DePauw University - Mirage Yearbook (Greencastle, IN)

 - Class of 1989

Page 1 of 236

 

DePauw University - Mirage Yearbook (Greencastle, IN) online collection, 1989 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 236 of the 1989 volume:

S E... .M. T. rt H T THEY ARE A CHANGIN' We'd madmanndanic af- fmmhare dam Wm - Irma: m'ldam- damn; m-mlmu,Whn'-m D-worcl noun - mama m mmm-Wup-m dd dd dawn - W's Fug m-mmmam s'ciyna'va mom ' W -mmsm-mmm 1 mwmw-mm mmmmm-mm domwmon-WTW keg7-puvadpmudla.plnw Orally! rmnaoi Manda prohaumum-mhmm WAmfmammm- way? -- Burghr Elna hit! W9 m:+ mmmm- kaap mmmmmr-quHa mmmmm.m- much an wmm - lava vmtanerm-wmem mmm;mu WhaiDryIMAbM-m modutmmvgmm m-Wihmuw nudism ' -magwl' .. ::I.u... . 10 The Tigers, in a 42-20 upseT of Taylor UniversiTy, snapped a tow game losing sTreck To copTure The 1988 Old Gold vicTory. Aided by a week of hard proc- Tices and The reTurn of seniors Mike KoT- Ioski, Tackle, and Mark McAuliffe. fuil- back, DePouw scored early in The game and never looked back. The Tigers' firsT scoring drive covered 80 yards in eighT plays, ending wiTh a 36-yard Touchdown pass up The middle from junior quorTerbcck Jeff Voris To senior wide receiver Greg Werner. For The game, Voris was 18 To 26 in passing. ToToling 321 yards and Tying 0 school record of five Touchdown posses seT in 1985 by Tony de Nicola. Werner coughT nine passes for 157 yards and Three Touchdowns. also Ty- ing a school record, This one for Touch- downs in a single game held by Tom Evans and Tim Weaver. By The end of The firsT half, DePouw had churned ouT 398 yards of offense and had buiIT 0 35-7 lead over Taylor. For The game, The Tiger offense gained 536 yards, 37? yards in The air and 159 yards on The ground. ConTribuTing To The offensive oTTock were wide receivers Todd Cleveland, junior. who pulled in six passes for 81 yards and one Touchdown and Dave Looksonen, senior. who coughT Two passes for 56 yards. Senior TighT end PeTe Boroni and junior wide receiver Joe Pindell each added 48 yards in re- cepTions. Freshman Toilbock Terry Dickey led The Tiger ground oTTock wiTh 89 yards in 12 carries. McAuliffe had 30 yards of combined running and receiving end one Touchdown. Freshman running back Jayson STodler pounded ouT 21 yards and had one score. Taylor come inTo The game averag- ing jusT under 30 poinTs per game, buT wos heid shorT of Tth by 0 Tough Tiger defense. AIThough allowing 350 yards, DePouw conToined The Taylor offense shorT of Tiger TerriTory in 11 of 15 drives. Freshman defensive back Ken Hol- land led The Tiger defense wiTh 18 Tock- les. Seniors Dick Jones and Tom O'Hara conTribuTed 11 and nine Tackles re- specTively. H monon 0K Staging an impressive comeback beginning loTe in The Third quorTer, The DePouw Tigers copTured a 24-44 upseT vicTorv over Wobosh College in The 95m onnuol Monon Bell fooTboll game. AfTer Trolling 7-3 0T holleme and '14-3 in The Third quorTer. The Tigers surged. Wide receiver Todd Cleveland, junior. coughT o 44-yard Touchdown pass from junior quorTerbock Jeff Voris. Sen- ior kicker Tom Kelly conneCTed on The exTro poinT To narrow The Wobosh leod To 14-10 wiTh 2:50 To play in The Third quorTer. WiTh Ten minuTes To play in The game, senior inside linebacker Dick Jones in- TercepTed o Wobosh pass and re- Turned The boll 20 yards To The Wobosh M yordline. Three minuTes loTer fresh- man runningbock Terry Dickey scored on o one-yord run and Kelly kicked The exTro poinT, giving DePouw 'rTs firsT lead of The gome. Senior fullback Mork MCAuIine's one- yord Touchdown run wiTh Two minuTes To play in The game copped The Tiger vicTory. Kelly's exTro polnT mode The fi- nol score 24-14, DePauw. McAullffe, who earned The Monon Bell MVP Award, rushed for 99 yards and one Touchdown. He also had Three recepTions for 35 yards. The Tigers Threw for 264 yards and ran for 245 yards. DePouw gained 26 flrsT downs To Wobosh's M. The Tiger defense held Wabash To 173 passing yards and 83 rushing yards. Vorls connecTed on 49 of 37 passes for 237 yards and one Touchdown. Cleveland led all receiveis wiTh seven cuTches. T28 yards and one Touch- down. Dickey led all rushers wiTh 120 yards on 23 carries and one Touch- down. Defensive leaders for The Tigers were freshmen defensive back Ken Holland and junior defensive end Doug Lowery. Hollond Topped DePouw wiTh '10 Tock- les and had one lnTercepTion. Lowery brought down seven Wabash boll corri- ers and recorded one quorTer bock sock. The DePouw win moved The series re- cord To 44-43-8 in favor of Wabash. O ePan ,, 24 wabasbgm IIIMHIII 'IIIIIIII IIIIIIII I. 'e, . Inners Nu - Theta i Delt - Tri Del? 'SpiriT w lng Ph Alpha Ph S 'l. 2. 3. Delhi Chi - Pi Phi 4. FINAL STANDINGS Women's Race Men's Race Kappa Kappa Gamma . DelTo Chi 4 Alpha Omicron Pi . Phi Gamma Delta Alpha Phi . BeTo Them Pi Kappa Alpha TheTo . DelTo Upsilon Delta Gamma . Phi Kappa Psi Pi Beta Phi Alpha Chi Omega . Alpha Gamma Dech . Phi Delta Theta . Lambda Chi Alpha . Sigma Nu omyowpwpe OWVOCNbOONA . Delfo Delta Delta . Sigma Alpha Epsilon '10. Lucy Rowland Hall 40 Delta Tau Delta 44. Bishop Roberts Hall 44. Delta Kappa Epsilon LongdenAocusVHogaTe Hall FosTesT Lap Holly Hammak 34.42 Greg Shcpleigh - 29.82 '19 FALL FEST '89 Fall Fest, sponsored by Junior Board, was held The weekend of OCTober 28-29. Despi're cold weather, octiviTies such as a pumpkin carving contest, bob- bing for apples and a hoysTack hun'r were held in Bowman Park. Friday night marked The open- ing of The Sundowner Concert Se- ries sponsored by Union Board with the music of the Rocket Sci- enTisTs. This year's Fall Fest also included 0 Triathlon of swimming, biking and running. BOWMAN BLACKSTOCK '89 While LiTTle 500 riders boTTIed iT ouT on The Track during Time Trials, The resT of The campus enjoyed music and carnival rides 0T Block- ,sTock '89. The music. porT of The Sun- downer ConcerT Series sponsored by Union Board, was provided by four bands, including: The Dyno- mics, a blues band from Blooming- Ton; Fire Sermon, from Minneapo- lis; River mm and The Spook FlooT- ers, from CinncinnoTi: and The SpirTles, who gained populariTy GT DePauw ofTer Their performance here IosT year. DePauw's own Dove MorTin played ccousTic seT beTween bonds. Four carnival rides and games made up The midway enTerToin- menT for sTudenTs and Townspeo- ple. 2'1 22 GeHing Away Frbm H All Spring Break '89 giNT E 5:??qu INC 1805 ? FLORIDA! hWosn'T it great? I mean jusT fabulous! Oh yeah! Really cool! Awesome Tons : - And The girls. The girls were ?fi 50 y :L Wt was okay. HWhere did you guys go for spring break? Doyfono, Ten of us! South Padre! hCruising the Caribbean CALIFORNIA! Kansas City. KANSAS CITY? uJob interview. God, I wish we weren't back here in GreencasTle. No kidding. My Ton's fading just Thinking obouf if. . At Ieosf we don t have To eat peanut buffer and jelly ten days in a row again. HAnd no more beer in my cere- al for breakfast. And no more sand in my shoes. It'll take me six monfhs To pay off The speeding Tickets. hMy parents are going To kill me when They get The VISA bill. I didn'T even geT The job. LeT's all do if again next year. In In 23 Senior Week The Lasf Hurrah Allyson Wylie poses for 0 picture as she participofes in The Trip To Chicago during Senior Week, 24 25 Walker Cup winner, Doug Driemeier Presidenf Bottoms welcomes the graduates, family, and friends. 26 ' Mwyrm M ,MMW w x- --s'- .mwavi'4wm uuwwv W M www.wm . Pulifzer Prize winner, James Stewart speaks To The groduofes of 4989. 27 28 Melissa Gillis and Allyson Wylie pose for another picture offer as DePouw graduates. Groduofes sit in cnticipofion of hearing Their name being called. The DePauw band days during The graduafion ceremony. Koren Ringel is all smiles after receiving her diploma. 29 34 E: Panhellenic Council E: Union Board 32 Lacrosse Club A lacrossej'eom of DePauW? Oh yes; 7 but not just another varsity Team chor- a acterized by strict training schedules, ,, 0nd disagreements with the coach This iocrose team is full of inner-dnyen I pioyers who wiIi do almost onihing They; , T please both on and off of The field The I fifteen men and one woman 3Q d season ThIs endng up With CI th 996 j 'win and three loss recerd The riecms-r 7 most rewor6ing win came cgainsf indi-V one University where the fme-iUned TI- ger lacrosse pidyers emerged with ah 8-7, victory Other opponents Included 6 indancpoh mens Club, Bowling Green NIH Q : Aerobic Insfrucfors 35 R.O.T.CL W 37 38 Under ThedirecTion of PoTrick Reyn-' oids, The DePouw UniversiTy Morehingw Bond marched down Pennsyivonic Avenue during The PresidenTioi inaugu- rol Parade. The band also performed on sTage 0T TTLooking Forward: An inqus gurai ForUm where Vice-PresidenT Dan Quayle spoke To several Thousand high school sTudenTs. AIThough The bond did noT receive iTs inviToTion To poriicipaTe in The inaugural evenTs unTii The week before ChrisTmas break, band members rearranged Their WinTere T erm schedules To play in This once-in-a- TifeTime expenenCe The band compensaTed for vacancies by reCruiTing groduoTes oid bond mem- bets and even Those Who had noT pio'yed since high schooi WiTh oil of The changes, The band had infense procTices To prepare for The evenTs. The 69 member band even -, procTiced on The bus Trip To puT finishing I Touches on Their performance I x The spur- -of- The- momenT exciTe- menT of The band led To Ci remarkable T performance and on experience To re- member. Chamber Orchesira $ - -..-- Symphony Orchesfra 39' IVCF Exec IVCF Duzer Du 4'1 E LiHle Theafre . . ,, 433114133 3: 5.. nu. 3x 42 This yearts Littie Theatre production schedule was a busy One. The 4988-89 season opened October 6-9, with Prof. ery Sutton's production of Anthony Shaffer's Whodunnif?, a hilarious, satiri- cal look at the mysteties and great de- ' tective stories of the 4930's and 403. November 3-6 saw the staging of a one of the Little Theatre's first'student- directed plays, Ted Tany's Coming At- tractions. Directed by Mike Dalton, a junior hwith assistance from Dr. Sam AbeD, Tatty's musical comedy is a les- son in how to become an instant ce- - Iebrity: commit a crime. Winter Term is a time of cooperation between the Little Theatre and the School of Music. The result this year was The Mystery of Edwin Drood, an adap- tation of Charles Dicken's story. There was even participation from the audi- ence .. at the end of the second act, ballots are distributed. and the audie ence gest to vote on the outcome of the story. Second semester saw a turn in the overatl mood the following produc- tions. Tennessee Witliam's The Night of the Iguana opened from March 9-42. Directed by Dr. James Elrod. William's most mature work tells the story of three sad and lonely people thrown to- d gather in the setting of a cheap Mexi- can hotel. The confticts and needs that arise force the characters to realize that life must be endured and that their spirit win surive, somehow. To close the year, Dr. Abel produced Anton Chekov's The Three Sisters on April 27-30. Set at the time when the RuSsian aristocracy was beginning to fall from grace, it tells the story of three a , provincial sisters who long with all their hearts to go to MosCow. The play itself deserves to be giVen the term close sic. a a , , a - Brian Gilkison 43 The Mirage Senafe 45 WhaT a wild and wonderful Trip. From dancing aT The discos To grocery shopping wiTh my hosT mom, This WinTer Term I IeT myself be absorbed inTo WesT German cuITure. I lived wiTh a hosT fam- ily ThaT has a daughTer abouT my age. My goal was To learn abouT The Ger- man perspecTive on various aspecTs of The UniTed STaTes. In The process, I meT IoTs of people wiTh inTeresTihg ideas. I Talked wiTh adulTs aT Tea in resTau- ranTs, and aT oTher social geT-To- geThers, Germans my age were easi- esT To Talk To in The diskoThek cafe. AfTer my quesTions ranging from Presi- denT Bush To Superbowl XX, I was usual- Iy deluged wiTh Their quesTions abouT 48 The US. One evening in parTicular, Uwe and PeTer, who were considering com- ing To America wiTh The German army, really puT my knowledge of our counTry To The TesT wiTh Their queries abouT Tex- as. IT wasn'T all work and no play, Though. I enjoyed shopping, visiTing The markeT place, and various excursions wiThin The NorThern parT of WesT Ger- many. I even visiTed a German Univer- siTy. My hosT parenTs quickly caughT on To my passion for casTIes, so . . .see casTIes we did! Aside from Their obvious hisTorical imporTance, The casTIes ofTen provided a uromanTic view of Tiny German Towns nesTIed in rolling hills. AHHH! As for The German perspeoTive of The UniTed STaTes, I found ThaT Ger- mans, young and old, hold The same basic ideas. AmongsT a myriad of social and value differences, They see Ameri- cans as basically similar To Themselves: good people who wanT peace in our world. Germans seemed inTenser cur- ious abouT America and see our coun- Try as an ally, a sorT of we're in This world TogeTher aTTiTude. Oh, and They're noT really inTeresTed in The Superbowl. Susan Slakes Susan SIakes Tsecond from The righD wiTh her German hosT family. Tcrini during her Winfer Term sToy in Bangalore, India. Barb Hill gets a picture wiTh those she worked wi'm over Winter Term. I 49 For months, Winter Term '89 was part of the distant future. But 4 hours after leaving the snow and ice of Indianapo- lis, we landed in sunny, warm Guadala- jara, Mexico. Then It hit me - this was REAL and I HAD to speak Spanish. Win- ter Term had officially begun. The anxiety increased as the twenty- five DPU students of Dr. Kent Mecum's Mexico '89 trip were warmly wel- comed by jubilant crowd of Mexican host mother and siblings. Upon our arri- val to what we soon learned to call home, we were greeted by our nine brothers and sisters. Ranging from adorable Rafa. age '10, to the serious businessman, Chavo. age 30, we had a full house. But, they were so much fun e I could easily say they were the best part of the trip. They were our buddies for going to the discos, the parties, the soccer games, or to just sit and chat. My roommate, Susan Umbaugh and I will never forget the night of dancing with the Mexican band - a definite change from DPU party music! 50 We also met more Mexicans through our daily classes. Everyday, we had a new Mexican teacher to take us around the city. Through our fiestas and games of volleyball and soccer, it became apparent that these young Mexicans would not only be our teach- er, but our friends. Unfortunately, the end came too quickly. From touring the Corona Fac- tory to dancing Ia Bamba, Mexico '89 left some of the best memories for all of us. I know that I am counting the days hand my memoryy until I can return to Guadalajara. As it was so sincerely put by our brother, Alberto, This is your home in Mexico. Alison Young Susan Umbaugh and her Mexican brother. HAYDN g... 1 OVERTURE - mm BALLET SUETE-DAVID OTT WinTer Term '89 was exciTing for The 35 members of The DePauw Chamber Symphony led by OrceniTh SmiTh, who Took a Two week Tour of GreaT BriTain. The monTh began wiTh a week of in- Tense rehearsals IasTing up To eighT hours a day. Then on January 9, The symphony lefT for London. The Tour included concerTs in York, Huddehsfield, Cardiff TWalesT, BaTh, STranord-upon-Avon, ColchesTer, and London. Two benefiT concerTs were given, one a joinT concerT wiTh The BaTh CameraTa Choir, wiTh proceeds going To The BriTish Epilepsy FoundaTion. The second benefiT conerT, for The Alz- heimer's AssociaTion, was performed in STranord. The DePauw Symphony also parTicipaTed in concerT workshops wiTh college orchestras in ColchesTer and Cardiff. SighT-seeing during The Tour included a Two highT homesTay wiTh Welsh fam- ilies in Cardiff and Trips To York MlnsTer, The Roman baThs and Shakespeare's birThpIace. In London, The chamber symphony Took in WesTminsTer Abbey, The Tower of London, Madame Tus- saud's, ST. Paul's and of course, Har- rod's. IT was an experience orchesTra members will long remember. Eileen Williams Lewis STahl pauses while sighTseeing befpre fhaT concerl in BaTh. 54 Our medical and consTruoTion Teams worked in San Andreas, a village near lquiTos, Peru. The consTrucTion Team builT five houses for The Bora Indians of San Andreas, and The medical Team TreaTed The Boras and people from neighboring villages in The healTh clinic. There is no Tl' in Team was a phrase carried ThroughouT The Trip, wheTher H was everyone piTching in To carry boards from The river To The consTruc- Tion siTes, members of The medical Team working wiTh The consTrucTion Team and vice versa, or eveyrone lin- ing up from The boaT To The lodge To unload The backpacks and carry-ons. Each evening, HThe Gracie Award was given To The person who did some- Thing amusing during The day. One of The funniesT awards wenT To Jeff Raw- lins. He was sawing a board for one of The houses, buT halfway Through sTopped and wondered why H was so difficulT To saw Through jusT one board. Someone poinTed ouT To Jeff ThaT he was also sawing Through one of The large posTs holding up The house. Maria Joven George Hides and Maria Joven were members of The Peru mission's Team 52 M vgmm'nn Our Team's mission Trip To El Paso, DePouw sTudenTs work on The consTrucT Team Texas was one Of The mOST enlighT- on The EI Peso Trip. ening and rewarding experiences of my life. We were immersed in o for- eign culTure, building a church in The small Hispanic comuniTy of So Elinorio and Teaching heoITh classes across The border in Juarez, Mexico. Fred Lamar said we would HTolk obouT Things we had never Talked obouT before, and he was righT, We grew close as 0 group, opening up and discovering much obouT each oTher and ourselves. This came noTurolly, living, eoTing, and sleeping TogeTher in 0 30x40 fooT chapel. Working 0T The consTrucTion siTe, we goT on The job Training in carpen- Try: Finy-four hiTs To geT ThoT nail in, noT bod. AfTer geTTing accus- Tomed To The monono culTure, we ocTuoIIy accomplished a IoT. And during Those delays in geTTing moTe- rials, we played games wiTh The neighborhood kids, who loved games. IT was Tough leaving The people who had Touched our lives so much. They had so much love To give. l was glad To be able To give back a IiTTIe of myself. The rewards were so much greoTer Than Those received by giv- ing a hondouT. No Team member will forgeT Those Three weeks in January. '89. Tom CurTis 53 p Don McArThur, Sheila Powell, Don Fe'rfers'rone, and Kathy Kemper visiT The Houses of Parliament during Their Winter Term Trip To England. Some DePauw sfudenTs participate in a Winfer Term Program in Washington DC. 6, DePcuw students show their fheofricol ,6? falenf by performing in The Mystery of Edwin Drood. O l W ulnun Rick Jones, Stephanie Kruel, Jone Gibson, and John DiTchmon Take Time . ouT To Take a picture in front of Dover 7 7 w J Castle. y : KJMyvlhufi-pm lnfernafional Studies Mediterranean Studies Program Spring '88 Cairo, Egypt. Luke Billman and GLCA European Urban Term friends in Lake Bled Yugoslavia. Terry Hoerman and Tim Wallace sticking Together in Leningrad. 56 Top R Brod Pierce brings Two fo- vorife American posffimes To Am- sTeram. Mid Eastern European Program sfudenfs visit Innsbruck, Austria. BoHom - Befh Coa'rs, Katie English, Kathy Collins, Laura Boback. and Meg Brif'ron enjoying Solzburg. Aus- Trio. 57 58 European Urban Term Program moves To Oxford, England. Melinda Kirk cf DunnoTlar CosTle, S'ronehci ven, Scotland. 1987-88 GLCA Sco'rlond Program DePcuw Participants: Phil Danen, Kathy Hendricks, To- moko Okcdo, Rebecco Weakly. Laura Wil- son, Allyson Wylie. Laura Wilson goes for a winning pass in Tor- rodole. Scotland, Missy Powell and Marci Thompson in 1he Peaks District of England 59 InTernaTional CQnTer The DePauw UniversiTy lnTernoTionoI CenTer began iTs year by moving from Asbury Hall To our new locoTion GT 307 E. Seminary, across from The ChorTer House. DePouw sTudenTs have The opporTu- niTy To experience French and Spanish universiTies, explore The orTs in New York, compare oncienT and modern socieTies in AThens, sTudy WesTern Eu- rope in Freiburg, invesTigoTe EosTern Eu- rope and The SovieT Union in Vienna and Budapest be c: parT of The work- ings of our governmenT in WashingTon, undersTand LaTin American perspec- Tives in Buenos Aires or BogoTc, Take on field sTudies and inTernships in The ciTy of Philadelphia. and see The world from The Japanese viewpoinT. Some lived and Traveled overseas wiTh oTher American sTudenTs or lived more inde- pendently and enrolled direcTIy in a for- eign universiTy. Some were off-compus for one semesTer, oThers for The enTire year. The common factors in all of These experiences was 0 newfound undersTcnding of oTher IifesTers and o greoT deal of fun!! The DePouw InTernaTionol CenTer mainToins an exTensive file of currenT inforchion on boTh foreign and do- mesTic off- campus sTudy projecTs. In- formoTion on specific counTries and siTes is also available, including video- Topes of several programs DPU sTu- denTs frequenTIy Toke parT in. The sTaff of The DePouw InTernoTional CenTer consisTs of Dr. Amir RofoT, Jer- eTTc Reynolds, Ann Rambo, Florine DougherTy, Sheri Adams and Allyson Wylie. KoThIeen Fairfax, former Coor- dinoTor of Off-Campus STudy, lefT De- Pouw in December To pursue 0 career in The Foreign Service. 60 The International Center's new location of 307 E. Seminary. Students participate in an inferesf meeTing held 01 The International Center. 61 Chapels and , Brooks brings audience to its feet To read Gwendolyn Brooks's poetry and credentials, including a Pulitzer Prize, is impressive. To hear her read her own poetry and talk about her life is unforgettable. Brooks, who was the first black to win the Pulitzer Prize in 4950, gave a poetry reading at DePauw on February 47 dur- ing the convocation hour. But more than reading poetry, Brooks told about herself, her marriage, love and death. After being introduced by Martha Rainboit, chairman of the English de- partment, Brooks took command of the stage and the audience. She talked mst of love and meeting her hus- band, introducing the poem When You Have Forgotten Sunday: The Love Story. Brooks at times chanted. at times sang the autobiographical poem, which she called a tribute to the adolescence of my marriage. Brooks spoke subtly of the plight of blacks, letting her poems carry the heavier messages. SHe reminded the audience to remember all black he- roes, especially during that week of E S commemorating black history. First reading The Life of Lincoln West, and following with perhaps her most well- known poem, We Real Cool, Brooks left the audience with much to think about. For much of the convocation hour, however, Brooks talked of less serious subjects, many times directly address- ing a group of grade school children who sat in the front of Meharry Hail. She read a recently composed poem about watching soap operas and The Tiger Who Wore White Gloves, a story inspired by her daughter. The message of the children's story, said Brooks, was Hyou are what you are. By the end of the hour reading, Brooks had brought the audience to laughter, pondering and finally to its feet in a standing ovation paying tri- bute to her talent and enthusiasm. The convocation was followed by a lunch at the Afro- American house and a book-signing session at the DePauw bookstore. Gwendolyn Brooks entertains students with her poetry. 62 MacNeil warns Depauw by Melissa Giliis Liberal arts education encourages unconventional thinking. Its tolerance springs from freedom from absoiutes. It encourages knowledge of what hu- man pursuits are glorious and what hu- man pursuits are in vain. These were the opening words of Robert MacNeii, editor and co-anchor of The MacNeiV Lehrer NewsHour, at the April 7 cam- pus-wide convocation in his speech The Liberal Arts and World Leader- ship. MacNeii, introduced by President Robert Bottoms as a practitioner of a ttquieter, more thoughtful form of jour- nalism, began his 35-year career in journalism with Reuters News Agency in London. He moved to television in 4960 and public television in 1971. MacNeii credited liberal arts educa- tion with the possibility of providing a moral compass. He said he finds to- day's college students clear-thinking and idealistic, but seriously deficient in language and writing skills. He addressed the issue of education in an increasingly global world. Liberal arts education is needed to enhance appreciation of other cultures, said MacNeii. He urged students to carefully examine the changes in the United Sta- tes's relative world position and the in- creasingly interdependent system we live in. The world has caught up with us. We must now compete, said MacNeii. We are surrounded by myths and as- sumptions portraying our nation as the defender of democracy and economi- cally efficient. We must face these as false. We need to confront the world Iife-size. Liberal arts education, contends MacNeii, provides the language, cul- tural and historical studies necessary. but lacks the funding and faculty to compete with foreign countries. Convocations MacNeil suggesTed one olTernoTive To Today's educaTion sysTem is free uni- versal higher educoTion wiTh more sTress on The humoniTies. He also sTressed The imporTcnce of educaTion before college. Liberal orTs educoTion should noT begin The day a freshman enTers college, said MacNeil. MocNeiI urged ogoinsT The Trend of liberal arTs schools To schools of mod- eroTe orTs. IT is clear, humane Thinking ThaT counTs. This is The sTrengTh of o lib- eral orTs educoTion, said MocNeil. MocNeiI visiTs and speaks oT DePouw Gubar Talks on women's HTeraTure Susan Gubar, co-ediTor of The Nor- fon AnThology of Liferafure by Women, compared To The works in her book To kangaroos, saying women's liTeroTure is ofTen viewed as inferior To and less im- porTanT Than ThoT of mole ouThors. Gubor, who received her bachelor's degree from CiTy College of New York, her mosTer's from The UniversiTy of Michigan and her Ph.D. from The Univer- siTy of lowo, began Teaching IiTeroTure 0T Indiana UniversiTy in 4973. WiTh her co-ediTor Sandro GilberT, Gubar compiled The onThoIogy disre- garding TrodiTionoi rules. Their one vol- ume coliecTion includes whoT mighT oTherwise be divided inTo several vol- umes. IT covers all genre, including shorT ficTion. journals. novels and whoT Gubar coils books of pouch. The purpose of The book is To beTTer educoTe sTudenTs abouT The wriTing of women Through direcT exposure. Gu- bar said of The four major onThoIogies used To Teach high shcool Classes, The 8.055 pages conToin only 300 pages of works by women. Gubor said This scorciTy is parle clue To a TigheTTo- izaTion, The imprisoning of women wriTers in o sTereoTypicol world. This keeps women from gaining The fame of Their mole counTerpcirTs, according To Gubor. Women's occomplishmenTs are be- ing neglecTed, said Gubor. WiTh her book, she is hoping To confronT This problem head on. In covering various TrodiTions of fe- male-auThored liTeroTure, Gubar's goal is To bring noTice To The work of women. Women are The cusTodions of The world's besT kepT secreT. Unless Their works gain more recogniTion, Their beouTy will only look like a morsupiol, said Gubor. Susan Gubor Talks To DePouw sTudenTs. 63 Chapels and Driemeier '89 named Rhodes Scholar Doug Driemeier, o 1989 graduoTe from FlorissonT, Missouri, was named a Rhodes Scholar in December, one of only 32 such scholars from This counTry. Driemeier, who sTudied poIiTicol sci- ence and Spanish while oT DePauw, will resume his sTudy in The fall oT Oxford UniversiTy in England. There he will pur- sue a mosTer's of philosophy degree in poliTicol science over The nexT Two years. Rhodes Scholars ore selecTed in a rig- orous process of inTerviews. Driemeier's firsT inTerview ofTer being chosen 03 De- Pouw's condidoTe for The scholarship Took place on December 7 in ST. Louis. AfTer This, he was informed by The Mis- souri Rhodes commiTTee ThoT he would be one of Two condidoTes To represenT his sToTe in The Middle WesT Region. JusT 64 Two days loTer, on Decmeber '19 and 10, Driemeier meT wiTh The regional commiTTee in Minneapolis. Here Drie- meier was named one of four scholars from The GreoT Lakes Region. While oT DePauw, Driemeier was a DisTlnguished RecTor Scholar, a mem- ber of Phi BeTo Koppel, OuTsTonding Ju- nior in PoliTicol Science, c1 Chopioins' Council represenToTive, a member of The Ambossodors' Club minoriTy recruiT- menT commiTTee, on Honor Scholar and presidenT of DelTo Chi froTerniTy. He also sTudied abroad in Barcelona, Spain during his junior year and porTicipoTed in WinTer Term in Mission To Peru as o porT of The medical Team. Rhodes Scholar, Doug Dreimeier KloosTer calls for radicalism i by Melissa Gillis We wriTe To change our world, said Dr. David KloosTer, ossisTonT profes- sor of English and direcTor of The WriTing CenTer, in his LosT LecTure speech Probing The Edges of Our UndersTand- ing: WriTing, Radicals 0nd ReoliTy. KloosTer, who is leaving DePouw afTer five years To join The John Carrol UniversiTy sToff in Cleveland, said he found DePouw To be a good place for wriTing and The W-CenTer To be a good place for academic eavesdropping. KloosTer presenTed Three proposi- Tions To his audience: '0 WriTing creoTes change. 2 All wriTers con and should Think of Themselves as radicals. ED This view of wriTing implies ThoT we will nev- ' er live in a world more real Than This one. WhoT have I changed by my wriT- ing? asked KloosTer. His answer, Til've changed myself, how I feel and whoTl see. WriTing forces us To The edges of undersTcnding. KloosTer said in This sense, his vocoTion is one of empower- menT. My Teaching gives sTudenTs The power To change Themselves and The world, said KloosTer. CorrecTness isn'T The goal of a wriT- ing course. We have a radical goal, said KloosTer. ThoT goal is To encour- age exominaTion of self and The world and Then To reshape These. KloosTer suggesTed os radicals, wriT- ers should base Their living and wriTing on exominoTion of The rooTs of prob- lems and issues. lTRcdicols, CT The rooTs of Their lives, desire To change, To make a beTTer world. Things as They are are noT good enough, said KloosTer. HThis sDePouws is The real world, said KloosTer, calling on sTudenTs To make DePouw o more Tilively, vibronT communiTy. KloosTer acknowledged The breaking down of The old ways oT DePauw. Are we mourning for Old De- Pauw? he asked. KloosTer sold The siT- uoTion coils for colloboroTion beTween foculTy and sTudehTs To make This 0 communiTy of co-Ieorners. He called for leadership To come from wriTers Through campus publicoTions, COnvocaTions Dr. KloosTer presenTs his LosT LecTure To DePouw sTudenTs. Til dwell in possibiliTy. To dwell in possi- biliTy is noT jusT To dream obouT iT; iT is o radical way To live, concluded Kloos- Ter. The experience of American PicTures . Amerion PicTures, a slide show of oppressors and oppressed, was shown To an audience of DePouw sTudenTs on Sunday evening, March 5. In a presen- ToTion which promised To nhounT The e audience for days, according To The Chicago Reader, Jacob HoldT re- vealed a side of America unfamiliar To many members of The middle class. The show, which follows The Danish mon's journey Through The American undercloss, covers 400,000 miles of souThern slave comps, gheTTos and American weoITh in iTs four and a half hour duroTion. HoldT puT The show TogeTher using 3000 slides Token of friends, compon- ions, violence, peace and poverTy. American PicTures is accompanied by HoidT's own norroTion, music and re- corded TesTimonies of various people feoTured in The show. The purpose of The show is To allow The audience noT only To see oppres- sion, buT also To feel iT, noT only overT oppression, buT olso hidden, unrealized oppression. HoldT coils racism The rooT of The op- pression in America Today. He says iT is locked inTo our sysTems, inTo The minds of rocisTs, The undercloss and even Those who Think They are helping. HoldT blames The middle and upper classes for much of The problem, saying They may use The rheToriC of freedom and equaliTy, wiThouT even seeing ThoT in The mind of a block child, There is no equoliTy, only inferioriTy. HoldT offers no simple answers To The problems he presenTs. In a discussion on The Monday following The show, he Took some Time To deal wiTh The feel- ings caused by The show: anger, feor, confusion, frusTroTion ond powerless- ness. The Tone. however, never Took a more posiTive Turn as many had hoped. DePouw's showing of American Pic- Tures wos jusT one of The hundreds of presenToTions ThoT have been made across The UniTed SToTes and Europe. IT has shown oT such oTher schools as Hor- vord and Berkeley, and has been pre- senTed CT The SmiThsonion InsTiTuTe and The Cannes Film FesTivoI. A powerful emoTionol experience, is whoT The L. A. Times coiled The show. i H is one ThoT will noT be forgoTTen by many who saw iT, no moTTer how hard They Try To push iT ouT of Their minds. Jacob HoldT speaks wiTh sTudenTs obouT The pre- senToTion. 65 67 Final Results -- 4988 Sept 7 Buffer Invitational SrWS Sept. 10 Indiana Wesleyan 3rdf5 $6er 24 Governor's Cup, Indianapolis' 5 no scoring Oct. 1 Hanover lnviTationof 3rdN Oct. 7 Anderson lvifotionol Srcvs Oct 14 LiHle State, Bloomington 61M 40 Oct 27 HCW Championships 2ndw 'Liso 810th competed in the 8K GoVernor's Cup Race and finished second in The 45-19 age divi- sion with a time of 33:40. ' 68 g, Sept Sept Oct. Oct. Oct Oct; Final Results - 4988 '10 Indiana Wesleyan 24 Governor's Cup. Indianapolis' 1 Hanover L InviToTionol 7 deash' 14mm State, Bloomington 29 ICAC Championszs 5W6 no scoring arm 1 L57-20 441mm; 6W7 - 'Joson Hedfon, Jamie; Croaning and Pete Morse finished firstgsecond and :1hirdre- spectivety in fheGovernor's Cup 8K Race. , 69 70 ! .452?E Va a r-Er-EEr- In Contention 71 Final ResuITs 63-5-0 Principic College I WashingTon UniversiTy Miami of Ohio IclubI Eorlhom U. of Evansville Icluby Earlthm MorvaIIe U of Evansville CclubI Miami of Ohio IcIubI 72 'yijr'ErE-ir'r-Er- by John STevehsOn Cecich Lori Herrhon and Sue Beatle- I and TwenfyeTwo pioyers mode hisTcIry ; V '1 ' This as The Dewa women s soccer Team 00mpIeIed IIS TirST seCISOn. The Team persevered over The probIemsT expenenced by many pIIoT sporIs and l. I year WITh a SoIId 3-54 re: , thfrom an III I I HenT Now ThoT They he , LfeeT In The door, The Team V'ICICTIVGY recruITII ' j'season I 'benefITTIng To 3 Two seniors I ET me: pm 9 I, ,L ,fufmag IGlenT and recrumngv 9:, 1 K ' DQQIS This new Tiger Ty has no; :7; Wh ,, , T :To go buT up w 6?: . lggw li$ X?Ri: , .. 1 1 $fo xnufuuu nunwaaaaf ??: :$::: w?aig! unl IllI:l ! jriIl' m x '..' - 1 ?' q-T Qx ; -x!e,:Q Wi -4 K ' : N V x... Ktty -- -j-- -nx i: ' V VA '. 1 3;: 5 ft; '31:; . u 73 r MA. AV., . A U A A FM Tm QR 74 4988 Final Results 46-10 Adrian Alma Hope Kenyon Indiana Wesleyan Calvin Bellermine Franklin Hanover 4 Transylvania - -'-' NMV: hw'k i : Centre ' ? Indiana Wesleyan Franklin Goshen Bereo Earlham WiTTenberg Oberlin Earlham Qemi-STOTQ Goshen wow 75 76 by Wiisso ems. , V team has made huge sfrides in its two . 2, years Under coach: Pot DOWdeil. The Ti- ', , ,ggersI finished The 4988 season of 19-21 'j L .awinning one more mofrch then Ids? j jig: igyeer I A'fnever beaten before: dnd this :5 how 1. hitter, led The M? gouge our progress 'sQid: Dowdeil In, 5010: blocks respec, ii their first Hoosier Conference for Wome :2, finished second behind Goshen on ' Tgpioced fQUr players On The AH-Confer. 4; ' vence tedm The T Igers dso recorded The DePauw women s voiteyboll 7 ' TWe' re overideng schools we' ve and freshman I Other team aw; enToumomenT dppeQ oncedheteom : 3 ' i5 If four defensive digs per game: i Gs a consisient compefmve :7; ,2 , x Final Results 09-20 St. Joseph's Indianapolis Denison 'Kenyon 'Kolamazoo 'Oberlin .Hope Oakland CiTy 963T. Mary's 36M0rion 96lUPUI ciAGoshen Franklin QDCedarville criTcylor QDTri-S'rofe Sf. Mary-of-The Woods Marian Manchester Eorlhom Hanover -Brescic oThomos More Oakland Cify -Brescia Anderson IU Southeast $9Monches'rer 49Tri-Sfo're 468?. Francis agePurdue-Colume'r dkMorion Illinois Wesleyan 8kEotham 8cGoshen UPUI Purdue-Cqume'r Tri-Sfa1e GLCA Tournament 3$Mefro lnvifofional of IUPUI QQTcylor Tournament Oakland Ci'ry Tournamen'r 4bMonchesfer Tournament 8LHCW Tournament 77 rsfrsrr22:2:2rEEEEEEFEVVFFEFFFEVEEFEVF 78 Ups and Downs .7. ,7 E --'l-IPY. 'Y a F 7 3'33! .. . 79 80 1,9 3;? , i4 wi' . 6 7 umuuwuzng'nmun : 1mm, jammy mm, mm .43 35 gm 5;, 45 42 E33 x. lqggMaU g: .m nsuuu ' WAD K xvii , v 21 30 m. :ndnswr 14-.... 4M .-4 .. .- .4...- m. -J............ Final ResulTs UB-Q Moryville Washington Indianapolis Earlhom Millikin Taylor Illinois Wesleyan .7: 96M. Benedicfine ! , , 96Kolomazoo v Thomas More X W IUPUI 2.x . - Taylor CenTre 4'Frc1nklin Monchesfer Wobosh 'Honover IUPUI 'Anderson 'Franklin i'ManchesTer 'Honover Rose-Hulmon ' Anderson Huntington 'Wobosh 96DePauw InviToTionol 'ICAC Games 22.-rEEEEEErErEErEEEErrEEr-E 81 by Melissa Giiiis In Their firsT year 0pron in The Hoosier ConferenCe for Women The DePouw women s b03ke1boti Team finished sec- ond wiTh a 7-3 Conference record and I placed 'Ton players on The Ail+Confer- - I 9enCe Team. The Teqrn finished 40- '14 i Cveroll. , senior Marlene MCQueary was 36-; IlecTed To firsT Team Aile Conference, . and freShman Carlo weaver was seieT- -- ed To second Team. Coach Lori Herr- - a mom also received Co-Cocich of The 9 Year honors - I , Team MVP McQUeCry Ted The TIgIers in scoring wiTh a 45.4 poinT averqger- : and became The leading scorer in De- ' Pouw women s baskeIT-bdii hisTory; eciipsing Jenny Bquer'is ToTcIi' of 999 i poinTs. McQuecIry ended her career 3 MW 4:159 pCinTs. She 0150 led The Team ' -i 82 II who afTer being hUrT early iCST season, IIfI , Time This year. She had a TCIugh role ii Used her for experience and leadership I an and sophomore Seahc Mu: hyI y ' f , rounded ouT The returning players TCr. - . Murphy The TeCm' s ToughesT d -, shoo'ring 50 and 56 perCenI ifieid respecTIvely qubo h son IQWCs Cuf'shCIT by C in sTeCis Cnd CssisTs According ToI :! Coach Herrann, McQuI'eCry' s biggeST award osseT was her compeTiTiveness uThe g- : Carlson woso whole Team benefited from her exper-I, Ij ience and dedichTio'nX ' 'Soid Herrmdnn. The Team Qiso benefiTed from The experience Cf senior Tina JamrosIe found herseif geTTing iimiTed playing 'i'L' Ii' in presSure siTuCTiCns, said Herrrfnonni '9 i Juniors Cheryl Rambo Cad Suzie Corie: The Tigers. Hermann Coiled Ram and piayers. as wait as offensiveI-T eoTsI 4988-89 Final Results mo-my Washington University ; St. Mary's 96Hope College , 960berlin , ; IU Southeast ; Purdue Colume'r Brescio Goshen 'bHonover Indiana Wesleyan , 'Manches'rer Eorlhom , Taylor ; ' Anderson i lUPUl Marion , 'Monches'rer , 'Eorlhom i Brescio :' 'Anderson L FonTbonne College Blackburn College 'Hanover 'Goshen rrrrErErrrErEEEEErrEErrr LSeGreoT Lakes Colleges Assn. Tourna- , menf HCW games 83 Menisswimming On The Way Up 4988-89 Season Finals ST. Louis W Wabash L BuTIer W DePouw InviToTionol ATW 7 Vincennes InviTaTional 4TW8 EasTern iiiinois UniversiTy of Indianapolis Valparaiso Rose-Hulmon WoshingTon Bali STaTe Lake ForesT Vincennes Wabash Vincennes Liberal ArTs lnviTaTionci 2ndT8 I 84 by Melissa Gillis A young men' s swim Team on Their way back To The Top, finished The sea- son TOT 5-8 behind a sTrong core of sprinTers. The DePauw sprinT Team was only outscored once during The sea- T son The Tigers, under firsT year coach Adam Cohen, were led by sprinTers Jo- son GoTTiieb, freshmen, and Wes Hob- son, senior co-copToin. GoTTiieb, The , Tecm'shigh-poinT scorer. jusT missed The opporTuniTy To compeTe ncTionally - ,in The 50-meTerTreesTyTe. I V' . 'GoTTii'eb and Hobson, oi'ong wiTh-T sophomore co-CapTQin Chad House- holder dnd freshThen Garfield Dordn seT o schoOT record In The 200 meTer frees- Tyle relay Hobson also Tied The school- record in The 200-meTer freeSTyl'e Householder led on excepTionoiiy deep backsTroke Team and conTth-Jed To seT and break his own recer'd in The , 100- meTer backsTroke ThroughouT The season ,, Sophomore Jeff Rose heid down The number one buTTerTIy, spoT all season while kfreshmon Aaron Skelly led The- ,breasTsTroke core. Rose and Skelly , combined wiTh GQTTIIeb and House-i holder To seT a schoel record In The 200-; meTer medley ,2 , Winning The Tecm' 3 MOST Tmprovedi 9 award was freshman SCOTT Blackweii, Who come on sTrong in The disTdnce evenTs as The Season progressed. Coach Cohen whose Team Test To U'qua'sh TWQ years age by 120 poinTs4 and This year by only 44, is QpTimisTIc; obouT nexT year. TTOur Team goal neXT , year is To beQT Wabash end reTurn To 5 , The Top 20 in Division iii sWim Teams in, ' The coUnTry,',' said COhen. ' I ' 1.1.1 44:. ....4.. a . $3.5? : : .. x w ug 4988-89 Finoi Results Si. Louis Buiier DePauw invitational Vincennes invitationoi Eastern Illinois indioncxpoiis Valparaiso Woshingion Boil Siaie Lake Forest Si. Mary's Vincennes Vincennes Libero! Aris Invitational 86 w w 4mm awe r.- by Melissa Gillis The DePauw women 's swim team fin- ished The 4988 89 season strong wiih a 2 ' I-win oi, the Libero! Arts invitationdi and tseni team members Chrissy Pionjep sophomore, and Ellen Sherman, fresh-I man to the NCAA Division III Noiionai, Swimming and Diving Chompibnships. , 2 CooCh Mary BreisCher said in o o; 2 season With no real surprises; ihe Team: . j Lbenefiied from senior eXperiehCe 6nd j, leadership We had six seniors whiCh Is; ,.. the iorgesi ndmber 6f four-yeor swim:- mers we' ve had. They comprised the , jnudeus of the Team said Breischer. Team MVP Sherman set we School? :feco'rds In the 400 meter ohd 200 meter- 2-V2Breciysfsirokes qualifying for nohonals! :H-WITh o Tithe of 4 4O 72in ihe 400 2 ChIiSSy Pidnje, who compeied in the. 3f: year. quoiified In the 20 meier fly Wiih a Time of 2: 44: 43 She Wastdisot . awarded The tedm' 5 Best Menioi Aiii-,, :- 'iucie Aword Most Improved on fihe Team were freshman AIny Kossciek 6nd. . sophomore Lynn Marquez Breischer said the Tigers didtbehfer' cs . a Team This year than ever before ffin, 'ihe post we hoye had good individUoi seasons This year the Iiedm depth was ; .. I our strength,- said BreiScher Breischer disc credited her sopth :more sWimmers with bridging The gap ' :befwen ,the' freshmen and uppper-,, Iciossmen nThey Isophomoresi are oh i outgoing class oiways concerned with: ?ieom morale, she said . Though the team missed Iisfgooi of I quudIfyIng a relay for The nahonai meet: . . L:by sixfh tenths of o seCohd the Tigers f-pulied iegeihe'r 6hd worked hard for a . I-successfui season 2 2 2 ,. '2 . 39:9: j WE 87 88 Final Results 1988-1989 Wheaten Wisconsin-Milwoukee Hanover Manchester Eorlhom Xavier Dayton Eastern Illinois Millikin 31. Louis Anderson Indianapolis HCW TournamenT BuTIer Marylond-Bahimore Akron Evansville Kenyon Wooster Albion Bufler Indiana State EEEVEEEEEFF Al'- In Vb Conference Winners Success a1 1he N919 11;? 3M 99W? a , ; 72111 W A 1119 spring were juniOr Brad Pierce and o Chabroja numbers one and Mo sin- In' the 9193 respec1ively. Pierce amassed 0 won; , 17-10 record and Chabraja wen? 17-4 one doubles 1eam. they Were 10-8 pionships as sIngles players and as a a doublesi1eam A 1hi's in his mofches? As 1116 1eam' 3 numbers, a Bo1h players were selected 10 go 10 - 1119 NCAA Division II! No1ionol Cham- :- , qu-W five: - Final Resul'rs 1988-89 Augusfana UniversiTy of The Sou1h EasTern Illinois Akron Florida S1c1e AmhersT Emory S1. John's Washing'ron Rose-Hulman lllinois-Chicago Bradley lmnois S1016 BuHer GLCA q; Woosfer Wabash IIIinois-BenedicTine Indianapolis Denison EEEEPFEVFEFE EEEE?E cVII 89 WIN 4 .q u nu 4989 Season Finals Huntington Relays 7thWIB Hanover W Wabash Relays no scoring Little State my '15 Earlhom 43174 Big State no points Home Quad 'lstM ICAC 5thy8 90 by Melissa Giliis The men's tack team finished 3-0 at , dual meets with balanced scoring and a strong team effort. iiWe wanted to improve our Little State standing and perform as well as we could in the conference. I think we did both of these, said Coach Tim Hreha. The team finished seventh of 45 at Little State, bettering their 'lSrh place finish last year. They also finished fifth of eight in their debut in the ICAC. Sophomore Hons Hollister was the , tecm' 5 high point man running the 200 meters, 400 meters and throwing the jaVetin. Aii- Conference runner John Hollen- Steiner senior was named the team 5 MVP. He finished one point behind HoI-N Iister for the season. i xiOur strong point varied duringthe . yeork bat we had good sprinters and Cl strong hurdling corp throughout, said 5 Hrehq Sprinters sophomore Sean Moa ' lie, senior Brod ,Wolkex; sophomore Chris Schmidt and Hollensteiner placed , third' In the conference mee'r' In the 400 . meter relay ' The Tigers had four good hurdters In seniors Joy Hosler and Jon Stromberg junior Don McDoWell and freshmen Ju- , . nior Hetzei ' - Hreha described Jason Hecton sophomore. as his best distance man ,, Hecton placed fifth In the 40 000 ,me- rters in the conference meet Senior Don Nelson and sophomOIe ,y Richard Groy anchored the throwing - events for the Tigers, while senior Dave Looksonen in his first year on the De- Pouw trde tedm had a chance to ; L qualify for the ndtionoi track meet in ' , the joveiin. We' re iOSing Some Qood peopie ' ' but we have some geod ones coming 3 back if we keep up the numbers we will have a strong team next year. said CodCh Hreho. 9'1 1989 Final Results Huntington Relays Little State Earlham NAiA District 24 Championship St. Joseph 8t Franklin aims 7IhyII isVS ATWM 2ndt3 HCW Championship 2ndt6 92 Record Breakers - .- Ind 0- -d by Melissa Gillis it was Cl record-breoking season for the DePouw women's track team who finished second in the HCW under first- yeor coach Sharon Chiong. 'iWe surprised people who are now lookingot us to be in contention in big- ger meets, said Chiong of her team that set six school records during the 1989 season The Tiger distance contingency was led by freshman Lisa Stanly, who set schooi records in the 5000 and 40 000 meters. Stohiy was also the Littie State qchompion in the 310,000 meters. The i 3200 meter relay, run by freshmen Shei- , lo McDermott, Shelly Liebetreu and ' VStohly, and junior Courtney Scoife, Giso I set a school reccrd shattering the old one by M secOnds Juniors Laura Bobock and Scoife, ? both HCW Aii-Confefence runners. and I freshmqn Lisa Foerster ied the DePouw I .qaa-uv sprinters. Scaife broke the school re- cord in the 1500 meters. , Andrea Haipin, freshman. also named HCW Aii-Conference, was a 0 strong performer for the Tigers in the t 100 0nd 400 meter hurdles, breaking ,, the school record in the 400i Leaders in the field events for: De- Pouw were senior Kristen Raub; 'who hoids the schooi record in the high jump set in 4986, and freshman Jennifer Equ, who set the school record in the discus,;- - I beating the oid recerd by 47 feet. Roub was a LittleStqte and NAiA Dis- trict 2'! Champion and HCW Aii- Con. ference for her performance in the high jump We had a ciose team, young and I enthusiastic, which says 0 tot for the members as individuals, said Chiong, Who ' hopes with I , continued: imprdves ; tmentethct herteom will be eveh stron-' Lger next. year. , 93 94 Coming on sfrong by Melissd Giiiis I , Led by Chris Koch With a .326 buffing ; average and pitcher Todd Bess with CI ' . 4 44 earned run ayerage, The Tiger baseball Team finished the 4989 season oi 49-46 overoii TheI Tigers were 3-7' In I the indiana Coilegicie Athletic Caner- pence ' :. Bess, senior finished the season at- 2- 5 4 wifh 25 Innings werked s'iriking out 20 and giVing up six walks. , ,2 , Senior GIeg Werner ended the sea- 5 ,, sen cf 5- 2 wiih CI 2 40 earned run aver- ' Sage He pitched 48 Innings, giving up 49 ,; , I hits. wemer struck out 45, ieoding Tigerh ii'T'IpiJIChers He also had one shufeut '3 . i ' Derek Morgan finiShed of 3-4 With the i. , I '3 most' Innings prched foI DePauw, 52.3 I average in 404 at bats Wifh sevien db'u4 ; bies Koch aiso had seven doubies In 35 L, ,4 hits The most hits by a Tiger pioye'r Along with Koch, Ted ISeoII dnd Jim: I Hebert each batted aQove .300 hit-J Ting 347 and .345 respecTIveiy Hebeddj , led 'rhe Tigers In stolen bases, coiiechng ; . , vion impressive 32 :in 34 attempts ' .- 2: Troy Adams led the DePcuw defense; : fin put outs with 242 o ' eniy oh 939' 8 -awv I.-. M a:t -.;. .. I k. I' Final ResulTs 4989 09-469 96EFoirmonT State 956Foirmon+ SfoTe a:hMuskingum ainope aseFoirmonT State aseMuskingom ageJohn Carroll aseEdinboro Voldosfo State Wabash Wabash 'Wobosh 'Wabosh 'Fronklin 'Fronklin Washington WashingTon North Park Norfh Pork Rose-Hulmon Rose-Hulmon Kalamazoo Kalamazoo Calvin Calvin 'Anderson 'Anderson Illinois Wesleyan Illinois Wesleyan 'Honover Monover Waylor 'Toylor Aurora Aurora ErrrrrrirrggEEEETEEEEErgrrrEFEEPFEE $ESpring Trip To Jacksonville, Florida 'lndiona Collegiate AThIeTic Con- - ference games 95 4988-89 Final ResulTs DePoul lnviToTionol 2nd Lady Greyhound InviTaTionol Tied for 'IsT Illinois SToTe UniversiTy InviTaTionol 8Th Lady Northern lnviToTionoI 48Th Division III no resuITs NaTionoI available 0T Championships Time of priming 96 by Melissa Gillis The DePauw women's goif Team compeTed in The Division Ill NoTional Championships in FoyeTTeville, NorTh CorOIina, To crown whoT Coach Ted Kafula Termed an ouTsTondihg sea- son. T ThoughT They had poTenTiol in The fall, buT This is beTTer Than even I had hoped, said KaTula. , During Their fall season, The Tigers Turned in only Two scores in The 905. The Team's highesT finishes were oTThe De; Pouw lnviToTionaT where They piacedh second, and The Lady Greyhound Invi- TaTionol, where They Tied for firsT. Top finisherswfor The DePouw in Their own inviTaTional were senior Jone Gib- son and junior Susan ETTer. who each , shoT 85 To Tie for The Third spoT in ThoT meeT. Sophomore JiTT Damon. who wds, losT To an injury during The spring seo-h ' son, shoT on 84 oThThe Lady Greyhound lnviTcaTioncl To Tie for The sixTh place 'in' L That meeTy -r Sophomore Jane Crondall was The Top golfer for DePouw CT The Illinois : STaTe UniversiTy TnviToTionoLTurhingein o 165 for Two rounds ond'plocihg 27Th.: Freshman Joy Rowe shoT The low score , for The Tigers of The Lady NorThern Invi-a ToTionoT, wsmo Three round TOTO! hof 260.8 ,8 T . e TTThe girls had a season They can be Kofula. ' ' , - proud of, They earned Their goal, said L i I ,Ll-Bryon BeoTy and BIII PeIkIns and fresh; gi imam RQb McConnIck Team MVP and V-conference ToumamenT mechIsT K ,, a ' K TuIQ described The begInnIng of,- Conference Champions ,V Qy MeIIssa GIIIIs .. I , , T , Ihis' IS The besT men 's goIf Team I ve i , coached aT DePauw.'-' Said Threeiye'or , ,1 coach Ted Kdqu of hTs ICAC champI-v ihbwever. The sprih, ,9 i and To 9be The IInks overseas xTWe had I. I j CI greoT Time. and iT' Is omeThIng we InIII I ipon In TO'ugh SiTuaTIons, and I was pqused wITh ThoT said KOTuI01, .nythnggyh The season five differenT; i u always remember: solid KoTuch , Ihe men had a chance To edrn o berTh To The; DIVIsIon III NcTIonCII Chom- 2 - :1 pIonshIp IoumomenT In The spring Res, I B; SUITS were ITQT yeT In CT The Time QT This :2, 77- prInTIng KoTuIcI said TIIs Team piayed well on Tough Courses :Iwe rdis'ed Our level of ; eok Trip To ScoT-Ki' 4989 Final ReseulTs Turkey Run Golf TournamenT ISVB Ball SToTe Golf lnviToTIonaI 6Th I '14 Wabash Golf lnviToTIonaI IsVS 4989 Indianapolis lnTercoIIegIaTe Golf InvITCITIonGI STIV I2 ICAC Golf ' Championships 'IsU8 Big Four TournamenT Crooked STick GoIf Club IsTM WITTenberg Golf InviTcTIonol ATM 46 97 98 Working Hard for Success by Melissa GIIIIS I I , HisygreaIesI SIrengIh, was IhaI he had no weaknesses, 5qu Coach Page CoIIon ofihisimidfielder Brian Joworski. , ,Joworskig whol graduaIed in: DCCCmC bar, is DePauw'Isi firsIr soccer, poner Io ggain 'AII-AmerIcon-honors. He was se: - IeCIed Io Ihe NoIIonoI Soccer Coaches AssocIoIion Cf America sec- ' 0nd Iedm No one worked thrder Ihoh Brian , A He was on exIremer Intense p dyer CII- k ways loyal Io IeammoIes said CoI-, Ion. bII Oil and resides in PoIomac, Mary- Iond, played high sChOoi soccer CII '100 JCWorskI, WhC' Is now Working aI MC- Homewood- Flossmoor High School In suburban ChiCogo. A IechnicoIIy solid player coming InIo DePauw, Jaworskiik'ysy ': inIen'se stleias a freshman and soph- omore someIimes worked CgCInSI his; overall performanCC, said CoIIorI. His greoIesI ImprovemenI In four sec- :7 ,, sons as 0 Tiger was in his Ievel of quuri- I Iy. In his junior year he bCCame more I : of o Ieom player and a leader' In word A I and ocIion moIIvoIing oIhers as WeiI-- as himseIf, said CoIIon ' I As midfiClder, JGWOrskI CoUId noI be I Cl gooiASCorer Lor a shuI- ouI Ieoder.-a ' ' IIY'OU Con'I puI your fing'e'r'Ion: numbers? Ith show his IcIenI as a player ThoI , I , V H . makes his AII AmCrICdn sIaIus eyenm f ,, rgy mCICr, Chef amedfh oIIdeirIg st on HC served ASSIgIgnI CCCC Ann Leader and Motivator Coach Judy George caged senior halfback Ann Duncan the best field , I hockey pIay'erI have ever c999h'99i 9t ., Depguw a i Duncan who come Io DePauw from Cosddy High School' In OkIdhomd City has 9193199 field hockey sin99 sixth; grade She ended her career after yearning AII -SI9?9 HCW AIFConference 9nd RegionaI AII:- American honors at DUncdn w9s 91s9' named the t9am' s it MVP. superb;f;-,;3 , PAnn s gam9 sense h9r kn9wledgei' A' A of what: to do and Wh9re to pass were A '9 said :Georig9 9f, h9r'kseniork ' captain. iiShe wilI bevsoreiy missed. : Duncan, the 4988 squad's lone sen- 'io:.idescrib9d her roIe as hond-in- hand With the coach. I assist in many - Ways In teaching skills, she said. ' f A foUr year player, Duncan scored 19 yugocls in her career at the halfback po- Lsrtion M of those coming in her senior year My most challenging gooi as an individual Is to be offensiver-oriented and sCoring goals, said, Duncan. I On the team, my biggest chOIIenge was working in new players and never 9 getting down, scidibuncan, whose leadership abiiities 0n the fieid earned her own coach7s Odmiration as wellas , Duncan that of area Coaches. HAnn was our field general. She Is positive and supportive. This made her shine as 9 leader, said George. ' Duncan, an art major speCiaIizing in I A sculpture. is pionning a trip to Africa after graduation. but does not rule Out the possibiity of later invoivement with fieid hockey. IAThe best thing about field hockey is the people out there. Thepioyers have been higher in, qudi'rty and more fun over, the, four years, said Duncan. She 9- ,odded. Til Ioved it. A 404 Freshman Record-Breaker 402 103 Women's The women's standings were unavail- able of Time of printing. 104 aggggsgpe ; Dena cm, ? . Deke ., HQQXLQHQ LSiQmQNU, ;:- Faculty, .. Stondmgsoremrough ,, Phi Psi, -' : , 5 1 5- g LATO : i , Beta ' . SAE gby; ,L :: : Sigma Chi L LomdeChi: L ' p Fiji; , Phi;DeIf , Del'r; ;: , M0309 : 405 I , ,y.,. . - . . '2 w VE'thqu-h;$ r ; h , I x '- 406 V A l: JWELn 1:15.. mm:m. rm 1nI-nzunuunml iiglhwau.uaiwigalxunawmn nnununu . : 107 409 aa-r-wccc-ow corw-ow MO Deep . . . Well, you sure Took The wind out of my soils . . . l don'T know, maybe iT'sjusf me. . . I'd rather have a bottle in front than a frontal Iobofomy. vx-R; It looks like the party acfuolly ended wifh Jamie Chapman! Kevin and Matt, computer genius' That They are, 1ype up the minutes from The hall government meeting. Hall government, hard of work but able To fake a few minutes for phoTos. Mus? have been a really long and Tough day for everybody. Let's go have a cocktail . . . Can I borrow your mountain bike Aerobosomes . . . Anybody going to The bar . . . There's noThing for me To e01! 3024.96! 414 +mcc-v-o-w LDZm-v'cw 112 How old are we really? Too much MTV? Live . . . in Brihdnio Spring Street escort service I don t know, Den, whoT do you Think? We are NOT Bloomsbury . . . She's so mellow. . .lsoid if, so it must be True. . . Oh do shut up . . . Snort derisively . . . how rude . . . c: dweom wfin o dweom .. . mowwioge born in a barn . d . Scusdemod . . . don'T forge'r The cheese. . .Idon'Tloiki'ondldon't What To do i' . . . This music really brings out The animal in some people . . . What's your point? . Discover mnyThingh . . . l'r's hot easy, being cheesy th'r house meeting? . . .yusT yoking . . . The Ice-Bifch from Hell . . . l'll pu'r you in The ToosTer . . . Don'T worry, be happy . . . Jus'r Say NO. 9 M . Word!! . . . Fiffh . . , negcfed . . . Whyeeieeoee . . . Basketball . . . LeTs do if . . . 'of 0 boy . . . Why nofl?! M3 m-o-ccw m-o-CDT-4 1'14 w: 'I'I'r l H II Illl mvgrr HI III I'l I H'Vl'Wl'l'W I I 11 '1'. J H l I' I II!!IE Wvlnhlllllll e. IIIH a . I'llm Ii'l'l' WWW I'llll'll'll 1,1,5: , . r I ' J, ,.,'.I'.Y.'y'y'r't'l'j'lrlllll vevvvv IV H'H'Hll WW Hill HHHHHHIHH ,vlyl. . Y' I I hl'llll ! l I .1 'II': n vluhhu'x'guu'gufylll' E i I ' '1 II! I l I I I ' V II. lillllll s'l'ny x I H H1 'I'Ih HI I1H For The Third year in a row brothers Burnside, Skel- Ton, and SmiTh brought The IM deepseo fishing Trophy home. Rush Chairmen Jeff Morkley wishing he was Piff- mon's date Bri. The Befo Juniors 01 Pig R0051. The rioT of Pig Roost. Still proving God is c: BeTc v1 Tim Cronin shis The Ranch's spaceous backyard. Alon Casey, Eric Wheeler, John Miler, Doug DreL meier, John Stevenson Go Huge or Go Home. Group Shot John Wcloszek: Man or MyTh. Hit The Rhodes, Drymeier . . Clueless . . Dogs are people, Too . . . NORMAN . . . bOTh Anniversary . . . P-Toe . . . NFL, pol . . . Bikers get chicks . . . Big-2 . . . TRee fore Prez . . . Thanks, Jay . m-h-CDU -:-CD '115 m '-I--I'DU v ! I II 2 J! ll... QI I III! II ' . I 7!! W. OD'U'UIDK Having a greaT Time in Chicago Dan Quayle? Yeah, he used to live here I remember back when I was a pledge . . . Oh, I doubt IT . , .Spring For- mal, geT 0 date! Yor, dude! Hosfc Io visIc, Baby! Jommin' wiTh The Four. Yo! D-K-E raps! 3 O -.a:1:n'l 416 ; DePauw? Yea righT . . . Schick and Walks doing it up . . . Way Cokfoosfeneu . . . The faction 01 its finesT M7 Delia Upsil. O n 1'18 Lugie, Hoffy, The Blob, Willy, and The Lid enjoy Shipwreck. FIJI Little 500 - Abu Dhabi rides The camel. Volleyball Tournamen'r '89 magma: -: o m-t--4'DU macaw!- Dcxle Young, Dove MeTcoff, Todd Cummings, and Tom Bra- den surround froTemiTy god Bob Nelson. Jeff Hums enforcing SRC policy Jim O'Brien and Paul STroTTon dress for Fall Formal. ,STeve Gaskin poses wiTh cardboard cuT-ouTs of John Meyer, John O'Goro, Drew Nelson, Marc Davis, and Choper- ones. Jarvis Racine and entourage 0T Fall For- moL mr'c-D RODEO!!. . .Rick,food,NOW!. . .AT The Xi . . . You'll never use my car again . . . ED! . . . Biddy . . . Spider, spider on The wall . . . CreQTiviTy, Planning, ExecuTion , . . The SkeITer . . . Casinoll . . . WhoT are you Thinking . . T No man . . . P.H. . .. Spring Break . . . Tango Tally . . .TCB . . . WerTh Evan? . . , Jamboree in The Hills . . . RODEOH '120 '12'1 ST. LOUIS FOR A1. 193p; , The Sigs rally in The Arch Ci'ry Honorary Sweethcrf, Housemofher Isobel Whiff, and her loyal date Jon Sfutz. Sonfo gefs laid out cfr SweeJrhCJrJr Sig supporf of Pi Phi informal Hanging OUT of Clam Bake. '122 Enjoying Their Olympic size swimming pooVre- flecTing pond in Their backyard, The Sigma Nu's cool off ofTer a Tough day of sTudying. JusT prior To Their 8 o'clock classes, The Sigma Nu's pose for a picTure Taken by an elderly posser-by. The Sigma Nu's are all smiles during Their mosT recenT Hoosier Formal. The Sigma Nu's huddle around The only source of heaT in Their house IasT winTeL a five inch dual- coop capsTon moTor. Hey, goT a package for you . . , I cm 209, Ruler of The universe . . . Hey, iTs obouT Time To pay The keeper . . . The quesTion isn'T how I'm doin' . . , She's a Triad. 123 m : U -D Here's To the Sopho- mores - We Love 'Em! Cheers f0 some of our Seniors offer RushH Don'f look so bummed, Max and Smith! -. TO Si'- manage To-go! Deb J., Ellen and Lisa lookin' sweeT offer Preference Night. 424 .5 Chernobyl See ya, bye Don'T worry, Be happy The week from hell . . . The phone commiTTee from hell . . . psycho kiTTy . . . Danger brighT IighTs ahead. . .Blizzordrun! . . .Mr. Mail- man, busy mailman . . . Men of De- pouw e Toke II. . .Evelyn on line 4 . . . Scrabble Queens . . . Musical cars . . . Roadkill of The week . . . JusT Do IT! . . . WaIIy-Red, Buff, Green . . . Warrior Squirrels 425 :owc-oao mT'U-D -.'D 126 The Sophomore class smiles offer moving into house, Mary Brown and Kathy Komper share a smile during IniTic'rion. Sarah Hunt and Jen Oroson re- lieve Their sTress offer a long week of rush. AOPi's emulating their idols for a Halloween Party. Quiet Hours . . . Are you on A, O or Pi? . . . No more hoT woe Ter?! . . . Jen's 8T Rudy's waif- er hunt . . . The Big Richard . . . The Stud Quad . . . Social Probation? Join The club! . . . AO AnyThing . . . Page Abuse . . . We heart our waiters . . . Line 4 - does anyone speak Spanish? The Junior class is ready for ono'rher year. ll 55 55 55 55 55... Exec from Hell . . . Burning down The house . . . HoTel Hanna. Chicken, rice, broccoli. The psycho doll . . . Wanna buy 0 sun- dress? . . . You are Evil . . . Condlelighf 01 'IO, M, and 12 . . . THE lNSTITUTlON!! mr'c-b -.:'U 427 m-o-ccc m+-ccc m+-CDC 428 IVE. Buffer Up The Juniors of formal pledging 1988 Cool DeITos A mechanical dreon . . . goggles! . . . LeTs go To The Hub for a beer! . . . Peanut buffer pie?? . . . bug- zopper, diner, disco, oirporT, aquarium Tri Del? . . . Hotel Tri Del'r . . . yogurt runs . . . I Think l'l sleep in my Tux. Anchor Runs counTry runs . . . cop some rays on The deck . . . makes my day ... scary! ... You jusT wouldn'T know Showing That DG nouTicoI spiriT! Preliminaries for The air band conTesT? Thanks, Joan! You jusT aired ouT The DeIT Housel DeITa Gamma celebroTed iTs 40Th anniversary wiTh The beginning of a 5-year redecoroTing plan. The Dee Gees conTinued Their winning Tradi- Tion by being firsT in IM's. The firsT co- ed Anchor Splash was a greaT suc- cess and Anchor Classic had a re- cord number of parTicipanTs. WiTh o greoT looking house and Tons of en- Thusiosm, The Dee Gees were guar- onTeed ThaT 4988-4989 would be a very good year! m-h-CDU 03330955 129 m+-ccc m-i-CDN 130 Christmas Carols Karo Wood 8a Heather Olson pose during Tree decorating. Susan Russel and Courtney Hughes Take part in a Chapfer Refredr. Foof! . . . Bonus! Big Bonus . . . The DuTy! . . . Whafs for dinner? Oh! Let's go To Marvs! . . . Chung! .. . Buddoh! . . .Gibby! . . . Someone geT The phone! informal Pledging 4988 Courtney Hughes and Carol Lar- eou during Christmas Exchange. .Aw VI, malwwwca 134 Junior Koppos hcng-ouf OT Fran and Ce- cil's for 0 Halloween Hayride. Koppo's 4988 Lime 500 riders proudly dis- play The trophy. '3 r;- ,, , '1. Lending a helping hand for their work . project chpos have 0 good time. Sophomore Kappas mai-Toi one on of Their Fall informal. Koppos celebroTe a gram new Pledge Class OT Informal Pledging. Seniors give sup- port To Old Gold H o m e c o m i n 9 Queen condidafe Teresa Bruno. 132 Alpha Gums pose for a picture during Informal Pledging. Del'ro Chi's and Their dates celebrofe Ranch Dance. 433 Freshmen '136 Brian Adam Holly Adams Michelle Aiello Andrea Alexander SCOTT Alexander SheIeTTe Alexander Conrad Almase Jennifer Bobcock Julie Bobcock BreT Bcier Niki Bovelis HeoTher Beebee James Bes'r IV Paul Bickle Kellie Bloke Stacy Booker 3w; YA man! 0; me .. mix?- .w- . o Laura Bond Robert Boros Daniel Boyer Todd Brondson Norah Bray Elizabeth Bresfon Anjie Briflon Tracy Ann Broeker Laurie Brown Jonathon Burke Karen BuTIer Lisa Compagnoli Laura Cerreck STeve Chapman Luis Choves Pofrick Childress 137 reshmen 438 Angela Chipmon 3 en Chrisfionson Paula Clodifis Susan Cobb Erica Cobbien BreTT Cochran Chris Conley Gory Conner Susie Conner Joseph Confe Thomas Cooley Jamie Coolmon Nancy Copeland BreTf Cornn Robin Crishin Jeff Cragen Jennifer CusTer Temple Custer Niki Domerel Sobrini DeLibera Emily Dicks BeTsy Dienner Jenny Doyle Don Droheim STeven Duffield Jennifer DuPree MOTT Earnest STeven Eornhorf Teresa Elliot Jill English Mica Forringfon Renato FeinTheI 139 Freshmen 440 Michael Fer'ron Laura Filoig Kathy Fletcher Lisa Mane Foers'rer Shenia Foonon Jill Fredrickson Mark Frisbie John Fulkerson Tamra Fuller Betsy Furlong Suzanne Gale Bryon Gombrel Tyler Gilbreo'rh Kendra Gordon Jason GoTTlieb Libby Gray ERR ; Jennifer Green Caroline Griffith Kay Grisson Tim Groeling M Brod Gus'r Kristin Hook KoThy chigeir Angelo Hoidin ' a Christopher Hamilton Joel Hand Anne Hordwick Kathy HorTIeb Mexico Hayden BeTh Heid Chelle Henderson Elizabeth Herman 141 Jennifer Hildenbiddle Freshmen Katie Hoffman Karen Horvcfrh Betsy Houser Jenn Howard Libby Howard Caro Hubbard Colin Hudson Mark Hudson Heather Hull Sarah Hun'r Todd Hunter Idellc: Jackson Michelle Jonn Koren Jenkins Patrick Johonsen Keith Johnson Nicole'rTe Johnson Shannon Johnson M011 Keedy Floyd Keller Brod Keller Anjelo Kemp Jan Kennedy Daniel Kiely Greg King Kraig Kinney Tricia Kirkby Robert Klein Kiki Kless Kristen Koch Amy Koenemcn 443 reshmen? 444 Lisa Kroeger Mandy Lomkin Brody Lopwor'rh LaShouna LowTon Margie Lawyer Koren Ledgerwood Barbara LeSound Dan Lee Lizobefh Leffler Lisa Lenz Melissa Leone Alexander Leopold MGTT Lewis Julie Licklider MeridiTh LinharT HeaTher Lochner 1. 25:3:5733 51 $2 w n Angelo Ludwig Christopher McCorTy Julio McCord Drew MocGregor Ann McWillioms Amanda Madden Jennifer Malinich David Mann Cassandra Marfien Joe Mason Mic: Moughin CynThio Mercer Michelle Merkle Rondo Merrymon Charles Meyer Kimberly Micholak 145 Freshmen M6 Jennifer Mills Michael Mock Mindy Monfgomery Michael Musgrove Debbie Nelson Richard Ness Lero Newfon Kafhleen Nicely Thomas O'Goro Jennifer Olsen Chrissie Olsen HeoTher Olsen Jeff Olsen Chris Ol'rsen Alyce OverTon Jennifer Pace Michelle Pace Jeremy Pope Pamela Porfenheimer Brion Pease Katie Perrin Ilbo Perendurich Chad PeTerson Kelly Pfleeger Jeanne Phelps Mary Jane Phelps Clorendo Phillips Lauren Pierce Jennifer Poch Jill Pool Andrea Powelson Evo-Mcrie Powers 447 Betsy PresTon Kris ProcTor Mark Redlinski Caroline Roll Laura Rankin Sara Rofliff Gail Reddemann Heather Reece Kelly SchweiTzer Mauro Shea Benjomen Sheldon Baker Shepley Stephanie Shomon SCOTT Silvion Laura Ann Singel Aaron Skelly Freshmen .nth r A Elizabeth Reichenboch John Robbins Rachel Roberfs Michael Rodmon Jennifer Roessler Joy Rowe ScoH Russell Mark Rye Todd Soionecki Tracy Salinas Kristen Sonosfrom Sarah Sargent Sinc: Scerbo Amy Schnoiler Beth Schorr Joy Schuetz 149 Freshmen? KrisTin Sloan Collee Smith Jennifer Smith Joe SmiTh Amy Jo Snyder Bob STeTonakos Claire STockmeyer Claire Taylor Kate Teegarden Regina Tessenyi-Wenner Meg Tewel Amy Theobald Bobby Thomson Emily Thyen Edward Todd Thai Tron 150 Judy Troyer Cindy Tuymon John Tyler Sasha Ulequek Bradley Uloeminck Dawn VonDekeere Reyna Vaughf Lynn Wachfmon Wendy Walker Kate Waller Ann Wolfers Eric Wapole Eric Ward Phil Woyco Michelle Weber Kerrie Weimer 154 Freshmen - w Janet Whaley Bruce Wheofon Jeff Whi're Tess WhiTe Tracy Whifeheod Ingrid Wilder Garrett Williams Travis Wilson Laura WiHe Karo Wood John Wrigm Michelle York 452 5 $1 siophom OUg ms Kathy ndllford ElizabeTh AITmin JOY Armsf Rick AShTon Misty AVGrs Bill Bach Robin BCIerUS Julio BeTJ-emClnn BeTh Behrendf Christina Bin Joe Blake Tommy BockoViCh Mike Border Ken Borgerding Douglas Boudreo 453 Sophomores Eric Broddorn Alice Bryce Michael Burfon Michelle Cornahon Chad Cosbon John Cassady Mike Catalano Tracy Chcsfoin Phil Clark 7:3. CoThy Coffman . . Amy Comer Jayne Coughlon Don Cosley Jane Crondoll Todd Cumbow Rick Cummings 154 Koren Cziperle Cathy Day MOTT Dean Jeanne DeVos Conley Dooley Becky Duksfein Ashley EarnesT Chris Eikenberry ChrisTine Ellis Koren Fifields Anna Fischer Nicole Francis Michael Fron'rz Laura Frigo Chris Gauss Justin Gericke 155 Sophomores Greg Giles ' 1 Robert Giles Sarah Goddard John Gray Bren'r Holl Janet Hammond Jeanie Hammond Poul Haynes Tiffany Hemmer Roderick Hefzel Barbara Hill Tor Hoerman Gorreff Hoffmonn Eric Hoggs Chodmcn Householder Krisfin Huber 456 me ' mewykga , Julie Jonzoruk Marcia Johnson MorgarexL Johnson KiT Jonas Laura Keedy Joe Kennedy II T. Poul Kreger ChrisTine Kremling Denise Kubcf Michelle Kuhn Mike Lombe Carol Loreou AniTa Lawrence Elizabeth Lee Leigh Ann LeoThery Koren Lucky - 457 Sophomores - 158 Spencer Lundguord Susan Lyons Tiffany Mokaus Anjelc: MorTin David Marzullo Tonya Mo'r'rern Mark Monhew Steve Mooney Susie Morris Amy Moser Kristy Muller James Mullin Sarah Neeb Shelli Nicholson Kristin Norene Nancy Novack Jim O'Brien David Orland John OH Safonycx Page Anne Patrick Kirk Perry Jane Probsf Tom ProThero Jennifer Quigley Mark Reufer Mary Rich Julie Ridenour Samuel Rosodo Beth Russell Chris Russell Rich RuTz 159 x Sophomores Beth Sounders , $3 Susie Schoenherr SCOTT Sector Heidi Shays Susie Shepherd Greg Shields Elisabeth Simeri Richard Si'r RoberT SiT Andrea Smith MotT Smith Delia 8010 um Thockery David Thoresen Keiko Toba Dennis Trinkle 160 John Tuey Cindy VanderNcld-Johnson Loni'rc: Wade Amy Wharton Eileen Williams Lisa Williamson Jennifer Wolf Amy Yorbough Alison Young Ann Zimdors .. A -..-w,.... - 46'! J n'or S 1 Bill Anderson ' Pam Anderson Sfocio Anderson Tommy Allee Holly Baker Amy Barragree Edward Becker STocey Blome Mark Boyer SfuorT Brooks David Burleigh John Busey II Steve Colby Joyce Collins Kim Cowgill SCOTT Cris'r 162 Diana David Juan Davilo Rip DePew Elizabeth Duncan STephcunie EmmiTT Joy EndicoH David EwTon Bejon Fokouri Elizabeth Ferguson Bart Findley David Hardy Jim Hermann Polly Horrold Amy Hougk Heido HerbsT Debbie Hewin 163 Megan Hughes a Helen HUiSingo L : TOnY JOST Amy KOVerz BeTSY Kie1 MoTT Kingsley Mike Jurs Mark KleehOmmer Amy Krohn Melissa Loncasfer JOn LUndy Don MCAFThur Mary McCracken Catherine McGrbw Nedra McKinney Rebeca: Miller M? Catherine Morrison Michael Myers Don Nelson KaTe Neumiller Jen Oroson 1 500er Osborne SCOTT Porsell Chrisfine Payne n3 rm! yuwdy ?nunds ,. wmgm aver tumght, 54; Lisa Petrie Liz PielsTicker Sheila Powell Carrie RosTkowski Liso Schlup Greg Shopleigh Ellen Shideler Clare Smifh JUDiors Lorry SmiTh MoTT Smith Stephan Summu5 Brad SusTer Kriz Szobo Tracey Thieme Marcie ThOmpson Brion Thornburg CurTis TOwne Michelle Troksa Bill Wainwright John Waller J09 Wolusek Lindo Winfon Bill Wolff TOdd Yoho 467 Seniors : Susan Amick 7 mm Dena Delfo Del'ro Psychology Rachael Andrew Alpha Phi English LiferoTure Julie Ankenbruck Pi Be'ro Phi CompuTer Science Carol Argobrigm Alpha Chi Omega PoliTicol Science Alex Baker Locus? Communicofions Chrisfy Borchef DelTa DelTo Delta Psychology John Bertram Phi Delta Theta English ComMSecondcry Ed. Todd Bess Lomda Chi Alpha Amy BesT Alpha Omicron Pi Biology 168 ' wu.m.mwi.mmm MN; Y? H . amamA Kathy Bofinger Alpha Omicron Pi Psychology Nicole Brcmain Hogcfe CommunicaTions Mary Augusto Bremnon OIT Todd Broeker Delta Chi CommunicoTions Teresa Bruno OIT English ComposiTion Jeffrey Burchfield Delta Kappa Epsilon Political Science Elizabeth Butler Kappa Alpha Them JoneT Byrne Delta Gamma Moth Marilyn Combs Kappa Alpha Theta English Composifion 169 Senior I 33 Laura Coppoc HogoTe Chemistry Timothy Cronin Delfo Chi Economics Frank Dcnahev DelTa Kappa Epsilon Music Phil Danen Delta Upsilon EcoMHisT Douglas Dove Beta Theta Pi PoliTical Science Susan Doyle Doug Driemeier DelTo Chi PoliTicol Science Paulo Edwards Hogofe Psychology Darcie Eglen Dech: Gamma English 470 MiTchel Everharf Longden Computer Science B. J. Eves Delfo Kappa Epsilon Christopher L. Felke Sigma Nu Connie Fellmon Alpha Chi Omega Communiccz'rions Julie Ferguson Kappa Alpha Theta EcoMPhilosphy Reggie Flesvig DelTo Chi English ComposiTion Cyndee Foster Alpha Omicron Pi Biology Charis Gaines Alpha Phi Political Science Susan Geeslin Kappa Alpha Them Economics Jone Gibson Delta ZeTcu Political Science Brian Gilkison Delta Kappa Epsilon Communications Melissa Gillis Alpha Gamma Delta English Comp. Mary Glennon Delta Gamma Economics Jodi Green Alpha Gamma DelTo English LiVEIem Ed. Heofher Greenslif Alpha Phi French Dole Grossard Pi BeTthi Communications Cristal Guinan Alpha Omicron Pi Psychology Sue Hacker Alpha Gamma DeITo Asian Sfudies Seniors Beth Hoebich Alpha Phi Psychology Barbara Hall Alpha Omicron Pi ElemenTory Ed. Julie Hcrmen Kappa Alpha TheTa English LiTeroture SCOTT Horkness Lcmdcn Chi Alpha PoliTical Science Cindi Hovenstein Alpha Gamma Delta English Literature KoThryn Hendriks Alpha Omicron Pi Physics Be'rh HenTze Kappa Alpha Theta Spanish James Hinshow Sigma Nu Wes Hobson Beta Them Pi Economics 178 JCY Hosler Sigma Nu Biology Alice Houston Delta Zeta Angie Howlond Alpha Gamma DelTo Communications Mhuff Huff Sigma Nu MOTThew Irvine Phi Gamma Del'rc: Communications Georgi Johnson Pi Beta Phi English Composition KrisTin Jones Pi Be'ro Phi Communications Richard Jones u Be'ro The'ro Pi Biology Sharon Kaczolo Alpha Chi Omega Biolochomm. 174 Kristen Kibens Locust Psychology Dove Kimbell Phi Gamma Delta Economics Don Kirby OIT Anthropology Keith Kisselle Alpha Tau Omega Biology Wendy Kloss Delta Gamma Sociology Mike KoTloski Delta Chi Physics Marie Lawkowski Locust Elementary Ed. Jock Lawrence Delta Chi Economics Carol Lawson Hogafe Musiq Business 175 Seniors Elizabe'rh LeSound Pi Beta Phi Communications Duane Lewis OIT Psychology Cynthia LinhordT Hogofe Music Kerry McLaren Delta Dena Del'ra Comijusic Erica McLecme Alpha Phi English Lit Marlene McQueary OIT Biology Jill McWillioms Alpha Omicron Pi Spanish Jennifer Mojewski Alpha Phi Psychology Jeff Morkley BeTCI TheTa Pi History Krisfen Markley OIT Sociology Eric Marshall Longden Economics McrgoreT Morfin Alpha Gamma Delta Biology J. P. MaTzigkeiT BeTo TheTo Pi Economics Cynthia Mayer Apho Chi Omega Communico'rions Cindy Meyers Alpha Phi Economics Todd Meyers Be'rc Thefo Pi John Miller DelTo Chi Psychology Lisa Morgan Alpha Phi Bio. Pre-Med. '177 Marty Mueller OIT Mathematics Ann Murphy Delta Delta DelTo Psychology Julie Murphy DelTo Ze'rc: Elem. Education Shara Neidell OIT Communication Jay 84 Blue Nichols OIT Jeanne O'Connell Alpha Phi Elem. Education Tom O'Hara Phi Delta Theta Economics Naney Orn Alpha Phi Elem. Education Nancy Palmeter Decha Delfc Delta English Comp. Don Peabody Phi Gamma Delta ChemisTry Joel Piaf? Delta Upsilon ChemJBiology Shannon Reece Alpha Chi Omega Psychology Becky Relic Pi Beta Phi Communicofions Mon Reinhard Phi Gamma Delta Ar'r Koren Ringel Alpha Gamma Delta Nursing Kris Roberfs Alpha Gamma Delta Music Educ. Chris Rout Beta Them Pi Communications Joanillo Rowan Longden Political Sci. 479 Seniors w E xxxxx Jamie Ryan - ,1 Sigma Chi . Mathematics ' Lisa Shofer Lucy English Comp. Kay ShelTon Longden Music AnThro. John Siefer'r Delta Chi Political Sci. Tim Skelfon Beta Them Pi Communications Susan Slokes Delta DeITo Decha Biology Jill Smith Hogo're Music EdJPerform. Julie Smith Kappa Kappa Gamma Communicofions Sue Smith Longden Mike Specks OIT History Stocio Sfonford Kappa Alpha Them Economics John Stevenson Delta Chi Political Sci. ChrisTine Szillo'r Alpha Phi Political Sci. Liso Taylor DelTo Gamma Psychology Lisa Renee Taylor Delta Gamma Mathematics Margaret Tenney Lucy Sociology Marcia Thursfon Delta Gamma Economics Jeffrey Tomlin Delta Kappa Epsilon Chemistry Seniors + Brenda Toomey Alpha Omicron Pi Elementary Ed. Deneen Troutman Delta Gamma PsychoIogy Sara Turner Delta DelTo DeITo Psychology Laura Uhlemonn Alpha Gamma Delta EIemenTcry Ed. Heidi Walter Delta Gamma Engl. LiTJPsych. Bryon Webb Sigma Nu History KrisTie Weimor Alph Phi Musiunsiness Greg Werner BeTc Them Pi Economics Eric Wheeler DelTa Chi Economics Kimberley Whi'rTle Delta Zeta Communications Joe Whittaker Locust Biology KrisTen Wick Delta Gamma Elementary Ed. Michael Willhife Phi Delta Theta Biology Laura Wilson Alpha Omicron Pi English Lit. Laura Woods Alpha Gamma Delta Psychology Sandro Woods Delta Delta Delta Spanish Allyson Wylie Alpha Gamma DeHG English Lit. Becky Yoeger Kappa Alpha Theta PsychjElem. Ed. 183 - Faculty :7 Biology Department Communications Deportmen'r Economics Deparfmenf . Education Depar'rmemL 484 Geology and Geography Department German and Russian Department tory His Deporfmen'r McTwCompuTer Science Department '185 Faculty Music Deparfmenf Philosophy and Religion Deporfmen'r Physics and AsTronomy DeporTmenT Political Science DepartmenT 486 Psychology Deportmenf 5: 1 :3 73' I! 1 1 ,3 ; sf Romance Languages Deporfmenf '187 :zenkor ; .- fat 3 pgawgliauh 190 191 s parIicipaIe In a healing Iggy held In Kresege Hgii Depauw Deals yviIh RaclerI On OCIoIoer 48 o porIy was held GI : Alpha Tau, Omega which IhrusI De- : 'uw info Ihe media spoIlighI and de- eioped info the moSI vocaI issue on ampus during Ihe year. The Iheme of , this party was figh'eIIo, in which peo- H pie came dressed as proinIuIes and i pimps, chd Ihe waits grid hallways were cieCOIdIed Io appear Io be c: gheIIo. ,A AIIhough porI'Ies of Ihe secme , I heme have been a IWere-year Irodi- ; :IIon, Ihis yecII 3 pain was differenI, adoptihg racial undertones when a i feW-Stpdems paInIed Iheir faces bIack I L. and wide racially derochory graffiIi 0n Ihe neWSpapeI-covered walls Of e ,basemenI Several block sIudeh'Is' 192 me anger of block sIudenIs ohd Io give Ihem Ihe support of Ihe campus. This march become quiIe large, and evenIucIIIy over 300 sIudenIs parIici- paied by gamean CII each house' In-; , volved in Ihe pcrIy and singing We ShaII Overcome AIso pquIcipaIing In , Ihis march were several members of Ihe DePauw fccuin 0nd adminisIro- Iion, Including PresidenI BoIIoms, Dean, Ciaar, and Chaplain SIuarI Lord. II was Ihis march IhoI drew Ihe OT- IenIIon of Ihe media, and DePouw Was I; feoIUred for severai days by Ihe major H Indianapolis Ielevision sICIIions, CI of L L whom cheied iI an issue of racism Dis- ciplinory ocII'on by Ihe universin nOILIe' VI'roin followed in Ihe form ofpiocing Ihe ,L A six fraterniIies and sororifies on social, ; proboIion. These houses included AI- A phc Tau omega. Alpha Chi Om BeIo Them Pi; Kappa Kappa i - Kappa Alpha TheIa. and Sigma Chi , In chorIer were rumored buI i' came Io be ' A were undersIandany ouIrqged he Associinon cif Afro- American SIud ?Is were made Io increqs Lgroch Iness on campus Wlnter Term Altered The Mnter term program at DePoIJw fwas a hot topic of debate during the , spring semester with rumors fiying that , ' the entire idea of a January short term f might be Sotappea. Amid cries of 2 save winter term, the faculty ac- ' cepted a propOsal on Aprils presented by the Committee On Academic Policy , and Planning for signiticont changes to be made to the program. , L The preposai, passed with only one amendment, calls for changes in dura- , ing programming and faculty partici- pation concerning winter term The length of the short term, formerly four weeks, will be shortened to three weeks fer onecompus' projects and left ' ottOurweeks for ottbompus activities. Students will be required to com- plete three out of four Winter termper- iods, rather than the previous require- ' ment of three and a half, allowing stu- dents to take one whole winter term off in an amendment to the CAPP pro- posal, the faculty voted to retain the old grading system which issues stu- dents either a tisatisfactory or uunso- tisfactory grade. CAPP had proposed this scale be changed to include hex- cellen cIlso. The faculty opposed this - because of the-difficuity' of asertaining what work deserves the mark of excel- i lent; They did, hoWever, clerify that to receive or satisfactory mark the stu- dent-must receive a C or above in the ,class; i A major requirement of the revised winter term will be for all first year stu- dents to participate In 0 Common Ex- , , perience program This program will be centered around a common set of readings and discussions led by faculty First-y'ear students will all be in- valved in the some intellectual inquiry. They will be struggling with theksome concepts and questions inside and outside the classroom, the proposal sold. The goal of this pregram is to nar- row the gap between iiving and learn ing at DePauw. Upperclass winter term programs will ' tion, graduation requirements, grad-w be available' In limited numbers and will be expected to be as rigorous as the Common, Experience program, ac- cording to the new plan. Facutty will be required, to particiv pate in every other winterterm and will I have their choice of working with first- year students or upperclossmen ort- campus or off. The goals of the plan are to revital- ize the on-compus experience, reduce the faculty's winter term workload and maintain those winter term programs that have proven successful. ' RuSh Deferred by Angie Howland I The 1988-89 academic year will be remembered for all of the changes it brought to DePauw University. The de- cision to defer rush was one of the ma- jor issues to hit the school. The announcement was mode in early September in compliance with the Board of Trustees' decision The Board's intention is to make the incom- ing freshmen's first experience on cam- pus ocodemicoily rather than socially centered. The announcement caught many students off-guard and left them with the question, when will formal rush be held? Other students felt they saw the change coming. i understand why the Uhe BoardT decided to do this but i don't think it will work, sophomore Heather Hltchens said. ttFor the upper- clasmen. having rush right in the middle of the semester will be an incredible strain. A rush committee consisting of ad- ministrators, studentstand professors was formed to investigate alternative times to conduct formal rush. The com mittee' contacted many universities similar to DePauw to see how they com duct their'rush'es; Five time options, I were formulated based on their find- ings and presented to the DePouw ' community. Option 1: The tirst weekend after classes begin, plus a second weekend ondtor additionai evenings. Option 2: End of Septembevbegin- ning of October. Option 3: Early second semester. a Option 4: An entire rush week during October. Option 5: A rush week before second semester begins. Two forums were held for students to voice their concerns and preferences to the committee. Concerns centered around the effect on academics, the lack of sufficient preparation time for houses, and the enforcement of rules cencerning illegal and dry rushing. President Bottoms, who attended the first forum called it ha fresh and wholesome exchange, and said the communication concerning this issue between the administtation, faculty and students had been the best he'd seen in his ten years at DePauw. The committee decided on Option 2 and the Board approved their choice. The 1989-90 school year will begin two days later than usual. Rush will be held from October 12-15 with informal pledging occurring on October 16. Fall break will be eliminated, lntrafraternity Council and Panhel- ienic Council, working with student in- put. will work out the specific mechan- ics of the new rush process. 193 Death on a Battleship The battleship Iowa is believed to have made it through decades of con- fiict, including World War ii and the K0- rean War. During this time. not a single crew member was killed in combat. Un- fortunately, this unblemished record was wiped out during the last week of April this year, when an explosion in the second gun turret of the vessel killed 47 young sailors. It was one of the worst accidents in recent military history, and as investigators worked hard to uncov- er the cause of the blast, defective wir- ing, a damaged firing mechanism in the ship's gun system, or even a loose spark were believed to possibly be at the bottom of it. The tragedy ignited a new national Spill When Exxon oil tanker Captain Jo- seph Hazelwood turned over com- mand of his ship to his third mate be- cause he had too much alcohoi in his blood, nobody involved could have re- alized the disastrous consequences Soon the tanker was impaled on a large underwater reef, causing millions of gallons of oil to gush from the torn hull into Alaska's Prince William Sound and the largest oil spill in American history. in a few short dQYS. Exxon, the company responsible for the accident, admitted that the spill was out of control, and the oil slick covered almost 900 square miles southwest of Valdez, Alaska. 494 National News debate over the usefulness of the old t battleships in today's nuclear age. The Iowa was built during World War ii and designed to withstand shielding from Japanese battleships. In order to do so, the ship's were encased in 17 95 inch thick armor. it was this armor that turned the gun turret into a tightly sealed pressure cooker when the ex- piosion occurred. Had the ship remained out of com- mission, where it was placed following the Koren War, or had its 50 year old equipment been updated with mod- ern technological advances, the trag- edy may have been avoided, claim many military reformers. This same claim was made in the early 1980's, The oil spill confirmed environmental- ists' worst fears and predictions. Orga- nizations had been claiming since the building of the Alaska Pipeline over a decade ago that such a spill could, and more than likely would, occur in Prince William Sound, but were told again and again that oil companies could handle it. Unfortunately, this was not so in the case of Exxon and area cleanup operations, whose efforts were plagued with compounding problems and complications that made a recovery impossible. An unprecedented ecological disas- ter resulted from these complications, because the oii posed a deadly clan- ger to the marine and bird life that prospered in Prince William Sound. As the loose oil becomes deposited on the bottom of the ocean floor, harmful petroleum hydrocarbons will be slowly released for years. killing the marine life when the vessels were brought back in order to help reach a goal for a 600 ship Navy. The Navy proposed to mod- ernize the vessels by replacing one of their three gun turrets with cruise-missile launch batteries. This plan was later dis- carded, an unfortunate decision ac- cording to many affected by the ex- plosion. Currently, the damage to the Iowa is almost certainly beyond repair, forcing either the modernization of the old equipment or the final retirement of the entire vessel. But the tragic loss of 47 young men will remain on the minds and in the hearts of Americansiong into the future. that was fortunate enough to survive the initial coating of crude oil from the spill. And when this life is destroyed, dire economic consequences result for area fishermen, whose livelihood virtu- ally disappears; Many questions were raised by the Exxon oil spill disaster, including the negligence of an intoxicated Captain. - still commanding a million dollar oil tanker after several drunken driving convictions. it also points up the unre- solved conflict between American de- sires for an unspoiled environment and t demands for greater energy resources that have long been American Nation- al policy. However, whatever ques- , tions raised by the disaster, one thing is certain: the harmfui consequences from the oil 5le will haunt many for years to come. The 4988-89 academic year saw The ,LnominaTionwond eTeeTion of CI cenTro- : I versiqi indidno: 'senoTOI wand DePcuw ' graducTe To The Vibe Presidency AI- Though The elecTiOn of The Geroge I ' Bushman Quayie TickeT seemed reia- Tiveiygsecure byThe Time The polls closed on Tuesday , November 8th. The T monThs preceeding The elecTioh were , filled WiTh Typical eleeTion uproar and ii - uncerTainTy as To who would succeed 1; 'RepubiiCdn PresidenT Ronald Reagan. - I Lining up on' The DemocraTic side were qusgchusehs Governor Michael i, by Dukokis and Texas SenoToroLioyd BenT- 9 ,9 sen. and coming ouT 'of Their NoTional I94 ConvenTion monyibeleived The TickeT copobie of' bringing The DemocroTs book No The WhiTe House afTer on eighT year absence. Bush had Theiim- I eager of invisible manThaT he acquired 9 es Reogcn' 5 Vice Presid'enT To conTend i WiTh. Thus, Dukokis seemed To have an I edge CT The end of The summer ' IT was aT ThoT Time mm The com- , L ; poigningbegan in full force, and along - wiTh iT came cries of mudslinging from , I boTh sides. AT issue Wereoreos such as I I oborTiOn, deoTh penoiTy, foreign policy and criminal righTs. ,As The condido'res I 'T'deboTed The issues Twice in from of o i noTionol aUdience and The monThs pro- gressed Toward The eiecTion, Dukakis ; oppedred To be iosing some of his pop- t L. ;, ulor upped. Official merono :One of The sTrongesT debates during The campo'gn period was noT ncTionaI issues, buT The issue of The Vice Presi- denTiCII choices of each side, mainly on The Republican side. Issues of Don Quoyie's educcTion, National Guard service, and genera! ievei of exper- , ience were consTonle in The spoTIighT. His grades here GT DePouw were ad- miTTediy average. and he apparently avoided service in VieTnCIm by pulling sTrings To geT inTo The Indiana NaTionoi Guard BenTsen. on The oTher hand, had age and iongTimeservice in The iol whiTe House phoTo SenaTe on his side, buT igniTed a con- Troversy over financial contributions To his campaign. WhoTever The Two men's quoiificoTions, They were definiTeiy a Iarge focus of The 4988 campaigns. When all was said and done, Michael Dukckis could noT override noTionoi fear of his llberai leaning and foreign policy inexperience. and George Bush and J. DonforTh Quayle Took The Trip To The WhiTe House on January 20Th. T95 Tragedy in the Sky International terrorism was once again in the news when 0 Pan Ameri- can jetiiner was blown from the sky ear- ly in January. killing 259 passengers and it people in the small town of Lockere bie, Scotland, where the crash oc curred. As friends and relatives grieved for the many victims, including a group of students from Syracuse University in New York and many other Americans, a world-wide debate over who and what caused the tragic crash began. After days of investigation of the rub- ble scattered in and around the small Scotland town, it was determined that it was in fact a bomb that destroyed the airplane. Burn marks and bits of metal were found embedded in lug- gage and in the bodies of some pas- sengers, suggesting that the explosive was set on a time and places in the forward luggage hold. From this loca- tion, the explosion instantly severed the cockpit and part of the first class cabin from the rear section of the plane. This explosive was made of mal- ieable material that is difficult to detect by security, explaining how it was able to get past inspection and on to the jet. After the disaster, three groups claimed credit for it: a pro-lranian orga- nization called the Guardians of the is- Iamic Revolution and two little known Lebanese factions. Also under suspi- cion were the irish Republican Army, the Palestine Liberation Organizations, and Sikh separatists. Investigators were understandably anxious to uncover ' solid evidence as to the person and organization responsible, so that they could be tried and convicted for on multiple murder charges. Meanwhile, the Federal Aviation Adw ministration in the United States and comparable agencies all over the . world immediately tightened up ground security processes, including the speeding up of installation of new detection devices capable of finding plastic explosives. if only those devices had already been in use before Janu- ary of 1989. the tragedy of Pan Am flight 103 could have been avoided. ' Reform in the U.S.S.R. Over the past year. the international political scene has focused greatly upon changes that appear evident in the Soviet Union. These changes have been brought about by General Sec- retary Mikhail Gorbachev and his vision of a itnew world order for the 2tst Century. in a speech to the United Na- tions last December, Gorbachev ex- pressed this vision by offering peace initiatives in many areas of world con- cern, including Afghanistan, emigra- tian, human rights, and arms control. Specifically, he called for a cut of Sovi- et armed forces by ten percent, the . withdrawal of 50,000 troops from East- ern Europe, and the reduction of half the number of Soviet tanks in East Ger- many. These initiathles are proposed to happen over the next two years, and 196 will hopefully revitalize conventional arms control talks between NATO and the Soviet bloc, especially the United States and the Soviet Union. Gorbachev has also been hard at work on issues of human rights and im- proving the quality of life within the bor- ders of the Soviet Union. With the intro- duction of policies such as glastnost and perestroika. the Soviet people have experienced a significantly more free press, discovered the potential of private business enterprise, shopped in private marketplaces, and even watched candidates debate on tele- vision. Unfortunately, the Soviet people must necessarily focus upon economic concerns. because the MarxisteLeninist economy in the U.S.S.R. is in a near shambles. The day-toaday life is still fraught with difficulties, and production cannot even begin to meet consumer demand, not only for large consumer items such as cars and household appli- ances, but also for staples such as cof- fee, meat, and candy. Price controls have been necessary to try and tame rising inflation. it is because of these dire i circumstances that Gorbachev has been caiied radical by many commu- nist party conservatives, Although he has earned world re- spect thorugh his peace efforts and at- tempts at massive reform, there is sig- nificant resistance to his programs with- in the Soviet nation. However, it is; obvious that Mikhail Gorbachev has made and will continue to make a sig- nificant impact on both the Soviet na- tion and the international community. 4 5'1: rfrtt: $23st ??;?iiwx; 4: Th9 Rushdie ' ConTroVersg AuThor Salman Rushdie became a conTroversiaT celebrlTy all over The world when his fourTh novel, The Saran- ic Verses, was published This year. The Islamic communiTy was in an uproar. T led 'byvlranian spiriTual ruler AyaTuIlah Ruhollah Khomeini. who publicly an- nounced ThaT The auThor musT be killed for The crime of insulTing Islam. Khomeini also included in his demand for deaTh anyone involved in publishing The book, and a Targe financial reward was seT for The Muslim who wasvable To carry ouT The dead . The worid responded wiTh ouTrage To The'public ThreaT of violence, buT as a The centroversy spread, booksellers everywhere removed copies of The novel from Theshelves, fearing violenT ' reTaliaTiony The dispuTe reminded WesTemers once again of The rage ThaT Khomeini is capable of, and TT also , raised quesTions abouT how free soci- ' eTies can besT proTecT Themselves and Their ciTizens againsT such furious public inTimidaTions. , The uproar also broughT inTo focus The culTural misundersTanidhg and mis- iTrUST ThaT exisTs beTWeenThe Muslim Agony in Armenia A massive earThquake shaTTered The Republic of Armenia in The SovieT Union jusT weeks before The world celebraT- ed The 4988 ChrisTmas holidays. As world aTTenTion Turned To This devas- TaTed area. we saw horrifying images of deaTh and desTrucTion via unprec- edenTed SovieT TV. coverage, and The WesT responded wiTh an incredible oquouring of aid in The form of medical supplies, rescue equipment and Trained search Teams. WiThin The borders of Armenia, caTa- sTrophic desTrucTion was of unprec- edenTed proporTions. WiThin The con- creTe and sTone rubble, nearly 500,000 people were lefT homeless, and jusT days afTer The quake The deaTh Toll was said To be 50,000 and rising, wiTh many yeT To be found in The midsT of The fallen homes and buildings. Grieving survivors were broadcasT picking Through The rubble, experiencing The grief of know- ing ThaT many of Their friends and family were buried undemeaTh. Bodies of vic- Tims lay in The sTreeTs, and The noise of TracTors and Trucks moving rubble, and ChrisTian' CommuniTies and Their dif- a ' aferingr values. Muslims believed Rushdie . was guilTy of blasphemy and renounc- ihg his religious foiTh, crimes which in The Islamic religion are TradiTionally pun- , ished by deaTh. And murder as a reli- giously ihspiredhacT is noT a value shared by The Jud'eo- ChrisTian religion. - Rushdie publiclyfadmiTTed ThaT Kho- meini's ThreaT was one ThaT he Took se- a riously, and subsequenle cancelled a planned book Tour of The UniTed STaTes. in a formal press sTaTemenT, he apolo- gized ToThe followers of islam ThaT he had- offended. Th The WesT; poliTical leaders and The public reacTed wTTh' disbelief and ouTrage overkone foreign leaderdeclaring aedeaTh se'nTence on , anoTher counTry's ciTizen, whose 0th crime was free expression of his own ideas. Khomeini's ThreaT rdefiniTeliy' had , a Tremendous impac'rsonk diplomaTic ,relaTions on an inTern'aTional level. women and children crying, and peo- ple shouTing was said To have been deafening. IT was a hearTbreaking di- sasTer. lmmediaTely following The earTh- quake, a massive rescue and recovery efforT began. buT The SovieT naTion faced desperaTe shorTages of man- power, equipment medical supplies, and The skills ThaT are necessary in such an operaTion. AmidsT a greaT econom- ic crisis ThroughouT The SovieT naTion. This was yeT anoTher complicaTion ThaT uncovered The weaknesses of The sys- Tem. ConsTrucTion Techniques, espe- cially The use of precasT concreTe slabs in modern buildings, was said To have widely conTribuTed To The deaTh Toll and complicaTed The rescue fforT. lT can only be hoped ThaT wiThin The re covery process, reform begins in These areas. 4 ForTunaTeiy, The world reached ouT To help The devasTaTed area of Arme- nia, bridging poliTical and ideological gaps and focusing on humaniTy. 197 ABBOT, STEPHANIE LYNN ABEL, CHRISTA RENE ACEVEDO, PABLO CARLOS 89 ACKERMAN, ANDREW CLARK ADAM, BRIAN THOMAS 436 ADAMS, ALEXANDER PAUL ADAMS, CRAIG HOWELL ADAMS, DOUGLAS BRUCE 453 ADAMS, HEATHER LYNN ADAMS, HOLLY BETH 436 ADAMS, JEFFREY MARSHALL ADAMS, KIMBERLY SUE ADAMS, SHERI l. ADAMS, TROY LYNN ADDISON, LAUREL ANNE ADENT, JOHN EDWARD AESCHLIMANN, DEBRA BENSON AIELLO, MICHELLE KATHLEEN 436, 6 AILES, KRISTIN L. AILES, LAURA ANN AKER, WILLIAM ROCKWELL AKINS, TODD ALAN 20 ALBERT, MARY MARGARET ALBIN, STEPHANIE ANN ALDEEN, ANDREW GEORGE ALEXANDER, ANDREW DE WITT 436, 89 ALEXANDER, SCOTT EDWARD 436 ALEXANDER, SHELETTE R. 436 ALI, ALLEN ALLEE, TAMARA KAY 462 ALLEN, JAMES EDWARD ALLEN. TIMOTHY JOSEPH ALLFORD, KATHERINE DIANE 453 200 ALMASE, CONRAD JOSEPH 436 . '6 ALTHAUSER, CAREN TRACY ALTMIN, ELIZABETH ANNE 453 ALTON, JOHN STUART AMADEN, KARIN LISA AMICK, SUSAN ELAINE 468 AMOROSO, LOUIS ADOLPH AMOS. JENNIFER LEE AMSTUTZ, KEIRA ANNE AMU, GLORIA BUKOLA ANAST, JAMES A. ANDERSON, ALLISON RAE ANDERSON, GARRETT ETHAN 34 ANDERSON! JENNIFER LYNNE ANDERSON, KAARIN ELISABETH ANDERSON, MARK EDWARD ANDERSON, PAMELA JEAN 462 ANDERSON, STACIA LYNN 462 ANDERSON, WILLIAM ALFRED 462 ANDERSON, WILLIAM STANLEY ANDLER, KIMBRA LEE ANDLER, KIRSTEN LYNN ANDREW, RACHAEL REBECCA 468 ANKENBRUCK, JULIE MARIE 468 APPLEGATE, ALAN MARCUS ARCHIE, JEANETTE MARIE ARENZ, MARK WESLEY ARGABRIGHT. CAROL ANN 468 ARMSTEAD, JOY LENORE 453 ARMSTRONG, LARISSA LOUISE ARNOLD, J. ALLAN ARNOLD, JONATHAN QUIN ARNOLD, LYNNE FARRIS ARNOLD, SIDRA JULIA ARTHINGTON, BETH ANN ARVIN, JEFFREY THOMAS 90 ASHLEY, ALLEN PORTER ASHTON, RICHARD JOSEPH 453 ' ASPEGREN, LORRAINE GLORIA AUBURN. JENNIFER LYNN AUGUSTIN, DANA MARIE AUSTIN, JILL LYNN AUSTIN, SHERRAL EILEEN AVERY, JENNIFER LYNN AYERS, MISTY ELAINE 453 AYLER, KIRK JAMES BABCOCK, JENNIFER LYNN 436 BABCOCK, JULIA LYNN 436 BACH, CHRISTIAN PHILIP BACH, WILLIAM JAY 453 BACKER, CLARE FRANCES BACKER, EMILY ALICE BAIER, WILLIAM BRET 436 BAILEY, KYMBERLY ANN BAIR, BRANT ALLEN 80 BAKER, ALEXANDRIA 468 BAKER, HOLLY DIANE 462 BAKER, KIMBERLY LYNNE BAKOS. AMY LYNN BALLARD, BRITTANY LEE BANGERT, DEBRAiLYNNE BANKS, NICOLE GARBE BARCHET, CHRISTINA LYNN 468 BARDEEN, JENNIFER MARY BARNES, EMILY JEAN BARNES, MICHAEL LEDDY BARNETT, SAMUEL MC BEATH BARONI, PETER GENE 90 BARR, JENNIFER ALAYNE BARRAGREE, AMY JANE 462 BARRON, MICHAEL DOUGLAS BARTELT, JAY DAVID BARTON, HILARY 72 BASS, JAMIE RENEE BASSLER, MELISSA MEGAN BATCHELDER, ROBERT BRUCE BATEMAN, TED ANDREW BATHIJA, SHIBANI RAJ BATTIES, ROBIN LYN 453 BATTO, RACHEL ANN BAUER, CATHERINE JEAN BAUKNECHT, LINDA LOUISE BAULDRIDGE, JODY LYNN BAUMGARTNER, JOHN CHRISTIAN BAVELIS, NIKI 436 BEATTY, JAMES AUGUST BEATY. BRYAN EDWARD BEAUCHAMP, EVAN FREDERlCK BEAULIUE, THOMAS JOSEPH BECHT, CYNTHIA ANN BECK, BRIAN CHRISTOPHER BECKER, EDWARD CHARLES 462 BECKER, STACY ANN 436 BEEBEE, HEATHER ANNE 436 BEEHLER, LANCE LEE BEGGS, WILLIAM JONATHAN BEHN, JENNIFER LYNN BEHRENDT, BETH ELLEN 453 BEKAR, HANDAN BELL, HEIDI ELISE BELLETTI, CHRISTOPHER TODD BELT, SUSAN CARLTON BENAGE, BRENDA LINN BENDER, URSULA JUSTINE BENNE, CHRISTOPHER PAUL BENNER, JOHN ALLEN BENNETT, ISHAM JAY BENNETT, MICHAEL PAUL BENSON, BRADLEY SCOTT BENSON, LAWRENCE DWAYNE BENTFIELD, DEBORAH SUE BERG, JAMES REICK 7O BERGEN, JOHN PHILLIP BERISH, WILLIAM MICHAEL BERLINER, JAY FREDERICK BERNSEE, DEBRA L. BERTRAM, JOHN CHARLES 468, 70 BESS, TODD DAVID 468 BEST, JAMES ARTHUR 436 BETJEMANN, JULIA LYNN 453 BETSILL, BRIAN COLLINS BHUYAN, RAJNISH BICKLE, PAUL ALLEN 436 BIEGHLER, MARY MARGARET 86 BlGGERS, ANDREW REED BIGONY, DEBORAH MICHELLE BILL, MARIA CRISTINA 453 BILLMAN, LUKE E. 56 BILO, JUNE MARIE BINGAMAN, GREGORY THOMAS BISSELL, THERESA ANN BIZAL, JANE ELLEN BLACKETOR, SHAROLYN S2 BLACKWELL, EDWARD SCOTT 84 BLAIR, KATHERINE MC KENZIE BLAKE, JOSEPH BRADLEY 453 BLAKE, KELLIE CROMWELL 436 BLANG, JOHN DAVlD BLANKENBUEHLER, CHERIE LYNNE BLOCK, JOSHUA TEIXLER BLOME, STACY LYNNE 462 BOATMAN, JANE BOLLES BOBACK, LAURA LOUISE 57, 92 BOEHM, ROBERT JAMES BOFINGER, KATHERINE MARY 469 BOGDAN, ANDREW CHRISTOPHER BOGGESS, TAMARA LEE BOHLMANN, ROBERT KEITH BOLEK, DEBORAH LOUISE BOLLER, MATTHEW HUBLY BONACCORSI, PATRICIA ANN 76 BONACCORSI, WILLIAM PETER BOND, LAURA ELIZABETH 437 BONE, RACHEL DAWN BOONE, NATHAN MICHAEL BOONE, ROBERT DUNCAN BOOTH, DIANE MARGARET BOOTHBY, LAURIE ANN BORAS, ROBERT JAMES 437 BORDER, MICHAEL ANTHONY 453 BORGERDING. JOHN KENNETH 453 BORNEMAN, SUSAN HELEN BOROWSKI, PAMELA ANN BORTZ, ELIZABETH ANNE BOSCH, ALBERT CASTELLO 80 BOSCH, SERGI CASTELLO BOSLER, JON ROBERT BOUDREAU, DANIELLE DENISE BOUDREAU, DOUGLAS LEONARD 453 BOULAIS, NICOLE ANNE BOWDEN, MICHAEL LEROY BOXELL, ELIZABETH ANN BOYD, ROBERT WILLIAM BOYER, DANIEL CARL 437 BOYER, MARK CHRISTOPHER BOYKINS, ERIKA L. BRADDOM, ERIC CHRISTOPHER 454 BRADEN, THOMAS EUGENE 420 BRANDES, TODD DAVID BRANDON, TODD D. 437 BRANDT, DEREK YEATS BRANSFIELD, MARK JOSEPH BRASELTON, MINDI LOUISE BRATTAIN, NICOLE GLADYS 469 BRAY, GREGORY DEAN BRAY, NORAH JEAN 437 BRAZIL, MARIA KATHLEEN BREIDENBACH. HEIDI SUE BRENNAN, KERI LOUISE BRENNAN, MARY AUGUSTA 469 BRESTAN, ELIZABETH VANESSA 4 37, 92 BRICKEL, ELIZABETH ANNE BRIDGES, CARYL 88 BRIDGES, MARY ROSE BRIGMAN, TODD ANDREW BRISIEL, JEREMY RYAN BRITTON, ANGELA MARIE 437, 57 BROADBRIDGE, PATRICK MARSHALL 84 BROCK, COLLEEN GENEVIEVE 96 BROCK, NICOLE ELIZABETH BRODERSON, ELIZABETH BENTON BROEKER, ROBERT TODD 469 BROEKER, TRACY ANN 437 BROOKMAN, MATTHEW PAUL BROOKS, STUART GLEN 462 BROPHYI HEATHER LEIGH BROSHEARS, CHARLES NELSON BROWN, JENNIFER ARLENE BROWN, LAURIE KATHERINE 437 BROWN, MARY FIONA 426 BROWNE, JAMES RALPH BROWNELL, BRADLEY ROBERT 80 I BROYLES, JOHN ASHLEY BRUNKOW, SARAH LUFKIN BRUNO, TERESA ANN 469, 432 BRUNT, THOMAS LEE 8O BRYAN, TEDRIC BATEY BRYANT, BUFFY MICHELLE BRYCE, ALICE SYLVESTER 454 BUCHANAN. ELIZABETH BUCHHOLZ, RAE MARIE BUCK! CHRISTA ANN BUCKOVICH, TAMMY SUE 86 BUDD, KATHRYN EATON BULGER, RICHARD F. BULLOCK; CATHERINE ANNE BUMGARDNER, BRADLEY CHANCE BUMGARDNER, JEFFREY SCOTT BURANOSKY, DALE JOSEPH BURCHFIELD, JEFFREY BRYAN 469 BURCZYK, ZACHARY JOHN BURDGE, MARK EDWARD BURGER, TINA MARIE BURKE, JONATHAN ROBERT 437 BURLEIGH, DAVID WILLIAM 462 BURNS, JENNIFER ANNE BURNS, KEVIN MICHAEL BURNSIDE, JAMES PETER BURTON, MICHAEL GENE 454 BUSCH, ROBERT MARTIN BUSEY, JOHN WALES 462 BUTLER, ELIZABETH ROBERTA 469 BUTLER, KAREN SUSANNE 437, 74 BUTTREY, EIKO W. BUTZ, MARY SUZANNE BYERS, GEORGE LEE BYERS, JULIE ANNE BYRNE, ELIZABETH ANNE BYRNE, JANET ELISE 469 BYRNE, JULIE CHRISTINE CALDEMEYER, KRYSTENA LALL CALDWELL, ANN DUMONT 86, 92 CALHOUN, FREDERICK D. CALLAHAN, DIANA JO CALLANAN, DANIEL PATRICK CALLECOD, LATICIA JANE CAMARILLO, JULIE ANN CAMPAGNOLI, LISA MARIE 437 CAMPBELL, CAROLINE 204 202 CAMPBELL, KATHRYN DAWN CAMPBELL, LAURA ANNE CAMPBELL, RUSSELL L. CANTWELL, CHRISTOPHER THOMAS CANTY, SHANNON ELIZABETH CAPOOT, RICHARD CHRISTOPHER CAPPELLETTI, FRANCIS ANTHONY CAPRA, MONICA CARD, MARY FOOTE CAREK, SARA ANNE CARLSON, CHRISTINE GRACE CARLSON, SUZANNE MARIE 76, 82 CARMIGNANI, TIMOTHY JOSEPH CARNAHAN, MICHELLE LYNN 154 CARNS. JENNIFER LYNN CAROTHERS, CHRISTI ANN 72 CAROTHERS, DANIEL GORDON CARPENTER, KELLY JO CARR, KETT LOUIS CARRICO, SUSAN REBECCA CARSON, DIANE ELIZABETH CARSON, JULIE SUZANNE CARTER, AMY LYNN CARTER, KIMBERLY S. CASBON, CHAD ALLEN 154 CASEY, JAMES ALAN 115 CASEY, JILL MARIE CASSADY, JOHN MC DOWELL 154 CASSIDAY, JACQUELINE JOY CASTLE, DAVID BEACH CATALANO, MICHAEL ANTHONY 154 CATHARINE, SHELLEY MANN CAUDLE, DAVID LEONARD CAUGHEY, KRISTEN ANNE CAVALLO, CHARLES ANTHONY 89 CAVIGGIOLA, STEVEN LOUIS CAW, THOMAS SHEPHERD CAZARES, MIGUEL CECIL. PHILIP WAYNE CERCONE, CHRISTINE DEBRA CERNOCK, LAURA ELIZABETH 137 . CHABRAJA, LAURA LYN 88 CHABRAJA, MICHAEL ANTHONY 89 CHALFANT, JEFFREY ALAN CHALMERS. JULIA HOWES CHAMBERS, CATHERINE ELIZABETH CHAMBERS, CRAIG DAVID CHAMPA, LOUIS EDWARD CHANDLER, LYNLEY SEARLE CHANDLER, PAULA ANN CHANDRA, RANDY SEKHAR CHAPMAN, ANGELA BROOKS 138 CHAPMAN, JAMIE LYN 111 CHAPMAN, STEVEN WAYNE 137 CHARBONNEAU, DANIEL WHITNEY CHASE, BARRY A. CHASTAIN, TRACY ANN 154 CHAVEZ, LUIS PEDRO 137 CHEN, HUNG YANG CHIANG, Ll-FENG CHILDERS, ROBIN MARIE CHILDRESS, PATRICK GENE 137 CHRISTENSON, SHAWN CHERI CHRISTIANSON, SVEN DAVID 138, 199 CHRISTLIEB, ROBERT MICHAEL PLATT CHRISTMAN, ANDREA ELIZABETH CHRISTOPHER, EDITH MARIE CICERO, JAMES JEROME CLADITIS, PAULA NICOLE 138 CLANCY, ALISON THERESA CLARK, ANDREW ROSS CLARK, PHILIP DOUGLAS 154 CLARK, SCOTT ANDREW CLAUDON, TIMOTHY JAMES CLAWSON, ROSALEE ANN CLEARY, NORINE TODD CLENDENING, AMY E. CLEVELAND, TODD MERRILL CLIFTON, KIMBERLY SUZETTE CLOONAN, TIMOTHY GILBERT CLUTTS, POLLY BECKER COATS, ELIZABETH CORNELL 57 COBB, SUSAN LINNEA 138 COBBIN, ERICA LYNN 138 ICOCHRAN, RHETT NATHANIEL 138 COCKERILL, CARYN SUE COCKERILL, HEIKE KRISTINA COFFMAN, CATHERINE ANN 154 COIL, BRENT WAYNE COIL, DEIDRE SUE COLBY, STEPHEN WILLIAM 162 COLLET, CATHERINE T. COLLINS, CURTIS LEE COLLINS, JOYCE LYNN 162 COLLINS, KATHLEEN ANN 57 COLLINS, TODD ALAN COMBS, BRADLEY CHARLES COMBS, DALE EDWIN COMBS, MARILYN JOY 169 COMER, AMY LEE 154. 125 COMFORT, REBEKAH ANNE 86 COMPTON, CHARLES ALAN COMPTON, LiSA ANNE CONLEY, CHRISTOPHER TODD 138, 70, 90 CONNER, CARY LEE 138 CONNER, SUSANNE CAROL 138 CONSTANCE, JULIE LYNNE 86 CONSTANCE, SUSAN ELIZABETH CONTE, JOSEPH ARTHUR 138, 70 COOK, JENNIFER LYNN COOLEY, BRENT ALAN 80 COOLEY, THOMAS LOREN 138 COOLIDGE, STEVEN KRESSLER COOLMAN, JAMIE LYNNE 138, 92 COOMER, CATHERINE ELIZABETH COONS, ANDREA RONNEAL COONS, RICHARD JOHN ' , COOPER, JEFFREY SCOTT COOPER, LISA ANN COOPRIDER, KATHRYN CARROLL COPELAND, NANCY ELLEN 438 COPPOC, LAURA JEAN 470 COPSEY, SCOTT THOMAS CORBIN, BRETA CORNELSON. KATHERINE ANN CORNN, BRET ANTHONY 488 COSLEY, DONALD JAMES 454 COSTANZO, CARRIE ANNE 4 COTTRELL, NICOLE KAY COUGHLAN, JAYNE CAROL 454. 425 COWAN, NANCY JO COWAN, PATRICIA KAY COWGILL, KIMBERLY ANN 462 COWLES, DOUGLAS MAC PHERSQN 89 COX, DONNA MARIE COY, GREGORY SCOTT 80 COYLE, ANNA MARGARET COZAD, AMY JO CRAGEN, CHARLES JEFFERSON 438 CRANDALL, JANE ELIZABETH 454, 96 CRECELIUS, JENNIFER LYNNE CRENSHAW, ELYSE ANN CRIST, BRETT MICHAEL 8O CRIST, SCOTT ANDREW 462 CROANING, JAMES PHILLIPS 69 CROMWELL, TARA WRIGHT CRONIN, TIMOTHY DESMOND 470, 45 CROSBY, JENNIFER MARIE CROSBY, THOMAS BYRON CROSS, KARMAN GAIL CROSSIN, PATRICK EDWARD CRUMP, STEPHEN MC INTYRE 70 CULL, JANET LYNN CUMBOW, TODD ERIC 454 CUMMINGS, GARY RICHARD 454 CUMMINGS, ROBERT TODD 420 CUNNINGHAM, JOAN ELLEN CUNNINGHAM, LAURA J. CURLESS, THOMAS DREVER CURRAN, JENNIFER A. CURTIS, THOMAS BRADFORD CUSTER, JENNIFER LOUISE 439 CUSTER, TEMPLE ANNE 439 CYTRON, BRADFORD JUDSON CZIPERLE, KAREN MARIE 455 DAHLMAN, KATHLEEN MARIE DAHLQUIST, KATHRYN LYNN 74 DAILY. BRIAN LESLIE DALBY, THOMAS DEAN DALENBERG, DAVID JUDD DALES, BRUCE ROBERT DALTON, MICHAEL ALBERT DAMEREL, NICOLA AIMEE 439 DANAHER, FRANK E. 470 DANEN, PHILIP JOHN 470, 59 DANIEL. MICHAEL JOSEPH 80 DANIELEWICZ, JENNIFER LYNN DAPP, NICOLE JEANINE 72 DARNALL, JILL E. 96 DARNELL, DEBORAH KAY DAROSETT, KIMBERLY JANE DAROSETT, TIMOTHY SCOTT DAUGHERTY, KYLE DAVID DAVID, DIANA LABELLE 463 DAVIDSON, LESLIE ANNE 74 DAVIDSON, THOMAS ANDREW DAVILA, JUAN PABLO 463 DAVIS, JACKSON BEECHER DAVIS, JENNIFER LYNN DAVIS, JULIE ANNE DAVID, MARC WILLIAM 420 DAVIS, MICHAEL C. DAY, CATHERINE L. 455 DAY, CHRISTINA LYNN DAY, KRISTIN SUZANNE DE BOLT, BETH ANN DE FREESE, SCOTT A. DE GRAAF, CARY RONALD DE HART, NATALIE SUE DE JONG, TAMARA LYNNE DE LIBERA, SABRINA MARIE 439 DE LONG, LAURA LYNN DE TEMPLE, KAREN LORRAINE DE VOS, ANDREA JEANNE NICOLE 455 DEAN, CHRISTINE BARRY DEAN, MATTHEW WILLIAM 455 DECKER, ANNE LINDEN DECKER, CHRISTINE MICHELE DEES, JENNIFER ANN DEHNER, THOMAS ROSS DEIMUND, MICHAEL GARETTE DELIO, ANN MARIE DEMMINGS, MATTHEW LORIMER DENICE, MICHAEL HUGH DEPEW, CHAUNCEY MITCHELL 463 DERRICKSON, ANNE MEDLEY DETTY, BRADLEY SCOTT DEXHEIMER, LESLIE KATHLEEN DEXTER, ADAM WINSTON DI NOTO, CINDY DICKEY, TERRENCE R. 84 DICKS, EMILY SUZANNE 439 DIECKMANN, SCOTT PADRAlC D4ENNER, ELIZABETH REGNIER 439 DIETZ, LINDA HEYWOOD DILLE, JOHN FLINT DILLON. DAVID CHRISTIAN DILTS, ROBERT DANIEL DIMMERS, MARTHA ANN DIPPELL, WILLIAM RANDLE DISMORE, ANDREW GATEN DITCHMAN, JOHN BUTLER 55 DIXON, JOHN HOWARD DIXON, MICHAEL JAMES DOBBS, TRACY DIANE DOBROTA, COLLEEN MICHELLE 92 DOMENIANNI, PAULA DONSON, STEPHEN BRADLEY DOOLEY, CONLEY ALLEN DOOLEY, MICHAEL DEAN 455 DOOLITTLE, HOLLY KAY I ' . . . . . urn . . DORAN, GARFIELD EUGENE 84 DOTSON, NATASHA RUTHANNE DOUGLAS, CLINTON ARNOLD DOUGLASS, PETER JAMES DOVE, DOUGLAS STEWART 470 DOVE, LAURA ANN DOW, ANGELA MARIE DOYLE, JENNIFER KAYE 439 DOYLE, SUSAN MARY 470 DRAEGER, TRACEY LYNN DRAHEIM, DANIEL PHILIP 439 DRANGMEISTER, LAURA ELLEN DRANGO. BARTON FREDERICK DRIEMEIER, DEBRA ALISON DRIEMEIER, DOUGLAS HARRY 470, 445, 26, 64 203 204 DRIGGS, MARK TOWNSEND DRUMTRA, DAWN ELIZABETH WILSON DU PREE, JENNIFER ANNE 439 DUFFIELD, STEVEN JAMES 439 DUKSTEIN, REBECCA DIANE 455 DUNCAN, ELIZABETH ANN 463 DUNCAN, KATHARINE ANN DUNCAN, VICTORIA LEE DUNN, MEREDITH CAROLINE DURHAM, COURTNEY LEIGH DUTT, JERE WARREN DUVALL, JENNIFER LYNN DWYER, LESLIE ANN DYKES, KATHERINE MARY EADS, JENNIFER L. EADS, MARCI LYNN EARHART, SCOTT WILLIAM EARNEST, ASHLEY LYNN 455, 24 EARNEST. MATTHEW BRYAN 4 39 EARNHART, STEVEN C. 439 EATON, GREGG THOMAS EDGAR, JAMES ALEXANDER EDWARDS, CHRISTOPHER ALAN EDWARDS, PAULA MARIE 470 EDWARDS, ROBERT P. EGAN, COLLEEN B. 72 EGLEN, DARCIE LYNNE 470 EHM, RANDALL DENNIS EIKENBERRY, CHRISTOPHER DOUGLAS 455 EISSLER, MARTHA L. 72 ELDRIDGE, DJUANA LEI ELLIOT, TERESA MICHELLE 439': ELLIOTT, JEFFREY JOHNSON ELLIOTT, SARAH ANN ELLIS, CHRISTINE 455 ELLIS, MARTIN LYNN ELLIS, WENDY ANNE ELSER, AMY FRANCESCA EMBREE, SHERI ELAINE EMBRY, KATHERINE KING EMENS, KRIS EMERY, KAREN ELIZABETH EMMERT, JENNIFER REBECCA EMMITT, STEPHANIE EILEEN 463 ENDICOTT, JAMES NESBIT 463 ENDICOTT, JILL CHRISTINE ENDSLEY, KARA SUE ENGELHARDT, TODD RAITH ENGLISH, JILL LYNN 439 ENGLISH, MARGARET KATHERINE 57 ERB, JASON CHARLES ERNST, TODD BERTRAM ETTER, SUSAN LORRAINE 96 EUKEN, CAROL BETH EVANS, CRAIG ALAN EVANS, RACHELLE LYNN EVANS, REBECCA GAY EVANS, TODD MICHAEL EVERHART, MITCHEL THOMAS 474 EVES, JONATHAN KENT 474 EWBANK, AHREN EWTON, DAVID MICHAEL 463 FACCHINI, FRANCIS R. FAHLSING, MICHELLE LYN FAKOURI, BEJAN JOHN 463 FANALY, ELIZABETH ANN FARKONAS, ANNE RENEE FARO, MARIE CECELIA FARRINGTON ,MICA LEIGH 439 FAY, LISA JEAN FEATHERSTONE, DONALD WILLIAM FEEHAN, TIMOTHY SEAN FEENEY, NANCY CAROL FEHLBERG, MARY LOU 76 FEINLEIB, MELISSA RUTH FEINTHEL, RENATA FAYE 439 FELGER, ELIZABETH ELLEN FELIX, ERICA LEIGH FELKE, CHRISTOPHER LEE 474 FELKE, SARAH KATHRYN FELLMAN, CONSTANCE MACKAY 474 FELTS, CHRISTOPHER PATRICK FENTON. DIANNE LESLIE FENTON, MICHAEL EDWIN 440, 84 FERGUSON, AMY MAYFIELD FERGUSON, ELIZABETH ANN 463 FERGUSON, JULIE CHRISTINE 474 FERGUSON, ROY JOHNER FERRELL, DAVID C. 80 FERRELL, SANDRA TEMPLE FETTER, WILLIAM LIVINGSTON FETZER, SASCHA CLIFF FEUTZ, KRIS SUSAN MC CLURE FIELDS, DEBORAH SUSAN FIFIELD, KAREN LOUISE 455 FILAS, BRENDAN ANTHONY FILLER, ABIGAIL SHEILA FILLER, TIMOTHY WADE FINCH, MATTHEW KENT FINDLEY, RICHARD B. 463 FINGERHUT, ASTRID HAALAND FINGERHUT, DAVID DARNELL 7O FINN, JAMES MATTHEW 8O FINNEGAN, MARK WILLIAM FIRMIN, BETH FIRMIN, HOLLY FISCHBACH, STEPHEN TODD FISCHER, ANNA LYN 455 FISCHER, REBECCA JEAN FISHER, ADRIENNE LEIGH FISHER, MICHAEL JUSTIN FISK, ALEXANDER WORKS FITZGERALD, CATHERINE PORTER 86 ' FITZGERALD, KIMBERLY ANN FITZGIBBONS, ELLEN MARGARET FITZSIMMONS, CATHERINE ANNE 72 FITZSIMMONS, JOHN MICHAEL FLAIG, LAURA ANN 440 FLEENOR, DAVID ALLEN FLEMING, AMY ELLEN FLEMING, SARA ANN FLESVIG, RAGNAR V. 474, 90 FLETCHER, KATHLYN EMMA 440, 83 FLORCZAK, JUDITH ELECIA FLORY, DOUGLAS ALAN FOERSTER, LISA MARIE 440, 92 FOLTZ, AARON ALAN 7O FOOTMAN, SHENIA LYNN 440 FORBES, J. PATRICK FORSLUND, JENNIFER ANN FOSTER, CYNTHIA ANN 474 FOX, CHRISTOPHER MATTHEW FOX, JON PIERRE FOX, LAURA MARIE FOX, NANCY LYNN FRANCIS, JEFFREY EDWARD FRANCIS, NICOLE ANNE 455 FRANKS, JAMIE MICHELLE FRAZIER, LYNN ELIZABETH FREDERICK, STEPHANIE JOAN FREDERlCKSON, JILL MO FREDRICKSON, TODD WILL4AM FREE, DAVID JAMES FREEMAN, TIMOTHY DAVIS FREEMAN. WHITNEY CASTLE FREY, LAURA ELIZABETH FREY, LISA MARIE FREY, TIMOTHY JAMES 80 FRIELlNGSDORF, HEIDI SHERWOOD FRIEZE, TODD WILLIAM FRIGO, LAURA JEAN 455 FRISBIE, MARK THOMAS 440 FRISCH, MARNIE JOANNA FRONTZ, MICHAEL JONATHAN 455 FROSCHAUER, JOSEPH PAUL FRYREAR, CLARK DOUGLAS FUCHS, JILL CHRISTINE FULKERSON, JOHN WILL4AMS 440 FULLER, TAMRA LYNN 440 FURLONG, ELIZABETH GERTRUDE G. 440 GABLE, ROBERT JOHN KENT GAINES, CHARIS CARMEN 474 GALBREATH, STUART EDWARD GALE, SUZANNE ELAINE GALE, TIMOTHY MICHAEL 440 GALLO, KIRSTEN LEA GALLOWAY, HEATHER ANN GALLT, DONNA LYNN GAMBLE, KYLE ARTHUR 89 GAMBREL, BRYAN PHILLIP 44o GAMMON, CLIFFORD WAYNE GANNON, LEIGH KATHLEEN GANTTER, VICTORIA LYNN GARFINK, CAROLINE HOFFMAN 74 GARNER, BRADLEY ARMSTRONG GARNER, SHANNON MICHELLE GARRAHY, PATRICK JOHN GARRETT, KATHERINE ELIZABETH GARVIN, WILLIAM ALLAN GASKIN, STEPHEN HAMILTON 420 GAUSS, CHRISTOPHER DAVID 455 GAUSS, ROBERT LEE GEBBEN, MEGAN LOUISE GEESLIN, SUSAN ELIZABETH 474 GEISS, LAURA JEAN GERALDSON, AMY CHRISTINE 88 GERBIG, PATRICIA MARIE 86 GERICKE, JUSTIN DOUGLAS 455 GETZ, BRIAN MICHAEL GIANNINI, LESLIE BETH GIBSON, JANE LYNN 472, 95, 55 GIBSON, JEFFREY GILBERT GIBSON, JOAN GHERING GIESECKE, MICHAEL JOHN 84 GIGANTI, JAY RUSSELL GILBERT, CHRISTOPHER WARREN GlLBREATH, TYLER s. 440 GILES, ROBERT HAMILTON 455 GILES, WILLIAM GREGORY 455 GILLISON, BRIAN MATTHEW 472 GILLIGAN, BARBARA JANE GILLIS. MELISSA JEAN 472, 76, 28 GILLISON, HEATHER ANNE GILMANI BRITTON EDWARD 7o GILMORE, BENJAMIN SALGE GINGRICH, CHAD JASON GLANDER, GRAHAM JAMES GLASS, JANET GLASS, LINDA 7,, GLEASON, CARROLL CHRISTOPHER GLENNON, MARY LYNN 472 GLOFF, CHRISTOPHER HENRY GLOTZBACH, MARY BETH GLOVESKE, ROBERT LOUIS 80 GLYNN, CHRISTINA MARIE GODDARD, SARAH ANN 456 GOETCHEUS, AMY LISABETH GOETCHEUS, GREGORY JOHN GOOD, DEBRA LYNN GORDON, KENDRA DIANE 440 GORMAN, KATHLEEN GORVETT, GAYLE SHAWN GORZ, CHRISTOPHER SEAN GOSLEE, BRIAN JOHN GOSNELL, JENNIFER MARIE GOSSARD, LISA DALE 472 GOSSETT, SCOTT DAVIS GOTTESMAN, ZACHARY GOTTLIEB, JASON DANIEL 440, 84 GOUGH, MELANIE BETH GOULD, ELLEN SUZANNE GOURLEY, DOUGLAS STEWART 89 GRAHAM, ANGELA KAYE GRAHAM, TIMOTHY JAMES 70 GRAM, MARY LOUON GRAMS, CATHERINE MARIE 433 GRANT, JAMES H. GRANT, JENNIFER LYNN GRAY, ELISABETH SUMMERS 440 GRAY, JOHN WILLIAM 456 GRAY, KRISTINA DIANE GRAYSON, THOMAS MICHAEL GREEN, JENNIFER LYNN 440 GREEN, JODI JANE 472 GREEN, ROGER W. GREENAWALD, ERIKA LYNN GREENE, JOHN EVANS GREENLEE, TROY SHANNON 80 GREENMAN, DANA ROCHELLE GREENMAN, SCOTT CHARLES GREENSLIT, HEATHER LIV 472 GREGG, JOSEPH RANDALL GREGORY, JESSICA LOUISE GREY, LISA MARIE GREY, RICHARD SEVERN 90 GRIDER, CHRISTOPHER W. GRIESER, STEPHANIE LYNN GRIEVE. ANDREW JOHN GRIFFIN, ROBIN WINONE 74 GRIFFITH, CAROLINE M. 444, 72 205 206 GRIFFITH, KEVIN SCOTT GRIMES, BETH ELLEN GRISSOM, KATHRYN VAUGHN 444 GRITTER, KATHY SUE GROELING, TIM JOSEPH 444 GROGAN, DAWN PARKS GROOMS, TRAVIS EDWARD GROTE, MICHAEL ROGER GROW, NATHANIAL DOUGLAS GRUBER, INGRID KJELDSEN GRUDZINSKI, RANDY ALLAN GRUNER, KRIS CHARLES GUIMONT, VINCENT PAUL GUINAN, CRISTAL MICHELE 472 GUINN, BRETT JOSEPH GULICK, HELEN SPENCER 86 GUST, BRAD ALLEN 444 GUZ, CANDACE ANN CUZ, CORINNE CATHERINE GUZZLE, BENJAMIN TURNER - HAAK, KRISTIN M. 444 HABIGER, KATHLEEN GORMAN 444 HACKBARTH, ALFRED ERNEST HACKER, SUSAN CAROL 472, 6 HACKNEY, DAVID JAY HACKWORTHY, DEBORAH LYNN 76, 82 HADDLE, KEVIN RAY HAEBICH, BETH LYNETTE 472 HAGLUND, JESPER NICLAS HAGUE, KRISTEN ANN HAIGHT, CONNIE LYNNE HALE, WELCOME EZRA HALFMANN, CHARLES MORGAN HALL, BARBARA RENEE 473 HALL, BRENT ANDREW 456 HALL, CHRISTOPHER M. HALL, DORINDA SUE HALL, ELLEN ELIZABETH HALL, KRISTEN HEATHER HALL, MARY CATHERINE HALL, MICHAEL LAWRENCE HALL, ROBERT THOMPSON HALLETT, RICHARD LEE HALPIN, ANDREA ELIZABETH 92 HALSTEAD, ALLYSON PRYOR 92 HALSTEAD, SCOTT MICHAEL HAMILTON, CHRISTOPHER JOHN 444 HAMILTON, JEFFREY DAVID HAMMACK, HOLLY JEAN HAMMOND, JANET LYNNE 456, 92 HAMMOND, JENNIFER LESLIE 456 HAND, JOEL DEE 444 HANLEY, ROBERT NEUMAN HANLON, JAMES PATRICK HANNON, DONALD LEE HANSEN, CRAIG ERIK HANSON, JENNIFER MARIAN HARDIN, ANGELA JO HARDING, JEFFREY BROOKS HARDWICK, ANNE MARIE 444 HARDY, DAVID WIDMAR 463 HARDY, DOUGLAS ERLING HARGROVE, AMY JO HARKNESS, CYNTHIA DIANE HARKNESS, SCOTT ALLEN 473 HARLAN, MATTHEW DOUGHERTY HARMANN, JAMES ALLEN 463 HARMENING, ANDREW JOHN HARMENING, JEFFREY LOUIS HARMON, JULIA EMISON 473 HARMON, SUSAN ELIZABETH HARRELL, ROBERT GILSON HARRINGTON, MAUREEN ANN HARRIS, GORDON LEE HARRIS, JODI LYN HARRIS, KIMBERLY ANN 74 HARROLD, POLLY MAREE 463 HARSHFIELD, CHARLOTTE E. HARSHMAN, KAREN ANN HART, DENISE BRESEE HART, ELIZABETH LOUISE 76 HART, KRISTIN GRIFFITH HART, L. PAUL HARTER, WENDY ELAINE HARTLEB, KATHERINE SUSAN 444 HARTMAN, BRAD F. HARTMAN, CRAIG ALLEN 70 HARTPENCE, JENNIFER LOUISE HARVEY, JENNIFER RUTH HARVEY, TYLER YOUMEUS HASLER, KIRSTE ELIZABETH HASTIE, BROCK ELLIOT 89 HASWELL, STEPHEN ANDREW HATCHER, SUSAN KAY HATFIELD, LAURA GAY HATFIELD, MATTHEW F. HATFIELD, MILTON AARON HAUGH, ELIZABETH ANN HAUGK, AMY JO 463 HAVENSTEIN, CYNTHIA ANN 473, 6 HAWES-DAVIS, DOUGLAS J. HAY, JANICE MARGARET HAYDEN, MEXICO 444 HAYES, ERIC BURTON 89 HAYES, MARY REBECCA HAYNES, CAROLYN JOANNE HAYNES, PAUL KENDEL 456 HAZEN, SARA L. 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HURLEY, JOHN ALOYSIUS HUSSEY, STEPHEN GALE HUTCHISON, PHILIP JAY HUTTO, CHLOE CARLISLE HUTTON, LAURA BETH HYNDS, BRIDGET ELAINE INGHAM, ELlZABETH WELLS INGLE, KATHRYN GRACE 1 ,-5-L INKROTT, JULIE A. IRVINE, MATTHEW GRANT 474 ISBISTER, KEVIN M. ISSA, ALI A. IVANICK, CYNTHIA LYN JACKSON, IDELLA EMLETTE 442 JACKSON, TIMOTHY NOEL JACOB, JOHN CARL JACOBS, GREGORY EDWARD JAMROSE, MARTINA 82 JANAC, JULIANE D. JANN, SUSAN MICHELLE 442 . $ 61,425 JANZARUK, JULIE ANN 457 JEFFERY, KATHRYN ANNE JENKINS, KAREN ELIZABETH 442 JENNINGS, SUSAN EVELYN JOHANSEN, PATRICK EUGENE 442 JOHN, CHERYL LYN JVOHNLOZ, CHRISTOPHER ALLEN JOHNSON, BLAKE EDWARD JOHNSON, DEBRA RAE JOHNSON, ELIEEN HARRINGTON JOHNSON, ELLEN ELIZABETH JOHNSON, GEORGIANNA KALLEY 474 :JOHNSON, JENNIFER LYNN JOHNSON, JOHN WILLIAM JOHNSON, KEITH MITCHELL 443 JOHNSON, MARCIA CLAIRE 457 JOHNSON, MARGARET JEAN 457 JOHNSON, MARIETTA SCURRY 72 JOHNSON, MICHELLE RENE' JOHNSON, NICOLETTE MICHELE 443 JOHNSON, PAUL ASHLEY EVANS JOHNSON, ROBERT STYRON JOHNSON, TIMOTHY CARL JOHNSON, TRACY MICHELLE 72 JOHNSTON, JEFFREY KARL JOHNSTON, SHANNON O'NEAL 443 JOHNSTONE, LISA MARIE JONAS, KATHARINE ANN 457 JONES, ANN-CLORE 40 JONES, HEATHER KATHLEEN JONES, JAMIE SUE JONES, KERRY LYNNE JONES, KRISTIN MARIE 474 JONES, RICHARD EARL 474 JONES, RICK JOSEPH 55 JOSEPH, PHILLIP DAVID JOSEPHSON, DEBORAH ANN JOST, ANTHONY RICHARD 464 JOSTES, CHRISTOPHER JOHN JOVEN, MARIA NASIS 52 JUNG, KAREN LYNN JURGENSON, CURTIS ROBERT JURS, MICHAEL SCOTT KACZALA, SHARON ANNE 474 KAISER, MARY JOSEPHINE KAISER, PAULA LUANN KAISER, STEPHANIE SUE KALISER, DAVID NEWTON KALUF, SHELLEY DEE KALUF, SHERRI LEA KANE, CHRISTOPHER P. 207 208 KANE, KIMBERLY ANN KANG, HUI A. KARAMPAS, CIA KARAMPAS, NICKIE KAROLY, FRANK MICHAEL KATICH, DOUGLAS JOHN KAUERZ, AMY LYNNE 464 KAULSAY, HARDEEP SINGH KAWESKE, KATHERINE ANNE KEEDY, LAURA JANE 457 KEEDY, MATTHEW JOHN 443, 499 KEELER, DAVID NANCE KEELER, RICHARD DEAN KEENAN, JOHN PORTER 84 KEEPING, JENNIFER ANN KEGLER, TODD MICHAEL KEHOE, ANTHONY E. KELLER, ANNE ELIZABETH 72 KELLER, BRADLEY DON 443 KELLER, FLOYD DOMMINICK 443 KELLY, EDWARD JOSEPH KELLY, JOHN KEVIN KELLY, MICHAEL PATRICK KEMP, ANGELA JEAN 443 KEMPER, KATHERINE READ 54 KEMPER, LAWRENCE JOSEPH KENNEDY, JANICE SUE 443 KENNEDY, JOE NATHAN 457 KEPCHAR, CASSANDRA ELLEN KERESEY, ALEXANDRA LOUISE KERN, NORA CHRISTINE KERR, LAURA GAYE KERRIHARD. 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MILLER, RONNIE LEE 3 MILLER, SARAH JANE MILLER, TODD ANTHONY MILLER, WILLIAM RANDOLPH MILLER, WILLIAM TIMOTHY MEHTA, SUDHIR MEIER, SHANNON D. 425 MELVIN, ANNETTE KATHRYN MERCER, CYNTHIA DEE 445 MEREDITH, BRIAN KIRK MILLIKIN, CATHERINE SUE 92 MERKEL, MICHELLE MATTHIAS MILLS. CHARLES DRAKE 145 MILLS, JENNIFER WELCH 446 MERRILL, MICHELE JANE - MILNER, CAROLYN y MERRYMAN, RONDA DIANE 445 MILNER, LAURA LYNN METCALF, DAVID NOLAN 420 MILTENBERGER, JULIE METCALF, ERIC SEAN MINER, ERIK CHRISTOPHER MEYER, BRYAN JAMES MINTURN, COREY ALAN 84 MEYER, CHARLES JOHNSON MIRACLE, TRENT BURCH 445 MITCHELL, DEBORAH LYNN MEYER, CHRISTOPHER i MITCHELL, JAMES EDWARD ANTHONY MITCHELL, KARI SUE MEYER, JOHN DAVID 420 MOATZ, NINA GAYLE MEYER, MOLLY LYNN MOCK, MICHAEL LIN 446 MEYER, PATRICK EDWARD MOLLABASHY, ALLAADDIN MEYERS, CYNTHIA KAY 477 MONFRE, CHRISTINE MARIE MICHALAK, KIMBERLY I. 445 MONSMA, JOTHAM ZACHARY MILES, BETH SUZANNE MONTEMURRO, GINA JOANN MILLAR, MATTHEW WALLACE , MONTGOMERY, MINDY CAROL MILLER, AMY MAE 446 MILLER, BARBARA LYNN 6 MONTGOMERY, TODD MARTIN MILLER, CHRISTINA KATHLEEN MONTGOMERY, WILLIAM LOUIS 4W3? 54:24.: , L MOODY, HEATHER SHOLES MOODY, PATRICK BURNETT MOONEY, STEPHEN MARR 458, 89 MOORE, KELLEY RENEE MOORE, NICOLEE LYNN MORAN, JAY PATRICK MORDINI, CATALINA SILVIA MORGAN, DEREK JOHN MORGAN, LISA BROOKS 477 MORICAL, GREGORY JAMES MORONEY, FRANCESCA MARIA MORR, KATHERINE LOUISE MORRIS, DIANE SUZANNE 458, 72 MORRIS, ROBERT SCOTT MORRIS, SUSAN JANE 76 MORRISON, CATHERINE MARIE 465, 6, 425 MORROW, JAY BRADLEY MORROW, JO ELLEN MORROW, JOHN CAIRNE MORSE, LISA CAROL MORSE, PETER ABERNETHY 69 MORSE, PETER HARWOOD MOSER, AMY LOUISE 458, 72 MOUNTS, MICHELLE MARIE MUCHA, LORYN KELLY 76, 82 MUEHLBAUER, STACEY ANN MUELLER, MARTHA HELEN 478, 72 MUGGLESTON, LAURA ANNE 74 MUIR, LAURA LEIGH MUKHOPADHYAY, SUCHETANA MULLIN, JAMES CHRISTOPHER 458 MUMBIRO, KUDZAI BENJAMIN MUMBIRO, NHAMO WALTER MURPHY, ANN MICHELE 478 MURPHY, JULIA ANN 478 MURPHY, PATRICK GUYON 80 MURPHY, SEANA CHERISE 82 MURTAUGH, ELIZABETH LYNN MUSE, JEFFREY DARREN MUSGRAVE, MICHAEL CARLYLE 446 MUSKOVICH, JASON VINCENT MUTH, CHRISTY ANN MYERS, MARY ELIZABETH MYERS, MICHAEL PAUL 465 MYERS, TIMOTHY MARK MYERS, TODD MICHAEL NAGGS, KARLA MARIE NAHRA, DAVID MICHEL NAPOLI, ANNEMARIE NARTEN, KARA LEE NARUKE. KENSUKE , NASSER, LESLIE ANNE NASSER, SUSAN WHITE NEAL, JENNIFER NEALON, RAYMOND JOSEPH NEEB, SARAH ELIZABETH 458 NEFF, BRIAN RAY NEFF, ROGER LEE NEIDELL, SHARAGAYLE 478, 86 NEISLER, ALEXANDRA DIANA NELSON, ANDREW FREDRICK 89, 420 NELSON, DANIEL EAGEN 465, 90 NELSON, DEBRA LYNN 446, 72 NELSON, MATTHEW BRETT NELSON, NANCY LYNN NELSON, STACI DAWN NESS, RICHARD MATHEW 446 NEUMILLER, KATHERINE COOLIDGE 465 NEWTON, LERA AYN 446 NICELY, KATHLEEN CLARE 446 NICHOLS, W. JAY 478 NICHOLSON, JEFFREY SCOTT NICHOLSON, MICHELE RENEE 458 NIEVES, EMILIO NIZAMOFF, NANCY MARIE NOBLE, THERESA ANNE MARIE NOECKER, ROBERT JOHN NOEL, CHERYL LYNN NOLL, JAMES DEAN NOLL, JENNlFER LEIGH NOLL, KATHRYN LAIRD 86 NORENE, KRISTINE JOAN 458 NORIAN, MARAL NORTHROP, KIMBERLY PREECE NORTHRUP, HEATHER LYNN NORTON, MARGARET LYNN NOVAK, DAVID LAWRENCE NOVAK, NANCY 458 NYBERG, PAMELA JEAN O'BRIEN, CARYN LYNN 86 O'BRIEN, DANIEL PATRICK O'BRIEN, DAVID WAYNE O'BRIEN, JAMES MARTIN 459, 420 O'BRIEN, MICHAEL PATRICK O'BRIEN, POLLY KATHRYN O'CONNELL, EDWARD JERbM-E- O'CONNELL, JEANNE MARIE 478 O'CONNELL, JOHN JOSEPH O'CONNELL, PATRICK JOHN O'GARA, THOMAS FRANCIS 446 O'GUINN, MAX DAVIS O'HARA, THOMAS JAMES 478 O'NEAL, JAY BEATTY OAKLEY, JAMES ROBERT OETTING, SUSAN ELIZABETH OETTINGER, CHRISTOPH MAX OKADA, TOMOKO 59 OKRAGLY, ANGELA JEANNINE OLEJNICZAK, RICHARD DAVID OLEKSY, LORETTA ANNE OLER, AMY ELIZABETH OLMSTED, HEATHER LEE OLSEN, JENNIFER MARIE 446 OLSON, CHRISTINE ADELINE 446 OLSON, HEATHER LYNN 446, 430 OLSON, JEFFREY D. 446 OOLEY, SHANNON JEAN ORLAND, DAVID MICHAEL 459 ORLANDO, AMY MARIE ORN, NANCY ANN 478 OROSAN, JENNIFER LYN 465, 426 ORTIZ, CAROLOS 446 OSBORN, NICOLA ANN OSBORNE, SCOTT EDWARD 465 OSHA, ROBERT HAROLD OSSMANN, ERIC WILLIAM OTT, JOHN GREGORY 459 OTT, CHRISTOPHER EDWARD 446, 70 OVERTON, ALYCE LUISE 446, 76 PACE, JENNIFER LYNN 446 PACE, MICHELLE DIANNE 447 244 PADDOCK, TAMARA LOUISE PAGACH, TOBI LYNN PAGANO, MICHAEL NEIL PAGE, SATONYA TYELISE 459 PAINE, ANDREW J. PALLOTTA, TODD MICHAEL PALMER, MICHELE ANN PALMETER, NANCY LYNN 478 PAMUK, GUNNAR SVEN PANCOAST, JENNIFER ELLEN PANGBORN. JANET LAURIE PANKEY, MICHAEL RICHARD PANKRATZ, SHERITH HOPE PAPE, JEREMY THOMAS 447 PAQUETTE, MACHELE DAWN PARDUS, PHILIP ANTHONY PARK, KANG IL PARKER, JENNIFER SUE PARSELL, SCOTT DAVID 465 PARTENHEIMER, PAMELA SUSAN 447 PASCHER, LYSANDRA PATE, MATTHEW DOUGLAS PATEL, SANJAY PATRICK, ANNE LOUISE 459 PATTERSON, JAMI JO GIBSON PATTERSON, ROBERT MICHAEL PATTERSON, TINA KAY PATTILLO, KENNETH MICHAEL PATTON, SUSAN WILSON PAVULS, ANDRA MARILYN PAYNE, CHRISTINE CLASS 465 PAYNE, STEVEN WILLIAM PEABODY, DANIEL PUTNAM 479 PEACOCK, BRADLEY SCOTT PEASE, BRIAN MICHAEL 447 PECK, DENETTE DAWN PEEBLES, SARAH ANNE PELLETTIERE, EDMUND VICTOR PENNER, GEORGE EDWARD PEREIRA, DAVID ROLAND PERENCEVICH, ILKA MARIE 447 PERKINS, WILLIAM DALE PERKS, BRETT DAVID PERKS, KRISTIN LYNNE PERRIN, KATHRYN ALICE 447 PERRY, JOHN RICHARDS PERRY, KIRK DWIGHT 459 PERRY, ROBERT STANDISH PERSON, PAMELA RENEE PETERS, CHAD BENJAMIN PETERS, JILL MARIE PETERS, RALPH W. PETERSON, CECILY ANNE PETERSON, CHAD SAYLOR 447, 89 PETERSON, JAMES EDWARD PETERSON, LAWRENCE ALAN PETRIE, LISA MICHELLE 465 PFLEEGER, KELLY ANNE 447 PHAM, THAI QUOC PHELAN, MATTHEW RICHARD PHELPS, JEANNE LYNN 447 PHELPS, MARY JANE 447 PHILIP, JAMES G. PHILIP, JUSTINE COALE PHILLIPS, CLARENDA MICHELLE 447 PHILLIPS, SUSAN HELENE PHIPPS, AUDRIE ALYNN PIATT, JOEL DEON 479 PICKENS, GEOFFREY EDMUND PlELSTlCKER, ELIZABETH JANE 465 PIERCE, BRAD APTED 57, 89 PIERCE, LAUREN SUSAN 447 PIGATO, LISANNE MARIE PIGOTT, THEODORE JOHN PINDELL, JOSEPH QUINBY PIPPERT, VALERIE CAROLINE PITNER, JENNIFER LYNN PITTMAN, JULIE CHRISTINE PLANJE, CHRISTINA ELISABETH 86, 99 PLATT, KAREN JEAN POCK, JENNIFER LYNN 447 POOL, JILL KATHERINE 447 POPE, JENNIFER LEIGH POPOWICS, KARL GILMOURE PORFILIO, DALE STEVEN PORTELL, GREGORY SCOTT POST, KATHARINE BERRY POWELL, KAREN LYNN POWELL, MARY ESTHER 59 POWELL, SHEILA ANN 465 POWELL, THOMAS DONALD 435, 46, 44. 425. 54 POWELL, THOMAS DONALD POWELSON, ANDREA LEE 447 POWERS, EVA-MARIE 447 POWERS, TRACEY ELIZABETH POYNTER, BRYAN WILLIAM PRESTON, ELIZABETH DEAN 448 PRIDE, AMY ELIZABETH 1 PRIGAN, SARA ELLEN PRIGOHZY, MARC ALAN 89 PROBST, JANE MARIE 459 PROCTOR, KRISTEN LEIGH 74 PROTHERO, THOMAS EDWARD 459 PRYSTALSKI, LYNN ANN PUFF, SCOTT TOWNLEY PUGH, GREGORY ERIC 84 PUGH, JASON ANDREW QUALIZZA, ERNESTO 70 QUALLEY, MICHAEL JOSEPH QUIGLEY, JENNIFER LYNN 459 QUIGLEY, KIMBERLY ANNE RABER, DAVID SHERMAN RABER, WENDY LYNN RABINOWITCH, MICHAEL 89 RACINE, JARVIS DARYL 420 RADLINSKI, MARK DAVID 448 RADWAY, ERICA LEE RAGLAND, HOWARD NICHOLAS RALL, CAROLINE EMILY 448 RAMAPRAKASH, TARINI VIJAYA RAMBO, CHERYL DAWN 76, 82 RAMSAY, ERIC NEIL RAMSAY, WILLIAM C. RANCK, ANDREW TODD RANDALL, MICHAEL CLARK RANDALL, MICHAEL G. 70 RANDALL, NATALIE JEAN RANDAZZO, MARISA ANGELA RANKIN, LAURA JANE 448 RASMUSSEN, GARY J. RATCLIFFE, AMY ANNE RATHJE, KELLY SUE RATLIFF, SARA ANN 448 RATZER, PHILIP REINHARDT RAUB. KRISTEN MARGARET 92 RAWLINS, JEFFREY ALLEN RAY, PAMELA SUE RAY, SUSAN CLAUDIA 88 REAM, KAREN ELAINE REASA, JANE ELIZABETH REBER, DONNA BETH REDDEMANN, GAIL DENISE 448, 96 REDIGER, SHARON LEE REECE, DAVID ALAN REECE, HEATHER NOELLE 448 REECE. SHANNON DIANE 479 REHN, DAVID RUSSELL REICHENBACH, ELIZABETH LORRENE 448 RElCHENBACH, GLEN EDWARD REICKERT, LAURA LYNN REID, DARBY 84 REID, SHERRY ANN REINHARD, MATTHEW ALLYN 479 RELIC, REBECCA LAUREN 479 REMMY, STACY CAROLE RENNIE, REBECCA KATHLEEN RENY, MARK SHELDON RETSECK, CAROL ANNETTE REUTER, MARK COLIN 459 REVELAS, ELENA RICE, KAREN ELIZABETH RICH, LAURA LYN RlCH, MARY LUCILLE 459 RICHARDS, JOAN KATHRYN RICHARDS, LORA LEIGH RICHARDS, SCOTT R. RICHARDSON, EDWiN NEIL RICHARDSON, LISA RENE RICHMAN, KATHERINE FRANCES RICHMAN, RONNA DEE RICHMOND, EMILY CAROL 74 RICKS, KAREN TERESA 82 RIDENOUR, JULIE ANNE 459 RIDGWAY, ELIZABETH ANN RIEPE, GAVIN CHARLES RIESS, DANA CORINNE 86 RILE, MARC PATRICK RILEY, DOUGLAS ALAN RILEY, JOEL PARTYKA RILEY, STACEY ELIZABETH RILEY, THOMAS KINGSBURY RlNGEL, KAREN ANNE 6, 29 RINK, SCOTT LAWRENCE RIPPERDA, TODD WAYNE RISTOW, BARBARA LYNNE RITTER, JAMES CALEB RITZENTHALER, TRENT THOMAS ROACHE, BRETT THOMAS ROBBINS, CHRISTOPHER KENNETH ROBBINS, JOHN HAROLD 448 ROBBINS, WILLIAM CHARLES ORBERTS, ANGELA FAVE ROBERTS, KRISTIN SUE 479 ROBERTS, MICHAEL LEE ROBERTS, RACHEL ELIZABETH 448 ROBERTSON, MIRIAM ANN RODGERS, ARCHIBALD DAVID RODMAN, KIMBERLY ANNE RODMAN, MICHAEL H. 448 ROELLER, RICHARD KEITH ROESSLER, ANN ELIZABETH ROESSLER, JENNIFER KATHRYN 448 ROGERS, ANGELA MARIE ROGERS, MELISSA ANN ROGERS, STEPHEN BRISTOL ROGOVICH, PETER CLARK ROHLFS, GREGORY ALLEN ROHS, SUSANNE MARIE ROLLINS, ANDREA LYNN 425, 433 ROOSE, VICTORIA JEAN ROSADO, SAMUEL 459 ROSE, JEFFREY CHARLES 84 ROSE, STEVEN SCOTT ROSEKRANS, WENDY MAY ROSES, CAMILLA LOUISE ROSES, GABRIEL JAMES ROSS, CHRISTIE ANN ROSS, CHRISTlNA KAY 74 ROSS, NATHAN MICHEL ROSS, ROBERT RAYMOND ROSTKOWSKI, CARRIE JEAN 465 ROTE, CHARLES ROBERT 479 ROULIER, MONTE SPENCER ROUSE, PAUL DAVID 89 ROWAN, JOANILLA MARIE 479 ROWE, JOY MARGUERITE 448, 96 ROWE, KIMBERLY ANN ROYER, CHAD DOUGLAS RUDA, JOHNINE MARIE RUHL, JENNIFER LYNN RULE, NED PERRY RUMMEL, MATTHEW MORTON RUMPLE, ANNE MARIE RUNNEBOHM, CYNTHIA ANN RUSSELL, CHRISTOPHER WILLIAM 459 ' RUSSELL, ELIZABETH ANN RUSSELL, ELIZABETH ANN 459 RUSSELL, ROBYN AUBYN RUSSELL, SCOTT ALAN 448 RUSSELL, SUSAN A. 430 RUTHERFORD, STEVEN LAMONT 80 RUTZ, RICHARD MARTIN 459 RUZIC, MLADEN RYAN, ELIZABETH GAYLE RYAN, JAMES EDWARD 480 RYAN. SCOTT THOMAS RYE, MARK STEPHEN 448 SAKAKEENY, BRANDT AUGUSTUS SALEMI, SCOTT G. SALINAS, TRACY LYNN 449 SALLOWS, JILL SUSAN SALONIKA, CHRISTINA ANN SALSBURY, MICHAEL WILLIAM SALVADOR, PAULINA ALEXANDRA SALZWEDEL, SUZANNE LYNNE SAMADDAR, SHEILA MARIE SANDELS, JENNIFER ELIZABETH SANDERSON, BROOKE JEAN SANSTROM, KRISTIN KAY 449, 86 SARANECKI, TODD MATTHEW 449 SARGENT, ELIZABETH KATHRYN SARGENT, JULIE M. 72 SARGENT, SARAH BEATRICE 449 SAUNDERS, ELIZABETH ANN 460 SCAIFE, COURTNEY LYNNE 92 SCERBA, SINA E. 449 SCHAEFER, KATHERINE SUE SCHAFFER, BRADLEY KIRK SCHEETZ, STEVEN DONGUS SCHERRER, CLARE ROSE SCHEURER, LESLIE ANN SCHICK, DOUGLAS FREDRlCK 90 SCHIELE, MICHAEL DAVID 84 SCHIERING, GEOFFREY DAVID SCHILLMOELLER. LAURA LYNN SCHILTZ, TODD CHARLES SCHIRMER, MARK HOWARD 243 244 SCHLAKER, MICHAEL LOUIS SCHLEUNING, BRENDA RENEE SCHLUETER, LAURIE ANN SCHLUP, LISA ANN 465 SCHMID, MARY KATHERINA SCHMIDT, CHRISTOPHER WILLIAM 9O SCHNAITER, AMY LYNN 449 SCHNEIDER, CHARLES H. SCHNEIDER, JAMES ROBERT 90 SCHOENFELD, LEAH SUE SCHOENHERR, SUSAN LUCILLE 460 SCHORR, BETH AMBER 449 SCHUETZ, MAURICE JOSEPH 449 SCHUG, VICTORIA JOAN SCHULER, JONATHAN ROBERT SCHULTE, KATHERINE MARIE SCHULTZ, ALEX EDWARD SCHULTZ, DANIEL JOSEPH SCHULTZ, VICTORIA MEAD SCHWARTZ, DAVID KOLEMAN SCHWARTZ, DOUGLAS HILL SCHWARTZ, STEVEN LESLIE SCHWEITZER, KELLY S. 449 SCOTT, DAVID PHILLIPS SCOTT, PATRICIA ANNE SEALL, EDWARD ANDREW SEAR, MICHAEL PAUL SEATOR, SCOTT DOUGLAS 460 SEEBASS, HEATHER ELIZABETH SEITZ, CYNTHIA LOUISE SELF, KIMBERLY ANN SELLERS, KRISTIN LOUISE SENESE, JOHN ANTHONY SEREWICZ, LAWRENCE WILLIAM SERGENT, JAMES EDWARD SHAFER, LISA LYNN 480 SHANLEY, MICHAEL CARTWRIGHT SHAPLEIGH, GREGORY BARTLETT 465 SHARIATZADEH, SHARENE DEE SHARPE, MARIA KATHRYN 86 SHAW, JAYNE ANN SHAW, JULIE ANNE SHAY, SHEIDE ANN 460, 74 SHEA, MAURA AILEEN 449 SHELDON, BENJAMIN STANTON M. 449 SHELTON, DIANE LOUISE MCMURTRY SHELTON, MELINDA KAY 480 SHEPARD, JENNIFER LYNN SHEPHERD, SUSAN NOEL 460 SHEPLER, BRIAN LOWELL SHEPLEY, LEWIS BAKER 449 SHEPPARD, RICHARD ALLEN 84 SHEPPARD, TIMOTHY ALAN SHERCK, LAURA ELLEN SHERMAN, ELEANOR KATHERINE 86 SHERMAN, JENNIFER LYNN SHERMAN, LAURA ELIZABETH SHERROD-SARPY, TOYA RENEE SHETTY, SAMEER SADANAND SHIDELER, ELLEN MARIE 465 SHIELDS, GREGORY WILLIAM 460 SHINN, HEATHER MARIE SHOMAN, STEPHANIE ANNE 449 SHOOTER, MARCIA LYNNE 86 SHORT, AMY DOWNS SHORTRIDGE, KATHLEEN SIEFERT, JOHN THOMAS 480 SIEFKER, ERIK JOHN SILVER, P. TYLER SILVIAN, SCOTT LEE 449 SIMCOX, RONALD WILLIAM 70 SIMERI, ELISABETH KATHLEEN 460 SIMMONS, NATALIE LUCILLE SIMPKINSON, JANET DREWRY SIMPSON, STEPHEN NEAL SIMS, MICHELLE GAY 86 SIMSIC, MICHAEL LOUIS SIMSIC, STEPHEN PAUL SINGEL, LAURA ANN 449 SINGER, BRIAN ARTHUR SINGER, DAVID LEO SIT. RICHARD ALLEN 460 SIT, ROBERT WILLIAM 460 SITES, KRISTON KARIN SKELLY, AARON CHARLES 449, 84 SKELTON. TIMOTHY JOHN 480 SKIDMORE, CHARLES GARRISON SKURKA, KAREN MARIE SLAKES. SUSAN RACHELLE 480, 48 SLOAN, ERIK DAVID SLOAN, KIRSTIN BARROW 450 SLOCOMB, PAUL TIMOTHY SLUHAN, DIANA MICHELLE SMITH, AMY EILEEN SMITH, ANDREA CHRISTINE SMITH, ANDREA DAWN 460 SMITH, ANGELA MARIE SMITH, BRADFORD CHANDLER SMITH, CLARE KATHLEEN 465 SMITH, ELIZABETH COLLINS 450 SMITH, EVERETT DEAN SMITH, HARRY CHARLES 70 SMITH, JENNIFER JILL 480 SMITH, JENNIFER SETTLE 45o SMITH, JOHN CAMERON 90 SMITH, JOSEPH LAWRENCE 450, 70 SMITH, JULIE ANN 480 SMITH, LAURA BETH SMITH, LEE CHRISTOPHER SMITH, MARCIA DEE MARIE A. SMITH, MARK EDWARD SMITH, MATTHEW JOSEPH 466 SMITH, MATTHEW THOMAS 460 SMITH, PAUL CHARLES 84 SMITH, SUE ANN 480 SMITH, SUSAN MICHELLE SMITH, TROY THOMAS SNIDER, LISA MICHELLE SNOEYINK, TODD CREIGHTON 4 80 SNYDER, AMY JO 450 SNYDER, REBECCA ISABEL 88 SOLlS-DIAZ. ALEJANDRA SOLON, JENNIFER EILEEN SOMMERS, JAMEY MICHELE SOUTH, MARY JUDE SPACKMAN. THOMAS JAMES SPARENBERG, ANN SZELECZKY SPECKS, MICHAEL EUGENE 484 SPEED, KIRSTEN LAVONNE SPEIDEL, SONJA CHARIS 34 SPENCER, WILLIAM EDWARD SPRINGER, JANCI LYN SPUTH, ERIC B. SQUIRES, MARGARET ELLEN STABENOW, CARRI ANN STACH, MARY KATHRYN STACK, JONATHAN NICHOLAS STACKER, MATTHEW CALVIN STADLER, JOHN CHRISTIAN STAEHLE, CRAIG ALLEN STAHL, LEWIS HUL 54 STAHL, TED BURTON STAHLY, LISA DIANNE 68, 92, 402 STANFORD, STACIA ELIZABETH 484 STANISH, MARLA JOAN STANISH, TANYA JO STANLEY, DAVID SCOTT STARR, ANDREW PATRICK STATON, TIMOTHY RHODES STAULCUP, JENNIFER JEANNE STEARNS, GREGORY ALLEN STEARS, RAYMOND BRADLEY STECK, HOLLY ANN STEELE, KYLE ALAN STEELE, SEAN SCOTT , STEELE, TAMARA RAE STEELE, TODD RANDALL STEFANAKOS, ROBERT THOMAS 150, 70 STEGER, EMILY MC KEE STEHLILK, DENNIS JOHN STERRETT, ROBERT CHARLES STEVENS, EDWARD IVES STEVENSON, JOHN GARDNER 484. 4'15 STEWART, BRYCE TODD STEWART, EDDIE LEE STEWART, MICHAEL STEVEN STICH, PETER CARL SHERIDAN STIER, RONALD LEE STOCKMYER, CLAIRE MARGARET-ANN '150 STOLL, CHRISTOPHER FRANCIS STORHOFF, DAVID MICHAEL STORRER, SCOTT ALAN STOUT, KATHLEEN DENlSE STOVER, SUSAN JANE STRASMA, JAMES REID STRATTON, PAUL CURRY 420 STRAUBINGER, MELISSA ANNE STROM, VICKI JO STROMBERG, JON SCIDMORE 90 STRUCK, MARY LOUISE STRUP, THOMAS DEAN 90 STUMP, JENNIFER BETH STURGEON, BETH ANN STUTZ, JON STUART '122 SULLIVAN, MICHAEL SULLIVAN, SHARON KAY SULLIVAN, SUSAN MAUREEN SULTZER, MARC PECAINE SUMIDA, KEVIN DAVID SUMMERS, STEPHEN PAUL 466 SUMMERS. WILLIAM GARY SUNDBERG, ANNE LAUREL SUPPLE, MATTHEW LAWRENCE 69 SUSTER, BRADLEY BARNES 466 SUTHERLIN, APRIL LYNN SUTTON, JERRY B. 80 SWAIN, BRENDA EILEEN 72 SWARTZ, WILLIAM EVERETT SWEENEY, KRISTEN NOEL 86 SWENSON, KARL ERIK SWINNEY, LYNNE ANNE SYLTE. SUZANNE LYVONNE SZABO, KRISTINA ROSHOLM '166 SZILLAT, CHRISTINE LOUISE '18'l SZKLAREK, STEPHEN JAMES TAFT, ELIZABETH ANNE 72 TAMBORNINO, KATHERINE MARY TAN, EMMELINE NGO TANNEHILL, KELLY RICHARD TASKER, SARAH ELIZABETH 74 TAYLOR, CLAIRE DIANE '150 TAYLOR, DAVID EDWARD TAYLOR, JULIA ANN TAYLOR, JULIE STEVENS TAYLOR, KATHARINE KAARI TAYLOR, LISA MARIA '18'1 TAYLOR, LISA RENEE '18'I TAYLOR, SHERRI KAY TEAGUE, BRADLEY KENT TEAGUE, JEFFORY ALAN TEBBETTS, LUCIA TOLAR TEEGARDEN, KATHARINE ANNE 450 TELFER, ELIZBETH STUART TENNEY, MARGARET MARIE 'I8'I TERBEEK, TODD EDWARD TERHUNE, JOHN A. TERRELL, SUSAN LYNN TERRY, JANA MONIQUE TESSENYI-WENNER, REGINA CORNELIA '150 TEUSCHLER, KATHARINE DENNISE TEWEL, MARGARET CASH 450 THACKERY, JILL ELIZABETH 460 THEOBALD, AMY ADAMS 150 THEOBALDJ ANDREW THOMAS THERBER, MICHAEL SCOTT THIBO, BRIAN MICHAEL THIEM, MARION ELIZABETH '166 THIEME, TRACEY ELIZABETH 68, 4 q 92 THOMAS, CYNTHIA BETH THOMAS, DAHN J'NEA 92 THOMAS, KRISTINA LYNN THOMPKINS, ANTON ANGELO 70 THOMPSON, BRENT RAY 89 THOMPSON, GREGORY MICHAEL THOMPSON, JILL DAWN THOMPSON, MARCIA BAGLEY 166,59 THOMSON, ROBERT BRUCE 450, 89 THORESEN, DAVID PAUL 460 THORNBURG, JAMES BRIAN 466 THURSTON, MARCIA LYNN 484 THYEN, EMILY JANE 450 TIMMONS, AMY KATHRINE TINDALL, TIMOTHY JOHN TINNEY, WILLIAM GILBERT TOBA, KEIKO 46o TOBE, LISA LYNN . TODD, EDWARD ROBERT 450 TODD, STEPHEN LLOYD TODD, SUSAN KAY TOMALIN, DALE SCOTT TOMLIN, JEFFREY SCOTT 484 TOMPKINS, KEVIN BRENT TOMPKINS, MICHAEL DAVID TOMSON, SUE ELLEN TOOMEY, BRENDA ALANA 482 TOONE, BRAD ALAN TOTZ, COLLEEN E. 425 TOWNE, CURTIS DALE 466 TRACY, JAMES DENNIS TRAMONTANA, CHRISTEN TRAN, THAI PHUOC 450 TRESSLER, CORRIE LYNN 34, 55 TRIFELOS, MICHAEL NICK TRINKLE, DENNIS ALAN 46o TRIPPETT, ROBIN M. TROKSA, MICHELLE RENEE 466 TROUTMAN, DENEEN MARIE 484 TROYER, JUDITH PORTIA 454 TRUDGEN, DAVID SPENCER mum, BRYAN MITCHELL TSCHAN, EDMOND WILLIS TUCCI, SCOTT PETER TUCKER, CHRISTOPHER ERIC TUCKER, MATTHEW SHERER TUHEY, JOHN MATTHEW 460 TURNER, FELICIA STREET TURNER, JASON PATRICK TURNER, SARA LYNN 484 TUTTLE, CARRIE LEE TWIST, SPENCER F. TWYMAN, CYNTHIA MACKAY 454, 74 UDDENBERG, SCOTT DAVID UHLEMANN, LAURA LEIGH 484, 6 UKROP, JOSEPH EDWARD ULEMEK, STANISLAV ULLEM, CYNTHIA SANDS ULLEM, SCOTT BENJAMIN 2'15 246 ULMER, SALLY HACKETT UMBAUGH, SUSAN RENEE 50, 86 UNRUH, HEATHER KIRSTEN VAN AELST, RACHEL LYNN VAN ASPEREN, STEPHANIE DOE VAN DE KEERE, DAWN MARIE 454 VAN KESTEREN, KELLY JEANNE VAN METRE, EVAN SCOTT VAN NESS, WILLIAM CHARLES VAN NEST, MARCIA LYNN VAN OOTEGHEM, DAVID LEE VAN TlLBURG, JODI CAROL VANDER NAALO-JOHNSON, CINDY SUE 464 VANDY BOGURT, WALTER LEWIS VASKE, RENEE ANN VAUGHT, RAYNA LYNN 454 VENEKLASEN, JAMI SUE VERNON, KAREN MARTHA VLAEMINCK, BRADLEY STEVEN 454 VOLZ, ERIN LYNN VONDERLAGE, DIRK EDWARD VOORHEIS, KIMBERLY PAGE VORIS, JEFFREY THOMAS VOSS, REBECCA ANN WACHTMAN, LYNN MARlE 454 WADE, DEVON RENE WADE, LANITA ANN 464 WAGGONER, MELISSA SUSAN WAGSCHAL, KERSTEN MEIKE WAINWRIGHT, WILLIAM ERIC 466 WALASZEK, JOHN MICHAEL 4 45 WALBRANDT, LISA GILE WALDTHAUSEN, CLARA CHARLOTTE WALKER, BRADLEY JAMES 90 WALKER, DOUGLAS WILLIAM WALKER, GWENDOLYN ANN 454 WALLACE, DEAN ROBERT WALLACE, KERRY LYNNE 86 WALLACE, TIMOTHY HAINES 56 WALLER, JOHN DAVID 466 WALLER, KATE ELIZABETH 454, 88 WALLER, MATTHEW HOWARD WALLIS, GREGORY CHARLES WALTER, HEIDI JOANNE 484 WALTERS, ANN ELIZABETH 454 WALTERS, RACHEL THERESA WALTON, MARGARET ANNE WALUSEK, JOSEPH CHARLES 466, 84 WAPOLE, ERIC FRANCIS 454 WARD, ERIC NORMAN 454 WARD. STEPHEN KINCAID WARD, THERESE ELIZABETH WARDEN, ELIZABETH DIXON WARFIELD, JOY ANN F- WARHOVER, JULIE LYNNE WARKINS, BRADLEY JOSEPH WARNER, RACHEL RANEE WARREN, MATTHEW WOODS WASHBURNE, JEFFREY ALAN WATSON, LAURA SCOTT WATSON, NEAL ROYSTON 80 WAYCO, PHILIP LEE 454 WEAKLEY, REBECCA LEE 59 WEAS, HEIDI MARIE 76 . WEAVER, CARLA JUNE 82 WEAVER, DAVID PAUL WEBB, BRYAN MALLORY 482 WEBER, MICHELE LEE 454 WEBSTER, JOSEPH WEDDLE, WENDY LEE WEED, JONATHAN CURRIE WEEKS, PAMELA DIANE WEEMS, GEORGE STEPHENSON WEEMS, HEATHER ELIZABETH WEHRENBERG, JOHN WILLIAM WEHRMAN, ROBERT RYAN WEIMAR, KERRIE LEIGH 454 WEIMAR, KRISTIE LYNN 482 WEINGART, KELLY LYNN WEIR, JEREMY KEITH WEISIGER, JEFFREY SCOTT WEISS, VIRGINIA LENORE WELLS, REAGAN L. WELSCH, WENDY LYNN WENNER, JANE WERNER, GREGORY ALAN 482, 403 WEST, CHARNITA VANEE WESTENFELDER, NATALIE ANNE WESTRICK, CRAIG ALLEN WETOSKA, MATTHEW JOHN WHALEY, JANET MARY 452 WHARTON, AMY SUE 464, 6 WHEATONJ BRUCE CARVELL 452 WHEELER, ERiC DAYNE 482, 445 WHETZEL, DAVID BRADLEY 70, 89 WHITE, CHERYL LYNN 86 WHITE! JEFFREY LONDELE 452 WHITE. SUZANNAH CLAIRE WHITE, TESS ALAIN 452 WHITEHEAD, TRACY LYNN 452 WHITTAKER, JOSEPH CAMERON 483 WHITTIER, JOSEPHINE LYNN WHITTLE, KIMBERLEY ANN 483 WHYTE, MARY REYNOLDS WICK, KRISTIN LOUISE 483 WIECKERT, DIANNE WIGGINS. GREGORY CHARLES WIKSTROM, ROLAND LARS WILCOX, CHARLES ANDREW WILDER, INGRID MICHELLE 152 WILKE, REBECCA JO WILKINS, JEFFREY ALLEN WILLHITE, MICHAEL SCOTT 183 WILLIAMS, AMY LYNNE WILLIAMS, DAVID CLARK WILLIAMS, EILEEN MARIE 161 WILLIAMS, GARRETT KYLE 152 WILLIAMS, JAMES EDWARD WILLIAMS, STEVEN ROBERT WILLIAMS, WENDY NOEL WILLIAMSON, LISA MARIE 161 WILLMERT, MARK BARRY 7O WILMSEN, G. WILLIAM WILSON, BRAD JAMES WILSON, ERICA KIRSTEN ELIZABETH WILSON, JUAN JOSE SAMUEL WILSON, LAURA BETH 183, 59 WILSON, MICHELLE MARIE WILSON, STACY LYNN WILSON, TRAVIS SCOTT 152 WILIFONG, ANN MARIE WILTFONG, SUSAN ELAINE WINGADER, JANICE LYNN WINSNESS, ANN ELEAN WINTER, ALISON RACHEL WINTON, LINDA ALICE 166 WISEMAN, DEAN ALLEN 84 WITTE, LAURA VICTORIA 152 WOLF, ANDREW ROBERT WOLF, CHRISTOPHER ALLEN WOLF. JENNIFER LOUISE 161 WOLFF, WILLIAM ANDREW 166 WOOD, DAVID WALLACE WOOD, JERRY RAY WOOD, JILL ANGELIQUE WOOD, KARA MICHELLE 152, 130 WOOD, KIRK RAY WOODS, FRANCIS LAWRENCE ' WOODS, LAURA JEAN 183 WOODS, SANDRA ANN 183 WRENCHER. VINCENT EDWARD WRIGHT, CREIGHTON BOLTER WRIGHT, JOHN JENNINGS 152, 199 WRIGHT, LORI ANN WRIGHT, REGAN CHRISTINE WRIGHT, SHELBI JO WROBEL, ELIZABETH ISABEL WYETT, JODI LEIGH WYLIE, ALLYSON JAYNE 183. 59, 24 YADAV, VIKASH YAEGER, REBECCA SUE 183 YARBROUGH, AMY NELL 161 YARBER, JOHN MAURICE YETTER, MARIBETH THERESE YOHO, TODD ANDREW 166 YOON. FREDERICK C. YORK, KERRI MICHELE 152, 92 YOSHII, SEHCHIRO YOUNG, ALISON MEILEE 161 YOUNGJ DALE LEE 120 YOUNG, JEFFREY MOSES YOUNG, PETER C. YOUNG, RUSSELL DUNCAN YOUNG, WILLIAM DAVIS YOUNGBLOOD, AMY GAIL ZAMBER. JANET MICHELLE ZIEG, MICHAEL BENJAMIN ZIMDARS, ANN MARYA 161 ZIMMERMAN, BOBBI LYNN ZITLOW, DAVJD PAUL ZUKLEY, ELIZABETH ANN ZURELL, CHRISTEN ELIZABETH v59 Records Tapes CD'S 25 South Vine Street 653-4278 JOHNNY JOHN'S Fashion Boutique 1,7 .7 7 . 45 South Indiana 73m 653-2226 Best Of Luck Class of 4989 from THE MONON GRILL TURKEY RUN R'Lniiiri' 1 'mii- . ..5 . .6 5 - '1 ' rm .251rWWl' :wwwn s ,m..-.- 3222-1224.. ., CANOE TRIPS 634 D 597-2456 OI 634D 569-6705 220 TWO BRAND NEW DAYS INNS TO SERVE YOU! DAvs'IfNN w Cloverdcle jag Mix, L 1-70 and SR 234 2 mm 795-6400 Crowfordsville 2' 'K 1-74 and SR 234 a 03m 362-0300 CONGRATULATIONS Class of '89 BEST OF LUCK 5W Sfeel Construction Co., Inc. Chattanooga, Tennessee We are proud you Mitchell! CONGRATULATIONS Don P. Peabody III Class of '89 We are very proud of you. We wish you much happiness and success. Toke great pride in what you have accomplished. Love, Mom and Dad 221 Laurie - CONGRATULATIONS! Love, The Whole BooThby Clan! Skip and CoThy Russ and Judy Diane and Wayne Jim and Debbie Mom and Dad 5 9 :Te'ma Park L. Firebaugh D.D.S. 49 PuTnum Plaza . . . . Indianapolis Rood SSSSEF'SETEE?OTGTTZSTEEX'WE SSSTZEZOT Greencoszel IN 464 3 5 Women's Swimming and Diving Championships held OT NoTre Dame UniversiTy. earned your IeTTer, seT 93 ll 79 653-5504 Team and pool records in The 400 yard breosTsTroke C 'I' I 1-. CI and The 200 yeard breasTsTroke, and had career besT Times of 2:46.68 in The 200 Individual Medley ongro U G lonls 033 and 2:32.53 in The 200 yard breosTsTroke! We love ' you! of 4989. Much love, Dad and Mom 222 k7 Congrofuldrions 4;: V KAO Seniors! Congratulations David M. . V V . v We Value You Love, Mom and Dad CONGRATULATIONS! John Lowe and Class of ,89 TO OUR IRISH-SWEDE! HMoy The wind be always of your back HGud Vere Med Dig Skd! Patrons Dr. and Mrs. Gory Pfleeger Ron and Carolyn Weimer STepheh H. SmiTh The Turner's Mr. and Mrs. Julian D. Pace II Dr. William D. and Susan Kerr Dr. and Mrs. CreighTon B. WrighT Donald E. and JudiTh M. Kiely Dr. and Mrs. Harold C. Rankin Dr. and Mrs. John C. Lowe Mr. and Mrs. Daniel P. Peabody Mr. and Mrs. David W. PoncoosT Mr. end Mrs. Thomas D. Hilgehdorf Mr. and Mrs. James H. Muehlbouer The Skurko's Mr. and Mrs. Edward C. Borhemeh Mr. and Mrs. Michael Bilo The ThursTon's Dave and Mary Jo McKeog Mr. end Mrs. Tim A. FronTz Richard and HorrieT GoTHieb Mr. and Mrs. RheH W. BuTIer Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gruner Dr. and Mrs. Erick R. ROTzer Mr. and Mrs. SmiTh Mr. and Mrs. Szcbo 226 CON'GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON'GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS CON GRADUATIONS CON GRADUATIONS CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CONnGRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS CONnGRADUATIONS CON'GRADUATIONS CON GRADUATIONS CON GRADUATIONS CON GRADUATIONS CON GRADUATIONS CON GRADUATIONS CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE GRADUATE GRADUATE GRADUATE GRADUATE GRADUATE GRADUATE GRADUATE GRADUATE JENNIFER ARLENE BROWN CLASS OF 89 CON GRADUATIONS CON GRADUATIONS CON GRADUATIONS CON GRADUATIONS I CON GRADUATIONS CON GRADUATIONS CON GRADUATIONS CON GRADUATIONS CON GRADUATIONS CON GRADUATIONS CON GRADUATIONS CON GRADUATIONS CON GRADUATIONS CON GRADUATIONS CON GRADUATIONS CON GRADUATIONS CON GRADUATIONS CON GRADUATIONS CON GHADUATIONS CON GRADUATIONS CON GRADUATIONSvll CON GRADUATIONS CON GRADUATIONS CON GRADUATIONS CON GRADUATIONS CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE GRADUATE GRADUATE GRADUATE GRADUATE GRADUATE GRADUATE GRADUATE GRADUATE GRADUATE GRADUATE GRADUATE GRADUATE GRADUATE GRADUATE GRADUATE GRADUATE GRADUATE GRADUATE GRADUATE WITH LOVE AND BEST WISHES FROM YOUR FAMILY GRADUATE GRADUATE GRADUATE GRADUATE GRADUATE GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS'GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS'GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GBADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE GRADUATE GRADUATE GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE CON GRADUATIONS GRADUATE 227 CongroTquTions ELIZABETH ASHMAN LeSOURD We Love You Mom, Dad, and Barbara Mom and Dad - Thank you for all your love and support Throughout This semesTer ond yearbook. I could noT have done if wiThouT you! love, Borb 'i Congratulations Kimberly Ann Kone - Alpha Chi I Omega o on your groduoTion from The School of Biological Sciences. We are very proud of you! Love, Dod, Mom, Teresa, John 228 In Honor Of T JULIA EMISON HARMON I II44H with admiration and love Jamie Mom and Dad -... '-F - - congratulations John T. Siefert Class of 1989 THE LOOK - A Unique BouTique Off Vine STreeT Greencasfle, IN 46435 We love you and are proud of your accomphsh- C34D 653-2226 menTs. May joy, peace, love and success be yours. Mom, Dad, Sabrina, and Eric - I I I I 229 1 0 11 230 .Cli ! 234


Suggestions in the DePauw University - Mirage Yearbook (Greencastle, IN) collection:

DePauw University - Mirage Yearbook (Greencastle, IN) online collection, 1983 Edition, Page 1

1983

DePauw University - Mirage Yearbook (Greencastle, IN) online collection, 1984 Edition, Page 1

1984

DePauw University - Mirage Yearbook (Greencastle, IN) online collection, 1985 Edition, Page 1

1985

DePauw University - Mirage Yearbook (Greencastle, IN) online collection, 1986 Edition, Page 1

1986

DePauw University - Mirage Yearbook (Greencastle, IN) online collection, 1987 Edition, Page 1

1987

DePauw University - Mirage Yearbook (Greencastle, IN) online collection, 1988 Edition, Page 1

1988


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