Wabash College - Wabash Yearbook (Crawfordsville, IN) - Class of 1971 Page 1 of 232
Cover
Pages 6 - 7 Pages 10 - 11 Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9 Pages 12 - 13 Pages 16 - 17
Show Hide text for 1971 volume (OCR )
Text from Pages 1 - 232 of the 1971 volume: “
4 © 3H SNe SRD Tae he Pe steele RDA SNA: Spero rate heaters ‘ sone pa SaR = ah SF Sore te SS Se ag Py , ; = ie é Wee. § He tA i he i. ( Re | a q eet _ yo a i i : | i 7 A . We = A iy f ea ; yt oy | 2 RAN - hata aa SS Fos en i y es ib igapgestis wee Seo Se aT g a Sit J @ (v) Ww NY w DAVE Aone i} irra _.and what good,” thought Alice, ““is a book without pictures... at all the moments that you’ve missed here (bisected). Never little girls | with dreams in the air and helium balloons tied to their never enough time to find release, moored to the earth with the trees, together for a few brief moments, tied to the forest, escaping for a day, the mad fields of the other life... Un GON Gis pe RTO Ny RCIA SESS ILO II TOR Deca CPE OAL TREAD LI LASSI PE LER SIA LED PT A ET DEE EE tie aaa a ae ad -saw riddles jig ions t defending and ova held by gauze projec ee . Ww be co) —G _—) fe) io le) is co) fer ==) 6) q os} from the storms ...and birds went mad and threw themselves from trees to taste still hot upon the ground the spilled sperm seed... Ferlinghetti | each suffers | his own | and the | ways are known to | all many— Drew... strange (are they inhuman?) inventions, tools and devices— man’s own effects result in security and sensibility. This we all know. { perme NGPA GS GUNN Heo A eta MELEE LG BH ER ELIE OT RSE els AEE MNO pags aaa ses SR = ma re rr nl NA RCRD PASSE SISO ELIAS BOSSI ESPERO P SIDS ASE SAP PALER IAT . . . nobody loves you when you're ith ing todo... ¢ t why we came. th noth wi icy cans... we go to a warm place jus Just another night to keep companies w amber bottles, ‘and we wonder fat glasses, : smiles ‘that turn y i us farther Nea AiS tH rape nen METER DENY aah our life, ‘THIRTEEN ; goddamn, ime of ing the time of our life the time of our life, the t re hav o) 3 Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. van. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb; Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Oo on HD Ore NS wowwWN ND YNHN DN BS NY NY BS HB ee ee Se Se eS = oO 8 ON GU Sf WO DS SB CO OO Os GS 8 BS NS = © Oo NO OS G Nae etd cS 305 159 251 215 101 224 306 199 194 325 $29 221 318 238 17 121 235 140 58 280 186 337 118 59 52 92 355 77 349 164 211 86 144 297 210 214 347 91 181 338 216 yO HO DW NH ND YP NM VSD HK KS SH KK KK Bee oon fh OW ha WRK KF OO ON DO UW ot BD Ne o On A UO Ff WOH ee ee ee on OD MW BS W ND F F OC yPrS 31 oO oO Neh O FP W DPD NO NO DM PD DN YN F F F F SF SF KF SS eS eS eS wf. WN FY OF OF ON HD UW S S @ NH FY © 26 May May May May May May May May May May May May May May May May May May May May May May May May May May May May May June June June June June June June June June June June 31 oOmAan Om arth WwW DY KF — = © June June June June June June June June June June June June June June June June June June June July July July July July July July July July July July July July July July Juty July July July July July July + = Se Se eS ee ht on Of WO F F W NY KF CO BES tid Eo Re eae wad 115 279 327 277 July July July July July July July July July Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. ®@® WN NR NY Ne ND NV ND Ke Oo DO ON A Oo. Ff W oO ON HD ot WS DN SK Mp ONY DN NR SY SY SE YP KY KE BS SE ee re WN FP. Oo HO AN HAH UW Ff WN KS OC 26 See: 8 8 oe fee oon oO A a. WS KO NN NM NNN BH RY BE ee Re oe oe oe CI ff W FSF FSF Oo OO On OD OO 2 WwW NH KF OO 30 oO aon ognogiitrth wn — = © NO NM NM NON YN ND ND 82S eS Se Nn OO OS WN, © 0O @©D NSN GS Ga SB We NS oS -§ SP H KF BE SS eS eR So © GON OO fF WH NY FS 266 310 282 126 127 131 107 143 146 203 185 Nov. Nov. Nov. Nov. Nov. Nov. Nov. Nov. Nov. Nov. SB NY NY NH WN NW HM N WH So © ON oO QQ Ne Oo ON A WM bf WB NY. me NW HY NH NM S S S S SB BH BSS KY RE eS eR oO fB@ WwW NS CO O ON OO OO fF OO NM KS OC 26 105 100 SRINS Sa ae Pea inset eon ae PLE Wen eas grate Onin epi oka USD DS pars (aah Sgag PE aE Te cep AED ASOT HED pat REITER TD MLB e353 BRN te rt etn ee Mere wets OLR RE eS tt PaO td Wrihdela ay Magen ede eraeacins oa r Joining Active I inst Smut Mail aidition to the Het they ere tTmogthly e ner 25 new names are added, : qrapoers who send sex- ‘ orn ed mail te persons whose : . mes apptar on the list will . t eble fer prosecution. The supple nw also requires mailers label their letters and ma- “al of the outuide with the ds “sexually oriented ad.” | Names of all farni} tn f = : et SR ere the chikiren in fire and police pens bill to provide state support ren d police and fire pen tesented about 15 per com of Crawfordsville’s civil macy tax tebe, Comic Dictionary Mirrer A device that’s very popular because . prevents from seeing ourselves as Others as others see us, AR, TE AER F PEE em HT ang 640 Cheaster Drive @ the Hoosier capital, was nemwd win ner of the Dr, Paul Y. Hart Award as the outstanding fresh. man two years ago and woe rgonerup last year in the Bait- win Oratorical Contest... He also tek hee, cape Walk whl S yethe i heeee «ll 2 at Oe rete pe Pale Cee @ as ened go (ee tations doe | ; Wiewfere ath @ Mads at f eC { ‘ae So longing fag Mees a min exrntend iit seers age WATE te depend from the £ a att 8 Racks femes Septal bay ¢% pew trometer agg apgernisetion of stata et. A pectin of the 5 ote frawy sieswnt em the © eh, Torhenepala ie, Whe kelp co wet OG oe tecpeercial a4 years Sep. “ presess. tiene, «4 seven 8197 anmmell! ee ¢ Sieteot Renete bell wih correst advertisieg ree meee Newting shes he, oom pared with only tte compl years age, the WNDY studelt execatives are antcipatlly being alte to stect on ther ow witha the svar future, 7 2 ten ee OE SERRE os MAAR ese eurrsininers sete SSSR 2 NSE A AA I SE 2B eR aS Cal a PAu iy Lap oats Har There are those special instants when boundaries expand and our delusions fail to hold; when growbth is the rule and reality is our sea to sail; when boredom shifts to mystery and life becomes once more an exciting place to be. Weare involved, seeking reality, our identity to hold. EIGHTEEN We slip from our fantasies and grasp what remains. It is real and now. It must be. Can we see it? Do we see it? Can we believe it? Do we believe it... NINETEEN SANE a ow ad mae a ae Seog A mommy gs oo ee G 9 aay e “ te yack onl at is wrong with being... cathexic and counter-cathexic, self-assured, forgettable, non-persona tending, creative, compliant while independent i OEP OSH ATED LEE GSR Horneyian detatched, U lve Frommian produc ic neologist J syntaxed istic? and non-somnabul ‘4 possibly be the same? Everybody can Ii The child looks. and the old man sees... Fire and a flag, the ripples caused by change. eae fc aleeh tay oe Sata : E : revelation, the night is an and _ . an STE | ao a ee ™ ap ee ane ee ee eet alee en ce ee ... When memories Bomie: best, and childhood is again only steps around some corner, sleeping in today’s death, dreaming to a glorious birth of another tomorrow. ited CASALE EASES OSG ES OSES BEER E SIRE IB AES LE He tala PET I Open RES LM LEIA PNG EEDA LURE RIEP IE LISLE P EER IIIS Die bash nite Me Tea ee sear ae Bes Oh 5 0 S i - te 7% No. 4570-WS SOLD BY WABASH COLLEGE GLEE CLUB Nano — Addr Cl a ¢ Re fn an mmm bi bd mn Mm Bul ma ee ae es ss mt ese Me Peited arp ES REVENUE... cy ae = Oo. Ty as — [e) Ww i= i} 179) iS) 7) jo ol o G e) mo) c Sy |WaBASH 71 INTERVIEW: LHADDEUS SEYMOUR }a candid conversation with an ‘idea man’’ at wabash college; thaddeus ‘| seymour has a few answers and relevant suggestions we might consider | The interview was open and airy—kind of | like the March day it was outside. More | of a conversation than an interview with only two “off the record’ comments, it | bubbled with a rare breed of enthusiasm | of which President Seymour is typical. | Taking time to sit with two of his shaggy- haired students and a tape recorder, he | chatted for two, maybe three hours. Here we bring you comments from the first half of that conversation. Unfortunately, the second tape and the above mentioned ma- chine were ripped off three days before | our deadline . . . Can you dig that? Our | apologies to the President. JML MJC III | WABASH 71: What do you feel the ‘| chances are that Wabash will become a | coeducational institution? | P RES. SEYMOUR: We are now to the | point of there being less than ten men’s | colleges . . . independent men’s colleges }...1n the U.S. I believe that there con- | tinues to be a case—an affirmative case— for men’s institutions. I believe that the issue is whether Wabash can make it | work. That’s really the issue and that’s | what we have to find out pretty fast. I be- | lieve that if it does not work the question | to a large extent answers itself, because _| nobody would want to come here and “ee . we need to get people participating ‘in things again. There’s an awful lot of ‘passivity, which is somehow a failure on our parts to get people into things.” those that are here wouldn’t want to stay. There is the question of what “working” means—it means to be glad that you came to a men’s college. If it doesn’t work then I guess we have to go co-ed; it’s as simple as that. One recent article said that you could philosophize all you want to but the decision of co-education simply comes down to two things: sex and money. W 71: Do you think the absence of women on the campus causes any feelings of lone- liness in the student body? PRES. S.: Oh sure, sure! W 71: Do you think possibly the presence of women would rectify this? PRES. S.: It would rectify loneliness. I don’t think it would provide instant hap- piness. It would simply have the unhappi- ness seek out other forms. I do think that the presence of women would be a con- venience for students in dealing with their social needs. W 71: Do you think that the presence of women in the classroom would help pre- pare students better for coming into con- tact with them in the real world? PRES S.: | think that this question of the presence of women in the classroom is for Wabash a much more fundamental one— one that has to do with the learning style of the place. And I don’t think it has to do with whether women are a distraction— in a way, women are more of a distrac- tion because they’re not here because you 4 “.. somebody wants to give us a substan- tial gift to do something we're not doing right now, . . . Our real problem is to avoid gifts which over-extend our pro- gram, gifts we really don’t need.”’ have to do down to Greencastle or Indian- apolis or wherever to find them. I think it’s more that the absence of women means that there is more energy going into stud- ies. I think this is a more studious campus. That could be just what is most special about this campus—that we take young men of more limited intellectual ability and move them further in four years than most other places. If you look at the ac- complishments of Wabash graduates four years later relative to their potential by standard measurement when coming in as freshmen, they have gone further than similar students at other institutions. You probably saw the study put out by the American Council on Higher Education stating that we ranked seventh in the number of graduate fellowships per grad- uate in the nation. In the top twenty, al- most without exception, the other places were the Reeds, the Cal Techs, the Sarah Lawrences, the Amhersts, the Williams. That is, if you took that same list of twen- ty places where we ranked seventh and ranked them by their admissions stand- ards, we'd be at the bottom of the list. I am not just kidding here, or playing games —the thing that I really fret about in this coeducation question is whether the tra- dition, the hard nosed tradition of the place, is not what put us there. Now it just may be that those days are over— that was the 60’s and we can’t make it work in the 70’s—in which case, fine... the question answers itself. But if it’s that ... if it’s really that .. . that means taking “One recent article said that you could Philosophize all you want to but the deci- sion of co-education simply comes down to two things: sex and money.” We ate a ALE AER OL EEL I EEL RE LEELA ATT tots Patent ae sn Pema SRE RS pat GS ERA CRO iaimaly ea Toiteg: Pe PEERED oa Olea ED, ete Ap ate Tae Pai et SP TO weitere E93 PNR Coe ore a 34 the DePauw and the Wabash populations and going through four years and looking at the DePauw man and the Wabash man and their effectiveness and accomplish- ments as they graduate. If it’s the fact that we are a men’s college that puts the Wabash man out front, then you are play- ing with big stakes. That’s what makes me want to know what we’re doing before, for reasons of convenience—and I don’t mean to take that lightly—we take the plunge. W 71: Again concerning the advantages of having girls on campus is the mass exo- dus to other campuses not only on week- ends, but also during the week, causing classes to be cut and academic work to be neglected in general. Would girls keep guys here on the weekends? PRES S.: It’s hard for me to generalize _.. I have a couple of other thoughts; one is that we make no effort to make this an attractive place to be on the weekend. We close everything Saturday night. Why any- body would want to stay, I really don’t know. I think that’s something we ought to work on. I think fraternities have not done as good a job as could be done in making this a place where you'd like to bring a girl. W 71: What do you think fellows need to know to better socialize here? PRES S.: It’s a lot of different things... I'll say it more broadly: we need to get people participating in things again. There’s an awful lot of passivity, which is somehow a failure on our parts to get peo- ple into things. I was over at play rehear- sal last night. People that get involved in that—they’re learning a lot, having a good time; they’re part of the place. Guys liv- ing off campus and watching Star Trek . . . ‘Why be at Wabash, go someplace else.’ I think this is maybe where it begins and then you fan out from there. I think there is a serious problem in the financial plight of the fraternities which don’t have the money to spend on the kind of activi- ties to make that fun. W 71: Do you think this lack of participa- tion as well as the lack of females could lead to a drug problem at Wabash? PRES S.: It could just like it does to li- quor usage .. . but my problem is that I look at a place like Cornell—I watched Dartmouth with 3000 men and Cornell with 3000 men and 2000 women—and so many of the problems of both institutions were the same—with or without women! W 71: Do you feel that there is a definite drug problem at Wabash? PRES S.: 1 don’t sense that it is any great- er than it is nationally. W 71: Do you see the college taking any steps to control what drug abuses there are On campus? PRES S.: 1 don’t think anyone has figured out all the steps you can take—I think it’s just a matter of time. Drugs are kind of cooling off nationally. W 71: Will Wabash still dole out the same amount of financial aid in the future? Do you see any decrease in this? PRES S.: | think it’s one of the most ur- gent problems. I’ve been spending a lot of time trying to figure out some answers which may be more creative than scholar- ships and loans. I assume that the per- centage of our total scholarship fund rela- tive to tuition will always be about the same. The trouble is as your tuition keeps going up that percentage does less and less good. There’s a gap between what a guy can afford and what it costs. W 71: There seems to be some dissatis- faction among students concerning re- cent tuition hikes, especially since there was evidently no comparable rise in schol- arships. Do you see a possible solution to this as setting the cost level for a college career, thus any tuition rise would be only applicable to incoming classes? PRES S.: Well, it’s possible—we’ve spent a lot of time talking about it—it’s an al- most impossible thing to manage. You would have to, for example, set the level for next year’s freshman class by predic- ting what it would be two years hence, thus obtaining an average amount. It seemed so uncertain in doing this that it didn’t seem feasible. Now, the informa- tion is wrong that additional scholarship aid is not available—it is! We made this clear in the letter that went out. About this increase, we’re all facing the same problem. DePauw for instance, has gone up $250 per year, a total of $750, where we've gone up only $400. Where we’ve hurt, however, is in the uncertainty; with changes in administrative staff, it’s been hard to get these decisions sequential. W 71: Wabash students can then expect more increases in tuition? PRES S.: To say it more generally, any- body in any private institution in the country can expect tuition increases in the neighborhood of $150 to $200 per year . . . forever! Unless we come up with a better idea. W 71: Does the college itself experience difficulty in obtaining funds? PRES S.: Yes and no. Because we have so many funds to raise, and because we have to raise more, we have the highest deficit to raise of probably any college in the country. We, on the other hand, con- tinue to raise it—we have met our deficit for this year. But it’s getting to be more and more money as the total budget goes up, and we’ve got to figure out ways to get the gap down. W 71: How often in the past has Wabash run in the red? PRES S.: Only one year. W 71: Do you think the present situation could force Wabash to seek federal funds, rather than private? PRES S.: 1 assume we’d do that before we went under. If we had done that be- fore, however, I think we’d be in much more serious trouble .. . I don’t think we would be ahead for it. W 71: In other words, if we were to ac- cept federal funds, the amount of private funds would decrease? PRES S.: No, no, not so much that. If you read the plight of places that have been dependent on federal funds which have now been cut off, you'll see that’s what’s killing them! There’s a fascinating report from Princeton—I’ve got it right here and I can quote it for you—which spells all this out in detail. Their crisis is that they had become so dependent on federal funds that when the funds were cut off, they were suddenly left with a program they had to keep going out of their own pock- ets. There are many philosophical issues involved, not the least of which is you have to give up your independence when you become dependent on another source . . that’s just what happened to these places. W 71: What specifications regarding us- age are put on gifts to Wabash College? PRES S.: We have institutions where some- one will say, ‘““Look, if you want this, Ill give it to you. If you don’t want it, I'll give to somebody else.’’ How do you deal with that? I’m involved with a couple of these right now where somebody wants to give us a substantial gift to do some- thing we’re not doing right now, but will no doubt help the cause. Our real prob- lem is to avoid gifts which over-extend our program, gifts we don’t really need. Much of the money we seek is to cover scholar- ships. More than half the contributions for our annual budget go to scholarships each year. This may be a little too preliminary, but I think we could eventually do some- thing like what Berea does—provide jobs for people to work their way through Wa- bash. Just today I was thinking of the idea of a factory. The reason a guy can’t get work in town is because the community has its own general tempo of working and it’s hard for a student to fit into it. But if you have a student business that is geared to student hours, then it’s easy to fit into it. And what hit me today, and I think we’re going to go into high gear on this, is that there are a number of different enter- prises depending on a guy’s skills. For instance, a gas station, and you could staff a gas station with college students. You would get some fellows that are pretty good mechanics, some that are bookkeep- ers, and so on. Another idea that I’ve.ac- tually had for about five years now—and this may sound far-fetched—is antique — furniture refinishing, refurbishing and sales. You might have a “‘factory’”’ where a student would learn a skilled or semi- skilled job connected with this field, but most of all, you’ve got a product for which there is a good market. I think by next year we'll have—we’re still working on this—jobs for, say, twenty-five guys; so that we can say to these twenty-five in- coming freshmen: regardless of need, we'll guarantee you a job for your four years at Wabash. What I’m getting at here is that the problem of financing a higher education requires an imaginative and bold idea, one that, so far, we haven’t been able to come up with. W 71: Have these ideas been introduced to the Financial Aid Committee? PRES. S.: In somewhat general terms. The Financial Aid Committee is trying to develop new job opportunities, part-time here and full-time during the summer. The point I’m making is the initiative must come from the college and the ideas have to begin here. Owen Duston’s contribution to the college included a great capacity to involve students in literature as literature. He developed methods of teaching such difficult concepts as style to the point where studying a work under Duston was like reading the work entirely anew. As a policy maker in the English department and on important committees, Duston was in intellectual power without peer. His mind seemed genuinely seminal, something like genius. He was an ‘‘idea’’ man in every sense. He was also always thinking of the total experience of the Wabash student. He worked hard to cre- ate a college atmosphere where intellectual and emotional capacity of all kinds could be satisfied and developed. He led the development of Nexus in Yandes Basement, a beautiful, inviting place where a ‘‘nexus’’ of emotional and intellectual experience was generated outside the classroom in painting, poetry, music, drama and any other genuine form of individual expression. Duston’s sense of good taste was always sought in any fine arts activity, and he was always ready to take on tedious chores to make sure litera- ture and the arts were well served. He gave all of himself to the college, to the students, and to the humanities. His ‘‘out- side’ interests were all direct extensions of his work. His involvements were intense, and he would spare nothing to make a lecture or an event uniquely excellent. His demands on himself and others were always purely qualitative, as if he had rejected permanently considerations of efficiency or longevity or economy. The curriculum of the college, and particularly the offerings in English and the humanities have been permanently affected by his influence. But because he was selfless and unambitious personally, almost no docu- mentary evidence of his influence will survive him. Walt Fertig Dr. C. Owen Duston (1918-1970) The 1971 Recipient of the Clair McTurnan Faculty Award for Excellence as a Teacher THIRTY FIVE ieeciearent eet Dean T.: Oh, you mean this is really the real 7977 Wabash? | Dean J.: Yes, but they call it the | WABASH 71. | i Dean T.: Class. i Dean J.: Yeah. | Dean T.: Say, what do our pictures look like? Dean J.: Boy, are they botched. Dean T.: Hmmm... Dean J.: You look like a comic strip. (Flash Gordon. ed.) Dean T.: Yum. Dean J.: Yeah, ya oughta see the new ‘71 Yearbook. Richard Traina, Dean of the College Robert Johnson, Acting Dean of Students Dean J.: Did ya see the new ’71 Yearbook? Dean T.: Yum. Dean J.: Well, what ya think of it? Dean T.: Hmmm .. . Dean J.: At least they (Thats us, the illistri- ous Yearbook Staff! ed!) got it out on time. ae eey “ THIRTY SIX i Qian =) (2) Le hall Doreen Prescott, Records; Sue Dulin, De- velopment; Hugo Prince, Placement Di- rector; Carroll E. Black, Director of Programs; Bernadine Webster, Research Assistant; Beatrice Bedrick, Development Gerald R. Dreyer, Director of Public Rela- tions; John C. Schott, Sports Information Director; Janet Larson, Public Relations Robert E. Russell, Jr., Director of Develop- ment and Public Affairs; Jeri Whittington, ; Public Relations; Alan Yeager, Develop- 3 ment; (Cindy Stevens, Development; Juanita Rutledge, Placement; Gail Mahens- mith, Development) Stephen D. Grissom, Admissions; Sandy Crumm, Admissions; William B. Degitz, Director of Administration and Planning; Diana Springer, Administration; Donald L. Sperry, Comptroller; Louise Barton, Administration; Jea- nette Miller, Admissions; Teresa Fyffe, Cashier; Elsie Jernagen, Director of Stenographic Services; Martha Montgomery, Administration; Mary Trefz, Business Office Manager; Imogene Cabbage, Clerk; Dolores Diehl, Admissions Peter Murphy, Physics +, by ee RT 8 Division | eS OD va OO a Oe a c oO S = o o a c o 5 = oS Ac O SPSS Nek beA Leper ya PAPSITS PASS oe Austin Brooks, Biology SIN John Erikson, Chemistry William Doemel, Biology Thomas Cole, Chairman Department of Biology Paul McKinney, Chemistry ) { | | ne iS ¥ SG } daa wy eis | William Swift, Mathematics THIRTY NINE iy Ajysimays ‘ueWwsawWwiz uYyo[ Vernon Easterling, Physics Sr ae aaa David Wilson, Mathematics Lester Hearson, Biology Roy Bowman, Mathematics Stephen Klug, Biology Daniel Gans, Mathematics Robert Petty, Biology Robert Cooley, Mathematics Eliot Williams, Biology 1h LEANED AGA ELEMENTS: French t ae o. eel S c oo o o s ro a) = 2 Ss 2 iS ) nee — igche = OO HN INNS, HUNAN, INE HLA INN ULNA HENNA INNA HUN INA HANA In AUN PPL ELE | Walter Fertig, Chairman Department of English Frederic Enenbach, Music Paul Schaich, Philosophy aan s@und® Herbert Stern, English William Barnett, Religion John Charles, Chairman Department of Classics Robert Harvey, English 7“ aes Seam SE Ot FORTY FIVE Peteris Silins, Russian Theater LeRoy Stoner youas4 “sf ‘anys sayeyy William Ponte, Theater rece enciianint timation: Terrence Ortwein, Bernard Manker, Spanish German Richard Hartzell, ion Relig Raymond Williams Spanish Theodore Bedrick, Classics Duncan Charters Timothy Nichols, Art a fs Michel Guillaume, French Karl-Heinz Planitz, Chairman Department of German Donald Baker, English Oe rae Cre Rh So Es S|) @ Hall Peebles, Religion | William Wieland, German FORTY SEVEN Peter Frederick, History Barry Schneider, Political Science Chairman Divisior le Chairman Department of Psychology Division II scene MEAT RET: Francis Mitchell, Psychology FORTY NINE William Bonifield, Economics Chairman Department of Economics Benjamin Rogge, Psychology Uy Wendell Calkins, Chairman Department of History Philip Spelt Phillip Mikesell, Political Science = 2 Se) o ODtn O—-e George Davis, History O) @) ==} Ce) =) ) Gy) inal Eldon Parks, Psychology James Mauk, Economics George Lipsky, Chairman Department of Political Science comment by Wasasu 71 The issue raised its head two years ago with the student activity to have Dr. David Britt retained in the English department. The action was successful, but it generated little further discussion. Obviously some people started thinking, though. The incident that brought the issue back this year was Dr. Finley Campbell, Professor of English and Afro-American Literature, and in the language of the media, a ‘controversial professor.’” Dr. Campbell came here as a visiting professor, stayed on for two years more, and by mutual agreement between him and Dean Traina, was to leave at the end of the year. As the end of the year approached, Dr. Campbell had decided he didn’t want to leave. Complicating things was the fact that no replacement had been found for him. Friday morning a group of black students entered classes and read a statement claiming that Wabash was merely trying to assimilate them. This was shown by the fact that Campbell wasn’t being rehired. They then called for a confrontation with Dean Traina on Monday morning. Monday morning came, President Seymour spoke in chapel on what would happen to demonstrators who broke laws or disrupted the college, and called for a discussion at 11 o'clock in the chapel. Now the real fun begins. After hours of basically fruitless ranting and inopportune statements by students, college employees and the administration, a meeting was arranged between a group of blacks and whites, Seymour and Traina. The upshot of this was the granting of funds to the Malcolm X Institute to employ a Fellow who would not be on the faculty. At this time it seems likely that man will be Finley Campbell. The issue had immediately moved from Campbell to institutional racism in the original statement of the blacks. During Monday and succeeding days, the issue expanded to faculty hiring and firing, tenure questions, and the role of students in the running of the college generally. The most obvious one to work on was student voice in hiring, firing and tenure of faculty; and it was rapidly picked up by a rather strange coalition of blacks, the ‘‘“expected’’ whites, various and sundry straight fraternity types and even an occasional liberatarian. A plan was rapidly proposed, and a referendum on student opinion run. The results of the referendum were never announced, but the plan was backed by the Student Senate and presented to the faculty. Shall we assume the referendum was in favor of a student role in these affairs? The system devised was mind-boggling in its size and complexity. Committee-mania was running rampant with a 50 member policy committee plus departmental committees. The most realistic feature of the original plan was allowing the Trustees as many places as they saw fit on the policy committee! Even assuming a reasonable plan can be drawn up, there are several objections which do not seem to have been carefully dealt with. First, basing decisions departmentally fails to take into account the nature of a small college. Though the faculty member who rarely leaves his office may in fact be very useful to majors in that department, we cannot have a faculty full of these types. It is generally expected that faculty members should be broader than their discipline and that they should take an interest in Wabash community activities. A departmentally based committee may not take this into account as easily as a broader cross-section might when confronted with a candidate for appointment or tenure. Secondly, even with the academic markets as they are, getting the quality of person we want is not always easy—most likely it is never easy. It does not seem likely that a committee would have any more success in accomplishing this than the present set up; in fact, it is likely that a committee tagging along with the division head and departmental chairman would inhibit more than encourage a candidate. There seems to be a general agreement on campus that students have a legitimate voice in faculty questions. But a voice doesn’t mean guaranteed success in what students want. Though students should be consulted more, and should work for this, the manner in which people are going about it now makes inadequate sense and does not make students look as if they are ready to take on formal power. Finally, and most important, is the effect to the power structure as it now stands. There is already an effort on the part of Dean Traina to seek out student opinion on questions of faculty status, especially tenure and retention. This student role is obviously very unstructured, but what many students fail to note is that faculty voice is also largely unstructured. Now, the immediate cry is that Dean Traina is some sort of power-mad megalomaniac. With a little knowledge of how this largely unstructured procedure works, however, one soon discovers that it is a rather delicate structure designed to arrive at a consensus on an individual case with a minimum of friction and a maximum of ease. Though there may well be difficulties in such a set-up, one hesitates to think what would happen if this complex set of checks and balances were to be put into constant flux by the entry and exit of students every year. It seems inevitable that a structured system of the sort proposed would lead to a polarization and politicization in at least a number of departments. That would lead to undesirable effects for the college. FIFTY ONE e Se OPEN E PNA TEEE PL BPA RA, BEAFIDPP So kL Ss oa ' ot - 4e Pes IES se “Cox Seat eae 26 Homecoming and DePauw weekend. Traditions: where have they gone? The pole fight, chapel, blue key stunt night, chapel sing, hell week, green underwear, ‘‘W”’ haircuts freshman indoctrination, and winning. Who gives a damn? Students don’t care. When will Saturday classes end? And comps? When will we go co-ed? Like all other traditions at Wabash, it is only a matter of time. ia é AQT ELIS TE TN I AE a ee FIFTY FIVE 2S iva) fs Fe ve Eee: ee Wea a cos : = aes SSS ad I a 7a. Reh aa ee: te ere “It is government in the end that decides your destiny, and peoples’ actions move that govern- ment to the right, center or left.’’ Julian Bond, Georgia legislator and V-P candidate at the ‘68 Demo Convention. Black people should band together economically as well as politically, adopting any plan that “keeps money circulating within the black com- munity” .. . these plans may range from more black ownership of businesses to charging subur- ban residents a fee of some sort when they de- pend on_ cities which are — primarily black-dominated for their income . . . be aware about forming coalitions that have failed in the past as blacks strive for more political power . several coalitions have failed in the past, specifically those with labor unions, churches and college students... . ‘‘black people have been denied access to the ladders of power’’ that have been available to other ethnic groups .. . the new wave of metropolitan governments, such as Indianapolis’ Unigov, are a further effort t o disen- franchise black people . . . while blacks are be- ginning to gain a majority of the cities’ population and developing a political organization of their own, the existing power structures enlarge the governmental base to include the suburban areas . . this effectively shuts off the blacks from the political process . ... black people should assume political control of the cities they dominate, turn- ing them into “enclaves against repression’’ . . thesolution includes two sources of revenue to aid the poor . . one is more tax money from the federal and state governments, which feed very little of their resourses back into the cities, and “using untaxed sources such as churches _.. the black movement is faced with ‘‘authori- ties who respond to civil disobedience with force —with emphasis on law and order rather than the considerations of political, social, or economic so- lutions. At this point violent repressions become routine“. . . among the avenues of escape from this trap, is revolutionary action, a ‘‘revolution in thinking, and psychology and in political position” . violence is only justified ‘“when you have a minimal chance of success and all other avenues have been exhausted.” . the black move- ment’s success depends on engaging in ‘‘non-vio- lent political action,’’ using blacks’ own political organizations, pressure groups and kinds of solu- tions that will work to solve their problems—prob- lems that are different and stem from different sources than any other ethnic group in America . . the “ever-spiraling scale of politics, protest and revolution’ will probably result only in repression. SG Tey Lesa PERI! AS Legge OO Re DS Sears Ra i PesScgine tn aS oa Pema E PTE ED ELBERT NCL nO Sa ate Ce Se fete Se ACen (ares aig Gat: Beate See: Codie hier ie awe oat ddan ad ee phaeIe hsp % Tate on 4 iM oe Bcd hd rf ae FIFTY EIGHT Seymour: “I got it!’ Hays: “No, I got it!” Donkey: “‘Pretty funny, man. (Hee-Haw!)” CRAWFORDSVILLE, _ Indiana (AP) Wabash College President Thaddeus Seymour (45) challeng- es a donkey and Crawfordsville Mayor Will H. Hays for the bas- ketball in a recent donkey bas- ketball game on campus to raise money for the Little Giant spring baseball trip. Dr. Seymour played on the winning faculty team (14— 12) and Mayor Hays coached the Crawfordsville businessmen’s team. Voyagers! G2 s tfOn See braving the burning sun and low waters. Congrats to Wacker and Ferry who made it first; to four lambchops and a tub who made it . . too; and to a couple Fijis who didn’t. I.M. Canoeing? not a bad idea—Coach Hamman, how about next year! by, Mas FIFTY NINE IDES OF MARCH TY | | t = = ne BY GR yi DIRT BAND NIT PE ate se pea RDA SADR SPEAR RDEL EA PUG REI YEE TINSEL S NDE DIERD I-13 SS PLEDAE ME SOSTE IIRC OEM ATPASE PRUE 2 ; a Sm gh SSeS OCEN Ee a AE Dern eg: AEE AIS Ie ‘eae e tate, BuIAOWW UO daay “9SINOA ie) puadap ‘Buje a8 0} s8nip uo pusdap },u0q ‘Addey ag g9|doed ay} YM aAkQ| 0} 241] NOA pjnom asessaw Jeu yoeqpsea) YIM poos Ajjead S,9H ‘Bulded siy ax! | ‘YA 499g Hel },USI yeY} aSNedD, “ saq ay) yOu yng ‘saAejd seyN3 poos e s,ay juUIU} | guo}dey Sq JO YUIU} NOA OP JeUM 3 ‘ajdoad ay} puke sie}s a4} YJOG payDaje yt adoy | ‘Aduapuadap snip siy} Jo awos paddo}s 1 adoy | gdisnw uO pey uNdof[ siuef{ pue xlupuda} wif JO SyJeap ay} YUIY} NOA Op JOedWI JEU Spud PJJOM aU} [JUN BdY aq ||IM YOOY jOU UO gpe}dIpeid uaaq sey }I Se pud ue O} BUIWOD SI 4901 yUIY} NOA OG | yeasun sem | ‘SMOUS Ju} Je papel sAeMje 919M Spl} BU} || “A4N}j]ND Bnip e aAey },Ued 9M UR|W | ‘ede Buje} si AJaID0S ajouM ay] ‘Uaddey 0} puNnog seM }! YBNOU} Se jae} | ING ‘1 INOGe AOS Ya} | ‘YU gSasOWWj|!4 94} BUISO|D WeYesD |jIg O} UOHDea1 INOA sem JEU ‘BUIPJOIII URY] J9}9qG } ayI] | “UO UN} | ‘UO UN} Adu} 4! ueawW | ‘AduUaIPNe JU} JO JjO }I O} JDeaI | “WaY} ay} Aljeas | gSMOUS JAI] JO YUIY} NOA OP JEU -J02UIM “TZ 4useqeM =4O}UIN TZ user 40}U1M TZ useaeM :49}UIM ‘TZ useqe M 7492UIM “TZ useqaeM :40UIM TZ useaeM :482UIM ITZ usede YAW IVd GNV 3¥V1 NOSYIWA thal — meet gat Ps a ine igh wre Bie een SGI Ea DOP oP LRP IIE LO 44LNIM ANN ; i i yao WIIid ALBANS Wad NY¥d x 4 iV Gow Wo Novia. x iui ‘wvaOM LiQIMS Mena: WN4 NV X 1H Wraow ems e OVER Now! WARS MUST THERE Bt | ged 0ox at these phates and surely youll See War is hot worth this ‘The Comat in Chiey - tell hit Somehow TO GET THIS wi AND DO-IT RIG! NO NVd KX I1¥Ll wvdOwW omment by Wasasu 71 ! SPE RN ign ua a EME ar Da Mapas ASE SS SR z aS Pe Gi Te RSCg at EF HOSA HE OPE BS Na CdD LD BS De ERO LE SAE PT IR PRE IIET The gym was as crowded as it’s ever been. The next closest thing was when they packed the bleachers for Donkey Basketball. Smoke hung like a cloud over the audience, scented with the smell of grass. The i audience was alien—young and old, freaks and straights—but not from Wabash. They had come from all over Indiana and Illinois to hear Johnny Winter, Emerson, Lake and Palmer, and Humble Pie. Some said the concert was great, others said it sucked. But whatever the verdict, the outcome was clear. The concert was the fantastic end to a year, and more specifically a spring, the likes of which Wabash had never seen before. For once, certain individuals took the initiative to bring activities to i Wabash. The Senate got their act together and helped to sponsor Don- 4 key Basketball, the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, and the Winter concert. : Graeme Whytlaw brought the Ides of March to campus and suffered ‘ a financial loss, while three others planned and financed the Winter 4 concert and reaped the profit. The existence of Wabash men was made a helluva lot more beautiful by these happenings. Along with the other activities sponsored by vari- ous groups on campus, these concerts provided something else to keep Ea Ee OE eGR RnB RE MEER Ha us at Wabash this spring. But although the happenings were here, we still had to drive to DPU, Purdue, Butler, Ball State, |U, ISU, or even U of | to find dates. Ain’t that the shits! SIXTY THREE nis as scene ee Z rae Js pat et is ; STA fa oat We the members of 513, in order to = Form a more perfect union, | Do ordain and establish . . . Ah, Who gives a damn anyway! fo aed % a SOO TIA Ree Ua eee seace: Baer Teeter aE EEE LEA AIRES RET LET OE NCA TUNE REN Beaches SERS : SIXTY SEVEN Be “sce iceieetiee cope eS ; ; ? Saves - The Delts are always “on the right track! = Seay See ea SIXTY EIGHT SSR Ra ear! ial [ge A RG ACES _ Of time we would make a stream upon whose bank we would sit and watch its flowing. Kahil Gibran SEVENTY ONE i i SEVENTY TWO aS NARI MaUN IAN er er { ? saben hacia a 2. =o Vine nie NT OPED DO eee ae ame, Ss | sg . mS CF o | 2 3 Co Ss : | ; ee) a | | : = a = | oO | 7 oo a | v— ee - a = S | ; | | | 7 1c} (ele a) , 7 a) c : é : ae ce 2 | (@) x Oo. | 25 ¢ i a S | = = i : : : | | P | ae —e pgm sr ei eran om é, % ey . hy, Berard i raat re see a ire = Pena ae NE a MRI Ee aN a EON Mae Bh EL aE Re Ee ph aaa L€—0Z:€Z SQIIAOId ae eae : S8e1 YIM URW BUjO]D |;eYS ssau | : “ISMOJP puke :AYaAOd 0} aWOD |;eYs UON|Z ay} pue pseyuNup au} 404 : : : | Ysalj JO Suayea snojol BuOWe :siaqggiqaulm BuOWe JOU ag i | 3 2% Thanksgiving Day Let all give humble, hearty and sincere thanks, now, but the turkeys. In the island of Fiji they do not use turkeys; they use plumbers. It does not become you and me to sneer at Fiji. Pudd’nhead Wilson’s Calendar ty, lp ZY eg 4 A a - ate SEVENTY SIX OTR entree ret rr ete mean EOL CRG BN RUA PUNE RE we crteeint scm ee Cater tN SEVENTY SEVEN -fraternity”’ Ol KAINA YI “The UN SEVENTY EIGHT SEVENTY NINE a PENNANT vam SW Gee Who can think that a being of , wisdom, and unbounded power should create a world 7 merely for the habitation of a goodness, ‘wa’ , without a ingle, rational being in it to race of monsters y o- Way. we erve and glorify him? tp the Rev. Mr. Kirby Ee ome PARCINONONONO aw evar. 4 a a ‘arm. wt: x cae ie SITMA XI EIGHTY See ne SES INI OYA RRE BOMBS IOI Su ee are, CYA aw ueitecn ROIS aane ESSER OS se on Ss aY¥ ca OY as peat Sec cenit tec is A Nal EAE FOS a | Cheats virav fav add Fi PaaS sees BNE aN a DIG LeEDD w Zz 9 = 26 Oo ‘pant vetet ti ane ee EIGHTY TWO” It were not best that we should all think alike: it is difference of opinion that makes horse-races. Mark Twain ase nee nT a arco EIGHTY THREE (a4 : i 2 = o 5 se o e G ° x = — g 5 oo S 1S) John Street Mike Medler Steve Flowers Bob Harris Russell Dart Steve Meisenheimer Bob Bogigan Robert Black Larry Kuhn Bill Davis Clint Rigg Gordon Vogel Ed Corley r) Pe ben lepaeer NDAL Marvin Keffer Jim McDaniel Jack Roudebush Scott Woodle y John Rosenberg John Zinn Justin Fisher Gary Martin Jim Crist Fred Hasse Joe Haklin Gregg Spitler Dan Holderbaum Preston Greene Joe Sinzer Dave Gibson Alden Taylor © c iS ‘ o 2 ee) £ Denny Lawson Dave Dike Darrell Olson Lewis Voils 1 John Kraft David Neitzel i { Carl Royal Scott Buehler Steven Ganson Richard Endress Carl Gibson Orlo Shoop Bruce Ong ’ James Rogers Brian Caraher John Hillsamer Stephen Santella Yi Dennis W and Dennis J Camille L Pitts | RPO Ses Greg Mentzer Frank Buckbee Jeff Ment is es cee sh pinata OS naa MSgee Niece N. Walnut sae crewed Ron Sharpe Mike Howard Mark Armstrong Tony Partee Mike Wingart Steve Edgington Carlos Armstead EIGHTY NINE Carl Washam Doc McDowell Lemul Stigler Bob Smith Larry Pottenger pee SORTER A eben tenied AS Gal TREE Se te gma A LAT RG ANG SS ck a tasted OMEORI han nstare ) Keith Nelson (Randy. Leigh Lucille” Mike Carroll (Steve Crowley) ° 1es,, ing. stress ture 1X iving. ] one of the newer fraternit AIIT, builds true Wabash men, a well balanced m of scholarship, tradition and conservative Shoop; Wolf, Station Mgr.; Sinzer; Cohen Myers, D., Meagher, Jacques, Haverstick, Fritsch, Long, Welles, Ristine, Adams, W., Cassell, Queen, Stoddard, T., Allen, N. NEWS STAFF Keech, Kunkel, Leach, Moppen, McDaniel, J., McQuillan, Mitchell, Moody, Ott, Smith, W. Bartholemew, Carpenter, Chillson, Edgington, Endress, Levenson, Thomey, Rey- nolds, Goebel NINETY FOUR Ot Greene, Chairman Harvey Johnson Duncan Lawson Bridge Thomas, P resident Adams, G., Vice-President Pitts, Secretary Sinzer, Treasurer Meeker Shellborne Defenbaugh Smith, T. Mallers Bleau Dykstra Worell Wilson, L. Schmidt, T. Musgrave Graham Baldwin Meyer, R. Guebard Dean, D. Martin, P. Hurd Bowerman Lowden Finch Duncan Westbrooks Bedrick Chin Czarniecki Feemster Hutchens Business Mer. The Bachelor The Board of Publications Fall: McDaniel, S., Business Mgr.; Lawson, Editor; Spring: Bridge, Editor; Hutchens, NINTY FIVE The Skin of Our Teeth $2As SU, PUN SUL 10 ARI 9 MAEWE THE TOME oF CL VALOR AND HEROISM 7 OPORT Soaser on cvs oo 3 a:% : GR TNT MPPORTIUT) Bis 0% a a Ceremonies In Dark Old Men osencrantz and Guildenstern | Are Dead The Importance | of Being Earnest Glass Menagerie Scarlet Masque (Bachner Baker Boxell Buckmaster Carroll Custer Degitz Hagaman Mitchell, |. Myers, D. Stern, A. Yerkes) Magner Coffinbarger Newman Wollenweber Ortwein Olson Warden Armstead Lawson Parks Welles Bleau Stoner Dreyer Belcke DCwWAmMmMAZA P? O Nmre uosq!D ‘Agyiej ‘sSaspuy ‘UO sUIpPJ ‘anyeuog ‘JauuoD ‘ed!ue}Ng ‘ulaysulag ‘peaysuy ‘suepy UURWIdeM SWRI BZIBM ‘S|IOA ‘ppol ‘SewoY] 49ZUIS ‘4apyoaquiyss == ‘IIISapny = ‘saBoy The Band aZNOY ‘UassnuuseYy “2A|Nd ‘saueud ‘ddUed ‘NO ‘|8ZON ‘SIDA ‘URWUIOOW ‘|J2BYNW ‘uoqury] ‘ure;dwiey ‘asseyH i teisl paesul A ‘uIp -uns ‘ssei8pous ‘ausnogjays ‘|jIsapny ‘ausiy ‘axpey “JBAjNd ‘SaseYd ‘|Ned ‘QIWRd “YDIAOHSIIN WAZWSN ‘URWIOOW “alii ‘Weqny ‘uuewoH ‘uasueH ‘QUddIDO ‘USAID ‘JyaDH ‘aUsi4 ‘sseipuy ‘ueoung ‘anyeuog ‘Weq ‘weysuiuuND ‘JajuadseD “| ‘ospug “ ‘a8pug ‘peaysuuy ‘swepy ONE HUNDRED Ong, B. Meagher Petruzzi Kovacs Dr. O’Rourke Worrell | Richey Royal Fisher Belcke ae 1osorn (Boxell Davis Davnie Ganza Goodman Joyce Messerschmidt Myers Ryder, J. Sweeney Wolf) | SAN aes Randak, Wong, McDowell, _ é Amsterdam, Ong, B. £ es i ts Pe PPS APO McDaniel, J. Thornton Foos Corley Pearce Rosenberg | Stankovich Rigg | Brown, J. | Royal Pulver Bedrick (Weston Zommick Fetter Wong Petruzzi Rogge Ryder (McLean) John Van Sickle Club i ONE HUNDRED TWO a Be Ds “ eitaapeiees € Mime Daniels Van Shafer Sweeny, P. Rifner Dean Hixon OZ7-rm- pn we GE fe (7 Rothe York Sharp Myers Golliher Janes Morcom Kalb Mr. Mrs. R. Anderson Mrs. J. Barbee Mr. Mrs. C. Bard Mr. Mrs. A. Burdett Mr. Mrs. J. Burdett Mr. Mrs. M. Burdett Finley Campbell Mrs. B. Chandler Mrs. N. Churchill Angel Armstead Breland Carpenter Chambers Clark Duncan Dunn Finch France Mr. Mrs. §. Churchill] Mr. Mrs. L. Dean Mr. Mrs. F. Elmore Mr. Mrs. Francis Elmore Mr. Mrs. H. Elmore Mr. Mrs. J. Elmore Mr. Mrs. T. Elmore Mr. Mrs. W. Elmore Mr. Mrs. J. Eubank Mr. T. Eubank Mrs. M. Fields Miss P. Fields Mr. Mrs. C. Hall Mr. J. Hall Mrs. V. M Greene Griffith Jackson Johnson, J. Johnson, S. Lewis Little McDowell McGee Nance Nelson O’Neal Hanner _ rs. E. Hyde Mrs, L. Jackson Mrs. L. Kennedy Mr. Mrs. J. Lee Mr. Mrs. L. Lucas Jodie Leona Mitchel] Mrs. B. Nichols Pace, M. Pace, R. Partee Poole Powell Ransom, C. Ransom, V. Mr. Mrs. J. No aS PRET TTeeLOr TR ERAS ETRE 2 ORNERTA TEN JPEN aR _ Mr. L. Robinson Mrs. L. Robinson _Mrs. R. Robinson _ Mr. Mrs. W. Robinson Mrs. B. Shultz _ Mr. Mrs. Van Tapp . Mrs. H. White - Westbrooks Mrs. M. Whitney Williams: Mrs. A. Wooden LAL Wasasu 71 | Study Club, Glee Club, German Club, Public Affairs Forum, The Bache- lor, WABASH ’71, Ecology Club, Scarlet Masque, Sphinx Club, Arts ’71, | WNDY, Student Senate, Film series, Genesis Il, Debate, Malcolm X Institute, Yandes art shows, Pi Delta Epsilon, Band, Spanish Club, Drug : and Draft Information Centers, YAF, Sailing Club, Veterans Club, IFC, IMA, Speakers Bureau, IM’s, Varsity sports and Bridge Club. ‘Ou don’ t have to look for activities here at Wabash. Some clubs and organizations have been pleading for participation. But the guy on third floor Martindale. or on the back hall of the frat house doesn’t give a damn. The independent stays couped up in his room, a social reject of his own making. The frat jock is friends with his brothers, but isolated from all others. Granted, some students participate in activities. The Julian Bond lecture - was ‘packed, but Lord Caradon spoke to an empty house. The club president called the meeting and people said they would be there. But who showed up? Students volunteered to take pictures for the year- book, but we never saw them. Did you ever wonder why you always seet ‘the same guys organizing and participating in all the activities? - The activities are here. If you stopped complaining about nothing to do : Elare| got up off your ass, this place would become more lively—on school days:and on weekends. Alpha Rifner, Hubert, Main, Julian, Unterschuetz Krasner, Wieland, Kazdan, Hartzell, York, Planitz, Si- lins, Duncan, Rendel, Simp- son, Zommick Phelps, Rasmussen Ei Eta Sigma Phi Lehman Heelies (Brackemyre | Benecke : Fourakis { Thomas Goodwin Hutchens Hasse Federenko . Nightenhelser Rhodehamel ee Pollitt Charles NII Mitchell, J. Psi Chi Pollitt Long Ball Carroll Snodgrass Parks Lawrie Levinson Kalb iene 7 — sh 50 Harvey Duncan Czarniecki Bedrick Johnson Greene Klein Long Sinzer LaValle Deffenbaugh Shoop Partee McDaniel Bridge Wong Brammell Rigg Allen iia, ; So ea : : Livengood Main Boxell Pi Delta Epsilon O’Rourke Fisher Royal Ong (Ryder Wolf) Delta Sigma Rho—Tau Kappa Alpha FRONT; Hewitt, peers Culley, Bit Long, Clark, Gearhardt, chante Martella, pavatict Dill, Czarniecki. BACK: ke p Martin Cc, Van peu icen: Shaffner, SUES Stout, Nielsen, Soey it 4 i Ce neh ‘ 4 . ina i Martin, S., Goff, Mullen, York, Graham, Miller, Flink, Pursel, Roembke, Flynn, Hurd, Fouts, Haklin, Gephart, Zavesky, i Phi Beta Kappa From the Junior Class: Fred Oliver Butler From the Senior Class: Michael Eugene Carroll William Fairbairn Davnie III Justin Kent Fisher John Richard Glendenning Frederick August Haase Gary Richard Hansen Theodore Farguhar Holland III John William Hubert Bruce Allen Julian James Mates Kamplain Eugene Crabill Kepple Keith Edward Nightenhelser David George Kinnet Robert Hargrave Long, Jr. Jon Rice Pactor Scott Sherwood Parker Garrett Edward Paul Gregory Terrance Rasmussen Dennis Huntington Reid James Forest Rendel Yiannis P. Roubatis Carl Andrew Royal Ted Curtis Ryder ‘. James Robert Smith Steven S. Wildman WT SY a a ra A AT + oye Ser O Patchel Given Rothe Main Dziubinskyj Moody Baker Simmons McGar Lee Moll Krasner Deffenbaugh Czarniecki Landgraf Hayes Holden Robb Tompkins Martin TRS | RH OMRN — RE | See Schwendeman Tworkowski White Bowerman | ese ee te ROW 7 Clements, Winkler, Medler, Nance, France, O’Brien, Gardner, Park, Johnston, Eckerle, Dunn, Henry, Weber, Burgess, Reinhart, Williams ROW 2 Miklusak, Weston, Van Deursen, Avant, Tipton, Shelbourne, Ladd, Lavalle, Fouts, Gephart, Gearhardt, Garrard, Hewitt, Zavesky, McClelland, Boyle, Shaffner ROW 3 Zinn, German, Servies, Laurent, Snyder, Steck, L. Clark, Miller, Paarlberg, D. Griffith, Nielson, Garbison, Roembke, Culley, Runau, K. Clark, Orrock, Haklin, Hammond, Lantz, Urick ROW 4 Robinette, Petska, Gunkler, Benecke, Hanner, Galovic, Mead, Brown, Schiff, Pursel, Kepchar, Nicolini, Bukatko, Lea, Radtke, Gall, Loehr, C. Clements 8 « t, e 4S ae i SPB O ONS Wen Oe ne. he Shere from the cliffhanger with a 22—22 tie and at 3—0- three yards and a cloud Chuck Johnston measurement (i Puarkh Ye If any one word seems capable of describing the agony of the last four games, it would have to be ‘‘frustration’”’. A tie and three losses effectively blotted out what had been a perfect first half of the season as mistakes, partial refs, and bad breaks all took their toll. A homecoming day clash with Valparaiso gave the Little Giants their second tie, 14—14. Wabash pushed the visiting Crusaders all over the field but couldn’t quite get into the endzone when it counted. The Ohio Wesleyan game was especially dominated by a flurry of bad breaks. The Little Giants watched a 21—14 lead vanish in less than three minutes as the Bishops capitalized on two interceptions and a fumble to win 35—21. At St. Joe, victory once again eluded the Little Giants’ grasp. For a brief instant it looked as though Big Red may be back in the win column, but it was not to be. For the second straight week Wabash was beaten in the final minutes. A Puma touchdown at the two minute mark nullified an earlier Scarlet field goal and Wabash found itself on the short end of a 21—17 score. But the big one was yet to come. A win against DePauw, regardless of season record, would make the year a success. The Monon Bell was all that counted now ONE NINETEEN bee el amar mr es vee BH me at that after all the work we had don our record was a lousy 3—3—2 2 It isa hee feeling ’ to know that you’re better than everyone you've faced. ething had gone wrong. My confusion is gone now and | know some of those things that went wrong. But there’s no sense in going Ong ene —Mike Tipton 66 ONE TWENTY ONE es 1970... fall—soccer che same as the last three years, only a tie blemishes the losing record. coach inexperienced : but not anymore ao | : 7 of 11 .. . freshmen (?) e i : red outran— f E ' : red outhustled— only to be outclassed. skill and luck : : oe spell the difference. HH sit i tH ef F come ae oe ae . . . a long season | : oo a team mellows | _ aa to their best oe learned but not + acetate aed ae Se forgotten. H | : ee 168 shots on goal I 0 (38 against grace) sie two new records! last time ‘round. He wilson, czarn | oe a. tried : mcgar died (trying) main shot d lee married tomkins coached krasner killed (deffenbaugh) but he'll be back they’Il be back: manker, mvp, 1st team Pes ; all-confere nce. leading scorer holden Sartre simmons and baker—solid. eigel’s good. 197 Pees tall==soccer tradition broken. ONE TWENTY FIVE Cross Country hurts your guts. Cross Country running hurts things too fierce to mention. il ils i | TiN Hl | i il Hy i | | | i ONE TWENTY SIX The challenge, summarily, is man running against himself. Man dares his body, if his will is strong, to i : go farther and faster than it wants to. 1 Dick Bowerman runs_ four miles in nineteen minutes and twenty-five seconds. Lesser | mortals try to keep up. | Why would man punish him- | ji self this way? Because he seeks | satisfaction outside himself. i | There are more things to life | ae oo A ; than Waugh Hall. Cross Coun- try running is a medium by which man might find himself —on his own terms and in his | own soul. ‘Each man creates his own Hell’’—Sartre . ' ; Owen Huntsman can _ only watch and help. He can only hope that his athletes will be better men than they might have been, had they not tried. BACK ROW: Wood, Roudebush, Snodgrass, Hoover, Hurd, Mardegan, Griffith, Haklin, Nichols. FRONT ROW: Jordon, Skinner, Williams, Fouts, Martella, Martin, Crist, Robinette. | I ye $1?) Oe se it tree le ‘ os Richard Meschke Ben Parks Steve Morris Ira Rouse Randy Leigh Jim Alexander Mike Tipton Doug Given Don Shelbourne Tom Williams Mark Feemster Tom Walsh Brown’s Sister Fred Creech Mrs. Sue Langraf Bill Defenbaugh Rick McGinnis Cliff Poppa Williams Coach Doug Landgraf Bill Beach Jim Hambidge Mark Carwell Steve Santello Bill Brown Disappointing. One word in a nutshell could aptly de- scribe the fortunes of Wabash basketball and disap- pointing seems more than adequate. For the tenth consecutive year, Wabash roundballers failed to come up with a winning season. Disappointing? What else? Not that the Little Giants had a “‘bad’’ team. This they did not. The 1970-71 squad would have to rate as one of the best in recent years. The potential was there but a few bad games, injuries to key personnel, narrow losses, and inconsistent play prevented it from being realized. Pre-season hopes were high. Only one starter was lost from the ‘69 team and coach Rusty Nichols had a solid nucleus of five returning lettermen, includ- ing the top scorer and two rebounders with which to build. Depth seemed no problem and some good frosh || prospects added an aura of optimism. Still 1O—11 : is not a winning season and what could have been ! the Little Giants’ year instead went into the record | books as another ho-hum campaign. Things ; started out well enough as the Cavemen made their traditional trip to DePauw for the season | opener and thrashed the Dannies 74—70. Even- - tual MVP Tom Martella led the Wabash assault, | canning 22 points and 14 rebounds. A healthy | number of Scarlet fans nullified the Tigers’ home } floor edge while some flaring tempers added to }j the usual excitement. Transylvania proved to be | somewhat stiffer opposition, downing the Little Giants 85—66. Wabash seemed to lack the fi-- nesse and sharpness they displayed the previous | week and were never really in the ball game. Get- ting back in the groove, Red ran away from Centre? 92—80. Freshman Jack Roudebush led the way) with 19 points. ONE THIRTY THREE ONE THIRTY FOUR aie nie Unbeaten Taylor toppled the Little Giants 8784 in a nip-and-tuck battle. Ray Griffith copped scoring hon- ors with 23 markers but the Trojans crackerbox gym and some hostile refs proved too much of a disadvan- tage. Back to back wins against Aurora, 91—73, and Knox, 82—73, boosted Red well above 0.500. Mar- tella and Roudebush led the scoring with 26 and 21 points respectively. Valparaiso then derailed the Little Giant Express in an 83—79 cliffhanger to halt Red’s win streak of two. Roger Hurd tossed in 27 points in a losing effort while soph Archie Williams grabbed 10 rebounds. Wabash got back on the track against And- erson, beating the Ravens in overtime 98—96. Tom Martella paced the Red scorers with 26 points. The opening round of the Wabash Holiday Tourney ended ame Rm in disaster for the Little Giants as they fell to eventual winner North Central 105—77. Martella again led Wa- bash scorers with 21 points. The consolation game was all Wabash as Lee Fouts led the way in an 89—72 trouncing of Carroll. Injuries forced Martella and Grif- fith to sit out the Indiana Central game and Red lost a real heartbreaker 83—82. Roger Hurd picked up the slack by gunning in 23 points. Rose Hulman provided the Little Giants with their second straight one point loss, nipping the Cavemen 75—74. Wabash turned the tables against St. Joe, however, this time winning by a point, 71—70. Tom Martella was high man with 20 markers, but the roof fell in on the Little Giants in the next three games. ONE THIRTY FIVE GY ies ae ONE THIRTY SIX ae ye The Nicholsmen bowed to Earlham 100—93, Principia 67—57 and Hanover 74—61. Martella and Roudebush each hit for 27 against the Quakers. Wabash finally got back in the win column, beating Franklin 101—98 behind Lee Fouts’ 23 points. Butler proved to be too much, knocking off the Cavemen 98—80. Roudebush ripped the nets for 20 points in this losing cause. The Little Giants primed themselves for the finale against DePauw by outclassing hapless Marion 98—69. Martella copped double honors by nailing 23 points and 13 rebounds. Wabash topped the Tigers in the closing game of the season by the same score with which they won the opener, 74—70. Ray Griffith led the scoring with 18 points while three seniors, Tom Martella, Lee Fouts and Craig Martin all played their last game for the Little Giants. What about next year? Only time will tell. One thing for sure, though, with three of the starting five leaving via graduation, coach Rusty Nichols will have a lot of shoes to fill. And a full I.C.C. schedule, including national college division titleholder Evansville won’t make things any easier. Next year’s workhorses would appear to be Jack Roudebush, who as a frosh averaged 13.9, and Ray Griffith, third in the rebounding column as well as holding down a 13 plus scoring average. Next year may be a turnabout. With some good breaks, consistent play and new recruits, who knows? But then again, only time will tell. ONE THIRTY SEVEN Wabash wrestlers continued their winning ways this win- ter as the matters compiled a 9—1—1 dual meet slate and added a host of new records to the book. The team mark of J—1—1 ties that of the 1962-63 squad as the best overall mark ever. Co-captain and MVP Don Shel- bourne paced the a ssult on the record book by registering the most consecutive falls (7) and the most falls in one season(11). Ben Park at 138, Tom Williams at 118, and Mike Tipton and 190 all set new individual marks for their weight class. The grapplers finished second in the Little State with Mike Tipton winning his third straight title at 190. Shelbourne, Park, and Randy Leigh all bagged sec- ond-place honors. Highlights of the season include a thrilling 19—18 win over Notre Dame, a come-from- behind tie with Franklin, and a 24—16 trouncing of De- Pauw. With Tom Williams being the only senior lost through graduation and seven lettermen returning, Coach Max Servies should have a solid nucleus to build next year’s squad around. ONE THIRTY EIGHT uu Z Ze i= x ale = uu Fh O ONE FORTY Ae RENT: Leia mie ee ee Pires ois Sie nb ner day eoowlon TAKE YOUR MARK GO! 1970 Swimming Season . . . Well? . Yes. No. Started out the season with . . . 98—19 you didn’t want to know that anyway. COUNTDOWN 14, 13, 12, 11, . 10 swimmers. and one coach—new. tr “My eyes hurt ‘If you don’t go, it’ll be your 7 He was proud of his- double-moons, 90 mph 10° below, on Michigan Highway. | closed my eyes! ‘150 yards at practice, today? Good Defenbaugh.”’ Hambidge, good attitude quit laughing. GIRL TIMERS, ANYWAY! “Good Brown, 5:35!” ‘“‘How much rest do | get?” “None! GO!”’ Honorary captain Creech—nothing. Berea, Centre . . . | said quit laughing! .500 season “Look at the fans!’’ “Yeah, 3. 10 swimmers, would you believe 9 Santello—money. The Mafia? OOPS, You’re not supposed to use that word. More chlorine, or is it bromine? “My balls itch.’” “Walsh, you’re gross!”’ | 5000 yds, 3 1 2 miles, 2 hrs of practice. | Williams, most valuable swimmer. ! oN a Molly ... mother to be . . . mother to be | me ve mother. ' ‘Where were you yesterday?” IW ie “Biology.” - “And you?” “Biology.” | “Coach, | couldn’t come yesterday (AWEE Oi sa.” ““Biology.”” 4 Carwell goes .. . yell. laugh ( | “Want me to dive on ya?’’— most improved. One senior— best time in last event of last meet— Rich McGinnis, Beta . . . that figures. Beach—what can you say? You can say, “‘this is all | can write, I’ve got to go study ... Biology.” Goff, N. Clark, Corley, Bradway, Mullen, Miller, Pursel, Coach Huntsman Koch, Swim, (Young), Tworkowski, Van Deursen, White, Foos | Bowerman, Dumser, Fouts, W. Smith, Lauer, Schwendeman, Reynolds, Himmelhaver | Coach Manker, Olson, Meyer, J. Lowe, Flink, Garber, Eaton | Coach Hamman, Campbell, Bridge, Gardner, Hall, Berning, Kepple Walton, Medler, Zavesky, Ladd, Loftus, C. Martin, W. Adams, Stout, Coach Lantz Haklin, P. Smith, Turner, Freeman, Hernandez, Long, Nielsen, Leonard Cinotti, Birk, Nyikos, Roudebush, K. Clark Once again track proved to be Wabash College’s most successful varsity sport. The Little Giants, under the mas- terful guidance of J}. Owen Huntsman, finished 6—0 to rack up their fourth consecutive unbeaten season. First place honors were also captured at the GLCA Outdoor Championships and the |.C.C. meet. The GLCA win marked the third year the Little Giants won the event. Wabash also garnered second in the GLCA indoors and thirds in both the Little State and DePauw Invitational. The speed freaks also placed an unofficial second in their own Wabash Relays to round out the highly successful season. In addition, two members of the squad, Ray White and Dick Bowerman earned the right to compete in the NCAA college division championships to be held at a later date. Bowerman will compete in the three mile run and White in the steeplechase. ONE FORTY SEVEN ite e aE 0 wo a ie O pred w Le e) The Little Giants started the dual meet season on | the right foot by trouncing | Wheaton and Chicago by identi- cal 78—34 scores. Monmouth was an easy 86—26 victim the following week. Butler proved to be the only worthy com- petition the Little Giants met all year. A late meet rally pulled them within striking distance, but Red held on to win it by a scant four points 79— 75. Against St. Joe, Wabash racked up an astronomical point total, humiliating the Puma’s 120 1 2—231 2. The Cavemen added salt to the St. Joe wounds by shaking up the line-up and running half the team in unfamiliar events. The thinlies closed out the season by trouncing Chicago in a rematch, 107—38. It seems appropriate to note that aside from Butler, no Wabash foe came any closer than 44 points. A total of three existing records were broken dur- ing the course of the year. Dick Bowerman covered three miles in 14:00.5, Jim Pursel heaved the shot 50’ 4” and Ray White sped through the steeplechase in 9: 24.1. All are new records. Brad Goff also tied the 440 yard intermediate hurdle stan- dard, racing around the oval in 56.2. Nate Clark was high scorer for the year, accounting for 154 points. Dick Bowerman was second with 104, followed by Brad Goff with 93 and Ray White with 80. Post-season awards went to Nate Clark, MVP, Ray White, Most Improved, and Bruce Bradway, captain. A total of 25 men earned letters, and with only four leaving through graduation there should be a solid nucleus next year to continue the squad’s winning tradition. ONE FORTY NINE j } Sr oe a le ei Co ee a gi ee Be ee ee “ge SiR Sa, a a Saude | ee oe ene | i a : ae “Niow, Here, you see, it takes all the running you can do, to keep in the same place. If you want to get somewhere else, ae eR cctliad SS eee you must run at least | twice as fast as that.”’ Lewis Carrol! = REELS OSS IT LE NLS OL a FOI AT LENE FESO LI ODL IE EAL ET Nr A 2 era 7a = a ent 9 2 _ Mm eae . ae ee - Caatona set bain cere Na et 508: af pA os PLAS Sa SE RESP Oo. ONE FIFTY TWO Remar ran hn wea Wabash baseball got a big boost this year in the form of a spring trip through the south over break. The entire excursion was organized and financed through fund raising efforts of the team and co-ordinated by head coach Dave Lantz. The trip proved to be a valuable experi- ence for the squad as they got some precious outdoor practice time in before returning to a rainy Indiana spring. Record-wise the Little Giants ended up 13—16. But records, as usual, don’t tell the whole story. Four of the losses came during the spring trip against teams who had the obvious benefit of pre-season outdoor practice. The schedule itself was rather formidable. Wabash played on even terms with such local powers as Purdue, Indiana State and Ball State before bowing out in the late innings. Half of the Little Giants’ defeats, in fact, were by a margin of two runs or less. The team started poorly but found itself at mid-season and came on strong to win ten of its last fourteen games, including an unprecedented five in a row. The Little Giants topped Eastern Illinois 4—3 and took both ends of a double header from Evansville to end the season on a happy note. Hopes for next year are high. With only three seniors lost through graduation, the bulk of the team, including eleven underclass lettermen, will be returning. Post season honors went to Larry Ladd, MVP and best won-lost record, Jack Roudebush, leading hitter, and Skip Long for best earned run average. In addition, Ladd, Roudebush, and Gary Leonard were selected to the all I.C.C. squad. ONE FIFTY THREE io e Ta CR As | ONE FIFTY FOUR ie Pe ee w . % % : ae : s ee ee Ce wage yp Mig ow say 2 ae sey: OR ag , Be ee a eae ey wd : ' ec gi BRR es Ske, a ep i P rn 4 — ees - aaa’ : . “ee ee. vs The Wabash College tennis team showed marked improvement over last year by posting a highly respectable 10—6 record for the ‘71 season. Only extremely tough competition prevented the rac- queters from doing any better. The team was also a serious contender for the ICC Championship, but was nosed out at the finish and ended up fourth, one point out of a three way tie for first. The tennis jocks nailed down three quick wins to open the season, beating Butler 5—2 and Ohio Wesleyan twice, 6—3 and 6—3. Big Ten competi- tion proved to be too much, however, as Indiana and Purdue each outclassed the Little Giants by identical 8—1 scores. Vincennes then fell 9—O but the winning streak was to be shortlived as Bradley and Chicago each defeated Wabash 7— 2 At this point, with a mediocre 4—4 record, the , Ey 2 i : : : iS e £ a oie eae, Beil | ONE FIFTY SIX Big Red Machine started to jell. They won six straight matches, knocking off Millikin, St. Joe, In- diana Central, DePauw, Rose-Hulman and Butler, all by comfortable margins. The DePauw match marked the highlight of the season. It was the first time in 44 years that Wabash had beaten the Dan- nies. Touted Valparaiso and Indiana State ended both the winning streak and the season, blanking Red by 9—O and 9—0 scores respectively. Steve Flink was the team’s winningest member, copping 17 singles and 12 doubles victories. He was also named the squad’s MVP. Bob Meyer received the Most 'mproved award and Jeff Eaton served as captain. Letter winners include seniors Eaton and Beck Hannaford, junior Flink, sophomores Meyer, John Lowe, John Garber, and John Tidner and freshman Darrell Olson. eH et Baris LIC AL Ladies tbl a nd oe | ONE FIFTY SEVEN | ONE FIFTY EIGHT The Wabash College golf team got off to a slow start this year and ended the season with a 7—8—2 record. Inexperience plagued the Little Giants more than any- thing else as each of The Four Freshmen broke into the starting line-up at one time or another. With the greeness gone and only one senior, Gene Kepple, lost through graduation, the linksmen should stand a better than average chance of winning a few more than they lose come next season. Highlights of this year’s campaign included three convincing wins over St. Joseph's and a 9 1 2—8 1 2 victory over Eastern Illinois. Unfortunately the duffers from Wa- bash Golf College dropped two to arch- rival DePauw. Kepple was high point man with 23 1 2 and also the team’s MVP. Bill Gardner copped Most Improved and Bob Hail the Sportsmanship award. Letter win- ners include Kepple, Gardner, Hall, Dave Campbell, Mark Dykstra, Dan Berning, and Tom Bridge. Once again the intramural season provided a needed outlet for the tensions of academic and the all around frustration that goes hand in hand with the Wabash environment. Competition was fierce and eligibility requirements almost instigated an NCAA probe, but the games went on and another IM season was recorded in the college archives. Tempers flared, as usual, much to the delight of the highly partisan crowds and a steady line of bruised contestants visited the training room to have the ‘‘Head Turkey” treat them for cuts, bloody noses, sprained ankles and other assorted maladies. The high quality of the officiating could be mentioned, but it is against our policy to be overly critical of fellow students. All in all, though, the 1970-71 IM season would have to be considered a success. After all, where else can you get a separated shoulder in a ‘‘friendly’’” game of touch football? IM’ The Beta’s ended up on top of the standings, their third championship in four years. First place finishes in cross country, football, indoor and outdoor track, the bike race, and a tie with the Figis for top honors in volleyball left them far ahead of the field. The boys from the big white house on the corner finished second, squeezing in front of the Phi Gams by a single point. They didn’t win anything outright, but consistently high finishes in all categories boosted their point total. The Phi Gams managed a first place tie in vol- leyball and a second in basketball to insure them a third place ranking. The Delts carried fourth on the strength of a swimming win while our illustrious faculty ended fifth. ‘The Grand Old Men of Wabash.” earned victories in tennis, badminton, a nd basketball. The Sigs, Kappa Sigs and Lamb Chops finished sixth, seventh and eighth. TKE, Wol-Mor, the Phi Psis and Martindale rounded out the bottom four places. : | - Football Hanover Washington U. Albion Butler Valparaiso Ohio Wesleyan St. Joseph's DePauw ).V. Team Max Urick Soccer Hope Lake Forest . Calvin . 1. M.'s Wheaton — vi ee . | Phi Delts Boe ee Phi Gams Principia Delts DePauw Faculty MacMurray Sigs oe oe Kappa Sigs — Doug Landgraf | . Lamb Chops), _ Tekes | Phi Psis Wol-Mor Martindale Cross Country 5—1—1 Wrestling Washington U. 28—28 Earlham Rose Poly 28—29 Notre Dame Huntington 15—50 Anderson DePauw 29—26 Valparaiso Earlham 24—36 Cincinnati Butler 26—3il Knox Chicago 22-33 Hanover Franklin GLCA fifth Manchester Little State fifth Washington U. Big State tenth DePauw J. Owen Huntsman Coach Max Servies Basketball DePauw Transylvania Centre Taylor Aurora Knox Valparaiso Anderson (OT) North Central Carroll Kalamazoo Ind. Central Rose Poly St. Joseph’s Earlham Principia Hanover Franklin Butler Marion DePauw Freshman Team Rusty Nichols ONE SIXTY TWO Swimming Ball State Albion Hanover Depauw Valparaiso North Central Berea Centre Wheaton Principia Millikin DePauw Doug Landgraf Baseball Lemoyn-Owen L.S.U.N.O. L.S.U.N.O. Nicholls State Loyola Butler Butler Northwood DePauw DePauw Indiana State Indiana Central Indiana Central Taylor Valparaiso Valparaiso Purdue Northwood Northwood Rose-Hulman Chicago Chicago Ball State Franklin Earlham Earlham Eastern Illinois Evansville Evansville David Lantz Tennis Butler Ohio Wesleyan Ohio Wesleyan Purdue 1.U. (VY) Vincennes Bradley Chicago Millikin St. Joseph’s Indiana Central DePauw Rose-Hulman Butler Valparaiso Indiana State Bernard Manker Track 6—0 Wheaton 78—34 Chicago 78—34 Monmouth 86—26 Butler 79-75 St. Joseph’s 120 1 2—23 1 2 Chicago 107—38 GLCA (indoor) second GLCA (outdoor) first ICC first Little State third J. Owen Huntsman Coach Golf Eastern Illinois Rose-Hulman DePauw Ball State Butler Marian St. Joseph’s DePauw St. Joseph's Manchester St. Joseph's Purdue PU (Ft. Wayne) PU (Calumet) Franklin Taylor Indiana Central Bruce Hamman 7—8—2 9 1 2—8 1 2 9—9 6—12 5 1 2—12 1 2 91 211 1 2 9 1 2—11 1 2 11—10 6—12 9 1 2—8 1 2 7 1 2—7 1 2 13—8 424—400 424—430 333—379 403—435 403—396 403—392 Coach ONE SIXTY THREE Martella Bowerman Pete Vaughn Award LEE FOUTS—First Team Academic All-Ameri- can College Division (Football); Co-recipient of the Pete Vaughn Award TOM MARTELLA—Second Team Academic All-American College Division (Basketball) : DICK BOWERMAN—Co-recipient of the Pete Presented by Dr. Robert Henry, Chairman Vaughn Award; NCAA Finalist, Track and Cross Faculty Committee on Athletics Country SAIAJaS Xe uopsof{ ueq ‘Jesspue] 8n0q ‘UeWWeH 99N1g SJOUDIN AIsny “BUISSI, ayauiqoy aude SIAIaS Bauee{ “SI URWUIADH aljeyud ONE SIXTY FIVE sjUaWa}D 4IIYD uewS}UNH UdMOC ‘[ Zue] BAe uewMog 1G Ud|JaMe] 327 eee Eee Lp NOS hl | bp A] ES 7 ANN WS NS SY | James L. Unger ill Biology Bradford F. Johnson Political Science Cloyce L. Hedge Psychology ONE SIXTY EIGHT Jeffrey W. Mentis Michael K. Lemon Mathematics J. Gregg Mentzer Psychology English Scott R. Buehler Psychology Richard D. Bentz Mathematics Edward L. Corley English Kurt Unterschuetz German Keith O. Nelson English and Afro-American Studies Dennis C. Lawson Political Science Richard Allen Morford Economics Andrew J. Dziubinskyj Biology Kenneth L. Haverstick Psychology Gordon M. Hayes English Lewis R. Voils Fconomics Steven P. Kennedy History ONE SEVENTY | ! q ti q Q los L. Armstead | Political Science i liam P. Rydell Economics Clark W. Johnson Economics John R. Pactor Latin Gilbert Greg Kaske Psychology (2eeesea Russell R. Dart History John S. Brackemyre English John L. Ryder History William A. Pearce Spanish Ted C. Ryder English QDUAIIG PI } Od e|jaweW “{ sewoyL Daniel Holderbav. | Lawrence G. Pottenger B o ogy Thomas Johnson Waugh Biology Smith Biology James R vid. Main ji ONE SEVENTY THREE Stephen F. Blau Re igion Gerald E. Bowman Political Science Long ae = ) 2 ie} [a“a Speech ogy logy Jeffrey M. Krasne | Thomas T. Williams Economics ie) 22 = _— x£ S iz O WY — © WD Zp) © = =i £ e Garrett E. Paul Re igion Eugene C. Kepple Fconomics John L. Brown Religion David G. Kinnett History Dennis W. Myers Philosophy OnomMIcs C. Michael Bartholomew Physics M. Mouse English WePJI}SUVY ] UOFV Timothy J. Shickley Len Tishler Political Science IIUIING [LINO “4{ ‘s8uiuual “g sewoul 4g Victor L. Ransom Polstical Science Samuel |. Kazdan Frg ish ixon H Christopher B Kai J. Chin History John P. Krom Economic. Ronald P. Higgins Political Science Ronald J. Flynn English — i CA aea ne ny SEH He ee History tole) Cc ) = 2 3 o = me) Cc Gary R. Hansen Physics Raymond K. Wore’ Bio ogy ONE SEVENTY EIGHT ONE SEVENTY NINE Woods English « ’ Mae = 2 Q aS 5 (e) ue, ec a Oo Howard L Prgis n M. Kalb Kerry J. Wilson Physics Biology , Julian Bruce A. cence Political § , Stephen J. McDaniel , Biology George A. Koch Economics = = ® 2 fe) [av Harlan, saishyd ‘UOsiyd|z “7 aopoay] Soe trconmamanenriai i aN A80 OYASY Pl2ey “H sluusq ONE EIGHTY ONE JDUIIIE PINN Od ‘Xeydday { ual|V Economics David R. Graham, Terry L. Jackson, English Myron L. Miller, Bio ogy Patrick J. Higgins, Jr., Political Science John W. Archer, Politica English Danny J. Dyer ABO OIY ‘UOWIAC ‘WY Uaydays S -o 0 — ic) ng (= SS fa) (Ss) uw ‘ ass , Psychology fa William B. Hemme German Lawrence W. Phelps ONE EIGHTY TWO MESSAGE LF ee: | Joseph H. Cassell, Economics (Long) Jarold A. Anderson Psychology S é ov o e} O ‘@) iS D dé fel ® 2 Ye) David L And Bonnie Earnhardt Frglish If you can’t find your MUG in this book— then pretend you are HERE! John W. Hubert Chemistry Carl A. Royal History Roscoe Lee Fouts Fconomics Justin K. Fisher Re igion Stuart W. Miller H story Robert G. Bogigian English Paul W. Gearhardt Fconomics “Hersh’”’ Harlan Gregory T. Rasmussen Chemistry English i? William P. Kovacs George Pollitt, Psychology Co Ho Kwok-Kit, Economics Richard S. Holcomb, Psycho ogy ONE EIGHTY SIX peeet eesti ie teeter Tere ae! Steven J. Weliever, Psychology Jeffrey D. Eaton, Biology a John L. Street, Political Science G. Michael Dill, English H. H. Pennock Ill, Political Science Philip R. Boxell, Jr., Economics J. Dean Lammering Biology oa Thomas H. Erickson, History Anthony R. Partee, English Yiannis P. Roubatis, Po itical Science BIUAIIG PIN1 Od ‘8aMO7 APUID puke ‘A jaeydIW a. | R A80 OYASY ‘ Weg “| sowel c wv : O oO Te iS o ia“ Le i?2) o € © = Paul J. Sweeny, Speech Theodore F. Holland III, Biology ONE EIGHTY NINE Chester H. Waters Ill, Chemistry ALE Robert F. Levinson, Psychology Stephen R. Ong, Economics Philp J. Rifner, English | HOTEL p) SIIWIOUOIT Ja}joy “[ UIE Timothy C. Perry, Economics ONE NINETY Allen G. Matthews Psychology me} = o me x) © we LY = Jo Wilson, English 3 = wH = D « uy o uw o _ fo) - oO —_ fo) ke ef Ye q Ni | | Hitt | i | Thomas W. Olds | q | Steven L. Hendricks History | | Economics Frederick M. Stults | Political Science | ONE NINETY TWO John M. Lathrop History Scott T. Baldwin Economics Bruce E. Conant Economics Frederick J. Urbaska French Charles R. Metzler English R. Mark Ramey Joel K. Eichenberger Political Science James M. Kamplain Biology William F. Hausmann, English IDUAIIIG [PINN Od ‘I24ICd “S OS | . Beck Hannafo rd, Political Science I | 1) James T. Bromley, Economics Steven L. Vint, Po itical Science Edward M. Pitkin, Economics John B. Livengood, Political Science William G. Watson, Psychology Timothy E. Pickrell, Political Science Leander A. Fabrizio, English SS o aS) a hol , of the happy days ONE NINETY FOUR % oC, eee iN ee 4, yy when the tribe gathers... . we are finished... ONE NINETY SIX but only to begin ... AGAIN ONE NINETY SEVEN Brammell . OE Czarniecki ‘ abate Ak wt wv WE y ae AMY AAW A ‘ ‘YS ‘ 3 % YA Ny f, . Sten uel YE HEMEH H P| Wh HTH JOUSEI| ONE NINETY EIGHT Thanks to the following: WRITERS Al Matthews Leslie Gerald R. Dreyer Walter L. Fertig Mike Tipton Bruce McGar Bill Davnie ARTISTS Andy Dziubinskyj Yukio Fukunaga Bill Beach Larry Jones Tom Woodrow PHOTOGRAPHERS Ed Wright Craig Johnson Dave Munson Joe Queen Jeff Krasner Bill France Mark Armstrong Kerry Wilson Steve Edgington Steve Brammell Mike Wingart Joe Boswell John Hinshaw Marty Pollack PUBLISHER’S REPRESENTATIVE: Bill Blanck ASSOCIA TE EDITORS Activities—Steve McDaniel Faculty—Fred Creech Housing—Jeff Krasner Dennis Pitts Aesthetic—Anthony Partee LaValle STAFF ARTISTS I PIS TS Donna Muehle Barb Beutel Craig Johnson Cindy Stevens Dave Dike STAFF PHOTOGRAPHERS Tom Buek, Chief Clinton Rigg Jerry Dreyer John Deffenbaugh Joe LaValle Epes : : | gee Sotoh Deffenbaugh ¥ OMAR ACCS AGE OLIN! LL BY IRS = Jim Czarniecki Steve McDaniel GORYEEDITOR, Steve Brammell PHOTOGRAPHY ED TOR Jerry Dreyer ART EDITOR Craig Johnson SPORTS EDITOR Joe LaValle LAYOUT EDITOR John Deffenbaugh BUSINESS MANAGER Mark Feemster EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Jim Czarniecki Feemster 9. EViSon) Eats KosH p PORK K ed Hair for sale CAE od Es eines fia ate en ney A faeces Peep, Pte. g OO —— Ba 6 6S fo rhs J % or v eS @ XS alive tn Os —— ——_——— C = Plans ee pes f “ aX — BoOsTro a i ae 4¢TTINS they Give ot andiawc ste POBILE ROR BS Wo ly { Bl BS EBS GH ES bs Give LS Oe aes = ee a) 4 Steve Bramme | Censored Se Cens “1g A S ae = @) OS Address S Ve Ine eed Ea “a : oS . L EATA wes = x : Clas ir , 14 0g. yivecamp Fes, es = % BY WABASH C@LLEGE GLEE CLUB : =a Sa Veey YON, Ma. NOID XY ae STAFF MHOLE LOoCcUdse UE RRROQK Lamb Chop AYaYe 6Vig a NX Bn ina RG. ac ats NORE m aant Phi Psi Ro 9 oh B eta 14 (Aya Fiji is Phi Delt ¥95 2 Ayorr ardogaaletbath fh avyhick a Sig Lamb Chop 9 Craig Moormann 19 Mates Kamplain 24 Alex Dadant 34 Don Cinotti 8 Bob Smith 3. Ernie Ladd r 10 Don Russell 20 Bob Hutchens 25 Bernie Manker 35 Jim Huffer 9 Stu Miller 4. Polar Bear Matthews 1 Craig May 1 Kahn Dog 11 Mark Jones 21 Reverand Bill Davnie 26 Joe Collings 36 Dick Entz 10 Steve Crowley 5. Larry Walton 2 Terry Cuffinbarger 2 Tank Clark 12 Vince Fragomeni 22 John Gotto 27 John Castineau 37 Mark Humbert 11 Ralph Rohrer 6. Rudy Runau 3 Steve Eshcoff 3 2% Alexander 13 Chris Aul 23 John Hubert 28 Steve Wildman 12 Scott Regan 7. Frank Buerger 4 Porno Myers 4 Reverand Martin 14 Steve Shaber 24 Steve Miller 29 Joe Skozen Beta 13 Pete Olson 8. Mercury Morris 5 Ed Wright 5 Lil’ Trela 15 Gene Keppel 25 Jim Hambidge 30 Pierce Klement 1 Rich McGinni 14 Ed Chapman 9. Niel Allen 6 Rod Kenly 6 Joey Meyers 16 Rich Radtke 26 Dick tlseman 31 Dennis Kepchar illic (Cae an ae 15 Bob Cooper 10. Lowe, John 7 John Feick a Fag O'Leary 17 Dick Bowerman 27 John Crosbie 32 Brian Robertson 3 jim eae 16 Reed Bernie 11. Paul Bisset 8 Rick Weber 8 Boritz Turnbull 18 Bob Getty 28 Aurelian Bukatko Baupaulhvocum 4 Skip Ad pes 17 Sam Kazdan 12. Paul Beerfart 9 Duane Donahue 9 Dick Morford 19 Bill Brown 29 John Tidner 34 Vern Tompkins : nahi ees 18 Rich Mindock 13. T-Bird Martella 10 Phil Gall 10 Kras Krasner 20 Bruce Bohner 30 Carl Snipes asuramiRdd é John T Si 19 George Angelone 14. Steve Flink 11 Shawn Townsend 11 Bill Braun 21 Jim Peters 31 Randy Wamsley 36 John Failey 7 Todd ‘enon 20 Bob Kenan — 15. Kathy 12 Ernie Fitch 12 Wally Wendling 22 Gordon Welles 32 Sam Kirtley 37 Chris Baker 8 Bill Dale 21 Joe Stankovich 16. Rebel Smith 13 White Whale Walsh 13 Smitty 23 John Brachemyre 33 Bruce Julian 38 Mike Doffin oNDaniGrube 22 Dave Worrell 17. D. Falk Boyle 14 Les Howard 14 Tex Mitchell 24 Ben Park 34 Mort Main 39 Jim Hanner OUD Aue IDuReer 23 Kurt Unterschuetz 18. Sticker Dill 15 Rich Meschke 15 Hot Dog Laurent 25 Trey Holland 35 Jack Hillsamer 40 Mike Nickovich 11 Bill Rieetes 24 Chris Lime 19. Brad Goff 16 Birdcock Braddock 16 Head | 26 Steve Tobias 36 Rag Waye 41 Mike Tipton 12 Jeff Burk 25 Tom Quick 20. Ray Roembke 17 Canada Dry lz (Uh Mitchell 27 Tom Robb 37 Tom Maury 42 Kerry Wilson 13 Pete Patchell 26 Al Acton 21. Zavo Zavesky 18 Garby Garbison 18 Denny Pitts 28 Chuck Ott 38 Tom Woodrow 43 Dave Stout 14 Chris Patchell 27 Denny Meyers 22. Lummox Miller 19 Granny Lesh 19 Sle rae 29 John Reynolds 39 Reed simp=0n 44 Ken Ganza 15, Joe Meisberger ee Doug Lennet 23. loon Mules 20 Frug Dewart 20 Bloodwyn Kruder 30 Tony Wolf 40 Gary Griffiths 45 Dan Schmidt 16 Tom Th ike Enyart 24. Outlaw Loehr 21 Charlth Wirth 21 John Laver 31 Gary Swim 41 Brian Sweeney 46 John Bloomfield Cn) UWS 30 Mitch Proctor 25. Steve Culley 22 Kraut German 22 Pinky 32 Mike Merrick 42 Stan Klaehn 47 sein Snyder a pave tee dace 31 Al Thornton 26. Fat Bear Hewitt 23 Rubus Burton 23 Spot Man Butler 33 Bill Betz 43 Mike Craig OMIEe Earn 32 Terry Bushing 27. Fat Eddie Pitkin 24 Tim Shannon 24 H. O. Dockendorf 34 Bill Kunkel 44 Craig Johnson Phi Psi 20 Bob Meier 33 Jim Hand F 28. Bill O'Bryan 25 Hurdle Himmelhaver 25 Bernie Flittner 35 Boyd Skinner 45 Vince Miklusak 21 Bill Bockstahler 34 Charlie Rudesill 29. Hick Weliever 26 Dino Lammering 26 Kent Priebe 36 Jim Benecker 46 Don Weller 1 Al Goodman S 35 Ron Snodgrass 30. Brownie 27 Wimpy Olson 27 Bingo Black 37 Pete Mallers 47 Tom Linton 2 Carl Davis 2 eS 36 Larry Zommick 31. Jack Kramer 28 orion Sharp 28 Grossbomb 38 Joe Queen 48 Butch Conner 3 caren 34 Carl Winkler 37 Bob Praline 32. Brent Lea 29 Grif Griffith 29 Blubbo McGaugney 39 Bob Nyikos 49 Dave Grey 4 . 38 Tom Pulver 33. General Mills 30 Bushman Bush 30 Turkey Rydell 40 Dave Moody 50 Jim Czarniecki 5 Bob Simpson ae ie evoke 39 Gary Baldwin 34. Otto Graham 31 Penniless Bradshaw 31 Taffy Creetch 41 Dave Smith 51 Ray Rhine Peterson 6 Terry Weston 8 40 Bill Schwartz 35. Pot 32 F rt Hansen 32 Jim Brooks 42 Dave Shapiro 52 Dan Whitehead 7 Jeff Hicks 27 Bruce Geubard 41 Steve Nelson 36. Vic DeRose S3ilRook Adams 33 Harvey Rabbit AourorArnat 8 Jared Willets 28 Cliff Williams 42 Bruce Ikawa 37. Marc Henry 34 T t Baker 34 Bob Kamm 44 Doug Freeman Delt 9 Dennis Higgins 29; Bill parc: : 38, Ralph Loftus 35 Hac Cameron 35 Mike Everret 45 Mark Thomey 10 Ron Rogers URSA Aes Apt 39. Mike Eckerle 36 Hugh Conner 36 Rube 46 Barry Keech 1 Marty Schaap Hl Rick Morcum 3 prem Ge 40. Lenny Rker le 37 Paul Bidez 37 Gabby Lempke 47 Jeff Rouze ; phen ire kel car ie A pppeat! 33 Doug Hol Brad pabey 40. mak a 38 Robin Hood 38 Crazyhorse ai Chin 41. Mal Malinowski 39 Su ani Key Clark 39 Gimp Deffenbaugh Si 4 Alex Miller 14 Lynn Thomas 34 Gary Hartman 3 Dave Nakamura 42. Shoes Schiff 40 Kentuck Colonel Carwell 40 W © Schimbecklet Kappa sig 5 Denny Reid 15 R. J. Reed oan 4 Rocket Williams 41 Martin Belcke 41 Gordy Hayes (Jennifer) 1 Marty See 6 Bill Hausman 16 Ben Kessler zopben seo) 5 Jeanidy Archer 42 White Rat Rendel acadieliMeGinle 2 Marshall Akers 7 Bo b Phares 17 Tom Bleau 37 Dan Berning 6 Creature York ite Rat Rende' a ratchet Y 3 Larry Joe Wilson 8 Greg Adams 18 Roger Hurd 38 fire Gould 7 Newel Wikone sa 4 Steve Hunsucker 9 Jim Pursel 19 John Smith doug Given 8 David Campbe a ete 5 reas Marti 10 Ralph Spoilsport 20 Rick Maupin 40 Rich Farnham 9 B. B. Buckmaster In the water: 46 Al Freeman 6 Rich Donovan 11 Tom Dean 21 Mike Bryan es trons Stee 10 1950 Brammell deluxe J. W. Bookwalter 47 $ Blau 7 Greg Crosbie 12 John Lathrop 22 eae Tworkowski a3 Boe Dooney 12 cole Bear Mathews Mark 8 Wayne Hoover 13 Mike Gephart 23 Bill Downs Wintsriss 13 Veda Lowe ak pecuset 48 Jay Laver : one Moll ialierediUeback 24 John Ziegler 44 Phil Smith We one Lowe H iji 10 Terry Gaff 15 Andy Young pit BF ees Did pac etand Fiji 11 dy Barnes 16 Perry Lewis 26 Steve Speth Teke , 16 Robert Taylor Pick Pickerell 1 Gary Elmore 12 Doug Round 17 Mark Randak 27 John Kalb 1 Chris Petruzzi 17 Saki Klein Bobo Bowman Betis ella eked 13 John P. Todd 18 Jeff Eaton 28 Mike Stepp 2 Bob Witzerman 18 Hustler Al Kepchar pene es 14 Mike Burnley 19 Bob Ivancevich 29 Greg Savoldi 3 Bob Wilkins f 4 Bob Hall n Shelbourne 30 Dave Schreiber 4 Dean Weinert Phi Delt Won 20 Don S i e Billy Mreean 5 Skip L 15 Ra 8 T. J. Roe leonard 16 Bill White 21 Chris Hixson 31 Howard Woods 5 Tom Federenko Bill Huff s Gay Leona 17 Wacker Wollenweber 22 Kerry Orrock 32 Mark Rains 6 Keith Isenberg 1. Don Petska Myro Miller 8 john Roses 18 Steve Murphy 23 Don Hudson 33 Ed Witt 7 Frank Ellston 2. Dick Brutus oo ‘7 we ; Se RY COO WT TUL CEERNST at? TiN ROLCETENS (GAC Tet ft ma HCHO a MrT UALLOS LOY yet 1 re we 5 ave re wey if Na) = e Q'Basa’e ® 'Q . oe Cree aes Uaccanae-2 ‘Vg Logs c.f Rees @ nena? a LITT TT 1 rat Ir Prryrir ty Our PARENT PATRONS Mr. and Mrs. Gene Akers Mr. and Mrs. Arthur W. Alexander Dr. and Mrs. Bernard Amsterdam Mr. and Mrs. Warren Baldwin Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Bockstahler Mr. and Mrs. Warren Bohner Mr. and Mrs. Howard Brown Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Brutus Mr. and Mrs. John H. Buehler Dr. and Mrs. Luther C. Carpenter Dr. and Mrs. Alfonse A. Cinotti Dr. and Mrs. Irving Cohen Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Czarniecki Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Edgar L. Engel Dr. and Mrs. Marcus Everett Mr. and Mrs. David A. Feemster Floyd W. Fetter Mr. and Mrs. Don E. Fouts Mr. and Mrs. William Gearhardt Col. and Mrs. Glen W. Goodman Mr. and Mrs. John D. Gould Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Gray Mr. and Mrs. Preston Greene, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Frank T. Jensen Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Johnson - Mr. and Mrs. James A. Julian Mr. and Mrs. George Lyiieg Kinnett Mrs. Sarah P. Kraft Dr. and Mrs. L. Krasner Joel A. Laver _W. Kendall Lee Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Loftus Mr. and Mrs. E. G. -Meisenheimer Mr. and Mrs. Edward S. Melshen Mr. and Mrs. William N. -Mentis Mr. and Mrs. Chester I. Miller S al and Martha Mitchell. Leonard and Helen Mitchell ‘Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Murphy Dr. and Mrs. John L. Ott Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert H. Paul a Mr. and Mrs. Harold Petit Mr. and Mrs. William W. Phelps Mr. and Mrs. Jerry J. Queen Mr. and Mrs. Victor L. Ransom Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Roudebush Mr. and Mrs. Geoffrey P. Sanders Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Santello Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Schreiber A. Leon Smith Mr. and Mrs. Brayton R. Tompkins Mr. and Mrs. James M. Van Deursen Mrs. Chester H. Waters, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. William Weinert Mr. and Mrs. Donald H. Weliever Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Weston Mr. and Mrs. James F. Wilkins Mrs. Naomi Williams we appreciate their kind support! Jeff’s Cycle Sales Sales Service New Used Bikes Parts Accessories Crna — ty. ae Locally owned and operated by Jeff Larkin en as a 506 Lafayette Ave. 362-5603 Yamaha—Hodaka —COMPLIMENTS OF— TED TOM’S RESTAURANT COCKTAILS STEAKS SEAFOODS 303 EAST TILLMAN ROAD FORT WAYNE, INDIANA BOB ESHCOFF The 7000-plus WABASH ALUMNI WELCOME The Class Of 1971 To The National Association of Wabash Men DAVID’S PLUMBING SERVICE SALES SERV IGE CONTRACTING wAIVdS ONINAVd JIdWY,, SCALESUS FOR ALL YOUR PLUMBING HEATING NEEDS” ALALYVA JOYVI “AAV JLLIAVAV1 709 JAYOLS YONOIT S.NOSIAIIG 130 WEST MAIN OFFICE 362-4603 HOME 362-2721 Compliments of HERMAN DAVIS, INC. EDWARD VANTINE Chevrolet STUDIOS, INC. Originators of Fraternity Composite Service Cadillac me OLN COMI Shee IT'S COMPOSITE TIME, Authorized THINK OF VANTINE Sales and Service 220 South Washington 362-2840 hia Grey ONE HOUR SERVICE ‘Take Pride In Your Cleaning ... We Do.” Clothes especially for the collegian at the ALTERATIONS WATERPROOFING | DRAPERIES SLIP COVERS QUIRE SHOP Sunkist ONE HOUR CLEANERS HOURS MON-WED 8:30-7:00 | THURSDAY FRI 8:30-8:00 SAT 8:30-6:00 210 East Main DiAls 362-0165 BLVD MALL SHOPPING CENTER TV in All Rooms LIVEFAS EIT ESAg; THE RIVIERA MOTEL THE DAIRY QUEEN 1 BLOCK SOUTH OF JUNCTION 47 and 32 BY THE MALL U.S. 231-43 SOUTH By The Mall WE APPRECIATE OUR 362-9925 “LITTLE GIANT” CUSTOMERS Willis and Golda Michael Bill Mickey Sikes Compliments of SCHLOOT FURNITURE COMPANY NYE BOOE DRUG CO. CLEMENTS ROSCHER core INSURANCE REAL ESTATE 362-2100 Walgreen Agency Drug Store EST.1887 111 North Washington Crawfordsville CRAWFORDSVILLE, INDIANA 47933 118 EAST MAIN ST. Until 9 P.M. Weekdays Noon Sundays LONG S MARKET “HOME OF CRAWFORDSVILLE’S BETTER MEATS” 201 West Main Street Crawfordsville, Indiana Phone 362-2508 PRESCRIPTIONS Kurfees Paints —HOURS— Phone 362-6900 “ Fates CAE ST, Aaa ad re eeh ae ie Lia Na ae IF | CAN’T HAVE SHOES FROM MILLER’S I'LL GO BAREFOOT B00Ks The Beck Store see 105 N. WASHINGTON ST. AG A 362-0906 CRAWFORDSVILLE, IND. 47933 —BOOKS — GHOOMSUPELIES —STATIONERY —GREETING CAR DS —RECORDS 105 N. Washington Street 362-0906 flswete bY dale DR. C. 0. HAFFNER Optometrist Smartly styled flowers for all occasions “THE COLLEGE MAN’S FLORIST’ 126 South Green Street Crawfordsville 362-4705 123 S. Green St.—Across from the Strand 362-5503 NEW YORK SHOE REPAIR NEW YORK BARGAIN CENTER 205 East Main 362-0194 Featuring: e@ Shoe Repairing @ Camping Equipment © Work Shoes e@ Winter Coats and Boots e@ Army Surplus @ Sunglasses Compliments of Bice MBER COD ING. INDIANAPOLIS ROAD 262-6940 New Market Lumber Co. Compliments of SPORTSMAN’S SHOP INC. 126 East Main Street Phone 362-1907 Featuring the finest names in— e ATHLETIC EQUIPMENT © PHOTOGRAPHIC EQUIPMENT @MEN’S LADIES SPORTSWEAR eTOY and HOBBY DEPARTMENT ‘ anaes as SS Bn LAFA YETTE RADIO ELECTR ONICS Acromancoperey rey Seat} CRAWFORDSVILLE, IND. UUUY Crawfordsville 122 S. WASHINGTON ST. CRAWFORDSVILLE, INDIANA 47933 DR. C. F. SCHROEDER Optometrist Lenses Duplicated Same Day Contact Lenses 211-13—Ben-Hur Building Phone 362-3209 RGERS| : ¥. i - -_ Community Cable 362-6161 Corporation ELAM’S PAINT POT WALLPAPER Wholesale - Retail MASURY IS GOOD PAINT 121 South Green Across from the Strand Crawfordsville, Indiana 362-4706 —COMPLETE SERVICE— 127 West Market Street Crawfordsville FOR 26 YEARS BOB SOSBE’S CONOCO SERVICE Phones 362-9953 362-3607 Member FDIC Compliments of ATHENS CITY DAIRY Distributors of BORDENS DAIRY PRODUCTS 106 110 North Pine Street Phone 362-2440 Crawfordsville, Indiana ELSTON BANK TRUST COMPANY CRAWFORDSVILLE, INDIANA 5 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS INCLUDING WAYNETOWN WAVELAND —COMPLIMENTS OF— JEWELERS Congratulate the 1971 Graduates of Wabash College Plumbing—Heating Repairs and Service KRUG PLUMBING CO. 106 East Market Street Shop Hillman’s Phone 362-6840 There’s NO Comparison CRAWFORDSVILLE, INDIANA ®DIAMONDS @ WATCHES ® CHINA ® CRYSTAL @ SILVER @ ELECTRONICS @ APPLIANCES ® LUGGAGE e¢@ GIFTS e SCHOOL and FRATERNAL JEWELRY YOUR CHARGE IS WELCOME PERRY LEWIS COMPANY, IN¢. G. T. DILLMAN SONS 118 West Market Street FORD MERCURY “THE HOUSE OF SERVICE SINCE 1890”’ Sales and Service The Big Ford Lot HARDWARE DEPARTMENT STORE 210 North Walnut Street 362-4800 OVER 60,000 ITEMS Crawfordsville, Indiana FOR A WORLD-DEMANDING KNOWLEDGE a é ff THE WORLDS LARGEST PRINTER THE MONTGOMERY SAVINGS ASSOCIATION 122 EAST MAIN STREET CRAWFORDSVILLE, INDIANA 47933 —— KOSTANZER ELECTRIC 121 S. WASHINGTON ST.,— CRAWFORDSVILLE, IND. 47833 PHONE 362-5900 CONGRATULATIONS! to the MEN of the CLASS of 1971 A.R. A. SLATER CO. Compliments of BANK CIGAR STORE, INC. 218 East Main Street THE SHORTEST DISTANCE Phone 362-5703 BETWEEN TWO POINTS . . ... 1S not necessarily a straight line! Compliments of CRAWFORD CAFE Crawfordsville Especially if one point is Wabash Col- lege and the other is home or some vacation spot. Let AAA show you how to get from here to there. We’re the country’s top travel experts. If you’re on a tight budget, our counselors— Barbara, Alice and Joyce—can help you get the most for every dollar. Just drop in or call Hoosier Motor Club. 362-3433 105 N. GREEN ST. CRAWFORDSVILLE, INDIANA 47933 ‘Serving the Community tor 67 Years” 208 East Main Street Phone 362-6607 Crawfordsville APPLE GROVE RESTAURANT FINEST FOODS COOKED HOOSIER STYLE 362-1442 Weimer Typesetting Co.,Inc. Indianapolis, Indiana Dance Party Decorations and Supplies Paper Plates, Cups, Napkins and Tablecovers for Large or Small Parties Scarlet Napkins Tablecovers Rental Service on Glass Punch Bowls— Cups—Plates—Coffee Urns, Centerpieces alle JEAUKING SialOue 1 Mile North on Lafayette Rd. Phone 362-2990 Crawfordsville, Indiana GENERAL LEW WALLACE MOTOR INN FEATURING IT’S NEW LOUNGE “THE GENERAL’S HEADQUARTERS” THE ULTIMATE IN COMFORT AND HOSPITALITY 1 2 BLOCK FROM CAMPUS (317) 362-8400 CRAWFORDSVILLE LIQUOR STORE 206 EAST MARKET STREET 362-3605 FINE LIQUORS AND WINES COLD BEER The FIRST ffs} NATIONAL BANK AND TRUST COMPANY OF CRAWFORDSVILLE BRANCHES LADOGA—NEW MARKET—WINGATE y om TOWN EDGE ad MOTORS, in CALL HIGHWAY 47 HIGHWAY 32. 1401 DARLINGTON AVE. U.S, 136- MARKET ST, OFFICIAL AUTO TRUCK INSPECTION STATION C. z= 362-5440 ‘‘Home of Traditional (317) 639-3351 Clothing’ WILDMAN, NEAL AND DEBOLT 707 MERCHANTS BANK BUILDING INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA JERRY NEAL CRAWFORDSVILLE PAINT AND WALL PAPER STORE @ PAINTS @ WALLPAPER @ PICTURE FRAMING @ ART SUPPLIES The Corner of Main Green 362-1500 ‘‘The Corner Store’ GEORGE'S PIZZA VARIETIES OF STEAKS PIZZAS CARRY OUT DELIVERY 362-2615 Ne “i BEAUTYREST MATTRESSES AIR CONDITIONED PHONE IN EVERY ROOM CERAMIC TILE SWIMMING POOL OPEN 24 HRS. A DAY 7 DAYS A WEEK Every room has a Private Bath with Tub CHECKS AND MONEY ORDERS CASHED and Shower “ALWAYS THERE WHEN YOU NEED US” —22 MODERN ROOMS— Yy Mile East on Indianapolis Rd. 362-5740 )))) BRIDGING THE GAP (CCC with 1,000 watts of community generated power alt eo a o eve WNDY 106.3 FM ae COMMUNITY COMMUNITY Long Hair?¢— No Hassle! ENJOY A REAL TREAT... Call Russ Harris for Featuring Col. Harland Sander’s Original Recipe renee Kentucky Fried Chicken ees It’s Finger Lickin’ Good! A Kentucky ially trained for styling long hair FreniGhi aie specially trained for styling long 10 miles west of campus in Waynetown Ph. 234-2561 CONGRATULATIONS! THE SHERWIN WILLIAMS PAINT CO. BRE, © Class of '71 115 North Washington Street To The CRAWFORDSVILLE, INDIANA Your A f Quality in Pai ae .« wae- GOOD LUCK our Assurance of Qua ity In Paint sy = N i IN THE for Home and Industry m eis . REAL | ™ 3 WORLD! PHONE 362-0604 - smote A cen ctengtins Ie = cme oUt coy Dt we a - eee a OD “WR we —-s Wessa ey que —_ . = SN ag eterna’ 2 wali Y Moar foo vA ) STUDIOS AND PLANTS: 6 Hannibal, Mo. Cambridge, Md. Topeka, Kan. Visalia, Calif. AMERICAN YEARBOOK COMPANY Bill Blanck, Representative Box 463 Crawfordsville, Ind. Phone 866-0077 . . ramblings in the wee hours . . . my apologies to Tony Partee and Jim Kamplain who didn’t get the senior picture they wanted . . . and to Howard L. Irish, Jr., and to Thomas G. Runge, and to Peter F. Toft, who didn’t get any senior picture . . . senior pictures—not a bad idea—whose idea was that, an yway? ... Whose idea was this yearbook, anyway? . . . Ideas. We had have will have lots of them... ideas, hmmm... Wabash is kind of an idea . . . what “‘is’” Wabash, anyway? . . . an- cient serenity known to all Wabash alums . . . shaken now and then not only by the ‘“Waaaa-bash Man” and his Saturday afternoon case of PBR . . . but also by the Jesushaired man in bell bottoms and work shirt toting his supply of grass from God-knows-where . . . and so-forth . . . Wabash is coming to appreciate more than just one lifestyle . . . well, tolerate, anyway . . . Where’s it all at? The youth culture, the GREAT youth culture, seems to be grinding to a halt . . . the shouts yells cries talk grunts whispers of youth seem to be gagged by . . . whom? Nixonagnew? No, we're just a little more relaxed, a little bit easy .. . but. . . yes, BUT! we’re here and we’re doing something about it. (Don’t just do something . . .) This book—trying to show something of where it’s at . . . so what about this book anyway? . . . What does it do? . . . the old gray coat-and-tie-and-stand-in- a-line is missing . . . so are some of the other journalistic niceties . . . we tried to capture in this book something that is actually YOU—if not your face, at least something that you can relate to ... that’s what Wabash “is”: you and what relates to you. Our idea wasn’t a new one—it’s just the first time it’s been tried . . . our staff wasn’t at all experienced—recruiting experience is difficult on a campus where yearbooking has been dead for three years . . . what we lacked in technical knowl- edge, we made up for in enthusiasm . . . upon the results you may pass judgment. We believe this book is a part of an evolution among college yearbooks, an evolution towards individuality and relevance . . . like the minds of those people for whom this book is intended . . . But, of the present —it only introduces the future: I look for a much better book to be produced by the 1972 Wabash staff—all of whom worked hard on this book . . . but they'll need your backing and encourage- ment, I can only wish them luck. Good God! It’s 4 am. . . Goodnight, everybody. MJC III seve ens ee SSIES SR es y MY CLASSMATE EAGUE MY COLL _ oO ww OV 7 Ov bh OV r — be —= = fe) 20 c 1 fa) oF joa) ae 1S) c fa) eH ise = = ahead (4) A. ...some may equal, but none shall excell a”, TWO TWENTY FOUR usa we } | | ata Na Ot EEE Sa RM ED Ha SP SN cere RA ate aL a OE IIR TO wit te conddhdn i. Unrest DEALERS odds aw ees aes iit haart OU hye Cans vb os BES Pattee aie 2S ee Aap
”
1967
1968
1970
1972
1973
1983
Find and Search Yearbooks Online Today!
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES
GENEALOGY ARCHIVE
REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.