Drury University - Souwester Yearbook (Springfield, MO)
- Class of 1985
Page 1 of 184
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 184 of the 1985 volume:
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I' 'J ,,,, .V,,- 1985: Alive. in Drury College. lt has been a special year in a special placeg the participants, too, have been special, frequently M . 4 extraordinary. Example: Shelly Langsford, multiple All-American, a one-woman swim team. Well, we don't want to steal our own thunder. Our theme is Alive in '85. This is our almanac, a sum- mary of our year, a comment on our educational career, some promise on our potential. Alive in '85, is the 1985 edition ofthe annual Sozfwester, published by the students of Drury College, Springfield, Missouri, 65802. Charlotte Hardin, class of '85, editor: Professor Jay Bynum, Communication Department, advisor. This is the 83rd volume of the Sou'wester. Alive in 1985 I Q ,., - xl ' ax- -'. xx X Q W. .O , 9 A, ' -' s , Hn. , , +1 Q .. . 1.. , ,QQ .. , i,-. ,Q . ,L N i .Ili . ' A 1 l X.-..lbx , '. ' N ' ' U Lx 1 ' 1 'U --'h P-4 A A ,, ' ' Q ' . Q 'Y M I . 'FJ Y: V. n ,lax 1 - z xx 1 J. .5 . . - N, .' , I - A vg R o: ' . 'ir M 'A afual' e 'Q S. . ' - A 'f , f '--'1-Q?' V' Q I 1 if n 1 fl Q 11's ff' If I J . Mxwfi K A 'Co ehce eht, '85 53 5 I l if ,.-My-nano-ws 'ut- W Contents AHvein'85? Visitors Drury Calling College Means Standing Genil and Genius Dance and Drama Peter and the Wolf Variorium Kerplunk! HaHoween Career Counseling and Discrimination Greek Goings-on Homecoming: Royalty and a Loss Vespers Swim Champs and a Love Letter Some Clubs and Organizations Student Senate and S.U.B. Alpha to Omega? Some Greeks DFC + BUIC More Hellenic Organizations Intramurals Swim Team Kansas City Kitties: BasketbaH HFans lLove'EnHn Like a Cat: Volleyball Tennh Anyone? Cheerleaders Have Spirit How lt Was ln Indianapolis VVhereas The Brouhaha The Pastls Prologue? What Exactly are FRESHMEN? First Fears Skilled, Daring: Sophomores Alive Quickie Crossword Juniors:Jaunty Even in January Junior Calendar Seniors: This ls lt Smiles and Hello More Jewels and Special Salutes A Couple of Rare Catches Memorabilia Nine DC Doers No Frenzy! Faculty Administration Here Come De Pres in New Regaha Columbus Senior Rediscovers United Seniors of America The Open Road Snow! Two Big Ones Sou'wester Charlotte Hardin fa staff trlckl Now Cometh Rest Index A 4 10 14 15 16 18 23 24 25 26 28 30 32 40 44 46 52 54 58 60 68 70, 74, 90 76 80 82 84 88 94 95 96 97 100 104 114 119 124 131 132 134 137 138 141 142 144 148 162 164 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 Alive In '85: Consider Drury College Y What's lacking at the far right are details. tones. colors. per- sonalities. We can give you only samples. Like: Dave Hughes Iabove, in mufti because he graduates in Augustj ls Senior class president and carries the class flag. His exuberance shows through better than the face of the marshal beside him. Just above: hundreds of Panther fans rode buses to KC for the Nationals to see Drury whip Iprobablyl the best team in lt. And lbelowl a president with a sense of humor and an almost audible smile. Yeah. we're alive in '85: ALIVE! Q EK X Liga ' bzeq ff , ,gn I g . ' Fif i , . 'X K qfi xi I r Alive in 1985? That's the campus below - at least one view of the campus. Bare bones. No frills. Oh, some trees, the flagpole. But that's not alive. We did it this way to show you the necessary ingre- dients. Grass and trees and buildings, walks, tennis courts. Not enough. Look at the inset. Typical. A pretty Drury coed goes to the net to intimidate the ball. Now, that's alive: that's how we do it at Drury: we activate the forty acres. We're starting our 113 year but we haven't slowed down. We're still gathering speed. We start things: this year the Drury Academy: next year, the May term. Our new writing enhancement program intends to benefit faculty and student writing. Oth- er signs: The Prize Book Award program for high school juniors, the Trustee Scholarship. There's more. ww This is the recipe: good students Neff Loeb, second from rightb, good teachers fDr. Jim Livingston, Lang. and Lit.j, good parents 1Jeff's familyb, alumni. Mrs. Livingston is at left. 1 vrrx ,of ',,, fr .Q IF YOURE ALIVE. YOU LOVE A WINNER That being so, you're lucky to be at Drury. Here are two pages full of win- ners. The bunch above, mostly girls. turned out for the Swim Team. but they also cheered the men's tennis team's second in the District 16, Sonya Hauck's tennis district all-star nomi- nation, and Scott Clinton's ditto ln golf. Shae Ruark finger! won a Coro Foundation Fellowship fone of 12 in the U.S.J The guys and gals rnghfl represent 10095 acceptance of Drury's medical-dental graduate applicants: Kimi Caswell. Julie Al- ford, Carolyn Huff: Bob Reynolds, David Cox, and Daryl McCall. Winners all' fl J . 5 3 9 Nm-p-1' 'fr' ii s --x 'wr x 1 5? X :ld , 1 jwa -n,NX -x, r 1. 45 C' ifba h ff J Q? 4 X z R 5619 of x ef WNY, A COMMUNIST. TWO TRUSTEES. and A BRAIN: fleftl Geza Jeszensky. himself a Fulbright scholar. ls an asso- clated professor ol international rela- tlons at Karl Marx University, Buda- pest. He presented four programs at DC In March. DC intends world aware- ness for students. The brain flefr, below! is Laura Kay Killian. North Garland. Texas. She won the Trustees Scholarship with ACT scores at the 99th percentile. She'll be a freshman at DC studying English llt- erature. Class of '89. Jack Shewmaker fright, below! ls the father of Shari Shewmaker Steiger. an '84 graduate. He ls a new trustee. Ray Aton Ibotloml has worn many Drury hats: graduate, chairman ofthe board, and now Dlstlngulshed Alumnl Award reclplent. He counts three other DC WWW grads in his immediate family. 'W dm, 9 , Gerise Herndon Kabove left! was, at this writing, a finalist for a Fulbright cholarship to study in France. A modest smartie, Gerise said, l appreciate he personal help that Drury professors have given meg you wouldn't get that ttention at a larger university. Jim Sharp fright! has been accepted for iraduate law study by the UMC law faculty. He had been accepted by four Iraduate schools of law and chose UMC because he plans to practice in lissouri. 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V 15374536 eff. 1- . ,ZiZ'55.5V 1 .....4,.,.., , 1 1 Vw, V 'EI LL- V .5 .V:'f,.f... -.f-me fu :,V....-.41-.--r.. 4.-...,.:1: V . .... X ,-., ., . .,m,.ZV'f -,1j'.Q41. Y 1 Q 5 E 'z Q 5 1 E , i E. 5 ga Q -ai 2 3 s E S a E E 5 5 2 5 2 3 E E 5 fi 15 E if 55 G 55 Ti 53 3 IQ 1 Visitors 'E i F3f'7- Q 5 11-'.'?YN' - Farious And Nefarious: 5 L-5. - I t Nt NN QS msg, I Dr. Omer Akin, AIA Head, Department of Architecture Carnegie-Mellon University Lay Auditorium 7:30 to 9 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 8 lCvirfwi'r'rwrvts tniiwixiny in ll.ir i li ii ',i STX- '1 '1fC7e,-fr ug? 5 omputers in Archi L1I'G Kevln Spencer tabovel IS standing on his head In a leakprool colfln ol water, holdlng his breath. Problem: how to escape from an eo- cape-proof contalner. Solution? He drowned. No, he dldn't. He performed that and many other new and classlc trlcks on February 6 In FSC. No foollngl G. Gordon Llddy, Watergate En- gineer Art of the Northwest Coast: artifacts and the vital Dr. Peter A. Iacobs Professor of Art Colorado State University Drury subscribes to the theory that there is a great variety of knowledge and many channels. lt's the wish here in Pantherland to expose DC students to that wlde spectrum of knowledge. Drs. Akin and Jacobs are obvious ex- amples. One can even make a case for John Stockwell: lt isn't easy to stand up before the world with blood up to your armpits. And We're headed for another war, probably before 1985. He said, G, Gordon Llddy is an edu- cated punk. Stockwell came In late Nov. ttop, left! and Llddy, the ex-con- vlct, ln early Oct. and Infamous Famous Visitors .Q : f N.- sv... , -W sg ws, ' 'N at - - Q N 5K?thI31a GOVGFQQ .W ,..... fx. V ' -war-f:f::r,:r::a - Q 3 tr' 25: On Drury Candldate Day, Brldgeton's Doug Allen kept his own counsel, made his own notes, voted after much dellberatlon and concern. He was concerned, he said, for the safety of the country and Its economic health. Agreeing, thereby, with both Regan and Mondale. ,x We think that a responsible voter is a legitimate goal of a liberal arts college. Indeed a democracy's strength and vul- nerability both lie in its citi- zens exercislng their voting right and responsibility. So: during the madness of cam- paigns we ask candidates ln. M 'I ffllll I. s N fi We hhjixm Bunny Allen and Mrs. Buelah Allen ' , Benevolent and Parental The Family are also guests i i I We call it the family - the Drury com- munity of staff and faculty lwho are, basi- j cally, here for the convenience of the stu- dentsj. And that's the relationship we 5, speak to here: students who have llike . Renee Krummichl a family relationship with a Drury faculty or staff member, or faculty fDudley Murphyj who have a spou- gl sal relationship with a student: : t A 5 'foo 1 f 'I PARENTS DAY: Every fall we invite our par- V ents to Drury for a visit. We show them the ,I u A Christopher and Susan and Dr. Jay Bynum Tina Carter and Mrs. Toni Carter Kelly Dill and Mrs. Darline Dill Donna Johnson and Professor Wayne Johnson Ann Lilly and Mrs. Lee Lilly Jeffrey Minasian and Sam + Joyce Minasian Andrew Nelms and Mrs. Ann Nelms Scott Rollins and Dr. Sue Rollins David Vise and Sidney and llga Vise campus: Right here 's the very chair lsat in 'J' when I scored 93 on the public relations test! Or: Well, of course thats the tennis court, mom. They eat with us a couple ot' times, usually brunch and linner lor that could be lup- perl. We introduce them to our teachers, advi- sors, deans. They seem to have a good time, but mainly they are just reassured: Drury is not a den of iniquityq these are conservation, car- ing, bright people standing in for them, helping to ease us into phases of personal indepen- dence. lt's a wrench, to be sure - to them, to us A more of the necessary distance. It re- members them to us. 1 Q Prospective students and parents X gall W, of .P MJMQEW P ,f s was vii m fyg ,fer X 31 XMSQ., x...s. 'EA Eff X . -5 Qu wi bl xe- X I P my J 1,1-sQNf,,y i V 1731561 T ri S f f T x X fy X 'iff x X X 1 f X' X XXI AN 2 K ffdxxf X W7 :ff lr fir fm fi . Wffi W x XXX X! WQGXC XWT 1. ' 1. x Panthers? They come - not really by rickshaw and bicycle ffre- quently in Caddies and Cor- vettes and Plymouth K'sJ and not really by chance. We've in- vited them specially, personal- ly, probably several. times - we're interested in them and we hope they are truly inter- ested in Drury. We arrange a special day for them: COL- LEGE DAY. It's an important decision and so we invite their parents, too. We want them to stay overnight, to visit with students and faculty, to see the campus, to taste the real flavor of Drury. They come, al- ready taller than at least one parent, a bit apprehensive but eager to find out. We think they're cuteg we like them. PANTHERS! -f' ' 5,1 6: P ' 'av 251, in-pfiz' 'ii X 11 ?7' . ff C ll- v H 1' 2 lx! a Ing Phonathon Q I in. 14 7 ,- .9 Q O 'TFT .F Z X 4. il: 5 . 'jug av' WW ! - ig-2A.igQf '4'Q ' - I . 5 1 ,J ' ' -RE' ' Nd xxvx mm ann N A W3 X -fu w TIME ZONES V PACOHC NOUNYAIN ffNVlAl ' flS'lRN lnlflff ,,,,,.,,,,, ,xxx .I g no un N 6 Je.. ,A ' 'mu W: D731 'mon can m..,m A 3 , K ' IQ, Y ww :fm on bf j E511'v1::r' . may 5 ny 5017 .1 ' n U. sr .va-In lg -Q1-.-. 7 -:S III Q j n 'l Qaf - 'Z fi , fffw 'W' ng '37 , U' na J- , I P:-3 .I E ..d.!..., U' A ww, ' ' 4 .'Y ,'. X -l1?ll'U10 K T X ll uw' I If A I1ttIe learnzng may re11eve registration standing bww.. ' -ll' College Means Standing The dance floor is crowded but you don't mind standing with your arms about somebody. You really kind of enjoy standing around a bonfire. You sort of hate to stand in FSC waiting for lunch. But you really enjoy that final standing waltlng for the BIG event. Davis and Wohltman and Thies Worlds of coufh st Ruth fi ,..s Terri Thies is from Glasgow, Missouri: Laura Davis is from Galena. Nice gals. Along with Steve Wohltman, they are three smart cookies. A bit smart-alecky. A little eccentric, a fair sense of humor, observers of the Drury scene. Steve's idea of a trick is to put shaving cream on someone's glasses while they're napping, Laura favors the ice cube in the shoe, and Terri - Steve says - loads a record jacket with shaving cream and shoots it under dorm doors. I would change? Stephen W. Wohltman is from St. Louis and a bit of a wag. What, he wanted to know, would you change in your life if you had the means? fremember the law of alteration: you change no part of any- thing without altering the whole in sever- al ways.l His own answer, used as an ex- ample, was, l'd choose to be rich rather than tall, handsome, and intelligent. fWell, you might say, one out of four isn't a bad average at all.J The question MAY deserve its answers. Anne Puidk, what of , your life would you change? l'd like to go back to my freshman year and challenge myself to greater achievement, in- crease my motl- k vation. Traci Riggins: l'd be taller for volley- ball games, and more aggressive: l'd be shorter on dates. l'd learn the piano, and l wouldn't mind be- ing rich myself. 1' ow about you, Dana Bray? Maybe l'd be born in Aus- tralia - l really liked it at Christ- mas. Maybe l'd have my father buy me IBM stock in 1940. Maybe no different. In the sometlmes hectlc world that Dniry la fsee photo leftl, what wlth the need to thrlve soclally ln '85, we have hardly had time to study. And suddenly lt's that tlme agaln: a test in boollan algebra. lSee photo below.l YOU'RE NOT READY? Comes the dreaded questlon: what's a six-lettered word which deacrlbes the average college student? Answer: C'R'A'M'M'l'N'G. fBut who'l counting? We're busy.J Crammlng at Its worst ls an all-nlghter. Would you pull an all-nlghter. Davld Shuler? Yeah, when l've let my work plle up or an assignment takes logner than l had expected. Theresa Wood, another sophomore. would, too, but the she sees herself as a night person. She feels flne the next day. Joanna Pearce agreed. Staying up Is no problem lor me, she sald. l'm hyper ln the mornlng but by noon l start runnlng down. OUIRKY Laura Daws says. Get your Pm! to rambIe: Put truth serum ln his CX coffee. Laugh at hls jokes: he'll really warm up to that. Everyone has a favorlte loke area: collect jokes for hlm, Complain about Commons food or faculty salarles. Say hls tests are too hard and the class wlll joln ln. Men- tion the defense budget. rock music. women In polltlcs. the UN. Edwln Newman. anythlng about the dean. DON'T ask why the tests taken just before Chrlstmaa aren't grad- ed yet. And be very careful about hls speclal lnterests - you may get out late. Experiment: ask for a syllabus. Compllment hlm on hls tle or beard or the gravy spot on his tle. Tell hlm he says, You know a lot. 10r maybe you'd better not.l Professors are Incensed by the passiv- lty of thls generatlon. Mention that. Ask hlm to hold the class outslde or to dlsmlss lt early so you can start home for Thankaglvlng. 'gg L For hire: On this page flnd Susan Laurenson, James Sharp fsharp, lndeedlj, Steve Smollnske and lrlghtl Michelle Crain, Charlotte Hardin, Valecla Quinn, and Lisa Seboldt, all properly blbbed and tuckered and neatly colffed as for a job lntervlew. Beautiful! Hlred. ll K I The job interview The Drury Career Center intends to help YOU land a job - that's the why back of the job interviews scheduled in FSC. You may be a ninety-day wonder with good looks and scores of great ideas, but it's HIS ideas, HIS first-im- presslon that means a lot. The Drury kids on this page have the right ldea. Be neat with clothes and hair lpens in your hand not ln your mouth or hair, as at leftl, a bit conservative. Be polite, Interested and friendly but don't fawn. Begin with a complete resume: be poised, be articu- late, be honest. Don't try to hide things you don't know if he asks: say you'll learn lf lt's part of the job. He will especially look for communication skills, intelli- gence, judgement, motivation, general orientation, and organization. You want to be ln the 1110 he asks back. Fw Uwe Nov 8-10 8.15 p m. Nov 15-17 8 15 p m X-ff Wilhoit Theatre f 0 f f , 1 f X , f f f f i l L: ix N tr.. r . XX -.im xi-. llwrp- f lkl .i 1 t S X 1 . , . 0 . , : . . X- Y Potpourri of Dance has be eagerly await ed annual terp slchorean of fering fThat translates loosely mg l The 84 version was no exception the performers had fun and the audiences en joyed it To be precise 25 Druty hoofers did their steps and struts before appreciative crowds Two acts of seven dances each and a fmale made up the program We try to come up with orlgl nal dances reflective of modern society things the kids can do and still have fun. ' They did. Top: Liesa Rowan. Andrea Ehrsam, Kristy Keltner, and Pam Tolson are at home in Cabbage Patch Emhyland Mid- dle right: Michelle Ward bal- ances for Dance Attack, the opening number. Right: Say lt Wim Your Bmly is the number and it's what Debbie. Liesa, and Lynn intend. Bottom. right: Lynn Grace, DeAna Haynes, and Anita Mullen practice for lnfatuation Bot- tom. left: Michelle and Robin attack. tg: 1, come Drury's Look, Ma, l'm danc- I 77 Y U . . i . ' .. 7 it nn,- Dann 3' Terri Bowman fwlth Catj Pam Drury's Children's Play sf T Pam lioward twereq knights in Q ' . . - 0 . 9 up Tolson lwlth Tern belowj and The lnsultnng Princess written by Drury s own Sandy Asher and directed by Mark Kay Hoops lt starred Bernadlne Kerran as the princess and featured Lynn Grace as the kmg and Christine Watts as the queen. The all-fe- male cast mostly freshmen and sophomores, entertained area children in Wilhoit Theatre just before Xmas vacation. Great! said the young audience. -Y L STAGE FRONT, acknowledge applause: Practically the whole cast gathers on state to NOT listen as Alfred the Baker QDella Heidebrinkl and the Princess lBernadine Keiranj ignore each other: Maureen Egan fleftl, Terri Bowman, Leslie McCoy, Tammy McCalmont, and Patricia Simons. 4 U-s CD 3 Ft- do H do G CD CD 'H 2 sf fi 5 .O ' . Wm., QM, , lf SM: ' ngf I 41:73, 5 4 RN 'W 3 fiiffwihr 1 . W--p I QQ' X k'-...4 V ,. .,,. X X -L' cf 43' Y-M .ffl vs. , 1 V- , 'WA' ' sh 3 45:-g.. 'l. 1 O .. ...ri QA.. 1 K 'U' ' 1 S-x -,lx 's X X After a six-day honeymoon, Paul Bratter, a new lawyer fhe's just won his first case, netting the grand sum of 649 and his bride, Corie las pretty and as addled as they comej move into the new, expensive apartment she has selected, a truly charming place. Drawback: lt's on the sixth floor. Not only that, the apartment is absolutely bare of furniture, the new paint job turned out wrong, the skylight leaks snow, and there is not enough room for a double bed. Even that is not all. An outlandish gourmet has been locked out of his quarters in the loft just above them: he uses the window ledge as access to his pad. So what spoils this Eden? Paul refuses to walk down and back up just to walk barefoot in the snow in the park with Corrie. She kicks him out: only poets are welcome in this garden. Todd Potter and his cast and crew go on from there to bring Neil Simon's comedy to life in Wilhoit Theater. CAST- Patty Moline as Corie Brat- terg DeAna Haynes as the tele- phone repalrerg Mark Stepp is the delivery man: Todd Chester is newly wed Paul Bratterg Lesley McCoy is Corie's mother: and Bob Florence is Victor Belasco. Production Crew: foremen: Todd Chester, set: DeWayne Kirchner, costumes: Lynn Grace and Heather Paulson, props: Maureen Egan, publicity: Melissa Rose, Box Office. All in all, Barefoot is a worthwhile presentation of an amusing Simon comedy. Laura Davis in Drury Mrror. Sisters and Subtexts I Tammy McCalmont fleftj and Melissa Rose Ilower photoj are form the major plot for COTH. Other actors: Rick Mitchellfgf sisters whose crimes of the heart have brought them together DBWHVHS Kil'ChD9l', C3lld3C9 KilP8ll'iC: ass't dll'9Ct0f55 Lynn II at home Gust belowi to work out intricate relationships which Grace and Deana Haynes. I l I I I I I ,GIVES f O ,6 PULITZER .7 PRIZE WINNING PLAY directed bv Michael Todd Potter ' 7-9, I4 -I6 8:15 p.m. Wilhoit Theatre , Y P Box Office Opens Feb. Z5 If Ja I f UI I I I I IIVHIII lfmlttm l tI.I'I I I rr II I .II I.IIII 5 I 1 IIII it Speaking about Crimes while it was in production, direc- tor Todd Potter said, l don't want acting. l want them to be the characters. lt's the fourth- wall theory: the actors don't know there's an audience out there. The actors in 'Crimes' are coming to understand the sub- text. That's crucial in any play. Tech staff and cast, Potter said, worked very hard to build characterization. The plot con- cerned the relationships between two sisters, who are the main characters. Crimes was the second pro- duction of the academic year for Troupers. Potter directed both. 'p1Qs If xxx I 1-fs! 1 G? 5 fr4s,,, I I I I I t X 1 x YI X I xxx--',, I . I I f- . wh . 'fy ti.- N, x W f gN,w..? 9 it x,,, 'i AN' .Vai X l .9 N w-.,..,..,.f ll , r xl,- , . 5-5-X 3 . i' 2, 1 bf Q Peter And The Wolf and men in horn-rimmedglasses lt began about thirteen years ago - well, no, it actually began in 1936 with Sergei Prokofiev fsay prokof' eefj, the great Russian conductor, composer, and pianist, and the master of orches- tration. That's important: he wrote Pe- ter and the Wolf, a symphonic fairy tale, to illustrate the universal appeal of or- chestra instruments. Since its compo- sition in 1936 it has entertained liter- ally thousands of groups of children throughout the world. Prokofiev died in 1953. Professor Sam Minasian came to Drury in 1969. ln 1973, after a year of planning and preparation, he began to offer the musical fairy tale to delight- ed area school children. Early every spring they came in convoys of school buses, flowering the Drury campus briefly like early croci. Dr. James Livingston, langflit pro- fessor and another gentleman in horn- rimmed glasses, has narrated ten or eleven of the thirteen performances. QFormer Chaplain Cliff McKay did the first one or two, and Dr. Ben Andrews narrated on performance whil Dr. L. was on academic leave.J - 4 f 1 :Af Y ' -55-F-t-4:1 V Y 'f'f:T'7r?7L7'flf. X ,nf 14.-'Y 5 ,etsn P fra--57' , ' , f :ggi 2-41-KN wx s - 5... : f ' r fat ' ff fe ,. ' J 3 ,4 , 1 - W 1 3 -1 . .1 - ,gig-w' df -' if lx -X I .1 la: A-- '-... ff -, Qty! W ms. Clif' ,F 5, 45,5 I 'flkigitrfymgff Q., W 212- 4+ H N-ut :fry X ,. NL! K 1 IMs-v.-w- , :J V n '4' H 'XX Ll K' ...., , yfxx , N4 , if -.X A. nk-. if, XX' l x If A af:- f 77 .1 ,-1 ,.., I' ,4 fgjs ,V , N Elite meet to eat Commons Director Bill Behling invented Glitter Specials and the first one was The 34th Annual Candlelight Dinner served on Dec. 5 to 18 DC students drawn randomly. They were treated to a seven course meal served by the faculty to music of a formal string quartet. The meal was served in the middle of the Commons before the envious eyes of other students. Right: Chaplain Mark Thomas serves French dessert to Diana l-lartzler. She's pleased, obviously. Below: John McDonald and Kal Mills exchange pleas- antries while Professor Mlnasiam and his string quartet play La Belle Helene. Other events planned for the Commons are: Breakfast in Bed Kreallyll, International Flair, Home Cooking, Biscuits and Gravy, and Na- chos and Doughnuts QQ. :CX Variorium Being mainly two slightly related bits ff V Q Part of the fun for Inaugural Week was the presl X X Z dent's Fun Run We don't know whether Ron Carrier .- Q Z ' S Q left, ran. He was trylng to declde whether it would be ' f Q fun. Lots of others lleft, above, made the effort ltr X X 'Z 0' A wasn't much fun. Neither was glvlng blood but Mortar: 4? 3 Board labovel found many who gladly dld just that K erp unk! Drury art and architecture stu- dents set sail in Atha Pool on Dec. 5. At least one of them didn't make it to shore. lt was the Drury paper boat regatta. Students had to ride paper boats of their own design and construc- tion. Capts. Pam Trlplett and Pat Burke, both freshmen, started out on even keels fSee middle photos.J Twenty minutes later Pam is still high and dry. But Pat- rick? Ah, Patrick has capsized, is even treading water, is a bit ap- prehensive of heavy seas. With good reason. Below is the site of his last sighting, the victim of an undertow or the great white shark in Atha. Ho! ho! ho! and a bottle of rum. Please. Flotsom. Jetsom, and neap tide, too. ' ' ., s - f ' .,.,32g1::g 1 .,,,,..,.,,, . , f . ..,. ,, ..v,f1-f'1f2f:1e:':-'. .yy .,. J? 53:5 ,W MZ. 15 V 2 l I E . 3 qs' V' V. -S1555 , Xl Q: 'A A t la hi ss ! , Sf .3 S . - , , . mf-'. - , ' is Eff 1. 2 f- 'fi'-51 ...Ki , ,.., F X- K M5, .QM :2Nib?3iI:kE9':'1E'1f. 1 P 'Q S N P' EX 2 X. .,1,.f:1'f-'ix EYE? T' ' ' X 5f 55i -f -.'-15:11:11 Q--qwq, :s-K.: sf x.wQkk1.:.i.,Zwq.: ,Q sp- .X ,. fl ,, 413115-xg.: -vw-: . X hrs, A Ll' 1. K 21 YO. is lBottorn Leftl The annual Kappa Alpha Halloween party added excitement to the middle of the week for many D.C. students. Another traditional Hallow- een event, the pumpkin carvlng contest allowed students to display thelr personal creativity QBelow Leftl Steve Wllson Gaylen Howell Michelle Baum and Sue Orchard all work together to create pumpkin masterpieces lAt Righty Tom Wiley and lBottom Rightl Jody Hopkins are quite intense on carving while others watch 51.7- ,nlmkvk , . vp, L' qi F1 . 41s, wi. His in U 9 1 'ii- S. S- v f A. + Q WCM ' C E THE SKY5 THE LIMIT 'LP I 1 The Career Counseling Center offered a series of four luncheons lon four consecutive Wednesdays beginning Feb. 6 in the FDRoom. Judy Duerkop ifar leftl of CCC hosted the serles and ls shown Introducing the guests. One of the guests was Ms. Joyce Reed, KYTV news director labovel. Drury students were guests of the CCC and Meadowmere Em- ployment Agency who funded the seminars. Excuse me, says Susan Mat- ney, senior from Gower iupper leftl, but l'm from Missouri: l'Il have to have documentation for that statement. Rebecca Hardy ltop, rlghtl ls a blt more credulous. After all, she ls not from Mlssourl. lliarrlson, Arkansas.l And Interested. So ls Melinda Foster, a Knob- noster senlor. She benefitted form the serles which covered dressing and career transition. among other subjects. i Racial and w y E . gtg , , E g A 2, lf gf S s. f l F I. fy ff S Aff Q. 5 'H' ,QQ . : W BUIC Sm... Discrimination ' Treat others the way you would have them treat you. That's from the Gospel of Matthew. lt's also the Goodnews form Eleanor Holmes Norton. You listen for awhile and you know that it's a homiletic that Eleanor Holmes Norton applies to every facet of life. Sponsored by Drury's BUIC and SUB, she came to Clara Thompson Hall Feb. 20 , to help celebrate Black Heritage Week. Now a professor of law at Georgetown University, Norton was the first woman to chair the US Equal Employment Op- portunity Commission. She is a Graduate of Antioch College and the Yale School of Law. Affirmative action was the important comcept of the '70's: what will be stressed in the '80's? The comparable work-comparable worht issue. James White was guest speaker at the BUIC banquet, upper, left. A couple of pretty girls lleftl came to listen: Pam Tol- son and Charlotte Hardin. ' ', , rim. ' , J V-JITQ' Tim, ' , W- .., Qs.:- --Ys Spf. f D i Y R Me! f?S1Wm fukthee thatwervlay MQRRILV Meet In Heaven rr-Thomas Mau 2' ' 45, ir X Y . 'Wg 1 K I K. . g ss- N ,.,x. W T . S lf 49 lAbove Leftl Mary Lelgh Hodge, Terl Thles, and Kathryn Glass all compete for the title of Daisy Mae . Sigma Nu's, Jeff Loeb and Greg Aleshlre help with the asking of questions to determine the winner. fAbove Rightl Sherry Denney, Dana Bray and Mike Shackelford spend an evening mak ing signs for Mortar Board's fall blood drlve. J Q wwf SE 2. +413 .DL :fp . dw 1,7 4 SV f lv xi? gs Q xnxx E Hx 7 itlwtwiitlwlwbilf Homecoming: Drury Style The old Indo-Europeans had a word kei which meant to Ile, to have a bed or lodging for the night. Perhaps without exception the descentant languages have retained lt and made it into home and its cognates. ln old Germanic it was Haima which became ham in Old English. English, separated from its Anglo-Saxon be- ginnings and becoming determlnedly indepen- dent, still went on an orgy of borrowing. It picked up other homes and used them In altered meanings. From Latin came city, civic, and civil tall derived from keijg from Old High German, house and Henry: from Old French, hamlet and hauntg from Greek, cemetery. All of them have meanings reminiscent of the origi- nal l-E word. lt's a very important concept to us and we have used it in many ways, literal and meta- phorical. An unabridged dictionary will list as many as 27 definitions. Home. Home is where the heart ls. You've heard them, the cliches about home. fLlke myths, there's a seed of truth ln every cliche - that's why they became overused.J They recall the less psychologically-infected pleasures of youth when all our senses flike our taste budsl were newer, more sensitive, more likely to produce lasting impressions. lYour mother's apple pie did taste better when you were seven because your taster was better suited to the task, less jaded.l We first came to Drury las a classl In 1981: we can't know much about the real homecom- ing. Only what we guess. To us, homecoming is only a period of heightened excitement: the newness depends on our altered participation. As Freshmen we were only minor participants, almost Incidental scenery. This year we were important in the planning and execution, in the participation But the real homecomers were those who have been gone long enough to remember with enhancement the good times, the good things that happened to them here at Drury. Thomas Moore, the Irish poet, spoke about it around the first of the 19th Century: 0ft ln the stilly night, Ere slumber's chain has bound me, Fond memory brings the light Of other days around me: The smiles, the tears, Of boyhood's years, The words of love then spoken: The eyes that shone Now dimmed and gone, The cheerful hearts now broken! Our days, perhaps, will be remembered with less drama and less significance. But they will be memorable. To us. We're not sure what forms our homecom- ings will take. Some will come back as hon- ored guests. ln other words of Thomas Moore, Drury exhorts us: Go where glory waits thee, But while fame elates thee, Oh! still remember me. lt won't be hard to do - but, then, it won't be easy on us. We'll know where the snows of yesteryear went: they didn't: they stayed - at least through January and much of February. And the nice guy who helped you over an icy patch of walk: the pretty blonde who passed the study-guides over her shining hair ln Pear- sons 3B: yeah, we'll re member them. The vic- tories ln Atha and Weiser. The midnight cram sessions. The parties. The homecoming dance at University Plaza. Moore again: The heart that has truly lov'd never forgets, But as truly loves on to the close L 3 N GiWQWGhiMWQWWhi?Qg A Bunch Of The Boys Were Whooping It Up Homecoming Pep Rally Call it a GUT-BUSTER: the pep rally which pre- pares the student body for the homecoming game. It's an all out effort. lf we could bottle it and dose the Panthers liberally, they'd sweep through the NAIA Nationals in both swimming and basketball. A SigEp Ueftl waves the past trophy in exhorta- tion but it didn't work: The brothers of Kappa Alpha were invincible. lf you look carefully at the right center of the photo you'll see a smiling gentleman whose lack of prejudice is only temporary. The KA group below had the pep, got the trophy, still have the spirit, and exult. fl-lum a few bars of Stars and Scars, guys.J The SigmaPl bunch fbelowl lost gracefully but not quietly. Then the PROs took over and the rafters for whatever Weiser affordsj properly rang. This coed, launched, gets an almost blrd's eye view of even the top bleachers. Too bad Chris Bliss' biz had to fizz before Saturday. 191 ' 1 Q I , iv if , N: e , tifzk S A SX 'A ,. S -Vvw., 'X if ' We Y A sg? , '85 1 . .ya Homecoming Royalty CLEAN CUT and PRETTY: juniors Dave Allen and Par- ry Moline hold their tro- phies as, respectively, Joe College and homecoming queen. Pretty and good-na- tured: Leslie Fedrizzi, right, and below with Ron Carrier, cheers the selections. Shea Ruark, below, gives the new queen a royal hug, and at- tendant Sue Orchard and Lord Allen Cbottomj join the celebration. 'Twas a right royal evening. C. 34 Royalty of a different kind When they come back - the old grads, that is - their eyes seek these sight: the old relics, the re- minders, the caches of memories. They look to orient themselves in place and times. And they are glad when they find them, for the stead- fastness of these landmarks adds stability to their own lives. The clocks of Stone Chapel, the ele- gance of Fairbanks, the red tower of Bentley. ww.,- ,S EM.. 2 ' T Nome, s... 'z.., WA 1..-,. Ng The pains are sweet and quick They are glad that the chapel is well-kept, sturdy, for its staunchness if of their own. Part and parcel. They Invested there and the returns are easy to read. And if Bentley no longer belongs to us, still lt's ln good hands - the new custodians add to the nelghborhoodg they're in the same kind of business. But the older ones, the ones who knew Fairbanks intimately, are pained by its demise: its going is part of their own knelling. They may mutter about phillstines and then they, too, pass. X-.. ,gg , .f- x ' 4 Y 4'-. FF' l Homecoming Royalty Of A Third Kind A Close Encounter We took part of our homecoming away for home - to University Plaza on Sherman Park- way. Maybe their parquet floor is better than that in FSC Ballroom on campus. Anyway, that's UP way down at the bottom. And the floor is also at the bottom under the feet of Dean and Mrs. Hallowell. The food was good, but that wasn't the reason. Mike Dunn would tell you that it was the bar. A bar, FSC doesn't have. President and Mrs. Moore would resent the royalty title: rightly so, and we respect them for that. It was a good bach U1 at UP. FK ir, , 1 Like Zeus Zeus? Absolutely! Llke Zeus was a myth, man, and the Myth are who played for the homecoming dance at Unlverslty Plaza. And lt was like, well, outta this world. And University Plaza or not, for Drury students it was a bash. Not all the moving was at UP: witness Hank Murphy above, doing steps with a pretty partner at SlgNu. ,1 .px 38 v -X1-:fs::a: m-If va-. W - -E - . . Q. -. .. . t ,, e m- ., . , X xi, ,Q-gi wtwxl. , ,- -. -N ,sms-,g :f,.1.-Nmgm-q,,-:Nr -Mgxtrxi-Q.:, 3.5-. t:4gq,gg . -. 1g:,.::3.s., , . . -. . , .- . X5 H--Ss f ...E E, , M x : Q an ,Q VVELCOIVIE TO--- C DR RY COLLEGE HOMECOMING WEEK HOME OF THE PANTHERS , ,ah ' Juv' - A ...W . ' T l ll , , Homecoming Loss Maybe there were reasons: Kelvin Parham and a broken bone in his foot and Ted Young blew an ankle ln the first three minutes. But lt was surely a bad time for bad luck or flatness. Everything - maybe even EVERYTHING - was on the line: top district ratings: we had them and UMKC wanted themg solid home team advantage all the way to KC. Maybe Gust maybel the entire Nationals. Sandwlched between two Cadillac games with Quincy Qback to back thumplngsj and a LeBaron vlcto- ry agalnst Marymount, were two Model Z lemons: the 53-51 expensive homecoming loss to UMKC and an unbelievable 67-64 loss to ll-18 Evangel ln the Rat Cage. The loss to Rockhurst hurt, but not like those two. Mark Sparks Imlddle leftl was almost down and out. The crowd fabovej was upbeat, and Jean Netzer and Mike Dunn lleftl pleaded for a charge: lt was short- clrculted. al CLLEGE COMING '85 Wednesday, January 30 Preliminary Homecoming Royalty Vote in the Commons at lunch and dinner Wednesday, February 6 Escape artist Kevin Spencer will perform at 8:30 pm in the FSC Ballroom. Thursday, February 7 Basketball game at Evangel, 7:30 pm. Final Homecoming Royalty Vote in the Commons at lunch and dinner Friday, February ,8 Pep Rally at 8:00 pm in Weiser Gym - organization cheerfpyramid contest, announcements, Chris Bliss - the opener for the lackson's Victory tour Saturday, February 9 Pregame Dinner at 5:00 pm in the Commons, BIG GAME with UMKC 7:30 in Weiser Gym iBe sure to pick up ticketsll Postgame Party at 9:00 with MYTH, lots of food and fun to be at University Plaza - sponsored .by SUB and Student Senate! 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' X r, Ea 'X ,XXV r -s X 5-,eine Th Mirror See the graphic at the top: the name of the game is Communication - in all dl- rectlons. The MIRROR has played lt for a century, plays It well: Madam Edltor K. Wil- llams. manager Patti White, the whole gang, above as staff and rlght as SCJ. The man at the top is Mark Good- man, advisor. M Af Takes Many Forms Association DUDLEY MURPHY's group be- low, the DRURY ART ASSOCIAI- TON, what do they know? A lot, we bet: a llne is the history of a dot, let the form and the medium express the message lnote the drip over Murphy's shoulderj, the polntlllists, Mondrian, the spectrum, Garamond and Baskerville, the stress excited by the diagonal. Well, graphic, guys and gals. L.-R: Rob lrvln, Deb Braw- ley, Sue Bynum, Kim Austin IPres.J, Steve Swartz, Karen Boyle, Melin- da Mltter, Michelle Crain, Dudley Murphy, Denise Presti, and Debbie Long. I-bl W X M 'Y' 1 all 3 1 I Vw f Q A f X Q in X . iffs-has .B s new : E--e i I 52335 , sallli w I x . Ill I 3.1 FE 3 El v w:: gx'j . r gi, ' .fl .. -Qi .. sm-Q: .-' - - X - 'N , i ' no mf? 85pv?74?a 'PW r 'Q A liQ 'x PUBUC N-:mov from E- OUBUCWY Rzumpug aff 'e V,x' ,EP ' 'HEY sv l rf' 'S 5 alll, Y? F' ' mu I 1, x4 L1 gui 'N-, Q-rf-.X ----an-...r r he . fffjfQ1,fgf,, T . A A, X , I M Advertising Club Joe McAdoo, left and below ltalklng to a representative of Rock 993 is the driving force behind the DC Media Fair, the local chapter of Ad Club land the author of the communication image poster?J and chairman of the Communication Department luno s on the word, pIease J. Dr McAdoo ls shown ibottom left! with some of the mem- bers of Ad Club: Kelly Adams, Pattl White, Grace Helm, Janet Schnefke, and Qin front! Valecla Quinn, Patty Moline, and Brenda Hansen, ln the photo just below, Drury students Kristy Erickson and Dave Shuler seek advice form Tlna Pacheco, Representative of Springfield Community Hospltal. Blow your own horn f? .44 .. , P SW., Media Fair . . . f e We 'tv' AKA , s S ,'f'?fl In Commfvn ICRTIOQ 312.9 .M X. M Meet 8: Greet At one time serious affairs were conducted by those ln charge the heads of states etc It was not al ways satisfactory requiring many In complete letters and several visits to clarify ln 1496 because the journey to England was very long and very dangerous Venice sent two perma nent representatives to London to take care of state business They were the first ambassadors The word is obviously related to embassy, comes from Latin lthrough French - a frequent routej: ambactia, office. Originally the ambassador was a servant, a vassal. When Judy Nickle KDC VP for de- velopmentj proposed Ambassadors a decade ago, she had another idea: a group of good students who would bridge the gap between Drury and visitors. Randy Barnes ls out-going president: Linda Mltter is the new ex- ecutlve. S pnnlhcu Rats 8: Cats The good-looklng bunch at the top are the newly formed Sociology Club. Its faculty mentors are Doc Glbson and Randall Beger. They have yet to wrlte a constitution and elect offlcers. Thls is their natal photo. From the left: front, Mary Lou Fuller, Peggy Regan, Renee Durk, Jody Hopkins, Theresa Woods: back, Pauline Hart, Llsa Clagett, Leigh Crain, Doc Gibson, Terri Morlan, Randy Beger, Charlotte Har- din, Thelr pat male student ls Terry Weisman. The group just above are equally handsome. They represent the Drury Chapter of Psl Chl, the national honore society ln psychology. They are Jeannie Rled, Dr. Agruso, Donna Dampler, and Joe Plerson. Donna ls holdlng Wham, the white rat. CATS and RATS and fights and bltes - but not at Drury. Not, at least, in the psychology department. Cats - Panthers, that is - put the rats through several tests and experi- ments. Rlght now they're running mazes. Psychology deals with human and animal behavior: sociology. anthropol- ogy. and geography Involve the sys- tematlc study of human social sys- tems: and criminology ls the scentlfic study of criminal behavior. Really, though, rats ls rats. T lunc KID' Ann tion vide tion stud KJ C s pre tees as r ano CBC rece The Ann . . xi. 'JP Q X, ir ' ijfifil , wx 1' Hg- 5 Cl V wg? if -'4?, 1 ff' yn 'K ,t .-A Aww-- Fil' 1- AT- .. .. . 1 ,Al .T.x ' :rr i A8060 7709 pq. ax ml , . ,YN . x U .4 ' l, O ov I 4 !' ' x P S0 of-.VQS5 :lx . , -is X X f .geilbsw f r ' f Student Union Bd. The student union fthat's a corner of Findlay at the rightj is an impressive building. lt's expensive fthe gas bill is in the neighborhood of S1200fmonthJ and it's busy. The students use it in hundreds of ways each day, the faculty and staff to lesser degrees, the com- munity often. Running it is an awe- some job. This group shown Q and ex- emplified by Ron Carrier, belowl is largely responsible for the student ac- tlvities. Front: Kim LeAn, concessions: Steve Adams, Pres.: Shelley Ausley, R8zT: Melinda Mltter, pro- motions: back: Hank Branom, Bsn. Mgr.: Mary Pyle, concessions: Carrier, arts I lee.: Matt Bown, VP: Paul Koch, films: Ken Bennett, RET. '-'-at Sigma Nu: sigma Sigma Nu fraternity was originally called the Le- gion of Honor. Virginia Military Institute lLexlngton, Virglniaj, the West Point of the South, saw the na- tional beglnning of Sigma Nu, January 1, 1869. Sigma Nu was based on the twin foundation stones of Honor and Brotherhood. The founding fathers were also de- termlnedly opposed to hazing. The important princi- ples then, as now, were Love, Honor, Truth. The colors are black, gold and white. The Sigma Nu fraternity at Drury QEpsilon Beta chapterl was founded December 17 1919 the second oldest on Drury campus Jeff Loeb is Commander Kevin Gebhart ls Lt Command er Greg Aleshire is Treas The White Rose formal was held at Tantarra Nice 4 I! T . ' Q 'W EP .gnnmwnwls Delta Delta Dears Let us steadfastly love one an- other : The language is a blt archaic but the sentiment is contemporary and very necessary in this busy mate- rialistic age. We mean it. Our alliances will last a lifetime. There are about 40 members in- volved ln the whole spectrum of cam- pus events. Delta Delta Delta, as a national or- ganization, was founded in 1888 ln Boston. The Drury chapter was orga- nlzed In 1913. We have been steadfast supporters of a variety of Drury pro- grams ever since. We support the American Cancer Society drives, visit convalescents, and contribute to other worthwhile causes. President ls Angela Carter: Ju- lie White ls representative on Panhel- lenic. The pine is our tree. OFFICERS Anlta Keseman, KD, President Patty Moline Pl Beta Phl, VP - Rebecca Hardy Zeta 5ec!Treas June Whlte, poo, sawn ' C Our purpose, says Anita Keseman, ls to maintain unity within the sorority system, to promote sisterhoodf' The main activity of the council is to plan Greek week, and to govern rush and all intersororlty functions. Other members of the council are DeAna Haynes, Michele Lilly, Amy Pyle, Kai Mills. and Janette Cllmer. KN If 1 fi 1 n -4 U' r. l T' 3 ? l fl ,. ..x . n 'r'9' X, Il F i a 3 Q, :f D59 141' J. ,ia M il ' 'l . .hy X-1 l N,..5.j-,-s Im .52 ml mx X.-.X ,E NW' xx 'ki WA YK 1...-mm XX. , , ,4 'f:?ia AN. Mm Zeta Tau lpha , 'T '3 . 3' -. , X Ig im xkw I X Q x M Q X L , fggg xk T' 2 s ab 5 x, RQ ,A hs x A J ' 1 , 2, fxl+wv'-'- N.: Mwfw- f-A . f ,-1 Q Q f 4+ ir, wx-9' , s.xv- Q. f SAV: -. 551 . L 5, . JY. ' , M .., .,.:.,, X: .Hx ,, .3 ,P ,Digg Q, . gl ' L 'mi f X . . , , e b: 4 w-X235 . W. xg 'N Q ik F'- x 'A .X N-K?t,.,,F9 ,, , ,g.'.'. . Jxzzgf Fi 'Qi Wllllillllllllllllll gjmfss 111 1 1 i -i I -I sw- . N .111- , ,..i...-,.. HAL 4 I In 1 'o Richard Killough, James Taylor, and Robert War- mack Cleft! are representa- tive of the Drury Flying Club. Other members are Duane Ball Mary Kay Hoops, Jeff Jones, Jeff Loeb, and Kevin Moen. Their ultimate goal is the wild blue yonder. They've started ground school which they hope wlll prepare them for a part of the flight certificate exam. BLACK UNITED INDE- PENDENT COLLEGIATES: Six beautiful people repre- sent BUIC fbelowl. Lower left are the officers: Pam Tolson, Charlotte Hardin, Karen Dlxson, and Presl- dent Kenneth Bennett. Frl- day Ogbuehl fbelowl ls from Nigeria, and Terri Faulkner fright, is from Springfield. W Hell- I , l I Black United Independent Collegiates THE NEED TO FEEL FREE In the summer of 1963, Kansas City University was admitted to the Mis- souri University system. My associ- ation with it had begun in 1949 ad fi- nally totaled eight years evenly divid- ed between studying and teaching. On being designated a state university, UMKC experienced vacuums of power and assertions of authority. It became, at least momentarily, an unhappy place to work. I don't tolerate tension and intrigue well, and I jumped at the opportunity to interview for a possible opening at Drury. Drury seemed a serene oasis of peace in an academic war, but I still approached my interview with some worry: Drury was a protestant school and I was a Catholic. Alan Eikner fone of the wisest and finest deansj never mentioned religion: sure- ly an oversight, I thought. BUIC iii- 3 fn 4 'Q , I Q y -X nl I xr f f' L X is-I., 'xt You have asked nothing about my religion, I said. Are you not concerned? He looked at me in some surprise. We're interested if you wish to talk about it, he said, but not at all concerned. Wise both ways. The Irish, when they immigrated to Boston in the early 1800's were often targets of stones: mackeral-snatchers, they were called. I am also Irish. There is this point to my brief history: all of us-if we are lucky- -have several things to set us apart. It makes for an interesting life and an interesting world. Blacks are different in a sometimes obvious way. Surely-as Alan Eikner would probably say-no more important than my being Irish Catholic. And no less important, either. That's a point we too frequently overlook: the importancefunimportance of being black. It has to be both ways. The Alan Eikners have to remind us of that-and there are not enough Eikners. BUIC at Drury was organized in some brief halcyon moment in the nasty storms that swirled through the late 60's, early 70's. It was organized from frustration and some bitterness caused by the stupidity which, in 32 days, motivated the murders of Martin King and Robert Kennedy. BUIC is meant to be an extension of King's dream, a non-violent dream which mixed majorities and minorities with liberal dollops of love and concern into the nation of caring individuals which Jefferson envisioned from the beginning. A nation which could value the need to feel free--a universal need. In almost 20 years on the faculty of Drury College, I have witnessed no overt acts of discrimination. Qlronically, the prejudices practiced at Drury are more apt to be fraternal rather than racial.J I am sure there have been some instances. Certainly there has been covert discrimina- tion. One instance of covert discrimination is blatant. In consulting several Sou'westers for BUlC's history, I was impressed by a continuing BUIC Invitation: BUIC is open to any student willing to work and participate in BUIC activities. BUIC is obliged by our national heritage to extend that invitation. Few sororlties and fraternities practice that kind of patriotism. But, what is worse: I am aware of no non-black Drury student who has accepted BUIC's invitation to join. That's the only way to test BUIC's sincerity. . . . Jay Bynum, Sou'wester, advisor IFIEIEMT EHE 1- WE WZKSYYUD ESEM RATI. 1:11. 3 Sa! 59 x xx .' , N A ' we , 'NEI 1 X Q XXX ., Sigma Phi Epsilon Virtue, diligence, and brotherly love: the founders of Slgma Phi Epsilon lin Richmond, Va., ln 19013 plcked that as the fraternal motto. When the Slg Eps came to Drury ln 1949 they started some long-llved tradltlons. The most memorable ones were Engla 119587 and Cllquot 11964 - one of Cllquot's favorite masters was Judge Donneganl. Officers are: Brad Mlmlltz, president: Greg Booker, vlce-president, Mike Boyle, controller: Jesse Owsley, secretary: Luc Helterbrand, correspendence: ' Charley Sellers, pledge educator. Thelr flower ls the violet, and the Sou'wester voted Chrls Letslnger Typical Slg Ep. There are 23 active members. Founders Fall Formal was held at Unlverslty Plaza. The Vlolet Festival, a spring formal, usually marks the blooming of the petlte spring flower. They support a number of worthy causes Easter Seals, Cerebral Palsy Foundation. The sponsored Country Time Music Jamboree lHarrlson, Arkansas! as a fund raiser. They are noted for GPA records. Pi Beta Phi lf the Pi Phls don't llve at home iand most of them don'tJ they live in Smith Hall. Their flower is the wine carnatlon and every good and true Pi Phi follows the arrow. President Kathy Minor says, The sisters of Pi Beta Phi have always stressed the importance of striving to become well-rounded women. They emphasize aca- demic achievement, and try to foster love. We're very supportive of our sisters, says Kathy. I K RRO lov The Angels? Absolutely! The sisters joined in the Pumpkin Sing, Fall and Spring Formals, Mystery Date, Pops, Walkout, and work togeth- er for Arrowmont, their national philanthropy. Their fall formal was at University Plaza, initiation was at Fremont Hills, and spring formal at Sheraton. They took kids from the Children's Home to the zoo, participated in the CP egg hunt, and had a picnic for all sororities. Deb Brock- mier, Jodie Hopkins, and Mindy Guppy were vice-presi- dents. FY21 the A 5 'lix .1 I'-H4 gg, . -Ni? 1 5 V H. l r I 5 -x 1 - 5 - J ' f -n 32 'Q S. Z-55:4 X J 3 +4-' 7 .-- X V C zifqwfr? ' ,f'fi95SQ . 'J E-qx X L fljwign- i N - T X ' APP ALPHA G 5' K 5 mmm . I X' , Xw ' v V' 'w g D ' , I R Some things wlll never change: KA ls the oldest frater- nity on campus. lt is one of the oldest in the nation: formed at Washington and Lee Univ., Lex- ington, Virglnla, in 1865 with the blessing of General Lee who was then president of Washington Univ. With the General as model, KA stresses morality, courage, loyalty, compassion, manners, generos- lty. They are strong on scholar- ship and athletics. Matt Bown is presidentg Dan Francis, VP: Steve Frazee, trea- surer. Thelr flower ls the red rose. Their Old South Ball cul- minates Dixie Week and this year was held on Table Rock Lake. Their national philan- thropy ls Muscular Dlstrophy. Their house ls at 1318 Wash- ington and ls guarded by an of- ten-flred cannon. 4 U 1-. si 1... .,,, . .....,., mn. of-. 'x V. 'i mm VP' -3 Muslc requires a lot of notes AND a lot of people of note. Some of Drury's noteworthy music people are shown here. beginning with Sigma Alpha Iota at the bottom. SAI has a long, distinguished history at Drury: over 30 years. Dawn Strlck ls Pres.: Laura Palmer, VP: members: Veronica Pentacost, Gael Eutsler. Robin Holmes. Anlta Yount, Molly Jones, Janice Smith, Rlta Elbert, Mlyuki Tsuhashl, Becky Williams. Bobby Tlllery fbottom leftl stands bow ready. Ron Harris and James Elswlck fmlddle left, tune up while Maureen Egan lmlddle below, ls - shall we say - ln full swing. Another trlo fmlddle rlghtj loin her: Llnda Dlcklson Tracy Hoskins Amy Vaughan. Lawrence Luthy lbelowl preambles with Harris. Gael Eutsler and vlolln joln Steve Selbert fat the keyboard! and Barbara Barr. Concert A - .A 8 .. ,, l :FQ by D ,.,, 1 S , . ...C .t vm. In 1 J? If uhm. V g-, 6 wt, i ,, H, x 5 at V., '55 Y 3 fi' i i -5 'QA 'Y .5555 X '52 X A. 4 an Q. E if A 3.2 I .gg I . . 4 fl., E 7 gg, .ix fits. li 'gefvf' , if fbi? j fu .. . 'iiipgffti its jezail ,.1 if-if wifi E ?:'1 -ff ,J vi JH' Sngma P '-5 . - in The Slgma Pl brothers iabovelg cheerleader Tom Jackman Qshown wlth Jean Netzerlg I see a great future for SlgPl - actually the nurse ls tak- lng a blood sample hom Hank Branom's ear fleft. topl: Mr. Holmes Is rlslbly allected by something Pres. Moore sald at the SP Tattletales show. Ron Carrier ls Sage and Wade Rouse ls Flrst Counselor. Other Coun- sellors are: Steve Adams, Hank Branom, Steve Wll- son: Dave Shuler ls her- ald. Thelr flower la the la- vendar orchld. H. Ray Chllders ls advlsor. Soclals Included Ok- tober Fest and the week- long Bahama-Mama ln the sprlng. They are flrst ln: over- all GPA, blood drlve par- tlclpants, and numbers of senators and Ambassa- dors. They pushed wheel- chalrs from .loplln to Drury to ralse money lor MS. .H 1. jf Mortar Board The Skiff Chapter of Mortar Board: Why Skiff? ln the early 50's Drury women with GPAs of 3.33 could join a scholastic honors club, the Skiff. They were tapped the Sunday after the iris around Stone Chapel bloomed and each of them was presented with a freshly cut Drury lris. When they began to tap men, the name was changed but the lris tradition persisted. Sue Orchard is president. Some of the members are pictured below. Two of the more memorable of their many activities were the blood drive in FSC fbelowj and the faculty chili supper. Psych professor, Dr. Victor Agruso dines in the Ceallar with a trio of pretty iris ladies. M5 wif rf! r A page from the past Of Lambda Chi Alpha Lambda Chl Qabovel readles ltself for Bld Day. 1982. The followlng scenes. too, are out of the past of a proud Dnrry fratemlty. It has been a great. sometlmea glorlous hlstory. Below are the guys who Ilved on the other slde of Benton ln 1981. Everybody ought to be able to remember 2 or 3 of them: the present brotherhood ought to know all of them. The old Lambda Chl house lrlghtl bumed February 20. 1959. the day before homecomlng. John Simmons. former Drury professor, was a member of that group, along with Dr. 1' 1 'QP j j .,.1:-bi gg Id ', 2.4 F A ,E ' , QM I , fx' 4 , , W.. ,W .-, A .ylj-et, fi ., f 'X '- -l 'g 7 1 I L W , l - . Li -Q, 9 , ff, .xa ' .77 I 1 I yi .K ' 5 fl , 1 ' t . 'X 1' I if 2 :H .Y f ,sv I 3 ' 1 - X. If x. .Ja hx ' . ' I I I UI' I V U' 2- ' al . an ,- X a I f f gg. ' f X . , 1 f A U u A v If . . , Y I 5,1 ' J Q - '- 1 IXFIWJ t Denny Pllant, SMSU professor. Jay Bender was presldent. The fratemlty was establlahed at Drury ln 1939 and by 1955 had already lnltlated lts 500th member. ln 1952. thelr membershlp Included James Flndlay, son of the Drury presldent. They had just moved lnto thelr house lwhlch later burnedl. Thelr 1956 motto. exempllfled below. was l'm a Lambda Chl and a hell ol a guy. Thelr wlnnlng 1953 lloat ls rlght. ssi- In 1958, for the 22nd consecutive semester. they led all Drury fraternltles ln GPA: of 152 North Amerlcan chapters, they ranked fourth. Thelr flower ls the whlte tudor rose. Thelr Great Dane pet ls Joseph Coul. Hlgh Alpha Is Mllre Shackleford: Hlgh Beta ls Bart Kesner. There are 30 actlves, 12 pledges. Thelr phllanthropy ls the Heart Assoclatlon. They were flrst ln IM softball. Harvest Moon was held at Hldden Valley and Sprlng Formal at l'lawlx's Nest. iff? Q36 .W Zf 1...- 'Wc .R U The sisters of Kappa Delta have been around Drury for 54 years, llvlng by their motto 1 Strlve for the honorable, the beautiful, the blghest J, adding luster to Drury's reputation. ln 67 they put on their KD dresses Qbottomj and went out to Table Rock for their pictures. In 1953 they gathered In the parlor ot their house. Yes, their houseg see it top, left. Fun was the name of the game in 1967 when the Coclclloaches, the KD unstrung quartet won the talent show. QHow does one seriously play a toilet seat?1 But serious and hard working when the tlmes demanded it. Molly Jones ls president: Anita Keseman ls president of Panhellenic: Ann Helm ls president of the student body: Chris Jackson is a Mlrror editor: Patti White ls Ad Club pres.: a Dmry Who 's Who. 4,54 M .8 vw, Hs u Mu Y 'ri tr 'S .W Av ,, r N N ---. 4.4, W' K 'Ml jfACf' BARBARA BOULWARE, Vr fy K7 From Past Gardens of Dreams KHPPH D eltas Find Thy Competition Within s The Astute Soaychsh, speaking to his old amah's son, is supposed to have said, Seek thy competition within. 'l'hat's appropriate to the Drury intramural program. l0f course he also said, Thy real enemy has thy face: Thy real demons are within. We don't think that applies to Drury lM.l ln Intramurals, the frontiers are all personal. The name of the game is equal or exceed your potential. Anyone can do that. If you can't dunk, can't spike, can't strike out the KA homerun hitter, what matters? Did you try your best? That should be enough. Try to convince that grieving SlgEp in the classic photo below. Hls brother is saying, No less an authority than Grant- land Rice said, 'When the One Great Scorer comes to write against your name, He marks - not that you won or lost - But how you played the game. ' Jeff Stockard Qleftj makes the proper point: the ball, frozen for all of time, is ever out there, waiting. 4' 9 'fjgxqbl it gi i Jesse Owsley plots strategy lleftl and Dan Beach listens, Dave Hughes thlnks It over. So a Slg Ep gets on, does Dave Burks Qabovel worry? James Parker fright, topj gets the runner at thlrd: the shutout ls Intact. Nobody sald Renee Thompson ltop, left, was a great swinger - just a good-looklng one. Intramurals lt's how you play the game? Well Lambda Chi played the game of softball pretty well and they won the intramural trophy, beating Sigma Nu in the tournament - held at Ozark Mountain Stadium because of persistent bad weather. fDean Hallowell said plans are to try to have future tourneys on campus.l Sigma Nu was second, Sigma Pl was third, and Turner Hall was fourth. The girls' softball tournament was post- poned Quntil late this sprlngl because of wet, cold weather. Sigma Pl A won the men's league volleyball crown, and Kappa Delta won the women's championship. Both teams went undefeated thru the regular season. Lambda Chl's junior squad won the men's B league. Basketball competition was in full swing in March and will be decid- ed durlng the spring. Other IM activities planned are ultimate frlsbee, ping-pong, billiards, and swimming. Hallowell directs the IM program. - ra- 5 FQ .i T Greg Aleshlre makes a herculean effort at a spike but Scott Slat- ten tickled lt over, just out of Greg's tar- get range. fTopJ The rest of the action ls softball. Sig Eps Llttle Sisters labovej show winning form what- ever the score ls. Jes- se Owsley lmiddle, leftl says, Whip her ln here, baby. Baby lleftl is pitcher Dan Beach. The third ele- ment of that diamond trlnlty ls the batter ffar leftj, swinging, missing. It better be how you play the game. sea This is exactly how we felt when we heard that Drury had won the na- tional swim title for the second time in 4 years: Like WOW! I can walk on water. ,af F' I as-L 'F -nb' 'Y '... ui 1-'Q I Q - C r ' 'W-,M A V 1... ' '4 -. V. . V .U - new '- ' 1K..'- Q'- f ' 4 - V. f Z ' B u V 4-D U ' X' ' V' 1 1' .I . . 'V V. ,,,. . W ,7:'. I w,H,,,..,....----- A . U, . 1 .. .,, IN A CONTRAST OF SEASONS: Llnda Davidson on a sweet summer day walked through the meadows sweet with hay. She was sweet and she walked across the concourse before Wallace and FSC. But SNOW: when lt first started lt had a luminous quality, an eerie lnner beauty, and it was friendly and melted, but the temperature dropped, the snow hardened, was mean. BELLS: If you had llved ln McCullagh Hall about 1915, you would have been gov- erned by bells: rising at 6:30: a breakfast bell at 7: luncheon at 12:45 ln the hall: as- sembly bell at 5:50: dinner bell at 6: study bell at 7:30: warning bell at 10: retiring bell -ww - at 10:15. The study pe- riod was spent in the room, quletly, wlo visiting. The most perfect qulet must be maintained through- out the house from 2 to 4 on Sunday after- noon. Amen. num COLL GE! ,.-g-1---g-1 h Tlflflrd Term of the DRURY Donut: will, h eemmeueenn THURSDXY, SEPT., 25th,' 1873, ' ARD COHTIXUI TILL HOLIDAYS. Equdl Advanjages to both Ladies and Gentlemevf. Able and experienced Corps of Instructors. 0 The Collegeivlll include two departments:--h A The Preparatory, and College proper-and will u embrace tour courses ofetudy. vu : the Cluel- eal, Beientido, Ladies and Nennel. Special ettentlon will oe giverxjn the Normal clue to persons preparing themselves for Teach- ere. Further announcement may be expected noon. L For particulars address- RRV. N. J. MORRISON. -DMD. Spriugdeldfllo., July 81, 1878. President. n -461t! N ' A . 1 Advertisement published in the Missouri Weekly Patriot August 28, 1873. .::.0 H .dim ., .. w 2 Mortor Board had a chlll supper for the faculty and the whole Communication Department showed up, the physics department, most of Breech - well, Sue Orchard and Chris Freeman break crackers with Kevin McAndrews. ln a contrasting scene, quiet Atha Pool, a massive reflecting pool, ls peaceful without thrashing bodies or the yells of coaches. 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WH? iv ' Panthers enjoyed lots of cat fights 'fob ' 1 l Exciting exemplars of excellence: exactly: They went to Kansas City for the national tournament and didn't really know how good they were. After all, SUB, UMKC, Rockhurst. even Evangel had beaten them. But, even with the breaks, eventual national champs Ft. Hays just barely beat them in Kemper in an early season game. CSee the What Ifs on page 79.5 In the playoffs they pounded Avila and took revenge on Rockhurst in Halpern. They beat Wisconsin-Steven Point for their last victory of the season, earlier they had sown victories from Illinois to Hawaii. They'II miss Tommy fleftj and Mark. but they'll go back to KC. THE 4-E PANTHERS Cabove, from the frontj: Michael Johnson, Robbie Hall, Ted Young, Tom- my Deffebough, Rod Gorman, Harold Craig. Phil Caster, Steve Frazee. Coach Stanfield. Thurman Denton. Kelvin Parham. Karl Quinn. Kevin Arnold, Coach Walker, Karma Murr, Tony King, Will Welsh, Mark Sparks. Steven Cox, Bobby Reasoner. Mike Blakeslee. Deffebaugh and Sparks were NAIA Honor- able Mention All-American. Everybody admits their loss will be felt. BUT - though he won't make any predictions - Coach Walker smiles broadly. There are six good reasons abovea an- other might be Coach Stanfield's all-star son. A Coach's I.ot ls Not fAIwaysj A Happy One If you win, Coach Walker Qfar right and left belowb admits, you're too high to sleep. lf you lose, you lie awake trying to figure out how you might have turned it around. Sometimes nothing goes right Cfar rightj and you die a little bit. The coach has been known to fling a clipboard or deliberately QD draw a T in order to moti- vate his team. lt's no career for a tender stomach. Sometimes things fall in place: the sun shines, the tro- phies pour in fthe district I6 championship, rightj and God's in his heaven. And that's why Coaches Walker and Stanfield Cbelowj do it. 'O' Wh y Me, Lord? Panther Basketball .75 A Nice, Zlmu, Nan-Koutacf Sport - kightzl? If you want a thing done right, says .lonna Chambers Cleftb, mascot. do it yourself: go out there on the floor and grab SBU 435 by the hair, take the ball and give it to Tommy'D who is asking fairly politely. We won't pretend to explain that melee except that it does take place in Bolivar and we think SBU's 435 has a lot to do with it. In the left photo Cabovej the whole SBU team is biting the hardwood - 41933 is teetering. We suspect that they're stripping Mike Blakeslee of his jersey - it's his feet you barely see in the exact center. On the right it's 435 again and again Blakeslee is the object of mayhem. lf we know Mike he gave as good as he took. Maybe this strategy is how SBU won at Home. lt's always a good cat fight when SBU and Drury get together. exciting - bruising, major surgery. 1 4 1 P W x KHIISHS City! We Almost Did It! The What lfs It started a couple of years ago in the mind of this man: Marvin Walker, DC basketball coach since 1980. What if, he said, I can put together a front line, loose, agile, fairly tall, good shots, board hangers, tough, alert, hungry? What if l can come up with a pair of ball-handlers who are fast, have deft hands, make sure passes, and shoot net balls from M 1 the perimeter. The whole bunch W' will hustle, press a lot, fast- break, drop free-throws like shelling peas. u He worked at it recruited with that in mind, wound up with a covey of HS all-starters, looked to '86. Well, that was one kind of what ifg what if the Panthers had been consistent all season long? There may have been three games all season that they could not have won under the circumstances. But who can account for the losses to Evangel, SBU, UMKC, Rockhurst. If they had won the games they should have, they would have gone into KC nationally ranked, probably were on the brink of being ranked when they lost to the Hawks in KC. Being ranked, they would have drawn an easier seed fpart of the luck that Ft. Hays earnedl. Dunkel had them ranked 46 ito Stevens Point's Jill - much better than their 18th seed. Now: what if? X. 8 r Q? ln the district playoffs there were several heroes. Par- ham and Arnold fleft, abovel came back from injuries. lWhat if they had been healty all season?J Tommy D Qrlghtl returned to his form. The Panthers marched throught the districts as they sould have and wnet against the 16th seed In NAIA, Waynesburg, Pa. It was easy. Well, it we're to believe Dunkel, the easy part was over. Remember they had UW-Stevens Point ranked 431, Drury 46. But remember, also, a couple of other things: Drury, along with Stanford and Colorado, et al, helped to start this association and played in the first tourey many years ago, and they have been to the national meet three of the last five years: an achievement rate that matches Stevens Point. its In the Kemper iungle, the Panthers' hackles were up: emotions, defense, offense - and the Pointers were no match. They crept back even but Ted Young took care of that Qleft, above! and the results show below. But the price was high and DC fell next game to Marycrest. Emotionally exhausted. Maybe so, for the Panthers were never in the game with Marycrest Qwhich subse- quently fell to ultimate winner, Ft. Haysj. The score was 78-68. Sparks, in his final DC game, socred 25 points with 15 rebounds. What if Tommy D had scored his season' average 16.4 Instead of 7. What if DC hadn't played the hardest game of the tourney the night be- fore? What if? Fans: I Love 'Eml Bob Vecker and Drury College and panther partisans It s a sea of faces. mainly mouths. sometimes fingers and clenched fists. and a lot of noise. It has all the individuality of a bin of wheat. lf you're playing in Weiser lor, as here, in Kemper and you're winningj the whole mass is for you. l Q They get bigger, more individual. Of course, and you knew it, they were individual all the time. You can begin to attach names to faces. You can say. Why! that's Ron Henson. Dan Beach. And Mark Ellis. And he shaved off his beard. She's wearing her Ghost Buster shirt You see them even playing to the TV cameras Maybe not. Their's is an identity that transcends embarrass- ment. They are, in the words of Willie Stargell. lamfly They belong: they're at home. Their brothers fyes. their sisters, tool are sitting right there with them: Randy Barnes and David Vlse: their cheerleaders are on the sidelines: their Panthers are on the floor. in the Then they begin to get specific, the face is familiar, and you can recognize the voice even if you can't hear it. They do specif- ic things: massing for a bus ride to KC: belling the Kemper roof for the NAIA March of Champions: giving a Big D. But, still, there's a certain temerity about your recognizing them, identifying them, as though you were watching them bathe, or pull up their panty hose, or blow their noses. Their mass anonymity has been fractured, and they don't know it. You are the observer: you watch emotions marshal on their faces: passions they'd probably prefer to hids? - l ffl. Something -just something - says lt's all right to accuse the referee, to go slightly berserk when the clock runs out and the victory is intact, to exult, physically, publicly. There's a conta- gion about it: if one leaps to his feet at a Mark Sparks whelm or a Pfankuck plunge, a hundred will follow. Or pound raw hands or raise fists. ?, ANS! A , . . ' ' , -'ws 35 M 'fi-2-122 Jw.: . x 5, ,,b., M,,,, :,: ,,,,:,., . . - . .1 ' ' . .-:1:- 151421:-5 ,1aZsf?3a2221::,1l-:f2f- fi: Z , ' 'E Q' :Z.QZf' V '1.2f55Z5f5?? W.. Af . ,f: My . 0 - A 4 ., A.:g5IQ:::2f '15-Q-I-.15- ' gg- is Q P 1 if ff , fliwfg1'ffif?f?5555L.fE'f'-ff? 1 V b 7 'S . , f- .1-'11f' 2:5g,fg13-?'f1ff , , ' X 35? - ' , , M, I, . 3 X .' 1, j'7 : , if V a ,137 cf' 115- ' W ,Q if H , dt- . .. 7 -'M - ,gf : Q . U ' W . ffm . mf .xg . ,.,:v,.-1 tif f: . 'Q fi. V A 4 , ,4 ,s:,f'--, ' fi, :.1'r:gr, 4. f 7 ' I1-2'--' f 1 M fag . f'E,:?'g4f5W4 ff- ' ' - V , -' ' ' P 1 ' ay-fy -3 V :-..1:-, ,. - 5, , -I 1- v,zm:4.y -'-,:Zzf..:,,fs'--,:- .V f ' ' . -x g. .. , - . 1 - 421' viiiff-1: fi ' Y 5235? V ' ' V V uf. 11- A , V A? K Q 44 ' v :vw t , ' A NV -i Q2 :P 1 ' , ., -'Z:.. wasp. . 321' -' ...Xff ' 1- .myvz-4,.1f:,.4 , AQEZI 25,9 Q. ,,,,, ,A M, 1 . , . 5, .,,,. K - - -vvwlswma -5 . MN mga'-.N The Thompsqns ,Vx :R X. it . Q W . , .. Gmifffw' N W -, , Y-jgiyqg. . Q .. ,..- K RX A R ef., 1' A - ' 'f I . - , .. - -':5-an 23,3 'f 5: ' ,. :Ag--, - NW fXr1..w Q , V Q ,S ,Q , m X gif Se' X As. Ax W' W S ' FQ R if-RPM: ff' J H? H' -L. F, ,1 4' 5 L. xl M-1 MX ls' I C512 A cat I -Q -.-i Like a cat with a ball Like a cat: cat quick, sure-footed, barely without wings, slashing at the ball, clawing, pounclng, spiking - coup de grace de la chatte. Volleyball at Dmry: femlnlne but no less furious. See it here: at Weiser, on these pages, by Elaine Hutchison 1131, Lori Bruner 161, Shelly Langsford 151, Julle Coble 141, Teresa Davis 121, Deah Caffey 1121, Gayla Davis 1101, Cathy Lalrmore 131, Lisa Layton, Tammy Vanderburg-Newman, Candy Clements, the whole bunch. The intense face in the middle of the big photo 1p. 821 ls Coach Barb Lawson: behind her: Myra Miller, the assistant, an ex-Panther. How'd they do? Third In District 16, and - cat-like - a Ilfe for next year. ' , 52:CfS,gL,, mars.: .ws X 3 at tb X Y 'fi be y . . :Q 1 .ig x ..s,,5 1e ss 1 ee s Q . 4 1 ' Q55 ti, 5 V ,, 1 1,555 1 ,V-v 25: 5 ., , M, f-1:l:'E'i5'- f 'Lf-. -3 - I I A. , ,X Q- 7 ,l -- - f -Za V is A eh affg, 1 , . 1 ,I ,F Q1 ,ii , 1 U , 1 gf Y - 83 Women's Tennis 31 l Q What has fourteen legs, seven rackets, fourteen arms, twenty-one tennis shoes fthey average one and one-half palrsl, hits zlngers, rushes the net, plays cagey, and doesn't know the mean- ing of love?What purrs like a kitten Kbut can clawj, wears red and white, plays In shorts and sets, and will probably go to districts? . ff--A ' - ., 7' 4 hw, , me - Mus.-N-Q-n-ul..-.Mwnnausnvnw--f. - f mx X X .A . . ,.,.,,,, hows- x - ,, . - ,375 ' ' ' , 1 ,,,v,,f, Y I A ,,.- - f ' A 1 v iff J Q' IFJ .- f'v7'9 3'x7t'hX' .Y .l 0 wings..- It beglns - for Sonya Hauck - wlth the ball coming ln Qsecond from topj, a bllster of white. She tenses, sets. readying a two-handed back- hand. The racket'and ball are a blur of speed fleftl: both feet off the ground. She sets fabovej for the return volley. y fs. The Drury women's tennis team, that's what. lYou knewlj tike CGreek: ball playing! when Major Walter C. Wing- field Invented It in England in 1873. The early game was played on an hourglass court: narrow at the net, wl- dest at the baselines. lt is supposed that Major Wing- field borrowed parts of his idea from squash, court tennis, and badminton. It be- came very popular and early players began very soon to call it lawn tennis. The first world tennis championship was played ln 1877 at a croquet club in Wimbledon. Drury and tennis share the same birthdate, and the game has always been popular on the forty acres. With few lapses, DC has always had a women's tennis team. lSee p. 971 Here you'll see Marcle Bothwell and Stephanie Rafter ltop, p. Slj, Sonya Hauck, and Kandace Keltner Qbelow, rlghtl. Not shown: Libby Gammon, Karen Wickersham, and Lyndsay Lowe. Dr. Jayne White is coach. And they probably will play in District 16 trials. lt was first called sphairis- Su . K ' 5' in '. r 7 1 I Tfl - 5: X .X ,S wx X X x X .M ' eg: . sw ' - - 7551 7 ss-rg: I x 4.3 ., -- S ,J , sg, - Q . f 5 1.151 . 35 , V. :fbi ,E . 3:'N?fQ5- ' by 1 .X 9. A m y 5.3 . 53 S Q ., sw .SQQNX 7 53' of . .N . SYN- L-Q 'faux - ' ' - . ' :+N:wE:..j'f'g f11f-2. X - - - Q a .-fl V Q gg? , 2, V-,X - - s . .wg ' , . .x ,Q S' '.'11-n.s'E- -X w V 3? .1 Q -...iiia' - ,. ksffaes N X - ' fr 1:,,a., 5' ', QQ fr L K.-K-Q, N. .2115 QL 2253? ,f i t ss. g Q . , 1 ,N AS ,.,,...fx -.,-. A. . Y- ,, xz':l S-as X- ,- 3 5' Q 5 , ' k 4 UK ' 2 ' ' ,, :.s3giQsb.s.rN 1 ' ., swab. me - 1' .. .. I f MW in b V, swam: siaiitsrismxr s1:i.'y3.s.xu'3swg ' H if f ww.w'fY'i .1 iff?-' D 9-219W 1-!Is.z'f-'f . ,V .gf w J . ' SQ - sf . - .. M .. -, . , 55 . - 4 K? is +g.gQ,sSgs'Sjggf.E. W, W- T . Q W. +1 ,, ,Q ' f '- ' ' ' 'sf' ygifsi is 'Wig' Q so . 2 Q Rf 'WX3' .- . f - W , ., 'f .K , M , 5 rs o u w In March It Was Still Love Dean, Sr., and Wills were still fighting for 41 D' al 'dir'- FK- - L. . . ,,.- - , ac..--a -----e ' fe i.. ll 1. Call It the ball comes ln: the ball goes out. The ball stars In thls sequence - along with Robbie Dean. fOr ls It the Deans? We can't always dlstlngulsh the elder Dean from hls younger brother, Randy.J Dean was so ready for the tennis schedule that he was actually a blt lmpatlent with the basketball Panthers lor extending their season and tolllng off tennls coach Dan Cashel who ls assistant AD and the whole Drury sports Infor- matlon department. l'm a BB fan, Robbie said. but we surely needed some solld competltlon. If l had to characterize this bunch, l'd have to say mental toughness, nerve, grittiness, an ability to hang tough. Well, that's good, for that's the kind of schedule they face. -Dan Cashel Drury tennis coach .Avi ' M N, , .ai6nu-- Wl S' ' Virginia we zinged the ball. Brlan Wills is a junior from Midlothian, Vlrglnla. ln March, he and Robbie Dean were still vying to see who would be No. 1 on the Drury tennis team. Students and alumni gathered one warm spring afternoon to watch Wills fright, and left, above, zlng the old green tennis ball. He zlnged lt: he played pretty good tennis, too. How about the famous Bachus serve fright, abovej? lt's been around DC for several years. Other Panther netsters were freshman Gary Goetz 1432, sophomore Randy Bachus 1441, and freshman Andrew I-lawl and Randy Stout, and sophomores Randy Dean and Tlm Reborl. Drury played a 28-match schedule which included Dlvlslon ll NMSU, UMSL, defending NAIA national champs SBU, and national junlor college champs ABC of Tlfton, Ga. Tough, said Wills, but we'll give lt the old college try. ' -779555-' Panthers' Twenty-Eight years ago: The short hair, the pleated skirts, saddle-oxfords, white blouses, voluminous sweaters, the Big D's. These gals were ambidextrous. fNote Carol Henry's flst. l Mary Quinn Fry, Barbara Stokes Love, Susie Flrman McKnight, Betty Evans Counts, Chigger Gideon Parker fask Chlpl and Carol Henry. Rah! - Senior Yell ai' gn '75, wuh-wash. whne-wash! 'Ex ' ,Q Naught Eight! By Gosh! 'I FN. .171 Cheerleaders Have Spirit gilw mn We don't know that anyone's qualified to tell us whether today's cheerleaders are better than those of 1958. 'l'hat's a cute bunch. lThe old nicknames may have been better: is Chlgger better than Chip - If both of you are Parkers? l'le'd probably say, Even. J Our kids know more about leading cheers now - I doubt lf the '58 rah-rahs even thought about pyramids but l'll bet those skirts looked fan- tastic ln a spin. Anyway, pyramids scare me. But one thing you know: then as now, Drury was big on spirit. The '85 squad: Dana Bray and Mike Dunn, co- captalnsg Tom Jackman, Geoff Head, Gayland Howell, Missy Stepp. Leigh Ann Agee, Rhonda Dunn, James Schaeffer, and Jean Netzer. ll ol? .Q 'lf ,Q 'Wa 1 . T. Q .- .f--'-M .wx'wmig,....-N.S:gpmwwwgvwwwwm,,QN x,x. ., .- ....' ...f--5,--- i , + .Z .- 4 1 Q W A 1 . 12 3 . U ' , ....-..+'W- V' S ff A --'vnu' pn, 1 Y 4 Q h. ' I ' 3 1 ' x - - ' ,,.....-1--ww , ' 5 1 N , is 4. s Q Y? , A 'I' N . X x A 'Q 8 if - . 'S b' Q 3 3 .3 tl 'V ' ' Y' si ' Kx'.-v r Q Q N 1.4, hi K up Q tt .- - - sex 3. I I X5 , W Q ui . fx s Q six S as A W on Nationals -ll 9 IJA-L ,.... f v We' Shakespeare has Othello say, He laughs that wins. Well, yes. There's an old hymn that goes, Here they come rejoicing, bringing in the sheaves. Something of the fervor of that old song must have infected all of us when our swimmers came into Weiser, bringing - if not sheaves as a reward for their virtue - an NAIA banner of victory. Not many words are necessary In recounting their glory, our ela- tion. That's good for the good feelings are indescribably delicious. WE won. lt just FEELS right. 4 1 How Indescribably Sweet It ls! Drury All- ericans 5. Nr- R 5.. ...., . ,. ..4,.. .. -'1 L f Vg-.Lo,..nl ' - ,. A 1 -f--N, 4 .qu-A ' . ...nh v IVY - fe-1'-X BY' 1 '- iyffrvky ' 'Q gf , . - -2. --.f ,Y How They Did It Brian Reynolds lfar left, p. 92l is a recent graduate of Drury, a student of Jack Steck. He's intense, drives himself as a technique of leading his swimmers. He's been there himself, knows the turmoil, the immense physical demands of the sport. Knows the loneliness, knows that the competition is individual, knows that a coach wins only if he builds the desire to win in his squad. He started it. He tracked down good prospects, kids who wanted a chance to swim. Told them Drury was a good school. Told them, You can swim with us or you can swim against us but we're going to be there in the national championship meet, , and we'll have to be reckoned with. Some of them came to him, having heard that Drury was a good school with a good NAIA swim program. We suspected when they beat SMSU in Atha Pool fsee p. 96D that they were ready. They were: Drury scored 368 points, Central Washington, 350, Denver 299. Sixteen Panthers won All-American honors. Shelly Langs- ford set four national records: by herself she placed tenth in the women's division. Of the All-Americans, only Dave Volland is a senior. Langsford, Barnes, and Kennedy are juniors. Rector, Keuser, and Lathrop are sophomores. The others - Lovan, Gleason, Crandall, Vicioso, Nicholson, and Saaf - are freshmen. Guess who will be favored to repeat in 1986. Langsford's firsts fshe's accepting accolades in Weiser on the team's triumphant return in the photo at leftl were in 100-yards breaststroke, 200-yards breaststroke, 50-yards freestyle, and 100-yards freestyle. Joe Kennedy was first in one-meter diving, and three- meters diving. Kurt Keuser was first in 100-yards butterfly, and second in 200-yards butterfly. Thomas Saaf was second in 200-yards individual medley, in 100-yards backstroke, and 200-yards backstroke, Drury's only dual losses during the regular season were to Division I powerhouses: Kansas, Missouri, and Arkansas. We were only hoping this year, said Reynolds. We were really aiming, all the time, at the 1986 champion- ships. We were, too. h ALL How It Was In Indianapolis In The Water How many time have you hit the water? God knows. A hundred? More than that ln one season. Practice, practice, practice, till you know you have it down pat: the trajectory flat like a torpedo, the chest barreled, hard: it will cut the water, make a trench for the softer belly: the arms extended, al- ready feeling swimmlng: the head lower - it will make the initial contact. But this is wrong and you know it so soon as the calves throw you. The body is arched: the chest is up: the head is up: the arms are reaching down, frantic for the water. You've blown entry: OKAY, you'll make it up. How? Where? Somewhere. Q5- You're pieces. Pieces of a body. A well-trained body. Does the right arm know where and what the left arm is doing? Do either of them know anything about the cadence of the feet? Should the left arm - as a friend In the neighborhood - tell the left leg to pick It up just a trifle? You still have that bad- dlve time to make up. Who cares? You're swim- ming and you know you're swimming good. The arms don't tell you to order steak for dinner and you don't tell them how to swim. The pieces are working. This is the day you'll do it. Or this is the day you'll die. There is a system in the system. A bell rings: a light goes on. The system sees. Or something sees - maybe the arms do see. You don't see, like you don't hear - you don't even taste the water. You don't see because you can't see: maybe the heart counts and there's the practical value of practice. lt teaches the heart to count to see. But the bell rings and a light goes on and there's a wall coming up fast. God! you are swimming. The hands touch brief- ly: there's a boilof water. The boil is you. The feet are angry on the wall. Where make up the bad-dive time? Here. Here! You're wlnglng. Hell! you are a torpedo and you're still a boil of water. M' . 'ii 1 .,A -'gli H ' Q .31.qQ'i'- .. ls I Why' don't they give us cheerleaders? Could you hear them? Hear? Are you crazy? l can't even hear my own head. And I do have cheerleaders. Here. ln the pool. Silly, that's your breathing: spit the water, grab the air. Spit the water, grab the air. That's cheering. No, cheering is spit the air, grab the water, spit the alr, grab the water. lt must be cheering for you've whipped the water, it's tamed, it's working with you, and it's time for the new pieces Qsee, you have to fool them that way: new pieces! to swim the backstroke. Time for the acquatlc salute. Down and back. Only dwon and back? Not even tired. The pieces don't know they're supposed to be tired. So, fine and dandy, you're not tired, so let's whip them. Take It easy, this already feels like wlnnlng. Take lt easy? Crap! this fels like a record. l.et's pull out all the stops, let It all hang out. See! Something sees - maybe lt's that smart old heart again. Sees what? Sees the finger, the right finger. Does lt mean first or number one? I dunno: let's go find out. Golly, you bastards are swimming - all you lovely pieces. Go. mmwmm we Q nw Mmm hmm mm WHEREAS the intercollegiate swimming team of Drury College, on the third day of March, year of our Lord one thousand, nine hundred and eighty- five, at Indianapolis, Indiana, through dint of great effort, superior talents, perserverance, superlative coaching, excellent preparation, and exercise of remarkable will power, did score 350 points to 299 for their closest com- petitorsg WHEREAS said team did win the NAIA National Swimming and Diving championship: WHEREAS that victory represents the third national title in the last five years, WHEREAS that victory adds luster to the already brilliant names of the Show Me State of Missouri, the City of Springfield, and Drury College: INASMUCH as it is our prerogative and pleasure to express the gratitude of our constituencies and our privilege to commemorate the splendor of that victory: Now, THEREFORE, do we issue this proclamation of recognition, re- questing that all our people do great honor to the individuals responsible for this achievement: namely, the swimmers, divers, coaches, and patrons. To that purpose we inscribe our names herewith: ANN HEIM JOHN E. MOORE President, Drury College Student Body Pmsidentv Dfvfv College GEORGE C. SCRUGGS ,101-iN ASHCRQF1- Mayor, City of Springfield fMissourlj Governor, state of Missoml Hhmlwlwliwlllih The Brouhaha Springfield's sports weeg L J ack's back 5 Jack Steck returns this weekend to Drury Colleges Allin Pool for the first time since resigning as DC swim L coach lwo seasons ago. Steck will guide his Southwest Missouri State Uni- i versity Bears against Brian Reynolds' Panthers. begin- p ning at l p.m. Saturday. f i i The News-Leader Officials make waves over location Despite disagreement schools will dive in at Atha Pool today By Tim Burke The News Leader The problems between Drury College and Southwest Missouri State University dont end with the basketball programs dual swimming meet at Drury s Atha Pool are at odds as to where today s meet should be held SMS coach Jack Steck who started Drury s swim pro gram and coached 15 years there says today s meet origi nally was scheduled at Drury s Atha Pool Brian Reynolds Stecks successor at Drury maintains the meet was slated for the l' ammons Center pool. 'P' kr 0 ' I of SMS, Drury meet 3 The two schools, scheduled to meet at l p.m. today in a A It had all the elements of the classlc brouhaha: the old coach comes back to hls beglnnlngs - to where he had begun and to face the team which he had helped to recruit, the program he had started. Now he's gettlng older, a blt thlck ln the waist, but he's got numbers, money, cannlness, confidence on hls slde. Agalnst him: the young coach, a former student, stlll swlmmlng trim. handsome, capable, hungry, wllllng to surprlse. Scene: the old pool. Atha is old, mlnlmum ln other ways: no gutters, only flve lanes, no three-meters dlvlng board. l I g X . f Fi E . rf- :ie-vfgaesr'-t'e11f1P ' ,hr 0 Ia Le-'.. 4 -g,,S1l.::. 3 s -r . ' 'Y 'C , fx 'Q ' in . 'm Add the brouhaha. Jack Steclr's SMS Bears practice ln an Olympic slzed pool which has all the necessary dlfferentlag lt's convenient to hlm, convenient to Drury. Recall that In the past, the same Jack Steck has been honestly ungener- ous In hls crltlclsm of Atha. Perhaps he perceives both a psychological and physlcal advantage ln swlmmlng the dual meet In Pantherland. He'll swlm hls team ln lanes 2 and 4: Reynolds wlll be left 1, 3, and 5 - and remember: no gutters means lanes 1 and 5 may not contribute to good swlmmlng. Brlan Reynolds sees no home advantage. Let's swim where the abllltles of the teams make for the difference. Jack insists: they swim. Thanks. Brian: WE NEEDED THAT! Drury knocks off SMS at swim meet Steck's homecoming ruined as Bears disorganized going into final event Women 's f X -ww' ,A ZX b A , ' -1 IFB X Athletics The Past ls Prologue? The past is prologue? We are wont to say that: it seems to promise some continuity to our actions, to say that our futures wlll prevent our having wasted the time and effort we've already spent. We'll have a future because we've had a past. There's no denying that the past has already influenced our futures - that's where it always begins. lt ls moot, though, how much the past is to influence the future. Some say the past is only epilogue: let the dead past absorb the past. In that case, those gals at right have no futures, even their Dnrry died with them sometime since. And one can ask, What matters if there is no Drury tennis team for women? And the hollow, ghostly answer fnot quite absorbed into the dead past! Is: No matter, for nothing matters. But does It matter? Really matter? Well, it depends: On what we've intended In the past and what we've done and on what we intend now. You take a look at the 1904 women's basketball team and you see determination, evidence of the importance they at- tached to what they did - every bit the equal of the importance the 1904 men's team evidenced. And lsn't that the only way anything had fhas?l importance? lf yesterday's volleyball team Qbelowl felt good about what they dld, was that enough? Let's ask some people who wear CAN-SAY hats, the ones who decide. John Moore is president of Drury. Bill Harding, a Drury graduate, ls athletic dlrector and chairman of the athletic department. Bar- bara Lawson is a full-time professor ln the athletic department. What's the future of women's athletics at Drury? When we've al- ready masculated them with Panthers and then emasculated them with Lady Panthers. iii in Bill Harding: we started the woman's athletic program at Dnrry with precisely the same philosophy that the men's program was founded on: do lt gradually, do it with style, and make it a whole- some part of the college. Because of space and scheduling difficul- ties, we deliberately took the women into a volleyball program. Under Barbara Lawson they have come along beautifully: we're competitive in the district and intend to be so on the national level. We're committed to the tennis program: we feel that we're verglng on national competition there. lt's certainly our goal. Another goal - one we can't 'plainly announce yet because we're still trying to work out details - is to add a thlrd sport for women's interscholas- tlc competition. No, we're expanding the women's program, not reducing lt. Barbara Lawsson: Adding to the glrls athletic offering requires a great deal of study. We have to consider our own facilities - a new sports complex would glve a lot of flexibility. We'd have to consider whether the sport was revenue-producing. A women's swim team, for example, would be equal to the boys team In conslderalon because lt's not a revenue-generating sports. We're actually think- lng of adding a women's sports team. We certainly don't plan on reducing the women's program at Drury. Dr. Moore: There has been a place for women's athletics all through Drury's history. Today both Drury and young people are more committed to physical fitness than ever before. One of our top priorities ls a health-physical education-recreation building. We're already in the planning stages. When lt is finally built there will be additional opportunities for intercollegiate sports for both men and women. We are committed to expanding our women's program. I Z 'N. wi My Ea' 4:23 .::f---5?-i5:5a7f ' , 19' 1f ' Q :fe ,gg 1,5121 ZQ YEGSEEEZZQ1 Af . 1 sr, -U' . five - Q .-gusszdaw M-pens::eaaeaezcz:':::fm:ee.,e:aA,av-f paV.,f115f1-gas-Qetzzfiigx7:14515 . -ffggg.1iig,'?-f,'f?:fs3gv-a 1s,:Q:f:5:.m:g:1afag32e2smaem?a f 1 Q 1:1:21517:f:'i5iZ2fFf:'14,-:ng,i535?Z7 - A: gy 5 'cf .. -'-. ...fggggw -fx.,3?z:::.fa-.1gg,'Q4:e f1ffirririgz-515w::z:,-,wffE?5?Zf'2eE13 .fag-fL,,,,wi:22Qf.-aff:azzria - ff, -21 :Gila fx 151:12fra:-':E: E?,aE22:'-.1'13-5:5-,-JR fi? :I-fl. -v -4- .'f- H- ..Z.:?.:f:' '1:E7,-95. 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'-nw..35?'eiz:12i2s3f:-1 ,3125322iiT5g2:22::.:.gsIfi:aa255-1 again. ' gazg- ,f-s':'f:a'f'1'-f 1 3953:.g':2f:s,,2f1f2z1g: Ns:-, 2.5 f 52:2 .4251:f.g23?3:2e32f.iHa'ei' f 'fxiijzzgff1:-Pe?-z:'ggse.g. f ezggsfzfggggx i1?i?'f'1 1 , if.: ff ' 31 2.22 f M. Ti',faz22'z2f1.j ',:z,:?ai,aCi.Y.,s.:lefi-:f5f2-aw5551: ,f1t2::f221Zfi515:?1P--121515.:Kai 25121 ?' 5if2?,f35?3F :i?'f7ifi'.e'?q:iliE'52-. . . V ,... . .,..., Qt. , 'rm -.1 -1 vac:-z:---:, wf:A:1:-z:x'- - .VM-4:-Vx , 'um , ,'l.f'5'aEi? ' 'fE.?f!li?2E'Q3g2.e-' if Wi' .,- J 5, ?'iii5'2i ii' u ..,f,-A :sis-a1:E1:E?'Z. Qff,?f3,2Z'EL X ,U if 'ar saezs 1' , , -.1315 -'EQ , .-Hd, 5- f ' ,. . X., f 'f.':-1' .Q ? . ,M 'l . , dv.. ., -,. -exft-455, 21.-,tv - -. - 5 E 2 2 5 x: if 5 E ii F 5 .ff 5 5 5 TQ Ii 5 2 s f3i.XeZlZ.'LZ'ZTfs ed: Freshmen? We've been freshmen recently and we still don't know. We could pretend to know: we could be clever and say A freshman is . . . fafter the fashion of Love is not having to say you're sorry. J We could seem to be literary and use an extended metaphor: hence the ballet figure. ln the college dance of life, freshmen are ballet dancers. Someone else would almost certainly say, But aren't they really square dancers? Or cloggers? 'l'hat's the trouble with metaphors: your apple ple ls someone else's belly ache. We think a case could be made for ballet dancers. You know: plie to pas de bourree to pas de deux. But we won't make lt - not directly, anyway. You figure -x out how lt could be. Or not. We've been freshmen recently, and so we have a great deal of sympathy for them. We won't be clever: we'll be factual: just the facts, ma'am. Freshmen are 18, 19 years old and were born in '65 to '67. Most of those llvlng si X XX X X1 4 .Av X :K HX X I in dorms are staying away from home for extended periods for the first time. W. And lt's not like high school slumber parties or overnight camping trips. This ls E real: you don't raid the fridge at the first pang, and you don't have somebody to 3 sew on a button or listen to a minor problem. You're it - with some little help ll from a good roommate. E You freshmen: you're a little scared, a bit embarrassed. terribly self-con- L sclous. You're aware: aware of the professor's eyes when you're not prepared: you have all these problems: is your deoderant going to fall you? Was your mom right about too much Jean Nate? Would you look kiddlsh lf you got a cone in the commons? ls It in to really like a class? What happens? Study like hell - reallyl Paint a smile on your lips. Ball your fists - is there dirt under the nails? Be as natural as you can manage. Keep telling yourself, This, too, will pass. lt will. Next year you'll be sophomores. And that's another set of problems. Remember: you're ours - warts and talents - and we love you. We really do. ' -X. aware of the hunk or the pretty bod sitting almost knee to knee with you. And Kelley J. Adams Leigh Ann Agee Bunny Lea Allen sl 'v-'rr Julle Dawn Anderson Kimberly R. Austln Rick Barnes -if v-'17 L 4A 'dw Q v-.ai .,,,.......- 'lm' 1 w If you're a Dnlry freshman In '85, you're really alive! Belinda M. Barnett Michelle Lynette Bays Christopher Alan Benne Shelley Janette Blakemore Tara Lavonne Booth Tara Lyn Brenlser Loren Edward Broaddus Bertus S. Brooks Shawn Eric Brown Jon E. Brownstein Kathy M. Bunch Patrick Dennis Burke David Lee Burton Carolyn Ruth Carpenter Lisa Christina Clagett 2 Candee Lynn Clinklngbeard Beverly Sue Crossland Amy Kate Crudginton Shelly Renay Davis Yvette Davis Diane Lynn Dempsey John Garner Devero Linda Gail Dlcklson Marsha Fay Dill Laura C. Dlmmlck Karen Denise Dlxson David R. Drake Sherri L. Dunn Jill Llnnette Duvall Tammy Kay Eagleburger Alive in '85 2 great In '88. -J .3-1 -vi 0- qv VT' 'L ,S Rf-., Of' Y KA 1' ,pf 43: xy' xv Greg L. Eckelkamp Steve Dillard Edwards Andrea Kristen Ehrsam Cheryl Lynn Elme Mary Martha Eisele Shelly Renee Emmerich Karla Jo Flte Lisa Marle Foerschler Trish Lynn Frost f Mary Lou Fuller Bruce Howard Galloway Tine Michelle Gardner Stacey Lee Garlich Jill Renee Giesler Kathryn A. Glass. Fort Acres - of First Fears Excited! Scared! but flnal- ly comfortable. A survey of freshmen on their first day on campus produced the predictable apprehension and the honest lwell, maybe a bit polltlcall conclusion that DC was a pretty good place to be. I love it, said Kathryn Glass. I think lt's a pretty good school - lots of fun, too. Troy Jones felt that lt was sort of small. When l look around, I feel good, though. 'l'here's a nice atmosphere. This is a place where l will really feel comfortable. Sherri Dunn also felt com- fortable but her very first opinion was that It's small and scary. lt seems a little preppy, but l've always liked Drury. James Shaeffer had an- other outlook. lt's small and old. The classrooms are old and different - neat. At first everyone was really nice. Now everyone ls ln his own little group forlentatlon groupj but everyone ls still really friendly. Tony King thought that it was small and quiet. lt'll pick up after basketball starts. Ut did: so did Tony., Wlll Welsh shared Tony's opinion. Kult needs to get a little bigger. Overall, though, lt's a good school: I'm happy. M When Noah bullt the ark, he tool: two of everything and the whole Drury freshman class. J. Lynn Grace Paul Wlllard Graves Tammy Marie Gulll Lisa Lynne Halley Brian Farrell Ham Richard L. Hardy Amy Lynn Harris Melissa J. Hanley Diana Lynn Hartzler Andrew Christopher Hawel 49 4 '? Q-47 if Q0 .Z 1' 9'--'Q '44 Y Y--1 Ill ,X W? ' rf 'T' I 22:4 S 1 fi? Rx A-C n 85: strive, thrive: Drury allve Lorl Ann Hayes Lara Elayne Head Della L. Heidbrlnk Chris Beth Herel Lori A. Herring Kimberly Ann Hlll Meri Ann Holder Christine Hollman Russell A. Holley Camille Homesley Stacey Monnln Hoskin Pamela Kay Howard Gaylen Howell Lori Mae Hurst Christine Renee Hutchison Most alive in '85! Timothy D. Jenklns Katie J. Johnson Troy E. Jones Bernadlne M. Kelran Candace J. Kllpatrlc Carol Jo Kirby Jamie R. Lamblng Regina Annette Lamke Mike Lamkin Kimberly Ann Larrlck Mary J. Latham William David Ledford Kelth R. Lisbon Angel R. Longwell Andy P. Lovan +- Q- ag: C17 if T29 A.- 4 17' 'NP QR? Glen N. Malan Jeffrey Earl Mann Sheila Sue Marso Arthur K. McClure Lesley E. McCoy Jeana Dawn McFerron Danette Marie McGuire Wendy G. McKlnzle Iris Delene Herlford Scott Douglas Merrlll Keith A. Meyer Jeffrey Dorman Miller Kim S. Mooney Shauna Denise Moore Samantha Lynn Mullin Beehjves are alive: Drury's a beehlve ln '85l lf we Kristin Renee Nelson Melody L. Nichols Karen Doreen Oelrlchs Meon Kyong Oh S. Paige Olson Heather Lesly Paulsen Joanna Pearce Julie Leann Pickering Dawn M. Pride - X 1 1' 1. yrs at ygea JD NJ --1 Carolyn says: after '85 Her name is Carolyn Carpenter: she's a Drury freshman from Greenwood, Missouri. She ls determlnedly against nuclear arms. ln the eighth grade they told us to go to our basements lf there were a nuclear attack. They even told us how to open cans so as to keep the dust out of the contents. They sald we'd have to stay underground years before the earth would be safe. That's crazyl No one will survive. Her older brother was a polltlcal scl- ence major at Drury, He told her ev- eryone would dle ln the nuclear wlnter that followed a war. She began to study and was soon convinced that there was a desperate need to educate Americans, especially young people, about the dangers. She jolned efforts wlth such groups as Women Against Nuclear War. We have the ablllty, she says, to de- stroy all the major cltles ln Russia ten times over. Russians have slmllar ca- pabilities. And all of us are 'improv- ing' nuclear arms and stockplllng them. One little mistake could destory our lives, could ruin the earth for hu- man habltatlon. And mistakes do hap- pen. Carolyn is 20. She flgures that most of her life ls before her with lts Impor- tant achlevements, its fulflllments. She wants to have a family of her own someday, and she wants a world they will feel safe ln. She suggests wrltlng congressmen, the president, newspapers. Why? I want young people to realize what will happen to them, their homes, their families, their lives ln case of nuclear war. Carolyn Carpenter: she's right. Na' I. .W v 1' SJ N---9 ak, fi -J 1:-1 Elizabeth Jean Pruett William Rex Rainey Lisa Sue Ray Michelle Suzanne Reeves Randall Lee Rhodes Marla Sue Richman Pamela Denise Rutledge Lori Ann Sachs Debbie A. Samek Kathleen DeAun Schaberg James P. Schaeffer Deann F. Schilling Y-nr Drury IS allve ln '85l 'we KJ r .D Patricia E. Simons Denise A. Sims Julie Ann Sims DC is the ' of Academe! Kent Richard Sloan Sarah D. Smith Crystal Dawn Smithee Thomas L. Spalding Michele Caren Sperllng Dan Ray Spragg Kimberly Kaye Springer Marla Kay Steele Mark Allen Stepp Randy Jay Stout Jill Elaine Tandy Patrick J. Taylor Melvin Cris Teter Terri Ann Thles Cheryl K. Thomas m smlllng: l'm grinning: we're alive ln '85l 'B , 5 l if- V -.9-P' Renee Ellzabeth Thompson Bob Gene Tlllery Marie Catherine Tinsley Lisa J. Tochtrop Pamela Renee Trlplett Stephanie Elisabeth Trlplett Randall Clark Tuller Jeffery Harold Turner Cindy R. Van Blber Amy L. Vaughan Carrie Ellen Volz Carlene Annette Von Holten Michele Sue Ward Lisa Mary Warren Christine Lynn Watts 7 Mia R. Weirlch Terry Hugo Welsman Alicia R. Wendel Meghan M. Weston Brian Keith Whipple Thomas G. Wlley Donna Jane Wilkerson Shelley D. Wilkerson Bellnda K. Wllllams Crystal Ann Wllson Kimberly Ann Woolley Llsa Ann Wright Theresa Mary Wood Myllssa Yazel Lynn Zander Making a drlve ln '85l 6 Nl' ,srx Q-'P' at J si :qv S 'IS it-9 ' I s What's it all about, Freshmen? ., ...sf - x 'X Of- 10 ll you're a freshman at Drury. what do you do? There are a couple of ways nf addresalng yourself to college llle. You can alt and walt: walt lor the phone to rlng: walt for the plants to grow: walt for the panther to tum plnk or blue - wait lar something to happen ta you. Dr you can get up and do. Don't walt to be bored - boredom comes from wlthln. not from outalde. See Paul GIIVBI and Chrls Bumpus leamlng to jockey dlscs ln KDCII. Maybe theater Is your bag. The Mirror. The senate. Danclng. flleks. photos, swlm- mlng. blrd-watehlng - elther klnd. Go do lt: that's what makea the world go round. ll you alt and moan, you're gonna be alone - and you should be. Where doea lt Hnally lead? Affiliation and amalgamatlon. 1See left.l Frlenda: yon make them. lots of them, for a Ille- tlme. And famlly. You be- come part ol the extended Drury lamlly. No loklng. There are no secret hand- ahakea, but you have lolned the lodge: you're part of the group. That glves you rights -A that have never been com- pletely catalogued. And re- eponolhllltlea: behavlors and expectations. Tbere will al- ways be a Dmry: you will al- ways be part of lt. Really. So stlck around, be part ol .Agni the action - not just the see- nery. You're allve for us - not luat ln 'B5. Always. 4 Skilled, daring: The Sophgmgfgg allve No plie ballet analogies for this group - not even pas de deux. lMaybe pas de dieu, as befits their lordly meln.J No slr - or ma'am. Sophomore is related to a lot of prestigious words. QPlus one or two pretty shady relatives.j lt's descended immediately from sophumer, which is Latin for arguments. Sounds likely so far. Sophumer's parent was sophum, the Latin version of sophism. And what does sophism mean? Deceptlve or fallaclous argumentation. So much for the shady relative. Another generation back flingulstlcallyj we find sophos which means skilled or clever. Progression brings us to sophisticate. Well, we all know that means having wordly knowledgement or refinement. Less naive, toog complex, appealing. And what of sophomore? lt's a person In his second year of any endeavor. Already he knows the ropesg he's less apprehensive. He lor she, because even second-year female students can get blasel tends to be overconfldent. Sopho- mores decide readily to avoid certain professors, don't schedule classes before 10 or after 2, can identify the jejune ln classroom or commons. But there's another side. They have learned a lot in a year: they do know what's going on and they are frequently Important parts of lt. Examples: there's Geoff Head, below, burning a noon-time lamp, aiming to skew the curve for upperclassmen: neat, sophisticated, wordly. And note Greg Booker fright, belowl. He's umplrlng a softball game but observe the confident smile - could Abner Double-day possibly master the game so well? The style, the form, the classic attire. Sophomores: that's where it is. ,,f ' l ' -NL Sue Aceto Douglas P. Allen Barbara Jeanne Angell How would you llke to Ilve on Llberty Drlve ln Llberty Mluourl? Heldl Prather does X What'd We Do In '8 -'85? What did we do In '84-'85? It was the first ever presidential election for most sophomores. Obviously many of us voted for Touche Turtle. QYou vote for anybody and then you hope - we're hoping.J We went to hear an ex-CIA agent scare us to death about an Imminent CIA Invasion of Nicaragua. fWe were happy when It didn't come off or, at least, on scheduleJ Some of us fell in love - again. 1And some of us fell out of love - agalnJ lt snowed and snowed and snowed and we had to watch out for the KA's driving around In Doug's pickup, peltlng everybody with snowballs. Lots of things were happen- Ing around the 40-acres and we managed to be In them or near them: basket- ball, swimming, volleyball, tennis. SUB did have a pumpkin carving contest at Halloween and we were there. fSee below., Steve Wilson lbelowl had a mean eye for the old punkln, not to mention a mean knife. It was scary and he was just starting. Maybe we should have stood with a potpourl of ballet. A COG ls a tooth on the rim of a wheel which transmits motive force to another wheel. Mark Llle was a cog on the Mirror. Shelley Dawn Ausley Kenenth Bennett Andrea Bishop ,-A v-.V--7 1 Becky C. Bishop Teresa Lynn Blair Karen Y. Boyle A COG ls a tooth on the rim of a wheel which transmits motive force to another wheel Mark Lile was a cog on the Mirror. 71 ,-Q , Teresa D Bowman Matthew P Bradley Jon Magnus Bylander Susan Elaine Bynum Sharon Kay Chesler Alan Dwight Cozad N i '- V, 53 3:v!.I'15 .MA , .mi ' --me wflky Qc-4 We were We were busy. Renee Hlllhouse Qleftl used all that material and a lot of ingenuity to drop that egg from the top of Lay without breaking lt. And Susan Bynum sent her parents that postcard from London fbelowjz I miss you whenever l have time. Busy? l reckon. I rid- ', 'ff x Swfofd' if ww w w wi WA 'list' F . , lOxford 2 3 Bam! - - 1 up I - . , , i I . W 1 l SIOUEVVEUQE. 1 , , 'ii,1:m f, ,W I r n Deana Haynes llves at 16354 Craclrerneck ln Independence but 'Lara Head lives at 11029 W. Bear Creek ln Denverl Sophom went almost Jarrett R Cooper David Wayne Cruts Scott Allan Cullens Rhonda J Dunn Todd Allen Edwards Maureen Egan Krlstlna Marie Erickson Leslle A Fedrlzzl Amy Lynn Forste Llsa Marie Frye Amy Anne Gelsendorfer Susan J George -,Q Drury sophomores ALIVE in '85 ffm, 1 ,, ,, Gi sd r 'a' ,1 L The New, The Qld 1 changing, changing, changing Whether we would have lt or not, slder the scene at the right. lt's from! E? change ls an inevitable part of the pro- about the same era as the Sears Chal-N g 4, cess of being - humans and buildings, lenger. Like the forge, the scene downr, 1 'gi all things. lThat old Challenger forge Benton no longer exists except In mu- . if.---7 ' a n at left could be bought In the 1903 seum pieces. Sears catalogue for S13.50. Not any Gong are liaat Acadsmy, West Acad- 'Kfi .. .-...PQ -- more.l emy, t e c u ouse, pencer ottage,' ,C . ,571 Flnally, all things pass, the good, the Fairbanks Hall, and Woodland and: Ai ia Of bad, the lndlfferent. Even as' sopho- McCullagh Cottages. Gone are thee 'EP Y mores we can appreciate that fact, Benton Avenue streetcars fsee then Q even ln our relative newness. Like us, tracks ln the middle of the street,- ' . i Thompson Hall, above, ls embraced Gone too are the cadets who used ton wlth newness, the newness of O'Ban- drlll on what we now call Sunderland: non and Lydy. Field. All things must change . . . Wlth the Mabee Center ln mind, con- .A tj 0 1- .2 g .4 4.-It X ' 1 46. .M 'CYS X ,ff 4? 'MV Darren Gowen Carola Roberta Haden Eileen Donna Hall Tom lvar Hamborg Lark Ellen Harris Becky L. Harrison Quickie Crossword for Svvhvmvres ACROSS 1. Junior Faulkner AND senior Mor- lan. 7. Debbie fshe lives ln Florissant and Smith 3171 and her family. 9. Pretend on stage. 10. Stole 11. factor, induces antigenic re- actions. 12. Enemy in most recent war, abbrev. 13. Postal code for Parham's home I state. 14. Initials of resident of Wallace 313. 15. Meon's last name. 16. Metric meas. of mass and weight. 17. Aulbach's first name. 19. A piece of waste cloth. 20. Those which turn or cause to turn. 22. Jerome, a Drury freshman from Excelsior, Minnesota. DOWN 1. Lisa, from Ofallon, lives in Smith 133, a sophomore. 2. A newt. 3. Basketball posltlon, abbrev. 4. Vomit. 5. A labor org. 6. Jeffery, Drury soph, lives on West Lee in Springfield. 7. Linda, Drury soph In Smith 220, from Mountain Grove. 8. Marcia, a Drury soph from St. Louis who lives In Wallace 223. 12. Oral. 18. A trade org. 21. Brltlsh for thanks. f-fig Quai If In 17 2 . A typical ill Drury sophomore gets all geared up for a potpourl of dance. ....., Things Change Sure, things change, especially at Drury. We know that: This book is predicated on that fact. lf there were no alterations at Drury, we could just continue to furnish graduating classes with copies of the first Sou 'Wester published ln 1902. One of the obvious places of change is in women's fashions. Susan Bynum, left, models the gown her grandmother wore to her 1931 wedding. Debbie Brockmeler, a Drury senior, shows the pretty, informal, easy-care dress of today. Compare them with the engraving from the 1908 Sou 'wester. 'r is . V5 1 1 1 s,,: I ' - .4 mal , ,A J ' ff' luclu ELlcvllc C DeAna Day Haynes Geoffrey Head Cindy Hooper Manda D Jensen Lisa B Johnson Irene Luthy v-L P1 Sl' Home towns: Sstya lndrayana - Jakarta. Indonesia: Carlos Lopez - Puerto La Cruz. Venezuela: Nicolas Pologeorgls - Athens, Greece: Slr Anthony Shull - Lancelot Ct., liberty. Sm V511 1- 111 .11115 11 1113153 1, ,1 .111 V of 4 1L'151' L ' , 1 '11 1, 1 1 ,1 7121 1 , 'kk V 1 1111 1111 1905 NW, 1 W 'J, .1 111 ' W1111111111G11 , ,. A 1, 1' 191 51' ,1 11 H 'ii 1 '4 1 1,v'11:1r 111 , 1' 1' 4,1 , 1111 '1112,,11111 Q '31 ', ' W' 1'1 f1 V7 1 1, 1-11 1 11 1 ' 1, zf'1:1W1115f5Vf 1 11 ,111 1 j1111,j1111w 1 Cf' 1 -1',' Y 1 WNQ1' 11 '111,I '.p'- ' ' ' 11'.191E1x!lF 'n 1 1, fy 511111111 U 1591 ' L' 1',?' IIl11III'P5 1 M ',?'111 1:7 11 1 LLM I 'VD W1 .1111 1 ln 1,1 11 1111 1111 1111 11 1 1Z11y111'1C'1711 71 M1 1'1 'WW 1 ' lien 'E 1 Hd' 'lf w , SM M1111 , - 115 1 1 . 1p13y11',1ij1 '1' 21. 1 J' 41 3'1fi.j1?11.111:-:WWI 11 '11 I P H W 141' Wwlzyllffl 11111111.5111 11- '--' 1 ,Q 5 F ws l L u 1 , 1 ,um 11 0,1 ,JF 1' 1 1 N11111111, 1 111 1111 111 T111 1 11111111 1111111-1' M1 11111 .-1 1-11411,11f1' 11111-1 11 1 f ' 1 '1?5fW11r1 '! 5 '1 -1 111211-' . 11 ' '111j141W 1 ,,,,,1.1 , 'M ,1,1M101 I'1W51'11.11 mm 1 J ra Compare There were 27 in the 1908 soph- omore class at Drury - 16 glrls. L. A. Doran was president: their colors were lavender and whlte. Thelr YELL: One-z-zlp-a, Two-a- zip-a, Three-z-zlp-a-zaml Four-a- zip-a, Five-a-zlp-a, I don't give a razzle dazzle! Hobble, gobble. zip-boom-bah! Sophl Sophl Rah! Rah! Rah! They were lfrom the topl: Marie McCanse, Will Reps, Isabel Shepard, Anna Barber: Loren McNlsh, Ruth Phllllps, Nellle Wood, Dean lngrahamg Marjorie Buffkln, Earle Craig, Pearl Dye, Agnes Sllsby: Wll- liam Wessllng, Della Shelton, Homer Marlatt, Mary Kidder, Charles Kelley. Nine are not shown. 1'Ey.'11 M'.'f14 , Lf , Q. 1 1, W 'f 1 1 f 'I'l1'131'I1'2111:' 1 1, KI, . M.. 'f 371111V,1'11f Myi,-1111,111,.,1 1111 111111111 1 W 11111: 1111 11'11f1111f'1Q11 111, ,111-1-11,1 1 5111,,1,,f . .M W 3 1 ,,,1111111.,1 1 1 1 172' 1, 1111, 1 1 1 ' '1 -M11 4111144 11 'H 17-mf 'wife' W 1' ',w:1,1-.1 11 '1 'R' my 1 111111 111.113 1 111 1 ima- , 5 . - '- gal M -. ,112-J ' - M 1 I :UW 1 xx if Q1 A , .W H12 1: . 1' ' 1, 1 1'g11'Wfff '1 ,1 f?Jf1' 11' 1 ' ',z11WmJiM71 ' H !11gn1MLM1 1, ,,,.1.-1431.1 rf ' . w1'i111 f Hf1.1?1'1 1 1 Ml' 'I' ' an W11111111111111'11 1i'f 1 1 111 15- 11 X j,jg11M11 , 1 Mark Milne MaryLee McNeel James Earl Moser L, ln Des Peres: Hank Murphy llves on Paradise Lane fhe really doesl, James Sedwlck lives on Hollyhead Drive, and Christine Iverson llves on Stump Court. Angela Kay Noel Becky Paul Dana Lynn Prlce -ZX of Sophs The unofficial student dlrecotry lists about 200 sophomores Qdivided almost equally between boys and girlsl. We have no scientific reason for generating any statistics concerning our membership, but we have a hunch - call It intuition - that it is one of the two most active classes at Drury. Pick any activity fthe Dean's roll, the model UN, basketball, swimming, tennis, volleyball, etc.J and you'll generally find the sophomore representation pretty strong. We think Denise Garnier Qin the KDCR studioj may be pretty typical iand typically prettyl. And note: she's not just putting in her time: she's concentrating. Watch for her on national TV one day. ,, Stephanie Rafter Jeanne D. Rled James Wade Rouse Cynthia Elaine Savage Steven D. Selbert 'Y ji Jane E. Shook David Neal Shuler Marcla Jean Skaggs Melissa Anne Stapp Eric Kyle Wahlqulst Nd ' Steven C. Wllson fi O' no Y lt's surprising how many sophomores llve on trees Kas street names. that Isl: Mlchelle Adorlan, n G Vellnda Davldson, and Judith Greene all llve on Maple: Dan Beach, Mark Mllne, Mary Briggs, and 9 g Karen Curry llve on some variety of Oak: Teresa Blalr Ilves on Dogwood, and Mlss Blumhost on O E Elm. mb PH M ,, A '45 J Little surprises us - now: Q- Q We're Sophomores! p -Iv W ' ' '. , , ' ' 1 . 1 - V- . ,.,. 1. . ff ,. - - . V . , 'X J t j-.V gg... 1 I 1 A . ..-1-: ,..,, .:v., A Q N V :I . I , ' , 7 t ss u u u s ig l1 s T sss1.s Q' 000 9 f f f Vixf tiaa- if IlfQElXa'll O fl We Kg 'f'.lQ'X lflllifllijxfxifk-z'ii VHDSK -...K s,x2s, 3 .y i o 00000 rf, in l X, , , X 1, 1s,z, ,Q W , N X rw ' xvu ajxayfwx ,.,x ,AE ., 1, P, A, tw X . 4i6 0'00'Q'o'o , a i, s ., i ' oo oo3,o,,.,.,. R, y l n 4 k 0 s u gmwfi as if Don't you think we knew it was going to snow - and snow and snow and snow? And if it snowed was there anything in God's great, white, wonderful world that would keep Mark Trimble from throwing a snow- ball at something, at anything, at everything? No, it takes more than 6-8 inches of snow and WCF's of 30 below to sur- prise us. The fresh fdidn't it smell like a new car?J clean look of new- ly refurbished Burnham Hall came close to surprising us. And the ever-present beauty of Pearson's west windows. fThat's Kenneth Bennett out- side them., No surprise at all: two soph- omores doing Faculty in the Sou'westerg the enduring friend- ships of Kathy Lathrop. Honestly: lots of things sur- prise us. . , X Nifty xllf, NW- 1 Ax - iii QW bfi xx i'1iNL4,v'X,Ea!vl'f' - sQXs??7WxT97J!l f- -Qxffl f, iff 1 D15 -few ws t , .ZNZ , . f ,, A, X' 'fmt .Q 11, X t. - --1, -f flllf .. M. M -H-f ga VA f 'ml A' I A f'M r I in JllIli0l'S! Alive in 1985-2055! Begin with Royalty. fAnd don't tell us that's a metaphor.l Are we not all princes and princesses, seniors to be, in the realm of Drury, year of our Lord, 1985? lt has been said. Proof? What better, prettier proof than Terri Faulkner with her tiara, her badges, her maces. iWe have to admit that Terri is a queen, not a princess, and that's one of the half-dozen beauty-queen trophies she has won as a Drury coed.l There is other proof on this page and the rest of the section. See us in our royal good humor desport ourselves with exceptional grace in this, the year of our regency. Egadsl you are lucky to have known us. l if - ff 5. , if - if . S' . is. tiki i Nfl '-'X ff. ,jb . , -C155 A 5, . I. . D. ,. rsx K Steve Adams Laurie Andrews Kimberly Boyd Karen Brlmmer Pamela Britton Ron Carrier ig, 'wlbff' i ,. zz. . iliiaaii- Steven Adams' palace ls at 2535 W. Blossom Street. Would you expect a junior to llve on some- thing pleblan like Maple? 1 3?',L Jaunty Ev... in January ,,,,,. 14 fi ,QM v-.. ga 'uh ' 9 'Ish 'tru 'dqi Ulf, fy I 143- th 'Gp o 'b Cro' ng ' '77 . ' 3 Se Q09 09,0 orfs Q I? 0 ,770 600 Cr fe o o I7 'G - 37 'ODS Dhv '1u 'h ou'-v effec Hp 'New' af, 'vb 'fee 'P u , s , ar' of- h . sl-fcessa 6406 . page 7.11 lofi, 3 lffioulmque 37 Geoff? f 01-hon Pr Q hewsstagfb hour t Sfof 0 .9 ob. rf, od Cas Q 3- l,. Iles Spar pub fic G U5 . F3 Etc is , f 1- Bt- Dr tl f 1' . lla 727 memgeatfbn 100-2 oducrfn L 3 elecasr smbhls in n '6'd,- l re,.,' ers o f pfoqu on Of follrs 5: Vlbegsbes eh'-S Wo? a9e,. 'v7Ib colin.. alfa.. t O'..' SFL1... tan.. 9 9r Regard the haughty mein of Beverly Davis. No mere tree for her, either: she lives on the whole royal Woodland. And in POPLAR Bluff, even yet. Kimi Caswell Todd Chester David Chiossone Ruth Clark Laura Coon Harold Craig Kim Curry Donna Dampier Gordon Dawley Beverly Davls Christopher Dletzman Kelly Dill Kelly Duvall Jaunty? Well, yes, jaunty, and even in Janu- ary, cold January. Jaunty, as a word, is borrowed from French, from gen- til: noble, gentle, genteel. 1Not at all like jaune fyellowj which produces jaundiced - no, the seniors are more apt to be jaune and the fresh- man are green. Who knows what sophomores are. But juniors are purple, royal purple.J lf you have any doubts, find Shelly Derrough and Brenda Dick Qwe could find neither them nor their plcturesl for the per- sonification of jaunty: noble, gen- teel. For sure. BT' '3 What's without a ' Robin Holmes, that is? Vickie Dyer Brian Ellsworth Laura Fahrmeier 1 'I' .J J A Vx in D . Robert Florence Andrea Freund Molly Garner Q- AI gt Q. 1.2 Jeff Glrkin Jerry Gray NI' ' Mindy Guppy ' ' r w Rebecca Hardy David Hartzler Ann Helm Nr N. r 1 Uflllu wil , ur Vr Sharon Henry Michael Johnson Prince Michael Johnson came east to see snow. The ,S x I I sun always shines on his palace ln Inglewood. He shines on Drury: that's a Drury smile. Fi There are many kinds of Royalty Not a prince, a count: Count Roberto Qwe dare to call him Robbiej Hall interrupts his wit- 'W ty conversation with a Hawai- lan princess in the Honolulu airport. He just happened to be there and this pretty girl - well, notice the royal Hawaiian lei about his royal neck lwhich his American princess may just wring for him.j Anyway, it proves that we do not always just loll about on our royal chaise lounges. We be- lleve in seeing what's on the other side of the mountain. So Hawaii was just one of our ports of call in our three years. We went all over Europe, some went to Africa, and a few even got out to India. lf Alexander could do lt, Oddsbloodl man, so could we. E g ' I X71-P 71' X,'- N ?5'rN'71 . W ' 2 1 1 Kandace Keltner Anita Keseman Bart Kesner Paul Koch Shelly Langsford L Llsa Layton A Right royal, too: Paul Koch and Kandace Keltner have I salntly streets or towns. Our divine right, you know. Bever- - Y ly Kemp lives on Cedarbrook, and Joseph E. Kennedy doesn't live In Mass. ' Some court behavior is batural Well, truth of the matter is, both of these behaviors had to be practiced. No royal person- age knows how to sweep a floor, but with a little practice and with natural grace, even a queen could perform in the potpouri of dance. And early in '84 lmaybe so early as '83J Tammy McCal- mont began practicing this royally benign smile. We think she has it down pretty well by now. True, lt's a different kind of court lbottom, rlghtl but we have practiced that for dec- ades and by now we're doing it pretty good. How about those District 16 Top Cats? Aren't they purrty? Ah, well, the royal humor has to be indulged. Klm Llttlch Jason Lorandos Lyndsay Lowe Kevin Lowry Edward Maddux Kevln Moen Jennifer Miller Mellnda Mltter JB I 33 Q fv- OE X Jean Netzer Qtopl waits among her anxious cheering squad during the homecoming game. A lost cause: UMKC won. Robbie Hall lrightl and January in sunny Hawaii while we froze in Springfield: the smug smile. Wit E . A '. zu .1 ' H ri Y ' O .- :u . gs AV BENTON SUMM AVE EXAS FIISCO N u IT CENTRAL BROWEFI NATIH Q CHESTNUT -- IGTON ERMAN - 54 ' CAMPBELLAVE aooNvLLE a rw nosaenson 9 2 Jerrensom Ave fi o 04 So 'I ' H -H Q tn 1 r H nm U, F 1: I i H 5. z 5 Z X , A A g 7? 'A 'Y EMI' XNQR Vis 4-st? ' I A ' -A - f:.qn,- yahg -yj w .X 1,- 4f':r1' fi. Sometimes we hurt Cathy Natlons Laura Palmer Kelvin Parham James Parker Debra Parson Nancy Pelter Mary Pyle Traci Rigglns Scott Rollins Phil Romlnger Llesa Rowan -1 -.z -1 -1 fr. fr. fr, fr, 72 'E 72 12 Lynne Ruehle Stuart Sackett Jim Sedwlck Leanne Shelton Blllle Stout Richard Stovernlk Dawn Strlck Kenny Sullivan 2526 Brad Stock X z n A my 'f Penultimate: Penultlmate - like it? That's what the junior class ls called by some who want to sound exalted. lt does have a high class sound. All lt means is next to last, almost last. Juvenis, the Latin word for young, ls the source of junior. So, okay, we buy that: we don't mind being sort of young. We've been driving for about five years, have already voted for 2 or 3 years, and can buy liquor. CNot terribly Important - just a sign of advancing age.J What ls important: In another year we will be going out to start careers: most of us will start famllles. We're not afraid: we think we're ready, we think we'll do all right. Another word we like better ls top-drawer. Defined: look right, at Patty Moline and Karen Brlmmer. High class, too. Ultimus, even. w.: :.9 Nl' I fi , .px 'Qt :if '-3' 4-V' I-low do you like Richard Stoverlnk's street: Pardor- oyal? Appropriate. Christopher Smlth's and Jane Shook's manors are country estates, but Derek Sllnker's, Jacque and Janice Smlth's castles are here in Springfield. 13 I W. Erskine Smith, Ill is probably our most dignified Junior. He lives at 1005 Pee Dee Ave., Albemarle, N.C. Pretty Julie White is from Warsaw - Missouri. On the lake. ' fi -.df I.. NGS: ' wr- if l Y gy fl-gk 1 OU Kathy Torrence Tammie Vanderburg Tina Varble Catherine Warren Marshall Wile Joy Wilson Mary Wilson lv L ellpfs. ss. -2 5,5 I Y 'O +1 N A Junior Calendar Jan. Feb. Mar. 2: Apr. May 19: Back from England In time for the SIU game. 1: Goya Festival in Cox Art Gallery. 9: Homecoming game- UMKC: dance at University Plaza. 12: Worked ln Alumni Phon- athon. 27: SUB flicks: 2 Bogey films. Jazz Festival AND district BB playoffs. 14-16: Greek Week: NAIA Nationals In KC - fingers crossed. 20: One Acts ln Wilhoit Theatre. 23: District muslc festival. 30: Registered for Drury Summer in England. 1-8: Spring break: watch out, Florida. 10: Pre-register for SENIOR fall. 20: College Day. 6-10: Finals week. How'd I do??? 10: Last day of classeslllll 10-??: Forget January: have summer fun. Above: the typical Junior study desk. Note the Dmry blble. Far left: the un-typical pretty glrl la typical Junlorj at the Drury Week display in Walker Library is Sue Aceto. 1-Q lv I W4-xt. + 46.41 1 IW: . I , - S, ' 4 . Q ggi-'sift' 'idk' J, g 5' ' - . I' 'AL I 21 ' Q' . 'Il' , 5 Q 1' i-,Q ':y . Z. V! ' '- X ' vl v ' 1 ls ltzgm g,,4Q M f' This IS lt. Oh, sure, this is the right year: SENIORS, 1985. But this is the place, too. The right place. The Big D. The Fine Red. Pantherland. Forty acres of Christian atmosphere. Where they make Budwiser. This is where it started four years ago. With trepidation. fwith fear and trembling?J This is where it ends, May 12. How do we feel about going away from this place. fAh, we'll come back, maybe even often, but it won't be the same. Hardy says you can't go home again. Ever.J We'll FEEL about this place: nostalgia, homeslckness, some sadness, massive loyalty, pride, protective, hopeful. lt was, for most of us, our first home away from home: the trees, the lawns, the buildings, the professors already becoming mythic. -X ' T ' . . .--Q ' AX . x 1 , g X, ,, QQ. . I.. Q3 W n, VX? -X N .., f-' Y A rf ff 4.- -. . ' iff X X. ,,.-- H h U ' .A .L-Q7l msI- u 7--' , 515. r X . N n 'C YL, L, 'if Q V, . rf. N gm- ,,1. .455 ESQ'-3' ,, Q gigwz k.--1. 1 . Cu ff? X L9 ew ' as- ff 'I Q aft.. ,lesffsaesw-eQga fr f Mx X o e -Q ff,-- V,R::I1'-11 I ZZ! jf-X. XXX r X Y X' lr- ' f . - :Fifi . s x J ef X 2: -f A ' J. . .Q , , . X . 1.5 , .X 9 1 N. 52- 'X ' WP 1 Q. 'Q ' xx 0 XX! , 7313! r KA., If A' LX, 4,2 - 'bd I' ' X ff-'1 -' x, X' .Q f- nl -f- 4 ' Y,-A- N 9 V rf Hx! 'iam 1 .rr 'F X 0 fx K--X ,TX K!-X ff . hui- I f x -dngf -,jg. if A Y vnu, -sfglff' ,gggggaz ,fx 0 XXX' ff Ngfigw J x F 4.1, v X2 2, gift :MBV s .,-'XXX pf: Xxv - ff! ,wif QD X r' 7 if X , X-,w ifes ,rf 1 p KG., X ',QiiT 4j!:i5?' r e s f 1: vi' X . r f '.tt . A as . fl S-N, XL' ff- 1 ' Q ... ni - - ,fp-1 tl il .a F 1757 . ,rflxrltff XXY Y -1' ., , . -f 1 Wye ililf' 'F ?' N'-flu xt, ix N :?i5'5xff? gif. , N lt , .A ,ff lg! M Y V, a .. 6 X n 2 ' .-4- , 51 f M gm:-13, . I1 , 1 Stone Chapel -'Q15. ? 'av ' ' ff' is K I X 'K ' RUF? , 1. ,itch 2 w Ik Lb 1 X 0 , 'f ff, '. -- - 1 gf3W ..:,.::.'4:w 4- Q, .es , , X. A Penrsons Hall f X '05, I. fi ' ' iz'-fQ F xx 5 Harwood mn ' ' V ' ,W J . I 2, la XX 6 Lay Science Cenlev ' X tx , ' N 'ls pf, X In xxx 7 Tennis Courts A xy :xv I 1 L , ' X ,' S - 5 x X I 8 Mebee Centev lov me Perla mmg Arts ix! , N I, V V : 3 J 1? ur. qlihllp X X X X V X, g K 9 Presldenfs Ho ings ff ' V Q Z. 3 I . ' '- tx N N iii! ffV,, 5 ' I? 57Sf'. .!l'H'1.T' XX 'P -1 ,-V ' y ...fe tQ'sa,,Q,, 5, - T or TX' ' I2 Benlley Naxuso N. 4 VK, , ix! . fl, :K l 13 S nn H -. --' I ,. ',, '-, - ,' 5' , N 5 ,' u Fflauy swam csnm 'KJ' X Q we ful 15 Pannellsmc Bunumg . ' v Q XG , X - ff' K ie:ki'r,?4jeA,. xjx I. f '. .. r if W I ,xx ,Q ur . H .-. -4 c- ' af.: ring-. 13?ZIf.?L'1.. 1 refill! fu -N .Q ,Y 4 441' ' xg IB Channel 21 and Malnlenanc . 1 SI' ' 1 l :lf V ' xfgalgfqpl 1 w L T, , V ' N t9 Mllnlenlnce Shop I 'i ,Hn wr v' 'ps ' 2.5 q ' ' , ' W1,j'f :fW h W- 20 Healing Plum ' f IX il ' I M 1, 'ras l -a rgl? dh ' I ' ' B I WelserGymneslum ' I ' Y lf K ., .F .b 2- ai-I . . W K Ah P I ry ., -L'.'- ' 1. ,f-' ' T-' ' V e gg Sbulh Zim and CX xx X fx, f Q S -1' , 7 F' 'I ,7-. Y' Xu 2: 2:::f.1'if:2'n' x-ff 1 ' if f 1' T ,ef N X - - - W Julie Alford ChemlstrylBlology Buffalo, M0 Terlanne Ballsle Communlcatlon Springfield, M0 Randy Barnes Commercial Art Minor: Architecture Crane, MO ov- QD ,Wm , ' 1' We Here s a Blg Hug to you, Drury: You're our favorite home-away-from-home aw-If X 1 V Deborah Brockmeier Business I French St. Louis, M0 v 1-',wW wlf' ,. . xp .hw ly ',y'uIn'i15llrgLL- Q. 'QQ -1:14 'jxtlgfgnii ' fl W VI I-, ,,j f' yr, .ek ml' ' X' yr' L' I' xkq lp ' . Y! 4'- . Q- , lf . , ' L... QW, -- eg Y. in UM -e X- le ' -wg: - N ,I -.7 ,-f,f es. r ax Y fn- A gaQI6!. .- lk- 'f Y--I Si at XS kb' .pw '-X J -I-.V xxx 1 5. x , - -fix!! we ik . V. Q- m 'jxq wlx 35. 1 rg 2 gg ' 'Qui 5. 'U' , 5 3 1 ' 5 3-' . 4 L ,g e J hx 'A - :V - ie? Yr s. HQ an-1 .-. .fiswffs 'Q 1 ' ' ' 'gmsxh Barbara Burr 'gf ' Music Education ' - ' 'l l' ' I M tl , lA we igh no usca ne 1.- - X l...+............... ..- Aloha, Drury: Hi. future Sabrina Batterton Business Administration Minor: Psychology Auxvasse, M0 David Bohnenkamper Architecture Ft. Smith. AR -i S, Michael Boyle 93 fr. Architecture . .E W I De Sotto, M0 .Q ',g 7 ',' ' wjijii' , Dana Bray if -.-fe '.-' Communication - 3 1, v' . 1 Emphasis: Public Relations : Qi'- Lowry City, MO E . 'jx I -n , ' X. ug. rbni I A, if f' ., 5 3 2- . i Q . X3 Have we llved in a real world? Absolutely. For four nice years. Have we given to that world? You'd better believe. Ask pretty Debbie Brockmeier. She gave blood in FSC in the RC drive. Exalted, Debbie? Llghtheaded, really. :Af IV ning jf ' A Wy! A Sharon Cauthon Business Admlnlstratlon Osceola, M0 Jonna Chambers Art! Psychology Sedalla, M0 Debbie Coffelt A Drury smile Just exactly what is a Drury smile? Not a Cheshire cat smile: not a dyspeptic smile, nor a sac- charine smile. What, then? It be- gins with feeling good about who you are, where you are, what you're doing. Witness Charlotte Hardin frightl. She's doing her in- ternship at KOLR - Communica- tion major, you know - and they are actually letting her touch the equipment and she's doing fine and learning some things, too. You feel like going out and buying a new Porsche, so you just wind up, flash about 220 volts and who knows how many watts, and let the glory shine. Drury smile. Business Administration Florissant, M0 ...Af-,V-,Til AC'-9 4 x- 'isvil-wg? r 13 wb Jwra- i X 'J' '-- -'V N , X I i 1 I Michelle Craln 'aw Marth Crottl ArtlCrImInology Spanish Ozark, MO Normal, IL A u J' xl 77 i . Sherry Denney FrenchlEducatlonfArt Sprlngfleld. M0 Renee Durk Sociology Hallsvllle, M0 Kathy Ek Llterature I Business Adm. Independence, MO Gael Eutsler Music Education Cedar Rapids, lA Terri Faulkner Communication Springfield, M0 Chris Freeman Physics Eugene, M0 Vicki Groves Education Garfield, AR 3 We'll miss Renee Durk and her bright-eyed smile, her oxford cloth shirt, the just-so jeans, her secrets, her accounts of her adventures in Lon- don and Paris. And Kathy Ek's poetry, Gael Eutsler's tall-corn-coun- try sweetness, 'l'errl's quiet lndustry and sudden smile, Chris' two-tone, Viking hair, and Vlcki's slight accent, sweet smile and grace: well, you don't give up readily those things you've learned to value. One thing we won't miss at all: running to the pay phone to make an emer- gency call. But lt was part of Drury, too. So was Christmas. 1.-. -. .-ae.:-:gas : : - 352255 if 'X -. Irs V S. .'f' i Q ,-E,-L ... aseggwi-: ,nav W -.:-- ' - TSIIEEFE 2: gh +i, sMs:: i!'f2'f TL- SNL Sa-E -' 2 I-.X v.,,gi . 'U'-2.-: - Q 1 is-it 'f-'fE1? ' ,L ' X-9 ff-'!,-1. ' iE?'?'fFai- 'l f m f ' fh if I ix W . sk ' ' .E 2: A2 :I :X I L. - H 2 zz H. .f lg: 1:71 K' V' X lu.: .LQ H l, xllm f ugly.. N- N' Nl 5,-,', 2-. 4-X 'Q '4 x, Q , .s scxx . 'al x , ... qt ua- X, 0- I, h I: n '. - f 1 ., I Q a u U Y I gvy.r,,.m Li::-:K 1m-e its ,4 ' f or .. I, uk ,u I' fecal' -I sw 'ZW' 55 New Na , 5 ' t- X J E - 1' 2 1' U .- - F v E f' Anti' My ect . , .. ,, C 1' I-U , I z.: v AVL -.-DH-'iz o- ' -,SJ as-L, ,'-,-- 'C' N :J -' fue , - ' 1 -V -.F X. . ff.- Q V W Vu If V I llf lelf ' YNY' vu-I .- --.f- wr, 5.-'x - 1 '- ,. ,....- -m ' ,L ...J 1,22 ',:!lf'?-., ' -2, , My ' ' ,-E., f . ' '1- .K C-I. . ...I ,, 4tg5g5vh -8 Jewels? lndeedl Every man a king: every woman a queen, every memory a jewel in our Drury crown. Previous Sou'westers have considered the many sea- sons of Stone Chapel but no one has done lt more fanclfully than thls: the photographer, loving his sub- ject, plays with it fondly. And Mears a jewel? Of course: an intellectual dragon, really, devouring books, breathing one-liners, wearing his old go-to-hell Irish contry hat. And the seniors: jewels. Brenda Hansen Communication Rolla, M0 Charlotte Hardin Communication Springfield, M0 Pauline Hart Math I Secondary Education St. Louis, M0 Debra Hecker Qabovej Accounting I Business Admlnlstratlon Owensvllle, MO Mark Hoemann Polltlcal Science I Environmental Studies Union, M0 Vlctorla Holmes Business Admlnlstratlon f French Ballwln, M0 . L51 . -, .4 . Tff J- V 1 3001 1, . - ny, -. :W .v.,ff4'-257140, N 1 ' gi f 1- 3, 4 Cf - 351 QR' I xfl' 'Q A QR' 5 'JO' -40 -v fl S 1 I Jollnda Hopkins Carolyn Huff Sociology f Criminology Biology f Chemistry Pacific. MO St. James, MO Kathryn Johnson Davld Jones Studio Art Communication Emphasis: Photography Springfield, M0 Joplln, M0 we 3 v , fr! it Molly Jones Dewayne Kirchner Elementary Education Theatre X lnterlor Design Minor: Music Kahoka, M0 Walnut Shade, MO R, , - ,,,,, 1.u mm ms 7' .hx 3, SQ -Y Special Salutes Department A special salute to Dr. Padron, Chemistry lshown here, approprlrately, before a Picasso printj. Jorge - he insists on George - left Cuba with the advent of Castro. l'le's been teacher, dean, president, department chairman, friend, an important researcher ln diabetes, an internation- al scholar just returned from a semester in South America. Cheers. And a special salute to one of our own: Dave Jones, who's aiming at an August graduation. Dave doesn't suffer from epilepsy: he fights it publicly, every step of the way, not always with public understanding and compasion but always with courage and determination. He'll win. Salud. I V lf ! ' 1' ' N 'llf ff' Xb luffmffff Qls'i5'fl1:v1rZ22f . u vf fic- . ' 9N'lill'?a::L'f gl' 'Nl xx ' E E X N 421 - Z AP km, 4 lx fax iff -Foxx. l. 'Q Michelle Kish Business Administration!Accounting Auburn, Ml Kevin Kloppenburg Art Educatlon!Graphic Design Springfield. M0 Susan Laurenson Business Administration!Accounting St. Charles, MO Kimberly LeAn Psychology Humansvllle, M0 . 1.1, , , , I 5 yr' rf , , 1 I , -Qt , ie Nvlt 1 if-1 X ' fr 2- . F B. 4 7 Chrls Letslnger Blolo . I 'aft'-. Y , l if QV Ava, M0 A couple of Rare Catches 'f ,, V au, Mike Boyle fmlddle abovel demonstrates the more conven tional catch crucial game score tied last inning two out runner on third and the batter slzzles a Texas leaguer over second The runner thunders toward home you charge the ball hold your breath catch lt Nothing conventional about dlchotomlst disturber of the status quo fe g Othello! stu dent of the plain people rancher good ole boy Likes a brew too Makes senlors out of lower dlvlslon provlnclals l . ll 31' Nl b...x VMW2- , - ml . Y' t M a M a all . K ,a . : w M 1 that rara avis just above: Professor Wayne Holmes, raconteur, fl l I .. , fllwll , . -- it , 3 , - . l D 38 Nl I We Know Who We Are, What We Are - And Why Deborah Long Business Administration Florissant, MO if -ve' .., ' I , 'twfl .1 ,V Teresa Long Business Administration! Accounting Minor: Economics V r mm? P - . f M,EoJ?:?:r-hefofe lu gvef , x gmnq M-gG+home., GYUA-Sli beerra' ' .Z '. +... limi mera , 4 'Q -: . Hwopen, J... . ' . -N ir 411- SMlLi FQ02-C9 GN ro , -,-9 pkg- CAD onlq bf- iiggrgaww ve'-0425 Nl C ' zen... H -...D wa 5 -tm embgrrssfll .. V to Mvursfllvsgltid 701.-m': ls CbW'i ll Hep! f A preHie. Szlhool . X 1 we-Met: con+ainL Sl gpidul-as gf X Seed! 5-.assume-N-.AF momma yqgpegf Q:-Qwn an WLM .saab-U25 0 Smeg q grade- ldmlajamdu vzpligo. of I-!.S.Diplornm MMV: iq :pam l trnegptlvt b , li 1354: We don't know where Jamie Franklin is now and we've been looking. Four years ago she was a junior at Drury, an artist on the Mirror staff. Frankly, we don't think she was much of an artist and certainly not perceptive: Look at that cartoon above. That's how she saw us four years ago. Well, how badly can you be wrong? She completely missed our sophistication, our Intelli- gence, our awareness, our mountain-moving ability. The '81 yearbook said she seems always to have her mouth In motion. lt also claimed that she was good natured, pretty, bright. We leave it to you. Lawrence Luthy Vocal Music Education Phllllpsburg, M0 Michael Matchael Jr. Music Education Cert. K-12, Instrumental 8: Vocal Music Sedalla, M0 Nr: X 1 I I . 1 I 'J . 1 W. i7j,V1.l V, -7 'K -I : ' XV N v, fi -F7 L M r: C.. M Q11 ng., .- .,- fv--41+ X H z. ,-IN. A long time ago there was the lost generationg then there were the flow- er children of the '50's. Yipples, up- the-establishment, yuppies: come and gone. What's next? Us, obviously. But WHAT is next? No ME generatlong it really ls US with us. We're going to stand together - oh, not with all our feet in the same bathwater. We're individuals Knot loners or co- poutsl with specific talents. We're going to combine them, pool our efforts: be an US force. Waitg see. .-In R: IH Susan Matney Accountlng!Buslness Administration Gower, MO 139 40 H! Bradley Mlmlitz Architecture Lawrenceburg, IN Kathryn Minor Communication LaMonte, MO is at . Q 7 - c i . uv-- , ,.,, , 1.3 Q., , A 2 J -L .-.' . .0 C X as K 2- .Rf ' 'fs pt weve' . N: .-'L 1- Mb fptdi fx . fry-ril p cox,- -- iiiaz. ' 91? , 7.1gi ':f: : . - . W s i 255 ' , A ' . 4 -- -I A.. ' X4 David Nason Business Administration Hannibal. M0 Jean Netzer Business Admlnlstrationfliconomlcs Springfield. MO Susan Orchard Business Admlnlstratlon Minor: Communication Glendale, M0 ,- Q A-Ti .f 'I ar 'E We don't know how Drury compares with other colleges when It comes to healthy good looks. lt seems to us that there are dozens and dozens of pretty girls scattered through these pages. And a bunch of hunks, too. Case ln point: Pretty Terri Faulkner iwho lives on N. Evangelj ls also a model. See. Krlsty Owen Elementary Education Minor: Special Education Topeka, KS Jesse Owsley Busness Admlnlstratlon Sprlnglleld, M0 Jeanie Pickering CommunlcatlonlStudlo Art Sprlnglleld, M0 Denlse Prestl Business Admlnlstratlon St. Louis. M0 From our past Q We are the products of our past. Wordsworth said it best: The child is father of the man. We are Q inevitably shaped by our history. What we have practiced in the past helps to determine what we are going to do well in the future. Consider these two illustrations from our past. We ought to do these things well. The manager of the '08 basketball team lbelowl was Roscoe Stewart. Can anyone improve ' V on that foot on ball, hand on knee pose? The team: Evans, Johnson, Humphrey, Reps, Loy, and McReynolds. ,. nfl J W '.,, 'Msn' shank . -nv' ,W Valecia Quinn Business Administration Boley, OK Julie Reed Elementary Education A cannon, Mo Peggy Regan Sociology Minor: Psychology, Criminology Kansas City, MO rf gg n f 7 l 1 X N N Ernrg Glnllrgv SPRINGFIELD, MISSOURI 11--D u ' .4 17 ' I N X . 5: 5 1 I Jlnaugnratinn sinh Qlnnunratinn Exerriuvz :gui .. u w-as-,1 X Thursday, June the 10th, 1909 I Lf' .'g,- A2315 ., HQ- Y g Yi Hnauguratinn Exrrriara. IILUIJ A. ill. 3' fwwjn Olnmmratinn Exerriara. 3.lIlJ B. ill. A B nifi- un 4 dmufm 1 '14 , Nine DC doers A couple of seniors fbelowj get their legs in gear, practicing for a potpourl of dance. We believe in getting right down on floor level and getting involved. The doer at the right is my friend John - good-natured, nearly always smiling, working hard, getting the job done. Drury is in good hands. .tang as i V i -.. ea X - Q, x sl . Cn-- I 'YW' 01 Q- A Xl X I 5 ar 9 ,. 9' 'fs ' A s . - , 5 s I K. -,, . , V 5' N be 'V' GT, ' N e . f i 1 1 un'lll Mldhrle ' I 0.4 the ' Hwflrso , , KA M0nS.cn . EM ,L Wed CX.t3I. :- '1 ,fix-11.1-3: 14 l -s 'r 55' 'L' . D Barbara Roblnson 1 ,- 4- , Mathematlcs!Secondary 0?' I-3 Education -'F' Mm:-neld, Mo I . 1 19' +1 M, 535 sig Melissa Rose 'Q 1 Theatre Emphasis: Dance Minor: Muslc Springfield, MO 142 3 f7 sa' ' 7 1 W Llsa Seboldt Communication Emphasis: Journalism, Writing Ozark. M0 Charles Sellers Hlstoryflhychology Mlnler, ll. James Sharp Business Admlnlstratlon History!Spanlsh!Secondary Salem, MO Education St. Louls, MO Llnda Sellenrlek -...Je :rj Nl' Tlmothy Stanton Art!Sociology Springfield, MO Debra Sumpter LaMonte, MO James Taylor Chemistry Cassvllle, MO Blake Thomas Biology Joplin, M0 Michael Thompson Physical Education X Secondary Education New Franklin, MO Miyuki Tsuhashl Music Minor: German Hiroshima, Japan iff . fag I 'I Ti: '. 1' xi .11--253:-I J , 1 I VJ ' ' ,- jg- :rv- T551 4-yV lg- ji' gg ..., 3 gi-rx -v:1fg ' bf 1. -.Wi 'ig ' 2 an if 3 'is H IH. , J Ns 'NH3-'J .. I unspvihj ,N -up., Q ff Q' M A , N xzz Yi, , ,v . L x 11-, 4' r.. .'..'57V ..3.zg.q,3,h:5. I nu lm ' N fli.-51 . .-,'.'f.'.. il Xu., W. Zh -4 Xxx' Il' W M .N si' - As wwf at 'A fu . .. 4 . , -2 -vw yin. h l :S 'Wi- 7'.e :gf N4 : C I , X Q 2 W .E 'iz 1 if ,Q . . -52 fr me 0 , -as zi- Y Our photographer - clever fellow - caught a senior tennis player about to smash the ball. His opponent was already hiding behind Mabee. The oth- er man of action Qleftl is Dr. Joe Mc- Adoo. The Sou'wester is published by students under the auspices of the Communication Department. Dr. Mc- Adoo is chairman of the department fand divisional chairman and member of about fifty - more or less, of course - faculty committees.l He's sort of our boss. On a fifty-flrst level, naturally. fl 19' X Him! mu S .lay W1 ' if 'Q 4 u 1 ,N Q, H, 1? :Ju hh! ys,1 : n Illllllilllllillllimmmf'fe'i:isfsgfy,g3ggF. Juni!-u,. w1:f5K'7f 1 , , hu ' ' E? ET:Q1Q'g.'ff'f . -. V' 3-'f.'i-illn. .--1a3 ' ,S .. -,S-'Na 'F--as -. -KM -.vw 1-if-wg+ M .w WP N 'X 4 'xl N Nl Karen Williams Communication Springfield. M0 Rebecca Williams Biology St. Louis. MO Mary Hopkins Nursing Springfield, MO fag, , 1 r . ' -3, if-1-war-v 1 . '57 .5 -' ' silk W' sf' as t a 1-'-Ms if -,MF 2 1 1 W1 Y Ibis is tn Qjzrtifg th at Karen Williams mu tnitizhh in urn-rbmu tvttly Up provisions uf the 'Ritual nth il n1!'l!J.!h ln fly: prnrihgrs nm lnnrfitl nf nunzhnslrtp hr Snriztg frrr 4HnLlzg'iair Journalists 'Hi Belt: 'fprilrm - Alpha 'Hlri Onnmn 'Ullp 'Qu-notary Qlnllzginir Jmzmalilm Dusirq 941+-1-if QL n2no.a V. li, -a- X x . , fl. Xp I22 was A ' ----T:---- I Q ' ! ' Q we of f i W Y I 'S of 4-1:1 -Q2-1' rf No frenzy! friends. Kismet. .4-s X K 8' ' rrtff. 'fs-4.2 'x -, J, .ui ,. .fx 'Av . iallf H: 3, 4 t 3 av-v..s in Not for us. Nobody told us It was going to be easy. lt wasn't. Nobody tells us lt's going to be easy from here on. lt probably won't be. That's all right. We don't know precisely where we're going - oh, we have goals but no road maps We'll be OK. Can you doubt that? Does Ml- chelle Roblchaud labove left! look scared? Don't we show patience - In the Commons line above? 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Vu, - 9 . -1:- :W -nm . -1 2' 11' ' -was iff ' -- ' - '.. - Q21 'xx '- '-- -- .. 2-H iw-fi., .54 . --. . . . !- 3 - , 'D gf- ,-Www 556 -12 - 5... -if2 : 'lgiifiiiixg z ii .. .i z --: jf'39?.e.?---1 --- -, -'f 3-mu ... Q 1 -'20 :Q -xx- . - ' .--3: S -Q ' ' - ' . '- ?E-s- ' .-:1- .fE-a1f:-f-:. :-.5:Z?5f- ':-. , -wa --- V-.fx-Q.-:Q-. W. 4. . 5-V-, 7565521135-',4ee.gf--3-w...--5,,f-. - --gawk:-f 'X-.N -dmwf. 52 r. .,,,,: e QM Q. G -1154 . gag -fs-I- ... - -:.:- - I - -: .wk-.- -'-1 2 : . 93 .Q 4..- ll lm! ,I nl' f, P' . '19 lg J. L. Murrow Qtop leftj is ca- pable of the Infamous wit which plauges EPCommlt- tee. He teaches BAM. Pam Brown ftop. centerl, also in Breech. is equally cheerful but she has a good reputa- tlon. Dr. Mercer Qtop rlghtl first came to Drury ln 1962 and returned in 1983 after a stlnt In lndustry. Just above, Steve Mulllns and Mary Sue Carter pre-register Breech majors. Dr. Strube Cabove, rlghtl has the patience, IQ, and wit to Direct Breech. Penny Clayton, right, has IQ, wit, and LOOKS. Patience? We don't know. She's a DC grad. Breech trlghtj was the 1960 gift of the Ernest R. Breech family. ln addition to furnishing offices and classrooms for the Breech School of Buslness Admlnlstratlon and Economics, lt houses the colleges com- puter complex. It also contains the 250-seat Wllholt Theatre fnamed for the late Drury Professor of Communication, with Its complete stage and costumlng facllltles. Fully air-condltloned , lt ls much used ln the summer programs. lt also contalns the office of Emeritus Professor Wilbur Bothwell. whose 1950's study provided the orglnal deslgn for a llberal arts orlented business school. I think Drury ls more alive In '85 than at any other time exceptlng - possibly - l967'69: faculty and students falrly bustled then. Jay Bynum WMF! i ' 2 if -:wig 'V 1 3 5 Drury has the potential to be more alive: good students, capable faculty, competent leaders. fvmfir. . ess: Q . 1 . 5. 4 ,ai sc- I , --' -, .-ex ln the rectangle Qtop leftj are five fine muslclans and an artist. They are ffrom the left, topj Wayne Johnson, Charles Facer, Jim Elswlck, Sam Minasian, Rosemary Jackson, and Jacque Warren, the artist. Johnson, Drury's resident composer, ls starting his 32nd year at DC, the longest tenure of any regular faculty member. ln the center rectangle are four fine artists: ffrom the topl Harriet Mears, probably the area's premier weaver: Mike Dickey, photo, and J. Warren, and Dudley Murphy, graph- ics. Most of them are in Mabee. The two chairmen are ffar leftl Sidney Vise and Tom Parker. Vlse, top, has been at Drury since 1965. Parker ls internationally famous for his jello mold sculps. Music and art are housed in the Mabee Cen- ter, the brainchild of the late Dr. Everheart, who secured the enabling grant from the Ma- bee Foundation. Combining that grant with other monies, Drury was able to bracket his- toric Clara Thompson Hall with 0'Bannon and Lydy. It was a happy union: the twin additions blend in nicely with CTH. Notice, in the out- side entrance to 0'Bannon, how the architect catches the essence of the old entrances. --Cffi., :ff xi Qxwxi 1 s '5 -M iraq' .wf '43 'BM Across the top: Check out those 3 DC librarians. Anna Brown Qcenterl and Kathy Llst frlghtl are happy because Virginia Corley has just enrolled a record class in Library Science. Ms. Judy Armstrong. Dl- rector of Walker Library, is happy be- cause DC Is doubling the size of the ll- brary. Her problems: shall the library bulldlng go up or out, shall we contlnue to shelve government documents, when land under what clrcumstancesl do we ex- hlblt our wlldllfe prints and rare books? lSee old llbrary bulldlng on p. 151.1 I wlll llft up mine eyes unto the hllls from whence cometh my help. On the other hand, Chaplain Mark Thomas may be ad- vlslng a pre-reglsterlng philosophy or reli- glon major. ln sunshine and ln shadow : Burnham Hall fright, houses ad- ministrative offices ladmlsslons on the left and presldent's suite on right in this front entrance vlewl, CED, dupllcatlons, testing, and the history and philosophy departments. Once almost exclu- slvely a classroom bulldlng, it ls now given over almost entirely to the varied tasks of organlzalng and directing the college. lt's probably the third oldest building on campus. l'd llke to be a college student today because knowledge is the source of llle. .gi H , - 1 ,.-. Q 1.1. ,Y ,W-V-wut .- w :ef -: w -- - 4 iii 5 ,yu .. :,f,f,.,.:.w rfb ' ':s?f'f -11g3fPf,Qa :-' -. 1 V.: .0 , 2 f s K .:,-3:.. ,. A? 56 ' .,-.- 5 if Dr. Jim Smith pretends to be napping during Renaissance and Reformation History, but - aheml Dr. Smith, the class is over. Dick Killough, chairman of Philosophy and Religion, pays very careful attention to a student's notebook lbelowj. The Lincolnesque face of Dr. Sam Smith lDean, School of Rellgionj expresses the same compassion that Abe showed but SS is from Dallas originally! Qmiddle, rlghtl. Below him is H. Ray Childers explaining to a seminar what happened in the '84 national election. Dr. C. is a DC grad. QBottom, mlddlel, is Dr. Harvey Asher, chairman of History 8: Poly Sci. Asher came to DC in 1967, the year he finished his PhD at Indiana. Dr. Ruth Bamberger, left at bottom, is Cincy fan fin everythingj, an Ohio State grad, and is active in politics at every level. S ' H 5 :1-:f earmz g Stone Chapel w-we---..m........,,.,2 .,,,v,h,,,mW ,v 74 M--...Q ...MY I believe ln the generation gap: lt's in the Poconos. J. L. Murrow HARWOOD means Education's Alive in '85. Dr. Ed Hill, natty as usual. may be set fright! for a trip to Ft. Wood, a testing session. a class, or a committee meeting. Dr. Dan Beach Har rightj is Director of the DC education program, which includes grad and undergraduate degrees on campus and all over the Ozarks. Dr. Karen Scott lbelowj is probably preparing for a reading class. Dr. Protima Roy lbelow, mlddlel is Drury's India connection - and Boyd and Plpkln and Central connection, too. Dr. Dee Wyckoff lbelow. rightj is mama to two DC grads and has a PhD from Georgia State. lf Harwood still has Library over its front entrance. that's only John E. Moore metaphor. lSee p. 162.1 ,.. -wa- Qvxxh 5-if '35 W nxt' ' ' an ,I , fr-.N Ni. 'slr' N' -Q.-we-,ggi ieanv K' QQ. Q- X nn aura. . 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'31, ai I..- '! .'.?, ' W T- , .,.!'-.Tar --.thi -Ts' .f-.lf -1 . .4 , h ..: ..,, .. 1 -Lacs l f '37 UZ z b 23. sr- l :Z -mfs: ---- 5352- pe Ned Reynolds says that Blll Harding Cleft, topl learned to play BB in those old FB bleachers but that's not so. lt ls true that he's added luster to DC's NAIA rep. as AD and prof. Dan Cashel fabove leftl is PR, ass't AD and coaches. Brian Reynolds iabovel ls a for- mer All-Amerlcan swimmer and a nationally recognized swim coach ln his third season. Jayne White fabove, top, coaches tennis. Coach Marv Walker's basketball Panthers have been Dist. 16 contenders every year. So have the lady volleyballers of Barb Lawson lrlght, middlel, e.g.: Myra Miller fright! who now teaches. txxw x W X N XQXY N X A 1',-I-aff:':::5fs:sf-2:me:-::-.a::i:s5vc.-.-- -s.:r 5:1fw35:2nmaerzrvsef.-22:3-5-f:. 'ms-:,. :-':se:.:f':2: - A ,f f-1555E.:.,.5-2:I-5.53:515:515:155531-bl-59:4-rr-x '- 5-1:-.g..f'fr5-I'-.430-C:WHERE,5q:j:5:5-':,,1:fE'Er:,-.:-Erff 'I-Q, - v:::g':-125: -5:24..5'2.f:s3g1:sgssseEiEf ' ' X ::2:fS1:3S:SaT' - ' IE., --'N N : -,'12: - ' .Ex'GEIESEE-ffiiiiliilifE1E2:Q?i:I:E:Ef5 pax .N Q 5 :1-, :X 'R it-ai' .9 5. S K . 'Y Vwffkfiifiiz f' .X ' ' , . ,X .X t - :1 ae: 1 ffwx.: K . Q- -rw'-. -:iw X xy-1.2.1 . W kgs, .. f1.'::5.gs . 'vim ff.,-xg j t .Q-Q 3 .13 X Q X Why NN N X. .gym XX X NX X5 s,,-,awfiwliqg x N 0 t Sb sv ,0- X A student came back early from his honeymoon just to take an exam. l thought It was pretty dumb. Later on the guy got a good job and made a lot of money but his wlfe left him. From the faculty survey. Drury is more alive in '85 than in years because of a new, fresh administration and an excellent crop of students. Joe McAdoo -,.-- ,Wt . Dr. Don Deeds, Bio, Dr. Don Weber. Physics Y Dr. Jim s 1 Dr. Robert lngersol. B 1 i Until 1968 all sciences were taught in Pearsons. In the early 60's, Herman W. Lay's gifts were largely responsi- ble for the Lay Science Center with its Brandenburg Lecture Hall Qnamed for the ninth Drury presidentj. lt houses the physics, biology, and chemistry departments with their respective laboratories and facilities. The physics department has laser equipment on the first floorg the biology department has a beginning museum on the second floor: chemistry occupies the third floor. Some claim that Oscar Fryer is still in the basement. Dr. James A. Riley lleftl is chairman of the Physics Department. A graduate of the University of Minnesota land an ardent Gopher loyal- istl, Riley came to Drury in 1969. He is a practcing conservationist and has saved the college thousands of dollars annually by monitoring and redesigning parts of the DC energy program. Dr. Lawrence N. Stauffer came to Drury in 1963 from Oklahoma State University: he is chairman of the Biology Department. He has been especially BCUVB in Dl'lll'U,5 Pre-Health professional programs and presently occupies the college's honorary chair. He's an avid traveler and makes many trips. Dr. Rabin- dra Roy, a native of lndia land a friend of the late and present prime ministersl, is a graduate of LSU. He came to Drury in 1966 and is married to Dr. Protima Roy of the Educational Department. N .xii 4 S S ' . ls QS . f .,., Q - S' , am.. wr, , ., X S. A: 'again , . .. Mary Kay Hoops lrightj got an A.B. from Drury is 1980. The name of the game is cos- tuming: doing it in Barefoot m lhe park and teaching it in THTR 266. Todd Potter ifar rightj is teaching four classes this spring: comedy. lighting, acting. directing. He exercised all four of them ln Barefoor Joyce Roberts lbelowl teaches dancing for both departments, physical education and theater. and organizes Potpoum Dan Pad- berg fbelow, rightl did his PhD at SIU and became de- partment chalrman in 1976. Sandy Asher lbottomj is resi- dent playwright and also teaches creative writing. -D6 .,x ie-- ,Q fi A V' ,g am, Offices for theater Instructors are only fairly private: they don't approach ade- quacy in any other way. Operating from their base ln the old Navy Building, they produce for participate lnj all Drury stage pro- grams: comedies, trag- edies, dance exhibi- tlons, musicals, Christ- mas plays, Peter and the Wolf, etc. A third addi- tion for stage arts was planned to CTH. lt was postponed. ln' the not too distant future the Drury Lane Troupers will have their own home. it , -L... -. llga Vise wears several hats: counsellor and assistant in CED, teaching Soc. 100 - World Geography - which only whets her yen for travel. lt's another cup of tea for Royle Vagle Cleft belowj: computers are his everything, including FRST 160, a new freshmen studies course in computers. Bill Rohlf Qbelowl is head of the Social Sciences Division, a Breech instructor, chairman of EPCommit- tee, author of a new text. The two gentlemen in the shelter square below are ftopl Ben Webb and lbelowl Jay Garrott. They are ar- chitects trying to help the DC architecture program to get off the ground. lBet they don't know what a Fenger Fulcrum ls.J From the sublime to the sublime: from the richness of Stone Chapel's newness lleftl to the new- ness of Burnham Hall's richness fbelowl. .. Q v 4 4 s F This is communication. ln good old Pearson 6, Chairman Joe McAdoo ls apparently introduc- ing the Communication l no S , please l Department. Or the Ad Club. Or Tops' Rusty Saber. Or the Humanities Division: he's its head. Everybody seems to be reacting to his introduction. ls this communi- cation? says Jay Bynum fabovej. ls the Sou'wester communica- tion? Kevin McAndrews lleftl knows what communication ls: he was manager of KOLR-TV for a quarter of a century - or there- abouts. Mark Goodman Qbottom leftj brightens everyone's life with a winning smile - that's com- munication, too. Chas DeBerry lbe- lowj seems to be counting the kinds of communication he knows. Besides counting, Charlie is good at PhD study - what he's doing at KU just now. .WV The Communication Department was formed in 1977 when parts of the old English and old Speech and Theater Departments were combined. lt's parent to KULR for is it KDCR?J, the Mirror, the Sou 'wester, offers ma- jors with 6 emphases. 1 1-is Q - H.. H Q ax ' '1 I - ' N f 5 Q 2 J, r. A . , . ' 9 , ',' - ' X cf. Av ,Af p V .,.. V . , H P . i , f , gs O 5 I wouldn't want to be a college student today because adolescence is always painful. Harvey Asher The Language and Literature Department is located ol ,. . . ., . , the second floor of Pearsons Qabove those beautiful win A chicken kept me from domg my paper rs the best excuse, lve ever heard, The student had been fishing, swerved to miss a fryer, and smashed dowsl' Besides the languages llangush and foreign, and th' his car into a tree. I thought it was a good excuse: gave him F various literatures, LLIT has major responsibility for FRST 1 A bunch of the boys land one girlj were whooping it up in Pearson's Malemute Hall. Chances are one of the boys fPhll Krummrich on the right. or Eltjen Flikkema. in the middle! said some- thing that Dr. Abrate Q5 couldn't countenance with solemn mein. lf only Jo Van- Arkel had been present . Dr. Richard Mears fright, center? prepares yet another alternative to convocation. Or maybe that's an honors paper, The Moses beard be- low fha! beard belongs to Wayne Holmes. leader of America's Plain People and Dean of Ozark wordsmiths. fix E . Gb. Q lj A ' I I i 'ws' at If l 2 A 5 1 if I 2 . .ff 1 , X Q Q .. Dr. Victor Agruso, Vic Agruso ftopl wrote a text in psychology, is an Ohloan with an MU PhD. Dr. DeStefano fmiddle rlghtl ls going to write a text: he's new at DC. Doc was the childhood nickname for Dr. Herman Gibson Qabovel - from LSU. Randall Beger fleftl did grad work at SIU. He likes Springfield and DC. Tom Martin lfar leftl organized the Criminology program at Drury. All five are members of Behavioral Sciences Department. I'd feel better about teaching at Drury if I didn't feel that I was playing a game of 0'Grady Says' all the time! From faculty survey. 2 The PRESIDENT, John E. Moore, Jr., There are infinite metaphors for talking about ex- ecutlves, espelcally college presidents. The faculty 4-:'---- lllfis might see the college as a car: A Caddy or a model T, , 'i' 1 . ' teg dwn ln good repair or poor, depending on their individual -.L-I ,' K, -. ' L' perceptions. They, themselves, are the obvious, nec- essary parts: the chassis, the body, the doors, win- dows, upholstery, the wheels and tires, even the shiny finish. lThe students are the passengers.J The administrative team are the engine. lt should run efficiently and quietly - ah, quietness of the administration ls important to the faculty - and it should stay out of sight under the hood. They will turn corners and choose routes - that's none of the englne's business: they will let it know when it has to work harder for greater speed or more pulllng. Understandably, presidents and the such elect other metaphors. John Moore, Drury's 14th president, likes the library: he's the map of the future, the law book, the whole encyclopedia - the last word. He enjoys his job. He smiles a lot, ls bright, approachable, completely honest. We think the metaphor is a good president. Drury has four vice-presidents. That might seem like a lot lroughly, It's one per each 250 studentsl. It's not too many, though: someone would stlll have to do the work and it little matters what the workers in the vineyards are called. Drury ls lucky: our VP's are pretty good. lCan you imagine the mess lf they started messing up?J Gordon Howatt fright, handles flnanclal matters. fWe intended no ranking by putting him on the same page with the president: lt's just that - in our pictures, he's the only one looking In the same dlrectlon as Dr. Moore. That may or may not be important in administration, but It's certainly important ln layout.J Howatt's provlce ls money and the spending thereof. He's responsible for paper clips and faculty salaries: for tuition, health insurance, pensions, maintenance, bulldlngs and grounds, energy - and he does each of them legally, thoughtfully, quite well. With, of course, the help of the faculty, the advice of the students, and the approval of the president. And ln administration Cas well as In layoutl that is important. The other 3 VP's are equally Important. The other three equally Important VP's are: Dr, Steve Good, Academic Alfairs and Dean Judy Nickle, Development and Alumni Karen Sweeney, Student Services, Church Relations M,-,,.q - ,gg 0,2535 g,fw,.: .ww ,,2q, 1 f JL 0 Q Ch1'1Sti8H At H A Km KN it H moSP ere 5' flaw ep LJ? X ,e 2 Xl 'Jax' -' , -f e'e- - - . S 5 I 'Q x ' 2' ' L, Xe 4 ., .p1-, if ' . -V be , , ap , X , X 4 lilif lic iff Ji . - Q ,v, A J, ' HW ' -'- 15, t . S :nf Dr. Sue Rollins ltop, leftj is Assistant dean. fShe's also director of CED be we can't say that: they're putting out their own annual.J On a sunny, problemless day CD, Dean of Students Sweeney and Dean of Men Kirk Hollowell take the morning air on a bench before FSC. Director of Admissions Dan Baker fleftl just barely represses his elation at yet another record freshman class: a Baker's dozen in 413. Julie Gulllebeau comes at Drury from three directions: faculty brat, DC coed, Direc- tor of Public Relations - mother of several future Panthers? She's on the left above. Beside her is Ann Nelms. Ann is Slgi's mother - well, he's the answering counsellor in the Placement Office and Director Ann ls his undisputed boss. At the left is The Ring of the Lords. No, the buildings don't have numbers on the roofs. 4 New Presidential Regalia The new presidential regalia fbelowj included - besides Dr. John Moore's beautifully red Q fr Harvard robe - the new, official Drury Presidential Medallion. A replica of the Drury seal, it is L being presented to President Moore finsetj by Robert Breech, Jr., chairman of the Drury Board of Trustees, at the Oct. 27 inauguration. f if , n 3 u I 4 Q Ns? i 17' N1 4i V A ' I 8 xx, , N K 0 WV.. .' QC :W ,x X , ,Qi XX S, if N5 . '.:fff.f '... wx . ' Q w N ,A 50 A 4-' fm XX R x xi if X 3 QW , Q M -, bj,.:.,.' ,K 3' ff , . 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X l ' ollins m rose w ruark l seboldt XXX 'K Q15 Q i sellenriek c sell sellers g sellers , m shackelford j sharp j skaggs g smalley s smolinske t stanton 1 5 stucky-mack d sumpter m t. tanubrata b thomas m thompsor iiand d wall p white k williams m tsuhashi r virnig d Vollano c wilson r woodmansee k woolford a yount l zahn r agbim d hughes d ball k williams lisa seboldt terianne balisle robert bell dana bray angela carter jor chambers debbie coffelt michelle crain tommy deffebaugh john dilday renee durk katharine ek libby gammon charlotte hardin james gardner christen jackson luis rivas john allen matt burghoff joni burr david clark mike dunn gael lithely xavier francis anita kelly charles pichard david patti karen miyuki mike tc blake ricky debra lynnett jacky gregory steven timothy jonah dea bryandeni denise valecia nancye margaret robert melissa' william linda james jeanie 2 Columbus Senior Rediscovers United Seniors Cf America I Z Q Q Q Q The Open Road Drury Style 'U Threads, washers, bearings, cogs, Big hill ahead: Sprockets, tires, rims, inner-tubes, Long and winding mad. Chains, gears, pedals, levers: John Deere, 18-wheeler: She's oiled and ready. Lay her down. Get on her, You're a mess: Hit the road - She's a mess - Flying along: And the week is careless Black asphalt underneath,Q . . . Steve Wohltman Q ., . 'LS cu ' s As lf You Could Snow mg.. An old song out of the '40's says, The weather outside is frightful, but the fire is so delightful, let It snow, let it snow, let it snow. As though anyone could stop it. As a matter of fact - as the cold and snow worsened through January - we even came to question whether we would persist. Some did lt comfortably: note Drs. Rohlf and Mullins before the fire in Walker Library. But outside it piled up and up and up. All of January - as soon as we can back from winter break, through half of February: snow, cold and snow. QE 4' ,- Q17- ,L lll-1 2 -1, N'- - v- . Q--1. nan. Nga- .. '- 1-5 ' i 4 6 ..- ' 'F' . 1 , J .4 ' s A N. L 'Ou-1 ' Q..5J M. Workmen tried valtantly to keep the streets drlveable, the walks passable. It was a losing game: It snowed too hard, too often. A half dozen days ln four weeks lt warmed up enough to thaw some during the day, but refroze at nlght. The walk from FSC to Burnham was sometimes a solid sheet of ice. Maintenance used record tons of salt and grit and we could move cars most of the tlme. Cautiously. But lt was cold: the nation set dozens of record low temperatures, and Dr. Moore finally cancelled one day of classes - for safety. Br-r-r-r. 168 'r I- effl u- . ,lb -xx X l A QA'-ll qi' ' V 1 X' of 11 Z N I of X Q f X -21...-. il' I ' 1 Sl X xx I X . 2 'Q g IDI' .2 'Xl .- , T., ' -t Q-' ' IA: .sa J Q Rl . ,' 'CX f xxx l , 1 .W X I , 1-0 .2 XX ff, ,A ...I X pl S 2 Q anx r. 5 . X ' N , 'Q Tel,-. E ,- ' P M S I ' .J . I .. ln' gg 5 sl' 'lm 47 lj, l 9 'A I 55137 L r shi: 1 gn, ,KN - ef .E 1 W 'Qi ., ' 'V -P' ,J?g'fQ:5-- gg Q' 0'lj'l:l'CF'Cl'- .-s.f..fW.m.,. Z -7 e lf - lvl? Architecture 8: Walker Library The two big stories at DC, 1984-85, are conjoined right here: Bryan Pollard, a senior architecture major, puts some finishing touches on his model of Walker Library. X XS-c Two Big Ones If a college doubles the slze of its library, that's a big story. lf it adds a new department to its curricu- lum, that's important. When it adds a new architecture department which makes Important contribu- tions to the library: double-header. Other A. students are fleftl with Dr. Garrott, Jason Lorandos and Ann Prstojevlch, and Dana Auman, and Kabovej Steve Smollnske. 169 its X -f Q3 '-ll Miss Sou'wester This is not a cutesy case of editor ego: Oh, look! there's a picture of me in the Sou'westerl edited. Charlotte Hardin thought she was going to have only her expected place with some others of the staff on page 170. This is our way of showing appreciation. Prim, proud, pretty - yes, but Char- lotte has more important virtues. Brightness and wit are sug- gested and important. Luck: she has that. But these are still not it. Quiet insistence, gentleness, consideration, tolerance, charity, energy, and - probably most important - resilience: the will to do with time to hide. Thanks, Charlotte, for smoothing the way. Sou'wester staff and advisor. f 1 Index ABRA TE Jayne 160 ACUFE Leigh Ann 57 ACETO, Susanna 114, 131 ADAMS, Kelley 48, 100 ADAMS, Steven 53, 64, 124 ADORJAINL Michelle 122 AGEE, Leigh 89, 100 AGRUSO, Victor 51, 65, 161 ALESHIRE, Gregory 30, 54, 69 ALFORD, Julie 132 ALLEN, Bunny 12, 100 ALLEN, Charles 49, 158 ALLEN, David 30, 34 ALLEN, Douglas 11, 114 ANDERSON, Julie 100 ANDREWS, Laurie 124 ARMSTRONG ,Judy 150 ARNOLD, Kevin 76, 77 ASHER, Harvey 156 ASHER, Sandi 19, 151, 156 AUMAM Dana 165 AUSLEK Shelley 53, 115 AUSTIN, Kimberly 45, 100 BAKER, Daniel 163 BALISLE, Terianne 49, 132 BALL, Duane 58 BAMBERGER, Ruth 151 BARNES, Randall 50, 132, 145 BARNES, Richard 93, 100 BARNET71 Belinda 101 BA TTERTON, Sabrina 133 BAUM Michelle 26 BA YS, Michelle 101 BEACI-L Dr. Daniel 152 BEACH Daniel M. 68, 69, 122 BEGER, Randall 51, 161 BENNE, Chris 101 BENNETT Kenneth 58, 115, 123 BISHOR Andrea 57 115 BISHOP, Rebecca 115 BLAIR, Teresa 115, 122 BLAKEMORE, Shelley 101 BLAKESLEE Michael 76, 77 BLEVINS, Tracy 43 BLUMHOS11 Julie 49 BLUMHOSI Threasa 122 BOHNENKAMPER, David 133 BOND, Lora 154 BOOKER, Gregory 60, 114 BOOTI-L Tara 101 BOUTWELL, Gale 147 BOWMAN, Teresa 19, 116 BOWN, Matthew 53, 62 BOYD, Kimberly 124 BOYLE, Karen 115 BOYLE, Michael 133, 138 BRADLEY, Matthew 116 BRANOM, Robert 53, 64 BRA WLEK Deborah 47 BRA Y, Dana 30, 88, 89, 133 BRENISER, Tara Lyn 101 BRIGGS, Mary 122 BRIMMER, Karen 130 BRITTON, Pamela 124 BROADDUS, Loren 101 BROCKMEIER, Deborah 61, 120, 133 BROOKS, Bertus 101 BROWN, Anna 150 BROWN, Pam 148 BROWN, Shawn E. 101 BROWNSTEIN, Jonathan 101 BRUNER, Lori 82 BUMPUS, Christopher 113 BUNCH, Kathy 101 BURKE, Patrick 101 BURKS. David 68 BURR, Barbara 63, 133 BURTON, David 49, 101 BYLANDER, Jon 116 BYNUM, Chris 12 BYNUM, James 12, 59, 148, 159 BYNUM, Susan 1-2, 47, 116, 120, 123 CAFFEY, Deah 82 CARPENTER, Carolyn 101, 108 CARRIER, James Ronald 34, 53, 64, 124 DAVIDSON, Donna 82 DAVIDSON, Velinda 71, 122 DA VIS, Beverly 125 DA VIS, Gayla 82 DA VIS, Laura 16 DA VIS, Shelly 102 DA VIS, Teresa 82 DA VIS, Yvette 102 DA WLEY. Gordon 125 DEAN, Robert 86 DEBERRY, Charles 159 DEEDS. Donald 154 DEFFENBAUGH, Tommy 76, DEMPSEY, Diane 46, 125 DENNEK Sherry 30, 134 77 CARTER, Angela 55, 84 CARTER, Mary Sue 148 CARTER, Tina 12 CASHEL, Dan 153 CASWELL, Kimberly 125 CAUTHON, Sharon 134 CHAMBERS, Janna 134 CHESLER, Sharon 116 CHESTER, James 20, 21, 125 CHILDERS, H. Ray 64, 147, 151 CHIOSSONE, David 125 CLAGETT, Lisa 51, 101 CLARK, Ruth 125 CLAYTON, Penny 148 CLEMENTS, Candace 82 CLIMER, Janette 57 CLINKIINIGBEARD, Candee 102 COBLE, Julie 82 COFFEL72 Debbie 134 COOM Laura 31, 125 COOPER, Jarrett 14, 52, 117 CORLEK Virginia 150 COX Stephen 76, 77 COZAD, Alan 116 CRAIG Harold 76, 125 CRAIM Leigh 51 CRAIINL Michelle 17, 47, 134 CRANDALL, Charles 93 CROSSLAND, Beverly 102 CROTTS, Martha 134 CRUDINGTOM Amy 102 CRUTS, David 117 CULLENS, Scott 31, 117 CURRY Karen 122 CURRK Kimberly 46, 125 DAMPIER, Danna 51, 125 Q-.. . DENTON, Thurman 76 DERROUGH, Rachelle 125 DESTEFANO, Thomas 161 DE VERO, John 102 DICK, Brenda 125 DICKEY Michael 149 DICKISON, Linda 43, 63, 102 DIE TZMANN, Christopher 125 DILL, Kelly 12, 125 DILL, Marsha 102 DIMMICK, Laura 102 DIXSON, Karen 58, 102 DRAKE, David 102 DUNN, Michael 27, 36, 38, 88, DUNN, Rhonda 89, 117 DUNN, Sherri 102 DIJWK, Renee 51, 135 DUVALL, Jill 102 DUVALL, Kelly 125 DYER, Vicki 126 EAGLEBURGER, Tamera 102 ECKELKAMP, Gregory 103 EDWARDS, Steven 103 EDWARDS, Todd 11 7 EGAN, Maureen 19, 43, 117 EHRSAM, Andrea 18, 103 EIME, Cheryl 103 EISELE. Mary 103 EK, Katharine 135 ELBERT, Rita 63 ELLSWORTH, Brian 49, 126 ELSWICK, James 63, 149 EMMERICH, Shelly 103 ERICKSON Kristina 48, 118 EUTSLER, Gael 63, 135 FACER, Charles 149 FAHRMEIER, Laura 126 8 FAULKNER, Terri 58, 124, 135, 140 FEDRIZZI, Leslie 34, 118 FELIN Lisa 30 FITE, Karla 103 FLIKKEMA, Eltjen 160 Steve 154 Index - 1: LE Robert 20, 21, 126 5' ERSCHLER, Lfsa 103 FORSTE. Jae 11 S FRANCIS, Daniel 02 FRAZEE, Stephen 02 FREEH.-LY, Christopher 71 FRELQYD, Andrea 126 FROST, Trssha 103 FRYE, Lisa 115 FULLER, Mary Lou 51, 103 GALLOW-1 Y, Bruce 103 GAMWION. Libby S4 GARDNER, Tina 43, 103 GARLICK, Stacey 31, 103 GARNER, Molly 126 GARNIER, Denise 122 GARROTT, Jay 157, 165 GEBHA TT, Kevin 54 GEISENDORFER, Amelia 118 GEORGE, Susan 57, 118 GIBBONS, James 154 GIBSON, Herman 51, 161 GIESLER, Jill 103 GIRKIN, Jeffrey 126 GLASS, Kathryn 30, 103 GLEASON, Wayne 93 5 GOOD. Stephen 147. 163 GOODMAN, Mark 46, 159 GORMAN, Rodney 76 GOWEN, Richard 119 GRACE, Lynn 18, 19, 104 GRA VES, Paul 104, 113 GRA Y, Je:ry 126 GREENE, Judith 122 GROVES, Victoria 135 GUILLEBEAU, Julie 163 GUILL, Tammy 104 GUPPY, Melinda 61, 126 HADEN, Carola 119 HAILEY, Lisa 104 HALL, Eileen 119 HALL, Robert 76, 127, 129 HALLOWELL, Kirk 69, 163 HAM, Brian 104 HAMBORG, Tom 119 HANSEN, Brenda 48. 136 HARDIN, Charlotte 17, 51, 58, 134, 136 HARDING, Bill 97, 153 HARDY, Rebecca 30, 56, 126 HARDY, Richard 104 HARRIS. Amy 104 HARRIS, Lark 119 HARRISON, Becky 119 JONES. JONES. JONES. JONES. Da vid H. 1 3 7 Jeffrey 58 Molly 63. 137. 1 HART, Pauline 49, 51, 136 HARTLEY, Melissa 104 HARTZLER, David 126 HARTZLER. Diana 31. 104 HAUCK, Sonya 84 HA WEL, Andrew 104 HA YES, Lori 105 HA YNE5, Deana 15. 56, 120 HEAD, Geollrey 89, 114, 120 HEAD, Lara 105 HECKER, Debra 136 HEIDBRINK, Della 19. 105 HEIM, Ann 52, 95, 126 HEIM, Grace 82 HEL TERBRAND, Luc 60 HENRY, Sharon 46. 126 HEREL. Chris Beth 105 HERIFORD, Iris 107 HERRING, Lori 105 HILL, Ed 147, 152 HILL, Kimberly 105 HILLHOUSE, Renee 116 HODGE, Mary 30 HOEMANN, Mark 136 HOLDER. Meri 105 HOLIMAN, Mary 105 HOLLEY. Russell 1 05 HOLMES, Robin 63, 126 HOLMES, Victoria 136 HOLMES. wayne 64, 138, 160 HOMESLEY, Julia 105 x 'S HOOPER, Cynthia 120 HOOP5, Mark Kay 19, 58, 156 HOPKINS, Jolinda 26, 51, 61, 137 HOPKINS. Mary 144 HOSKIN. Stacey 30, 105 HOWARD. HOWA T71 HOWELL, Pamela 19, 105 Gordon 162 Gaylen 26, 89, 105 HUFF, Carolyn 137 HUGHES. David 68 HURST, Lori 105 HUTCHISON, Christine 105 HUTCHISON, Elaine 82 INGERSOL, Robert 154 IRVIN, Robert 47 JACKMAN, Thomas 31, 64, 89 JACKSON, Rosemary 147, 149 JENKINS, Timothy 106 JENSEN, Monda 120 JOHNSON, Donna 12 JOHNSON. JOHNSON, D, Wayne 12, 149 Kathryn 137 JOHNSON, Katie J, 106 JOHNSON, Lisa 120 JOHNSON, Michael 126 JONES, Troy 106 KEIRAN, Bernadine 19, 106 KELTNER. Kandace 84, 127 KELTNER, Kristy 18 KEMP, Beverly 127 KENNEDY. Joseph 93, 127 KESEMAN, Anita 56, 127 KESNER, Barton 31, 66, 127 KEUSER, Kurt 93 KILLOUGH. Richard 151 KILPA TRIC, Candace 106 KING, Anthony 76 KIRBY. Carol 106 KIRCHNER, DeWayne 137, 145 KISH. Michelle 138 KLOPPENBURG, Kevin 138 KOCH, Paul 53, 127 KRUMMICH. Phillip 160 KRUMMRICH, Renee 12 LAIRMORE, Catherine 82 LAMBING, Jamie 106 LAMKE, Regina LAMKIN, Mike 106 LANGSFORD, Michelle 82. 93. 127 LARRICK, Kim 106 LA THAM. Mary 106 LA THROP, Jeffrey 93 LA THROP, Kathy 123 LAURENSON, Susan 17, 138 LAWSON, Barbara 82, 97, 153 LA YTON. Lisa 82, 127 LEAN, Kimberly 53. 128, 138 LEDFORD. William 106 LE TSINGER, Chris 60, 138 LILLY, Ann 12, 56 LISBON, Keith 106 LIST, Kathleen 150 LITTICH, Kimberly 57, 128 LIVINGSTON, James 23, 161 LOEB. Jeffrey 30, 54, 58 LONG, Deborah 47, 139 LONG, Samuela 49 LONG, Teresa 139 LONGWELL, Angela 106 LORANDOS, Jason 128, 165 LOVAN, Andrew 93, 106 LOWE, Lyndsay 128 LOWERY, Kevin 128 LUTHY, Irene 99, 120 LUTHY, Lawrence 139 MADDUX, Edward 128 MALAN, Glen 107 VW --4-J MANN, Jeffrey 107 MARSO, Sheila 107 MA TCHAEL, Mchael 139 MA TNEK Susan 139 MARTIN Thomas 161 MA YES, Michael 128 MCADOO, Joe 48, 143, 157, 159 McANDREWS, Kevin 71, 159 McCALMON7, Tammy 19, 128 McCLURE Arthur 107 MCCOY, Leslie 19, 20, 21, 107 McDONALD, John 24 MCFERRON, Jeana 107 McGUIRE, Danette 107 MCKINZIE, Wendy 107 MCNEEL, Mary 121 MEARS, Harriet 149 MEARS, Richard 136, 160 MERCER, Charles 148 MERRILL, Scott 107 MEYER, Keith 49, 107 MILLER, Jeffrey 107 MILLER, Jennifer 30, 57, 128 MILLER, Myra 153 MILLS, Kai Lea 24, 56, 145 MILNE, Mark 121, 122 MIMLITZ Bradley 60, 140 MINASIAN, Jeffrey 12 MINASIAN, Samuel 12, 23, 149 MINOR, Kathryn 61, 140 MITCHELL, Richard 30 MITTER, Melinda 47 50, 53, 57, 128 MOEN, Kevin M. 58, 81, 128 MOLINE, Patricia 20, 21, 48, 56, 130 MOONEY, Kimberly 82, 107 MOORE, President John 36, 64, 95, 97, 142, 147, 152, 162 MOORE, Shauna 107 MORLAN Terri 51 MOSER, James 121 MULLEINL Anita 18 MULLIM Samantha 107 MULLINS, Steve 148, 164 MURPHK Martha 12 MURPHK Dudley 12, 47, 149 MURPHY Hank 37 MURROW J. L. 148, 151 NASOM David 140 NATIONS, Catherine 129 NELMS, Ann 12, 163 NELSON Kristin 108 NETZER, Jean 38, 64, 89, 140 NICHOLS, Melody 108 NICHOLSON, Kent 93 NICKLE, Judy 150, 163 NICKLE Ted 49, 158 NOEL, Angela 27, 121 OCCENO, Margaret 31 OELRICHS, Karen 108 OGBUEHI, Friday 58 OH, Meon K, 108 OLSON, Stephanie 108 ORCHARD, Susan 26, 34, 65, 71 , OWEN, Kristy 140 OWSLEY, Jesse 60, 68, 69, 140 PADBERG, Daniel 156 PADRON, Jorge 137, 154 PALMER, Laura 63, 129 PARHAM, Kelvin 38, 76, 77, 129 PARKER, H. James 68, 129 PARKER, Thomas 147, 149 PARSON, Debra 129 PAUL, Becky 121 PAULSEN. Heather 108 PEARCE, Joanna 108 PEITER, Nancy 129 PENTECOSII Veronica 63 PICKERING, Jeanie 140 PICKERING Julie 108 PIERSON, Johan 51 POLLARD, Bryan 167 POTTER, Todd 156 PRESTI, Denise 47, 140 PRICE, Dana 121 PRIDE, Dawn 108 PRSTOJEVICH, Ann 165 PRUE T71 Elizabeth 109 PUIDK, Anne 16, 49 PYLE, Amy 56 PYLE, Mary 53, 129 1 SCHABERG, Kathleen 109 SCHAEFFER. James 89, 109 SCHNEFKE, Janet 48 SCOTT Karen 152 SEBOLDT Lisa K, 17, 142 SEDWICK, James 130 SEIBERT Steven 63, 122 SELLENRIEK, Linda 142 SELLERS, Charles 60, 142 SHACKELFORD, Michael 30, 66 SHARP, James 17, 49, 142 SHEL TON, Leanne 130 SHILLING. Deann 109 SHOOK, Jane 122. 130 SHULER, David 16. 48, 64. 122 SIMONS, Patricia 19, 109 QUINN, Karl 76 QUINN, Valecia 17, 48, 141 RAFTER, Stephanie 84, 122 RAINEY, William 109 RAK Lisa 109 REC TOR, Greggory 30, 93 REED, Julie 141 REE VES, Michele 109 REGAN, Margaret 51, 141 REYNOLDS, Brian 93, 96, 153 RHODES, Randall 31, 109 RICHMAN, Marla 109 RIED, Jeanne 51, 122 RIGGINS, Traci 16, 129 RILEY, James 155 ROBERTS, Joyce 18, 156 ROBICHAUD, Michelle 144 ROBINSON, Barbara 49, 142 ROHLE William 156, 164 ROLLINS, Scott 12, 129 ROLLINS, Sue 12, 163 ROMINGER, Phillip 30, 129 ROSE, Melissa 142 ROUSE, Wade 46, 64, 122 ROWAN, Liesa 129 ROK Protima 152 ROK Rabindra 155 RUARK, Hhlliam 14, 34, 145 RUEHLE, Teresa 43, 130 RUTAN Stephen 158 RUTLEDGE, Pamela 109 SAAE Thomas 93 SACHS, Lori 109 SACKET71 Stuart 130 SAMEK, Deborah 109 SA VAGE1 Cynthia 122 SIMS, Denise 109 SIMS, Julie 109 SKAGGS, Marcia 122 SLA TTEN, Scott 69 SLINKER, R. Derek 130 SLOAN, Kent 110 SMI TI-I SMI TH. SMITH, SMITH, SMI TH. SMI TI-L SMI TH, Christopher 130 Dr. James 151 Jacqueline 130 Janice 63, 130 Dr. Sam 151 Sarah 110 W Erskine 131 SMITHEE, Crystal 110 SMOLINSKE, Steven 17, 165 Q. f 3. ,asap , rw , X- 7' ,Q lv 'ir , is A S is 173' 5- wfv 'T' 9 , f, ' I 'F f . . ' L' Kw ai SPALDING Thomas 110 SPARKS, Mark 38, 76, 77 SPERLING. Michele 110 SPRAGG, Danny 110 SPRINGER, Kimberly 110 STANFIELD, Gary 76, 78 STANTON, Timothy 143 STAPP, Melissa 89, 122 STAUFFER, Larry 155 STEELE, Marla 110 STEPP, Mark 110 STOCK, James 130 STOCKARD. Jeffery 68 STOUT, Billie 31, 130 STOU71 Randall 110 STOVERINK, Richard 130 STRICK, Dawn 43, 63, 130 STRUBE, Curtis 148 SULLIVAN, Kenneth 130 SUMPTER, Debra 143 SWARTZ, Steven 47 SWEENEX Karen 163 TANDK .Hll 110 TAYLOR, James 58, 143 TA YLOR, Patrick 110 TE TER, Melvin 110 index 'MK Te '1o in 110 1o'O,'-1.-15, Stake 1-15' f HC',V.-3 5 , C h erin I T1-IOM.-15, .Vark 24, 40, 150 THf,1.'.95O.N', Mtchael 143 THOXIPSON, Renee US. 111 TILLERY, Bobby 03, 111 TINSLEY, Mane 111 TOCHTROP, Lfsa 111 TOLSON, Pam 18, 19, 53 TORRENCE, Catherine 130, 131 TRIJIBLE, 123 TRIPLETT, Pamela 111 TRIPLETT. Stephane 111 TSUHASHI. Mzyukf 03, 143 TURNER, Jeffery 111 KAGLE, Royle 157 VAN BIBER, Cynthia 111 KZANDERBURG-NEWMAN, Tammle 82, 131 VARBLE, Trna 131 VAUGHAN, Amy 43, 03, 111 VICIOSO, Danilo 03 VISE, Dawd 12 VISE, Ilga 12, 157 WSE, Srdney 12. 147, 149 VOLLAND. Da wd 93 VOL2, Came 111 VONHOL TEN, Carlene 111 WAHLQUIST, Eric 122 WALKER, Marvin 76, 68, 153 WARD, Michele 18, 111 WARMACK, Robert 58 WARREN, Catherine 57, 131 WARREN, Jacquelrne 149 WARREN, Lisa 111 WA TTS, Chrlsnne 19, 111 WEBB. Ben 157 WEBER, Donald 154 WEIRICH, Mia 112 WEISMAN, Terence 51, 112 WENDEL, Alicia 112 WESTON, Meghan 112 WHIPPLE, Brian 112 WHITE, Jayne 153 WHITE, Julle 55, 56, 131 WHITE, Path 48 WICKERSHAM, Karen H4 WIELAND, Julra 57 WILE, Marshall 1.31 WILEY, Thomas 26, 112 WILKERSON, Donna 112 WILKERSON, Shelley 112 WILLIAMS, Belmda 112 WILLIAMS, Karen 46, 144 WILLIAMS, Rebecca 63, 144 WILLIS, Resa 161 WILSON, Crystal 112 WIL SON, Joy 49, 131 WILSON, Mary 131 WILSON, Steven 26, 115, 122 WOHL TMAN. Stephen 16. 167 WOOD, Theresa 16, 51, 112 WOOLLEY, Kimberly 112 WRIGHT, Lisa 112 WYCKOFF Dee 152 WYLIE, Linda 112 YAZEL. Myllssa 112 YOUNG, Ted 38. 76, 77 ZANDER, Lynn 112 Super Ka N 1 Im- , '4' -1 'UQ I -4, U' W Jr ti? -it Io Nr ' mvx , f V , - ' a fr:'f21yi, i, 3. 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