Kansas State University - Royal Purple Yearbook (Manhattan, KS)
- Class of 1976
Page 1 of 502
Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 502 of the 1976 volume:
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Kansas state university manhattan, kansas volume 67 Royal Purple 1976 editor in chief lll d managing editor business editor deb sports editor tad thompson feat acai contents SpO: koti features 14 academics 120 organizations . . 140 sports 206 s housing 286 It is easy in the world to live after the world ' s opinion; it is easy in solitude to live after our own; but the great man is he who in the midst of the crowd keeps with per- fect sweetness the independence of solitude. from essay on self-reliance Ralph Waldo Emerson 6 introduction Self-reliance. Think of it and what comes to mind? Paint-thirsty barns that still stand despite broken boards, or weather-mangled cottonwoods. All seemingly indestructible structures the unshakably sturdy. Humanize it and what appears? Old people with their lives etched in creased faces and callused hands. Or the scarred. Outliving it all, overcoming life. Self-reliance, or literally relying on the self. Can a student know self-reliance while exist- ing under the protection of a glass university? introduction 7 Self-reliance and the student. Relying on the self, not looking to others for direction or example. Nonconforming. Students are familiar with nonconforming. They ' ve grown up with the subject having be your own true person pounded into their minds by the media. In university surroundings, a student is ide- ally offered all alternatives. Involvement or apathy. Socialization or isolation. Piety or atheism. Sophistication orcrassness. But, in seeking what is right for one ' s self, can a student march into the conformity of not conforming? Did the same media screaming be one ' s own true self also illustrate the college stu- dent ? Have all available categories been pre- selected? Collegiate stereotypes do exist. 8 introduction introduction 9 10 intioduction What about K-State? Cowboys, Jesus freaks, farmer jocks, home economics majors looking for husbands are there any bona fide originals in existence? Undoubtedly, the original free-spirit was caught in a deluge of pseudo-grubby types, wearing mass-produced army surplus. As well, the first sincere devoutee shouted praises only to hear a resounding echo from the thundering Bible-tote rs behind. Their u- nique invention was copied unmercifully to the point of monotony or commonplace. But it is important that some people once relied on their own resources not another ' s manufactured identity. introduction 1 1 12 introduction And what of an identity? Labels are tagged to the merchandise at K-State as fast as in any media. Everyone from southeast Kansas is a hick something a kid from Kansas City is above, or not aware of. Typical? Perhaps only to those comfortable with prefabricated molds, and those with the need to shape oth- ers into such. But if one wants to stray seek another level then confidence in one ' s self helps. Maybe the new level cannot be justified by others, but then they aren ' t living it. Self-reliance. If it ' s there, then no pre- imposed caste can set binding limitations. Why shouldn ' t a Kansas City student fi nd cowboy boots and a down-filled vest a good fit? introduction 13 r features iL. 14 res -16 Hickory sticks thrash results of ' new school ' by Scott Kraft I ' d trade it all four years of drinking, dating, party- ing, cramming, sleeping, and eating sporadically for one honest-to-goodness classroom. A classroom with real tests essay tests, and a classroom with real lectures demanding appropriate recitation, are the things I ' ve spent my undergraduate thesis looking for. In short, a classroom from the old school of education. Oh, for 50 minutes of Socratic training. Stretching the mind, searching for an answer that ' s there, but not obvious. Even though the answers are there they may differ from person to person there ' s knowledge to be gained from the stretching. And that ' s what we as education consumers need a lot of mind stretching. But instead, we are permeated for four years of col- lege, and most likely four years of high school, with lis- tening labs, appreciation courses, superficial current events discussions, and pud class projects. That ' s right the junk food of education. The word pud , as attributed to easy classes, has almost grown meaningless with overuse. It is now possible, with the help of modern technol- ogy and all that, to go through four years of higher education and emerge unblemished with not one stretch mark on the mind. How can one get into this great sport we call college? It ' s not difficult to get in, or to stay in. And with a pleas- ing personality and a charismatic aura, you can go far in college. 16 education There is one problem educators can ' t explain away personality and charisma don ' t always pay the bills. Besides, it ' s hard to be dignified and have self-respect when you ' re flat on your face after graduation. Businesses are yelling, though. They charge col- leges and universities with graduating ill-prepared stu- dents. ACT scores are telling the real story, while rising grades are giving the educators fallacious arguments for their case. Grades are skyrocketing with little or no concurrent increase in student ability as gauged by standardized tests. Standardized test scores are reaching all-time lows around the country. The indictment is true of at least a handful of educa- tors in virtually every U.S. college. Where did the classes go? Relaxed grading policies keep students from competing. It works, all right stu- dents couldn ' t give a damn about schoolwork. But students aren ' t stupid. If the teachers don ' t give them enough to do, they ' ll find something. Usually, that something begins with Aggie and ends with bars . More brains are lost in urinals than in any other place. I used to think the forces for traditional education had been pushed all the way back to high school. But the seeping education made fun syndrome is biting heavily there, and casualties are becoming numerous. First it was history and English courses in high school. Next thing you know, it ' ll be science. Turn up the beat, an uncomfortable student says. Yes, sir, answers the instructor, whose salary is dipped from a federal grant for experimental high schooT education. But we really must get to the busi- ness of teaching you all how to run a projector that ' s important in the real world, you know. How I long for that junior high school science teacher we thought was a sadist. He would open all the windows in the classroom for a test. As the teen-degree air briskly filled the room he would remark, with a smile, You perform better when the room ' s cooler. It was funny, though it always worked. But you didn ' t waste time on questions you couldn ' t answer. Nevertheless, we learned something from that teacher. He expected, and got, attention from his sev- enth grade classes. We didn ' t dare turn away or close our eyes for fear a piece of white chalk might come zip- ping by our ears. No monkey business in that class. But perhaps the great educational joke goes back even further than junior high. Grade schools are afraid to teach the basics, or rather too timid to make the stu- dent learn what he or she must know. As more than one high school and college teacher has remarked, These kids can ' t even read. If they can ' t read, what can they get out of college classrooms where a premium is put on communication of ideas and thinking? Not very much. And that ' s what has been the catalyst of alternative learning and the mindless class. A graduate without stretch marks isn ' t going to be questioning much of anything particularly the edu- cation that bores him. I want to be able to ask those questions. education 1 7 18 k-slale union K-State ' s Union celebrated its twenti- eth birthday on March 6 and it ' s come a long way from the barracks which housed a makeshift coffee shop of the 40s. Students began paying into the building fund in 1 941 . Five dollars were extracted from their student fees each semester a sum comparable to $22 each semester according to 1 976 val- ues. World War II and the Korean War interrupted the fund raising, however, and it was not until 1 954 that construc- tion began. Two years later K-Staters replaced the stand-by coffee shop with a building that offered a small recrea- tion area, food service operations, an activities center, and an information desk. Two additional periods of construc- tion in 1961 and 1968 provided the Union with a recreation area that dou- bled the size of the original area, expanded the activities center, added the K, S, and U ballrooms, and made the Union the facility it is to K-Staters today. Union lab draws rush crowd by Jerri Phillips It was 8:45 am. I was late and I knew it. So did the rest of my lab table. Nobody comes late for Union labs, and now I ' d have to pay the consequences. In three years I had never spent more than a few minutes in the Union between classes. But this semester, I was stuck j with a half hour here, two hours there, and time off on Fridays to show my good behavior off elsewhere. But now I was late, and facing the group was going to : be ugly. Maybe they ' ll be easy on me, I told myself as I ran across campus. First offenders get off easy. Maybe Mr. Monitor won ' t be there today, I tried to convince myself as I opened the front door of the Union. But all my hopes melted to the floor as I walked through the cafeteria doors and saw his beady eyes looking just at me underneath the bill of a Chester White 1 hog hat. I squared my shoulders, swal- lowed hard, and began my death march i to the table. You ' re late, Phillips! came the booming voice of Mr. Monitor. Nobody ' s late at this table! Nobody! he shouted, slamming a rolled-up 1974 Collegian on the edge of the table. I closed my eyes and shuttered inside. In the few weeks I had been to Union lab, I had learned to hate that Collegian. Whenever one of us forgot why or how he had become table monitor, he would unroll that paper and show the finished crossword puzzle completed in record time of 16.5 minutes. What ' s your excuse? he yelled, slamming the paper down on the table top again. I knew I had to play it cool so I sat down and decided to try my luck. Sorry, I said, rubbing my sweaty palms together. I was signing up for credit-no credit. That ended last week! he screamed, this time drawing noticeable stares from the other lab tables. Not for Union labs, I said. My fellow lab partners, who had been trying to fin- ish today ' s crossword puzzle within Mr. Monitor ' s 20-minute time limit, stopped writing and looked up at me. What a per- son wouldn ' t do for an audience, I thought. Please Mr. Monitor, don ' t kick me out of the Union! I pleaded. Where will I go? What will I do between classes? If you throw me out, I ' ll lose the 10 hours of credit I just signed up for my Union labs. Please, Mr. Monitor! I was on my knees . by now and Mr. Monitor was looking at me with a confused stare. I decided to push my luck a little further. The ladies at the Office of Continuing Education were really nice to me, I said. After I found out I met the four-hour-a- week minimum requirement for Union lab credit, they issued me a discount card for food and drinks bought during labs, assigned me a tutor for crossword puzzle help, and even fixed my transcript. Mr. Monitor pushed his Chester White hog hat back on his head with the news- paper and listened for more. I was ready to deliver the final blow. Besides, Mr. Monitor, now I ' ll be able to graduate a semester early. And they ' re even making it retroactive. For every hour of Union lab spent since 1974, you get one half of a credit. One lady said I could ' ve graduated a semester ago if I would have come in earlier. I ' d just begun another sentence when the table emptied in seconds and a mad dash through the cafeteria doors toward the continuing education office was in progress. In his haste to collect what was rightfully his, Mr. Monitor had left his sacred Chester White crown and vintage Collegian. I picked up the hat and placed it on my head. Slamming the rolled-up newspaper on the table, I could feel the power. It felt good. I then picked up a cur- rent Collegian and spied an unfinished crossword puzzle. By the wall clock it was 9:05. Leaving lab early, without my permis- sion, and not finishing the puzzle, I said to myself. That ' s inexcusable! I slammed the Collegian down hard on the table and smiled. And they thought they had it rough before. k-state union 1 9 20 anderson bell tower Attic belfry echoes heritage by Rita Shelley A student of the early part of the cen- tury would surely be lost on today ' s K- State campus. Who would have thought cornfields could sprout all those build- ings? What possible logic could have contributed to converting the Domestic Sciences Building into a home for the geology and geography departments? Many campus buildings house differ- ent facilities today than they were origi- nally built for. Anderson Hall, formerly the Main College Building , contained a chapel back in days gone by. It also had the early 1900 ' s answer to today ' s stu- dent union: a canteen. And may the male students of those days never forget an important concession offered by Ander- son the haircut. There is one feature of Anderson Hall that still exists in its near-original form the legendary old bell. Pigeon droppings notwithstanding, it is now used only to announce commencement exercises. Any visitor expecting a bell tower just like in the movies won ' t be disappointed by rickety stairs reaching to eerie heights and a view of too much distance between up here and down there . Flashes of headlines reading, Student Falls From Umpteenth Floor Window D oesn ' t Live To Tell Story come to mind. Several students of earlier days found their ways to the upper reaches of Ander- son from time to time. Their business, not necessarily official, was probably con- ducted at odd hours of the night. One prank, attributed to a group of sopho- mores, involved stealing the bell clapper. Perhaps they were sentenced to herding the sheep brought to Anderson lawn to control dandelions? What has been described as a chilling experience for the bell happened when wintertime pranksters turned the bell upside-down and filled it with water dur- ing the 1 870s. Rumor has it that custodi- ans had to light a fire under it to melt the ice. Another time, the bell failed to ring when rags were tied around the clapper, producing only silence during the early morning hours when it usually sounded. Not only a victim of intentional pranks, the bell suffered accidental damage in a 1968 fire attributed to faulty wiring. More trauma was experienced by the squirrels, though, than the tower itself, Vince Cool, of the planning department, said. During the late 50s and early 60s, it was a custodian ' s job to ring the bell, sig- naling the approach of 8 am and 1 pm classes. One such custodian, Mark Riat, described this aspect of his job to the Collegian several years ago. ' Every morning there are pigeons in the tower, ' he said. They aren ' t any hap- pier about being awakened at 7:45 am than a lot of students. They fly out when the bell begins clanging, but are always back when I go to work again at 12:55 pm ' . The bell hasn ' t always been in Ander- son ' s attic. Donated by eastern philan- thropist Joseph Ingalls in 1861, it was first housed in the Bluemont Central Col- lege building. It was moved in 1875 to Farm Machinery Hall, which was located near Burt Hall. When the central part of Anderson was completed in 1882, the bell was installed in the belfry where it remains today. A K-State historian, Charles M. Correll, told the Collegian in 1960 that the bell once rang every hour to signal the begin- ning and end of classes since time pieces were not common in those days. What had been a tradition at K-State became history in 1965 when the old bell was replaced by an electronic carillon. Presented by Mr. and Mrs. Ralf Hockens in appreciation for Kansas State ' s serv- ice to us, and to the people and the state of Kansas, it put Ingalls ' s gift into retire- ment. Contrary to popular belief, no hunch- backed centenarians are responsible for the music coming from the carillon. Instead, it consists of an electronic sys- tem with 98 bells that are struck by tiny hammers to produce sound. Rolls of music, similar to those used on a player piano, are used. Ken Heywood, director of the Endow- ment Association, decides what music to play, Marge Van Buren, EA secretary, said. He chooses from about 80 selec- tions that have been donated by campus groups. Besides playing every hour and half- hour, the carillon has been used for longer recitals. John Klein, a world- renowned carillonneur, played a dedica- tory recital on it in 1966. Occasionally, the bells announce a wedding in Dan- forth Chapel. Time marches on. And changes come with its passing. The Avi-Tron pigeon controller installed in Anderson has sent former feathered inhabitants to new roosts. The Anderson barbershop no longer exists. Barbers of those days would be hard put to fulfill requests for fros and other styled haircuts of today. Telling time has been of paramount importance to people since the sundial. Perhaps all would be better off not worry- ing about being there before the bell rings. But time is here to stay. Somewhere the green freshie will metamorphosize into a seasoned senior. Can ' t stay in school forever , kid. Whether appreciated or not, Anderson cupola melodies are there as a reminder of time ' s passing. anderson bell lower 21 -as 22 the entertainers the entertainers MARCEL MARCEAU Besides several heralding thumps before the curtains opened, the performer remained silent. That wasn ' t unusual the performer was Marcel Marceau, world-renowned French pantomimist, who entertained an overflow McCain Auditorium audience March 19. The mime of Marceau described in a gesture what volumes of words have failed to express. Marceau exemplified this when he acted out the biblical story of Genesis in his moving ballet, Creation of the world . Equally expressive and beautiful was his interpretation of the life cycle of mankind from birth to death in Youth, Old Age, and Death . In a lighter vein, Marceau donned the scruffy, flower-trimmed hat and striped shirt of Bip, his alter-ego creation to whom every kind of misfortune, big and small, seemed to happen. Some such adventures were a tipsy jaunt at a society party, failure to tame a stubborn lion, and a shaky experience on the high-wire as a trapeze artist with second thoughts. There were split-second character changes as he played both parts in a re- enactment of the biblical story of David and Goliath. Topping off the evening, Marceau per- formed his classic, The Maskmaker . While trying on his collection of masks, the maskmaker gets a mask stuck on his face a smiling one. With his face trap- ped in an obnoxious grin, he tries desper- ately to pull the stubborn mask off his face. SEALS AND CROFTS A crowd waited impatiently April 4 as the last ech- oes of the jazz back-up band died in the corners of Ahearn Field House. People twisted in their seats, straining for the first glimpse of the pair which was to perform. A few people sitting on the floor stood up to stretch their legs after the first 20-min- ute set. And then they appeared Jimmy Seals and Dash Crofts. I ' ll Play For You broke the applause which greeted them and introduced their 90 minutes of music. Approximately 4,000 fans were treated to a varied musical format, including jazz, pop, and bluegrass. Well-known hits such as Summer Breeze , Diamond Girl , and We May Never Pass This Way Again mingled throughout the concert. A jazz number, Wisdom , allowed the pair to improvise with saxophone and drums. Hog callin ' music in the second half of the concert brought the crowd to its feet, with enthusiasm staying high until the performance ' s end. After the concert, Seals and Crofts reappeared on the stage to explain their religious faith, Baha ' i, a belief that all reli- gions come from God and all people are of one family. JEFFERSON STARSHIP April 17, 1975 will never hold a prominent place in K-State ' s history. It was the day of a dou- ble-bill concert at Ahearn Field House Jefferson Starship was the main attrac- tion, with Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen starting the show. Only 2,000 people attended, many of whom were not K-State students. The anxious crowd, sporting long hair and beads, smoked pot while they waited to be entertained. Commander Cody played an hour-long set. All were on their feet clapping and snapping fingers to Hot Rod Lincoln , Lost in the Ozone Again , Riot in Cell Block Number 9 , and Down to Seeds and Stems Again Blues . Commander Cody, with his excellent country-swing style on the keyboards, helped the crowd along. When the spotlights illuminated Grace Slick, Paul Kanter, and Papa John Creech, spines began to tingle. There they were, the veterans. Ten years together as a sign of the times: from their beginnings in 1965, their music has not only expounded upon, but helped shape and mold the youth culture during one of the most controversial and importan t decades of this century. Marti Balin, who had taken a back seat to Paul Kantner during the Jefferson Air- plane days, has all but stepped into the lead male vocal part with Starship. He harmonized beautifully with Grace Slick on songs like Caroline and Dragonfly . Miracles , a soothing love song, was introduced to the crowd by Balin ' s rich tenor voice. Septuagenarian Papa John Creech, though slow in body, showed just how young in spirit he was by rocking with the best of them. His unique violin sound added depth and perspective to Starship ' s music. Times have changed, though, and so have the crowds and the music. It was only eight years ago that the Airplane played to half-a-million people on a farm in upstate New York. That was Wood- stock. Now only a small percentage of that Woodstock crowd remains. LILY TOMLIN With superb mimicry and daft characterizations, comedienne Lily Tomlin entertained two full-capacity audiences in her April 31 Forum Hall per- formance. Tomlin told the audience she had so many thoughts running through her mind she didn ' t know what to do with them. As a result, one-liners spiced her perform- ance. Lily brought along her best-known characters, such as Susy Sorority and the maiden from Ma Bell, Ernestine. And Edith Ann, the five-and-a-half-year-old pixie, who knows about and comments upon everything, was there. Lily also portrayed a 77-year-old female evangelist who preached boo- geying . The former member of the now defunct Laugh-In television series ram- bled on to satirize funerals, commercials, politics, sex, and even tasteful people. the entertainers 23 K-State has never been a trend-setter. And if one would care to expound on the subject K-State has never really been a trend-follower. The fact that streaking caught on in 1974 brought a blush of surprise to everyone ' s cheeks. But the following year ' s appearance of flying pies on campus took the cake. K-State had managed to catch on two years run- ning. As for future fool-hardy collegiate, fads well, America, K-State ' s eyes ' are finally open and upon you. , Cream pies soar, plastering ' paid for ' targets by Doug Fink Except for an unusually high attendance, the class appeared normal in all respects. The professor arranged his notes and the students waited for the lec- ture to begin. One student rose and approached the professor. Dr. Williams, my name is Jeff Pierce and this is for you. Moments later Pierce, senior in philosophy, was flee- ing as Dudley Williams, regents professor in physics, stood blinded his face plastered with pie. Creative Promotions had struck again, in reaction to a challenge by Ed Klimek, KMKF-FM coordinator, to bring the nationwide pie-throwing fad to K-State. We didn ' t think it would go at K-State, Pierce said, but it went over real big. The phone rang all hours of the night. Ironically, the first victim of the enterprise was Kli- mek, himself. Upon concluding an interview with Mike Rice, co-originator of Creative Promotions, concerning the pie-tossing craze, Pierce zapped Klimek. The KMKF broadcast of the interview brought many phone calls and a variety of requests. One wanted us to get a judge, Rice said. He said the judge had arrested him but he wouldn ' t give us his (own) name. Another caller asked them to hit a police officer who had arrested the caller. For a while we shied away from grudges, Pierce said. Later we decided to take them, as that was the purpose of the fad elsewhere. There was really no adverse reaction except for one. The adverse reaction was elicited from Michael Hoff- man, assistant professor of chemistry. Hoffman retali- ated by tossing a cup of coffee on Pierce. Dr. Williams took it real well. He waved to me as I ran off and later he was full of compliments about the company. We did have to worry about the legal aspects, Pierce said. First there was the pie fad, then there was a fad to sue the pie-throwers. Creative Promotions helped avoid animosity by pro- viding each victim with a towel and certificate. In addi- tion, about 85 per cent of the profits were contributed : : 24 pie throwing ;said. Hesai( dn ' tgiveushi; lice off icerwhc udges, Piera as that was the was really no ivedtomeasl j rents about the I legal aspects. then there was ere contribi to the Southern Poverty Law Center. The towel and certificate were partly a good will gesture and partly an attempt to distinguish ourselves from competitors. Others were beginning to take up the craze and we wanted to be sure we didn ' t have to take responsibility for their work, Pierce said. Creative Promotions collected about $350 as a result of 1 5 to 20 hits. Students requesting hits were charged $15 while others paid $30 as fees were higher for cer- tain victims. One such case was the attempt to zap Governor Robert Bennett. Bennett was participating as a speaker at Spring Fling 75 activities and arrangements were made to hit him at the bed races. However, the mission was thwarted by two K-State students who knocked the pie to the ground. Hired hit-man Bruce Moore was lectured by the stu- dents on the merits of preserving the image of K-State. Pierce said he believed the governor would have reacted good-naturedly. Sessions of Student Senate were disrupted by several pie-wielding incidents. Among those zapped were student senators Amy Button, Chris Badger and Pierce. I thought it was funny, Gerald Polich, assistant professor of music and another of Pierce ' s targets, said. Polich, who displays his certificate in his office, said he grew suspicious when several music students crowded around his door as he was about to begin a class. He also thought it strange when Pierce approached him with one hand behind his back. He was able to block Pierce ' s throw and the pie fell. I hit him with it, Polich said. Pierce still managed to get pie on Polich ' s clothing. Making arrangements for zaps sometimes resembled contacts between spies. One woman met Pierce dressed in sunglasses and trench coat, including the turned-up collar. Another thought he was to identify himself by removing one shoe. Pierce was unaware of this code, however, and the man stood in a public area for several minutes with his shoe in hand. Creative Promotions had made no hits since the 1 975 spring semester, but remained open to requests. As to future escapades? We ' re just going to wait until the next fad comes along and possibly follow up on it, Pierce said. pie throwing 25 f 0), Records are made to be broken. And there ' s always someone who is willing to take on the challenge. Though not quite as bizarre as the older versions of goldfish swallowing or flagpole sitting, the more modern marathon stunts are just as mentally and physically gruel- ing. K-Staters were involved in several attempts at record-breaking and will probably go on and on. Record breakers collapse and heroes remain unsung by Greg Doyle Just a few more hours and it will all be over. Heart how you doing? Beating a little fast, I see. Stomach sure you ' re hungry, but you ' ve gone without food for a lot longer than this. Legs a little more Ben Gay will soothe the ache. Back don ' t tense up now. Eyelids don ' t close yet. Not yet ... but they ' re so heavy ... so ... heavy . . . And just before they shut tight and the owner ' s body melts into a Sealy mattress for a day and a half of peaceful slumber, the ordeal is completed. Somebody switches off the broadcasting console, and the turnta- ble stops. The Isley Brothers ' Fight the Power fades off and the exhausted dancers rest their aching mem- bers. The last lap is swum, the last card trumped. The long haul is over. 1975 could rightly earn the reputation of being a marathon year Guineas Book of World Records got its share of business from K-State prestige-seekers who tried everything from a 1 00-hour continuous radio broadcast to bump-dancing for two and a half days at Mother ' s Worry Tavern in Aggieville. As a result, thousands of dollars were raised for charity. Long hours were not wasted, despite jeers of disbelief from those who cried, You ' re crazy! or You ' re going to kill yourself! The finish line was too important. Lasting was too vital. Steve Physioc, junior in radio and tv, and Gevin Kidd, sophomore in radio and television, proved they could do the seemingly impossible by staying on the air for 1 00 hours on KSDB-FM. From 9 am Thursday, April 1 7, to 1 pm Monday, April 21 , the duo volleyed between the penthouse of Far- rell Library and the main corridor in the Union playing popular music, joking with listeners, and each other over the air, and yawning a lot. During the broadcast, only 60 seconds was lost to dead air, when Kidd ' s eyelids just wouldn ' t stay up. With coffee on hand, and the pair needling each other to stay awake, the hundredth hour finally came, and the crowd in the Union cheered as the pair pointed to each other, proud of the triumph. The duo broadcast to raise money for the newly-cre- ated James A. McCain Commemorative Scholarship Fund. Working in conjunction were Alpha Phi Omega, Chimes, and Spurs which took pledges. In the back of their minds, though, Physioc and Kidd had another purpose for the marathon radio show, and that was to break the supposed world record of 99 hours, 33 minutes. The pair managed to break that record, but they missed getting their names in Guiness by 63 hours, 45 minutes. The McCain Scholarship Fund got off to a good start, but the two disappointed K-Staters went down to defeat in their quest for world fame. Marathons became the craze, though, and through- 26 marathons out the year other groups began testing their minds and bodies to see how long they could last at just about anything. Shortly after 1 975 spring break, Mother ' s Worry Tav- ern stayed open for 60 hours straight. The dance floor wasn ' t crowded, but the few couples dancing were : tenacious. Six couples began the 60-hour bump-a- thon , but only three couples lasted the duration. We got a 10-minute break every two hours, Greg Cline, one of the sturdier participants, said. I was rub- bing Ben Gay into my legs during the breaks. On February 1 9, ten more couples survived the trial this time lasting 62 hours. Ironically, both marathon dances were put on to raise i money for Muscular Distrophy of America. About $2,000 was raised in the first effort with $5,000 as the : second ' s goal. If the dances set a world record, Guiness doesn ' t list the dancers ' names in its celebrated pages. Apparently i the editors have never heard of the bump , or were afraid to ask what it was when they received the record entry application from the dancers. Such are the trials and tribulations of the marathoner. Imagination seems to be the key in the marathon : business. Card games helped raise money for other charities across America. The annual Black and Gold Card-a-thon , in March 1975 lasted four days, allowing 65 persons from Acacia and Alpha Xi Delta to play cards in shifts. Spades, hearts, and bridge kept the participants busy at card tables in front of the Union. Nearly $2,000 was raised for the K-State Speech and Hearing Center, Pittman Hall in New York, and the Capper Foundation for Crip- pled Children in Topeka. In another charity drive, members of the K-State and University of Kansas chapters of Kappa Kappa Gamma staged a run-a-thon in October to raise money for the Burns Center at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City. More than 160 women participated, meeting at a halfway point between Manhattan and Lawrence. A participant from each chapter ran a mile, then was picked up in a car, and replaced by another Kappa. $2,300 was collected to help buy medical equipment for the center. A 3,200 lap swim-a-thon meant survival for the K- State women ' s swim team, which was in danger of los- ing its status as an intercollegiate contender. Last October, 16 team members each swam 200 lengths. The $2,000 the team raised for the effort gained it reinstatement. Marathons and more marathons. K-Staters couldn ' t seem to exhaust the marathon possibilities. Although no group succeeded in its quest for a world ' s record, charities, teams, and scholarship funds profited by the unselfish efforts of those who believe that people are capable of much more than they ever thought possible. marathons 27 28 spring break V; w M v A The reincarnation of recess Why the pilgrimage? In either direction, the prodding begins and ends with snow . Some can ' t get too deeply buried in the stuff or others too soon rid of it. Whichever, in the middle of March, book-badgered col- legiates pack it up for a spring break. The non-snow faction migrates south, using the sun for their guiding star. Sweeping through Dixie, a Kan- sas Yankee can pick up mouse ears from Florida, a drawl in Texas, or the quick-steps from Old Mexico. Regardless of the souvenir, the aches of winter are baked into memories, not to be remembered for at least eight months. Alas, if it were only true. As classes resume too soon, so does the blizzardous climate of Kansas. And the tanables must re-enter hibernation to await the second coming of spring. Now for those of opposite opinion, the sun is still admired but only if their feet, ankles, and knees are swamped with snow. And under all that, which is so often poetically called a blanket , lurks a pair of skis waxed and waiting for the show to start with a down- ward shove. And like their southern cousins, on the trip they may also pick up a few remembrances like bro- ken limbs, rearranged faces, or disconnected spines. But it ' s all a part of the package deal and the chance for the uneventful run is there. At the end of the week, the downhillers are forced to make a clean break with the marrow of Colorado and strike out across the Kansas plains. If riding on ice all the way home, the snow bunnies smile at the proba- bility of another chilly Easter. When the returning ski- blood is still too hot, majestic Mt. Bleu of Lawrence can bring cooling relief. Decisions, decisions. And all because of the snow. But returnees can take comfort in the thought that even Annette and Frankie were torn between the beaches and slopes. So when comparing third degree burns or thigh-high plaster casts, one conclusion can be drawn. It isn ' t always just like the movies. spring break 29 Cash deficit bounces dire needs by Paula Meyers Make checks payable to Kansas State University. That ' s the beginning of four more years of the same. The pained looks on those faces at registration as the checks are torn from the checkbooks aren ' t just for show. It hurts. The resident student pays a minimum of $1 0,000 ($2,500 a year) to spend four years attending K-State. Minimum means modest, but adequate providing for the necessities and limiting some of those desired things that aren ' t needed. But how is the student to know what is really necessary? The first step is to decide on your goals. Values come in here, Sandra Grey, family economics instructor, said. The most basic needs are food, shelter, and clothing, but even in these categor- ies there is a problem of making deci- sions, she said. How much and what kind may differ from one person to the next. Spending your money is really a series of decisions, Grey said. As you grow older, you don ' t have to constantly be making these same decisions. You ' ll gain expertise you won ' t have to go back through and re-evaluate each time, she said. Entrance into college life may very well be the first time many students have con- trol over their own money, Gerald Ber- gen, director of aids and awards, said. Part of education is to learn how to manage the funds, he said. Fees, books, supplies, room and board, trans- portation, and miscellaneous items are considered for all students, and for mar- ried students, we consider a 12-month instead of a nine-month period, and extra books and fees, he said. The aids and awards office has deter- mined that an allowance of $50 each month will probably be spent for personal expenses of the student. This includes items such as toilet articles, clothing pur- chase and maintenance, entertainment, and recreation. It isn ' t as much as a person might think until you figure that it includes the Cokes at the Union and recreation, Ber- gen said. Then there ' s lipstick, powder, and paint for the girls, and ... I was going to say razor blades for the guys ... but anyway most people can get by on it. Some wouldn ' t spend that in a month and others would spend that in shoes, he said. A tipping of the scales on the entertain- ment and recreation side is not difficult to achieve. Impulse spending is an espe- cially hazardous temptation to the stu- dent in a limited situation. Bad habits can be formed that take years to unlearn, Grey said. If you go down to a store at the beginning of the month and buy a sweater, you ' re going to suffer for it at the end of the month. Grey believes that although students may occasionally find themselves in eco- nomical dilemmas, these small-scale crises are, in the long run, helpful as learning experiences. These financial problems will prepare the person to plan future expenditures more wisely. You can grasp control of your budget. There isn ' t really any mythical hand that keeps coming down and flicking it away, she said. It isn ' t something that comes naturally. Obtaining it from your own past experience plus some kind of formal training is ideal. Possibly the most unnecessary spend- ing by students is tunneled into a posses- sion that many would hesitate to consider unnecessary the automobile. They probably buy better cars than they need, and could get by on more modest transportation, Bergen said. He cited upkeep, maintenance, gas, oil, and insurance as the areas of accumulated expense. However, Bergen does not believe that this applies to off-campus residents who rely on their cars as the only means of transportation. The unnec- essary auto expenses are incurred mainly by students living on campus, whose cars are largely a convenience. The over-spending of pocket money is also considered as unnecessary by Ber- gen. This includes between-class refreshments, snacks, cigarettes, and other items that don ' t seem to be costly or extravagant at the time of purchase. But, Bergen said, if students would keep a running account, they would probably be astonished at the amount of pocket money actually spent. Especially for off-campus residents, the probable source of most unnecessary expenditures ironically falls into the cate- gory of a basic need food. The prob- lem comes because of a lack of experi- ence on the part of students in purchas- ing and preparing the food. Food is sim- ply wasted, Bergen said. He attributed this to the fact that most off-campus residents, perhaps living in apartments, houses, or mobile homes, are novice shoppers and cooks. Usually, they are unfamiliar with the supermarket bargain and wise purchases. And when they take the food home, they inevitably prepare more than they can eat. The net result is waste of food and money, in addition to the expenditure of time pre- paring the meal. A popular myth is the idea that a mar- ried couple spends less than two single people. Wrong. Expenditures of a mar- ried couple are exactly double that of a single person. Marriage does not save money for students, Bergen said. He attributed this to factors such as a single person being likely to share living quarters with one or more other persons and dividing the rent among them. Mar- rieds can only divide the rent in half. And chances are that the couple is purchas- ing items such as a television, stereo, and furniture, whereas typical roommates do not make joint major purchases. Loans are available to students who wish to borrow. To qualify for the National Direct Student Loan, the need for addi- tional funds must be clearly shown, Ber- gen said. Bergen said there is an expectation that the student will contribute $400 from summer employment earnings. After the need is defined, undergraduates may borrow up to $5,000 on NDSL during the college career. A guaranteed student loan, the Feder- ally Insured Student Loan, is available without showing a need for additional funds. Up to $2,000 may be borrowed until graduation. Both NDSL and FISL require the student to begin repayment of loans nine months after termination of study, with a 10-year span in which to complete repayment. I 30 student spending student spending 31 Scholars buy tassels, gowns . . . and limbo The college degree passport to unlimited opportunities? Recent recipi- ents of the sheepskin might disagree, as attempts at entering the working world ended where the unemployment line began. What good is a graduation- gift pen set if there is no banking account to write checks on? by Judy Puckett There is a certain awe that surrounds a senior a feeling of reaching a four-year goal. For that last year, he expends his whole energy cramming in everything he may have missed in the first three. Then it happens. Graduation. Like attaining an enormously gratifying climax after four brutal years of being screwed, the mind shivers in cold reality that it ' s all over. Traditional America, clinging to its faint tr aces of pomp and circumstances, still silently requests that cer- emonies remain. For births, funerals, and unless Mom and Dad can be talked out of it, graduation. Not really sure why, students find themselves seated once again in designated rows, segregated by the hue of each one ' s tassel. The engineer, the farmer, the teacher, and the poet all ready to begin the journey. But unlike the passengers heading for the famed Atlan- tis, the opportunities are not there. Swamped by letters of regret, growing unpaid bills, and under societal pressures to succeed, the graduate stands, head swimming with but we will certainly keep your resume on file, and notify you if we do have any openings. Then someone tells him to sit. He lowers his head. He could be sleeping, dreaming, or thinking. Or he might be bored. Regardless, as the ceremony continues i Creator knows teve, but it seems raditionalAmeric fetation, admire Wsnoseupatl us experience it, arc graduate has c glances at the w at least toa hein thetradriior not ii av! to toltom of her p , mport ation grc 32 graduation ids a senior - iis whole enerc missed in theV mously gratvr ing screuec over. Is fain! traces requests that ce liernselvesseate ! larmer. I wing unpaid j W do have an) }Sit ceremony continues, the words fly by and he wonders f the orator knows what he ' s talking about. He wants to believe, but it seems much too intangible. Traditional America, clinging to its feelings of class distinction, admires the attainer, the achiever, and .turns its nose up at the unemployed, the failure. Moth- ers experience it, and so do fathers. But of late, the col- lege graduate has created a new sector of the unem- ployed, adding an air of sophistication to the social dis- order. He glances at the young woman next to him. She ' s fumbling with her jewelry. He takes a closer look. Her class ring. Another $45 she poured toward her educa- tion, or at least toward advertising it. Taking it off, she watches the prisms in the sun. And as the youth of America, you will be expected to shoulder the responsibilities of leadership, and con- tinue in the traditions of peace and prosperity, the speaker continues. She must not have heard him. The ring is tossed to the bottom of her purse. He catches her glance and she shrugs. It seemed important at the time, she whispers to him. He nods, shifting in his seat. He is anxious. There are no prospects for her either, he surmises. asW] The frustration grows, nurtured by the bureaucrats and their messages of what tomorrow will bring; blos- soming careers and a chance to exercise the skills of education. He knows he has something to give, but no one will take it. The speaker rambles incessantly. Maybe there will be a letter when he returns home. Maybe there will be several, and he ' ll have to make a choice. Which com- pany will he choose? He doesn ' t mean to chuckle out loud. But no one quiets him. Instead, there are several agreeing nods. Someone even gives him a reassuring pat on the back someone with a different colored tassel. They know. The feelings are universal among his comrades. He remembers sharing feelings with his fel- low high school graduates, too. But those were posi- tive, and held in store a new life for most of them. Col- lege life the ultimate preparation for the real world. The applause brings him back to the present. The speaker steps back, and a new voice requests all stand for the National Anthem. Everyone does, for the most part, but this time he decides to be still. The female next to him looks down. He notices a faint smile. If it ' s any consolation, she says, I don ' t know what I ' m going to do either. She wasn ' t sure he heard her as he pulled the tassel to the other side of his cap and buried his face in his hands. graduation 33 34 godspell r ummer ' s dusk casts a Godspell byKathy Kindscher K-State ' s production of the rock-musi- ; cal Godspell was a dramatic highlight Of the 1 975 summer session. Godspell was originally written to -Devitalize the joy of the Gospel according :o Saint Matthew. This production did so ; through an unusual set, brightly outra- geous costumes, and modern music and ' dance. The stage was set on the gray concrete Dleachersof Memorial Stadium. Rock musicians and some actors were ele- vated on painters ' scaffolds wh ile a mesh lence screened a portion of the stage from the bleachers. The players first appeared in tie-dyed T-shirts ' and jeans; however, following a baptism by a fistful of glitter, they changed into brightly-colored clown and motley gypsy costumes. By using colors to remove the stereo- typed apostles ' dress, ' Godspell ' becomes a penetrating human drama in the modern sense, Lydia Aseneta, cos- tume designer, said. Actors belted the musical ' s hard rock numbers, which included Turn Back, Oh Man , with an earthy bawdiness. Other songs, such as Day by Day , were presented in a lyrical, devout man- Show-and-tell games portrayed the Gospel, each with a short conclusive message. In one scene the troupe recited the Beatitudes as a kindergarten class might recite the alphabet, each actor responding with the same sense of won- der a child radiates with learning. Magic tricks and vaudeville routines were also an nstrumental portion of Godspell . In All for the Best , two actors tap danced and crooned for the audience. Godspell ended with the silhouetted Christ reaching out in the dark to the audience. As the sun set, the play ended. 36 the entertainers the entertainers DIE FLEDERMAUS For James A. McCain, the 10-day Festival Arts Cele- bration conducted in his honor reached its pinnacle at the presidential perform- ance of Die Fledermaus , April 19. Between acts of the operetta, Governor Robert Bennett officially renamed the auditorium McCain Auditorium. President McCain had requested that the K-State Players and music depart- ment perform ' Die Fledermaus ' before he retired, John Chalmers, vice president of academic affairs, said. The production featured ballet seg- ments danced by Ronnie Mahler, assist- ant professor of dance at K-State and Clark Tippet of New York ' s American Bal- let Theater. Die Fledermaus was directed by Ralph Herbert, director of operatic productions at the University of Michigan and former Metropolitan Opera director. HEDDA GABLER An 85-year-old play by Henrik Ibsen captured the uncertainty of many of today ' s questions about societal roles. The K-State speech department ' s production of the drama Hedda Gabler , directed by Lewis Shel- ton, was presented October 16, 17, and 1 8 at McCain Auditorium. The story portrays the protagonist, Hedda Gabler, who realizes that she has a choice between marital entrapment in a domestic life that she finds dull and unin- teresting, or using her femininity and intelligence to manipulate others. This would allow her control of her own life in a way contrary to the mores of her soci- ety. Hedda finally follows the example of a former lover who could not survive her manipulations and killed himself. With a revolver to her head, she snuffs out her life. Hedda lived in a time of female depen- dency. Her tragic death resulted from her inability to cope with dissatisfaction with herself and her abuse of manipulatory power. PETER NERO Popular concert pianist and composer Peter Nero exhibited the keyboard perfection he is renowned for in McCain Auditorium, October 24. The concert was part of a month-long tour that included 21 different cities. Although he was accompanied by bass guitarist and drummer, the show belonged to Nero. His piano mastery delighted the audience as he played both light and dramatic compositions. Contemporary musical arrangements provided the bulk of Nero ' s concert. Arrangements of the theme from Sum- mer of ' 42 and You Are the Sunshine of My Life demonstrated why Nero has earned respect as a musician. But, as in many concerts, it was the golden oldies that received the best response. One selection displaying Nero ' s versa- tility over a wide range of rhythms and harmonies was a medley of Duke Elling- ton numbers. The medley included Don ' t Get Around Much Anymore , I Got It Bad And That Ain ' t Good , and Black Satin Doll . By adding conversational humor to classical piano, Nero exhibited a good bit of showmanship along with his musical talent. After his final number, Nero returned and said with a smile, Wel- come back to the encore portion of our show. Nero ' s concerts have been enjoyed by people of all ages around the world. Known as a solo performer while still in his teens, he has cut nearly 30 albums, including his award-winning Summer of ' 42 . the entertainers 37 Kickin ' that Aggieville habit by Greg Doyle And into the bowels of Babylon go those Epicu- rean college-types, to reap the pleasures of wine, lovers, and song. Embarking nightly into those dark, mysterious taverns and roaming the streets, both on foot and in their bellowing chariots, attempting to impress the opposite sex, in the haven of hedonism known as Aggieville . . . Or at least a large proportion of them do. But to some students, Aggieville is a carnival where fresh- men go out of curiosity and the social set goes to fra- ternize. Many who don ' t belong in either category have found alternatives to Horneyville , because somehow, the thrill of Manhattan ' s town within a town is lost. A flick at the Union now and then. A mellow eve- ning of folk guitar spiced with a bit of refreshing country night air at the Flint Hills Theatre. Or it may be a romp-stompin ' time at Pott County Civic Audito- rium, chugalugging Coors to country and western licks. Regardless of these and many other options extant in the Manhattan area, there are students who would rather stomp some other ground on week- ends besides the path between bars on Moro Street. Film buffs have a reasonable choice in Manhattan movies. If they don ' t have wheels to take in a first- run feature at the Westloop Twin, hoofing it over to the Union Forum Hall for a look at a last year ' s Acad- emy Award winner seems to satisfy. It ' s a good way to take in all the movies missed last summer because the lines were so long that the 1 pm show was sold out by 7:30. The Union Feature Films series at 75 cents a per- son is an empty-pocketed student ' s dream. Spend- ing an evening in the darkness engrossed in the best in audio-visual amusement is better than sitting in a smoky beer parlor gazing at the scenery anyway . . . isn ' t it? Besides the movies, these Flint Hills are a store- house of some of the finest folk music in the land. Jim Kweskin, Kenton Oliphant, Robert Scott Williams all of whom have on occasion picked and strum- med a mellow Martin or Gibson or Guild guitar at the Flint Hills Theatre. The Theatre ' s atmosphere is especially conducive to listening to those musicians. Sitting on carpeted tiers holding a Ball Mason jar of brew, made at the foot of the Rocky Mountains, only feet away from a live performer is a pleasant change from squeezing through the masses and trying to make sense of the latest Osmonds ' hit you ' ve heard a hundred times on the radio. Stepping outside the Theatre, the sights and sounds of nature blend well with the mellow music played inside. The stars are multiplied in the country- sky, and the air saturates your lungs with freshness. No blasting horns or blinding headlights only the sounds and visions of natural beauty. Like the music, it settles the soul. But a mellow niche in the country can get old, too. Even country-lovin ' folks like to raise the roof once in a while. So, for those who enjoy the kickin ' good times of a barn dance, Belvue, KS, is the place to go for a drunk and delirious Saturday night. Belvue, Population 350 reads the sign as you enter town on Highway 24. And just before the speed limit goes back up to 55, there stands a large barn-like structure off the highway. The parking lot is full. As you near the door, all your fears concerning all you ' ve heard about the ruckus that goes on here are suddenly confirmed. Entering cautiously, you ' re nearly knocked out the door by the vibration from the resounding stomp of cowboy boots keeping time to Panama Red being played at incredible decibels by the Pott County Pork and Bean Band. So the doorman stamps BULLSHIT on your hand in red, you grab a beer, find a seat, and start slapping your knee. You can ' t help it, what with everybody swingin ' their partners, and gals riding piggyback on their partners, hootin ' and hollerin ' and clappin ' . Now you ' re getting the idea. Another six-pack, and you ' ll be out on the dance floor too. Hootin ' and hollerin ' and slappin ' and clappin ' just like the wasted bunch. Aggieville rocks and rolls at a snail ' s pace compared to this wild crowd. All too soon the last song has been played, and the last Coors ' top has been popped, and it ' s back to the books, because the weekend is suddenly over. Aggieville ' s streets are lined with the empty cans of Friday and Saturday nights. In an attic apartment in the midst of drink and dance, a desk lamp lights the economics book of a student who chose the smartest option to Aggieville studying. And out of the bowels of Babylon they emerged, homeward bound to sleep off the effects of too much 3.2, not enough love, and too many Top 40 songs. And Babylon ' s streets sleep as well, lurking in dark- ness till the next week, when the avenue again will clamor with the sights and sounds and suds of those who think there ' s no thrill like Aggieville. 38 alternatives alternatives 39 ; burns the h( :: ctoose correct c tke humble servant People begin to ; I tester air outside. IWricomestoabl [wsnksinhisseat. At Wall the bei le night ' s entertair tie table servant Mtsandgumwrai tags, sticky, astvdi rtimdertoot. So tiydoesthe pd-dodgtr.fi tote occasional ' wethanstude tentirelyfof i, ' -=;:::- 40 aggieviile Play taps before day is done by Paula Meyers Hey barkeep, we ' ll take another pitcher and two draws. And how about a bag of pretzels and couldya empty these ashtrays? Oh yeah, and bring us a bar rag, willya? Alas, the humble servant of the Aggieville beer- drinker moves back into the crowd and is shuffled in the general direction of the taps. A co-worker, with pitcher held high and change clutched in hand, blazes a slow trail through a swaying conglomeration of bod- ies that dances in the corner, sits or pushes through animated conversations in the middle of the room, and leans on elbows and walls around the edges. The air is as close as the wrap-around couples mov- ing to slow music out on the dance floor. Cigarette smoke burns the heavy air and stings eyes that squint to choose correct change in the low light. The jeans of the humble servant are stiff from careless splashes of tottering steins. And there are no words for the thoughtful customer who tosses back the dripping bar rag. 11:30 and last call. As the disc jockey leaves his booth, not-so-sure-footed couples dance to the juke box. People begin to abandon booths and tables for the fresher air outside. The chugging contest in the corner booth comes to a bleary-eyed close as the bloated win- ner sinks in his seat. At last, all the beer is off the tables and the debris of the night ' s entertainment can be surveyed. The task of the humble servant is evident in ashtrays of cigarette butts and gum wrappers, empty cups and potato chip bags, sticky, ash-dusted tabletops, and crushed pret- zels underfoot. So why does the Aggieville bartender do it? In the face of all these obstacles, what draws a person to the job of beer-pourer, money-changer, table-washer, crowd-dodger, fight-stopper, and house-cleaner, besides occasional plunges into emergency plumbing? The average bartender in an Aggieville tavern makes no more than student minimum wage. So it ' s probably not entirely for the money. If I wasn ' t down there working, I ' d be down there spending money anyway, John Hellman, a Kite ' s employe, said. The job is definitely easier physically than my past work experience, but mentally it ' s a lot tougher. Until you work in a place, you don ' t realize what bartenders go through. Generally, money is not the rationale for taking the job. Even though there are drawbacks to the work, most bartenders enjoy the work and consider it a social experience. I couldn ' t afford to spend money in Aggieville, so I started working there. You get paid for being social, Mike Hafling, former Mr. K ' s employe, said. Though hectic, and perhaps frustrating at times, bar- tenders also consider the job easier than most. I ' d rather serve beer than food, Lee Ann Simmons, former Dark Horse employe, said. There ' s no order- ing, and it ' s less complicated than other jobs. Some facets of the work are generally disliked by the bartender. Being scheduled to work both nights of the weekend is probably the first on the list, with closing- time clean-up running a close second. Working the door and checking IDs is also considered a bum task. That ' s one of the worst jobs, because people give you a lot of trouble. People get mad when you check their IDs, Jim Johndrow, former Mother ' s Worry employe, said. It ' s also a hassle to stop fights. As student bartenders, employes believe they are regarded as equals by customers, the majority of which are students themselves. Few Aggieville patrons attempt to treat the bartender as subservient, but those few are disappointing, Hellman said. We ' re human too. We don ' t like to be treated like that. The most appealing aspect of the job is meeting and being with people of the same age group. Perhaps this single factor diminishes the low pay and hassles char- acteristic of the work. I ' ve had a chance to meet all kinds to see all types of characteristics in people, Hellman said. Granted, the brew has been known to lend a more friendly than usual atmosphere to an otherwise stilted or less than jovial social situation. My favorite part is meeting people, drunk or not. Them drunk, not me, Hafling said. On the other hand, the overly-friendly customer might pose a problem. Simmons cited game days when a rival university visits Aggieville as particularly bad for pinching and other forms of harrassment to female bartenders. However, those bartenders who turn heads might also turn the tables on admirers to their own advan- tage. Female bartenders occasionally get tips from cus- tomers, Dean Tyler, manager of Brother ' s, said. He believes this shows favoritism . Admiration is not always shown in monetary meas- ure. Every bartender that ever worked in Aggieville got picked up sometime or another by a girl, Hafling said. Ah, the romance of it all. The low lights, dance music, the tinkle of glasses, the meeting of eyes across a crowded, smoky room. Alas, the humble servant of the Aggieville beer-drinker moves back into the crowd and is shuffled in the general direction of the taps. aggieville 41 don ' t 42 studying Every semester after registration and schedule changes, well-meaning stu- dents make that dreaded sojourn to the bookstore and emerge poorer in pocket but richer in potential. The problem comes in when it ' s time to get the mon- ey ' s worth. Whet the appetite for brain-feud by Paula Meyers I squirmed as my hot liner squeaked across the page. From nearby tables, several sets of glassy eyes rested on me. Hmmm. I ' d have to be less enthusiastic on the next important point I came across. As I turned the fuchsia-lined page, another ritual of staring began around me. I winced. Farrell ' s third floor reading room was not conducive to study. It was too quiet. I thought back over the day. With my only class of the day cancelled, I had set out at mid-morning, ambitious and equipped with the necessary books, spi- ral notebooks, and an extra pen (to counter the inevitable disappearing ink trick). An entire day in which to catch up on all that reading and finish that paper. And maybe tonight ... a little vacation from academia, sans guilt complex. I had strolled to the Union, glad to abandon the usual late-to-class sprint across campus. Inside, I found an out-of- the-way table and opened a book. Half- way thro ugh the first column of words and the second glazed doughnut, I felt a hand on my sleeve. It was George, from my cancelled class. G ' morning. Isn ' t it kinda early to start studying? he slurred. Well, I thought I ' d get an early start since we don ' t have class today. Oh. George sat down and leaned his elbows on my open book. Uh, excuse me . . . I began. Wait a minute. We don ' t have class today? he asked, his bloodshot eyes widening to reveal a lovely network of red on white. No, we don ' t. Remember? The instructor said . . . . Wow, that ' s great! That means I can go back home and sack out, George said, as he took a large bite from my doughnut. Man, do you know how late I stayed up last night? he asked as small bits of moistened doughnut spattered the table. A bunch of my friends and me, we par- tied till 3 am and then we went to Vern ' s and . . . I decided to cancel George from my schedule. I pulled the book from under his elbows and began gathering up my things. As I pushed in my chair, he rubbed his elbow and stuffed more of the pastry somewhere beneath his over- grown mustache. Outside, I inspected the weather. Looked good. The spring sun was warm and the sky clear. Definitely a nice day to study outside. I found a wide wooden bench beneath a tree and settled down to outline a chapter or two. Occasionally, class bells rang and I smirked at my own freedom from classes. Fiscal policy and the Federal Reserve System was finally becoming clear as I flipped page after page. Then, the inevitable happened. My pen began to skip. I pressed it against the paper more vigorously. No luck. It was drysville again. As I rummaged through my purse for the spare, my spiral notebook fell onto the ground. I scooted across the bench to recover it. Instant, splintering pain. My desire for open-air study came to an uncomfortable end as I hobbled toward the library. My stomach growled that it was past lunchtime. With a bag of chips and a cup of carbonated empty calories, I slid (care- fully) into a booth in the library basement. Crunching and sipping, I made it through Act I, Scene V of Hamlet. Gradually, I became aware of a sort of suspense in the air. I listened. Next to me, a college-type had snoozed off. A raspy snore, louder than the previous series, escaped from the next booth. I could ignore it. Back to Shakespeare. Ouch! A kick in the shin. I glanced down and spied the culprit ' s earthshoes. Another kick. It seems I had been taken for a chair rung. I recrossed my legs, to move out of the path of attack. The feet changed their course. There was no escape. Behind me, a couple of humorous types exchanged the latest versions of dead baby jokes. Their outbursts of wild laughter grew more frequent. I glanced around. One of them looked and sounded a lot like Woody Woodpecker. The other wiped his tear-filled eyes and went into another spasm of giggles. Shakespeare and I bade farewell to Sleeping Beauty, Golden Toe, and Woody and headed for the elevator and the silence of the third floor reading room. Overwhelming silence, that is. Here I was, trying to breathe quietly. Campus had to be the least favorable place to study. I revolted. I capped my hot liner with a click and began to noisily tear pages from my spiral. As I crumpled them and threw the wads about the room, several people began to leave with armloads of books. I continued until the last wide-eyed scholar had scampered from the room. Back to Hamlet and Ophelia. studying 43 the events HOUSING SHORTAGE Home sweet home was non-existent for about 1 ,500 students who came to K-State this year with no place to live. There is no housing shortage, Thomas Frith, director of housing, explained. At the first of the year people need a few weeks to find where they want to live. Most students had help finding tempo- rary housing from the Temporary Hous- ing Committee. Formed in the light of the sudden crisis, the committee helped stu- dents find immediate living places with faith that permanent housing could be found later. Chaired by Margaret Nordin, associate director of the Center for Student Devel- opment, the committee first contacted faculty members who might have room for one or more students. The Chamber of Commerce, Alumni Association, and various churches were asked the same question. The committee did most of its work during the week of registration, August 18 through 22. The average stay in temporary housing was four days, and the longest about three-and-one-half weeks before perma- nent housing was found. According to Joe Cousins, director of off-campus housing, many people moved into resi- dence halls after additional space turned up. Some students found friends or rela- tives to live with while others made their temporary housing permanent. K-STATE - - KU CANOE RACE Packed into vans, station wagons, and jeeps, 300 K-State and University of Kan- sas students arrived at the bank of the Kansas River to begin the seventh annual canoe race from Manhattan to Lawrence a distance of 1 03 miles. The annual event, sponsored by K- State and KU ' s associations of residence halls, began at 9 am September 6 when 35 canoes were launched at once. The decision by the judges to start the canoes in one heat resulted in a bottleneck in which a few canoes were tipped and oth- ers started in the wrong direction. How- ever, in five minutes the canoes were all headed in the right direction and disap- pearing around the bend. Once the canoes were launched the rest of the teams piled back into cars and headed for the first checkpoint. The race was run much like a relay, with predeter- mined spots for changing teams. When non-paddling team members arrived at checkpoints it was time to check maps, chatter on citizen-band radios, and squint anxiously down the river. As the canoes came into sight, fresh teams ran out into the river yelling encouragement and instructions to their tired teammates. A quick switch and the canoes were off down the river again. Dinner time found tired, aching, and sunburned canoeists stopping for the night at the sandbar near St. Marys. After dragging the canoes onto the sand, it was time to set up tents and start fires to dry out wet clothes, tennis shoes, and hair. The rest of the night was spent par- tying, making friends, or even sleeping. In the morning, judges sent the canoes off in the same order that they had come in the night before. Brunch was served outside of Topeka. From there it was non- stop to Lawrence. After about 1 7 hours of canoeing, the winning Haymaker 3 team paddled into Lawrence. Though the race was open to resi- dence hall and independent teams, only residence hall teams were counted in the official race results. activities carnival 44 me events housing shortage ACTIVITIES CARNIVAL K-Staters, laughter, exhibits, and tables of organiza- tional literature filled the Union on a steamy Sunday evening. Once again, the Activities Carnival displayed for students the organizations the campus offers. An estimated 6,000 students browsed among the 1 97 organizations ' booths and displays on September 7. Steve Hermes, assistant director for programs at the Union, said most attend- ing the carnival were freshmen or first- year students. For the clubs represented, approximately 10 per cent of all new members were recruited then. One significant feature of this year ' s carnival was the presence of the new K- State president, Duane Acker. President Acker stopped by each booth to talk with organization representatives, ask ques- tions, and shake hands. PARENTS ' DAY Mom and Dad were welcomed to K-State with a beautiful day that could be really appreciated. Septem- ber 20 marked Parents ' Day for 1975, and along with the first home football game, many activities were contrived by students and faculty members to greet the folks. Following the game with Wichita State University, visitors were invited to tour the campus, getting a taste of college. All parents were recognized at the game, as members of Chimes presented a wood carving called Vision during halftime. The carving was created by Chester Peters, vice president for student affairs, and donated to K-State especially for Parents ' Day. Parents were shown their college kids ' talent, as they were entertained with skits and refreshments by those living in resi- dence halls and greek houses. The Union planned a special buffet din- ner following the game. That evening the Pointer Sisters presented a concert at McCain Auditorium with John Biggs as the opening act. theevenls 45 Mystery frames campus art by Rusty Harris Wind blowing through the trees. Squirrels romping across the grass. Feet shuffling in the fallen leaves. Then it happens. My God, what is that thing? Gee, I don ' t know. Kinda looks like a smashed cockroach tome. K-State students discover art on campus. Yes, Willie. Art. For in spite of poor art facilities and almost entirely due to a private grant, art in many forms, shapes, and colors dot the K-State landscape. Most of the more visible things are from the Art in Situation workshops, John Vogt, associate professor of art, said. The workshops were funded by a special grant sup- plied by the Ford Foundation and covered three sum- mers. Vogt and Alden Krider, professor of pre-design professions, were in charge of the workshops, the last taking place in 1 973. Pieces of sculpture and other works, designed and executed in the workshops by students from across the nation, have since taken their places as part of the K- State environment. Art needs to get out on the campus where people can bump up against it, Vogt said. And over the years, students have bumped up against, stared at, or just plain ignored the artwork on campus. Other students, attempting to discover for themselves the true meaning of the artwork, have labeled the displays including Denison Iceberg , the Willard Hall Dead Fly or Smashed Cockroach , theSeaton Thing , and the King Hall Fork . Most of the art from the workshops is still standing. However, some pieces have not remained, nor were they intended to. One used to occupy the concrete slab between Ked- zie and Anderson Halls. Consisting of large, colorful geometric forms and constructed of plywood, it didn ' t stand the test of time. That was one of the projects that was rather tempo- rary in form. It wasn ' t meant to be permanent, Vogt said. It was getting scratched up and had taken a beating. Therefore it was removed, leaving only the concrete slab. Other works caused controversy while under con- struction like the mural on the north side of East Waters Hall. Designed by Charles Theis, a professor from St. Louis, the mural consists of bright colors in abstract form. But some students, notably students of the Col- lege of Agriculture, believed at the time that a land- scape would have been more appropriate. In spite of their protests, the work remained, with little said about it now. Not all the art on campus is a result of the Art in Situ- ation workshops, Vogt said. Other works, including the mural on the north end of Seaton Hall, the painting of the physical plant boiler, and the metal sculptures next to West Stadium, were projects of various classes and individuals in the Col- lege of Architecture and the department of art. Yet the art on campus isn ' t just plopped down any place. For if something on a monumental scale is available for placement on campus, the matter is taken before the University ' s Long-Range Planning Committee, Oscar Larmer, professor of art, said. But one area on campus, the site next to West Stadium, has been assigned to the art department for its use. From time to time, student sculpture is displayed there. And we don ' t have to go through any planning board to change it either, Larmer said. At times, more than just the Long-Range Planning Committee ' s okay is involved. When you talk about putting sculpture in public places, the quality and durability must be taken into account, Vogt said. Students continue to debate the quality and merits of campus art. And the question of whether or not the campus needs more is also one of continual discus- sion. We don ' t want to saturate the environment with art- work, Vogt said. Yet, both Vogt and Larmer agree that there is still room for more. Around the new auditorium should be some good- sized pieces of art. There are a lot of good places on campus for it, Larmer said. And Vogt believes that the now vacant slab between Kedzie and Anderson Halls is an ideal place for another sculpture. In spite of room for more art, there are currently no plans underway for another Art in Situation-type pro- gram, Vogt said. It was kind of a one-shot deal. It wasn ' t intended at the time to be a continuing thing, he said. However, I think the program overall was a success. Vogt also believes that there are risks involved in placing art on campus, risks that are worth taking. We need to take more risks, he said, because you can always take something down! Meanwhile, students can expect to continue their lei- surely afternoon strolls across campus, discovering things they ' ve never seen before as they stumble across yet another work of art and ask themselves: Just what is that thing? 46 campus art campus art 47 the catskeller The Catskeller. By day a study haven, with soft music and carpeted tran- quility. By night an entertainer ' s night club, with applauding audiences under low lights. The performers are as versatile and varied as the Catskeller itself, rang- ing from bluegrass to classical guitar to pantomime. Among the weekend entertainment offered there was the local country rock of Pott County Pork and Bean Band, the bluegrass sounds of Grand River Town- ship and New Grass Revival, the mime of Michael Hennessy, and the Nashville- influenced, progressive country of South of the Tracks. Classical guitarist Michael Johnson, Nitty Gritty Dirt Band member John McEuen, and composer-guitarist Peter Lang also shared their talents with Catskeller crowds. MICHAEL HENNESSY Michael Hen- nessy ' s mime and Blegen and Sayer ' s music combined to form Michael Hen- nessy ' s Mime and Musical Theater, which put the icing on K-State ' s first din- ner theatre, November 1 4 and 1 5. Presented by the Union Programming Council, the dinners were served in the Catskeller. Hennessy, dressed in the tra- ditional mime garb of white face, black beret, and black and white harlequin ' s suit, chose a wide range of acts. The Surgeon , The Kite , and The Trained Flea Act were traditional acts, while oth- ers, such as College Registration , were designed for the college audience. Hennessy ' s performance was sup- ported by the music of Dan Blegen and Eric Sayer, who played a wide range of musical instruments and styles. Their back-up served as a highlighter for Hen- nessy, amplifying the meaning of his act. The group also provided segue music between acts. Intermission proved to be different than most, with Blegen and Sayer presenting their own musical show. They sang several self-written songs, one being Marvin Marc and His Two Wheeled Tri- cycle . Hennessy returned after the intermis- sion for more pantomime, including an improvisation session in which he mim- icked a waterbed and a snowf lake. The performance was a combination of Hennessy ' s charm and Blegen and Say- er ' s musical talent. Both interludes of music alone and mime alone presented a refreshing view of the two arts. JOHN MCEUEN Fantasy became fact December 12 and 13, when John McEuen, master of banjo and fiddle from the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band meticulously strummed and picked his way through four solo performances. Switching con- tinually from banjo to guitar to mandolin and back to banjo again, McEuen played and joked until the audience applauded for more which he gladly gave them. McEuen ' s performance was largely classical banjo and classical guitar, with brief interruptions of bluegrass banjo and frequent monologues of Nitty Gritty-type humor. The Dirt Band is notorious for their jovial criticism of other performers, and McEuen ' s concert was no exception. Did you all see the ' John Denver Average ' on television the other night? he asked, at one point. John Denver thought it was special, but I thought it was just average. Although McEuen is not renowned as a vocalist, probably the biggest number of his performance was The Mountain Whippoorwill . Through the song, McEuen sang the story of how a young hillbilly travels to the county fair in hopes of winning the Georgia Fiddler ' s Show, and how he, in the end, out-fiddles the finest fiddlers there. McEuen was no stranger to K-State, for with the Dirt Band, he has repeatedly played concerts here in the past few years. Although he usually appears on stage with the other members of the band, McEuen enjoys these solo shots because they give him a chance to be a perfectionist. I like to play by myself because it ' s harder. When you ' re with the band, you can hide behind the others, he said. MICHAEL JOHNSON Though classi- cal guitarists have never gone over big at K-State, Michael Johnson seemed to be the rule ' s exception. Greeted by only mild rounds of opening applause in the Cat- skeller, February 7 and 8, Johnson appeared to have won audience approval by the close of his shows. Johnson, a folksinger who has already cut two albums, is a self-taught musician who claims to play a lot in the key of D. This may be true, but it was unapparent as his fingers moved across the guitar with the dexterity and skill essential to being a classical guitarist. What made Johnson more successful than many classical cohorts was that his performance was not strictly instrumen- tal. He proved himself easily capable of carrying a. tune. His main preference is folk, and his soft, easy-going voice works well for this type of vocal. Besides music, Johnson also poured out a good deal of humor during his per- formances. Welcome to the second spasm, Johnson said, as he began the second half of his first show. Although the shows were composed f largely of classical guitar, it was t Johnson ' s humorous songs that were the crowd pleasers. You ' re Concave and I ' m Convex, Sure Is a Wonderful World of Sex , received the most obvious approval by the audience, along with a more mellow ballad, Love Will Get You Through Times of No Sex Better Than Sex Will Get You Through Times of No Love . 48 Ihecalskeller yoi ffs, hesaid, 11 Though class tain the Ca md 8, Johnso udienceapprovi whohasalread : -taughtmysiciai I in the key of D :wasunappara icross the guita moresuccessfb orts was that his asily capable o in pretence is oing voice work son also pouret y during his per- juitar, it gs that were the e Concave and nderiul World ol the catskeller 49 t fc -.-- y Pam Page Throughout the year, K-State greeks sponsor various activities to promote unity or to raise money for any number of causes. Greek Week, March 2 through 8, gave greeks a chance to unwind and have fun getting acquainted. Activities included exchange dinners, a houseparents ' tea, and a leadership banquet. Free movies in the Union and Greek Week buttons, good for Aggieville specials donated by Aggieville merchants, contributed to the week ' s success. Greek Follies, March 3 through 6, highlighted the week when onlookers filled the bottom tier of the audi- torium for over two hours of entertainment. Six groups, with five to six houses per group, com- posed the acts. Numbers ranged from plays and skit combinations to dance musicals. Many hours of work, rehearsal, and above all increased cooperation, cre- ated friendship among the houses, Keith Pike, Greek Week co-chairman, said. A cable-thon, March 3 through 6, sponsored by Alpha Tau Omega fraternity, donated $1 7,000 toward the March of Dimes. Local talent contributed and radio and tv class members helped set the program that aired over channel 2 on cable tv. Acacia fraternity sponsored their third annual card-a- thon with Alpha Xi Delta sorority. Cards were shuffled and dealt under a tent outside the Union for 1 50 hours. The $1 ,800 earned was later donated to three philan- Wefficien :X ;.-.-. :? :: awards 50 greek week and tollies for charities y group, corn- loursoiwork. period cre- tiPike, Greek ponsoredby 7,000 toward led and radio nnualcard-a- were shi or 150 hours. thropies. The motto of our fraternity is human service and this is the most efficient way to contribute. In the three years we ' ve participated, $6,500 to $7,000 has been earned and we have had fun getting to know other houses, Dan Stables, Acacia coordinator, said. Two sororities and four fraternities teamed up to dance for those who can ' t at the Muscular Dystro- phy Bump-a-thon. The management of Mother ' s Worry donated the building while 60 continuous hours of dancing produced about $2,000 for the cause. It was a good way of having a public relations pro- ject that everyone could have a good time at, Scott Stuckey, Sigma Chi representative, said. The twelfth annual Derby Day, sponsored by Sigma Chi, earned $806.75 toward their national philan- thropy, the Wallace Village for Children, a center for children with minimal brain damage. Sorority women competed in numerous fund-raising projects, such as a T-shirt sale, aluminum can collection, and a Mother ' s Worry function. Each year we try to re-evaluate the various compe- titions and get rid of those that have lost their purpose while replacing them with new ones. The women are asked for feedback before and after Derby Day so that we may make the changes that they desire, Kile Morri- son, Sigma Chi coordinator of Derby Day, said. So no matter what the cause or reason, greeks man- age to create original vehicles of fun to support their drives. greek week and follies 51 Dormies race motors 1 1t_ , T t f. Spring Fling is; .A ' We crazy. Spons SpimgFlmgIS seesamarate Khip Fund. St: seadilj in front! i taught a scavei ' F Center lea 1 Diamonds WatKrame by Cheryl Charles Spring Fling is that time of year when for one week, students participate in fun and games and go just a little crazy. Sponsored by KSUARH, Spring Fling cov- ered everything from a seesaw marathon to bed races. Spring Fling 1975 kicked off Sunday, April 13, with a seesaw marathon to raise money for the McCain Schol- arship Fund. Starting at 4 pm, the seesaw bobbed steadily in front of the Union until Friday. Sunday also brought a scavenger hunt and then a dance at Kramer Food Center featuring K-State ' s Bobbie Gem and the Blue Diamonds . On the second day, a scholarship banquet was served at Kramer, as well as movies on Goodnow Hall ' s front lawn. A Sweet Sassafras ice cream social and table games played in and out of Derby Food Center on Tuesday. Wednesday was dedicated to former President James A. McCain, as a McC ain display was shown in the Union. McCain dined in Derby ' s Gold Room and spoke at the leadership banquet in ' Putnam Hall. The Chase and The Pink Panther were the movies fea- tured on Goodnow ' s front lawn that night. Thursday night brought rock and opera music and cheap beer. The group Jefferson Starship played to a crowd in Ahearn Field House; Johann Strauss ' opera, Die Fledermaus was presented in the newly-chris- tened McCain Auditorium; and it was discount night in Aggieville. The seesaw marathon ended Friday and Saturday closed off Spring Fling with events scheduled all day. A parade through Aggieville led to the bed races outside Ahearn with Governor Robert Bennett as the official starter. Participants pushed the beds, some rode; and water balloons hailed both winners and losers at the finish line. All were rewarded by a picnic lunch outside Danforth Chapel. Dancing to Hot Foot on Derby basketball courts ended Spring Fling -- the week that students of the residence halls went a little wacky. Similar to Spring Fling was the first weekend in Octo- ber, when residence hall co-eds got a chance to Escape From It Hall with 1 975 Fall Follies. Friday, October 3, marked the beginning of Fall Fol- lies with TGIFing at Mother ' s Worry. Also featured were a talent contest in the Catskeller and another Sweet Sassafras in Derby Food Center. A Weber Arena dance brought Fall Follies to a close Saturday night. spring fling and fall tollies - 54 houseparents All-purpose guides answer calling by Doug Fink We are younger than some think we are, Mary Belle Chappell, houseparent for Delta Tau Delta fraternity, exclaimed. I always try to be happy and look on the bright side. Such a youthful spirit is a useful pre- requisite in fulfilling the duties of a houseparent, now officially called resi- dent advisers. Resident advisers need to be skilled in many ways, from the man- agement of the food budget and menus to thoughtful listening to individual problems. Veda Johnson, resident adviser for Delta Zeta sorority, makes out all the menus, buys all the food, hires house- boys, and aids in hiring the cook. A resi- dent adviser for both fraternities and sororities for 1 4 years, she is well-pre- pared for the rigors of the job. I know I can take the pressure, Johnson said. I ' ve learned to keep my temper. In addition to managing the kitchen, you ' re the hostess of the house, Chappell said. The houseparent ' s func- tion is to uplift the fraternity and add grace. Resident advisers represent their chapters at special events and dinners. At Delta Tau Delta, Chappell even instructs pledges in etiquette. Helping in the rushing of prospective members is another activity of the resi- dent adviser. Once a prospect is pledged they take the initiative of offi- cially welcoming the newcomers, Cindy Biehl, Beta Sigma Psi fraternity adviser, said. Biehl teams with her husband Dave, a veterinary medicine student, though she shoulders most of the responsibility. Chappell endeared herself to the rushees so well that they were calling her Mom like the rest of her boys , she said. Resident advisers sometimes serve as friends in hearing out the problems of greeks, both on management and per- sonal levels. A lot of times they come for my opin- ion, Biehl said. Usually they need help in such areas as planning dinners. Occasionally men go to Biehl to talk out problems concerning girls or rela- tionships with other men in the house. I ' m a good sounding board, Chap- pell said, but the boys also help each other out a lot. There ' s always an upperclassman to help, especially with schoolwork. The resident adviser also helps in little ways, such as sewing on buttons and mending clothes. Chappell, with previ- ous experience in tailoring, will even shorten or lengthen pant legs. The greeks reciprocate these ser- vices in many ways. Johnson noted that her girls will escort her to church or any other event she wishes to attend. I go to everything they have, Biehl said, any function or formal. I help to organize these events. The men also ask her to attend, along with their dates, such activities as mov- ies or theatre productions when her husband is unable to accompany her. Chappell especially enjoys going to varsity and intramural athletics with the fraternity members. She enjoys the experience of sharing in the varied interests of the members. The problem of noisiness or rowdi- ness were deemed no problem at all by the resident advisers. None expressed any need to discipline members, except perhaps in an indirect manner. You have to go the long way around, Johnson said. You have to work behind the scenes. You can ' t say ' don ' t do this ' . No good house would give, or need to give the resident adviser, real discipli- nary authority, Biehl said. They have ways of taking care of it themselves, Chappel said. I love the hubbub, it doesn ' t bother me one bit. I ' ve always felt if a person couldn ' t adjust to group living they should leave, Johnson said. Solomon Tafesse, former resident adviser and member of Kappa Alpha Psi, played a less defined but equally vital role in the fraternity. Tafesse, who is from Ethiopia, assumed duties of house manager and also assumed a leadership role when he became houseparent. Like Johnson, Tafesse said he does not command people to do this or don ' t do that. Instead he attempted to help individuals become aware of their mutual responsibilities. You make a person aware that he ' s away from home and living with 14 other people, Tafesse said. There is a good relationship with the brothers. Tafesse stressed that the members take on the respon sibility of upkeep and cleaning on their own initiative a great part of the time. His job became subse- quently a matter of reminding others of things which needed to be done. Any time a conflict arises I help as a mediator, Tafesse said. You become the center of attention as far as making decisions. You have to play a role and practice what you preach. Tafesse played a role in helping with individual problems, but no more a pro- nounced role than any other member. The fraternity provides a feeling of home and helps raise the feeling of black con- sciousness, he said. Over there we just live like one fam- ily, Tafesse said. To me it ' s a matter of being part of what I am. For all the resident advisers their responsibilities require a strong commit- ment in time and personal energy. This is a full time job, don ' t let any- body say any different, Chappell said. You ' ve got to give your all. houseparents 55 56 the concerts the concerts POINTER SISTERS Parents ' Day 1975 brought four sisters from Oakland by the name of Pointer. Sponsored by UPC, Anita, Bonnie, Ruth, and June danced, strutted, stepped, and sang in McCain Auditorium, September 20. Besides performing their own popular songs such as Fairytale , Yes We Can Can , and How Long (Betcha Got a Chick-en the Side) , they harmonized to songs from artists Dizzy Gillespie and Duke Ellington. After opening the show with Gillespie ' s Salt Peanuts , they combined four songs in a tribute to Ellington I Ain ' t Got Nothing But The Blues , I ' ve Got Rocks In My Bed , Black Satin Doll , and Indigo Blues . Backed by two gui- tarists, a drummer, and a pianist, the sis- ters didn ' t forget to let them shine also in solo performances. Singer Joh n Biggs, a native of Manhat- tan and K-State graduate, was first on the bill at the concert. Recently recording his first album, Biggs has toured with groups such as Ike and Tina Turner, Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Rare Earth, and Dionne War- wick. JETHRO TULL The massive string of people that crept forward, pressing through the single set of doors, was even longer than the line eighteen days earlier that formed for those first precious tick- ets. It was October 18, homecoming night, and everyone outside Ahearn Field House was waiting for the same thing a seat which would give them a ride into the world of Jethro Tull. And what a ride! After a late start, a less than excellent performance by back- up band U.F.O., and a frisbee-filled inter- mission, Jethro Tull lost no time in captur- ing the audience. From the concert ' s first number to the encore ' s last farewell, it was evident that Britain ' s rock superstar, Ian Anderson, was in complete control; he radiated the fieldhouse with his energy. His solo per- formance on the guitar, flute, and saxo- phone, along with his near acrobatic per- formance on stage kept the audience straining in their chairs. Although Tull ' s blend of mellow and hard rock was excellently received by the audience, the band ' s showmanship far out-distanced their musical presentation. At one point in the show, two band mem- bers garbed in a zebra costume appeared on stage and excreted striped rubber balls, which were in turn juggled by guitarist Jeffery Hammond-Hammond. Ian Anderson ' s analogy of this scene was that while Elton John had his funny glasses, Mic Jagger had funny lips, and David Bowie didn ' t know which way to go, Tull had their shit together. Other stage effects employed by Tull added to the concert. During Warchild , Anderson was bombarded by several near-miss explosions, with a final burst of smoke obliterating him at the song ' s end. Fiery explosions during a drum solo by Barrimore Barlow slowly engulfed the stage in smoke, filling the fieldhouse with a blue-gray haze. Tull treated the audience to a longer- than-average encore. At the concert ' s close, a few people left, but the majority remained in hopes of bringing back the band. After a few minutes of upheld matches and lighters, Tull returned for a full 30- minute encore. the concerts 57 Full-time-and-a-half job bogs book by Rita Shelley Many are the laments of the working student. No time to play or to study for those so inclined. Compared to the fate of an imprisoned bridge builder in Outer Siberia, it ' s not a bad life. Boredom certainly isn ' t a prob- lem. Who can be bored leading a double life? And the folks surely can ' t complain about the money spent if it ' s not coming out of their pockets. Students find jobs for one of two rea- sons. A need to fi ll up some spare time. Or parents can ' t afford (or are suddenly unwilling to pay for) the beer and pizza . . . and tuition . . . and books . The lifestyle of working students is not much like that of their non-working counterparts. While their friends are con- suming Aggieville pizzas, they stand behind the counter taking orders and watching the crowd go by. By the time they finally get free time, they ' re too tired to spend it. For the person trying to cram 36 hours into a 24-hour day, sleep is a precious commodity. For Dan Bolton, professional fireman and junior in journalism and mass com- munications, this tends to be a hectic life. There have been times when I ' ve fought a fire until 7:30 am, slept for half an hour, and had an 8:30 test, Bolton said. I ' m not much good on days like that. In order to get the most mileage out of the time they do have, working students have special considerations. Planning is the keyword. Bolton works in 24-hour shifts three times a week. He meets with his profes- sors at the beginning of each semester to iron out time conflicts between when he must work and when tests are scheduled. Most teachers have been very coop- erative, Bolton said. One professor gave me a test at the station he wanted to see the fire trucks anyway. I have to plan a whole day ' s schedule at a time, Keitti Tucker, an engineering student and houseboy for Gamma Phi Beta sorority, said. What I put in my backpack in the morning has to be every- thing I need until 9 pm that night. A job can have disastrous effects on grades depending on how the student does or does not organize time. I ' ve had 3.6 and 3.7 semesters as well as 1.9 semesters while working, Bolton said. He restricts himself to nine or 1 1 hours a semester. When I have to use my free time for working, there ' s less time for studying, Larry Reed, senior in landscape architec- ture, said. Reed works at the engineering copy center. Because free time is at a premium, it ' s hard not to steal from study time for times to remember . And it never gels easier to spend a spring afternoon in the library. A working student may not finish col- lege in four years. Though there are alter- natives to working while in school, these aren ' t always feasible. For instance, engi- neering courses are designed to be taken consecutively. A student in that field would risk forgetting a lot of necessary information if he or she took a semester off to earn money. Another alternative is to borrow money to finance one ' s education, but for stu- dents who dislike being in debt, this isn ' t the answer. In my field I might be faced with a few years in a low-paying job. A $5,000 debt could be disastrous, Bolton said. Being married, he believes he has a responsibil- ity to maintain a financially sound budget. Even though working students often miss a lot of good times with friends and have worries they wouldn ' t otherwise have, they do find occasional advantages to their lifestyles. The quality of your free time improves because you find yourself being more creative with the time you do have, Reed said. I find myself meeting more people. It forces you to think of things to talk about besides your major. Another advantage is the added edu- cation of the real-life situations the stu- dent doesn ' t experience in the class- room. I feel like sometimes this education interferes with the real life education, Bolton said. When money spent is gained by one ' s own blood, sweat, and tears, it is likely to be appreciated more. I appreciate my education a great deal more for having sweated it out, Bol- ton said. I feel more responsible toward the money I spend when it ' s my own, Tucker said. These students are probably more conscientious about attending classes and getting the most out of the game called higher education. If I ' m spending $2,000 to $2,500 a year, I want to say I get something for it, Tucker said. As working students say au revoir to another potentially great weekend to spend it pushing pizzas, a serving cart, or themselves off of Bluemont Hill, they can keep one happy thought in mind. In these days of unemployment, at least they have a job. And it is good training for what they ' ll be doing after graduation push- ing pizzas, serving carts, or themselves off of Bluemont Hill. 58 working students working students 59 Genuii y gone tee, and I arait toe best ( atleastintheWet I hope that says ;, .oyalistheor 60 k-state alums Genuine loyalty burns with a purple passion by Greg Doyle Long before I was indoctrinated to hav- ing purple pride, I heard what a great place K-State was. Not from present stu- dents (I didn ' t know any then), but from alumni. They kept saying I couldn ' t go wrong at K-State because their parents had gone here, and their parents ' parents had gone here, and therefore, it must be about the best university in the world, or at least in the United States. I hope that says something about loy- alty. Loyal is the only word that depicts a K-State alumnus properly. Everyone, from county extension agents to house- wives to wheat farmers to lawyers, con- fesses allegiance to their purple and white alma mater. That allegiance isn ' t just nominal, either. That allegiance includes support- ing K-State athletic events, academic concerns, and financial obligations. Take a relatively distant, sparsely-pop- ulated region of the state like Norton County and you ' ll find generations of K- Staters and more generations to come. K-State is as much a part of these people as is the soil upon which they grow their life-sustaining wheat. Purple blood runs thick in the veins of people living in areas like this. Thick enough, in fact, that great groups of alumni travel to football games whenever the team plays in Manhattan. Thick enough to upset them when they can ' t get basketball tickets to home games. They even have a 1960 Cadillac hearse they call the Community Good Will Car painted purple with purple seats and white carpeting that they drive in parades like the Miss Frontier Pageant, held in Pratt every year. And when they get together on occa- sion with University of Kansas alumni (what few there are), the K-State alumni show the Jayhawkers around in the hearse. Although there is no formal organiza- tion of K-Staters in Norton County, the alumni seem to have purple pride ingrained in their characters. We should have won that game, one alumnus said about a recent basketball defeat. Our team was just fooling around too much. That particular alumnus has a right to speak of K-State as his. Boyd Hall was named after his grandmother, Mamie, who, until she passed away in 1 972 at the age of 96, had her own special seat at the stadium and fieldhouse and never missed a home football or basketball game. Purple pride became a hereditary trait in the Boyd family Mamie ' s sons all went to K-State, and her sons ' sons spent their college days here too. It ' s as if they didn ' t know any other university existed. Soon all of us will be alumni in one sense or another. When you leave your last class for the last time, remember the heritage of K-State: Willie Wildcat dies hard. k-state alums 61 Two steps ahead, one back put ' person ' in right place by Linda Reed No score and four years ago. That ' s not an unpatriotic printed mix-up. It ' s the way the situation added up before college and Gloria Steinem greeted me. Those were the days prior to the match up between the male pop- ulation and me. No trumpets had been sounded, nor battlefields bloodied. Now, with a B.S. degree in one hand and no ring on the left, it ' s time to regroup and survey the casuality list. Which were my vic- tories and which my defeats? Or, in short, what have I ms. ' d out on? 1. On the question of bras, whether or not to wear one. Now, for me there was never anything to decide. Personally, it was either wear one or be prepared for a slap on the back and, Hi, there fella. Funny lookin ' T-shirt you ' re wearing! ' ' To put it another way, by age 1 6, it was obvi- ous I could never sue a bra for non-support. Two years older and thrilled to have actually outgrown a few of the darned contraptions, I had a barricade thrown at me by the libbers . Burn that bra and show the world what you ' ve got to offer! they shouted, or something to that effect. Back then, my sheltered brain couldn ' t quite compre- hend what or to whom I should be shouting unfair . But there ' s one thing I certainly was not ready to get off my chest. And that was my bra! A month or so into college life and some of the terri- ble injustice began to bear its real misguided, peach- fuzz face to me. 2. On the question of home ec, whether or not to major in it. My initiation into libber basic training came unexpectantly. In fact, the setting was more conducive to the breeding of unliberation. It happened ta da! at a dorm function for fresh- men. Not unlike eighth grade dances, sweaty palms, perspira- tion, and dry lips were of real concern there. Everyone was uneasy, trying not to do what freshmen do, trying to be worldly. My number happened to come up and I was asked to dance by a fellow rookie of the college social game. We threaded our way through the fidgety crowd toward the impromptu bandstand. The drummer was getting off on his solo the fifth one that night which left us nothing to do but talk. So then came the big three what ' s your name, where you from, what ' s your major? Right away, I knew this kid was the original wit! Anyway, to pick it up in the third round What ' s your major? Home economics and journ Home ec? Home ec! Are you planning to get mar- ried? he shrieked. Well, no ... but really, don ' t you think it would be better if we went out a few ... Then what good will a degree in home ec do you if you don ' t get married? I was hoping for an instant replay of the last few min- utes of my life so as to correct my offending answer or whatever had set this kid off. But just then, the entire teachings of liberation came together for me. And hav- ing the word handed down to me, I theorized, Who needs this jerk?! With visions of Gloria ' s commanding, streaked mane waving in the wind, I confronted the enemy and blurted: I don ' t have to take this crap. Which, by the way, is what you are full of! Ah, how sweet the smell of singed peach fuzz! 62 liberation It was crude, but cute and to the point. Luckily, I later increased my vocabulary and was able to express myself less inhibitedly. You know, let my gut feelings shine through. From that exhilaratingly liberating moment on, I announced my home ec and journalism major without hesitation and openly glared anyone to defy me. It was the same patented, perfected glare that carried me through my next mission. 3. On the question of male-opened doors, whether or not to walk through one. Being a person of small frame, all those heavy, tightly encased doors can be a pain. So, in the beginning, I sought relief of my burden through the chivalry of males. To spur them into action, I entailed special tactics a look of total helplessness with an almost-ready-to-drop book or two teetering in my weak, puny arms. Successful campaigns were pol- ished off with a smile and soft thank you . Then came the period of possession. Visions blotted my sleep at night. Gloria kept leaping at me, spitting phrases like double standards and the weaker sex ! So with bags under my eyes, I vowed to make good the commitment to my sisters. No more taking the easy way out. It was either develop a good set of biceps or succumb to the male faction. Wrestling with wind-whipped, two-ton doors didn ' t turn me into Charles Atlas, but it did drive the demon Scarlett O ' Hara out of me. Once exorcised, I began my retaliation. Whenever a door magically sprang open for me, I would move on to an alternate route, sometimes circling a building two times before gaining entrance. But I did it my way! Soon the tardiness to classes caused by this ritual began to play havoc on my GPA. So I resorted to merely glaring all amateur doormen into submission and a subsequent slamming of the door in my face. A real triumph for my liberation! But it was time to move on up the hierarchy of libber- ness. 4. On the question of freebies, whether or not to drink them. My memory fresh with warnings of no boy gives you something for nothing without expecting something in return whatever that means I spent my first two years of college life warily sizing up every offer of free beer. Aha! Just a beer and it ' s over between us? Fat chance! But since the ' . ' us usually consisted of seven girls total, the risk wasn ' t too great and I drank up. As the semesters drew on, I noticed in my female friends a new interest in men namely their billfolds. The biggest contributors were rated and cataloged, and a watchful eye searched for the more select items on every night out. One especially obliging male practically declared bankruptcy each time he sat in our booth. Such a price to pay for the company of this bevy of beauties! I soon lost my taste for the prostituted drink and made alter- nate plans for future weekends. Tripping into the golden semesters of my college career, I stumbled over a startling phenomenon. While out with three friends for the evening, I ordered a pitcher of beer, cringing in apprehension of the inevita- ble scene to follow. Sure enough, the male next to me reached for his money. Suffering from battle fatigue, I routinely muttered that I r eally wanted to pay for it. And eureka! It happened! The bills were slipped back into his pocket, no fuss or reassurances necessary! Here, sitting on my right, was my first truly liberated male! Now the next step popped into my head. How could I ever afford to keep a liberated man? That brings me back to the degree. There it is. My purple heart for surviving four years of sorting out and saving, trying to gain some ground. So where do I stand? Alice Cooper still laments that only women bleed. Guess more blood will spill in the battle for human rights. But the injuries are seldom fatal in this fight. Most of the ammunition used is meant to shake up the inflicted. Now for the self-evaluation. Occasionally, I get pinched by my bra, hear a snide remark about home ec majors, or walk through a male-opened door. And as for the naked left hand, it doesn ' t bother me much. Anyway, who can afford a husband and kids with prices the way they are on the meager salary of a woman? liberation 63 HOUSEi ll Vetera Cieatures Great tene of the nin nary Medicine Besides veteni on small anima 1 equine, there w Die fty County ray medicine sti tanHymaneSoci The open hou ' Pfesent a wide ned with the S ' oups. This yi veterinary medicine open house 54 the events the events VETERINARY MEDICINE OPEN HOUSE Veterinary Medicine and All Creatures Great and Small set the theme of the nineteenth annual Veteri- nary Medicine Open House, Saturday, October 18. Besides veterinary medicine displays on small animals, food animals, and equine, there were special displays by the Riley County Kennel Club, pre-veteri- nary medicine students, and the Manhat- tan Humane Society. The open house committee worked to present a wide range of exhibits and events. In the past, exhibits were usually con- cerned with the major divisions of animal groups. This year we tried to be more diversified, including more exotic animal classes, Sue Sawyer said. She, with another senior in veterinary medicine, Kathy Potter, conducted the event. This was entirely a student-con- ducted open house. All displays and pro- jects were the brain-childs of veterinary medicine students, D. W. Upson, pro- fessor of physiology, said of the event that involved 400 students. ACKER ' S INAUGURATION Pomp, ceremony, a dignified procession of stu- dents and faculty donning academic attire, and formal speeches. All the trap- pings of academia were present for Duane Acker ' s installation as K-State ' s eleventh president, September 26. Also present was a sense of substance and optimism. You have asked me to lead this Uni- versity and I accept your eagerness, Acker said. But leadership is shared by many, especially in a university. Student body president Bernard Frank- lin expressed the students ' expectations of an active voice in campus affairs. Not only do we urge your support for a faculty salary increase, we feel as stu- dents that we should have a constructive voice in the reappointment and tenure of our faculty, Franklin said. We are not interested in running the University, only in the opportunity to voice and be heard on our concerns on major issues, such as Nichols Gym, he continued. In response, Acker said he expected students to mature, by experiencing, encountering, interacting by voicing on University issues, but to mature in the cadence of time, not by rushing or grasp- ing. Acker charged the faculty to develop a knowledge as to the place of their disci- plines in both the academic community and society as a whole, and to harness basic research, wherever done, in applied research for Kansans. In his summary remarks, Acker said the vineyard now assigned me is K- State, extending to all corners of Kansas. I will work using all the talents given me, and with your help. Franklin perhaps summarized the feel- ings of alumni, faculty, and students alike by assuring President Acker that our eyes are upon you. HOMECOMING Once again, adrena- lin is pumped into the veins of an ancient custom. After respiration begins, this revived entity is carefully dusted off, given a new suit of activities, and set loose to terrorize the villagers for a few days before cardiac boredom sets in and the sleepy homecoming monster retreats for still another year. The traditional mystique surrounding homecoming is as strong as ever. The custom appears to be immortal silver bullets only bounce off its thick hide. Backstabbers only dull their knives on it. In all fairness to Blue Key, Mortar Board, the alumni, and everyone else concerned, Homecoming 1975, while not universally appreciated or supported, still provided meaningful enjoyment for many. The first official home coming activity was the revival of a long-forgotten K- State tradition: the horsetank dunking of favorite campus figures in the Union courtyard the Wednesday before home- coming. For Thursday night, KSUARH, Interfra- ternity Council, Panhellenic Council, and the Student Governing Association spon- sored a free street dance in Aggieville which featured The Exceptions. A recep- tion and banquet for alumni and the stu- dent body took place Friday night in the Union. Homecoming decorations and displays created by residence halls, sororities, and fraternities were also judged that night. All through the week, these living groups spent time and money constructing wood and paper to depict good ol ' Willie Wildcat and his friends picking on poor Sooner characters. On October 18, Homecoming Day, President and Shirley Acker were hon- ored in the pre-game activities before the Wildcat-Sooner battle, as Ms. Acker was crowned homecoming queen. The alumni band marched out on the field playing Wildcat Victory, and com- bined with the KSU marching band to perform 76 Trombones during the half- time show. The Pridettes also held a half- time reunion with former drill-team per- sonnel to celebrate their fifth anniversary. Homecoming came to an end Saturday night as 7,200 fans packed Ahearn Field House for the Jethro Tull concert. the events 65 school, and so on a I ' ve always bee ' WoodrrorJeappoifi about wailing in lira and casually mentk in fact, there wai ill, as any fail knows, pride goetl todmobiewasir tod types. Early stages of tl DOS appointment, I mnutestosnagori to the pulse-temp tad pressure lady question-and-ans stated? No. Ears Hey, lady you ' re a pint low pregnant in tne last radicate, inciudii you that you have ' asethey would exl I survived the qu g phase, the tan the truly dedi wld not endure by Sara Severance Medical authorities try to claim that there are several types of blood, ranging from A negative to O posi- tive . They say that determining a person ' s blood type is a complicated matter, requiring elaborate equipment and technical expertise. Balderdash! There are exactly two types of blood: the type run- ning through the veins of a blood donor, and the type running through the veins of a non-donor. Determining which type a person belongs to is a simple matter. Just mention the word bloodmobile and the person will volunteer his type. Type D (donors) swagger about their type. Yup, I ' ve given blood 12 times now had to wait in line four times last year, they say, with an unconscious flexing nurse ' s aide Rafter a gi; Wilier wait, D-d 66 giving blood - of the arm muscles. I never miss figure it ' s my patri- otic duty. The non-donor (ND) types, on the other hand, have a sheepish air. They tend to shudder a lot and change the subject when blood giving comes up in conversa- tion. Who, me? they ask, if pinned down. They then go on to tell about how they know a person who was perfectly healthy until he gave blood. Then he fainted, and got hepatitis from a dirty needle, and had to quit school, and so on and so forth. I ' ve always been a type D, with all the blatant charac- teristics of the breed. I carried around the little pink bloodmobile appointment card conspicuously, bragged about waiting in line through two classes to give blood, and casually mentioned in conversation that in another eight years I ' d be eligible for the Golden Drop award. In fact, there was nothing I was prouder of than my generous Red Cross habits. Well, as any faithful follower of K-State football knows, pride goeth before a fall. The last time the bloodmobile was in town, I almost decided to change blood types. Early stages of the process went well. With a previ- ous appointment, I only had to stand in line for a few minutes to snag one of the chairs in the queue leading to the pulse-temperature lady. After that came the blood pressure lady, then the 20-questions lady. As a seasoned veteran, I was usually ahead in this question-and-answer session. Malaria? No. Teeth extracted? No. Ears pierced in the last few months? No. Ever rejected to give blood? Had an abortion or been pregnant in the last six months? Are you on any type of medication, including aspirin? Has the doctor ever told you that you have too much blood? (I presume in this case they would extract two pints instead of one.) I survived the questioning and moved on to the ear- sticking phase, the test to separate the merely curious from the truly dedicated. Anyone not truly dedicated could not endure the jab in the earlobe by what appears to be a rusty paper clip, with the volunteer squeezing and pulling until a drop of blood appears. The nurse ' s aide noticed my yelp, but wasn ' t notice- ably sympathetic. This isn ' t as bad as getting a sample taken from your finger, she said. It ' s not as bad as being run through by a bayonet either so what! Then, after a glass of lukewarm orange juice and another wait, D-hour had arrived. Up onto a table where the bloodmobile nurse efficiently connected vein and plastic bag. Invariably I ' m steered to the table facing the door, where only the immediate world can see me. It ' s diffi- cult enough to concentrate on squeezing the sponge for five counts and releasing for three without trying to satisfy an audience. Hey how ' re you doing? a friend might ask, from a cozy vantage point immediately outside the donating area. One-two-three-fine-one-two-three-four-five-and you?-one-two-three . . . Oh, not bad. How ' re your classes going? ... four-five-okay-one-two-three-and yours?-one- two . . . Not bad. I ' ve got thi s one professor do you know anything about physics? By the time the conversation has deteriorated into oblivion, the other person has usually decided I ' ve regressed to kindergarten stage. After the blood had been transferred from vein to plastic bag and a Band-aid slapped on the puncture mark, it was happy hour. Time to visit the canteen. The canteen is a good place to visit your friends and neighbors and enjoy a glass of water. If you don ' t have any friends or neighbors present and have finished the glass of water before the 20-minute rest period is over, then it ' s best to read the literature the Red Cross provides to while away the hours. I chose Facts and Figures About Blood Donation . Hmm, I ' m A-negative, that means I ' m one of only six in 1 00 donors. Far out. What ' s this? A section labeled So You ' ve Just Given Blood . . . Drink plenty of fluids in the next few days, and avoid lifting heavy objects with the arm used to give blood. All the talk about blood was beginning to make the ther- apeutic doughnut sit a bit heavy in my stomach. Some bleeding is normal. However, if you should see blood start to seep from beneath the bandage . . . I got no further. The Red Cross volunteer had seen enough lily livers and shrinking hearts to recognize my greenish com- plexion and wild-eyed expression. She quietly hustled me off to a cot where I could col- lapse in peace and relative privacy. An hour later I was on my way, slightly shaky, but with my Be nice to me I gave blood today sticker firmly tacked to my lapel. Giving blood probably wouldn ' t rank in anyone ' s list of top 1 experiences, but next time the bloodmobile is in town, all the type D donors will be there. After all, it ' s our patriotic duty. And in another eight years we ' ll all qualify for Golden Drop awards. What more could you ask for? giving blood 67 68 soap operas by Greg Doyle Many a housewife has scorched her husband ' s shirt as she suddenly discov- ers that John is living with Joan unbe- knownst to John ' s wife Sally, while Sally thinks John is really seeing Mary on his lunch breaks. The smell of burning fabric reaches the housewife ' s nose, and she realizes that what ' s on the tube couldn ' t be that important. At least not any more impor- tant than what will happen between Bill and Diane on the next program. And as if college weren ' t complicated enough, hundreds of attentive viewers flock to public televisions all over campus to watch the complicated lives of their favorite stars unfold. Television melo- drama, otherwise known as soap operas, because her party crystal has water spots. The audience, however, is chattering away, apparently unconcerned about dishwashing troubles, wagering on what earth-shaking event will take place as the plot unravels on the next program. And that ' s the way it goes from day to day. For a few hours at midday, soap opera addicts step out of the doldrums of school and secretarial work, involving themselves in complex webs of love, death, infidelity, pain, and on rare occa- sions happiness and humor of daytime television. And being the curious sort, I asked two young ladies why. Why is this time in front of the tube so important? Why does The Young and the Restless bore me to tears, while they seem to be engrossed in it? like. It ' s always the ones you like the most the cutest guy, the ones that are hap- pily married. So day after day the viewers return with anxious anticipation to follow the trials and tribulations of these characters of that never-never land of daytime tv. The regulars consist of about 95 per cent females, and about five per cent males. Among that male population is one about whom there is no mistaking his masculinity namely, Carl Pennington, defensive linebacker for the Wildcat foot- ball squad. He ' s not shy at all, one girl said, about Pennington ' s precise arrivals at 1 1 am for The Young and the Restless. He marches right up and sits ' on the front row, and is as attentive as the girls. The girls believe that guys watch the soap operas usually to see the good- Spending the days of our lives in search for another world attracts people from every walk of life, and yes, one sex is as attentive as the other. Coeds of every description crowd the Union tv room every day around noon, equipped with pop and a cottage cheese salad, to catch up on the latest gossip from both sides of the tv screen . . . Oh Jack, it was like I was born to love you, a swooning female on Ryan ' s Hope explains. What are your parents going to say when you tell them? asks her lover. If they see how happy I am, and how sure I am, they ' ll accept it, she replies. The scene changes, and the girl tells her parents of the affair she ' s been hav- ing with this married man. I don ' t want you spending any more time with that scoundrel, snaps her father. Dad, I ' ve made the decision. You can ' t make me feel guilty, comes the daughter ' s defense. A couple of foreboding organ chords, and the scene changes to a busy kitchen where a distraught newlywed bemoans the fact that she ' s losing all her friends There ' s nothing else to do, one coed replied. Hmm, I could think of a lot of things, but I kept quiet. We mostly laugh at the acting, the other answered. There ' s just nothing else on tv. At first they weren ' t too open about the subject. Gaining their confidence, how- ever, I discovered the real reasons why soap operas are so popular. When you get sick and tired of school, you can identify with someone else ' s life, and get out of your own, one girl said. When they get angry, you get angry. Okay, that sounds reasonable. At least there seems to be some substantial reason for wasting . . .I mean spending your time here. But all the programs seem the same, I said. They ' re just about life, one girl rep- lied. Somebody ' s got to fall in love, get hurt, die. That ' s why the shows seem all alike. The most fun thing about watching them is guessing what ' s going to happen next, one girl said. I ' m always wrong. They never kill off the ones you don ' t looking girls, which, I must admit, seems as good a reason as any. Because, regardless of their acting skills, most of the characters could be models. For whatever reason people watch, though, there are those who are hope- lessly addicted to the pastime. Asked how often she watches, one girl replied: Every day. I can ' t miss. I ' ve even skip- ped classes. Last semester this long event was occurring over a two-month period. I had to see the show. I was taking economics credit-no credit, and I ended up with no credit, she said. Last summer I had a friend who tape recorded all the shows so I could listen to them when I got home from work. She admitted she ' d hardly missed a show in a year and a half. But her room- mate was beyond hope. She can ' t sleep at night worrying about what is going to happen next, the girl said. So when school gets you down, go watch a soap opera. It may be the worst thing that ' s happened to you all day. soap operas 69 ass; 70 planetarium Study soars to telescopic heights by Jerri Phillips Sitting underneath that plain white dome, you wonder just what could possi- bly happen. Then you notice the lights are gradually dimming, and off in the background, faint music starts to increase in intensity. You look up above and in a matter of seconds, that plain white dome has become a dark sky full of stars. For the next 20 minutes, you can see any portion of the sky at any time of any year without having to leave Room 407 in Cardwell Hall. Our only limitation is our imagination, John Evans, associate pro- fessor of physics and director of the K- State Planetarium, said. The mechanical devices in the room are equipped to pro- duce a simulated sky a sky that you can see with the naked eye. And it ' s rea- sonably accurate. Reasonably accurate , however, may not be the phrase that comes to mind as you sit through one of the 12 shows offered in the planetarium. Through the use of projectors and the new sound sys- tem, realistic constellations, comets, and exploding stars appear on the overhead dome. We are not limited by subjects for presentations as long as they are astro- nomically-oriented, Evans, who special- izes in astronomy, said. Shown on the tours offered by the physics department, some of the shows deal with UFOs, the evolution of stars, galaxies and the uni- verse, and Indian legends of the sky. These presentations are prepared and given by K-State students, Evans explained. By the time they have devel- oped the script, planned and coordinated the visual effects, and blended in a suit- able musical score, the students have spent about 60 hours. The presentations average about 20 minutes in length, he added. We have no staff as such that keeps the planetarium in working order, Evans said, and the planetarium is open just for the tours. We have about 2,000 to 3,000 people from outside the University visit the planetarium a year. Built when Cardwell Hall was con- structed in 1963, the planetarium was at first poorly equipped and offered a limited selection of shows. In the last five years, however, several major improvements have been made, including the installa- tion of the sound show and taped presen- tations. It ' s small, but we keep it up to date, Evans said. It ' s one of the oldest plane- tariums in the state in educational institu- tions. But we think it is as scientifically accurate as the professional ones. He proved just that as he pushed a but- ton and produced a sunrise as real as the actual one earlier that morning. The orange ball finished its ascent on the eastern side of the dome. Excuse me while I reset the sun, Evans said. Everything goes in cycles around here, just like it does up there, he added, pointing toward the sky. planetarium 71 MOVED TOO 4 HIT f ' LAMT TREES AS OOMD UKllONJ LOT TICKET ....WAIT 4 LOOK LAPS LOT 4 WAIT IM WEST STANOM CHAMCE- PAR.KIKJ6 Ikl A Z4 HK. (SET CAU6HT, SO MCX E. 2. MCVE THE K5U PARKING LOT GAME IN WOOL Z.QE105E JTURM5 72 parking lots U5MIUUTE i DIM6 ZON AM 1C . ' COIN A ?DOL- MOVE BUXK1M6 IM STALL muSE ALARM flNALLY you ONLY WAV Tj WIN ISTO LOSE TUKMS MAKIHATAN BUYS MEW t -xi ro ar TO Ll6HTS...STOf 2. HOUR5 ST NRT LOOKIM6 parking lots 73 74 the speakers the speakers JAMES A. McCAIN With words of praise, retiring president James A. McCain held his first and last all-Univer- sity convocation, April 29. The small crowd in McCain Auditorium heard McCain review his 25 years as president of K-State. McCain lauded land-grant universities ' pasts as well as their prospective futures. It is eternally to the credit of these institutions that they have remained faith- ful to their original principles. Their aca- demic programs have been continuously adapted to altering conditions of society as witness the pioneering developments in nuclear engineering and the agribusi- nesses here at K-State, McCain said. In my opinion, no legislature in the history of our state has been more responsive than the 1975 session, McCain said, praising the legislators for their support of K-State. Among the appropriations noted by McCain were $2.7 million to raise faculty salaries by 10 per cent, a $168,775 increase in the stu- dent payroll, and a $30,000 increase in funds to support women ' s intercollegiate athletics. ESTELLE R. RAMEY Sex and society was the topic of the first all-University convocation of the 1975 fall semester. Estelle R. Ramey, professor of physiology and biophysics, addressed a crowd of about 500 persons in McCain Auditorium September 9, on the current social changes stemming from an increase in the educational level of women. If women had been used in solving societal and scientific problems, this would be a different and better society, Ramey said. Not because women are better than men, but because they per- ceive the world differently. According to Ramey, American women are the best fed and watered, best dressed, best sheltered, and best edu- cated women the world has ever seen. But more and more women are asking why educate me, and then discard me as an intellectual entity? It costs $25 billion a year to keep women in college, and no one has the faintest idea why we are doing it, Ramey said. JULIAN BOND Julian Bond, the out- spoken state senator from Georgia, gave a striking oration on poverty, the adminis- tration, and the 1 976 presidential election to a crowd of over 1 ,000 in McCain Audi- torium during an all-University Convoca- tion on November 20, 1 975. An informal discussion in the Union Big-8 Room fol- lowed the program. Bond believes that the civil rights gains of the 60s are slipping away in the 70s due to the state of the economy, apa- thetic administration, and public igno- rance. The Nixon-Ford administration was criticized by Bond as one that showed arrogant contempt for the peo- ple and their problems. Bond ' s powerful sarcasm cut into Con- gress, which he cited for lacking testicu- lar fortitude for being unable to offer any alternative to the President ' s pro- gram of promoting austerity by making the poor pay more for food stamps and gas and by refusing a decent raise in Social Security. Bond illuminated several blights on America ' s image. The black infant mortality rate is twice as high as whites. The black American male can expect to die seven years ear- lier than a white male, Bond said. Blacks are the last hired and the first fired. On the upcoming election Bond said he is not running for the presidency because of a lack of money. The Georgia legislator was cast into the world spotlight during the 1968 Democratic convention in Chicago when he was nominated for vice-president on the Democratic ticket, only to withdraw his own name. When asked if he would consider accepting the same nomination in 1 976 with an appro- priate presidential running mate, Julian Bond simply said, Yes. the speakers 75 Broth lorn yp the soi fie front of the tti laughter and volui ad comedy fans Urn Forum Hall h Marx Brothers If Yes, toe ton I M-did itself by del | its with not one, j aiematic works of I ta history. Begmn j % Cocoanuts , 1 W, and appiau ftbrothers ' filmpr rough, UPC md as presented, stu Wchthebrothe ; ' twevidentby PHW.HBPQ breezf with cra 76 m arx brothers I shot an elephant in my pajamas this morning. How he got there I ' ll never know! The cigar, bushy eyebrows, and atrocious posture symbolize only one man Groucho Marx. Mix him with an Italian and a mute, and out will come a comedy gourmet ' s delight. Then sit back and savor it. Or as Grou- cho would say, Don ' t fight it. It ' s big- ger than both of us. In fact, you ' re big- ger than the both of us! Brothers retain comedy domain by Paul Rhodes Turn up the sound! someone near the front of the theatre yelled, as the speakers blared out at full volume. As the laughter and volume both died down, avid comedy fans who nearly filled Union Forum Hall settled into their seats and applauded furiously because the Marx Brothers were about to Go West . Yes, the Union Programming Council out-did itself by delighting Marx Brothers fans with not one, but rather the entire cinematic works of the zaniest brothers in film history. Beginning September 1 1 with The Cocoanuts , Marxists laughed, yelled, and applauded through all 13 of the brothers ' film productions. As though offering the series was not enough, UPC made it almost impossible not to attend one of the films. With each film being shown three times the day it was presented, students had 39 chances to catch the brothers in action. And, at 75 cen ts, the brothers-four were the cheapest entertainment in town. It was evident by the number of season tickets sold and the large crowds attend- ing the films, that the Marx Brothers were just as or probably more popular than ever. Harpo, Chico, Zeppo, and Groucho breezed through their antics on screen with such ease, that they appeared as if acting quite naturally. This was understandable, because off stage, they were even crazier than when acting. Once, after becoming annoyed from sitting nearly a half hour in a producer ' s waiting room, the Marx Brothers pro- ceeded to build a fire in the fireplace. When the smoke was thick enough, they stripped naked and burst into the produc- er ' s office screaming, Fire, fire! The producer was never known to keep them waiting again. Although it is true that W. C. Fields re- fused to follow the Marx Brothers on stage, Groucho, Harpo, Chico, and Zeppo were not born into success. When they first entered vaudeville with their real names of Julius, Adolph, Leonard, and Milton, they were barely able to get a laugh. It was only after Harpo began to panto- mime, that the other brothers developed the individual styles that led to their suc- cess. Chico, who had often used an Ital- ian accent, adopted it for the stage. Groucho, on the other hand, was a suc- cess just being himself. Unfortunately, Zeppo, whose humor was nearly identi- cal to Groucho ' s, was destined to die in show business as a straight-man. K-Staters were not only entertained by the humor of the Marx Brothers, they were also spellbound by the musical tal- ents of Harpo and Chico. When Harpo strummed his harp and Chico lingered his piano, there were very few who could not recognize their musical genius. But the sharp notes of Groucho ' s wit always out-distanced piano and harp. Eh, my shrinking violet? Groucho asked Madame, in Monkey Business . Say, it wouldn ' t hurt you to shrink thirty or forty pounds. The Marx Brothers series was high- lighted by two major events. The first was the Marx Brothers dress-up on the day of Duck Soup . Though those who garbed themselves as one of the brothers were allowed to enter for two bits, the turnout of appropriately dressed persons was small. Although the dress-up did not pan out, Duck Soup proved to be one of the funnier movies of the series. If one scene from all the Marx Brothers ' films was to be singled out as the best, it would quite possibly be the mirror scene from this film. In it, the brothers put on a mirror- image pantomime, showing themselves capable of perfection. The other highlight of the series came February 1 2, when Maxine Marx, daugh- ter of Chico, presented two lectures in Forum Hall. Bearing subtle characteris- tics of her father and uncles, Marx deliv- ered an interesting and humorous address and revealed a number of unknown facts about the brothers. The brothers voted on everything. But Harpo always voted with Chico, so what Chico wanted to do they did. Maxine also told of her own feelings about her father and how he appeared to her. He was a father like a will-o ' -the-wisp. He was always entrancing. Marx shocked the audience at one point by bringing out a quite different side in the personality of her Uncle Groucho. It seems his nickname fit his personality to a t . He was a cold, bitter man. When I was a kid, he used to pick on me. But she told the audience that at times Groucho was also capable of extreme love and generosity. Although April 22 ended the Marx Brothers ' stay at K-State, the influence of their wit and humor remained behind. Jeffery Haag, an avid Marx Brothers fan, had a final comment about his comedian heroes: I owe a lot to the Marx Brothers. See- ing those four treat everything that hap- pened to them so lightly has helped me to look at life in a much more positive man- ner than I thought possible. marx brothers 77 Existing within the confines of a college campus can instill confidence. Living among peers, ideals and viewpoints are shared at near-equal age levels. But then there is the occasional and rude brushing with the real world. The bub- ble bursts against its sharp cruelty, leaving only fragments to piece together. As bedfellows of higher education ' s fri- volity, the outs of suicide, discourage- ment of employment-seeking, the entanglement of unplanned pregnancy, and disgust at sexual assault must be contended with. Making light of crises may be the remedy for onlookers while personal counseling supports victims. No matter what cure is taken, the mere cold reality of the real world ' s existence chills the University ' s spine. Cold Reality Shadows assault imaginations by Judy Puckett The sky was clear, but dark. The moonlight was vague. I thought to myself, the only thing missing was the whispering wind. Just then the leaves rustled. My composure remained intact, though, and I contin- ued through the small-scale forest just south of Justin Hall. It would be silly, I decided, to get worked up over a few noisy leaves. But it was inevitable. My attempt at keeping a clear mind was thwarted by darting thoughts of recent reports of females being attacked on campus. As I reached in my pocket, the cold steel generated a warm feeling in my hand. I hadn ' t wanted to go this far, but it seemed the only thing to do. If I were to be threat- ened by physical danger, I would need a weapon of some sort. It had been a last resort. Nearing the rose garden, I thought I heard the famil- iar rhythm of hard-soled shoes caressing concrete. Momentarily, I hesitated. Should I glance over my shoulder? What if no one was there? I turned my head, just a little, when whoosh a red Corvette sped by me. My pace lost its sense of urgency as I concluded the Corvette had been a taxi for the feet that had trailed me. Nearing Anderson ' s front lawn, I became aware of a sense of pressure within myself. Of course. I released the tight grip on the hunk of steel in my coat pocket. All would be okay, I was sure. A few more minutes and I would be at work, safe within the newsroom and near my friends. The wind whipped around and I pulled my jacket closer to my neck. The odor of the pine trees filled my lungs. I breathed deeply, and stared at the tops of the reaching trees. That was a mistake. The heel of my shoe caught in the hardened remains of a once-muddy crevice. Sitting clumsily on the ground, I likened a mis- placed picnicker. My ankle was throbbing. Grabbing a nearby limb, I tried to pull myself to a standing position. No such luck. I couldn ' t put any weight on my right foot. Then I heard the noise again. My first thoughts were of relief. Someone was here who could help me. As the sounds of the steps grew more intense, my thoughts changed. There was, of course, another possibility to consider. Overwhelmed by eerie ideas of danger, I crawled closer to the pines, pulling myself into seclusion. Then I waited. My heart thumped with the methodical movements of the mysterious steps. Then something happened. Something that jarred the regularity of the cadence. He must have seen me. I crouched lower, thinking what a good idea it had been to wear jeans. The denim faded into the darkness. Maybe he would pass on by. Long ago my hand had found its way to my pocket, and I had a strong hold on my only element of protec- tion. I slowly, quietly withdrew my hand. With it came the carefully manufactured instrument. Then the shadow moved. Slowly, with calculated thought. Crouching. Lower, lower, back under the pines. My eyes were wide. She too was clasping steel. Before the laughter came, I felt my grasp loosen on the cold metal of my whistle. I thought was all the further I got. She nodded her head. I know. I saw you hiding by the bush and thought you were going to attack me. We laughed. First for relief, then about the situation. We must make quite a pair, she remarked. I admitted we probably looked cute, posed beneath the pines. I suppose we should celebrate, she said, with a gleam in her eye. Simultaneously, we reached for our whistles. The shrillness broke the dark silence. We were safe. rape 81 Cold Reality l Counsel services ease stress by Paul Rhodes Hello, this is The Fone. Can I help you? Hello, comes the hesitant reply at the other end of the line. I don ' t really know why I called. I ... I guess I ' m just bummed out on school. I was wondering if I could talk to someone for a while . . . A second phone rings, the young man at the receiver answers, then waits for a reply. A long pause follows. His voice shaking badly, the caller begins. My buddy took some pills about an hour ago. I don ' t know what they were, but he ' s really strung out. I need some help. Mike Caldwell, director of The Fone, strains on the edge of his chair, quickly scribbling down the address. Explaining to the others there what has happened, Caldwell grabs his coat and runs for the door. Some- one else takes his chair. The phone rings again. This is The Fone K-State ' s call-in walk-in crisis center. Started in 1969 by the Laramie House, The Fone is designed to assist people with problems rang- ing anywhere from depression to unwanted pregnan- cies. The service grew so rapidly, that in 1970 it became funded by the Student Governing Association. Most of The Fone ' s calls deal with depression. About 35 per cent of our calls fall into the category of loneliness or depression, Caldwell said. About 15 per cent are drug-related calls, another 10 to 15 per cent deal with sexuality, and about five per cent of the calls deal with pregnancy. The Fone received 1 ,254 calls during the fall semes- ter. Of these, about 60 per cent were referred to other sources. There are a lot of calls we can ' t handle ourselves. If the problem is alcoholism, for example, we refer the person on to the Drug Education Center, Caldwell said. Along with The Fone, SGA funds two specialized cri- sis centers The Drug Education Center and the Pregnancy Counseling Center. The Drug Education Center began services in 1971 . Under the direction of John Leslie, the center provides counseling for problem drug users and has initiated a wide range of programs. We ' re really in a growing stage right now, Jeff Morris, assistant director, said. We ' ve established a number of programs, and we seem to be gaining ground through them. Besides serving as a walk-in drug counseling service and giving presentations to campus groups, the center also airs a television show on Manhattan ' s cable net- work. Focus on Drug Use and Abuse provides the community and campus with weekly updates of infor- mation. The center also offers two classes through Uni- versity For Man. One is designed for parents of high school students, while the other is specifically for drug users. The class is designed to teach drug users how to use drugs properly, Morris said. If a person is going to use drugs, he should know which drugs are the least harmful. This way, we hope to reduce the number of overdoses. Leslie and Morris also teach two University- accredited courses, Speed I and Speed II. The second specialized crisis service funded by SGA is the Pregnancy Counseling Center. Located in Holtz Hall, the center is directed by Karen Barquest, graduate student in counseling. Basically, my office is a resource center for people who want to know about birth control, venereal dis- ease, pregnancy alternatives, and abortion, Barquest said. Probably the biggest advancement of this service has been in the Peer Sex Education Program. Last year, over 4,000 persons took advantage of it. The upward trend in counseling this year has been tremendous, Barquest said. Personal counseling during the fall semester increased 1 27 per cent and the number of telephone contacts tripled. Many times, problems faced by students seem to have no solution. Because of this, some turn to suicide. But, because of the efforts of Robert Sinnett and other staff members of Lafene Student Health Center ' s men- tal ward, many persons are finding such a drastic measure is unnecessary. Sinnett, a clinical psychologist, said the mental ward ' s staff treats over 400 patients a year. Most of the individuals I see are self-referred. Nearly 95 per cent of the patients we see come in without re- ferral, Sinnett said. The road to us is wide open. We ' re open 24 hours a day here, and if we ' re needed for anything, the nurses will call us any time day or night. Although many persons consider suicide at one time or another, few ever follow the act to completion. Suicide forms somewhat of a pyramid, Sinnett said. There are a few individuals at the top who do commit suicide. Below them is a larger number who attempt suicide and fail. At the bottom is the largest number, those who at one time or another contemplate suicide. Through the efforts of The Fone, the Drug Education Center, and the Pregnancy Counseling Center, many are finding life ' s cold slap in the face a little less chilling. counseling services 83 Cold Reality Job search is steady work by Doug Fink The process of job hunting can be traumatic, easy, or of no concern at all, depending on the inclination of the job hunter. Curriculum plays a major role in the availability of jobs. Specialized skills are currently the best guarantee of finding employment. Engineers, in general, have greater opportunities, Bruce Laughlin, director of the Career Planning and Placement Center, said. Specialization doesn ' t always assure abundant opportunity, though. Craig Meyer, graduating senior, notes a tight job market in his field of agricultural mech- anization. There aren ' t enough companies coming to campus in my area, Meyer said. I ' ve had to start writing let- ters to companies on my own. Meyer was given one definite rejection, which he described as discouraging , but still has at least one prospective job. He laments, nevertheless, that big companies that hire from his curriculum are laying peo- ple off. A liberal arts degree presents even more difficulty, but is not hopeless. We don ' t regard a liberal arts curriculum as a bad curriculum in any sense. It doesn ' t in and of itself defeat them, Laughlin said. If the person is capable, with strong personal qualities, he or she will likely succeed anywhere. While employers find greater difficulty in applying broadly-based training, there are opportunities in such fields as sales and public relations, Laughlin said. Possibly even more discouraging to many students than the shortage of jobs is the prospect of the job hunting process itself. Knowing what an interviewer expects, and what to expect from him is one aid in helping the applicant. The worst thing a student can do is to be fright- ened, Dick Humes, Westinghouse representative, said. We want you to be very much at ease. Tell us how you perceive yourself. Casey Smith, graduating senior in marketing, reflected Humes ' advice from his experience. Make sure you know who you are and what you want. You should have a confident attitude, Smith said. The reason they come is to get an idea of who you are. Interviewers assess candidates in terms of curricu- lum, academic records, outside activities, honors, geo- graphic preferences, and travel attitudes, Humes said. The GPA is important. We look at the transcript and apply it to communications skills. We try to ascertain self-sufficiency and look for strong points, Humes continued. Humes emphasized that he looked for positive quali- ties in people and did not try to discern specific weak- nesses, except where such matters as health were con- cerned. Everyone has a self which is a ' product ' they are trying to sell, such as personality, mannerism, and the educated self, Laughlin said. Everyone can have a strategy in marketing themselves, though we do not ourselves plan the strategy. It must be the individual ' s project. Laughlin noted that students are often overly con- cerned with being interviewed as to their competence. Employers rely on the GPA and transcript for this information. Resumes are important also in job hunting because they are what employers use as an initial screen of applicants, Laughlin said. Beginning the job hunt early is a valuable but much neglected aid. Both Meyer and Humes agreed that interviews should begin as much as a year before grad- uation. My personal view is that students should start talk- ing to employers at the sophomore level and should look for summer employment for experience, Humes said. The last semester of the junior year is a good time to start looking and taking advantage of services like the placement center, Meyer said. Written recommendations may be overrated by some. Frankly I think recommendations are of limited importance outside the teaching profession, Laughlin said. They are not a real important input to us, Humes said. Our own input is much more important. Then, after all the effort, comes the rejection. How should and how do students handle it? Meyer simply wrote more resumes and made more intense efforts to contact companies on his own, the response suggested by Laughlin and Humes. It ' s not human to be happy to be turned down, but the only way to succeed is to not get discouraged. Fail- ures should be treated as signposts or guideposts. They should channel students to where they can be accepted, Laughlin said. It ' s a matter of working harder and longer. A rejection doesn ' t mean you ' re not valuable, it means there wasn ' t a match between needs and capa- bilities, Humes said. It ' s probably not a setback but another experience. Many students still have alternatives in case they cannot find work, and some place their alternatives before work. Some regard graduate school as some- thing to fall back on, while others look forward to travel- ing or simply spending a few months at odd jobs or idling waiting for a job. job hunting 85 landon lecturers WILLIAM SIMON A full McCain Audi- torium, television cameras, and scores of reporters awaited to hear Treasury Sec- retary William Simon deliver his Landon Lecture. But Simon ' s plane was fogged- down by unappreciative weather at Manhattan airport. His Washington jet was forced to land at Salina where he was taken by helicopter to Manhattan. By the time he arrived, the March 18 lecture had been cancelled. Simon did, however, deliver his pre- pared speech to a sprinkling of students and Landon Lecture patrons at a Union Ballroom luncheon. We cannot long survive as a world leader if we continue to trade our free- doms to the government in exchange for false promises for a better future, Simon warned. To recover from the recession, Simon insisted, American government must restore greater discipline to its financial affairs, control overzealous government regulations, make policies that encour- age savings and investment, and make Americans aware of the threat of bigger government. DANIEL MOYNIHAN Several years in South Asia have convinced me that a rhetorical dynamic has taken hold in the new nations. This comment, reflecting the fear of growing anti-Americanism across the world, was made during the May 6 speech and thirty-first Landon Lecture by Daniel Moynihan, former ambassador to theU.N. and India. Moynihan, then in line to become the next United States ambassador to the United Nations, said new nations are acquiring a different view of the United States. He believes growing anti-Ameri- canism is placing responsibility on the United States not only for American mis- deeds, but the misdeeds of all world pow- ers. The danger occurs when these charges are believed or accepted. Moyni- 86 landon lecturers han is convinced many of this country ' s educated young people believe this rhet- oric, and that withdrawing from the other nations will cause them to become dependent on totalitarian regimes. He cautioned that dependence of other countries on totalitarian regimes could affect the United States. Even a country as big, independent, and self-sufficient as ours needs a kind word somewhere and, increasingly, we find that it is in our relations with totalitar- ian nations that we can obtain some approval of what we do and some legiti- mation of what we are. HENRY JACKSON Under the ever- alert eyes of secret service men and other security agents, Senator Henry Scoop Jackson delivered the thirty- second Landon Lecture in a nearly full McCain Auditorium on January 21 . I will not settle for a ' lesser America ' , Jackson retorted, to the prophets of doom who warn that America cannot continue unrestrained economic growth. Jackson, one of the many democrats vying for the 1976 presidential nomina- tion, also attacked current American for- eign policy that prompts the Soviet Union to become more powerful, more adven- turous, and more threatening to Ameri- can interests and international order than at any time since the Stalin era. Jackson blamed detente, a body with- out a soul a policy indifferent to human rights, for promoting expan- sionist Soviet policy. The restoration of real economic growth was Jackson ' s answer to the problems of poverty, education, health care, adequate housing, and full employ- ment. The Senator decried those who warn that the age of plenty is over. Jackson lauded Kansas as an agricul- tural example of America ' s richness and productivity, built up by our free market system, and the free people who make it work. landon lecturers 87 88 holidays and home Home rules respect by Judy Puckett As students, most of us find a sense of security in being collectively surrounded by the limestone walls of our environment where: ending a Friday night in a state of Aggieville-bred drunkenness is the rule and not the exception. shouting a four-letter word just to make yourself feel better is not offensive. coming in the front door at 8 am after a hazy all-nighter with a member of the opposite sex is not immoral. College life breeds an openness among students allowing traditionally unaccepted actions or roles to become acceptable. And, for the time we are in school, that is good. But several times each year, college plays the devil ' s advo- cate by forcing us outside of those oh-so- comforting walls and into the confines of Mom, Dad, and the old home town. Alas, students facing the well-earned breaks and vacations from campus life find themselves shoved into a mild state o f schizophrenia. People are complex creatures. We col- lect, over the years, bits of tradition and hints of rebellion and uniquely intertwine the two, each creating our own separate characters. But we quickly learn that certain aspects of that character are offensive to some. That is, what your roommate may approve of could give Mom a heart attack. So it is in going home we find ourselves changing. Curbing the cussing, denying the drink ultimately altering our living habits so as not to disrupt the norm. Often in this situation, we find our- selves struggling with notions of hypoc- risy and guilt. If we honestly feel the things we do at school are not wrong, how can pattern changes be justified? Through respect maybe. While we are within their home, we act according to our parents ' rules and regulations, pri- marily placing their feelings ahead of ours. From the time we are children, respect for others is greatly impressed upon us. We don ' t throw mashed potatoes at the woman seated next to us in a public res- taurant. We don ' t burp during church services. We don ' t walk down Main Street in the nude. Why? Essentially, out of respect for others. This reasoning creates a new struggle. When a sense of respect for others begins to encroach on our honesty with ourselves, which do we choose to favor? Consider the time element. Is the time we spend at home great enough to justify the hassles we will prob- ably incur by riding against the tides of pre-set norms? How much longer will Mom and Dad be around? Is it worth it to invoke upon them the worry they ' ll harbor when we return to school? Because Mom and Dad have had more time to experience life, is it possible they will understand our non-traditional actions? Remember, they haven ' t always been in an authoritative role. It ' s possible, highly probable, they have been involved in unconventional actions, too. The dilemma is constant the deci- sion, ever-changing, as we are. It may have started with college life, but it isn ' t going to stop there. We are constantly under demand by society to re-evaluate, re-work ourselves as we fit into the masses. But we can only do so successfully if we keep foremost in our minds that individuality, our unique- ness, is the mainstay of change. holidays and home - 90 (he events the events GREAT PUMPKIN CONTEST Jack- o ' -lanterns are priceless. Unless they were entered in the Horticulture Club ' s annual Great Pumpkin Decorating Con- test then they might be worth $5. Five K-Slate faculty members acted as the panel of judges, and with all the expertise of pumpkin connoisseurs, selected the lucky pumpkin from each category most ugly, most beautiful, most original, and best characterization. But decisions were not long debated, because there were only four entries. The $5 prizes went to Cinde Doby, Susan Bell, Cindy Helferstay, and Janene Lewis, for their mastery of the seasonal art of pumpkin decorating. UNIVERSITY SING K-State ' s Univer- sity Sing proved that not only little kids care about Hurst Major ' s Children ' s Zoo, but big kids do too. Sponsored by the Interfraternity Coun- cil, 15 performing groups from greek houses, dormitories, and scholarship houses formed in the spring of 1 975. Practice sessions began soon after everyone returned from summer vaca- tion. Groups competed not only in sing- ing, but also in selling tickets for the final night of competition. After endless hours of practice, partici- pants competed in the semi-finals. Eight groups were then chosen to continue in the November 1 6 finals. The singers were judged on the basis of a number of fac- tors, from song selection to stage appear- ance. The judges announced their decisions. Sigma Alpha Epsilon and Gamma Phi Beta took third place and Delta Delta Delta and Delta Upsilon came in second. Farmhouse and Chi Omega, who sang Matchmaker and Days of Wine and Roses were declared first place winners. Sigma Alpha Epsilon led in the ticket sales by bringing in $800. Delta Delta Delta came in right behind, with Gamma Phi Beta placing third. Proceeds from the ticket sales were used for the zoo ' s benefit. A CHRISTMAS CAROL Christmas cheer won out in K-State ' s musical ver- sion of Charles Dickens ' A Christmas Carol . The play was presented Decem- ber 5 and 6 in McCain Auditorium by the speech and music departments. The traditional forces of good and evil were pitted against each other in this pro- duction. Scrooge, played by Matt Smith, graduate student in speech, was a mean, grasping miser who repeatedly grumbled Christmas bah, humbug! His meetings with three spirits of Christmas provided the drama of the play. The Ghost of Christmas Past led Scrooge through his unhappy childhood, the Ghost of Christmas Present showed the Christmas festivities that Scrooge despised and refused to participate in, and the Ghost of Christmas Future pre- dicted a bleak future for the miser and the death of Tiny Tim, the crippled son of his clerk. The play was a joint effort of the Uni- versity and Manhattan residents. Dressed in scarves and mittens, local children car- oled with K-State students who wore bonnets and top hats. Special effects were an instrumental portion of the production. Snow fell as a woman sold balloons in the street. The ghostly image of Joseph Marley, Scrooge ' s deceased business partner, flashed on a door knocker and then dis- appeared. The staging of A Christmas Carol was intricate. Store fronts on a street scene opened to reveal Scrooge ' s bed- room, a drawing room, and even a rag- picker ' s storehouse. the events 91 Conspiracy: super sleuths stray figment department by Jerri Phillips A Massachusetts Assassination Bureau came to the K-State campus with information instead of threats. Politics of Conspiracy , a lecture series sponsored by the Union Program Council, enlightened students and faculty with lectures and seminars about political assassinations, the presence of secret dealings within the government, and other clandestine operations. Bob Katz, co-founder of the Massachusetts-based Assassination Information Bureau, began the week- long program Monday, November 10, with two evening presentations entitled Who Killed JFK? Through the use of slides, including a bootleg copy of the famous Zapruder home movie, Katz retraced the events and evidence in the Kennedy assassination for the near-capacity crowds in Union Forum Hall. Though at times rather sarcastic, Katz pointed out obvious weaknesses of the controversial Warren Report. Throughout his presentations, Katz urged public sup- port to reopen the investigation, which after more than 1 years, still has no conclusive answers. We need a strong organization of networks of local groups interested in getting a Congressional investiga- tion going, he said. Katz followed his night lecture with a seminar in the Union Big 8 Room Tuesday. Speaking again on the Kennedy assassination, he noted a recent Gallup poll showed that only 1 per cent of the American public still believes the Warren Report findings. Katz also touched on the Martin Luther King and Robert Kennedy assassinations in his hour-long semi- nar. He presented evidence to his audience that King ' s assassin not necessarily Earl Ray did not fire the fatal shots from the rooming house. He also mentioned that the FBI is more strongly involved in the King case than generally thought. People should understand that if we don ' t know who assassinated President Kennedy, we also don ' t 92 conspiracy tray nent came to the teadof threats. sponsors htened student s about pofca operations, achusetts-basec egan the week- Mthtwoeveninc (atz retraced the Varren Report, rged public sup- i after more than is. letworksol local sonal investija- a seminai in the cent Gallup poll American public i. .utter King and hour-long semi- ience that King ' s -did not fire the also mentioned intheKingcase. die don ' t kno , also n: know who is running our country, he said. We can ' t rely on Congress to reopen investigations into the assassinations. I ' m convinced of the need for a political effort involving petitions, demonstrations, and media saturation if we are ever to have a full and open investi- gation. The CIA and You , the second lecture of the series, was presented Tuesday in Union Forum Hall. Those on hand listened to a sometimes light treatment of the Central Intelligence Agency by Doug Porter, consultant to the House Select Commission on Intelligence opera- tions. Sprinkling humor throughout his presentation, Porter drew laughter recounting CIA operations against national leaders. Intelligence operations are carried out in 64 govern- ment agencies, Porter said. And the CIA is one of the smaller ones. That doesn ' t limit the agency or its activi- ties, he said, as they are diversified. Only a small part of agency operations involve intelligence gathering, the original task. Most CIA operations involve clandestine work in other countries. Porter also called for public support in CIA investiga- tions saying that one of the main problems America has to deal with in trying to control the CIA is that the public doesn ' t seem to care. At his Wednesday afternoon seminar, Porter echoed his main lecture points and delved deeper into some of the illegal action taken by the CIA. The CIA is fat and self-serving, Porter said. They should be taken out of the meddling business and put back into coordinating. One of the agency ' s main faults is not coordinating information picked up from different areas of government, which Porter believes is the real purpose of the CIA. Speaking about the FBI, Porter briefly mentioned its role in Martin Luther King ' s assassination and said the ' investigation bureau and the IRS have taken the cue - from the CIA in clandestine operations of their own. Explaining what he labeled a mosaic of earlier con- cepts, Carl Oglesby reviewed his theory of political control in the final evening program of the Conspir- acy lecture series. Speaking before a small but interested group in Forum Hall, Oglesby related what he terms the Cow- boy-Yankee theory of political elites contending for control of national political policy-making. The power pyramid of this country is not uniform, the one-time president of the Students for a Democratic Society said. We have a divided group of competing elites based on independent economic factors. Oglesby explained the history of his theory, which although never stated as such by anyone else, was active throughout American history beginning with the struggle for national independence all the way through to recent political assassinations and clandes- tine operations. Oglesby believed the JFK assassination was a strug- gle between the Cowboy faction those with modern interests tied in oil, land, and industry to overthrow a Yankee president eastern factions of old banking institutions and wealthy family backgrounds. Oglesby said he offers the theory as a way for people to see through the inner mechanisms of governmental conflicts, without confusing them. At a Thursday after- noon seminar in the Union, Oglesby gave a more detailed explanation of the way his theory worked. Throughout his hour-long discussion session, he traced incriminating links among the Rockefellers, Howard Hughes, Richard Nixon, and the syndicate, involving a power struggle to run the country. Oglesby said that the Rockefellers were at the top of the Yankee faction the top banking magnates. Hughes, on the other hand, headed the Cowboy group of agri-businessmen and independent oil tycoons. He explained specific details of how the two groups were continually locked in a power struggle and how it even- tually involved ex-President Nixon through illegal cam- paign contributions. conspiracy 93 the bicentennial 94 - bicentennial r s r r .g r fcjw-.KTv. M . - . . TFwas. mial bicentennial 95 r 96 bicentennial Some revolutionary ideas Botched party calls for amends by Scott Kraft We did it all wrong. It ' s probably not the first time we ' ve bungled the job, botched the project, or just plain fumbled the ball. But just imagine the grandiose plans, the stacks of $1 ,000 bills, and the used elbow grease we, the United States, will have after the Bicentennial celebration falls to its knees. It ' ll be taller than a master ' s thesis on the national debt or George Washing- ton ' s immortal cherry tree (we really always doubted that bit of historical trivia anyway). And for what? A colossal flop, no doubt. A few streamers, but no heart-warmers. A can- non on a hill, but no defense and no peace. We ' ll feel a bit like the irreverent kid who gorged on popcorn, soda pop, and Butterfingers still can ' t get the sticky feeling of cotton candy off his face. But this sort of stuff never sticks to your ribs, only your face. That ' s the kind of empty feeling we ' re liable to have following Bicentennial ' 76, U.S. of A. But, like most other things, the after- effects of the unevent can be avoided. Not this year, but the next time we decide to throw that colossal super-party. And, as the greenskeeper for the Augusta National or the official head of the Rose Bowl parade will tell you, the preparation for next year begins now . Mark these words: the next time a cen- tennial celebration graces our country, chances are we still won ' t have true objectives in mind, priorities straight, or wise money in hand. So, as an aid to those budding Tricen- tennial planners who will soon be pound- ing away (not as in fingers to typewriters, rather as in heads to walls), we offer sug- gestions for an efficient celebration. This year is when the planners should begin thinking about 2076. Start saturat- ing the people with news of the pseudo-event. Urge corporations and nonprofit organizations alike to declare a Tricentennial Week. Maybe the Department of Health, Edu- cation and Welfare, in conjunction with the city of Boston can construct a papier- mache statue tomb of the unknown student in a school bus at a cost of less than $15 trillion. Other cities and government agencies can construct similar disposable master- pieces depicting similar great social events. The Tricentennial will mark an ideal sit- uation for an opportunistic president (name one that wasn ' t). The President will have a chance to place people from groups other than the majority race, reli- gion, or sex in full-time jobs with big titles and bigger salaries. Some radical leftist and extremist right groups will surely be supporting their favorite candidates for Tricentennial Director of Community Action. It ' ll be an uncertain proposition purring liberal programs or crass anarchist ones. That ' ll be a high price to pay for token- ism. But by Tricentennial time, the white male will probably be as abused as any- one. Presidential appointments can also provide good hideouts for aging politi- cians. Let them plan a Tricentennial cel- ebration, the President will say. Taxpayers will pay for the construction of plastic men in buccaneer outfits, at the whims of these senile presidential appointees. And television, if there is such an ani- mal in 2076, should have Tricentennial Seconds in which a sponsor pays $30 million for 59 seconds of advertising to support one second of programming. Thousands of aging history books will feel the brunt of dog-ears and coffee stains as tv programmers rack brains and funds for tidbits of history worthy of one second of airtime. Chances are, they ' ll find something. And while the Fed continues its god- like stranglehold on the money supply, government will continue to print that small percentage of money supply known as currency. Government engravers can have a heyday with the currency. A red, white, and blue dollar bill heads the list of inno- vations with Patty Hearst, national hero (anybody that can dodge the FBI that long ought to have her track shoes bronzed) and on the back of that same dollar bill a flattering picture of Spiro Agnew, with dollar signs for eyes. Silver coins should be by then of recyclable plastic. For the Tricentennial, the government can sell advertising on each coin, with an inverse relationship between advertising cost and worth of the coin. Cigarettes should not be allowed to shine from U.S. coins however the government must not be bastardized. And when the parly ' s all over, future planners, make sure to lock the gates. Citizens will be applying wildly for passports to get into those countries less fortunate than ours anything to get away from cleaning up the aftermath. But catch them they can ' t get away without doing their fair share to clean up the mess. In line with its policy of noninterfer- ence, the government should not hinder free enterprise from cleaning up the gov- ernment ' s mess. Just to be safe, when you approach the businesspersons ask- ing them to sweep up . . . and you tell them the government threw the party . . . bring a bedpan. And don ' t forget to send suggestions to the Quadcentennial planners with a personal note attached, written in blood: rrj bicentennial 97 Buffs graze ' grass roots ' history by Rusty Harris Kansas? Kansas and the Bicentennial? Now come on, I ' ve heard of odd combinations in my day, but really, what the heck does Kansas have to do with the Bicentennial? Well, in some ways, very little. But in others, I can only say, yes, Kansans do have something to celebrate in this, the year of the buy-centennial . While most people may believe somewhat accurately that 200 years ago, Kansas was nothing more than the Great Buffalo Dumping Ground Out West, a lot more can be said about Kan- sas history. For, if nothing else, Kansas is unique in that the greater part of its history has been nothing more than a place for peo- ple to pass through thank God. The first record of a European coming out Kansas-way was in the 1 500s. It was a very modest affair, nothing more than some people some in chains out looking things over for the Spanish crown under the command of Coronado. Lucky for us, the dear boy only got as far as central Kansas. If he had seen the Flint Hills, he might have wanted to stay. And I have enough trouble trying to get hello to come out right, much less buenos dias . After the Big C, little was heard or seen of Kansas by the Europeans for about 300 years. Then a few short years after the Ameri- can revolt, Lewis and Clark came whip- ping through or around - - in their hurry to find a short-cut to the California beaches. And they weren ' t the last ones to try that trick. Oh yeah, even the Indians didn ' t last that long. Shortly after L C came to find L.A., various tribes signed treaties with the good ole U.S. of A., selling their lands east of the Mighty Miss in exchange for lands in Kansas. That lasted for a few decades, and then most of the Indians moved on. Come to think of it, shoved out would be a bet- ter term. Those Indians unlucky enough to stick around found themselves in the midst of a legal dispute when the upstart Kansas legislature tried to tax Indian lands and property in the 1860s, in violation of ear- lier treaties. They should have remem- 98 bicentennial bered a lesson their Eastern counterparts had learned that the only good white man was a dead one. But wait a minute, I ' m getting ahead of myself. On the track once again, one can find that Kansas didn ' t make news too often in the first hundred years of the nation ' s existence. The first biggie, if you can term it that, involved name-calling. Well, more specifi- cally, it was the controversy over the cor- rect spelling of Kansas. It seems everyone and the dearly departed mapmakers had a different interpretation of the name of the Indian tribe that predominated this neck of the plains. Some said Cansa , others claimed Canza , still others Kanza . All in all, there were about 50 different spellings given to that poor tribe. The dispute wasn ' t really settled until the Territory of Kansas (that ' s right folks, two of the s , one k , and no c ) was established in 1854. Between that time and the earlier trav- els of Lewis and Clark, hundreds of set- tlers trekked across the hills and plains of Kansas. All of them, in the tradition estab- lished by the non-dynamic duo, headed for the west coast. In fact, no one really decided to drop in and stay in mass (other than the buffalo chips), until it came time for admitting Kansas into the Union. And then the word was out it would be up to the inhabi- tants (as long as they were white males), to decide if the soon-to-be state would be free or slave. Perhaps the world has never witnessed such a monumental effort at ballot-stuff- ing. Thousands headed this way to stay, believe it or not to attempt to swing Kansas and the nation their way. New communities sprang up every- where, including at the base of Bluemont Hill. Thanks to the efforts of a group of determined Massachusetts Methodists who were bound and determined to see Kansas a free state, Manhattan was born after a few name changes (one of them including New Boston). Both sides, free and slave, entered the area with battle gear in place. And when the two factions met, sparks flew. The brouhaha got so bad at times that some of the eastern newspapers promptly dubbed the territory Bloody Kansas . The Kansas Chamber of Commerce must have loved it. Well, anyway, when the dust settled, and the votes were in, Kansas entered the not-so-united Union on January 29, 1861 as a free state. And within 90 days, the Civil War had broken out some birthday party. And since then, things have been fairly much downhill. Yeah, we can ' t forget other big events in Kansas history since then the first land-grant college (rah, rah!), Alt Landon, Carrie Nation, Amelia Earhart, being the breadbasket of the nation, the Soviet Union, et. al. But time and time again, Kansas has been maligned, mostly due to our good friends in Hollywood. Did you know that most easterners still believe there are Cowboys and Indians running loose out here shooting at one another? And in spite of our clean air, scenic vis- tas, and a long list of famous Americans ' (you know Matt, Kitty, Doc, and Fes- tus), the rest of the nation still treats us as if God created Kansas to receive the enema for the rest of the country. Need we forget where the government wanted to dump all those nasty nuclear wastes a few years back? But the heck with the rest of the nation anyway. Let them all run out and buy their way into the country ' s next one hun- dred years. Kansas is about the only place that hasn ' t jumped onto the red, white, and blue bandwagon. I mean, after all, if we had we would have red, white, and blue hybrid wheat growing all over the place, right? But maybe we ought to jump on that bandwagon, just a little bit. Just to get even. You see, I ' ve got this great idea to get , back at our sophisticated Yankee cous- ins. All we have to do is take some of those things lying around in the pastures you know, those round things the Univer- j sity For Man staff taught us to throw through hula-hoops. Anyway, all we have to do is paint the .. things red, white, and blue and write a manual on how to care for them. Then we could sell them to New York- ers as genuine, 200-year-old, pet Buffalo Chips I hear they ' ll buy anything, even a birthday. ' he dust setti 0(1 January 29, d in90d ' enouu v t, being the W Kansas tia due to our goo i you know th elieve thereat unning loose 01 an air, scenic vis wous American y,Doc,andFs n still treats us a: s to receive tlii country. Neet j enment wants nuclear wastes i restofthenata unoulandb ! y ' snexto. -: about the onlj j 3d onto the red p.lmean,altei toe red, white growing all ove BUT WHAT IF IT HADNT HAPPENED YEARS TODAYooo ....SCOTLAND ARD WOULD TAPPING YOUR PHOME. (INSTEAD OF THE CIA ) 5 MF IANDON WOULD BE. INTRODUCING LONDON BE PUSHIM6 INSTAHT TEA WOULD W 100 bicentennial T.DUKC DENNETT WOULD RULE OVEK KANSAS .. AND A -FEN. ....THE CITY ROYALS WOULDN ' T BE THE TEAM bicentennial 101 102 the concerts the concerts HARRY CHAPIN Popular singer Harry Chapin charmed a K-State audience Feb- ruary 2 in McCain Auditorium. The audi- ence laughed, sang, and demanded two encores before they allowed him to leave. Although Chapin started the concert alone, he was later joined by John Wal- lace on the bass guitar and Howie Fields on lead guitar. The trio sang and poked fun at each other throughout their joint performance. Audience participation was a key por- tion of the concert. It began when Chapin asked their help on the country and west- ern song, Bananas , a comedy about a truck driver who los t his load of 30,000 pounds of bananas. Other songs were more serious. In one, Bummer , he sang of the troubles of a black Vietnam war hero. Following a 1 5-minute intermission, Chapin returned onstage with several sheets of crumpled paper, which con- tained the lyrics of two songs he had writ- ten recently. He sang while reading the lyrics from the papers. I wrote ' Kansas City Airport Blues ' while waiting in the airport terminal on the way over here today, he said. The longer I waited, the filthier the verses got. Throughout the concert Chapin ridi- culed several well-known personalities and issues. His final comment on one of these issues, women ' s liberation, was, Thank God, you women are taking over the world. PURE PRAIRIE LEAGUE Boots, belts, and cowboy hats are in vogue at K-State, but February 1 3 was the cowboy ' s hey- day. Pure Prairie League and The Flying Burrito Brothers appeared in concert at Weber Arena. The concert opened with The Flying Burrito Brothers, a country-rock band on their first wide-spread tour since their recent reunion. The band, who broke up over three years ago, came on strong for the K-State audience. Although The Fly- ing Burrito Brothers played numbers mainly from their new album, Flying Again , their best response came when they dug into the past for traditional country numbers. After the introduction of Country Fid- dler Floyd Gilbeau, the audience went wild as the band broke into Diggy Liggy Lo . During the encore, Gilbeau again showed his fiddle expertise with another old-time song, Orange Blossom Spe- cial . Gilbeau proved to the audience he was one of the best. The audience acknowledged the fact with a thunderous round of applause as Gilbeau and the band left the stage. After a long wait between changes, the lights dimmed and Pure Prairie League began their portion of the show. Although The Flying Burrito Brothers were tough to follow, Pure Prairie League soon picked up the pace and had the audience clap- pin ' ' n hollerin ' to the music. Featuring lead guitarist Larry Gros- horn, Pure Prairie League opened with several mellower country numbers, with Amy coming early in the concert. The audience became restless during this lull of mellower numbers, but Pure Prairie later got them on their feet and picked up the pace, playing the fast-moving country songs that many had come to hear. Pickin 1 to Beat the Devil , a fast- action country song featuring guitar and banjo, got the audience back into the same mood that the Burrito Brothers had left them with. I ' ll Change Your Flat Tire, Merle turned out to be another crowd pleaser. Near the end of the concert, the band again gave the audience what they wanted with their second big hit, Two Lane Highway . Pure Prairie League did not go over as well as expected, and a number of listen- ers left before the concert was over. Many believed the group was slow-mov- ing and did not play up to par. Ihe concerts 1 03 01 ' Bossie is moo-ving on to better barns by Linda Reed They ' re moving the herd up north. Yep, Silo Tech may soon lose one of its infa- mous landmarks the dairy barn. But, contrary to popular myth, odor isn ' t a main motive in the move from Manhattan city limits. Obsolescence has spurred the search for greener pastures. But until there ' s a new barn raising, the aging limestone continues its productive existence. Yes, productive. Besides irking neighborhood residents and providing hayshed seclusion for minors craving a few smokes, the dairy turns out one-and-a-half million pounds of Grade A milk each year enough to supply K-State dormies with milk and soft-serve ice cream. Call Hall ' s process- ing center handles the total- bulk and also houses a dairy bar where more c ampus- made ice cream is sold. All money made is recycled into the dairy and poultry departments, bracing major financial support for research. Providing a herd for teaching and research in areas of nutrition, physiol- ogy, and management is the dairy barn ' s initial objective. The 300 head of cattle housed there fully meet the nutri- tional and physiological needs but the management side is lacking. Though constantly remodeled throughout its 43 years, the barn has reached its final roundup and must be put out to pasture permanently. It ' s been do or die here, George Ward, dairy and poultry science profes- sor, said, as he patted the limestone. There is just so much you can do to remodel a barn with strong stone walls like this. In his 20 years at K-State Ward has wit- nessed or initiated quite a few of these changes. He can remember when Elaine and Todd Road didn ' t exist. No, those long-ago campus planners didn ' t pick an urban lot for the original site! Rather, a flourishing Manhattan has engulfed the barn. Virtually no corner of the dairy plant has escaped change. Two wooden barns moved onto the present site in 1933 as temporary structures to house bulls now shelter calves. The original 70-stall milk- ing parlor was reduced to 35 and then cut to eight stalls, making room for indi- vidualized feeding bunks. Pipelines were added to the parlor as a bit of moderniza- tion. Still the best possible use of labor was not feasible under such deteriorating conditions. Not all appendages of the barn have been salvaged. Age has punctured the silos to the point of no repair. The only feed stored in them now is an occasional mouse-dinner for industrious resident cats. Beings living in the barn, other than the feline and bovine type, are two students. Bunking in second-floor rooms, their chores consist of riding night watch on the herd. A full-time herdsman and several civil-service persons carry out daytime duties. So ... plans were drafted for a new dairy plant to fit between the swine and poultry locations north of campus. However i Mure. 34 dairy barn ne and Expected facilities will undoubtedly allow improved nutritional and physiological research and also boost management back to an acceptable level. But what of the remains? Quite possi- bly, the stink raised over the barn ' s future might have equalled any smells generated in the past. The vacated struc- ture had all the possibilities of a pigeon paradise Nichols Gym II. The cost to tear it down today would equal its original construction cost of $45,000, Ward spec- ulated. However, university planners stam- peded through with the decision to turn the structure over to plant science. So the dairy ' s packing chores began. The move may clear the air for a while, but there will still be a profound need to watch where one steps. Sooner or later courting co-eds are sure to hear a mournful moo bellowed by some home- sick beast grazing in the Top of the World pasture. Never can say goodby . . . cow pies. dairy barn 105 To 106 the events the events UNION BEER ISSUE Students responded to the Union Governing Board ' s decision to not sell or serve beer in the Union with a scream of apathetic silence. This was, however, the same response that was shown throughout the battle for the repeal of campus prohi- bition. In October 1975, when the Kansas Board of Regents amended its policy to allow 3.2 beer to be sold in campus unions, many students felt that the issue was open and shut. Beer would be sold. But this was not so. UGB refused to allow malt beverages sold before the issue was decided upon. The dry factors on campus began showing their discontent and outrage against the potential contamination of K- Straight. But students in support of beer on campus were uniformly silent. UGB conducted two different surveys to better ascertain student opinion. One survey composed of seven questions was printed in the Collegian and relied upon student initiative to take fifteen seconds to fill out and turn in only 215 both- ered. Of these few students, those against the brew were in an unquestiona- ble majority. It seemed some people did not want beer more than others wanted it. A more representative random sam- pling of opinion was achieved through a telephone survey. It found the campus fairly split on the same seven questions posed by the Collegian survey. On catering beer for banquets in the Union, 45.7 per cent approved while only 21 .3 per cent were against it. The ques- tion of selling beer in the Union brought 32.9 per cent approving and 32 per cent registering a negative opinion. A clear majority of 41 per cent said they would not personally buy beer in the K-State Union while only 26.1 per cent said they would. This final question was one of the key ones leading to the UGB decision, Walter Smith, Union director, said. The only way the Union could make money or simply break even would be through volume sales on an Aggieville- type scale, Smith said. We have a u- nique situation. With Aggieville as close as it is, we don ' t need beer in the Union. Three hundred irate letters opposing the sale of beer on campus were sent to the UGB before the final decision was reached, Smith said. After the decision, a few letters praising the UGB ' s action were received. There were no letters con- demning the vote. When the UGB vote finally came on January 20, six members on the board voted against the Union handling of beer, while two voted for it. The people who made the decision were, in reality, the students. Many voted with their unconcern. ID VALIDATION Hurriedly, I double- checked all my pen marks: name, amount, address, and date March 5, 1976. Everything was in order. I was about to get my badly-needed weekend allowance. I marched up to the Union check cashing window, smiled, and handed the cashier my check and ID card. But before there was chance for a transaction, both check and ID were back in my hand. I ' m sorry sir, you ' ll have to have your ID validated before I can accept it. I wasn ' t sure what she had said, so I just stood there. I still wanted my money. She repeated herself. This time it sunk in. What do you mean I ' ll have to get it validated? was my first ignorant, but obvious question. It ' s after the first of March. You ' ll have to go to Farrell Library to get your ID vali- dated. You know, with one of those little green stickers. I wanted to tell her where she could stick her little green stickers, but instead, I slid my worthless check and ID back into my empty wallet. As I stormed off around the corner, a bright green poster that I hadn ' t noticed before caught my eye. Sorry we goofed, it said, but you ' ll have to get your ID validated. The sign was right, but I had goofed, too. Made effective by the Student Govern- ing Association, the idea of validating IDs was conceived to prevent the misuse of student identification cards. Various cam- pus facilities reported that students who had graduated or were no longer attend- ing the University were using their old ID cards to check out books from the library, for services from Lafene Health Center, and to check out recreational equipment. Steve Phillips, head of the committee that proposed and designed the idea of validation, said the misuse of IDs was brought to attention mainly by the over- crowding of campus facilities. Phillips ' committee originated the idea of the small, gum-backed paper tags to be at- tached to the ID cards. But Phillips acknowledged that the tags are not fool- proof. We ' re aware that the present system needs improvement. We ' re looking for a new system that will be more effective in the future. Hassle or no hassle, ID validation is going to be a biannual event for K-Sta- ters. THE MIKADO Sleet and cold winds forced the cancellation of the scheduled March 4 performance, but the cast and crew of The Mikado proved that the show must go on when they performed Gilbert and Sullivan ' s operetta the follow- ing two nights. Presented by the speech and music departments, the story, written in 1885, is set in a Japanese village called Titipu. The plot evolves around a proclamation by the Emperor of Japan, Mikado, that flirting shall be deemed a crime punisha- ble by beheading the offender. The story thickens as Mikado ' s son, Nanki Poo, who is traveling under the guise of a minstrel, attempts to win the hand of the beautiful lady Yum Yum. However, she is betrothed to Koko, the Lord High Executioner who would rather not carry out his official duty in this case because he is guilty of the flirtation crime himself. This theatric triangle is strongly supple- mented by the antics of the other colorful characters. Under the direction of Lewis Shelton, assistant speech professor, the play was sprinkled throughout with songs by the cast members, coached by Jerry Langekamp, associate professor of music. Choreographer was Lynn Shel- ton, assistant professor of speech. urole Masaue by Tern Phillips Thirteen years ago if you had ventured through the northern doors of the East Stadium and followed your curiosity down a lengthy corridor, you ' d probably have been trampled by K-State athletes on their way to the cafeteria. If you retraced that same path today, however, you ' d find yourself walking down a brightly decorated hallway that leads to K-State ' s own experimental theatre, the Purple Masque. Room 107 was redecorated from training tables and food service lines to a three-quarter round stage and seating for 1 1 in 1 963 after the athletic dorm moved to a new location. Under the guidance of Jack Past, pro- fessor of speech, the theatre was ready for a July showing of A Majority of One . The Purple Masque has since provided settings for more than 1 01 plays. The Masque is primarily committed to the training of students in theatre and to show them how it can work, Norma Bunion, professor of speech, said. Some direc- ting classes conduct direction of scenes in the theatre and make-up classes also use the facilities. Most productions shown in the Masque are directed by students under faculty supervision. Several thesis projects have been staged in the theatre, Bunton said, adding that at least six of the present speech faculty members have taken a turn at directing a show. While many of the productions in the Masque are original one act and full length plays written by K-State students, some of the more standard plays are also pre- sented. And this is where most of the experimentation takes place. By experimental theatre, I don ' t mean just present- ing student-written plays, Bunton said. We take the more standard plays, written by established play- wrights, and present them in different ways. The Masque lends itself to certain kinds of plays belter than most theatres do. We can abandon the usual settings and try different types of scenery. The theatre is a three-quartered stage, with seating around all three sides. Depending on the configuration of the stage, which can be changed dimensionally, var- ious types and styles of scenery and settings can be arranged. The Masque housed a full schedule of productions this year. Beanstalk Country , Carry , and several one acts were among the shows staged. Because of its accessibility in the East Stadium, the theatre has been vandalized frequently, Bunton said. One student has been hired to keep the place in order, but there are some things he just can ' t do to keep rehearsals going on schedule. Last year a female cat crawled into the theatre to have her kittens, Bunton explained. The cast of the pro- duction at that time brought food for the animals every day which slowed things down a little. But this year, a more threatening menace for rehearsals and produc- tion has appeared. A skunk was recently reported to have taken up residence nearby and sometimes makes rather untimely appearances. The Masque can best be described as a dark cavern, Bunton said. And there are a lot of short- comings with cramped quarters. But it ' s a chance for students to try and see the theatre in a different light. Emphasis condenses in BAW by Cheryl Charles Black Awareness Week came at a most appropriate time. February was black history month, and K-State observed it along with the annual events ot BAW. Feb- ruary 22 through 29 hailed an array ot depictions of $ black accomplishments, expressions, and ways of life. BAW began on Sunday, February 22, with religious ( day services in Forum Hall. The significance of these I services expressed the importance of the black church [ in black American history. On Monday, black artist Leon Hicks presented a dis- play in the Union Art Gallery, which continued the rest of the week. That night he lectured in the Little Theatre and a reception followed. Local businessman Wallace Kidd spoke on Black Business Today on Tuesday night. Kidd heads the Anti-Pest Control Company. Little sisters of Omega Psi Phi fraternity, the Omega I Pearls, sponsored a talent and fashion show on Wed- i! nesday night. The show in Forum Hall featured a multi- faceted production of clothes, skits, and dances. Rep- resentatives of every black greek organization per- formed, as did Sisters of Soul, a group of black high school girls from Manhattan who made a guest appear- ance and presented a dance routine. Other entertainment included the Gospel Truth, group of six K-State students who performed two gos- pel numbers, and Sharon Sheppard who led the sing- ing of the black national anthem, Lift Every Voice . Thursday through Sunday was filled with a career symposium in the Little Theatre, the movie Claudine showing in the Union Forum Hall, and the Black Aware- ness Week Dance in the K-Room of the Union. Reli- gious Day Services in conjunction with the Bicentennial brought BAW to an official close at the Church of God in Christ. Several speakers during the month included Robert Bontrager, associate professor from the journalism department, who spoke on the Black Press, USA, Feb- ruary 1 1 . Dean Veryl Switzer ' s topic covered the Black Perspective of Nicodemus Kansas a week later Nico- demus was the first black community in Kansas. black awareness .veeh l the construction DURLAND HALL For 40 years, K- State ' s chemical and industrial engineers have been making do with a 72-year-old building designed to serve as a creamery. But atter June 1 976, it will no longer be necessary to make do . These two departments will be housed in some of the finest facilities in the country. Durland Hall, located across the street and north of Ahearn Field House, will be a reality. The new building will house class- rooms, laboratories, and offices for chemical and industrial engineering stu- dents and faculty. One lab, for human factors engineer- ing, offers facilities for research of human performance under various environmen- tal conditions. The effects of factors, such as lighting, interior design, and work methods can be studied. Durland Hall is unique at K-State for its glass facing instead of the usual lime- stone. Its modular design is meant to fa- cilitate adding on in the future. Extreme inflation of building costs posed several problems in financing the new building. When bids for the project were higher than the legislature ' s $2.7 million allocation for construction, adjust- ments had to be made. Following an appeal to the Kansas leg- islature, K-State was authorized to spend up to $1 50,000 from sponsored research overhead funds and to accept monetary gifts in any amount to help meet costs. The state architect was authorized to negotiate directly with the lowest bidder. In these negotiations, it was agreed to eliminate some equipment, exterior steps, change from copper to aluminum wiring, and transfer the sewer extension to another contract. These brought the estimated cost from $3.1 million to $2.85 million. The building ' s namesake, M. A. Dur- land, is a K-State graduate and Manhat- tan resident. He served as dean of the College of Engineering from 1949 until 1 961 . During this time he was also direc- tor of the Engineering Experiment Sta- tion. He taught at K-State from 1 91 9 until 1967. As dean, Durland established a KSU College of Engineering Advisory Council a group of Midwestern leaders in engi- neering, education, and industry who provide input toward instruction and research in the college. The building was dedicated on April 9. VETERINARY MEDICINE ADDITION Ranking as the second most expensive building in the history of Kansas, the new $17 million veterinary medicine addition is scheduled for completion in two years. Two concerns accompany the clinical science and pathology building. Will it, unlike the original buildings in the com- plex, be air conditioned from the begin- ning? And will the University power plant have the capacity to provide power for it? The answer to the first question is a definite yes , Vince Cool, assistant to the vice-president for University develop- ment, said. Due to insufficient funds, orig- inally there were not enough cooling tow- ers to operate the air conditioning. This time there will be. As to the power plant ' s capacity to serve the building ' s needs, the answer is a qualified yes . In order to accommo- date the additional 268,000 square feet of floor space, the present plant facilities must be bolstered, Cool said. Within two years, we hope to receive a report on the power plant study and arrive at a solution to the rising needs, he said. Possibilities range from renovating and adding on to the present plant to building an entirely new plant. Aiding in the solu- tion of energy problems is the fact that the new clinical sciences building is designed for maximum conservation of energy. It will have up to five inches of high- grade insulation and will utilize heat recovery systems which can recover 70 to 72 per cent of the heat loss, Cool said. The heat recovery systems are an asset in compensating for the heat loss incurred by the constant flow of fresh air needed in buildings which house ani- mals. The main problem is with extreme temperatures outside. When classes are in session people are constantly going in and out, Cool said. There may be times when we can ' t heat or cool to a comforta- ble point, but campus buildings will always be heated and cooled. Only the foundation and supporting columns are intact. The building will be similar in appearance to the others on the site. Although only two stories high, it will have about twice the floor space as any of the others. The facade will be of the familiar lime- stone. The limestone won ' t actually hold the building up, like it does in Waters Hall. But it will be a long-wearing, durable sur- face, Frame said. 112 the construction sac. Plant study am rising needs; n renovating an Iplanttobuildm i g in the soli sis the fact the ices building i conservation c ! inches oi high- will utilize to i can recover 7( heat loss, Coo systems are K, fof the heat loss t flow ol fresh a is with extreme te classes art instantly going if ere may bete wltoacomtorta- s buildings wil ; building will be the others on the ;toneshigh,itwi xir space as any the familiar I sin i the construction 113 This is the first, last, and possibly never-should-have-been issue of K- State ' s Gallegian. Its columns have been crammed full of timeless news. The monumental and non-monumental decisions, the newsmakers or newsfak- ers, the uncovered scandals and those affairs that no one cares to see all contained in the one-time press run. So, for future reference when the tots inquire as to what K-State was like in the old days , just whip out this heir- loom to back up the wild stories . . . or tell them the way it really was. 114 future reference Students found hustling in public dance halls All together now. Up and back four times. Then the steps. Two to the front, two to the back, repeat once, inside, outside, kick, and turn. That was the bus stop. Or was it the Latin hustle? Or the Chicago, Dallas, or New Yorker? Whatever the name, hustlers stepped and strutted en masse in musical motion to the predetermined steps of the hustle and other unreasonable facsimiles thereof. And nobody was really sure what they were doing but it looked good. On illuminated, sole-tromped dance floors, a new cult had been born. The off- spring of synchronization and sound was not coddled, however. It was distorted and contorted to fit the moods, tunes, personalities, and quirks. College types embraced the fad and stomped it out in sine. Poor spasticated beginners, not sure of which foot went where when, even got trampled in the high beat of enthusiasm. Everyone had their own versions. Back home, parents heard something about it and wondered about all the hustling going on in the schools. Hustling just ain ' t what it used to be, folks. But then, neither is dancing. No accident report A K-State student suffered a brain con- cussion and dislocated shoulder blade when he unwittingly fell head first into a freshly dug pit. Cal Q. Lashan, graduate student in computer science, was reported to have been studying a printout when he made the slip. Campus police reported that Lashan ' s fall was broken by a physical plant employe who was lunching at the bottom of the pit. future reference 115 f bu I If ace Bee gets the nod, sunflower the shaft Kansas legislators matched strides with societal advancement by supporting legislation to make the honey bee the state ' s official insect. It was later reported that buffaloes all over the state were stunned by the move. Humming right in tune were Iowa ' s lawmakers. There, it was officially decided that the wild sunflower was a noxious weed. As corny as the passed proposal was, Kansas showed great restraint and maturity in their reaction. No move was made to declare Iowa ' s beloved goldfinch a public nuisance as in years past. ' Key ' locks door, women admit men In compliance to Title IX, K-State ' s Mortar Board announced among its 26 selections for 1976-77, three males. However, Blue Key, possibly fearing impotency, remained of a masculine nature. This nonadvancement was made in lieu of the organization ' s national deci- sion to go coed. Once again, some Kansans preferred to sit back and not make any hasty deci- sions. Who knows, Title IX could be just another passing idiocy like the auto- mobile, color tv, Frank Sinatra . Go east, NCAA! So, they promised the Cats a berth if Utah lost? The if happened but the invi- tation didn ' t. And the K-State basketball squad bid the NCAA tourney farewell. With the scream of foul still echoing, the Cats packed their 20-7 season record and caught a plane to the NIT. Spurred on HA HA HA HA c Technology 1 oia.Yes,daya new and me w don ' t always are perfect 01 rodent tiafi me in our food -u to be on our tab ismocnuptieav Lessdsgustinc Aspirin bottles lal overdoses. Bii ogy advancement Numerous case: The shortcomings of Title IX Weal clones, terminal migraine. rate. Advance transitions FADE OUT: Ernie Barrett, 46, left two positions at K-State in as many weeks. His service as athletic director terminated on December 16, Barrett accepted the post of assistant to the president for spe- cial projects. But being an APSP wasn ' t much fun anymore so he quit. Rumors had Barrett spotted at Wildcat basketball games carrying two-gallon buckets of paint and trying to cover up debts . . . er, dirt on Ahearn walls. Or something like that. LOST OUT: Vince Gibson, 44, resigned from the Big 8 and winged his way to the more secure surrounding of independ- ence Louisville to be specific. In his first season stripped of purple pride, Gib- son guided his new following through a turf-ripping season of 1-10. If that isn ' t a kick in the old end zone! Better luck come next scheduling time. PULLED OUT: Pop tops, ??, disappeared from aluminum beer cans, making them completely recyclable. Replacing the rings are two indented perforated discs. Outcomes of the new system are: (1) the cut in time spent for fingernail upkeep (as no one has any now), and (2) an upswing in crime due to obliterated fingerprints (caused by massive scar tissue build-up). Although then in on the ex- 116 future reference Cancer creators lurk! Technology makes for neurotic paran- oia. Yes, day after day, the 6 o ' clock news and the evening paper barrage us with the latest scientific discoveries. And we don ' t always want to know. Maybe we are perfectly content to be unaware of rodent hairs, mercury, salmonella, mag- gots, and other mouth-watering additives in our food unless that food happens to be on our tables or in our mouths at the time of the breakthrough. Then, there is much upheaval. There also follows strick abstinence from nutrition for long spans of time. Less disgusting, and more frightening, are the oft-heard reports concerning can- cer-causing forces. Carcinogens haunt us throughout our daily activities. How can we even be sure that sleeping between sheets isn ' t carci- nogenic? Cigarettes, or cancer sticks , are probably the most talked-out item in this category. And if the Surgeon General deterred some of us from the habit, he didn ' t always succeed with the person sitting in the adjacent study booth. Then there are the food additives that sneak into the diets of even the most cau- tious consumers. And of course, the little pills labeled with the days of the week Mercy cries unheard Aspirin bottles equipped with child- proof caps protect minors from acciden- tal overdoses. But this medical technol- ogy advancement failed to ease the suf- fering of inflicted collegiates. Numerous cases of student deaths rel- ated to underdoses of aspirin were ' reported following final weeks and major Wi ldcat victories. The biggest killer was terminal migraine, with eyestrain compli- cations. Advance hangover followed as an uncontested second. Loss of blood from perforated finger- tips threatened the health of untold oth- ers who sought relief by the buffers. Efforts to develop specially designed acetylsalicylic acid containers for the higher educated expired, as officials found the students ' unique perplexity bayerly plausible. Representative X. Cederin ignored the fact that seven out of every 1 students supported the evidence against the safety caps. He retorted that the facts were hard to swallow, leaving a bad taste in his mouth. One rejected supporter suggested he try eating soda crackers. Old receding hairline is back! Although there was a time when strangers were welcomed here, familiar faces from the past still are. Neil Sedaka, that middle-aged musical wonder, crawled back into the Top 40 and Casey Kasem ' s countdown. Riding in on the high tide of his choir- boy pipes, the ex-has been flooded the charts by laughing in the rain, claiming that ' s where the music took him? Elton John stepped aboard the return voyage to stardom and helped propel Sedaka to a grand slam. Though he ' d slowed down a bit, Sedaka still wailed that breaking up is hard to do. Maybe he ' ll stick around longer this time, as any bad blood exist- ing between the artist and audience appears to have dried up. may do away with some immediate prob- lems, but may be contributing to detri- mental, long-range effects. Sunbathers and sunlamp cheaters sim- ply have to assess their priorities. After all, what ' s more attractive bronze- beautiful body now or wrinkles and skin cancer later? But these things are superficial, insig- nificant trivia in the face of the most shat- tering recent development. The appear- ance of the latest carcinogen Red Dye 2. This is where we must draw the line, and put a stop to the technological advances that are ruining our lives. They can take away our cigarettes and birth control pills and sunlamps and cycla- mates but we must not tolerate the con- fiscation of the red maraschino cherries in our vodka collins! Tepid drink draws gurgles of surprise Having strayed from the rest of his tribe, the nomad finds himself baking under the merciless sun, parched and dreaming of nothing but a long, cool drink of water. Baked out of his mind, he is tortured by mirages, one after another, taunting him until he finally collapses. But this time it ' s no mirage. There it flows the only oasis for hundreds of miles. He staggers closer. He throws him- self down, submerges his face and gulps the drink he ' s been dying for. AAARGH! The sheik has been at it again. Never in this desert dweller ' s wildest dreams did he suspect the energy short- age to reach him, too. Leaving no cor- ners uncut, he must make do with luke- warm water. This time the plug has been pulled on the drinking fountains ' cooling system. future reference 117 Adopt crush on rocks To think it took so long to catch on. For millions of years, humans have been ignoring them, throwing them around, and just plain walking all over them. But 1976 was a milestone year, the time of the greatest discovery since back in the Stone Age when cavepeople were oohing and aahing over the wheel while they should have been digging on their geologic counterparts pet rocks. (You know rocking and rolling.) And we have been just as ignorant, just as stonyhearted about the whole affair as were the Neanderthals. While we and our recent ancestors have pampered and indulged Fido, Thomasina, and Tweety Pie, the gems waited patiently in drive- ways and quarries, to be unearthed, to be swept off their formations. All they got was kicked in the fossils or complet ely skipped over. But metamorphosis has rocked the country, and we have left no stone unturned in our quest for more of the earthy little products of sentiment and sediment. No longer must we settle for the shedding, chirping, and littering of what we once knew as our pets. To think it took so long to get down to basics. Printout too revealing, this does not compute A group of students huddled near the bulletin board where the test results were to be posted. At first, they quietly scanned the computer printout sheets, searching in vain for their respective ID numbers and the matching grades. A few began to perspire and nibble at their fin- gernails. Others squinted their eyes and stoically persisted in the digital dilemma. The scene grew tense, strained. Not again! one screamed. Why me? Why always me? another asked, his voice cracking. Across campus, in the data processing center, a computer giggled a calculated giggle. It had done it again. It knew it had all those human students out there wrapped around its little activator switch. There was a formula to the whole thing. One little erasure was all it took. And no matter how well the campus creatures had followed directions, no matter how evenly and neatly they had darkened in the blanks in fact, no matter how sharp their minds or pencil leads had been before the test, it could always detect a bit of No. 2 lead pencil outside the bubble area on the IBM card. But compie ' s favorite strategem was the optional section of the card. Here were unlimited chances to spindle and mutilate test results. Especially if the stu- dent had designated here that the grade could be posted. Then, in automated ecstasy, compie would spit out all of the cards into a neat little erroneous pile and nearly lose its control panel out of sheer delight at the stacks of blunderous printout sheets that would soon adorn campus bulletin boards and make students very nervous. For as all good computers are pro- grammed to know, To forgive is human and to err, devised. That ' s a no-no! Choke smokers Mrs. O ' Leary ' s cow has always been blamed for the Chicago fire. But no one really knows for sure if this was the case or it was really old lady O ' Leary sneaking asmoke in the barn. University officials have taken the les- son to heart and decided that where there ' s smoke there ' s fire. Thus, a no smoking policy. Theoreti- cally, students may only light up in desig- nated areas. Unfortunately, Mrs. O ' Leary wasn ' t the only one with a nicotine habit. Ashtrays and hallways are still recipients of smol- dering visitors. And plenty of note-takers still puff their way through class lectures and dirty looks from neighboring scholars. No doubt the cigarette industry is doing as well as ever. GPAs MB | 118 future reference Fashion scoffs misfit The courtroom inhabitants rise. The judge enters. The case? Glamorous magazine vs. Georgina Slopperina on two counts of poor taste wearing hiking boots with her new midi-length skirt and refusal to discard a tube of pink lipstick. The sentence? Two years at a well-known Midwestern charm school, Patricia Paintface ' s School of Fine Taste, and 20 hours in a library reading fashion magazines for insured rehabilitation. Along with many other concerns facing twentieth centurians is the runaway crime found in cities and rural areas alike. Many a study has been done on this phenome- non its possible causes and cures, but no real answers have been found. Georgia ' s case is used here because it happens to be representative of the many others causing a tremendous backlog in courthouses. When the young lady talks about her childhood she remembers daily temper tantrums when she wasn ' t allowed to wear a flower-decked Easter bonnet to the sand pile. Such things aren ' t accepted, dear, her mother would say. But even this early training was to no avail. After serving time for a minor offense, wearing sweat pants to a dress ball, her family and friends hoped her troubles would be over. But she continues to have relapses. She is luckier than some in that many rise and fallings University professors have been instructed to strengthen their class requirements and raise grading scales. GPAs are too good and no longer reflect high enough standards within the University, officials said. Aggieville merchants have been encouraged to lower beer prices in order to attract more customers. people are concerned about her welfare. But she can ' t really be helped until she is ready to help herself. According to a survey by ' Preen maga- zine, occurrences of hiking boots worn with dresses are on the rise. Three out of 1 people questioned admitted to this offense. One coed offered her story. Who can afford two pairs of shoes in this day and age? she asked. When my jeans were dirty I had no choice but to wear a dress. I would have worn my ten- nis shoes but they disintegrated last year. Another finding of the survey was that the floods of the 50s had put an over- whelming fear of high water into the minds of many college men. Some of them are still too petrified to wear their jeans more than half way down their calves. Because of the affluent society in which this generation grew up, they are often guilty of certain excesses. One of these, the silk scarf syndrome, is charac- terized by draping scarves in hundreds of different ways around the neck or shoulders, tied about the head to hide greasy hair, and a few isolated cases of wearing the pointed end forward to hide blemishes. Who knows what this misguided gener- ation will come up with next? As in Slop- perina ' s case, neither gentle reminders nor harsh sentences have any effect. This potential plague faced by society must somehow be nipped in the bud if it is to be controlled at all. Metric System Nowadays, 1 5-cent candy bars are so commonplace that hardly anyone remembers paying a nickel for them. When you think about it, who really remembers paying a nickel for anything? As of April, the dollar bill also went the way of small change. Due to the ineffi- ciency of using a bill that was only worth a shadow of what it used to be, the num- ber on it was doubled. Dogs ' hind legs will always be crooked, but the two-dollar bill is no longer odd. Two-Dollar Bill Do your own thing an expression coined by Thoreau and brought back to life during the 60s. But things don ' t always work that way. By 1 980, Americans will be forced to adapt to the metric system in order to stay in tune with the rest of the world. Many complications could result from this conversion. Customer requests for a yard, gallon, or pound of merchandise will be met by blank stares from rattled salespersons. Adjustments of more than just stand- ard measures will have to be made. So as we inch (oops) toward 1 980, Americans will have to measure up to the transition or be caught with their yards down. future reference 119 academics 121 Administrators When Duane Acker was last at K-State in 1966, he was an associate dean of agriculture. Upon returning in 1975 as president of the University, he became aware of marked changes that occurred in his nine-year absence. According to figures released by the Office of Admissions and Records, the University ' s enrollment increased from 1 1 ,000 to nearly 18,000 during that time span. The general attitude of the students had changed. In the 60s, the students had what Acker termed a good healthy dose of negativism. Their biggest frus- tration was that they had ideals in mind, but not in focus, he said. Now students are learning to use avail- able means to effect changes, which is due in part to an effort to involve students and faculty more in University policy- making. Those nine years have also taken a toll on the job market. Because employment is elusive, K-State ' s colleges have become job-oriented. Acker explained that these time- induced trends are not unique to K-State, but are evident at other universities as well. Though Acker has little spare time, he spends it visiting classrooms around campus, believing this lets the faculty know he ' s interested in what they are doing. Acker ' s job is not without its share of frustrations. He said that inflation is terri- bly rough. Though price hikes are a uni- versal problem, it is especially difficult for a public institution to keep pace with inflation since it is always somewhat behind in receiving funds for operation. The incident of trying to decide a loca- tion for the International Student Center is another frustrating situation Acker has had to deal with. This was a case of the students, faculty, and administration working toward the same goal, but lack- ing the mutual trust necessary to achieve that goal. But these are all things that make the challenge of my job interesting, Acker said, in reference to getting people to understand each other. That was one aspect that attracted him to the job in the first place. Plains people tend to be open with each other. In an urban setting, people clam up and you don ' t get the coopera- tion that you do here. Open communication remains though leadership changes by Rita Shelley Everybody knows that university administrators do nothing but arrange meetings to appoint committees to call meetings. They invent work and shuttle letters and torms trom office to office, right? Not necessarily. Whether training peo- ple to deal with world food shortages or installing a library security system, administrators help keep the University alive by adding to or initiating new pro- grams. With these programs, agriculture stu- dents really do stand a chance of working with food shortages, K-State veterinary medicine students have access to some of the best facilities in the country, and everyone can enjoy an updated sound system in the Catskellar. And, surprisingly enough, administra- tors have been known to show personal concern for students. The K-State rowing crew owes its existence in part to Chester Peters, vice president for student affairs. Several deans strive to remain close and available to students. If creative new programs and evidence of personal interest in students are any indication of success, maybe there ' s not so much to worry about after all. I ' K ' - _ i , ' ! admmisli.ilois Administrators Responsible to staffs, students John Chalmers, vice president for aca- demic affairs, is responsible for the qual- ity and development of the University ' s faculty. All faculty appointments go over my desk, Chalmers said. He personally interviews all prospects for senior appointments and applicants for other appointments if he is requested to. In hiring new faculty members, one of Chalmer ' s considerations is affirmative action . This means widely publicizing a job opening, interviewing all qualified persons, and hiring the best persdn for the job, he said. Chalmers has urged vig- orous efforts to hire women and mem- bers of minorities to faculty positions. Once an appointment is made, Chal- mers ' s further concern is to insure excellence in teaching . It is his job to emphasize the importance of quality instruction and to assist in the process of helping people develop the necessary elements of teaching. If special equip- ment or extra money is needed to improve an instructor ' s effectiveness, Chalmers tries to obtain it. Chalmers summarizes the responsibili- ties of his office as seeing that the cli- mate of the University is one in which the faculty and students are able to develop individual judgement. Our efforts are very much people-ori- ented, Roger Mitchell said about his job as vice president for agriculture. He believes a land grant institution like K- State should utilize its opportunity to serve by sharing with others knowledge gained through research. Mitchell ' s concern with personalizing the university experience begins on the student level. He is pleased with the increased number of students enrolled in the College of Agriculture and wants to improve advising procedures. On a state-wide level, Mitchell ' s responsibilities lie with agricultural exten- sion programs. He spends one or two days a week traveling around the state to gain feedback from those served through the program Besides operating on college and state-wide levels, Mitchell believes he has potential to serve on a world-wide basis by using the result of research done at K- State as a foundation. One such area of research affecting people on a world-wide basis is helping other countries maintain food supplies. Mitchell ' s ultimate purpose is to inspire those working to produce food. Administrators Daniel Beatty, vice president for busi- ness affairs, finds that the greatest satis- faction in his job is the ability to see changes made without disrupting existing organizations. In order to do this, it is necessary to avoid crash programs and to make changes on a gradual basis, he said. Beatty and his staff handle all account- ing, grants, contracts, budgeting, and payrolls for the University. When he first came to K-State, Beatty converted all book-work to data processing. This has eased complications caused by increased enrollment. As students stare out of classroom win- dows for diversion from a droning lecture, they become aware of the campus ' s physical environment. There may be a building under construction, people relaxing on the lawn, or stately trees nes- tling against limestone. University atmos- phere is an important aspect of campus life. The person responsible for K-State ' s look is Paul Young, vice president for university development. Plans for new buildings go through his office, as do plans for renovations of old ones. Improvements in the University ' s physical appeal and its maintenance are addi- tional concerns. There is a tremendous amount of detailed work that can fill my less reward- ing days, Young said. But the job has its satisfactions when we are able to help provide the needed facilities for the Uni- versity ' s inhabitants. Chester Peters believes first-hand experience is the student ' s best teacher. This is evident in his contributions as vice president for student affairs. Peters ' level of involvement with the K- State rowing crew mirrors this philoso- phy. Besides providing the crew with moral support, he has worked to obtain funds for the sport from Student Senate. He describes his role of helping good things happen as a result of being impressed with how hard crew members have worked without monetary compen- sation. Peters employs his own talents to fur- ther his educational commitments in a University for Man sculpture class. One of Peters ' wood sculptures, Vision , com- missioned by Chimes, was later donated to the University on Parents ' Day. 1 975. Through his desire to see education take place outside the classroom, he encourages projects such as the design- ing of dorm lobbies by architecture stu- dents. He thinks this is an effective method of instruction and would like to see more programs of this nature. This is all part of making K-State a more flexible institution, which is neces- sary in order for it to serve the students, Peters said. K. efnenlwithtW T The administrators ot K-State presi- ors this phitaf ' dents Milton Eisenhower, James A. in (tie crew wilt c McCain, and Duane Acker all have some- worked to obtaiif ' hing in common: Max Milboum, assi- i Student Senate! 1 ' 1 stant to tne president. Part of Milbourn ' s 3t helpinqgd ( i 3 ' s to see na ne transition from one result ot beinf administration to the next goes smoothly. rdcrennwte ' A smootn transition requires a lot of cnetary compel wrapping up of old matters. In order to do a this I must know as much about the Uni- n talents to fur versit y as tne president does, he said. mnitrnents in $ Mi ' bourn ' s schedule is a varied one eclass Oneoli wn ' cn might include attending an endow- Vision com 11 ? ment banquet and visiting legislators to slater donate discuss updating bids in the same week. .TtauiQ? 1 ) My job cuts across all lines. If it PHIS UQ ' ' education! doesn ' t fit into a slot, then it ' s my con- ' During his 42 years in education, Ells- worth Gerritz has developed a belief that the major aim of an educational system is to help students succeed in a manner that coincides with their abilities. This means finding out how much students know and taking them as far as possible beyond that level, he said. As dean of admissions and records, Gerritz makes changes designed to aid this educational process. One of these changes is securing fac- ulty acceptance of broad curriculum choices for underclasspersons. This would allow students to choose a college as a freshman without pressure to c junior year. Another of Gerritz ' s concerns is the development of a more efficient system of keeping student academic records. At present, this is done one semester at a time but Gerritz plans to initiate consoli- dated record keeping. This would mini- mize problems for student advisers and afford greater efficiency in examining the progress of a student toward a degree. K-State ' s graduate school is unique in that its members are actually involved in the other eight colleges of the University. Besides keeping records and dealing with student problems, it serves as a clearing house for ideas for new graduate programs, ' ' according to Robert Kruh, dean of graduate studies. These special programs originate as suggestions from faculty members. In establishing programs, Kruh assembles people with the necessary expertise from any of the University ' s colleges. These experts, supported by funding located by Kruh, form the groundwork in developing the new ideas. For example, by fostering cooperation between such disciplines as architecture, family economics, sociol- ogy, continuing education, and environ- mental science, Kruh is coordinating the development of a center for the study of the aging. This will provide a common base from which to discuss these problems of great current interest, Kruh said. Increased amounts of University-spon- sored research, at a time when funds are difficult to obtain, are evidence of Kruh ' s efforts. administrators 127 Administrators This is an age in which the prospect of seeking employment is not always a happy one for the college graduate. Con- sequently, William Stamey, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, would like to see his office take more responsibility in helping the student toward a more secure future. Stamey believes that while it is imprac- tical to attempt to map out a student ' s life, the office can be helpful in pointing out opportunities. Students in the College of Arts and Sci- ences are now allowed greater freedom in meeting graduation requirements, resulting in a well-rounded education. This enables them to more capably meet the changing demands of the employ- ment world. The ability to reason and communicate is, according to Stamey, fundamental to a sound education. He sees the college as a medium through which learning can take place for its own sake. Drastic changes and crises in tech- nology, energy, and the environment are placing great demands on profes- sionals in agriculture, according to the College of Agriculture ' s dean, Carroll Hess. He believes the pressure on agri- culturists to produce an adequate food supply has put them near the top of the list of prestigious professions. The College has added new curricu- lums in order to help meet these demands. A few of these include a mas- ter ' s degree in crop protection, a bach- elor ' s in food science, and an expanded program in food science. These new programs are to no avail if they are not taught well, Hess said. This concern prompted him to organize a committee on effective instruction. The committee is responsible for gen- erating seminars, discussions, and sym- posiums to help the faculty improve its teaching methods. The College of Agriculture has also added a media specialist to its staff. This person is available to assist faculty members implement their ideas for avoiding the conventional lecture sys- tem. We have seen evidence that faculty members are ready to look at new ways to teach. We hope that these innova- tions will set students afire with an enthusiastic desire to learn, Hess said. I 8uanessMrasl [ uosttohe I 1 menl concerning We ' ve had an incredible increase in [ B enrollment. It ' s just unbelievable, Bernd f feiollle P ra Foerster, dean of the College of Architec- | eorgara ture, said. According to August 1975 fig- Batti i ures, the College grew from 790 students I (P ' 8flB i in 1 974 to over 1 000. I Km n nal a Foerster ' s main concern this year is f coping with this unexpected increase, i totherofriisp Class sizes must be expanded and the i owapenlofi lack of classroom space dealt with . ' areas such as i The space shortage isn ' t really limit- M behavior, re ing us though. We ' ve been able to con- j rtoel. vert this liability into an asset through stu- f ' tot ol the thing dent involvement in the creation of facili- ei %areduelori ties, Foerster said. Students have also become involved in faculty recruiting. Foerster commented that new staff members have been impressed with the high level of student involvement in this area. Foerster would also like to see a greater involvement of students in improving advising procedures. Making these changes will be one of his future concerns. Wsedenrollmf Discounter Robert Lynn, dean of the College of Business Administration, enjoys his job most when he witnesses students ' excite- ment concerning instruction they ' re receiving from instructors he has brought to K-State. We ' re in the process of building a bet- ter people organization, he said. Besides adding to the college ' s faculty, one of Lynn ' s major plans has been to secure national accreditation for the school. Another of his projects has been the encouragement of faculty research effort. In areas such as marketing and con- sumer behavior, research has risen to a higher level. A lot of the things we are doing differ- ently are due to having to cope with increased enrollment, Lynn said. The College is countering the increase by expanding class size and securing more graduate student assistance. I have a strong commitment to educa- tion of the poor and I feel we have made progress in that area, Samuel Keys, dean of the College of Education, said. Keys has made contributions in this area through the Teacher Corps, a pro- gram aimed at teacher self-improvement. Because teachers involved in this pro- gram are usually located in less prosper- ous areas, Keys sees the corps as a fed- erally-funded vehicle which helps reach the people we want to reach. He helped write the original legislation for the pro- gram. Another project is procuring new facili- ties for the College of Education, which Keys believes would improve the morale of students and add to the diversity of programs offered. The College is cur- rently housed in 16 different buildings, he said. Also of his concern is dealing with changes in the educational job market. Because schools now hire fewer teach- ers, he believes more emphasis should be placed on helping those teachers already in service rather than in training. Donald Rathbone ' s main interest as dean of the College of Engineering is to become more involved with the students than another dean might. He believes this strengthens the College because the stu- dents are its best advertisers. Rathbone ' s involvement with students includes serving as an adviser to the engineering honorary Tau Beta Pi, and making additions to the College ' s schol- arship program for high school seniors, transfer students, and K-State sopho- mores. He has also been active in plan- ning a student lounge which will serve to centralize activities of engineering stu- dents. Student involvement strengthens the College ' s esprit de corps. The students are often the most enjoyable part of my day, Rath bone said. administrators 1 29 Administrators I don ' t want to close my door to stu- dents. It ' s important that people who need to see me are able to, Ruth Hoef- lin, dean of the College of Home Eco- nomics, said. Hoeflin is concerned about the lack of increased enrollment in home econom- ics. She attributes this to the fact that more women are going into traditionally male-dominated fields while very few men are going into home economics. She hopes to remedy this with a program to make men aware of opportunities in theCollege. Though relatively new to the position of dean, Hoeflin served as associate dean for 1 5 years. Because she worked very closely with the former dean, the late Doretta Hoffman, she doesn ' t expect to make many major changes. Another of Hoeflin ' s concerns is the securing of national accreditation by the American Home Economics Association. She expects to finalize this effort during the 1 975-76 school year. Donald Trotter, dean of the College of Veterinary Medicine, has over 20 years of teaching experience and a desire to offer the best possible teaching atmosphere to veterinary medicine students. His concern led him to assist in the ini- tiation of construction of the veterinary building complex. He has been working since 1966 to acquire the necessary funds and will continue to work toward securing more equipment and staff for theCollege in the future. Due to limited availability of funds, the veterinary complex had to be built in three sections, the first beginning in 1 970 and the second in 1971 . Construction on the third and last section began in Octo- ber 1975. A unique feature of the com- plex is that it contains a multi-discipline laboratory. There are facilities on each of the three floors, enabling students to contain all their work in one area. Stu- dents also have access to the most sophisticated teaching materials availa- ble, including video-television sets for viewing class lectures and laboratory demonstrations. In addition to the physical aspects of the complex, Trotter is concerned with hiring and retaining faculty members. Because there is a short supply of quali- fied persons, there is a great deal of com- petition in hiring them, he said. The Center for Student Development is an important facet of the University even though it doesn ' t operate in a classroom situation, Earl Nolting, director of the cen- ter, said. Its function is to provide oppor- tunities to explore new ideas, just as sub- ject courses introduce students to differ- ent concepts. These opportunities are provided by the center through a number of programs which assist the students. Students are first acquainted with the orientation program which helps them make a smooth transition into the Univer- sity ' s community. Other programs are many and varied and have the potential to serve students in some way as they attend K-State. We want to provide services that are responsive to the student ' s needs, Nolt- ing said. We hope that through our pro- g rams we will be able to respond to their problems before they reach crisis propor- tions. The Union is unique in that it operates I Development iS| { na |f wa y between being an educational University ever , operation and being a business, Walter einaclassroodjfy smith, director of the K-State Union, said. otthecentg His background in business enables him o provide oppoty t o | enc j extra SU pp Or t to that area. ieasjuslassub We try for a break-even budget, to to 1rT Smith said. This requires constant remod- r eling of the building and additions to the are provided 1% services offered. Changes effected by nber of program Smith and his staff include a new speaker i. system added to Forum Hall and an luaintedwiththfy improved sound system in the Catskeller. Inch helps Itienjn A noon buffet line in the Bluemont Room n into the Uniwljj provides a quieter atmosphere for Union f diners. nany and varied; There is always something different o serve studentSm going on in the Union and I particularly ndK-State tji enjoy working with the students, Smith services that aret remarked. The monetary sacrifice of leaving a private practice was worth it since it gives me more time with my family, Dr. Robert Sinclair said, about his job as director of Lafene Student Health Center. It was the need for a more structured existence that brought me here. More structured, perhaps, but by no means inactive. In the five years since Sinclair came to Lafene, the number of patients treated per year has increased by 10,000. This problem was countered by increasing the staff from five to nine physicians. Sinclair has also changed some types of services offered. One of these was the organization of peer consumer groups, allowing students to deal with student complaints and requests. Sinclair believes these groups enable Lafene to deal more efficiently with its patients. G. Jay Ftausch believes that K-State is becoming more of an urban environment. He sees evidence of this in the increased amount of theft of library materials from Farrell Library. To deal with this problem, the library ' s director is instituting an elec- tronic security system which detects sto- len articles hidden in clothing, briefcases, and backpacks Rausch, who has 12 years of experi- ence in three libraries other than Farrell, is also changing the faculty book loaning policy. In the past, faculty members have been allowed to check out library materi- als for any length of time. Since the fall of 1975, it has been mandatory to check these back into the library once a year. Rausch believes this regulation will make library materials more readily available and help to complete inventories. Vows join with tit ks by Debbie Olmstead Time and money, two commodities stu- dents never have enough of, are even more difficult to manage when students have responsibilities not only to them- selves but to another person a spouse. Finding time for myself is hard, Mari- lyn Bader, a married student who lives in Jardine Terrace, said. Both she and her husband, Terry, attend K-State. Though Marilyn is a part-time student, she works full time. Connie and Steve McFarland, married students living in Jardine, believe that time isn ' t a problem once the couple gets organized. Once you adjust to the time demands of the other person, there ' s no problem, Steve said. When free time is available the couples like to spend it together. We play tennis at the rec complex together or we go bowling together at the Union, Steve said. The couples like what the University has to offer in the line of recreation and services for married couples such as counseling and insurance. Marilyn finds that, in general, being a married student isn ' t that much of a prob- lem. In fact, she thinks it has more advan- tages than being a single student. When you ' re upset about something that hap- pens you can go home and there will be someone who cares to listen to your problem, she said. Both Marilyn and Steve commented about the difference between the per- sonal development of a single student and that of a married student. You grow with the other person, Steve said. Marilyn believed, however, that the growth could be classified as coping skills learning to handle new experiences and new situations. Their outings are usually inexpensive. Entertainment might be movies at the Union or tennis games on the University ' s courts. The McFarlands enjoy football games in the fall and thought the price was reasonable. The Baders expressed the desire to go to the basketball games but wished the University could offer reduced ticket prices to married couples. These married students believe they are anything but left out of university activities and that K-State has done ever- ything possible for married students. We just want to be treated like stu- dents, Marilyn summed up. 132 married students married students 1 33 1 34 professional blocks It ' s a stiff dose of ' the real thing ' byPamPage Students anxious to go into the work- ing world find experiences await them in blocks and internships away from K- State. Being thrust into the world can be frightening, as a taste of civilization can hold its own problems. For the elementary education under- graduate, there are teaching blocks in Topeka and Kansas City under the Multi Institutional Teacher Education Centers (MITEC) program. Unlike the regular eight-week student-teaching program, MITEC is a full semester. The additional time allows the student to attend semi- nars and learn about various modes of education outside the classroom. To the student teacher, this experience means moving away from most connec- tions with K-State. Full tuition is required, although no time is spent on campus. Finding an apartment and setting up housekeeping is an adjustment in itself. I felt lonely at first because I was used to living with lots of people and all of a sudden I was alone, Bill Powell, a senior in elementary education, said. As far as a changed schedule, I have no choice it ' s 8:30 am to 3:30 pm and I ' m expected to be there, Powell said. The official classroom teacher super- vises and there ' s also a supervisor from K-State who visits periodically to keep tabs on progress. We come out of the program more prepared because we know how every- thing runs. Instead of just learning through books and lectures, we see and experience teaching as a whole, Powell said. New scenery also awaits the student who commutes to Topeka for pre-school student teaching. In the College of Home Economics, family and child development is a four-day program. The fifth day is spent at K-State in the classroom. Approximately forty dollars a month is spent on gas in addition to the full tuition paid to K-State. Aside from programs in Topeka and Kansas City, weekly class- room participation is still required. It ' s nice coming back on Mondays and becoming a student again, Trish Kerr, senior in family and child develop- ment, said. The weekly curriculum includes working with children and attending staff and teachers ' meetings. It ' s a nice change after three years of classes. I ' m finally practicing what I ' ve been reading about all these years. Inter- acting with the children is the fun part, Kerr said. The College of Home Economics holds various outlets for internships such as clothing and textiles. Participating stu- dents are paid by the rate of the individual store and work full-time in either Kansas City, Topeka, Wichita, or Manhattan. This type of internship gives a three- way benefit the stores, the University, and the student. It also provides the stu- dents with a chance to put to use all they have learned, Miriam Cross, instructor in clothing and textiles, said. Students involved know the store and even the department in which they will be placed a month in advance so they can make necessary living preparations. The internship provides both the stu- dent and the store with a chance to eval- uate one another for possible future employment. Each store usually has at least one student working there perma- nently, Cross said. The stores ' involve- ment helps public relations for them and gives them the opportunity to send feed- back on our system. This helps us improve our program on the whole. Horticulture therapy, an extension of horticulture and forestry, has a six-month field study available to students twice a year. Students in this curriculum earn 1 5 credit hours without pay. Working in the adult-hospital section with the activities therapy area of the hospital is the crux of their duties. Activities include creative crafts, art therapy, and ceramics, in addition to hor- ticulture-related activities. Other recent experimental internship programs are the Veterans Administra- tion Hospital in Alabama where interns work with rehabilitation, as well as psy- chiatric patients, and the John Knox Retirement Village in Lee ' s Summit, MO, where elderly are primarily cared for. Some students are hired after intern- ships. We have three students currently at Menninger ' s Clinic in Topeka, Rich- ard Mattson, assistant professor of horti- culture and forestry, said. I think the transition is important in adjusting from college to the real life. Stu- dents leave with ideas, and finding out what it ' s really like out there helps, Matt- son said. Although venturing alone into the working world is a big adjustment, stu- dents make it by accepting the responsi- bility and hard work with ambition. professional blocks 135 Knead bread for a hungry world by Mary Jane Smith K-State claims the title of the only uni- versity in the world offering bachelor ' s degrees in bakery science and manage- ment and milling science and manage- ment. Master ' s and doctorate degrees in grain science are also offered. One-hundred forty-five undergradu- ates and about 75 graduate students are enrolled in bakery, feed, and milling cur- riculums. Options in these curriculums are administration, chemistry, and opera- tions. Because K-State ' s grain science and industry program is the only one in exist- ence, 60 per cent of its students are from foreign countries. They represent 1 5 dif- ferent countries throughout the world. Foreign students come to K-State to gain knowledge for use when they return to their own countries to work in process- ing, research, or milling. Because cereal products constitute most of the food intake in overseas countries, the govern- ments of these countries believe their stu- dents should be well-educated in the grain science fields. One class in the milling science and management department makes flour for use by K-State resident housing. Classes in the feed science department process feed for University-owned animals. The bakery department offers courses which teach the process of bread baking in the all-day labs, Baking I and II. Students enjoy the courses because they gain practical experience while they are preparing for jobs. What I like most about the grain sci- ence and industry department is the will- ingness of the professors to help the stu- dents, Eileen Havel, junior in bakery sci- ence and management, said. It ' s just so personalized it seems we know our teachers like our parents. It ' s a close relationship, Mary Soltis, sophomore in milling science and man- agement, said. K-State administrators realized the need for exploring the field due to the lack of milling knowledge about Kansas ' prosperous wheat industry. Experimenta- tion led to the organization of the depart- ment of milling industry in 1910. Since, it has grown rapidly, and generous dona- tions have made possible construction of new buildings with modern equipment. With the emphasis today on world food problems, the grain science and industry department is helping to meet the demands for the increase of protein-rich foods. There are more available job posi- tions than students to fill them. Students are also able to get summer jobs with companies, helping them further their careers. 1 36 bakery and milling sciences bakery and milling sciences 137 Stick to it with glue ' n gumption by Doug Fink The lights burn long in Seaton Hall. Every night. Combined with the extended hours is the panoply of talents of architecture stu- dents, many whom spend an entire semester on a single project. Their work requires both tedious exact- ness and creative imagination. The result is a professional product, be it the com- prehensive plans for a park development or a piece of custom-made furniture. A chair seems a simple thing ' until you design and build one. The planning alone takes four to five weeks, Randy Hoffman, senior in interior architecture, said. Hoffman, who has built a synthes- izer as well as a chair, undertook consid- erable research before beginning to design his chair. The designers must first study anthro- pometries, the study of the dimensions of the human body. Using these principles, they adapt the chair ' s features to the contours of their own bodies. The chair structure must conform to their shoulder widths, the length of their arms and legs, and a host of other considerations. These measurements must then be incorporated with the aesthetic principles of design, Hoffman said. Such factors include form, materials, and coloring. At this point, working drawings of the chair are made showing every screw and every dowel. The students then submit their plans for criticism by professors and fellow stu- dents. The criticism, Hoffman said, can be quite intense, and heated debates may ensue. The rest of the semester is spent building the chair in the interior architecture workshop. Although the methods are sometimes crude by commercial standards, the stu- dent is responsible for each step in the process. Hoffman, whose chair was fiber- glass, built the mold of chicken wire and plaster of Paris himself. He also hand-laid the fiberglass. Once the furniture piece is completed, the student must have a presentation board which is, in essence, a sales pitch which goes into graphic design, Hoff- man said. The students do not limit themselves to chairs, Dave Meyer, senior in interior architecture, said. Among the other pro- jects are tables, beds, and even a grand- father clock. I don ' t think people know the things which go into these projects, Meyer said. We design it; we don ' t copy the plans. Past projects made at K-State have attained high honors in national competi- tion sponsored by the International Woodworking Machinery and Furniture Supply, Steve Murphy, workshop instruc- tor, said. Team work is essential in some of the Seaton Hall projects. Four landscape architecture students joined forces to construct a promotional display for fire- arms. The most visible product of their efforts are two scale models of a shooting range to be located in a park. Both are topo- graphical reliefs, requiring careful meas- urement to assure proper proportion. The big model shows the activity in relation to other park activities, Dave Wagner, senior in landscape architec- ture, said. We made it to show that it can be compatible with other park activities. The smaller model shows the shooting range in greater detail. Four weeks were taken to prepare drawings and gather information before the actual models were made. Two or three weeks were spent learning about shooting and rifle ranges, then more time was spent making site and slope ana- lyses, studying weather conditions, and determining safety factors. Soil, vegeta- tion, and drainage had to be evaluated. We spend four nights a week and five afternoons a week working on this, Roger Schenewerk, senior in landscape architecture, said. We even have to build the shipping crates. Mike Hauck and Mike Snyder, seniors in landscape architecture, concentrated on the drawings, specifications, and cost estimations. They show the various techniques for sidewalks, roads, and other things, Schenewerk said. This provides the client with alternatives for different meth- ods, materials, and expenses that can be used. The project will be shown to park departments and placed in booths at sports and home shows, Wagner said. It will possibly be shown at the National Recreation Commission Conference. 1 38 projects projects 1 39 r | organizations 140 OftS 141 Students can find means of involvement by gaining admittance, through scholastic achievement, to honor- ary organizations. Groups such as Blue Key and Mortar Board usher at Landon Lectures and sponsor home- coming activities. Though some honoraries encompass little more than membership dues, others aid in promot- ing knowledge and fellowship within their colleges and professions. 1 Ms, tau beta pi 1 42 honorary groups alpha epsilon rho [ mem by gaining t, to honor- Key and Mortai sponsor home- wsencompas lf s aid in promt . ieir colleges an : alpha kappa psi alpha lambda delta TOP ROW: Timothy L. McDiffett, Gordon V. Hibbard, Eric P. Deffenbaugh, Cynthia L. Railsback, Philip P. Omenski, Connie J. Doebele, John C. Feldmann, Mar- lene K. Henderson. SECOND ROW: Jerry D. Schnacke, Marlene S. Adkison, Susan L. Griffith, Suzanne C. Shaw BOTTOM ROW: Emme Smith, Kathryn A. Bailey, MarciaG. McGraw. TOP ROW: David W. Perky, Robert W. Parker, Steven J. Hoffman, Donald R. Johnson. SECOND ROW: Royce C. Janssen, Larry D. Fox, Donald J. Voth, Ralph E. Lag- ergren, Dell J. Klema. BOTTOM ROW: Rod L Jones, Bruce A. Mullen, Mark S. Lee, Larry L. Sears, Verlyn D. Richards. TOP ROW: Jana B. Blythe, Linda E. North, Roxanna M. Fundis, Connie J. Olson, Angela C. Rexwinkle, Kathryn L. Hullman, Glenda R. Keil, Debra S. Higgs. SECOND ROW: Teresa K. Klaumann, Angela M. Callanan, Julie L. Hampl, Elaine C. Hefty, Rosann G. Garrett, Laurie A. Norman, Merilu James. THIRD ROW: Michele R. War- mund, She ryl A. Ingram, Phyllis A. Murphy, Venita J. Brokesh, Marsha A. Hagenmaier, JoLee Wingerson, Cynthia L. Fry, Julie Albright. BOTTOM ROW: Carol E. Oukrop, Connie D. Nutter, Carolyn M. Beaudet, Ann E. George, Sue J. Gibbs, Julie A. Bieberly, Joyce A. Hyson, PamS. Grout. honorary groups 1 43 TOP ROW: Sudhakar R. Paidy, Anil Mital, Girish D. Desai, Bruce L. Fredrick, Krishen K. Sud, Pramil Kumar, Subramaniam Krishnan. SECOND ROW: Yosef S. Sherif, Daniel E. Deter, Anand Chitlangia, Robert A, Becker, Leslie E. Trainor, Roderick C. Briggs THIRD ROW: Bob D. Squires, Jon P. Jantz, Lynn E. Bussey, James H. Bachman, Marc A. Campbell, Karl L. Town- send. BOTTOM ROW: Robert A. Moore, Leroy W. Paul, David G. Bell, Michael D. Chatham, Alan J. Siemer. RickR. Weir. alpha pi mu TOP ROW: James J Albracht, Kenneth Eugene Rob- son. Abdu D. Tofa, Ralph W. Unger, Steve J. Albracht. SECOND ROW: Randall L. Warner, Leroy W. Russell, Maurice A. Catlin. Adam A. Warra, Robert D. Lauber, Ralph J. Cassibba. BOTTOM ROW: Michael W. Catlin, Ray G. Flickner, Ronald J. Wilson, Dale D. Hostinsky, Harry L. Field, Jim M. Maguin. TOP ROW: Mark A. Furney, William F. Small, Allen L. Hurley, Robert A. Smith, David J. Mugler, James P. Weyer, Thomas S. Strickler, J. Gregory Kite. BOTTOM ROW: Edward H. Perry, Merlin B. Chestnut, Keith A. Wright, Don A. Folkerts, Keith D. Tucker, Steven W. Rankin, Gary A. McNaughton, Andrew L. Oswald, Sam- uel E. Mathis. alpha tau alpha 1 44 honorary groups chi epsilon chimes delta psi kappa TOP ROW: Nancy J. Johnson, Allen L. Sneath, Sidney A. Thompson, David M. Janssen, Eldon F. Mockry, Jerry Zovne, Mark G. Snyder, Cynthia K. Sanders. SECOND ROW: Steven C. Dollmann, Kim A. Tanner, John T. Barrett, Richard L. Kussman, James B. Henley, Rick F. Biery, Peter H. Best. BOTTOM ROW: John H. Ahern, Steve Anderson, W. Clay Adams, Gordon A. Brest, Darrell R. Riekenberg, Richard W. Saunders. TOP ROW: Debra K. McCandless, Amy D. Bachman, Christy S. Shrum, Linda D. McCune, Patty E. Compton, Deborah D. Ward. SECOND ROW: Elaine Geist, Paula Marten, Deborah F. Hobble, Ann C. Tollefson, Nancy L. Musick. THIRD ROW: Marie L. Wisegarver, Deana C. Paulsen, Becky L. Durst. Deborah J. Stadel, Nancy V. Benignus, Barbara I. Roe. BOTTOM ROW: Lesley K. Whitehead, Kay D. Patrick, Deb Haifleigh, Janet K. Anderson, Debra J Romberger. TOP ROW: Ginger K. Thull, Janet K. Reusser, Teri L Anderson, Judy M. Biegler, Shann A. Shalala, Kimberle J. Rule, Kristin A. Stockstill. SECOND ROW: Mary E. Palmateer, Cynthia A. Corbin, Deborah A. Andrew, Elaine L Webster, Kathie J. Orme, Donna G. Perry, Cheryl J. Hill BOTTOM ROW: Miriam P. Poole, Joann M. Dobbie, Margie L. Wilke, Joyce R. Urish, Katheryn A. McKinney. honorary groups 145 eta kappa nu TOP ROW: Debra K. Miller, Michael L. Uhl, Kala J. Mar- ietta, John H. Yoakum, Donald D. Firestone, Gary A. McNaughton, Sharon A. Feightner, William A. Bucher. SECOND ROW: John K. Waterman, Robert J. Fogler, Glenn E. Funk, Ronald G. Rogers, Steven E. Shute, Thomas A. Beery, Philip N. King. THIRD ROW: Janusz Pawlus, Robert G. Montgomery, Richard M. Kelsey, Edward H. Perry, Jeff S. Barth, David E. Kimble, James P. Moore. BOTTOM ROW: Joe E. Ward, Thomas L. Hopkins, Robert W. Owens, Scott A. Boster, Greg Degi, Douglas D. Fowler, Randy Rhodes. gamma theta upsilon TOP ROW: Sy Seyler, Patricia Lambert, M. Candace Bogart, Robin Blackman, Martha A. McCoy. SECOND ROW: Brian C. Logan, David L. Wall, Barbara B. Eakin, Doug R. McAdams, David A. Rhoads, Rick Illgner. THIRD ROW: Steven E. Chellgren, John R. Morton, Randy A. McKinley, Theodore H. Grossardt, Chuck Bussing. BOTTOM ROW: Michael G. Sooy, Gail A. Lei- thauser, Laura J. Ahlstrom, Emelise Stutzman, Michael F. Ortmann. kappa delta pi TOP ROW: Carole Sharp, Teresa A. Oesterreich, Joyce K. Speer, Susan K. Pharr, Lynne E. Bessier. SECOND ROW: Beverly E. Holman, Linda L. Holeman, Pauline M. Wold-Echert, Carol E. Holmes. BOTTOM ROW: Sharon D. Johnson, Connie J. Poland, Cindy M. Macy, Debo- rah L. Tripp, Joe H. Loeb. 146 honorary groups mortar board phi epsilon kappa phi eta sigma TOP ROW: Nancy D. Womack, Heather K. Johnson, Cindy M. Macy, Sara J. Severance, Carol J. Campbell, Sharon L. Kroupa, Sallie K. Davis, Mary A. Robben, Patricia A. McEwen. SECOND ROW: LouAnn Bruey, Meg McGranaghan, Man Ann E. Channel, Evelyn S. Bergkamp, Pam S. Gudikunst, Suzanne Bruce, Julie A. Gamba, Cathie Silva, Leslie A. Koepke. BOTTOM ROW: Luci L. Ronning, Karen S. Ukena, Barbara J. Doebele, Shann A. Shalala, Deborah E. Clark, Carol A. Hille- brandt, Jane A. Fore. TOP ROW: Ralph P. Ziegler, Ronald G. Dreher, Tom A. Fenton, Rex A. Christner, Paul V. Klipowicz, Randy E. Merritt. SECOND ROW: Greg B. Miller, Gene W. War- ren, Vernon J. Henricks, Randall K. Dirks, Randy L. Condie, Alan D. Newkirk, Larry Noble. BOTTOM ROW: Tim A. Strathman, Roger N. Stucky, Dick J. Smith, Wil- liam R. Kehneier, Stephen E. Long, Brad W. Friesen. TOP ROW: Duane A. Dale, Ronald A. Kite, Steve M. Clark, Donald T. Dinges, Thomas L. Bell, Steve A. Liebl, Loren D. Bareiss, Randy D. Groves, Kent C. Kelly, Wil- liam J. Sidebottom. SECOND ROW: Terry C. Matlack, Jack R. Weaver, Rex M. Joyce, Kent A. Martens, John M. Cooper, Gordon W. Thayer, Douglas J. Little, David G. Deters, David M. Ylander, Donald W. Hanna. THIRD ROW: James E. Cole, Larry D. Vavroch, Jeff A. Snyder, Reginald A. VanPelt, Douglas A. Hall, Greg A. Tucker, Sam D. Brownback, Casey D. Garten, Dale P. Denning, William A. Bunch. BOTTOM ROW: Philip F. Palma, Dar- rel E. Krause, Dan L. Delimont, Richard H. Brensing, Ronnie L. Sims, Karl F. Fabrizius, Donald E. Atwill, Michael L. Gonzalez, Gregory L. Stock, James L. Cooper. honorary groups 147 phi upsilon omicron TOP ROW: Debra K. McCandless, Colleen G. Feese, Karen S. Matson, Lois J. Hagen, Vickie A. Doud, Denise L. Click, Mary C. Sharp, Charlotte A. Ediger, Beverly E. Holman, Barbara A. Rust, Dee A. Lewis. SECOND ROW: Brenda J. Lala, Heddy E. Kroeger, Cynthia D. Roney, Judy A. McKee, Janet L. Twaddell, Christina L. Blackaby, Vickie L. James, Brenda S. Hunt, Cheryl J. Keller, Karla J. Carney. THIRD ROW: Janice L. Ewing, Carol A. Whitney, Barbara J. Kelly, Rebecca J. Smith, Stacey J. Miller, Marlene S. Stum, Laura S. Carnes, Lana J. Woolery, Cindy M. Macy, Susan E. Bowe. BOT- TOM ROW: MaryAnn E. Channel, Bonnie R. Funk, Mar- ilyn A. King, Barbara I. Roe, Donna R. Meyer, Aline G. Nelson, Carol J. Barnett, Sandra J. Ward, Nancy S. Carnahan. TOP ROW: Deaun K.-Trayer, Joe A. Ragole, Stan L. Williams, Terrill J. Munkres, Luci L. Ronning. SECOND ROW: Steven D. Johnson, Richard A. Sachse, Kervin J. Brungardt, Lawrence R. Redd. BOTTOM ROW: Rod H. Cool, Jim R. Banks, John W. Hein, Paul L. Miller. TOP ROW: Sharon S. Kelly, Karen S. Dammann, Vero- nica S. Kasten, Angela C. Rexwinkle, Debbie L. Rhoades, Joleen D. Moden, Glenda R. Keil, Elaine L. Case, Jo A. Schrock, Joni C. Kroupa, Laurie A. Nor- man. SECOND ROW: Lisa I. Isch, Elaine C. Hefty, Teresa R. Basom, Melanie A. Landrith, Janet M. Stoffer, Merilu James, Sidney R. Reynolds, Amy S. Cooley, Nei- sha L. Bennett, Julie L. Hampl. THIRD ROW: Jean C. Sharp, Deborah S. Stover, Marsha A. Hagenmaier, Car- olyn Hoener, Patty J. Bruey, Sheryl A. Ingram, Sylvia J. Dumler, Elaine C. Naegele, Charlotte A. McKee. BOT- TOM ROW: LuAnn Holmes, Sue A. Steffenhagen, Diane M. Robson, Mary E. Soltis, Sue J. Gibbs, Ann E. George, Jodi R. Knocke, Donna R. Meyer, Terry L. Feldkamp. pi tau sigma 1 48 honorary groups steel ring tau beta pi tau sigma delta TOP ROW: Gregory B. Fyfe, Jeffrey D. Bone, William G. Houf, Keith D. Tucker, Eldon F. Mockry, Ronald L. Brown, Jonathan P. Jantz, Steven L. Phillips. BOTTOM ROW: Gary A. McNaughton, Peggy A. Gilliam, Luci L. Ronning, Steve T. Brumbaugh, Stephen L. Lewallen, Sharon A. Feightner, Edward H. Perry. TOP ROW: Luci L. Ronning, Debra K. Miller, Robert W. Schmidt, John H. Yoakum, Dody L. Demuth, Marilyn A. Bailey, Eldon F. Mockry, Steven T. Brumbaugh. SEC- OND ROW: John T. Barrett, Steven E. Shute, Jonathan P. Jantz, Ronald L. Brown, Dennis C. Wegener, Robert W. McGriff, Richard A. Kinder, Kim A. Tanner, Joe A. Ragole. THIRD ROW: Edward H. Perry, Thomas L. Hopkins, Robert G. Montgomery, William G. Houf, Douglas D. Fowler, Rocke C. Verser, Richard M. Kel- sey, Michael D. Chatham. BOTTOM ROW: Tracy E. Weaver, Jeffrey D. Bone, Keith D. Tucker, Greg A. Degi, Roger W. Toebben, William M. Upton, John B. Garner, Kenneth B. Gooden, Theodore F. Wiesner. TOP ROW: Cynthia K. Sanders, Michael L. Uhl, Kala J. Marietta, Gary A. McNaughton, Sharon A. Feightner, Jonathan W. Bredow, William A. Bucher, John K. Waterman, Robert J. Fogler. SECOND ROW: Tim L. Heiman, Lowell R. Mitchell, Thomas A. Beery, Philip N. King, James B. Glaze, Ronald G. Rogers, Steven C. Dollmann, Keith G. Peetz. THIRD ROW: Wayne A. Harms, Randy A. Rhodes, Robert W. Owens, Scott N. Kalivoda, Kervin J. Brungardt, Wayne L. Edwards, Gregory J. Wurtz. BOTTOM ROW: Rick F. Biery, Chris- topher A. Grier, Jerald A. Howell, Roger C. Gorman, David M. Dechant, Frank A. Tillman, Lawrence R. Redd. TOP ROW: Douglas W. Fredrikson, John W. Irwin, Richard K. Tilghman, Cynthia J. Browne, Somjetana Bua-Aim, Kendall J. Helmer, Douglas P. Wikoff. SEC- OND ROW: Greg D. Shanklin, Michael W. Milburn, Merle F. Jantz, Randall G. Allen, Victor J. Vouga, George M. Holton. THIRD ROW: Steve J. Hageman, Mark D. McCluggage, Kim A. Williams, Jim C. Fisher, Ronald L. Brown, Terry F. Bader, Gary A. Busse. BOT- TOM ROW: Ben J. Tensing, James R. Vollintine, Bob L. Fingland, Dennis A. Haugh, Neil E. Murphy, Steve L. Weidner. honorary groups 149 Fraternities are assisted in chapter projects of chari- table, public relations, and social nature by the little sis- ters women ' s auxiliary organizations. Selected by fra- ternity members, little sisters are viewed as representa- tives of their respective fraternities. TOP ROW: Glenda R. Keil, Gina L. Sanders, Elizabeth L. Rhodes, Kay R. Yarnell, Kristie A. Painter, Julie L. Hampl. SECOND ROW: Janet L. Myers, Stephannie A. Hunsley, Connie A. Hatfener, Debbie L. Meyer, Dee A. McMurray, Julie A. Dill. BOTTOM ROW: Jeanette F. Gaylord, Sherry M. Nave, Natalie K. Green, Anna J. Roberts, Marsha L. Trueblood, Teresa A. Collier. ' cacia girls TOP ROW: Debbie Rudd, Sheree Lowe, Theresa M. Kiernan, Barb Weisser, Lynn M. Duncan, Cathy Allen. SECOND ROW: Suzanne K Moore, Monica R. Sainich, Debi L. Bishop, Debi R. Swenson, Debbie L. Fisher, Kathy Flynn, Stephanie Smith. BOTTOM ROW: Candi J. Caplinger, Susan B. Henderson, Mary F. Kappelmann, Jane L. Cramer, Mary K. Zawatzki, Becky J. Eyman. 150 little sisters crescents TOP ROW: Tamara R. Lowry, Leslie A. Brown, Kathy E. Gray, Francie B. Vining, Cindy K. Logan, Karen Letour- neau, Shera V. Carpenter, Jeanne A. Holborn. SEC- OND ROW: Mary J. Nesbit, Pamela J. Noller, Martha L. Baker, Cheryl L. Collins, Gwen Davies, Debbie A. Albers, Marsha R. Isaacson. THIRD ROW: Sherri D. Voss, Carole A. Immenschuh, Claudia A. Roberts, Linda Larsen, Debbie K. Williams, Karen S. Ukena, Car- olyn C. Feeney, Cynthia C. Craig. BOTTOM ROW: Les- lie D. Johnson, Andrea L. Barlow, Jo L. Ehrlich, Lisa C. Montgomery, Gerri A. Laue, Kim L. Auer, Carol A. Carr, Joyce L. Morgan. Projects of chat ' e by the lit si Selected by ;( daughters of diana delta darlings TOP ROW: Susie J. Brooks, Donna L. Snyder, Brenda G. Baker. SECOND ROW: Annette M. Schafer, Barbara K. Book, Jackie R. Beatson, Pam R. Johnson. THIRD ROW: Kate McNeive, Lisa K. Robinson, Ann C. Tollef- son. BOTTOM ROW: Linda J. Spicer, Doreen K. Frantz, Shelley A. McBee, Kathy P. Miller. TOP ROW: M. Beth Ellis, Ann L. Spence, Renee I. Sher- man, Mary D. Stockton, Becky C. Gardner, Kathy A. Hogerty, Del G. Hoge. SECOND ROW: Linda K. Knecht, Sandy S. Thies, Johnnie M. Summerlin, Nanci K. Jones, Nan C. Goin. THIRD ROW: Karen A. Dunne, Denise I. Blomquist, Debora J. Braun, Carla A. Berger, Jan A. Saunders. BOTTOM ROW: Kay D. Patrick, Jac- que E. Knox, Brenda K. Zwick, Marilyn K. Crouch, Billie M. Aaron. little sisters 151 golden hearts TOP ROW: Pamela J. Brown, Elaine L. Graff, Deb A. Rumble, Deb J. Barnes, Carol G. Crews, Jennifer L. Main. SECOND ROW: Cindy S. Converse. Tana S. Lee, Cindy K. Dipman, Nancy G. Woods, Susie J. Sageser, Terrie L. Lafferty. BOTTOM ROW: Paula J. Neugent, Su M. Townsend, Brenda C. Connor, Nancy J. Wood- worth, Cmda A. Hatcher, Jean V. Tideman. TOP ROW: Tonya M. Smith, Wilene A. Jones, Karen L. Woods, Tami E. Farr, Patricia Stephenson, Lorraine E. Breckenridge, Cheryl L. McAfee. SECOND ROW: Terri L. Terrell, Tressia A. Brown, Deborah A. Fletcher, Diane C. Rogan, Patricia A. Slater, Dore D. Woodson, Sherri A. Carter. BOTTOM ROW: Valerie A. Pope, Che- ryl A. Hill, Sandra K. McGee, Rhonda D. Rush, Mon- trula Johnson, Winnona D. Dancy, Cheryl A. Petty. kappa kittens little sigmas TOP ROW: Marilyn J. Nielsen, Paula L. Gatzoulis, Janet S. Atchity, Marprie Barber, Jan P. Armstrong, Connie A. Kennedy, PamS. Gudikunst, Nancy C. Roach. SEC- OND ROW: Debbie A. Winsky, C. Leigh Peters, Sally C. Reed, Gail A. Cardinal, Barbara L. Campbell, Paula M. Ranallo, Linda D. McCune. THIRD ROW: Kimberly A. Maupin, Jeanine V. Besch. Teresa J. Case, Barbara A. Stanton, Susan J. Denzel, Cindy A. Schmidt, Susan J. McClure, Suzan L. Hoffman. BOTTOM ROW: Belinda G. Dizmang, Teresa A. Bartoszek, Suzanne H. Aal- bregtse, Beth A. Zahner, Michelle E. Renz, Barbara I. Roe, Marilyn K. Broadie. 1 52 little sisters little sisters of athena little sisters of minerva little sisters of the golden rose TOP ROW: Leigh Ann Kenagy, Pam Y. Green, Nancy Johnson, Bekki A. Dunn. SECOND ROW: Susan M. Weiss, Debra A. Zimmerman, Connie C. Oppitz, Eliza- beth A. Mount, Janet L. Burgdorfer BOTTOM ROW: Bettie A. Venneman, Janet A. Mahoney, Margaret M. Hein, Jackie E. Durant. TOP ROW: Rhonda L. Medill, Terri S. Benedict, Barbara A. Kocour, Bobbie L. Bessette, Mary J. Smith, Sandy S. Cornelius, Maria J. Zarda, Diana J. Shaw, Nancy A. Moddrell, Lynn McCallister, Sally A. Sageser. SECOND ROW: Mary A. Bornheimer, Linda S. Hicks, Mikelyn A. Sims, Marilyn A. Schreuder, Nancy L. Anderson, Susan M. Lacy, Paula P. Knetter, Lisa M. Flynn, Sara J. Clark, Sheryl A. Trump. THIRD ROW: Mary J. Johnson, Cindy L. Asbury, Mary E. Arnold!, Mary E. Glidden, Shana K. Winston, Linda J. Love, Maureen P. O ' Rourke, Renea C. Dorsey, Susan R. Schrock. BOTTOM ROW: Donita L. Whitney, Julie K. Tucker, Cheri S. Spener, Sharyl A. Strack, Karen L. Roughton, Julie C. Albright, Sally A. Haertling, Barb J. Lambie, Kathy A. Etzel, Terry Kunz. TOP ROW: Susan K. Ringler, Janice M. Fabrizius, Dianne L. Murphy, Rebecca J. Bales, Teresa C. Hol- thus, Stefni L. Weeks, Sandy S. Blackwood. SECOND ROW: Mary G. Hornung, Mary A. Lindstrom, Janiece A. DuPree, Susan M. Eisiminger, Debbie L. Staples, Nancy S. McDaniel. THIRD ROW: Sheila A. North, Deborah Lynn Peters, Kathy K. Lindholm, Sheri L. Bar- eiss, Susan M. Peil, Kaye L. Klema. BOTTOM ROW: Shirley E. Maskus, Eileen E. Grossardt.SusieA.Chaput, Joan D. Vogts, Janet L. Klema, Wilma L. Masters. little srslers 153 little sisters of the pearls and rubies TOP ROW: Janet M. Houk, Jennifer K. Edwards, Brenda J. Brinkman, Ronda J. Wilson, Susan J. Dennis, Rebecca J. Tanner, Dianna L. Walker. SECOND ROW: Nancy S. Carnahan, Margo A. Reiman, Rita A. Oltjen, Pennie E. Parcel, Mary T. Suellentrop, Barb K. Blick. BOTTOM ROW: JoAnn J. Roth, LuAnne Faubion, Shari A. Hildebrand, Susan K. Gartrell, Faire French. TOP ROW: Nancy J. Murphy, Renee M. McMahon, Col- leen P. Kill, Heather M. Warren, Debbie R. Knierim. SECOND ROW: Susan L. Specht, Victoria A. Seitz, Rhonda G. Young, LuAnne E. Maloney, Jean A. Boyd. BOTTOM ROW: Michelle L. Bowman, Audrey L. Rein, Debbie S. McLeod. TOP ROW: Diane K. Bergquist, Karen A. Testori, P. Jane Braxmeyer, Pamela R. Page, Sharon S. Emig, Debi D. Lauck, Kimberly J. Moore, Mitsy M. White, M. Elaine Warren. SECOND ROW: Kimberly S. Fisher, Beverly J. Benda, Cathy J. McCosh, Lina J. Buchanan, Shelly J. Gayle, Polly A. Nichols, Cheri D. Cox, Ann M. Zimmerman. THIRD ROW: Linda D. Sundgren, Jane A. Five, Linda K. Thomas, Marilyn I. Rudeen, Rita B. Debrick, Julie A. Juno, Mary A. Barnes, Carla F. Taylor, Jody A. Cheatum. BOTTOM ROW: Joan A. Queen, Ann C. King, Kristie L. Hudson, Nancy L. Smith, Marki M. Rush, Cynthia D. Twietmeyer, Janice A. Smith, Patricia A. Mahoney. little sisters of the shield and diamond iin 6 little sisters of the white rose 154 little sisters little sisters of theta xi omega pearls phi gammas TOP ROW: Jana B. Blythe, Kim M. Denton, Sue E. Bridgewater, Renet A. Olson, E. Darlene Wiley. SEC- OND ROW: Jan L. Nedwed, Bev J. Kongs, Venette R. Kolman, Janet L. Herriott. BOTTOM ROW: Denise L. McVey, Patricia J. Given, JoAnne Pagan, Pam S. Grovt. TOP ROW: Freddie E. Adkins, Jennie L. Graves, Terry D. Revels, Luisa C. Edmonson, Frances A. Gunn, Lynda C. Dotson, Ruby Brown, Kim D. Henderson, Peachiey Davis, Vanessa R. Barrett, Lorand Brecken- ridge. SECOND ROW: Pamela L. White, Karen K. Wil- liams, Gwendolyn S. Macon, Latessa R. Jackson, Norma J. Thomas, Denise Davis, Mitzi Stuart, Hilda R. Houston, Shawn D. Gibson, Vester D. Davis. BOTTOM ROW: Robin E. Walker, Beatrice A. Johnson, Linda K. Morris, Frankie I. Thomas, Cherrie L. James, Linda K. Thomas. TOP ROW: Jacque K. Berkley, Lorraine R. Weis, Sally A. Heller, Elizabeth D. Peach, Sharon L. Butcher, Mar- cia J. Rector, Teresa F. Baughman, Rhonda S. Noel, Anna G. Piland, Paula K. Meyers. SECOND ROW: Lora J. Shehi, Marcia L. Sutton, Valerie A. Vedros, Cynthia D. Pistora, Kathy A. Bailey, Carol A. Meyers, Ellison Rainsberger. BOTTOM ROW: Mary B. Shivers, Barbara A. Sadowski, Debbie A. Dreiling, Jacquelyn R. Ayres, J. Jill Britegam, Christine M. Stout. lie sisters 1 55 TOP ROW: Karen E. Wimmer, Julie L. Walker, Marsha K. Henke, Nancy J. Henke, Mary A. Good, Jane A. Peters. SECOND ROW: Marjorie J. Hedger, Rose M. Jilka, Sandy A. Brooks, Marcia E. Hicks, Crystal L. Wiley, Cylinda L. Anderson. Debora A. Nordhus. BOT- TOM ROW: Linda M. Atwell, Mary E. Mead, Eloise M. Winterscheidt, Mary E. Soltis, Karen J. Plegge, Susan E. Peters. phi kaptives she du TOP ROW: Karen R. Calhoun, Patti D. Whitt, Candie K. Cramer, Jean M. Plegge, Christy S. Shrum, Sheryl K. Wilkinson, Kenna S. Carson, Thena M. Bell, Debby M. Fountain. SECOND ROW: Amy L. Livingood, Lurenda E. Breckenridge, Ginger Cook, Vicki G. McEndree, Jane L. Dembski, Susie Edgerley, Vicky L. Teeter, San- dra L. Miller, Charliss A. Miller. THIRD ROW: Julie A. Stever, Kathleen A. Gillan, Peggy Cranberry, Cindy L. Littleton, Valerie D. Manning, Lynn L. Barrett, Jan S. Southard, Barbara J. Kelly. BOTTOM ROW: Jeanine Miller, Leslie J. Allen, Jonna Bolan, Judy C. Weltsch, Nancy L. Harlan, Vicki F. Lultrell, Linda L. Zetazalo, Sheryll S. Gebhart, Kay D. Patrick. sisters of the maltese cross TOP ROW: Diane S. Vock, Paula K. Byron, Sheril L. Johnson, Beverly White, Eve L. Rundquist, Gail L. Breen, Jan A. Harder. SECOND ROW: Maggie A. Rem- bleske, Shauna L. Kelly, Kay J. Bartak, Paula J. Thomp- son, Karen J. Kloster, Tresa L. Flora, Suzie May. BOT- TOM ROW: Barb E. Kessler, Kathy Mollett, Marby Ham- bright, Patty D. Dunn, Elizabeth A. Bearly, Jill Thayer. 156 little sisters sisters of the sphinx TOP ROW: Colleen G. Feese, Susan M. Schabel, Nancy L. Adams, Lori K. Ellis, Mary K. Robitaille, Deb- bie S. Smith, Cindy M. Robinson. SECOND ROW: Carol M. Medill, Dawn J. Dennis, Claudia L. Effland, Mary Beth Stallbaumer, Carrie A. Lawson, Deborah J. Mense. THIRD ROW: Kathy D. Burkhard, Pamela J. Kilby, Janet A. Goff, Nyla J. Aspelin, Christy L. Hrabe. BOTTOM ROW: Kathleen A. OToole, Eleonore M. Ken- ning, Teresa A. Phillips, Sheryl A. Ingram, Adrienne D. Anderson, MaryS. Herbers. TOP ROW: Vicki L. Sollner, Nina M. Kelly, Susie McAndrew, Jane A. Reed, Jeanne M. Johnson, Janis A. Pack, Terry Dunaway, Janette E. Kaup, Paula K. Daylor, Cynthia L. Pixley, Jeannie Huettenmueller. SECOND ROW: Barbara L. Hoffman, Joan M. Pottorf, Sue A. Malone, Mary L. Hepperly, Patricia A. Bat- chelder, Karen S. Dammann, Jill E. Tobler, Jane E. Tobler, Marty Lewis, Deanna M. Karlin. THIRD ROW: Mary K. Knudson, Michele Luckeroth, Joni L. Bergren, Cindy A. Joerg, Susie K. Lukert, Barbara J. Marksman, Sherry J. Ackerman, Linda J. Cook, Janet L. Noll. BOT- TOM ROW: Lisa J. Redfield, Barbara A. Kille, Joan Houghton, Mia Brewer, Mary Ann Weibert, Cindy C. McDaniel, Karen L. Wasinger, Paula M. Wasinger, Julie Sh eik, D ' Earl Danner. TOP ROW: Marjorie M. Neibling, Maureen L. Hall, Linda L. Neal, Cynthia J. Masters. SECOND ROW: Patti S. Hobson, Susan L. Hubbs, Beth Land, Connie Elsea, Lisa A. Telthorst. BOTTOM ROW: Nancy D. Bootman, Jane Koelsch, Jan E. Hardman, Margie A. Lohrentz, JaneE. Rowland. little sisters 157 Interest groups center their efforts on specific objec- tives. By inviting speakers, sponsoring field trips, hold- ing seminars, and providing special services to their members they aim to sharpen professional skills or share common concerns. Often, members are assisted in ways otherwise una- vailable. For a minimal fee, the Council for Exceptional Children makes available $300,000 in liability insur- ance to prospective teachers. Several interest organizations serve community needs as well as their own, as with the Horticulture Club aiding in campus beautification, or the several mil- itary organizations which work for bloodmobiles, launch food drives, and entertain hospitalized soldiers at Ft. Riley. Musical and theatrical groups ' performances repre- sent the University statewide. 1 58 interest groups skills ierve rfomancesn agricultural education club agricultural mechanization club TOP ROW: Gregory V. Anderes, Kenneth E. Robson, G. Noel Park, Mick V. Morrell, Deanna L. Raab, Abdu D. Tofa, Stanton L. Newby, Judy K. Gress, Lea M. Borst, Velva C. Hale, Ronda J. Wilson. SECOND ROW: Robert J. Danler, Donnie D. Phillips, James W. Ramsey, Steven P. Schmidt, John W. Slocombe, Leroy W. Russell, Joe L. Eder. THIRD ROW: George B. Ebert, Ronald J. Wil- son, G. Mark Mayfield, Ray G. Flickner, Allen D. Kurtz, Richard C. Snell, John F. Graff, Rodney L. Nulik, S. Allen Konicek. BOTTOM ROW: Casey D. Garten, Larry A. Gossen, Dale D. Hostinsky, Michael W. Catlin, Rob- ert D. Lauber, Donald L. Rhine, Ralph G. Field. TOP ROW: Martin E. Herbers, Stanton J. Janssen, Jef- frey L. Levin, Jeffrey E. Noll, Timothy A. Beim, Richard E. Dempster. SECOND ROW: David A. Dick, Wayne A. McKinney, Verne A. Hubalek, Ray Brunker, Gerald Link. THIRD ROW: Eldon D. Fehrenback, Craig H. Sto- ver, Thomas K. Hooper, Don E. Werner, C. David John- son, Curtis Willhite. BOTTOM ROW: James M. Harden, Keith B. Call, Tim A. Berglund, Shane Messenger, Jon E. Buckman. interest groups 1 59 block and bridle TOP ROW: Brenda J. Hemberger, Deborah L. White, Beth G. Pringle, Amy L. Townsend, Susan C. Jones, Cynthia C. Craig, Deborah E. Clark, Margaret A. Schultz, Eva J. Vosler, Susan Thames. SECOND ROW: Steve A. Mayo, Carla J. Steeples, Julie A. Hamma, Aline G. Nelson, Deadra L. Cauble, Martha A. Vanier, Douglas G. Zillinger, Thann Boyum, Joel W. Wimer, William L. McGee. THIRD ROW: Larry Poss, Bruce A. Schlickau, C. Ray Ladd, Beverly F. Droge, Ted J. Nighswonger, Brett A. Prochaska, Rodney L. Nulik, Kim M. Fawcett, Kathleen A. Klein, Douglas K. Claas- sen. BOTTOM ROW: Rick Olson, Alan J. Ladd, Regi- nald S. Phillips, Clayton J. Story, William Q. Gattshall, Rodney B. Peters, Raymond B. Hawn, Richard D. Scott, Raebern L. Nelson, Steven W. Miles. TOP ROW: Judy K. Gress, Alice J. Phillips, Ann E. Mueller, Suzanne C. Shaw, Gayle L. Davis, Betsy L. Pfeffer, Lynette K. Bond, Mary L. Steele, Barbara S. Seers, Debbie L. Holt. SECOND ROW: Ann J. Leach, Terri S. Reinhardt, Cindy M. Macy, Sue Herwig, Pat L. Krehbiel, Pam Kilby, Katie A. Blunk, Elizabeth I. Evans, Debra L. Bennett, Lindsay A. Friend. THIRD ROW: Paul W. Merklein, Terry L. Weeden, Terry W. Henry, Rex A. Hoskinson, Leon E. Sylvester, Zane D. Kiracofe, Diane K. Glover, Penny S. Burger, Brenda Landritn, Elizabeth C. Stevens. BOTTOM ROW: Craig A. Good, Chris A. Strait, Bruce D. Rinkes, Pat K. Herrmann, Richard H. Brensing, Michael A. Collinge, Charles P. Collins, Philip E. Beesley, Robert S. Adam, Daniel S. Hale. TOP ROW: Debbie Ericson, Shelly D. Thompson, Gwen S. Johnson, Susan M. Gatz, Rick L. Peterson, Martha L. Voigts, Melissa A. Forbes, Cecelia A. Tandy, Mary A. Bradford, Kim J. Curry. SECOND ROW: Emily M. Dans- kin, Leah S. Price, Cassandra D. Utz, Mary M. Hurlburt, Lesa J. Schwanke, Joleen D. Moden, Linda L. Collinge, Ruth A. Schweitzer, Donita L. Whitney, Liz Folger. THIRD ROW: Donald H. Kropf, Debbie K. Fox, Cathleen J. Langton, Patsy L. Houghton, Jimalene R. Jeffery, Annette K. Bredthauer, Chris Sankey, Joseph L. Koe- chner, Jay Sheldon, Gary R. Rider. BOTTOM ROW: Charles E. Oleen, Randall R. Gruber, Gary E. Poss, Lynn R. Holt, Steven F. Russell, Chris A. Melson, Peter R. Fish, Robert G. Haynes, Nancy S. Whisman. TOP ROW: Frank G. Healy, Paula J. Petersen, Greg C. Clark, Fred W. Marmor, Linda S. Bringham, Larry V. Kaster. SECOND ROW: Brent D. Rains, John M. Yost, Steve M. Irons, Tony C. Schmid, Dan A. Ball. THIRD ROW: N. Dean Stoskopt, Philip A. Hodson, Larry E. Schilling. BOTTOM ROW: H. Derrick Blocker, Loarn L. Bucl, Barry D. Rowland, James F. Schesser. crop protection club 1 60 interest groups dairy science club forestry club grain science club TOP ROW:. Lynda S. Davis, JoEllen Arnold, Cindy S. McAllister, Kathleen A. Klein, Keith A. Heikes. SECOND ROW: Bob D. Knight, Paul C. Schmidt, Peter S. Fletcher, John C. Coen. THIRD ROW: Daniel W. Sex- ton, George C. Pretz, Ben J. Smith, Phillip J. Stroupe. BOTTOM ROW: C. L. Norton, Tom S. Strickler, Ty L. Compton, Galen L. Larson. TOP ROW: Fred J. Deneke, Michael J. Adams, Patricia L. Graybeal, Nancy A. Vathauer, Mary A. Marsh, Candy K. Spielman, Jon A. Moser. SECOND ROW: Dana L. Hamm, Karen A. Stout, Wendy L. Benefiel, Tom W. Conroy, Lynn E. Thurlow. BOTTOM ROW: Peter N. Miller, Bruce D. Wood, Tapley W. Kent, Richard J. Suel- lentrop. TOP ROW: Robert D. Ricklefs, Stephen H. Combs, Richard L: Helvey, Bryan J. Warren, Mark L. Vollbracht, Patrick B. Aydt, Robert A. Blaida. SECOND ROW: Dale Eustace, Lauren J. Larson, Gary E. Wietharn, Blaine K. Holder, Pat C. Dreese, Ahmed A. W. Abed. THIRD ROW: Joe M. Pistora, William C. Cramer, Frank P. McFarland, Jayson B. Seymour, William M. Gross, David D. Green, Craig E. Hogue. BOTTOM ROW: Eugene Farrell, Randal W. Baker, Timothy J. Dodd, Darryl L. Engelhardt, James K. Musil, Randy L. Wehl- ing. interest groups 161 horticulture club TOP ROW: Cari S. Leman, Anita L. Heacock, Vickie S. Hase, Cheri J. Church, Jane A. Wittmeyer, Linda K. Johnson, Joseph M. Jackson, Lindsay B. Arnold, Heather K. Johnson. SECOND ROW: Lee K. Anken- man, Virginia S. Shirer, Michele R. Warmund, Marsha K. Baugher, Jeanene G. French, Crystal L. Wiley, Joe- lyn K Squires, Evelyn S. Bergkamp. THIRD ROW: Carol J. Maggard, Cathryn S. Badger, Rick J. Wenger, Sandy K. Holcom, John P. Breault, K eith E. Turner, Lawana G. Clements. BOTTOM ROW: Susan F. Montgomery, Matt J. Knilans, Thomas E. Mance, Gary L. Fanning, Freddie E. Palmblade, Bill R. Zimmer, Bruce A. Relihan, Marvin B. McKenzie, Rick L. Davis. natural resource management club TOP RCA ' : Tamara R. Lowry, Carol E. Goss, Becky L. Durst, Teresa G. Owens, Sheila D. McKain, Larry G. Parker, Harley S. Holliday. SECOND ROW: George C. Watts, Darrell D. Parks, Thomas L. Taylor, Stewart R. Duncan, Anthony W. Sharp, Baron J. Shively, Gary A. Schuler. BOTTOM ROW: Ben D. Mahaffey, Michael E. Oppitz, Michael W. Bonham, Walter B. Jordan, James T. Fleming, Raul R. Mortti, Orville W. Bidwell. wheat state agronomy club TOP ROW: Loren L. Seaman, Arlen E. Wilcox, Gary C. Peterson, Norman D. Johns, Paul F. Stich, James W. Eubank, Michael R. Grogan, Francis A. Kelsey, William D. Moore. SECOND ROW: Gregory W. Morrical, Carl W. Matousek, Aden E. Joy, Wallace C. Leavitt, Jay H. Holste, Bryan D. Evans, Duane W. Frasier, James M. Burton, Tom W. Cott. THIRD ROW: Lyman L. Nuss, Eric S. Sevatson, James R. Marietta, William H. Slater, Jim S. Season, Barry D. Rowland, Gregory A. Sarensen, S. W. Ehler. BOTTOM ROW: Dean A. Graber, Duane W. Drees, David D. Green, Elissa R. Levine, Stanley G. Freyenberger, William J. Harmon, Joe H. Bunck, Rich- ard W. Stumpf, L. V. Withee. 1 62 interest groups arts and science council TOP ROW: Terri G. Crowe, Bryce F. Haverkamp, Rob- ert E. Hall, Phil F. Raima, Andy L. Oswald, Terry C. Mat- lack. BOTTOM ROW: Lisa Foster, Mary Jo Prochazka, Greg D. Olds, Emilie K. Smith, Mary E. Flanagan, L. Gay Linvill, Mark S. Lee, Steve F. Twietmeyer. interest groups 1 63 association of computing machinery TOP ROW: Mary L. Love, Haroon U. Rashid, Steve P. Keller, William E. Shea, Catherine Neal. SECOND ROW: William F. Weber, John E. McCormick, Stanley Wileman, David Neal, John W. Shellenberger. BOTTOM ROW: Harvey A, Long, Randolph P. Johnston, Bryan D. Harold, Thomas L. Cofran, Tom L. Gallagher. biology club TOP ROW: Sherry L. Williams, Linda S. Deitrick, Daniel E. Headrick, Steven E. McCormic. SECOND ROW: Dana J. Orten, Robin A. Ladner. BOTTOM ROW: Rob- ert R. Laforge, Randy A. Smith, Keith D. Taylor, Ann E. Kammer. TOP ROW: Cindy L. Ediger, Nancy S. Anstaett, Paula K. Meyers, Robert A. Percy, Terri L. Bechtel, Keith W. Schlaegel, Pam Kreutzer. BOTTOM ROW: Chad L. Perry, Ayn M. Uilliland, Eugene G. Malcolm, Kathy K. Garrelts, Cindy E. Rogers, Don D. Froebe, Helen J. Wil- liams. in tenebris association n 1 64 interest groups ksdb-fm staff k-state players ksu wildlife society TOP ROW: M. Emme Smith, Marcia G. McGraw, Carrie E. Stapleton, Marlene S. Adkison, Paul M. Gaston, Michael Haberkorn, Kathryn M. Thomas. SECOND ROW: Susan L. Griffith, Lynn E. Cress, Roger W. Han- naford, John R. Stauffer, John C. Feldmann, Adel L. Visser. THIRD ROW: Les A. Younger, Mark D. Haden, Steven A. Herrs, Gordon V. Hibbard, Kent M. Taylor. BOTTOM ROW: Philip R. Arnett, Marlene K. Hender- son, Richard S. Smalley, Philip F. Grossardt, Scott L. Jacobsen, Jerry D. Schnacke. TOP ROW: Susan K. Griffin, Laurie D. Johnson, Teresa S. Haffener, Connie Jo Doebele, Cynthia M. Helferstay, Pamela S. Evers, Natalie K. Green. SECOND ROW: Gregory P. Mitchell, Alica E. Krchma, Curtis G. Gra- ham, Nancy K. Baker, Dennis T. Reh, Doug S. Pender- gast. BOTTOM ROW: Brenda J. Clark, Mark M. Gustaf- son, Michael J. Byington, Tim L. Blacker, Matt W. Smith. TOP ROW: Janet J. Block, Mary J. Davis, Malia J. Weide, Thomas J. Snodgrass, Terry Z. Riley, Roger D. Vancil. SECOND ROW: Steven E. McCormic, Gary D. Print, Paul C. Martin, Sheila D. Bahruth, Rick L. Moss- man. THIRD RO W: Daniel F. Ronnebaum, Mack E. Byard, Robert R. Laforge, Mark D. Collinge, David W. Beck. BOTTOM ROW: John C. Jaques, Dennis E. Wil- son, Michael L. Peterman, Greg A. Wingfield, Albert F. Sutlick, Randall A. Smith. interest groups 1 65 medical technology club TOP ROW: Sheri L. Richardson, Carol L. Hahn, Lora A. Heptig, Jill E. Mueller, Lora J. Shehi, Joyce L. Frey, Susan R. Seely. SECOND ROW: Brenda A. Raile, Janet K. Fowles, Kathryn L. Bortz, Janet A. Stigall, Kristine L. Regier, Debbie R. Yaussi. THIRD ROW: Kerri J West, Deborah S. Stover, Karen D. Swander, Lea A. Wiltse, Kirk L. Gates, Charlotte D. Paulsen, Barry S. Hardman. BOTTOM ROW: Jeffrey J. Sutton, Mitchell C. Moheng, Ted G. Betzen, David P. Franken, John S. Anderson, Mark E. Coughenour. TOP ROW: Charlotte D. Paulsen, Carl Batt, John J. Voegeli, Scott M. Dennis. BOTTOM ROW: Jane E. Lar- sen, Kirk S. Anderson, Barb J. Dudrey, Bill M. Shafer, Jerry S. Knapp, Randy D. Milby. TOP ROW: John A. Davis, Steven J. Coloney, Gary L. Norton, Kent N. Scarbrough, James B. Heathman, John D. Layne. BOTTOM ROW: Stephen G. Batsell, Roger L. Facklam. microbiology club physics club 1 66 interest groups pre-med club pre-nursing club pre-physical therapy club TOP ROW: Cathie Silva, Barbara A. Kocour, Katharine A. Pertsch, Hannah W. Robinson, Sallie K. Davis, Judith L. Weber, Bonnie G. Howard, Jane A. Fore. SECOND ROW: Martha L. Hurley, Jill M. Burris, Roger C. Mickelson, John D. Marteney, Daniel E. Headrick, Deana C. Paulsen, Sherri L. Hooper. THIRD ROW: Bar- bara A. Bell, Mark A. Smith, Daniel C. Schiessler, Rich- ard A. Burton, Mary L. Meengs, John M. Cooper, John G. Kite, James C. Schiefen. BOTTOM ROW: Herbert C. Moser, Martin E. Sellberg, Harry C. Stenvall, John D. Hughes, Robert L. Sweet, Michael E. Michel, James W. Baker, Richard J. Kueker. TOP ROW: Elaine L. Case, Deborah A. Combs, Lynn A. DeBarge, Terri D. Lungren, Kayla J. Nelson, Bev J. Hoff. SECOND ROW: Jill M. Burris, Sheryl A. Ingram, Teresa J. Parmely, Rita B. Debrick, Mary D. Nlvens. BOTTOM ROW: Brenda K. Zwick, Beth A. Skidmore, Linda L. Neal, LuAnne Faubion, Therese Blanchon, Charlotte A. McKee. TOP ROW: Martha J. Shook, Paula J. Mohler, Linda E. North, Glenda E. Julian, Kathleen A. Minor, LoEtta M. Waters, Lissa F. Windhorst. SECOND ROW: Marlene K. Wilkerson, Deborah K. Dlabal, Deborah S. Koch, Katharine D. Grout, Janice M. Mueller, Mary C. Keat- ing. THIRD ROW: Laurel C. Combs, Joan E. Elling, Carol A. Moore, Dana L. Denyer, Kathy L. Sparks, Gara L. Burnette, Kathryn M. Shippers. BOTTOM ROW: Tim N. Bowe, Rick L. Jones, Greg B. Miller, John O. Tucker, Ann E. George, Tom J. Knoll. interest groups 1 67 TOP ROW: Linda A, Ree d, Linda B. Brozanic, Paula K. Meyers, Colleen M. Smith, Maggie Lee, Catherine M. Jilka, Susie Edgerley. SECOND ROW: Tim J. Janicke, Judy L. Puckett, Marilyn I. Rudeen, Karla J. Carney, Cindie D. Dalton, Sherry L. Spitsnaugle. THIRD ROW: Bill E. Brown, Susan K. Pickler, Sara J. Severance, Greg S. Doyle, Michael R. Scott. BOTTOM ROW: W. Russell Harris, Mark T. Eaton, Mark A. Furney, Lee C. Stuart, Samuel J. Brungardt, Victor J. Winter. sigma delta chi social work club TOP ROW: Rick Selig, D. Duane McGuire, Sam Stan- ton, Tom Moore. BOTTOM ROW: Sonia S. Anderson, Susan K. Olson, Connie S. Canfield, Cathy J. McCosh, Holly J. Tuttle, Paula K. Daylor, Cathalene Newton, Eliz- abeth R. Nelson, Rosemary Chapin. women in communications, inc. TOP ROW: Linda A. Reed, Linda M. Brozanic, Paula K. Meyers, M. Emme Smith, Carol J. Doyen. SECOND ROW: Sherry L. Spitsnaugle, Susan K. Pickler, Sara J. Severance, Cindie D. Dalton. BOTTOM ROW: Uteva E. Powers, Geralynn L. Johns, Marty M. Snyder, Connie J. Doebele, Susie Edgerley. 1 68 interest groups businesss council TOP ROW: Robert W. Parker, Beverly J. Benda, Dan C. Ruda, William R. Patton, Steven J. Hoffman. SECOND ROW: David W. Perky, Katherine L. Reader, Lesley K. Whitehead, Vicki F. Luttrell, Don A. Folkerts, Larry D. Fox. BOTTOM ROW: Norman C. Pishny, David B. Zoel- ler, Mark S. Eagleton, Hugo G. Dahlstrom, Jeff A. Craw- ford. phi chi theta TOP ROW: Laura I. Hoisington, Amanda S. Roderick, Gale D. Thierolf, Joyce M. Kramer, Janinne M. Murray, Gail D. Holtman, Karen S. Brunnenkant, Ann M. Dusin. SECOND ROW: Kathleen A. Malone, Ann L. Lockyer, Alesia J. Ball, Julie L. Hampl, Anne M. Keehn, Mary S. Davis, Lisa M. Evans. BOTTOM ROW: Mary L. Ginn, Kathy S. McVay, Lily J. Nelson, Susan E. Peters, E. Diane Blackburn, Judy K. Haskins, Irva K. Streit. interest groups 1 69 council for exceptional children TOP ROW: Patti L. Leonard, Ann C. Tollefson, Mary L. Napier, Jocelyn D. Dunmire, Marilyn K. Funk, Nancy L. Adams. SECOND ROW: Carol E. Holmes, Linda L. Holeman, Debbie L. Fisher, Marcia R. Kohake, Alicia A. Rues, Nancy L. Vickers, Mary F. Morris. BOTTOM ROW: John W. DeMand, Walter E. Knapp, Robbie A. Campbell, Janet R. Lowdon, Vicki L. Garrison, Cindy L. Powell. education council TOP ROW: Deborah D. Solomon, Jocelyn D. Dunmire, Mary L. Napier, Cheryl L. Wisdom, Linda L. Hurt, Leslie A. Walker. SECOND ROW: Donald C. Barnes, Mary A. Robben, Susan R. Schrock, Robbie A. Campbell, Ann C. Tollefson. BOTTOM ROW: Carl W. Kirkpatrick, Linda J. Spicer, Vicki L. Garrison, Judith J. Mathewson. student education association TOP ROW: Lynne E. Bessier, Coleen A. McNerney, Gina C. Ramsey, Ann C. Tollefson, Nancy K. Hedrick, Pamela S. Kinast, Jill A. Hinkel, Jureta L. Ragel, Patti L. Leonard. SECOND ROW: Ann E. Mueller, Susan R. Schrock, Mary A. Robben, Terrie L. Lafferty, Sharon D. Johnson, Sharon K. Graves, Linda L. Holeman, Mary F. Morris. THIRD ROW: Robie R. Watson, Ruth E. Howard, Marcia R. Kohake, Rose M. Carver, Jeanette L. Neu- mann, Gail A. Lundgren, Linda K. Mealman. BOTTOM ROW: Carol J. Hansen, Linda A. Robinson, Virlon N. Unruh, Randolph P. Johnston, Robbie A. Campbell, Michael F. Ortmann, Anna M. Kroeger, Sharon L. McCrary. americ At 1 70 interest groups american nuclear society american society of agricultural engineers TOP ROW: Teresa A. Wise, Joan E. Gregory, Brenda J. Laakso, Terry L. Cellmer, Dwaine R. Pucket, Ronald A. Kite, Kord S. Smith. SECOND ROW: Jeffrey C. Ryman, Trudy D. Rempel, Steven T. Nichols, Robert W. McGriff, Dennis C. Wegener, William G. Houf. THIRD ROW: Cyd A. Harris, Richard D. Flannigan, Ronald S. Rather, Terry L. Shill, Randy R. Nason. BOTTOM ROW: Her- mann J. Donnert, Christopher A. Grier, Bruce A. Napier, Terry A. Jansen, Larry W. Stevens, David L. Stucker. TOP ROW: Maynard M. Herron, Kent A. Casey, Steven L. Phillips, Edwin W. Radatz, Nancy J. Cooper, Daniel P. Spare; Francis V. Robbins, James G. Leiszler, Kyle D. Swart, Do Sup Chung. SECOND ROW: L. Leon Hob- son, Joe A. Haffener, Mark S. Olson, George R. Thor- sell, Daryl Heronemus, Howard Zimmerman, Harold R. Blume, Dennis Stucky, David Skinner, Larry K. Boldt, G. Alan Johnson. THIRD ROW: Gregory A. Gartrell, David R. Masters, Charles C. Nixon, Lester F. Young, Philip A. Harden, David H. Weast, Samuel M. Babb, Dale L. Burnick, Duane H. Mueting, Craig J. Ramsey, Nicholas F. Koch. BOTTOM ROW: Ray A. Dilts, Danny H. Rogers, Mark A. Locke, David L. Malm, Edward L. Janke, Glen M. Schmidt, Steven L. Blume, Alan G. Van- Nahmen, James V. Schletzbaum, Matthew L. Birzer, David A. Corn. interest groups 171 american society of mechanical engineers TOP ROW: Virginia A. Unruh, Stan L. Williams, Dody L. Demuth, Wayne E. Buhrer, Jon J. Held, Terrill J. Munkres, John D. Rinkenbaugh. SECOND ROW: Joe A. Ragole, Steven D. Johnson, Randy L. Gary, Clar- ence A. Hill, Wayne F. Sloan, Dwight A. Schoneweis. THIRD ROW: Robin D. Drumm, Alan J. Atkinson, Edward T. Socolofsky, Martin D. Barker, Kervin Brun- gardl, Dale E. Vogel, Larry R. Redd. BOTTOM ROW: Daniel J. Olberding, Mike D. McCoy, Stephen G. Stout, Chris Kuchem, Gerard F. Meitl, John C. Lindholm. TOP ROW: Ray A. Christy, Vince R. Zawistowski, Timo- thy M. Burke, Leslie D. Lindenmuth, D. Craig Nelson, Richard A. Tortora, Morris Slupianek, Pat Bartko. SEC- OND ROW: Verney D. Lehrman, Jack R. Ernst, John W. Rohrer, Frank J. Sauerwein, Dennis W. Helmer, David A. Garrert, Ronald Fowles, Gregory B. Fyfe, Dennis D. Deweese. THIRD ROW: Daniel R. Haworth, Merle F. Jantz, Willone E. EuBanks, Christopher Gartner, James R. Lambie, Jeffrey Schroeder, Dick A. Wise, Allen Walker, Randy K. Hurlburt. BOTTOM ROW: Merrill Blackman, Robert Esch, John R. Williams, Michael R. McGivern, Robert V. Pester, David W. Bower, Joseph S. Graney, Chet Brians, Charles Koehn. TOP ROW: Cindy M. Snow, Debbie S. Connolly, Cathy Sullivan, Debra S. Higgs, Mary Ann Robben, Thelma G. Mueller. SECOND ROW: Kimberly A. Dean, Marsha P. Ramsey, Linda L. Etherly, Martha F. Bohannon, Kathe- rine L. Reeder, Debora M. Louk. THIRD ROW: Deborah J. Stadel, Dana L. Denyer, Jennifer A. Jungmann, Linda L. Zatezalo, Karen G. Evans. BOTTOM ROW: Vicki F. Luttrell, Carol B. Engel, Joan A. King, Maureen L. Hall. associated general contractors of america engindears 1 72 interest groups engineering student council TOP ROW: Richard A. Vilander, Gary A. McNaughton, W. Craig Rundle, Larry N. Phillips, Steven T. Bram- baugh, Tim L. Heiman, Gary L. Adams. SECOND ROW: Debora M. Louk, Joe A. Haffener, Steven L. Phillips, L. Leon Hobson, Susan M. Myers, Stephen W. Koenig, Kord S. Smith. THIRD ROW: Alan J. Atkinson, David R. Masters, Lawrence R. Redd, Donald E. Rathbone, Ste- ven L. Blume, Clay G. Jones, Nicholas F. Koch. BOT- TOM ROW: Keith D. Tucker, Peter Cooper, Robert D. Williams, Charles E. Koehn, Matthew L. Birzer, Edward L. Janke. ieee society of women engineers TOP ROW: Debra K. Miller, Michael L. Uhl, Munehiro K. Doe, Kala J Marietta, John H. Yoakum, Donald D. Fire- stone, Gary A. McNaughton, Sharon A. Feightner, Ken- neth A. Ward, Janusz Pawlus. SECOND ROW: Daniel J. Burk, Glenn E. Funk, Mac A. Cody, Thomas A. Beery, Philip N. King, Michael F. Silady, George F. Detar, Wil- liam N. Dowling. THIRD ROW: Richard M. Kelsey, Susan M. Myers, Edward H. Perry, Scott A. Boster, Jeff S. Barth, David I. Rhodes, Douglas D. Fowle.r, James P. Moore, David E. Kimble, Bruce G. Bailey. BOTTOM ROW: William R. Lear, Dwight D. Dupy, Thomas L. Hopkins, Delbert G. Riebe, Stuart L. Claassen, Edwin L. Rehme, David M. Barnett, William R. Goodman. TOP ROW: Debra A. Royse, Peggy A. Gilliam, Mary L. Stout, Cindy M. Bowen, Theresa M. Quigley, Karen S. Chandler, Jennie L. Graves, Greta F. Nelson, Teresa A. Wise, Mary A. Kramer. SECOND ROW: Lisa A. Tel- thorst, Dena E. Mezger, Tina M. Foust, Sherri D. Taylor, Debra S. Higgs, Amy L. Armstrong, Page Puckett, Les- lie L. Elliott, Virginia A. Unruh. BOTTOM ROW: DeAnn C. Humes, Sandra K. Siebert, Susan M. Myers, Susan I. Galyardt, Marianne Ives, Judith A. Nutter, Cynthia A. Bily, John C. Lindholm. interest groups 1 73 american society of interior designers TOP ROW: Judy L. Wilson, Del G. Hoge, Linda K. Can- non, Sarah J. Will, Julie M. Thielen, Brenda J. Lala, Carolyn L. Graves, Joann A. Loflin. SECOND ROW: Bart A. Garst, Luanne Beardmore, Wendy W. Hum- phreys, Shelly J Gayle, Karen L. Reed, Paula K. Hood, Judy M. Matyak, Sue E. Dieckhoff. THIRD ROW: Bonnie L. Stueve, Cindy L. Gough, Teresa M. Kruse, Pamela J. Mathews, Katherine Berentz, Dianne J. Bondank, David Hachinsky. BOTTOM ROW: Carol L. Miller, Pamela E. Hoffman, Cheri S. Spener, Debbie L. Adams, David R. Smith, Dave Clark, Ted Murphy, Fran Newby. TOP ROW: Denise J. Dahl, Ruth M. Sawin, LaDonna L. Thurlow, Denise L. Glick, Victoria M. Swift, Sharon A. Boehm, Debra A. Lundquist. SECOND ROW: Sandra A. Brooks, Susan J. Furnish, Cynthia A. Williams, Lisa C. Poison, Lisa K. Mawhiney, LuAnn Holmes. THIRD ROW: Debbie K. Ash, Lana J. Woolery, Sheri K. Tomp- kins, Wendy L. Babington, Jana K. Clark, Lillie R. Brown. BOTTOM ROW: Debora A. Nordhus, Darlene C. Vinduska, Marilyn A. King, Mary C. Stiles, Jane D. Lowdon, Martha K. Smith. TOP ROW: Nancy L. Overstreet, Lynn Y. Schroeder, Patricia A. Colby, Susan L. Specht. SECOND ROW: Una J. Buchanan, Carol J. Wolf, Kay Bartak, Cheryl J. Keller. BOTTOM ROW: Jody A. Cheatum, Lynne Stout, Susan J. Johnson. clothing, textiles and interior design family and child development 1 74 interest groups home economics council rs A A home economics education club extension professional section professional foods club TOP ROW: Mary G. Hornung, Sherilyn S. Henderson, Denise S. Russell, Mary C. Sharp, Nancy J. Henke, Beverly E. Holman. SECOND HOW: Rita K. Fowles, Carolyn Hoener, Carol J. Barnetl, Stacey J. Miller, Ann R. Johnson, Cheryl J. Keller. THIRD ROW: Sherry Evans, Rebecca R. Canny, Janet M. Stoffer, Paula A. Felder, Marlene S. Stum, Lorene K. Wohler. BOTTOM ROW: Brent F. Akright, Barbara I. Roe, MaryAnn E. Channel, Mary E. Moser, Starla J. Krause, Brenda J. Funk, Martha K. Smith. TOP ROW: Susan C. Jones, Denise S. Russell, Chris- tine K. Loewen, Mary C. Sharp, Janet M. Houk, Nancy J. Henke. SECOND ROW: Melissa K. Hathaway, Bev- erly E. Holman, Kay S. Kowalzyk, Kathryn L. Hullman, Beth Warner, Joyce Diveley. THIRD ROW: Rebecca R. Canny, Janet M. Stoffer, Connie J. Seaman, Holly M. Dean, Dee A. Lewis. BOTTOM ROW: Cindy M. Macy, Mary E. Whitmer, Lorinda S. Holbrook, MaryAnn E. Channel, Laura S. Carnes, Deborah L. Peters. TOP ROW: Nancy Jelinek, Carol S. Hamm, Sheri A. Hunt, Christine Chestnut, Marlene Burr, Barbara Zwey- gardt, Jeanine Miller, Catherine A. Gillett, Jill A. Ster- ling, Peggy M. Jensen. BOTTOM ROW: Nancy A. Ham- ilton, Amy L. Townsend, Janice E. Unruh, Cinda A. Hatcher, Karen L. Bahr, Doris J. Ohrens, Susan C. Jones, Ann R. Johnson. TOP ROW: Barbara A. Betzold, Nancy E. Moore, Janis K. G. Loo, Wendi E. Mlinek, Andrea M. Murphy, Paula A. Felder, Susan E. Bowe. SECOND ROW: Denise A. Conoway, Olinda G. Pfost, Angela M. Callahan, Bonnie H. Schmidt, Janice E. Friesen, Carol A. Swartzendru- ber, Kim J. Curry. BOTTOM ROW: Rebecca A. Wil- liams, Karla K. Engel, Carol E. Reder, Janet L. Back- hus, Susan B. Japp, Pamela J. Snyder, Kaye L. Klema. interest groups 1 75 TOP ROW: Cari S. Leman, Jana M. Jones, Debbie D. Ward, Jean A. Harris, Carol J. Doyen, Theresa M. Kier- nan, Melissa K. Hathaway. SECOND ROW: Connie J. Doebele, Patricia L. Rutt, Beth A. Glanville, Connie A. Haffener, Deborah F. Hobble, Mary L. Hepperly, Jane E. Sedlacek. THIRD ROW: Shelly C. Conn, Carla J. Steeples, Deborah L. Peters, Lisa M. Priddy, M. Lisa Baumgarten, Deborah J. Stadel. BOTTOM ROW: Sherry M. Nave, Maura M. Miller, Susan D. Apley, Nancy S. Whisman, Emily J. Simunac. TOP ROW: Frank D. Meacham, Steven L. Stambaugh, Jack W. Swank, Gary R. Mitchell, Richard M. Seitz, Rodney E. Nally, Erick L. Sallman. SECOND ROW: Clarence S. Clarke, Dale K. Dickson, Terrence R. Kraft, Ronald P. Jones, Larry Lawrence, Steven J. Coloney, Robert O Wating. THIRD ROW: Gordon A. Brest, Wayne L. Thompson, David W. Alvis, Joseph B. Con- nell, Charles W. Armour, Randall L. Rathbun, Samuel B. Shamburger BOTTOM ROW: Michael G. Flouer, Bruce E. Barrett, Steven J. Wagoner, Floyd A. Badsky, H. Thomas Jackson, Gerald M. Feeney, Richard E. Fel- ton. TOP ROW: David W. Alvis, Frank W. Meyer, Dale K. Dickson, Leigh A. Marshall, Jere L. Dodge, Jack Swank, Richard Seitz, Shanan Schultz. SECOND ROW: Kenneth E. Stachelbeck, Ronald P. Jones, Larry L. Lawrence, Andrew V. Duffin, James J. Buchheister, James W. Mack, Allan B. Hundley. THIRD ROW: Mark A. Kisner, Alan D. Alspach, Homer D. Caine, Randall L. Rathbun, Morris C. Dozier, Gerald M. Feeney, Gordon A. Brest. BOTTOM ROW: Donald E. Jones, Greg A. Degi, David L. Blackwood, David G. Burnett, H. Thomas Jackson, Kevin E. Bradfield, Floyd F. McSpadden. angel flight 1 76 interest groups arnold air society cadet corps airforce rote cadet corps airforce rote light brigade pershing rifles scabbard and blade TOP ROW: Maura M. Miller, Frank D. Meacham, She-_ rylyn F. Baay, Debbie L. Dobson, Steven L. Stam- baugh, Richard E. Felton, Howard W. Tuttle. SECOND ROW: Terrence R. Kraft, Terry J. Adamson, Jeff L. Gross, Steven A. MacLaird, Marvin Mason, Erick L._ Sallman, John L. Stupica. THIRD ROW: Clarence S. Clarke, Stanley R. Miller, Alan J. Engle, David M. Rog- ers, Charles W. Armour, Coy S. Baxley, James C. Mur- ray. BOTTOM ROW: Glessner J. Wagner, Bruce E. Bar- rett, Michael G. Flouer, Steven J. Wagoner, Floyd A. Badsky, James A. Mercer. TOP ROW: Teresa C. Holthus, Stefni L. Weeks, LaDonna L. Thurlow, Debra M. Foster, Terry L. Erwin, Diane M. Buck, Linda B. Williams, Marjorie C. Collier. SECOND ROW: Susan R. Schrock, Suzanne L. Fee, Deborah S. Koch, Sandra K. Elliott, Sheri K. Tomp- kins, Judy L. Puckett, Terrie L. Lafferty, Veronica S. Kasten. BOTTOM ROW: Peter Cullen, Rose M. Kai- ser, Cynthia D. Twietmeyer, Mary C. Stiles, Denise L. Kettler, Linda J. Spicer, Susan M. Glotzbach. TOP ROW: Rita M. Screen, Carol S. Lawrence, Charles S. Tyler, Gloria A. Atkinson, Steven L. Boeh, Jane M. Peterson, Dennis V. Lacey, John W. Hildebrand. SEC- OND ROW: Lee B. Fleischman, Scott J. Pearson, Mikel R. Carter, Greg L. Musil, Joseph J. Kolman, Ross M. Flin, Greg E. Couch. BOTTOM ROW: Darrell E. Herrm- ann, Howard H. Depew, Roger D. Duwe, J. Michael Kinsey, Charles E. Herrmann, Terry A. Schmidt, Kermit O. Taylor, Thomas L. Hopkins. TOP ROW: Rita M. Screen, John E. Glasgow, Carol S. Lawrence, Loren A. Semrau, Lee B. Fleischman, Joseph E. Faubion. SECOND ROW: Nicholas L. Kinsch, Dennis V. Lacey, Gloria A. Atkinson, George B. Hansen, Thomas R. Veleker, Steven W. Archer. BOT- TOM ROW: Darrell E. Herrmann, Dan A. Riedl, Dan E. Chatelain, Gary M. Gottschalk, Darrell R. Riekenberg, Robert J. Wiesner. interest groups 177 chamber orchestra TOP ROW: Jeanne E. Hansen, David K. Melgaard, Beth Snyder, Michael E. Flaherty, Tony Walker, W. Randall Detrick, Scott D. Reed, Michael K. Boss, Laurel A. Nevins. SECOND ROW: Lyndal Nyberg, Marilyn Cunningham, Janice Albright, Tye White, 1 78 interest groups Scott L. Jacobsen, Diane K Legge, Trudy D. Rem- pel, James H. Jatko. THIRD ROW: Louis Pigno, Eliz- abeth E. Criss, LeRoy Johnson, Kathrine L. Cole- man, Brian J. Graul, Lisa G. Rempel, Lizabeth A. Slinkman, Nancy K. Nickell, Mark I. Holt. BOTTOM ROW: Stephen P. Easterday, Carolyn J. Thayer, Marsha L. Curtis, Roxanna M. Fundis, Paul Tara- bek, Patti L. Allen, Jeanette F. Slinkman, Dave McClelland, Sally A. Blomquist. collegiate chorale TOP ROW: K. Douglas Matson, Bernard Franklin, John Olson, David Rogers, Mark A. Pennington, Dave C. Atwell, Joe L. Frasier, John C. Burk, Doug D. Bowers. SECOND ROW: Chuck V. Adams, Steve D. Dietz, David W. Hunt, Kevin C. Webster, Russ D. Anderson, Tim I. McCool, Karl Fabrizius, Richard J. Sheahan, Rylan J. Bebermeyer, Jack Frost, Kevin C. Ericson. THIRD ROW: Paula S. Winter, Carol Grier, Nancy S. Whisman, Doti L. Jacobs, Colleen J. Meyer, Jane K. Schultz, Suzanne E. Schlender, Gwen McMillen, Barbara J. Bodecker, Judy K. Whearty, Donna D. Brown. BOTTOM ROW: Lisa C. Montgomery, Karen L. Roth, Vickie Kellenberger, Deb D. Parsons, Heather McCaustland, Carolyn J. Thayer, Ruthie J. Oman, Melinda K. Foreman, Linda S. Henderson, Mary Lou Bowers, Ann M. Zimmer- man, Debbie K. Krehbiel, Kathy D. Hensley, Paula J. Hoisington. concert choir TOP ROW: Ed F. Gwin, Greg S. Herzog, Ralph G. Weber, Vincent N. Baskin, John A. Holmes, Noel D. Sylvester, Robert A. Calhoun, Greg D. Olds, Steve N. Thomason, Robert G. Eaverson, John Barnes, James Hamilton, Bruno F. Tschannen. SECOND ROW: Tom Faulkner, Dennis J. Schaffer, Duane E. Williams, Keith A. Wright, Steve E. Chellgren, Roy C. Lashbrook, Gary L. Tolle, Dallas D. Hai nline, Steve P. Larkin, Bill G. Woodard, Matthew W. Smith, Larry Bommarito, Martin H. Prettyman. THIRD ROW: Lisa Good, Alice F. Schneider, Nancy Martin, Jean M. Peterson, M. Susan Eisiminger, Ginny E. Fuller, Robin J. Rives, Connie Nutter, Cindy Dieck- grafe, Heidi M. Surber, Anne K. Lacy, Wanetta Col- lins, Ann C. Tollefson. BOTTOM ROW: Patti D. Whitt, Pennie Parcel, Sue Yocum, Audrey K. Span- nuth, Jeanette F. Slinkman, Gina D. Cox, Lee Ann Paulson, Jonna Bolan, Debbie K. Sullins, Annetta M. Kemper, Lauren A. Reed, Janet R. Lowdon, Kathy D. Burkhard. Car ' : ' interest groups 1 79 marching band FLUTES: Gary A. Anderson, Charlotte L. Sevens, Tana J. Billingham, Patricia J. Bruey, Gara L. Bur- nette, Marcee L. Buchner, Shelli L. Darrow, Bonnie G. Dickerhoof, Susan Garinger, Saundra E. Gould, Debbie Hawk, Susan Hill, Kathryn Jorderberg, Mary J. Kent, Janet S. Kerwin, Renee S. Marcotte, Shelia D. McKain, Phyllis A. Murphy, Karen Z. Nations, Wendy Parks, Debra C. Pearson, Audrey D. Percy, Sulynn J. Richards, Patricia G. Roberts, Debra J. Romberger, Becky Smith, Tracey L. Smith, Candy L Spacek, Joy D. Swallow, Cindy A. Stearns, Lisa L. Tharp, Kerri J. West, Sandra C. Wendt, Judy K. Whearty. CLARINETS: Susan M. Bahre, Chris A. Biegler, Melanie J. Bowden, Douglas D. Bowers, Susan J. Burden, Vicki Carmell, Terri Clark, Cindy A. Cunningham, Marty R. Currie, Terry S. Godfrey, Pamela S. Gray, Rose Jilka, Randy E. Keil, Patricia Lynam, Laurie J. McGinty, Scott M. Miller, Peggy J. Nightengale, Bruce A. Noe, Cynthia M. Page, Susan K. Pickler, Pamela K. Rader, Ann E. Reising, Barbara Riedel, Mary K. Robitaille, Mary E. Rogge, Kathryn M. Shippers, Susan K. Pickett, Susan A. Treiber, Dana J. Woellhof, Deborah L. Hunt, Janice E. Knopp, Nancy J. Koukol, Nancy J. Naethe, Mari- lyn K. Wagner. ALTO CLARINET: Gale D. Theirolf. BASS CLARINETS: Randy Cain, Lorinda M. Duch, Max E. Gump, Nita L. Havel, Jane E. Knoche. TENOR SAXOPHONES: Melvin R. Cairns, Larry W. Durant, Kevin C. Ericson, Richard N. Rogers, Diane Sebesta, Kirk Shippers, Gay L. Stewart, Joleen M. Wary. BARITONE SAXOPHONES: Daniel M. Davis, Nancy E. Nutter. ALTO SAXOPHONES: Cynthia L. Andrew, Marlene Buris, Constance S. Butin, Jon K. Chestnut, Ronald D. Conner, Dean A. Cox, Rhonda R. Engelland, Kenna S. Fincher, Brenda M. Finni- gan, Carol Hahn, Lisa L. Hittle, Debra J. Hopkins, Kent E. Ketterman, Susan K. Latta, John D. Lee, David S. Londeen, David A. McLeland, Tim Nichols, Rita A. Oltjen, Jan K. Peterson, Terri S. Reinhardt, Cynthia R. Siemens, Janice Shadday, Cynthia L. Stroh, Jeffrey J. Sutton, Michael K. Snyder, Brian C. Short, Nancy S. Whisman, Donna P. Simon. MEL- LOPHONES: Cherie A. Brinkman, Douglas J. Cech, Jackie E. Durant, Stephen L. Foerster, Lisa D. Henry, Roy C. Lashbrook, Jana K. Muchow, Steven Rector, Cinda L. Roberts, Richard Shearer, Robert M. Willis, Linda J. Young. TROMBONES: Dick Anderson, Charles B. Baker, Roma L. Baldwin, Dwane M. Beckenhauer, Lyle J. Cain, William R. Carpenter, John M. Cater, Randall L. Crow, David T. Duensing, Rodney M. Funk, Wesley R. Hay, Charles E. Herrmann, Wyatt A. Hoch, Gevin C. Kidd, David L. Lee, Becky A. Malin, John W. Marks, Ernest L. Mason, Myron Molzen, Russell W. Palmer, Larry K. Rhodes, Timothy R. Shook, Bruce E. Sny- der, Michael L. Spearman, Sharon J. Spiller, Wesley D. Strowig, Jim Tutman, Richard A. Vilander, Ran- dell G. Wagner, Ralph G. Weber, Kent M. Willis, Ste- phen T. Carr, Eric A. Schroll. TRUMPETS: Russell D. Anderson, Rebecca J. Ballew, Alexis J. Beamer, Rylan J. Bebermeyer, Mark A. Bichel, Bill Boaldin, Randa Gallion, Gary F. Garten, Keith W. Graber, Donald Hanna, William D. Harding, Richard B. Henoch, Marilou Huxman, Douglas W. Irvin, Mon- trula Johnson, Karen M. Kirkendall, Joan C. Kroupa, Forrest C. Lawson, Steven J. Lundberg, Michel A. Maddux, Douglas R. McKaig, Pat Minnis, Paula J. Mohler, Bill A. Ogle, David R. Owen, Ste- phen H. Pomeroy, Kraig M. Post, James A. Reim- und, Alan L. Remick, Richard A. Roenigk, Steven J. Rowel, Terry A. Schmidt, Martin E. Sellberg, Joce- lyn K. Sheets, Robert J. Shideler, Dale W. Stiles, Doug L. Stiles, Gary D. Strohm, Eric Sutton, Mike Thompson, Wayne L. Thompson, Kenneth A. Ward, Randall E. Ward, Spencer T. White, Terry York, Dor- othy A. Terry, William T. McCann, Cecilia V. Ver- schelden. BARITONES: Dennis J. Brinkman, William L. Cummings, Margaret A. Duwe, Marjorie M. Nei- bling, James A. Nyquist, Karl D. Paxton, Ken Pow- ell, Thomas B. Reed, Scott O. Sickler. BASS: Cheryll A. Becker, Bart Blickenstaff, Bradley C. Colburn, Robert D. Foster, John B. Godfrey, Chad W. Hain- line, Timothy F. Schliekee, Kirby A. Shineman, Anthony C. Walker, John P. Jilka. PERCUSSION: Steve Adams, David L. Altenbernd, Scott Anderson, Rick L. Aubrey, Charles Bey, Sally A. Blomquist, Scott A. Bohning, Edward Gonzales, Joseph R. Har- grave, John Hecht, Terry A. Hull, Jeffrey L. Keeler, Delaine K. Kleiner, Michael A. Leonard, Vicki Olandt, John Pendleton, Judith L. Roberts, Darrel L. Schwilling, Richard S. Smalley, Lucy Stout, Keith D. Thomas. K-STEPPERS: Melissa Moore, Annette Anderson, Rebecca A. Frye, Darcy L. Frye, Kittie V. Hargrave, Karen L. Hay, Corrine K. Riniker, Lori A. Rose, Julie K. Tucker, Donita L. Whitney, Jane Wil- cox. FEATURE TWIRLERS: Kim Stegman, Karen Wilson. MANAGERS: Darrell E. Herrmann, Joseph M. McAtee, Gale J. Rose. DRUM MAJORS: David E. Cink, Jane L. Dembski, Michelle A. Lewis, David H. Livingood. SECRETARY: Nancy K. Kongs. STU- DENT ASSISTANTS: Tommy J. Taylor, Thomas L. Zercher. FLAGS: Patricia L. Cooper, Shirley L. Fine, Cheri L. Fiscus, Teresea R. Hecht, Carol Klopfen- stein, Marilyn E. Lacey, Martha L. Minturn, Maryann Stalcup, Susan K. Veach, Christy Hrabe, Mary S. Herbers, Sally L. Sharp. 1 80 interest groups symphonic orchestra TOP ROW: Steve H. Hilt, Ann E. Bidwell, Craig R. Biegler, Robert W. Wisecup, Debra A. Boyd, Jeff R. Frost, Dennis R. Jones, Patrick D. Heinz, Daryl J. Batchelor, Wesley D. Strowig, Debra J. Fromme, Randy L. Crow, Chad W. Hainline. SECOND ROW: Janice Albright, Vince N. Baskin, Brock Dale, Beth Snyder, Ty White, Nita L. Havel, Lila E. Ahlquist, Susan A. Treiber, Lionel C. Noel, Suzan Hall, Mic- helle A. Lewis, Mike E. Flaherty, Chris Banner, Anthony C. Walker, W. Randy Detrick, Trudy D. Rempel. THIRD ROW: Lyndal Nyberg, Marilyn Cun- ningham, Scott L. Jacobsen, Nancy L. Stover, Lisa L. Tharp, Elizabeth I. Evans, Bret Tomasch, Renee S. Marcotte, Carol J. Campbell, Deadra L. Cauble, Mitzi C. Maddux, Rich Brunner, Scott D. Reed, Mike K. Boss, Laurie A. Nevins, Jim H. Jatko, Florence H. Schwab. FOURTH ROW: Lisa Criss, David K. Mel- gaard, Leroy Johnson, Kathy L. Coleman, Brian J. Graul, Liz A. Slinkman, Nancy K. Nickell, Mark I. Holt. BOTTOM ROW: Steven P. Easterday, Louis Pigno, Marsha L. Curtis, Roxanna M. Fundis, Paul A. Tarabek, Patti L. Allen, Jeanette F. Slinkman, Dave McClelland, Sally A. Blomquist, Paula J. Hois- ington. symphonic wind ensemble ' ' TOP ROW: Jack A. Flouer, Craig R. Biegler, Allen L. Carter, Stephen H. Hitt, Michael A. Leonard, Tommy J. Taylor, Joseph R. Hargrave, Rick L. Aubrey, Timothy F. Schlieker, Michael K. Boss, Marjorie M. Neibling, Rebecca J. Ballew. SECOND ROW: Melissa Moore, Laurie J. McGinty, Chris A. Biegler, Kathryn A. Hess, Eric Sutton, Russell D. Anderson, Kim A. Harrison, Patrick D. Heinz, Keith M. Hinman, Jon M. Hutchison, Debra J. Fromme, Thomas L. Zercher, Lisa L. Hittle, Sara S. Goldber- ger, Mary A. Stone, Bryan C. Brown, Cynthia L. Andrew, Florence H. Schwab. THIRD ROW: Susan A. Treiber, Cynthia M. Page, Nancy E. Nutter, Nita L. Havel, Jefferson M. Brown, Robert W. Wisecup, Debra A. Boyd, Jeff R. Frost, Ann E. George, Janice Shadday. BOTTOM ROW: Deborah K. Marshall, Lila E. Ahlquist, Lionel C. Noel, Deadra L. Cauble, Mitzi C. Maddux, Carol J. Campbell, Suzan Hall, Jane E. Tobler, Lisa Tharp. interest groups 181 american choral director association TOP ROW: Jonna L. Bolan, Heather C. McCaustland, Mary J. Weber, Kerry K. Binford. SECOND ROW: Deb- bie K. Krehbiel, Barbara A. Floyd, Pennie E. Parcel. BOTTOM ROW: Noel D. Sylvester, LeeAnn Paulson, Kent D. Matson. concert jazz ensemble TOP ROW: Robert G. Montogomery, Joseph R. Har- grave, Allen L. Carter, Tommy J. Taylor, Thomas L. Zercher, Debra J. Fromme, Michael L. Spearman, John Burlington, Wesley D. Strowig. SECOND ROW: Scott D. Reed, Steve J. Rowel, Martin E. Sellberg, Michael M. Esau, Randall E. Ward, Keith W. Graber, Daniel Bald- win, Phillip W. Hewett. BOTTOM ROW: Randy Dedrick, Michelle A. Lewis, Cynthia L. Stroh, Cynthia L. Andrew, Jon K. Chestnut, Lisa L. Hittle. k-state singers TOP ROW: Gerald Polich, Sharon A. Wilson, Mike P. Oliver, Debra L. Andrews, Kevin E. Koch, Andrea J. Curry. BOTTOM ROW: Ray L. Witthuhn, Kent S. Wil- liams, Denise M. Jackson, Denise L. Craig, Catharine A. Brown, Joni L. Dittemore, Mark R. Keller, Robert A. Langenkamp. 1 82 interest groups men ' s glee club united black voices women ' s glee club TOP ROW: James F. Compton, Tindel K. Jennison, Daniel J. Schrader, Jerry L. Frees, Scott R. Wible, John R. Campbell, Joseph L. Koechner, Dana G. Olson, John T. Olson, James W. Eubank, James E. Reese. SECOND ROW: Terry L. York, Jack W. Roddy, Calvin J. Glasco, Ronald P. Jones, Kent S. Williams, G. Richard Munson, Michael T. Geisert, Robert W. Sanford, George H. Pearson, Timothy L. McDiflett. THIRD ROW: Leon E. Sylvester, Gary L. Walker, Tony A. Wilbeck, Christian A. G. Loschcke, Gary W. Fisher, Steven L. Zielke, Samuel C. Lefever, Steve J. Miller, Norman D. Brown, Gerald S. Polich. BOTTOM ROW: Richard H. Brensing, Gary L. Michels, Richard B. Strunk, Daniel H. Roberts, Guy M. Seller, Robert J. Dahl, Lawrence R. Moehlenbrink, Lee L. Stuart, Kevin E. Koch, Stuart C. Brubaker, Janet S. Deines. TOP ROW: Janice M. Murry, Rose J. Downs, Rosalin Willis, Cherrie L. James, Tami E. Farr. SECOND ROW: Emily A. Levell, Bernard W. Norman, Pamela J. Bayn- ham, Frances A. Gunn, Micah A. Ross, James D. Mer- cer. BOTTOM ROW: Norma Thomas, Ernest Downs, Ezell A. Blanchard, Billy Williams, Gary L. Robinson, Gil Alexander. TOP ROW: Candace K. Cramer, Eydie R. Matz, Karen A. Dunne, Cindy A. Wilcox, Renet A. Olson, Mary M. Hartig, Teresa K. Klaumann, Wanda L. Wainwright, Teresa M. Costello, Gwen K. Chase. SECOND ROW: Jana J. Redeker, Ruth E. Howard, Tressa A. Mikesell, Rita A. Oltjen, Janet L. Myers, Jacquelyn R. Ayres, Kathleen A. Youngblood, Judith A. Nutter, Carol S. Goodsell. THIRD ROW: Mary A. Williamson, Barbara J. Hixson, Shell! L. Darrow, Janet A. Mahoney, Sara E. Ehret, Marcy L. Denyer, Wilma L. Masters, Gerald S. Polich. BOTTOM ROW: Gayle M. Rauscher, Nancy K. Baker, Cindy A. Wesson, Cindy S. Grisham, Donna D. Brown, Pamela E. Hoffman, Jamie L. Compaan, Gay L. Stewart, Patricia A. Macke. interest groups 1 83 Service organizations contribute to the well-being of both the University and the community-at-large. Their members help the elderly and youth, work in hospitals, help run bloodmobiles, and participate in such projects as the Walk for Mankind. alpha phi omega 1 84 service groups alpha phi omega TOP ROW: Sherry L. Harber, Jerrilee Williams, Julie M. Thielen, Belinda A. Pfeifer, Janice A. Staats, Beverly A. Urbanski, Kevin C. Hensley, Daniel J. Landon, Paul N. Briggs, Kathy J. McDonough. SECOND HOW: Darrell D. Spoon, Daniel E. Speed, Donald D. Firestone, Bev- erly A. Brzuchalski, Ronald A. Kite, Janet A. Mahoney, Jill M. Burris, Michael J. Sauber, Judith J. Mathewson, A. Thornton Edwards. THIRD ROW: Pamela A. McGuire, Lon R. Seaman, Bryce A. Tolin, Dell J. Klema, William L. Boeh, David E. Adams, Michael G. Berry, James T. Grimwood, Glenn D. Marshall, Michael W. Thompson. BOTTOM ROW: Reginald A. VanPelt, Paul J. Prosser, D. Glen Gee, Michael W. Murphy. Patrick R. Schwab, Paul W. Burns, Gordon A. Brest, Don E. Wer- ner, Thomas N. Roane, Charles W. Brzuchalski. circle k club delta sigma theta TOP ROW: John E. Glasgow, Steven E. Hirt, Jamie- Leigh Compaan, Kathryn J. McDonough, Elizabeth C. Stevens, Rodney M. Funk. SECOND ROW: Edward P. Call, Rodney B. Peters. BOTTOM ROW: Carol S. Hamm, Mary C. Holder, Janet L. Edwards, Barbara A. Betzold. TOP ROW: Gurner F. Stuart, Lynda C. Dotson, Debo- rah A. Combs. BOTTOM ROW: Terri A. Combs, Gay- nelle A. Jennings, Dedria L. Dane. service groups 1 85 Reflecting the diversity of cultural and social interests at K-State are many organizations which help to emphasize cultural identities, unify people with com- mon concerns, and familiarize other students with their unique qualities. Much like other foreign student associations, the African Student Association is designed as a means for Africans on campus to meet socially and realize com- mon goals. Among the association ' s activities are the All African Night and special events sponsored by stu- dents from individual African nations. Veterans on Campus offers services suited to the special needs of veterans. It is active in promoting legis- lation on both federal and state levels, offers orientation programs to incoming veterans, sponsors a book exchange, and holds veteran group life seminars. Kappa Alpha Psi, a black fraternity, seeks to provide educational and social activities on a university-wide basis, with an emphasis on black culture. The fraternity sponsors the Sickle Cell Walk-a-thon and the Dean Harris Scholarship. african student association TOP ROW: Rebecca F. Kolo, Erne C. Nkugba, Seth L. Musisi, Bassey E. Ossom, Bartholomew I. Muruli, S. E. K. Muwanga-Zake, Joseph N. Sama. SECOND ROW: Adamu A. Warra, Bashir H. Teirab, Timothy A. Gbodi, Adrian W. Mukhebi, Abdu D. Tofa, Umaru Hassan. BOTTOM ROW: Samuel K. M. Kiggwe, Zaiyanu Z. A. Abdullah!, Babatunde Ajakaiye, Gyang, Isidore N. Timti, Yoramu J. Ajeani. b ' nai b ' rith hillel TOP ROW: Mark D. Atzenhotfer, Alan M. Goldstein, Stanley A. Wileman, Ira P. Gutchin, Lee B. Fleischman. BOTTOM ROW: James C. Galitzer, Steven J. Galitzer, llene Gutchin, Michael Dubroff, Charlotte Edelman. 186 social clubs collegiate 4-H wsorsatook seminars, seeks to prort i university-wife re. The fraternity kappa alpha psi TOP ROW: Shirley R. Smith, Carol J. Peckman, Cynthia R. Siemens, Deb L. Drake, Judy K. Gress, Joy E. Dunback, Nancy R. Olsen, Joleen D. Moden, Gayle L. Davis, Linda S. Peterson. SECOND ROW: Alice J. Phillips, Karma J. Over- miller, Debbie J. Williams, Ann R. Johnson, Cecilia M. Kasl, Rose M. Kaiser, James L. Cooper, Barbara I. Roe, Annette J. Conners. THIRD ROW: Douglas K. Claassen, Beverly F. Droge, Gary D. Anderson, James L. Gordon, Robert R. Kellogg, Adel L. Visser, Randy L. O ' Neal, Cathleen J. Langton. BOTTOM ROW: Lyle J. Cain, Vernon L. Waldren, Rex W. Harbison, Clayton J. Story, Deryl E. Waldren, Karl W. McNorton, Mark E. Henley, Stanley A. Konicek, Theresa M. Gleue. TOP ROW: Sara J. Mertz, Elizabeth D. Aust, Denise J. Dahl, Barbara A. Betzold, Emily G. Rest, Julie L. Govert, Nancy S. Monfort, Carol A. LuKert, Kristi J. Hardman, Shirley F. Cowen. SECOND ROW: Lisa A. Sexton, Mary J. Smith, Christa J. Fagan, Joyce K. Haskett, Rebecca J. Tanner, Linda K. Richter, Mary L. Milberger, Kathy K. Lindholm, Janet K. Musick. THIRD ROW: Susan K. Gartrell, Melody Leigh Compaan, Peggy M. Jensen, Paula K. Ritter, James A. Lobmeyer, Kaye L. Klema, Jamie Leigh Compaan, Susan D. Apley, Kathi M. Albright, N. Dean Stoskopf. BOTTOM ROW: Daniel W. Sexton, Steven K. Riffel, Donnie E. Boll, Richard C. Snell, Carl H. Garten, Curtis R. Willhite, Casey D. Garten, Leon E. Sylvester, Gary L. Baehler. TOP ROW: Ivan E. Harrison, Arthur L. Alexander, Larry E. Thaw, Karl Townsend, Cornell C. Hill. SECOND ROW: Wayne L. Franklin, Hiawatha Turner, Gorenzo A. Matthews, Solomon Tatesse. THIRD ROW: John R. Wil- liams, Lawrence I. Combs, Roger A. Williams, Tyron S. Thompson, Robert G. Watson. BOTTOM ROW: Joseph Copes, Curtis Lee, Vance D. Roland, Alan D. Moore, Darnell Smith. social clubs 187 k-laires TOP ROW: Carol L. Hahn, Bonita A. Lassman, Susan C. Jones, Deborah E. Clark, Beverly E. Holman, Angela C. Rexwinkle, Mary L. Milberger, Judy K. Gress, Kim J. Curry. SECOND ROW: Janis K. G. Loo, Elaine C. Hefty, Terry S. Godfrey, Janet K. Musick, Cindy A. Auen, Cindy M. Macy, Jean A. Dunn, Pamela J. Snyder. THIRD ROW: Karen L. Johnson, Daniel J. Landon, Diane M. Robson, Laurie K. Schroeder, Beverly F. Droge, Kathleen A. Klein, Vince R. Zawistowski. BOT- TOM ROW: Thorn L. Felton, John E. Shearer, David H. Weast, Danny H. Rogers, Kay S. Conkwright, Curtis R. Willhite, Rex W. Harbison, Paul D. Clark. TOP ROW: Jody S. Johnston, Treva J. Rader, Christy A. St. Clair, Shelly D. Thompson, Gwen S. Johnson, Barbara S. Seers, Debbie J. Williams, Suzanne C. Shaw, Catherine A. Gillett. SECOND ROW: Jan R. Bohn, B. Jean Gruber, Bonnie H. Schmidt, Malia J. Weide, Mian H. Rehman, Ronald B. Crosier, Brad Ham- ilton, Rab N. Khan. THIRD ROW: Penny S. Burger, James L. Dempster, Richard E. Dempster, Pam Mose- ley, J. C. Wright, Drew I. Lowrey, William L. McGee. BOTTOM ROW: Randall R. Gruber, J. Michael Kiwiey, Arlan E. Bentz, Shane A. Soeken, Harry C. Stenvall, C. David Johnson, Kenneth J. Stoss, Mark R. Corbin. TOP ROW: Rebecca M. Leon, Joanna I. Smith, Carolyn F. Resales, Maria M. Chavez. SECOND ROW: Maria A. Rivas, Stephanie M. Elmore, Lucas M. Herme, Teresa M. Guillen, Lucinda M. Gonzales. BOTTOM ROW: Ger- ardo Jaramklo, Manuel C. Munoz, Art B. Rays, Arthur C. Munoz. fi l 1 88 social clubs phi kappa trakka TOP ROW: Alice M. Wheat, Teri L. Anderson, Mary L. Muehlbach, Leesa M. Wallace, Sharon L. Stinson, Jane A. Wittmeyer, Becky A. Watts, Diana J. Shaw, Cindy J. Young, Renee S. Urish, Dona J. Werkmeister. SECOND ROW: Sharon A. McKee, Jacolyn E. Bowman, Teresa L. Everett, Veronica McGillick, Austin B. Campbell, Joyce R. Urish, Carla K. Nealy, Cathy R. Nealy, Diane K. Moeller, Melony L. Beneke. THIRD ROW: Janice A. Smith, Ann C. King, Kevin Sloan, Chris J. Muehlbach, Jeff W. Schemmel, Doug E. Knauss, Bob L. Prince, Mark R. Denning, Raymond J. Hamilton. BOTTOM ROW: Ted F. Settle, James G. Nicolay, Joseph F. Ryan, Roger B. Winter, Tim R. Davis, Larry D. Beesley, Greg- ory L. Schlatter, Kent L. Adams, Michael J. Braden, Donald L. Akin. pigma sti TOP ROW: Doug R. Gfeller, Mike D. Relihan, Bruce A. Relihan, Doug A. Davidson, Dave Moreland, Phil S. Yerby. SECOND ROW: Gregg T. Barnes, Broc Sears, Eric L. Lavine, Dave E. Roesler. BOTTOM ROW: Nick A. Sottler, Mike D. Rousselot, Wayne E. Buhrer. veterans on campus TOP ROW: Michael R. Sheely, Doral E. Leasure, Patri- cia R. Pritchard, Harold D. Weathers, Richard Brun- gardt. SECOND ROW: Donald R. Bock, Norman E. Bradley, Jack A. Curtis, Harold D. Hewlett, Ronald L. Samuels. BOTTOM ROW: Charles F. Schneider, Mitc- hell B. Gerlaugh, Fredric L. Davis, Carl E. Smith, George W. Sanneman. social clubs 1 89 Whether pursuing a physically demanding hobby, promoting the competitive spirit, or representing K- State across the world, sports oriented organizations aid in creating vitality on campus. Both beginners and experienced shooters can sharpen and demonstrate their skills by joining the Rifle Club. The basics of handling weapons safely are taught by club members and individuals of exceptional ability participate on the club ' s team, which competes on local, national, and international levels. The Scuba Club gives K-Staters the opportunity to explore underwater depths, with instructions on the proper use of scuba equipment and trips to different diving sites. The Fencing Club makes available another recreational endeavor and sponsors tourna- ments for beginners. Pep Coordinating Council is responsible for main- taining school spirit. The Council selects cheerleaders and Willie the Wildcat, as well as coordinating pre- game rallies. Pridettes, the K-State drill team, entertains the crowd during half-time at football and basketball games. Help- ing to attract quality athletes to play those games are the Kitten Kruiters, who familiarize prospective players with the campus. 1 90 sports oriented cheerleaders let) PPOrtyi diamond darlings fencing club TOP ROW: Robert L. Harper, Terry L. Walker, Deborah L. Bell, Jeffrey R. McDade, Gerald W. Janssen, Gerald R. Stites, Greg L. Baker, Jon E. Portell, Gary Breipohl. BOTTOM ROW: Kerry Binford, Robin E. Walker, Ann E. Wiggins, H. Daniel Butler, Shan A. Shalala, Christy Schrum, Martha L. Parsons, Sheryl M. Sasenick, Susan Conard. TOP ROW: Deb L. Bell, Janet S. Deines, Lee A. Schutte, Jan A. Saunders, Susie Burrus. BOTTOM ROW: Mary E. Glidden, Cathy A. Reiland, Dianne Feild, Carrie Henderson, Jan Southard. TOP ROW: Denise Elliott, Charles A. Matley, Dick Hay- ter, John P. Odell, Richard Eyestone, Joseph B. McCullough. BOTTOM ROW: Steve W. Koenig, Lucia K. Smith, Elaine B. Haynes, Paul Briggs, Gary A. McNaughton. sports oriented 191 kitten kruiters TOP ROW: Cheryl A. Charles, Lynne M. Rieger, Lisa L. Gerstner, Shelly R. Heinen, Inga Z. Walker, Pam Y. Green, Paulette Ketter, Connie A. Wray, Vicki L. Helms. SECOND ROW: Cynthia L. Rischer, Bobbie L. Bessette, Julie K. Tucker, Vicki J. Brougher, Donna J. Blue, Amy L. Snider, Joanna Reed, D. J. Mense, Karen Ingram, Juanita Alexander. THIRD ROW: Cindy L. Woods, Kim- berly S. Fisher, Christina J. Kleweno, Judy C. Weltsch, Miriam L. Hicklin, Ellen Upton, Debra E. Jones, Jonette R. Genchan, Penny S. Burger. BOTTOM ROW: Cindy S. Grisham, Sandra L. Oldberg, Candi J. Gaplinger, Marty K. Beaston, Pamela S. Grout, Lilly J. Nelson, Eileen E. Grossardt, Laura L. Burnett. TOP ROW: Mary E. Glidden, Lisa M. Flynn, Shann A. Shalala, Pam Green, Cheryl A. Charles, Kimberle J. Rule, Janet S. Stephenson. SECOND ROW: Lisa M. Schlueter, Paul A. Heuermann, Daniel J. Landon, Gregory E. Bogue, Paula J. Neugent, Gerald W. Jans- sen. BOTTOM ROW: Phillip W. Hewett, Roderick A. Kline, Ronald E. Ringer, Bradley L. Rothermel, David E. Cink. TOP ROW: Susan J. Foley, Kathleen A. Mitts, Debbie Johnson, Kathryn L. Kraft, Debra L. Hastings, Debbie Byarlay, Debra L. Ogden, H. Jill Thayer, Georgiana Beverly, Cynthia E. Ott, Joan D. Vogts, L. Lynn Cox, Susan E. Rohles, Sandra L. Miller, Pam L. White, Rebecca A. Brewer, Lisa L. Arnone, Teresa J. Bosch, Teresa M. Costello, Debra J. Martin. BOTTOM ROW: Cinde Doby, Suzanne K. Woolery, Barbara J. Bodecker, Cheryl A. Charles, Lori A. Griffith, Kym L. Cline, Deborah A. Andrew, Charlotte A. McKee, Gwen S. Macon, Gyll Bates, Thena M. Bell, Debbie Barker, Sheila M. Bright, Suzan G. Holcomb, Su M. Townsend, Joni M. Blanding, Kimberle J. Rule, Eydie R. Matz, Amy Walters, Teresa L. Myzer. pep co-ordinating council 1 92 sports oriented riffle team TOP ROW: Evan Parsons, Rick S. Stubbs, Bill W. Ahrens, Lament A. Ross, Margaret J. Schoap, Byron W. LeClerc. BOTTOM ROW: James H. Owens, Mark A. Fanty, Leo P. Matzeder, June E. Bryan, Gregg L. Rein- hardt, Frank Vovk. scuba club TOP ROW: Bill Burmeister, Greg B. Young, Barry R. Heller, Dave M. Hachinsky, Robert L. Dye. BOTTOM ROW: David R. Stone, Greg D. Stonecipher, Brentton G. Stoller, Dennis L. Wilder, Stephen L. Foerster, Greg C. Clark. sports car club TOP ROW: Melvin D. Dale, James L. Carter, John R. McKay, Larry L. French, Jim E. Nail, Eric R. Thompson. SECOND ROW: Case A. Bonebrake, Ken Sidorowicz, Matt McGill, Jon J. Held, Cris T. J. Castaneda. THIRD ROW: Kevin T. Knutson, Rick Raymond, William C. Hofelt, Harry E. Kimball, Irvin S. Greer, Scott R. Downie. BOTTOM ROW: Michael S. Brannan, Warren F. Roseb- raugh, Siegfried D. Benson, Scott A. Kessler, Keith E. Boyer. sports oriented 1 93 Central to the campus organizations, and providing funding for most, is the Student Governing Association. SGA gleans its funds from student activity fees and allo- cates them according to need, largely through the aus- pices of the college councils. Other services offered to the general student body are a consumer-business arbitration board, and the Fine Arts Council, which brings as much entertainment to campus as possible. The Interfraternity Council and Panhellenic Council serve as channels of communication between inde- pendent greek chapters. Through workshops, cooper- atives, and other joint activities, greeks work together without sacrificing chapter diversity. Residence halls provide similar advantages for stu- dents through KSUARH, the associated residence hall governing board, which regulates policies and pro- gramming. consumer relations board TOP ROW: Colleen G. Feese, Elizabeth A. Leech, Joan K. Calhoun, Karen S. Matson, Norma J. Claassen, Mark A. Rogers. SECOND ROW: Elaine R. Suderman, Linda K. Houghton, Sherry K. Pigg, Bryce F. Haverkamp, Jo A. Farney, Maria J. Zarda, Becky A. Watts. THIRD ROW: Jean A. Strathman, Larie L. Schoap, Annette L. Thurlow, Thomas R. Crook, Brenda S. West, Barbara J. Doebele. BOTTOM ROW: Cathy A. Butts, Kenneth E. Allen, Deb Haifleigh, Dave Davidson, Mark Hilyard. TOP ROW: Eddy J. Van Meter, Carole A. Francq, Con- nie H. Batson, Sylvia J. Blanding, O. John Seltridge, Draytford Richardson, Dorothy L. Thompson, Judy Miller. SECOND ROW: Milton L. Manuel, Lowell E. Brandner, James C. Carey, Ross Mickelsen, Frank Ora- zem, Carol L. Miller, Phoebe J. Samelson, Bernard Franklin, Amy L. Button, Christopher Badger, David E. Schafer, Donald L. Figurski, Floyd H. Price, James J. Albracht. THIRD ROW: Keith H. Christensen, Orville W. Bidwell, Margaret N. Nordin, Thomas L. Brown, Law- rence R. Jauch, Kenneth L. Fox, Charles B. Corbin, Robert L. Gorton, Richard R. Gallagher, Kendall F. Casey, John T. Pence. FOURTH ROW: M. Betsy Ber- gen, Roscoe Ellis, John K. Strickler, Paul F. DeWeese, Neil V. Anderson, William E. Moore, Naomi B. Lynn, Page C. Twiss. BOTTOM ROW: Warren V. Walker, Leo- nard E. Fuller, Ray A. Keen, John M. Marr, Robert L. Johnson, Robert W. Schoetf, Theresa A. Perenich, Jack L. Lambert. faculty senate 1 94 governing boards fine arts council iwklogig images for siu- Residence y te and pro. LEFT TO RIGHT: Harold J. Nichols, Robert Melnick, Jerrold Maddox, John Chalmers, Mark H. Ollington, Deb G. Haifleigh, Jim Hamilton, Robert Steinbauer. ice council TOP ROW: Shin L. Yu, Hong W. Lee, Bartholomew I. Muruli, Francis Y. Huang. SECOND ROW: Yoramu J. Ajeani, Ekramul Hague, Mohammad Ganjidoost, Rath Ben, Abdu Benhallam. BOTTOM ROW: Robert E. Hall, Suzanne Bruce, Allan Brettell, Kobie C. Coetzee. interfraternity council TOP ROW: Bruce E. Brinkman, Marc S. Connor, Allen L. Sneath, Edward K. Kite, Terry E. Denker, Scott D. Stuckey, Mark G. Snyder, Charles M. Kramer. SECOND ROW: Lowell R. Mitchell, John C. Marietta, Terry J. Garvert, Milo M. Unruh, Steven D. Johnson, Larry C. Reed, Kent L. Zernickow, Robert M. Adrian. THIRD ROW: Stephen W. Rankin, Larry A. Berning, Alan H. Hipps, Gary W. Hansen, W. Russell Harris, Paul D. Har- rison, Jerry A. Lilly, Philip A. Harden. BOTTOM ROW: Stephen E. Cordes, Merlin B. Chestnut, Philip C. Krug, Patrick P. Mudd, William K. Bell, Scott J. Martin, P. Griff Hawkinson. governing boards 1 95 ksuarh TOP ROW: Rhonda J. Brown, Mary T. Chase, Janice K. Heikes, Mary J. Prochazka, Lorinda L. Robb, Becky Smith, Maggie A. Vining, Becky A. Blackmer, Julie L. Hampl, Mabel B. Strong. SECOND ROW: Nancy S. Chaffee. Mary D. Nivens, Sandy K. Johnson, Nancy J. Hansen, Barbara J. Heimer, Carol J. Maggard, Thomas S. Hollinberger. Jeffrey L. Stafford, Nancy V. Benignus, Peggy J. Morgan, M. Fran Morris. THIRD ROW: Karen L. Johnson, Linda M. Rudeen, Patrick B. Aydt, Karen J. Keeler, Teresa E. Biery, Pamela E. Hoffman, Douglas L. Franklin, Gregory Goforth, Deb A. Collins, Clifford S. Lewis. BOTTOM ROW: Donald E. Roof, Steven W. Lloyd, Mark E. Weddle, Terry W. Brungardt, Mark J. Paschal, James H. Kealing, Ralph L. Ungles, Gene Bransgrove. Rob D. Carr. TOP ROW: Sheryl A. Trump, Paula K. Byron, Carol A. Hillebrandt, Pam R. Page, Joan K. Waeldin, Chris M. Egan, Virginia A. Ray. SECOND ROW: Kathy L. Sparks, Audrey L. Rein, Shauna L. Kelly, Debi R. Swenson, J. M. Besch, Susan J. McClure. THIRD ROW: Donna M. Williams, Karen G. Evans, Jean C. Sharp, H. Denise Carpenter. BOTTOM ROW: Veronica S. Kasten, Jan E. Kaup, Karen A. Testori, Charlotte M. Sontag, Amy J. Rundquist. TOP ROW: Mike R. Waters. E. Bernard Franklin, Terry A. Lober. BOTTOM ROW: Sue Sandmeyer, Fran L. Egan, L. Gay Linvill, Susie Edgerley, Samuel E. Mathis. panhellenic council sga cabinet 1 96 governing boards sga executive committee union governing board TOP ROW: Craig A. Swann, Chris Badger. BOTTOM ROW: Amy L Button. Keith D. Tucker, Jane E. Kittner, Mark T. Dolliver, Pat M. McFadden. TOP ROW: James J. Hamilton, Curtis Doss, Stanley F. Watt, Stephen J. Hoffmann, Walt Smith, Donald Montague. B OTTOM ROW: William H. Honstead, Fran- ces L. Egan, Christine M. Egan, David A. Schoneweis, John T. Pence, Rory O. Turner. union program council TOP ROW: Pat Mallory, Dana Elmer, Rory Turner, Rob Cieslicki, Margaret Smith, Angie Rosselot, Carrie Sta- pleton, Mark Wille. BOTTOM ROW: Samuel J. Cox, Wayne Franklin, Harold Vandeventer, Steve Hermes, Keith Tucker, Don Montague. governing boards 197 Informing the campus community through a variety of channels is Student Publications. The Board of Stu- dent Publications governs policy for the Collegian, the Royal Purple, and the student directory. The board annually hires the editors of the Royal Purple and the three Collegian staffs. It is funded par- tially by SGA and receives the bulk of its revenue from advertising and subscriptions, Bill Brown, director of student publications, said. Additional board responsibilities include receiving bids for the printing of the Royal Purple. The board consists of three students and two faculty members, and is chaired by Walter Bunge, head of the journalism and mass communications department. Both the Collegian, the campus newspaper, and the Royal Purple, the yearbook, have won numerous hon- ors in previous years. The Associated Collegiate Press has awarded all-American ratings to the Collegian the last five times it was entered. The Royal Purple took the same honor for 38 consecutive years. It is the highest rating given. 1 98 student publications board of student publications TOP ROW: Walter K. Bunge, John R. Graham. BOT- TOM ROW: Scott C. Kraft, Judy L. Puckett, Colleen M. Smith, Jack R. Carpenter. Mary Kahl royal purple adviser Bill Brown director student publications 1 99 royal purple staff LEFT TO RIGHT: Linda A. Reed, Paula K. Meyers, Tad M. Thompson, Rita L. S helley, Debra S. VanTasell. - 200 sludent publications royal purple writers royal purple business staff LEFT TO RIGHT: Terri A. Phillips, Ann Benson, Doug R. Fink. LEFT TO RIGHT: Marilyn S. Miller, Michele K. Kissing, Karma J. Overmiller, Debbie A. Albers, Paul W. Rhodes, David R. Kaup, Mary Jane Smith, Jett B. Anderson. student publications 201 photographers TOP ROW: Grant Ringel, Matt Klaassen, Jeff Cott, Tim J. Janicke, Brenda H. Smith, Vic J. Winter. BOTTOM ROW: Tom N. Bell, Dan L. Peak. 202 student publications summer collegian ad staff LEFT TO RIGHT: Stefni L. Weeks, Les W. Gary, Janet Klema. LEFT TO RIGHT: Ted Ludlum, Steve A. Menaugh, W. Russell Harris, Margaret G. Beatty, Larry Steel, Gloria Freeland, Victor J. Winter, Judy L. Puckett, Sherry Spitsnaugle, Kathy Kindscher, Janet Klema, Kristin oi3rK. collegian staff student publications 203 fall collegian staff TOP ROW: Don R. Carter, Steve A. Menaugh, Mark T. Eaton, Mark A. Furney, Judy L. Puckett, Mary Jo Lane, Richard N. Roe, Sherry Spitsnaugle, Scott C. Kraft, Karla J. Carney, Lorna M. Salter. BOTTOM ROW: Brad E. Catt, Colleen M. Smith, Kathy Kindscher, Jim H. Brock. TOP ROW: Brent Conger, Les W. Gary. BOTTOM ROW: Cindy G. Loucks, Donna E. Standley, Marilyn S. Miller. fall collegian ad staff student publications 204 student publications spring collegian staff spring collegian ad staff TOP ROW: Brad E. Catt, Steve E. Suther, Judy L. Puck- ett, Scott C. Kraft, Colleen M. Smith, Paul J. Hart, Susie Edgerly, Steve A. Menaugh. BOTTOM ROW: Lee C. Stuart, Karla J. Carney, Casey M. Scott, Sherry Spit- snaugle. LEFT TO RIGHT: Brent Conger, Rita A. West, Les W. Cary, Dian Burns, Gail L. Breen, Chuck J. Hilger, Linda J. Cook, Lorna M. Salter, Connie L. Seals. student publications 205 1% Z06 tporti sports 207 Although there are coaches to coach, peers to encourage, and quality equip- ment to aid performance, the essence of sports of competition is based on individual responsibility. Once committed to competition, indi- vidual performance is it. When the start- ing gun is sounded, or the ball put in play, an individual is all alone. Help from the outside may not be sought. To be involved in sports and not be self-reliant is to be a spectator. sports introduction 209 Spring Sports above: Dan Johnson displays the concentration that won him the second spot on the K-State men ' s tennis team. right: Lynn Barrett won eight of ten varsity singles matches during spring and fall competition. The K-State men ' s tennis team managed a 6-1 1 dual record during the spring of 1 975 and placed sixth in the Big 8. The netters beat two of their seven conference oppo- nents the University of Nebraska and Iowa State University. Iowa State was unable to win a match against the Wildcats. The tables were turned though, against the consistently tough University of Oklahoma team and the University of Missouri, the conference champions. Traveling to Texas, the netters could only establish one victory against what Coach Karl Finney described as some tough southern teams at the Hardin-Sim- mons Invitational. The victim was Trinity, which fell six matches to three. In season play, Mike Lynch, the Cats ' top netter, won 10 of 20 matches. Dan Johnson, number two for the Wildcats, won seven and lost 13. Ron Dreher and Lynch teamed up to go 8-1 1 in doubles competition. We took players with no full scholarships and beat people like Nebraska, Finney said, adding that Nebraska offers full scholarships. Most of our players come with no support. Only two had their in-state tui- tion paid. When rating Big 8 teams on a national scale, John- son said the conference compares favorably, noting the relative success of some conference players in national tournaments. Most of the competition generally get their players from out of state, Johnson said. K-State and Iowa State were the only teams without out-of-state players. With the end of the 1975 spring season, the tennis team ceased to exist. Tennis was among the minor sports to lose Intercollegiate Athletic Council funding, a fact which Finney strongly laments because of the small amount of money the team spent in relation to other sports. Johnson ' s only hope was that the situation would be temporary. The same is true for Finney, who has coached the team for 20 years. 210 tennis Financial lows impose net limits With rackets ready and hopes still high from an unde- feated fall season, six returning Wildkitten netters opened their spring tennis season on home courts in early April. They were looking for a winning start against Nebraska and were not disappointed by the 6 to 3 score. A week later, coach Beverly Yenzer took her team to Columbia, MO, for their first tournament, the Stephens Invitational. There, the K-Staters tied for second place with rival University of Kansas. This was not the sole confrontation with the KU team, however. Back on home ground, the Kittens faced the Kansas team April 1 6 and emerged victorious, 8 to 1 . After traveling to Baldwin City where the Kittens rolled over Baker and Graceland with 8 to 1 and 9 to victories, the women headed for Lawrence once more for the final play of the season the Missouri Valley Tournament. Exhibiting the strength and depth that carried the team to one of its finest seasons ever, the Kittens placed sixth out of 1 7 schools. Although the women ' s team had been on campus for more than four years, the spring season was the first with scheduled participation in an out-of-state tourna- ment. Our toughest competition was against the Stephen ' s team, Yenzer said, adding she was disap- pointed with the regular season competition. Our team was the best around with any depth, she said. All the girls played excellently. We had a fine team effort. I was very pleased with their matches. The only serious problem of the season ' s scheduling resulted from too many tournament offers and not enough money to cover them. I had to turn meets down, Yenzer explained, because our budget didn ' t allow for them. But the competition is there if you can afford it. tennis 21 1 spring sports Crew: mixes frustration and satisfaction Which of the following are inseparable? a. soup and sandwiches b. Romeo and Juliet c. Don Rose and the K-State crew There was a time at K-State when the conclusion between a and b would have been contested. Don Rose, it seemed, would fight forever to hang on to the crew he had built. Going into the summer of 1975, Rose had been fighting for 12 years, only paid for his coaching duties the last two. Why would he quit at 1 2? K-State no longer had the money to continue Rose ' s meager $4,800 salary. The new Intercollegiate Athletic Council, starting its duties with a $400,000-plus debt, was unable to support a rowing coach on its payroll. So Rose, declining to work again for nothing, terminated his job on July 5. Rose ' s last season had its disappoint- ments, but should be remembered for the progress made toward improving the future of rowing at K-State. Highlighting the year was the first regu- lar season of competition for women ' s crew. Other firsts were the Kansas State Rowing Championships on April 1 9, and the next day ' s Eat ' Em Up Day against the University of Purdue. Another premier was the Big 8 Rowing Champion- ship. The 1975 schedule included nine regattas, the largest number of races in a season for any K-State crew. Lingering ice and high winds on Tuttle Creek held the crew a month behind in preparation for the season. Only days after the crew got on the water, a rusty, but veteran varsity crew and K-State ' s unpolished freshmen easily handled up- start Oklahoma State University in the March 22 regatta at Stillwater. In the crew ' s first year of collegiate competition, the Wichita State University Shockers shocked the host Wildcats by winning the varsity, junior varsity, wom- en ' s, and freshman eight races at the state championship. The wealthy Shocker crew had spent its spring break rowing in Texas and had been rowing on the calm Arkansas River as the Wildcats struggled with Tuttle Creek. Ironically, Tuttle Creek was too rough to row on, so the regatta was held on the River Pond. Eat ' Em Up Day found K-State rowing better, but not well enough to keep from being nosed out by Purdue in all but the freshman race. The following week, at the Midwest Sprints, the regional championships in Madison, Wl, Purdue found what the stern of K-State ' s varsity boat looked like as the Wildcats took second in a seven- boat field, losing only to national cham- pion University of Wisconsin. Shawnee Mission Park Lake was the sight of the Big 8 Championship. A fired- up University of Nebraska crew, turning the tables from the Midwest Sprints, became the first to beat K-State. The margin of victory was less than a boat- length. The Wichita River Festival, May 10 and 1 1 , was a relief for the frustrated K-State crew. The varsity avenged the season ' s disappointments by defeating the field which included Wichita State ' s varsity and junior varsity, Nebraska, Oklahoma State, and K-State ' s junior varsity. The women ' s crew was estatic as they came from behind to capture their first win 0.4 of a second over the Wichita State women. On the way to the invitational national championships in Syracuse, NY, the crew stopped in Lincoln and again defeated the Cornhusker crew. The Wild- cats overpowered all comers at the Me- morial Day Regatta in Minneapolis, MN. Of the national championships, Don Rose later said, I should have been aware of the feelings of our crews at Syr- acuse. I ' m not a K-State graduate, so I have never had any feelings of being ' out of our league ' at the nationals. We had just rowed a great convincing victory (at Minneapolis) and our workouts at Syra- cuse were more than adequate. The varsity crew finished thirteenth in the fourteen-team field. K-State ' s fresh- men were twelfth of 13 and the Wildcat junior varsity was a distant last place of 13 entries. Unlike the story book ending, the var- sity crew did not win it all in what turned out to be the last race for the out- going coach. As Rose saw it, his crews had choked. .- ition valMaylOaitf ustratedK-Slate Jdttieseasor ' s iska, Oklata rvarsity. sestaticasite left: The K-State women ' s crew steams toward their first victory. With a finishing sprint at 41 strokes per minute, the women defeated Wichita State on the Arkansas River at Wichita. below: Coxed by Ron Pepperdine, oarsmen Dave Chamberlin, Brad Myers, Cliff Elliott, and John James carry the stern of the varsity-eight shell after a victory over Wichita State. Martha Wherry of K- State women ' s crew looks on. K-State defeated Wichita State in every race the schools had in Wich- ita, avenging early season losses at the state cham- pionships in Manhattan. iver the Wichita icuse.NY.the oh and again crew. The W nersattheMe- fieapolis,MN jionships.Dop a crews at Sjr- sol ton W xtoutsalSfia-, quale. ied thirteenth!? K-State ' ste ' - l the Wa ending, the it all i ; spring sports Tape doesn ' t break for runners As they headed for the mile run finish in the Big 8 Track Championships at the University of Oklahoma, three runners were neck and neck. All wore purple jer- seys. Jeff Schemmel, Keith Palmer, and Ted Settle were about to finish one, two, three for K-State. It really wasn ' t anything new for Schemmel. A little over two months before, he had won the Big 8 indoor title. Or for Settle either he had been behind Schemmel, finish- ing second. And Palmer? Well, he holds the fastest mile time in K-State track history. They had all been there before. Still it was a fitting reward to what had been a long, hard 1 975 season. Head coach DeLoss Dodds was returning a strong Wildcat team the defending Big 8 indoor champions and second in the outdoor championships. Dodds knew the potential was there, but there was a tough schedule to face and competition in the conference appeared to be even stronger. On January 25 at the Sooner Indoor Relays, the Cats placed second. Three meets later, the Cats were in Kansas City to defend their Big 8 indoor title. It was a tough battle but when it was over the Cats had finished second. Though failing to repeat as champions, it was a good performance. There was Vance Roland, who after undergoing an off-season operation to remove scar tissue from a leg muscle, proceeded to win the 60-yard high and low hurdles. If the operation had slowed Roland it was not apparent this day, nor would it be for the remainder of the season. In 17 outings, senior Roland captured 12 firsts including first in the 120-yard high hurdles at the Big 8 outdoor championships, (more) Ift,. HH tat - 214 track the conference e Cats we or title. It was a undergoing i S ye from ale? left: Jeff Schemmel is starting to move on the crowd in the four-mile relay at the Kansas Relays. Schemmel, Keith Palmer, Chris Perez, and Ted Set- tle took second place in the event. above: Lennie Harrison has the satisfaction of breaking the tape in K-State ' s only relay victory of the year the two-mile relay, which was won in 7:28.8 at the Kansas Relays. Ted Settle, Jim Hinchliffe, and Bob Prince were Harrison ' s team- mates. Schemmel and Settle battled it out for top miler in the Big 8 indoor circuit. When it was over Schemmel had nudged his senior teammate by three-tenths of a second with a time of 4:08. 1 . There was one more K-State champion at the con- ference indoor. Sophomore Bob Prince scampered to a first-place finish in the 880-yard run. After an impressive freshman season, Prince looked strong again. The indoor season concluded with a twelfth-place finish at Detroit in the NCAA Championships. Then it was on to an extremely competitive outdoor sched- ule. The outdoor season progressed slowly for the Cats. The team couldn ' t seem to put together a con- sistent performance. As the season drew near an end, one thing was obvious the luster was gone from K-State ' s distance relay teams that had made the nation take notice with victories at the Texas, Kansas, and Drake Relays in 1974. This season the relay team could manage only one victory, that com- ing at the Kansas Relays. There were no excuses to be offered; that winning touch was lacking. For the fifth straight year, K-State finished second at the Big 8 outdoor. We ' re at the point at K-State now that when we go into a meet we want to win it, Dodds said. With an operating budget half that of some Big 8 schools, the success of the K-State track men is miraculous. We shouldn ' t be second, but we want to be first, Dodds concluded. 216 Irack far left: Bob Prince takes the baton from Jim Hin- chliffe on one of the handoffs of K-State ' s winning two-mile relay. left: Jeff Schemmel catches his breath after anchoring K-State ' s second-place distance medley relay team at the Kansas Relays. Schemmel ran with Roger Winter, Chris Muelbach, and Keith Palmer. below: In spite of the great effort, long-jumper Darryll Bennett failed to place at the Kansas Relays with this jump of 23 ' 6 3 i . spring sports ; - - - spring sports Kittens run tenth nationally With the return of the entire team that finished ninth nationally the previous season and with an addition of talented underclassmen, the Wildkitten track team was again competitive on a national level in 1975. The Kittens opened their indoor season by dominat- ing two meets hosted by Kansas University defeat- ing the Lady Jayhawks 81 .5 to 1 9.5 in a dual and win- ning a quadrangular that included Kansas, Southwest Missouri State, and Northwest Missouri State. The indoor schedule ended with a trip to Kearney, NB, for a dual with Kearney State. Competing in Kear- ney ' s unusual sprint relays, the Kittens were dropped, 50 to 46. Outdoor competition brought the Southwest Missouri State Interstate Meet at Springfield, MO. Powerful Iowa State won with 195.5 points; K-State was second with 135. The Wildkittens defeated the in-state competition at the Wichita State Relays, almost doubling second place Dodge City Junior College ' s score. The strength of the Kittens was again proven at the Kansas Relays. Winning the 100-yard dash, 220-yard dash, and the shot put while taking four second places and two thirds, the Wildkittens finished in a tie for sec- ond. The Kittens were able to avenge the earlier indoor loss to Kearney State by hosting them in an outdoor dual and winning it, 68 to 59. Iowa State, a team which later would finish sixth nationally, was again too much for the Wildkittens when the schools met in the Big 8 championships. K-State, however, greatly outdistanced third-place Oklahoma State. K-State women ' s track team was at its peak as it fin- ished tenth in the AIAW national championships at Ore- gon State University, an event they would be hosting in another year. Few of the 104 other schools repre- sented had more individuals qualify for the champion- ships than K-State, which had 10 a tribute to the depth of the Wildkitten squad. K-State ' s performance was highlighted by Marsha Poppe and Susie Norton who took second and third respectively in the javelin throw. Poppe threw 1 49 ' 1 1 , with Norton 7 2 back. The javelin wasn ' t the Wildkittens ' only impressive showing. Diane Grout, Sharon McKee, Jan Smith, and Lesa Wallace teamed to claim fifth in the 800-meter medley relay in 1 :47.4. Shirley Mitzner took seventh in the shot put, with Joyce Urish eighth in the mile and eleventh in the 880-yard run. It was a good season, Barry Anderson, the Wildkit- ten coach said, although we had some bad luck at nationals and could have done better than tenth. K-State ' s mile relay team, which had never finished lower than third in the two years of the team ' s exist- ence, was disqualified. When a baton was dropped on a handoff in the qualifying heat, it was picked up and tossed instead of handed to the next runner. Although the team finished third in the heat, K-State ' s chances for additional points were gone. 218 Wildkitten track far left: Wildkittens Diane Grout (foreground) and Jan Smith cross the finish line of the 1 00-yard dash together at the Wichita State Relays. Each was timed at 11.1, but Grout was pronounced the win- ner. left: Wildkitlen first baseman Betsy Locke warms up. She was also the Kittens ' number two pitcher. Diamond girls fail to shine Inexperience and a lack of depth outlined the 1974- 75 Wildkitten Softball season, and brought a 5-1 1 over- all record with a 2-3 conference tally. We had a completely new team, Vicki Edmonds, right-fielder, said. It was the first time a lot of us started. Inexperience was our biggest problem. The inconsistency plaguing the team ' s performance throughout the season surfaced April 10 in the first game, against the University of Kansas. Played in Man- hattan, the KU softballers stole the first game of the double-header, 5 to 3. The Wildkittens, however, rallied in the second game to squeeze by the Jayhawks, 3 to 2. Following a tight 18-game itinerary which spanned the month of April, the Wildkittens dropped to South- west Missouri, 2 to 9, and to Central, 5 to 6, in Spring- field, MO the team which won the national baseball title. Hosting the University of Nebraska-Omaha at Man- hattan, the Kittens continued their losing streak by fall- ing in a double-header, 6 to 8 and 1 to 1 0. On April 19, the K-State squad headed to Hays for conference competition with Hays and Emporia. Incon- sistency again found its way into the Kitten scoring, winning against the stronger Hays team, 7 to 3, while admitting defeat to Emporia State, 8 to 1 2. A conference win over Wichita State University and with losses to Northwest Missouri and Washburn took the Kittens up to April 26 and the Grand View College Invitational Tourney in De ' s Moines. Making what several team members considered to be the strongest showing of the year, the Kittens beat Grand View and the University of Northern Iowa to earn first place hon- ors. The K-State softballers ended the season in Manhat- tan against John F. Kennedy University on a losing note. The team from Wahoo, NB, claimed both games of the double-header, 1 2 to and 1 2 to 5. There was a lot of tough competition during the season, Edmonds said. Sometimes we played well and other times we messed up with errors. We were just inconsistent. A second team weakness was the lack of pitching depth, as the team started its season with two pitchers and ended with only one. The weather provided neither a boost of morale nor smooth scheduling for the Wildkittens. Because of April rains and late snows, five games were cancelled. We have high hopes for going to the national soft- ball competition next year, Edmonds said, and the hopes are realistic ones. We ' ll have more returning starters and also some talented beginners. We ' ll be able to work better as a team. Softball 219 spring sports above: This K-State runner has a close call at second against Bethany. right: Freshman second baseman Greg Korbe waits for a throw to put out a Bethany runner. Korbe turned down professional baseball offers to play at K-State. 220 baseball (tee was an ping season il tan, tie first bas totted bnght k wsattheUnive , state seres Mediocrity strikes Cat diamond A-f+rt - fir ir K i - -i 1 O7 A lA itt ! ito k u-ir t r v j riH i i ir + kn- ol vf C i r n Afi rl r i n -i C ' +T nL ' nt tl-m f l After finishing 1974 with its best record ever, the Wildcat baseball team entered its 1 975 spring practice on an optimistic note. After all, it had just come off a season with a 31-16 record, finished second to power- ful University of Oklahoma, and was returning several I starters. Head coach Phil Wilson believed improved pitching had been the key to the Wildcats ' past success. The 1974 team received strong throwing from Andy Replo- gle, Ted Powers, Stu Lindell, and Les Sutton. Lindell had graduated but Dale Allerheiligen, Dave Tuttle, and several other unproven but promising young pitchers were there to take his place. If there was an obvious question mark about the upcoming season it would be the infield. Only Steve Anson, the first baseman, was returning. Still, the pic- ture looked bright for the Wildcat baseball team in the spring. As the days began to wind down before the opening : series at the University of Arkansas the picture had changed somewhat. Tuttle was gone with a leg injury and, after this series, Powers would also be lost for the rest of the season. The season opener at Arkansas got the team off to a good start as Replogle fired the Cats to a 3 to victory. The rest of the series was to set a pattern that the Wild- cats would follow for almost the entire season. Arkan- sas won the next two and the Wildcats the last one to salvage a split in the four-game series. This pattern lasted for 39 games, until the Wildcats put together a six-of-seven winning streak at the end. Though the 24-22 overall record and 9-9 conference mark was somewhat of a disappointment, there were many bright spots in the 1975 campaign. Junior first baseman Anson put together another outstanding sea- son, batting .357 with seven home runs and 37 runs batted in. There was catcher Craig Cooper whose solid hitting and play behind the plate helped the Wildcats through- out the year. Senior outfielder Dave Specht ended his combination baseball-football career by hitting .271 with six home runs and 29 RBIs. Freshman second baseman Greg Korbe showed his potential by batting .31 9 with four home runs and 31 RBIs. One outstanding pitcher was Andy Replogle, who had a strong 9-4 season and led the team in strikeouts by fanning 71 Wildcat opponents. After the season, Replogle signed a professional contract with the St. Louis Cardinals. Scott Mach turned out to be the big surprise of the season. Freshman Mach was the ace of the bullpen, making 1 4 total appearances and compiling a 5-0 record. He also started seven games, one of which was a two-hit victory over University of Kansas. Mach proved himself to be one of the top young hurlers in the Big 8. Though Phil Wilson ' s third season was somewhat disappointing, the Wildcats finished strong and with a large group of talented young players returning, once again, could look with optimism toward next season. baseball 221 spring sports below: Substitute goalie Pat Carpenter stops a field goal attempt. right: Third year fullback Dennis Martin kicks around one-third of team ' s equipment a soccer ball. far right: Golfer Steve Kaup makes a long drive at the Manhattan Country Club. Soccer owns title without funds Sneaking past exceptionally strong Oklahoma State University in the semi- finals, the K-State soccer team captured its second consecutive Big 8 champion- ship at the end of the 1975 spring sea- son. K-State ' s tournament play was aided by veteran Dean Zagortz, who was named the Big 8 ' s most valuable offen- sive player for the second year straight, and by goalie Robert Gahagen, who allowed only three goals in three games. The Big 8 tournament and the Kansas City tournament, in which K-State took second, culminated a 7-1 season. During the season, K-State beat the University of Kansas twice 3 to 2 at home and 4 to 1 in Lawrence. The team had a slightly better defense than offense, Frank Sauerwein, veteran player, explained of K-State. In the really tight games, the defense did better than the offense. The team lost three of its four defensive starters to graduation at the end of the spring season. Despite the successful season, the club was plagued with severe financial difficulties during 1975. Money had always been a problem for the team but the Student Senate ' s cut of the soccer team from allocations in 1974 com- pounded the problem. As in previous years, the club was invited to join larger leagues and organi- zations, such as the NCAA, but was una- ble to as it lacked traveling money. To stay afloat, the club received mone- tary aid from a local tavern. Because of their financial plight, soccer players could not afford a paid coach or trainer. The team had no first aid supplies and at the height of the season, the club ' s equip- ment consisted of three soccer balls. Having no faculty adviser and conse- quently not recognized as a campus organization, the team could not legally reserve or play on any University fields. Soccer players also caught criticism for their unbusinesslike manner. We didn ' t keep records or anything like that. We just did what we had to do and we won games, John Dietchmann, the team coach, replied. 222 soccer i received roe- em. cer players com! i or trainer. Efforts fall under par It was another disappointing season for the K-State golfers. Participating in only two tournaments in the fall, the Cat golf- ers strugged in both. We had some bad weather and all the other teams went down south to play, Steve Kaup, golf team member, said. It was kind of a bad hit against us. At the Mid-American Intercollegiate in St. Louis, MO, K-State placed in the mid- dle of a 36-team field. Then at a tourna- ment that brought together top teams in the state, the golfers put together one of their best performances of the year by placing third. The spring brought cold, wet weather and like the season, the Cat golfers just couldn ' t seem to get going. Playing six tournaments, the Cats never managed to place higher than sev- enth this finish coming at the Drake Relays tournament and the Great Plains Invitational in Wichita. In the Big 8 championships at Norman, OK, the disappointment continued as the golfers wound up last. The Cats were led by Terry Brennan who finished 22 strokes off the pace. Bad weather turned out to be only one of the hits against the K-State golf team in 1974-75. With the financial woes of the athletic department m ounting, all scholarships for non-revenue sports, including golf, were dropped in Decem- ber. The question for 1 975-76 had changed from can we win, to will we have enough money to compete? golf 223 spring sports far right: The Ruggers, in the striped shirts, defeated Wichita State, 7 to 4, and finished their fall season undefeated. right: K-State ' s Ruggers sing a traditional rugby song as a pre-game warm-up. below: Kicked, beaten, scratched, and bruised, the KSUFR Rugby Club prepares to inflict the same on their opponent. Rugby approaches seriousness The K-State-Fort Riley Rugby Club opened their spring season as a rebuild- ing year, with inexperienced but enthusi- astic and talented personnel. Weather was the primary competition at the season-opening Big 8 Rugby Tour- nament as on the second day the playing field was mud crusted with ice and sn ow. After taking the first-round game from the University of Nebraska and los- ing to the University of Missouri, the third- place game was forced to postponement until fall. In that contest, the University of Oklahoma rolled by the K-Staters, 31 to 10. In addition to several duals, the season included two other tournaments the KU Round Robin Tournament, where K- State finished third of four, and the Sun- flower Tournament, hosted by KSUFR in Manhattan. Twelve teams came for the event, which was blessed with good weather and playing conditions. The bat- tered Wildcat team went 1 -2 in their tour- nament. The Sunflower Tournament brought K- State ' s season to a close with a 10-6 record. In fall competition, KSUFR fin- ished 14-8. The women ' s rugby team, the Rug- gers , saw a fair amount of competition, in their second regular season, including the country ' s first women ' s rugby tourna- ment at the University of Iowa. Starting as a jo ke with girl friends of the men ' s team who played in a powder puff rugby game, women ' s rugby has since matured to attract more athletically inclined women who take the sport seri- ously. The record of the women reflects the improvement of the team as the Rug- gers wound up the spring 1 975 season 2- 5, and by fall were good enough to go undefeated in six games. rugby 225 226 leisure sports Leisure generates competition It used to be that getting in shape was something male high school, college, or professional athletes did. Enter the 70s. Women showed up on the athletic scene in droves and the government ' s physical titness program was starting to sink into the minds of those who had been sitting dormant for years. Intramural and recreational programs sprung up and grew almost overnight across the country. Frank Anneberg, director of Manhattan ' s Recreation Commission, said the number of participants in the city program has more than doubled since 1 970. During the summer of 1 975 alone, 3,000 people par- ticipated in the commission ' s fitness activities. Anne- berg attributed the upswing to public cooperation, con- stantly improving facilities, and local clinics which help people improve various athletic skills. Anneberg said an increase in leisure time was, in addition to the emphasis on fitness and women ' s par- ticipation, a major reason for the recent increase. At K-State, the intramural program also reflects the national trend toward individuals leading more active lives. Raydon Robel, director of Recreational Services, said that 42 per cent of the full-time students partici- pated in at least one intramural activity during the 1975-76 school year a total of almost 6,500 per- sons. There is a trend away from being a spectator and toward being a participator, Robel said. People are aware that if they ' re fit, they ' ll be more productive, live longer, and feel better. There is the social dimension, too, Robel contin- ued, like going out and playing tennis with your neigh- left: A chess player concentrates while participat- ing in the Association of College Unions Interna- tional Tournament. bor. Sports are a common ground that people can talk about on the college and professional levels. Now they are starting to talk about their own activities. Charles Ballard, who has owned a sporting goods store in Aggieville since 1951, has witnessed many changes in sports participation. It used to be, we had four types of shoes one each for football, basketball, track, and baseball. Now we stock over 80 different kinds, Ballard said. It was adequate 20 years ago to have a $2,500 inventory. You couldn ' t attract any customers today with an inventory less than $125, 000. Ballard said women ' s increased activity in sports was responsible for most of the recent rise in his business. I think the trend will continue because of all the national organizations established, Anneberg said. Plus, the kids are seeing their parents (get in shape) and are becoming involved in the movement, too. Not all individuals involved in leisure-time competi- tion are motivated by physical conditioning. Indoor sports, such as foosball, chess, bowling, and billiards are also rising in popularity. The K-State Union participates in a tournament spon- sored by the Association of College Unions Interna- tional. The tournament starts with competition on the campus level, then the search for an international champion progresses to sectional, regional, national, and international levels. It gives students a broader variety in their activities, Bob Yecke, director of the Union ' s recrea- tion area, said. leisure sports 227 The ' purple ' bleeds into red When Big 8 officials informed K-State that it would need a minimum of six recognized intercollegiate sports to stay in the conference, one University com- mittee heeded the call. The Intercollegiate Athletic Council moved quickly in adding another sport to the University ' s repertoire of five. It wasn ' t hard, though, because less than a year before, the K-State athletic department had displayed nine such sports: But, that was the kind of year it was for athletics at this University. K-State athletic news snared, and held, the spotlight from its birth in early 1975 through 1976. While still an infant, the council was saddled with reducing and or eliminating a nearly $400,000 debt in the department. The facts a $35,000 bank balance and nearly $165,000 in unpaid bills would probably have been damning enough. But the department had borrowed $200,000 against advance football ticket sales. One thing led to another and another, until, well . . . until the K-State men ' s athletic department just wasn ' t the same. Ernie Barrett, men ' s athletic director, was charged with lopping some $200,000 from the current year ' s budget. He subsequently found a convenient way to eliminate $185,000 of that budget terminate golf, tennis, and wr estling as varsity sports. Golf was later reinstated to bring the University up to the six-sport limit. Cutting wrestling wasn ' t that hard; the coach had been fired during the spring months, apparently for overspending. Barrett ' s valiant attempt to save the department was overshadowed by the deficit much of which was accrued during Barrett ' s six-year reign. At the end of the fall semester, Barrett was relieved of command by yearling President Duane Acker. Barrett accepted, and later spurned, an offer to serve as assist- ant to the president for special projects. While still athletic director, Barrett had told a reporter he had seen belt-tightening coming four or five years before, but few serious attempts had been made to cut back. The handwriting was on the wall then, he said. We have been drawing from advance ticket sales to balance previous budgets. We didn ' t feel we could cut back then because of the adverse publicity. Adverse publicity created by the questionable admin- istration of the department ' s budget and the removal of Barrett depressed alumni donations and was discon- certing to many K-State supporters. Acker did not hesitate to respond to criticism of his decision. I was fully acquainted with the problems. There had been management problems in the department, Acker said. Acker had offered the fund-raising position to Barrett because, he said, he recognized that Barrett was a good fund-raiser. Barrett announced he would quit that post less than two weeks after he accepted it. Several things attributed to Acker ' s athletic deci- sions, and more decisions were forthcoming. He asked the IAC to create, at least on paper, one athletic depart- ment by combining the men ' s and women ' s depart- ments. It agreed. The effect of Title IX legislation (calling for equal funding of women ' s athletics) was being bantered about. Where it would take K-State, and all universities, was anyone ' s guess. But the first steps for implementation had been taken at K-State. The department had been consolidated and a new athletic director was being sought to head the joint department. The public had been made aware of the depart- ment ' s financial situation. That Barrett was ultimately responsible for the debt and its coverup was obvious, yet some alumni began to withdraw their donations. They were fearful of the advent of Title IX and women ' s sports into the limelight. The next step was uncertain. A stairway with blinding lights and inpenetrable darkness marked the lAC ' s next move. But whether the stairway would lead up or down was a question no one could answer. It ' s that limbo that has characterized K-State sports in the past and looks to continue in the future. right: Willie the Wildcat stares down the barrel representative of K-State ' s financial debt. As money was raised to cover the debt, the barrel was propor- tionately painted purple. 228 intercollegiate athletic council MS. There had rtwrit, Acker stiontoBarreit would quith edit. athletic dea- ling. He a men ' s depart- ing tor equal jing bantered of the depart- was ultimatelj donations (and women ' s iy with blinding IthelAC ' snext K-State sports intercollegiate athletic council 229 FOOTBALL: always on the defensive Consistent with tradition, the Wildcat football team was picked to go nowhere in 1975. According to prognosticators, an out- standing crop of defensive players and coach Ellis Rainsberger ' s new Slot I offense wouldn ' t make the Wildcats win- ners in Rainsberger ' s first season at K- State. Admittedly, there was reason for pessi- mism. The few offensive linemen returning from the worst offensive team in the Big 8 of 1974 were backed by young and inex- perienced players. Steve Grogan, the league ' s fifth-lead- ing passer in the previous season, had graduated and gone to the New England Patriots. Grogan ' s understudy, Arthur Bail ey, had been dismissed from the team during the summer. All but one running back, Dave Specht, returned from the 1974 team, but to Rainsberger ' s disappointment, none of the returnees would emerge as a consist- ent, premier bread and butter man . The defense, which in the previous season had spent enough time on the field to become the seventh worst in the Big 8, had the potential to prove the prog- nosticators wrong. Seventeen of the top 22 defenders of 1 974 were returning. The defensive line, linebacker, and end positions were all manned by exceptional athletes. More good athletes on the sec- ond string added depth to a good squad. This defense didn ' t have to wait long to be tested. The University of Tulsa ' s Golden Hurri- cane was riding on a seven-game win- ning streak and a 1974 Missouri Valley Conference championship. Quarterback Jeb Blount and the nation ' s leading touchdown receiver, Steve Largent, returned with four other all-conference selections to the optimistic, perhaps cocky, Tulsa team. A crowd of 34,000, the second largest in Tulsa ' s history, went to Skelly Stadium expecting to see the Hurricanes break their string of five consecutive losses to the Wildcats. But the Wildcat defense disappointed the partisan crowd by stopping three seri- ous Hurricane drives in the last six min- utes of the game preserving the final score, 1 7 to 1 6. In addition to an interception which halted Tulsa ' s last drive, K-State line- backer, Carl Pennington had six unas- sisted and nine assisted tackles, broke up an attempted pass, and dropped ball car- riers behind the line of scrimmage twice. He was voted Big 8 defensive player of the week. The home crowd was impressed with their first look at Ellis Rainsberger football as the Wildcats rolled by Wichita State University, 32-0, on a beautiful autumn afternoon. The defense was superb holding Wichita State to 1 62 total offensive yards while the offense cruised for 393. Although the Wildcats scored 1 5 points in the first half, it wasn ' t until the third quarter that the offense really got going. The Wildcats became victims of late hits, one giving Jim Couch a knee injury that brought his season to a quick close. We got tired of cheap shots and got tired of being pushed around, Tom Mer- rifield, backup quarterback, said. The offensive line really picked up then and carried us through. Merrifield replaced Joe Hatcher in the third quarter, when Hatcher suffered a recurrence of a rib injury. In addition to K-State ' s victory, every other Big 8 team defeated their non-con- ference opponent on Saturday, Septem- ber 20. It was the first time in the history of the conference for a clean sweep. The next weekend, the Big 8 would do it again. The conference finished 28-4 against regular season, non-conference opponents. About a year before the Wake Forest- K-State football clash in Winston-Salem, Sports Illustrated stated that next to K- State, Wake Forest had the worst all-time football record of any major college. With this in mind it seemed the clash would be more like a bump two incompetents struggling but remaining the worst in the country. Such was not the case. Under third-year coach Chuck Mills, the Demon Deacons in three games were averaging 325 yards a game and had upset well-regarded North Carolina State. The Wildcats were averaging 354 yards a game and holding the opposition to 216 yards per contest. Wake Forest scored a touchdown with 2:19 remaining to pull within one, 17 to 16. Electing to go for the two-point con- version and the win, Deacon quarterback Jerry McManus dropped back to throw to Alan Zeglinski, but Wildcat linebacker Carl Pennington knocked the pass down and the Wildcats had won another squeaker, more W up tod Hatcher in tie i ' s victory, ew xl their non Way, Septet meinltietelaf) :tean sweep, ft gSwoulddoil e finished 28-1 non-conferera heWakeFors- i Winston-Saler ' tat next to K- Ihe worst all-lM left: Bill Sinovic (6) gets one of his three extra points against Wichita State. Sinovic also had an 18-yard field goal against the Shockers in addition to salvaging two points out of a high snap on an extra point attempt. Retrieving the loose ball, he passed to quarterback Tom Merrifield, wl o ran the ball in for two. below: The K-State defense established itself as a power early in the season. A Tulsa ball carrier has attracted linebackers Carl Pennington (55) and Gary Spani (59), Marvin Switzer (32), and safety Jim Lembright(17). e dash moo o incompelS I the worst in ft ch Chuck ft .touchdown MthinoneJ . e t far right: Tailback Carlos Whitfield picks up a few of the 1 2 yards he gained on three carries against a stingy Texas A M defense. right: A young fan reflects the crowd ' s concern about the Wildcat offense. below: Quarterback Joe Hatcher, Verdell Jones (34) and Carlos Whitfield (1) prepare to go against the Iowa State defense. The three accounted for 1 83 yards rushing against the Cyclones. FOOTBALL With the shaky win over Wake Forest tucked away, thoughts turned to the Texas A M Aggies, the upcoming Band Day competition. The sixth-ranked Aggies boasted the top defense in the country and, behind the running of half- back Bubba Bean and efforts of quarter- back David Shipman, an offense which averaged nearly 400 yards a game. The Wildcats were undefeated and the defense very impressive, but because of the competition to this point in the sea- son, were unranked and considered untested. A record non-conference crowd of 37,1 00 witnessed a classic defensive football game. The Wildcat defensive squad proved they were for real by hold- ing the larger Aggies time after time. With mutes led m the pouts a game, g to defense jWtuiiies a the help of four dropped K-State passes, A M held for the entire game, winning 1 toO. It wasn ' t until there were less than five minutes left in the third quarter that the Aggies, who previously averaged 30 points a game, got on the Scoreboard. The only other score came on a 36-yard field goal for the Aggies, who started the drive only 37 yards from the end zone. Our defense was outstanding, Rainsberger said. Now, we gotta get our offense cranked up. We didn ' t receive any big plays from our big-play people. We dropped four passes which were catchable, and you don ' t get that many opportunities against a great team like Texas A M. After playing Texas A M on an equal basis, the fans seemed convinced that Rainsberger had brought respectability to K-State football. The days of 63 to and 52 to 15 losses to high-caliber competi- tion seemed to be gone. It was hoped, too, the days of losses to teams of equal caliber were also behind. But Iowa State University brought a grim reminder that a coach can ' t totally erase a tradition with four games. For most of the Iowa State contest, K- State ' s defense was again superb. The Wildcat offense nearly matched the Cyclones on the ground. Like the old days however, penalties, fumbles, and poor execution forced the Wildcats to settle for one touchdown and their sec- ond consecutive loss. The one touch- down followed a fumble recovered by the Wildcat defense on K-State ' s 20-yard line. Iowa State was the first time this sea- son that I have been disappointed in our football team. Apparently we just didn ' t recover mentally from the Texas A M game, Rainsberger said. Offensively, we just can ' t seem to get it clicking. Our quarterbacks haven ' t thrown the ball well short, and receivers haven ' t caught it well long. Inexperience has tremendously hurt the execution of the passing game. Plus, we have continuously halted our- selves with mistakes and penalties. Rainsberger had one week to pull his Wildcats together and prepare for Joe Washington and company the sec- ond-ranked University of Oklahoma Sooners. Coming into K-State ' s Homecoming, the Sooners had not lost a game in 34 outings, although some of their awesome mystique was tarnished. They had won their last three games by a total of only 1 1 points, more right: Linebacker Gary Spani (59) throttles Oklahoma halfback Horace Ivory. Spani had 1 1 tackles against OU, three less than his final season average. above center: Missouri cornerback Kenny Downing stops slotback Mike Harris, who could gain just three yards on three carries against the Tigers. Harris quit the team a week and a half later. below center: Ellis Rainsberger ' s youngest son, Michael, empathizes with offensive guard Shelby Henderson. left: Linebacker Carl Pennington (55) and defen- sive end Vic Chandler (87) crunch Oklahoma ' s star halfback, Joe Washington. Washington was held by the K-State defense for the worst day of his OU career. FOOTBALL Oklahoma was still a tremendous chal- lenge for the Cats. In the previous four meetings between the schools, the Soon- ers had averaged more than 61 points a game, while shutting out K-State twice. The first 1 1 minutes of the game went as expected; the Sooner Wishbone rolled to a 1 4 to lead, with the apparent ability to score at will. But it was the same K-State defense on the field which had throttled Texas A M ' s Wishbone two weeks earlier. For the lasi 48 minutes of the game, the defense held OU to three field goals. All-American Heisman-trophy candidate Joe Washing- ton experienced the worst game in his four seasons as a Sooner, finishing with just 49 yards rushing. The Wildcat offense was again ineffec- tive, scoring three points and losing two on a safety in a drive that started at K- State ' s three. The Sooners won, 25 to 3. With a crack defense, it seemed the Wildcats could at least hope for a to tie going into fifteenth-ranked University of Missouri ' s homecoming game. This is not to say Missouri was expected to be easy. Quarterback Steve Pisarkiewicz and running back Tony Gal- breath had led Missouri to a 4-2 record including a season-opening 20 to 7 upset of Alabama, then ranked second nation- ally. Galbreath, because of an ankle injury, didn ' t play a down, but his replacement, Curtis Brown, rushed for 141 yards and two touchdowns in slightly more than two quarters. Yes, even the Wildcat defense failed to pull through against Mizzou. By the end isewas - Missouri as uarterbackfef g back Tony i to a 4-2rffl!C sou of the first quarter, Missouri had more than half the yards rushing that other teams averaged against K-State in a game. At the end of the game, the Tigers had outscored the Cats 35 to 3. The offense was again throttled. When the Cats did move the ball, it was never far enough a fumble inches from the Missouri goal line was the most painful of the many stops. Physically battered before the game, the Wildcats were further set back with a knee injury to tailback Carlos Whitfield, a re-bruised shoulder to fullback Verdell Jones, and bruised ribs to both quarter- backs, Joe Hatcher and Tom Merrifield. We missed a lot of tackles, which is uncharacteristic of our aggressive defense, Rainsberger said, following the loss. Offensively, we are still having trouble moving the ball. Our offense needs something good to happen to it . . . something to help it gain confi- dence. I thought it was going to get a shot in the arm when we drove to Mis- souri ' s one-yard line in the fourth quarter. Then we fumbled on the goal line. That touchdown really would have meant a lot to our confidence. It looked pretty bad. The Cats had been defeated and outscored 13 to 87 in the last four games. Nebraska, Oklahoma State, and Colorado all currently ranked in the top twenty remained to be played in addition to the immediate game with arch-rival Kansas. At this low point, it was fortunate to be preparing for an emotional game, such as with the University of Kansas, where past failures wouldn ' t hinder the team ' s men- tal attitude, more far right: Linebacker Carl Pennington (55) stops Nebraska quarterback Vince Ferragamo. right: Coach Ellis Rainsberger picks up a new wrinkle as the Wildcat offense is thwarted by Nebraska. below left: Kansas center John Morgan throws a block for Scott McCamy, one of four KU quarter- backs to play against K-State. below right: These K-State band members ' expressions generally represent the football season three frowns for every smile. The Pride of Wildcat Land played at nine of K-State ' s 1 1 games. FOOTBALL Like Missouri, Kansas was led by an outstanding junior quarterback Nolan Cromwell. Cromwell, converted from a safety the previous year, was the Big 8 ' s leading rusher. Kansas ran a Wishbone offense, the third of the season to oppose the Wildcat defense. Because the previous two Texas A M and Oklahoma had been contained so well, there was optimism going into the KU game. K-State ' s battered offense was held scoreless by KU ' s also battered, but fired-up defense. The Wildcats managed 51 offensive plays, while the Jayhawks ran 94. For the second week in a row, the Cat defense was lacking its potential rugged- ness. The Jayhawks won 28 to 0, in a week would stop Oklahoma ' s unbeaten streak at 37 games. We were up for the game, Jim Lem- bright, senior strong safety, later said, but the offense couldn ' t score and we just physically got beat. The loss to Kansas was an extremely big one for us, Rainsberger said. We realize that we are limited on what we can do offensively, so we plan to work very, hard on what we can do ... well. Also, we realize the importance of staying posi- tive, mentally. It was a beautiful, warm day in Manhat- tan Saturday, November 8, as the other four football Saturdays had been this sea- son. Undefeated, third-ranked Nebraska had rolled into town with 10,000 red-clad fans, all expecting to feast on the lowly Cats. When the Cornhuskers scored nine points on their first two possessions, it seemed roast Wildcat was indeed the top item on the menu. But K-State ' s once proud defense became proud again. In spite of amass- ing 372 offensive yards, the Huskers were forced to go home with a humble 1 2 to victory. As he had most of the season, K- State ' s Manhattan product, sophomore linebacker Gary Spani led the tough defense in tackles. This time he came up with 19. For the second time in his career, Spani was named the Big 8 defensive player of the week. I couldn ' t have been more proud of our defense, Rainsberger said. Against Nebraska they played as well as they can possibly play . . . nobody really had a bad day on our defense. more s far right: Linebacker Gary Spani (59) goes after Cowboy quarterback Charlie Weatherbie ( 1 5). As a sophomore, Spani was named to the first all-Big 8 and third string all-American teams. right: Rainsberger calls for another Wildcat to try and slow the Cowboys. below: Cheerleader Kerry Binford and Willie the Wildcat find it difficult to cheer about the game in Stillwater. FOOTBALL Although Oklahoma State University ran a potent offensive machine and one of the better defenses in the conference, Wildcat hopes were again up. If K-State could play their best against a team just slightly less than the best, it seemed a victory wasn ' t out of the question. When K-State led 3 to after the first quarter, a conference victory did, indeed, seem a possibility. It was also possible the Cowboys would outscore the Cats 56 to in the last three quarters, but that had crossed no one ' s mind. The Cowboys were stopped on their first three possessions before touted quarterback Charlie Weatherbie entered the game. Weatherbie, who had missed most of the last six games because of injuries, was known for leading the pow- erful Oklahoma State ground attack. He was not known as a passer and only threw nine times against the Wildcats. Six of the nine were caught for three touch- downs and 237 yards. Prior to our game, Rainsberger said, Oklahoma State hadn ' t thrown the ball well all year. There were a couple of times when our defense didn ' t adjust, and we didn ' t cover well, but there were other times when we did adjust, and they still completed the pass for sizeable gains. The Cowboys also ran for 370 yards enroute to demolishing K-State, 56 to 3. Let ' s face it, Rainsberger reflected, Oklahoma State was bigger, stronger and quicker than we were. They just physically whipped us. Ninth-ranked and Astro-Bluebonnet Bowl bound University of Colorado would bring an end to the Cat ' s miserable foot- ball season. Big, talented, and physical, the Buffaloes had lost only to Oklahoma and Nebraska in ten games. K-State, which upset the Colorado team two years straight, had not scored a touchdown in 22 quarters. A third consecutive upset was, at best, unlikely. Colorado ' s Bill Waddy ran the opening kick-off 102 yards to put the Buffaloes ahead 7 to with 1 4 seconds gone in the game. Yes, it was another dreadfully long afternoon for the Wildcats, this time los- ing 33 to 7. There were, however, a few bright spots. The offense had its best day in many weeks, by accumulating 258 yards of total offense and, most of all, scoring a touchdown in the fourth quar- ter. This stopped the string of quarters without touchdowns at 25. Consistent with tradition, the Big 8 doormat was purple in 1975. The Wild- cats finished the year 3-8 overall and 0-7 in the conference. It ' s been a frustrating year, particu- larly with the injuries and all, Rainsber- ger said. But I can honestly say that this team never lost its competitiveness, its ability to hustle or hit. As long as you compete and do the best you can, you ' ll never be a loser . . . you ' ll be a winner in life. In spite of the season, Rainsberger ' s ambition, realism, and sincerity retained his popularity with K-State supporters. The fans were aware that there was prob- ably no one who could have made K- State a winner in 1 975 with K-State ' s schedule. Five of the eight losses were to bowl-bound teams Texas A M, Oklahoma, Kansas, Colorado, and Nebraska. We need to recruit big, fast football players in order to compete with the other teams on our schedule, Rainsberger said. But we don ' t intend to overlook the fine players we already have. We will build with them. Home town heroes lose headlines Each year K-State recruits high school football stars from all over the country. They come to K-State with outstanding credentials, unbelievable cockiness, and the determination to become another all- American. But before they discover the glorious life of a college football star, the young jocks must experience the lesser thrill known as junior varsity football. Coming straight from high schools where each individual was a leader, the young ath- letes are soon thrust into a new situation. Competing against the finest athletes in the nation, the JV football player soon finds out what K-State football is all about. Playing in stadiums that hold thou- sands, the men soon find themselves revealing their talents to crowds number- ing in the hundreds. There are no bands playing the Wabash Cannonball, there are no cheerleaders yelling for a victory. The only support comes from the handful of loyal individuals who watch with inter- est the formation of K-State ' s future foot- ball team. The young JV football player is a giver of the self. Straining with every fiber of his being, thinking of the day that he may be glorified. Until that time comes, JV play- ers must play in the shadows, striving for their own personal goals. Even if their goals are not always reached, their pride remains knowing at least that they have tried. Because of a NCAA rule passed two years ago that cut football scholarships back by one-third a limit of 30 a year many schools have eliminated their junior varsity programs completely. Because of this cutback, the primary pur- pose of K-State ' s junior varsity is to help the varsity teams prepare for competition. The JVs run the upcoming competitors offensive and defensive formations for the varsity to practice against. There is lit- tle time for the JVs to practice together as a team. The lack of practice was evident as the JVs went 0-2 in 1 975. Opening in Manhattan against the Uni- versity of Nebraska, the Wildcats were outgunned 30 to 0. K-State could man- age just 1 66 total yards while the Corn- husker offense rolled for 361 . Hosting the University of Kansas in the only other game of the season, the Wild- cats led early, but trailed 24 to 20 at the half. The game continued to get worse for the Cats, as they finally lost 44 to 20. left: Clyde Brinson (30) makes one of the six tackles he had against KU. Brinson also broke up three Kansas passes. below: K-State ' s Mike Nunn (88) and Mike Merri- field (1 8) prepare to crunch a Jayhawk. es primary pur- irsityistotielp or competition, KJ competitors ist. There is lil- ice together as 2 was evident i, gainst the Uni- te could man- He the Corn- il. Kansas in the ISOIV 14 to 20 at the jget worse for 44to20. far right: Rainsberger and an official discuss a call in the game with the University of Kansas. right: Rainsberger shouts instructions to his team. below: Rainsberger and trainer Porky Morgan applaud a play. below center: Rainsberger calls his team in on a time out in his first game at the Wildcat helm. Rainsberger tries for Cats ... again In 1967, K-State hired what was needed to get a football program going. One of the world ' s greatest promotional men, Vince Gibson, came to Manhattan, waved a purple wand in the air and almost overnight came up with a new ath- letic dorm and football stadium. Wildcat football teams did better than they ' d ever done before, but fell short of what Gibson had made the fans crave. He resigned and K-Staters began looking for a coach who could average better than four wins a year. On December 20, 1974, a former K- State academic all-American football player, Ellis Rainsberger, agreed to try to make the Wildcats winners. In a sharp contrast to his predecessor, Rainsberger promised no pie in the sky just that he would try his hardest. His quiet, confident manner instilled confidence in the prom- ise-weary Wildcat fans. His immediate goal was to build a solid foundation on which to grow and be successful, and his basic goal was to have winning football at K-State. With the honest realism that soon came to be his primary trademark, he wouldn ' t say how long it would take to be consistently com- petitive with the best in the Big 8. The most important thing is to com- pete with most of the people in the con- ference, he said. Then you go from there. Rainsberger said the biggest obstacle for winning K-State football was, of course, the high-caliber competition of the Big 8 conference. The athletic depart- ment ' s financial problems, which came to light shortly after his arrival, are his sec- ond biggest headache. Although the conference makes it hard to win, it is also good to be in the best football conference, Rainsberger said. There are good facilities and good people here. Rainsberger said it would take just three to four top-notch athletes to turn the program around. Rainsberger described himself as being between the extremes of a strict disciplinarian and the relaxed, happy-go- lucky type. He prefers coaching self-dis- ciplined players over enforcing discipline because of the longer-lasting effects of self-discipline. One aspect of coaching Rainsberger particularly enjoys is recruiting. I enjoy talking to the athletes in their homes, hearing their goals and aims, then watching those goals and aims grow. It ' s hard work, Rainsberger said, of his profession. But the next day you ' re ready to get up and get after it again. It ' s something I enjoy doing. It ' s not a job, it ' s my hobby. Rainsberger was captain of K-State ' s 1956 and 1957 teams. He was twice named to the all-Big 7 football team and was also a Missouri Valley heavyweight wrestling champion despite weighing less than 200 pounds. In 1957, Rainsberger became K- State ' s first representative to the Fellow- ship of Christian Athletes. Following graduation from K-State, Rainsberger went to Drake University, where he was an assistant until becoming head coach at Washburn University in 1962. While at Washburn, he guided the Ichabods to an 8-1 season, and the school ' s first conference championship in 31 years. Rainsberger then went to Kansas Uni- versity as an assistant for a year before moving on to Southern Illinois University as head coach for the 1 966 season. The University of Illinois then hired Rainsberger. He served as their offensive and defensive coordinator for six sea- sons, before becoming the University of Wisconsin ' s offensive and recruiting coordinator. Wisconsin ' s 1 974 team, which finished 7-4, was eighth in the nation in scoring and second in the Big 1 in total offense. To Rainsberger, K-State has improved considerably since his days as a student. The facilities and aesthetic beauty have improved continually. They are the best around, he said. Throughout the changing times, the University has retained the medium-sized college atmosphere with friendly, down-to-earth students. Hewett ' s enthusiasm tunes band Imagine a K-State basketball game without the pep band. Or a football game without the Pride of Wildcat Land . The cheerleaders would look pretty funny doing their Wabash Cannonball rou- tine and the crowd would be very much like a herd of sheep without a shepherd. The enthusiasm generated by pep and marching band members is largely a reflection on their director, Phil Hewett. The K-State band program had no uni- versity financial support when Hewett arrived in 1968 and has since only received funds from the sale of K-Block football tickets and donations. Without money, Hewett resorted to a free commodity to gain success. The K-State students and alums are in favor of the band, Hewett said. That in itself was a pretty good sell job. Hewett relied on the simple force of enthusiasm to gain support. If somebody is in the band and they enjoy it, then they talk about it. It just snowballs, he explained. And the enthusiasm has gained momentum and rewards. K-State ' s marching band, the largest in the Big 8 conference, is the only marching band in the league without scholarship musi- cians. Hewett ' s jazz ensembles have won many jazz festivals, played in the national finals in 1973, and were selected to be among 20 international ensembles to compete in Switzerland in July 1 976. In addition to the support of students and alums, Hewett said the University is the second asset to the marching band. There are just more outstanding stu- dents here, Hewett said. I ' ve traveled all over the country to various clinics and always come back thinking how lucky I am to be at K-State. The finances are the biggest drawback to directing at K-State. Money needed for uniforms, instruments, and basic opera- tion is just not available as at other schools. Hewett said the high schools at which he directed before his arrival at K-State were always in unusually bad financial situations. It seems to be my lot to be in tight financial positions, Hewett said. But, I always seem to be able to raise the money by hook or crook or whatever. Hewett told of an offer he received to direct at the University of Georgia. He was offered a $7,000 raise over his K- State salary and a $100,000 band budget. Hewett declined, feeling a strong lack of emotional support for the pro- gram. The atmosphere is worth a whole lot more, as far as I ' m concerned, Hewett explained. I could have all the money I ' d want, but without the enthusiasm it just wouldn ' t be the same. I felt if I stayed 10 or 15 years, I wouldn ' t have the support I have here. When considering a career, Hewett was torn between being a minister, foot- ball coach, or band director. He partici- pated in sports in high school and while in the Navy played on the baseball team which won the 1953 All-Navy champion- ship. Hewett decided by directing bands, he could have the best of three worlds helping kids and being somewhat involved with athletics while participating in music. The challenge is to try to help people find the way, Hewett said, referring to the many college students looking for a direction in life. If I can help those indi- viduals somehow, then that ' s what it ' s all about. Hewett received a bachelor of music education degree from Texas Christian University, then taught high school in Fort Worth, TX. At Paschal High School, his jazz bands won national titles in 1 966 and 1967. In 1967, Paschal ' s marching band received a first-place rating in marching and fifth in concert at the Washington, DC Cherry Blossom con- test. The following year, Paschal ' s band was selected from national competition to play at the opening of San Antonio ' s Hemisfair. That fall he came to K-State on a grad- uate teaching scholarship just in time for Nichols Gym (which housed the music department) to burn. After that, I decided we were gonna build a band, anyway, Hewett said. By the next spring, 60 students were left in the band that had many instru- ments destroyed by the fire. But, out of it, Hewett recalled, came a spirit that ' s just tremendous. 244 phil hewetl below: Phil Hewett directs the K-State marching band at a Wildcat football game. left: Hewett, an avid sports fan, disagrees with an official ' s call at a K-State basketball game. below right: With his purple crutches at his feet, Hewett directs the pep band from a wheel chair. Hewett suffered a ruptured bone three years ago. After faulty medical advice set back recovery, Hew- ett expects to be off the crutches soon. philhewetl 245 far right: Freshman Sheryl Sasenick displays concern over a tight game. right: From left, Kerry Binford, Robert Harper, Susan Conrad, and Christy Shrum enjoy the bas- ketball game. below right: Head cheerleader, Shann Shalala, left, and Anne Wiggins cap the line of cheerleaders which is so familiar to K-State football and basket- ball fans. below: The sister-brother cheerleader combina- tion of Robin, left, and Terry Walker perform a rou- tine. As tomecow on campus fade p I thriving li, are the tatf crfczi sands Ntio attend ide-spre Traveling to an Worms 246 cheerleaders Squad survives ' sixties syndrome ' As homecoming queens and big men on campus fade quickly into the past, few landmarks of the glorious college tradi- tions remain. Still thriving across the country, though, are the smiling, attractive girls and well-groomed guys who continue the tradition of traditions cheerleading. T hough criticized as rah-rahs with mighty egos, the response of the thou- sands who attend athletic events still indi- cate wide-spread awareness of the cheerleaders ' performances. Traveling to all of K-State ' s Big 8 foot- ball and basketball clashes and those non-conference games within driving dis- tance, the cheerleaders lead busy lives. Their uniforms, travel, and lodging expenses are paid from the $3,000-plus budget that comes from the sale of K- Block football tickets. All of a sudden you ' re thrust in front of a huge crowd, yell-leader Terry Walker said, describing the first sensa- tions of leading a crowd. They ' re all watching you. After awhile, though, you realize that they ' re not so much and you can relax. It demands work and dedication . . . and a lot of ham. It ' s a big show with a bunch of hams. You have to be a ham or you don ' t do that sort of stuff, he said. The squad practices 1 2 hours each week. People don ' t realize it ' s a lot of work, but it is, Walker said. You want to work hard because you don ' t want to make a fool out of yourself. Walker saw the cheerleading squad ' s purpose as two-fold. The primary goal is to instill crowd spirit, letting the team know you ' re behind them 1 00 per cent. Crowd control is their second goal. It ' s not as significant, but I think it ' s pretty important, Walker said. If the crowd gets too worked up, the cheer- leaders make an effort to divert attention from the game to a cheer or the band. Walker believes it was important for the squad to travel to games outside Manhat- tan. The team will see us and know we ' re there. They ' ll wink at the girls, smile at the girls. They know . . .. hesaid. In the fall, a national cheerleading organization rated 264 major colleges across the country, and chose K-State ' s as sixteenth. Collectively, we can all do something real well, Walker said. And that ' s what makes us good. cheerleaders 247 Harriers make tracks in country If 1 975 ' s Big 8 cross country champi- onship scores had been recorded in two columns K-State and Other Seven the Cats would have won, 25 to 30. With what coach DeLoss Dodds described as the best cross country team K-State has ever had, the Cats ' 25 total points were a conference record for the lowest winning score. Paced by senior Jeff Schemmel ' s lead, which set a new record for the course in Boulder, CO, five Wildcat distance men finished in the top eight places first, third, sixth, seventh and eighth. Seniors Don Akin, Keith Palmer, and Chris Perez and freshman Larry Beesley joined Schemmel in the team championship. September saw the team open the sea- son with a victory at Wichita. Then came K-State ' s invitational meet at the Man- hattan Count ry Club. K-State won the meet with the second, third, fourth, fifth, seventh, eighth, and ninth places. The Cats then proceeded to win duals with both Wichita State and Nebraska. The following meet, a dual at Missouri, was the turning point in the attitude of the team. We went into the meet thinking we could win the conference title, and when we left, we knew we could, Dodds said. K-State won the meet taking the first, third, and fourth places. The next trial for the team was the Big 8 meet. K-State ' s team so distinctly won there that it went to the NCAA finals with- out going to the qualifying meet. Before the season had started, Big 8 cross coun- try coaches had picked K-State as the conference favorite. But according to Dodds, later in the season and particu- larly before the Big 8 meet, the title was considered to be wide open. He added that this was definitely the best overall cross country year the Big 8 had ever had. Taking only twelfth in the NCAA finals at Penn State was a disappointment to Dodds. He attributed the successful sea- son to four good seniors who wanted to win. The two main pre-season objectives for the team were to keep the seniors healthy and to bring along a younger man as a fifth. The season passed without a serious injury. Freshman Larry Beesley, who did not make the team until the second or third meet, rose to be the third man on the team by the season ' s end. 248 cross country ' according to ' n W parley. He added NCM finals ippointmentto to wanted to ip the seniors ng a younger Tout a serioos estey, tioiid left: First-place finisher, Jeff Schemmel, holds the Big 8 cross-country team trophy. Schemmel is joined by Chris Perez, center, and Keith Palmer, right. below lelt: Approaching the championship fin- ish, Jeff Schemmel moves to take the lead. below: Schemmel was at the head of the pack throughout the Big 8 championship in Boulder, CO. cross country 249 SFCHR.T! PriwtoDeLoss tffoSuqg Swison, bOVK Dodds talks to sprinter Hiawatha Turner. above right: Dodds works with a sprinter on a start. 250 deloss dodds Dodds attracts responsibilities Prior to DeLoss Dodds ' appointment as K-State ' s head track coach in 1963, the University ' s track reputation and facilities left much to be desired. Since that time, Dodds has helped bring about one of the finest outdoor track facilities in the nation, and has also made the K-State squad one of the top in the country. Dodds ' K-State coaching career has had many highlights the Big 8 Indoor C hampionship in 1974, his team ' s four Big 8 cross country championships, the world record of K-State ' s distance med- ley relay team in the 1971 Drake Relays, and Ken Swenson ' s American record in the 880 yard run at an NCAA tournament at Drake in 1 969. Swenson, who was on the 1972 U.S. Olympic team, was one of three Dodds- coached men to reach the Olympics. Conrad Nightingale made the team in 1968, with Jerome Howe serving as an alternate four years later. As head coach, Dodds has led his team to 1 7 titles over the past five years on the Texas-Kansas-Drake relay circuit. This is nearly twice as many as the sec- ond place school. Besides the exceptional coaching results over the years, Dodds has shown his leadership abilities in other areas. When K-State Athletic Director Ernie Bar- rett was dismissed in December 1975, President Duane Acker asked Dodds to assume the job until a new full-time direc- tor could be found. I was surprised to get the job, Dodds said, but I was willing to help out in any way President Acker thought I could. Dodds said as athletic director his goals were to work closely with the stu- dent body, keep K-State ' s alumni and friends behind the athletic department, and continue to improve the University ' s sports programs. Dodds is currently chairman of the prestigious NCAA Track and Field Rules Committee, as well as serving on the NCAA Marketing Advisory Board. While school is in session, he instructs several track and field classes and spon- sors an annual Wildcat track and field camp during the summer months. I ' ve really enjoyed the years I ' ve spent at K-State. There seems to be something that holds people around, he said. I think it ' s the type of students we have here. There is a great deal of differ- ence between student bodies throughout the country. We just happen to be lucky with the types of students we receive. As for his future plans, Dodds believes he should remain at K-State. I believe that as long as I can contrib- ute something to the K-State track pro- gram, I should continue coaching, he said. I brought the track program up to a respectable level and I ' m not about to leave it. delossdodds 251 SFORTSI Spike goes wrong way The season started and ended on win- ning notes. But what happened between is a different story. K-State ' s women ' s volleyball team opened their season November 4, with tournament play in Stillwater, OK. Although the Kittens were defeated by Tulsa YMCA and Oklahoma State Univer- sity, they won both matches against the University of Tulsa, 15 to 7 and 15 to 2. The team had hopes of additional wins in the matches to come. But somehow they just couldn ' t do it. The girls ended the month-long season with a 2-37 record in match play, and an overall game record of 9-75. The season saw the Kittens entered in tournaments that matched them against the toughest competition they ' d ever met. And with only one returnee from the pre- vious successful year, the young team had no chance for survival in the league. Although there were a lot of freshmen on the team, three junior college trans- fers provided what depth the team had. But inexperience still kept the team from top performance. Knee injuries also by Mary Phyl Dwight. Although the games were played with a team effort, Nancy Garnder became known as the team ' s best spiker, with Patty Berry providing exceptional set- tings. The Kittens had more home meets than in previous years. The team has a tremendous amount of potential, one team member said. There ' s a good chance that next year ' s team will be better because we have played together before. This was a rebuilding year and we all learned a lot. right: The Kittens won their last two games of the year. They defeated Tabor College for two of their nine victories in 84 games. tar right: A race prepares to get underway at K- State ' s natatorium. Four of the swimming team ' s six meets were in Manhattan. NoSwimmingi ' Ihose words rue left Idler) sw arrival at K-StateJ Ration When Ins team, they reat W, and anger, Esj Hell called tti opiate Athlete wed events as a; 18 reply, if the a % scholastic elii to simmers the men ' s concerts. 252 volleyball Swimmers gasp for fresh breath No Swimming! Those words rudely greeted Mike Witt- lieff, Wildkitten swimming coach, on his arrival at K-State, just one day before fall registration. When he unhappily informed his team, they reacted with shock, disbe- lief, and anger. Especially anger. Wittlieff called the Association of Inter- collegiate Athletics for Women to see if the group could compete in AlAW-spon- sored events as a sports club. Yes, came the reply, if the athletic director would okay scholastic eligibility and a few other items. The athletic director refused. The swimmers appealed to the I AC. After much ado, the council conditionally granted approval if the team could prove they could pay their own way. Some $2,600 in pledges resulted from a long distance swim-a-thon (about 75 per cent of it was collected). Another $1 ,000 was expected from a contract with the men ' s athletic department to work at football and basketball games and concerts. In November, swimming became the sixth Wildkitten sport. Life brightened, but not much. Practice time had been drastically cut, and several potential swimmers had made other com- mitments. Despite such handicaps, the Kittens managed a 4-3 dual record. Wittlieff is high on swimmers Kathy Koontz and Rita Buchanan. Koontz already holds the school record in the 200-yard breasts troke. Wittlieff thinks she ' s the most promising of his squad. He calls Buchanan a hard worker. She competes in the middle-distance free- style, the butterfly and individual medley, and holds the school record in the 200- yard butterfly. Clare Thorn was the mainstay of the squad. Though this is her last year of competition, she holds four school records and two pool records the 1 00- yard butterfly and the 200-yard individual medley. Wittlieff was satisfied with the Kitten ' s season, given the reduced number of competing swimmers and the late start. However, he was displeased with the lack of attention his swimmers received, point- ing his finger directly at the sports media. Most people didn ' t know we com- peted second semester, he said, because the newspapers and radio sta- tions didn ' t even mention us. The future of the swimming team once again is in doubt. Though the women ' s athletic budget requests funds for swim- ming, the combined budgets for intercol- legiate athletics at K-State for 1976-77 are more than $500,000 over the pro- jected income. The axe has to fall some- where. Wittlieff hopes swimming won ' t be the victim. He thinks K-State is an ideal site for building a swimming program. We probably have the best facility in the Midwest, he declared. There ' s a lot of potential for making money. In fact, he ' s already looking to 1978, when the AIAW national swimming cham- pionships are scheduled for this area. I ' d like to see us submit a bid, he said. These facilities are optimal for per- formance. swimming 253 254 women ' s sports Women ' s sports: created unequal ,by Jan Garton Room 1 01 , Men ' s Gymnasium. Today, it ' s the home of women ' s athletics. Tomorrow .? The status of women ' s athletics here can be graphi- cally described in one word limbo. In a few short years, the women ' s athletic program at K-State has grown from disorganized chaos into a visi- ble, viable, and nationally-recognized force. Less than four years ago, the department did not exist, but was loosely connected to the intramural department and governed by the Intramural Council, now the Recrea- tional Services. The women operated out of the gym basement, confined to a partitioned area roughly 8 by 1 feet. But today, room 101 is a complex of several offices, carpeted, draped, and actually pleasant. Yeah, baby, you ' ve come a long way. The prime mover and shaker behind this amazing transformation, of course, has been Judy Akers. Her goal is not, as many alumni have loudly asserted, to destroy men ' s athletics. She is totally and unequivo- cally committed to equality of opportunity for women athletes. Period. Because of that commitment and the efforts of a very few of the University ' s officialdom, K-State can boast a winning Wildkitten tradition. Over the past three years, Wildkitten teams have finished among the nation ' s top 10 teams six different times, the best a third place tro- phy in the 1 974 cross country championships. Individually, Teri Anderson, Janet Reusser, and Joyce Urish have all been named Missouri Valley AAU woman athlete of the year Teri Anderson twice. Susie Norton and Marsha Poppe captured second places in 1974 and 1975, respectively, in national jave- lin competition. Wildkitten softball and volleyball coach Mary Phyl Dwight is a member of the 1976 U.S. team handball squad. K-State played host to the AIAW National Basketball Championships in 1 974, and to the National Track and Field Championships in May, 1 976. Women ' s athletics at K-State are not up and com- ing the Wildkittens have arrived. Then what ' s the talk of limbo? The Wildkittens are facing one of the more critical points in their seven-year saga. Their future will not be determined by superb performances in the playing arena, nor by discipline, practice, aches, pains, or sweat. Instead, the attitudes of the person selected to head the new Intercollegiate Athletic Department will rule the day. The Wildkittens ' success so far has been achieved on a shoestring budget. (Any department that pays for a basketball coach and assistant, and then expects them to run the department for free qualifies as shoestring .) But the emergence of Title IX has forced many schools to substantially beef up their women ' s athletic budgets. If the new director at K-State chooses not to keep pace with other schools, the Wildkittens ' winning tradition will quickly die. So what does the magic mirror say? It shows the man in Anderson Hall with the power of decision. President Acker ' s selection for director could signal a revolution- ary change in the University ' s attitude toward women athletes, or it might continue to perpetuate the myth of women ' s second-class athletic status. In this bicentennial year, I vote for revolution. women ' s sports 255 right: Morgan attends to Shelby Henderson. below: Morgan has been helping out K-State ath letes for 25 years. Tapes for 25 years Porky: a K-State institution If an athlete spends more than two or three years on the bench, many might question his value. An athletic trainer, though, is another matter. Proba- bly no one would question the value of Porky Morgan, K-State ' s first trainer, who has been sitting on the bench for 25 years. Since arriving at the Big 8 conference and K-State in March, 1951, Morgan has witnessed athletic changes that are primarily results of the emphasis put on win- ning athletic programs. Occurrences of medical problems normally not asso- ciated with sports are increasing. Although the number of cases is small, Morgan has seen gout, ulcers, and allergies resulting from big scholarship programs and pressure from coaches. Another change the veteran trainer has witnessed is a steady decline in the number of two- and three-sport collegiate athletes since training seasons for sports have been expanded. But Morgan claims the quality of athletes has gener- ally improved as high school training programs have become more sophisticated. He has seen a major change in Big 8 football. In 1951 , the then Big 7 conference was totally dominated by the University of Oklahoma, and was known as OU and the Sorry Six . When Oklahoma State University joined the conference in the late 50s, the nickname changed to OU and the Seven Dwarfs . Today, Morgan said, the difference between one and eight is a whole lot less. The Big 8 schools are a close-knit group closer, Morgan said, than other conferences around the coun- try. The schools get along well and have a good work- ing relationship which carries over to the training rooms. If a visiting team needs training supplies, they are available on a help yourself basis. Basically, everybody ' s just trying to help the athlete do a better job, Morgan said. The color of an athlete ' s uniform makes no difference ... by a few happenstances, he could have gone to your school. Morgan ' s generous attitude also applies to K-State athletics, where he is willing to help all athletes including women and those involved in non-revenue producing sports. Most of the good competitors are good to work with, Morgan said, no matter what race, creed, color, sex, or whatever the hell you have. Though Morgan leads a busy life, it wasn ' t until November 3, that he had a full-time assistant. Eugene Benner, the former head trainer at the University of Cin- cinnati, couldn ' t have been hired at a better time. Five days later, Morgan suffered a serious knee injury on a sideline play in the third quarter of the foot- ball game with the University of Nebraska. Morgan tore all the ligaments in his right knee, in addition to break- ing both cartilages and the bone just below the knee. It wasn ' t Morgan ' s first injury in the line of duty. In the early 50s, he was involved in an automobile accident on a track trip and suffered a broken back. Morgan ' s first training job was at a East Moline, IL, high school in 1 935. And except for a stint in the Army from 1941 to 1945, he has been a trainer. He enrolled at St. Ambrose College in Davenport, IA, in 1939 and was a student trainer there before becoming the head trainer at The Citadel the same year he entered the Army. Morgan returned to St. Ambrose, and received his degree in 1 949. During the 1 949-50 basketball sea- son, he was the trainer for the Tri-City Blackhawks, a professional basketball team. Morgan was one of eight trainers from across the country to serve in the 1 967 Pan American games. In 1974, Morgan was inducted into the Helms Hall of Fame at the annual National Association of Athletic Trainers ' convention. porky morgan 257 Recreation is complex matter The intramural program at K-State is growing at a phenomenal rate. The facility situation, however, is not. In an effort to lose extra weight, maintain teenage physiques, and keep halfway fit, K-State students flood the intramural facilities. With the increased interest in intramural activities, faculty, and students are finding little success in obtain- ing available space. According to Raydon Robel, recre- ational services director, the problem is growing at an increasing rate. The problem will not get any better. Right now we just don ' t have the space or facilities to accommodate all of the participants, Robel said. The biggest problem stems from having to share the facilities with other organizations. Since the whole intramural program has grown to such an extreme over the past three years, time conflicts have become inevi- table, Robel added. According to Robel, the only solution to the problem would be the addition of a new recreational complex. The fact is that we are in need of a new facility. Par- ticipation on campus and the national scene have shown that the intramural activities are on the way up. If we are to solve the shortage problem, we must find the money for a new complex, Robel said. The possibilities for a new complex increased sub- stantially in the February 18 general SGA elections, when 71 per cent of 5,342 students voted in favor of a referendum to the proposed complex as a line item. 258 intramurals above: Delta Tau Delta ' s houseparent, Mary Belle Chappell, cheers on one of her boys at the intramural swimming championships. above left: Careful planning is put into the next football play of these intramural participants. far left: The form might not be that of O.J. ' s, but that ' s what intramurals are all about. left: A swimming champion is determined. intramurals 259 right: Cowboys clown around before settling to the serious practice. below: A rodeo club member prepares to rope a calf. below right: A female equestrian practices one of three women ' s events in rodeo, barrel racing. .and lidet become one. changes, the built lonoavalVtiory This is a part ol lo members ol the sport requinng pt along withacertaii Itetypicalrode There is much moi ing to an animal 1 ; anticipated next react. This holdsti Events lor men Three events are ( There are nine ran and three previous rodeo ci the teaman pc torn members m a2 %ade point Clore,anartinsti 260 rodeo The gate opens ... a blur of motion explodes from the chute . . . and in eight short seconds the bull and rider become one. With a volley of spins, jumps, and changes, the bull tries to shake the rider from his back, to no avail. Victory belongs to the rider today. This is a part of rodeo, a sport . . . and yet an art to members of the K-State rodeo team. It is a vigorous sport requiring physical coordination and quickness along with a certain mental dexterity. The typical rodeo cowboy has long been regarded as dumb with the anybody can do that attitude. There is much more to it than that though, according to Randy Fisher, the men ' s team captain. For while react- ing to an animal ' s movements, the cowboy must also anticipate its next possible move, in order to correctly react. This holds true for all events. Events for men include: bareback and saddle bronc riding, bull riding, calf roping, and steer wrestling. Three events are open for women: break-away calf rop- ing, goat tying, and barrel racing. There are nine members of the rodeo team six men and three women chosen from performances in previous rodeo competition. Those persons who have consistently placed in the most events are chosen for the team, with positions always open for change. The team members must also be full-time students carrying a 2.0 grade point average and members of the National Intercollegiate Rodeo Association. Their coach is Bob Clore, an art instructor and former Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association bareback rider. The cowboys practice every day, weather permitting, at facilities outside Manhattan. There they polish roping that calf, striving for the fastest time yet. Or ride the bronc anticipating its moves while spurring it on the shoulders. They practice long and hard, for rodeo is a sport of every season. Intercollegiate competition begins in the fall, continuing through the spring when K-State com- petes against 25 teams from across Kansas and Oklahoma. In the fall of 1975, the team placed fourth in the region, putting K-State near the top as was consist- ently done in the past. Like other minor sports at K-State, the team receives no financing from the University. Gas mileage to rodeos is paid by the Rodeo Club with all other expenses footed by team members. This includes entry fees for every event participated in. Therefore, all winnings go to the individual if he or she places. Even though it ' s possible to earn money, one should remember the added expenses involved. All equipment saddles, ropes, riggings are furnished by the individual. Each must also furnish and board a horse and practice stock, along with providing practice facili- ties, such as chutes and pens. Why then, if obstacles are so many and the risk of injury so great, does a person get on the back of a wild bull? Or, race at breakneck speeds around the barrels? It ' s hard to say the cowboy can ' t pinpoint a rea- son except that it just gets in your blood. By the looks of it, there ' s no stopping it at K-State. rodeo 261 Akers ' efforts reap rewards Sandy Hick had coached a small-time women ' s basketball team at K-State for a few years until 1968, when she decided to go to Europe for a year. Unless a volunteer came along to take her place, it seemed almost no one except the team members cared if the team went on. A former player of Hick ' s, Judy Akers, had gradu- ated from K-State in 1 967 and had spent a year teach- ing in Concordia. Akers had always enjoyed and excelled in athletics and agreed to return to K-State, attend graduate school, and coach the women ' s bas- ketball team while Hick was abroad. On a scanty $240 budget, the women practiced early in the morning or in the evening when the men ' s team had finished with the athletic facilities. Akers ' first team went undefeated against regional competi- tion, then went to the national play-offs, where they were slaughtered as Akers put it, by Wayland Bap- tist. In the meantime, Hick had returned and ended her coaching career to try her hand at something else. Akers continued coaching four sports a year for several years before she was paid for her time. In 1 972, she was named coordinator of women ' s athlet- ics and in 1 974, women ' s athletic director. Today, the K-State women ' s athletic department directly employs 1 people and Akers ' only respon- sibilities are athletic director and head basketball coach. Because women ' s basketball has expanded to include scholarships and recruiting, Akers said both positions are full-time occupations. To say Akers, president of the recently-formed National Basketball Academy, merely supports wom- en ' s athletics, is an understatement. She cites two reasons why women ' s sports are important to K-State. I like to see as many girls as possible get involved in athletics, Akers said. The development of a self- concept and the ability to make decisions are really enhanced by athletics. Your own value system can be enhanced through competition. Any opportunity you have to learn about yourself and other people is a good experience. Akers believes women ' s athletics serve not only to motivate individual students, but to enhance the repu- tation of K-State. It serves as an arm, an outlet, for the University, she said. Anything we do as long as we do it in qual- ity is good for the University. One way of involving women in athletics is through the Wildkitten Basketball Camp for which Akers is known throughout Kansas and the Midwest as founder and featured instructor. The camp had 250 participants in the summer of 1 975. Akers is further involved in women ' s athletics by serving on the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women Basketball Committee. Her interest and determination haven ' t gone unre- warded. Akers ' basketball teams have won five state titles, one regional championship, and made appear- ances in three of the five AIAW National Champion- ships capturing fifth in 1973, hosting the affair in 1974, and finishing fifth in 1975. In 1976, Akers ' Wild- kittens finished second to William Penn College in the regional finals and hosted and won the first Big 8 tour- nament championship. In eight years, her teams have a cumulative 143-57 record. Akers had considerable success as an athlete before she entered coaching. In 1967, she was selected as the national all-star catcher in the National Women ' s Softball Championship and finished third in the national Women ' s Bowling tournament in 1972. I was more lucky than good, she explained, with a laugh and shrug of the shoulders. When asked what she didn ' t like about coaching, Akers had to stop and think for several seconds. I suppose the traveling, she finally answered. It wears me out. It is the method of travel that is so exhausting. I have to come home from a trip and get right at both jobs. I guess it ' s a hazard of the occupa- tion. I like tremendously working with people that have good skill, Akers continued. It makes anything that you dislike minute. left: Judy Akers, who has been involved in athlet- ics since first grade, said there ' s nothing she ' d rather do than coach. 262 |udy akers Judy akers 263 To feel the freedom of flight In an age when Americans have more leisure time than ever, the American spirit of adventure has spread to a rww-bteed. of sp_prts Thte new breed inclTJcies those sports hang-glid- ing, repelling and sky.-diving that in themselves may bfe safe but, with an equipment failure or a moments panic or carelessness, have the potential to bring violent death. Hills of the Manhattan area are ideally suited for one of these spoils hang-gliding. If you learn to fly a kite in Kansas, Monte Nieden- thal, a local participant, said, you can fly any place in the world. When the greatest vertical drop of a hill in the, area is 400 feet, a fast reaction time is demanded. The high winds of the area also force a pilot to be constantly alert. The number of eastern Kansas enthusiasts has increased from a mere handful to roughly one hundred in a year ' s time. It takes no psychologist to find why these people become dedicated to the sport. It is something that dis- tinguishes participants from others they have done something -relatively few have done. The excitement of depending upon one ' s instincts, reflexes, and skills to stay in flight is a thrill like, they say, no other experi- ence. , Or as Niedenthal said: It ' s the ultimate sport lunq ijlidirx) ; , ' , wildcat basketba -shining hopes tarnish In the spring of 1975, K-State basket- ball fans fell in love with the team that was supposed to go nowhere, but did. Except for forward Doug Snider, the team that could dribble on water was back in the fall. The nationally-famous Purple Popgun Duo of guards Chuckie Williams and Mike Evans was returning. The leaping, talented forward, Darryl Winston was back. Rugged, enthusiastic Dan Droge was returning with forward Bobby Noland. The third guard, Mark Baxter, was back as was the man K-State coach Jack Hartman labeled the quickest center in the country, Carl Gerlach. The team was joined by talented newcomers, who were expected to help 1975 ' s fif- teenth-ranked team finish even higher. Like the local fans, the national pre- season basketball polls were expecting great things of the Wildcats, placing them between sixth and fourteenth. In time, always-conservative Hartman was proven correct in his prognosis of the season. The carryover of our success a year ago has to help us, Hartman said. We gained valuable experience winning experience in key games. Last year, though, we may have been at somewhat of an advantage because we were young and not a great deal was expected from us. We may have slipped up on a few people. That won ' t be the case this year. Everybody will be pointing for us ... we ' ll have to be ready for an ambush. Who would be better suited to set an ambush for the high-flying Wildcats than a bunch of Red Raiders? A particular Red Raider was about all Texas Tech University needed to spoil K- State ' s anticipated shiny record from the start. Tech ' s center, Rick Bullock, the Southwest Conference ' s most valuable player of the previous season, hit 14 of 20 from the field against the Cats, fin- ished with 32 points and grabbed nine rebounds to do in the Cats, 66 to 58. Licking their wounds, the Wildcats returned to Manhattan to play in a much friendlier place Ahearn Field House. Louisiana Tech was in a tough posi- tion, coming to Manhattan to face a good K-State team which wanted to prove it could play defense. Considering K- State ' s defense forced the Bulldogs into 32 turnovers, Louisiana Tech was fortu- nate to lose by no more than 37 points. K-State used the turnovers to lead 45 to 1 7 at the half and win 86 to 49. In the opening game of the Vanderbilt Classic in Nashville, TN, Chuckie Wil- liams put on a scoring show the Holy Cross University basketball team would not soon forget. Scoring 47 points, Williams broke six K-State and Vanderbilt Classic records, in addition to tying Vanderbilt ' s Memorial Gymnasium record of 22 field goals in a game. The man Williams guarded scored four points and was forced into seven turnovers. K-State, ranked eighteenth by the Associated Press at that time, defeated Holy Cross 89 to 85 in overtime. In the championship game the follow- ing night, K-State lost 80 to 81 to the Uni- versity of Southern California on an off- balance, last second shot by a reserve guard, (more) 266 basketball !ii . above: Mike Evans passes over Arizona guard Jim Rappis. Evans scored 25 points in the game. above left: A fan exhibits her appreciation of a good Wildcat effort. left: Students wanting non-reserved tickets crowd Ahearn ' s doors. Except for the Tulane game during Christmas break, all home basketball games were sold out before the season started. basketball 267 bosketbo It was back home for the Cats to whip then eleventh-ranked Arizona, 71 to 61 . And in their fourth game in six days, the Cats blasted Northern Illinois, 86 to 59. Central Missouri State and Northeast Missouri State came to be K-State ' s third and fourth consecutive victims. There were no clear-cut favorites for the Big 8 pre-season tournament. K- State and Missouri were the schools mentioned most frequently, while Kan- sas and Nebraska were also considered possible winners. K-State hadn ' t won the tournament since 1 963. The Wildcats ' first-round opponent, Iowa State University, had knocked the Cats off in the second round for the last two years. With Iowa State entering the tourna- ment carrying an 0-7 record, it seemed a third upset was unlikely against the Wildcats. When the Cats led the Cyclones 32 to 1 2, with 8:30 left in the first half, it seemed K-State was in for a laugher. But with the score 38 to 35 at the half, the game wasn ' t too funny anymore the Cyclones had shot 61 per cent and, the fans remembered, had upset the Cats before. But several great individual performances led K-State to an 81 to 67 win. Carl Gerlach hit seven of 10 from the floor and had 1 7 rebounds. Chuckle Williams had 24 points and Mike Evans, 19. Missouri, 8-2, and the Cats ' next opponent, had squeaked by Oklahoma State 81 to 79 in their first round game. The Cats were flat against an outstand- ing Missouri team. In front of almost 1 7,000 bi-partisan Kemper Arena fans, the Tigers developed an early lead. With all K-State comeback efforts falling short, it ended as an embarrassing 66 to 86 loss for the Wildcats. Colorado ' s Buffaloes led most of the way against the Cats before finally sur- rendering 55 to 60 in the battle for third place. The Colorado victory was Jack Hart- man ' s one hundredth as a Wildcat coach against 49 losses in little more than five years. I thought we played pretty well in the tournament. . . for the most part, Hartman said. At times, however, we didn ' t move as well or play with as much intensity as I would like. Some of our obvious weaknesses were exposed, Hartman continued. We ' re just not very tall or physical inside, so we will have to do a better job of blocking out, and in our shot selec- tion. Our frontline people wouldn ' t win many arm-wrestling contests. Mizzou won the tournament, defeat- ing the University of Kansas, 79 to 69. Chuckie Williams, who scored 65 points in three games, was named a first team, all-tourney selection, (more) 268 basketball above: Chuckle Williams moves past Iowa State guard Jeff Branstetter in the opening game of the thirtieth annual Big 8 Pre-season Basketball Tour- nament. left: Iowa State forward Mike Benjamin sneaks past Carl Gerlach. lar left: Larry Dassie, noted for his aggressive mobility, goes after Iowa State ' s talented forward, ArtJohnson. basketball 269 bosketbo The Wildcats were 8-3 going into the Tulane game in Ahearn Field House where Wildcat basketball squads had won 50 of their last 52 contests. Led by Williams ' 32 points, the Wildcats rolled the Green Wave home, 81 to 69. The Cats ' last regular-season, non- conference game with Creighton in Omaha, was a classic. The Wildcats ran into a team that shot 75 per cent from the field in the first half 65 per cent for the game. In spite of hitting just eight of 16 free throws, K-State played well and lost by only three in overtime, 79 to 76. We had chances to win it, they had chances to win it, Hartman said. What else can you say? It was just a whale of a ballgame. The Cats ' conference opener was a biggie. They were at home on regional televi- sion against the University of Nebraska, a team which had won eight of their last nine games. The Cornhuskers were the last team that beat the Wildcats in Ahearn during the 1 974 conference race. The Cats had since won 1 8 straight at home. Nebraska has played tougher at our place than any other Big 8 team in the last few years, Hartman said, before the game. They really get motivated and we don ' t seem to enjoy much of a home court advantage. The Huskers were undoubtedly moti- vated for this game, being tough on the Cats all the way. In a shoot-out with Chuckie Williams, Nebraska ' s standout guard, Jerry Fort, hit 15 of 20 from the field and was perfect with his four free throws to lead the Huskers to the second victory in three years at Ahearn. The score was 65 to 59. I thought at times we had opportuni- ties to gain control of the game, but we just weren ' t able to do it, Hartman said. But then, that ' s been a pattern with us all season. Hartman had been hinting of a major line-up change for a week or two. The Purple Popgun Duo, with forwards Darryl Winston and Bobby Noland, and center Carl Gerlach had been starting all sea- son. Dan Droge and all-American juco transfer Larry Dassie had been shuffled into the line-up at the forward spots regu- larly. Red-shirt sophomore Dan Hickert and sophomore transfer Jerry Black had spent some time spelling Gerlach. When the Wildcats came on the floor against the University of Colorado, Black was playing at center, with Gerlach and Droge at the forward spots. The fans were impressed with Hart- man ' s innovation. The Cats were blowing the Buffaloes out at the half 44 to 22 it looked easy. Like several other games of the season, though, the Cats couldn ' t hold it together for an entire game. Hart- man used the words totally flat to describe the second half of their perform- ance. Colorado charged back at an alarming rate, but the game was over before the Cats could lose. The Buffs fell short 70 to 63. Relief. The Cats could play well for an entire game, after all. With excellent play from K-State ' s front line and a team shooting effort of 60 per cent, the Wildcats whip- ped the University of Oklahoma in Nor- man, 6 5 to 51 . We got control of the game and main- tained control, Hartman reflected. We managed it like we wanted to. That ' s what we will need to do the rest of the season. (more) 270 basketball left: Carl Gerlach (43) pulls down a rebound against Colorado. Dan Droge, right, led the team with eight rebounds against Colorado. below left: Carl Gerlach battles Oklahoma ' s Billy Graham for a loose ball. Gerlach had 12 rebounds against the Sooners in the game at Norman. below: Jerry Black (32) and teammate Dan Droge stretch for the ball. basketball 271 bosketbo At home again, the Cats made a few mistakes against Iowa State, but they basically continued to play well, whipping the Cyclones, 84 to 66. Mike Evans led the team in scoring with 24, the first time in nine games Chuckie Williams failed to be the team ' s top s corer. By this point of the season, the four pre-season favorites for the conference crown had emerged at the top of the heap. Missouri and Nebraska were tied at 4-0, K-State was 3-1 , and Kansas was fourth at 2-2. If the Cats could put the Jayhawks away in the upcoming shoot- out, they would remain in excellent posi- tion to take the lead while at the same time do tremendous damage to KU ' s hopes of repeating as conference cham- pions. In addition to being one of the greatest rivalries around, the KU-K-State game was, as usual, important in sorting out a Big 8 champion. After falling behind 10 to 0, the Cats fought hard and made good shots throughout the game. The problem was that just 37 per cent of the shots went through the hoop. For the third straight year, the Cats were beat in Lawrence this time 57 to 62. It is unusual for K-State basketball teams to be in a bad position in the Big 8 basketball race, but now the Cats were hurting. They were 3-2 and traveled next to the University of Missouri to play in Hearnes Center, where the Tigers had won 23 in a row. After defeating Nebraska, thirteenth- ranked Mizzou was alone on top the con- ference standings and was riding an 1 1 - game winning streak. There were few people belting on the Cats. The Cats were fighting for their lives, and they played as if they were. Jerry Black, as a matter of fact, was ejected from the game for fighting before seven minutes of the game had elapsed. K- State was also thrown to a disadvantage when Droge and Noland each fouled out with seven minutes left in the game. In spite of the setbacks, though, the Wildcats put in a tremendous effort in fighting off the Tigers to win 85 to 81 and jump back in the conference race. They played just like we ' ve been play- ing, Mizzou ' s coach Norm Stewart said. They were intense and did what they had to do. They played a helluva game. They deserved to win. Our win over Missouri was . . .one of the biggest we have enjoyed while I have been at K-State, Hartman said. Chuckie Williams scored 32 points to pass Jack Parr and become the second- leading scorer in K-State history. Mike Evans had his third straight 20-point game to become K-State ' s sixteenth- leading scorer as a sophomore. Williams was averaging 22 points a game going into the upcoming Oklahoma State University contest, with Evans at 1 5 points. Darryl Winston and Carl Gerlach were also scoring in double figures. But more impressive than their total points, was their accuracy from the field. Win- ston was hitting 51 per cent, and Gerlach an incredible 56.7 per cent. Gerlach was by far the best shooter in K-State history, carrying a 56.8 per cent career average. Jack Hartman had defeated his alma mater 1 of the 1 1 times he had coached again st Oklahoma State. The Cowboys were not expected to be a push-over, though, as they came to Manhattan with big and talented frontline personnel. O-State led throughout most of the game, with the Cats lurking in the shad- ows until the middle of the second half, when K-State took the lead and put the game away for good. The 60 to 55 win was Hartman ' s 250th as a major college basketball coach. It was his 400th win, including his victories as a junior college coach. The K-State win was also a big one for Mike Evans, who scored 31 points, a career high. Evans was named Big 8 player-of-the-week. (more; above right: Jerry Black tries to gain control of the ball. Oklahoma State ' s Lafayette Threat (32) and Dan Droge are among those moving in. lar right: Chuckie Williams does strange things to his shoes as he puts a move on Kansas ' Clint John- son. right: Oklahoma guard Eddie Fields watches a Mike Evans pass fly by. 272 basketball basketball 273 bosketbo The start of the second half of a tight conference race found Wildcats battling Buffaloes at the University of Colorado in Boulder. Colorado was holding down the wrong end of the conference standings, with a 1-4 record, but Jack Hartman wasn ' t expecting the Buffaloes to roll over and die. Colorado has already played us too close twice this year, Hartman said, and they always have scared me out there. The Buffaloes scared Hartman and his Wildcats again, hanging close until the middle of the second half. The Cats pulled away, though, and presented Hart- man with his thirteenth consecutive win over Colorado, 57 to 47. Starting with Carl Gerlach and Jerry Black on the Wildcat front line, Larry Das- sie contributed 10 rebounds and 13 points to the effort against Colorado. Mike Evans continued to be red-hot, toss- ing in 28 points. Chuckle Williams, mean- while, scored seven points, failing for the first time in 49 games as a Wildcat starter to score in double figures. Elsewhere in the Big 8, Missouri stayed a step ahead of K-State by sneaking past Oklahoma State, 72 to 71 . For Valentine ' s Day, the Wildcats decked Ahearn ' s visitor bench in red and white and presented their fans with, as Hartman later said, a heck of a ball game. Starting three freshmen, a sophomore, and a junior, Oklahoma University had won four games in a row when they entered Ahearn where no OU team had ever won. Like other recent Oklahoma-K-State games, it was an exceptionally exciting, well-played contest. K-State shot 52 per cent from the field, the Sooners 55 per cent. Together, the teams committed just 22 turnovers. Wil- liams and Evans each had 22 points, with Dassie scoring 20 as the Cats whipped Oklahoma, 75 to 70. Time for the Shootout with Nebraska had arrived. Since the Cornhuskers had damaged the Cats ' hopes a month ear- lier, the trip to Lincoln had been on the minds of all. The teams were tied for sec- ond at 7-2 and had identical 1 6-6 overall records. Like many other K-State games of the season, it was a tight struggle until the Cats pulled away late to win, 65 to 53. Bobby Noland, noted for his hustle and tough defense, joined Gerlach and Das- sie on the ever-changing starting front line against Nebraska. Sophomore Man- hattanite Scott Langton was at the same time establishing himself as a strong third guard. But it was Mike Evans who continued to play in the limelight. After a 30-point performance against Nebraska, Evans was named the Big 8 player-of-the-week for the second time in two weeks by the Associated Press. This time, Evans shared the honor with Missouri ' s Willie Smith. The only way Kansas University hurt K- State ' s title hopes during the remainder of the season was by losing 61 to 60 to Missouri in Allen Field House. Against K- State ' s tremendous defensive effort which forced them to 23 turnovers, KU was helpless perhaps helpless enough to heal K-State ' s scars from the 91 to 53 loss in Lawrence a year earlier. K-State fans seemed to want KU in this match-up more than usual in the highly emotional super-series. Some students holding non-reserved seats were camp- ing on Ahearn ' s doorstep Wednesday afternoon before the Saturday game. In the usual tradition, K-State tans threw four red and blue chickens on Ahearn ' s court during KU ' s pre-game introduction. Later delirium broke out in response to Mike Evans ' unbelievable behind-the- back pass from a mid-air leap to Larry Dassie who promptly put the ball in, plac- ing the score at 59 to 35. If there was a hero in the tremendous effort by the Wildcats, it was Carl Gerlach who hit seven of 1 2 field goals, five of six free throws, and grabbed eight rebounds against the bigger but slower Jayhawks. Evans and Williams combined for 33 points, contributing to the entertainment for the regional television audience. The 69 to 54 victory was the Wildcats ' sixth in a row. Missouri continued to win by narrow margins, this Saturday it was in overtime against Nebraska, (more) 274 basketball far left: A scene typical of the year, where quick, slender Carl Gerlach darts around a heavier man to score. Here, Gerlach is moving on Oklahoma ' s Rick McNeil. left: Chuckie Williams is challenged by Kansas ' Clint Johnson. below: Dan Droge passes around Oklahoma ' s Billy Graham. below left: Larry Dassie looks for some help in getting around Kansas ' Herb Nobles. Dassie had nine rebounds against KU. basketball 275 bosketbo Perhaps K-State ' s greatest threat going against Iowa State, 2-22, was the Cats ' mental attitude. The Wildcats were conning off the tremendously emotional KU game and in five days, Missouri would be visiting Manhattan, giving the Cats a chance to tie for the league lead. But K- State rolled to an 80 to 67 victory. By noon, the next day, students could be found with tents, sleeping bags, and books outside the southeast door of Ahearn Field House. They were waiting for the doors to open for the Missouri game four days away. While the Cats were winning at Iowa State, the Tigers were finally knocked off by Oklahoma. This left the Tigers and Wildcats tied for first. The upcoming game was probably for the Big 8 championship. While the K-State students waited for the Tigers, Missouri coach Norm Stewart had his team practicing in front of the noise machines and volunteer students banging pots and pans in an effort to pre- pare for the K-State crowd. The Cats were generally favored to defeat the Tigers, who were 22-4 on the season. Jimmy the Greek predicted the Cats would win t he regionally televised game by three. In the opening minutes, it seemed the Cats would win by 20. But Missouri fought back and led 45 to 42 at halftime. To the extreme frustration of the 11,100 noisy K-State fans, Missouri rode on the lead for most of the second half. A jump shot by Mike Evans, who finished the game with 24 points, brought the Cats to within a point with three minutes to go. But the Wildcats went cold and watched the game slip through their fingers as the Tigers pranced on to win, 81 to 72. As a team, Missouri hit 23 of 26 free throws while the Cats shot just seven free throws and missed three of those. Carl Gerlach, honorably mentioned on the all-Big 8 team, was deadly from the field, finishing with 21 points after hitting 10 of 13 from the field. He also grabbed 1 2 rebounds in the losing effort. It had been the understanding during the week prior to K-State ' s conference finale with Oklahoma State that an NCAA at-large bid would either go to K-State or the runner-up in the Western Athletic Conference, the University of Utah. Utah was upset by Wyoming the night before the Cats ' game at Stillwater, and it appeared all K-State needed to do to obtain the bid was win. The Cats played well in defeating Oklahoma State. If they hadn ' t, the red- hot Cowboys would have undoubtedly won the hard-fought 82 to 78 overtime game. First team all-Big 8 guards Wil- liams and Evans combined for 52 points. The Cats shot 55 per cent from the field and 16 of 17 free throws. The Oklahoma State win was like the Cats ' loss to Missouri three days earlier, with the winner nabbing the game by way of free throws. Missouri clinched its first undisputed title in 46 years by defeating Colorado, 95 to 60. The Wildcats, 20-7, were in sole possession of second place. Wildcat fans who sat back to wait for the NCAA invitation were stunned the next day to learn that DePaul University, a team with a 1 9-8 record and only casu- ally mentioned before, received the bid. The National Invitation Tournament soothed the irritation of the fans, though, by inviting K-State to attend and giving them a fourth-place seeding and a bye in the first round. K-State opened its fifth consecutive post-season tournament against the Uni- versity of Kentucky, a young team, which after a slow start, had won eight games in a row. Kentucky had beaten Niagara in the first round of the NIT. After a tight battle, the Cats pulled away to lead 63 to 51 with 13:44 to go. To the delight of K-State ' s pep band, cheerleaders, and television-viewing fans at home, the Cats seemd to have tucked the game away. But a 1 0-point counter-charge by Ken- tucky left the Cats shaken and unusually out of control. Late turnovers and missed shots doomed the Cats to an eventual 78 to 81 loss. Kentucky went on to win the tourna- ment. For K-State, the loss, like the season, made one think of what could have been. But, then, a 20-8 season wasn ' t really much to brood over. 276 basketball below: Mike Evans goes high to shoot over Mis- souri ' s Willie Smith. Although Evans finished the game with 24 points, Smith stole the show by bom- bing the Cats ' title hopes with 38 points. right: Darryl Winston and Willie Smith rest during a pause in the action. below right: Bobby Noland guards Missouri ' s standout forward Kim Anderson. Noland, who cut his lip playing Iowa State, finished with 10 rebounds against Missouri. basketball 277 bosketbo JVs escape untouched If K-State ' s junior varsity basketball team had a problem during their 1975-76 season, it was a lack of competition that could keep up with the young Cats. The junior varsity finished their 1 1 - game schedule with the first undefeated season in K-State ' s history. On the aver- age, the team won each game by 24. points. We were fortunate to have a group of young men who were talented and played together as a team, Jim Eads, junior varsity coach, said. Many times at this level of competition, a high percent- age of the participating athletes have received numerous individual honors and find it difficult to remove themselves from the role of stars to the team aspect. That was not a problem. The Wildcats opened their all-home schedule with Allen County Junior Col- lege, trouncing the visitors 85 to 44. The next game with Emporia State ' s junior varsity was important for the Cats, according to Eads. They didn ' t play well, and got behind, the coach said, but, they got some intensity in the last four or five min- utes and came back to win (77 to 71). After that game, they got started as a team. The junior varsity then cruised by New- man Center, 103 to 59; the Alma Chefs, 1 1 1 to 83; and Whiteman Air Force Base, 93 to 58. Coffeyville Juco, which has had an outstanding basketball tradition since K- State ' s Jack Hartman coached there in the middle 50s, seemed to pose more of a threat to the Wildcats than earlier oppo- nents. But an inspirational team effort subdued Coffeyville, 74 to 47. Kansas Newman ' s junior varsity, Kan- sas City Community College, and Dodge City and Pratt Jucos then fell before the Wildcats. A basketball team from Fort Sill, in Lawton, OK, was supposed to be the toughest test on K-State ' s schedule. Lawton Army Base had gone 28-3 on the year. The older, more experienced team had defeated the junior varsity teams of Oklahoma State and the Universities of Oklahoma and Oklahoma City. But again, K-State ' s talented junior varsity prevailed, winning 87 to 73. We played with the most intensity that we played with all year, Eads said. We played excellent defense, ran a con- trolled offense, and ran the fast break when the opportunity presented itself. The junior varsity enjoyed balanced scoring over the course of the season, with 10 players averaging at least 8.0 points a game. Only two team members played in all 1 1 games. above center: Freshman Keith Frazier avoids an aggressive defender. Frazier, who played in varsity games, averaged 10 points a game tor the junior varsity. above right: Sophomore guard Scott Langton brings the ball upcourt. Langton finished the season finding considerable playing time as the varsity squad ' s third guard. far right: Scott Langton, an exceptional ball han- dler, scored more than 1 5 points a game on the jun- ior varsity. right: Freshman forward Henry Morton ended the season averaging 1 points a game. 278 |unioc varsity basketball jack hartman 28 1 Opponents find the Kittens vicious Any team that finishes 24-9, as the Wildkitten basketball team did in 1975, leaves a hard act to follow. But in 1976, the Wildkittens rolled to a glossy 28-6 season and, had it not been for William Penn College of Oskaloosa, IA, the season could have been consider- ably better. The teams met three times during the season, with Penn causing two of the Kittens ' five regular season losses. Then came the regional tournament which would qualify one team for national competition. The rivals met in the regional finals and the First Ladies pre- vailed for the ninth time in the 1 1-game series with the Kittens, bringing an other- wise tremendous season to an abrupt halt. A year earlier, on the way to the sixth place national finish, the Wildkittens had defeated Penn. Eight veterans returned from that sixth- place team in addition to a host of tal- ented newcomers who contributed to the Kittens ' continuing success. There were 10 home games, several invitational tournaments, and the first Big 8 tournament, hosted by K-State the best schedule, according to coach Judy Akers, since her arrival at K-State in 1968. The season opened with a Thanksgiv- ing tournament hosted by Southwest Mis- souri State in Springfield, MO. The Kit- tens, ranked tenth and twelfth by two leading pre-season publications, won the tournament by defeating always-tough Grand View College in the finals, 73 to 72. Team captain Susie Norton, with Janet Reusser, Greta Sigel, Marsha Poppe, and freshman Tami Johnson started for the Kittens, though many other women would see playing time as the games progressed. The Kittens were at home as they opened their conference race by defeat- ing Wichita State, 65 to 45, and demolish- ing Fort Hays State, 1 05 to 28. Then eighth-ranked William Penn came to Manhattan, defeating the Kittens 65 to 58 and the next night, sixth-ranked Wayland Baptist beat the Kittens by three. A trip to Texas saw K-State win the Temple Classic before losing again to Wayland Baptist. Tournaments seemed to be the Kittens ' cup of tea as they returned to Kansas to win the Kansas Classic at Lawrence. Except for William Penn, Central Mis- souri State was the only team to beat the Wildkittens in their last 21 games. The wins included championships at the Illi- nois State Tournament and in the Big 8. As the season ended, the Wildkitten team left many marks on the record books. Senior guard Janet Reusser finished her career with records in 1 categories, including all-time leading scorer (1,227 points), career scoring average (11.9 points a game), and career highest free throw percentage (.70). Senior Susie Norton ended her career as third on K-State ' s all-time scoring list (1,036), despite missing 10 games her senior year with an ankle injury. Second on the all-time scoring list was claimed by a junior, Marsha Poppe, who had 1 ,067 points. Poppe led the team in rebounds from her forward spot during the season, with 8.4 rebounds a game. I think we had a good season as far as our improvement and playing some good basketball were concerned, Akers said. Of course, the disappointment was not finishing well enough to go on to the nationals. We beat four or five teams that are in the tournament. I think there ' s defi- nitely a fallacy in the way teams are being chosen, she said. i 1 282 Wildkitten basketball far left: Senior center Greta Sigel accepts the Big 8 tournament trophy for her team and coach, Judy Akers. left: Freshman center Margo Jones (30) brings a rebound down with a teammate. The Kittens won this game against Iowa State, 1 05 to 80. below: Judy Akers gives her team instructions during a time out. below right: Team captain Susie Norton (32) closely guards an opponent from Southwest Mis- souri State. wildkiilen basketball 283 Scores are criticized for smothering the fun aspect of sports, for sometimes vaguely describing the actual events of a game. But, what better indicates the talent, preparation, and motivation of a com- petitor? sports scores KSU Baseball OPP. Basketball Arkansas Arkansas Arkansas Arkansas Fort Hays State Fort Hays State Fort Hays State Wayne State Wayne State Creighton Creighton Creighton Creighton Creighton Baker Baker Phillips Phillips Missouri Missouri Missouri Fort Hays State Fort Hays State Oklahoma State Oklahoma State Oklahoma State Creighton Creighton Iowa State Iowa State Iowa State Colorado Colorado Colorado Bethany Bethany Nebraska Nebraska Nebraska Kansas Wesleyan Kansas Wesleyan Missouri Western Missouri Western Kansas Kansas Kansas 58 Texas Tech 86 Louisiana Tech 89(OT) Holy Cross 80 USC 71 Arizona 86 Northern Illinois 77 Central Missouri State 99 NE Missouri State 81 Iowa State 66 Missouri 60 Colorado 81 Tulane 76(OT) Creighton 59 Nebraska 70 Colorado 65 Oklahoma 84 Iowa State 57 Kansas 85 Missouri 60 Oklahoma State 57 Colorado 75 Oklahoma 65 Nebraska 69 Kansas 80 Iowa State 72 Missouri 82 (OT) Oklahoma State 78 Kentucky Wildkitten Basketball 78 Claremore 90 Wayne State 73 Grand View 65 Wichita State 105 Fort Hays State 58 William Penn 49 Wayland Baptist 93 Temple Juco 63 Stephen Austin 66 Weatherford Juco 53 Wayland Baptist 62 Nebraska 79 Oklahoma State 62 Central Missouri State 58 S.W. Missouri State 54 Kansas Phillips Iowa State Wayne State Central Michigan Wisconsin-LaCrosse William Penn William Penn Grand View Oklahoma Nebraska Missouri Fort Hays State Wichita State Kansas Emporia State South Dakota State Northwest Missouri State William Penn Cross Country Wichita State Manhattan Invitational Wichita State Nebraska Missouri Big 8 Championship NCAA Finals Football Tulsa Wichita State Wake Forest Texas A M Iowa State Oklahoma Missouri Kansas Nebraska Oklahoma State Colorado Oklahoma Intercoll. Tourn. Great Plains Intercoll. Tourn Softball Iowa State Kansas Relays Drake Relays Iowa Slate-Drake Big 8 Championship Kansas Kansas S.W. Missouri State Central Missouri State Nebraska-Omaha Nebraska-Omaha Fort Hays State Emporia State N W. Missouri State N.W. Missouri State Wichita State Washburn Grand View College Northern Iowa John F. Kennedy John F. Kennedy ( Swimming Tennis Kearney State Kansas Kansas Relays Stephens College Missouri Oklahoma Oklahoma State Nebraska Big 8 Championships Northern Colorado Air Force Colorado Washburn Oklahoma State Hardin-Simmons West Texas State Pan American New Mexico State Central Texas Trinity Nebraska Wildkitten Tennis Volleyball Nebraska Stephen ' s Invitational Kansas Baker Graceland Missouri Valley Tourney Indoor Track 2nd Sooner Invitational Relays 1 st Wichita State-Oklahoma 2nd Wichita State-Oklahoma 4th USTFF 2nd Big 8 Championships 12th NCAA Championships Outdoor Track 69 Texas No 1 sts Texas Relays 4 1 sts Wichita State Relays 1 1st Kansas Relays 60 Kansas 2nd Big 8 Championships Wildkitten Indoor Track 81.5 Kansas 1st Missouri-Kansas 46 Kearney State Wildkitten Outdoor Track 2nd Southwest Missouri State 1st Wichita State Relays 3 1sts Kansas Relays 68 Kearney State 2nd Big Eight Championships 10th AIAW Championships 0,1 TulsaYMCA 15,15 Tulsa 8.5 Oklahoma State 4.9 Kearney State 15.1.5 Fort Hays State 5,13 Drake 2,3 Nebraska 10.4 Fort Hays State Central Missouri State 12,15 Augsburg, MN 6,15,7 Graceland 11.10 Kansas 10.9 Kearney State 2.3 S.W. Missouri State 4,11 Minnesota 5.1 Nebraska 12.13 Fort Hays State 15,12 Wichita State 5,15 Kansas 4.8 Iowa 13,6 Nebraska-Omaha 10,14,4 Concordia College 6.6 Creighton 8,13 Nebraska-Omaha 4,0 S.W. Missouri State 1 .2 Nebraska-Lincoln 1.4 Illinois 1.11 Kansas 8.10 Missouri 3,4 Graceland 1 1 .2 Kansas 5.16.6 Fort Hays State 7.9 Wichita State 7.12 Max Pack 15.11 Oklahoma 11.5 Swain ' s MFA 6,4 Kansas City Juco 7,2 Nebraska-Lincoln 15.14 Tabor College 9,15,15 15,15 15,15 13,15 15,15 14,17 15.13,15 15,15 15.15 15,15 15,15 15,15 15,15 17,15 15,17 15,15 15,15 15.10.15 15,15 15,15 15,15 15.15 15,15 15,15 15,15 15,15 15,15 15,14,15 15,15 15.15 11.15 15,15 15,15 15,15 7.12 r housing u 288 touting hourtng 287 acacia MAUSER. W MAXINE BADSKY. FLOYD A Nuclear Engineering SEVER. DENNIS W Industrial Engineering BLATTNER. THOMAS L Engineering BLEVINS. MICHAEL F. Architecture BOLT. 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BETH A Kansas City Family and Child Development Junior CRANBERRY, MARGARET L Fairport, NY Landscape Architecture Senior GRICE, CARA M Topeka Accounting Senior GRISSOM, JONI F Wichita Clothing and Retailing Sophomore -HAERTLING.SALLYA Overland Park General Sophomore HARTMAN. DAVY S Manhattan Modern Language Freshman HASTINGS, DEBBI L Council Grove General Freshman HELMS. VICKIL Overland Park Pre-Design Professions Sophomore HOFFMAN. SUSAN L Leawood Pre-Vetennary Medicine Freshman HOTCHKISS. JULIE A Empona Home Economics Freshman HRABE. CHRISTY L Plamville General Sophomore IVES. MARIANNE Overland Park Engineering Freshman KESSLER.BARB Overland Park Speech Pathology Junior KIERNAN, THERESA M Salina Pre-Law Junior alpha delta pi 293 alpha delta pi LAMBIE, BARBARA J . . Home Economics LAWSON, CAROLYN A. Math Education LAY. LINDA K Home Economics LUCKEROTH, MICHELE Business LUTTRELL.VICKIF Accounting MAY, SUZIE Mathematics MEDILL. CAROL M Pre-Law MENSE, DEBORAH J Home Economics MILLER, MARY A Family and Child Development MILLER. SANDRA L Elementary Education MILLS, MARGARET A Pre- Veterinary Medicine MOORE. SUZANNE K Elementary Education Overland Park Freshman Lea wood Freshman Wichita Junior Seneca Sophomore Great Bend Senior . Overland Park Senior Seneca Sophomore Overland Park Freshman Collier Senior Topeka Junior . . Gordon, NB Sophomore Caney Sophomore MUELLER, THELMAG Business MURRAY, JEREL Home Economics Extension MYER, MELINDAA Psychology NELSON. GRETA F Engineering OLIVER. SARA Pre-Vetennary Medicine PETERSEN, PAULA J Entomology PRIDDY. LISAM General PRINGLE.BETHG Animal Science and Industry RAILE.BRENDAA Medical Technology REYNOLDS, REBECCA S. History ROBB. REBECCA L Clothing and Retailing SANDERS. GINA L Fashion Design Hanover Senior Salina Senior . Kansas City .Junior St Joseph. MO Sophomore Hutchinson Junior Lee ' s Summit, MO Freshman Junction City Freshman Yates Center Freshman . Edson Freshman Winfield Senior Kansas City. MO Sophomore Wichita Sophomore do not open Looks like someone found a great gift and decided to share it with all her friends. The recipients had better unwrap them all at once or forget the surprise bit. 294 alpha delta pi SCHRAEDER. LEANN Accounting SMITH, DEBORAHS Business SMITH. SHELLEY D General SPITSNAUGLE, SHERRY L Journalism and Mass Communications STEINER. SUSAN K Speech Pathology . . STUCK, LAURA L Fashion Marketing SUMMERLIN. JOHNNIE M Accounting SWAGGERTY, SARAH N Pre-Vetennary Medicine TEHEL. TERRY L Physical Education THAYER, HOLLY J. . Fashion Marketing TRUE. RONI M Dietetics TUREK,SALLYA Elementary Education Timken Sophomore Shawnee Mission Freshman Lake Quivira Freshman Wakeeney Senior Beloit . Sophomore Shawnee Freshman Overland Park Sophomore Ulysses Freshman Overland Park Junior . . . Belleville Sophomore Shawnee Mission . Junior Overland Park Junior WALSH. MARY J Journalism and Mass Communications WARNOCK. MARY F. Social Work . WELLS. STEPHANIE J Journalism and Mass Communications WHITE. CAROLYN K Fashion Merchandising WILLIAMS, DEBBIE K Fashion Marketing WINSKY, DEBBIE A Accounting Onaga Junior Roeland Park . . .Sophomore Wichita Sophomore Topeka . Freshman Shawnee Mission Sophomore Merriam Senior WOODS. CINDY L Fashion Merchandising Shawnee Mission . Freshman alpha delta pi 295 alpha gamma rho ADAM, ROBERTS Horticulture BEARNES, BYRON K Animal Science and Industry BEESLEY. PHILIP E Animal Science and Industry BEYEA, KURTW Animal Science and Industry . BROWNBACK. SAMUEL D Pre-Vetennary Medicine BUCHANAN, SHANNON L. Accounting Holcomb Freshman Culver Junior Qu inter Sophomore Springview, NB Sophomore Parker Sophomore . . Little River Senior CARLSON, MARK W Smolan Animal Science and Industry Senior CHESTNUT, ALLAN B. Clay Center Animal Science and Industry Graduate Student CHESTNUT, MERLIN B Clay Center Animal Science and Industry Senior COMBS, STEPHEN H Paradise, PA Feed Technology Senior COTTON, TERRY A Ellinwood Agriculture Senior DANLER, ROBERT J . Holcomb Agricultural Education Freshman DEVLIN. DANIEL L Agriculture DILL. THOMAS A Agricultural Economics DUNCAN, STEWART R. Natural Resource Management EDER, JOEL L. . . . Agricultural Education FISH, PETER R. Animal Science and Industry FLETCHER. PETERS Dairy Production FLICKNER. RAYMOND G Agricultural Education GALLE. JACKG Agricultural Economics GEORGE, PHILIP D. Smith Center Freshman Olathe Junior Olivet Sophomore Leoti Freshman Cedarburg. Wl Junior Westford. MA Junior Moundndge Junior Moundndge Sophomore . Lebo Animal Science and Industry Senior GIGSTAD, ALFRED O Nebraska City, NB Veterinary Medicine Senior GREEN, DAVID D . . Melvern Agronomy Junior HOLSTE, JAY H Norton Agronomy Senior HOLT, LYNN R. Wmlield Animal Science and Industry Sophomore IDOL. KEMS .Rolo, NB Agricultural Economics Sophomore KELLER, DANIEL J St. Francis Animal Science and Industry Senior KLAASSEN. MATT K Whitewater Agricultural Economics Sophomore KLINE, RODERICK A LeRoy, IL Animal Science and Industry Senior KOECHNER, JOSEPH L. . Wright Pre-Vetennary Medicine Freshman KONICEK.S ALLEN Agricultural Education LADD.CARLR Animal Science and Industry LARSON. CRAIG A Agriculture MARSTON.TWIGT Pre-Vetennary Medicine MAYO. STEVE A. Animal Science and Industry McCORGARY, LARRY W Animal Science and Industry . McGEE, WILLIAM L Agriculture MELSON, CHRIS A Animal Science and Industry MILES. STEVEN W Animal Science and Industry MORGAN. THOMAS H Agricultural Economics MORRELL, MICKEY V Agricultural Education NIELSEN, DANNY L. Pre- Veterinary Medicine NOLL. MARK T Animal Science and Industry PARK.G NOEL Agricultural Education PETERSON. RICK L. Animal Science and Industry PRICE. JOHN R Pre-Vetennary Medicine POSS, GARY E Animal Science and Industry POSS, LARRY D Animal Science and Industry 296 alpha gamma rho McPherson Sophomore Humboldt Sophomore Marquette Freshman Canton Junior Garden City Sophomore . Geuda Springs Senior Normal. IL Fr eshman Potwm Sophomore . .Burlmgame Junior Greeley Graduate Student Blue Mound Freshman St. Paul. NB Junior Reserve Sophomore Protection Junior Assana Junior Weir Freshman Richmond Junior Richmond Freshman r Hi. You don ' t know me but . . . When the papers are written and the chapters outlined, dial tones come into style and cradles are robbed of their receivers. This AGR leans into a comfort- able conversation. a gentleman caller PRITCHETT. MICHAEL S Agriculture REECE, EDWARD G. . Agricultural Mechanization RHINE. DONALD L Agricultural Education ROCKERS. CHRISTOPHER J Pre-Vetennary Medicine ROENBAUGH, JOHNB Agronomy RUSSELL, LEROYW. Agricultural Education SCHLICKAU. BRUCE A Animal Science and Industry SCHOEN, RODNEY R Veterinary Medicine -SEILER. KENJ Agricultural Economics SORRICK. WILLIAM A Pre- Veterinary Medicine STRICKLER, THOMAS S. . Agricultural Economics . . . STUMPF. RICHARD W Agronomy Overland Park . . .Freshman . . Phillipsburg Junior Narka . Sophomore Garnett Freshman Lewis Junior Eureka . Junior SWADER. TERRY A. Animal Science and Industry THOMPSON, MIKE D Agricultural Economics WELTMER, KENTON L Animal Science and Industry . WINTER. BRIAN F Agriculture WINTER, KENTT Agricultural Economics Haven Sophomore .... Downs Senior . Colwich Junior Eskndge Sophomore lola Senior Axtell . . Freshman Gardner Freshman Little River Senior . Smith Center Senior Andale Sophomore Andale Junior alpha gamma rho 297 alpha kappa lambda ATWELL. DAVID C Electrical Engineering BARRETT. BRUCE E. Agronomy BRANDENBURG, ALBERT L . Interior Architecture BREITENBACH. CHARLES Pre-Law BREITENBACH. MARJAIN L Agronomy CRANE, JAMES B Pre-Design Professions CROSS. JOHN H Industrial Engineering DUTTON. ANDY D Computer Science DUTTON. EDWARD E Agricultural Business EDWARDS. FLOYD W Chemical Engineering FARRELL, RITCHIE L Pre-Vetennary Medicine FEHR, DAVID L Fisheries and Wildlife Biology GORDON, STEVE J Fisheries and Wildhle Biology GROGAN, MICHAEL R. . Agronomy HENNESS. TIMOTHY C. Electrical Engineering HINSON. DONALD J . Engineering HOLMES. DAVID K Business HOSTIN.GARYL Business Administration .... Overland Park Junior Randall Junior Wakeeney Senior Belpre Freshman Belpre Junior Wichita Freshman Lewis Freshman Kmgman Freshman Kmgman Sophomore . Hutchmson Freshman Scandia Sophomore Topeka Senior JACOBS. CARL L Mechanical Engineering JENKINS. ROBE. Mechanical Engineering KINSLER, ROSSN Agriculture KRAFT. SCOTT C Journalism and Mass Communications KRAMER, CHARLES M Physical Education METZINGER. JOSEPH W Pre-Vetermary Medicine Winfield Sophomore Winfield Freshman Kansas City Freshman Winfield Freshman Wichita Freshman Olathe Senior Augusta Graduate Student Montrose. IA Sophomore Spivey Freshman Wichita Junior . Nornstown, PA Senior Dexter . .Sophomore 298 alpha kappa lambda a MIDDLEKAMP, RICK Computer Science MORELAND, RICHARD C Pre-Design Professions NALLY, RODNEY E Engineering OPPITZ. LAWRENCE W Architecture OPPITZ, MICHAEL E Natural Resource Management . POPP, CHARLES J Pre-Vetennary Medicine POTTER, JONH Civil Engineering ROOD. KEVIN L Civil Engineering SHEAHAN. RICK J Electrical Engineering SWOB, BRUCE C Agricultural Mechanization TURNER, KEITH E Horticulture WATERMAN, JOHN K Electrical Engineering Overland Park . Junior Manhattan Freshman Winlield Freshman Topeka Senior Topeka Senior Boston, MA Freshman Wmfield Junior Winlield Freshman Randall Sophomore . . . .Albert Sophomore . Lmdsborg Senior . Manhattan Senior WRIGHT, RONALD E. Geology ZAWISTOWSKI. VINCE R Construction Science ZIMMERMAN. GERALD L Accounting . . . .Trenton, MO Senior Greenville, PA Junior Nashville, TN Graduate Student treadache Ever since Henry turned out the first one, the automobile has been nothing but a heap of trouble besides a con- venience and status symbol. Some, like these AKLs, even enjoy the trouble. alpha kappa lambda 299 alpha tau omega ACHTEN, PHILIP B Journalism and Mass Communications AKERLY. JEFFREYS Business AKRIGHT. BRENT F Hotel and Restaurant Management ANDERSON. STEVE D Business ARMSTRONG. KENTW Animal Science and Industry BARRON. GREGORY C Agricultural Economics BAUMGART. STEVEN G Biology BERLEKAMP, JOE D Pre-Design Professions BROWN. NORMAN D General CHILDS. JAMES A Architecture COMPTON. GILBERT E Pre-Design Professions CONNOR, MARC S Interior Architecture DEGENHARDT RiCHARD K Pre-Design Professions DEUTSCH, JOHNL Business Administration DUNBAR. STEVEN D. Microbiology EIKENBERRY, KENT R Journalism and Mass Communications ENGEN. ROBL Civil Engineering FORSYTH, BRAD Business Administration Wetmore Sophomore Leawood Sophomore Leawood Freshman Belleville Freshman Topeka Freshman Topeka Freshman Overland Park Junior Lee ' s Summit. MO Sophomore Council Grove Freshman Belleville Junior Wichita Freshman Prairie Village Senior Leawood Freshman Hoisington Junior Valley Center Junior Leoti Senior Wichita Junior . Medicine Lodge . . . . Senior FREEMAN. DAVID W Mechanical Engineering GARRISON. STEPHEN J Agricultural Economics GLATT, ANDREW K Industrial Engineering . . . HAHN. DOUGLAS E Architecture HILDERHOF.GARY Architecture HILTON, BARRY P Architecture HUSCHKA. JAMES A Agronomy KEITH. RAYE Architecture KOGLER. LARRY R Agricultural Engineering LARSEN, PETER E Pre-Dentistry MARITAN, MICKEY J Business Administration MASON. DAVID P Business Overland Park Junior Osborne Sophomore Salma Senior Overland Park . . Junior Overland Park Senior Leawood Senior MATHEWS. MARK R Animal Science and Industry MCCLELLAND, JEFF D Elementary Education McCOY. T MIKE General McFALL, RONNYD Business Administration MEEKS. HERBERT L Landscape Architecture MEINKE. MICHAELS Pre-Vetermary Medicine MEYER. DAVID L Interior Architecture MORTS.R SCOTT Architecture NORTH. LARRY J Construction Science ORR. DENNISW Accounting POTTORFF. MICHAEL L Pre-Medicme ROBERTSON. CURT L Pre-Design Professions SCHMIDT, JEFFREY E Business Administration SHROPSHIRE, D CLAY Mechanical Engineering SMALL, WILLIAM E Horticulture SMITH. PERRY L Medical Technology STRUNK, RANDALL J Psychology SUNDGRLN.DONALDW Agricultural Economics Garden City Junior Cnillicothe. MO Junior Salma Sophomore Leawood Freshman . . .Overland Park Senior Wichita Junior bnaron Junior Kansas City Sophomore Wichita Freshman Sabetha Junior Lee ' s Summit. MO Junior Bonner Springs Sophomore Kansas City Junior Chillicothe. MO Junior Kansas City Freshman Wichita Freshman Wichita Freshman Leawood Freshman Overland Park Freshman Lafayette IN Freshman Con way Springs Senior Lake City Freshman Manhattan Junior Salma Junior 300 alpha tau omega THOMPSON. PETER L Pre-Veterinary Medicine TINDLE, MARKG . Biology . WALLACE. ROGER W. Agricultural Economics YOUNG. STEVE B Business Administration Overland Park Junior Overland Park . . . , Sophomore -Luray Sophomore . Overland Park . Sophomore il Comfort furnishes the setting for quiet reading in the living room of the ATO house. The fraternity made the move from the former address of 1408 Denison to this McCain Lane house in August of 1970. study circle alpha tau omega 301 alpha xi delta RYAN LOUISES ADAMS, DEBORAH L. Interior Design Al RFRS. PAMEl AD Pre-Nursing AMRINE, ROBIN D. Social Science ATWFLL LINDA M Community Services BAKER. CHERYL L Special Education BARNES MARY A Business Management BEAL. SAN ORAL Speech Pathology BECKERLE HOLLY L Business BELL.CARLAS Retail Floriculture BELL, MARYG Public Relations BERNER KATHRYN M Medical Technology BLOMQUIST. DEMISE I Mathematics BLUE. DONNA J Home Economics BORNHEIMER. MARYANN Special Education BOYD. DIANNE M Accounting BOYD. JEAN A Elementary Education - . BROUGHER. VlCKI J Business Houseparent .Overland Park Senior Bendena Junior Kansas City Senior Norton Junior Shawnee Mission Junior Sedan Freshman Overland Park Freshman Shawnee Mission Junior Great Bend Sophomore Wichita Sophomore Overland Park Freshman Assana Junior Wichita Freshman Prairie Village Freshman Hutchinson Freshman Overland Park Senior Great Bend Freshman BRUNIN. CAROL A Pre-Nursing BURIK, KIMBERLY A Accounting CAPLINGER CANDRAJ Business Administration CARLSON. JENNIFER L Fashion Marketing CARR. CAROL A. Home Economics and Journalism CHANDLER, KARENS Engineering St Marys Freshman Ottawa Sophomore Effingham Freshman Smolan Sophomore Wichita Freshman Richmond Freshman ' 302 alpha xi delta COOPER. KAREN L Interior Design CRAMER, JANE L. . Special Education . . DAVIS. DEBORAH D Speech Pathology DENZEL, SUSAN J. Social Science . . . DiKEMAN. SANDY A Dental Hygiene DREHER. TERESA L Business EDWARDS. JANICE A Special Education ELSEA. CONNIE D Interior Design ERWIN, TERRY L Elementary Education EYMAN. BECKY J Engineering FARHA. CONNIE A Graphic Arts FEE. SUZANNE L Physical Therapy Gamett Freshman Wichita Senior Hays Sophomore Leawood Senior Syracuse . Sophomore lota Freshman Manhattan Junior Manhattan Sophomore Kankakee, IL Senior Shawnee Mission Freshman Wichita Junior Stillwell Sophomore FLYNN.MARYK Speech FORSBERG. ROCHELLE L Social Work FOSTER. DEBRAM Pre-Vetermary Medicine FOUST. TINA M Industrial Engineering GARRETT, ELAINE G. Clothing and Retailing GRIMES, GAILM Home Economics and Journalism GUNZELMAN. RITA J Accounting HENDERSON, SUSAN B Home Economics and Journalism . . HUTTON, LACINDAG Fashion Marketing ISAACSON, MARSHA R Early Childhood Education JUNO, JULIE A Clothing and Retailing KAPPELMANN. MARY F Restaurant Management Leawood Senior Lindsborg Sophomore Overbrook Sophomore Bucklm Freshman Shawnee Junior Cimarron Sophomore Topeka Sophomore . . -Kansas City Senior Overland Park Sophomore Belleville Senior . Prairie Village Senior Topeka Sophomore KELLY, KAREN L Elementary Education KILBOURN, SHARON K Electrical Engineering KILLE. BARBARA A Fashion Marketing KROUPA, SHARON L. Music LAFFERTY. TERRIE L Elementary Education LALA.BRENDAJ Interior Design LAMOREUX, SHERRY L General LARSEN, LINDA Political Science LEWIS. PEGGY J Speech LOWE.SHEREER Journalism and Mass Communications LUNDSTROM. GAYLE D . Business LYNTON. SUZANNE L Family and Child Development LYON, BARBARA J Physical Education MARSH, DEBRAK Clothing and Retailing MATLACK, ROXANNE Modern Language MATTINGLY. KATHY A Accounting McDANIEL, PAMELA D Special Education McLEOD, DEBBIE S Family and Child Development .Overland Park Senior St erling Freshman Hardtner Sophomore Marion Senior De Soto Junior . . Smith Center Senior Shawnee Mission Freshman Manhattan Sophomore Syracuse Freshman Wichita Sophomore McPherson Freshman Overland Park Freshman Salina Senior Manhattan Senior Clearwater Senior Clay Center Sophomore Hutchinson Senior Wichita Senior MEAD. MARY E Elementary Education MEHL. KAREN A Computer Science MYZER, TERESA L Physical Education NELSON, CATHY L Pre-Medicme NELSON. KARLAB Interior Design NELSON. SALLY G Home Economics Wichita Sophomore Prairie Village Sophomore Topeka Freshman Olathe Junior Manhattan Sophomore Long Island Freshman alpha M delta 303 alpha xi delta S when you hear the beep Notes telling who is where and called when but won ' t be there then. Confusing to the messenger but not the messagee, slips containing vital information can bridge the gap between school and the social world. OLANDER, JANE A Little River Elementary Education Senior PARKS. CYNTHIA L Wichita Pre-Design Professions Junior RHOADES. DEBORAH L Wakeeney General ... Sophomore RUNDOUIST. AMY J. Assana Speech Sophomore RUNDQUIST, EVE L Assaria Clothing and Retailing Senior SAINICH, MONICA R. KansasCity Biology Freshman SCHEETZ. SUZI J Home Economics . . SCHLINTZ.JANEL. Journalism and Mass Communications SHIELDS, CYNTHIA M Physical Education SHORT. KAREN A. Clothing and Retailing SMITH, STEPHANIE L Special Education SNIDER, AMY L General Norton . Freshman . . . . Wichita Freshman . Overland Park Senior Stamford. CT Sophomore Leawood Freshman Wichita Freshman SONTAG, CHARLOTTE M Derby Clothing and Retailing Senior STEINMEYER, DENA M Wichita Sociology Senior STILES. MARY C . ... Jefferson City. MO Clothing and Retailing . Junior TJADEN. DENAS. Clearwater Home Economics Education Sophomore TO.MPKINS, SHERI K Topeka Clothing and Retailing Senior TWIETMEYER, CYNTHIA D Goddard Business Administration Sophomore UKENA, KARENS Manhattan Business Administration Senior VANDER DUSSEN. CATHY L Cherry Hill. NJ Family and Child Development Freshman WHITE, PEGGY M Kansas City Music Education Senior WILCOX.JANEL Junction City Theatre Sophomore WRAY, CONNIE A Norton Fashion Marketing . Freshman 304 alpha xi delta beta sigma psi BIEHL, CINDY K Houseparent BIEHL, DAVID L Lexington, NB Veterinary Medicine - - - . Senior ADAMS, R. DAVID Salina Sociology Senior BAREISS. LOREN D Atchison Physics Sophomore BECKER, CURTIS J Garden City Etectricat Engineering Senior BOMAN. ROGbHJ Garden City Electrical Engineering Freshman BOSCH. JOHN F Political Science BURKMAN. GALEN R Architecture CARLSON, DARVINA Civil Engineering GASPERS, STEVEN L Engineering CORDES, STEPHEN E Pre-Medicine CROSSWHITE. DARRELL L Pre-Vetennary Medicine DEUTSCH. STEVE L. Business Administration EBERTH, KEITH A Agriculture FABRIZIUS. KARLF. Chemical Engineering GEHRT. ALAN K Chemical Engineering GRAUERHOLZ. MARCUS R. Agricultural Economics HAROLD, BRYAN D Industrial Engineering HOLSTE. HARLANG Engineering HOLTHUS, MITCHELL G. Radio and Television JACOBS, BRENT D. Agriculture JOHNSON. SCOTT M. Business Administration KARST, DAVID W Agricultural Economics KARST, STEPHEN Engineering Clay Center Sophomore Shawnee Junior Salina Junior Gaylord . . Freshman Meade Senior LaGrange, IL Junior Hoismgton Junior Basehor Freshman Hutchmson Sophomore Hutchmson Sophomore Kensington Sophomore Salina Sophomore Ludell . Freshman Smith Center . . . Freshman Smith Center Sophomore . Marquette Sophomore . Rush Center Senior Rush Center Sophomore KIRCHHOFF. STEVE P Cedar Mechanical Engineering . . . Freshman KOHR, LARRY D , . Clay Center Business Administration . Freshman KRUG. JOHN R. . Hoisington Pre-Dentistry Junior KRUG, PHILIP C Hoisington Business Administration Senior LIETZ, RICHARD G. Paxico Pre-Design Professions Sophomore LUCKE, GREGORY A. Girard Speech . Junior LUPTON. JAMES W. Hazlet, NJ Animal Science and industry Junior LUST, KEITH M Hoisington Building Construction Senior MARSCHMAN. KENT L Marysville Political Science Sophomore McLELAND, DAVID A .Wichita Music Education . . .Junior MEIN, STEVE A Leavenworth Horticulture Senior MEYER. ALLEN D Hiawatha Animal Science and Industry . Junior MEYER. REX H Mt. Hope Mechanical Engineering . .Junior MILLSAP. TIMOTHY M . Bonner Springs Veterinary Medicine Sophomore MURPHY, DANIEL D Alton Animal Science and Industry Senior PETERS, BRUCE L Ellinwood Electrical Engineering Senior PITMAN, PAUL A Wichita Labor Relations Senior REESE, MARK C Salina Psychology Senior SIMS, RONNIE L . Berryton Electrical Engineering Sophomore SOEKEN. SHANE A Clathn Mathematics Freshman STARK, KENNETH P . Perryville, MO Architecture . . .Fifth Year Student TAYLOR. ELDON D. , . Abilene Restaurant Management Junior WAGNER. RANDELL G. . Kinsley Industrial Engineering Junior WAGNER, WENDELL D Kinsley Nuclear Engineering Senior beta sigma psi 305 beta sigma psi WILMS. DAVID E Natural Resource Management WILMS, RICHARD N Mechanical Engineering WINCHELL. JOHN S Accounting WISE, SCOTT G Animal Science and Industry WRIGHT, JOHN L Agricultural Engineering Topeka Freshman Topeka Senior Prairie Village Freshman Tonganoxie Sophomore Pawnee Rock Freshman all the trimmings It wouldn ' t be Christmas without the tree and the usual twisted cord of lights to untangle. These Beta Sigs seem to have found that decorating for yuletide brings out the kid in old college peo- ple . 306 beta Sigma pst beta theta pi ADAMS. HELEN K. AELMORE. JOHND Business ANDERSON. BERT D. . Pre-Vetermary Medicine ATKINSON, ALAN J Mechanical Engineering BALES. ROBERT K. Business BARR. RICK N Pre-Velennary Medicine BASOM, GARYD Business BASOM. THON A Pre- Medicine BLEAKLEY.TODDE Pre-Law BROWNLEE, DOUGLAS D Business BROWNLEE, JAMES W Journalism and Mass Communications CALHOUN, RICK R Business Management Houseparent Green sburg Freshman Ottawa Junior Overland Park . Sophomore Overland Park Freshman Overland Park Freshman .Salma Junior Lamed .Junior Overland Park Junior Paola Sophomore Paola Senior McPherson . . . Senior CAMPBELL, JOHN R Accounting . COLLINS. CHARLES P Agricultural Economics DANIELSON. BRADLEY A Business EXLINE.ROBERTW Mechanical Engineering FAULKNER, TOM Journalism and Mass Communications FISHER. GARY W Pre-Dentistry FORD. FRED L. . . Nuclear Engineering FORKE. SCOTT L Pre-Design Professions GALLEHUGH. KEITH C General GARRETT, TERRY J. Nuclear Engineering CAST, CHUCK Animal Science and Industry . GOLD. DAVID N Electrical Engineering Manhattan Junior Junction City Sophomore .Norton Junior . . .Salma Freshman Manhattan Sophomore Eufaula. OK Junior Wichita Freshman . . Lincoln, NB . Sophomore .Shawnee Mission . Sophomore . St. Peter, IL Sophomore Manhattan Senior Goff Sophomore GROVES, RANDY D Electrical Engineering HAGEN.RANDELLS Business HALL, TRACY Business Management HAMILTON, JAMES J Biochemistry HANNAFORD, ROGER W Radio and Television HANSON, DIRK A. Veterinary Medicine HARTMAN. ANDYS. . Accounting HAWKINSON, GRIFF Corrections HENDERSON, KEVINS. Pre-Vetennary Medicine HILDEBRAND, REX E General HOCH, WYATT A. Pre-Design Professions HUMPHREYS. RANDY B Civil Engineering .Salma Sophomore Salina Freshman Overland Park Sophomore Wakeeney Junior Marion Senior Concordia Sophomore Blue Bell, PA Junior McPherson Senior Almena Sophomore Stafford Sophomore McPherson Freshman LakeWinnebago, MO Junior JONES. JEFFERYR. Pre-Design Professions . LOYD, THOMAS W Business Management MASSEY, RANDY M Secondary Education MERTZ, ROBERTO Animal Science and Industry MOXLEY. MARK A Pre-Dentistry MUCK. FRED T Mechanical Engineering NEWCOMER. RICK V Pre-Design Professions NICHOLS, RONALD D Natural Resource Management OLSON, PHILIP D Pre-Velertnary Medicine OSWALD, ANDREW L Pre-Law OSWALD. WILLIAM J Business Administration OTTO, DANIEL L. Pre-Vetermary Medicine .Salma Sophomore Newton Sophomore St. John Senior Wamego Senior Wichita . .Junior Lea wood Sophomore Overland Park . .Sophomore . . . McPherson Senior Arkansas City Freshman Hulchmson Senior . . Hutchinson Freshman Arlington, NB Sophomore beta theta pi 307 beta theta pi PARKE. PATRICK P Engineering PEARSON. GEORGE H Business and Pre-law PRIDDLE. HARLANDG Mechanical Engineering PRINSLOW.KURTD Landscape Architecture REICH. TIMOTHY D. Animal Science and industry REINHARDT, RANDALL D . Pre-Optometry RIDDELL.M GATZ Veterinary Medicine ROBINSON. PATRICK R. Business Administration SARGENT. PATRICK C Accounting SCHLAEGEL.DAVIDA General SCHWENSEN, JOHN C. . Business Administration SHEARER. RICHARD M Geography Wakeeney Freshman Prairie Village Sophomore . Hutchmson Sophomore Arlington Heights, IL Senior Paradise .Junior . Great Bend Junior McPherson Junior Cedar Point Sophomore Wichita Freshman Olathe . . . Freshman Clay Center Senior Wichita . Sophomore SPENCER. LANCE J. Pre-Veter mary Medicine STITES, JERRY R Business Administration STONE, THOMAS W. General SWEET, ROBERT L. . Pre-Dentistry TEICHGRAEBER. ARTC. Engineering Technology THOMPSON, GREG . . . Accounting Great Bend Freshman Manhattan . . . .Junior Sabetha Freshman Hutchmson Sophomore Eureka Sophomore . . Manhattan Senior VOOS.JONM Secondary Education WAMPLER. JEFFREY W. Political Science WATERS, CLARENCE E Industrial Engineering . . . WELBORN, JAMES J Architecture WILSON, GARTH W Natural Resource Management . ZIELKE, STEVEN L Pre- Medicine Russell Senior .Overland Park Junior . Junction City . .Sophomore Manhattan Fifth Year Student Kansas City Senior Wichita Senior calculated guess A plastic, battery-operated wonder that can turn any struggling calculus enrollee into a mathematical genius the calcu- lator. At last technology has come to the aid of this Beta and brought feasibility to previously insoluble formulas. 308 beta theta pi it yd hall COWLEY, CRAIG R. . Agronomy ALLEN. MARY L. Guidance and Counseling ANDERSON, JOLEEN Family and Child Development ANGEVINE, HELENE M Fine Arts BAAR, JULIA A. Home Economics BELL. SUSAN M General BENSON, REBECCA J Family and Child Development BENTLEY, JANE K Psychology BESSETTE. ROBERTA L . Home Economics BEVERLY, GEORGIANA Sociology BISCHOFF, GRETCHEN M. Social Work BLANCHON. THERESE A. . Pre-Nursing Axtell Graduate Student Valley Center Graduate Student Morganville Senior Stamford, CT Freshman Zenith Freshman Wichita . . Freshman Clay Center Sophomore . . . Chanute Senior Wichita . . Freshman Topeka Senior Junction City Sophomore Bucyrus Sophomore BLANKENSHIP, JANET R. Business BOTTIGER. MARY E. Special Education BROWN, KAREN L General BUCK, PAMELAA General BYARLAY, DEBBIE J Physical Education . CADWELL. EILEEN M Home Economics Education CALDWELL.BRENDAK. . Business CARR.CAROLA. Elementary Education CARVER, ROSE M Mathematics Education . . CASHIER. YVONNE M General CASTELLI. CYNTHIA A Elementary Education CHESTNUT, CHRISTINE Home Economics Extension Salma Freshman Denton Junior . . .Mission . Freshman Overland Park . .Freshman Lincoln Sophomore Brea.CA Junior . . . Burlington . Freshman Shawnee Mission . . .Sophomore Kennedy, NY Senior Shawnee Mission Sophomore . . .Carlisle, PA Freshman Clay Center . .Sophomore COMBS, DEBORAH A. Pre-Nursing COMBS. TERRI A. . Pre- Medicine CONKLING. JUDITH E Foods and Nutrition CONWAY. MARY A. Journalism and Mass Communications COWLEY. KAYE Interior Design CROSLEY. DEBBIE A Home Economics Education DAHL.DENISEJ Fashion Merchandising DELIMONT. BARBARA G. Home Economics Extension . DICKERHOOF. BONNIE G. . . General EDENS. JENNIE L. Physical Education EMIG, KATHLEEN L. Journalism and Mass Communications ERICKSON, JUDITH M Marketing . . . Hiawatha Sophomore Hiawatha Junior . Partridge Junior Hoxie Freshman Logan, UT Graduate Student Pretty Prairie Senior . . . Webber Freshman Stamford. NB Junior .Chanute Freshman . .Wmtield Junior . . . Hutchinson Sophomore Salma Freshman FENGEL. JANISM Agricultural Education FOLTZ. DEBORAH L. Pre-Design Professions -GARTRELL. SUSAN K Business GEE. KIMBERLYK. General CLICK, DENISEL Clothing and Retailing GODFREY, TERRY S Speech Pathology . GREEN, MARCIAB. Physical Education HEENE, PAMM Home Economics with Liberal Arts HERBERT. SUSAN L General . HICKLIN. MIRIAM L. Pre-Design Professions HOLEMAN, LINDA L Special Education HOLLE, BARBARA R Home Economics Education . . . Oakhill Sophomore .... Garnett . . Freshman Logan . Freshman . . . Wichita Freshman Topeka Senior . Marysville . . Junior . . Newton Sophomore Roxbury Sophomore Prairie Village . . Freshman Lawrence .Freshman Seneca Senior Ludell Senior boyd hall 309 boyd hall HOLT.KATHRYN A General HOTCHKISS. JULIE- A Home Economics HOYT, TINAM. General JAMES. MERILU Early Childhood Education JELINEK.NANCY A Home Economics JOHNSON, DEBRAS Horticulture JOHNSON. KAREN L Medical Technology KARLIN. JULIE A Speech Pathology KELLER. LAURA L Home Economics KIRKENDALL. KAREN M Music Education KNACKENDOFFEL. NANCY A Pre-Nursmg KROEGER. ANNA M Elementary Education KROEGER. HEDDYE Recreation KURFISS.BRENDAK Elementary Education LADD. SALLY J Elementary Education LALLEMENT, LINDA J. Mathematics LAMAN.RENE J General LANDRITH.BRENDAJ Pre-Vetennary Medicine LANDRITH. MELANIE A Civil Engineering LEAR. NANCY L Home Economics LEWIS. JANENE Community Services LUNGREN. TERRI D Pre-Nursmg . . MACK. ALYSONB English MARTIN. CHRISTINA K Family and Child Development McCLURE.GAY Family and Child Development McCOWAN. DIANA L Dietetics McCREIGHT, JANE General McGIVERN.TONIM. Interior Design MEEHAN, BARBARA L Dietetics and Institutional Management MIKESELL.TRESSAA General MONKS. ANDREA J Special Education MUCHOW. JANA K Biology MUGLER. CONNIES. Interior Design MYERS, KRISTY A History NACE. DIANE M Pre-Design Professions NELSON. DE BORAH L Pre-Vetennary Medicine Overland Park Freshman Empona Freshman Shawnee Freshman Topeka Sophomore Bluff City Senior New York City. NY Sophomore Hutchmson Junior Grmnell Sophomore St Francis Freshman Norton Freshman Norton Freshman . .Marysville Senior Marysville Junior Hutchmson Sophomore Overland Park Freshman Wichita Senior Concordia Freshman Bartlett Freshman Bartlett Sophomore Overland Park Sophomore Empona Junior Hays Freshman Overland Park Freshman Wichita Sophomore Kingman Sophomore Lenexa Sophomore Wichita Sophomore Topeka Freshman Abilene Senior Manchester Sophomore NICHOLS. BECKY J Elementary Education NUTTER, NANCY E Chemistry PERCY, AUDREY D Music Education PETERS. JANE A Pre-Vetennary Medicine PETERS, SUSAN E Accounting PRATT. PAMELA P Elementary Education PROCHAZKA, MARY J Political Science REBER, PAMELAS Interior Design REED, KARENS Community Services RICKS, CHERYL L Family and Child Development RICKS. ROBIN L Pre-Dentistry ROBERTS, PATRICIA G Secondary Education Overland Park Freshman Paola Freshman Hutchmson Sophomore . . . Hutchinson Senior Topeka Freshman Sylvan Grove Sophomore Hutchinson Sophomore Los Alamos, NM Freshman Shawnee Mission Junior Shawnee Sophomore Shawnee Junior Shawnee Sophomore Atwood Junior Newton Junior Ottawa Senior Topeka Sophomore Topeka Freshman Norton Sophomore 310 boyd hall ROTHMAN, CHERYL A Home Economics Education . RUDEEN, LINDA M Elementary Education SAWMILL. RHONDA R Family and Child Development SEBESTA. DIANE M Mathematics SEXTON, LISA A Computer Science SHANK, DEBRAD Fashion Marketing SHAUGHNESSY. CATHERINE S Sociology SHEETS. JENNIFER L Art SHOOK, MARTHA J Physical Therapy SLINKMAN, JEANETTEF. Music Education SMITH, MARTHA K Textile Research SMITH, ODILE Fashion Design Prairie Village Senior Osage City Freshman Valley Center Senior Wilson Sophomore Abilene Freshman Abilene Sophomore Obertin Junior Topeka Freshman Mission Sophomore Manhattan Junior Topeka Junior Inman Freshman Opening a door and walking into a wall of newsprint can really get Monday morn- ing off to a thrilling start. A favorite gag among dormies, door-papering provides pranksters with a chuckle and Boyd maids with a pain. print bound boydhall 311 boyd hall Parsons Junior Independence, MO Freshman Kansas City Freshman Topeka Freshman . Great Bend Freshman Empona Freshman Morse Bluff. NB Freshman Overland Park Freshman Galva Sophomore Leawood Freshman Overland Park Senior Salma Freshman Manter Junior Osage City Freshman Sterling Freshman Louisbur Sophomore Praine Village Freshman Rose Hill Freshman SNYDER. PAMELA J Dietetics and Institutional Management STANLEY. LISA J .... Interior Design STE ELE. VICKIE J Computer Science STEVER. JULIE A General TERRY. DOROTHY A. Home Economics Education THAMES. SUSAN E Agricultural Journalism VOSLER.EVAJ Pre-Vetennary Medicine WALSH. BARBARA A. Business WARREN. M. ELAINE Accounting WATSON. SHIRLEY A Pre-Medicme WEBSTER, ELAINE L. Recreation WILCOX.CINDYA Interior Design WILKERSON. MARLENE K Physical Therapy WILLIAMS. CYNTHIA A Home Economics WILLIS. BRENDAD Art WISE CRISS General WRIGHT. ROXANE P. Interior Design YOUNG. LESLEE L Elementary Education ZIMMERMAN. ANN M Elementary Education 312 boyd hall chi omega BRANNAN MARY J AALBREGTSE. CHRISTINE R Medical Technology AALBREGTSE, SUZANNE H. Home Economics Education AARON. BILLIE M. Special Education ARMSTRONG, JAN P Business Administration ... BAKER, BRENDAG Business Management BALDERSON. JOY A Pre-Design Professions BARBER. SUE M Fashion Marketing BAUMGARTEN, FRITZ Public Relations BAUMGAR TEN, LISA General BEYMER, LISAK Business BONTZ. EVAN L Social Work Houseparent Leawood Freshman Leawood Senior Leavenworth Junior Overland Park Senior Topeka Senior Overland Park Freshman Overland Park Junior . . Hutchinson Senior Hutchinson . Freshman Topeka . Freshman Wichita Sophomore BOOMER, KATHYL Elementary Physical Education . BRAMMER, LIZM Food and Nutrition BROWN. JODI J Music Theory BROWN. SANDY L General BURKHARD, KATHY D Music BURNETT, LAURA L General CHAPPELL. SUSAN L Interior Design COOPER, COLLETTE R Family and Child Development COX.GINAD. Music Education CUSHMAN. RHONDA R Family and Child Development FEESE, COLLEEN G Consumer Interest FLAMING. NANCY F. Clothing and Retailing Portis Senior Wichita Senior . Manhattan Sophomore Salma Sophomore Manhattan Sophomore Overland Park . Freshman Prairie Village Freshman Wichita Senior Overland Park Sophomore Belle Plame Freshman Wichita Senior . . . Olathe Junior FOGERSON. DEBBIE M Family and Child Development FOLTZ. BECKY L. Fashion Marketing . FREELY. DEBBIE L. Special Education FULLER. DEBI A Family and Child Development GALYARDT.SUSANI. Engineering GATZOULIS. PAULA L Business Manhattan Freshman Topeka . . Junior Overland Park Sophomore . . Shawnee . .Junior Lawrence .Freshman Praine Village Sophomore chi omega 313 chi omega GEHLBACH. DEBBIE L Home Economics and Journalism GEPHARDT. AIMEE G Elementary Education GERSTNER, LISA L General GREENBANK. JANET E General GRIFFITH. LORI A Fashion Marketing HALL. MAUREEN L Recreation HARMED. HOLLY A Pre-Vetermary Medicine HARSH, ALICIA K Clothing and Textiles . . HEINEN. MICHELLE R Psychology HIRNING, MARYL Clothing and Retailing . HOFFMAN. JOAN K Pre-Dentistry HOOKER. HOLLY K Fashion Marketing Shawnee Junior Kansas City Sophomore Wichita Freshman El Dorado Sophomore Topeka Freshman Overland Park Junior Wichita Freshman . El Dorado Senior Concordia Freshman Wichita Senior Hoisington Sophomore Garden City Junior HOULDER. CAROL Business HRONES, KAREN L P re -Dentistry HUMMER. WHITNEY A Physical Education INGRAM, NANCY G. Foods and Nutrition INGRAM. SHERYL A Pre-Nursmg JACOBS. MENDY S Fashion Marketing JONES. RHYS A Art KELLY. NINA M General KENNING, ELEONORE M Modern Language KNOP.AMYJ Home Economics Education LACY, ANNE K General LEARY. KATHLEEN Pre- Veterinary Medicine LINENBERGER.SUSANA Accounting LINSCOTT. SARAH A. Audiology LOCY. SHELLEY D Physical Education LOUCKS, CYNTHIA G Journalism and Mass Communications MARTENS, BETH D Learning Disabilities McANDREW, SUSAN M Social Work Overland Park Freshman Roeland Park Freshman Wichita Freshman Leawood Senior Overland Park Sophomore Leawood Freshman Salma Freshman Olathe Sophomore Spring Hill Sophomore . Prairie Village Senior Manhattan Freshman Mission Hills Sophomore McCLURE. SUSAN J Business Administration McCRILLIS. MARILYN E Home Economics Education MERTZ.SARAJ General MOSS.MELINDAA Home Economics Journalism MUSICK.MARTAA General MUSICK. NANCY L Microbiology NUCKOLLS. JILL D Journalism and Mass Communications OBERFELL. SUSAN D Journalism and Mass Communications PAPPAS, PAMELA K Pre-Dentistry PLAGGE, DAWNETT L Physical Education RAMSEY. MARSHA P Dietetics RANALLO, PAULA M Family and Child Development Garden City Junior Mission Hills Freshman Manhattan Freshman . . Manhattan Senior El Dorado Senior Topeka Sophomore Topeka Sophomore Wichita Sophomore Manhattan Freshman Shawnee Mission Sophomore Overland Park Freshman Overland Park Junior Valley Center Freshman Wichita Freshman Overland Park Freshman Tampa, FL Senior Garden City Junior Leawood Senior RAY, VIRGINIA A Elementary Education RENZ. MICHELLE E Fashion Merchandising RISCHER, CYNTHIA L General ROBINSON. LISA K Elementary Education ROSY, JOAN E Family and Child Development SCHABEL, SUSAN M Elementary Education Leawood Junior Manhattan Sophomore Topeka Freshman Topeka Junior Wichita Senior Severna Park, MD Senior 314 chi omega tinsel time Turkey dinners have been devoured and the first snow has fallen. It ' s time to decorate the spruce or just spruce up for the holidays. Tinsel hanging from the ear provides a glittering touch to a Chi O. SCHMALE. ROBYNG. General SCHULTZ, JANE K Music Education SHETTER, NANCY J. General SIMCOX, MARCINE M Business SMITH, KARENS. Journalism and Mass Communications STANLEY. DEE ANN Business Garden City Sophomore Leawood Freshman Abilene Freshman Saima Sophomore Wichita Sophomore Topeka Sophomore TOBLER. JANE E Olathe General Freshman TOBLER, JILL E Olathe Modern Language Senior TRIPP, DEBORAH L Manhattan Elementary Education Senior UTTER. NANCY C Family and Child Development WALLER. GAYLEL Psychology WILSON. ALICE E. General Wichita Junior Overland Park Freshman Kansas City . Freshman WILSON. MICHELED General ZAHNER, BETH A Family and Child Development Lawrence Sophomore Leawood Senior chi omega 315 clovia FRANCIS. LOUISE BAKER, DORIS R Business BALZER, NILA L Business Administration BESSIER. LYNNEE Elementary Education . . BORN. JOANNE M General BOYTS. PAMELA K Horticulture CARNAHAN. NANCYS Home Economics Extension CARTER, DEBRA L Home Economics Education CASE, ELAINE L Pre-Nursing CAUBLE, DEADRA L Music Education CLARK, DEBORAH E Baking Science and Management . CRAIG, CYNTHIA C Consumer Interest Houseparent Erie Junior Arkansas City Senior Prairie Village Senior Eudora Freshman Hesston Junior Wamego Junior . . . Emporia Senior . McPherson Sophomore Mt. Hope Senior Clinton, MO Senior .... Natoma Senior DETTMER, DEBORAH J Home Economics and Liberal Arts EDWARDS. JENNIFER K Pre-Nursmg EYESTONE.GAILL Radio and Television FAGAN, CHRIS J Journalism and Mass Communications FISHER. MARYL Home Economics Education FREY, JOYCE L Medical Technology . . . Leawood Senior Olsburg Sophomore Manhattan Sophomore Wichita Freshman Harper Junior Goessel Junior budding baez Joan may not be in immediate danger of a musical oust, but then she doesn ' t have Clovia as a recording studio. Belting out a few tunes helps balance the har- mony between school and sanity. 316 clovia FRIESEN. JANICE E Dietetics GIBBS, SUE J. General GOECKEL, CAROL L Pre-Nursing HADICKE. JONIL Pre-Vetennary Medicine HAGENMAIER. MARSHA A Home Economics Education HAMM. CAROL S Home Economics HARBACH. EVELYN J Family and Child Development HEFTY. ELAINE C Medical Technology HEINIGER, SUSAN R Home Economics Education HERBERS, MARYS. Home Economics Education HUCKE. BRENDAL Home Economics Extension HUNT.SHERI A Home Economics Extension HUNT. TERIJ Fashion Design JANSSEN. KIMBERLY D Computer Science JOHNSON. ANN R Home Economics Extension JONES, SUSAN C Home Economics E ducation KAISER. ROSE MARY Office Administration KETTLER, DENISE L Home Economics with Liberal Arts Hesslon Junior Olsburg Sophomore Washington Junior Arkansas City Sophomore Randolph Sophomore Wmlield Freshman Scott City Sophomore Valley Falls Sophomore Powhaltan Freshman Holton Freshman Mound Valley Junior Osawatomie Junior Osawatomie Freshman Leoti . . Freshman Scandia Junior ... Frankfort Senior Hoismgton Sophomore Paola Senior LATTA, SUSAN K General MACY, CINDY M Home Economics Education MADDUX. MITZIC Music Education McCRARY. SHARON L Elementary Education MEYER. DONNA R Home Economics Education MURPHY, MARCIA A Home Economics Harper Freshman AltaVista Senior Scott City Sophomore Shawnee Mission Senior Hanover Junior Lyndon . . Senior NELSON, ALINE G Home Economics with Liberal Arts NELSON, ANN K. Horticulture NORMAN. LAURIE A Clothing and Retailing OVERMILLER. KARMA J Home Economics and Journalism PECKMAN. CAROL J Dietetics REED, SARA M Secondary Physical Education . . . Goodland Senior Empona Sophomore Waverly Sophomore Bellaire Freshman Paola Junior Salina Senior ROBITAILLE. MARY K Home Economics Extension ROBSON. DIANE M Pre-Nursmg SCHMIDT, BONNIE H Dietetics SEAMAN. CONNIE J Home Economics Education SHAW. SUZANNE C Horticulture SPENCER. JANELLEE Accounting STALLBAUMER. MARY E General STEELE. MARYL. Pre-Vetennary Medicine SWARTZENDRUBER. CAROL A Dietetics TOWNSEND, AMY L Home Economics with Liberal Arts TURNER. DIANA KAY Home Economics UNRUH, JANICE E Home Economics Education Carbondale Junior Abilene Sophomore Goessel Junior Abilene Junior Topeka Junior Argonia Sophomore Frankfort . Freshman Burdick Freshman .Rocky Ford, CO Junior Goodland Senior Waverly Freshman Goessel Senior VISSER.ADELL Housing and Equipment WEDEL, VICKID Clothing and Retailing WILEY. CRYSTAL L. Urban Horticulture . WISE, PATRICIA A Physical Science YOUNG, CARRIE ANN Medical Technology Riley Senior Tonganoxie Senior Lawrence . . Junior . . . . Empona Senior McPherson Sophomore delta chi BARRETT, JOHN T Civil Engineering BERGNER, THOMAS W Crop Protection BOKERMANN.NEILC Business Administration BRANT. WES O Mechanical Engineering CAMPBELL. WILLIAMS Psychology CATO. C RICHARD Pre-Design Professions CRIST, KELLY J Ammal Science and Industry DAVIS. GARY R. General DAY, MICHAEL J Business FOSTER, JOHNS Business Administration .. FULKERSON. KEVIN L. . . Civil Engineering HAMLETT. CHARLES A Business Administration . . . .Hiawatha Senior Pratt Junior Overland Park Junior Luray Junior Kansas City . . Freshman Prairie Village Sophomore Scott City Freshman Kansas Cily Freshman Overland Park . Sophomore Norton Senior Manhattan Senior Derby . . Freshman HARTMAN. WILLIAM R Animal Science and Industry MASS. JOE Electrical Engineering HAYES. MARK R Pre-Forestry KNOWLES, CURTIS J Pre-Design Professions KOLEGA, ROBERT M Architecture MICK, PERRY J Architectural Engineering MILLER. ROBERT E Chemical Engineering MOORE. TIMOTHY R. Computer Science MOSLEY. KIMD Pre-Law MILL, WILLIAMS Radio and Television NOYES. BRAD A Radio and Television PALMER. MICHAEL L. Nuclear Engineering Preston Sophomore Lyons Sophomore Kansas City Freshman Salina Freshman St. Joseph. MO Junior Tipton Freshman Kansas City Freshman Junction City . . Sophomore Kansas City Sophomore Kansas City Senior Osborne Sophomore Derby . Sophomore REAM, MICHAEL D. Finance SONTAG. WILLIAM M Business STROUSE.DWIGHTL. Radio and Television . STUHR. JOHNC Psychology . . WARREN. STEVE R Business Wichita Sophomore Derby . Junior Merriam Senior Overland Park Sophomore Ottawa . Freshman sign on the line Little sisters always have to put up with big brothers the same is true at col- lege. At a paddle party, Delta Chi little sis- ters were ordered to obtain the signa- tures of Delta Chis or ... or ... or what? 318 delta chi delta delta delta ALLEN. CHRISTINE A Valley Center Special Education Junior ANDERSON. LAURA M Salma Art Freshman BELL. DEBORAH L Fort Scott Speech Pathology Junior BETTISON, JUDY L Leawood General Freshman BLYTHE, JANA B Manhattan Elementary Education Sophomore BOAND, VICKI A Prairie Village Elementary Education Junior BOSSLER ANN L Topeka General Freshman BREHM. REBECCA L Hays Clothing and Retailing Freshman BRIDGEWATER, SUSAN E Manhattan Elementary Education Sophomore BROADIE, ANN M Lamed Elementary Education Junior BROADIE, MARILYN K. Lamed Pre-Nursmg Sophomore BROWNE. REBECCA L Norton Political Science Freshman CASE DIANA L Marion English Education Sophomore CASEY, DONNA L Hays Recreation Sophomore CHARLES. CHARENE A Wichita Fashion Marketing . Freshman CLARK. SARA J Hays Accounting Sophomore COMER, PAMELA J Overland Park Fashion Merchandising Freshman DAVIS. CHERYL E Manhattan Clothing and Retailing Sophomore FIELD. AMY L Manhattan Family and Child Development Freshman FORE, JENNY L Basehor Physical Therapy Freshman FREEDING.CATHYA. Wichita History Freshman GOIN. NAN C Palatine. IL General Freshman GONTERMAN. PAM J Leawood Elementary Education Junior GUDIKUNST, PAM S Overland Park French and English Education Senior HALE. KAREN L Leawood Pre-Vetermary Medicine Freshman HANCOCK, KAREN J Topeka Graphic Design Junior HITZ. LOTTIE M Great Bend Accounting Sophomore HOCH.SYDA Wilson Fashion Design Junior HOGE, DEL G Shawnee Mission Interior Design Senior ISCH, ELLEN M Morrill Speech Senior ISCH. LISA I Morrill Accounting Sophomore JOHNSON. JANICE L Belle Plame Fashion Merchandising Junior JOHNSON. JULIE A Overland Park Family and Child Development . . Freshman KELLY, SHAUNA L Overland Park Speech Pathology and Audiology Junior KOHB, BECKY Stockton Veterinary Medicine Freshman KORB. TESSY K Stockton Secondary Physical Education Freshman LAUCK. DEBI D Topeka Accounting Sophomore LINE. NANCY S Shawnee Mission Early Childhood Education Junior ' LYNAM, PAT A. Burdett Office Administration Sophomore MALONEY, LUANNE E Shawnee Mission Social Work Senior MAUPIN, KIMBERLY A Manhattan Pre-Dentistry Sophomore McCUNE, LINDA D Stafford Journalism and Mass Communications Junior McMILLEN, GWEN S . Wichita Horticulture Sophomore MELHUS. MELINDA Concordia Speech Senior MILLER. KATHY A Manhattan Psychology Junior MODDRELL, NANCY A Wichita Medical Technology Sophomore MONK, GWEN A Overland Park Special Education Senior MONTGOMERY, NANCY J Leawood Elementary Education Senior delta delta delta 319 delta delta delta musically inclined Shakespeare and others lauded the romance of the moonlight serenade, but Romeo never had it so good. Tri Delts take a balcony stance to chivalrous chords. MOORE , KIMBERLY J Topeka Finance Sophomore MUCKENTHALER. TERRY M . Overland Park Accounting Sophomore NEDWED. JAN I Manhattan Interior Design Sophomore NORTON, SUSIE M Manhattan Physical Education Senior OETINGER. CYNTHIA L Tacoma.WA Clothing and Retailing Junior PETERS. C LEIGH . Wichita Interior Design Junior PHELPS, LOU ANN Normal, IL Clothing and Retailing Senior REAMES. DEBORAH E Leawood Family and Child Development Junior HEED, SALLY C Deertield, IL Food and Nutrition Senior RUCKER. DEANNA M Burdett Home Economics Sophomore RUMBLE. DEB A Great Bend Family and Child Development Junior SAGESER. SALLY A Overland Park Radio and Television Freshman SAGESER, SUSAN J Overland Park Clothing and Retailing Junior SAPP. ELLEN M Valley Center Recreation Sophomore SEAMAN. CINDY J Liberal Animal Science and Industry Sophomore SEAMAN, SUZANNE M Liberal Home Economics Freshman SILER, LISAS Turner Elementary Education Freshman SIMMONS, LEE ANN Olatne Elementary Education Junior SMITH, TERESA A Kansas City Secondary Education Senior SMITH. TRACEY L , Burlington Home Economics . Freshman SOMMER, CINDY G, Overland Park Business Freshman STIGALL, JAN A St. Joseph. MO Medical Technology Senior STOCKHAM, AUDREY L Salma Interior Design Freshman STREETER. JUDY A Palos Verdes. CA Physical Therapy Sophomore 320 delta delta delta SWENSON, DEBI R Salma Pre-School Education Senior THIES, SANDY S Salma Elementary Education Junior THOMAS, REBECCA J Overland Park Pre-School Education Senior UNGEHEUER, BETH L Centerville Clothing and Retailing Senior VOLKER, SUSAN L . Hays Elementary Education . . Freshman Early Childhood Education Senior WALTER, DEBRAL. . Great Bend Early Childhood Education Sophomore WEAVER. KAREN A Overland Park General Freshman WEIDENHEIMER. M BETH Kinsley Business Administration Freshman WIGGINS, ANNE E Minneapolis Elementary Education Sophomore WINKLER, NANCY C Salma Learning Disabilities Junior WOELK. TERESA D Rozel Home Economics Freshman WOELLHOF. DANAJ Oakhill Statistics Junior YOUNGQUIST, GAIL Miami, FL Architecture Senior delta delta delta 321 delta sigma phi ALISON. DALE ... Hal stead AL-MADANI, ABDALLAH A . Grain Science ARENSMAN MICHAEL G . Saudi Arabia Graduate Student Southfield Ml Chemical Engineering BAKER STEVEN W Sophomore Overland Park Pre-Veterinary Medicine BASTIAN. ROBERT C. . . Political Science BILBREY JOHNP Freshman Grand Haven, Ml Junior Overland Park Sophomore BLEISH STEVEN v Leawood COLE. STEVEN M. . . Milling Science and Management . CRUMP RAYMOND P . Auburn Sophomore P re- Veterinary Medicine CUMMINS, SCOTT Political Science DENKER, TERRY E. Freshman . Olathe Junior Pomona DERR. DONALD D Ate hi son DICKMAN. CHARLES E Journalism and Mass Communications DUNTON, DOUGLAS K Electrical Engineering DUNTON LYNN F Webb City, MO Sophomore Topeka Sophomore Manhattan FOSTER. DON M Building Construction GERBOTH DANNY L Manhattan Sophomore Pre-Design Professions GREIG DAVID R Sophomore Freshman GROSSENBACHER, JEFFERY A. Mechanical Engineering HAMBELTON, JOHN J Horticulture HAVER DAVIDP Bern Sophomore Shawnee Freshman Veterinary Medicine HOWE DAVID M Freshman Psychology INGRAM, JAMES R Sophomore JOHNSON. ROBERTS. Radio and Television . LeCLERC. BYRON W Junction City Junior Wichita Biology Junior LOBER, TERENCE A Leavenworth Political Science Senior MAHAN, JESSE H. Paragould, AR Horticulture Freshman MANN, GEORGE W Yorktown Heights, NY Physical Science Senior McGIVERN. MIKE R. Topeka Building Construction Sophomore METCALF.BILLL. Paola Pre-Veterinary Medicine Sophomore PEPOON, MICHAEL D.. English PEPOON. STEVE Radio and Television PIGIEL, JOHNP Architecture RASBY. RANDALL R. Veterinary Medicine REINHAROT, GREGG L. . Accounting REIST, RANDALL D. Paola Senior Paola Sophomore Bridgeport. CT Junior Sutherland. NB Junior Bison Senior Seneca Computer Science Senior ROBERTS. ALLEN W Architecture SCHONEWEIS. DWIGHT A Mechanical Engineering SMITH, KORD S Nuclear Engineering SMITH. STEPHEN D Fisheries and Wildlife Biology SMITH. WILLIAM L History STRATHMAN, TIMOTHY A Physical Education Columbia. MO Junior Manhattan Sophomore Rapid City, SD Senior Prairie Village Junior DeSoto Sophomore Rocklord, IL Senior STUMPFF. RONALD G DeSoto Agriculture Freshman STONE, DAVID R Manhattan Pre-Medicme Senior TORTORA, RICHARD A Syracuse, NY Construction Science Senior VANDYKE. DAVID Tonganoxie Fisheries and Wildlite Biology Freshman VELASQUEZ. NAT Garden City Civil Engineering Junior WALKER, ANTHONY C Manhattan Business Education Sophomore 322 delta Sigma phi WILSON. RODNEY L Pre-Vetennary Medicine WOLF, DAN W Civil Engineering Ha I stead Freshman Prairie Village Freshman The round table is now square but men still gather around it for deep discussion. However, Delta Sigs surely find their days a bit lighter than King Arthur did his knights. cozy camelot delta sigma phi 323 delta tau delta CHAPPELL, MARY BELLE ADRIAN, ROBERT M? Pre-Law ANDERSON, ERIK S Construction Science ANDERSON, MIKE Building Construction . . BABER, DOUGLAS L Public Administration BAIRD. JIM R Business BERGER.RICKN Pre-Law BLAKLEY.GLENR Business Administration BLATTNER, STUART E Physical Education BOGUE.GARYL General BRUCKER, RANDY Journalism and Mass Communications BUSER, WILLIAM D. Engineering Houseparent Smolan Senior Holton Freshman Holton Senior Derby Junior Logan Junior Atchtson Junior Atchison Freshman Rozel Senior Wichita Junior .Valley Center Senior Independence Junior CAREY, CALVIN M Business Administration CHEATHAM. THOMAS K Radio and Television CONRAD. KELLY E Accounting CON WAY. JOHN F Business Management COOK. CHARLES M Business COOPER. RICHARD D Business Sterling Senior Oklahoma City. OK Junior Clay Center Junior . . . .Overland Park Senior Lea wood Sophomore Overland Park Freshman a news snooze Among its attributes, the Collegian can provide shelter from rain and snow and at times, the noise of the Delta Tau Delta house. 324 delta lau delta COSSMAN. DOUGLAS! Horticulture CURRIE. CURTIS G Agronomy CURRIE, MICHAEL R. Dairy Production CURRIE, RALPH A Accounting DAVIS. CLARK H Political Science DIERKING, MARKC Business Administration DROWN, BRADFORD D. Radio and Television .. DUNNE, PATRICK J. . . . Marketing FARRINGTON, KIP E Civil Engineering FOLEY. ROBERT L Radio and Television FRENCH, RUSSELL W Crop Protection GALLAGHER. STEVEN P Pre-Forestry Baton Rouge. LA Sophomore Gypsum Sophomore Gypsum Senior Manhattan Senior Overland Park Junior Atchison Sophomore . .Overland Park Senior Manhattan Senior Chanute Sophomore Atchison Sophomore Sublette . Sophomore Topeka Freshman GERLACH, CARLR. Marketing HEFFEL, TIMH General HENDERSON. MARK W Pre-Dentistry HOFMEIER. DENNIS G Accounting HUMPHREY. JIM M Pre-Vetennary Medicine JEFFRIES, GREG A Political Science KELLER, MARK R Business Management .... KELLY. MICHAEL J General KENNEY.MARKB Engineering KNIGHT. JOEY D. Mechanical Engineering KROH, ROGER L Business Administration . . KUHN.STEVEA. Business LARSON, THAYNE A Agricultural Economics LIETZAN, CHRISTOPHER E. Accounting MARTIN. M. RAY Pre- Dentistry MARTIN. SCOTT J Business MclLHON, STEPHEN J Pre-Law MOORE, GREGORY D Fisheries and Wildlife Biology Leawood Senior Manhattan Freshman Prairie Village . . Sophomore Assana Junior Roeland Park Freshman Atchison Junior . . . Manhattan Senior Leawood Freshman Overland Park Freshman Salina Sophomore Merriam Senior Manhattan Sophomore Scandia Senior . . . .Clay Center Senior Overland Park Sophomore Attica . Junior . Des Moines, IA Senior Hollon . Sophomore MUELLER, LARRY H Marketing NOLAND, ROBERT C. Marketing ODELL, CHRIS L Pre-Dentistry OLIVER, MICHAEL P Pre-Law O ' NEAL. KELLY D Pre-Dentistry ORMISTON. ROCK A Agricultural Economics OTEY. JOSEPHS ' Business PARKER, MARSHALL D Accounting PARR, HOWARD F. Agronomy REDMOND. RICHARD A Marketing RICHARDS, DAN W. Business RIORDAN. ROBT Accounting ROGERS. DAVID M General ROYER. DOUG Business SANKEY, CHRIS Animal Science and industry SANKEY, LEE Agricultural Business SHERMAN, BRADS Animal Science and Industry . SLIFER, RICK D Recreation Overland Park Graduate Student . Fayetteville, AR Senior West wood Hills Freshman Shawnee, OK Junior Prairie Village Junior Kismet Sophomore Overland Park Freshman Overland Park Sophomore Rossville Sophomore Prairie Village Junior . Manhattan Sophomore Solomon Sophomore Manhattan Freshman Leawood Freshman Sterling Sophomore Sterling Senior Coldwater Senior Duncan, OK Fifth Year Student delta tau delta 325 delta tau delta Burdett Sophomore Gypsum . Sophomore Gypsum Junior Manhattan Freshman Salina Senior Salina Freshman Salina Junior Co Id water Senior Sabetha Junior Shawnee Mission Sophomore Coldwater Sophomore Des Moines, IA . Senior SMITH. GREG V Accounting STEIN. CHRIS Animal Science and Industry STEIN. DAVID E Agronomy STONE. BRUCE H Pre-Medicine SULLIVAN. GREGORY A. Business SULLIVAN. KEVIN F General THOLSTRUP DAVID B Agronomy THORNTON, ROGER D. Agricultural Economics TODD. DAVID M Civil Engineering VEREEN. WILLIAM N Pre-Medicine WAGNON, THOMAS L Agriculture WASKER, CHARLES F. Pre-Law WERNER, F. SCOTT Pre-Medicine WINGER. JOE A Marketing WISE, DICK A Construction Science WRIGHT, KEITH A Pre-Medicine ZILLMAN. JOHN J Business ZIPP. GARY L Animal Science and industry 326 delta tau delta Kansas City, MO Senior Prairie Village Junior Lawrence Senior Topeka Senior Leawood Fifth Year Studeni Overland Park Junior : delta upsilon ANDERSON, STEVEN E. . . Civil Engineering ARNOLD. JERRY W. . Animal Science and Industry BAUER, BRAD L Horticulture BAUMGARTNER, DAVID E Chemical Engineering BOKERMANN. BRIAN F Biology BOLERJACK, STEVEN M Architecture BOSWORTH.COLLISP. Electrical Engineering BRUMBAUGH, STEVEN T. Chemical Engineering . . . BRYAN. DANIEL W Business BUCK, FREDERICK E Geography CARTER, STEVE Accounting DAVIS. PHILIPS Economics Mentor Senior Ashland Freshman Burdett Junior Kansas City Sophomore Overland Park . .Sophomore Shawnee Junior Overland Park . .Junior . . Hutchinson Senior Topeka Sophomore . . Hutchinson Senior Wichita . Junior . Lyons Sophomore DRAKE, RICHARD L Agricultural Economics EBRIGHT. ALAN J Business Finance EDGERLEY. PAUL B Accounting EGBERT, DOUGLAS D. . Engineering . ERHARDT, LARRY D Electrical Engineering CRANBERRY, GEORGES. Fisheries and Wildlife Biology HAYDEN. RICHARD G. Psychology HAYNES, STEVES. Pre-Vetennary Medicine HEIMAN.TIML. . Architectural Engineering HENOCH, RICHARD B. . Elementary Education . . HOFFMANN, STEPHEN J. Pre-Law HURLEY, JAMES A. Civil Engineering Sterling Junior . . .Lyons . . Junior Overland Park Sophomore Dighton Sophomore Ellsworth Junior . . .Fairport.NY . Junior Wichita .Junior Topeka . . . Freshman Seneca Fitth Year Student Topeka Senior Overland Park .... Junior Glasco Sophomore JOHNSON. DAVID O. . Electrical Engineering JOHNSON, MICHAEL D Pre-Medicine . JONES, CLAY G. . Electrical Engineering JONES, CLIFTON C. . . Microbiology KERSHNER, CURTIS R General KRISS. PHILLIPS Marketing KUEBELBECK, RICKW Business KUTTER, DONALD L. Veterinary Medicine LEWIS, JOHN G Accounting MARSHALL, MARK L Architecture McGRANAGHAN. THOMAS J Business McNORTON. KEVIN E. . . General Hutchinson Graduate Student . . Lenexa Freshman . .Overland Park . . Junior . . . Manhattan Junior Scott City . . Freshman Prairie Village Junior Kansas City . . Sophomore . Empona . Sophomore Gardner Senior . . Mmneola Senior Overland Park Sophomore Topeka Sophomore MERILLAT. CHRIS H Construction Science MORRIS, JEFFERYB . Nuclear Engineering MOWRY, STEWART Pre-Medicine . . MULCH. GARY L. . . . Electrical Engineering MULLEN, KEVIN M Accounting ORLOFF, DOUGLAS F Journalism and Mass Communications PATRICK, KERRY L Economics PLANK. CRAIG A. Pre-Design Professions POTTER, BRADS Agricultural Economics PRATT. ROBERT D Pre-Vetennary Medicine REED, LARRY C Landscape Architecture SCOTT. CASEY M . Journalism and Mass Communications Topeka . . .Freshman . Topeka Freshman . .Manhattan Junior Scott City . . . Freshman . Hutchinson Senior . . . Shawnee Senior , . . . Leawood Senior . Wichita . .Junior Dighton . Freshman . Topeka . Sophomore . . Hutchinson Senior .Wichita . .Junior delta upsi Ion 327 delta upsilon tickling the ivories It is not uncommon to hear a piano playing in the background at the DU house. And maybe an occasional bass tiddletogoalong. SEILER.GUYM. Accounting SELL. RICHARD D Business SHEELY. MICHAEL R Animal Science and industry STEIDER.TOMW Civil Engineering STROBERG, JEFFERYA Industrial Engineering SWENSON, JIM W Business Administration TEETER. JOHN H Pre-Vetennary Medicine TENHOLDER, TIMOTHY N. Pre-Law THOMAS. DANIEL A Mathematics THOMPSON, TAD M Journalism and Mass Communications TOMPKINS. JOHNF Mechanical Engineering TSCHANNEN, BRUNO F Radio and Television .. Mount Hope Junior Pacific Grove. CA Sophomore Manhattan Junior Overland Park Sophomore Hutchmson Sophomore Topeka Junior Hutchmson Junior Topeka Sophomore Wmfield Freshman Manhattan Senior Prairie Village Junior . Overland Park . . . Senior TUCKER, KEITH D. . . . Civil Engineering VAIL. WILLIAM A Pre-Vetermary Medicine WALKER, TERRY L Music Education WALTERS, DELBERT A Pre-Vetermary Medicine WEBER, BILL F General WESTLUND, TERRY L Pre- Design Professions WILLIAMS, DENNIS M Pre-Design Professions WILSON, JON Political Science WILSON, MARK D Pre-Vetennary Medicine ZATEZALO. MITCHELL D Pre-Medicme ZEIGLER, STEVEN W Business Wichita Senior Wichita Freshman .Kansas City Senior Langdon Sophomore Hutchmson Freshman Kansas City. MO Freshman Kansas City, MO Junior lola Junior Mission Junior Kansas City Freshman Shawnee Mission Freshman 328 delta upsilon delta zeta JOHNSON, VEDA M Houseparent BARNES. SUE A Caldwell Accounting Sophomore BLANK, CHERYL M Hulchmson Home Economics Senior BROWN, ANNE K Prairie Village Business and Finance Sophomore BROWNELL.LOREE Topeka Pre-Vetennary Medicine Freshman BURNS, CHERIE Manhattan Office Administration Senior COLE, KATHRYN E Garnetl Horticulture Freshman EVERS, PAMELA S. Norton Theatre and Journalism ... Sophomore FARMER, FAITH A Manhattan English Education Freshman FERRIS, CONNIE A Kansas City Marketing Senioi GOBBER, JANA S Manhattan Retail Floriculture JuniO ' GREEN, PAMELA Y Overland Part. Elementary Education Junior HART, LAURA E Leawood Pre-Veterinary Medicine Freshman HATHAWAY, CYNTHIA A Kansas City Accounting Freshman HATHAWAY, MELISSA K Kansas City Home Economics Education Junior HOBBLE, DEBORAH F Wichita Political Science Senior HOL L IS, LAURA S, Prairie Village Pre-Veterinary Medicine Freshman HURT, LINDAL Ellis Elementary Education Senior KENAGY, LEIGH ANN Shawnee Mission Business Education Junior LEMAN, CARI S Sabetha Horticulture Junior MASTERS, CYNTHIA J Troy General Freshman MURRAY, JANINNE M Junction City Accounting . Freshman NEIBLING, MARJORIE M Highland Music Education Senior ROACH, REBECCA A Topeka Accounting Freshman RODERICK, AMANDA S Garden City Office Administration Sophomore ROWLAND. JANE E Topeka Fine Arts Sophomore SIMUNAC, EMILY J Baldwin Modern Language Freshman STADEL DEBORAH J Riley Architecture Junior TELTHORST.LISAA Topeka Nuclear Engineering Sophomore WALTERS. DONNA R Salma Education Freshman sentry duty Sun porches, balconies, and fire escape platforms offer the best in van- tage points. Whether scoping, catching rays, or eagerly waiting, DZs gather where the sun shines. delta zeta 329 farmhouse FRENCH. FAIRE BEBERMEYER, RYLAN J Music Education BERGER, LONNIED Animal Science and Industry BUCK, JOHN B Animal Science and Industry BOYINGTON, JOHN W Animal Science and Industry - BRENSING. RICHARD H Animal Science and Industry BRINKMAN, BRUCE E Business COTT, RICHARD H Animal Science and Industry COTT.THOMASW Agronomy DETERS. DAVID G Animal Science and Industry DREITH, JON R Animal Science and Industry ENGLER. VERLYNR Agricultural Economics .... Houseparent Manchester Sophomore Waterville Sophomore Andale Junior . . Goodfand Senior Stafford Sophomore .Arkansas City Senior . . .Clay Center Senior Clay Center Junior Manhattan Sophomore Randolph Junior Deerf icld .Senior ETHERIDGE, WARREN A Physical Education FLESKE, DAVID H Accounting FRASIER, DUANE W Agronomy FRASIER. JOEL Animal Science and Industry FRITZEMEIER, RANDY J Agricultural Economics GARTEN. CASEY D Agricultural Education GARTRELL GREGORY A Agricultural Engineering GOOD, CRAIG A Animal Science and Industry GURNSEY, MICHAEL A Interior Architecture HENRY, TERRY W Animal Science and Industry . HILDEBRAND. DONALD S Agricultural Economics HORNBAKER, KENNETH O Agronomy Medicine Lodge Junior Gartield Senior . Sharon Springs Senior Woodrow. CO Freshman Stafford Sophomore Abilene Sophomore Phillipsburg Junior Manhattan Senior Wichita Senior Randolph Senior Stafford Junior Stafford Freshman HOSKINSON. REX A, Pre-Vetermary Medicine JACKSON. BRIAN C. Agricultural Economics JULIAN. ARLYND Agricultural Education KNOPP. MAX E Agricultural Economics LINDSHIELD. CHARLES A Electrical Engineering LINVILLE, RANDALL Agricultural Economics . . . Stafford Sophomore Elsmore Junior Manhattan Sophomore Chapman Sophomore Smolan Sophomore . . Holcomb Senior MAYDEW, BRIAN J Agriculture Economics MAYER GREG L Accounting McKINNEY. WAYNE A Agricultural Mechanization McNICKLE.TIM A Agricultural Mechanization McWILLIAMS, ROB L Architecture MICHELS. GARY L Animal Science and Industry Lebanon Senior Gypsum Sophomore Weskan Junior Stafford Senior . Sharon Springs Senior Hunter Junior MILLER, KIM A Landscape Horticulture MUNDEN, DAVID G Fisheries and Wildlife Biology MUNSON, G. RICHARD Agricultural Economics NULIK, RODNEY L Agricultural Education NUSS. LYMAN L Agronomy O ' CONNOR. WILLIAM M General OLSON. DAN S Electrical Engineering PARKER JAMES W Food Science and Industry RAMSEY. JAMES W Agricultural Education RIFFEL. STEVEN K Animal Science and industry ROTH, ROBERT A Animal Science and Industry . RUNDLE. W CRAIG Civil Engineering Burdett Senior Wichita Senior . .Junction City Senior .Arkansas City Senior Wilson Junior Blame Sophomore Morganville Senior Mulvane Junior Arkansas City Sophomore Stockton Junior Green Senior Axteir Junior 330 farmhouse Abtlene Freshman Weskan Sophomore Mulvane Senior Hoisington Junior Colwich Junior Wamego Senior Warnego Sophomore Medicine Lodge Senior Amencus Sophomore Stafford Senior Emporia Freshman Hiawatha Sophomore SCANLAN MARKK Milling Science and Management SLOAN, CRAIG S Pre Veterinary Medicine SPEER, ROBERT W Agricultural Education STOSKOPF , DEAN Crop Prelection SUFLl.FNTROP. RICHARD J Pre-Forestry SYLVESTER, LEON E Animal Science and Industry SYLVESTER, NOEL D Music tducation THOMPSON, STEVEN L. . . Computer Science VAN GUNDY. MIKE W Agriculture VOLKER.BOYDL Agricultural Economics . . WALK[R. GARYL Pre-Vetennary Medicine WEAVER. JACK R Agricultural Economics WEEDLN, TERRY L Animal Science and Industry WILSON, RONALD J Agricultural Education Like shelved trophies, those myriad late-night jam sessions are remembered and reflected upon. And like the gathering dust awards, the conversation gradually loses its brilliance as the hours wear on. farmhouse 331 ford hall BECNEL HARRY P BECNEL. MARY ANN ADAMS. JANEEN A Accounting ADAMS. JODY E Fashion Marketing ADAMS. MALINDAM Anlhropology AFFOLTER JACLYND Physical Education ALMOND, DEBRA A Interior Design ANDERSON DENISEK Floriculture ANDREW CINDY L Music Education ANDREW. DEBORAH A Physical Education ANNAN. ALYSSA L Medical Technology ARMSTRONG. JODY Family and Child Development ARNONE. USAL Biochemistry ASH.DEBRAK Fashion Marketing BABINGTON, WENDY L Clothing and Retailing BAJICH. HELEN General BARANCIK. KATHY M Business BARNETT. LINDA J Pre-Design Professions BEL L.BARBARA A Pre-Medicme BENNETT. NEISHAL Pre-Law BERGKAMP, EVELYN S. Horticulture BERGREN. JONI L Business BERKLEY. JACOUE K Physical Therapy BETZOLD. BARBARA A Institutional Management BICHELMEYER. JANE C Pre-School Education BILY, CYNTHIA A Chemical Engineering BLACKABY, CHRISTINA L Family and Child Development BLACKMER, REBECCA A Education BLAIDA, KATHRYNA Elementary Education BLEW. NANCY K Business Education BLISS, ELIZABETHA Business BLOCK. JAYNES Business BOEHM, SHARON A Clothing and Retailing .... BOHN. JAN R Home Economics BOULA KIME Accounting BRANDENBERGER. JAMIE L Elementary Education Direclor Director Freeport Freshman McPherson Freshman Salma Sophomore MorganviHe Freshman Shawnee Mission Senior Abilene Freshman Kansas City Sophomore Kansas City Junior Onaga Freshman Overland Park Graduate Student Topeka Freshman Newton Freshman Overland Park Sophomore Kansas City Freshman Shawnee Mission Freshman Wichita Freshman Holton Freshman Newton Sophomore .Garden Plain Senior Kiowa Freshman Abilene Sophomore Nokomis. IL Junior Shawnee Sophomore Wichita Freshman .Kansas City Senior Kansas City Sophomore Lea wood Freshman Mount Hope Sophomore Bonner Springs Junior Ankeny, IA Sophomore Olathe Senior Eskndge Freshman McPherson Freshman Mount Hope Juntor BRANDSBERG, JILL L Biology BRINKMAN, CHERIE A General BRITEGAM. JOANNA J General BROOKS, SANDRA A Fashion Marketing BROOKS, SUSAN J Home Economics BUNCK.DE BORAH L Family and Child Development BURNETT. SARAH L Home Economics with Liberal Arts BUTIN. CONSTANCE S Home Economics CAMPBELL. CONNIES Elementary Education CAMPBELL, JAN L Fashion Marketing CAMPBELL. JUDITH A Architecture CANNELL. VICKIL Modern Language Olathe Freshman Topeka Freshman Salma Freshman Newton Freshman Horton Sophomore Silver Lake Sophomore Kansas City Junior Hafstead Freshman Atchison Sophomore .... Cheshire, CT Senior Overland Park Filth Year Student Montrose. CO Junior 332 lord hall CANNY. REBECCA R Home Economics Education CARLSON. JILINDAL Home Economics CARPENTER. JANET I Accounting CASTER. CATHE A Home Economics CHAFFEE. NANCY Elementary Education CHAPIN, DENAL Pre-Vetennary Medicine Johnson .Junior Little River Freshman Shawnee Mission Freshman Overland Park Freshman Overland Park Junior Wichita Freshman CHARLES. CHERYL A Journalism and Mass Communications CHARTRAND. LUCY A Humanities CHEATUM. JODYANN Family and Child Development CLINE, KYML Elementary Education COMPAAN, JAMIE L Gener COOVER, MICHELLE M Dietetics COWEN. SHIRLEY F Education COX. LESLIE L Pre-Design Professions CRAWFORD, GAY V General CROCKETT, GAYLE A General CROSS. DEBORAL Home Economics Education CROUCH. MARTHA L Elementary Education CURTRIGHT, PAULA R Accounting DAMMANN, KARENS Retail Floriculture DAVIS, DENISE Fashion Marketing DAVIS. FAWN L Fine Arts DAVIS. GAYLE L Pre-Velennary Medicine DAVIS. RAMONA L Fashion Marketing Leawood Junior Marysville Sophomore Junction City Freshman Esbon Freshman Jetrnore Freshman Overland Park Freshman ford hall 333 ford hall DAVIS, SHERRY L Elementary Education DAY, CYNTHIA J Political Science DEMO. THERESEM Clothing and Retailing DENNIS, SUSAN J Speech Pathology DILLON, JOAN M Early Childhood Education DITTEMORE. JONI L Journalism and Mass Communications DLABAL, ANGELA D Physical Therapy DOHERTY, KATHLEEN M Pre-Vetermary Medicine DORAN, JANET L Interior Design DUNBACK. JOY E Pre-Veterinary Medicine DUNLAP. SHERRY M Modern Language DYER. LYNN A Elementary Education EHRLICH. JOANNA L Special Education EKART.KIMBERLY A Pre-Nursing ELLSWORTH, DEBORAH D Dietetics and Institutional Management EVANS, ELIZABETHI Pre-Vetennary Medicine EVANS. JAN K Mathematics EVANS, KATHLEEN Physical Education EWING, JANICE L Home Economics Education . . FABRIZIUS. M JANICE Fashion Marketing FANKHAUSER. CAROL A Accounting FARR, JOANE. Fashion Design FAUBION. LU ANNE Pre-Nursing FINNIGIN, BRENDAM Foods and Nutrition Mulhnville Junior Lincoln . Freshman Overland Park Junior Phillipsburg Freshman Hope Freshman Severance Sophomore Ellsworth Freshman Mercerville, NJ Freshman Macksville Freshman Belleville Freshman Olathe Sophomore . Caney P ' eshman Mission Sophomore Henngton Sophomore Wichrta Freshman Overland Park Junior Lyons Freshman Hutchmson Junior Independence Senior Hutchinson Freshman Elmdale Freshman Derby Junior Smith Center Sophomore Beattie . . .Freshman FITCH, JULIE K Caldwell General . . .Freshman FORD. NANCY A Wakefield Home Economics with Liberal Arts Junior FRANTZ, DOREEN K Sahna Speech Pathology Junior FRENCH, BRONA S. Sublette Elementary Education Freshman FRICK.SUZIL. . Sahna Floriculture . Freshman FRIEBUS, MELANIE A Salina Home Economics . . Freshman FROMHOLTZ, CINDY M . Shawnee General Freshman FULLER. CAROL D Wichita Business Administration Freshman GARINGER. SUSAN L. . . Buhler Education Sophomore GATZ, CHARLA K McPherson Pre-Law Freshman GAUDREAU. SUZANNE Wichita Physical Education Sophomore GAUNCE, CANDEE L. Kansas City Secondary Education . Sophomore GEORGE. ANNE Colby Pre-Physical Therapy . Sophomore GIBSON, BARBARA M Salina Medical Technology Sophomore GILLIAM. PEGGY A Greenleal Agricultural Engineering Senior GODFREY, JANNA L Lyons Social Work Freshman GOERING. DIANE S Lyons History Freshman GOULD. SAUNDRA E . Farmmgdale. NJ Fashion Design . Freshman GRAFF. BARBARA J Manenthal General Sophomore GREENE, JUDY L Overland Park Family and Child Development Freshman GROSSARDT, ELLEEN E Clallin General Freshman HAMMA.JULIEA Caldwell General Freshman HANCHETT. TARA S Salina Physics . Sophomore HARLIN. MAUREEN C Overland Park Business Sophomore 334 ford hall HARRINGTON, NANCY K Overland Park HATTRUP. DARLENE Kinsley HAWKINS, TRUDY J Business HEDGER MARSHAL McPherson Freshmah Secondary Education HEIMAN JUDI M Freshman Baileyville HEIMER, KATHYA Pre-Nursmg HENDERSON SHERILYNS Merriam Freshman Dietetics HENG. MARILYN L. Business HENKE NANCY J Junior . . . Liberal Sophomore HENSLER, PATRICIA J Lenexa HENTZLER, CAROL L Interior Design . . . HERBERS, SUSAN K Junior Rose Hill HERNANDEZ, OLIVIA B Overland Park HESS CONNIE J Family and Child Development HEVERMANN PAMELAS Junior Physical Therapy HICKS, DIANE L Mount Hope HICKS, JUDITH A. Early Childhood Education . HIGGINS JANEM . Little River . Freshman Journalism and Mass Communications HILL MARYS Freshman Family and Child Development HOENK KAREN A Freshman HOLCOMB. SUZI G Hutchmson HORNECKER. SUSAN L Topeka HORNER. KIMBERLYC Shawnee HOUGHTON LINDA K Consumer Interest HUMES DEANNC Junior ISENBERG CAROL E Overland Park ISENBERG. MARGIE E Home Economics Education JACQUES PAULA R Overland Park . . Sophomore Political Science JAMES JONI K Sophomore Wichita General JENKINS, MARGARET J . Freshman Prairie Village Freshman JENSEN MARJORIEA JOHN. JERRIANNEG Argonia JOHNSON DEBBIE S General JOHNSON KRIS G Freshman Wichita Business Education JOHNSON, LESLIE D Home Economics JOHNSON SUSAN J . Freshman Ate hi son Sophomore Family and Child Development JOHNSTON, BRENDAS Elementary Education . JOHNSTON PAM J .... Junior Goodland Sophomore Clothing and Retailing JONES DEBRA E Freshman General JONES, JANA M Accounting JOYCE ANN Freshman Washington Sophomore Ulysses Special Education KAUFFMAN NOREEN H Freshman . . Abilene Social Work KAUFMAN NATHALEA J. Sophomore Great Bend Math Education Senior KELLER CHERYL J Halstead Senior KILBY, PAMELA J. Physical Education KILGORE. TERRI Family and Child Development KING. DEBORAH J. Family and Child Development KLENKE.SUEM . . .Wichita Sophomore Roeland Park Sophomore Newton Freshman Hutchinson Junior lord hall 335 ford hall sticky situation It ' s not exactly like sitting in front of a blazing, stone fireplace but a candle gets the job done. Improvising Ford resi- dents treat themselves to the luxury of a smoky, melted marshmallow snack. KNIPPER.MARYB Physical Education KNOEBBER, ELIZABETH M Elementary Education KOMIN. KATHRYN M Accounting . . KONGS. NANCY K General KOSSOY, FAITH S Bakery Science and Management KOSTELEC, MAUREEN A Accounting KRAFT. KATHRYN L. . . . . . Home Economics . . KRAISINGER. SUSAN K . Mathematics KREHBIEL. PEGGY A Commercial Art KROENING, MARYL Early Childhood Education KRUEGER, KATHY A Fashion Marketing KUBIE. DIANE C Animal Science and Industry Shawnee Freshman Shawnee Freshman Overland Park Freshman Wet mo re Freshman St Louis, MO Sophomore Kansas City Sophomore Elmhurst, IL . Freshman Pratt Freshman Kingman Senior Overland Park Junior . Yates Center Senior Mernam Freshman KURTZ. SUE L General LADNER.KRISTYL. . Elementary Education LALLY. KATHERINEM. Home Economics and Journalism LANGTON.CATHLEENJ Animal Science and Industry LEHNER, PAMELA J Home Economics Education . . . LEWIS, DEE A Home Economics Education . . 336 lord hall . Overland Park Freshman . . Solomon Freshman Kansas City Freshman Perry . Freshman Shawnee Senior . Sharon Springs Senior It LEWIS, JANET M Business Administration LEWIS, LISAS Fashion Marketing LEWIS, SHANNON M Clothing and Retailing LINDAU, MARYR Elementary Education LINSCOTT. SHERRY A Elementary Education LOFLIN, JOANN A Interior Design . Wichita Sophomore Scott City . . Freshman Eureka Sophomore Shawnee Mission Freshman Atchison Sophomore Sllah nior .Ogall .Sen LONG.LYNA Interior Design LOWRY. TAMARA R Natural Resource Management LUCK. JANET K Home Economics Education MACKE, PATRICIA A. . General MAECHTLEN, MICHELLE S Pre-Nursmg MALONE. KATHLEEN A. General MARR. PATTY Fashion Design MARTIN, JACKIE A Family and Child Development MARTIN, NANCY A Family and Child Development MASTERSON, CYNTHIA K Home Economics MATHEWS, D LEANNE Accounting MAUPIN. MICHELE A Dietetics and Institutional Management Eureka Senior Topeka . Sophomore . . . Lincoln Sophomore Plamville Sophomore . Clearwater Freshman Overland Park Sophomore Overland Park . Freshman Assana . . Freshman Olathe Senior Shawnee Mission Sophomore Sharon Freshman Hays . .Junior MAYHEW. CYNTHIA A Elementary Education MCAFEE, CHERYL L Pre-Design Professions . McAULIFFE, SUSAN B Special Education McFALL, NANCY R. Special Education McGRATH, JULIA A Dietetics McKEE.JUDYA Family and Child Development McROBERTS. JEANETTE M Pre-Vetermary Medicine MILLER. KATHYW Clothing and Retailing MLINEK, WENDIE , . Home Economics MOORMAN, CATHERINE A Speech MOORS, MARYC Accounting . . MORGENSTERN, PAMELAS. Elementary Education . MORRIS, M FRAN Special Education MOSER THERESA K. Ofdce Administration MUSE.RISAK. Elementary Education MYERS, KATHLEEN A Early Childhood Education NEUFELD, JOLENES Medical Technology NEVINS. LAUREL A Physical Therapy Hutchmson Junior .Wichita . .Sophomore . Shawnee Mission Senior Wichita . Freshman Overland Park Junior Brewster Senior .Silver Lake Sophomore Prairie Village Junior St Francis Freshman . Lyons . . . Freshman McP herson Freshman Hoismgton Freshman NIGHTENGALE. CATHY L. Chemical Engineering NIGHTENGALE, PEGGY J. Education NORMAN. SARA J Animal Science and Industry . O ' BRIEN, GINNY Liberal Arts OTTE. JANE M Family and Child Development PACE.CAMILLIAA Physical Therapy PAGE. BRENDAK Physical Therapy PAINTER, KRISTIE A Bakery Science and Management PARKS, WENDY L Mathematics PAULICH, CHERYL L. Elementary Education PEARCE. SHARON K General POLSON. LISAC Interior Design . Minneapolis Junior . . Tribune Sophomore Sublette Freshman Overland Park . . Sophomore Newton Freshman Overland Park Sophomore Burns Freshman . . . .Cedar Point Sophomore Scott City Junior Leawood Sophomore Herington Freshman Washington, DC Sophomore Herington Freshman Shawnee Mission Junior Leawood Sophomore Troy Junior Sedan . . . . Freshman Halstead , Freshman ford hall 337 ford hall POWERS, JEAN M Home Economics PRESTA. PAULAS Pre-School Education PRICE. LEAH S Animal Science and industry PRINGLE.BETHG Animal Science and Industry PYPES. ELIZABETH R Pre-Pharmacy QUINN, TERESA A Elementary Education REBER. CAROL L General REDFIELD. LISAJ Physical Education REED, JANE A Elementary Education REED. KATHLEEN M Physical Education REED. ROBIN R Microbiology REED. SANDRA L Elementary Education REG1ER. KRISTINEL Medical Technology REID, SUSAN A Medical Technology REITZ, JUDYK Business RICE. LETITIAA General RICHARDSON. KATHY L General RIZZA, KATHERINEG Home Economics ROBERTS. CINDAL Pre- Veterinary Medicine ROWLAND. VERAV Horticulture RUSCO. RHONDA L Fashion Marketing RUTLEDGE.CINTHIAS Pre-Nursmg SAMUELSON. JOYCE A Accounting SANDMEYER. LISAC Journalism and Mass Communications SANDY, MARCIAC Home Economics SASENICK.SHERYLM Business SCANLAN, VICKI L Accounting SCHERER. LISAC Art SCHLUETER.LISAM Pre-Dentistry SCHMIDT, YVONNE K Home Economics Education Great Bend Freshman Scott City Sophomore Perry Sophomore Yates Center Freshman Prairie Village Sophomore . . . Shawnee Senior Newton Freshman Hardtner Freshman Topeka Freshman Salma Freshman Lawrence Junior Wetmore Freshman Halstead Junior Leawood Sophomore Medicine Lodge Freshman Overland Park Freshman Salma Sophomore Halstead Freshman Wmtield Sophomore Lenexa Sophomore Great Bend Freshman Dover Sophomore Overland Park Sophomore Topeka Freshman Overland Park Sophomore Overland Park Sophomore Agra Freshman Wichita Freshman Overland Park Freshman Hillsboro Senior SCHNEIDER. BRENDAJ Physical Education SCHOAP. LARIE Consumer Interest SCHROEDER, LYNN Y Home Economics Education SCHROEDER. SHARl J Pre-Vetennary Medicine SCHUETTE, SHARON S Political Science SCHULLER, MARYL Physical Therapy SCHWARTZ. JILL R General SCHWEERS. JANC Home Economics SEDLACEK. JANE E History and Political Science SELEY, DEBRAJ Accounting SHANKS, LORI M General SHAW, JANE E Physical Science SHELITE. BELINDA K Family and Child Development SHIELDS. MARTHA M Home Economics with Liberal Arts SIEBERT. SANDRA K Engineering SIEMENS. CYNTHIA R Animal Science and Industry SIMARI. GAIL E Home Economics Education SKOCH. JANET A Retail Floriculture 338 ford hall Sumrnerfield Junior Cottonwood Falls Sophomore . . . . Pretty Prairie Senior Valley Center Freshman Manhattan Sophomore Salma Freshman Hutchmson Freshman Overland Park Freshman Hanover Sophomore Abilene Sophomore Lenexa Freshman Lakm Freshman Anthony Junior Olathe Junior Prettv Frame Freshman Halstead Sophomore Overland Park Junior Baileyville Sophomore SMITH, CONNIE D Floriculture SMITH, JOYCE E Adult and Community Counseling SNYDER, JILL K General SORENSEN. SUSAN E Elementary Education SPARKE, JERRI A Home Economics STAPLETON, CARRIE E. . . . Home Economics and Journalism . Wichita Freshman Kansas City Graduate Student Auburn Freshman Ness City Sophomore Prairie Village Freshman . Kansas City, MO Senior Bonner Springs Freshman Seattle. WA Junior Overland Park Freshman Hutchinson Freshman Downs Sophomore Hutchinson Freshman Abilene . . Freshman Kansas City Sophomore Kipp . . Freshman Newton . Freshman Bonner Springs Freshman Salina , .Junior STOKESBURY, DEBRA A Genera STONE, LOUISE A Dietetics and Institutional Management STOUT. KAREN A Pre-Forestry . STOUT. MARY L Engineering STREIT. NADINEJ. Textiles Research STROH, CYNTHIA L Music Education STRONG, TERRESA M. Pre-Veterinary Medicine STUMP, SANDRA K Labor Relations SUNDGREN, LINDA D Horticultural Therapy SWANSON, JEANETTE M General TEWELL. MARIAN P. . . . Computer Science THOMAS. KIMBERLY A, Elementary Education lord hall 339 ford hall THOMAS. I FSLEF K Business THOMEN. SHIRLEY K Computer Science TOPLIFF BECKY A Home Economics with Liberal Arts TRAVIS, CHRISTY I Pre-Nursmg UEBELHART.CRISA Fashion Design UMPHREY, ELIZABETH C Journalism and Mass Communications UPTON. L ELLEN Pre-Nursmg VAN GUNDY. DIANE E Special Education VENN TERRI K Medical Technology VENNEMAN BETTlE A Fashion Marketing VOCK. DIANE S Accounting VOGELMAN. TRESA D Bakery Science and Management WAETZIG VALERIE L General WALLACE LEESAM Health and Physical Education WALLERIUS. KAREN A Business WALTERS. AMY L Physical Education WATKINS. HOLLY G Pre-Oesign Professions WAUGH. MARCIA L Business WEISHAAR. ELIZABETH A Pre-School Education WEISS. JO ANN Elementary Education WEISS. SUSAN M General WELLER. LINDA J General WENDT. SANDRA C Elementary Education WENGER. MELANIE LYNN Business Finance WESSELMANN. MICHEt.E M Business WESSON CYNTHIA A Elementary Education WESTERHOLD. DEBORAH A Pre-Design Professions WHERRY MARTHA L Fine Arts WHITE. CHERYL J Conservation WHITE, DEBORAH L Music Education . Sprmgtield. VA Sophomore Gardner Freshman Goodland Sophomore Newton Sophomore Overland Park Freshman Salma Freshman Overland Park Freshman Ellsworth Freshman Mission Freshman Praine Village Junior Shawnee Mission Sophomore Burns Sophomore Wakarusa Freshman Barnard Sophomore Salina Freshman Topeka Freshman Wichita Sophomore Goodland Sophomore Valley Falls Sophomore Garden City Junior Overland Park Sophomore Gypsum Freshman Hermgton Sophomore Newton Freshman Overland Park Freshman Kansas City Junior St Louis. MO Freshman Wichita Junior Topeka Freshman Colby Senior WHITE. PAULA F General WIENCK. LINDA R Elementary Education . WILLIAMS. DEBORAH J Pre-Vetermary Medicine WILLIAMS. EILEEN P Health WILLIAMS. JERRILEE Horticulture WILLIAMS. KRISTI A Applied Music WILLIS. ROSALIN Special Education WILSON. CARRIE A Business Management WISE. TERESA A Nuclear Engineering WISNER, DIANA L. Physical Education . . YATES. KATHLEEN A Physical Therapy YOUNG. ANNL Home Economics Caldwell Freshman Barnes Junior Eskndge freshman Overland Park Freshman Abilene Sophomore Topeka Freshman Kansas City Junior Hutchinson Junior Abilene Freshman .Shawnee Mission Senior Prame Village Freshman Kinsley Junior YOUNG. CINDY J Physical Education YOUNG. SUSAN M Fashion Marketing ZWICK BRENDAK Pre-Nursmg Pretty Prairie Freshman Overland Park Freshman Sterling Freshman 340 ford hall gamma phi beta ANDREWS, KATHY J Journalism and Mass Communications BAALMAN. KAREN M Secondary Education BARKER, DEBRAK General BARRETT. LAURA L Recreation BERGER, CARLA A Business BRAUN, DEBORA J Physical Therapy . . . Kansas City Senior Menlo Freshman Manhattan Freshman Kansas City Sophomore . . . Atchinson Senior Atchinson Sophomore CHAMBLISS, TERRY A Lawrence CHINN. JANELLEK Elementary Education CLARK. CRISTAC General CONNOR. BRENDAC Interior Design CORBIN. CINDY Recreational Therapy DALLMAN, NANCY C Physical Therapy DANIELS, KATE . . Wichita Freshman Norton Freshman . . Prairie Village . . Sophomore Leawood Junior . . .Prairie Village .Sophomore DEINES, JANETS Pre-Vetennary Medicine DEMBSKI, JANEL. . . . Garden City Sophomore Recreational Therapy DEMING. SHAWN D. Pre-Design Professions DIZMANG. BELINDA G Home Economics DOMBAUGH, DENA R . . Hutchmson Freshman . . Leoti Sophomore Wichita DOWNING. JONIR General DUNNE. KAREN A. Physical Education EDGERLEY, SUSAN English Overland Park Sophomore Manhattan Freshman Overland Park EGAN. CHRISTINE M. Business Administration ERICKSON, DEBRAJ Pre-Design Professions EVERETT, TERESA L. Physical Education GAMBA, JULIE A. . Salma Junior Assana Junior Hutchmson Freshman Accounting GARDNER, REBECCA C Dietetics Senior Derby Senior GLOTZBACH, SUSAN M Business Management GRAY. BARB J Medical Technology HARPSTER. LESLIES. Fashion Merchandising HASSIG, MARILYN Home Economics Leaven worth Junior Overland Park Sophomo re . Prairie Village Freshman . . Kansas City Freshman number, please A phone call obviously isn ' t always made on a private line. Though it ' s some- what of a close call, the Gamma Phis evi- dently find operating a party line more conducive to conversation. gamma phi beta 34 1 gamma phi beta HENDERSON, CAROL W Journalism and Mass Communications HENDERSON. SUSAN R General HOGERTY, KATHRYN A Education JONES, NANCI K English Education KARST, CATHY R. Recreation Overland Park Junior Overland Park Freshman Leawood Senior Overland Park Junior Manhattan Sophomore KELLY, NANCY S Leawood Special Education . . . Senior KERB, PATRICIA A Wichita Family and Child Development Senior KILL. COLLEEN P. Overland Park Consumer Interest Sophomore KISSING, MICHELE K Overland Park Medical Technology Freshman KNECHT, LINDA K Shawnee Mission Social Science Senior KOEPKE, LESLIE A Wichita Social Work Senior KUNZ. THERESA Prairie Village General Freshman LEE, TANAS. . Leoti Recreation Sophomore McKEE, CHARLOTTE A Colby Pre-Nursmg Sophomore MERRIFIELD, CAROL L Leawood Recreation Senior OUSDAHL. KIMBERLY J. Shawnee General Freshman PAGE, PAMELA R. Wichita Journalism and Mass Communications Sophomore PARKER, KIM J. Russell Physical Education Freshman PARSONS, MARTY L .Wichita Recreation Sophomore PATRICK, KAY D Leawood Statistics Junior PAULSEN.DEANAC. . Stafford P re -Dentistry Junior PAYNE, KAREN Overland Park Fashion Merchandising Sophomore PETERSON, TANNAR Macksville Medical Technology Freshman REUSSER, JANET K Viola Physical Education Senior ROBBEN, MARY A Oakley Elementary Education , Senior RONNING, LUCI L Overland Park Mechanical Engineering Senior ROOKS. MALLORY A Manhattan Pre-Velermary Medicine Junior SAUNDERS, JAN A Wichita Pre-Law Senior SCHROCK, SUSAN R Kiowa Art Education Senior SCHWARTZKOPF.LEE ANN Ness City Home Economics Freshman SHORT. KRISTI D Journalism and Mass Communications SLOAN, MICHELE E Consumer Interest SNOW. CINDY M Speech Pathology STANTON, BARBARA A Family and Child Development STEPHENSON. JANET S Dietetics STOCKTON. MARY D Consumer Interest THOMPSON, TONI M Fashion Merchandising TOWNSEND, SU M . . Recreation TRAPP. DEBORAH L Psychology VARNEY, SUSAN R. Computer Science WINDSOR. LYNN Pre-Nursmg . WINGER. JANE A General Wichita Sophomore Overbrook Senior Wichita Junior . Shawnee Mission Senior Prairie Village Sophomore Leawood Sophomore McPherson Freshman Leoti Junior Rochester. NY Freshman Manhattan Junior Atchison Junior Prairie Village Freshman WOOD, SUZANNE E Prairie Village Elementary Education Senior YEAGER, NANCY L Norton Interior Design Senior ZATEZALO, LINDA L Kansas City Math Education Sophomore 342 gamma phi beta now hall ABERLE.JEANETTES . . Interior Design . ADAMS, CYNTHIA J. General ALDRICH.LISAK. Pre-Design Professions . ALUMBAUGH, JANET Psychology . . ANDERSON, ANNETTE K. , Food Science and Industry ANDERSON. DEBBIE R. Physical Therapy ANDERSON, KIRK B Microbiology ARMSTRONG, MECHELLE M. Physical Education ASBURY, CINDY L Special Education . . ASPELIN, NYLAJ Psychology .... ATTEBERRY, KIM R. . . . History . . BAHRE, SUSAN M Elementary Education BANKS, CAROL A Family and Child Development BARBER, JULIE A Medical Technology BARE, MARK M.. ., Nuclear Engineering BARTROM, KREGEfJE E Dietetics BASOM. TERESA R Retail Floriculture BEATTY. KAREN S Physical Education BERRY, RALPH C Environmental Science . . . BICHEL, MARK A Pre-Design Professions BIEBERLY, DAVID D Pre-Design Profession .... BLANDING, JONI M Sociology BLOCK, JANET J Pre-Veterinary Medicine BOOTMAN. NANCY D Family Economics . Troy . . Freshman Frankfort . Freshman Wichita . . .Sophomore Overland Park . Freshman . . . Belleville Sophomore . Hugoton . . . Freshman Wheaton, IL Senior . . Onaga Sophomore . Montgomery, AL Freshman Dwight Sophomore Lamed Freshman . . .Lyons Sophomore BRECHEISEN, KURTD. General . . . BRIGHT, BARIL. Home Economics BRINGHAM, LINDA L. . Crop Protection BROCK, SCOTT E Pre-Veterinary Medicine . BROWN. RHONDA J. . . Interior Design BUCHNER.MARCEEL. . Pre-Veterinary Medicine . BUEHNE, JANICE S Early Childhood Education . . BULBA. MICAELA Pre-Veterinary Medicine BUNCH, DEBRAE. . Fisheries and Wildlife Biology . BURRIS.JILLM Pre-Nursing BUSENITZ, DAVID L Mechanical Engineering BUTLER. RETHAA Psychology . . . CALDWELL. LOVINAM. . Retail Floriculture . . . CAMPBELL, CHRISTOPHER C. Physical Education . . . CARRIER, DONNA S Pre-Design Professions . CARSON, SHAN J Accounting . . CASSLER, NANCY I. . . Pre-Veterinary Medicine CHASE, MARY T Horticulture . . . CHURCH, CHERIJ Biology COCKERILL, RICHARD L. Animal Science and Industry COLLIER. AVAT . Restaurant Management . . COMBS. LAUREL C Physical Therapy COOK. TERESA M. . . Horticulture CORNELIUS, SANDYS. Home Economics . . . . Leavenworth Senior . .Alexandria, VA . . Freshman . . Raytown ... . Sophomore . . .St. Louis. MO Junior Lamed . . . Sophomore . Shawnee Mission . . . Freshman Prairie Village . . . .Junior Parkville, MO Sophomore Salma Sophomore . . Douglass Junior Topeka . .Sophomore . . . Fairway . . . Freshman Garnett Freshman Topeka Sophomore Meade Senior . Prairie Village . . . Freshman Lansing Junior . Overland Park . . .Freshman Wichita Sophomore .Bloomfield. CT . . . .Freshman . Independence Junior Wichita . . Sophomore . . . Whitewater . . . Sophomore Derby . . Junior Culver Sophomore . Overland Park Junior . . Mission . . Freshman . . . Ulysses Junior . Overland Park . Sophomore Abilene Junior Haysville . Sophomore Spalding. NB Junior Shawnee Mission . .Sophomore Lebanon Junior Gardner Sophomore Overland Park . . Freshman goodnow hall 343 goodnow hall CORNETT. SHIRLEY Scandia Home Economic Education Freshman CORNWELL, KELLEE A Ellsworth Journalism and Mass Communications Freshman CROWE, TERRIG Kansas City Political Science Senior DANNUCCI. KEITH J Morristown, NJ Pre-Vetennary Medicine Freshman DARBY, LEORA L Burlingame Sociology Sophomore DENTON. DEBORAH D Prairie Village Family and Child Development Sophomore DESCHNER, KIM M Natoma Psychology Junior DIECKGRAFE. INDY Derby General Freshman DIPMAN, CYNTHIA K Clothing and Retailing DOBSON. DEBBIE L Topeka Pre-Veterinary Medicine Freshman DORSEY. JALENE D Haysville Accounting Freshman DOUD, VICKIE A. Wakaruma Consumer Interest Senior DOWNING, KAREN S Atwood Pre-Nursing Sophomore DUDREY. BARBARA J Stafford Microbiology Junior DUESING, DENISE A Spearville Fashion Marketing Junior DUNTON. STEPHEN M Topeka Biology Freshman EDWARDS, JANET L Overland Park Animal Science and Industry Senior ENGEL. GLENN R Merriam Electrical Engineering Freshman FAGAN. JOANNE .. Wichita Natural Resource Management Sophomore FEARS, CARLA D Fairtield. IL Home Economics Junior FELTS, BARBARA A Lawrence Pre-Design Professions Sophomore FISHER. KIMBERLY S Osawatomie Business Freshman FISHER, RITA A Wichita Interior Design Freshman FISHER, TENA I Preston Elementary Education Junior FLANAGAN, MARY E Kansas City Journalism and Mass Communications Junior: FOWLES JAN M Clay Center General Sophomore FRYE. DARCY L Kingman Family and Child Development Sophomore GARDNER, MICHAEL J Kansas City Engineering Technology Junior GATZ, SUSAN M Newton Pre-Veterinary Medicine Freshman GAYLORD, JEANETTE F Lenexa Accounting Junior GIBLIN. ANNE M Leawood General Sophomore GILLASPIE, JUDY M Rozel Recreation Junior GLEUE, THERESA M Marysville Pre-Veterinary Medicine Sophomore GRAHAM, LYNN J Leavenworth Biology Sophomore GREEN, CHERYL E Kansas City Social Science Senior GREENWOOD. DEBRA A Topeka Pre-Design Professions Freshman GREGORY. JOAN E Osborne Nuclear Engineering Freshman GREUSEL, DAVID B Kansas City, MO Pre-Design Professions Sophomore GRUBER, BETTY J Bennington Business Sophomore HABERKORN, MICHAEL R Topeka Radio and Television . . Junior HABIGER. MARY BETH Bushton Early Childhood Education Freshman HAMPL, JULIE L Russell Accounting Sophomore HARDMAN, JAN E. . . Hill City Dietetics Sophomore HARDMAN. KRISTI J Home Secondary Education Sophomore HARGUS. HERSCHELLAK Kansas City Textile Research Sophomore HARPER. MARK A Overland Park Electrical Engineering Freshman HARTER. PENELOPE K Kansas City Nuclear Engineering Sophomore HAY, REBECCA J Ottawa Microbiology Sophomore 344 gooonow hall HAYES, MARY H General HEIN, JOHNW Mechanical Engineering . . HENDERSON, BONNIE J. Pre-Veterinary Medicine HETTRICK. BRIAN T. Chemical Engineering HILES. WILLIAM! Health Education HILL, BRENDAJ Music Education . HILL, DEBORAHS Special Education HILL.KRISTAM Pre-Dentistry HILL. SUSAN E Music Education HINDMAN, KRISTI L Elementary Education HOISINGTON, PAULA J Music Education HOLBROOK. LORINDAS. Home Economics Education Independence Junior Buhler Junior Topeka .... Freshman Topeka .... Freshman Wilmington, IL Junior Plains Junior Plains .... Freshman Newton .... Freshman .... Acton, MA Junior . Junction City . . . Sophomore Salina Senior . .Washington Sophomore When the sun comes out of hiding, so do basketballs, tennis rackets, and sag- ging muscles. Getting the game into shape might well do the same for the body. concrete evidence goodnow hall 345 goodnow hall HOLT. NANCY L Special Education . . HORNUNG. MARY G. Clothing and Retailing HUGHES, CYNTHIA C Pre-Veterinary Medicine HUGHEY. BEVERLY A. Music Education HUNG. PETER M Mechanical Engineering IMBODEN, KATHY B. Fashion Marketing . INGRAM. KAREN A Journalism and Mass Communications JAMISON, MONTE D. Business Administration JOHNSON, STACY A Journalism and Mass Communications KEIL, GLENDA R Health Education KEITH, KAREN G Elementary Education KELLY. SHARON S Medical Technology KEMPER, ANNETTA M English Education . . . KERWIN. JANETS. Elementary Education KETTER. M PAULETTE Accounting KIER, NANCY T Fashion Marketing KIRKMAN. KATHLEEN J Lite Science .... KLEMA. KAYEL Home Economics Highland Junior Spearville Junior Wichita Freshman Ottawa Freshman Sydney, Australia ... Sophomore . . . .Clayton, MO Junior . Salina Sophomore Quinter Senior Olathe Freshman Russell Sophomore . Hoisington Sophomore Derby Sophomore Garden City Senior Delia Sophomore Meriden . . Freshman Washington Freshman Overland Park Freshman Russell . .Sophomore 346 goodnow hall KLING, DAVID L. Mechanical Engineering KNOCHE. JANEE Mechanical Engineering KNOPP, JANICE E Business KNOWLES, MELODIES Business . . LARABEE, MARY M. . . Pre-Design Professions . LAWRENCE, CINDY D. . Business Management . LEEBURG. JANE E. Early Childhood Education LEWIS. STEVE J. . . Business Management LINDAHL, CAROLS Business Management . . LOADER, BARBARA A. . Elementary Education LONG, JO ANN Pre-Law LOTT, MICHAEL L . . Pre-Pharmacy . . Lenexa Freshman Gardner . . Sophomore . .Girard . Freshman . Kirwin . . . Sophomore Independence, MO Sophomore Gardner . .Junior .... Miller Freshman .Salina . Sophomore Enterprise Senior . . . Junction City . . . Freshman Hesston . . .Freshman .... Minneapolis . . . Sophomore LOUGH, SUSAN D Speech Therapy LUKERT, CAROL A Agricultural Journalism MACKEY, ROBERT J. . Radio and Television . . MAHONEY, JANET A Special Education . . MALL, DENISEE . Family and Child Development MARSTON, BARBARA D Retail Floriculture . . . MATNEY, CONNIE M Medical Technology MATTHIS, JUDITH A. . Psychology . . . MATZEDER, LEO P. . Computer Science MAY. CYNTHIA E . . Pre-Nursing McCORD, BARBARA J. . Family and Child Development McCORMICK, SHARON K. Pre-Design Professions . McDANIEL, NANCYS. . General . . McDIFFETT. SHELLEY L. General McGRIFF.P. SUSAN Business .... McNERNEY, FRANCES M. Political Science . MEANS, CAROL J. . Pre-Pharmacy MEDILL, RHONDA L. . Pre-Nursing MILBERGER, MARYL.. . Home Economics Education MILES, MELODY D. . Psychology MILLER, COLEENN . Physical Education MILLER, JANE A Physical Education . . MOELLER, DEBRAL. . . Medical Technology MONTGOMERY, SUSAN F Horticulture . . MONTGOMERY. THERESA L. General MOORE, SUSAN K Pre-School Education MORGAN, PEG English . . MOSS, CINDY D Interior Design . MUELLER. JANICE M. . Physical Therapy MURET, WILLIAM E Education MURRAY, JANEE. Animal Science and Industry . MUSICK, JANET K. Clothing and Retailing MYERS. LISA A. Pre-Veterinary Medicine NAUERT, CONNIE M. . Home Economics NAVE, SHERRY M. Home Economics and Journalism NAYLOR, GARY L Physical Education . Leavenworth . Sophomore Topeka . . Sophomore Hutchmson . . . Freshman Docrance . . . .Junior . Topeka . .Sophomore . . .Canton Sophomore . Kansas City Freshman Topeka Junior Leaven worth . . Freshman .Shawnee Mission . . Sophomore . Emporia Freshman Monett, MO . . .Sophomore Salina . Freshman . AltaVista Freshman . . Liberal . . .Junior Hampton, VA Sophomore . Hiawatha Freshman . Leavenworth . . . Freshman Ellis . . . .Junior Wichita . Freshman Alia, IA . . Sophomore . Enterprise . Freshman . Bonner Springs Sophomore . . Burlingame .... Sophomore . . . . Lincolnville Freshman Wichita Senior Greeley Junior . Wichita . Freshman Henngton . . . Freshman . Winfield Graduate Student . Lawrence Freshman . Bonner Springs Junior Salma Freshman Larned Freshman Belle Plaine Junior . . Kansas City .Junior goodnow half 347 goodnow hall NEAL. LINDA L Wellington Pre-Nufsmg Sophomore NEELY. DEBBIE K Topeka General Freshman NELSON, LILY J. Salina Business Sophomore NELSON. LYNNEC Salina Home Economics Sophomore NETHERTON. RENE M Great Bend Psychology Freshman NEUGENT, PAULA J. Wichita Dietetics Sophomore NICHOLS. STEVEN T Garden City Nuclear Engineering Junior NICHOLSON, DONNA J Colby Fashion Design Freshman NORRIS, STACY K Gladstone. MO Pre-Vetermary Medicine Sophomore OELKERS. SHELLEY J. McCracken Pre-Vetennary Medicine Freshman OLDBERG, SANDRA L Shawnee Mission Art Therapy Freshman OLLENBURGER. MAROLYN A Hillsboro Business Freshman OLSON. BEVERLEYJ Winlield English Education Junior ORTH, GERRY D LaCrosse Pre-Veterinary Medicine Freshman OTT. TIMOTHY M. Lament Agriculture Freshman OVERGAARD. MARCIA L Luverne, MN Biology Freshman PEARSON, DEBRA C Monlicello. AR Interior Design Senior PEELER. JULIE K Olathe Consumer Interest Junior PEHH, SHELLEY B Overland Park Speech Pathology Senior PENNER. SUZANNE M Hillsboro General . Freshman PETERSON. ANN L Clitton Special Education Freshman PETERSON. LINDAS Home Psychology Sophomore PFEFFER. BETSY L New Berlin, IL Animal Science and Industry Junior PFEIFER, BELINDA A Topeka Fashion Marketing Senior PFEIFER, DIANE . Garden City Business Freshman PREBYL, LORI L Topeka Dietetics Freshman RAUSCHER. GAYLE M . . . Coffeyville Home Economics Education Junior RAYBORN. CHARLYN K. Overland Park General Freshman REGAN. KATHYJ . . Shawnee General Freshman REH, DENNIS T. Natoma General Freshman REICH. JODY M Paradise General Freshman RIEGER, LYNNE M . Kirkwood. MO Pre-Design Professions Freshman ROBERTS, L. KAY Council Grove Fashion Design Freshman ROBERTS, ROBERTA R Council Grove Home Economics Education Sophomore ROBINSON, CINDY M Overland Park Horticulture Sophomore ROGERS. RICK A Merriam Pre-Veterinary Medicine Freshman ROSE. LORI A Prescott Family and Child Development Freshman ROTH. JOAN L Oskaloosa Physical Education Sophomore ROUSE. MELINDA A Wichita Business Administration Junior ROWLEY, CHERYL A Eskridge Family and Child Development Sophomore RUNDLE, JOHN A Axtell English Education Senior RUPE. JANIS L Clay Center Physical Education Freshman RUPP SYLVIEA Wakeeney Architecture Junior RUST, BARBARA A Richardson, TX Dietetics Senior SAETZ, PATRICIA E. . . Bonner Springs Psychology and Speech Therapy Sophomore SANDS. DEBORAH A .Wichita Clothing and Retailing Sophomore SCHAD, JULIE A Miltord Elementary Education Freshman SCHAEFER. ANN M Wichita Biology Freshman 348 goodnow hall SCHMIDT, DEBS. General SCHMIDT, ROBERT W Industrial Engineering . . SCHROEDER, LAURIE K Home Economics SCHWERMANN. RITA M Pre-Veterinary Medicine SCICCHITANO, FRANCIS L Architecture SEERS. BARBARAS Agriculture SEVATSON, ERICS Agronomy SEVERANCE, SARA J Journalism and Mass Communications SHEETS. JOCELYN K Journalism and Mass Communications . SHIPPERS, KATHRYN M Physical Therapy SHIPPERS, KIRK A. Psychology SIDESINGER.TAMARAS Secondary Education . SKINNER, KIMBERLYR Pre-Veterinary Medicine SOMES, LYNN M. . . Horticulture SORRICK. CINDY j Accounting SPENCE. LORI A. Dietetics SPRATT, DEBRA S Accounting STANLEY, ILAROSE M General Hesston Freshman Wichita Senior Topeka Sophomore Beloit Freshman Hudson Falls, NY Junior Shawnee Freshman Kansas City, MO . .Freshman Belo.t Senior Linwood Freshman Ft. Leavenworth .... Junior Ft. Leavenworth Freshman Topeka Junior Overland Park . .Sophomore .... Wichita Sophomore .Washington Sophomore . .Washington Freshman Leawood Senior . . Rose Hill . Freshman goodnow hall 349 goodnow hall STARCH. MIKES Wichita Chemistry Sophomore STENVALL. HARRY C Wallingtord. PA Biochemistry Freshman STEWART. GAY L Washington Music Education Sophomore STONE. WANDA L. Washington Home Economics Freshman STRYKER. ROSSW .Blue Rapids Pre-Optometry Sophomore SVATY, LYNN M _ Lucas Elementary Education Freshman SWARTWOUT, NANCY J Rockville. MD General Freshman TAPPAN.KIMA Leawood Art Freshman TAYLOR. MELODY B . . . . Kansas City General Freshman TERRILL, LYNDA L . . Prairie Village General Sophomore THARP, TONI K Trenton, MO Correctional Administration Sophomore THIELEN. JULIE M Dorrance Interior Design Junior TOOR. BARRY M Hollywood, FL Restaurant Management Freshman TOWNSEND, STEVEN E Oberlin Business Administration Senior TUBBS. KEVIN L ... Long Island Business Administration Junior TUCKWOOD, THOMAS E Stafford Education Sophomore TURNER. ROBERT M Overland Park Pre-Design Professions Freshman UMBEHR N KIHM Singapore Pre-Nusing Sophomore VASCONCELLS. ROGER A. . .Lyons Electrical Engineering .Junior VEACH. SUSAN K Abilene Bakery Science and Management Freshman VERNON. SUSAN K Topeka Horticulture Therapy Freshman VINDUSKA, D ARLENE C Marion Fashion Marketing Senior VOGEL, CYNTHIA K Newton Business Administration Sophomore WADE, JACQUELINE L Topeka Art Education Senior WANKLYN, TIMOTHY E Frankfort Animal Science and Industry Senior WASINGER, KAREN L Nest City Recreation Senior WASSER. LESLIE V Leawood Clothing and Retailing Freshman WAYLAND. KELLY R. .. Washington Art Freshman WEBER. JUDITH L Herington Pre-Medicine Freshman WEGMAN, ELAINE R Hoxie Nuclear Engineering . . Sophomore WEISER, CATHY M. . . , . , Great Bend Interior Design Junior WEST, KERRI J Rush Center Medical Technology . Sophomore WHITACRE, JEHI A Olattie Business Administration Senior WHITE, PAMELA L Kansas City Fashion Merchandising Freshman WICK. LINDA K. Hutchinson Fashion Marketing . Sophomore WILLETT. CINDY S Superior, NB Special Education . . Freshman WILLHITE. LISA K Elmdale Music Education Freshman WILLIAMSON, MARY A Mound City Home Economics Education . Junior WILLIS. ROBERT M. . Topeka Accounting Junior WILSON. RONDA J Arkansas City Agriculture Freshman WILSON. SUE A Abilene Journalism and Mass Communications Freshman WOLTERS, JONI L Pocti Elementary Education Senior WOOD. BRUCE D. Wichita Pre-Forestry Sophomore WRIGLEY, LAUREL E Salina Sociology Senior WULLER. ROSEMARY L Overland Park Special Education Freshman YOUNG, DAVID A Oxford Marketing Junior ZERRER, MARY ... Leavenworth Elementary Education . . Sophomore ZIEGLER, CARLA J. . . Salina Business . . . Freshman 360 goodnow hall haymaker hall WERRING CHUCK J Director ADAMS. CHARLES V Spring Hill General . Freshman ADAMS, STEVE O El Dorado Statistics and Accounting Senior ALLER, JERRY C Hiawatha Agricultural Economics Senior ALSPACH, ALAN D Snellville. GA Agronomy Freshman ANDERSEN, GREGORY B. Snawnee General Freshman ANDERSON, JETT B Journalism and Mass Communications ANDERSON, MARVIN R Agronomy ANDERSON, STEVEN M. , Mechanical Engineering ANGELL, SCOTT W Pre-Veterinary Medicine ARMAGOST, STEVE M Secondary Education ARNETT, DOUG A Finance Topeka Freshman Smolan Junior Overland Park Freshman Atwood Sophomore Cottonwood Falls Junior . . Overland Park Senior ARNOLD. TERRENCE E Civil Engineering . ATHERLY, RANDALL B Pre-Design Professions ATKINSON. ERIC J Radio and Television ATT A WAY, JACK A Animal Science and Industry . ATWELL, LEON L Engineering ATWOOD, WILLIAM D. Agricultural Education AYLWARD. ROBERT R. Agriculture BADGER, CHRISTOPHER J. Agricultural Economics .... BADGER, DAVID A Animal Science and Industry BAKER, CHARLES B Education BAKER, JAMES W Pre-Dentistry BAKER, MARC F Mechanical Engineering Horton Junior Topeka Freshman Winfield Sophomore El Dorado Senior Norton Freshman La Cygne Sophomore Solomon Freshman Carbondale Graduate Student . Carbo ndale Junior Topeka Junior Goodland Senior Tecumseh Sophomore BAKER, RANDAL W Milling Science and Management BARNES, DONALD C History Education BARRETT, JAMES A Architectural Engineering BATTENBERG, JAY D Business Management BAUER, EDWARD J Accounting BAUER, JOHN W Pre-Design Professions BEAGLE, BARRY T Pre-Veterinary Medicine BEIM.TIM A Agricultural Mechanization BERGHAUS.SCOTTA General BERRY. ZACHARYJ Accounting BIGGS. BRYAN E Journalism and Mass Communications BIRDSONG. DAVID A Pre-Design Professions BIRKMAN, JEFFREY D Chemical Engineering BISH. JOHN D Pre-Veterinary Medicine BLACK, JAMES D Flecreation BLANCHARD. EZELL A Architecture BLANDING, DAVID A Journalism and Mass Communications BLUMANHOURST. MICHAELS. . Agricultural Mechanization BLUSH. GEORGE H. . . Animal Science and Industry BOLLINGER, MICHAEL G Agricultural Economics BONNEWELL, ROBERT L Pre-Design Professions BOYD, GARLAND H History BRADLEY, ROGER A. . . Pre-Veterinary Medicine BREAULT, JOHN P Horticulture Therapy Overbrook Senior .... Kansas City Senior Cimarron Freshman . . . Leavenworth Senior Lenexa . Sophomore . . . .St. Louis. MO Sophomore Topeka Sophomore Phillipsburg . . Freshman Elkhart Freshman Merriam Freshman Leavenworth Graduate Student Salina . . Sophomore Overland Park Freshman Wichita Freshman Indianapolis. IN Freshman . . St. Louis. MO Junior Topeka Sophomore Murdock . . Freshman Silver Lake Sophomore Wichita Senior Kiowa Freshman . Hutchinson Junior .... Lawrence ... Freshman . . Concordia Senior haymaker hall 351 haymaker hall BRINK. WILLIAM A Tecumseh Geology Freshman BROWN. ALLEN J Topeka Engineering Freshman BROWN. BRADLEY V Leawood Crop Protection Freshman BROWN, LEON L Haysville Landscape Architecture Junior BRUNGARDT. TERRENCE W Atchison Journalism and Mass Communications Sophomore BRUNKER.RAY Olame Agricultural Mechanization Senior BUCHMAN, FRANKIE L AltaVista Business Administration Sophomore BUNCK. JOE H Everest Agronomy Junior BUNNEL. RANDALL D Welda Agricultural Education Sophomore BUNTING, CURTIS E Russell Journalism and Mass Communications Freshman BURTIS. JOHN O Shawnee Mission Speech -. Junior CAIN, FRED L Topeka History Senior CAIN, LYLE J Halstead Music Freshman CALL, KEITH B Cedar Vale Agricultural Mechanization Senior CAMPBELL, GERALD G Burrton Pre-Veterinary Medicine Freshman CAMPFIELD. MORRIS L Centralia Feed Science and Management Sophomore CANNON. JOHN B Derby Journalism and Mass Communications Graduate Student CARL. TONY A. Wilsey Agricultural Economics Senior CARPENTER, DAVID H Ottawa Agricultural Mechanization Senior CARTER. JOHN C Jamestown Agricultural Economics Junior CASE. JAMES G Overland Park Business Administration Sophomore CECH. DOUGLAS J Liberal Music Education Freshman CHAPMAN. GREGORY P KansasCity Pre-Veterinary Medicine Freshman CHINEN. LEONARD T Honolulu. HI Architecture Junior CHRISTY, RAY A Kansas City, MO Construction Science Senior CHUBB. RICHARD M Baxter Springs Agriculture . Freshman CLINE, CHARLES K Shawnee Mission Journalism and Mass Communications Senior COMBS, RONALD J Mission Business Junior CONWAY. KENNETH J Oakley Pre-Veterinary Medicine Freshman COOK, NILES J . . Fredonia Electrical Engineering Freshman COUCH. GREGORY E. Pre-Veterinary Medicine CROSS. MICHAEL J Political Science CROSSON, RUSSELL D. Math Education CRUMRINE, RALPHS. . Civil Engineering DAISE, RICHARD L Veterinary Medicine DALE, DUANE A Horticulture Therapy . Overland Park . . . . Freshman . . . Kansas City Freshman . . . Minneapolis Senior Olathe Freshman Kanorado Senior Topeka . . . . Sophomore DAVIS, MICHAEL D Kansas City Business Freshman DAVIS, RANDY N Lamed Pre-Dentistry Senior DEBENHAM, RANDYR ClayCenter Speech Junior DEGI, GREG A Savannah, GA Electrical Engineering DICK. RANDY L Pre-Veterinary Medicine . DICKSON. DALE K Engineering . Senior Rossville . Freshman Hiawatha Freshman DIDDE. DAVID C Empona Business Management . . . Freshman DIVELEY, R. ROYCE Severance Animal Science and Industry Senior DODGE, TERRY J Lenexa General Freshman DOE, MUNEHIRD K Derby Electrical Engineering DOW. STEVEN R. Philosophy and History DOWLING. WILLIAM N. Electrical Engineering . .Senior , . . . Olathe Junior Wilson Freshman 352 haymaker hall DREW. JEFF L Overland Park Business Administration Freshman DRYDEN. LESTER A Overland Park Pre-Design Professions Sophomore DYE. TIMOTHY J Kansas City Pre-Design Professions Sophomore EDMONDS. JAMES K Topeka General Freshman EHLERS, BRUCE J Fort Atkinson, Wl Animal Science and Industry Senior ELLIOTT, CAMERON M Phillipsburg Pre-Design Professions Sophomore ELLIOTT, ROBERT L. , , . Wichita Animal Science and Industry Junior ERKER, MICHAEL F Argonia Animal Science and Industry Senior EVANS, LESLIE W Valley Center Electrical Engineering Junior EVANS, RANDALL K Topeka Humanities Senior FENTON, GARY K Leawood General Sophomore FERGUSON. KENT L Phillipsburg Agricultural Economics Sophomore FERNANDEZ, OSCAR M Mexico City. Mexico Milling Science and Management Freshman FISCHER, GREGG K Seward Animal Science and Industry Senior FOELSCH. DOUGLAS S Hilton. NY Pre-Design Professions Sophomore FORD. MICHAEL J Ulysses Pre-Forestry Freshman FORET. GREGORY W Shawnee Mission Landscape Architecture Junior FRAZIER. JEROME B Prairie Village Business Freshman FREEMAN, BRUCE R Hutchinson Pre-Veterinary Medicine Junior FREY, EDWARD H Albion, NB Animal Science and Industry Junior FUHRMAN, WILLIAM D Meade Accounting Junior FUNKHOUSER, JACK R Prairie Village Mechanical Engineering Sophomore GALE. MARK D Overland Park Pre-Design Professions Sophomore GARDNER, L. MARK Florissant. MO Pre-Design Professions Freshman haymaker hall 353 haymaker hall GEISERT. MICHAEL T Chapman P re- Medicine Freshman GLATT. CHRISTOPHER G Chapman Engineering Freshman GOFORTH, GREGORY L. Topeka Business Junior GOFORTH, TODD A Topeka Statistics Freshman GOTTSCHALK, GARY M Leavenworth Accounting Senior GRAHAM, LLOYD R Casa Grande, AZ Chemistry Senior GRAHAM, STEVE H Belleville Architecture Junior GRANDY, MICHAEL L. Belleville, IL Pre- Design Professions Freshman GRAPENGATER, DANA L Newton Accounting Junior GREER. WILLIAM L. Elk City Pre- Veterinary Medicine Sophomore GREGG, STEPHEN L . Wichita Mathematics Freshman GRIPPING, WILLIAM J Greenfield, IN Biology Senior Hays Senior Leoti Senior Hope Senior Wichita Architecture Senior HARDEN, JAMES M Ashland Agricultural Mechanization Freshman HART.BARRYT Kansas City Architecture Senior GROSS. WILLIAM M Milling Science and Management GWIN, EDDIE Music Education HADEN, MARK D Radio and Television HAGEMAN, STEVE J. HARTMAN, MATTHEWS. Engineering HAUSMANN.GARYJ. Pre-Vetennary Medicine HAXTON, RICK L Accounting HAY, WESLEY R. . . . General HAZEN, RICHARD D. . . . Radio and Television , HAZEN, ROBERT E Agriculture , , , HECHT. JOHN L Agronomy HEINRICH, FORREST A. Pre-Design Professions HENRY, TERRY L. Accounting HERBERS, MARTIN E Fisheries and Wildhte Biology HERRING, OUENTINJ. ... Finance HESS, MICHAEL H Architecture Topeka Sophomore Butte, NB . Junior Topeka Freshman Ottawa Freshman Grmnell Junior Gnnnell Sophomore Andale Sophomore Wichita Sophomore Ottawa Freshman Rose Hill . Freshman . Highland Senior Lawrence Junior HILL, BRIAN K Architectural Engineering HOCH, JOSEPH C, , Electrical Engineering HODGSON, MICHAEL L Pre-Vetennary Medicine HOLCOMB. MARK A Accounting HORINE.TROYE Secondary Education HOOPER, THOMAS K Agricultural Mechanization . Salina Sophomore Wilson Freshman Wetmore Sophomore Plevna Junior Wichita Freshman . Hiawatha . . .Senior HOUF, WILLIAM G Nuclear Engineering HOWELL. RONALD T Psychology HUGHES. LONNIE J Animal Science and Industry HUMFELD. TERRY L. Horticulture HUNT, DAVID W Agriculture HUTCHINSON, JAY N. Civil Engineering Lamed Senior Sheffield. AL Sophomore Sublette Sophomore Beloit Graduate Student Arkansas City Freshman Great Bend Freshman JACOB, STEVEN D Halstead Animal Science and Industry Senior JANSSEN. DAVID M. Solomon Civil Engineering Junior JANTZ, MERLE F Wichita Architecture Senior JAOUES, JOHN C Wichita Fisheries and Wildlife Biology Senior JENKINS, EDWARD L Cape Girardeau, MO Architecture Senior JOHNSON, DONALD R Tecumseh Accounting Senior 354 haymaker hall JOHNSTON. RANDOLPH P. Computer Science JONES, RICK L Physical Therapy KAUFMAN, DEAN A. . Accounting KAUFMAN. RUSSELL F Business KAUFMANN. RODNEY D Business Administration KEARNEY, BOB C Commercial Art Hutchinson Junior .... Newton Senior Atchison Junior Dorrance Sophomore Topeka Junior . Hutchinson Senior KELLY. KENT C. Phillipsburg Mechanical Engineering Sophomore KELSEY. FRANCIS A. Silver Lake Agronomy Junior KENDALL, JOE D. . Topeka Pre- Veterinary Medicine Sophomore KERLEY, DONE Peck Feed Technology . Junior KIDWELL.DAVIDA. ..Enterprise Agricultural Mechanization . . . Freshman KING, MICHAEL E Osage City Animal Science and Industry Senior KINNAMAN. MARK B Prairie Village Milling Science and Management Freshman KISER, KIMBALL P. Argonia Architecture Fifth Year Student KLIEWER, GLEN M Hillsboro Dairy Production Junior KOPITNIK, LARRY J Prairie Village Pre-Design Professions Freshman KOPSHINSKY, DANIEL W Waukesha. Wl Animal Science and Industry Freshman KOST, JOHN A. Eagle Butte. SD Animal Science and Industry Junior KRISS. J. T Prairie Village Agriculture . Freshman KULICH. STEVE J Sylvan Grove Chemical Engineering Freshman KUMMER, FRED S. St. Louis. MO Pre-Design Professions Freshman KURTZ, ALLEN D Burlingame Agricultural Education Sophomore LANCE, DOUGLAS H Ulysses Mechanical Engineering Senior LARKIN. STEVE P Prairie Village Political Science Graduate Student LEHMAN, ROBERT L. Brewster General Sophomore LEVENSON, LEE A Manhattan Geology Sophomore LEWANDOWSKI, RICK J . . . Salina Pre-Design Professions . . Freshman LITCH. JOHN E Melvern Agriculture Freshman LITTLE, RICHARD L Carbondale Business Freshman LOWREY, DREW I Milton Agricultural Economics Senior LUTZ. RANDY L Topeka Architectural Engineering Freshman MAGEE, MATTHEW K Shawnee Mission General Sophomore MANGAN, STEPHEN L Tribune Animal Science and Industry Senior MATHES, DANAL. .. .Derby Chemical Engineering Freshman MAYSE, LARRY W Mission Business Junior MCALLISTER, R. DOUGLAS Prairie village Chemistry Senior McBRIDE, STEVEN B. Atwood Electrical Engineering Freshman McCLANAHAN, ALAN J Overland Park Landscape Architecture Junior McCLUGGAGE, MARK D Douglass Architecture Senior McCREARY, TERRY L Newton Social Science Senior McCULLOUGH. MIKEL L Gnnnell Accounting Junior McFALL, LARRY D. . . . Sabetha Journalism and Mass Communications Junior MEISENHEIMER. FRANCIS E. Kingman Business Junior MENARD, TERRY M Kimberling City, MO Pre-Design Professions Freshman MIDDLETON. JEFFERYP Overland Park Geology Senior MILLER, NEIL A Kansas City, MO Milling Science and Management . Freshman MILLER, ROBERT C Greenleal Chemical Science Senior MILLS, EARL E .Centralia Agricultural Economics Junior haymaker hall 355 haymaker hall MITCHELL. PAUL D Bonner Springs Accounting Junior MOLL . CHARLES A Wellsville Fisheries and Wildlife Biology . . Sophomore MOLZEN. MYRON A Clements Horticulture Sophomore MOORE, WILLIAM K Wichita Pre-Law Freshman MORRAY. BRIAN S Madison Pre-Veterinary Medicine Sophomore MULLEN, KEVIN M Hutchmson Accounting Senior MYERS. JOE C. . Meriden Pre-Vetennary Medicine Freshman NECH.DOUGW Salina Animal Science and Industry Junior NEIBLING, DAVID L Highland Agricultural Mechanization Senior NEIER. WILLIAM C. Mullinville Agricultural Economics Junior NELSON . LLOYD D. Ottawa Horticulture Junior NEMECHEK, MICHAEL C .Goodland Accounting Junior NORRIS. GALE E Edgerton Chemical Engineering Freshman NOTTINGHAM, DAVID L Lawrence Veterinary Medicine Senior NOVOTNY, BRUCE J Winner. SD Veterinary Medicine Junior NUSS. GARY A. Durham Horticulture Junior OCHS. ROGER K Leavenworth Business Administration Junior O ' NEAL, RANDY L. . . Halstead Agriculture Freshman I: 356 haymaker hall ORTMANN, MICHAEL F History OSBORNE, DAVID F Building Construction OTT, JON S Animal Science and Industry PALMER, BRUCE E Architecture PALMER, DWIGHT R Electrical Engineering PARR. KELLEER. Animal Science and Industry PENDLETON, JOHNC. . Agriculture , PERRY. MICHAEL R Agriculture PERSINGER, STEVEN W. Agriculture PETERS, CLARK C Pre-Design Professions PETERSEN. BERNARD J. Pre-Veterinary Medicine PETERSON, SOLOMAN F Architecture Augusta . Junior . Overland Park Senior Kiowa Senior Wichita Senior . Wichita Freshman Delia Sophomore Lawrence Sophomore Overland Park . . . Freshman Norton . . Sophomore Hastings, NB Freshman Salina Freshman Salina Junior PETRUSKY, ALBERT R Pre-Design Professions POE.EDGARA Pre-Design Professions POELL, TIMOTHY M. . . Accounting Carbondale Sophomore Oberlin Freshman . Hanover Junior POLSON, DOUGLAS R Halstead Business Management Senior POST. KRAIG M Wichita Pre-Design Professions Sophomore PRATHER. NORMAN T . . Kmcaid Agricultural Education .... Sophomore PRETZ. GEORGE C. Agricultural Education PRINGLE. R KENT . Accounting PRUITT, THOMAS L. . Dairy Production .... PRYOR.GARYA Economics PRYOR, WILLIAM D. . . Engineering Technology Osawatomie Junior Yates Center Junior . Barnard Freshman .Hutchmson Junior Kansas City .Junior PUTNAM, JAMES C Newton Architecture Senior PUTNAM, JANA L Newton Elementary Education Senior RANDALL, MICHAEL D Rockport. MO Architecture Senior RAUTH, MARK K Atchison Business Freshman REED, CARL I Pomona Animal Science and Industry Senior REID. LANCE E Brewster Physical Education Graduate Student REID, NATHAN D Brewster Business Administration Senior REMINGTON, PAUL R. Architecture RICHARDS, STEVEN H Accounting and Finance . . RICHARDSON. DAVID E Fine Arts RIDER, GARY R Animal Science and Industry RIEB. MARKL Biology RIEMANN. RALPH E Agricultural Mechanization RIPPE. EDWIN C Physical Education ROBERTS. WILLIAM D. Computer Science ROBSON, KENNETH E. Agricultural Education ROENIGK. RICHARD A Nuclear Engineering . . . ROGERS, RONALD G Electrical Engineering ROSS. MICAH A. Pre-Veterinary Medicine San Jose, Costa Rica Junior Mission Junior Kansas City Junior Abilene Junior St. Francis Junior Claflin Junior Linn , Freshman Norton Sophomore Abilene Junior Shawnee Mission Freshman Overland Park Junior . Topeka Freshman RYAN. JOHN R Animal Science and Industry RYBERG, GARY A Pre-Design Professions SALLADE, EDWARD M Pre-Design Professions SALTER, STEVEN C. . Business Administration .... SAMBOL, F. KEVIN Pre-Veterinary Medicine . SCHAAKE.MARKD Agricultural Engineering . . . . Solomon Junior Wichita Sophomore St Louis. MO . Sophomore Overland Park Freshman Leawood Freshman Lawrence Sophomore haymaker hall 357 haymaker hall featherweight At the risk of pet accidents, shedding hair, and floating feathers, favorite ani- mals occupy a place in many hearts and living quarters. Pets often prove to be less messy roommates than their human counterparts. SCHIEFEN, JAMES C Goodland Pre-Medic ine Senior SCHMIDT. STEVE A Stanley Pre-Veterinary Medicine Freshman SCHMITT, JOSEPH C Beloit Business and Finance Senior Ogallah . . Freshman Wankesha, Wl . . Freshman Prairie Village . . Freshman SCHOENTHALEH, RANDY D Agricultural Education SCHOETT. DAVID E Pre-Veterinary Medicine .... SCHUMAN. GARY R Restaurant Management SELIGH. DAVID G Wichita Landscape Architecture Junior SELM. MICHAEL E Salina Mechanical Engineering Sophomore SEXTON. DANIEL W Chapman Dairy Science Junior SHAY. WILLIAM O. . Overland Park Pre-Design Professions Freshman SHERLOCK, PETE St. Francis Animal Science and Industry Senior SHIDELER. ROBERT J Topeka Architecture Junior SHOOK. TIMOTHY R Music SILKMAN. WILLIAM C Architectural Engineering SMITH. ERICA Animal Science and Industry SNYDER, RICHARD K Business Administration . SPADE, STEVE L. . . . Fisheries and Wildlife Biology SPARE. BRUCE D Agronomy . Hutchinson Junior Hopewell Junction. NY Freshman Macksville Junior Topeka Junior Burlingame Freshman St. John Junior 358 haymaker hall SPARKS, DAVID L Minneola Journalism and Mass Communications Junior STAFFORD, JEFFREY L Kansas City Architecture Senior STEGEMAN. JAMES F Overland Park Geology Junior STEINKIRCHNER, P. GARY Newton Business Administration Junior STEVENS, DOUG E Merriam Pre-Design Professions Freshman STEVENS, LARRY W Harper Nuclear Engineering Senior STEWART, PAUL D Olathe Wildlife Biology Senior STICH. PAUL F. . . . Agronomy STILES, DALE W Agricultural Engineering STILES, DOUG L Chemical Engineering . . STOCK, GREG L Pre-Design Professions . STOCK. STEVEN J Architecture . STORY. CLAYTON J Animal Science and Industry STRAWN, BARRY W Business Administration STRUNK, NEALV Business Administration SUHR. FREDM Pre-Design Professions .... SUTTON, JEFFREY J Medical Technology SWANSON, RICHARD D Electrical Engineering Chanute Junior Spring Hill Sophomore Liberal Freshman Kansas City, MO Sophomore St. Joseph, MO Graduate Student Udall Sophomore Salina Junior Colwich . . . Freshman Salina . . . Freshman . . Atchison Junior Yates Center Junior SZTUKOWSKI.GARYF Pre-Design Professions TAYLOR, BRADLEY H Horticulture TAYLOR. MARK K Civil Engineering . Florissant, MO . . . Freshman El Dorado Senior Topeka . Sophomore TAYLOR, T. J Goodland Music Education . TAYLOR, TOM G Accounting TEEL. MARKE Pre-Design Professions . Senior . McPherson Junior Ballwin, MO . Freshman TILGHMAN, RICHARD K Topeka Architecture Se nior TOLL. DENNIS J Mexico, MO Pre-Design Professions Freshman TRYON. CHARLES P Marysville Architecture Junior TRYON. MIKE D Marysville Business Junior TURNER. RONALD E Overland Park Business Administration Sophomore TURNER. WAYNE B Overland Park Accounting Freshman Kingman Junior Eskridge Freshman Salina Freshman Salina Senior Salina Junior Conway Springs Freshman TUXHORN. DOYLE P. . Accounting VAN PETTEN, JEFFREY F. Pre-Veterinary Medicine VAUPEL.GARYR Engineering VAUPEL, WILLIAM E. . . . Civil Engineering WARDEN, PAULG Agronomy WATKINS, BRIAN K Pre-Design Professions . . WEATHERBIE, WILLIAM K tola Agricultural Economic! Senior WEBER, DAVID P Shawnee Mission Radio and Television Senior Overland Park Freshman Florissant. MO Freshman Salina Sophomore Herington Freshman WEBSTER. ROBERT E General WEIBLE. W.JEFFREY Pre-Design Professions WEIDMAN, JOHNH Electrical Engineering WENDT, RICHARD G Pre-Medicine WERNER. DONALD E Agricultural Mechanization WERNER. MARK A Chemical Engineering WETTA. EARL J Engineering WIENCK, DENNIS A Mechanical Engineering WIENS, JEFFREY R Pre-Veterinary Medicine WILBECK.TONYA Business Overland Park Sophomore Dodge City Freshman Andale Freshman Barnes Sophomore Olathe Freshman Hutchinson Sophomore haymaker hall 359 haymaker hall WILDER. DENNIS L. Pre-Design Professions WILLE, MARKH Modern Language WILLIAMS, BILLY C. . . History WILLIAMS. ROBERT D. Industrial Engineering WILLIS. GREGORY O Milling Science and Management WILLIS. KENT M. Civil Engineering . St. Louis. MO . . Freshman Overland Park Junior Topeka . . Sophomore Leawood . Senior Overland Park Freshman Topeka Freshman WILSON. CHASE C. Pre-Dentistry WINTER, SAM S Engineering WOLTERS. MARK A Secondary Education WOOD. RONALD J Agriculture WOODALL. DENNIS C Pre-Medicine . . WOODARD, BILL G. . Business WORKS, FRED J Humboldt Business . . Freshman WORKS, RICHARD C Humboldt Political Science Senior WRIGHT. JOHN H Overland Park Business Administration Senior WRIGHT. WILLIAM M Electrical Engineering WUTHNOW, MARK L. Agricultural Economics YLANDER. DAVID M Pre-Vetermary Medicine YODER. DAVID D Education YOUNGER, LES A Radio and Television ZEORLIN. DAN H Civil Engineering ZERBE, STEVEN C. . Animal Science and Industry 2IEGLER, MARKH . Geology ZIMMERMAN, LESLIE H Dover Food Science and Industry Senior ZUK, ERIC A Hutchinson Biology Senior Prairie Village Freshman Ml Hope Freshman Atwood Junior Solomon Freshman Salina Sophomore Overland Park Sophomore Overland Park . . Freshman Manchester Sophomore Omaha. NB Sophomore Demon Graduate Student Lebanon Junior Wichita Freshman Council Grove Senior Topeka Sophomore 360 haymaker hall kappa alpha theta THOMAS. CLARA E BALES, REBECCA J Fashion Marketing BARRETT. MICHELE Pre-Nursing BAUMGART. JACQUELINE A Business BEEN. EMILYS. General BERNASEK. JANICE M Speech Pathology BIGELOW, LANA J Elementary Education . . . BODECKER. BARBARA J Education CAMPBELL. KATHY Speech CHANDLER. TERESA Pre-Nursing CLEMMONS. MARYJ. . General COFFMAN. GERALDINE A Elementary Education Housemother Empona Senior Belleville Sophomore Overland Park Freshman Scott City Freshman Manhattan Junior Ottawa Senior . Wichita Sophomore Holcomb Freshman Almena Freshman Topeka Freshman Ottawa Sophomore COLLINS, CYNDIE A General CORKRAN, DEBBIE S Animal Science and Industry . CORRIGAN. SUE E Pre-Design Professions COX. PAULA N. Interior Design CURRIE. MARTY Textile Research DANIELSON, CANDY S. Business DAVIS, AMY K Lite Science DE BRICK, RITA B Pre-Nursing DENGLER. PATRICIA M Business DENYER. DANAL Pre-Physical Therapy DENYER, MARCYL Marketing . EATON, NATALIE J Clothing and Retailing Liberal Freshman . Shawnee Mission Senior Wichita Freshman Topeka . Freshman Stockton Freshman Wichita Sophomore Fanwood, NJ Senior Garnett Sophomore Wichita Sophomore Manhattan . . Junior Manhattan Freshman Wichita Sophomore ENGEL. CAROLS Fashion Design FOWLES, RITA K Home Economics Education FULLERTON, JULIA A Elementary Education GIVEN, PATRICIA J Modern Language GOODING, MARTHA J. Fashion Marketing HAMMERLI. BARBARA A Early Childhood Education HAUSE. JANE C Recreation . HILL, CHARLOTTE J. Elementary Education HINKEL, JILL A. Learning Disabilities HODNEFIELD. LORIL. Pre-Nursing HOENER. CAROLYN Fashion Design JONES, MARGO A Physical Education Liberal . Junior . . Clay Center Junior Overland Park Sophomore Manhattan Sophomore Shawnee Mission Freshman Salma . . Freshman Manhattan Sophomore McPherson Sophomore Hutchmson .Junior . Mission . Sophomore St Louis. MO Sophomore Wichita Freshman JUNGMANN, JENNIFER A. Accounting KASTEN. TERESA A Office Administration KESL. PEGGY M Horticulture KREHBIEL.PATL. Physical Education LASH, ELIZABETH L General LASSEN.LINDAA Family Economics LUNDHIGH. MARCI A Horticulture LUX. LYNNM Pre-Nursing McCANDLESS. DEBRA K Family Economics . MENEHAN. MELISSA A. Recreation MOORE. MELISSA Dietetics MOSER, MARYE Home Economics Education . Prairie Village Senior . Atchison Freshman Belleville Junior Pretty Prairie Sophomore Prairie Village Freshman Mesa, AZ . . Freshman Overland Park Freshman Wichita Junior St. John Junior Wichita Sophomore Manhattan Freshman Marysville Junior kappa alpha theta 361 kappa alpha theta best medicine Between the unfailing study assign- ments and the sometimes failing GPA, there ' s a medium of happy. Thetas relax in the jovial togetherness that often is the most infectious way to cure depression cases and bring down up again. NORTH, LINDA E Physical Therapy NUTTER. CONNIE D Applied Music PETERS, DEBORAH L Home Economics Education POPHAM. DEBORAH S Elementary Education POWERS, LAURA J. Business Administration PUCKETT. E PAGE General Engineering REED, KAREN L Interior Design REED. LAUREN A Accounting REEDER. KATHERINE L Business REIN, AUDREY L General REMBLESKE, MARGARET A Home Economics REYNOLDS, LAURA L Special Education Prairie Village Sophomore Wellington Sophomore .Overland Park Senior Minneapolis Sophomore . . Manhattan Junior Prairie Village Freshman . .Prairie Village Senior Prairie Village Freshman Troy Junior Russell Sophomore Wichita Junior Shawnee Mission Senior ROSTINE.JOAN Fashion Marketing RUMSEY. JILL J Elementary Education SCOTT. KATHY A Music Education SPRINGER. KIMD. Clothing and Retailing STALCUP. GIAM Home Economics with Liberal Arts STALCUP, MARY ANN Business Management SWALLOW. JOYD Political Science THIESSEN. EVAN Mathematics TOMPKINS. M DIANE Home Economics WESLEY, TERRIL Clothing and Retailing WESTHUSING. JANA D Psychology WHITE. MARY A Early Childhood Education . Hulchmson Senior Dekalb. IL Junior Salina Sophomore Manhattan Sophomore St John Junior Lawrence Freshman Manhattan Freshman Wichita Freshman Overland Park Freshman . . Hutch i n son Senior Stockton Sophomore Shawnee Sophomore WHITHAM, JENNIFER E Accounting WHITT.PATTI D Music Education WILLIAMS. DONNA M Special Education ZIMMER. PAULA K Accounting Leoti Freshman Wichita Sophomore P ratt Junior Shawnee Sophomore 362 kappa alpha theta kappa delta HEDRICH. SALLY A ALBERS. DEBORAH A Psychology and Pre-Law ALIOTO. ALICE M Interior Design ALLEN, CATHY Special Education ALLEN, JEAN E Pre-Nursing ANDERSEN, JANE E. Elementary Education . . BAKER, STEPHANIE D Physical Therapy BALL, JANAL Business BAREISS. SHERIL Special Education BATT, BEVERLY A Family and Child Development BERGQUIST, DIANE K Corrections Administration BERRY. RHONDA L Physical Therapy Houseparenl Topeka . .Junior Parsons Freshman Leawood Senior Leawood . Freshman . Shawnee Mission Senior BOOK, BARBARA K Special Education BROWN. PAMELA J Biology BRUNNENKANT. KAREN S Business Administration BURNETT, CHRIS Accounting CHRISTIANSEN. KAREN L Elementary Education DAVIDSON, SALLY K Physical Therapy DEAN. KIMBERLYA Special Education DENTON, KIMM English Literature DOLL.CANDICER Home Economics DREILING.ELYNNM Family and Child Development DuPREE, JANIECEA. Accounting EHRET.SARAE General . . Manhattan . Sophomore . McPherson Freshman Overland Park . Freshman . . Kinsley Junior . Topeka Sophomore Rossville Sophomore Overland Park . . Junior Overland Park . Sophomore Leawood Junior Overland Park . Sophomore Durham . . . Freshman . .Wellington Sophomore Kansas City Junior Minneola Senior Peck . . . Freshman Topeka . , . Freshman Prairie Village . . .Junior .Atchison . . . Freshman up for bibs this group of KDs is a typical sam- pling, one out of five K-State coeds owns and wears denim overalls. Big Macs are fashionable among all students who desire comfort, freedom of movement . . . and lots of pockets. kappa della 363 kappa delta EISIMINGER. MARYS Music Education ENGELLAND. RHONDA R Home Economics ERICKSON. MARIANS Elementary Education FORSBERG. LORI L Business FRIEND, LINDSAY A Pre-Vetennary Medicine GATES. SHELLY L Accounting GAYLE. SHELLY J Interior Design GEORGE. VERONICA A General GOLDSMITH. LINDA G Accounting GOOLEY. BARBARA E Accounting GRISHAM, CYNTHIA S Medical Technology GUTKNECHT, DEBORAH L. . . . Family and Child Development HARBERT. CATHIE A. Special Education HEDGER, MARJORIE J Elementary Education HENRY. LISAD Elementary Education HIMEBAUGH. KARENS Music Education HOLLAND, BARBARA J General HOLLOWAY. LINDAS.. Food Science and Industry HOLT, DENISEJ Pre-Design Professions HOUGHTON, JOAN Speech Pathology and Audiology . . HOVERDER. JAMIE Journalism and Mass Communications JAYNES. LEESAA Psychology KARLIN, DEANNAM. Pre-Dentistry KASTEN. VERONICAS. Elementary Education KAUP, JANETTE E Music Education KELLY, BARBARA J Clothing and Retailing KNOX. JACALYNE Sociology MAY, ROSEMARY Fashion Marketing McBEE. SHELLEY A Family and Child Development MEALMAN. LINDA K Elementary Education Walhena Freshman Sterling Freshman Kansas City Freshman Lmdsborg Freshman Augusta Sophomore Winona Sophomore Leawood Sophomore St Louis, MO Freshman Overland Park Sophomore Prairie Village Freshman Shawnee Sophomore .Overland Park . . .Senior Lamed Junior Overland Park Junior Parsons . Sophomore Wichita Sophomore Overland Park Sophomore Mission Sophomore Manhattan . Sophomore Leawood Senior Overland Park Freshman Hoisinglon Sophomore . Salma Sophomore Atchison Sophomore Manhattan . . Junior Leawood Senior Topeka Junior .Crown Point, IN Senior Wichita Senior Overland Park Junior MILLS. LAURIE L Pre-Vetermary Medicine MILLSAP, TERESA C Physical Therapy MITTS. KATHLEEN A. Horticulture Therapy MUELLER. ANN ELLEN Elementary Education MURPHY. KAREN I. Physical Education NORTH. SHEILA A Home Economics with Liberal Arts OLMSTEAD. DEBRAF Journalism and Mass Communications OPPITZ, CONSTANCE C Foods and Nutrition PLETCHER. JANETS Family Economics PLUMMER. SARAH M Social Welfare POE, SUSAN J General RASH, VALERIE L. Computer Science St Francis Freshman Bonner Springs Junior Bonner Springs Junior Hiawatha Junior Liberty. MO Freshman Baldwin Junior Topeka Freshman Topeka Senior . Manhattan . Junior LakeOuivira Freshman Dodge City Freshman Wichita Sophomore RAWSON. JAN R General REED, JOANNA Pre-Vetennary Medicine RIVES, ROBIN J Music RUNNELS, REBECCA Recreation SH1DELER, DEANNR General SiNOvic, SUSAN M Special Education Lmdsborg Freshman Chapman Freshman Wichita Sophomore Leawood Junior Topeka . . Freshman Prairie Village Sophomore 364 kappa deit;i SPICER, LINDA J Business Education STAPLES, DEBBIE L. . Elementary Education . . STEVENS. ELIZABETH C Pre-Veterinary Medicine STOVER. DEBORAH S. Medical Technology SULLIVAN, CATHY Social Studies Education . .Hutchmson Junior Norman. OK Junior Salina Freshman Salina . Sophomore Kansas City Senior SWEENEY, MICHELLE L Overland Park Elementary Education Senior Topeka Junior Valley Center Junior Mernam Sophomore Junction City Freshman Hoisington Senior Overland Park Senior Overland Park Junior Valley Falls Freshman Kansas City. MO Sophomore .... Manhattan Senior TESTORI, KAREN A Fashion Marketing TIDE MANN. JEAN V Horticulture VOLDER. PATRICIA A Biochemistry WAHLE, SUSAN L. Physical Education WEEKS, STEFNI L. Elementary Education WOODS. NANCY G Horticulture . . . WOODWORTH, NANCY J. Sociology WUNDER, MARIA K. Business YOUNGBLOOD, KATHLEEN A Horticulture ZIMMERMAN, SUSIE C Modern Language kappa delta 365 kappa kappa gamma PARKER BONNIE ALDERSON, LAURA E. Home Economics ALLEN. KARIN S Medical Technology ANDERSEN. CONNIE R Pre-Nursmg ARNOLD!. MARYE General BARKIS. LLOYA K Secondary Education . Houseparent Kansas City Senior Olathe Junior Shawnee Mission Freshman Overland Park Sophomore Paola Senior BENEDICT TERRIS Clothing and Retailing BIRCH. CAROLYN A Business Administration BOPPART. MARYS Fashion Marketing BOTKINS. JOYCE E Journalism and Mass Communications BRINKMAN. BRENDAJ Home Economics BRISTOW. TARAJ Modern Language Garden City Sophomore Wichita Freshman Overland Park Freshman Overland Park Sophomore Arkansas City Freshman Manhattan Junior smackin ' good Words don ' t always express a true feel- ing the best way. A trio of Kappas realize that on occasion a sincere smooch on the cheek succeeds as well. 366 kappa kappa gamma la BROWN. PAMELA J Clothing and Retailing BURRUS. SUSIE Speech Pathology CASE. TERESA J Interior Design CASTETTER. KIM E Accounting CHISHOLM.SUEA Secondary Education CONNOLLY. DEBORAHS Elementary Education COSTELLO. TERESA M Special Education CRAMER, KARINK Business Education DILL. JULIE A Office Administration DILLER. HEATHER Family and Child Development DINKEL. PATTY Early Childhood Education DOEBELE, BARBARA J Consumer Interest Shawnee Mission Junior Wichita Sophomore Marion Junior McPherson Sophomore McPherson Senior Manhattan Sophomore Marion Freshman Manhattan Senior Overland Park Freshman Belleville Junior Topeka Junior Hanover . . Senior DOLL. DAI ENI M Learning Disabilities DOOLING, MELODI A Business Administration FEILD, DIANNE Social Science FINK. SARA A Modern Language FLYNN. LISAM Fashion Merchandising FOSTER. CELESTE K Fashion Marketing GAAR. ANNE E Art GIBSON. MARSHA A Economics GLIDDEN MARY E Special Education HARRISON, NANCY A Physical Therapy HELM, JANET L Home Economics and Journalism HOLLINGSWORTH. MICHELE V Speech Pathology HOPKINS. HOLLY A Fashion Design HOSENEY. CHERYL L Elementary Education HOWARD, E BARCLAY Recreation KENDALL, CONNIE M Modern Language KINNEY.KRISTIL Elementary Education KLEWENO CHRISTINA J Interior Design LAASER. WINI L Fashion Marketing LACEY. MARILYN E Home Economics LINVILL, L. GAY Radio and Television LIVINGOOD. AMY L Horticulture LUNDSTED. NANCY J Clothing and Retailing McCAUSTLAND. HEATHER C Music Education McEWEN, PATRICIA A Accounting McRAE PATRICIA A Pre-Vetennary Medicine MILLARD. BARBARAS Fashion Merchandising MILLER, CAROL L Interior Design MOORE MICHELLE K Journalism and Mass Communications OSWALD. LESLIE E Accounting Olathe Freshman Stillwell Freshman Overland Park Junior Topeka Sophomore Mission Hills Freshman Leawood Sophomore Kansas City Freshman Wichita Junior Overland Park Junior Shawnee Mission Freshman Independence. MO Freshman Hutchmson Sophomore Prairie Village Sophomore Manhattan Freshman Arkansas City Senior Wichita Senior Garden City Senior Shawnee Mission Freshman Kansas City Sophomore Lawrence Freshman Tiburon.CA Senior Overland Park Junior Columbia. MO Junior Bucklin Freshman PASTRICK. PATRICIA K Interior Design PENCE. MERROLE Office Administration QUICK. TAMI K General QUINLAN. SALLY J Dietetics REIIAND. CATHERINE A General ROOK. MARY A General Belleville Senior Topeka Sophomore Overland Park Freshman Leawood Senior Mernarn Junior Hutchmson Junior Leawood F reshman Overland Park Sophomore Wichita Freshman Topeka Freshman Wichita Sophomore Kansas City Sophomore kappa kappa gamma 367 kappa kappa gamma SCHROEDER. CONNEE B Horticulture SCHUTTE.EMILYA Accounting SEITZ. VICTORIA A Fashion Design SHARP. JEAN C Pre-Optometry SHIRLEY, JULIE L Clothing and Retailing SHRUM. CHRISTY S. Accounting SMALL, TERRIR Business SMITH, TRACEY L Chemical Engineering SOUTHARD, JANS. Family and Child Development STANFIELD. MELANIEA Business STEEPLES, CARLAJ Agricultural Economics TEATE. A MICHELLE Pre-Design Professions THOMPSON, DAWN G. Chemistry TOWERS. DONNA L Foods and Nutrition TRAYFORD.G MICHELLE Business and French TURNBULL, CHERYL R. General TURNBULL, CYNTHIA J. Speech Pathology VANIER. MARTHA A Pre-Vetermary Medicine Topeka Sophomore Prairre Village Junior Junction City Sophomore Humboldt Sophomore . Topeka Senior Wichita Junior WARD, KAREN L Interior Design WINSTON. SHANAK. Physical Therapy WINTER. PAULAS Music ZAWATZKI. MARY KAY Elementary Education Garden City Freshman Liberal Sophomore . . . Wichita Sophomore Oakley Freshman . Palco Junior Shawnee Mission Freshman Manhattan Senior Durham. NC Freshman Overland Park Sophomore Stockton Sophomore Stockton . . .Senior ookviile Sophomore Overland Park Senior St. Francis Junior Prairie Village Freshman Kansas City Junior 368 kappa kappa gamma kappa sigma CIONI. BECKY L CIONI PETER J ANDERSON. DENNIS P Business Administration BACKES. KENNETH P. Architectural Engineering BELL, WILLIAM K Business Administration BOLTON, KEVIN L Accounting Houseparent . Houseparent Smith Center Freshman San Diego, CA Sophomore Salina Senior . . .Burlington . Sophomore BRAINERD. PAUL W . Hiawatha Political Science Sophomore BROS E. MICHAEL L. . Valley Falls Agricultural Economics . . .Freshman CAMPBELL, HUGH J. Hoxie Agriculture . .Freshman COMMER. ROGER D Wichita Architecture Senior COOK. GARY S . Olathe Pre-Law Junior COOK. JOHN V Hardtner Animal Science and Industry . . . .Freshman COOL. RODERICK H Mechanical Engineering COOPER. JOHN M Pre-Dentistry DILLON. KURTR Agricultural Engineering DONOVAN, GARY J Agricultural Business ECKENBERG.GENEW. Agriculture EGGERMAN.JEFF Animal Science and Industry . . . Manhattan Junior Topeka Sophomore Ozawkie Sophomore . Medicine Lodge Senior . Lenexa Freshman Green Senior EHRSAM. ALEXG. Accounting EVANS. STEPHEN P Pre-Vetermary Medicine FOWLER, DOUGLAS D. Electrical Engineering . FUSSELL, LARRY G. . General GIBSON. CRAIG A Agricultural Economics GRAVES. WILLIAM D. Pre- Veterinary Medicine HAZZARD, DANIEL M Business HOWES. BRIAN T Business HUNT. ALAN H. Engineering . . MUTTON, BRAD D. Architecture JAOUITH. STEVEN L. General JAUERNIG. JEFFD Agriculture Bern Junior . .Louisburg Sophomore Centralia Senior .Overland Park .... Freshman Hulchmson Junior . Greensburg . . . Freshman Ozawkie . Sophomore Overland Park . Freshman Overland Park . Freshman Topeka Senior Topeka Freshman . Burlington Freshman JAUERNIG, WILLIAM J. Agricultural Economics . KULL. DANIEL D Business LANGLEY. LYLE E General LEHMAN, WILLIAM W Business Administration LONG. R DALE Medical Technology MANSBERGER, CURTIS D Sociology McCLARY. KENTM Pre-Vetermary Medicine McCLARY. MICHAEL D Business Administration McGUIRK, KELLY J Business MILBURN, MICHAEL W. Architecture MOSS, DON V. Agriculture OLTJEN, LARRY M Animal Science and Industry .... Burlington Senior Topeka . Sophomore Ozawkie Sophomore .Overland Park Senior Wmtield Sophomore Roselle . . Freshman . Centralia . . . Junior Vermillion Junior Louisburg Sophomore . . Hutchmson Senior .... Hoxie . Freshman Robinson Sophomore OST.KIRKD Business Administration PETERSON. BRUCE W Agricultural Economics PETRY. GARY L Veterinary Medicine Mankato Senior Abilene Freshman Centraiia Sophomore ROANE, THOMAS N Clay Center Economics Senior SCHAIBLE, JAMES M Fairview Agricultural Economics Senior SHOEMAKER, STEVE Manhattan Feed Science and Management Senior kappa sigma 369 kappa sigma it ' s really loaded Some bartenders get carried away with their concoctions. With two or three shots to trigger it off some Kappa Sig is sure to get blasted. SIMLER.DANB Pre-Design Professions SPENCER. DOUGLAS M. . . Mechanical Engineering STERLING, PATRICKS Business STERLING, STEVE E. . Agricultural Business STILES, MARK Pre-Vetermary Medicine STOLTENBERG, STEPHEN R. Agricultural Economics STOUT, TERRY S Chemical Engineering THOMPSON, MICHAEL W. . . Business Administration VOLLBRACHT, MARK L Milling Science and Management . WATTS, TONY B Agricultural Economics WHISLER. SCOTT R Business Administration WILLIAMS, GREGORY W Pre-Design Professions Kansas City. MO Sophomore Topeka . . . .Sophomore Hardtner Freshman Hardtner Sophomore Hutchinson . . . .Freshman Hiawatha Sophomore . . . . Salma Freshman Osborne Freshman .Valley Center Senior . Hardtner Sophomore Topeka . Junior Larned . . .Freshman WILLIAMS. JOHN K. Agriculture . . Topeka Freshman 41k 370 kappa sigma lambda chi alpha VANOVI.H IHLNE J At. VIS DAVID W Business Administration ANSELMI. KENT E PrG-Velennar Medicine BFARDMORE DAVID H Chemical Engineering BIS HOFF. EDWARD L Pre-Design Professions BOGGS MARION A Marketing BURNS WILL IAMH Business Management CLIPSHAM ROBERT G Biochemistry CLIPSHAM SEAN J Biology COUlTtR THOMAS P Mechanical Engineering CRAIG DOUGLAS J Radio and Television CROSBY MARKS History DAVIS, DALE B Architecture DOME RTf. STEPHEN J Accounting DRITIFY. PAUL M Pre- Veterinary Medicine DUNN. CRAIG A Business Administration DUNN RONALD M Business FOSTER. ROBERT D Pre-Dentistry FRANK [ AWRENCE V Pre-Design Professions HARRIS, W. RUSSELL Political Science and Journalism . HASFLHORST. RONALD J English HICKOK, TIMOTHY W Fisheries and Wildlife Biology HILGER, CHARLES J Electrical Engineering HOGLUND. GREGORY S Engmeenng Houseparent Cimarron Junior Lea wood Sophomore Overland Park Junior Si Joseph. MO Sophomore Prairie Village Sophomore Hutchmson Junior Prairie Village Junior Prairie Village Freshman Overland Park Freshman Natorna Sophomore Rocklord. IL Junior Garden City Senior Prairie Village Sophomore Fremont. NB Sophomore Junction City Junior Overland Park Junior Olathe Sophomore HOOVER, ALAN J Computer Science and Accounting . JANKOVICH. RICHARD B Marketing JENKINS, PHILIP W Electrical Engineering JOHNSON. KYRON D Electrical Engineering KELPE. RONALDM Pre-Velennary Medicine KNIGHT GARYF Political Science LEONARD MIKE A Music LETCH, PETER E Milling Science and Management MANN. JOSEPH D Pre- Dentistry MAROUEZ. EDWARD J Accounting MARTENS. KENT A Mechanical Engineering McCONNELL. KEVIN P Sociology SI Joseph MO Freshman Manhattan Senior Hays Junior . Overland Park . . Freshman Murdock Senior Ottawa Freshman Manhattan Senior Manhattan Sophomore . Srmwnee Mission Senior Topeka Freshman Omaha. NB Freshman Topeka Sophomore McWHORItR. ' DANIEL M Electrical Engineering MEANS, DANIEL E Business NEFl Y. DAVID G Pre-Desiqn Professions NOLL, DAVID S Pre-Medicine OLDS. GARY D Business Administration OLDS, GREGORY D English and Political Science PFNNINGION. MARK A Pre-Design Professions PETfRSEN. CHRIS K Pre- 1 aw PROGAR. RON A Architecture PURNER, ROBERT A Architecture ROBINSON, CURTIS S Nalural Resource Management ROMBERGER. NELSON A Genera I Agriculture Grand Island. NB Sophomore Kansas City, MO Senior Olathe Freshman Topeka Sophomore Prairie Village Sophomore Topeka Sophomore Elkader. IA Junior Hiawatha Junior Fopeka Sophomore . Chesterfield, MO Senior Junction City Junior Junction City . . .Senior Easton, MO Freshman Overland Park Freshman Wichita Junior . Hockaway , NJ Senior Peabody Sophomore Abilene Freshman lambda chi alpha 371 lambda chi alpha SANDERS GARY B Business and Political Science SCHARIG. TERRY D Pre-Design Professions SCHMIDT. P MARK English SCHROEDER. FREDJ Pre-Vetennary Medicine STANLEY. MARKE Psychology SVOBODA. WAYNE A Pre-Veterinary Medicine TEEFEY, JEFFREY L. . Business TUCKER. ANDREW E Engineering WEGNER. STEVEN L. Business WHITESIDE. TIMOTHY E. Pre-Design Professions WINTERS. KEVIN L Business ZANDERS, DAVE Veterinary Medicine . . . Praine Village Junior Independence. MO Sophomore Hays Sophomore Overland Park Sophomore Topeka Sophomore Wahoo. NB Freshman . Kansas City. MO Senior Salma Sophomore Rockville. MD Sophomore Tulsa. OK Sophomore Mission Freshman . . . Prairie Village . . -Senior ZERNICKOW. KENTL. Nuclear Engineering Abilene Junior they went thataway Showering Lambda Chis rush outdoors to catch a glimpse of the varmint with the water pistol. Not being dressed for the occasion, they voluntarily gave up the chase. 3 2 lambfla chi alpha marlatt hall ROOF, DONALD B ADAMS. PHILIP A Pre-Velennary Medicine ADRIANO. JOSEPH M . General ALLEN. F O. BENJAMIN Pre-Design Professions ALMS. THOMAS H Pre-Dentistry AMMERMAN, ALLEN M. Chemical Engineering Director Ft Lauderdale. FL Freshman Kansas City Freshman Lee ' s Summit. MO Sophomore . Overland Park Junior McPherson Sophomore ANDERSON. GARY D Oberlin Business Administration Freshman ANNIS. JOHN R Oakley Chemical Engineering Sophomore APPLING. SCOTT Ulysses Pre-Medicine ... Freshman ARNETT, PHILIP R Lenexa Radio and Television Senior ASBURY, LONALD K Moberly, MO Architectural Engineering Senior AYDT, PATRICK B Nashville. IL Milling Science and Management ... Sophomore BAER. RANDALL L Overland Park General . . Freshman BAKER. PAUL E Scandia History Sophomore BARCLAY. LYNDSEY L. . . Topeka Civil Engineering Sophomore BATSELL. STEPHEN G Deertield Physics and Mathematics . . Junior BENDA, DAVID L Alwood Business Administration Senior BERRY, MICHAEL G St. Ann. MO Pre-Design Professions Freshman BIENHOFF, JOEL F Kensington Animal Science and Industry Freshman BIERY, RICK F Topeka Civil Engineering Senior BLAIDA, ROBERT A Leawood Milling Science and Management Sophomore BOEH, WILLIAM L Troy Architecture Senior BOHNING. SCOTT A Hanover Pre-Design Professions Sophomore BOIS, PAUL K Shawnee Mission Business Administration Sophomore BONE, JEFFREY D Chemical Engineering BONHAM, MICHAEL W Natural Resource Management . BOYD, TIMOTHY M Secondary Education BRACE, MARK A Pre-Design Professions BRADSHAW, KEVIN General BREST, GORDON A. Shawnee Mission Senior Anthony Sophomore Overland Park Senior Wichita Sophomore Midwest City. OK Freshman Topeka Civil Engineering Senior BROWN. ALAN L. Civil Engineering BROWN. BRIAN T Pre-Design Professions BURDGE, BRENT A. . . Chemical Engineering . Towanda Freshman Shawnee Freshman Goddard Freshman CARRIER, DAVID W Mission Electrical Engineering Senior CARTER, RICHARD H Cape Girardeau, MO Architecture Senior CASEY, BARRY A Glen Elder Milling Science and Management Senior CASEY. TEDD A General .... CASEY, TODDA General CATER, JOHN M Engineering .... CEDERSTROM, DAYN L Architecture CHESTNUT, WILLIAM B Natural Resource Management CLARK, MICHAEL C General Glen Elder Freshman Glen Elder Freshman Topeka Freshman . Blue Springs, MO Senior Clay Center . . Freshman Paola Sophomore CLARK, STEVE M. Nuclear Engineering CLASSEN. DALE A. . . Accounting COCKRUM. ERNEST H Engineering COLLING. RON D Nuclear Engineering Overland Park Sophomore Hesston Junior Tulsa. OK Sophomore Austin. MN .Junior COLLINGE, MARK D Carbondale Fisheries and Wildlife Biology Senior CONES. DAVID J McPherson Chemical Engineering Junior marlatt hall 373 marlatt hall COOK. ROY N Emporia Agricultural Economics Freshman CRA8B, JERBY E Williamsburg Pre-Medicme Senior CRAIG. WILLIAM M Olathe Milling Science and Management Junior CRAWFORD. ALAN W Wakeeney Civil Engineering Sophomore CREEK, KENNETH D Meriden Electrical Engineering Sophomore CUMMINGS, WILLIAM L. Syracuse Psychology and Corrections Senior CURTIS, DAVID W Chemical Engineering CUSHENBERY. DARYL W. Art DALE. OUENTIN B Labor Relations DAVENPORT. JOEL A . Chemical Engineering DAVIS, GREGORY L General . Great Bend Freshman Hoisington . . Freshman Manhattan Junior Concordia Freshman . Emporia Freshman DAVIS, LYNN A Norton Geology Senior DAVIS, ROGER L Hutchinson Fisheries and Wildlife Biology Senior DAY. DENNIS St. Louis. MO Construction Science Sophomore DIAZ, JOSE F Mexicali, Mexico Business Administration Graduate Student DIERKS, LLOYD R Brewster Business Senior DOLES. DENNIS A Topeka Chemical Engineering Sophomore DRUMM. DON A Hamilton, MO Civil Engineering Graduate Student DURANT. LARRYW Wellington Accounting Freshman DYE, ROBERT L Shawnee Mission Construction Science Senior DYKMAN, GARY L Shawnee Mission Horticulture . EDIE. ROBERT J Electrical Engineering EHRLICH.MELVINR. . Electrical Engineering EICKMEYER, DAVID A. Electrical Engineering . EISENBARTH, STEPHEN L Agriculture EISENHAUER. CARL A. . Architectural Engineering ENLOE, JACK L Architecture ERICSON, KEVIN C Pre-Veterinary Medicine . . FIELDS. GREGORY L Pre-Design Professions FINGER, GREG F Agricultural Mechanization . Sophomore Emporia Junior Russell . .Sophomore . Prairie Village . . .Junior Hoyt Freshman . Moberly. MO Junior . . .St. Louis, MO Junior Funk, NB Freshman Wichita Freshman Larned . . . . Sophomore FINGLAND, ROBERT L Sedalia. MO Architecture Senior FIRESTONE, DONALD D Roeland Park Electrical Engineering Fifth Year Student FORD, CHARLES A Salina Nuclear Engineering Sophomore FORD, DON T Edgerton Electrical Engineering Junior FOSTER. DAVID W Wichita Pre-Design Professions -Freshman FRANKEN. DAVID P Easton Medical Technology Freshman FRANKLIN, DOUGLAS L Wichita Physical Science Senior PREACH, STEPHEN G. . ... Tampa Pre-Veterinary Medicine . . . ... Sophomore FRYDENDALL, DOUGLAS L Smith Center Accounting Senior FUNK, KEITH M. Horticulture FUNK, RODNEY M Psychology GAITO. MICHAEL E Pre-Design Professions Newton Junior ... Goessel . Sophomore Topeka Sophomore GALLEGO. JORGE I Mexicali. Mexico Business Administration Graduate Student GASTON, PAUL M Marysville Radio and Television Senior GEE, D GLEN Business GFELLER. DOUGLAS R Agricultural Economics GILL. JEFFREY L Accounting GILLEN, RICHARD P Fisheries and Wildlife Biology . Oklahoma City, OK . Graduate Student Junction City Junior Harper Freshman Ulysses Sophomore 374 marlatt hall GOOD, RICKY C Pre-Veterinary Medicine .... GRAFF, GARY M Animal Science and Industry GREEN. DANIEL J Mechanical Engineering .... GREEN, THOMAS H Electrical Engineering GRIMWOOD, TED Electrical Engineering HAAG, JEFF E Pre-Veterinary Medicine .... San Juan, PR Junior Marienthal Junior Emporia Freshman Kansas City Graduate Student Sedgwick Senior Plattsmouth, NB . . . Freshman HAFLING, MICHAEL N Topeka Architectural Engineering Senior HAGER, DARYLE E King City. MO Pre-Design Professions Sophomore HAWTHORNE. BRADLEY C Derby Fisheries and Wildlife Biology Sophomore HEATHMAN, JAMES B Ottawa Physics Senior HEINZ, RICHARD M Overland Park Pre-Design Professions Sophomore HEMMER. MICHAEL W St. Libory. NB Pre-Veterinary Medicine Freshman never the twain One likes books, the other prefers beer. Potluck with the housing computer can be hazardous or provide a chance for personal growth and tolerance. Roommates make excellent sociology projects. marlatthall 375 marlatt hall Kansas City Freshman Derby Freshman Offerle Sophomore . . . Oflerle Senior Rozel Junior Kansas City Freshman HENDERSON , GRADY Recreation HENSLEY. KEVIN C. Pre-Design Professions HERRMANN. CHARLES E Mechanical Engineering HERRMANN, DARRELLE Physics HIEBERT, DALLAS D. Animal Science and Industry HILL, DONALD A. Radio and Television Wakeeney Sophomore Walerville . . . . Senior Green . . . . Senior Dor ranee Freshman Topeka Sophomore Mayetta Freshman Johnson Freshman Demson, TX Senior Great Bend Senior Topeka Sophomore Prairie Village Senior Overland Park Freshman Empona .Junior Latham Sophomore Axte Sophomore Wichita Freshman Agenda Junior Overland Park Freshman HILLMAN.REXV Business Management HIRT, STEVEN E. Agricultural Economics HOFMANN, ROBERT J. Business Finance HOKE. BRENT K Biology HOLMES. RODNEY E Business Administration HOOD, THOMAS P. Nuclear Engineering HURST. GARY L Agricultural Mechanization HURST, JOHN P. History HUTCHISON, JON M. Music Education INGLE, PAUL B Agricultural Engineering IRONS, STEPHEN M. Crop Protection JAFFERIS. PETER M General JANSEN.TERRYA. Nuclear Engineering JENNISON.TINDELK Computer Science JOHNSON. BRUCE A Pre-Veterinary Medicine JOHNSON, REX G. . Pre-Veterinary Medicine KALIVODA, SCOTT N Civil Engineering KANNARD, KRAIG E. Business Administration 376 marlatt hall KATTERHENRY. CURT A Pre- Design Professions KAUB. DAVID F Physical Education KAUFFMAN. BYRON B Engineering KITE, RONALD A Nuclear Engineering . . KOUKOL, DARWIN L. . . Agricultural Mechanization KRAUSE, DARREL E. . . Civil Engineering KRIER. THOMAS J Business Administration LAYNE, DARYL E Electrical Engineering LEMMONS, BLAINE E. Nuclear Engineering LOBMEYER, JAMES A Agricultural Engineering LOLLAR. MICHAEL D. Civil Engineering LONDEEN. DAVIDS. . . Music Education LOW, M. DOUGLAS Mechanical Engineering LUKERT, KARLF Animal Science and Industry . LUKOW, EUGENE W. . Pre-Design Professions LYNCH, DENNIS R. Accounting MANZO, WILFRED F Pre-Design Professions MARIHUGH, KENNETH L . . . Agriculture MARKS, JAMES M. Accounting .... MARTIN, BRYAN V Pre-Design Professions MARTINCICH, KEITH E Psychology MASON, ERNEST L.. . . Electrical Engineering McCANN, WILLIAM T. Pre-Vetermary Medicine McCHESNEY. JOSEPH L Computer Science . Florissant. MO Sophomore Ottawa Junior Brewster Freshman Lyons Sophomore Cuba Junior . . - . Lincolnville Sophomore Beloit .... Freshman Atwood Sophomore . Pittsburg Sophomore Garden City . . Freshman Topeka . . . Freshman Arkansas City Junior Fowler Sophomore Dover Senior Holstem, NB . . Freshman Kansas City Junior Mount Vernon, NY Sophomore Esbon . Freshman Atwood Sophomore Spring Grove, PA Sophomore Fairway Freshman Hays Sophomore Paola . . . Freshman Downs . .Sophomore McCLANAHAN, KENNETH C. Physical Education McCLURE. STEVEN L Engineering McDANIEL. KIMW Pre- Veterinary Medicine McDONALD.GARYL Architecture . McFADDEN. WILLIAM C Chemical Engineering McGRIFF, ROBERT W Nuclear Engineering MclVER. BRADJ Journalism and Mass Communications McKEE, CHARLES D Civil Engineering McKEE, JACK K Agriculture .... McKENZIE, MARVIN B Horticulture MELCHER. JEFFREY L Nuclear Engineering MEYER. DARREL W. Engineering . . LaCygne Sophomore Phillipsburg . . Freshman Norfork, NB Junior Rolla, MO Fifth Year Student Larned Freshman Liberal Junior MICKELSON, ROGER C. . Pre-Medicine MILLER, CHARLES E Mechanical Engineering . MOHNEY, CHARLES D Agricultural Economics . . MORGAN. PHILLIP L Pre-Design Professions MORRICAL, GREGORY W. Agronomy MOSBACHER, RICHARD D.. Mechanical Engineering MOSER, MONTE B Journalism and Mass Communications MURPHY, NEILE Architecture . . MUSIL, PATRICKS. . . . Pre-Design Professions NELSEN, KIRK Business NICHOLSON. WILLIAM D. . Engineering NOE, BRUCE A Electrical Engineering Buhler Sophomore Derby Freshman Gofl Freshman Overland Park Junior Fort Scott Junior Sabetha Freshman Wichita Freshman El Dorado Senior Ozawkie Senior Onaga Sophomore Beverly Freshman Cincinnati, OH . . . Freshman Oakley Freshman Santa Fe. NM Fifth Year Student Turner . . Freshman Leawood Sophomore Topeka Freshman Tecumseh Sophomore marlatthall 377 marlatt hall NOLAN, JOHN R Bayonne. NJ Biotogy Senior NOLL. JEFFREY E Easton Agricultural Mechanization Junior O ' CONNELL TIMOTHY J. El Dorado Pre-Design and Professions Sophomore OLDHAM. ANDREW L Wakeeney Electrical Engineering Sophomore OLSON, MARK S Arkansas City Agricultural Engineering Senior OWENS. ROBERT W Wamego Electrical Engineering Junior PANKRATZ.GARYL Agricultural Engineering PHILLIPS. LARRY N. Electrical Engineering PORTELL, JONE Biology PROCTER, DAVID E. Political Science PYLE. RICHARD G. Pre-Design Professions RATHBURN, RANDALL L Mechanical Engineering RELIHAN. BRUCE A Horticulture RELIHAN, MICHAEL O Political Science RHODES. PAUL W . Journalism and Mass Communications RICHTER. J BLAIR Bakery Science and Management . RIEBE.DELBERTG Electrical Engineering . RIEKENBERG, DARRELL R Civil Engineering RILEY, WILLIAM F . Mechanical Engineering RINGEL, H GRANT . General RINKE. JAMES E Electrical Engineering ROBERTS, DANIEL H. General ROBIDOU, ROBERT K. . Civil Engineering ROESLER, DAVID E. Architecture Wakelield, MA . Freshman Lyons Sophomore Mission Junior . Spring Hill Junior Prairie Village Freshman . Bellevue. WA . . . Freshman Chapman Junior Chapman Senior Gaylord .... Freshman San Antonio, TX . . . Freshman Girard . Sophomore . . . Sylvan Grove Senior ROGERS, JEFF K P re-Veterinary Medicine ROLOFF, VERNON A. Architectural Engineering . . . ROM1G, RALPH W. Chemical Engineering ROSE, GALE J Theatre RUDER. JOHNATHAN E. . Pre-Design Professions SCHAMLE, RODNEY J Animal Science and Industry . Shawnee Mission Sophomore Alma . . Freshman Lenexa Freshman Newton Freshman Salina . Freshman . Ballwm. MO Fifth Year Student Esbon . . . . Freshman Clayton, MO Junior Assana . . . Freshman ... Hav.land Senior .St. Louis. MO Sophomore . . Wellsville Senior SCHEURLE. JAYS Construction Science SCHINZE, KEVIN M. Pre- Veterinary Medicine SCHROEDER, DENNIS L Accounting SEBA, RODNEY R. Civil Engineering SEMPLE. DON R Agriculture SHALINSKY, LEEB. Journalism and Mass Communications SHARP, ANTHONY W. ... Natural Resource Management SHARP, JOHNF. Engineering SHEPARD, LELANDM Chemical Engineering SHIMP. JOHNF Chemical Engineering SHORE, CARL L Electrical Engineering SHORT, BRIAN C Business Administration SIEMENS, MICHAEL A Chemistry SIMONTON. JEFFREY A Electrical Engineering SKIDMORE. MIKE B Agricultural Economics SMITH, CASEY V Business Administration . . SMITH. WAYNE E Computer Science SMITHHISLER, MATTHEW L Business 378 marlatt hall Glenview, IL Freshman Topeka Junior Atchison Junior Larned Sophomore Overland Park .... Freshman Prairie Village Sophomore Annondale, VA Sophomore Great Bend . .Freshman Chapman . . .Freshman Topeka Junior Leavenworth Sophomore Topeka Freshman ... Wichita Freshman Oakley . . . Freshman Ottawa Sophomore .Junction City Senior Prairie Village Sophomore Lihue. HI . . Freshman SNELL, RICHARD C Winfield Agricultural Education Junior SNETHER. GARY L Goodland Agriculture Freshman SPEED. DANIEL E Shawnee Mechanical Engineering Sophomore SPELLMAN, STANLEY D Salina Pre-Design Professions Sophomore STALLBAUMER, JAMES F Frankfort Agricultural Economics Senior STROM, STEPHEN C White City Electrical Engineering Sophomore STUBER, DENNIS K Kansas City, MO Computer Science Senior STUCKY, TIMOTHY A. Moundridge Agriculture Sophomore SUDERMAN. GLENN M Hillsboro Physical Education Junior SWANN. RICK M Shawnee General . . Freshman SWART, KYLE D Seneca Agricultural Engineering Senior SYNEK, TIMOTHYS Overland Park Business . . Sophomore TAYLOR, ROY J Waldo Agricultural Mechanization Freshman TERRY, DAVID D Russell Agricultural Economics Senior THARP. DAVID W Kansas City Business Freshman THOMPSON, ROBERT C Sedalia, MO Construction Science Senior THORNTON, LARRY L Overland Park Pre-Design Professions . . Freshman TOBLER, JEFFREY E, , . Olathe Nuclear Engineering Sophomore TOHER, JAMES D Little Falls, NY Architecture Senior TRUPKA, DENNIS J. Ellisville. MO Pre-Design Professions Freshman TYSON, JEFF A Olathe Business Administration Sophomore UNRUH, DOUGLASS Halstead Civil Engineering Junior VAN NAHMEN, ALAN G Spearville Agricultural Engineering Junior VOEGELI.TOMJ Peck Civil Engineering Freshman VONFELDT, BRYAN L. Victoria Industrial Engineering ,, Junior WAHL, SCOTT M Washington Civil Engineering Fre shman WALDREN, DERYL E. Tribune Radio and Television Junior WALKER, TERRY L Kansas City Music Education Senior WALL. ORIE E Topeka Engineering Freshman WALLACE, RICHARD E Papillion, NB Agriculture Freshman WALSH. HAROLD J Alexandria, VA Sociology , Freshman WALTON, DAVID N Ellsworth Computer Science Senior WARREN, WYMAN M Wichita Pre-Forestry Freshman WEBB, STEPHEN D Glen Ellyn. IL Civil Engineering Freshman WEBER. RALPH G Bonner Springs Business Marketing Freshman WEEMS. STEVE Shawnee Mission Fisheries and Wildlite Biology Freshman WEHLING. RANDY L Hollenberg Milling Science and Management Senior WENGER, ELDRED D Powhattan Animal Science and Industry Junior WIBLE, SCOTT R Topeka Speech Pathology Junior WILKERSON, KELLY L. . . Jefferson City. MO Pre-Design Professions Freshman WILLIAMS, HENHY A. . Salina Economics Junior WILLIAMSON, KEITH W Hudson Animal Science and Industry . Sophomore WITHINGTON.HARLANE Atwood General Freshman YERBY, PHILIP S Overland Park Civil Engineering Senior marlatthall 379 moore hall PETERSON, VALERIE ABED, AHMED A Grain Science and Industry AITKEN, JOANNE E Pre-Vetennary Medicine ALBERS. TREGAN P Pre-Veterinary Medicine ALSTOT.CORV1NG Pre-Design Professions ANDERSON, ADRIENNE D. Psychology ANDERSON, CORT D .... Agricultural Engineering ANDERSON. DAVID A Architecture ANDERSON, MICHAEL R. Business ANDERSON. REX M Fisheries and Wildlife Biology APPLEGATE, TERRY L Industrial Engineering AYLWARD. JAYNEA Animal Science and Industry Director Jeddah, Saudi Arabia Graduate Student Wichita Sophomore Davenport. NB Sophomore Deerlield.lL Freshman Belleville Junior BABB, SAMUEL M Agricultural Engineering BACH, REX C Microbiology BAGWELL, LEANNES Horticulture BARTH, JEFF S Electrical Engineering . . BAUGHMAN. GARYL. . . . P re- Veterinary Medicine . BAXTER, DARRELL J. .. Accounting . . .Leawood Freshman Kansas City Junior . Jamestown Senior Wheaton. IL Sophomore . .Hutchmson Junior Salma Sophomore . . Wakeeney Senior . . . .Jetmore Junior Salina . . . Freshman .. .Belleville Senior Long ton Senior . Clay Center Senior BEATY. JEAN Agricultural Business BEATY, JO A. Pre-Veterinary Medicine BENNETT, CAROL J . . Pre-Vetennary Medicine BENNETT, SHARON B Pre-Veterinary Medicine BERRA, RONALD J. Pre-Design Professions BISHOP, EVERETT D. Business Administration . BISHOP. JIML General BLACKWOOD. SANDRA S. Home Economics Extension BLICKENSTAFF.BARTD. Applied Music BOHNENKAMP, DONALD R. Microbiology BONEBRAKE, DAVID R Marketing BOREN, FREDW. General Leonardville . Sophomore Leonardville Sophomore Topeka . Freshman Prairie Village Freshman Bndgeton, MO Sophomore Bonner Springs Junior Bonner Springs Freshman Belleville . .Junior Norton Freshman Omaha, NB Senior . Shawnee Mission Senior Parsons . . Freshman BOWE, SUSAN E Dietetics BRANSGROVE.GENE Agronomy BRANTINGHAM, MICKIE G. Speech BRAUN, GLENN R. Political Science BREDTHAUER, ANNETTE K. Pre-Vetennary Medicine BRENNAN, GEORGE L Biology BRINK. LINDA J. Animal Science and Industry BROCKMAN, LORI L. Accounting BROWN, CAROL A P re -Design Professions BROWN, CHRIS P. . . Clothing and Retailing BROWN.GRATZA Architectural Engineering BROWNING, GENE C Agricultural Mechanization Pratt Senior Liberal Sophomore Wheaton, IL . Freshman Garden City . . Sophomore Wood River, NB Freshman Huntmgton. NY Junior . . Tecumseh Junior .Grandview. MO Freshman Raytown, MO Freshman Abilene Sophomore Wichita Sophomore . Shawnee Mission Senior BRUBAKER. STUART C. . Agronomy BRUNGARDT, GREGORY N. . Agricultural Education BRUNK.MALEAJ. Modern Language BRUNT, JANE E Biology BUELL, SHERYL L Family and Child Development BUNCK. DENNIS J Agriculture 380 moore hall Cortez, CO Sophomore Galesburg Sophomore Hill City . . . Freshman Wall, NJ Junior Junction City Sophomore Silver Lake Freshman . Mulberry Sophomore Bird City Junior Great Bend Freshman Big Bow Sophomore Kansas City Sophomore Prairie Village Junior . . Kansas City, MO Senior Wichita . Graduate Student Karachi. Pakistan Freshman Newton Junior Goddard Freshman Birkenleld. Germany Sophomore El Dorado Freshman Olathe Freshman Wheaton. IL Sophomore Athol Junior Clatlin Freshman Ellinwood Freshman BURNICK, DALE L Agricultural Engineering BUSSE, STEPHEN M. Agricultural Economics BUTTON. DAVID D. Engineering CAMPBELL, RONALD A Pre-Dentistry CANTRELL, CANDY C. Accounting CARR. CHARLES R History CHELLGREN. STEVEN E. Geography CHIPMAN, JAMES T. . Counseling CHOWDHURY. ASHESH Business Administration CLARK. BRADLEY E Journalism and Mass Communication CLAWSON, RODNEY R. Genera CLEMENT, DANIEL J Fisheries and Wildlife Biology CODY. MAC A Electrical Engineering COGSWELL, DAVE A Computer Science COLSON, CONNIE J. . Speech Pathology CONAWAY, DENISE A Dietetics CONNELL.MARKA. . Pre-Vetermary Medicine COOK, DOUGLAS M. . . . Pre-Design Professions CREVISTON. DAVID A Accounting CURRIER, MARK A. Psychology . CURRIER, MARTIN L. Psychology . CURRIER, ROBERTA K. Family and Child Development CUSIC, B. KEVIN Biology DAHL, ROBERT J Electrical Engineering Overland Park Sophomore Salina Senior Salina Senior Salina Senior Emporia Junior Abilene Sophomore moorehall 381 moore hall DAKIN, ROYL Electrical Engineering DANIELS. SANDRA J. Accounting DAVEY. LARRY D Pre-Vetennary Medicine DAVILA. CASPAR M. Veterinary Medicine . DAWSON. MARGIE M. Psychology DECKARD. KRIST. Accounting DeGEER. JAMES E Pre-Vetermary Medicine DeROUCHEY. DOUGLAS W Pre-Vetennary Medicine DETRICK, WILLIAM R Applied Music DIETRICH. GREGORY L Chemistry DIETZ, RANDY F Business Administration . . DILLON, KATHYL. . . General DIXON, MICHAEL E. . Journalism and Mass Communications DOLL. JULIE Journalism and Mass Communications DONNELL. PAMELA J. . . Elementary Education DRUMM, ROBIN D. Mechanical Engineering DUCH.LORINDAM. . . Art DUNNING, CRAIG S Horticulture EDMUND. KIMBERLY A Engineering EDWARDS, SARAH L Interior Design FARR. TAMI E Elementary Education FENLEY, PAUL F Civil Engineering FINE. CONNIE E Home Economics FLETCHER, TERRI L. Secondary Education FOREMAN. MELINDA K Clothing and Retailing FORSTER. MELANIEP Animal Science and Industry FOWLER. DON K Natural Resource Management FOWLER, RONALD K. Pre-Forestry FOX. WILLIAM L Pre-Design Professions FRASER, BARRY R. Electrical Engineering FRIESEN. CYNTHIA L Biology FRIESEN, ROBERTS. Business Administration GANTZ. MICHAEL W Engineering GARTEN, GARY F Milling Science and Management GASSAWAY. TERESA A General GENTRY, ROBERT H. Pre-Vetennary Medicine Louisburg Freshman Augusta Freshman Osawatomie Freshman Guaynabo, PR Freshman Junction City Freshman Herington Sophomore Lake City Freshman Miller, SD Freshman . . Kansas City Senior Topeka Freshman Satanta Senior .Junction City Freshman GILBERT, SCOTT A Business Administration GILSLEIDER. EDWARD F P re- Veterinary Medicine GOOSEY, BRUCE F. . . Electrical Engineering GOOSEY. JULIE A Commercial Art GOTTSCH, KAREN K. Business . GOVERT, JULIE L English Junction City Sophomore Garden City Freshman . . Coffeyville Sophomore Bushton Sophomore .Junction City Freshman Wichita Junior Hays Freshman . Reedley, CA .Junior Topeka Freshman Norton Freshman Junction City Sophomore Kansas City . .Junior Goodland Freshman Smithfield.NB Sophomore McLouth Junior McLouth Junior St. Louis, MO Sophomore Belleville Sophomore Bel Air. MO Freshman Colby Junior . . Hutchinson . . .Junior Abilene Sophomore Overland Park Freshman Topeka Sophomore . Council Grove Junior East Brunswick. NJ Sophomore Waterville . Graduate Student Waterville Sophomore Hutchinson . . Freshman Kingman . Sophomore GRANSTROM, DAVID E. Veterinary Medicine HAIFLEIGH, DEBRA Political Science HAJI. ALI T Gram Science HALE.VELVAC . . Agricultural Education HALL. BARBARA A Fashion Marketing HAMILTON, STUART A. Interior Architecture - - . Roeland Park Sophomore Goodland Junior Riyadh. Saudi Arabia Freshman Arkansas City Freshman . Overland Park Sophomore Topeka Senior 382 moore hall HANSEN. NANCY J Office Administration . . HAYES, MONTE L Bakery Science and Management . HAYS, ROSSE Milling Science and Management . HEADRICK, DANIEL E. . . Biology HENKE, MARSHA K Interior Design HENN, ANTHONY W Computer Science Augusta . Sophomore . Poplar Bluff, MO Senior Arkansas City Freshman Kismet Sophomore Shawnee Sophomore El Dorado Senior HERZ,SALEHM Grain Science . HILL. JEFFREY C General . HISKETT, LARRY W Landscape Architecture . HJETLAND. PEGGY L. . . Social Work HOLL, DIANE K. Pre- Veterinary Medicine . HOLMAN. STEVE C. . . Business . . HOLT, MICHAEL T Fisheries and Wildlife Biology . HOUSER, MARKC ' Architectural Engineering . . . HOUTZ, BECKY A Horticulture Therapy HUAMAN, ROSA I Business HUDSON, KRISTIEL Elementary Education HUFFMAN, KATHYL Pre-Law HUSTEAD, DAVID R. . . . Pre- Veterinary Medicine . INMAN, TAMMY J Pre-Veterinary Medicine . JANISCH, NANCY A. . . . Pre- Veterinary Medicine . JOHNSEN, DAVID W. . . . Pre-Veterinary Medicine . JOHNSON, BRIAN W. . . Chemical Engineering . . JOHNSON, DEBRAL. Fashion Marketing JOHNSON, GAIL A Business Finance JOHNSON, RICHARD L. Business JOHNSTON. MALAD . . General JOINER. DAVID L Architecture JONES, COLLEEN K General JORDAN, ROBERTO J. . . Economics .Hofuf, Saudi Arabia Freshman Bushton Sophomore Ellmwood Senior Everest Senior Great Bend Junior Topeka Freshman Pocasset, MA Junior . . Minneola Freshman Alma Freshman Topeka . Sophomore Topeka .... Freshman Beloit . . . 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KAREN E Home Economics . . . LaFORGE. ROBERT R. . Pre-Vetertnary Medicine LANE, MARY J History LEA. LESLIE C. . Journalism and Mass Communications LEAVITT, WALLACE C Agronomy LEHMANN, DIXIES. . Medical Technology Phillipsburg Freshman Matawan. NJ . . . Freshman Belleville Junior Kansas City Sophomore . Mound City Senior Gaylord . .Freshman moore hall 383 moore hall LENTELL. BRIAN A Business Administration LEON. REBECCA M Social Work LEONARD. LARRY D. . Agricultural Economics LILLARD, DIANE L Music Education LLAMAS. PAT A Business Administration LOO, JAMS KG Home Economics LUDWIG, SYLVIA R Physical Education LUKINAC. CINDY D. Pre-Nursing MACNISH, THOMAS A. Biochemistry MACON. GWENDOLYN S General MANCE. THOMAS E. . Horticulture MARKEN. HARVEY E Biology Wichita Freshman Wichita Freshman Sublette Sophomore Prairie Village Sophomore Newton Sophomore Lihue. HI Sophomore Beloit . Freshman Kansas City . Freshman Cranlord, NJ Junior Junction City Freshman Prairie Village Junior . Salina Freshman basket case If Mom didn ' t quite come through on washing instructions, a little direction from neighboring co-eds might deter gents from overflowing soapsuds, shrunken T-shirts, or the ultimate pink BVDs. 384 moore hall MARSHALL. LEIGH A Pre-Vetennary Medictne MARTIN, DEBORAH L Psychology MARTIN. KATHRYN J Horticulture Therapy MASSOTH. JOSEPH J Geology MATHISON. DEBORAH K Pre-Nursmg MATLACK. REXW Business Administration Leavenworth Freshman . Garden City Senior GlenEllyn. IL Junior Yates Center Sophomore Clay Center Junior Clearwater Freshman MATSON. DEAN L Smith Center Business Administration Junior MATTHEW. RANDALL K Prairie Village General Sophomore McCLINTOCK. GARY W . . . Louisburg Milling Science and Management . Sophomore McCLINTOCK, WILLIAM G Louisburg Animal Science and Industry Senior McCOSH. CATHERINE J Chapman Social Work Sophomore MclNTYRE. ROBERT R Meadville, MO Pre-Design Professions Sophomore McLEOD. TERESA M Junction City General Freshman McWILLIAMS, GORDON C Olathe Electrical Engineering . Freshman MIKA, JOESPH D Kansas City Engineering .Freshman MILLER. KIRK W Ness City Agriculture Freshman MILLER. MELANIE A Dodge City Home Economics Sophomore MILLER. STEVE J Franklort Horticulture Sophomore MINNEAR, DONALD G. . - McPherson History Junior MIROCKE, ANNETTE C Shawnee Sociology Senior MONTELEON, ROSALIE M Kansas City Elementary Education Freshman MOORE, GREGORY A Topeka Recreation Graduate Studenl MORGAN, DAVID J Wichita General Freshman MORSE. ROBERT E. Joplin. MO Chemical Engineering Junior MUEHLBACH. MARY L Shawnee Mission Consumer Interest Freshman MUETING, DALE F Axtell Dairy Science Senior MUETING. DUANE H Axtell Agricultural Engineering Sophomore MULHEM. ABDULRAHMAN A Riyadh. Saudi Arabia Gram Science Freshman MURRAY, ROBERT G Moscow Pre-Vetennary Medicine Freshman NAVINSKY. MARCIA L Leavenworth General Freshman NELSEN, BRADJ Omaha. NB Pre-Design Professions Freshman NEYER. PATRICIA L. Junction City Consumer Interest Sophomore OGDEN. DEBRA L Overland Park Physical Education Sophomore OSTFELD. ADRIENNE L Chicago. IL Accounting Junior OTT. CYNTHIA E Olathe Recreation Freshman OWEN, DAVID R Topeka Mechanical Engineering Sophomore PALMER KIRKW Shawnee General Freshman PARHAMOVICH. JEFFREY L Garfield Heights. OH Bakery Science and Management Sophomore PARKINS, KATHLEEN J Succasunna. NJ Pre-Vetermary Medicine Freshman PASCHAL, MARK J Luray Animal Science and Industry Senior PATCHEN. TERRY L. Jetmore Pre-Vetennary Medicine Freshman PATTERSON, TERRI K Kansas City Pre-Design Professions Freshman PATTON, RICK R Kansas City Electrical Engineering Junior PEDROSA, SYLVIA A. Newton Psychology Sophomore PENG, VICTOR I Emporia Architecture Senior PENNY, BEVERLY Lawrence Home Economics Sophomore PETERSON. BRADLEY D Topeka Nuclear Engineering Sophomore PETERSON. JEAN M Overland Park Applied Music Junior moore hall 385 moore hall PFEIFER. RHONDA L. . . Fashion Marketing PHERIGO. NANCY J General PICKFORD, PEGGY A. . Pre-Veterinary Medicine PINICK, STEVEN J Engineering POLSON, CRAIG M Agronomy PRATT, DOUGLAS C. . . Pro-Design Professions PRICE, DAN R Pre-Design Professions PRICE, SUSAN B Family and Child Development . PRINGLE, BARBARA A General PUGLIESE. JOSEPH Pre-Veterinary Medicine PULLIAM. GARY D Animal Science and Industry . RATH, CURTIS M Pre-Veterinary Medicine RECTOR, STEVEN P Music Education RIEPL, GREG A Geology RINNER, GEORGE A General RIOS. RITA E Physical Education ROBB, LORINDA Special Education ROHNER. KEVIN A Civil Engineering Hays Sophomore . . . . Waverly Sophomore Topeka Sophomore . . . .Wichita . Freshman Vermitlion . Sophomore Goddard . . Freshman Overland Park Freshman Shaker Heights. OH Sophomore Topeka Sophomore . . .Locust Valley, NY Sophomore Freeport Junior Dodge City Junior Leavenworth Sophomore Cimarron Sophomore Topeka Freshman Kansas City Sophomore . Shawnee Mission Junior Wichita . . Freshman ROESLER. KAREN E Elementary Education ROGERS, JOHN Electrical Engineering ROLLINS. RAY E Pre-Medicine ROMEIEH. CHARLOTTE A. Pre-Veterinary Medicine . . ROMIG. RONALD L Accounting RUES. ROSEMARY General . . . Junction City .... Freshman . . . . Kansas City Junior . Overland Park Freshman . . Morehead, KY Freshman . . . Leavenworth Junior Lewis . . . Freshman RUSSELL, STEVEN F Animal Science and Industry SAGER. KIMS Elementary Education SANDOVAL. JEANNIE I Pre-Veterinary Medicine SCHAFF.JASONA Journalism and Mass Communications SCHUL. JILLD Early Childhood Education Eureka Junior Mission . . . Sophomore . Tuba City. AZ Freshman . Lunenburg, MA .... Sophomore Topeka Sophomore SEARS, BROC Jackson, TN Commercial Art Senior SECK. MARK W Gardner Animal Science and Industry Sophomore SHELLEY. RITA L Leroy Journalism and Mass Communications Sophomore SHOEMAKER. ROBERT M Winner, SD Pre-Veterinary Medicine Freshman SHUMAN, DEBBIE Salina Elementary Education Senior SILKMAN. CHERYL J HopewellJunction, NY Engineering Sophomore SLOAN, HERBERTW Wichita Pre-Veterinary Medicine Freshman Conway Springs Graduate Student Kansas City Freshman Bismarck, ND Graduate Student Overland Park Freshman STILL, RICHARD E Topeka Industrial Engineering Senior STUCKY. DENNISJ Pretty Prairie Agricultural Engineering Junior SMALL, SUSAN K Family Economics SMART. ROBERT L Restaurant Management SNORTLAND, KRISTI J. . . . Early Childhood Education . SOUTHERLAND, STEVE R. Pre-Design Professions SVOBODA, ALAN C Electrical Engineering SWANSON. JIM R Pre-Veterinary Medicine SWANSON. JOHN E Animal Science and Industry TAYLOR. JOHN E Agricultural Engineering THOMSEN, DAVID J Pre-Veterinary Medicine . THOMPSON, PATRICIA L Secondary Education Chapman Freshman Kansas City Freshman Kansas City Junior El Dorado Freshman Council Bluffs, IA Freshman Clay Center Junior 386 moore hall THORSELL. GEORGE R Chanute Agricultural Engineering Junior TOBALD, JOHN A Glaco Senior RRES, ABDON M Junction City Psychology Senior TRAMPOSH, GERALD P Overland Park Biology Senior UNGLES. RALPH L Salanta Agronomy Junior VACZI, JAMES A Overland Park Physical Education Sophomore VASEY VELDA J Winlield General Sophomore VEITH, ANTHONY J Viola Pre-Design Professions Freshman VILLA. RANDY J Waukesha, Wl Business Administration Freshman VOEGELI, JOHN J Peck Microbiology Senior VORAN, KENT S McPherson Agricultural Mechanization Freshman WABUDA, GARY J Shelton, CT Microbiology Junior WALRAFEN, GREGG L Topeka Pre-Veterinary Medicine Junior WARD, KENNETH A Manhattan Electrical Engineering Junior WEIDE, MALIA J Topeka Fisheries and Wildlile Biology Freshman WESTHUES JAMES M Overland Park General Freshman WIEDENMANN, KURT R Overland Park Pre-Forestry Freshman WILDER, GREGG A Prairie Village Physical Education Junior WILSON. PAUL R. . . Burr Oak Accounting Junior WINTER, CHARLES L Garden City Accounting Sophomore WISWELL. CHESTER L Sublette Agronomy Freshman WOELK, LINLEY E Topeka Pre-Design Professions Sophomore WOODERSON, RICKY A Newton Business Management Freshman WOOLERY, SUSIE K Wichita Fashion Marketing Sophomore WORKMAN, WESLEY E. . . . Topeka Biochemistry Sophomore WRIGHT. DOUGLAS E Sublette Pre-Design Professions Sophomore ZIMMERMAN. STEVEN W Olathe Mechanical Engineering Freshman ZORN. MICHAEL A Claflin Engineering Freshman moore hall 387 phi delta theta BURKHART DORIS L ANDERSON, JOHN M Business ASHBURN. RICHIE F Natural Resource Management! BAY RANDALL S Business Administration BEERS GREGS Chemistry BEERS. RAY Business Administration BEINS. MAX A Building Construction BENSON. JAY B Pre-Design Professions BLOCK BILLC General BOL. DAVID G Accounting BROADFOOT, JEFFREY A. Pre-Vetennary Medicine BRUCE ROBERT P Pre-Medicme Houseparent Garden City Senior Garden City Freshman Topeka Sophomore Topeka Freshman Topeka Junior Overland Park Junior Garden City Sophomore Overland Park Freshman Leawood Junior Olathe Senior Shawnee Mission Junior CALLAWAY. HAROLD C Agriculture DAVIDSON. GARY M Business DAVIS. GREG D Business DAWES. MICHAEL A Pre-Dentistry DORAN. PATRICK J Business Administration DOUGLASS. JASON J Business ENGELS. GLENN M Feed Science ERWINE. STANFORD W Business Management FAIRBAIRN. SCOTT W Pre-Design Professions FLAIR, ROBERT F Pre-Vetennary Medicine FOSTER. MARK E. Business Administration GALLUP. DONALD R Nuclear Engineering GALLUP. GEORGE A Business Administration GRAT. DAVID C Veterinary Medicine GREELEY. PAUL K Pre-Design Professions HEIDEBRECHT. BRENTON L Nuclear Engineering HORST.GUYR Social Science HOUGLAND. STEVEN C Business HOWARD. GREG W Psychology HUEBEN. BRIAN C Pre- Medicine JACOBS. THEODORE R ' Pre-Design Professions JOHNSON. DAN General JOHNSON, STEVEN D. . Mechanical Engineering KAUP. STEVEN C Biochemistry Ottawa Freshman Manhattan Freshman Manhattan Freshman Topeka Junior Overland Park Freshman Ottawa Sophomore Rose Hill Sophomore Garden City Sophomore Garden City Freshman Bucklin Freshman Topeka Junior Blue Rapids Sophomore Blue Rapids Junior Overland Park Freshman West LaFayette, IN Sophomore McPherson Freshman Stanley Senior Olathe Junior Kansas City Junior Overland Park Freshman St Louis. MO Freshman Salina Freshman Salina Senior Manhattan Junior KEARNY. MICHAEL A Finance K1LLOUGH. JOHN E Architectural Engineering KOEHN. MATTHEW A Pre-Design Professions LANGENWALTER. PETER A Business Finance LEGLER, DONALD A Political Science MAGGIO MARK R Pre-Design Professions MOEHLENBRINK. LARRY D. Radio and Television MOORE. JEFFREY W General MOORE. MICHAEL E Electrical Engineering MOSER, GREGG A Pre-Design Professions MOSER. JEFFREY C Business MUSIL. JAMES K Feed Science and Management Leawood . .Junior Ottawa Sophomore Newton Freshman Wichita Sophomore . Overland Park Senior Overland Park Freshman Blue Rapids Junior Overland Park Sophomore White City Freshman Holton Sophomore Marysville Junior Manhattan Junior 388 phi delta theta .ROM Hill .. .Senior . . Rose Hill Freshman Manhattan . . . Freshman McPherson Junior Overland Park Junior McPherson . . .Freshman RICHARDS, DOUGLAS D Topeka Computer Science Freshman SCHREIBER, JEFFREY A Wichita Pre-Vetennary Medicine . .Sophomore SCHULER, STEVEN J Chapman Animal Science and Industry Senior SEATON. ALAN J Wichita Pre-Dentistry Sophomore SMITH, MARK E Ottawa Business Sophomore STAUFFER, WILLIAM H Topeka Business Sophomore Manhattan Freshman Manhattan . Freshman Manhattan . . . .Junior NELSON, D. CRAIG Construction Science . . NELSON, TODD A Business NEWSOME, WILLIAM R General NICHOLSON, WILLIAM G Business Administration PATTON, LEWIS A Pre-Medicine . . RAMSDALE, MARC R. . Chemical Engineering THOMPSON, MARC A. Pre-Design Professions TURNER, RODNEY L. . Business WATSON, DAVID E. Accounting . . Sometimes a view of the next door resi- dence affords diversion from the routine. These Phi Delts may be on the brink of a discovery as they look out on the neigh- borhood from a precarious vantage point. outside interests phi delta theta 389 phi gamma delta DUNCAN. HELEN M ALLISON, DOUGLAS A. Building Construction . . . ANTHONY. H SEAVEY Pre-Design Professions BARTLEY. KEITH D Pre-Pharmacy CAMPBELL. MICHAEL W Electrical Engineering CHAMBERLAIN, RONALD L General CLANCY. DON D Elemenlary Education DAWDY.DAVE A Economics DORSEY, THOMAS H General FARR, STONEY Physical Education FENLON.C PAUL Electrical Engineering FRISOUE. JOHNT. Criminology GEBHART, MARK D Fisheries and Wildlife Biology HARRISON, PAUL D Accounting HAUG. EDWARD W Business HAUG. TOM Pre-Vetermary Medicine HELLMAN. JOHN E Construction Science HERMAN. JOHN D Business Administration Houseparent . Riverside, CA Senior Manhattan Freshman Manhattan Freshman Westmoreland Sophomore Smith Center Freshman Liberal Sophomore Salma Sophomore Salma Freshman Abilene Freshman St Louis. MO Freshman Salma Freshman HITCH. DANIEL L Pre-Vetennary Medicine JANSSEN, ROYCE C. . . . Accounting JOHNSON. KENDAL D Pre-Vetermary Medicine KELLOGG. RICHARD J. Psychology LAWRENCE. RICHARD W Pre-Design Professions LUSTGARTEN.EDH Chemistry Salma Freshman . . . . Fairway Senior Abilene Freshman Abilene Sophomore Manhattan Junior Abilene Junior Westmoreland Junior . . Little River Senior Little River Freshman Prairie Village Freshman Manhattan Freshman Overland Park Junior an earful One surefire method of drowning out crowd noise is by using a more distract- ing noise -- like music. When tired enough, listeners can be lulled into slum- ber even by Led Zeppelin. 390 phi gamma delta MILLIGAN. RANDY J Agricultural Economics MORRIS, MICHAEL E . Food Science PAUSTIAN, DONALD L Family and Child Development ROBSON.MIKE Pre-Dentistry ROME, DONALD L. Agricultural Economics SEARS, LARRY L.. Finance Clay Center . . Freshman Westmoreland Junior . -Manhattan Junior .... Abilene Junior . Holcomb . Senior . Smith Center .Senior Prairie Village Junior Elliott, IA Senior . . Manhattan Junior Kansas City, MO Sophomore Atwood Sophomore Salma Sophomore Clay Center Freshman Zenda Senior Clay Center .Junior Abilene Sophomore Abilene Junior SHAW, WILLIAM D History SMITH, RICHARD J Physical Education SMITH, ROD A Horticulture Therapy STRAUB. ERNIE J Construction Science THOMAS. MICHAEL D. Pre- Veterinary Medicine VANIER. JAYD Journalism and Mass Communications WANG. ROGER W Milling Science and Management WHITMER, MONTE W. Animal Science and Industry WIETHARN. GARY E Milling Science and Management WILSON. GREG H Animal Science and Industry WILSON. MARKT Bakery Science and Management I A ft 1 phi gamma delta 391 phi kappa tau ANDERSON. DOUGLASS. Pre-Medicine ARNOLD, RICHARD L Social Work ARPIN. SIDNEY I Civil Engineering BECKERLE. HARRYS Nuclear Engineering BHANGANANDA, NITINAI Animal Science and Industry BRYAN. KIMF Accounting CARPENTER. WILLIAM R Business Administration CARR. STEPHEN! Restaurant Management CASE. TIMOTHY G Pre-Medicine CHAFFEE.PAULD Regional and Community Planning DAUBERT. KENTJ Agronomy DAVIS. DANIEL M Pre-Forestry DILLMAN. DENNIS B Nuclear Engineering DISSEL.STEPHANC Business DUENSING. DAVID T Electrical Engineers ELLIS. WALTER C Agricultural Economics FORREST. ROBERTS Political Science GORDON. DANIEL B General Wisconsin Dells, Wl Freshman ... Overland Park Senior Stockton Junior Shawnee Mission Freshman Thailand Freshman Independence Freshman Kansas City Graduate Studeni Ptttsburg Freshman Manhattan Sophomore Overland Park Graduate Student Scott City Junior Mernam Freshman Wichita Sophomore Manhattan Freshman Liberal Sophomore Garden City Senior Kansas City Junior Overland Park Sophomore 392 phi kappa tau GUSTAFSON. MARK M Theatre GUTIERREZ, RALPH Architecture JONES. RICHARD P Business JONES, ROBERT! Architecture JONES, TOM M Animal Science and Industry . KENNEDY, CHARLES D Physical Education KRAMER. JOHN C Pre-Forestry LAWSON, FORREST C Music Education UNDER. JAY E Chemical Engineering LUCK, RICHARD D Pre-Design Professions MARTIN, RICHARD A Architecture McKENZIE, JEFFD Electrical Engineering Hastings. NB Junior Topeka Senior Overland Park Sophomore .Overland Park Senior . . .Garden City Senior Luray . . . Freshman . Ottawa Sophomore . Wichita Sophomore . Clay Center Freshman . Lyons Sophomore Assaria Senior Independence Freshman PALMBLADE, FREDDIE E. Horticulture PASSEN, PHILIP C Mechanical Engineering RODDY. WALTER C Agricultural Economics SHOEMAKER. ROBERTS Architecture SNYDER, MARKG Civil Engineering STEIN. GREGORY L Architecture THIERER. LARRY Pre-Design Professions TRACY, WILLIAM O. Pre-Veterinary Medicine VENKER. J. STEPHEN Architecture WALLACE. JAMES R Journalism and Mass Communicalions WHEELER, LARRY R. . Horticulture Therapy Leoti Senior Leawood .... Junior Overland Park . Sophomore Kansas City. MO Fifth Year Student . . . Overland Park Senior Gypsum Fifth Year Student Ogden Sophomore Syracuse Junior .St. Louis. MO Fifth Year Student Ottawa Freshman Shawnee Graduate Student the better the sooner A lot of time and papier-mach6 reaped first place for the Phi Kappa Tau home- coming display. Counterpart of the ! ; Conestoga wagon, a ferocious Willie h Wildcat perched atop the Phi Tau house j during homecoming week, but didn ' t i scare off any Sooners or Wildcats. phi kappa lau 393 phi kappa theta BRUNK. GLESNOR L ATWOOD. ALAN R Agricultural Economics BERG. WILLIAM M Business Administration BIRCH, JOHN W. Accounting BORGERDING, DAVID G Accounting ERICKSON, MICHAEL V Pre-Law FRIEDEL. MICHAEL D. . Chemical Engineering GOTTSCHALK. GENE Pre-Vetennary Medicine HASTERT. ARTHUR A Fisheries and Wildlife Biology HELLMER. JOHN F Electrical Engineering HENRY. STEPHEN L. Agricultural Economics HOLLANDER. STEVE J Pre-Design Professions . IVES, RON M Pre-Vetennary Medicine JILKA, JOHN P Anthropology KELLNER, TIMOTHY L. . . Chemical Engineering . . . LINENBERGER, STEVEN P. Architectural Engineering LLAMAS, STEVE A Accounting LOW. KENDALL C Architecture House parent Oswego Junior Prairie Village Freshman Shawnee Mission Sophomore Marysville Sophomore Council Grove Junior Wichita Sophomore . Hays Sophomore Topeka Sophomore Shawnee Mission Junior Gypsum Junior .St. Charles, MO Freshman Saline Freshman Assaria Senior . Littleton, CO Senior Hays Sophomore Newton Junior Fowler Junior MAHONEY, THOMAS H General MARTINEZ. JESUS R Pre-Design Professions MILLER. STEVE L Pre-Design Professions MORGAN, TIMOTHY J Physical Education MUDD, FLAVIAN G Animal Science and Industry MUDD, PATRICK P Agricultural Engineering Dorrance Freshman Wichita Freshman Frame Village Sophomore Greeley Senior Gorham Senior Gorham Senior Members of the Hell Hole look a bit devilish as they repose in the rustic set- ting of their clubroom. Primarily used for study, the pit lends itself to ... er ... entertainment. 394 phi kappa theta Haven Sophomore ... St. John . Senior Kansas City Junior Pretty Praine Sophomore . Atchison PREISSER. DONG Agricultural Economics REDD, LAWRENCE R. . Mechanical Engineering ROSEWICZ. GARY P Civil Engineering SCHAFER.GREG A. Pre-Vetennary Medicine SCHLETZBAUM, JAMES V. Agricultural Engineering Senior SCHMIDT. FREDERICK J .St. Louis Pre-Design Professions Sophomore SCHMIDT, PAUL C Hays Dairy Production Senior Caldwell . Sophomore . . Hays Filth Year Student Prairie Village Junior . . Princeton. IL Freshman Hutchmson Freshman Seneca Sophomore Prairie Village Freshman St. Louis. MO Freshman Blue Rapids Freshman WIESNER, THEODORE F Ellis Chemical Engineering Senior ZIEGLER. LOREN A Gramfield Business Education Sophomore SCHMIDT, STEVEN P. Agricultural Education SCHROEDER, RICHARD V Architecture SIGLER, HAROLD W Business Management SMULLING, TIMOTHY W Pre-Design Professions STEWART. ROBERTA Pre-Vetermary Medicine WARNICA. CHARLES A Mechanical Engineering WATKINS. JAMES P Natural Science WAWRZYNIAK. JUDE J Pre-Design Professions WHITESELL, WAYNE D Genera ZIEGLER, RALPH P Physical Education . . . Gramlield . . . Senior pi beta phi GOHEEN. DELTA G ALLEN. SUE L Speech Pathology BARBER, MARJORIE Speech Pathology and Audtology BARNES. DEBBIE J Elementary Education BEARDMORE, LUANNE Interior Design .... BENIGNUS, SARAS Journalism and Mass Communications BINFORD, KERRY K Child Psychology BISAGNO. KAY Accounting BOLAN. JONNAL Vocal Music BOLES. CATHERINE S General BRADBURY, DANA A General BRAUNAGEL.CARENA Clothing and Retailing House parent In man Freshman . . Anthony . Senior Wichita Junior Topeka . . .Senior Hoi sing ton Sophomore L.bera Sophomore Augusta Sophomore Manhattan Sophomore Manhattan Freshman Topeka Sophomore Wichita . Junior Straight shooting Pi Phis? Couldn ' t be any other way with the arrow as their ample ammunition symbol. No marauding enemy greeks better try to make off with this prize. 396 pi beta ph BROWN, CATHARINE A Clothing and Retailing BURNETTE, GARA L Physical Therapy BUSTER. SALLY L Business Administration BUTTON, AMY L Political Science CALL. JULIE A General CAMPBELL, BARBARA L Nuclear Engineering CARDINAL. GAIL A Family and Child Development COOK. CAROL S. Business COULTER. SUSAN E General CRUTCHFIELD, PATRICIA E Pre-Elementary Education DANNER, D ' EARL H. Sociology DEPEW, JULIE A Family and Child Development DRAKE. DEBRAL Business EATHERLY, LINDA L. . Elementary Education EDDY. JAN Recreation Therapy ENGEL, KARLAK Home Economics ESAU. VICKIE L General EVANS. KAREN G. Speech Pathology EVANS. LESLIE E. Early Childhood Education FREY.RUTH A. Accounting FROWME.DEBRAJ Music Education GRAFF, ELAINE L. Secondary Education GREEN, POLLY A Business GUTZMAN. MELISSA A Interior Design HAWKINS. LAURA J Fashion Design HEPPERLY. MARYL General HUTCHISON. MARLA S Pre-Nursmg IRELAND, DEBORAH A. Outdoor Recreation . . . JOHNSON, JOLENEK Physical Therapy KING, JOAN A Fashion Marketing . Manhattan Senior Overland Park Freshman McCracken Freshman Newton Senior Manhattan Freshman Fairway Senior Peona. IL Sophomore Wichita . . Junior Topeka Freshman Coffeyville Freshman Manhattan Sophomore Manhattan Freshman Wmlield Sophomore Garden City . . Junior .Hays Sophomore Solomon Freshman Hutchmson . . Freshman Eureka Junior Eureka Freshman Manhattan Sophomore Topeka . .Junior Manenthal Freshman Manhattan Freshman Leawood Sophomore KINGSTON. ARLETTAM Fashion Marketing KNIERIM. DEBBIE R Business Education KRIWIEL, MARGARET J Elementary Education LINDGREN, DEBIEJ. Architecture LIVINGSTON. SUE A Pre-Medicme LUTHI, ALLISON J Physical Science LUTHI. JON! R Recreation MAIN, JENNIFER L Commercial Art MANN. DONNA L Elementary Education McENDREE. VICKIG Family and Child Development MclNTYRE, PEGGEA Business Education MEADE. SANDRA A General Wichita Freshman Concord i a Freshman Hays Sophomore Holton Senior Colorado Springs, CO Sophomore Bartlesville, OK Senior Hoisington Sophomore Rock Port, MO Junior Wichita Sophomore Prairie Village Senior El Dorado Freshman Madison Sophomore MITCHELL. SHELLEY D Journalism and Mass Communications MORGAN, KIMBERLY A. Social Work PALMER, KIMK General PHELAN, JANEM Nuclear Engineering PIERCE, JEANNE L Pre-Dentistry PROPHET, DEBBIE J Speech Pathology and Audiology Madison Junior El Dorado Senior Salma Freshman Wichita Sophomore Coldwater Sophomore Wichita Freshman Cassville, MO Sophomore Salma Junior Shawnee Sophomore Hutchmson Junior Salma Junior Springfield. MO Sophomore pi beta phi 397 pi beta phi RIEDEL, BARBARA C General ROACH, NANCY C Home Economics and Journalism ROE. BARBARA I Textile Research SALMON. DEMISE A Elementary Education SCHMIDT, CINDY A Fashion Marketing SCHROCK, JO A Agriculture SCHULTE.KIMA General SCHUMACHER. KARLA J. Home Economics Education SEELEY. MARYANN Journalism and Mass Communications SHEIK. JULIE B Math Education SPARKS, KATHYL Physical Therapy SURBER, HEIDI M Applied Voice Topeka Sophomore Wichita Sophomore Superior, NB Junior Manhattan Junior . Kansas City Kiowa Sophomore Garnett Freshman Salina Freshman El Dorado Sophomore Bern Sophomore Shawnee Mission Junior Eureka Sophomore TAYLOR. ELISABETH A General TIPPIN. KIMBERLYA. Landscape Architecture TOLLEFSON. ANN C Special Education . TOWNSEND, NANCY A. . Recreational Therapy . . . VAN CLEAVE, JANET H. Modern Language WELTSCH. JUDYC . Business Administration WHITEHEAD. LESLEY K Business WILKINSON, SHERYL K Recreation WILLIAMS, SHARIL.. Pre-Nursing WITTMEYER.GAYLEJ. . Music Education Kinsley Freshman Wichita Junior Leavenworth .Junior . . Con cord i a Senior . Kansas City Senior Leawood Freshman Lincoln, NB .Junior Wichita Sophomore Dodge City Freshman Ottawa Sophomore 398 pi beta phi pi kappa alpha ADAMS, GARY L Civil Engineering ADAMS. RICHARD R Chemical Engineering ADAMS, W. CLAY Civil Engineering ARCHER. DOUGLASS K Commercial Art BODELSON. MICHAEL A Architecture BURNETT, DAVID G Natural Resource Management BURRIS. JEFFK Business CARR. CHARLES R General CARTER, KENT L Accounting CLESS.GARYC Agricultural Economics CLESS, STEPHEN E. Radio and Television . CORMAN. RICHARD W Accounting CORY. SCOTT E Veterinary Medicine COYLE, MICHAEL D. . . . Horticulture CROFOOT. JAMES W Business Administration DAVISSpN, STANLEY P. Accounting DELL, BRUCE D Pre-Design Professions DENNING. DALE P Pre-Medicme Concordia Senior Concordia Freshman Overbrook Senior Garnett Junior Santa Fe. NM Junior Overland Park Junior Garnett Sophomore Wichita Freshman Russell Freshman Prairie Village . Sophomore . . Prairie Village Senior Wichita Sophomore DREHER, STEVEN P Animal Science and Industry . ELMER, DANA G Biology FUESSLE. RICHARDS Agricultural Economics GRIFFITH, EDWARD L Business HEIM. DANNY W Agriculture . JOHNSON. ROBERT P Business Administration JONES, JAMES C Secondary Education KIMBLE, DAVID E Electrical Engineering LAIR. GREGORY D Agronomy LOOMIS, JACK L Business Administration LYLE, DWIGHT R Construction Science MALONE, MARKS Architecture Wichita Junior . . Overland Park Senior Cedar Point Junior Mission Senior St Louis. MO Sophomore Russell Sophomore lola Senior Manhattan Senior Overland Park Freshman . Marion Junior Manon .Junior Kansas City Graduate Student Stanley . Sophomore Chanute Senior Pigua . Sophomore Marion Junior . . Overland Park Senior Ulysses . Junior MARKEE.JIMM Restaurant Management McARTHUR. WEST K Accounting McCARTER. STEVEN W. Architectural Engineering McGREW, ROBERT L. Business Administration McNITT, JAYD. Engineering Science METZLER. BRADD Architecture MILLS. BRIAN J. Political Science NEIGHBORS. DAVID C General NEIGHBORS, MARK S Business Administration NELSON, JEFFREY A Milling Science and Management NICHOLS. LAURENCE E Business PEPPERDINE, ROND Bakery Science and Management PUCKET, STEVEN K. Agronomy RILEY. GREGG T Agricultural Economics SANDERS. DOUGLAS K Pre-Vetennary Medicine SCHNEIDER, MARTIN E Pre-Vetennary Medicine SEITZ. RICHARD M Business SHORT, FREDRICK W. Pre-Medicine .Franklin, MA Senior Salina . Sophomore Overland Park Freshman lola Senior Ulysses Sophomore Dover Junior . . . . Russell Sophomore Olathe Sophomore Olathe Senior Kansas City Freshman Leawood Sophomore Kansas City . .Junior Ulysses Sophomore lola Sophomore Concordia Sophomore . Luray Freshman Junction City Sophomore . Kansas City Senior pt kappa alpha 399 pi kappa alpha SIPES. MARTIN J Accounting SMART GREGL Engineering STANIFORTH. CHRISTOPHER J Business Administration TOWELL. MICHAEL S Marketing VALLERO. KEVIN M Physical Therapy WATKINS, JEFFREY P Pre-Vetermary Medicine WHITE. TRACY M Chemical Engineering WILLIAMS LARRY A Arl WINDHORST. DANAJ Pre- Medicine Russell Junior Kansas City Freshman LeawoocJ Sophomore Kansas City Senior Galesburg. IL Freshman Newton Sophomore Concordia Sophomore Garnet! Freshman Wells Junior where ' s the fire (truck) Should a riot or flames break out in this group, the fire hose might cool it down ... if the Pikes can find it in the crowd. The 1 928 La France was purchased from the Garnett Fire Department in 1 968. 400 pi kappa alpha putnam hall BURK, DANIEL J Electrical Engineering DUPY, DWIGHT D Electrical Engineering ALBRIGHT. KATHI M. . . . Food Science and industry ALLISON, PAMELA D. . Home Economics Extension . APLEY. SUSAN D. . . Home Economics . . . ATTERBURY, RUTH A. . . Accounting . . AUST. ELIZABETH D Agricultural Journalism AYRES, JACQUELYNR. General . BAKER, JUDY E Business Finance BLUNK, KATIE A Pre-Vetennary Medicine . BOGGS, PAMELA J Family and Child Development . BRACKETT, BARBARA L. . General , . . . McDonald ....... Senior Salina Senior . . .Hutchinson . Sophomore Basehor Junior Larned Freshman Kansas City Junior Wichita . . . Sophomore . .Smith Center Freshman . . . . Humboldt Senior . . . Hardtner . Sophomore Arkansas City . . .Sophomore . LakeOuivira Freshman BREWER. TINAA Early Childhood Education BROWN, NANCY J. . . . Industrial Engineering BURGDORFER, JANET L . General CALLAHAN, ANGELA M. Dietetics . CARLSON, MIRIAM G Physical Education CASSELMAN, MARSHA A. Fashion Design . COFFMAN. BARBARA A. Physical Education CREWS, CAROL G Early Childhood Education . DALTON, CYNTHIA D Journalism and Psychology . DETWILER. JAN E. . Pre-Design Professions DIVELEY. C. JOYCE Home Economics Education DOCKER, CONNIE D Fashion Marketing . . Pittsburg Freshman . Garden City . . Sophomore Gardner . . Sophomore .St. Marys Sophomore Lindsborg Senior Conway Springs . . Freshman DeSoto Freshman Kansas City Senior Kansas City Senior . .Wichita . . .Freshman Highland . . .Junior Topeka . . .Freshman DUSIN.ANNM Accounting EGAN. DIANE Speech Pathology FARRELL, MAUREEN E Elementary Education FUNK, BRENDAJ. Home Economics Education GERAGHTY, SUSAN E General GERMANN, DEBORAH K Business . GOFF, JANET A History . . GOODRICH, TRACY J. Medical Technology GOWEN, ALICIA K. . . General . GRAVES, SHARON K. . Elei lentary Education GRIFFITH, SUSAN L. . . Radio and Television . GRIPP, LISA A Home Economics . - Phillipsburg Senior . . Wichita Junior Leawood Senior .... Garden City Junior Lenexa . . Sophomore . . Garden City . . . Junior Olathe Junior . . .Olathe Junior . .Wichita . . . Freshman . Green sburg Senior Walton Senior . Smith Center Sophomore HAMMEKE. MARY E. . , Accounting . . HANSON. CAROLYN S. . . Physical Therapy . . . HANSON, MARGARET A. . Accounting . . HAYS, LINDAS Special Education HEIKES. JANICE K. . . . Sociology and Social Work HEITSCHMIDT, DIANE K. Home Economics New Providence, NJ Sophomore Olathe Freshman Leavenworth Junior .... Natoma Sophomore . Riley Junior Scott City Senior HESS. JAN L Early Childhood Education HIGGS, DEBRAS. . Chemical Engineering HILTZ, SUSAN M. ... Computer Science . . HOECKLE, CHERYL L. . . Dietetics HOFFMAN, PAMELA E. . Interior Design HUMBARGER. JOYCE E Pre-Nursing . . Scott City Junior . Topeka Sophomore Waukesha. Wl Junior . . . . Montpelier, ND Senior Chaflin Junior . . . Herington . . . Freshman putnam hall 401 putnam hall HUSTON, DONNA K Social Work ISAACSON. J ANNA J Dietetics ISENHOWER. DANA J Interior Design JAHNKE.DEBRAA Business Education JILKA. ROSEM. Retail Floriculture JOHNSON. DONNA J Fisheries and Wildlife Biology JOHNSON, LINDA K Horticulture Industries JOHNSON, SHARON D Elementary Education JULIAN. GLENDAE Pre-Physical Therapy KALLENBACH. SUSAN L Fashion Design KECK, DEBRAA Veterinary Medicine KENNEDY, CONNIE A Fashion Design KLASINSKI, DANETTE E. Interior Design KNACKSTEDT. NANCY J Accounting KRAUSE, ROBINS Foods and Nutrition KRAUSE. STARLAJ Consumer Interest KREMPA, ELLEN M Home Economics Extension KREUTZER, PAMELA D Journalism and Mass Communications Wichita Freshman McPherson Junior Harper Senior Topeka Sophomore Assana Sophomore Bridgeport Freshman Assana Senior Assana Senior Johnson Junior Valley Center Sophomore Wakarusa Freshman .Prairie Village Senior Kansas City Junior Russell Freshman Modoc Sophomore Modoc Junior Eden. NY Sophomore Scott City Sophomore eat your heart out Mention munchies in a dorm and the rush is on. Snarfin ' and chompin ' accom- panied with good friends equals an impromptu party. 402 putnam hall lorm and the npin ' accom- s equals an LA NDIS. LAURA L. Pre-Design Professions LETOURNEAU. KARENS Recreation . . . LILLARD. REBECCA L Fashion Design LOGAN, CINDY K Art Education LOHKAMP.DEEDRAA. Elementary Education MAGGARD, CAROL . . Horticulture McCALL, CYNTHIA S. . Political Science McMAHON, RENEE Psychology McNEILL. ANNA L. Horticulture McVAY.KATHYS. Office Administration . . MEAGHER, FREDA M. Elementary Education . METSCH. DIANE M. . Pre-Veterinary Medicine Kansas City Sophomore . Wichita Sophomore Kansas City Junior . Olathe . Freshman Wichita . . .Junior LaCrosse Junior . . . .Phillipsburg Senior Overland Park . . Sophomore Shawnee Mission Sophomore . . . Norcatur Sophomore Solomon . Freshman Newton . . Junior MEZGER, DENAE. . Civil Engineering . . . MIERAU, CONNIE L. Business Education MILLS. LORRAINE A. Pre-Forestry . . MOCK. DEBORAK Interior Design MODEN.JOLEEND. . General . MOORE, DEE A. Elementary Education MOORE, NANCY E. Dietetics MONFORT. NANCYS. Home Economics Extension MURPHY. MARY A General MURPHY. NANCY J Elementary Education . MURPHY, PHYLLIS A Music Education NICKEL. CONNIE J. Interior Design NOLL, JANET L Journalism and Mass Communications OLSEN, NANCY R Agriculture . OLSON. CONNIE J Home Economics and Journalism .. PARCEL, PENNIEE. . Music Education PETERSON, CINDY M Family and Child Development PFOST, OLINDA G Home Economics Wichita Senior . .Wichita Junior Russell . . Freshman Wichita . . Freshman . Wakeeney .Sophomore .... Ulysses . Sophomore . Basehor Junior lola . . . Freshman . Wichita Freshman . Overland Park . . Sophomore Girard Sophomore Buhler . . .Junior . Winchester . .Sophomore Kinsley . . . Freshman Oberlin . . Sophomore . . Coldwater . . Sophomore . Assaria Junior . Medicine Lodge Senior PICKLER, SUSAN K Journalism and Mass Communications PIXLEY, CYNTHIA L Pre-Vetermary Medicine RAMSDALE. JANELLES. . Journalism and Mass Communications REBMAN, LINDAS. Engineering REISING, ANNE. Pre-Physical Therapy RICHTER. LINDA K Home Economics RILEY, KARENS Journalism and Mass Communications ROBB, CYNTHIA K Office Administration ROUS, SUSAN K Clothing and Retailing SABATKA, JANIECE M Modern Language SALTER, LORNA M Journalism and Mass Communications SCHWANKE. LESAS. . Pre-Vetermary Medicine Ulysses Senior .Cimarron .Sophomore McPherson . . .Junior Olathe Junior Momence, IL Sophomore Assaria . . . Freshman . . . lola Freshman . Kansas City Senior Claflm Senior . . . Atwood . .Junior Wakefield Senior Scott City . Sophomore SHAUGHNESSY, TERESA J Political Science SLOOP, SANDRA K English SMITH, SHIRLEY R Computer Science SPARE. DONNA J Pre-Nursmg SPRATT.PATTI J. Accounting . . STEFFENHAGEN.SUEA. Education Oberlin Sophomore . . . Winchester Senior Big Bow Senior ... St. John Junior Leawood Junior Overland Park . Sophomore putnarnhall 403 putnam hall SI! STEGEMAN. MARGARET C Overland Park General Freshman STRAND, CONSTANCE . Leavenworth Journalism and Mass Communications Sophomore SUELLENTROP.MARYT Colwich Pre-Nursing Sophomore TANNER, REBECCA J SI John Radio and Television Sophomore TENNAL . APRIL S Sabetha General Sophomore TETLOW, SUSAN E. . . . Troy Microbiology . Junior TEWELL.JANEE Bonner Springs Clothing and Retailing Junior TIBBITS. DARLENE .Minneapolis Pre-Nursing . Sophomore TRAMMELL. JANICE L Wichita General Freshman TRAYER, DEAUN K Garden City Mechanical Engineering Senior TRAYER. MARTHA A Garden City Mechanical Engineering Freshman TURNER. KIMBERLYJ Topeka Pre-Nursing Sophomore VANTASELL.BRENDAK DeSoto Physical Education Freshman VAN TASELL. DEBRA S DeSoto Family Economics Junior VOGTS. JOAN D Girard Clothing and Retailing Sophomore VOILES. DENISE A Shawnee Pre-Design Professions Junior WALTERS. SANDRA A Olathe Radio and Television Freshman WANN. MARJORIE M Hays Home Economics Extension Junior WEST, KAREN A Kansas City Foods and Nutrition Senior WILLIAMS, SHERRY L Kansas City Biology Senior WOMACK, NANCY D lola Interior Architecture Senior WOOD. MARY E Cedar Point Horticulture . Freshman ZWEYGARDT. BARBARA K .St. Francis Home Economics Sophomore 404 putnam hall sigma alpha epsilon FOSBERG KATHRYN ALBRIGHT. JEFF P Engineering ARMBRUST, JAMES R Mechanical Engineering ASBURY, DANIELS. . . . Business ATKINSON, STEPHEN C. . Pre-Law BANNER. KEVIN A. Journalism and Mass Communications BANTA, THOMAS B. . Business . . . ... BARNES, JOHN F. Mechanical Engineering BASHAM, CHUCK E. . . Pre-Design Professions BERKE. JEFFREY H. . . Pre-Vetermary Medicine BERNICA, R. GREG Accounting . . . BEYMER, ROBERT K. . . Business Administration BISHOP, BARRY W Accounting BOWLES. THOMAS 8. . Accounting BREWER, STEVEN R. Business . . . CHANDLER, C.JEROME Business . . CHRISTIE. KENNETH A. Engineering . DA YVAULT, MARKS. Pre-Design Professions Houseparent . Winfield . Freshman .... Buhler . .Junior Leavenworth . Sophomore Winfield Freshman Topeka . . . Freshman .Wichita . . Freshman Newton Junior . Manhattan Freshman Leavenworth Sophomore . . . Topeka . . Freshman Lakin . Sophomore . Independence Senior . . Hutchinson Junior . . Manhattan . . . Sophomore Sterling . . .Sophomore Beloit . . Freshman . . Wichita . . . Freshman DECK. STEVE B Wichita Agricultural Economics Freshman DeVORE, PAUL C Independence Mechanical Engineering Senior DYKSTRA, MICHAEL A . Atchison Business Administration . . Sophomore ELDER. KENT E. Mufvane Pre-Medictne . Sophomore ERNST, JACK R Manhattan Building Construction Senior ESTILL, BRADFORD W Arkansas City Mechanical Engineering Senior ETLING, JAMES B Garden City Microbiology . Junior EUBANK, JAMES W Coats Pre-Veterinary Medicine Senior GARVERT, TERRY J Plainville Food Science and Management Senior GIESCH, JOHN A . Leawood Business . Freshman GILLETTE, CURT J Pillon, CO Journalism and Mass Communications Senior GLOTZBACH. JOSEPH C Leavenworth Pre-Vetennary Medicine Freshman GUNTHER, GREG J. . . Topeka Mechanical Engineering . . .Freshman HALE, STEVEN C Lawrence Journalism and Mass Communications Senior HATFIELD, JOHN R., II El Dorado Animal Science Senior HATTAN, MICHAEL A. . . Concordia Pre-Optometry . . Sophomore HEALY, MARK J . ... Manhattan Business . . . Junior HENDRY. DAVID W San Francisco. CA Mechanical Engineering . - . Junior HEROLD, DON Parsons Architecture Senior HOPPAS, DOUGLAS W Lakin Animal Science and Industry Senior HUGHES, JEFF D Manhattan Business Administration Senior INGRAM, STEVE W Overland Park Physical Education Senior JONES, DAVID E Arkansas City Mechanical Engineering Senior JONES, JEFFERYW. . , Topeka Engineering . Freshman JONES, RONALD P Mulvane Business .Junior KITE, EDWARD K St. Francis Marketing Senior KUNZ, MICHAEL Prairie Village Journalism and Mass Communications Senior LACY, STEPHEN M Shawnee Mission Accounting Senior LADNER. ROBIN A. .. . Topeka Fisheries and Wildlife Biology . Sophomore MARIETTA, JAMES R. Salma Agronomy . Sophomore sigma alpha epsilon 405 sigma alpha epsilon MARTIN. R CRAIG Pre-Law McCUNE.GREGA Agricultural Journalism . McPHETER. GEORGE R Business MEITNER.JOHNT Agricultural Economics . MILLER. MARK W Mechanical Engineering MILLER. THOMAS E Business MASS. MICHAEL G Pre-Law NEUMANN. THOMAS A Business NITZSCHKE. KEVIN J Electrical Engineering OTT.KENT A Agricultural Economics PARKER, LANDON K Pre-Design Professions PIKE. BYRON L Pre-Vetennary Medicine RANKIN. MILTON R Pre-Velermary Medicine REESE, JAMES E General REESE. RUSTY A Pre- Dentistry ROBERTS. ROY C Agricultural Mechanization RODDY. JACK W Grain Science and Industry SANTEE.RAYL Building Construction SCHUST, JAYE Electrical Engineering SMITH. DONALD R Pre-Vetermary Medicine SMYTH. D CRAIG Agriculture STEPHENS, DONALD D. Agricultural Economics . STEPHENSON. JAMES D Pre-Design Professions TAYLOR. MATTHEW M Civil Engineering Overland Park Sophomore . . . Plamville Senior . Hutchmson Junior Lenexa Senior Topeka Sophomore Atchison Sophomore Atchison Freshman Atchison Freshman Ale hi son Sophomore Peck Junior Atchison Sophomore Mmneola Freshman Ashland Sophomore White Cloud Freshman Leavenworth Sophomore Ashland Sophomore Overland Park Junior Parsons Junior Leawood Junior Walnut Freshman Beloit Freshman Ashland Senior St Louis. MO Freshman Atchison Freshman THOMPSON. KRIS P Accounting WEIR, RICK R Industrial Engineering WEST, STEPHEN G Engineering WORNOM. JOHN L Ammal Science and Industry Topeka Freshman . .Geuda Springs Senior Shawnee Mission Freshman Chandler Sophomore hellenic upkeep Brushing up on his greek alphabet, a Sig Alph gives his house ' s cement insig- nia a fresh coat of paint. The letters stand on the front lawn and were donated by the 1 975 pledge class. 406 sigma alpha epsilon sigma chi KELLER OLETTA ALLDRITT, LESLIE D. . Pre-Vetermary Medicine ATLAKESON, KEVIN K Pre-Dentistry BARBER. CHESTER! Aeronautical Engineering BAUER, GARY B Business BECKENHAUER, DWANE M Pre- Medicine BLEAKLEY, DAVID P Animal Science and Industry BOOTH. JOHN E Pre-Law BOWMAN, JOHN D . General BURKE, PATRICK T Construction Science BURKHART. W MARK Business CARR. JAMES E Pre-Vetermary Medicine COTT. JEFFJ Radio and Television DOVE, DeVERE Animal Science and Industry . EASTER. RICHARD C. Pre-Design Professions EICHMAN. JAMES J Fashion Marketing FLICK, JOHN W Pre-Forestry FOLKERTS, DON A Accounting Houseparent Wichita Freshman . . . .Atchison Junior Anthony Sophomore Wichita . . .Junior . . Manhattan . Sophomore Overland Park . . . Sophomore Overland Park Freshman Prairie Village . . . Freshman Mulvane . . Freshman . Kansas City . .Sophomore Mulvane Freshman Belle Plame Sophomore . . Great Bend Senior Raytown, MO . Sophomore Wamego Sophomore . Wmfield Sophomore . Great Bend Senior FOX, LARRY D Business GANTZ.GARYR Pre-Vetermary Medicine HARMON. DAVID P Business Administration HAVENS, JOHN H Pre-Veterinary Medicine HEUERMANN.PAULA. Geophysics HOFFMAN, STEVEN J. Business Management . HONER. STEVEN L Radio and Television HOWARD. ROBERT L. General JACOBSON, STEPHEN B Pre-Design Professions JONES, REX A Business KNOP1CK, THOMAS J Pre-Forestry . LYNTON, PETER D Business Administration MACH, SCOTT W Radio and Television MARKEY, DOUG B. Business . MATLACK, TERRY C. . General McCOY, MICHAEL D Mec.ianical Engineering MORRISON, KILE R. . . Architecture NELSON. JAMES C Business Lamed Senior Ness City Sophomore Wichita Junior Olathe Junior . Prairie Village Sophomore . .Kansas City Senior Atchison Sophomore Overland Park . . . Freshman Wamego . . Sophomore Wichita Sophomore Wichita Sophomore Overland Park . Sophomore Peona. IL . . Sophomore LakeQuivira . . Sophomore Clearwater Sophomore Manhattan . . Sophomore Wichita Senior Overland Park Freshman NORTON. DANIEL J Business OSTERMANN. SCOTT L Agricultural Economics PAL MA, PHILIP F Journalism and Political Science PARKER, ROBERT W Accounting PARSONS, DAVID C Pre-Dentistry PATRICK. J. BRIAN Accounting PERKY, DAVID W Accounting PETERS, MATTHEW W Economics PISHNY, NORMAN C Computer Science and Accounting PRATT. TYLER P. Business RAY. CARL D Pre- Design Professions REED. LAWRENCE D Pre-Medicme Shell Knob, MO Freshman . Sylvan Grove . Sophomore Topeka . . . Sophomore Glen Elder Junior Wmfield Sophomore Pittsburg Junior Leawood Senior Wichita Senior Waterville Senior Goddard .Junior Jefferson City. MO . . Freshman Prame Village Special Student sigma chi 407 sigma chi brewing over books Midnight oil isn ' t the only late night study fuel. True crammers employ any- thing from the usual coffee and No-Doz to individualized methods of continuous eating, chain smoking, or vigorous exer- cising at regular intervals. For some, however, the almighty GPA is ample incentive. REISTER, BRIAN P Pre-Veterinary Medicine ROE, KEITH E Economics SCHNEIDER. DWIGHT T General SKOOG. PETER R Pre-Veterinary Medicine STUCKEY. D. SCOTT . . Architecture WHITEHEAD, MARK A Pre-Design Prolessions WOLHNGION SCOTE Construction Science Prairie Village Freshman Mankato Senior Slockton Freshman Topeka Sophomore . . . .Junction City Senior Lincoln. NB Freshman Mmdenmmes. MO Freshman 408 sigma chi sigma nu BALDWIN. THOMAS F Salina Pre-Medicine . Freshman BAY, MICHAEL W Topeka Business Administration Senior BENNETT. DANIEL M Newton Business Freshman BERNING, GARY L Manenlhal Agricultural Economics Senior BERNING, LARRY A Manenlhal Business Senior BERNING, MARK S Leoti General . . Freshman BROTTON, LESLIE E. . . Salina Physical Therapy Sophomore COPE, JOHN M Leawood Pre-Medicine ' Sophomore CRAWFORD. JEFF A Shawnee Mission Business Administration Junior DAHLSTROM, H. GEORGE Topeka Business Administration Senior DOLLIVER. MARK T Leawood Business Administration Junior DOLLIVER. MATTHEW P Leawood General Freshman EAGLETON, MARK S Salina Business Administration Junior FAIRCHILD. KIPP C Leawood Architecture Filth Year Student GNAEGY. DAVID L Glendale. MO Landscape Architecture Junior GRIEVES. BRAD A Topeka General Sophomore GRIEVES, KEVIN D Topeka Architecture Senior HARP, RICHARD D Leoti General Freshman HAX, CHRIS M Prairie Village Business Administration Junior HILLS. SCOTT W Sedan General Sophomore IVES. RANDY G Salina Business Administration Sophomore LAW, ROBERT S Kansas City, MO Architecture Fifth Year Student LOUGHARY. STEVEN J Topeka Commercial Art Sophomore MARIETTA. JOHN C Salina Pre-Dentistry Junior MURRY. JOHN P Manhattan Pre-Law Freshman NORTON. WILLIAM B Haven Nuclear Engineering Sophomore ORTH, DOUGLASG Andale General Freshman PATTON, WILLIAM R Troy Business Finance Senior PUKACH. WALTER S Topeka Civil Engineering Junior RIDDER, J. JEFFERY Leoti Agriculture Freshman sigma nu 409 sigma nu RINNEH JOHN A Building Construction SANDBERG, CRAIG L Business Management SCHRAG. LORENR Animal Science and industry SNELL. ROBERT R Pre-Vetermary Medicine STILLIONS. KEITH M Pre-Vetermary Medicine SUTLICK, ALBERT F Fisheries and Wildlife Biology . Topeka Sophomore . .Prairie Village Senior Moundndge Junior Manhattan Sophomore Topeka Junior . . .Kansas City Senior THIES CHARLES W Construction Engineering TRAPP. TIMOTHY M Pre-Design Professions TWIETMEYER. STEVEN F Pre-Dentistry VAN WORMER. GREGORY W Business Administration WEBSTER, RANDALL B Architecture WILSON, BRIAN C Bakery Science and Management WOLFENBARGER. KURT A Pre-Design Professions WOOLDRIDGE.BAIRDJ Pre-E)esign Professions Salma Freshman Overland Park Junior Goddard Junior Berkeley Heights. NJ Junior Osawatornie Junior . . . Coral Gables, FL Senior Raytown. MO Freshman Prairie Village Sophomore a bad batch Cooks not only handle pots and pans with skill but also the pranks and com- plaints of those they feed. A good sense of humor is one ingredient the Sigma Nu ' s top chef isn ' t without. 410 sigma nu sigma phi epsilon SHUPE, CORAL AICHER, ERICL Feed Science and Management AMES. RODNEY W. Agriculture APPLEBY, JONL Business AVERILL. SCOTT G Business BELL, KEVIN P Business BIRD. RONALD D. History BLEWITT. TIMOTHYS Business BONN, MICHAEL D Veterinary Medicine BOHN, RODNEY P. Dairy Science BOURK. GIL BERT P Business BUTTON. DANIEL J Pre-Forestry CARLSON, RANDALL A Business CHALTAS. J STEVE . Clothing and Retailing CODY. MARK W Accounting COE, ROBERT W Pre-Law DIERKS, CHUCK C Business Management DYER, DAVID K Business EVERETT. JOHN W. Pre-Vetermary Medicine FREES, JERRY L Agronomy GEHRING. GEORGE M Radio and Television GERSTBERGER, JEFF F. Agricultural Business - . . GLASCO.CALVINJ Agricultural Economics GRAFF, JOHN F Agricultural Education . . Houseparent Eureka Sophomore Leoti Sophomore- McPherson Freshman Kansas City Junior Salma Sophomore Wichita Freshman Lawrence Sophomore Alta Vista Junior Alta Vista Freshman Leawood Sophomore Newton Sophomore Valley Center Junior Sahna Sophomore Coffeyville Junior McPherson Freshman Leoti Junior Overland Park Sophomore Scotl City Sophomore Great Bend Senior Atchison Freshman Leoti Senior Good I and Sophomore Marienthal Senior GREENLEE. JOHN W Architecture HATCHER, BRYAN C. Agricultural Economics HECHT, ROBERTO Agronomy HECKMAN.CHADC. . Computer Science HERZOG. GREGORYS Architecture HODGES. TERRY L Accounting Denver, CO Junior Goodland Senior Seneca Freshman Wakeeney Fifth Year Student Topeka Junior Leawood Sophomore HUEY, KIRKE Education JOHNSON, ROBERT R. Architecture JOY. DANNY W General JOYCE. REX M Pre-Medicme KIRK. CHUCK Agricultural Economics KNOX. KENNETH W Agr icultural Economics LARSON, G.KENT Agronomy LAUE. HAROLD L Nuclear Engineering LEVY, DAVID S Architecture LEWIS. R PERRY Pre-Design Professions LIEBL. STEPHEN A. Pre-Vetermary Medicine LUEBBERS. DENNIS J Mechanical Engineering Russell Senior . Garden City Senior Durham Sophomore Garden City Sophomore Scott City Sophomore Wellington Sophomore MACALUSO, NICK J. . Business MARKER, JEFF A Physical Education MCDONALD, JAMES P. Business MEARS, TIMP General METHENY. LARRY A. Veterinary Medicine MOOTS, CRAIG K Plant Pathology . . Scandia Senior Topeka Freshman Coffeyville Senior Topeka Sophomore Dodge City Sophomore Manenthal Freshman Shawnee Freshman Garden City Freshman . . Scandia Senior Topeka Sophomore . Garden City Sophomore Eureka Sophomore sigma phi epsilon 411 sigma phi epsilon contestant number one Daytime tv viewers have a wide selec- tion of programming to choose from game shows, game shows, or game shows. Which did these Sig Eps choose? A right guess could mean three sets of luggage, a trip to Hawaii, and five cases of dog food. Atchison Freshman Overland Park Junior Overland Park Sophomore Great Bend ... Senior Lawrence Sophomore Salina . . Senior Shawnee Freshman Topeka Sophomore Kansas City, MO . .Senior Lenexa Freshman Shawnee Junior Shawnee Freshman Salina Sophomore Shawnee Sophomore McPherson Senior Wichita Senior . . Harveyville Senior Garden City Junior MYER, MARK L Business NEDERMAN. JEFF A. Marketing NELSON. RICK Business NIEDEREE, MIKE C. . . . Pre- Veterinary Medicine O ' TOOLE. PATRICK J Pre-Vetennary Medicine OWEN, GREG D. Radio and Television PHELPS. ROGER A Pre-Design Professions REID WILLIAM M Corrections ROHRER, JOHN W. Construction Science RUFFIN. TIM R Agricultural Engineering RYNARD. JOHN E Accounting SCHROEGER. MICHAELS Business STANSBERRY. GARY General SWARNER, JOE M Pre-Pharmacy UNRUH. GALEN K. Agricultural Economics UNRUH, MILOM History and Pre-Law . . WEEMS, ROBERT E. Corrections WESTERHAUS. JOHN J Architecture 412 sigma phi epsilon SLOAN. GERALD E. . . SLOAN. JAN L ATWILL, DONALD E. . . Chemical Engineering BAHR.BILLG Electrical Engineering . BELL, THOMAS L. Psychology BRACK. MICHAEL J. . . Accounting FORD. CARL D. Electrical Engineering . FUNK. GLENN E Electrical Engineering GONZOLAS, ED Accounting HUDSON, DONALD L. KAUP. DAVID R Journalism and Mass Communications KELTZ. JACK D Agricultural Engineering KENWORTHY, JAMES R Biology LATTA. RONALD D Chemistry McCOSKEY, STEVEN L Chemical Engineering MOORE, KENNETH D Mechanical Engineering MORIN, TERRY J Chemical Engineering NASON, RANDALL R Nuclear Engineering PARKER. JEFFREY J Industrial Engineering smith Houseparent Houseparent Smith Center Sophomore Clallin . . . Freshman Holton Sophomore . . . . Ness City . Sophomore CHARTRAND, EDWARD E Leawood Business Sophomore CORN, DAVID A Bushton Agricultural Engineering Senior Salma Freshman Topeka .Junior Hermgton . .Junior Olathe Pre-Veterinary Medicine Senior . Smith Center Freshman Mound Valley Sophomore Ransom . . Freshman Wichita . Freshman Wichita Junior Wichita .Sophomore Manhattan Junior Wakarusa Junior Kansas City Junior .................................... RAYS, ARTHUR B ....................................... Salina Pre-Law and Physical Science ............................ Senior RHODES. RANDY ....................................... Clifton Electrical Engineering .................................... Junior RODENBAUGH. STEPHAN M ............................. St. Marys Electrical Engineering ................................ Sophomore ROGERS, DANNY H Topeka Agricultural Engineering Senior RUARK, ROGER L Cotfeyville Mechanical Engineering Sophomore SIDEBOTTOM. BILL J Topeka Chemical Engineering Sophomore SIMPSON, SCOTT A Clay Center Biochemistry Senior SIMPSON, STEVEN R Dodge City Business Management Senior STAHL. MIKE El Dorado Electrical Engineering Sophomore STUEVE, GERALD J. . . 1 ' rical Engineering WURTZ, GREGORY J. Chemical Engineering Hiawatha . .Junior . Topeka . .Junior smith 413 smurthwaite HUESNER NEVA ALEXANDER. MILAA Elementary Education BARB. CHERYL L Pre-Veterinary Medicine BENIGNUS. NANCY V. Recreation BRUEY, LOU ANN Elementary Education BRUEY. PATRICIA J Recreation BYRNES, CAROLYN A Physical Education BYRNES. JEANNE M Ammal Science and Industry CHANNEL, MARY Home Economics Education CRAIG, RHONDA L Horticulture DAVISON, JANET E General DEAN. HOLLY M Home Economics Houseparent Overland Park Junior Aita Vista Freshman Hoisington Junior Bluff City Senior Bluff City Sophomore Overland Park Freshman Overland Park Junior Soldier Senior Kansas City Freshman Topeka Freshman Wichita Freshman ENGELHARDT. VICKI J. . Dietetics FELDKAMP, TERRY L. Dietetics GARDNER, MARY Clothing and Retailing GARRETT.ROANNK Elementary Education GARRETT.ROSANNG Elementary Education HARRIS. S KAY Fisheries and Wildlife Biology HAVEL, EILEEN Food Science and Industry HECHT. THERESE R. Physical Therapy HILDEBRAND, SHARI Home Economics HOLMAN, BEVERLY E Home Economics Education HONIG. CATHERINE A Foods and Nutrition . HOUK, JANET M. . . Home Economics Education KASL. CECILIA M Home Economics and Journalism KOLMAN.VENETTER Sociology KOUKOL, NANCY J Special Education MARTIN, NANCY J Music McCLURE, CYNTHIA Hitory McKAIN, SHEILA D Natural Resource Management MINTURN. MARTY Special Education NAEGELE. ELAINE C Elementary Education NEAL. JERIL Agriculture OESTERREICH, TERRI A. Music Education POLSTON, DIANA M Home Economics RADER, PAM Agricultural Journalism Chase Sophomore Axtell Junior . . Hartford Senior Woodbine Sophomore Woodbine Sophomore Hays Sophomore Belleville Junior Andale Freshman Stafford Freshman . . . Winfield Senior Onaga Sophomore Moran Junior Cuba Freshman Greensburg Freshman Cuba Freshman Hays Sophomore ..Stafford Senior Miltonvale Junior Abilene Junior Arkansas City Sophomore Williarnsburg Sophomore Woodbine Senior Hope Freshman Olsburg Junior REESE. MARJORIEL Pre-Design Professions REXWINKLE, ANGELA C Accounting RICHARDSON. DENISE L Medical Technology ROMBERGER.DEBRAJ Medical Technology SMITH. BECKY A Interior Design SMITH. MARY J General SOLTIS, MARY E Milling Science and Management STOFFER, JANET M Home Economics Education TAYLOR, KAREN S Biology TREIBER.SUSANA. Music Education TRUMBLE.CARLAE General VINtNG, MARGARET A Life Science Plamville Sophomore Great Bend Sophomore Wilsey Freshman Abilene Junior Wichita Sophomore Onaga Freshman Wichita Sophomore Abilene Sophomore Watdo Senior Atchison Freshman Oakhill Freshman Horton Junior 414 smudhwaite WARY. JOLEEN M Music Education WAYBRIGHT. GLENDAS. Psychology and Education . WETTA. PATRIC1AJ Home Economics WHITEHOUSE. KEVA R Business uolumous Sophomore . . . . Liberal Senior Wichita Sophomore Stafford Freshman Watch those hands and how those cards are landing comes the warning from one player who doesn ' t care to be dealt a bad deal. Nothing like a friendly game of chance to bring out the true grit in a Smurthwaite woman. shuffle scuffle h smurthwaite 415 straube MAY DA VI DC MAY. DEBORAH J. ANDERSON. JOHN G Veterinary Medicine ANDREW. DEAN R Geography ARPIN. RICHARD W Agronomy ARPIN. RONALD D Horticulture BAKER. JERRY L Civil Engineering BIRD. JACK E Chemical Engineering COOPER. JAMES L Pre-Medicme DODD. TIMOTHY J Milling Science and Management DOUGLAS. STEPHEN L Chemical Engineering DRUMHILLER, STEPHEN A. . . . Economics Houseparent House pa rent Reading Freshman Des Moines. IA Freshman Salma Freshman Salma Sophomore Scandia Junior Great Bend Freshman St John Sophomore Mankato Junior Leavenworth Freshman Milan Senior ELSASSER. SCOTT E Mechanical Engineering ENGELHARDT. DARRYL L Feed Technology GORDON. JAMES L Accounting HICKEL, GREGORY A Business HOFFMAN. MARK A Engineering HOLLINBERGER. THOMAS S Pre-Design Professions Clifton Sophomore Chase Junior Fort Scott Junior Elltnwood Freshman Claflin Freshman Belleville, 11 Sophomore pouring it on Everyone knows Tom Collins is one of the most sociable partiers around even if the party is private. A Straube resi- dent introduces a couple of acquain- tances. 416 straube HOLT. MARK I Music HURTIG. FRANKS Pre-Vetennary Medicine IVES. BRADLEY D Accounting KATHKA, DAVID K Pre-Law MALTBY. DAN Bakery Science and Management O ' TOOLE. FRANK K Mechanical Engineering OYER, DOUG L Electrical Engineering PETERSON. GARRY E Microbiology SNYDER. MICHAEL D Engineering STITT TERRY L Journalism and Mass Communications SWIFT. BILL Education VANDYKE, JOHN R Civil Engineering WULLSCHLEGER, RICHARD D Milling Science and Management Newton Junior Silver Lake Sophomore El Dorado freshman Oberhn Freshman Wet more Sophomore Marysville Sophomore Gardner Sophomore Basehor Freshman Mankato Freshman Clay Center Freshman Wichita Sophomore Tonganoxie Junior Wichita Freshman I A - . ins is one ol rs around - Slrauberesi- i jofacquaio straube 41 7 tau kappa epsilon AMSLER. KENNETH J Pre-Design Professions AUXIER, BRYAN E Pre-Design Professions BAKER. ROGER D Industrial Engineering BARRON. DAYNEC. Pre-Forestry BAUER. GREGG Accounting BLICKENSTAFF. ROBERT D Pre-Design Professions BRALEY.BILLR Accounting BROTHERS. MIKE J Agricultural Mechanization BRUEGGEMAN. DALE H Accounting BRUMBAUGH. SCOTT A. Chemical Engineering CLINE, GREGORY S Sociology COPELAND, MALCOLM L. Political Science St Louis, MO Sophomore St. Joseph. MO Junior Topeka Graduate Studen! Topeka Sophomore Wichita Junior Scott City Sophomore Wichita Sophomore Lyons Sophomore Scott City .Junior Hutchmson Freshman Kansas City Senior Topeka . . . Senior DARRAH.MARK W Pre-Dentistry DOLLMANN, STEVEN C. . Civil Engineering FERGUSON, TERRY L Recreation FREED. STEPHEN W. Horticulture FRITSON. RODNEY D. Chemical Engineering GALLAWAY. DALE W. Computer Science GRAVES. MARC L Engineering GRIFFITH,!. SCOTT Accounting HAAS. JOSEPH G Agriculture HANSEN.GARY W Chemistry HANSLEY, STEPHEN M. Accounting HELTON. TIMOTHY M. Business Marketing Lyons Freshman McPherson Senior Dighton Senior Lansing Junior Shawnee Mission Freshman Topeka Junior Greensburg Freshman Topeka Junior St Louis . . Sophomore Horlon Junior Wichita Senior Pensacola, FL Sophomore HENDRICKS, CHARLES R. Business and Finance HENRY, FRANK J Pre-Vetermary Medicine HESLOP, STEPHEN J Mechanical Engineering HUFFMAN, TERRY E Agricultural Economics IRELAND, RANDY W. Mechanical Engineering KIMMEL, HALSEY W. .. . Landscape Architecture . Overland Park .Junior . . Enterprise Junior . Independence Senior Wichita Junior Madison Sophomore Topeka Senior KLEIN, SCOTT S Pre-Destgn Professions KURZ. KENNETH W . Business Administration LAST. GREGORY D Pre-Design Professions MADDUX. MICHEL A. Electrical Engineering McGINNESS, CLARE A. . Business Administration McGONAGLE, TIMOTHY J Horticulture MILLS. KEITH A General MINNIX, JAMES M Agricultural Economics NELSON, DAVID J. Pre-Design Professions PARIS. ALLAN J Agricultural Mechanization PARKER, MARK M Business Administration RASSETTE. BRIAN L Agriculture Topeka Freshman Leawood Junior . Leavenworth Freshman Scott City Freshman Marion Senior Scott City . .Junior Oxon Hill. MD Freshman Scott City Senior Indianapolis, IN Junior Dighton Freshman . . .Kansas City Senior Salina Freshman REED. DOUGLAS W Pre-Design Professions SANDMEYER.CARYB Pre-Design Professions SCHENEWERK. ROGER L Landscape Architecture SMITH, RON D Physical Education THOMPSON, STEPHEN H Journalism and Mass Communications TJADEN.MAXH Animal Science and Industry 418 tau kappa epsilon Lyons Freshman Topeka Sophomore Wichita Fifth Year Student Salina Senior Topeka Sophomore Clearwater Junior WALSH. GERALD J Pre-Design Professions WEARING. MICHAEL A Psychology WOODS. WILLIAM D Animal Science and Industry Topeka Freshman Salma Freshman Clearwater Junior IV I ti summit meeting To sum it up, TKEs perched on a porch means something. Possibly that either the sun or the passing scenery is being soaked up. tau kappa epsilon 419 theta xi ADAMS. DAVID E Genera! ALLEN, RANDALL G Architecture BARUTH. KENNETH F Psychology BODEN, RICHARD . . Veterinary Medicine . BOGART.LEEL Mechanical Engineering BREIPOHL.GARY W Nuclear Engineering BRENNAN, TERRENCE L Architecture CHAMBERS, CURTIS N Agricultural Economics COLLIER. JOHN N Agriculture COLLIER, STUART R. . Agricultural Economics DAVIS. ROBERT D Business Management DIETZ. STEVEN D History ELKINS. MARCE Nuclear Engineering ENDECOTT, MARK A Architecture FELTON, RICHARD E Psychology and Political Science FISHBURN. CASEY G Pre-Vetermary Medicine HEALY. MATTHEW F Business HUEBERT. MICHAEL A. Veterinary Medicine El Dorado Sophomore JelfersonCity, MO Fifth Year Student Marysville Junior Bloommgdale, NJ Senior Wichita Junior Lawrence Sophomore Manhattan Filth Year Student Norton Junior Alta Vista Sophomore AltaVista Senior Greensburg Sophomore Ottawa Sophomore Manhattan Freshman . . .Trenton, MO Senior . .Junction City Senior Manhattan Sophomore Manhattan Junior Henderson, NB Freshman 420 theta xi LUNDSTROM. RICHARD A. Pre-Design Professions McDIFFETT, TIMOTHY L. Radio and Television McVEY, BART L Accounting MITCHELL. LOWELL R Chemical Engineering OLSON. DANAG Business OWENS, CHARLES H Landscape Architecture . . . PAYNE. MIKEL A. Business PULLIAM, KENDALK Agricultural Engineering ' RANKIN, STEPHEN W. . . . Physical Education ROTTMANN. RUSSELL W Pre-Design Professions SESSIONS. CHARLES E Animal Science and Industry SHEHI. DENNIS W. Pre-Design Professions Topeka . Freshman Alta Vista Junior Manhattan Sophomore Marquette Junior Marquette Sophomore . . Shawnee Senior SOUTHWICK. CHRISTOPHER L Pre-Medicme STEJSKAL, RICK L Agriculture and Business STIGGE. DOUGLAS K Pre-Medicme WATT, STANLEY F. Agricultural Economics WHITE. SPENCER T Engineering WINGER. JOHN Business Administration Salma Freshman Freeport Sophomore Moundndge Senior Jefferson City, MO Sophomore Farmer City, IL Freshman Westmoreland . . Freshman Abilene Sophomore Timken Freshman Manhattan Junior Harper Junior St. John Freshman Wellington Junior rerun review Hogan ' s Heroes, Beverly Hillbillies, and Andy Griffith. Appearing faithfully every night, tv reruns are bountiful. Who do the Theta Xis let choose the programs? They leave it to Beaver. theta xi 421 triangle ANDERSON. CARL R Electrical Engineering BAUERBAND. STEVEN R Mechanical Engineering BRIGGS. PAUL N Mechanical Engineering BOWER, DAVID W Architecture and Construction Science CHRISTENSEN. KEVIN D Nuclear Engineering FESSENDEN, CHARLES B Math Education Muscotah Sophomore Junction City Sophomore Leavenworth Junior . Independence, MO Senior Hollon Freshman Clifton . . . Senior FRANKEN, JOHN W Pre-Design Professions GARTNER. CHRISTOPHER L Civil Engineering GONZALEZ. MICHAEL L Architectural Engineering GRANEY. JOSEPHS Architecture and Construction Science HAFFENER.JOEA. Agricultural Engineering HAKE. NOLAN F Civil Engineering HARDEN. PHILIP A Agricultural Engineering HARDMAN, BARRY S. Medical Technology . . HART. LAWRENCE R Pre-Design Professions HEYLIN. MICHAEL T. Pre-Design Professions HICKS, MICHAEL D. Electrical Engineering HOWELL. RICKS Pre-Design Professions Sedalia. MO Sophomore . . . Topeka Senior Mexico, MO Sophomore Seneca Junior Alta Vista Junior Lenora Sophomore Ashland Junior Hill City Senior . Holland, Ml Sophomore Manhattan Sophomore Atchison Freshman Independence. MO Sophomore KOELSCH, RICHARD K Agricultural Engineering KUNIHOLM. ALANG . Architecture LITTLE, DOUGLAS J Chemical Engineering LOHRENTZ. DAVID K. Architecture LUCAS. GARY F Civil Engineering MASTERS. DAVID R Engineering Great Bend Graduate Student Pierceville Senior Wichita Sophomore Hutchmson Fifth Year Student Great Bend Sophomore Troy . Sophomore all washed up College is great for learning but it ' s not all in the books. Knowledge also waits in the laundry hamper or behind a broom and dustpan. Armed with trusty dishtowel and dishwater hands, this Triangle man learns a few facts of life in the kitchen. 422 inangle McCONAUGHEY, KENT E Building Construction McNAUGHTON, GARY A. Electrical Engineering . . NEIBLING. WILLIAM H Agricultural Engineering O ' BRIEN. CHARLES E. Pre-Design Professions PETERSON, WILLIAM C Engineering POLLI, STEVE Pre-Design Professions Ulysses Freshman Laurel Springs, NJ Senior Highland Graduate Student St. Joseph, MO Freshman Greeley Freshman Mahopac, NY Sophomore ROBSON, JOHNE. Chemical Engineering SAGE, JOSEPH W. Electrical Engineering SMITH. DAVID R Interior Architecture SPENCER. STEVEN H Mechanical Engineering STONECIPHER, GREG D Nuclear Engineering TOLIN, BRYCE A Industrial Engineering VAN PELT. REGINALD A Pre-Design Professions WISE. STEVEN C Architecture . . Abilene Junior Augusta . Freshman Osawatomie Fifth Year Student Leavenworth Junior Overland Park Sophomore Holton Junior Pierce City. MO . .Sophomore Clearwater Junior triangle 423 van zile pass WEDOLE MARKE ANDERSON. WILLIAM L Dairy Science ANNIS. JENNIFER L Horn Economics Education ARNOLDY. DIANE K Pre Design Professions ARNOLDY, LANETTE M Horticulture ARTH. KAREN A General BEOUGHER. DUANE V General CLELAND. SARA A Home Economics Extension COATS. ROBERT L Accounting COLONEY. PATRICIA L Pre-Vetennary Medicine COOPER. NANCY J Agricultural Engineering . COX. CRAIG J Agricultural Education Director Oberlin Graduate Student Lawrence Tipton Freshman Tipton Junior Overland Park Freshman Ellsworth Sophomore Baldwin Junior Wichita Junior Wichita Sophomore SaMordville Senior Atwood Graduate Student CURTIS. MARSHA L Music DAVIS. JUDITH A Pre-Vetermary Medicine DREESE. PATRICK C Milling Science and Management EULERT. CAROL J Engineering FOERSTER. STEPHEN L Electrical Engineering FOWLER. DANIEL L Labor Relations Dodge City Sophomore Overland Park Sophomore Wichita Junior Topeka Sophomore Lmdsborg Sophomore Salina Senior GIBSON, DANIEL W Architecture GIBSON, ROGER E. . . Horticulture GOCHENOUR.KIMG Pre-Design Professions GREEN. NATALIE K. Speech GROENEWOLD. JOAN K Pre- Veterinary Medicine GUTZMAN LINDA K English GUTZMAN, RICCI L General HANKINS. KEVIN G Animal Science and Industry HAVERFIELD. CATHY J Political Science HEIN. MARGARET M Chemical Engineering HENDRICKSON. JANA D Pre-Design Professions HENSLEY. KENNETH S Electrical Engineering HINTZ, JAMES R Accounting HODGSON, KIM A Geophysics HYSON, JOYCE A Elementary Education JOHNSON, LONE Pre-Design Professions KLOCK. EDWARD L Architecture LEWIS, CLIFFORD S. Accounting Wichita Fifth Year Student Wichita Senior Wichita Sophomore Atwood Graduate Student Wichita Sophomore Almena Junior Almena Freshman Wichita Freshman Russell Springs Freshman Andale Sophomore Garden City Freshman Overland Park Sophomore Salina Junior Little River Sophomore Blue Mound Sophomore Wichita Freshman Wichita Junior ....Wichita LIGNITZ, LARRY G Chemical Engineering LLOYD, STEVE W Milling Science and Management LONG. STEVE P Chemical Engineering LUNDBERG. CHERYL A Special Education MARTENEY. JOHN D Pre- Dentistry MARTIN, PATRICIA R Psychology MCNEIL. DEB L Business and Psychology MIKOLS. WAYNE J Nuclear Engineering MILLER. MICHELLE Journalism and Mass Communications MOORE. LYNN A Architecture MURPHY, MICHAEL W Biology OLSON. JACOUELYNJ Journalism and Mass Communications 424 van zile hall Marysville Sophomore Clay Center Senior Shawnee Mission Sophomore Mission Sophomore Wichita Freshman Kansas City Senior Hutchmson Junior Hinsdale. IL Graduate Student Downs Freshman Arvada. CO Junior Wichita Freshman Osage City Freshman passing notes in Though finals be painful, it helps to share the hurt with a fellow sufferer. Everyone knows two heads are better than one not to mention two sets of lecture notes. ORNDORFF.DANETTEL Recreation PLOOSTER LARRY G Topeka Sophomore RENCHER, DAVID M Nuclear Engineering SANNEMAM, GEORGE W Agricultural Economics SCHANKER, NEIL. Fisheries and Wildlife Biology SCHOOF, VALE. Pre-Medicme SCHROEDER, MARYL . . Retail Floriculture SCHWAB, PATRICK R. . Overland Park Freshman Idana Junior Prairie Village Sophomore Council Grove Freshman Tipton Freshman SEDLACEK, WANDA J Geology SMITH, KENNETH C Electrical Engineering SOOY MICHAEL G Marysville Junior Shawnee Mission Sophomore Prairie Village SPICER, RONALD W Electrical Engineering SPICHER, RANDALL-D Business STUTZMAN, EMELISE D. Wichita Freshman Overland Park Sophomore Prairie Village SUTTON. CRYSTAL R Physical Education TUCKER, GREG A Civil Engineering VORAN, ROXIEL Geology WATERS. MONTE G Mathematics WHEELER. JANE C General WHITE, EARL R Engineering WINTER, MARY A Blue Rapids Freshman Wichita Sophomore Kingrnan Graduate Student Liberal Junior Shawnee Sophomore Moscow Freshman Senior WOOD, PHILIP A Pre-Vetennary Medicine YARROW. FREDERICK L. Agricultural Engineering Liberal Sophomore Morganville Sophomore vanzile hall 425 west hall ADAMS. DEMISE M Home Economics ADAMS. LUCY A Family and Child Development ADAMS, NANCY L Elementary Education AHRENS, DORIS J. Home Economics Extension ALEXANDER, JUANITA Office Administration ANTWEILER, MARILYN B. Business Administration Overland Park Freshman Overland Park Sophomore . . Prairie Village Senior Powhattan Junior Gardner Sophomore Overland Park Sophomore ARNOLD, JO ELLEN. Dairy Production ARNOLD. LINDSAYS. Horticulture BACKHUS. JANET L Dietetics BAIER, JENNIFER A. Fine Arts BAILEY, CYNTHIA J.. Horticulture BAKER. BARBARA . Elementary Education BALDWIN, BARBARA J Fashion Merchandising BALDWIN. ROMA L Dietetics BARNES, ROXIE A Chemical Engineering BARSTOW, TAMARA K General BARTAK.KATHRYNJ Family and Child Development BARTH, ANNEM Interior Design . Burlmgame Senior Burlmgame Freshman Leavenworth Junior . Salma Sophomore Sabetha Freshman Overbrook Sophomore . . Salma Junior Salina Freshman Smith Center Freshman . Macksville Freshman Cuba Junior Belleville Sophomore BEARD. SHEILA A Centralia Home Economics Education Freshman BEHM KAREN A. Paola Dietetics Freshman BELL. SHERYL A El Dorado Electrical Engineering Junior BERGES, CINDY K Onaga Home Economics Freshman BERNHARDT. LAUREL L Tampa Journalism and Mass Communications . . Sophomore BIERY, TERESA E Topeka Biology Education Senior BINGHAM. KIM R Sociology BLOOM. RONI J. Elementary Education BLUME, DEBRA D Salma Freshman Topeka Junior Scott City , Accounting ........................................... Senior BOTTOM. KAY A Topeka Physical Therapy ... ......... Freshman BOURN, LESLIE J ........ ............ Overland Park Business Administration .......... Freshman BOWERS, MARY L ............. Marion General .......... Freshman BRADLEY, GILL L Horticulture BROKESH. VENITAJ . Foods and Nutrition BROOKS. BECKY J Elementary Education BROSE. LISA A Anthropology BROWN, SUSAN M Business BROWNING, CYNTHIA D Agriculture CAMPBELL, JOYCE L Early Childhood Education . . CARNES. LAURA S Home Economics Education CARSON. KENNAS. Home Economics Extension CASE. LEILA L. Fisheries and Wildlife Biology CASWELL. SANDEE L . . Pre-Veterinary Medicine CHAPUT, SUSIE A. . General . Leaven worth . .Sophomore Narka Sophomore Salma Sophomore . Marion . . . Freshman Salina . Freshman Lawrence . . . Freshman Cheshire. CT . Sophomore Weir Junior Clearwater Junior Beloit Sophomore Salina Freshman Salina Sophomore COCHRAN, MICHELER . . Animal Science and Industry COLLINS, DEB Speech Pathology COLLINS. MONICA M Education . CONARD, SUSAN E Elementary Education CONNERS. ANNETTE J. . Secondary Education COOK, KARENS Horticulture 426 west hall Topeka Sophomore Topeka Senior Kansas City Sophomore Overland Park Junior . . Meriden Freshman Kansas City, MO Freshman Ifeu. CORN. SUSAN L Bushton Dietetics Junior CURRY. KIM J Madison Dietetics Junior DICKSON, DEBRA D Hiawatha Computer Science Sophomore DIXON, KRISTI L Parsons Fashion Design Freshman DONAHUE. DEBBIE J ....... Durham Accounting . . Sophomore DREILING. DEBBIE A Chapman General Freshman DUSCH. KIM C Marysville Elementary Education . . Sophomore DUWE. MARGARET A . .: Lucas Home Economics Education Freshman EFFLAND. CLAUDIA L Lincoln Speech Pathology Freshman EPPERSON. CAROL L Prairie Village Fashion Merchandising Junior ERDWIEN. MARY C. El Dorado Modern Language Junior ESCHMANN, CYNDEE D Topeka Fashion Marketing Junior EVANS. LISA M. El Dorado Finance Junior EVERETT, EVELYN A Kansas City Interior Architecture Senior FENTON, DONNA M Sabetha Elementary Education . . Freshman FISCHER, KATHRYN J Ottawa Home Economics Education Sophomore FLOYD, BARBARA St. Francis Music Education Senior FOX. DEBBIE K Cambridge Animal Science and Industry Freshman FRICK, CHRISTINE E Atwood Early Childhood Education Senior FULTON. JOY L. Manhattan Journalism and Mass Communications Sophomore GALLION. RANDA K Mullmville Accounting Freshman GAY, VICKEY L Chapman Physical Therapy .Freshman GENCHAN, JONETTE R Kansas City Social Work Sophomore GILMORE.LYNNA. . Topeka Consumer Interest . . Junior west hall 427 west hall GODOARD. JONAJ Radium General Freshman GOERL VALERIE A Little River Elementary Education Junior GRIFFIN, BETTY L. Alton Political Science Freshman HAHN. CAROL L Gypsum Medical Technology Sophomore HAMILTON, NANCY A Dodge City Clothing and Textile Senior HAND. JENNIFER J Newton Biology Freshman HEIMER, BARBARA J Merriam Elementary Education Junior HENKE. MAURENE L Leawood Elementary Education Junior HOBSON. PATTI S Wichita Pre-Pharmacy Sophomore HOFMEISTER. PHYLLIS E Claflin Elementary Education Senior HOISINGTON. LAURA I Salina Business Administration Sophomore HOLMQUIST. KRISTIN D Smolan Physical Education Sophomore HOLTHAUS. DEBRA K. Seneca Speech Pathology Sophomore HOLZRICHTER. SHIRLEY A Halstead Elementary Education Junior HOUCK. SHERYL L Augusta Home Economics Freshman HUERTER. SUSAN M Overland Park Recreation Junior JACOB, CINDY K Amencus Home Economics Freshman JOHNSON, SANDRA K Wichita Political Science Junior JONES, BONNIE L McPherson Home Economics Freshman KANAGA. L ROSE SHARON Ness City Otiice Administration Freshman KANAGA, MARY E Ness City Horticulture Junior KELLENBERGER, VICKIE L. Sabetha Music Education Freshman KELLY, NANCY L, Shawnee Mission Secondary Education . . . : Sophomore KIMPLE. KANDACE A Little River Fashion Marketing Junior KINAST. PAMELA S , Hutchinson Elementary Education Junior KING. ANN E Marysville Natural Resource Management Sophomore KLAUMANN, TERESA K Belleville Psychology Sophomore KOGER, BARBARA A Holton Pre-Dentistry Freshman KOHMAN, JULIE E. Solomon General Freshman KOLLING, JANAM Chapman Business Education Freshman KORTE, ROSEM. Concordia Computer Science Freshman KOSKO, JOY E Overland Park General . . Freshman KREIOLER. MARGARET L. Udall General Freshman KRENGER. TERESA A Abilene Pre-Dentistry Freshman KROUPA, JOAN C Marion Special Education Sophomore KRUSE. TERESA M Wichita Interior Design Junior LANG. KATHLEEN L. . . . . Clatlin Retail Floriculture Freshman LESHOVSKY. DEANN M. Prairie Village General Freshman LOCKHART. VALARIE A Salina Pre-Vetermary Medicine ..Freshman LUNDOUIST. DEBRA A Overland Park Fashion Marketing Junior LUNDY. JOANM Salina General Freshman MABEN, PAMELA S Overland Park Biology Senior MAJORS. NANCY j. Dodge City Home Economics . Junior MARTIN. DEBRA J Madison Physical Education . Junior MASKUS. SHIRLEY E. Jetmore Accounting Sophomore MATHEWS, PAMELA J Topeka Interior Design Senior MATZ, EYDIE R . Hillsboro General Freshman McDANIEL, CINDY C Winchester General . Freshman 428 west hall . . Stockton Freshman Salina . . Freshman Overland Park Freshman Lawrence Senior Kansas City, MO . . . Sophomore Mission Hills . . .Junior St. John . . . .Freshman luka .... Freshman Wichita Junior Marion . . . .Freshman . Overland Park Junior . Overland Park . . .Junior . . Kansas City . . . Sophomore . Overland Park . . . .Freshman Bonner Springs . . 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But, to reach the pinnacle, one must receive the postal ultimate a care package from home. handle with care west hall 429 west hall Salina Freshman Salina Junior Los Alamos, NM Sophomore Leavenworth Freshman Robinson Sophomore Washington Freshman Lewis Freshman Washington Freshman Topek a Senior Valley Falls Freshman Leavenworth Junior Lake Quivira Freshman NIGHTINGALE. DEBBIE K Business NORDBOE. CONNIE J Biology NUTTER. JUDITH A Electrical Engineering OCHS. TERRI L Business Administration OLTJEN. RITA A Clothing and Retailing PANNBACKER. MARY K Food Science and Industry PARKER. KATHLEEN J Retail Floriculture PARRY. BECKY J Home Economics Education PASLAY.LESAG Family and Child Development PHILLIPS. ALICE J. Home Economics Extension PHILLIPS. JO ANN Speech Pathology . PRATHER, DEBORAH L Pre-Design Professions PRICE. BRENDA Clothing and Retailing QUIGLEY. THERESA M. Engineering REED. NANCY D Home Economics Education REIMAN, MARGO A Landscape Architecture . . . REINHARDT, TERRI S Music Education ROBBINS, CHERYL L. Medical Technology Kansas City Junior St Francis Freshman Clay Center Sophomore Byers Senior Erie Freshman Belleville Junior m v 430 west hall ROBERTS, SANDY K. . . . Early Childhood Education ROBERTS, VICKI L. Accounting RONEY, CYNTHIA D Consumer Interest ROOS, RITA JO Math Education ROTH, JOANN J Dietetics ROTH, KAREN L. Applied Music ROYSE. DEBRAA Engineering SAATHOFF, SANDRA F.r. . Pre-Physical Therapy SADOWSKI. BARBARA A. General SAMS, JUDY C. . . Home Economics . . . SCHULTZ MARGARET A. . Art SELF, MARIE E Psychology . . . Topeka . . . Sophomore Pomona . . Sophomore Waverly Senior Shawnee Senior Green . Sophomore . . Shawnee . Freshman Langdon Freshman Marysville Sophomore . . .Chapman Freshman Overland Park Freshman . . . Macksville Freshman . Salma . . Freshman SEXTRO, WANDA M Home Economics Education . . SHAFFER, NANCY E. Pre-Nursing SHARP, SALLY L Music Education . . SHRIMPLIN.TINAM. Medical Technology . . SIDIC, DINKAD History . SIEMSEN, DEBRAK Family and Child Development SKIDMORE, BETH A Pre-Nursing SMITH. DIANE M Home Economics SMITH, JOANNA I. Secondary Education . . STINSON, SHARON L. . Early Childhood Education STOSKOPF, DEBRAL. Education STOSKOPF, JAYNEL. . . Finance . Netawaka Senior . . Valley Falls . . .Sophomore . St. Marys Freshman . . .Valley Falls . Freshman Canberra, Australia . . . Junior Little River Senior STUM, MARLENES Consumer Interest . TEETER, VICKY L Community Services . THOMPSON, DIANE K Art TOMPKINS. JACQUEA Chemical Engineering . . TRUEBLOOD. MARSHA L. Retail Floriculture . TURK, BECKYS Speech Pathology and Audiology TYLER, CINDY L Family and Child Development URISH, RENEES. Recreation UTZ, CASSANDRA D Agricultural Journalism VENTRESS, VICKIE E Business Administration VOIGTS. MARTHA L. Animal Science and Industry VOSS. SHERRI D. . Foods and Nutrition . . . . Ottawa Freshman . . .Enterprise . . . Freshman Shiprock, NM . .Freshman .... Admire Freshman . . .Valley Falls Junior . . .Valley Falls . . . Freshman Ness City Junior Lyons . . . Sophomore . South Euclid, OH . . Sophomore Ford Freshman Norton . . Sophomore . Independence, MO Senior WARNER, BETH . . . Home Economics Education WEYAND, CAROL A. Accounting . . WILLIAMS, GAYLET. . . Corrections and Sociology WILLIAMS, REBECCA A. Dietetics WILTZ, JANICE C. . Biology WINTEROTH. SUZANNE E. . Elementary Education . . WOHLER, LORENE K, . Home Economics Education YENZER. SYLVIA L . General YOUK. TERESA A Horticulture YOUNG, MARLENAG. . . . Animal Science and Industry Sabetha . . . Freshman . Burlmgame .... Sophomore Kansas City, MO Sophomore Olathe Junior Lenexa Junior .St. Louis, MO . . Sophomore Belleville Junior . . McPherson Junior Oklahoma City. OK Junior . .Overland Park .Junior Sabetha Freshman Norton . . .Sophomore . .St. Marys Sophomore Dodge City Sophomore . Durham Sophomore . Topeka . Freshman west hall 431 off -cam pus ABDULLAHI. JEMIMAH P Home Economics ABRAMS. STEVE E. Veterinary Medicine ADAMS. JEAN M Journalism and Mass Communications ADAMS, REBECCA S Elementary Education ADAMS, SHANE L Biochemistry ADKISON, MARLENE S Radio and Television Nigeria Graduate Student Arkansas City Junior Manhattan Junior Welda Sophomore Deertield Junior Topeka Senior AESCHLIMAN. SUSAN D Retail Floriculture AHERN. JOHN H Civil Engineering AHLQUIST, LILA E. General AISTRUP.EMMETTD. Pre-Veterinary Medicine AJAKAIYE. MICHAEL B Horticulture AJEANI. MILDRED R Business Administration , Centralia . Sophomore Howard Junior Clay Center Sophomore Hanston Junior Ogidi-ljumu, Nigeria Graduate Student Arua, Uganda , , Freshman AJEANI. YORAMU J Arua, Uganda Animal Science and Industry . . Graduate Student AKIN, LYNNE C Manhattan Elementary Education . . . . Sophomore AL-AMOUOI, ABDULLATIF A Jeddah, Saudi Arabia Business Administration Senior ALAMOUOI. HUSSEIN S Jeddah, Saudi Arabia Pre-Design Protessions Sophomore AL-AMOUDI, KHALID A Jeddah. Saudi Arabia Interior Architecture Junior ALBERT, HARRY Baton Rouge, LA Education . . , , . . Graduate Student ALBRACHT, STEPHEN J Manhattan Agricultural Education Senior ALLDRITT, CELESTE L Halstead Anthropology Sophomore ALLEN, DOUGLAS B Haddam Agricultural Economics Senior ALLEN, GREG L Topeka Architecture Senior ALLEN, KEITH R Sublette Agronomy Sophomore ALLEN, LESLIE J Topeka Clothing and Retailing Senior ALLEN, RONALD K General ALTIZER, PAGE L Journalism and Mass Communications ALTLAND. SUSAN M Early Childhood Education AMEND. MICHAELS History AMOAKO-ATTA. BOAKYE Entomology ANDERSON, CAROL J Home Economics Extension , Elkhart Freshman . Overland Park Sophomore Manhattan . Sophomore El Dorado Graduate Student Legon. Ghana Graduate Student Oberlin Junior ANDERSON, HAROLD E Animal Science and Industry . ANDERSON, JACQUELINE S. . Fashion Marketing ANDERSON. MARGARET E. Home Economics Education . . ANDERSON, SONIAS Social Work ANDRES, JOHN L Veterinary Medicine . . ANDREWS. BOB L. . Animal Science and Industry Chanute Senior Manhattan Senior Garnett Graduate Student McPherson Senior Alia Vista Junior Pierceville Junior ANDREWS, DEBRA L Concordia Clothing and Retailing Senior ANKENMAN, LEE K Norton Horticulture Senior ANNETT. CLARENCE H Amarillo. TX Physics Graduate Student ANSON, ELIZABETH O Trumansburg. NY Elementary Education Senior ANTHONY. RUSSELL V. Lexington, NB Animal Science and Industry Junior ARCHER, PATRICIA A Lyons Family and Child Development . Junior ARMOUR. CHARLES W Electrical Engineering ARMOUR, JAMES L. . . Civil Engineering ARMSTRONG, MARK J. Agricultural Economics Junction City Sophomore Viola Senior . . Muscotah . Senior ARNOLDY, JEANNE Tipton Fashion Marketing Senior ARNOLDY, NANCYS Tipton Corrections Administration Sophomore ARPIN.ALCIDT . Stockton Architecture . Fifth Year Student 432 ott-campus ARPIN. LANAG El Dorado Interior Design Junior ARTZ, DONNA K. El Dorado Health . Sophomore ASHCRAFT, BRENDA L. Waketield Retail Floriculture Sophomore ASHER. LAWRENCE J Shawnee Radio and Television Senior ATKINSON, DWIGHTC Abilene History Senior ATKINSON. GLORIA A Austin, TX Geology Junior ATTEBERRY, D ONALD G Tecumseh Veterinary Medicine Senior ATTEBERY. J. DENISE Paola Special Education Junior ATZENHOFFER, MARK D Great Bend Radio and Television Freshman AUEN. CYNTHIA A. . . Manhattan General Freshman AVEY. KIMBERLY J Liberal Interior Design Sophomore AYLWARD, KATHY M Solomon Finance Senior AYLWARD, THOMAS M Solomon Agricultural Economics Senior BAALMAN. RHONDA G Menlo Speech Pathology Junior BADER, TERRY F St. Louis. MO Architecture Fifth Year Student BADGER. CATHRYN S Carbondale Horticulture Junior BAEHLER, GARY L Sharon Springs Animal Science and Industry Senior BAHR. KAREN L Olmitz Home Economics with Liberal Arts Junior BAHR. PAULA S Foods and Nutrition BAILEY, KATHRYN A Home Economics and Radio-Television BAILEY, MARILYN A Civil Engineering BAILEY. THOMAS F Mechanical Engineering BAILEY. TIMOTHY K. . Secondary Education BAIRD. DARREL K Agricultural Economics BAKER, ANN F Elementary Education BAKER, CINDY S Fashion Marketing . BAKER, JILL C Home Economics Education BAKER, MARGARET D. Nuclear Engineering BAKER, SUSAN L Medical Technology . BALCOM. RAMONAJ Office Administration Gridley Junior Newton Senior Emporia Junior Manhattan Graduate Student Oskaloosa Sophomore Benedict Sophomore . Kansas City, MO Senior Syracuse . Sophomore . . . . Overland Park Junior Leavenworth Junior Buhler Junior Mernam Junior BALDWIN, LYNN W Galva Recreation Senior BANKS, NANCY A Wamego Fashion Marketing Senior BARBER, REX A Ellinwood Architecture .... Junior BARGER. ROBERT E Madison Music ... . . .Sophomore BARKER, GARY D Pratt Agricultural Economics Senior BARKER, MARTIN D Topeka Mechanical Engineering Senior BARKER, RICKY J.. Muscatine, IA Mathematics Graduate Student BARKER, RUTH A Pratt Elementary Education Senior BARKYOUMB. SUSAN Manhattan General Freshman BARNES. GREGGORY T. Newton Education Junior BARNETT, CAROL J Wichita Foods and Nutrition Senior BARNETT, CYNTHIA A Wichita Retail Floriculture Senior BARNETT, DAVID M Wichita Electrical Engineering Senior BARR. KATHY J Burdick Art Sophomore BARRETT, SHERYL A Colby Fashion Retailing Senior BARTA, RANDALL L . Ellinwood Interior Architecture Junior BATCHELDER, PAUL H Highland Veterinary Medicine Senior BATTEN. MARK B Toledo, OH Architectural Engineering . Junior off -campus 433 off-campus BAUER. MICHAEL E Florissant. MO Architecture Junior BAUGHER. MARSHA K Manhattan Horticulture Senior BAUMGARTNER, PEGGY L Bern Elementary Education Senior BAXTER. RICHARD R Kirwm Agricultural Economics .Junior BEADLES, SHERRI L Fall River Business Administration Senior SEALS, CONSTANCE L Runnells, IA Home Economics and Journalism Senior Cleveland. OH Junior Luray Graduate Student Marion Sophomore Prairie Village Junior Manhattan Sophomore BECHTEL, ROGER A Conway Springs Veterinary Medicine Senior BEAMISH. CYNTHIA L Special Education . BEAN. THEODORE A . Civil Engineering . BEASTON. MARTY K General BEATSON, JACKIE R. Speech Pathology BEAUDET, CAROLYN M. Business BECHTEL, TERRI L Manhattan Education Sophomore BECK. DAVID W Wichita Fisheries and Wildlife Biology Senior BECKER. CHERYLL A Monroe. LA Business Administration Junior BECKERDITE, CLAUDIA E Kingsoown Veterinary Medicine Senior BEINEKE. KAY Nickerson Recreation Senior BELL. DAVID G El Dorado Veterinary Medicine Junior BELL, DEBORAH J Beloit Horticulture Senior BELL. JOSEPHINEC Pine Bluff. AR Curriculum and Instruction Graduate Student BENDA, BEVERLY J Ludell Accounting Senior BENIGNUS, ELSBETH J Hoismgton Journalism and Mass Communications Senior BENSON. ANN Garden City Architecture Senior BENSON, KIRKT Cofleyville Pre-Medicine Senior BENTZ. ARLAN E Abilene Computer Science Graduate Student BERGLUND, TIM A Stanley Agricultural Mechanization Senior BERGMEIER. WILLIAM R Physical Education BERNEY, RANDY C. Accounting BERRY. PATTY D. . Physical Education . BEST. PETER H. Civil Engineering . SEVENS. CHARLOTTE L. Physical Therapy BICKLE. LYNETTE R. . . . Physical Therapy BIEBERLY, GREGORY E. Civil Engineering BIEBERLY. JULIE A Medical Technology Wakef ield . Sophomore Phillipsburg Junior Wichita Junior Manhattan .Junior . Topeka . . Freshman .... Hays Freshman Salma .... Senior Manhattan Sophomore BIENHOFF, MARK W Kensington Veterinary Medicine Senior BIESENTHAL, JANE M Westmoreland Animal Science and Industry Senior Hays Graduate Student . . . . Liberal Fifth Year Student Liberal Freshman Liberal Junior Bonner Springs Junior Elhnwood BINDER, STEPHEN F Grain Science BINFORD, MARY E Art Education BIRD. ALICIA A Elementary Education BIRD. GREGORY J Accounting BIRZER.DEBEJ Family and Child Development BIRZER, MATTHEW L Agricultural Engineering Senior BISWELL. JULIE A Manhattan Horticulture Therapy Junior BLACKER. TIMOTHY L . Manhattan Theatre Freshman BLACKMAN, ROBIN G Olathe Geography Senior BLACKMON, SANDRA G Topeka Home Economics and Journalism Senior BLOCKSOME, RICHARD C Ransom Agronomy Senior BLASCHKE. WILLIAM A Palm Beach. FL Bakery Science and Management Sophomore 434 ott-campus Marysville Sophomore Beloit Sophomore . Wichita Junior Kansas City Senior Clay Center Junior Jdiet.lL Junior Westmoreland Senior Manhattan Freshman Lenexa Sophomore Huntsville, AL Sophomore Pratt Sophomore Wichita Junior St. George Sophomore Holcomb Freshman Lea wood Senior Fredonia Senior Pittsburg Graduate Student Shiraz, Iran Graduate Student BLASKE.KATHYJ Elementary Education BLASS. MIKE L Building Construction SLICK. JOANNE E Early Childhood Education BLINZLER, CAROL A. Special Education BLOOM. ADALEEA. Home Economics BLOUNT, JOHN M Elementary Education BLUME, HAROLD R Agricultural Engineering BOCK. DONALD R Engineering . BOGINA, MICHAEL E Civil Engineering BOISCLAIR, PAULA A Business Administration . BOLDT, LARRY K Agricultural Engineering BOLIN. DEBORAH J Family and Child Development BOLTON. CHARLES L Animal Science and Industry BOMAN, SHIRLEY M Special Education BONDANK, OIANNE J Interior Design BONNER, TIMOTHY J Sociology BORHANI.KATHYJ Chemistry BORHANI.MOSTAFA Electrical Engineering ' j- ' ott-campus 435 off -campus Manhattan Senior Manhattan Sophomore Bennington Senior BOUCHARD. ' RHEAL 3 Newmgion.CT Veterinary Medicine Senior BOURAY. MICHAEL D Chanute Pre-Forestry Freshman BOWERS. DOUGLAS D Wichita Accounting Sophomore BORTZ, KATHRYN L. Medical Technology . . BOSCH. CATHERINES Physical Therapy BOSTER, SCOTT A. . . Electrical Engineering BOWMAN. JACOLYN E Physical Education BOWMAN. MARY M Business Education BOYD. BECKY L Interior Design BOZARTH, JACK M Radio and Television BOZEMAN, RICHARD T. Electrical Engineering . BOZEMAN, SUSAN K Mathematics Ellmwood Sophomore Kansas City Junior Topeka Junior Minneapolis. MN Freshman Hays Senior Hays Graduate Student BRACK, KIM E Hutchinson Elementary Education Senior BRACK, LES L Hutchinson Electrical Engineering Senior BRADEN. MICHAEL J. Wakelield Marketing Junior BRADFORD. SHERI L Lyons Recreation Senior BRADFORD, THELMA H Baton Rouge, LA English Education , Graduate Student BRADLEY. DENNIS M Atchison Architecture Senior BRADLEY. NORMAN E Peculiar, MO Pre-Design Professions Sophomore BRADLEY. REBECCA L Goff Physical Education Sophomore BRAND. JEAN M Welda Art Sophomore BRANOEBERRY, JACKIE L Russell Modern Language Senior BRANNAN. MICHAEL S Meade Civil Engineering Senior BRAUN, MARY J Edgerton Social Work Senior BRAXMEYER. PATRICIA J Atwood Business Junior BREEDEN, BRADLEY A Great Bend Biology Senior BREEN. GAIL L Augusta Art Junior BREESE, LYNN C Hillsboro Early Childhood Education Junior BRENNAN, LISA A Rossvllle Accounting Sophomore BRENNEIS, DENNIS R Hollenberg Electrical Engineering Senior BRENNER, DEBORRAH S Early Childhood Education BRETTELL. JOHN E Political Science BREWER, MIA Pre-Law BRIGHT, SHEILA M Finance BRINKER, KAREN K Family and Child Development BRINKLEY. JAMES H Pre- Design Professions Junction City Junior Manhattan Sophomore Ouenemo Junior Meriden Sophomore Glen Elder Junior Overland Park Sophomore BRISON.LEAHJ Fashion Merchandising BHITO, GUSTAVO P Biology BHITTON, ROGER G Natural Resource Management BROKES. CRAIG D Journalism and Mass Communications BROUGHER. TONI K. Elementary Education BROWN. BARBARA J Foods and Nutrition BROWN, BRYAN C Music Education BROWN. DALLAS S Journalism and Mass Communications BROWN. DANIEL K General El Dorado Senior . . . . San Juan, PR Senior Hutchinson Senior Wichita Freshman Great Bend Junior Manhattan Graduate Student Manhattan Senior Wichita Sophomore Wichita Sophomore BROWN, MICHAEL S Liberal Business Administration BROWN, PATRICIA J Interior Design BROWN, PHIL W Animal Science and Industry . . Senior El Dorado . . Senior Wakelield .Senior 436 otf-campus BROWN, RONALD L Erie, IL Architectural Engineering Senior BROWNBACK. ALAN L . Parker Veterinary Medicine Junior BROWNBACK, NANCY E Parker Family and Child Development Senior BROWNE, CHARLES R Colby Art Senior BROWNE, CYNTHIA J Salma Architecture . . . Filth Year Student BROZANIC. LINDA M Kansas City Journalism and Ma Communications Senior BRUHL . BERTHA K New Cambria Pre-Nursmg Freshman BRUNA, ALAN W Hanover Mathematics .- Senior BRUNGARDT, RICHARD Victoria Veterinary Medicine Senior BRYAN, DAVID H. . . . Highland Journalism and Mass Communications Junior BRYON. DIANA M Kansas City Home Economics Education Senior BUCHANAN, UNA J. ..Spring Hill Family and Child Development Junior BUCHANAN, LOIS A Lewis Recreation Junior BUCHER, DEMISE M Overland Park Home Economics Education Senior BUCHMAN, KAREN A . . Manhattan Home Economics Sophomore BUCHMAN, REX B Manhattan Animal Science and Industry Senior BUCHMAN. SUSAN K Burdick Family and Child Development Sophomore BUCL, LOARN L Timken Crop-Protection Senior BUDD, DAVID R Fallston, MD Architecture Senior BULK. MARTINA M Topeka Horticulture Senior Prairie Village Freshman Tqpeka Junior Goddard Sophomore . Clay Center Sophomore BULKLEY, SHELLEY S. Horticultural Therapy BULLER, REBECCA J Early Childhood Education BUNDY, ALANL Agricultural Mechanization BURGER, SHEILA M Family and Child Development BURKE, MARY L Overland Park Fashion Marketing Junior BURKE, PATRICIA L Overland Park Elementary Educa tion Senior BURKHOLDER, DAVID E McPherson Interior Architecture Senior BURNS, PAUL W Topeka Horticulture Sophomore BURNS, S DIAN Chattanooga, TN Commercial Art Freshman BURR. MARLENE K SI Francis Home Economics Extension Junior BURTON, CHARLENE J Greensburg Speech and Drama Education Senior BURTON. JAMES M Haddam Agronomy Senior BURTON, KENNETH R Wichita Pre-Vetermary Medicine Junior BURTON, RICHARD A El Dorado Pre-Dentistry Senior BUSBY, MARGARET D Hutchinson Family and Child Development Senior BUSSE, GARY A Kansas City, MO Architecture Senior BUSSE, KENNETH R English Literature . . BUTIN, SANDRA L. Home Economics . . . BUTLER, HUGH D. Pre-Medicme . Goodland Sophomore Halstead Junior Manhattan Sophomore BUTLER, JOANNE G Topeka Clothing and Retailing Senior CAFLISCH, LEONHARD R Independence Architecture Senior CALHOUN. KAREN R Wichita Dietetics Sophomore CALKINS, STEVEN H Olathe Geology Senior CALL. JERILYN J Wamego Social Work Junior CALL, MARY P Prairie Village Elementary Education Senior CAMPBELL, CAROL J Beloit Music. CAMPBELL, CLYDE A Animal Science and Industry CAMPBELL, MARC A Industrial Engineering Senior Russell Junior Wichita Graduate Student oti-campus 437 off-campus CAMPBELL. MARILYN K Home Economics CAMPBELL. ROBERT A Special Education CAMPBELL. STEVEN G Business CAMPBELL. WILLIAM R Pre-Medicine Manhattan Sophomore Wichita Junior Ulysses Sophomore Topeka Sophomore CANFIELD. CONNIE S El Dorado Social Wor Senior CANNAN, S. GAIL Pratt Clothing and Retailing Senior CAPPS. JAMES R Architecture CARBAUGH. DONNA J Physical Education CARLETON. CARLAL Veterinary Medicine CAflLIN. ROGER E. . . Agricultural Economics CARLSON. MARK D Biology CARNEY, KARLA J. .St. Louis. MO Junior Lawrence Sophomore Burtonsville. MD Junior Bucklin . Senior Overland Park Junior . Edna Home Economics and Journalism . . Senior CARR, KATHERINE L Kansas City Education Senior CARREL, DEBRAS Shawnee Foods and Nutrition Graduate Student CARSON. COLETTE A Wetmore Journalism and Mass Communications Sophomore CARTER, BILL C. Civil Engineering CARTER, CAMMIE C. Secondary Education . . CARVER, DAVID L Mernarn Senior Paola Senior Manhattan Chemical Engineering Senior CARVER, JENNA S Manhattan English CARY. JAMES H Milling Science and Management CARY, LES Journalism and Mass Communications CASTANEDA. CHRIS T Industrial Engineering CATES.L KIRK Medical Technology CATLIN, DANIEL L Animal Science and Industry . Senior Downs Junior Downs Senior Junction City Sophomore Belleville Junior Miltonvale Senior CATLIN, MAURICE A Concordia Agricultural Education Senior CATLIN, MICHAEL W Concordia Agricultural Education Senior CEDERBERG, JOEL E Manhattan General Freshman CELLMER, TERRY L Plainville Nuclear Engineering Senior CHAFFIN, VERONA JK Leavenworth Pre-Veterinary Medicine . .Freshman CHAMBERS. BARBARA L Overland Park Dietetics Junior CHAPMAN, MARY J Liberal Arts CHAPMAN, SCOTT L Business Administration CHATHAM, MICHAEL D Industrial Engineering CHEATUM. JODYA Family and Child Development CHEEK. LINDAS. Pre-Design Professions Glasco Sophomore Beloit Graduate Student Topeka Senior Syracuse Junior St Louis, MO Sophomore CHILDS, BARRY K Manhattan Agricultural Economics Senior CHILDS, SUSAN E Manhattan Family and Child Development Senior CHISM, SABRINAA Clallm Nuclear Physics Junior CHRISMAN, DIANE Wichita Family and Child Development Senior CHRISTENSEN, JOND Manhattan Geology Junior CHRISTNER, REX A Hutchinson Physical Education Senior CHRISTNER, TERRY A Hutchinson Family and Child Development Senior CLARK. ELAINE J Junction City Fashion Marketing Freshman CLARK, GAY A Netawaka Elementary Education Senior CLARK, GREGORY C. Crop Pro tection CLARK. JENNIFER C Foods and Nutrition CLARK, HANDLE L. Architecture CLARK. ROBERTA M Art Education Manhattan Junior Topeka Freshman McPherson Senior . Manhattan Graduate Student CLARKE, THOMAS W Finance and Accounting CLEMENTS. LAWANAG Horticultural Industries CLEVENGER, MINDY L Sociology CLINE, REMYD Business CLINE. ROGER H. Electrical Engineering CLINTON. DARRYL L Chemical Engineering Yates Center Senior Oxford Sophomore Mission Senior Manhattan Freshman Honolulu. HI Sophomore Scott City Junior COATS, LINDA J Hutchinson Physical Therapy Junior COATS, VICKI R Wichita Natural Resource Management Senior COLBY.PATRICAA Concordia Early Childhood Education Junior COLE, CYNTHIA A Wamego Secondary Education Senior COLEMAN. KATHERINE L Manhattan Modern Language Freshman COLLE, LANCE D Nickerson Animal Science and Industry Junior ott-campus 439 off -cam pus COLLINS, ANNETTE K Concordia Family and Child Development Senior COLLINS CHERYL L Overland Park Social Work Sophomore COLLINS, GARY W SI Louis. MO Architecture Fifth Year Student COLYN. LESLIE D McPherson Secondary Education Junior COMPAAN, MELODY-LEIGH Norton Elementary Education Senior CONDRAY, SCOTT R Clilton Agricultural Economic Senior CONDRY. ELLEN M Elementary Education CONGER, C BRENT Pre-Design Prolessions CONKWRIGHT, KAY S Graphic Art CONNER, JERRY E Graphic Art CONNER, MARTHA J Journalism and Mass Communications CONVERSE. CINDY S Physical Education Overland Park Junior Independence, MO Sophomore Manhattan Junior Maple Hill . . Freshman Maple Hill Freshman Eskridge Senior CONVERSE. MARK A Manhattan Engineering Freshman COOK.GIOVANNAT Manhattan Modern Language Sophomore COOK, JUDITH A Manhattan English Senior COOK, MARIKA F Manhattan Fine Arts Sophomore COOK, ROBERT R Jewell Agriculture . Sophomore COOPER, ALICE E Topeka Horticulture Senior COOPER. DAVID L Leavenworth Political Science Junior COOPER, DEAN L St. John Animal Science and Industry Senior COOPER. JAMES L. Overland Park Business Management Junior CORBIN, MARK R St Louis, MO Animal Science and Industry Senior CORCORAN. JEFFREY B Junction City Art Education Junior CORCORAN, THERESA G Hutchinson Special Education Senior CORFMAN. TERESA J Elementary Education CORNELIUS. GREGORY T. Accounting CORNELIUS. MARY D Pre-Medicme CORNETT. JACK L. . Agricultural Economics Manhattan Junior . Overland Park Sophomore Overland Park Junior Belleville Junior CORNWELL, MARTHA J St. John Dietetics Senior CORY, LINDA M Wichita Elementary Education Junior GOTTEN, JENNIFER J Hoismgton Dietetics Senior COTTINGHAM, LEANN Concordia English Education Senior COURI. ROBERT M East Peoria, IL Landscape Architecture Senior COWEN, MELVIN D . Manhattan Architecture Junior COX. CHERI D. Topeka Pre-Nursing Sophomore CRAFT, GLENN S Lebo Veterinary Medicine Senior CRAIG, OENISE L Overland Park Radio and Television Senior CRAMER. CONNIE S Manhattan General Freshman CRAMER, STACIAJ, Manhattan General Freshman CRANDALL. ROBERT J Overland Park Business Administration Senior CRANDALL. SUSAN J Overland Park Home Economics Education Senior CRANE, E DAVID Lamed Mechanical Engineering . Sophomore CRANSTON, BRADD Montrose, CO Animal Science and Industry Senior CRAWFORD, WARREN L Longton Veterinary Medicine Senior CREASON, MARK O Kansas City Construction Science Senior CRISLER, MICHELLE E Wamego Horticulture Senior CRIST, CYNTHIA D Little River Early Childhood Education Junior CROWL , GARY M Topeka Journalism and Mass Communications Junior 440 off-campus CUDNEY. NANCY L Psychology DAHL. MICHAEL E Pre-Design Professions OANLER. PATRICK J. Biology DARNELL, GWEN S. . . Education DAROSETT, GARYW Pre-Law Trousdale . Junior Abilene Freshman Kingman Junior Salina Senior Newlon Freshman DAVIDSON, DOUGLAS A Wellington Industrial Engineering Senior DAVIDSON, STEPHEN R Wichita Architecture Fifth Year Student DAVIGNON, ROGER E Hill City Agricultural Mechanization Senior DAVIS, CAROL S Scandia Political Science Senior DAVIS, CHRIS N Mission Geology Senior DAVIS, DEBRA J Highland Pre-Vetermary Medicine Sophomore DAVIS, GEORGE A Junction City Business Administration Senior DAVIS, LYNDA S Dairy Science DAVIS. MARY J Fisheries and Wildlife Biology DAVIS, MARY S Business Education DAVIS, RETTA A. Fort Scott Junior Overland Park . .Junior . . Manhattan Senior . Shawnee Marketing Research Senior DAVIS, VICKI L Leawood Microbiology Graduate Student DAWKINS, JOHN L Shawnee Mission Biochemistry Senior OAWSON, HERBERT E Medicine Lodge Architecture Senior DAY, CINDY L Henrietta, NY Home Economics - , Freshman DA Y.TRACY Overland Park Business Finance Senior DAYLOR, PAULA K Wamego Social Work and Corrections Junior DEAN. KENT A. . Wamego Corrections Administration Junior DEAN, WILLIAM H Cheney, WA Accounting Senior DEBOLD, TERENCE E Salina Business Administration Senior DEBRICK, CONNIE M Paola Social Sciences Senior DEBRICK, KATHY L Paola Medical Technology Senior DECKER, PATRICIA K Burr Oak Computer Science Junior DEFFENBAUGH. ERIC P Manhattan Radio and Television . . Junior DeFRIES. RICHARD B Manhattan Nuclear Engineering Sophomore DeHART. STEVE D Topeka Microbiology Senior DEINES, GEORGE F Ness City Restaurant Management Senior DEINES, PEGGY J Solomon Elementary Education Senior DEMO. DANIEL D El Dorado Business Sophomore DEMUTH, DOROTHY L Wright Mechanical Engineering Senior DEMUTH, YVONNE M Hanover Elementary Education Senior DEMPSTER, JAMES L Atchison Business Management Freshman DEMPSTER, RICHARD E Atchison Agricultural Mechanization Senior DENNING, DOUGLAS G Russell Accounting Senior DENNIS. E. ANN Leavenworth General Freshman DENNIS, SCOTT M Olathe Microbiology Senior DEPENBUSCH. LARRY J Zenda Architecture Junior DESCH. JOSEPH P Veterinary Medicine DEUTSCH, BRADLEY L. Accounting DIAZ. CARLOS A Veterinary Medicine DIBBEN. ELAINE M Home Economics Education DIBBEN, N. CRAIG Business Administration Senior DICK. DAVID A Buhler Agricultural Mechanization Junior Topeka Junior Hoisinglon Junior Cayey. PR Sophomore . Junction City Senior . . . Junction City off-campus 441 off-campus DICKASON. CYNTHIA A Fort Scott Recreation Senior DICKENS. LOREN E Pre-Vetermary Medicine DICKERSON. BILL J Health DICKEY, HALLEY K Architecture DICKS. CHRISTOPHER L Criminology Neodesha Junior Topeka Sophomore Lake Lotawaha, MO Junior Bardstown. KY Sophomore DICKS, VIRGINIA G Bardstown. KY Psychology DICRISTINA. NADINE M Jackson, NJ Family and Child Development Senior DIECKHOFF. SUE E Salina Interior Design Senior DIETRICH, MARY S. Animal Science and Industry DIETZ, CARMAJ Clothing and Retailing DIETZ, CHARLES H Park and Recreation Management OIKEMAN, STEVE Mechanical Engineering DIRKS, RANDALL K. Physical Education DIRKS. SUSAN K General DIVER. MARCIA L Dietetics DLABAL. DEBORAH K Physical Therapy Hiawatha . . Junior Hoismgton Sophomore Manhattan . . .Senior Syracuse . .Senior Dodge City . .. .Senior Dodge City Junior El Dorado . .Junior Ellsworth .Junior DOAN, RICHARD L Mound City, MO Architecture Senior DOBBIE. JOANN M Kansas City Physical Education Senior PRIVAT PARKING VIUIAIORS CAPS REMOVED 442 ott-campus DOBY, CINDED Marketing . . . . DODGE. JAMES W. . Education DOEBELE, CONNIE J. Radio and Television leavenworth Sophomore . . Manhattan Senior Hanover Junior DOKKEN, DANIEL P Derby Architecture Senior DOKKEN. PEGGY L Derby Music Education Senior DONLEY, KEITH B Wichita Pre-Design Professions . Freshman DONMYER, JOHN E Statistics . . DOOLEY. MIKE E. Milling Science and Management DORSEY, RENEA C. Interior Design DOTSON. DEBORAH Theatre DOYLE, GREG Journalism and Mass Communications DREES. CHARLES M. Guidance and Counseling Casper, WY Junior Atchison Freshman Haysville Junior Wichita Sophomore Denver, CO Senior Hays Graduate Student DREES, DUANE W Garden City Agronomy Junior DROGE, BEVERLY F Seneca Home Economics with Liberal Arts Senior DRUMHILLER, LINDA K Hutchinson Home Economics with Liberal Arts Senior DUDLEY. DEBRA J Cawker City Recreation Junior DUDTE, TIMOTHY J Hesston Architecture Senior DLJFFENDACK. SCOTT A. Kansas City Business Administration Junior DUKICH, MARSHA L Leawood Sociology Senior DUMLER. SYLVIA J Russell Pre-Nursing Sophomore DUNCAN, JON B Kensington Veterinary Medicine Senior DUNCAN, LYNN M Kansas City Accounting Senior DUNCAN, VICKI L Trenton, MO Fashion Marketing Senior DUNIVENT, GAYLE K Manhattan Interior Design . Sophomore DUNN, JOSEPH J, Hollis, NY Architecture Fifth Year Student DUNN, WAYNE E. . . Menden Agricultural Education Graduate Student DUNTON, MARION D . . . . , Topeka Adult Education Graduate Student DURANT, JACKIE E Jewell Fashion Marketing Sophomore DURBIN, RANDAL L Moline Agricultural Economics Senior DURLER, MAURICE G Dodge City Accounting Junior DYE. REBECCA A. Goodland Business Sophomore EAVERSON, DEBORAH J Overland Park Speech Education Senior EAVERSON, ROBERTO Overland Park Music Education Junior EBERTH, TOME Basehor Veterinary Medicine Freshman EBY. CARL W Howard Accounting .... Junior EDDY. ADELLL Syracuse Accounting Senior EDDY. SUSAN M. Marysville General Sophomore EDELMAN, MARK A Manhattan Agricultural Economics Senior EDIGER, CHARLOTTE A Buhler Home Economics with Liberal Arts Senior EDMONDS. VICKI S. McLouth Physical Education Junior EDWARDS, SUSAN F Emporia Clothing and Retailing Sophomore EGAN, FRANCES L Salina Political Science Senior EGGERS, DOUGLAS W, Ellinwood Business Administration Sophomore EICHHORN. CONNIE M Salina Physical Education Junior EICKHOLT, MARIE-ANNE T. Junction City Modern Language Junior EILERT, BECKY L, Beloit Pre-Nursing . . . Junior ELDER, RODERIC L Arkansas City Architecture Senior ELLIFF CONNIE J. Port Isabel. TX Foods and Nutrition Graduate Student off -campus 443 off -cam pus ELLIFF. DONALD A Administration ELLING.JOANE Physical Therapy ELLIOTT, SANDRA K Pre-Medicine ELLIS. DOREEN J General ELLIS, RANDALL W Journalism and Mass Communications ELSAHOOKIE, MEDHATM. Agronomy Port Isabel, TX Graduate Student Marion Senior Manhattan Sophomore Overland Park Sophomore Manhattan Junior Baghdad, Iraq Graduate Student ELSEN, CAROLYN M Pratt Elementary Education Senior ELSEY. BRUCE D Garden City Veterinary Medicine Junior EMERY, BARBARA A McPherson Home Economic Senior EMERY. TERRI K . . . . McPherson Pre-Design Professions Sophomore ENGELLAND, GLENNA Sterling Poultry Science Senior ENGLISH, C. STEVEN Sedan Pre-Veterinary Medicine Senior ENYART. JENISE G Social Work , EPLER. DEBORAH K Social Work ERICKSON. JULIE A Management ERICKSON. SHELLEY A Elementary Education ERICKSON, TIM J Architecture ERKELENS, ALLISON C Journalism and Mass Communications Abilene Junior Valley Falls Junior Courtland Junior Wichita Junior Wichita Senior Heidelberg, Germany Freshman ERTL, GARY R Manhattan Business Administration Freshman ESCH, ROBERT J Spalding, NB Construction Science Senior ESSER, MARY E Topeka Art Senior EUDALEY. DEBBIE L Manhattan Elementary Education Freshman EUKER, VALERIE D Hutchinson Physical Education Senior EVANS, BRYAN D. - Arlington Agronomy , . . Junior EVANS, JERRY R Elementary Education EVANS, MARY M Fine Arts EVANS. SHERRY . Manhattan Senior Manhattan Senior Chetopa Fashion Merchandising Senior EYLER. JERRY M. Abilene Accounting , . . Graduate Student EYLER. PAMELA B . . Abilene General Freshman FAGERAH. ADNAN H Meccah. Saudi Arabia Accounting Junior FAIR, DORIS M Raymond Family and Child Development Senior FALLON, LORETTAA Topeka Business Senior FANKHAUSER. TONY H Madison Animal Science and Industry , Junior FANNING, GARY L Meriden Horticulture Senior FASNACHT, GLEN F Galva Physical Education Senior FAWCETT, KIM M Ree Heights, SD Animal Science and Industry Senior FAY, CAROLYN A Manhattan Home Economics Extension Senior FEE.FORRESTM WhiteCloud Wildlite Management Junior FEHR, LESLIES Herington Animal Science and Industry Senior FEHRENBACH. ELDON D. Ness City Agricultural Mechanization . , . Junior FEIGHTNER, SHARON A Overland Park Electrical Engineering Senior FELDER. PAULA Wakeeney Foods and Nutrition in Business Senior FELDMAN, ROBERTAL Kinsley Psychology Senior FENNEMA, DIANE R Kansas City Special Education . Junior FENTON.TOM A Sabetha Physical Education Senior FERGUSON, RUTH A Abilene Special Education . . Junior FERRO, FRANK S . Ottawa Pre-Veterinary Medicine Junior FEYERHERM. JOAN L Manhattan Pre-Nursing Sophomore 444 off -campus FILBY, JEFF B Junction City Recreation Freshman FILIATREAULT. GREGG L. . . . Topeka Sociology Junior FINNIGAN, KATHRYN J Junction City Elementary Education Junior FIORAMONTI, E.JOHN Silver Spring, MO Veterinary Medicine Senior FISHER, DEANNA L Norton Elementary Education Junior FISHER, DEBBIE L Slilwell Special Education Senior FISHER. TERRY L Liberal Pre-Design Professions . Sophomore FITCH. GREGORY K Caldwell Biology and Psychology Junior FLACK, THOMAS D Lincoln, NB Veterinary Medicine Senior FLETCHER, DONNA L Lepti Home Economics Education Senior FLETCHER. MICHAEL T Leoti Social Work Senior FLINN, JERYL A Glen Elder English Education Senior FLUDERER. JO ANN Shawnee Mission Physical Therapy Junior FLUDERER, WILLIAM H Shawnee Mission Fisheries and Wildlife Biology Senior FOHEY, MICHELLE L Overland Park Elementary Education . . Junior FOLEY. DONNA F Atchison Psychology ... Junior FOLEY, SUSAN J Joplin, MO Elementary Education Senior FOLGER, LIZA Wichita Animal Science and Industry Senior FOLK, SHERRY L Holyrood Pre-Law Sophomore FORBES, LAURIE A Lawrence Business Education Sophomore FORE, JANE A Mission Biology and Pre-Medicine Senior FORREST, KEITH P Manhattan Fisheries and Wildlife Biology Junior FOSTER. ANNE K Topeka Business Administration Sophomore FOSTER, GARY L Eureka Physical Education Senior FOSTER, KELLI I. Manhattan Interior Design Junior FOSTER, KENT R Manhattan Architecture Senior FOUNTAIN, DEBBY M Sterling Family and Child Development Junior FOUNT AINE, CHARLES W ... Randolph Animal Science and Industry Junior FOWLES. JANET K Wakefield Medical Technology Junior FRANKENFIELD, PEGGY A Spring Hill Architecture Senior FRANKLIN, MARK A Business Administration FREDERICK. PHIL B Animal Science and Industry FREELAND, GAILA M. Elementary Education . . FREEMAN, PATRICIA A. . .. Dietetics FRENCH, DEBORAH K Sociology FRENCH, JEANENE G. . . . Horticulture Edson Graduate Student Hutchinson Junior . . Burns Junior Topeka Senior Carbondale Graduate Student . . Kansas City, MO . . .Senior FRICK, NANCY L Durham Family and Child Development Senior FRIEDRICH. RAYMOND L Leonardville Animal Science and Industry Senior FRIEND, SUSAN C Wichita Special Education Senior FRIESEN, BRADLEY W Inman Physical Education Senior PRINT, GARY D Belleville Wildlife Conservation Senior FROEBE, DONALD D Independence English ' Senior FROHNE, RICHARD F Architecture FRY.ROSELYNG Physical Education FRYE, LINDAS Home Economics Education FRYE. RAYMOND E Agriculture FUHRMAN. WILLIAM A. Agronomy FULTON, RICK A Pre- Dentistry Palatine, IL . Junior Sedgwick Sophomore Topeka Freshman Topeka . Freshman Severance Junior Ottawa Junior ofl-campus 445 off-campus FUNDERBURG. LOISJ Manhattan Interior Design Freshman FUNK, BONNIER Abilene Interior Design Senior FUNK. MARILYN K Russell Special Education Junior FUQUA.FREDE Kansas City. MO Regional and Community Planning Graduate Student FURNISH. SUSAN J Shawnee Mission Fashion Marketing Junior FYFE, GREGORY 8 Manhattan Construction Science Senior QABEL, CRYSTAL L Kana City Elementary Education Senior GABLE. OEBORA K Manhattan Social Work Senior GABLE, C. MICHAEL Wichita Building Conduction Senior GABEL. SUSAN R Manhattan Social Work Sophomore GALLE, KAY A Moundridge Interior Design Senior GALLON. MARY E Fredonia Family and Child Development . , . Senior GALVIN, RICHARD R Overland Park Political Science Senior GAMBLE. DIANA L. Plainville Home Economics Junior GARBER. SUSAN D Manson, IA Social Work Senior GARDNER, CHARLES R Overland Park Theatre Junior GARDNER, NANCY C Overland Park Business Administration Junior GARNSON. VICKI L. . Salina Special Education Junior GARST. BARIA Pratt Interior Design Junior GARTEN, CARL H Abilene Animal Science and Industry Senior GARTEN, MARK L Abilene Horticulture ... Junior GARY, RANDY L Abilene Mechanical Engineering Senior GATES, JONI L Manhattan Business Administration Junior GATZ. JANET K Pratt English Junior GATZ, JOHN E Preston Radio and Television Senior GEBHARDS, JAMES R Weskan Crop Protection Junior GEHRT, TERESA A Manhattan Dietetics Senior GEIST, GARY Hays Animal Science and Industry Senior GEITZ, GREGORY A Morton Veterinary Medicine Senior GERARD. ROY W Syracuse Art Junior GERLACH, DEBRA N Manhattan Bakery Science and Management Senior GERLACH. PAUL M. Manhattan Geology Graduate Student GHOLSON, JENNY . . . Dodge City Radio and Television Junior GIANFORTE, THOMAS J Racine, Wl Veterinary Medicine Senior GILMORE, DEBORAH D Manhattan Business Management Senior GILMORE, JAMES W Manhattan Architecture Junior GLADDEN. LINDA C Wathena Computer Science Sophomore GLASKER. PATRICIA A Culpeper.VA Physical Education Freshman GLAZE, DEBBIEL Augusta Business Administration Sophomore GLAZE, JAMES B Augusta Chemical Engineering Senior GLEASON, MARTIN J Kinsley Pre-Vetennary Medicine Junior GLOVER. DIANE K. Manhattan Pre-Veterinary Medicine Junior GOBEL. MARYE Pre-Nufsmg GOETZ, RONALD E Accounting GONZALES. LUCINDA M Psychology GOOD. LISA . Music Manhattan Sophomore ....Wichita Senior Garden City Junior Benton Junior GOODWIN, BRUCE W Prairie City, SO Veterinary Medicine Senior GORMAN, L. KEVIN Fort Scott Food Science and Management Senior 446 ott-campus GOSNELL, JONI nterior Architecture . . . . GOUGH, CINDY L Interior Design GOULDING, THERESA D. Recreation GRADY, MARGARET A. Mechanical Engineering GRAFF, VICKI S. Elementary Education GRAHAM, GAY E Accounting Shawnee Mission Junior Wichita Junior Shawnee Senior Manhattan . . Freshman . . Marienthal Senior . . Manhattan . . Freshman GRANT, JOHN J. . Accounting GRAVES, CAROLYN L Interior Design GREEN, DEE A usiness GREENBERG, BARRY S Architecture GREGORY, JULIANA Medical Technology GREGWIRE. ROBERTA L. Animal Science and Industry . Manhattan Sophomore . . . .Salina Senior . . Kansas City . . Sophomore Chesterfield, MO Senior . Ulysses Sophomore . . . .Salina . .Junior GRESS, JUDITH K Agricultural Education GRIDER, NANCY E Fashion Retailing GRIER, CAROL J Music Education GRIER, CHRISTOPHER A Nuclear Engineering GRIFFIN. SUSAN K Speech and Theatre GROSS, TIMOTHY L Pre-Dentistry GROSSARDT, PHILIP F Radio and Television GROTHUSEN, JANET S Family and Child Development GROVER, JOYCE K Social Work GRUBER, RANDALL R ......... Animal Science and Industry GRUBER, TERRY M Adult and Occupational Education GRUENTHAL, LINOAA English Summertield Senior Shawnee Mission ..... Junior Billings, MT Senior Wichita Senior Alton Junior Lamed Senior Claflin Junior Ellsworth Junior Palmer Senior Bennington Junior ... Hope Graduate Student Salina Senior oft-campus 447 off -cam pus GUIPRE, KEVEN A Minneapolis Business Administration Senior HACHINSKY. DAVID M interior Design HADDOCK, MICHAEL J Modern Language HAFFENER, CONNIE A General HAFFENER. TERESAS Theatre HAGANS. ROBIN A Accounting Kansas City Junior Beloit Junior Manhattan Sophomore . Manhattan Junior Overland Park Junior HAGEDORN, STEPHEN W Overland Park Landscape Architecture Senior HAGERMAN, DENNIS R Larned Business Administration Senior HAGERMAN, JOYCE D Larned Elementary Education Senior HAGGARD. MARKHAM R . .Vienna, VA Journalism and Mass Communications Sophomore HAHN, CAROLE A Leavenworth Art Senior HAJOVSKY, ROBERT J Elkhart Pre-Forestry Sophomore HAKE, LYNN D Tipton Architecture Senior HALAWANI. ABDUL-AZIZO Medina. Saudi Arabia Bakery Science and Management Graduate Student HALEY, PAUL J P 01 Animal Science and Industry Senior HALL, KATHRYN L. Arne , IA Interior Design Senior HALL. MARY A Ames, IA Medical Technology Sophomore HALL, S. GAY Kansas City Homo Economics with Liberal Arts Senior Wichita Junior Topeka Junior Ellmwood HAMBRIGHT, MARJORIE B Pre-Vetermary Medicine HAMM. DANA L Horticulture HAMMEKE. KEVIN F Secondary Education Senior HAMMOND. SUSAN L Easton, CT Housing and Equipment Junior HANEY.KARLAJ Claflin Art Education Junior HANSEN, CAROL J Fort Collins. CO Special Education .Junior HANSEN, TERRY J Cylinder, IA Geophysics Senior HARDER. JAN A. Merriam Business Administration Junior HARDER, RON J Whitewater Agricultural Economics Senior HARKEY, JERRY P Manhattan Mechanical Engineering Senior HARLAN, NANCY L Madison Retail Floriculture Senior HARMS, WAYNE A Newton Chemical Engineering Senior HARPER, MARK W Building Construction HARRIS. JEAN A. Elementary Education HARRIS. NANCYS. Home Economics Springfield, MO Junior Manhattan Sophomore Wichita Sophomore HARRISON, BRENT A Kansas City Business Senior HARRISON, DEBRAL Pratt Sociology Junior HARRISON, JANE A, Betoit Pre-Nursing Junior HARRYMAN, JOAN D Kansas City Family and Child Development Senior HART, MARY A Jamestown Psychology Junior HARTFIELD. FREDDIE D PineBlutl.AR Education , Graduate Student HARTIG, MARY M Anchorage. AK Accounting Sophomore HARTNETT, KIM L Stafford Family and Child Development Junior HASKINS, JUDY K Meade Marketing Senior HASLETT. LISAS Pre-Nursmg HATCHER, CINDA A Home Economics Extension HAVERFIELD. NANCY L Psychology HAWKINS TERI J Pre-Dentistry HA WORTH, DANIEL H Construction Science HAWTHORNE, SUSAN E Food Science and Management Junction City Sophomore Goodland Senior . Russell Springs Senior Dodge City Junior Melvern Junior Greeley Sophomore 448 oti-campus HAYNES, BRADLEY R. . . . Pre-Design Professions HAYNES, JEANINEE Family and Child Development HAYNES. ROBERTO Animal Science and Industry Larned . .Junior . Pawnee Rock Senior Wamego Freshman HEACOCK, ANITA L Topeka Horticulture Senior HEALY, FRANK G Spring Hill Crop Protection Senior HECHT. JANET M Seneca Family Economics . Graduate Student HECKMAN. JOHN E Independence Architecture Junior HEDKE, DENNIS E Manhattan Geophysics Senior HEDRICK, NANCY K Elementary Education HEIDRICK.RUTHA Dietetics HELD, JON J Physics . Hutchinson Junior Beloit Junior . Jamesburg, NJ Senior HELFERSTAY, CYNTHIA M Mulvane Speech and Theatre Senior HEUNE, LINDA F Home Economics Education . . HELMER, DENNIS W . . . . . Building Construction HELMER, KENDALL J Architecture HELVEY. RICHARD L. Milling Science and Management HEMPHILL. SUSAN J. Community Service HENN.CARLAJ Dietetics Salina Senior Marion Junior .Marion . . Fifth Year Student Abilene Junior Clay Center Junior El Dorado Sophomore HENRICKS, VERNON J Hope Physical Education Junior HENRY, CINDY K Topeka Interior Design Junior HENRY, FLORENCE Enterprise Social Work Freshman HENRY, FRANK J .. Enterprise Sociology Junior HEPTIG. LORAA St. George Medical Technology Sophomore HERL, JACQUELINE Monument Fashion Marketing Senior HERMAN, KATHRYN A Concordia Business Administration Senior HERMAN. SANDRA J Concordia Home Economics Education Junior HERONEMUS, DARYL L Ness City Agricultural Engineering . . .Junior HERRON. LYNDELL D Manter Agronomy Junior HERRON. MAYNARD M Manter Agricultural Engineering Graduate Student HERRS. STEVEN A. .Linn Radio and Television . Junior HETTENBACH, BRUCE E Abilene Accounting Junior HEWSON, ROBERTA D Larned Family and Child Development Graduate Student HIBBARD, GORDON V Toronto Secondary Education Senior HICKERT, DAN E Bird City Business Junior HICKS, LINDAS Shawnee Mission Health Education Junior HICKS, MARICAE, Garnet! Household Equipment Sophomore HIGGINS, JONI K Elkhart Home Economics Junior HILDEBRAND. JOHN W .Stafford Agricultural Economics Junior HILL, CHERYL A Kansas City Medical Technology Senior HILL, CHERYL J Hutchinson Physical Education Senior HILL, CLARENCE A Bloom Mechanical Engineering Senior HILL, JEANIE E Manhattan Family and Child Development Senior HILL, ROGER R Bucklin Electrical Engineering Senior HINKSON, CRAIG Q Wichita Philosophy Senior HINSON. LOIS A Arkansas City History Sophomore HINTEN, STEVEN R Mexico, MO Pre-Vetermary Medicine Freshman HINTZ. DAVID J Salina Business Administration Senior HITT, STEPHEN H Omaha, NB Music Senior otf-campus 449 off -cam pus HIXSON. BARBARA J Home Economics with Liberal Arts HOBSON, JUDY A Elementary Education HODGE. SHARON D Home Economics HODGES, MARILYN A Veterinary Medicine HOERMAN, CONNIE M Family Economics HOFFINE.SUEL Early Childhood Education HOFFMAN. CALVIN C Psychology HOFFMAN. LINDA K . . . Interior Design HOGLUND. BRUCE A Physical Education HOLBORN. JEANNE A Elementary Education HOLCOM. SANDRA K Horticulture Therapy HOLDER, BLAINE K Milling Science and Management Salina Senior Scandia Junior Reno, NV Junior Lawrence Sophomore Manhattan Graduate Student Prairie Village Junior Abilene Junior Salina Junior Overland Park Junior Junction City Freshman Gypsum Senior Leona . Senior HOLDER, MARY C Manhattan Home Economics Freshman HOLLAND, CONNIE L Shawnee Mission Family and Child Development Senior HOLLIS, BRIAN W Landscape Architeclure HOLLIS. RALPH Electrical Engineering HOLLOWAY. RANDALL L Animal Science and Industry HOLLOWAY, RICK D Pre-Vetermary Medicine . Wichita Filth Year Student . . . . Erie Junior Narka Junior Narka Junior HOLMES, CAROL E Eudora Elementary Education Senior HOLMES, JOE D Eudora Animal Science and Industry Senior HOLMES, LUANN Manhattan Interior Design Sophomore HOLSTE, CURTIS A Ludell Fisheries and Wildlife Biology Junior HOLSTE, SYLVIA N Ludell Art Education Senior HOLT, SUSAN E Topeka Elementary Education Junior HOLTON, GEORGE M Kansas City, MO Architecture Senior HOLUB, GARY S Marion Business Administration Senior HOLUB, RODNEY J Marion Fisheries and Wildlife Biology , , Freshman HOLYFIELD, ROGER L, Kansas City Business Administration Sophomore HOOVER, STEPHEN J Clay Center Construction Science Senior HOPKINS , DAVID W Olathe Biology Senior HOPKINS, THOMAS L Washington Electrical Engineering Senior HORAN. KATHLEEN D Abilene Elementary Education Sophomore HORAN. TIM D Abilene Journalism and Mass Communications Sophomore HOSSAIN, MD. MOSHARRAF Jessore. Bangladesh Architecture Graduate Student HOSTIN. LONNIE D . Olathe Accounting Sophomore HOSTINSKY, DALE D Cuba Agricultural Education Senior HOUSH, RICHARD D Hiawatha Mathematics Senior HOWARD, RUTH E Topeka Elementary Education Senior HOWE. MARCIA L Overland Park Clothing and Retailing Junior HUBALEK.VERNEA, Wakeeney Agricultural Mechanization Junior HUDSON, JUDY M Falun Elementary Education Senior HUEY. DANIEL E , Manhattan Political Science Junior HUGGINS, HOWARD M Parsons Marketing Senior HUGHES, DENNIS L. Agricultural Economics HUGHES, JERALDYN L. Clothing and Retailing . . . HULLMAN, KATHRYN L Home Economics Education HULLMAN. KIM H Accounting Anthony Senior Eureka Senior St John Sophomore St John Junior HUMBARGER, GLENN E Herington Microbiology Senior 450 ott-campus HUNT, BRENDA S Lyon Home Economics Education Senior HUNT. DEBORAH L Attica Family Economics Graduate Student HUNT, JEFF B Prairie Village Business Senior HUNTER, STEVEN R Topeka Geography Junior HUNTSMAN. JENNIFER C Belvue Home Economics Education Sophomore HUPPE, GARY S. Roeland Park Journalism and Mass Communications Sophomore HURLEY, ALLEN L Republic Agricultural Economics Senior HURLEY. BARBARA E Republic Family and Child Development Junior HURLEY, MARTHA L Glasco Pre-Medicine Senior HURST-WALKER. DEBORAH K Johnson Art Education Junior HUSEMAN. BOBE Ellsworth Veterinary Medicine Junior HUSEMAN. WILLIAM A Scott City Veterinary Medicine Junior HUSER. BERNARD P . . . Hays Electrical Engineering Sophomore HUSETH, GREGORY C Topeka Accounting Senior HUSTON, RANDALL W. Americus Biology Special Student HUSTON, TERRY A Overland Park Home Economics with Liberal Arts Sophomore HUXMAN. MARILOU . . . . Morland Journalism and Mass Communications . Junior HYDE, DOUGLAS W Newton Civil Engineering Senior IRELAND, JAMES R Benderville Chemistry . . . Junior ISERN, JOHN M Ellinwood Sociology Senior ISERN. MYRON J Ellinwood General . Sophomore IWERT, WILLIAM H Mahaska Education Senior IWINSKI, DAVID M Caracas, Venezuela Milling Science and Management Senior IZADI, REZA Hamadan. Iran Education , Graduate Student JACKA. CARL G. . . Fort Riley Pre-Medicine Freshman JACKSON, DENISE M Arkansas City Elementary Education Senior JACKSON. GALEN H Wichita Horticulture . . . Sophomore JACKSON. SHARYL L Merriam Corrections Junior JACOBS. CHARLES C Peabody General Freshman JACOBS, JOAN M Solomon Fashion Marketing Senior JACOBS, ROXANNE M. Plains Pre-Veterinary Medicine , Junior JACOBS, WILLIAM R Peabody Geology Senior JACOBSON, CAROL S Hope Medical Technology Senior JACQUES, ROBERT M Hutchinson Agronomy Graduate Student JAMES, JOHN D. . . Dighton Special Education Graduate Student JAMES. SUSAN M Jewell General Sophomore JAMES. VICKIE L Dighton Dietetics . . . . Junior JAMISON, MARK A Fontana Agricultural Education Sophomore JANKE, EDWARD L Chapman Agricultural Engineering Senior JANSSEN, GERALD W Geneseo Architecture Senior JAPP, SUSAN B Hays Dietetics Junior JARRETT. TERESA E Salina Social Work . . . Junior JARVIS. DAVID A Salina Sociology Junior JASTER. NANCY L Leavenworth Computer Science . Junior JENSEN, HOWARD A Holton Veterinary Medicine Sophomore JENSEN. PEGGY M Hays Home Economics Extension Junior JENSEN. RITA L Holton Pre-Nursmg Sophomore JILKA. CATHERINE M Shawnee Mission Journalism and Mass Communications Junior off -campus 451 off -cam pus JOERG, CINDY A Manhattan Sociology Senior JOHANNSEN. NANCY J Lawrence Biology Junior JOHNS, QERALYNN L Richfield Agricultural Journalism Senior JOH NS. NORMAN D. . . Richfield Agronomy Junior JOHNSON. BRENDAG Holton Psychology Senior JOHNSON, C DAVID Stafford Agricultural Mechanization Sophomore JOHNSON, DIANE K Eskridge Social Science Senior JOHNSON, EDWARD A Wichita History ... Sophomore JOHNSON, HEATHER K Dwight Horticulture Senior JOHNSON. JANEL L. Pre-Forestry JOHNSON. JANET E. Medical Technology JOHNSON. JEANNE M. Physical Education . . . JOHNSON, KAY L Microbiology JOHNSON. KENT R Pre-Forestry JOHNSON. MARY J. . . Music Education JOHNSON. MICHAEL G Architecture JOHNSON, MURIEL J Belleville Animal Science and Industry Senior JOHNSON. NANCY J Salina Civil Engineering Junior Wichita - . Junior Manhattan Freshman Sterling . . Junior Wichita .Junior 452 off-campus JOHNSTON, CYNTHIA J Overland Park Marketing Junior JOHNSTON, DENISE R . Glen Elder Medical Technology Junior JOHNSTON, JERRY D Concordia Construction Science Junior JOHNSTON, JODY S Wichita Fisheries and Wildlife Biology Senior JOKERST, KATHLEEN M Salina Early Childhood Education Senior JONES, ALBERT R Stanley Commercial Art Senior JONES, CHARLOTTE A Independence Animal Science and Industry Senior JONES, DAVID A Baldwin City Physical Science Senior JONES, GARY L Meade Civil Engineering Senior JONES. JAMY A Kansas City, MO Architecture Senior JONES.JANISA Hiawatha Social Science Sophomore JONES, MARK A Topeka Finance Senior JONES. MARLAS Hiawatha Physical Education Sophomore JONES. MAX A Pretty Prairie Biochemistry Senior JONES, NADINE N Memphis, TN Modern Language Senior JONES, PAMELA L Topeka History Senior JONES, PATSY Y Pretty Prairie Pre-Vetermary Medicine Junior JONES. REGINALD D Great Bend Engineering Technology Junior JONES, ROD L Hiawatha Accounting Senior JONES. TERESA M Chanute Elementary Education Junior JONES. TIMOTHY J Baldwin Animal Science and Industry Junior JORDAN, MICHAEL D Beloit Agronomy Senior JOSLYN, RANDY L Wichita Architecture Senior JOY. ADEN E Narka Agronomy Sophomore JOYCE. JODEE L Wichita Pre-Physical Therapy Sophomore JOYCE, PATRIC L Garden City Mechanical Engineering Senior JUAREZ. JOYCE A Junction City Family and Child Development Sophomore JUNGE. RICHARD C . . . Coffeyville Bakery Science and Management Junior KADAVY, DAVID J Belleville Science Education Senior KAISER. ROBERT H Phillipsburg Medical Technology Senior KARR, STEVEN D Emporia Architecture Junior KASTER. LARRY V Kansas City Entomology Junior KAUFFMANN, TOM V Tulsa, OK Landscape Architecture Senior KEATING. ELIZABETH A Fort Scott Radio and Television Junior KEATING, MARY C Fort Scott Pre-Physical Therapy Senior KEATING. RICK A . Liberal Architectural Engineering Sophomore KEEHN. ANNE M Towanda Business Administration Sophomore KEETEN, JAN S Phillipsburg Home Economics Extension Senior KEIM, JERRY L Waketield Electrical Engineering Sophomore KELLAMS. R KENT Manhattan Business Junior KELLEY, RAYNAS Manhattan General Freshman KELLOGG. ROBERT R Phillipsburg Accounting Junior KELLY, STEPHEN R Elfingham Animal Science and Industry Senior KELSEY, RICHARD M Rossville Electrical Engineering Senior KEMNITZ. DENNIS R Wamego Food Science Junior KEMP, KEVIN C Oxford Pre-Medicine Senior KENNEDY. KAY E Waldo Physical Education Junior KENNEY, CALVIN R Overland Park Elementary Education Sophomore ott-campus 453 off-campus KENT, MARY J Overland Park Horticulture Junior KEPKA.GARYE Ell.worth Architecture Sen ' KERKULIET MICHAEL F Larchwood. IA Education Graduate Student KERSHAW. KAREN L Hulchmson Elementary Education Senior KESSLER.SCOTTA Topeka Mechanical Engineering Senior KETTER, DOROTHY W Meriden Fashion Marketing Junior KILGORE, PATRICIA A Roeland Park Radio and Television Senior KILLION, CINDY L Cofteyville Journalism and Mass Communications Junior KILLION, JANETTE S Prairie Village Phyncal Education Senior KIMBALL. HARRY E Medicine Lodge Electrical Engineering Junior KIMSEY, OWEN L Manhattan Earty Childhood Education Senior KING, EDWARD A Oakhill Business Administration Senior KING, JpHN E Wichita Food Science Senior KING, MARCIA A Praine Village Psychology and Secondary Education Senior KINNARD, ARTHUR H Manhattan Curriculum and Instruction Graduate Student KINSEY, HUGH C Manhattan Animal Science and Industry Senior KIRACOFE, ZANE D Ml. Solon, VA Animal Science and Industry Senior KIRCHOFF. DIANA L. Independence Business Education Junior KIRKWOOD. GLYNNISA Accounting KISNER. MARK A Electrical Engineering KISSICK.KIM A Elementary Education Prairie Village Junior Hays Sophomore Garden City Junior KLAHR, MICHAEL D DeSoto Agricultural Education Senior KLEIN, KATHLEEN A Fairview Animal Science and Industry Senior KLEIN, RHODA L Munich, ND Dietetics Senior KLEPPER. RICHARD G Agronomy KLEUSCH. THOMAS E Mechanical Engineering KLIEWER. PATRICE M Mathematics Ellinwood Junior Miltord Freshman Dodge City Junior KLIPOWICZ, PAUL V Miles, IL Physical Education Senior KLOEFKORN, RANDY L Caldwell Electrical Engineering Senior KNAUSS. DOUGLAS E Halstead Business Administration Sophomore KNIGHT, VIRGINIA . . Fashion Marketing . . . KNILAMS, MATTHEW J Horticulture KNIPP. SAM H. . ... Beanie Senior Manhattan Sophomore Scott City Agricultural Journalism Senior KNOEPFLE. MARK G Manhattan Business Sophomore KNOPP. CLAYTON R Chapman Milling Science and Management Sophomore KNOWLES. KENTON V Salma Pre-Design Professions Freshman KOCH. DEBORAH S Manhattan Pre-Physical Therapy Freshman KOHAKE. MARCIA R Gotf Special Education Junior KOHL, VICKI M Ellis English Senior KOHMAN.KURTA Solomon Agricultural Economics Sophomore KOHMAN, RAY J Solomon Animal Science and Industry Senior KOLARIK. THOMAS J Prairie Village Landscape Architecture Fifth Year Student KOLMAN. JOSEPH J Industrial Engineering KONGS. 8EV J Elementary Education KONICEK. JEANETTE M Accounting KORVER, KIMD Computer Science KOSTER. DERALD R Horticulture KOUKOL. MARK A Architecture 454 ott-campus Washington Freshman Wetmore Junior McPherson Sophomore Overland Park Sophomore Cawker City Freshman Cuba Junior KRAFT. RANDY E. Agricultural Education KRAMER. JOYCE M Accounting KRAMER, MARY A Architectural Engineering KREHBIEL, BRAD J Mechanical Engineering KREHBIEL, DEBBIE K Music Education KRIER, KIRBYW Animal Science and Industry . KUCHEM, CHRIS L Mechanical Engineering KURFISS. DEBRAJ Secondary Education KURTZ, QUENTINE. General KUSSMAN, JANICE M Accounting KUSSMAN, RICHARD L. Civil Engineering KUTNINK. DEBORAH A. Business Administration . Gridley Sophomore Basehor Junior Ogden . Freshman Newton Senior Pretty Prairie Junior Clatlin Senior . Leawood Junior Hutchinson Senior . Manhattan . . Freshman Seneca Sophomore Seneca Graduate Student Manhattan Freshman KUTNINK, KATHY J Manhattan Business Administration Junior LAASER. GREGORY N Kansas City Animal Science and Industry Senior LADD, ALAN J. Humboldt Animal Science and Industry Sophomore LAGERGREN, RALPH E Lincoln Business Marketing Senior LaHUE, BRICE W . Manhattan General Freshman LAMBIE. JAMES R. Overland Park Building Construction Junior LAMBIE, SUSAN A. . Overland Park Early Childhood Education Junior LANG, JANE A Shawnee Elementary Education Sophomore LANGE, JEFF M Conway Springs Agronomy Senior LANGE. PATTI A Conway Springs Interior Design Junior LANGENKAMP, ROBERTA Manhattan Natural Resource Management Junior LANGLEY, MARILYN K Ozawkie Sociology Senior LARSON, BRENT G Manhattan Animal Science and Industry Senior LARSON, JANETTE E Manhattan Physical Education Senior LARSON, MARK W Overland Part- Psychology Sophomore LASSEN, DENNIS L Atchison Finance Senior LAUBER, PAMELA S Tribune Community Health Senior LAUBER, ROBERT D Tribune Agricultural Education Senior LAUDEL, SHARON A Leawood Accounting Junior LAUGHERY, SONDRA F Kansas City Computer Science Junior LAURITZEN, CINDY L Arkansas City Animal Science and Industry Sophomore LAWRENCE, CAROL S Shawnee Restaurant Management Senior LEACH, ANN J Chesapeake, VA Animal Science and Industry Senior LEBOEUF, LEE C Vergennes, VT Architecture Senior LEDELL, BERT A McPherson Veterinary Medicine Senior LEE, SANDRA C Shawnee Mission Civil Engineering Senior LEHRMAN, VERNEY D Newton Construction Science Junior LELAND, STANLEY B Manhattan Veterinary Medicine Senior LEMBRIGHT, JIM A Dodge City Animal Science and Industry Senior LEONARD. EVAN L. . . White City Accounting Junior LESSLIE. TEDDI A Social Work LESTER, TERRY L Pre-Medicme LETT, KIRK R. Architecture . . LEWALLEN, STEPHEN L Architecture LEWIS, ALLEN L Business Administration LEWIS, GREGORY K Landscape Architecture . , Independence Sophomore Minneapolis Freshman Kansas City, MO Filth Year Student Winfield Filth Year Student Manhattan Freshman St. John Senior otf-campus 455 off -cam pus LEWIS. JANE A Clothing and Textiles LEWIS. KAYLEENC Animal Science and Industry LEWIS, KIRK J Bakery Science and Management Sylvan Grove Graduate Student Concordia Junior Manhattan . Senior LICKTEIG, DOTTIE J Greeley Elementary Education Senior LIEBL. BARBARA E. Dodge City Veterinary Medicine Junior LIES, STEPHEN J Corwich Radio and Television Senior LILLARO. DAVIDS Pre-Veterinary Medicine LINDEMUTH, J TIM Journalism and Mass Communications LINGER, LEE J Political Science LINDGREN, FRED Leawood Radio and Television Senior LINOHOLM, KATHY K Cheney Home Economic Education Senior LINDSTROM, MARY A Clay Center Family and Child Development Senior LINENBROKER, MELANIE A Greensburg Fashion Marketing Senior LINK, MALCOLM K Animal Science and Industry LINN, BRIAN G Business Administration LINN. GARY D Landscape Architecture LIPOVITZ. FRANCIS A Electrical Engineering LITTLE, RITA A Modern Language Prairie Village Sophomore Lancaster. NY Graduate Student .... Pleasantpn . . Senior Chase Junior Wichita Sophomore Wichita Junior Kansas City Sophomore Kansas City Graduate Student 456 oft-campus LIVINGSTON, MARSHA R Orleans, MA Animal Science and Industry Senior LIVINGSTON, MICHAEL J. Manhattan Agronomy Sophomore LJUNGDAHL, MARILYN Dodge City Early Childhood Education Senior . . Altamont . . . . Senior Arlington Junior . Lawrence LOCKARD, NANCY E. . Office Administration . . . LOCKE. MARK A Agricultural Engineering LOCKYEAR, WILLIAM L. . Accounting Senior LOCKYER.ANNL Junction City Accounting Senior LOOER, BRYCE J Marquette Biochemistry Senior LOEB. LINDYR . Junction City Elementary Education Freshman LOGAN, BRIAN C Clay Center Geography Senior LOHREY, CYNTHIA J La Crosse Animal Science and Industry Junior LONG. KENNETH D. . . Manhattan General Freshman LONG, PATRICK O Clifton Veterinary Medicine Senior Overland Park Junior Partridge Graduate Student Overland Park Sophomore .... Pawnee Rock Agricultural Journalism Senior LOW, KELLEY S Atchison General Sophomore LOVE, LINDA J Business Education . LOVE, MARY L Computer Science LOVE. MELANIEA. , Fashion Marketing LOVING, PATTI G. . Downs Senior Cawker City Junior Lakin Junior Topeka Electrical Engineering Senior LUCE, ROGER C , Derby Business Junior LUDWIG, SUSAN M Leavenworth Fashion Marketing Senior LOWDON, JANE D. . Fashion Design .... LOWDON, JANET R Special Education LUCAS, ANN M Special Education LUCAS. STEVEN E. . LUKE, CHARLES W, Veterinary Medicine LUNDBERG. DAVID W General LUNDBERG, DONNA L Political Science Lebanon Junior Manhattan Sophomore Manhattan Sophomore LUNDGREN, GAIL A Osage City Fine Arts Senior LUNDIN, MARSHA L Manhattan Family and Child Development Senior LUNGREN.JEFF Hays Business Administration Junior LUNGREN, KATHY M Hays Political Science Senior MAGANA. AUDIE B . Kanopolis Business Sophomore MAHANEY, JAY W Merriam Architecture Senior MALINOWSKI. PATTI Shawnee Business Junior MALLARD. HARRY C Ottawa Pre-Design Professions Sophomore MALLORY, PATRICIA L Ellis Journalism and Mass Communications Senior MALM, DAVID L Agricultural Engineering MALONE, BRAD P Agricultural Engineering MALONE, SUE A Physical Education MANESS, MARK M Building Construction MANRY, JOHN Agricultural Economics MARCELLE, YVONNE M Education . , . Lmdsborq Senior Manhattan Freshman Manhattan Junior St. Louis. MO Junior Larned Sophomore Baton Rouge, LA Graduate Student MARCOTTE, RENEE S Hoisington Music Education Senior MARCUSON, BRADLEY A Agricultural Mechanization MARIETTA. K ALA J Electrical Engineering . . . MARKHAM, MARCIE L. . . Business Administration . MARLOW. DENVER D Veterinary Medicine MARMET, TERRY W Architecture Dresden Sophomore .Great Bend Senior . . . Osborne Senior Manhattan Sophomore . . , Sabetha Senior off -campus 457 off-campus MARMOR. FREDERICK W Crop Protection MARR. STEVEN K Accounting MARRS. DON D Architecture MARRS, RAMON A A. Physical Education MARRS. VALERIA C Family Economics MARSH. MARY A Pre-Forestry Wichita Junior Manhattan Junior Clitton Junior Great Bind Senior Bennington Graduate Student Leavenworlh Sophomore Overland Park Junior . . . . San Antonio, TX Senior Onaga Junior Mayaguez. PR Freshman . . Silver Lake MARSH. SUSIE M Secondary Education MARSHALL. GLENN D Architecture MARTEN. PAULAS Business Administration MARTI.HUMBERTOA Pre-Veterinary Medicine MARTIN, PEGGY J Math and Computer Science Senior MARTIN. RICHARD E Salma Natural Resource Management Freshman MASON, LUCY N Hutchinson Elementary Education Senior MASSA, JOSEPH L Shawnee Mission Accounting Senior MASSOTH, GLENROY F Piqua Agricultural Economics Senior MASTER. AMRAPALI Manhattan Family and Child Development Graduate Student MATHEWSON, JUDITH J Kansas City Secondary Education Senior MATOUSEK, CARL W Cuba Agronomy Senior MATSON, KAREN S Onaga Foods and Nutrition Senior MATTHEWS, DOUGLAS A. Junction City Pre-Law Junior MATY AK, JUDY M Rossville Interior Design Senior MAURER. SAM G Overland Park Grain Science and Industry . Graduate Student MAWHINEY, LISA K Hoisington Clothing and Retailing Senior MAYDEW. JANETTE L Lebanon Accounting Senior MAYO, MICHAEL G Manhattan Architecture Senior MCALLISTER. CINDY s Bndgeton. NJ Animal Science and Industry Junior McAMIS, VICKIE Hugoton Home Economics Senior McBRIDE, RONALD H Granite City, IL Accounting Senior McCABE. FRANCIS D. Pleasonton, CA Architecture Junior MCCARTHY, CAREN J Medicine Lodge Horticu lture Sophomore McCONAUGHEY, PATRICK J Accounting McCORMICK. ALLEN C Counseling McCOY. MARTHA A Geography McCRANER. CAROL Family and Child Development McCRANN.LISAP Radio and Television McCRAY, CHRISTI A. . Pre-Forestry Kansas City Graduate Student Atlanta. GA Graduate Student Independence Junior Overland Park Junior Manhattan Junior Salma Sophomore McCULLEY. SCOTT M Manhattan Engineering Freshman McCULLOUGH. JOSEPH B Girard Business Administration Senior McCUNOY, MARK f Hutchinson Animal Science and Industry Senior McDOWELL, RAVAEJ Manhattan Family Child and Development Sophomore MCELROY, NORVAL R Belleville Finance ' Senior McELWAIN, RHONDA S Lyons Recreation Senior McFADDEN, EDWARD H Business Administration McFADDEN. PATRICK M Philosophy McFARLAND, CONNIE S. Accounting McGEE. KAREN E Special Education McGEENEY. SUZANNE M Elementary Education McGHEE. DAVID Veterinary Medicine Kansas City Junior Natoma Junior Belle Plame Senior Merriam Junior Summerlield Sophomore Ellsworth Junior 458 ort-campus McGRATH. BARBARA A Greenleal Accounting Senior McGRATH, STEPHANIE A Wichita Education Sophomore McGRATH, TIMOTHY H Wichita Pre-Vetennary Medicine . . Freshman McGRAW. MARCIAG Hutchinson Radio and Television Junior McGUIRE, D. DUANE Ulysses Social Work Senior McGUIRE, TERESA A Manhattan Computer Science Senior McHUGH. MIKE Valley Center Mathematics . Graduate Student McKAIG, SUSAN Gardner Music Education Senior McKAY, KEVIN W La Crosse Physical Education Junior MCLAUGHLIN, KATHLEEN M Danvers, MA Business Management Junior McMURRAY, DEE A Hutchtnson Elementary Education Senior McNERNEY, COLEEN Lenexa Elementary Education Senior McVEY, CRAIG L Manhattan Accounting and Physical Education Junior McVICKER. MARILYN M Abilene Fashion Marketing Senior MEENGS. MARY L. Ft. Bliss, TX Biochemistry Junior MEHARG. RANDALL L. . . . . .Hoisington Computer Science . Junior MEITL, SUSAN M Oberlm Home Economics Education Junior MELLIES, DAVE Ness City Business -.Junior MELLOR, KAREN A. . Manhattan Journalism and Mass Communications Sophomore MENAUGH, STEVE A Kansas City Journalism and Mass Communications Senior MENDENHALL, JANA B Hiawatha Home Economics Education Senior MERCER. BRAD F Carbondale Agricultural Economics . . Junior MERCHANT, HASHIMALI Karachi, Pakistan Mechanical Engineering Senior MERTZ. WENDI J Wichita Interior Architecture . . Junior MESSENGER, E. SHANE Dighton Agricultural Mechanization Senior MESSENGER. TANYA L Dighton Agriculture Freshman MEYER, BRENDAS Overland Park Physical Education Junior MEYER, CONNIE S Belleville Family and Child Development Senior MEYER, CRAIGA Smith Center Agricultural Mechanization Senior MEYER. DAVID J Wichita Interior Architecture Fifth Year Student MEYER. DEBRAL Leavenworth Business Sophomore MEYER. DWIGHT C. Hiawatha Accounting Graduate Student MEYER, GARY W . . . St. Louis. MO Architecture Junior MEYER, VICKY L. Emporia Retail Floriculture Junior MEYERS, CAROL A Olathe Dietetics Senior MEYERS, PAULA K. Olathe Journalism and Mass Communications Junior MICHEELS. MARLENE M Overland Park Secondary Education Junior MICHEL, MIKE Cotteyville Pre-Dentistry Senior MICHEL, VICKIE L Manhattan Interior Design Junior MICHELS, KAY L Independence Elementary Education Senior MILLER, ALAN G Alma Microbiology Senior MILLER, CYNTHIA L Enterprise Fashion Marketing Senior MILLER. DEBRAK Russell Electrical Engineering Junior MILLER, GREGORY B Minneapolis Health Education Senior MILLER. KATHY P. Rossville Accounting Sophomore MILLER, MARCIA A Claflin Elementary Education Junior MILLER, MARILYN S Wichita Journalism and Mass Communications Senior MILLER. MARVIN L, Mulvane Pre-Design Professions Sophomore off -campus 459 off -cam pus MILLER. RUTH A Winchester General Sophomore MILLER, STACEY J Eureka Home Economics Education Senior MILLS, DAVID W Enterprise Accounting Senior MILNER, SUSAN E Ellinwood Art MINNIS. PATC General MINOR. KATHLEEN A. Physical Therapy MISKIMINS, JOEL A Overland Park Animal Science and Industry Junior MITCHELL, DEBORAH A Overland Park Home Economics Education Senior MITCHELL. GREG P McLouth Architecture Junior MOATS, BILLIE M. Kansas City Biology Graduate Student MOCKRY, ELDON F Manhattan Civil Engineering Senior MOECKEL, MERLE J Hutchmson Physical Therapy Sophomore MOEDER, LEON La Crosse Construction Science Senior MOEDER, SUSAN J La Crosse Landscape Architecture Senior MOELLER. CHRIS R Bonner Springs Nuclear Engineering Junior MOELLER. DIANE K Hardy. NB Physical Education . . . Freshman MOHLER, MICHAEL H Shawnee Mission Marketing Senior MOHLER. PAULA J Atchison Pre-Physical Therapy . Junior MOHR, JULIE K Topeka Computer Science Senior MOHR, WILMA L Hutchinson Pre-Nursing . Freshman MONCADA. LUIS F Bogota, Colombia Agricultural Engineering Senior MONFORT, DARRELL R lola Veterinary Medicine Senior MOORE, ALISAK Wichita Architecture Senior MOORE. CAROL A . . . Kansas City Physical Therapy Junior 460 ofl-campus MOORE, JAMES P Kansas City Electrical Engineering Senior MOORE. LUCIAN Hiawatha Agricultural Economics . . Junior MOORE. WILLIAM D Scott City Agronomy Senior MORAIN, MICHELLE A Liberal Fashion Merchandising Sophomore MORANO. MIKE A Fontana Agricultural Education Sophomore MORFORD, OUENTIN A Greensburg Mechanical Engineering Senior MORGAN. JOYCE L Family Economics MORGAN, KATHY A . Social Work MORGAN, PAMELA Animal Science and Industry MORGENSTERN, ROXANNE Radio and Television MORIN. DALEE Pre-Design Professions MORRIS, BRADFORD H Journalism and Mass Communications Shawnee Mission , .Sophomore Wichita . . Sophomore Lenexa Sophomore Hoisington Senior Manhattan Freshman . . Dodge City Junior MORRIS, DANNY W Chanute Elementary Education Junior MORRIS, DERRICK E Cofleyville Business Administration Senior MORRIS. TRESIAE Wichita Home Economics with Liberal Arts Senior MORSE, STEVEN K Galva Political Science Junior MOSHARRAF, ZUBAIDA Decca, Bangladesh Architecture Junior MOSSMAN, DONNA M El Dorado Office Administration Senior MOSSMAN, RICK L Topeka Fisheries and Wildlife Biology Junior MUCKENTHALER, MICHAEL J Overland Park Accounting Senior MUDD, ANTHONY D Ness City Pre-Dentistry Senior MUELLER, JAMES C Hot Springs, SD Architecture Senior MUELLER, TOM E Waukesha, Wl Animal Science and Industry Junior MULLEN, BRUCE A Erie Business Finance Senior MULLEN, RICHARD G Leoti Animal Science and Industry Sophomore MULLIN, MARY J Shawnee Mission Early Childhood Education Senior MULVIHILL, JOANNE L Kansas City Social Work Senior MUNKRES, TERRILL J Haysville Mechanical Engineering Junior MUNOZ, ARTHUR C Topeka Civil Engineering Senior MUNZ. OLEN M Great Bend Agronomy Junior MURPHY. TED Interior Architecture . MURRAY. DAVID A Engineering ' . MURTHY, ALAMPALLI V Grain Science MUSSEMANN, SHARLA K Home Economics Education MYERS, JANET L Art Education MYRICK, TIMOTHY E Nuclear Engineering Topeka Fifth Year Student Clay Center Freshman Bangalore, India Graduate Student Wakeeney Junior Little River Senior Hugoton Senior NACE, JOHN R. . Delphos Social Science Junior NASH, MARGARET M Lakin Psychology Senior NAVINSKEY, CYNTHIA L Cummmgs Computer Science Sophomore NAVINSKY, TERRY L Leavenworth Fine Arts Graduate Student NAY, CYNTHIA A El Dorado Special Education . . Junior NEADERHISER, STEPHEN R Bennington Biology Senior NEASE, DENNIS A Olathe Architecture Senior NEIBLING. WALTER H Highland Animal Science and Industry Junior NEILL, GEORGE T Emporia Chemistry Senior NELKIN, KEN S Overland Park Pre-Dentistry Senior NELLANS, JAMES C El Dorado Agricultural Economics Senior NELSON, BRUCE A. Holton Engineering Technology Sophomore off -campus 461 off-campus NELSON. DENNIS F Agricultural Mechanization NELSON. ERIC L Business Administration NELSON. RONALD W Pre-Vetennary Medicine NEMECHEK, EUGENE C. Veterinary Medicine NESBIT, MARY J Nuclear Engineering NETHERTON.TAMMYA Special Education Manhattan Junior Formoso Junior Salma Sophomore Goodland Senior Kansas City, MO Senior . Great Bend Graduate Student NEUMANN, YVETTEX Electrical Engineering NEVINS.MARLYSE Merriam Junior Overland Park Fashion Design Senior NEWELL. KAREN K StaHord Art Education Senior NEWINGTON. DIRK B Merriam Pre-Dentislry Senior NEY, JOHN T Mansion Animal Science and Industry Senior NICHOLS, NANCY A Sterling Social Sciences Senior NICHOLS. POLLY A Interior Design NICHOLSON. LARRY A, Architectural Engineering NIETFELD, KATHERINEA General NIGHSWONGER, TED J. Agricultural Economics . NIXON, CHARLES C Agricultural Engineering NOFSINGER. RONALD L Business Administration NOLLER. PAMELA J Art Education NONAMAKER, THANE N. . . Secondary Education NORDLING. MELANIE E. Recreation NOREN. ALICE V. . Elementary Education . NORRIS. MARY K. . Family and Child Development NOSSAMAN, MELANIE S. . . Anthropology Overland Park Sophomore Colby Freshman Dodge City Junior Hill City Senior .Burlesom.TX Graduate Student Liberal Freshman Hebron, NB Junior Cedar Senior Hugoton Sophomore Oberlm . .Junior Edgerlon Junior Pratt Senior NOTEIS. VICKIL Architecture NOTTINGHAM. LYLE D Veterinary Medicine NOVY, CINDI L Medical Technology NUESSEN. MICHAEL J Business Administration NYQUIST, JAMES A Mechanical Engineering OBERG, BRADLEY G. Architecture OBERHELMAN.KATHYJ Physical Therapy OBERMUELLER.BRICEB. Pre-Design Professions O ' CONNOR, MARGARET M Pre-Design Professions OGAN, THOMAS W Biology OGLE, BILL A Business Administration OHLEY, KENNETH D Secondary Education Kansas City, MO Fifth Year Student Lawrence Junior Maize Sophomore Eureka Sophomore Phillipsburg Junior Cheyenne, WY Junior Clay Center Sophomore Lody, WY Sophomore Prairie Village Sophomore Topeka Senior Topeka Junior Pratt Senior OHNO, TSUTOMU Manhattan Chemistry Junior OLBERDING, WILLIAM L Olathe Biochemistry . . . . , Senior OLSON. RENET A Marquette Accounting Junior OMAN. RUTHIE J Leonardville Music Education Junior OMENSKI, PHILIP P Kansas City Radio and Television Senior ONELLO. ANN L Leavenworth Business Junior OPAT. THOMAS D Horticulture OROFINO, GLORIA L. P re-Veterinary Medicine OROSCO, SANDRA K Elementary Education St. George Junior Landing, NJ Sophomore Garden City Junior ORR, D. KEVIN Wichita Animal Science and Industry Senior ORR, MARCIA K St. John Accounting Senior ORVIS. TERRY L Wichita Engineering Sophomore 462 oil-campus OSTERMAN, ERIC D Manhattan Pre-Veterinary Medicine Senior OTOOLE. KATHLEEN A Lawrence Physical Education Junior OTT AWAY, DOUGLAS A Overland Park Psychology Senior OTT AWAY, KATHLEEN M Medical Technology OUELLETTE. DULCE M Adult Education OUSDAHL.LISAP. Business Administration McLouth Junior Manhattan Graduate Student Shawnee Junior OUTTEN. BEVERLY V Ellmwood Horticulture Sophomore PAGE, BEVERLY A .. Topeka Fashion Marketing Sophomore PAGE. CYNTHIA M Abilene Music Education Sophomore PAINTER, DOLORES W Tulu.OK Agronomy Senior PALENSKE, JUDITH A Alma Interior Design Senior PANKRATZ, BARBARA A Hillsboro Interior Design Senior PARAMORE. CYNTHIA J Delphos Corrections Senior PARKER. CAROLYN S. Kansas City Speech Pathology . Junior PARKS, MARK K Johnson Agronomy Senior PARMELY, JANICE K LeRoy Special Education Senior PARR, PATRICIA A Rossville Elementary Education Junior PARRISH, GLENDA W lola Fashion Merchandising Senior PARSONS, IRENE K. . . Manhattan Fashion Marketing Freshman PATE, WILLIAM G Overland Park Business Management Senior PATRY, MARIAN S Hillsboro Home Economics Education Senior PATTON, JOYCE L Abilene Elementary Education Senior PATTON, RONDA L . . . Hutchinson Fashion Retailing . Junior PATZELL. CHRIS D Manhattan Engineering ... Freshman PAUL, MARGARET L Ingalls Psychology Junior PAUZAUSKIE, TONY V Cofteyville Business Administration Senior PAYNE. LISA A Manhattan Horticulture Sophomore PEARSON, BRADB. Beloit Business Administration Junior PEARSON, PATRICIA Prairie Village Political Service Senior PEDERSEN, JONI E Manhattan Theatre Junior Business Administration Senior PEIL, SUSAN M Manhattan Horticulture Therapy Freshman PEMBER, MARIANNE A Ness City Animal Science and Industry Sophomore PENDLETON, DAVID E. Union, MO Pre-Design Professions Sophomore PENG. CHRISTINE L. Emporia Industrial Engineering Junior PENNINGTON NANCY J Meade Physical Education . .Junior PENNY NANCY L Richmond. VA Accounting Junior PENNY SUSAN M Emporia Food Science Sophomore PERRY. DONNA G . . Chapman Physical Education Junior PERRY, EDWARD H Manhattan Electrical Engineering PERTSCH, KATHERINE A Leesburg, VA Pre-Dentistry Senior PETERKORD.JOHNW Overland Park Architecture Sixth Year Student PETERS. STEPHEN C. . Manhattan Political Science Freshman PETERS, WALTER P. Burlington, NJ Marketing Freshman PETERSON, GARY C Manhattan Agronomy Senior PETERSON, JANE M Greeley Lite Science Senior PETERSON, JANET L Delavan Physical Education Sophomore PETERSON, MICHAEL J Clyde Civil Engineering Senior off -campus 463 off -cam pus PETITJEAN. JOYCE D St Francis Foods and Nutrition Junior PETTET, GARY A Wakefield Radio and Television Sophomore PHARR, SUSAN K Cha Business Education Senior PHILLIPS, REGINALD S Syracuse Animal Science and Industry Senior PHILLIPS, ROBIN E Prairie Village Specia l Education Senior PHILLIPS. STEVEN L Carlton Agricultural Engineering Senior PHILLIPS. TERESA A Journalism and Mass Communications PICKETT. DELMARV Anthropology PICKUP, CHERYL L Home Economics PIEPER. LESTER N Engineering Olathe ....... Junior Olsburg Graduate Student Kansas City Sophomore Overland Park Freshman ....... PIERCE, JERRY E ..................................... Wichita Architecture .......................................... Senior PIERCE, LINDAJ ................................... Manhattan Family and Child Development ........................... Senior PIERCE, MARK A. . Veterinary Medicine PIERCE. MICHAEL E Business PIGG. SHERRY K. Manhattan Senior Tribune Graduate Student Topeka Home Economic and Journalism Senior PILAND.ANNAG Abilene Home Economics Junior PISTORA. CYNTHIA D Abilene Fashion Design Junior PLEGGE. JEAN M ..Marysville Speech Pathology Junior PLEGGE. KAREN J . Marysville Recreation Junior POLAND. CONNIE J Junction City English Education Senior POLAND, JOHN A Chapman Landscape Architecture Filth Year Student POLITO. GREGORY S. . ... Morton Grove. IL Horticulture Sophomore POLLEY, ROGERT D Easton Veterinary Medicine Senior POOL, TIMOTHY K Lyons Building Construction Senior POORE. LARRY D . . .Woodston Agricultural Economics Junior POOVEY, BILLY M Westphalia Animal Science and Industry Senior POPE. DONALD E Manhattan Pre-Design Protessions Sophomore POPE.GINNYA Kansas City, MO Pre-Design Professions Sophomore PORUBSKY. RICHARD A Topeka Accounting . . Sophomore POTTER, KATHLEEN A Omaha, NB Veterinary Medicine Senior POTTS, DIANE M Leonardville Social Science Senior POWER. TED H Abilene Physical Education Junior PRATT, HARRY J. Hoxie Agricultural Economics . . . Freshman PRETTYMAN, MARTIN H Omaha, NB Restaurant Management Senior PROCHASKA, BRETT A Ada Animal Science and Industry Senior PROCTOR, ROBERT D Denver, CO Architecture Senior PROTHE. SUSAN E Home Economics Extension PRUITT. COLLEEN M Family and Child Development PRUS, WANDA R Fine Arts PUCKETT, JUDY L Journalism and Mass Communications Senior OUALIZZA, AMY Bucyrus Parks and Recreation Sophomore OUINLAN.MARCIAK, Leavenworth Political Science Sophomore Medicine Lodge ... Junior Overland Park Junior Manhattan Senior . Manhattan OUINN. TOM Business Administration RAA8, DEANNAL Agricultural Education RAAB. LINDA L Physical Education RADATZ. EDWIN W Agricultural Engineering RADER. TREVA J Physical Therapy RAGEL, JURETAL Special Education Wichita Senior Topeka Freshman Topeka Junior Galva Junior Wichita Senior Garden City Junior 464 ott-campus RAGOLE, JOE A Mechanical Engineering . . RAHBERG, RICKD Pre-Oesign Professions RAILE. RICHARD W. Animal Science and Industry RAILSBACK, CYNTHIA J. . . Radio and Television RALEIGH, NANCY J. .... Marion Senior Topeka Sophomore Edson Sophomore . . . Langdon Senior Wmdom Marketing Senior RAMSEY, CRAIG J Scott City Agricultural Engineering Senior RAMSEY, GINAC Scott City Elementary Education Senior RANDOLPH, RITA J Pratt Accounting Senior RASHID, HAROON U Pakistan Computer Science . Graduate Student RATCLIFFE, FREDERICK W. . . Manhattan Electrical Engineering . . . Fifth Year Student RATHER, RONALD S, Independence Nuclear Engineering Junior RATHERT, MARK F Marion Landscape Architecture Senior off-campus 465 off -cam pus RATHERT, SUSAN L Junction City Elementary Education Junior RATHERT, VICKY L Lancaster Home Economics Education Senior RATZLAFF. DEBBIE L Fredonia Business Education Sophomore REDEKER. JANAJ Olpe Pre-Veterinary Medicine Junior REDENBAUGH, ELAINE M Gardner Home Economics Education Junior REDER. CAROL E Etlingham Dietetics Senior REED. LINDA A Lyons Home Economics and Journalism Senior REED, RICHARD L Topeka Political Science Senior REES. DOUGLAS M St John Physical Therapy Junior REES. JANE H Great Bend Business Administration Junior REESE, RICK I St. Marys Accounting Senior REGAN. CAROLYN L Shawnee Elementary Education Junior REGAN. TIMOTHY J Atchison Business Administration Sophomore REICHLE. ANNALENE R Manhattan Elementary Education Sophomore REID, JOYCE A Topeka Animal Science and Industry Senior HEINHARDT, SUSAN D Manhattan Physical Education Senior RENFRO. VICKI L Emporia Art Junior REYHLE. LINDA L Prairie Village Fashion Marketing Senior REYNOLDS. JANET S Manhattan Foods and Nutrition Freshman REYNOLDS, JOHN M Paradise Veterinary Medicine Senior RE2NICEK, JUDITH A Ottawa Pre-Nursing Junior REZNICEK. SUSAN E Ottawa English ... Freshman RHODES, DAVID I Salina Electrical Engineering Senior RICE, JENNIFER L Overland Park Animal Science and Industry Senior RICE. NANCY L. . Fashion Marketing RICE, SHARON E Finance RICHARDS, ASHANNA M Elementary Education RICHARDS. DENNIS S Shawnee Mission Junior Manhattan Senior Greensburg Junior Greensburg Speech Education Senior RICHARDS, PATRICI A K. Topeka Counseling Graduate Student RICHARDSON, C. MICHAEL Overland Park Business Administration Senior HIEPL, GARY M Cimarron Business Finance Senior RIETZKE, JAYNEA Kensington Recreation Junior RILEY. MONICA J . . .Lincoln, NB Sociology Sophomore RILEY, TERRYZ Carbondale Fisheries and Wildlife Biology Senior RINIKER, CORRINE K Manhattan Accounting Freshman RINKENBAUGH. JOHND Coffeyville Mechanical Engineering Senior RIPHAHN, BILL D. Copeland Pre-Design Professions Sophomore RIVAS.MARIAA Ulysses General Freshman ROACH. RICHARD R Manhattan Business Administration Junior ROBBINS. FRANCIS V Yates Center Agricultural Engineering Senior ROBERTS, CHARLES B Kansas City Marketing Senior ROBERTS, RICKEY J Kansas City Dairy Production Senior ROBERTS. STEPHEN P Manhattan Accounting Sophomore ROBINSON, FRED L Garden City Pre-Law Junior ROBINSON, G. CRAIG Ellmwood Pre-Law Senior ROBINSON, LINDA A Perry Education Senior ROBINSON, TOM Superior, NB Accounting and Psychology Junior ROBINSON, ZENDA J Wellington Elementary Education Senior 466 oft-campus ROBL JAMES M . Ellinwood Pre-Veterinary Medicine . Junior ROE, RICHARD N Olathe Journalism and Mass Communications Senior ROENBAUGH. JACOB W Trousdale Agronomy Senior ROENBAUGH, SHIRLEY A Trousdale Elementary Education Senior ROESNER. JAMES R Salina General Freshman ROESSLEIN, MARK A St. Louis, MO Architecture Senior ROGERS, MARK A Manhattan Journalism and Mass Communications Senior ROLAND, RONALD L. Falls City, NB Veterinary Medicine Senior ROLES. GARY D DeSoto Architecture Junior ROMIG, MARGARET A Manhattan Lile Science Senior ROSETTA. VICTOR F. Topeka Engineering Technology ..Sophomore ROSS, TERENCE L. Ellinwood Journalism and Mass Communications Junior ROSSELOT, ANGELA M Topeka Medical Technology . Sophomore ROTHLISBERGER, ROYCE R Green Animal Science and Industry Senior ROWE, TIMN Hill City Physical Therapy . . Junior ROWLAND, BARRY D Elkhart Agronomy Senior RUDD, DEBBIE Kansas City Pre-Nursmg Senior RUDEEN, MARILYN I Harveyville Journalism and Mass Communications Senior RUDER. HARVEY Hays Construction Science Sophomore RUEBKE, JUDITH A Pretty Prairie Accounting Junior RUES, ALICIA A Lewis Elementary Education Senior RULE, KIMBERLE J Herington Physical Education Senior RUNDLE. KATHLEEN E Logan Retail Floriculture Sophomore RUNFT, SHARON K Scandia Dietetics Senior RUPE.DOUGLASG Wichita Radio and Television Junior RUSH, JEANETTE Troy Lile Science Senior RUSH. MARKI Arkansas City Pre-Design Professions Junior RUSSELL, DENISE S Kansas City, MO Home Economics Education Senior RUTSCHMANN. JAMS E Maple Hill General Junior RUTT, PATRICIA L Junction City General Freshman RUTTGEN. GREGORY L Oswego Agricultural Education .Sophomore RYAN, GEORGE F Salina Veterinary Medicine Senior RYAN, MICHELLE Kansas City Family and Child Development Senior RYSER, DICK L .Concordia Architecture Fifth Year Student SALLMAN, VICKIE J Junction City English . Sophomore SALMANS, STAN R Scott City Architecture Senior SANDERS, CYNTHIA K Overland Park Civil Engineering Senior SANDERS, RICHARD M Concordia Business Management Senior SAPP. DEBBIE A . . Esbon Natural Resource Management Junior SARENSEN, GREGORY A Netawaka Agronomy Senior SARGENT, SHARLIN J Latham Elementary Education Senior SATTERLEE, JANE E Assaria Math Education Senior SAUBER. MICHAEL J Electrical Engineering SAUERWEIN. TOM D Pre-Veterinary Medicine SAULS. TIME Building Construction Ellinwood Junior Newton Sophomore Topeka Sophomore SAWIN, RUTH M Lyons Fashion Marketing Senior SAWYER, DOUGLAS W McPherson Animal Science and Industry Senior SAYLER. EDWIN W. Paxico Speech Junior off -campus 467 off -cam pus SCHAFER. ANNETTE M Topeka Social Work Junior SCHAFER. CALVIN E Perry Veterinary Medicine Senior SCHAFFER, DENNIS J Manhattan Accounting Junior SCHAFFER. JILL R Garden City Retail Floriculture Sophomore SCHEID, MARK W Whiting Journalism and Mass Communications Senior SCHENBERGER, NANCY L Overland Park Early Childhood Education .Senior SCHIERLING, DUANE A Quinter Animal Science and Industry Senior SCHILLING, LAURENCE E Abilene Crop Protection Senior SCHINSTOCK. GERALD L Kinsley Agricultural Economics Sophomore SCHLATTER. CHARLES W. . . . Overland Park Business Management Junior SCHLICHT, MARK R Prairie Village Economics Senior SCHMEIDLER, EDWIN F Wakeeney Agricultural Economics Junior SCHMID. ANTHONY C Atwood Crop Protection Junior SCHMIDT, RANDY G Norwich Fisheries and Wildlife Biology Senior SCHMITT, BEVERLY J Beloit Accounting Sophomore SCHMITT, JOE G . . . Beloit Animal Science and Industry Junior SCHMITT. MICHAEL L Lakin Pre-Design Professions Junior SCHMITZ, DAVID G Selkirk Veterinary Medicine Senior SCHNACKE, JERRY D Overland Park Radio and Television - Senior SCHNECK.GARYA. Lamed Mechanical Engineering Graduate Student SCHNEIDER, ALICE F Russell Music Education Senior SCHNEIDER, TOM A Neodesha Accounting Senior SCHOEN. STEVEN J. Cawker City Business Administration Junior SCHOOLEY. KAROLYN K Clay Center Pre-Nursmg Sophomore SCHRADER. DANIEL J Oskaloosa Business Junior SCHRADER. DEBORAH K Oskaloosa Business Administration Senior SCHRAEDER, JULIE A Rush Center Speech Pathology Senior SCHRANDT. STEVE F ... Glasco Agricultural Economics Junior SCHREIBVOGEL.BECKYA. Holcomb Physical Therapy Junior SCHREUDER. MARILYN A Cawker City Social Work Junior SCHREURS. KATHY M Physical Education SCHROEDER. LINDA M Office Administration SCHROTT. BRUCE D Chemical Engineering SCHROTT. PEGGY L Business SCHUETTE. MARK L Geology SCHULER, GARY A Natural Resource Management . Hays Junior Kansas City Junior Rush Center Junior La Crosse Junior Manhattan Freshman . . . Ness City Senior SCHULTZ, DONG Architecture SCHUL2E. RONALD E Agriculture SCHWARM, MARK A Veterinary Medicine SCHWARZENBERGER, MARY B Psychology SCHWERTFEGER, ELAINE Family and Child Development SCOTT. CHARMAINE B Pre-Design Professions Topeka F ilth Year Student Manhattan Freshman Haviland Senior Collyer Junior Satanta Senior Overland Park Freshman SCOTT, DICK D Fredonia Animal Science and Industry Senior SCOTT, KAREN L Wichita Family and Child Development Senior SCOTT, LARRY R Anthony Biology Senior SCOTT, MICHAEL R Hays Journalism and Mass Communications Senior SCOTT, NANCY C Hays Elementary Education Senior SCOTT, SHARON S Wichita Family and Child Development Senior 468 off -campus SCOVILLE. NANCY J. Lyons Radio and Television . . . Junior SCRIBNER, CRAIG W. Caldwell English Junior SCRIMSHER. 8RENDA J Topeka Sociology Senior SCROGGIN, WILLIAM W Mission Hills Pre-Veterinary Medicine Junior SEARS, STEVEN R. Hiawatha Agricultural Education Junior SEATON. JULIE A Olathe Art . Sophomore SEE, JOHN Kansas City Business Senior SEEHAFER, MARILYN S Hunter Accounting . ' Senior SEIBERT, PAMELA J Macksville Retail Floriculture Senior SEIRER, PEGGY A. Manhattan Medical Technology Freshman SELIG, RICK H Topefca Psychology Senior SEMRAU. LOREN A Sioux Falls, SD Architecture Junior SEPTS. ERNEST ... Baker, LA Education Graduate Student SEXTRO, DON L Seneca Mechanical Engineering . Freshman SHADDAY, JANICE C Manhattan Music Education Sophomore SHALALA, SHANN A Manhattan Beach, CA Physical Education Senior SHANKS, DENNIS N Columbus Animal Science and Industry Senior SHARP, GORDON A Benedict Animal Science and Industry Sophomore IS ott-campus 469 off -cam pus SHARP. MARY C Ft. Worth, TX Horn Economics Education Senior SHARPE ANGELA K Clyde Recreation Sophomore SHAW. DIANA J. Meriden Psychology Sophomore SHEAHAN CATHERINE L Randall General Freshman SHEARER. JOHN E Frankfort Horticulture Junior SHEEHAN, JOAN M Kansas City Business Administration Senior SHEHI, RONDAG Westmoreland Elementary Education Senior SHELDON, L. JAY Leawood Animal Science and Industry Senior SHELLENBERGER. JOHN W Topeka Computer Science Graduate Student SHERMAN. DEBORAH K Overland Park Psychology Junior SHERRARD. DIANA L Winlield Physical Education Senior SHIELDS, JANETT L Cherry-vale Secondary Education Junior SHILL, TERRY L Manhattan Nuclear Engineering Senior SHINEMAN. KIRBY A Manhattan General Freshman SHIVERS. MARY B. . . . . Holton Business Administration Junior SHORT, ANITA K Goodland English and Sociology Senior SHUTE. STEVEN E Esbon Electrical Engineering Junior SIEFKIN, BARBARA C Manhattan Foods and Nutrition Senior SIEGLE. RICK Manhattan Business Administration Freshman SIEMER, ALAN J Bushton Industrial Engineering Senior SIOEL, GRETA Cottonwood Falls Mathematics Senior SILADY, MICHAEL F Shawnee Mission Electrical Engineering Senior SILVA, CATHERINE Manhattan Pre-Medicine and Chemical Science Senior SILVA, MARC Manhattan Pre-Design Professions . . Sophomore SILVERTOOTH. JEFF C. Agronomy SIMS. MIKELYN A Elementary Education SINCLAIR. SONNIES, , Physical Therapy Wichita Junior Shawnee Mission Junior Manhattan .... Freshman SINGER, SANDRA J Topeka Physical Education Senior SINGLETON, S. JEANIE Independence Elementary Education Senior SKINNER, DAVID A. Garden City Agricultural Engineering Junior SLAGLE, CHARLES E Overland Park Political Science Junior SLAGLE, PENNY J Manhattan Elementary Education Senior SLATER, VICKI L Morrowville Elementary Education Senior SLATER, WILLIAM H Mahaska Agronomy Senior SLAVIK, DOYLE R Smith Center Animal Science and Industry Senior SLIFE. CURTIS L Princeton. MO Interior Architecture Junior SLOCOMBE. BONITA A Ransom Medical Technology . Junior SLOCOMBE, JOHN W. Peabody Agricultural Education . Junior SMADES. RITA M Marienthal Business Administration Senior SMAIL. DEBORAH A tola Elementary Education , , Junior SMAIL. RONALD D lola General . Freshman SMITH, BENJAMIN J Topeka Dairy Production Senior SM ' TH, BRENDA H Formoio Journalism and Mass Communicatio ns Senior SMITH. BRYAN T Manhattan Business Administration Junior SMITH. CINDY L Colby Business Education Junior SMITH, DONALD J Topeka Marketing Senior SMITH. FREDERICK E Wichita Civil Engineering Sophomore SMITH, GAIL A Garden City Elementary Education Senior 470 off-campus SMITH, GALE L Recreation SMITH. JANICE A Business SMITH, JENNIFER J Dietetics SMITH. JON M Accounting SMITH. KATHE J Pre-Nursing SMITH. KERN W Architecture St. Paul Senior Topeka Sophomore Goodland Sophomore Greensburg Junior Macksville Sophomore St Paul Filth Year Student SMITH, KEVIN D Horticulture . SMITH, KEVIN W. Business Administration SMITH, LAMAR Education SMITH, LAYTON A Nuclear Engineering . Hutchmson Sophomore Manhattan . Junior . .Columbus, GA . Graduate Student Eskndge Sophomore SMITH, MARK A. . Salina Pre-Medicine Senior SMITH, M. EMME Junction City Radio and Television Junior SMITH, PAUL R Shawnee Business Administration Sophomore SMITH, REBECCA J. Mankato Family and Child Development Junior SMITH, REBECCA J Anthony Accounting Senior SMITH, ROBERT A Pittsburg Veterinary Medicine Senior SMITH, ROBERTA M Mankato Family and Child Development Senior SNIDER, RAY S Abilene Agricultural Economics Senior SNYDER, BERRY L Atchison Marketing Senior SNYDER, DONNA L Morton Special Education .Junior SNYDER, DOUGLAS R Salina Architecture , . . . Fifth Year Student SNYDER, JACQUELINE S. . . ..Manhattan Journalism and Mass Communications Junior SNYDER, MARTHA M Salina Journalism and Mass Communications Senior SNYDER, PEGGY J Hiawatha Political Science Sophomore SOLOMON, DEBORAH D Whitewater Elementary Education Senior SOROKA, MITCHELL S North Caldwell, NJ Medical Technology Senior SOUKUP. NANCY A Haven Elementary Education Junior SOWERS, PAUL R Spring Hill Animal Science and Industry Senior SPAETH, ELAINE E Hutchinson Foods and Nutrition Senior SPANGLER. PHYLLIS J. .Cedar Vale History and Education Junior SPANGLER. RONALD K Newton Psychology Graduate Student SPANNUTH. AUDREY K Prairie Village Family and Child Development Junior SPARE, DANIEL P St. John Agricultural Engineering Senior SPEAR, DAVID S Norton Civil Engineering Senior SPEAR, DIANE M. Newton Institutional Management Graduate Student SPECHT, SUSAN L Overland Park Home Economics Senior SPEER, JOYCE K Chapman Chemistry and Education Senior SPENCER, LAUREN E Overland Park Political Science Junior SPENCER, TERRY L Dodge City Landscape Architecture Junior SPICHER, ELLSWORTH D Overland Park Civil Engineering Senior SPURLOCK.BETHA E Manhattan Speech Junior SPURLOCK, CINDY Manhattan General Freshman SQUIRES, BOBBY D Arkansas City Industrial Engineering Senior SQUIRES, JOELYNK Arkansas City Horticulture Senior STALCUP, NANCY K Stafford General Sophomore STALCUP, ROGER A Haven Industrial Engineering Senior STANDLEY, DONNA E Great Bend Journalism and Mass Communications Senior STANLEY, JOHN T Dodge City Animal Science and Industry Senior ott-campus 471 off-campus STANLEY. NEAL M Dighton Agricultural Economics Junior STAPP. RANDY W Norcotur Food Science and Management Sophomore STAUFFER, JOHN R Emporia Radio and Television Senior St CLAIR. CHRISTINE A Salma Biology Freshman STEELE.GARYJ Gamerl Agricultural Economic Senior STEELE. NANCY L Wichita Interior Architecture Fifth Year Student STEELE. PATRICK E Scott City Microbiology Junior STEINER, JO A Hulchinaon BuimB t Adminiatration Senior STEITZ, JOE A Syracuae Agricultural Economict Senior STENZEL, PATRICIA A Ness City Junior Oklahoma City, OK Electrical Engineering Senior STEPHNEY. KEVIN E Oklahoma City, OK Electrical Engineering .Freshman Recreation STEPHNEY, JAMES D. 472 off-campus ' I I STEPONICK, MARILYN R Russell Computer Science Senior STERLING, JILL A Humboldl Home Economics Extension Senior STERRETT, TIM J Norton Physical Education Junior STEVENS. ROBERT P Manhattan Architecture .Fifth Year Student STEWART. JANINE L. Frankfort Floriculture Sophomore STICKNEY. LARRY D Ellinwood Architecture Junior STIEBE. DAVID A Kinsley Agricultural Economics Sophomore STOCKWELL. GREGG M Dodge City Pre-Design Professions Freshman STOFFEL, DONALD W Miltonvale Finance and Accounting Senior STOLLER, BRENTTON G Sabetha Graphic Design Senior STOSS. KENNETH J. . . . .Otis Mechanical Engineering Junior STOTTS. LESLIE R. Byers English Junior STOTTS, ROGER L Pre-Vetermary Medicine STOVER, KEVIN V Agricultural Economics STRAFUSS. BEN J Architectural Engineering STRAIT, CHRIS A Animal Science and Industry STRAMEL, TERRY L. Family and Child Development STRAMEL. THERESA J Business Education . Byers Junior Glen Elder Junior Manhattan . Junior Kingman Freshma n Hays Junior Pretty Prairie Sophomore STRASSER. MARK F .Garden City Agricultural Economics Junior STREETER, MARCIA J Overland Park Clothing and Retailing Senior STROUPE, PHILLIP J Fort Atkinson, Wl Dairy Production Senior STROUSE, DWIGHT L Merriam Radio and Television Senior STRUNK, MARVEL J Abilene Elementary Education Senior STUART, LEE C Blue Rapids Journalism and Mass Communications Junior STUCKER, DAVID L Leavenworth Nuclear Engineering Senior STUDER, BILLY D Preston Political Science Senior STUEVE, BETTY L Abilene Sociology Senior STUEVE, BONNIE L . Abilene Interior Design Junior STUM. WILLIAM L Ness City Radio and Television Junior STUMP, SALLY L Blue Rapids Office Administration Senior STUMP, WILLIAM L Wichita Business Administration Senior STUTEVILLE, SUSAN A Manhattan Family and Child Development Sophomore SUBERA. STUART A Caldwell Business Management Senior SUDERMAN. ELAINE R Windom, MN Consumer Interest Senior SUITER, KERRY R St. John Animal Science and Industry Senior SUITER, RITAJ St John Modern Language Junior SULLIVAN, JANET C Holton Home Economics Education Senior SUTHER, STEPHEN E. Blaine Agricultural Journalism Junior SUTTON, MARCIA L Prairie Village Fashion Merchandising Senior SWAIN, LEILA G. . El Dorado Business Administration Sophomore SWAN, STEVEN L Wichita Chemical Engineering Senior SWANSON, JENITA L. Salina Marketing Junior Overland Park Junior Bird City Junior Mission Junior . . Salina Junior Chanute Senior SWIST, RONALD A Shelton.CT Veterinary Medicine Senior off -campus 473 SWARTZ, MICHELE L. . . . Physical Education SWEAZY. SHAREE K Home Economics Extension SWEENEY. FELICIA C Special Education SWENSON. GALEN G Agricultural Economics SWIFT, VICTORIA M Fashion Marketing . off-campus SYLVESTER. RANDALL B Civil Engineering TADE, JEFFREY A Art TAMSON, TONY W Business TANDY, CECELIA A Animal Science and industry TANNER. KIM A Civil Engineering TAPSAK. RAM Community Services TAYLOR. CATHERINE M. Business Finance . TAYLOR. KARISJ Special Education TAYLOR RAM A Art TAYLOR, THOMAS E Civil Engineering TEASLEY. KAREN L. Fine Arts TEDROW. JAN M. Pre- Veterinary Medicine . Salma Junior Medicine Lodge Junior - . . Independence Senior Rosewell, NM Junior Wichita Senior Shawnee Mission Junior Bartlesville. OK Junior Goddard Sophomore Topeka Junior . . Prairie Village Senior Topeka Sophomore Overland Park Junior TEICHGRAEBER. PAM A Emporia Family and Child Development Junior TERRILL, RICHARD D Shawnee Business Administration Senior THIEROLF, CRAIG A. . Manhattan Business Freshman THIEROLF, GALE D Manhattan Business Finance Senior THIEROLF, LINDA L Overland Park Recreation Senior THOMAS. CYNTHIA J. Atwood Secondary Education .Junior THOMAS. EMMA J Baton Rouge, LA Education Graduate Student THOMAS, RANDY W Hutchinson Business Administration Senior THOMAS, ROBERT W Architecture THOMPSON, BOHDAN L. Veterinary Medicine THOMPSON, CAROLYN F Home Economics and Liberal Arts THOMPSON, DOUGLAS C Architecture Mission Junior Topeka .Junior . Harveyville Senior Wichita Senior THOMPSON, PAULA J. . Wichita Business Junior THULL, VIRGINIA K Cawker City . Senior Wakefietd Junior Wakelield . . .Junior THWEATT, ANGELAP Carlisle, AR Animal Science and Industry Senior TIEKING, CHRISTINE C Concordia Clothing and Retailing Senior Physical Education . . THURLOW. DEANNA M. Elementary Education THURLOW. LADONNA L Fashion Merchandising TILTON.CHARLAJ . . Elementary Education TILTON.DONE. Political Science TOFA. ABDU D Agricultural Education TOMS, LORETTA S Elementary Education TOWSE. MARLON D Mathematics TREMBLEY, SARAH J Sociology TRIMBLE, FRANK H. . Architecture TRIMMER, DIANE L. Speech TROWER, GAY L English TUCKER, BRENDAK. Accounting TUCKER. JULIE K Business TUCKER, TERESA D Veterinary Medicine Quinter Junior Quinter . ... Freshman Kano. Nigeria Freshman . Overland Park Senior Ulysses Junior Arlington Junior Weatherby Lake, MO Senior Manhattan Senior Abilene Sophomore Kiowa Sophomore Manhattan Junior Carbondale Junior TWADDELL, JANET L Mission Consumer Interest Senior ULLOM. STEVEN J .... Wichita Veterinary Medicine Junior UMPHENOUR, JUDITH A Overland Park Social Sciences Senior UMSCHEID, JANICE M. Home Economics Education UNDERWOOD. TRACY W Radio and Television UNKEFER. DAYNAD Fashion Marketing Manhattan Freshman Lancaster Junior Leawood Sophomore 474 oil-campus UNREIN, CAROL E Great Bend General Junior UNRUH, VIRGINIA A Greensburg Psychology Senior UNRUH, VIRLON N Lamed Elementary Education Senior UPHAM, WARD S Junction City Education Senior UPHOFF. BETH A Manhattan Anthropology Sophomore URE, BARBARA E Kana City Elementary Education Senior USELDINGER, LINDA S Kansas City Home Economics Education Junior VALE, BARBARA YENZER Dodge City Foods and Nutrition Graduate Student VALE, KIM J Lamed Animal Science and Industry Senior VANCIL, ROGER D Manhattan Fisheries and Wildlife Biology Senior VANDEVENTER, WILLIAM H Wichita Architecture Fifth Year Student VANDEWIEK. SCOTT J New Providence, NJ Food Science Junior VAN LERBERG, DIANE M Shawnee Medical Technology Junior VAN LERBERG, ROBERT J Shawnee Animal Science and Industry Senior VAN LOENEN, RODGER L Prairie View Business Administration Sophomore VAN METER, RUSSELL M Ada Animal Science and Industry Senior VAN WINKLE, CLINTON A Silver Creek, NB Veterinary Medicine Senior VAN WINKLE. DAPHNE L Junction City Journalism and Mass Communications Junior off -campus 475 off -campus VELASQUEZ, TERRY J Topeka Secondary Education Senior VELEZ, JAMES O Junction City Radio and Television Senior VERVYNCK, JAN L Gardner Speech Pathology Sem ' VICK STEVEN A Basehor Business Junlor VICKEHS. MAX E Kansas City Marketing Junior VICKERS. NANCY L Gardner Special Education Junior VIENTOS. JOSE A. Mayaguez. PR Veterinary Medicine Junior VIGNERON. RUSSELL D Hesston Animal Science and Industry Junior VOPATA, 8ARBRA M Marysville Animal Science and Industry Senior VOTH, DARRELL H Inman Crop Protection Senior VOTH, DONALD J Walton Accounting Senior VOUGA VICTOR J St. Louis, MO Architecture Fit Year Senior WAGNER, DANA M Wichita Family and Child Development Senior WAGNER, JACOUELYN L Great Bend Early Childhood Education Senior WAKEFIELD. RONW Marysville Horticulture Junior WALDREN. VERNON L Tribune Agricultural Economics Graduate Student WALKER, DENISE K Kansas City Early Childhood Education Senior WALKER, DIANNAL Shawnee Mission Home Economics with Liberal Arts Senior WALKER. INGAZ Sharon Springs Finance Freshman WALKER. LESLIE A. . Kansas City Secondary Education Junior WALKER, LONNIE J Johnson Animal Science and Industry . Junior WALL, DAVID L Hays Geography Junior WALTER. DOUGLAS P Downs Architecture Junior WALTER ROXANNE G. Hoisington Business Sophomore WALTERS, CATHY J Abilene Social Work Junior WALTERS, CHARLES I Hays Accounting Senior WARD, DEBORAH D Newton Social Work Junior WARD, SANDRA J Topeka Family and Child Development Senior WARKENTINE, BOBW. Wellington Physical Education Junior WARKENTINE. JANET R. Wellington Physical Education . Sophomore WARMUND, PAMELA J Prairie Village Natural Resource Management Senior WARNER, RANDALL L Lebanon Agricultural Education Senior WARREN, BRYAN J Galva Milling Science and Technology Senior WARREN, HEATHER M Bonner Springs Recreation Junior WARREN, VIRGINIA L Eskridge Veterinary Medicine Senior WASHBURN. ROBERT L Hutchinson Pre-Design Professions . Sophomore WASINGER. RICK L . Hays Nuclear Engineering Sophomore WASSER.SCOTTA Overland Park Speech Senior WATKINS, GARY L St Francis Business Junior WATSON, ROBIE R. . Hutchinson Elementary Education Sophomore WATTS, REBECCA A. CawkerCity Family Economics Senior WEAST, DAVIDH Moran Agricultural Engineering Senior WEBBER. MARY E Borger, TX Accounting Sophomore WEBER. SUSAN I. Junction City Sociology . . . . Junior WEBER, WILLIAM P Oakley Computer Science . Graduate Student WEDDLE.SARAK. Wichita Elementary Education . Junior WEHRLY. MANFRED R Lenexa Mechanical Engineering Junior WEIDNER. STEVE L, Colorado City. CO Architecture . , . Junior 476 orf -campus WEISS, RUSS W Overland Park Business Administration Sophomore WEISSER, BARBARA A Leawood Family and Child Development Senior WELLS, CAROLYN L Nickerson Corrections Senior WELLS, RAYMOND L Wallace Journalism and Mass Communications Senior WELTER. JOHN F. Colby History Junior WELTSCH. SUSAN G Leawood Accounting . . .Graduate Student WENGER, JOAN S Newton Accounting Senior WENGER, RONALD E Powhattan Agricultural Education Senior WEST, JIM E Neodesha Animal Science and Industry Junior WESTBROOK, RENA L. Pine Blutt. AR Architecture Junior WETMORE, DAVID B Fowler Computer Science Senior WETMORE, LU A Fowler Accounting Junior WEYER, JAMES P Barneston, NB Agricultural Economics Senior WEYER, MARILYN B Abilene Biology Education Senior WHATLEY, LIDA A Mission, TX Anthropology Senior WHISMAN, NANCY S Palco Music Senior WHISTON, KAREN A Kansas City, MO Fashion Design Senior WHITE, BEVERLY Norton Clothing and Retailing Junior WHITE, JENIFER L Kansas City Horticulture . . . Freshman WHITE, JOAN E Viola Veterinary Medicine Senior WHITEHAIR. STEPHEN C Abilene Milling Science and Management Junior WHITNEY, CARL J Manhattan Computer Science Senior WHITNEY, CAROL A Phillipsburg Home Economics Education Senior WHITNEY, DONITA L Manhattan Retail Floriculture Senior WHITNEY, HARRY E. . Man hattan Animal Science and Industry Junior WICHMAN. BOYD F Seneca Accounting Junior WIENS, GREGG E Meade Accounting Senior WIENS, JANICE K Meade Fashion Marketing Senior WIESNER, ROBERT J Concordia Engineering Technology Senior WIKOFF, DEBRA K Manhattan Elementary Education Senior WIKOFF, DOUGLAS P Independence. MO Architecture Fifth Year Student WILCOX, EDWIN L. . . . Minneapolis Business Administration . Junior WILHITE, PATRICIA K Yates Center Microbiology and Medical Technology Senior WILKE, MARGIE L Troy Physical Education Senior WILKINSON, ARTHUR S Philadelphia, PA Political Science Senior WILL, SARAH J Chapman Interior Design Senior WILLHITE, CURTIS R . Agricultural Mechanization WILLIAMS, DEWEY D Medical Technology WILLIAMS, KAREN K Theatre WILLIAMS, KENT S. Leon Sophomore Osage City Junior Fort Scott . Junior Hutchinson Elementary Education Senior WILLIAMS, MARTHA A Helton Elementary Education Senior WILLIAMS, STAN L Newton Mechanical Engineering Senior WILLIAMS, TRENTON L Qreensburg Mechanical Engineering Junior WILLIS, ANNE L Kingman Elementary Education Senior WILLIS, LINDEN G Manhattan Civil Engineering Sophomore WILLS, MELINDA L. El Dorado Elementary Education Senior WILLIS, RODNEY D Sterling Agricultural Education Senior WILSON, CAROLYN A. . . .Asherville Business Administration Freshman ott-campus 477 off -campus WILSON . CRAIG N Wellington Agricultural Mechanization Junior WILSON. DALYN B Lawrence Animal Science and Industry Senior WILSON, JANET L Council Grove Journalism and Mass Communications Senior WILSON, JAREO L Mansion Animal Science and Industry Senior WILSON. LYNDA S Council Grove Theatre Junior WILSON, MARILYN D Atchison Interior Design Senior WILSON, TERRI L Shawnee Mission Speech Pathology and Audiology Graduate Student WILTFANG, WENDY S Topeka Consumer Interest Senior WILTZ, PATRICIA A St. Marys Biology Senior WIMER, JOEL W Manhattan Animal Science and Industry Junior WINDHORST, DAVE A Manhattan Computer Science Senior WINDHORST, LISSA F Manhattan Physical Therapy Junior WINEINGER. ALANW Animal Science and Industry . WINGERSON.JOLEE Economics WINGFIELD. GREG A Fisheries and Wildlife Biology WINKLER. MELISSA A Horticultural Therapy WINTER. DANIEL R Architecture WINTER. EDWARD D Animal Science and Industry Tribune Senior Topeka Sophomore McDonald Junior Paola Sophomore Andale Fifth Year Student Hiawatha Junior WINTER, ORAN K Andale Agricultural Economics Senior WINTER, RANDALL A Marienthal Animal Science and Industry Senior WINTER, VICTOR J Columbus Journalism and Mass Communications Senior WINTERSCHEIDT, ELOISE M Political Science WITHEE. JANE S Humanities WITHERSPOON. KATHY M Pre-Dentistry Clearwater Junior Manhattan Junior Manhattan Freshman WITT. JAMES G Garden City Regional and Community Planning Graduate Student WITT, KIM L Garden City Elementary Education Senior Bazme Junior Wichita Junior Overland Park Sophomore WOHLETZ, DALE H EHingham Animal Science and Industry Senior WITTHUHN, RAYL Agricultural Economics WITTSTOCK. JANE A Medical Technology WIXSON.MICHEALG Business WOLD-ECHERT, PAULINE M Seattle. WA Elementary Education Senior WOLF. CAROL J Kensington Pre-School Education Sophomore WOLF. GREG A Wichita Veterinary Medicine Freshman WOMACK, ROGER D Wichita Fine Arts Senior WOODSON. DORE D Topeka Home Economics Junior WOOLERY, LANA J Topeka Fashion Marketing Senior WORRELL, DAVID L Leon Animal Science and Industry Senior WUNDER, BEVERLY F Topeka Journalism and Mass Communications WUNDERLE, MARTIN Elementary Education WURDEMAN, DAVID A. Business Administration WURST. WEN W Political Science YARSULIK. STEPHANIE E Pre-Nursing YAUSSI, DEBBIE R Medical Technology YEAGLEY. ROBERTO Biology YENNE. JACKIE B Natural Resource Management YERKES. JAN M. . Senior Clifton Junior Meade Junior Sterling Junior Shawnee Mission Junior Wichita Junior Salina Sophomore Smith Center Junior . Independence Elementary Education Senior YIM. KWOK F North Point, Hong Kong Chemistry Graduate Student YOAKUM. JOHN H Scott City Electrical Engineering Senior 478 ott-campus YORK. EDWARD E Chapman Business Finance Sophomore YOST, JOHN M Moundridge Crop Protection Senior YOUNG, GREGORY A Prairie Village Chemical Engineering Senior YOUNG. GREGORY B . . . Salina Civil Engineering Sophomore YOUNG, LESTER F Erie Agricultural Engineering Senior YOUNG. RHONDA G Shawnee Mission Physical Education Junior YOUNG, ROBERT K Pretty Prairie Animal Science and Industry Senior YOUNG, TERRELL A Natoma Elementary Education Senior YOUNG, WENDY J Overland Park Elementary and Special Education Senior YOUNGLAND. DEBBIE J Salina Dietetics Junior YOUNKIN, ROBERTA Kincaid Civil Engineering Senior ZEMAN, GEORGE Ellsworth Electrical Engineering Senior ZERCHER, THOMAS L Russell Music Education Senior ZIEGLER, THOMAS C St. Louis. MO Horticultur e Senior ZILLINGER, DOUGLAS G Phillipsburg Animal Science and Industry Senior ZIMMERMAN. DEBORA A Wellington Nuclear Engineering Sophomore ZIMMERMAN, HOWARD A Wellington Agricultural Engineering Senior ZIMMERMAN, JACKS Prairie Village Building Construction Sophomore ZIRNSTEIN, WANDA M Emporia Dietetics Jun:or ZOELLER. BECKY L Manhattan Elementary Education Senior ZWAHL.TODD Augusta Pre-Vetermary Medicine Freshman ZWEGO, MARILYN S Overland Park Physical Education Senior oil-campus 479 aaa Alpha Gammo Rho 296 Alpha Kappa Lambda 298 Alpha Kappa Psi 143 Alpha Lambda Delta 1 43 Alpha Phi Omega 1 85 Armstrong, Teri A. Arnett. Douglas A Arnett, Philip R. . . .165 Arnold Air Society Arnold. Jerry W 290 351 373 176 327 Baker. Brenda G . . . Baker. Charles B Baker. Cheryl L Baker Cindy S 151 180 313 351 302 433 316 Bauer. Michael E Bauerband, Stephen R. . Baugher, Marsha K Baughman, GaryL Baughman, Teresa F . . 434 422 ! 162,434 J2V6 380 J w i .155 Baker, Dons R Alpha Pi Mu 144 Arnold, Jo E 161. 426 Baker. Greg L 191 Bauman, Judith A. 293 W MtS Aalbregtse, Christine R 313 Alpha Tau Alpha 1 44 Arnold, Lindsay B. 162, 426 Baker. James W. 167 351 Baumgart, Jacqueline A. . . 361 Aalbregtse. Suzanne H. 152 313 Alpha Tau Omega 300 Arnold, Richard L 392 Baker. Jerry L 416 Baumgart, Steven G 300 ;,-. Aaron, Billie M 151 313 Alpha Xi Delta 302 Arnold, Terrence E . 351 Baker. Jill C 433 Baumgarten, Lisa 176,313 Abdullahi, Jemimah P. . . 432 Alspach. Alan D .176,351 Arnold!, Mary E 1 53, 366 Baker, Judy E 401 Baumgarten, Winnie F ....313 Abdullahi. Zaiyanu . . 186 Alstot, Corvin G 380 Arnoldy. Diane K. 424 Baker, Marc 351 Baumgartner, David E 327 Abed, Ahmed A 161 380 Allenbernd. David L 1 80 Arnoldy. Jeanne T 432 Baker, Margaret D. . 433 Baumgartner. Peggy L 434 ESS.I Aberle. Jeanette S 343 Altizer. Page L 432 Arnoldy. L anetle M 424 Baker, Martha L 151 Baxley.CoyS .177 Abrams, Steve E 432 Altland. Susan M . 432 Arnoldy, NancyS. . . 432 Baker, Nancy K 165 183 Baxter. Darrell J .380 Acacia 288 Alumbaugh. Janet .... 343 Arnone. Lisa L 192. 332 Baker. Paul E . . . 373 Baxter, Richard R 434 ' ; ' : Academics 120 Alvis. David W 176.371 Arpin, Alcid T 432 Baker. Randal W. 161 351 Bay. Michael W A Christmas Carol 91 Amend. Michael S. ..432 Arpin, Lana G 433 Baker. Roger D. 418 Bay. Randall S IflR 3 ' ' rne ww , PplfifH Achten, Philip B 300 American Choral Director Arpin, Richard W 416 Baker, Stephanie D. . 363 Baynham, Pamela J. Aekerman. Sherry J 157 Association 182 Arpin. Ronald D 416 Baker, Steven W 322 Beadles. Sherri L 414 BetlW 111 .... tot Trill ?1 Acker ' s Inauguration 65 American Nuclear Society 171 Arpin, Sidney L 392 Baker, Susan L 433 Beagle. Barry T. oci Jd|lrrP8 r ' Activities Carnival 45 American Society of Agricultural Arth, Karen A 424 Balcom, Ramona J 433 Beal, Sandra L . . . JU TWOdQ ' fcu Adam. Robert S 160 296 Engineers 171 Arts and Sciences Council 163 Balderson, Joy A. 313 Beals. Constance L ?ns 414 B(W- |nwM . iv :U3. to + - Adams, Charles V. . . . 351 American Society of Interior Ariz, Donna K 433 Baldwin. Barbara J. 426 Beamer, Alexis J ....180 Adams. Cynthia J. 343 Designers 1 74 Asbury, Cindy L. 153, 343 Baldwin. Daniel 182 Beamish, Cynthia L 414 1 ' ' ' J . ,,ft ffyrtofle. Adams, David E H- 420 American Society of Mechanical Asbury, Daniel B. . . 405 Baldwin, Lynn W. 433 Bean, Theodore A. Adams, Debbie L . . 1 ,M 302 Engineers Asbury, Lonald K 373 Baldwin, Roma L. 180 426 Beard, Sheila A. 426 l l GmM Adams, Denise M. 426 Ames. Rodney W 410 Ash, Debra K 1 74. 332 Baldwin, Thomas F 409 Beardmore, David H ..371 Adams, Gary L 173 399 Ammerman, Allen M 373 Ashburn, Richie F. 388 Bales, Rebecca J. .153 361 Beardmore. Luanne 174.396 Adams, Helen K 307 Amoako-Atta, Boakye 432 Ashcraft, Brenda L. 433 Bales. Robert K 307 Bearly. Elizabeth A. 156.290 Adams, Janeen A 332 Amrine, Robin D 302 Asher Lawrence J 433 Ball. AlesiaJ 169 Bearnes, Byron K. . .... 296 ' D r Mr K Adams. Jean M Adams, Jody E Adams. Kent L 432 332 189 Amsler. Kenneth J. .418 Anderes. Gregory V 159 Andersen. Connie R 366 Aspelm. Nyla J. . 157. Association of Computing Machinery 343 164 Bail, Dan A Ball, Jana L Ballew, Rebecca J. 180 160 363 181 Season. James S Beaston, Martha K Beatson, Jacquelyn R. 192.434 151.434 JB Adams. Lucy A 426 Andersen. Jane E 363 Association of General Balzer. Nila L 316 Beatty. Karen S. ...343 Adams. Malinda M. . . 332 Anderson. Adrienne D. . . 1 57. 380 Contractors of America 172 Banks, Carol A 343 Beatty, Margaret ....203 Adams. Michael J 161 Anderson. Annette 180, 343 Atchity, Janet S 152 Banks, Jim R 148 Beaty, Jean 380 Adams. Nancy L 1 57, 1 i(! 426 Anderson. Bert D 307 Atherly, Randall B 351 Banks, Nancy A 433 Beaty, Jo A rian BiCW 1 AnnE .... ouw (VnlbW Adams, Philip A. . 373 Anderson. Carl R 422 Atkinson, Alan J. 172,173. 307 Banner. Christopher 181 Beaudet, Carolyn M. 143.434 Adams. Rebecca S. . . Adams, Richard R. 432 399 Anderson, Carol J 432 Anderson. Cylinda L 156 Atkinson, Dwight C. . Atkinson Eric J 433 351 Bann ster, Diane M Banta, Thomas B 290 405 Bebermeyer, Rylan J. 1 79 Bechtel.RogerA 180.330 434 ' B i Adams. Robert D 305 Anderson. Cort D 380 Atkinson. Gloria A. 1 77. 433 Barancik. Kathy M 332 Bechtel, Theresa L 164.434 Adams. Shane L 432 Anderson. David A 380 Atkinson Steve C 405 Barb, Cheryl 414 Beck, David W 165,434 Biegler.Cm Adams, Steve O 18G 351 Anderson, Debbie R 343 Atlakson Kevin K 407 Barber, Chester I 406 Beck, Jennifer L ..293 =! -ir Adams. William C 145 399 Anderson, Denise K 332 351 Barber, Julie A 343 Beckenhauer, Dwane M. . 180.307 ' egB.Jirtf Adamson, Terry J 177 Anderson, Dennis P 369 Atteberrv Donald G 433 Barber. Marjorie . . . ! ' . ' . ' . 1 52 396 Becker. Cheryll A 180 434 Adkins, Freddie E 155 Anderson, Dick 180 Barber, Rex A 433 Becker, Curtis J 305 m DaJl Adkison. Marlene S. .143 Adrian, Robert M 165 195 432 324 Anderson, Douglas S 392 Anderson, ErikS 324 Attebery. Jean D 433 Barber, Suzanne M. . Barclay. Lyndsey L 313 373 Becker, Evelyn E Becker, Robert A ... 290 144 Adriano. Joseph M 373 Anderson, Gary A 1 80 ou y. ui OQB Bare. Mark M 343 Beckerdite, Claudia . ..434 3ry mt Aelmore. John D 307 Anderson. Gary D 187. 373 Atwe , uavio L i y OE-I Bareiss. Loren D. 147 307 Beckerle, HarryS 392 Aeschliman, Susan D. . . . 432 Anderson. Gregory 13. 351 Atwen, Leon JD 1 Bareiss. Sheri L. . . . 153 363 Beckerle, Holly L 302 3enra JWN Affolter. Jaclyn D 332 Anderson, Harold E 432 Atwell, Linda M 156 Atwill Donald E 147 302 413 Barger. Robert E. . . . 433 Becnel, Harry P ...332 SgetalanaJ African Student Associati on 186 Anderson. Jacqueline S 432 Barker, Debra K. .192 341 Becnel, Mary A ,332 Biggs. Bryan E Agriculture Education Club 159 Anderson, Janet K 145. 290 Afwood. Alan R 394 351 Barker, Gary D 433 Been, Emily S . . . .361 BiiWyJrtriP Ahern, John H 145 432 Anderson. Jett B 201 , 351 Atwood, William D Barker, Martin D. 1 72 433 Beers, Greg .388 Biiimgnam lanaj Ahlquist. Lila E 18 ' 432 Anderson, John G 416 Atzenhoffer, Mark D 1 86 433 Barker, Ricky J. . . 433 Beers, Ray 388 B ly CynttiaA Ahlstrom, Laura J 146 Anderson, John M 388 Aubrey, Rick L 180 181 Barker. Ruth A 433 Beery, Thomas A. .146 149 173 Ahrens. Doris J 426 Anderson, John S 1 66 Auen, Cynthia A 188 433 Barkis. Lloya K. . 366 Beesley, Larry D 189 Ahrens. William W 193 Anderson. Joleen 309 Auer, KimL 151 Barkyoumb. Susan 433 Beesley, Philip E 160.296 Aicher. Eric L 411 Anderson, Kirk B 1 66. 343 Aust, Elizabeth D 187 401 Barlow, Andrea L. . . 151 290 Behm, Karen A .426 :-;-,-.-: Aistrup. Emmett D 432 Anderson. Kristen K 290 Auxier, Bryan E 418 Barads, Claudia S. . 290 Beim, Timothy A 159,351 BKdub Aitken. Joanne E 380 Anderson. Laura M 319 Averill, Scott G 41 1 Barnes, Debbie J. . . .152 396 Beineke. Betty K . . . .434 Sichdroyn Ajakalye. Babatunne .... 186 Anderson, Margaret E 432 Avey. Kimberly J 433 Barnes, Donald C. . . .... 1 70 351 Beins. Max A 388 BudUctinW Ajakalye. Michael B 432 Anderson, Marvin R 351 Aydt, Patrick B 161, 196 373 Barnes, Greggory T. . .188 433 Bell, Barbara A 167.332 W.AltaA Ajeani. Mildred R. J 432 Anderson. Michael B 324 Aylward, Jayne A 380 Barnes, John F . ... 1 79, 405 Bell. Carla . . . . 302 W.GiegcfyJ Ajeani. Yoramu . . .186 1!) ' , 432 Anderson. Michael R 380 Aylward. Katherine M 433 Barnes, Mary A 154 302 Bell, David G 144,434 SrtJackE Akerly. Jeffrey S 300 Anderson. Nancy L 153. 290 Aylward. Robert R 351 Barnes. Roxie A 426 Bell, Deborah J .... 434 Bid Ron Akin. Donald L 189 Anderson, NeilV 194 Aylward, Thomas M. 433 Barnes, Sue A. 329 Bell. Deborah L 191,319 ; Jmfl Akin. Lynne C 432 Anderson, Rex M 380 Ayres. Jacquelyn R. .. 155, 183 401 Barnett. Carol J 148,175,433 Bell. Josephine C . . . .434 r--r etfreyD Akright. Brent F 175 300 Anderson, Russell D. 1 79. 1 80, 1 81 Barnett. Cynthia A. 433 Bell Kevin P 411 B ' fzfl ' OeDe AI-Amoudi, Abdullati AI-Amoudi. Hussein AI-Amoudi. Khalid A AI-Madam. Abdallah . . Albers, Deborah A. .151 Albers, Pamela D jbi 432 432 432 322 363 302 Anderson. Scott 180 Anderson. SoniaS 168 Anderson. Steve D 1 45. 300 Anderson, Steven E 327 Anderson. Steven M 351 Anderson, Teri L 1 45. 1 89. 432 bbb Barnett. David M. . . . Barnett. Linda J. . . . Barr, Kathy J Barr, Richard N. . Barrett, Bruce E . Barrett. James A. . . . . . 1 73 176, 177 433 332 433 307 298 351 Bell Mary G ... 302 . . . 426 309 156. 192 147,413 202 Bwr.Mattel Bsagno.SKay BKMGfeMl JscWf GietchenM Sisli Jonn D Isnop w , , ' . Bell Sheryl A Bell, Susan M Bell, Thena M Bell, Thomas L Bell. Thomas N Albers, Tregan P 380 Anderson. William L 424 Barrett, John T 145, 149 318 Bell. William K 195.369 3 srotDet L Albert, Harry 432 Andres. John L 432 Baalman, Karen M 341 Barrett. Laura L. . 341 Ben, Rath .. . .195 isrop Evetata Albrecht, James J 144 194 Andrew. Cynthia L. . . 1 80. 1 81 . 1 82, Baalman, Rhonda G 433 Barrett. Lynn L 156 Benda, Beverly 154 169,434 3-snop James 1 . Albracht. Stephen J 144 432 332 Baar, Julia A 309 Barrett. Michele . . . . 361 Benda. David L . . .373 B swell JUIKA Albright. Janice 1 8 181 Andrew, Dean R 416 Baay. Sherylyn F 177 Barrett. Sheryl A. . . 433 Benedict. Terri S 153,366 BlKUiirtntuWii Albright. Jeff P 405 Andrew. Deborah A. . 1 45, 1 92. 332 Babb, Anne R 293 Barrett, Vanessa R. . 155 Benefiel, Wendy L . . ..161 Black James D Albright. Julia C 293 Andrews, Debra L 1 82. 432 Babb, Samuel M 171 380 Barren. DayneC. 418 Beneke, Melony L . .. .189 Albright. Julie 143 153 Andrews. Kathryn J 341 Saber, Douglas L 324 Barron, Gregory C. 300 Benhallam, Abderrafi ....195 m.EtaC Albright, Kathleen M 187 401 Andrews. Robert L 432 Babmgton, Wendy L 1 74 332 Barstow, Tamara K 426 Benignus, Elsbeth J . . 434 B ' acfce ' ' -:-,. Alderson. Laura E 366 Angel Flight 176 Bach. Rex C 380 Barta. Randall L. 433 Benignus, Nancy V. 145 196,414 JaCkKJ- Vr- Aldnch, Lisa 343 Angell. Scott W 351 Bachman. Amy D 145 290 Bartak. Kathryn J. . 156.174 426 Benignus, Sara S .396 Sackmjn.UfcnG Alexander. Arthur L 187 Angevine, Helene M 309 Bachman. James H 144 Barth. Anne M 426 Bennett. Carol J ... 380 Sackmer Receca Alexander. Gil 183 Ankenman, Lee K 162. 432 Bachman. Melissa J 293 Barth, Jeffreys 146, 173 380 Bennett. Debra L .. . .160 BiackmcuSanaG Alexander, Juanita 192 426 Annan, Alyssa L 332 Backes. Kenneth P 369 Bartko. Patrick J. . . 172 Bennett. Daniel M .... 409 Alexander, Mila A 414 Annett, Clarence H 432 Backhus. Janet L 175 426 Bartley. Keith D. . . . 390 Bennett, Neisha L 148,332 Biattwcc Swris Alioto. Alice M 363 Annis, Jennifer L 424 Bader. Terry F 149 433 Bartoszek. Teresa A. 152 Bennett, Sharon B . . . . 380 Alison. Dale L 322 Annis. John R 373 Badger. Cathryn S 1 62 433 Bartrom, Kregene E. 343 Benson, Ann 201.434 total Alldritt. Celeste L 432 Anselmi, KentE 371 Badger, Christopher 194, 197 351 Baruth, Kenneth F 420 Benson, Jay B . . . 388 ;= = Alldritt. Leslie D 407 Anson, Elizabeth D 432 Badger, David A 351 Baseball 219 Benson, Kirk T . . . .434 ::;;; :- ; : Allen. Cathy 150 363 Anstaett. Nancy S 164 Badsky, Floyd A 176 177 Basham, Charles E. . 405 Benson, Rebecca J .309 Blanche -; : Allen. Christine A 319 Anstine, Mary F 293 Baehler, Gary L 187 433 Basketball Benson, Siefgried D . . ..193 Allen, Douglass 432 Anthony, Harry S 390 Baer. Randall L 373 Baskin, Vincent N. . . .... 1 79 181 Bentley. Jane K . . ..309 Blaring j y Allen, Forrest O 373 Anthony, Russell V 432 Baetz. Cindy 293 Basom, Gary D 407 Bentz, Arlan E 188.434 Allen, Gregory L 432 Antweiler, Marilyn B 426 Bagwell, Leanne S 380 Basom, Teresa R. . . 148 343 Beougher, Duane . . . .424 9 1k rV ' y Allen, Jean E 363 Apley. Susan D 1 76, 187. 401 Bahner, Kevin A 405 Basom, Thon A 407 Berentz, Katherine . . . .174 Banket ;-..- Allen, KarinS 366 Appleby. JonL 411 Bahr, Bill G 413 Bassky, Floyd A. . 288 Berg. William M .... 394 Allen. Keith R 432 Applegate, Terry L 380 Bahr, Karen L 175 433 Bastian, Robert C. . . 322 Bergen. M. Betsy . . ..194 . Allen, Kenneth E 194 Appling. Scott 373 Bahr, Paula S 433 Batchelder. Patricia A 157 Berger, Carla A 151.341 . - . . lass W.LP Allen. Leslie J 156 432 Archer, Douglass K 399 Bahre Susan M 1 80 343 Batchelder, Paul H. 433 Berger, Lonnie D. 330 j weL Allen. Lisa A 290 Archer, Patricia A 432 Bahruth. Sheila D 165 Batchelor. Daryl J. . . 181 Berger. Richard N g1all| w siuaiE Allen. Mary L 309 Archer. Steven W 1 77 Baier, Jennifer A 426 Bates, Gyll 192 Serges. Cynthia K 4 26 Bleakly rjj p Allen. Patti L 178 181 Arensman, Michael G 322 Bailey, Bruce G 173 Batsell, Stephen G. . 166 373 Berghaus. Scott A 351 BieaWey TOME Allen, Randall G 149 420 Armagost. Steven M 351 Bailey, Cynthia J 426 Batson, Connie H. . . 194 Bergkamp. Evelyn S. 147 162.332 Allen, Ronald K 432 Armbrust. James R 405 Bailey. Kathryn A. 143.155 433 Bait, Beverly A 363 Berglund. Tim A 159.434 v-; u Allen, Sue L 396 Armour. Charles W. .. 1 76. 1 77. 432 Bailey. Marilyn A 149 433 Bait. Cart 166 Bergmeier, William R . . .434 - ' cnae - : -i. -.- . Aller. Jerry C 351 Armour. James L 432 Bailey, Thomas F 433 Batten. Mark B. 433 Bergner, Thomas W .318 Allison, Douglas A . 390 Armstrong, Amy L 1 73, 290 Bailey. Timothy K 433 Battenberg, Jay D 351 Bergquist, Diane K 154.363 Allison, Pamela D 401 Armstrong, Jan P 1 52, 31 3 Baird, Darrel K 433 Baue , Bradley L 327 Bergren, Joni L 157,332 Almond, Debra A 332 Armstrong, Jody 332 Baird. James R 324 Baue , Edward J. . 351 Berke. Jeffrey H .405 Alms. Thomas H 373 Armstrong, Kent W 300 Bajich, Helen 332 Baue , Gary B 407 Berkley, Jacqueline K. 155.332 Alpha Delta Pi 293 Armstrong. Mark J 432 Baker, Ann F 433 Baue , Gregory G. . . 418 Berlekamp, Joseph D. . . . ..300 Alpha Epsilon Rho 143 Armstrong. Mechelle 343 Baker. Barbara 426 Baue . JohnW 351 Bernasek, Janice M ...361 tR 2 it J .-. . Ill : 1 lit 1 in ' i- a i; as ' - ' -. lil lil 8; Ifttil : a in a j ii w tx ISS.Ji 1 lil JS - in. 131 111,31! IS H : K ffi IS6.Hi ro us B lil ii) Ht 15!, 366 If ' Si H M ' -- m,K js; ji ii . 17) ::: i ESS Berner. Kathryn M 302 Berney. Rand C 434 Bernhardt. Laurel L 426 Bernica. Robert G 405 Bernmg. Gary L 409 Berning.LarryA. . 195,409 Bernmg, MarkS 409 Berra, Ronald J 380 Berry. Elizabeth J 290 Berry, Michael G 185,373 Berry, Patty D . . 434 Berry. Ralph C ... 343 Berry, Rhonda L 363 Berry, Zachary J 351 Besch. Jeanme M 152,196 Bessette. Roberta L 153,192.309 Bessier, Lynne E 1 46, 1 70. 31 6 Best. Peter H 145. 434 Beta Sigma Psi 300 BetaThetaPi 307 Bettison, JudyL 319 Betzen. Theodore G .... 166 Betzold. Barbara A. 1 75. 1 85, 1 87, 332 Sevens. Charlotte L 180, 434 Sever. Dennis W 288 Beverly. Georgiana 192, 309 Bey, Charles 180 Beyea, Kurt W 296 Beymer. Lisa K 313 Beymer, Robert K 405 Bhangananda. Nitmai 392 Bicentennial . .94 Bichel. Mark A 180, 343 Bichelmeyer, JaneC 332 Bickle, Lynette R 434 Bidwell, AnnE 181 Bidwell.OrvilleW. 162,194 Bieberly. David D 343 Bieberly, Gregory E 434 Bieberly, Julie A 143,434 Biegler, Chris A . 180,181 Biegler, Craig R 181 Biegler, Judy M 145 Biehl. Cindy K. . .305 Biehl David L 305 Bliss. Elizabeth A Bloch, William C Block, Janet J Block Jayne S ... 332 388 165,343 332 Boyer, Keith E. Boyington. John W. . . Boyts Pamela K .193 . . .330 316 160 436 . . . .436 . . . .436 373 . . . .436 . . .436 .413 401 . . . .396 189,436 .176 ... .160 .436 436 .... 436 .... 426 189.436 .... 436 351 . . . .373 . . . .369 418 . 313 . . . .436 . . . .436 .... 332 298 . 1 94 332 . . .313 193,436 196.380 . . . 318 ... 380 288 151,341 .... 380 .,..436 .... 396 154.436 162.351 .... 343 152. 155 ... .156 .149 1 60, 380 .436 205. 436 .... 436 . . . .319 191,420 . ... 298 298 380 . 436 ... 420 .... 436 .... 436 160, 183. 330 185,373 195 436 157,436 192,293 .405 401 172 155,319 144 191,422 .... 343 192,436 160.343 380 .... 352 436 .... 436 154.366 195.330 180.332 . .180 436 Brown, Catharine A Brown, Chris P Brown, Dal las S Brown, Daniel K. . Brown, Donna D Brown, Gratz A Brown, Jefferson M. Brown, Jodi J Brown, Karen L. Brown. Leon L Brown. Leslie A Brown, Lillie R Brown, Michael S Brown, Nancy J. Brown, Norman D. . . Brown, Pamela J Brown, Pamela J Brown, Patricia J. Brown, Phillip W. Brown, Rhonda J Brown, Ronald L. Brown, Ruby Brown, Sandra L. Brown, Susan M. Brown, Thomas L Brown, Tressia A Brownback. Alan L. Brownback. Nancy E Brownback, Sam D Browne, Charles R. . Browne, Cynthia J. Browne, Rebecca L. Brownell, Loree Browning, Cynthia D. Browning, Eugene C. Brownlee, Douglas D Brownlee, James W Brozanic. Linda M Brubaker, Stuart C. . Bruce. Robert P Bruce. Suzanne Brucker Lester R 182,396 380 436 436 179, 183 380 181 313 309 351 151 .174 436 401 . .183,300 367 152,363 . . ..436 436 . . .196.343 149,437 1 55 313 . . . .426 .194 152 437 437 147,296 437 149,437 319 329 426 380 307 307 168.437 183.380 388 147, 195 324 Burkhard. Kathryn D 157.179,313 Burkhart. Doris L 388 Burkhart. W Mark 407 Burkholder, David E . 437 Burkman. Galen R 307 Burlington. John . . .182 Burmeister. William 193 Burnett. Christine 363 Burnett, David G 176.399 Burnett. Laura L 192,313 Burnett, Sarah L 332 Burnette. Gara L. 1 67. 1 80, 396 Burnick, Dale L 171.381 Burns. Cheryl A 329 Burns, Dian 205 Burns. Paul W 185. 437 Burns, Sheila D 437 Burns. William H 371 Burr. Marlene K 1 75, 437 Burris. Jeffrey K 359 Burris. Jill M 167,185,343 Burrus, Susie 191,367 Burtis, JohnO 352 Burton. Charlene J 437 Burton, James M 162, 437 Burton, Kenneth R 437 Burton, Richard A 167, 437 Busby. Margaret D 437 Busenitz, David L 343 Buser, William D 324 Business Council 1 69 Busse, Gary A 149,437 Busse, Kenneth R 437 Busse, Stephen M 381 Bussey Lynn E 1 44 Boyum. Thann Bozarth, Jack M Bozeman, Richard T Bozeman, Susan K Brace. Mark A Brack, Kim E Brack, Les L Brack, Michael J. . Bracket!, Barbara L Bradbury, Dana A Braden, Michael J Bradlield. Kevin E Bradford. Mary A Bradford. Sheri L Bradford. Thelma D Bradley, Dennis M Bradley, Gill L Bradley, Norman E Bradley. Rebecca L Bradley, Roger A Bradshaw, John K Brainerd, Paul W Braley. William Brammer. Elizabeth M. . Brand. Jean M Brandeberry, Jackie L Brandenberger, Jamie L. Brandenburg, Albert L. . . Brandner, Lowell E Brandsberg, Jill L Brannan, Mary J Brannan, Michael S Bransgrove, Gene Brant, WesO Brantingham, Michell G. . Brashear, Stephen A Braun, Debora J Braun, Glenn R Braun, Mary J Braunagel, Caren A Braxmeyer, Patricia J. . Breault. John P Brecheisen, Kurt D. . Breckenridge, Lorraine E. Breckenridge, Lurenda Bredow, Jonathan W. . . . Bredthauer, Annette K. Breeden, Bradley A Breen.GailL 156 Breese, Lynn C Brehm, Rebecca L Breipohl, Gary W Breitenbach, Charles Breitenbach, Marjain L Brennan. George L Brennan. Lisa A Brennan, Terrence L ... Brenneis, Dennis R Brenner, Deborrah S Brensing, Richard H. 1 47, Brest. Gordon A 145,176 Brettell. Allan Brettell. John E Brewer, Mia Brewer, Rebecca A. , . Brewer, Steven Brewer, Tina A Brians, Chester L Bridgewater, Susan Briggs. Roderick C Briggs. Paul N 185 Bright, Ban L Bright, Sheila M Bnngham, Linda L. . Brink. Linda J Brink, William A Bnnker, Karen K Bnnkley, James H Brinkman. Brenda J Brinkman. Bruce E Brinkman. Cherie A. ... Brinkman, Dennis J. . . Brison Leah J Block and Bridle Blocker, H Derrick Blocksome, Richard C. Blomquist, Denise I Blomquist.SallyA. . .178 Bloom, Adalee A Bloom, Roni J Blount, John M Blue, Donna J Blue Key Blumanhourst, Michael . . Blume. Debra D Blume. Harold R Blume. Steven L Slunk, Katie A Blush, George Blythe, JanaB 143 B ' nai B ' rith Hillel Boaldin, Bill Boand, Victoria A Bock, Donald R Bodecker, Barbara J. .179 Bodelson, Michael A Boden, Richard Boeh, Stephen L Boeh William L 160 .. . .160 .... 434 151.302 180, 181 ... 435 426 435 192.302 144 .351 .... 426 171.435 1 71. 173 160,401 .351 155,319 ,. . .186 .. . .180 319 189.435 192,361 . ... 399 .420 ... .177 185,373 174,332 . . . .420 146 Boehm, Sharon A Bogart Lee L Bogart M Candace ' Boggs Marion A 371 Boggs, Pamela J Bogina, Michael E Bogue, Gary L Bogue, Gregory E Bohannon, Martha F Bohn, Jan R Bohn. Michael D Bohn. Rodney P Bohnenkamp. Donald R. . Bohning. Scott A Bois. Paul K Boisclair, Paula A Bokermann, Brian F Bokermann, Neil C Bol. David G Bolan, JonnaL 156. 179 Boldt, Larry K Bolerjack. Steven M Boles. Catherine S Bolin, Deborah J Bollinger, Michael G Bolt.DonnieE Bolton, Charles L Bolton, Kevin L Boman, Roger J Boman, Shirley M Bommanto, Lawrence Bond, Lynette K Bondank, Dianne J. Bone, Jeffrey D Bonebrake,CaseA Bonebrake. David R Bonham, Michael W Bonner, Timothy J Bonnewell. Robert L Bontz, Evan L Book, Barbara K Boomer, Kathy L Booth. John E Bootman, Nancy D Boppart. Mary S Boren, Fred W Borgerdmg, David G Borhani, KathyJ Borhani, Mostafa Bom, Joanne M Bornheimer, Mary A. . .. Borst. Lea M Bortz. Kathryn L Bosch, Catherine E Bosch, John F Bosch, Teresa J Boss, Michael K Bossier, Ann L Boster, Scoff A 146 Bosworth, Collis P. . Botkins, Joyce E Bottiger, Mary E Bottom. Kay A Bouchard, Rheal J Boula. Kim Bouray, Michael D Bourk. Gil Bourn, Leslie J Bowden, Melanie J Bowe, Susan E 148 Bowe, Tim N Bowen, Beth S Bowen, Cindy M Bower, David W Bowers, Douglas D. . . 1 79 Bowers, Mary L Bowles, Thomas B Bowman, Jacolyn E Bowman, John D Bowman, Mary M Bowman, Michelle L Boyd. Becky L Boyd. Debra A Boyd Dianne M 401 ... .435 .... 324 .. . .192 172 188,332 ... .411 411 ... 380 180.373 . 373 ... 435 . . .327 318 388 182.396 171,435 327 . .396 ...435 ....351 187,288 ... 435 369 307 ... 435 . . . 1 79 160 174,435 149,373 193 .... 380 162,373 .... 435 351 313 151,363 313 407 157.343 .366 .380 . 394 . .435 .... 435 .316 153.302 .... 1 59 166.435 ... 435 .305 192. 293 178, 181 319 173,435 . 327 . . 366 .... 309 .426 ... 436 ... 332 . . .436 411 . .426 . . .180 175.380 ....167 .290 ... 1 73 172,422 180.436 179.426 ... 405 189,436 .... 407 .436 154 436 181 . . . . 302 .351 . .309 154,302 373 Bussing, Chuck 146 Buster, Sally 396 Butcher. Sharon L 155.290 Butin, Constances 180, 332 Butin, Sandra L 437 Butler, Hugh D 191,437 Butler, Joanne G 437 Butler. Retha A 343 Button, Amy L 194,197,396 Button, Daniel J 411 Button, David D 381 Butts. Cathy A 194 Byard.MackE 165 Byarlay. Debbie . . . . 192,309 Byington, Michael J 165 Byrnes, Carolyn A 414 Byrnes, Jeanne M 414 Byron, Paula K 156,196,293 ccc Cable, Karen L ... 290 ' Cacia Girls 150 Cadet Corps Air Force ROTC 176.177 Cadwell, Eileen . .309 Callisch, Leonhard R. .437 Cain, Fredrick L 352 Cain. Lyle J 1 80, 1 87. 352 Cain, Randy 180 Caine, Homer D 176 Cairns, Melvm R 180 Caldwell. Brenda K. . . 309 Caldwell, Lovina 343 Calhoun, Joan K 194 Calhoun. Karen R 156, 437 Calhoun. Richard R 307 Calhoun. Robert A 179 Calkins. Steven H. 437 Call, Edward P .185 Call. JerilynJ . . .437 Call Julie A 397 Brueggeman. Dale H. Bruey, Lou A Bruey. Patricia J Bruhl. Bertha K. Brumbaugh, Scott A. Brumbaugh, Steven T Bruna, Alan W Brungardt, Gregory N Brungardt, Kervin Brungardt, Richard Brungardt, Samuel J Brungardt, Terrence Brunin, Carol A Bruning. Keith D Brunk, Glesnor L Brunk, Malea J. Brunker, Elmer R. . . Brunnenkant, Karen S Brunner, Rich Brunt, Jane E Bryan. Daniel W. . . Bryan. David H. . Bryan. June E Bryan. Kim F. Bryon, Diana M. Brzuchalski, Beverly A Brzuchalski. Charles V Bua-Aim. Somjetana Buchanan, Lina J Buchanan, Lois A Buchanan, Shannon L Bucher, Denise M. . Bucher, William A. Buchheister, James J Buchman, B Rex Buchman, Frankie L Buchman, Karen A Buchman, Susan K. . Buchner, Marcee L. Buck, Diane M. Buck, Frederick E. Buck, Pamela A. Buckman. Jon E Bucl. Loarn L Budd. David R Buehne, Janice S Buell.SherylL. Buhrer, Wayne E Bulba. Micaela Bulk. Martina M. Bulkley, Shelley S. Buller, Rebecca J ; Bunch. Debra E Bunch, William A Bunck, Deborah L Bunck, Dennis J Bunck, Joseph H Bundy. Alan L Bunge, Walter K Bunnel, Randall D. . Bunting, Curtis E Burden, Susan J Burdge, Brent A Burgdorfer, Janet L Burger, Penny S. . Burger, Sheila M Burik, Kimberly A Burls. Marlene Burk. Daniel J Burk. John C Burkdoll. Marcia A Burke, Mary L Burke, Patricia L Burke, Patrick T. . . . Burke, Timothy M 418 147.414 148, 180.414 437 . . . .418 149, 173, 327 437 380 148. 149, 172 . .189.437 1 68 . .196,351 302 288 . . 394 380 159.351 169.363 181 380 327 437 . . .193 392 437 185 185 149 154, 174.437 437 296 437 146, 149 176 . 437 352 437 437 ...180,343 177 327 . . 309 ... 1 59 160.437 437 343 380 172, 188 343 437 437 437 343 . . 147 332 380 162.352 437 1 99 352 352 180 373 153,401 160, 188, 192 437 302 180 173,401 1 79 293 437 437 407 ... .172 Bienhotf Joel F 373 Bienhoff. MarkW. . Biery, Rick F 145 Biery, Teresa E. . . Biesenthal. Jane M Bigelow, Lana J Biggs. Bryan E . Bilbrey. John P Billingham. Tana J Bily, Cynthia A Binder. Stephen F. . Binford. Kerry K 182 Binford Mary E . .434 149.373 196.426 434 . .361 .351 . . . .322 ... .180 173.332 434 191,396 434 Bingham Kim R 426 Bioclub Birch, Carolyn A. . Birch. John W Bird, Alicia A Bird, Gregory J Bird, Jack E Bird. Ronald Birdsong, David Birkman, Jeffrey D Birzer. DebeJ Birzer. Matthew L. .171 Bisagno, S Kay Bischolf, Edward L Bischoff, Gretchen M Bish. John D Bishop. Barry W. Bishop. DebiL . Bishop, Everett D Bishop, James L Biswell, Julie A. . . Black Awareness Week Black, James D Blackaby. Christina L . Blackburn, Ellen D Blacker. Timothy L Blackman, Merrill Blackman, Robin G Blackmer, Rebecca A. . Blackmon. Sandra G. Blackwood. David L. . . . . Blackwood, Sandra S. Blaida. Kathryn A Blaida, Robert A Blakley, Glen R Blanchard, Ezell A Blanchon. Therese A Blanding. David . Blanding, Joni M Blanding, Sylvia J Blank. Cheryl M Blankenship. Janet R. . Blaschke, William A Blaske, KathyJ Blass. MikeL Blattner, Stuart E Blattner, Thomas L Bleakley David P 164 .366 394 . . . . 434 434 416 411 . . .351 ..351 . . . .434 173.434 .396 . 371 .... 309 351 . . .405 .150 .380 . . . . 380 . . .434 . . ..108 . . . .351 148,332 . . .169 165.434 172 146.434 196.332 . . . .434 .176 153,380 . . . .332 161,373 . . . .324 183,351 167,309 .351 192,343 .194 .... 329 .... 309 . .434 ... 435 . .435 . . . .324 288 Call, Keith B. 159,352 Call, Mary P 437 Callahan. Angela M. . 1 43. 1 75, 401 Callaway. Harold C. . 388 Campbell, Austin B 189 Campbell, Barbara L .152,397 Campbell. Carol J 147,181. 437 Campbell, Christopher C 343 Campbell, Clyde A ..437 Campbell. Connie S 332 Campbell. Gerald G 352 Campbell, Hugh J. . 369 Campbell, Janet L 332 Campbell, John R 183,307 Campbell, Joyce L 426 Campbell Judith A 332 Bristow, Tara J . Britegam, Jill Britegam, Joanna J Brito. Gustavo R Britton, Roger G. . . Broadfoot, Jeffrey A Broadie, Ann M Broadie, Marilyn K Brock, James H Brock. Scott E Brockman. Lori L Brokes. Craig D Brokesh, Venita J Brooks, Rebecca J Brooks, Sandra A. 1 56 Brooks. Susan J Brose, Lisa A Brose. Michael L Brothers, Michael J Brotton, Leslie E Brougher, Toni K Brougher, Vicki J Brown, Alan L Brown, Allen J Brown, Anne K Brown, Barbara J Brown, Bill E Brown, Bradley V Brown, Brian T Brown. Bryan C Brown. Carol A. .... 366 .155 ... 332 . . . 436 436 388 . . . .319 152.319 .... 204 . . . .343 380 . . 436 143,426 .... 426 174.332 151,332 ,426 369 . . .418 .... 409 ... 436 ... .192 373 ... .351 329 ... 436 168. 199 351 373 181,436 . . . .380 Campbell, Kathy . . . . .361 Campbell, MarcA 144,437 Campbell. Marilyn K. 438 Campbell, Michael W . .390 Campbell. Robert A 1 70, 438 Campbell. Ronald A 381 Campbell. Steven G. 438 Campbell. William R. 438 Campbell. Williams 318 Campfield, Morris L 352 Canfield, Connie S 168, 438 Cannan. Susan G 438 Cannell, Vicki L 332 Cannon, John B . 352 Cannon, Linda K 1 74 Canny. Rebecca R. 1 75. 333 Cantrell, Candy C .381 Caplmger, Candra J. 150,302 Capps, James R 438 Carbaugh, Donna J 438 Cardinal. Gail A 152.397 407 Bleakley Todd E 307 Bleish. Steven V. Blevins, Michael F Blew. Nancy K Blewilt. TimothyS Slick, Barb K Blick, Joanne E Blick, John B Blickenstaff, Barton D Blickenstafl, Robert D. Blmzler, Carol A. . .... 322 ... 288 332 411 ... .154 .... 435 .... 330 1 80. 380 . . . .418 435 Boyd, Garland H. Boyd Hall Boyd, Jean A. Boyd. Timothy M index 481 Carey, Calvin M Carey, James C Carl, Tony A Carleton. Carla L Carlm, Roger E Carlson. Darvin A Carlson. Jennifer L Carlson, Jilmda L Carlson, Mark D 324 194 352 438 438 305 302 333 438 Charles, Cheryl A Chartrand, E Chartrand. Lucy A Chase, Gwen K Chase, Mary T Chatelam. Daniel E Chatham, Michael D Chavez, Martha M Cheatham, Thomas K 192,333 413 333 183 196.343 177 144 149.439 188 324 Coleman. Kathnne L 176 Collegiate Chorale Collegiate 4-H Colle. Lance D Collier. Ava T Collier. John N. Collier. MarjoneC Collier. Stuart R. Collier, Teresa A 181.439 1 79 187 439 343 . . .420 . 177 420 150 Cornwell. Martha J Cornwell, Nancy Corrigan. Sue E Cory. Linda M Cory, Scott E Cosgrove, Sarah J Cossman, Douglas T. Costello. Teresa M 1 83 Cott. Jeff . .440 290 361 440 .399 293 . . .325 192.367 202, 407 ( ddd ! Dahl. Denise J... 174.187.309 Dahl. Michael E . . 441 Dahl Robert J 1 01 001 Carlson, Mark W 296 Cheatum. Jody A 154. 174.333, Colling, Ron D 373 Cott. Richard H ... 330 169 409 - ' - ' ' ' Carlson, Miriam G Carlson. Randall A 401 411 Cheek, Linda S 439 439 Collinge. Linda L. Collinge. Mark D. . . 160 165.373 Cott. Thomas W Gotten, Jennifer J. . . 162.330 440 Dairy Science Club , . ' .161 W . . 352 DenD 11 ' Carmell, Vicki Carnahan, Nancy S 148 Games. Laura S 1 48 180 154,316 175.426 Cheek. Randy K Cheerleaders Chellgren. Steven E 288 191.246 146. 179,381 Collinge. Michael A Collins. Annette K. Collins. Charles P .160 440 160.307 Cottingham. Leann . Cotton. Terry A Couch Gregory E . . .440 296 177 .I :? Dakin. Roy L Dale, DuaneA 382 Demfe 147.352 SllS Carney, KarlaJ 148.168. Carpenter. David H Carpenter, Denise Carpenter, Helen D 204,205. 438 352 .293 196 Chestnut, Allan B Chestnut, Christine Chestnut, Jon K Chestnut. Merlin B Chestnut. William B .296 175.309 180.182 144. 195.296 373 Collins, Cheryl L. Collins, Cynthia A Collins, Deborah A Collins, Gary W, Collins, Monica M 151.140 361 1 96, 426 440 426 Coughenour, Mark E 1 66 Coulter, Susan E. . ... 397 Coulter. Thomas P. .. 371 Council for Exceptional Children Dale, Melvin D Dale. Michelle M. . . Dale. Quentm B Dallman. Nancy C Dalton, Cynthia D. 181 ' 1 DrfiUjiW 168,401 DttU ..., Carpenter, Jack R Carpenter, Janet I Carpenter. SheraV, Carpenter. William R . .199 333 151 392 Chi Delphia Chi Epsilon Childs, Barry K Childs. James A 150 145 . . 439 300 Collins. Wanetta Coloney, Patricia L, , Coloney, Steven J 166 Colson, Connie J 179 ,424 1 76. 288 381 Couri, Robert M Cowen, Melvin D Cowen, Shirley F 1 u . . . 440 . . .440 187,333 Dalton. Janet Dammann, Karen S. 148, Dancy, Winnona D Dane, Dedna L . 203 157 333 3effH % i to Dein S u 185 3ew3a f ' J Carpenter, William R 180 Childs. Susan E 439 Cotyn, Leslie D 440 Cowley. Craig R 309 Daniel Moynihan 86 Carr. Carol A. .309 Chimes 145 Combs, Deborah A 167 185.309 Cowley, Kaye 309 Daniels. Kate . 34 1 Carr. Carol A 151.302 Chinen, Leonard T 352 Combs. Laurel C. . . 167.343 Cox, Cherlyn D 1 54, 440 Daniels, Sandra S 1 ' ' ' r mrth DorotfiyL ' ' Carr. Charles R. 381 Chinn, Janelle K. 341 Combs, Lawrence I 187 Cox, Craig J , , 424 Danielson, Bradley A. . . .307 ; Carr. Charles R 399 Chi Omega 313 Combs. Ronald J .352 Cox. Dean A 180 Danielson. Candace S 361 Carr. James E 407 Chipman. James T 381 Combs, Stephen H 161,296 Cox, Gina D 179 Danler. Patrick J 44 1 Dene 1 ' ' K . _nnlor p f3 V Carr, Kathenne L. . . . . .439 Chisholm. Sue A 367 Combs, Tern A 185,309 Cox, Leslie L 192.333 Danler. Robert J 159 296 Carr. Pamela L 293 Chism, Sabnna A .439 Comer, Pamela J 319 Cox, Paula N 361 Danner. Dearl H . . 157 397 Dei ff. Te y t Carr. Robert D 196 Chitlangia. Anand 144 Commer, Roger D 369 Cox, Regina D 313 Dannucci. Keith J 144 Dcnniix) DOS Carr, Stephen T 180.392 Chowdhury, Ashesh 381 Compaan. Jamie L 1 83. 185. 187. Cox, Samuel J 197 Danskin. Emily M. . 1 60 Carrel, Debra S 439 Chrisman, Jennifer D 439 333 Coyle. Michael D . 399 Darby. Leora L. 144 It - ' ' J44 Carrier, David W 373 Christensen, Jon D 439 Compaan, Melody L 440 Crabb Jeremiah E 374 Darnell. Gwen S 44 1 Dfi rr - : ' Carrier, Donna .343 Christensen. Keith H . . . . 194 Compton, Gilbert E. . . . 300 Craft Glenn S 440 Darosett.GaryW. 441 Carson. Colette A Carson. Kenna S 439 156.426 Christensen. Kevin D Christiansen. Karen L 422 363 Compton, James F Compton, Patty E 183 145 Craig. Cynthia C. 151 160.316 182 440 Darrah, Mark W. Darrow. Shelli L 180 418 ,83290 Denns;. Carson, Sharon J 343 Christie. Kenneth A 405 Compton. Ty L . 161 t. ag. ue be L Daubert.Kent J 392 Carter, Allen L. 181, 182 Christner. Rex A . 147.439 Conard, Susan E 191.426 Craig, Douglas J . . . 371 Daughters of Diana ...151 r Carter, Cammie C 439 Christner. Terry A. 439 Conaway. Denise A . . . .381 Craig, Kellee A . . . 293 Davenport, Joel A . . 374 Carter, Debra L .316 Christy. Ray A .172,352 Concert Choir . . . 1 79 Craig, Rhonda L .... 414 Davey, Larry D OQT Denver Wfly .... VJOC c Carter, Don R . . 204 Chubb. Richard M. 352 Concert Jazz Ensemble 182 Craig, William M . . . .374 Davidson. Dave ...194 Carter, James L .193 Chung. DoS 171 Condie, Randy L 147 Cramer, Candace K . 1 56 1 83, 293 Davidson. Douglas A. 189.441 Carter, John C ... 352 Church, Cheri J. . . . 162.343 Condray. Scott R 440 Cramer, Connie S ... 440 Davidson. Gary M 388 : ' -:-- Carter, Kent L .399 Ciesclicki, Rob 197 Condry. Ellen M . . 440 Cramer, Jane L 150,307 Davidson, Sally K 363 Depe ,- :_ Carter, Mikel R 177 Cink, David E 180,192 Cones, David J 373 Cramer, Karin K .367 Davidson, Stephen R. . . . 441 Oe ' ouc y jxq ' Carter, Richard H . . .373 Cioni. Becky L 369 Conger, Charles B 205. 440 Cramer, Stacia J 440 Davies. Gwen . 151 DP- ax; Carter, Sherri A ... .152 Cioni. Peter J. 369 Conkling, Judith E 309 Cramer, William C , 161 Davignon. Roger E 441 DBS j?- Carter, Steve .327 Circle K 185 Conkwright, Kay S 188,440 Crandall, Robert J ... 440 Davila, Caspar M. 382 Descf.jc (f s Carter. William C .439 Claassen. Douglas K . 160,187 Conn, Shelly C 1 76, 293 Crandall. Susan J . . . . 440 Davis, Amy K 361 Descniw Kind Carver, David L 439 Claassen. Norma J 194 Connell. Joseph B 176 Crane. E. David 440 Davis, CarolS 441 Dear Gauge F Carver. Jenna S .439 Claassen. Stuart L 173 Conneli. Mark H 381 Crane. James B 298 Davis, Cheryl E . 319 DeierDanf! ' Carver. Rose M 170,309 Clancy. Donnie D. 390 Conner, Jerry E 440 Cranston, Bradd L . 440 Davis, Chris N 441 DeOT DaG Gary. James H . .439 Clark. Ann M. 290 Conner, Martha J . . . . 440 Crawford, Alan W 374 Davis. Clark H .325 c Mian 3 Gary. Leslie W 205. 439 Clark, Bradley E . . . . 381 Conners, Annette J 426. 187 Crawford, Gay V 333 Davis, Dale B . 371 Deitmer.DeOffar. Case, Diana L 319 Clark, Brenda J 165 Connolly, Deborah S 367, 172 Crawford, Jeffery A. . . . 169.409 Davis, Daniel M. . . 180.392 Oelti. E Case. Elaine L 148 167,316 Clark, Cnsta . 203.341 Connor. Brenda C 152.341 Crawford, Warren L. .440 Davis. Deborah D .303 DeuK- - Case, James G. 352 Clark, Dave 174 Connor. MarcS. 300. 195 Creason, Mark D. 440 Davis. Debra J 441 De.sc- Wit Case, Leila L 426 Clark. Deborah E . 147 160. 188, Connor, Ronald D 180 Creek Kenny D 374 Davis. Denise 155.333 Deutsr : : . Case, Teresa J 152,367 316 Conoway, Denise A 1 75 Crescents of Lambda Ch Alpha . . Davis. Fawn L . . 333 De -: Case. Timothy G 392 Clark. Elaine J .439 Conrad. Kelly E 324 151 Davis. Fredric L .189 DevwePaJC Casey, Barry A, 373 Clark. Gay A. 439 Conroy. Tom W 161 Cress, Lynn E 165 Davis, Gary R .318 De e Denrfit Casey, Donna L 319 Clark. Gregory C . 160, 193.493 Consumer Relations Board 1 94 Creviston, David A. .381 Davis. Gayle L 1 60 187.333 Dess --.. Casey, Kendall F. 194 Clark, JanaK 174 Converse. Cynthia S 152.440 212 Davis, George A 441 Diamond Didinj! Casey. Kent A 171 Clark, Jennifer C . . . 439 Converse. Mark A .440 Crews Carol G 152 401 Davis. Gregory D. . . 388 032 CanUsA Casey. Tedd A ... .373 Clark, Michael C 373 Conway. John F. 324 Crisler Michelle E 440 Davis, Gregory L. .374 ftai.JoseF Casey, Todd A 373 Clark, Paul D 188 Conway, Kenny J . . 352 181 293 Davis. John A. ... . . .166 Ditto E f N Cashier, Yvonne M. .309 Clark, Randle L .439 Conway, Mary A, ... 309 unss, biizaoetn u Davis, Judith A. . . . 424 DiCce r ' , Gaspers. Steven L. .305 Clark, Roberta M. 439 Cook, Carol S . . 397 Cnss, Elizabeth E ... 1 78 Davis. Lynda S. 161.441 DrtDavO Casselman, Marsha A . .401 Clark. Sara J . 153,319 Cook, Charles M. . . ... 324 Crist, Cynthia D . . . 440 Davis, Lynn A 374 Dick. Bam L Cassibba. Ralph J . .144 Clark. Steven M 147.373 Cook, Douglas M. . 381 Crist, Kelly J ... .318 Davis. Mary J 165,441 Dickason Cfl - Gassing, Nancy 293 Clark. Terri .180 Cook, Gary S 369 Crockett, Gayle A 333 Davis, Mary S 169.441 ftckers Lor: Gassier, Nancy 343 Clarke. Clarence S. 176. 177 Cook, Ginger 156.293 Crofoot, James W 399 Davis, Michael D. .352 ' - Castaneda.CnsT. 193,439 Clarke, Thomas W . .439 Cook. Giovanna T 440 Crop Protection Club .160 Davis, Peachley . . 155 Dtckerson Sara Gastelti. Cynthia A 309 Classen Dale A 373 Cook, John V 369 Crook. Thomas R 194 Davis Philip B 327 Dickerson Wllati; Caster, Cathryn A. 333 Clawson, Rodney R 381 Cook. Karen S. 426. 440 Crosby, MarkS 371 Davis, RamonaL. . ... 333 DckevHStyl ' Castelter. Kim E 367 Cleland, Sara A 424 Cook, Linda J, 157, 205 Crosier, Ronald B, 1 88 Davis Randy N .352 Dickrrgn Qwles Caswell. Sandee L 426 Clement, Daniel J . .381 Cook, Marika F, . 440 Crosley, Debra A . .309 Davis. Retta A. 441 - ' : - - : ' :;- Cater, John M 180,373 Clements, Lawana 162,439 Cook. NilesJ, . . . ... 352 Cross Country . . 248 Davis. Richard L. . . 162 ftckson3ae Gates, Larry K. . . . 166,439 Clemmons, Mary J. , 361 Cook, Robert R, . . . 440 Cross, Debora L ... 333 Davis, RobertD. . . . . . .420 Dtkson Decffl! Catlin, Daniel L. . . . 439 Cless, Gary C 399 Cook, Roy N 374 Cross. John H .298 Davis, Roger L . . . 374 --,,, Catlin, Maurice A 144.439 Cless, Stephen E .399 Cook. Teresa M. 343 Cross. Michael J. . ... 352 Davis, Sallie K 147, 167 ' ::: ' Catlin, Michael W 144 159.439 Clevenger. Melinda L 439 Cool. Roderick H. 148.369 Crosson, Russell D, .352 Davis. Sherry L. 334 Oeckg Cnr. Cato. C Richard , 318 Cline, Charles K 352 Cooley. Amy S 148 Crosswhite, Darrell . . . 307 Davis, Timothy R. . . . .189 ;: Catskellar 48 Cline, Gregory S 418 Cooper, Alice E, . . .440 Crouch, Marilyn K 151 Davis, Vester D. .155 Di5F : C;--: , Catt, Bradford E 204, 205 Cline Kym L 192 333 Cooper, Collette R 313 Crouch Martha L .333 Davis, Vicki L. 441 Qe ' k in u . Cauble, Deadra L, 160 181.316 Cline. Remy D 439 Cooper, David L 440 Crow, Randall L 180. 181 Davison, Janet E 414 ' ]: ' -, ' ' Caughron. Richard N 288 Cline. Roger H .439 Cooper, Dean L 440 Crowe. Teresa G . 163,344 Davisson, Stanley P 399 DwteUoHR Cech, Douglas J 180.352 Clinton, Darryl L 439 Cooper, James L 416 Crowl, Gary M , . . 440 Dawdy, David A. 390 Cederberg. Joel E ... .439 Clipsham, Robert C 371 Cooper, James L 147, 187,440 Crump, Raymond P ... 322 Dawes, Michael A 388 V Cederstrom. Dayn L .373 Clipsham, Sean J 371 Cooper, John M 147, 167,369 Crumrine, Ralph S , . . .352 Dawkins, John L 441 Dietz Carrra: Cellmer, Terrance L 171.439 Clothing, Textiles and Interior Cooper, Karen L ... . . 303 Crutchtield, Patricia E 397 Dawson, Herbert E .... 441 Chalfee. Nancy S 196.333 Design Club 174 Cooper, Nancy J 171, 424 Cudney Nancy L. 441 Dawson, Margie M 382 ;: Chatfee, Paul D, . . 392 Clovia 316 Cooper, Patricia L . 180 Cuilen Peter .177 Day, Cynthia J. 334,441 to Sievei; Chaffm, Verona J, ... 349 Coats, Linda J. .439 Cooper, Peter 173 Cummings, William L 180,374 Day, Dennis. . 374 OMmar. Sawji Chalmers. John . ... 1 95 Coats. Robert L 424 Cooper, Richard D , , , 324 Cummins Walter S 322 Day, Michael J . . .318 - Chaltas. J Steven Chamberlain, Ronald L Chamber Orchestra 411 390 178 Coats, Vicki R Cochennet. Carrie A Cochran, Michele R 439 290 426 Coover. Michelle M Cope. John M Copeland. Malcolm L 333 409 418 Cunningham. Cindy A Cunningham. Marilyn 180 178, 181 qoc Day, Tracy Daylor, Paula K. Dayvault, MarkS 441 168.441 . . 405 M. JolnS Dfc.VHea Chambers. Barbara L . . . 349 Cockerill, Richard L . .343 Copes, Joseph 187 Curne. Curtis G . . . jD Dean. Holly M 175,414 L llrrgr De ms a Chambers. Curtis N .420 Cockrum, Ernest H 373 Corbin, Charles B 194 Curne. Marty R 1 80, 361 Dean, Kent A. . . , 441 DtllOl karll Chambliss. Terry A 341 Cody, Mac A 173.381 Corbin. Cynthia A 145,341 Currie. Michael R. , , 325 Dean, KimberlyA 1 72. 363 WI.JMTlId - Chandler, C Jerome 405 Cody, Mark W 411 Corbin, Mark R 188,440 Curne. Ralph A . . 325 Dean, William H. 441 Chandler. Karen S 173.302 Coe. RobW 411 Corcoran. Jeffrey B 440 Currier. Mark A 381 DeBarge. Lynn A. 167 - - . - - ' -- ' - ' ,- Chandler. Teresa 361 Coen, John C 161 Corcoran, Theresa G . . 440 Currier, Martin L, . . .381 Debenham. Randy R 352 Channel. Mary A 147. 148. 175, Coetzee, Jacobus C 195 Cordes. Stephen E 195.307 Currier, Roberta K, , 381 Debold. Terence E . ., ; .441 Dints D,,. 414 Coffman, Barbara A 401 Corfman, Teresa J 440 Curry, Andrea J 182,293 Debnck. Connie M. 441 Chapin. Dena L 333 Coffman, Geraldine A 361 Corkran. Deborah S 361 Curry. Beth A 293 Debnck. KathyL. . . . , .,- ' - ,. .: . Chapin. Rosemary . 168 Cofran, Thomas L 164 Gorman, Richard W 399 Curry, Kim J 160. 175 188,427 Debnck. Rita B. 154, ' 67.361 ft ss,r. Chapman. Gregory P. 352 Cogswell. Dave A 381 Corn. David A 171,413 Curtis. David W .374 Dechant. David M 149 Chapman, Mary J 439 Colburn. Bradley C 180 Cornelius, Gregory T 440 Curtis, Jack A . .189 Deck, Steven B. .. 405 ;.;. Chapman, Scott L 439 Colby. Patricia A 1 74. 439 Cornelius, Mary D . 440 Curtis, Marsha L 176 181.424 Deckard, KrisT. 382 Chappell, Mary B 324 Cole, Cynthia A. 439 Cornelius, Sandra S 153.343 Curtnght, Paula R . . . .333 Decker, Patricia K 441 Chappell, Susan L 313 Cole, James E 147 Cornett, Jack L, . 440 Cushenbery.DarylW .374 Dedrick, Randy .182 Chapul, Susan A. 153,426 Cole, Kathryn E 329 Cornett, Shirley D, 344 Cushman, Rhonda R. . .313 Deftenbaugh. Eric P. 143,441 - ' ' ' Charles. Charene A 319 Cole, Steven M. 322 Cornwell, Kellee A 344 Cusic. Bernie K 381 Defries, Richard B 441 ttdlr id ' i s 15 II 111 | ' .; S ;; s 1 :.: ffltj w B i? U ' Si ; U ' ;: II U IS! 1(0111 U ' :;: 161 U ' ! - !f)u r :: : ' . ' U! ' - ' - : tr i ' i $ H ;: 3K J3l.ij ' :: ' ' ti v IttS l K ;;. if u ' u ' Ijl 1(7.0 IIS 113 ' ' 1 Degeer. James E Degenhardt, Richard K Degi.GregA 146,149 Dehart. Steve D Deines. George F. Demes. Janet S 183 Deines, Peggy J. . Deitrick, Linda S, . Delimont, Barbara G Dehmont. Dan Dell. Bruce D Delta Chi Delt Darlings Delta Delta Delta Delta Psi Kappa Delta Sigma Phi Delta Sigma Theta Delta Tau Delta Delta Upsilon Delta Zeta DeMand. JohnW. Dembski. Janet 156 Deming. Shawn D. Demo. Daniel D. . Demo, Therese M Dempster, James L Dempster, Richard E. 159 Demuth, Dorothy L. 149 Demuth, Yvonne M Deneke. FredJ Dengler. Patricia M Denker, Terry E Denning, Dale P Denning. Douglas G Denning. Mark R. . Dennis, Dawn J. Dennis, Elizabeth A Dennis, Scott M. Dennis, Susan J Denton, Deborah D Denton, Kim M Denver. Dana L 167 Denyer, Marcy L Denzel, Susan J Depenbusch, Lawrence Depew, Howard H Depew, Julie A Derouchey, Douglas W Derr, Donald D. Desai, Ginsh D Desch. Joseph P. . Deschner. Kim M Detar, George F. Deter, Daniel E Deters. David G Derrick, William R. 178 Dettmer. Deborah J. Detwiler. Jan E Deutsch, Bradley L. 382 300 176,352 441 441 191,341 441 164 .309 147 399 . . .318 151 ...319 145 .322 . .185 324 327 329 .170 180.341 . ...341 441 . . .334 188,441 188.441 172.441 441 161 . .361 195,322 147.399 441 189 .157 441 166.441 154,334 . 344 155,363 172,361 183.361 152.303 441 177 .... 397 382 322 144 441 .... 344 . .173 144 147,330 181.382 316 . . .401 441 . . 300 . . 305 296 405 172 194 191 441 374 441 441 159,441 . . . .352 . .442 . . .442 1 80, 309 .290 ... 442 442 ... 322 . . .442 176.352 427 . . 442 . .352 1 79. 344 174,442 36 325 411 374 ... 382 . 442 442 ... 442 .382 179,420 303 , . . .442 150.367 296 367 392 334 ... 382 369 171 147 . . 367 152.344 147.442 . .442 392 182.334 175,401 . . 352 . . 442 . .427 382 Dizmang, Belinda G Dlabal, Angela D. Dlabal. Deborah K Doan. Richard L Dobbie, Joann M Dobson, Debbie L . Doby, Cinde D Docker. Connie D Dodd. Timothy J Dodge. James W Dodge. Jere L Dodge, Terry J Doe. Munehiro K Doebele, Barbara J 147 Doebele, Constance J 168 Doherty, Kathleen M . Doherty. Stephen J Dokken. Daniel P Dokken, Peggy L. Doles, Dennis A Doll. Candice R Doll. Dalene M Doll, Julie A Dolliver, Mark T Dolliver, Matthew P. . . Dollmann, Steven C. 145 Dombaugh. Dena R. Donahue. Debbie J Donley. Keith B Donmyer, John E Donnell. Pamela J Donnert, Hermann J. Donohue, Ann E Donovan, Gary J Dooling, Melodi A Doran, Janet L Doran, Patrick J Dorsey. Jalene D Dorsey, Renea C Dorsey, Tom H Doss. Curtis J Dotson, Deborah Dotson, Lynda C Doud. Vickie A Douglas, Stephen L Douglass, Jason J Dove, Devere Dow, Steven R Dowell, Diane M Dowling, William N Downie. Scott R Downing, Joni R Downing, Karen S Downs. Ernest Downs, Rose J Doyen. Carol J .168 Doyle. Greg S Dozier, Morns C Drake, Debra L Drake. Richard L Drees, Charles M Drees, Duane W. Dreese. Patrick C Dreher. Donald C Dreher, Steven P Dreher. Teresa L Dreiling. Debra A Dreiling, Elynn M Dreith, Jon Drew, Jeft L Dntley, Paul M Droge. Beverly 160, 187 Drown, Bradford D Drumhiller, Linda K Drumhiller, Stephen A. Drumm. Don A Drumm. Robin D Dryden, Lester A Dubroff, Michael Duch, Lorinda M Dudley, Debra J Dudrey, Barbara J Dudte, Timothy J Duensing, David T Duesing. Denise Dutlin, Andrew V Dukich, Marsha L Dumler, Sylvia J Dunaway. Terry Dunback, Joy E Dunbar, Steven D . Duncan, Helen M Duncan, Jon B Duncan. Lynn M Duncan, Stewart R Duncan, Vicki L Dunivent. Gayle K 152.341 . .334 167,442 442 145,442 177,344 192,443 401 161.416 443 . . . 1 76 .... 352 173,352 194,367 143, 165. 176 443 .... 334 371 .443 . . 443 .374 ... 363 .... 367 . .382 197.409 ... 409 149,418 341 427 . . . 443 ... 443 .382 171 290 .369 367 .... 334 388 344 153,443 .... 390 ... 1 97 . . . .443 155,185 148,341 ,,,,416 388 . . . .407 ... 352 .290 173.352 . . .193 .341 344 183 . 1 83 176,293 168,443 176 187,397 .327 . 443 162.443 161 424 147 . . 399 ... 303 155.427 ... 363 .330 ... 353 371 188.443 .... 325 . . . .443 . .416 374 172.382 .... 353 ... .186 180,382 443 166,344 , . . .443 180,392 . .344 . .176 443 148 443 . 157 187,334 300 390 . .443 150,443 162,296 443 . . 443 .... 334 . ... 1 70 . . . 1 53 . . .371 . .188 ... 443 1 56. 293 371 . .443 183,341 ... 325 .... 382 ... 322 ... 322 .443 .344 . . 363 173.401 180.443 180.374 Durbin.RandalL. Durler, Maurice G Durst. Rebecca L Dusch.KimC Dusin, Ann M. Dutton. Andy D. Dutton, Edward E . Duwe. Margaret A. . Duwe. Roger D Dye, Rebecca A Dye, Robert L Dye, Timothy J Dyer. David K Dyer, Lynn A. Dykman. Gary L Dykstra, Michael A ee W Eagleton. Marks. . Eakin, Barbaras. . - Easter. Richard C Easterday. Stephen P Eatherly, Linda L. Eaton. Mark T Eaton, Natalie J Eaverson, Deborah J Eaverson, Robert G Ebert, George B. Eberth. Keith A Eberth. Thomas E. . Ebright. Alan J Eby, Carl W Eckenberg.GeneW Eddy, Aden L Eddy, Jan Eddy, Susan M Edelman, Charlotte Edelman, Mark A . . Edens. Jennie L. . Eder, Joel L Edgerley, Paul Edgerley, Susan 1 56, Edie, Robert J. . Ediger, Charlotte A Ediger, Cindy L Edmonds, James K Edmonds. Vicki S. . . Edmonson, Luisa C Edmund. Kimberly A Education Council Edwards. A. Thornton Edwards. Floyd W. Edwards. Janet L Edwards, Janice A Edwards. Jennifer K Edwards, Sarah L Edwards, Susan F. Edwards, Wayne L Etfland. Claudia L Egan, Christine M. . Egan, Diane Egan, Frances L Egbert, Douglas D Eggerman, Jeffrey N. Eggers, Douglas W Ehler. S. W Ehlers. Bruce J Eh ret. Sara E Ehrlich. Joanna L . . Ehrlich. Melvin R Ehrsam, Alex G Ehrsam, Julie A Eichhorn, Connie M Eichman, James J, Eickholt, Marie-Anne Eickmeyer, David A Eikenberry. Kent R Eilert, Rebecca L Eisenbarth, Stephen L Eisenhauer. Carl A. Eisiminger. Mary S Ekart. Kimberly A Elder Kent E 443 .443 145. 162,290 427 169,401 298 298 180.427 177 443 193,374 353 411 334 374 405 3 . .169,409 146 407 . . . 176. 181 . . .172.397 168.204 361 443 1 79, 443 . .159 305 443 327 . 443 ... 369 443 397 443 186 443 309 . . . .159.296 325 168, 196,205, 341 374 . . . .148,443 164 353 443 155 382 1 70 185 298 185.344 303 154,316 382 443 149 151,427 196,197,341 401 196, 197,443 327 369 443 162 353 1 83. 363 . 151,334 374 Endecott. Mark A . 420 Engel, Carol B 172.361 Engel, Glenn R . .344 Engel, Karla K 397, 175 Engel, Maryann 293 Engelhard!, DarrylL 161,416 Engelhardt, Vicki 414 Engelland, Glenn A . , .444 Engelland. Rhonda R 180.364 Engels, Glenn M 388 Engen, Robbie L 300 Engindears 1 72 Engineering Student Council 1 73 Engle, Alan 177 Engler, Verlyn R. . . .330 English ,C Steven .444 Enloe. JackL 374 Enyart. JeniseG 444 Epler, Deborah K 444 Epperson, Carol L. . ...427 Erdwien, Mary C .427 Erhardt. Larry D 327 Erickson. Debra J. 341 Erickson. Judith M 309 Erickson. Julie A . .444 Erickson. Marian S 364 Erickson. Michael V 394 Erickson, Shelley A 444 Erickson, Timothy J . 444 Ericson. Debra D. . .-160 Ericson. Kevin C 179,180.374 Erkelens, Allison C 444 Erker. Michael F 353 Ernst. Jack R 172,405 Ertl. Gary R 444 Erwin, Terry L 177, 303 Erwine, Stanford W 388 Esau. Michael M. . 182 Esau, Vickie L . 397 Esch, Robert J 172,444 Eschmann, Cyndee D 427 Faubion. Luanne Faulkner. Tom Fawcett, Kim M Fay. Carolyn A Fears. Carla D Features Fee, Forrest M Fee, Suzanne L Feeney, Carolyn C Feeney. Gerald M Feese, Colleen G. Fehr, David L Fehr, Leslie B Fehrenbach, Eldon D Feightner, Sharon A. Feild, Dianne Felder, Paula A Feldkamp, Cynthia Feldkamp. Terry L Feldman, Roberta L Feldman, John C. Felton, Richard E. , . Felton, Thomas L. . . Felts, Barbara A Fencing Club Fengel, Janis M. . . . Fenley, Paul F. Fenlon. Clement P Fennema, Diane R Fenton, Donna M. . . Fenton, Gary K Fenton, Tom A. Ferguson, Kent L Ferguson, Ruth Ferguson, Terry L Fernandez, Oscar M Ferris. Connie A. Ferro. Frank S Fessenden. Charles E Feyerherm, Joan L. . Field, Amy L Field, Harry L Field, Ralph G Fields, Gregory L . Figurski. Donald L. . Filby. Jeffrey B Filiatreault, Gregg L Fincher. Kenna S Fine Arts Council Fine, Connie Fine. Shirley L Finger. Greg F Fingland, Robert L Fink, Doug R Fink, Sara A Finnigan, Kathryn J. Finnigin, Brenda M. Fioramonti, E John Firestone. Donald D. Fischer. Gregg K. . . Fischer. Kathryn J. . Fiscus Cheri L 156 167.334 1 79, 307 1 60. 444 . . . 444 344 15 444 . . . .177.303 . . 151 1 76 148. 157. 194. 313 298 444 159,444 146. 149, 173, 444 191,367 ... 175.444 . .290 148.414 444 143 .176. 177,420 188 ... 344 191 309 .382 . .390 . . .444 . .427 353 147,444 353 444 . .418 353 329 . 444 422 444 319 .144 159 374 194 445 445 180 195 382 180 374 149,374 201 367 445 . .180.334 445 146, 173, 185. 374 353 . . .427 180 160 296 Estelle. R Ramey Estill, Bradford W. . . Eta Kappa Nu 75 405 146 Etheridge. Warren A. Etling, James B. . Etzel, Kathleen A. . Eubank, James W, Eubanks. Willone E Eudaley, Deborah L Euker. Valerie D. Eulert, Carol J Eustace, Dale . . . . Evans, Bryan D. . Evans, Elizabeth I, Evans, Jan K Evans, Jerry R, Evans. Karen G Evans, Kathleen . . Evans, Leslie E. . Evans, Leslie W Evans, Lisa M Evans, Mary M Evans, Randall K. . . Evans, Sheryl J Evans, Stephen . . Everett, Evelyn A. Everett, John W Everett, Teresa L Evers, Pamela S Ewing, Janice L Exline, Robert W Eyestone, Gail L. . Eyestone, T. Richard Eyler, Jerry M Eyler, Pamela B Eyman, Becky J. fff Fabnzius. Janice M Fabrizius, Karl Fabrizius, Margaret Facklam. Roger L. . Faculty Senate Fagan. Chnsta J. . . Fagan, Jo A Fagerah. Adnan H. Fair. Doris M Fairbairn. Scott W. Fairchild. KippC. . . Fall Follies Fallen, Loretta A, . Family and Child De Club Fankhauser. Carol A Fankhauser, Tony H Fanning, Gary L Fanty, Mark A Farha. Connie A Farley. Brooke A. Farmer, Faith A. Farmhouse 330 . . . 405 .153,293 162,183.405 172 444 444 .424 161 162.444 160, 181,334 . . . 334 444 172, 196.397 . 334 397 353 169.427 444 353 175 444 369 427 411 189.341 165.329 148,334 307 316 191 444 . . . 444 1 50, 303 153 147, 179,305 334 166 1 94 187,316 155,344 444 444 388 409 53 .444 relopment 1 74 334 444 . . 162.444 193 303 290 329 330 194 Deutsch, Steven L. . Devlin, Daniel L Devore. Paul C Deweese, Dennis D Deweese, Paul F . . . Diamond Darlings Diaz, Carlos A Diaz, Jose F Dibben. Elaine M Dibben, Norman C Dick, David A Dick, Randy L Dickason. Cynthia A Dickens. Loren E Dickerhoof, Bonnie G Dickerson. Sara . Dickerson, William J Dickey, Halley K. Dickman, Charles E Dicks, Christopher L Dickson, Dale K. Dickson, Debra D Dicristina, Nadme M Didde, David C. . . . Dieckgrafe, Cynthia Dieckhott. Sue E Die Fledermaus Dierkmg. MarkC . . Dierks. Charles C Dierks, Lloyd R Dietrich, Gregory L. . Dietrich, MaryS. . . Dietz. Carma J Dietz, Charles H. . Dielz. Randy F. Dietz. Steven D Dikeman. Sandra A Dikeman. Steven L Dill, Julie A Dill, Thomas A Oilier. V Heather Dillman, Dennis B. Dillon, Joan M Dillon. Kathy L. . . Dillon, Kurt R Dills, Ray A Dinges. Donald T. Dmkel. Patricia Dipman, Cynthia K Dirks, Randall K. . Dirks, Susan K Dissel. Stephan C Dittemore. Joni L Diveley. Connie J, Diveley, Robert R Diver, Marcia L . . Dixon, Krisli L. Dixon, Michael E. . Fish Peter R Fishburn. Casey G . Fisher. Deanna .... Fisher, Debra L Fisher. Gary W Fisher, JimC Fisher. Kimberly S. . Fisher, Mary L Fisher, Rita A Fisher, Tena I Fisher, Terry L Fisiminger, Susan M Fitch, Gregory K Fitch, Julie K Five, Jane A Flack, Thomas D. . . . Flaherty, Michael E. Flair. Robert F Flaming, Nancy F. . . Flanagan, Mary E Flannigan, Richard D Fleischman, Lee B Fleming. James T. . . Fleske. David H Fletcher. Deborah A. Fletcher, Donna L. . . Fletcher. Michael T . Fletcher, Peter S Fletcher, Tern L Flick. John Flickner, Raymond G Flin. RossM Flinn. Jeryl A Flora, Tresa L Flouer, Jack A. Flouer, Michael G Flower, Michael G Floyd, Barbara A Fluderer, Jo A Fluderer, William H. . Flynn. Kathy Flynn, Lisa M Flynn, Mary K Foelsch, Douglas S. Foerster. Stephen L. Fogerson. Debra M. Fogler. Robert J Fohey, Michelle L. . . Foley, Donna F Foley, Robert L Foley, Susan J Folger, Elizabeth A Folk. Sherry L. .420 . . .445 150. 170,445 183.307 149 154, 194,344 316 344 344 . 445 153 445 . . .334 154 445 369 290 . . 443 407 ... 443 374 300 443 374 374 . 1 79. 364 334 178,181 388 313 163,344 171 ... .177. 186 162 330 1 52 445 445 161.296 382 407 144,159.296 177 445 156 . . .181 177 1 76 182.427 445 445 150 153. 197.367 303 353 180. 193,424 313 146. 149 445 .... 445 325 . . . .192.445 . . .160.445 445 405 Elder, Roderic L. Elkins, Marc E Elliff. Connie J Ellilf. Donald A Elling, Joan E. Elliott, Cameron M, , Elliott, Denise Elliott, Leslie L Elliott. Robert L Elliott. Sandra K . . .443 ... 420 ... 443 . 444 167.444 353 191 173 353 . . .177,444 444 Dunmire, Jocelyn D Ellis Lori K 157 Ellis M Beth 151 Dunn, Jean A Dunn, Joseph J Dunn, Patricia D Dunn, Ronald Dunn, Wayne E Dunne, Karen A 151 Dunne, Patrick J Dunning, Craig S Dunton. Douglas K Dunton, Lynn Dunton, Marion D. Dunton. Stephen M. Dupree. Janiece A. . Dupy. Dwight Durant. Jackie E 153 Durant, Larry W. Ellis Randall W 444 Ellis, Roscoe Ellis, Walter C Ellison, Susan Ellsworth, Deborah D Elmer, Dana G Elmore, Stephanie M Elsahookie, Medhat M Elsasser, Scott E. . . . . Elsea, Connie Elsen. Carolyn M. Elsey, Bruce Emery, Barbara A. Emery, Teresa K Emig, Kathleen L Emig, Sharon S 194 392 . . . 290 . . 334 197.399 188 444 416 157,303 444 444 444 ... 444 309 154.293 Farr, Joan E Farr, Stoney Farr, Tami E Farrell, Eugene Farrell, Maureen E Farrell, Ritchie L Farrington, Kipley E Fasnacht, Glen F Faubion, Joseph E . . 334 390 152.183.382 161 401 298 325 444 177 index 483 Folkerts. Don A 144. 169,407 Frye.DarcyL 180,344 Gehrmg. George M 41 1 Gossen. Larry A 159 Gutchm. llene 186 -s? ,., fi . Gehrt Alan K 305 Gottsch, Karen K 382 Gutchm Ira P 186 FoltZ. Becky L Foltz. Debra L 313 309 Frye, Raymond E 445 Gehrt, Teresa A 446 Gottschalk. Eugene .394 Gutierrez. RaulJ . . . . 393 Football 230 Frye. Rebecca A 1 80 Geisert, Michael T 183,354 Gottschalk, Gary M 177.354 Gutknecht, Deborah L 364 nan 1 ' ; Forbes. Laurie A 445 Fuessle. Richard S 399 Geist, Elaine 145 Gough, Cynthia L 1 74. 447 Gutzman, Linda K 424 -; ' ' ' : Forbes, Melissa A 160 Fuhrman. William A 445 Geist.GaryE 446 Gould. Saundra E 1 80. 334 Gutzman, Melissa A 397 -r ' - ' Ford. Carl D. 413 Fuhrman. William D 353 Geitz, Gregory A 446 Goulding. Theresa D 447 Gutzman, RICCI L ... 424 HarrW ' Ford. Charles A 374 Fulkerson. Kevin L 318 Genchan. Jonette R 192.427 Govert, Julie L 187.382 Gwm, Francis E 1 79. 354 Haws T. Ford. Don T 374 Fuller. Carol D 334 Gentry. Robert H. 382 Gowen, Alicia K 401 Gyang. ErastusO 186 Ford, Fred L Ford Hall Ford. Michael J. Ford. Nancy A Fore. Jane A. Fore. Jenny L 307 332 353 334 147. 167,445 314 Fuller, Deborah A. . 313 Fuller. Leonard E 194 Fuller. Virginia E 1 79 Fullerton. Julia A 361 Fulton, Joy L 427 Fulton, Rick A 445 George, Ann E 143. George. Philip D George. Veronica A Geraghty. Susan E Gerard. Roy W 148 167 181, 334 296 364 401 446 Graber, Dean A Graber, Keith W Grady, Margaret A Graff. Barbara J Graff. Elaine L Graff. Gary M . . . .162 . .180 . 447 334 152,397 . .375 hhh Foreman. Melmda K 1 79. 382 Funderburg, Lois J 446 Gerboth, Danny L 322 Graff, John F. 159.411 -; ' -. ' Forestry Club 161 Fundis, Roxanna M 178,181 Gerhardt, AimeeG 314 Graff. Victorias .447 Haack.PamlaJ .290 - a -; :.: : Foret. Gregory W 353 Funk, Bonnie R 148,446 Gerlach. Carl R. 325 Graham. Curtis G . . . . .165 Haag. Jeffery E 375 HamsJ ar Forke. Scott C 307 Funk, BrendaJ 175.401 Gerlach. Debra N 446 Graham. Gay E 447 Haas. Joseph G 418 HamsNancyS Forrest. Keith P 445 Funk.GlennE 146.173.413 Gerlach. Paul M 446 Graham. John R 199 Haberkorn, Michael R 344 Harr Saty ' Forrest. Roberts 392 Funk. Keith M 374 Gerlaugh, Mitchell B 189 Graham, Lloyd R . . . 354 Habiger. MaryB . . .344 Hams, Pam Forsberg, Lori L 364 Funk. Marilyn K 170.446 Germann. Deborah K 401 Graham, Lynn J 344 Hachinsky, David M 174,193,448 _ ; . ;i entA Forsberg, Rochelle L 303 Funk. Rodney M 180.185,374 Gerstberger. Jeff F 411 Graham. Steven H 354 Haddock, Michael J. 448 Forster. Melanie P 382 Funkhouser. Jack R 353 Gerstner. Lisa L. 192,314 Grain Science Club 161 Hadicke, Joni L . . 317 amsc ' ' - Forsyth, Brad 300 FuQua Fred 446 Gt eller. Douglas R 189,374 Cranberry, George S 327 Haertling.SallyA 153.293 Fosberg. Kathryn Foster. Anne K 405 445 Furney.MarkA 144.168,204 Furnish Susan J. 174,446 Gholson. Jennifer L Gianforte, Thomas J 446 446 Cranberry, Margaret Grandy, Michael L 156,293 354 Haffener. Connie A 150,176,448 Hanson KffiA Haffener, Joe A, 171.173.422 H SC ' ! ' ; Foster. Celeste K 367 Fussell Larry G 369 Gibbs.Sue J 143, 148,317 Graney. Joseph S 172,422 Haffener, TeresaS. 165,448 Har ' iso ' : ' - : Foster. David W 374 Fyfe GregoryB 149 172 446 Giblin. Marguerite A 344 Granstrom. David E 382 Hading. Michael N 375 H nyCr Foster. Debra M 1 77 303 Gibson Barbara M ,334 Grant, John J 447 Hagans, Robin A ... 448 Foster, Don Foster. Gary L Foster, JohnS Foster. Kelli 1 Foster. Kent R. Foster. Lisa 322 445 318 . . 445 445 163 ggg Gibson, Craig A Gibson, Daniel W Gibson, Marsha A Gibson, Roger E Gibson. Shawn D Giesch, John A . 369 424 ' 367 424 155 .405 Grapengater. Dana L Grat, David C Grauerholz. Marcus R Graul, Brian J Graves, Carolyn L . Graves, Jennie L ... 354 388 305 178. 181 174, 447 155. 173 Hagedorn, Stephen W ..448 Hageman. Steve J. . . 149.354 Hart8a rf y T Hagen.LoisJ. 148 -r .!- ' =- Hagen, Randell S 307 - a - jre ! Hagenmaier. Marsha A. 143,148, HartMaryA 317 na Pai ' i J Foster. Mark E 388 Gaar, Anne E 367 Qger. Debra L 290 Graves, Marc L 418 Hager, Daryle E 375 Foster. Roberto 180.371 Gabel. Crystal L, . 446 Gigstad, Alfred O. . 296 Graves, Sharon K 170 401 Hagerman. Dennis R. .. 448 Harrj ' M FreftMi Fountain. Debra M 156.445 Gabel. Susan R. .446 Gilbert. Scott A 382 Graves, William D ,369 Hagerman, Joyce D. . ...448 Ha MaryM Fountaine, Charles W 445 Gable, C Michael 446 Gill, Jeffrey L 374 Gray. Barbara J ,341 Haggard, Markham R 448 todrewE Foust, Tina M. . 173.303 Gable, Debora K .446 Gillan, Kathleen A. . . 1 56, 293 Gray. Kathy E 151 Hahn. Carol L 1 66, 1 80. 1 88, 428 Harra = Fouts, Amy L. 293 Gaito. Michael E 374 Gillaspie. Judy M. . 344 Gray, Pamela S . .180 Hahn, Carole A 448 HartnwMafwS Fowler. Daniel L 424 Gale. David M 353 Gillen. P Richard 374 Graybeal, Patricia 161 Hahn, Douglas E .300 Hanna , ' , ' ' - Fowler, Donald K . 382 Galitzer. James L 186 Gillett, Catherine A. 175, 188,293 Greek Follies 51 Haifleigh, Debra G. . 145.194,195, HaflW. ' ,-- Fowler. Douglas D . 146 149 173 Galitzer. Steven J 186 Gillette, Curtis J. 405 Greeley, Paul K .388 382 Base WueS 393 Gallagher, Richard R 1 94 Gilliam, Peggy A 149. 173,334 Green, Cheryl E 344 Hainline. Chad W . . 180.181 Haseiwt RonaCJ Fowler. Ronald K 382 Gallagher, Steven P 325 Gilmore. Deborah D 446 Green. Daniel J 375 Hainline, Dallas D 1 79 .-- .j,ttK Fowles. Jan M. . 344 Gallagher, Tom L 164 Gilmore, James W. 446 Green, David D ,161, 162.296 Haji. AhT 382 Hashrs Judy ' K Fowles. Janet K. .166,445 Gallaway.DaleW 418 Gilmore. Lynn A. 427 Green, Dee A 447 Hajovsk , Robert J 448 Hasietl LsaS Fowles. Rita K 175,361 Galle.JackG 296 Gilsletder, Edward F 382 Green, Marcia B 309 Hake, Lynn D 448 Hass ' -: ' - Fowles. Ronald R 172 Galle.KayA 446 Ginn.MaryL . 1 69 Green, Natalie K 150. 165.424 Hake, Nolan F 422 assa , ; ' - Fox. Deborah K. . . 160,427 Gallego. Jorge 1 374 Given. Patricia J. . 155.361 Green, Pamela Y. .153, 192,329 Halawani, Abdul-Aziz 448 Hasag Mantyn Fox. Kenneth L. 194 Gallehugh. Keith C 307 Gladden, Linda C 446 Green, Polly A. ... 397 Hale, DanielS 160 Hasie - ' - Fox. Larry D 143. 169.407 Gallion. Randa .180.427 Glanville. Beth A 176.293 Green. Thomas H . . . .375 Hale, Karen L 319 -a ' : r : ' -- ' ' - ' ' . Fox, William L. 382 Gallon. MaryE 446 Glasco, Calvin . .411, 183 Greenbank, Janet . . .314 Hale, Steven C 405 Hatcner.CinrjaA Francis, Louise 316 Gallup. Donald R 388 Glasgow, John E , 177.185 Greenberg, Barry S . 447 Hale, VelvaC 159.382 Francq. Carole A 194 Gallup. George A 388 Glasker, Patricia A . .446 Greene, Earl F . . 288 Haley, Paul J 448 -I-;,; : : . Frank. Lawrence V . 371 Galvm. Richard R ...446 Glatt, Andrew K 300 Greene. Judy L . . 334 Hall, Barbara A 382 Harra. 1 ,- ' Franken, David P. 166,374 Galyardt. Susan I 173.313 Glatt, Christopher G 354 Greenlee, John W ... .411 Hall, DouglasA 147 Hanan MKhae A Franken, John W 422 Gamba. Julie A 147.341 Glaze. Debbie L. . . . 446 Greenwood. Debra A 344 Hall, Kathryn L 448 Frankendeld, Peggy A 445 Gamble. Diana L 446 Glaze. James B. 149.446 Greer, Irvin S . . 193 Hall. Mary A 448 _ . Franklin, Douglas L. . . 196,374 Gamma Phi Beta 341 Gleason, Martin J . 446 Greer. William L ... 354 Hall. Maureen L . . 157.172,314 H3LB Tom Franklin, Earl B 176. 194. 196 Gamma Theta Upsilon 146 Gleue. Theresa M, 187.344 Gregg. Stephen L . . 354 Hall. Robert E 163.195 Haugh FJr ' ;- Franklin, Mark A. 445 Ganjidoost, Mohammad 195 Glick. Denise L. 148, 174,309 Gregory. Joan E 171.344 Hall. Sharon G 448 Hause janeC Franklin, Wayne L . 187, 197 Gantz.GaryR 407 Glidden, MaryE. 153 191 192,367 Gregory. Juliana 447 Hall.Suzan 181 Mauser. W Marine Frantz. Doreen K. 151.334 Gantz. Michael W 382 Glotzbach. Joseph C .405 Gregwire, Roberta L 447 Hall. Tracy 307 Hausmann Gary J Fraser. Barry R. . . . 382 Gaplm ger, Candi J 192 Glotzbach, Susan M 177.341 Greig, David 322 Hambelton, JohnJ 322 Have! E er - Frasier, Duane W. 162,330 Garber. Susan D 446 Glover, Diane K 1 60. 446 Gress, Judith K 159,160,187,188, Hambnght, Mar|one B 1 56. 448 : V: Frasier, Joe L 179.330 Gardner, Charles R 446 Gnaegy, David L .409 447 Hamilton, Bradley 188 Havens John H Frazier, Jerome B 353 Gardner, Leonard M 353 Gobber, JanaS 329 Greusel, David B .... 344 Hamilton, James J, 1 79, 1 95. 1 97 HaveiVafnc SrrceF Freach.G S. 374 Gardner, Mary 414 Gobel, MaryE 446 Grice, Cara M .293 Hamilton. James J. ...307 Haw jerjrje Frederick. PhilB. . 445 Gardner, Michael J 344 Gochenour, Kim G 424 Grider, Nancy E .447 Hamilton. Nancy A 175.428 Fredrick. Bruce L 144 Gardner, Nancy C 446 Goddard, Jona J .428 Grier. Carol J 179,447 Hamilton. Raymond J . 189 H T Frednkson, Douglas 149 Gardner. Rebecca C 151.341 Godfrey. Janna L 334 Grier. Christopher A 149 171,447 Hamilton, Stuart A 382 Freed. Stephen W. . 418 Garinger, Susan L 1 80, 334 Godfrey. John B 180 Grieves. Brad A .409 Hamlett, Charles A. .318 F reeding, Catherine 319 Garner, John B 149 Godfrey. Terry S, 180, 188.309 Grieves, Kevin D . .409 Hamm. Carols 175,185,317 n - Freeland, Gaila M 445 Garnson. Vicki L 446 Godsey, Bruce F 382 Griffin. Betty L ... 428 Hamm. Dana L 161.448 Freeland, Gloria . 203 Garrelts. Kathy K. 164 Godsey, Julie A 382 Griffin. Susan K 165,447 Hamma. Julie A 160.334 f ' ' ' Freely. Debbie L. . 313 Garrett. David A 172 Godspell 35 Gnffing. William J. . ... 354 Hammeke. Kevin F 448 Freeman, Bruce R 353 Garrett, Elaine G . . . .303 Goeckel, Carol L 317 Griffith, Edward L. ... 399 Hammeke. Mary E 401 ' Freeman, David W. . 300 Garrett. Roann K. 414 Goermg, Diane S . . 334 Griffith. Lori A. 192.314 Hammerli. Barbara A 361 a cnnstopnei Freeman. Patricia A. 445 Garrett, Rosann G 143.414 Goerl, Valerie A . .428 Griffith, Stephen J. . . 288 Hammond. Susan L 448 - ' ' - ! ' ; Frees. Jerry L. 183.411 Garrett, Terry J 307 Goetz, Ronald E 446 Griffith, Susan L 143.401 Hampl. Julie L 1 43. 1 48. 1 50. 1 69. -H. :;- _ French, BronaS 334 Garrison, Stephen J 300 Goff, Janet A 157.401 Griffith, Thomas S .418 196,344 HaynakerHall French. Deborah K. 445 Garrison. Victoria L. 170 Gotorth. Gregory L 196,354 Grimes. Gail M 303 Hanchett. Tara S. . . . . 334 French. Faire 154.330 Garst.Bari A 174,446 Goforth, Todd A ... 354 Grimwood. James T. . . . 185.375 Hancock, Karen J 319 lay wesJeyP French, JeaneneG. . . .162.445 Garten, Carl H 187.446 Goheen. Dalta G ... 396 Gripp. Lisa A 401 Hand. Jennifer J 428 Hayden Hems 3 French. Larry L . .193 Garten. Casey D 147.159.187,330 Goin. Nancy C 151,319 Grisham. Cynthia S 183 192.364 Haney, Karla J 448 French. Russell W 325 Garten. Gary F 382, 180 Gold. David N ... .307 Grissom, Joni F . . 293 Hang Gliding 264 Hayes Wane, Frewen, Cynthia J 293 Garten, Mark L . 446 Goldberger. Sara . . .181 Groenewold. Joan K 424 Hankms. Kevin G 424 aynes, orarJey H Frey, Edward H 353 Gartner, Christopher 1 72, 422 Golden Hearts 152 Grogan, Michael R. . 162,298 Hanna. Donald . .. ..147.180 aynes Elaine 3 Frey, Joyce L 166.316 Cartrell, Gregory A 171, 330 Goldsmith. Linda G 364 Gross, Jeff L 177 Hannalord, Roger W 307 Hayes Jeanne; Frey. Ruth A. 397 Gartrell, Susan K 154,187,309 Goldstein, Alan M. . .186 Gross, Timothy L 447 Hannmg, Valerie D 156 H s Rouen 3 Freyenberger, Stanley 162 Garvert, Terrance J 195.405 Golf 223 Gross, William M 161.354 Hansen, Carol J 1 70, 448 Haws SteS Fnck. Christine E 427 Gary. Randy L 1 72. 446 Gonterman, Pamela J 319 Grossardt. Eileen E .155 1 92. 334 Hansen. Gary W. . . . 195, 418 Hays unrjas Fnck, Nancy L 445 Gassaway, Teresa A , . . 382 Gonzales, Lucinda M 188,446 Grossardt. Philip F . 447 Hansen. George B. 177 Fnck. Suzi L. 334 Gast, David C 307 Gonzalez, Michael L 147,422 Grossarot. Theodore 146 Hansen. Jeanne E. . . 178 Hayier.ta Fnebus, Melanie A 334 Gaston. Paul M 374 Gonzolas, Edward 180.413 Grossenbacher. Jeffery . . . 322 Hansen. Nancy J . 1 96, 383 13 - :;: Fnedel, Mike D. . 394 Gates. Joni L 446 Good, Craig A. 160.330 Grothusen. Janets . 447 Hansen, Terry J . . 448 -.:-- -::;-: Fnednch, Raymond L 445 Gates. Shelly L 364 Good, Lisa 179,446 Grout. Katharine D 167 Hansley. Stephen M 418 HazzarQ uangiy Friend. Lindsay A 160.364 Gattshall. William O 160 Good, Mary A 156 Grout, Pamela S 143.192 Hanson, Carolyn S 401 Heaccck A, j Friend. Susan C 445 Gatz. Charla K. . . . . . 334 Good, Ricky C. 375 Grover, Joyce K. . .447 Hanson. Dirk A. ... 307 Fnesen. Bradley W. 147.445 Gatz. Janet K .446 Gooden, Kenneth B 149 Groves. Randy D 147,307 Hanson. Margaret A 401 Friesen. Cynthia L. 382 Gatz. John E 446 Gooding, Martha J 361 Grout, Pam S 1 55 Hapgood, Curtis R. 288 Friesen. Janice E 175.317 Gatz. Susan M 160.344 Goodnow Hall , .343 Gruber, Betty J 188.344 Hague. Ekramul ... . . 195 Htaty Mania,: Friesen, Robert S 382 Gatzoulis. Paula L 152,313 Goodman, William R 1 73 Gruber, Cynthia D .290 Harbach, Evelyn J 317 j- .;-.- ; Frmt.GaryD . . .165.445 Gaudreau, Suzanne 334 Goodrich, Tracy J 401 Gruber, Randall R . . 160 188 447 Harber, Sheryl L 185 Ffisque. John T. 390 Gaunce.CandeeL 334 Goodsell. Carols. 183 Gruber. Terry M 447 Harbert. Cathie A. . . 364 Fntson. Rodney D . 418 Gay, VickeyL 427 Goodwin, Bruce W .446 Gruenthal, Linda A. 447 Harbison, RexW 187.188 Fntzerneier. Randy J. 330 Gayle, Shelly J 154,174.364 Godley, Barbara E ... 364 Gudikunst. Pamelas. .147 152,319 Harden. James M 159, 354 Tew Froebe. Donald D 164,445 Gaylord, Jeanette F. 150.344 Gordon, Daniel E. . . 392 Guillen, Teresa M . . .188 Harden, Philip A. .. 171,195.422 nettr wCr; Frohne. Richard F. 445 Gbodi, Timothy A 186 Gordon. James L 187 416 Guipre, Keven A 448 Harder. Jan A 156 Frornholtz, Cindy M. 334 Gebhards, James R 446 Gordon, Steve J 298 Gump, Max E 180 Harder. Melmda L .290 toOHfe Fromme, Debra J 181, 182.397 Gebhart, Mark D 390 Gorman. L Kevin . . 446 Gunn, Frances A 155,183 Harder. Ron J 448 Frost. Jeff R. 179, 181 Gebhart. Sheryll S 156.290 Gorman. Roger C 149 Gunther. Greg J. ... 405 Harding. William D. . . . 1 80 H M9er u a , Fry. Cynthia L 143.293 Gee. Darrell C 374, 185 Gorton. Robert L 194 Gunzelman. Rita J. . . . .303 Hardman. Barry S. . . 166. 422 Fry. Roselyn G . . 445 Gee. KimberlyK 309 Gosnell, Joni 447 Gurnsey, Michael A. . . ... 330 Hardman, Jan E 157. 344 Frydendall. Douglas L 374 Gehlbach, Debra L. .314 Goss. Carol E 162 Gustafson, Mark M. . . . 165,393 Hardman. Kristi J 187,344 ' Hargrave, Joseph R. 180. 181, 182 Heltel, Tim H . ... 325 Hicklin, Miriam L. . . . . . 192.309 Holliday. HarleyS 162 Huelskamp, Clinton A 288 I 1 Hargrave, Kittie V ... 1 80 Hefty, ElameC 143. 148. 188.317 Hickok, Timothy W. 371 Hollinberger, Thomas S 196,416 Huerter, Susan M .428 Hargus. Herschella K . .344 Heidebrecht. brent L . . 388 Hicks Dianna L 335 Hollingsworth, MicheleV 367 Juettenmueller, Jeannie .157 li, Harkey. Jerry P. 448 Heidrick, Ruth A. .449 Hicks Judith A 335 Hollis, Brian W. . . . 450 Huey, Daniel E. . .450 Harlan. Nancy L 1 56, 448 Heikes, Janice K 196,401 Hicks, Linda S . 153.449 Hollis. Ralph . 450 Huey, Kirk E . 411 ' ' -. Si Harlm. Maureen C . . . .334 Heikes. Keith A .161 Hicks, Marcia . . .156.449 Hollis. LauraS. 329 Huffman, Kathy L 383 ;; Harmon, David P 407 Heim, Danny W ... 399 Hicks, Michael D 422 Holloway. LindaS 364 Huffman, Terry E . .418 . Harmon. William J 162 Heiman, Judith M. . . . .... 335 Hiebert. Dallas D. 376 Holloway, Randall L 450 Huggins, Howard M . . .450 Ik Harms. Wayne A. 149 448 Heiman, Tim 149, 173 327 Higgins Jane M 335 Holloway, Richard D 450 Hughes. Cynthia 346 | Harned. Holly A. . 314 Heimer, Barbara J. 196.428 Higgins. Joni K. . . 449 Holman, Beverly E. 1 46. 1 48. 1 75, Hughes, Dennis L . . .450 L Harold, Bryan D 164.305 Heimer, Kathleen A. .... 335 Higgs, Debra S. .143, 172, 173,401 188,414 Hughes, Jeffrey D . . . .405 n in Harp, Ri chard D. . . . .409 Hein. Robert H ... 288 Hildebrand, Donald S 330 Holman, Steve C 383 Hughes, Jeraldyn L . . .450 Harper. Mark A 344 Hein. John W 148,335 Hildebrand, John W 177.449 Holmes, Carol E 146,170.450 Hughes, John D 167 Harper, MarkW . . .448 Hein. Margaret M, . . . 153,424 Hildebrand, Rex E 307 Holmes, David K 298 Hughes, Lonnie J .354 1 1 1 Harper, Robert L. 191 Hemen, Michelle R 192,314 Hildebrand. Shan A. . 154,414 Holmes, Joe D 450 Hughey, Beverly A .346 u Harpsler, Leslies 341 Hemiger, Susan R. . . . . . . .317 Hilderhof.GaryB. . . . 300 Holmes, John A 1 79 Hull, Terry A .180 r S Harrington, Nancy K . . 335 Heinrich Forrest 354 Hiles, William T 345 Holmes, Luann 1 48, 1 74, 450 Hullman, Kathryn L. . . 1 43, 175,450 ' G Harris, Cyd A 171 Heinz. Patrick D . 181 Hilger. Charles J . 205.371 Holmes, Rodney E 376 Hullman, Kim H .450 : Harris, Jean 176,448 Heinz. Richard M. . . . . . . 375 Hill. Brenda J 345 Holmquisl, Kristin D 428 Humbarger, Glenn E .450 III Harris. NancyS 448 Heitschmidt. Diane K 401 Hill, Brian K 354 Holste. Curtis A 450 Humbarger, Joyce E 401 )K Harris, Sally K . 414 Held, Jon J 172, 193,449 Hill, Charlotte J 361 Holste. Harlan G 162.305 Humes. Deann 1 73, 335 Ill.lJJid Harris, William R. 168, 195. 203.371 Helferstay, Cynthia . 165,449 Hill, Cheryl A . . . .152.449 Holste, Jay H 296 Humfeld, Terry L .... 354 -: Harrison, Brent A. 448 Heline, Linda F 449 Hill, Cheryl J . .154.449 Holste, Sylvia N. 450 Hummer, Whitney A. . . 314 Harrison. Debra L . 448 Heller. Barry R 193 Hill. Clarence A ... 1 72. 449 Holl, Debra L 160 Humphrey, James M .... 325 Harrison, Ivan E 187 Heller, Sally A 155 Hill, Cornell C 187 Holt.Denise J 364 Humphreys. Randy B, . . .307 Harrison, Jane A . . 448 Hellman John E 390 Hill, Deborah S 345 Holt, Kathryn A 310 Humphreys, Wendy W. ... 1 74 1?1,l?3(2 Harrison, Kim A . , . 181 Hellmer John F 394 Hill, Donald A 376 Holt, LynnR 160,296 Hundley, Allan B 176 Harrison, Nancy A . .367 Helm, Janet L. . ...367 Hill, Jeanie E 449 Holt. Mark I 178, 181,417 Hung, Peter M . . 346 Harrison, Paul D 195,390 Heimer, Dennis W. . . 172,449 Hill, Jeffrey C 383 Holt, Michael T 383 Hunsley, Stephannie A. 150 L: Harry Chapin 103 Heimer, Kendall J 149,449 Hill, Krisla M 345 Holt. Nancy L 346 Hunt. Alan H ... 369 :: Harryman, Joan D . . 448 Helms, Vicki L 192,293 Hill. Mary S 335 Holt, Susan E 450 Hunt, Brenda S 148.451 II! Jl Harsh. Alicia K . 314 Helton. Timothy M. . . . . .418 Hill, Roger R 449 Holthaus, Debra K 428 Hunt. David W 179,354 Hart, Barry T . . 354 Helvey. Richard L. 161.449 Hill. Susan E. . . 180,345 Holthus. Teresa C 153.177 Hunt. Deborah L 451 Hart. Laura E 329 Hemberger. Brenda . 160 Hillebrandt. Carol A. 147. 196 Holtman, Gail D 169 Hunt, Deborah L . . .180 Hart, Lawrence R. ... 422 Hemmer, Michael W . .375 Hillman, RexV. 376 Hollman, Michael E. . . .305 Hunt. Jeffreys. 451 Hart, Mary A. . . 448 Hemphill, Susan ... 449 Hills. Scott W 409 Holton, George M 1 49, 450 Hunt, Sheri A 175.317 E Hart, Paul J ... 205 Henderson, Bonnie J . . .335 Hilton, Barry P 300 Holub. Gary S 450 Hunt, Teri J . . . .317 rat if IE 16 I sd 81, iHn , mj ;.; u ; |J ill). Ill: :: ax Hi is?,i:; . : Harter, Penelope K Hartfield, Freddie D Hartig, MaryM. Hartman, Andrews Hartman, Davy S Hartman, Matthews Hartman, William R Hartnett. KimL Hase, Vickie S Haselhorsl, Ronald J Haskett. Joyce K Haskms. Judy ' K. Haslett. LisaS Hass, Kenneth J Hassan Urnaru 344 . . 448 183.448 307 . . 293 . . . .354 318 . 448 . . . .162 371 187 169.448 .448 318 186 Henderson, Carol W Henderson, Carrie . . Henderson, Grady Henderson, Kevin S. . Henderson. Kim D. . . Henderson, Linda S Henderson, Marlene K Henderson, Mark. . . Henderson, Sherilyn S Henderson, Susan B Henderson. Susan R. Hendricks, Charles R Hendrickson, Jana D. Hendry, David W. Henke. Marsha K. . . . Henke, Maurene L. . . Henke, Nancy J Henley, James B. Henley. Mark E Henn, Anthony W Henn, Carla J Henne, Pamela M. . . Henness, Timothy C Henoch, Richard B. Henricks, Vernon J. . . Henry, Cynthia K Henry, Florence Henry, Frank J Henry, Frank J Henry Jackson Henry, Lisa D 156, . . .342 191 . . 376 .307 1 55 179 143 . . .325 175,335 150,303 ... 342 . . . .418 . . . .424 . . . .405 1 56, 383 . . 428 175.335 ....145 183 .... 383 . . . . 449 . . 309 . . 298 180,327 147,449 . . . 449 449 .418 .... 449 86 180. 364 Hiltz, Susan M Hilyard. Mark Himebaugh. Karen S Hindman, Kristi L Hinkel. Jill A Hinkson, Craig 0. Hinman, M. Keith Hinson. Donald J Hinson. Lois A Hinten Steven R 401 193 364 345 . .170,361 449 181 298 449 449 Holub, Rodney J. . . 450 Holyfield, Roger L 450 Holzrichter. Shirley A 428 Homecoming 65 Hunter, Steven R Huntsman. Jennifer . Huppe, Gary S Hurlburt. Mary M Hurlburt, Randy K Hurley, Allen L Hurley, Barbara E Hurley. James A Hurley, Martha L Hurst, Gary L Hurst, John P Hurst-Walker, Deborah K. Hurt, Linda L Hurtig. Franks Huschka, James A Huseman, BobE Huseman, William A Huser, Bernard P Huseth, Gregory C Hustead, David R Huston, Donna K Huston, Randall W Huston, Terry A Hutchison, Jay N Hutchison, Jon M Hutchison, Maria S Mutton. Bradley D Hutton, Lacinda G. . . . Huxman, Marilou Hyde, Douglas W Hyson, Joyce A 451 451 451 160 . ... 1 72 144,451 451 .327 167,450 .376 . . .376 451 1 70. 329 417 . ...300 . . . .451 . . . .451 . . .451 451 383 402 451 451 . . .354 181,376 . . .397 ... 369 ... 303 180,451 451 142.424 Home Economics Council 1 75 Home Economics Education Club 175 Home Economics Extension Professional Section 1 75 honer, Steven L 407 Honig, Catherine A 414 Honstead, William H 197 Hood, Patsy A 1 74 Hood, Thomas P 376 Hooker, Holly K 314 Hooper, Sherri L. .167 Hooper, Thomas K 159.354 Hoover, Alan J 371 Hoover, Stephen J 450 Hopkins. David W 450 Hopkins, Debra J 180 Hopkins, Holly A . . .367 Hopkins Thomas L 146.149.173 177.450 Hoppas, Douglas W 405 Horan, Kathleen D 450 Horan, Tim . . 450 Horine. Troy E 354 Hornbaker, Kenneth O . ,330 Hornecker, Susan L 335 Homer, Kimberly C 335 Hintz. David J Hintz James R 449 424 Hipps, Alan H Hirning, Mary L Hirt Steven E . .195 314 185 376 Hassig Marilyn 341 Hisketl, Larry W. Hitch, Daniel L Hitt. Stephen H. Hittle. Lisa L. . Hitz, Lottie M Hixson, Barbara J Hjetland. Peggy L Hobble, Deborah F. Hobson, Judy A Hobson, L Leon Hobson, Patti S Hoch, Joseph C Hoch. Sydney A Hoch.WyatIA Hodge, Sharon D. . . Hodges, Marilyn A . Hodges, Terry L. . . 383 390 181.449 180, 181, 182 319 . 183,450 383 .145. 176.329 450 . . 171, 173 157,428 354 319 . 180.307 450 450 411 Haslert, Arthur A Hatcher. Bryan C Hatcher, Cmda A 152, Hatfield. John R Hathaway, Cynthia A Hathaway, Melissa K 175. Hattan, Michael A Hatlrup, Darlene M Haug. Edward W Haug. Tom Haugh. Dennis A Hause. Jane C Hauser. W Maxine Hausmann, Gary J. Havel, Eileen F Havel. Nita L ... 394 . 411 175,448 . . . .405 . . . .329 176.329 . 405 . .335 . . . 390 390 149 361 288 . . . .354 414 180, 181 l :: Havens, John H 407 Henry, Stephen L 394 Hodgson, Kim A. .424 Hornung. MaryG 153.175.346 1 H H 5J A 11 : ' . ' :: ' - Haverkamp, Bryce F Hawk, Debbie Hawkins, Laura J Hawkins, Teri J Hawkins, Trudy J 163,194 ... 1 80 .... 397 448 335 Henry, Terry L Henry, Terry W. Hensler, Patricia J Hensley, Kathy D Hensley, Kenneth S. . ... 354 160,330 .... 335 1 79 .... 424 Hodgson, Michael L Hodnefield, Lori Hodson, Philip A Hoeckle. Cheryl L Hoefgen, Debra K. . 354 361 160 401 290 Horst.GuyR 388 Horticulture Club 1 62 Horton, John R 1 46 Hoseney, Cheryl L . . 367 Hoskinson, Rex A 1 60. 330 III SA Hawkmson, Paul G 195.307 Hensley, Kevin C. 185.376 Hoener, Carolyn 148,175,361 Hossam, MD Mosharra 450 ICC Council 195 IMS 1 ' Hawn, Raymond B 1 60 Henlzler, Carol L. . . . .... 335 Hoenk, Karen A 335 Hostin, Gary L. ... 298,450 Idol. Kern S .... 296 1C i Haworth, Daniel R 172.448 Hepperly, Mary L. 157. ' 176,397 Hoerman, Connie M. 450 Hostinsky. Dale D. 1 44. 1 59. 450 Illgner. Rick 146 Hawthorne, Bradley C ... 375 Heptig, Lora A 166,449 Hofelt, William C . 193 Hotchkiss, Julia A 293, 310 Imboden, Kathy B 346 : -: Hawthorne. Susan E 448 Herbers, Martin E. . . . 159,354 Hoff, Beverly J 167 Houck, Sheryl L 428 Immenschuh. Carole A 151 Hax, Christopher . . .409 Herbers, Mary S. . 157, 180.317 Hotfine, Susan L . . 450 Houl. William G 149, 171,354 Ingle. Paul B . . .376 if Haxton, Rickey L .... 354 Herbers, Susan K. . . .. ..335 Hottman, Barbara L 157 Houghton, Joan 157, 364 Ingram, James R . . .322 5-. Hay. Karen L 180.290 Herbert. Susan L .... 309 Hoffman, Calvin C. 450 Houghton, Linda K 1 93, 335 Ingram, Karen A 192.346 ' ! 1(8 ISC ' S Haymaker Hall 351 Herl Jacqueline 449 314 Houghton, Patricia L .... 160 314 . ' - Hay. Rebecca J . 344 Herman, John D . . . .390 Hoffman, Linda K. . . 450 Hougland, Steven C 388 Ingram, Sheryl A ..143, 148, 157, S Hay. Wesley R 180.354 Herman, Kathryn A. . . . . 449 Hoffman, Mark A. 416 Houk.JanetM. 154,175.414 167.314 ij J ' ; Hayden, Richard G 327 Herman, Sandra J. . . . ... 449 Hoffman, Pamela E . 174, 183, 196, Houlder. Edith C 314 Ingram, Stephen W 405 :!: Hayes, M H .345 Herme, Lucas M. . . .188 401 Houser, MarkC. , . 383 Inman. Tammy J 383 If Hayes. Monte L 383 Hermes, Steve 197 Hoffman, Steven J 143, 169, 197. Housn, Richard D. . ...450 Institute of Electrical and Haynes. Bradley R 449 Hernandez, Olivia B ... 335 407 Housing ' 286 Electronic Engineers .173 G - Haynes, Elaine B . . 191 Herold, Don . . . .405 Hoffman, Susan L 152,293 Houston, Hilda R 155 Inter-Collegiate Athletic Council III l Haynes, Jeanine E . . .449 Heronemus, Daryl L. . 171,449 Hoffmann, Stephen J 327 Houtz, Becky A 383 228 Haynes, Robert G 160.449 Herring. Quentin J. . . .... 354 Hofmann, Robert J 376 Hoverder, Jamie 364 Inter-Fraternity Council .195 ' ' Haynes, SteveS ... 327 Herriott. Janet L ... .155 Hofmeier, Dennis G 325 Howard, Bonnie G 167 Intramurals 258 !-: Hays. Linda S 401 Herrmann, Charles E 177, 180,376 Hofmeister, Phyllis E. 428 Howard, Elizabeth B. . . .367 In Tenebris Association . . .164 1 ' ! Hays, Ross E ... 383 Herrmann, Darrell E . 177 180.376 Hogan, Terry L 288 Howard, Gregory W 388 Ireland, Deborah A .... 397 :G Hayter, Dick 191 Herrmann, Patrick K. ... .160 Hoge. Cordelia G. . . 319 Howard, Robert L 407 Irela nd, James R . . .451 Hazen, Richard D 354 Herron, Lyndell D. . . . . . .449 Hoge. Del G 151. 174 Howard. Ruth E 1 70. 1 83, 450 Ireland, Randal W . . .418 I Hazen, Roberts . . . 354 Herron, Maynard M 171,449 Hogerty, Kathryn A. .151,342 Howe. David M 322 Ireland, Tara R .... 290 : Hazzard. Daniel M .369 Herrs, Steven A . 165,449 Hoglund. Bruce A. ..450 Howe, Marcia L 450 Irons. Stephen M 160,376 ; ' : Heacock, Anita L 449. 162 Herwig, Suzanne A . 160.290 Hoglund, Gregory S 371 Howell. Jerald A 149 In in, Douglas W . . . 180 V Headnck, Daniel E 164 167.383 Herz, Saleh M .... 383 Hogue, Craig E 161 Howell. RickS 422 Irwin, John W 149,288 r Healy, Frank G 160,449 Herzog, Gregorys. . 179.411 Hoisington, Laura I. . 169.428 Howell. Ronald T. . .354 Isaacson, Janna J 402 -! Healy, Mark J .405 Heslop. Stephen J. .. . .418 Hoisington, Paula J 179,181.345 Howes, Brian T 369 Isaacson. Marsha R 151,303 X Healy, Matthew F 420 Hess, Connie J ... 335 Hoke, Brent K 376 Howlett, Harold D 189 Isch, Ellen M . . .319 1 U Heathman. James B 166.375 Hess, Janette L 401 Holborn, Jeanne A. 151,450 Hoyt. Tina M 310 Isch, Lisa I 148 319 ill Hecht. Janet M . . .449 Hess, Kathryn A . .181 Holbrook, LorindaS. 175,345 Hrabe. Christy 157. 180. 293 Isenberg, Carol E ... 335 i: Hecht. John L 180,354 Hess, Michael H. . ...354 Holcom, Sandra K . 162.450 Hrones, Karen L 314 Isenberg, Marjorie E 335 $ Hecht. Robert D 411 Hetlenbach. Bruce E. 449 Holcomb, Mark A. . . 354 Huaman.Rosal 383 Isenhower. Dana J 402 IjjtS Hecht, Teresa R. . 180.414 Hettrick, Brian T, ... 345 Holcomb, Suzan G. 192.335 Huang. Francis Y. . . 1 95 Isern, John M 451 Heckman Chad C 411 Heuermann, Paul A. 192 407 Holder, Blaine K. 161, 450 Hubalek, Verne A 159,450 Isern, Myron J. . .451 M Heckman, John E 449 Hevermann, Pamela S .... 335 Holder! Mary C 1 85 450 Hubbs, Susan L 1 57 Ives, Bradley D . .417 it Hedda Gabler 36 Hewelt. Phillip W. 192.182 Holeman, Linda L 146. 170,309 Hucke, Brenda L 317 Ives, Marianne 1 73, 293 : Hedger, Marjorie J 1 56. 354 Hewson. Roberta D . . . .449 Holl. Diane K 383 Hudson, Donald L 413 Ives. Randy .409 L y: Hedger, Marsha L ... 335 Heylin. Michael T. . . .422 Holland, Barbara J 364 Hudson. Judy M 450 Ives. Ron M 394 ;: Hedke. Dennis E 449 Hibbard, Gordon V. . . 143, 165.449 Holland, Constance L 450 Hudson, Kristie L 1 54. 383 Iwert, William H . .451 iD 166 ' 2 Hedrick, Nancy K .170 449 Hickel, Gregory A. . . . . 416 Hollander, Stephen J 394 Hueben, Brian C 388 Iwinski, David M . . .451 S fl Hednck.SallyA. . ..363 Hickert, Daniel E . 449 Holle, Barbara R 309 Huebert. Michael 420 Izadi, Reza . . . .451 index 485 B B H Johnson. KnstmeG 335 Kappa Alpha Psi 187 Kilby, Pamela 157.160.335 Koechner. Joseph L 1 60 183.296 JJJ Johnson, Kyron D Johnson. Laurie D Johnson. Leroy Johnson. Leslie D Johnson, Linda K Johnson, Lon E 371 165 178, 181 151,335 162,402 424 Kappa Alpha Thela Kappa Delta Kappa Delta Pi Kappa Kappa Gamma Kappa Kittens Kappa Sigma 361 363 146 366 152 369 Kilgore, Patricia A Kilgore. Terri Kill, Colleen P Kille, Barbara A Killion, Cindy L Killion, Janette S. 454 .335 154.342 157.303 . 454 454 Koehler, Edward C Koehn, Charles E. Koehn. Matthew A. Koelsch, Jane Koenig, Stephen W. Koepke, Leslie A. . . 383 172.173 388 157 173.191 147.342 Li 9 Jacka Carl G 451 Johnson, Mary J 153.452 Kappelmann, Mary F 150,303 Killough. John E 388 Koger, Barbara A 428 Jackson Brian C 330 Johnson, Michael D 327 Karlin. Deanna M 157.364 Kilpatnck, Sean D 383 Kogler, Larry R 300 Laa ' Jackson Denise M 182.451 Johnson. Michael G 452 Karlin. Julie A 310 Kimball. Harry E 193.454 Kohake. Marcia R 170.454 Jackson Howard T 176 288 Johnson, Montrula 152. 180 Karnes. Howard A 288 Kimble. David E 1 46 173.399 Kohl, Vicki M Jackson. Joseph M Jackson Latessa R 162 155 Johnson, Muriel J Johnson. Nancy J 1 45 452 153.452 Karr. Steven D Karst. Catherine R 453 .342 Kimmel. Halsey W Kimple. Kandace A 418 428 Kohman, Julie E. Kohman, Kurt ::S Jackson Sharyl L 451 Johnson. Pam 151 Karst. David W 305 Kimsey, Gwen L 454 Kohman Ray J 454 Lac.SW Jacob. Cynthia K Jacob. Steven D. Jacobs. Brent D Jacobs. Carl L Jacobs, Charles C Jacobs, Doti L Jacobs. Joan M Jacobs, Mendy S Jacobs, Roxanne M. Jacobs. Theodore R Jacobs. William R Jacobsen, Scott L 428 354 305 298 . .451 . 179 451 314 451 388 451 178, 181 Johnson, Rex G Johnson, Richard L Johnson, Robert L Johnson, Robert R Johnson, Robert P Johnson, Robert S Johnson. Sandra K. Johnson, Scott M Johnson, Sharon D. 146 Johnson, Sheril L. Johnson, Stacy A Johnson, Steven D 148. 376 383 194 411 399 322 196.428 305 170.402 156.290 346 172. 195. 388 Karst. Stephen Kasl. Cecilia M Kasten, Teresa A Kasten. Veronica S. 148. Kaster, Larry V. Kathka, David K. Katterhenry. Curtis A Kaub. David F Kauffman, Byron B Kauffman. Noreen . . Kaufman, Dean A . . Kaufman, Nathalea J. 305 187 414 361 177.196. 364 160,453 417 377 377 377 335 355 335 Kinast, Pamela S Kinder, Richard A. Kinoscher, Katherine . King, Ann C King, Ann E King, Deborah J King, Edward A King. Joan A King. John E King. Marcia A King, Marilyn A. . King. Michael E. King. Philip N 146. 149 170.428 149 203. 204 154. 189 428 ... 335 ... 454 172.397 . 454 454 148 174 355 1 73. 393 Kohr, Larry D Kolank, Thomas J Kolega, Robert M Kolich, Margaret J Kolling. Jana M. . . . Kolman, Joseph J Kolman, Venetle R Kolo, Rebecca F Komin, Kathryn M Kongs, Beverly J Kongs, Nancy K Konicek, Jeanette M ' VK ' - ' - ' 454 LaflUCanS 0,0 LaddSaitfJ 383 ' 28 Kw ll5i 1 77, 454 .. . 155,414 1 BC D : - : ' - 180.335 3wenl.L ' 454 . i neM Jacobson, Carol S Jacobson. Stephen B 451 407 Johnson. Susan J Johnson, Veda M. 174.335 329 Kaufman. Russell F Kaufmann, Rodney D 355 355 Kingston. Arietta M Kinnaman. Mark B . .397 355 Konicek. Stanley A 159 Koontz. Kathryn L 1 87. 296 . aeneJ . 290 ; u,ChUM Jacques. Paula Jacques, Robert M. . . Jaflens. Peter M Jahnke. Debra James. CherneL James. John D James. Joni K James. Menlu James, Susan M 335 .451 376 352 155, 183 451 335 148,310 . 451 Johnston, Brenda Johnston, Cynthia J. Johnston, Denise R Johnston, Jerry D Johnston, Jody S Johnston, Mala D Johnston. Pam J Johnston, Randolph P. 335 453 453 453 188,458 383 . . 335 164. 170, 355 Kaufmann. Tom V. .453 Kaup.DavidR ...201.413 Kaup. Janette E .157.196,364 Kaup. Steven C 388 Kautz, Michael G. . 383 Kealing. James H. 196,383 Kearney, Bob C 355 Kearny, Michael A. 388 Keating, Elizabeth A 453 Kinnard. Arthur H. Kinney. Kristi L . . Kinsch. Nicholas L Kinsey, Hugh C Kinsey. John M Kinsler. Ross N Kiracofe. Zane D. . Kirchhoff. Steven P Kirchoff. Diana L. .454 . .367 .177 454 177 298 160.464 305 . 454 Kopitnik. Lawrence J Kopshmsky. Daniel W Korb, Rebecca J Kerb, Teresa K Korte. Rose M Korver, Kim D Kosko. Joy E Kossoy. Faith S. . . 355 . . ..355 . . .319 319 . 428 454 428 LJI.WV- Lames ' ' Lambert Pawa A. Lart 3asJ Lamcrev ' - Land .336 James. Vickie L Jamison, Mark Jamison. Monte D. Janicke, Timothy J. . 148,451 451 . . 346 168,202 Jomer. Dave L Jokerst. Kathleen M. Jones, Albert R 383 453 . . . .453 290 Keating. Mary C Keating, Rick A Keck, Debra A Keehn, Anne M 167.453 453 402 169.453 Kirk, Chuck Kirkendall. Karen M Kirkman, Kathleen J. Kirkpatnck, CarlW. . 411 180.310 346 170 Kost, John A Kostelec. Maureen A Koster, Derald R Koukol, Darwin L . . . .355 landislaML . .336 LanxO--. . . .454 LmdonlKW . . .377 lanantn.Brenffl. Janisch.NancyA. 383 428 Keeler. Jeffrey L 180 Kirkwood. Glynnis A 454 Koukol, Mark A . .454 Janke, Edward L 171. 173.451 _ | ft A 453 Keeler, Karen J .196 Kiser. Kimball P . . 355 Koukol, Nancy J 414.180 Lara Mr... Jankovich, Richard B . . 371 Jones Clay G 173, 327 Keen, Ray A 194 Kisner, Mark A ... 176.454 Kowalzyk, Kay S 1 75 lang janeA Jansen, Terry A 171.376 Jones Clifton C 327 Keeten, Jan S .453 Kissick, Kim A .454 Kraft, Kathryn L 192 336 Lang.Kattlwil Janssen. David M 145.354 Jones Colleen K 383 Kehneier, William R 147 Kissing. Michele K 201.342 Kraft. Randall E 455 Lange Jew Janssen. Gerald W. 191 192,451 Jones, David A. 453 Keil, Glenda R, 143, 148 150.346 Kite. Edward K 195.405 Kraft, Scott C 199.204 205.298 Janssen. Kimberly D . 317 Jones, David E 405 Keil. Terry D .288 Kile. John G 144 167 Kraft, Terrence R 176.177 Janssen. RoyceC 143,390 Jones, Debfa E 192 290, 335 Keim, Jerry L . .453 Kile. Ronald A 171 185.377 Kraisinger, Susan K 336 Janssen, Stanton J 159 Jones, Dennis R 181 Keith, Karen G 346 Kitten Kruiters .192 Kramer, Charles M 195.298 Jantz, Jonathan P. 144, 149 Jones. Diane L 290 Keith. Raymond E . . 300 Kittner, Jane E 197 Kramer, John C 393 ' Jantz, Merle F. 149 172,354 Jones. Donald E . 176 Kellams. Robert K. ... 453 Kiwiey. J. Michael 188 Kramer, Joyce M. 169.455 Japp, Susan B 175.451 Jones Gary L 453 Kellenberger. Vickie 179,428 Klaassen. Matthew K 202. 296 Kramer. Mary A 173 455 Langion w:nw. Jaques. JohnC. . . 165,354 Jones. James C , . 399 Keller. Cheryl J. 148. 174 1 75. 335 Klahr. Michael D. . 454 Krause, Darrel E o?i Laraww.v 147 377 (. - Jaquith. Steve L 369 Jones Jamy A .... 453 Keller. Daniel J 296 K-Laires . . .188 Krause, Robin S. 402 Jaramklo, Gerardo . . 188 Jones. Jana M 176.335 Keller. 1 Oletta 407 Klasmski, Danette E 402 Krause. Starla J. 175,402 Larsen Janet Jarrett. Teresa E. . 451 Jones, Janis A. 453 Keller. Laura L 310 Klassen, Delton C 383 165 .arsen Linda Jarvis, David A Jaster. Nancy L . . Jatko. James H. Jauch, Lawrence R. Jauernig. Jeff D. .. .451 . 451 178. 181 . . 194 . .369 Jones, Jeffery R Jones, Jeffery W Jones, Margo A Jones, Mark A Jones. Maria S 307 405 361 .453 453 Keller. Mark R Keller. Stephen P Kelley. David W Kelley. Rayna S Kellner, Timothy L 182,325 164 383 . 453 . , 394 Klaumann, Teresa K. 143 Klein. Kathleen A, 160. Klein. Rhoda L Klein, Roderick A 183,428 161. 188, 454 454 296 Krehbiel, Bradley J Krehbiel. Debra K. Krehbiel. Patricia L Krehbiel, Peggy A. 182.455 1 79. 455 160,361 . . 336 Larsen Peter E Larson, BtenlG Larsr ' LaOT CtaqA Larson GaenL Jauernig, William J. . . . 369 Jones, Max A 453 Kellogg, Richard J 390 Klein. Scott S .418 Kreidler, Margaret L . 428 Larson G Keni Jaynes, Leesa A . . 364 Jones. Nadine N 453 Kellogg, Robert R 187.453 Kleiner. DeLaine K 180 Krempa, Ellen M . 402 LarsotjaWte: Jefferson Starship 23 Jones, Nancy K. 151 , 342 Kelly, Barbara J. . 148 1 56. 364 Klema. Dell J 143. 185 Krenger, Teresa A. . 428 LarSC -- ' ' -. Jeflery, Jimalene R. 1 60 Jones, Pamela L 453 Kelly. Karen L .303 Klema, Janet L 153 Kreutzer. Pamela 164,402 Larson Lame j Jeffries, Greg A 325 Jones, Patsy Y 453 Kelly. Kent C. ... 355 Klema, KayeL 153, 175 187,346 Kner. Kirby W 455 Larson Man ft Jelinek. Nancy A. 175,310 Jones, Reginald D. 453 Kelly, Michael J ... 325 Klenke. Susan M. . 335 Krier. Thomas J .377 Larson Thayrsi Jenkins, Edward L .354 Jones, Rex . 407 Kelly, Nancy L. .428 Klepper, Richard G. , . .454 Krishnan. Subramania . 144 LasnEUateui Jenkins, Margaret J. . . .335 Jones, Rhys A 314 Kelly. Nancy S ... 342 Kleusch. Thomas E 454 Kriss. Joseph T . 355 LashtHookBovC Jenkins, Nancy J. . . 290 Jones, Rick L 355, 167 Kelly. Nina M 157,314 Kleweno. Christina J 192.367 Knss. PhillipS ... 327 Lasse r . Jenkms. Philip W. . .. .371 393 Kelly, Sharon S 148,346 Kliewer, Glen M . ..355 Kriwiel Margaret J 397 Lassen. lirtiaA Jenkins, Rob E 298 Jones, Robert T 393 Kelly, Shauna L 1 56 196,319 Kliewer, Patrice M, 454 Krizek, Brian E 288 Lassman BonfeA Jennings. Gaynelle A 185 Jones, Rodney L 143 453 Kelly. Stephen R 453 Kline, Roderick A 192 Knzek, Craig L 288 Last Greom D Jenmson, Tindel K. . 183,376 Jones, Ronald P. 1 76 1 83 405 Kelpe, Ronald M 371 Kling, David L. . 347 Kroeger, Anna M. . . 170.310 Jensen, Marjorie A. . .335 Jones. Susan C. 160, 175 188 317 Kelsey. Francis A 162,355 Klipowicz. Paul V 147,454 Kroeger, Hedwig E 148.310 Lara Susan K Jensen. Peggy M. 175 187,451 Jones, Teresa M , .453 Kelsey. Richard M 146, 149,173. Klock. Edward L 424 Kroening, Mary L. .336 Lauoer Parr ta 5 Jensen, Rita L 451 Jones, Thomas M. 393 453 Klocke. Arlan D 383 Kroh Roger L 325 Lauber 3rw ; JethroTull . . . . 57 Jones, Timothy J. 453 Keltz, Jack D 413 Kloefkorn. Randy L 454 Kropf Donald H 1 60 -: ' Jilka. Catherine M 168.451 Jones. WileneA. . . 152 Kemnitz, Dennis R . .453 Klopfenstein. Carol .... ,180 Kroupa Joan C 1 48 180 428 Lau Sharon A Jilka. John P. . . Jilka, Rose 156 180.394 180,402 Jordan, Michael D. Jordan, Roberto J. . . . 453 .383 Kemp, Kevin C. Kemper. Annetta M 453 1 79, 346 Kloster, Karen J. Knackendotfel, Nancy A 156 . . .310 Kroupa. Sharon L 147 ' 303 336 Joerg, Cindy A 157,452 Jordan, Walter B. 162 Kemrite, Harold D . . 383 Knackstedt, Nancy J ... 402 Krueger, Kathateen A . - Johannsen, Nancy J. 452 Jorderberg. Kathryn .180 Kenagy, Leigh A. . . 153.329 Knapp. Jerald S. .166 Krug. John R . . 305 Launsen Luorca John. JerrianneG. 335 Joslyn, Randy L .453 Kendall, Constance M 367 Knapp. Walter E 170 Krug. Karen E 383 Johns, Geralynn L. . 168,452 Joss, Delma D .290 Kendall, Joe D . 355 Knauss, Douglas E 189.454 Krug, Philip C 195,305 La . BOOKS Johns, Norman D. 162,452 Joy. Aden 162.453 Kendrick. David A . 383 Knecht. Linda K. 151,342 Kruse, Teresa M 174.428 Lawrence Cards Johnsen. David W .383 Joy. Danny W 41 1 Kennedy. Charles D 393 Knetter, Paula P. 153,290 KSDM-FM 165 .: Johnson, Ann R. . 175 187.317 Joyce. Ann .335 Kennedy, Constance A. 152.402 Knierim, Debra R 154,397 K-State Players 165 Lawce Lar ' , ' . Johnson, Beatrice A . 155 Joyce. Jodee L 453 Kennedy, Kay E. . . .453 Knight. Gary E , ,371 K-State Singers . .. .182 Lawrence. Rdiaro Johnson, Brenda G 452 Joyce, Patrick L .453 Kenney. Calvin R. . . 453 Knight. Joey 6. ,325 K-State Sports Car Club 193 La son Caroly i Johnson. Brian W 383 Joyce, Rex M 411 Kenney, Mark B. . . 325 Knight, Robert D 161 KSUARH 196 Johnson, Bruce A. 376 Juarez, Joyce A. 453 Kenning, Eleonore M 157,314 Knight, Virginia A. . . 454 KSU Wildlife Society .165 Lay. Lindas Johnson. Calvin D. 159 188.452 Judge. Patty L . 383 Kent, Mary J. . 180,454 Knilans, Matthew J. . 162.454 Kubie, Diane C . .336 Layne.DaryiE Johnson. Daniel E. 388 Julian. Arlyn D . 330 Kent.TapleyW. 161 Knipp, Sam H .454 Kuchem, Christopher L 172.455 Johnson. David O. 327 Julian Bond 75 Kenworthy. James R. 413 Knipper. Mary B 336 Kuebelbeck. Rick W 327 Johnson, Debra L . 383 Julian, Glenda E. . 167.402 Kepka. Gary E . . . .454 Knoche, Jane E 347. 180 Kueker, Richard J . . . .167 Leach. Amj Johnson. Debra S. . 192,335 Junge. Richard C 453 Kerkuliet. Michael F . . .454 Knocke, Jodi R 148,290 Kuhn Steven A 325 Lear Nancy L Johnson, Debra S. . . 310 Jungmann. Jennifer A. . . 172.361 Kerley. Donald E . . 355 Knoebber, Elizabeth ... 336 Kulich, Steve J 355 - Johnson, Diane K. . .452 Juno, Julie A . 154,303 K err. Patricia A. . . . .342 Knoepfle. Mark G , .454 Kull Daniel D 369 Johnson. Donald R. 143,354 Kershaw, Karen L. . . 454 Knoll. Thomas J. 167 Johnson, Donna J. Johnson, Edward A. Johnson. Gail A. Johnson. George A. Johnson, Gwenolyn S Johnson, Heather K. 147 402 452 383 171 160, 188 162,452 kkk Kershner, Curtis R. Kerwm, Janet S Kesl. Peggy M. . . Kessler, Barbara E Kessler.ScottA Ketter. Dorothy W . 327 180.346 ... 361 156.293 193.454 . .454 Knop, Amy J. Knopick, Thomas J Knopp, Clayton R . . Knopp, Janice E . Knopp, Max E Knowles, Curtis J 314 .407 .454 347, 180 .330 . . . .318 Kumar, Pramil Kummer. Fredericks Kuniholm, Alan G. . Kunz. Michael Kunz. Theresa Kurfiss, Brenda K .... 144 355 . . 422 . . . . 405 153.342 . . .3)0 .-I- -K ' Letwui LKC Leoelltet Lee. Guns a IM rv.. Johnson. Janel L. 452 Kadavy. Dayid J 453 Keller. Mary P . 192,346 Knowles. Kenton V. . . . .454 Kurfiss, Debra J .455 Johnson, Janet E 452 Kahl, Mary . .199 Ketterman, Kent E 180 Knowles. Melodie S 347 Kurtz, Allen D 1 59, 355 I 00 . - Johnson, Janice L. 319 Kaiser. Robert H 453 Kettler, Denise L 177.317 Knox. Jacalyn E 151.364 Kurtz. Ouentm E . . .455 Johnson, Jeanne M, 157,452 Kaiser. Rose M 177 187,317 Khan, Rab N . .188 Knox, Kenneth 411 Kurtz, Sue L 336 Johnson, Jolene K. .397 Kalivoda, Scott N. 149,376 Kidd. Gevin C . . . .180 Knudson. Mary K 157 Kurz, Kenneth W A 1 R ark S ' ' ' Lep tj - Johnson. Julie A 319 Kallenbach, Susan L. 402 Kidwell. David A .... 355 Knutson. Kevin T . . .193 Kussman. Janice M. 455 Johnson, Karen L. . ' 88 196.310 Kammer. Anne 164 Kier, Nancy T. . .346 Koch. Deborah S. 167, 177,454 Kussman. Richard L 145.455 Johnson, Kay L . .452 Kanaga, Mary E . . . 428 Kiernan. Theresa M 150 176.293 Koch, Kevin Erskine 182, 183 Kutnink, Deborah A ...455 Johnson, Kendal D. 390 Kanaga. Rose S. . . .428 Kiggwe. Samuel M. 186 Koch, Nicholas F. 171. 173 Kulnmk Kathy J 455 Johnson, Kent R 452 Kannard. Kraig E. 376 Kilbourn, Sharon K 303 Kocour. Barbara A 153! 167 Kutter, Ronald L ..327 486 index -s. : llSl III Legler, Donald A.. 388 Lehman, Robert L. . 355 Lehman. William W. 369 Lehmann, Dixie S. . 383 Lehner, Pamela J. . . 336 Lehrman, Verney D 172.455 Leiszler, James G 171 Lockyer, Ann L. 169,457 Locy, Shelley D 314 Loder, Bryce J 457 Loeb. Joe H 146 Loeb. LmayR 457 Loewen, Christine K . 1 75 Loflin. Joann A 174,337 Maggard, Carol J Maggio, Mark R . . Magum, James M Mahaffey. Edward A Mahan. Jesse H Mahaney. Jay W Mahoney. Janet A 162. 196,403 388 144 .162 322 457 153. 183, 186. Mathewson. Judith J 170.185, Mathis, Samuel E 144, Mathison, Deborah K Matlack, Rex W Matlack, Roxanne Matlack, Terry C 163, Matley. Charles A 458 196 385 385 303 107 191 ia Laakso, Brenda J 171 Leilhauser. Gail A 146 Logan, Brian C . 146.457 347 Matney, Constance M 347 Laaser, Gregory N 455 Leland. Stanley B 455 Logan. Cynthia K. 151.403 Mahoney, Patricia A, 154 Matousek, Carl W 162, 458 1(1 (y Laaser, Wini L 367 Leman.CariS 162.176.329 Lohkamp. Deedra A . . . 403 Mahoney, Thomas H. 394 Matson. Dean L. 385 |J| Lacey, Dennis V 177 Lembright, James A 455 Lohrentz, David K 422 Main, Jennifer L 152 397 Matson. Karen S 148 193, 458 I): Lacy, Anne K 179.314 Lemmons. Blame E 377 Lohrentz, Margie A 157 Majors, Nancy J 428 Matson. Kent D 179, 182 $1 Lacey. Marilyn E 180,367 Lentell. Brian A. . . . 384 Lohrey. Cynthia J 457 Malcolm. Eugene G. 164 Matthew, Randall K 385 ij, Lacy, Stephen M 405 Leon, Rebecca M. 188, 384 Lollar, Michael D 377 Malm. Becky A. . . 180 Matthews, Douglas A 458 .J Lacy, Susan M 153,290 Leonard, Evan L 455 Londeen, David S 1 80, 377 Malinowski, Patricia 457 Matthis, Judith A 347 Q, Ladd. Alan J . 160.455 Leonard, Larry D 384 Long, Harvey A. 164 Mall. Denise E 347 Mattmgly. Kathleen 303 jn Ladd. Carl R 160, 296 Leonard. Michael A. . 1 80. 1 81 , 371 Long, Jo A 347 Mallard. Harry C. 457 Mattson. Lisa L. 291 v ' Ladd, Sally J. 310 Leonard, Patricia L 170 Long, Kenneth D 457 Mallory. Pat 197 Matyak. Judy M 174 458 ' Ladner, Kristy 336 Leshovsky, Deann M 428 Long. Lyn A. . . . . . 337 Mallory. Patricia L . 457 Matz. EydieR .183 192 428 ' Ladner. Robin A . 164.405 Lesslie, Teddi A. 455 Long. Patrick O 457 Malm. David L 171 457 Matzeder, Leo P 193 347 ' K I ' l Lafterty. Terrie L 152, 170. 177.303 Lester, Terry L 455 Long. R Dale 369 Malone, Bradley P 457 Maupin, Kimberly A 152 319 Laforge, Robert R, 164, 165,383 Letch, Peter E 371 Long, Stephens E 147 Malone, Kathleen A .169 337 Maupin, Michele A 337 BE Lagergren, Ralph E 143.455 Letourneau. Karen 151. 403 Long, Steven P. 424 Malone. MarkS 399 Maurer, Samuel G 458 :: Lahue, Brice W 455 Lett, Kirk R. . 455 Loo. JanisK. 175. 188.384 Malone, Sue A 157.457 Mawhiney. Lisa K 174 458 ' JJfJl Lair, Gregory D. 399 Levell, Emily A 183 Loomis, Jack L 399 Maloney. Lu A. 154 319 May, Cynthia E. 347 - Lala, Brenda J. 148, 174,303 Levenson. Lee A. . . 355 Loschcke. Christian . . . . 1 83 Maltby, Daniel P. 417 May, David C 416 lj! Lallement. Linda J 310 Levin, Jeffrey L 159 Loll, Michael L 347 Mance, Thomas E . 162 384 May, Deborah J 416 : ' = Lally. Katherine M 336 Levme, Elissa R 162 Loucks. Cynthia G. 314 Maness, Mark M 457 May, Rosemary A . 364 Laman, Rene J 310 Levy. David S 41 1 Lough, Susan D 347 Mangan, Stephen L. . 355 May, Suzie 156 294 K Lambda Chi Alpha 371 Lewallen, Stephen L 149. 455 Loughary. Steven J ..409 Mann, Donna L. .397 Maydew, Brian J .330 K Lambert, Jack L 194 Lewandowskj. Rick J 355 Louk. Debora M. .. .172,173 Mann, George W .322 Maydew, Janette 458 Lambert, Patricia A 146 455 Mann Joseph D 371 330 jis Lambie. Barbara J 153, 294 PI ff H Q 424 Love, Linda J 1 53, 457 Manry John R 457 Mayfield Garold M 1 59 Lambie, James R 172! 455 Lewis, Dee A 148, 175, 336 Love, Mary L 1 64, 457 Love, Melanie . . .457 Mansberger, Curtis D. .369 Mayhew, Cynthia A 337 Lambie, Susan A 455 Lewis, Gregory K 455 Loving. Patti G 457 Manuel. Milton L 194 Mayo, Michael G 458 n Lamoreux, Sherry L 303 Lewis, Jane A 456 Low, Douglas M 377 Manzo, Wilfred F 377 Mayo. Steven A 160 296 $ Lance. Douglas H. 355 Lewis, Janene 310 Low, Kelley 457 Marcel Marceau 22 Mayse. Lawrence W 355 ;:: ' Land. Beth 157 Lewis, Janet 337 Low, Kendall C 394 Marcelle. Yvonne M 457 McAdams, Douglas R 146 .; Landis. Laura L 403 Lewis. John G 327 Lowdon, Jane D. 174,457 Marching Band 180 McAfee, Cheryl L. . . 152 337 Landon. Daniel J 185, 188, 192 Lewis. Kayleen C 456 Lowdon, Janet R 1 70, 1 79, 457 Marcotte. Renee S 180,181 457 McAlister. David L 288 !- Landon Lectures 86 Lewis, Kirk J 456 Lowe, Sheree 1 50, 303 Marcuson. Bradley A 457 McAllister. Cynthia S 161 458 Landrith, Brenda J. 160,310 Lewis, LisaS 337 Lowrey. Drew I . .188. 355 Marietta. James R. 162 405 McCallisler, Lynn . 153 ,., .. Landrith. Melanie A 148,310 Lewis. Marty A 157.291 Lowry. Tamara R 151.162.337 Marietta, John C 195, 409 McAllister. R. D 355 :. Lane, Mary j 204. 383 Lewis. Michelle A. 180,181, 182 Loyd, Thomas 307 Marietta, Kala J 146, 149. 173.457 McAndrew, Susan M. . 157 314 : Lang. Jane A . . .455 Lewis, Peggy J 303 Lucas. Ann M 457 Marihugh, Kenneth L 377 McAmis, Vickie 458 192 $ Lang. Kathleen L . .428 Lewis, R Perry 411 Lucas. Gary F. 422 Mantan, Mickey J . .300 McArthur, West K 399 -: ; Lange. Jeffrey M. .455 Lewis, Shannon M. . . 337 Lucas. Steven E. . . 457 Markee, James M 399 McAtee, Joseph M 180 . Lange, Patli A. 455 Lewis, Steve J 347 Luce. Roger C 457 Marken. Harvey E 384 McAuliffe, Susan B 337 Lanaenkamn Marv C 18? 456 Marker, Jeff A 411 McBee Shelley A. 151 364 __. Lanaenkamn Robert A 455 Liebl Barbara E 456 Luck, Janet K. . . 337 Markey, Douglas B. 407 McBride Ronald H 458 IKS Langenwalter, P 388 Liebl Stephen A 411 Luck, Richard D 393 Markham Marcie L 457 McBride Steven B 355 Langley. Lyle E 369 456 Lucke. Gregory A . 305 Marks James M 377 458 ' 69 J :: Langley. Marilyn K. 455 Lietz Richard G 305 Luckeroth. Michele 157.294 Marks JohnW 180 McCall Cynthia S 403 173 :: Langton, Cathleen J. 160.187.336 Lietzan, Christopher 325 Ludlum. Ted 203 Ludwig, Susan M 457 Marksman, Barbara J 157 McCandless, Debra K 148, 154, U7 V Larabee. Mary M. 347 Light Brigade 177 Ludwig. Sylvia R 384 Marlatt Hall .373 361 B Larkin, Stephen P. 1 79. 355 Lignitz, Larry G 424 Luebbers. Dennis J 41 1 Marlow. Denver D 457 McCann, William T 180.377 i;: j- Larsen, Jane E 166 Lillard. David S 456 Lueker, Deborah A 291 Marmet, Terry W 457 McCarter, Steven W 399 Larsen, Linda 151,303 Lillard. Diane L 384 Luke. Charles W 457 Marmor, Frederick W. 160 458 McCarthy. Caren J. . 458 :- Larsen, Peter E 300 Lillard. Rebecca L . 403 Lukert, Carol A. 187,347 Marquez, Edward J. . . 371 McCaustland, Heather C 179. 182, Larson. Brent G 455 Lily Tomlin 23 Marr John M 194 367 :-:: Larson, Charyl D. 291 Lilly, Jerry A 195 Lukert, Karl F. 377 Marr Patricia A 337 McChesney, Joseph L 377 160,36 ' Larson, Craig A 296 Lindahl. Carols. . . 347 Lukert, Susan K 157 Lukinac, Cynthia D 384 Marr, Steven K 458 McClain, David D 289 Larson. Galen L 161 Lindau, MaryR . 337 Lukow. Eugene W 377 Marrs, Donnie D .458 McClanahan, Alan J 355 - : Larson. G Kent . 411 Linder, Lee j. . 456 Lundberg, Cheryl A 424 Marrs, Ramona A 458 McClanahan, Kenneth C 377 - Larson, JanetteE . 455 Lmdemuth. James T . 456 Lundberg, David W .457 Marrs, Valeria L 458 McClary, Kent M. 369 4ii Larson, Knstine L 291 Lindenmulh. Leslie D 172. 288 Lundberg, Donna L 457 Marschman, Kent L. 305 McClary, Michael D 369 16 c Larson, Lauren J 161 Linder, Jay E 393 Lundberg, Steven J ... 180 Marsh, Debra K 303 McClelland, Dave 181 i: : Larson, MarkW 455 Lindgren, Debie J 397 Lundgren. Gail A .1 70. 457 Marsh, Mary A. 161 458 McClelland, Jeffrey D. 300 Larson. Thayne A . 325 Lindgren, Fred 456 Lundhigh, Marcefyn A 361 Marsh, Susan M 458 McClmtock. Gary W 385 W Lash, Elizabeth L. . 361 Lmdholm. John C 172, 173 Lundin, Marsha L. . . .457 Marshall, Deborah K . 181 McClintock, William 385 :: : Lashbrook. RoyC. . 179. 180 Lmdholm. KathyK 153.187, 456 Lundquist, Debra A 1 74, 428 Marshall, Glenn D. 185, 458 McCluggage, Mark D 149, 355 : Lassen. Dennis L 455 Lmdshield, Charles A 330 Lundsted, Nancy J .367 Marshall, Leigh A 176, 385 McClure. Cynthia A 414 :-: Lassen, Linda A. 361 Lmdstrom, Mary A 153, 456 Lundstrom. Gayle D .303 Marshall, Mark L 327 McClure. Gay 310 $ Lassman, Bonita A, , , 188 Line, Nancy S 319 Lundstrom. Richard A 421 Marston, Barbara D. . 347 McClure, Steven L 377 Last, Gregory D. 418 Linenberger, Steven P 394 Lundy, Joan M 428 Marston, Twig T. 296 McClure, Susan J . 1 52 196, 314 - ' - ' Latta, Ronald 413 Linenberger, Susan A 314 Lungren, Herbert J 457 Marten. Paula S 154, 458 McConaughey, Kent E 423 Hj ]; Latta, Susan K . .180,317 Linenbroker, Melanie A 456 Lungren. Kathy M 457 Marteney. John D 167, 424 McConaughey, Patrick J. 458 . Lauber, Pamela S . . . 455 Link, Gerald L 159 Lungren. Terri D 167,310 Martens. Beth D 314 McConnell, Kevin P 371 Lauber, Robert D 144. 159.455 Link, Malcolm K 456 Lupton, James W 305 Martens. Kent A. . . 371 McCool. Timothy 1. . 179 . Lauck. Debra D 154.319 Linn, Brian G 456 Lust, Keith M. .305 Marti. HumberloA 458 McCord. Barbara J, , , 347 ' - Laudel, Sharon A 455 Linn, Gary D 456 Lustgarten, Eddie H. 390 Martin, Bryan V . 377 McCorgary, Larry W . . 296 I,IW, 3 Laue, Geraldine A. , . . 151 Linscott, Sarah A 314 Luthi. Allison J. 397 Martin, Christina K 310 McCormic, Steven E .164, 165 !47 3t; Laue. Harold L 411 Linscott. Sheryl A. 337 Luthi. Joni R . . .397 Martin, Deborah L 385 McCormick, Allen C 458 :. Laughery. Sondra F 455 Linvill. Laurie G 163,196. 367 Luttrell. Vicki F. 1 56, 1 69. 1 72, 294 Martin, Debra J 192, 428 McCormick, John E. 164 ... Launtzen. Lucmda L .455 Lmville. Randal L 330 Lutz, Randall L 355 Martin, Jackie A 337 McCormick. Sharon K. 347 36! Lavine, Eric L ... .189 Lipovitz, Francis A 456 Lux. Lynn M. 361 Martin, Kathryn J. 385 McCosh. Cathy J. 154 168, 385 19531: Law. Robert S 409 Litch, John E 355 Lyle. Dwight R. 399 Martin. Michael R. 325 McCoskey, Steven L 413 :: Lawrence, Carol S 177.455 Little, Douglas J . . 147. 422 Lynam. Patricia 180. 319 Martin. Nancy A. . 337 McCowan, Diana L 310 ' ii Lawrence, Cindy D 347 Little. Richard L 355 Lynch, Dennis R 377 Martin. Nancy J 179, 414 McCoy, Martha A .146, 458 ' ii Lawrence, Larry L 176 Little, Rita A 456 Lynn, Naomi B 194 Martin, Patricia R. 424 McCoy, Michael D 172. 407 Lawrence, Richard W .390 Little Sigmas 152 Lynton, Peter D 407 Martin, Paul C 165 McCoy, Thomas M 300 Lawson, Carolyn A 157.294 Little Sisters of Athena 153 Lynton, Suzanne L .303 Martin, Peggy J 458 McCraner, Carol 458 y Lawson, Forrest C 180,393 Little Sisters of Minerva 153 Lyon Barbara J 303 Martin, Ralph C 406 McCrann, Lisa P 458 |M Lay, Linda K 294 Little Sisters of the Gold Rose 153 Martin, Richard A 393 McCrary, Sharon L. 170, 317 S Layne. Daryl E 377 Little Sisters of the Pearls and Martin, Richard A 458 McCray, Christi 458 Layne. John D Lea, Leslie C. Leach, Ann J Lear, Nancy L. .166 383 . . . .160,455 .310 Rubies Little Sisters of the Shield and Diamond Little Sisters of ThetaXi 154 154 155 mmm Martin, ScottyJ Martincich, Keith E Martinez, Jesus R, Marvel. Randall W. . 195. 325 377 394 289 McCreary, Terry L McCreight, Jane . McCrillis. Marilyn McCulley, Scott M 355 310 314 458 . Lear, William R 173 Little Sisters of the White Rose Maskus, Shirley E . .153. 428 McCullough, Joseph B. . 191. 458 Leary, Kathleen 314 154 Maben Pamela S 428 Mason David P 300 McCullough, Mikel J 355 365 Leasure, Doral E . .189 Littleton, Cindy L 156 Macaluso, NickJ 411 Mason, Ernest L 180. 377 McCundy, Mark F 458 1 Leavitt. Wallace C 162.383 Livmgood. David W 180 Mach, Scott W 407 Mason, Lucy N 458 McCune, Greg A 406 K Leboeuf.LeeC 455 Livingston, Marsha R 457 Mack. AlysonB 310 Mason, Marvin 177 McCune, Linda D 152, 154, 319 (S Leclerc, Byron W. 193,322 Livingston, Michael J 457 Mack, James W 176 Massa, Joseph L 458 McDade, Jeffrey R . 191 (05 Ledell BertilA 455 Livingood, Amy L. .156, 367 Macke Patricia A 183 337 Massey Randy M 307 McDaniel, Cindy C 157, 428 Lee Curtis R 187 Livingston, Sue A. 397 Mackey Robert J 347 Massoth Glenroy R 458 McDaniel, Kim W. 377 jU Lee, David L 180 Ljungdahl, Marilyn 457 MacLaird Steven A 177 Massoth Joe J 385 McDaniel, Nancy S 153. 347 Lee Hong W 195 Llamas. Patricia A. 384 MacNish Thomas A 384 Master Amrapali 458 McDaniel Pamela D 303 153,8 Lee. John D . . .180 Llamas, Stephen A. 394 Macon, Gwendolyn S 1 55, 1 92. 384 Masters, Cynthia J. 157, 329 McDiffelt, Shelley L 347 Lee, Margaret M. . . 168 Lloyd. Steven W. 196. 424 Macy. Cindy M 146.147,148,160, Masters. David R. 171, 173. 422 McDiffett, Timothy L 143. 183, 421 J Lee, Mark S 143.163 Loader, Barbara A 347 175. 188.317 Masters. Wilma L 153. 183 McDonald, Gary L 377 Lee. Sandra C. . . 455 Lober, Terence A 196. 322 Maddox, Jerrold . . .195 Maslerson. Cynthia K 337 McDonald. James P 411 4S5 Lee. Tana S . . .152.342 Lobmeyer, James A 187, 377 Maddux, Michel A 180,418 Malhes, Dana L. . . . . 355 McDonough, Kathryn J 185 Leeburg. Jane E 347 Lockard, Nancy E. . . 457 Maddux. MitziC 181,317 Mathews, Debra L 337 McDowell, RavaeJ 458 .; Leech, Elizabeth A .193 Locke, Mark A 171. 457 Maechtlen, Michelle 337 Mathews, Gorenzo A 187 McElroy. Norval R 458 Lefever, Samuel C . . .183 Lockhart, Valarie A. . . 428 Magana, Audie B .457 Mathews. Mark R 300 McElwam, Rhonda S 458 Leooe. Diane K . . . 1 78 Lockvear. William L 457 Maoee. Matthew K .355 Mathews. Pamela J 174 428 McEndree Vicki G 156 397 index 487 McEwen. Patricia A 147.367 McFadden. Edward H 458 McFadden. Patrick M 197.458 McFadden, William C McFall, Larry D McFall, Nancy R, McFall, RonnyD McFarland. ConnieS 458 McFarland, Frank R 161 McGee. Karen E 458 McGee. Sandra K. McGee, William L 1 60, 1 88, 296 McGeeney. Suzanne M 458 McGhee, David R 458 McGill.Matt McGillick, Veronica McGmness. Clare A 418 McGmty Laurie J McGivern. Michael R 172.322 McGivern. Tom M McGonagle, Timothy J McGranaghan, Margaret 147.291 McGranaghan, Thomas McGrath. Barbara A, 459 McGrath. Julia A McGrath. Stephanie A 459 McGrath, Timothy H, 459 McGraw, Marcia G 143.459 McGrew. Robert L McGritt PatriciaS McGriff. Robert W 149,171,377 McGuire, D Duane 168,459 McGuire, Tamela A, McGuire, Teresa A McGuirk. Kelly J 369 McHugh, Michael L Mcllhon, Stephen J Mclntyre, Pegge A Mclntyre. Robert R Mclver.BradJ 377 McKaig, Douglas R McKaig. Susan M 459 McKam. Sheila D 162.180.414 McKay, John R McKay, Kevin W 459 McKee. Charles D McKee Charlotte A 148.167,1 92. 342 McKee, Jack K, 377 McKee, Judy A 148,337 McKee, Sharon A McKenzie. Jeffery D McKenzie. Marvin B 162,377 McKinley. Randolph A 146 McKinney. Katheryn A 145 McKinney, Wayne A 159.330 McLaughlin. Kathleen 459 McLeland. David A. 1 78, 180. 305 McLeod. Deborah S 1 54, 303 McLeod, Terese M McMahon. Renee 154.403 McMillen. Gwendolyn 179,319 McMurray, Dee A 1 50. 459 McNaughton, Gary A. 144,146, 149.173.191.423 McNeil. Deborah L .424 McNeil. Richard I . McNeill. Anna L 403 McNeive, Lucy K. McNerney, Coleen A, 1 70, 459 McNerney, Frances M McNickle.TimA 330 McNitt, Jay D McNorton, Karl W McNorton. Kevin E McPheter. George R 406 McRae. Patricia A McRoberts, Jeanette 337 McSpadden, Floyd F McVay.KathyS. 169,403 McVey, Bart L 421 McVey, Craig L ,459 McVey, Denise L 155 McVicker. Marilyn M. 459 McWhorter, Daniel M McWilliams, Gordon C McWilliams. Robben L 330 Meacham, Frank D 1 76. 1 77 Mead. Mary E 156.303 Meade. Sandra A 397 Meagher. Freda M 403 Mealman. Linda K 170,364 Means. Carol 347 Means. Daniel E 371 MECHA Medical Technology Club 166 Mears, Timothy P 411 Medill, Carol 157. 294 Medill. Rhonda L 1 53. 347 Meehan, Barbara L 310 Meeks, Herbert L. ..300 Meengs, Mary L 1 67, 459 Meharg. Randall L 459 Mehl.KarenA . .303 Mem, Steven A. 305 Memke. Michael S 300 Meisenheimer. F E 355 Meitl. Gerard F. .172 Meitl, Susan M 459 Meitner, JohnT 406 Melcher, Jeffrey L 377 Melgaard. David K 178.181 Melhus. Melinda .319 Mellies, David N 459 Mellor, Karen A. 459 Melnick, Robert 195 Melson.ChrisA 160,296 Mellon, Coral E .429 Menard, Terry M 355 Menaugh . Steven A 203 . 204 . 205 . Mendenhall . Jana B 459 Menehan Melissa Mense. Deborah J 157.192.294 Men ' s Glee Club Mercer. Brad F Mercer, James A Mercer, Susan J 429 Merchant, Hashim A. 459 Merder. James D Merillat, Chris H Merklem.PaulW 160 Mernfield, Carol L 342 Merrill, Randall E Mertz, Robert D Mertz, SaraJ 187.314 Mertz, WendiJ 459 Messenger. Evan S . 1 59. 459 Messenger. Tanya L 459 Messmer.DeaneneS Metcalf, Bill L Metheney. Larry A 411 Metsch. Diane M Metzmger. JoeW. Metzler. Bradley D Meyer, Allen D Meyer. BrendaS 459 Meyer, Colleen J Meyer, ConnieS 459 Meyer, Craig A Meyer, DarrelW 377 Meyer. David J Meyer, David L Meyer, Debra L 150,459 Meyer, Donna R 148.317 Meyer. Dwight C 459 Meyer, Frank W. Meyer, Gary W Meyer. Rex H Meyer. VickiL 459 Meyers, Carol A 459 Meyers Paula K 155, 164, 168. 200, 459 Mezger. Dena E 1 73, 403 Micheels. Marlene M 459 Michel, Michael E 167,459 Michel Vickie L 459 Michels. Gary L 183.330 Michels, Kay L 459 Mick. Perry J . 318 Mickelsen, Ross . Mickelson, Roger C 167.377 Microbiology Club Middlekamp.RickD Middleton, Jetfery P Mierau, Constance L Mika, Joseph D Mikesell.TressaA. 183.310 Mikols, Wayne J. 424 Milberger. Mary L . 187,188.347 Milburn. Michael W 149. 369 Milby, Randy D 166 Miles. Melody D. . 347 Miles. Steven W 160,296 Millard. Barbaras Millen, MaryL 429 Miller, Alan G. 459 Miller. Carol L 174.194,367 Miller, Charles E .377 Miller. Charliss A 156 Miller, Coleen , Miller. Cynlhia L 459 Miller, Debra K 146,149.173.459 Miller. Gregory B 147,167,459 Miller, Jane A. 347 Miller, Jeanme 156,175 Miller, Judy E, 194 Miller, Kathryn A Miller, Kathy P. . 151.459 Miller. KathyW . Miller Kim A Miller, Kirk W Miller Marcia A 459 Miller MarilynS . 201.459 Miller. Mark W 406 Miller, Marvin L, 459 Miller Mary A. Miller, Maura M 176.177 Miller. Melanie A Miller, Michelle . . . 424 Miller, Neil A. 355 Miller, Paul L Miller, Peler N Miller. Robert C. 355 Miller. Robert E Miller, Ruth A 460 Miller, Sandra L 156.192.294 Miller. Scott M Miller, Stacey J. ,148.175,460 Miller. Stanley R. . . Miller. Stephen L . . . 394 Miller. Steven J 183.385 Miller, Thomas 406 Miller, Vickie K . . 429 Milligan. Randy J . .391 Mills Brian J Mills, David W 460 Mills, Earl E 355 Mills, Keith A .418 Mills. Laurie L ..364 Mills. Lorraine A Mills. Margaret A. 294 Millsap, Teresa C 364 Millsap, Timothy M Milner. Susan E 460 Mmear, Donald G 385 Mmnis, Pat C Minnix, James M Minor. Kathleen A Mmturn. Martha L Mirocke. Annette C Miskimins. Joel A Mital. Anil Mitchell. Danna M. Mitchell. Deborah A Mitchell. Gary R Mitchell. Gregory P 180.460 418 167.460 180.414 460 460 165.460 Mosbacher, Richard D Moseley, Pamela K Moser. Gregg A Moser, Herbert C. Moser. Jeffrey C Moser, Jon A 377 188,291 388 161 ' Mitchell ' . Lowell R 149. 195, 421 Mitchell. Paul D Mitchell. Phyllis Mitchell. Shelley D. 397 Mitts. Kathleen A. .192.364 Mlinek, Wendi E. 175.337 Moats. Billie M 460 Mock. Debora K . 403 Mockry, Eldon F 1 45. 1 49. 460 Moddrell Nancy 153.319 Moden, Joleen ,148, 160, 187. 403 Moeckel. Merle J. 460 Moeder. Leon 460 Moeder. Susan J Moehlenbrink. Larry .. 183,388 Moeller, Chris R 460 Moeller. Debra L Moeller Diane K 189,460 Moheng, Mitchell C. . . . 166. 289 Mohler Michael H. 460 Mohler. Paula J .167.180.460 Mohney. Charles D Mohr. Julie K 460 Mohr. WilmaL 460 Moll. Charles A 356 Mollett. Kathryn 156 Molzen, Myron A 180.356 Moncada. Luis F 460 Monfort, Darrell R. 460 Monlort. Nancy S. . 187,403 Monk, Gwen A Monks. Andrea J 310 Montague. Donald Monleleon. Rosalie M 385 Montgomery, Lisa C 1 51 , 1 79 Montgomery, Nancy J 319 Mo ntgomery. Robert G 1 46, 1 49. 182 Montgomery. Susan F. . 1 62, 347 Montgomery. Theresa 347 Moody, JoE 429 Moore. Alan D Moore Alisa K 460 Moore Carol A 167,460 Moore, Dee A 403 Moore, Gregory A. . . . Moore. Gregory D 325 Moore Hall Moore James P 1 46. 1 73. 461 Moore. Jeffrey W 388 Moore, Kenneth D 413 Moore KimL 429 Moore, Kimberly J 1 54, 320 Moore. Lucian 461 Moore, Lynn A 424 Moore. Melissa 180.181.361 Moore. Michael Moore. Michelle K 367 Moore, Nancy E 175,403 Moore. Robert A 144 Moore, Susan K 347 Moore, Suzanne K 150.294 Moore, Thomas 1 68 Moore. Timothy R 318 Moore, William D 162,461 Moore. William E .194 Moore. William K 356 Moorman, Catherine A 337 Moors, Mary C 337 Moots, Craig K 411 Morain, Michelle 461 Morano. Michael A 461 Moreland. Dave . . . Moreland. Richard C Morffi. Raul R Mortord.QuentinA. Morgan. David J 385 Morgan. Joyce L 1 51 , 461 Morgan. Kathryn A 461 Morgan, Kimberly A 397 Morgan. Pamela 461 Morgan, Peggy J 1 96. 347 Morgan, Phillip L . Morgan, Thomas H 296 Morgan. Timothy J. . 394 Morgenstern, Pamela Morgenstern, R 461 Morin.DaleE 461 Morm, Terrence J. . . 413 Morray Brian S 356 Morrell Mickey V 159.296 Morrical, Gregory W 162.377 Morris Bradford H . .461 Morris, Daniel W 461 Morris. Derrick E . 461 Morris. Jeffery B. . Morris. Julia A 429 Morris. Linda K. . .155 Morris, Mary F 170, 196.337 Morris. Michael E 391 Morris. Tresia E .461 Morrison. Kile R 407 Morse, RoannaL. 291 Morse, Robert E 385 Morse. Steven K 461 Mortar Board Moris Robert S 300 Moser ' . Mary E 175.361 Moser. Monte B Moser. Theresa K Mosharraf. Zubaida 461 Mosley. Kim D. Moss. Don V 369 Moss. Marilyn C . Moss, Melinda A. . . 314,347 Mossman. Donna M 461 Mossman. Rick L 165.461 Mount, Elizabeth A. . . . Mowry, Gerald S, Moxley Mark A .307 Muchow. Jana K. . 180,310 Muck, Frederick T Muckenthaler. Michael J. .. 461 Muckenthaler, Terry 320 Mudd. Anthony D Mudd.FalvianG. . . 394 Mudd. Patrick P 195.394 Muehlbach, Christopher J. 189 Muehlbach. Mary L. . . . 1 89. 385 Mueller, Ann E 160,170,364 Mueller. James C, 461 Mueller. Janice M 167,347 Mueller, Jill E 166 Mueller. Jo M 429 Mueller. Lawrence H. . . . Mueller, Linda L Mueller. ThelmaG . 172,294 Mueller. Thomas E. Mueting, Dale F 385 Muetmg, Duane H. .. 385.171 Mugler. David T 144 Mugler. Connie S. 310 Mukhebi. Adrian W. . 186 Mulch, Gary L Mulhem, Aboulrahman A 385 Mulhern, Dan Mullen. Bruce A. 143,461 Mullen, Kevin M, 327,356 Mullen. Richard G 461 Mullin, MaryJ 461 Mulvihill. Joanne L 461 Munden David G 330 Munkres, Ternll J. 1 48. 1 72. 461 Munoz. ArthurC 188,461 Munoz Manuel C 188 Munson, Gaylord R 1 83, 330 Munz.OlenM 461 Muret, William E. 347 Murphy, Andrea M. . Murphy. Claire E, . 429 Murphy, Daniel D 305 Murphy, Dianne L Murphy, Karen 1 364 Murphy. Marcia A Murphy, Mary A 403 Murphy, Michael W 1 85. 424 Murphy, Nancy J 1 54. 403 Murphy. Neil E 149.377 Murphy, Phyllis A 143,180,403 Murphy, Sylvia C 180,403 Murphy, Ted 173,461 Murray, David A 461 Murray, James C Murray, Jane E Murray. Janinne M. . 169.329 Murray. Jere L Murray. Robert G 385 Murry, Janice Murry. John P 409 Murthy, AlampalliV. Muruli. Bartholomew I 186,195 Muse Risa K Musick. Janet K. .. 187,188,347 Musick, Maria A 314 Musick. Nancy L, . . 314 Musil. Gregory L Musil. James K. 161.388 Musil Patrick E Musisi.SethL 186 Mussemann. Sharla K Mustoe, Nancy D. Muwanga-Zake. Elijah Myer, Mark L 412 Myer, Melinda A 294 Myers, Janet L 150,183.461 Myers. Joe C 356 Myers, Kathleen A Myers, Knsty A Myers. Lisa A Myers. Ramona L 429 Myers, Susan M Myrick. Timothy E 461 Myzer, Teresa L 192.303 nnn Nace, Diane M Nace. JohnR Naegele. Elaine . . . Naethe. Nancy J Nail JimE Nally, Rodney E Napier. Bruce A Napier, MaryL Nash. Margaret M. . 310 461 148,414 193 176,299 170 461 Nason, Randall R .171.413 Nass Michael 406 Nations. Karen Z 180.429 Natural Resources Management Club 162 Nauert, Connie M 347 Nave. Sherry M 1 50. 1 76, 347 Navinskey, Cynlhia L 461 Navmsky. Marcia L 385 Navinsky, Terry L 461 Nay, Cynthia A 461 Naylor, Gary L Neaderhiser, Stephen 461 Neal. Catherine . ,164 Neal, David N. .164 Neal. Jen L ...414 Neal LindaL . . 157. 167,348 Nealy CarlaK 189,429 Nealy, Cathy R. . . .189.429 Nease, Dennis A 461 Nech. Douglas W 356 Nederman, JeffryA. . . Nedwed, Jan .155.320 Neely. David G Neely, Debbie K 348 Neibling, David L 356 Neiblmg. Manorie M. 157.180.181. Neiblmg. Walter H. . . .461 Neibling. William H. Neier, William C Neighbors, David C Neighbors. Mark S 399 Neill, George T .461 Nelkin, Kenneth S 461 Nellans. James C 461 Nelsen. Brad J Nelsen. Kirk Nelson, Aline G 148,160.317 Nelson, Ann K . . 317 Nelson, Bruce A Nelson. Cathy L Nelson, David C 172,389 Nelson, David J. . . Nelson, Deborah L. Nelson, Dennis F. . . . 462 Nelson, Elizabeth R Nelson. Eric L. Nelson, Greta F 173,294 Nelson, James , Nelson, Jeffrey A. Nelson, Karla 303 Nelson, KaylaJ 167 Nelson. Lily J 169. 192.348 Nelson, Lloyd D . . . . Nelson. LynneC, Nelson, Marsha K 429 Nelson, Raebern L, .160 Nelson, Richard L. . . , Nelson, Rodney A Nelson, Ronald W 462 Nelson. Sally G Nelson. Todd A Nemechek, Eugene C Nemechek, Michael C, Nesbil, MaryJ 151.462 Netherton. Rene M Netherton, Tammy A 462 Neufeld. JoleneS 337 Neugent. Paula J . 152.192.348 Neumann, Jeanette L 1 70. 429 Neumann, Thomas A. .. 406 Neumann. Yvette 462 Nevins. Laurel A. . . . 1 78, 1 81 . 337 Nevins, MarlysE 462 Newby, Fran Newby. Stanton L Newcomer, Rick V. , Newell, Karen K. . . 462 Newinglon, Dirk B . Newkirk, Alan D 147.289 Newsome. William 389 Newton, Cathy M. , . Ney. John T Neyer, Patricia L. . . Nichols. Becky J 310 Nichols. Harold J Nichols. Laurence E Nichols. Nancy A 462 Nichols. Polly 154.462 Nichols. Ronald D. . . . Nichols. Steven T. . . . 171, 348 Nichols. Tim Nicholson, Donna J Nicholson, Larry A. . . Nicholson. William D Nicholson, William G Nickel, Connie J 403 Nickell, Nancy K 178. 18 Nicolay. James G, Niederee. Michael C . Nielsen, Danny L Nielsen, Marilyn J Nietfeld.KatherineA 462 Nighswonger, Ted J 160,462 Nightengale, Cathy L Nightengale. Peggy J 1 80. 33 Nightingale. Debra K Mill. William S Nitzschke. Kevin J Nivens. Mary D 1 67. 1 96 Nixon. Charles C. .. 171.462 Nkugba.EmeC. Nobel Larry Noe. Bruce A 180.377 Noel. Lionel C, Noel. Rhonda S Nofsmger, Ronald L 462 ft! S , iwur Pan , :: i ' , ... iB 1 Neman La Norman, SaraJ NoG E Horns, W1 K Norns, Stacy . Norton Susan Notes, WOT L NOVOT, B ' ,- : - Novy. Cind ' NOyesBraOftS . Nuiik.Hodneyl Nuss.GarvA Nuss Lytnan w comD lulWJur Nultt.W NyWS.ll 1 MyojjS.JamesA Cartel SusanO . Ufa Nolan, John R . . . .378 Orosco, Sandra K 462 Patchen, Terry L 385 Pfeifer. Belinda A 185 348 Price, Dan R 386 IjCt ' Noland, Robert C .... 325 O ' Rourke, Maureen P 153. 291 Pate, William G 463 Pfeifer. Diane 348 Price, Floyd H 194 ' Up. ' Noll, DavidS . .371 Orr. Dean K 462 Patrick, John B 407 Pfeiter. Rhonda L 386 Price. John R 296 Noll, Janet L. 157.403 Orr, Dennis W 300 Patrick, Kay D. 145.151 156 342 Pfost, Olinda G 175 403 Price, LeahS 160,338 Noll. Jeffrey E 159,378 Orr, Marcia K 462 Patrick, Kerry L 327 Pharr, Susan K 146 464 Price, Susan B 386 ] 5Ci]63(j Noll. Mark T . ... 296 Orten. Dana J 164 Patry, Marian S 463 Phelan, Jane M 397 Priddle, Harland G 308 jj, Noller. Pamela J 151,462 Orth. Douglas G 409 Patterson, James P 289 Phelps, Lou A 320 Priddy, LisaM 176,294 Nonamaker, Thane W. . . .462 Orth, Gerry D 348 Patterson, Terri K 385 Phelps, Roger 412 Pridettes 192 Nordboe, Connie J .... 430 Ortmann, Michael P. . 1 46. 1 70 357 Patton, Joyce L 463 Pherigo, Nancy J 386 Prince. Robert L 189 Nordhus, DeboraA. . 156, 174 On is, Terry C 462 Patton, Lewis A 389 Phi Chi Theta 169 Pringle. Barbara A 386 Nordin, Margaret N 194 Osborne, David F 357 Patton. Rickey R 385 Phi Delta Theta 388 Pringle, Beth G. 160, 294. 338 tf; Nordlmg, Melanie E .... 462 Ossom, Bassey E 186 Patton, Ronda L 463 Phi Epsilon Kappa 147 Pringle, Richard K 357 Noren. Alice V .... 462 Ost, Kirk D 369 Patton, William R 169 409 Phi Eta Sigma 147 Prinslow, Kurt D 308 Norman, Bernard W ... .183 Osterman. Eric D 463 Patzell, Christopher D . 463 Phi Gamma Delta . 390 Pritchard, Patricia R 189 Norman. Laurie A. 1 43 148,317 Ostermann, Scott L 406 Paul. Leroy W 144 Phi Gamma ' s 155 Pritchett, Michael S 297 Norman, Sara J . . , .337 Ostfeld, Adrienne L 385 Paul. Margaret 463 Phi Kappa Tau 392 Prochaska. Brett A 1 60, 464 189 Norris Gale E 356 Oswald, Andrew L .144,163 307 Paulich, Cheryl L 337 Phi Kappa Theta 394 Prochazka, Mary J, .163,196,310 Norris, Mary K . . 462 Oswald. Bill J 307 Paulsen, Charlotte D 166 Phi Kappa Trakka 189 Procter. David E 378 Norris Stacy K 348 Oswald. Leslie E 367 Paulsen, Deana C. . . 145 167 342 Phi Kaptives 156 Proctor, Robert D 464 North, Lawrence J ... 300 Otey, Joseph B. . . 325 Paulson, Charles A 289 Phillips, Alice J 160 187 430 Professional Foods Club ... 1 75 j North, Linda E 143 167.362 O ' Toole, Frank K 417 Paulson, Lee A 179 182 Phillips. Donald D 159 Progar, Ronald A. . .371 IS 33) North, Sheila A 153.364 O ' Toole, Kathleen A 1 57 463 Paustian, Donald L 390 Phillips, Jo A 430 Prophet Debbie J 397 Norton Daniel J 407 O ' Toole, Patrick J 412 Pauzauskie, Anthony V. . . 463 Phillips, Larry N 173 378 Prosser Paul J 1 85 Norton Gary L 166 Ott, Cynthia E. 192 385 Pawlus, Janusz T 146 173 Phillips. Reginald S 160 464 Prothe, Susan E 464 Norton, Susan M ... 320 Ott, Jon S. . . 357 Paxton, Karl D 180 Phillips, Robin E 464 Pruitt, Colleen M 464 157,180 1 Norton, William B. . . . .409 Ott, Kent A 406 Payne, Karen 342 Phillips. Steven L. 149. 171, 173, Pruitt, Thomas L 357 Nossaman, Melanie S. . . . . . 462 Ott. Timothy M 348 Payne, Lisa A 463 464 Prus, Wanda R 464 Noteis, Victoria L . . . .462 Ottaway, Douglas A 463 Payne, Mikel A 421 Phillips, Teresa A. . . .157 201 464 Pryor.GaryA 357 Nottingham. David L . . .356 Ottaway, Kathleen M 463 Peach, Elizabeth 292 Phi Upsilon Omicron 148 Pryor. William D 357 Nottingham, Lyle D. . . . . . . .462 Otte, Jane M 337 Peak. Dan L 202 Physics Club 166 Pucket, Dwaine R 171 Novotny. Bruce J . . . .356 Otto, Daniel L 307 Pearce, Sharon K 337 Pi Beta Phi 396 Pucket, Steven K 399 Novy, Cindi ..462 Ouellette, Dulce M 463 Peach, Elizabeth D 155 Picketl, Delmar V 464 Puckett, Elizabeth P 1 73, 362 Noyes, Bradley A . . . .318 Oukrop. Carol E 143 Pearson, Bradley B 463 Pickford, Peggy A 386 Puckett, Judy L. 1 68, 1 77, 1 99, 203, % Nuckolls, Jill D 314 ' Ousdahl, Kimberly J 342 Pearson, Debra C 180 348 Pickler, Susan K 168 180 403 204, 205, 464 Nuessen, Michael J. . . ... 462 Ousdahl, Lisa P 463 Pearson, George H 183 308 Pickup, Cheryl L. . 464 Pugliese, Joseph 386 Nulik. Rodney L. . . .159 1 60, 330 Outlen, Beverly V 463 Pearson, Patricia 463 Pieper, Lester N 464 Pukach, Walters 409 Nuss. Gary A ... 356 Overgaard, Marcia L 348 Pearson, Scott J 177 Pierce. Jeanne L 397 Pulliam, Gary D 386 t 6 160 r Nuss, Lyman 162.330 Overmiller, Karma J. 1 87, 201 317 Peckman, Carol J 187 317 Pierce, Jerry E 464 Pulliam, Kendal 421 3 Nutter, Connie D. . . .143 1 79. 362 Overstreet, Nancy L 174 Pedersen, Joni E 463 Pierce, Linda J 464 Pure Prairie League 1 03 461 Nutter, Judith A 173 183,430 Owen, David R 180 385 Pedrosa, Sylvia A 385 Pierce, Mark A 464 Purner, Robert A 371 Nutter, Nancy E 310 181, 180 Owen, Greg D 412 Peel, John E 463 Pierce, Michael E 464 Purple Masque 1 08 M.389 Nyberg, Lyndell 178. 181 Owens. Charles H 421 Peeler, Julie K 348 Pigg, Sherry K 194 464 Putnam Hall 401 415 Nyquist, James A 180,462 Owens, James H 193 Peetz. Keith G 149 Pigiel, John P 322 Putnam, James C 357 Owens, Robert W. 1 46, 1 49 378 Pehr, Shelley B 348 Pigma Sti 189 Putnam, Jana L 357 46? _ Owens, Teresa G 162 Peil, Susan M 153 463 Pigno, Louis 178 181 Pyle, Richard G. .378 .. jfl k. HB k Pember Marianne A 463 Pi Kappa Alpha 399 ... 163 m I m I A i Oyer, Doug L 417 Pence, John T 194 197 Pike, Byron L 406 Pypes, Elizabeth R 338 .4$ V 1 V 1 w 1 Pence, Merrole 367 Piland, Anna G 155 464 1 303 T 169,192,3(5 Obertell, Susan D Oberg. Bradley G Oberhelman, Kathy J. . . . Obermueller. Brice B. . . . ' . 314 ... 462 ... 462 .... 462 PPP Pendergast. DougS Pendleton, David E Pendleton, John C Peng, Christine L Peng. Victor I Penner, Suzanne M 180 165 463 357 463 385 348 Pinick Steven J 169 161 386 407 464 148 305 403 qqq Pishny, Norman C Pistora, Cynthia D Pi Tau Sigma Pitman Paul A Pixley. Cynthia L 157 33 Oblinger. Warren G . . 289 Pace, Camillia A 337 Pennington, Garry W. . . . 289 Plagge, Dawnett L, . . 314 Qualizza Amelia 464 . 343 O ' Brien. Charles E .... 423 Pack, Janis A 157 Pennington, Mark A . . . 179 371 Plank, Craig A 327 Queen, Joan A 1 54 4!S O ' Brien, Ginny . . . .337 Page, Beverly A 463 Pennington, Nancy J. . . . 463 Plegge, Jean M 156 464 Quick. TamiK 367 0. Ochs. Roger K ... 356 Page, Brenda K 337 Penny, Beverly 385 Plegge, Karen J 156 464 Quigley, Theresa M 1 73, 430 41! Ochs. Terri L .... 430 Page, Cynthia M 180, 181 463 Penny, Nancy L 463 Pletcher, Janet S 364 Quinlan Marcia K 464 285 O ' Connell, Timothy J. . . . ....378 Page, Pamela R 154. 196 342 Penny, Susan M 463 Plooster, Larry G 425 Quinlan, Sally J 367 . 4ii O ' Connor, Margaret M . . . 462 Paidy.SudhakarR 144 Pep Club 192 Plummer, Sarah M 364 Quinn Colleen M 292 ;.: O ' Connor, William M, . . .... 330 Painter, Dolores W 463 Pepoon, Michael D 322 Poe, Edgar A 357 Quinn, Teresa A 338 36: O ' Dell. Christopher L. . . .... 325 Painter. Kristie A 1 50 337 Pepoon, Steve 322 Poe. Susan J 364 Quinn Thomas P 464 4 Odell, John P . .191 Pakstis, Gail L 463 Pepperdine, Ronald D. . . 399 Poell, Timothy M 357 .35E Oelkers. Shelley J .... 348 Palma. Philip F 147, 163 407 Percy. Audrey D 180 310 Pointer Sisters .57 ISI.ffi 33 : Oesterreich, Teresa Oetinger, Cynthia L Ogan, Thomas W Ogden, Debra L. 146 446 .... 320 ... 462 192.385 Palmateer, Mary E Palmblade, Freddie E 162 Palmer, Bruce E Palmer, Dwight R 145 393 357 357 Percy, Robert A Perenich, Theresa A Perky, David W 143 Perry, Chad L 169 164 194 407 164 Poland. Connie J Poland, John A Polich, Gerald Polito, Gregory S 146 182 464 464 183 464 rrr 152.M Ogle, Bill A 180.462 Palmer, Kim K 397 Perry, Donna G 145 463 Polley, Robert D 464 170,425 Ohley, Kenneth D .... 462 Palmer. Kirk W 385 Perry. Edward H 144, 146. 149, Polli, Steve 423 Raab, Deanna L 159, 464 4K Ohno, Tsutomu .462 Palmer, Michael L 318 173 463 Poison, Craig M 386 Raab, Linda L 464 462 Ohrens, Doris J . ... 1 75 Palmer, Russell W 180 Perry. Michael R 357 Poison, Douglas R 357 Radatz, Edwin W 171,464 179,181,33 ' Olander, Jane A .... 304 Panhellenic Council 196 Pershing Rifles 177 Poison, LisaC 174 337 Rader, Pamela K 180,414 462 Olandt. Vicki . . .180 Pankratz, Barbara A 463 Persinger, Steven W 357 Polston, Diana M 414 Rader, Treva J 188, 464 t(4 Olberding, Daniel J ... 1 72 Pankratz. Gary L 378 Pertsch, Katherine A 167 463 Pomeroy, Stephen H. 180 Ragel, JuretaL 170,464 159 Olberding, William L . . . .462 Pannbacker, Mary K 430 Pester, Robert V 172 Pool, Timothy K 464 Ragole, Joe A, . 1 48, 1 49, 1 72, 465 30 ' Oldberg, Sandy L 192,348 Pappas, Pamela K 314 Peter Nero .36 Poole Miriam P 145 Rahberg. Rick D 465 Oldnam, Andrew L 378 Paramore. Cynthia J 463 Peterkord, John W 463 Poore, Larry D 464 Raile, Brenda A . ... ..166,294 -:. Olds. Gary D ... 371 Parcel, Pennie . 1 54. 1 79. 1 82 403 Peterman, Michael L 165 Poovy, Billy M 464 Raile, Richard W 465 1J7, 255 Olds, Gregory D 163 179,371 Parents ' Day .45 Peters, Bruce L 305 Pope, Donald E 464 Railsback, Cynthia J 143, 465 $ Oleen, Charles E ... .160 Parhamovich, Jeffrey L 385 Peters. Cinda L 152 320 Pope, Ginny A 464 Rains, Brent D 160 163 Oliver, Michael P 182,325 Paris, Allan J 418 Peters, Clark C 357 Pope. Valerie A 152 Rainsberger, Ellison 1 55 462 Oliver, Sara L .... 294 Park Gilbert N 159 296 Peters, Deborah L. 153, 175. 176 Popham, Deborah S 362 Raleigh, Nancy J 465 38: Ollenburger, Marolyn A. . . . .348 Parke, Patrick P 308 362 Popp. Charles J. . . 299 Ramsdale, Janelle S 403 31: Ollington. MarkH ... .195 Parker, Bonnie 366 Peters, Jane A 156 310 Portell, John E 191 378 Ramsdale, Marc R 389 IK Olmstead, Debra F . . . .364 Parker, Carolyn S 463 Peters. Matthew W 407 Porubsky. Richard A 464 Ramsey. Craig J 171, 465 $3 Olsen. Nancy R 187,403 Parker, James W 330 Peters. Rodney B 160 185 Poss, Gary E 160 296 Ramsey. Gina C 1 70. 465 Olson, Beverley J ... 348 Parker, Jeffrey J 413 Peters, Stephen C 463 Poss, Larry D 160 296 Ramsey, James W 1 59. 330 154.46! Olson, Connie J 143,403 Parker, Kathleen J 430 Peters. Susan E. . 1 56 169 310 Post. Kraig M 180 357 Ramsey, Marsha P 1 72. 314 Olson Dan S 330 Parker, Kim J 342 Peters. Walter P 463 Potter, Bradley S 327 Ranallo, Paula M 1 52, 31 4 Olson, Dana G 421, 183 Parker, Landon K 406 Petersen, Bernard J 357 Potter. Jon H 299 Randall! Michael D ' .357 Olson Jacquelyn J 424 Parker, Larry G 162 Petersen, Chris K 371 Potter, Kathleen A 464 Randolph, Rita J 465 $ Olson, John T 179, 183 Parker, Mark M 418 Petersen, Paula J 160 294 Potion , Joan M. . . 157 Rankin, Milton 406 Olson, MarkS 171,378 Parker, Marshall D 325 Peterson, Ann L 348 Pottortf, Michael L. 300 Rankin. Stephen W. .144, 195,421 Olson Philip D .... 307 Parker, Robert E 143 Peterson, Bradley D 385 Potts, Diane M 464 Rasby, Randall R 322 Olson.RenetA 155 183.462 Parker, Robert W 169, 407 Peterson, Bruce W 369 Powell, Cindy L 170 Rash, Valerie L . .364 403 Olson, Richard W ... .160 Parkins, Kathleen J 385 Peterson, Cindy M 403 Powell, Kenneth E 180 Rashid, Haroon U 164,465 Olson, Susan K ... .168 Parks, Cynthia L 304 Peterson, Garry E 417 Power, Ted H 464 Rassette. Brian L 418 Oltjen, Larry M . . . .369 Parks, Darrell D 162 Peterson, Gary C 162 463 Powers, Jean M 338 Ratcliffe, Frederick W 465 41; Oltjen. Rita A. . . .154, 180 183,430 Parks, Mark K 463 Peterson, Jan K 180 Powers, Laura J 362 Rath, Curtis M 386 Oman, Ruth J 1 79, 462 Parks, Wendy 337 180 Peterson, Jane M 177 463 Powers, Uteva E 168 Rathbone, Donald E 1 73 Omega Pearls , ... 1 55 Parmely, Janice K 463 Peterson, Janet L 463 Prather, Deborah L 430 Rathbun. Randall L 1 76, 378 $ Omenski, Phillip 143,462 Parmely, Teresa J 167 292 Peterson, Jean M 179 385 Prather, Norman T 357 Rather. Ronald S 1 71 , 465 1G 0 O ' Neal, Kelly D . . . .325 Parr, Howard F 325 Peterson, Linda S 187 348 Pratt. Doug C 386 Rathert. Mark F 465 O ' Neal, Randy L 187.356 Parr, Kellee R 357 Peterson. Michael J 463 Pratt. Harry J 464 Rathert, Susan L 466 IjBjF Onello. Ann L . . .462 Parr, Patricia A 463 Peterson, Ricky L 160 296 Pratt. Pamela P 310 Rathert, Vicky L 466 Opat, Thomas D . . .462 Parrish.GlendaW 463 Peterson, Soloman F 357 Pratt. Robert 327 Ratzlaff, Debbie L 466 Oppitz. Constance C. 150,364 Parry. Becky J 430 Peterson, Tanna R 342 Pratt, Tyler P 407 Rauscher, Gayle M 183, 348 $ Oppitz. Lawrence W .299 Parsons, David C 407 Peterson, Valerie H 380 Prebyl, Lori L 348 Rauth, MarkK 357 Oppitz. Michael E 162,299 Parsons, Debra D 179 292 Peterson, William C 423 Preisser, Donald G 391 Rawson, Jan R 364 fii$ Orazem. Frank .194 Parsons, Evan W 193 Petitjean, Joyce D 464 Pre-Medicine Club . . 167 Ray. Carl D 407 Organizations 140 Parsons, Irene K 463 Petrusky, Albert R 357 Pre-Nursing Club 167 Ray, Virginia A 196,314 Orloff, Douglas F . . 327 Parsons, Martha L 191 342 Petry, Gary L 369 Pre-Physical Therapy 167 Rayborn, Charlyn K 348 Orme, Kathie J 145.425 Paschal. Mark J 196 385 Pettet.GaryA 464 Presta. Paula S 338 Raymond, Richard 1 93 Ormiston, Rock A .... 325 Paslay, LesaG 430 Petty, Cheryl A 152 Prettyman, Martin H 179 464 Rays. Arthurs 188,413 Orndorff, Danette L . . . .425 Passen, Philip C. 393 Pettygrove, Lynne L 292 Pretz. George C 161 357 Ream, Michael D 318 Orofino, Gloria L 462 Pastrick, Patricia K 367 Pfeffer. Betsy L 160 348 Price, Brenda 430 Reames, Deborah E 320 Reoer Carol L 338 Richter, Linda K. 187.403 Rogge. Mary Ellen R . .180 Sageser. Susan J. . 152.320 Schoett, David E 358 Tw R Reber Pamela S 310 Ricklefs, Robert D 161 Rohles, Susan E 192 Samich, Monica R . 150.304 Sc holer. Thomas C. Semple, Rebman, Linda S 403 Ricks. Cheryl L 310 Rohner, Kevin A 386 Sallade. Edward M . .357 Schoneweis, David A . . 197 Rector. Marcia J 155 Ricks, Robin L 310 Rohrer, John W 172.412 Sallman. Erick L. . 176. 177 Schoneweis, Dwight A 1 70 T5o SeP ' s E 51 , fff crartesE Rector, Steven 180.386 Riddell. M Gatz 308 Roland, Ronald L 467 Sallman, Vickie J 467 School. Val E. . ' 425 Redd. Lawrence R 148. 149. 173. Ridder. J Jeffery 409 Roland, Vance D 187 Salmans, Stan R, .467 Schooley. Karolyn K . . . 468 Self , 395 Rider. Gary R 160.357 Roles. Gary D . .467 Salmon. Denise A 398 Schott. LeoJ. OHO sevatso ... . Oy ;,.; Redeker, Jana J 183,466 Rieb. MarkL 357 Rollins, Ray E 386 Sailer. Lorna M 204. 403 Schrader, Daniel J 1 83. 468 Redenbaugh. Elaine M 466 Riebe. Delbert G 173,378 Rolotf. Vernon A 378 Sailer. Steven C 357 Schrader. Deborah K. ' 468 Reder. Carol E. 175.466 Riedel. Barbara C 180.398 Romberger, Debra J. 145 180.414 Sama. Joseph N. 186 Schraeder. Julie A .. 468 Redlield. LisaJ 157.338 Riedl. Daniel A 177 Romberger, Nelson A 371 Sambol. Francis K . . 357 Schraeder. Leann 295 SeiWK 2 Redmond, Richard A 325 Rieger. Lynne M. 192.348 Rome, Donald L 391 Samelson, Phoebe J 194 Schrag. Loren R 410 Sexl ' o w - Reece, Edward G 297 Riekenberg. Darrell R 145 177,378 Romeieh. Charlotte A 386 Sams. Judy C 431 Schrandt, Stephen F 468 Reed, Carl 1. 357 Riemann, Ralph E 357 Romig, Margaret A . .467 Samuels, Ronald L 189 Schreiber, Jeffrey A 389 SGAdtMW Reed, Doug W 418 Riepl, Gary M 466 Romig, Ralph W .378 Samuelson. Joyce A 338 Schreibvogel. Becky A. 468 $ lttw _. Reed, Jane A 157.338 Riepl, Greg A 386 Romig, Ronald L 386 Sandberg, Craig L 410 Schreuder. Marilyn A. 468.153 Reed, Joanna 192.364 Rietzke, Jayne A . , ,466 Roney, Cynthia D 148.431 Sanders, Anne K. . . . .292 Schreurs. Katherine M 468 ' - ' - ' :: Reed, Karen L, 1 74. 362 Riltel. Steven K 187,330 Ronnebaum, Daniel F 165 Sanders. Cynthia K 145. 149.467 Schrock. Jo A 148398 Staler ' 1 Reed, KarenS 310 Rifle Team 193 Ronnmg, Lucia L ,147, 148. 149. Sanders. Douglas K 399 Schrock. Susan R. 153 170.177, Staff -JW Reed, Kathleen M. 292. 338 Riley, Gregg T 399 342 Sanders. Gary B. . 372 342 ShaialaStannA Reed, Larry C 195.327 Riley. Karen S .403 Rood, Kevin L 299 Sanders, Gma L . . 150.294 Schroeder, Constance B, .368 Reed, Larry R 172 Riley. Monica J 466 Roof, Donald 196.373 Sanders, Richard M. 467 Schroeder, Dennis L 378 SWsty Reed. Lauren A 179.362 Riley, Terry Z 165.466 Rook, Mary A 367 Sandmeyer, Gary B 418 Schroeder, Fred J. 372 ShanWger.Sar Reed. Lawrence D 407 Riley. William F . .378 Rooks, Mallory A . .342 Sandmeyer, Lisa C 338 Schroeder, Jeffrey J. 1 72 Shank DetxaO Reed. Linda A 168 200, 466 Rmgel, Harold G. 202, 378 Roos, Rita J 431 Sandmeyer, Sue . .196 Schroeder. Laurie K. 188349 Shanklm GregM Reed. Nancy 430 Ringer, Ronald E . 192 Resales, Carolyn F .188 Sandova . Jeanme 1 386 Schroeder. Linda M. 468 Shanks. DennsN Reed. Richard L 466 Ringler. Susan K 153 Rose, Gale J, 180,378 Sands. Deborah A . . 348 Schroeder, Lynn Y 174,338 Stwks.LwM Reed. Robin R 338 Riniker. Corrine K 180.466 Rose, Lori A 180,348 Sandy. Marcia C 338 Schroeder, MaryL 425 Sharp. Anthony n Reed. Sally C 152,320 Rinke. James E . . . 378 Rosebraugh, Warren F 193 Sanlord.CraigA. . 183 Schroeder. Richard V. . 395 Reed, Sandra L 338 Rmkenbaugh. John D 172,466 Rosetta. Victor F 467 Sankey. Chris 160.325 Schroeder. Shan J .338 : Sharp. Gor Reed, Sara M 317 Rinkes. Bruce D 160 Rosewicz. Gary P. . 395 Sankey. Lee 325 Schroeger, Michael S ...412 StarpJeahC Reed. Scott D 182 183. 198 Rmner, George A 386 Ross, Lament A 193 Sanneman. George W 189,425 Schroll. Eric A . .180 ' Sharp Jowf Reed, Thomas B 180 Rmner. John A 410 Ross, Micah A 183,357 Sante e. Ray L 406 Schrott. Bruce D 468 Reeder. Katherine L 169 172,362 Riordan. Robert .325 Ross, Terence L . . .467 Sapp. Deborah A. . . 467 Schrott, Peggy L.. . .468 Sna-plto: Rees. Douglas M . 466 Rios. Rita E 386 Rosselot, Angela M 197,467 Sapp, Ellen 320 Schrum, Christy ... .191 SWJ.SalvL Rees. Jane H 466 Riphahn. Bill D 466 Rostine. Joan V. .362 Sarensen. Gregory A . . .467 Schuette, Mark L .468 Sharpe, Angela K Reese. James E 183.406 Rippe. Edwin C 357 Roth. Joan L 348 Sargent. Patrick C 308 Schuette. Sharon S 338 Shaugnnessy i-ait Reese. Marjone L 414 Rischer. Cynthia L 192.314 Roth. Joann J 154.431 Sargent. Sharlin K 467 Schul. JilID 386 Sriaugrirasv. ' eresa Reese. Mark C 305 Rist. Brenda A 292 Roth. Karen L 179,431 Sasenick. Sheryl M 191.338 Schuler.GaryA 162.468 :-s aJ Reese. Rick 1 466 Ritter. Paula K 187 Roth, Robert A. 330 Satterlee. Jane E 467 Schuler. Steven J 389 Sna JaneE Reese, Rusty A . 406 Rivas. Maria A . 188.466 Rothermel, Bradley L 192 Sauber. Michael J . . 185.467 Schuller, Mary L 338 : snaSc2aC Regan, Carolyn L . .466 Rives. Robin J 1 79. 364 Rothlisberger. Royce R .... 467 Sauerwein. Frank J . . 1 72 Schulte.KimberlyA .398 Regan, Kathy J 348 Rizza. Katherine G 338 Rothman, Cheryl A 311 Sauerwein. Thomas D 467 Schultz. Donald G . . . . 468 Sna t ' -i - Regan. Timothy J 466 Roach. Nancy C. . 152,398 Rottmann, Russell W 421 Sauls, Tim E. . 467 Schultz. Jane K .179,315 snay.KWpC Regier. Krisline L. 166,338 Roach. Rebecca A , ,329 Roughton, Karen L. 153.292 Saunders, Janet A. . . 151, 191.342 Schultz. Margaret A. 160,431 Shea. Wan E Reh, Dennis T 165,348 Roach. Richard R 466 Rous. Susan K 403 Saunders, Richard W 145 Schultz, Shanan K . . . .176 Sheanan. Catherine L Rehman, Mian H . 188 Roane, Thomas N 185,369 Rouse. Melinda A . 348 Sawhill, Rhonda R . .311 Schulze, Ronald E 468 Shea-r Rehme, Erwm L 173 Robb, Cynthia K . 403 Rousselot. Mike D . 189 Sawin, Ruth M 174 467 Schumacher, Karla J . . . .398 Shearer JonnE Reich, Jody M 348 Robb, Lorinda L 196.386 Rowe. Timothy N 467 Sawyer, Douglas W . .467 Schuman, Gary R .358 Siea ' er Rc h a r rjV Reich, Timothy D . . . 308 Robb, Rebecca L 294 Rowel. Steven J 180. 182 Sayler. Edwin W. . .467 Schupe. Cora L. 411 SIxDu Reichle. Annalene R 466 Robben, Mary A 147.170.172.342 Rowland, Barry D 160 162,467 Scabbard and Blade . .. 177 Schust. Jay E .406 Sheehan JoanM Reid. Joyce A. 466 Robbms, Cheryl L. 430 Rowland. Jane E. . . 157,329 Scanlan. Mark K 331 Schutte.EmilyA .368 : . ' . ' : = Reid. Lance E 357 Robbms. Francis V. 171.466 Rowland, Vera V 338 Scanlan, Vicki L ... 338 Schutte, Lee A. . . .191 Sheels, Jennifer I Reid. Nathan D 357 Roberts. Allen W . .322 Rowley. Cheryl A 348 Scarbrough, Kent N 166 Schwab, Florence H. . ..181 Sheets. ioceiynK Reid. Susan A 338 Roberts. Anna J 150 Royer, Doug ... 325 Schaake. Mark D 357 Schwab, Patrick R. 185.425 Sheh, Dennis Reid. William 412 Roberts, Charles B, . 466 Royse. Debra A 173,431 Schabel. Susan M 157.314 Schwamborn, Kenneth J .... 289 Sued. LOT J Reiland. Catherine A 191.367 Roberts, Cinda L 180,338 Ruark Roger 413 Schad, Julie A 348 Schwanke, Lesa J 160.403 Shell fiWaG Reiman. Margo A 154,430 Roberts. Claudia A 151 Rucker, Deanna . .320 Schaeter, Ann M, . 348 Schwarm, Mark A 468 She . June B Reimund. James A. 180 Roberts. Daniel H 183.378 Ruda, Daniel C 169 Schafer. Annette M, 151 Schwartz. Jill R .338 SWon, Lefty Rein, Audrey L 154 196,362 Roberts. Judith L 180 Rudd, Debbie 150,467 Schafer, David E 194 Schwartzkopf , Lee A . ..342 Shekte Belinda Remhardt, Gregg L 193,322 Roberts. Laquita K 348 Rudeen. Linda M 196,311 Schafer, Gregory A 395 Schwarzenberger. Mary B . . 468 SMenbeijet.johji Remhardt, Randall D 308 Roberts. Patricia G 180.310 Rudeen. Marilyn 1 .154 168,467 Schaff, Jason A 386 Schweers. Jan C. . 338 - Reinhardt, Susan D. 466 Roberts. Rickey J 466 Ruder, Harvey 467 Schaffer, Dennis J. 179 Schweitzer, Ruth A, . ... .160 Snepardlelanc ' U Remhardt, Tern S .160 180,430 Roberts. Roberta R. 348 Ruder, Johnathan E ,378 Schaible, James M .369 Schwensen, John C. . 308 Shenl. VosefS Reismg. Ann E 180,403 Roberts. Roy C 406 Ruebke. Judith A 467 Schamle, Rodney J . 278. 425 Schwermann. Rita M .349 Sherkxk Peter K Reist. Randall D 322 Roberts. Sandra K. 431 Rues. Alicia A 170,467 Scharig, Terry D 372 Schwertfeger. Elaine .468 Sherman. Brad S Reister. Brian P 408 Roberts. Stephen P . 466 Rues, Rosemary . 386 Scheelz, Susan J. . 304 Schwillmg, Darrel L. . ..180 Sherman DettxahK Reitz, Judith K 338 Roberts. Vicki L 431 Ruffm, Timothy R 412 Schemmel. Jeffrey W 189 Scicchitano, Francis . . . 349 Sherman Reneet Relihan. Bruce A 162 189,378 Roberts. William D 357 Rugby 224 Schenewerk, Roger L. 418 Scott, Casey M 205. 327 Snerrard.QanaL Relihan. Michael D. 189,378 Robertson. Curtis L. . 300 Rule, Kimberle J 145 192,467 Scherer, Lisa C 338 Scott, Charmame B 468 Shelter UancyJ Rembleske. Margaret A 156.362 Robidou, Robert K. ... 378 Rumble. Debra A 152,320 Schesser, James F. 160 Scott, Karen L. 468 Shiffler.DeannR Remick. Alan L 180 Robinson. Curtis S 371 Rumsey, Jill J .... 362 Scheurle, Jason S. 378 Scott. Kathy A .362 ShKfeier Robert J Remington. Paul R . 357 Robinson, Cynthia M 157.341 Rundle, John A 348 Schiefen, James C . .167.358 Scott. Larry R ... 468 Shelds Cyntha M Rempel, LisaG 178 Robinson, Fred L , . . 466 Rundle, Kathleen E. 467 Schiessler, Daniel C. 167 Scott, Michael R 168,468 Shields JanettL Rempel. Trudy D 171. 178. 181 Robinson, Gary L 183 Rundle, Willis C 1 73. 330 Schilling. Laurence E 160 Scott, Nancy C . . 468 Rencher. David M .425 Robinson, Glenn C .466 Rundquist, Amy 196.304 Schinze. Kevin M 378 Scotl, Richard D 160.468 SMI. Terry L Renlro, Vicki L. . 466 Robinson. Hannah W. . 167 Rundquist, Eve 1 56, 304 Schlaegel. David A. 308 Scott, Sharon S .468 Stiimp JohnF Renz. Michelle 152,314 Robinson, Linda A. 1 70. 466 Runft, Sharon K 467 Schlaegel. Keith W . 164 Screen, Rita M 177 Shmenar - L Rest, Emily G 187 Robinson. Lisa K 151.314 Runnels, Rebecca . 364 Schlatter, Gregory L 189 Scribner, Craig W. ... 469 Shippers Karti rvn M ' Reusser, Janet K 145.342 Robinson, Patrick R 308 Rupe, Douglas G . 467 Schlender, Suzanne E 1 79 Scrimsher, Brenda J 469 Shippers Kjrk Revels. Terry D 155 Robinson, Thomas A 466 Rupe, Janis L 348 Schletzbaum, James V .171,395 Scroggin, William W 469 Shirer Vrania Rexwinkle, Angela C 143.148.188, Robinson, Zenda J .466 Rupp, Sylvie A . . 348 Schlickau, Bruce A. . 160.297 Scuba Club ... .193 Shirley. Jute L 414 Robitaille. Mary K 157 180.317 Rusco, Rhonda L. 338 Schliekee. KirbyA 180 Seals and Crofts 23 Reyhle. Linda L . 466 Robl, James M 467 Rush. Jeanette 467 Schlieker, Timothy F. 181 Seaman, Connie J. 175,317 Shivers Marv R Reynolds Janet S 466 466 Robson, Diane M 1 48 Robson. John E 188,317 423 Rush. Mary M. Rush Rhonda D 154.467 152 Schlintz, Jane L Schlueter. Lisa M . . 304 . .192.338 Seaman. Cynthia J. Seaman, L. R 320 . . .185 S oemaerflofeftM Reynolds. John M Reynolds. Laura L 362 Robson. Kenneth E 144 159,357 Russell, DeniseS 175,467 Schmale, Robyn G. . 315 Seaman, Loren L 162 ShowM Reynolds, Rebecca S Reynolds. Sidney R 294 148 Robson, Mike Roby. Joan E 391 314 Russell, LeroyW 144. Russell, Steven F, 159,297 160, 386 Schmid, Anthony C Schmidt, Bonnie H .160 175. 188.317 Seaman, Suzanne M Sears, Broc . .320 . .189 Slook Martha j Reznicek, Judith A. . . 466 Rockers, Christopher J 297 Rust. Barbara A 148 348 Schmidt. Cynthia A 152.398 Sears, Larry L 143.391 Shore Carl ' Reznicek. Susan E 466 Roddy. Jack W 183,406 Rutledge. Cmthia S 338 Schmidt. Debra S 349 Sears, Robert B. . 386 Short AniiaK Rhine, Donald L 159.297 Roddy. Walter C . 393 Rutschmann, Jams E 467 Schmidt, Frederick J 395 Sears, Steven R 469 SflOtl griarif Rhoades. Deborah L 148.304 Rodenbaugh. Stephan 413 Rutt, Patricia L 176,467 Schmidt. Glen M. . .171 Seaton, Alan J . . 389 . - Rhoads. David A Rhodes, David I 146 173.466 Rodeo Roderick, Amanda S . . 260 169,329 Ruttgen, Gregory L Ryan, George F 467 467 Schmidt, Jeffrey B Schmidt, Paul C 300 161.395 Seaton, Julie A Seba, Rodney R. .469 ...378 Snon Karen A Rhodes. Elizabeth L. 150 Roe. Barbara I 145.148, 152.175. Ryan. John R 357 Schmidt, Philip M . . .372 Sebesta, Diane ... 180.311 .... Rhodes. Larry K Rhodes. Paul W 180 201.378 Roe, Keith E 187,398 408 Ryan. Joseph F 189 302 Schmidt, Robert W. Schmidt, Steve 149.349 159.393 Seek. Mark W Sedlacek, Jane E 386 1 76. 335 iiiipn TinaM Stoopshire.o.c Rhodes, Randall A 146, 149 413 Roe. Richard N 204,467 Ryan. Michelle 467 Schmidt, Steven A. 358 Sedlacek. Wanda J. .425 rum ! ;-,; Rice. Jennifer L 466 Roenbaugh, Jacob W. 467 Ryberg Gary A 357 Schmidt, Terry A 177. 180 See, John P 469 u Uebbe Rice. Letitia A 338 Roenbaugh, John B 297 Ryman. Jeffrey C 171 Schmitt, Joseph C 358 Seehafer. Marilyn S. 469 IT _ KxaA Rice. Nancy L. Rice. Sharon E . 466 466 Roenbaugh, Shirley A Roenigk, Richard A 467 180.357 Rynard, John E Ryser Dickie L 412 467 Schmitt. Michael L. Schmitz, David G . 468 468 Seeley, Maryann . Seely, Susan R .398 166 S .ScotiQ ' Richards. Ashanna M 466 Roesler, David E 189.378 Schnacke. Jerry D. . . 143.468 Seers, Barbara S 160 188.349 WCTtom. lrVr%n Richards, Daniel 325 Roesler, Karen E . 386 Schneck, Gary A, 468 Seibert, Pamela J . 469 ' flesingef Marwip Richards. Dennis S 466 Roesner, James R 467 P aV a P B B B Schneider, Alice F. , 1 79. 468 Seller, Guy M 183.328 Richards, Douglas D. 389 Roesslem, Mark A 467 B Bte. L BB BB Ex Schneider, Brenda J 338 Seller, Ken J 297 Richards, Patricia K. 466 Rogan. Diane C 152 BB BB BB H B jBl Schneide . Charles F 189 Seirer, Peggy A 469 . Sandra ' Richards. Steven H 357 Rogers. Cindy E 164 VB VB Vk Schneide , Dwight T. 408 Seitz, Richard M 176.399 f ii-jn: Richards. Sulynn J .180 Rogers. Danny H. 171, 188.413 Schneide . Martin E 399 Seitz, Victoria A 154.368 Richards, Verlyn D 143 Rogers, David M 177, 179.325 Saathoff. Sandra F 431 Schneide , Robyn R 289 Seley, Debra J. . . . 338 r Cfltan u Richardson, Charles 466 Rogers, Jay W 289 Sabatka. Janiece M 403 Schneide , Tom A 468 Self, Mane E 431 - ' , Richardson. David E 357 Rogers, Jeffrey K 378 Sachse. Richard A. 148 Schoap, Larie L 194.338 Selfridge, O John 194 Richardson. Denise L 414 Rogers, John 386 Sadowski, Barbara A 155.431 Schoap. Margaret J 193 Selig, Richard H 168469 OetxaK Richardson, Draytford 194 Rogers. Mark A 194.467 Saetz, Patricia E .348 Schoeff. Robert W .194 Seligh, David G 358 ' G ' eta Richardson. Kathy L. 338 Rogers. Richard N 180 Sage. Joseph W 423 Schoen. Rodney R. . . . . . 297 Sell, Richard D .328 , : Richardson, Sheri L 166 Rogers. Rick A . 348 Sager. KimS. . . . 386 Schoen. Steven J 468 Sellberg, Martin E 167.180.182, .r ' Ennla Richter.J Blair . 378 Rogers. Ronald G 146. 149,357 Sageser.SallyA 153.320 Schoenthaler. Randy D 358 289 JJi s Selm, Michael E . . .358 Sigma Nu 409 Smith. Ronald D 418 Stahl, John M 413 Stout, Mary L 173,180,339 Semple, Donald R. ... 378 Sigma Phi Epsilon 411 Smith Shelley D 295 Stalcup, Gia M, 362 Stout, Stephen G 172 S !,$ Semrau. Loren A 177,469 Silady, Michael F, 173.470 Smith, Shirley R. . .187,403 Stalcup, Mary A. . 180,362 Stout, Terry S 370 Q Septs. Ernest . 469 Silcott, Jeannine . . 292 Smith, Stephanie L 150, 403 Stalcup, Nancy 471 Stover, Craig 1 59 Sessions. Charles E .421 Siler, Lisa S 320 Smith. Stephen D. . . 322 Stalcup, Roger A 471 Stover, Deborah S 148.166.365 | Settle, Ted F ..189 Silkman, Cheryl J. . 386 Smith. Teresa A 320 Stallbaumer, James F 379 Stover, Kevin V 473 Sevatson. Eric S 1 62. 349 Silkman. William C. 358 Smith. Tonya M ..152 Stallbaumer, Mary B 157 Stover. Nancy L 181 Severance. Sara J 147,168,349 Silva, Catherine 147 . 167.470 Smith. Tracey L 1 80. 320. 368 Stallbaumer, Mary E 317 Strack, Sharyl A .153 Seyler, Sy 146 Silva. Marcos .470 Smith. Walt 197 Stambaugh. Steven L ,176.177 Strafuss, Benedict J ...473 Sexton. Daniel W 161.187,357 Silvertooth, Jeffrey 470 Smith. Wayne E 378 Standley, Donna E 471 Strait, Chris A 160,473 2 Sexton, Lisa A 187.311 Simari, Gail E. 338 Smith, William L. . . .322 Stanfield, MelanieA, 368 Stramel, Terry L .473 Sextro. Donald L 469 Simcox, Marcine 315 Smulling, Timothy W 395 Stanilorth, Christopher J, .400 Stramel. Theresa J 473 Sextro. Wanda M. 431 Simler, Daniel B. 370 Smurthwaite 414 Stanley, Dee A 315 Strand. Constance 404 SGA Cabinet 1 96 Simmons, Leeann 320 Smyth, Donald C. . , 406 Stanley, llarose M ... 349 Strasser, MarkF 473 Hn SGA Executive Committee 1 96 Sims, Ronnie L, 147 Sneath, Allen L . 1 54. 1 95, 289 Stanley, John T 471 Strathman. Jean A 194 ' ft Seymour, Jayson B , ,161 Simon, Donna P . .180 Snell, Richard C 1 59, 1 87, 379 Stanley, Lisa J 312 Strathman. Timothy A. . . 147, 322 f! Ilk Shadday, Janice C 180,181,469 Simonton, Jeffrey A. . .378 Snell, Robert 410 Stanley. Mark E 372 Straube 416 ... Shafer, William M , , ,166 Simpson, Scott A. . . 413 Snether. Gary L, . . .379 Stanley, Neal M 472 Straub, Ernest J 391 Shaffer, Nancy E. 431 Simpson, Steven R, 413 Snider, Amy L. 192,304 Stansberry. Gary 412 Streeter, Judith A 320 - Shalala Shann A 145 191 192 Sims, Mikelyn A 470. 153 Snider. Ray S 471 Stanton, Barbara A 152.342 Streeter, Marcia J 473 469 Sims, Ronnie L 305 Snodgrass, Thomas J. .165 Stanton, Sammy R 168 Streit, IrvaK 169 r- Shalmsky, Lee B 378 Simunac, Emily J, 176.329 Snortland. Kristi J. . . 386 Staples, Deborah L 365. 153 Streit, Nadine J 339 Shamburger. Samuel B. 1 76 Sinclair, Bonnie S, . .470 Snow. Cindy M 172.342 Stapleton, Carrie E, 197.339 Strickler, John K ,194 Shank, Debra D 311 Singer. Sandra J. .470 Snyder. Berry L . . . .471 Stapp, Randy W. . 472 Strickler, Thomas S 1 44, 1 61 , 247 Shanklm, Gregory D 149 Singleton, JeanieS 470 Snyder, Beth 178, 181 Starch, Michael 350 Stroberg. Jeffrey A 328 Shanks, Dennis N 469 Sinovic, Susan M 364 Snyder, Bruce E 180 Stardusters 157 Stroh, Cynthia L. 1 80. 1 82, 339 , : Shanks, Lori M 338 Sipes. Martin J 400 Snyder. Donna L. 151.471 Stark, Kenneth P. . . 305 Strohm, Gary D 180 Sharp, Anthony W , 162,378 Sisters of the Maltese Cross 1 56 Snyder, Douglas R 471 Stautter. John R. 472 Strom. Stephen C 379 Sharp. Carole . . .146 Sisters of the Sphinx 157 Snyder, Jacqueline S 471 Stautfer, William H. 389 Strong. Mabel B 196 Sharp, Gordon A 469 Skidmore. Beth A 167,431 Snyder, Jeffrey A. , . 147 St Clair, Christine A 188.472 Strong. Terresa M 339 ' Sharp, Jean C 148,196,368 Skidmore, Michael B 378 Snyder, Jill K 339 Stearns, Cindy A 180 Stroupe. Phillip J 161,473 Sharp, John F .378 Skinner. David A 171.470 Snyder. Mark G 1 45, 1 95, 393 Steel, Larry 203 Strouse, Dwight L 318,473 ' Sharp. Mary C 148,175,470 Skinner. Kimberly R 349 Snyder, Martha M 168,471 Steele, GaryJ, 472 Strowig, Wesley D 180.181,182 Sharp. Max D .289 Skoch. Janet A . 338 Snyder, Michael D 417 Steele, Mary L 160.317 Strunk, Marvel J. . . . . 473 Sharp. Sally L 180,431 Skoog. Peter R. .408 Snyder, Michael K 180 Steele, Nancy L 472 Strunk. Randall J 300 Sharpe. Angela K ..470 Slage, Charles E 470 Snyder, Pamela J 175,188.312, Steele, Patrick E 472 Strunk, Richard B 183 2 Shaughnessy, Catherine 311 Slagle, Penny J 470 471 Steele, Vickie J 312 Stryker, Ross W 350 Shaughnessy. Teresa 403 Slater .Patricia A 152 Snyder. Richard K 358 Steel Ring . .149 Stuart, Gurner F 185 Shaw, Diana J 153, 189,470 Slater. Vicki L 470 Social Work Club 168 Steeples, Carla J ,160 1 76. 368 Stuart, Lee C 168,183,205,473 K Shaw, Jane E 338 Slater, William H. 162.470 Soccer 222 Stetfenhagen.SueA 148,403 Stuart. Susan K 292 : Shaw, Suzanne C 143,160.188, Slavik, Doyle R 470 Socolofsky, Edward T 1 72 Stegeman, James F . . . 359 Stuart, Mitzi 155 317 Slite. Curtis L 470 Soeken. Shane A 1 88. 305 Stegeman, Margaret C . . 404 Stubbs. Ricky S 193 Shaw. William D 391 Slifer. Ricky D .... 325 Softball 219 Stegman, K. 180 Stuber, Dennis K 379 ? ' . Shay, William O . . 358 Slinkman. Jeanette F. 178, 179, 181. Sollner. Vicki L 157 Steider, Tom W .328 Stucker. David L 171.473 ' - Shea. William E 164 311 Solomon, Deborah D. ,170,471 Stein, Chris 326 Stuckey. David S 195.408 Sheahan, Catherine L 470 Slmkman, Lizbeth A 178, 181 Sollis, Mary E, .148,156,414 Stem. David E 326 Stucky. Dennis J 171.386 5 Sheahan, Richard J 179,299 Sloan. Craig S 331 Somes, LynnM 349 Stein, Gregory L. .393 Stucky. Roger N 147 Shearer. John E . 188,470 Sloan. Herbert W , 386 Sommer Cynthia G 320 Stembauer, Robert 195 Stucky. Timothy A 379 S Shearer, Richard M . . , 1 80, 308 Sloan, Kevin W 189 Sontag, Charlotte M 196. 304 Steiner, Jo A 472 Student Education Association 1 SheDu 156 Sloan, Michele E 342 Sontag William M 318 Steiner, Susan K .... 295 170 - Sheehan, Joan M 470 Sloan, Wayne F 172 Sooy. Michael G. . . .148,425 Steinkirchner, Paul G . . .359 Student Publications 1 98 K Sheely. Michael R ,189.328 Slocombe, Bonita A . , , 470 Sorensen, Gregory A 1 62 Stemmeyer, Dena M 304 Studer. Billy D 473 1 Sheets, Jennifer L 311 Slocombe. John W 159,470 Sorensen, Susan E 339 Steitz. Joe A 472 Stueve, Betty L 473 : Sheets, Jocelyn K 180,349 Sloop. Sandra K. . , 403 Soroka, Mitchell S 471 Stejskal, Ricky L 421 Stueve, Bonnie L 174.473 : Shehi. Dennis W. .. 421 Slupianek, Norris R 172 Sorrick, Cynthia J 349 Stenvall, Harry C 167, 188,350 Stueve, Gerald J 413 Shehi.LoraJ 155,166 Smades, Rita M 470 Sorrick, William A 297 Stenzel. Patricia A 472 Stuhr. JohnC 318 Shehi.RondaG 470 Smail. Deborah A 470 Sottler, Nick A 189 Stephens, Donald D 406 Stum, MarleneS, 148,175,431 I Sheik, Julie B 157,398 Smail. Ronald D 470 Soukup. Nancy A 471 Stephenson, James D , 406 Stum, William L 473 S Sheldon, LeRoy 160, 470 Small, Susan K 386 Southard, JanisS 156.191,368 Stephenson , Janet S 192,342 Stump, Sally L 473 X Shelite, Belinda K 338 Small, Terri R 368 Southerland Steve R 386 Stephenson, Patricia 1 52 Stump Sandra K 339 fyB Ja Shellenberger, John ..164.470 Small! William E. 144,300 Southwick, Christopher 421 Stephney, James D 472 Stump. William L, . . . 473 a Shelley. Rita 200,386 Smalley. Richard S ... 180 Sowers, Paul R 471 Stephney, Kevin E, , , , ,472 Stumpt, Richard W 1 62, 297 I Shepard, Leland M 378 Smart, Gregory L. 400 Spacek. Candy L 180 Steponick, Marilyn R 473 Stumpff , Ronald G 322 H Shenf, Yosel S 144 Smart. Robert L 386 Spade, Steve L 358 Sterling, Jill A. . 175.473 Stupica. John L 177 Sherlock, Peter K 358 Smith 413 Spaeth, Elaine E 471 Sterling, Patrick B, . . ,370 Stuteville, S, 473 H Sherman. Brad S 325 Smith. Brenda H. . 202.470 Spangler. Phyllis J . , 471 Sterling, Steve E 370 Stutzman, Emelise D 148.425 1 Sherman. Deborah K 470 Smith. Bryan T 470 Spangler. Ronald K 471 Sterrett, Timothy J, 473 Subera. Stuart A 473 Sherman. Renee I 292. 1 51 Smith, Carl E 189 Spannuth. Audrey K 179,471 Stevens, Douglas E 359 Sud. KnshenK 144 Sherrard, Diana L 470 Smith. Casey V .378 Spare, Bruce D , ,358 Stevens. Elizabeth C, ,160. 185,365 Suderman, Elaine R 197,473 ti Shelter, Nancy J 315 Smith, Cindy L 470 Spare. Daniel P 171,471 Stevens. Larry W. 171.359 Suderman, Glenn M 379 tt Shideler, Deann R 364 Smith. Colleen M, 168, 199,204, Spare. Donna J 403 Stevens. Robert P .473 Suellentrop, Mary T 1 54. 404 Shideler, Robert J. , 180. 358 205 Sparke. Jerri A 339 Stever, Julie A 156,312 Suellentrop, Richard J. . . 161.331 ft Shields, Cynthia M 304 Smith, Connie D . ... 339 Sparks. David L 359 Stewart, Gay L 180, 183,350 Suiter, Kerry R 473 IH Shields, Janett L 470 Smith, Darnell . 187 Sparks. Kathryn L ... 167, 192, 398 Stewart, JanineL 473 Suiter. Rita J 473 Shields, Martha M 338 Smith. David R 174 423 Spear. DavidS 471 Stewart, Paul D. ,359 Sullins. Debra K 1 79 t Shill, Terry L 171.470 Smith, DeborahS 157,295 Spear. Diane M 471 Stewart, Robert A. 395 Sullivan, Cathy 172,365 i Shimp. John F 378 Smith. Diane M 431 Spearman. Michael L 1 80, 1 82 Stich. Paul F 162 Sullivan, Gregory A .326 Shmeman. Kirby A 180, 470 Smith, Donald J 470 Specht, Susan L 154,174.471 Stickney, Larry D 473 Sullivan, Janet C. 473 Shippers, Kathryn M 167,180,349 Smith, Donald R. . . 406 Speed, Daniel E 185, 379 Stiebe. David A 473 Sullivan. Kevin F 326 Shippers. Kirk 180.349 Smith, EmilieK 163 Speer. Joyce K 146,471 Stigall, Janet A 166,320 Summerlm, Johnnie M 295,151 $ Shirer. Virginia 162 Smith. Eric A 358 Speer, Robert W 331 Stigge, Douglas K. 421 Sundgren, Donald W 300 Shirley. Julie L 368 Smith. Frederick E 470 Spellman, Stanley D 379 Stiles. Dale W 180 Sundgren, Linda D 1 54, 339 , ; Shively, Baron J 162 Smith. Gail A 470 Spence, Ann L 151 Stiles. Doug L 180 Surber. Heidi M 179,398 UP Shivers, Mary B 155,470 Smith. Gail L 471 Spence, Lori A 345 Stiles, Mark 370 Suther, Stephen E 205. 473 I! Shoemaker, Robert M 386 Smith, Gregory V ,326 Spencer, Douglas M 370 Stiles, Mary C 174, 177,304 Sutlick, Albert F 165.410 Shoemaker, Robert S 393 Smith, Janice A 154, 189,471 Spencer, Janelle E 317 Still, Richard E 386 Sutton, Crystal R 425 t Shoemaker, Steven J 369 Smith, Jennifer J 471 Spencer, Lance J 308 Stillions, Keith M. 410 Sutton, Eric 180, 181 Z Shook, Martha J 167,311 Smith, Joanna 1 188,431 Spencer, Lauren E. . , ,471 Stmson. Sharon L. 189,431 Sutton. Jeffrey J 166, 180 t Shook, Timothy R 180,358 Smith. Jon M 471 Spencer, Steven H. . . . . .423 Stiles, Gerald R 191,308 Sutton. Marcia L 155,473 Shore, Carl L 378 Smith, Joyce E . 339 Spencer. Terry L 471 Stilt, Terry L 417 Svaty, Lynn M 350 Short, Anita K 470 Smith, KarenS 315 Spener, Cheri S 153.174.292 Stock, Gregory L 147 Svoboda, Alan C 386 IS Short, Brian C 180,378 Smith, Kathy J 471 Spicer. Linda J. 151.170.177.365 Stockham, Audrey L , ,320 Svoboda. Wayne A 372 K Short, Fredrick W 399 Smith, Kenneth C , , , 425 Spicer, Ronald W. . . ... .425 Stockstill, Kristin 145.292 Swader.TerryA 297 ft Short. Karen A 304 Smith, KernW. 471 Spicher. Ellsworth D 471 Stockton, Mary D. , . 342, 151 Swaggerty. Sarah N 295 in Short. KnstiD 342 Smith, Kevin D 471 Spicher. Randall D 425 Stockwell, Gregg M 473 Swain. Leila G . . .473 Shnmplm, Tina M 431 Smith. Kevin W 471 Spielman, Candy N 161 Stottel, Donald W 473 Swallow. Joy D 180.362 S Shropshire, DC 300 Smith, KordS. 171. 1 73. 322 Spiller, Sharon J 180 Stoffer, Janet M 148. 175,414 Swan, Steven L 473 -: ' -= Shrum. Christy S, 1 45, 1 56, 368 Smith. Lamar 471 Spitsnaugle, Sherry 168,203.204, Stokesbury, Debra A 339 Swander, Karen D 166 1 Shull, Debbie 292 Smith, Layton A 471 205, 295 Stoller; Brentton G 193,473 Swank, Jack W , . 1 76 Shuman, Debra A 386 Smith. Lucia K 191 Spoon. Darrell D 185 Stoloff. David R . . . .193 Swann, Craig A, , ,197 Shute, Steven E 146.149,470 Smith. Margaret 197 Sports 206 Stoltenberg. Stephen R 370 Swann, Rick M , , ,379 Si Sickler. Scott O 180 Smith. Mark A. 167.471 Sports Scores 284 Stone, Bruce H 326 Swanson. James R 386 t Sidebottom, William 147.413 Smith, Mark E. 389 Spratt, Debra S 349 Stone. David R 322 Swanson. Jeanette 339 Sidesinger. Marvin R 349 Smith, Martha K 174. 175.311 Spratt, Patti J 403 Stone. Louise A .339 Swanson, Jenita L 473 Sidic, Dinka D 431 Smith. Mary J. 151.187. 201,414 Springer, Kim D , . . ,362 Stone. Mary A 181 Swanson. John E 386 ,0 Sidorowicz. Kenneth ... 193 Smith. Maureen E 143. 168,471 Spring Fling 53 Stone. Thomas W. 308 Swarner, Joseph M 412 Siebert, Sandra K .173,338 Smith. Nancy L. 154 Spurlock, Anne E 471 Stone. Wanda L . . . 350 Swart, KyleD 171.379 t Siefkm, Barbara C 470 Smith, Odile 311 Spurlock, Cynthia 471 Stonecipher. G. 193.423 Swartwout, Nancy J 350 Siegle.Rick 470 Smith, Paul R 471 Spurs 148 Story, Clayton J 160. 187 Swartz. Michele L 473 ' ' ' $ Siemens, Cynthia R 180, 187, 338 Smith, Perry L . . 300 Squires, Bobby D 144,471 Stoskopf, Debra L 431 Swartzendruber. Carol A, 175.317 a Siemens, Michael A 378 Smith, Randall A. . 164, 165 Squires, Joelyn 162.471 Stoskopf, Jayne L 431 Sweazy. Sharee K 473 i Siemer.AlanJ 144,470 Smith, Rebecca A 196.414 Staats. Janice A 185 Stoskopf, Norman D 1 60, 181.331 Sweeney. Felicia C. . . . .473 Siemsen Debra K . .431 Smith, Rebecca J 471 Stables. Dan R 289 Stoss, Kenneth J 188,473 Sweeney. Michelle L. 365 - Sigel, Greta 470 Smith. Rebecca J 148. 180.471 Stables. Michael C 289 Stotts. Leslie R 473 Sweet, Robert L 167.308 9 Sigler, Harold W 395 Smith. Richard J 147,391 Stachelbeck. Kenneth E 1 76. 289 Stotts, Roger L 473 Swenson, Debra R. 150,196.321 J! Sigma Alpha Epsilon 405 Smith. Robert A 144.471 Stadel, Deborah J 154.172,176. Stout, Christine M. 155 Swenson, Galen G 473 f i?ifi Sigma Chi 407 Smith, Roberta M 471 329 Stout, Karen A. 161,339 Swenson, James W 328 |J, J pi Sigma Delta Chi 168 Smith. Roderick A 391 Stafford, Jeffrey L. 196,359 Stout. Lynne 174 Swift, Victoria M. . 1 74. 473 index 491 Swift. William J 417 Swimming 253 Swist. Ronald A 473 Swob, Bruce C 299 Sylvester, Leon E 160, 183. 187 331 Sylvester. Noel D 179.182.331 Sylvester, Randall B 474 Symphonic Orchestra 1 8 1 Symphonic Wind Emsemble 181 Synek. Timothy B 379 Thomas. Kimberly A Thomas. Leslee K Thomas. Linda K Thomas, Linda K Thomas. Michael D Thomas. Norma J Thomas. Randall W Thomas, Rebecca J Thomas, Robe rtW Thomason, Steven N Thomen, Shirley K 155 339 340 155 154 391 183 474 321 474 179 340 Travis. Christy L 340 Trayer. Deaun K 148.404 Trayer, Martha A 404 Trayford. Gail M ... 368 Treiber.SusanA 180.181.414 Trembley, Sarah J 474 Triangels 157 Triangle 422 Trimble, Frank H 474 Trimmer. Diane L 474 Tnpp. Deborah L 146.315 WY Vaczi, James Vail. William A Vale. Barbara Y. Vale. KimJ Vallero, Kevin M Vancil, Roger D 387 328 475 475 400 165 Voss. Sherri D. .151.431 MS ' 1 ' Voth. Darrell R 476 ;,asf - s ' Voth. Donald J 143.476 I. ? ' ' - ' Vouga, Victor J. ,149.476 naier ' Vovk. Frank 193 BWiQM ' Waters . rj WWW (akinsG Wabuda. GaryJ 387 474 Trower.GayL 474 ttt Thompson, Carolyn F Thompson, Dawn G Thompson, Diane K Thompson, Dorothy L 474 368 431 194 True. Roni M, 295 Trueblood. Marsha L, 150,431 Trumble. Carla E 414 Trump. Sheryl A, 1 53, 1 96, 292 Van Cleave, Janet H Van Dyke, David Van Dyke, John R Van Gundy. Diane E Van Loenen, Rodger L 398 322 417 340 ,475 Wade. Jacqueline L Waeldm. Joan K Waetzig. Valerie L , Wagner. Dana M Wagner. Glessner J 350 , . ,196.321 .340 Waisff 1 - . -,-, wa ' soi. 474 Trupka, Dennis J, . .379 Tade, Jeffrey A 474 F R 193 Tryon. Charles P 359 Van Meter, Russell M 194.475 Wagner, Jacquelyn L 476 j Tafesse, Solomon Tamson, Tony W. , 187 474 Thompson, Gregory N Thompson Kris P. 308 406 Tryon. Michael D, 359 Tschannen, Bruno F. 179,328 Van Pelt, Reginald A . Van Petten, Jeffrey 185.423 359 Wagner, Marilyn K. . , Wagner, Randell G. . 180,305 Tandy, Cecelia A Tanner, Kim A ... Tanner, Rebecca J Tappan, Kimberly A 160 1 49, 1 54 154.187 474 474 404 350 Thompson, Marc A Thompson, Michael D Thompson. Michael W 180. 389 297 185, 370 Tubbs. Kevin L. 350 Tucker, Andrew E 372 Tucker. Brenda K 474 Tucker. Greg A 425 Van Tasell. Brenda K. Van Wormer, Gregory Vancil, Roger D Vander Dussen, Cathy 404 410 475 304 Wagner. Wendell D, Wagnon, L Thomas Wagoner. Steven J. . Wahl, Scott M 3g Walts Her 176.177,289 . . .379 Tapsak, Pamela A 474 Thompson, Patricia L 386 Tucker. John O 167 Vandeventer. Harold 197 Wahle. Susan L occ WaA ' pr 1 ODD Tarabek, Paul 178 Thompson, Paula J . 156 474 Tucker. Julie K 153.180,192,474 Vandeventer, William H 475 Wainwright, Wanda . QT Wsytx ' Tau Beta Pi 149 Thompson, Peter L 301 Tucker. Keith D, 141,149.173.197. Vandewiele. Scott J 475 Wakefield. Ronny W 47R ' ' e ' 3 . lAfoatinn UtkfiA Tau Kappa Epsilon 418 Thompson, Robert C 379 328 Vangundy. Mike W , 331 Waldren, Deryl E 187,379 Tau Sigma Delta Taylor. Carla F 149 154 Thompson. Shelly D Thompson. Sidney A, 160 145 188 154 Tucker. Teresa D 474 Tuckwood. Tom E 350 Vanier, Jay Vanier, Martha A 391 160.368 Waldren, Vernon L . Walker, Allen D , 187,476 1 72 weasi I - UK ' .-. Taylor. Catherine M. 474 Thompson, Stephen H 418 Turek. Sally A 295 Vanlerberg. Diane M. . . 475 Walker, Anthony C. 180. 181,322 wea = ' - Taylor. Eldon D 305 Thompson, Steven L 331 Turk, Rebeccas 431 Vanlerberg. Robert J 475 Walker, Denise K 476 Weaw.Jar. Taylor. Elisabeth A 398 Thompson, Tad M. 200 328 Turnbull, Cheryl R 368 Vannahmen. Alan G . 171.379 Walker, DiannaL . .154.476 Taylor. John E 386 Thompson, Toni M, 342 Turnbull, Cynthia J 368 Vanovar. Irene J 371 Walker. Gary L. 183.331 Taylor. Karen S 414 Thompson, TyronS 187 Turner. Diana K 31 7 Vanpelt, Reginald , . 147 Walker, IngaZ 192.476 Taylor, KansJ, 474 Thompson, Wayne L 176 180 Turner, Hiawatha 187 Vantasell, Debra S 200, 404 Walker, Julie L 1 cc A ' eKsf tovE I OD j Taylor. Keith D 164 Thomsen. David J. . 386 Turner, Jeffrey L 289 Vanwinkle, Clinton A, , , .475 Walker. Leslie A 170,476 Taylor. Kermit O. 177 Thornton, Larry L 379 Turner, Keith E, 162.299 Vanwmkle, Daphne L 475 Walker, Lonnie J 476 Taylor. Matthew M 406 Thornton, Roger D 326 Turner. Kimberly 404 Van Zile 424 Walker. Robin E , .155, 191 Taylor. Melody B 350 Thorsell. George R. 171 387 Turner. Robert M. 350 Varney, Susan R 342 Walker, Terry L. . 191,328,379 Webei iWG Taylor. Pamela A. 474 Thull, Virginia K 145 174 Turner. Rodney L 389 Vasconcells. Roger A. 350 Walker, Tony 178 Taylor, Paula K, . . 157 Thurlow, Annette L 194 Turner, Ronald E. 359 Vasey, Velda J 387 Walker, Warren V 194 Weber! ! Taylor, Roy J 379 Thurlow. Deanna M 474 Turner, Rory O 197 Vathauer, Nancy A 161 Wall. David L 146.476 Taylor, Sherri D 173 Thurlow, Ladonna L 174. 177 474 Turner, Wayne B 359 Vaupel. Gary R 359 Wall. Orie E 379 Webste -Er:. Taylor, Thomas E 474 Thurlow, Lynn E 161 Tutman, Jim 180 Vaupel, William E , 359 Wallace. James R. 393 Wessice ' C Taylor, Thomas L 162 Thweatt. Angela P 474 Tullle. Holly J. 168 Vauroch, Larry D 147 Wallace. Leesa M. . . .,189,340 Web Una 1 : Taylor, Tommy J. . . 180, 181 182 Tibbits, Doris D 404 Tuttle, Howard 1 77 Veach, Susan K 180,350 Wallace, Richard 379 Wets- -:: Teasley, Karen L 474 Tidemann, Jean V. 365 152 Tuxhorn. Doyle P 359 Vedros, Valerie A 1 55, 292 Wallace. Roger W 301 Wed ME Teate, Ann M 368 Tieking. Christine C 474 Twaddell. Janet L 148,474 Veith, Anthony J. 387 Waller. Gayle L 315 Wed . Sari Tedrow. Jan M. . 474 Tilgh-nan. Richard K 149 359 Twietmeyer, Cynthia D 1 54. 1 77, Velasquez, Nat J .322 Wallerius, Karen A 340 We . VtoO Teefey, Jeffrey L 372 Tillman, Frank A. 149 304 Velasquez. Terry J 476 Walrafen, Gregg 387 Weeo? ' : I Teel.MarkE 359 Tilton, Charla J 474 Twietmeyer, Steven F. 163, 410 Veleker. Thomas R . . .177 Walsh, Barbara 312 WeeJsSWriL Teeter, John H 328 Tilton, Donald E 474 Tyler, Charles S 177 Velez, James O 476 Walsh, Gerald J . .418 Weerns RtttrlE Teeter. Vicky L. 156 431 Timti. Isidore N 186 Tyler, Cindy L 431 Venker, John S 393 Walsh, Harold J 379 Weems SIM Tehel, Terry L. 295 Tindle. MarkG 301 Tyson. Jeff A 379 Venn, Theresa K , ,340 Walsh, Mary J, 295 WerjerB.rjmsC Teichgraeber. Art C. 308 Tippin, Kimberly A, 398 Venneman. Bettie A 340. 151 Walter, Debra L . 321 Wegra-;j-i : Teichgraeber. Pamela Teirab. Bashir H Telthorst.LisaA, Tenholder. Timothy N 157, 173 474 186 329 328 Tjaden, Dena Tjaden, Max H Tobald, John A. Tobler, Jane E 157. 181 304 418 387 315 uuu Ventress, Victoria E Vereen, William N Vernon, Susan K , Verschelden. Cecilia V. 431 326 350 .180 Walter. Douglas P. Walter, Roxanne G. . Walters. Amy L Walters. Cathy J, 476 476 192.340 476 Werjw.Saeil Wel :- Wlf. V Wettfl Marj Tennal, April S 404 Tobler, Jeffrey E, 379 Uebelhart. Christine A 340 Verser, RockeC. 149 Walters, Charles I , 476 WeeW jr. Tennis 210 Tobler, Jill E 157 315 Uhl. Michael L 146,149,173 Vervynck, Janice L 476 Walters. Delbert A 328 Weirie Uaiaj Tensing, Bernard J 149 Todd, David M 326 Uilliland, Ayn M, 164 Veterans On Campus 189 Walters. Donna 329 WMenrt Terrell. Tern L 152 Toebben. Roger W, 149 Ukena, Karen S 147,151,304 Vick, Steven A 476 Walters, Sandra A . 404 Wedman JcrmH Terrill, Lynda L 350 Tofa.AbduD 144, 159,186 474 Ullom, Steven J. , .474 Vickers, Max E 476 Walton. David N 379 KMner.SlML Terrill, Richard D. 474 Toher, James D 379 Umbehr. Nancy K 350 Vickers, Nancy L 170.476 Wampler. Jeffrey W 308 Weir, to R Terry, David D, 379 Tolin, Bryce A, 185 423 Umphenour. Judith A 474 Vientos Jose A , 476 Wang, Roger W 391 taslonwR Terry, Dorothy A. 180 312 Toll, Dennis J 359 Umphrey, Elizabeth C 340 Vigneron, Russell D 476 Wanklyn, Timothy E, 350 Wsser.Cami Testori, Karen A. 154, 196 365 Tolle.GaryL. . . 179 Umscheid. Janice M 474 Vilander. Richard A. 173, 180 Wann. Marjorie M .404 Waste Tetlow. Susan E 404 Tollefson, Ann C 145, 151. 170. Underwood, Tracy W. 474 Villa. Randy J. .387 Wannemacher. Jo A. 292 Weiss Joarr. Tewell. Jane E 404 179 398 Ungeheuer. Beth L 321 Vincent, Linda L 292 Ward. Deborah D, 145. 176.476 Wess : . Tewell. Marian P. 339 Tomasch, B. 181 Unger. Ralph W. 144 Vinduska, DarleneC 1 74. 350 Ward. Joe E 146 WessSwii Thames. Susan E. 160 312 Tompkins. Jacqueline A 431 Ungles, Ralph L .196.387 Vining. Frances B 151,292 Ward. Karen L 368 Weiss? fe:: Tharp. David W 379 Tompkins. John F 328 Union Governing Board . 1 96 Vining. Margaret A 196.414 Ward. Kenneth A 173.180.387 Wetorri Jjrrejj Tharp. Lisa L 180 181 Tompkins, M Diane 362 United Black Voices 1 83 Visser. Adelma L 187,317 Ward. Randall E 180. 182 Tharp. ToniK 350 Tompkins. Sheri K 174.177 304 University Sing 91 Vock, Diane S, 156.340 Ward, Sandra J . 148.476 Wefc.Caryr,L Thaw, Larry E . 187 Toms. Loretta S 474 Unkefer, Dayna D 474 Voegeli. JohnJ . 166.387 Warden, Paul G 359 Well =;. Thayer. Carolyn J 178 179 Toor, Barry M 350 Unrein. Carol E 475 Voegeli, Tom J 379 Warkentine, Robert W ..476 Wells Ste-j.; Thayer. Gordon W 147 Topliff. Becky A, 340 Unruh, Douglas E 379 Vogel, Cynthia K 350 Warmund, Michele 143.162 ' !:.;: Thayer. Holly J 156,192 295 Torres. Abdon M 387 Unruh, Galen K. 412 Vogel, Dale E 172 Warmund, Pamela J 476 We(rre.Ke% Theta Xi 420 Tortora, Richard A 172 322 Unruh, Janice E 175,317 Vogelman, Tresa D 340 Warner, Beth 175.431 Thielen. Julie M. 174, 185 350 Towell. Michael S 400 Unruh. MiloM 195.412 Vogts. Joan D 1 53 192,404 Warner. Randall L. 144.476 Weils--. Thierer, Larry 393 Towers, Donna L 368 Unruh, Virginia A 172.173.475 Voigts. Martha L 160.431 Warnica. Charles A 395 Were =;;..- Thierolf, Craig A 474 Townsend, Amy L 160.175.317, Unruh. Virlon N. 1 70. 475 Voiles. Denise A, 404 Warnock. Mary , , 295 WerKri. fiancra Thierolf, Gale D 169. 180 474 350 UPC Coordinators 197 Voider, Patricia A 365 Warra. Adamu A 144, 186 Thierolf, Linda L 474 Townsend, Karl L 144 187 Upham. Ward S 475 Volker. Boyd L 331 Warren. Gene W , 147 iger, Joans Thies, Charles W 410 Townsend. Nancy A 398 Upholf, Beth A. 475 Volker, Susan L 321 Warren, Heather M 154.476 Thies, Sandra S. 321 151 Townsend. Su M 152.192 342 Upton, Laura E. 192.340 Vollbracht. Mark L 161.370 Warren, M Elaine . , 154.312 WengerBtt,: ' Thiessen. Evan . 362 Towse, Marlon D 474 Upton, William M 149 Volleyball 252 Warren. Stephen R 318 We :-.-.; Tholstrup. David B 326 Track 214 Urbanski. Beverly A 185 Vollintine. James R 149 Warren. Virginia L. . 476 erwifts|B( r - Thomas. Clara E 361 Tracy, William O 393 Ure. Barbara E, 475 Vonfeldt. Bryan L 379 Warren, Wyman M 379 tone, Dtra E Thomas, Cynthia J 474 Trainor, Leslie E 144 Urish, Joyce R. 145.189 Voos. Jon M 308 Wary, Joleen M , 415.180 eneuj.; Thomas, Daniel A 328 Trammell, Janice L 404 Urish. ReneeS 189,431 Vopata, Barbra M . 476 Washburn. Robert L 476 Thomas, Emma J. 474 Tramposh. Gerald P, 387 Useldmger. Linda S 475 Voran. Kent S 387 Wasinger, Karen L 157.350 Thomas. Frankie 1 155 Trapp, Deborah L 342 Utter. Nancy C 315 Voran. Roxie L 425 Wasinge. Paula 157 Thomas. Keith D 180 Trapp, Timothy M 410 Utz. Cassandra D 160,431 Vosler. Eva J 160,312 Wasinger, Richard L . 476 492 index til llj. Wasker, Charles F 326 West, Brenda S. 194 Willhite. Curtis R 159 187, 188,477 Winter, Daniel R . 478 Yarnell, Ruth K. .150 ' :;; Wasser, Leslie V 350 West Hall 426 Willhite. Lisa K. 350 Winter. Edward D 478 Yarrow, Frederick L. . . 425 r:: Wasser, Scott A 476 West, James E 477 Williams, Billy C 183,360 Winter. Kent T 297 Yarsuhk, Stephanie . 478 Waterman, John K 146 149.299 West, Karen A . 404 Williams. Cynthia A 174.312 Winter. Mary A 425 Yates. Kathleen A . . 340 Waters, Clarence E 308 West. Kerri J. . 166 180,350 Williams. Deborah J. 187, 188,340 Winter, Oran K 478 Yaussi, Debra R 166,478 . Waters. Loetta M 167 West. Rita A . . 205 Williams, Deborah K 151,295 Winter. Paula S 1 79, 368 Yeager, Nancy L 342 Waters. Mike R 196 West. Steve G . 406 Williams. Dennis M 328 Winter, Randall A 478 Yeagley, Robed D 478 UU Waters. Monte G 425 Westbrook. Rena L 477 Williams, Dewey D. 477 Winter, Roger B . 189 Yenne, Jackie B. 478 Wating. Robert O 176 Westerhaus, John J . . 412 Williams. Donna M . . . .196.362 Winter, Sam S 360 Watkins. Brian K 359 Westerhold, Deborah A . . . . 340 Williams, Duane E. . 179 Winter, Victor J 168.202,203.478 Yenzer, Sylvia L 431 Watkms. Gary L . .476 Westhues, James M . . . .387 Williams, Eileen P. . 340 Wmteroth, Suzanne E 431 Yerby, Philip S 189, 379 Watkins. Holly G 340 Westhusing, Jana D .362 Williams, Gayle T 431 Winters, Kevin L 372 Yerkes, Jan M . . 478 Watkins, James P 395 Westlund. Terry L . . . . 328 Williams, Gregory W. 370 Winterscheidt, Elois M. .156. 478 Yim. KwokF 478 Watkins, Jeffrey P 400 Wetmore. David B. . . . ... .477 Williams, Helen D 164 Wisdom, Cheryl L 1 70 Ylander, David M 147,360 Watson, David E 389 Wetmore. Lu A . .477 Williams, Henry A. . 379 Wise, Criss 312 Yoakum, John H. 1 46. 1 49 173.478 Watson, Robert G 187 Wetta, EarlJ. .359 William Simon 86 Wise. Dick A 172,326 Yocum. Sue . 1 79 11. Watson. Robie R 170,476 Wetta. Patricia J . .415 Williams, Jerrilee . 185.340 Wise. Patricia A 317 Yoder, David D 360 Watson. Shirley A .312 Weyand, Carol A 431 Williams. John K 370 Wise. Scott G 306 Wise Steve C 423 York, Edward E. . . 479 : . Watt. Stanley F 197.421 Weyer. James P 144,477 Williams. John R 172 Wise. Teresa A .340.173,171 York, Terry 180. 183 ' :. Watts. George C. 162 Weyer. Marilyn B ... .477 Williams, John R 187 Wisecup. Robert T W. 181 Yost, John M 160.479 ' S Watts, Rebecca A 1 89 194,476 Whatley. Lida A. 477 Williams. Karen K. . . . . . .155,477 Youk, Teresa A 431 ,: ' Watts, Tony B . . . .370 Whearty. Judy K. 179.180 Williams. Kent S. . . . 182. 183,477 Wisner. Diana L 340 Young, Ann L. . . 340 Waugh, Marcia L 340 Wheat, Alice M .189 Williams. Kim A 149 Wiswell, Chester L 387 Young, Carrie A. . . . . . 317 ... Wawrzyniak, Jude . . 395 Wheat State Agronomy Club 1 62 Williams, Kristi A. 340 Withee. Jane S -478 Young, Cindy J 189,340 ' !! Waybright, Glenda S. . .. 415 Wheeler, Jane C .... 425 Williams, Larry A 400 Withee.L. V 162 Young, David A . . 350 ; : Wayland. Kelly R . .350 Wheeler. Larry R ... 393 Williams, Linda B. 177 Witherspoon, Kathy M 478 Young, Gregory A. . . .479 : ' Wearing. Mike A . .418 . Wherry. Martha L . . . . 340 Williams, Martha A .477 Withington. Harlan E 379 Young, Gregory B 193,479 : ' Weast. David H 171 188.476 Whisler, Scott R .370 Williams. Rebecca A. . 175.431 Witt, James G 478 Young, Leslee 312 Weatherbie. William K 359 Whisman. Nancy S 160. 176.179. Williams, Robert D. . 1 73. 360 Witt. Kim L 478 Young, Lester F 171.479 1 Weathers, Harold D 1 89 180. 477 Williams, Roger A. 187 Witthuhn. Ray L. . 182.478 Young, Linda J 1 80, 292 Weaver. Jack R 147.331 Whiston, Karen A . .477 Williams. Shari L. . . . 398 Wittmeyer. Gayle J 398 Young Marlena G 431 ;; ; Weaver, Karen A. Weaver, Tracy E. 321 149 Whitacre. Jeri A White. Beverly 350 156.477 Williams. Sherry L. . Williams, Stan L. . . . 164,404 148. 172.477 Wittmeyer. Jane A 162, 189 Wittstock. Jane A 478 Young, Rhonda G 154.479 ;: . Webb. Stephen D . ..379 White, Carolyn 295 Williams, Trenton L, . 477 Wixson, Michael G. . . 478 Y oung, Robert K. 479 is Webber. Mary E 476 White, Cheryl J 340 Williamson, Keith W. 379 Woelk. Linley E 387 Young, Steve B 301 1 0-1 Wphp Hfl rt P 359 White Deborah L 160 340 Willis Anne L 477 Young, Susan M 340 ' Weber, Judith 167.350 White. Earl R . . 425 Willis, Brenda D. . 312 Woelk. Teresa 321 Woellhof, Dana J 180,321 Young, Terrell 479 i. : Weber, Mary J . 1 82 White, Jenifer L . . . .477 Willis, Gregory O. . . 360 Wohler, Lorene K 1 75, 431 Young, Wendy J . 479 . Weber, Ralph G 1 79 180,379 White. Joan E. . . 477 Willis KentM 180 360 Wohletz, Dale R 478 Youngblood, Kathleen A. 183,365 Weber, Susan .476 White, Mary A. . . . 362 Willis, Linden G 477 Wold-Echert, Pauline M 146,478 Younger. LesA. . 360 f Weber. William 164.328 White. Mitsy M 154 Willis. Robert M. 180.350 Wolf, Carol J 174,478 Youngland, Debbie J. . 479 ,. ; Weber William P 476 White, Pamela L 155 192.350 Willis Rodney D 477 Wolf DanW 323 Youngouist Gail 321 Webster. Elaine L 145.312 White, Paula F ... .340 Willis. Rosalin 340. 183 Wolf, Gregory A 478 Younkin, Robed A 479 .; Webster. Kevin C 179 White. Peggy M 304 Wills, Melmda L 477 Wolfenbarger. Kurt A 410 Yu.ShinL .195 :: - Webster, Randall B 410 White, Spencer T 180,421 Wilms. David E 306 Wellington, Scot E 408 Webster, Robert . .359 White. Tracy M .400 Wilms, Richard N 306 Wolters, Joni L 350 M M Weddle. Mark E. 196,424 White, Tye 178. 181 Wilson, Alice E 315 Wolters. Mark A 360 B B B Weddle. Sara K 476 Whitehair. Stephen C. . . . . . . .477 Wilson, Brian C. 410 Womack. Nancy D 147. 404 r v- Wedel, Vicki D .317 Whitehead, Lesley K .145 169,398 Wilson, Carolyn A. 477 Womack. Roger D 478 . l I - LB iv Weeden, Terry L 160.331 Whitehead.MarkA 408 Wilson. Carrie A. 340 Women in Communications 1 68 Weeks, Stefni L. . 153 177.365 Whitehouse. Keva R . . 415 Wilson, Chase C. 360 Women ' s Glee Club 1 83 Zahner, Elizabeth A 152.315 ' , ' -. Weems. Robert E 412 Whitesell. Wayne 395 Wilson, Craig N. 478 Women ' s Sports 254 Zanders, David W 372 Weems, Steve .379 Whiteside, Timothy E. ... . .372 Wilson. Dalyn B 478 Wood, Bruce D. . 161 . 350 Zarda. Maria J 153 194.292 1 49 1 71 Whitham Jennifer E 362 1 65 Wood, MaryE 404 Zatezalo Linda L 1 56 1 72 328 Wegman, Elaine R 350 Whitmer, Mary E ....175 Wilson, Garth W. 308 Wood, Ronald J 360 Wood Suzanne E 342 342 Wegner. Steven L 372 Whitmer, Monte W .391 Wilson, Gregory H. . 391 Woodall, Dennis C. 360 Zawatzki. Mary K 1 50, 368 ct Wehlmg, Randy L 161,379 Whitney, Carl J, . . . .477 Wilson, Janet L 478 Woodard. William G 179.360 Zawistowski, Vince R. 172 1 88. 299 m Wehrly, Manfred R .476 Whitney, Carol A 148.477 Wilson. Jared L 478 Wooderson, Ricky A 387 Zeigler, Steven W .... 328 Weibert.MaryA. .157 Whitney. Donita L. . .153, 160. 180. 477 Wilson. Jon R 328 Woods, Cynthia L . 192,295 Zeman, George .479 i ' i Weible. William J . . 359 ' Wilson, Judy L 1 74 Woods, Karen L 1 52 Zeorlin, Daniel H 360 328 Weide, Malia J 165 188,387 Whitney, Harry E 477 Wilson, Karen 1 80 Woods, Nancy G 365. 152 Zerbe, Steven C 360 ;: Weidenheimer, Mary B. ... 321 Whitt. Patricia D 156 179.362 Wilson, Linda S 478 Woods, William D 418 Zercher. Thomas L. 180, 181, 182. : -; Weidman, John H .... 359 Wible Scott R 183.379 Wilson, Marilyn D . . 478 Woodson, Dore D 1 52, 478 479 Weidner, Steve L 149.476 Wichman, Boyd F . . . .477 Wilson. Mark D 328 Woodworth, Nancy J 365. 153 Zernickow, Kent L 195,372 Weir. Rick R 144,406 Wick, Linda K ... 350 Wilson, MarkT. . 391 Wooldndge, Baird J 410 Zerrer, Mary F 350 Weis, Lorraine R 155 Wiedenmann. Kurt R . . 387 Wilson, Michele D. 315 Woolery, Lana J 148.174.48 Ziegler. Carla J 350 Weiser, Cathy M . 350 Wienck, Dennis A . . . . 359 Wilson. Paul R. 387 Woolery. Suzanne K 192, 387 395 : Weishaar, Elizabeth A Weiss, Joann . Weiss, Russell W 340 340 477 Wienck, Linda R Wiens. Gregory E Wiens, Janice K 340 .477 ...477 Wilson. Rodney L Wilson. Ronald J. Wilson. Ronda J 323 144, 159.331 154. 159.350 Workman, Wesley E. 387 Works, Fred J. . . . 360 Works, Richard C 360 Ziegler, Mark H Ziegler, Ralph P. .360 147,395 ' ' ,. Weiss, Susan M 340. 1 53 Wiens, Jeffrey P. ... 359 Wilson, Sharon A . . 1 82 Wornom, John L 406 Ziegler. Thomas C . . .479 ' Weisser. Barbara A 150.477 Wiesner. Robert J 177.477 Wilson. Sue A 350 Worrell, David L 478 Zielke. Steven L 1 83. 308 Welborn, James J .... 308 Wiesner. Theodore F. 149,395 Wilson. Terri L 478 Wray, Connie A 192. 304 Zillinger. Douglas G. . 160.479 I8G.2 : Weller, Linda J .... 340 Wietharn. Gary E 161,391 Wiltfang, Wendy S 478 Wright. Douglas E 387 Zillman, John J 326 IBL 1 ' Wells, Carolyn L ... .477 Wiggins, Anne E 191,321 Wiltes, Lea A 1 66 Wright, James C 188 Zimmer. Billy R .162 : ' : Well, Raymond L . .477 Wikoft. Debra K .477 Wiltz. Janice C 431 Wright. John H 360 Zimmer, Paula K 362 Wells. Stephanie J . . 295 Wikolf. Douglas P 149.457 Wiltz. Patricia A 478 Wright, John L. 306 Zimmerman, Ann M. . 1 54 179.312 Welter. John F. 477 Wilbeck. Tony A. 183.359 Wimer. Joel W . 160.478 Wright, Keith A 144.179,326 Zimmerman, Debora A. . 479, 153 : Welimer, Kenton L ..297 Wilcox, Arlen E ... .162 Wimmer. Karen E. . . 156 Wright, Ronald A. ... 299 Zimmerman, Gerald L . .299 : Weltsch. Judy O 156 192.398 Wilcox, Cindy A 183.312 Winchell. Johns.. . 306 Wright, Roxane P 312 Zimmerman, Howard A. . . 171.479 .. Weltsch. Susan G 477 Wilcox, Edwin L 477 Windhorst. Dana J. 400 Wright. William M 360 Zimmerman, Jack 479 Wendt. Richard G 359 Wilcox, Jane 180.304 Windhorst, Dave A. . 478 Wrigley, Laurel E 350 Zimmerman, Leslie H. 360 Wendt, Sandra O Wenger. Eldred D. Wenger. Joan S 180.340 .379 477 Wilder. Dennis L Wilder. Gregg A Wileman, Stanley A 193,360 387 164, 186 Windhorst, Lissa F. Windsor, Nancy L Wmeinger, Alan W 167,478 342 478 Wuller, Rosemary L 350 Wullschleger, Richard D 417 Wunder. Beverly F. 478 Wunder, Maria K. . . 365 Zimmerman, Steven W Zimmerman, Susan C . Zipp, Gary L 387 365 326 ' 1 Wenger Melanie L 340 Wiley, Crystal L. . . . 156 162.317 Winger, Jane A. 342 Wunderle, Martin . 478 Zirnstein, Wanda M . . .479 ; Wenger. Ricky J .162 Wiley, E. Darlene . . 1 55 Winger, John R 421 Wurdeman, David A 478 Zoeller David B 169 ,11 Wenger, Ronald E 477 Wilhite, Patricia K 477 Winger, Joseph A. . . 326 Wurst, Wendel W 478 Zoeller Rebecca L 479 i : Werkmeister. Dona J 189 Werner. Donald E 1 59. 1 85, 359 Wilke, Margie L Wilkerson, Kelly L 145.477 . ... 379 Wingerson, Jolee . . Wingfield. Gregory A 143,478 165,478 Wurtz. Gregory J 149, 143 Wuthnow MarkL. . . . .360 Zorn, Michael A 387 Werner, Mark A . . . . 359 Wilkerson, Marlene K. . 167,312 Wmkler, Melissa A. . 478 Zovne, Jerry 145. 154 lil Werner, Scott Wernng, Chuck V Wesley, Tern L Wesselmann, Michelle M. Wesson. Cynthia A 326 351 362 .340 183.340 Wilkinson. Arthur S. Wilkinson. Sheryl K Will. Sarah J Wille.MarkH. . . Willett, Cindy S 477 156,398 174,477 360. 197 .350 Winkler. Nancy C. . . Winsky, Deborah A. Winston, Shana K. Winter. Brian F Winter, Charles L 321 152,295 368,153 297 387 yyy Zuk, Eric A Zwahl.ToddE Zwego. Marilyn S- . Zweygardt, Barbara K Zwick. Brenda K 151 360 479 479 1 75. 404 167.340 index 493 494 credits colophon art credits paper stock: 80-pound Karma cover: 239 green mission grain, gold mylar headline type: 36 point Helios body type: 1 point Helvetica outline type: 8 point Helvetica division page art type: Windsor additional art type: Charter Oak, Diplomat Bold, Garamond, Hellenic Wide, Helvetica Thin, Orbit Shaded, Patriot, Ronda Light, Smile, Tucsan Ornate. ink: RP Brown press run: 7,200 copies story credits Jett Anderson: 44; 75; 222; 248 NylaAspelin: Linda Brozanic: 23 Randy Brucker: 240; 251 ; 258 Cheryl Charles: 45; 53; 57; 1 1 1 Greg Doyle: 23; 26; 38; 61 ; 69 DoufifF n c:24;55;65;85; 112; 138; 142; 158; 184; 186; 190; 194; 198; 210 Jan Carton: 253; 255 flusfy Harris: 46; 98 Brenda Hemberger: 261 Troy Horine: 86 Dave Kaup: 37; 65; 75; 86; 1 07 Kathy Kindscher: 35; 91 ; 1 03 ScoKraff:16;97;228 Paula Meyers: 30; 41 ; 43; 91 Debbie Olmstead: 37; 44; 1 32 Ram Page: 50; 135 Jerri Phillips: 1 9; 71 ; 92; 1 09; 21 1 ; 21 9; 252 JudyPuc ceff;32;81;89 Linda Reed: 29; 62; 104 Paul Rhodes: 37; 48; 57; 65; 77; 83; 86; 1 03; 1 07 Lorna Salter: 23 Sara Severance: 66 Rita Shelley: 21 ; 58; 1 1 2; 1 22; 1 24 Mary Jane Smith: 45; 1 36 Tad Thompson: 21 2; 21 8; 225; 230; 243; 247; 257; 262; 265; 266; 278; 280; 282 Kevin Weiberg: 21 4; 221 ; 223 Ann Benson: 1 5; 24; 25; 27; 38; 41 ; 50; 51 ; 52; 53; 62; 68; 72; 73; 92; 93; 96; 100; 101; 116; 121; 137; 141; 207; 254; 287 GrefifVb fc ert:16; 17; 80 photography credits Tom Bell: 36T; 36BL; 40; 49B; 66; 76T; 76BR; 86B; 90TL; 125R; 126R; 126L; 127L; 127C; 128; 129; 1 30; 1 31 L; 1 31 R; 1 90T; 209; 259TR; 259B Jeff Cott: 20; 22B; 47; 68; 70; 71 ; 88; 98; 99; 1 02; 1 06; 111; 132T; 134; 136; 137; 139; 163; 184; 198;200B; 21 0; 21 1 ; 222; 223; 229; 232R; 234BR; 236B; 250; 251 ; 260; 267; 283TL; 345; 346; 349; 370; 381 ; 387; 398; 435; 438; 442; 452; 456; 465; 472; 479 Dennis Doles: 28 Sam Green: 22T; 214; 215; 216; 217 Jane - at ger:218;219 77m Janicke: 4; 5; 6; 8; 9; 1 2; 45; 64TL; 96; 1 22; 1 23L; 220; 224; 225; 231 T; 234L; 235; 236TL; 237; 242TR; 242TL; 243; 245; 256; 264; 266T; 267T; 271; 494 Matt Klassen: 64TR; 1 78T; 240; 241 ; 258; 259TL; 288; 289; 295; 297; 298; 299; 302; 304; 308; 31 1 ; 31 2; 31 3; 31 6; 324; 326; 328; 32 9; 331 ; 333; 336; 362; 363; 365; 366; 368; 372; 389; 391 ; 392; 395; 396; 400; 402; 404; 406; 408; 41 0; 41 2; 41 5; 41 7; 41 9; 420; 423; 425 Don Lee: 32; 50; 51 ; 74B; 87 B. J. McCrae:212;213 Dan Peak: 36BR; 64B; 1 42; 1 58T; 1 90B; 266B Granf Ringle: 1 0; 18; 42; 49TR; 54; 59; 76BL; 82; 84; 1 08; 1 1 0; 1 1 3; 1 1 5; 1 1 8; 339; 353; 356; 358; 360; 375; 376; 41 3; 447; 496 Brenda Smith: 1 32B; 1 33; 427; 429; 430 Vic Winter; 34; 35; 39; 44T; 49TL; 56T; 74TL; 78; 86T; 90TR; 90B; 104; 105; 123R; 123B; 125L; 126C; 1 27R; 1 31 C; 1 58B; 202T; 231 B; 232L; 234TR; 236TR; 238; 239; 242B; 244B; 246; 247; 252; 253; 268; 269; 272; 273; 280; 281 ; 469; 475 Larry Wright: 56B credits 495 the closing Sitting at the usual pit of a desk, I really get the urge to start whacking out a string of paper dolls. But then no one would think it strange, so why waste the paper? Anyhow, if I haven ' t thanked the people who worked with me by now, it wouldn ' t mean much at this date. But for all the world to read, here are the specifics. Thank you, Paula, Deb, Tad, Rita. Without all of you, I ' d have gone nuts solo! Always glad to have company! I hope you all know that without your support and friendship, the year would have been wasted for me. Really. A special thanks goes to Mary ' s ears (and the rest of her), for they never shut out my pains and complaints. You were my bit of sanity in a totally unpredictable world. Enough of this sentiment, or whatever. Here ' s to the photogs especially Tim. May all of those horrendous plagues that I, at times, wished upon your person never arrive! Glad the bookcase never caved in on me. Now for the rest of the crew Ann and the writers, Doug, Terri, Greg. What talent! Thanks for letting us exploit it. And for anyone else reading this, thanks for paging through the Royal Purple. If you don ' t like it, blame Jean. She started me in this game and then deserted, save through the mail. Enjoy. Linda Reed 1976 Royal Purple editor 496 lhe closing ' [.Here ' s to the ise horrendous ir person fiea on me. : ' m Sfc
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