.p.; Chi Delphia, pres.; Kan. PTA Scholarship; General Scholarship; French Summer Lang. Inst. GUY, JAMES M., Wichita Pol. Sci. CYR. GUY, LAWRENCE JAMES, Kansas City Social Studies GUZZO, VINCENT JOSEPH, Brooklyn, N. Y. IEEE. Elec. Engineering HAAS, STEVEN L., Tulsa, Okla. Psychology Phi Delta Theta. Transfer, Westminster Coll.: Phi Delta Theta, pl. cl. pres., treas.; Religion in Life comm.; academic scholarship. HAEHL, EARL L., Lawrence Journalism KU-Y; MUN; CYR; UDK; Sigma Delta Chi; Kappa Alpha Mu, sec., v.p., pres.; Kansas City Press Club Scholarship. HAGAR, CALLAWAY B., Dodge City Civil Engineering Honor Roll, five sem.; Engineering Sch. Coun.; Civil Engineering Honor Soc., v.p.; Tau Beta Pi; Sigma Tan; ASCE; Kan. Contractors Assn. Scholarship. HAGEMAN, CHARLES E., Hutchinson Civil Engineering Civil Engineering Honor Soc.; Am. Soc. of Civil En- gineers, treas. HAGGART, TED QUINCY, Salina Math., Econ. Delta Upsilon, pl. cl. pres., sch. chin., pl. trainer, v.p., pres., Man of the Year; Honor Roll, six sem.; ASC social comm., chm.; CIB; Relays Stu. Comm., parade chin.; Rock Chalk Revue, asst. sales mgr.; Stu. Adv. Bd., summer chin.; Vox; CYR; Owl Society; Sachem; Pi Mu Epsilon; Summerfield Scholarship; KU Honor Schol- arship; U. G. Mitchell Math Scholarship; NSF under- grad. grant; Woodrow Wilson Nominee; Rhodes Can- didate; Jayhawker Hilltopper; Pachacamac. HAGSTROM, JERRY E. JR., Shawnee Mission Mech. Engineering Delta Chi, intramurals; Engineering Sch. Coun.; KU-Y; ski club; SUA; ASME; Engineering Exposition Comm. HAIGHT, JEAN MAXINE, Raytown, Mo. Language Arts Hashinger Hall, treas., senate, exec. coun., hall gov. rev. comm.; Honor Roll, one sem.; SNEA. 478 1967 SENIO S HALL, DAVID KENT, Coffeyville Chem., Pol. Sci. Phi Delta Theta, sch. chm., chorister, pres.; Honor Roll, six sem.; ASC, host. and hosp. cousin.; univ. disc. comm.; MC, rep., civil rights comm., expan. comm.; Relays Stu. Comm.; UP, exec. coon.; Owl Society; Sachem; Phi Lambda Upsilon; Sommerfield Scholar- ship; U. G. Mitchell Math Scholarship; Jayhawker Hill- topper; French Summer Lang. Inst.; Stu. Adv. Bd. HALL, MARION THOMAS, Garden City Architecture Delta Tau Delta; Honor Roll, two sem.; Stu. AIA; Scarab. HALLERAN, JOANNE MARIE, Lawrence Elem. Ed. SNEA; Spanish Club; Newman Club. Transfer, Boston Coll.: Dean ' s List; psychology club; Women ' s Athletic Assn.; Spanish Club. HAMILTON, THOMAS RICHARD, Lyons Bus. Admin. Transfer, Hutchinson Comm. Coll., Hutchinson, Kan.: Dean ' s Honor Roll. HAMMIG, MICHAEL DEAN, Lawrence Math., Econ. Peace Corps. HAMPTON, JOHN LEWIS, Great Bend Eng., Philosophy Sport parachute club; rugby club; sports car club; CYR. HANDY, CAROLE JEAN, Emporia Elem. Ed. Delta Delta Delta, int. chin., asst. rush marshall; AWS; Campus Crusade for Christ; Frosh Hawks; Gk. Wk. Sing; KU-Y; MUN; P-t-P; SUA; WRA; sr. cl. HOPE comm., chin.; SNEA; KU Honor Scholarship. HANSEN, PATRICIA A., Wheaton, Ill. Secondary Soc. Studies Alpha Delta Pi, intramurals; Gk. Wk; MUN; Rock Chalk Revue; Vox; Pharmacy Wives; SNEA; Nat. Conn. for the Soc. Studies. HANSEN, RONALD G., Lamed Pharmacy Beta Sigma Psi, p1. cl. pres., sec., pres.; Am. Pharm. Assn. HANZ, DAVID LEE, Albuquerque, N. M. Elec. Eng. Templin. Hall; Honor Roll, four sem.; Tau Beta Pi; Eta Kappa Nu; Sigma Tau; IEEE. HARDER, DANILLE L., Wichita Math., Anthropology Honor Roll, three sem.; KU Honor Scholarship; NSF undergrad. research grant; German Summer Lang. Inst. HARDY, JEAN, Hoisington French, Eng. Sellards Hall, soc. chin., new stu. counselor, exec. bd.; GIB; Univ. Review; ASC, current events comm., cam- pus chest comm.; Mortar Bd.; Honor Roll; Frosh Hawks, song leader; Cwens; concert band; Emily Berger Scholarship; Scholarship Hall Award; French Summer Lang. Inst.; Jr. Yr. Abroad, Bordeaux, France. HARE, LARRY ESTELL, Osawatomie Pharmacy Honor Roll, four sem.; Rho Chi, pres.; Phi Lambda Upsilon; Am. Pharm. Assn.; NSF undergrad. research grant; J. Allen Reese Memorial Scholarship. HARGREAVES, CHARLES L., Solomon Zoology Tau Kappa Epsilon, sgt.-at-arms, soc. comm., pl. trainer, soc. v.p., reg. conclave del.; AFROTC, drill team; fencing club; Gk. Wk. Sing; KU-Y, membership drive; Rock Chalk Revue In-Between Acts; UP; CYR; univ. chorus; varsity fencing. HARMS, CAROL ANN, Shawnee Mission Elena. Ed. Hashinger Hall; Frosh Hawks; ski club; CYR; SNEA. HARP, RICHARD LAYNE, Overland Park Hist., Eng. Delta Upsilon, sec., exec. corm., sch. chin.; Honor Roll, six sem.; sr. el. HOPE comm.; P-t-P, exec. bd.; SUA, summer bd. chin.; Phi Alpha Theta; Univ. Review, ed. bd.; Sachem; Claude Benedum Foundation Scholarship; Woodrow Wilson Nominee; Danforth Scholarship. HARRELL, DONNA RUTH, Greensburg Lang. Arts HARRINGTON, RICK ALAN, Terre Haute, Ind. Int. Rel., Slavic Area Studies Delta Tau Delta, rush chin.; Honor Roll, seven sem.; ASC, frat. rep., athletic seating bd., host, and hosp. comm.; Stu. Adv. Rd.; sr. cl. special events chin.; Relays Stu. Comm., queens comm. chm.; SUA, featured speakers chm., v.p.; Vox, exec. comm.; Pi Sigma Alpha; Owl Soc.; Sachem; Rhodes Scholarship Candidate; Woodrow Wilson Nominee; Veta B. Lear Award; Paul Gustafson Award; Russian Summer Lang. Inst.; Nat. Stu. Leadership Seminar del., Wash., D.C.; Am. Assembly on Cul. Affairs and Int. Rel. del., USAF Academy; Pachacamac; Jayhawker Hilltopper. HARRIS, CYNTHIA ANN, Chanute Elem. Ed. Chi Omega, key priv. comm.; AWS; Frosh Hawks; Gk. Wk. Sing; KU-Y; P-t-P; UP. HARRIS, KAREN KATHLEEN, Shawnee Mission Elem. Ed. UP; CYR; SNEA. Transfer, Christian Coll., Columbia, Mo.: my Chain; Int. Rel. Club; Modeling Club; CCG. HART, ELLEN SUZANNE, Wichita Spanish Hashinger Hall, soc. chm.; Frosh Hawks; SUA; Span. Summer Lang. Inst. HART, MICHAEL RALPH, Col Del Valle, Mex. Hist., Spanish, Latin Ans. Studies MUN; P-t-P; UP; CYD. HARTMAN, RUTH ANN, Lawrence Social Work HARVEY, SARA L., Overland Park Mathematics Lewis Hall, sec.; Honor Roll, six sem.; College Bowl, ques. chin.; CYR; math. club, sec.; Phi Beta Kappa; Pi Mu Epsilon; Woodrow Wilson Nominee; NSF undergrad. math. research grant; U. G. Mitchell Math Scholarship. SENIORS 1967 HASVOLD, CAROL ANN, Clinton, Wisc. History Woodrow Wilson Nominee; Phi Alpha Theta. HATCH, RUTH A., Davenport, Ia. Soc. Studies, Pol. Sci. Alpha Delta Pi, asst. house mgr., sch. Honor Roll, three sew.; AWS, community affairs comm.; Col- lege Bowl; varsity debate, outstanding fr. debator; International Club; Jay Janes, sec.; KU-Y, You and Future Y steering comm., cabinet; MUN, del., security coun. pres., sec.-gen.; Collegiate Coun. for the UN summer inst.; Panhell., Sch. Conn.; UP; Delta Sigma Rho; Nat. Coun. of Soc. Studies, associate reg. dir.; Nat. MUN General Assembly, del. chm.; Alcoa Founda- tion Scholarship. HAUGHT, STEVE RHOADS, Lawrence Biological Science Vox; MEN, scribe. HAVENS, MARY LOUISE, Lakewood, N. J. Psychology Hashinger Hall; Psi Chi; New Jersey St. Scholarship; Am. Baptist Cony. Scholarship. Transfer, Glassboro St. Coll.: Linden Hall; TWIG; Women ' s Ath. Assn. Ottawa Univ.: Kappa Tau Delta; psychology club. HEATH, BEVERLY J., Huntington, N. Y. Advertising Lewis Hall, rec. chm., fl. pres.; Frosh Hawks; Gamma Alpha Chi, pres. HEDGE, LAWRENCE R., Hoxie Anthro., Spanish, Span. Ed. Grace Pearson Hall; Templin Hall, senate; chorus; con- cert choir. HEFTY, NONYA KARLENE, Syracuse Art Education HEIDINGER, G. FRED, Jacksonville, Ill. Accounting Delta Tau Delta; Honor Roll, three sem.; accounting soc.; Bus. Stu. Assn.; varsity football. HEISLER, RICHARD LEROY, Millard, Nebr. Civil Engineering Honor Roll, one sem.; ASCE, rec. sec., membership chm. HEIT, ALICIA ANNE, Kinsley Physical Therapy Transfer, Kan. St. Univ. Mt. Saint Scholastica. HEITZ, KATHARINE ELLEN, Alton, Ill. Elem. Ed. Alpha Delta Pi, Stan. chm.; AURH; AWS, High Sch. Leadership Day comm.; Frosh Hawks; Daughters of Diana; Panhell., Standards Bd.; UP; SNEA. HELLER, LEONARD EARL, Topeka Zoology Alpha Kappa Lambda, sac. chm., Kallay Filleeans pl. trainer; Honor Roll, one sem.; Gk. Wk. Sing; KU-Y Fr. Model Senate; MUN; Rock Chalk Revue; SUA Carnival. HELLER, PATRICIA JEAN, Topeka Secondary Ed. Kallay Filleeans, pres.; Taming of the Shrew; Hurricane Island; jr. member of Nat. Coun. of Eng. Teachers; Alpha Kappa Lambda Sweetheart. Transfer, Washburn Univ., Topeka: Delta Gamma, pl. cl. v.p., asst. rush chin., rush chm.; Panhell., treas.; CYR. HENDERSON, KAREN JEAN, Prairie Village Journalism Theta Sigma Phi. Transfer, Baker Univ.: Alpha Chi Omega, asst. rush chin.; soph. cl. sec. HENRICHS, BETTY LOU, Topeka Pol. Sci., Hist. Sigma Kappa, Stan. comm., asst. rush chm.; Honor Roll, three sem.; AWS, All-Women ' s Night comm.; Vox; Pi Sigma Alpha; SNEA; Frosh Hawks, program chm., Frosh Hawk of the Year. HENTSCH, CHERYL GAY, Lawrence Journalism Chi Omega, affiliate; Honor Roll, seven sem.; UDK, wire ed., copy ed.; Theta Sigma Phi; Am. Assn. of Univ. Women Scholarship; Mabel Beth McLaughling Journalism Scholarship. HERD, PAMELA SUE, Coldwater English Kappa Alpha Theta. Transfer, Stephens Coll.: honors strident; vespers chm. HERMAN, EDWARD ALFRED, Kansas City Psychology Aerohawk Flying Club; Newman Club; French Club. Transfer, Lewis Coll., Lockport, Ill. HERRERA, LUIS FERNANDO, Lawrence Int. Rel. International Club; SLO; soccer club. HEWETT, KATHRYN DEE, Fort Scott English Kappa Alpha Theta, ed., chaplain; Corbin Hall, pres.; Honor Roll, one sem.; AWS, senator, orientations chm., Commission on the Status of Women clan.; Cwens; Scholarship Hall Award; Independent Study Program. HEWINS, CHARLES F. JR., Rockville, Md. Pol. Sci. Pi Kappa Alpha, house mgr., v.p., pres.; AFROTC, flight cmdr.; fencing club; IFC, rep.; Vox, pub. comm.; Alpha Phi Omega, pl. cl. pres.; Arnold Air Soc., admin. off.; varsity fencing. HEWITT, THOMAS T., Topeka Geography AROTC, operations off., bat. exec. off.; sport para- chute club, pres.; Pershing Rifles, operations off., drill team cmdr., exec. off., capt.; Scabbard and Blade; AROTC Scholarship; Army Chicago Tribune Award; Army Superior Cadet Award; AROTC summer camp, platoon honor man. HEWLETT, JAMES LEROY, Springfield, Mo. Architecture Honor Roll, two sem.; Stu. Am. Inst. of Arch.; Scarab; Tau Sigma Delta; Tau Beta Pi; Goldwin Gold- smith Arch. Scholarship; Smith, Smith, Haines, Wal- burg Arch. Scholarship. Transfer, Drury Coll., Spring- field, Mo.: Sigma Phi Epsilon. HEXUM, PATRICIA H., Kansas City, Mo. Psychology Honor Roll, four sem.; Psi Chi, treas.; Woodrow Wilson Nominee. 480 1967 SENIORS HICKERSON, KEN L., Des Moines, Ia. Adcertising Sigma Nu, hist.; ASC orientation comm., chm.; UDK, adv. mgr.; Jayhawker, adv. mgr.; intramural golf; KU-Y. Transfer, Central Univ. of Ia.: all student coon. Grand- view Coll.: faculty planning comm. HIGGINS, HARWOOD OWEN JR., Lawrence Elec. Engineering Engineering Exposition; IEEE; Kan. Professional En- gineers Soc., Engineer-in-Training. HILL, JEFFREY W., Wellington Bus. Admin. MUN; Am. Leg. Scholarship; Marketing Club; wrestling. HILL, RONALD WILLIAM, Erie Int. Rel. Rugby club; Freidline Fund Scholarship. HILYARD, GARY RICHARD, Wichita Pharmacy AFROTC, drill team; Am. Pharm. Assn. HIMES, JEWELL DEAN, Independence, Miss. Spanish Hashinger Hall, intramurals; International Club; P-t-P; Spanish Club, pres.; SNEA. HITT, ALAN BERKLEY, Lawrence Chinese Beta Theta Pi, treas.; Honor Roll, seven sem.; AROTC; CIB; SUA, table tennis chm.; Owl Soc.; Sachem; Phi Beta Kappa; Pi Mu Epsilon; Summerfield Scholarship; Nat. Merit Scholarship; Stu. Adv. Bd.; Jr. Yr. Abroad, Taiwan; Jayhawker Outstanding Senior. HOBBS, PATSY JEAN, Kansas City Microbiology Hashinger sch. comm.; CRC; MISUK. HOBSON, MONA GAYLE, St. John Pol. Sci. Alpha Chi Omega, recommendations chin.; ASC, pub. r0. comm., commencement comm.; AWS, rep., SMOP cormn., House of Rep. sec.-treas.; KU-Y; MUN, steering comm.; Rock Chalk Revue; SUA Carnival; State of Kan. Scholarship; St. John Teachers ' Scholarship. HODSON, MARY LOUISE, Leawood English Hashinger Hall; fencing club; P-t-P; CYR; WRA, ball rep.; UDK; Gamma Alpha Chi; Kappa Phi, p1. cl. pres., hist.; Spanish Summer Lang. Inst. HOFFMAN, HOWARD, Hixson, Tenn. Architecture Joseph R. Pearson Hall, corm. rep., sec., v.p., home- coming chm., Relays chin., librarian; Alpha Epsilon Pi, Pl. cl. v.p., sec., v.p.; AURH; IFC; MRA; Spring Fling; UP; CYD; B ' nai Brith Hillel; Stu. AIA. HOFFMAN, JERRY WAYNE, Lakin Pre-fled. Jolliffe Hall, small appropriations chin., treas., forums bd., intramurals; Honor Roll, one sem.; College Bowl; Spring Fling; Spring Sing; German Club; NSF under- grad. grant; Woodrow Wilson Nominee. HOGAN, RICHARD MARK, Glen Ellyn, Ill. Architecture Sigma Nu; AIA; Tau Sigma Delta. Transfer, Iowa St. Univ.: Sigma Nu, chaplain, rush chm. HOGUE, KATHLYN RAE, Topeka German Alpha Omicron Pi; Honor Roll; AWS; jr. cl. sec.; Bd. of Class Officers; College Bowl; Gk. Wk. Sing; International Club; Panhell.; SUA; Vox; Delta Phi Alpha; German Club, sec.; SNEA; Woodrow Wilson Nominee; Jr. Yr. Abroad, Bonn, Germany; German Summer Lang. Inst.; German teaching asst.; band; chorus. FIOLLINGSWORTH, HARVEY D., Wellington Pharmacy Guy Hall Scholarship. HOLMES, MERRILL DENNIS, Marietta, Ga. Geography AFROTC; intramurals; AIAA, sec.; Hawaiian Club. HOLMES, RICHARD WAYNE, Kansas City, Mo. Aerospace Engineering Honor Roll, three sem.; Sigma Gamma Tau, pres.; Tau Beta Pi; AIAA. HOLROYD, SUSAN JEANNE, Sedan Social Work Lewis Hall; Hashinger Hall; Honor Roll; Frosh Hawks; statewide act.; Woodrow Wilson Nominee; KU General Scholarship; Univ. Women ' s Club Scholarship. HOLT, DENNIS W., Kansas City Soc. Studies, Pol. Sci. Tau Kappa Epsilon, soc. comm., fraternal comm., rush comm., treas.; Gk. Wk., concert comm.; KU-Y; Rock Chalk Revue; MUN; SUA, pub. rel. comm.; UP; CYR, soc. comm.; Newman Club, pub. comm.; ASC campus chest comm. Transfer, Donnelly Coll., Kansas City, Kan.: Dean ' s Honor Roll. HOLMER, MARTIN ROBERT, Wichita Econ., Math. Beta Theta Pi, alumni sec., rush chin., v.p.; Honor Roll, seven sem.; IFC, v.p. for rush; Stu. Relays Comm., office mgr., sr. co-chin.; Owl Soc.; Sachem; NFS undergrad. grant in math.; NSF undergrad. grant in econ.; U. G. Mitchell Math. Scholarship; John Ise Econ. Scholarship; Woodrow Wilson Nominee; Rhodes Scholar- ship Candidate; swimming. HOOVER, JOHN GENE, Marion Pol. Sci., Hist. Templin Hall. HOOVER, WILLIAM, Shawnee Mission Bus. Admin. Honor Roll, one sem.; Aerohawk Flying Club; Soc. for the Advancement of Management; Marketing Club. HORAY, PATRICK JAMES, Mission Anth•o., Sociology Honor Roll, two sem.; International Club; MUN; Peace Corps. HORD, GLENDA KAY, Kansas City Common Learnings Chi Omega, pl. cl. sec., sec.; Honor Roll, seven sem.; AWS, senator; Panhell., pres.; Chi Dclphia; Cwens, sec.; Mortar Bd.; Watkins Scholarship; Jayhatcker Hilltopper; Dean ' s Adv. Bd.; SUA Carnival, judge. 481 SENIORS 1967 HORNUNG, GEORGE C., Spearville Phys. Ed., Soc. Studies Tau Kappa Epsilon; K Club; varsity football. HORNUNG, SANDRA SUE, Kinslev Apparel Merchandising HORST, KENNETH ALAN, Abilene Pharmacy Sigma Chi; UP; volleyball club; Am. Phann. Assn.; Kan. Pharm. Assn. HORTON, WILLIAM ARNOLD, Chanute Zoology Alpha Tau Omega; Honor Roll, three sem. HOSKINS, RICHARD J., Bonner Springs Pol. Sci. Honor Roll; KU-Y; MUN; Peace Corps; Vox; CYR; Univ. Events Comm.; Pi Sigma Alpha; Delta Sigma Rho, pres.; varsity debate, outstanding fr. debator; out- standing sr. div. debator; Pol. Sci. sr. teaching asst. HOUGH, PAUL W. JR., Newton Theatre Alpha Kappa Lambda; Honor Roll, one sem.; Centennial Celebration; Gk. Wk. Sing; Rock Chalk Revue, house script dir.; honors acting program; USO Music Man tour; East Eur. Cultural Exchange; Beauty and the Beast; Tempest; West Side Story; Mother Courage; Little Mary Sunshine; Music Man; My Fair Lady; Ass American Medley; Tom Thumb; Olicerl; Roque ' s Trial; Oh! What a Lovely War; Campus Tale nt ' 67; Two For the See- saw, costumes. HOUGHLAND, DAVID ALLISON, Olathe Architecture Phi Kappa Tau, chaplain, house mgr., v.p., pres.; Honor Roll, one sem.; IFC; CYD; Scarab; AIA. HOWARD, JESSIE ANNE, Scranton, Ia. Phys. Ed. HOWELL, JUDY M., Hinsdale, Ill. Lang. Arts Gamma Phi Beta, song leader, stan. chm.; Grace Pearson Hall, soc. chin.; Honor Roll, four sem.; AWS, orienta- tion skits; Kallay Filleeans, sec.; Rock Chalk Revue, skit lead; CYR; Pi Lambda Theta; Cwens; Miss KU- Lawrence finalist; Jayhawker Queen finalist; Gk. Wk. Sing; Oh! What a Lovely War; Little Mary Sunshine; 011 Dad, Poor Dad, Mom ' s Locked You in the Closet, and I ' m Feelin ' So Sad; Peter Pan; John Brown ' s Body. HOYT, TERRY JO, Kansas City, Mo. Commercial Art Kappa Kappa Gamma, sch. chm.; Honor Roll, two sem.; AWS, rep.; Frosh Hawks; Gk. Wk.; Panhell., sch. coun., rush counselor; P-t-P, summer abroad program, hosp. comm.; Rock Chalk Revue; student communications bd.; SUA, travel bur.; CYR; Previews counselor. HUCK, CAROL A., Lawrence Bus. Admin. International Club; Newman Club; Phi Beta Lambda, sec.; NEA. HUDDLESTON, LARRY KEITH, Kansas City Hist., Pol. Sci. Triangle, rec. sec.; SUA Carnival, ticket comm.; CYR. HUDSON, ANNE-MARIE, Mission English Hashinger Hall, house mgr. HUGHES, JACK, Clafin Anthro., Sociology Honor Roll, one sem.; Whatchamacallit; Anthro. club; Kansas Peace Officers Assn. Essay Contest Award. HULTS, ARLO R., Sherman Oak, Calif. Advertising CYR; SUA, carnival comm.; UP; UDK; Jayhawker, adv. staff; intramurals. HUNTER, DONALD ALLAN, Council Grove Advertising Tau Kappa Epsilon, alumni chin., pl. trainer, pres.; AROTC; soph. cl. pres.; sr. cl. calendar comm., chin.; IFC; SUA; UP; CYR; Alpha Delta Sigma, sec., rush chin.; UDK, circulation mgr.; Greek Column. HUNTINGTON, JAMES FIELD, Bartlesville, Okla. Advertising Delta Tau Delta, p1. trainer, rush chin., rec. sec.; HOPE Award Comm., co-chin. HURT, MICHAEL GLEN, Leawood Elec. Engr. Delta Tau Delta, v.p., pres.; Honor Roll, three sem.; MUN; SUA Carnival, ticket chin.; Eta Kappa Nu; NSF scholarship. HURT, WILLIAM EWING, Sedalia, Mo. Pol. Sci., Speech COMM. Joseph R. Pearson Hall, hall congress; Honor Roll, three sem.; Campus Chest comm.; AURH; International Club; MRA, hall rep.; MUN; SUA, fireside chat; UP; Woodrow Wilson Nominee; speech potpourri; English teaching asst. HUSTON, DAVID WYATT, Winchester Indus. Design HUTCHESON, Elsie Louise, Overland Park Art Ed. Hashinger Hall, fl. recreation and song chin.; College Bowl. Transfer, Univ. of Mo.: Curator ' s Scholarship; Chancel Choir; fr. debators ' soc. HUTCHISON, LYNDA JEAN, Chanute English Douthart Hall, v.p.; Honor Roll, three sem.; Campus Crusade for Christ; KU-Y; Univ. Honors Scholarship; Pi Lambda Theta; Span. Summer Lang. Inst. HUTTON, KATHLEEN, Mount Hope Education Alpha Phi, rec. sec., rush chm.; Frosh Hawks, song leader; Gk. Wk. Sing, chin.; P-t-P, bd.; Jay Janes; Little Sisters of Areta, pres.; Panhell.; Rock Chalk Revue; MENC. HUTTON, PENNIE LYNN, Lenexa Biology Alpha Chi Omega, warden; MUN. Transfer, Stephens Coll.: vespers comm.; hall exec. coml.; concert choir; science book award. 482 1.967 SENIORS HYLAND, VICKI McBRIDE, Hutchinson Design Alpha Phi, intramurals; Honor Roll, one sem.; AWS; Frosh Hawks; Gk. Wk.; KU-Y; P-t-P; Rifle Club; Rock Chalk Revue; Ski Club; SUA, picture lending comm.; Vox; Kansas Designer Craftsman Show award; KU law wives; WRA, exec. bd. IMMENSCIIUH, LINDA J., Rossville Bus. Ed. Hashinger Hall; Pi Omega Pi; Phi Beta Lambda; Phi Chi Theta, sec. INGALLS, DAVID S., Fitchburg, Mass. Bus. Admin. Phi Gamma Delta, grad. rel. chm., sch. chm., pres.; Gk. Wk., relays, queen comm. ohm.; IFC, jud. coml.; UP; Alpha Kappa Psi. JACKSON, JUDITH ANN, Kansas City, Mo. Interior Design Lewis Hall, communications comm. rep., staff asst., homecoming chm.; AUREL nat. registration chm., hous- ing comm.; AWS, communications COMM.; KU-Y. JARRATT, JACK CARSON, Kansas City Accounting Honor Roll, one sem.; accounting soc. Transfer, Kansas City Jr. Coll.: P-t-P. JENNINGS, ANNE, Wichita Apparel Merchandising Delta Delta Delta, pl. el. treas., pres.; AWS, rep., All Women ' s Wk., planning comm.; Gk. Wk., planning comm.; MUN; P-t-P, job oppor. comm.; SUA Carnival, judge; CYD; home coon. club; Gk. Wk. queen nominee. JENNINGS, GWYNN ANN, Bartlesville, Okla. Math., Econ. Alpha Gamma Delta, treas., pres.; Honor Roll, three sem.; Panhell., pres. coun.; UP; CYR; Phi Chi Theta; Pi Mu Epsilon. JENSEN, ELIZABETH GAY, Kansas City Elem. Eel. Chi Omega; AWS, High Sch. Leadership Day; Frosh Hawks; KU-Y; P-t-P; Rock Chalk Revue; Ski Club; SUA; sr. cl. announcements comm., chm.; SNEA. JOHNSMEYER, JO ANNE, Mount Hope Music Ed. Delta Gamma, song leader, soph. key; jr. cl. sec.; Gk. Wk. Sing, co-ohm.; Centennial Celebration; Sisters of the Maltese Cross; Rock Chalk Revue; Miss Lawrence- KU Pageant, semi-finalist; MENC. JOHNSON, CONNIE ROSE, Oneill, Nebr. Art Ed. McCollum Hall, fl. v.p. Transfer, Nebr. St. Coll., Wymore, Nebr.: YWCA; Kappa Pi. JOHNSON, DEBORAH LESLIE, Hutchinson Elem. Eel. Kappa Kappa Gamma, asst. marshall, marshall; AWS; Gk. Wk Sing; Rock Chalk Revue. JOHNSON, HOWELL DONALD, Junction City Chemistry Templin Hall, counselor; Honor Roll, one sem.; MUN; NROTC, Chicago Tribune Award; Hawkwatch Soc. JOHNSON, JERRIE LEE, Olathe Physical Therapy Hashinger Hall. JOHNSON, DOLPFL Wymore, Nebr. Span., Int. Rel. Sigma Chi, soc. chm., pl. trainer; Honor Roll, four sem.; ASC elec. comm., ohm.; SUA; UP; CYR; Pi Sigma Alpha; Owl Soc. JOHNSON, LARRY S., Hutchinson Advertising, Bus. Pi Kappa Alpha, v.p., pres.; IFC, pres. coma., rush comm.; Gk. Wk.; UDK, adv. staff. JOHNSON, LELAND ROBERT, Wichita Elec. Engr. Pearson Hall, intramurals mgr., jud. coun.; Hono r Roll, three sem.; College Bowl; band; orch.; Tau Beta Pi; Eta Kappa Nu; Sigma Tau; Black and Veatch Engr. Scholarship; Scholarship Hall Award. JOHNSON, LESLIE MARTIN, Wichita Pol. Sci., Hist. Stephenson Hall; AFROTC, group admin. officer, drill team; CYR; Arnold Air Soc., comptroller; Wesley Foundation, treas.; Scholarship Hall Award; Kansas Legis. Scholarship; Air Force Scholarship. JOHNSON, STEVEN WAYNE, Mission Accounting, Bus. Admin. Ellsworth Hall, fl. pres.; McCollum Hall, fl. treas.; Spring Fling; Karate Club; accounting soc. JOHNSTON, TERRY LEE, Kankakee, Ill. Architecture Stu. adv. bd.; Kansas Engineer; AIA, pub. ohm.; Scarab, pl. trainer, v.p.; Kansas Designer Craftsman Show awards. JOHNSTON, TINA SUSAN, McPherson Occupational Therapy Ellsworth Hall, soc. ohm.; Omega Tau Iota; Kansas Occ. Ther. Assn.; Am. Occ. Ther. Assn. JONES, SHARON KAY, Wichita Elem. Ed. Lewis Hall; West Side Story; Six Characters in Search of an Author; USA; Little Mary Sunshine; Actors Showcase; Cottonwood Review. JORGENSEN, JOHN FREDERICK, Mount Hope Accounting Tau Kappa Epsilon, rush chm., alumni chm.; P-t-P; UP; CYD; Delta Sigma Pi. JOSE, SUSAN H., Carthage, Mo. English. Sigma Kappa, house mgr.; Honor Roll, two sem.; ASC stu. health comm. sec., film series comm.; Gk. Wk. Sing; sr. el. party comm.; P-t-P; Riding Club; Vox; French Club. JOYCE, MARSHA ELAINE, Topeka Mathematics Lewis Hall, stan. bd.; AWS, convention comm., del.; Jay Janes, frosh hawks adv.; Pi Lambda Theta; SNEA. 483 SENIORS 1967 JUDD, KIM K., Kansas City, Mo. Sociology, Human Rel. Joseph R. Pearson Hall, soc. chm., coon., relays comm., newspaper asst. ed, counselor; AURH, hall rep.; MBA, sec.; Spring Fling, dance chin.; UP; Woolford Founda- tion Scholarship. Transfer, UMKC: Tau Kappa Epsilon, sec., red carnation chin.; Alpha Phi Omega; Univ. Pro- gram Coon., music entertainment comm. chm. JUETT, DONALD J., Shawnee Mission Mech. Engr. Joseph R. Pearson Hall; UP; CYR; Engr. Exposition; Am. Soc. of Mech. Engr.; AIAA; Am. Soc. of Tool and Manufacturing Engr. KAHN, REGINA, New London, Conn. Russian Honor Roll, one sem.; B ' nai Brith Hillel, sec., pres.; KU-CU Russian Lang. Inst. Scholarship. Transfer, Conn. Coll. for Women: fr. coon.; religious coon.; mod- ern dance group. KALBFLEISCH, GREGG HAL, Kansas City Zoology Delta Chi, corr. sec., exec. coon., jud. coon.; Honor Roll, one sem.; Gk. Wk. relays comm., chm.; IFC, rushbook comm.; P-t-P; Vox; CYR; Chi Delphia, ad- visor. KAMPMEIER, SHARON ANN, Kansas City Elem. Ed. Hashinger Hall; SNEA. Transfer, Kansas City Jr. Coll.: SNEA; P-t-P. KANGAS, BARBARA LYNN, Prairie Village Spanish Delta Delta Delta, asst. treas., honor initiate; Honor Roll, four sem.; AWS; Chi Delphia, sec.-treas.; Cwens; Sigma Delta Pi; Span. asst. research grant. KANGAS, MIRIAM KAY, Wichita Sociology, Psychology Lewis Hall, homecoming chm.; ASC, hall rep.; Frosh Hawks; KU-Y, children ' s hour; YWCA, New York City Project. KAPP, NANCY K., Leawood Soc. Studies Alpha Delta Pi, act. chm.; Frosh Hawks; Jay Janes; KU-Y; MUN; P-t-P; SUA, carnival ticket comm., music forums; UP; CYD; SNEA; Kansas General Scholarship; Dream Girl of Phi Kappa Tau. KARNAZE, WILLIAM C., Kansas City Physics Lambda Chi Alpha; stu. adv. bd.; SUA. Transfer, Kansas City Jr. Coll.: Phi Theta Kappa; Magna Cum Laude. KASPER, DANIEL M., Overland Park Pol. Sci. Phi Kappa Theta, pl. trainer, rush chin., exec. comm., Pres.; Honor Roll, five sem.; IFC, pres. coml.; NROTC; Hawkwatch Soc.; CYD, exec. comm.; Vox, exec. adv.; Jayhawker, features ed.; Pi Sigma Alpha; Newman Club; Am. Assn. of Pol. Scientists; NROTC Scholarship; Dodd Foundation Scholarship; sr. cl. HOPE award comm., co-chm. Transfer, Univ. of Mo. at Rolla: Dean ' s Honor Roll; Phi Eta Sigma; newspaper features editor; NSF undergrad. research grant. KAUFMAN, BARRY L., Newton Biology Sigma Nu, reporter, jud. coun.; Honor Roll, two sem.; Vox; CYR; Mu Epsilon Nu, prog. pres.; NSTA. KAUTZ, FREDERICK W., Atchison Pharmacy Honor Roll, five sem.; Pbi Lambda Upsilon; Rho Chi; Am. Pharm. Assn.; NSF undergrad. research grant. KEAGY, IRVANA SUE, Valley Center Journalism. Ellsworth Hall, v.p.; McCollum Hall, adv. bd., staff asst.; AURH, coordinating comm. for NACURH; Frosh Hawks; P-t-P; UDK. KEAIRNES, JARETH, Web ster Groves, Mo. Span., Math. Scllards Hall; Honor Roll, three sem.; fr. women ' s hall counsellor; AWS; riding club; Cwens; Pi Lambda Theta; SHOP Scholarship; Scholarship Hall Award. KEARNEY, JOHN BRIAN, Olathe Mathematics Honor Roll, eight sem.; bowling assn.; Newman Club. KELLER, SI-IARYL LEE, Prairie Village History Alpha Delta Pi, asst. treas., dec. chm.; Gk. Wk. Sing; Chi Delphia; Vox; Jayhatcker. KELLEY, VIRGINIA, Beloit Education Alpha Phi; Frosh Hawks; Gk. Wk.; Peace Corps; Rock Chalk Revue; SUA; SNEA; Jayhawker. KELLY, MYRL WILLIAM, Cedar Vale Elec. Engr. Triangle, pl. trainer, corr. sec., v.p., pres.; engr. sch. coon., treas.; KU-Y; Vox; IEEE. KELLY, SUSAN EILEEN, Ottawa Voice Lewis Hall, communications fl. chm., ways and means comm.; Spring Fling; Frosh Hawks; IRC, fr. orientation comm.; UP; concert choir; opera workshop; showcase theatre; The Marriage of My Fair Lady; Carry Nation; The Magic Flute; French Club; NSF undergrad. grant. KENNEDY, DAVID CARTER, Lawrence Comp. Biochem., Physiology Honor Roll, one sem. KEPHART, MICHAEL DAVID, Perryville, Mo. Architecture Honor Roll, one sem.; Kansas Concrete Masonry Assn. Design Award. KERNS, RICHARD LEE, Kinsley Physics Stephenson Hall, v.p.; Honor Roll, three sem.; KU-Y; Vox; Sigma Pi Sigma; American Inst. of Physics; gen- eral scholarship; Scholarship Hall Award. KERR, HOYT ALLEN, Manhattan Pharmacy KETCHAM, SUE ANNE, Leawood Social Work KU-Y, fr. camp counsellor; P-t-P, stu. abroad comm. and ambassador; fr. hall, soc. chin., counsellor. 484 1967 SENIORS KIFER, CHARLES JAMES, Scott City Chemistry Pearson Hall, treas., v.p., jud. coon. chm.; Honor Roll, five sem.; Phi Lambda Upsilon; Alpha Chi Sigma; Kaw Valley Heart Assn. Research Scholarship; Sum- merfield nomination; Woodrow Wilson nomination; Pearson Hall award, three years; pre-med scholarship; Phi Eta Sigma. KIMZEY, STEPHEN R., Topeka Bus. Admin. Honor Roll, one sem.; Vox; AROTC. KINCAID, D. LAWRENCE, Mission Psychology Phi Delta Theta; Honor Roll, two sem.; Peace Corps, advanced training, Columbia Community Development; SUA, Jazz Fest. Steering Comm. KING, MARILYN GODWIN, Ness City Elem. Fd. Watkins Hall; Honor Roll, three sem.; Methodist Church scholarship; Delta Kappa Gamma scholarship; band; brass choir; SERVAS; SNEA. KING, ROBERT EUGENE, Glasco Chemistry, Biology Honor Roll, seven sem.; International Club; Men ' s Schol- arship Hall Council, rep.; MUN; SNEA; NSF Grant; Brewster Scholarship; May Landis Scholarship; Kansas PTA Scholarship; Harvard Prize Award in Science and Math; SERVAS, Midwest rep. KINYOU, LEON KEITH, Greenberg Pol. Sci. Tau Kappa Epsilon, treas., housemother comm. chm.; AROTC; Gk. Wk.; KU-Y; UP; CYR; Chancery Club; Rosco G. Simpson Foundation; Greensburg High School Stu. Cozen. Scholarship. KIRST, CAROL J., Springfield, Mo. Elem. Ed. Kappa Alpha Theta, corr. sec.; Honor Roll, four sem.; Delta Phi Alpha; Pi Lambda Theta; German Summer Lang. Inst.; NDEA Summer Inst.; University Symphony Orch. KITTRELL, CHARLES ANAN, Kansas City Business Admin. Honor Roll; wrestling. Transfer, Baker Univ.: Kappa Sigma, scholarship chin.; French Club. KLEIER, David K., Oxford Psychology Theta Chi, pl. cl. sec., intr. chm., chaplain, sec., IFC rep., regional conclave chin., pres.; Honor Roll, two sem.; IFC Scholarship symposium comm., chm.; MUN; Stu- dent Communications Bd.; SUA, on-campus ticket chm., general ticket chin., travel bureau chm.; Vox; sr. cl. pub. comm.; ASC current events comm. chin., student com- munications board, campus chest committee. KLEINBERG, MARY JILL, Lawrence East Asian Area Studies, Hist. Pi Beta Phi; Honor Roll, four sem.; AWS steering comm.; Frosh Hawks; Woodrow Wilson Fellowship; Jr. Yr. Abroad, International Christian University, Tokyo, Japan. KLENDA, KATHLEEN, Wichita Art History Lewis Hall. Transfer, Rosary College, River Forest, Ill. KLINE, ROBERT JOHN, Hutchinson English Phi Kappa Psi, pl. cl. pres., sch. chm., corr. sec., v.p.; SUA. Transfer, Coll. of William and Mary. KLUGE, WILLIAM F., III, Wichita Psychology Honor Roll, four sem.; CYR, Anthro. Club; Psi Chi. KNIGHT, VINCENT LEE, Ponca City, Okla. Pol. Sri., Personnel Admin. Joseph R. Pearson IIall, fl. v.p.; Sigma Psi. KNOX, SHERRY, Omaha, Nebr. Art Education Alpha Delta Pi, second v.p.; Honor Roll, two sem.; AWS; Frosh Hawks; Gk. Wk.; Jay Janes; KU-Y; SUA comm. chm.; Delta Phi Delta; Art Education Club; SNEA. KOBLER, ANN LYNNE, Hill City Elem. Fri. Alpha Gamma Delta, pres.; Honor Roll, one sem.; Frosh Hawks; IRC rep.; Chi Delphia; Panhell., pres. rosin.; NEA; Youth Fellowship Program. KOCH, VICKI ANN, Shawnee Mission Personnel Admin., Psychology Sigma Kappa, chaplin, asst. house mgr.; Honor Roll, one sem.; Frosh Hawks; P-t-P; Vox; Sigma Psi, pub. rel. chm., sec.-treas. KOETT, LARRY J., Hays Pharmacy Am. Pharm. Assn. Transfer, Ft. Hays St. Coll.: New- man Club. KOETTING, JOHN KENNETH, Prairie Village Accounting Joseph R. Pearson Hall; Honor Roll, eight sem.; P-t-P; Accounting Soc.; Beta Gamma Sigma; Delta Sigma Pi; Newman Club; Am. Inst. of Arch. KOPPER, MARTHA LOUISE, Wichita English Douthart Hall, counsellor, jud. bd. chin.; Honor Roll, seven sem.; AURH, v. chin., sec.; MUN; Stu. Adv. Bd.; Elizabeth M. Watkins Scholarship; Veto B. Lear Award; Paul B. Lawson Award; Phi Beta Kappa; NSF Grant in Chemistry; Woodrow Wilson Nominee; Scholarship Hall Award; German Summer Lang. Inst. KOVACS, GYONGYI, Novi Sad, Yugoslavia Art History International Festival; P-t-P. Transfer, Lewis and Clark Coll.: United Nations Club. KOWALSKI, DEE ANNA, Wichita Spanish Gamma Phi Beta, act. chm., Stan. bd.; AWS, reg. cony. del.; P-t-P, Jaypeople; Vox; Rock Chalk Revue; CYR; Span. Summer Lang. Inst., Barcelona, Spain. ROWING, BEN E., Lawrence Zoology AFROTC, Arnold Air Soc., Area Admin. Off.; Kappa Eta Kappa, sr. commission pres.; VFW Scholarship; NSF Grant. ROWING, CAROL F., Winfield Mathematics Honor Roll, one sem. 485 SENIORS 1967 KRAEMER, CHARLES NV., Marysville Commercial Art, English Beta Theta Pi, rush book ed., song leader; Honor Roll, five sem.; Rock Chalk Revue, house dir. KRAMER, BOBETTE, Hutchinson Lewis Hall; Douthart Hall, J-Board, soc. cm.;h3Ells- worth Hall; Frosh Hawks, coast. comm.; Jay Janes, mum sale; KU-Y; Spring Fling; SUA; Vox; SUA, Chancellor ' s Reception, after game reception comm.; Campus and Career. KRANNAMITTER, KENNETH, Hoxie Education KREBS, JERRY, Garden City Ed Jewelry, Silversmithing Honor Roll, one sem.; Alpha Rho Gamma, v.p.; Design Dept. Award; Midwestern Music and Art Camp, asst. KREIDER, KAREN SUE, Chanute Latin, English Gamma Phi Beta, sch. chm.; Gertrude Sellards Pear- son Hall, sr. assistant; Angel Flight; AWS, fr. leadership comm.; fr. orientation comm.; Chi Delphia; UCCF, prog. chm.; McCollum Hall, counsellor. KREITZER, JULIE GLENN, Lawrence Elem. Education Delta Delta Delta; Honor Roll, two sem.; KU-Y. KREUTZER, GAYLE, Leavenworth Elem. Education Delta Delta Delta, soc. chm.; AWS, fashion bd.; Bd. of Cl. Off.; sr. cl. sec.; Frosh Hawks; Sisters of the Maltese Cross; Panhell., Soc. Coun.; NROTC Color Girl. KROEKER, SONDRA EPP, Buhler Elem. Spec. Ed. Honor Roll, seven s em.; Jay Janes; SUA; Pi Lambda Theta; Student Educators Assn.; Coon. for Exceptional Children; Sr. Trainee Fellowship; Fr. Counselor; SNEA. Transfer, Hutchinson Jr. College: Phi Theta Kappa; choir; SNEA. KRSTOLIC, CONSTANCE, Kansas City Advertising Hashinger Hall, sen., fl. pres.; MUN; UP; Newman Club, hall capt.; Gamma Alpha Chi. Transfer, Don- nelly College: Delta Kappa Gamma, v.p.; Donnelly Newsletter, reporter. KRUG, JOHN A., Wichita Industrial Design AFROTC, cadet capt.; gymnastic letterman, three years. KUHLMANN, DONNA ANN, Guernsey, Wyo. Zoology Douthart Hall, house mgr.; College Bowl; KU-Y, tutoring service comm.; Honor Roll, three sem.; LaVerne Noyes Scholarship. KURTZ, SUSAN KAY, Kansas City Zoology Honor Roll, two sem. LACEY, ELIZABETH, St. Louis, Mo. Elem. Education Hashinger Hall; IRC; UP. Transfer, DePauw Univ.: AWS; Young Repub. LACKIE, MARGO, McPherson Soc. Stud., Sec. Ed. Honor Roll, one sem.; AWS; KU-Y. Transfer, Univ. of Hawaii: International Club. LA MONT, MARVIN DEAN, Ottawa Elec. Engineering Honor Roll, one sem.; AFROTC, area comptroller, drill team, IEEE; Sigma Tau; Henry L. Doherty Educational Foundation Scholarship. LANCE, TANYA ERRETT, St. Joseph, Mo. East Asian Studies, Elem. Ed. Lewis Hall, house comm. chin.; International Club; P-t-P; Spring Fling; theatrical work; UP; Spring Sing, steering comm.; Chinese-American Club; Newman Club; Concert Choir; Summer Inst. for Chinese and Japanese. LANDAKER, PATRICIA JANE, Kansas City, Mo. German Alpha Omicron Pi, courtesy comm. chin.; Bowling Assn.; Gk. Wk.; Rock Chalk Revue; Spring Fling; SUA; Vox; French Club; German Club; band. LANGDON, MERLE K., Fall River Classics, Classical Archaeology Ellsworth Hall, hall congress, jud. coon., counsellor; Honor Roll, four sem.; Woodrow Wilson nominee. LANGFORD, JAMES PAUL, Galena Journalism Pi Kappa Alpha, pres., alumni rel. chm., pl. cl. pres.; IFC; Kansan Board; MUN; Vox, pub. comm.; UDK; Sigma Delta Chi; KANU-FM KUOK, staff announcer. Transfer, Univ. of Ken.: WBKY news staff; The Ken- tucky Kernel, editorial and feature writer; Sigma Delta Chi. LANGSTON, SUSAN P., Springfield, Mo. Physical Therapy Pi Beta Phi, bd. mem. chin., rec. sec., rep. to exec. bd., soc. chm., Honor Initiate, A ctivities Award; Honor Roll, five sem.; ASC; AWS, fr. sen., host and hosp. comm.; Frosh Hawks; Gk. Wk., co-chm., queen ' s comm.; KU-Y; Chi Delphia; Panhell.; Rock Chalk Revue, sales comm.; SUA, homecoming dec. comm., homecoming queen ' s comm.; UP, exec. coon.; Jayhawker, theatre ed.; Cwens; Mortar Board; Pi Beta Phi Scholarship. LANNING, MARTHA N., Lawrence Elem. Education Kappa Alpha Theta, rush cumin.; Honor Roll, six sem.; ASC, dept. sec.; AWS, fashion bd., sen.; Frosh Hawks; Pom-Pon Squad; Quack Club; Pi Lambda Theta; Fr. Summer Inst. LATHAN, JOHN WALLACE, Atchison History Pearson Hall, sec., proctor; Honor Roll, three sem.; KU-Y, cab.; Spring Fling; EOG; Woodrow Wilson nominee. LAVIGNE, RUSSELL AYLES, JR., St. Charles, Mo. Political Science AROTC; Rock Chalk Revue; The Bird magazine. LEE, CHRISTINE, Florissant, Mo. Elem. Education Kappa Kappa Gamma, asst. rush. chm., rush chm.; AWS; Frosh Hawks; Panhell., rush coon. chm.; KU-Y, steering comm. for fr.; UP; Jayhawker. 486 1967 SENIORS LEE, C. WILLIAM, Baxter Springs Accounting Accounting Soc. Transfer, Coffeyville Coll.: Student Conn., off.; Men ' s Bus. Ed. Club, pres.; Interest Scholar. ship. LEE, JO KAREN, Kansas City Design Delta Delta Delta, frat. ed. dir; pl. trainer; v.p.; Honor Roll, one sem.; AWS, pub. chm.; Frosh Hawks; Jay Janes; Panhell., exec. bd., pl. trainers ' coun., chin.; Vox; Delta Phi Delta, pub. chin., pres.; Cwens; Mortar Board; Jayhawker, prod. mgr.; AWS coll. fashion bd., hist., v.p.; Fine Arts intermediary bd.; Grace Pearson Hall, soc. chm.; ASC, host. and hosp. comm.; Optimist Club Scholarship. LEINS, WILLIAM M., Overland Park Aerospace Engr. Transfer, Independence Jr. Coll.: varsity basketball; Honor Roll, one sem. LENDERMAN, JANE ELIZABETH, Liberal Psychology Canterbury Assn. LEONARD, PENELOPE ANNE, Kansas City, Mo. Commercial and Fashion Art Alpha Gamma Delta, scribe; CYR, YWCA. Transfer, Wm. Woods Coll.: hist.; Riding Club; YWCA; Art Club. LEVOTA, MICHAEL, Kansas City, Mo. Int. Rel. Kappa Sigma, guard; P-t-P; SUA; CYR; YMCA; Vox, treas., v.p. LIDDLE, ROBERT, JR., Crestwood, Mo. Bus. Admin. Delta Chi, co-soc. chm., sec.; Honor Roll, one sem.; ASC, elec. comm.; IFC, sch. comm.; Rock Chalk Revue, skit writer and actor; SUA, ticket comm., pub. chin.; CYR; Alpha Kappa Psi; fr. cl. project comm. LIGUSH, CHRISTINE, Fort Worth, Tex. Chem., German Watkins Hall; Angel Flight, admin. off., cmdr.; MUN, delegation chin.; Spring Fling; Pershing Rifles, honorary cmdr.; German Summer Lang. Inst. LILLARD, SALLIE ANN, Salina Elem. Ed. Kappa Kappa Gamma, second v.p., sr. personnel, exec. comm.; AWS, high sch. leadership chm., Jr.-Sr. key regret comm. chm.; Gk. Wk., banquet chin.; KU-Y; Panhell.; P-t-P; SUA, music and drama chm.; UP, sec.; CYR; Festival of Arts steering comm.; residence hall counsellor. LINDBERG, LAWRENCE ROY, Lawrence Ed., Soc. Studies, Physical Ed. McCollum Hall; Honor Roll, three sem.; AFROTC; Pershing Rifles; SNEA. LINDSEY, JUDITH ANNE, Kansas City Elem. Education Honor Roll, one sem.; Alpha Phi, hostess; KU-Y, tutoring prog.; Panhell., counsellor; P-t-P; Rock Chalk Revue; SUA, Jazz Fest.; SNEA; KSTA. LINDSHIELD, JAMES HARVEY, Lindsborg Economics Honor Roll, one sem.; Pi Epsilon Pi; Arnold Air Soc., information off.; AFROTC, exec. off.; Jayhawker; State of Kansas General Education Scholarship. LITTLE, GARY CHARLES, Prairie Village Commercial Art Bd. of Cl. Off.; Bowling Assn.; fr. cl. treas.; Vox; CYD; Newman Club; Prairie Village Scholarship Founda- tion. LOCKHART, ANNE, Wichita Speech Communication Alpha Omicron Pi, sch. chm., rec. sec.; Honor Roll, six sem.; Canterbury Assn., Haskell prog. Grant; Woodrow Wilson nominee. LOEBEL, JANET LUISE, Emporia Art Education Honor Roll, one sem. Transfer, Wichita St.: Kappa Pi. LONG, CHARLES, Buhler Engineering, Physics Honor Roll, one sem.; KU-Y, tutoring service comm.; Tau Beta Pi; Sigma Tau; Frank Lansing Gilmore Scholarship. Transfer, Hutchinson Jr. Coll.: Student Commission; Honor Roll, two sem.; Dragons ' Club Scholarship. LONG, SHERYL KAY, Humboldt Elem. Education and Special Education Hashinger Hall; Kallay Filleeans; UP; SNEA, treas. Transfer, Stephens Coll.: Sigma Alpha Chi. LONGLEY, JOANNA, Chicago, Ill. Elem. Education Alpha Phi, v.p., pl. trainer; Gk. Wk.; KU-Y; Rock Chalk Revue; SUA; SNEA; AWS, high-sch. leadership comm. and hostess. LONGREN, PAUL ALBIN, Lawrence Bus. Admin. Honor Roll, one sem.; AFROTC squadron cmdr. LOTER, ZELMA MARIE, Albany, Tex. Microbiology Transfer, McMurry Coll.: Kappa Phi; Science Club. LOWE, JACK J., Colby Pi Kappa Alpha. LUCAS, DEEDRA LOU, Chanute Speech Pathology Chi Omega, asst. pl. trainer, standards bd.; campus chest; • AWS; Bd. of Cl. Off.; Frosh Hawks; P-t-P; Rock Chalk Revue; Ski Club; UP; GSP hall council; Gk. Wk., co-chm. of • drive; sr. cl. chm. of parties; SUA, sec. comm.; NEA; SCEC. LUEDERS, LINDA KAY, Independence, Mo. Elem. Education Alpha Chi Omega, house mgr., asst. pl. trainer; Honor six sem.; Chi Delphia, v.p.; Pi Lambda Theta, membership dir.; H. May Carpenter Scholarship; Pi Beta Phi Scholarship; KC School District Scholarship. LUKENS, PATRICIA ANN, Wichita Elem. Education Alpha Gamma Delta, rush chin.; AWS, high sch. leader- ship day steering comm.; Frosh Hawks; P-t-P; SUA; Oliver Hall, sr. asst. 487 SENIORS 1967 ,LUTTON, LYLE DAVID, Lockbourne AFB, Ohio Electrical Engineering Templin Hall, ath. elec. comm, chm.; AFROTC, honor cadet, flight cmdr.; ASC, rep. elec. comm., fr. lead- ership comm.; MRA, rep.; UP, undersecretary, adv. coun.; Arnold Air Soc., Midwestern Area Staff; IEEE; Armed Forces Communications and Electronics Assn. Honor Award, LYON, JESSIE INGRAM, Godfrey, Ill. Elem. Education Alpha Chi Omega, soc. chm.; Frosh Hawks; KU-Y; Panhell.; University Women ' s Club; WRA, sec., v.p. McADOO, ROBERT JAMES, Lamed Math., Accounting Stephenson, soc. chm., sec.; ASC, treas.; Bus. Sch. Coon.; MUN; Accounting Soc., pres., v.p., sec.; Conti- nental Oil Co. Scholarship; Goodyear Foundation Schol- arship; Beta Gamma Sigma; Sachem; Stu. Adv. Bd.; Delta Sigma Pi; ASC host. and hose. comm.; COSA. McALPIN, BARBARA, Nashville, Tenn. Lang. Arts McCollum Hall, pres.; Grace Pearson Hall, special events; Vox, co-chm. for campaigns in Lewis Hall; Univ. Human Rel. Comm.; Alpha Kappa Alpha, rush chin., soc. Kappa Alpha Psi, Sweetheart Court. McCALLUM, RODERICK E., Wichita Honor Roll, one sem.; Microbiology Soc. McCANN, JOHN H., St. Joseph, Mo. English, History Templin, fl. pres., food comm. chin.; Voices of Templin; Canterbury Club; band; marching band. McCARLEY, KAREN, Olive Branch, Miss. Language Arts AWS, rules Hashinger, fl. off.; Frosh Hawks; UP; CYR; Stu. National Ed. Assn. McCLURE, ALICE DIANE, Green Valley, Mo. Language Arts Lewis Hall, fr. counsellor. Transfer, Univ. of Colo.: AWS, hearing bd., stage mgr. for revue; Alpha Chi Omega, sch. chin.; Spurs; Hesperia; Alpha Lambda Delta. McCUE, DANNY P., St. Joseph, Mo. Pharmacy Theta Chi. Transfer, St. Joseph Jr. Coll.: Student Union Bd., pres. McDANIEL, ELAINE ROSE, Shawnee Social Work Hashinger Hall; IRC; Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship; pub., sec. McDANIEL, MICHAEL EUGENE, Wichita Philosophy Joseph R. Pearson Hall; Honor Roll, two sem.; College Bowl; German Club; KU Religious Liberals; KU Honor Scholarship; NSF Grant; Year Abroad in Bonn, Germany. McFADDEN, NANCY LEE, Kansas City Chemistry Hashinger Hall, pub. chm.; Honor Roll, two sem.; gen- eral scholarship. McGHEE, JUDY, Overland Park News and Editorial Kappa Alpha Theta, ed.; Eros ' s Hawks; Gk. Wk.; UP; Kansan, reporter, copy ed.; Jayhawker; Theta Sigma Phi. McGREW, PATRICIA ANN, Lawrence Music Kappa Alpha Theta, song leader; Honor Roll, one sem.; Rock Chalk Revue; Kappa Phi Club, song leader; Mu Phi Epsilon; Fulbright nominee; Chamber Choir; Con- cert Choir; Madame Butterfly; The Marriage of Figaro; Carry Nation; The Magic Flute. McHUGH, JAMES PAUL, JR., Wichita Psychology Templin Hall, soc. chm., counsellor; Honor Roll, two sem.; NROTC, decorations chin., ring dance; Parish Council, St. Lawrence stu. center; Scabbard and Blade; Military Ball. Transfer, Univ. of Newman Club, pres.; Navy Drill Team; Delta Sigma Phi, soc. chin. McINTIRE, MASON, Oregon, Mo. Per. Admin., Human Rel. Phi Kappa Psi, hist., sch. chm., v.p.; co-chm. of sr. comm.; SUA; Sigma Psi, v.p.; marching band. McIVER, ROBERT, JR., Prairie Village Chemistry Honor Roll, six sem.; Woodrow Wilson Scholarship nominee; NSF Undergraduate Research Grant in Chem- istry. Transfer, Baker Univ.: Kappa Sigma, sch. chm., scribe, alumni sec.; P-t-P; Achievement in Chemistry awards; Asbury Scholarship; Petroleum Research Fund. McLAIN, CONNIE J., Leavenworth Language Arts Pi Beta Phi, pub., prog. chm., censor, hist.; AWS, high sch. leadership day, all women ' s wk. consul; Frosh Hawks; Sisters of the Maltese Cross; Jayhawker. McLAUGI-ILIN, CHILTON, Bethesda, Md. Civil Engr. Phi Kappa Psi, hist.; Honor Roll, one sem.; MUN; SUA, bridge club; Vox; CYD, v.p., pres.; Am. Soc. of Civil En- gineers, engr. exp. chin., pres.; Civil Honor Soc.; wrestling. McLAUGFILIN, LINDA CLAIR, Kansas City, Mo. Apparel Merchandising Frosh Hawks. McLELLAND, MARK, Pratt Astr., Math., Econ. Honor Roll; four sem.; AURH, delegation chm.; Men ' s Scholarship Hall Council, rep.; NACURH conference, communications coordinator; National Residence Hall Honorary; Sigma Pi Sigma; Scholarship Hall Award; Woodrow Wilson nominee; fr. model sen., steering comm. McMORRIS, MARIE, Leawood Design, Weaving Kappa Alpha Theta, pl. cl. treas.; Honor Roll, one sem.; AWS, steering cousin.; sr. breakfast chin. McPHERSON, ANN, Hutchinson Elem. Ed. Chi Omega, house mgr.; AWS; KU-Y; P-t-P; Ski Club; SUA; CYR. McSPADDEN, GAIL, Wilmington, Del. Elem. Ed. P-t-P; YWCA. Transfer, Univ. of Del.: Honor Roll, hall soc. chin.; Pep Club. 488 1967 SENIORS MACK, KATHRYN, Leavenworth Elem. Ed. Chi Omega, p1. el. treas., asst. rush chm., standards bd.; Honor Roll, two sem.; stu. adv. bd.; AWS, careers steering cumin.; Frosh Hawks; Gk. Wk., comm. sec.; SUA, concert comm., chancellor ' s fall reception chm.; Pi Lambda Theta; Span. Summer Lang. Inst. MAHER, LINDA JANE, Hinsdale, Ill. English Chi Omega, pl. sec., pres.; Frosh Hawks; Gk. Wk., queen candidate; Kallay Filleeans; Panhell., pres. coon.; Rock Chalk Revue; SUA, carnival steering comm., pres. luncheon chm.; Jayhawker Outstanding Senior. MAHERONNAGHSH, AKBAR I., Sfahan, Iran Civil Engineering Honor Roll, two sem.; International Club; International Fest.; P-t-P; American Soc. of Civil Engineers; Persian Club; summer band camp, counsellor. MAHOOD, SHARON MARIE, Springfield, Mo. Speech Alpha Delta Pi, asst. treas., asst. stare. chin.; Honor Roll, four sem.; ASC, elec. comm.; AWS, all women ' s wk., fr. orien.; Debate Varsity; Gk. Wk., co-chm.; MUN, dele- gation chin.; SUA, travel bureau newsletter chin.; UP; CYD; Delta Sigma Rho, soc. chm., membership chm.; Firestone Competitive Scholarship; Allen Craton Schol- arship. MAIER, PETER FISHER, Emporia French, Spanish. Jolliffe Hall, treas., soc. chm.; Honor Roll; Centennial Celebration; KU-Y; Spring Fling; SUA; Le Cercle Francais; El Ateneo; UCCF; SCC; French Summer Lang. Inst.; Miller Honorary Housefather. MALONEY, NANCY JEAN, Lawrence Mathematics Alpha Chi Omega, pl. cl. treas., rec. sec.; Frosh Hawks; Rock Chalk Revue; Stu. Communications Bd.; UP; Sr. Calendar Comm. MANKA, RICHARD A., Wichita Accounting Phi Gamma Delta, hist.; Honor Roll, one sem.; Business School Employment Coun., chm.; Gk. Wk., comm. chm. MANKA, RONALD E., Wichita Bus. Admin. Phi Gamma Delta; Honor Roll, three sem.; Bus. Stu. Coun., Undergrad. Bd., finance comm. chm.; UP; Beta Gamma Sigma; varsity football. MANLEY, ROBERT FREDRICK, Chanute Bus. Admin. Sigma Nu; IFC. MANUEL, RONALD WARREN, Kansas City Indus. Design, Commercial Art Sculpture Club; Industrial Design Club. MARION, EVA GERALDINE, Oklahoma City, Okla. Harp, Vocal Music Ed. Sellards Hall, song leader, librarian, parlimentarian; Honor Roll, two sem.; Spring Fling; Sigma Alpha, pres., rec. sec., program chm.; Maud Eva Clavin Scholarship; general scholarship; Elizabeth Watkins Scholarship for women in music; Elizabeth Bundy Parry Fund; Ed- ucational Opportunity Grant; Luella F. Stewart Fund; Lawrence Alumnae Chapter Scholarship; KU Beta Chap- ter Scholarship. MARQUIS, WILLIAM P., Paris, Ill. Aerospace Engr. NROTC; AIAA. MARSHALL, BARBARA, Kansas City Social Work Honor Roll, seven sem.; IRC; Mu Phi Epsilon, program chm.; Scholarship Hall Award; teaching asst. MARTIN, JERRY, Kansas City Civil ASCE, student chapter. MARTIN, RICHARD JAMES, Leland, Ill. Mech. Engr. ASME; ASTME. Transfer, Parsons Coll.: Dean ' s List. MASEDA, STEPHEN, Los Angeles, Calif. Accounting Kappa Sigma, treas.; Honor Roll, one sem.; Accounting Soc. MASER, THOMAS 0., Dodge City Electrical Engineering Honor Roll, three sem.; IEEE, treas.; Eta Kappa Nu, sec.; Sigma Tau; Tau Beta Pi. MATHEWS, MICHAEL JOSEPH, Leawood Bus. Admin. Bowling Assn.; CYD; intr. bowling. MATHEWS, VICKI MARLENE, Leawood Lang. Arts Alpha Delta Pi, pres., second v.p.; Honor Roll, three sem.; AWS, house of rep., theatre ushering comm., del. to reg. high sch. leadership day hostess; College Bowl; Frosh Hawks; Gk. Wk., subcomm.; Panhell. Assn., pres. coun., v.p., rep. to Big Eight IFC Panhell. Conf.; UP; Cwens; Mortar Bd.; Pi Lambda Theta; Undergrad. Re- search Grant in Speech Communication; sr. cl. ring chm. MATHIASMEIER, KENNETH JAMES, Arkansas City Elec. Engr. Templin Hall, soc. lihr. comm. chm., exec. coun.; AFROTC, flight cmdr.; AURH; military ball emcee; Templin Observer; IEEE; residence hall counselor; ASC, calendar comm., soc. comm.; Alpha Sigma. MAUK, WILLIAM, Overland Park Radio-TV-Film Kappa Sigma, house mgr., Centennial Celebration; MUN; Rock Chalk Revue; Vox; Kansan, photo ed.; KUOK station mgr.; prod. dir. of Radio Production Center; KFKU Radio; Kappa Alpha Mu; Alpha Epsilon Rho; Sculpture from Fire, film ed. MAURER, SALLY JO, Shawnee Mission Elem. Ed. Hashinger Hall; CYR; Univ. Chorus; SNEA; Kappa Phi. MAYANDA, DIEUDONNE MARCEL, Boko, Congo-Brazzaville Geology African Club; Agency for International Development Scholarship; Soccer Club. MEADOWS, LOIS JEWELL, Muncie Bus. Ed. 489 SENIORS 1967 MEEKER, LARRY GEORGE, Garden City Mech. Engr. Alpha Tau Omega, exec. corm. chin., scholarship chin., alumni rel. chin., soc. chm.; Honor Roll, six sem.; ASC, stn. adv. bd., con. and lectures comm. chin.; College Bowl; KU-Y, Youth Friendship Program; P-t-P; Am. Society for Mech. Engr.; Tau Beta Pi; Owl Soc.; Sachem; honor initiate scholarship. MEEKS, MARLENA RAE, Kansas City Social Work Hashinger Hall, dec. comm.; CRC; CYD. Transfer, Kan- sas City, Kan. Jr. Coll.: Dean ' s Honor Roll; speech fest.; FTA, SNEA; French Club; Debate. MELLINGER, LARRY KENT, Wichita Int. Rel. Kappa Sigma, soc. chin.; KU-Y; MUN; P-t-P; Rock Chalk Revue, liaison staff, asst. to producer; SUA, car- nival finale chm.; Oh Dad, Poor Dad; Vox, pub.; CYR, pub. comm. MELTON, MARY, Marion Personnel Admin. PI. el. standards chin., soc. chin.; ASC, convocations and lectures comm.; P anhell., soc. comm.; Rock Chalk Revue, asst. house dir.; Vox; CYR; Sigma Psi. MENDEZ, JULIO N., La Paz, Bolivia Elec. Engr. International Club; International Festival; P-t-P; IEEE; Newman Club. MERRILL, SUSAN Y., Honolulu, Hawaii Social Work Grace Pearson Hall, cultural chm.; Honor Roll, three sem.; International Club; International Fest.; Jay Janes, treas.; Social Work Club; Jayhawker; Fr. Summer Lang. Inst. MESIGH, JANET CAROL, Topeka Social Work, Sociology Hashinger Hall; AWS, rep.; student-faculty comm.; Rifle Club; Women ' s Rifle Team; German Club; Social. Work Club. MESSICK, TERRY MICHAEL, Prairie Village Accounting Christian Science Organ, pres., v.p., reader; Delta Sigma Pi. MESSINA, JUDY LYN, Kansas City, Mo. Spanish UP; El Ateneo Spanish Club; Newman Club. METZ, SUSAN LYNN, Kansas City Elem. Ed. SNEA. MEYER, JO ELLEN, Kansas City, Mo. History of Art Transfer, Bradford Jr. Coll., Bradford, Mass.: Purchase Award in Design; Athletic Assn., pres. MEYER, STEPHEN, Leavenworth Bus. Admin. Sigma Chi, treas., exec. comm.; Honor Roll, three sem.; AROTC; Rock Chalk Revue; SUA, travel bd.; Jayhawker, dist. mgr., bus. mgr.; Beta Gamma Sigma. MIDDENDORF, ALAN LEE, Topeka Bits. Admin. MIDDENDORF, ROBERT DEAN, Humboldt Chemistry Grace Pearson Hall, MSIIC rep., v.p.; Honor Roll, three sem.; Men ' s Scholarship Hall Coun., intramural chin.; SNEA, voting del., student KSTA elec. comm. chin.; Scholarship Hall Award. MIDDLETON, RANDALL EDWARD, Normal, Ill. Architecture Honor Roll, one sem.; CYR; Kansas Engineer; Scarab, treas.; AIA; Charles S. Haines Scholarship. N HESSE, MARY ANN, Bonner Springs Microbiology, German Douthart Hall, house mgr., pres.; AWS, house of rep.; Microbiology Club; Scholarship Hall Award; scholarship for German Summer Lang. Inst. MILANI, JANICE MARIE, Overland Park Pharmacy Alpha Omicron Pi, house mgr., treas.; Honor Roll, three sem.; Chi Delphia; Am. Pharm. Assn., sec.; Kappa Epsi- lon, treas. MILETT, ELAINE AVA, Lawrence Piano Spanish Club; Houston Scholarship; Miss Lawrence-KU candidate; Piano Master Class participant in Mexico City; Honors Recital. MILLER, ANN ELIZABETH, Shawnee Mission Elem. Ed. Hashinger Hall; KU-Y; SNEA. MILLER, DONNA LYNN, St. Joseph, Mo. Advertising Lewis Hall, pres.; Ellsworth Hall, fl. pres.; AWS, rules and reg. del., sub-comm. for Gamma Alpha Chi; homecoming queen candidate. Transfer, William Jewell Coll.: Beta Sigma Omicron; Panhell., rep.; SUA comm.; Tatter yearbook staff scholarship. MILLER, JANET ELIZABETH, Russell Music Ed. Alpha Phi, efficiency chm., song leader; Alpha Kappa Lambda; Rock Chalk Revue; MENC; Mu Phi Epsilon; concert choir; chamber choir. MILLER, LYNUS PATRICK, Salina Piano, Music Theory McCollum Hall; Honor Roll, three sem.; College Bowl; Canterbury Assn.; univ. chorus. MILLER, ROLAND BROOK III, Platte City, Mo. Pol. Sci. Beta Theta Pi, pres., soc. chm.; Gk. Wk., track meet chin.; SUA, transportation dim.; varsity football. MILLERET, JANET, Lawrence Mathematics Honor Roll, four sem.; AURH; KU-Y; CYD; SNEA; SKSTA; Coun. for Exceptional Children. 490 1967 SENIORS MILLSAP, LARRY DONALD, Pratt Organ, Music Theory Stephenson Hall, song leader, sec.; Honor Roll, eight sem.; Pi Kappa Lambda; Scholarship Hall Award; Fr. Summer Lang. Inst. MITCHELL, RICHARD, Overland Park Bus. Admin. Templin Hall, exec. coml.; AURH; Rifle Club; Ski Club; Spring Fling. MIZE, KATHRYN, Salina Elem. Ed. Pi Beta Phi, v.p., pi. cl. sob. chin.; Honor Roll, one sem.; AWS, sen., treas.; Gk. Wk., banquet co-chin.; Panhell. Assn., stan. coun.; Jayhawker, sec.; Cwens; Mortar Board; Previews counselor. MODRELL, WALTER EDWIN, Kansas City Psychology, Zoology Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship. MOHS, MARNIE, Overland Park Lang. Arts Chi Omega, Lambda Log ed.; Rock Chalk Revue, house dir.; SUA, Carnival Advisors chin.; West Side Story; Tau Sigma, sec.; Kallay Filleans, intermediary bd.; GSP, soc. ohm.; SNEA; KATE; NCTE. MOLL, SONDRA ANN, St. Louis, Mo. Math, Phil., Eng. MONASMITH, BEVERLY, Belpre Microbiology KU-Y; MUN; High Sch. Leadership Day, hostess; Kappa Phi, ed.; French Club; Microbiology Club; Scholarship Hall Award; State of Kansas Scholarship. MONTAGUE, MARSHA MAURICE, Wichita Advertising Gamma Phi Beta, lib.; Gamma Alpha Chi. Transfer, Wichita St. Univ.: Angel Flight; CYR; YWCA. MONTGOMERY, WILLIAM ROBERT, Topeka Philosophy Kappa Sigma, guard, s oc. chm., jud. coun.; IFC, rep.; P-t-P; Rock Chalk Revue; Vox; CYR. MOORE, ARDIS CAROL, Independence, Mo. Fashion Illus. Honor Roll, two sem.; Liahona Fellowship; Design Dept. Award. MOORE, DENNIS W., Wichita Pol. Sci. Joseph R. Pearson Hall; Honor Roll, one sem.; ASC, comm. evaluation bd.; residence hall counselor. Trans- fer, Southern Meth. Univ.: IFC, rep. MOREAU, BARBARA JEAN, Evanston, Ill. Social Work Sigma Kappa, corr. sec., rec. sec.; Honor Roll, one sem.; KU-Y; MUN, del.; P-t-P; Social Work Club; Wesley Foundation; girls badminton; sr. Breakfast comm. MOREAU, PAUL HENRI, Fall River, Mass. French Phi Kappa Sigma, corr. sec.; Honor Roll, three sem.; IFC; International Club; MUN; Peace Corps, research chm.; P-t-P; UP; CYD; Pi Delta Phi; Newman Club; Le Cercle Francais; T. J. Alexander award; Martha Cook Clark Scholarship; Jr. Yr. Abroad, Bordeaux, Fr. MORGAN, JANET RUTH, Pryor, Okla. Comm. Art Hashinger Hall, fl. chm., hall comm. chm.; Cwens; fr. residence hall counselor; Baptist Stu. Union, soc. chm., pres.; Nat. Art Honor Soc.; Inter-Religious Coun.; Homecoming Queen contest. MORGENTHALER, ROBERT ERIC, JR., Prairie Village News-Editorial, Pol. Sci. Phi Gamma Delta; Honor Roll, two sem.; UDK, bd., ed. page ed., asst. managing ed.; CYR; Sigma Delta Chi, sec.; Minneapolis Tribune Scholarship; Kansas City Press Club Scholarship; William Randolph Hearst Foundation, nat. writing awards; Stu. Affairs Coon.; Jour. Sch. Dean ' s Adv. Bd. Transfer, Univ. of the South; Jayhawker Out- standing Senior; Pachacamac. MORRISON, DENNIS, Great Bend Zoology, Eng. Delta Upsilon, head host, phone chm.; Gk. Wk., reg. of relays; IFC; KU Relays Comm. pub. comm.; KU-Y; MUN; P-t-P; SUA, cam., jazz fest.; Vox; CYR, stu. lead- ership seminar, v.chm. MORTON, GARY WAYNE, Leavenworth Soc. Stu.; Hist. Colleen. AROTC, Cadet Capt.; Scholarship Hall Award. MOSELEY, JUDITH, St. Louis, Mo. Eng., Psychology College Bowl, team comm.; MUN, Steering Comm.; Jay- hawker, copy writer, copy ed. MOUSER, DAVID CARSON, Wichita English. McCollum Hall, Tartan photo. MOWRY, ROBERT DEAN, Beaver City, Nebr. Hist. of Art, Medical Humanities Stephenson Hall, treas.; Honor Roll; International Club; P-t-P; CYD; The Register of the Museum of Art, trans. of article; BPOE State Scholarship award; Undergrad. Research Asst.; Woodrow Wilson Fellowship nominee; Fr. Summer Lang. Inst.; Registrar of Museum of Art. MOXON, R. C., Lawrence German, Psychology MUELL, CATHERINE JANE, Des Moines, Ia. French Ka ppa Kappa Gamma, pl. cl. treas.; Honor Roll, one sem.; SUA, carnival judge ' s comm.; Cwens; Endowment Assn. Scholarship; Jr. Yr. Abroad in France; Fr. Resi- dence Hall Counselor. MUELLER, ROBERT H., Leawood Pol. Sci. International Club; CYR; Mexican Trip, chin. Transfer, Ind. Univ.: CYR, del. to Midwest Fed. of YR Cony.; residence hall, v.gov.; Cosmopolitan Club. Transfer, Baker Univ.: Baker Orange, editorial ed.; CYR. MULALLY, ALAN ROGER, Lawrence Aerospace Engr. Kappa Sigma, pres., rush chin.; Honor Roll, four Sens.; AFROTC; Vox; Rock Chalk Revue; CYR; Sigma Gamma Tau; Sigma Tau; AIAA; ASTME; Kansas Engineer, bus. staff; Chubb and Son Scholarship; Kappa Sigma scholar- ship award; VFW scholarship; gymnastics. 491 SENIORS 1967 MUNDINGER, MARIETTA, St. Louis, Mo. German, History Douthart Hall; AURH; Spring Fling, comm.; MUN; Women ' s Standards Bd.; Gamma Delta; Univ. Lutheran Church, sec.; Scholarship Hall Award; Jr. Yr. Abroad in Germany; Homecoming Queen cand.; German Summer Lang. Inst. MUNROE, ELIZABETH S., Silvis, Ill. Music Ed. Concert Band; Symphony Orch.; Music Educators Nat. Conference; SNEA; Christmas Vespers Music Scholar- ship. MURPHY, BARRY LEON, Lincoln Psychology Honor Roll, two sem.; Beta Theta Pi; Concert Choir. MYERS, CONSTANCE D., Newton Radio-TV-Film Gamma Phi Beta, pl. cl. soc. chin., star. bd.; Honor Roll, two sem.; Angel Flight; Frosh Hawks; KU-Y, current issues forum chm., ushers comm. chin.; Daughters of Diana; SUA, carnival judges comm. chm.; CYR; Alpha Epsilon Rho, sec.; Theta Sigma Phi; Honorary Scholarship; Homecoming Attendant; KU Cover Girl; Ks. CYR Queen; Jour. Dean ' s Stu. Adv. Bd. MYERS, JUDITH MARY, Overland Park Latin Am. Studies; Span. Honor Roll, three sem.; Episcopal Youth Group; Gen- eral Scholarships; Research Grant; Nat. Conn. of Jewish Women Scholarship; Fulbright Grant; Interna- tional Club Beauty contest finalist; Span. Summer Lang. Inst.; Summer Inst. in Guadalajara, Mex.; Jr. Yr. Abroad in Costa Rica. MYERS, LARRY EDWARD, Mission Rad. Biophysics Microbiology Soc.; Res. Hall Scholarship; Dept. of Microbiology, Research Asst. MYERS, RAY WARREN, Dodge City Civil and Arch. Engr. ASC, treas., finance comm.; UP; Joseph R. Pearson Hall, hall coml. rep., soc. chm.; AEA; ASCE; Res. Hall Coun- selor; intramurals. NACCARATO, PATRICIA ANN, Shawnee Mission Apparell Mdse. Kappa Alpha Theta, sec.; Frosh Hawks; P-t-P; SUA, hostess comm.; fr. res. hall fl. officer, soc. chin. NAGORI, PRAKASH FULCHAND, Aurangabad, India Bus. Admin. Cricket Club; International Club; International Fest., pub. chin., prog. ohm.; P-t-P, treas., v. chin.; UP; Scholar- ship Hall Award; International World Understanding Seminar. NALLS, PATRICIA JOAN, Tulsa, Okla. Bus. Ed. Lewis Hall; CRC; Gk. Wk.; Baptist Stu. Union; NEA; Phi Chi Theta. NASH, ROBERT RHOADES, Bartlesville, Okla. Bus. Admin. Delta Chi, rush chin., pl. adv., jud. coun.; Vox; CYR; Alpha Kappa Psi, sec. NAYLOR, DONNA SUE, Kansas City, Mo. Elem. Ed. Alpha Chi Omega, asst. soc. chm., rush chin.; Honor Roll, three sem.; Bowling Assn., pres.; Frosh Hawks; Gk. Wk.; KU-Y, cabinet; Panhell., rush corm.; Rock Chalk Revue; UP, del. to gen. assembly; Pi Lambda Theta. NEDJAR, BRAHIM E., Algeria Mech. Engr. International Club; International Festival; ASME; IIE Scholarship. Transfer, Georgetown Univ. NEDJAR, ELEANOR Y., Algeria English International Club; Midwestern Music and Art Camp; Symphony Orch.; Watkins Scholarship. Transfer, Univ. of Hawaii: Music Award; Extemp. Speech award; Pre- med Student Group Award. Univ. of S. Dak.: Interna- tional Student Award; Outstanding Musician. NEECE, TERI LYN, Kansas City, Mo. Elem. Ed. Lewis Hall, fl. pres., fr. oricn. comm.; Honor Roll, two sem.; AWS, fashion bd.; Pi Lambda Theta. NEGASH, GIRMA, Gobs, Ethiopia Jour., Int. Rel. International Club; International Fest.; African Club, sec.; African Pub., pub. ed., pol. ed.; KU-Y; SUA; P-t-P; theatrical work; UDK reporter; Adventure in World Understanding Scholarship; soccer. NETS, HENRY F., Eudora Aerospace Engr. NESSEL, LARRY EDWIN, Humboldt Pharmacy Am. Pharm. Assn.; intramurals. NESSETH, RUSSELL CHARLES, Kansas City, Mo. Bus. Admin. Delta Sigma Phi, pres., sec.; Honor Roll, one sem.; WC. NEVIUS, S. EDWARD, Spring Hill Mathematics Honor Roll, five sem.; CYR; Pi Mu Epsilon; MAA; NSF Undergrad. Res. in Math.; Bernard Meidinger Memorial Scholarship in Math.; German Summer Lang. Inst. NEWTON, CHARLES R., Grainfield Chemistry Honor Roll, nine sem.; NSF Undergrad. Research Grant; Summerfield Scholarship. NICKLAS, ALYSON B., Ridgefield, Conn. Linguistics, French Lewis Hall, fl. v.p.; AWS, house of rep.; intramurals. Transfer, Univ. of Wisc.: Gamma Phi Beta, act. clam.; intramurals. NICHOLSON, DIANE KAYE, Overland Park Advertising Frosh Hawks; CYR; Gamma Alpha Chi. NICHOLSON, JOHN REZIN, Paola Comm. Art Phi Gamma Delta; CYR; Alpha Phi Omega. Transfer, Westminster Coll.: Phi Gamma Delta; Men ' s Choir; Alpha Phi Omega; Hist. Club; CYR; band. 492 1967 SENIORS NICOLAY, KENNETH M., Mission Hist., Int. Rel. Alpha Tau Omega, pad., trad. chm., act. chm.; Rock Chalk Revue; Honor Roll, three sem.; College Bowl; P-t-P, bd., contact chm.; SUA, ticket chm., off-campus pub. chm., house mgr.; UP; Phi Alpha Theta. NIVER, JOHN RUSSELL, Chanute Zool., Pre-Dentistry Joseph R. Pearson Hall; P-t-P; CYD. NOKES, LARRY E., Garnett Bus. Admin. Pearson Hall, proctor, soc. chm.; Honor Roll, two sem.; SUA; Scholarship Hall Award; Elizabeth H. Hoyt Schol- arship; Greater Univ. Fund Banking Scholarship; Kan. Assn. of Finance Co. Scholarship; Mkting. Club. NORRIS, DAVID EUGENE, Wichita Hist., Pol. Sci. Phi Gamma Delta, soc. chm., song leader., intramurals; wrestling. Transfer, Hutchinson Comm. Coll.: football. NORRIS, MARTHA SUE, Topeka Elem. Ed. Alpha Gamma Delta, house chin.; Honor Roll, three sem.; Frosh Hawks; P-t-P; UP. NORTH, EDWARD R., Clinton, Iowa Psychology Alpha Tau Omega, song chm., exec. coun. chin.; Honor Roll, three sem.; Six Characters in Search of an Author; Tom Thumb; Stu. Adv. Bd.; Owl Soc. NOSSAMAN, GEORGE 0., Great Bend Elec. Engr. Stephenson Hall, soc. chin.; Honor Roll, four sem.; IEEE, v.p.; Sigma Pi Sigma; Elec. Ind. Award. NUSBAUM, JEROME THOMAS, St. John Civil Engr. Battenfeld Hall; Honor Roll, five sem.; Men ' s Scholar- ship Hall Coma., intramural mgr.; Tau Beta Pi, treas.; Chi Epsilon; Sigma Tau; ASCE, pres.; John Curry Battenfeld Award; gen. scholarship; Scholarship Hall Award; Much- Die Found. Engr. Scholarship; Civil Engr. Teach. Asst.; intramurals. O ' BRIEN, MICHAEL LEE, Shawnee Mission French, Linguistics Delta Sigma Phi, sec., v.p., exec. bd. chin., pledge master; Honor Roll, seven sem.; IFC, rep; KU-Y, cabi- net; KU-Y Jayhawker ed., tutor; P-t-P; SUA; ski club; Phi Beta Kappa; Pi Delta Phi; Search Ed. Bd.; Alumni Assn. Scholarship; NDEA Grant; Research Fund Grant; Oriental Inst. Tuition Scholarship; Woodrow Wilson nominee; honors program; Delta Sigma Phi Scholarship; Alpha Phi Omega, serv. projects v.p.; Chinese Stu. Assn.; Dept. of Anthropology, Stu. Research Asst. O ' DONNELL, GEORGE WILLIAM, Kansas City, Mo. History McCollum Hall. Transfer: Phi Theta Kappa; Honor Roll, three sem. OELSCHLAGER, ROGER ERVIN, Clay Center Zoology Delta Upsilon; ASC, stu. ath. seat. bd. chm.; Vox; CYR. OFFICER, JEANEANE K., Robinson Eng., Speech Hashinger Hall, fl. soc. chm., hall soc. ohm., treas., fl. pres.; Honor Roll, one sem.; AWS; Daughters of Diana, pres.; Spring Fling; SUA; theatrical work, asst. clic.; UP, rep.; American Royal Queen Candidate; Best- Dressed Girl contest; Kan. Relays Queen Cand. OFFUTT, CARL RICHARD, Raytown, Mo. Elec. Engr. Kappa Eta Kappa, v.p., kitchen mgr.; Engr. Sch. Conn., engr. dance comm. chm.; IEEE; Engr. Exposition. OGROSKY, MELISSA K., Winfield Psy., Soc., Human Rel. Sellards Hall, new stu. counselor; KU-Y; honor scholar- ship; Fr. Summer Lang. Inst. OHMART, HAROLD EUGENE, Scott City Mathematics Lambda Chi Alpha; Honor Roll, one sem.; State of Kan. Scholarship. OHNEMILLER, JOHN R., Clearwater Pharmacy Am. Pharm. Assn.; Kan. Pharm. Assn. OKUN, MICHAEL BRUCE, Shawnee Mission Economics Beta Tau, rush chm., v.p., pres.; KU-Y; Rock Chalk Revue, bus. staff, adv. comm.; SUA, Act. Carnival ticket comm., Fest. of the Arts pub. comm.; Vox; CYR; gym- nastics; Karate Club; UDK, staff photo.; Jayhawker, photo.; USO Show, pub. dir. OLDFATHER, TIMOTHY, Lawrence Mathematics OLSON, RENA MARGARET, Omaha, Nebr. French Kappa Alpha ' Theta, archivist, trans. coordinator; Honor Roll, one sem.; Frosh Hawks; UP; Cwens; GSP, hall coun., fl. chin. O ' NEIL, JAMES PHILIP, Shawnee Mission Chemistry Phi Gamma Delta, pub. corr. sec.; SUA; ticket comm. OROKE, RODGER EDWIN, Perry Civil Engr. ASCE. ORTH, CHERYL L., Lawrence Design. Lewis Hall, soc. chin.; Ellsworth Hall, fl. pres.; AURII, soc. adv. bd.; AWS; Spring Fling. ORTH, KAY LEE, El Dorado Russian, Eng., Slavic- Soviet Area Studies Kappa Alpha Theta, act. chin.; Honor Roll, six sem.; ASC, rep., election co-chm., comm. on comm., stu. regulations comm. chm., host. and hosp. comm.; AWS, treas.; Centennial Celebration, Chancellor ' s Comm.; Col- lege Bowl; UP, dist. campaign chin.; COSA, sec.; Cwens; Mortar Board; Phi Beta Kappa; Woodrow Wilson nomi- nee; Undergrad. Research Grant; Watkins Scholarship; Burger and Altman Scholarship; Jayhawker Hilltopper; Russian Summer Lang. Inst.; Progressive Alliance, exec. bd. OSBORNE, BRUCE LEE, Kansas City Philosophy Phi Kappa Tau, v.p., rush chm., sec.; ASC, stu. leader- ship comm., stu. fac. film comm.; IFC, rep.; P-t-P; Vox, sr. adv. bd., head frat. dist.; CYR; Woodrow Wil- son Fellowship nominee; Sr. Day Comm. 493 SENIORS 1967 BACK, DAVID JOSEPH, Wichita Math., Econ. Triangle, sch. chin., treas., pres.; Honor Roll, seven sem.; KU-Y, tutor; SUA, earn. comm., Nassau Trip comm.; CYR; Pi Mu Epsilon; U. G. Mitchell Math Scholarship; A. J. Boynton Memorial Scholarship; Woodrow Wilson nominee. PADGET, JOHN EARL, Lawrence Eng., Int. Rel. MUN; P-t-P; Spring Fling; SUA; UP; CYD; Chess Club; Bridge Club; Le Cercle Francais. PAKULA, BENJAMIN JOHN, Philadelphia, Pa. Ind. Design, Math. IDSA. PANKRATZ, HOWARD JOHN, Bartlesville, Okla. Advertising McCollum Hall, fl, soc. Honor Roll, two sem.; UDK, cir. mgr., nat. adv. mgr.; Assn. of Ind. Adv. Star Student ; intramural football. PARKER, JAY PHILLIP, Tonganoxie Zoology PARKER, ROBERT WARREN, Prairie Village Chemistry Joseph R. Pearson Hall; Honor Roll, two sem.; UDK, photo.; German Summer Lang. Inst. PARR, RODNEY KENT, Pierceville Eng., Biol. SNEA. Transfer, Ft. Hays St.: Sigma Theta Epsilon, chaplain; intramurals; Honor Roll, three sem. PARSONS, STEPHEN P., Northfield, Ill. Spanish Delta Chi, int. ohm., sch. ohm., soc. comm., Gk. Wk. chm.; Rock Chalk Revue; Vox; C Club; SUGPA; varsity baseball. PATE, THOMAS CARL, Chanute Bus. Admin. Alpha Kappa Lambda, rush ohm.; Honor Roll, two sem.; KU-Y; Rock Chalk Revue; UP; CYR; AIESEC, co- founder, pres.; Delta Sigma Pi. PATTERSON, KATHERINE, Newton Square, Pa. Sociology Kappa Kappa Gamma; Honor Roll, eight sem.; Stu. Communications Bd .; Mortar Board, pres.; Watkins Scholarship; National Merit Scholarship; NSF Grant; Jayhawker Hilltopper; Previews counselor; fr. res. hall counselor. Transfer, Northwestern Univ. PATTERSON, PATRICIA SUE, Colby Anthropology Res. Hall, fl. off.; AWS, rep.; MUN, del.; UP, rep. PATTERSON, WILLIAM DONALD, Prairie Village English Joseph R. Pearson Hall; US Marine Corps PLC prog.; band; orch. Transfer, North Tex. St.: French Club; gymnastics; Sempre Fidelis Club, treas.; Westminster Fellowship Foundation. PATTON, GLENN E. JR., Cunningham Organ, Music Therapy Jolliffe Hall; Honor Roll, seven sem.; Pi Kappa Lambda; Scholarship Hall Award; Greater Univ. Scholarship; Fr. Summer Lang. Inst. PATTON, JOHN ROBERT, Oregon, Mo. Pharmacy Kicks Band Assn.; Concert Band; Am. Pharm. Assn. PAUL, CAROL LYNN, Miltonvale Sociology Alpha Phi, quarterly corr., sob. chm., Honor Roll, one sem.; Frosh Hawks; KU-Y, Eng.-in-Action, Adolescent Guidance; MUN; Panhell., sch. coun.; P-t-P, sec. staff; Rock Chalk Revue; Peace Corps, counselling comm.; General Scholarship. PAULI, WERNER F. JR., Overland Park Comm. Art Joseph R. Pearson Hall; West Side Story; UP; Alpha Rho Gamma. PAYER, LYNN JEANINE, Wichita Comp. Biochem., Physiology Delta Delta Delta, pl. cl. sch. alumni sec., corr. sec.; Honor Roll, three sem.; AWS, fr. fl. off.; KU-Y, cabinet, Tutor Match co-chin.; Search, ed. bd.; NSF Undergrad. Research Part.; German Summer Lang. Inst.; Mademoiselle Coll. Bd. PEARCE, S. BOYD, JR., Topeka Chem., Math. Sigma Alpha Epsilon. PEARSON, ROBERT ALAN, Kansas City, Mo. Accounting Delta Chi; Gk. Wk.; Rock Chalk Revue; Vox; YMCA; Engr. Exposition; Delta Sigma Pi; intramurals. PENNINGTON, DONALD LEE, Prairie Village Phys. Ed. Lambda Chi Alpha, sch. chin.; athletic scholarship; var- sity swimming, co-capt., varsity and Big Eight record holder, NCAA All-Am. Team. PENNY, PATRICIA ANNE, Emporia Zoology Kappa Kappa Gamma, act. chin. , house chin.; GSP Hall Coun., house chin.; Honor Roll, one sem.; Frosh Hawks; KU-Y, co-chin. of fr. camp, sec.; P-t-P; Cwens. PERKINS, JAMES DONALD, Prairie Village History Delta Tau Delta, honor initiate, pl. cl. sec.; Honor Roll, six sem.; KU-Y, pres., cab., model sen.; SUA; YMCA; Owl Society; Sachem; Phi Beta Kappa; Summerfield Scholarship; Undergrad. Research Asst. PETERSON, LARRY EDWARD, Kansas City, Ks. Elec. Engr. Stephenson Hall, sec., treas.; Honor Roll, four sem.; KU-Y, fr. camp counselor; UCCF, pres., Kan. state pies., nat. del.; Eta Kappa Nu; Tau Beta Pi nominee; Scho- larship Hall Award; Frank Lansing Gilmore Engr. Scholarship. PETERSON, MYRNA ELIZABETH, Kansas City Elem. Ed. Hashinger Hall; P-t-P; SNEA, hist. Transfer, Kansas City Jr. Coll.: Stu. Governing Body, rep.; P-t-P; Span. Club, pres.; SNEA, hist. 494 1967 SENIORS PHILIPP, JOSEPH THEODORE, Hiawatha Chemistry AFROTC; Alpha Chi Sigma, hist., alumni sec.; Arnold Air Soc., cmdr., comptroller. PHILLIPS, THOMAS H., Wilson Pharmacy Honor Roll, four sem. PIERCE, MICHAEL M., McPherson Psychology Phi Kappa Sigma, sec., sch. chm.; Honor Roll, three sem.; KU-Y; MUN; SUA; UP; Psi Chi; Woodrow Wil- son nominee. PINKERTON, JULIE ANN, Wichita German Ellsworth Hall, fl. pres.; Honor Roll, two sem.; College Bowl; Frosh Hawks; Spring Fling. PISHNY, CAROL ANN, Blue Rapids Theatre Concentration Bd. of Cl. Off.; jr. cl. treas.; Centennial Celebration; The Bed Bug; Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs; Vox; CYR; Previews Counselor; residence hall sr. asst. PITTS, CECILY KATHLEEN, Merriam Advertising Kappa Alpha Theta, soc. chin.; AWS, rep., sec.-treas., v.p., house of rep. pres., senate v.p.; Gk. Wk.; Panhell., soc. comm.; Rock Chalk Revue; Dean ' s Adv. Bd.; Cwens; Gamma Alpha Chi, pres.; Sweetheart of Sigma Chi; Jour. Adv. Bd.; Jayhawker Outstanding Senior. PITTS, CHARLES D., Tulsa, Okla. Zoology Ellsworth, fl. pres.; Templin, fl. soc. chm.; KU-Y, cab., Eng. style debate comm. chm., children ' s hour, tutor; MUN; theatrical work; UP; CYD. PLOWMAN, ROGER WARREN, Jewell Architecture Honor Roll, one sem.; AIA; Voskamp and Slezak Award; intramurals. POGGEMEYER, GLORIA JEAN, Bloomington, Minn. German Honor Roll, one sem.; Rifle Club. POGSON, BARBARA LEE, Overland Park History POLLARA, CECELIA JEANNE, Oberlin Microbiology Alpha Phi, act. ohm., rec. sec.; Honor Roll, one sem.; Gk. Wk., pub. comm.; MUN; P-t-P, treas., commun. bd.; Rock Chalk Revue, asst. house dir.; ski club; SUA, Queen ' s dance pub. chin.; Microbiology Soc., entertain- ment chm.; NSF Undergrad. Grant; Jayhawker. PORTER, WILLIAM E., Topeka Pol. Sci. Sigma Chi, sec., rush chin., v.p.; Honor Roll, two sem.; ASC, stu. publications bd.; Rock Chalk Revue; Student Commun. Bd., chm.; SUA, earn. tickets comm.; UP, exec. coun.; CYR, chin., state ohm.; Jayhawker, sales mgr.; Owl. Soc.; Span. Summer Lang. Inst.; Pachacamac. POTTER, SHIRLEY ELAINE, Mendon, Mo. Music Honor Roll, one sem.; Centennial Celebration; Interna- tional Club; Carry Nation; Oliver; Snow White; Sigma Alpha Iota; Opera Workshop; Chamber Choir. POWELL, JULONA CAMILLE, Kansas City Home Ecoq. McCollum Hall, fl. pres. Transfer, Kan. State Univ.: Kappa Kappa Gamma, house comm.; NEA; Pep Club, pub. PRAGER, JAMES M., Fullerton, Calif. Math., Pol. Sci. Stephenson Hall, pres.; ASC, ohm., v. chin., rep., Univ. Trad. comm. chin., elec. comm. ohm.; Centennial Cele- bration, cover and program sub-comm.; Vox, dist. chin.; CYR; Sachem; Omicron Delta Kappa; Pi Sigma Alpha; Scholarship Hall Award; Jayhawker ' Hilltopper; Dean ' s Adv. Bd.; Univ. Human Rel. Comm. PRELOGAR, MARY CLARK, Grandview, Mo. Lang. Arts Honor Roll, five sem.; Pi Lambda Theta. PRELOGAR, WILLIAM HENRY JR., Grandview, Mo. Architecture Alpha Kappa Lambda; Honor Roll, two sem.; AIA, v.p., reg. dir.; Tau Sigma Delta, v.p., pres.; Tau Beta Pi; Joseph Kellogg Scholarship; Smith Haines Scholarship; Alpha Rho Chi medal; Scarab Design award; Tau Sigma Delta book award. Transfer, Kansas City Jr. Coll.: Phi Theta Kappa. PRICE, GARY L., Osborne Anthropology Delta Chi, house mgr., sgt.-at-arms, exec. coun.; Car- ruth fl. rep.; Rock Chalk Revue; Vox; Anthropology Club; Kimbell Found. Scholarship. PRICE, WILL G. III, Wichita Humanities Phi Delta Theta, pub. rel. chm., cultural chin., treas.; Honor Roll, six sem.; KU-Y, cabinet; Rock Chalk Revue, In-Between Acts mgr., house mgr., producer; theatrical work; Owl Society; Sachem; varsity golf. PRIEST, CONNIE LEE, Baxter Springs Elem. Ed. Corbin Hall, sch. chm.; AWS; CYR; Phi Lambda Theta; SNEA; gen. scholarship; McCartney Scholarship; con- cert choir; concert chorale; Bus. Wives. PRIEST, STEVEN GERALD, Morrill Indus. Admin. Men ' s Residence Assn.; CYR; intramural basketball. PRILL, PENNY VIRGINIA, St. Louis, Mo. Social Work Sigma Kappa, soc. chin.; intramurals; Fresh Hawks; Gk. Wk.; KU-Y; MUN; Panhell. PRIM, JOHN E., Overbrook Mech. Engr. Joseph R. Pearson Hall, soc. ohm., special events chm., relays float co-chm.; Engr. Sch. Coun.; UP; Honor Roll, two sem.; Tau Beta Pi, corr. sec., nat. del.; Pi Tau Sigma, rec. sec., treas., nat. cony. del.; ASTME, sec.; ASME; Newman Club; Dow Chem. Co. Grant. PROFFITT, DONNA JEAN, Glendale, Mo. French Frosh Hawks; IRC, staff asst.; GSP Hall, cultural af- fairs ohm.; Corbin Hall, sr. asst.; Pi Lambda Theta; NFMC Music Therapy Scholarship; NDEA French Summer Lang. Inst. Grant. 495 SENIORS 1967 -PRUCKKUMVONG, NANTHANA, Bangkok, Thailand Pharmacy Lewis Hall; Am. Pharm. Assn.; Kappa Epsilon. PUCKETT, GEORGE PHILLIP, Cabool, Mo. Music Ed. My Fair Lady, Tom Thumb; Univ. Symph. Orch.; Little Symph.; Opera Workshop; Summerfield Music Scholar- ship; Christmas Vespers Music Scholarship. QUENOY, JOHN HERBERT, McCune Civil Engr. Honor Roll, one sem.; ASCE, treas.; football. RABON, LOREN D., Kansas City Indus. Design Indus. Design Club; Kan. St. Football Official. Trans- fer, Dodge City Jr. Coll.: varsity football; football scholarship. RADER, LUCILLE ELAINE, Council Grove Biology Honor Roll, four sem.; SNEA; NSTA; honors program; Erdmunate von Unwerat Scholarship; German Honor Soc. RADFORD, BILL, Kansas City, Mo. Mathematics Ellsworth Hall, fl. soc. chm., exec. bd., jud. bd. chm., constit. comm. co-clam.; ASC, rep.; KUPA; SNEA; intra- mural baseball. RAGAN, WILLIAM LEE, Kansas City Indus. Admin. ASTME. RANKIN, ANNE MARIE, Kansas City Microbiology Sigma Kappa; Honor Roll, one sem. RATCHFORD, DIANNE, Prairie Village La•?g. Arts Chi Omega, rush chm., song leader; Honor Roll, one sem.; Angel Flight; AWS; Gk. Wk.; KU-Y; Kallay Fil- leeans, rush clans.; Panhell., rush coun.; Rock Chalk Revue, In-Between-Acts comm.; SUA; Pi Lambda Theta; SNEA. Transfer, Univ. of Mo.: fl. soc. ohm.; newspaper staff; yearbook staff; AWS pub. comm. RATHBUN, BONNIE JEAN, La Grange Park, Ill. Elem. Ed. P-t-P; UP; SNEA. Transfer, Univ. of Ariz. RAY, GARY DEAN, Lawrence Biology Delta Upsilon; WC; varsity baseball; baseball scholar- ship. REA, DON WYMAN, Kansas City, Mo. Architecture Kappa Sigma, asst. house mgr.; Engr. School Coun.; Vox; Rock Chalk Revue; Scarab; AIA. RECKART, JOYCE BERNICE, Kansas City, Mo. German, French Lewis Hall; Honor Roll, six sem.; College Bowl; Frosh Hawks; French Club, v.p.; German Club, sec.-treas.; Phi Beta Kappa; Delta Phi Alpha; Greater KC Science Fair Scholarship; German Dept. Scholarship; Woodrow Wilson nominee; French Summer Lang. Inst.; German Summer Lang. Inst.; Oberlin Coll. German Summer Inst. REDFIELD, MICHAEL L., Des Monies, Ia. Sociology REDFORD, MELVIN ROBERT JR., Leavenworth Chem. Engr. NROTC; Scabbard and Blade; Sigma Tau, rec. sec.; AICHE, treas. REED, BETTY GAIL, Wichita Elem. Ed. KU-Y, youth friendship prog.; SNEA; Law Wives. REED, MYRON CLYDE, Mapleton Elec. Engr. NROTC; IEEE; Liaisons Fellowship; Ahrens Scholarship; gen. scholarship; NROTC Scholarship; Scholarship Hall Award; Battalion PIO. REESE, JOHN JONES, Hiawatha Music Ed. Templin Hall; band; MENC. REESE, TESSA ANNE, Kansas City, Mo. Elem. Ed. Alpha Delta Pi, soc. chm., exec. corm., sr. key rep.; Honor Roll, one sem.; AWS, commun. comm.; Frosh Hawks; Gk. Wk., queen candidate; KU-Y; Panhell., soc. comm., rush counselor; SUA, cam. tickets comm.; UP; SNEA. REICHENBORN, RAYMOND DEAN, Dodge City Architecture Honor Roll, one sem.; AIA. Transfer, Jr. Coll.: sta. coun., pres. RENICK, STEPHEN WADE, Hays Bus. Admin. Honor Roll, one sem.; Marketing Club; Am. Pharm. Assn. REPPERT, BRENT ARLEN, Osawatomie Chemistry McCollum Hall; Honor Roll, two sem.; UP, wing rep.; marching band; UCCF; Alpha Chi Sigma, alumni sec., hist., rep. REPPERT, NELSON LANCE, Osawatomie Hist., German McCollum Hall; Honor Roll, five sem.; CYR; Phi Alpha Theta, pres.; Delta Phi Alpha, sec.; German Club; Hist. Club; German Summer Lang. Inst. REYNOLDS, ROGER I., Ottawa Pharmacy Honor Roll, one sem.; third yr. pharm. cl. v.p.; Am. Pharm. Assn.; Kan. Pharm. Assn.; Pepsodent Scholarship. 496 1967 SENIORS RICE, BARBARA L., Topeka Elms. Ed., Spec. Ed. Kappa Kappa Gamma, pl. cl. off., pub. rel.; Honor Roll, One sem.; AWS, high sch. leadership day comm.; KU-Y, children ' s hour, tutor; Sisters of Maltese Cross, treas.; Rock Chalk Revue, writer staff; SUA; UP; Jayhawker; SNEA. Transfer, Kan. St. Teachers Coll.: varsity cheer- leader; CYR; Christmas Queen nominee. RICKETTS, CARL OWEN, Ness City Bus. Admin. McCollum Hall, fl. pres., hall senate; Honor Roll, one sem.; Sports Car Club; Vox, rep.; Marketing Club. RIEDMILLER, MARY JOYCE, Glasco Music Ed. Lewis Hall, spring sing dir.; Spring Fling, spring sing dir.; Mu Phi Epsilon, v.p., hist.; Newman Club, corr. sec., choir dir.; Chamber Choir; MENC; Concert Band. BILLER, LOUISE ANN, Kansas City, Mo. Anthropology Alpha Delta Pi, honor initiate; AWS, fashion bd.; Frosh Hawks; International Club; KU-Y; Crescents; MUN, steering comm.; Ski Club; SUA; UP; Jayhawker. RINACKE, TROY. Independence, Mo. Phy. Ed., Biol. Sci. Delta Chi, house mgr., sgt.-at-arms; Hoyt Scholarship. RINNE, LARRY WAYNE, Gardner Aero. Engr. Engr. Sch. Coun.; NROTC; CYR; Navy Hawkwatch Soc., sec.; Scabbard and Blade, first lieut.; AIAA. ROBERTS, RUTH MARIE, Kansas City, Mo. Apparel Merchandising Delta Delta Delta, rec. sec.; AWS, all women ' s day. ROBERTSON, JOAN, Bloomington, Ind. Eng. Alpha Chi Omega; KU-Y; UP; CYD; Rock Chalk Revue. ROBERTSON, SHARON, Prairie Village Soc. Studies Alpha Phi, pl. cl. pres., v.p., pl. trainer, rec. sec.; Angel Flight; AWS, stu.-fac. tea comm., status of women commission; WRA, hall rep., fl. off.; Panhell., pl. train- ers ' coon.; SUA, cam. tickets comm.; SNEA. ROBERTSON, SHARON, Silver City, N. M. Lang. Arts Honor Roll, one sem.; AWS, fr. steering comm.; Gk. Wk.; KU-Y, North Lawrence Project; MUN; P-t-P. ROBINSON, WILLIAM, Independence Bus. Ad 117 in. AFROTC; Bus. Sch. Coon.; Marketing Club, treas., v.p. ROBINSON, WILLIAM L., Great Bend Int. Rel., Human Rel. Ellsworth Hall, jud. bd. chm., exec. coon.; Honor Roll, one sem.; ASC, men ' s residence hall rep., Little Hoover Commission, Comm. on Comm., Big Eight stu. govern- ment co-ordinator, ASG, nat. exec. coon.; MUN; stu. body v.p.; Union Operating Comm.; Vox, exec. coon.; CYR; Nat. AURH Honor Roll; Previews Asst.; residence hall counselor; Jayhawker Outstanding Senior; Resident Dir.; COSA; Dean ' s Adv. Coun. ROBISON, ANDREA, Chanute Anthropology Sigma Kappa, honor initiate, lib., reg., treas.; Honor Roll, three sem.; AWS; Bowling Assn.; KU-Y; MUN; P-t-P; Rifle Club; Anth. Club, lib., pres. German Club, sec.; Span. Club; Spanish Summer Lang. Inst. ROGERS, PAUL HENRY, St. Louis, Mo. Geography Templin Hall; McCollum Hall, wing rep.; AFROTC, drill team; Pershing Rifles. Transfer, Washington Univ. ROGERS, REBECCA RUTH, Garden City Music Ed., Music Theory Watkins Hall, song leader, pres.; Honor Roll, five sem.; ASC Stu. Adv. Bd., sec.; AWS; College Bowl; Peace Corps, comm. sec.; Stu. Communications Bd.; Covens; Mortar Board; Jayhawker Hilltopper; Pi Kappa Lambda; Mu Phi Epsilon, rush chm., pres.; Scholarship Hall Award; Watkins Women in Music; Smop Scholarship; Elks Scholarship. ROMANO, NORMA C., Oruro, Bolivia Jour., French Hashinger Hall, soc. chm.; Angel Flight; International Fest., steering comm., pub.; UDK, bd., copy ed.; KU-Y; MUN; Peace Corps, trainer; P-t-P, adv. bd.; Int ernational Club, pub. comm.; Theta Sigma Phi; Newman Club; Span. Club; French Club; International Club Queen. RONNING, NANCY J., Kansas City, Mo. Lang. Arts Alpha Phi, corr. sec., eff. ohm., key rep.; AWS, careers comm.; Frosh Hawks; Rock Chalk Revue; SUA. ROSANDER, ROBERT, Shawnee Mission Chem. Engr. Theta Tau, pres., pl. trainer; Engr. Sch. Coon.; Engr. Exposition, archway comm.; AICHE; tennis. ROSENTHAL, STANTON JAY, St. Joseph, Mo. History Ellsworth Hall, jud. coon., constit. comm.; Honor Roll, one sem.; Woodrow Wilson Fellowship nominee. Trans- fer, St. Joseph Jr. Coll.: Phi Theta Kappa; German Club. ROSPOPO, STEVE MICHAEL, Mishawaka Comm. McCollum Hall; Honor Roll, one sem.; Pi Epsilon Pi. ROSS, PAMELA ANN, Leavenworth Desig n, Weaving Honor Roll, one sem.; AWS; Spring Fling; UP. ROSSER, ROBERT LEE, Topeka Bus. Admin. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, treas., soc. chm.; Honor Roll, two sem.; ASC, exec. comptroller; SUA, tickets chin.; Vox; Owl Soc. Transfer, Brigham Young Univ. ROSSI, MARILYN ANN, Denver, Colo. Elem. Ed. Hashinger Hall; AWS, high sch. leadership day comm.; Jay Janes; CYR; SNEA; CEC; AAMD. Transfer, Colo. St. Univ.: Delta Delta Delta, pres.; Alpha Lambda Delta, v.p.; Spurs; Hesperia; AWS, treas. ROTH, THOMAS LLOYD, Ellinwood Elem. Ed. Sigma Phi Epsilon, corr. sec., pub. rel. chin., act. chm.; Honor Roll, one sem.; KU-Y, comm. chm.; Rock Chalk Revue; Ski Club; SUA; UP; YMCA; SCEC; NEA; KSTA; Newman Club; Concert Choir. 497 SENIORS 1967 ROUSE, LARRY ALLAN, Kansas City Indus. Management Sigma Nu, pres., pl. trainer, hist., jud. coun.; Engr. Sch. Coun.; IFC; Vox; CYR; Kansas Engineer, bus. mgr.; Marketing Club; Engr. Stu. Adv. Bd.; track. ROYSE, PATRICIA ANN, Stilwell Theatre, Drama AURH; Spring Fling; My Fair Lady; Bedbug; Oliver!; Oh, What a Lovely War; The Magic Flute; Concert Choir; Chamber Choir; Military Ball; Campus Talent; Soph. Variety Show, Happiness Is ; USO tour to Ft. Leonard Wood. Transfer, Loretto Heights Coll.: Dean ' s List, two sem.; Grammer Gurton ' s Needle; Carnival. Avila Coll.: Honor Roll, two sem.; Phoenix Too Fre- quent; Naughty Marietta; Our Lady ' s Juggler; chorus small ensemble; Alpha Gamma Omega; Nat. Catholic Dramatic Frat. RUBIN, JANET KATHLEEN, Overland Park Human Rel., Per. Admin., Pol. Sci. Alpha Chi Omega, sr. key rep.; Honor Roll, one sem.; Bowling Assn.; Frosh Hawks; MUN; Fr. Res. Hall Coun- sellor; Corbin Hall, fl. soc. hosp. chm.; Sigma Psi, corr. sec. RUEFF, JAMES M., Overland Park Bus. Admin. Theta Chi, pres., pl. marshall; IFC; MUN. RUND, DONNA JEAN, Garden Valley, Calif. Geog., Hist. Hashinger Hall, standards bd.; Honor Roll, two sem.; KU-Y, tutor; NSF Grant; Woodrow Wilson Fellowship nominee. RUNDLE, BARBARA JOAN, Clay Center Music Ed. Frosh Hawks; Concert Band; Symph. Orch.; Accompanist for Opera Workshop and Oliver!. RUSSELL, GARY A., Ft. Scott Ed., Psychology Pi Epsilon Pi; CYD; Psi Chi; Roger Williams Fellowship. Transfer: Tau Kappa Epsilon. RUSSELL, STEPHEN A., Topeka Journalism Phi Kappa Theta; UDK, sports ed., asst. man. ed.; Sigma Delta Chi; Pachacamac. RUSSELL, SUSAN KAY, Kansas City, Mo. Spanish Alpha Delta Pi, asst. rush chin., reg.; Honor Roll, two sem.; AWS, all women ' s wk. comm.; Minority Opinions Forum comm.; Frosh Hawks; KU-Y; MUN, steering comm.; P-t-P; SUA; Sr. Breakfast comm.; Span. Club. SAGERSER, DAVID ALLAN, Overland Park Aerospace Engr. Phi Kappa Sigma, sec., sch. chin., pl. trainer, pres.; Honor Roll, one sem.; IFC, rep., sch. comm.; Sigma Pi Sigma; AIAA, soc. comm.; track. SAHLBERG, CAROL ANNE, Western Springs, Ill. Soc. Studies Alpha Omicron Pi, asst. treas.; Rock Chalk Revue; Vox; Law Day Queen candidate. SALMON, LARRY RAYMOND, Winfield Special Honor Roll, six sem.; Stu. Comniun. Bd. rep.; CYR, ed. staff; Symph. Orch.; Concert Band; Marching Band; Brass Choir; Phi Mu Alpha, hist.; University Review Ed. Bd.; Summerfield Scholarship; Fine Arts Summerfield Scholarship; Univ. Honor Scholarship; Veta B. Lear Award; Owl Society; Sachem. SANDERS, NANCY PATRICIA, Lawrence Spanish Alpha Chi Omega, asst. soc. chin., asst. recom. chin.; Honor Roll; Angel Flight; AWS, props comm. for orientation prog.; Frosh Hawks; Sigma Delta Pi; Wood- row Wilson nominee. SAPP, CHARLES W., Hepler Aerospace Engr. Honor Roll, seven sem.; AIAA; Sigma Gamma Tau; Tau Beta Pi. SCHAUB, GARY RAY, Coffeyville Elec. Engr. Sigma Nu, sch. chin. alumni contact, treas.; Kansas Engineer, ed.; Eta Kappa Nu; Dean ' s Stu. Bd.; IEEE; Muchnic Scholarship; Owens-Corning Scholarship. SCHEFFNER, NORMAN WAHL, Matoon, Ill. Civil Engr. Honor Roll, two sem.; AROTC, co. cmdr.; ASCE, treas. SCHEIB, CHARLES WILLIAM, Bucklin Pharmacy Foster Hall; Grace Pearson Hall, soc. athl. v.p.; Honor Roll, three sem.; Men ' s Scholarship Hall Coun.; Am. Pharm. Assn.; Scholarship Hall Award; NSF Research Grant. SCHEURICH, JAMES J., Baxter Springs Eng., Soc. Studies Honor Roll, four sem. SCHLENKER, JANET ESTHER, Kansas City Microbiology, Zoology Alpha Omicron Pi, asst. rush chm., house mgr., treas.; College Bowl; Gk. Wk.; KU-Y, Fr. Camp comm.; Microbiology Club. SCHMIDT, CLINTON R., Peabody Mathematics Honor Roll, one sem.; Chamber Choir. SCHMIDT, RONALD E., Kansas City Psychology CYD; Univ. Lutheran Church, financial chin., bd.; Butler Scholarship. Transfer, Washburn Univ.: Phi Delta Theta; Gk. Wk.; SUA; Voice Political Party; CYD; tennis. SCHMITZ, LINDA, Kansas City, Mo. Hist., French Sigma Kappa, rush chm.; Gk. Wk.; MUN; Panhell. Assn. SCHNEIDER, KAREN SUE, Prairie Village Elem. Ed. McCollum Hall, staff asst.; NEA. SCHONEMAN, KENT 0., Bethel Bus. Admin. Honor Roll, one sem.; Marketing Club. 498 1967 SENIORS I SCHOOLER, GAYLE BARLOW, Saratoga, Calif. Adcertising Delta Delta Delta; Honor Roll, two sem.; Gamma Alpha Chi; UDK, nat. adv.; Gladys Feld Helzberg Scholarship. SCHORR, MARY ELIZABETH, St. Louis, Mo. Soc. Studies Delta Gamma, rush chin.; Honor Roll, one sem.; AWS; Panhell. Assn., rush comm. chin.; SUA, tickets comm.; SNEA; Best-Dressed Coed Contest. SCHRODER, CONNIE JEAN, Hutchinson Lang. Arts Sigma Kappa, pl. el. soc. chm., house mgr., v.p.; stan- dards chm., jr.-sr. key chm.; MUN; Panhell. Assn.; Vox; Regulations Comm.; Rush Violations Comm.; Sr. Cal- endar Comm.; mixed bowling; women ' s bowling; SUA. SCHUETZ, PERRY NEWELL, Great Bend Chem., Span. Honor Roll, three sem.; KU-Y; CYR; Mexico Summer Inst. SCHULTE, WAYNE F., Hugoton Pharmacy AFROTC; ASC; Drill Team AFROTC; Am. Pharm. Assn., v.p.; Newman Club; Hall Memorial Scholarship; intramurals. SCHWARTZ, RICHARD G., Paola Radio-TV-Film MUN; UP; CYD. SCOTT, LYNETTE AULT, Esbon Elem. Ed. Sigma Kappa, asst. pl. trainer; Honor Roll, one sem; CYR; Panhell., rush corm.; SNEA. SCOTT, LYNN SHARRON, Omaha, Nebr. Span., Psychology McCollum Hall; Corbin Hall, cultural rep.; Honor Roll, three sem.; International Club, soc. chin.; International Fest.; SUA; admissions scholarship; music scholarship. SCRIBNER, ROBERT JAMES, Salina Indus. Design McCollum Hall, fl. pres.; residence ball counselor; Honor Roll, one sem; AFROTC; swimming. SEARS, ROBERT EMERY, Kansas City Pol. Sci. Alpha Kappa Lambda, pres., sec., sch. chm.; AFROTC, PAS Gold Medal; IFC, pros. coun., jud. coun.; KU-Y, cabinet, membership chm.; Rock Chalk Revue; CYR, v. chm., treas.; Pi Sigma Alpha; Scabbard and Blade; US Air Force Scholarship Grant; US Senate Internship; Jayhawker Outstanding Senior; Pachacamac. SECREST, VICKI JO, Colby Lang. Arts Ed. Chi Omega, soc. and civic serv., asst. rec. sec.; KU-Y, children ' s hour chm.; Rock Chalk Revue, script writer, musical dir.; SUA, music forum chm.; UP. SEITZ, JOHN KRAFT, Holyrood Bus. Admin. ASC, married stu. rep.; Vox; CYR; Psy. Club; Market- ing Club. SELIG, LINDA MARIE, Clay Center Music Ed. Sellards Hall, v.p., aux. offices; Honor Roll, three sem.; ASC, calendar comm.; KU-Y; Pi Lambda Theta; Music Educators Nat. Conf.; Sigma Alpha Iota; Roger Wil- liams Fellowship; Scholarship Hall Award; Univ. Gen. Scholarship; Nat. Baptist Convention Scholarship. SELLERS, SISTER MARION CLARE, Mobile, Ala. Latin Honor Roll, two sem.; Hannah Oliver Latin Award; Woodrow Wilson nominee. Transfer, Saint Mary Coll.: Honor Roll, one sem. SHAFFER, ROBERT L., Pratt Mech. Engr. Stephenson Hall, intramurals chin.; Honor Roll, one sem.; Pi Tau Sigma; ASTME, pub. chm.; ASME; Scholarship Hall Award; Standard Oil Co. of Calif. Scholarship. SHAFFER, RUTH M., Pratt Elem. Ed. Honor Roll, one sem.; SNEA. SHANTEAU, RICHARD EUGENE, Minneola Zoology CYR; French Club; Anthropology Club. SHAPLEY, JOHN ROGER, Wichita Chemistry Pearson Hall, v.p., pres.; Honor Roll, six sem.; Sum- merfield Schol arship; Grace Carolyn Eaton Scholarship; Kan. Heart Assn. Res. Grant; NSF Res. Grant; Phi Beta Kappa; Paul B. Lawson Award; Veta B. Lear Award; German Summer Lang. Inst.; intramurals. SHAW, BARBARA JOAN, Kansas City, Mo. Elem. Ed. AWS, rep.; SNEA. Transfer, Metropolitan Jr. Coll.: soph. cl. sec.; Phi Theta Kappa, sec.; Span. Club, pres. SHAW, CHARLES PARK, Cheshire, Conn. Mathematics Delta Chi, sgt.-at-arms, co-rush chin.; jud. coun. chin.; MUN; NROTC, Hawkwatch Soc.; Navy Scholarship. SHAW, JANET KAY, Freeport Lang. Arts, Eng. Colleen. Honor Roll, one sem. SHELDON, SUSAN L., Kansas City, Mo. Spanish Hashinger Hall, fl. off., adv. bd.; P-t-P; Rock Chalk Revue; Spring Fling; SUA; CYR; SNEA; Summer Lang. Inst. Scholarship. SHELLHAMMER, JERRIE JEAN, Wichita Econ., Eng. SHEPARD, PETER ATWOOD, Edwardsville Mathematics McCollum Hall, jud. bd.; NROTC; Soccer Club; Navy Scholarship; Hawkwatch Soc.; Scabbard and Blade. 499 SENIORS 1967 SHIELDS, EDWOOD WILLIAM, Kansas City, Mo. Mech. and Aerospace Engr. AIAA. Transfer, Metropolitan Jr. Coll.: associate degree. SHIVERS, GARY M., Kansas City Speech Commun., Radio-TV-Film KUOK Radio, music. dir., prog. dir.; Radio Prod. Center, prog. mgr., pres.; Jazz Fest. Workshop, pub. dir. SHOEMAKER, ELLEN ANNETTE, Platte City, Mo. Soc., Social Work SHONTZ, PHILIP A., Kansas City, Mo. Elec. Engr. Delta Upsilon, rec. sec., list.; Honor Roll, one sem.; Engr. Sch. Coun.; Gk. Wk., Queens Comm.; Vox; CYR; Eta Kappa Nu, v.p., pres.; Sigma Tau, v.p.; Oread Jazz Festival, prog. chin.; IEEE, corr. sec. SCHULTZ, HARRIET HAZEL, Overland Park Psychology, Child Der. and Behavior Honor Roll, three sem.; Psi Chi; Ford Found. Fellow- ship; Woodrow Wilson nominee; fr. residence hall counselor, sr. asst.; Cwens. SHULTZ, SALLY ANN, Merriam Hist. of Art Alpha Chi Omega. SIGLEY, CHARLES W., Ness City Elec. Engr. Kappa Eta Kappa, corr. sec.; Vox; IEEE, stu. branch chm., prog. chm., engr. exposition chm.; Rotary Club Scholarship; Undergrad. Teaching Asst.; Dean ' s Stu. Cab. SIGLEY, FRANCES ZORTMAN, Fowler Microbiology Hashinger Hall. SILKNITTER, SONYA SUE, Wichita Sec. Ed., Theatre Sigma Kappa, song leader; Carry Nation; Intercollegiate Broadcasting System, Inc.; Sr. Cl. Ring Comm. SILVERBERG, STEPHEN KEITH, Lawrence Phy. Ed. Track. Transfer, Central Mo. St.: track; cross country; basketball. SILVERMAN, JILL, St. Louis, Mo. English Delta Gamma, intramural chm.; SUA, jester; Sr. Fall Party Comm.; Rock Chalk. SIMMONS, PATRICIA KAY, Erie Elem. Ed. Lewis Hall; Ellsworth Hall, house comm.; SNEA. Trans- fer, Independence Comm. Coll.: football queen attendant; cheerleader. SIMPSON, WILLIAM RICHARD, Tribune Personnel Admin. Delta Upsilon, sec.-treas.; AFROTC, Drill Team Cmdr.; ASC, marr. rep.; KU-Y; P-t-P, overseas rep.; Radio Club; theatrical work, light and sound supervisor; CYR. SINGER, STEPHEN BARRY, Prairie Village Advertising P-t-P; SUA; Vox; UDK; Alpha Delta Sigma. SIPPLE, DEANNA DEE, Marysville Latin, Lang. Arts Transfer, Kansas State Univ. SKAHAN, BOB EUGENE, Columbus Bus. Admin. Delta Upsilon, chaplain, alumni corr.; Honor Roll, one sem.; Campus Crusade for Christ; Gk. Wk.; football scholarship; baseball, All Big Eight; KU football summer ambassador to Kansas. SLEZAK, SALLY ANN, Kansas City, Mo. Elem. Ed. AURH; Golden Hearts of Sigma Phi Epsilon, soc. chm.; UP; CYR; SNEA, comm. chm. SMITH, CARL LEON, Medicine Lodge Elec. Engr. Honor Roll, two sem. SMITH, GLEE SIDNEY, Lamed Hist., ha. Rel. Delta Tau Delta, alumni sec., corr. sec.; Honor Roll, four sem.; ASC, convocation and lectures comm.; MUN; SUA, arr. com. chm.; CYR, newsletter ed.; Jayhawker, Adv. Rd.; Owl Soc.; Pi Sigma Alpha; honor scholar- ship; French Summer Lang. Inst. SMITH, JOYCE GLIPSE, Gloucester, Va. English Transfer, Hope Coll., Holland, Mich.: Dean ' s List, four sem.; Stu. Orient. Advisor; Stu. Union Bd.; yearbook ed.; Women ' s Athl. Assn. bd.; women ' s varsity basketball; Mortar Board, Alcor Chapter; Scholarship in Coll. Teach. Frog. Univ. of Mass.: Art Club; Polymer Res. Inst., tech. ed., undergrad. res. asst. SMITH, ROBERT PETE, Shawnee Mission Accounting Lambda Chi Alpha, treas.; Honor Roll, five sem.; Rd. of Cl. Off.; Bus. Sch. Coun.; soph. v.p.; IFC; ASC, rep.; UP, treas.; Acct. Soc., v.p.; Beta Gamma Sigma; Eliz- abeth M. Hoyt Award. SMITH, SUSAN JANE, Ambler, Penn. Art Ed. Hashinger Hall, pub. chin.; AURH, pub. comm.; Vox; CYD, pub. comm. SNYDER, SHARON EVAUGHN, Haven French Watkins Hall, IRC rep.; AURH, Inf. and Coordination comm. chm., nat. conf., trans. comm. chm.; Frosh Hawks; IRC, treas.; ASC, stu.-fac. orient. comm.; MUN; Vox; French Summer Lang. Inst.; Scholarship Hall Award. SODERSTROM, NANCY KAREN, Wichita Sociology Kappa Kappa Gamma, music chin., rush coordinator; AWS; Gk. Wk.; Vox. 500 1967 SENIORS SOICE, NANCY, Wichita Bus. Ed. Alpha Chi Omega, corr. sec.; AWS; Frosh Hawks; SUA; Phi Beta Lambda, treas. SOLLENBERGER, MICHAEL, Hutchinson Bus. Admin. Sigma Chi, honor initiate, pl. eh pres., exec. comm., soc. chm., jud. bd.; Honor Roll, one sem.; P-t-P, job placement; Rock Chalk Revue; SUA; UP; CYR; Ultra- murals; tennis. Transfer, Hutchinson Jr. Coll.: varsity tennis. SOMERS, WILLIAM, Leavenworth Soc. Sci., Phy. Ed. Kahper, v.p. SOMMERLATH, EDWARD, St. Louis, Mo. Bus. Admin. Delta Tau Delta; Delta Sigma Pi. SPAETH, JOHN C., Rye Beach, N. H. Biol. Sot. SPEER, ANDREA FRANCES, Kansas City Mathematics Pi Beta Phi, asst. treas., treas.; Honor Roll, five sem.; ASC, fr. leadership comm. v. chm.; AWS, steering comm. for high school leadership clay comm., Cwens advisor, bd. of standards; Frosh Hawks; Gk. Wk., queen comm. chin.; SUA, travel comm.; Stu. Adv. Bd.; Cwens, rituals chm.; Mortar Board, treas.; honor scholarship; Woodrow Wilson nominee; Advanced Ger- man Summer Lang. Inst.; Jayhawker Outstanding Senior. SPENCER, MICHAEL ALLEN, Overland Park Radio-TV-Files Sigma Phi Epsilon, pl. cl. pres., honor initiate, rush chin., soc. pres.; Honor Roll, one sem.; ASC, campus chest comm. chin.; sr. cl. picnic chin.; Gk. Wk., sing comm.; IFC, rep.; MUN; Rock Chalk Revue; UP; KUOK, sta. mgr.; Radio Prod. Center, bus. mgr. SPILKER, JEANNE, St. Louis, Mo. Sec. Ed., Lang. Arts Alpha Gamma Delta, act. chin.; MUN; SNEA. SPOMER, JOHN L., Lamed Pol. Sci. Honor Roll, two sem. SPRAGUE, DALE M., McPherson Pol. Sci., Hist. Delta Tau Delta; AFROTC, Drill Team; International Club; International Fest., chin.; KU-Y; MUN; P-t-P, bd., pres.; Ski Club; SUA, bd.; Vox, exec. bd.; CYR; Nat. P-t-P, pres., exec. comm.; Rotary International Fellow- ship; Princeton Eur. Civil. Prog. nominee. SRAMEK, NANCY, Oswego Lang. Arts, Psychology Lewis Hall, standards bd.; KU-Y, cabinet, youth friend- ship prog. chin.; Dr. in Spite of Himself; Vox, rep.; CYR, corr. sec., exec. bd.; Kappa Phi Club; SNEA. STAAB, DAVID ALAN, Shawnee Mission Geology Lambda Chi Alpha, sec.; UP; Newman Club. STANLEY, GAIL LOUISE, Dighton CO771111011 Learnings Wesley Foundation, exec. coun. STANTESKY, JOANNE, La Grange, Ill. Physical Ed. Lewis Hall, rec. chin.; Honor Roll, one sem.; Jay Janes; Quack Club, sec.-treas.; SNEA; Women ' s Phy. Ed. Club, rep.; intramurals; WTI N. Transfer, Butler Univ.: Half-Time Honeys; YWCA; Kappa Kappa Gamma. STARK, SHERYL, Salina Soc. Sci., Hist. Concen. Delta Gamma; Honor Roll, one sem.; GSP, fl. soc. chin.; Miss Kan. rep.; AWS, mare. stu. rep.; Frosh Hawks; Gk. Wk.; MUN, rep.; Rock Chalk Revue; SUA, hosp. comm., cam., lect. and humanities chin.; Vox; CYD; high sch. leadership clay; KSTA; Law Wives; Jayhausker. STARRETT, GARY D., Spring Hill Mech. Engr. ASME, treas.; ASTME, chin., v. chin.; Pi Tau Sigma, rec. sec.; Dean ' s Stu. Cab. STEED, DIANE K., Hutchinson Lang. Arts Alpha Phi, rush chm., pres., pl. cl. pres.; Angel Flight, Panhell., rush coun.; P-t-P, Am. Stu. Abroad; Vox; CYR; Pi Lambda Theta. Transfer, Hutchinson Comm. Coll. STEEN, DOUGLAS WAYNE, Lawrence Aerospace Engr. AIAA. STENZEL, BONNIE KAY, Ness City Speech Pathology Alpha Chi Omega, chaplain, act. chin., pl. cl. v.p., stan- dards bd. rep.; Corbin Hall, fl. chm., cultural aff. chin.; Honor Roll, one sem.; ASC, stu. adv. bd., sec.; AWS high school leadership day hostess and discussion leader; KU-Y, children ' s hour co-chm., fr. camp counselor, cab.; Cwens; gen. scholarship; intramurals. STEURY, JACK EDWIN, Springfield, Alo. Geology Delta Chi, v.p.; pl. trainer, scholarship chin.; Gk. Wk.; IFC, Gk. Wk. cousin., rush comm., alumni comm.; MUN; NROTC, Battalion Cmdr., Drill Team Cmdr., rifle team; Rock Chalk Revue; Vox; YMCA; Hawkwatch Soc., pres.; Scabbard and Blade; NROTC Scholarship; Mili- tary Order of the Loyal Legion Award. STEVENSON, MARY ANNE, Leawood Soc. Stu., English Hashinger Hall, staff asst.; IRC, rep., transfer treat chm.; NAURH comm.; Honor Roll, six sem. Transfer, Baker Univ.: Delta Delta Delta; SNEA; WAA. STEWART, CHUCK, Shawnee Mission Advertising Acacia, alumni rel. off., rush chin., pies.; IFC, rush handbook ed., sec., exec. coins.; Rock Chalk Revue, prog. chin., bus. staff; Jayhawker Outstanding Senior; Pachacamac; NIFC del. STEWART, JOHN WESLEY, Kansas City Elem. Ed. Honor Roll, one sem.; intramural volleyball. STIDHAM, SPRING, Park Ridge, Ill. App. Merchandising Delta Delta Delta, pl. cl. pres., outstanding initiate, chaplain, standards bd., sr. cl. coun. del.; Honor Roll, one sem.; ASC, rep., nat. conf. del.; CIB, Jr. Panhell. bd., pres.; Panhell., standards bd., exec. bd.; Vox; Cwens; Scoop Scholarship; Miss Lawrence nominee; Color Guard Queen nominee. 501 SENIORS 1967 STINSON, JOHN BURKE, Topeka Chem., Math. Phi Delta Theta, pl. cl. pres., honor initiate, sch. chin., rec. sec., pub. chm., standards comm. chm.; Honor Roll, six sem.; College Bowl, rep.; Owl Soc.; Sachem; Pi Mu Ep silon; Phi Beta Kappa; Summerfield Scholar- ship; R.C.A. Scholarship; U. G. Mitchell Scholarship; Woodrow Wilson nominee; German Summer Lang. Inst. STITT, JUDITH ANN, Prairie Village Zoology Delta Delta Delta, treas., sr. key comm.; AWS, role of women; sr. breakfast chin.; Panhell., treas. bd.; SUA, sports comm.; Greek Column, Panhell. ed.; NSF Grant. Transfer, Univ. of Iowa: Fashion Board. STODDARD, SUSAN, Hutchinson Pol. Sci., Sec. Ed. Alpha Delta Pi, sch. chm.; Honor Roll, five sem.; ASC, rep., sec. comm., election chm.; A WS, Smop comm., high school leadership comm., orient. comm., open sen. meeting; Frosh Hawks; Jay Janes; KU Relays Comm., dance dec.; MUN; Panhell., sch. coun.; Stu. Comma n. Bd.; SUA, chin.; UP, Caucus sec., Caucus v. chin.; CYR; Stu. Body v.p. admin. asst.; Chancellor ' s reception of new stu. chin.; Mortar Board; SNEA. STOKER, SUSAN A., Shawnee Mission French, Anthro. Watkins Hall, house mgr.; Honor Roll, two sem.; AWS, high sch. leadership day; Jay Janes; Anthropology Club; Ed. Oppor. Grant; French Summer Lang. Inst. STONE, PATRICIA, Overland Park Elem. and Special Ed. UP; KSTA; Coun. for Excep. Children; SNEA; KU-Y, children ' s hour; Crippled Children ' s Soc. Fellow. STONE, PEGGY E., Wichita Personnel Admin. Lewis Hall, soc. dim.; Corbin Hall, soc. chm.; AWS; Frosh Hawks; KU-Y; UP; Newman Club; Sigma Psi. STONEKING, JAMES K., Wichita Pharmacy Honor Roll, four sem.; Am. Pharm. Assn.; Rho Chi, v.p.; Phi Lambda Upsilon; NSF Grant; Laverne Noyes Scholarship; Rho Chi Award. Transfer, Kan. State Univ. STONER, J. ROGER, Garden City Music Ed. Concert Band; Univ. Symph. Orch.; brass choir; band, soc. chm., v.p.; MENC, soc. v.p.; PTA ship. STONER, SHERE, Garden City Foods and Nutrition STRAHM, WINIFRED P., Kansas City, Mo. Soc. Work Lewis Hall, adv. bd.; Frosh Hawks. STRAIGHT, STEPHEN, Shawnee Mission Advertising Phi Gamma Delta, pub. chin., publications chin.; Honor Roll, one sem.; Centennial Celebration; UDK, bd.; Sports Car Club; UP; Alpha Delta Sigma, v.p.; KUOK Radio, aud. res. dir.; Jayhawker, editorial staff; UDK, reporter, incise. mgr.; Centennial Film Staff; track. STRAYER, KATHLEEN MARIE, Mission Hills Spanish Kappa Alpha Theta, rush chm.; Honor Roll, three sem.; ASC, stn. adv. bd.; AWS, fashion lid. v. chin., high sch. leadership day comm.; Gk. Wk.; KU-Y; Little Sisters of Minerva, treas.; SUA; UP; Frosh Hawks; Jayhawker; fr. residence hall counsellor; Span. Summer Lang. Inst.; Engr. Queen finalist; Homecoming Princess. STRUBY, CARL W., Leawood Pol. Sci. Ellsworth Hall, fl. pres., treas.; Honor Roll, six sem.; College Bowl; MUN; Spring Fling; Vox; CYD; ASC, human rights comm. chin., exec. per. off., pub. rel.; KUPA; KUAC; Omicron Delta Kappa; Pi Sigma Alpha; Woodrow Wilson nominee; Residence Hall Counselor. SUCHY, ROBERT EUGENE, Emporia Bits. Admin. Vox. SUFFBON, RAYMOND D., Lawrence Elec. Engr. Honor Roll, one sem.; AFROTC; MSHC; MUN; Sigma Tau; Arnold Air Soc., admin. off.; general scholarship; Strickler Scholarship; Air Force Scholarship. SULLIVAN, JOHN, Emporia Span., Latin Am. Studies Honor Roll, one sem.; Span. Summer Lang. Inst.; Jr. Yr. Aboard. SULLIVAN, MICHAEL, Alexandria, Va. Bus. Admin. McCollum Hall, counselor; NROTC, scholarship; Scab- bard and Blade; Hawkwatch Soc. SULLIVAN, TOMMY GRAY, Wichita Math., Pre-Med. Alpha Tau Omega, v.p., exec. coun.; SUA, cam. gen. chin., enter. chin., bd. SUMMA, JAMES MICHAEL, Marysville, Mo. Aero. Engr. Tan Kappa Epsilon, sch. chin.; Honor Roll, two sem.; UP; CYR; Sigma Gamma Tau; Sigma Tau. SUTHERLAND, MARY ANN, Prescott Soc. Work Watkins Hall, soc. chin.; Angel Flight; AURH, nat. cony. comm.; AWS, rep.; MUN; ' ox; Kappa Phi, pres.; Univ. Women ' s Club Scholarship; residence hall counselor. SUTTER, YVONNE E., Leawood Theatre Alpha Omicron Pi, intramurals chin.; AWS; Bowling Assn.; Six Characters in Search of an Author; Taming of the Shrew; The Bedbug; Blind Mouth; Oliver; Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs; SUA Carnival; Actor ' s Showcase; KATE; WR A; KUOK; Speech Potpourri winner. SWEANEY, EDWARD JAMES, Lees Summit, Mo. McCollum Hall; Honor Roll, two sem.; CYR.Accounting SWEENEY, JON MILES, Pittsburg Bus. Admin. Delta Chi, soh. chm.; AROTC, cadet capt.; Bus. Sch. Coon.; Vox; Scabbard and Blade; MIISAM; gen schol- arship; Summerfield nominee. TARR, TERRY GEORGE, Bartlesville, Okla. Aero. Engr. Delta Tau Delta; Honor Roll, five sem.; AFROTC; Tau Beta Pi; Sigma Gamma Tau; Arnold Air Soc.; Dist. Military SM. 502 1967 SENIORS TESSON, EUGENE ALBERT, Shawnee Mission Advertising Karate Club. Transfer, Kansas City Jr. Coll.: Dean ' s Honor Roll, two sem.; school paper, ed. THAYER, CHARLES JAMES, Abilene Bus. Admin. THOMAS, VIRGINIA KATHRYN, ' Marysville Soc. Work Kappa Alpha Theta, pl. el. off., house mgr.; Frosh Hawks; KU-Y, spec. events comm. chin.; SUA. THOMPSON, DONALD DEAN, Rolla Spanish, Math. Endowment Scholarship. THOMPSON, KATHLEEN HELEN, Iola Eng., Philosophy Kappa Alpha Theta, marshall; Honor Roll, six sem.; AWS, rep., stu.-fac. comm.; KU-Y, fac. firesides comm.; Rock Chalk Revue; UP; Cwens; Eng. Prog. honors; Woodrow Wilson nominee; fr. res. hall counselor. THOMPSON, RICHARD LEE, Chanute Bus. Admin. Phi Kappa Psi, corr. sec., rush chin.; Gk. Wk.; WC; P-t-P; CYD. THOMPSON, SALLY, Paris, Tex. Math., Zoology Chi Omega, treas., sch. rep., sr. key comm.; Honor Roll; AURH, rep.; Centennial Celebration; Gk. Wk., comm. chm.; IRC rep.; KU-Y, tutor; P-t-P; UP, rep.; CYR; NSF Undergrad. Grant; Rock Chalk Revue, bus. mgr.; SUA, tickets comm.; sr. cl. parties comm. Transfer, Randolph Macon Women ' s Coll.: newspaper, circ. mgr. THORPE, DAVID BRUCE, Jamestown, N. Y. Chem. Engr. AICHE. Transfer, Jamestown Comm. Coll.: Stu. Coun.; varsity basketball; ASTME Scholarship. TIETZE, JUDY, Shawnee Mission Art Eel. Pi Beta Phi, hist., soc. chm., prog. chin.; Angel Flight, rush chin., pl. trainer, exec. off.; Frosh Hawks; KU-Y; P-t-P; Ski Club, pub. chm.; Rock Chalk Revue, adv. TINDALL, JAMES MARTIN, Kansas City Bus. Admin. Honor Roll, one sem.; P-t-P; Phillips Petroleum Co. Scholarship. Transfer, Kansas City Jr. Coll.: P-t-P, v.p.; Phi Theta Kappa; Dean ' s Honor Roll. TINKLER, MARIANNE, Gypsum CO1111)1011, Learnings Alpha Phi, pl. cl. sch. chin., alumni rel. chin., soc. chin.; Honor Roll, one sem.; An gel Flight, information off., drill team; Frosh Hawks; MUN; Peace Corps, off. sec.; P-t-P; SUA, union open house hostess, mead jazz festi- val hostess; SNEA. TOPOROWSKI, THOMAS, Warrington, Pa. Psychology McCollum Hall, fl. intramural rep.; Ellsworth Hall, fl. soc. rep.; NROTC; ASTME; res. hall counselor. TRAMP, NANCY JANE, Kirkwood, Mo. Int. Design Alpha Delta Pi, pl. el. treas., chaplain, rep., hist., fr. fl. off.; Honor Roll, two sem.; Frosh Hawks; Jay Janes; Am. Inst. of Int. Design, v.p. TRAVIS, TYSON TUCKER, Lawrence German, Pol. Sci. Honor Roll, five sem.; AFROTC, fin. asst. prog., dist. mil. grad.; Arnold Air Soc.; German Club; Delta Phi Alpha; Versuch, ed.; German Summer Lang. Inst.; Schlegel-Carruth Award; Engle Award; honors prog. TRUELOVE, NANCY JAYNE, Burlington Elem. Ed. Alpha Phi, pl. cl. v.p.; Kallay Eilleeans, sec.; Peace Corps, sec.; Rock Chalk Revue; SUA; Vox, rep. TUCKER, THOMAS K., Winterset, Ia. Hist. of Art, Int. Design Templin Hall, fl. soc. chm., ball soc. chm., exec. bd.; AURH, soc. rep.; International Club; Spring Fling; KU Relays Comm.; SUA; Vox; Am. Inst. of Int. Design; Jr. Yr. Abroad in Denmark. Transfer, Northeast Mo. St. Coll.: Art Club; religious emphasis week comm. Southwest Mo. St. Coll. TUGGLE, DENNIS DAVIS, Cimarron Spanish Kappa Sigma; Honor Roll, one sem.; Rock Chalk Revue, In-Between-Acts; band; Span. Inst. in Mexico. TURESKI, JANIS SHARON, Camden, Ark. Art Ed. Delta Delta Delta; ASC, stu.-fac. orient. comm.; KU-Y, cab., spec. act. comm.; Chi Delphia; Vox; Art Ed. Club; Omega Tau Iota. TURNER, SARAH KATHLEEN, Wheaton, Ill. Elem. Eel. Alpha Delta Pi, asst. rush chm., member at large; Honor Roll, one sem.; Gk. Wk., exchange dinner comm. co- chin.; Crescents, rush chin.; SUA, elections night comm., earn. concess. comm.; UP; SNEA. TURRELL, LEMAN H., Shawnee Mission Accounting McCollum Hall; Honor Roll, three sem.; AFROTC, dist. grad.; men ' s residence hall counselor; Rock Chalk Re- vue; Beta Gamma Sigma; Arnold Air Soc. TYLER, TONI CAREN, Prairie Village Elem. Eel. Lewis Hall. UBAMADU, HYACINTH OZIRI, Owerri, Nigeria Personnel Admin. International Club; KU-Y; Soccer Club; YMCA; African Club; Newman Club; NCSS; NCTC; Phelps-Stoke Award. UHLIG, CAROL JANE, Kansas City French, Art Hist. Chi Omega, v.p.; Honor Roll, five sem.; AWS, foreign rel. comm.; KU-Y, tutor; Panhell., scholarship coun.; ASC, stu. adv. bd.; Phi Delta Phi; Phi Beta Kappa; French Summer Lang. Inst.; Woodrow Wilson nomin ee. Transfer, Kansas City, Kan., Jr. Coll.: Phi Theta Kappa. ULMER, NANCY LOUISE, Lawrence Mathematics Delta Delta Delta, intramural chin.; Honor Roll, one sem.; AWS, comm. chm., Bowling Assn.; Frosh Hawks; International Fest.; P-t-P, Ambassador Abroad, bd.; Women ' s Varsity Bowling team. 503 SENIORS 1967 UNDERKOFLER, QUENTIN, Overland Park Botany Transfer: football; Span. Club; Botany Club, UNDERWOOD, LEIGH M., Evergreen, Colo. Anthropology, East Asian Studies Honor Roll, two sem.; Nat. Defense Foreign Lang. Undergrad. Fellowship; Woodrow Wilson nominee; Chinese-Japanese Summer Lang. Inst. Transfer, Harding Coll.: Kappa Phi. UNDERWOOD, WILLIAM EDWARD JR., Carthage, Mo. Mathematics, Philosophy Honor Roll, two sem.; Phil. Club, pros.; Westinghouse Science Talent Search Scholarship; G.M. Coll. Scholar- ship; Scholarship Hall Award; Carnegie Undergrad. Research Fellowship; Woodrow Wilson nominee; Chinese- Japanese Summer Lang. Inst. UTZ, KRISTIN LEE, Independence Elem. Ed. Kappa Kappa Gamma, corr. sec., honor initiate; Honor Roll, six sem.; Angel Flight; AWS, high sch. leadership day steering comm.; Frosh Hawks; P-t-P; Rock Chalk Revue; Pi Lambda Theta; French Summer Lang. Inst. VAN BIBER, JAMES, Independence, Mo. Zoology Transfer, Graceland Coll.: Medical Sci. Club, pres.; Adv. Coun., chm.; Liahona Coll. Fellowship of Re- organ. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, treas. VAN EMAN, JACQUELINE R., Overland Park Education Res. ball, sr. asst., fl. off.; Honor Roll, one sem.; ASC, rep.; AURH, Spring Fling Coordinator; Frosh Hawks; Spring Fling; UP; Vox; fr. residence hall counselor. VARGAS, J. DAVID, San Jose, Costa Rica Theatre Design International Club, prog. chin.; International Fest., stage and dir. chin.; Men ' s Scholarship Hall Coun.; MUN, rep.; West Side Story; Hurricane Island; Two for the Seesaw; scholarship grant; Battenfeld Scholarship award. Transfer, Univ. of Costa Rica: theatre award. VARGAS, MANUEL JOSEPH, Topeka Interior Design Interior Design Club. VON BEHREN, OLIVER L., Martoch, Ill. Bus. Admin. Tau Kappa Epsilon; AFROTC; SUA; UP; CYR; Market- ing Club; ASCE; intramurals. VOSE, RICHARD KENT, Topeka Comm. Art Honor Roll, one sem.; Delta P hi Delta. Transfer, Wash- burn Univ. VRATIL, JOHN L., Lamed Mathematics Beta Theta Pi, pres., treas., intramural chm.; Honor Roll, four sem.; ASC, soc. comm., current events comm.; IFC, standards bd. chm., jud. coun., rush registration chm.; KU-Y; MUN; Rock Ch alk Revue, bus. staff; SUA, tickets sales comm.; Stu. Adv. Bd.; Stu. Ath. Bd., v.p.; Sr. Calendar Comm. chm.; SUA concert; Sachem; Beta Theta Pi Alumni Assn. Scholarship. VRBENEC, NORMAN JOHN, Kansas City Bus. Admin. Newman Club. Transfer, Kan. St. Univ.: Am. Market- ing Assn., sec.; Newman Club. VSETECKA, JUDITH KAYE, Kansas City Lang. Arts Sigma Kappa; Gk. Wk.; SUA; Vox; SNEA. WALKER, DOUGLAS, Belle Mead, N. J. Bus. Admin. Templin Hall, fl. soc. chm.; Honor Roll, one sem.; AFROTC, flight cmdr.; ASC, rep.; Little Brothers of Hermes; Vox, v.p. WALKER, JANE ELIZABETH, Hutchinson Elem. Ed. Alpha Omicron Pi, act., corr. sec.; AWS, rep.; KU-Y; MUN; Panhell.; UP; SNEA. WALLER, MARY LUCINDA, Girard Elem. Ed. Kappa Kappa Gamma, pl. cl. pres., pl. trainer; Honor Roll, three sem.; ASC, rep., elec. comm.; Frosh Hawks; Panhell.; SUA, bd. sec.; UP; Jayhawker, sec.; Cwens; Mortar Bd.; SUA earn. queen; Sweetheart of Sigma Chi. WALLER, SHERRIL IRENE, Hiawatha Lang. Arts Hashinger Hall. Transfer, St. Joseph Jr. Coll. WALSMAN, THOMAS, Kansas City, Mo. Arch. Templin Hall; Ski Club; LDS Inst. of Religion; AIR, sec.-treas.; Charles Haines Scholarship; Summer Arch. Inst. in France, Italy, Eng. Transfer, Colo. Coll.: Ski Club; Mountain Club. WALTERS, HAROLD DAVID, Kansas City Int. Rd. Templin Hall; CRC; KU-Y; P-t-P; Spring Fling; New- man Club. Transfer: Span. Club; Honor Roll. WARNER, CHARLES H., Wichita Bus. Admin. Sigma Chi, rush chm., pub. rel. chm., alumni rel. chm.; Rock Chalk Revue; sr. cl. comm. chm. WARNER, RICHARD BALLWEG, Lawrence English Alpha Tau Omega, act. sch. chin.; Honor Roll, seven sem.; CIB; SUA, bd., v.p., Festival of Arts, dir.; Union Operat ing Comm.; Univ. Disciplinary Comm.; Dean ' s Adv. Comm.; ASC, stu. adv. bd.; Sachem, pres.; Owl Society, pros.; French Summer Lang. Inst.; Jayhawker Hilltopper. WARREN, ANTHONY JACKSON, Lawrence Anthropology WARREN, BRUCE N., Emporia Int. Rel. Phi Delta Theta, alumni sec., pres.; Honor Roll, seven sem.; ASC, rep.; P-t-P, bd.; SUA, bd., treas.; Union Operating Comm.; UP, exec. comm.; Owl Soc.; Sachem; Phi Beta Kappa; Summerfield Scholar; Jayhawker Hill- topper; Pachacamac. WASINGER, WILLIAM JOSEPH, Council Bluff, Ia. Radio-TV-Film Phi Kappa Psi, pl. cl. sec.-treas.; AFROTC; John Out- land Memorial Scholarship; basketball. 504 1967 SENIORS S WAXSE, DAVID J., Oswego Int. Rel. Delta Upsilon, pl. trainer, sr. coun., exec. coun.; Honor Roll, one sem.; International Club; International Fest., steering comm.; MUN; P-t-P, pres., bd.; Ski Club; Stu. Commun. Bd.; SUA, pres., bd.; Union Operating Comm.; Univ. Review; Sachem; Owl Society; Outland Scholarship; varsity football; Jayhawker Hilltopper. WEAST, THOMAS, Kansas City, Mo. Mech. Engr. Joseph R. Pearson Hall; Honor Roll, three sem.; Tau Beta Pi; Pi Tau Sigma; Forney Engr. Scholarship; ASME. Transfer, Metropolitan Jr. Coll.: Phi Theta Kappa; Mo. Soc. of Prof. Engr. WEAVER, DAVID 0., Wichita Pharmacy Joseph R. Pearson Hall; CYR; Am. Pharm. Assn. WEBB, WILLIAM F., Rolla Architecture Honor Roll, one sem.; Tau Sigma Delta; Smith, Smith, Walker, and Haines Scholarship. WEBER, JOHN, Shawnee Mission Chem. Engr. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, warden; SUA, modern lit. forum; ASCE. WEBER, WILLIAM CHARLES, Wichita Bus. Admin. Theta Chi, alumni corr. chm., house mgr., summer rush ohm., treas., pl. marshal ' , soc. chm.; Honor Roll, one sem.; ASC, pub. rel. comm.; MUN; SUA; Alpha Kappa Psi. WEINER, DONALD MARK, Overland Park Hist., Human Rel., Speech Commun. Joseph R. Pearson Hall, wing rep., elec. comm.; Grace Pearson Hall; AURH; College Bowl; MUN; intramurals; swimming team. WEINHOLD, FRANK RAY, Salina Civil. Engr. ASCE. Transfer, Sterling Coll.: varsity football, varsity track; Drama Club; yearbook photo.; Int. Rel. Club; Young Christians Club; Dean ' s Honor Roll, two sem. WEINSTEIN, CHARLES, Overland Park Psychology Tau Kappa Epsilon, pres., sec., host.; UP; CYR. WEIRICH, LUCIA LEA, Council Grove Soc. Work Hashinger Hall, staff asst.; Honor Roll, one sem.; AURH; AWS; Campus Crusade for Christ; Spring Fling, co- chm.; UP. WEISPFENNING, ELAINE, Winchester Soc. Studies McCollum Hall, treas.; bowling assn. WELLS, SHARON SUE, Winfield French, Eng. Ed. Sigma Kappa, rush chin., pres.; Honor Roll, three sem.; Panhell., sec.; Pi Delta Phi; SNEA; French Club; French Summer Lang. Inst. WENGLER, DIANE KIRK, Hutchinson Elem. Ed. Kappa Alpha Theta, honor initiate; Honor Roll; AWS, high school leadership day; P-t-P; Rock Chalk Revue; N Lambda Theta. WENTZ, RALPH DAVID, Leavenworth Hist., Int. Rel. Beta Theta Pi; KU-Y; Rock Chalk Revue; fr. baseball. WESCOE, BARBARA E., Lawrence Soc. Studies Pi Beta Phi, pl. cl. pres., recomm. chm.; AWS, orien. comm., high sch. leadership day hostess., recognition clay comm.; Sisters of the Maltese Cross; Chi Delphia; fr. res. hall counselor; Previews counselor. Transfer, Indiana Univ.: res. ball, Md. bd., exec. bd. WESTER, GENE WARD, Mankato Elec. Engr. Honor Roll, eight sem.; Eta Kappa Nu, pres., corr. sec.; Tau Beta Pi; IEEE; Summerfield Scholarship; G.M. Scholarship; Schlumberger Collegiate award; William J. Squire award; Greater Univ. Fund Scholarship; Phillips Prof. Develop. Award nominee. Transfer, Ft. Hays St. Coll.: Outstanding Fr. in Math. Award; Out- standing Soph. in Physics award; Boeing Scholarship. WHALEN, JANET SUE, Wichita Psychology Naismith Hall, res. asst.; Hashinger Hall, house improve- ment comm. chin.; Honor Roll, four sem.; AURH, housing bd.; AWS, house of rep., rules chm., Smop comm.; Rifle Club; Rifle Team, Women ' s; Em- peror Jones; showcase plays; Peace Corps; UP; Psi Chi; Naismith residence hall counselor. Transfer, Wichita St. Univ.: CYR; theatrical work; Rifle Team, Women ' s. WHEATLEY, JAMES WALTER, Garden City Pharmacy Tau Kappa Epsilon, pres., pl. trainer, sch. chm., sgt.-at- arms; Honor Roll, three sem.; College Bowl; IFC; UP; CYR; Am. Pharm. Assn., pres.; NSF Grant. WHEATLEY, SUZANN WHITE, Hutchinson Pharmacy Hashinger Hall, fl. pres., standards bd., hostess comm., staff asst.; Honor Roll, one sem.; CYR; Am. Pharm. Assn., treas.; Kappa Epsilon, sec., chaplain. WHITE, ALICE, San Diego, Calif. Russian, Spanish Chi Omega, recoil). chm.; Honor Roll, five sem.; Frosh Hawks; P-t-P; KU-Y, tutor; AWS, high sch. leadership clay steering comm. and hostess; SUA, hose. comm.; Phi Beta Kappa; Woodrow Wilson nominee; Span. Summer Lang. Inst.; Russ ian Lang. Inst. WHITE, V. KATHLEEN, Lawrence Comm. Art, Fashion Illus. International Club, pub. chm.; International Fest., pub., Dubke dancing; KU-Y; MUN, rep.; theatrical work. H WHITENIGHT, KENNETH, Lawrence History Sigma Chi; Honor Roll, one sem.; IFC, rushbook ed., rep., treas., v.p.; KU Relays Comm.; Rock Chalk Re- vue; CYR; Pl. Coun., pres.; Jayhawker; homecoming queen comm. chin.; Pachacamac. WHITNEY, WAYNE, Lawrence Personnel Admin. Bus. Sch. Conn.; Kicks Band; CYR; Delta Sigma Pi. WICHMAN, KENNETH, Blue Rapids Arch. 505 SENIORS 1967 WIDICK, PAUL E., Atchison Hist., Int. Rel. Alpha Tau Omega; Honor Roll, two sem.; College Bowl; Minority Opinions Forum; P-t-P, hooks for people comm. chm.; Rock Chalk Revue, comm.; SUA; UP, soc. comm.; CYR; Woodrow Wilson nominee; teaching asst.; honors in hist., int. rel. WIEBE, PATRICIA ANN, Lawrence Int. Design Corbin Hall; AIID; Alpha Alpha Gamma. WILBURN, Joyce Elaine, Lawrence Sociology CRC; College Bowl; Gk. Wk.; International Club; P- t-P; Alpha Kappa Alpha; Ivy Leaf Club, SOC. chm., Dean of Pledges. WILES, HARRY GORDON, Topeka Bus. Admin. Delta Tau Delta, pl. cl. soc. bd. of cl. off.; Bus. Sch. Cozen.; sr. cl. pres.; Vox; CYD; Delta Sigma Pi, corr. sec . WILEY, BARBARA KAY, Basehor Span., Int. Rel. Sellards Hall, treas., v.p.; Honor Roll, four sem.; MUN; State of Kan. Scholarship; Scholarship Hall. Award; Educ. Opportunities Grant; Undergrad. Research Asst.; Dean ' s Honor Roll; French Summer Lang. Inst. WILKERSON, JAMISON LYNN, Overland Park English Alpha Chi Omega, pres., Lyre ed.; Honor Roll, one sem.; KU-Y; Panhell., treas.; Rock Chalk Revue; Tau Sigma. WILLE, BARBARA ANN, Park Ridge, Ill. Design, Weaving Alpha Delta Pi, rep., hist.; ASC, pub. rel. comm.; Jay Janes; fr. res. hall counselor; fr. res. hall sr. asst. WILLETT, GARY WAYNE, Kansas City Indus. Admin. CYR; IEEE; ASTME. WILLIAMS, CARL D., Wichita Radio-TV-Film, Adv. Kappa Sigma; AROTC; Alpha Delta Sigma. WILLIAMS, CLYDE HAROLD, Prairie Village Zoology McCollum Hall, res. ball counselor, stu. coun.; intra- mural basketball; Honor Roll, two sem.; Spring Fling, coordinating comm.; UP; CYR. WILLIAMS, KITTIE LEE, Pittsburg German Kappa Kappa Gamma; Honor Roll, one sem.; KU-Y, fr. camp counselor; P-t-P, comm. work; SUA, comm. work; German Club; German Summer Lang. Inst. Schol- arship. Transfer, Christian Coll.: soph. cl. pres.; Honor Roll, four sem.; school paper, bus. mgr.; drama prod.; singing ensemble; Phi Theta Kappa; res. hall corm.; scholarship. WILLIAMS, LAWRENCE ERWIN, Iola English Vox; CYR; Mu Epsilon Nu, sec.; SNEA; KSTA. Trans- fer, Allen County Comm. Jr. Coll.: P-t-P, pres.; Bd. of Educ. Scholarship; stu. coml. WILLIAMS, RONAL D RAY, Overland Park Bus. Admin. Honor Roll, six sem.; Bus. Sch. Conn., rep., course and fac. excellence comm. WILLIAMSON, PEGGY JO, Salina Elem. Ed. Lewis Hall. Transfer, Emporia St. Teachers Coll. WILSON, BEVERLY KAY, Hutchinson Sec. Ed., Eng. College Bowl; KU-Y, children ' s hour; MUN, steering comm.; CYR; Jayhawker. WILSON, CAROLYN REA, Raytown, Mo. Fashion Illus. Honor Roll. WILSON, HARRY OLIVER, Concordia Bus. Admin. WILSON, TERRY GAYLE, Concordia Arch. Design Scarab, pl. trainer. WINTERS, LINDA ANN, Lawrence Elem. Ed. Honor Roll, two sem.; Pi Lambda Theta; Sigma Alpha Iota; Concert Choir. WISDOM, ROBERT ROLAND, Shawnee Mission Pity. Ed., Biol. Sci. Rugby Club, adv. bd., eastern spring trip. Transfer, Baker Univ.: football; track; football scholarship; Delta Tau Delta. WITT, S. DOUGLAS, Boulder, Colo. Psy., Int. Rel. McCollum Hall, asst. res. dir., res. dir.; AURH; KU-Y, fac. firesides, skeptics corner; Vox, platform comm.; Woodrow Wilson nominee; Ellsworth Hall, res. hall counselor, res. dir., hall congress, jud. bd. chm. WOOD, TERRANCE MICHAEL, Topeka English AROTC; International Club; Ski Club; CYR; Newman Club; Young Am. for Freedom. WOODCOCK, JEANINE MARIE, Shawnee Mission Speech Correction Lewis Ha11; Coun. for Except. Child.; SNEA; CEC. Transfer, Metro. Jr. Coll.: Dean ' s Honor Roll, two sem.; yearbook, co-ed. WOOTON, SHANI KATHRYN, Emporia English Delta Gamma, first v.p., standards bd. chm.; AWS, reg. Panhell., standards bd. elms.; Rock Chalk Revue; Vox; Jayhawker. 506 1967 SENIORS WORLEY, R. COURTNEY, Severy Soc. Studies Kappa Sigma, parliamentarian, guard; Rock Chalk Revue; Vox; CYR. Transfer, Univ. of Wash., Seattle: mock pol. cony. WORTMAN, CAROLYN KAY, Atchison Elem. Ed. Hashinger Hall, sen. fl.; AWS; Ski Club; SUA, earn. comm.; Pi Lambda Theta. Transfer, Baker Univ.: Delta Delta Delta; SNEA; gen. scholarship. WORTMAN, MARGARET, Chanute Soc., Psychology Lewis Hall, Hosp. Comm., Commun. Comm.; MC; AURH; Spring Fling, steering comm.; UP; Newman Club. WRIGHT, GARY LEE, Wichita Elec. Engr. Ellsworth Hall, exec. coma. rep.; Templin Hall, coun- selor; Honor Roll, five sem.; Eta Kappa Nu, treas.; Tau Beta Pi; Sigma Tau; Chi Alpha, pies.; IEEE; Sum- merfield Scholarship; honors scholarship; Vendo Engr. Scholarship; Elec. Engr. Dept. teaching asst. WRIGHT, GARY LLOYD, Wichita Ada:., Bus. UDK, bus. mgr., promotion mgr., bus. comm., news comm.; Alpha Delta Sigma, comm. sec. WULF, WALTER, Humboldt Speech Communication Pi Kappa Alpha, alumni sec., soc. chin., rush chm., v.p., pres.; AROTC; IFC; MUN; SUA; Vox. YOUNG, HENRY ADAM, Shawnee Mission Pol. Sci. Phi Kappa Psi; Honor Roll, two sem.; varsity basketball. YOUNG, JAN KAY, De Kalb, Ill. Art Ed. YEAGER, RICHARD ALLAN, Lamed English Delta Upsilon, intramural clam., alumni chm., sr. coun., v.p.; P-t-P, job placement comm.; SUA, quarter- back club, summer bd. rec. fr. football. YOWELL, LINDA SUE, McPherson Occupational Therapy Lewis Hall; Honor Roll, two sem.; AWS, del.; College Bowl; KU-Y, sen.; Spring Fling, coordinator; Lee Miller Scholarship; Elisa Morgan Scholarship. ZIMMERMAN, JANE ANNE, Ft. Scott Lang. Arts Watkins Hall, treas.; Honor Roll, six sem.; ASC, campus chest comm.; AURH, pub. comm.; College Bowl, pub. comm.; MUN; SUA, pub. clam.; Pi Lambda Theta; Pi Beta Phi Ed. Fund Scholarship; Scholarship Hall Award; Greater Univ. Scholarship. Transfer, Coe Coll.: Alpha Lambda Delta. ANDERSON, MARGARET, Emporia Nursing Hashinger Hall, fl. soc. clam.; Caduceus Capers; Nurses Club; sr. cl. v.p., soc. clam. BARTOS, PAMELA, Grandview, Mo. Nursing Res. hall counselor; Stu. Conn., soc. comm.; Sigma Theta Tau; Loomis Scholarship; Stephen Buf ton Me- morial Ed. Award. Transfer, Metro. Jr. Coll.: Phi Theta Kappa; Altrusa Scholarship. BILDERBACK, BARBARA, Coffeyville Nursing GSP Hall, fl. pres.; jr. el. sec.; Caduceus Capers; Stu. Coun., corr. sec.; Nurses Club, sec, v.p. BOUSKA, CARLA ANN, Wilson Nursing Hon or Roll, two sem.; Newman Club; Arm Nurses Assn.; Chorale Group; Am. Heart Assn. Scholarship; Am. Bus. Women ' s Assn.; Endowment Fund Scholar- ship; Prof. Nurse Traineeship Grant; Sigma Theta Tau; Kan. St. Stu. Nurses ' Assn., pres. Transfer, Marymount: Honor Roll, two sem.; scholarship. St. Joseph School of Nursing: stu. body, pres.; Spring Queen; Am. TB Scholarship. BOUSKA, GAYLENE MARIE, Wilson Nursing Honor Roll, two sem.; Am. Heart Assn. Scholarship; Prof. Nurse Traineeship Grant; Newman Club; Am. Nurses ' Assn.; Sigma Theta Tau. Transfer, Marymount Coll.: Honor Roll, six sem.; Kan. St. Stu. Nurse Assn., pres.; International Coun. of Nurses, chm.; jr. and sr. cl. v.p.; May Crowning Queen attendant; Russell Co. Nurses Club Scholarship. BRILL, PATRICIA, Lewis Nursing Miller Hall, asst. soc. chin.; Honor Roll, two sem.; Frosh Hawks; Little Sisters of the Maltese Cross; Jay Janes; CYD; Scholarship Hall Award. BURKLE, SUZI CORPORON, Ponca City, Okla. Nursing Jr. Nursing Cl., soc. P-t-P; Stu. Body, rec. sec.; Caduceus Capers, script comm.; chorus; Canter- bury Assn.; Kan. St. Stu. Nurses Assn.; Nurses Club. Transfer, Phillips Univ.: Comet Club. COFFEL, JUDY, LaCygne Nursing Caduceus Capers; Nurses Club, pres., reporter. DARST, ELAINE, Bucklin Nursing Caduceus Capers. DODGE, JANET, Kansas City, Mo. Nursing Alpha Delta Pi, Sr. cl. pres.; Frosh Hawks; Caduceus Capers; Vox; chorus; Kan. St. Stu. Nurses Assn. EDDY, CHERYL, Salina Alpha Phi; Cwens; Caduceus Capers; Stu. Conn. FITTELL, CAROL, Olathe Nursing Caduceus Capers, asst. producer. Transfer, Kan. St. Univ.: Honor Roll; Omicron Nu Theta; intramural sports; Home Ec. open house. GEITZ, JANICE E., Horton Nursing Women ' s res. hall., fl. off.; Honor Roll, eight sem.; Caduceus Capers, asst. dir., script comm.; Nurses Club, pres., treas.; nursing cl. pies.; Stu. Union rep.; Stu. Coun.; Sigma Theta Tau Scholarship Award; Undergrad. Academic Award in Zool.; summer res. hall counselor. 507 SENIORS 1967 GENTHER, LILLIAN, Prairie Village Nursing Lewis Hall; IRC; KU-Y, stu. teach. asst. prog.; Caduceus Capers. GRIFFITH, RUTH, Hill City Nursing Alpha Delta Pi, asst. house mgr.; Honor Roll, two sem.; Stu. Commun. Bd.; Nurses Club, prog. chm.; Kan. St. Stu. Nurses Assn., state treas.; honor prog.; Stu. Nurse of the Year. HIGBEE, JEAN, Williamsburg Nursing Caduceus Capers; Stu. Coun., treas.; Nurses Club, v.p., sec. KIPPER, LINDA, Kansas City Nursing Caduceus Capers; CYR; Nurses Club. Transfer, Auburn Univ.: debate; debate club; Newman Club, prog. elms.; Town Girl ' s Club. LACKEY, KAREN, Meade Nursing Caduceus Capers, comm. Transfer, Southwestern Coll.: Women ' s chorus; chapel choir; achievement scholarship. LARSON, DOROTHY, Kansas City, Mo. Nursing LARSON, MARTHA, Kansas City Nursing Delta Delta Delta; Caduceus Capers, asst. bus. mgr.; Kan. St. Stu. Nurses Assn. MARQUARDT, DEANNA KAY, Wichita Nursing Honor Roll, two sem.; Frosh Hawks; Crescents; Caduceus Capers, costume comm.; Jayhawker; Nurses Club, soc. ohm.; stu. body, v.p.; house comm. chm.; Nursing Scholarship. MASER, CYNTHIA, Shawnee Mission Nursing Honor Roll, one sem.; Caduceus Capers; CYD; Nurses Club. Transfer, Stephens Coll.: community service cl ub; soc. sorority. MAYERS, CAROL S., Osborne Nursing Watkins Hall; Honor Roll, one sem.; Caduceus Capers, set comm.; Nurses Club; Kan. St. Stu. Nurses Assn.; Newman Club; State of Kan. Scholarship; gen. scholar- ship. MCKILLOP, BETSY, Topeka Nursing Kappa Kappa Gamma; stu. coup., soc. comm. chm.; Nurses Club. OPOCENSKY, PHYLLIS, Cuba Nursing Sr. cl. sec.; Caduceus Capers, costume comm. chm.; Stu. Coun., prof. organizations comm.; Kan. St. Stu. Nurses Assn.; Nat. Stu. Nurses sec., v.p. PARKISON, LYNDA, Overland Park Nursing Lewis Hall, rec. comm.; Spring Fling; Stu. Coun., soc. comm.; Jayhawker, nursing ed.; Nurses Club, treas.; March of Dimes Scholarship; US Navy Corps Candidate Prog., ensign. RAYNIER, CECILIA, Lamed Nursing Caduceus Capers. Transfer, Kan. St. Univ.: Delta Zeta, house mgr.; mock pol. congress, house rep. RILEY, RUTH, Luray Nursing Caduceus Capers. RINKER, GERI, Vermillion, S. D. Nursing Rifle Club; Rifle Team, Women ' s; Jayhawker; Stu. Coun., house comm.; Nurses Club; UCCF, sec.; Am. Heart Assn. Scholarship; US Navy Nurse Corps Candi- date Prog., ensign. SMASAL, VALERIE, Kansas City, Mo. Nursing Alpha Delta Pi, house mgr.; Honor Roll; AWS, all women ' s day comm.; MUN; SUA, hosp. comm.; Jay- hawker; Undergrad. Research Grant; Am. Assn. of Univ. Women Scholarship. STEUDTNER, CHERYL, Wichita Nursing Alpha Phi; jr. cl. v.p.; KU-Y; Stu. Coun., prof. organi- zation comm.; Jayhawker; Nurses Club. STINSON, MARGARET JEAN, Wilson Nursing Sellards Hall. STOTT, JAN C LAIR, Kansas City Nursing Caduceus Capers; P-t-P; Stu. Coun., ' hist.; Kan. St. Stu. Nurses Assn. TATE, MARY ELSIE, Prairie Village Nursing Alpha Omicron Pi, pl. cl. pres., honor initiate; Honor Roll, eight sem.; AWS, area women ' s stu. government comm.; Caduceus Capers, bus. mgr.; Sigma Theta Tau; Roger Williams Fellowship; honor scholarship; Watkins Scholarship; Sigma Theta Tau Nursing Stu. Award; con- cert band; Med. Center Symph.; Speech Potpourri Winner. TAYLOR, SHARON RUTH, Kansas City Nursing Frosh Hawks. WALLINGSFORD, CAROLJANE, Wellington Nursing Watkins FIall; sr. nursing cl. treas.; Frosh Hawks; Caduceus Capers, properties chm.; Kan. St. Stu. Nurses Assn.; Nurses Club; Scholarship Hall Award. 508 GRADUATION 1967. Two graduates stop for a picture near Jayhawk Boulevard before ceremonies in Memorial Stadium. CLASS OF 1967 COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN. STANDING, ToP Row. Judy Stitt, Prairie Village; Marie McMorris, Leawood; Judy Ericson, Leavenworth; Betsy Jensen, Kansas City; Patty Gilliland, Hutchinson; Deedra Lucas, Chanute. STANDING, BOTTOM Row. Jim Huntington, Bartlesville, Okla.; Dan Kasper, Overland Park; Linda Boone, Eureka; Don Hunter, Abilene; Jim Grumpier, Sharon Springs; Mike Spencer, Overland Park; Mason McIntire, Oregon, Mo.; Kirk Flury, Kansas City. SEATED. Harry Wiles, Topeka; R. A. Edwards, Kansas City; Joe Walstad, Joplin, Mo.; Chuck Warner, Wichita; Rick Harrington, Terre Haute, Ind.; Jim Brenner, Parsons. 509 THE BACCALAUREATE PROCESSION, led by Chancellor Wescoe and speaker Dr. L. Arden Alniquist, winds past the Campanile to Memorial Stadium. PREPARING FOR KU ' S NINETY-FIFTH COMMENCEMENT EXERCISES, seniors fit caps and gowns in Hoch Auditorium. 510 INDEX 511 Grv Abernathy, Rick 131 Acacia 26, 274 Adams, John 431 Adams, Lee 414, 422 Adams, Mel 323 Adams, Steve 294 Agee, Warren K. 60 Albee, Edward 383 Albrecht, William P. 72 Alderson, Donald K. 42 Allen, Mark 428 Almquist, L. Arden 510 Alpha Chi Omega 256,261 Alpha Delta Pi 257, 262 Alpha Delta Sigma 340 Alpha Epsilon Pi 27, 275 Alpha Gamma Delta 257, 263 Alpha Kappa Lambda 27, 276 Alpha Kappa Psi 340 Alpha Omicron Pi 257, 264 Alpha Phi 258, 265 Alpha Phi Omega 326 Alpha Tau Omega 27, 277, 449 American Institute of Archi- tects 334 American Pharmaceutical As- sociation 338 Anderson, Drew 379, 437 Anderson, Kenneth 54 Anderson, TOM 117, 131 An Evenings Frost 384 Angel Flight 354 Applegate, Mal 323 Ard, Gamy 414, 422 Argersinger, W. J. 43 Army ROTC 350-352 Arndt, Howard 360 Arnold Air Society 354 Ascanio, Gary 431 Ashurst, Steve 423 Askins, Jim 428 Associated Women Students 308 Avery, William 211 Balcombe, Doug 307 Ball, Cheri 460 Ball, Tom 131 Basie, Count 385 Bass, William 53 Bates, Parmalee 215 Battenfeld Hall 35, 176 Bayless, Pam 220 Beach, Terry 394 Bell, Aldon 13, 218, 458 Bell, Greg 428 Bentley, Kathy 436 Berg, Wendy 291 Beta Sigma Psi 278 Beta Tau 432 Beta Theta Pi 28, 279 Biles, Blake 435 Billings, Robert 45 Bishard, Tom 431 Bock, Paul 392 Bohnenstiehl, Rodger 363 Boone, Linda 509 Borders, Mike 427 Bornkessel, Dick 422 Bouda, Dave 130 Bowling Association 327 Bowser, Tom 428 Boyle, Jim 428 Bray, Shelley 436 Brenner, Jim 509 Brinkerhoff, William 77 Brown, Charles F. Jr. 77 Buda, Sandy 131, 431 Buethe, Doug 429 Bunn, Marcia 459 Burdick, Mike 423 Burgardt, Jeanie 461 Burge, Frank 48 Business Students Association 312 Butler, Bob 437 Butler, Thermus 130 Byers, George 414, 417, 422 Calderwood, Natalie 389 Callahan, Julia 87 Christensen, Keith 130 Coan, Clark 45 Corbin Hall 15-17 Crenshaw, Clayton 216 Campus Chest 327 Carrel, Rolla 282 Casady, John 459 Cheerleaders 314 Chi Delphia 343 Chi Omega 258, 266 Class of 1967 310 Class of 1968 311 Class of 1970 311 Collegiate Young Republicans 307 Cooper, Sherril 436 Cordill , Randy 431 Cowen, Trish 392 Cunningham, Glen 373 Cupp, Liz 436 Crescents 344 Cricket Club 328 Grumpier, Jim 509 Dahl, Grant 129 Dallam, Jo 440 Daniel, Bob 428 Davis, Paul 436 Debate 325 DeBann, Bill 427 De la Torre, Rey 380 Delta Chi 28, 280 Delta Delta Delta 258, 267 Delta Gamma 259, 268 Delta Sigma Phi 28, 281 Delta Sigma Rho 325 Delta Tau Delta 29, 282 Delta Upsilon 29, 283 Denk, Gerald 429 Dercher, Larry 130 DiBiase, Tom 130 Dickson, Cindy 211 Di Giovanni, Pete 242 Dixon, Wayne 429 Dobyns, Ralph 170 Douglass, Bob 130 Douthart Hall 172 Doyle, Mickey 131 Earp, Cindy 376 Eckland, Bruce 376 Edgar, Tom 393 Edwards, R. A. 509 Elias, Jeff 131 Ellsworth Hall 197-200 Engineering School Council 313 Engles, Renetta 437 Ericson, Judy 509 Eslinger, Robert Jr. 77 Estes, Greg 429 Eta Kappa Nu 335 Evans, Bill 380 Evilsizer, Robert 431 Fall Repertory Festival 86 Faust, Judy 463 Fenton, Bill 125 Fisher, Steve 428 Fleskes, Mickey 428 Flury, Kirk 509 Fogleman, Larry 436 Franz, Ron 364 Frosh Hawks 316 Fuller, Max 45 Gallup, Nancy 221 Gamma Alpha Chi 339 Gamma Phi Beta 259, 269, 448 Geer, Will 384 Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall 18-21 Gibbs, Bev 297 Giele, Katherine 48 Gill, Linda 245 Gilliland, Patty 509 Gillispie, Jim 429 Godfrey, Joe 437 Gorton, Thomas 64 Grace Pearson Hall 177 Graham, Dale 248 Graves, David 435 Gray, Bev 436 Green, Don 391 Greene, Bill 130 Greene, John 129 Gregg, Gary 92 Gribben, Gary 436 Griffin, Sean 87 Grindal, Curt 137, 423 Grossman, Steve 216, 461 Gunn, James 44 Haggart, Ted 222 Flail, Dave 461 Hamilton, Drew 416, 422 Hardin, Cindy 465 Harmon, Phil 364 Harrington, Rick 93, 509 Harvey, George 122 Hashinger Hall 181-184 Hayes, Mike 137, 422, 443 Haynes, Clarence 424 Heck, Steve 130 Heinz, Curt 377 Heller, Francis H. 43 Hemphill, Richard 429 FIemy, Alice 245 Horowitz, Sharon 379 Hill, John 460 Hirt, Al 213 Hitt, Alan 462 Hitt, James K. 45 Hixon, J. C. 131 Hord, Glenda 92 House, Kay 269 Hunt, Bill 122, 131 Hunter, Don 509 Huntington, Jim 509 Hurley, Jack 86 Hutchings, Bill 428 Hutchins, Pat 11 India Club 341 Jackson, John 118, 131 Jackson, Roger 431 James, John 429 Jay Janes 315 Jenkins, Donald 10 Jensen, Betsy 509 Deter, Chris 428 Johnson, Ken 131 Jolliffe Hall 35, 178 Jones, Chuck 382 Jones, Gordon 326 Joseph R. Pearson Hall 204 Julian, Randy 424 Kallay Filleeans 345 Kampschroeder, Halley 131 Kanter, Sid 427 Kappa Alpha Theta 259, 270 Kappa Eta Kappa 343 Kappa Kappa Gamma 260, 271 Kappa Sigma 29, 284 Kasper, Dan 509 Kathol, Roger 11 Kearns, Mike 137, 423 Keller, Jim 427 Kelly, William L. 45 Kerby, Linda 437 Kilroy, Jack 427 Kirk, Jacki 377 Kitchen, Laura 82 Kraemer, Chuck 377 Kreutzer, Bob 130 KUOK 324 KU-Y 320 Lain, Jurahee 378 Lambda Chi Alpha 30, 285 Lawner, George 67 Lawton, Keith 44 Lewis Hall 185-187, 447 Lillard, Sallie 436 Little Sisters of Areta 346 Little Sisters of Minerva 344 Livingston, Robert 428 Lockwood, Robert 429 Logan, James K. 74 Lucas, Deedra 509 Lynch, Bill 131 Macauley, John 71 Mackey, Doug 436 Macklux, Bill 431 Maher, Linda 462 Mansfield, Dave 137, 423 Marat-Sade 387 Marsolais, Ken 386 Martin, Dick 429 Martin, John 287 Meade, Julio 11, 424 Meisingcr, Mark 428 Melcher, Kathy 214 Mendenhall, Janice 436 Merchant, Jim 428 Meredith, Sue 282 Meyer, Jo Ann 435 Meyer, Steve 435 Military Ball 356 Miller Hall 25, 173 Miller, Nancy 287 Miller, Pat 373 Miner, Bob 307 Miner, Hugh 428 Miranda, Sam 367 Mitchell, Burt 379 Mitchell, Jack 132 Moffatt, Robert 431 Monsees, Jan 438,-439 Montgomery, Harold 125, 131 Moon, Steve 422 Moore, William J. 70 Morgan, Dave 126 Morgenthaler, Erie 463 Mortar Board 330 Mosier, John 134 Mossberg, Howard 62 Mu Epsilon Nu 342 Mu Phi Epsilon 336 McCabe, Joan 323 McCammon, Cindy 435 McCauley, Charlie 248 McClain, Dave 245 McClain, Gene 137, 423 McCollum Hall 188-193 NIcCool, Pete 291 McDonald, Linda 214 McGhee, Judy 436 McGuire, Joseph W. 68 McIntire, Mason 509 McLean, Charles 326 McMorris, Marie 509 Pakistan Students Association 342 Parachute Club 329 Patterson, Kay 94 Paulsen, Mary Lou 245 Payne, Wes 376 Pearse, Anne 436 Pearson Hall 35, 179 Peck, Dwight 422 Pennington, Don 428 People-to-People 321 Perry, Bill 131 Perry, Robert 429 Pershing Rifles 355 Peters, Dave 245 Peterson, Bruce 122, 130 Petroleum Engineers 334 Petterson, Mike 137, 423 Peuter, Kit 440 Pharmacy Wives 339 Phi Delta Theta 30, 286 Phi Chi Theta 337 Phi Gamma Delta 30, 287, 411 Phi Kappa Psi 31, 288 Phi Kappa Sigma 31, 289 Phi Kappa Tau 31, 290 Phi Kappa Theta 32, 291 Phi Mu Alpha 335 Pi Beta Phi 260, 272 Pi Kappa Alpha 32, 292, 449 Pierce, Sue 379 Pitts, Cecily 464 Porter, Margie 440 Prager, Jim 220 Price, Will 377 Proctor, Goody 342 Pyle, Steve 429 Quack Club 329 Rawlings, Roger 131 Rea, Tom 217 Reed, John 242 Renstrom, Karen 443 Rho Chi 338 Biggins, Junior 130 Roach, Nick 47 Robinson, Bill 464 Rodgers, Frank Pepper 133 Rogers, Becky 393 Bogus, Jeannie 263 Rogosin, Lionel 381 Rood, Stan 429 Royce, Pat 85 Russell, Allen 422 Ryun, Jim 137, 373, 414, 420, 423 Sachem 331 Saffels, Suzanne 436 Scabbard and Blade 355 Scarab 334 Scheufelc, Lynn 441 School for Scandal 217 Sears, Bob 462 Secret Seven 342 Sellards Hall 26, 174 Shaffer, Harry 91 Shankel, Delbert 455 Shanklin, Don 117, 118, 121, 125, 129 Shapely, Carol 10 Shaver, Connie 88 Shawger, Fred 130 Sheahon, Mike 137 Shields, Wayne 429 Shramek, Jay 427 Sigma Alpha Epsilon 32, 293 Sigma Alpha Iota 336 Sigma Chi 33, 294, 448 Sigma Gamma Tau 333 Sigma Kappa 260, 273 Sigma Nu 33, 295 Sigma Phi Epsilon 33, 296 Sigma Psi 341 Sigma Tau 333 Silverberg, Steve 423 Simon, Jay 47 Simpson, Tom 163 Sisters of the Maltese Cross 345 Skahan, Bob 118, 121, 129, 431 Ski Club 328 Slicker, Richard 431 Sloan, Bruce 362 Smith, George B. 44 Smith, William P. 58 Snow White 215 Society of Pachacamac 346 Speer, Andrea 465 Spencer, Mike 378, 509 Steinhoff, Bob 373, 422 Stephenson Hall 36, 180, 411 Stewart, Chuck 463 Stimson, Cole 430, 431 Stinson, Wade R. 46 Stitt, Judy 509 Stoike, Alan 431 Stokstad, Marilyn 90 Strayer, Kathy 436 Stroup, Randy 430, 431 Student Government 303 Student Union Activities 318 Stuhl, Raymond 390 Sturdy, Rob 436 Surface, James R. 43 Sweatman, Mike 122, 130 Swope, Donna 269 Sweethearts of Sigma Chi 345 Talleur, john 219 Tau Beta Pi 332 Tau Kappa Epsilon 34, 297 Tau Sigma 339 Taylor, Denny 253 Taylor, Emily 42 Templin Hall 205-208, 447 Terry, Bill 427 Theatre USA 214 The Magic Flute 452 The Rehearsal 87 The Rogues ' Trial 216 The Wicked Cooks 453 Theta Chi 34, 298 Theta. Tau 299 Timmons, Bob 136 Tisdall, Sue 86, 217 Triangle 34, 300 Turck, John 423 Turgeon, Orville 130 Turtle, Julie 83 Tyler, Sue 356 University Daily Kansan 322 Vanoy, Vernon 362, 364 Van Slyke, Tom 428 Van Vleck, Fred 456 Vox Populi 314 Waggoner, George R. 50 Waldron, Brent 436 Walker, Howard 49 Walsh, Steve 431 Walstad, Joe 509 Warner, Chuck 509 Warner, Dick 221 Warren, Bruce 222 Watkins Hall 26, 175 Waxe, Dave 94, 131 Weinlood, Susan 88 Wertzberger, Ken 130 Wescoe, W. Clarke 38, 39, 412, 443, 510 White, Gene 306 White, Jo-Jo 360, 365 White, Larry 129 Wiles, Harry 509 Willey, Daryl 297 Wilson, Bob 361 Wilson, Bob G. 428 Wilson, J. J. 44 Winkler, Ellen 269 Wintermote, Dick 45 Woelk, Larry 137 Wohlford, Bill 122, 129, 394 Wolf, George A. 78 Women ' s Recreation Associa- tion 337 Wood, David 431 Wood, Keith 326 Woodruff, Laurence 42 Woodsma11, Pete 253 Woolems, Mike 428 Worcester, Jim 429 Wright, Jack 214 Wrigley, Rick 437 Yergovich, Tom 137, 417 Yoe, Tom 44 Young, Dave 437 Young, Lee 454 Youngberg, Irvin 45 Zook, John 130 McNally, Mike 465 McPherson, John 428 Naismith Hall 194-196 Navy ROTC 348, 349, 432 NESEP 353 Nichols, Raymond 43 Niemeir, Ray 435 Nitcher, Keith 43 Niven, Kip 84, 86, 87 Nohe, Marty 428 O ' Connor, Roy 428 Odetta 385 Oh, What A Lovely War 386 Okun, Mike 437 Olison, Ben 422 Oliver 84 Oliver Hull 21-25 Ortb, Kay 93 201- Owens, Ted 366, 367 Owl Society 332 512 • GIs most important crowd is its 4 10,000 Alumni Jayhawkers- ( who continue to cheer! 4 ‘ 0011111FP i • e sure K.U. ALAN! ASSOCIATION- has your curpot address 0 Photography of Quality Official Jayhawker Photographer , _ , 1967 JAY FIAWKER PARTY ACTURE EDITION DICK AN.; tfitNE Meet Dick. ( Hello, Dick.) Dick is a typical KU man. He drinks Bud, smokes Marlboro, and drives a Shelby GT 350 (with apologies to Rock Chalk Revue). He is cool. Meet Jane. ( Hello, Jane.) Jane is a typical KU coed. She has knee socks, long hair, and a suede jacket. She is hot. (Well, it is May. ) Dick and Jane will take a trip (without LSD ). They will go to New Fraser. They will take their dog, Spot. Bark, Spot. ( Bark, barks Spot.) My, said Jane, as they approached the tainly big building. It is certainly a big building. Dick and Jane ( and Spot) went inside. Yes, said Dick, it is. No one wants to clean it. See the trash. See the cigarette butts. ( Marlboro, of course. ) Yes, said Jane. You know what? said Dick. No . . . what? said Jane, being a typically coy and precocious child. This place looks like a huge bathroom, said Dick. There is even tile on the walls. think so, too, Dick, said Jane. Spot thought so, too. Go, Spot, go. Color Dick and Jane convinced. Color the spot. 1967 JAYHAWKER PARTY PICTURE EDITION I don ' t know—I just assumed it was the other way around .. . He keeps calling for air support, but I ' m afraid he ' s already Yes, it ' s true. Brushing with KU Coeds gives 21% fewer cavities! bombed. Yes, but what shape is your stomach in? I don ' t care if your name is Napoleon—get your hand off my sweater! Yes, as a matter of fact, I was a Toilet Training drop-out. Isn ' t he just the grossest thin g? This is the Russian Eagle—five times more powerful than the American Bird. Regardless of what you may think, this typical KU male is not guzzling beer. Now on a money-saving spree, he is buying . paste in the large economy size. • I don ' t care how long it ' s been, Rick, you ' re not supposed to do that! I give up—which hand has the chocolate-covered goodies? Move that hand or you ' ll really be wet! Yes, I agree—P.D.A. certainly is disgusting. • No kidding, Doc. He ' s had this t hing growing out his nose for three months now. • I knew she ' d find out that I bite my fingernails. No . . . no . . . it can ' t be . . . it is—a pig party! • • Oh, Frank, you shouldn ' t have. A self-portrait done in silly putty! Dean Emily, how the hell are ya ' ? Don ' t act so amazed—everyone ' s doing it. Charlie, I think I remember where I hid our bottle! .. . and this will inherit the earth. I wish Cupid would find some other spot! That ' s right, I ' m the drill instructor. Just watch. • Aaack—if I had legs like that I ' d die. Mother told.me about girls like you. Wow, was she right! Hold everything while I get the housemother down from the rafters. Hey, Tom . . . did I really have four legs when I came in? C ' monJane, cheer up. We can ahvays take Marriage and Family ' Life next semester!


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