Harvey Mudd College - Spectrum Yearbook (Claremont, CA)

 - Class of 1983

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Harvey Mudd College - Spectrum Yearbook (Claremont, CA) online collection, 1983 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 224 of the 1983 volume:

CONTENTS: Round About opening The Huh of the Wheel faculty The Ruling Sphere administration staff Not for Squares clubs activities Having a Ball sports The Students Hemisphere dorms Spiraling Upward classes The Last Round seniors Rolling in Dough ads SPECTRUM 1983 Harvey Mudd College Claremont, CA 91711 The Well Rounded Student 1 2 Well Rounded Club Mudd: The Squarest Place Around Arc you looking for a truly unique resort experience? One that ' s well rounded, so that you ' ll never be bored dur- ing your entire stay? At CLUB MUDD, well-rounded is the word of the day; none of our members is ever lacking for pleasant, exciting, and enlightening things to do. We hope that you will join our evergrowing membership for what will be one of the most delightful vacations of your en- tire existence. One of the cornerstones of the Club Mudd experience is our ever-green campus with its quaint, warted architecture, which provides an ideal setting for our wide range of leisure activities. Our low biannual fee gives you unlimited access to our ample facilities, which include: an eighteen-hole Folf course, complete with moving hazards; nearly unlimited unicycle and skateboard park- ing; the peculiar, mysterious ambiance of the Cafe Piatt; secluded freshwater fishing; well-appointed condominium facilities, in addition to the Luxury Class Hotel New (with its innovative community showers); three beautiful in- door amphitheatres, numerous sumptuous classrooms, and exquisitely delightful collection of contem- porary and classical sculpture. Take pleasant evening strolls down our long, shaded mallways. Lounge on our miles of grassy beach. Enjoy pizza-and-video-game Happy Hour in the exclusive Mud- dhole lounge. Avid readers will delight in the library ' s col- lection of Agatha Christie titles, while the more active will enjoy swimming in our pool, which is never closed. There are thousands of ways to have fun at Club Mudd, lurking in all corners of the campus. Come and enjoy, in an atmosphere that is truly timeless (since no one knows how to read the sundial). Opposite Page, top left — What time is it? top right — Isn ' t there anything better on ' middle left — An idea! middle right — Reserved parking, circle — a reflection of beauty bottom right — Poolside. This page, top — What was that radiation reading? middle — What is it? bottom — We are not alone! Well Rounded 3 4 Well Rounded Circle of Friends Club Mudd members have little difficulty finding a circle of associates among their fellow guests. These prove to be pleasant, enlightening com- pany for most of the events, scheduled and unscheduled, that keep Club Mudders among the happiest of resort-goers. We ' ve already mentioned the congenial problem-solving sessions, when groups of friends gather around the pop- corn bowl to enjoy, together the delights of the Club Mudd learning experience. Friends arc invaluable for making these gatherings successful, as well as in those occasional, ex- citing moments of personal crisis. Your friends will treat you to surprise aquatic activities (pools, pxjnds, and showers on- ly, of course) to help celebrate birthdays and other important occasions. They may help you redecorate your living space in any of a number of peculiar and thought-provoking ways. They will always be willing to fill up your spare time with any number of tasks and ac- tivities; one popular annual rite is the light-hearted expedi- tion to the wilds of Routt by a gang of gentleman Club- Mudders — gaily. decked out in native dress, of course. Lest your busy round of scheduled and social events threaten to leave you bored, your friends will be there to forestall this (unlikely) event. For Club Mudd members come in a wide variety of shapes, sizes, and personality types, and you ' ll find yourself free to mix-and-match until you find the p erfect combina- tion to precisely round out your experience at Club Mudd and make it what it is really meant to be: the Ultimate Escape from Sanity. Top left — Taking the purity test, top middle — Friends always remember your birthday, top right — How do we get down? circle — Best ot friends, middle right — Native dress, bottom left — Dorm meeting, bottom right — Would you buy a used car from this man? Well Rounded 5 Going in Circles Do you want your resort to provide a wide range of ac- tivities to round out your weekly vacation schedule? Club Mudd gives you more of them. In fact, Club Mudd packs nnore activities and more work with more value in- to more hours than any other West Coast resort. Your week begins Sunday evening with a friendly look at Monday ' s math homework. The next morning begins the weekly circle of exciting events, including: a flurry of stimulating and informative lectures on the latest topics in recreational science; congenial early-morning wine-and-cheese discussion sessions, designed to complement the lectures, with our trained staff of recreation specialists (many of them college-educated); and exciting evening problem- solving get-togethers which often last late into the night. In addition, a wide variety of laboratory and Clinic activities is planned for your afternoon pleasure. In all, enough events are rescribed to maintain the .ast, jet-set pace for which Club Mudd life is so very famous. And lest these weekly events become routine, our full-time professional staff are happy to provide members with an ample supply of papers, research projects, and little quizzes to put real spice into the weekly cycle of events. It all adds up to a truly well-rounded vacation — one that you ' ll remember for years to come. In fact, your tailor-made personal schedule will take you so far, so fast, that it ' ll seem like you ' ve hardly had time to enjoy the rough-hewn sophistication of the Cafe Piatt or relax in your con- dominium ' s well-appointed sleeping accomodations before you ' ve gone full circle and are once again doing Mon- day ' s math. The exhilarating circle of life at Club Mudd awaits your discovery; why not join the over 500 satisfied members whp vacation with us every Thi page, top — Linmy up for lunch, middle — Partying again? bottom — Night of the liv- ing dead ' Opposite page, top left — Osmosis ' lop right — Only a f-ROSH ' middle left — Early one rhetoric morning - . - middle right — Lab! bottom left — Bui I did my laundry last month ' bottom right — You call that studying! 6 Well Rounded m Well Rounded 7 Making the Rounds The night life at Club Mudd is as exciting and sophisticated as you ' ll find anywhere. At these functions (invariably black-tie, of course), Club Mudd members are treated to the latest advances in intoxi- cant technology. Just picture yourself reclining in one of our luxurious entertainment facilities, immersed in a deeply stimulating discussion, nibbl- ing at a square of vodka jello or sipping casually at your six- teenth tequila shot of the evening. The intellectually stimulating nature of these events is enhanced by the presence of visitors from neighboring campuses, often in quaint examples of native dress. Especially popular are our theme parties; notable are Tequila Night, where every party-going need is provided for, and East Cond ominium ' s orgiastic Milk-and-Cookies par- ty. Many of these gatherings are annual events, giving our regular members (once you ' ve enjoyed the Club Mudd ex- perience, you ' ll return year after year) something to look forward to. The most recent addition to the busy social schedule was this season ' s hit, Claremont ' s Biggest Ball a presentation of the joined entertainment staffs of the South and West con- dominiums. The exclusive group of guests were enter- tained by a quaint electrified Bavarian brass dance band, Frankie S. and the von Flaschbachenzimmers. The image of tens and tens of tender couples polka-ing across the South-West quad will live in the minds of this year ' s Club Mudd visitors for years to come. In all, you ' ll find that Club Mudd ' s social schedule will round out your social ex- perience in a most delightful and memorable way. Top left — When all else fails . . top right — SMASH bottom left — Check out that Scrippsie ' middle — Is this unleaded? middle right — Ever been in a trash compactor? bot- tom middle — Hey. I ' ve got an idea! bottom right — Who stole the sign? 8 Well Rounded Well Rounded 9 Traveling the Circuit The Club Muddcr, sophisticated and well- rounded as he is, knows that the ideal resort experience is not limited to mere intellectual endeavors. Many, therefore, engage in any of a number of activities designed to develop and maintain a high level of cardiovascular fitness and ex- quisite muscle tone. Others play sports for fun. Especially popular among the Club Mudd athletic set are the competitions (crudely call- ed intramurals ) which pit Club Mudders against residents of other Club Mudd condos and against vaca- tioners from the other Clare- mont resorts; these latter con- tests are particularly enjoyable since they provide a chance to see how the other half lives. The season cycle of flag foot- ball, innertube waterpolo, soc- cer, volleyball, basketball, and Softball makes it hard for any Club Mudd visitor to claim that he has no chance to exercise. For those who lack the com- petitive will to win, we provide another opportunity for physical development in the form of a bi-weekly ritual known as Aerobics. If nothing else, the frightening spectacle of a horde of fitness en- thusiasts gyrating and jumping in what appears to be an obscure Central American ritual of human sacrifice will increase the observer ' s heart- beat enough to put him on the road to fitness after only a few minutes. In addition to these organized activities, games of football, volleyball, or the ever popular bagel-ball often generate spon- taneously somewhere on cam- pus (the exact location of the source has yet to be found) and migrate to the ap- propriate playing-field. There are, as well, ample facilities for individual pursuits OoQging, swimming, deep breathing). In short it is difficult, if not im- possible, for any Club Mudd member to complain of the lack of good cardiovascular exercise. ThU page, top — Another CMC ' er bites the dust! bottom — No. no, base first, then beer! Opposite page, top left — Dedication, circle Pet bowling ball, middle right — Beach Bums! bottom left — Strike three! bottom right — I love contact sports!! JO Well Rounded M Well Rounded 11 12 Well Rounded Another Round The rustic, mysterious at- mosphere of the Cafe Piatt is the centerpiece of the Club Mudd ' s exclusive dining facilities. Here, our Cordon Bleu chefs de cuisine prepare an endless variety of gourmet delights for your gastronomic pleasure; it is said that no dish is ever seen more that once at Chez Glen (as the Cafe is affec- tionately known). Club Mud- ders are continually astounded by the modem and efficient service system which speeds them to ecstatic union with their nourishing and delicious fare. For a more intimate treat, you ' ll find yourself visiting Club Mudd ' s own posh and ex- clusive nightclub, Le Warehouse-Pizza. There, in the quiet, candlelit surroun- dings of an Old World trat- toria, serenaded by the soft cooing of the videogames and the chirping of the pinball machines, you and your close associates will enjoy a stimulating tete-a-tete while enjoying light snacks which are a true gourmand ' s delight. In the afternoon and early evening, you ' ll find a variety of brews and wines — imports and the best domestic — available at a number of small dispensaries throughout the campus. These are often at the center of the lively and in- formative discussion groups which enliven and ex{ and the already well-rounded intellec- tual life of every Club Mudd member. Opposite page, circle — I can ' t believe I ' m eating this! middle left — Piatt food again? bottom left — Is this edible? top right — Only the best! bottom right — Real California boys, This page, top — Where is the keg? bottom — This one ' s mine. Well Rounded 13 14 Well Rounded Hanging Around While our Club Mudd staff make every effort to make your stay fast-paced and pro- ductive, you ' ll find that there ' s plenty of time for just hang- ing around . In your spare time, you can enjoy the broad panoramas of exquisite local scenery from our well-placed balconies; the surrounding mountains are truly a vision of rare and spectacular beauty. Impromptu discussion groups form freely, for animated chats about the week ' s fun. Outdoor luncheon concerts lend an air of high culture and musical excellence to your already exciting Fridays. Other popular leisure-time activities include our unique and informative exterior decorating classes; bathing in the perpetual, crystal-clear sunshine; and exploring our well-kept and fascinating physical facilities (see Campus ). Mostly, though, you ' ll find yourself reminiscing with your fellow Club Mudders about your previous resort ex- perience, before you discovered Club Mudd. Then, all you could do was hang around; now, at Club Mudd, you find yourself having such a broad and well-rounded ex- perience, such a truly grand time, that hanging around is just a part of what must be one of the most exciting and innovative vacation ex- periences west of the Rockies. Top left — Open House! top right — You mean this isn ' t the beach? middle right — Nothing comes between me and my flag! middle left — Come closer and say that! middle — Test . . . Test . . . Test . . . circle — Mike, I didn ' t know you cared! bottom middle — The apathy squad, bottom right — Who ' s room was it? Well Rounded 15 w ' - 1 F 1 1 wKm Well Rounded? 16 Well Rounded 17 B O L O G y William Purves T. J. Mueller 18 v William Daub CHEMISTRY 19 CHEMISTRY Eikeren Gerald Van Hecke ■ 20 Michael Erlinger Jchuda Kamienchick b m Andy Davenport Ik ' J. ■ - f J 1 i 9 i f1 COMPUTER SCIENCE 21 ENGINEERING Fred Phelps 22 Robert Edgerton HarryJWilliams ENGINEERING IHiV Prabir Sengupta 23 Donald Remcr 1 Mr 1 f 1 1 1 Wts flHHHIIi ,,,„,., -wxJ Bi ENGINEERING 24 HUMANITIES AND SOCIAL SCIENCES David Sanders 25 26 Gary Evans m K fl d ... s o c A L S C £ N C E S 21 MATHEMATICS r I Courtney Cole 28 MATHEMATICS Henry Kreiger 29 PHYSICS James Eckert 30 Josepn Kia 4 i Daniel Petersen Alonzo Stoddard PHYSICS 31 ' Jack Waggoner THE OLD RUN AROUND I like the current system of reigning anarchy and confusion. This is great. The students are starting to have fun again. You should always be preapred to decompose. This is boring even for me to lecture about. Take this sexy circuit, and . . . This is trivial. Why are we doing this? Now let ' s find the radius of the universe! ' I think the man on the street should know this, but unfortunately . . . OK, now I ' m going to derive circuit theory in five minutes! It ' s intuitively obvious that . . . Where the heck am I? I ' m not going to hand out the quiz until you guys are quiet. Of course this integral can ' t be done, but we ' ll do it anyway. You ' re gonna fail and there ' s nothing you can do about it. ' I just gave a Stat Mech problem to my students that I can ' t solve yet. In the pedagogical sense, you see ... If you don ' t see this, you ' re a sexual deviant anyway! Dean of Students: William Gann President D. Kenneth Baker 34 Dean of Faculty: B. S. Tanenbaum Dean of Admissions Duncan Murdoch 35 Back Row: Thornton Hamlin — Director of Special Gifts, Don Gross — Corporate Rela- tions, George McKelvey — Vice President, Vicki Sharp — Corporate Relations Secretary, Mary Flewelling — Alumni Secretary, Peggy Keys — News Bureau Secretary, Elizabeth Bed- dingfield — Computer Recorder, Judy Medford — Development Secretary, Bobbye Trotter — Secretary to the Vice-President, Nancy Gamer — Alumni Director; Front Row: John Crow — Director of Development. Shirley Butterick — Development Accountant, Dorothy Harris — Support Groups, Wilma Henderson — Opera- tions Supervisor, Betty Osborne — Support Groups Secretary, The Kingston Staff Vice President: George McKelvey Admissions Office Back Row — LaVerne Higgs, Rick Diaz. Barbara Brown Front Row — Kathy Carver, Susanne Fite. 36 The Registrars Wf Norma Mann Betty Lumpkin Connie Leiva Departmental Secretaries k • llir -r Marsha Myers — Chemistry Theresa Grogan — Engineering Sue Cook — Math Diane Sanchez — Hum Soc Helen White — Physics 37 Peggy Morisson - Eng. Clinic I Hilda Larson — Placement Office Holly Hauck — Eng. Clinic Marion Snyder — Dean of Faculty Office Marian Sawyer — Dean of Students Office Barbara Graham Division Freshman Mary Bcnzon — Assistant to the President Nancy Mandala — Secretary to the President 38 CLUBS AND A C T I V I T I E 39 FROSH-SOPH GAMES For the second straight year, the class of 1985 won the games. Though the freshmen started out ahead by easily winning the Softball game, the sophomores came back with a vengeance to the point where the freshmen were too scared to show up in any number for the tug of war. This included the freshman president. 40 Iff f ■ iii ' ? r  : i--K-.«K  T 42 PUMPKIN CAROLING Once again about 100 strange looking members of the Mudd community piled onto a truck and into cars to go and sing Halloween carols to sleepy professors. 42 TURKEY TROT The annual race around the par course was won this year by the juniors (the class of ' 84 really did win it). The team consisted of: Kris Barnett, Nate Cook, Dave Green- field, Laurie Marble, Fawzi Mhemedi, Laura Merritt, Kent Mesplay, Don Person, and Carolyn Wetzel. . ' 7 43 CHRISTMAS PARTY The East Dorm Christmas Party was once more a success. Mrs. Lumpkin, as Santa Claus, handed out various gifts, Professor Piatt returned once again to sing his much loved songs, and the winners of the door decorating awards were named. There was also much kissing under the mistletoe. r VpH _ ' ir ' V 1 r ' ' m V V « H ? H| 1 im W L. 44 LUNCH BANDS A new series of events was started by Diana Cozzi. Lunches on the grass in front of Piatt Campus Center, entertained by bands such as the Hot Pecans, Frankie S. and the Flashbacks, and the Andrew Schafer Group, gave students a chance to relax. 45 TALENT SHOW The Talent Show, a tradition for five years, sponsored by the HMC women, was once more a big success. The highlights of the Talent Show were the dorm skits. For the second year in a row. East Dorm won the award for the best dorm act with the story of Cinderblocka. More serious entertainment was provided by the well known barbershop quartet. The Muddy Tones, and by Jeff Graham singing sea shanties. As in past years, ASHMC provided commercials between acts. Leading the other numerous acts was an entertaining show put on by the unicy- cic club. 46 mi m ' - i 47 %r ' w . ' 1 ' PATIENT RECORD Hospital: Baxter General Doctor(s): Dr. Winga PdB., FoJ., BSChE, Head Surgeon Dr. Colin Williams BSME, Proctologist Dr. Peckham BSSE, Gynecologist Intern Gif Cheung, Pre-Mudd Dr. Magras BSEE, Neurdosurgeon Dr. T. T. T. C. Clifner BSME, Chief Anaesthesiologist Pts. Name: Sir William of Mudd Address: Rusto Manor, Apt. 69, Baldpate-on-thc-Sea Hosp. No.: 47 Age: 53 (unverified) Phone: 602-1023 Insura nce: American Express Reason for Admittance: Complains of severe headaches and back pains, extreme hair loss, loss of touch with reality, elbow cramps, and trouser wrinkles. Phi sical Examination: Blood: red, 1 qt. low Heart: most of the time Hair: see above Teeth: half gold Height: 1 .85E10A Weight: 1 1 stone 6 Diagnosis: The trouser wrinkles are terminal. The patient has less than 60 years to live. The elbow cramps are a result of pickus toomuchus, or orchid elbow. More tennis is prescribed. Headaches, back pains, hair loss, and loss of touch with reality are a result of a swollen left frontal lobe. Surgery is recommended. THE CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP Sc 4f It ' s not all reading and singing! A skit demonstrating how not to care tor your friends. Making new friends and learning about God together. I i. A L- fetir ' ■n 1 1 ' jj lS| wkf w; j IL..; | H H B ' i B T J k k£ k W L. ' B s l .jF B p H [2 Q fl ■ i 9 Ri ' 4 fl ■ III rS B H r l H • ip i S Lj 4M L - rr !R Caring for people in another culture Would you let this man serve you ice cream? 50 ANOTHER YEAR BRINGING THE LOVE OF JESUS CHRIST TO THE PEOPLE A T HARVEY MUDD MATH CLUB 51 n e Vol. 1, No. 1 All The News That Fits, We Print Thursday, Feb. 14, 1980 NEW DORM FALLS Destruction of new dorm occured at a furious pace. The next morning saw Dean Gann and Muddraker reporters sifting through the rubble. Muddraker photographers record the horror. Claremont (MDRKR1 - Of- ficials are still puzzlea by the sudden and inexplicable col- lapse of the newest dormitory at Harvey Mudd College. The new dorm, known to the students as New Dorm, was already a pile of rubble when residents of the other dorms awoke early Wednesday morn- ing. Rescue workers were call- ed in from Upland, but as of last night only one survivor had been founci. Searchers are looking for the other 118 residents of the dorm, all of whom are missing. The lone survivor was ASHMC president Ian McCut- cheon who was scooped out of the wreckage. As ne helped Dean of Students William Gann survey the wreckage, McCutcheon was mobbed oy Muddraker reporters but could not provide any information on the cause of the collapse: I was dreaming I was alone on a South Pacific island with . . . uh, anyway the next thing I knew two irosh were standing over me screaming ' We founa a body! We found a body! ' Investigators originally thought a piece of the Soviet satellite Cosmos 1402 demolished the dorm. They discarded this theory after be- ing told that the dented metal spnere they found was not a nuclear reactor but a dorm pet. The investigators are now following up on a tip that the 559 day money-back guarantee that came with the dorm ex- pired on Tuesday. See OOPS, page 46 . . % Ji t- O.S.P. The Outdoor sports program extends to HMC students op- portunities to test their mental and physical capabilities in an out- door environment. Over the past several years, the club has had over 100 students involved in activities such as rock climbi ng, cross country skiing, backbacking, hiking, and just relaxing in an environment that is as far away from Harvey Mudd as possible. L 53 PHYSICS CLUB 54 UMCYCLE CLUB 55 56 BATES ALROlll Goeff Kulik, John Young, Mitch Simpson The Bates Foundation for Aeronautical Education has been training Harvey Mudd students how to fly for twenty-one years. The program was designed to combine the experience of flight training with sound academic achievement, both in the study of aeronautics and in the nor- mal college curriculum. Each flier put about four-thousand miles behind them as they made trips up and down the coast and in the local area. AERO II Joe Anderberg, Mike Magras. Don Eichmann, Lance Clifner. Missing: Wendy Duckworth, Pete Dickinson AERO! Mr. C, Nate Cook. Greg Felton. Greg Roberts. Alan Benner. missing: Kirk Jones. 57 VOLLEYBALL CLUB RADIO CLUB 58 J.B. Chairman; Mike Hundley Members; Laura Mcrrttt Darwin Popeno« Burke Treldler Suzanne Miller Vu Phan Mark Moehring (not pictured) SA.C. Chairman: Anthony Jacob Members; John Ryan Scott Cook (n. p.) Doug Brown Alan Benner Lucas Morel (n.p.) Dean Gann Efu: .- 59 A.S.HM.C. DA.a President; Ian McCutcheon Treasurer: Vincent Tobin Secretary: Carolyn Wetzel Athletics: Joel Voelzke (n.p.) Publicity: Leonard Vance SAC: Anthony Jacob (n.p.) Social Mike Sanchez (n.p.) Committee: Bill Konya (n.p.) Trustee Rep: Mitch Simpson East Dorm: Brian Szemenyci Alan Teruya New Dorm: Charles Polk Mike Sailor North Dorm: Kris Barnett (n.p.) Jay Foster (n.p.) South Dorm: Wendy Duckworth Wendy Lopez West Dorm: Geoff Kulik Ron Smith Women At Anne Allder (n.p.) Scripps: Stephanie Mashima Chairman; Fred Streitz; Members: Anne Allder, Kris Barnett, Wendy Duckworth, Jay Foster, Geoff Kulik, Wendy Lopez, Stephanie Mashima, Charles Polk, Mike Sailor. Roger Sensenbaugh, Ron Smith, Brian Szemenyei, Alan Teruya. 60 X4 V1 : MEN ' S FOOTBALL For the second year, New Dorm was the most powerful Harvey Mudd team both in the intermural competition and in the Mudd Bowl. New Dorm made it to the finals of the intermurals where they lost in the second game after winning the first game only to have it challenged. In the Mudd Bowl, North Dorm took second place and East and South tied for third. 62 63 WOMEN ' S FOOTBALL The women ' s team had their best season ever. Under the coaching of Jeff Graham, the young team ended up with a final league record of 3-1. This was with only three returning players. In the Mudd bowl the women were beaten with some unconven- tional plays by East Dorm. . - -i i ■? 64 SOCCER Harvey Mudd fielded two teams in the intermural competition. The North South East team took first place overall in the CMC HMC competition. New Dorm won the Mudd Bowl. 65 FOOTBALL; Mark Shaw TRACK Fawzi Mhemedi, Peter Hodges, Kent Mesplay. Burke Treidler, Keith Gollwitzer. Robert Miyaoka, Mike Ward, Rhett Fulwider, Steve Flynn, Todd Hancock, Stella Quan INTERCOLLEGIATE ATHLETICS i -Jpe ' CMS X CROSSCOUNTRY Mike Ward, Fawz. Mhemedi, Kent Mesplay, Peter Hodges, Burke Treidler, Steve Flynn, VOLLEYBALL: Nicole Sampson SOCCER: Carl Krentz, Don Person, Rick Cabral, Jason Gould, Dave Greenfield 66 TENNIS: Paul Frankel, Shreekant Khare, Kevin Maher. Mark Elliot, Gitfon Cheung. Steve Talley, Wynne Chang. Lucas Morel. BASKETBALL: Ron Smelser Not Pictured: Soccer: Jay Foster Jeff Greenfield Peter Higa Mike Shimizul Volleyball: Irina Cernucan Water Polo: Len Pomrehn Wrestling: Chris Myrick Tennis: Bill Konga Shahin Bakhshandeh Kurt Overly Track: Joel Voelzke Richard Meador SWIMMING: Maurice Clifton. Laurie Marbel. John Shubin. Mark Ryba. Havlin Kemp, John Hillier, Jim Stepman. WATER POLO: Kirk Jones. Eric Rosser. DIVING: Paul Breed. Debbie Beboul 67 PLAYING AROUND i 68 , ' A. V D O 71 w s T D O R M 72 13 74 N O R T H D O R M 75 J. SOUTH DORM 76 n A. N £ W D O R M I 79 so ■ it ' • • % -- i ' yii m ii i 1 sr 4 MmLj E?Ti BM L. 15 III 1 ■ J ' - F 1  H K ( -P H 1 J -. __ m H r .1:: L J . I ' . L—— _  82 p m F R E S H M E N 83 let SOPHO «► -. - J ! i ,1 ' — i . v .A ' ■% - tft f i ' . MORES 85 -:.m l • - J u N I O R S 87 -• T. V V vi •};. iV 13 Go • . . -rC ' % - - vt.V t ' V, I «k ' - ; j - t . O Si S9 TMI CMSi ti -k 1 « ... r MAX ADOFO ENGINEER LOYAL WEST DORMER LIBRARIAN What a wa to spend four i ears of a macho man ' s life! Thanks to all who made this possible. Thanks to Mom and Dad. 92 . -• SEMPER , f . f i : fc ;••  - ' .y ' .v :- : V .;,4 : - -- . . ' • ' ' : . z, I WILLIAM KRAUSE , Engineering Literature ' 93 TfTTTTrTmrTTTil Good friends make life enjoyable Kevin Cloonan ¥ n  REASON AND FAITH 94  - ' t t nf ]« «1. ott Of j,9„ k„ . ' ,.-, ., ... . , ' ' •«.. ..... ,...,, • • ,. -•-- : :tz :::• ' •■ — It « on), through j„ - ... - ' ' • •■  ... 9 «th en th crojt ,,,, ,. • r .. ..:. ' :.::, ' • •• ' •■oP ' -lttt tuit forot,,,.,. . «« •«. k, f.«t . .„ ' ' ' •• ' • • ' • ' - Ctn.t.oo to - -H... ,. ,.,, ,. ; ; -- -. .. Lo.. •••• ' - '  • M., CM.t «.u „„. Mf.. u U tH. ;:::::: 7 T ' ' ' • -•- -v:r - ' M.. -..„ 1.7. ' ' •- ' •• •- -  •• •, ' - - -ui 95 JIM HOFFMAN ENGINEERING ECONOMICS Thanks dad for all the support you have given me. 97 Ifeel released Bad times deceased My confidence has increasei Reality is here! Mtim Alright, who put super glue on the baton? coneenn Z ime is Zrieetina; nladneid ZJakeA Sti Jotl. GREAT FAMILY GREAT FRIENDS Allen Nelson Biochemistry 1 976-)?0 83 (with time off for not-so-good behavior) y r ' ' m ' m: : Z Vk.-. . :.:j.« i Time it was. And what a time it was, It was . . . A time of innocence, A time of confidences. Long ago ... it must be. . . I have a photograph. Preserve your memories; They ' re ail that ' s left you. Simon Garfunicel, Bookends Going to Harvey Mudd is like banging your head against the wall; it feels so good when you stop. Well, what does one say after seven years of this place? I ' ve come to know a lot of people in my time here; I couldn ' t begin to list you all (well, I could begin but I couldn ' t finish). I ' ve made many friends (and some not) here; good and bad, you ' ve made me what I am. To everyone: Good-bye, take care, and God bless. I ' m finally getting out of here . . . Dr. van Eikeren, are you sure this tritium and C- 1 4 are safe to work with? 100 Alan Teruya East Dormer Engineering History r Engineers Lo tlei The past four.years have been a tremendous grow- ing experience intellectually, emotionally, and socially. I must thank everyone I ' ve known here for making this possible. I ' d also like to thank: . . . my parents for putting me through Harvey Mudd. ... the residents of East Dorm over the past four years for making East a second home for me. ... the Muddraker staff. The old group for star- ting the paper and letting me be a part of it, and the current staff for continuing something we never - Tt: CI 1 Co-Presidents and Four-Year Hast Dormers H thought would survive. The most popular part of my Muddraker column On Campus was the quotes. Well, here ' s one more. Everyone who had P-Chem from VH will recognize it. From Virgil ' s Aenied: Forsam et haec olem meminesse juvabit — Someday even these things may be pleasant to remember. Looking back over the last four years (and conveniently ignoring the many hours of banging my head against the wall) in some ways they already are. Good Luck to All, •.X 4 Uv. I thought that after I became an engineer they were going to give me a locomotive. lOl Fl« 1 m flW J V '  KI Chris Curzon Mathemusical physicist . . . chivalrous . . . Luke 4:18 . . . Gershwin Three Preludes . . . philosophical . . . youngest of four kids . . . diplomat . . . fuzzy sweater . . . mathephysical musician . . . Rachmaninoff ' s Vocalise . . . BBs friend . . . Matthew 22:35-40 . . . analytical . . . recitalist . . . ZB, DMJ, RRM . . . physimusical mathemati- cian . . .John 4:24 The whole of me is definitely greater than the sum of these parts. The aim and final end of all music should be none other than the glory of God and the refreshment of the soul. If heed is not paid to this, it is not true music, but a diabolical bawling and twanging J.S. Bach • • To everyone at Mudd, To all whom I love so dearly. Especially to Dad, Mom, Elliott, Becca and Peter Deep Peace of the running wave to you, Deep Peace of the flowing air to you. Deep Peace of the quiet earth to you, Deep Peace of the shining stars to you, Deep Peace of Christ, the Light of the World, to you. 102 Thanks to them who made it all possible God, Mom, and Dad. I shall be telling this with a sigh Somewhere ages and ages hence: Two roads diverged in a wood, and I — I took the one less traveled by, And that has made all the difference. Robert Frost For one thing, they were nowhere as bad as you think — and at the same time, they were infinitely worse than anything you could ever im- agine. 1 cannot explain that either. Ein Haftling K. Patrick Ash 103 Lance A. Clifner Engineer In Search Of The Good Life Don a. Eichmann Engineer In the space of one hundred and seventy-sii yeara the lower Mississippi haa shortened itself two hundred and forty-two miles. That is an average of a trifle over one mile and a third per year. I herefore, any calm person, who is not blind or idiotic, can see that in the Old Oolitic bilurian Period, just a million years ago next November, the Lower Mississippi River was up- wards of one million three hundred thousand miles long, and stuck out over the Gulf of Mex- ico like a fishing-rod. And by the same token any person can see that seven hundred and forty-two years from now the Lower Mississippi will only be a mile and three quarters long and Cairo and New Orleans will have joined their streets together and be plodding comfor- tably along under a single mayor and a mutual board of aldermen. There is something fascinating about science. One gets such wholesale returns of conjecture out of such a trifling investment of fact. Mark Twain The Atlantic Monthly 36, 193 (1875) When you part from a friend, you grieve not; for that which you love most in him may be clearer in his absence, as the mountain to the climber is clearer from the plain. Kahlii Gibran 105 f erii ¥ cJjuckwortn c. nqineenng REMEMBER . Space Invaders women ' s football, beer, Gerome in a coma. Mastermind, Fred, volleyball, Ross, Martha, broken finger, Don, Leslie, sprained ankles (3 of them!), mushrooms, water skiing, fruit wars, ' Welcome to the General D — oops!, Sarah, Apollo, Grand Ca- nyon, Ken, Gif, f r o s h runs, Mr. Mrs. C., An- nette, green hair, beer. Hell, DAC, South kegs, Women ' s pitza party, Ted, Dragons, Kaolas, Dave A., Valen- tine ' s Dance, LTG, voting. Bates, 21st b-days (all of them), break-in afi Scripps, volleyball, kahlua, Phelps, Fernando J., Eric M., Pinochle, napkin fights, head injury. Rolling Stones, Deepak, beer, Seth, Joe A., Queen, Anne and Helen, obscene phone calls, peanut butter, Tull, pizza. Magic Mountain, getting showered, I ' m clueless, Ron Lloyd, getting pooled, backrubs, Sam and Dave frosh, Christmas tree, peach brandy, Hamlett, first solo, fuzzy, E-54, Sad- dlerock, Frank Shelley, Mr. Baker, Bailey ' s, interviews, dorm president. Pine Mountain Lake, Bates bugs. Heartbreak Hotel, smile for free gas!, Uno, racquetball, H R ' s, juggling, neaner neaner neaner, Ramolap, midnight volleyball during finals. Systems (A), 42G, 62Q, cherry bomb, pool, pinball. lis education has been mode possi- ble by grants from the Duclfworth and Petit foundations. To them, my family and friends, I give my sincerest thanks. The hell with systems I want to be a cat . . . 1 All My Children, volleyball. Las Vegas, low grade notices. Ferret song. Lance, Pat, mayonnaise, snow skiing (kamikazes), Mikey ' s sm.ile, Lin- da, South dorm air vents speaker system, Lowenhrau, Pete, La Bamba, Garfield, Stella, Nicotine, backrubs, ants. Grand Ca- nyon, Dan Stritch, Grace, Mrs. Lum- pkin, Ian, guitar, beer, r um.my , ASHMC, cold showers, Miriam,, Vince, tape for Dr. D . RUSH, volleyball, Sadat, Southwest Connec- tion, Amaretto, Dean Gann, Fred Pugsley, Carolyn, Scruffy, r iis is a what?, tickle fights, beer, Karl F., Charles, Suzannt;. dayuiri . bf:er on the floor, universal food patties, solitaire, sodas (diet), dorm auctions, Figgy, Why don ' t you iruyt uit iraohing?!. wine tasting, taco nite, Mrs. Morrison, clinic, Yosemite, Foster ' i runs, swit- chboard at Sf.ripps, tp ' d roomi, co-ed suite, interviews, dorm, president, hot tubs, yearbook pages, handcuffs, Frank Schwab, cookiei at thii prnndnnt ' s house, leadership workshop, da-dah dah dah, talent show, frosh campout, REDO, volleyball, Fridays, ukt re ' s my i.ar, Mt. Baldy, the three little frosh — Bruce, Doug, Nick, Honk — if you passed p- chem (beep ), noisy hour , tkort jokns and long talks. Mammoth, coffee. lA endu s. eJLopez C naineerin 9 ' 9 Of the things that wisdom prepares for insuring lifelong hoppiness, by for the greatest is the possession of friends — Epicurus To my Mom, family, ond friends Thank you for oil the support and understanding you ' ve given me I love you oil REMEMBERANCESlin no exact order) . . . fl Long Tall Brian Lipsky: mischief at large Margaret the tease The S.W C Leisa my long-awaited loss Theory of Communication The Chemistry Song: H20 Co. foun- ?■! 7 J k ' , I 0 ' « ta o Sponsor Living at the Bakers Grace F k P- fS p l ? A? J, A. Seevers B. Fong Young John How DID I pass E M? Pmg-Pong Asleep in Waldman ' s Home for a year Dole: the last straw 56 hr. weeks at Certified U.H.: £-211: what a joke! I miss Mudd! CaroW Sa a J J. Atlas Shrugged: Phase II completed (full consciousness). Phase III begins (self- awareness): Power of the Mind the Journey begins Hawaii social scene: superficiality Wisdom teeth, mtrous trip Theory of Medicine Bye. Hawaii Back again remember I c ' u ' ' ' - 9 ° R ' ° Meeting the Wendies Two years WpHn . 1f ' ' ' m ' .° ' ' ' '  Orland the incompetent Wednesday niter: a capella comedy Partying with the Wendies Boston Miriam Lance and Don VoHeyball! Skiing with the Clifners et al Hello again. Grandma faction K.S ri ° ' - ' u ' . ' = ' ' ' ' S ' Beckman bores Stella in- fatuation Karl Suzanne: making the summer fly Multiple Relationships I En- counter w.th fierce irrationality SKIING with the Clifners et al Gorgonio Idylliild Mike Grand. Canyon Orientation Sponsor Multiple Relationships II Ross didn ' t srnHlrd fS rr ' u ' i ' ' I ' t- I ' R ' 5th Year: the G?A double DoS t tic kief ' ' ' ° ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' « ° 9° A few quotes and phrases ... Things are not always as they seem. It takes one to know one. To hell with systems, I want to be a cat! — WRL I only cough when I eat salad. — SJM r I ' o ' l.rr.i ' th T M ' ' ' tr ' ' f space, time, and mind, in search of the knowledge a resources that will enable me to live my life as I please andtoef- feet whatever my imagination conceives. I have glimpsed the rh % % A ■.•AVi iBa«% Power of the Mind. It is this power that will transform my dreams K t l!sX A lA ATI I lUO into realities. I have come this far, but the rest of my journey has ■ V- V Vym«¥¥ri|| ||l|0 only just begun ... The woods are lovely, dark, and deep But I have promises to keep, And miles to go before I sleep. And miles to go before I sleep. — Robert Frost I swear by my life and my love of it that I will never live for the sake of another man, nor ask another man to live for mine — John Gait Thanks to my friends and special thanks to my Mother, Father and Brother, for their love, support, and all the good times we ' ve shared. Remember that our love and friendship will always be and that they will ripen, no matter the separation in distance or time. ENGINEERING (since fhe day i was born) ««F!iTi,5s!asi Si ei; r)L) S. 108 Remembering . . The Annex - Phil - Fresh Aire - Mary and Diane - All nighters - Annex 1 Gang (Scott, Kathleen, Rick, Tim, Kevin, Mike) - RTD 401 to Pasadena - Martha - Mailroom - Emily and Kristi — Lived in all the dorms except New — Mark G. — Freshman Orientation ' 81 - Linda - Cake Mixer Clinic - Brian - 21st Birthday Parties - Wendy and Wendy - Society of Women Engineers - Keith and John G. and Frank - Coed Suites - Karl - Parents ' Orientation ' 82 - Don and Lance - Volleyball - Ross - Ticklewars - Mike M. - JB - Beer Clinic 9UZANNE J. MILLER ENGINEERING ith special thanks to Ross, Phil, Martha, and my family. Jkc-YK Yx nje Q. YYuMUaJ 109 THANKS GREELEY Don ' t forget your history know your destiny In the abundance of water the fool is thirsty Rat race, rat race, rat race B.Marley Valete! MARCUS GARVEY Wake Up and Live! no Jim Thomas Victor de Gyarfas r. ! ■) v ' Ku WiC. w remain Uis bettet to Ailent ana be tnougnt a (ooi, than ipeah up ana ail doubt. remoue Engineer 113 .  t f r ' •r ' l l ' if ! : ir GETTINa S) 4 1 1 DOUG HAMILTON ENGINEERING CULTURAL METALLURGY Be Thou my vision O Lord of my heart. Naught be else to me save that Thou art. Thou my best thought by day or by night, Waking or sleeping thy presence my light. — Irish Hymn Come follow me, Jesus said, and I will make you fishers of men. At once they left their nets and followed him. — Mark 1:18 114 Dad ANDREW KATAYAMA AS E.E. THE ELECTRICAL ENGINEER PRODUCED BY ANDREW KATAYAMA DIRECTED BY MOM AND DAD 4 - i- i- A 115 David A. ©veroye CDave-€ Actina Fizziks PS — Thanx Mom and Dad, Miss Face, DGKMTKMGVTPWMAJVRZEF If you saw a hippopotamus and everyone con- vinced you it was a race horse, you ' d think it was a pretty ugly racehorse. Taken one step fur- ther, if they convinced you it was a French poo- dle, it would be even uglier. In fact, it was pro- bably a pretty nifty hippo. Jim Unger 116 Ron S m -b. : -r.SJL Js • . . lEngineertng lElectrontcs to nuK m . JfV .ro .• ' ■•► HARVEY MUDDiCPLLEGE 118 Stella Quan Freshmen hard at ik I hav e tasted the fruit of the tree of knowledge and often delighted in its taste. But the pleasure did not outlast the moment of understanding and left no profound mark upon me.lt seems as though I had not drunk from the cup of wisdom, but had fallen into S. Kierkegaard from The Journals ■ ? • vZ- ivf Mark McCoy 119 w ' Ssfr ' N, ■ , TRk - r.-x MITCHELL JAY SIMPSON Physics — Aeronautics — Public Relations • N - ■m. MmhmK i m :  . GEOFFREY PAUL KlJtiK Physics - Aeronautics - Economics There is no savor more sweety more salt than to be glad to be whatf woman and whOf myself I am. — Denise Levertov Benise j-ew i -. .mmmmwria .j wM some may say Vm. wishing m.y days away — no way and ifiVs the price I pay — some say Tomorrow ' s another day — you ' ll stay I may as well play — Police - I • ■ t f -1 . Ks::, ' . - D Q I cannot conceive of wanting to live, or wanting my children or grandchildren to live, in an America fashioned in the image of the junior senator from Wisconsin. R. Flanders howardgiffordamericans tudiesphysicsbaseball. ■iisj t- v, ■; ' ' S!9 W ' fi : ' -r-!SftJS 5gj ., [ ' M ' ..r.A ■«« J r ? .-. i ' «i| H You Gotta Live Life! 126 Vincent M. Tobin physics, philosophy, and gnigamad niarb rehto activities We con walk our rood rogerher, if our goals ore oil rhe some. We con run olone ond free, if we pursue o different aim. Ler rhe truth of Love be lighted, let the love of Truth shine clear. Sensibility, ormed with sense ond liberty, with the Heart and Mind united in a single perfect sphere. by Neil Peort Science, like Noture, Must also be tamed. With a view towards Its preservation. also by Peart y aML - Why does the porridge-bird lay his egg in the air? lAJitnout cnemlcali, life itieif wouidn t be ai tnucn fun. Love comes for those that seek it Love hides inside the rainbow Love hides in molecular structure Love is the answer Jim Morrison There is a required, pass fail course at Mudd called Life. I think I passed. To all those who tutored me, Thank you ' ji Randy Drwinga Applied Chemistry American Studies 127 But, when you know that I you ' ve got a real friend somewhere, f Suddenly all the others s ' l are so much easier to bear. Jackson Browne m r-S, r - ' ' y - 1 ' % PAfM4biiNs ' jf AKESHI NIIYA Mtm.. mm ' cw 5- «S S voO i -c . ' J._Sfi all men are equal before fish. H Hoover SOMEDAY Som day I ' ll walk away And be free And leave the sterile ones their secure sterility. I ' ll leave without a forwarding address And walk across some barren wilderness To drop the world there. Then wander free of care Like an unemployed Atlas, lames Kavanaugh 1 III % c.l 1 ONCE THERE WERE Once there were No limits to my dreaming No boundaries to my ambitions No love I could not possess. Some fire raged within Volcanic and seething Nourished by success That only at intervals could rest. Each day another test, Each day a challenge beyond compromise Critics only shadows, empty voices That came and went. Then I lost a love I thought I owned And tried to conquer life myself alone While age came crashing into youth In cosmic conflict. And left me lost in fears I ' d never known. IK. 130 Peter Jaeger FERNANDO A. URDINA ' . . . it occurred to me, he ' d grown up just like me. My boy was just like me. Harry Chapin ! ¥ I 1 if you could see what we can hear . . ' I I I J I 1 k. h w A t! ' ' VT ROB WITTMOND PHYSICS Beware thejabberwock, my son! The jaws that bite, The claws that catch! Beware thejubjub bird, and shun The frumious Bandernsatch! « I .- ' s r ' y ; ' ' f I Z «s ' ifrV 134 Albert W. Lee Engineering Philosophy ... I will never live for the sake of another man, nor ask another man to live for mine. Atlas Shrugged Ayn Rand . ' . - •■  , f9 I l} v- r ■ ■ . ■y i? . ' .jf HARVEY f . U •- •Tif ' ' - -; ■;-. - -..A • ' M.:: . ! X, m: kTi- % - fy A ' ■ -§ A tm So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past. — F. Scott Fitzgerald D COLLEGE ■irw ' ' . r¥ 5-.i.  - rv - k ,Mi ■M M uhdfey A friend loves at all times, And a brother is born for adversity. Proverbs 17:17 MARTHA MORTON ENGINEER DORM MOM 138 EMILY A. GREENE Physics Hisfory My Summer Earnings I ' -m:: ' . A«.M -.!.V 139 • 1 Life is a dance — such n trBTitfhl . ■luivl nfWiitik in its parage and faditvfaway all • 7 ' NS GROSSES . iC)iX llA 1 i hi V- s spielt die Strophe der N Deutsche Frauen, deutsche Treue, Deutscher Welti und deutscher Sang let, deep. H Henry: you look like a total idiot doing that. (O, well: sursum ad summum) why would anyone want to stay just three years . . . Mudd ' s such a great place MAX LACHMANN 1 .. ' I ... ' ■ Si Am I all here? No, says my guide, The light from the place Where Phantasie whiles. In the never-netherlands! See the duo feuding Where I find the kindred clans. My thoughts and my Gedanken. Milton ) c HtuSbrakcr Icdine with s VJii ii oppoituniiiM ) ftconiey- t jTvis sTtcTrmfion ( t mc ' l J euucciTcU. To KOK vs. SMOG Fu(pt4ic hl iro idL ■ n DdffirleMTv); my parents, the professors and administrators otthe schoo and especially to all of (he students 1 ha e known and •?-.u:ni5=-2 i I hunk ■ [ become friendsnvith, I butTniTTrtlTrvN ariirTiKi,knTP ii Althojr i M DHSt lour Cai ir no ' ouiv nn inorias tJity vvdl be ■ %Je4,hed vv ijjRTi c )i|vj|_ X XT X V-X V-X j r laPhMcCuicheon tv rliV Applied Physic gt il 142 TEXAS PO.E. byte off Lobotortiy Never can tell. How much is reality? Homework is for you. BASIC is your friend. 10 is a prime number. How much is the drug? What hath god wrought? Death to all fanatics! Hi hi hi, Mr. Deltoid. Could be, could not be. We accept you one of us. How much is our trickery? space is vast, excellency. Ed yem ull, cross nul atau I ' m singing in the rain . . Fortran is nearly ambiguous. Because these are ancient times as a result there are not enough wetbacks to do the work for us. So harvest the barley before you plant it — it is easier that way. And in the sky. a 1500 pound ox appeared over my head, as a halo might. Oh well. Crunch. A 16 ton weight fell on his toes As soon as his toes rotted off, 1 doused the ox in gasoline and torched it. — YESKLD FORTRAN, the infantile disorder, by now more than 20 years old, is hopelessly inadequate for whatever computer application you have in mind today: it is now too clumsy, too risky, and too expensive to use. PL 1 — the final disease — belongs more to the problem set than the solution set. The use of COBOL cripples the mind; its teaching should, therefore be regarded as a criminal offense. APL is a mistake, carried through to perfection, it is the language of the future for the problems of the past: it creates a new generation of coding bums. It is practically impossible to teach good programming style to students that have had prior exposure to BASIC: as potential programmers they are mentally mutilated beyond hope of regeneration. — DIJKSTRA Some of my best friends are continuous functions, i just wouldn ' t want my sister to marry one. But what does it eat, where does it live, what does it spew out? No time for the old in-and-out; just here to read the meter. One of these days, i ' m going to cut you into little pieces. Gonna doofcity. gonna have some fun; doof city here i come. What we have here is a failure to communicate. Is there intelligent life in the universe? Violence is the refuge of the incompetent. You are living on the planet of the apes. This phone booth reserved for Clark Kent. I can crash that VAX with . . . You cannot petition the lord with prayer. No smoking, no spitting, the MANAGEMENT. All that is not mandatory is forbidden. All that is not forbidden is mandatory. Stardust on thursday is the only wrong. In space nobody can hear you scream . . . (This page intentionally left blank.) Q: Are we not men? A:We are DEVO. What is this thing called LISP? It ' s not a bug. it ' s a feature. Jeff Deifik 143 li ■ ■- ■ir ' ' - Peter Reichert Engineering, Convertibles, Pumpkin Consultant ( Well, that ' s pretty boot ) 144 ex McCarthy ingineering Lirerorure The problem wirh well-rounded srudenrs is rhor when ou push rhem, rheyjusr roll. wonr ro rhonk oil my friends, especially Mike, Fred, Ion, Dhn, Neol, Morrho, Emily, and Perer. I couldn ' r hove node ir wirhour you! What a team! 145 ?v To My Friends, I love all of you dearly, and you ' ve been more important to me than anything else that I ' ve ever had ... I have learned a great deal from you, and shared as much with you. I truly hope that the experience was mutual. There is nothing in this world that can match your beauty, the beauty of good friends, and few things even come close. So if you ' re wondering about the rose, it is a small present to you (and to me, a symbol of you). And this rose, unlike most, shares with good friendships the quality of lasting for a long, lon i  e. ' You are a most terrific family. Much love and thanx, , 4 Nr, 146 Mikfiv 9 i BRIAN SZEMENYEI AND THE LITTLE BLUE MAN :PHYSICS I hope the day will be a lighter highway, For friends are found on every road. Can you ever think of any better way For the lost and weary travelers to go? Making friends for the world to see, Let the people know you got what you need. With a friend at hand you will see the light. If your friends are there then everything ' s all It seems to me a crime that we should age, These fragile time should never slip us by. A time you never can or shall erase As friends together watch their childhood fly. right. Bernie Taupin Thanks to all of you who helped us (me and the Little Blue Man) enjoy four years of oodles of fun. We couldn ' t have done it without you. Mom, I wish you were here. Dad and everyone else, I ' m glad you are. 147 wk today, a boar yesterday, Brful instability! . . . . ... ..Jvhat will come of it I shsq M be in another shape. The K]e of Bran H WI; i CErr j?- 1 I 1 •r -i i - ' Jiira -- IMTw h Roger Cliff Physics etc. T ' HE L flNQ QF ILLUSION; BEING IS BECOMING ' ' ll l Jp p 1 1 H Hk ■■ ro all of my friends, yVithout whom 1 am nothing, -specially — My Little Buddy 0  v. . ' , JH L, ' ' ' - ' J . M y A. The sky looks very blue — Is that its real color? Or is it because it is So far away and has no end? — Chuang Tzu « . ' ■ fl RAMON F. VALENCIA ARTIST ENGINEER Reach for the stars, but keep both feet on the ground. It is the artist in me that reaches for the stars: it is the engineer in me that keeps my feet on the ground. 150 -?f cI ' , ' -£XJ ' ETER WOLFF 151 Mario Rocdcrer (Pusher) Pinball Slroids Defender Ping pong Pool F ' oosball Irisbee (iolf Occasional Chemistry and Literature Get off my bock, Emily Historical Perspective: Freshman (Sophomore?) in Alaska; transfer; S M; VAX; Coke; loft (built with a 12 ruler, Dave, and a lot of luck engineering); Coke; The Muddraker (writer); The twins, Maggie L. Maggie R. (flat as a board, but I really turned ' em on); A.D. (finally got to shoot my own rocks); The Muddraker (clutch); Attempting to fail; Coke; Back on Track; The Muddraker (Production Manager); Dee (for practice at saving lives); Joe, Roger, Ron, and all the other addicts who kept supporting me; the Lite Beer Brigade; Leonard (who made me a Zeppy and somehow put up with me on and off for 2 years); and that greene thing . . . And thanks to my family: Ernesto, Irene, Silvia, Omama, and especially my mother and father, of whom I am but a reflection. The Aloskon 152 Ili: j;%iV Joe Anderberg (Junkie) Physics Literature Flying Paragon Defender Asteroids Voiieybaii Pool Cards Alcohol Smut Dog Order of the Folded Wing Bores: This is where it ' s or. HMC: Freshman: ... a great place Sophomore: . . a pain in the butt Junior: . survival is possible Senior: . . leave it and love It I have no regrets. came in Search of knowledqe; leave with wisdom too. rhe Colifornion May you enjoy a magnificent pastrami sandwich, sip hot Dr. Pepper by an open fire . . . and devour a burned marshmallow at the end of an out-ofdoors day with a special friend . . . Dr. Earl Reum Special thanks to WKP, Dr. D, Prof. Seilery; my friends who made life enjoyable; and Minor . . . hook, line and sinker. But most of all, thanks to my parents for sending me through four years at Mudd. i 3 . f BV ? ._; j 1 r _• «- u t£ 7 ■s W : LYNN S. FUJISE CHEMISTRY LITERATURE ■k SHARON R. LUNT CHEMISTRY SOCIOLOGY working hard . . .horsing around Kiss today good-bye, And point me towards tomorrow, We did what we had to do. Won ' t forget, can ' t regret, What I did for love. — A Chorus Line The Sex Bag — Maximum Occupancy 10 Special Thanks to KVC A finely ttmpereJ naturf longs to escape from personal life into the world of objective percep- tion and thought, this desire may be compared with the townsman ' s irresistible longing to escape from his noisy, cramped surroundings into the silence of high mountains, where the eye ranges freely through the still, pure air and fondly traces out the restful contours apparently built for eternity. A Kinstein .Wan tries to make for himself in the fashion that suits htm best a simplified and intelligible picture of the world, he then tries to some extent to substitute this cosmos of his for the world of experience, and thus to overcome it . . . (He I makes this cosmos and its construction the pivot of his emotional life, in order to find in this way the peace and security which he cannot find in the narrow whirlpool of personal experience. A, Einstein is not enough to teach a man a specialty. Through it he may become a kind of useful machine but not a harmoniously developed personality. It is essential that the student acquire an understanding of and a lively feeling for values. He must acquire a vivid sense of the beautiful and the morally good .He must learn to understand the motives of human be- ings, their illusions, and their sufferings m order to acquire a proper relationship to in- dividual fellow- men and to the community. A. Einstein GLENN ALEXANDER (SASHA) HANSEN PHYSICS SOVIET STUDIES 156 Jinn t -o-p t ? - oy yeyxM. There may never be nothing such as that No Mo ' — No Mo ' Birdland as sung by The Manhattan Transfer Water, Water Everywhere - But Only One Beer To Drink % — - bhit, LuAnne ' vlo  J terrible. ! happ«r td to h|p I, il v r fi . - joel voel zke ' I S?- ?%!•••% ' V N tiv I V V ■ . . ' • k Sr mt K W m: 2- ' ■• X V I . 9 y Phil Wolf 159 O.K., for sure this will be the last balloon ... And all I see is little dots Some are smeared and some are spots Feels like murder but that ' s all right Somebody said there ' s too much light Pull down the shade and it ' s all right It ' ll be over in a minute or two, David Byrne If I took enough of these red things, Get some permanent sleep, blue things, What lullabys would you sing, white things. For me? Johnny Fingers Study Hard Play Hard The thrill ov victory and J fp GREENFIELD the agony of my feet. GMREEMGNE — Adrian Belew The vaccuum created by the arrival of freedom And the possibilities it seems to offer It ' s got nothing to do with you If one can grasp it . . . A series of shocks — sneakers fall apart Earth keeps on rolling — witnesses falling It ' s got nothing to do with you If one can grasp it . . . — Up the hill backwards It ' ll be all right. — David Bowie If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer. Let him step to the music which he hears, however measured or far away. — Thoreau ;iMlvTuv WW The Good Life . . . BEAUTifully restored vintage automobiles . Fine wine . Classic literature HARVEY MUDD: The best four years I ever spent in college High Technology . . MICHAEL HARDING: ENG 162 Paul and Chee provide necessary motivation to get through Harvey Mudd. I heard life at Mudd was rough, but this is ridiculous- Subtle metamorphoses occur at Harvey Mudd College. LINDA L0UI9E LUCY MILLER Engineering HMC Economics CMC Freshman Year: Smoking cigs with Nicoline. We have to be efficient so we can party more. Sophomore Year: ce econ so much I think I ' ll double-major. That ' s crazy . . . Blow-off materials and come watch Athena basketball . . . Wendy. Wendy, and Leslie, the party suite at Frankel. Junior Year: Back to the 60 ' s and New Wave. I like econ. I bste like some engineering. Senior Year: want to be back at the beach . . . The 4th semester taking 6 classes. It ' s all downhill from here. Going to Harvey Mudd is kinda like MENTAL HOPSCOTCH, you know. I would like to thank Nicoline, Paul, Chee, Lesley, and Laura in helping me get through HMC. Thanks to all my classmates and friends I made these past four years, except for the nerds who just made life miserable. I guess we all transformed in our 4 years here, since humans are dynamic systems . . . (non-linear and marginally stable of course) . A special thanks to my parents and family for always being there. 163 « f y C Vr ' cs ' - ' Vi 4 ..   . .7 Dan Stanfill y ,, .ff- :j f ' . ' T . ... ■■= y J Michael Flanders Engineering Japanese Studies The chief My brain You must Eschew wonder of runneth keep in obfuscation education under. mind very — anon. is that it — JPS much your does not theorems ruin every- at the top body concerned or your in it, teachers fingertips! and taught. — Liu — AdauK Bury my ass at Harvey Mudd. — JPS philosophy philophosy phipholosy philodendron all is phine . ' aJiAal ' . ' ■ • r rv U • ' • I «• •• ' ? M ■ '  , MARK PADDOCK PHYSICS 170 JOHN RYAN PHYSICS 5 Did you ever get the feeling that the story is too damn real and in the present tense? Or that the world is just a stage and you ' re the only player sitting in the audience? I. Anderson This production made possible by grants from the Ryan-Paddock Foundation 171 - ' .. .,.- i ' ■ ' t . i; --c: . . • .-v- -: f - - -■; V ■ ' r-,,1 • ' • ■ The future 1$ M Mote 1$, il 1$ llifhin Is. DOUBLETAKE Engineering may be fun, but it ' s the peo- ple who really count Don ' t ever forget that. h tennis anyone? Leonard Vance 1 73 They say work builds cheireicter, but I ' d reither be seiUing! 174 G. MarcSimmel MIKE SANCHEZ APPLIED CHEMISTRY U. 175 r,imknij l M s ' ■TSjiTCTTrrr T-J When I survey the wondrous cross Dn which the prince of glory died, hv richest gain I count but loss, Lnour contempt on all my pride. I ord, that I should boast, death of Christ, my God; vain things that charm me most, ' ifice them to his blood. . t;. ; from His head. His hands. His feet, xrow and love flow mingled down; ,d e ' er such love and sorrow meet, Tiorns compose so rich a crown? Were the whole realm of nature mine. That were a present far too small; iwe so amazing, so divine, iemands my soul, my life, my all. % — Isaac Watts J 76 Pete Dickinson Offhand, I can remember seeing just three girls in my life who struck me as having unclassifiably great beauty at first sight. — J. D. Salinger Thanks, Toad! — Marco Polo Astronaut Thanks Mo SCOTT H. PECKHAM Engiqeeripy ' ' •♦; ♦ • ' i t ' y 0: I ' m like the raiir ' Cause 1 like your thunder I know we ' ve learned to live together Here in the heartlight Stand in the dark I ' ll light a candle 4 And then we ' ll dance it in the moonli t Until the sunrise. i (K. Loggins 19 ) y JMB i ffl H I H ' ' ' T H P iP B I ■T ' --- •v- H HH H T!]HH H ' i i Bo B Lw fl iff, 1 Ir ■ ■ ■ s«i . . ' MM ( 2G 2 - f jrfT •« - -■ ■ FRANK, HAVE A WILSON AND A SMILE. ROBERT S. MIYAOKA ENGINEER The culmination of four years of hard work and frustration. bobinyourfacedisgrace - II •) close mi eves, onl for a moment and the moment gone • « «i All mi dreams, pass before mv ever dust in the wind in qn endless sea - • M ' we dfo, crufnble to Ihe ground, • tfiotigh we refu$eM se9. ' Dtts ntke wind, all.we are ' is dust in the windy - Don ' t han n p ifffflasts forever • . but eqrthprjd kil A. - ' wl, . JN ■•  ' l ' t MARK SCHULT2 - ENGINEER 182 If we weren ' t all a little crazy, we ' d have all gone insane. ' . mm ' .- - - m ' - ■m - kim - ; ' ' ' v- Glenn Sasagawa Physics geophjnics iK ' 7fte t9 ' U«l H ' P€ T Mickey Bitsko, a personality that came to us through Jim Cummings from a high school near Porterville. He barely survived freshman year by turning in a minimum of homework assignments and taking an occasional test. He was renowned for being intergrated by parts and sidewalk skiing in the original version of the Cross-your- crotch jock. Sophomore year, Mickey managed to pass a few P-Chem problems, but the class load proved too great and Mickey passed into obscurity. However, before his disappearance, Mickey left behind a legacy and a new style of fashion in eye glasses. im Welcome to the General Dynamics . . , oops! Wendy Duckworth introducing Northrop Clinic Presentation a; o « JO|!es ..sBnjQ,, aiji sa|jen3 ' ii «oji(n,uoa To Exaggerate the Truth; Charles Polk as Dean Gann Pete Jaeger as Ursula! Up . Sam the Cockatiel o ° -g a u Z ' a 8 . 5 w •° - n o z = ' H : 3 S-x- r. 3 3 2 Q l VE KA OM WHERE WE ' RE GOING WEST SOUTH o o 3 3 -► at i € a 3 5 ' a. C Zt £ fO -o fl c a oi o -S ■ o , t— 3 41 o O. n3 -£ r -.« .u It ' s easy to multiply by 6; just remember Ihe rhyming rule: 6 times 6 Is 36. 6 times 7 IS , . , Mike Sailor EAST NORTH HARVEY MUDD COLLEGE CLASS OF ' 83 V S P 3 5 ' O A ' ' ' .S l ' 60 S ' o J c,cO ' What! ' ?! Ian McCutcheon A„ V ' CQ. :fe. % ' r 4 GR N. 0861 J oQ ls V jazuaQ iisjj ajiwasno)-) uiJOQ Remember Nathan and Cat-bowling If bits are binary digits, what arc tertiary digits? Ross Watkins in Digital Logic Attendance is not necessary in this class. Prof, Williams A 0 .v ' . .: o o. B, O 3 . - er ..• S 3 ??-3 - rt % TO fm.vu-- ' 1 He was the most influential writer of his f time — and even before ' hat. „ , , Prof. Sanders 185 THE CLR55 DF Ha3  1 I . ,1 ; ' y y, . ■. m. ' Here they were — Frosh in 1980 IN MEMORIAM Cynthia Abbott Steve Alter John Apodaca Jason Bloomberg David Browning Dave Burse Shen-Chia Chen Gitfon Cheung Se Yong Chon ' Sterling Chow Ken Cline James Cummings Greg DeHaan Kristi Denzer Fred Dosher Seth Foerster Dave Gardner John Husdale Van Johnson ' Han Chon Kang Henry Kapteyn Vipada Kasemsri Leslie Kirby Nicoline Kiwiet Kaveh Kohani Ki Chul Lee Ken Lindner ' Milton Lum 188 Here they remain — Seniors in 1983 Dean Luvisa Ali Manoochehrian Stephen Masjoan Brian McDonald Gil Milbauer Calvin Miles Tajchai Navapanich Howard Newberg John O ' Leary Neil Ormos Peter Oswald Sandra Phillips Alfred Pugsley Kris Sakaitani Frank Sanders Yvette Sasseen Steve Schnniesing ' Frank Schwab Marc SimmeJ Jaehee Song Patrick Thomas Michael Todd David Whitehead Jeff Williams Randall Woo ' There ' s still hope! 189 Lucas ■ Othello Morel Shahin ••Sharif Bakhshandeh •Big BobTanaka •niif;{nm — Rustom Nagar Walla SHME 190 Hector the Uriit Vector ' Gonzalez hen life ' s waters get rou nd HMC wears you thin, Uust come to the blood And we ' ll push you in! Ihe last Bom Brfoiu Rrtch hcid President — Gordon Borneman Sacrificial Cat Memo Board — Nancy Young Very Graphic Designer — Mark Pitchford Token Whittierite — Dan Adent President of Vice — Jeff Graham Showering Favorite — Heidi Kirkpatrick Production Manager — Ross LaFetra Lead Boogity — Boogity — Larry Roll 191 m.aM. K. ' : MK . - A Six Year Tradition Joe Anderberg Mala Arthur Jerry Bakin Joel Berendzen Greg Bollon Chuck Carlino Kevin Carosso Jim Dodd Wendy Duckworth Bob Fisch Ned Freed Ka thleen Garza Jon Gayle Howard Gifford Dave Gonda Jeff Graham Shelley Griffith Holly Harris Holly Henninger Mike Hundley Betty Johnson Mark Johnson Pam Kincaid Bob Kossler Burt Lamoureux Jodi Lamoureux Sue Larson Kurt Lieberman Bob Litjen Todd Lituirn Wendy Lopez Maggie Lok Sharon Lunt Ed McClanahan Kevin McLaren Mark Moehring Martha Morton Grace Nakayama Kevin Nay Allen Nelson Dale Neverman Dave Overoye Scott Pace Dick Pappas Nancy Phillips Andy Pineda Mike Roberts Annette Rogers Glenn Sasagawa Randy Saunders Nan Sherer JohnShockley MarcSimmel Brad Slettene Dean Smith Keith Smith Dan Stritch Brian Szemenyei Mark Terris Gayle Trager Susan Turner Wayne Ung Ken Van Emden Karen Bogel Jim Wall Morgan Wesson Julie Wolf Phil Wolf Plus irregular visitors too numerous to mention. 192 Getting through four years of HMC could have been an impossible task without friends to help us along. Learning became easier and (almost) enjoyable in groups, we took trips together, and shared a common release for our tensions. Here ' s to good friends and four years of fun! small, white and moving very fast! xmwHmtamKi--. Executive 194 They were legends in their own minds ■MMttM . . . .J4ere we come, u aOtin down tne itreel vUe get ike j-unniesl Cooka from everyone we meet, Me lM. 1 We ' re iL WuJJer -Mnd people 6au we muaale around out we re too ouiu Ainginq to put angbodg down . . . '  ♦, iierfung iflSalaboo 94H-0 Sobo iCerutn 195 T il We have got the watts. Brain Damage Suite The ghost of b. hits yet to come. Man, I need a bong hit! Homework sucks! I need a beer. Frosty the snowman. The Party Continues!!! Brewmeister to the rescue! Jack is your friend. Say High! Grow your own! WiEAmm IS-RLL OkI EVE I H(b0w OF THE KJPtf w eecelbec ' arty for the pass out. Drink for the toss. 196 THE 1 983 SPECTRUM STAFF HERE ' S TO US! Editor-in-Chief: Laura Merritt Business Manager: Lance Clifner Clubs and Activities Editor: Mark Pitchford Copy Editor: Bill Hovingh Faculty Editor: Karl Flueckiger Photography Editors: Anthony Jacob Milton Lum Senior Page Editor: Carolyn Wetzel Here ' s to us . . . for making 3 deadlines on time; for making the budget work; for working together to make this yearbook the best we could. Here ' s to Anthony who worked even harder than i did, and always came through; to Milton who managed to shoot just a few spectacular pictures; to Carolyn for working hard and offer- ing a shoulder to cry on in times of need; to Mark for putting up with some unreasonalbe bitching; to Karl for sticking to the job even though I suckered him into it; to Bill who wrote some wonderful copy, even at 3 am:; to Lance for all that money that kept (ke eps) up from bankrupcy; to all the photographers for im- measurable help; and to me for keeping my sanity. Here ' s to all the lists; to ail the jokes; to all those unprintable captions; to the brain-storming during tickle fights; to staying up till 5 a.m. waiting for pictures; to breeding blank pages; to being uptight and nervous; to Rose and rum; to heart balloons; to pizza on yearbook funds; to undone homework; to working together; to having a good time. Most of all here ' s to being WELL-ROUNDED!!! CHEERS! I 197 WILLING PHOTOGRAPHERS: Doug Ray, Rod Morimoto, Peter Reichert, Gordon Borneman, Alan Teruya, Louis Kuo, Marc Simmel, Brian Gragg, and Shelley Mitchell. Thanks for all your hard work, especially on the few last minute details! 198 Shelley Mitchell Taking if easy! The MEN of HMC! Mark Pitchford and Gordon Borneman. Laura Merritt She satisfies them all! Milton Lum At home in the dark. Marc Slmmel You want a picture of What? 199 LITTLE BLACK DOG 1983 AMANDA MINIERI Legend has it that a small black Scottie of lascivious temperament haunted North Dorm in 1972. This truly enterprising creature was not dismayed by the scarcity of suitable canines at Mudd; it attempted to make out with benches, warts, bicycle wheels, people ' s legs, etc. Annually, the frosh who is the most obnoxious to Mudders in general and the opposite sex in particular is elected Little Black Dog by the North Dorm Seniors. PAST WINNERS: 1972 - ALAN DAVIS 1973 - KEEVIN MISHIMA 1974 - KARL SHIMADA 1975 - KARL MOERDER 1976 - JAMES BARBER 1977 - JEFF SILVERMAN 1978 - MITCH REIDER 1979 - CATHY MEYER 1980 - DAVE BURSE 1981 - ANNETTE ROGERS 1982 - FRED ELSNER 200 CLOSING WRAPPING IT UP. . . If anything is constant from year to year, it ' s change; this is as true at Mudd as anywhere else. 1982-83 had its share of arrivals and depar- tures; things we thought were fixtures are gone, and we ' ve been surprised by some of the things that have come to replace them. Physically, Mudd is a different place now. Who will forget the Decemeber storm that did a major landscaping job by felling some of our favorite trees? Apparently, Mother Nature decided to get into the redecorating, to go along with the new look at East (a.k.a. Mildred Mudd) Dorm, the improved word processing facilities, the revamped physics labs, and the bigger (you want me to pay 11,000 whats?!?). better bills. ASHMC moved their offices. ar]d even the mathematicians got into the act, translating axes to the freshl]; remodeled (and not a minute too early) Libra wing, lounge and all. And what should move into the empty space at Kingston but our very own Admissions Office (on the HMC campus for the first time), complete with a brand new Dean of Admissions; Duncan Mur- doch, lately of the Rose-Hulman Institute of Snow Sports (you know, Ski Terre Haute ), replaces Dean Emery Walker, who admitted us ALL (that means you. too, VH). 202 Also missing from the Administration line-up are Tim Johnson and Marilea Price, while the faculty are sporting two new faces, Professors Brodt and Goldstein. A very popular face won ' t be around next fall, to our dismay; this is Diana Cozzi ' s third and last year at Mudd. But it ' s not just the people and the campus that have changed — some real fixtures are gone, too. Noticed how hard it is to get you hair wet these days? Last fall saw the end of that venerable (if thoroughly disgusting) tradition, Whirling. And who was it that turned Noisy Hours into Sing Along with Mr. Fred Hour? (I told you there ' d be trouble if we let a house into the neighborhood.) But to make up for our loss we got ourselves a nice two-dorm bash, the South-West C!onnection. And for the revenge hungry, room-moving enjoyed something of a vogue. Then again, some things never change, it ' s Sunday night, and I gotta do my math . . . a continuing Cycle 203  ■•,■;-.. = « '  . . ' i In an endeavor to show how truly well-rounded the students of Harvey Mudd College are, we shot this picture. The individuals in this picture all have one thing in common, they go to HMC. However, this is where the resemblance stops. Each of these people have their own ideas of fun that lie outside school work. These are the partiers, skiers, sailors, sportsmen, and general funlovers that make HMC well-rounded. 205 WHY NOT SQUARE? Contrary to local opinion, Harvey Mudd students really are well-rounded. Not surprisingly, it was planned to be that way; in the 1950 ' s. Harvey S, Mudd, then chairman of the Board of Fellows of the Claremont Colleges and an internationally known mining engineer, decided that a college was needed which stress- ed science and engineering but didn ' t neglect the humanities and social sciences. The plans for such a college were well under way when Harvey Mudd died; the college was founded on December 14, 1955 on the Claremont Colleges campus and named in honor of the man who inspired it. Today Harvey Mudd College students find themselves getting a thorough grounding in all the sciences to round out the major program, while at the same time taking a substantial number of courses in the humanities and social sciences, including a concen- tration in a particular area. They end up being more well- rounded, academically, than students at other technical institutions. While academics are important to Harvey Mudders, they don ' t stay permanently chained to their desks. A donation made by Henry Mudd, Harvey ' s son, in 1956, made possible a joint athletics program with Claremont Men ' s College; this has grown to become the Claremont-Mudd-Scripps program in which many Mudders participate. For those not inclined towards inter- collegiate competition, there are intramural sports essentially year-round; and minimum P.E. requirements have been establish- ed for all students, on the presumption that ani one who lives in Southern California should know how to run and swim. But well-roundedncss doesn ' t stop with academics and athletics. It ' s been said that every Mudder has a hobby ; the variety of hobbies seen a Mudd would probably surprise anyone who didn ' t know a college student (and maybe a few who did). All things considered, we think Harvey Mudd would be pleased with the well-rounded people his college has produced. 206 PATRONS MR. AND MRS. JOHN E. FOSTER MR. AND MRS. DONALD MILLS MR. AND MRS. DAVID P. MILLER II SALLY JONES LOIS AND JACK SPIELMAN DELBERT AND DOREEN MASON DAVID AND JEANETTE GOLD DR. AND MRS. JOHN M. REICHERT MR. AND MRS. AL CABRAL FRANKLIN A. PHRANER ERICH AND GISELA JAEGER DONNA AND JOE OSHIRO MR. AND MRS. JOHN T. KIRKPATRICK ERVIN AND MELODIE ANN HELM CHARLES AND MARY ANN MILLER T. J. OVERLEY MR. AND MRS. JERRY B. STEPMAN ROY AND MARTHA HANSEN MR. AND MRS. THOMAS M. MCDONOUGH MR. AND MRS. JOSEPH B. GONDEK RICHARD AND JANNA HUNDLEY FRED AND LISA SPENCE EDWARD T. MONAHAN MR. IBRAHIM MOHD TAIB YUEN SANG SO MR. AND MRS. TAKAO NIIYA MR. AND MRS. LOUIS S. QUAN IVAN AND LILLY PAVKOVIC JACK WAGGONER WILLIAM GANN MRS. EVELYN SANDUSKY MR. AND MRS. JOHN D. MORTON WILMA L. BURNETTE MR. AND MRS. DEAN E. STEPHAN 208 PATRONS LARRY AND ALICE CLIFNER TODD HONDA MR. AND MRS. MIKE C. TANAKA MR. AND MRS. KOO MING CHEE MR. AND MRS. HOWARD CRITCHELL MR. AND MRS. JOHN F. WITTMOND MR. AND MRS. PAUL MADISON SHANKLIN MR. JAND MRS. TIMOTHY E. DICKINSON MR. AND MRS. ED LACHMAN MR. AND MRS. GEORGE BENZON MR. AND MRS. D. KENNETH BAKER E. H. CLARK, JR. HENRY T. MUDD MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM MCILROY JOHN AND BETTY MERRITT MR. AND MRS. CHARLES L. RICHARDSON MR. AND MRS. EDWARD J. MCGOWAN VH REGISTRAR ' S OFFICE ENGINEERING DEPARTMANT ENGINEERING CLINIC JANE M. MAGRAS JOHN TOWNSEND FAMILY OF MITCHELL J. SIMPSON KRAUSE AND DIMARE, M.D., INC. REVON AND JOANNE WOLF MR. AND MRS. C. GENE BAKER CAROL AND SAM TANENBAUM SEVEN SEVEN MR. AND MRS. WARREN YOUNG MR. J. B. TATA the YEARBOOK staff ANONYMOUS 209 ELECTRONIC ENGINEERS MECHANICAL ENGINEERS DESIGN ENGINEERS OUR CHALLENGE IS IMAGINATIOIM. It takes creative vision to bring progress about. At Perkin-Elnner. we provide the opportunities and the environment in v hich technology becomes responsive to the needs of the future. PERKIN ELMER THE PERKIN-ELMER CORPORATION AEROSPACE DIVISION 2771 N. Garey Avenue. Pomona. CA 91767 An Equal Opportunity Employer M F ADMINISTRATORS TECHNICIANS CLERICAL AND OFFICE WORKERS  M 210 ' 83 ' 83 ' 83 ' 83 ' 83 ' 83 ' 83 ' 83 I3d 83 Everett Charles 83 6101 Cherry Avenue )ntana, CA923; (714)899-2411 ,g3 Fontana, CA 92335 .g Congratulations to the Class of 1983 203 Yale Avenue Claremont (714) 626-3501 Member FDIC 211 i ammoLBi mn ! 280 Garden Set Guest Rooms and Suites Heated Pool and Jacuzzi Indian Hill Dining Room Sunday Champagne Brunch 10am-2pm Sunday Gourmet Buffet 5pm-9pm Cocktail Lounge with Live Entertainment Shell Station 4pm-7pm (Seafood Priced at cost) Smorgasbord — Bakery Old School House (20 Variety Shops) Conference Center — Meeting Facilities Banquet — Wedding Arrangements Week-end Art Fair 555 Foothill Blvd. 626-2411 Claremont YOU DON ' T KNOW HOW GOOD DONUTS CAN BE UNTIL YOU ' VE TRIED FOSTER ' S! West on Foothill to Glenclora(213)335-9111 212 RED BARON PIZZA in the Muddhole Haruex; Mudd College ext. 3158 Hours 6:00 12:00 Midnight Dai y Good Luck Best Wishes Class of 1983 from MARY WALLY HOLMGREN LIQUORAMA 875 W. Foothill Blvd. 985-3131 THIS SPACE FOR RENT (STILL) 213 Senior Index Adofo. Max Anderberg, Joe Ash. K. Patrick Burse, Dave Chang, Enson Cheung, Gitfon Chu, Helen Chun, Given Cliff, Roger Clifner. Lance Cloonan, Kevin Curzon, Chris de Gyarfus, Victor Deifik, Jeff Dickenson, Pete Drwinga, Randy Duckworth, Wendy Dunaetz, Dave Eichmann, Donald Flanders, Michael Fujise, Lynn Gifford, Howard Gondek, Mark Graves, John Greene, Emily Greenfield, Jeff Gudzikowski, Dcnise Hamilton, Doug Hammond, Brian Hansen, Glenn Harding, Mike Higa, Peter Hoffman, Jim Holland, Bob Hoover, Dan Hu, Frank Hundley, Mike Jaeger, Pete Katayama, Andrew Kenya, Bill Krause, Bill Kulik, Geoff CToto ) Lachman, Max Lee, Albert Lopez, Wendy Lunt, Sharon 92 Magras. Mike 153 McCarthy, Rex 103 McCoy, Mark 160 McCutcheon, Ian 164 McDuffie, Greg 123 McLaren, Kevin 113 Miller, Linda 165 Miller, Suzanne 149 Miyaoka, Robert 104 Moehring, Mark 94 Morton, Martha 102 Nakayama, Grace 111 Nelson, Allen 143 Niiya, Brian 176 Overoye, David 127 Paddock, Mark 106 Peckham, Scott 95 Polk, Charles 105 Quan, Stella 167 Rcichert, Peter 154 Roederer, Mario 124 Ryan, John 99 Sailor, Mike 157 Sanchez, Mike 139 Sasagawa, Glenn 161 Schultz, Mark 122 Simmel, Marc 114 Simpson, Mitch 133 Smith, Ron 156 Stanfill, Dan 162 Streitz, Fred 96 Szemenyei, Brian 97 Takebayashi, Donn 140 Teruya, Alan 125 Thomas, Jim 181 Tobin, Vincent 137 Trisno, Rita 130 Urbina, Fernando 115 Valencia, Ramon 179 Vance, Leonard 93 Voelzke, Joel 121 Watkins, Ross 141 Williams, Colin 135 Wittmond, Rob 107 Wolf. Phil 155 Wolff, Peter 146 145 119 142 128 98 163 109 180 177 138 136 100 129 116 170 178 172 118 144 152 171 168 175 183 182 174 120 117 166 169 147 132 101 110 126 112 113 150 173 158 108 148 134 159 151 214 I I CONTENTS: % Round About 1 •% opening The Huh of the Wheel faculty 17 The Ruling Sphere administration staff 33 Not for Squares clubs activities 39 Havmg a Ball sports 61 The Students Hemisphere dorms Spiraling Upward classes The Last Round 69 81 89 JMb fl P ,| B| t lP nlr ;-2 E ' ;. ' 1 ' 1 seniors ' Rolling in Dough ads 205 I J.


Suggestions in the Harvey Mudd College - Spectrum Yearbook (Claremont, CA) collection:

Harvey Mudd College - Spectrum Yearbook (Claremont, CA) online collection, 1971 Edition, Page 1

1971

Harvey Mudd College - Spectrum Yearbook (Claremont, CA) online collection, 1983 Edition, Page 104

1983, pg 104

Harvey Mudd College - Spectrum Yearbook (Claremont, CA) online collection, 1983 Edition, Page 62

1983, pg 62

Harvey Mudd College - Spectrum Yearbook (Claremont, CA) online collection, 1983 Edition, Page 161

1983, pg 161

Harvey Mudd College - Spectrum Yearbook (Claremont, CA) online collection, 1983 Edition, Page 35

1983, pg 35

Harvey Mudd College - Spectrum Yearbook (Claremont, CA) online collection, 1983 Edition, Page 33

1983, pg 33


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