DePauw University - Mirage Yearbook (Greencastle, IN)
- Class of 1986
Page 1 of 244
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 244 of the 1986 volume:
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Volume 404 DePouw UniversiTy Greencastle, Indiana Welcome To DePouw . . . C'mon 1n, give us some money and we'll help y0u grow old, Welcome To reol CD life oops. noT yeT folks. GoTTo go Through ceremony firsT. GoTTo pay your dues babe. GoTTo bide your Time. Time. Time. Time. Four years To find your soul. bare your soul. mend iT whole. Books ThoT weigh your arms down. Loves ThoT weigh your heorT down. STronge ThoughTs ThoT make you cry. Welcome To DePauw. FooTboll games ThoT ring a bell. ChoTTing in The dells. ConnoT find The book I need. GoTTo road Trip ouTc here. Trip. Trip. Trip. WoTching clock hands run around. See The people mimick Them. JusT Jike circus fun. We inviTe you To join in. Sorry. no noT him. GoTTo waTch our rep. Hey, man. drink wiTh me. You're coolesomebody LeT's have a liTTle pohTy. pohTy. pohTy. pohTy. Hey, Welcome To DePauw, boy. rainbow of polos. small Town resorT. big Time ways. Take a IiTTle Trip from here. See The world. face a fear. BuT don'T forgeTewe're always near. Close To The heurT . . . Close To your money beIT. Ciose To your sense of doubT. Unsure of sense of self. As we leave DePauw. -S.R. Frances LeoTh Whof did you expect. . . Bowman Pond? Fire up, psyche up, fire up, psyche up There: a keggur of our house Saturday nigh? We're gonna have 0 dozen kegs Space Shuffle Challenger explodes Fire up. psyche up. fire up, psyche up I feel preffy good about This fincul I Think I'll probably ace i1 Unifed Sfafes bombs Tnpoii Fire up, psyche up. fire up, psyche up It's gonna be a great Little 5 We're paired with The best sorority Fire up, psyche up. fire up, psyche up S'reve Blunt for S 42, 000 a year? Whof did you expect. . . Whaf did you expecf. . . fhe Plaza Hofel? l goT The blues. Those DPU blues. A blues as deep As Bowman Pond. I goT The bluesK Those DPU ques. I goT The blues. LOST week I regisTered. Oh man, whoT c: bummer. Comped ouT oll nighT for a class in my major. GOT up To The from of The Iine and The class was full. 80 I had no choice. I had To Take InTro. To Calculus, I goT The blues. I Took a TesT IosT year. Couldn'T hear myself Think. IT was in Asbury Hall when They were remodeling everyThing. So much noise and disTrocTion. I made an IF' on The TexT. I goT a ID for The course and H ruined my GPA. I goT The blues. No more all nighT IGA. No more PresidenT Rosser. The only Thing ThoT don'T change around here is The brown ciTy oner. They even moved Marvin's. Ain'T noThing scored? The nexT Thing you know iT's all gonna be coed living uniTs. God forbid. I goT The blues. eSTeve Blunt What did you expecf. . . The virglh Owl? Sherry Richert Dun Peabody Sherry Richer? . w; Afar t 5.2. 1MMP KINDAYl v. f Inf. ....'l'.l! 1.1 '. 9 U'X . $3. . ,innva. .... . l. .K For n x .1. va .E.I' .I'l .5 J1 '10 Whaf did you expecf unresfrolhed euphoria? What do you do wiTh a drunken , . . Phi Deli . . . Rub a ii'riie Ben Guy in his jocksirop. Beta i . . Wrinkle up his bution-down Oxford. Fiji . . . Cornflokes and speed for breakfast. Sig Chi . . . Kick him out of bed; it's time for lineup. SNU . . . Close him down and leave him homeless. Lombchop . . . Ask him 'boui his grade point average. Phi Psi . . . Move him into Dei'ro Zeta. ATO . . . Bring your gun 'n' go squirrei huniing. Frances Lecth Deke . . . Make him walk To cioss 0nd briskly. Den . . . Tell him iho'r he's go'rio mow The front lawn. Rancher . . . Search his room and then press charges. Du K . . No such Thing as a drunken DU. hsung f0 Tune of th? do you db with a drunken soilorTj ySTeve Blunt H Whof did you expecf. . . 12 - .J 12 1 e Sherry chherf Photo courtesy of The DePouw 43 .J -'.'.'.. .$-x'1: 4 ,. 3., 't .- . IT seems like I have lived here a long Time -T.S. Eliof .3 Frances Lemh Whof did you expect. . . . . . o phofo of East College? 15 Stratford-Upon-Avon ?.'- x CreoTive STudies TTThese programs also give sTuden Ts The opporfunify To sTudy T wiTh sTudenTs from oTher parTs of The counfry, live and work in a mefropolifon area, and uTilize skills The y have learned in Their classroom courses. ePouw has a loT To offer iTs sTu- denTs in Terms of unique educa- Tionol opporTuniTies. One of The mosT exciTing of These are The opporTu- anies To sTudy off-compus. The wide se- lecTion of programs can fiT lnTo jusT obouT onybodys major field and pro- vide 0 new and challenging academic environmenT. AnoTher area which pre- senTs challenging opporTuniTies To sTu- denTs are The exTernshipsiinTernships during WinTer Term. These can range from on opporTuniTy To work wiTh on inTernoTionol firm CT on overseas office, ossisTing o senaTor in WoshingTon, or being a research ossisTonT of a major phormcceuTicol such 05 Eli Lilly. WiThin The area of off-compus sTud- ies There are basically Three Types of programs. The firsT, and The one which mosT people Think of when you men- Tion off-compus sTudies, are The inTer- noTionol programs in counTries which English is noT The noTive language. The program oT Freiburg, Germany is The oldesT of DePouw's overseas pro- grams. In oddiTion To The TrodiTionol classroom seTTing of sTudies, The sTu- denTs learn much obouT The culTure of Germany and The surrounding coun- Tries by experiencing Things firsT- hand on field Trips To coThedrols, breweries. wineries, monumenTs. ond oTher hisToric sighTs. The program in Vi- enna, AusTrio is very similar To The Frei- burg program in ThoT The sTudenTs ex- perience The culTure while visiTing hisToric sighTs, sampling The food and enjoying The TheoTreiopero. OTher DePauw programs of This Type ore 0T These sighTs; Barcelona, Spain; Madrid, Spain; STrosbourg, France: Se- ville, Spain; Buenos Aires, ArgenTino. The second Type of programs are Those inTernoTionol programs where The noTive language is English. Several programs exisT in England, buT There are also programs in ScoTlond 0nd Aus- Trolio. STudenTs who have oTTended These programs will oTTesT To The focT ThoT spoken English, uScoTTish , 0nd iiAusTrolion are much differenT from American. Because The communi- 48 coTion barrier is significonle reduced by The common language, sTudenTs have a IoT more freedom To explore These counTries on Their own. The Third Type of off-compus pro- gram ore opporTuniTies of sTudy wiThin 0 working seTTing somewhere else wiThin The UniTed SToTes. Programs in Philadelphia, WoshingTon, D.C., New- berry Library, and Oak Ridge NaTionol LoboroTorles give sTudenTs a chance To work and sTudy while gaining a volu- oble experience. These programs also give sTudenTs The opporTuniTy To sTudy wiTh sTudenTs from oTher porTs of The counTry, live and work in o meTropoli- Ton oreo Tuniike GreencosTley and uh- Ilze skills They have learned in Their class- room courses oT DePouw. eTony Thompson -T h 4 4'. wlxv- ' irv nun ex. STudy Abrood STrosbourg Besides The faCT ThoT foreign beer is be TTer, There's so much To learneabouf life, yourself, and oThers. key, I realize I need To be more open minded obouT This. Some people ocTuoIIy do look forward To coming back To DePouw ofTer d semesTer dbrood, on urban semesTer in The STdTes, whoTever. Forgive me, please, If I find ThoT o biT hord To undersTond. WhoT a shock To walk back on campus and see The same old plaid everyThing, Top-siders, American Boys, eTc. Everyone else was wearing brighT colors, bows, carrying ToTebogs and Talking abouT how They goT sooooo drunk IosT weekend. Boy, did I geT sTronge looks when one brighT sunny day I onked To EosT College all in block. Yes, This was before wearing black become fashionable 0T DePouw, Though I suppose we were Trying To make some sorT of fashion sToTemenT by dressing as we did. ThoT's 0T IeosT one DePouw hdbiT I hoven'T been able To break. AfTer all, you're TIouT If you dren'T foshionobIeeunIess of course you're so unfoshionoble ThoT iT becomes fashionable. Friends kepT reminding me To smile. I didn'T InTenTionoIly acquire The cold French dTTiTude or permanenT scowI. IT seemed To acquire me. Few fun and inTeresTIng Things To do wiTh DePouw-especiolly on weekends. Sorry, The froT pdrTies jusT don'T quiTe cuT H for me. I know a couple of clochdrds in The STrdsbourg Polois UniversiToire I can hang around wiTh if all I wonT To do is geT drunk and Try To pick someone up. I realized once again, how silly The Greek sysTem was when I Tried To explain iT To The French couple I had lived wiTh while abroad. Needless To say, They couIdn'T quiTe undersTond The whole siTuoTion. And I couIdn'T convince myself Tor Thems ThoT I was happy To have one 45' x 20' box To call my IIhome'Ieond o roommoTe To booT. I quiT wIThe-well 0 bunch of girls or guys live in The same house. They didn'T osk obouT The IeTTers I'PdsTed on my friend's buTT. We didn'T bring iT up eiTher. I won'T be bursTIng ony bubbles if I say ThoT DePouw Isn'T The real world will I? If ThoT upseTs anyone Too Terriny much maybe you shouldn'T go on reodingeor beTTer yeT, maybe you should go off campus for o semesTer. One friend from over There wroTe me once saying she Thinks we should make on amendmenT To The consTiTuTion requiring everyone To spend oT IeosT one semesTer obrood. thT on Ideo! I love ITI! Besides The focT ThoT foreign beer Is beTTer, There's so much To Ieorne dbouT life, yourself, and oThers. I become inTeresTed In learning while I was abroad in 0 way I had never before experienced. InTernoTionoI poIiTics and economics, orT hIsTory, musiceThey all mean someThing more To me now because I lived Through an American presidenTioI elecTion obrood, wiTh on abnormally sTrong dollar, I Toured The VdTicon museum, The Louvre, 0nd wenT To MozorT's homeland and an opera in Vienna. My French major would have been a joke ToT IeosT To mey wiThouT having spenT Time in The counTry I had spenT so many years learning obouT. WiThouT buying a holiday cake in d poTIsserie in Chinon. wiThouT sleeping in The marvelous Fren'Ch Trains, wiThouT experiencing firsT hand The Friday mIIiTory moss exodus To Paris. I Thdnk DePouw so much for making IT possible for me To go To STrosbourg, I don'T Thdnk DePouw, however, for making IT so hard for me To sToy for 0 whole yedreond for making iT hard To reTurn. Maybe Tth's jusT as much my fouIT Though. I'm noT sorry I hoTed coming bock-hoTe being book. The whole world Is open To me now. Isn'T ThoT whoT college is all obouT? I con'T sTdy oT DePouw forever and I'm glad I don'T wonT To. Of course, H was we who broughT sTirrup ponTs, block as 0 fashion color, and IeoTher jockeTs To DePouw. We were The firsT To realize how sheITered and shallow life Is 0T DePouw-ond we were so cool, worldly, we had jusT spenT o semesTer obroodein Europe!-TroveIing-Ieorning. Ho! No, we know we weren'T The TIrsT To experience These feelings of hosTiIiTy ond disillusionment HopefuIIy The numbers will keep growing, Hopefully each of you will become disillusioned. Hopefully you will grow ouT of DePouw. If you don'T, I feel sorry for you. eROCheI Schroeder 49 STudy Abroad Greece . . . a sandal maker pumped our arms and grinned. You are Americans? Drink some ouzo. You like my son? You marry! eing in AThens, Greece was a Timeless experience for me, losTing from SepTember 4985 unTil The end of ThoT December. One of The mosT beouTiful weekends I had There was early in OcTober. I had been nosTolgicolly remembering The colors of ouTumn 0T home in lndiono while being seeped in The ciTy concreTe of AThens, where every building looked like a cemenT block, wiTh cemenT sidewalks, and even The ruins of The PorThenon in The disTonce were replaced in poTches wiTh cemenT. BuT This weekend, The DePouw group Took a Trip To Delphi, carrying me ouT To The mounToins and lnTo The oranges and reds of changing foliage. We saw a clear sTreom Tumbling down a rocky cliff in o onerfoll, ending in The founTcrin where They say The Delphic Oracle drank before she gave her prophecy. When we arrived GT Delphi iTselT, driving Through The rain while winding up Tiny roads, The rain sTopped end The clouds rose up in o misTy halo. EveryThing below us become vibronT wiTh color as The grey arose. The weT air jusT added a sharpness To The scene, and The air was full of flowers in bloom. For our orienTaTion inTo Greece, our group Took an overnighT ferry boaT To The island of CreTe. We learned of Minoan hisTory from our Greek Language and CulTure professor, Mimika DimiTri, and we saw The ruins oT Knossos, where King Minos supposedly ruled. We had our firsT run- ins wiTh The Greek noTiveseo 20 sondolmoker pumped our arms and grinned. You are Americans? Drink some ouzol You like my son? You marry him! We sTorTed enropTured CT The golden mounToins and dry landscapes, while we could see The blue ocean wherever we looked, We laughed CT The flocks of sheep crossing The roads in from of us. Once, as we wound The Tiny Volkswogon bus Through one-lone roads of a village, our driver, CosTos, leaned ouT The window To occepT o boskeT of fresh figs from a village man. This was Greece. AfTer The firsT few weeks of being mesmerized wiTh The Greek landscape, The surrounding ocean, The noTive villager's simple cloThes and The whiTe-woshed churches of blue posTer Tome, Then The reoliTy of Greece 05 a modern counTry began To seTTle in. On Thanksgiving Day, our Trip To EgypT was ThreoTened by The EgypTAir hijacking. The plane had been Token exochy seven days before our Trip, and was The some airline and flighT number ThoT we were To leave on. We were given The choice, individually, of wheTher each of us sTill wonTed To go or noT. i called home To ask my moTher for advice, buT The overseas lines were busy wiTh a Three hour woiT. Once i finally goT Through, my moTher couldn'T advise me 0T all. She Told me i knew The siTucTion beTTer Then she could ever know iT. l felT very alone, and very for from home. I decided To cancel my Trip, and one by one, The oThers of our group canceled, also, I wondered if The hijacking could have happened back in The USA. Back in AThens, oTTer a Trip we did Take To Turkey, I began To see The ciTy as The booming meTropolis iTs CiTizens saw iT as. The shop keepers oil spoke English for The many TourisTs. The Toxi drivers did, Too. The drycleaners, The resTourenT woiTers, The disco's borTenders oil spoke English. In TocT, There never seemed To be Cl Time when we really needed To know The Greek ThoT we sTudied, besides in our Greek class, and when we needed To Talk To our landlady. I never dreamed ThoT in The land of Homer, I would have To worry abouT o dripping kiTchen sink, and cockroaches. I never realized ThoT hoT oner hod To be heoTed each dove our hoT wcTer Tank balanced precoriously over our ToileTeond ThoT iT Took a full TwenTy minuTes To geT five minuTes' worTh of shower oner, if i wonTed iT hoT. I never dreamed o ciTy like AThens wouldn'T have recognized The reoliTy of dieT soda, dieT salad dressing, low-foT milk. Greece is The land of Olive Oil-we kidded each oTher obouT how we'd skip classes, book 0T DePauw, To sneak our hiTs of oil down in The dells, jusT To make iT Through The day. The yogurT in Greece is mode from sheep's milk, whole, rich and creamy. The food in general is fried. The Greeks weren'T concerned wiTh calories or moderoTion-Their moTTo wos To live-live-live. -Louro Holnes 2'1 STudy Abroad Spain OTher Than seeing The sights, a sTudenT learns how To de- pend on himself and survive in an enfirely differenT culfure. everyThing mm o sTudenT could wonT ouT of o semesTer obrood. From The colorful Los Rombios To The dark alleys of Borrio GoTico, The ciTy is never wiThouT beouTy and surprise. EiTher in walking Through The famous coThedroI or opprecioTing The orT of boTh Miro 0nd Picasso, one can see The mojesTy, TrodiTion, ond hisToricoi precedence which Barcelona noT only provides To Spoin, buT The resT of Europe as well. WheTher you spend some of your Time 0T a soccer game surrounded by 80,000 rioTous fans, or o bulifighT, or even onching The famous founToins CT The base of The Palace of MonTjuich, one is never ieT dOWn by The many Things which on American sTudenT musT see while in Barcelona. Besides The ciTy, The Borcelono program has numerous offerings which can be Token odvonToge of by a sTudenT. The peaceful beaches of SiTges and The CosTo Bravo are less Then an hour away from The noisy copiToi 0T CoTquno. OTher Thon seeing The sighTs, o sTudenT learns how To depend on himself and survive in on enTirer differenT culTure. A sTudenT grows by living wiTh a Spanish fomiiy, Taking classes ToughT in Spanish, and going ouT mm The Spanish nighTIife. A Two week Trip Through SouThern Spain and Morocco noT only provides differenT diolecTs and differenT cusToms To grasp, buT also on example and TosTe of African and Arabic ways of life. The educoTion oT The UniversiTy of Barcelona is very procTicol wiTh I he Barcelona program provides 22 courses in o vorieTy of subjecTs To IeT sTudenTs know and undersTond more obouT Spain and iTs culTure. However, Talking To The CoTolon people and learning obouT noT only Their unique cuiTure buT Their ouTlondish pride in CoToiuno Teaches The mosT imporTonT lessons of o semesTer obrood. When speaking of The culTure, The educoTion, and The social life, a semesTer in Barcelona is on experience which will never be forgoTTen. -Tim Clork STudy Abrood England He smiled at my American occenT when I gave my order and seT abouT preparing scones and Tea. worm, smoky smell from The fireplace inviTed me inside The small Teoshopi BuT once inside, There was no one To be found. Anybody here? I ducked under low ceiling beams and Travelled The shorT disTonce To dork wooden Tables and wicker-boTTomed choirs. My quesTion meT only silence. BuT 0 cold and rainy Englond doy woiTed for me ouTside. so I Took 0 Table close To The fireplace and woiTed. Well hello There. A young man wiTh 0 Thick Devon brogue greeTed me wiTh surprise as he peered ouT of CI back room. ITCome in for o biT of Tea Todoy, did you? He smiles oT my American occenT when I gave my order and seT obouT preparing scones and Tea. TTAre you in ExeTer on Holiday? No, I'm sTudying CT The UniversiTy. I was always proud To say This-iT made me less of o foreigner. I belonged, 0T IeosT more Then The groups of American TourisTs ThoT Thronged The CoThedrol on sunny days and purchased whole villages of Tiny ceramic ThoTched roof farmhouses. ThoT ofTernoon I escaped To The Teoroom, idyllicolly Tucked away on a very narrow lone, To console myself obouT life in o counTry ThoT sTiII confused and frusTroTed me, even ofTer olmosT half a year. TuTorioI ThoT morning had been Terrible. Miss Hole, how do you spell Czechoslovakia? The old professor, 24 whose face ofTen seemed kindly and dignified, singied me ouT of The small group of sTudenTs and now appeared sinisTer, absurd. I did noT see how This had any relevance To Ibsen's play The Wild Duck. I was Tired of his picky quesTions ThoT had no real bearing on our discussion, Tired of The mysTerious Things he scrawled in his black noTebook during our meeTings. I don'T know. My Tense answer plucked each word like a To-Tigh'r violin sTring. He direoTed The quesTion To The nexT person in The circle and irroTionol Teors ThreoTened To soil! from my eyes. BuT The smell and wormTh of Earl Grey Tea and The sighT of scones and sTrowberry jom reminded me of The good Things obouT England. The young man laid a creamy rose bud cup and ploTe before me. His friendly quesTions and The riTuoI of Team Time sooThed The Tension I feIT. I poured myself a cup of Tea and breoThed sTrengTh from iTs delicoTe perfume. Now back oT DePouw 0 year IoTer, I jusT opened my IosT box of Twinings Earl Grey Teo, which I crammed inTo my suiTcose CT The expense of o fraying roincooT and my fovoriTe pair of sneakers IefT behind. And when I flew in from London To JFK oirporT, harried by cusToms officials and exhousTed from carrying my loaded suiTooses, I sTopped in on oirporT snack bar and ordered Tea. eCoThy Hole ,IIIII 'IIIII'I I III ,II IIIIIII IIII IIII IIIIIIIII If I III L IIIIIIIIIII II Ml, II. IIIII -II I- II -M ,oul CNK 25 STudy Abrood llOne day you love Japan and The nexT day you con'T wolf To geT home; back To The real life of o 'normol' American. even ThirTy! Oh no! I'll be loTe for my Troin! Have To hurry! Grob my obenTo box Ooponese sTyle lunch boxy and I'm ouT The door. ITTe kimasu! Luckily The Train sToTion is near, so l'm on my way To work in no Time. Change from Train To subwoy in ShinjukueThis is The worsT porT! The subs are so incredibly crowded The whiTe-gloved pushers have To hold people in while The doors close. Ten unbeoroble minuTes loTer we arrive oT my sToTion, passengers spilling ouT in relief as The doors open. Flosh my commuTer pass oT The TickeT goTe and begin The Trek Through Akosoko To my office building. TTOhoyo gozoimosu! Punch in oT 9:00 om. on The doTewhewl How in The world did a naive young Thing from 0 small Town in The MidwesT end up living and working in The world's second lorgesT ciTy? lT's o quesTion l'm sTill Trying To answer! AfTer o semesTer of sTudy oT Nonzon UniversiTy in Nagoya, Jopon, I moved To Tokyo To begin my MonogemenT Fellows inTernship wiTh ViTel Japan, The Tokyo branch of on inTernoTionol TelecommunicoTions neTwork. My Tokyo odvenTure began when I moved inTo The oporTmenT of Yukie Oso, exchange sTudenT oT DPU 4984- 85, and her sisTer, Mikiko. Sligthy lorger Than 0 RecTor single, our oporTmenT is convenienle locoTed only fifTeen minuTes by Train from Shinjuku, perhaps one of The busiesT shopping, business, and municipal governmenT cenTers in Town, noT To menTion o fovoriTe nighTTime spoT! When Trying To describe life in Tokyo, many words come To mind: on one hand iT is fun and exciTing, yeT on The oTher, H is difficulT ond frusTroTing. One day you love Japan and The nexT day you coniT woiT To geT home, book To The real life of 0 normal American. BuT Tokyo is like ThoT, full of opposiTes ThoT somehow manage To exisT side-by-side. For example, iT is noT uncommon To see a woman wrapped in o beouTiful kimono wolking doinTily down The sTreeT, ond righT behind her follows 0 punk sTruTTing along in his block leoTher jockeT 0nd skin-TighT jeons wiTh dork glosses hiding his eyes under 0 wild mone of block hoir bleached sTrowberry blond. And here in Tokyo, The Golden Arches and The Colonel are as well-known as The neighborhood sushi bor-ond jusT os crowded! Also, iT is hard To believe ThoT BuddhisT Temples ond ShinTo shrines sTill inhobiT hollowed ground omong The shadows of The oiTy's skyscrapers, buT There They are offering 0 relief from oil of The sTeel ond concreTe. Life in This chooTic CiTy hos iTs ups and downs, buT good memories will by for ouTnumber bod ones. Good ones like hanami in Ueno Pork where we oTe sushi under The beouTiful cherry blossoms and onched Thousands of Japanese drink Themselves inTo all kinds of craziness; oTTending c: TrodiTionol Joponese ShinTo wedding msuolly foreigners ore noT ollowedy where The bride poinTed her face whiTe and wore o gorgeous red kimono ond eloboroTe heod dress; going ouT wiTh friends from Wosedo UniversiTy To one of The many nomiya in Shinjuku; and The Time when l Traveled To Hiroshima and climbed To The Top of MT. SeTo on Miyojimo for o beouTiful view of The Inland Sea and HS sprinkling of islands. UnpleosonT memories will include The obsoluTe heorT-sTopping Terror of my firsT TTbig eorThquoke, The incredible rush-hour crowds; and The many frusTroTions of being 0 gaiiin, on ouTsider who is respecTed for being a WesTerner, yeT CT The some Time, scorned for being non-Joponese. WhoT? lT's olreody six o'clock?! Time To head home. As I bockTrock The sTeps of This morning, I walk by The American Embassy, counTless coffeeshops and Chinese resTouronTs, bars, and mm sTonds, ond There is The flower shop ThoT hos such exoTic hana. The subwoy is jusT os crowded as iT was This morning, buT mosT of The solorymen don'T mind because They have already sopped off for o few drinks. Walking Through Shinjuku, There are men hawking Snoopy T- shirTs, peonuTs, Japanese sweeTs, ond insTonT Joponese noodle dinners. i buy 0 paper To read on The way home. News of ioTe: rodioocTiviTy from The nuclear power plonT occidenT in Russia has reached Japan, on ulTro- lefTisT group Tired rockeT-bombs ond plonTed smoke bombs in various subway Troins To demonsTroTe ogoinsT The Tokyo Economic SummiT, Prince Charles and Princess Diana are due To arrive This evening for a Tour of Japan, and The Dragons beoT The Corp. WhoT a day! Check The mailbox for news from homee DePouw seems so far away and so long ogoleThen up five flighTs of sToirs and I'm home. Todoimol -Robin RoberTs would wager ThaT my experience as an exchange sTudenT in WesT Africa was radically differenT from any oTher. IT wasn'T jusT a casual sTep off- campus, buT a conscious decision To spend a semesTer in rural Liberia, immersed in The life of African sTudenTs and focuITy 0T 0 small, ' privaTe college of 900. To be honesT, iT Took some guTs. Beforehand, iT was hard To imagine whaT iT would be like To be one of Two whiTe American exchange sTudenTs in a counTry so proud of iTs heriTage, where only persons of African heriTage may become ciTizens. Somehow ThaT boThered meeThe me who had never had The experience of being a racial minoriTy in all of my 20 years. i sTruggled wiTh quesTions of my own racial prejudices and a fear ThaT I would noT be accepTed as a person because my color sTood for someThing greaTer. Now Those fears and quesTions are gone for The mosT parT. AfTer seTTling inTo Liberian life, reflecTing, and reading, I Think I know myself preTTy well. I have begun To undersTand abouT pride, and abouT being oppressed, ignored, and TreaTed like a sub-human-and whaT all ThaT means To me. In Liberia, I Took all of my classes in African IiTeraTure, hisTory, arT, and poliTics. and l was opened up To a differenT view of hisTory and The world, a view I had previously been denied. I experienced The richness of African culTure and read abouT and saw wiTh my own eyes how The indusTrialized world had become so rich-by exploiTing Liberia, Africa, The . resT of The Third World. Living in Liberia was a wonderful growing experience for-me. I came back To DePauw wiTh energy and wiTh angereanger aT The facT ThaT very few people here had any idea or even cared abouT whaT was going on in The resT of The world; angry ThaT This whole Euro-American cenTered aTTiTude was parT of DePauw as a whiTe, monoliThic, insTiTuTion, supporTed by iTs dominaTing social sysTem; angry ThaT Those Two IiTeraTure courses I had Taken my sophomore year ignored and Thereby dismissed all auThors who weren'T whiTe Americans or Europeans; angry ThaT I realized how lucky I was To be an anThropology major. Those courses were The only place I could regularly find a place To deal wiTh The world ouTside of The U.S. I now undersTand Those who call The liberal s arTs educaTion The firsT of The area sTudies. I began To Think abouT whaT iT would be like To be a person of color aT DePauw-and grew angry again. When i was in Liberia i had no personal power and could have been Thrown ouT aT any Time. BUT l was sTill a whiTe U.S. ciTizen who represenTed a dominanT sysTem, and no one was denying my righT To read and sTudy importanl IiTeraTure and hisTory. ThaT college had given me The choice To read The speeches of Nelson Mandela, The novels of Chinua Achebe or The plays of William Shakespeare. All, as well as The works of on Alice Walker or 0 Gabriel Garcia Marquez, are imporTanT for me, for my Liberian roommaTe Gbour, and for every DePauw sTudenT To read. WhaT I leave To DePauw is a quesTioning of iTs values. Shall iT remain The monoliTh concerned only wiTh The dominanT powers ThaT be? Or shall iT include The hisTory, issues and views of all? WhaT my African experience gave To me was an appreciaTion of The value of diversiTy and a knowledge of The world in my educaTion and The resT of my life. eAngie Beauchamp Urban STudy NchPhIYIwaC The icing on The cake for me was being included in The filming of an M- TV video for Chrisfmas, and subsequenfly appearing on M- TV several Times. Growing up in a small Town in Indiana for 24 years, I never imagined I would one day find myself living in New York CiTy for four monThs. If you had Told me I'd be working for The naTion's number one cable neTwork e MTV - while I was in New York, I would have really laughed. BUT, Thanks To The GLCA New Yorks ArTs Program, I was able To do boTh of These Things. Before going To MTV, I had worked for a concerT promoTion firm in Indianapolis and had some limiTed experience wiTh radio aT WGRE. Beyond ThaT, my only involvemenT wiTh The music indusTry was my purchase of albums, concerT TlckeTs, and T-shirTs. MTV changed all ThaT. This experience was invaluable. l was able To meeT several arTisTs, including: 28 Kevin Cronin of REO Speedwagon, John Anderson of Yes. Billy Squirer, and Michael HuTchence and Tim Farris of INXS. Besides meeTing These people, I was able To aTTend The 2nd Annual MTV Video Music Awards and was a guesT aT The world premier of STing's movie, Bring On The Nighl. Perhaps The icing on The cake for me was being included in The filming of an MTV video for ChrisTmas, and subsequenfly appearing on MTV several Times. MTV, I discovered, was noT all fun and games. There really was a loT of work To be done and a IoT To learn. Living in one of The world's mosT exciTing clTies was an experience I'll never forgeT. BUT working aT MTV was an experience of a IifeTime. eCaThy Shoemaker M. '95.- The WashingTon Journalism SemesTer . . . simply one of The mosT exciTing experiences ThaT l have ever had. The opporTuniTy To live aT American UniversiTy, a School ThaT I would call a broadening change from DePauw, was really fascinaTing. I became acquainTed wiTh noT only The American UniversiTy sTudenTs, buT many sTudenTs from all over The UniTed STaTes who were parTicipaTing in The same program as I. My semesTer consisTed of parTicipaTion in seminars held by professionals in The field of journalism. However, The inTeresTing parT abouT my program was ThaT The seminars were held on locaTion, Ge, The WashingTon PosT, New York Times, Newsweek, The WhiTe House, The PenTagon, STaTe DepT., eTcJ. Along wiTh The seminars, I was involved in an inTernship ThaT I had To seek ouT and arrange afTer my arrival. I was lucky enough To work aT a major neTwork news operaTion, Cable News NeTwork. l became more involved and aware of The various faceTs of broadcasT journalism. BuT believe me, along wiTh This fun, There was even more fun. The endless hours of sighTseeing, shopping, and nigthife in GeorgeTown, all IefT my free Time To a minimum. This program was Truly an ouTsTanding experience, as I was able To sTudy specifically in my area of inTeresT in The news capiTal of The world. I feel Thai The benefiTs were greaT ones and will reflecT in The years To come. eSarah GoldsmiTh The Philadelpha CenTer is a semesTer long program which is sponsored by The GreaT Lakes College AssociaTion. The program offers The chance To work, sTudy, and live in one of our counTry's oldesT and largesT ciTies. The experience gained Through This program is invaluable, and The enjoymenT of living on your own in a large ciTy is Tremendous. The Three componenTs menTioned above are The essenTial parTs of whaT could prove To be your besT semesTer of your collegiaTe career. The firsT sTep is, perhaps, The mosT imporTanT sTep of all, and This sTep is The process of landing an inTernship. The Phil. CenTer has over 500 possible placemenTs on file. Therefore, anyone can find an inTeresTing and enjoyable inTernship. These jobs range from working for a radio sTaTion To working for a company such as ARCO Chemical Company. And, They have had people aTTend The program wiTh majors varying from compuTer science To geology. The Philadelphia CenTer has someThing for everyone. Each sTudenT who aTTends This program is required To Take Two courses which are TaughT by GLC'A professors. One course is a ciTy seminar, which is designed To Teach you abouT Philadelphia. And, The oTher course is an elecTive which can vary from Economics To JusTice. The courses TaughT are in a seminar-like aTmosphere, and They are quiTe inTeresTing and exciTing. Professors definiTer consider The inTernship work when making assignmenTs. The CiTy of Philadelphia has a greaT deal To offer, also. EveryThing you could ever Think of doing seems To be righT around The corner from your aparTmenT. Philadelphia is a ciTy ThaT is rich wiTh cuITure and full of exciTemenT. One can visiT The ArT Museum in The morning. caTch a baseball game in The afTernoonl and waTch a play aT nighT. WhaTever a person could wanT, iT can be found in Philly. The nigthlubs and The small pubs can Turn a boring nighT inTo someThing ThaT will never be forgoTTen. The people of Philadelphia can Turn a Terrible morning mm a beauTiful afTernoon. The Philadelphia CenTer is a growing experience, and an experience ThaT should be had by all. One more Thing, The Philadelphia CheesesTeaks and Hoagies are Tremendous. -Kevin Sweeney 29 WlhTer Term Off-Campus TlWorklng in London was a very rewarding experience for me. NOT only was l in a counTry I had never before been To, buT I was also working There as a businessman. IT was hard for me To believe ThaT Cable News NeTwork would puT The TrusT in me ThaT They did. For The lasT Two weeks of my lnTernship wiTh Them, all of my work was puT on The air. During The firsT Two weeks, ljusT basically learned my way around The place and HS basic operaTion. I had never worked in The Television indusTry anywhere or even in an indusTry relaTed To my major, so This was a ToTally new experience. The work I did for The firsT Two weeks was noT real exciTing, buT iT gave me Time To look around The place and learn abouT The differenT areas. AT The beginning of The inTernship, l waTohed sporTlng evehTs and Took noTes on The highlighTs in Them. This makes The ediTors' job more efficienT. l was able To sTroll around The sTudlo in beTween games and meeT many differenT people, buT The seT oaughT The majoriTy of my aTTenTion. IT Took The firsT Two weeks jusT for me To geT accusTomed To such an inTimidaTing environmenT. During my final Two weeks aT CNN, l was a video eleor for The morning sporTs cuT-ins. l was responsible for all of The video highlighTs ThaT were used during These 5-minuTe shows, which are seen all over The world. This seemed like a greaT deal of responsibiliTy for an inTern aTTer Two weeks of work. This responsibiliTy was The cause for some raTher Tense momehTs. Dealing wiTh deadlines and demanding anchormen was somewhaT nerve racking aT Times. AfTer learning all ThaT I did and meeTihg so many differenT people, I would say my inTernship wiTh Cable News NeTwork was a very valuable experience. -PaT Keller John STefany working wiTh Jim STewarT of The Wall STreeT Journal 30 During WinTer Term 4986, I inTerned wiTh The American NaTionaI Bank and TrusT Company of Chicago, London Branch. While being exposed To a varieTy of bank operaTions, Ohis was a non-service banky my main projecT was a counTry profile reporT on The counTry of Spain. The reporT included calcuIaTing The 4985 GNP, Real GNP, GNP growTh raTes and per capiTa GNP, and oTher key sTaTisTics. CiTing The favorable and unfavorable facTors of The counTry was also included in The profile. In my capaciTy, I worked as an equal To The oTher banking officers. I prepared an ouTlook and recommendaTion To mainTain a counTry IimiT of 25 million dollars divided beTween 8 Spanish banks, from which I prepared individual bank analyses. Working in The banking disTricT of London, I was expecTed To be aT work by 8:00 am, aT which Time we would have coffeerTea and discuss whaT areas we would focus aTTenTion on for The day. Working wiTh cusTomers and loans, iT was very imporTanT To be up-To-daTe on when loans rolled over or were To be updaTed. I also did work wiTh companies varying from McDonald's To large Oil CorporaTions or lnTernaTionaI Loan Firms. AfTer The firsT five minuTes I knew iT would be a full- STephanie Hamernik wiTh Congressman Dan BurTon. Time job, and I worked hard and They were willing To help me. I sTayed In SouTh KensingTon 0T 0 hoTeI and commuTed by Tube every day. AT 5:45 pm. afTer work, The office in which I worked always ended The day TogeTher in The London STaIe Pub, Their business was puT aside and minds were cleared unTiI The nexT work day. I was also able To Travel and sighTsee on The weekends. I spenT parT of my evenings wiTh people on The DePauw London Trip, wiTh whom i saw plays and musicals. VisiTing all The popular spoTs from Buckingham Palace, Big Ben, House of Cannon, and ST. Paul's CaThedraI, To The Hard Rock Cafe, were all prioriTies. I even Traveled To Paris and meT up wiTh five sTudenTs from San Diego. Working in London was a very rewarding experience for me. NoT only was I in a counTry I had never before been To, buT I was also working There as a businessman. I learned a greaT deal abouT London from The people I worked wiTh and also a greaT deal abouT InTernaTionai Affairs. I would leave righT now and do iT all over again. Joe Charles in London. lELU'OILn mm: MUSEUX 31 mm m. a m, In. Wm; M: xm M m m M w 35 I'll never forgeT my experience in Americus, Georgia This pasT January. Memories of long, hard work days, noT so-hard days of sTuffing newsIeTTers, IaTe-nighT walks. and making friends wiTh The people on The Team and The people of Americus, will always make ThaT experience special To me. The main Thing ThaT made my WinTer Term Trip so meaningful, however, was whaT I learned while There. Millard Fuller, The founder of HabiTaT for HumaniTy, The agency we worked wiTh in Georgia, Told a sTory ThaT sums up whaT I learned in Americus. One day, he goT a phone call from a very influenTial woman in Town, who wanTed To know why her maid's new house wasn'T finished yeT. The woman, Mrs. Crisp, was very iraTe ThaT DoroThy, her maid, was having To waiT so long. When Millard inquired as To The full name of her maid so ThaT he could check on The siTuaTion, Mrs. Crisp could noT even Tell him. All she knew was ThaT her maid, DoroThy, was sTiII living in a shack and she was going To use her influence To do someThing abouT iT. Millard explained ThaT progress on The houses was someTimes slow due To a lack of funds for consTrucTian. He suggesTed ThaT perhaps she would like To make a donaTion Toward The compleTion of DoroThy's house. Mrs. Crisp flale refused To donaTe, saying ThaT she jusT wanTed To call and see why The house wasn'T done yeT. Mrs. Crisp was willing To make only a small sacrifice-a mere phone callefor her maid. Giving money, even Though she was The richesT woman in Town, would have been Too greaT a sacrifice. Millard's sTory made me ask myself if I was willing To give someThing ThaT would cosT me, or if I would only give whaT wouldn'T hurT. Sure, I was willing To donaTe Three weeks of my life To build houses for needy people, buT would I volunTeer a year or more To help oThers less forTunaTe Than I? IT's a Tough quesTion To answer, buT in Americus I came much closer To being able To say yes. True giving, as I learned in Americus, is making a sacrifice. IT hurTs To do, buT aT The same Time, The good feeling ThaT you geT makes The pain worThwhiIe. ThaT is when chariTy isn'T chariTy anymore , . . i1 is love. eLuAnne STanIey 37 Africa has onoys been a place I wonTed To go To for as long as I can remember. When C.L.U.C. sponsored a mission Trip To Sierra Leone, I quickly applied and was occepTed on The Team. I spenT The monTh of January 4986 building 0 soncTuory wiTh oTher DePouw sTudenTs as well as wiTh several young Africans. The mosT imporTonT porT of The Trip for me was gaining friends from onoTher cuITure. I remember one nIghT NoThoniel, Young and I were going Through FreeTown ofTer dork Trying To buy pop for The Team. AT one poinT I realized ThoT I was ToTolly dependenT on These Two men for my sofeTy-buT I wosn'T scored because I Truly TrusTed Them. They guided me around holes, oner or dangerous obsTocIes ond proTeCTed me when Africans sow o whiTe woman and called ouT To me. ' AfTer ThoT, I conTinued To spend a IoT of Time Talking and laughing wiTh Them. We shared a loT of ourseres wiTh one onoTher which mode iT very hard To leave CT The end of The monTh. I mode 0 promise To myself ThoT I would be back in FreeTown one day To help These friends in any way possible. Now, looking CIT picTures, I miss NoThoniel and Young, buT I know ThoT all of our lives are richer because we did Take The Time To shore and To love one onoTher. To me, ThoT is one of The mosT ImporTonT ospecTs of These mission Tripsehelping people because They have Truly become friends and noT simply poor Africans. -Bonnie Hansen 38 39 40 n! . . g sj- -l .- During The monTh of January 4985, I spenT Three weeks in The counTry of HaiTi. The bulk of The Time my Team spenT was in a rural village called L'Acui. We had a medical Team which ran a clinic for The people of L'Acul and iTs surrounding village, and a consTrucTion Team, which dug and buiiT some 40 IaTrines for The village. One day I vividly remember on The IaTrine siTe was one of The firsT days we spenT in L'Acui. Three oTher sTudenTs, our HaiTian carpenTer, a few villagers and myself were siTTing around a hole which aT This poinT was noT exTremer deep. We were Taking Turns wiTh The pick axe, digging down deeper inTo The hole wiTh each swing. One specific evenT broughT abouT a greaT reaIiTy To me. As we waTched Paul, The experT carpenTer, work his magic wiTh The axe, i ThoughT To myself: I can'T believe how accuraTe he is, yeT he's quick and incredibly ,W V r ;.s resourceful wiTh his hands. i could never learn his Trade as well as he has. There is so much To learn from him, and I don'T know whaT we can give in reTurn. Anyway, The nexT ThoughT I had was ThaT l feIT preTTy sTupid sTanding around, looking aT Paul, giaveless, while I wasn'T using my gloves aT all, So I did The HAmerIcan Thing and gave him my gloves. However, when I handed him my gloves, he quickiy puT on an air of confusion. I realized ThaT he had never worn gloves. This reaiizaTion was supporTed when Paul could noT fiT The pair on his hands. We helped him figure ouT The fingers, and he wenT To work again, buT This simple gesTure had broader implicaTions for me. IT showed me ThaT The people of The village could benefiT from us, alThough perhaps noT in The way we mighT've expecTed. We weren'T Jr? 5 going To save The world, or even The smallesT village of L'Acui. WhaT we could do, however, is inTeracT wiTh The people, share our cuITure wiTh Them, and grow as friends. The glove gesTure was buT a small sTarTing poinT aT which we mighT break down all The barriers such as language and cuITure, and grow close To a radically differenT environmenT. The final realizaTion is simple; we wenT To L'Acul, HaiTi To give of ourselves in whaTever wayTsy possible, buT we ofTen ended up on The receiving end. I believe ThaT our love and concern for These people was reciprocafed and given back To use and ThaT was someThing no one bargained foreTo be so affecTed by The ones we were supposed To be aifecTing. -Rob Jacobs 44 i lrl! i ......-l I i . 9.x TTWhy do you do This? Every week you skip lunch and head for Filmore, Indiana. WhaT possibly can Filmore offer you? AcTually, Filmore, Russelville, Roachdale and oTher foreign places do offer more Than one mighT Think aT firsT glance. IT is in These real life classrooms ThaT many DePauw sTudenTs learn a very valuable Iesson-one ThaT can'T be learned by lecTures, reading assignmenTs, observaTion or vldeoTapes. This lesson has To be learned firsT hand, wiTh one caTcheiT involves hearT. The lesson? You can make a difference, you can give of yourself, you have a responsibiliTy To oTher people. and mosT of all you need To Take Time, Time To look in The eyes of anoTher and Truly see The person inside. The person I saw when I looked in The eyes of fifTh grader Mary was an unTrusTing, shy, hurTing and angry liTTle girl. Who was I To This seemingly unresponsive grade schooler? Believe iT or noT, I was Her DePauw STudenT -quiTe a Thing To be proud of-noT all boys and girls geT one; she musT be special. Mary was indeed special and In facT, for Three years has conTinued To be a source of concern, joy and fun for me. Mary didn'T like school, didn'T have friends, didn'T like her Mom and Dad and didn'T like To TalkebuT she did like me. We boTh loved dogs and haTed maThl For Three years Mary and I'd color, Talk abouT her dog and Take walks-jusT us-no one else. I would more ofTen Than noT drag my feeT Wednesdays aT noon. To shifT gears, drop books and head To Mary was a difficulT Task. Once There Though, I would realize ThaT I needed This Time as much as Mary. I needed To be reminded ThaT DePauw wasn'T The mosT imporTanT Thing and The husTle and busTle jusT couldn'T compeTe wiTh people. AT firsT I didn'T see The changes buT her MoTher did, and her Teacher did. Mary Talked abouT her DePauw STudenT ; Mary began playing more, doing her school work and Mary smiled more. Gradually I Too noTiced The change in Mary's eyes; anger Turned a IiTTIe warmer and someTimes a Twinkle could be deTecTed. All I did was reach ouT To a lonely liTTle girl- people To people conTaCT, buT The resulT is one only achieved Through inTeracTion. I had a similar experience aT The nursing home. When I firsT sTarTed I was a biT apprehensiveewhaT did I have To offer? To MarTha l was a person who had my life ahead of me and she sensed ThaT zesT for life. To Ida I was new ears To IisTen To old jokes. To Bill I was his girlfriend and To Peggy I was someone wiTh whom To recall old songs. AfTer l goT over my apprehension I began To look inTo The eyes of These people as well. In Those eyes I saw loneliness, pain, confusion, long years of hard work and a glimmer of laughTer ThaT was waiTing To be rekindled. I appreciaTed who They were, respecTed Their individual sTories and wisdom. Again, H is only Through people To people conTacT ThaT self-respecT and laughTer can come abouT. These experiences involve one on one giving and receiving. This lesson is one of The greaTesT of alleand iT involves hearT, you can make a difference; you have a responsibiliTy To oThers, To all of Gods children. eDoni Driemeier 43 Bogs: 3E9 079 5M My personal experience wiTh classroom every Monday and have STucIenT Friend sTarTed aT The my sTudenTs jump up and shouT a big beginning of IasT year, when, as a hello. IT is c Tough program, Too. The freshman, I was assigned To do an hard parT is saying goodbye each arTicIe on The program for The semesTer since you never know if you newspaper. I Talked To Debbie wiII be back To The same school for BhaTTacharyya and PaTTy Ashman for The same Times. IT's really hard for The The sTory and decided iT sounded kids also. One of The Teachers inTeresTing. I had always been approached me on my reTurn IasT involved in Teaching Sunday school, year and Thanked me for coming and l ThoughT This was a perfecT way back. The siXTh grader had been To geT ThaT same fulfillmenT. I have progressing well while I was There in been going To The same elemenTary The fall, buT during The Two monThs I school meeisviliey for Two years and was gone TChrisTmas and WinTer have had five differenT children from Termy he had slipped and They were The firsT grade To a sixTh grader who afraid he wouldn'T pass This year. His wenT on To junior high IasT year. The face IiT up when I walked in The room program gives me such a sense of and he managed To puII Through being needed, which I find imporTanT nicely for The year. ThaT's whaT makes while juggling classes and oTher iT aII worThwhiIe for me. aCTiviTies. lT's greaT To walk inTo The -ScoTT Swan My hearT was racing and buTTerfIies filled my sTomach. I saT, frozen in my chair, IisTening To The phone ring. Finally, afTer whaT seemed like an eTerniTy, I breaThed a siIenT prayer and picked up The phone. Hello, This is ConTacT. May I help you? This scenario is one I can remember vividly; H was my firsT solo shIfT and my very firsT phone call. I goT involved wiTh ConTacT because I care very deeply abouT people and I wanTed To IisTen and help. I'd been Through all The Training, buT suddenly as I heard The phone ring, I was scared. WhaT if I didn'T know whaT To say? WhaT if I said The wrong Thing? Now, Two and a half years IaTer, I look forward To The phone ringing, because I know ThaT all The caller needs is a friend . . . someone To IisTen. The boTTom line for Those people who call ConTacT is noT ThaT we always have jusT The righT Thing To say, buT ThaT we IisTen and we care. I've learned much as a Telephone worker for ConTacT. I realize ThaT a 'crisis' can be many Things; a young chiId waTching his dog die, a Teenager who feels peer pressure, or someone who has decided ThaT life jusT isn'T worTh living anymore. All These people, no maTTer how IiTTIe Their problem may seem To me, need a friend. I've learned ThaT iT is noT whaT you say buT how you say iT ThaT really counTs, and ThaT IuIIs in The conversaTion . . . silences . . . are okay. MosT imporTanTIy, I know ThaT I musT be genuine, sincere, 'real', and, believe IT or noT, The resT jusT comes naTuraIIy. This is one parT of my college years ThaT many people don'T know abouT: ThaT doesn'T maTTer, Though, because I'm noT doing This To receive praise from oThers. I work for ConTacT because of The saTisfacTion I feel when I help someone else. Now when The phone rings, aIThough I sTiII breaThe a siIenT prayer, I make myself comforTabIe, reach ouT for The phone, and say, Hello, This Is ConTacT. May I help you? . eA ConTacT Worker ConnecTions is very similar To The Big BroTheVBig SisTer Program. Individuals are paired up wiTh youTh ThroughouT PuTnam CounTy. Originally iT was a program ThaT worked wiTh kids who had been in Trouble, buT iT now covers kids wiTh only one parenT or Those from a lower class background. There is a greaT bond of friendship ThaT usually develops beTween The DePauw sTudenT and The youTh. The kids really look up To The DePauw sTudenTs and brag To Their friends abouT Them. IT is noT unusual for a DePauw sTudenT To aTTracT The neighboring kids in for a good game of fooTbaII or soccer. OTher acTiviTies ThaT occur are bike riding, playing games, and jusT Talking. IT helps The kids OUT 0 IoT because This program makes Them special. IT helps The DePauw sTudenT because in addITion To feeling good abouT yourself, you geT To escape The DePauw environmenT a few hours a week. -Lynn Cameron Solurday mornings arrive very early on work projecT day, buT The ThoughT of helping someone else makes iT all seem worThwhile. For The IasT Two projecTs aT our house, I was The one To make sure everyone else was awake, and I found ThaT my friends didn'T need much coaxing; They all have heard or have experienced These group projecTs before. On my flrsT projecT we had The chance To meeT The young boys whose rooms we would be painTing oT Pleasanl Run Children's Home. We all had a greoT day working wlTh Them and found OUT 0 loT abouT Their pasTl IT was hard To believe whaT These homeless kids had been Through already! Hopefully ThaT biT of aTTenTlon by 0 group of college sTudenTs will help. By The Time we finished painTing, we had made some incredible messes as well as some really neaT friends . . . ThaT's one of The mosT rewarding parTs . . . running inTo someone on campus lhaT you meT on The work projecT and knowing you've found one more person who cares abouT Those boys in Indy. -Jenny Nichol 47 Once every semesTer your living unIT's C.L.U.C. rep TChopIoin's Living UniT Council RepresenToTiveT pulls you ouT of bed GT 0 very ridiculous hour on SaTurdoy morning. The C.L,U.C. rep, who used To be your friend, Tells you ThoT you have fifTeen minuTes To dress, eoT ond geT ready for 0 group work project WhoT you don'T know is exochy whoT The day ahead of you is all about Well, wiThin fifTeen minuTes you sTorT To geT o vogue idea of whch happens on group work projeoTs. You find yourself and eighTeen oTher sleepy people, some of whom you know, packed inTo a creoky old blue van, which is heading EosT on I-70 To some unknown desTinoTion. When 9:00 rolls around, you awake To see The Task before you; your group is To clean and poinT The bosemenT of a ChrisTion youTh cenTer so ThoT H can be used for o recreczTion room. Tools are puT inTo your hands and you seT obouT poinTing. While The morning hours pass, you meeT and Talk wiTh several new people, some who become your friends Through The resT of your years oT DePauw. One porTicqur person coTches your eye. She's o cuTe blonde who has poinT on her nose and sploTTered on her sporTsweor. Before you know iT, lunch is spread 48 before you, and TT cosTs you noThing. While you Take in The blonde's viToi informoTion, The youTh direcTor gives you The viToI deToiIs abouT The fociIiTy you jusT poinTed. You may noT coTch oil of whoT he says. buT you goT The blonde's name and number. AfTer lunch, you and The blonde work in o privoTe corner by yourselves. In no Time, The room is porinTed. BeTTer yeT, each of you has 0 doTe for This semesTer's formols! You poT yourself on The book for signing up for This work projecT. On The way book To your very own D.P.U. campus, The cuTe blonde falls asleep in your arms. As The von creoks down I-70. you Think of yourself obouT The day and do 0 IoT of reflecTing. th1T 0 greoT day! I goT myself 0 formal daTe, meT o IoT of new people, worked hard, and had 0 very good Time. Why did I geT ouT of bed This morning onywoy? Could iT be ThoT I was called To work To help my fellow man? I don'T feel 05 Though I've performed ony greoT miracles. YeT, geTTing ouT of bed was 0 mirocle iTseIf! Maybe I had a purpose in poinTingI I Think I'll do iT ogoin nexT semesTer 0nd invITe o few friends wiTh me. YeaheThoT's The TickeT. Group Work ProjecTs. yeah , . . yeoh! eEric Broun 49 50 There I was, a naive freshman, wondering whaT The besT way was To geT Involved on campus. Everyone on my floor had The answeremake her The C.L.U.C. rep. I could Tell from The name ThaT my freshman year was off To a scary sTarT, WeII, if ThaT wasn'T enough, I had To sign up for a commiTTee when I goT To The firsT meeTing. Chapel commiTTeeeThaT sounded preTTy easy. I faiThfuIIy wenT To The chapel commiTTee meeTings every week; buT, you know whaT I forgoT To do? You guessed IT! GO TO CHAPELSI AfTer a semesTer of sleeping Through every chapel excepT The one I hosTed, I decided I had beTTer find ouT whaT H was ThaT my commITTee was doing. And, believe H or noT, I discovered ThaT I liked going To chapels even beTTer Than sleeping. Since Then, I have experienced so many Things aT chapels; I've seen a juggler and a Hindu dancer, Ive Taken communion and jammed To ChrisTian rock. Some Wednesdays I laugh, someTimes I cry, buT I always come OUT 0 beTTer personea IITTIe smarTer aT IeasTI Now I wonder whaT I missed when I blew off 0 Those chapels my firsT semesTer here. BuT I guess The mosT imporTanT Thing Is ThaT I'm noT missing iT anymore. And even Though I don'T geT To sleep aT 40:00 on Wednesday morning, I know iT's worTh The sacrifice. Besides, I can always grab a nap aT 44:00 on Friday. AfTer all, IT's onIy Convo hour! -Jackie Sells Old Gdd Pep Rouy AUGUS Tuesday WednT '1 My firsT yeor 0T DePouw has been really exciTing. From The firsT week ThroughouT The resT of The year, There have been few dull momenTs. IT is very easy To geT involved here and I have Token odvonToge of several ocTiviTies ThoT DePouw offers. I have especially enjoyed meeTing and Talking To people from all over The counTry. I Think DePouw is on excellenT place To go To school because of The academics and The greoT social life! -Bryce STeworT. 2 15 16 23 27 -- MK Ah..;.V l w I? Rush week was full of numerous and varied emotions and is on experience which only happens once in a Iifelime hgosp-scoryy. To Think lhoi your college life and friendships stem from this short week is o frigh'rening Thoughl. Pressure builds among friends and ii is a difficulT Task 10 make decisions based upon your own feelings and opinions roTher Than Those around you. To oliempl on occuroie description of The actual rush parlies is difficull for each differs with every person. Just how much do you ocluolly know oboul a certain house offer jusl Twenty minutes? in a nutshell, rush is o mixlure of many conflicting emolions. IT is a Time of anxiety, hope, fear, happiness, disappointment and confusion. One won'rs to be occepled by a group, and yet They desire To be wonled for Themselves. ll is all a game, a game of Chance Thor will affect The four years of your DePouw career. Rush is a fun Time, if you Take ii for whai i1 is wor'rh and remember you'll never have To do if again rHopefullyD. -Corol Johnson 24 25 CC SEPTEM Tuesday Wedni I have been Told ThoT The besT way To Team has liTTle To do wiTh classes and exams. IT involves, roTher, finding someone who inTeresTs you. IT involves IisTening To and Talking wiTh That person unTil you have learned CIII ThoT you con. Then you move on. AenigmoTe, DePauw's oITerndTive magazine, has been 0 forum for such experiences. We give 0 good deal of space To inTerviews-leks wiTh people who, for one reason or onoTher, have on IoT To offer wiTh Their words. An ofTernoon wiTh Marilyn Waring, o former member of New Zealand's porliomenT, wos spenT Talking obouT inTernoTiondl feminism. We soT in our suiTe one evening wiTh Robin Morgan, discussing whoT iT meonT To be a feminisT in our world. I had bredkfosT wiTh SCOTT WolTon, direcTor of The CenTrol Ohio Gay and Lesbian AssocioTion, ond Talked obouT prejudice, courT boTTles, failures and vicTories. The Times were all limiTed, The discussions olwoys Too shorT, buT The learningeond The inspiroTione was immense. A loT of Time oT college is spenT wondering obouT meoning. WhoT do I wonT To do wiTh my life when There is so much To see and do? Then These peopleewomen and men of words and experience and dcTion-wolk Through, and They share Their lives. They offer meanings, TruThs ond devoTions. So IisTen. Ask quesTions. Leorn. Then move on. -Amie Klempnouer Co-EdiTor of AenigmoTe BER 1985 Thumdoy sday 73 I LMWJ'R 20 .7 Meetings, meetings, and more meetings. Does ThOT sound familiar? Ofien I wondered if I had majored in meetings, while my exfrccurriculor dciiviiies involved homework and classes. BuI That's DePduw for you. There is always something To do if you wonI Io geT involved. For me, Union Board has been my home away from home. Having been on Union Board for four years, ii has become second nature. II's been 0 I01 of work and frusTrdIing OT Times, buT ii makes IT CI wothwhile when cCTiviIies planned ore enjoyed by others. DePouw has 0 unique and special feeling ThCIT mosi people don'I realize unTiI They Iedve. When leaving DePauw, I will Toke many memories of friends, Toppers, Old Gold, Liiile 500, The U.B., 0nd Koimdn saying Hey J.W,, how you do'in girl? Silly, buT True, This IITTIe place in . Greencds'rle I wiII miss. BUT, I will carry The DePduw pride with me and know when I come back, I would do if all over again if I could. -JuIie Winchesier Union Board Presideni 40 58 11 NOVEMI Deadline ended early TonighT. I can hear The quorescenT Tubes above humming Their lighT onTo empTy desk- Tops and covered TypewriTers. And The gurgling of The 50-year old radiaTors simmer in The four corners of The newsroomenever producing The righT amounT of heaT. Less Than half an hour ago, headlines were being wriTTen, picTures needed cropping and copy waiTed Tor ediTing. BuT now iT's quieT. As I Try To Think back on being ediTor of The DePauwl my ThoughTs keep reTurning To my freshman year-The TirsT sTories I wroTe in This musTy room, The ediTors who saT me down aT The scraTChed meTaI desks and TaughT me newswriTing, and The friends I made wiThin The Pub Building. I Think I came To be ediTor Through The culminaTion of These predecessors, each conTribuTing a biT here and a biT There, Trying To pass on whaT was passed on To Them. And in Wed n reTurn, promising To do The same myself when The Time came. BuT even The besT Teachers didn'T prepare me for being ediTor. My firsT day on The job I remember siTTing down wiTh my sTaff, Trying To remain as serious and professional as possible. You don'T look like an ediTor, someone joked from The foam-rubber couch on The oTher side of my ediTor's desk. IT made me wonder jusT whaT an ediTor did look like. Maybe I needed a pencil sTuck behind my ear and a cup of coffee and cigareTTes on my desk. Now, as I look ouT across The empTy newsroom, reminiscing abouT The IasT four years of IaTe-nighT deadlines, iraTe IeTTers To The ediTor, and ITno commenT inTerviews, I realize being ediTor was The besT Thing I was a parT of aT DePauw. -Tom Felkner EdITor, The DePauw 20 27 ER 1985 iesday Thursday N 15 Brown Bag iT wiTh Lyceum, Nicaraguan ReoliTies 0nd ConTradicTions, TTGeT The Real Scoop on WhaT's Happening in CenTrol America. In iTs fourTh year, Lyceum again provided a forum for discussion of criTicoI inTemaTionoI, naTiohol and local issues. STimuloTing and :encouroging an exchange of ideas ibeTween foculTy, sTudenTs, and The communiTy, iT broke away from iTs TrodiTionoT panel discussion sTrucTure by beginning The year wiTh a series of brown bag dinner discussions on VieTnam, U.S. Nuclear Weapon Policies, and Modern Holy Wars. The crisis in SouTh Africa prompTed a showing of SouTh African wriTer, film maker, and social worker Ellen Kuzwoyo's Two films on block life and proTesT, followed by a discussion wiTh Ms. Kuzwoyo. A member of The Indiana Governor's Task Force on AIDS and The direcTor of The CehTrol Ohio Gay and Lesbian AssocioTion also joined Lyceum for a panel discussion. Two oTher Lyceums focused on Nicaragua and The conflicTs involving iTs governmenT, The conTros, and The US. An informal quesTion and answer session wiTh on American priesT working in Nicaragua was held, as well as a panel discussion wiTh four DePouw Hinsiders who spenT Their WinTer Term in Nicaragua. Organizers for The evenTs were seniors CcThy Hole, Brenda Baker, Angie Beouchomp, Rob LoPreTe, 0nd Faye Ogosaworo, junior Jone Miller and sophomore Amie Klempnouer. Funds for Lyceum are provided by FcculTy Development eAngie Beouchomp 17 24 OUIUIUUY Illuuy i l l i Thursday asday 29 BM Munoz: 28 Thursday Friday SaTurday manta amp 7 0 mmmw 3 Once upon a Time . . . For winTer Term This year I was a sToryTelIer. ThaT means I learn how To Tell sTories To people in an audience. I Told a sTory abouT a caT, a sTory abouT a Tree, and a sTory abouT a scenT. I did iT wiTh STeve BIunT, who 4 Par'l-y also Told sTories. I'd wake up in The morning, IisTen To a Tape of a sTory, go play racqueTball, pracTice Telling a story, eaT lunch, Take a nap, play soIiTaire, read a new sTory, eaT dinner, sleep. ThaT is whaT I did for mosT of The monTh. I Think iT is whaT winTer Term should be all abouT. IT was noT hard work. Nope. NoT a biT. BuT iT was Early inTeresTing. And I Think ThaT is good enough. I also had some performances. Halfway Through The monTh we wenT To an elemenTary school and Told sTories To IiTTIe kids. I hadn'T been To an elemenTary school for quiTe a long Time. The kids There are small, The desks are small, and The drinking founTains are small. BuT They really dug iT. One kid fell ouT of his chair SARTV laughing so hard. I hope he didn'T hurT himself. We had a BIG SHOW The firsT week in February. We renTed ouT a room in EasT College and enTerTained friends we'd forced To aTTend for abouT an hour or so. I don'T Think ThaT They were bored, buT you neverrknow wiTh friends. ThaT's The good Thing abouT Them. We boTh feIT like big successes, and paTTed ourselves on The backs. WhaT did I accomplish, whaT did I learn? I improved my backhand in racqueTbaII, I oaughT up on my sleep, and I learned a few sTories. . . . and They lived happily ever afTer. eBruce Gay HI Philosophy Club become ocTive again This year ofTer c: shorT hioTus. We delved inTo The TradiTionoI mind- boggling subjecTs, deTermined To solve Those sTubborn philosophical quesTions once and for all. I mean, eiTher There is life ofTer deoTh or not and we feel ThoT we seTTled This and many oTher quesTions successfuny. We found ourselves wondering wheTher we could exisT wiThouT bodies Uhis possibiliTy did noT sound porTicularly oTTrocTive To mosT of usD, and wheTher we even exisT 0T all. How do we come To Think The way . -we do, and know wth we know? We never quiTe solved This one, buT we plan To Try again soon. The foculTy of The Philosophy DeporTmenT was very supporTive in coming To The meeTings and providing TrusTraTing quesTions when we ran ouT. We hope To oTTrocT some visiTing philosophers nexT year To sTimuloTe us all To ask even sTronger quesTions. Our philosophy is welcome To all persons who wonT To discuss These knoTTy Things. eKrisTen Frederickson PresidenT of The Philosophy Club FEBRUAR rnuuy L oumruuy 1 :in EEEEEEEEJ EE ; gt EEEE EEEm LL. H 1986 esday Thursday Women's STudies GT DePauweis iT a conTradicTion in Terms? IT doesn'T have To be. There are elemenTs of a solid Women's STudies program here: concerned sTudenTs, supporTive focuiTy and sToff, 0nd encouragemenT from The GLCA. DePcuw has a sTudehT group, The AssocioTion of Women STudenTs, o i foculTy commiTTee, end sTrong porTicipoTion in GLCA Women's STudies conferences. The AssociaTion of Women STudehTs TAWST has worked hard This spring To bring obouT The second successful Women's Week which will hopefully conTinue To be on annual evehT, This 13 year, in conj'UncTion wiTh The pornography symposium, The week's ocTiviTies had a combined TurnouT of close To a Thousand people. The showings of NOT a Love STory and The Women's NighT CT The Hub were porTiculoriy well oTTended. Also, iT is possible To puT TogeTher a Women's STudies major CT DePauw. Gender and ldenTiTy and Psychology of Women are basic courses for This, and nearly everyThing offered in The Sociology and AnThropoiogy DeporTmenT can be counTed Towards C! major. -A.C. Miller 14 Dacha: Major'- Laaar Day ! '5 Tce Q WW; xv? W 27 Good ?:TTCG'y' 28 20 Pres 5prinq Break Crazies $1 APRIL LiTTIe 500. Games, conTesTs, pairings, porTies . . . a bike race? Yes. CT The cenTer of The biggesT spring weekend oT DePouw UniversiTy is 0 bike race. In all of The exciTemenT, some people may forgeT The reason for The celebroTion. There is one group who knows exocTIy The focus of LiTTIe 500; They have had H on Their minds for many weeks, even monThs, before The ocTuol evenT. This group is The riders, and The Thrill of LiTTIe 500 is The race and The preporoTion for iT. IT Takes 0 special person To sacrifice her Time and give her full efforT To Train for The race. No one wonTs To IeT down her TeommoTes or her friends in The sTonds. If you wonT To succeed, you have To Take Training and compeTing seriously. There is no easy woyeiT's noT jusT you and your bike on The Track; iT's your friends, your living unit and Their expecToTions. I would be wrong in saying ThoT I rode only for oThers. The ulTimoTe moTivoTion musT come from wiThin. I enjoy pushing my body To iTs IimiTs, seeing wheTher or noT I have whoT iT Takes. Biking gives one The 15 opporTuniTy To physically exTend oneself, To sTrive for improvemenT, and To ulTimoTely succeed. For me, The LiTTIe 500 calls forTh The image of The rider on o deserTed counTry road. In ThoT reolm are The Toilwinds, The heodwinds, The climbs, The coosTs . . . The rider and her bike. All The exciTemenT boils down To The inner sTruggle of oThleTe and body, rider 2 2 and mind. Finally, LiTTIe 500 is a series of communicoTions. The rider communicoTes wiTh The body and mind wiTh every cronk of The pedol. WiThouT The inTernol prodding, success would be impossible. Inside, ouTside, coming ouT! Dig, dig, dig . . . hold ThoT curve . . . SpiriT! Meaningless gibberish To mosT, These 'W cries corry greoT meaning among 29 riders. These words which are so viToI To sofeTy epiTomize The comoroderie among bikers on The Track. eNgncy GriTTer I'5'Il k N 28 en M e 26 25 gigaspaiili :4 iii. .0.. V.l.i,.i .3 . .. Ill! 4.51.439. Norman Thoyer, Jr.,51ephen Blunt ' thel Thoyer ....... Roberfo Gufhrie Choriie Morfin ...... Kenneth Atkins Chelsea Thoyer Wayne . . . . .' .Karen Yohnke Biliy Roy ........... William McCoffrey Bill Ray ..................... Todd Hansen On Golden Pond ? 3i 3i .1: Mother Coutcge Jennifer Municon Ellif. heroider son ..................... WJohnKoemer Swiss Cease, her younger son ..Chones N. Brosheors chfrin, her mute Daughter. Susan D. Conger The Cook Thomas Von Progg The Chopiam .. Paul C Hufchison Yveffe Perrier The General.. .Lori S. Rosekrons ..Brion M. Gilkison The Reamer ...Eric Kindle: The Sergeant Melissa Rogers The Young Soldier .TWendy Waddle The Old Soldier hhhhh Alice Housfon The Clerk Melissa Sfroublnger The Ordnance Officer .Micheile Farmising The Peosom Woman T. ..Jodi Green The Voung Peasonf ..... .Jone? Gicss The Soldier ..................................................... Sheri Adams MUSICIANS .. Susan Erdel AEson Brown Kathy Milfaj? Lucy ........................... ....... I...'..Ellisa Cooper Lynne Snyder Ben ......................................... Rod Nelman Joe Rigo'r'ri Donna Riboldo ................ Gaye Motrovers Lori Rosekrons Carmen Ghio ...................... Dale Edwards Kathleen Byrum Don Octave ....................... Rich Arshonsky ' Barry Trowbridge Dog .................................... Rich Arshonsky Barry Trowbridge u Commendatoreodor .......... Dave Sharp Groucho Marx CO .......... Mat? Greenberg Charlie ................................. Ron Dwenger James Hoiiand Billy .......................................... Robert Cort Tim Miller Bobby ............................. Muff Greenberg Jimmy ........................................ Muff Hook Rod Nelmon Jessie .......................... Coryllon Cummings Bessie ................................... Dione Hossock Rebecca Nardin Artie Shaughnessy ............ Dan Harris Ronnie Shcughnessy .......... Jonofhon , B.J. Eves Bananas Shoughnessy...Lyneffe Fox Bunny Flingus..;....,....Micheiie Maum's , - 'COrinnq Stroller ....... Wendy Waddle - Head Nun ., ............. Jone NeuhCuser Second Nun ...... Krisfie Weimcr Lime Nun, ....................... Jonef Gloss L Billy Einhorn ................ Maffhew Irvine Milifory Policeman ........ Brion Gilkison Man in White .............. Spencer Twisf 79 Dr. Leonard Silver .............. Jim Hoeksemo Dr. Karen Gold ................ Jennifer Mutlicon Eleanor ................................ Lori Rosekrons 3 Freddie ......................... Damian Anastasio 80 w qr, 5 ' 5 m . m : 26 Tr x 1m mwiimnw :esmzemwx '6: , 4T ' , 6 L w? , m ' Mgmeug, Wm ? k; :gviafww C1755 5 5m w W - m in .2 3'; ; x - 82 , . i Vih! 83 Sf; Louis Dumas. Govt Worth, Lubbock T't. unthdvu. mgg 18h m'DL 545929 ?imse, den ; ever quit: thcuvn'n C, app RS, dpqu'aS JdneusoodEh chair, quxshcs Hooked ongadinq S , ELLLtr , qud?$uutch,de sew. W Ttwt, Hawk, mom destrt 'EL-bnfhcd FOYWCI wihdqs: W VMSS ULCXOB, :DIvaeg land, borotkq Umndltr, Vtmgg Missouri .Tuas Otlmkww KATPS. The armadillo was camera shy l4 Lbucbmvtblb , de, L 50mm chandler, LA! $ u Ao3u'0'3 ovum... mlN'moTLMV 85 IA. PiCCOLO Elizabeth Miuer FLUTE Alyson Brown Susan Erde Amy Logan Julie Overmier Tamara Paddock Holly Robb Kay Shelton Julie Trowbridge OBOE Rebecco Collins CLARINET KOThy Miffojf CLARbNET Micheue Alien Kelly Bonar Lisa Brickley Adam Calabrese Scott Greenmon Chris Hetrick Kafhy Miifojt Lori Rosekrons BASS CLARINET Scott Greenman BASSOON Laura Francis ALTO SAXOPHONE Ke'rrh Roeller Bill Rosche Mike Sfewarf TENOR SAXOPHONE Mindy Nixon BARITONE SAXOPHONE Carole Spinner . CORNET 8t TRUMPET John Armstrong Frank Donaher ' Brion Goslee Cheryl Hon Kerry McLaren Neal Smith Joy Stowe Phit Thomas L FRENCH HORN Ann Koenig Bette Lawrence . Wendy Rogers L Krisfi Sheahan ' EUPHONIUM Brian Gilkison , V , Dave McGyrcrm V V TROMBONE L L Bil! Dahlgren ' Scot? ,Dieckmcnn - Ernie Limbo A Doug McElhoney L Glenn Norton Biron Shepler TUBA Jim DeVore 'Po'rriCk Tilley Don, Stamets L PERCUSSION Gregg Deickmdle $301+ Koon Scot? McMahad Mott Minor Kris Roberts LIBRARIAN L Doug McElhcney L Phil Thomas Lu 87 ?xswryc;?e53ugathg .w W Mike Jeffn'es Football Knowing that my opportunity had finally arrived I was very excited about travelling to Kenyon College to play the Lords. On that Friday evening, as we arrived for a light workout, the rain began to fall from an eminous sky above. Saturday would be a day of sunshine and rain. As we arrived at the stadium game day that old familiar feeling was again present. In high school It came every Friday night for three years. It wasn't nervousness, just readiness and mental preparation. Starting this game would be my first collegiate chance. The reason - because of an individual by the name of Steve Batman Battreal. What a football player!! He is one of the lightest players, and yet when the game starts strap on your helmet or he will undoubtedly knock you ass over apple cart. Not starting has been an adjustment, but also a maturing experience. While here I have learned that you must compete with yourself to be the best player you can be. Otherwise, your chance will come and you won't be ready because of worrying about the guy ahead of you. Besides, how can I be disappointed for not playing when an athlete like uBatman plays my position. Well. my opportunity came and I was ready to meet the challenge. How did I do? Best yet! One interception, one recovered fumble, one caused fumble, four batted passes, lead in tackles, and was defensive MVP. But was the work while I waited worth just one game? Hell yes! There is much more to football than just Saturday afternoon. I would not trade the past three years for another experience. -L. Jon Porman 90 Mike Jeffries 94 Cheerleading The Cheerleading season began early in AugusT. By early i mean abouT 6:30 in The morning, during The Two weeks before classes began. We pracTiced in The morning for aT IeasT an hour each day, for The girls, and in The afTernoons wiTh The guys for an hour several Times a week. Then, once Classes began we worked several Times each week To prepare for each game. This year DePauw helped us ouT by providing a budgeT large enough To allow us To Travel wiTh The Team To a few of The away games. We Traveled To Illinois Wesleyan and To Taylor, alThough The guys bagged us aT Taylor, leaving jusT six girls To cheer and do The push-ups!! In addiTion To helping us geT To The away games our budgeT allowed us To geT Twelve new sweaTers This year. Finally, The DePauw cheerleaders, boTh male and female, have maTching uniformsi! We Tried a bunch of new sTunTs and cheers This year which Cindy, Jane Annland Jen broughT To us. These we combined wiTh ideas from Robyn, Susan and BeTsy, all cheerleading Their second year, and many of The TradiTional DePauw cheers. Susan SeaT, as capTain organized all These cheers. chanTs, mounTs, IifTs and The squad worked very well TogeTher. This year The crowd was more involved Than iasT, and i1 was exciTing To cheer for such a fanTasTic Team! The DayTon game broughT us To an all Time high and The fans were incredible. However, we're sTiII looking for some more real fan supporT. 92 Poms Being a Tiger Porn is more Then jusT performing GT holf-Time of home games. IT's marching ankle knee in weT gross. IT's procTicing The school song unTil your arms oche. IT's hearing our fovoriTe bond direCTor soy smile, you ugly wenches! more Times Than you care To remember. IT's learning Three new rouTines in Two weeks, wiTh someThing geTTing changed five minuTe before you go on The field. iT's procTicing during every Chapel, convocoTion hour, SaTurdoy morning. and Tuesday and Thursday ofTernoons unTiI mid-November. And This is supposed To be fun? IT is. This year, '18 of us spenT The beTTer porT of firsT semesTer sTreTching, dancing, marching, and laughing TogeTher. The squad wos mosTiy freshmen, wiTh jusT enough upperclossmen and familiar faces for spice. We even had a senior rookie rAmes . . . y. There were Times when Tempers fiored and muscles Tore e yes, we are doing a spiiT ripple ond ThoT is final. - buT These were for ouTnumbered by The fun Times. Times when everyone laughed oT an impossible sTep ThoT Linda and i had invenTed, Times when The 4's and 2's changed so ofTen no one was sure which end was up. We've rolled on The ground, done mild imiToTions of The Solid Gold dancers, boogie down while iifeeling for you, sTorred 0T a basketball game, and sTiII had Time To go on a few Pom counTry runs. When fooTboIl season rolls around nexT year, someThing will be missing for me. AT my nexT DePouw fooTboII game, I won'T run behind BlocksTock wiTh five minuTes iefT in The firsT holf To procTice ThoT week's rouTine. i'll sToy in The sTonds during hoIfTimes, onching a new squad of Poms doing . whoT I've done for The IosT four years, and Hi be very proud of Them. Oh, and if you should happen To siT nexT To a woman 0T 0 fooTboii game who knows The words To boTh of our school songs, iT's a preTTy sofe beT ThoT she used To be a Tiger Pom. eAngie Arihood Field Hocke y 7 This year DePauw's field hockey Team mode scenes on and off The field. Led by Indiana's coach of The year, Judy George, The Team improved Their record from 2-42-2 To 15-5. UndefeoTed Through The firsT seven games, DePauw's mosT TriumphonT momenT was a vicTory over naTionolIy ranked WiTTenburg College, by penalTy sTrokes, 3-2. Finishing up The season, The Tigers came in second in The SToTe Tournament losing by a 4-0 score To Goshen. The players are looking forward To bumming around Indiana in onoTher exciTing season nexT year and will definiTely be The ones To beaT. O.K. sickies-STeak or honogs? Hockey Team womps-shoT poTrol Iives-OB's TonighT-C'Iobber gobble who-Hey Team good luck To you. Score score score-EEEYEAHeMcke a sceneeShcke iT ouT-Schncoao . ps. -Kim Edgar. Denise KnighT, Carolyn Uhle 94 lit!!! Steve Fish 95 Volleyball As a junior and a Third-yeor member of DePauw's volleyball Team, I can honesle soy ThaT DePauw allows equal opporTuniTy for iTs players. Coach Barbara Federmon doesn'T believe in The senioriTy policy of coaching, Therefore The mosT TalenTed players represenT DePauw on The sTarTing Team, which generally consisTs of OT IeasT Two freshmen. DePauw's volleyball record is noT exTremely successful, which in no way jusTifies The posiTive benefiTs each player gains from her experience as c: vorsiTy volleyball player. The overall aTTiTude of The Team is supporTive, moTivoTive, and enThusiasTic. Coach Federmczn is open To new ideas and conTinuoust learning drills, Techniques, and sTroTegies which may prove beneficial To her Team. Having been injured during Two consecuTive volleyball seasons, I began To find iT difficulT To sToy commiTTed To volleyball. ReTurning for play 0T mid-seoson, I relied heavily on I i The supporT of The coach and The enThusiosm of The Team To remind me noT To be a quiTTer e buT 0 winner. Thanks To Them and my own desire for success in volleyball, I quickly achieved The necessary level of menTaI and physical sTrengTh To regain a posiTion on The sTorTing Team. When I leave DePouw I will Toke many enjoyable volleyball memories wiTh me. These include orange juice wiThouT pulp, fasTening secT belTs, The joking, Our coach can'T drive sign, chocolaTe chip shakes, Wendy's vs. McDonald's, and The mosT memorable of all, The weekend Trip To ST. Louis when The van unexpecTedly broke down and The Team hiked along The highway To The hoTeI. -Tino STeeIman 3+ LEW i I I $ ,va - ' i f. m Soccer frag Willi! !' .. Nh' 3'! v 97 Men ,3 Baske tball Our baskeTboll Team This year was such a greaT experience for everyone involved. Our success was noT represenTed by our record alone, buT by The Team concepT ThaT prevailed all season long. This was a special Team because all The players and coaches were working TogeTher for The same goals. The year sTarTed off by us winning Two overTime games in The ManchesTer Tourney jusT prior To Thanksgiving. Even Though we won The Tourney we sTiII had some very sTrong doust abouT our Team aT This Time. We did noT play very well and were exTremely forTunaTe To win Two games. However, we made some adjusTmenTs and were able To go on To play much beTTer The resT of The season. Our only loss of The regular season was T0 BuTler aT Hinkle Fieldhouse. We were able To reach a goal of ours by making The NCAA Division III playoffs for The Third sTraighT year, The firsT game of The playoffs was a very saTisfying To us because The Team we defeaTed, WiTTenburg, had beaT us Twice in The previous year. However, The nexT game our season came To a close by losing To OTTerbeih College. This year we had many Team accomplishmenTs. We exTended our home winning sTreak To 50 games; we finished wiTh The besT record in The school hisTory, 26-2: we made The NCAA Division Three playoffs for The Third sTraighT year; and we managed To remain ranked 9662 in The n'aTion for The enTire season. -Phil Wendel STeve Fish Lynn Cameron 98 Steve Fish Sfeve Fish Steve Fish - i- '- r... ,V..... . .. Baske tball Steve Fish Mike Jeffries 400 Marc Dars'r '10'1 Women ,s Baske tball When I Think abouT my career oT DePauw, many memories come To mind. I don'T Think dbouT personal sToTisTics or The focT ThoT we losT more games Then we won. However, I do remember inTrinsic gains ThoT are hard To express To oTher people who weren'T involved. AfTer having survived Three differenT coaches, major knee surgery and The biases of DePauw. I would do iT oil over again if I were given The chance. Personally I feel like The program is improving each year, and I hope I've had someThing To do wiTh ThoT. As a graduoTing senior, I will be wondering obouT The upcoming season 0980 and I will miss playing for The Lady Tigers. The hordesT pdrT of my experience here is ThoT nobody cores obouT our program excepT Those who are direcTIy involved. When I become a porT of someThing, I seT goals, and find a challenge. Here, I wonTed people To core obouT our program. Looking back, Things have goTTen beTTer-buT They sTiII hove Cl long way To go. I like To leave Things knowing ThoT They are beTTer now Then when I enTered The scene. Being The oldesT porT of a young Team. I found iT rewarding To show The underclossmen The ropes of TrddITion involved in our program, Helping Them To see ThoT The ever-ldsTing friendships would geT Them Through The hard Times. My advice To my younger TeommaTes is Twofold: Try To make a difference in The program. DedicoTIon in The long run will provide some soTisfdcTion dhd evenTuoIIy a winning program will follow. Also, be The besT person Tth you can be. These kind of people win! eMesho McCorTy 402 Donna Elam Cord Estes 403 Women ,3 Swimming Four years ago, 0 IiTTle known swim program was beginning iTs firsT season in The new Lilly CenTer NaToTorium. Since ThoT Time. I have seen The coach and The swimmers grow info a ,, . w 7 s y. , very TalenTed naTionolly ranked Team. ' ' T T A DonnciElarn Among our currenT Team members we have noTionol champion, seven AlI-Americans w of whom are reTurningy and Two academic All- Americans. Swimming is a very demanding sporT, so you can find us in The pool from ioTe SepTember unTii March. IT seems like a ioT of work sand iT is; buT H is all worThwhiIe when you look CT The rewards we have received. I, personally, have mde friends and memories ThoT will losT forever, along wiTh geTTing pienTy of exercise and The Thrill of compeTiTion. I don'T wonT This To sound like paradise because we do give up our fair share of naps, sTudy Time, weekends, as well as normal eoTing hourseloTe ploTes become a way of life. BeTween The workouTs and The swim meeTs, we puT in 46-25 hours c: week in The oner swimming 3-7 miles a day wepending on The Time of The season y The oner is our second home and when we're ouT of iT you will ofTen see us in sweoTs and wearing hoTs. AnoTher ChorocTerisTic is our fifTh appendage, The ever presenT wolkman compIeTe wiTh James Taylor or The Big Chill SoundTrack. As for my experience wiTh DePauw, swimming will be one of The mosT memorable. Many Times when The Transferring ThoughTs cropped upe iT kepT me here. I wouldn'T Trade my four years and The friends I have made for onyThing in The world. Thank You. -Robin Clark Donna Elam 404 VNlike JeffTies . Early morning procTices, endless yards, red eyes, green hair . . . why do we do iT? There are no AThleTic scholarships in division I swimming, no moneTory inducemenTs; so why do we boTher geTTing weT? DePouw swimmers are a special breed, willing To sacrifice a greoT deol To compeTe in sporT so often overlooked. lswim oT DePouw for The challenge, The i friendships, The fun-rewords noT measured in dollars and cenTs buT in soTisfocTion and love. AT DePouw I am always a sTudenT firsT and on oThleTe second. STriking This balance beTween academics and oThleTics probably offers The greoTesT Challenge To The DePouw oThleTe. Our coaches undersTond The imporTonce of academics and work wiTh The swimmers To develop his or , her poTenTicnI in boTh areas. In my I opinion, discipline and deTerminaTion ore essenTiol To succeed in boTh. DeTerminoTion geTs me up oT 5:30 in The morning To procTice; and discipline makes me dive in The oner. Swimmers undersTond one onoTher. The shared experience and common drive among swimmers forms friendships ThoT Transcend The living uniT, The year in school, and The swimming speed. The friends I have found Through swimming undersTond my frusTroTions and encourage me when I am down. When The moTivoTion is lacking from wiThin, I find The sTrengTh for my TeommoTes. We Train TogeTher,-eoT TogeTher, complain TogeTher, compeTe TogeTher, buT mosT of all . . . we have fun TogeTher. Swimming is definiTely fun. I enjoy pushing my body To iTs IimiTs Trying To shove off ThoT exTro TenTh of 0 second. ProcTices can even be fun- kicking To The beoT of The BeoTIes , shoring The doys' gossip, finishing 0 hard seT. Team shove downs before a big meeT, plone flighTs home from ATIonTo, swim Teom porTies- memories To IosT for o IifeTime. The fans in The sTonds may be few, The recogniTion minimal, and The pay nonexisTenT, buT H is my plan To conTinue swimming. I happily occepT The challenge of compeTing CT The Division III level in exchange for The invaluable rewards I have already and will conTlnue To receive. To quoTe o sporTs wriTer commenTing on Division III oThleTics: . . . ThoT's O.K. obscuriTy is 0 way of life in Division III; . . . H is Division III. JusT college kids wiTh no oThleTic scholarships, who don'T live in oThIeTic dorms ondeyou'll never believe Thisewho don'T even seem To geT many of The usual inducemenTs such as cosh and drugs and DoTsun 2802's. They jusT like To play . . . IT's quoinT and old fashioned, buT There are people, forgive Them, who enjoy iT This way. Qouglos 8. Looney, SporTs lIIusTroTed. March 24, 49860 Me-I am one of Those people. The friends and experiences I have gained Through swimming will be mine beyond The day I hang up my goggles for good. -Noncy GriTTer 105 Mike Jefflies Men ,3 Swimming WW Mike Jeffries ,.',' , 7 aakmrv Vadt sf rug: 5 Q . .-' 6w-'! Mike Jeffries 106 Wres tling '107 Men ,5 Tennis We were a really good team. If we got beat we found comfort in the thought that we'd all be wealthy someday while that other guy would end up managing some Dairy Queen; or else in the fact that they must have been practicing sixteen hours a day to overcome our national, albeit unpolished, talent. Oddly enough, what I remember most about playing tennis for DePauw are the van rides to and from different matches. We slept a lot and listened to walkmans, but most of all we'd talk about whose best at other sports and then about some crucial three-all point we lost that afternoon. We also talked about other stuff that you only bring up when it's 4 am, on I-70, in Ohio, and you're missing your formal. -James Grohmann David Hollander - x :u; vt K. David Hollander h I t '., tip 1, n I I '. . .., H- :l: ui.'1 flgnsiey, 5W V JepuorIOH prnoa 108 13 mb H mm WT . 0.1 ' c:cdrf A H a .a.vw-. xi Donna Elam 409 Donna Elam g. V. : A 3.. mi l Amf'evigiz .m, H -g., Donna Elan 1'10 Men ,5 Golf David Hollander David Hotlander Donna Elam Donna Elam 0: :3 $$$- Donna Elam Men $ Track u; , , - .5 ' 4?- 142 H3 Donna Elam u : Baseball Do P Donna Elam n eobody M4 Donna Elam Brent Larson VMM STeve Hsn Don Peabody 4'15 Softball. David Hollander Road Trips. Going To and from away games bring ouT some of The besT Times in sofTbaII. Everyone's True personoIiTy comes To life. For a few hours, we're away from all The academic and social pressures of DePauw and we can comforTobly say whoTever and OCT however we wanT. EveryThing is laid back. IT's greoT! No social mores ekisTH We jusT Try To have fun. SomeTimes we regress back inTo childhood G.e.-doing The Time Warp in The van as we drive down I- Dovid Hollander 7o; buT we have a good Time. ; Playing on The sofTboll Team has given me The opporTuniTy To meeT and develop friendships wiTh people ouTside of my living uniT. WiTh all The social ocTiviTies wiThin each house, iT's hard To really geT To know people ouTside of ThaT conTexT. SofTbaII makes iT possible. -Momi Ford M6 David Hollander David Hollander H7 9 9 Little 500 Men's Final Standings . Phi Gamma Delfc: . Be'ro Theta Pi . Delta Tau Delta . Hego'rerngden . Alpha Tau Omega . Delta Chi . Phi Kappa Psi . Sigma Chi . Sigma Alpha Epsilon . Delta Upsilon . Lambda Chi Alpha . MosonAocust . Phi Delta Theta . Delta Kappa Epsilon EgSic'SoooNomth-x Steve Fish USH 919943 2a Men9s Race 1-. Results Mosl Laps-Sfeve Smifh, DelTo Chi, 54 laps Faslesl Lap-Thomas Downhom, Beta. 3026 FaslesI Average-Gom Huggins, Fiji, 34 40 Robkie of lhe Year9Jef-f Clinfon. Deli Most Valuable Rider9eom Huggins, Fiji AIl-Siars First Team '1. Gem Huggins, Fiji 2. Jeff Clinfon, DeIT 3. Wes Hobson. Be'ra 4. Ned Sizer, Fiji 5. Mark Korner, Hega'rerngden Second Team 1. Muff Quirk, Fiji 2. Thomas Downham. Beta 3, Max Miller, ATO 4. Mike Lynch, BeTo 5. Reese Watt, Hogoferngden 69 Greg Fox, Delta Chi 9 '118 .. . 5-5-2. '- ' 'IVWW 3 Steve Fish Womews Final Standings . Alpha Omicron Pi . Kappa Alpha Theta . Alpha Chi Omega . Delta Gamma . Bishop Roberts Hall . Kappa Kappa Gamma . Alpha Phi . Ou'r-in-Town . Pi Beta Phi '10. Hogofe Hall 4'1. Alpha Gamma Delta 42. Lucy 4842 OOONOO'I-bwwa Women2s Race Results Most Laps2Judy Dunipace, OIT, 41 Fastest Lap-Alyson Woods. Them. 32.84 Fastest Average2Be2He Lawrence. AOPi, 39.04 Rookie of the Year-Noncy Griffer. AOPi Most Valuable Rider-BeHe Lawrence, AOPi AII-Skll's Firs? Team 1. Alyson Woods, Theta 2. Bette Lawrence. AOPi 3. Nancy GriHer, AOPi 4. Judy Dunipace, OIT 5. Cory Cummings, Alpha Chi Second Team 4. Susan Elkins, Them 2. Susan Pattie, Alpha Chi 3. Amy Dolliver, Delta Gamma 4. Kristin Johnson, AOPi 5. Jill Slivka, Them 6. Tommy Cooper, Alpha Phi Steve Fish . - mmmmw v 119 Donna Elam In tramurals Devin Koch 420 Eonna Elam IT is The primary purpose of The men's inTromurol program To provide every sTudenT 0nd foculTy member CIT DePauw UniversiTy wiTh The opporTuniTy To compeTe and parTicipaTe in on oThieTic or recreoTionai ccTiviTy of his desire. This year five major sporTs and nine minor sporTs were offered. The major sporTs consisTed of Touch fooTball, volleyball, baskeTboil, indoor soccer, and sofTbaII. Any living uniT ocTiver porTicipaTing in 0 minor sporT receives TwenTy-five poinTs per sporT plus finishing poinTs. The 1985-4986 inTromurol season was won by Phi Kappa Psi. However, even Though They won every major sporT excepT sofTboIl, The sTondings were close ThroughouT The year. Along wiTh The TighT compeTiTion, The 4985-1986 season was blessed wiTh good leadership. FaculTy inTramural Di'recTor Page CoTTon worked wiTh The inTramurol Board which organized oil The evenTs. The InTramurol Board also reiciyed messages To living uniTs represenToTives, ironed ouT all problems, and handled conTroversies 0nd proTesT. Along wiTh Coach Cohen The InTromuraIs Board consisTed of Mike MofchT TPresidenD, Brad Sellers TVice-Presidenb, Jeff Reposky Ureosureo, POT Keiier TSecreToryy and Ben Hodgin and Geoff Heekin TPubliciTy Chairmem. These men in cooperaTion wiTh oil The living uniTs made This year's inTromuroi season quiTe a success. -Brod Sellers '121 F aculty imi i illiitlx AdmlnlsTratlon: F. Silonder, R. A qucIiTy liberal orTs college such as DePauw has 0 brood curriculum focused upon basic human quesTions and on exposure To The wisdom of The ages. H is in a sTraTegic posiTion To forever influence The lives of iTs sTudenTs. DePouw fosTers a value- orienTed educaTion and offers iTs sTudenTs on educoTion ThoT is more Than equipping oneself for The firsT job. Indeed, iT offers an enriched criTical perspeCTive on The acTiviTies and issues of life in The 243T cenTury. 0,, Liberal orTs educoTion conTinues To represenT The besT preporoTion noT only for The markeTpioce buT also for an informed life of reflecTion and 424 growTh. Such a life encompasses an exisTence enhanced by The orTs and o conTinuing dialogue wiTh value sysTems from The diverse culTures of The world. AT DePouw This enlighTened exisTence hos iTs genesis in on academic environmenT supporTive enough To cause The sTudenT To develop his or her own voiue-orienTed frame of reference which should offer a cerToin coherence To life. The Timeless quesTions perTcining To The meaning and value of life, The responsibliiTy of individuals To one CinoTher, and issues of jusTice and peace are as relevanT Today as They have been 0T any oTher poinT in our Tarryuieodilgues Rosser, J. Cooper, R. BoTToms hisTory. From This perspecTive, iT is The liberal orTs college which sTonds in a unique posiTion To ossisT our young aduITs in esToinshing Their values. Today, iT is The iiberai arTs college which con fosTer personal inTerocTion beTween facuITy 0nd sTudenTs, a curriculum defined by wisdom and TrodiTion roTher Then on analysis of The IoTesT vocoTionol Training, and o communiTy small enough To TesT new ideas, and leadership poTenTicuI in a supporTive onosphere. -RoberT G. BoTToms ExecuTive Vice PresidenT ' i . e Larry Rodigije; STudeni Affairs: J. Simmons, A. Buser, S. Mill, L. Adelman, J. Cloor, T. Amer, C. Amer In The pcsT eighT years I have experienced DePouw as o sTudenT, alumnus, odminisTroTor. and as on insTrucTor in WinTer Term classes. Each role has given me a new view of The DePouw communiTy. Eoch role has iTs own unique seT of challenges and rewards. The ospecT of DePouw ThaT has left The mosT significonT impression wiTh me, is The inTeIIigence and caring of The people who are a porT of DePauw. DePauw's sTudenTs are inTeIIigenT and moTivoTed. Each is successful and TolenTed in unique ways. Our focuITy are dedicoTed, commiTTed, professionals. They give many long hours sTudenTs and scholarly pursuiTs. The odminisTroTors sTrive To see issues from a vorieTy of perspecTives and choose ocTions ThoT ore congruenT wiTh The goals and ideals of The universiTy. Our alumni are loyal and supporTive, giving generously of Their Time, TolenTs and money. Finally, H is our friendly and hardworking sTaff ThoT keeps The universiTy running smooThly from day To day. AT DePauw, we have our share of conflicTs and problems. However, I see our people working TogeTher To solve problems and plan for The fuTure. My iasTing impression of DePauw is one of inTelIigenT, coring people working TogeTher To achieve personal, professional and insTiTuTional goals. -Jonice Simmons AssisTonT Dean of STudenTs '125 Faculty , Larry Rodrigues A An: R. Kingsley, C. Fruhcn, D. Herroldl W. Meehan whoirmom 426 Biological Sciences: C. Mays $hoirmom, P. Adams, J. Gammon, M. Johnson, R. Stork, W. Hazel Larry Rodrigues F aculty Larry Rodfigies Chemistry: E. Schwartz, D. Cook. H. Burkef'r, J. George, J. McFarland thcirmam Brent Lalgofi 128 Lorry Rodriguas Classical Studies: P. Gilmer, N. Steele mhairmany C. Huffman, L. Cornell Lorry Rodrigues 130 F aculjcy v Q3- Communlcclllon Ads and Sciences: B. Crow, J. McCall. N. Mefzger, R. Weiss aiding chairman; S. Abel, D. Congal'ron U Larry Rodrigues Larry Rodrlgues Facglty Lorry Rodrigues Economlcs and Management: sfondinm T. Catonese, D. Mcloney. M. Cotonese, G. Lemon, W. Field, A. Pankrcnz, W. Shchin, D. WochTer; Giftinm R. Gray $hoirmcm Larry Rodrlgues 131 F aculty 8 in D 8 a E Education: Gtanding S. Warren, R. Swihcrf, B. Silonder, J Peck. N. MocPhoil; Sitting J. Raybern $hoirmcn; M. Wills, K. Sfeele E 9 5 r.........m.w.4. -,, mm g . B 432 Faculty .3 2 English: CsTondingI I. Csicery-Ronoy, T. Emery, W. Glousser, W. GiImer moTing choirmom, D. Field, M. Roinboit, D. Mobry, Gifting D. KIoosTer, E. McGrow, K. STeeIe Whoi does if mean T0 be 0 express herself forcefully; KirsIen who encouragemeni as I could musief. member Of the fOCUlTY Of DePGUW showed me aspects of Virginia Woolf Over The four year period, I have University? ThOT IS 0 diffiCUlT QUGSI'IOh Thai I hodn'f noticed before; Paul who had in class oboui o quor'rer of These To answer, buI if I musT choose one finally learned To get his work in on , graduating seniors. A few of Them I meaning-iT would be indiVIdUClI Time and Amy who never seemed To I will continue To hear from, bu'r mosT of students. When groduo'rion comes, I '1 learn Thai seIf-discipline; Jill who could I Them I won'I see again. But all of am OIWOYS 50d- The ihdiViduoI always interpret my moods and knew Ihem in some way have helped my sTudenfS who are imporioni Io when a hug was a real necessity; Bob education, my developmen'r as o DePouw and TO me are Ieoving-wiih who had real pofehiiol but never Teacher. 30 To be 0 Teacher of Their educations unfinished. AS They developed ii, no mo'r'rer how hard his DePcuw means individual sTudenTs: walk across The stage, I wish Them Teachers pushed him; Bill who Tough? sTudenTs who have helped me To farewell: Sarah who always had great me tho'r I must Threoien sometimes in learn and grow. obiIiTy bu'r didn't realize Iho'r she had if order To geT real work from o siudeni; -Mor1ho Roinboli UhTil her junior year when she Mary who needed no Threois of all Associate Professor of English developed The selfeconfidence to but as much suppor'r and 133 Larry Rodtlgues Geology and Geography: F SosTer, K. Bridges, R. Loring, J. Madison chairmam 134 $3960: 36.. 339502 3.0.. E. Welliver, D. Gibson 1:3; .13: . E. Mayer G. Welliver a:hoirmom German and Russian Faculty Lorry Rodrlgues Health. Physloal Educatlon and Recreaflon: R. Lester; T. Mon? mhoirmom, B. Federmon. M. Brefscher, S. Foster, E. Meyer, L. Schoenfeld. N. Mourouzis Health, Physlcal Education and Recreation: P. Dowdell, M. Steele, J. George Larry Rodrlgues 436 7 3 II $3960: :3 . $20.59.. 6.6.. n O m h Q U C B . ,3.2.22:1..Z21I J L n O m .m h C IK a m T uh D J. n. O ucnv w Im m, 0 W :4... Hing, 496,1: C 3V, 3w.H 81M... R. N. m H F aculty Larry Rodrlgueg Mathematlcs and Computer Sclence: CSTondinQ R. Thomas, J. Morrill, C. 6033, G. Townsend, U. DudIey: Giftinm J. Andetson mhoirrnom, M. Zellerl J. Teeguarden, C. Singer '138 F aculty FaculTy members in The School of Music enjoy performing TogeTher as do sTudenT groups. The FacuITy Brass QuinTeT is unique in ThaT one of iTs members is always 0 sTudenT-The second TrumpeT player. In oddiTion, The group has, from Time To Time, added sTudenT horn and Tormbone performers. The regular members of The quinTeT are RoberT Grocock, OrceniTh SmiTh, Lorry PhilpoTT, James Beckel. Professors PhilpoTT and Beckel are firsT choir players in The Tndianapolis Symphony. The quinTeT gives a concerT each semesTer. The sTudenTs selecTed To perform ore Top players. The sTudenT TrumpeTer for The posT Two years has been John Mchin, a senior performance major and concerTo winner. John is also carrying a double major in pre-engineering. According To Professor Grocock, founder of The quinTeT, The procTice of sTudenTs learning by playing alongside Their Teachers were begun by Felix Mendelssohn when he headed The Leipzig ConservaTory of Music in The 49Th cenTury. in The 19205, when George EasTmon founded The famed EosTmon School of Music and The RochesTer Philharmonic, he followed This same pracTice. Professor Grocick, a groduoTe of EosTmon, Tend, IoTer, a member of The Chicago SymphonyT was a producT of This sysTem, having been chosen by his Teacher To play in The TrumpeT secTion from his sophomore year on. According To Professor Grocock, uBoTh Teachers and sTudenTs are enThusiosTic abouT This kind of experience. IT develops a closeness and muTuaI respecT because we are all musicians TogeTher sharing The joy of making music and learning from each oTher. 439 Larry Rodrigues School of Nurslng: T. Kessler, P. Riffer, M. A On-campus Counselor: M. Hendrich 440 Larry Rodrigues Faculty , ,Phi19309h9'and 'R e1i gi5n : ' . . i Philosophy and Religion: N. Sfeinberg, K. Erndl, M. McKeJIigan, R. Newton thirmcm, M. Chandler 444 Faculty ; icsandAStronomy : Larry Rodrigues Physlcs and Astronomy: H. Brooks, E. Henniger a:hoirmom, P. Kissinger, V. DeCorIo 142 $39.02. go.- Faculty Pollllcal Sclence: J. Simmons, R. Calvert, A. Rafcf, R. Raymond 839802 5.64 '143 Larry Rodiigues :sychology: TsTondingy D. Ryujin, E. Ypmo, J. DieTrichi M. Berrio, M. Silver, B. GarreTT Tchoirmam; TsiTTingy T. Hogomon, R. Kelly. . Roines When asked by The Mirage To wriTe o shorT piece for The yearbook, I sTorTed To reflecT upon my own undergroduoTe experiences To search for someThing To soy. My memories cenTered upon my old friends, some of my professors, The owkword social siTuoTions, walking To classes, and The never ending barrage of papers, exominoTions ond ossignmenTs. As a Teacher, The Troubling ospecT of my refiecTions was The scorciTy of memories ossocioTed wiTh learning. In focT, when I recall The sTruggIes I had wiTh my classes, I remember a quieT, urgenT pain, 0 sorT of fear. There were indeed momenTs of discovery, inTeresT and fun. BUT, The pain seemed To have a sense of primacy. 144 If These are The memories of my Classes. Then whoT happened To my educoTion; did I even geT one? I know now ThoT I wosTed o IoT of my undergroduoTe opporTuniTies; I was Too undisciplined, Too uninTeresTed and T00 confused To Toke fuII odvonToge of Them. YeT, someThing did emerge. Like 0 pebbie rolled by 0 river, I come ouT somewhoT differenT, somewhoT The some, buT jusT o IiTTle more polished for The wear. Thus, I was educoTed by my undergroduoTe experience, noT so much by iTs conTenT buT by iTs process. The irony is ThoT The quieT. urgenT poin ThoT I remember so well and The classes I recoil so IiTTIe, combined somehow To Transform me mm on individual who would evenTuoIIy have The opporTuniTy T0 laugh and smile, I musT odmiT ThoT my educoTion did noT Teach me how To laugh and smIIe, iT jusT gave me o fighTing chonce To do so. For me This chance is on imporTonT porT of on undergroduoTe educoTion and o universiTy is a benevolenT environmenT in which To obToin iT. Thus, for my sTudenTs and for oil sTudenTs, I hope DePouw has given This opporTuniTy To you. For wiThouT iT, more Than on educoTion moy Truly be wosTed. -Don Ryujin AssisTonT Professor of Psychology Romance Languages: wandinw V. Serpa, G. Walters mhairmany J. Rambo, R. Curry, K Mecum, A. Evans; Gitfinw A. Beoudry, F. CoulonT-Henderson Terrl Castle Lorry Rodrlgues 445 w , E??illty ? a - g'e' Larry Rodrigues Sociology and Anlhropology: TsTandingT .I. Kaemmer Tohairmam, D. LaLone; GiTTingy D. BhaTTacharyya, J. Mannon, N. Davis I do an exercise in one of my classes called secreT sharing. Each person wriTes down a secreT ThaT They would noT wanT oThers in The room To know. The slips of paper are shuffled and Then The secreTs read ouT anonymously. IT has been exTremer insighTful To learn whaT DePauw sTudenTs feel They musT keep secreT. I was especially surprised ThaT sTudenTs kepT secreT The painful Things ThaT happened To Them. Why should being a vicTim of sexual abuse be a secreT'? Why should a sTudenT noT wanT oThers To know ThaT his girlfriend dumped him? Or why noT IeT oThers know when one feels sad, or lonely, or scared abouT The fuTure? As I lisTened To The sTudenTs Try To empaThize wiTh each oThers' secreTs, I '146 began To realize ThaT There is a feeling ThaT To have had bad Things happen in one's life is To raise doust abouT wheTher one somehow broughT iT on oneself. Maybe The abuse vicTim should have been sTrong enough To repulse The abuser? Maybe The girlfriend dumped you because you really were noT good enough for her, maybe noT good enough for any girl? Maybe, we ask, we are really failures. I have several problems wiTh This poInT of view. A major problem is ThaT iT ToTaIIy ignores The ImpacT of ouTside influences. This is perhaps mosT evidenT in The fears of The abuse vicTim: Could I have done someThing ThaT would have prevenTed This from happening? Usually noT, buT The soul- searching required To come To This conclusion is wrenching. And if This issue arises even in such cases where The causes are so clearly exTernaI, imagine how hard iT is for The person whose girlfriend dumped him or who feels sad and alone. Our socieTy has a Tendency To view each individual as in conTroI of hisTher faTe. WhaT we neglecT are The Walls ThaT hinder our abiIiTy To go where we wanT, Or if we don'T ignore Them, we argue ThaT The Truly moTivaTed will learn To climb over Them. I would be The IasT To say ThaT we should give up, buT perhaps a IiTTIe humiIiTy abouT our IimiTaTions is needed. -Deborah P. BhaTTacharyya AssisTanT Professor of Sociology SomeTimes odulThood slaps you in The face. I feel iTs sTing ofTer lugging cleon Ioundry up To my Third floor oporTmenT or Two Trosh bogs down To l The curb. I always feel iT when I pay my Visa bill. MosochisTicolly, I musT Tell you oduiThood is The mosT delighTfuI pleasure-poini IT is replacing your muffler on The cor you boughT because iT is The responsible Thing To do. rAfTer geTTing Two esTimoTes, of courseJ In The shorT Time I've been oT DePouw, l have been very impressed wiTh and have become 0 sTrong supporTer of iiThe DePouw Experience. This has obviously been necessary in my oTTemst To sell DePouw ond iTs groduoTes To employers, buT my supporT in sincere, as well as enThusiosTic. OpporTuniTies obound for sTudenTs To develop skills which all Types of employers seek:- -Leodership obiliTies can be culTivoTed Through The many on- compus ocTiviTies and The differenT offices in living uniTs. -WinTer Term inTernships offer The chance To view differenT careers, moke conTocTs in The field, develop coreer-reloTed skills, and make career decisions. More sTudenTs should Toke odvonToge of These quoliTy experiences. 2 Faculty IT is learning To negoTioTe wiTh your landlord, because 0 closeT door really should come wiTh The oporTmenT. BuT more Thon onyThing else, growing up is o consTonT quesTing ond seIf-evoluoTion Towards ond ogoinsT ever-chonging sTondords. Am 1 good enough? Am I successful? Hove I arrived? YES. Your DePouw yeors hove ToughT you much. BuT consider whoT iT hosn'T Lorry Rodrigues -STudenTs sTudying off campus or porTicipoTing in The HWinTer Term in Mission Trips can learn obouT new culTures and environmenTs; employers perceive This as o definiTe demonsTroTion of flexibiIiTy and odopTobiliTy. Personally, I like geTTing To know The sTudenTs as individuals, which ofTen isn'T possible 0T 0 much larger insTiTuTion; This puTs The foculTy and The odminisTroTion in 0 much beTTer posiTion To ossisT eoch sTudenT and address his or her specific circumsTonces. The olumni involvemenT oT DePouw is cerToinly one of HS s'Trong poinTs. lT's exciTing To see so many successful men and women voiunTeering To help currenT sTudenTs in whoTever way They can. STudenTs learn so much from These individuals; Through informal inTerviews, oTTending ToughT you . . . whoT you musT figure ouT for yourself. ThoT is a one on one focuITyrsTudenT roTio; and as professor and sTudenT boTh, you achieve 0 sense of compleTeness. Oh yes, I recommend odulThood! When The slop comes, I'd roTher fighT Thon swiTchl -Polly CoddingTon '83 Admissions Counselor Les, Cori, NickeThe classical sTooges presenToTions. and even by developing inTernships wiTh olumni. The DePouw Experience can be many Things To many individuals: however, The mosT imporTonT Thing is ThoT sTudenTs Toke odvonToge of DePouw's offerings To The fullesT. GeT involved, explore differenT disciplines and careers, moke conTocTs ond geT To know The foculTy, odminisTroTion oncl oTher sTudenTs. These unique ospecTs ore CT The core of HThe DePouw Experience and will help each sTudenT reop The mosT from his or her involvemenT. They also ore whoT disTinguishes DePouw from oTher insTiTuTions. -Becky Lomb AssisTonT DirecTor of Career Planning and PIocemenT 147 ,7 v,.' iii. 450 Kimberly Adams, RecTor Hall troy Adams, Sigma Alpha Epsilon Andy Alleen, Sigma Alpha Epsilon Caren Althauser, Rec'ror Hall Susan Amick, Lucy Rowland Hall louis Amoroso, Delfo Kappa Epsilon Rachael Andrew, Lucy Rowland Hall Carol Argabrighi, Lucy Rowiond HoII John Armsirong, Delta Kappa Epsilon J. Arnold, Mason Hall Merideih Arrandale. Bishop RoberT Holl Alexandrla Baker. Bishop Roberts Hall Amy Bakos, Lucy Rowland Hall Debbie Bangen, Lucy Rowland Hall Chrislina Barchet. Bishop Roberfs Hall Pete Baronl, Delta Tau Delta Bryan Beaty, Lambda Chi Alpha Jennifer Beaulieu, Rector Hall anhia Bechl, Bishop Roberts Hall Edward Becker, Phi DeITc TheTc William Beggs, Sigma Chi John Benner, Mason Hall Deborah Benlfield, Bishop RoberTs Hall John Bertram, Mason Hall Todd Bess. Lambda Chi Alpha Amy Besl, Lucy Rowland Hall Martin Bilowich. Sigma Chi Gregory Bingaman, Delta Upsilon Katherine Boflnger, Bishop Roberfs Hall Sieven Boggs, Befo Them Phi Deborah Bolek, Bishop Roberts Hall Laurie Boothby, Lucy Rowland Hull Albert Bosch, Mason Hon Nicole Braltain, Bishop Roberts Hall Todd Broeker. Mason Hall 151 Thomas Broughton. Lambda Chi Alpha Jennifer Brown. Rector Hall Teresa Bruno, Rector Hall Scott Bucher. Phi Delfo Theta Kalhryn Budd, Bishop Roberts Hall Jamey Burchlleld, Mason Hall Tlna Burger, Bishop Roberts Hall Francis Cappellem. Mason Hall Christine Carlson, Recfor Holl l'lmolhy Carmlgnani, Delta Tau Delta Dlana Carson, RecTor Hall James Casey, Dena Chi Davld Castle, Alpha Tau Omega Theresa Castle. Bishop Roberts Holl Mlchael Chabrarja, Mason Hall Julia Chalmers. Lucy Rowland Hall Daniel Charbonneau. Phi Delta Theta Barry Chase, Lambda Chi Alpha Wal Cheung Chang, Mason Hall Andrea Christmcm. Bishop Roberts Hall Caryn Cockerlll, Rec'ror Hall Marllyn Combs, Lucy Rowland Hall Charles Compton. Sigma Chi Pamela Cook, Bishop Roberfs Hall Steve Coolldge, Beta Theta Pi Andrea Coons, Rector Hall Amy Cooper, Rector Hall Cathy Cox, Ouf-in-Town Cheryl Croker, Rector Hall Tlmolhy Cronin, Mason Hall Carol Cuiler, Bishop Roberts Hall Stuart Cytron, Befo Them Pi Kathleen Dahlman, Lucy Rowland Hall Frank Danaher, Delta Kappa Epsilon Philip Danen, Delta Upsilon 152 Debbie Darnell, Lucy Rowland Hall Tlm Darosetf, Sigma Chi Jeffery Davis, Mason Hall Jill Dawson, Recfor Hall Cary DeGruaf, Mason Hall 1 Laura deLong, Lucy Rowland Hall John DeLucla, DeITo Tau Delta Daniel Demien, Phi Gamma Delta leslle Dexhelmer, Lucy Rowland Hall Adam Dexter, Sigma Alpha Epsilon Soon Dleckmann. Mason Hall 1 Siacle Dlenharl, Lucy Rowland Hall Llnda Dlefz, Lucy Rowland Hall Rob Dlxon. Beta Theta Pi Michael Dooley, Dena Tau Delta Douglas Dove. BeTo Them Pi Laura Dove, Lucy Rowland Hall Doug Drlemeler, Delta Chi Keni Eckeri, Mason Hall James Edgar, Phi Gamma Delta Paula Edwards, Lucy Rowland Hall Darcie Eglen, Rector Hall Wendy Ellls, Rec'tor Holl Krls Emens. Lucy Rowland Hall Susan Erickson. Lucy Rowland Hall Mitchel Everhan, Delta Upsilon Jonathan Eves. Delta Kappa Epsilon Michael Feagler, Delta Tau DelTo Nancy Feeney. Bishop Roberts Hall Christopher Felke. Mason Hall Connie Fellman. Lucy Rowland Hall Julle Ferguson, Lucy Rowland Hall Mcm Finch, Mason Hall Reggie Flesvlg, Delta Chi Cynthia Foster, Recfor Hall 153 Stephanie Frederlck. Rector Hall JIII Fuchs. Lucy Rowland Hall Bob Gamble. Alpha Tau Omega Susan Geeslln. Lucy Rowland Hall Juml Glbson. Rector Hall Jane Gibson. Lucy Rowland Hall Joan Gibson, Bishop Roberfs Hall Brlan Gllklson. Mason Hall Benjamin Gilmore, Phi Delta Theta Amy Goetcheus. Bishop RoberTs Hall Brian Goslee, Mason Hall Gregory Grdben. Mason Hall Chlp Grabow, Delta Upsilon Jodl Green, Rec'ror Hall Roger Green. Mason Hall Scot! Greenman, Locust Manor Heather Greensllf, Reefer Hall Joedy Gregg, Sigma Alpha Epsilon John Grieve. Mason Hall ' Eric Grimes, Mason Hall Travls Grooms, Delia Upsilon Mlchael Groie, Phi Delta Theta Crlslal Gulnan, Recfor Hall Susan Hacker. Lucy Rowland Hall Beth Haeblch. Lucy Rowland Hall Connle Halght. Bishop Roberts Hall Barbara Hull, Bishop Roberts Hall Jeff Hamilton, Phi Kappa Psi Scott Harkness, Lambda Chi Alpha Jeff Harmenlng. Delia Upsilon Brian Harrls, Sigma Alpha Epsilon Carolyn Haynes, Rector Hall Kathleen Hegyl. Lucy Rowland Hall Kathryn Handrlcks, Bishop Roberfs Hall PaIrIcIa Henke, Rector Hall 454 155 Beth Henlze, Bishop Robeds Hall Walter Hickel, Longden Hall George Hldes. Sigma Chi James Hlnshaw, Mason Hall Michael HIHesdorl. Phi Delta Thech Wesley Hobson. Beta Them Pi James Holland, Locus'r Manor John Hollensielner, Phi Gamma Delta David Homann. Delfo Kappa Epsilon Jay Hosler, Mason Hall Allce Houston, Recfor Hcll Dan Howe, Mason Hall Angela Howland, Lucy Rowland Hall Jay Huber. Delta Tau Delfo Craig Hudson, Phi Gamma Delta Matthew Huff, Mason Hall Leslie Hughes. Lucy Rowland Holl lim Hughes. Lambda Chi Alpha Paul Hutchlson, Lambda Chi Alpha Matthew Irvine, Phi Gamma Delta Kalhryn Jeffery, Bishop RoberTs Hall Cheri John. Lucy Rowland Hall Paul Johnson, Delfc: Kappa Epsilon Jamie Jones. Lucy Rowland Hall Christopher Josies, Alpha Tau Omega Stephen Jovonovlch, Phi Delta Them Sharon Kaczala, Rec'ror Hall Robert Kammerer, Delta Upsilon Christopher Kane, Delta Tau Delta Kimberly Kane. RecTor Hall Frank Karoly, B910 Them Pi Kaiherine Kaweske, Lucy Rowland Holl Michael Kelly, Delta Tau Delta Kristln Kibens, Bishop Roberts Hall David Klmbell, Mason Hall 156 Erlc Kindler, Locust Manor Brooks King, Phi Kappa Psi Cassandra Klslel, Bishop Roberts Hall Kelth Klsselle, Alpha Tau Omega Christian Kjaer, Lambda Chi Alpha Wendra Klos, Bishop Roberts HoII Joseph Klupchak, Phi Delfo Theta Kennelh Kolsh, Phi Gamma Delta Scott Koon, Delta Kappa Epsilon Kevln Krakora. Mason Hall Anne Kreldle, Rector Hall laura Kruse, Bishop Roberts Hall Kasla Krzion, Bishop Roberts Hall Robin Kukla, Lucy Rowland Hall Lori Lance, Bishop Roberts Hall Cinda Landes, Lucy Rowland Hall Caihy Larson, Lucy Rowland Hall Marle Laskowskl, Lucy Rowland Hall Mindy Laukitis, Rec'ror Hall Jack Lawrence, Delia Chi Michele Learner, Lucy Rowland Hall Chrlsiopher Lee. Sigma Chi Katherine Lenz, Lucy Rowland Hall Elizabeth LeSourd, Rector Hall Julie Levonicm. Rector Hall Victor Lewis, Phi Gamma Delfo Ernie lebo, Lambda Chi Alpha Cynthia Linhardl. RecTor HoII Amy Logan, Rector Hall Mark Long, Delta Upsilon Greg Love. Mason Hall John Lowe, Befa Thefc Pi Cindee Luh, Bishop Roberts Hall Tom Machllon, Beta TheTo Pi Michael Mahoney, Beta Them Pi 157 Jeff Main, Delta Chi Mellndu Malne. Rec'ror Hall Jenny Majewskl, Recfor Hall John Mallory. Delia Chi Jeff Mara. DeITa Upsilon Andrew Marek, Mason Hall Jeff Marklay, Befo Them Pi Krlsien Markley, Lucy Rowland Hall Erlc Marshay, Mason Holl Margaret Marlin, Lucy Rowland Hall Todd Mariln, Lambda Chi Alpha Dave Malhlas, Beta Them Pi Robert Mamx, Sigma Alpha Epsilon John Maizlgkeli, BeTa Them Pi Rose Mau, Bishop Roberts Hall Wllllam May, Mason Hall Cynihlu Mayer, Rec'ror Hall Phlllp McCauley, Alpha Tau Omega Kevln McCarthy. Alpha Tau Omega Heather McFarlane, Lucy Rowland Hall Frunklln McGuler. Mason Hall John Mclnnes, Delta Tau Dena Donald McKlnney, Mason Hall Kerry McLaren. Bishop Roberts Hall Marlene McQueary, RecTor Hall Todd McQulston. Alpha Tau Omega Jlll Mchlllams, Rector Hall Christopher Meguschar. DeITc: Tau Delta Michele Merrill, Lucy Rowland Hall Bryan Meyer. Sigma Alpha Epsilon Cynihla Meyers, Lucy Rowland Hall Matthew Mlllar, Lambda Chi Alpha John Miller, Delfa Chi Ronnie Miller. Mason Hall Gina Monlemurro. Rector Hall 458 Lisa Morgan. Lucy Rowland Hall Lisa Morse, Lucy Rowland Hall Michelle Mounis. Lucy Rowland Hall Ann Murphy, Lucy Rowland Hall Julla Murphy. Rector Hall Mlchele Murphy, Recfor Hall Todd Myers, Beta TheTa Pi Karla Naggs, Rector Hall Eva Navarrete. Longden Hall Brlan Neil. Mason Hall Shara Neldell, Lucy Rowland Hall Joyce Nlccum. Bishop Roberts Holl Jay Nichols. Delta Chi Rob Noecker, Phi Gamma Delta Glenn Norion, DeITo Upsilon Caryn O'Brlen, Rector Hall Jeanne O'Connell. Lucy Rowland Hall John O'Connell, Del'ro Upsilon Susan Oemng. Bishop RoberTs Hall Tom O'Hara, Phi Delfo Theta Christopher O'Hea, Phi Dlefo Theta Tomoko Okada, Reefer Hall Richard Ollvler, Longden Hall Nancy O'Nelll, Lucy Rowland Hall Todd Palloita, Sigma Alpha Epsilon Nancy Palmeter, Lucy Rowland Hall Gunnar Pamuk. Sigma Chi Phlnp Pardus, Mdson Holl Julianne Parks, Lucy Rowland Hall Matthew Pate. Sigma Chi Kenneth Palllllo, Locust Manor Daniel Peabody. Mason Hall George Penner. Phi Gamma Delft: Wllllam Perklns, Alpha Tau Omega Brett Perks. Lambda Chi Alpha 459 mores H T f WOOL T363 mm V -1 n L! 9' vzme M , w 160 Robed Perry, Delfa Upsilon Thai Pham. Phi Gamma DeITo James Philip, Befo Theta Pi Joel Flatt. Mason Hall Karen Plalf, Rector Hall Bryan Poynter, Delta Upsilon ' Sara Prigan. Recior Hall Timothy Princing. Mason Hall Scot! Pritchard, Phi Gamma DelTo Lynn Prystalski, Rector Hall Krisilne Rachuy, Bishop Roberts Hall Philip Ratzer. Phi Gamma Delta Kristen Raub, Bishop Roberfs Hall David Rehn, Be'ra TheTa Pi Glen Reichenbach, Sigma Alpha Epsilon MaH Reinhard, Mason Holl Rebecca Relic, Rector Hall Joan Richards. Lucy Rowland Hall Edwin Richardson, Sigma Chi Dana Riess, Bishop Rober'rs Hall Karen Ringel, Lucy Rowland Hall Kristin Roberts, Lucy Rowland Hall Steven Roberts, Locusf Manor Leigh Robertson, Phi DeITc Theta Thomas Rockaway, Delta Kappa Epsilon Mailhew Rodgers, Delfo Kappa Epsilon Kelih Roeller, DelTo Kappa Epsilon Melissa Rogers, Recfor Hall Wendy Rogers, Rector Hall Scot! Rose, Sigma Chi Gabriel Roses, Phi Kappa Psi Joanllla Rowan, Recfor Hall Robyn Russell, Bishop Roberfs Hall James Ryan, Sigma Chi Suzanne Salzwedel. Bishop Roberts Hall 464 Brandt Sakakeeny, Lambda Chi Alpha JusIo Samallo, Mason Hall Geoff Schiering, Sigma Alpha Epsilon Mark Schirmer, Delta Kappa Epsilon Michael Schlaker, Deho Tau Delta Sieven Schweitzer. Delta Chi Darby Scism, Lucy Rowland Hall Katherlne Scott, Lucy Rowland Holl inhla Sells, Bishop Roberts Hall Melinda Shelton, Rector Hall Brlan Shepler. Mason Hall Toya Sherrod, Rector Hall Kathleen Shortridge. Lucy Rowland Hall John Sleferf, Delta Chi Stephen Simsic. Beta Them Phi Brian Singer, Phi Delta Theta Charles Skldmore. Lambda Chi Alpha Jennifer Smith. Bishop RoberTs Hall Julle Smith, RecTor Hall Laura Smith. Bishop Roberts Hall Sue Smilh, Rector Hall Thomas Spackman, Sigma Chi Mike Specks, Sigma Alpha Epsilon Paul Sialey, Mason Hall SIacia Stanford. Rector Hall John Stevenson. Delta Chi Bryce Siewarf, DeHo Upsilon Michael Slewan, Mason Hall Bren! St. John, Mason Hail Scot! Siorrer, Mason Hall Susan Stover, Bishop Roberts Hall John Stowe, Mason Hail Mellssa Slraublnger. Rector Hell Jon Siromberg, Alpha Tau Omega Thomas strup. Sigma Chi 462 Lynne Swinney. Bishop Roberts Hall Chrisilne Szlllai, Lucy Rowland Hall Sherri Taylor, RecTor Hall Jeff league, Locus? Manor Margaret Tenney, Recfor Hall Todd Ierbeek. Mason Hall Bren! Thompson, Sigma Alpha Epsilon Brlan Ihornburg. Phi Gamma Delta Jason Thorne, Phi Gamma Del'ro Jennifer Ihrasher. Lucy Rowland HOII Marlca Thurslon, Lucy Rowland Hall Tim Tlndall. Lambda Chi Alpha Jeff Tomlin. DIeTo Kappa Epsilon Brenda Toomey, Lucy Rowland Hall Deneen Troutman, Bishop Roberts Hall Edward Tscham, Sigma Chi Scan. Tuoci. DeITc Kappa Epsilon Chris Tucker, Mason Hall Laura Uhleman, Lucy Rowland Hall ScoH Ullem, Phi Kappa Psi Monlca Unkefer, Bishop Roberts Hall Heather Unruh, Bishop RoberTs Hall Marcia Van Nest. Bishop RoberJrs Hall Thomas Van Prong. Longden Hall Dirk Vonderlage, Sigma Alpha Epsilon Devon Wade, Rector Hall Sarah Wade. Lucy Rowand Hall Brad Walker, Delta Tau Dena Heldl Walter, Lucy Rowland Hall Siephen Ward, Delta Upsilon Todd Wasmund, Sigma Chi Heldl Weas. Bishop RoberTs Hall Bryan Webb, Mason Hall Chandra Wehrle, Lucy Rowland Holl Robert Wehrman. Sigma Chi 163 Kurt Weller. Lambda Chi Alpha Krisile Welmar, Rector Hall Wendy Welsch. Rector Hall Cheryl Whlfe, Lucy Rowland Hall Eric Whlte, Delta Tau Delta Joseph Whmuker, Locusf Manor Kimberley Whmle. Rector Hall Krislen Wick, Rector Hall Roland Wlksirom, Sigma Chi Mike Willhlte. Phi Delta Theta Mark Wlllmerl, Phi Go-ma Delta Brad Wilson. Dem: Upsilon Laura Wilson, Bishop Roberfs Hull Lynn Woelfl, Bishop Roberts Hall Andrew Wolf, Mason Hall David Wood. Sigma Chi Kirk Wood, Mason Hall Stephen Woodruff. Mason Hall Sandy Woods. Bishop Roberfs Hall Shelbl erghi, Bishop Roberts 164 Allyson Wylle, Lucy Rowland Hall John Yarger, Dlefa Kappa Epsilon Dale Young, Lambda Chi Alpha Russell Young, Mason Hall 465 Dean Adams, Sigma Alpha Epsilon Brendan Anderson, Phi Delta Them Brent Anderson, Delta Kappa Epsilon Evan Anderson, Phi Delta Them Steve Andreasen, Delta Chi Stacy Arenz, Hogcfe Hall Kelly Arnold, Alpha Omicron Pi Mindy Arnold, Alpha Gamma Delta Richard Arshonsky, Dlefo Upsilon Kristy Atkinson, Alpha Gamma DechI Lisa Baker. Longden Hall Karen Borg, Bishop Roberts Hall Jenny Bauer, Alpha Gamma Delta Cathleen Beaity, Kappa Alpha Thefo Margaret Beebe, Kappa Slphc: Them Brenda Beesley, Alpha Phi Cynihia Belcher, Pi Beta Phi Iracey Bellamy, Pi Beta Phi Jeff Benage, Longden Holl Darryl Bennett, Sigma Alpha Epsilon louise Blake, Kappa Kappa Gamma John 305, Delta Tau Delta Amy Bowman, Alpha Chi Omega Steve Brady, Delfo Upsilon Stephanie Bronson, Pi Beta Phi Lisa Brickley. Alpha Gamma DeITo Kelley Briles, Alpha Omicron Pi Harold Buchholz, Hogote Hall Amy Buell, Hogcrfe Hall Douglas Burger, Alpha Tau Omega Kevin Burns, Delta Tau Del'ro Anna Cahlll, Alpha Phi Judi Cahill, Delta Delta Delta Adam Calabrese, Delta Upsilon Teresa Caplinger. Bishop RoberTs Hall 467 Lori Caroihers, Kappa Kappa Gamma Ellzabeih Christman, Kappa Kappa Gamma Jennlter Clarkson, Kappa Kappa Gamma Elizabeth Clifford, Alpha Chi Omega Brad Cofleld, Delta Tau Delfo Anthony Collem. DelTo Kappa Epsilon Mlchael Connor, Beta Theta Pi Julie Cook, Delta Gamma Debra Cowdell, Longden Hall Wllllam Crosby. Delta Upsilon Stephen Cross, Delta Kappa Epsilon Jim Duhlem, Lambda Chi Alpha Wllllam Dahlgren. Hogofe Hall Molly Davenport, Kappa Kappa Gamma Bill Davis, Phi Gamma Delfc: John Davis, Alpha Tau Omega Anne Delaney. Hogofe Hall Ruth Deng. Hogofe Hall Polly dePenaloza, Alpha Chi Omega Megan DePrez, Alpho Omicron Pi James DeVore, Hogcrre Hall Ellen Dexheimer. Pi Bem Phi Gregg Dieckmann. Hogclfe Hall Pete Douglas, Sigma Alpha Epsilon Benjamin Dover, Sigma Chi Cuihy Dowers. Alpha Gamma DeITo Dana Drew, Alpha Chi Omega Cindy Dugan, Pi Beta Phi Wali Duncan, Befo Theta Pi Mike Edwards. Delta Tau DeITa Mark Eiten, Delta Tau DeITo Donna Elam, Alpha Omicron Pi Susan Elklns. Kappa Alpha TheTo Charles Ellis. Sigma Chi Laura Evangelism. Kappa Alpha Them 168 Sarah Fischer, Delta Gamma Brett Flora, Delta Kappa Epsilon Momi Ford, Longden Hall Tony Forszt, Delfo Kappa Epsilon Jennifer Fosnough. Alpha Omicron Pi Wllllam Fox, Delta Chi Florianne Franada, Delta DelTCl DeITc Deborah Frazier, Hogofe Hall Nancy Fucilla. Pi BeTa Phi Miguel Gambeita, Delta Kappa Epsilon Cliff Gamble, Phi Delta Theta Martha Garlinger, Delta Dech: Delta Cindy Gaston, Hogofe Hall Megan Gebben, Dem: Gamma Carrie Gibson. DeITo Gamma Jane GilIis. Delta Gamma Kamal Glrgls, Delfo Upsilon Douglas Glowe. Sigma Alpha Epsilon Jeff Gordon, Delta Upsilon Suzann Granger. Alpha Omicron Pi Caryn Greer. Pi Befo Phi Nancy GriHer, Alpha Omicron Pi Sarah Guild, Kappa Kappa Gamma Burt Hagler, Befo Theta Pi David Haney, HogaTe Hall Margaret Hanson, Alpha Omicron Pi Lyle Hardman, Hogcfe Hall Sandi Harker, Alpha Gamma Delta William Hurting, Delia Kappa Epsilon Stephen Hauter, Delta Chi Janet Head, Alpha Gamma Delta Kristin Hendrickson. Alpha Phi Amy Herrin, Kappa Kappa Gamma Scott Herrman. Beta Theta Pi Kaiie Hershberger, Alpha Gamma Delta 469 Cara Hess, Alpha Chi Omega Chrisiopher Herrick, Hogo're Hall Jamie Higglnbotham. Sigma Chi Jennifer Hlll, Hogofe Hall Mcmhew Hodge, DGITG Upsilon Tlmothy Hon, DeHa Kappa Epsilon Mcm Hook, DeITo Upsilon Douglas Hovland, Phi Gamma Delta Bobble Hull. Alpha Chi Omega Ellyn lkeda, Delta DeI'ta Delfo Doug lngersoll. Phi Gamma Delta Amy Jay, Del'ro Gamma Stephen Jeni, Hoga're Hall Mark Johnson, Phi Gamma Delia Robb Johnson. Sigma Alpha Epsilon John Keenan. Sigma Alpha Epsilon David Klrk, Delta Upsilon Julle Koenlg. Alpha Phi LiAnne Kraizer, Delta Delta Delfa Brlgeite Kuhn, Alpha Chi Omega Russell LaMore, Phi Gamma Delta Alexandra Lamson. Delta Gamma Brent Larson, Delta Kappa Epsilon Thomas Lewls. Phi Gamma Delta Angelo Loubmas, Delta Upsilon Jacque lyitle, Alpha Chi Omega Alllson MacDougall. Alpha Omicron Pi Siephen Marcy, Dena Chi Cam Marsieller, Sigma Alpha Epsilon Gail Marlin, Alpha Omicron Pi Gary Marfln, Phi Gamma Delta Theresa Mariln, Delta Delta Del'ro Mail Massey, Sigma Alpha Epsilon Ierra McCann, Pi Beta Phi Mellssa McElderry, Alpha Phi 470 LeTTing a Teacher Tolk obouT Teaching is o dangerous Thing. She'll begin wiTh o sober consideroTion of pedagogical modes and Theories. She'll iIIusTroTe her mosT Telling poinTs wiTh examples judiciously seiecTed from The syllabus, she'll reinforce her mosT imporTonT poinTs wiTh special core, and Then before you know iT she's off remembering. She's Telling you obouT The fine sTudenTs, The really greoT ones-The one who read all of Ulyssess, say, in o siTTing, because he jusT couldn'T puT iT down. Encouraging o wriTer who Teaches wriTing is even worse. NoT only do we call in The scholars, we remeber The visionaries. The sTudenTs who sow apocalypse ond redempTion oil oT once in lunch lines, The ones who answered The phone, ITOur dried voices, when we whisper TogeTher, ore quieT and meaningless as wind in dry gross, The ones who-well, you see. This sorT of Thing is jusT asking for Trouble. BuT wiTh all due respeCT, iT seems To me noTuroI-or forgiveobie, onywoyeThoT wriTing Teochers should be porTicqurIy edger To Talk. NoT only because we're all shameless sTory Tellers, buT because of The sTudenTs we oTTrocT. Consider: in o creoTive wriTing classroom, The Teacher is engaged in scory pursuiTs of no mean measure. She is Talking obouT revoluTionizing The coilecTive conscience, she is Talking obouT TruTh ond beouTy and passion as if Those were daily words; she is Talking obouT Them os necessiTies. She is saying ThoT each of us hos The responsibiliTy To change The world. The foinT of heorT hod besT Toke TlighT. So The wriTing Teacher is lefT wiTh Those dounTIess sTudenTs who feed on This Toik. You can always find Their sorT. You con pick Them ouT in o crowd, The ones wiTh The biozing eyes. They're The ones who pick up Kofko and soy, iiYeoh, I see 471 everyThing he's geTTingoT, buT wouldn'T This sTory work beTTer if The scene wiTh The mogisTroTe come reorlier? They do iT wiTh Shakespeare, Too. There's no proper respecT in These sTudenTs. They read Jone AusTen and say, Tell me someThing I didn'T already know. They look oT James Joyce's TTAroby and soy scornfuiiy. IT sTorTs Too slow. ThoT They're righT doesn'T make life any more comforToble for Those of us who Took years To odmiT ThoT Aroby is kind of slow on The upToke. This is noT To soy ThoT The wriTing sTudenTs ore pompous. They are, buT ThoT isn'T The poinT. There They are woiTing oT The office door in The morning, Those blozing eyes hounTed. They've been up all nighT. IneviTobly. i con'TeconnoT geT Moria over To Dick's house in one scene. She won'T do iT. I'll never be 0 wriTer. uI rereod everyThing I've wriTTen oil semesTer ond Threw iT oil in The Trosh. I'll never be 0 wriTer. TI worked for Two weeks on This poem and none of iT makes any sense I'll never be 0 wriTer. When, some Time ofTer lunch, The sTudenT sTroIIs in and says, I really don'T see whoT The big deal is obouT Chekhov, iT's a relief. IT's o dicey proposiTion all around, This rendering of wirTers. Because iT's noT simply ThoT wriTing sTudenTs ore enCOuroged To Take Themselves serioust-no sTudenT hos business doing onyThing Iess-buT These sTudenTs are required To do H, To look CT The world, make decisions obouT it pass judgemenT. They're coached To use Their words as sensors, To feel Their way along, To press oT The Things They've been ToughT To believe and Try To find The roTTen spoTs. They become very skilled. And They cosT 0 poll of uneose over any Teacher who feels iT should be her job To be judging Them. One becomes fleeT ofooT in This business. WhoT oTher opTion is There, in The face of Those sTeody, judging eyes? One Ieorns To be Iony in ThoughT ond ocTion. Under all circumsTonces one keeps The sTudenTs disTonT from The dull and Towdry reaches of one's everyday life. One sTrives for o persona ThoT has a high-gloss sheen. One gives up in disgusT. You odjusT. You have To. You geT used To finding your sTudenTs ore in The aisles of your grocery sTore, furiously scribbling on whoTever cereal box was close when The words-The righT ones, for onceecome spilling forTh. You find onoTher one by The check-ouT counTer, juggling Snickers, and There are Two more in The book seoT of The car, finding 0 new approach To norroTive sTrucTure in The ouTo repair manual They found in The glove comporTmenT. They're The ones whose dog's name is on onogrom of IIJoseph Conrad Was 0 BIowhord, They're The ones CT The porTy muTTering by The corn chips. They're The ones whose friends puT up wiTh Tape recorders nexT To phone and bed so ThoT The wriTing sTudenTs con sTudy The rhyThms of daily speech. They're The ones who siT suddenly Tronsfixed in class, hoving jusT figured ouT how To pull off The sTory obouT The woman who disguises herself as Genghis Khan. l don'T defend This as marching To a differenT drummer. I defend This as Temporary insoniTy, The giddy momenT ThoT cries, Yes! I can do This! There are more, of course. The one who submiTTed her Teenage sisTer's diory as 0 found poem, The one who submiTTed 0 religious TrocT he'd been handed as 0 found poem, The enTire closs ThoT submiTTed The annual PenTogon budgeT as 0 found poem. Or oil of Them, which I submiT. As evidence, 05 poems, os wriTers. Erin McGrow Douglas McElhuney, Hogote Hall Austin McLean. Phi Delta Them Scoif McMahon, Hogote Hall Marlorle Meeks, Alpha Omicron Pi Susan Meicalfe, Kappa Alpha Them Davld Mlller. Lambda Chi Alpha Max Mlller, Alpha Tou Omega Tummy Mlller, Delta Gamma Dianna Mlnnlck, Alpha Phi Amy Moore, Alpha Omicron Pi Steve Moore, Phi Delta Theta Ann Morehead, Kappa Kappa Gamma Peter Munson, Befc TheTo Pi Brooks Murphy. Phi Gamma Delta Jane Mulchner, Pi Beta Phi Darryl Neher. Sigma Alpha Epsilon Cynthia Neil, Alpha Gamma Delfc: James Nelsler. DeITo Tau Delfo David Nelson, Dena Kappa Epsilon Judy Nesbllt, Delta Del'ro DeITc Lisa Nieburg, Pi B610 Phi Steven Nolan, Delta Chi Erica Okone, Alpha Gamma Delta Murce Olson, Delta DelTo DelTo Susan Osborne, Kappa Kappa Gamma Andrew Peterson. Delta Kappa Epsilon Michael PfIsIer, Sigma Alpha Epsilon Ihomas Poyntner, Phi Delta Them Jenniter Preston, Hogc're Hall Becki Ranney, DeITc Gamma Sleven Ray, Delta Chi Carol Reed. Alpha Omicron Pi Elizabeth Reller. Alpha Phi Terri Rhodes. Alpha Omicron Pi Gregory Rheams, Sigma Alpha Epsilon 172 Lorrle Rogers, Alpha Phi Loulse Rogers, DeITo DeITo Delta Ktherlne Roob. Pi Beta Phi Scot! Rosenleld, Delta Kappa Epsilon Jennifer Schaffer, Alpha Phi Darla Schurmeler. Alpha Chi Omega John Schwarz, Del'ro Upsilon Todd Sellers, Phi Delta Theta Elizabelh Selph, Delta Gamma Mike Sherman. Delta Tau Delta Elisabeth Shorney, Delfo Gamma Laurl Shrock, Alpha Omicron Pi James Silkworm, Phi Gamma Delfc Jun Snyder, Hogofe Hall Scott Somervllle, Hogo're Hall Blayne Smlih, DeITo Tau Delta Cynthia Smith. Delfo Del'rcl DeITo Leslie Smith, Alpha Gamma Delta Whitney Smith, Beta TheTc Pi Anne Stalley, Delta Gamma LuAnne Stanley, Alpha Omicron Pi Mary stelmle, Alpha Gamma Delta James Sferba, Delfc: Upsilon Jennifer Stewart. Alpha Chi Omega Diane Stinson, Alpha Gamma DelTa Carol Shem. Alpha Omicron Pi Siephanle Stuisman, Alpha Chi Omega Kennan Sullivan. Longden Hall Mary Sulllvan, Kappa Alpha Theta Michael Sumlda, Phi Delta Theta Julia Summers. Alpha Gamma Delta Scott Swan, Mason Hall Angle Tate. Alpha Chi Omega H.D. Taylor, Phi Gamma Delta Trinda Thomas, Pi Beta Phi '173 Michael Traylor. Alpha Tau Omega Junie Trego, Kappa Kappa Gamma Barry Trowbridge, Hogafe Hon Julle Trowbrldge, Alpha Gamma Delta Jenniter Turner, Alpha Omicron Pi John Valle, Delfo Upsilon Ned Van Bruni, Sigma Chi Sundal Vorhees, Bishop Roberfs Hall John Wainwright. Longden Hall Keilh Warnlng, Sigma Chi Reese Wan, Hogate Hall Mlchael Weber, Phi Delta Thefo Suzann Weber, Alpha Omicron Pi Bill Welmer. Beta Theta Pi Lee Welngarl, Phi Delta Theta Julla Welse. Alpha Chi Omega Jane Welsh, Alpha Omicron Pi Patrlck West, Sigma Alpha Epsilon Camille Wicks , Delfc Delta Dena Heldl Wlese, Bishop Roberts Hall Rodnle Wllllams, Sigma Alpha Epsilon Wendy Wlse. Kappa Alpha Theta Rhonda Wolf, Lucy Rowland Holl Danlel Woodruff, Be'rc Them Pi Sean Zenner. Longden Hall 174 475 476 Jlll Aclon, Indianapolis Campus Martina Alvey, Indianapolis Campus Mark Amman. Sigma Alpha Epsilon Damlan Anasiaslo, Longden Hall Christine Anderson, Indianapolis Campus Frances Anderson. Kappa Alpha Theta PaIrIcIa Bare. HogoTe Hall Paige Bates, Alpha Phi Rob Bates. Lambda Chi Alpha Jennifer Bay, Pi 8910 Phi Mark Bennett, Be'rc Them Pi Paula Belling. Indianapolis Campus Dennis Bland, Longden Hall James Bozzo, Delta Chi Kimberly Brooks. Kappa Alpha Theta Kelly Burk. Alpha Omicron Pi Shannon Byerly, Hogafe Hall Lynn Cameron, Delta Kappa Epsilon Mlchele Casclano. DeITa Dech DelTo Joe Charles, Delta Tau Delta Carrie Clark, Pi 3910 Phi Susan Conger. Hogafe Hall Susan Conners, DeHc: Delta Delta Denlse Cooke, Alpha Phi Tlm Come , Delfo Tau Delta Howard, Cromwell. Delta Chi Sharon Darllnglon, Delta Gamma Andrew Das, Hogafe Hall Klra Davis, Pi BeTo Phi Marle Deardorf, Indianapolis Campus Michael Definer, Delta Kappa Epsilon Davld Dickens, Delta Chi Wllllam Dlllon, Phi Kappa Psi Debbie Dreiband. Hogo're Hall Clalre Dunbar, Pi BeTo Phi '177 leby Ebaugh. Indianapolis Campus Mlchael Ehlers. Beta Them Pi Mlke Ellls, Indianapolis Campus Linda Ely. Kappa Alpha TheTo Veronica Embry, Hogofe Hall Danlel Emerson, Sigma Chi Lynne Evers. Pi Beta Phi Chrlsllne Faude. Delta Gamma Darcee Flsher, Alpha Phi Rabecca Fitzpatrick. Indianapolis Campus Robert Fleschler, Sigma Chi Peter Fosnough. Delta Kappa Epsilon Vlckl Freeman, Alpha Phi Cameron Frost, Delta Chi James Garber. Alpha Tau Omega Iodd Gardner. Sigma Chi John GdiQey, Phi Kappa Psi George Glll, Delta Chi Beth-Euen Gilmor. Alpha Phi Ellen Gomard. Alpha Phi John Gray, Alpha Tau Omega Davld Grelwe, DeITo Upsilon Llsa Grlder. Indianapolis Campus Jennlfer Groppe, Del'ra Dena Delta Mary Gulden, Alpha Gamma DeITa Mlke Hulaschak, Sigma Chi Dabble Hale, Alpha Phi Leanna Hardln, Alpha Chi Omega Davld Husenbalg. Sigma Alpha Epsilon Jennller Hayes. Alpha Omicron Pi Geollrey Heekln. Phi Kappa Psi Mellnda Henbest, Alpha Phi Klmberly Hendrlcks. Indianapolis Campus Tlm chkey, Delfc Upsilon Tlna Hlll, Alpha Gamma Dem: 478 Mary Hlnes, Indianapolis Campus Erln Hlnkle, Indianapolis Campus Kimberly Hlnkle, Indianapolis Campus Scott Hlntz, Delta Upsilon Susla Hoffman, Alpha Phi Davld Hollander, Lambda Chi Alpha David Holob, Phi Gamma Delta Ted Howard, Phi Gamma Delta Rob Huislnga, Alpha Tau Omega Tracy Hulln, DelTo Delta Delta Jlll Huler. OuT-in-Town Sieve Huler, Delfo Kappa Epsilon Lelsa Jackson, Indianapolis Campus Rob Jacobs. Delta Upsilon Kan Jennlson, Delta Kappa Epsilon Ellen Johnson. Dena Delta Delta Krlsiln Johnson, Alpha Omicron Pi Andrea Jones. Alpha Omicron Pi chkle Jones, Lambda Chi Alpha Krlstln Kacena. Alpha Gamma Delta Mark Karner. Hogcne Hall Michael Kasales. Delta Tau DeITo Patrick Keller, Hogofe Hall Susan Kelley. Delta Delta Delta Krlslln Ker, Delta Delfa Delfc Carol Klng. Alpha Chi Omega Denise Knlgm, Alpha Phi Ann Koenlg, Alpha Chi Omega BIII Krauss, Alpha Tau Omega Bette lawrence, Alpha Omicron Pi Ellzabeih LeDonne. Alpha Gamma Delta Mlchael Lewis, Be'rc Theta Pi Ed lllly, Ho'oTe Hall Erlc llnlon, Sigma Alpha Epsilon Norene Llpplnoolt, Alpha Phi 479 Suzanne Loechte. Indianapolis Campus Amy longnecker, Alpha Omicron Pi JIII Losey, Alpha Gamma Delta Carolyn Lukens, Alpha Chi Omega Carrle Beth Lunsford. Delfo Delta Delta Megan lynch, Hogofe Hall Mlchael lynch, Beta Them Pi Susan Macvelgh, Alpha Omicron Pi Tracy Magee. Indianapolis Campus Chrlstopher Malne, Lambda Chi Alpha Susan Mann. Alpha Phi Llsa Murrella, Indianapolis Campus Charllne Marsh, Bishop Roberts Hall Slephanle Marlinson. Alpha Gamma Delta George Massey. Delta Tau Delta Geollrey Mather, Befo Theta Pi Mlchael McAuliffe, Delta Tau DelTo Robert McBrlde. Longden Hall Michael McCalpln, Delfo Kappa Epsilon Brian McCann. Phi Delta Them Jane Michel, Delta Gamma James Miller, Hogofe Hall Todd Miller, Lambda Chi Alpha Kevln Morse. Beta Theta Pi Steven Morehead, Ouf-in-Town Beth Morrison, Alpha Chi Omega Beth Moshak. Lucy Rowland Hall Robyn Nave, Pi Beta Phi Amy Newbanks, Alpha Omicron Pi Elizabeth Newell, Delfo Gamma Llsa Nlbbelin. Hogate Hall Ellzabefh Nicely, Indianapolis Campus Laurle Nlcholson, Longden Hall John Oberbeck, Dena Chi Jennlfer Obrechi, Indianapolis Campus 480 WiThouT a doubT, my semesTer abroad sTudying in Barcelona, Spain provided me wiTh The mosT worThwhiIe learning opporTuniTy of my life. Before I IefT for my Trip in AugusT, I was a TwenTy-year old who needed someThing more ouT of life. My firsT Two years aT DePauw were very enjoyable and rewarding, buT neverTheless as my junior year rolled around. I was ready for a change. I had never Traveled To Europe before and I guess I was preTTy clue- less as To whaT To expecT. Luckiiy. myself and anoTher DePauw sTudenT, Bryan Sarge, were able To explore various parTs of England, Germany, and SwiTzerIand before arriving in Spain. Needless To say, we made misTakes quickly, spenT Too much money, goT IosT, and fumbled our way around, buT had a bIasT doing iT. One Thing each sTudenT realizes is ThaT he or she is on Their own compIeTely. This feeling can be fascinaTing aT Times and scary aT oThers. YeT ThroughouT on These advenTures, you grow and maTure and begin To undersTand life beTTer. SeTTIing down in Barcelona and living wiTh a 69-year old Spanish senora was a compIeTer differenT sTory. IT was difficuIT aT firsT To adjusT To living my enTire life in Spanish, and inTegraTing myself in a new cuITure. . However, I began To feel more aT ease as The days passed and developed a very special reIaTionship wiTh my new Iimom. In order To make friends ouTside of oTher Americans on The same program, you musT be ouTgoing. I found ThaT I used every excuse imaginable To Talk To someone and hopefully make a new Spanish friend. AThIeTics, riding The meTro or bus, in class, or aT The bar were all acTiviTies or places where I meT people. A couple words of advice: Don'T geT discouraged, be paTienT, and always remember To wriTe down names and phone numbers of people when you meeT Them. STudying abroad is a chance To live life To The max. Our academic schedule was noT quiTe as demanding as DePauw's, Thus we were able To spend more Time wiTh each oTher, sharing our experiences and learning from our misTakes. We all wenT Through good and bad Times, missed our families aT holidays. and feIT alone occasionally. YeT now as I refiecT on my six monThs in Europe, I finally begin To realize The full impacT iT had on me. Perhaps The mosT imporTanT lesson I Ieamed was To enjoy every day of my life, help and care for oThers whenever possible, and To never sTop growing as a person. eRick Lohmeyer Mary Jeanne O'Gara, Delta DeITo DeITo Davld Oskln. Alpha Tau Omega Susan Owen. Alpha Phi Gina Pagano, Alpha Phi Mlchael Pankratz. Phi Delia TheTo Stacy Pope. Kappa Alpha TheTo Larry Porman. Hogofe Hall Polly Peder. HogoTe Hall Jim Prlce, Alpha Tou Omega Thomas Prlnce. Delta Upsilon Stella Qulnlan. Bishop Roberts Hall Mark Rauschen, Beta Theft: Pi Richard Ray. Indianapolis Campus Teresa Reld, Indianapolis Campus Sarah Rem, Alpha Phi Cole Remsburg, Lambda Chi Alpha Bradley Ranch, Delta Kappa Epsilon Mike Risch, Lambda Chi Alpha Wendy RlHer, Alpha Chi Omega Klm Roblnson. Alpha Phi Krlsiln Roehr. Kappa Alpha Them Carla Rogovlch, Indianapolis Campus Jayne Rooksberry, Indianapolis Campus Janet Roslron, Indianapolis Campus Joan Ruggles, Indianapolis Campus Laura Runyan. Alpha Chi Omega Todd Russell, HogoTe Hall Elizabeth Rydell, Alpha Omicron Pi Steven Salarls, Deho Upsilon Chrlslopher Schmalz. Alpha Tau Omega Erlc Schoenfeld, Lambda Chi Alpha Edward Schroder. Lambda Chi Alpha Rebecca Schubert. Delfo Delta Delta John Schwarz. Phi Delta Theta Brian Schymik, Delta Kappa Epsilon 182 Jacqueline Sells, Alpha Gamma Dena Marcella Servles, Ouf-in-Town Julle Sefzer, Alpha Chi Omega Dave Sharp. Delta Upsilon Martha Shedd, Hoga're Annex John Shoemaker. Delfc: Kappa Epsilon David Slegel. BeTa Theta Pi John Slsson. Del'rc Upsilon Krlslen Slaunerback, Alpha Omicron Pi Judy Small, Indianapolis Campus Julle Smlih, Delft: Gamma Mark Sorg, Lambda Chi Alpha Jeffery Spllman. Sigma Chi Jeffrey Stacey, Hogofe Hall Martina Sleelman, Alpha Phi Jane Sielnmeiz. Alpha Omicron Pi Rlla Slrange, Kappa Alpha Theta Karen Strusma, Alpha Chi Omega Nancy SurraH, Indianapolis Campus Elizabeth Tinsman. Pi Beta Phi Jose Torres, Delta Kappa Epsilon Nell Toussalnt. HogaTe Hall Carrle Travls, Indianapolis Campus Anne Tucker. Indianapolis Campus Ellzabe'th Uedlng. Indianapolis Campus Ted Ukrop. Sigma Alpha Epsilon S.R. Vaughn, Phi Gamma Dena Kathryn Vokes, Indianapolis Campus Sieve Wade, Delta Chi Iom Wald, Delta Tau D9110 Pamela Warren. Delta Gamma Geo Weaver, Del'ro Chi Kendall Weber. Hogcfe Hall Datren Wells, Phi Gamma Delta Llsa Welter. Delta Delta DeITo '183 Tracy Weston. Alpha Gamma Delta Amy Wlasen, Indianapolis Campus Gregory Wlllhlle. Phi Delta Theta Chad Wlnslon. Befa Theta Pi Jeff Winton, Delta Tau Delta Jeffrey Wood, Sigma Chi Karen Yahnke, Pi Beta Phi Cynihla Young, Longden Hall Luclnda erkelbach. Delta Gamma 184 '185 hp: Seniors I had noT been To The UniTed SToTes before when I came To GreencasTIe, Indiana. Yes, iT sounds Terrifying, buT iT really wasn'T. I did feel uncomforTabIe 01 Times, buT mosTIy I was Too busy experiencing new Things To noTice when someThing wenT wrong. IT was. in a word nice. I was impressed, aT firsT, by whaT I Took To be people's concern wiTh my welI-being. You see, where I come from we don'T say hello To sTrangers in The sTreeT, much less inquire abouT Their welfare. Over here I encounTered The everyday How's-i- goin'? and How-ya-doin'? , noT To menTion The nice To meeT you from Those I was inTroduced To. I was overwhelmed aT firsT, unTil I realized ThaT of course no one meanT anyThing by Those commenTs. They were merely forced social behavior- a sorT of human face for The compeTiTive and back-biTing world ThaT American kids are TaughT To live in. WiTh a few honorable excepTions. I decided I didn'T like These people who didn'T mean whaT They said and didn'T say whaT They meanT. These were some of my firsT impressions. How, as I am preparing To leave DePauw, I am of course older and wiser. l sTilI don'T like people who don'T mean whaT They say, Though. BuT almosT everyThing else has changed. As I Try To summarize my ThoughTs abouT DePauw now I find ThaT mosT of H is good, some bad, and very IiTTle of H is nasTy. IT is jusT possible ThaT I have become Too Americanized-one of my greaTesT fears in Iife-buT I Think my judgemenTs are TruThful. The good sTuff is academics and The genuine friends ThaT I have made. DePauw has an excellenT academic program for Those who are willing To make use of iT. I have sTilI To meeT a professor ThaT I don'T like-They are a weaITh of knowledge, helpful and good people. I ofTen wonder, however, whaT makes Them Tick. They seem To like Their jobs, which is surprising, because iT doesn'T seem ThaT many sTudenTs are inTeresTed in academics. DePauw produces few scholars. IT musT be frusTraTing To Teach a class which consisTs mosle of people who are more inTeresTed in The coming dance Than They are in learning. There are excepTlons, of course, buT This seems To be The rule. NoT ThaT There aren'T valuable Things To be learned from social life- of course There are. BuT, alas, DePauw social life doesn'T offer many opporTuniTies for learning and growTh. I haTe having To join The choir of Those who blame The Greek social sysTem for bad DePauw social life, buT I'm afraid iT's True. Generally, I Think ThaT any social sysTem wiTh sTricTIy defined rules is damaging To The human spiriT, and The Greek sysTem falls inTo ThaT caTegory. IT is noT jusT ThaT H is unfair, sexisT, eIiTisT, and conformisT-as such iT merely mirrors American socieTy. WhaT is worse is ThaT iT is sTifIing and desTrucTive of social educaTion. Men who live wlTh oTher men and only see women when They are dressed up and have war painT on Their faces musT have a severely disTorTed view of half of The human race. And vice versa, of course. WiTh The Greek sysTem comes forced social life, which is bad in iTseIf. Then There are The independenTs- The word is no coincidence-who have no social sTrucTure wiThin which They could express Themselves, noT To menTion The impliciT and expliciT sTigma ThaT always comes To Those who are ouT of The mainsTream. BuT This song has been sung ofTen before, and l won'T pursue The poinT. I jusT hope ThaT for The sake of The sTudenTs, DePauw will abandon This anachronism of a social insTiTuTion. These are some of my currenT impressions of DePauw, as I am leaving GreencasTle. A word of caveaT is in order, however, since H is always difficulT To see The picTure when one is inside The frame. WhaT will probably sTay wiTh me in The long run are memories of The good people I have been forTunaTe enough To geT To know-professors and sTudenTs alike. I will miss Them as individuals, buT noT as a parT of DePauw. l don'T Think I will ever feel nosTaIgic abouT DePauw as an insTiTuTion-only abouT The people who are here. Karl Th. Birgisson Seniors Rlia Alliss, Alpha Phi Economics Richard Alvey, Mason Hall Computer Science Bren Arenz. Ouf-in-Town Communication Angle Arihood. Alpha Omicron Pi Communication Marc Armstrong, Hogofe Hall Economics Scott Arrlngfon, Phi Kappa Psi Physics Patricia Ashman, Delta Delfa Delft: Sociology Eric Baker, Sigma Chi Economics Ellzabefh Ballanfyne. Alpha Chi Omega Computer Science Thomas Ballard. Phi Gamma Delfcu Communicofion Susan Barre , Kappa Kappa Gamma Economics Kimberll Banon, Indianapolis Campus Nursing Llsa Barton, Alpha Phi lnfernotional BusinesVFrench Angela Beauchamp, Hogofe Hall Anfhropology John Bennett, Mason Hall Mathematics Tamra Bernacchl. Alpha Chi Omega Economics Emma Lynn Bobbi , Delta Gamma Sociology Charles Boesel, OuT-in-Town Political SciencWCommunicc'rion LeAnne Bossfick, Indianapolis Campus Nursing John Boylan, Sigma Alpha Epsi!on Communication Klm Braasch, Alpha Omicron Pi Economics Eric Brant, Del'rc Chi Communication Karen Brehob. OuT-in-Town CompuTer Science Todd Broud, Delta Chi Physics '189 Seniors Sieve Brunion, Sigma Alpha Epsilon Communication Cathy Bryant. Hogate Hal! Zoology Chris Bunton. Alpha Chi Omega Psychology Dean Burch, Beta Theta Pi Economics Scot! Burgess. Lambda Chi Alpha Economics Lisa Bush, Kappa Kappa Gamma Spanish Roc Byrd, Be'ro Thefo Pi Biology David Cain, DeHo Chi Economics Beth Carpenter. Ou'r-in-Town Psychology Laura Castillo. Hoga're Hall English Composition Don Cotes, Hogofe Hall Sociology John Cowley, Phi Delta Theta Economics James Cerone, Mason Hall Communico'rion David Chalmers, BeTa Theta Pi Physics Jean Chamness. Alpha Chi Omega Psychology Guy Chapman, Lambda Chi AIpho Computer Science Katherine Chezem. Pendle1on, Ind. Nursing Robin Clark. Alpha Omicron Pi Ma'rhemotics Doug Cleaves, Alpha Tou Omega Economics Laura Cllngman, Indianapolis Campus Nursing Laura Clymer. Ou'r-in-Town HistorWCommunicoTion Wendy Colbert. Delta DeITa DeIJro German Gregory Condra, Lambda Chi Alpha Economics Nick Connors, Delta Upsilon Zoology 190 we , gqv ' S$ WW . IV. 141.. .uuk. ,, ,3 C143 13$ Ea C1 191 Seniors Candace Cooper. Ouf-in-Town Psychology John Cooper, Alpha Tau Omega English Literofure Tamara Cooper, Alpha Phi Compufofionol Moth Barbara Cote. Indianapolis Campus Nursing Susan Creamer, Dem: Gamma English Lifero'rure Caryllon Cummings, Alpha Chi Omega English Composition Mlchele Dally, OuT-in-Town Polifical Science Mark Davis, Alpha Tou Omega Chemistry Elizabeth Dean, Kappa Kappa Gamma Psychology AHillo DeNardin, Sigma Alpha Epsilon Economics Anthony deNIcola, Longden Hall Economics Stephen Denlson, Sigma Chi Economics Cynthla Densford. Delta Delta DeITc: Elementary EducaTion Daria Depa. Delta Gamma Music-Piano Performance Ann Devlln, Indianapolis Campus Nursing Maureen Diercxsens, Delta Gamma French Susan Doherfy, Ouf-in-Town English LiferoTurWBoTany and Bacteriology Diane Dolan. Alpha Phi Political ScienceEconomics Vlvlen Dorsey, Hogczfe Hall Zoology Doni Driemeler, Alpha Phi Psychology Jim Dunmyer, Phi Delta The'ro Economics Todd Durham, Phi Delta Theta Pre-Denfisfry Ronald Dwenger, Phi Gamma DeITo Musiunsiness Jennlfer Dyke, Alpha Phi Chemistry 192 Seniors Diane Eaton, Hogofe Annex Communication Dale Edwards, Hogote Hall Music-Voioe Performance Eric Eickmeyer, Delfo Tau Delfc English Composition Kelly Elshoft. Alpha Gamma Delta Communiccfion Julia Emmering, OuT-in-Town Music-Keyboord Area Performance Marcia Engel. DeITo Gamma Economics Peter Eshleman, DelTa Tau Delta English Lifercz'rure Karen Evans, Alpha Phi Economics Leigh Evans. Alpha Omicron Pi Psychology Sandra Farrow, OuT-in-Town Communication Tom Falkner, OuT-in-Town English Composifion Eric Fernandez. OUT-in-Town Zoology Chrislopher Finch, BeTO Theta Pi Economics Stephen Fish, OuT-in-Town English LITeroTure Brian Fitzwaier, DeHo Upsilon Psychology Steven Forsyihe, Longden Hall EconomichnfernoTional Affairs Laura Francis. HogoTe Hall Musiunsiness Peter Garllnger, Delta Chi Communicofion Michele Gaus, Delta Delta Delfc Psychology Susan Gerard, Delta Delta Delta , Poli'ticol Sciencefrench Liferofure Randy GlanoHi, Phi Delta Theta Economics James Gibson, Alpha Tcxu Omega Economics William Gilcresl, Delft: Upsilon Economics Melissa Gilliam, Alpha Gamma Delia Poli1ical Science '193 DePouw: The real world confined wiThin The limiTs of 0 small liberal orTs school. DePouw: The ToTol college experience. DePouw: The Howard of The midwesT. Is There room for improvemenT? WhoT would I change obouT DeP'ouw? There are many people who would soy ThoT coming To This universiTy has given Them 0 head sTorT in life and has prepared Them well for life. From on educoTionol view poinT, perhaps This is True. lf memorizing The Tebeook The nighT before The exam is on exercise in cramming and on The spoT preparoTion, Then 0 number of people may be quiTe successful when They need To become experTs overnighT on some ospecT of Their fuTure job. I will odmiT ThoT There ocTuolly is a large number of sTudenTs who do sTudy because They enjoy Cl subjecT, buT ulTimoTely isn'T H The grade ThoT These people are seeking as 0 means of deTermining how well They know a subjecT or whoT Their professors are Thinking? Do sTudenTs ever Take an exam wiThouT coring obouT The grade They'll geT because They have opprecioTed The subjecT moTTer, and while They oren'T experTs do They feel ThoT They undersTood The moTeriol To The besT of Their obiIiTies? DePouw sTudenTs pick up survival skills To boTTle The greoT real world ouT There, ouT do They know how To Think or why The color purple is beouTiful? DePouw is The ToToI college experience, so of course DePouw sTudenTs know how To Think and why The color purple is beouTiful. If They don'T know now, surely They will by The Time They are groduoTing seniors. lsn'T The ToTol college experience along The lines of an explosion of learning, emoTionol, ond spiriTuoI growTh? Yes! Yes! People will say ThoT, buT if This is so, why are people here so afraid of communicoTing how They feel, expanding Their knowledge and experience in areas ouTside of Their major, TrusTing oTher people, being who and whoT They are? Why have people oTTempTed To converT me To Their religion wiThouT ever oTTempTing To hear wth my religious beliefs ore? Why do people assume ThoT l om o cerToin sTereoType because I am Japanese? Why are my gay or lesbian friends ThoughT To be iTobnormol or weird because They happen To love and shore wiTh people who are of The some sex as They ore? In This world of excessive violence and hoTe, is loving or sharing ever wrong? Why do people lalk obouT how awful oporTheid is buT always manage noT To doTe a block sTudenT? Do DePduw sTudenTs leorn onyThing obouT opprecioTing life, communicoTing, loving, shoring, TrusTing. or being a woman or 0 man? Does onyThing really moTTer Though? DePouw is The Harvard of The midwesT. DePouw con creoTe a person wiTh as much know how and fuTure success as o groduoTe of Harvard. We're jusT as good as Horvord. Why con'T we go one sTep beTTer? Every year several hundred women and men leave our dear Old Gold, knowing what To Think and having successful careers, buT how many of Them know how To Think or ever quesTion onyThing They have learned? If we are willing To Take more risks, wouldn'T iT be nedT if we True onclenT Greek school of ThoughT? For insTonce, There would be no grades, no disTribuTion requiremenTs, ond sTudenTs could learn whoT They wonTed, when They wonTed, and expand Themselves To Their fullesT poTenTiol. Why won'T DePouw live up To iTs ideals of educoTional excellence by oTTrocTing The kinds of sTudenTs who don'T need grades for moTivoTion or are oTTending o universiTy because They are sincere in Their search for furTher educoTion? AdmiTTedly, There are noT many such people around and ThoT would make for o greoT decrease in admissions, buT in The long run, wouldn'T These people become The revivers ond revoluTionizers of This counTry if noT The world? Wouldn'T These people have The courage To Try and do Things differenTIy? DePouw has The financial securiTy To do This for CT leosT Ten years. AfTer Ten years, wouldn'T o universiTy ThoT ocTuolly meT iTs ideals draw a large number of Top sTudenTs? People can argue ThoT DePouw olreody draws a large number of Top sTudenTs, buT whoT do They learn here? STudenTs learn how To survive, buT do They learn how To Think or find The sTrengTh To look dT someThing from a fresh, new or differenT perspecTive? Once again, The iniTiol quesTion: whoT would I change obouT DePouw? I would change DePouw from on insTiTuTion ThoT Teaches sTudenTs how To survive To an insTiTuTion ThoT Teaches sTudenTs how To Think and find The courage To see and Try Things differenle. Foye O. WhoT is The ToToI college experience? could have someThing else closer To a j Seniors Audrey Glllls. Ouf-in-Town Psychology . Arthur Goodall, Phi Delta Theta Psychology Brlan Gourley. Ou'r-in-Town Hisfory Dunlel Grelslng. BeTo Theta Pi Zoology Mlchael Grmlih, Phi Kappa Psi Psychology James Gtohmann, Sigma Chi English Literature Thomas Grooms, Delfo Upsilon PoliTicol Science lorl Gulan, Alpha Omicron Pi Economics Vlckl Gulllon. Greenfield, Ind. Nursing Kathy Guttman. Indianapolis Campus Nursing Lynn Hagedorn, Indianapolis Campus Nursing Carla Hale, HogaTe HCIII EducaTion Wendy Hall, Alpha Omicron Pi Economics Ronda Hamaker, Bishop Roberts Hall ChemisfrWSocioIogy Todd Hamllion. Alpha Tau Omega Religion Dora Hardman, Hogate Hall Elementary Education Debbie Hardy. Pi Befa Phi Elementary Education James Harkness. Lambda Chi Alpha Economics Terry Harrell, Alpha Phi Psychology thzl Hartley, Hogofe Hall Spanish John Hauser, Phi Gamma Delta Philosophy Thomas Hausmann. Phi Gamma Delta Spanish Candace Hedberg. Kappa Alpha Them Economics Sharon Helnrlch. Hogoie Hall Religion 195 Seniors Benjamin Henrikson, Oui-in-Town HisTory Tracy Heslln, Kappa Kappa Gamma Economics Danlel Heun, Phi Gamma Delfo Economics Julie Hayward, Dem: DelTo Delta Biological Sciences Maureen Hlll, Delta Gamma Chemis'rry Benjamin Hodgln. Alpha Tau Omega Economics James Hoeksema, Phi Gamma DeITo English LiferoTure Susan Holder. Alpha Omicron Pi Compufofioncl Math Cheryl Holl, Delfc: DeITc: Delta Communication Penny Hood, Brazil. Ind. Nursing Charles Hudson, Sigma Alpha Epsilon EconomicVEnglish LiTeroTure Michael Heusing. Alpha Tau Omega EconomicVCompufofioncl Mafh George Huggins, Phi Gamma Delta PhysicVPre-Med Laura Huskey, Alpha Omicron Pi English ComposiTion Timothy Huston, Delta Upsilon EconomicVMaTh Pamla Ireland. Ou1-in-Town Psychology Carole Irwln. Alpha Chi Omega Communicofion Pamela Jacobs. Indianapolis Campus Nursing Blll Jennings, Oui-in-Town Economics ScoH Jensen, Lambda Chi Alpha Economics Jullf Johnson, Kappa Kappa Gamma EconomicsAnTernofioncl Business Pairlcla Johnson, Indianapolis Campus Nursing Vlrglnla Jones. Kappa Alpha Theta Economicylntemcfional Business Douglas Jordan, Delta Tau Delta Zoology 496 Being crowned Old Gold Queen was definiIely one of The highlights of my college years 01 DePauw. Everything happened in a blur, but if was all so exciting! As I was sifting There, I recall seeing all my friends and famin-smiling and cheering, while in The background, the band played The ToasI Io DePauw. II was surely a moment I will never forgeII! I feel proud To be a parI of a DePauw IradiTion such as Old Gold-because I feel That Tradition is The essence of DePauw. I was proud To be DePauw's Old Gold Queen and thankful for The opportuniTy to share IhaI special moment with my friends and family. SIacy Hedges '197 Seniors Alene Kant, Kappa Alpha Them Economics Laura Keeler, Hogczte Annex English Composifion Tara Kemp, Alpha Omicron Pi Communicofion Anne Klncald, Pi Beta Phi Economics Krlsilna Klng, Kappa Kappa Gamma Communica'rion Amy Kirkpairick, Longden Hall ArT Klrsfen Klump, Longden Hall English Literature Mark Koenig. Sigma Chi Economics Chrlstlne Koman, Kappa Kappa Gamma EconomicVFrench Tim Koopman, Longden Hull Psychology Karen Krukowski. Indianapolis Campus Nursing Kenneih Krumlns. HogoTe Hall Biological Sciences Rlso Kuhlman, Ouf-in-Town Elememary EducoTion Kerry Leatham, Pi Beta Phi CommunicatiowFrench Wendy leinbach, Pi Befo Phi Elementary EduchTion Llnda Lesniak, Delta Gamma Chemistry Martha Levine, Hogofe Holl Musiunsiness Lisa Lewis, HogaTe Hall Philosophy Tamara Lewis, Delta Gamma Economics Carolyn the, Indianapolis Campus Nursing Mary nghthammer. Alpha Phi Elementary Educofion Nlcholas llnardos, Delta Upsilon Economics Mark Lingen. Alpha Tcu Omega Zoology Dumarls Llnnekln, Indianapolis Campus Nursing 198 Seniors Anne llpe, Alpha Chi Omega Economics Linda lischka, Longden Holl Economics Scott Looney, Phi Delfa Them Psychology Robert Lopreie. OuT-in-Town HistorWEnglish Lifero1ure Thomas Lueder, Phi Gamma Dena Economics Jessica Lumsden, Pi 8610 Phi English Composition KGI'I'Y Mackay, DeITo Gamma French Dave Macknick, Delta Upsilon English Composition Susan Mahan, Alpha Phi Economics Sean Major, Phi Gamma Delta Economics Scofl Makin, Ou'r-in-Town Computer Science Lisa Maloney, Hogo're Hall CommunicatioMEnglish Composition John Martin. Mason Hall Music-Performonce Wllliam Marllnov. Phi DeITo Them Economics John Muihls, Alpha Tau Omega Economics Mesha McCarty. OuT-in-Town Communication Susan Mclendon. Kappa Kappa Gamma ZoologWPre-Med Jeff McQuary, HogoTe Hall Political Science Debora Mead, Alpha Gamma Delta Computer SciencWFrench Joni Merriam, Pi Befa Phi Communiccmon Charles Meyer, Phi Dena Thech English Composition Kathryn Mllfall, Hogc're Hall MusidBusiness Amy C. Miller, Hogofe Hall Women's Studies Elizabeth Mlller, HogoTe Hall Musiunsiness 199 200 Seniors lammy Minor, Longden Hall Anthropology Elizabeth Mitchell. Alpha Phi Physical Educofion Michael Moffen, Delta Tau Delta Political Science Barren Moore. Ouf-in-Town History Balke Myers. Beta Theta Pi Physics Paul Myers, Hogofe Hall Bofany Susan Nalizger. Pi BeTa Phi Economics James Nurgang. Delta Upsilon Chemistry Ellzabeth Nelson. Delta Delta Delta Religion Jane Neuhauser, Rector Holl Communication Susan Nichols, Kappa Kappa Gamma Psychology Christopher Nicholson, Alpha Tau Omega Physics Ani Nieves. Hoga're Hall Communication Fay Ogasawara, HogaTe Hall Chemisfry Christine Olde, Delta Delta Delta EconomicVFrench Jonathon Orr. Longden Hall Music-Business Paul Owen, Phi Gamma DeITo Communication Maria Pajo, Alpha Chi Omega Russian Studies Susan Pattie, Alpha Chi Omega Communication Jeremiah Pearson, Out-in-Town Communication Cathy Pelham, Alpha Omicron Pi Psychology Amy Perkins, Pi BeTo Phi Economics Gregory Pitner. OuT-in-Town Economics Scott Plesha, Phi Delta Them Pre-Den'risfry 201 Seniors Rlchard Posller. Phi Kappa Psi Psychology Jamle Prlce, Brazil, Ind. Nursing John Quigley, DeITc Tau Delta Pre-Denfisfry Allce Ralney, Alpha Omicron Pi Psychology Erlc Rowe, Beta Theta Pi Economics Rlchard Ray, Mason Hall Polificcl Science 500 Reeves, Hogofe Hall Religion Phllllp Renforth, OuT-in-Town Political Science Tlffany Renwiok, Delta Gamma English Composifion Jeffrey Repasky. Sigma Alpha Epsilon EconomicVCommunicafion Sherry Rlchert. OuT-in-Town English Composition Timoihy Rlehle, Phi Gamma Delta Economics Karla Riessler, Alpha Phi Mofhemofics Susan Risk, Pi Befo Phi Psychology Jlll Robertson. Alpha Omicron Pi Economics Lawrence Rodrigues, Longden Hall French Tom Roesch, Phi Dle'ro Theta Economics John Rogers. Phi Kappa Psi Computational Moth Lorl Rosekrans, Kappa Kappa Gamma Music-Voice Performance Jodi Royer, Delfo Gamma Musiunsiness Peter Ruppen, Phi Kappa Psi Economics Colleen Ryan, Kappa Kappa Gamma Elementary Education Allce Sacks , Alpha Omicron Pi Political Science Sharon Sandbo. Pi Beta Phi Psychology 202 lmogine whoT would happen in GreencosTle if nuclear bombs were TorgeTed 0T 0 misslie base in souThwesT Missouri. We could noT hope To escape The pervosive rodloTlon which would ThreoTen our very exisTence. WhoT would life be like? Is nuclear war survivoble. If so, would The quoIiTy of life be worThwhiIe? These are The quesTions ThoT four sTudenTs in John WhiTe's Peace STudies decided To probe by using The above scenario. While The resT of us were sTill digesTing Turkey and pumpkin pie on Friday. November 29, Susan Connors, Rob Jocobs, Jockie Sells, and Mike Welling IefT The world behind To explore life in o simuloTed bomb shelTer. WiTh sleeping bogs, conned food, and Triviol PursuiT, The fourihibernoTed in The bosemenT of The UnlversiTy ChrisTion CenTer from 5:30 Friday p.m., To 2:00 p.m., Sundoy. According To Professor WhiTe, The purpose of The exercise was To personalize Their inTelleoTuol experience by going beyond sToTisTios, Theories, and policies regarding nuclear war. For The sTudenTs There come 0 poinT when -m-IQ'IIIm. l? 1 Ilill: EV The experience become more Than 0 gome. ln fooT. Mike reoolls o momenT of compIeTe blockness where any possibiIiTy of life seemed fuTile. He said, The large despoir didn'T make me wonT To give up hope and yeT The siTuoTion seemed hopeless. And whoT did The four conclude from over forTy-five hours beneoTh The ground? llThe psychological and emoTionol sTress of surviving 0 nuclear war would be so immense ThoT you couldn'T do iT olone, Jockie Sells commenTed. She sold ThoT iT would Toke group cohesiveness To offer The comrodery ond supporT needed To survive, NoT only did The group find The weekend grim, buT The experience also led Them To form long-losTing impressions. As Jackie reflecTed, IT made us all oword ThoT nuclear war is o possibiliTy and maybe we should do someThing To make sure we prevenT iT. WiTh over 50,000 nuclear warheads in The world Today This is perhaps The mosT significonT reolionlon for The fuTure of our exlsTence. Anne ChrisTy 203 :1- Seniors Enc Schiffli. Hogcfre Hall Computer Science Bret Schoch, Sigma Chi Economics Michael Schmidt. Delta Tau Delta English Jefferson Scull, Delta Upsilon Economics Mark Seiiz, Lambda Chi Alpha PoliTicoI Science Gregory Seketa, Lambda Chi Alpha HistorWPoliTiccl Science Susan Sells, Kappa Kappa Gamma Compufer Science Bradley Sellers, Phi Delta The'ro Economics Michael Sellers. Sigma Chi SpanishAnTemofionol Business Tracy Shlvely, Alpha Phi Communiccrrion Caihsrlne Shoemaker, Alpha Gamma DeITo Communicofion Zoymarie Slmonei. Delta DeITG DeITo PsychologWEconomics James Slmonlan, Delta Chi Political Science Janet Slmpson. Indianapolis Campus Nursing Cralg Smlth, Ouf-in-Town Communication Robin Snyder, Alpha Omicron Pi Music Business Stephanle Somers, Kappa Kappa Gamma Zoology Marcla Spencer, OuT-in-Town Economics Carole Splnner, Delta Delta Delta PoliTiccl Science Beth Squlres. Kappa Alpha Theta Elemen'rcry Education Jennlfer Steele. Hoga're Hall Computer Science Peier Sleelmun, Ouf-in-Town English Composition John SIefany, Hogofe Hull History James Stephens. Phi Kappa Psi Economics 204 Seniors Llndsey Slerling, Indianapolis Campus Nursing Scott Stetson, OuT-in-Town Physical Education Garry Stevenson, OuT-in-Town Geology Lorrie Stewart, Indianapolis Nursing Carolyn stone. Pi BeTo Phi English Literature Qnihia Siorer, Alpha Omicron Pi English Composi'rion Joanna SIrayer, Out-in-Town Zoology Julle Sirlmbu, Indianapolis Campus Nursing Linda SIrorn, Alpha Omicron Pi Communication Jay Siuiz, Sigma Chi Economics Sheri Sullon, Hogafe Hall PhysicVMaThemofics Marianne Swank, Out-in-Town CommunicaTion Kevln Sweeney, Phi Delta Them Computer Science Laura Tatham, Kappa Kappa Gamma Psychology Gregory Taylor, DeITu Chi Communiccfion Gregory Terpstra, Hogafe Hall Biological Sciences Gene Thiem, Phi Kappa Psi Economics Robin Thiems, Kappa Alpha Theta Educcl'rion Amy Thompson, Alpha Omicron Pi English Composi'rion Bradley Thompson, Sigma Alpha Epsilon Economics Phil Thyen, Sigma Abho Epsilon Economics Paula Towell, Morfinsville, Ind. Nursing Philllp Iroyer, Delta Upsilon Polificol Science Vincent Truax, Phi Kappa Psi Economics 205 Financial Frustration As a graduating senior, it hardly seems possible that the four greatest years of my life are practically over. But were they all that great? Let's see-the social life was great, one of the best for a small liberal arts school. How 'bout the academics?-I need not have to say a word for something that speaks for itself! But what about the finances? Here's where the story scene changes drastically. The following is a short statement representing how I sand ' I'm sure many othersy feel about DePauw's strong arm financial tactics. I can begin by looking at freshman year. What a great time -new girls, parties, and most importantly being on my own. However, near the end of second semester the long hard battle of staying at DPU began. Being eligible for a student loan had to be one of the biggest things that ever happened to me because it allowed me to stay at DePauw for at least one more year-so I thought! Sophomore year was just as great as freshman year but only better! Once again, however, that second semester started off pretty rough. The second day of classes my father informed me that he could not afford tuition for second semester. There I was second day into classes and I was faced with sitting out a semester-and probably never attending DePauw again. So for three days Uhe remainder of the first weeIQ I went in to see the financial aid offices staff about my problem. The problem, to me, seemed to be very serious. However, for those staff 206 members, It appeared as if I didn't get a loan or something, who cares! I'm not knocking the financial aid staff themselves, I'm sure each person in the office would give what they could-but whoever makes up the damn rules about aid, that's an entirely different story! Anyway, for three days I pleaded my case-Ioan or home. I tried to apply to Manchester College as an immediate transfer Similar academic yeao but that fell through. So there I was, Friday afternoon In the financial aid office waiting to hear if I got a loan. The financial aid staff member walked into the office and said there was nothing she could do-nothing! What happened to all of that $400 million endowment fund, wasn't it for students who want to get an education, or was it another publicity hype? Well, needless to say, I lost my cool somewhat and only with that was I reconsidered for a loan, right then and there. Is that what it takes?-can no one be trusted? Well, another spring semester passed by and summer arrived. Again, the problem of staying at DePauw made its presence felt. After phone and mail correspondence from June until mid-Augusteup until two days before the start of football, I realized there was only one real virtue in life-patience! All that time QV2 monthss I sent every conceivable document that proved I needed money. I also applied to two schools and was accepted in the fear that DePauw would fall through. 80, after all this correspondence and expensive phone calls sand only two days before I planned to go back to school for my junior yeao I was still denied a loan. A loanemoney DePauw gets back plus some. What's the big problem, huh? I could not and never will see how DePauw has problems loaning money to students who otherwise have to drop out. Again, I prevailed with a loan and I got to attend DPU for another eventful year. Junior year went smooth as did senior year. Actually, senior year I had no problems whatsoever because my younger sister was also in school and therefore made my financial aid package total almost full cost of tuition and books. This article is not to let the reader think I am not personally thankful for all that's been done to me, or what I've done on my own-Iike waiting tables, mopping floors, and holding a work-study job all at once. This is not a plea for pity, however, it is a final note to remember for all of us who had similar problems; and that we can all appreciate the education that we've gotten a little more than if we coasted through. I hope for the future students, that DePauw can start to see some of the hidden problems of student financing their own education. Again, I'm not knocking those who helped me in the past-I just hope DePauw doesn't overlook the importance of its students well-being in the future. I had to apply for transfer three times while at DePauw-thank God I never had to take any one of those schools up on their offer-l wouldn't have traded these past four years at DPU for anything! eBiIIy Red Seniors John Tull, Phi Kappa Psi HisTory Richard Tull. Phi Delta Theta Political Science Llsa turner. Indianapolis Campus Nursing Joseph Vanderkolk. Delta Upsilon History Jennlfer Vaughn. Pi Beta Phi English CompositioMFrench Jennifer Vesper, Delta Gamma Zoology Ann Volle, Alpha Chi Omega Computer Science Rebecca Walter, Alpha Omicron Pi Economics Glenn Warning, Alpha Tau Omega Communication Doug Warren. Longden Hall His'rory Rlchurd Was. Phi Kappa Psi Economics Tlmoihy Weaver. Longden Hall History Mlchael Welllng, Longden Hall Chemisfry Kenneth West, Beta Theta Pi Economics Llsa West. Longden Holl Anthropology Klm Wheizel, Pi Befo Phi Communication Laurle Wh'lfacre, Hogate Hall English Literaturemeligion Kristen Wlese, DeHa Delta Delta Mafhemafics Randall Wilhelm. Delta Chi Economics Jllann Wilklns, Alpha Gamma Delta Elementary Education Anne Wllllams, Indianapolis Campus Nursing Bruce Wllllams, Hogafe Annex Physics Mlchel Wllllams. Pi Beta Phi Economics Chrlstlne Wllllamson. Alpha Gamma Delia Psychology 207 Seniors 1 Wendee Wilson, Delta Delta Delfc MathematicVEconomics Julle Winchesler, Alpha Chi Omega Economics Derek Wonman, Ou'r-in-Town Economics Susan Youtsey. HogcTe Hall PhysicVMofhemofics John Zechlel, Lambda Chi Alpha Communicofion 208 209 Graduafion TTWe are probably scuTuroTed wiTh hearing The virTues and benefiTs of a DePouw educcTion . . . DePouw graduoTes have made imporTonT conTribuTions To socieTy and succeeded in Their careers. Successful careers, however, do noT necessarily make sTrong, happy families. I believe ThoT The mosT imporTanT conTribuTion ThoT all of us can make To socieTy will come in our own families. We are The nexT generoTion of spouses and porenTs. IT 210 is our responsibiliTy To recognize The imporTonce of c: sTrong family reloTionship. IT is noT enough To use our DePouw educaTion To be leaders in The professional arena. We musT also Take The iniTioTive in shaping and molding our socieTy inTo a beTTer world. As we move inTo The nexT sToges of our lives, Tth is our challenge. -Tony deNicola 1986 CommencemenT 2M . ',,. Car bomb iri Wes1Beiru1 212 1- ' . .- . ' 4' 1' . - .. s. . A o ' - .. I , . m b .0 ' a o- .-, .. ., . X. V , A ,. .. r . . AN fun... mu: s cltu. V . i World ' 1985-86 Almanac April 44, 1986-UniTed Sfofes planes bomb Libya for whaT if said was irrefuroble evidence of sTaTe- supported Terrorism Training camps in mm counfry. The recenT American raid on Libyo wos opporenle conducTed To make 0 poinT. IT is noT olTogeTher clear wth The poinT was or To whom iT was being mode, and PresidenT Reogon's remarks and explonoTions ore noT helpful in ThoT regord. He says he ordered The raid To show ThoT The UniTed SToTes is noT going To siT book and leT TerrorisTs hove Their way wiThouT American reToIidTion. As To whom This was being said, There are Three possibiliTies. FirsT, Khodofy and The TerrorisTs. The bombing was perhaps carried ouT in order To show Them ThoT Their dcTiviTies will noT be ToleroTed. This, of course, is silly and naive, for Two reasons. Khodofy, murderous as he is, is noT The cause of Terrorism in The world. He is merely on unusual producT of The real oouses-Arob noTionoiism in general and PolesTinion homelessness in porTicuior. His modness serves The cause of The dispossessed PolesTinions and The xenophobic of Arab noTionolism. Khodofy's disappearance from The sToge of world poliTics would ddmiTTedly moke iT less colorful, buT hordly less dangerous. FurThermore, we are noT dealing wiTh people who will be inTimidoTed by The show of row miliTory force. Those who carry ouT TerrorisT dTTocks and suicide missions are quiTe willing To die for Their cause. They were hardly surprised by The Americon oTTock, since They have only seen violence and beTroon from The WesT ever since The false promises of The Balfour DecloroTion. They regard The UniTed SToTes, righTIy or wrongly, as on imperiolisTio power oTTocking The Arab underdog, ond recenT 2M developmenTs will surely noT Change ThoT percepTion. On The conTrory, The American roids mighT produce more young commandos willing To sacrifice Their lives for o jusT cause, as The case Turned ouT To be dfTer The Israeli invasion of Lebanon and The subsequenT massacres in The PolesTinion refugee camps. We could perhaps draw on onology here To The VieTnomese whom The Americans ThoughT They could easily defeoT wiTh superior weapons and Technology. They were wrong, of course, because These people, unlike mosT Americans, are moved by ideas, noT force and weapons. Secondly, PresidenT Reagan could be Trying To persuade The Europeans To Take sTronger ocTions ogoinsT Khodofy's Libyo, The American dllies have To been relucTonT To use economic soncTions as 0 means of inTimidoTing Libyo, for very good reasons: They probably wouldn'T work, and They would likely sTrengThen Arob solidoriTy ond consequenTiy produce an incenTive for seTTing oside The economic consideroTions currenle Tearing oporT The OPEC oil corTei. If This is whoT Mr. Reagan was Trying To do, he has foiled. The Europeans, wiTh The excepTion of BriToin, have condemned The American ocTion ond Token only lukewarm diplomoTic measures ogainsT Libya. They know very well Tth They are already Cl boTTlefieId for Terrorism direcTed dgoinsT Americans and iT would be ouTrighT suicidal To condone violence ogoinsT people who are likely To reTolioTe indiscriminoTely. Also, They undersTond The real cause of Terrorism and wonT To address The issue opproprioTely, Through negoTioTions beTween lsroel, The PolesTinions, and Their Arob neighbors. Curiously enough, The Americans seem To have forgoTTen o quiTe effecTive measure Taken by PresidenT Jimmy CorTer who broughT obouT peace beTween lsroel ond EgypT wiTh The Camp David ogreemenT. ThoT approach, however, would noT be well received in The America of The Reagan age. Which brings us To The Third and mosT likely explonoTion for The ill- odvised American raid. I Think Mr. Reagan was making The poinT To himself and The American people Tth They are sTill sTonding Toll in a world ThoT likes Them less by The day. The Americans feor To appear weak in The face of Terrorism. The experience of VieTnom and Iron sTilI lingers in The American people's minds. They don'T wonT To see again The humilioTion ond defeoT suffered There, dIThough The IoTTer experience probably broughT Them more good-will ond sympoThy in The world Thon onyThing They have done since World War II. BUT, no- America will never be humilidTed again promised Mr. Reagan in 4980, 0nd by goliy They are going To show how Tough They ore. The Toughness is The producT of fear and self- doubTeo noTurol psychological response. America is book, according To 0 Reagan slogan of 1984. lT's back fighTing foreign people for owoy whose hisTories ond culTures iT doesn'T undersTond ond apparenle does noT wonT To undersTdnd. IT is so coincidenTol ThoT we see The producTion of Rambo and Rocky iv in The Reagan age. These films are merely on expression of o noTionol moodeThe macho mood ThoT rejecTs The wimpiness of negoTidTion and prefers To IeT The guns do The Talking. IT is said, however, culThough noT surprising, ThoT The Rambo syndrome has Token over The minds of American foreign policy-mokers. Should we expecT d Slelone-Norris TickeT in 1988? -Korl Th. Birgisson E N S Above: A TWA jeT wiTh 445 passengers and eighT crew members was hijacked in AThens in June. The ShiiTe Muslim hijackers ordered The plane around The MediTerrcnean, seTTIing evenTuolly in BeiruT. AIThough mosT of The hosToges were released wiThin a few days, The remaining 39 were held for 47 days. One American hosToge was killed LefT: PalesTinicn TerrorisTs hijacked The ITcrIion cruise liner Achille Louro while on a MediTerranean cruise. One American passenger, confined To cr wheelchair, was killed. AfTer The ship was released, The EgypTian governmenT agreed To reTurn The hijackers To The PLO. However, The EgypTAir jeT carrying The hijackers was inTerecepTed by American planes. The hijackers were puT on Trial in Holy. 215 ,e.r....,.- World 1985-86 Almanac Righf: In 1985, America discovered oparTheid. Meanwhile in Soufh Africa, violence increased. Rio'rs, like this one in downfown Johannesburg, occured olmosf daily. Below: A series of devosfo'ring earthquakes rumbled Through Mexico Cify in September. Thousands were killed. Few of the city's 48 million residenfs escaped The effects of The first quake QM on The Richfer scam or The second US 216 February 26, 4986-Fillpino PresidenT Ferdinand Marcos leaves The counTry he had ruled for 20 years. Corozon Aquino, who had challenged Marcos in presiden Tial elecTions earlier ThaT monfh, was proclaimed leader of The island naTion. The DePauw asked sTudenTs and faculTy whaf They Thoughf of The change in pa wer. uI Think Morcos' leaving The Philippines is 0 Filipino problem. iT's o nosTy American hobiT ThoT we have of sTicking our noses in where They don'T belong. The American governmenT doesn'T have The righT To geT involved wiTh The Philippines-we should jusT leave Them clone. eLiTzi HorTley H is a good Thing. i'm glad ThoT he did leave. I Think iT's kind of offensive ThaT people in The Reagan odminisTroTion ore Taking crediT where i'm noT sure crediT is due eJili Snyder Relievedel Think everyone is relieved. eNoncy Davis AssT. Professor of Sociology iTLeoving is 0 good Thing. He sTayed Too long. Glad The UniTed STCiTes finally decided To geT on The side of jusTice. eFred Lamar UniversiTy Chaplain I had The neoT opporTuniTy To meeT Cory Aquino This pasT summer before she had any poliTicoI ombiTions. IT's been kind of neoT To see her progression from on opoliTicoi housewife To become whoT I Think is a very osTuTe and effecTive poliTicoI leader of a major naTion. I'm happy To see Marcos leave wiThouT bloodshed. BoTh he and The Reagan odminisTroTion should be applauded LefT: PresidenT Ronald Reagan and SovieT Leader Mikhail Gorbachev held Their firsT summiT conference in Geneva in November. This was The firsT meeTing beTween The heads of The Two noTions in six years. for being sensiTive To whoT could have been a very bloody revoluTion. -John Curran iT doesn'T concern me. eRuTh Deng Marcos proved himself ToTolly ineffecTive since The elecTions. Corozon Aquino proved ThoT she can lead supporTers democraTicoIly ond nonviolenle and hopefully resisT The NPA, New People's Army. -STeve L. SmiTh My guT reocTion To his leaving is The example of The Rad ThoT The UniTed SToTes joined The bandwagon iaTe. We had known obouT The oppression in The Philippines. I wanT To cauTion us obouT poTTing ourselves on The back as for as The odminisTraTion is concerned. because we come inTo iT so ioTe. eJohn WhiTe Assoc. Prof. of Philosophy and Religion 2'17 Nahon 1985-86 Almanac March 20, 4986- The House of Represenfafives voTes 222 To 240 for i a $400 million aid package for ConTra guerrillas in Nicaragua. WhoT do The people of Nicaragua wonT? For years They hove wonTed democracy and freedomefreedom To speak, live, and criTicizeefreedom ThoT was promised To Them by The SondinisTds, buT never delivered. lnsTeod OrTego hos sTeodin moved his regime more and more Towords The kind of MorxisT dichTorship under which people around The world live ogoinsT Their will. He has deceived dnd beTroyed his own people . . . . The US. needs To serve noTice To boTh The SondinisTos and The ConTros ThoT we will see To iT ThoT The people of Nicaragua geT wth They've wonTed and needed for so long: democracy, freedom, and respecT for human righTs. AIThough iT's highly unlikely, if OrTego con finoliy give his people whoT he promised Them in The beginning, we will sTop aiding The 2'18 ConTrds. BuT The ConTros should demonsTroTe o commiTmenT To democroTic principles in order To receive U.S. oid. WiTh leaders such as Robelo ond Cruz Twho were as much ogoinsT Somozo as They are ogdinsT OrTeng, There is reason To believe ThoT The ConTro leadership has such 0 l commiTmenT. BuT They need To convince us ThoT This commiTmenT exTends inTo The ronk and file. IT would be nice if we could simply do noThing unTiI we can make sure ThoT in aiding The ConTros we're noT giving The people of Nicaragua Two wrongs insTeod of o righT. BuT iT's noT ThoT simple-iT's noT merely o Cdse of The SondinisTos ogoinsT The ConTros. Moscow and Hdvono moin'Toin o greoT deal of leverage behind OrTego, and no one in ThoT counTry-neiTher The ConTros or anyone elseehos 0 chance ogoinsT Them under currenT circumsTonces. Even if iTls True ThoT The US. has sconT jusTificoTion for being involved, The SovieTs have none whoTsoever . . . . If we allow OrTego To sTobiIize his illegiTimoTe dicToToriol governmenT, and he ollows The SovieTs To begin building air and naval boses, Then U.S. Troops will surely be senT in, and we'll be on The brink of involvemenT for more cosTIy Than $400 million in aid. lT's Too bod ThoT we con'T be compleTely sure of The moTives of some ConTros. BuT we know dbouT Daniel OrTego's moTives, and we also know The moTives of The superpower ThoT books him. Because of This, The ConTros are The besT hope Tor democracy in Nicaragua, and our supporT Tor Them is crucial. In 0 speech losT year on This very subjeCT oT The US. Naval Academy in Annapolis, former UN. Ambassador 2 Jean KirkpdTrick puT iT This way: LeT iT never be said ThoT we in America are so poor in spiriT ThoT we foil To sTond for Those who sTond for freedom. eJeff BenneTT Above: NoThing could have prepared America for whoT happened January 28, 4986, The explosion of The Space ShuTTIe Challenger was The firsT in-flighT disosTer in The space program's . . 5b-mission hisTory. All seven crew members - ' 3 574 were killed, including school Teacher ChrisTa k i MCAuIif'fe. N LefT: STudenTs and focuITy here were shocked by The accidenT and sTunned by followup reporTs which indicoTed engineers had warned NASA obouT fouITy boosTer rockeT seals prior To The launch. ExTreme lefT: In 4986, The Reagan odminisTroTion lobbied successfully for aid To ConTro rebels in Nicaragua. OpposiTion To U.S. involvemenT, however, was inTense. For IefT: An enTire ciTy block in Philadelphia was desTroyed in 4985 when police Tried To evTcT members of The radical group MOVE frdm Their forTified rowhouse by dropping 0 small bomb on The building. lnsTead, The device sTorTed a fire which desTroyed obouT 60 houses. 219 BrenT Larson ' Community 1985-86 Almanac March 4986eGreencasTle Chrisfian Church officials announce plans To demolish The Commercial HoTel and replace if wiTh a parking loT. WhoT boThers me is how passive The desTrucTion of The hoTei makes me feel, even before The firsT bricks come crashing down. I con'T resTore The building: I con'T renovoTe iT . . . re- esToblish iT . . . rebuild iT, buT perhaps I can recrecTe H. The poeT ee. cummings wroTe. 'TTo desTroy is always The firsT sTep in creaTion. So iT Turns ouT mm The poinT of This essay is also noT jusT obouT The desTrucTion of o hoTeI. Maybe iT's The desTrucTion of a life-long enTiTy ThaT greeTed me every day ThroughouT childhood, adolescence, and even during my psuedo-odulT college days. Maybe iT's obouT The desTrucTion of 0 dream. A dream To see The building remade inTo off-compus housing, inTo ThaT quoinT ground floor cafe wiTh sidewalk orT exhibiTs. I con'T help Thinking of The opproprioTeness in The song lyrics, Pave paradise, puT up 0 parking IoT. Maybe iT's The ineviTabIe desTrucTion of The misconcepTion Tth I can change The world. And jusT moybe-hopefullyeiTs desTrucTion is The creoTion of someThing ThoT encompasses more Then oil of These Things. -Kim George 220 CONTRACTORSJNC. 835 EMERY LN. Fla ?Ailtfilfegrz. Julie Commarno Marilyn Combs Bren? Larson For left, above: The walls come Tumbiing down as The Commercial Hotel was demolished in March. The civil war era sfrudure was replaced by a parking IoT. Far left Fire gutted port of the wesf side of The square in SepTember. One woman died in The blaze. Left, Top to bottom: A mini-building boom hi1 Greencasfle this year. As evidence, Wendy's, WoI-MarT, and Walden Inn provided new places to eaf, sleep, and buy discoun'r shampoo. 22'1 Campus 1985-86 Almanac January 7, 4986-PresidenT Richard Rosser, if was announced, would reTire as president He would become chancellor and Robert BoTToms would follow him as presidenT. Soon offer, if was announced ThaT James Cooper would resign as vice presidenT for academic affairs and Thai Eugene Delves, would step down as presldenf of The board of Trustees. . . . Excuse The absTracT Talk, buT someThing has been missing for The pasT year from DePauw. IT can'T be moniTorecl objecTiver, buT This place jusT hasn'T been as friendly as H usually is. The number of people running around wiTh bad feelings seems To have reached an awfully high level The pasT year. We can sTiII smile for alumni and prospecTive sTudenTs all we wanT. We'Ve always known we could do ThaT. and do iT well. Life can always seem peachy-keen in corporaTe Terms, as long as The bucks hold ouT. And The Tone of UniverslTy PresidenT Richard Rosser's and Jim Cooper's resignaTion leTTers bear no sign of a single problem. BuT There's Too much comforTable kidding going on if anyone Thinks all DePauw needs for a universiTy is buildings and bucks and bodies wiTh Ph.Ds. ThaT doesn'T even make for good public reIaTions. The Rosser and Cooper legacies are Those where The money and The buildings were greaT. and The hardline sTance Toward faculTy hiring was kepT wiTh The sTiffesT upper lips. AT whaT cosT was This money squirreled away and The policies kepT is The quesTion. ThaT is why nexT year's presidenT Bob BoTToms and Jim Cooper's replacemenT aT Academic Affairs have Their work cuT ouT for Them in more Than The convenTional universiTy sene . . . . Becky Fleming In all The fervor To improve DePauw's looks, finances and image, whaT has been forgoTTen is people. The single inTangible of people hasn'T been TreaTed like one; iT's been blown off as mechanical, or aT The very besT, significanle downplayed Perhaps The greaTesT challenge- and mosT difficulT, because iT can'T be measured-for BoTToms will be To help geT rid of The bad feelings aT DePauw. His job as conciliaTor was praised firsT semes'rer, buT The honeymoon period he'll geT as new u presidenT nexT year won'T IasT forever. DePauw has had buildings for a while now. IT jusT needs some of The people. Too much of This progress and The universiTy won'T wanT To reach The 24 sT cenTury. -Jlm Simonian T1 222 T wmvu fj-Z 3335' i'.' .. M 9.3 Brent Larson Susan Connors For LefT: The Iong-owoifed summer renovoTion of Asbury Hall proceeded slowly-so slowly ThoT workers were sTiII moving furniTure and Touching up pcinT as class began in SepTember. LefT: LighTs shined again in The old DelTo ZeTo house. BuT This Time, The voices coming from , inside were decidedly masculine. As Phi Kappa Psi embarked on o $.75 million renochion of Their year-old chapter house They arranged To lease The DZ house-now owned by The universiTy. Below lefT: WinTer Term in Mission sign-ups? No, jusT regisTroTion. Responding To sTudenT complainTs over The old regisTroTion sysTem, The regisTror's office revised The process. BUT is woiTing in fronT of The Ad Building OT 7 am. really progress? some sTudenTs asked. 223 A :-nrws-- Asides 1985-86 Almanac Sep Tember 22, 1985-Farm Aid, conceived offer The success of The summer Live Aid concerfs in London and Philadelphia, was held in Champaign, Illinois. Being a young, someTimes energeTic person who lives by The creed, Live music is beTTer. I simply could noT pass up The opporTuniTy To oTTend The Farm Aid concerT . . . in Champaign, Ill. l musT confess ThoT my original compulsion To oTTend was The prospecT of seeing and hearing The likes of Lou Reed, BB. King and Neil Young in The some day. However, ofTer The 44-hour music moroThon ended I came To The reolizaTlon ThoT The concert was much more Than a goThering of musicians To raise funds for a certain cause. The concerT was a forum for raising cerTcin issues. The issues raised, 1 Think, were imporTonT enough To worronT our serious consideroTion . . . . The proprieTors of smell forms have been The vichms of on unsToble economy and decidely unfavorable governmenT policies. If The small form is To remain on American enTlTy help musT be quickly forThcoming . . . . We have before us on opporTuniTy To sTem This sTrongling Tide. By helping save The small forms of This counTry we can show ThoT we are noT merely a bunch of money-grubbing, outomaTons, buT roTher 0 group of Imelligem humons inTeresTed in Top-Grosslng Films ' , 'ToMaIed Televlslon Programs preserving one of The IasT bosTlons of . VarieTy listed The flve Top- grossing films In The following were The mosT-wofched Truly human endeavor . . . . Saving Thad U S. .Jandzcgondda for The week gxe-Tirgezgargnol Television shows Feb. en an on , are 86 as determined b small forms would noT only help some . 1. his Color Purple Mama Brow A C. Nielsen CO. . Y of our fellow humans, buT IT would also . 2. Ten EeeTe Uri Stor3 . 1. The Cosby Show TNBCT represenT o refreshing and much- 3 gm of Amm TUNVSISOD : 2 You Again? WBCT needed change of dlrecTion for our , 4. The Jewel of the Nae 520m CenTury , . 3. Family Ties cNBc3 - socieTy. Fox3 . 4 Murder She WroTe T0833 eeeoffrey Weaver . . 5 RockylV mGMTOSAj , j , I T, 5 Cheers mam 224 , 1L'opL-Lselllng Slngles 8in listed the fiv9 beS'hselhg singlesL , for March 22: 1 These Dreams, Hear? 9Copifoh 2 Sero. $?ersz 9GruhTmCAy ., . 3 Secret Lovers.A11danc Sfm9A81Mj 4 Rock Me Amadeus F0100 94183111 5 ROCK m1heU.SA.9JohnCougar - Mellenccmp L9RivojPolygram? '1 1 in 3'1 Iop-Selling Albums Billboard s: 1 ve ?o'p-seliing albums for the . , week of March 22: . . 1. Whitney Houston. Whlmey HLouston' ' 9Aristo1 2 Premise, Sade 9Pomolepm , 3. Heart, Hearf 9Capifoh 4 Scarecrow, John Cougar Meliencorhp 9Rivcholygromh 5 Welcome to the Red WoddL, M i . Miser cacAy For Left: Chicago sporTs fans finally gained a champion of Their own. Bears quarterback Jim McMahon and kicker Kevin Butler celebrate Chicago's 46-10 rouT of the New England PcmioTs in Super Bowl XX. Left: Kansas Chy Royals Took The World Series from The cross-s'ra're Cardinals in seven games. Pitcher Bre'r Soberhogen embraces third baseman George Brett. Below: Cincinno'ri Reds player-manoger Pete Rose celebrafes a victory of his ownehif no. 4,192. Rose broke Ty CobbWS career hit record in September. Fiction HardbaeRPBest-Sellersi - hPub1ishers WeekIyLLof Jan. 31 listedfhe V hardback 13951356593: 1 The qumofh Huhiers. .19th M Auei 9Crowro 2 Lake Wobegon Days Garrison Keillor Mania 3 Texas James A Muchener 9Rchdom ' Hausa 4. Secrefs. Danielle Sfee! 9Delacor1e3 5. Cbhfcc'r, Carl Sagan 9Simon 81 Schusfeo P ' PATRONS John Burton Mr. and Mrs. Ted Vieki JudiTh E. and Robert H. Gillow J.P. Side , MD. 0. Ralph Edwards, Jr. and Nancy D. Edwards Andrew and Virginia Gregowicz Dr. and Mrs. Patrick T. Breen Walter and Marianne Beckmon Mr. and Mrs. William P. Holder, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Warren RobenL 0nd Sherri Whefzel Mr. and Mrs. H.A. Harrell Mr. and Mrs. ViCTor Woods Dr. and Mrs. Whifocre Barbara S. Cummings Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Evans Norvol Stephens, Jr. and Diane Stephens Dr. and Mrs. Carl Holl Mr. and Mrs. McNichols Sandra and Robert Densford Mr. and Mrs. ArThur PiedmonTe Sally and Wesley Hedges Mr. and Mrs. John Simpson William and Patricia Ulmer Mr. and Mrs. Peter J. Bernocchi EIizobeTh A. Levine and Richard B. Levine Raymond S. Thiem 0nd VoniTa Thiem Patricio Houser Edwin 0nd JoneT Ogosowora James and Carol Rohrobough Dr. and Mrs. Calvin Schrog Dr. and Mrs. Gory CoroThers Dr. and Mrs. Horace O. Hickman, Jr. George P. Osborn Mrs. W. Douglas Hartley Dr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Durham 228 Congrorulorions, Doria Good Luck Seniors of 4986 Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Frouenheim With Love- Mother, Dad, Darius, Busio ond Dziodzio Ms. Laura W. Keeler Have The menrol equipment To do your job, Then take The job seriously, yourself not too seriously. Never get up wirh Iork. Get up only for o Iork. Congrorulorions, Love ya . . . You have come a long way baby. Mom and Dod Congratulations on all your hard ' work. Everyone of us is proud of you and your many occomplishmen'rs. Love, All your Densford reloTives 229 Lance AHiIio Denordin Ad. We are so very proud of you! We are proud of your efforts and accomplishments! CongroTquTions wiTh much love!! Mom, Liso, Jose, Alon, Shannon, Andy, SCOTT and Kim Three cheers for Roh-Rah! We're all so proud of you, Good Luck Cher! Mr. and Mrs. Joseph T. lves Jr. Good luck in KKF! All our love always, Mom, Dad and All 230 To The Class of '86: Congratulations and Thanks for The memories! The WheTzel Fomily y Hey Old fellow, A SoinT you oin'f But 0 star you ore!! We're all very proud of you, and love you very much! HCongrotulo'rions Mom, Dad and Family We Love You, Jill. Good Luck As A Sophomore. Mother Dod Jennifer Pe'rer Congro'rulo'rions Liso Barron Love, Dad 231 CongraTuloTions 0nd BesT Wishes To all Grodudring Seniors Mr. and Mrs. William E. LGIVIoThe You've Come 0 Long Way, Brooke Go for if Class of 4988 Congrofulofions! Mr. and Mrs. Duane B. MCEIderry Mom and Dad and Melissa 2.: J 39 Congrafula'rions, Sheri Sutton We are so proud of you! Dad and Mom Congrdrulofions Sherry Lynn Jones Love You GM. 233 Congratulations To Alice SockeTT on her grodudrion from Mother, Dad, Laura, Sally and Grandmother Kevin 0. Sweeney The ransom hos Dcmgrotuftiogsgom - . u nom ea 0 y been pGId- on Completing Your Firs'r Groduohon WIII occur Ygggr gigogga :33 Hope we will see you Very Proud of Your SOON Accomplishments During ' Your Freshman Year. Your porenfs 234 CONGRATULATIONS TO OUR DAUGHTER, LINDA LAEL LISCHKA class of '86 A DAUGHTER is The sweetest gift c: lifetime can provide, a blessing and a consTonf source of happiness and pride A DAUGHTER means fond memories of 0 IiTTIe girl of play and all the carefree joy she brought To every passing day A DAUGHTER means sweet dreams fulfilled and everything That's dear; 0 Treasure To warmly cherish and comforT Through each year A DAUGHTER is always Thought abou'r and often spoken of; she's always very close in heart because a DAUGHTER means LOVE! Our LOVE always, Mom ti Dad You've come a long way, Congratulations! What's A Nice Girl Like You Doing WiTh A Bachelor's Degree? Congra'rulafions, Craig, and Good Luck! Mom, Dad, Caryn, Brian and Deanna 235 Congratulations T0 Lori Rosekrons DePauw's marching Tigers drum major. May it never rain on your parade We are proud of you. Mom, Dad, Wendy and Heidi Boosie 9964 Always a Good Show Congratulations Mike Love, Mom and Dad Besf Wishes To all students from The Mirage 236 The Final Word Back in February There was a sign on The Mirage office door ThaT read Please do noT complain abouT The year- book. We are under severe reconsTrucTion. If you would like To conTribuTe Then we can Talk. UnTil Then, Thank you for your cooperaTion. Very few people realized ThaT There was no yearbook sTaff Then-There was no ediTor and There would probably be no yearbook. BuT wiThin The monTh a wonderful group of people had double Time, Dr. Field was calmly dealing wiTh com- plainTs, and many people were working on personal essays for The book. LaTer, John STefany came on as co-ediTor jusT in Time To save my saniTy and The bookD. The book was compleT- ed by The lasT day of Sen- ior Week. So whaT you are holding in your hand is a symbol of Triumph To all of us who Tknew back in February ThaT iT couldn'T be done. A hugh THANK YOU goes To Those who can- TribuTedeour dedicaTed sTaff, all The creaTive wriT- ers, The phoTographers, and friends who helped ouT when Things were really bleak. Also, To Wilson PhoTogra- phy, The DePauw BooksTore, Sudlow PhoTography, Scalini PhoTography, DePauw Alumni RelaTions, DePauw Publica- Tions Board, The DePauw sTaff and Herff Jones. MosT of all, Thank you To Marcia Overfield and John STe- fany-iT never would have been compleTed wiThouT you Two!! As a lasT word . . . This book is The producT of a loT of creaTive minds and exTremely shorT deadlines. IT may be a disappoinTmenT To some of you. BuT iT says a loT of whaT we hoped iT would say. lT is our besT efforT aT a book boTh original and compleTe. My warmesT ThoughTs go ouT To Those who Took The Time To help. Go Those who didn'T helpeWHAT DID YOU EXPECT???D eSherry RicherT answered my plea for a sTaff, Marcia Overfield was doing l Editors STefany, Elam and RicherT The day before graduaiion. Mirage has somehow always seemed an appropriaTe name for DePauw's yearbook. For a good parT of This year, The book exisTed wiThouT a sTaff, wiThouT money, wiThouT phoTos or copy. lTs office was almosT always locked and no maTTer how long you leT The phone ring, There was never anyone There To answer iT. Could iT be The yearbook was a hoaxea confidence scam which grabbed The money of sTudenTs and parenTs, leaving Them wiTh claim checks for a yearbook which would never be produced? DespiTe The evidence ThaT The Mirage was eva- poraTing before our eyes, iT does in facT exisT. You are indeed holding Tangi- ble proof ThaT This year- book is more Than a mi- rage. AdmiTTedly, The book is flawed in many re- specTs. Producing This vol- ume was a series of com- promises necessiTaTed by The belief ThaT a flawed realiTy is beTTer Than a perfecT, buT illusory, mi- rage. Those who conTribuTed are many. You deserve more recogniTion Than you received. Our leaderefrom The beginning-was The ever-spiriTed Sherry Ri- cherT, who againsT her beTTer judgemenT agreed To be cap- Tain of The Good Ship Mirage 0T 0 Time when H was resTing aT The boTTom of Bowman Pond. Sherry had The courage To believe a yearbook could be creaTed from scraTch in a liTTle over Three monThs and had The abiliTy To recruiT volunTeers whenever Things began To look hopeless. Special Thanks also To David Field and Gary Lemon for Their advice and hard work, To former Mirage ediTor Becky Flem- ing whose 4985 book I now appreciaTe much more, The DePauw CompuTer CenTerl MargareT HamilTon and The School of Nursing, PaT Ewing and The Academic Affairs sTaff, The News Bureau and Their phoTo files, my colleagues aT The DePauw, and of course, our rooky publishing rep, Marcia Overfield. Our mosT sincere graTiTude goes ouT To our subscribers and paTrons-sTudenTs and parenTs, wiThouT whom This book would Truly be a mirage. Thank you for your supporT. -John STefany m My. 237
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