Coe College - Acorn Yearbook (Cedar Rapids, IA)

 - Class of 1965

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Coe College - Acorn Yearbook (Cedar Rapids, IA) online collection, 1965 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 232 of the 1965 volume:

£hl ALLEN COUNTY PUBLIC LIBRAR 3 1833 01860 9732 (;( 977.702 C32CO, 1965 y THE 1965 ACORN COE COLLEGE CEDAR RAPIDS, lO VA EDITORS KAREN KRISAC • MARY UNA HEAD ■€:  ■ ■- ;« 4. -T? a COE COLLEGE 185 1 m - w ««« B|| t« !g PM ' s?«at: v:h . --; ' - Wi 4 -. ' h te m a r . - V Jk ' fv .? ,c«; MK -r v -:- STE ' WART MEMORIAL LIBRARY ... To the sacred halls of ivy every voice will bid farewell . . . 1 j i • ' -- . H Q ! ■ %.. mam i m ' ' i- |f k ,v -H N ' t. - ' ' ' V ? ! ' Sl % :-- r . 4 ' 9 0 i • _ : ■X- 9 t . = . iiii i ff U HICKOK HALL . . . and shimmer off in twilight like the old vesper bell . . . iij .. GREENE HALL . . . One day a hush will fall; the footsteps of us all . . . m . t ■ p. 1 1 P Br- -- ' - 1 ! i Jl r I f r ! I ! r r m ' ■ ■ f r ! f r r p. r i r r r r r !«■ i aeBdil i s fe. l ' 1 ' ' I •-. i.y; ' . ' i ' WILLISTON HALL - ' • ... will echo down the hall and disaooear J f ' and as we sadly start ... • v A ■ y- ' ?t PIH ■■■jMH pvnraH ■ H I HI m . ,rig ajfal1 _- ,«a - j t. u rr ■ I II ' : .v ' ._ c £ 5 ■MHi Pf N iJfr:. ' ir: VOORHEES HALL ... our journeys far apart, a part of every heart will linger near . . . •;;v. «;,. , . • 1 - 1 1 Si - J ■ !l ■ r I if I W ; srj! : S ' ' ' rj-JtT ■■ 5j1 ; ' ' ■ ' 3 ' -ji N ' , yjgj (S ' - ' Wl m SCIENCE HALL . ... In the hallowed halls of ivy where we ' ve lived and learned to know . . . 1 m 1 1 W - dlMMt ' . N ' ' ' a« « . .a ■altars nm ft WKrSH  u q WKrw  x« wmsmxt iimt. mm ' •ms mmvwm  ■«• ««« '  «  • ' wm- fmmy Tt  MARQUIS HALL . . . that through the years we ' ll see you in the sweet after-glow. T i| c in Ill w fl (1 fl i T.U.B. TO RAISE WE RAZE P.U.B. 20 TABLE OF CONTENTS Administration and Faculty 24 Seniors — Class of 1965 38 Activities 58 Features 86 Underclass 100 Organizations 136 Sports 178 Commencement 208 21 22 DEDICATION Dr. Howard S. Greenlee, a native of Illinois, received his Bachelor of Arts, Master of Arts, and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Chicago. He taught in the Wood- stock public schools before serving as an ordinance instructor in the Navy ' s Midship- man ' s school at Northwestern University. From 1950-1955 Dr. Greenlee served on the staff of Simpson College at Indianola. During the last years at Simpson he was named an associate professor of history and chairman of the social studies division of the college. Dr. Greenlee left Simpson to accept a position as associate dean at South- western University at Georgetown, Texas, for one year. In 1956 he became dean of the college at Park College at Parkville, Missouri. Dr. Greenlee has served as dean and professor of history at Coe since 1958. He has been the recipient of a Carnegie Corporation Administrator ' s Travel Grant and a Ford Foundation Faculty Fellowship, which enabled him to study at Columbia University and Union Theological Seminary in New York. This September he will become professor of history at Tuskegee Insti- tute at Tuskegee, Alabama. During his years at Coe, Dr. Greenlee has been instrumental in initiating various academic programs. He has demonstrated a constant interest in the welfare of the col- lege. In sincere appreciation for his dedication to Coe, the 1965 ACORN is dedicated to Dr. Greenlee. 23 24 ADMINISTRATION CLARK ANTES Director of Public Relations MELVIN J. COLLINS Associate Director of Admissions JAMES M. DRISCOLL Assistant Director of Admissions BETTY FISHER RICHARD L. GARNER R. S. GATES HOWARD S. GREENLEE Circulation Librarian Assistant to Dean Vice President Dean of tfie College of College for Development 25 RICHARD S. HENRY Director of Challenge Campaign ROBERT E. HEYWOOD Business IVlanager CARL KANE Director of News Service ALICE KIRWIN Director of Coe Growth HARRIS A. LAMB Director of Alumni Affairs MILDRED LORENC College Nurse RICHARD P. MACKEY Assistant Director of Admissions NANCY REINECKE Administrative Assistant of Admissions EUGENE C. SLACK Director of Physical Plant and Purchasing JAMES M, TISDALE Assistant Director Coe Challenge Campaign r .. - ' % A 27 FACULTY ALEXEY ALMASOV ROBERT ARNSPIGER CHARLES ATKINS CARL BABCOCK Assistant Professor Assistant Professor Instructor Instructor in of Foreign Languages of Teacher Education in Biology Physical Education M.A. B.A., M.Ed. B.A., M.S. B.A., M.A. SHEILA BLANCHARD Instr uctor in Er iglish B.A., , M.A. CHARLES CANNON Associate Professor of English B.A., M.A., Ph.D. DUANE CARR ssistant Professor of Chemistry B.A., Ph.D. JAMES CARRITHERS Professor of Business Administration and Economics B.A., M.S., C.P.A., Ph.D. 28 0 m ASUNDA CASTAGNA HUBERT J. CHARON SUSAN BETH Assistant Professor Lt, Colonel, USAF CHRISTIANSEN of Foreign Languages Professor of Instructor B.A., M.A. Aerospace Studies in Mathematics B.S. B.A.. M.S. IRVING CHURCHILL KENNETH COOK GLENN DRAHN ROBERT DREXLER Professor Associate Professor Associate Professor Professor of Biology of English of Biology of Physical Education, B.S., M.S., Ph.D. B.S., M.A., Ph.D. B.S., M.S., Ph.D. Director of Athletics B.S., M.A. LYNN ENGDHAL Instructor in Speech B.A., M.A. VERONIKA ENGLEHARDT-GRIMM Assistant Professor of Psychology B.A., Ph.D. MARY ALICE ERICSON Professor of Sociology M.A., M.A., Ph.D. 29 SIGNI FALK Associate Professor of English B.A., M.A., Ph.D. LEONARD D. DAVID GOBERT FLANSBURG Associate Professor Assistant Professor of Romance Languages of Physics B.A., M.A., Ph.D. B.S., IVI.S. KARL GOELLNER Professor of Biology B.A., M.S., Ph.D. JIM GRIMM Assistant Professor of Business Administration B.A., M.B.A. CHARLES HAMILTON Professor of Psychology B.A., M.A., Ph.D. PASCAL HANCOCK Captain, USAF Assista nt Professor of Aerospace Studies B.S. HOWARD HIGHTOWER Associate Professor of Teacher Education B.S., M.S., Ed M. ALBERT HUETTEMAN Assistant Professor of Music B.M., M.F.A. NORIMOTO UNO Visiting Professor Non-Western Studies Ph.D. 30 DENNIS JONES Instructor in English B.A., M.A. DEAN KARNS Assistant Professor of Matfiematics B.S., M.A. JOSEPH KASPER Professor of Physics B.A., Ph.D. BURTON KENDLE JEAN KERN DONALD KING ROBERT KOCHER Assistant Professor Assistant Professor Assistant Professor Associate Professor of English of English of Physical Education of Art B.A.. M.A., Ph.D. B.A., M.A., Ph.D. B.A., M.A. B.A., M.A. JAMES LARKIN Assistant Professor of Spanish B.S., M.A. GENEVIEVE VERNON LICHTENSTEIN LICHTENSTEIN Instructor in Professor of English Physical Education B.A., M.A., Ph.D. B.S. 31 CHARLES LINDSAY Assistant Professor of Mathematics B.S., IVl.S. GERTRUDE LIPPISCH Instructor in Foreign Language DONALD LISIO Assistant Professor of History B.A., IVl.A., Ph.D. PRINCE D. McCLOUD Sergeant, USAF AFROTC Air Science ALFRED MEYER Professor of Physics Emeritus FRED MOYER Instructor in Physical Education B.S. EILEEN MULLEN Part-time Instructor in Physical Education B.S., M.S. JOHN MURRAY Professor of History B.A., M.A., Ph.D., F.R.H.S. RUSSELL NASH Assistant Professor of Sociology B.A., M.A. 32 DONALD NICHOLS JOHN NICHOLS GORDON OHLSSON Captain, USAF Assistant Professor Professor of Music Assistant Professor of of Economics B.A., B.M., Ph.D. Aerospace Studies B.A., M.A., Ph.D. B.S. THOMAS OLSHEWSKY Assistant Professor of Philosophy, A.B., B.D.. Ph.D. HOWARD PARSONS Professor of Philosophy, B.A., Ph.D. SEBASTIANO PATANE Sergeant, USAF Instructor, USAF FRANK PENNINGTON Professor of Chemistry B.A-, Ph.D. GEORGE POWELL RICHARD PUTNEY PAUL SCHUMANN RAY Associate Professor Assistant Professor Professor of Voice of Economics of Psychology B A. B.A., M.A., Ph.D. B.A., M.A. 33 ROBERT REINECKE Instructor in Speech and Theatre, B.A. ROBERT REHK Instructor in Englis B.A., M.A. JEANNETTE RI NGLAND Associate Professor of Speech and Dramatics B.A., M.A. ALBERT SCHMIDT Associate Professor of History B.A., M.A., Ph.D. DONALD SEABERG Sergeant, USAF AFROTC EDWIN SETTLE Professor of Religion and Philosophy B.A., Ph.D. RUTH SIEMER Assistant Professor of Biology B.A., M.A., Ph.D. PAUL SMITH Assistant Professor in Physics B.A., M.A., Ph.D. RICHARD SPENCER Professor of Political Science B.A., M.A., Ph.D. NORMAN STAFFORD Director of Bands, Assistant Professor of Music, B.A., M.M. 34 ELEANOR TAYLOR RICHARD TAYLOR ALMA TURECHEK SUSAN TURNER Associate Professor Professor of Professor of Piano Instructor in French of Organ, Theory, and Political Science and Music Theory B.A., M.A. Piano, B.A., B,M., M.A. B.A., M.A., Ph.D. B.M., M.A. JOHN WALKER College Chaplain and Assistant Professor of Religion and Philosophy B.A., B.D., M.A. STANLEY WATKINS Associate Professor of Chemistry, B.S., Ph.D. HERBERT WIESE Professor of German B.A., M.A., Ph.D. • A DEAN YARWOOD Assistant Professor of Political Science B.A., M.A. RUTH ZIKA Associate Professor in Physical Education, B.A. 35 PERSONNEL RICHARD ABSHIRE Supervisor Of Custodial Services y MARGUERITE BURKE Secretary to the Dean imi DOROTHY DUKES Secretary Placement Office MYRTLE ENTSMINGER Resident Director of Salter House W. TED FIEBIGER Manager Saga Food Service MARY GOUDY Secretary Music Department VIRGINIA HOLMES Secretary to Alumni Director NORINE HOWELLS Administrative Assistant to Registrar 36 ARTHUR E. MEFFERD Director of Maintenance ' ■:::7 «fc DARLEINE NEAGLE Secretary to Business IVIanager JANET NISLEY Secretary to Vice President for Development INEZ PARKER Resident Director Freslnman Hall NADENE ROBERTS Secretary to Associate Dean VELVA SCOTT Resident Director Greene Hall HELEN VAN AUKEN Resident Director Voorhees Hall 37 19 6 5 COE COLLEGE CEDAR RAPIDS enwM 38 JAMES ALFINI St. Charles, III.; Major French; Alpha Sigma Phi. KAREN ANDERSON Shakopee, Minn.; Major: Biology; Kappa Delta; Cres- cent; Freshman Tenth; Voo r- hees Counselor; Voorhees House Council; Catalinas; ACM Field Station; WAA, YWCA, Y-Cluer. KENNETH A. BALLOU Rochester, New York; Major: History; Lambda Chi Alpha, Treas., Rush Chr.; Swim- ming; Clan of C; Acorn Staff, Co-Business Mgr.; SNEA. FT ERIC BAUGH Amityville, New York; Major: Biology; Lambda Chi Alpha; Student Encampment Comm.; ROA; AFROTC Com- mander; Greene Counselor. . Ik STEPHEN BELLIS Cedar Falls, Iowa; Major: General Science; Bryant Scholar; Football; Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Kappa Phi; Tau Kappa Epsilon: Magna Cum Laude. RONALD BEERMANN West Union, Iowa; Major: Physical Education; Sigma Nu; Dept. Ass ' t., Phys. Ed.; Football; Clan of C. NORMAN J. BEU Elgin, Illinois; Major: Psy- chology; Phi Kappa Tau, Vice-Pres.; Choir, Student- Faculty Committee; AFROTC, ROA; Homecoming Chairman; Student Council Parliamentarian, Student Encampment, COSMOS. RONALD BOWERS Toddville. Iowa; Major: Busi- ness Administration. ROBERT BRIZZOLARA Chicago, Illinois; Major: Business Administration; Phi Kappa Tau; Sachem; Dept. Ass ' t., Business; Foot- ball; Clan of C; COSMOS, Business Manager; Cum Laude. JUDY BROCKWAY Des Moines, Iowa; Major: History, Sociology; Kappa Delta Sorority; Sociology Club, Pres.; Young Republi- cans; ACORN Beauty — 1st Attend.; WAA; SNEA; YWCA, Soc. Chr., Group Work; WAA. 39 PERRY L. BROWN Estherville, Iowa; Major: Mathematics, Economics; Sigma Nu, Pres.: Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Kappa Phi; Sachem, Pres.; Freshman Tenth: Student Encamp- ment, Chr.; Intercom; Home- coming Committee; IVlath Club, Pres.; Business Club; Band; IPC; Outstanding Sen- ior Man; Who ' s Who; Magna Cum Laude. TERRY BUNGE Lowden, Iowa; Major; Eco- nomics; Lambda Chi Alpha; Baseball; Basketball; Clan of C; Business Club; Student Encampment; Pi Delta Epsi- lon. Pres.; COSMOS, Ass ' t, Editor; SNEA, Pres.; IPC. ROBERT BRUCKNER Franklin Park, Illinois; Ma- jor; Business Administra- tion; Tau Kappa Epsilon, Vice-Pres.; Track; Tennis; Football; Clan of C; Vice- Pres. of Jr. Class; Business Club; Psychology Club, Pres.; Student Council; ROA; IFC. SUSAN BRYANT Lake Bluff, Illinois; Major; Physical Education; Alpha Xi Delta; Student Council; Cheerleader; Catalinas; Sig- lympics Queen: TKE Sleepy Time Gal; Homecoming Queen Atte n da n t ;- WAA ; AWS; YWCA, Y-Cluer: Fresh- man Hall Counselor. CAROL CARLSON Chicago, ML; Major; Eng- lish; Kappa Delta: Voorhees House Council, Sec; ACORN Ass ' t. Organization Ed., Sen- ior Ed.; WAA; AWS; YWCA: NWC. JOHN CARLSON Davenport, Iowa; Major: English; Alpha Sigma Phi. Corres. Sec, Sec, Rush Chr., Social Chr.; Young Republi- cans, Co-Pres.; Band; ROTC Band; Choir; SNEA, Vice- Pres.; American Chemical Society k CAROLINE CARRITHERS Cedar Rapids, Iowa; Major ' English; Magna Cum Laude JOHN P. CASEY, JR. Clarkson Nebr.; Major; Phi- losophy; Student Council, Pres.: Pi Kappa Delta, Pres.; Sachem; Forensics; Oak Oration; Intercom; Student Encampment; Dept. Ass ' t., Philosophy; Young Demo- ' crat; Who ' s Who; Cum Laude. DENNIS CHRISTENSEN Palatine, III.; Major; Polit- ical Science; Sigma Nu; Basketball; Business Club, JUDY CHRISTIANSEN Ringsted, Iowa; Major; So- ciology; Kappa Delta: Dept. Ass ' t., Sociology; Sociology Club; Young Republicans, Sec.-Treas.; Homecoming Committee; SNEA; WAA; YWCA. MICHAEL COLLIS Des Moines, Iowa; Major: Physical Education; Sigma Nu; Track; Basketball; Clan of C, LARRY J, COPPOLA Des Moines, Iowa; Major: General Science; Tau Kappa Epsilon; Wrestling. JANET CRAIG Glenview, III. Major: Eng- lish; Chi Omega; Pi Kappa Delta; Student Council; Crescent; Dept. Ass ' t. Eng- lish; Coe Players; SNEA; WAA; YWCA; Phi Beta Kappa; Magna Cum Laude. RICHARD CRAWFORD Tama, Iowa; Major: Busi- ness Administration; Bas- ketball, ROBERT S. CROWE West Union, Iowa; Major: Business Administration; Sigma Nu; Student Council, Treas.; Football; Clan of C; Business Club, Sec. -Treas.; Dept. Ass ' t., Business Ad- ministration. WILLIAM DAVIS Cedar Rapids, Iowa; Major: Business Administration. DONALD DECKER Libertyville,, III.; Major; Business Administration; Alpha Sigma Phi, Pres.; Senior Gift Committee; ROA; AFROTC, Group Com- mander; IPC. PEGGY DEEMS Minneapolis, Minn.; Major: Sociology; Alpha Gamma Delta, Vice-Pres., Social Chr.; Delta Chi Beta, Pres.; Catalinas, Vice-Pres.; Home- coming Committee, Publi- city Chr.; Sociology Club; YWCA, Y-Cluer; AWS; WAA; NWC. DONALD DEMPSEY Clinton, Iowa; Major; His- tory; Lambda Chi Alpha; Christian Council, Pres,; Baseball; Clan of C; Sum- mer Service Projects, Puerto Rico, Arizona; Freshman Hall Counselor; IFC, Sec- Treas. DAVID C. DEUBEN Des Moines, Iowa; Major: English; Lambda Chi Alpha, Social Chr. 41 JANE DICKINSON Stillwater, Minn.; Major: Art; Delta Delta Delta; Washing- ton Term; Homecoming Committee; ACORN, Copy Ed.; Art Guild; ' ACORN Beauty Candidate; AWS, Publicity Chr.; WAA; YWCA. JERRY DIETZ Minneapolis, Minn.; Major: Business Administration; Sigma Nu, Treas.; Business Club. JOAN M. DRISCOLL Arlington Heigtits, III.; Ma- jor; English; 1963 Summer Seivice Project, Puerto Rico: SNEA; YWCA, Group Work. RUDY DROST Chicago, III.; Major: History; Sigma Nu; Football; Track; Clan of C; Dept. Ass ' t., History; German Club; Freshman Tenth; G.E. Col- lege Bowl; Sachem; SNEA; ISEA; Who ' s Who; Cum Laude. si uttf W JON DUERR St. Charles, III.; Major; Bi- ology; Biology Club, Pres.; Track; Freshman Hall Coun- selor. CAROLYN DUNCAN Libertyville, III.; Major: Physical Education; Delta Delta Delta, Vice-Pres., Pledge Trainer; Student En- campitient; Freshman Hall Counselor; Summer Service Project; YWCA; WAA; AWS; NWC; Senior Gift Commit- tee. CHERE ECKERLEBE Bettendorf, la.; Major: Phys- ical Education; Alpha Xi Delta, Rush Chr., Vice Pres., Pres; Homecoming Chr. ' 64; Student Council; Student Encampment; AWS; YWCA; WAA In tramura Is Chr.; Voorhees Counselor. KENNETH EHRENSAFT Skokie, III.; Major: Art. So- ciology; Alpha Sigma Phi, Pres.; Cross-country; Track; Clan of C; IFC, Sec. -Treas.; KCOE. THOMAS EISEMAN Skokie, III.; Major: Mattre- matics; Math Club; Football; Track. ROSELLA ELVIDGE Cedar Rapids, la.; Major; Physical Education. GUITY ENGDAHL Cedar Rapids, la.; Major; PHILLIP ENSLEY Scarsdale, N. Y,; Major; Bi- ology; Lambda Chi Alpha. T-: ?- 0e:T TERRY ERICKSON Morton Grove, III.; Major: Busin ess Administration; Phi Kappa Tau, Pres.; Ten- nis; Golf; Football; Clan of C; Business Club; COSMOS, Sports Ed.; IFC, Pres. GEORGE F ESSLINGER, JR. Narberth. Pa.; Major; Soci- ology, Business Administra- tion; Alpha Sigma Phi, Treas.; Sociology Club, Vice- Pres.; AFROTC; ROA; IFC; KCOE. ELLIS RONALD EVANS Libertyville, III.; Major: Physical Education; Alpha Sigma Phi; Dept. Ass ' t., Phys. Ed.; Student Council; Basketball; Golf; Clan of C, Sec Treas.; Religion in Life Committee; Young Demo- crats; President ' s Commit- tee on Student Encamp- ment; Tri-Delt Heart Throb, Spanish Club; AFROTC; ROA, KCOE D.J. GAYLE EWINGER Brookfield, ML; Major; Eng- lish; Alpha Gamma Delta; Delta Chi Beta; Catalinas; Voorhees House Council; Christian Council; AWS; YWCA; WAA; SNEA. ROBERT FORMANEK Mt. Pleasant, la.; Major: Chemistry; Sigma Nu, Sec; Choir; American Chemical Society; Dept. Ass ' t., Chem- istry; Greene Hall Coutase- lor; Cum Lau de. JOHN FORSTER Richfield, Minn.; Major: Eco- nomics. RONALD FREDERICK Winterset, la.; Major: Po- litical Science; Lambda Chi Alpha, Pres.; Young Repub- licans, Co-Chr.; Golf; Clan of C; ROA. JO FRERICHS Davenport, la.; Major; Soci- ology; Chi Omega; Sociology Club; Concert Band; St. Luke ' s Senior Class Pres.; Student Council; AWS; YWCA; WAA; SNAI. 43 LEE D. GARR Arlington Heights, III.; Ma- jor: Business Adm in ' istra- tion; Lambda Chi Alpha; Baseball; Business Club; ACORN, co-business man- ager. DANIEL T. GEITTMANN Winnetka, III.; Major: Biol- ogy; Sigma Nu, Social Chr.; Pi Mu Delta, Treas.; Mem- ber of Iowa Academy of Science. CAROLE F. GERBERDING Libertyville, III.; Major: French; Voorhees House Council, Vice-Pres.; Alpha Xi Delta; Delta Chi Beta; CARAVAN, Art Ed.; NWC; SNEA; AWS; WAA; YWCA. RAM GIBSON Crown Point, In d.; Major: English; Delta Delta Delta, Pres.; SNEA; WAA; YWCA; AWS. PATRICIA GLANNON Roslyn, N. Y.; Major: Eng- lish; Kappa Delta, Editor, Pres.; Senior Gift Commit- tee; YWCA, Group Work; WAA; SNEA. ROBERT GLAFKA Millidgeville, III.; Major: Physical Education; Foot- ball; Track; Clan of C; Sigma DAVID N. GLIDDEN Freeport, III.; Major: Phys- ics; Sigma Nu; Football; Track; Swimming; Clan of C; Math Club. JOSEPH L. GORECKI Chicago, III.; Major: Psy- chology; Football; Clan of C; Dept Ass ' t, Psychology; AFROTC; ROA. WILLIAM GRIFFITHS Hinsdale, III.; Major: Er lish; Alpha Sigma Phi. PETER GRUBMEYER Philadelphia, Pa.; Major: Physics, Mathematics; Alpha Phi Omega, Historian; Christian Council; Summer Service Project; Dept. Ass ' t., Physics. KENNETH HACK Cedar Rapids, la.; Major: Business Administration; Phi Kappa Tau. JEFFREY HARRINGTON Davenport, la.; Major Speech), Theatre; Lambda Chi Alpha; Pi Kappa Delta Freshman Basketball Coach Tennis; Track; Clan of C Dramatics; SNEA; AFROTC ROA. DOUGLAS HAYEK Cedar Rapids, la.; Major: Economics, Business Ad- ministration; Dept. Ass ' t., Economics; Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Kappa Phi; CSA, Treas.; Magna Cum Laude. DAVID H. HAYES Maquoketa, la.; Major: Physical Education; Lambda Chi Alpha; Football; Clan of MARY UNA HEAD Vicksburg, Miss.; Major: Po- litical Science; Kappa Delta, Editor, Rush Chr.; Dept. Ass ' t., Pol. Science; ACORN, co-editor, organizations ed- itor; Young Democrats, Pres.; Freshman Tenth; Crescent, Treas.; Pi Delta Epsilon, Sec, Treas.; Voor- hees House Council; Pi Kappa Delta; Student En- campment; Washington term; WAA; YWCA; AWS ju- dicial board; Who ' s Who; Cum Laude. LINDA HEINTZ Deerfield, III.; Major: Art; Alpha Xi Delta, Sec; Pledge Trainer; Catalinas; Home- coming Queen; Cheerlead- ing; Drake Relays Candi- date; Homecoming Commit- tee; Art Guild; YWCA; AWS; WAA. JAMES B. HERMAN Skokie, III.; Major: Business Administration; Alpha Sigma Phi; Business Club; Coe Players; KCOE D.J.; Transfer from U. of III. GARY HILKER Milton, Wise; Major: Busi- ness Administration. WALTER HOLLENDER Waukegan, III.; Major: Phys- ical Education; Tau Kappa Epsilon, Sec. JONNA HUBERS Los Angeles, Calif.; Major: English; Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Kappa Phi; Dept. Ass ' t., English; Washington Term; Choir; A.CORN, Activities Ed.; ACM Conference — Wingspread; YWCA, Social Chr.; Magna Cum Laude. 45 JUDITH HUCK Chicago, III.; Major: English Homecoming Committee Coe Players; COSMOS KCOE. DENNIS HUMMEL Charles City, la.; Major English; Tau Kappa Epsilon AFROTC. SUSAN CARRITHERS JESS Cedar Rapids, la.; Major: Business Administration; Magna Cum Laude. ROBERT B. JUBENVILLE Halesite, N. Y.; Major; Bi- ology; Sigma Nu, Vice-Pres.; Biology Club; Senior Class Gift Committee, Chr.; Greene Hall Counselor; Freshman Hall Counselor; Wrestlmg; Football; Clan of C, Pres.; Military Band. A ll WANITA KEHRLI Cedar Rapids, la.; Major; DAVID MILTON KIESAU Postville, la.; Major: General Science; Tau Kappa Epsilon, Vice-Pres.; Basketball; Foot- ball; IFC, Pres.; Greene Hall Counselor. KARL KINDEL Greendale, Wise; Major: Psychology; Psychology Club; Dept. Ass ' t., Psychol- ogy; Washington Term; Art Guild; TC. ■ DAVID N. KING Toledo, la.; Major: Business Administration; Lambda Chi Alpha, Vice-Pres.; Band; Choir; Young Republicans; Business Club; Homecom- ing Committee. DENNIS KITTLER Glenview, III.; Major: Busi- ness Administration; Sigma Nu; Football; Track; Base- ball; Clan of C; Business Club; ACORN, sports editor; COSMOS; Greene Hall Coun- selor. VIRGINIA KNIGHT Cedar Rapids, la.; Major: English: Delta Delta Delta; Pi Kappa Delta; Forensics; ACORN; Voorhees House Council; Christian Council; Concert Choir; Student Council; CARAVAN; Fresh- man House Council; SNEA; WAA; AWS; KCOE DJ. PEGGY KNOTT Cedar Rapids, la.; Major; Business Administration, Economics; Student Coun- cil; Commuting Students Ass.. Treas.; TUB Commit- tee; SAC; TSA, Treas BURT KRAFT Ctiicago, III.; Major: Biology, Business Administration; Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia; Argonne Semester; Pi Mu Delta; Cum Laude. KAREN SUE KRISAC Toms River, N. J.; Major: English; Chi Omega, Sec; Dept. Ass ' t., English; ACORN, co-editor; CARA- VAN; Pi Delta Epsilon; -Stu- dent Encampment; Chicago Urban Semester; AWS, Sec; SNEA. JAMES LEAHY Bayshore, N. Y.; Major Mathematics. NANCY LONG Greensburg, Pa.; Major: History; Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Kappa Phi; Dept. Ass ' t., History; Choir; Christian Council, Vice-Pres.; Voor- hees Counselor; Summer Service Project to Puerto Rico; WAA; AWS, Program Chr.; SNEA; YWCA; Magna Cum Laude. DONALD MACKAY, JR. Cedar Rapids, la.; Major History, Economics; Ph Kappa Tau. THOMAS MARTIN Conrad, la.; Major: Business Administration; Lambda Chi Alpha; Business Club; Bas- ketball. HARRISON J. MEANS Corning, la.; Major; English; Lambda Chi Alpha, Social Chr., Treas., Pres.; Dept. Ass ' t., English; Pi Kappa Delta, Vice-Pres.; Basket ball; Intercom; COSMOS; Washington Term. STEVEN MELSON Jefferson, la.; Major: Biol- ogy; Sigma Nu; Choir. STEVEN MENZNER Cedar Rapids, la.; Major: Business Administration; Lambda Chi Alpha; Student Council; Swimming; Clan of C; Business Club; Commut- ing Students Ass. 47 MARIE-LOUISE MILLER Bergenfield, N.J.; Major: English; Dept. Ass ' t., Eng- lish; Freshman Tenth; Chi Omega, Pres.; Crescent. Pres.; Voorhees House Coun- cil; Student Encampment; Pi Delta Epsilon; CARAVAN. Fiction Ed.; Ladies Literary Award; YWCA. Sec; AWS. Judicial Board; SNEA; IMWC; Who ' s Who; Cum Laude. SHARLEIME MILLER Cedar Rapids, la.; Major: History; Town Students Ass., Pres.; Commuting Students, Pres. WILLIAM MILLER Cedar Rapids, la.; Major; History; Phi Kappa Tau, Sec; BasebaJI; Clan of C; COSMOS; Homecoming Com. SUSAN MORGAN Pepper Pike, Ohio; Major; English; Alpha Gamma Del- ta; Delta Chi Beta; Band; Theatre; AWS; YWCA; SNEA; WAA. fjj«« « STEVEN MULLER Ackley. la.; Major: History; Sigma Nu, Social Chr.; Football; Clan of C; Junior Class Pres.; Student Coun- cil; Freshman Hall Counse- lor. DEAN MYERS Grundy Center, la.; Major: Philosoohy; Choir; Band; Phi Mu Alpha, Pres.; Chris- tian Council; Student En- campment; Summer Service Project, Arizona; Cum Laude. ROBERT MYERS Cedar Rapids, la.; Major Business Administration. 3 ter LINDA McCRORY Cedar Rapids, la.; Major; English; Alpha Gamma Del- ta Delta Chi Beta. JAMES M. McJOYNT Downers Grove, III.; Major: Sociology; Phi Kappa Tau, Rush Chr.; Pledge Trainer; Sociology Club; Wrestling; Tennis; Clan of C; Home- coming Committee; AFROTC; ROA. 48 GEOFFREY McKEE Naperville, ML; Major; His- tory; Phi Kappa Tau, Sec, Vice-Pres.; Student Council, Vice-Pres.; COSMOS, Man- aging Editor; Pi Delta Epsi- lon, Vice-Pres.; Campus Chest, Chr.; Greene Hall Counselor; SAC. Chr.; Who ' s Who. c- KAREN McMURRAY Des Moines, la.; Major: His- tory; Delta Delta Delta, Rush Chr., Pres.; Dept. Ass ' t., History; Freshman Hall Counselor; Voorhees Hall Counselor; Samuel B Mc- cormick Presidential Schol- ar; AWS. Publicity Chr., WAA; YWCA; SNEA; Cum Laude. ROBERT NAGEL Edgewood, la.; Major: Biol- ogy; Phi Kappa Tau; Tennis; Clan of C. SUSAN NELSON Park Ridge, III.; .Major: So- ciology; Kappa Delta, Treas.; Student Council; Homecom- ing Queen; Sociology Club, Pres., SNEA; WAA; AWS; YWCA. PAULINE NG Hong Kong; Major: Art, His- tory; Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Kappa Phi; Art Guild; Senior Honors in History; Magna Cum Laude. MARLYS NIELSON Cedar Falls, la.; Major: His- tory; Alpha Xi Delta; Treas., Pres.; Choir; Voorhees House Council; Washington Term; YWCA, Publicity, AWS; WAA; Student En- campment; Homecoming Committee; Intercom; Who ' s Who; Cum Laude. JANET N. NISLEY Cedar Rapids, la.; Major English; Phi Kappa Phi. BARBARA NORTH St. Paul, Minn.; Major: Spanish; Delta Delta Delta; Dept. Ass ' t., Spanish; Cres- cent; Russian Club; Fresh- man Counselor; Student En- campment; Summer Service Projects, Puerto Rico, Ari- zona; Phi Beta Kappa; Inter- com; AWS, Judicial Board, Social Chr.; WAA; YWCA; Cum Laude. EL LEN NUECHTERLEIN Keystone, la.; Major; Music Crescent; Who ' s Who. DONNA OETJEN Park Ridge, III.; Major: Biol- ogy; Chi Omega, Pres. JAMES O ' NEIL Tokyo; Major: Political Sci- ence; Sigma Nu; Pi Kappa Delta; Forensics: Baseball; Swimming; Football; Clan of C; Dept. Ass ' t., Pol. Science; Student Council; Young Re- publicans; Freshman Class President; Washington Term; Murray Scholar; KGOE; Cum Laude. 49 CHARLES PALMBERG Burlingtor, la.; Major; Art; Art Guild; Freshman Hall Counselor; TC. BRIAN PAPPALARDO Berwyn, III.; Major; Business Administration; Phi Kappa Tau, Social Chr.; Business DOROTHY PERRY Madrid, la.i Major: Psychol- ogy. GEILDA PETERSON Des Moines, la.; Major; Mathematics, General Sci- ence; Chi Omega, Treas., Sec; Math Club; Freshman House Council; Student En- campment; WAA; YWCA; SNEA, Program Committee. DONALD E. PFLIEGER York, Pa,; Major; Music: Band; Phi Mu Alpha. ELIZABETH PLACE erior. Wise; Major: Soci- MARIANNE PLATNER Cedar Rapids, la.; Major; Political Science; Chi Ome- ga; Dept. Ass ' t., Pol. Sci- ence; Washington Term; Panhellenic Council; En- campment; KCOE DJ; AWS; WAA; Cum Laude, PHYLLIS PREHN DeWitt, la.; Major: History; Alpha Gamma Delta; Delta Chi Beta; Chicago Urban Se- mester; Concert Band; AWS; WAA; SNEA; YWCA. ELEANORE RAMSEY Park Forest, III.: Major: So- ciology; Alpha Gamma Delta; Delta Chi Beta; Band; KCOE; WAA; YWCA; AWS. LOWELL RUTZ Cedar Rapids, la.; Major; History, 50 FRAN REUSE Chicago, III. I Major: English; Alpha Xi Delta, Social Chr., Pledge Trainer, Sec; Pan- hellenic Council, Social Chr., Sec; Vocrhees House Council, Treas.; Flame Queen Attendant; English Dept. Ass ' t.; TKE Pajama Dance Queen; Homecoming Committee, Publicity Chr., Chapel Co-Chr.; AWS, Vice- Pres.; WAA; YWCA, Social Chr.; Cum Laude. CARLA SCHAEFER Grayslake, III.; Major; His- tory; Delta Delta Delta. LYNNE A. SAGER Highland Park, III.; Major: English; Delta Delta Delta; Voorhees House Council, Sec; Freshman Hall Coun- selor; Cheerleader; WAA; AWS. A WILLIAM SCHALK Chicago, III.; Major: Political Science; Lambda Chi Alpha; Summer Service Project, Mississippi; Track; Football; Cross Country; Clan of C, Vice Pres.; Young Republi- cans. GARY SCHLARBAUM Van Home, la.; Major: Eco- nomics, Mathematics; Sig- ma Nu; Phi Beta Kappa; Sachem; Dept. Ass ' t., Eco- nomics; IPC; Basketball; Baseball; Clan of C; Roy W. Le Clere Award; Bryant Scholar; Who ' s Who; Magna Cum Laude. SARA SCHOMP Denver, Colo.; History; Alpha Xi Delta, Sec, Social Chr.; Art Guild; Homecoming Committee; SAC; Senior Gift Committee; Voorhees House Council: COSMOS; Coe Play- ers; AWS; YWCA; WAA. CT LOYD SHAFFER Maquoketa, la.; Major; Phy- sical Education; Lambda Chi Alpha; Wrestling; Football; Clan of C; Wrestling Coach; Football Coach. MARIA SHEBETKA Cedar Rapids, la.; ' Major; Speech. ALISON E. SHEPHERD Ames, la.; Major: English, Psychology; Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Kappa Phi; Crescent; Alpha Gamma Delta; Pan- hellenic Rep., Social Chr.; Delta Chi Beta; Alpha Lambda Delta, Vice-Pres.; Chi Omega Social Science Award; Presidential Scholar; G. E. College Bowl Team, Capt.; CARAVAN, Poetry Ed., Ed.; Freshman Counselor; Dept. Ass ' t., Psychology; Band: Choir; Voorhees House Council, Treas.; Washington Term: Student Encampment, Sec.; Inter- com: Pi Delta Epsilon; WAA, Pres.; AWS, Judicial Board; AWS; YWCA; Who ' s WhO: Magna Cum Laude. MARY ALICE SHIERK St. Charles, III.; Major: French; Alpha Xi Delta, Sec; ACORN Beauty; AWS: WAA: YWCA; SNEA. 51 , M LARRY SHRYOCK Nevada, la.; Major: Business Administration; Sigma Nu, Recorder; Business Club; Basketball; MVP; Clan of C, Sec, Treas. ALAN SIMPSON Westport Point, Mass.; Ma- jor: Psychology; Sigma Nu; Psychology Club; Football. CAROL SMITH Northbrook, III.; Major: Psy- chology; Chi Omega; ACORN Beauty Candidate; WAA; AWS; YWCA; Psychology Club. BARBARA STEIDEMANN Webster Groves, Mo.; Major: Sociology. Philosophy; Young Democrats; Dept. Ass ' t., Sociology; Washing- ton Term. JO ANN STENNER Glen Ellyn, III.; Major: Eng- lish; Chi Omega; SNEA; AWS; WAA; YWCA. RACHAEL STEWART Ft. Madison, la.; Major: Po- litical Science; Forensics; Debate; Christian Heritage; Pi Kappa Delta; Theatre; Washington Term; Fresh- man Tenth; Young Republi- cans; YWCA. Treas., Y-Cluer; SNEA; ISEA; AWS; WAA. WALLACE A. SWAN Van Home, la.; Major: Biol- ogy; Sigma Nu; Biology Club: Basketball; Baseball; Clan of C. ARTHUR SWANSON Cedar Rapids, la.; Major History. 52 SANDRA SWEARINGEN Chicago, III.; Major: History; Kappa Delta; ACORN, Activi- ties Ed.; Young Republicans; Christian Council; Student Encampment; Voorhees House Council; SNEA, Treas.; WAA; YWCA, Y-Cluer. JOANN THODE Ft. Wayne, Ind.; Major: Art Kappa Delta; Crescent, Sec. Alpha Lambda Delta, Pres. Young Republicans; Art Guild; Math Club: Voorhees House Council, Pres.; AWS, Treas.: Judicial Board; WAA; YWCA; Who ' s Who; Cum Laude. SUSAN THOMA Northbrook, ML; Major: Music; Delta Delta Delta; Mu Phi Epsiion, Sec, Vice-Pres. Homecoming Committee Choir; MENC, Sec; WAA AWS; YWCA. ANN THOMAS Carroll, la.; Major: Psychol- ogy; Alpha Gamma Delta; Delta Chi Beta, Sec; Wash- ington Term; Christian Council, Band; Psychology Club: YWCA, Pres. ILGA TIESNIEKS LaGrange, III.; Major: Span- ish; Chi Omega; P nhellenic Council, Sec, Treas.; Span- ish Dept. Ass ' t.: Homecom- ing attendant; AWS; WAA. RICHARD C. TOSI Chicago Heights, III.; Major: History; Sigma Nu, Rush Chr., Pledge Trainer; Foot- ball, Tri-Capt.; Baseball; Clan of C. DAVID TOUMARKINE Wilmington, Del.; Major: English; Dept. Ass ' t., Eng- lish; Student Encampment; Intercom; Phi Mu Alpha; SAC. CAROL .VON FRANK Montvale, N. J.; Major: Psy- chology; Kappa Delta, Rush Chr.. Vice-Pres., Pledge Trainer; Student Encamp- ment; Homecoming Com- mittee, Dance Co-Chr.; Psy- chology Club; WAA; SAC. CHARLES VOSSELER Somerville, N. J.; Major: Ec- onomics. LINDA WARD River Grove, III.; Major: His- tory; Delta Delta Delta; Pan- hellenic Council, Vice-Pres., Pres.; Homecoming Commit- tee, Chr.; TUB Committee; SAC; WAA; SNEA; AWS. JENNINGS WERNER New London, Wise; Major: P.olitical Science; Transfer from Wisconsin; Washington Term; Forensics; Pi Kappa Delta; Young Republicans. 53 MEREDITH THOMAE WHIPPLE Gladbrook, la.; Major: Mu sic; Alpha Gamma Delta Delta Chi Beta; Crescent Mu Phi Epsilon, Pres. MENC, Vice-Pres.; Voorhees House Council; AWS, Judi- cial Board; Dept. Ass ' t.; Mu- sic; Choir; Band; Flame Queen Attendant; SNEA; NWC; WAA. ROBERT WHIPPLE Cedar Rapids, la.; Major: Business Administration, Mathematics; Phi Kappa Phi; Math Club, Business Young Republicans; Dept. Ass ' t., Business; SNEA; Magna Cum Laude. RICHARD WILFONG Mason City, la.: Major: Po- litical Science; Sigma Nu; Basketball; Young Demo- crats; Washington Term; Cum Laude. SUZI WILSON Richfield, Minn.; Major: Eng- lish; Alpha Gamma Delta; Delta Chi Beta; Panhellenic Council, Treas.; Voorhees House Council; Voorhees Hall Counselor. S% '  a ' M V -vr- y ,,,; .i«. . RUTH WOLF Cedar Rapids, la.; Major; Mathematics, Physics; Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Kappa Phi; Dept. Ass ' t., Mathematics; Alpha Lambda Delta, Sec; Band; Student Council; Stu- dent Encampment; Math Club: SNEA: CSA: Magna Cum Laude. RONALD WOOD Baldwin, N. Y.: Major: Po- litical Science; Choir; Fo- rensics: Young Republicans; ROA. DALE GLENN WULF Grand Mound, la.; Major: General Science; Phi Beta Kappa: Phi Kappa Phi; Bi- ology Club; American Chem- ical Society; Summa Cum Laude. ROBERT H. YOUNG Chicago, III.; Major: Psychol- ogy; Sigma Nu, Rush Chr., Vice-Pres.; Psychology Club, Pres.; Dept. Ass ' t., Psychol- ogy; Greene Hall Counselor; Basketball; Football, MVP; Clan of C, Pres- 54 CHARLES ZIMMERMAN Corning, la.; Major: Busi- ness Administration; Tau Kappa Epsilon, Treas., Pres.; Business Club, Pres.; Base- ball; Clan of C; Greene Hall Counselor; IFC. NOLAN ZAVORAL Cedar Rapids, la.; Major: English. SENIOR CHAPEL Ivy Oration Alison E. Shepherd In a rather unusual election Perry Brown and Alison Shepherd were elected Outstanding Senior Man and Woman. 55 WHO ' S MARLYS NIELSON JOANN THODE c L A S s o F 1 9 6 5 LOUISE MILLER PERRY BROWN RUDY DROST ELLEN NUECHTERLEIN 56 TVHO GARY SCHLARBAUM MARY UNA HEAD OUTSTANDINO SENIORS ALISON SHEPHERD GEOFFREY McKEE 57 fMcilmlie 58 STUDENT ENCAMPMENT The tenth annual Student Encampment was held the week prior to the beginning of fall term classes. Faculty, administration, influential and interested students representing every phase of Coe life attended and spent these days discussing such topics as student government, the reading program, academic attitudes and student- faculty relations. The goal of this Encampment was to offer practical suggestions on these general topics and prepare to attack more specific problems. Encampment proved its effectiveness as all of its 28 resolutions were acted upon by Student Council during the year. Faculty, administration, and interested students took part in the discussions on the banks of the Wapsinicon River two days before classes began. Their purpose was to discuss problems in all aspects of campus life. They pro- posed specific improvements in the reading program, cultural events, and in over-all communications between the students and faculty. They promoted school spirit through the issuance of several resolutions, which were carried out effectively. The spirited group suggested the idea for the big-brother, big-sister program which became a reaUty. Plans for utilization of TUB and PUB facilities were listed and submitted to the administra- tion. There was constructive criticism for KCOE and the Cosmos. The group dealt with such practical issues as abolition of PE uniforms and the extension of TUB hours. Stu- dent Council President John Casey distributed a list of the contributions of Student En- campment. He wanted it known that the ideas presented in that ineffective body do become realities. 59 STUDENT ENCAMPMENT Concentration Planning Discussion Guidance 60 Back row: Karl Kindel, Bryan Hall, Carolyn Montgomery, Barbara Steidemann, Rae Stewart, David Correll. Middle row: Gay Nelson, Jane Dickinson, Ann Thomas. Front row: Douglas Mat- sumoto, Jonna Hubers, Alison Shepherd. WASHINGTON TERM The students selected from among the juniors and seniors, have a variety of majors and thus individual reasons for participation in the fall term program. The program which gives fall term credit includes a course in American government, independent studies in their respective majors, and an art course for which the facilities in the nation ' s capital are abundant. The Coe students live in a house provided by the college but have their meals at the In- ternational House where they have the perfect opportunity to promote international under- standing with the foreign students studying in the capital. The location of the Program thus gives the students the opportunity to broaden their knowledge of their own government be- sides broadening their academic and cultural perspectives. It is evident from the students ' re- ports of the Program that it has been very beneficial to their entire educational program. 61 South Sea Island candidates were: Carolyn Brown (replaced by Gerry Harrington who is not pictured), Jane Coffey, Alice Diffenderfer, Ann Ludvigsen, Eline Schneck, Marie Horn. SOUTH SEA ISLAND DANCE The Lambda Chi Alpha South Sea Island Dance begins Coe ' s social year with this in- tellectual question, What girl would you like to be stranded with on a desert island? The problem was solved when Jane Coffey was se- lected as island queen by popular vote. Gerry Harrington was named as the best dressed or rather least dressed girl attending the dance. The dance was kept down to a low roar by The Mauraders. It was another great success for the Lambda Chi ' s. What time does the boat leave? PAJAMA DANCE The annual Tau Kappa Epsilon Pajama Dance, better known as The Greatest Nighty of the Year was held m the T.U.B. The surroundings could hardly be recognized with the bunk beds lining the walls and pajama-clad couples dancing to swinging music. Intermission entertainment featured Frank Fazio with guitar solos and an interpretive dance presented by Mary Alice Shierk. Sue Bryant reigned as Sleepy Time Gal. A comfortable evening was had by all. Oh, Jimmy! Pajama Dance candidates were: Cora Doner, Jill Babler, Sue Osgood, Sue Bryant, Barbara Camp, Karin Saral, Judy Keck. 63 Siglympics Queen candidates: Paula Fager, Diane Hyder, Susie Englehart (Queen), Diane Gerry, Carol Von Frank, Julie Garraway. SIGLYMPICS Alpha Sigma Phi again sponsored a day of sore muscles, backs, and strained voices better known to all Coe Women as Siglympics. The various women ' s organizations competed in such thrilling events as the rolling pin toss, spoon and egg relay, and a running sack race. The fun and games ended in a tie for first place between the KD ' s and the Tri Delts. After a tense run-off the trophy was again awarded to Delta Delta Delta. The evening activities consisted of the Siglympics Ball highlighted by the crowning of Sue Englehart as Siglympic Queen. Alpha Xi ' s coach, Sterling Price. 64 egg throw three legged race Alpha Sigma Phi annual ground-breaking for the P.U.B. Grave Affair Candidates: Nancy Weller, Shirley Hughes, Linda Wankey Barb Fisher, Nancy Stoker, Karen Blaney, Barb Gish. GRAVE AFFAIR The TUB was converted into a tomb for the annual Phi Kappa Tau Grave Affair. Shrieks of terror and gasps of fear filled the room as couples edged toward an open coffin. The music of Chicago ' s Singing Sam and the Sparks left the TUB literally rocking. Inter- mission featured the Foul Tones ' lead by Scott Jones (the foulest of them all). Barb Fisher was selected the 1965 Ghoul Friend. Congratulations on another affair to remember. 1964 Phi Kappa Tau Ghoul Friend. HEART THROB HOP Valentine ' s Day for the Tri-Delts is more than a time for candy and flowers from that certain someone. It is the date of the annual Heart Throb Hop, an all school informal dance. Members of Delta Delta Delta sponsor the Hop as a service project to earn money for the Heart Fund, and chose their Heart Throb from the fraterni- ties. This year ' s lucky man was Ron Feltes. S. Thoma, T. Brandon, B. Bruckner, K. Kelly, R. Feltes. WriNTER With heroic effort the Student Activities Committee staged Coe ' s first Winter Car- nival. Unfortunately, the Iowa weather refused to cooperate, and skiing plans were soon abandoned. Despite the lack of snow the carnival was a tremendous The Judge ' at her best. t ? 3 ?i ™? ' -ss ?. xn SKI PATR( An easy way to restrain a friend. ' Shakespeare at his sexiest. A study in contrasting beauties! CARNIVAL A V E ALPHA PHI OMEOA UGLY MAN CONTEST THE BRAINS and.. I t ' Manatrey v. 1 THE BRAWN Mirror, mirror on the wall, who ' s the loveliest of them all? WEEK K A P P P I A E D E E A L T T I A N O C o N T E S T Immaculate Pat ALPHA XI DELTA IDEAL FRATERNITY MAN Candidates: Bob Young, Jay Means, Chuck Zimmerman, George Esslinger, Geoff McKee At the sound of the pitch pipe, it will be the beginning of the Alpha Xi Delta Spring sing. Directing the sweet tones of thirty-five female voices, Gini Knight led the way for Delta Delta Delta ' s victory in the sorority division. Dave (Sky) King and the brothers of Lambda Chi Alpha sang their way to first place among the fraternities. A new category was invented for the fine performance of Alpha Sigma Phi and ' Along Came Chubs? The Aljjha Xi ' s again made a wise choice in an Ideal Fraternity Man, congratulations to Bob Young, athlete, scholar and all around campus hero. ALPHA XI DELTA SPRING SING DELTA DELTA DELTA sorority winner ALPHA SIGMA PHI The hit of the evening! LAMBDA CHI ALPHA fraternity winner G.E. COLLEGE BOWL TEAM Late in November it was announced that Coe was to send a team to New York to represent the college on the General Electric television show, College Bowl. Eight students were selected on the basis of a special test, (given to over a hundred students) College Board scores. Junior Orals, Graduate Record Exams, grade point average, and teacher recommendations. Those eight students were Carolyn Carri- thers, Rudy Drost, Julia Eanes, Jonathan Fiske, Dean Meyers, Tony Pordes, Paul Roberts, and Alison Shepherd. Beginning in January the team met each Sunday with the coaches Lynn Engdahl and Dr. John Murry. and competed against each other on a buzzer board that had been built for the team to use. The practice would end with the team competing against the two teams presented on the College Bowl that week, (see picture above) On the last Sunday in January the eight members were divided up into two separate teams and competed against each other on a simulated College Bowl contest. which was presented over KWWL-TV in Waterloo. After this show the final four members of the team were selected on the basis of performance during the practice sessions and under the pressure of live TV. The four finalists were Rudy Drost, Tony Pordes, Paul Roberts and the team captain Alison Shepherd. Dean Meyers was selected as the alternate to accom))an_v them on the trip. On February 26 the team flew to New York, and were the guests of General Electric for three days. Saturday was spent on sightseeing and touring of the famous museums and art galleries of New York, and that night the team was able to see a Broadway show. Sunday morning the team breakfasted to- gether and tried to relax. At noon they journeyed to Rockefeller Plaza, where they met their host and their opponents, three time winners, Portland State LIniversity. After a few brief practice sessions they lunched with the producer and their opponents. The after- noon was spent in rehearsals until 5:30 when the real contest began. Coe jumped off to a big lead, capturing the first three questions, but by half-time Portland State had closed the gap to just a few points. When the buzzer rang, for the start of the second half, Portland State caught the Coe team and went ahead. Displaying the form which carried them through five straight victories Portland State won again. The Coe team was disappointed in their defeat, but drew pride from the fact that they had scored more points against the Portland State Team than their other four opponents combined. SPEECH TOURNAMENTS It was another challenging year, ending in tre- mendous success for the Coe forensics team. Trav- eling to tournaments across the midwest, the team showed great promise early in the fall term. This promise held true in November, when Coe took first place in sweepstakes for the second year in a row at the Bradley Speech Tournament, the largest college forensics meet in the nation. Between tournaments in the second term. Coe staged its annual high school tournament on the Coe Campus . Then in the third term, Coe ' s Doug Matsumoto, Steve Souder, and John Casey won the men ' s sweepstakes at the National ' s, thus ending another proud year of speech tournaments and trophies for the team. Another trophy Back row; Gus Webster, Bill Young, Ron Wood, Jennings Warner, James O ' Neil, Ed Runner. Front row: Sandi Ballard, Virginia Horak, Nancy DeYoung, Chere Jemsek, Gin! Knight, Susie Engelhardt. COE PLAYERS Amphitryon 38 ' Inherit the Wind Death, of a Salesman SUMMER SERVICE PROJECT The Summer Service Project Committee of Christian Council chose British Columbia, Canada, as the site of the 1965 project. The nine students to be accompa- nied by faculty advisor Dr. John Walker are: Dave Rau, Pete Grubmeyer, John Wilson, Tom Vaughn, Jay Griffin, Sue Abrahamson, Susan Davis, Carmen White- cotton, and Sue Shroeder. The project plans were coordinated with the help of Reverend Richard Warne of the United Church of Canada. The project was to last from August 2 to September 10, allowing two weeks travel time. The work that the students did was completion of the construction of an A-frame church in Field, British Columbia in the Canadian Rockies. Living with families and working directly with the community on the project helped the student-adult relations as well as the overall goal of promoting Canadian-American relations. Side trips into the neighboring areas gave the Coe students a knowledge and greater under- standing of an area quite unlike those of former projects in North Dakota, Mississippi, Mexico, Puerto Rico, and Arizona. B L A C K O TJ T Please! Lights blinked out. Studies ceased. Greene Hall marched on Voorhees. Two coeds diverted their intentions with the cry, Let ' s get B avenue! Thus they had a purpose. A self-designated leader perched on the stop light and the street swarmed with demonstrators. The paddy wagons arrived, but it took Mayor Johnson and Dr. McCabe to assure the enthusiastic throng that B avenue would be got in the near future . . . and furthermore the police could be better utilized in the darkened city. ' Kids! We want B Avenue! FLUNK DAY The Bell tolls 5:15 a.m. You wander out the attack is on! A man ' s best-friend, especially on flunk day, is ills duck! Right Dan? Come on duck! 81 Acorn Beauty Candidates were: Nancy Weller, Dee Gerry, Jane Calvert, Claire Flemming, Carolyn Brown and Elaine Schnek. c o N V o c A T I O N Mary Alice presents Carolyn with roses and ' 65 Acorn Beauty title. Nancy Weller, Jane Calvert, Carolyn Brown 82 Harris Lamb presents Bob Hoffman, Ray Zir- polo, Denny Kittler, Don Hayes and Tom Green the Thelma Lamb Gold Track Shoe Award. Ray Zirpolo receives the Captain Marvin Lamb Track Award from Harris Lamb. Warren Reinecke presents the Inter-fraternity Schol- arship Award to Tom Brandon, president of Sigma Nu. John Casey swears in John Wilson and Paul Roberts as President and Vice President of the Student Council. 83 CAMPUS SCENES To see, to really see, amidst silences composed of echoes, is to learn. It is to the student ' s vision of himself and his world that Coe College is dedicated. Sometime between registration and first exams the freshman stirs, shifts the stocks of his mind, and sees himself no longer a child. Sometime after that first wild spring fever and the next snow, the sophomore stops, groups the range of his thoughts, and sees his tomorrows. We saw the others, all the others, and marvelled how much alike we were. We marvelled, too, at differences and found that to explore was to uncover wonders we could perceive only with minds changed by the per- ceiving. And then if we were lucky, we took the final step into ourselves. With eyes wide open we plunged into understanding. And we dared the endless dare — to be ourselves. Mists did not matter ... we could see. But as the modern poet says . . . it was not a view that one ' saw ' in the strict sense: it radiated over one, dancing in that dark mist, pouring into the eyes and spreading within the five senses — as light enters the pin-hole of a camera ' s lens but floods the whole gela- tine surface of the negative. 85 IQ 6 5 COE COLLEGE CEDAR RAPIDS euiu ie 86 HOMECOMING CANDIDS First place float by Alpha Xi Delta and Lambda Chi Alpha. Ron Fredrick and Sara Schomp accept trophies for winning float. Honoring tliuse ivho made it all possible! The fathers of the heroes of the day. 1964 Homecoming Court Jan Kamps Ruthanne Dempsey 1964 HOMECOMING QUEENS ' ■ ' • =- •— t i ri 1 ' ' . if jK n - • w- hP li l w _ wSrjiSsat r .1 j _ HOMECOMINO i cmtce {am DELTA DELTA DELTA 88 QUEENS KAPPA DELTA 89 : ■ r S. N • ■ 19 6 5 COE COLLEGE CEDAR RAPIDS ACORN BEAUTY a o iim c oi n DELTA CHI BETA 91 19 6 5 COE COLLEGE CEDAR RAPIDS FIRST ATTENDANT uncM i e e KAPPA DELTA 93 A 19 6 5 COE COLLEGE CEDAR RAPIDS SECOND ATTENDANT ane tjd m i CHI OMEGA 95 A 19 6 5 COE COLLEGE CEDAR RAPIDS - lOWA - ' ALPHA XI DELTA 96 A 19 6 5 CQE COLLEGE CEDAR RAPIDS €€ e u DELTA DELTA DELTA 97 19 6 5 COE COLLEGE CEDAR RAPIDS ; s m A A y-r, ' aine SPc mec c INDEPENDENT 98 H T pi ■ H H ■i! jHI H H l K 1H n B r S tmmmii Mllli ' -4 -.w w g t M 11 1 HMbh I - ' ll B 1 II H HH H 1 ir HB H i , «  - • •i -- ' ' 1 H ll oJ H H ACORN BEAUTY JUDGE HUGH M. HEFNER Playboy Magazine P L A T B O T 3l Ohio- Chicago,. Uu )rn_Beauty Queen. lovely young leJy v jn i J 99 IQ 6 5 COE COLLEGE CEDAR RAPIDS }i f eiefa 100 Dean Adams Lawrence Alsbrook Martin Appelt Peter Bagley David Barich New York, K ' .Y, Dodge City, Kan. Sioux City Duluth, Minn. Westbury, N.Y. Sandra Beatty Cedar Rapids Karen Bell South Bend. Ind, 101 Lynda Bell Lee Benson Jane Berntsen David Black Douglas Boeckmann Galene, III. Chicago, III. Clinton Glen Rock, N.J. Waverly James Bradshaw Delphi. Ind. Janet Braly Denver, Colo. Wayne Bronaugh Brooklyn, N. Y. Burton Bruggeman Heidi Bruns International Falls, Minn. Palos Park, III. Carol Burkhardt Minneapolis, Minn Steve Carey Tipton John Coats Westfield, N. J. Rudolph Collum Chicago, III. Joseph Condron Chicago Charles S. Cook aioomfield Hills, Mich. Frank Cooper Waban, Mass. Anthony Courtney Chicago, III. Robert Cox Wyoming Sue Crissman Des Moines Marilyn Crocker Lake Bluff, III. Norman Cummings Omaha, Neb. Charles Curtis Cedar Rapids Gordon Dash Englewood, N. J. Larry Davis Glenview, III. John Deleray S. Pasadena, Calif. Timothy Dieffenbache Setauket, L. I., N. Y. Delbert Disch Woodstock, III. Jim Dvorin Berkeley Hts., N. J. Julia Eanes Georgetown, Texas Ilia Mae Earnest Washington John Elliott Robert Etter Pamela Farnam Joseph Ferguson Michael Fink Wheaton, III. Fairfax, Va. Glen Ellyn, III. Des Moines Tripoli Jon Gates Wannatosa, Wis. Michael Grames W. Chicago, III. Dennis Greenspon Lorraine Gregory Jay Griffin Mary Haberkamp Daniel Haggerty Chicago, III. Deerfield, III. Dubuque Forest City Evanston, III. John Hall Hinsdale, III. Pat Hansen Billings, Mont. Barbara Hansing Minneapolis, Minn. Geoffrey Harding Chicago, III. Gene Henderson Monona Dennis Highland Omaha, Neb. Margaret Hinde Fulton, Mo. Larry Holm Crystal Lake, III. Mark Hopkins Corning, N. Y. Frank Humphrey Rowley 105 Robert Huston Yellow Springs, Ohio Dale Inman Hartford City, Ind. Jane Irwin Arlington, Va. Isma Ma Iba Okene, Nigeria Regina Janevics LaGrange, III. Cheryl Jemsek Western Springs, III. Brian Johnson Winnebago, III. John Johnson Springfield, Mass. Paul Johnson Des Moines Kevin Kane Cedar Rapids Bennett Kathenbeutel Cedar Rapids Ray Kavanaugh Dayton, Ohio Patricia Keefe St. Paul, Minn. Lee Kitts Albuquerque, N. M. Patricia Koehn Lancaster, Pa. Barbara Kojis St. Louis Park, Minn. John Kwitkor Newton, IVlass. Jackie Leeser Claremont, Calif. William Lester Chicago, III. Bonnie Fischer Honolulu, Hawaii David Llewellyn Judy Locke Cedar Rapids George Lutjen Centerport, N. Y. Renee Lytle Dubuque Bryce MacDonald Chagrin Falls, Ohio Mary Jane Madden Glen Ellyn, III. Judith Maier White Bear Lake, Minn. Marilyn Mangels Brookfleld, Wis. Patricia Maroushek Hastings, Minn. Joel Martin St. Louis, Mo. Cathie Mason Toledo Linda Mason Des Moines Frederick McCarthy Newton, Mass. James McGarry Dayton, Ohio Virginia Mcintosh David McKibbin Peggy Medling Dennis Meinert Cat Ol Meyer Belleview, III. N. Miami, Fla. St. Louis, Mo. Durant Barr ington. III. Susan Miller Arlington Heights, III. Winston IVliller Red Wing, Minn. Ronald Moehling Mount Prospect, III. Ralph Montgomery Chicago, III. Andrea Moore Des Moines John Montenson Palos Park, III. Julie Nelson Colquet, Minn. Carol Nordengren Cedar Rapids Judy O ' Neil Winthrop, Mass. Nancy Osburn Iowa City James Oster Mundelein, III. M arilyn Ough Davenport 109 m Gwendolyn Potts West Chester, Pa. Dale Reynoldson Boone Harold Robinson Neuton, Mass. Alan Rowe Ralston, Neb. Randy Rowsey Oak Lawn, III. Arthur Saldana Cedar Rapids William Sansom Huntington, N. Y. 110 Mary Scharfenberg El Paso, Texas Angela Schmidt N. Newton, Kan. David Schroder Davenport Alice Schroeder Appleton, Wise. Daryl Schroeder DeForest, Wise. Paul Schwartz Freeport, N. Y. Jerry Shanholtzer Mundelein, III. Susan Shelienberger Libertyville, III. Scott Simpson Park Ridge, III. Steve Skinnari Indianapolis, Ind. Noriko lino Tokyo, Japan Patti Smith Wheaton, III. Edward Spence Normandy, Mo. Ill John Stalmack Burn ham, III. Michael Steele Washington Shelby Steele Harvey, III. Kathryn Strong Nancy Swaine Peter Taggart Gorlon Tapley Eric Thompson Mt. Prospect, III. North Attleboro, Mass. Des Moines Mc luntain Lakes, IN. J. New York, N. Y. Sue Ann Thompson Kansas City, Mo. Susan VanDerpoel Chicopee Falls, Mass. Maurice Van Note Palo Donald Vogler Carbondale, III. Susan Watkins Dearborn, Mich. Lynne Watson Cedar Rapids William Wendling Evergreen Park, III. Donald Witte Pes Plaines, III. Marjorie Wolf Deerfield, III. David Wright Geneseo, III. 113 s o p H O M O R S imim Ralph S. Ackerman Huntington Va., Pa. Robert Albright Oklahoma City, Okla. Alfred Anderson Tuskegee Inst., Ala. k Kki Andrew Arnold Moorestown, N. J. Carl Bachelor Dayton, Ohio James Bacon Philadelphia, Pa. Nicki Beals Loves Park, III. George Bernard Bryn Maur, Penn. Phyllis Bert Rockford, III. Kathy Bihl Freeport, III. Betsy Black Salt Lake City, Utah Dwight Beske Minnesota Lake, Minn Andrew Blume St. Louis, Mo. Elaine Bourne Cedar Rapids Kathleen Bouttell St. Paul, Minn. Charles Brady Chicago, III. Kathleen Brinn Davenport Rutherford Brosious St. Paul, Minn. Robert Butikofer Highland, Ind. 115 Jane Calvert Aurora, III. Marilyn Churchill Moorhead, Minn. Diane Clutter W. Alexander, Pa. Jane Coffey Minneapolis, Minn. John Cole Trumansburg, N. Y. Jane Conkey Philadelphia, Pa. Frederick Conklin Bridgehampton, L. I., N. Y. Paul Conti Arlington Heights, III. Charles Cook Olympia Fields, III. Susan Davis Kansas City, Mo. Steve Dayan Chicago, III. l: .A Christine Detwiler Michigan City, Ind. George Dewey Deerfield, III. Cora Doner Park Ridge, III. Thomas Dunlap Cedar Rapids Melrose Park, III. Mike Edwards Springfield, Mass. Diane Ekiund Rockford, III. Susan Engelhardt Cedar Rapids Margot Graham Roslyn Heights, N.Y. Thomas Green Louisville, Ky. Robert Groundwater Chicago, III. Janet Hammond Eureka, III. Nancy Huey Kansas City, Mo. Gerald Hughes Strongsville, Ohio Dianne Hyder Denver, Colo. John Imig Iowa City i iii-i ' iii ' i i t BiiWiMi - ' ' - % Joseph Jogmen Chicago, III. Richard Jones Red Wing, Minn. 118 Daniel King New Yorl , N. Y. Scott Koiar Glen Ellyn, III. Harry Kreutzer Bellwood, III. Paul Kriese Cheektowaga, N. Y. Linda Larsen Locl port, III. Shirley Lear Galesburg, III. Gerald Lietz Champaign, III Ellen Luetzelschwab Highland, Ind. John Mankopf Sheboygan, Wis. 119 Roberta Meinholdt Tipton Brian Melcho Chicago, III. Jack Melvin Blue Island, III. Barbara Millei Cedar Rapids Linda Mittag Arlington Hts., III. James Murphy Philadelphia, Pa Margaret Nettleton York, Neb. 4«k Bih Susan Osgood Maiden, Mass. John Parker Farmington, N. M. David Petrick Park Ridge, 111. Lee Polk Chicago, III. John Reese McHenry, III. 120 Paul Riggio Northbrook, III. Sandra Robiso Washington David Sargent Schenectady, N. Y, Karin Saral Ames Elaine Schneck Bangalore, India Susan Schroeder Newton Thomas Schultz Cedar Rapids Edward Schwenke Des Plaines, III. Richard Smith Naperville, III. Anne Snell Spencer Sandra Spellmeyer St. Louis, Mo. Linnea Stromberg Grand Rapids, IVIinn. Carolyn Van Zee Nevada Thomas Vaughn Mundelein, III. Thomas Vavra Ely Charlene Vi alker St. Louis, Mo. Timothy W alsh Park Ridge, III. Linda Wanke Hastings, Minn. Robert Webster Minneapolis, Minn. Margaret Winkler Arlington, Va. Sally Wilson Deerfield, III. Gerry Wolf Crystal Lake, III. Howard Woivington Burlington Thomas Worden Yonkers, N. Y. 123 J XJ N I O R S Gordon Anderson Wilmington, Del. Robert Anderson Beloit, Wis. Charlotte Ask Cedar Rapids -• ' r !! Am Ralph Aye Tampa, Fla. Russell Batz Western Springs, III. Rolf Beckhussen Barryville, N. Y. Robert Birch Freeport, III. Thomas Brandon Dubuque Paul Broderick Bergenfield, N. J. James Brokaw Carolyn Brown Lakewood, Colo. Seattle, Wash. i; William Cologate Flushing, N. Y. Judy Correll Olympia Fields, II Muriel Cover Cedar Rapids James Davis Dobbs Ferry, N. Y. Lewis Davis Cedar Rapids Nancy DeYoung Milwaukee, Wis. Alice Diffenderfer Lanark, III. Florence Eidsvaag Westbury, N.Y. 125 Gerald Erickson Elgin Laird Evans Gladwyne, Pa. Pamela Everest Mosinee, Wis. Peter Fader Pittsburgh, Pa. Douglas Farnham James Far nham Lynne Farnham Ronald Feltes Mary Fernald Minneapolis, Minn. Rosemoni I, Pa. Wayzata, Minn. Oak Park, III. Palatine, III. Jonathan Fiske Leopoldville, Republique du Congo Leopoldville, Congo Sherry Folson Spencer Timothy Frisch Gary, III. Jacquelyn Galvin Toledo, Ohio £ Ruby Fowler Marengo Jane Grube Logansport, Ind. Daniel Guenther Glen Ellyn, III. Barbara Halliburton Omaha, Neb. Charles Harrison Oklahoma City, Okla. Russell Hass Sac City Jane Helgeson Palatine, III. Allen Hoppe Greenville, S. C. Virginia Horak Cedar Rapids Marie Horn Minneapolis, Mil iL ' k Beverly Inman Cedar Rapids Patricia Johnston Cedar Rapids Janice Kamps Skokie, Ml. James Kreamer Cedar Rapids Michael Lawrence Cedar Rapids Richard Lewis Bethesda, IVId. Vincent Lombardi Huntington, N. Y. Ann Ludvigsen Jackson, IVIinn. Benson IVIacharia Nairobi, Kenya Richard IVIarl s Corpus Christi, Tex. Douglas Miller Waterloo Theodore Miller Bergenfield, N. J. Carolyn Montgomery Fair Haven, N. J. Marshall Mortenson Palos Park, III. Louis Moses V ilmington, Del. David Nix Mt. Prospect, III 128 Jim Pickering Cedar Rapids SterHng Price Highlanri Park, III. Elizabeth Quigley Instanbul, Turkey Judith Riedel Wheaton, III. David Rau Chatham, N. J. Margaret Shank Findlay, Ohio Sheryin Shupe Indianola Martha Sidlik Cudahy, Wis. Steve Souder Des Moines Linda Sullivan Garland, Texas Deanna Thomas Central City Janet Ungry Arlington Hts., III. W Iham Warr ck Philadelphia, Pa. Freder c Webster Cambridge, Mass. William Wells Prairie Village, Kan. Kent Westerbeck W. Des Moines Carmen Whitecotton Lombard, III. John Wilson Roanoke, Va. Douglas Woodvuard OKIahoma City, Okia Pamela Zima Chicago, 111. HERE -d THERE Typical Greenlee meditative pose Maker of heroes Smiling— in spite of the tie! Clark always works hard. IQ 6 5 CQE COLLEGE CEDAR RAPIDS O aoyni aiion PHI KAPPA PHI PHI BETA KAPPA Members of both are: Perry Brown, Pauline Ng, Nancy Long, Alison Shepard, Jonna Hubers, Dale Wulf, and Ruth Wolf. CRESCENT SACHEM J. Casey, P. Brown, G. Schlarbaum K. Anderson, B. North, A. Shephard, J. Craig, J. Thode, L. Miller, M. Head, E. Nuechterlein. ALPHA LAMBDA DELTA Row 1: S. Watkins; L Gregory; J. Bernsten; J. hanes. Row 2: J. Rudd; M. Nettle- ton. Row 3: A. Schroder; S. Baxendale; M. Jensen; C. Meyer; K. Goetsch; D. Roberts; A. Moore. PI DELTA EPSILON Row 1: D. Guenther, C. Moyer, W. Wells. Row 2: G. McKee, T. Bunge, M. Head. Row 3: L Yates, G. Kakesako, A. Shepherd, D. Rau. Row 4: B. Hall, L. Miller, J. Wolf. PHI KAPPA DELTA Row 1: K. Jensen, V. Horak, D. Thomas, J. Craig. Row 2: L. Stromberg, V. Knight, P. Maroushek, S. Englehardt. Row 3: D. Matsumoto, E. Runner, G. Webster, S. Souder, J. Casey, M. Warren, J. Warner, J. Wilson. ALPHA PSI OMEGA Row 1: J. Fiske, C. Whitecotten, Row 2: D. Woodward, J. Kwitkor. FORENSICS Row 1: V. Horak, D. Thomas, G. Knight, P. Maroushek. Row 2: S. Souder, D. Matsumoto, S. Englehart, A. Webster, M. Warren, E. Runner, L. Stromberg, J. Wilson, J. Craig, J. Casey. MU PHI ALPHA Row 1: S. Thoma, E. Neuchterlein. Row 2: iVIeyer, M. Jensen, iVl. Nettleton, IV1. Rusche. PHI MU ALPHA Row 1: B. Hall, W. Miller, E. Spense, J. Coffman, A. Hoppe B. Kothenbeal. Row 2: D. Woodward, D. Meyers, H. Wol vington, D. Pfleager. Row 3: G. Johnson, D. Corson, T Worden, M. Malina, J. Davis, R. Rousey, D. Black, J. Cherry , J. Click. Ted Miller, Editor Geoff McKee, Managing Editor Bob Brizzolara, Business Manager Carol Moyor, Copy Editor A happy staff makes a great newspaper. KCOE DJ ' s iliiMlttttttiiitiaatt John Wilson, Station Manager CARAVAN Alison Shepherd, Editor D. Guether E. Hartman C. Gerberding A. Shepherd M. L Miller ACORN STAFF Karen Krisac — Co-Editor Mary Una Head — Co-Editor Lee Garr— Business IVIanager Ken Ballou — Business Manger Judy Wolf — Underclass Barb Kojis— Underclass Carol Carlson — Senior Jane Helgeson — Senior Dave Rau — Sports John Mankopf — Sports Nancy DeYoung — Activities Nancy Weller — Activities Marie Horn — Organizations Sue Watkins — Organizations Carol Von Frank — Index Not much work done, but lots of fun! But Casey we need this loan desperately. Layout meditation Slam bid and made . . . but no yearbook. They really mean it! ENCAMPMENT COMMITTEE Row 1: J. Arima, V. Horak, A. Shepherd, B. North Row 2: D. Matsumoto, P. Brown, D. Rau, J. Casey, P. Roberts. CHAIRMAN Geoff McKee D. Rau, P. Knott, P. Roberts, J. Correll, J. Mankopf G. McKee C. Von Frank G. Potts L. Ward HOMECOMING COMMITTEE SAC CO-CHAIRMEN Lyn Ward Norm Beu Row 1: D. Rau, L Ward, J. Kamps, J. Wilson. Row 2: J. Christiansen, P. Deems, S. Thoma, F. Reuse, C. Von Frank. It ' s GREEK to me... PANHELLENIC COUN CIL PRESIDENT Lyn Ward Pam Wheat Lyn Ward Fran Reuse Judy Correll INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL PRESIDENT Terry Erickson P. Brown, G. Schlarbaum, J. Brokaw, A. Snow, K. Ehrensaft D. Miller, D. Hummel STUDENT COUNCIL PRESIDENT — John Casey, VICE-PRESIDENT — Geoff McKee Row 1: R. Crowe, G. McKee, J. Casey, V. Horak. Row 2: G. Potts, unidentified, E. Hartmann, D. Ecklund, J. Farnham, J. Imig, M. Head. Row 3: L Stone, L Harstman, P. Roberts, J. Wilson, S. Menzner, E. Runner, M. Mead, G. Hughes. INTERCOM CHAIRMAN — Bryan Hall M. Mead, R. Evans, E. Runner J. Wilson, B. Hall FRESHMAN COUNSELORS B. Jubenville, C. Palmberg, J. Duerr, D. Dempsey. J. Walden, Mrs. Parker, S. Bryant, L Sager B. North, C. Erickson, V. Arima. VOORHEES HOUSE COUNCIL WILLISTON HALL HOUSE COUNCIL PRESIDENT — Jean Mack Row 1: S. Vandiver, G. Mcintosh, J. McShane Row 2: J. Walden, Mrs. Parker, L. Sager Row 3: C. Erickson, B. North, S. Bryant, J. Arima PRESIDENT — Jo Thode Row 1: B. Turnbull, C. Gerberding, J. Thode, Mrs. Van Auken, C. Whitecotton Row 2: S. Swearingen, M. Churchill, B. Quigley, M. Head, S. Schomp, G. Knight, N. Huey O 1? r? € COE COLLEGE CHOIR O, i 9 9 Q o m M.E.N.C. E. Nuechterlein, S. Thoma, M. Jensen R. Rowsey, G. Johnson CHRISTIAN COUNCIL PRESIDENT Row 1: D. Meyers, C. Whitecotton, S. Folsom, S. Abrahamson, F. Eidsvaag, M. Churchill Row 2: D. Dempsey, P. Roberts, N. Long, R. Dempsey Row 3: P. Grubmeyer, B. Turnbull, D. Corson, M. Nettleton, S. Davis, S. Swearingen, C. Co well AWS PRESIDENT — Joy Arima S. Brozik, J. Thode, N. Long J. Walden, J. Arima J. Correll CHAIRMAN — Sally Brozik C. Rohrbeck, J. Mack, J. Thode S. Brozik, M. Head YWCA WAA PRESIDENT— Betsy Turnbull L. Stromberg, L. Larsen, L Miller J. Grube, B. Turnbull J. Walden, J. Brockway PRESIDENT— Peggy Shank M. Shearer, S. Folsom A. Diffenderfer BUSINESS CLUB PRESIDENT — Doug Miller J. Davis, R. Crowe, D. Farnham D. Miller, R. Brizzolara SOCIOLOGY CLUB BIOLOGY CLUB PRESIDENT — Sue Nelson J. Wilson, S. Nelson, J. McJoynt, J. Christiansen, M. Malina. PRESIDENT — Jon Duerr Row 1: S. Mayeda, J. Nelson, J. Wolf, S. Colgate. Row 2: D. Nix, B. MIecko, D. Wulf, H. Brunkhorst. Future Teachers of America — UNITE ' AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY Row 1: J. Davis, S. Boyd. Row 2: D. Kehret, C. Cook, H. Brunkhorst, S. Mayeda, B. Macharia, D. Wulf. S.N.E.A. PRESIDENT — Terry Bunge Row 1: A. Ludvigsen, J. Christiansen, S. Nelson, J Peterson, R. Wolfe. Row 2: N. Huey, N. Stoker, T. Bunge, S. Swearingen. Row 3: S. Bryant, J. Galvin, N. Long, C. Ask, L Miller, G. Knight, J. Craig, F. Eidsvaag, D. Kriese, R. Evans. YOUNG DEMOCRATS YOUNG REPUBLICANS CO-CHAIRMEN John Carlson Ron Frederick R. Fredrick, P. Roberts D. Ekiund, A. Parkinson, J. Helgeson, S. Swearingen B. Gish, J. Christiansen, S. Folsom PRESIDENT Mary Una Head R. Manaster, J. Wilson M. Mead, T. Miller M. Head, J. Casey STUDENT ART GUILD PRESIDENT — Jo Thode J. Thode, R. Levett, J. Rudd L. Heintz, S. Schomp, C. Palmberg, A. Parkinsen, R. Houston CATALINAS PRESIDENT — Phyllis Bert L. Bell, B. Martin, P. Koenn, P. Bert, L. Yates, J. Rudd. COMUTING STUDENTS ASSOCIATION PRESIDENT — Sharlene Miller B. Kothenbeutel, S. Menzner, V. Horak, D. Moore P. Knott, B. Miller R. Wolf, S. Englehardt WITCHES CLUB PRESIDENT — Carolyn Duncan CLAN OF C PRESIDENT Bob Young Row 1: R. Evans, G. Dyche, R. Schodtler, J. Imig, B. Stern, C. Grady, S. Souder, D. imhof, T. Brandon, R. Mass. Row 2: D. Beske, D, Glidden, J. Forest, J. Hughes, B. Crowe, D. Peter- son, J. O ' Neil, D. Smith, B. Brizzolara, K. Ehrensaft. Row 3: M. Mortenson, R. Bachelor, B. Anderson, R. Marks, J. Foley, D. Kittler, K. Knutsen, D. Rau, D. Nix, R. Tosi. Row 4: L. Harris, D. Hayes, R. Frederic, B. MIecko, W. Swan, B. Hoffman, G. Solmonson, B. Schalk, S. Menzer, B. Birch, M. Freerks, L Polk. CHEERLEADERS Lynn Sager Jan Kamps, Sue Abrahamson Cindy Erickson, Sue Bryant Shirley Hughes, Judy Jones Nancy DeYoung, Paula Fager ALPHA XI DELTA As each passing year adds to the store of experiences and memories, 1964- ' 65 leaves its indelible mark of achievement and fun for the sisters of Alpha Xi Delta. The year began with our annual Fall retreat where all the sun-tanned Xi ' s congregated to reminisce about the summer and plan for the coming flood of activity. Susie Bryant reigned as TKE Sleepy Time Gal as well as rejiresenting the Xi ' s as Homecom- ing Queen Candidate. This year ' s Homecoming was an e.xtra-special event for Alpha Gamma chapter since our float, built in cooperation with the Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity, was awarded the first place trophy. Fran Reuse and Marlys Nielsen both served on the Home- coming Committee, heljjing to make that much-anticipated weekend enjoyable for all. This year the Alpha Xi ' s adopted a new philanthropy jiroject which has been both a rewarding and delightful experience for every girl. We have been working at the Jane Boyd Community Center each Thursday night teaching jiing pong and card games. ■Winter carnival was a new innovation at Coe this year, and Sara Schomp was quite active in making this a very successful, and, we hope, annual event. The Xi ' s shared much of the spotlight on the Coe stage in ' ( president of Alpha Psi Omega, honorary dramatic fraternity, play 38. and six of us were seen in Inherit the Wind. One of the highlights of the year was our pledging of a brand the State College of Iowa. Cedar Falls. A student Art Guild was initiatetl into the Coe community and sisters Linda Heintz, Sara Schomp. and Ann Parkin.son were among the founders. Election of officers was held and Ann Ludvigsen was chosen our new ijresident. Spring arrived and with it the Alpha Xi Delta Greek Sing. The judges had a difficult job but finally picked Delta Delta Delta and Lambda Chi Alpha as the deserving winners. Bob Young was elected Ideal Fraternity Man. Along with the fun of Greek Week was the Phi Kappa Tau Greased Pig Contest. Our loyal teammates were Sara Schomp, Linda Mason, and Sue Canon who tied for the championship with the Tri Delts. We were all proud of Mary Alice Shierk who reigned as Cedar Rapids Home Show Queen. The year drew to a close with our annual Spring Formal. Linda Heintz was chosen Friend- liest Girl and Jim Farnham became Alpha Xi Delta Dream Man. 1964- ' 65, as all others before and all those ahead, was a special year in mir college li es. We look back on it with fond memories. Carmen Whitecotton. the lead n Ampbytrian . l|)ha Xi chapter at Winning 1965 Homecoming Float An act from Winter Carnival Jim Farnham, Alpha Xi Delta Sweetheart. V H K - B HI B : mF iP P aJ Rjl ' i |h ' (J H 1 Bob Young ' 65 Ideal Prat. Man 1955 Home Show CHI OMEGA Chi Omegas started the school year early with five girls at Student Encampment. A week later, the rest of the chapter arrived for the annual House Party at Palisades-Kepler Park. With tall term in full swing, Chi O ' s were found in the chapter rooms enjoying a complete house-cleaning; working in ye ole barn with the TEKE ' S on our Homecoming float entitled Button Frosh; cheering at football games; and entertaining Mrs. Santa Claus at our .sorority Christmas party. We were honored to have Carolyn Van Zee chosen as Cedar Rapids Flame Queen. Winter term brought nine new pledges with many honors attached. Jane Bernsten, Julia Eanes, and Sue Baxendale were elected to Alpha Lambda Delta; Kathy Goetsch, pledged in the spring was also elected for membership. Coe Christian Council chose Susan Davis and Sue_Schroeder as participants in the Summer Service Project in Canada. Several Chi O ' s were members of band and choir. The pledges brought an end to winter term with their pledge dance. Who Done It? , and we all agreed that it was the biggest success ever. Chi Omegas found spring term packed with picnics, formals, Greek Week, activation, and many more wonderful events. Omicron Alpha hosted the Iowa chapters of Chi Omega at the Holiday Inn for an inspiring Eleusinia, our Founder ' s Day celebration. A lovely initiation banquet was held at the Town House where awards were presented to Lynn Haedtler, Julia Eanes, Julie Ukena. and Janet Braly. The chapter presented the annual Shades of Evening spring formal at Elmcrest Country Club. Don Decker was chosen Chi Omega Sweetheart during the intermission of the dance. The seniors were very pleased with their shiny silver baby mugs which were presented to them at the Senior Breakfast, May 23. Omicron Alpha was so very proud to help honor Jackie Dennis, a fifty year alumna of our chapter, at an open house displaying her paintings. The chapter presented songs, featuring a beautiful duet composed and sung by Ann Carpenter and Jane Bernsten. Chi O ' s finished the year with a sorority picnic enjoyed by all, in spite of the rain. The past year has been a great one for Chi Omega. Once again we received the Panhellenic Scholarship Tray for the highest average winter term. Many Chi O ' s served as assistants in the deiiartments of English, Spanish, Political Science, and Math. Donna Oetjen spent six months in Costa Rica in the study of lichens, while Barb Halliburton studied at Argonne National Laboratories during spring term. These are two of the programs sponsored by the Associated Colleges of the Midwest. Thus ended a happy and successful year for Chi Omega at Coe College. Fun Games Chi Seniors complete witli baby mug. Carolyn Van Zee 1965 Flame Queen Spring Formal time agam Pledges Victory DELTA CHI BETA With the beginning of fall term, the Delta Chi ' s experienced one of the busiest school years ever. Complete redecoration of our chapter rooms was our first major project, and we extend special thanks to Jeff Harrington for all of his help and advice. We all missed Alison Shepherd and Ann Thomas who participated in the Washington Term Program and Phyllis Prehn who did her student teaching under the Chicago Urban Semester Program. The Delta Chi ' s proved to be hard workers for campus activities such as Homecoming Com- mittee, Y.W.C.A., and student productions. During Fall term Susie Engelhardt was chosen as the Sig lympic Queen and Joy Arima was our Homecoming candidate. Winter term was welcomed with Formal Rush, and many of our activities centered around our new pledges. Our pledge dance Far Away Places, was the big social event for the term. Just before finals, the Delta Chi ' s were gathered around the T.V. set in the chapter rooms to watch Alison Shepherd who was part of Coe ' s team on College Bowl. Spring term brought Ideal Week and initiation, Greek Week and more honors for the Delta Chi ' s. Mary Jensen was elected president of Mu Phi Epsilon, Shirley Hughes was chosen for the Student Encampment Committee, and Susie Engelhardt was chosen as Publi- city Chairman for Student Council. The Delta Chi ' s celebrated spring with a barbecue and dance, and at that time George Esslinger was chosen as the Delta Chi Mascot. Flunk Day and our picnic honoring the seniors completed a perfect year for the Delta Chi Beta ' s. Outstanding Senior Man and Woman Alison Shepherd Perry Brown Delta Chi Beta Alpha Sigma Phi Homecoming float Phyllis Prehn participated in Chicago Urban Program. Delta Delta Delta The year of 1964-65 has been one full of warm memories for the Tri Deltas. Active par- ticipation in debate, Catalinas, homecoming, and sports has made each Tri Delta feel this year has been outstanding. September was started with our annual house party followed by many fraternity dances in- cluding the Lambda Chi ' s South Sea Island Dance where Jane Coffey was named the girl whom one would most like to be stranded with on a desert island and the Phi Tau ' s Grave Affair with Barbie Fisher as their Ghoul Friend. With Homecoming approaching, our cheerleaders, Cyndy Erickson, Janice Kamps. Lynn Sager, and Nancy Swaine led the team to victory on the field; while Lyn Ward led Homecoming weekend to success with Tri Delta ' s Janice Kamps sharing the crown of Homecoming Queen with Kappa Delta ' s Ruth- anne Dempsey. Before Homecoming came the Siglym|)ics which the Deltas won now for the seventh consecutive year. At Christmas, the Lambda Chi ' s and Tri Deltas held a party for the underprivileged children. In scholarship. Delta Delta Delta placed first on campus and was proud to have Lorraine Gregory initiated into Alpha Lambda Delta. With winter term came the pledging of ten girls and the pledge dance titled Sea and Ski. Delta Delta Delta again awarded a scholarship to a Coe woman student regardless of her social affiliation. Valentine ' s Day brought Heart Throb Hop along and we honored Ron Feltes as the Tri Deltas Heart Throb. The dance is hekl annually to raise donations for the heart fund. Spring term welcomed Ideal Week and nine new actives into Delta Eta Chapter along with three new pledges. Spring Sing followed with the Tri Deltas winning first place with A Few of My Favorite Things. Greek Week tricked us all this year with the bad weather, but Phi Tau ' s still held their Greased Pig Contest in which the Delta ' s tied with the Alpha Xi ' s for first place. Parents ' Weekend featured a breakfast for the parents in our Chapter rooms. Tri Delta al.so jjrovefl their athletic ability by coming in first in baseball. With the end of Spring Formals, the Deltas had Karen McMurray crowned as Sigma Nu Sweetheart and John Cotter as our 1965 Dream Man. Our year ended wonderfully with our nine seniors leaving us yet obtaining their Tri Delta alumnae Circle Degree. Delta Delta Delta Winning Greek Sing 1965 Pledge Class at Pledge Dance Sea Ski John Cotter 1965 Tri Delta Sweetheart Another Tri Delta first Siglympics 9Bh- 9B5 ' V iu kv o . O Vi ► ?oc (TDlle e 4 1 rn th !- V Wy v O V- y Ky ■ |3 ! v Vy x y Wy ' vy o v V KAPPA DELTA Kappa Deltas had many opportunities throughout the school year to direct their enthusiasm toward sorority and campus life. They started the fall term by participation in student en- campment, freshmen orientation, and house party. They immediately assumed their responsi- bilities as Acorn and Cosmos editors, AWS officers. Christian Council and Student Council members. Their energies were directed toward su ch activities as Siglympics (which they almost won!), the political campaign, campus chest, and Winter Carnival. Fun-loving KD ' s enjoyed fraternity exchanges which resulted from campus chest auction, all-school dances and formals, and athletic events. Two peppy KD ' s expressed their enthusiasm as cheerleaders. Others dis- played their funny and serious sides in the school plays. In the area of scholarship several KD ' s were named to the Dean ' s List, Crescent, or pursued independent study in Washington, D. C. The innocent pledges fooled the actives by a show of wit and cunning in pledge skips, skits, and pranks. Seniors supplied their sophisticated wit for the specific benefit of those in the sophomore slump. In the Beauty category Kappa Deltas proudly claimed Homecoming Queen Ruthanne Demp- sey. Marie Horn was military ball queen. Karen Andrews and Judy Salladay were atten- dants to Flame Queen and Homecoming, respectively. Beauty and sincerity combined to make three fraternity sweethearts. Sincerity of purpose was put to practical use on the philanthropy which was a party given for the mentally retarded of Cedar Rapids each month with the Alpha Phi Omegas. One mem- ber was able to be a member of the Summer Service Project which went to Canada. Each Kappa Delta is a unique inflividual who contributes her talents and energies toward realistic goals in campus life. WITHIN THE DIAMOND SHIELD A MYRIAD OF PERSONALITIES KAPPA DELTA ALPHA PHI OMEGA During the past year the Delta Lambda Chapter of Alpha Phi Omega carried out the aspects of its purpose on Coe ' s campus — leadership, friendship, and service, in a variety of ways. The members have worked in co-operation with Kappa Delta in helping the Linn County Retarded Children Center. A Phi O also sponsored the Ugly Man Contest with the proceeds going to the Summer Service project. Members also helped the local Boy Scout Troops as well as acting as ushers at convocations. The responsibility of leadership was assumed by many members of A Phi O. John Wilson was elected President of the Student Council and Paul Roberts vice president of Student Council. Paul also served as President of the Christian Council, and was a member of the College Bowl Team. Dave Rau was selected treasurer of Student Council, and President of Pi Delta Epsilon. Rolf Beckhusen, in addition to his serving as President of the frater- nity, was captain of the victorious independent men ' s intramural teams. Other members were active in social fraternities, student council and its committees, school publications, and athletics. The members of A Phi O enjoyed several social activities starting with the party for the freshmen during orientation week, and ending with a party with the Chi O ' s in the spring. ALPHA SIOMA PHI The men of Alpha Sigma Phi, Alpha Chi Chapter, once again illustrated their high spirit and enthusiasm this year. From the Siglympics Ball to the Black and White Formal, the Sigs were known as gracious entertainers. Susie Englehardt reigned as Siglympics Queen, and Louise Miller reigned at the Black and White Formal. The Sigs also put on a school-wide book drive under the auspices of the National Student Association. The book drive was a tremendous success as we gathered over 600 books for proverty -stricken areas and Negro Colleges. Another strong point of Alpha Sigma Phi was AFROTC. Brothers Decker, Esslinger, and Evans are all to be congratulated on their outstanding performance and excellent leadership. The year was wrapped up with the initiation of six new members. These new initiates will return next year to continue the outstanding character of men which prevails in Alpha Sigma Phi. ikikik LAMBDA CHI ALPHA The Zeta Alpha chapter of Lambda Chi Alpha concluded another memorable year on the Coe Campus by maintaining its traditions, principles, and ideals. The chapter continued to maintain its high level of excellence in three competitive areas: academics, athletics, and social activities. The brothers have retained their high rank of scholarship on the campus and in the nation. Our scholarship program continued to boost the level of academic achievement of both the brothers and the pledges, while allowing the members to participate in all extra curricular campus events. We stood second overall this year. The athletic year also proved quite rewarding to the brotherhood. Many of the brothers excelled in the college sports program as well as in the intra-mural program. The brothers received recognition for their participation in football, cross country, track, baseball, swim- ming, and golf. In the intramural program, the Lambda Chis started the year by capturing the football crown and continued to prove their athletic prowess by taking six more of the Intramural events. The social year of the Zeta Alpha chapter was one of unprecedented activity. The South Sea Island Dance began the social year for the brothers as well as the school. Homecoming followed with the Lambda Chi Alpha and Alpha Xi Delta sorority combining their creative efforts to receive first place in the float contest. The annual Pledge Dance followed with numerous informal gatherings occurring throughout the entire year. The climax of the social year was the annual White Rose Formal held at the Cedar Rapids Country Club. M iss Marie Horn of the Kappa Delta sorority was crowned Crescent Girl. Other awards were presented to Terry Bunge for outstanding senior man, Don Dempsey for outstanding Intra- mural man, and the outstanding pledge award was presented to Larry Alsbrook. The Brotherhood of the Lambda Chi Alpha Fraternity has displayed a well-rounded, worthwhile, and enjoyable schedule of events. With the departure of the senior class, the undergraduates of Zeta Alpha accept the challenge posed by these fine men to uphold the high standard achievement that they have maintained. First Place Greek Sing Flunk Day Indian anyone? First Place Homecoming Float PHI KAPPA TAU The men of Iota continued this year to improve their scholastic standing on campus while maintaining their usual varied assortment of social events and activities. A number of the brothers should be given individual recognition for their contributions to campus life. Terry Erickson was the President of Inter-Fraternity Council and Ron Feltus is the newly elected President for ' 65. Geoff McKee served as vice-president of Student Council and Norm Beu headed the 1964 Homecoming committee. In the A.F.R.O.T.C. pro- gram, Jim McJoynt was group commander and Joe Manatrey received the Reserve Officers Award of Achievement. Bob Brizzalara served as president of the Business Club and as business manager for the Cosmos. Bob Smythe coached the Freshman Football Team bringing his overall two-year record to 5-1, and Dan Guenther was chosen Editor for the 1965 Caravan. Social highlights included a highly successful Grave Affair, featuring Singing Sam and the Sparks, and our Winter Turnabout pledge dance. During Greek Week the Phi Taus initiated the Annual Sorority Pig-Chase and won the Kappa Delta pie-eating contest for the third consecutive year. Special recognition must go to Joe Manatrey, Greek Week ' s Ugliest Man On Campus. At the annual Spring Formal dinner Karen Andrews of Kappa Delta was named Phi Kappa Tau Sweetheart. Terry Erickson was selected most valuable intramural man, Geoff Bangs, most valuable pledge, and Sachem-member Bob Brizzalara outstanding Fraternity man. Flunk Day with Phi Kappa Tau complete with diving board Good Clean - Fun! SIOMA NU Sigma Nu continued to maintain a high level of scholastic achievement this year. The chap- ter placed first academically among the fraternities during the fall, winter and spring terms. Brothers were elected to Phi Beta Kappa and received many awards for their academic achievement. Beta Epsilon ranked high among the Sigma Nu chapters across the nation. In addition to captains of the foot ball teams, brothers were selected to little All-American teams sponsored by the fraternity. Several brothers were selected to all-conference teams in football, basketball and baseball. Many awards for excellent performance and improve- ment in all three major sports were given to Sigma Nus. In general campus activity, the men of Sigma Nu were active in forensics, drama and administration. Many of the brothers, received assistantships in the various departments of the college. Clan of C, student council and interfraternity council were served well by members of Sigma Nu. The social calendar was highlighted by the annual White Rose Formal held at the Town House. Popular opinion seemed to provide proof of its success. The Mods and Rockers pledge dance in the winter term was another outstanding event. The social calendar was full of exchanges and other happenings to provide entertainment during the year. Taking all into consideration — scholastically, socially and athletically — the year was most successful. It provided the men of Sigma Nu with many memories of rewarding experiences. It was a good year. Hard at work at Wapsie — the Red Fantom strikes. Brothers together. Some peoples ' kids! It was all too much. jyk TAU KAPPA EPSILON Zeta chapter ended its forty ninth year on Cooe ' s campus after participating in a wide variety of campus activities. Top events on the T. K. E. calendar were the Homecoming celebration, the all school TKE Pajama Dance, and the Red Carnation Spring Formal. At the annual formal, Bobbie Kamps was chosen TKE Sweetheart, while John Stalmac was elected Ideal Pledge. Chuck Zimmer- man was the recipient of the 1965 TKE Outstanding Senior Award. The TKE ' s were active in many campus activities. In football, Rollie Pardun and Robert Bruckner were standouts. Rollie, as Coe ' s kicking specialist, kicked a field goal with seconds left to win against Cornell in the Homecoming game. Bruckner led Coe ' s defensive team as an all conference safety man. Ray Zirpolo starred in track by taking first in the 100 yard dash and 220 yard dash at the conference meet and fourth in the 100 yard dash at the Drake Relays. Tim Frisch led Coe ' s baseball team to a successful season as their leading pitcher. Dennis Hummel was president of the R. O. A. Doug Miller won the outstanding Flight Com- mander award in ROTC and served as vice president of the Business Club. Looking forward to next year, TKE has an excellent social calendar planned. We are await- ing with a positive attitude another good year at Coe. 1 n K ' • 1 % ' iu 1 i _aj ' m vW aJB ■ rir« r z v K D • i C2J V j m j,tik ' 1 -H. i W WA ' A i f l - i The Brothers of T.K.E. have everything .asat. strength A IQ 6 5 COE COLLEGE CEDAR RAPIDS rj ' iniA A ; ' (jffwth F O O B Row 1: S. Muller, S. Souder, D. Kittler, R. Drost, R. Brizzolara, R. Glafka, R. Crowe, D. Guenther, T. Erickerson R Tosi R Beer- man, Row 2: L Polk, G. Hughes, T. Green, R. Smith, J. Imig, P. Conti, R. Schodtler, K. Westerbeck, T. Brandon, D Glidden J Forest, F. Conkhn. Row 3; B. MIecko, D. Peterson, D. Hayes, J. Hill, R. Young, R. Pardun, D. Hayes, R. Feltes T Butkus ' R Bachelor, J. Manatrey, Coach Schaffer. Row 4; Coach Drahn, Coach Moyer, Coach Smythe, L Harris, G. Dewey, A Arnold J s ' pil- man, K. Knutsen, R. Jubenville, R. Bruckner, R. Zirpolo, J. Jogmen, D. Beske, Coach Babcock, Coach King. Coach King Head Coach Drahn Coach Moyer Coach Babcock Bob Jubenville All Conference Bob Young : ;:,--: .ft;: ' s:. MWC Champions With twenty-three returning lettermen, the Kohawks under Coach Glenn Drahn were picked as one of the leading contenders for the Midwest Con- ference title. Travelling up to Northfield, Minn, for their Midwest Conference season opener, the Kohawks returned victorious after dumping Carleton 27-0. The gridders opened their home season against St. Olaf and posted a 16-6 victory. The defense proved itself to be rugged by recovering four fumbles and intercepting two passes. Sporting a 2-0 record and hopes of their third consecutive conference victory, Coach Drahn ' s gridders faced the Redmen of Ripon only to be set back 42-14. After the defeat by Ripon, the Kohawks headed for paydirt against the Knox Siwash drubbing them 35-6. Sophomore Dick Smith dashed 72 yards for a TD after grabbing a Knox punt on his own 28 yard line. Coming back from behind twice, the Kohawks spilled Cornell 15-14 on a 32 yard field goal by Rollie Pardun early in the fourth period. Quarterback Rich Tosi scored on a 5 yard plunge and on a 6 inch plunge. The Home- coming victory over Cornell put the Kohawks in a tie for second place. Held scoreless in the first half, the Kohawks came back in the second half and marched over the Grinnell Pioneers 21-15. Early in the fourth quarter Bob Bruckner intercepted a pass and raced 70 yards for the TD. Parent ' s Day found the Kohawks walloping the Monmouth Scots 49-0 and placing them in a three way tie with Cornell and Ripon for first place in the conference. Seventeen seniors closed out their college football careers as the Ko- hawks trampled the Lawrence University Vikings 47-10 to gain a share of the Midwest Conference title. This was the first title for the Kohawk gridders since 1959. Rich Tosi Coe ' s mighty defense stops a Cornell halfback on a fourth down play. ' Rudy Drost All Conference Rollie Pardun Steve Muller Bob Brizzolara 178 Bob Bruckner Terry Erickson Gerry Hughes catchfi one ut 1 em Bran- don ' s passes for a long gam against Mon- mouth. Bob Crowe All Conference Kim Knutsen Boo Glafka Dave Hayes Denny Kittler All Conference Jamie Hill Ron Beermann All Conference Ron Beermann drives to tine one yard line dgainst Monmouth. Roy Schodtler Steve Souder Dick Smith All Conference Tom Butkus Steve Souder carries to the Cornell five yard line during the tremendous Homecoming game. Dan Guenther m k Lee Polk Paul Conti 180 Gerry Hughes All Conference rr ■- ' -„ 1 ' a Kent Westerbeck Don Hayes Don Hayes finds a big hole in the line and goes in for the score against fVlonmouth. fe; -VW Tom Brandon Jon Forest £ i %.. :,,ik Dave Glidden 181 Dick Smith jubt misscb one of lorn Brandon ' s passes in the game against IVlonmouth. Lynn Harris V -1  nA Ray Zirpolo Rick Bachelor _:v e Jack Imig % %- Dave Peterson Joe Jogman Dwight Beske 182 © ., ' 4; ' . V y Brian MIecko Tom Green George Dewey Cross Country Coach King, J. Melvin, R. Anderson, S. Marks, R. Mass, J. Orsini. Row 1: M. Collis, D. Pietrzak, W. Swan, L. Shryock, G. Schlarbaum. Row 2: Coach King, R. Smith, T. Vaughn, G. Solmonson, T. Frisch, J. Spillman, R. Evans. BASKETBALL Head Coach King, Student Coach Evans, and Freshman Coach Babcock. Capturing their opening game against William Penn College 72-63, the Kohawks set the pace in the Midwest Conference with wins over the Siwash of Knox 86-69 and the Scots of Monmouth 95-85. The cagers under Coach Don King dribbled on to their fourth straight victory by tumbling Buena Vista College only to lose the battle of the unbeaten teams against Upper Iowa 103-83. The Kohawks bounced back to outlast St. Ambrose for a 79-71 victory. The first road trip against conference opponents proved disastrous as the Lawrence University Vikings handed Coe their first conference loss 75-72 and the Redmen of Ripon dumped the Kohawks 81-63. The cagers regained the league lead by putting together a late spurt and waltzing away from Carleton 72-60 and scrambling to an 81-69 victory over St. Olaf. With seven seconds left in the game, veteran Larry Shyrock hit a 10 foot jump shot for an 82-81 victory over Beloit College. Once again a road trip proved disastrous as St. Olaf handed the Kohawks an 88-68 loss and Carleton dropped the Kohawks 88-74 to push the Kohawks into third place in conference standings. In the following outings the cagers smothered Grinnell 80-53 but lost to arch-rival Cornell 77-71. The Kohawks once again broke the 100 point mark as they handed the Lawrence University Vikings a 102-81 defeat. The following night found the Ripon Redman edging the Kohawks 68-66. In an exciting overtime bout, Grinnell edged Coe 105-100 and the Cornell Rams wal- loped Coe 90-73 in their next game. The Kohawks then knocked off their road jinx as they defeated Knox 95-85, but bowed down to Monmouth 79-72. Veteran letterman Larry Shryock swept three post- season honors as he was selected most improved player by the coaching staff, most valuable player by his teammates, and was cited by Coach King for the Dick Case Hustle Award. Larry Shryock Wally Swan 185 (VV. Mike Collis Garry Schlarbaum s 5 .i Bob Hoffman Denny Pietrzak 186 Dick Smith Garry Solmonson Tim Frisch Tom Vaughn 187 Row 1: F. Fazio, R. Imhof, L. Coppola, P. Fader. Row 2: Coach Moyer, G. Dyche, G. Anderson, D. MacKay. WRESTLING With three returning lettermen, Coach Fred Moyer opened the season with an inexperienced and injury-ridden squad with a quadrangular meet at Lawrence University where they finished behind Carleton, Lawrence and Ripon. Dick Imhof, Pete Fader, and George Dyche placed first in their respective weight classes. Losing three matches on forfeits against Llpper Iowa the grapplers managed to pick up 9 points by winning three of the next five matches. Imhof, Fader, and Dyche were still undefeated. Returning home for a two meet stand, the Ko- hawks beat Knox 24-6 with Imhof and Cappola pinning their opponents, and then losing to Dubuque 27-3 with only George Dyche managing to pick up any points for Coe. Dick Imhof and George Dyche combined talents for five points to place Coe twentieth in the NCAA Small College Tournament at Colden, Colorado. Dyche placed fourth and fought his way into the NCAA nationals at Laramie, Wyoming where he was defeated in his opening bout. The grapplers finished seventh in the conference meet with Dyche, Imhof, and Cappola grabbing points for the Kohawks. Coach Moyer 188 Dick Imhof pinning his opponent from Monmouth. Larry Cappola 147 pound class MWC 4th Place George Dyche 167 pound class MWC 2nd Place; NCAA Small College Tournament 4th Place Dick Imhof 136 pound class MWC 2nd Place George Dyche picked up another victory against his opponent from Monmouth. 189 Pete Fader 157 Pound Class Gordon Anderson 177 Pound Class Don MacKay 191 Pound Class Don MacKay gets tied up with his opposition from Monmouth. 190 Row 1: R. Norberg, M. Mortenson. Row 2: W Stern, G Bangs, M. Frericks. SWIMMINO Co-Captains Bob Norberg and Geff Bangs. 191 Row 1: D. Peterson, M. Collis, R. Freeman, J. Gawthrop, R. Pardun, T. Green. Row 2: Coach Moyer, R. Glafka, D. Kittler, T. Vavra, B. Hop, R. Hoffman, D. Hayes, R. Zirpolo, A. Snow, Coach Babcock. , ' f ' - Coach Carl Babcock ' s track squad opened the indoor sea son by taking a licking from the State College of Iowa 86-17. The thinclads, however, dashed right back and smashed the Monmouth Scots 66-28 as Ray Zirpolo and Don Hayes paved the way to the victory. Tuning up for the Mid- west Conference Indoor Track Meet, the spike- sters trounced Grinnell 56-38 and Wartburg Col- lege 58-37. Sophomore Ray Zirpolo was the only first place winner as the Kohawks placed third in the con- ference indoor track meet, just six points behind title holder Grinnell and only one point behind second place Carleton. John Gawthrop led the spikesters to victory with double wins in the one and two mile events as the Kohawks outscored their opponents in the annual triangular meet with Loras and St. Ambrose. Coe collected 43 points to Loras s 42 and St. Ambrose ' s 33. The 440 yard relay team composed of Ray Zirpolo, Don Hayes, Tom Green, and Rollie Pardun placed fifth in the Cornell Relays. In the Monmouth Relays the track squad placed in eleven of the eighteen events, and in the Redmen Relays at Simpson College the thinclads grabbed second place. Warming up for the conference meet, the spikesters of Coe trounced Iowa Wesle- yan 85-49 with double winners Don Hayes, Mike Collis, Ray Zirpolo, and John Gawthrop leading the way. In the conference meet sophomore Ray Zirpolo posted victories in the 100 and 220 yard dashes to give Coe a fourth place in the Midwest Con- ference Track Meet. Coach Babcock 192 Coe ' s three fine hurdlers Bob Hoffman, Denny Kittler, and Don Hayes. Don Hayes was one of the members of the 440 yd. relay team, and the MWC high hurdle champion. Ray Zirpolo, Coe ' s outstanding 100 and 220 yard dash man. Rollie Pardun, Tom Vavra, Dave Peterson, and Mike Collis made up two different relay teams for Coe. : ' HWJr.KM ' . . ' ' ii iss axi ' Row 1: D. Beske, R. Webster, J. Reese, T. Brandon, R. Tosi, G. Sclildrbaum, J. O ' Neil, J. Mana- trey. Row 2: Coach King, D. McDonald, W. Miller, R. Birch, D. Dempsey, C. Bachleor, T. Frisch, E. Schwenke, R. Smith, W. Swan, G. Hughes. BASEBALL SOUTHERN DIVISION CHAMPIONS With nine returning lettermen and a solid pitching staff, the Coe baseballers under Coach Don King were jjegged as contenders for the southern division championship which they won. The Kohawks opened the season by splitting a doubleheader with William Penn, losing the first game fO-5 but winning the second 2-1. In 13 innings of action, Coe tied the State College of Iowa 0-0. Opening the con- ference season against arch-rival Cornell, the Kohawks walloped the Rams 8-3. Coe moved into the league lead by taking advantage of Knox errors as they stomped the Siwash 9-2 and posted a 2-0 conference record. Facing the Pioneers of Grinnell in a doubleheader, the baseballers romped to an easy 12-0 victory in the first game but went down in defeat 1-0 in the second game. Cornell edged Coe 4-3 in the first game of a doubleheader, but the Kohawks swung their way to victory in the second game by the score of 7-0. The University of Iowa baseball team proved too powerful for Coe as they shut out the Kohawks 5-0. The Monmouth Scots romped to a rain-shortened 8-6 victory in the first and the second game was called because of rain after one inning of play with Coe leading 3-0. The Kohawks clinched the southern division crown with a doubleheader victory over Monmouth. In these two games the Kohawks won by the scores of 7-5 and 4-2, In the best of three series, northern division chamjiion Riixin shut out Coe in the first game on a no-hitter 2-0. Coe ' s Ed Schwenke pitched a shut-out for seven innings of the second game, but then ran into trouble. A two run rally in the ninth inning gave Ripon a 5-4 victory and the championship. Garry Schlarbaum First Base Skip Swan Outfield - Short Stop Rich Tosi Short Stop -Outfield Ed Schwenke Pitcher Tom Brandon Catcher Rick Bachleor First Base -Outfield Jim O ' Neil Outfield rwc, - , -r - Bob Birch Outfield Lee Polk Outfield .aSs e fL: ! Don MacDonald Outfield — H— - ] Row 1: S. McDonald, J. Melvin, R. Wiener. Row 2: J. McJoint, T. Erickson, R. Nagle, Coach Drahn. SHP m H ni HPm 9« T H 0Jffil %- B L 1 3Hj B H yfl 1 ' ■ ' ' ISSl ' .. 1 b Pt m ' p t J i i 9 . gM %d P- ! A - 1 1 i ' ' ' W 111 Coach Nichols, D. Arenz, F. Conklin, R. Frederick, K. Westerbeck, W. Stern. Row 1: J. Kwitkor, W. Lester, 0. Grey, S. Woodruff, J. McGary, D. Witte, D. Highland, R. Kavaugh, W. Wendling, D, Wright, A. Rowe. Row 2: Coach Smyth, R. Montgomery, L. Holm, D. Disch, B. Bruggman, Stehura, H. Caldara, D. Beckmen, G. Dash, J. Johnson, Coach Schaffer. Row 3: J. Brookings, Jones, R. McCleary, J. Stalmack, M. Con- drin, S. Simpson, G. Henderson, D. McKibbin, N. Cummins. FRESHMAN Row 1: R. Oliver, M. Wilson, S. Simpson. Row 2: D. Highland, Coach Schaefer, D. Wright. Row 1: J. Harding, R. Collum, J. Valentine, G. Creese, D. Minert, J. Griffin, T. Courtney. Row 2: Coach Beerman, M. Fink, M. Steele, R. Lovett, R. Moehling, L Alsbrook, T. Watiey, Coach Babcock. Row 1: B. Wendling, F. Humphrey, G. Henderson, S. Simpson, D. Witte. Row 2: Coach Muller, M. Condron, D. Boeck- man, T. Courtney, J. Griffin, A. Rows, J. Hansen, B. Cox. Row 1: R. Baybayan, L. Holm, J. Marlin. Row 2; B. Huston, J. Forbes, W. Collier, Coach Drahn. Row 1: J. Stalmack, D. Wright, J. Reed, L Cummins, T. Sparacio, Row 2: D. Orsini, R. Levett, J. Brooking, D. Disch, Coach Beerman. IQ 6 5 COE COLLEGE CEDAR RAPIDS Cadet Commanders E. Baugh, J. McJoint, and D. Decker. The Drill Team passes in review on Veteran ' s Day. J. McJoint receiving the Presidential Medal F.I. P. Cadets on the flight line at the air- port. Row 1: N. Beu, J. McJoint, D. Hummel, D. Miller, J. Coffman, E. Baugh. Row 2: D. Decker, R. Freeman, R. Frederick, W. Barr, J. Leahy, J. Harring- ton. Row 3: L Moses, R. Lewis, J. Hill, R. Hoffman, R. Wood, A. Lambert. Row 4: R. Marks, V. Rausch, A. Hoppe, A. Heinrick, T. Parker. Marie Horn, Queen of the Miltary e ' e ime Mice ' iA ty ' ociutmm Colonel Brookes Booker. Guests following the Veteran ' s Day Review on November 11, 1964. ,:!!! ' The Coe AFROTC Band in the Inaugural Parade in Washington, D.C. on January 20, 1965. The Coe AFROTC Band once again was selected to represent Iowa in the Presidential Inaugural Parade. This marked the ninth consecutive Inaugural that the Coe band has participated in. Norman Stafford receives the Outstanding Service Award from Lt. Col. Charon. 19 6 5 COE COLLEGE CEDAR RAPIDS - lOWA- ' oonimencenien In four swift years mellowed now to yester- days, we saw a million sights. We recognized in campus scenes even those small stabilities reminding that we are enclosed and moved by the heartbeat of legend. But we realized, too, that tradition is promised to the future. SENIOR BANQUET Robert Jubenville presents Dr. McCabe with the 1965 class gift. The money is for the pur- pose of landscaping B Avenue — when we get it — and also a portion of it to be used for a scholarship. COMMENCEMENT Senior Week was climaxed by graduation on June 13, 1965. It was filled with many mem- orable activities for those who were passing through the doors of Coe ' s Sinclair Memorial Chapel for the last time as students. Gradu- ation day was initiated by Baccalaureate and Commencement climaxed the ending of a per- fect day. The Commencement address was The Human Side of Economic Progress and was presented by Dr. Howard R. Bowen, Presi- dent. University of Iowa. A reception was held in Voorhee ' s Grove for parents, friends, and graduates following Commencement. This was the end of one road and the beginning of another, hoj efully even more successful then the first. The beginning of the end of a long journey. A portion of the 1965 graduating class listen intently to the Commencement ad- dress and its promise of the bright future which lies ahead. Howard R. Bowen, President, University of Iowa, presented tlie 1965 Commencement Address, which was the Human Side of Economic Progress. He stressed the promise and opportunity of our economic advancement. The conferring of honorary degrees on distin- guished and deserving men has always been a high light of Coe ' s Commencement program and this year was no exception. Three honorary degrees were conferred this year to Victor Robert Hurka, Doctor of Science, Kenneth Raymond Clark, Doctor of Laws, and Howard R. Bowen, Doctor of Human- ities, Victor Robert Hurka is a graduate of Coe and a Production Manager of DuPont ' s Organic Chemicals Department. He truly illustrates the philosophy of Better Things for Better Living through Chemistry. Another graduate of Coe, Kenneth Raymond Clark, conducts a distinguished law practice in Chicago and is considered out- standing in several areas by fellow members of his profession. Howard R. Bowen acts as teacher, administrator, and public servant in his chosen field of economics. His career exemplifies the qualities of the responsible intellectual and he has learned so that he might serve. Dr. Cook with the newly elected Phi Kappa Phi members: Janet Craig, Carolyn Carrithers, Barbara North, and Gary Schlarbaum. President McCabe congratulates Dale Glenn Wulf, Summa Cum Laude graduate. Air Force Commissions were pre- sented by Lt. Col. Hubert J. Charon to ten men. They were: Eric R. Baugh, Robert A. Bruckner, Donald C. Decker, Milton C. Deerr, Ellis R. Evans, Ronald A. Frederick, Jeffrey M. Harrington, James M. Hill, Arthur H. Hollender, and James M. IVlcJoynt. Forward toward the promise of tomorrow and the happiness it will bring. The end of a long journey. Family and friends — the perfect ending to the perfect day. :: ' iSit- Drawing of new Wagners building being constructed in Davenport. a fine school deserves a fine annual M If HlRi THERE IS PRIDE IN PRINTING aaners prmten - DAVE PnRT - CEDAR RAPIDS The NORTHWESTERN MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY . . . because there is a difference Jeff Hansen Special Agent Compliments of . . . EASTSIDE MAIDRITE • GIFTS — LEATHER GOODS CEDAR RAPIDS, IOWA 215 3RD STREET S.E. PHONE EM 2-2646 We welcome your patronage Del-Ray ' s 850 Second Ave. S. E. BARTEL ' S STANDARD SERVICE 526 Center Point Road Service you can trust — products you can depend on Phone 364-9539 S H Green Stamps D S GLASS COMPANY Distributors L-O-F GLASS LOWE BROS. PAINT 907 2nd Street S. E. Cedar Rapids. Iowa Area 319 364-2495 Congratulations to the Class of 1965 Employment Agency Service 312 2nd Ave. S.E. 366-2432 Wilson ' s Motorcycle Sales 620 Center Point Road N. E. Bw Harley-Davidson and Honda The last word in equipment from tlie first name in the industry LeFebu-re Corporation. Business systems equipment GENERAL OFFICES: CEDAR RAPIDS, IOWA — EM 3-8244 LeFebure is a subsidiary of Craig Systems, Incorporated With graduation, you have reached an important mile- stone in life. You are now on your way to your chosen career. Success in the future will depend upon careful planning as well as hard work and continuing improve- ment. At IOWA-ILLINOIS, planning ahead is part of our business too. We constantly strive to improve our facilities WE WISH YOU A SUCCESSFUL FUTURE yours for better living lOlVA V IlililNOIS Gas and m Electric Company PHOTO STUDIO THIRD FLOOR Major in Clothesmanship! Its part of the campus tradition — good clothesman- ship. Traditional styling, classic elegance, superb tai- loring — they ' re part of our tradition. We cater to the college man and his fine taste with names like Gant, Cricketeer, Jaymar, and Alps. Stop in, brouse if you like — we ' re sure you will. ARMSTRONG ' S 333 SHOP THIRD FLOOR LATER ON L ATER ON«LA R ON LATE you may not be able to get life insurance Your health or the nature of your occupation may prevent it. When you buy a General American life insurance policy with Guaranteed Insurability, you will have the guaran- teed right to buy additional insurance every three years starting at age 25 and continuing until you are 40 . . . regardless of your health or occupation at the time. And you can do it at standard rates. Call your General American Life representative for help in guaranteeing your future financial security. THOMAS L HOLMES 801 Higley BIdg. Phone: 365-5255 GENERAL AMERICAN LIFE F©ir AMY 5irii§iiiiirmini€© Whipple, VVinterberg, Burleson $c Wilts 316 Second Avenue S. E. IT PAYS TO LOOK WELL • YOU ARE NEXT AT THE COLLEGE BARBER SHOP Across from campus at 111 - 12th Street N. E. Dial EM 2-1432 With or without appointments — Ken and Fred Compliments of WISCONSIN CHEESE STORE GROCERY 314 Center Point Road N. E. THE STAR FIXTURE COMPANY Complete Line in Food Service Equipment Extends Congratulations and Best Wishes to Class of ' 65 628 5th Ave. S. E. PHONE EM 4-3423 Ralston-Nelson Company, Inc. INSURANCE 417 First Ave. S. E. EMpire 3-2626 Pledged to Your Security Congratulations and Best Wishes Class of ' 65 {M BUICK CADILLAC f F£ A 1015-1025-First Ave. S.E, OLDSMOBILE lAA iX f if ALLEN IMPORTS c- ion-:, Phone 366-1861 Since 1903 COMPLIMENTS OF EBY ' S SPORTING GOODS CO. COE ' S SHOPPING CENTER FOR SPORTING GOODS 1417— 1st Ave. S.E. EM-3-2645 CcwHe AKwe YOU ' RE IN THE PEPSI GENERATION! j vvvvvvvvvavvvvvvvv avvvvv aAAAVvvv vvvvvvvtvvvv vu, you want a fine portrait... to record forever with charm and dignity the important events of your life, come to the Photograph Studio of your Official Photographer . . . ik l JV l l wv MMI x l l l JV 858 FIRST AVE., N.E. Cedar Iowa We Believe in People • Exchangers • Counselors PHONE 365-0581 or 385-7591 Realtors 1 : ' ' Tf; i pcc t Ktd ' poodf 1004 1st Ave. KOZY INN CHUCK, MERT, AND BILL STICKNEY, Mgrs. Eat in comfort with our newly established individual stereo-phonographs — the First in C.R. Helping You to Live Better ELECTRICALLY! IOWA ElECTRC IIGHI POWER COMPANY eS An Investor-Ownod UtUity Congratulations Class of 1965 saga KCRG-TV CH. 9 KCRG 1600 KC For Complete News Coverage . . . READ THE CEDAR RAPIDS GAZETTE Eastern Iowa ' s Daily Newspaper Complete Sports News KLINGER PAINT CO., INC. Manufacturers QUALITY PAINTS FOR EVERY SURFACE Dial EM 4-4153 117— 2nd Ave. S. E. Est. 1900 COMPLIMENTS FROM JOHN E. LAPES FLORIST Flowers for any occasion — order early 308 3rd Ave. S. E. 1 909- 1 965 — 56th year serving Cedar Rapids and surrounding communities Phone 365-0511 Compliments of ALBERT ' S DRY CLEANING 1120 1st Ave. N. E. Congratulations to the Class of 1965 HEABEL COMPANY 701 Center Point Rd. N. E. INDEX A ' s Susan M, Abrahamson 65-78-114-145-151-160 Ralph Ackerman 114 Dean Adams 70-101-166 Robert Albright 114 John Allen 124 Lawrence Alsbrook 101-166-198 Alfred F. Anderson 114 Gordon M.Anderson 124-188-190 Karen Anderson 39-133-160 Robert Anderson 124-166 Robert C. Anderson 183 Karen Andrews 65-114-160 Martin L. Appelt 101 Don E. Arenz 114-197 Joy Y. Arima 124-140-143-146-154 Andrew N. Arnold 114-176 Charlott Ask 124-148-156 Ralph C. Aye 124-166 B ' s Jill Babler 63-114 Carl E. Bachelor 114-151-162-170-176-182-194-196 Janet Bacon 114 Peter D. Bagley 101-162 Kenneth A. Ballou 39-138-166 Geoffrey Bangs 115-168-190 David Barich 101-172 Terry L. Barker 101 Jean Barnett 115 George B. Bernard 115 William Barr 124-166-202 Russell Batz 124 Joseph W. Bauder, Jr. Eric R. Baugh 39-166-201-202-208 Elizabeth Baxendale 101-134-154 Ronald A. Baybayan 101-199 Sandra K. Beatty 101 Rolf G. Beckhussen, Jr. 124-137-160 Ronald Beerman 39-170-176-178-198-199 Arthur H. Behn 115-166 Karen Bell 101 Lynda K. Bell 102-150 Stephen L. Bellis 39 Thomas Bell 115 Lee Benson 102 Jane E. Berntsen 102-134-144-154 Phyllis Bert 115-150 Dwight E. Beske 115-151-170-176-182-194-196 Norman Beu 39-60-168-202 Katherin Bihl 115-144 Robert G. Birch 124-151-166-194-196 Betsy A. Black 115-158 David A. Black 102-135 Ernest Black 115 Andrew M. Blume 115-166 Douglas Boeckmann 102-170-198-199 Elaine M. Bourne 115 Kathleen Bouttell 69-115-158 Diana L. Bowers 102 Ronald J. Bowers 39 Stephen D. Boyd 125-148-166 James Bradshaw 102 Charles Brady 115 Janet Braly 102-154 Frank J. Branca 115 Thomas J. Brandon 83-125-151-170-176-181- 194-195 John Brennan 102 Kathleen Brinn 115-156 Robert A. Brizzolara 39-136-147-151-168-176-178 Judith A. Brockway 39-147-160 Paul E. Broderick 125 James A. Brokaw 125-141-166 Wayne Bronaugh 102 Jack Brooking 102-198-199 Rutherford Brosious 115 Carolyn Brown 62-82-90-91-125-156 Perry L. Brown 40-55-56-60-133-140-141-170 Shelia J. Brown 125 Sally K. Brozik 125-146-154 Robert Bruckner 40-172-176-178-208 Burton L. Bruggeman 101-168-198 Herbert Brunkhorst 125-148-170 Heidi Bruns 102 Susan K. Bryant 40-63-143-148-150-151 Terry J. Bunge 40-134-148-166 Carol A. Burkhardt 102-160 Robert Butikofer 115-168 Thomas V. Butkus 125-170-176-180 Barbara Bys 115 C ' s Hugh B. Caldara 71-102-164-198 Janet Cain 115-154 Jane Calvert 82-94-95-116-154 Barbara Camp 63-116-160 Susan C. Canon 125-152 Steve Carey 102 Carol M. Carlson 40-138-16J John D. Carlson 40 Ann M. Carpenter 102-154-144 Caroline Carrithers 40-74-207 John P. Casey, Jr. 40-55-57-80-83-133-134-135- 140-142-149 Carmen L. Castiello 152 John Cherry 116-135 Dennis P. Chnstensen 40 Judith K. Christiansen 40-148-160 Marilyn Churchill 116-143-145 John B. Clarke 125-172 Diane E. Clutter 116-158 John P. Coats 102 Jane A. Coffey 62-116-158 John C. Coffman 125-135-202 John Cole 116 William Colgate 125-148 Wade Collier 137-199 Michael Collis 41-170-184-186-192-193 Rudolph Collum 102-164-198 Carolyn Colwell 116-145 Joseph M.Condron 103-170-198-199 Jane F. Conkey 68-116-160 Frederic Conklin, Jr. 116-166-176-197 Paul Conti 166-176-180 Charles S. Cook 103-164-148 Frank Cooper 103 Larry J. Coppola 41-172-188-189 Judy K. Correll 125-141-146-160 Donald Corson 125-135-145-144 Anthony Courtney 103-164-198-199 Muriel A. Cover 125 Robert G. Cox 103-199 Janet Craig 41-133-134-135-148-154-207 Raymond L. Crawford 41 Gerald A. Crees 198 Susan Crissman 103-144 Marilyn Crocker 103-144 Robert S. Crowe 41-69-142-147-151-176-178 Norman L. Cummins 103-166-198-199 Charles Curtis 103 D ' s Gordon H. Dash 103-198 James A. Davis 116-135 James J. Davis 125-147-148 Lawrence Davis 103-172 Lewis H. Davis 125 Susan K. Davis 78-116-145-154 William W. Davis 41 Pamela Dawson 116-158 Stephen Dayan 116 Donald C. Decker 41-164-201-202-208 Margaret A. Deemes 41-150-154 C. Deerr 208 John E. Deleray 103-164 Donald R. Dempsey 41-145-194-195 Ruth A. Dempsey 68-87-89-116-160-144 Craig Denny 116-172 Richard Derning 116 Christin Detwiler 117-156 David C. Deuben 41-166 George W. Dewey 116-166-176-183 Nancy DeYoung 65-68-125-138-151-160 Jane E. Dickinson 42-67-158 Tim Dieffenbacher 103 Jerry R. Dietz 42 Alice S. Diffenderfer 62-125-147-154 John Dimel 103 Delbert Disch 103-198-199 Joyce F. Dodson 103-151 William Donavan 117 Cora Doner 63-117-154 Joan Driscoll 42 Rudolf O. Drost 42-56-74-176-178 Jon J. Duerr 42 Carolyn R. Duncan 42-67-150 Thomas S. Dunlop 117 Richard Durning 162 James Dvorin 103 George R. Dyche 70-117-150-188-189 E ' s Julia Eanes 74-103-134-154 Ilia M. Earnest 103 Chere L. Eckerlebe 42 Michael Edwards 117-162 Kenneth B. Ehrensaft 42-137-141-151-164 Florence Eidsvaag 125-145-148-160 Thomas Eiseman 42 Diane Ekiund 117-142-149-152 John A. Elliot 104 Rosella Elvidge 42 Guity H. Engdahl 43 Susan A. Engelhardt 117-134-135-150-156 Phil Ensley 43 Barry A. Epstein 117 Cynthia Erickson 126-143-151-158 Gerald Erickson 126 Terry L. Erickson 43-66-168-176-178-197 George Esslinger 43-72-164 Robert Etter 104 Ellis R. Evans 43-137-141-148-150-164-184-208 Laird Evans 126 Pamela M. Everest 126-154 Gayle A. Ewinger 43-156 F ' s Pete Fader 126-170-188-190 Paula Fager 64-117-151-154 Douglas Farnam, Jr. 126-147-172 Lynne F. Farnam 126-160 James P. Farnham 126-142 Pamela Farnham 104 Frank Fazk 172-188 Ronald L. Feltes 67-71-126-168-176 Joseph H. Ferguson 104 Mary L. Fernald 126-158 Michael Fink 104-198 Bonnie Fischer 107 Barbara Fisher 66-117 Jonathan Fiske 74-126-135 Claire Fleming 82-96-126-152 James G. Foley 117-151 Sherry Folsom 126-145-147-149-160 Stephen Foote 126 John Forbes 104-172-199 Robert V. Formanek 43 Jon D. Forest 117-151-170-176-181 John S. Forster 43 Ruby M. Fowler 126 Donald Eraser 117-172 Ronald A. Frederick 43-87-149-151-166-197- 202-208 Richard Freehad 192-202 Barbara Freer 104-158 Marshall Freriks, Jr. 151-191 Johanna M. Frerechs 43 Timothy Frisch 126-172-184-187-194-195 Jim Frueling 104 Mary Kay Fry 104 David M. Furman G ' s Jacquelyn Galvin 126-148-154 Julie A. Gannaway 117-160 Lee D.Garr 44-138-166 Jon G. Gates 104-168 John R. Gawthrop 125-192 Marilyn Gebbie 117 Diane R. Geery 126-150-158 Daniel T. Geittmann 44-170 Ashley A. George 117-150 Carol F. Gerberding 44-137-143-150 Elizabeth Gerke 104 Pamela I. Gibson 44-67 Barbara Gish 117-149-160-144 Robert L. Glafka 44-170-176-178-192 Patricia Glannon 44-71-160 Kathleen Glaves 127 Joseph R. Click 135 David N. Glidden 44-151-176-181 Kathleen Goetsch 104-134 George W. Goldsworthy 172 Louise Golliet 160 Normon L. Goodfriend 164 Mary J. Goodwin 104 Joseph L. Gorecki 44 Claude F. Grady 118-151-170 Margo S. Graham 118-156 Michael Grames 104 Thomas L. Green 118-176-182-183 Dennis Greenspon 104 Lorraine Gregory 104-134-158 O. Grey 198 Arthur J. Griffin 78-104-170-198-199 William Griffiths 44-164 Robert Groundwater 118 Jane S. Grube 127-147-152 Peter S. Grubmeyer 44-78-162 Daniel B. Guenther 71-81-127-134-137-168- 176-180 H ' s Mary Haberkamp 104-108 Kenneth R. Hach 45 Lynn Haedtler 118-154 Daniel Haggerty 104 Bryan Hall 134-135-142 John Hall 105 Barbara Halliburton 127-154 Janet M. Hammond 118 Jeffrey Hansen 105-170-199 Pat Hansen 105 Barbara Hansing 105 Geoffrey Harding 105-166-198 Gerry Harrington 156 Jeffrey M. Harrington 45-202-208 Lynn M. Harris 151-170-176-182 Charles Harrison 127 Edward Hartmann 105-137-142-160 Russell Hass 127-151-156-183 Robert S. Hauter 166 Scott Hauter 105 Michele Hayashi 118 Douglas R. Hayek 45 David H. Hayes 45-156-176-178 Donald J. Hayes 83-151-170-176-181-192-193 Mary Una Head 45-56-133-134-138-142-143- 146-149-160 Alan P. Heinrich 202 Linda K. Heintz 45-149-152 Mary Heise 127 Jane A. Helgeson 127-138-149-160 Karl F. Helscher 105 Gene M. Henderson 105-170-198-199 Jim Herman 45 Stephan Herring 127 Dennis M. Highland 105-198 Gary Hilker 45 Bruce Hill James Hill 176-178-202-208 Michael Hill 105 Margaret Hinde 105-155 Stan Hirschman 105 Ann M. Hoffman 105-158-144 Robert Hoffman 83-127-151-162-185-193-202 Joseph Hodgkins 118 A. H. Hollender 172-208 Walter Hollender 45-172 Larry Holm 105-198-199 Bruce Hop 192 Mark L. Hopkins 105-160-156 Allen B. Hoppe 127-135-202 Virginia Horaek 127-134-135-140-142-150 Marie Horn 127-138-160-202 Lee Horstman 105-142 Jeffrey Houston Robert Houston 149-199 Karen B. Houey 105-150 Jonna C. Hubers 45-133 Judith L. Huck 46-76 Emma C. Hudson Nancy Huey 148-154 Gerald Hughes 118-142-151-150-170-176-181-194 Helen F. Hughes 127-152 Shirley Hughes 156 Dennis Hummel 45-141-172-202 Frank Humphreys 105-150-199 Robert Huston 106 Dianne F, Hyder 54-118-152 I ' S Richard Imhof 127-150-188-189 John R. Imig 118-142-150-170-176-182 Beverly Inman 127 Dale Inm an 106 Isma lla Isa 106 Jane D. Irwin 106 J ' S Sally A. Jacobsen 105-158 Regina S. Janevics 105-158 Cheryl S. Jemsek 75-106-150-158 Karen J. Jensen 118-134-152 Mary L. Jensen 118-134-135-144-156 Susan Jeso 46 Joseph M. Jogmen 118-176-182 Brian Johnson 105 Gary R. Johnson 118-135-144 John J. Johnson 105-172-198 Paul D. Johnson 105-144 Patricia Johnston 127 Karen Johnson 118 Alan K. Jones 198 Judy A. Jones 118-151 Karen Jones 156 Richard Jones 118-168 Robert B. Jubenville 45-170-175-177 K ' s Karen E. Kahn 150-152 Gregg K. Kakesako 119-134-136 Janice R. Kamps 65-87-88-127-151-158 Kevin C. Kane 106 Chris Katz 106-160 Raphael Kavanaugh 106-158-198 Patricia Keefe 105 Donald Keene 105 William Keene 105-158 W. David Kehret 148 Wanita A. Kerhle 46 Dexter Kekua 105 Kevin J. Kelly 156 Douglass Kent 105 Kathleen Kessel 107 David M. Kiesau 172 Douglass Kiesau 172 Gary L. Kimball 107 Karl K. Kindel 46 Daniel King 119 David King 46-156 Dennis 8. Kittler 46-83-151-170-175-178-192-193 Lee B. Kitts 107 158 Virginia Knight 134-135-137-143-144-148 Margaret A. Knott 47-150 William Knudsen 165 Kim A. Knutsen 176-178 Patricia Koehn 107-150-156 Barbara Kojis 107-138-150 Scott M. Kolar 119-158 Carol Koppel 119 Bennet Kothenbeutel 106-135-150 Burt Kraft 47 James R. Kreamer 127 Harry E. Kreutzer 119 Daniel P. Kriese 119-148 Karen S. Krisac 47-138 Cynthia Krumsies 154 Nathan J. Kurashige 128-166 John S. Kwitkor 75-77-107-135-137-198 L ' s Diane Lamb 107-160 Alvin G. Lambert, Jr. 170-202 Linda A. Larsen 147-150 Larry L. Larson 119 Michael Lawrence 128 James Leaky 47-202 Shirley Lear 119-152 Jacqueline Lieser 107 Robert S. Leggat, Jr. 137 William Lester 107-158-198 Ross Levett 107-149-170-199 Richard Lewis 128-168-202 Ronald G. Lietz 119 David Llewellyn 107-158 Judy Locke 107 Michael Loehrer Vincent Loneardi 128 Phillip Lohmen 172 Nancy A. Long 47-133-145-148-144 Robert Lovett 198 Jane Ludemann 128-155 Ellen Luetzelschwab 119 Ann C. Ludvigsen 128-148-152 George P. Lutjin, Jr. 107-156 Renee Lytle 107 M ' s Bryce MacDonald 107 Donald MacDonald 119-170-194-195 Scott MacDonald 168-197 Benson W. Macharia 128-148 Jeanette Mack 107-143-146-150 Mary A. Mack 119 Donald R. MacKay 47-188-190 Mary Jane Madden 107 Judith E. Maier 107-137-154 Michael Malina 135-148-152 Ronald T. Manaster 137-149 Larry J. Manatrey 70-119-168-175-181-194-196 Marilyn Mangels 108 John A. Mankopf 119-138-168 Stanley Marks 128-151-183-202 Joel M. Marlin 108-166-199 Ann E. Marohn 108 Patricia Maroushek 108-134-135 Barbara Marshall 108 Betty L. Martin 108-150-160 Thomas S. Martin 47 William Martin 108-168 Cathie J. Mason 108-152 Meriwether Mason 119 M. Linda Mason 108-152 James Matsen 158 Douglas Matsumoto 128-134-135-140 Diannakay Matthews 119 Marjorie May 108 Samuel Mayeda 128-148 Frederic McCarthy 108-168 Richard McCleary 108-198 Lynda McCrory 48-155 Owen McDonald 108 Sue McDowell 119 James L. McGarry 108-170-198 Virginia Mcintosh 108-143-154 James M. McJoynt 48-148-158-197-201-208 Geoffrey R. McKee 48-57-134-135-142-158 David McKibbon 108-172-198 Karen L. McMurray 49 Evalina S. McNamara 47 Judith A. McShane 143-158 Michael Mead 119-142-149 Harrison J. Means 47-72-165 Margaret Medling 108-156 Laneva Meeks Dennis R. Meinert 108 Roberta Meinholdt 120 Stephen J, Melson 47 Jack A. Melvin 120-162-183-197 Steven Menzer 47-142-150-151-155 Carol J. Meyer 108-134-135-160 Richard Meyer 109-135-135-145 Dianne L. Miles 109 Barbara Miller 120, 150, 156 Douglass Miller 128-141-147-172-202 Mane-Louise Miller 48-56-133-134-137-147- 148-150-154 M. Lynn Miller 109 Richard Miller 109 Sharlene S. Miller 48 Susan J. Miller 109, 152 Theodore Miller 109-128-149 William Miller 48-135-168-194-195 Winston Miller 109 Dennis Minert 198 Sally Mische 120 Linda Millay 120-160 Brian MIecko 120-148-151-175-183 Ronald E. Moehling 109-170-198 Carolyn Montgomery 128 Ralph Montgomery 109-164-198 Andrea L, Moore 109-134 Dennis F. Moore 109-150 Susan Morgan 48-156 Neal R. Morris 128-158 John A. Mortenson 109 Marshall Mortenson 128-151-191 Louis Moses 128-156 Carol J. Moyer 120-134-136-150 Moses M. Moyo 119 Steven Muller 48-170-176-178-199 James G. Murphy 120 Keith Dean Myers 48-74-144 Robert K. Myers 48 N ' s Robert E. Nagel 49-158-197 Nicholas Nappi 172 Diane M. Nelson 152 Gay 8. Nelson 128 Julie Nelson 109-148-150-144 Susan J. Nelson 49-148-160 Margaret Nettleton 120-134-135-145-194 Sik-Pin Pauline Ng 49-133 Warren A. Nicholas 172 Marlys L. Neilsen 49-56-152 David Nix 128-148-151-155 Robert 8. Norberg 158-191 Carol S. Nordengren 109 Nancy Norris 158 Barbara North 133-140-143-207 Ellen Nuechterlein 49-56-133-135-144 O ' s Gary Oakly 120 Joan K. Offt 128 Clayton Ogg 120 John R. Oliver 109-198 Donna Oetjen 49 James C. O ' Neil 49-151-170-194-196 Judith O ' Neil 109-160 Dennis J. Orsini 183-199 Nancy Osborn 109 Richard Osenton 109 Sue Osgood 63-120-156 James M. Oster 109-170 Marilyn Ough 109 P ' S Charles A. Palmberg 50-70-149 Brian V. Pappalardo 50 Roland C. Pardun 172-176-178-192 Ann M. Parkonson 129-149-152 John T. Parker 120-172-202 Gerald W. Paulausky 172 Dorothy G. Perry 50 David F. Peterson 120-151-162-170-176- 182-192-193 Geilda J. Peterson 50-68-148-154 Karen Petranek 152 David Petrick 120 Donald Pflilger 50-135 James P. Pickering 129 Dennis S. Pietrzak 170-184-185 Elizabeth Place 50 Marianne Plainer 50-154 Lee Polk 120-151-170-176-180-196 Tony Pordes 70-110 V elma Porter 129-144 Gwendolyn Potts 110-142 Phyllis A, Prehn 156 Sterling Price 129 Marcia Prichard 110-158 Q ' s Elizabeth Quigley 129-143 R ' s Eleanore Ramsey 50-156 Daryl Rathman 120 David Rau 129-134-138-140-151-162 Vincent Rausch 202 John H. Reed 199 Michael Reed 110-168 Thomas Reed 120 John V. Reese 120-194-196 Frances E. Reuse 51-65-141-152 Dale Reynoldson 110 Linda Rhodes 121 Judith P. Riedel 129-152 Robert F. Riggio 121-129-168 Betty L. Robb 110-144 Diane C. Roberts 110-134 Paul M. Roberts 74-83-129-140-142-145-149-162 Faye Robinson 110 Harold Robinson 110 Sandra Robinson 121-158 Cynthia Rohrbeck 110-146-152 Rebecca Rommel 129 Philip H. Rooney Mary Roos 129-158 George F. Ross 110-137 Randall Rotter 129-137 Judith M. Rowden 110-158 Alan D. Rowe 110-170-198-199 Randy Rowsey 110-135-144 Janice Rudd 121-134-149-150-154 Gordon D. Rundquist Edward Runner 134-135-137-142 Nancy H. Runner 118-143 Gretchen Rupe Marilyn Rusche 110-135-194 Lowell A. Rutz 50 Virginia Ryan 121 S ' s Judy Salladay 121-160 Patricia Sanderson 110 William Sansom 110 Karin Saral 121-158 David M. Sargent 121 Marilyn Sauer 121-154 Linda A. Schaffer 110-156 Caria T. Schaeffer 51-158 William H. Schalk 151-166 Mary Scharfenberg 111 Gary Schlarbaum 51-56-133-141-170-184-186 194-195-207 Janice Schatz 129 Angela Schmidt 111 Elaine Schneck 121 Roy Schodtler 129-151-170-176-180 Sara Schomp 51-87-143-149-152 Alice M. Schoeder 111-134 Daryl J. Schroeder 111 Sue Schroeder 121-154 Kerry Schuiz 111-152 Randall Schurber 121-166 Paul T. Schwartz 111 John E. Schwenke 121-170-194-195 Loyd R. Shaffer 51 Jerry Shanholtzer 111-170 Margaret Shank 129-147-156 Melinda Shearer 129-137-147-158 Susan Shellenberger 111-152 Alan Shepherd 121 Alison E. Shepherd 51-55-57-74-133-134-137- 140-156 Diane Shiely 111-158 Mary A. Shierk 51-82-152 Larry L. Shruock 52-170-184-185 Mary L. Shuler 121-158 Thomas Shultz 121 Sherlyn Shupe 129-144-160 Martha Sidlik 129 Alan G. Simpson, Jr. 52-170 Scott Simpson 111-198-199 Stephen Skinnari 111 Sheldon Skolfield Martha Slater 129-154 Georgia Slaterpryce 111 Carol Smith 52 Patti Smith 111 Richard Smith, Jr. 121-151-170-176-180-184- 187-194-195 Sharon Smith 111 William Smith 52 Anne Snell 121-156 Allen Snow 121-141-156-192 Garry Solomson 130-151-184-187 Philip Sorkin 111 Stephen Souder 130-134-135-151-176-180 Anthony Sparacio 111-199 Edward Spence 111-135-144 Sandra Spellmeyer 122 Jerry Spilman 168-176-183 Karl R. Stanly 130-170 Richard Stalmack 112-172-198-199 Michael Steele 112-198 Shelby A. Steele 112-172 Thomas Stehura 112-198 Barbara A. Steidemann 52 Joann Stenner 150-154 William Stern 122-151-191-197 Rachel A. Stewart 52 Nancy Stoker 130-148-154 Linnea Stromberg 122-134-135-147 Larry A. Stone 112-142 Katherine Strong 112 Linda Sullivan 130-158 Arthur Sutherland 122-166 Nancy Swaine 112-158 Wallace Swan 52-151-170-184-185-194-195 Arthur Swanson 52 Sandra L. Swearingen 52-143-145-148-149-160 T ' s Peter Taggart 112-162-166 Gordon P. Tapley 112-172 Tom G. Taylor 122 Susan C. Tetrev 122-154 Joann C. Thode 52-133-143-146-149-160 Susan Thoma 130-144-158 Deanna D. Thomas 130-135 E. Ann Thomas 53-155 Gregory Thomas 130 Eric A. Thompson 112 Sue Ann Thompson 112-156 llga Tiesnieks 53-154 Richard Tosi 53-151-176-177-194-195 David M. Toumarkine 53 Elizabeth Turnbull 130-147 U ' s Cheryl J. Ukena 112-154-194 Janet Ungry 130-158 V ' s John L. Valentine 112-198 Dale Van Cleve 144 Susan VanDerpoel 112 Susan Vandiver 113-143-160 Maurice VanNote 113 Gary VanRooyan Carolyn VanZee 122-154 Thomas P. Vaughn 78-122-170-184-187 Thomas G. Vavra 122-192-193 Donald Vogler 113 Karen Vistain 122 Carol Von Frank 53-64-138 Charles Voseeler 53 W ' s Joann Wade 122 Nancy Wagner 59-113 Judy Walden 130-143-146-147-160 Charlene Walker 122 Barry Wallerstedt 122-144-162 Tinothy Walsh 122-152 Linda Wanke 66, 122-152 Linda Ward 52-57-141-158 Jennings Warner 53-134 Gail Warren 113 Michael Warren 130-134-135 Michael Warrick 130-168 Susan Warkins 113-134-138 D. Lynn Watson 113 Thomas Watley 113-198 Frederic Webster 130 Robert Webster 122-194-196 Nancy Weller 66-82-92-123-138-160 William Wells 130-134-165 William Wendling 113-170-198-199 Kent Westerbeck 130-170-175-181-197 Pamela Wheat 141-156 Meredith T. Whipple 54-150 Robert Whipple 54 Carmen Whitecotton 59-76-78-130-135-143- 145-152 Robert Wiener 123-172-197 Richard Wilfong 54 Bruce Williams 123 Deborah Williams 123-156 John Wilson 130-134-135-137-141-148-149-162 Linda Wilson 54 Mike Wilson 198 Sally Wilson 123-154 Robert Wing 123 Margaret Winkler 123 Donald Witte 113-168-198-199 Joseph Woldennichel 123 Gerry Wolf 123 Judy Wolf 130-134-138-148-160 Marjorie Wolf 113-160-144 Ruth A. Wolf 54-133-148-150 Howard Wolvington 123 Ron Wood 54 Stephen Woodruff 113-198 Douglas Woodward 130-135 Thomas Worden 123-135 David Wright 113-198-199 Dale Wulf 54-133-148-208 Y ' s M. Leilani Yates 123-134-135-150-160 Karen Yoshido 130 Dwight Yoshioko 123-162 Janice Young 123 Robert H. Young, Jr. 54-72-170-176-177 William Young 77-123-170 Z ' s Nolan Zavoral 54 Jo A. Zemanek Pamela Ziha 130 Charles Zimmerman 54-72-172 Ray Zirpole 123-172-176-182-192-193 Connie Zuber 123-160


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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.