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RECORD HILLTOP 1971 §18 L y V . « • • J % £y. ,v r jy i«N v' F , $ , -- , ,.v,, . Vi ; , ■: -V ■ M0 - jSl jt £K$ V t v ■ . , • t .- r liP jS? .. •••',': :•• “r; ifijr y ' , • ■ • . ww - alii f_vBnip - ’. 9 'Irjr . v Wig a‘ S . - W2et: IKsifc ;- • ••■ : l -% .v ' ‘Mil w ii t j ; m - ' ¥-m S ■£ .. • HILLTOP 1971 Volume 57 Issue HILLTOP 1971 ENV Did you sign up for a single room and end up with a bunk bed? Then you've heard of The Housing Situation. IRO NME NTS CO-EDITORS Anne P. Harpham Mary C. Jablonski ASSOCIATE EDITOR Brien Lee ADVISOR Warren G. Bovee COPY EDITOR Claire M. Jameson ENVIRONMENTS EDITOR Martin Liszewski EVENTS EDITOR Glenda S. Buell LAYOUT EDITOR Harland C. Hirtzel RESEARCH EDITOR Sheila Kelly SENIORS-INDEX EDITOR jacqui Banaszynski SPORTS EDITOR Cheryl Orlowski SPRING-SUMMER EDITOR Jackie Patterson SPO 1 here's more to Marquette sports than just basketball. Club football, for instance. RTS WI5. ELECTK'C •'OWtK LU. - bALLKwm SCIENCE OF ECOLOGY Mh 200 USBAXIZATION i NATURAL RESOURCE ASE-T 2:0 CONGRESSMAN REuSS - BALLROOM 5 .30 KHJ.Y MACARThuR SO.-IEAWE lmon f M POPULATION PROBLEM-TwC KX 7 30 . | POLITICAL IMPLICATIONS-PATRICK LUCEYiS uhon ) urban resources mator mail rBiSS ?MTROi- “BATE - T wc 121 CAfum sm Overpopulation-mm 200 «« 3-30 ™ u) ;r ecology - ballroom nfp°i iH AL APP 0ACH -TWC 10 AFviftT fcr°R LOST- DONALD PC7FR ■s irasK« The people sit back and discuss it over coffee while outside the children play in polluted air on concrete hopscotch squares. Earth Day. April 22, 1970; an admission of our collective guilt, a recognition of the urgency of the nation's environment problem. The anti-pollution movement, designed to educate the ignorant masses, was an intellectual get-together. At times, it became a playground for political games. Marquette's environment-conscious students, aptly called MUSTBE, organized a whirlwind day of speeches and lectures. Literature on crowding and over-crowding, social obligations and evils abounded. The Mass for the Earth was moved from the chapel to the union to accommodate an overflow crowd. Most classes had optional attendance. Some students slept through the happening. Some didn’t even know there was one. But many listened. The experts told us that we must declare all-out war on ourselves or risk the loss of generations of progress. Some listened and thought. Some forgot. On April 23, 1970, Marquette went back to school. Smoke still belched from the lofty cylinders of the Menomonee Valley. Almost a year later, the destruction goes on. 4 6 WASHINGTON, D.C.,-April 30,1970 President Nixon announced today over nationwide television his decision to send thousands of combat troops into Cambodia. This is not an invasion of Cambodia. The areas in which these attacks will be launched are completely occupied by North Vietnamese forces, Nixon said. KENT, OHIO—May 4. 1970-Four students at Kent State University were shot and killed by Ohio National Guardsmen about noon today. The guardsmen fired into a crowd protesting the U.S. invasion of Cambodia. • Remember the strike? Remember Off the Pigs? Remember On Strike Shut It Down? Remember Right On? How about Left Off? The day after the Kent State incident about 800 MU students voted to strike on Wednesday, May 6, to protest Kent, Cambodia and the racist structure of the United States. Attitudes of the other 11,200 students on campus were mixed. For their cautiousness, they were branded apathetic. Unfortunately apathy is a convenient label slapped on the foreheads of many students much like the proverbial condemning of Cain. Often apathy is synonymous with unconcern. But many students are concerned about the problems of this wretched earth. Some feel helpless when confronted with the giant bureaucracy we call government. Others are repulsed by the violence used to precipitate change. What, then, allows a student to actively show his concern? The strike began as a statement of moral outrage at the Kent State shootings. It left fear, violence, disgust and destruction in its wake. It never completed itself, but died in utter confusion. The day after Kent, university president John Raynor, SJ, told a Washington subcommittee that universities themselves must remain responsible for keeping order and free speech on campus. He said the federal government should not legislate specific law-and order regulations. WEDNESDAY, May 6. The striking students demanded that the university publicly condemn Kent, Cambodia and racism. At the same time, the newly-olected ASMU administration faced its first crisis by affirming the students’ right to strike voluntarily and non-violently, and began to organize workshops. Keep it rational, keep it intellectual, the handbills said. ASMU president John Dunn told his senators, This is a chance for ASMU to take the initiative. But the initiative was not with the ASMU. The Student Strike Committee flooded the campus with leaflets early Wednesday morning and distributed armbands to supporters. However, few turned out to picket and block doors to campus buildings as planned. The infant Campus Ministry began its three-day fast to end violence and held a Peace Mass. There President Raynor urged students to express their concern in charity and not in violence. Demonstrators queried Raynor a jout ROTC on campus, black scholarships, minimum wages for university employees and the guns rumored to be carried by cafmpus security guards. These questions continued to muddle the three basic strike issues for the duration of the kaleidoscopic week to come. Rumors flew and facts lagged behind. The mad days ran together. THURSDAY. ASMU president John Dunn requests a public statement from MU president John Raynor, SJ. The Committee on Faculty passes a resolution deploring violence and the Kent State shootings. Many faculty sign a petition condemning Kent, Cambodia and racism. Debate rages on merits of confrontation tactics and beer drinking in union grill. Most Steering Committee members resign in pro anti-violence dispute. Mayor Maier calls for UWM-MU referendum to carry to White House. 7 POLICE DEPAiTMEKT 10 Fire bombs hit Marquette Hall, Speech School and J-School. Sirens. O'Donnell girls walk out protesting unfair open-house rules in girls’ dorms. Dorms guarded by ASMU senators, faculty, dorm counselors, et al. Bomb scares begin. FRIDAY. Picketing begins at Grandmora. At a noon rally Dunn announces that Raynor's announcement will be announced later. He adds that the strike is over. Library sit-in. Expressway blocked. Milwaukee riot squad makes four arrests. Windows broken in Todd Wehr Chemistry. Sirens. l.D.’s needed to enter dorms. Black Student Union holds dance in ballroom. Traditional Music Society sponsors 12-hour jam session in grill annex. Heraty Beach fills with strikers, spectators, Milwaukee residents and drunks. Sirens all night. SATURDAY. Students mill through the grill, waiting for the unknown. Small fire in union men’s room. Publications Banquet cancelled. One thousand students brave rainstorm to picket O’Hara Hall for speeches. SUNDAY. Milwaukee Health Department closes union. Free the Three” rally held downtown. All day meeting at Greater Marquette Center produces grade option decision. Paris Baldacci reads Raynor's statement to crowd outside union. Options explained. Crowd rallies at People's Park, tours campus, throwing rocks and chanting. Dorm guarding goes on. Bomb scares frequent. Sirens. Dud bomb discovered on McCormick’s fifth floor. Students evacuate to union and Ardmore Apartments. Fire bomb discovered in Schroeder. Students evacuated to union. MONDAY. Cold and freezing weather. No strike activity. Students line up at department offices for grade options. Dorm exodus in full swing. Students live off campus: 333 from O’Donnell, 190 from McCormick and 110 from Tower. TUESDAY. All is quiet on the Marquette front. WEDNESDAY. Sixty students at afternoon rally decide campus needs political awareness through the summer and fall. The days ran into nights. The absurd mingled with the real. Emotions ran wild as intellects tried to cope. The self-seekers and self-sacrificers came forward, gave their speeches and retired to the wings. The student body was as confused as ever. It never recovered. It reeled under the terrorism of bomb scares and firebombs, reacted with beer bottles on Heraty Beach and wandered down the avenue looking for cops. It watched and clapped and retched. It stood in line to negotiate for final grades—the university’s blatant public avowal that grades mean very little—and slept off campus. It packed its suitcases early and went home. The corporate body died and the university yawned. Commencement ceremonies came with “Pomp and Circumstance resounding off the steel rafters of the Arena. In the wake of the strike, rumors of planned disruptions had circulated all during Senior Week. Everyone waited. The ROTC graduates filed into the Arena and sat together rather than in their resepctive college sections. Immediately they were sworn into commissioned service—for the second time in two days—to the tune of “give peace a chance. Several Liberal Arts seniors chanted and flashed the peace sign. Slowly the parental audience rose to its feet thunderously clapping in support of ROTC. The question arises: why must the ROTC commissioning ceremony be re-enacted before the entire graduating audience? Preferential treatment is given where none is due. Is ROTC interwoven so completely into the Marquette community that it deserves such elaborate attention? On the heels of the departing graduates, Hegelian scholars arrived for a Hegel Symposium held June 2-5th. The 175 philosophers brought intellectual excellence back to the campus. Hegel was a German philosopher who originated the historical and cultural dialectic theory that Karl Marx used sometime later to describe communism's proposed triumph over capitalism. All participants commented on the excellence of the symposium, sponsored by Marquette’s philosophy department. They said, the symposium aimed for quality and achieved it... superior to all others, and absolutely excellent, in every important respect .. A Benedictine monk, Dorn Sebastian Moore, OSB, finally made it to Marquette after being delayed by a ship’s broken propellor in the mid-Atlantic. Continuing Education worked arduously to arrange his two-day visit. Moore, a noted English religious scholar, lectured on God-talk and the notion of a bi-polar Church. Next the circus rolled in to celebrate the Fourth. Dom s b ti n Moore, osb While the majority of Marquette scholars grazed in the grass or tanned on the beaches from Maine to Hawaii, the Marquette Players remained in Milwaukee keeping the university's cultural heart beating. The versatile actors became the Marquette Players Touring Company. They loaded costumes and scenery on flatbed trucks and performed for two-night stands in several locations around the city. They also took advantage of the warm summer evenings and staged their performances under the skies. On campus, they set up shop in the Bus. Ad. parking lot for their two summer offerings. Their adaptation to open-air performances was impressive. The Players presented a slapstick farce called “A Runaway Colt and The Apple Tree, a combination of three short plays. Milwaukee media reviewers saluted both shows as successes. The summer also bore witness to Marquette's first Faculty Forum. The theme of the meeting was generated by the issues which precipitated the spring strike. For the first time, the faculty gathered to discuss an issue of vital importance to the future of the university. Those involved questioned the extent to which our “commitment to intellectual and moral excellence warrants an official university stand on publicly disputed issues. Re-directing the nation's priorities has become the newest cliche of our time. Students who harbored a genuine concern for that cause remained disorganized and helpless until the establishment in May of the Movement for a New Congress. Following its birth at Princeton, MNC blossomed to include 322 campus chapters. Its purpose was to organize voter support for peace candidates through massive student drives. It had vowed to work within the system for constructive political reform. The Marquette chapter of MNC was established in June. Its first step was to support Bus. Ad. assistant professor Les Aspin in his bid for a seat in Wisconsin’s first congressional district. 16 It's Wednesday, July 1,1970! Gather up Jimmy, Jack and Joe, join the talent round-up. Round ’em up, bring 'em in. Everybody is sure to win. Step right up, here we go. Oh, what a rodeo! Bring along Eddie, Bob and Bill. Ask everybody on the hill. We’re going to have a great big thrill. Join the talent round-up. Roll call. Count off now. Number 1 July 9th Six hundred thousand 19 year olds’ futures were determined Number 2 December 24th in a scientifically devised lottery. Number 3 July 25th Two capsules at a time. Red—birthdate, green—order of induction. Number 4 July 29th Numbers one through 185 consider yourselves eligible. Number 5 October 21st There are hopes of compulsory service ending by 1973. Number 6 November 17th Faulty equipment delayed the scheduled drawing. Number 7 June 8th Otherwise the ceremony ended without incident, unlike last December. Number 8 April 21st Happy birthday to you, happy birthday to you ... Sometime over the summer, the Coordinating Committee reviewed the experimental “doors closed” intervisitation policy of the 1970 spring semester and presented a revised policy to Marquette University president John Raynor, SJ. This revised policy designated specific intervisitation hours on Friday, Saturday and Sunday. It also established that lights must be on, doors ajar and a counselor on each floor plus a student host assigned to supervise the signing-in of guests. Raynor approved the revised plan which went into effect for the fall 1970 semester. The Coordinating Committee is strictly an advisory body to the president of the university. There are ten people on the committee representing University Relations, Business and Finance, Academic Affairs and Student Affairs. Unfortunately the only reoresentative of the students is Dr. James Scott, vice-president of Student Affairs. It makes one wonder where the university's priorities lie. The student body left the campus last spring assuming that the same experimental policy of intervisitation would be in effect upon their return. Over the summer the administrative mind hashed over intervisitation; at times the thought of not extending intervisitation arose. The Coordinating Committee was reluctant to extend intervisitation without first investigating the entire residence hall program. But, alas, the summer was not an adequate time to study residence hall problems. The Coordinating Committee seemed to ignore the fact that the parents consented to intervisitation by responding to approval forms sent out by the Student Affairs office last year. The Committee on Student Life also approved the intervisitation plan. Why then did the Coordinating Committee skirt these opinions and devise a plan that restricts rather than encourages the community spirit that personifies “home ? Perhaps the Coordinating Committee did not comprehend the depressive dormitory atmosphere. A more open-minded intervisitation policy would provide the student with the opportunity to identify the dormitory as a home rather than just a place to stay. Perhaps the cement jungle would then become a pleasant place, a home that encouraged a relaxed atmosphere. With this policy of intervisitation, students living in dormitories have very little opportunity to practice hospitality that is such an integral part of home. 17 • • From the superiority of seniority to the insecurity of once again being low rung on the ladder; this is the freshman dilemma; this is the bewilderment syndrome. Freshman orientation orograms have been stereotyped operations. Often, they have resulted in stereotyped opinions of the university. This year, Marquette's orientation program was given a much-needed face lift. Realizing that the traditional Welcome Week routine was lacking, the university relinquished control of the proceedings and placed it in the hands of a student steering board. The idea was elementary: students helping students; upperclassmen helping underclassmen. It was, understandably, impossible to give individual attention to almost 1900 students in four days. Hence, the group discussion format. Responsibility for the success of the program was entrusted to discussion leaders who led their respective groups through the days’ activities. The object was to keep a relatively small number of students together long enough so they would recognize one another in the daily sea of faces which would confront them later. Some felt the idea was overworked. There were too many formal meetings, too much talk, and not enough action. But most were enthusiastic about the change. The smaller groups allowed stranger to meet stranger in a more relaxed atmosphere. The discussions allowed students to ask questions of other students who were not too far removed from their own freshman years to remember what it was all about. Perhaps more importantly, the program was a show of confidence on the part of the university administration. Students ran the show. The show smacked of success. Arnold Mitchem, director, Educational Opportunity Program. Marquette University prides itself on an intellectual academic life on campus. The routine of classes prevails most of the year. But, during registration, it’s strictly a dog-eat-dog world on the gym floor. The mapping of 12,000 lives in two days results in crying fits, cursing, and a general berating of the staff. Students are forced into unwanted sections, and driven through a maze of check-out lines and stop-off points. Their faith in the system’s continuing faults encourages them to duck the bursar’s line and forge signatures. After a final reshuffling of the student's academic life, the mad rush ends when his face is photographed and instantly laminated between two strips of clear plastic. The system is all very mechanical. Student numbers are given priority over students. Wrinkle-free IBM cards reign over wrinkled people. Only the merciful smiles of some faculty and students make the system bearable. After the initial shock of freshman year, it all becomes routine. Ray here Stephen Birringer, Wisconsin State Assembly candidate. 21 So you decide that Left Overshoe Community College isn’t your bag and you transfer to Marquette. Or you've had it with that high school routine and it’s time to move on. And somewhere in your travels, you heard about this college out there where they make all the beer. Good move. Marquette has a lot to offer. Everything from a championship basketball team to the world’s largest single-room dental clinic. Everything but adequate living space, that is. Did you say you wanted to live on campus? If you didn’t live here last year, you may be in trouble. Yes, we know you reserved a room. However, your new habitat might just turn out to be a single room with two people in it, or a double room with three people in it. If so, you were among the luckiest of the unlucky ones. For the rest, it was pot luck all the way. The problem was simple. Admissions accepted more people than Housing could accommodate. This anticipation of dorm drop-outs caused a few minor disruptions. About 50 of Marquette’s anxious newcomers were privileged to spend their first weeks crowded in T.V. rooms, basements, and laundry rooms. Approximately 8 such misfits were in Schroeder, 16 in McCormick, 8 m Cobeen, and 10 in O’Donnell. The accommodations were less than ideal. In these temporary surroundings, improvise1 became the word of the hour. Ironing boards became makeshift closets; suitcases served as drawer space. People were upset; people's mothers were upset. The Housing Office said that there had been some mix-up and would everyone please be patient. Didn’t I hear about some guy named Ehrlich talking about overcrowding? 23 Student: Manager: Student: Manager: Student: Manager: Student: Manager: Manager: Yes siree, no more of those dorms for me. I’m going to get myself an apartment and buy some freedom. I'll be able to study in peace any time I want, eat good food any time I want, turn my stereo up as loud as I want, and have big sprawling orgy parties every Friday and Saturday night. Hurry, Hurry, Hurry. Only one furnished 15' x 23' efficiency apartment left, at only $120 a month, (utilities extra of course) and going fast. $120 a month! Isn't that kind of steep? I mean it's only a small efficiency apartment. Look kid, that’s the price. If you don’t want it just step aside. I've got a waiting list as long as my arm for this apartment. And it’s the only one left around campus. Well it’s expensive, but for the freedom that I’ll have it’ll be worth it. O.K. I’ll take it. That’s fine kid, just sign right here on the dotted line. O.K. all signed. Why, my apartment looks bigger already! O.K. the place is all yours now. Do what you want, just don’t get me in trouble. By the way kid, there’s older people living in this building, so keep the noise down. Hurry, Hurry, Hurry. Only one furnished 15’ x 23’ efficiency apartment left, at only $120 a month, (utilities extra of course) and going fast. CALL 771-7 77 LARGE EFFICIENCY APARTMEHTS 4 24 25 What is a dorm? McCormick was described by an administrator as a rabbit warren. Schroeder has the air of an institution. Marquette’s coeds live in converted hotels. Yet, to a quarter of the university it is home for most of the year. Ideally, dorm living could be community living in the deepest sense. For most students it doesn’t even come close. Paradoxically many students find freedom in the dorms. Away from the watchful eyes of their parents, they rub shoulders with people of many backgrounds and ideas. All-night bull sessions and marathon card games cement friendships. The university tries to compromise the demands of the students and parents. The handbook promises parents that Marquette University provides and operates a system of supervised men’s and women’s residence halls to provide for the educational, spiritual and social development of its students. Yet, on campus, the university finds itself faced with increasing demands from students for more freedom and self-government. 26 27 ICHI . . . The Karate Club's Tuesday night classes Nl . . . . remained a popular activity for MU’s guys and SAN . . . geishas. A black belt instructor and CHI . . . an above-average level of enthusiasm helped GO! . . . the club maintain its position as a perennial campus favorite. ........OR ELSE! 28 Mixers are passe and festivals are in, or so it seems. The street festivals began over the summer on the East Side. The tradition of community fun combined with local music, games and food continued during the fall. They seemed to add a personal touch to an impersonal city. The men's dorms tried to add to campus social activities by sponsoring mixers. They suffered from bland bands and lack of student patronage. Do students truly mix and make merry at mixers? Perhapsthe dorm councils should follow the example of the street festivals. 29 Religion used to be a dirty word on campus. It meant enforced attendance at retreats and annual Masses for the masses of Catholic boys and girls. Then Marquette caught up with the spirit of Vatican II. Religion came to mean personalized liturgies punctuated with verse and song. Religion at Marquette recovered some of its relevance this year with the birth of the Campus Ministry. Students who had written Catholicism off as a lost cause discovered that ritual could be relevant. They voiced their approval by jamming Schroeder’s basement on Saturday nights. Nearly 350 even attended the traditional Mass of the Holy Spirit. It is not Catholic these days. It is Christian; it is human. 30 Fred Tabak, Democratic candidate for Congress from the ninth district, and Frank Utech, Democratic congressional candidate from the sixth district, spoke at Marquette in early October. The two candidates were supported by the Movement for a New Congress. In November we must show him (Nixon) that this mythical ‘silent majority’ is in fact a frustrated, angered majority... Frank Utech I believe the time has come to end our involvement in an emotionally and financially draining war in Southeast Asia. Fred Tabak In Vietnam the United States has lost $6 billion in airplanes. What would that mean here in America? Frank Utech Our national leaders have concluded that we are not seeking a military victory__The loss of more American blood is intolerable. Fred Tabak We need to be more concerned with people. I don’t see the point of going to the moon or Vietnam if we are going to be torn apart here. Frank Utech Utech TabiK Olympic Day, the Rabbit’s annual Mud Fest, was held on September 20 at Marquette Stadium. Included in the annual Olympic Day fare: a greased pig contest, beer barrel toss, four-legged race, steeplechase, bat race and a tug of war. The result: approximately 100 mud-covered students. Winning the women’s overall and sorority title was Theta Phi Alpha, while the men’s overall and fraternity title went to Alpha Kappa Psi. Placing first in the men’s independent division were the Nad’s and the women’s independent was won by the Avalanche Club. Placing first over everyone was MUD. 32 The actives are daring you to impress them. You're at the Holiday Inn, drinking slightly spiked punch and learning the sisters' song. Or you’re at the house, meeting the brothers, telling them about yourself and sipping a freshly tapped Miller. So far, so good. Your dress is perfect; you look like the New York woman. Even if you’re not, well, you’ve got to play the part. Mom’ll be proud if you’re picked; she was a Kappa, too. Back at the house, you're sipping another freshly tapped Miller. You're starting to feel high—but not drunk! You’ve got to learn how to drink if you want to be a brother. So far, so good. Everybody likes each other here at the Inn. Pretty soon it’ll be time to go. You’re sure you’ve impressed them. And as the fellows raise their Beta steins for the last bars of the song, you realize you’re one of the few prospectives who hasn’t gotten sick. Thank God. Remember to visit the union table often. You didn’t make it! Cut from the team—blackballed. No one says why, but a ‘friend’ ‘on the inside’ says it’s because the girls thought you acted too cool. The men at the house said you drank too much. But that’s totally irrelevant, you say! Funny you should think that now. 33 Spiro T. Agnew, self-appointed mouthpiece of the silent majority, hit Milwaukee on September 25 like Hurricane Daisy. He arrived at the height of an all-out campaign to put the Republicans in the majority on Capitol Hill. Milwaukee’s famed tactical squad was ready for Spiro but Milwaukee wasn’t. The $150-a-plate dinner attracted a crowd but was not a sell-out. The welcoming crowds, although voicing the usual obscenities, numbered only a few hundred. Spiro fans who expected a castigating verbal barrage were moderately disappointed. He refrained from commenting on his party’s opponents, but directed his seven syllable words, metaphors, and alliteration against what he termed the “permissive elements of our society. The partisan crowd inside the arena applauded while the anti-Agnew demonstrators chanted outside. After a tasty snack of roast pig, the enthusiastic rabble rousers took to a rock throwing spree and reshaped at least forty windows in the downtown section. The violence was unprovoked and uncalled for. The rock-chuckers, self-appointed anti-Agnew disciples, played right into Spiro's hand. His point about permissiveness was made in living color. Concert pianist Leonard Pennario inaugurated Marquette’s Artist Series with an impressive performance before a near capacity crowd in the union ballroom. The celebrated musician was criticized by some for a lack of imagination and artistic depth. However, the predominantly student audience gave him a warm welcome. The large student turnout was proof that Marquette caters to more than the fingersnapping, toe-tapping music enthusiasts. Henry David Aiken, Brandeis philosophy professor, initiated the philosophy department’s lecture series by speaking on the need for trust in a community. Aiken said this trust could be achieved by the mutual sharing of obligation by members of that community. He cautioned against the assumption of community where none actually exists. Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead came alive at Marquette in September. These two characters are famous for their traitorous friendship with Shakespeare’s Hamlet. Pre-play publicity included a mock funeral procession around campus for the dead duo in true seventeenth century style. Some onlookers thought the stunt was another campus protest march. But the play was more profound than this passing spectacle. R G presented mental teasers in a light-hearted form. Due to exceptional student response, the play was held over another week. 37 Marquette harriers, characterized by coach Mel “Bus” Shimek as young, talented, but green, are in the midst of what coaches call a rebuilding year. Shimek, coaching at a school that reserves its scholarships for brains or basketball talent, competes in a conference where scholarships have attracted top talent. After losing two strong runners from last year's 9-4 squad, MU concentrated on providing broad-based competition experience for the four freshmen and three veterans making up the team. Two of the veterans, captain Ted Drewek and sophomore Bruce Jankowski, proved to be the harriers best finishers. Marquette placed 28th in a field of 30 in the highly competitive Notre Dame Invitational at South Bend. The team competes in the Central Collegiate Conference and includes several smaller colleges in its schedule. 38 40 The art of fencing is offered to the MU student as both an intramural activity and a competitive sport. Students, who range from experienced swordsmen to rank novices, meet in the gym on Wednesday nights to advance their skills under the direction of Coach Ed Sampson. The fencing team draws its members from participants in the intramural class. Now in its third year, the MU team can look forward to stiff competition this season from schools in the Wisconsin area. Ghetto children are best helped by specially trained teachers, according to attorney Harold Jackson and Robert Harris, Urban Day principal. They spoke on “Black Miseducation” to the MU Faculty for Interracial Justice. The faculty group began eight years ago to quietly direct attention to problems in interracial justice. As students rail about their professors' ivory tower attitudes and citizens blame educators for condoning campus riots, the 100 members continue their low-key, rationally conceived activism. US Rep. Henry Reuss cited the Vietnam war as the cause of the nation's inflation problems and the growing dissent within the country. He also blamed the Nixon administration’s economic policy for increased unemployment. A Milwaukee cop provoked a minor incident in front of the union on October 1. While checking cars in the union parking lot, he spotted a salesman of Bugle American, a Madison-Milwaukee underground newspaper, and demanded his solicitor’s permit. The issue became confused when an MU friend of the salesman appeared wearing a belt made from an American flag. The cop issued a verbal lacing to the belted boy and a warning to the Bugle salesman to have a permit by tomorrow’. By Friday each week, MU students are ready to let off steam at one of the year’s countless TGIF’s. The faculty, however, must go home to discipline the kids or to hang fallen curtain rods. But four times a year, they have their own TG, formally called the faculty cocktail party. 42 The Pere Marquette Invitational Sailing Regatta, sponsored by the Midwest Collegiate Sailing Association, is an annual fall event of the MU Sailing Club. This year, October hailed the event with gusty winds and choppy waters. The two MU teams that entered were hampered by torn sails and five capsized boats. One Marquette entry bent its mast in winds of up to forty knots per hour. In the regatta's minimum six races, the MU sailors took one first place, one second place, but failed to show better than fourth in the remaining races. Six universities in the Midwest competed in the regatta. The University of Michigan and Notre Dame took the top spots. Marquette placed a low fifth. Marquette’s soccer team continued to supply some interesting moments for the local aficionados of the world's most popular sport. They also managed to come up with several more victories than the average MU sports fan usually sees off the basketball court. After only two weeks of training, the team slipped by Ripon in its opener, and gradually increased teamwork and passing efficiency in the following weeks. In the meantime, they tied Notre Dame, after seeing a one goal lead slip by in the closing minute of the game. A few games were won or lost by small margins before coaches Charles Nader and Joe Born succeeded in plugging some vulnerable holes in the lineup left by departed seniors. Marquette lost a tough game to nationally ranked Illinois, but made up for the loss a few weeks later by bombing a surprised Carthage College 7-1. The win gave the Warriors an added boost in morale as they prepared for the tough competition facing them in the upcoming weeks. Even the Kick-Off Council president admitted it this year. Students,” said Mike Moran, are more sophisticated and don't go in for that rah-rah stuff anymore. They haven't for quite a while; witness Earth Day, Spring Strike and the lack of attendance at Kick-Off contests and the parade. What even the most sober student does “go in for these days is good solid entertainment and the Council stumbled onto that entity in Laura Nyro. And even though the success of the Marquette basketball dynasty has proven embarrassing to those who decided to change Tip-Off to Kick-Off, the answer no longer lies in a return to a basketball weekend. If they won’t parade for football in the fall, they may no longer walk on Wisconsin Avenue for the Warriors in the winter. But look at Laura. She packed 'em in. Maybe—instead of wasting money booking bands and ballrooms for poorly attended dances, we could have casual gatherings three or four times a year with the Misses Nyro and Mitchell and the Messers Crosby, Stills, Nash, and or Young. Maybe. 46 47 We almost won one. But the rest of this year's club football season was exactly what most casual fans have come to expect, despite a pre-season scrimmage victory over Concordia. The one point deficit in the first game was the closest any of MU’s three club football teams have come to victory. An unusually enthusiastic offense surprised even the most cynical of the club's critics. The defense was aggressive, recording impressive interceptions and fumble recoveries. But the net result of this football season, and all others so far, was the same. The team record this year showed deficits of up to 33 points. Said Coach Warren Braun, “We just couldn't move the ball.” More fans than ever witnessed the 1970 Kick-Off game. But they showed more devotion to a 75c wonder called Ripple than they did to the success or failure of the team. They knew what to expect. 51 53 Inflation is everyone’s worry. Residents of the 15th and Highland Streets area tried to fight it through a North Side People’s Cooperative Food Store. Area corporations and businesses were appealed to but they declined to help. The Co-op received donations from Campus Ministry, the Marquette faculty, and proceeds from a union ballroom dance. The Gym upped its prices for one night and donated the skimmings. The Co-op itself held an afternoon chicken fry and rummage sale. John Erickson: a Republican, a candidate for US Senate, but most of all, a “team man.’’ He was pro-Agnew, but against police on campus. He was for Nixon's Vietnam policy but against the draft. The former Bucks’ manager appeared to be red-shirted for the season. 54 The Marquette Players introduced chamber theater to Marquette with an adaptation of J. D. Salinger's short story To Esme With Love and Squalor. An important device in literature is often the narrator. However, many plays adapted from literature dispense with the narrator. This may produce a good play, but the original flavor of the work is lost. Chamber theater seeks to retain this flavor. It dispenses with high-cost scenery and props, relying on a skilled narrator to create these details for his audience. “Esme was presented in the Players’ new workshop theater in the basement of Bellarmine Hall. A workshoo theater aims to promote an intimate theatrical relationship between the actors and their audience. The theater is open to any interested group, providing a theater atmosphere for amateur groups and a greater interest in the theater arts. Communication occurs in many ways. Some sing it, some write it, some speak it. The Utah Repertory Dance Theater danced it. They showed the MU audience that there is a vocabulary to dance just as there is in English 3 or 7. They introduced several interpretations to modern dance, including those of Merce Cunningham and Martha Graham as well as their own choreographers. A study of circular body motion and a translation of pictorial abstractions into dance were included in the lecture-demonstration. 56 Those hep cats of the Traditional Music Society tuned up their ’57 Chevies and cruised over to the union annex for the Greaser Festival.” The guys dressed up really dreamy, concealing their Camel packs beneath rolled up T-shirt sleeves. .The sight of jelly rolls and white socks brought back those nifty days of Captain Glasspack and His Magic Mufflers. Cool saxes wailed the jive of the swinging ’50’s as punch-outs between rival gangs raged outside the dance floor door. Like, hey daddy-o, it was crazy, man, crazy! MU tuition rises as regularly as the sun: $87.50 a semester for 1971. ASMU called a special meeting with administrators Scott, Moeller and Kallenberger to explain the figure. The administrators said MU was committed, among other things, to land development and library addition contracts. But MU was also cutting the total budget to help save money. ASMU said students would be hard put to pay the higher cost, and asked what academic value would come of the tuition hike. But the meeting went on in a vacuum. The tuition hike was fait accompli. The trustees had already approved it two weeks before the ASMU or students even heard about it. 58 7t On October 19, Dr. Joseph ben-Jochannan, co-founder of the Harlem Prep school, spoke on Education in the Ghetto. He said the school re-established students' pride in themselves through study of their cultural backgrounds. The political science department and Liberal Arts Council sponsored his speech. Violence can mean more than rock-throwing or dynamiting. One form of violence is failure to accept others as they are, and trying to fit them into a mold. In the November mass for non violence, sponsored by the Catholic Peace Fellowship in conjunction with the dorm fast, Bob Doran SJ, Campus Ministry director, spoke on the violence in the modern school system. He said that schools often fail to take seriously students' interests and needs. But the Highland Community School, through the Montessori method, is attempting to realize the students' personal and cultural values. 60 For the second year MU students gave up one dorm meal a month to help finance the Highland Community School. But this year fewer students abstained due to waning interest and poor publicity. And Ace Foods, Inc., newly-contracted university catering service, cut back to 45c per student. Interest waxed stronger elsewhere. Campus Ministry grilled hot dogs at Merritty Hall and Father Mac dished out his famous spaghetti at the Dental School cafeteria. gnce upon a time there was a Highland Community School. It existed on the edge of the ghetto. Mike Williams was the director of the school, but he was handicapped because he didn't have any money. Margaret and Sarah were two of the teachers at the school and they were handicapped because Mike didn’t have any money to offer them. Sheila, Vivian, Rick, Tommy and 35 other kids in the school were handicapped because they were very poor and had no money to give Mike. One day Mike went to Marquette while the little kiddies stayed home. The Marquette students had roast beef while Rick and Tommy had none. The Marquette students offered to give up one meal a month and give the money from the meal to Mike. Soon, however, not enough people fasted, and Mike got less money to take home, and he found it very difficult to keep the school open. So what’s the moral of the story? There is none. In fact there is no story to tell: it’s reality. If you want to discover a moral in the reality of the Highland Community school, look to yourself and recall when you last sacrificed one meal a month for Sheila, Vivian, Rick and Tommy. 62 Who else came to dinner besides Spiro? Well, President Raynor did. In the first of a series of administrators’ informal dinners with dorm residents, O'Donnell girls hosted Raynor amid the delicacies of Ace Foods. He talked with them for an hour and a half, but the girls did not mention intervisitation. Raynor dined again with the Milwaukee Parents Association at their annual meeting. There, Marquette students presented a panel discussion on campus problems and how students are trying to solve them. They put special emphasis on the Manasa Drug Center Switchboard. 64 Marquette’s expanding intramural department included rowing in this year’s list of activities. The team was composed entirely of Evans Scholars. Coached by Don Dundon, president of the Milwaukee Rowing Club, the squad consisted of freshmen and sophomore rowers. Competing in the first annual Milwaukee Intercollegiate Rowing Regatta against MSOE and UWM, the Scholars placed second, a good beginning for a first year team. If you had a noon class in Marquette Hall or the Modern Language building first semester you got more than you bargained for. Together with McCormick Hall they received the most bomb scares. Students talked about them, the security department searched for Mad Phoning Fingers and the guys in McCormick became increasingly disgusted. Efforts to solve the mystery seemed doomed to failure. Soon the university gave up evacuating. Everybody played it cool from then on and studied for mids anyway. Classes and dorms returned to normal in short order. If the plan was to disrupt the university, it failed miserably. Students who had experienced the bomb threat hysteria of last spring weren’t about to fall for the same thing again. They had weathered the strike and the moratorium and all that stuff. The war was the same old issue and so was poverty, crime and the inequities of our society. Bomb threats no longer fazed anybody. They were something to talk about besides the weather. 67 Saul Alinsky and William Rusher did agree on one point—the word “revolution” is overused and misunderstood. Alinsky, a radical organizer ot communities into blocs, debated with Rusher, conservative publisher ol the National Review. Alinsky said that revolution is an emotional word that usually implies blood and barricades, but that this is a mistaken notion. Rusher insisted that the word is often misused by students who put it in a historical context only. The two debated before a crowd of 1,100 people in a confrontation sponsored by the ASMU. Alinsky said that America must war change before there will be any, while Rusher seemingly agreed by saying that society is what the citizens make it. 68 In line with the administration’s attempts to meet students and particularly dorm residents, Dr. Arthur Moeller, vice-president for academic affairs met with McCormick residents in their lounge. Moeller even caught a glimpse of intervisitation in practice as he hosted eighth floor’s open house on October 30. But McCormick residents remained irked and, despite avowals of maturity and pleas for trust, staged a “Halloween trick” on the 31st. Thanks to enthusiastic organization, it came off— against the wishes of the head resident and dorm president. If the “trick had a purpose, it escaped most. Indeed it helped to negate the confidence of administrators in dorm residents. 69 a People, not coffee, are the main ingredients of a coffee house. Coffee houses are places where people talk about ever is on their minds. At the General Store—intervisitation, . campus bomb scares and ecology. At The Coffee House-nonviolence, the American Indian, Milwaukee's community schools. The General Store, 1717 W. Wisconsin Avenue, was begun in November by Campus Ministry to create community spirit among MU students. Besides holding Wednesday night dialogues on campus issues, it sponsors a draft seminar, c. plays and films. The director is Bob Doran, SJ. The Coffee House, 631 N. 19th Street, is directed by Rev., Davis of Redeemer Evangelical Lutheran Church. Its purpose to provide a place... where the questions, issues, interests hopes that lie within and around us may unfold in an ati of openness and candor. Thursday evening is given to a -simple dinner, Friday to films, Saturday to stage events like $ folk concerts, street theater, one-act plays and guitar sessions . Yet, community unity... and candor come from people, tltt aims of the General Store and The Coffee House are good; bufifj coffee house is only an empty room whose character is determined by the people who fill it. So what will it be—a guHair session, a draft seminar, a film—or perhaps even a cup of coffee?. 71 mm 73 Paris Baldacci Jerry Gardner Jana Via 76 Don Cotton Professor Albion Ross William Sullivan SJ On October 31, the nation-wide effort to elect peace candidates to Congress in November culminated with a national mobilization day. On October 28, in connection with that drive, the MU Catholic Peace Fellowship sponsored lectures on peace-related topics. The speeches included, “Violence, a Christian Viewpoint, “History of the US in Vietnam, and Nonviolence. If the workshop had been more effectively publicized, attendance might have been greater. As it was, Paris Baldacci’s talk on The Christian and Revolution or Why I Love the Viet Cong drew the most substantial audience. The biggest and perhaps only incentive the MNC had all year was the election of Les Aspin in the primary. But MU students failed to give the movement much support; only 30 became actively involved. Those few spent their weekends campaigning for MNC candidates Utech, Aspin, and Tabak. Their strategy was, by their own admission, hit and miss. They used different approaches to voters depending on how well a particular candidate was known among his constituents. Their efforts consisted of door to door polling and distribution of leaflets and bumper stickers. The big furor over re-directing the nation’s priorities obviously did not gain much support at MU. J Students don’t give a damn” was the reaction of one faculty member at a gathering of the faculty forum this year. Three students—Norma Rosner, journalism sophomore, Terry McDonald, journalism senior, and Dan Eagen, liberal arts senior—were invited by the faculty to sound off on what troubled them most on campus. Miss Rosner urged the adoption of a curriculum based on a unifying theme such as war. Eagen proposed wide-area study programs on which to base the core curriculum, e.g. physical sciences, social sciences, the humanities and the logical systems. McDonald stressed the importance of faculty participation in social issues on campus. He said that with the exception of the Marquette Faculty for Interracial Justice, faculty concern with social issues has been minimal. However, many faculty members felt that the three students represented a minority of socially concerned students. The faculty felt that there was no more student interest on campus than faculty interest. The role of the physical therapist in long term rehabilitation was the theme of the physical therapy convention held here on October 31. Visiting students from the University of Wisconsin at Madison and Northwestern heard lectures and discussions on the treatment of burn patients and the rehabilitation of amputees and stroke patients. 81 Forty members of the Student Council for Exceptional Children delighted the infirm and aged patients of the Waukesha County Home and Institution with a Halloween party on October 31. The students entertained 250-300 patients with games, songs and clowns' antics. The council throws annual Halloween and Easter parties for people confined to hospitals and institutions. Council president Jim Jaspers said the group tries to choose places overlooked by sororities, fraternities and volunteer groups. The SCEC is a national organization for students of special education. The MU chapter, however, is composed of students of several majors. The council aids unfortunate and needy children through a variety of programs. Tutors work with children of the inner city, of St. Rose’s elementary school and with the MU Freshman Frontiers program. SCEC members also spend Saturday mornings with children at the Jewish Community Center. 82 83 Discovery Days are hard to explain; those who have been on one feel that words are inadequate. They can only say it is a day of shared experiences. Campus Ministry, aiming toward a more unified community, began the Discovery Days in the fall semester. The day revolves around students getting to know each other. The experience lasts from noon to midnight and includes group dynamics, trust walks, films, talks, and liturgy. The approach is very flexible; the interests of the students guide the day. It is a day for talking, discussing problems and getting to know each other. But to be effective it must be more than a day; it must be a lifetime. Ferrante and Teicher displayed a superb coordination of piano mastery to an enraptured MU audience on November 7. Although the performance, sponsored by the Fine Arts Council, portrayed a versatility in musical artistry, the duo basically limited themselves to the popular sounds of the sixties. Perhaps the pianists sought a closer rapport with the young audience through the rendition of popular rather than classical selections. Whatever the reason, the audience reacted with fervor to such well-known pieces as “Midnight Cowboy and Lara's Theme . The standing ovation reiterated the audience’s appreciation of the smooth assemblage of a decade of musical greats. The concert lacked little in musical artistry. The only flaw was Ferrante and Teicher's lack of comical expertise. The International Students' Dinner was a viable solution to Ace Foods, Dal's and Burger Chef. Marquette’s foreign students cooked, spiced and served their national dishes. They also provided song and dance from their native lands. 85 The very presence of the man dominated the room. When he spoke, the philosophers were delighted, the revolutionaries were disappointed and most students were lost. Kenneth Mills, assistant professor of philosophy at Yale, spoke on The Ethics of Revolution in a Democratic Society. Some expected a treatise on the tactics of revolution but received a philosophical talk on revolution instead. Mills defined revolution as the gaining of power by one group and the restructuring of that power in society. He also said that the conditions for revolution don’t exist until people realize that their needs are not being met by society. According to Mills, revolution in the United States is not imminent. 86 On November 5, MU law students were treated with a visit by former Supreme Court Justice Abe Fortas. Fortas made a brief visit to the law school while in Milwaukee to address the Wisconsin Education Association convention. Fortas told the future lawyers that the federal ‘no-knock’ rule, which allows law enforcement agents with a warrant to enter a home without knocking or identifying themselves was both outrageous and unconstitutional. Fortas added, It is a paradox that the United States government thinks you need a warrant before it bugs a member of the Mafia but that you don’t need a warrant to put a bug on a student leader. I think I would reverse it. 87 ‘‘Blood Wedding” was the MU Players' third production of the year. The Spanish tragedy was written by Frederico Garcia Lorca. Players’ director Leo Jones said Lorca attempted to explore man’s conflict between his own desires and society's conventions. The play is based upon an incident reported in a Spanish newspaper, and tells of a Spanish bride who flees with a lover. Her husband and the lover 3re ultimately killed in a vengeful bloodbath by the husband’s family. In one reviewer’s words, it was “a story of disappointed love told in the grand Spanish style.” 88 From the Dojo come shouts of KAIA followed momentarily by several loud thuds as white-robed students toss each other from one side of the room to the other. The Marquette Judo Club now in its tenth year, is under the direction of Ronald Kazel, a leading figure in Wisconsin judo. Beginning and advanced classes are offered for MU students every Thursday night in the fine art of The Gentle Way. Dorm residents sided with an administrator and a faculty member rather than with two radicals in a curious turnabout at Schroeder Hall on November 17. The residents asked for a question period with experts of last spring's strike events. Schroeder's board of governors invited Dr. James Scott, vice-president for student affairs; Mr. John Johannes, instructor of political science; and Art Heitzer and Mike McHale, familiar figures last spring. Heitzer and McHale tried selling the same simplistic reasoning that aggravated the strike, but the residents weren't buying. They sided instead with the more complex rational approachs of Scott and Johannes. Or. Scott at O'Oonnotl dinner. The ASMU ardently tried to improve communication through afternoon coffee hours in the union. Two were held in the first semester. Attendance was poor for the first coffee hour but improved on November 10 with the appearance of Father Raynor. The coffee hours provided one medium for the exchange of ideas and problems among all levels of the university. But few seemed to be aware of the opportunity. It was November 11, the 315th day in the year of the bomb scare. At 9:45 a.m., a caller advised that Carpenter Hall might soon be the site of an instant grass sod lawn. At 11:51, Carpenter’s name was again dropped—to the Milwaukee police. At 1:44 p.m., a call to the MU switchboard named Marquette Hall as the next target. Three bomb threats—three different times. Yet few students knew of them. At 7 that night, 46 students and faculty heard straight talk from the administration on bomb scares—a subject of more historical than current interest. Security head Harold Grote said his department’s newest tactic was to ignore threats where a '‘pattern was discovered. Why humor the bomber by constant evacuation? Grote said his interest was to protect students first, university property second. He suggested that 1% of the students were calling in threats. (One student later faced expulsion; he was caught by Milwaukee police while calling in a threat.) Dean of Men Albin Yokie suggested that guerrilla tactics have replaced mass confrontation .. . The purpose is that, through fear and hysteria, the university shall not operate. Tad Guzie, SJ tried to offer a solution when he asked, Has the student response to the scares produced unity or fragmentation? How can students respond? Is a vigilante witch hunt the answer? Mayor Maier is fond of calling his city the city of fountains. But as every sleepy dorm resident knows, it is really the city of parades. Milwaukeeans have a parade for every conceivable occasion. Most wend their way down Wisconsin Avenue and through the heart of the campus, usually at 9 in the morning. Veterans Day was celebrated with the usual baton twirlers and high school bands. The only thing that marked this parade as Veterans Day were the hordes of sailors turned loose in Milwaukee on shore leave. Backed by some thirty enthusiastic athletes and advisor Bob DeRoche, the informally organized MU hockey team has been given official club status by the ASMU. Unassured of financial support, the team may seek outside sponsorship to help pay for ice rentals. A new league composed of Milwaukee area schools has been created under the supervision of Bob DeRoche and intramural director Don Clark in an effort to promote interest in the sport. 94 95 MARQUETTE UNIVERSITY MEMORIAL LIBRARY ADDITION assisted by front , funds raoM thi us oipartmint or health ioucatk n ..jimm or net or iducation GRELLINGER-ROSE JERENE KLUMBRAPPL HAAS. INC. ARCHITECTS PLANNERS ENGINEERS CONTRACTORS SIESELCONSTR. general JOS. LEHMANN PlUMBINO CONSULTANTS STRASS t MAGUIRE structural LEBENOW LOBSTER rlumb.no WENNINGER CO. ««..« «« HOLLAND KURTZ mammm STAFF ELEC. eiectr.cal DOLAN DUSTIN electrical NORTHWESTERN ELEVATOR HOLD An infant organization, Manasa, held a benefit dance at the Milwaukee YMCA, November 15. Manasa is an underground switchboard which was organized to help students better relate to their environment. The benefit was not successful as planned due to the day, Sunday, and the location. The MU student body donated very little to an organization that was set up to help them. Whatever the reason, Manasa flopped into financial problems. The group needed funds desperately. Through the establishment of a switchboard, Manasa hopes to combat drug abuse. Although Manasa views the drug problem as their top priority, it hopes to extend the referral program to abortion, alcoholism, birth control, draft counseling, legal aid, pregnancy tests, social disease and suicide prevention. Persons who call with these problems would be referred to qualified medical, legal and psychological aid. Manasa also plans to establish an information library. The organization has an office at 525 N. 17th Street which will provide facilities to collect information and make it available to students. The switchboard will be in operation early in the second semester. It appears paradoxical that the university has refused to approve Manasa as a campus organization, when the administration stated that it wanted to see this type of program esablished and eagerly offered assistance last spring. But Manasa was aborted by the university due to the possibility of legal complications. Also, if Manasa were recognized on campus the university would indirectly acknowledge birth control and abortion. And a Catholic institution dare not do that. Four major newspapers plus assorted other news media are taught lessons monthly by a scrappy little journal which has learned to capitalize on the power of embarrassment.” Dan Rottenberg. managing editor of the Chicago Journalism Review, told over 50 aspiring MU journalists that publications like the Review are needed to combat the effects laziness and elbow-rubbing” have on reporters and editors in the news media. Rottenberg was sponsored by the Journalism Council. Using an anectodal, unassuming, yet factual discourse, Rottenberg pointed to instances where lack of verification of facts or requests by public officials resulted in the publishing of untruths or the withholding of important stories. He talked softly, but it was apparent that he and the Review carry a big stick. 100 Operating with the philosophy that the intramural department has something for everyone, Director Don Clark provided the MU student with a wide and diversified program of activities. A total of 22 sports were offered by the department, including volleyball, basketball, swimming and bowling. Touch football, the top participation sport, added something new this year with the creation of a Powder Puff league for girls. For the students participating in the sports clubs, such as judo, rowing, and modern dance, some of the finest equipment available was matched by expert instruction, giving the student a perfect opportunity to increase his knowledge in an area of speciality, for fun or competition. 103 Sttiifc . It rained Thursday, snowed Friday, sleeted Saturday and froze Sunday. But the marathon football game continued as scheduled. For 82 gruelling, mud-slogging hours, 600 Greek, grease and freak students battled it out on the 13th Street turf to raise money for the Marine Corps' Toys for Tots campaign. ASMU Senator Jack Kammer organized teams that played in two hour shifts for McCormick Friends or Schroeder Friends. T-shirt donations by Schlitz and Miller breweries, refreshment sales and contributions by spectators and passing motorists brought in $1,300 which Schlitz later matched. Despite freezing temperatures and 50 mph winds, Marquette set a world record. The score? McCormick Friends, 788; Schroeder Friends, 767. Marquette was one of 51 universities visited this fall by officials from the US Justice Department, which sought direct communication between the department and college students. Noticeably absent from the list, however, were such hotbeds of student dissent as UW-Madison and Berkeley. The delegation to Marquette was headed by MU graduate Jerris Leonard, now assistant US attorney general for civil rights. The assigned rooms were too small for the overflow crowd, but students, faculty and press jammed together for the talks and discussions. Topics included school desegregation and the presence of federal agents on campus. Many felt that Leonard evaded questions. Often he accused questioners of “not having the facts. But they did have the questions, which should have indicated to the Justice Department the tenor of campus opinions. 107 Never seen Paris? But oui, monsieur. You saw it at The Sleazie Cafe,” presented by the Musical Varieties Council. The council tried something different this year. It built MV’s around the sleazie theme and used the usual talent acts as cafe performances. Bistro jazz slithered from the lips of the MU band. Patrons munched popcorn while seated around small tables in the ballroom. The cafe’s night club acts worked into a unified show through the graces of emcee Monsieur Lafin (Steve Gallagher) complete with handlebar mustache, flashy sports jacket and a quasi-French accent. First place winners in the talent contest were Dave Ramey and Mary B. Hollenkamp. Second place went to Bob and Tom, while Maureen Balke and John Clausen took third. Ill First place winners: Dave Ramey and Mary B. Hollenkamp MU students caught a glimpse of their ethnic forebears’ traditions at Milwaukee’s annual Folk Fair held at the Arena the weekend of November 20. A variety of international dishes were available. Patrons sampled delicacies made from recipes handed down through generations. There were also booths presenting the customs, culture and craftsmanship of numerous nationalities. The onlooker was confronted with many insights into the distinctiveness of nationality. 112 113 114 The exodus of study-weary students left Marquette virtually barren at Thanksgiving. For those left behind, a variety of holiday activities were available. A thanksgiving liturgy at The 19th Street Coffee House and a one-man concert at the General Store drew some students. By far the most successful event of the holiday was Father Mac’s annual Thanksgiving dinner, prepared with the help of the Milwaukee Club. Roast turkey with all the trimmings was served in the Dental School cafeteria. 116 As the semester drew to a close, the honorary and professional Greeks began their initiating activities. Most included a dinner and guest speaker. Phi Alpha Theta, honorary history society, featured Dr. George Mosse, an authority on European intellectual history from UW-Madison. He spoke on The Appeal of the Nazi Culture. Dr. Robert Freedman of MU’s political science department spoke at the initiation dinner of Pi Gamma Mu, honorary social science society. Freedman spoke on the Interplay of Arab and Israeli Nationalism Since 1880. He placed the blame for the Mideast crisis on the British foreign office. During World War II. England promised land in the mideast to her allies. The conflict arose when the war was over and there wasn’t enough land to fulfill the promises. The initiation ceremony of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalism society, coincided with a celebration of the chapter’s 50th anniversary. Guest speaker Mayor Henry Maier launched another attack on his favorite target—the press. Maier said that journalism maimed and devoured public officials and undermined their efforts. The union ballroom jumped December 3rd to the tunes of the Ramsey Lewis Trio. Jazz is not dead when about 800 students pack the ballroom on a week night. This jazz was Lewis at the piano, Cleveland Eaton on bass, and Maurice Evans on drums. The trio opened with the heavy sounds of a Lennon-McCarthy song, “Fool on the Hill. Lewis kept things cooking with He Ain’t Heavy, He’s My Brother.” The rhythmic, supersonic sounds filled the ballroom. Lewis brought the audience down with the low-geared love ballad Love Now On and took them flying high with the resonant tune, In Crowd. At concert’s end, the audience was completely intoxicated with his free-wheeling jazz. Speech students, presenting Speech Spoofs, succeeded in boosting the morale of their own school by mocking the other schools and departments of the university. But the audience loved it. Their favorite was a classic burlesque skit on The Jesuit. Other acts spoofed Business Administration, Philosophy, and Nursing. 119 Famous courtroom scenes aren't restricted to Judge Seraphim's court. The MU Players, in their second workshop production of the season, staged trial scenes from well-known plays. The production, under the supervision of James P. Siettmann, assistant professor of speech, was directed by students. “Evening in the Courtroom” included the famous trial scenes from Caucasian Chalk Circle by Bertolt Brecht, The Merchant of Venice” by William Shakespeare, St. Joan by George Bernard Shaw, Fiorello, by J. Woidman, Can-Can by A. F. Schak, Inherit the Wind by Jerome Lawrence and The Investigation by Peter Weiss. Will Rogers once said that everyone always talks about the weather, but no one ever does anything about it. In some ways ecology is analogous to the weather. On April 22, 1970, everyone talked; today virtually no one acts. Only eight students gathered at the General Store coffee house on December 2 to hear Dr. Harry Miles, assistant professor of biology, and Ed Fitch and Kerry Felski of MUSTBE discuss Ecology and Milwaukee. MUSTBE is handicapped by a lack of cooperation by Marquette students. Membership in the organization is tragically sparse. To understand the perspective and impact of MUSTBE on campus, the name Marquette Students to Better the Environment must be prefaced by the phrase “the ten sincere. Everyone knows that the earth’s future is clouded with the dirt, smoke and poison which technology has imposed upon us. What is to be done about that future? According to Kerry Felski, vice-president of MUSTBE, “To solve the pollution problem, EVERYONE may have to undergo a radical change in his life style.” 121 The complexities of basketball in the gospel according to Al McGuire were explained for some 500 ladies who attended the third annual “powder puff clinic. Penetrating the usually stiff and formal atmosphere of the Pfister Hotel with his humor and personality, McGuire stressed the need for cohesiveness among the member's of this year's team. In a rambling discourse, the MU coach talked about the black-white problem on the team, drugs, gambling and Gary Brell’s hair. With the pressure of high pre-season ranking breathing heavily down his neck, Al McGuire was expectedly cautious in his predictions. He compared the team with that of the 1968-69 season; great potential but a lack of experience and cohesiveness. We’ll be a little slow in the beginning, jell around Christmas and then finish real strong. Dean Meminger and Gary Brell were the only returning starters from the NIT championship team of last year, with Jim Chones, Bob Lackey and Allie McGuire rounding out the reservoir of untapped talent. The bench was strong, the offense was improved over last year but the defense, the trademark of all McGuire teams, would lack the experience and conditioned reflex found on former squads. After a freshmen game filled with singular performances by Lackey, Chones and Meminger, McGuire began to smooth the rough edges in teamwork. Marquette outclassed St. John’s 87-58 in the home opener, showing signs of their offensive and defensive capabilities. But the attack lacked consistency. Veterans Brell and Meminger dominated play at both ends of the court and by the second half it became a question of point spread as the reserves were shuttled in and out. Although St. Louis came well prepared to disrupt the full court press, they could not cope with the overall power displayed by Lackey, Meminger and Brell. Rebounding was the only evident weakness as Marquette neared the century mark, winning 95-72. With a tough schedule over Christmas still ahead, the Warriors appeared ready and equal to the task. 125 130 Marquette University Chorus Christmas Concert Sally Kill Staff LAYOUT Edwina Lamp Rowena Lamp Tom Armstrong PHOTOGRAPHY Mark Haertlein Tom Olander John Bruchs Fran Hopp Gary Paquette Chuck Danis Jake Jacobson Ric Sorgel Kat Fink Jim Krol Bob Tadych Patrick Frawley Edward Miller Ellen Wallace RESEARCH SPORTS Linda Duczman Dave Kern Patrick Deady Terry Oprinovich Photo Credits 6, 7 Courtesy of the Milwaukee Journal 8 Roger Schreiber 8, 9 William Mordaunt 3, 6, 11 Tim Coursey 12 Courtesy of Lt. John Washbush, USN 12 Courtesy of Professor Joseph O'Malley 13, 15 Michael Jackson The 1971 Hilltop, Volume 57 Issue 1, has 144 pages. The cover was printed in offset by the Marquette press. The cover material is 65 lb. Kromekote Cast Coated Two Sides. The page paper is 80 lb. Cameo Dull Coated. The end sheets are 100 lb. white Nekoosa offset. Headlines are Optima type photographed to size. The body type is 10 pt. Trade Gothic. Cutlines are 6 pt and index is 8 pt. Trade Gothic. The book was printed in offset by the Marquette University Press and bound by Boehm Bindery of Milwaukee. 131 NEXT ISSUE 1 ENV iro r-1 NME M | NTS y ] EVE NTS SPO RTS K SEN IORS V I VvL I I-- r | Plus: Those Who Do And Those Who Don't ! Hilltop 1971 Volume 57 Issue COMING IN MAY Looking for career opportunities? In addition to publishing two metropolitan newspapers, The Journql Company operates radio stations WTMJ and WTMJ-FM and television station WTMJ-TV. In the task of publishing two metropolitan newspapers (morning, evening and Sunday) and broadcasting top notch program material thot is available to millions of people at the turn of the dial, the staff requirements and organizational range of The Journal Company cover a broad range of talents, skills, crafts and professions. Each of these plays an essential part in the huge, complex task of modern mass communication. For example, on the staffs of The Milwaukee Journal and Sentinel you'll find not only editors, reporters, photographers and writers, but also artists, machinists, bookkeepers, librarians, salesmen, statisticians, researchers, cashiers, insurance clerks, printers, carpenters, stenographers, engravers, truck drivers, shipping clerks, pressmen, accountants, data processing machine operators, maintenance men, electricians—each and all of them contributing their part to the smooth operation demanded by daily deadlines and the public expectation that The Journal and Sentinel will be delivered to the home regularly, day in and day out, regardless of weather, regardless of season. Move into the area of broadcasting and you find still other skills and talents added to the list—the audio and visual engineers, the producers ond directors, the continuity writers, the musicians and announcers and many more. But behind the newspaper by-line writers and behind the headliners familiar to the public os radio voices or TV personalities, there exists the team, the silent partners whose efforts contribute so mightily to the finished product or result. Examine the career opportunities on a large metropolitan newspaper such as The Milwaukee Journol or Milwaukee Sentinel, or WTMJ, WTMJ-TV or WTMJ-FM, and you’ll find that even a limited list includes: Accountonts Ad Salesmen Ad Saleswomen AnnoutKtn Artists Bookkeepers Cameramen Cor'OOa.its Cods ers Circulation Men Color Techmoons Computer Technicians Copywriters Dispatchers District Manogers Draftsmen Editors Editorial Writers Engineers feature Writers layout Artists librarians lob Technicians Newswnters Mechanics Payroll Clerks Photographers Printers Producer-Directors Program Directors Promotion Writers Proofreaders Public Service Clerks Rodia-TV Engineers RodiO-TV Salesmen Reporters Reseorchers Secretaries Sports Writers Statisticians Stenographers Supervisors Telephone Operofors Television Directors Television Engineers Typists MORNING EVENING SUNDAY Milwaukee SENTINEL Since I fill? The Milwaukee JOURNAL Since 18H2 The Milwaukee JOURNAL Since 1911 134 WTMJ Since 1927 WTMJ-TV Since 1947 WTMJ-FM Since 197)9 INDEX TO HILLTOP VOLUME 57 ISSUE 1 Ace Foods. Inc. ... Agnew, Spiro ...... Aiken. Henry David Algozin, Keith — Alinsky, Saul ..... Alpha Kappa Psi .. Anthropology ...... Artist Series ..... ASMU .............. Aspin, Les......... Avalanche Club ... .. 61 2. 34 .. 36 .. 12 .. 68 .. 32 .. 20 ........36. 56 7. 58. 68. 91 ........15. 78 ............ 32 B Baldacci, Paris.................11 76, 77 Balke, Maureen .......................-1C8 Band ...................................|6 ben-Jochannan. Joseph...................60 Berringer, Stephen .................... 21 Black Student Union..................... H Bomb Scares ........................66, 92 Born, Joe .............................. Braun, Warren ......................... 50 Brel I. Gary ..........................123 C Campus Ministry..........7, 30, 54. 61, 70. 84 Catholic Peace Fellowship..........60. 77 Chones, Jom ..........................123 Chorus................................130 Clark, Don ...........................94. 101 Clausen, John ......................108 Club Football ...................... 50 Coffee Hours.......................... 81 Coffee House .........................70. 115 Committee on Faculty ............... 7 Committee on Student Life.......... 17 Coordinating Committee ............... 17 Cotten, Don .......................... 77 Cross Country......................... 38 D De Roche. Bob ......................... 94 Discovery Days ........................ 84 Doran SJ, Bob ......................... 60 Draft ................................. 16 Drewek, Ted ........................... 38 Dundon, Don ........................... 65 Dunn, John ............................ 7 E Eagen, Dan ............................ 80 Earth Day ..........................4, 121 Erickson, John ........................ 54 Evans Scholars ........................ 65 F Faculty Forum .......................15, 80 Faculty for Interracial Justice......41. 80 Felski, Kerry............................121 Fencing ................................. 40 Ferrante and Teicher .................... 85 Fine Arts Council ....................... 85 Fitch, Ed ...............................121 Folk Fair ...............................112 Fortas, Abe ............................. 87 Freedman, Robert ........................117 G Gallagher, Steve .....................108 Gardner, Jerry ....................... 76 General Store.........................70, 115 Graduation ........................... 13 Greek Initiations ....................117 Grote, Harold ........................ 92 Guzie SJ, Tad .....................15. 92 H Halloween ............................ 69 Harris, Robert ........................41 Hegel Symposium ...................12. 13 Heitzer, Art ..........................90 Highland Community School _____60, 61, 62 Hockey ................................94 Hollenkamp, Mary B...................108. Ill Housing .......................22. 26, 27 International Students 85 Intervisitation 17 101 Jackson. Harold — J 41 Jankowski. Bruce .. 38 Jaspers, Jim 82 Johannes, John 90 Jones, Leo 83 Journalism Council . 100 Judo Club K 89 Kallenberger, Roy .. 58 Kammer, Jack 104 Karate Club 28 Kazel, Ronald 89 Kick-Off L 46, 50 Lackey, Bob 123 Law 87 Leonard. Jerris 107 Liberal Arts Council M 60 Maier, Henry 117 Manasa 64. 98 Marathon Football 104 Marquette Players . .. 14. 37. 55, 88. 120 Mass of the Holy Spirit 30 McDonald, Terry ... 80 McEvoy SJ, William 61. 115 McGuire, Al 123 McGuire. Allie 123 McHale. Mike 90 Meminger. Dean .. 123 Miles. Harry 121 Mills. Kenneth . . 86 Milwaukee Club ... 115 Mitchem, Arnold .. 18 Mixers 29 Moeller. Arthur — 58. 69 Moore OSB, Dorn Sebastian........... 13 Moran, Mike ........................ 46 Movement for a New Congress ... 15, 31, 78 Musical Varieties ..................108 MUSTBE ..........................4. 121 N Nader, Charles......................... 44 Nads .................................. 32 Nixon................................... 7 North Side People's Cooperative Food Store........................... 54 Nyro, Laura ............................ 46 0 Olympic Day ......................... 32 P Pennario. Leonard ................... 36 Phi Alpha Theta .......................117 Philosophy .......................... 86 Physical Therapy .................... 81 Pi Gamma Mu .........................117 Political Science Department ........60 R Rabbits ............................. 32 Ramey. Dave.......................108, 111 Ramsey Lewis Trio......................118 Raynor SJ. John............7,11, 17. 64. 91 Registration ........................ 20 Reuss, Henry .......................5. 41 Rosner. Norma ....................... 80 Ross, Albion ........................ 77 ROTC ................................ 13 Rottenberg. Dan........................100 Rowing ................................ 65 Rusher, William ....................... 68 S Sailing Club .......................... 43 St. John ............................123 St. Louis..............................123 Sampson, Ed............................ 40 Schwartz. Joseph ...................... 15 Scott. James ..................17. 58. 90 Shimek. Mel ........................... 38 Siettmann, James P.....................120 Sigma Delta Chi .......................117 Soccer................................. 44 Speech ................................119 Student Council for Exceptional Children .................82 Student Strike ..............6, 7, 11, 90 Sullivan SJ, William................... 77 T Tabak. Fred .......................31, 78 Theta Phil Alpha....................... 32 Traditional Music Society..........11, 57 U Utah Repertory Dance Theater........... 56 Utech, Frank ......................31, 78 V Veteran's Day.......................... 93 Via, Jane ............................. 76 W Wade SJ, Francis ...................... 15 Williams. Mike .........................62 Y Yokie. Albin........................... 92 135 Our 47th Year MORRISON Photographer Specializing in Photographs that please. Graduations, Weddings, Passports, Family Groups, Babies and Confirmations. In our large concrete vault we keep your finished negatives on file, and can furnish on short notice duplicate orders promptly. Official Photographers for 7977 Hilltop of the individual Seniors and Fraternity Groups • CINEMA THEATRE BUILDING 536 West Wisconsin Avenue Phone 271-3793 136 IBinbcrs to tfje Unibersitp for ober 2?alf a Ccnturp “If It's Bound by Boehm, It's Bound to be CoocT Bound for Permanence and Beauty BOEHM BINDERY COMPANY Eitobliihed 1904 104 E. Mason Street Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53201 137 THANKS FROM THE SUB-BUILDERS TO ALL THE MARQUETTE SUB-SINKERS llmtmrpta Submarine Sandwich Shoppes 1230 West Wisconsin Ave. and across from McCormick Hall Plan Your Future with Dynomatic Division of EATON, YALE TOWNE, INC. Manufacturers of clcctro-mcchanical industrial drive units Challenging jobs for electrical and mechanical engineers 3122-14th Avenue Kenosha, Wis. 53140 Call or Write D. H. Langcland — 1-656-4211 139 New Modern Language Building The Modern Longuage Building, which opened in foil, 1969, hos on exterior of white procost concrete ponels, some blank ond others having large borrel shoped windows of sun-bronred gloss. Among its unique fcotures ore one of the most complete dial occess language lob systems in the notion, on environment controled audio tope ond film library, ond o teaching techniques classroom, composed of two classrooms divided by o one-way mirror. AWARD-WINNING DISTINGUISHED ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN Schutte-Mochon, Inc. Architects, Planners and Engineers 140 Happiness is a brand-new bank building that we can share with the friends who helped make it possible. Being m the tanking business we know something about credit Such as when to give it when it is deserved And the tact is, our etegant new quarters in Time Pla a are the outcome of a banking philosophy that says. As our customers grow we grow In a very real sense, our progress may be credited to the progress ot those we're privileged to serve So it s a great pleasure tor us to welcome our old friends to the new Bank of Commerce And to invite those of you who may be seeking a banking connection geared to the needs ot the small businessman to vis t us too You'll find we have a lot more to otter than ever before And that was considerable Bank of Commerce Time Pta a • 5ih and Weils Milwaukee Wis 53201 • Phone 271 1786 Member fooerai Deposit insurance Corporation in ine head ol the Cw c Center mst oil the expressway 141 SUPERIOR DIE SET CORPORATION Plf SET MANUFACTURERS 764-4900 900 W. Drexcl Oak Creek, Wis. iscount records oi 434 W. Wisconsin 276-1493 Nnc fr« Mirfcn M kuntnin Casah Conducts Four Fnoriu Sympkcn: “ ‘ ■ ttokutfi I' TV PUrtcf I Folnii Ordtnln Haydn Surpnv Mendthsokn Italian Mozart Junta Sckubat “UnfmisKd TV Mirtort Mhk Fnlml IdiH SqVn.fcrecHr mr We feature a complete stock of LP Records-Classical, Jazz Rock, Folk, Spoken Word, Humor, Popular and more-over 400 different labels. Discounts range from 15 to 40% off list price. A large selection of tapes, phonographs, tape players, needles and accessories are also available. MGP32 142 you should have your own checking account... of Milwaukee You're handling money every day. Important money— your own. And chances are you have to watch every penny. A checking account helps you do just that. Cash is great, but it’s too easy to lose. Checks are safe. But the big reason for having a checking account is to keep track of expenses and have receipts for each bill you pay. At the First Wisconsin we have a checking account plan for everyone. Stop in or telephone the nearest office. FIRST WISCONSIN NATIONAL BANK 14 CITYWIDK LOCATIONS • DOWNTOWN: N. Water at Muon • WUconiin at 3rd NORTH and EAST: VUIard ml 37th • Cmpltol mt Teutonia • Farwrll at North Port Wa hin ton at Brown Deer WEST: Capitol at I.libon • Capitol Court • Liabon at North Wiaconain at 24th • Fonddu I.ac at North SOUTH: Mitchell at 10th • Howell at Norwich • Oklahoma at 74th The Charge Card Bank 143 Your depotit are mtured up to t IS.000 by the Federal Depot it Inturanct Corporation, and tafeguarded by the retourtet ol Wiecontin't target! bank So convenient to you, on Wisconsin Avenue at 8th Street • Enjoy your FREE CHECKING ACCOUNT ! (With $ 100 monthly average) • Low rental rate on your own Safety Deposit box. • Instant service on Travelers Checks, Cashier Checks and Money Orders. Make the Continental Bank your Campus Bank CONTIINENT L B NK TRUST CO. Founded 1894 MEMBER: F.D.I.C. 7 Continental Plaza Wisconsin Ave. at 8th St. Phone 272-5000 f i HILLTOP 1971 HILLTOP 1971 Volume 57 Issue IRO NME NTS Have you searched vainly for a better burger, or was it a substitute for Ripple you wanted? See page....32. There was more to second semester than basketball, but no one knew it. EVE NTS HLLTOP 1971 MARQUETTE UNIVERSITY MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN CO-EDITORS Anne P. Harpham Mary C. Jablonski ADVISOR Warren G. Bovee ASSOCIATE EDITOR Brien Lee COPY EDITOR Claire M. Jameson ENVIRONMENTS EDITOR Martin Liszewski LAYOUT EDITOR Harland C. Hirtzel PHOTO EDITOR Gary Paquette RESEARCH EDITOR Sheila Kelly SPORTS EDITOR Cheryl Orlowski SENIORS-INDEX EDITOR Jacqui Banaszynski ORS RTS You didn't want to work in college, and when you graduate you can't! From the Notre Dame victory I the Kentucky romp it was the Warrior's year all the way. SPO SENI In the past two years, MU yearbooks have broken from the traditional concept of yearbook. Our basic purpose is to present to you, our student audience, the events and trends of the year 1970-71. We have tried to do so honestly and entertainingly. You, of course, are the judges of our success. The words events and trends presuppose some choice on the part of the Hilltop editors. The total number of events would fill volumes. We have defined a trend as an interesting and perhaps important development on campus that affects Marquette and the lives of our audience. Outstanding events of the first semester included the Laura Nyro concert, the marathon football game and the bomb scare mania. Outstanding trends included the birth and growth of Campus Ministry, the birth and death of the campus peace movement and the continuing struggle of the Greeks to attract members through attempts at relevancy. With this we present Issue 2 of the 1971 Hilltop. SIDEWALK CLOSED PLEASE USE OTHER SIRE During semester break the student accused of phoning in bomb threats was exiled from Milwaukee by the downtown court. Manasa, MU’s infant drug information center, was forced to close up shop when its lawyer quit and the building was lost. The Coordinating Committee—bugbear of the intervisitation hassle—was quietly disbanded by President Raynor and replaced by a five-man Administration Committee. But the Christmas break was dominated by the Dream and his dribbling cohorts. Students trailed the Warriors by car, radio and TV. The January 12 victory over Notre Dame was the sweetest to date. 6 Sports lllustrated’s Curry Kirkpatrick called them “college basketball's answer to wonderland , students simply called them “unreal and the sportsman of the intelligentsia, Heywood Hale Broun, travelled to Milwaukee and discovered that the Warrior “star had left at least one blacktop driveway in his path. By the time Mr. Broun arrived, the Warriors had just wrapped up a successful semester break, were still undefeated, and had stolen the number 2 spot in the Associated Press poll from USC. They hit like hell! exclaimed Long Beach State coach Jerry Tarkanian, after the Warriors had won their first game of the Christmas break. The Dream dribbled holes in the 49’er defense, while big Jim Chones hit the boards for 21 points, living proof that Marquette really could shoot from the outside. After a less-than-impressive victory over North Texas State, the Warriors returned to the arena to clinch their third consecutive Milwaukee Classic Championship. Three victories later, the Warriors were more than ready for Austin Carr and Co. on January 12. Coach Johnny Dee, confident of an Irish victory, slipped Gary Brell a package of German mustard to spread on the MU hotdogs. But the Goose held Carr to a mere 22 of his average 37 points and the Irish found themselves on the short end of a 71-66 score. At the expense of New Mexico State, the Warriors pocketed victory number 13 of the season in a nationally televised game on the 17th and began second semester a week later with a win over the DePaul Blue Demons. 8 9 10 11 Gershon Kingsley’s First Moog Quartet amazed and delighted its Marquette audience with sounds ranging from perking coffee to orchestral music. The Moog, an electronic computer-like instrument, described as a cross between an upright piano and a telephone switchboard”, can simulate almost any sound. Once used almost exclusively for television commercials, the Moog has played on stages from the union ballroom to Carnegie Hall. Because the Moog needs re-tuning between each selection and can play only one sound at a time, four were needed for the concert. Accompanied by a female vocalist of eerie timbre, the musicians and Moogs gave students a taste of the music of the future. If you missed the show, catch the Moog music in the rock opera Jesus Christ Superstar” or your favorite commercial. 18 Two men stand hungry and footsore in a stark, one-tree field. One screams, Nothing happens, nobody comes, nobody goes, it’s awful! That is the essence of Samuel Beckett’s tragicomedy Waiting for Godot. It shows life as utterly serious, yet also absurd — contradictory, unanswerable, topsy-turvy. Why live in a world of blindness and cruelty? But then again, why die from a world of friendship and hope? We’re waiting for Godot, is the only answer that the helpless, unhappy men can give each other. The MU Players staged the tragicomedy to sellout audiences for a run of three months. Their next production, The Apple Tree, a carry-over from the summer stock contained an adaptation of Frank Stockton's The Lady or the Tiger? 19 20 Almost three years ago, midnight mass at Marquette was a novelty. Today it’s a popular Saturday night event in Schroeder’s basement. Students jam the window sills, corridors and doorways to sing folk songs and catch an advance report of the Dr. Cadavarino movie of the night. John Naus SJ, Schroeder's chaplain who doubles as a philosophy instructor, is the main celebrant. His low-key, personalized homilies emphasize involvement. The event draws increasingly larger crowds, collecting those who come for the mass, those who like the sing-along and those on their way to or from a Saturday night social. Ecumenical Prayer Service The problems of the changing Greek system were mirrored in this year's Greek Ball, held February 5. The Ball went into debt for the first time in its history. The problem, said its coordinator, is lack of interest of people generally in organizational activities.” Other groups masked their problems in do-nothing meetings. But for the Greeks, failure at the Ball was noticeable: about $500 lost through the open bar, with a very small though enthusiastic crowd. The Ball was an annual event organized by a few members of the Inter-Fraternity Council and the College Panhellenic Council. It culminated Greek Week,” a melange of mural-painting, W. C. Fields movies, a magic show for community school children and a blood drive for Milwaukee residents. Music by The Third House and carding by the Zoo at the bar kept the Greek Ball well-oiled, but the Greeks were the first to admit that next year should be time to try something else. 22 Sisterhood Power was the slogan this year. Sororities were out recruiting for second semester rush and received a larger turn out than they expected—approximately 90 girls. The system of rush and pledging is one that scares many girls away. They just don’t want to go through “preferencing” and six to eight weeks of signature collecting, interviews and projects assigned by the actives. The Greeks say it is a means for the actives to get to know the pledges and vice versa. But outsiders view the system as irrelevant. Friendship and sisterhood, they say, shouldn't begin this way. At a time when the Greek System is declining, some sororities have decided to change. They have broken away from the national, put an emphasis on individual initiative and are trying to liberalize many of the rules of the College Panhellenic Council. Maybe it’s the start of an upswing for the Greeks. 24 25 What is the MU Greek System? A definitive statement, fair to Greeks and non-Greeks alike, isn’t possible. The system is in flux. It isn’t the rah-rah hazing of the golden-oldie decade. Nor it it the acme of relevant social concern. What caused the rah-rah decline? History crowded it out. Cities grew larger, wars dirtier, and problems bigger. Students lived through the Cuban Missile Crisis, McCarthy and Kennedy's 1968 primary campaign, Dallas and Selma, Alabama. War veterans back at school wanted a serious education. Colleges abandoned or soft-pedaled the in loco parentis doctrine. At Marquette, rah-rah faded and social issues rose. In September 1970, the Greeks’ tables in the union grill were assigned to the annex, and fraternities and sororities debated policy with the IFC, CPC and national headquarters. Some Greek activities still serve and please the student body: Musical and Varsity Varieties and the annual Blood drive. But Greek salvation is in relevance. As the old rush-smoke-pledge routine dies, their ideals of brother sisterhood may take on meaning. A near-capacity crowd in TWC 100 heard Dr. Marcus Singer of the University of Wisconsin explain and criticize moral skepticism on February 8. Singer, a moral philosopher, said that moral skepticism is any position that maintains that there can be no such thing as a good reason for a moral judgment, that ultimate moral principles cannot be proved, that morality is only a matter of taste. Later Singer said that people should not be moral skeptics, that it leads to unfortunate consequences—a moral confusion. But he also said that moral skepticism has been “a healthy stimulus to more accurate thinking. 29 Abortion—yes or no? An all-male panel, stimulated by an animated crowd of faculty and students, tackled this question at a Wednesday night General Store discussion. Similar discussions were arranged for those students who complained of the inaccessability of faculty and administrators. Current social and campus issues like the tuition increase, the proposed core curriculum change and the Berrigan conspiracy case made up the General Store’s agenda. Attendance figures varied. The exclusively Marquette-related topics drew small crowds. The discussions of social concern, especially the Berrigan talk, attracted more students. Fr. James Etzweller, Or. Patrick Coffey and Fr. Dennis Doherty discuss abortion. Or. James Barrett, Dr. James Robb and Or. Albert Jache discuss proposed core curriculum. Fr. Ken Fiet (second from right) discusses the alleged Berrigan conspiracy. ENVIRON- MENTS THE ALLEGED STACKED BEEF CONSPIRACY At 10:40 A.M., ace detective Joe Friday spotted the alleged stacked beef sandwich being placed on the tray at the union grill. At approximately 3:00 P.M. the same day, ace detective assistant Bill Gannon staked out the union. The object of the stake-out—to discover the truth of the alleged stacked beef sandwich conspiracy. Gannon found the marked beef sandwich still on the tray. At 10:30 A.M. the next day, Friday and Gannon returned to the grill and found the alleged stacked beef sandwich hiding inconspicuously among the other sandwiches on the tray. Gannon remained to “check it out for the rest of the day. On the third day, at 3:13 P.M. the alleged (and now green) stacked beef sandwich was snatched up and gobbled down by an unsuspecting customer. Unreliable reports stated that during digestion of the sandwich, the customer turned colors and shrank to a mere skeleton. In a moment... the details. 33 The alleged stacked-beef conspiracy” is fictitious. It has come to the attention of our palates and taste buds, however, that sandwiches don't retain their fine flavor after hours under hot lights. Hamburgers get stale after hours in a hermetically sealed bin. Donuts just don’t seem too edible after one hundred and one people poke their fingers into the donut to check its freshness. The Mothers of Invention” once said you are what you eat. I for one do not want to live my life as a stale cheeseburger. If I have but one life to live, let me live it as a fresh made-to-order hamburger. 34 Grebe’s Bakery and Delicatessen is a little slice of the South Side nestled among the Marquette skyscrapers. Annie, your hostess, will help you select your gulletable delights from a fine selection of hot-off-the-oven baked goods, fresh from the farm fruit and dairy products and tasty delicatessen treats. After you have selected your purchase, you may “eat it there, in the little-known and little-used “hot cross bun room,” or you may take it home with complete safety under the scrutinizing eye of Grebe's own free-lance house detective. Ode to a California Burger Hub of the university, Navel of the universe, To you we pledge our allegiance. Your coffee has helped us through Long nights in sleepless study. Your burgers... Oh your burgers May not be so fine But they only cost three nickels and a dime. Above all, thanks for the hours spent in intellectual discussion With your scholarly, drunky and bummy clientele. I have spent many hours inside your ketchup-splattered walls And will gladly live my life looking at the world Through the double plexi-glass windows at Dal's. $ul ur t SUBMARINI ianduweh § 38 40 After dropping their first two meets to Wisconsin and Superior State, the Marquette Wrestlers decided to mend their losing ways, perhaps fearing that all that physical punishment would go for naught. During the Christmas break the team shook itself from the doldrums; enthusiasm highlighted its practices. It became sharper and more aggressive. As a result, the Warriors powered themselves to two impressive wins, including one over the UWM Panthers. Coach Karpfinger summed it up when he said, We are a much improved team . . . because we are working harder and beginning to believe in our own strength. A long-awaited victory over powerful Bowling Green and a second place finish in the highly competitive Wheaton Tourney highlighted the following month of MU wrestling. With two meets remaining, including one with favorite foe Notre Dame, the MU wrestlers seemed to have the momentum to win. Fine individual performances by sophomore Terry Hake overshadowed an otherwise dreary season for the MU gymnastic team. Although Marquette lost its first three meets, Hake dominated the competition on he parallel bars and won first place in each meet. Also performing well for the Warriors this season was senior Lou Carbonetta in the floor competition. In the season's last home meet, Hake won both the horizontal and parallel bar competition, but the Warriors failed to convert Hake’s individual victories into a team win. Gymnastics coach Bob Lagerman described the problem as “lack of depth.” He said the cramped facilities are a major problem in recruiting a new team each year. - --- EVENTS Each year two of 447 fulltime MU professors are acclaimed teacher-of-the-year and awarded $1,000 apiece by a grateful university. The following is an account of the involved route to the Teacher Excellence Award (TEA). “In recognition of demonstrated ability to inspire students to seek the ideals of the University and to cause them to grow in knowledge and scholarship for the glory of God and the good of their fellow men. (Award citation, in part) One branch of the TEA route begins with the ASMU. Students happening across the nomination table in the union landing submit the names of their favorite teachers. Other students either vote for the favorites or nominate their own. The ASMU’s list goes to Dr. Arthur C. Moeller, vice-president for academic affairs. This is the ASMU's first year handling the student nominating process. The affair was lightly publicized and had little student participation. Hopefully future student nomination processes will be more organized. r C ■ Former TEA Winners These routes lead to Moeller. He compiles a list of the Top Twenty and asks the department chairmen for evaluations. Then he sends another list—this time of the Top Ten—to a panel of five former TEA winners. Each panel member sends Moeller a list of five choices by rank, with his reasons. All roads lead eventually to Raynor. The president, now faced with the Final Ranked List of Five Excellent Teachers, chooses two. These two, on April 23, 1971 received a commendation, plaque, check and ovation. The faculty also submit nominations of colleagues considered excellent teachers. Their lists are submitted to the department chairmen or deans. The Teacher Excellence Award is MU's largest single tribute to individual teaching excellence. It can be pointed out, however, that students have much more contact with their professors’ teaching methods than the present TEA system credits them. There are too many bugs in the present system. It could be altered to include more student opinion. It would be nice if students had more of a voice in the final selection of the two TEA winners. 45 They're on the way to the TEA (Courtesy ASMU) Dr. James Rhodes, Political Scitnce Mrs. Barbara Hoyt, German Fr. John Naus, Philosophy 48 Or. Albert Joe he, Chemistry Or. John Pick, English Journalism professor James Arnold: By-Line Award Recipient John R. Springer; Vice-President for Academic Affairs Dr. Arthur C. Moeller. 50 Nursing Capping A close friend of Hank” Fonda received the College of Journalism’s 1971 By-Line Award. A self-made public relations specialist who hob-nobs with the stars and name-drops among the bourgeoisie, John R. Springer attributed his success to a close personal relationship with his clients. Ninety-five members of the College of Nursing Class of 1973 recited the nurse’s Nightingale pledge and promised to strive for excellence at a capping ceremony in Gesu on Valentine’s Day. Dr. Mary Alice Cannon delivered the principal address to fifty-eight Dental Hygiene students who received their caps in a candlelight ceremony on February 12. 51 Dental Hygiene Capping 1:07.7 .......... 1:07.8 1:07.9! 1:12.0 . 1:12.1 1.12.2! Eight school records were shattered in this year's intramural swim meet. Sixty-three students competed in dorm, fraternity and independent teams in twenty-five events. Heraty Hall won overall in the women’s division while Sigma Phi Delta claimed first place in the men’s division. The biggest splashes of the evening were Jennifer Wish who broke freestyle, breaststroke and individual medley records, and Tom Bohmann who was awarded the Swimmer of the Meet trophy. 52 54 Theaters are suspicious places. They’re inhabited by magicians who transform bare planks into fields, oceans and city streets; who bring lightning and sunsets from rusty lighting boards. With 2x4’s and props like beat-up ash cans the MU Players threw reality on stage with “Contemporary One-Act Plays. “The Independent Female was a melodramatic spoof of women's lib. “Hello Michaelangelo showed the discoveries of a young poet and his girl through situation comedy. The Room painted the banalities of a household woman's life. Theater art is making-up and making-do. Madrid Study Program Brunch Red Letter Oiy lot MU student —Ring Day Or. Francis Parker, 1971 Aquinas Lecturer 57 The university is not the place for political action, said Dr. Sidney Hook, a noted professor of philosophy at New York University. He told his Marquette audience that academic freedom is threatened when students try to impose their wills on the rights of the faculty and administration. He defined academic freedom for students as freedom to doubt, challenge and debate within the context of inquiry. For faculty it is a freedom. ... to inquire, discover, publish and teach the truth.... According to Hook, the right to teach is earned, while learning is a human right. In his speech, Hook presupposed the university as a community of teachers and learners working together or separately, united by ties of respect... 58 Senator George McGovern (D-S.D.) began his presidential campaign in Wisconsin on one of our famous free study days. Despite the upcoming mid week, an overflow crowd jammed the union ballroom to cheer and applaud the only announced presidential candidate for 1972. After a quick crowd-pleasing reference to the winning Warriors, McGovern moved on to attack the war, the draft and the credibility gap. McGovern stressed that the nation cannot adequately face all of its problems until the war is over. He supports an unconditional surrender of troops from Southeast Asia and an end to the draft. McGovern drew considerable applause for his tongue in cheek draft proposal. The four point plan provided that no one under 30 be drafted, no one be sent to war without a declaration of war supported by two-thirds of Congress, all congressmen and members of the National Security Council be required to serve front line combat and no business or industry be allowed to profit from the war. 59 “There will be no more events like Kick-Off, said Michael J. Krachon, referring to what might be the last of the great rah-rah weekends at Marquette. Such statements have been a long time coming from weekend council presidents at MU, but Krachon went about making his predictions come true. The result? He and his council answered the Winterfest—Kick-Off—Tip-Off—Carnival syndrome with a weekend of events that made recent efforts in all-university weekends look like Rick Nelson’s idea of hot times. The weekend called A Long Time Coming was the first true response by a weekend council to student entertainment needs. The popular broom hockey tournament was retained; more participated than ever. Cool Hand Luke and Davy Crockett flickered on the union ballroom screen all day Saturday. But the mainstream was music. Richie Havens made it this year, in what many considered a double jeopardy situation. He had cancelled at the last minute in 70, but sang in 71 to an amorphous crowd at the Eagles Club Ballroom after its non-Caucasian membership policy had been repealed. Saturday evening, Bloodrock took over the ballroom. While the concept of a second concert was the product of good judgment, the choice of Bloodrock was the product of a poor choice. A Long Time Coming came as a valid response to student entertainment needs on MU’s musically-famished campus. It should prove to be a blueprint for future entertainment councils—if weekends of this sort remain. As Krachon says, We have to offer more than we have in the past. It’s been a long, long time. 60 Former Warrior star Ric Cobb receives McCahill Award. Blood rock Concert 61 ALONG TIMECOMING 5 Richie HAVENS IN CONCERT wife CATHY SMITH fRIDAV FEB. 26. 1971 8:00 P-A EAGLES CLUB BALLROOM ENVIRON- MENTS l i,i 65 66 he 67 68 'low DRAFT NUMBER Consider Army R.O. T. C. X+ offers ’ |. Graduale school draff defernoents ZMonfh y sc.bsUfence check 3. Second Ljeu+eoW' commission in the guhr or Reserve Arm] on completion of fho ro ram you have. two yean orf imder rad graduate or a combination of Vheae. hit, ]ou Could cjuolify for the 2 year program. Check with the. Arm] P.O.TC. offee, located in the Maryjotta. gymnasium Ix ildinq or call 37 ?r not later than Feb. I0t 1171. - ■ - - - - • — The Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) arrived at MU in 1940. During 1970-71 it had 320 members. Why did they join? Patriotism, tuition and an education, to avoid being drafted, to see the world. What do they do? Drill on Tuesdays or Thursdays, study naval or military science, wear uniforms and compete in drill and rifle teams, treat dates to the annual ROTC ball, usher at past graduations. And they wait for their own graduations. Commissioned service could take them to the Mediterranean or Indochina. ROTC men practice for the latter on cruises and in field maneuvers, studying triangulation and night compass work. 69 This man, John P. Oakwood, is MU students’ liaison with U.S. draft boards. He supplies forms and draft information about 2-S deferments, conscientious objection and other draft choices. He also handles the campus veterans’ affairs. In recent years, government and public opinion has become more tolerant of legal draft alternatives. And so the counseling business flourishes: privately-sponsored seminars, counseling centers, bookstores. But John P. Oakwood doesn't mind. ’’This isn’t the kind of thing you’re competitive in.” he says. He’s right. Young men need what help they can find. The lottery wheel spins once a year. You're both a winner and a loser at the early morning physical. Old Post Office buikting; Milwaukee's local draft boards. 70 i 3 r a ► n 1 «8 t ! ii -J 8 1 § il 5 55S u 5 Si tf - Ji si L y £ si s ft . • On March 16, 1971 about fifty old and young persons attended a My Lai Memorial Service at the lakefront War Memorial Center. The service was warm and personal. Holding hands and chanting yes, yes, yes, they affirmed a belief in peace. On March 1, 1971 a soldier in Vietnam sent a letter to a girl at Marquette. Every day, men apply for CO status and consider settling in Canada. Every day, friends and relatives are affected by the choices of these men. The options — draft, enlistment, exile or jail — loom before us all. You're affected when your draft board writes Greetings; when your fiance writes home from boot camp; when a friend asks for a letter for his CO application; when your brother checks out library books on Ghandi and Martin Luther King. The war and the draft — we’re all affected, they touch all our lives. Everyone has a stake in this war. u u ilV SIN 3 A3 Marquette's week of the arts began this year with writer and writers' friend Allen Tate, and ended with a low-key concert by Mason Williams. The sixth annual Fine Arts Festival featured concerts, lectures, displays, dances and films. On special display was the university’s most recent art gift, Madonna and Child” by the fifteenth century Flemish artist Jan Wilder. Films of Francois Truffaut were shown all week; the Marquette Players presented two one-act plays; and the Fifth National Student Film Festival, ten films which received awards in college film competition, were shown. Dance routines were performed by the Saint Nikola Church Members’ Group and the Marquette Modern Dance group. A student art exhibit and a demonstration by craftsmen rounded out the week. 75 The Saint Nikola Church Member ' Group. LitffcfitU •Speech SEH to UMl A TJ tMATDR ELECT A S WIU.PRESIDEWT votb ron EXPERIENCE I Russ Janowiak. Bob Browninf. Arthur C- Browne ASMU elections came early this year—ten days of campaigning, unpredictability and some lethargy. In the presidential race, Russ Janowiak ran as the best balance between commuter and dorm interests, and on his previous ASMU record. Bob Browning ran as the experienced Liberal Arts Council president. Arthur C. Browne, write-in candidate and BSU member, ran as a committed student” by special grace of the ASMU election board. Browning won by 254 votes. Only one-third of the student body voted, although all will be affected by the policies and methods of the next ASMU administration. The closest race was for legislative vice-president, where Tom Westerheide squeaked past Cindy Parks with an eight vote margin. Mark Crossland ran away with the executive veep spot over Jonathan Libby. In the senatorial elections, some candidates ran unopposed. That's been the usual situation at Marquette. We didn't need a primary election this year—again. Browne’s candidacy caused a major electoral change. From now on, any MU student, regardless of previous office or non-office held, may nominate himself for the ASMU presidency. 4. Now the question is: what has the ASMU done for you? It tried. There were few important issues, and few serious stands. But the senate never really seemed to find itself. It has little student support, and its best hope is to dog the coattails of the administration, turning its policies to our ends, as president-elect Browning said during his campaign. Trying to broaden students’ lives, ASMU sponsored speakers throughout the year. In this vein, it brought the debate duo of Alinsky and Rusher, billed as the debate of the century. 80 John Ounn, ASMU president Frustrated by internal indecision, ASMU tried reorganizing its councils. Sometimes that worked. We got the Ramsey Lewis Trio, Laura Nyro and Richie Havens........heavy stuff on a lightweight budget. The ASMU sponsored all-university coffee hours, one during the second semester. It was well-planned and publicized, yet failed. Apparently students, faculty and administrators relate best over textbooks and desktops —not punch glasses. O’Donnell girls tangled with the proper channels all year to abolish women’s dorm hours. ASMU studied the problem, and its officers gave individual support. By a slim majority, the ASMU decided to recommend the demise of Willie Wampum. Seven Indian students plus supporters demanded it, while fans at the Arena applauded the Indian basketball mascot. Next year’s ASMU gets to choose a brand-new mascot. Goody. Led by Mark Gannon, Alpha Delta Gamma withdrew from the Inter-Fraternity Council. The senate refereed the ensuing public squabble, and favored ADG. The ASMU amended IFC’s charter. IFC called foul, ASMU called fair. An unbrotherly row all around. © 81 Is there an engineer in the house? I say, the place is full of them! The 23rd annual Engineering Open House culminated a week of intra-college competition and activity. Between chin-dipping in the fertilizer bucket to help along the Best Beard, the engineers chose a sweetheart and a teacher of the year. Civil, Mechanical and Electrical engineers vied for the coveted spirit award; the EE's won it again. The open house is designed to familiarize the layman with the world of the engineers. E-students explained displays, exhibits and the use of labs. The week ended with the Knights Banquet—no slide rules allowed. 82 Are you aware of your rights as a citizen? If not, there are about 200 Milwaukee high schoolers smarter than you. Project Outreach, sponsored by the MU Law School, aimed at teaching respect for the law and discouraging its circumvention. It taught the legal system, the people within it and the students' own rights and obligations. The wheels of fortune turned at Casino Night on March 27. The gambling was courtesy of the Bus Ad and Nursing councils. Two weeks earlier, Helen Hayes had received the 1971 McElligott medal from the Association of MU Women. 83 Catholic theology has long ignored the fact that different peoples have different cultures and levels of authenticity, according to Bernard Lonergan SJ, the 1971 Pere Marquette lecturer. He spoke to a large crowd at the Performing Arts Center's Uihlein Hall on April 3. Lonergan said that Catholic theology has been immersed in classical culture and has just begun to recognize the pluralism that always existed. Pluralism arises because different men have trained their minds in different ways, according to Lonergan. For each of these differences there will be a different theological doctrine. Today the church must accept and face pluralism. Lonergan said that it is essential that we work out the true nature of unity and live in accord with it. If you’re interested in cars, the Motor Sports Association is right up your alley. Numbering about thirty members, and averaging about that number of cars in events, the club sponsors road ralleyes, slaloms and an ice trial. Anyone can join and everyone can watch. So if you're bombing the avenue on weekends, cruise on over to the MSA. FNVIROF si- LIN V 11 v— 1 ME NTS 50 Rashes can be caused by adverse reaction to certain types of food, to the fabric of your clothing or even from a specific allergy. Then again in your case, that rash consuming your right arm is probably caused by the aggressor forces of an army of bed bugs. The Marquette Health Center seems to operate on the mathematical equation: ah c. In laymen's terms this means: a hurt equals a cold. That sore throat which you've had for three weeks is merely the after effects of a bad cold. Disregard the fact that your tonsils look like lacerated watermelons. The kind understanding of the Health Center personnel will sooth your aching bones, while the tremendous healing powers of those miraculous yellow and orange pills gently caress your body back to healthy perfection. All the modern techniques of medicine are used in the treatment of your sickness. Only the freshest stumpwater is used to cure warts. Hybrid pedigree leeches, costing thousands of dollars per gross, are used for all blood-letting rituals. If the four biles have got you down and the bad blood has infiltrated your veins, head over to the Health Center. They've got abracadabras and alakazams to cure all your ills. Who will win the coveted Campus Sweethearts award this year? In connection with Gregory Peck and the other distinguished members of The Academy, the Hilltop has selected the following nominees: The Union ladies for their supporting role in the Stacked Beef Conspiracy. The barkeeps in the Ardmore and Avalanche, for their directing and producing of The Graduate—Marquette Style.” The cast of thousands, whose food has kept our stomachs full, and whose drinks have rotted our livers. The envelope please. 89 Before the announcement of the winners Charlene Piasecki will sing the theme of the pageant, Here he and she are, Mr. and Mrs. Campus Sweethearts (to be sung to the tune by the same name). Charlene will be accompanied by a band of thirty-five musicians, masters of the imported Spanish flamenco castinet, under the direction of head bandmaster William Geisheker. The winners of the Campus Sweethearts pageant will receive the official Marquette Loving Cup. The cup is the only one of its type: a perfectly-formed glass goblet artistically created by skilled Barvarian craftsmen. No expense has been spared in the delicate crafting of this Loving Cup. With much fanfare and many huzzahs, the Hilltop staff has selected the dear duo of Drambuie, Daiquiri and Drewry’s fame! Southern Comforters and purveyors of Pabst, Pagan Pink and Port! Righteous retailers of Ripple, Rhine and Rose! ... Paula and Howie of Wells Wine and Liquor, winners of the 1971 Campus Sweethearts Pageant. 91 Those who do and those who don't ............... Do and don’t, it is up to you Those who do study and those who don’t Those who frequent the bars and those who don’t .. Well, either you do or you don’t 92 All together now: We are — Marquette, We are — Marquette! We are — Marquette, We are — Marquette! We are — Marquette, We are — Marquette! We are — Marquette. We are — Marquette! % MR VvV SPORTS The Marquette Warrior basketball team followed an undefeated, best-ever regular season with bittersweet tournament action that dropped the curtain on dreams of the NCAA championship. After twenty-seven opponents in a row bit the dust, the hopes of Dean the Dream and his cohorts were erased by Ohio State, two back injuries and some contested calls by a superzealous Pacific Eight official. A true sportsman, Coach Al McGuire took the loss in his stride, but not without comment. What the hell are we talking about, a kid who has never played the game before? This is Dean Meminger... He doesn’t foul out in 120 games, and we get down here and he fouls out one day and has to sit on the bench for 14 minutes two days later. It’s ridiculous.” The Warriors looked a little tougher in an almost meaningless consolation game with Kentucky. Kentucky forward Larry Steele offered to flip a coin to decide the winner. “It was a tough game to get up for, said Dean Meminger, who declined the offer. There was no stopping the Warriors that day. They dribbled, passed and shot circles around drooping Kentucky as Dean the Dream led the pack. When it was all over, the Warriors had beaten the Baron, 91-74. Mr. Rupp performed as usual after defeat at the hands of Al McGuire; he told the world why he lost. But in that game, the Warriors showed the world that they were still the best, despite their individual manias, madnesses and looks. They could play basketball. And they did. The consolation game ended the greatest year of basketball in Marquette history. Acknowledging this, some 300 students greeted the team as they returned home from Atlanta. Dean Meminger summed up everyone's feelings when he said, The mark of a great team is their ability to come back strong after a loss and I think we’ve proved that we’re a good team. Any team that plays well enough to have their coach named Coach of the Year and to have another crack at an NCAA championship doesn't need to prove anything. They know and we know, they’re the best. 101 103 Speaking of scrubs ... On April 1. 1971, a ten year old youngster, Willie Wampum, was red-shirted for MU games forever. Early in the semester, Fr. James Groppi, in a TV discussion, declared that the Indian mascot was offensive and degrading. Indian students on campus rallied, demanding that Willie be ousted. Student and public reaction was quick and surprising. The vast majority were in favor of retaining Willie. The AS MU reacted otherwise. After heated debate, the senate recommended that Willie be retired. It felt it had a duty to protect the rights and wishes of minority students. Students, however, did not agree. They claimed that the ASMU as a representative body should reflect the majority’s wishes, and keep Willie. But the CSL also recommended that Willie be ousted, adding that “depicting of people in a derogatory manner is inappropriate to a Christian university.” The question was—who had the power to depose Willie? The students, administration or alumni? Willie was started by students ten years ago. And while students and alumni were in favor of retaining him, decision-making bodies were not. Basketball season ended. Dr. James Scott, vice president for student affairs, made the final decision—scrub Willie. The ASMU was directed to select a new mascot, unoffensive to anyone. Willie served us well, inciting the fans and the team on to victory. But we live in an age when we are becoming more aware of the feelings of peoples. Willie was offensive to Indians and as such it was best to retire him gracefully. 114 Back in 1964, Marquette hired Al McGuire to rescue its sinking basketball team. Little did they know that in 6 short seasons Marquette would be well on the way to becoming a basketball dynasty. Al McGuire brought his brand of ‘‘scrambled eggs basketball— partly physical, but mostly emotional—into the national spotlight. In the process he won the respect and admiration of fellow coaches. As Al himself says, Pm not the average coach. I say things I shouldn't. I go berserk. Although noted for his defensive techniques, McGuire's genius lies in his relationships with his players and his ability to deal honestly and realistically with team problems. Why not be frank? We talk about differences . . says Al. In 1971, such distinguished organizations as AP, UPI, Sporting Magazine and the NCAA named Al McGuire Coach of the Year. The title wasn’t won, it was earned. In four years Al has managed to win 101 games, two NIT bids and three NCAA bids. When asked for his formula of success, Al simply replied, Fear is what makes coaches great. Georgia Peach, the Grand Funk. Dick Dastardly and the White Rabbit crowded together below stage and in the narrow wings of Milwaukee’s Pabst Theater. The house lights went down and the emcees went on. The 29th annual Varsity Varieties began. VV’s is the traditional stamping ground of Greeks with larger treasuries and dorms with greater spirit. This year, Best of Show went to Delta Tau Delta and Chi Sigma Chi. Sigma Phi Epsilon and Gamma Pi Omega walked away with four of the ten awards. In the dorm division, O'Donnell Hall won over Cobeen. The skits dealt mainly with singing, dancing and colorfully dressed couples. They entered Stage Right with a common problem, then exited Stage Left in smiling harmony. Judging concentrated on the pageantry ... best choreography, best scenery, publicity, special effect, chorus. It took months to write music and scripts, and even more time to rehearse them. The skits were over within 20 minutes. 116 HIBill Vi ON STAGC 1 fjlk AT THE K'SHERTE'R. K Mil 2,3.4 ■ 3-00 PH. Delta Upslloo and Tower Dorm O'Donnell Hall Triangle Triangle Omegas 120 Tom Allen and Marco Pardo Soma Dan Riley and Bill SchuUman 121 Chi Sigma Chi and Oolta Tau Delta 122 Gamma Pi Omega and Sigma Phi Epsilon s Marquette’s campus remained calm from September, 1970 to April, 1971. After initiation by bomb threats— reminders of past spring violence—the year passed into relative uneventfulness. Why? Why did most of us sit back and simply watch things happen? Part of it was exhaustion; part, a rejection of active protest. National events like the Indochina invasion drew little response. Campus events like the tuition hike were accepted with only a whimper. We sat back and listened to academia tell us about Christian Marriage and the History of Music. The world is volatile. Its people are sparks, each of whom can ignite the whole suddenly and instantly. People were wondering “what would happen this spring.” They wondered how to react if the campus blew up again, as it has for the past three years. They were thwarted by anger and impotence while faced with the need to act. How can they act? What can a student do—realistically— to affect change at Marquette? Where to begin? A dorm wing rep or an ASMU senator? Walk out or sign in? Pass or fail? Answers don’t seem to come during the four years a student is at Marquette. Some changes were made—but behind closed doors, in committee meetings, and through forums and discussions that most students knew little of and did not attend. They waited to be affected instead of affecting. The two issues of Hilltop 1971 have tried to show the complexities of students’ lives at Marquette, and to help affect some of those changes. the RECORD 1971 SIDE ONE 1. The House I Live In (What Is Marquette to Me?) 3:07 2. His Love of Battle. 6:39 I. Arena Scenes II. Some people say They're Number One SIDE TWO 1. Publick Occurrences—MU Events 71 9:30 I. Introduction: The Milwaukee Symphony: Overture to The School for Scandal II. That’s Reality: Richie Havens; President Richard M. Nixon; Handsome Johnnie —Richie Havens III. Presidents, etc.: Art Brown, ASMU write in candidate; Representative Henry Reuss; Senator George McGovern IV. You Get What You Pay For: Sidney Hook, philosopher; John Dunn, ASMU President (emergency ASMU meeting) V. A Gift of Song: Introduction, Mason Williams; 29th Annual Varsity Varieties—Delta Tau Delta and Chi Sigma Chi, The Best of Show; Doug Daughtry, M.C., as Albert the Alley Cat; Brien Lee, M.C.. singing Candle of Love, accompanied by David English; Carolina in My Mind, Soma; First place winners in varieties competition; “A Gift of Song. Mason Williams 2. Post Script: The Last Dance :2S Staff Layout Jim Hughes Rowena Lamp John Zanoni Photography Tom Armstrong Chuck Danis Eddie B. Miller John Bruchs Mark Haertlein John Pontarelli Tim Coursey Fran Hopp Ric Sorgel Charlie Dahlhausen Greg Latsch Ellen Wallace Record Lou Jablonski Research Linda Duczman Jackie Patterson ] Seniors Tricia Blow Kathy Fennie Adele Drake Sally Kill Antoinette Elchert Diana Lee 1 Special Correspondent Glenda Buell The 1971 Hilltop, Volume 57, Issue 2 has 224 pages. All paper weights, type styles and printing information are contained in Issue 1 except for the following. Senior names are 8 pt. Trade Gothic, directory is 8 pt. Metro Lite. Slipcase by Universal Bookbindery, Inc., Bernard Cohn agent. Senior pictures by Morrison Studio, Inc., downtown. The record was produced by Brien Lee of the Hilltop and pressed by Evatone Soundsheets, division of American Evatone Corp., Ralph E. Klinke agent. SENIORS Business Administration Harold B. Averkamp John S. Barton JaH T. Balias Richard J. Bavolak 0. Reid Barton Bonnie E. Becker Thomas J. Berner 127 Cary A. Berre Raymond J. Blair Paul Blochowiak Ouane j. Bloomquisl Thomas E. 8udd Charles R. Burke Paul B. Casey William H. Church Mike W. Cimmo Michael C. Crowley Ray W. Curler Josephine Oiciocco Oavid P. Dobrzynski Steven J. Douglass Thomas L. Ouckhorn Robert R. Essig John S. Falcone James W. Finn. Jr. Michael J. Fons Robert C. Fo« Oouglas F. Frank Oarrell J. Fnsque Chns J. Gadient Peter M. Gandolfo Kathleen A. Gavin 128 Gregory C. Grots Marlin J. Grubanowitch Michael A. Guglielmo Michael R. Hackett Ronald J. Herro Robert S. HilliS Paul M. Hirmer John M. Hochhaus Edward C. Hubbard David M. Jacobs Roger W. Janice Craig w. Johnson Thomas M. Jurkowski Jeffrey R. Kaminski Ted A. Kay William A. Krating Mealin G. Klemme Catherine E. Koenig Jamie C. Kowalski Robert G. Kozel Donald J. Kulas Eugene R. Laczniak Robert D. Langonc Robert R. Latek Nancy M. Lee 129 Thomas O. Lilia Leonard M. Liptak Paul A. Lis.us Bernard K. Loohr Joseph T. Machi Thomas K. Maher, Jr. Jamas J. Mahoney Carl H.Maier Anthony J. Majewski Richard E. Marx Robert M. McCormick Donald f. McMann Harold W. Munroo Martarot P. Murphy Edward J. Nastav, Jr. John J. Nocosek Bruce J. Olson Christopher J. Palen Kathleen Pawlak Oennis C. Perrino Richard Pires Richard J. Powers John J. Purcell John P. Quitter Roger E. Rahils 130 Paul 6. Rocca William 6. Romaniuk Chrytan U Rychwalski John E. Sayer Oaniol N. Schnattlor Grant P. Schwartz David P. Shaughnessy Barnard R. Shaw Charles P. Shaahy Jettrey S. Sfcarhalus Paul L. Sollitto Stavan J. Stanak Lawrence A. Staintaifzar Joseph C. Streator Lao F. Strickland Charlas M. Sturm Neil R. Sullivan Ronald L. Tomas John A. Trautmann Adrian T. Ulatowski Jerome R. Wainhold William A. wensiaft Gregory E. Wichman Jamas J. Wolowick Ouane R. Wolter 131 Dental Hygiene Judi L. Adrian Barbara R. Sensing Helen A. Amidon Susan K. Brady Barbara L. Baum Patricia E. Breidenbach 132 Nancy A. Ctrvarich Karan A. Christen Deborah L Conner Susan E. Dvorsky Jano D. Friedrich Linda L. Cerndt Mary Jo Cettelman Joanne E. Guy Laura A. Hood Shirley C. Lenz Linda A. Maedek Judy M. Mikkelsen Colleen M. O'Brien Kristine M. Ott Susan A. Ssdd Dorie T. Seidl Therese R. Standish Kathy F. Stanislawski Sueanne M. Thibadeau Cheryl J. Tieteo Karen K. Twyman Debra R. Wendt Barbara A. Wolf Mary Louise Zeman Patricia M. Ziomba 133 Dean Russell V. Brown, DDS Dentistry 134 Ronald M. Alden Richard L. Anderson Wilmot T. Baughn Clondon i. Bogdon Charles F. Bohl Robert J. Brennan Robert A. Brevard David J. Brunner Dennis M. Connolly Michael F. Connor Dean W. Crow Daniel J. D'Angelo Richard L. T. DeFurio Richard A. OeMark Robert J. Coelx James 0. Covoni Dennis J. Grabowsfci David W. Haler William R. Hansmann Thomas J. Heinrich Lawrence L. Howard Terry W. Huff David R. Jahimiak Francis C. Joyce Richard L. Marcucci Dennis M. McMahon Sheldon H. Natkin Robert T. Navratil Frederick B. Oates 135 Kenneth C. Sherman Anthony F. Skiba Steven O. Solverton Daniel J. Stang Lawrence T. Patti Robert C. Petersen Oelp S. Schafer Nicolas J. Shane Cary O. Tielens James P. Toft John M. Ukich Schuyler H. VanCordon Oonald A. Whitlock Kenneth J. Walisxewski 136 Gary R. Anderson Peter P. Bell Georce A. Bowmen Robert L. Bulgarelli Gunther E. Ast Donald f. Benedict Wilson C. Brown Tem A. Barlow Jeffrey I. B.schof Robert E. Begiinger William S. Burkhart 137 Timothy C. Butzkiewicz Timothy F. Columbia James L. Conger William H. Conger Michael J. Connelly Craig R. Conner Patrick J. Crotteau Anton J. Eichmullor. Jr. Ronald L. Engelsman William L. Falk James 0. Ficke Jose E. Figueroa Daniel J. Frankovich James J. Frater Colin M. Fritsch James M. Cobat Charles A. Goilnick, Jr. Ralph E. Grant Charles F. Grielf George Groppi ■ 138 Rhaoul A. Guillaume Thomas D. Guyette George E. Haas Michael J. Halligan Roger A. Hedding Danny Ho Lonny H. Holfman Daniel A. Huck Ronald N. Jansen Richard D. Kader Andrew J. Kantoris Alfred J. Keller Robert V. King Thomas P. Kirk Kevin C. Komorowski Oavid G. Komatsa Jon E. Koniecki John A. Koziol John J. Kuenzle John J. Kunzer 139 Thomas A. Kwasny Dale A. Landgren Ccorgo M. Lange Nancy Laning Kenneth R. Latus Gary W. LaVasser Thomas J. Levall James 0. Loehr Richard J. Losch Franklin A. Lue Ronald J. Madsen Patrick H. Maggo Chester Malkowski. Jr. Neal E. Manske Robert C. Maresca Frank C. McGrady Earl D. McNamee Timothy C. Morawski Dennis M. Motl Edward S. Muraczewski Joseph P. Murphy Michael P. Murphy Christopher R. Myers Dennis W. O'Brien Dennis L. O'Connell 140 Daniel J. O’Oonovai Robert J. 0rainier Thomas R. O'Toole Ralph J. Parod Joseph J. Patek Thomas A. Paulson Gerald R. Pech Gerald M. PeiHer Stephen 0. Peluso John M. Perkowich Norbert F. Poch William M. Poui Walter J. Powell Robert D. Quinn Joseph A. Racine Roger W. Rcak Michael P. Rcince George L. Revoir Marguerite 0. Riedl Edward P. Riehl Joseph P. Roarty Kenneth E. Scheive Mariano Schifalacqua William J. Skeens Charles J. Slanicky. Jr. 141 Gregory S. Smith Robert F. Sobczak Joseph R. Soriano Richard P. Stanis Jeffrey A. Staple Michael 0. Stelzer Stephen J. Street Thomas J. Stys Richard S. Surma Frank E. Sweeney James M. Sypniewski Gerald J. Taborsky Francis X. Tiefert Steven J. Vanderah Thomas J. Wagner William C. Ward Vaughan C. Weaver Thomas P. Weber John 0. Whitacre Diane M. Wicklund Dennis C. Withey Constantine L. Xefteris Jerome M. Zajicek Terrance R. Zimmerlee Donnis M. Zlaten 142 Dean Clifford L. Helbert Journalism Margaret A. Abaravich Janice Ackerman Rosemary Bogner Philip R. Brich Barbara E. Bryan Kevin M. Byrne Stephan P. Chatbum Dennis J. Collier Mary J. Coyle Vincent J. DiPaulo Donna 0. Ounkclberger 143 David A. English Robert L. Fariello John E. Fisher Marjorie 0. Frcytag Michael F. Grimaldi Cynthia I. Guzzo Oean P. Hahnenberg Gregory S. Houghton Celesto H. Huedergard Mary C. Jablonski Madeline G. Keane James A. Keller Susan E. Kennedy Patricia A. Krawczyk Joan A. Lipscomb Linda L. Lockridge Kathleen A. Lorenz Stephanie Loughran Mary T. Magner Catherine E. Marchete 144 Joshua L. McMahon Dcrmot A. McNulty Carol A. Pearson Dorianne R. Perrucci JoAnnc M. Pctrcllo Regina C. Plichta Carolan Przybysz Thomas J. Olander Andrew F. Rogers Alan M. Sabbath Maxine Saporta Jeanne M. Schmitt Michael A. Schwaba Thomas W. Sheehan Deborah A. Smith Juan 0. Tamayo Michael J. Turmell Patricia L. Turner Carol J. VanZinnicqBergmann Paulette A. Weir 145 146 Michael M. Blanton Joseph C. Branch Robert M. Budic Thomas $. Burke Frank A. Calarco James L. Cirilli Gerald E. Connolly Oennis M. Cook John H. Correll John C. Curran Terrance E. Dawiedczyk Richard 0. Oepka Richard 0. D'Estrada Patrick J. Oevill William J. Drew James F. Eldndge Edward J. Fink Michael w. Ford Kurt A. Frank John J. Gcrmanotta 147 John M. Gadzichowski Martin J. Greenberg John E. Herald Judith M. Hill David J. Hirschberg Daniel G. Hunteman Robin J. Irwin David I. Jorcing Michael T. Kavanaugh Michael E. Kehoe Charles B. Kendall Frederick M. Lorenz Richard V. Lubinski Anthony J. Machi Douglas J. Malueg Frank G. Mandcrs Patrick Mares William J. Marquardt Dale F. Martell Maurice G. McCormick William M. McMonigal Dennis J. McNally John F. McNally Robert J. McNeil Dale D. Miller 148 Donald S. Mollor, Jr. Michael J. Mulroy Arthur B. Nathan Danial A. Noonan Kevin E. O'Neill David W. Paulson Jamos H. Peterson Jon P. Peterson Marc L. Polland Michael L Quirk Louis H. Rico Audrey Y. Schatell Joseph C. Schmitt John R. Schweitzer Thomas S. Sleik Daniel L. Smart James A. Spella Mary L. Staudenmaier Mandy L. Stallman Donald K. Stitt Mario J. Ventura Russell M. Ware Oennis P. Wherry Paul B. Wiseman James J. Zambon 149 Liberal Arts Catherine C. Adkins Salvatore J. Agncllo Anthony J. Amodeo Stephen J. Anhalt Judith A. Aldcrson William 0. Andersen Paul G. Babich Guy J. Bacci Stephen R. Bachhuber 150 Richard J. Bacigalupo John R. Barrett Bruca J. Barrette Gregory A. Berwick Sylvia A. Beardsley Susan M. Behling William J. Bendt Kathleen M. Bennetts Susan B. Bimba Frances A. Blankenheim Peter I. Borrelli Peggy A. Bossarte Patricia L. Boysen Jean M. Brady Linda C. Breaux Ronald J. Brejcha Carolyn T. Brescia Daniel J. Brierton Eileen M. Brierton Paul D. Brindza 151 Mary Ann Brophy John L. Brugman Carol A. Bularxik Paul R. Bunnell Mel A. Burchman Wilma J. Busse Kathleen M. Byrd Angela T. Byrne Kathleen V. Byrne Brian J. Cain Edwin F. Campbell Richard A. Campbell Linda M. Canevari Edward F. Capitota, Jr. Robert S. Caprini Louie J. Carbonetta Michael P. Carlton Richard J. Carter Cary A. Cashero John M. Cashman Francis E. Cassidy Ceorge Cavallo Cheryl 0. Cesano Susan L. Cheney Lois J. Cherico 152 Mark C. Cherwin Michael A. Chilinski Paul T. Cholis Vivian Chnstiano Gloria M. Ciardo Thomas P. Ciecarelli Cheryl A. Clemons Glenn M. Colacurci Carol R. Coleman John Colombo Michele G. Comunala Catherine M. Connelly Stephen J. Connolly Tressa M. Connolly Richard Coolman Margaret A. Corrigan Timothy J. Corrigan Timothy t. Coursey Thomas P. Crowley Patricia A. Cullen Eugene P. Cybulski Roger T. Cyr Theodore S. Czerniak Donald W. Daly Susan M. Daniels 153 Ruth R. Oominiak William J. Oorfan III Theresa A. Oorszynski Jeanette C. Dotski Stephen Doyle Mary L. Oeegan Stephen E. DeLaney George C. DeLaney. Jr. Maria R. Dcllorto Robert V. Oelzio Dominic P. OaMain Carol A. Depenbrok Francis E. Desmarais Arlene E. Oettmann Frances L. DiBenedetto Jean M. Dickie John OiPadova Oennis P. Dirindin Maureen C. Doherty Thomas J. Doherty Mary Karen T. Oressman Timothy M. Orewek James J. Dries Lynda L. Orow D. Robert Dufour 154 Robin J. Ouy Polar E. Eckert Robert M. Eckstein. Jr. Rita M. Eton Roger A. Elseth John P. Emir Kathryn M. Ennis James J. Ernst Anne 8. Erwin Dennis P. Esernia Candace J. Fabri Patrick A. Fargo Anne P. Farrell Kerry P. Felski Karen M. Festge Donna A. Fidelibus Christine E. Fields John F. Fink Nancy J. Flood Kathy M. Flynn Mary Ann Forciea Dorothy H. Forlenza Joseph Frty Paul E. Fry,off John A. Fucila 155 Mark S. Cannon Mauroon A. Center Susan K. Gibbons Julie A. Gilmore Stephen J. Cinal Cary A. Clatzmaier Susan A. Clennon Robert J. Cogan Kathleen M. Golden Michael P. Goodspeed Sharon K. Gorman Bruce C. Corzalski William J. Grace John E. Grahovec William H. Green William P. Grow George F. Grubisic Michael G. Grzeca Alan K. Hahn Edward N. Hahn Cynthia J. Haigter William R. Haines Thomas K. Hamel Mary Patricia Hamm Thomas J. Hammer 156 Jane M. Hanratty Martin R. Hartz Charles 0. Hasse Roberta A. Heintz Mary E. Heinz Joy A. Hembel Mary C. Henke Thomas M. Hennessy Kathleen M. Henry Susan A. Herkender Diane M. Hickey James S. Hickey III Harvey W. Hodges Christopher M. Houlihan Rory A. Houston John J. Huffman Wendy L. Hufnagel Daniel P. Hughes Renee E. Humpage Katherine G. Hutchinson James F. Huth Philip J. jachowicz John t_ Jannuzzi Robert H. Jeffers Carl N. Jette 157 Charles E. Jagemann Patrick C. Johns Conrad A. Johnson Linda S. Joy Bath M. Joyce Ramona Jusxczak Linda L. Kacmarynski Barbara Kaplan Kathleen M. Karrer Jacquelyn M. Kelly Joseph P. Kelly Karen A. Kelly Wayne J. Kempen Mary J. Kerscher Maria C. Kirylo David A. Klafka Robert F. Klaver Mary L. Kleber Kathleen M. Klein Ann C. Kloka Carol Knoerxcr Mark A. Koludrovic John E. Kosobucki John J. Kowalevski Kathy L. Kramer 158 Laura B. Krawczyk Adam A. Kretowicz Mary E. Kuehne Thomas L. Kuhlman Staven R. Kuhnmuanch Joy M. Kulkoski Henry K. H. Kwan William J. Lagand Julia E. Lamberti Paul L. LaRue Rita J. Lavin Ronald P. LaFevar Ronald J. Lemanowski Ronald J. Lanss James A. Lcvernier Apolonia Limoni Mary Lu Linnana Richard T. Lochowitz Mary Rosa Loranzini Mary Jo Lynch Janet M. Mahoney Ricky R. Majerus Stephanie E. Manka Mary Pat Manz Paula J. Marconi 159 Jeffrey A. Mark Kim Marrkand Jamas E. Martin Joseph 6. Mastronardi Ann M. McAulty Douglas M. McCabe Kathleen A. McCaleb Elaine L McCart Kathryn E. McCoy Kathleen R. McConagle Ann Mary McGrath James A. McGrath Raymond T. Mclnemy Kathleen M. McKenna Michael E. McKibbin James E. McManus Donna J. McNeil Elizabeth M. Meade Marlene D. Melzer Andrew W. Meuler Gregory J. Michelson Thomas S. Miller William 0. Miller Gerald J. Minter-Batten Raul 0. Moberg 160 Linda J. Mode Martin L. Moleski Cynthia M. Monge Thomas W. Montgomary William R. Mordaunt Edward J. Morris Margaret M. Morrison Michael J. Morrissey Patricia A. Morrissey Mary E. Muckerheide John C. Mundie Daniel C. Murray John J. Murphy James 0. Murtaugh Richard A. Musolino Kip J. Naugle Mary K. Neary Christopher P. Nemeth John P. Nightingale Naomi Y. Noborikawa John M. Norell M. Susan Oatis Christine M. O'Serle Mary Ellen Oberting Ruth A. O’Brien 161 William O. O'Connor Edward M. 0‘Donnoll Catherine 8. Oehmann John Q. O'Loughlin John 0. O'Malley John K. O'Meara Ernest B. Orsatti Thaddeus J. Oriechowski Kathleen M. Owens Jerry R. Packard Stephanie Jane Padcett Denise M. Pakula Mary Ellen Palmer Pedro Pares Philip 0. Parks Jeane K. Patrick Pamela J. Paul John T. Pearce Douglas J. Persich Mary E. Peterhans Karen A. Petit Lynn M. Phalen William R. Phillipson Thomas J. Piggot David A. Pignotti 162 John G. Poluiaeh Jonathan Polzin Mary J. Porter Richard E. Poulson Linda A. Prewitt Andrew Z. Pusztai Frances E. Quinn Linda A. Rakolta Mary E. Rex John D. Rice Thomas V. Ripp Michael J. Ripple Cynthia C. Rostankowski Michael 0. Rothgery Gretchen M. Rothstein William J. Ruidl Mark R. Russell Daniel B. Ryan Peter A. Ryan Joan E. Sarles Leslee M. Sawyer Jane M. Scanlon Marcus Schaefer OcWayne A. Schantzen Judith L. Scharlock 163 Carol L. Schmidt Susan L. Schnaidar Paul S. Schommar Jeremiah P. Schrot Suzanne M. Schueller Nancy $. Schuatta Oratory M. Schultz Patrick J. Sciortino Paula f. Scott Janet C. Sedcnquist Nano L. Sederich Joan L. Shanahan Albert J. Shannon Hannah E. Sheridan Thomas M. Shine Mary 0. Shioleno Harry S. Shorey III Lucy Sirianni Dianne R. Smith Theresa M. MW Ruth M. Sort James M. Spires Kenneth A. Spoeato Richard A. Stack. Jr. Thomas A. Stans 164 Sharon J. Sullivan Cary 0. Swanson Ralph C. Sylvester Frederick L. Syrjanen Dianna M. Szczur Donna C. Tatroo Mary Jo Taylor John F. Teftt Linda L. Thielies Barbara J. Tiesch Patricia A. Timpane Andrew J. Tomich Joseph R. Totoraitis, Jr. William S. Traudt David P. Traut Robert J. Twohig Edward P. Tynan Michael F. Uebelherr Laura L. Veckey Edward F. Vlack III Sandra J. Stainmetz Frederick M. Style Richard J. Sucharda John L. Sullivan MaryJo Sullivan 1 Paul R. Vogel Gerald A. Vogue Lynne T. Wabisaewski Mark H. Wahlberg Diane D. Wastey Scott C. Weaver Eric f. Weber Michael T. Weber Lothar H. Wedekind Marilynn J. Weiland Michael P. Weisrock Kathleen L Welch Eileen F. Welsh Pauline M. Welsh Thomas R. Wemer Philip C. Westfahl James P. Whalen Vincent J. White Joan M. Wmkowski Thomas R. Wisniewski Richard J. Witas Robert 8. Woyach Marianne C. Wyar Charles B. Yerkes Panait A. Zaragoua 166 Medical Technology Director Alice Semrad Margaret M. Becker Linda A. Burmesch Marsha M. Croasdaile Kathleen M. Freimuth Patricia A. Calka Mary B. Cerstmeier Jean M. Geskermann Barbara J. Glueckcrt 167 Pamela J. Hoostal Mary E. Kaczmarek Mary C. Kay Janice A. Komorowski Teresa A. Kuhn Nancy S. Maloney Louise E. Muehl Mary L Pfeil Judith A. Perko Teresa M. Robinson Ooroen M. Serwin Lumina A. Schiller Cynthia A. Sperks Carol A. Vorderer Sandra A. Wiesner 168 Dean M. Rosalie Klein, CSF Kathleen 0. Barrett Barbara L. Beno Br. Thomas R. Bolduc Patricia R. Cassidy Carla f. Castrofiovanni Elizabeth E. Chappell Jeanne M. Constantin Carol L. Crichton 169 Patricia A. Elder Sandra J. Enea Mary Jeanne Fischer Phyllis F. Flowers Mary Kay Gebhard Patricia M. Gormley Charlene A. Grill Mary Beth Harper Andrea M. Henkel Mary M. Hollahan Katherine A. Kieffer Jane M. Lancour Barbara A. Lawrence Marilyn A. Ledvina Marci J. Ludwig Lynn K. Mackley Mary Ann Marbach Barbara J. McArthur Margaret M. McNamara Josephine A. Means 170 Pamela A. Miller Victoria S. Mitchel Sarah A. Monahan Suzanne M. O'Brien Judith E. O’Grady Kathleen F. Potts Margaret M. Przybysz Sr. M. Theresa Regler Colleen Riehl Suzanne V. Ries Sr. Patrice Seidl Sarah M. Slota Linda Lee M. Stark Kathryn 0. Street Susan J. Sypniewski Mary Helen Turner Ellen M. Webb Sharon L. Wolohan Kathleen A. Wood Patricia A. Zahorik 171 Mary Margaret Anella Karen A. Arndt Genevieve P. Boris Kristen E. Birkmeier Joan M. Bull Nancy L. Fritnche Gay L Girolami Director Donald J. Gavinski Physical Therapy 172 Mary A. Heinrich Marie C. Hudak Mary K. Kiersxnowski Maureen Klaran Christine A. Lewis Julia A. Linn Mary E. Lipscomb Maribcth Littelmann Michelle McNally Linda A. Mihalko Marsha M. Mogilka Kenneth E. Nolle Claire J. Ohlmiller Anne Riendl Robert Sarno Camille A. Sheehan Boatrice A. Spaeth Katheryn L. Wilson Susan M. wood Patricia A. Zamoiski 173 Speech Dean Alfred J. Sokolnicki Barbara A. Anthony Mary J. Binzel Rebecca R. Bishop Anno M. Blom Pamela M. Boyd Elizabeth A. Brinsko Ellen F. Butler Mary C. Clark John J. Comerford Janet M. Curran Jeanne M. Orager Stephen J. Dupree Robert J. Escobar Sheila M. Gallagher Chris C. Gulinski Mary M. Hauser Lynn M. Idxikowski Deborah R. Jung Deirdre Lanigan Robert W. Lour Janet L. LeJeune Anna K. Matxdorf Peter J. McCumiskey Michaele M. McGrath Kathleen R. Murphy Nancy J. Nelson Priscilla E. Nietxol 175 Charlene P. Piasecki Nona M. Rand Thomas M. Ratkowski Kathleen A. Reuter Mike Rolnicki Lynn A. Roes Penelope J. Ryan Constance M. Schneider Tony Schneider Theresa L. Sharbaugh Christopher 6. Sheppard Jean A. Tebinka Judith A. Twombly Mary K. Walsh Sandra C. Weber James P. Welboum Thomas J. Winninger Elizabeth M. Wise Joan S. Wojtal Patricia A. Yahle 176 SENIOR DIRECTORY A8ARAVICH, MARGARET A. 305) S. 50th St. Milwoukee, Wit Bochelor of Art in Joumolitm Koppo Beta Gamma. Wmtcrfetf Council ABRAHAM, JEFFREY L. 4129 N. Bortlett Milwaukee, Wis. Juris Doctor Law Review, Thomas More Scholar, Tau Epsilon Rho ACKERMAN, JANICE I 744 State Rte 885 West Mifflin, Po. Bachelor of Arts In Journalism ADAMS, HERBERT V. Ill 1522 Hilkrest Dr. Sheridan. Wyo. Juris Doctor Delta Theta Phi, Low Review, Oyer, Placement Digest ADKINS. CATHERINE C 797 Overview Ct. Proirie du Cheine, Wis. Bochelor of Arts ADRIAN, JUDI L. 107 Courtney Ct. Neenah, Wis. Diploma In Dental Hygiene ANGELLO, SALVATORE J. 708 E. Clorke Milwaukee, Wis. Bachelor of Arts Scobbord and Blade, Pershing Rifles. Pi Gamma Mu, Pi Sigma Alpha, Army ROTC Drill Team. MU Young Republicans ALBERT, JERRY R. 4534 N. Wilson Dr. Shorewaod, Wis. Juris Doctor PI Lambda Phi, Tau Epsilon Rho ALBERT. JOHN J. 3733 LJahthouse Dr. Racine, Wis. Juris Doctor ALDEN, RONALD M. 720 Green Meadow Ave. Rockford. III. Doctor of Dental Surgery, Beta Beta Beta ALDERSON, JUDITH A. 2417 Pemberton Toledo, Ohio Bachelor of Arts Psi Chi AMIDON, HELEN A. 901 Rolling Poss Glenview, III. Diploma in Dental Hygiene Alpha Delta Eta AM0DE0, ANTHONY J. Orange St. Marlboro, N.Y. Bochelor of Arts Notional Social Science Honor Society ANDERSEN, WILLIAM O. 401 Division St. Melrose Park, III. Bochelor of Arts Delta Too Delta, Intromurol Sports ANDERSON, GARY R. W134 50 Nl 13 Crestview Dr. Germantown, Wis. Bochelor of Science In Electrical Engineering Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers, Engineering Council ANDERSON, RICHARD L. 5023 Volley Troil Rocine. Wis. Doctor of Dental Surgery Psi Omega ANELLA. MARY MARGARET A. 11038 S. Avenue N. Chicago, III. Bachelor of Science in Physical Theropy Phi Mu ANHALT, STEPHEN J. 2224 Markham Manitowoc, Wis. Bochelor of Arts Dorm Government ANTHONY, BARBARA A. SI N. Mam St. Jewett City, Conn. Bochelor of Science in Speech Sigmo Alpha Eto, Dorm Counselor, Varsity Varieties. Kick-Off Chairman ARNOT, KAREN A. 3021 S. Lincoln Springe Id. III. Bochelor of Science in Physical Theropy AST. GUNTHER f. 3819 N. Oakland Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Science In Mechonicol Soccer Engineering Phi Kappa Theta, Varsity AVERKAMP, HAROLD B. 1534 S. 59th St. West Allis. Wrs. Bachelor ot Science In Business Administration Beta Alpha Psi BABICH. PAUL G. 10399 W, Carpenter Greenfield, Wis. Bochtflor of Artm Pi Sigma Alpha, Honors Students Association BACCI, GUY J. 1039 Meodowlark Glenview, III. Bochelor of Arts Delta Tau Delto, Inter-Frotemity Council Judkiol Board BACHHUBER, STEPHEN R. 7504 Wotson Ave. Wauwatosa, Wis. Bachelor of Science in Biology BACIGALUPO, RICHARD J. 1701 Poloce St. Paul, Minn. Bachelor of Arts Crown and Anchor BALLAS, JEFF T. RR 2 LoCresccnt, Minn. Bachelor of Science in Business Administration Club Football BARRETT, JOHN R. 802 S. 5th Ave. Vircinio, Minn. Bochelor of Arts Club Footboll, Kick-Off, MUCAP. Mens Inter-Residence Hall Council BARRETT. KATHLEEN D. 211 Rowe Dr. Bloomington, III. Bochelor of Science in Nursing Traditional Musk Society, Avalanche BARRETTE, BRUCE J. Badger Park Peshtioo Wis. Bochelor of Science Pre-Med Club, Crown ond Anchor BARTON, D. REID 203 S. I Morion, Ind. Bochelor of Science in Business Administration BARTON. JOHN S. 3371 S. 35th St. Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Science In Business Administration Beta Alpha Psi, Intromurol Sports BARTOSZ, TOM A. 12885 Wilbur Dr. New Berlin, Wis. Bachelor of Science in Mechonicol Engineering Monks Club 8ARWICK, GREGORY A. 3210 Delray Dr. Ft. Wayne, Ind. Bochelor of Science in Political Science BATES, PATRICK B. 5512 W. Washington Blvd. Milwaukee, Wis. Juris Doctor Delta Theta Phi, Placement Digest BAUGHN, WILMOT T. 80 Carrol de Tierra Salinas, Colif. Doctor ot Dentol Surgery BAUM, BARBARA L. 1234 Hazel St. Oshkosh, W.s. Diploma in Dentol Hygiene Alpha Delta Eto, Dentol Hygiene Chorus, Junior American Dentol Hygiene Association BAVOLEK, RICHARD J. 8304 Tripp Skokie. Ilf Bochelor of Science in Business Administration Beta Alpha Psi, Evans Scholars 8EARDSLEY, SYLVIA A. 3464 s. 96th SI. Milwaukee Wis. Bachelor of Arts BECKER. BONNIE E. 709 Center St. Hartford. Wis. Bochelor of Science in Business Administration BECKER, MARGARET M. 1822 N. 71st St. Wouwotosa, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Medical Technology Alpha Delto Theta BEGLINGER, ROBERT E. 1615 Hilloest Dr. Lake Geneva, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Civil Engineering Alpha Delto Gamma BEHLING, SUSAN M. 4022 N. Downer Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Arts Koppa Betto Gommo. Musical Varieties, Vorsiy Varieties BILL, PETER P. 5200 Carrtoge Way Dr. Rolling Mcodows, III. Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering Scabbard and Blode, Triangle. Marquette Engineer, ASMU, Engineering Council 8CLLANDI, JAMES A. 3227 Liberty Dr. Rockford. III. Juris Doctor Sigmo Phi Epsilon, Delto Thefo Phi BENOT, WILLIAM J. 315 W. Van Buren Port Washington, Wis. Bochelor of Arts Tribune BENEDICT, DONALD F. 454 W. First El Paso. III. Bochelor of Science In Electrkol Engineering Vorsity Varieties 8ENNETTS, KATHLEEN M. 9529 W. Lorraine PI. Milwaukee, Wis. Bachelor ot Arts BENO, BARBARA L. 140 St. Mary's Blvd. Green Boy, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Nursing Chi Sigma Chi BEN5ING, BARBARA R. 1504 Lyon Woterloo, Iowa Bachelor of Science in Dental Hygiene BERG. GENEVIEVE P. 1361 Allison Conon City, Colo. Bachelor of Science In Physical Therapy BERNER, THOMAS J. 1210 Motheson Jonetville, Wn. Bochelor of Science in Business Administration Beta Alpha Psi, Phi Koppa Theta BERRES, GARY A. 3612 N. 81st St. Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Business Administration BIMBA, SUSAN B. Beckwith Lane Crete, III. Bochelor of Arts 8INZEL, MARY J. 1015 W. 6th St. Morthfeld, Wis. Bachelor of Science In Speech Sigmo Alpha Eta, Alpha Delta Pi, Semcr Week Council. Speech Council, Avolanche Club, Dorm Council BIRKMIIER, KRISTEN L 304 E. 3rd St. Delphos, Ohio Bochelor of Science In Physical Theropy BISCHOF. JEFFREY I. 34 S. Ridge Arlington Hts., III. Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering Fencing, Avalanche Club, Young Americans for Freedom BISHOP, REBECCA R. 1402 Joan Dr. Palatine, III. Bochelor of Arts in Speech Sigmo Sigma Epsilon, Marcodettas BLAIR, RAYMOND J. 3851 W. 57th St. Chicogo, III. Bachelor of Science In Business Administration BLANKENHEIM, FRANCES A. N9I-WI7366 St. Mork Dr. Menomonee Foils, Wit. Bochelor of Arts BLANTON, MICHAEL M. 217 Debbie Dr. Waukesha, Wis. Juris Doctor Delta Theto Phi, Placement Digest, Law Day Trial, Student Bor Association 8LOCHOWIAK, PAUL 3I20A S. 30th St. Milwaukee, Wis. Bachelor of Science in Business Administration BLOM, ANNE M. 4907 W. Vine Milwaukee, Wit. Bachelor of Science in Speech Theropy BLOOMQUIST, DUANE J. 137 W. New boll Ave. Woukesho, Wis. Bachelor of Science In Business Administration BOGDON, GLENDON J. 3335 E. Grange Cudahy, Wis. Doctor of Dental Surgery Student Amerkon Dentol Association, American Society of Dentistry for Children BOGNER, ROSEMARY 6316 S. Keeler Chicago, III. Bochelor of Arts in Journalism BOHL, CHARLES F. 1047 E. Melrose Appleton, Wis. Doctor of Dentol Surgery ond Bochelor of Arts Delta Sigma Delta BOLDUC, BR. THOMAS R. 7 Chrome St. Worcester, Mass. Bachelor of Science in Nursing BORRELLI, PETER L. 7 Brooklyn Lavollette, N J. Bachelor of Science Alpho Epsilon Delta, Crow Country, Sailing Club, Musical Varieties, Vorsity Varieties BOSSARTE, PEGGY A. 923 Edoehill Rd. Jacksonville, III. Bochelor of Arts BOWMAN, GEORGE A. 3292 N. 51st St. Milwaukee, Wis. Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering Engineer Co-op, Engineer Open House BOYD, PAMELA M. Gb Harbor, Washington Bochelor ot Science in Speech Sigma Alpha Eto BOYSEN, PATRICIA L. 9676 S. Brennan Chicogo, III. Bochelor of Arts BRADY, JEAN M. 714 S. Marshall Coledonia. Minn. Bochelor ot Science Koppa Beta Comma, Musicol Voneties, Varsity Varieties, Ski Club BRADY, SUSAN K. 839 N. I3fh St. Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Dental Hygiene BRANCH, JOSEPH C. 3736 N. Humboldt Blvd. Milwaukee, Wis. Juris Doctor Alpho Sigmo Nu, Law Review, Student Bar Association 177 BREAUX, LINDA. 1415 Woverly Tyler, Tc OS Bachelor of Art BREIDEN8ACH, PATRICIA E. 1206 Adr.on Blvd. Ft. Atkinson, Wis. Diploma in Dental Hygiene Alpho Delta Eta, Jr. American Dentol Hygiene Association, American Dentol Association BRtJCHA, RONALD J. 556 Byrd Riverside, III. Bachelor of Arts Pi Sigma Alpha, MUCAP BRINAN, ROBERT J. 729 Reid St. West DePere, Wis. Doctor of Dental Surgery Psi Omega BRESCIA, CAROLYN T. 230 North Rd.-Smoke Rise Kmnelon, NJ. Bachelor of Arts BREVARO, ROBERT A. 3859 N. Humboldt Milwaukee, Wis. Doctor of Dentol Surgery Junior American Dentol Association, Americon Society of Dentistry for Children BRICH, PHILIP R. 449 E. Linden Dr. Jefferson, Wis. Bochelor of Arts In Journolism Scabbard and Blade, Zeta Beta Tou, Sigma Delta Chi BRIERTON, DANIEL J. 711 N. I6fh St. Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Arts Troek MVP Award, Freshman Basketball BRIERTON. EILEEN M. 711 N. 16th St. Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Arts BRINDZA, PAUL D. 3930 S. Pockord St. Francis, Wis. Bachelor of Science in Physics Young Republicans, Society for Individual Liberty, Lob Instructor, Research Assistant, Tutor for Black Opportunity Center BRINSKO, ELIZABETH A. 327 Grond Avo. Thiensville, Wis. Bocholer of Science In Speech Zeta Phi Eto, Sigma Alpha Eta, Band BROPHY, MARY ANN 530 Seneca Pkwy. Rochester, N.Y. Bochelor of Arts Young Democrats BROWN, WILSON C. 132 E. 6th Hinsdale. III. Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering Institute of Electronic and Electrical Engineers BRUOMAN, JOHN L. 1707 S. 8th Ave. Sofford, Ariz. Bachelor of Science Alpha Sigma Nu. Honors Program, Dorm Counselor BRUNNER, DAVID i. 5430 N. Shoreland Whifefish Bay, Wis. Doctor of Dentol Surgery Psi Omega, Infromurol Sports BRYAN. BARBARA E. Barkers Point Rd. Sands Point, N.Y. Bachelor of Arts in Journalism BUDD, THOMAS E. 50 Budd Ave. Pemberton, NJ. Bochelor of Science In Business Administration Sigma Phi Epsilon, Fraternity Football, Baskctboll ond Baseball, Kick-Off. Varsity Varieties BUDIC, R08ERT M 2353 Lefcber Ave. Wouwotoso, Wis. Juris Doctor Phi Alpha Delta BULARZIK, CAROL A. 138 56th St. Downers Grove, III. 8acholor of Arts, Library Assistant, International Students Club 8ULGARELLI, ROBERT L. 28W064 Plomview Dr. Noperville. III. Bochelor of Science In Electrical Engineering Sigma Phi Delta, Freshman Orientation, Student Activities Bocrd, Engineering Council, Who's Who Committee. BULL, JOAN M. 1326 S. 9th St. Manitowoc, Wis. Bachelor of Science In Physical Therapy BUNNELL, PAUL R. 172 E ghth St. Leominster, Moss. Bachelor of Science in Biology Alpha Delta Gammo BURCHMAN, MEL A. 15-62 209th St. Boy-ude, N.Y. Bachelor of Science in Pre-Med BURKE, CHARLES, R. 15133 I5l f Oak Forest, III. Bachelor of Science In Business Administration Beta Gamma Sigma, Beto Alpho Psi BURKE, THOMAS S. 4709 W. Anthony Dr. Greenfield, Wit. Juris Doctor Alpho Sigma Nu, Delfo Theto Phi BURKHART, WILLIAM S. 4266 Sheridan Ave. N. Minneapolis, Minn. Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering Sigma Phi Delta BURMESCH, LINDA A. 1339 McCormick St. Green Boy, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Medical Technology BUSZKIEWICZ, TIMOTHY C 2417 N Pierce St. Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Science In Mechanical Engineering Tou Beta Pi, Pi Tou Epsilon, ASME BUSSE, WILMA, J. 41 Forest Grove Coroopolis, Pa. Bochelor of Arts Psi Chi BUTLER, ELLEN F. Cedar Foils Rd. Hazclhurst, Wis. Bochelor of Arts In Speech Sigma Sigma Epsilon, Korate Club BYRO, KATHLEEN M. 393 Jeiliff Mill New Conaan, Conn. Bachelor of Arts Fme Arts, Anthropology Club, Pi Gamma Mu BYRNE. ANGELA T. 516 Pleasant View St. Wauwatosa, Wiv Bachelor of Arts Phi Alpha Theta, Chorus BYRNE, KATHLEEN V. 1710 S. Fernandez Arlington Hts., III. Bochelor of Science In Moth MUCAP, Soiling Club BYRNE, KEVIN M. 1335 Webb Lokewood. Ohio Bachelor of Arts in Journalism Tribune, Varsity Wrestling, Student Senate, Dorm Counselor CAIN, BRIAN J. I Andrea Dr. Setouket, N.Y. Bachelor of Arts CALARCO, FRANK A. 4917 W. Wells St. Milwaukee, Wis. Juris Doctor Delta Theto Phi CAMPBELL. EDWIN F. 310 Knollwood Ave. Dougloston, N.Y. Bochelor of Arts In Psychology Psi Chi, Varsity Tennis, Morryiette Players, CCD, SURE CAMPBELL, RICHARD A. 701 Rutgers Rd. Dayton, Ohio Bachelor of Arts CANEVARI, LINDA M. 304 Springfield Ave. Cronford, NJ. Bachelor of Arts ond Certification in Education Theta Phi Alpha CAPITOLA. EDWARD F. JR. 304 Meier Ave. New Castle. Po. Bochelor of Arts CAPRINI. ROBERT 5. 681 Winston Dr. Melrose Pork. III. Bachelor of Arts Pi Sigmo Epsilon CARBONETTA, LOUIS J. 925 Grandview Blvd. Lancaster, Po. Bachelor of Science Delto U psi Ion. Delto Sigma PI, Varsity Gymnostict, Varsity Soccer, Bond CARLTON, MICHAEL P. 1500 Green Valley Brookfield, W s. Bachelor of Science Nationol Germon Honor Fraternity. Honors Program, Vorsify Wrestling, E0P Tutoring, Infromurol Sports CARTER, RICHARD J. 2519 N. 67th St. Wouwotoso, Wis. Bachelor of Arts Pro Mod Club, Booster Club CASEY, PAUL B. 3575 N. Oakland Shorewood, Wis. Bachelor of Science In Business Administration Phi Koppa Theto, Indoor Sports. Bowling CASHERO, GARY A. 9051 Worwlck Detroit, Mich. Bachelor of Arts Pi Sigma Epsilon CASHMAN, JOHN M. 307 N. Central Medford, Wis. Bochelor of Arts Phi Alpha Theta, Pi Gamma Mu, Zeta Beta Tou, Honors Students Association, MUCAP CASSIDY, FRANCIS L 790 School St. Webster, Mass. Bochelor of Arts Sailing Club CASSIDY, PATRICIA R. 1535 Ponfioc Grand Rapids, Mich. Bachelor of Science In Nursing Sailing Club CASTROGIOVANI, CARLA F. 622 Colvin Pork Blvd. Rockford, III. Bachelor of Science in Nursing Alpha Delta Pi, Nursing Council CAVALLO, GEORGE 64-47 Austin St. Forest HilU, N.Y. Bochelor of Arts CERVARICH, NANCY A. 4 Cody Lone Deerfield, III. Bochelor of Science In Dentol Hygiene Junior American Dentol Hygiene Association, Wmterfest Council CESARIO, CHERYL O. 3280 Pleasont Run Northbrook. III. Bochelor of Arts Dorm Council, Dorm Coiesselor, CCSW, New Student Orientation Steering Board CHAPPELL, ELIZABETH V 6024-B Ridge Acres Cincinnati, Ohio Koppa Beta Gamma CHATBURN, STEPHEN P. 2B38 Pierce Ave, Camden, NJ. Bochelor of Arts in Journalism Sigma Delta Chi, Journal, Tribune, Journalism Council CHENEY, SUSAN L. 1267 Rosemont Lone Abmgton, Po. Bachelor of Arts CHERICO, LOIS J. 30 Westward Lane Pelham Manor, N.Y. Bachelor of Arts Chi Sigma Chi, Varsity Varieties CHERWIN, MARK G. 4345 N 36th St. Milwaukee, Wis. Bachelor of Science In Chemistry Honors Progrom CHILINSKI, MICHAEL A. 3605 S. 96th St. Milwaukee, Wis. Bachelor of Science CHOLIS PAUL T. 305 W. North Shore Dr. South Bend. Ind Bochelor of Arts CHRISTEN, KAREN A. 5135 Woodland Ave. Western Springs, III. Diploma in Dentol Hygiene Alpho Delto Eto, Sailing Club, MUCAP, Dentol Hygiene Chorus CHRISTIANO, VIVIAN 366 Ruby Clarendon Hills. III. Bochelor of Arts Psi Chi, Theto Phi Alpho. Kick-Off Varsity Vouches, W.nterfest CHURCH, WILLIAM H. 5455 N 92nd St. Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Science In Business Administration Beta Alpho Psi, Beto Gamma Sigma, Bus. Ad. Student Council CIARDO, GLORIA M. 3638 S. 93rd St. Milwaukee, W s. Bachelor of Arts Chorus CICCARELLI. THOMAS P, 64 Punton Ave. Yonkers. N.Y. Bachelor of Arts Pi Sigma Epsilon CIMINO. MIKE W. 4th St. Savonno, III. Bochelor of Science In Business Administration Rabbits, CM Football CIRILLI, JAMES L. 909 E. 4th St. Superior, Wis. Juris Doctor CLARK. MARY C. 610 Sfcketee Rd. Ado, Mich. Bachelor of Science in Speech Theto Phi Alpha, Varsity Vorieties, Tnmnastics, Sigma Phi Epsilon Sweetheart, Boys Club Tutoring CLEMONS, CHERYL A. 5210 S Ingleside Ave. Chicogo, III. Bocneior of Arts COLACURCI. GLENN M. 191 MocDonold Dr. Wayne, NJ. Bachelor of Arts Pi Sigma Alpho, Chain Pullers, Intramural Sports, Dorm Council COLEMAN, CAROL R. 219 Nossou Ave. Freeport, N.Y. Bachelor of Arts COLLIER, DENNIS J. 348 Washington St. Compbellsport, Wis. Bochelor of Arts in Journalism Alpha Epsilon Pi COLOMBO, JOHN 82 Trover Cir. Rochester, N.Y. Bochelor of Arts Pi Sigma Epsilon, MUCAP COLOMBIA. TIMOTHY F. 19 Hannah s Pk Lebonon, N.H. Bachelor of Science In Engineering Alpha Epsilon Pi COMERFORD, JOHN J. 610 N. 17th St. Milwaukee, Wis. Bachelor of Arts in Speech Marquette Players COMUNALE. MICHELE G. 1616 Kingsley Ave. Akron, Ohio Bochelor of Arts CONGER, JAMES U Rt. 2 Ottawa, III. Bachelor of Science in Engineering CONGER, WILLIAM H. Rt. 2 Ottawo, III. Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering Institute of Electrical ond Electronic Engineers 178 Looking for career opportunities? In addition to publishing two metropolitan newspapers, The Journgl Company operates radio stations WTMJ and WTMJ-FM and television station WTMJ-TV. In the task of publishing two metropolitan newspapers (morning, evening and Sunday) and broadcasting top notch program material that is available to millions of people at the turn of the diol, the staff requirements and organizational range of The Journal Company cover a broad range of talents, skills, crafts and professions. Each of these plays an essential part in the huge, complex task of modern mass communication. For example, on the staffs of The Milwaukee Journal and Sentinel you'll find not only editors, reporters, photographers and writers, but also artists, machinists, bookkeepers, librarians, salesmen, statisticians, researchers, cashiers, insurance clerks, printers, carpenters, stenographers, engravers, truck drivers, shipping clerks, pressmen, accountants, data processing machine operators, maintenance men, electricians—each and all of them contributing their part to the smooth operation demanded by daily deadlines ond the public expectation that The Journal and Sentinel will be delivered to the home regularly, day in and day out, regardless of weather, regardless of season. Move into the area of broadcasting and you find still other skills and talents added to the list—the audio and visual engineers, the producers and directors, the continuity writers, the musicians and announcers ond many more. But behind the newspaper by-line writers and behind the headliners familiar to the public as radio voices or TV personalities, there exists the teom, the silent partners whose efforts contribute so mightily to the finished product or result. Examine the career opportunities on a large metropolitan newspaper such as The Milwaukee Journal or Milwaukee Sentinel, or WTMJ, WTMJ-TV or WTMJ-FM, and you'll find that even a limited list includes: Accountant Ad Soles nen Ad Saleswomen Announcers ArtnH Bookkeeper Cameramen Cartoonist Cashiers Circulation Men Color Technicians Computer Technicians Copywriters Dispatchers District Manogers Draftsmen Editors Editoriol Writers Engineers Feature Writers Layout Artists bbrorions lab Technicians Newswr iters Mechomcs Poyroll Clerks Photographers Printers Producer-Directors Program Directors Promotion Writers Proofreaders Public Service Clerks Radio-TV Engineers Rodo-TV Salesmen Reporters Researcher Secretaries Sports Writers Statisticians Stenographers Supervisors Telephone Operators Television Directors Television Engineers Typists MORNING EVENING SUNDAY Milwaukee SENTINEL Since 1837 The Milwaukee JOURNAL Since 1882 The Milwaukee JOURNAL Since 1911 179 WTMJ Since 1927 WTMJ-TV Since 1947 WTMJ-FM Since 1959 'NOBLESSE OBLIGE' The concept of noblesse oblige as promulgated by the old French aristocracy had much in its favor. It was the voiced recognition of the obligation which, per se, accompanies every privilege. It was the admission that noble rank requires honorable conduct. Although the phrase originated in a monarchical culture, now long gone, its truth remains. The concept of privilege engendering obligation is as valid in democratic America today as it was in the courts of long-dead French kings. We salute Marquette University for her constant service to this concept. MILWAUKEE BREWERS' ASSOCIATION 180 CONNELLY, CATHERINE M. 6329 Boy Ridge WJuttfun Boy, Wis. Bachelor of Art Alpha Kappa Delta CONNELLY, MICHAEL J. 211 Tonalewood Dr. Warner Robins, Go. Bachelor of Science In Engineering CONNER. CRAIG R. 2157 N. 5l t St. Milwaukee, Wis. Bachelor of Science In Electrico! Engineering Eto Koppa Nu. Tou Beta Pi, Engineering Council, I nit i tut o of Elect! col and Electronic Engineer . Foculty Evaluation Committee CONNER, DEBORAH L. RR 2 Box 338 H Aurora, III. I Diploma in Dental Hygiene Dental Hygiene Choru CONNOLLY, DENNIS M. 3048 N. Oakland Milwaukee, Wit. Doctor of Dentol Surgery Delta Sigma Delta, Sigmo Beta Koppa CONNOLLY. GERALD C. 924 11 Vj St. S.W. Rochester, Minn. Juri Doctor CONNOLLY. M. TRESSA 5411 Albemarle St. Washington. D C. Bachelor of Art Kappa Beta Gamma, Vor ity Varieti , Musicol Voricne , Riding Chib CONNOLLY, STEPHEN J. 175-A School Rd. Bolton. Conn. Bachelor of Art Pi Sigma Epsilon CONNOR, MICHAEL F. 3070 Foster Warren, Ohio Ooctor of Dental Surgery Delto Sigma Delto CONSTANTIN, JEANNE M. 5960 N. Kent Ave. Whitefi h Boy, Wi . Bochelor of Science in Nursing COOK, DENNIS M. 1626 N. 56th St. Milwaukee, Wr . Juris Doctor Delta Theta Phi CROW, DEAN W. 5401 S. Balboa Dr. New Berlin, Wis. Doctor of Dentol Surgery Psi Omega, Omicron Koppa Upsilon CROWLEY, MICHAEL C. 908 Winona Blvd. Rochester, N.Y. Bachelor of Science in Business Administration Phi Theta Psi CROWLEY, THOMAS P. 5930 W. Siegfried PI. Milwaukee, Wi . Bochelor of Art CULLEN, PATRICIA A. 18650 Kamalo La. Brookfield. Wr Bochelor of Art Chi Sigmo Chi CURLER RAY W. 115 E. Miliord New London, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Business Administration Phi Theta Psi CURRAN, JANET M. 3)0 Tremont Mouston Wi . Bachelor of Science in Speech Alpha SST.0 Pi, Sigma Alpho Eto. Zeto Phi Eta CURRAN. JOHN C. 410 Tremont Mouston, Wis. Juris Doctor Delto Theta Phi CYBULSKI, EUGENE P. 58 St. Paul's Ave. Jersey City, N.J. Bachelor of Arts Young Republicans, MUST8E, Pre Med Club CYR, ROGER T. 34 Wilmot Rivervirw, New Brunswick, Canode Bochelor of Arts French Honorory Fraternity CZERNIAK, THEODORE S. 3026 S. 83rd West Allis, Wi . Bochelor of Arts Phi Thcto Psi, Welcome Week, Super Friday D COOLMAN, RICHARD H. 42 Rolling Lane Way land, Mass. Bachelor of Arts Sigma Phi Epsilon, Vanity Varieties CORRILL, JOHN H. 2623 N. Prospect Milwaukee, Wi . Juris Doctor CORRIGAN, MARGARET A. 18878 Conyon Rd. Fairview Pork. Ohio Bachelor of Arts Alpha Delta Pi CORRIGAN. TIM J. 101 Newton St. Hoffman Estates, III. Bochelor of Arts Pi Sigma Epsilon COURSEY. TIM F. 3455 W. Scott PI. Denver, Colo. Bochelor of Arts Tribune, Hilltop COYLE, MARY J. 208 S. Ooks Lake City, Minn. Bochelor of Art In Journalism Alpho Phi CRICHTON, CAROL L. 1809 Hollyhock Rockford. III. Bochelor of Science in Nursing Nursing Council CROASDAILE, MARSHA M. 8651 22nd Ave. Kenosha. Wi . Bochelor of Science In Medical Technology Alpho Delto Theto, Vonity Varieties CROTTCAU, PATRICK J. RR I Bor 261 A Wodsworth, III. Bochelor of Science In Mechonlcol Engineering ASM DALY, DONALD W. RR. 2 Aroyle, Wis. Bochelor of Arts D'ANGELO, DANIEL J. 2946 W. Wilson Ave. Chicago, III. Doctor of Dentol Surgery Delta Srgmo Delta DANIELS, SUSAN M. 135 Sherwood Forest Dr. New Orleans, Lo. Bachelor of Arts Gamma Phi Epsilon, ISC. CCD. Dorm Council DAWIIDCZYK, TERRANCE I. Rt 2 Mosinee, Wi . Juris Doctor Delto Theto Phi, Low Review DEEGAN, MARY L. 101 Hovcrlmg St, Bath. N.Y. Bochelor of Arts Sigmo Sigmo S gmo, Young Republicans DeFURIO, RICHARD L. T. 2419 Taylor Ave. Roone, Wis. Doctor of Dentol Surgery Phi Alpho Theto, Phi Kapoo Psi, Alpha Phi Omogo, Psi Omega DELANEY, GEORGE C„ JR. 6301 N. Sheridan Rd. Chicogo, III. Bochelor of Art Rabbits DELANEY, STEPHEN C. 1603 Elmhurst Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Bachelor of Art ASMU DELLORTO, MARIA . 1264 E. 164th St. South Holland, III. Bochelor of Arts Pi Gamma Mu, Alpha Delta PI DELZIO, ROBERT V. 617 Ridgeway White Plain , N.Y. Bochelor of Arts Zeta Beta Tou, Sailing Club. Avalonche Club Domain, dominic p. 4240 Southern Blvd. Youngstown, Ohio Sigma Phi Epsilon, Judicial V.P. of IFC, Kick-Off Council, President Sigmo Phi Epsilon DcMARK, RICHARD A. 1250 W.Lown Ave. Roone, W.s. Doctor of Dental Surgery Psi Omega DEPENBROK. CAROL A. 5715 Corol Morion Grove. III. Bochelor of Arts CCO, ASMU Election Committee DEPKA. RICHARD D. 1413 W. Grant St. Mitwoukee, Wit. Juris Doctor DCSMARAIS, FRANCIS E. 92 Robert Gray Ave. Tiverton, R.l. Bochelor of Arts O'ESTRADA, RICHARD D. Hoy-word. Wis. Juris Doctor Low Review DETTMAN. ARLENE E. 3142 N. 94th St. Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Arts Mar codettas DEVITT, PATRICK J. 4303 N. Lake Dr. Milwaukee. Wit. Juris Doctor Oyer DiBENEDETTO, FRANCES L. 4851 N. Frank Pkwy. Norridge, III. Bochelor of Arts Sioma Delto PI DICIOCCO, JOSEPHINE 9756 Avenue H Chicago, III. Bochelor of Science in Business Administration Kick-Off Council, Panhellenic Council, Squalid Arms, Chi Sigma Chi DICKIE, JEAN M. 7016 Beckwith Rd. Morton Grove, III. Bachelor of Arts MUSTBE OiPAOOVA, JOHN 1557 5. Betvotr S. Euclid. Ohio Bochelor of Arts DIPAOLO, VINCENT J. 125 Ridge Ave. Kennett Square, Pa. Bochelor of Arts in Journalism Alpha Koppa Psi, Freshman Orientation, Senior Week Council, Tribune DIRINDIN, DENNIS P. 398 Crandon Colomef City. III. Bochelor of Arts Band, Dorm Council DOBRZYNSKI, DAVID P. 149 S. 75th St. Milwaukee, Wr . Bochelor ot Science in Business Administration DOHERTY, MAUREEN C. 12975 Gremoor Dr. Elm Grove, Wis. Bochelor of Am DOHERTY, THOMAS J. 7612 Lynn Dr. Chevy Chase. Md. Bochelor of Am PI Srgmo Alpha, Pi Sigma Epsilon, Kick-Off Council DOMINIAK. RUTH R. 3113 W. Drury Lane Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Am Phi S gma Tou DORGAN, WILLIAM J. Ill 85 Herschel St. Providence, R.l. Bochelor of Arts DORSZYNSKI, THERCSE A. 5131 W. Washington Blvd. Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Art In Psychology Avalonche Club, Student Council for Exceptional Children, Astronaut Dinner DOTSKI, JEANETTE C. 3406 W. Ruskin Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Art Psi Chi DOUGLASS, STEVEN J. 13 Robin Hill Rd. N. Caldwell. NJ. Bochelor of Science in Business Administration Sigmo Phi Epsilon, Beta Alpho Psi DOYLE, STEPHEN 23 Smith Ave. White Ploins, N.Y. Bochelor of Art In History Pi Gamma Mu, Intromurots, Soiling Club ORAGER. JEANNE M. 6 N. Merrill Ave. Pork Ridge, III. Bochelor of Science In Speech Morcodetto DRESSMAN, MARY KAREN T. 3107 Artstew Drive Edoewood, Ky. Bochelor of Science MUCAP. CCD DREW. WILLIAM J. 1229 tlmlown Wouwotoso. Wi . Juris Doctor DREWEK, TIMOTHY M. 311 W. Lexington Glendale, Wis. Bochelor of Science Cross Country, Letterman's Club, Track DRIES, JAMES J. 2847 N. 87th St. Milwaukee, Wis. Bachelor ot Art Tutoring OROW, LYNDA L. 5310 W. Loomis Greendole, Wis. Bachelor of Art OUCKHORN, THOMAS L. 206 N. 68th St. Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Business Administration OUFOUR, D. ROBERT 535 N. 113th St. Wouwotoso, Wi . Bochelor of Science Honors Program, Booster Club, Student AfMiotes American Chemical Society, CCD DUNKCLBERGER, DONNA D. 1017 Anderson Bismorck, N.D. Bochelor of Am In Joumolltm Chi Sigma Chi, Sigma Delto Chi, Tribune DUPREE, STEPHEN J. 1101 JeftrasAve. Morion, Ind. Bochelor of Am In Speech DUY, ROBIN J. 1310 Molitor Rd. Aurora, III. Bochelor of Am DVORSKY, SUSAN L 2001 Meod St. Roone, Wis. Diploma in Dental Hygiene Alpha Delta Eta ECKERT, PETER E. 490 Old Ridge Rd. Northport, N.Y. Bochelor of Am ECKSTEIN, ROBERT H-, JR. 5325 W. Ookin Chicogo. III. Bochelor of Science EGAN, RITA M. 2403 Slayton Way Louisville, Ky. Bochelor of Science In Biology Soling Club, Intromurob. MUCAP, Biology Club EICHMULLER, ANTON J., JR. 9504 Elsmere Dr. Pormo, Ohio Bochelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering 181 Graham Cracker Chocolate COOKIES, HOT FUDGE, READY CRUST SINCE 1848 ROBERT A. JOHNSTON COMPANY, INC. Milwaukee, Wit. HiIItide, NJ. San Francitca. Calif. CLOCK, PATRICIA A. 13010 W. Col (ox PI. Butler. Wis. Bochelor of Science In Nuruno ELDRIDGE, JAMES f. 3330 S. 93rd S . Milwaukee. Wis. Jurit Doctor Low Review CLSCTH, ROGCR A. 4821 Arbor Lane Wisconsin Rooids, Wit. Bochelor of Science Pi Mu Epsilon. Phi Sic mo Tou, SOP PC, Avolonche Club CMCR, JOHN P. 319 Mon o yj South Mlhraufcee, Wit. Bochelor of Arts CNCA. SANORA J. 8911 W. Villord Milwaukee. Wis. Bachelor of Science In Nursing Aloha Tou Delta, Jr. Ckm Treasurer CNOCLSMAN, RONALD L. Bovden, Iowa Bochelor of Science in Electricol Eryjlneerino CNbllSH. DAVID A. 3829 Mlllsorina Rd Bloomfield Hilh. Mleh. Bachelor of Arts In Journalism Sigmo Delto Chi. Journalism Council, Students United for Rocial Eouotity. Trod'tionol Music Society. WMUR ENNIS. KATHRYN M. 1121 37th Ave. Menominee, Mich. Bachelor of Arts ERNST. JAMES J. 7313 Touhv Ave. CWcono III Bachelor of Arts Varsity Varieties, Musical Varieties ERWIN. ANNE 8. 7100 Boxwood Rd. Louisville. Ky. Bachelor of Arts CSenMR. RoprOT J. 7040 N. Green Boy Milwaukee, Wis Bachelor of Arts In Soeech Ch f r Avolonche Ski Club, Solllno Club CSCRNIA. DENNIS P. 20 Butternut Lo. Kensington, Conn, Bochelor of Arts So'llno Club, Trodltionol Music Society IS«IG ROBERT R. 1773 Grevstnoe Dr. Piftsb oh. Po. BoetwW of Science In Business Administration Intfomural Footboll, Boteboll ond Basketball, Monks FARRI. CANDACE J. 9509 Crawford Evonston. III. Bachelor of Arts Gamma Pi Eosilon, Sigma Tou Delto FALCONE. JOHN S. 23 Hickory Dr. N. Caldwell. NJ. Bochelor of Arts In Business Administration Siamo Phi Epsilon FALK. WILLIAM L. 2412 W. Scott St. Milwaukee. Wis. Bochelor of Science In Electrical Engineering Intramural Sports. Institute of Electrical ond Electronic Engineers FARGO. PATRICK A. 4S48 N. 49th St. Milwaukee. Wis Bochelor of Science In Physics ond Math Zeto Beta Tou. Karate Club FARIELLO, ROBERT L. 46 Lincoln Ave. Amsterdam, N.Y. Bachelor of Arts In Journalism FARRELL, ANNE P. 5754 Orchard Hill Drive, Pittsburgh, Po. Bochelor of Arts Alpha Delta PI FELSKI, KERRY P. 580B W. Fillmore Dr. West Allis. Wis. Bachelor of Arts MUSTBf FESTGE, KAREN M. 11001 W. Memecke, Wauwatosa, Wis. Bochelor of Science Ka po Bella (Sammo, Panhellenic FICKE, JAMES D. Rt. I Box 1526 Zion, III. Bochelor of Science In Electricol Engineering Eto Kappa Nu, NEC Convention FIDELIBUS, DONNA A. 2 Poplar St. Port _better, N.Y. Bochelor of Arts Pi Delta Phi, Riding Club, Basketball, Dorm Council FIELDS, CHRISTINE L 48 Wyatt Rd. Gorden City. N.Y. Bachelor of Arts Theto Phi Alpho, Varsity Varieties, Musicol Varieties, Trimnostics, Hospital Volunteer Work FIGUEROA, JOSE I. 3903 Guoyquil Ecuodor Bochelor of Science In Electrical Engineering Institute ol Electricol ond Electronic Engineers FINK, EDWARD J. 325 S. Sheldon Richland Center, Wis. Juris Doctor FINK, JOHN F. 621 West Ave. Lock port, N.Y. Bochelor ot Arts FINN, JAMES W. 141 S. Lake Ave. Albony, N.Y. Bochelor of Science in Business Administration Intramural Sports FISCHER, MARY JEANHE 101 Strathmore Fort Thomas, Ky. Bachelor of Science in Nursing Fine Arts Council FISHER. JOHN E. 2220 E. Ok lo homo Milwaukee, Wis. Bachelor ot Arts In Journalism Sigma Delto Chi, Chorus, Tribune, Journal, Journalism Council FLOOD. NANCY J. 4815 N. Kenneth Ave. Chicago, III. Bochelor of Arts Phi Alpha Theto, Phi Stgma Tou. Pi Garrmo Mu, Pi Sigma Alpha. Pre-Law Club, CCSW, MUCAP, Triple O FLOWERS. PHYLLIS F. 220 E. Dova St. Jockson, Miss. Bochelor of Science In Nursing FLYNN. KATHY M. 967 Sumer St. Lynnfield, Moss. Bochelor of Arts FONS MICHAEL J. 3054 S. Superior St. Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Science In Business Administration Beto Gamma Sigma, Froth Basketball, Vorsity Basketball FORCIEA, MARY ANN 301 Lokeview Blvd. Coleraine, Mn. Bochelor ot Science Gamma Pi Epsilon, Phi Sigma, Resident Assistant FORD, MICHAEL W. 41 Stelling Ave. Maywood. NJ. Juris Doctor Low Review FORLENZA, DOROTHY H. 2143 Chestnut Ave. Wilmette, lill. Bochelor of Arts Alpho Delto Pi FOX. ROBERT C 1415 Nicolet Detroit, Mich. Bochelor of Arts In Business Administration Intramural Baseball, Footboll ond Bosketboll FRANK, DOUGLS F. 2534 N. Terrace Ave. Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Science In Business Administration FRANK, KURT A. 933 E. Ohio Ave. Milwaukee, Wis. Juris Doctor Delto Theto Phi FRANKOVICH. DANIEL J. 3733 Polk St. Gory, Ind. Bachelor of Science in Engineering ASCE FRATIR, JAMES J. 227 North Ave. Wotertown, Wis. Bochelor of Science In Engineering Tou Beto Pi. ASMU Student Conduct Committee FREIMUTH, KATHLEEN M. 4924 N. 22nd St. Milwaukee Wis. Bochelor of Science In Medical Technology Modern Donee Club FRET, JOSEPH 318 Chillmgworth Lo. Charlotte. N.C. Bochelor of Arts Pi Sigma Epsilon, Brooks Council FREYTAG. MARJORIE 0. RR I Minster, Ohio Bochelor of Arts in Journalism Sigma Delta Chi, Vorsity Voneties, Kick-Off Committee, Joumol, Marquette Players FRIEDERICH, JANE 0. 2207 Wedgewood Fond du Loe Wis. Diploma in Dentol Hygiene Alpha Delta Eto. Junior ADHA FRISQUC, DARRELL J. 2611 N. 95th St. Wouwototo, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Business Administration FRITSCH, COLIN M. 4345 N. 135th Brookfield. Wis. Bochelor of Science in Electricol Engineering Zeto Beta Tou FRITZSCHE, NANCY L. 4601 Downers Dr. Downers Grove, III. Bochelor of Science in Physicol Therapy Vorsity Varieties FRYJOFF, PAUL C. 3563 S. 15th PI. Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor ot Arts FUCILE, JOHN A. 3289 S. Springfield Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Chemistry Sailing Club, SAACS GADEICHOWSKI, JOHN M. 4787 N. Sheffield Whitefish Bay. Wis. Juris Doctor Ptu Sigma Tou. Delta Theta Phi GAOIENT, CHRIS J. 9832 W. Oklohomo Ave. West Allis, Wis. Bochelor ot Science in Business Administration Beta Alpha Psi, Vet's Club GALKA, PATRICIA A. 2422 Jefferson St. Minneapolis, Minn. Bochelor of Science In Medical Technology GALLAGHER. SHEILA M. 496 Edens Lane Northfield, III. Bochelor of Arts In Speech Education ASMU. Varvty Varieties GANDOLFO, PETER M. 254 Farrington Ave. N. Tarrytown. N.Y. Bochelor of Science in Business Administration Delta Tou Delta GANNON, MARK S. 3555 Trinity Dr. Columbus, Go. Bochelor of Arts Alpha Sigma Nu, Alpho Delta Gamma, Liberal Arts Student Council, Educ. Opportunity Program-Tutoring GAVIN, KATHLEEN A. 626 N. Pine Chicago. III. Bochelor of Science In Business Administration Phi Chi Theto, Bus Ad Student Council GEBHARD, MARY KAY 629 2nd Ave. S.E. Dyersville, lowo Bochelor of Science In Nursing GERMANOTTA, JOHN J. 4411 N. Morris 8hrd. Milwaukee, Wis. Juris Doctor Low Review, Student Bar Association, Delto Theta Phi GERNOT, LINDA L. RR I Box 73A Soring, Wis. Diploma in Dentol Hygiene GERSTMEIER, MARY B. 184 N. 86th St. Wouwotoso, Wis Bochelor of Science in Medical Tecfvtology GESKERMANN, JEAN M. 1335 Harvey Ave. Brookfield, Wis. Bochelor of Science In Medico! Technology GESSLER, MAUREEN A. 4701 Hornpton Farms Dr. Allison Pork, Po. Bochelor of Science in Biology Karate Club GETTELMAN, MARY JO 6631 W.Moitke Milwaukee, Wis. Diplomo in Dental Hygiene Alpha Delto Eto GIBBONS, SUSAN K. 9504 Crosby Rd Silver Spring. Md. Bochelor ot Arts Sigmo Stgma Sigmo GILMORE, JULIE A. 445 Grove Glencoe. III. Bochelor of Arts GINAL. STEPHEN J. 931 E. Morgon Ave. Milwaukee, Wis. Bachelor of Science In Moth GIROLAMI, GAY L. 7039 Kedzie Niles. III. Bochelor of Science in Physicol Therapy Physical Therapy Council, Residence Noll Stoff. Pi Alpha Sigmo GLATZMAIER, GARY A. 641 6th St. Albony, Minn. Bochelor of Science Cross Country. NROTC. Pi Mu Epsilon GLENNON, SUSAN A. 303 Longview Terroce Minneapolis, Minn. Bochelor of Arts GLUECKERT, BARBARA J. 8251 Jockson Ave. Munster, Ind. Bochelor of Science in Medical Technology Alpha Delta Theto, Medical Technology Council GOSAT, JAMES M. I BOS Spring Brook Ave. Rockford, 111. Bochelor of Science In Electricol ASMu!nMu'aXoIot Sports Association. Engineering Open House, Honors Student Association, Tou Beta PI GOGAN, ROBERT J. 3009 W. National Ave. Milwaukee. Wis. Bochelor of Science Phi Kappa Theto, Vorsity Gymnastics, SAACS GOELZ. ROBERT J. 144 West Mission Rd. Green Boy, Wis. Doctor of Dentol Surgery Psi Omega GOLDEN. KATHLEEN M. 2282 W. 115th St. Chicooo, III. Bochelor of Arts Pi Gamma Mu. MUCAP GILLNICK. CHARLES A., JR. 3135 N. Booth St. Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Science In Electricol Engineering Karate Club GOO ©SPEED, MICHAEL P. 3537 South Lone Fronksville. Wis. Bochelor of Science In Biolcgy Liberal Arts Student Council, Soiling Club. Biology Club, 183 REINKE SCHOMANN, INC Sheet Metal, Ornamental Metal Miscellaneous Steel Contractors 1400 E. Park Place Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53211 Phone 964-1600 QUALIFIED SERVICE DEALER REPRESENTING: H. H. ROBERTSON CO. STATE OF WISCONSIN Warehousing Distributors and Erectors for: REYNOLDS ALUMINUM PRODUCTS WISCONSIN AND UPPER MICHIGAN 184 GORMAN, SHARON K. 3207 Frymon Rd. Studio City, Collf. Bachelor of Science Alpha Delta PI, Senior Week-Welcome Week Council GORMLEY, PATRICIA M. 1746 N. 52nd St. Milwaukee, Wi . Bochelor of Science in Nursing GORZALSKI, BRUCE C. 2675 S. 15th Ploce Milwaukee, Wit. Bochelor of Am in Hittory Young Republicans GOVONI, JAMES O. 2861 W. 101 St. Evergreen Pork, III. Doctor of Dental Surgery Pti Omega GRA80WSKI, DENNIS J. 1629 E. 7th St. St. Paul, Minn. Doctor of Dental Surgery Pti Omega GRACE, WILLIAM J. 80 Deepdole Dr. Monhasset. N.Y. Bachelor of Am Anchor and Chain GRAHOVAC, JOHN E. 8137 44th Ct. Lyont, III. Bochelor of Am Honort Student Attn., Dorm Government, Intromural Sports, Sigma Tou Delta GRANT. RALPH E. 4652 N. 107th Wouwatoto, Wit Bochelor of Science in Electricol Engineering Scobbord ond Biode, Inttitute of Electricol ond Electronic Engineer , Intromurolt, M-Club, Rifle Team GREEN, WILLIAM H. 1239 N. 85th St. Wouwatoto, Wiv Bochelor of Science Intramural Fencing, Pro-Mod Club. MUCAP GREENBERG, MARTIN J. 5104 N. Lover Lone Milwaukee, Wit. Juris Doctor Low Review. Alpha Sigma Nu, Tou Epsilon Rho, Project Outreach GREIFF, CHARLES F. 903 E. Juneau Ave. Milwaukee, Wit. Bachelor of Science in Electricol Engineering Judo Club, Soccor Club GRILL, CHARLENE A. 1858 Ccrmak Rd. Chlcoao, III. Bachelor of Science In Nursing Nursing Council, Alpha Tou Delta GRIMALDI, MICHAEL 5505 Ook St. Kansas City, Mo. Bachelor of Arts in Journalism Sigma Delto Chi, Tribune, Hilltop GROPPI, GEORGE 321 E. Smith Milwaukee, Wi . Bochelor of Science In Mechanical Engineering Pi Tou Sigma, Tou Beto Pi, ASM. Intramurol Sports GROSS, GREGORY C. 6383 Pontiac Dr. LoGronge, III. Bochelor of Science in Business Administration Sigmo Phi Delta GROW, WILLIAM P. 112 Holl Dr. Wodsworth, Ohio Bochelc of Am GRUBANOWITCH, MARTIN J. 14140 W. Glendale Brookfield, Wit. Bachelor of Science In Business Administration GRUBISIC, GEORGE F. Route 1 Box 223 Sturtevant, Wit. Bochelor of Arts Hispanic Club GRZECA, MICHAEL G. 1747 S. 14th St. Sheboygan, Wi . Bochelor of Am Phi Theta Pti GUGLIELMO, MICHAEL A. 2700 De Cook Park Ridge, III. Bachelor of Science in Business Administration GUILLAUME, RHAOUL A. 6138 Providence PI. New Orleans, La. Bochelor of Science in Civil Engineering Chi Epsilon, Pi Mu Epsilon, Sigma Ph. Delta GULINSKI, CHRIS C. 9260 Callero Dr. Niles, III. Bochelor of Art in Speech Cha inpullers GUY, JOANNE E. 5410 79th PI. N. E. Morysville, Washington Bochelor of Science in Dcntol D ' ien. Chorus, Dentol Hygiene Council, JADHA GUYETTE, THOMAS 0. 419 Third Ave. Ottawa, III. Bochelor of Science in Electricol Engineering Trock, Club Footboll, Judo. Tou Beta Pi, Eto Kappa Nu GUZZO. CYNTHIA L. 1583 S. Belvolr South Euclid. Ohio Bochelor of Arts in Journalism Kappo Beta Gammo, Varieties Council H HAAS, GEORGE E. 409 E. I8th Koukouno. Wit. Bachelor of Science in Electricol Eta 'Soppo Nu, Pi Mu Epsilon, ASMU, Broodcosting Laboratory, Institute of Electrical ond Electronics Engineers, Student Activities Board HACKET, MICHAEL R. 9537 W. Harding PI. West Allis, Wis. Bochelor of Am in Business Administration HAFER DAVID W. 805 Stophens Ave. Missoula, Mont. Doctor of Dental Surgery Omicron Kappa Upsilon HAHN, ALAN K. 7921 19th Ave. Kenosha. Wis. Bochelor of Arts Pershing Rifles, Liberal Arts Acodemic Committee HAHN, EDWARD N. 938 Clarence Oak Park. III. Bochelor of Arts Soccer, Student Government HAHNENBERG, DEAN P. 298 John M. St. Clawson, Mich. Bochelor of Arts In Journalism Hilltop HAIGLER, CYNTHIA J. 1900 Gordon Creek Rd. Casper, Wyo. Bochelor of Am Eta Sigma Phi HAINES. WILLIAM R. Cadott, wis. Bochelor of Science in Moth HALLIGAN, MICHAEL J. 228 Smklor Dr. Radnor, Po. Bochelor of Science In Civil Engineering HAMEL, THOMAS K. 120 Keightley St. Ignoce, Mich. 8achelor of Arts HAMM, MARY PATRICIA 108 Southorm Dr. St. Louis. Mo. Bachelor of Am Sigma Sigma Sigma HAMMER, THOMAS J. 3004 S. 84th St. West Allis, Wis. Bochelor of Arts PI Sigma Alpha HANRATTY, JANE M. 815 N. 63rd Wauwatosa, Wis. Bachelor of Arts Alpha Koppa Delta, Sociology Club. Women's Athletic Club. Student Cotmcil for Exception Children HANSMANN, WILLIAM R. 236 Swift St. Gienbeuloh, Wis. Doctor of Dentol Suroery Psi Omega HARPER, MARY B. 170 Allen Dr. Son-Bruno, Calif. Bachelor of Science in Nursing SoiLng Club, Tri-State Intercollegiate Sknng Assoc.. Wis. Intercollegiate Sailing Assoc., Intercollegiate Ski-Rocmg Assoc, of North America HARTZ, MARTIN R. 3576 Lockport-Otcutt Rd. Lockport, N Y. Bochelor of Arts Choinpullers HASSE. CHARLES D. 34180 Schulte Farmington, Mich. Bachelor of Science Phi Sigma Society, Alpha Epsilon Delta. Pro-Med Chib, Biology Club, musYbe HAUSER, MARY M. S345 W. Pensocola Chicago, III. Bochelor of Arts in Speech Alpha Pi Omega, Marquette Players HEDDING, ROGER A. 4722 W. Newton Ploce Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor ot Science In Electricol Engineering Institute ot Electrical and Electronic Engineers, Engineering Open House, NEC Convention, SAE HEINRICH, MARY A. Route I Antigo, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Physical Theropy Girts' Intramurol. Soiling Club HEINRICH, THOMAS J. 2465 S. 63rd St. Milwaukee, Wis. Doctor of Dental Surgery HEINTZ, ROBERTA A. 3330 Forest Road Bethel Park. Pa. Bachelor of Science Society of Women Engineers HEINZ, MARY £. 807 W. Cotino Arlington Heights, III. Bochelor of Arts Kappa Beto Gamma, Varsity Varieties HEMBEL, JOY A. 2204 N. 64th St. Wauwatosa, Wis. Bochelor of Am French Club, Spanish Club, Fine Am Council, International Students Club HENKE, MARY C. 16415 Golf Porkway Brookfield, W.s. Bachelor ot Science Honors Program, Society of Women Engineers, Student Affiliates of the American Chemical Soc., Honor Students Association HENKEL, ANDREA M. 424 Bloomsbury Ave. Baltimore, Md. Bachelor of Science in Nursing Alpha Tou Delta, Synchronized Swimming, Softball, Dorm Council HENNESSY, THOMAS M. 38 Hancock Rd. Wokefield, Mats. Bochelor of Am Sigma Phi Epsilon HENRY, KATHLEEN M. 44 Booconstiekl Rd. Worcester, Mats. Bochelor of Arts Inter notional Students Club HERALD. JOHN E. 213 Quincy St. Oconto, Wit. Juris Doctor Delta Theta Phi, Low Review, Thomas More Scholarship HERKENDER, SUSAN A. 5 Central Norwalk, Ohio Bochelor of Science MUCAP, Biology Club, Booster Club HERRO, RONALD J. 430 N. 98th St. Wauwatosa, Wis. Bochelor of Science In Business Administration Beta Alpha Psi. HEWARD, LAWRENCE L. 443 Marsh Ave. Reno, Nev. Doctor of Dental Surgery HICKEY, DIANE M. 2117 E. Jarvis Shorewood, Wis. Bachelor of Am Sigma Tou Delto, Phi Sigma Tou, MUCAP, Brooks Council HICKEY, JAMES S. 2117 E. Jarvis Shorewood, Wis. Bochelor of Arts Dorm Governor, ASMU, Men's Inter-Residence Council HILL, JUDITH M. 911 Court St St. Joseph, Mich. Juris Doctor Tou Epsilon Rho, Placement Digest HILLIS, ROBERT S. 4718 W. Clarendon PI, Milwaukee We. Bochelor of Science In Business Administration ond Low, Varsity Golf HIRSCHBERG, DAVID J. 5330 Primrose La. Oshkosh, Wis. Juris Doctor Tou Epsilon Rho, Zeto Beta Tou HIRMER, PAULM. 670 S. Sunny Slope Rd. Brookfield, Wis. Bochelor of Science In Business Administration Sailing Club. Rodio Amateurs HO, DANNY 3606A W. Lisbon Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Electrical Engineering Institute ot Electricol and Electronic Engineers HOCHHAUS, JOHN M. 1810 N. 58th St. Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Science In Business Administration Beta Alpha Psi, Monoger-MU Warriors HODGES, HARVEY W. Rt. 220 Unity, Maine Bochelor of Arts Theta Chi, Ski Club HOFFMAN, LONNY H. 9727 N. Tripp Skokie, III. Bochelor of Science in Electricol Engineering Eto Koppo Nu Alpha Epsilon PI, Institute of Elcctncal ond Electronics Engineers HOLLAHAN, MARY M. 1220 S. Delphks Pork Ridge, III. Bochelor of Science in Nursing HOOD, LAURA A. 1809 Wisconsin Geornl Haven, Mich. Diploma in Dental Hygiene Alpha Delta Eto, Student American Dental Hygiene Association HOOSTAL, PAMELA J. 745 Commolas Conchas Thousand Ooks, Colif. Bochelor of Science In Medical Technology HOUGHTON, GREGORY S. 408 Dawn Ave. Glen Ellyn, III. Bochelor of Am in Journo!ism Tribune HOULIHAN, CHRISTOPHER M. 354 Scorsdole Rd. Cresfwood, N.Y. Bochelor of Arts Sailing Chib, MUCAP HOUSTON, RORY A. 9957 Dresden Dallas, Texas Bochelor of Arts HUBBARD, EDWARD G. 2908 McCulloch St. Stevens Point. Wis. 8ochelor of Science In Business Administration Alpho Sigma Nu, Beto Gammo Sigmo, Honors Students Assoc. HUCK, DANIEL A. 189 Everett Fond du Loc, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering Society of Automotive Engineers, American Society of Mechanical Engineers 185 Congratulations To Coach Al McGuire 186 And The 1971 MARQUETTE WARRIORS on a Great Season A Safe Place For Your Savings WEST FEDERAL SAVINGS LOAN Capitol Court 873-4122 Kenosha Corner 6th Ave. and 58th St. 658-2573 HUDAK, MARIE C. 1735 Alcester Rd. Mqyfietd Ht y Ohio Bochelor of Science in Physicol Therapy HUINERCARD, CELESTE H. 7900 S. W. Brentwood Portlond, Ore. Bachelor of Art in Journalism Theto Phi Alpha, Debate Toom HUFF, TERRY W. 1320 E. Lotlm Ave. Wauketho, Wis. Doctor of Dental Surgery P i Omega HUffMAN, JOHN J. 32 River oo Or. Clintonvillo, Wi . Bochelor of Art Theta Chi. Kick-Off Council, Greek Week HUFNAGEL, WENDY L. 2660 N. 131st St. Brookfield. Wn. Bochelor of Art P i Chi HUGHES, DANIEL P. 3900 Clifton Ave. Cincinnati, Ohio Bochelor of Art Debate Team, ASMU HUMPAGE, RENEE E. 760 S.E. 2nd Ave. Deerfield Booch, Fla. Bachelor of Art HUNTEMAN. DANIEL C 7419 Hennessey Ave. Wouwatosa, Wis. Juris Doctor Delta Theta Phi HUTCHINSON, KATHERINE G. 4056 Salem Ave. St. Louis Pork, Minn. Bochelor of Art HUTH, JAMES F. 107 7th St. Boraboo, Wis. Bochelor of Science Alpha Sigma Nu IDZIKOWSKI, LYNN M. 3441 S, 56th St. Milwaukee, Wi . Bochelor of Science In Speech Marquette Player , Modem Donee IRWIN, ROBIN J. 7801 W. Hompton Ave. Milwaukee, Wi . Juri Doctor Delta Theta Phi, Law Review, Student Bar Association, Placement Digest J JA8LONSKI, MARY C. 8447 W. Lisbon Ave. Milwaukee, Wi . Bochelor of Art in Journalism Theto Sigma Phi, Joumoiism Council, Ad Hoc Committee for Teoching Effectiveness, Hilltop, Tribune JACHOWICZ, PHILIP J. 537 N. 17th St. Milwoukee, Wi . Bochelor of Art Intromural Sport JACOBS, DAVID M. 7700 Stickney Wouwotosa, Wi . Bochelor of Science In Business Administration Phi Koppa Theta, Indoor Sport JAGEMANN, CHARLES E. 1529 S. 24th St. Manitowoc, Wi . Bochelor of Art JAHIMIAK, DAVID R. 424 S. 22nd St. LoCrosse, Wi . Doctor of Dental Surgery P l Onego JANKE. ROGER W. 401 Wheeler Ave. Fredomo, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Business Administration JANNUZZI, JOHN L. 36 Coddmgton Ave. N. Plainfield, NJ. Bochelor of Art Vanity Voritie Council JANSEN, RONALD N. 412 E. Lincoln Ave. Little Chute, Wi . Bachelor of Science in Electrical Instdute of Electricol ond Electronic Engineers JEFFERS, ROBERT H. 325 Grandview Glen Ellyn, III. Bachelor of Art Alpha Delta Gamma, Brooks Council. Dorm Governor, Movement for o New Congress, New Student Orientation Committee JETTE, CARL N. 10850 Transit Rd. E. Amherst, N.Y. Bochelor of Arts Intramural Sports JOHNS. PATRICK C. 101 E. Church St. Plano, III. Bochelor of Arts Sigma Phi Epsilon JOHNSON. CONRAD A. 2054 Duels. New Or icons. La Bochetcr of Arts Tutor, MU Home Study JOHNSON, CRAIG W. 418 John Ripon, Wi . Bachelor of Science in Business Administration Student Council President JORCING, DAVID L. 3575 Show Ave. Cincinnati, Ohio Juris Doctor Delto Theto Phi, Oyer, Student Bor Association JOY. LINDA S. 72 North Lane Anoolo, N.Y. Bachelor of Art JOYCE. BETH M. 3019 Woubenocr Green Boy, Wi . Bochelor of Art JOYCE. FRANCIS C. 900 S. Moorland Rd. Brook fold, Wi . Doctor of Dentol Surgery JUNG, DEBORAH R. 16 Woodlond C . Belleville, III. Bochelor of Art In Speech Theta Phi Atpho, Cheerleoding JURKOWSKI, THOMAS M. 7903 N. Fairway PI. Milwoukee, Wi . Bachelor of Science in Business Administration Scobbord ond Blode, Zeto Beta Tou, Inter-Fraternity Council JUSZCZAK, RAMONA 620 S. 3rd St. Milwoukee. Wis. Bachelor of Arts K KACMARYNSKI, LINDA L. 502 Thornton Ave. Butler, Alo. Bochelor of Science KACZMAREK, MARY E. 2936 S. 80th St. Milwoukee. Wis. Bochelor of Science In Medical Technology Alpha Delta Theto KADER, RICHARD D. 5534 W. Aver Ave. Milwoukee, Wi . Bochelor of Science in Mechonical Engineering PI Tou Sigmo, Engineering Open House, ASME KAMINSKI, JEFFREY R. 61 Heather Ridge Rd. Battle Creek, Mich. Bochelor of So once in Business Administration Sigma Phi Epsilon, Intramural Sports KANTORIS, ANDREW J. B35 N. 23rd St. Milwoukee Wis. Bochelor of Science in Electrical Engineering KAPLAN,BARBARA 54 Silver Lake Rd. Staten Islond, N.Y. Bachelor of Art WIRC, Dorm President KARRER, KATHLEEN M. 811 Highviow Deorborn, Mich. Bachelor of Science Phi Sigmo, Honor Program, Biology Club, MUCAP KAVANAUGH, MICHAEL T. 1830 N. Oakland Ave. Milwoukee, Wi . Juris Doctor Phi Alpha Delta KAY. MARY C 2728 N. 90th St. Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Science In Medical Technology Delto PI Alpha KAY. TED A. 140 $. Cuyler Oak Park, III. Bochelor of Science in Business Administration KEANE, MADELINE, G. 823 Ashland River Forest, III. Bachelor of Arts in Joumoiism Kick-Off. Welcome Week. Senior Week, Dorm Rep KIHOE, MICHAEL E. 2935 N. Maryland Ave. Milwaukee, Wis. Juris Doctor KELLER. ALFRED J. 4324 N. 68th St. Milwaukee. Wis. Bochelor of Science in Engineering Soling Club, Ski Team, Soiling Team KELLER. JAMES A. 6159 W Eddy St. Chicoao, III. Bochelor of Arts in Journalism Delto Tou Delto, Alpho Delta S«gmo, Tribune, Hilltop, Journal, Student for McCarthy KELLY, JACQUELYN M. 144 Washington Glenview, III Bochelor of Arts KILLY, JOSEPH P. Box 33 E. Greenbush. N.Y. Bochelor of Arts KELLY. KAREN A. 4063 N. 66th St. Milwoukee, Wis. Bochelor of Arts KEMPEN, WAYNE J. 2736 Ridge Rood Green Bay, Wis Bochelor of Art Phi Alpha Theto KENDALL, CHARLES B. 2603 W. Michigan Milwoukee, Wis. Juri Doctor Intromural Sports KENNEDY, SUSAN L 1640 N. 76th Ave. Elmwood Pork. III. Bochelor of Arts In Journalism KERSCHfR, MARY t. 1306 Fairmont Lone Monitowoc, Wis. Bochelor of Arts MUCAP, Dorm Council, Dorm Counselor KIIFFER, KATHERINE A. 2625 Lefeber Ave. Wouwotoso, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Nursing Alpho Tou Delto KIERSZNOWSKI, MARY K. 271 Wood Dale Or. Ball ton Lake. N.Y. Bochelor of Science in Physical Theropy KING, ROBERT V. 8524 W. Harrison Ave. West Allis, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Electrical Engineering KIRK. THOMAS P. 2101 W. Neil Place Milwaukee, Wis. Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering KIRYLO, MARIA C. 29 Via Pioppi Tirrenio, Pisa, ttoty Bochleor of Arts Fine Arts KISTING, WILLIAM A. 2525 St. Anne Dubuque, Iowa Bochelor of Science In Business Administration Foreign Studies, Song Writing KLAFKA, DAVID A. 2144 S. 107th St. West Allis, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Moth KLAREN, MAUREEN 220 Walnut Libertyville, III. Bachelor of Science in Physical Theropy KLAVER. ROBERT f. 9150 N. Bayside Dr. Milwoukee, Wis. Bochelor of Arts In Political Science Pi Sigma Alpha, Sir Thomas More Society KLEBER. MARY L. 551 N. Shore Dr. S. Haven, Mich. Bachelor of Arts KLEIN, KATHLEEN M. 8204 Stickney Ave. Wouwotoso Wis. Bochelor of Science KLEMME, MERLIN G. 2007 N. 8th St. Admininstrotion Karate Club KLOKA, ANN C. 6115 Chico3o Rd. Worren, Mich. Bochelor of Science MUCAP, Booster Club, Biology Club, Educational Opportunity Program KNOERZER, CAROL 1432 Gordon Pork Ridge, III. Bochelor of Arts Dorm Government KOENIG, CATHERINE E. 69 Charles St. Clifton, NJ. Bochelor of Science in Business Administration Phi Chi Theto, Bus Ad Student Council, Soiling Club KOLUDROVIC. MARK A. 5352 Sfoney Creek Or. Ooklown III. Bochelor of Arts Alpha Delto Gomma KOMASSA, DAVID G. 2425 S. 11th St. Milwoukee, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Electrical Engineering KOMOROWSKI, JANICE A. 2418 S. 77th St. West Allis, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Medicol Technology KOMOROWSKI, KEVIN C. 3324 S. 95th St. Milwoukee, Wis. Bochelor of Science In Electrical Engineering Eta Kappa Nu, Rod o Amateurs, Institute of Electricol and Electronics Engineers KONIECKI. JON S. 12247 MeShone Rd. Franklin, Wis. Bochelor of Science In Electricol Engineering Bond, Engineering Cosmcil, Tou Beta Pi, Eta Kappa Nu KOSOBUCKI, JOHN C. 2959 N. 4th St. Milwaukee. Wis. Bochelor of Arts Scobbord and Blode, Pershing Rifles, Army ROTC Drill Team. Army ROTC Rifle Team KOWALEWSKI, JOHN J. 6058 S. Robert Ave. Cudohy, Wis. Bocholor of Arts KOWALSKI, JAMIE C 2627 N. Prospect Milwoukee, Wis. Bachelor of Science In Business Administration Intramural Sports KOZEL, ROBERT G. 6536 Wilson Mills Rd. Cleveland, Ohio Bochelor of Science In Business Administration Beta Gommo Sigmo. Pi Sigma Epsilon, MUCAP KOZIOL, JOHN A. 5820 N. Mason Ave Chicogo, III. Bochelor of Science in Electrical Engmeoring 187 JSmtJers to tfje ©nibersitp for ober Staff a Ccnturp If It's Bound by Boehm, It's Bound to be Good Bound for Permanence and Beauty BOEHM BINDERY COMPANY EttoblilkMl 1904 104 E. Mason Street Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53201 188 KRAMER. KATHY L 4901 N. Dixbofo Rd. Ann Arbor, Mich. Bochelor of Arts KRAWCZYK, LAURA B. 2105 S. 6th $t. Milwoukee, Wit. Bochelor of Arts Sigmo Sigma Sigma KRAWCZYK. PATRICIA A. 764 Oak Ave. Loko Bluff. III. Bochelor of Art In Journalism Sigma Delta Pi. Fin Am Council, Vanity Varieties KRETOWICZ, ADAM A. I Von Orel Rum son, NJ. Bochelor of Arts Sigma Phi Epsilon, Vorsity Soccer, Theology Club, Student Government, Varsity Varieties KUEMNE. MARY L 1005 Ridgewood Dr. Metairie. La. Bochelor of Arts PI Delta Phi. Debate Team, Honors Student Association KUENZLE, JOHN J. 3845 N. 77th St. Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Electrical Engineering Tou Seta Pi, Eto Kappa Nu, Sigma Phi Delta. Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Marquette Engineer KUHLMAN, THOMAS L. 134 w. Lakeside Av . Lakeside Pork, Kent. Bochelor of Arts Psi Chi, Monaso KUHNMUENCH, STEVEN R. 1006 E. Spooner Fox Point, Wis. 8achelor of Arts KOLA TERESA A. 31 E. Dixon Dayton, Ohio Bochelor of Science in Medicol Technology Varsity Varieties, Sailing Club. Intromural Sports KULAS, DONALD J. 722 N. 13th St. Milwaukee, Wis. Bachelor of Science In Business Administration KULKOSKI, JOY M. 1012 Forest Hill Dr. Green Bay, Wis. Bachelor of Arts Girl's Basketball Team KUNZER, JOHN J. 6143 N. Lawndale Chicogo, III. Bochelor of Science in Electrical Engineering Eto Kappa Nu, Institute of Electrical ond Electronics Engineers, SAE Sailing Club KWAN, HENRY K. H. 8 Shouson Hill Rd. Hong Kong Bachelor of Science SAACS, Chorus, Vorsity Tennis KWASNY, THOMAS A. 5637 W. 100 PI. Oak Lawn, III. Bachelor of Science in Engineering American Society of Civil Engineers, Blueprint, Intramural Football LACZNIAK, EUGENE R. 3735 S. 14th St. Milwaukee, Wis. Bachelor of Science in Business Administration Beta Gamma Sigma, Honors Progrom LAGANO, WILLIAM J. 3063 Clifton Terrace Largo, Florida Bochelor of Arts Phi Alpho Theta LAMBERTI, JULIE E. 1225 Tclegroph Road Lake Forest, III. Bochelor of Am MUSTBE, MUCAP, Educational Opportunity Program LANCOUR, JANE M. 1734 S. 62nd St. West Allis, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Nursing LANDGREN, DALE A. 4928 N. 57th St. Milwoukee, Wis. 8oche!or of Science in Electrical Engineering Eta Kappa Nu. Tou Beta PI, Institute of Electrical ond Electronics Engineers, Engineering Council, LANGE, GEORGE M. 5710 N. 35th St. Milwaukee, Wts. Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering Eto Koppo Nu, Tou Beta PI. Institute of Electncol and Electronics Engineers LANGONE. ROBERT D. 32 Budd Av . Brockton, Mass. Bochelor of Science in Business Administration LANIGAN, DEIDRE 455 Hawthorne Rd. Duluth, Minn. Bochelor of Science in Speech Therapy Chi Sigma Chi, Kick-Off Council, Squalid Arms LANING. NANCY W38-38I Hwy. D Dousmon, Wis. Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering Eto Koppo Nu, Gamma PI Epsilon, Tou Beta Pi, Pi Mu Epsilon LoRUE. PAUL L. 5 lngles.de Rd. Foirfield, Conn. Bachelor of Arts MUCAP, CPF LATEK, ROBERT R. 7312 Pottawotomi Polos Hts., III. Bochelor of Science in Business Administration LATUS, KENNETH R. 3444 N. 41st St. Milwaukee. Wit. Bachelor of Science in Engineering LAUIZ, ROBERT W. 2866 N. 90th St. Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Arts in Speech Sigma Sigma Epsilon, Marquette Plovers, Marquette Chorus; Alpna Psi Omega LoVASSER, GARY W. 906 Edgewood Place Jefferson, Wis. Bachelor of Science In Electrical Engineering Sigma Phi Delto, Varsity Trock and Cross Country LAVIN, RITA J. 1922 N. Normandy Avenue Chicogo, III. Bachelor of Arts CCD, Soiling Club, Young Democrats LAWRENCE. BARBARA A. 6823 Kinsmon Wauwatosa, Wis. Bachelor of Science In Nursing Alpho Tou Delta, Avalanche Ski Club LEDVINA, MARILYN A. R.R. 3 Luxemburg, Wis. Bochelor of Sconce in Nursing Gamma Pi Epsilon, Alpha Delta PI LEE, NANCY M. 151 Old Hope Rd. Kingston. Jomoico Bochelor of Science In Business Administration Beta Comma Sigma, Beto Alpha Psi, Phi Chi Theta LeFEVER RONALD P. 7775 N. 107th St. Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Arts Pershing Rifles LeJEUNE, JANET L. 1273 Deer Troil Libertyvllle, HI. Bochelor of Science in Speech Therapy Zeta Phi Eto, Vorsity Vorletles, Speech Coiescil, Tower Dorm Council, Tower Boiketboll Team LEMANOWSKI, RONALD J. 360 New York Ave. Jersey City, NJ. Bochelor of Arts Delta Tau Delta, Intramurals, Sailing Club LENSS. RONALD J. 1474 Hastings St. Green Boy, Wis. Bochelor of Am Delta Upsilon LENZ, SHIRLEY C. 715 Nebraska $W Huron. South Dakota Bochelor of Science in Dental Hygiene National Honor Society in Dental Hygiene LEV ALL, THOMAS J. 6I2B 15th Pioce Kenosho. Wis. Bochelor of Science in Electrical Engineering Triangle, Varieties Council, Engineering Council LEVERNIER, JAMES A. 860 Burton Ave. Highland Pork, III. Bochelor of Arts Sigma Tou Delta LEWIS, CHRISTINE A. 894 Mom St. Leominster, Mass. Bochelor of Science «n Physical Pi AlphoStgmo, Editor of Physical Theropy Paper LILLA. D. THOMAS 3167 S. 11th St. Milwoukee, Wis. Bochelor of Science In Business Administration Pi Sigmo Epsilon, Business Administration Student Council LIMONI, APOLONIA 1205 S. 72nd St. West Allis, Wis. Bochelor of Science LINN, JULIA A. 4505 Ardendcle South Euclid, Ohio, Bochelor of Science in Physicol Pi Su , Riding Club, Booster Club LINNANE, MARY LU 400 Hill Ave. Glen Ellyn, III. Bochelor of Am Alpha Delta PI LIPSCOMB, JOAN A. 715 N. 79th SI. Wouwotoso, Wis. Bochelor of Am in Journalism Koppo Beto Gamma, Tribune LIPSCOMB, MARY L 1120 Glenview Ave. Wouwotoso, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Physicol Theropy Alpho Delto PI LIPTAK. LEONARD M. 1060 Brandon Rd. Cleveland Ht ., Ohio Bochelor of Arts In Business Administration Alpha Do I to Gamma, Vorsity Vorieties, Intramurols LISIUS, PAUL A. SS61 N. Kent Ave. Milwoukee, Wis. Bachelor of Science In Business Administration LITTELMAN, MARIBETH 3167 Wendovcr Toledo, Ohio Bochelor of Science in Physicol Pi Alpha igmo, Modem Dance Club, Young Democrats, Sailing Club, Physicol Theropy Council LOCHOWITZ, RICHARD T. 2165 Fairhoven Blvd. Elm Grovo, Wis. Bochelor of Science In Pre-Med Alpho Epsilon Pi, Ployers, Pre-Med Club, Biology Club, Morquette Motorcycle Association LOCKRIDGf, LINDA L. Rfd. 2 Farmington, Mo. Bachelor of Arts In Journalism Fine Arts Council LOEHR, BERNARD K. SI I Minnesota Ave. North Fond du Loc, Wis. Bochelor of Science In Business Administration Beto Gamma Sigma, Pi Sigmo Epsilon, Intromurals LOEHR, JAMES D. Rt. 2 Hilbert, Wis. Bochelor of Science In Civil Engineering Chi Epsilon, American Society of Civil Engineers LORENZ. FREDERICK M. 1343 W. Wisconsin Ave. 230 Milwaukee, Wis. Juris Doctor Phi Alpha Delto, Student Bor Assn. LORENZ. KATHLEEN A. 2009 N. Prospect Ave. 25 Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Am In Journalism Theto Sigma Phi, Modern Dance, Journalism Council LORENZINI, MARY R. 3819 E. Dole Ave. Cudohy, Wis. Bochelor of Am Eta Sigmo Phi, Sigmo Tou Delta LOSCH, RICHARD J. 1145 Huber Ln. Glenview. III. Bochelor of Science In Mechonlcol Engineering Triangle, American Society of Mechonical Engineers LOUGHRAN, STEPHANIE 150 Washington St. Pembroke. Moss. Bochelor of Am In Journalism Morquette Journal, Troditionol Music Society LUBINSKI, RICHARD V. 903 Ivory St. Seymour, Wts. Juris Doctor Delto Theto Phi, ROTC LUDWIG. MARCI J. 8S3 3rd Ave. N.W. Volley City. N O. 8ochclor of Science in Nursing Alpho Delto PI LUC, FRANKLIN A. 143 Old Hope Rd. Kingston, Jomoico Bochelor of Science in Engineering Eta Kappa Nu, Institute of Electncol and Electronics Engineers, Vorsity Soccer, Marquette Engineer Art Editor, International Students' Club, Dorm Council LYNCH, MARY, J. 1700 Forest Wilmette. III. Bochelor of Am Chi Sigmo Chi, Ponhellenlc Council. Squalid Arms M MACHI, ANTHONY, J. 2834A $. 15th St. Milwoukee, Wis. Juris Doctor Delta Theto Phi, Motor Sports Association MACCI, JOSEPH T. 5553 Jockson Park Dr. Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Business Administration Young Republicans MACKLEY, LYNN K. 2304 Robinwood Toledo, Ohio Bochelor of Science In Nursing Alpha Tou Delto, International Students Club, Religious Council MADSEN, RONALD J. 4611 Rose St. Schiller Park. III. Bochelor of Science in Electrical Engineering Eto Koppo Nu, Institute of Electrical ond Electronic Engineers, Blueprint MAEDER, LINDA A. Washington West Bend, Wis. Diploma in Dentol Hygiene Alpha Delto Eto, Dentol Hygiene Council MAGEE, PATRICK H. 9 Robin Hill N. Caldwell, NJ. Bochelor of Science in Electrical Engineering Brooks Council, Campus Ministry MAGNER, MARY T. 15 Breezy Hill Terrace Nahonf, Moss. Bochelor of Am in Journalism Tribune, Hilltop, MUCAP 189 Fother Jocques Morquefte, o Jesuit priest, ond the Conodicn bom, Jesuit trained explorer Louis Joliet are credited with blazing a route which for a century and a half comprised the main ortery of travel In the Northwest. In December, 1672, his Jesuit superior at the St. Ignoce mission provided the opportunity long awaited by Father Marquette ond Joliet. They spent that winter preparing for the expedition. Marquette's diary chronicled tho storing of Indian corn ond smoked meat os their only provisions, ond Indian warnings of horrible monsters which devoured men and canoes together . On Moy 17, 1673 they left St. Ignoce with a five-man crew and two bork conoes. The Moscouten-Miomi-Kickopoo village on the upper Fox River wos reached on June 7. From there, guides led them through o maze of reeds ond wild rice to the Mcskousing (Wisconsin) River ot the present site of Portoge, Wisconsin. Following this waterway the group FAT HER MARQUETTE sighted the awesome Mississippi, almost o mile wide at this point, on June 17. Charting their course, they floated southward post the Missouri ond Ohio Rivers, writing of wild cattle and monstrous cotfish and sturgeon, to the Arkonsos River. Here, to avoid trouble with the Spaniards further south, they turned bock. By way of the Illinois River, the Chicogo portoge, Loke Michigan ond Green Bay, they returned to the mission of St. Ignoce. In failing health, Marquette kept his promise to return to the Illinois Indians, conoeing down Lake Michigan's coast In October, 1674. He stopped briefly at the site of Milwaukee and wintered near the mouth of the Chicago River ond reached the Illinois Indians in spring. But death was near and, hurrying to reach the mission ot St. Ignoce, Fother Marquette died on Moy 18, 1675 ot the mouth of the river nomed for him, near what is now Ludington, Michigan. THIS HISTORICAL MESSAGE IS BROUGHT TO YOU BY FRIENDS OF MARQUETTE UNIVERSITY BADGER METER, INC. CHARLES L. COUGHLIN MRS. JOHN CUDAHY ALVIN E. GRELLINGER DONALD E. MURPHY LOUIS QUARLES GEO. SEELMAN SONS CO. H. W. STORY JOS. T. TALSKY RUD. W. TALSKY ROBERT A. UIHLEIN JR. G. K. VIALL 190 MAHER, THOMAS K., JR. 425 N. Catherine Av«. LoGrongc, III. Bachelor of Science In Business Administration Intramurol Sports, Cross Country, Brooks Council MAHONEY, JAMES J. 1044 Prairie Lawn Rood Glenview, III. Bachelor of Science In Business Admmistrotion Delta Upsilon, Delta Sigma PI, Intcr-frotcrnity Council MAHONEY, JANET M. 3 Avon PI. Yonkers, N.Y. Bachelor of Arts in History MAIER, CARL H. 76 Old Orchard R. Riverside, Conn. Bochclor of Science in Business Administration Persino Rifles, Kick-Off, ASMU, Tribune MAJERUS, RICKY R. 2187 N. S3rd St. Milwaukee Wis. Bachelor of Arts MAJEWSKI, ANTHONY J. 4055 N. Newholl Milwaukee, Wts. Bochelor of Science In Business Administration Zeta Beta Tou, ROTC MALKOWSKI, CHESTER, JR. 8652 Essex Chicogo, III. Bachelor of Science In Electricol Engineering Brooks Council, Institute of Electricol and Electronics Engineers MALONEY, NANCY S. 1320 S. 94th West Allis, Wit. Bochelor of Science In Medical Technology Alpha Detto Theta MALUEG, DOUGLAS J. 112 N. Clinton Clmtonville, Wis. Juris Doctor MANDERS, FRANK G. 2635 E. Capitol Dr. Milwaukee, Wis. Juris Doctor MANKA, STEPHANIE E. 1384 Crest wood Dr. Redlonds, Collf. Bachelor of Science Pi Mu Epsilon, Sigma Sigma Sigma, MANSKE, NEAL E. 3761 N. 60th St. Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Civil Engineering American Society of Civil Engineers MANZ. MARY PAT 2743 Highland Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Arts MAR8ACH, MARY ANN 293 Loudonville Rd. Loudonville, N.Y. Bochelor of Science In Nursing Alpha Tou Delta MARCHESE, CATHERINE L 1638 Cedar St. South Milwaukee, Wit. Bochelor of Arts in Jour no I am Kappa Tou Alpha MARCONI, PAULA J. 55 Brentwood Dr. Avon, Conn. Bochelor of Arts MARCUCCI, RICHARD L. 707 East Drive Sheffield Lake. Ohio Doctor of Dental Surgery Psi Omega MARES, PATRICK 906 W. Morquetto St. Appleton, Wis. Juris Doctor MARESCA, ROBERT C. 14671 Moron Westminster, Calif. Bachelor of Science in Mochanicol Engineering Pershing Rifles MARK. JEFFREY A. 10305 S. Washington Oaklown. III. Bochelor of Science Intromurol Sports MARQUARDT, WILLIAM J. 3485 N 67th St. Milwaukee, Wis. Juris Doctor Delta Theta Phi, Law Review MARRKAND, KIM 19 Jonet Circle North Grafton. Moss. Bochelor of Arts MUCAP, Model Cities. International Students Club, Assistant Head Resident MARTELL. DALE F. 4635 S. 20th St. Milwaukee, Wis. Juris Doctor MARTIN, JAMES E. Rt. 2 Welcher Rd. Newark, N.Y. Bachelor of Arts Alpha Delta Gamma, Pre-Law Club MARX, RICHARD E. 1434 Roselond Dr. Kewaskum, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Business Administration Beta Alpha Psi, Brooks Council MASTRONARDI, JOSEPH G. 25 Kershner Place Fairlawn. NJ. Bochelor of Arts Chain Pullers MATZDORF, ANNE K. IS35 Forest Park Blvd. Ft. Wayne, Ind. Bachelor of Science In Speech Alpha Delta Pi, Sigma Alpha Efo McARTHUR, BARBARA J. 208 Poi kcrest Dr. Thiensville, Wis. Bochelor of Science In Nursing McAULEY, ANN M. 760 Yole St. Louis. Mo. Bachelor of Arts McCABE, DOUGLAS M. 54 7 W. Th.rd St. Elmhurst. III. Bochelor of Arts Alpha Sigma Nu, Pi Gamma Mu, Phi Alpha Thcto. Pi Sigma Alpha, Phi Sigma Tou, Sir Thomas More Society, Crown ond Anchor, Sailing Club, Young Republicans, Liberal Arts Student Coswscil, Alpha Delto Gamma McCALEB, KATHLEEN A. 5603 Kirk vide Dr. Chevy Chose, Md. Bochelor of Arts McCART ELAINE L 96 Beocon St. Chestnut Hill, Mass. Bochelor of Arts McCORMICK, MAURICE G. 1038 llth St. Forgo, N.D. Juris Doctor McCORMICK, ROBERT M. 1932 N. 33rd St. Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Business Administration Band, Jazz Ensemble McCOY, KATHRYN (. 5316 Aldrich S. Minneapolis, Minn. Bochelor of Arts Delta Sigma Pi, Pi Gamma Mu. Chi Sigma Chi McCUMISKEY, PETER J. 13 Meodowbrook Lane Westfield, Mass. Bochelor of Arts in Speech Chows Pullers, Intramurol Sports McGONAGLE, KATHLEEN R. 45-18th Ave. N. Hopkins, Minn. Bochelor of Arts Honorary Political Science Fraternity McGRADY, FRANK C. 6250 Massachusetts Ave. Woshmgton, D.C. Bochelor of Science in Engineering Alpha Sigma Nu, PI Tou Sigma, Sigma Phi Delto, Wintcrfest Council, Club Football Council, Engineering Council, American Society of Mechanical Engineers McGrath, ann mary 215 Spruce Tree Rd. Rodnor, Penn. Bochelor of Arts in Psychology Skiing McGRATH, JAMES A. Tower Hill Wokefield, R.l. Bochelor of Arts Soiling Club McGRATH, MICHAELS M. 2 Silver Ave. Hunt Str., Long Islond. N.Y. Bochelor of Arts in Speech MclNERNY, RAYMOND T. 2943 S. 102nd St. West Allis, Wis. Bochelor of Arts Alpha Delta Gamma McKENNA, KATHLEEN M. 5405 Btoado Omaha, Neb. Bochelor of Arts Conduct Board McKIBBIN, MICHAEL E. 2125 S. 98th St. West Allis, Wis. Bochelor of Arts Soiling, Club, Booster Club McMAHON, DENNIS M. 24 9th Ave. N.W. Mmto. N.D. Doctor of Dental Surgery Delta Sigmo Delta, Brooks Council McMAHON. JOSHUA L. 228 Richilieu Terroce Newark.N J. Bochelor of Arts in Juornolism Alpha Delia Gamma, ASMU. Kick-Off Council, Orientation, Varsity Varieties McMANN, DONALD F. 57 Sexton Ave, Westwood, Mass. Bochelor of Science in Business Administration McMANUS, JAMES E. 3715 S. Arctic St. Froncis, Wis. Bochelor of Arts Phi Alpha Thcto, Monks Athletic Club McMONIGAL, WILLIAM M. 122 N. Church St. Berlin, Wis. Juris Doctor Delto Theta Phi, Student Bar Association McNALLY. DENNIS J. 8345 Gridiey Ave. Wauwatosa, Wis. Juris Doctor Law Review, Sir Thomas More Scholarship mcnally, john f. 6902 Grand Pkwy. Wouwotoso, Wis. Juris Doctor mcnally, michelle a. 1265 5. Elm Denver Colo. Bachelor of Science in Physical mcnamara, Margaret m. 5 Stuyvesant Oval New York, N.Y. Bochelor of Science in Nursing Alpho Tou Delto, MUCAP. Nursing Council McNAMEE, EARL D. RFD 2 Woutoma, Wis. Bochelor of Science m Electricol Engineering Brooks Council McNEIL, DONNA J. Rt. I Box 155 Oelof eld, Wis. Bachelor of Arts Alpha Delta Pi McNEIL, ROBERT J. Rt. 1 W3092I Hy. CCC Deloticld. Wis. Juris Doctor Intromurol Sports McNULTY, OERMOT A. 508 Forest Ave. River Forest, III. Bachelor of Arts in Journalism Delta Upsilon, Varsity Varieties, Intramural Sports ADE, ELIZABETH M. I Inwood Dr. Chester, N.Y. Bochelor of Arts MEANS, JOSEPHINE A. 4552 N. Delco Wouwototo, Wis. Bachelor of Science In Nursing Alpha Delto Pi, Nursing Student-Foculty Board MELZER. MARLENE D. 4472 N. 39th Sf. Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Science Pi Mu Epsilon, American Chemistry Society, Honors Student Association MEULER, ANDREW W. 2430 N. 38th St. Mitwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Science Pi Mu Epsilon, Phi Kappa Theta MICHELSON, GREGORY J. 1422 71st St. Kenosha. Wis. Bochelor of Science MIHALKO, LINDA A. 300 S. Blvd Saddle Brook, N.J. Bochelor of Science in Physical Gommo pT Epsilon, Sigma Sigma Sigma, Pi Alpha Sigmo MIKKELSEN, JUDY M. 10216 Vultee 229 Downey, Colif. Bochelor of Science in Dcntol Hygiene Junior American Dental Hygiene Association MILLER, DALE D. Wittenberg, WiS. Juris Doctor Phi Alpha Theta, Tou Epsilon Rho, Low Review Editorial Board, Placement Digest, Student Bar Association, Moot Court Competition MILLER, PAMELA A. 563 Easllond Rd. Berea, Ohio Bochclor of Science in Nursing Alpha Tou Delta MILLER, THOMAS S. 4480 Tullocks Woods Trail Rockford, III. Bachelor of Arts Alpha Delta Gommo MILLER, WILLIAM D. Box 118 Lloyd. Fla. Bochelor of Arts MINTER-BATTEN, GERALD J. I6S6 Milford Houston, Tex. Bachelor of Arts in Political Science Scobbord ond Blade, International Students Club, Army ROTC Rangers, Political Science Association, Economic Association MITCHEL, VICTORIA S. 730 DePere St. Menotho, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Nursing Theta Phi Alpha, Band MOBERG, 0. PAUL 2619 E. Newberry Blvd. Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Arts in Sociology MODE, LINDA J. Hockborth Rd Ft. Atkinson, Wis. Bochelor of Arts MOGILKA, MARSHA M. 3806 E. Plonkinton Cudahy, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Physical Theropy Stoma Sigma Sigma MOLESKI, L. MARTIN 1462 Milton St. S.E. Grand Ropids. Mich. Bochelor of Arts in Psychology Sigma Phi Epsilon, IGck-Off Council MOLTER, DONALD S., JR. 207 Whitney St. Morshall, Minn. Juris Doctor Alpho Koppa Psi MONAHAN, SARAH A. 266 Taylor Glen Elryn, III. Bochelor of Science in Nursing Gommo Pi Epsilon, ASMU, Nursing Council MONGE, CYNTHIA M. 3100 Belvidere Waukegan, III, Bochelor of Arts MONTGOMERY, THOMJlS W. 124 Napoleon Blvd. South Bend, Ind. Bochelor of Arts MORAWSKI, TIMOTHY C. 4621 Robmwood, Royal Ook, Mich. Bochelor ol Science in Electricol Engineering Sigmo Phi Delta 191 Human history becomes more more a race between education and catastrophe” --H. G. WELLS, Outline of History The race is accelerating, and those who choose not to continue their education have given up the race and fallen behind. Now, more than ever, with the problems wc face that cry for solutions, our country and our world need well educated people. That means postgraduate study. Not just for the tangible rewards (which naturally come with the increase in your skills and knowledge) but more importantly for the good of us all. We at Allis-Chalmcrs, from our vantage point in the heart of the space age, cannot urge strongly enough that you continue your education . . . For the good of us all. ALUS-CHALMERS 192 MORDAUNT, WILLIAM R. 6117 Abbott Av . S. Mmneopolis, Mir«n. Bochelor of Art Tribun , Journal MORRIS, COWARD J. 570 W.lmof Deerfield. III. Bochelor of Arti Football MORRISSCY, MICHAEL J. 9400 S. Moyne Chicogo, III. Bocnelnr of Art Alpho Delta Gamma, Pre-Law Club. Freshman Basketball. Inter-Fraternity Council MORRISSCY, PATRICIA A. 852 Giddlnos Grand Rooldt, Mich. Bachelor of Art Pi Gamma Mu, Alpha Delto PI MORRISON, MARGARET M. 21597 Ellacott Worrensvllle Ht ., Ohio Bachelor of Science MOTl. DENNIS M. 7437 N. 91st St. Wo- wotosa, Wis. Bachelor of Science In Electricol Engineering Pi To i Siomo. Tou Beto Pi, Soiling Club MUCKERHCIDE, MARY F. RR I Rondom Lake. Wis. Bachelor of Science MUCAP. Pre-Med Club. SAACS MUEHL. LOUISE E. 10236 W Pork Ridge Wouwotoso, Wis. Bochelor of Science In Medical Technology Alpha Delta The to MIILROY, MICHAEL J. 2754 N. 56th St. Milwnokee, Wn. Juris Doctor MUNDIE, JOHN C. RR 2 Germantown Mills, III. Bachelor of Art In English Alpha Delta Gamma, Intromurol Sport MUNROE, HAROLD W. 58 Maroaret Lane Glastonbury, Conn. Bachelor of Science In Business Administration Beto Alpha Rho MURACZCWSKI, COWARD S. 9012 W. Molt Av . Mlwouke . Wi . Bochelor of Science In Engineering, ASM MIIRPHY, JOHN J. 925 E Well St. Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Art Delta Upsilon, Delta Sigma PI MURPHY, JOSEPH P. 3057 Ernst St. Omaha. Neb. Bachelor of Science In Mechanical Engineerina Alpha Delta Gammo, Intromurol Sports MURPHY. KATHLEEN R. 285 Gdlett St. Fond du Lac. Wis. Bachelor of Science In Speech Chi Sigma Chi, Kick-Off Council MURPHY, MARGARET P. 1301 16th St. Grofton, Wis. Bachelor of Science In Business Administration MURPHY, MICHAEL P. 3809 Sterling St. Flint, Mich. Bochelor of Science In Electricol Enomeering Tou Beto Pi. Eto Koooa Nu, Pi Tou Sigma, Institute of Electrical and Electronics Enginoers, Engineering Council, SCEC MURRAY, DANIEL C. 7266 Northrrvooc Dr. University City, Mo. Bochelor of Arts PI S'oma Alpha. Sigmo Phi Epsilon, Phi Gamma Mu, Sir Thomas More Society, Kick-Off Council, Econ Association MURTAUGH, JAMES O. 6936 S. Oakley Chicago, III. Bochelor of Arts Alpha Delta Gommo, Varsity varieties, Intromurol Sports, Pre-Law Club MUSOLINO, RICHARD A. 4490 Upton St. N.W. Washington, D.C. Bachelor of Arts Alpha Delto Gammo, Young Ropublicons, ASMU, Sir Thomas More Society, Liberal Arts Council MYERS, CHRISTOPHER R. 1210 S. 113th St. West Alii , Wis. Bochelor of Science In Mechanical Enameerlng Tou Beto Pi, PI Tou Sigma, N NASTAV, EDWARD J., JR. 8729 Kingston ChicoQO. III. Bochelor of Science in Business Admmistrotion Beta Alpha Psi, Brooks Council NATHAN. ARTHUR B. 5413 Morboro Dr. Racine, W.s Juris Doctor Tou Epsilon Rho. Student Bor Association, ABA-ISO Notioool Society NATKIN, SHELDON H. 496 England Ln. Orange, Conn. Doctor of Dental Surgery Alpha Omega NAUGLE, KIP J. 920 Ook Hill Ave. Honerstown, Md. Bochelor of Arts NAVRATIL, ROBERT T. 1509 Ttvrston Rocin . Wis. Doctor of Dental Surgery P i Omega Nf ARY, MARY K. 7005 N. 85th St. Wauwatoso. Wis. Bochelor of Arts Alpha Koppa Delto. Sigmo PI Delta. Spanish Club, Sociology Club NELSON, NANCY J. 32363 Electric Avon Lake. Ohio Bachelor of Art In Speech Sigmo Sigma Epsilon. CCD NEMETH. CHRISTOPHER P. 419 Woodlown Wheaton. Ill Bochelor of Arts Alpha Delto Gamma. WMUR Rodio. ASMU, Sailing Club NIETZEL, PRISCILLA E. 307 Prospect Ave. Cronford. NJ. Bochelor of Art In Speech NIGHTINGALE. JOHN P. 39 Waldeck St. Dorchester, Mass. Bochelor of Art Delta Siama Rho. Pi Delto Phi. Debate NOBORIKAWA, NAOMI Y. 4543 Molio St. Honolulu. Hawaii Bachelor of Arts Yourto Democrat , Booster Club NOGOSEK, JOHN J. 456 Bonk Mill Rd Aiken, S.C. Bochelor of Science In Business Administration Alpha Koppa Psi, Navy ROTC. Varsity Voneties, Young Republicans. Intramurols NOLTI, KENNETH E. 3423 S. 56th St. Milwaukee, Wit. Bochelor of Science in Physical Theropy Monk's Chib NOONAN, 0ANIEL A. Bodoer Pork Pcshfigo. Wis. Juris Doctor Delta Theta Phi, Student Bor Association NORELL. JOHN M. 1945 Hawthorn Dr, Elm Grove, Wis. Bochelor of Art Chorus 0 OATES, FREDERICK 8. 210 Dwight St. Bosccbot W.s. Doctor of Dental Surgery Junior American Denfol Atsooot.on, American Society of Dentistry for Children OATIS, M. SUSAN 5022 Allitonvillo Indianapolis, Ind. Bochelor of Arts Honors Progrom, Alpha Delto PI, Kick-Off Council, Dorm Judiciol Board, Panhollenic Council O'BERLE, CHRISTINE M. 495 Rosiyn Rood East W.lliston, N.Y. Bochelor of Arts Fin Arts Council, MUSTBE OBERTING, MARY ELLEN 635 E. Edge wood Ave. Indiarvopolis, Ind. Bochelor of Arts MUCAP, Soiling Club, 8oo t r Club O'BRIEN, COLLEEN M. 126 Grotton St. Bod A . Mich. Bochelor of Science in Dental Hygiene O'BRIEN, DENNIS W. 1745 N. 72nd St. Bachelor of Science In Engineering Sigmo Phi Delto O'BRIEN, RUTH A. 176 deverty Dr. Rochester, N.Y. Bachelor of Arts O'BRIEN, SUZANNE M. 3306A W. Highland Milwaukee, Wis. Bachelor of Science in Nursing O'CONNELL, DENNIS L. Chicogo, III. Bochelor of Science in Electrical Engineering Eta Koppo Nu O'CONNOR, WILLIAM 0. 919 S. Cumberland Park Ridge, III. Bachelor of Arts O'DONNELL, EDWARD M. 9216 S. Moyne Chicogo, III. Bocnelor of Arts Alpha Delto Gamma, Vorsity Voneties, Intromurol Sports O'DONOVAN, DANIEL J. 2555 Mors Chicago, III. Bocnelor ot Science in Engineering Engineering Open House OEHMANN, CATHERINE, B. 3603 Dunlop St. Chevy Chase, Md. Bochelor ot Arts Theta Phi Alpha O'GRADY, JUDITH E. 31 Grosvenor Pork Lynn, Moss. Bochelor of Science in Nursing Theta Phi Alpha, ASMU, Nursing Council, Varsity Varieties, Student Health Organization, Committee to Study Ethnic Groups OHLMILLER, CLAIRE J. 24 Mason Av . Babylon, N.Y. Bachelor of Science in Physical P. Kgmo OLANDER, THOMAS J. 3234 S. 60th St. Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Arts in Journalism Srgma Delta Chi, Hilltop, Tribune O'LOUGHLIN. JOHN Q. 295 Wolthom St. W. Newton. Moss. Bochelor of Arts Alpha Delto Gommo OLSON, BRUCE J. 1675 Clinton Cf. Melrose Pork. III. Bochelor of Science in Business Administration Pi Sigmo Epsilon, Business Admmistrotion Student Council, Bus ness Administration Senotor, Intramurols O'MALLEY, JOHN 0. 2221 Glerndg St. Pout, Minn. Bochelor of Arts Classical Honor Fraternity, Public Relations Director O'MEARA, JOHN K. 2536 Mod.son PI. LaCrosse, Wis. Bochelor of Arts Rabbits O'NEILL. KEVIN I. 5822 W. Washington Blvd. Milwaukee, Wo. Juris Doctor ORSATTI, ERNEST B. 108 Ivy land Dr. Penn Hills, Po. Bachelor of Arts Scabbard and Blode, Pershing Rifles ORSINGER, ROBERT J. 10610 W. 102 Terrace Overland Park, Kan, Bachelor of Science In Engineering American Society of Mechanical Engineers ORZECHOWSKI, THA00EUS J. 4900 W. Cold Spring Rd. Greenfield, Wis. Bochelor of Science Pi Mu Epsilon O'TOOLE, THOMAS R. Box 148 Rt. I Indian Heod, Md. Bochelor of Science In Mechanicot Engineering Triangle, Pi Tou Sigmo, Navy ROTC Drill Team, Tennis. Dorm Counselor OTT, KRISTINE M. 614 Shelby St. Sandusky, Ohio Diplomo in Dental Hygiene Alpha Delto Eto, Professional Panhellenic Council, Junior Amocicon Dental Hygiene Association OWENS, KATHLEEN M. 2937 Coleridge Cleveland Ht ., Ohio Bachelor of Art P PACKARD, JERRY R. 620 N. Pine Mt. Prospect, III. Bochelor of Arts Alpha Delto Gamma PADGETT, STEPHANIE J. 712 N. 7th St. Broinerd, Minn. Bochelor of Arts MUCAP, SURE PAKULA, DENISE M. 3840 N. Oconto Chicogo, III. Bocnelor of Science In Biology PALCN, CHRISTOPHER J. 111 N. Booth St. Dubuque. Iowa Bochelor of Science in Business Administration Phi Koppa Psi, Alpha Koppo Psi PALMER, MARY ELLEN 13422 W. Forest Dr. New Berlin, Wi . Bochelor of Arts FARE'S, PEDRO 60 Venus St. Santurc . Puerto Rico Bochelor of Arts Sir Thomas Mare Society, Young Republicans, Brooks Council PARKS, PHILIP D. 113 S. Modison Bloomfield, lowo Bochelor of Science In Chemistry Delto Phi Alpha, SAACS PAROO, RALPH J. 920 N. Main Noperviile, III. Bochelor of Science In Civil Engineerina Chi Epsilon. Engineering Knights, Engineering Council, Triongle PATEK. JOSEPH J. 3410 P crce Blvd. Roc.ne, Wi . Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering Pi Tou Sigmo, Tou Beto Pi, Band. ASME, Dorm Council PATRICK, JEANS K. 5005 Rodman Rd. Washington, D.C. Bochelor of Arts Dorm Council PATTI, LAWRENCE T. 3024 S. 9th St. Milwaukee, Wis. Doctor of Dental Surgery Psi Omega 193 'JU Ml ik May the success of the Warriors be continued... ACE FOODS INC. 4500 W. WISCONSIN AVE. MILWAUKEE. WIS. 53208 414-774-1111 194 FOOD SERVICE MANAGEMENT PAUL. PAMILA J. 4130 N. River SI. Arlington, Vo. Bochelor of Art PAULSON, DAVID W. 620 Melvin Roc me, W.v Juris Doctor Phi Alpha Delta PAULSON, THOMAS A. 3903 Erie St. Rocmo. W.v Bochelor of Science In Engineering Trock, Cross Country PAWLAK. KATHLEEN 4185 S. 92nd St Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Business Administration PEARCE, JOHN T. Rt I PD. 335 Mortlond. Wis. Bochelor of Art in Biology MUSTBE, Pith PEARSON. CAROL A. 3693 Highwood Dr. Washington, D.C. Bochelor of Art in Journolism Marquette Players PECH, GERALD R. OR 2 friendship, Wis. Bochelor of Science In Engineer Pi Tou Sigma, Tou Beta Pi, Anc and Chain Society PEIffER, GERALD, M. 850 North St. Anchor Belgium, Wit Bochelor of Science m Engineering ASME. Phi S.oma Epsilon, Intramural PELUSO,STEPHEN D. 56 Mcrseli Ave. Clifton, N.J. Bochelor of Science in Mechonicol Engineering Sigma Phi Delto, Intromurab. ASM PERKO, JUDITH A. 1895 Idlehurst Or. Euclid, Ohio Bochelor of Science m Medical Technology Medicol Technology Council PERKOWICH, JOHN M. 3240 N. 37th St. Milwaukee, Wisconsin Bachelor of Science in Mechonicol Engineering American Society for Metals PERRINE, DENNIS C. 11 Ook Ave. Morrisville, Perm. Bochelor of Science In Business Administration Alpha Delta Gamma PERRUCCI, DORIANNE R. 408 Stout Ave. Scotch Plaint, N.J. Bochelor of Arts in Journalism and Philosophy Publications, WIRC PERSICH, DOUGLAS J. 17-03 W. Kilboum Milwaukee, Wit. Bachelor of Arts Alpha Delta Gamma, Alpho Sigma Theto, MUCAP, McCormick Board of Governors PETERHANS, MARY E. 507 N. Mople Prospect Hts., III. 8ochetor of Arts Vorsity Voneties, MUSTBE PETERSEN, JAMES H. 205 N Story Pkwy. Milwaukee. Wis Juris Doctor Law Review PETERSEN. ROBERT G. 6409 W. Wright Wouwotoso, Wis. Doctor of Oentol Surgery PETERSON, JON P. 1803 N. 57th St. Milwaukee, Wis. Juris Doctor Low Review PETIT, KAREN A. 6S9 North Ave. Botavio. III. Bochelor of Arts PETRELLA, Joanne m. 404 Penna. Ave. Dowinalown, Po. Bochelor of Arts In Journalism Kick-Off Council PfEIL, MARY L. 37 E. Glenove Ridgewood, N.J. Bochelor of Science in Medical Technology Gamma Pi Epsilon Alpha Delto Theto, Medicol Technology Council, Soiling Club, Professional Ponhellinic Council PHALEN, LYNN M. 385 Willow Dr. Fond du Loc, Wis Bochelor of Arts Theto Phi Alpho, Alpha Delto Theto, MUCAP, Dorm Council, MUSTBE, Welcome Week-Senior Week Council PHILLIPSON, WILLIAM R. 5025 Loke Forest Dr. Kalomozoo. Mich Bochelor of Arts Alpha Delta Gamma, Varsity Wrestling PIASECKI, CHARLENE P. 2106 N. 49th St. Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Science In Speech Theropy Zeto Phi Eta, Varsity Varieties, Musical Varieties PIGGOT, THOMAS J. IIII Westgate Rd Mt Prospect, III. Bochelor of Science PIGNOTTI, DAVID A. 7 Clork St. Glenwood, III. Bochelor of Science in Economics PIRES, RICHARD Fernonde Circle Norton. Mass. Bochelor of Science In Business Admmisfrotion Delto Tou Delta PLICHTA, REGINA C. Box 1321 8olboo, Canal Zone Bachelor of Arts in Journolism POCH, NORBERT F. 3604 N. 86th St. Milwaukee, Wis, Bochelor of Science in Electrical Engineering Soiling Club, Blueprint POGGI, WILLIAM M. 7937 Westwood Dr Elmwood Pork, III Bochelor of Science in Electrical Engineering Karate Club POLLAND, MARC L. 1308 N. Aster Milwaukee, W.s. Juris Doctor Community Services POLULACH, JOHN G. 149 Longcommon Rd. Riverside, III. Bochelor of Arts in Psychology POLZIN, JONATHAN S. 921 N. Mornston St. Appleton. Wis. Bochelor of Am PORTER, MARY J. 325 Tomorock Naperville, III. Borholr-r of Art Theto Phi Alpha POTTS, KATHLEEN F. 3516 Menomonee River Pkwy. Wouwotoso, Wis. Bachelor of Science in Nursing Alpho Tou Della POULSON, RICHARD E. 7849 W. Kothyryn Ave. Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Arts Delto Upsilon, Varsity Wrestling POWELL, WALTER J. RR I Hillpoinf. Wis. Bochelor of Science In Engineering Triongle, Engineering Council POWERS, RICHARD J. 7829 W Lorraine PI. Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Science In Business Administration Pi Siamo Epsilon, Business Administration Council PREWITT, LINDA A. 472 Fianders St. Louis, Mo. Bachelor of Arts Thera Phi Alpha, Kick-Off Council PRZYBYSZ, CAROLAN 8722 Momstee Chicogo, III. Bochelor of Arts In Journolism PRZYBYSZ, MARGARET M. 864 Adbor St. Nc. Grand Rapids. Mich. Bachelor of Science in Nursing Alpho Tou Delto, Nursing Council PURCELL, JOHN J. 1727 N. Drexo Dr. Hamilton, Ohio Bochelor of Science in Business Administration PUSZTAI ANDREW Z. 2700 E. College Ave. Cudahy, Wis. Bochelor of Science Q QUILTCR, JOHN F 500 Westridge Dr. Portola Valley, Calif. Bochelor of Science in Business Administration NROTC QUINN, FRANCES E. 3816 Nichol Anderson, Ind. Bochelor of Arts Sigma Delto Pi, Modrid Center, Spanish Club, MUCAP, Dorm Council QUINN, ROBERT D. 240 S. Iowa St. Addison, III. Bochelor of Science in Electrical Engineering Intromurol Basketboll, Karate Club, Swim Team QUIRK, MICHALC L. 3876 E. Dale Ave. Cudahy, Wes. Juris Doctor Phi Delfo Phi RACINE. JOSEPH A. 2710 W. 87th Chicooo, III. Bochelor of Science m Electrical Engineering Engineering Council, Engineering Knights, Blueprint, Monitor Holl Council RAHLFS, ROGER E. 88 Gromor Rd. Elgin, III. Bachelor of Science In Business Administration Alpha Delto Gommo RAKOLTA, LINDA A. 3858 Shellmarr Ln. Bloomfield Hills, Mich. Bochelor of Arts Theto Phi Alpha, Sociology Club, MUCAP RAND. NONA M. 2984 S. Hcrmon St. Milwaukee, Wis. Bachelor of Science in Speech Sigmo Alpha Efo RATKOWSKI, THOMAS M. SS23 W. Cleveland Milwaukee, Wis. Bachelor of Arts In Speech Alpha Psi Omega. APO. Marquette Players, Musical Varieties REAK, ROGER W. Rondolph, Wis Bochelor of Science in Electrical Engineering Alpha Delta Gommo, Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers, Varsity Varieties REGLER, SISTER M. THERESA 6618 N. Teutonia Milwaukee, Wis. Bachelor of Science In Nursing REINCE, MICHAEL P. 2600 Beaumont Sf. Green Bay, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering Pi Tou Sigmo, Sigma Phi Delta, Varsity Voneties Council REUTER, KATHLEEN A. 409 Vornon Ave. Ttvensvillo, Wis. Bachelor of Science in Speech Zeto Phi Eto. Chi Sigma Chi REVOIR, GEORGE L. 14136 Calumet Dolton, III. Bochelor of Science In Engineering REX, MARY C. 89 Morncrest Dr. Rochester, N.Y. Bochelor of Science RICE, JOHN D. 2666 E. 73rd St. Chicogo, III. Bochelor of Arts Scobbord ond Blode, Sailing Club RICE, LOUIS H. 8954 Eltmere Drive Pormo, Ohio Juris Doctor Law Review REIDL, MARGUERITE O. 2026 Mortho Washington Dr. Wouwotoso, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Electrical Engineering Tou Beta Pi. Gamma Pi Epsilon, Eta Koppa Nu, PI Mu Epsilon, ASMU, Engineering Council, Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers, Society of Women Engineer RIEHL. COLLEEN 20522 Foirview Dearborn Hts., Mich. Bochelor of Science in Nursing Vorsity Varieties RIEHL, EDWARD P. 860 N E. Catawba Rd. Port Clinton, Ohio Bochelor of Science In Mechanical Engineering Engineering Knlohts, Triangle, Winreffest, ASMU RIENDL, ANNE 1009 S. Vine Marshfield, Wis. Bachelor of Science in Physical Theropy RIES, SUZANNE V. 3107 S. Highway 141 Sheboygan, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Nursing RIPP, THOMAS V. 11 N. Phelps Ave Arlington Hts. III. Bochelor of Science Freshmon Orientation Committee, Economic Opportunity Program-Tutor RIPPLE, MICHAEL J. 7808 Gee a la yn Circle Wouwatosa, Wis. Bachelor of Arts ROARTY. JOSEPH P. 5216 Nohont St. Washington, D.C. Bachelor of Science In Mechonicol Engineering Sigma Phi Delta ROBINSON, TERES! M. 227 Crescent Dr. Neonoh, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Medicol Technology Medicol Technology Council ROCCA, PAUL G. 13979 Hughes La. Dollos. Texas Bochelor of Science in Business Administration Alpha Delto Gamma, Club Football, Vorsity Varieties, Bus Ad Student Council ROGERS, ANDREW F. 4584 Alcott St. Denver, Colo. Bochelor of Arts in Journalism Alpha Sigma Nu, Sigma Delta Chi, Tribune, MUCAP ROLNICKI, MIKE 5941 N. Odell Ave. Chicogo, III. Bachelor of Arts in Speech Alpha Delto Gommo. Rho Tou Beto, Resident Advisor, Marquette Players, Speech Senator, International Student Society, Speech Council, Marine P.L.C. Program, Who's Who in American Universities 1971 ROMANIUK, WILLIAM G. 1335 Porks de Park Ridge, III. Bachelor of Arts in Business Administration ROSS, LYNN A. 2331 N.E. 34lh St Lighthouse Pt., Flo. Bochelor of Science in Speech Gamma Pi Epsilon, Theta Phi Alpha, Zeto Phi tto, Speech Council, Dorm Council 195 MAYNARD ELECTRIC STEEL CASTING CO. • Carbon steel, alloy and manganese steel castings •X-ray Gamma Kay •Complete heat treating and pattern shop facilities MAYNARD DATA PROCESSING OCR SCANNING • PROGRAMMING • SYSTEMS 2856 South 27th Street. Milwaukee. Wisconsin 53215 - 414 645-0440 ROSTANKOWSKI, CYNTHIA C. 2329 E. Fern wood Ave. Milwoukee, Wis. Bochelor of Art Phi S-gmo Too, Gamma Pi Epsilon, Delta Phi Alpha. Student Undergraduate Philosophy Programming Committee ROTHGtRY, MICHAEL D. 9SO Cloirmont Ave. Napoleon, Ohio Bachelor of Science Delta Tou Delta, Bond. Young Democrat ROTHSTEIN, GRETCHEN M. 2110 El Roncho Lone Rockford, III. Bochelor of Art RUIDL, WILLIAM J. 2S4S N. 94th St. Wauwatoco, Wit. Bachelor of Art Zeto Beta Tou RUSSELL. MARK R. RFD I Putman Ht . Putnom, Conn. Bochelor of Art Phi Kappa Theta, Fine Art Council, Welcome Week Council. Intro-froternity Judicio! Board RYAN, DANIEL B. 1621-AW 103rd St. Chicogo. III. Bochelor of Art Delto Upsilon, Delta Sigma Pi, Diamond Athletic Club RYAN, PENELOPE J. 2830 W. Bobolink Milwoukee, Wi . Bochelor of Science in Speech RYAN, PETER A. 90 Broom Rd., Tedding ton. Middlesex, England Bochelor of Art Crown ond Anchor Society, Weekly Forum, Brooks Council RYCHWALSKI, CHRYSAN L. 2778 S. Adams Milwoukee. Wi . Bachelor of Science in Business Administration Gymnastics I SABBATH, ALAN M. 11909 W. Vllet Wouwotoso, Wit. Bochelor of Arts In Journalism Journalism Honor Society, Tribune SADD, SUSAN A. 611 Hall St. Chroletton. W. Vo. Bochelor of Science in Dental Hygiene Alpha Delta Eta, Varsity Varieties, Dental Hygiene Council, Dorm Council, Junior American Dental Hygiene Association SAPORTA, MAXINE 249-31 64th Ave. Little Neck. N.Y. Bochelor of Arts in Journalism S«gma Delto Chi, Tribune SARLES, JOAN E. 4104 Dewmor Ct. Kewsmgton, Md. Bochelor of Arts Phi Gamma Mu. Student Council for Exceotionol Children, Sociology Club, JVS SARNO, ROBERT 112 Rolling Hills Thornwood, N.Y. Bochelor of Science in Physicol PT CouncTl, Avalanche Club SAWYER, LESLEE M. 2145 Clover Rd. Northbrook, III. Bochelor of Arts Gamma Pi Mu, MUCAP, Young Democrats SAYER, JOHN E. Rt. 3 Box 712 Excelsior, Minn. Bochelor of Science in Business Administration SCANLON, JANE M. 9125 N. Moodowlork Lone Boyside, Wis. Bochelor of Arts SCHAEFER MARCUS L. Chester, Mont. Bachelor of Science SCHAFER, DELP S. 5319 N. Boy Ridge Whitefish Boy, Wi . Doctor of Dental Surgery Psi Omega SCHANTZEN, DeWAYNE A. 49 Elizabeth Lane Budd Loke, N.J. Bochelor of Arts Soiling Club SCHARLOCK, JUDITH L. 2407 Fotrlawn St. Washington, D.C. Bachelor of Arts SCHATELL. AUDREY Y. 34SO N. 67th SI. Milwoukee, Wis. Juris Doctor Kappo Beta Pi. Oyer SCHEIVE, KENNETH E. 2100 Westchester Blvd. Westchester, III. Bochelor of Science In Engineering SCHIFALACQUA. MARIANO 1900 Trooper Rd. Reodmg, Po. Bochelor of Science in Civil Engineering Chi Epsilon, Triangle. Dorm Cosmot, Engineering Council SCHILLER, LUMINA A. 235 Isabella Muskegon, Mich. Bochelor of Science in Medical Technology Intramural Sport . Dorm Council SCHMIDT, CAROL L. 7100 W. Crawford Milwoukee, Wi . Bochelor of Art SCHMITT, JEANNE M. 544 Locust Rd. Wilmette, III. Bachelor of Art in Jour no I ism Alpha Delto Pi SCHMITT. JOSEPH C. Green Bay, Wit. Juris Doctor SCHNEIDER, CONSTANCE M. 1818 N. HiMount Blvd. Milwaukee, Wa. Bochelor of Science in Speech Zeto Phi Eto SCHNEIDER, SUSAN L. 10601 Monor Cleveland, Ohio Bochelor of Arts Alpha Delto Pi, Kick-Off, Booster Club SCHNEIDER, TONY 1446 S. 60th West Allis, Wit. Bochelor of Arts In Speech Tou Omega, Marquette Players. Alpha Psi Omego, MUCAP SCHNETTLER, DANIEL N. 6627 Ciaverieof Lone Brown Deer, Wis. Bochelor of Science m Business Administration Zeto Beta Tou SCHOMMER, PAUL S. • 13 E. Wells Milwoukee. Wi . Bochelor of Science SCHROT, JEREMIAH P. 269 Spencer Rd. Rochester, N.Y. Bochelor of Science Delto Tou Delto SCHUELLER, SUZANNE M. SOI Sunset Ridge Dubuque, Iowa Bochelor of Art Sigma Delto Pi. Sponith Club SCHUETTE, NANCY S. 1909 S. Willow Sioux Foils, S-D. Bochelor of Arts Honor Students Association, Kick-Off SCHULTZ, GREGORY M. 70S Moin St. Almo, Wit. Bochelor of Arts SCHWABA, MICHAEL A. 6060 N. Kirkwood Chicago, III. Bachelor of Arts in Journalism Tribune SCHWARTZ. GRANT P. 2319 W. Michigon Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelcr of Science In Business Administration SCHWEITZER, JOHN R. 7829 W. Mt, Vernon Milwoukee, Wis. Juri Doctor Delta Theta Phi SCIORTINO, PATRICK J. 1155 82nd St. Brooklyn N.Y. Bochelor of Arts Rabbits, lntrorm.ro! Sports SCOTT, PAULA F. 320 Mam St. Oneido. N.Y. Bochelor of Arts SEDENQUIST, JANET E. 2900 W. Highland Blvd. Milwoukee. Wis. Bochelor of Arts SEIDL, DORIE T. 4629 N. Loke Dr. Milwoukee, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Dental Hygiene Koppa Beta Gamma SEIDL, SISTER PATRICE 6618 N. Teutono Milwaukee. Wis. Bochelor of Science In Nursing SERWICH, NANO L. 3520 Forest Wilmette, III. Bochelor of Art Chi S gmo OH, Sailing Club SERWIN, DOREEN M. 2628 S. 71st St. Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Med-col Technology Alpha Delta Theta SHANAHAN, JOAN L. 339 Colket Lane Strafford, Po. Bochelor of Arts Gammo Pi Epsilon, Alpha Delto Pi, Panhellemc Council, Varieties Council SHANE, NICOLAS i. 2768 N, 8l t St. Milwoukee. Wi . Doctor of Dental Surgery Psi Omega SHANNON. ALBERT J. 16891 LeCloire Ave. Oak Forest, III. Bachelor of Arts Eto Sigma Phi. Sigmo Tou Delto, Education Review, Confraternity of Chirst ion Doctrine SHINE. THOMAS M. 1325 Pine Glenview. III. Bochelor of Art Club Footboll, MUCAP. Young Democrat SHIOLENO, MARY 1142 Gteenfield Erie, Pa. Bochelor of Art SH0REY, HARRY S. Ill 84 Grange Ave. Foir Hoven, N.J. Bochelor of Art Pi Sigma Epsilon SIRIANNI, LUCY 3268 N. 24th St. Milwaukee, Wis. Bachelor of Art SKARBALUS, JEFFREY S. 1033 S. Elmwood Ave. Woukegon, Ul. Bochelor of Science in Business Administration Alpha Epsilon Pi. Fencing Club SKEENS, WILLIAM J. Box IS Morshallville, Ohio Bochelor of Science In Electrical Engineering SKIBA, ANTHONY F. 417 S. 2nd Ave. Alpena. Mich. Doctor of Dental Surgery Alpha Koppa P i, Psi Omega SLANICKY. CHARLES K JR- 2543 W. 59th PI. Chicogo, III. Bochelor of Science In Electricol Engineering Institute of Electricol ond Electronics Engineers, Intramural Footboll SLEIK, THOMAS S. 716 N. Ilth St. Milwoukee. Wis. Juris Doctor Alpha Sigma Nu, Delta Theta Phi, ASMU SLOTA, SARAH M. 104 Jockson St. Thorp, Wrv Bochelor of Science in Nursing Dorm President, Dorm Counselor SHARBAUGH, THERESA L. 54 S. Linwood Norwalk. Ohio Bochelor of Art In Speech Marquette Player SMART, DANIEL L. 204 Franklin Mukwonogo, Wrs, Jura Doctor Phi Alpha Delta SHAUGHNESSY, DAVID P. 11116 S. Homan Chicogo, III. Bochelor of Science in Business Administration Evans Scholars, Intramural Sports, Varieties Council SHAW, BERNARO R. 10732 W. York PI. Wouwotoso, Wi . Bochelor of Science in Business Administration SHEEHAN, CAMILLE A. 31 Clmtwood Dr. Rochester, N.Y. Bochelor of Science in Physicol Therapy Chi Sigmo Chi, Pi Alpha Sigmo. Senior Week Council, Winterfett SHEEHAN, THOMAS W. 350 E. N. Broodway Columbus, Ohio Bochelor of Arts in Journalism Intramural Spcrt , Tribune SHEEHY, CHARLES P. 2990 N.W. I5l l St. Beaverton, Oregon Bachelor of Science in Business Administration Scobbord and 8 lode SHEPPARD CHRISTOPHER G. 2621 Pork Ave. Baldwin, N.Y. Bochelor of Art in Speech Anchor and Chain, Robbits, Footboll SHERIDAN, HANNAH I. 4901 Edgemoor Lane Bethesdo, Md. Bochelor of Art Theta Phi Alpha, Winterfest Council SHERMAN, KENNETH G. 1111 Delies Rd. Wheaton, III. Doctor of Dental Surgery Psi Omega SMITH, DEBORAH A. 32SS five mere Cleveland, Ohio Bochelor of Art in Joumolism Booster Ckib. MUCAP SMITH, DIANNE R. 3039 M.litory Rd. Washington, D.C. Bochelor of Art SMITH, GREGORY A. 1515 Compton Cleveland Ht ., Ohio Bochelor of Science In Engineering Tou Beta Phi, Chi Epsilon, Scobbord and Blode, American Society of Civil Engineers, Central States Water Pollution Control Aisn. SMYTH, THERESA M. 229 S. Edson Lombard, III. Bochelor of Art Psi Chi. Chorus, MUCAP, Honor Student Association SNYDER, JOHN L. 61 W. Emerson Ave. Rahway, NJ. Bochelor of Arts Avolanche Club SOBCZAK, ROBERT F. 2674 S. 9th PI. Milwoukee, Wis. Bochelor of Science In Engineering SOLUTTO, PAUL L. 59 E. I Slit Horvey. III. Bochelor of Science In Business Administration Club Footboll SOLVERSON, STEVEN D. Rt. 4 Viroqua, Wit. Doctor of Dental Surgery American Dental Association, ASDS, Dental Student Council 197 All Accounts insured up to $20,000 Mortgage Loans at reasonable rates Highest Earnings on Certificate Accounts Congratulations Warriors on a Great Season SAVINGS LOAN ASSOCIATION Joseph T. Tolsky, Pres. Morie V. Tolsky, Sec'y-Treos. 1605 W. Mitchell St. 645-5962 198 SORIANO, JOSEPH R. 2437ft W. Logon Blvd Chicogo, III. Bochelor of Science in Civil Engineering Amor .con Society of Civil Engineers, Novy ROTC, Student Council for Exceptional Children. Internotionol Students Club SORC, RUTH M. Vine Rd. St. Mor s, Po. Bochelor of Science MUCAP, Student Council for Exceptional Children, Biology Club, Soiling Club SPAETH, BEATRICE A. 913 N. 20th Milwaukee, Wi . Bochelor of Science in Phywcol Therapy Pi Alpha Sigma SPELLA, JAMES A. 3218 N. 78th Milwaukee, Wi . Juris Doctor Tou Epsilon Rho SPERKS, CYNTHIA A. 5438 N. Lomon Chicogo, III. Bochelor of Science In Med col Technology Alpha Delta Theta SPIRES, JAMES M. 610 Pme Waukegan, III. Bachelor of Art Phi Kappa Theta, Club Football SPOSATA. KENNETH A. Century Ridge Rd. Purchaso N.Y. Bochelor of Arts Sigma Phi Epsilon STACK, RICHARD A., JR 1621 Hillerest Dr. Appleton, Wit. Bochelor of Science Phi Alpha Theta. Alpha Epsilon Delta, Zeta Beto Tou, Soiling Club, Pre-Med Club STANOISH, THERESE R. 586 S. Lexington Pkwy. St. Poul, Minn. Bochelor of Science in Dental Hygiene STANEK. STEVEN J. 214 Bellevtew Ave. East Troy, Wis. Bochelor ot Science in Business Adiministration Delta Sigma Rho, Tou Kappo Alpho, Pi Gomma Mu. Alpho Sigma Nu. Debate, Econ Association, Bus Ad Student Council, Honors Program STANC, DANIEL J. 372 Conkey St. Burlington, Wit. Doctor of Dental Surgery STANC. THOMAS A. 372 Conkey St. Burlington, Wit. Bochelor of Science STANIS, RICHARD P. 1111 N. tOth Melrose Pork, III. Bochelor of Science in Mechonicol Engineering American Society for Metals, Intromurol Sports, Engineering Council STANISLAWSKI, KATHY F. 922 E Wright St. Milwaukee, Wit. Diploma in Dental Hygiene STAPLE. JEFFREY A. 2 Tonglewood Lone Green Brook, N.J. Bachelor of Science in Mechonicol Engineering Pi Tou Sigma, Tou Beta Pi, Sailing Club STARK, LINDA LEE M. 7009 W. Melrose Chicogo, III. Bochelor of Science in Nursing Alpha Delta Pi STAUDENMAIER, MARY L. 1919 Rivertide Morinetto, Wit. Juris Doctor Kappo Beto Pi STEINMETZ, SANDRA J. 5002 25fh PI. Washington, D.C. Bochelor of Arts Soiling Club STEINSEIFZER, LAWRENCE A. 261 Jerome Ave. Mineolo, N.Y. Bochelor of Science in Business Administration Pi Sigma Eps.lan STELLMAN, MANDY L. 1545 W. Foirfield Cl. Glendale, Wit. Juris Doctor Tou Epsilon Rho, Oyer STELZER, MICHAEL D. 1712 Cedar St. S. Milwaukee, Wit. Bochelor of Science in Electricol Engineering Eta Kappa Nu, Institute of Eloctncal and Electronics Engineers STITT, DONALD K. 2550 N. Loke Dr. Milwaukee, Wit. Juris Doctor Phi Delfo Theta STREATOR, JOSEPH C. WI60-N90I3 Modison Ave. Menomonee Foils, Wit. Bachelor of Science in Business Administration Alpha Koppo Pti, Intramural Sports STREET KATHRYN D. 28 Illinois St. Rocine, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Nursing Gomma Pi Epsilon, Student-Foculty Committee. Dorm Council STREET, STEPHEN J. 1036 S. 104th West Allis. Wis. Bochelor ot Science in Electrical Engineering Blueprint, Vorsity Varieties, Karate Club STRICTLAND, LEO F. 10 Floral PI. Hyde Pork, Mass. Bochelor of Science In Business Administration Chorus STURM, CHARLES M. 9220 Harding Blvd. Wouwotoso, Wis. Bochelor of Science In Business Administration Zeto Beto Tou STYLE, FREDERICK M. 619 Elm Hortford. Wis. Bochelor of Science Judo Club STYS, THOMAS J. 3849 W. Bocnord Ave. Greenfield, Wit. Bachelor of Science in Engineering American Society of Metals, Korate Club SUCHARDA, RICHARO J. 3310 Erie St. Rocine, Wis. Bachelor of Science Trock, Cross Country. Athletic Council, M Club SULLIVAN. JOHN L. 905 S. Monroe Ave. Green Boy, Wit. Bachelor of Science SULLIVAN, MARY JO 5425 N Delaware St. Indianapolis, Ind. Bochelor of Arts MUCAP SULLIVAN, NEIL A. 4467 N. Loke Dr. Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Science In Business Administration Vets Club SULLIVAN SHARON J. 1315 Prospect Park Ridge, III. Bachelor of Arts MUCAP, Catholic Peoce Fellowship SURMA, RICHARD S. 1834 Cornell Rd. Flossmoor, III. Bachelor of Science In Electrical Engineering Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers SWANSON, GARY D. 4913 Cherry St. Erie, Po. Bochelor of Science In Chemistry Pi Mu Epsilon, Alpho Epsilon Delto, Fencing, SAACS, Willie Wampum SWEENEY, FRANK I. 123 Jumping Brook Rd Lmcroft, NJ. Bochelor of Science in Civil Engineering Student Council for Exceptional Children, American Society for Civil Engineers SYLVESTER, RALPH C. 26 Ook Shelton, Conn. Bachelor of Arts SYPNIEWSKI, JAMES M. 1117 Dayton Grand Rapids. Mich. Bochelor of Science in Engineering SYPNIEWSKI, SUSAN J. 635 W. Clark Freeport, III. Bachelor of Science in Nursing Alpha Tou Delto SYRJANCN, FREDERICK L. 232 Olivo Ave. Florence, Wis. Bochelor of Arts SZCZUR, DIANNA M. 807 N. 8th St. Wohpcton, N.D. Bochelor of Arts T TABORSKY, GERALD J. 143 Kohler St. Sun Proirie, Wis. Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering Eto Koppa Nu, Tou Beto Pi, Sigma Phi Delto, Institute of Electricol ond Electronics Engineers, Engineering Council, Vorsity Voneties TAMAYO, JUAN O. 1156 E. Mom St. Bridgeport, Conn. Bochelor of Arts In Journalism Sigma Delto Chi, Journalism Council, Tribune TATROE, DONNA C. 41 Pilgrim Or. Port Chester, N.Y. Bachelor ot Arts TAYLOR, MARY JO 7436 S. Euclid Parkway Chicogo, III. Bochelor of Arts TEBINKA, JEAN A. 215 Morristown Rd. Gillette, NJ. Bochelor of Science In Speech Speech Council, Zeta Phi Eto, Intramural Sports TEFFY, JOHN F. 4506 Wokefield St. Modison, Wis. Bochelor of Arts Phi Alpho Theta, Crown and Anchor THIBADEAU, SUEANNE M. 231 Bischoff St. Fond du lac, Wis. Diploma in Dental Hygiene Dental Hygiene Chorus THIELGES, LINDA L. 1035 High kind Dr. Elm Grove, Wis. Bochelor of Arts TIIFIRT. FRANCIS X. 6427 Rangevtew Dr. Dayton, Ohio Bochelor of Science In Civil Engineering Tou Beto Pi, Koppo Sigma. Honors Progrom, International Students Club. ASCE TIELENS, GARY O. 241 Iroquis St. Green Boy, Wis. Doctor of Dentol Surgery Psi Omega YIESCH, BARBARA J. 3643 N, Hording Chicogo, III. Bochelor of Arts CCD. Alpho Delto Theta T1ITGI, CHERYL J. 1511 Rust St. Eou Claire, Wis. Diploma In Dentol Hygiene MUCAP, Dental Hygiene Council TIMPANI, PATRICIA A. IS Homedalo Rd Hopkins, Minn. Bochelor of Arts Journal TOFT, JAMES P. 3205 W. Wisconsin Ave. Milwaukee, Wis. Doctor of Dental Surgery Psi Omega TOMAS, RONALD L. 4483 N. 84th St Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Business Administration TOMICH, ANDREW J. 3751 W. 114 Place Chicogo, III. Bochelor of Arts in History Cross Country, Club Hockey, Trock. Intromurols TOTORAITIS, JOSEPH R„ JR. 157 Trovit NE. Grand Ropids. Mkh. Bochelor of Arts Econ Association, Division of Continuing Education TRAUDT, WILUAM S. 422 Bluff Sheboygan, Wis. Bochelor of Arts Alpho Epsilon Delto. Phi Kappo Theta, Booster Club, Soiling Club TRAUT, DAVID P. 404 Clinton Ook Pork, III. Bochelor of Arts TRAUTMANN, JOHN A. 721 Watch Hill Lone Cincinnati, Ohio Bochelor of Arts in Business Administration Rabbits TURMELL, MICHAEL J. 314 Green Ave. Boy City, Mich. Bochelor of Arts in Journalism Tribune TURNER. MARY HELEN Route I Odell, III. Bachelor of Science in Nursing Alpho Tou Delto, Dorm Counselor TURNER PATRICIA L. 1017 E. 8th Ave. Ft. Morgan, Colo. Bochelor of Arts in Journalism Phi Mu TWOMIG. ROBERT J. 2045 Elm St. Compbellsport, Wis. Bochelor of Science Alpho Epsilon Pi, Fencing Club TWOMBLY, JUDITH A. 2015 West High Roc me. Wis. Bochelor of Science in Speech Sigma Alpha Eta TWYMAN, KAREN K. 233 Greenfield Dr. Freeport, III. Diploma In Dental Hygiene Alpha Delta Eto TYNAN, EDWARD P. Menden Ave. Southington, Conn. Bachelor of Arts Anchor and Chain, Young Democrats, CCD U UCBELHERR, MICHAEL F. 2642 N. Forfeit Ave. Milwaukee, Wis. Bachelor of Science In Physics UKICH, JOHN M. 2735 N. Slowed Milwaukee, Wis. Doctor of Dental Surgery ULATOWSKI, ADRIAN T. 3640 S. 15th PI. Milwaukee, Wis. Bochelor of Science In Business Administration Beto Alpha Psi, Beto Gomma Sigma. Intramurals V VANDERAH, STEVEN J. 380 Wisconsin Ave. East Dubuque. III. Bochelor of Science m Civil Engineering Chi Epsilon, American Society of Civil Engineers 199 4290 North Teutonia Avenue Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53209 Phone 442-6788 Purveyors of Meat to the Food. Service Industry Best Wishes from . . . NACKIE PAPER COMPANY 100 N. Marshall Street Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53201 200 VonGORDIN, SCHUYLER H. 120 10th Ave. Eou Clolro, Wis. Doctor of Dentol SurQety Psi Omega WEBB, ELLEN M. 10208 Upham Avo. Holm Comen. Wn, Bachelor of Science in Nursing Alpha Delta Pi Von ZinnicqBERGMANN, CAROL J. 508 W. Moreland Addison, III. Bachelor of Art in Joumolitm Chi Sigma Chi, Sigma Delta Chi, MUCAP, MUSTBE, Dorm Council VECKIY. LAURA L. 6017 N. Lawndale Chicago, III. Bochelor of Am MUCAP. WIRC Boord VENTURA MARIO J. R 3 Box 405 Kenosha W.S. Juris Doctor WEBER. ERIC F. 2330 S. 91st St. We t All.i. Wn. Bachelor of Science In Biology Monk WEBER. MICHAEL T. 2130 Polnode Dr. Appleton, Wn. Bachelor of Art Bond. Dorm Counselor WEBER, SANDRA C. 508 Squires St. Chmpewo Foils. Wis. Bochelor of Science in Speech Zeto Phi Eta VLACK, EDWARD F. Ill 1804 Lincoln N. Chicago, III. Bochelor of Science Alpha Epsilon Pi VOGEL. PAUL R. 4135 N. 85th St. Milwoukee, Wis. Bocholor of Art VOGUS, GERALD A. 446 N. Lake St. Aurora. III. Bachelor of Arts VORDERER, CAROL A. 204 Essex St. Weymouth, Moss. Bochelor of Science In Medical Technology Theta Phi Alpha W WABISZEWSKI, LYNN T. 2835 S. 43rd St. Milwaukee, Wi . Bochelor of Am Chi Sigma Chi WAGNER. THOMAS J. Route I Box 2-K Butter Alo. Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering SAE, ASME, YGOP, PI Tou Sigmo, Judo Club WAHLBERG, MARK H. Merchant St. Guilford, N.Y. Bochelor of Science Alpha Delta Gamma WALISZEWSKI, KENNETH J. 11806 Tmberline Lone Holes Corners, Wis, Doctor of Dental Surgery Alpha Sigma Nu, Ormcron Kappa Upsiion, Delto Sigma Delto, Studont Council, Dentol Students Magazine, Class President WALSH, MARY K. 249 S. Rote Bivd. Akron, Ohio Bochelor of Arts in Speech Marquette Player WARD, WIILLIAM C. 3724 S. 34th St. Greenfield, Wis. Bocholor of Science in Electricol Engineering Eta Kappa Nu WARE, RUSSELL M. 1057 70th Wouwatoso, Wi . Juris Doctor Low Review, Moot Court Team WASLEY, DIANE D. 23 Willow St. Plymouth, Pa. Bachelor of Arts Dorm Council, Council for Comrmmlty Service and Worship WEAVER, SCOTT C. 1210 Apoche Troll Brookfield, Wit. Bochelor of Arts Phi Alpho Theto, Zeto Beta Tou, Young Republicans, ASMU WEAVER. VAUGHAN C 1400 Hloleoh Dr. Orlondo, Flo. Bochelor of Science in Mechonlcol Engineering Pi Tou Sigmo, Tou Beta Pi, Amorlcon Society for Metols WEBER, THOMAS P. 5911 N. 61st St. Milwaukee, Wi . Bochelor of Science In Engineering Tou Beta Pi, Pi Tou S.gmo. Sigmo Phi Delto WEDEKIND. LOTHAR H. 8127 S. 51st St. Fronklin, WI . Bochelor of Am Varsity Soccer WEILAND, MARILYNN J. IS6I Maple Evanston, III. Bochelor of Arts WEINHOLD, JEROME R. 5288 N Lovers Lone Milwaukee, Wis. Bachelor of Science in Business Administration WEIR, PAULETTE A. 3360 N. Euclid Indianapolis, Ind. Bochelor of Arts in Journalism Hilltop, Young Democrats WEISROCK, MICHAEL P. 1425 Morion S. Milwoukee. Wis. Bochelor of Arts in Psychology WELBOURN, JAMES P. 592 S. Edson Lombard. III. Bochelor of Arts in Spoech Evans Scholars WELCH, KATHLEEN L. 331 Blonde Green Boy, Wis. Bochelor of Arts Alpha Delto Pi WELSH, EILEEN F. 860 Morningside Dr. Lake Forest, III. Bochelor of Science WELSH, PAULINE M. 3824 Emerson Schiller Pork, III. Bochelor of Arts Sigma Sigmo Sigmo WENSLAFF, WILLIAM A. 3921 W. Wenonoh Stickney, III. Bochelor of Science In Business Administration Anchor ond Chain. Navy ROTC. Intramurals WENDT. DEBRA R. 403 15th Ave. N.E. Austin, Minn. Diploma In Dentol Hygiene Alpho Delto Eto, Chorus, Kick-Off WERNER, THOMAS R. 1)32 S. IlSthSf. West Allis, Wis. Bochelor of Science Pi Mu Epsilon WESTFAHL, PHILIP C. 2010 N. S3rd St. Milwoukee, Wis. Bochelor of Arts Phi Koppa Theto WHALEN JAMES P. 2013 Field Ave. St. Poul, Minn. Bochelor of Am WHERRY. DENNIS P. 9514 W. Highland Mequoa Wis Juris Doctor Low Review WHITACRE. JOHN D. 1621 W. Wisconsin Milwaukee, Wis. Bachelor of Science in Electricol Engineering Eto Kappa Nu, Tou Beto Pi WHITE, VINCENT J. 3065 Highland Dr. Northbrook. III. Bochelor of Arts in Psychology WHITLOCK, DONALD A. 2205 Toylor Joliet, III. Doctor of Dental Surgery WICHMAN, GREGORY I. 7300 W. Southndgo Dr. Greenfield, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Business Administration WICKLUNO, DIANE M. 4209 Volley View Rd. Edina, Minn. Bochelor of Science In Electricol Engineering Sating Club WIESNER. SANDRA A. 4920 W. Spring Lone Brown Deer, Wis. Bochelor of Science In Medical Technology WILSON, KATHERYN L. 1552 E. Terry Pocotello, Idaho Bochelor of Science In Phys col Therapy Phi Mu WINKOWSKI, JOAN M. 3216 W. Drury Lone Milwaukee. Wis. Bachelor of Science Alpho Delto Pi WINNINGER, THOMAS J. 140 Elmridge Waterloo, Iowa Bochelor of Science in Speech Rho Tou Beto, Speech Council, Soiling Chib WISE, ELIZABETH M. 1525 Lothom St. Rockford. III. Bochelor of Science in Speech Sigmo Alpha Efo. Zeto Phi Eto, Speech Council WISEMAN, PAUL B. Rt. 3 Box 66 Keomey, Neb. Juris Doctor WISNIEWSKI, THOMAS R. 243) W. Wormmont Milwoukee, Wis. Bochelor of Science In Biology Monks Athletic Club, Biology Club WITAS, RICHARD J. 1916 S. 5th PI. Milwoukee. Wi . Bochelor of Science Sailing Club WITHEY, DENNIS C. 2520 N. 73rd S . Wouwatoso, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Civil Engineering Tou Beto Pi, Chi Epsilon WOJTAL JOAN S. 53S5 S 22nd St. Milwaukee. Wis. Bochelor of Science in Speech Therapy Sigmo Alpho Eto, Siama Sigmo Sigmo, Zeto Phi Efo. Ponhellemc Council WOLF, BARBARA A. 419 Franklin Mokwonogo, Wis. Diploma in Dentol Hygiene WOLOHAN, SHARON L. 1604 Lothrup Soglnow, Mich. Bochelor of Science In Nursmg Chi Sigmo Chi, Vorsity Vonet.es. Kick-Off WOLOWICK, JAMES J. 3425A N. Bremen Milwoukee. Wis. Bochelor of Science In Business Admimstrotion W0LTER, DUANE, R. 1255 Kovonough PI. Wouwatoso, Wis. Bochelor of Science In Business Administration 8efo Alpho Psi. Delto Tou Delto, Alpho Delta Sigmo, ASMU. Bus. Ad Council, Community Schools Protect. Bus Ad School Paper WOOD, KATHLEEN A. 1224 Yellowstone Rd. Cleveland Hts., Ohio Bochelor of Science in Nursing Gomma Pi Epsilon, Nursing Council, Vorsity Vorietres. Closs Officer, Welcome Week, MUCAP WOOD. SUSAN M. 2)43 Norfolk Westchester, III. Bochelor of Science In Physical Therapy Pi Alpho Sigmo, ASMU WOYACH, ROBERT B. 11324 N. Oriole Ln. Mequon, Wis. Bochelor of Arts Pi Sigmo Alpho, Pi Gomma Mu, Koppa Tou Alpha, Honors Students Association WYAR, MARIANNE C. 390 Crossbrook Dr. Berea, Ohio Bochelor of Art Dorm Council, Brooks Council X XEFTERIS. CONSTANTINE L 40B Pocohonto S . Norfolk, Vo. Bochelor of Science in Electricol Engineering Beto Alpho Rho, Navy ROTC Y YAHLE. PATRICIA A. 3340 N. 92nd St. Milwaukee, Wts. Bochelor of Science of Speech Phi Mu YERKES, CHARLES B. 5909 N. 38th St. Milwoukee, Wis. Bochelor of Am MUCAP, Zeto Beto Tou Z ZAHORIK, PATRICIA A. 2645 W. Mill Rd. Milwoukee, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Nursing Alpho Delto Pi, Vorsity Varieties, Tip-Off ZAJICEK, JEROME M. 7740 W. Appleton Milwaukee, W.s. Bochelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering American Society for Metals ZAMBON, JAMES J. 2807 W. Michigan Milwoukee. Wis. Juris Doctor Delto Theto Phi, Dorm Council, Intromurols ZAMOISKI, PATRICIA A. RD 2 Condor. N.Y. Bochelor of Science in Physical Pi AlphoXgmo, WIRC. Dorm Council ZARAGOZZA. PANAIT A. 3655 E. Cor pent er Cudohy, Wis. Bochelor of Art Soccer, Tennis, Wrestling ZEMAN, MARY LOUISE 1150 Dudley Lakewood. Ohio Bochelor of Science in Dentol Hygiene ZIMMERLEE, TERRANCE R. 2772 S. 16th St. Milwoukee, Wis. Bochelor of Science in Engineering ZIEMBA, PATRICIA M. 600 Depot St. Mosinee, Wit. Bochelor of Science in Dentol Hygiene Alpho Delto Efo, Vorsity Varieties. Student Council, Avoianche Club, Dental Hygiene Chorus ZLATCN. DENNIS M. 617 Col Iyer St. Longmont, Colo. Bochelor of Science in Mechonlcol Engineering ASME, ASM. Brooks Council 201 THANKS FROM THE SUB-BUILDERS TO ALL THE MARQUETTE SUB-SINKERS Submarine Sandwich Shoppes 1230 West Wisconsin Avc. and across from McCormick Hall INDEX TO HILLTOP VOLUME 57 ISSUE 2 A Abaravich, Margaret A .................143 Abraham. Jeffrey L ....................146 Ackerman, Janice ......................143 Adams, Herbert V.......................146 Adkins, Catherine C....................150 Administration Committee ............... 5 Adrian, Judi L ........................132 Agnello, Salvatore J...................150 Albert, Jerry R........................146 Albert. John J.........................146 Alden, Ronald M........................134 Alderson, Judith A ....................150 Alinsky-Rusher Debate ................. 80 Allen, Tom ............................120 Alpha Delta Gamma ......................81 Alpha Delta Pi ........................122 Amidon, Helen A .......................132 Amodeo, Anthony J......................150 Andersen, William 0....................150 Anderson, Gary R.......................137 Anderson, Richard L ...................134 Anella, Mary Margaret A ...............172 Anhalt, Stephen J......................150 Anthony, Barbara A ....................174 Arndt, Karen A ........................172 Arnold, James ......................... 48 Association of MU Women ............... 83 ASMU ......................44, 46. 81, 114 ASMU Elections .....................78. 80 Ast, Gunther E. .......................137 Averkamp, Harold B.....................127 B Babich, Paul G. .......................150 Bacci, Guy J...........................150 Bachhuber, Stephen R...................150 Bacigalupo, Richard J..................151 Balke, Maureen ........................121 Balias, Jeff T.........................127 Barrett, James ........................ 30 Barrett, John R........................151 Barrett, Kathleen D....................169 Barrette, Bruce J......................151 Barton, D. Reid .......................127 Barton, John S.........................127 Bartosz, Tom A ........................137 Barwick, Gregory A ....................151 Bates, Patrick B.......................146 Baughn, Wilmot T. .....................134 Baum, Barbara L .......................132 Bavolek, Richard J.....................127 Beardsley, Sylvia A ...................151 Becker, Bonnie E. .....................127 Becker, Margaret M.....................167 Beglinger, Robert E. ..................137 Behling, Susan M.......................151 Bell. Peter P. ........................137 Bellandi, James A ...................146 Bendt, William J.....................151 Benedict, Donald F...................137 Bennetts, Kathleen M.................151 Beno. Barbara L .....................169 Bensing, Barbara R...................132 Berg. Genevieve P....................172 Berner, Thomas J.....................127 Berres, Gary A ......................128 Berrigan Conspiracy ................. 31 Bimba, Susan B.......................151 Binzel, Mary J.......................174 Birkmeier, Kristen E. ...............172 Bischof, Jeffrey E. .................137 Bishop, Rebecca R....................174 Blair, Raymond J.....................128 Blankenheim, Frances A ..............151 Blanton, Michael M...................147 Blochowiak. Paul ....................128 Blom, Anne M.........................174 Bloodrock ........................60, 61 Bloomquist, Duane J..................128 Boden, Robert F......................146 Bogdon, Glendon J....................134 Bogner, Rosemary ....................143 Bohl, Charles F......................135 Bohmann, Tom ........................ 52 Bolduc, Br. Thomas R.................169 Bomb Scares .......................... 5 Best Wishes, Marquette University RELIABLE KNITTING WORKS Our 60th Year 233 E. Chicago St. Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53202 272-5084 203 WISCONSIN GASKET MFG. CO. Light Gauge Metal Stampings Shims Asbestos Cement Board Fabrication Molded Extruded Rubber Plastic Specialties O Rings Gaskets of All Types ss 11500 W. Brown Deer Rd. Box 8058 Milwaukee, Wis. 53224 354-4900 DESIGNERS AND CONTRACTORS OF TOTAL COMMERCIAL INTERIORS building service, inc. 620 N. 108th Place • Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53226 • Phone: 453-6786 • WALLS AND PARTITIONS • AIR DISTRIBUTION • AND NOW FURNITURE! CEILINGS • CARPETING LIGHTING • WALL COVERINGS TO YOUR SPECIFICATIONS MILWAUKEE IFw INSURANCE MILWAUKEE MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY MILWAUKEE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY MILWAUKEE EQUITY SERVICES. INC. MUTUAL FUNDS Eighth ond Michigon, Milwaukee, Wit. 53201 Congratulations to the Marquette Warriors on their fine season. Service Since 1917 204 151 147 143 151 ...137 152 117 167 152 174 83, 127 153 151 . .138 153 151 ...152 116, 122 VO 174 Choi is,” Paul T 153 147 48, 49 Ill 151 152 133 11? 152 153 151 152 128 7, 109 143 153 115 128 151 c 147 115 152 175 141 147 153 152 61 Brierton. Eileen M 151 Campbell, Richard A. 152 Cobeen Hall ...116, 118 151 88. 91 174 152 153 15? 152 153 7 152 143 13J 42, 152 153 117 152 138 7ft 7 175 Browning, Bob 78. 80 Carter, Richard J 152 Committee on Student Life ... 114 152 128 115 152 138 141 152 138 l?ft 152 153 147 169 138 15? 83 138 117 169 133 17? 152 135 Bunnell, Paul R 152 Cervarich, Nancy A 133 Connolly, Gerald E 147 15? 152 Burke, Charles R 128 Chappell, Elizabeth E 169 Connolly, Stephen J 153 J. M. BRENNAN, Inc. Plumbing, Heating, Process Piping COMMERCIAL • INSTITUTIONAL • INDUSTRIAL • RESIDENTIAL New Construction, Repair, Maintenance, Remodeling 2930 W. Clybourn Phone 342-3829 205 H. F. HAESSLER HARDWARE CO 414 East Mason Street METAL FORMS CORP. Established 1909 3334 N. Booth St. Milwaukee. Wit. 53212 Manufacturers of METAFORM STEEL FORMS FOR CONCRETE CONSTRUCTION Curb ortd Gutter Forms — Sidewolk Forms Paving Forms — Strolght Woll Forms Circular Forms LOUIS HOFFMANN CO Established 1878 117 N. Jefferson St. Milwaukee, Wis. 53202 276-2695 Ornomentol Mctoli. Architectural Metals. Ventilating. Stoinless Steel Specialties. Industrial Sheet Metal. Architectural Sheet Metal. Slote Tile Roofing. 206 Connor, Michael F.......................135 Constantin, Jeanne M....................169 Cook, Dennis M..........................147 Coolman, Richard H......................153 Coordinating Committee .................. 5 Correll, John H.........................147 Corrigan. Margaret A. ..................153 Corrigan, Timothy J.....................153 Coursey. Timothy F......................153 Coyle, Mary J...........................143 Crichton, Carol L.......................169 Croasdaile, Marsha M....................167 Crossland, Mark ........................ 78 Crotteau, Patrick J.....................138 Crow, Dean W............................135 Crowley, Michael C......................128 Crowley, Thomas P.......................153 Cullen, Patricia A. ....................153 Curler, Ray W...........................128 Curran, Janet M.........................175 Curran, John C..........................147 Cybulski, Eugene P......................153 Cyr, Roger T............................153 Czemiak, Theodore S.....................153 0 Dal’s .................................. 37 Daly, Donald W..........................153 D’Angelo, Daniel J......................135 Daniels, Susan M........................153 Daughtry, Doug .........................116 Dawiedczyk, Terrance E. ................147 Dee, Johnny .........................7, 111 Deegan, Mary L .........................154 DeFurio, Richard L T....................135 Delaney, George C.......................154 Delaney, Stephen E. ...................154 Dellorto, Maria R......................154 Delta Tau Delta ......................116, 122 Delta Upsilon .........................118 Delzio, Robert V.......................154 DeMain, Dominic P......................154 DeMark, Richard A. ....................135 Dental Hygiene .................. .49. 132 Dentistry .............................134 DePaul ................................. 7 Depenbrok. Carol A. ...................154 Depka, Richard D.......................147 Desmarais, Francis E...................154 D’Estrada, Richard D...................147 Dettman, Arlene E. ....................154 Devitt, Patrick J......................147 DiBenedetto, Frances L ................154 Diciocco, Josephine ...................128 Dickie, Jean M.........................154 DiPadova, John ........................154 DiPaolo, Vincent J.....................143 Dirindin, Dennis P.....................154 Dobrzynski, David P....................128 Doherty, Dennis ....................... 30 Doherty. Maureen C. ...................154 Doherty. Thomas J......................154 Dominiak, Ruth R.......................154 Dorgan, William J......................154 Dorszynski, Therese A. ................154 Dotski, Jeanette C. ...................154 Douglass, Steven J.....................128 Doyle, Stephen ........................154 Draft ................................. 70 Drager, Jeanne M.......................175 Dressman, Mary Karen T.................154 Drew, William J........................147 Drewek, Timothy M.....................154 Dries, James J........................154 Drew, Lynda L ........................154 Duckhorn, Thomas L ...............128 Dufour, D. Robert ....................154 Dunkelberger, Donna D..............143 Dunn, John ........................... 80 DuPree, Stephen J.....................175 Duy, Robin J..........................155 Dvorsky, Susan E......................133 E Eckert, Peter S.......................155 Eckstein, Robert H. Jr...............155 Ecumenical Prayer Service ............ 21 Egan, Fr. Keith ...................... 48 Egan, Rita M..........................155 Eichmuller, Anton J. Jr...............138 Elder. Patricia A. ...................170 Eldridge, James F. ................147 Elseth, Roger A. .....................155 Emeleus, Harry ....................... 56 Emer, John P..........................155 Enea, Sandra J........................170 Engelsman, Ronald L 138 Engineering ..........................137 Engineering Open House................ 82 English, David A. ....................144 Ennis, Kathryn M......................155 Ernst, James J........................155 Erwin, Anne B.........................155 Escamilla. Tess ......................120 Escobar, Robert J.....................175 Esemia, Dennis P. ....................155 Essig, Robert R.......................128 Etzweiler, James ..................... 30 Helwig Carbon Brushes RED TOP BRUSHES Hr twig Quick Disconnect Terminals lor Safe, Quick Brush Change. HELWIG CARBON PRODUCTS, Inc. 2550 N. 30th St. Miiwoiikec, Wit. 53210 PHONE: 372-3113 J Absorb Vibration J Improve Commutotlon J Assure Longer Brush Life llruthes are carried in stock lor • WELDING GENERATORS • PORTABLE TOOLS • INDUSTRIAL ELECTRIC TRUCKS • BATTERY CHARGERS • FRACTIONAL HORSEPOWER MOTORS RED TOP with HQD Terminal Where quality is a family tradition AMERICA'S LEADING LINE OF FORAGE HARVESTING EQUIPMENT GEHL COMPANY WEST BEND, WISCONSIN 207 Manufacturers of trailers for hauling contractor’s equipment 12,000 to 44,000 Lbs. Copocity MILLER Tilt-Top TRAILER, INC. 456 So. 92nd St. 453-3426 Milwaukee. Wit. 53214 KempsmitH MILLING MACHINES The famous Kempsmith line of Milling Machines dotes back to 1888 when America's first real production surge was already in evidence. Today with more than a half century of experience as a background, Kempsmith continues to forge ahead in the industry. The well-known Kempsmith ruggedness, precision, speed and dependability are in keeping with modern high speed tools and methods. Also manufacturers of File Folder machinery KEMPSMITH MACHINE COMPANY 1819 South 71st St. 476-3625 West Allis, Wis. THE JULIEN SHADE SHOP, INC. 829 W. Michigan Street One of the Largest and Oldest In the Midwest WINDOW SHADES —VENETIAN BUNDS CURTAIN ond TRAVERSE RODS Bamboo ond Woven Wood CLEANING and REPAIRING 271-3864 DESALES PREPARATORY SEMINARY HIGH SCHOOL 3501 S. Lake Drive 744-4412 Milwaukee, Wit. 53207 208 F Fabri, Candace J........................155 Falcone, John S.........................128 Falk, William L ........................138 Fargo, Patrick A. ......................155 Fariello, Robert L .....................144 Farrell, Anne P.........................155 Felski, Kerry P.........................155 Festge, Karen M.........................155 Ficke, James 0..........................138 Fidel ibus, Donna A. ...................155 Fields, Christine E. ...................155 Figueroa. Jose E........................138 Fine Arts Festival ..................... 75 Fink, Edward J..........................147 Fink, John F............................155 Finn, James W...........................128 Fischer, Mary Jeanne ...................170 Fisher, John E. ........................144 Flood, Nancy J..........................155 Flowers. Phyllis F......................170 Flynn. Kathy M..........................155 Fons. Michael J.........................128 Forciea. Mary Ann ......................155 Ford. Michael U.........................147 Forlenza. Dorothy H.....................155 Fox, Robert C...........................128 Frank, Douglas F........................128 Frank, Kurt A. .........................147 Frankovich, Daniel J....................138 Frater, James J ........................138 Freedman, Robert ........................46 Freimuth, Kathleen M....................167 Fret. Fr. Ken .......................... 31 Frey, Joseph ...........................155 Freytag, Marjorie 0.....................144 Friedrich. Jane D.......................133 Frisque, Darrell J..........................128 Fritsch, Colin M............................138 Fritzsche. Nancy L..........................172 Fryjoft. Paul E. ...........................155 Fucile, John A...............................IK 6 Gadzichowski, John M..................148 Gadient. Chris J......................128 Galka. Patricia A.....................167 Gallagher, Sheila M...................175 Gamma Pi Omega .......................US, 122 Gandolfo, Peter M.....................128 Gannon, Mark S........................81, 156 Gannon, Mary Alice ................... 49 Gassert, Robert J. SJ ................150 Gavin, Kathleen A. ...................128 Gavinski, Donald J....................172 Gebhard, Mary Kay ....................170 Geisheker, William ................... 91 General Store ........................ 30 Germanotta, John J....................147 Gerndt, Linda L ......................133 Gerstmeier, Mary B....................167 Geskermann, Jean M....................167 Gessler, Maureen A. ..................156 Gettelman, Mary Jo ...................133 Gibbons, Susan K......................156 Gilmore, Julie A......................156 Ginal, Stephen J......................156 Ginsberg. Tillie D....................132 Girolami, Gay L ......................172 Glatzmaier, Gary A....................156 Glennon, Susan A. ....................156 Glueckert, Barbara J..................167 Gobat, James M.........................138 Goelz, Robert J........................135 Gogan, Robert J........................156 Golden, Kathleen M.....................156 Gollnick, Charles A. Jr................138 Goodspeed, Michael P. .................156 Gorman, Sharon K.......................156 Gormley, Patricia M....................170 Gorzalski, Bruce C.....................156 Govoni, James D........................135 Grabowski, Dennis J ...................135 Grace, William J.......................156 Grahovac, John E. .....................156 Grant, Ralph E. .......................138 Grebe's Bakery and Delicatessen ........36 Greeks ....................22. 24, 28. 116 Greek Ball ........................... 22 Greek Week ............................ 22 Green, William H.......................156 Greenberg, Martin J....................148 Greiff, Charles F......................138 Grill, Charlene A......................170 Grimaldi, Michael .....................144 Groppi, George ........................138 Groppi. Fr. James .....................114 Gross, Gregory C.......................129 Grow, William P........................156 Grubanowitch, Martin J.................129 Grubisic. George F.....................156 Grzeca. Michael G......................156 Guglielmo, Michael A. .................129 Guillaume, Rhaoul A. ..................139 Gulinski, Chris C......................175 Guy, Joanne E. ........................133 Guyette, Thomas D......................139 Guzzo, Cynthia L ......................144 Gymnastics ............................ 42 SUPERIOR DIE SET CORPORATION DIE SET MANUFACTURERS 764-4900 900 W. Drexel Oak Creek, Wis. 209 Compliments of BOSTROM DIVISION UNIVERSAL OIL PRODUCTS COMPANY 133 W. Oregon St. Milwaukee Friends of Marquette AAA. Acme Lock Co. Inc. 1319 N. 12th Street 342-1290 London Hat Shop and Shoe Repairing Co. Established 1908 778 North Milwaukee Street Sprinkmann Sons Corp. Heat Cold INSULATION Contractors Since 1888 462-7750 Milwaukee a The American Appraisal Co. Mitchell Street Stote Bonk Consultants in Valuation Established 1907 525 E. Michigan St. 271-7240 Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Deposits Insured up to $20,000.00 • 1039 W. Mitchell St. First National Bank in Wauwatosa 7430 West Stote Street 258-5100 Northwest Dental Laboratory Milwaukee St. Francis Seminory 3257 S. Loke Drive St. Mary's Academy An Accredited High School for Girls College Preparatory, Business and General High School Courses 3195 S. Superior St. Milwaukee 53207 Now located In the attractive Jennings Village complex, 76th, ond Bluemound Rood. Easily reochcd by private or public transportation from all points within Milwaukee County. The store orea is orcatly expanded and expresses the modern note in dental merchandising. Ample customer parking on the site. MOSSEY-OTTO COMPANY DENTAL SUPPLIES —DENTAL EQUIPMENT Phone —778-1443 305 N. 76th Street P.O. Box 562 210 H Haas, George E.........................139 Hachey, Thomas ........................ 49 Hackett, Michael R.....................129 Hater, David W. .......................135 Hahn, Alan K...........................156 Hahn, Edward N.........................156 Hahnenberg, Dean P.....................144 Haigler, Cynthia J.....................156 Haines, William R......................156 Hake, Terry ........................... 42 Halligan, Michael J....................138 Hamel, Thomas K........................156 Hamm, Mary Patricia ...................156 Hammer, Thomas J.......................156 Hanratty, Jane M.......................157 Hansmann, William R....................135 Harper, Mary B.........................170 Hartz, Martin R........................157 Hasse. Charles D.......................157 Hauser, Mary M.........................175 Havens, Richie .........................60 Hayes, Helen .......................... 83 Health Center ........................ 86 Hedding, Roger A. .....................139 Heinrich, Mary A.......................173 Heinrich, Thomas J.....................135 Heintz, Roberta A......................157 Heinz, Mary E..........................157 Helbert, Clifford L....................143 Hembel, Joy A..........................157 Henke, Mary C..........................157 Henkel, Andrea N.......................170 Hennessy, Thomas M.....................157 Henry, Kathleen M......................157 Herald, John E. .......................148 Heraty Hall ........................... 52 Herkender, Susan A. ...................157 Herro, Ronald J........................129 Heward, Lawrence L ....................135 Hickey, Diane M........................157 Hickey, James S........................157 Hill. Judith M.........................148 Hillis, Robert S.......................129 Hirschtberg. David J...................148 Hirmer, Paul M.........................129 Ho, Danny .............................139 Hochhaus, John M.......................129 Hodges, Harvey W.......................157 Hoffman, Lonny H.......................139 Hollahan, Mary M.......................170 Hood, Laura A. ........................133 Hook, Sidney .......................... 58 Hoostal, Pamela J......................168 Houghton, Gregory S....................144 Houlihan, Christopher M................157 Houston, Rory A........................157 Hoyt. Barbara ......................... 46 Hubbard, Edward G......................129 Huck. Daniel A. .......................139 Hudak. Marie C.........................173 Huedergard. Celeste H..................144 Huff, Terry W..........................135 Huffman, John J........................157 Hufnagel, Wendy L .....................157 Hughes, Daniel P.......................157 Humpage, Renee E. .....................157 Hunteman, Daniel G.....................148 Hutchinson, Katherine G................157 Huth, James F..........................157 I Idzikowski, Lynn M.....................175 Inter-Fraternity Council ...........22, 81 Intramural Swimming ................... 52 Irwin, Robin J.........................148 J Jablonski, Mary C. .....................144 Jache, Albert ......................30, 48 Jachowicz, Philip J....................157 Jacobs, David M........................129 Jagemann, Charles E. ...................158 Jahimiak, David R......................135 Janke, Roger W.........................129 Jannuzzi, John L ......................157 Janowiak, Russ ........................ 78 Jansen, Ronald N.......................139 Jazz Ensemble ......................... 53 Jeffers, Robert H......................157 Jette, Carl N..........................157 Johannes, John ........................ 49 Johns, Patrick C. ......................158 Johnson, Conrad A. .....................158 Johnson, Criag W.......................129 Jorcing, David L .......................148 Journalism .............................143 Joy, Linda S...........................158 Joyce, Beth M..........................158 Joyce, Francis C.......................135 Jung, Deborah R........................175 Jurkowski, Thomas M....................129 Juszczak, Ramona .......................158 K Kacmaryski, Linda L ....................158 Kaczmarek, Mary E......................168 Kader, Richard D.......................139 Kaminski, Jeffrey R....................129 Kantor, Harry ......................... 47 Kantoris, Andrew J.....................139 QUALITY CONTROLLED Zinc Aluminum Alloy Die Castings JOS. D. BONNESS Inc. Since 1903 STR0H DIE CASTING General Highway Contractors COMPANY, INC. • 11123 W. Burleigh St. Milwaukee, Wis. 53222 774-8900 10815 Wotertown Plank Road Wauwatosa, Wis. 211 Gordon R. Rush Associates MIMEOGRAPH SPIRIT DUPLICATORS New and Used SALES. SUPPLIES and SERVICE 2573 So. KK Ave. Milwaukee 53207 483-0911 ANDIS CLIPPER CO. Racine, Wisconsin PRECISION BUILT CLIPPERS and VIBRATORS FOR THE PROFESSIONAL BARBER and 8EAUTICIAN 1922 — 49 Years of Quolity—1971 Sold Only Through BARBER AND BEAUTY SUPPLY DEALERS THE NORTHWESTERN MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY • MILWAUKEE NML John A. Formello, C.L.U., Associates 765 North Jockson Street Dennis W. Loudon, C.L.U., Associates 1550 North Prospect Ave. Milwaukee, Wisconsin HALL STEEL CORP. CUSTOM WELDMENTS—FLAME CUTTING Telephone 445-5790 3235 N. 32nd St. Milwaukee, Wis. 53216 Established 1912 CUDAHY SAVINGS LOAN ASSOCIATION SAVINGS MORTGAGE LOANS Accounts Insured up to 520,000 4677 S. Pockard Ave. 482-4700 CUDAHY. WISCONSIN FALK a good name in industry Designers and Manufacturers of a broad range of quality gear drives and shaft couplings for industry throughout the free world. THE FALK CORPORATION subsidiary o Sundstrand Corporation Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53201 212 Kaplan, Barbara ........................158 Karpfinger. Barney ..................... 41 Karrer, Kathleen M......................158 Kavanaugh, Michael T....................148 Kay, Mary C............................-188 Kay, Ted A.............................-129 Keane, Madeline 6......................-144 Kehoe, Michael E....................... 148 Keller, Alfred J....................... 139 Keller, James A. .......................144 Kelly, Jacquelyn M......................158 Kelly, Joseph P.........................158 Kelly, Karen A. ........................158 Kempen, Wayne J.........................158 Kendall, Charles .......................148 Kennedy, Susan E........................144 Kentucky ...............................100 Kerscher, Mary J........................158 Kick-Off Parade ........................ 28 Kieffer, Katherine A. ..................170 Kiersznowski, Mary K....................173 King, Robert V..........................139 Kirk, Thomas P..........................139 Kirkpatrick, Curry ...................... 7 Kirylo, Maria C.........................158 Kisting, William A......................129 Klafka, David A.........................158 Klaren, Maureen ........................173 Klaver, Robert F........................158 Kleber, Mary L .........................158 Klein, Kathleen M.......................158 Klein, M. Rosalie CSF ..................169 Klemme, Merlin G........................129 Kloka. Ann C............................158 Knoerzer, Carol ........................158 Koenig, Catherine E.....................129 Koludrovic, Mark A......................158 Komassa, David G......................139 Komorowski, Janie A...................168 Komorowski, Kevin C...................139 Koniecki, Jon E.......................139 Kosobucki, John E.....................158 Kowalewski, John J....................158 Kowalski, Jamie C.....................129 Kozel, Robert G.......................129 Koziol, John A. .......................139 Krachon, Michael J.....................60 Kramer, Kathy L .......................158 Krawczyk. Laura B.....................159 Krawczyk, Patricia A..................144 Kretowicz, Adam A.....................159 Kuehne, Mary E........................159 Kuenzle, John J.......................139 Kuhlman, Thomas L.....................159 Kuhnmuench. Steven R..................159 Kulas, Donald J.......................129 Kulkoski, Joy M.......................159 Kuhn, Teresa A........................168 Kunzer, John J........................139 Kwan, Henry X. H......................159 Kwasny, Thomas A. .....................140 L Lackey, Bob ...........................112 Laczniak, Eugene R....................129 Lagano, William J.....................159 Lagerman, Bob ........................ 42 Lamberti, Julie E. ...................159 Lancour, Jane M.......................170 Landgren, Dale A......................140 Lange, George M.......................140 Langone, Robert D.....................129 Lanigan, Deidre .......................175 Laning. Nancy .........................140 LaRue. Paul L..........................159 Latek, Robert R........................129 Latus, Kenneth R.......................140 Laur, Robert W.........................175 LaVasser. Gary W.......................140 Lavin, Rita J..........................159 Law ...............................83, 146 Lawrence, Barbara A....................170 Ledvina. Marilyn A.....................170 Lee. Brien ............................116 Lee, Nancy M...........................129 LeFever, Ronald P......................159 LeJeune, Janet L ......................175 Lemanowski, Ronald J...................159 Lenss, Ronald J........................159 Lenz, Shirley C........................133 Leva!I, Thomas J.......................140 Levernier, James A.....................159 Lewis, Christine A.....................173 Libby, Jonathan ....................... 78 Libera! Arts ..........................150 Lilia, D. Thomas ......................130 Limoni, Apolonia ......................159 Linn, Julia A..........................173 Linnane, Mary Lu ......................159 Lipscomb, Joan A. .....................144 Lipscomb, Mary E.......................173 Liptak, Leonard M......................130 Lisius, Paul A.........................130 Littelmann, Maribeth ..................173 Lochowitz, Richard T...................159 Lockridge, Linda L ....................144 Loehr, Bernard K.......................130 Loehr, James D.........................140 Lonergan, Bernard SJ .................. 84 Long Beach State ....................... 7 Long Time Coming ...................... 60 Johnson wax WE INVITE YOU TO SEE ACADEMY AWARD WINNING FILM FREE FAMILY ENTERTAINMENT at the qaiiDBTI ROTVDGLL.G theatre For information on theater schedule RicIm, ffliCMili S340J and group visits write or call: Ar™c : 4u-mm ii 213 Modern Language Building The Modern Language Building, which opened in fall, 1969, has an exterior of white precost concrete ponelj, some blank and other having large borrel ihoped window of sun-bronzed gloss. Among its unique feotures ore one of the most complete dial access language lob systems in the notion, on environment controled oudio tope and film librory, and o teoching techniques clossroom, composed of two clossrooms divided by o one-way mirror. AWARD-WINNING DISTINGUISHED ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN Schutte-Mochon, Inc. Architects, Planners and Engineers 214 Lorenz, Frederick M...................148 Lorenz, Kathleen A. ..................144 Lorenz, Larry ........................ 48 Lorenzini, Mary R.....................159 Losch, Richard J......................140 Loughran, Stephanie...................144 Lubinski, Richard V...................148 Ludwig, Marci J.......................170 Lue, Franklin A.......................140 Lynch, Mary Jo .......................159 M Machi, Anthony J......................148 Machi, Joseph T.......................130 Mackley, Lynn K.......................170 Madrid Study Program ................. 56 Madsen, Ronald J......................140 Maeder, Linda A.......................133 Magee, Patrick H......................140 Magner, Mary T........................144 Maher, Thomas K. Jr...................130 Mahoney, James J......................130 Mahoney, Janet M......................159 Maier, Carl H.........................130 Majerus, Ricky N......................159 Majewski, Anthony J................130 Malkowski, Chester Jr................140 Maloney, Nancy S......................168 Malueg. Douglas J.....................148 Manasa ................................ 5 Manders, Frank G. ....................148 Manka, Stephanie E....................159 Manske, Neal E. ......................140 Manz, Mary Pat .......................159 Marbach, Mary Ann ....................170 Marchese, Catherine E.................144 Marconi, Paula J......................159 Marcucci, Richard L ..................135 Mares, Patrick .......................148 Maresca, Robert C......................140 Mark, Jeffrey A. .....................160 Marquardt. William J...................148 Marquette Players .............18, 54, 123 Marrkand, Kim ........................160 Martell, Dale F........................148 Martin, James E........................160 Martin, T. Robert ....................127 Marx, Richard E........................130 Mastronardi, Joseph G..................160 Mater, Joseph E........................137 Matzdorf, Anne K.......................175 McArthur, Barbara J....................170 McAuley, Ann M.........................160 McCabe, Douglas M......................160 McCahill Award ....................... 61 McCaleb. Kathleen A. .................160 McCall, Raymond ....................... 49 McCart, Elaine L.......................160 McCormick. Maurice G...................148 McCormick, Robert M....................130 McCoy, Kathryn E.......................160 McCumiskey, Peter J....................175 McElligott Medal ...................... 83 McGonagle, Kathleen R..................160 McGovern, George ...................... 59 McGrady, Frank C.......................140 McGrath, Ann Mary ..................160 McGrath, James A. ..................160 McGrath, Michaele M....................175 McGuire. Al ......................100. 115 McGuire, Allie .......................110 Mclnerny, Raymond T................160 McKenna, Kathleen M.................160 McKibbin, Michael E....................160 McMahon, Dennis M. . McMahon, Joshua L. . McMann, Donald F. .. McManus. James R. .. McMonigal, William M. McNally, Dennis J. ... McNally, John F........................1 8 McNally, Michelle A. ..................173 McNamara, Margaret M...................170 McNamee, Earl D........................1 0 McNeil, Donna J........................160 McNeil. Robert J.......................148 McNulty, Dermot A......................145 Meade, Elizabeth M.....................160 Means, Josephine A. ...................170 Medical Technology ....................167 Melzer, Marlene D......................160 Meminger, Dean .................7, 100, 108 Meuler, Andrew W.......................160 Michaelo, Carey .......................120 Michelson, Gregory J...................160 Midnight Mass ......................... 20 Mihalko, Linda A. ................... 173 Mikkelsen, Judy M......................133 Miller. Dale D.........................148 Miller. Pamela A. .....................171 Miller, Thomas S.......................160 Miller, William D......................160 Milwaukee Classic ...................... 7 Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra ...........53 Minter-Batten, Gerald J................160 Mitchel, Victoria S....................171 Mitchell, Roger ....................... 47 Moberg, D. Paul .......................160 Mode, Linda J..........................161 Moeller, Arthur C...............44, 45, 48 Mogilka, Marsha M......................173 Congratulations, Warriors! on a great team on a great season on a great future fla] Loewi Co. Member New York Stock Eichenge. Inc 225 East Mason Street. Milwaukee Wis 53202 (414) 272-StOO Milwaukee Suburban Office Wauwatosa • WMetSft Bay • SouthnOge 215 Ittinoa Iowa. Minnesota and throughout Wisconsin New Marquette Memorial Library Addition Morquettc's Memorial Library oddition featuring reinforced pre-cast concrete ond brick veneer cavity windows will provide 1 14,987 square feet of additional floor spoce and increose librory copacity from 260,000 volumes to 650,000 volumes and increase seating capacity from 1.600 to 2,597. Grellinger, Rose, Jurenec, Klumb, Rappl Hass, Inc. Architects, Planners and Engineers 216 Moleski, L Martin .....................161 Moller, Donald S. Jr..................149 Monahan, Sarah A......................171 Monge, Cynthia M......................161 Montgomery, Thomas W..................161 Moog Quartet .......................... 17 Morawski, Timothy C................140 Mordaunt, William R................161 Morris, Edward J......................161 Morrissey, Michael J................161 Morrissey, Patricia A. ...............161 Morrison, Margaret M.................161 Mot I, Dennis M.......................140 Motor Sports Association .............. 85 Muckerheide, Mary E...................161 Muehl, Louise E.......................168 Mulroy, Michael J.....................149 Mundie, John C........................161 Munroe, Harold W......................130 Muraczewski, Edward S.................140 Murphy. John J........................161 Murphy, Joseph P...............-......140 Murphy, Kathleen R....................175 Murphy, Margaret P....................130 Murphy, Michael P.....................140 Murray, Daniel C......................161 Murtaugh, James 0.....................161 Musolino, Richard A...................161 Myers, Christopher R..................140 N Nastav, Edward J......................130 Nathan, Arthur B......................149 Natkin, Sheldon H.....................135 Naugle, Kip J.........................161 Naus, John SJ .....................20. 46 Navratil, Robert T....................135 Neary, Mary K..........................161 Nelson, Nancy J...........................175 Nemeth, Christopher P..................161 New Mexico State .......................... 7 Nietzel, Priscilla E......................175 Nightingale, John P....................161 Noborikawa, Naomi ........................161 Nogosek, John J...........................130 Nolte, Kenneth E..........................173 Noonan. Daniel A..........................149 Norell, John M............................161 North Texas State ......................... 7 Notre Dame ............................5, 7 Nursing .....................48. 49, 83, 169 0 Oakwood, John F............................70 Oates, Frederick B........................135 Oatis, M. Susan ..........................161 O'Berle, Christine M......................161 Oberting, Mary Ellen .....................161 O'Brien. Colleen M........................133 O'Brien, Dennis W.........................140 O’Brien. Ruth A. .........................161 O'Brien, Suzanne M........................171 O'Connell. Dennis L.......................140 O'Connor. William D.......................162 O’Donnell, Edward M.......................162 O'Donnell Hall ..................81, 116, 118 O’Donovan, Daniel J.......................141 Oehmann, Catherine B......................162 O'Grady, Judith E.........................171 Ohio State ...............................100 Ohlmiller, Claire J.......................173 Olander, Thomas J.........................145 O'Loughlin, John Q........................162 Olson, Bruce J............................130 O'Malley. John D.......................162 O'Meara, John K........................162 Omegas .................................119 O'Neill, Kevin E.......................149 Orsatti, Ernest B......................162 Orsinger, Robert J.....................141 Orzechowski, Thaddeus J................162 OToole, Thomas R.......................141 Ott, Kristine M........................133 Owens, Kathleen M......................162 P Packard, Jerry R.......................162 Padgett, Stephanie J...................162 Pakula, Denise M.......................162 Palen, Christopher J...................130 Palmer, Mary Ellen ....................162 Panhellenic Council ................22. 24 Pardo, Marco ..........................120 Pares, Pedro ..........................162 Parker, Francis ....................... 56 Parks. Cindy ........................... 78 Parks, Phillip D.......................162 Parod. Ralph J.........................141 Patek, Joseph J........................141 Patrick, Jcane K.......................162 Patti, Lawrence T......................136 Paul, Pamela J.........................162 Paulson, David W.......................149 Paulson, Thomas A. .....................141 Pawlak, Kathleen .......................130 Pearce. John T.........................162 Pearson, Carol A .......................145 Perrucci, Dorianne R...................145 Pech, Gerald R.........................141 Peiffer, Gerald M......................141 Peluso, Stephen D......................141 PREMIUM GOLD heoting oil—exclusively ot... DELCO ELECTRONICS IS OUR NEW NAME... 7700 W. Slot Street Phone 258-7700 Maysteel Sheet Metal Fabricators Products Gleoson Reels Corp. Magnesium Dockboards Plonts of Moyville, Wi . Soles Office: 740 N. Plonkinton Ave. Milwaukee, Witconsin 53203 Telephone: 271-2545 Last fall, General Motors consolidated its AC Electronics Division in Oak Creek, Wisconsin, with its Dclco Radio Division in Kokomo. Indiana, to form the Dclco Electronics Division. Now our Oak Creek employes are applying the technology of our Apollo and Boeing 747 guidance and navigation work to the design and production of automotive electronics products for the seventies. And there are some interesting developments underway: an electronic crash sensor for the inflatable air cushion restraint systems scheduled to go into future automobiles; and our PhystesterTM Ignition Interlock System designed to prevent a drunk from starting his car. Yes, we’re still in the space and commercial avionics business, but we're working on some down-to-earth products, too. From Delco Electronics ... new ideas for the seventies. RUEMELIN MFG. CO. Engineer ond Monufocturert of SAND BLAST EQUIPMENT DUST ond FUME COLLECTING EQUIPMENT 3860 N. Palmer St. Milwaukee, Wit. 53212 o q Delco Electronics W GENERAL MOTORS CORPORATION MILWAUKEE. WISCONSIN 53201 217 McCormick Hall Dormitory McCormick Hall ho accommodations for 741 residents. The twelve story building ho 34 fan-shaped rooms on eoch of it top I 1 floors. The moin floor of the dormitory hos o formol lounge, hi-fi lounge, two dining rooms, food preparation and service areos, and administrative suites. A sauna both, billiard parlor, meeting room ond chapel ore located in the basement. 218 Brielmaier, Sherer and Sherer Architects Perko, Judith A.........................168 Perkowich, John M.......................141 Perrine, Dennis C.......................130 Persich, Douglas J......................162 Peterhans, Mary E. .....................162 Petersen, James H.......................149 Petersen, Robert G......................136 Peterson, Jon P.........................149 Petit, Karen A..........................162 Petrella, JoAnne M....................1.145 Pfeil, Mary L ..........................168 Phalen, Lynn M..........................162 Phillipson, William R...................162 Physical Therapy .......................172 Pi Sigma Epsilon .......................122 Piasecki, Charlene P................91. 176 Pick, John .........................47, 49 Piggot, Thomas J........................162 Pignotti, David A. .....................162 Pires, Richard .........................130 Plichta, Regina C.......................145 Poch, Robert P..........................141 Poggi, William M........................141 Polland, Marc ..........................149 Polulach, John G........................163 Polzin, Jonathan S......................163 Porter, Mary J..........................163 Potts, Kathleen F.......................171 Poulson, Richard E......................163 Powell, Walter J........................141 Powers, Richard J.......................130 Prewitt, Linda A........................163 Project Outreach ........................83 Przybysz, Carolan ......................145 Przybysz, Margaret M....................171 Purcell. John J.........................130 Pusztai, Andrew Z.......................163 Q Quilter, John F.........................130 Quinn, Frances E........................163 Quinn, Robert D.........................141 Quirk, Michael L........................149 R Racine, Joseph A. ......................141 Rahlfs, Roger E.........................130 Rakolta, Linda A........................163 Rand, Nona M............................176 Ratkowski, Thomas M.....................176 Raymonds, Hank .........................110 Raynor, John SJ .....................5, 45 Reak, Roger W...........................141 Regler, Sr. M. Theresa .................171 Reince, Michael P.......................141 Reuter. Kathleen A......................176 Revoir, George L........................141 Rex, Mary E.............................163 Rhodes, James .......................... 46 Rice, John D............................163 Rice, Louis H...........................149 Riehl, Colleen ........................171 Riehl, Edward P.......................141 Riendl, Anne ..........................173 Reidl, Marguerite 0...................141 Ries, Suzanne V.......................171 Riley, Dan ............................121 Ring Day .............................. 56 Ripp, Thomas V........................163 Ripple, Michael J.....................163 Roarty, Joseph P......................141 Robb. James .......................30, 47 Robinson, Terese M....................168 Rocca, Paul G.........................131 Rogers, Andrew F......................145 Rolnicki, Mike ........................176 Romaniuk, William G...................131 Ross, Lynn S..........................176 Rostankcwski, Cynthia C...............163 ROTC ................................. 69 Rothgery, Michael D...................163 Rothstein, Gretchen M.................163 Ruidl, William J......................163 Rupp, Adolph ..........................100 Rush ................................ 24 Russell. Mark R.......................163 Ryan, Daniel B........................163 Ryan, Penelope J......................176 Ryan, Peter A.........................163 Rychwalski, Chrysan L.................131 S Sabbath, Alan M.......................145 Sadd, Susan A.........................133 SL Nikola Church Members' Group .... 75 Saporta, Maxine .......................145 Sarles, Joan E........................163 Sarno, Robert .........................173 Sauve, Fr. James ..................... 47 Sawyer, Leslee M......................163 Sayer, John E.........................131 Scanlon, Jane M.......................163 Schaefer, Marcus L ....................163 Schafer, Delp S.......................136 Schantzen, DeWayne A. .................163 Scharlock, Judith L...................163 Schatell, Audrey Y....................149 Scheive, Kenneth E....................141 Schermerhorn, Kenneth .................53 Schifalacqua, Mariano .................141 Schiller, Lumina A. ...................168 Schmidt, Carol L......................164 Schmitt, Jeanne M.....................145 Schmitt. Joseph C.....................149 Schneider. Constance M................176 Schneider, Susan L ....................164 Schneider. Tony ......................176 Schnettler, Daniel N..................131 Schommer. Paul S......................164 Schroeder Hall ....................... 20 Schrot, Jeremiah P....................164 Schueller, Suzanne M..................164 Schuette, Nancy S...................164 Schultz, Gregory M...................164 Schutzman, Bill .......................121 Schwaba, Michael A.....................145 Schwartz, Grant P......................131 Schweitzer, John R...................149 Sciortino, Patrick J...................164 Scott, James ..........................114 Scott, Paula F.........................164 Sedenquist, Janet E....................164 Seidl, Dorie T.........................133 Seidl, Sr. Patrice ....................171 Semrad. Alice .........................167 Serwich, Nano L .......................164 Serwin, Doreen M.......................168 Shanahan, Joan L ......................164 Shane, Nicolas J.......................136 Shannon, Albert J......................164 Sharbough, Theresa L ..................176 Shaughnessy, David P...................131 Shaw, Bernard R........................131 Sheehan, Camille A.....................173 Sheehan, Thomas W......................145 Sheehy, Charles P......................131 Sheppard, Christopher G................176 Sheridan, Hannah E.....................164 Sherman, Kenneth G.....................136 Shine. Thomas M........................164 Shioleno, Mary G.......................164 Shorey, Harry S........................164 Sieracki, Aloysuis SJ ................. 47 Sigma Phi Oelta ....................... 52 Sigma Phi Epsilon ................116, 122 Singer, Marcus ........................ 29 Sirianni, Lucy ........................164 Skarbalus, Jeffrey S...................131 Skeens, William J......................141 Skiba, Anthony F.......................136 Slanicky, Charles J. Jr................141 Sleik, Thomas S........................149 Slota, Sarah M.........................171 Smart, Daniel L .......................149 Smith, Deborah A. .....................145 Smith, Dianne R........................164 Smith, Gregory A. .....................142 Smyth, Theresa M.......................164 Snyder, John L.........................164 Sobczak, Robert F......................142 Sokolnicki, Alfred J...................174 Sollitto, Paul L ......................131 Solverson, Steven D....................136 Soma ..................................121 Sonnenschein, Richard ................. 48 Sorg, Ruth M...........................164 Soriano, Joseph R......................142 Sororities............................. 24 Spaeth, Beatrice A. ...................173 Speech ................................174 Spella, James A........................149 Sperks, Cynthia A. ....................168 Spires, James M........................164 Sposata, Kenneth A. ...................164 Springer, John R...................48, 49 Stack, Richard A.......................164 Standish, Therese R....................133 Stanek, Steve J .......................131 Stang, Daniel J........................136 Stang. Thomas A. ......................164 Stanis, Richard P......................142 Stanislawski, Kathy F..................133 Staple, Jeffrey A......................142 Stark, Linda Lee M.....................171 Staudenmaier, Mary L ..................149 Steele. Larry .........................100 Steinmetz, Sandra J....................165 Steinseifzer, Lawrence A...............131 IIWAUKII FINE SAUSAGE SINCE 1880 219 Stellman, Mandy L ......................149 Stelzer, Michael D......................142 Stephans. James......................... 46 Stitt, Donald K.........................149 Steator, Joseph C.......................131 Streat, Kathryn D.......................171 Street. Stephen J.......................142 Strictland, Leo F.......................131 Sturm, Charles M........................131 Style, Frederick M......................164 Stys, Thomas J..........................142 Sucharda, Richard J.....................165 Sullivan, John L .......................165 Sullivan. Mary Jo ......................165 Sullivan, Neil A........................131 Sullivan. Sharon J......................165 Superior State ..........................41 Surma, Richard S........................142 Swanson, Gary D.........................165 Sweeney, Frank E........................142 Sylvester, Ralph C......................165 Sypniewski, James M..................142 Sypniewski, Susan J..................171 Syrjanen. Frederick L...................165 Szczur, Dianna M........................165 T Taborsky, Gerald J......................142 Tamayo, Juan 0..........................145 Tarkanian, Jerry ........................ 7 Tate, Allen .........................74, 75 Tatroe. Donna C.........................165 Taylor, Mary Jo ........................165 Teacher Excellence Award ........44, 45, 46 Tebinka, Jean A. .......................176 Tefft, John F...........................165 Thibadeau, Sueanne M....................133 Thielges, Linda L ....................165 Tiefert. Francis X. ..................142 Tielens, Gary D.......................136 Tiesch, Barbara J.....................165 Tietge. Cheryl J......................133 Timpane, Patricia A. .................165 Toft. James P.........................136 Tomas. Ronald L ......................131 Tomich, Andrew J......................165 Totoraitis, Joseph R..................165 Tower Oorm ...........................Ill Traudt, William S.....................165 Traut, David P........................165 Trautmann, John A. ...................131 Triangle .............................Ill Turmell, Michael J....................145 Turner, Mary Helen ...................171 Turner, Patricia L ...................145 Twohig, Robert J......................165 Twombly, Judith A.....................176 Twyman, Karen K.......................133 Tynan, Edward P.......................165 U Uebelherr, Michael F..................165 Ukich, John M.........................136 Ulatowski, Adrian T. .................131 Union Grill Cafeteria ...........32, 34 UW-Madison ........................... 41 UW-Milwaukee ......................... 41 V Vanderah, Steven J....................142 VanGorden, Schuyler H.................136 VanZinnicqBergmann, Carol J...........145 Varieties Council ....................123 Varsity Varieties ................116-123 Veckey. Laura L ......................165 Ventura, Mario J......................149 VietNam War .......................... 72 Vlack, Edward F.......................165 Vogel. Paul R.........................166 Vogus, Gerald A. .....................166 Vorderer, Carol A.....................168 W Wabiszewski, Lynne T..................166 Wagner, Thomas J......................142 Wahlberg, Mark H......................166 Waliszewski, Kenneth J................136 Walsh. Mary K.........................176 Ward. William C.......................142 Ware, Russell M.......................149 Warriors .............................. 5 Wasley, Diane D.......................166 Weaver, Scott C. .....................166 Weaver, Vaughan C.....................142 Webb. Ellen M.........................171 Weber, Eric F.........................166 Weber. Michael T......................166 Weber, Sandra C.......................176 Weber. Thomas P.......................142 Wedekind. Lothar H....................166 Weekends Council ......................60 Wei land, Marilyn J...................166 Weinhold. Jerome R....................131 Weir. Paulette A......................145 Weisrock, Michael P...................166 Welbourn, James P.....................176 Welch, Kathleen L ....................166 Welsh. Eileen F.......................166 Welsh. Pauline M......................166 Wenslaff, William A. .................131 Wendt. Debra R........................133 CHILSTROM ERECTING COMPANY REINFORCING STEEL ERECTING 338 S. 17th St. 672-1132 Milwaukee 53233 JOHN HENNES TRUCKING CO. MACHINERY MOVERS 320 S. 19th St. Milwaukee 53233 672-3470 220 .142 .176 .166 .171 .142 .149 .173 .166 .133 .142 .133 .142 221 ....166 Wise, Elizabeth M......................176 .... 78 Wiseman, Paul B........................149 ....166 Wish, Jennifer ........................ 52 ___166 Wisniewski, Thomas R...................166 ___ 41 Witas, Richard J....................166 ___149 Withey, Dennis C....................142 ___142 Wojtal, Joan S.........................176 ....166 Wolf, Barbara A........................133 —136 Wolohan, Sharon L......................171 —S Wolowick, James J......................131 Wolter, Duane R.......................131 Wood, Kathleen A. ....................171 •1 114 Wood, Susan M..........................173 ' 173 Woyach, Robert B.......................166 !”.166 Wrestling ............................. 41 ....176 Wyar, Marianne C.......................166 X Xefteris, Constantine L Y Yahle, Patricia A....... Yerkes. Charles B....... Zahorik, Patricia A. ... Zajicek, Jerome M. ... Zambon, James J........ Zamboiski, Patricia A. Zaragozza, Panait A. .. Zeman, Mary Louise .. Zimmerlee, Terrance R. Ziemba, Patricia M. ... Zlaten, Dennis M...... ikrf
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