Kansas State University - Royal Purple Yearbook (Manhattan, KS)

 - Class of 1988

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Kansas State University - Royal Purple Yearbook (Manhattan, KS) online collection, 1988 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 540 of the 1988 volume:

328 506 Closing Light shining through the main stained glass window in Danforth Chapel shows the vibrant colors and intricate patterns. The Chapel was built in 1940 as a memorial to the 5,000 K-State students that served in World War II. All-Faiths Chapel, which was added on in 1956, and Danforth Chapel are nondenominational. (Photo by Gary Lytle) ROYAL PURPLE April 1987-March 1988 Volume 79 Kansas State University Manhattan, Kan. 66506 Copyright 1988 Student Publications, Inc. What began Feb. 16, 1863, as one structure and one idea has evolved into a University covering 315 acres with 127 structures and 18,000 students. In 125 years, the faces and places have changed, but not the expectations. The years, changing the entire world, left intact the simple idea for an institution — that of higher learning. Through the invention of the first automobile, electricity and two world wars, this University has endured. Other aspects of college life also endured. Books, homework and finals were as much a part of the students ' lives then as they were during this anniversary year. We were part of a tradition begun by the founders of Bluemont Central College and the first students Trailing a string of balloons, Kevin Hochman, senior in electrical engineering, waits for the start of K-State ' s Homecoming football game. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) 2 Phillip Ginn, freshman in biology, and his dog, Nakaita, watch the crowd while listening to one of the bands playing at the Welcome Back (Photo by Gary Lytle) Two parachutists give each other the high-five after successfully landing in KSU Stadium during the halftime of K-State ' s game against Army. (Photo by Andy Nelson) 3 Jason Lilly, senior in mechanical engineering, and Jerome Nadel, graduate in psychology, prepare to finish the Alpha Gamma Delta bike race together. The two often compete against each other, only this time, the competition waned. (Photo by Jim Dietz) A Wildcat football spectator has plenty of room to sit in the uncrowded stands at KSU Stadium during the K-State-KU game. (Photo by Gary Lytle) to attend Kansas State Agricultural College. The Morrill Act established this as the first land-grant college in the nation, with its main objective being to teach courses in agriculture and mechanical arts. As the 125th anniversary of Kansas State University, 1988 was only a touch of time in the history of K-State, a touch of the past. This yearbook, as well, only reflected a touch of time in this anniversary year. In fact, the photographs in this book captured only about 10 seconds of all the time spent studying, celebrating, dreaming and building. This brief reflection showed a University that surpassed simply educating students to cultivate the land in rural Kansas, to educating students in over 200 areas. It is an institution that was Butchart, junior in business rides atop Andy Mcllvaine, freshman in administration, as they compete in the smash competition of the Sigma Chi Derby Days. (Photo by Jim Dietz) 5 Pope John Paul speaks to hundreds of thousands near San Antonio, Texas, during the fourth stop of his nine-city U.S. tour. (Photo by Andy Nelson) K-State President Jon Wefald looks on while U.S. Sen. Nancy Kassebaum greets Costa Rican President Arias Sanchez after he delivered the 77th Landon Lecture on Public Issues in Ahearn Field House. (Photo by Andy Nelson) 6 host to prominent individuals known both throughout the nation and world. K-State said good-bye to Alf Landon, Kansas ' elder statesman after whom the prestigious Landon Lecture Series on Public Issues was named. President Reagan visited Landon in celebration of his 100th birthday, and Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, was the 76th Landon lecturer to her father. Only a month later, Landon died. Costa Rican President Oscar Arias Sanchez visited K-State shortly before he was awarded a Nobel Peace Prize for his Central American peace plan. Indeed, the University ' s beginning was humble, but the years that followed created a University that reaches into the future, while at the same time, holds to its roots. Perhaps one day, 125 years will only be a touch of time in the history of this University. President Ronald Reagan visits the home of Alf Landon to celebrate his 100th birthday. daughter, Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan., took part. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) 8 125th Anniversary. Elections Homecoming State Fair Landon Lectures Pillsbury Crossing out in purple, Nick Hulsing, freshman in administration, cheers the Wildcat foo ill team during their Homecoming game the University of Oklahoma. (Photo by Gary Lytle) 9 Student Life Division by Karen Allen For race participants, the Little Apple Triathlon is a challenging test of dedication, endurance and skill. 10 Triathlon Little Apple Triathlon tested the endurance of over 150 athletes at Tuttle Creek State Park last fall. The triathlon, an annual communi- ty event sponsored by KSU Recrea- tional Services, consisted of a swim, a 10.5-mile bike ride and a 1.3-mile run. Race participants had to be 14 years old to enter and then competed in categories based on age. The oldest division was over 50, and this year two Participants in the Little Apple Triathlon get a quick drink of water while running up the path from the swimming stage to the bicycling stage. (Photo by Gary Lytle) Little Apple Triathlon participant Larry Mah slides his shirt on over his helmet while getting ready for the bicycling portion of the race. Mah finished the race — which took place at Tuttle Creek Reservoir — 10th in his division. (Photo by Chris Assaf) men and one woman finished in that division. The 1987 Little Apple Triathlon affected participants differently. For some, the race was easy. Talking and laughing among themselves, some participants jogged the last three miles of the course. For others, the race was a serious test of endurance and a challenge to the finish. And for a few, the race proved to be too much, as 37 contestants withdrew before finishing. Michael York, Topeka, successfully completed the course in less than an hour to win the men ' s overall divison. York, who was competing in his seventh triathlon of the summer, in 53:00.01 minutes. Jim junior in veterinary medicine, finished 2:12 behind York to capture second place. The competition gets better every year, Nelson said. I competed last year, and this year I was trying to win. Although he did not win, Nelson said he improved his time. Paula Smith, Topeka, won the women ' s overall division with a time of 1:05.14. Second place went to Lynn Biggs, Kansas City, who missed first place by 31 seconds and crossed the finish line in 1:05.45. Third place went to Diane Compton, Wichita, who Bradley Fagan, senior in business nears the end of the bicycling stretch in the Little Apple Triathlon. Fagan finished 13th in his 25-29 age group. (Photo by Jim Dietz) finished in 1:08.38. While most participants competed individually, some chose to enter as a team. The teams consisted of three members, and each member in one leg of the course. Both the men ' s and women ' s in this category were based on the combined ages of the team 100 and younger or 100 and older. Three K-State students captured the men ' s 100 and younger title for the second consecutive year with a time of 55.20. Martin Dannatt, senior in competed in the swim, Rob Wilkerson, senior in engineering, handled the cycling, and Mark senior in nuclear engineering, participated in the run. The trio is already making plans for the 1988 triathlon. We had to come out to prove the fact that we could do it (win) again. We will probably do it again next year, Dannatt said. Local competitors believed the sport was here to stay. The sport has proven itself, said. I continue to look for new challenges, and the sport continues to offer them. Most everyone I know that competes likes the action. It is a fast-moving event, and even if you get injured in one area, you don ' t have to completely give up training. Training in different areas really makes for a well-rounded athlete. 11 by Nancy Chartrand GHOSTS OF THE NIGHT Halloween celebrat ions have students dressing up in costumes and carrying on stories of campus ghosts and legends. 12 Halloween alloween, This holiday u sually conjured up images of clad in costumes, running door to door in an attempt to gather Perhaps it also presented images of teen-agers dressed in costume, playing pranks and stealing jack-o-lanterns. Most people might have thought that by the time one reached college age, such foolery would be out of one ' s system. However, every year the students of K-State proved this wrong, through their antics and legends. Janelle Zimmerman, sophomore in bakery and management, and Rachele Gagliano, junior in business administration, react with surprise to the Halloween costumes of Brian McCallum and Rob Caffey, both freshmen in arts and sciences general, as they walk through Kite ' s Bar and Grill. The two were dressed as East German women wrestlers. (Photo by Jim Dietz) Aggieville was a hot spot on Halloween night. Bars in the area were packed with students dressed up in everything from Ronald Reagan costumes to grapes. It is an escape from reality, which is what we need up here. It is a good way to blow off pressure and be a kid again, Ken Schmidt, senior in engineering, said. For the past two years on Schmidt entered a room, applied extensive stage makeup and exited as Freddie Kruger, the villain from the horror film A Nightmare On Elm Street. Last year Schmidt, in his frightenly real Freddie costume, made an appearance in Aggieville. Guys would say, ' that ' s cool, ' and girls would cower and refuse to talk to me, Schmidt said. People I know didn ' t even recognize me. However, if a college student with a lot of theater makeup didn ' t send a chill up your spine, maybe some of the local ghost stories would. Polly Pi Phi was said to roam the halls of the Lambda Chi Alpha house. The Pi Beta Phis occupied the current Lambda Chi house in the 1940s. Legend had it that one member, who was referred to as Polly, died in her sleep at the house. I myself have never seen her, Bob Stuart, senior in biology, said. But some of the guys and one of our housemoms claim they have. Allegedly, early one morning the Lambda Chi housemom went down into the basement to get ice. As she was about to ascend the stairs she saw a young woman enter the house ' s chapter room. When she went to the door and looked in, she found no one. The woman had vanished, for there was no other exit to the room. The Purple Masque Theatre, located in East Stadium, was said to be home to a ghost named Nick. In the 1950s, East Stadium was an athletic dormitory. As the story went, Nick was a football player who was injured during a game. He was carried into the cafeteria, where he died on a table. It was said that he haunts the theatre. The years between 1964 and 1969 seemed to have been Nick ' s most active years. Clanging pipes, vanishing costumes and dimming lights were all attributed to Nick. During the summer, four students spent a night at the theater in hopes of making contact with Nick. Answers to questions they posed to Nick via a Ouija board sent chills up their spines. They also claimed to have heard footsteps in the corridor above the theater. So next Halloween, if you are look- ing for something scary, you need not look far. The K-State campus and Aggieville could be two of the scariest places on earth. Visitors to the Putnam Hall Haunted House react to the work of mad doctor Andy Van Blarcum, freshman in architecture, as he works on Sandberg, sophomore in engineering. (Photo By Brad Fanshier) 13 Halloween Hold on to Your Hats...Here Come the Cats echoed throughout the Union as groups participated in the 1987 Homecoming celebration. The competition preceded the K-State vs. University of Oklahoma football game. The festivity began with groups competing in Body Building. Yell Like Hell consisted of skits with acting and singing. Pant the Chant, a screaming contest, took place at the bonfire held in Memorial Stadium. The morning of the game, competitors displayed their floats in the annual Homecoming parade. For two weeks, every evening we spent at least four to five hours on the float, and some nights we spent up to eight hours, said Kim Dahlsten, member of Kappa Kappa Gamma and sophomore in management. This was the first year that FarmHouse participated in the Homecoming competition. For our house, it was a little difficult because we had never done it before, said Stacey Campbell, senior in agricultural journalism and member of FarmHouse fraternity. The Homecoming activities culminated Saturday afternoon with the announcing of the new ambassadors. Janelle Larson, junior in animal science and industry, and Mark Lacy, junior in business administration, were named ambassadors in front of 27,200 people at halftime of the game. by Sheila Graber Football schedule doesn ' t deter Homecoming festivities. Eric Becker, left, senior in and Dave Johnson, in civil engineering, get a good view of the Homecoming parade. (Photo by Gary Lytle) 14 Homecoming Alpha Delta Pi sorority members Shelly Underwood, sophomore in elementary education, and Tracy Gough, sophomore in food and nutrition - exercise science, hold up part of the Homecoming parade float their house help build.(Photo by Andy Nelson) Marc hing Band drummer David Watson, sophomore in arts and sciences undecided, performs during Homecoming halftime in special uniforms the band rented for the occasion. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) Members of the Alpha Chi Omega sorority and the Phi Kappa Theta fraternity run circles around their Homecoming parade float. (Photo by Andy Nelson) 15 P L WHAT ' S Grads face real problems. AHEAD? Getting out of college and into the real world can be quite an experience. find themselves facing a new set of problems. Deciding among many options — where to apply for a job, what to wear for an interview, how to choose between two jobs or how to deal with the frustration of not finding a job — can be the first real world challenges. Bruce Laughlin, director of Career Planning and Placement, said the job market for qualified in most fields is very good. But, he added, there is no field in which a student can get a job without any effort at all. For Sandy Macy, 1987 graduate in interior design, finding an entry-level position after graduation was not an easy task. Although Macy found employment in something other than her major area, she believed K-State her well for a career in interior design. We are lucky at K-State, in that K-State is well recognized for its quality of education and for the work ethics of Laughlin said. Many graduates find adjusting to a professional life a real difficult one to make. The hardest part is with non-activity, said Leslie Stokes, 1987 graduate in journalism and mass communications. Having most of her evenings to Stokes said she has to find things to do with her time. Time, that in the past, was spent studying. I miss the friendships the most, Macy said. But, she said, she is looking to what the future holds. by Lori Bredow Cindy Durham, graduate in art, adds stripes of color to the sea of black-ai id-white commencement gowns, worn by the 1987 K-State graduates, with her brightly painted cap.(Photo by Gary Lytle) Two of the students from the class of ' 87 find a way to show a little bit of color during the All-University Graduation at KSU Stadium in May of 1987. (Photo by Gary Lytle) 16 0 p Shaded from the bright — and hot — sun, geology professor Ron West observes the graduation ceremonies. (Photo by Gary Lytle) 17 Bad weather does not deter faithful fans. One die-hard country music entertainer, added to an estimated 10,000 country music fans in KSU Stadium, equaled both awareness and support for the die-hard American farmer. The cool, late summer rain did not dampen the spirit or enthusiasm of Nelson and Family as they performed in concert after the Austin Peay 26-22 upset of the Wildcats the 1987 football season home opener. In an interview before the show, Nelson talked about the plight of the farmer and about his Farm Aid shows. The farmer needs to be able to get a good price for his product, Nelson said. Farm Aid and shows like this are intended to do what I ' m doing right now — talk about it. We are trying to raise the level of awareness because people don ' t really know how serious the farm problem is in this country. Besides bringing attention to the farmers ' the concerts are also intended to provide som e financial relief. However, Mike Jones, K- State athletic business manager, said the concert sponsored by the K-State athletic department and Wrangler and Projects West, didn ' t even hit the break-even point. In order for Farm Aid to have received any revenue from the ticket sales, an additional 3,000 tickets needed to be sold, Jones said. At that point, Farm Aid would have received $2 from each subsequent sale. Jones estimated that 17,000 tickets were sold. Only 5,000 student were sold for the game and concert, and for every student ticket sold, three to four adult tickets were sold, Jones said. Jones attributed the low ticket sales to the fact the concert was held on Labor Day weekend. Though the problems were not solved or they were put aside for a while as Nelson opened the show with Whiskey River. And as Nelson sang the first few bars of Blue Eyes Cryin ' in the Rain, the heavens opened up and the rain fell. Members of the K-State Rodeo Club, hired to assist Nelson ' s crew, scrambled to cover the band and equipment with large sheets of plastic. While the continued and danced, Nelson sang a few of his hits, including Country Music singer Willie Nelsor waits for the end of the K-State Austin Peay game to perform it KSU Stadium. Approximate) 10,000 people attended the game and concert on Sept. 5. (Photo Jeff Weatherly) All of Me and My Heroes Have Always Been as well as old county) standbys like You Wen Always on My Mind, Sta ) a Little Longer and I You ' ve got the Money, I ' ve Got the Time. Nelson, who claimed was a little unsure about this type of concert at first summed up the evening himself and the fans endured the rain: I like any type of concert. by LaReina Waldof 18 Willie Nelson Despite the disappointment of rainy weather and the Austin Peay State University 26-22 upset of the Wildcats ' football season opener, the Willie Nelson and Family Concert bene fitting Farm Aid proceeded the game as scheduled. (Photo by John Thelander) Jamie Aylward, juni or in electrical engineering, works for the Gamma Phi Beta sorority at a concession stand during a football game. (Photo by Chris Assaf) Pledges of the Kappa Sigma work one of the concession stands during half-time of the K- State-Army game. (Photo by Chris Assaf) 20 fans evour concessions The aroma of polish sausage tickles the nostrils. The sound of crunching popcorn makes mouths water, sending surges of hunger pangs through the stomachs of restless fans. Concentrating on the game becomes pointless, and the only thing that will bring is a trip to the stand. Concessions stands aren ' t just traditions at athletic events, they ' ve become necessities. K-State Stadium services spectators with 14 stands and vendors during football and games, and hungry fans take advantage of all of them. It would boggle your mind at the amount of stuff we go through, said Dennis Schwant, concessions manager. It took 40 50-pound buckets of oil to pop enough corn to satisfy customers at the season opener against Austin Peay. During big games, fans eat more than 760 dozen hot dogs and polish sausages, Schwant said. Preparing all this food takes time, and the stands must have a full work crew and be stocked when the gates open two hours before Bill Coiner, sophomore in technology, puts out boxes to be filled with popcorn just before the halftime rush of the K-State- Army game. (Photo by Chris Assaf) the game. Vickie Beckley, stand manager, said it took 21 2 hours to pop six cases of popcorn used in just one stand. The hot dogs must be done when the gates open, Beckley said. That ' s another reason we have to be here so early. E.S. Webb and Co. owns the concession stands and employs 190 people to manage them. But, labor during the game is free. Members of the fraternities, sororities and other organizations volunteer their time to work in order to keep 10 percent of the sales. Kevin Meyerhoff, senior in business administration and member of Phi Kappa Theta, said it ' s hard work. It gets monotonous. If you don ' t talk to people who come in here, you get bored to death, he said. E.S. Webb and Co. not only puts food in the bellies of sports fans, but it also puts the clothes on their backs. The eye-catching stands enticing passersby with sweatshirts, and penants were also owned by E.S. Webb and Co. As long as there are sports and spectators, there will be hunger — and the concession stands will be there to satisfy it. by Audra Dietz 21 concession Stand 0 • Wildcat football fan Robin Battiest, sophomore in music education, cheers the team during the last few minutes of the game. (Photo by Gary Lytle) Just hours before the K-State-KU game, Riley County police officers talk with one of the merchants in Aggieville as shoppers and visitors walk the nearly carless street around them. The streets had been closed off from all motor traffic that morning. (Photo by Chris Assaf) 22 AGGIE CROWD Airs quiet on the Aggieville front after the K-State KU game. One Riley County said he was bored, but gladly so. What had been dreaded was a repeat of the and vandalism of the two previous K-State vs. University of Kansas football games in Manhattan, but that did not happen. That afternoon the football game ended in a tie, 17-17. There was no winner, except for Aggieville. City of Manhattan Street workers put up snow fences on the entrances to Aggieville on the day of the K-State-KU game. The fences blocked off all vehicular traffic and helped police control the flow of people into Aggieville after the game. (Photo by Chris Assaf) Many claimed the reason for the quieted nature of Aggieville visitors was the presence of the police in the core, which included the main four- block area. ' The fact that nothing is going on has a lot to do with the publicity of the preventative measures, and the fact that there is a on every square foot of the block, said Minida Dowdy, owner of the Master Gamer, an Aggieville shop. Officers from Wichita, Salina, Lawrence, Junction City and the Kansas Highway Patrol, policed the area. Some attributed the more mild atmosphere to the game ending in a tie. Dowdy was working that night after the game, as she was the previous year. I think it was fairly tame compared to last year. I think part of it was the score of the game. Both sides felt like they lost. No one had a big victory celebration, she said. I think it would have been more out of hand if it had been a win or a loss, then some people would have been upset about it, Lonnie Augustine, KU student, said. Cy Wainscott, director of University News, said he expected it to be a quiet evening because of the bad publicity from the disturbance the year before, the game ' s result and measures taken. However, many students said they only went to Aggieville out of curiosity, to see what was going on. To party, they went elsewhere. This isn ' t what we came here for. We came here for the game, but decided to come down to Aggieville to see what was going on. I ' m sure most of the people are here for the same reason, Augustine said. by Alicia Lowe Jari Webber, freshman in arts and sciences undecided, takes a nap on her bass drum during the K-State- KU football game. (Photo by Brad Camp) 23 Entering college as a seemed exciting and adventurous, but there was a problem. I had to cross one major obstacle: registration. My scheduled enrollment time was 8:30 a.m. I didn ' t even wake up until 9:30 a.m. I was already starting off on the wrong foot. Would they still accept my registration? When should I go? I figured the only way to find out was to walk over and try to get in. Waiting outside Ahearn Field House, I began to worry. I decided to keep myself busy by watching other students in line. They looked the same as I did, but were they as confused? I finally entered the field house only to find I had to make a decision. Which line should I enter? I chose the closest one. Unfortunately, it was the wrong one. What I didn ' t know was each line had a little sign which alphabetized the students ' last names. Looking around, I spotted the table which had my initial. Now there was another bridge to cross. How do I get from here to there without waiting outside again? Slowly I edged toward the line and slipped in, virtually unnoticed. As I proceeded to the next table, I realized I had forgotten to bring a pen. Luckily someone, who didn ' t seem to be having as much trouble as I was, loaned me his pen. I tried to fill out the forms quickly. I came to a blank that asked for my phone number. What is it? How should I know? It ' s only been my for a few hours. After racking my brain I came up with the four digit number 1212, but what prefix was it? 776? 539? or 532? I once again asked the guy who was waiting for me to finish with his pen, which prefix was used on campus. He knew. I quickly finished the forms and confidently looked to my next stop. There, inquiring about the financial aid process, the woman asked for my fee card and student I.D. What was a fee card? I couldn ' t figure it out. So, at the risk of sounding foolish, I asked her which one it was. She responded by grabbing the appropriate card from my hands. And that began my with financial aid. for my mental and physical health, this process wasn ' t too difficult. I continued on, had my I.D. card validated and the process was over. I looked back and felt sympathy for those rushing through the doors, just beginning. As I left the field house, I heard a friend yell, Hey, how did it go? Still dazed and overcome, I relayed my experience as I sighed and sank to the hot sidewalk in exhaustion, only to hear him say, You should have been here yesterday. There was hardly anyone here. by Alicia Lowe Waiting to register for fall classes can be a tedious process with the hot sun beating down, but Jerald Spohn, sophomore in agriculture education, stands his ground as others file by to pay fees before him. (Photo by Andy Nelson) BLUES Registration at Ahearn can be puzzling to all students, but especially to the new ones. TOP HERE Michelle Werner, junior in elementary education, (left) and Darci Henricksen, junior in home economics education, fill out a questionnaire for the NCAA after paying their fees during in August. (Photo by Andy Nelson) Thousands of students filed through registration lines in Ahearn during fall registration. More than 15,000 registered during the two-day process. (Photo by Andy Nelson) 25 Registration by Susan Hilt Pillsbury Crossing is appreciated for being a place to relax, get some sun or just have a good time. Stretch for the catch, Chuck McKale, senior in architectural engineering, finds the shallow water area an ideal field for frisbee. (Photo by Jeff Weatherly) Located 10 miles southeast of Manhattan off highway 177, Pillsbury Crossing Wildlife Area provides residents with a peaceful spot to spend the afternoon. (Photo by Jeff Weatherly) PILLSBURY CROSSING WILDLIFE AREA 26 as the sun glistened across the water, people enjoyed the hot, summer air and the cool, clear stream at Pillsbury Crossing. The water slowly ran over the fall onto the rocks below, making a splashing noise in the background, creating an atmosphere of relaxation. According to information found at the Riley County Historical Society, Pillsbury Crossing is located on 160 acres of land, eight miles southeast of Manhattan. It is a rock bottom creek bed which is usually covered with six to 18 inches of water. The crossing was reportedly used by wagon trains moving up the south side of the Kansas River. In the 1930s, water was pumped from the crossing to the city of Manhattan. It was one of the few spring-fed creeks that did not dry up in the summer. Pillsbury Crossing derived its name from the man who first settled the land, Josiah H. Pil lsbury. Pillsbury let the community use the crossing in the 1860s and 1870s for picnics and outings. It became a popular spot because of its natural beauty. The land was given to the Manhattan community in 1967 under the sponsorship of Kansas Forestry and Kansas Fish and Game Commission (now known as Kansas Wildlife and Parks). Dacia Fankhauser, junior in bakery science, first went to Pillsbury Crossing with a group of friends in her sorority. It was our last chance to do something relaxing so we packed up a picnic lunch and went to layout on our air mattresses in the water. Relaxation was a big attraction of the crossing. It is just a peaceful getaway. I can just relax and really think things through, said Debby Johnson, junior in pre-nursing and life sciences. Pillsbury Crossing offered what Johnson called earthy It was free and supplied natural entertainment in its picnic areas, swimming and fishing. The waterfall located at the offers tranquility. Rocks which fell from the rim rock years ago made it a bubbling stream. The waterfall has a real calming effect. It is peaceful and serene, Fankhauser said. If you just want a good time and fun in the sun, then go to Tuttle, Johnson said. If you want someplace that ' s peaceful, quiet, someplace with solitude and a nice natural then go to Pillsbury Crossing. Pillsbury Crossing offers a remote spot for sun- bathing and relaxation for four members of the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. (Photo by Jeff Weatherly) 27 Crossing The conflict of man vs. nature was not a new one. In recent years, man has been overtaking nature and limiting it to a smaller and smaller area on earth. Highways and sidewalks were built where pastures used to be. High-rise buildings took the place of forests and fields. Even here at K-State the conflict was prevalent. The animals on campus were shoved around a lot. Although the squirrels were here long before the campus was, buildings and sidewalks were constructed, and the squirrels were forced to live with it. No one asked them if it was OK. Through it all, the squirrels were good sports about The squirrels on campus were very friendly, and many people enjoyed watching them. I like them, said Diane The K-State campus sustains many critters including ground squirrels, birds and rabbits which find life at the University exciting and invigorating. Several University employees help in the creatures survival by placing food out for the animals. (Photo by Andy Nelson) Zumwalt, junior in journalism and mass communications. I wouldn ' t pet them — I know they bite, but they are cute and fun to watch. Winter posed a real threat to the cute critters. According to Chris Smith, professor of biology, tree squirrels did not hibernate. They fed all winter long on and acorns they buried to give them an added food If the acorn and walnut crop was scarce, they could die. It was common knowledge that squirrels buried nuts throughout the fall, but Kieffer, associate of psychology, said the do not know where they bury the nuts. So there was no real way for the animals to retrieve them except to dig at random. That was why many employees took a little time each day to feed them. Karen Hetrick and Dorothy Smith, secretaries for the vice president for institutional advancement, were two who fed the squirrels. Heavens, (they started feeding the squirrels) years ago — before my time, Hetrick said. I think the box has been here for six to eight years. We took over feeding them when we moved here a year and a quarter ago, Smith said. (We feed them) corn and sunflower seeds — bags by the 50 pounds, she said. Smith added, ' They are fun to watch, a delight, we love them. by Laura Renfro The animals on campus are appreciated for being cute, friendly and fun to watch. 29 adventures provide needed relict. Every once in a while, the of everyday college life just seemed too much. The urge to break out and explore new territories became all-consuming. Images of never-ending highways and exciting, new places ran through the minds of adventurous K-Staters. Escape seemed to be the only plan. With the car full of gas and friends, and ideas of various destinations, it was time to slip in a cruisin ' tape, roll down the windows and hit the road. Sometimes you get bored seeing the same people and places over and over again. It ' s good to see different faces and sights, said Mark Bales, sophomore in physical education. His most memorable road trip was to the University of Kansas to party with friends. Destinations were as varied as the personalities of the travelers. Usually the trips involved visiting out-of-town friends and family. KU, Oklahoma, Colorado and Missouri ranked high on the travel list. Then there was always the ever-familiar road back to hometowns. (Roadtripping) is a good thing to do if you don ' t have any tests coming up, or if you ' re just looking for something to do besides studying, Roger Holt, junior in psychology, said. ' There is always someone who wants to go with you. Besides the spontaneous, jump-in- the-car-and-go trips, there were also roadtrips of a more planned nature. Each year, pledge classes of and sororities took what was known as a sneaks. They planned a trip to chapters of their fraternity or sorority in another city or state, while keeping the destination and date a secret from the actives in the house. It was a fun time for us to get closer and to meet pledge sisters who we hadn ' t known as well, said Kim sophomore in family studies and a member of the Pi Beta Phi sorority. Traveling was even a part of some courses offered at K-State. The K- State marching band chartered a bus and went on tour to Norton, Logan and Phillipsburg, Kan. Basically, it was just to get out and practice playing in front of people, said Jenni Stone, freshman in pre- medicine and music. It got a little rowdy on the way there, but it was all part of the fun of the trip. Whether traveling with an group or just taking a break from life ' s pressures, roadtrips were definitely part of the college scene. Any reason (or lack of reason) was enough to get some students out on the road. K-Staters may not always have known where they were going, but they sure knew how to get there. by Heather Downs Illustration by Joe Cook by Kristi Barancik Sig Ep Fite Nite involves K-State students while benefiting Big Lakes Developmental Center, A screaming crowd, flashing lights, pounding music and a boxing ring were not part of a scene from Rocky. The scene, instead, was the Sigma Phi Epsilon Fite Nite. For almost a decade, Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity has sponsored its annual Golden Gloves Fite Nite boxing tournament to support the American Heart Association as the fraternity ' s philanthropy. Benefits from the 1987 Fite Nite also went to help support Big Lakes Developmental Center, Inc., an organization for developmentally handicapped children. Fite Nite is a three-night elimination tournament. There are eight weight classifications which range from flyweight to heavyweight. Each fight consists of three -minute rounds with a one-minute rest period between rounds. Whoever is interested can fight, said Kurt Folmer, publicity chairman and senior in marketing. The Sig Eps encourage involvement from all the fraternities on campus. In 1987, there was at least one participant from 14 of the fraternities on campus. I think a lot of the guys that box are guys in the Sig Ep house that have wanted to get involved in something. This is their way of showing that they can participate, said Brad Dirks, 1987 Fite Nite chairman and senior in business administration. Brian Crane, senior in biology and member of Pi Kappa Phi fraternity, was a four-time champion in his division. The 1987 Fite Nite was Crane ' s last year to participate. He said he felt a lot of pressure during his last fight to continue his winning record. You have got to have guts, Crane said. The scariest moment is right after the referee talks to you, and right before the bell, he said. But at the sound of the final bell, Crane was again a champion. The 1987 Pi Kappa Phi team, composed of eight members from five weight classes, was the team. An outstanding sportmanship award was also presented. In 1987, it was presented to Scott Taggart, so phomore in agricultural economics and member of Alpha Tau Omega fraternity. This award honors Kelly C. Jackson, who died in 1983. Jackson was a two-time Fite Nite champion and a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity. John Skarda, sophomore in electrical sits dazed on the mat after being knocked down during a fight. (Photo by Steve Rasmussen) Sean Sturrock, junior in pre-professional administration, receives instruction from his corner during a break between rounds. (Photo by Steve Rasmussen) 32 by Victoria Ohmacht The big brother Big program offers youth the opportunity to be matched up with caring adults to form important friendships. Jessica and her Big Sister, Maria Keating, junior in elementary education, walk together through City Park after an afternoon of playing. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) ake one adult who was willing to share personal time, a child who needed a special friend, and there was a match made by the local Big Brothers and Big of America organization. Half of the adults involved in the program were K-State students, and it was hard to tell who got more out of it – the student or the child. For Maria Keating, junior in elementary education, being a Big Sister to 6-year-old Jessica meant a new understanding of the word responsibility. I have somebody else I ' m for (now), Keating said. It ' s my responsibility to get together with If one week I ' ve been sick or I have too many tests, it is my to call her and explain it to her. Finding responsible adults to guidance and act as role models was the task of caseworkers like Diane Clark of the Manhattan office. went through an extensive screening process to find someone the child can look up to and trust, Clark said. Someone who is stable and responsible, who they can really talk to about whatever is on their mind, she said. The program did not interfere with the normal parent-child relationship, Clark said. Instead, it acted as a to the family situation so the child has another adult and can get another adult ' s perspective. The adults make a one-year commitment to the program and spend three to six hours a week with the child. As a Big Sister to 11-year-old Erin, Clark said their activities together includ ed anything you would do with a friend. Erin and I do laundry, we cook and wash the car together. You want the child to see you for what you really are. Brian Everett, senior in social work and pre-law, said his best times with 16-year-old Lamont were spent just talking. We do things together, like play basketball and bowl, but usually our best time is when he just comes over (to my home), and we talk about we want to, Everett said. Like Clark and Keating, Everett believed he got as much out of the relationship as his Little Brother. There ' s a need out there for to have someone to look up to and talk with, Everett said. The person who is the Big Brother or Big Sister gets so much out of it by just seeing that young person grow and change. After a long day of classes for both Keating and Jessica, a playground is a welcome change of scenery. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) Keating and Jessica take a break from the to talk. Jessica and her Big Sister spent a lot of their time talking about their families and school. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) 34 Big Brothers Big Sisters 35 Big Brothers Big Sisters by Susan Hilt THE Students are taking the pressure off by stretching their college career to five years. whether it was transferring from another college, changing majors or just goofing off, there were always reasons students remained in college more than four years. According to the K-State admissions office, in the fall of 1983 there were 219 fifth- and sixth-year seniors. In the spring of 1987, the number had risen to 269. In the spring of 1988, there were 231 fifth-year seniors. There were four majors at K-State that required a five-year curriculum. Students in architecture, landscape architecture, architectural and interior design were on a strict schedule with heavy class loads. Robert Burnham, head of the department, said students needed 167 credit hours to graduate. Architecture students take an average of 17 hours per semester. most manage in five years, but more recently there has been the tendency to stretch it to six years, Burnham said. Eirene Tatham, fifth-year senior in construction science, said she was going five years because of a change in major from chemical engineering to construction science. By going five years, I could take fewer hours and more electives. I could take classes that didn ' t go toward my major but would be applicable in my field, Tatham said. Construction science students and engineering students faced many semesters with many hours, which left little or no time to goof off or retake courses. Phil Davidson, fifth-year senior in engineering technology, said there were many factors which contributed to his prolonged schooling. Davidson transferred from Johnson County Community College and lost 11 hours in the process. He full time his first two years of school and carried 10 hours each semester. During his sophomore year at K-State he lived in a residence hall and said he just had too much fun. In the spring of 1987, he changed his major from mechanical to engineering technology. He that he would have to take 16 hours each semester to graduate in the spring of 1989, six years after he started college. I took my time, and it took some of the pressure off. The classes are tough and you can ' t learn as well if you ' re carrying 17 or 18 hours, Davidson said. Burnham said grades were affecting how long students were going to school. Architecture students are concerned about grades so they are taking fewer hours and relieving some of the tension, Burnham said. Tatham believed five years really benefited her personally. I ' ve got a much broader background by going five years. There ' s too much pressure in a four-year situation, and you really can ' t expand your interests in four years, Tatham said. (Photo Illustration by Steve Rasmussen) 36 Fifth Year Seniors 37 since the State Fair ' s beginning, no other event has so accurately reflected the rich traditions and diverse cultures which make up this unique blend of people and land we know as Kansas, Gov. Mike Hayden said in an official welcome at the 1987 Kansas State Fair in Hutchinson. Celebrating its 75th anniversary, the Great Kansas Get Together something for everyone. It offered a wide variety of top-name entertainment and quality exhibits, ranging from an opening-day concert by the popular rock group, Survivor, to commercial product promotion booths. Other events ranged from live animal and agricultural shows to a busy carnival midway. K-State ' s presence at the fair was not unnoticed. The general University booth featured A Week At Kansas State, the alumni photojournalism book project held on campus Oct. 12-19, 1986. K-State ' s new representatives and faculty from Student Publications Inc. and the Department of Journalism and Mass Communications worked the K- State fair booth, distributing literature and AWAKS book promotions. Students from K-State were also represented at the fair. Phil Bentz, sophomore in pre- veterinary medicine, was selected to judge a near 300-entry 4-H dog show during the second weekend of the fair. He said overall the Kansas State Fair has a reputation for being of top-notch quality. Being selected to serve as a judge is a rewarding honor because it me with the unique opportunity to give something in return to an (4-H) that has done so much for me, Bentz said. And it is yet an added honor to have been selected to judge a fair as distinguished as the Kansas State Fair. Dan Moser, freshman in animal sciences and industry, saw the fair from an exhibitor ' s point of view, as he showed his two polled Hereford in the Future Farmers of America livestock show. This is my fourth year to show at the fair, and I enjoy it here because this is the only time during the year that I get the chance to see and visit with many of my ' cattle-circle ' friends and acquaintances, Moser said. Win or lose, I also gain a great deal of personal satisfaction from just knowing that I have exhibited at a fair as prestigious as the Kansas State Fair. Melanie Mainquist, junior in animal sciences and industry, assisted with the judging of swine herdsmanship during the FFA livestock show, The Kansas State Fair promotes two of Kansas ' most valuable commodities: agriculture and people. Dan Moser, freshman in animal sciences and industry, brushes one of the two polled Hereford heifers which he entered in the Future Farmers of America livestock show. (Photo by Greg Vogel) Bob Hope entertains the crowd with a song during the State Fair at Hutchinson. This year was the 75th anniversary of the State Fair. (Photo by Greg Vogel) 38 Kansas State Fair by LaReina Waldorf CATS The Kansas State Fair offers many students a way to exhibit and judge their talents. Fair patrons walk the midway during Sunday afternoon of opening weekend. Attendance was substantially up during the opening weekend, with 103,015 passing through the gates. (Photo by Greg Vogel) 39 Kansas State Fair the image of Manhat tan as a small, agricultural college town underwent a startling transformation with the opening of the Manhattan Town Center. Described by Manhattan City Dave Fiser as a jewel of the prairie, the 302,000-square-foot mall indeed has all the glamour and aesthetic beauty of a fine jewel. And just as a jewel was formed over a long period of time under pressure and then crafted with painstaking planni ng, so was the Manhattan Town Center. The framework for the mall was laid in 1968 when the City Commission adopted a Land Use Plan which it to maintain downtown as a regional shopping area. On the basis of that plan, the Commission turned down rezoning requests in 1971, 1972 and 1977 that would have allowed the establishment of a mall outside of the downtown area. But faced with a deteriorating downtown, the City Commission it would have to begin moving toward some sort of redevelopment plan for the area. So in 1978 it hired a Boulder, Colo., consulting firm to the potential of the downtown area to continue as a regional shopping center. One of the firm ' s recommendations for the downtown area was for an enclosed mall. In the spring of 1980, plans were unveiled for a mall in the 100 and 200 blocks of Poyntz Avenue. This area was chosen because it could best tie the mall into the rest of downtown and because many of its buildings were among the oldest and in the poorest condition. This was where the mall began, as many of the approximately 70 businesses located in the area did not want to move. The mall became a major issue in the 1981 and 1983 City Commission elections but only one mall opponent, Suzanne was elected. This was critical because the city later had to file about 50 lawsuits invoking its power of eminent domain — a governmental right to take private property for public use in order to obtain the property needed for the mall. Any ordinance authorizing acquisition by eminent domain required four of the five commission votes in order to pass. Another vote against the mall would have put a halt to the project. During those years, the city was also working through a myriad of paperwork in order to obtain $10 in federal money for the project in the form of an Urban Development Action Grant. Beginning in December of 1985, the demolition of nearly 60 buildings in the area began. In June 1986, the groundbreaking for Town Center was held. A formal gala celebration that included food and dancing preceded the mall ' s Oct. 26 opening. During the first week of operation, shoppers were treated to entertainment from various bands, choirs, fashions shows and a fireworks display. What shoppers found in Town was a simply designed, but building with architectural features similar to others in and the surrounding area. Most notable were the clerestories — small gabled roofs containing windows which rise above the main roofs of the building — a feature of local farm buildings. The clerestories, exposed roof and atriums produced an of sunny spaciousness inside for more than 50 businesses. Few local businesses, other than chain stores, made the transition to the mall. According to Chris Heavey, Town Center general manager, of the seven locally owned and operated businesses which took temporary spots in the mall for the Christmas season, only two were negotiating for long term leases. Undercover, a lingerie shop at 1224 Moro, maintained its Aggieville store while testing the market at Town in a temporary space during its first few months of operation. It wasn ' t a disaster, but it wasn ' t as profitable as we had hoped, Pat Undercover manager, said. We found that for my sort of store, a more private store was more profitable. Aggieville lost very few businesses continued on page 43 Touring the unfinished inside of the Manhattan Town Center, a group of local dignitaries walk through the mall during its construction. (Photo by Jim Dietz) The KSU String Quartet performs in the opening celebration at the Manhattan Town Center. (Photo by Brad Camp) Installing the D in Dillard ' s, Burton Garett, employed by E. Dunn and Sons Inc., finishes work on a sign announcing the store. (Photo by Jim Dietz) 40 by Vicki Wiler THE PRAIRIE The Manhattan Town Center adds a dimension and diversion to the lives of college students. 41 JEWEL continued from page 40 to the mall, Lisa Reed, executive of the Aggieville Merchants said. In fact, since last fall about a dozen new businesses located in Aggieville and its boundaries were actually expanding west along Anderson Avenue, Reed said. Many K-State students ' shopping habits changed in response to the Town Center ' s opening, yet their about the mall were as diverse as their backgrounds. I like the atmosphere a lot; it ' s just a really nice place, Trisha Huddle, sophomore in secondary education, said. Huddle said she now shopped less in Aggieville and in her hometown of McPherson. Because of the number of stores in Town Center and their sales, she said she spent more money. We used to go to Topeka to shop, Mike Reams, a senior in mechanical The Manhattan Town Center sits on 38 acres in the downtown area and opened in late October. (Photo by Brad Camp) Even on a partly cloudy day, light streams in through the large windows at the east entrance of the Manhattan Town Center. (Photo by Rob Squires) engineering, said. Now we never do. Some students found Town Center not only a good place to shop, but also a good place to spend leisure hours. If there ' s nothing to do, we just go out to the mall and walk around and see what ' s going on, Fern Grant, junior in psychology, said. Grant said that since the mall drew her she also patronized downtown stores that she didn ' t before. But other students weren ' t as enthused about Town Center. It ' s too small, Debbie Wilson, junior in business, said. I ' d rather go home (to Overland Park) to shop. Stephanie Mills, junior in apparel and textile marketing, said she loved the mall, citing the variety of merchandise available there. But if I ' m in a real big hurry, I go someplace else. I don ' t like to go to the mall and fight all the traffic, Mills said. But despite any of its Town Center added a dimension and diversion to the life of the college student in a midwestern town. A sign cut in stone announces the Manhattan Town Center at one of its entrances. (Photo by Rob Squires) 43 Manhattan Town Center K-State. Home of the Wildcats...land of bargains? If there ' s one thing that attracted college students, it was a bargain. And to help students budget their budget and keep a check on their checks, Manhattan offered some special prices for the K- State student. One popular place for leisure-seeking students was at the movies. Local theaters offered dollar movies on certain weekday nights, so with a fatal attraction for the flicks didn ' t go over- board in spending their money. The Union theaters also offered reduced movie rates for students. Anne Schartz, junior in apparel and textile marketing, said that she went to the movies if she wanted to see a film that she was not quite sure about. If t here ' s a movie that I want to see, but it gets bad reviews, this is a good chance to go, she said. Students ' pocketbooks could also benefit from special prices offered by local taverns. A little nightlife didn ' t have to cost a fortune when dollar pitchers and $1.50 well drinks were made available. If timed right, dollar signs wouldn ' t go crazy when students met their friends at local bars with beverages. Randy Short, junior in and mass said that he liked to have fun without spending a lot of money. These bargain nights encouraged people to go out, he said. A priced-right pizza was another bargain that students could use to their advantage. A little sausage and could go a long way with one of the many pizza coupons. Deals such as 2-for- 1 , Madness, and a large for the price of a medium were all phrases college students could relate to. The ol ' beat the winter white sale was also a popular bargain. With $2 tanning students could keep their bronzed look so the tan didn ' t fade with the summer. When students started a hard time seeing the chalkboard through their bangs, it was time for a A discount on a trim, cut or style could almost always be found. Cutting one ' s own hair was usually not the best idea for the average student. Even for the thrifty individual, having the scissors in one hand and the thinning shears in the other, wasn ' t necessary. keeping one ' s ears was worth the $5 bargain price for getting a haircut from people who knew what they were doing. It ' s a fact, bargains made college life a little easier. Some students, it was rumored, went through fee payment just to get the coupon book at the end of the line. Knowing that there was a 50 percent off yogurt coupon and a free aerobic workout coupon in hand could even make buying textbooks a little more affordable. Food, fun and even necessities didn ' t have to add up to big dollar signs. So when the checkbook balance was running low, and the credit card bills were high, the many bargains offered to students could come in extremely handy ... here at K-State ... home of the Wildcats ... land of bargains.... by Angela Hale (Photo Illustration by Brad Camp) Area make college life easier by offering special discounts on services. 44 by Sally Neary Bradley ' s term was shortened by moving S.G.A. elections from the spring semester to the fall. the 1987 student government election was a time of change and busy preparation for candidates and the elections committee. A bylaw change moved Student Association elections from the spring semester to the fall. The bylaw was passed in the spring under the administration of Steven Johnson, senior in agricultural economics. The measure was passed to give the student senators more time to learn parliamentary procedures before going into allocations, said Debbie Fields, SGA elections committee chairperson and senior in marketing. Before, when senators were elected in February, they had only three or four meetings before diving into marathon meetings, Fields said. It also allowed students to become familiar with the services and that sponsor activities and receive allocations. She said the new measure gave the senators more time to orient with the entire government process and the student body president more time to gather cabinet members. A disadvantage was probably the timing for people running this year, Fields said. Kent Bradley, senior in nutrition was the first student body president to be affected by the change in elections. He said the new bylaw had advantages for the president. It allows the individual Christmas break to get settled and situated, which takes a long time, he said. Bradley said the president worked closely with the Kansas Legislature. The legislative session runs from January to April. Before, the way it was setup, Steven (Johnson) and I were splitting the time with the legislators, Bradley said. He said after Johnson had spent his term lobbying with the legislators, it was tough to step in as a new face and go over the same arguments. Bradley said a disadvantage of elections in the fall was that it some of the freshmen from running for office. He said the freshmen, who could make a positive contribution to student government, were not or comfortable enough with their position on campus. Bradley said the fall semester was a busy time of the year to have elections. It crowds an already crowded semester, he said. In the past, when elections were in February, people were ready to start new, to look forward to the rest of the semester. All candidates were required to particular guidelines outlined by the eight-member elections committee. A week before the elections, the were allowed to displa y posters on campus. Banners could be put up three days prior to the first election day. Advertising in the Collegian could be done anytime. All candidates were responsible for taking their posters down by 8 p.m. the second day of the election. Fields said the elections committee was not a part of the two presidential debates sponsored by Putnam Hall and the Union Program Council. This fall, as in the past, polling places were set up in the Union and the Veterinary Medicine Center over the noon hour. Fields said next year two additional polling places will be in Cardwell Hall and Derby Food Center. Jack Taylor, junior in political science and life science, makes a point about his support of the museum during a presidential debate in Putnam Hall, while Troy Lubbers, junior in business, and Pat Muir, senior in agricultural economics, listen. (Photo by Brett Hacker) 46 Going out on a political limb, Cliff Veatch, junior in political science, posts an election sign on a tree near Farrell Library. Veatch and other students covered the campus with political signs during the SGA elections in November. (Photo by Gary Lytle) Julia Van Doren, junior in criminal science, checks through the listing of arts and sciences senator candidates while voting in the November Student Governing Association elections. (Photo by Chris Assaf) 47 by Audra Dietz RISING TO THE TOP Troy Lubbers ' laid-back campaign concentrated on meeting people, not debating the issues. lazy days of fall may have been the cause for poor voter turnout at elections this year or it could have been the revision in policy which changed the voting from spring to fall. Nonetheless, a new student body president was elected by a narrow margin. Troy Lubbers, junior in business administration, was elected student body president over Jack Taylor, junior in political science, in the run- off election. Lubbers recovered from a 66 vote deficit in the general election to defeat Taylor by 206 votes in the run-off. Lubbers received 970 votes; Taylor, 764. In the general election, Lubbers came in second with 735 votes, behind Taylor who had 801. Pat Muir, senior in agricultural economics, was in third place with 603 votes. Write-in candidate Monte Couchman, in secondary education, trailed with 306. Lubbers said he wasn ' t worried after the general election. I was and nervous, but that ' s how I planned it. I wanted to be in second, and then really make a push in the run-off and win by a fair margin. This election had one of the lowest voter turnouts in history, as only 1,743 voters cast ballots. Voter was down by 346 from the run-off election in February, between Kent Bradley, senior in science, and Michelle Benoit, senior in agricultural economics, who drew 2,080 voters to the polls. said moving the elections from February to November might have caught some students off guard and they simply forgot to vote. But he thought the turnout still should have been higher. If you were even on campus that week, there were enough posters campus that students should have known something was up. During the campaign, Lubbers concentrated on meeting people, not debating issues. Lubbers made no promises to cure the chronic parking problem or to increase the periodical supply in Farrell Library. Lubbers Student Body President Troy Lubbers, junior in business, helps Jose Lassalle, freshman in restaurant management, find information on preparing Lassalle ' s taxes. (Photo by Gary Lytle) said his laid-back campaign was his biggest advantage. My campaign was aggressive, but it was very realistic and personal. I only tried to hit things that were in my area of expertise. Lubbers campaigned on improving communication between students and student government and between students and the state Legislature. I didn ' t attack this by saying I could solve this and solve that. I think it started showing through in the end that I was just a normal student like everyone else. Lubbers said he stuck with things he believed he could improve, like lobbying at the state level and keeping students informed about campus issues. Lubbers said improving student relations with student government would be his top priority in 1988. I think that ' s one reason I ' m in this office. I tried to relate to the students on a student level. I think I ' d let the students and myself down if I didn ' t make student relations a top priority. Receiving word by phone, Troy Lubbers, junior in marketing, reacts to the news that he won the run-off election for student body president. (Photo by Greg Vogel) Student body presidential candidate, Jack junior in political science and life sciences, listens to fellow candidate, Troy Lubbers, junior in marketing, make a point during a debate the day of the run-off election. (Photo by Greg Vogel) 48 Troy Lubbers 49 Dennis Howard, associate professor of veterinary diagnosis, cleans a tube that carries a food supplement into his stomach. (Photo by Brett Hacker) Howard explains the difficulties he has experienced since learning he has AIDS. His father Don attends to the daily chores. (Photo by Brett Hacker) In September 1987, Dennis Howard learned that what he had secretly been fearing for months was true. He had AIDS. Being in the medical profession, I think I knew I had AIDS, said the 38-year-old veterinary pathologist, who was placed on medical absence from K-State April 14, 1987. I had been experiencing some weight loss and a loss of energy. Controversy has the situation since September 1987, when charged that he was forced out of his position because he had AIDS. A tenured professor who had been with the University 16 years, Dennis said he was diagnosed as having acquired immune deficiency syndrome after he checked into a Topeka hospital suffering from pneumocystis pneumonia. He said his doctor put him on AZT, a drug used to fight the disease, at the end of October 1986. After that, it was an on-again, off-again battle with the drug, until finally, he stopped taking it. Does AZT help? That ' s really hard to say, he said. It didn ' t keep me out of the hospital. AZT pills cost about $2.50 each, and Dennis said he was taking 12 a day. My drug bills averaged about $1,200 a month, he said. For many months after he learned he had the disease, Dennis seldom ate solid foods. He consumed liquid through a plastic tube that ran directly into his stomach. His sustenance consisted of four feedings, or eight 400-calorie cans, a day. Then, Dennis said he was feeling stronger and was again able to eat solid food. Dennis said although it was difficult, he didn ' t try to hide his homosexuality. Yes, I am gay, he said. It ' s something that I don ' t try and publicize, but I certainly don ' t try to hide it. It ' s kind of funny – I don ' t know why it I just met Greg and we hit it off. He and Greg have been together five years. I don ' t know how I ' d have made it without him, he said. Dennis, the oldest child in his family, had two brothers and one sister. All, he said, were very supportive. Don Howard, Dennis ' father, made trips to from Grove, Okla., to spend time with his son. one visit, the two sat at the kitchen table and talked. As Dennis displayed a gift continued on page 52 Adjusting the tubes on a pouch of high-calorie liquid food supplement for his son, Don Howard prepares one of the four daily feedings. The feedings take about 30 minutes each. (Photo by Brett Hacker) AIDS strikes close to home when professor contracts the disease. continued from page 51 he had always treasured — his father ' s Purple Heart and Silver Star Medal for Bravery from World War II — the elder Howard explained what it was like to find out his son was gay. It hurt, he said. I don ' t understand it, but I accept it. If you love your child, you ' ll support them. Don said the family ' s friends were also very supportive. I don ' t hide the fact he ' s got AIDS, he said. I ' d rather they talk to me about it. I ' ve got friends down at the grocery store who always say a prayer for us. The elder Howard said if he could give a bit of advice to other parents of people with AIDS, it would be to just never give up loving them, and be supportive of them. Is he worried about getting AIDS while staying with his son? Lord, no, he said. While AIDS was not a big problem at K-State, it was a problem to be concerned about, said Dr. Robert Tout, director of Lafene Student Health Center. Because we will have more AIDS on campus (in the future), the more information we can get out, the better, he said. In spite of everything you ' ve read, I think there is still the fear that AIDS can be spread by casual contact, he said. No, you can ' t get it by someone coughing and on you. Tout said while he knew of few AIDS cases at K-State, he had ordered tests for some students. Procedures for the tests were as follows: Before a blood test was taken, the was counseled about the disease. Then a test was taken and sent to a local After about three days, the test was returned to Lafene. If the test came back positive, Tout said, further tests were conducted. If those also came back positive, the individual was notified and received more counseling. Tout said some confusion existed as to the difference between testing positive for AIDS and actually having the disease. Testing positive did not mean a person had AIDS — it meant a person was a and could spread the disease, he said. In Kansas, the number of reported AIDS cases increased from 38 in 1986 to 44 in 1987. Since the Kansas Department of Health and Environment began keeping records in 1982, 103 cases were reported in the state. Since 1982, 70 of those 103 individuals with AIDS have died. For the moment, Dennis Howard was not quite sure what to do with the remainder of his life. When he first learned he had AIDS, he said the doctor gave him six months to live. Now he was playing the game. He would like to go back to work at the University, but to date, has not been allowed to. So he spent time outdoors playing with his two Labrador retrievers. He watched a lot of TV, rented movies and read books. The uncertainty of the disease was tough on everyone who knew him. What hurts Mother and me most is the waiting, Don said, slowly shaking his head. We lost our daughter at age 9 to a brain tumor, and now this. While the entire ordeal was extremely painful to deal with, Dennis said the hardest thing he had to do was make his arrangements. I ' m going to be cremated, he said, looking solemnly out the sliding glass doors of his spacious house on a hill over- looking Manhattan. I want some of my ashes spread over the pasture out here. I love this place. by Judy Lundstrom As his cat crawls over his lap, Dennis Howard, associate professor of veterinary diagnosis, sits in his living room contemplating his future with the AIDS virus. (Photo by Brett Hacker) Howard looks over the letter he received last April that told him he had been placed on medical retirement from the University. Howard was diagnosed as having AIDS in September. (Photo by Brett Hacker) 1 c t fashion trends of 1987 and 1988 brought back everything from bright, loud colors to subdued romantic styles. Big, loosely hung scarves over blouses and sweaters were the final touch to any outfit. I think scarves are the finishing touch to a classic outfit, Cindy Day, senior in accounting, said. Adding a pair of extravagantly large earrings, a long peasant-style skirt and low-heeled boots captured the romantic renaissance look. Long, soft wavy hair to top it all off was the real desired effect, motivating many women to get that soft perm look at their local hairdresser. At the other end of the spectrum, students were picking up such trends as acid-washed jeans with a tear in the knee for added effect, book bags instead of back packs, Reebok trench coats and brightly colored Converse high tops. I like book bags, Dee O ' Hair, senior in modern languages, said. I first noticed them in Paris last year. This spring, bright colors were staying, but black and white stripes were also in. The romantic look for women was being replaced by a classy, yet sexy look with off-the- shoulder sweaters, backless dresses, skin tight or baggy and belted cropped pants, and French tees by I.O.U. For men, bright colors and baggy, pleated pants were the in thing on campus. It ' s a question of creativity, said Rene Pier, exchange student in architecture from Trier, Germany. You can take a white T-shirt and make something outbreak with it if you ' re creative. Hairstyles for women were going from spiked to soft and less defined, while men were going from the short, spiked look to the longer European hair- styles. There were a lot of social trends during the year also. Fad diets were going out and were being replaced by a sense of all- around health consciousness. Exercise on a regular basis instead of as a New Year ' s resolution that was forgotten by February was becoming the norm for many students. While many of these trends would go out as quickly as they came, there were some things at K-State that remained the same year after year. Students were still cramming for exams at the last minute, calling home for money, and hanging out in the Union talking with their friends. by Shelly Tierney TIMES The campus styles were as diversified as the student body itself. (Illustrations by Britta Stolfus) by Britta Stolfus) Rhonda Johnson, sophomore in administration, works out on the leg table which moves the feet back and forth while in rubber shoes. (Photo by Brett Hacker) A timing dial on one of the toning beds at Slender You controls the exercise equipment. (Photo by Brett Hacker) 56 Toning Machines With the onset of the ' 80s, physical fitness became an obsession for the American society. With this craze came the cliche, no pain, no gain. Now, a new concept of exercise attempted to change the image with calisthenics that required almost no work. The new concept was toning tables, a system of at least six motorized tables requiring minimal effort to tone and firm the body. According to an article in Looking Fit magazine, the tables accomplished these major tasks: loss of inches, improved flexibility, improved circulation and overall strengthening. The tables achieved all of this with no sweat, strain or tired muscles because the machines supported the body as it did repetitive said Bob Clark, founder of the Slender You program. Since the program required minimal effort, it was a good alternative exercise program for a variety of people, said Debbie Reese, manager of Slender You in Manhattan. K-State students and members gave the new a try. For some, it became part of their routine. I heard about toning tables when they put some in at my home town, Kristina Reece, junior in industrial engineering, said. My roommate told me about the ones in so I decided to try them out. It ' s part of my weekly now. I can tell my muscles are toning up. English instructer Dahl had been going to a body toning salon since May 1987. I felt like I needed an place, Dahl said. I didn ' t feel good about myself, I felt flabby. When I started going I didn ' t expect to lose weight, but I wanted to tone up. I ' m convinced that I wouldn ' t have been able to fit into my clothes without this program. Toning tables worked all different parts of the body, toning the muscles. The machines move you in places you wouldn ' t normally move, said Jerry Kelly, of Nu-Weigh, a body toning salon. They are not designed to take off weight, they ' re designed to tighten and firm the lean tissue. Toning tables have no bad effects, said Guy Smith, director of Eriksen Clinic in Lafene Health Center. As a matter of fact, they have no effect. No muscle program will cause you to lose inches, only weight reduction will lose inches. It ' s like the old saying ' it ' s too good to be true. ' I think that ' s the case here. by Carol Knorr and Mary Gomez Debbie Reese of Slender You helps Florence Schmieding, Manhattan, with directions on how to use the sit-up table. (Photo by Brett Hacker) LOSE WEIGHT Toning tables provide an exercise for people who might otherwise not exercise. 57 Toning Machines Landon dies at 100, leaves behind prominent When the name Alfred M. Landon was many descriptions came to mind. Ronald Reagan described him as the living soul of Kansas. People from other states may have remembered Landon as a presidential hopeful against Franklin D. Roosevelt, Kansas governor or philanthropist. But Kansans thought of Landon as a symbol of a way of life, dignified yet down to earth, and an important part of Kansas history. Landon died Oct. 12, 1987, but not without leaving a lasting memory as a man whose vigilance, and integrity made him a legend. Landon, the father of Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan., wryly described himself as a lawyer who never had a case, an oilman who never made a million and a presidential candidate who carried only Maine and Vermont. Landon defied the odds, the grand old man of the Grand Old Party celebrated his first century of life this past year. On Landon ' s 95th birthday, Reagan promised Landon he would return here for Landon ' s 100th birthday, give him a ride in Air Force One and a party at the White House. Reagan visited Landon as he promised, but Landon didn ' t collect on the rest of the bargain. After his defeat by Franklin D. Roosevelt in the 1936 presidential election, the most defeat in history at the time, Landon politics, as far as elected positions were concerned. K-State remembered Landon in a more intimate way. He established the Landon Lecture Series on Public Issues at the suggestion of K-State President James McCain in an effort to bring more top-notch speakers to the Midwest. Landon himself delivered the first speech on Dec. 13, 1966. Funding for the Landon Lecture Series came from the administration budget at K- With a little assistance from his daughter, Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, former Gov. Alf Landon blows out the on the cake celebrating his 100th birthday as the president and Nancy Reagan look on. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) lecture series honoring his name, principles State. In 1968, J. Robert Wilson and several Manhattan residents began a patron fund for the series. The group now includes more than 450 people who annually contribute $100. He (Landon) lent us his good name; we have the most outstanding lecture series in the No university, including Harvard, can hold a candle to it, said Barry Flinchbaugh, professor of agricultural economics and chair of the Lecture Series from 1976-81. The final lecture Landon attended was in 1982 when President Reagan spoke. Prior to that, Landon took an active role in selecting speakers and attending the lectures, Edward Seaton, chairman of the Landon patrons, said. Landon was remembered as many things, but K-State and Kansas would always remember him as a great and cherished part of Kansas. by Candy Leonard and Jennifer Dorsch During a 19-gun salute to former Gov. Alfred M. Landon at an outdoor ceremony at the Capitol, Landon ' s son John Cobb Landon consoles Landon ' s widow Theo, as his daughter, Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, reacts to the ceremony. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) More than 2,100 people paid their final respects to the former governor and 1936 Republican party presidential nominee. (Photo by Andy Nelson) alfred Landon George Will In a critical and sometimes humorous address, columnist George Will said politicians and the public were ignoring the need for Will delivered the 74th Landon Lecture on Public Issues in McCain Auditorium April 15. Will criticized both Democrats and for their inability to propose policies to means, or means commensurate with policies. He accused the Democratics of seeking that enhance equality of condition, while being unprepared to ask the country to pay for them. Will also had harsh words for the Republican Party. Republicans have come to think that the world is their oyster and the promise of low taxes is their oyster fork. Political columnist and ABC television news George Will delivers the 74th Landon Lecture in McCain Auditorium. Jon Wefald sits to his right and listens. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) In honor of her father, Alfred Landon, Nancy Kassebaum delivers the 76th Landon Lecture on Public Issues. (Photo by Jeff Weatherly) Nancy Kassebaum Sen. Nancy Kassebaum delivered the 76th Landon Lecture on Public Issues speaking about The Challenge of Change on Sept. 9 in McCain Auditorium in honor of her father Alf Landon ' s 100th birthday. Kassebaum spoke about the changes her fath er, the United States and the world have faced in the past 100 years. Kassebaum remarked on the many ways life and our have changed over time. ' The past century has brought both a drastic shrinkage of time and distance, and an of knowledge, Kassebaum said. She added that this change affected both our lives and the way we think, in that, though our knowledge increased, our perspective narrowed. Kassebaum said this narrowing of our was something we must try to change. We must work constantly to build and maintain a broader perspective on our world, she said. In preparing her speech, Kassebaum noted that she went over her father ' s speech for the first Landon Lecture in December, 1966. I was struck not only by his specific observations, but by what he saw as the flow of events. Kassebaum expressed the belief that the upcoming year would hold many changes and challenges. Challenges my father has always been confident the American people could meet. Franco Modigliani The legacy of the Reagan administration was the knowledge that the United States must reduce its deficits, said Pulitzer Prize-winning economist Franco Modigliani. The one urgent thing we must do is to reduce the twin deficits — the external deficit and the internal deficit, he said. Modigliani presented the 75th Landon Lecture on Public Issues April 21 in McCain Auditorium. The result of Reagan ' s supply-side economic policy ultimately increased deficits in foreign trade and domestic fiscal policy, Modigliani said. To understand Reagan ' s economic one must examine the climate at the end of former President Jimmy Carter ' s term. During his first years in office, Carter reduced inflation and produced a fair expansion of Modigliani said. In 1980, inflation increased and output decreased, while the United States had accumulated substantial deficits totaling about 2.5 percent of the GNP, a large amount, he said. When Reagan took office, he proposed three solutions, Modigliani said. I believe they (the Reagan administration) felt once they created a huge deficit, it would be easier to cut expenditures. That hasn ' t been the case. Economist Franco Modigliani and President Jon Wefald talk while passing a crowd waiting to enter McCain Auditorium to hear the Nobel Prize winner deliver the 75th Landon Lecture. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) Landon Lecture Oscar Arias Sanchez Costa Rican President Oscar Arias Sanchez brought his plan for achieving peace in Latin America to K-State Sept. 21. Arias delivered the 77th Landon Lecture on Public Issues to a crowd of about 4,000 people in Ahearn Field House. The theme of his address was History is Ours to Write and focused on his peace plan for Central America. Development and peace are inseparable, Arias said. Nothing undermines the struggle for development more than a threat to peace. Arias drafted a peace agreement among five Central American countries: Guatemala, El Honduras, Nicaragua and Costa Rica. Presidents of the five countries signed the Aug. 7 in Guatemala City, Guatemala. The terns included a ceasefire in Central America, democratization of Central American governments and the elimination of aid to forces or insurgent movements in Central America. Arias said the most important element of the agreement was the ceasefire. Without it, it will be extremely difficult to comply with the rest of the points, he said. U.S. aid to Contra Rebels in Nicaragua was one of the areas in which Arias was asking for cessation of funds. He said he hoped President Reagan would stop sending support to the Contras until the five Central American countries implemented the terms of agreement. The main concern was whether or not the terms of the agreement could be complied with by the deadline, Arias said. He said the treaty has created so many expectations of 25 million people that he can ' t think about the possibility of failure. We were aware of the implications when we were signing the agreement, Arias said. I believe we will be able to comply. Costa Rica was proud to be a country without an army, where dialogue prevails over violence, and where basic needs of the less fortunate have a priority over the demands of the more privileged, he said. He said with the signing of the peace agreement, there would be an end to the conflict. We are convinced that no matter how high the risk of fighting for peace, the cost will always be less than that of war, Arias said. Costa Rican President Oscar Arias Sanchez walks toward McCain Auditorium where he delivered the 77th Landon on Public Issues. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) Sandra Day O ' Connor Edward Seaton, chairman of the Landon Lecture Patrons, presents a book about to Associate Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O ' Connor and her husband John, as Landon Lecture Series Chairman Charles Reagan looks on. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) In an address that was praised by some and criticized by others, Supreme Court Associate Justice Sandra Day O ' Connor delivered the 78th Landon Lecture on Public Issues in McCain Auditorium on Feb.16. Speaking to a standing-room-only crowd of 1,850, O ' Connor focused her 30-minute address on the establishment of the country ' s judicial system. The lecture was held in with Founders Day, the 125th of the University. O ' Connor said the recent debates over the nominations of a new Supreme Court Justice have focused public attention on the court and led to questions about its role, power and method of operation. The answers to the questions, she said, are outlined in the U.S. Constitution. She added, however, that the framers of the Constitution those answers in broad and general terms. ' That we are still here with the structure intact is a powerful testament to the skill and wisdom they applied to their task, she said. When designing the Constitution, O ' Connor said, it was surprising that the framers paid little attention to the judicial branch as to the executive and legislative branches. She attributed the lack of debate to a general high regard for the judiciary. Because they held judges in relatively high esteem, the framers were somewhat less concerned with erecting checks on judicial power than they were with creating similar checks on the other two branches, she said. Perhaps there are those today who think our judges might not deserve such favored status, but in the minds of the framers, the third branch was the least dangerous branch. Because of the broad language employed in the Constitution, O ' Connor said a branch of must sometimes exercise a specific power to give meaning to a rule. One example is the advise and consent clause, which says justices shall be nominated by the president with the advise and consent of the Senate. It is possible that we have recently witnessed a change in the scope of Senate inquiry to this clause, she said. Until relatively recently, it was not the practice of the Senate to ask any questions at all of the nominee. O ' Connor said that today the judicial branch had considerably more influence than any of the delegates to the Constitutional Convention might have expected. McCain Series Madama Butterfly An attentive and appreciative full house greeted the New York City Opera National production of Madama Butterfly, on March 31, 1987. Thrilled by the lead soprano, Karen Notare as Butterfly, the audience saw the company portray the life and tragedy of Butterfly I in unforgettable excellence. First produced in 1904, the opera was adapted by Giacomo Puccini from a one-act play by American playwright David Belasco. Puccini continued to change his score of Madama and finished revisions in 1911. The opera details a three-year span in the life of Cio-Cio San, known as Butterfly. As a child of 15, she married Lt. Benjamin Pinkerton of the U.S. Navy. Pinkerton contracted with a marriage broker to marry Butterfly, with the stipulation that the contract could be broken at any time. But, Butterfly marries Pinkerton for life. The expected break occurred when Pinkerton left for the United States and abandoned She remained faithful, caring for his child and waiting for his return. Pinkerton did return, but with his real American wife. The loss of her honor left Butterfly the one available recourse in her culture — death. The company was supported by an excellent orchestra conducted by Ted Taylor. A beautiful set was designed by Peter Dean Beck and superb costuming done by Malabar Ltd. The set and costumes were fantastic, as was the music. Benjamin Franklin Pinkerton, performed by Michael Phillip Davis, comforts his bride, Cio-Cio San, played by Karen Notare, after her uncle denounced her for betraying her during the New York City Opera National Company of Madama Butterfly in McCain Auditorium. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) Helen Reddy I Tom Chapin Playing their oldest and newest material, Tom Chapin and Helen Reddy performed at McCain Auditorium on Sept. 25, to start off the 1987-88 McCain Performance Series season. First on stage was Tom Chapin and his guitar. With no band to back him up, Chapin entertained the audiene with his sense of humor and his ability to play the guitar and sing. Reddy then set the mood for her portion of the show by starting off with the top 10 hits Take it Uptown, You and Me Against the World and Angie Baby. She put together a medley of her top 10 hits which included That Ain ' t No Way to Treat a Lady, Delta Dawn, I Don ' t Know How to Love Him and Ruby Red Dress. She ended the concert with one of her favorite songs, I Am Woman, which she wrote 17 years ago and which became the anthem for the American women ' s movement. In 1966, Reddy and her 3-year-old daughter came to the United States from Australia after winning a contest which promised the winner an audition with an American record company. Shortly after arriving in New York, she didn ' t get her audition because she was a female. They wouldn ' t take any more females because there were already some on the chart, Reddy said. It ' s persistance that makes it, Reddy said. It ' s a myth about getting a break. You have to go forward and backward to succeed. This prejudice was a lso one of the factors that helped Reddy to write the song I Am Woman. Entertainer Helen Reddy performs at McCain Auditorium in the first show of the 1987-88 McCain Performance Series season. (Photo by Jeff Weatherly) The Amsterdam Guitar Trio The Amsterdam Guitar Trio, composed of Helenus De Rijke, Johan Dorrenstein and Olga Frassen, performed second in the 1987-88 McCain Performance Series — An International Season on Oct. 3. The trio was formed in 1978 at the Sweelick Conservatorium in Amsterdam. It was Johan Dorrestein, Olga Frassen and Helenus De Rijke of the Amsterdam Guitar Trio perform at McCain Auditorium. The trio played pieces from Bach, Debussy, Chopin and others in a two-hour concert. This performance was part of the McCain International Season Series. (Photo by Brad Camp) ately recognized by both audience and critics alike for their virtually flawless technique and ensemble, beauty of tone and originality. The music played by the trio was a revival of an old but now somewhat lost tradition of transcribing, arranging and ornamenting their music. The trio and groups like it had given new life to a variety of compositions ranging from 16th century lute music to piano works by Debussy and Faure. In 1981 the trio gave its London debut at Hall which served to launch a career that has resulted in many tours. Cain Events McCain Series Little Women Not only Little Women, but little boys, grandparents, parents and students filled McCain Auditorium Wednesday evening, Oct. 7, as The Children ' s Theatre Company of presented its original theatrical adaptation of Louisa May Alcott ' s Little Women. The play tells of the hardships and joys of the March family: Meg, Jo, Beth, Amy and their parents. The story is told through the eyes of Jo, a tomboy who is struggling to keep her family together while her father is away fighting in the Civil War. The Children ' s Theater Company has been touring for 23 years, perfoi ming to young people and their families. The company performs 300 times a year in facilities ranging from school gymnasiums to large metropolitan theaters. The CTC ' s home is a multimillion dollar facility which was built in 19 74. The CTC has developed an annual audience of nearly 250,000 for its Mainstage productions. This year, the touring production of Little Women is expected to play to an audience of 100,000. Two of the audience ' s younger members, Janssen and Jennifer Barth, both 10 years old, said they were enjoying the play. I ' ve read it before but have never seen it, Barth said. The daughters of Marmee March present Christmas gifts to their mother during The Children ' s Theatre Company ' s presentation of Little Women in McCain Auditorium. (Photo by Gary Lytle) The State Ballet of Missouri, under the choreography of Todd Bolender, are part of the McCain International Season. They performed four ballets. (Photo courtesy of McCain Auditorium) State Ballet of Missouri The State Ballet of Missouri, under the direction of internationally acclaimed choreographer Todd Bolender, performed on Nov. 9, in McCain Auditorium. The company of 28 dancers, formerly the Kansas City Ballet, performed four ballets from their repertory. Two of these were ballets by George Balanchine, Pas de Dix and Divertimento. Pas de Dix pays homage to the tradition of Russia ' s celebrated Maryinsky Theatre and was inspired by Balanchine ' s recollections of his days there. The highlight of the State Ballet ' s performance was Divertimento, a ballet which was once considered lost. This piece was dropped from the repertory of the Ballet Society (as the New York City Ballet was originally called) in 1952. It was thought to be lost because it was believed that no one remembered the steps. The State Ballet of Missouri was now the only that performs Divertimento. A Summer ' s Day by Bolender, and Con Amore by Lew Christensen were also performed at McCain. Sports and jazz were combined in A Summer ' s Day, to form a tale of four brash boys. The evening concluded with Con Amore, the tale of a thief who runs afoul of a band of each of whom falls in love with him; and of a faithless wife whose husband catches her with her lovers. The Central Philharmonic Orchestra of China On Oct. 27, McCain Auditorium was filled with music performed by the Central Philharmonic Orchestra of China. The Philharmonic was formed in 1956 and was an orchestra of over 100 full-time with Li Delun as music director and conductor. The orchestra made its first successful appearance on the Berlin musical scene at the World Youth Festival. Later, with concerts in Beijing and Warsaw, the orchestra won recognition at home and abroad. During the 10 years of the cultural revolution, symphonic music in China suffered a great deal. For 14 years, virtually no symphonic music was performed. In 1978 a live performance of the Central Philharmonic was relayed to France and Britain via a communications satellite, an unprecedented in the history of symphonic music. The orchestra also played a large role in exchange. It made two concert tours abroad, one in Japan and the other in Korea. They have collaborated with many world renowned conductors and performers. The Central Philharmonic Orchestra has recorded the nine Beethoven symphonies for a French recording company and continued to make contributions to the cause of symphonic music in China. This tour represented the debut performance of this orchestra in the United States. The Barber of Seville Figaro, the barber of Seville, concocted a plot to bring the two together. In the meantime, was also plotting to trick Rosina into him. With clever disguises and much trickery, was able to help the two elope. Finally, the doctor was forced to admit defeat and give a blessing on the marriage. The piece was written by Gioacchino Rossini taken from pieces written first by Pierre Rossini then turned it into an opera, titling it The Useless Precaution. orchesta and according to repertoire requirements, other instruments were added. Among the Camerata ' s successful tours were to be included those of the Soviet Union, Hungary, Poland, Bulgaria, Italy, Spain, Portugal, Cuba, Peru, Venezuela, Mexico, Brazil, India, Finland and China. In October of 1983, the Camerata and its leader, Zeljko Straka, were awarded the National Order of Merit and, in 1985, the first prize of the National Order of Art. During a six-week tour, the New York City Opera National Company brought to McCain Auditorium The Barber of Seville on Feb. 19. The tour consisted of a 61-member ensemble including a 28-piece orchestra, 10 soloists, 11 choristers, and a staff of 15 people. The company was founded by Beverly Sills in 1979. The opera centered around two lovers (Rosina and the Count of Almavia) who were separated due to Rosina ' s jealous guardian, Dr. Bartolo. The doctor himself wished to marry Rosina. The Camerata Musica of East Berlin, Orchestra performed in McCain Auditorium on Jan. 30. The Camerata was composed of 22 musicians of East Germany ' s leading orchestras. The Camerata was in 1973 under the of Professor Zeljko Straka. Since 1984 the Camerata string ensemble has been led by Wolf- Dieter Batzdorf, first concert master of the State Orchestra. The string ensemble formed the core of the The Camerata Musica, composed of 22 musicians from East Germany ' s leading orchestras, perform under the direction of Dieter (Photo courtesy of McCain Auditorium) Camerata Musica of East Berlin McCain Series The Canadian Brass The nubile Rosina, played by Katharyn Cowdrick, is kissed by Count Almaviva, portrayed by Robert Swensen, while the count ' s sword preoccupies Dr. played by Paul Milkie, Rosina ' s keeper in The of Seville. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) Seventy-six trombones lead the big parade, with one hundred and ten cornets close at hand. Well, maybe not quite that many. a few of these brass instruments rang out and into McCain Auditorium on Dec. 6. These tones came from the instruments of the popular quintet, The Canadian Brass. They presented pieces from a wide range of music, with works by Gabrieli and Vivaldi, carols and Handel ' s Hallelujah Chorus. The Canadian Brass was a group composed of two trumpets played by Frederick Mills and Ronald Romm, a French horn played by David Ohanian, a trombone played by Eugene Watts, and a tuba played by Charles Daellenbach. They performed on a specially matched set of 24 karet gold-plated Yahmaha instruments originally designed by Renold Schilke. They first appeared on the musical scene in 1970, and have been accredited with brass music and establishing the brass quintet as a force in the music world. The key to The Canadian Brass ' style was communication between the artists and their audiences. It ' s important that people get involved in the music, said tuba player Charles Daellenbach. We feel a responsibility to see to it that the has fun. A good performance isn ' t enough – people have to go out feeling happy. The Canadian Brass has appeared on the Tonight Show, the Today Show, Camera III and Sesame Street. They were the first brass ensemble to play in Carnegie Hall. Pulitizer Prize-winning composer and All-University Convocation speaker Ellen Taaffe Zwilich discusses a musical composition by Byron Jensen, right, student in music history, in McCain Auditorium. Patty Russell, senior in music education, and Craig Parker, associate professor of also listen to her (Photo by Rob Squires) Michael McElroy More than 10 billion tons of the largest single waste product of society was released into the atmosphere every year. Carbon dioxide, said Michael McElroy, of atmospheric sciences at Harvard and a councillor in the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, is colorless and odorless, but it doesn ' t disappear. McElroy delivered an All-University Sept. 16 in McCain Auditorium. Our world is dominated by change and it always has been, but it is unique now because it is such rapid change. The change could be seen in the build-up of carbon dioxide and other gases in the atmosphere, which McElroy said was creating a thicker atmospheric blanket. This thick blanket was the cause of the greenhouse effect. The constant burning of fossil fuels was the main cause of the increased carbon dioxide. Gases released by the fuels rem ained in the atmosphere for about 100 years, McElroy said. The greenhouse effect is already working on Venus. The planet is covered with a lot of carbon dioxide and it is very hot there. The effect caused heat to radiate back onto the planet which raised the surface temperature. There was concern that the rising levels of carbon dioxide and other gases in the atmosphere would cause a drastic change in the earth ' s climate. While McElroy agreed that the climate would be affected in the future, I wish people would refrain from making doomsday predictions about the greenhouse effect. He said that climate change was an but that we were in the unique position of being able to control that change now. We are not smart enough yet to predict the exact changes, but we will be within the next few years if we work at it. Ellen Taaffe Zwilich Many Americans hear what is only a limited exposure to music of all eras, Pulitzer prize- winning composer Ellen Zwilich said. One cannot demand variety if not exposed to the variety that is there, she said. If they are exposed to different types of music and they choose only to listen to Top 40, that ' s democracy, Zwilich said. If their choice is made in ignorance of what else is out there, that ' s tyranny. The composer addressed an audience of about 100 students and faculty in McCain at an All-University Convocation, April 21, delivering a speech titled Idealism and Adventure: The Arts in a Technological Age. Zwilich, a composer and violinist, was best known as the first woman to win a Pulitzer Prize in music and the first woman to obtain a in composition from The Julliard School, New York. Zwilich said although musical technology has obvious positive qualities, she could see some problems arising in today ' s society with regard to music and musical attitudes. She said electronic resources should be used to open up the world for an exchange of culture, allowing people of different backgrounds to share with one another. No one voice should be allowed to speak for all of us, Zwilich said. After an afternoon master ' s composition class with music students, Zwilich elaborated on her desire to compose and the advice she gives wanting to write their own pieces. A problem, especially among students, was their worry to be original enough, she said. I think an artist has to have inspiration. If you ' re not driven, then you ' re in the wrong There needs to be drive, desire and a love of your work. Michael McElroy, member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and of Atmospheric at Harvard University, explains climatic changes of the earth during the last 100,000 years while deliver- ing the first All-University Convocation Sept. 16 in McCain Auditorium. (Photo by Andy Nelson) All-University Convocations Noam Chomsky speaks with James Monschke, in computer science, following the convocation he delivered in McCain Auditorium. Chomsky, professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, spoke on the Iran-Contra affair and the role of the United States. (Photo by Jim Dietz) Noam Chomsky In McCain Auditorium Nov. 17, Noam Chomsky, at an All-University Convocation dealing with the Iran-Contra affair, guided more than 1,000 people through the unusual exercise of looking at ourselves as a country. Chomsky, professor of linguistics and at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, discussed the U.S. government ' s involvement and the public ' s apathy of the involvement in Honduras, El Salvador, Guatemala and Nicaragua. When Congress releases the findings on the Iran-Contra affair, the real story of the arms sale to Iran will not be discussed, Chomsky said. He said the U.S. government ' s attempt to keep Nicaragua in the Central American mode — another name for human rights violations including mass starvation, illiteracy, torture, mass slaughter and constant brutality and oppression — was not considered a scandal. Rather, Chomsky said the only real scandal the U.S. government says it committed was with a terrorist state, namely Iran. But the most serious action that Iran has so far been trapped in is support to the Contras through the arms supply that was sent in these negotiations.... The scandal should be that Iran was caught in negotiations with us, he said. Michael Kammen Michael Kammen spoke at the All-University Convocation Nov. 4 in McCain Auditorium about changes which occurred in the concept of personal liberty through the history of the U.S. Constitution. Kammen, a professor of history at Cornell University, received a Puli tzer Prize in history. He said personal liberty was, the oldest, the commonest, but surely the least major concept involved in the The meaning of liberty has changed. have always defined liberty and understood liberty in relationship to some other quality. Personal liberty has even extended into what may and may not be put on the label of a bottle of beer, he said. The U.S. Supreme Court decided the representation of the flag for the purpose of advertisement could not be accepted despite the possible infringement of personal liberty. Lerone Bennett In a passionate and charismatic speech, Bennett Jr., historian and senior editor of Ebony magazine, said increasing freedom for blacks means increasing freedom for whites, just as decreasing black freedom decreases white freedom. Bennett delivered an All-University Jan. 21 in McCain Auditorium to about 600 people, including students from the Manhattan, Junction City and Topeka school districts. He spoke as part of the University ' s activities the birthday of slain civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. The world is full of witnesses on this point: White students and white women discovered their own freedom in the ' 60s in the struggle for black freedom, he said. In fact, it can be argued that King and the movement he led freed more white people than black. There was no way to help, hurt or save one group of people without helping, hurting or another group, Bennett said. At one point in the speech Bennett asked all the young people in the audience who had ever seen a Jim Crow sign to raise their hand, and none did. Even though Jim Crow signs – which discriminated against blacks by designating certain areas where blacks could not travel, eat and live – were gone, institutional racism still existed, Bennett said. Today, Bennett believed King ' s dream of equality for all people was threatened like it had never been threatened before. A new spirit of reaction at the highest level of American society has made racism respectable again, he said. The raw bigotry we thought we had defeated forever... is coming out of the again. Bennett said people did not understand King if they viewed him against mindless media myths and divorced him from his time and space. He said people must avoid the myth who tell us King sprang from the head of Zeus, rather than from the depths of the black experience. We must explain the personality by the and not the history by the personality, he said. He described King as the most authentic voice of real America and called King ' s story the of the rejected stone who became the cornerstone. Lerone Bennett, executive editor of Ebony magazine, spoke at an All-University Convocation in connection with Martin Luther King Jr. Week in McCain Auditorium. He discussed the influences of Martin Luther King Jr. on the lives of black people in today ' s society. (Photo by Neal Hinkle) 3 convocations Lou Douglas Lectures The only way to secure a democratic future for this country was to eliminate the economic of capitalism, said Samuel Bowles, of economics at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Bowles delivered a speech, Capitalism and Democracy: Scarcity, Despotism and Freedom, as part of the Lou Douglas Lectures on Public Affairs in Union Forum Hall on April 9. Bowles said America was upon an era when the people had to choose between one of the two conflicting philosophies – capitalism and democracy – because they cannot co-exist. The game of democracy promises equality; the game of capitalism promises inequality, he said. The problem is the two games are being played on the same field. Bowles said democracy guaranteed civil and supported the idea that people should be equally influential in the economic process. Capitalism, however, was an economic system in which goods were produced for profit by and people were employed for wages. The clash between democracy and capitalism was evident in the case of medical care in Bowles said. Should medical care be determined by how much the rich can pay or for what the people actually need? One reason capitalism was brought to was the invisible-hand philosophy, developed by Scottish economist, Adam Smith, in the 1700s. The invisible hand referred to the way people should be led by their own desires and not worry about others. While delivering a Lou Douglas Lecture on Public Affairs, Samuel Bowles, professor of economics at the University of Massachusetts, emphasizes that America must eliminate its system of capitalism to secure democracy. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) Samuel Bowles Renny Golden Sanctuaries and the underground railroads were speaking for the voiceless Central American refugees, said Renny Golden, last of four speakers for the Lou Douglas Lecture Series on Public Affairs on April 21. Golden, associate professor of criminal at Northeastern Illinois University, Chicago, and member of the Chicago Religious Task Force on Central America, spoke on Refugees: in Low Intensity Conflict in Union Forum Hall. Low intensity conflict was a form of warfare that began in Central America in the last two years, Golden said. (Low intensity conflict) is a change in the nature of war, she said. The military is no against the guerrillas. Now they are against the population — the people. It is draining the sea to catch the fish. Although the conflict was termed low it was not low intensity for the people of Guatemala and El Salvador. Low intensity conflict is mobile, intense and deadly, Golden said. When the air bombardments by the military began in these countries, the people fled into the cities to be fed and clothed by the religious groups, she said. But this would not allow the military to accomplish its goal of displacing the population and breaking them down, so the groups were no longer allowed to provide help. Because of the situation in Central America, the homeless and poor of these countries came to the United States to seek political asylum, she said. Unfortunately, these people were consistently denied asylum. In (El) Salvador and Guatemala, the people will not defeat the insurgent hope, Golden said. This insurgent hope continues, and that is the miracle that has come to us. Lou Douglas lecturer Renny Golden, front row left, walks along Anderson Avenue with Mary Douglas and Kale senior in modern languages, in a peace march for American refugees. (Photo by Rob Squires) Michael Parenti The answer to the nation ' s problems was democracy, democracy and more democracy, said Michael Parenti, in a Lou Douglas Lecture Series address. Parenti, currently a guest professor of science at Howard University in Washington, D.C., delivered the lecture, Monopoly Culture and Democratic Struggle on March 8 in Forum Hall. You can ' t sit back and say America is the best country there is, Parenti said. If you truly believe America is the best country, you must never forget the struggling and fighting that got us where we are today. Freedom of speech and the right to talk and fight back were not given to us by our founders, but were fought for by the people, he said. This process and struggle of democracy is something we ' re still facing today. Parenti said the issue of class freedom remained an on-going struggle. Further, he said, a dirty secret in America today was class, which was often not talked about except in terms of class stratification. He gave the of class as relating to means of production, wealth and social power. Parenti said the class system was a reality not confronted. He presented the idea of the class, which, he said, was missing in every breakdown given of the whole class system. This is the class that owns America, that is the capital of America, he said. It isn ' t the small producer or business owner, but the giant multi-national corporation owner. He referred to the small business owners as the squirrels that danced among elephants. He said there was not that much independent capital, but only the illusion of independent capital. Fortune 500 determines the air we breathe and the images available for consumption, Parenti said. Capitalism is not an economic system but a whole social order. Michael Parenti delivers the lecture Monopoly Culture and Democratic Struggle during a Lou Douglas in the Union Forum Hall. Parenti is currently a guest professor of political science at Howard University in Washington, D.C. (Photo by Rob Squires) Richard Rhodes At a Lou Douglas Lecture Series, author Richard Rhodes speaks on the arms race. (Photo by Brad Camp) The United States ' growing stockpile of nuclear weapons was creating a total death machine, according to Richard Rhodes, author of The Making of the Atomic Bomb. Rhodes discussed The Arms Race, the of Hope with a crowd of about 250. Rhodes spoke at a Lou Douglas Lecture Series, Feb. 9. He said caution, fear, ambition and greed had promoted the growth of nuclear weapons. The reality of nuclear weapons, which the United States and the Soviet Union continually butt their heads against, is their total uselessness. They cannot be used. We have built for our enemies, as well as for ourselves, a total death machine, he said. The United States had a stockpile of about 50,000 nuclear weapons that was still growing. That is comparable to 5 million Hiroshimas, Rhodes said. Each year 2,000 nuclear warheads are built. We are naked to our enemies now, and in the future, Rhodes said. A buildup of only adds to the peril of an accident or a miscalculation. He said the development of nuclear weapons helped force nations to negotiate for world peace. Nuclear weapons are anonymous, mass- produced objects. But not only are they they serve as tools – tools that help political change. The knowledge of nuclear weapons provided a type of low-grade world peace, he said. And not only had a nuclear bomb not been fired in anger since World War II, the superpowers had not placed their military at full alert. The Strategic Defense Initiative has only the issue of the arms race, and has in no way solved it, he said. Using nuclear weapons would produce nations of the dead, even the potential of the world of the dead. The knowledge of nuclear weapons will result in either multiple sovereignties that exist peaceably. Or simultaneously, the race will materialize into mass nuclear fear. America celebrates 2 years of S. Constitution makes history Birthday celebration of the U Schoolgirls on the deck of the Kitty Hawk recited the Pledge of Allegiance on Sept. 16 along with construction workers in President Reagan and millions of Americans celebrating the U.S. 200th birthday a day early. Reagan led a nationally televised Pledge of Allegiance for Celebrate the Constitution Day, the preamble to the bash. It ' s still our blueprint for After making a human flag on the school yard, the pupils of Northview Elementary School recite the Pledge of Allegiance. (Photos by Andy Nelson) freedom, Reagan said from the Capitol in Washington during the day-long civics and history lesson. On the eve of the signing of the U.S. Constitution, we pay tribute to the single greatest work of government the world has ever seen, retired Chief Justice Warren Burger said at the Capitol. Burger headed the Commission on the of the U.S. Constitution. At the New York Stock Exchange, trading was halted briefly during the afternoon, and workers cheered and waved American flags on the trading floor. In Boston, workers took off their hard hats, dropped their tools and joined Reagan in the pledge. We ' re a part of history, said Holly Maultz, 16, one of 108 pupils from the Day School of the Sacred Heart in Bryn Mawr, who recited the pledge a half- hour before Reagan on the flight deck of the aircraft carrier USS Kitty Hawk. Minister delivers message to Manhattan in five-day crusade Luis Palau usually ministered in large capital cities with populations of 1 million or more, but Palau spent a five-day tour in Manhattan, Oct. 3-8, 1987. The last time Palau held a college crusade was at the University of in Madison in 1982. His reason for returning to the college scene: Today ' s students have an image of a perfect body, but not a perfect soul, he said. The University is not geared to the soul, the spirit and moral he said. The emphasis is more on the intellectual and the aspects. I feel that every year there should be an event to give students a balance in their total lifestyle. I am always nervous when I speak to university students, but I then end up enjoying it and wishing I was there longer. Delivering his message of Hope for a Stressed-Out Heart Land, Palau speaks to about 2,000 in Ahearn Field House. Palau ' s speech was the opening session of a five-day crusade in the area. (Photo by Steve Rasmussen) 78 Nine students hit by cars Kathy Kramer, sophomore in administration, on Oct. 7 became the sixth pedestrian to be struck by a vehicle since Sept. 1 in the Manhattan area. Kramer was injured while crossing Mid-Campus Drive between Kedzie Hall and the Union at about 10:20 a.m. As paramedics place Kathy Kramer ' s leg in a splint, Sue McMillan, junior in apparel and textile marketing and driver of the car, is consoled by Ken Snook, junior in fine arts. Kramer was the sixth pedestrian to have been hit by a car in Manhattan since September. (Photo by Andy Nelson) She was transported to The Saint Mary Hospital and treated for bruises and abrasions before being released that afternoon. Prior to the Kramer accident three bicyclists had been struck by vehicles. One of those bicyclists was William Everett, senior in social work. Everett received deep bruises and had 35 s titches as a result of the accident. Everett was struck by a car at about 5 p.m., Sept. 28, at the intersection of 6th Street and Poyntz Avenue. Hopes are exceeded The Kansas Lottery generated more than $4 million in ticket sales in its first five days, lottery officials announced. Rough estimates put ticket sales between $4 million and $4.5 million, based upon the number of people who won the top instant- win prize of $5,000 and the odds of winning the prize. Tickets for the first state- operated gambling game in Kansas history, Up and Away, went on sale just after midnight on Nov. 12, and lottery officials reported gross sales of almost $2.1 million during the first 36 hours the lottery was in operation. Lottery officials had projected gross sales of $3.1 million during the lottery ' s first full week and $18.1 during its first game, which was scheduled to last between eight and 10 weeks. bloomingdale ' s 16 stores to feature Kansas goods Riley was the stop March 4 for a delegation from department store in New York. They arrived in Kansas Feb. 29 for a five-day tour of the state. The Bloomingdale ' s visited vendors and Kansas points of interest in preparation for a six- week promotion of Kansas products in their 16 stores that began in May. The promotion is a feature in all 16 of Bloomingdale ' s stores in New York, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Florida, Texas and the District of Columbia, and features products billed as the ' Best of Kansas,- said Michelle Watkins, public information officer for the Kansas Department of Commerce. The visit to Riley dealt with aspects of Bloomingdale ' s store displays that depicted how a Kansas home looked in the early 1900s, Watkins said. In addition to the Riley stop that week, the Bloomingdale ' s representatives visited: Lenexa to see 1950s auto art; the Louisburg Mill: Lawrence to meet with arts and crafts the Kansas Museum of History and the Capitol in Topeka; Wichita ' s Cowtown; Hutchinson to visit the Center and the Cosmosphere; Newton to view the Kaufman Museum; and Dodge City to visit a feedlot outside of the city as well as see Dodge City ' s Boothill Museum and Front Street. The tour was a follow-up to an earlier tour in October 1987. Last October ' s visit focused on food vendors. Bloomingdale ' s chose 52 of the more than 120 vendors who had sought selection. Information for the news pages compiled from the Associated Press, Kansas State Collegian and Time magazine. 79 Mass murders stun nation A homeless man went beserk and stabbed at least five worshipers who tried to stop him from approaching a priest during a Sunday morning mass in Fort Worth, Texas. The teen-age son and daughter of a Welch rancher were arraigned on three counts of first-degree murder in the slayings of The past few years have not been good years for evangelists. Because of the scandals, first in 1987 with Jim Bakker of the PTL Club, then in 1988 with Jimmy Swaggart of the Assembly of God denomination, these ministries were brought into scrutiny by the public. Bakker resigned from the PTL due to his admission of having had a sexual tryst with Jessica Hahn, a church secretary from L ong Island, N.Y. He also admit their father, stepmother and infant half sister. These were only two of several Mass murders that occurred during the year. He had gone beserk inside the church and stabbed several people before being subdued, said police Sgt. Ken Francis. Ty Delbert Wingfied, 19, and his 16-year-old sister, ted that he had paid out $265,000 in hush money. Other televangelists claimed this hurt their ministries because it made America focus on the ministries with some distrust. One of the most critical opponents of Bakker was Swaggart. He said Bakker ' s entire debacle was a cancer that needed to be excised from the body of the Christ. This later proved to be ironic. In February 1988, Swaggart admitted to Holly Wingfield, were charged as adults in the Craig County District Court in Vinita with three counts of first degree murder. Investigators found the bodies of the slain in a trash dump near their rural home, near the Kansas in northeastern Oklahoma, said Craig County Sheriff Jess Walker. incidents of moral according to Forest H. Hall, secretary-treasurer of the Louisiana District of the Assemblies of God. It was reported that Swaggart was with a prostitute. Swaggart said he would stop preaching until church officials completed an investigation. I do not plan to my sin and call it a Swaggart said in a tearful confession to his congregation. Television evangels ministries corrupted Dow Jones Industrial Average Friday ' s close: 2246.74 1111 2240 2180 2120 2060 2000 — 1940 — 1880 — 1820 — 1760 — 1700 Mondays close: 1738.41 (approximately 15 minute intervals) The Dow Jones Average plummeted an astonishing 508.32 points, or 22.6 percent, to 1,738.42 on Oct. 19. The drop exceeded the 12.8 percent decline on the notorious day of Oct. 28, 1929, which was considered the start of the Great Depression. The industrial average tumbled the last 130 points in the final 30 minutes of the session. With the drop, the average had given up all its 1987 gains and now showed an 8.3 percent loss for the year. From its Aug. 25 high of 2722.42, it had lost 36.1 percent. The reaction around Wall Street, from traders, money managers and securities analysts, was mostly of stunned disbelief. We ' re in the midst of a crash, said Jon Groveman, head equity trader at Ladenburg Thalmann Co. in New York. Plunge shocks Wall Street 80 Kennedy elected to Supreme Court Bob Dole, R Kan came home to formally announce his campaign for the Republican for president in 1988. Speaking before a crowd of almost 7,000 people. Dole said he had I the determination to I become the next president and was confident he would be given the to make a difference. I came here today because my home is at the of everything that I believe about America, he said. Our families, our neighbors, our communities were at the center of everything we did. Dole ' s 3 0-minute announcement was made from a platform at the of Eighth and Main streets, next to the drug store where he worked as a teen-ager. G.V. Bob Dawson, former co-owner of the drug store, presented the senator with more than $100,000 in a cigar box with the good wishes of the people of Russell... in the fervent hope you will be elected president of the United States Dole acknowledged the generosity of the people who helped reshape my life. In return, when Dole reached the podium, he presented Mayor Randy Masi with a gift of $10,000 from an anonymous donor who wanted it to go to the poor people of Russell. Included on the were Dole ' s wife, Transportation Elizabeth Dole; Dole ' s daughter, Robin; Gov. Mike Hayden; Marie Boyd, wife of the late McGill Huck Boyd; Sen. Nancy Kassebaum and Rep. Pat Roberts, R-Dodge City. After announcing his presidential candidacy for the Republican U.S. Sen. Bob Dole and his wife Elizabeth wave to supporters through a sea of balloons that were released as part of the ceremonies in downtown Russell. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) Appointment ends political battle The Senate on Feb. 1 unanimously confirmed Anthony M. Kennedy to the Supreme Court, ending a ferocious battle that began seven months before. Kennedy, a federal court judge who was President Reagan ' s third choice to succeed retired Associate Justice Lewis F. Powell, was approved, 97-0, with Democrats and Republicans alike praising him as a moderate, open- minded conservative. Reagan said he was extremely pleased and declared Kennedy will make an outstanding addition to the Supreme Court. The Senate has not only restored to the nation a full nine-member Supreme Court, it has reaffirmed this country ' s commitment to the philosophy of judicial restraint. Robert Bork, Reagan ' s first choice to fill the created by Powell ' s retirement, was denounced as a rigid right-wing who threatened freedom and civil rights progress. The Senate rejected him, 58-42. Kennedy ' s confirmation, after a pro forma one-hour debate, was in marked contrast to the stormy fight touched off by the nomination of Bork. Reagan, calling Bork the victim of a lynch mob, then picked Douglas H. Ginsburg as his next candidate, but he withdrew from after admitting he had smoked marijuana while a Harvard law school professor. Iran-Contra affair leaves nation questioning officials Papal Mass ends long day ' s journey For the hundreds of thousands of people who turned out on Sept. 16 in the hot Texas sun to Mass with Pope John Paul II, the event was the end of a long day ' s journey. The 5,000 ushers, who were to help control the crowd of 350,000 arrived at 2:30 a.m. to begin their 17-hour day. They lined up and were issued papal usher caps. The ushers also donned sashes which they had purchased for $5 each. Crowds poured into the 210-acre Mass site west of San Antonio at 3:45 a.m., 45 minutes before the opening time. Those who made the early pilgrimage quickly staked their claim to a spot that would give them the best vantage point, nearly 150 yards away, from which to see the pope Mass. The voices of the Sacred Hearts Men ' s Choir and a group of Polish choirs greeted worshipers at 7 Anticipation increased as the 10:30 a.m. papal tour neared. The crowd pressed forward to the rope barrier lining the route as an announcer informed the crowd that the pope — aboard the papal airplane Shepherd One — had landed at Kelly Air Force Base. For thousands of The pope ' s San Antonio visit was the fourth on his nine-city U.S. tour. (Photo by Andy Nelson) seeing the pope was a once-in-a-lifetime Their long hours of waiting had finally been rewarded. Poindexter reveals role in arms deal In February 1986, after two months on the job, John Poindexter, former national security adviser, decided to usurp the authority of his commander in chief. In his testimony before the congressional committees investigating the Iran- Contra affair, Poindexter insisted he and he alone gave final approval to Lt. Colonel Oliver North ' s to take profits from U.S. arms sales to Iran and divert them to the rebel forces. He claimed to have exercised this authority without ever telling the president, so as to protect Reagan from the politically volatile issue. Moreover, Poindexter said, his extraordinary exercise of authority did not end with the contra diversion. As the scandal was breaking last November, Poindexter testified he destroyed a piece of vital evidence: a covert-action finding, drafted by the CIA and signed by the president in December 1985, that approved Israel ' s of U.S. amis to Iran. To the president ' s supporters, Poindexter ' s was a turning point in the Iran-Contra resolving one of the essential iss ues of the There would be no directly linking to the possibly unlawful use of money gathered by selling weapons. But Poindexter ' s testimony still had devastating implications. If the admiral was to be believed, his story revealed a lack of in the White House. Poindexter matter-of- factly told the panel of the day in February 1986 when North said he had found a way to fund the contras with profits from the arms sales to Iran. Poindexter saw the diversion scheme as a way of providing bridge financing for the contras while the administration struggled to Congress to approve a $100 million aid package. 82 Leaders sign treaty President Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev signed a treaty banning intermediate- range nuclear missiles. We have made history, Reagan declared after he and Gorbachev spent more than three minut es putting their signatures – time and again – into leather-bound volumes containing the and accompanying documents. We can be proud of planting this sapling which may one day grow into a great oak of peace, said. May December 8, 1987, become a date that will be inscribed in the history books – a date that will mark the watershed the era of a mounting risk of nuclear wars from the era of a demilitarization of human life, the Soviet leader said. Said Reagan: We can only hope that this history- making agreement will not be an end in itself, but a beginning. Reagan and Gorbachev sat side by side to sign the agreement under the of the East Room of the White House. The 24-minute ceremony was broadcast live in America and the Soviet Union, as were separate remarks made by the two leaders moments later in the State Dining Room. In the audience were the two leaders ' wives, Nancy Reagan and Raisa American and Soviet diplomats and anus control negotiators, and scores of members of Congress, including senators who will pass judgment on the treaty in deciding whether to ratify it. As he had before, Reagan characterized the treaty with a few words of Russian, Trust but verify. The audience broke into laughter when Gorbachev interrupted that, You repeat that at every meeting. Winter Olympics hold so many memories So many memories, Backup goalie Ric Kosti mused Freddie Powell, Kosti was worried: Next the Jamaican bobsled time they may just grab a so many bunch unch of National Hockey As the Olympic Village eyILeague guys at the last was emptying and stu te and see what at the University of they can do. Calgary were retaking Even if they ' re a great their campus, the last deal better, I don ' t think looks at the XVth Winter it will mean half as much Games were long and to them as it did to us. yearning. a Over the entire 16 Alberto Tomba, 21, days, the nearest Canada Italy ' s self-proclaimed beast and La Bomba, buried his ski boots in what snow remained at Nakiska on the day of the giant slalom in the second week of the great chinook. He feared they might soften halfway down the mountain under the weight of his confidence. Canada ' s hockey team at least got to the medal round, but a 5-0 loss to the U.S.S.R. deflated much of the country. came to a gold medal was figure skater Brian Orser ' s second-place to Brian Boitano of the United States. Softly Orser said, Apart from the my memory will be of the Americans even more than Canadians. I already knew the of my countrymen, but so many people from the U.S. have come up to me to say they just wished there were two gold medals. Haitian election tainted When Haitians returned to the polls Jan. 17, the Nov. 29 election day massacre was fixed in their minds. It was in November that Haiti ' s first attempt at a national election in 30 years was cancelled after President-elect Leslie Manigat stands by a bullet hole in his campaign office that came from an assassination attempt during the Nov. 29 election. (Photo by Brett Hacker.) violence left 34 dead. Opposition leaders charged that this election was a sham in which double voting and other inflated election claim that 35 percent of three million eligible took part in the election. It appeared the military junta allowed Leslie university professor, to use every means possible to ensure his election to the presidency. For the 125th anniversary of this land-grant University, students, faculty and alumni took one year, just a touch of time in 125 years, to They celebrated the growth and expansion of a University that began with 52 students and now has an enrollment exceeding 18,000. The first look back during the celebration was Feb. 16, with the first Landon Lecture on Public Issues in 1988. The lecture was given by Justice Sandra Day O ' Connor of the U.S. Supreme Court. Feb. 16 the founding day of the University, 125 years earlier. The 125th celebration was planned to continue until Feb. 15, 1989. All the Founding Day events were tied into the lecture, but, John Fairman, assistant vice president for institutional advancement, said the key events of the celebration were planned for the fall semester of next year. The lecture was followed by a and a halftime presentation by Sen. Merill Werts, R-Junction City, at the K-State vs. the University of basketball game the same night. A legislative citation was given by the senator to call attention to the University ' s Founding Day. We will have a major convocation of the past, future and present of K- State. It will tell you where we were, where we are and where we are going, Fail man said. In 1863, Kansas State Agricultural College opened its doors to 52 students, 26 men and 26 women. Other events consisted of guest an All-University Open House, cultural programs and the issuance of a commemorative medallion. Other campus activities were planned for fall of 1988. Although the celebration recognized the many things that changed since the doors of Blue Mont College first opened in 1860, many of the older buildings have endured. The first who enrolled in the one- building college might have difficulty locating their classes on today ' s campus. When the trustees of Blue Mont College petitioned the Legislature to establish a state university in they included the use of their already established building and grounds. Thus, when the Kansas State Agricultural College opened in 1863, its first classes were held in the old Blue Mont building. Although the Blue Mont building was razed in 1883, part of it was saved. Stones from the archway above its entrance were installed in the Auditorium. When the Auditorium burned, the stones were removed and embedded in the south wall of the top story of the library, behind some bookshelves. Each of the 15 blocks was inscribed with a letter. Together they spelled out the name of the old school. The stones and name the beginning, a significant touch of time. The Barn was the first building designed for the new college. This facility was primarily used for a barn until 1875 when funds were provided to remodel it for classroom use. Later known as the Faun Machinery Hall, the Barn ' s construction was finished in 1873. Early use of the Barn was for the study of cattle. The building was torn down in 1963. Holtz Hall, named in honor of Adrian Holtz for his 35 years of service to KSAC, was built in 1876 for the of chemistry instruction. In 1900, after a fire in the building, the hall served as a gym until Nichols Gymnasium was built in 1911. After Nichol ' s completion, Holtz Hall once again served for chemistry The hall currently houses Career Planni ng and Placement. Perhaps one of the best-known buildings on campus is Anderson Hall, named forJohn A. Anderson, the second president of KSAC. Although Anderson Hall now houses the offices, it once served multiple purposes. There were three building phases during Anderson ' s construction. The first was in 1879, when it was called the Practical Agricultural Building. In its early history, this building housed the college library, sewing classes and women ' s calisthenic classes. During its second building phase in 1882, the central portion of the building was added. The final portion was added in 1884. Denison Hall was built in 1960, and received its name from KSAC ' s first president, Joseph Denison. This was the second Denison Hall to be built, and now houses the English department. The original Denison building was constructed in 1902 to house chemistry, but it burned to the ground in 1934. In order to hold large meetings, the Auditorium was created in 1904 and could hold up to 2,000 people. It was continued on page 86 With the roof supports overhead, Kelly Briggs, Manhattan, bulldozes dirt from the inside of Bramlage Coliseum. (Photo by Gary Lytle) 84 125th Anniversary The old Auditorium was the meeting place for the campus until 1965 when fire destroyed the building. McCain Auditorium now stands on the site of the previous auditorium. (Photo courtesy of Photo Services) An old aerial shows the K-State campus without many of its familiar landmarks such as the Union, Ahearn Field House, Durland Hall and Ackert Hall. (Photo courtesy of Photo Services) 85 125th Anniversary Kansas State University 1988 continued from page 84 used for the music department and burned to the ground in 1965. To replace it, McCain Auditorium was built in 1970. The largest building expansion occurred under the presidency of James A. McCain. During his from 1950 to 1975, 46 were added to the campus. Among these were Ahearn Field House, All-Faiths Memorial Chapel, K-State Union, Lafene Student Health Center and the Veterinary Medicine Center. Bluemont Hall was built in 1981 Holtz Hall, built in 1876, is the oldest building on campus and now houses the Career Planning and Placement Center. (Photo courtesy of Photo Services) The main building of Kansas State Agricultural College, Anderson Hall, as it looked in 1885. (Photo courtesy of Photo Services) and housed the College of Education. Throckmorton Hall and Brandeberry Indoor Complex were also new additions to the campus in 1981. Most recently, Bramlage Coliseum, the Weber renovation and the chemistry biochemistry building were under construction. According to Larry Garvin, of the K- State Planning Offices, there are expansion plans for buildings on the University for the next 40 years. Some of the new plans for the campus include the demolishing of the Memorial Stadium. The future holds many ideas for K- State expansion. Old buildings will stand by the new, each for the growth of the University, and each standing through a touch of time. by Gidget Kuntz and Larissa Kimura The east entrance to the King Hall addition stands largely finished except for a door. The building will provide much needed office and laboratory space for the chemistry and biochemistry departments. (Photo by Gary Lytle) 86 125th Anniversary Betty Bubendorf, switchboard operator, sits at her desk in the telecommunications office at Memorial Stadium. Bubendorf had been with the university since 1959. (Photo by Brad Camp) A telephone operator works at an old-time University switchboard. (Photo courtesy of University Archives) 88 125th Anniversary Two decades didn ' t pass by without leaving a mark, and Shirley Olson, administrative assistant, witnessed history in the making. In 1965, Olson joined the K-State faculty as a clerk in the College of Arts and Sciences. She spent her days ironing out wrinkles in payroll on adding machines and wading through more than 4,500 individual student files. Olson said the computer was the biggest change K-State made. She said endless hours and sore arms from cranking the mimeograph machine were awful, and when the first copy machine arrived, it was nothing short of a miracle. We used to run that mimeograph Stacking the punch cards that contain student data, an office worker uses computer equipment that has drastically shortened the time it takes to perform most office tasks. (Photo courtesy of Archives) machine and make those awful and collate them by hand, Olson said. Now she could punch up data on computers. Office equipment had been through a revolution, but Olson said the student body hadn ' t changed much. The students are still the same. She said every new Student Senate thought it was dealing with new issues like parking and the budget, but they weren ' t. Those are the same problems we had 20 years ago. After 23 years, Olson said she wouldn ' t trade her job for anything. I love the students, the faculty and everything about it. If I didn ' t, I ' d leave. Registrar Don Foster graduated from K-State in 1960 with a bachelor ' s degree in agriculture education. After four years of teaching junior high students, he returned to Wildcat country as dean of student life. Foster said students ' priorities had changed since his college days. He said men weren ' t worried about building a career, they just wanted a job. Women set their priorities on marriage and family. Students want to be more well- rounded than when I left, and that ' s a positive change. Foster also said had a broader view of education than they did in the ' 60s. I was more vocationally oriented, Foster said. Most classes only required one textbook, not five or six as some classes require today. Foster also didn ' t have the luxury of heading to the Union and watching big-screen television, sampling the Stateroom ' s menu or heading to the Catskeller for some peace and quiet. A make-shift union was set up in a Army barracks building just south of where the new Union was built. ' There was just a snack bar, a couple of pool and ping-pong tables, and that was it, he said. Derby and Kramer food centers weren ' t around either, and coed dining was out of the question. Women were served at Boyd, Putnam and Van Zile Halls, and the men ate at Thompson Hall. Foster said the food wasn ' t much different than it is now, but there wasn ' t much choice then. Although enrollment has tripled and computers have taken over the bookkeeping, both Foster and Olson agreed one thing hadn ' t changed, and that ' s K-State spirit. Foster said there was a lot of school spirit then, just like now. by Audra Dietz 89 125th Anniversary The historic fire on Dec. 13, 1968, that left only the stone exterior of Nichols Hall, started the controversy over the future of the building. (Photo courtesy of Photo Services) K-State students, upset by the lack of research materials in the library, protested in October of 1968. (Photo courtesy of University Archives) 125th Anniversary Kansas State University 1988 90 125th Anniversary From the time Kansas State Agricultural College opened its doors in 1863 for 52 students — 26 men and 26 women — the students have had a strong hand in forming the history at K-State, whether the end came to triumph or defeat. ' The most visible things are being remembered. One thing is Nichols Gym, now Nichols Hall, said Anthony Crawford, University archivist. Nichols Gymnasium burned on Dec. 13, 1968, leaving just the stone outer-structure. For a period of time, there were two swimming pools inside the walls. When the Natatorium opened, there was no longer a use for the building. The building remained a topic of interest, especially for architecture students. A group called the Castle Crusade was developed with the aim of keeping the issue in the news. When the funds were sought to tear down Nichols in 1979, the students rallied to save the structure. The students had a major hand in the saving of Nichols, Crawford said. Another example of students their voices was in the decision to build the Bramlage Coliseum. Bramlage was popular when it first came up because basketball games were selling out. There was a positive attitude toward building something larger than Ahearn Field House, he said. A new 15,000- to 17,000-seat was voted on and passed, 1,332 to 246, in a student referendum held in February 1979. When bids for the new coliseum came in over what was expected, Ahearn was no longer selling out. Then there was the turnover in students. This made the sentiments change somewhat, Crawford said. In Octob er 1968, more than 1,000 students gathered outside Farrell Library to protest the lack of available in many research areas. Students met with President James A. McCain to discuss the of an increase in funds going to the library. For two or three years following there was better funding. The library has been an issue in itself because everyone has a common interest in it, Crawford said. Students also rallied to causes that were not quite as serious in nature. We had athletic holidays (days off after major athletic events) in the past. It was that spring, (of 1960) or shortly before, that they changed from the holidays to a full week off for spring break, said Deanna Amstein, 1962 graduate and current employee of the Academic Assistance Center. In the spring of 1960, after K-State won the basketball game against the University of Kansas, the idea was formed to have another athletic holiday, she said. These individuals called the fraternities and living quarters to organize the materials and the people needed to blockade the campus and keep faculty and students out. It would be like an athletic holiday. I knew the blockade was being planned, but I never thought it would really happen. I had an early class that morning and that was when I saw the blockade, she said. As people approached the campus, they just stayed by the blockades, so crowds formed, Amstein said. The blockade lasted long enough to keep instructors off campus, so most classes were not held that day. The administration said if it happened again, spring break would be cancelled. These were some of the ways K- State students, for serious reasons or not, have helped shape the social and academic history of K-State. by Debra Couture An artist ' s sketch shows the origin al Blue Mont Central College building. (Photo courtesy of Photo Services) 91 1251h Anniversary Wildcat football player and 1974 graduate Steve Grogan is currently a member of the New Patriots. (Photo courtesy of K-State Sports Information) Although Kirstie Alley did not graduate from K- State, she credits her experiences in the theater program here with giving her the confidence to pursue her acting career. (Photo courtesy of NBC) 125th Anniversary Kansas State University 92 125th Anniversary When looking at a university, one often judged it by looking at the people who attended the school and went on to become well k nown in certain areas. K-State was not short-changed when it came to people who had gained prominence in their fields. These people went on to achieve what many K-Staters hoped to accomplish, whether in Kansas or in the nation. Jim Hollis, WIBW-TV news received his degree in in 1957. I worked at KSDB when it was only a 10-watt radio station, and it was located in old Nichols Gym. Hollis considered Manhattan to be a second home. He said his father went to school here in the 1920s and met his mother here. Another K-State graduate who settled in Kansas was Richard Rogers. This 1943 graduate grew up in Wamego and served as a U.S. Federal Judge in the 10th district. Rogers with a bachelor ' s degree in business administration. Rogers taught business law at K- University of Maryland Chancellor John graduated from K-State in 1956 and said he is trying to make his school as friendly as K-State. (Photo courtesy of the University of Maryland) State after leaving the Air Corp after World War II. Last year, he received an honorary degree of Humane Letters through the College of Business Administration. John Slaughter, chancellor of the University of Maryland, was a 1956 graduate from Topeka. Although it had been over 30 years (since I graduated), I still grab the sports page every Sunday to see how K-State is doing, he said. I have nothing but fond memories of K-State. I remember it as such a friendly place, he said. He was to both K-State and KU, but he thought the campus at K-State was so much friendlier he came here. I feel good about leaving an imprint at K-State. It is a truly fine university that has a long tradition of being a school that truly cares about people who go there, Slaughter said. I ' m trying to make this school (University of Maryland) like K-State. Kirstie Alley didn ' t graduate from K-State, but said she gained valuable experience while being here. Alley went as far as outer space to attain fame in her acting career. The role that became her big break was as Lt. Saavik in the movie Star Trek II. She attended K-State as an major from 1969-71. Alley said she came here from Wichita because of her boyfriend, but always dreamed of being an actress. After appearing in some K- State play productions, she gained the confidence she needed to attempt a career in show business. Alley now plays Rebecca Howe on the hit NBC-TV series Cheers. Some other K-Staters that have achieved notability in their field were: Marlin Fitzwater, ' 65, press secretary to President Reagan; Robert Dole, ' 59, Senate minority leader; Gordon Jump, ' 57, actor; Milton Eisenhower, ' 51, former K-State president; Steve Grogan, ' 72- ' 74, member of the New England Patriots football team. by Debra Couture 93 94 Academic Division Comparative Anatomy Birds NASA Players Explore Friendship Tutoring In commemoration of Veterans Day, Norman Childs, sophomore in architecture, holds a flag during the annual command retreat ceremony on the front lawn of Anderson Hall. The Army ROTC and Air Force ROTC combined to commemorate the day. (Photo by Brad Camp) 95 Academic Division President Meets Goals Wefald ' s initial goals have become a partial reality, but to reach them completely, the University will need help from the state. BY MINDY ROBERT President Jon Wefald came to K- State in 1986 with several goals: to increase enrollment, move K-State to one of the top three universities in the Big Eight academically, and make it one of the top 15 land-grant institutions in the country. We have stabilized the enrollment here at Kansas State and indeed turned it around, Wefald said. There was a 24 percent increase in the class, and the University boasts over 18,000 students for the first time in the last four years. Wefald said K-State ' s other goals were highly dependent on funding from the state. You cannot develop academic excellence without the resources. If we get the resources from the state of Kansas in the next five years, then I think we can make the kind of progress we want to make. The overriding goal needs to be academic excellence, and to have and outstanding academic programs, Wefald said. The Margin of Excellence, approved by the Kansas Board of Regents in June 1987, represented a strategic plan to revitalize the quality and of higher education in Kansas. In order to put the plan into effect, it must be approved by the state Legislature. Wefald said the Margin of would provide for making faculty salaries more competitive and also monies for areas such as the library and academic computing. There was also a program in the plan for a food- processing center. After one year, Wefald said his view was that we must be realistic about funding. Kansas is a very conservative state, and there are more fiscal restraints here than I ever dreamed possible, he said. KU and K-State and schools like that need funding and they haven ' t been getting it. There has been a decline in support for higher education since 1980, Wefald said. The key to the future of K-State and KU would be the funding by the the Legislature. The K-State football team may not have been a selling point of the with a 0-10-1 record, but there were many other to promote the image of K- State. K-State had more Truman Scholars than any other public university in America since the beginning of the program in 1979, Wefald said. The debate team ranked high in the nation and 104 of the 355 Governor ' s of 1987 came to K-State this year. Kansas State University has an excellent future, especially if the state decides higher education is important, Wefald said. K-State President Jon Wefald sees the Margin of Excellence program as vital to the quality of education offered by the University. (Photo by Gary Lytle) 96 97 President Wefald Although the deans find their jobs rewarding, they are faced with the task of maintaining excellence. BY JUDI WALTER Being a dean was more than sitting behind a desk signing endless amounts of paperwork, smiling and shaking hands at social events or dressing up in all that fancy garb for graduation ceremonies. For most of the deans at K-State, it was the and faculty that made their jobs rewarding. The ideal situation would be to spend less time dealing with the State Board of Regents and spend more time with the students, said David Byrne, dean of the College of Education. Dean of Engineering Donald said the element he en joyed most about his position as dean was the people — dealing with the people — the students, faculty and alumni. That ' s the fun part of the job. The deans were attracted to K-State for various reasons. Dean of Business Administration Randolph Pohlman received his bachelor ' s and master ' s degrees from K-State and said he returned because the faculty that I had as a student was impressive when I was looking at the job market. Mark Lapping, dean of the College of Architecture and Design, said the reason he came to K-State four years ago was that he liked the University because it was very solid. It ' s loaded in all faculties and colleges with high- quality folks that have a strong commitment to the people of the state. Thomas Isenhour, dean of the of Arts and Sciences, left Utah State University for K-State this fall because I found exciting faculty in all es areas of scholarship in arts and and I wanted to participate in the development of the University into a truly excellent comprehensive University. The College of Human Ecology at K-State has a long, proud history and a good reputation among colleges of its kind across the United States, said Barbara Stowe, dean of human ecology. It was looking for leadership to help address important issues. I saw a lot of potential for the c ollege at K-State and I have not been disappointed. Trying to maintain the high level of excellence at K-State has proved to be the most challenging aspect of the deans ' responsibilities. Rathbone said he found it difficult to build an outstanding program on limited funds because he believed the state does not give the University adequate funding. Dean of Agriculture Walter Woods said, ...more funding is needed to allow faculty to pursue creative ideas in research and teaching, to provide students the best instruction and equipment, and to reward to those who significantly contribute to the programs. I think the most challenging aspect is trying to help the college move forward during a period of resource deficiency, Lapping said. College of Human Ecology Dean Barbara Stowe meets with the Human Ecology Council to plans for the college. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) Randolph Pohlman, dean of the College of Business, checks on the programs of Lynn Omeara, senior in marketing, and Andria Hainline, in business administration, while in the computer lab in Calvin HalL (Photo by Steve Wolgast) College of Education Dean David Byrne speaks to the freshman orientation seminar about one ' s duties as a college student. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) 99 Deans George Miller, vice president for administration and finance, catches up on some paper work during a quiet time in his office. (Photo by Brad Fanshier) Vice President for Institutional Advancement Robert Krause, right, listens thoughtfully to John Fairman, assistant vice president for University Relations, during a meeting in Krause ' s office. (Photo by Brad Fanshier) 100 Administration Face Budget Issues Grossly inadequate base budget poses difficulties when trying to run a University. BY LAURA RENFRO They were here to make things work. They worried about the budget, they made sure campus had a phone system, they got alumni support and they recruited new students. They were the administration. And as administrators, they dealt with the problems faced by the University. The budget concerned members of the administration. George Miller, vice president for administration and finance, said, Budget cuts are difficult to deal with under any It is especially difficult to deal with when the University is so seri- ously underfunded. I find it hard to tell a department that they must cut an already grossly inadequate base budget. Miller was not the only one to feel the effects of budget cuts. Virtually no funds exist for seed money, money, equipment replacement, or additional help to allow faculty to extend the effects of their expertise, Provost James Coffman said. Pat Bosco, associate vice president and dean of student life, attempted to combat the budget problems by increasing enrollment. His goal was to have an enrollment of 20,000 by 1990, which would allocate K-State more state funds. Associate Vice President for Institutional Advancement and Dean of Student Life Pat talks with admissions representatives about a recent Board of Regents action on K-State enrollment. (Photo by Brad Fanshier) Robert Krause, vice president for institutional advancement, Bosco ' s effort. He said the increase in enrollment for the fall of 1987 increased K-State ' s funding by $1 million. Coffman believed one of the biggest issues facing K-State was the faculty salaries and faculty retention. We ' re losing people, Krause said. (K-State) cannot maintain a level as a comprehensive research institution without qualified faculty. Behind every cloud there was a silver lining. The administration found its silver lining to be the students and faculty. I am most satisfied when we are able to help a division, department or individual achieve a particular goal. That is a great feeling, Miller said. Coffman said he found job facilitating efforts of faculty and other administration to do the best job they possibly could. Bosco ' s job dealt directly with the student body. I have the pleasure of initially working with the prospective and their families. I have the responsibility for their experience throughout their education while at K-State, involving housing, financial aid, enrollment, student orientation — even commencement, Bosco said. Miller summed up the role of the administration. In short, we are here to facilitate and help make things work. We are here to provide logistical services on campus. 101 Administration learning Teaching Being a student and a teacher at the same time was not an easy role to play. But that was the role 340 students played every semester at K-State. These people were known as teaching assistants or GTAs and were employed by the University to teach classes as they worked on a master ' s or doctoral degree. Because there were no federal grants available for graduate being a GTA could mean a way to help finance graduate school. Scott Wilbur, graduate in speech, said that on a national scale, GTAs at K-State were paid poorly, which was in close conjunction with the low pay rate of professors. It discourages a lot of potentially good students from going into these fields on a graduate level, he said. Not only were K-State ' s GTAs paid poorly on a national scale, but the GTAs in the Department of Speech were the second lowest on the pay scale in the College of Arts and They received about $4,000 a year, and had tough teaching loads, Wilbur said. Lou Cairoli, GTA in the Department of Statistics, said he didn ' t have a lot of free time, and like Wilbur, said that the low pay was a big disadvantage for GTAs. ' The money doesn ' t nearly compensate for the work that we do, he said. However, he said, the University could not get along without GTAs. The position is something that ' s required. If you eliminated this position, tuition would double or triple, he said, and many people need this to get through school. One student said she thought this was a problem with GTAs. Marsha Goodwin, senior in secondary said that this was not necessarily good. It seems like the majority of them are just hungry students, she said. That ' s all they take it as, just a job to get through. Wilbur said the GTAs in his met once a week to discuss prob- lems and techniques of teaching. It ' s very intra-supported and teacher-oriented. I think there ' s an ongoing concern to be a better he said. He said that for most GTAs, being in front of a class was a brand new experience. The position of GTA is really in training, he said. A typical GTA comes in with zero experience. Within the Department of Speech, a GTA taught six hours of class a which was an average of 65 students. There ' s stress with that many Wilbur said. The classes are overcrowded by one-half or one- third. He said that overcrowed classes were due to lack of funding. Wilbur said because many classes were lecture classes with 100 or 200 people, a speech class which was smaller was one of the few that the teacher could work more closely with the students. There ' s a powerful aspect of what we do, he said. We ' re shaping academic standards and values more than any other person at this University. Cairoli said he thought, overall, the advantages of being a GTA the disadvantages. This is a good apprenticeship. It gives you a feeling of what ' s going on (in teaching), he said. Wilbur said it was both draining and stressing teaching and being a student, but it was an exciting challenge. ' That is the reward, and it ' s worth all the indignities, he said. by Stacey Schumacher Scott Wilbur gives Chace Brundige, freshman in finance, ideas for a speech during his office hours. (Photo by Sarah Bradshaw) 102 Welcoming drop-in students, Scott Wilbur helps Chace Brundige, freshman in finance, on ideas for a Public Speaking 1 A presentation. (Photo by Sarah Bradshaw) Randy Kreutziger, freshman in finance, his speech during class with Scott Wilbur, a graduate teaching assistant for the speech department. (Photo by Sarah Bradshaw) Living in a world of scattered sound was difficult. For those who suffered no hearing loss, it was a world beyond imagination, a world no hearing would want to give up. But people like Kate Bromley faced these challenges everyday. Bromley, instructor of Beginnning Manual Communication (sign language), has been hearing impaired since grade school, and she didn ' t let it deter her from doing the things she wanted to do. Bromley, originally from Rock Island, Ill., attended the University of Illinois, where she received her degree in psychology. She then continued her education at Calif., for her master ' s in administration. Before coming to K-State, Bromley worked as a counselor in a private rehabilitation center in Illinois. Sh e interpreted, studied and taught signing. Actually, I started learning signing because I worked in a rehabilitation center. In order to communicate to others in the institution, it was Bromley said. This was the beginning of Bromley ' s interest in learning sign language. She attended different workshops and learned through her job. Bromley said she had never taken a formal sign language class, but had been signing for 11 years. She taught basic signing for two years at K-State. The course gave a chance to learn about hearing impairments, which made them understand the deaf culture and what it was like to be deaf. Kris Hill, junior in secondary education, said, Kate is wonderful and she ' s easy to work with. She has tried to show an interest in every student. Hill also said that Bromley tried to apply everyone ' s major to the class. She found ways in which students in her class could communicate with the deaf in different work-related circumstances. Through the class, students became more aware of what it was like to be part of a deaf culture. Things that most people took for granted, such as talking on the telephone or answering the doorbell, had to be dealt with in different ways by people who were deaf. They also learned how difficult it was for the deaf to communicate in everyday society because few people knew the deaf language. Some of the class learned songs and presented them to grade schools in Manhattan and St. George. This was used as a final project. The student could choose to sign Christmas songs or or do an individual presentation to the class. continued on page 106 Kate Bromley, instructor in speech pathology, demonstrates sign language to her Beginning Manual Communications (signing) class. In the seventh grade, Bromley was diagnosed as hearing impaired. (Photo by Greg Vogel) Her Hands Speak 104 Gary Yenzer and Audrey Westate, kindergarten pupils, listen to the teacher during the reading period while Bromley sits opposite Wyffels and interprets for her. (Photo by Greg Vogel) 105 Kate Bromley Accounting FRONT ROW: Penne Ainsworth, Carolyn George, Bonnie Hull. Patricia Anderson. ROW: Ann Haycock, David Donnelly. Johanna Lyle, Dan Deines. THIRD ROW: Cynthia Foley, Eugene Laughlin. Richard Ott. Scott Anderson, Lawrence Green. BACK ROW: Maurice Stark, David Vruwink, Danny Fisher, Kenneth Fox, Lynn Thomas. and Foundation Counselor Education and Educational Psychology FRONT ROW: Fred Bradley. Gerald Hanna. Micheal Dannells, Kenneth Hoyt. BACK ROW: Deanna Hawes, Peggy Dettmer.. Robert Newhouse, Margery Neely, John Stephen Benton, Thomas Parish. Deering, Lisa Richards. Administration and Foundation Special Education FRONT ROW: Peggy Dettmer, Norma Dyck. R. L. Ohlsen, Warren White, Mary Kay Zabel. Linda Thurston, Robert Zabel. adult and occupational Education FRONT ROW: Kathy Holmes, Barbara Wilma Schuh. Evelyn Hausmann, Diane Matteson. BACK ROW: Charles Oaklief, Robert Meisner, Darla Stone, Ann Jankovich. Phillip Carter, Betty Skidmore, John Parmley. Aerospace Studies FRONT ROW: Dale Braun. Richard Brown John Taglieri. BACK ROW: Danny Kerr Michael Chrisman, Carl Soap, Law rence Everett. continued from page 104 Bromley also helped with a kindergarten class at St. George Elementary School, where she interpreted for a girl and taught teachers how to use sign language. Most of the time I don ' t notice my Bromley said. I ' m more aware of it in crowded places and on the telephone. I am most frustrated when to music because it is hard to distinguish different notes, she said. To help overcome her handicap, Bromley used an amplified telephone and occasionally used an interpreter for certain events, such as the Landon Lectures. Bromley said she enjoyed teaching more than anything else she had done in the past. Her goals included teaching special education or specializing as a teacher for the deaf. I am at crossroads right now. I don ' t know if I will go back to school or be certified to teach in public school systems. In her spare time, Bromley played the harp, read a lot and also enjoyed gardening. I like the prairies, and birds, she said. I like to identify the different types (of birds) also. I really enjoy the outdoors. by Larissa Kimura Mary Jane Wyffels, a kindergarten pupil at St. George Elementary School, reacts to a signed question posed to her from Kate Bromley, instructor of Beginnning Manual (sign language) at K-State. Bromley for Wyffels and taught teachers to use sign language at the school. (Photo by Greg Vogel) 106 Kate Bromley Bromley interprets for Wyffels during Steven Renner ' s turn at show and tell so that Wyffels can understand what is being talked about.(Photo by Greg Vogel) Ceramics Offers Beautiful things came out of the dim, dusty confines of West Stadium as life and creation and contrast were manifested in the art of the potters who worked and taught there. Angelo Garzio and Yoshiro Ikeda both had separate i deas of what the art of ceramics should convey. How they conceptualized their work as much as their cultural background, and what they strove to teach their students reflected their history and personal philosophy. Garzio, professor of art, was born in Italy and immigrated to the United States in 1930. But he didn ' t get started in his life ' s work until the 1950s. He was enrolled at the University of Iowa ' s graduate art program, working for his doctoral degree in art history, and got hooked on clay when one of his friends was asked to initiate a ceramics program for the department. He finished his doctoral degree in art history, but stayed on to get a of fine arts degree in ceramics, which he completed in 1955. Garzio has been at K-State since 1957. In class, Garzio stressed traditional craftsmanship where function was the most important consideration. He created objects that had a strong relationship and a strong identity with man ' s daily needs and uses. Garzio said his goal in teaching was to expose students to a good feel for what has gone on before them so that they are able to build on what they have seen and what their ancestors have done... and (so) they have some basis on which to explore and build. We ' re nothing but a summation of With skillful hands, Yoshiro Ikeda smooths the surface of a pot while working in the ceramics shop in East Stadium. (Photo by Gary Lytle) what has gone on before us. In my classroom, I don ' t try to make artists or potters out of That is not my goal, Garzio said. Ikeda, associate professor of art, was born in Japan. He immigrated to the United States with his parents and attended college at Portland State University in Portland, Ore., where he studied architecture. His love was art, but as he said his parents wanted their children to succeed, or have a good job. So he attended the four- year university rather than an art college. But that changed in April of his third year when he saw students drawing. 108 Ceramics I said, ' I don ' t want to be doing this; I want to be a painting or drawing major, Ikeda said. So I changed my major. He was a fifth-year senior when one of his friends introduced him to clay. Ikeda said he got the idea of while talking to his teacher on the subject of his future. I thought, ' god, that seems to be an easy job with three months off and all those vacations,- Ikeda said. He chose to teach the field of ceramics because of the language barrier. The reason for ceramics is that I had - still have - a handicap in English. I thought demonstrating in front of a student would be much easier, he said. Ikeda stressed creativity in the form for the sake of itself. His philosophy was simple. Clay is a medium like this continued on page 111 Yoshiro Ikeda reminds his ceramics class of deadlines for the firing of its final projects. (Photo by Photo by Gary Lytle) Agricultural Economics FRONT ROW: Bryan Schurle, David Darling, Dean Davis, John Schlender, Donald Erickson, Orlan Buller. Orlo Sorenson SECOND ROW: Robert Burton. Paul Gallegher, Joseph Koudele, Harvey Kiser, David Barton, Marc Johnson, Paul, Kelley, Barry Flinchbaugh, Frank Orazem, BACK ROW: Jeffery Williams, Art Barnaby, Ted Schroeder, James Mintert, Allen Featherstone, William Tierney. agricultural engineering FRONT ROW: Pat Murphy, Stanley Clark. Joeseph Harner, John Kramer, Steven Young, Earl Baugher. Harry Manges. Steven Eckhoff, Do Chung. BACK ROW: David Pacey, Dennis Kuhlman, John Slocombe, Albert Heber, George TenEyck, Morgan Powell, Mark Schrock Darrell Oard, Richard Black, James Steichen, Charles Spillman. Agronomy FRONT ROW: George Ham, Gerry Posler, Floyd Smith, Vernon Schaffer, Rollin Sears. Steve Thien. Lowell Burchett, Clyde Wassom, Ed Kanemasu, Loyd Stone, Mary Beth Kirkham, Van Withee.SECOND ROW: Buck John Havlin, Paul Schwab, Dave Regehr, Erick Nilson, Mickey Ransom, Stan Cox, Bill Schapaugh, Ed Sorenson, Oliver Russ. Ted Walter. BACK ROW: Jack Brotemarkle. Dave Whitney, Ray Lamond, John Hickman, Walter Fick, Stan Ehler, Frank Barnett, Richard Vanderlip, Loren Moshier, Gary Paulsen, George Liang. An imal Sciences and Industry FRONT ROW: Don Good, David Schafer, Ike Jeon, Albert Adams, Kenneth Anderson, Micheal Dikeman, Calvin Drake. William Ikins. SECOND ROW: Walter Smith. Dennis Sigler. Jack Riley, Frank Cunningham. Ernest Robert Cochran, Charles Norton, Tiruvoor Nagaraja. THIRD ROW: Kieth Zoellner, Guy Kiracofe. Jeffery Stevenson, Miles McKee. Curtis Kastner. Larry Corah, David Harmon, Gerry Kuhl. BACK ROW: Keith Bolsen, Leniel Harbers, Jimmy Hoover, Harold Roberts, James Craig, Robert Schalles, Benny Brent, James Morrill. Architecture FRONT ROW: James Jones, Ed Devilbiss, Daniel Faoro, Gene Ernst, Paul Windley, Robert Burnham, Bill Jahnke. BACK ROW: William Garvin, Eugene Kremer, Keith Lyn Norris-Baker, Llewellyn Seibold, David Seamon, Dale Bryant, Martha Abbott, Gary Coates, Sidney Stotesbury. 109 Art professor Angelo Garzio inscribes a pattern in the coating of a ceramic piece. (Photo by Gary Lytle) architectural engineering and construction Science FRONT ROW: Charles Bissey, Edwin Lindly. Charles Burton, Ted Hodges. BACK ROW: Robert Dahl, David Peterson, Merrill Blackman. Micheal Mayo, James Goddard, Clarence Waters, Lula Poe. Biochemistry FRONT ROW: Ramaswa Krishnamoorthi Subbarat Muthukrishnan, David Cox, Delbert Mueller, Lawrence Davis, Dolores Takemoto. BACK ROW: Thomas Roche, Owen Koeppe, Philip Nordin, Kenneth Burkhard, Raymond Ochs, Charles Hedgcoth, William Klopfenstein, Gerald Reeck. Biology FRONT ROW: Louis Fina, George Marchin Christopher Smith. Marion Kundiger. Jean Pierre Perchellet. Richard Marzolf. SECOND ROW: Keith Chapes, Melvin Center, William Fortner, James Urban, Steve Upton, William Sutton, Timothy Seastedt, O.J. Reichman. THIRD ROW: Donald Roufa, Harold Klassen. Ruth Welti, David Hartnett. Theodore Barkley. Fred Wilson. BACK ROW: Larry Williams. Brian Spooner. Chemical Engineering FRONT ROW: John Matthews, Larry Erickson. Benjamin Kyle. BACK ROW: Walter Walawender, Richard Akins, Larry Glasgow John Schlup, L.T. Fan. Chemistry FRONT ROW: James Copeland, Herb Moser, Anne Lenhert, Duy Hua, Kenneth Klabunde. BACK ROW: Dale Hawley, Eric Maatta, Don Setser, Joseph Paukstelis. Peter Sherwood. Keith Purcell, Clif Meloan, Richard McDonald Ceramics continued from page 109 moment. It can go in many different directions, Ikeda said. It doesn ' t matter what kind of pots you make, anything can become art. Ikeda said that ceramics in the United States has changed in the last 15 years, not just utilitarian craftsmanship, but art. In the U.S., it (ceramics as art) just happened recently, but still utilitarian ceramics are very difficult Angelo Garzio works on a ceramic piece in the studio just off his office in East Stadium. (Photo by Gary Lytle) Angelo Garzio describes to Tammie Livingston, freshman in fine arts, the ideal shape her pot should take. (Photo by Gary Lytle) to become (considered) as art because of its background, he said. Both Garzio and Ikeda taught and undergraduate level courses and both stressed the importance of using the fundamental of ceramics, but both their own different philosophies in the creation of the art. There ' s no right or wrong, just the give and take of emotions, Garzio said to one of his students, and the words subtly conveyed the reality of the situation. Despite their in philosophy, both Garzio and Ikeda were attracted to the confines of West Stadium by the meduim of clay, of earth, and the basic desire to create. by Susan L ' Ecuyer Program Stresses Adult-Student It was a cold and drizzly fall night outside Manhattan Middle School, but inside the school ' s cafeteria a group of K-State students established a warm atmosphere. As a dozen or so high school students began to trickle in, each was greeted by a K-State student. After a few moments of friendly conversation, most pairs began to open textbooks and study. It was a scene that was repeated almost weekly in the 22 years since the Friendship Tutoring Program was established by the city of Manhattan. The program operated out of K- State ' s Family Center, and involved K- State students tutoring Manhattan school district students. During the 1986-87 school year, approximately 140 students and 125 tutors participated in Friendship Tutoring each semester. As indicated by its name, Tutoring emphasizwd the of adult-student friendships as well as tutoring, Frank Pritz, director of the program, said. Ideally, they work together, said Pritz, a doctorate student in human ecology. The goal is that one-to-one relationship. Kim Buchanan, Manhattan Middle School eighth grader, said that although her grades improved over the three semesters she was tutored by Shari Henry, K-State senior in education, their friendship was the greatest benefit of the program. She ' s like my sister, Buchanan said. Henry said that she helped academically by pushing her to study. I get my homework done (now) instead of putting it off because Shari makes me, Buchanan said. The program also provided the tutors, many of whom were education majors, experience in working with students. I ' ve learned a lot, Henry said. I can see what it ' s like at the junior high Friendship tutor Shari Henry, senior in education, laughs with Manhattan Middle School eighth grader Kim Buchanan while in the lunch room at Manhattan Middle School. (Photo by Andy Nelson) 112 Friendship Tutoring Bonds Engineering FRONT ROW: Cecil Best, Kuo-Kuang Hu, Stuart Swartz, Alexander Mathews, Robert Snell. BACK ROW: Albert Lin, Wayne Harry Knostman, Peter Cooper, Robert Lamb, Bob Smith, Eugene Russell, James Koelliker. level. It ' s helped to meet Kim ' s friends. The program, which until January of 1987 had been funded jointly by the city of Manhattan and the K-State family and child development no longer received funds from the city. A donation from the Pilot Club, a Manhattan business women ' s group, provided funds to continue the program through the spring semester, Pritz said. But, he said, the continuation of the program was dependent on finding another source for the $5,600 Manhattan formerly contributed. Though no other source of money had been found by the fall of 1987, Pritz was optimistic that one would be. by Vicki Wiler Computing and Information Sciences FRONT ROW: Virgil Wallentine, Elizabeth Unger, Richard McBride, Austin Melton, Myron Calhoun. SECOND ROW: David Gustafson, Maria Zamfir-Bleyberg, Maarten Van Swaay. BACK ROW: Masaaki Mizuns, Mark Foehse, Bill Hankley. Economics Debra Strawn, sophomore in business and Latrice Washington, find a quiet hallway in Manhattan Middle School in which to study. (Photo by Andy Nelson) FRONT ROW: Krishna Akkina. Joyce Lapping, Paul Koch, Michael Oldfather, Edwin Olson, Jarvin Emerson. BACK ROW: Lloyd Thomas, David Hula, Carol Tremblay, Victor Tremblay, Richard Megna, James Ragan, Roger Trenary, Douglas Copeland. clothing, Textiles interior Design FRONT ROW: Mary Peterson, Barbara Elizabeth McCullough. Marlene McComas. Ann Deegan, Artyee Hedrick. BACK ROW: Bettie Minshall. Barbara Cannon, Deanna Munson, Bernard Rueschhoff, Janice Huck, Margaret Boschetti, Ludwig VilIasi, Emily Arpin, Patty Annis, Sylvan Eldringhoff, Robert Habiger. Curriculum and Instruction FRONT ROW: Richard Hause, Dave Laurie, Michael French, Emmett Wright, Ray Kurtz, Floyd Price, Mary Hellen. SECOND ROW: Ow en Koeppe. Harry McAnarney, Rita Paul Burden, Hilary McLellan, Diane McGrath, Judy Pickle. BACK ROW: Charles Brookthart, Edward Sturr, Charles Heerman, John Hortin, James Boyer, Loren Alexander. 113 Friendship Tutoring Electrical and Computer Engineering FRONT ROW: Eddie Fowler, Melvin Cottom, Michael Lucas, Anil Pahwa, D.V. Chandra, Medhat Morcos, Ruth Dyer, Donald Lenhert, Philip Kirmser. BACK ROW: Brian Harms Kenneth Carpenter, John Devore. Andrzej Rys, Gary Johnson, Everett Haft, Stephen Dyer. Donald Hummels. engineering technology FRONT ROW: Kenneth Gowdy. David Delker Fred Hoppe, James Devault, William Dawes English FRONT ROW: Naomi Ossar, Pat Stewart Michael Donnelly, Rob Grindell, Harry Donaghy, Jack Morris. SECOND ROW: Sprehe. Jane Clark, Claire Baharianmehr, Sandra Bussing, Clara Thiessen, Patricia Kolonosky, Bonnie Nelson, Phyllis Bixler, Geissler, Ruth Heflin, Ann Warren, Alison Wheatley, Lillian Kremer, Pamela Johnston. THIRD ROW: Harold Schneider, Brad Stucky, John Rees, Bill Brondell, Paul Jerry Dees, James Cooper, Ben Nyberg, Ken Johnston, Mary Martin, Charlotte Dahl, Margaret Conrow, Marcella Clark. BACK ROW: Thomas Pynchon, Dave Redmon, Mark Jarvis, G.W. Clift, Chris Pierson, Jonathan Holden, Steve Heller. Walter Eitner, Kathryn Seltzer, Karen Tracey, Robin Mosher, Don Hedrick, Mark Dorion, Stacy Smith. Entomology FRONT ROW: Donald Mock, Ernst Horber, Valerie Wright, Marion Harris, James Nechols, Richard Elzinga, Richard Beeman. BACK ROW: William McGaughey, John Reese, Ralph Howard. Leroy Brooks, Ted Hopkins. A.B. Broce, H.D. Blocker. Don Cress, David Hagstrum, Randall Higgins. Environmental Design FRONT ROW: Carol Watts, Gwen Wilson, Susanne Siept-Coates, LaBarbara Wigfall, Carol Knepper, Laurence Clement. BACK ROW: Dick Haag, Ifan Payne, Anthony Chelz, William Sullivan, Robert Bullock, Bernd Foerster, Chuck Schrader, Dick McDonald, Ron Donsho, Don Watts. 114 Dr. Davis Davis Tapes Research Larry Davis, professor of biochemistry, moved beyond just teaching courses. During the summer, Davis produced a 90-minute videotape of biochemistry experiments to be used in high school classrooms. The idea for the videotapes was developed in response to suggestions received at a meeting of the Wichita Larry Davis, professor of biochemistry, chemistry demonstrations for basic high school chemistry classes. He had only done a few but received good feedback and planned to do more in the future. (Photo by Neal Hinkle) Northwest Science Teachers Association. The 10-20 minute segments were of various experiments that could not be carried out in most high schools due to costs, lack of equipment or safety precautions, Davis said. A lot of schools are not big enough to carry out their own research. (The students ' ) only exposure is through movies or tapes, Davis said. Davis said one of the major of the tapes was being able to cut out wait time so the experiments could be compressed into a reasonable time frame. Visual communication was another advantage. You can read out of a book but it ' s not the same, Davis said. Davis said the development of the satellite line and the TELENET could make the tapes even more useful in the high school classroom. The tapes of the experiments could be sent out to schools and shown with a direct line to the related department on campus for questions from At some later time Davis hoped that live experiments could be carried out in labs at K-State, while being viewed by high school students across the state. by Michelle Engemann Davis points out the results of a experiment. In the experiment, he used types of alcohol and showed their results. (Photo by Neal Hinkle) 115 Dr. Davis Pi. To some it was just a Greek To others it was approximately 3.14. B ut to Rajan Srinivasan Mahadevan, graduate in psychology, it meant a place in the Guiness Book of World Records. Mahadevan, who is from Mandir, India, set the world record in memory in 1981 for reciting 31,811 decimal places of the actual value of pi in 3 hours and 49 minutes. Mahadevan said the only reason he stopped at 31,811 was because he made a mistake. The actual value of pi does not repeat, Mahadevan said. It is only the approximate value of 22 divided by seven that repeats after six decimal Finance FRONT ROW: Lucy Williams, Verly Richards, Ray Worthington. SECOND ROW Robert Hollinger, Ali Fatemi, Randolph Pohlman. BACK ROW: Tom Fryer, Emmanuel Santiago, Steve Shaw. Foods and Nutrition FRONT ROW: Meredith Smith, Beth Fryer, Carol Ann Holcomb, Kathleen Newell, Karen Penner. BACK ROW: Carole Harbers, Joseph Zayas, Carole Setser. Grace Lang, Robert Reeves, Jane Bowers. Forestry FRONT ROW: Les Pinkerton, Ted Cable. BACK ROW: James Nighswonger, Keith Lynch, Wayne Geyer. Geography FRONT ROW: Stephen Stover, David Kromm, William Siddall. BACK ROW: Duane Nellis, Charles Bussing, Sy Seyler, Stephen White. Geology FRONT ROW: George Clark, Richard Busch, Bob Cullers. BACK ROW: Ron West, David McConnell, Joseph Graf, Sam Chaudhuri. 116 Rajan Mahadevan world Record, Easy as pi places. It was not until Feb. 16, 1983, that Mahadevan saw his name listed in the Guiness Book of World Records. It was great to see my name in the book, he said. My father was so proud to see my name in print. Since then, he has unofficially his own record. He said he has gone beyond 40,000 decimal places. My goal is to go to 100,000, Mahadevan said. Three other men have attempted such a record. According to the only one that was still trying to beat him was a Japanese man. Mahadevan said he could just about anything. He memorized pi just for the fun of it, and then his friends encouraged him to go for a record. The ability to retain unusual amounts of information was thought to be genetically inherited. said his entire family had extraordinary memories. My father is very good at words and so was his father, he said. My mother can remember notes, and my grandmother is good with numbers. Even his siblings had good memories. As for me, I find it easiest to memorize numbers, but I can remember just about anything, Mahadevan said. I ' ll have to admit, though, I am lousy with names. He spoke 10 languages and was learning Japanese and German. The first time Mahadevan realized he had an unusual talent for memorization was when he was 5 years old. My parents had a dinner party one night and invited a lot of guests, Mahadevan said. When the guests left, I was talking to my parents and recited the license plate numbers of the vehicles some of the guests drove. They were amazed. Even after discovering his ability, he said he never consciously tried to improve his memory. Mahadevan, who came to K-State in July 1987, worked in a psychology laboratory with Stephen Kiefer, professor of psychology. Even though Kiefer had not worked with Mahadevan very long, he recognized Mahadevan ' s extraordinary memory. We all have memories, very good memories in fact, considering the number of people we can remember and the like, Kiefer said. But he is able to do that and more. He came to the United States to attend graduate school because he said he believed that America ' s level of education was the best in the world. K-State was the most financially accessible school. He said he hopes the future included obtaining a Ph.D. in psychology and remaining in the United States. He also hoped to someday publish a few papers. by Carol Knorr Rajan Srinivasan Mahadevan, graduate in psychology, earned a place in the Guiness Book of World Records in 1981 by reciting 31,811 places of the actual value of pi in 3 hours and 49 minutes. (Photo by Andy Nelson) 117 Rajan Mahadevan Creative Acting Class develops imagination of students through spontaneous improvizational activities. by Cindie Baldwin Doc Fedder stood in the middle of the large circle of students and as they yelled out some things they hated. One student said, I hate K-State parking! Another one said, I hate Wildcat football! The class would then repeat the words and imitate the person ' s gestures. This warm up activity helped to get the poisons out, said Norman Doc Fedder, professor of speech. It also helped to put the students at ease with themselves and with each other. Creative Dramatics was first taught at K-State in 1970 and steadily increased in popularity ever since. Fedder described the purpose of the class as the development of imagination, self-expressiveness and social relatedness through active participation in a variety of improvised, dramatic actings. In other words, students did not rely on scripts or written material. Instead, they acted out how they felt at a particular moment, with no time to prepare. Although I have never been too shy in front of people, I still got nervous because we had to improvise, said Jenny Kale, sophomore in journalism and mass communications. I just wanted everything to be really good. At the beginning of the semester, we were doing more improvisation, but toward the end of the semester, when we had to act out controversial topics, we were given more time to what we wanted to say, Kale said. Fedder divided the semester into six activities. The students began with theater games to become comfortable around their peers. To remember each others ' names easier, we put an adjective in front of our names and introduced ourselves to the group, Michelle Mehlinger, senior in accounting, said. Mine was Merry Michelle. The second activity was story drama. The students got into groups of four or five, picked out a particular fairy tale, movie or book, and acted it out. The students did not act out the story completely as it was written. Instead, they used their own creativity and humor to change the story into their own words. Watching people act out these scenes was a little like being in a experiment because you knew how people were going to react, Kale said. Educational drama was the third activity, in which the student to the class a particular activity that was a strength to the student. It usually involved something in the students ' major. The fourth activity involved dealing with social problems, such as AIDS or continued on page 121 Jim Jenkins, sophomore in economics, and Debi Steen, Junior in pre-veterinary medicine, take a ride on Scott Hamilton, sophomore in business administration, while performing a skit of one of Aesop ' s fables. (Photo by Andy Nelson) Lisa Pelfrey, senior in animal sciences and industry, Norman Doc Fedder, professor of speech, and Jim Jenkins, sophomore in relax on the lawn outside of the Purple Masque Theatre and share a laugh while class members perform skits. (Photo by Andy Nelson) 118 Creative Dramatics History FRONT ROW: Burton Kaufman, Robin Higharn, John McCulloh, G.D. Wilcoxon, Albert Hamscher. BACK ROW: Donald Nieman, Clyde Ferguson, Sarah Shields, Leroy Page, George Kren, Kenneth Jones, Sue Zschoche, Marion Gray, Rene De La Pedraja, Robert Donovan, John Daly, Homer Socolofsky. Hotel, Restaurant, Institutional Management and Dietetics FRONT ROW: Malley Sisson, John Pence. Marian Spears, Charles Partlow, Faith Roach. SECOND ROW: Sandra Procter, Paige Sheryl Powell, Barbara Brooks, Denise Wiseman, Pat Pesci. BACK ROW: Helen McManis, Garland Lewis, Mary Molt, Mary Gregoire, Deborah Canter, Janice Dana, Hearne. Grain Science and Industry FRONT ROW: Roger Johnson, Carol Klopfenstein, Charles Deyoe, Dale Eustace, J.G Ponte. SECOND ROW: Bob Wilcox, Ulysse Acasio, Ralph Wolffing, Keith Behnke, John Pederson, Robert McEllhiney, Elieser Posner. BACK ROW: Paul Sieb Carl Hoseney, Robert Schoeff, D.L. Wetzel. Horticulture FRONT ROW: Jeff Nus, Ron Campbell, Mary Albrecht, Chann Rajashekar, Charles Marr. SECOND ROW: Kent Kimmins, Houchang Khatamian. C.D. Clayberg, Ed Hellman, David Hensley, James Robbins. BACK ROW: John Pair, Richard Mattson, Steven Wiest, Jim Greig, Paul Jennings. Human Development and Family Studies FRONT ROW: Howard Barnes. Robert Poresky, Nancy File, Lou West, John Murray, David Balk, David Wright. BACK ROW: Lorraine Nighswonger, Judd Swihart, Marjorie Stith, LuAnn Hoover, Sus an Wanska, Joyce Cantrell, Rick Scheidt. Candyce Russell, Beverly Briggs, Katey Walker, Tony Jurich, Michael Bradshaw. Creative Dramatics 119 120 Creative Dramatics Acting continued from page 118 child abuse. This activity requires that everyone be serious. It is hard to believe some people in the class can be after all the joking that usually goes on, Kale said. The fifth activity dealt with a a student may have had, but it cannot be too serious a problem, said. I am not trained to be a psychiatrist, so I try to get away from really touchy problems that the students might have, he said. The final activity involved the of The Wizard of Oz. put the production together and the public was invited to attend. Although it was probably assumed that most of the students in the class were theater majors, many were not. Many students heard about the class by word-of-mouth. The only who were specifically to enroll in the class were the K-State Singers. Ed Berridge, junior in journalism and mass communications, center, and Brad Miller, junior in journalism and mass communications, pull out the legs of Tawnie Larson, senior in journalism and mass communications, while performing a skit in which they acted as healing preachers during a Creative Dramatics project. (Photo by Andy Nelson) Michael Walden, senior in marketing, lunges for the microphone to try and quiet Debby Johnson, junior in pre-nursing and life science, as she talks and talks and talks about her date on a skit parodying the Love Connection television show. (Photo by Andy Nelson) Engineering FRONT ROW: Alvin Willems, Carl Wilson, Paul McCright, Steve Konz. BACK ROW: Bradley Kramer, Stanley Lee, Doris Grosh, Gene Grosh, Ching Lai Hwang. interior architecture FRONT ROW: Jack Durgan, Eugene McGraw, Stephen Murphy. BACK ROW: Rod Troyer, James Dubois, Velizar Genov. labratory FRONT ROW: Scott McVey, Shryll Hoffman, William Moore, Harish Minocha. BACK ROW: Wayne Bailie, Kerry Keeton, Donald Seedle, Robert Ridley, Richard Parker. landscape Architecture FRONT ROW: Richard Forsyth, Lynn Ewanow, Thomas Musiak. Kenneth Brooks, Dennis Law. BACK ROW: Alan Tautges, Neal Rossman, Robert Page, Tony Barnes, Tim Keane, Chip Winslow, Dennis Day. 121 Creative Dramatics journalism and Mass Communications FRONT ROW: Charles Pearce. Roberta Applegate. Don Holt. Dave MacFarland, Paul Prince. Bob Bontrager. Harry Marsh. BACK ROW: William Adams, Barbara Hayter, Nancy Hause, Dave Deitch, Gloria Freeland, Lee Buller, Carol Oukrop, Shirley Ramsey. Robert Daly, Paul Parsons. Management FRONT ROW: Constanza Castro. Linda Robert Paul, Mike Park. BACK ROW: Daylin Butler. Yar Ebadi, Merrill Riley, Stan Elsea, Jim Townsend. FRONT ROW: Wayne Norvell. BACK ROW: Cynthia Fraser, David Andrus, Richard Coleman, Mike Ahern. FRONT ROW: Qisu Zou, Lige Li, Louis Pigno, John Marr, Louis Herman, Dan Curtis. Linden Willis. SECOND ROW: Todd Cochrane, Muenzenberger, Robert Dressler, Alberto Delgado, Karl Stromberg, Lyle Dixon, Saeki, Jacqueline Barab, George Strecker. BACK ROW: Robert BurckeI. David Surowski, Kadosa Halasi, Andrew Chermak, Willard Parker. Mechanical Engineering FRONT ROW: Allen Cogley, Garth Thompson, Chi Huang, Donald Fenton, Ralph Fred Appl, Warren White. BACK ROW: Dan Swenson, Paul Miller, George Eggeman, John Kipp, Byron Jones, B. Terry Beck, Krishnamoorthi, Naim Azer, Robert Gorton. Herbert Ball, Hugh Walker. Military Science Army ROTC FRONT ROW: Susan Barton, Lynn Pepperd, John Evans, Thomas Guillory. Melody Stralow. BACK ROW: Douglas Booker, Robert Dana Bres, Stephen Clark, Kevin Adkins. Christie Jones. 122 of Sexual Behavior Human Sexuality Films and slides enhance learning. by Ann William Griffitt, professor of psychology, taught a course which was inherently interesting to people. Psychology of Sexual Behavior information on the basic topics of human sexuality. This is a class (in which) you ' ll really learn something because you ' re said Michelle Zimmerman, senior in radio-television. Sex is a big part of your life and it ' s good to be Trevor Whitney, senior in mechanical and Jamie Berends, junior in education watch an educational film on sexual techniques practiced between heterosexuals. (Photo by Brett Hacker) Iseman knowledgeable about it. Films and slides shown in the class have received much attention since Griffitt started the class 16 years ago. I know people who aren ' t even in the class who come to the class on film days, Pat Klein, sophomore in psychology, said. Griffitt showed scientific films with physiological responses of men and women during sexual artistic films with explicit sex and some soft-core pornographic films. In addition to the films, Griffitt showed pornographic slides. He used sexual depictions from pornographic magazines to make the slides, which he used for research, as well as the class. He was researching the effects of being exposed to pornography by observing the reactions of people who viewed the slides. I work very hard not to offend — I ' ve never had any irate parents, Griffitt said. I ' ve been teaching since 1971 and haven ' t had any controversies. Griffit, who was called the sex professor by some of his colleagues, was actually a personality and social He had researched various aspects of interpersonal relations and effects of relationships on behavior, and he gradually became interested in researching sex. Griffitt started the Psychology of Sexual Behavior class at K-State and was the only one to have taught it. He said there were few courses like it. I gradually phased it in, Griffitt said. I had to educate myself before educating the others because this class hadn ' t been taught any place in the past. William Griffitt, professor of psychology, uses his bull penis pointer while lecturing to his of Sexual Behavior class. Griffitt didn ' t tell the class what the pointer was until he was finished lecturing over that section of the class. (Photo by Brett Hacker) 123 Know Hands-on experience benefits Comparative Anatomy students, assisting them Dissecting lampreys, salamanders, sharks and cats was the job of students who participated in a class called Anatomy. In Comparative Anatomy, the stress is on anatomy and how different animals are built, said Lynn Dreese, assistant instructor of the class. We compare the by Jackie Wendt of organ systems f rom the vertebrates to the advanced. Dreese said the class was developed by Ann Stalheim-Smith. There used to be a Comparative Anatomy class a long time ago and it was eventually dropped, but Ann started a human body course 10 years ago and through that, this class Dreese said. Stalheim-Smith was also the instructor for the class, but because of illness was unable to teach for most of the fal l semester. Dreese was given the job of lab instructor for the class while Stalheim-Smith recovered. On the first day of class, we hand out a lamprey, a shark, a salamander and a cat, Dreese said. We study in systems, in that we go to one animal, study it, and go on to the next animal. We take one system, such as the external anatomy, and study it for all four of the animals ' skin structures, Dreese said. We start with the most primitive animal (lamprey) and work our way up. Dreese said the lamprey represented a primitive vertebrate, the dog fish shark represented a fish, the was the equivalent of an amphibian A student examines the contents of a sheep brain. (Photo by Steve Rasmussen) in their studies. and the cat was an example of a mammal. Twelve students took the course under Dreese. She said most of these students were biology majors. Biology majors take it because of an interest in animals and it ' s great if you are going to go on and learn anatomy, Dreese said. Troy Robert, junior in pre-physical therapy, said he took the course because it had a lot of dissection and that will be useful to him later. You come across so many in everything in all animals, and it really surprised me, Robert said. I ' ve gained a more rounded about anatomy, animals and their structures, Diane Schmidt, junior in pre-nursing, said. I took the course because I was interested in learning more of the structures of anatomy. Dreese said the class also entailed doing individual projects. They make a project physically or do a research report, and then share it with the class, Dreese said. They do about a 10- to 15-minute presentation. Dreese cited one example of one who obtained a kidney from a horse, dog, cat, rabbit, pig and cow and preserved each specimen in a labeled jar. Dreese said this enabled the to compare the variation in and helped explain why the structure of the organ was like it was for each particular animal. Because of all the work involved, we end up with hard-working students who are a pleasure to teach, Dreese said. These are the students who want to learn. Brock Exline, fifth-year student in veterinary medicine, studies a dogfish shark. (Photo by Steve Rasmussen) 125 Modern Languages FRONT ROW: Robert Corum, Bradley Shaw, Claire Dehon, George Tunstall. Lucia Garavito, Thomas O ' Conner. BACK ROW: Heinz Bulmahn, Carol Miller, Burney Medenhall, Ann Driss, Doug Benson, Peggy Beeson. Michael Ossar. Music FRONT ROW: Alfred Cochran. Jennifer Edwards, Ingrid Johnson, Theresa Breymeyer, Paul Shull, Jean Sloop. SECOND ROW: Edward Brookhart. Jack Flouer, Annette Funk, Sara Funkhouser, Chappell White, Frank Sidorfsky, Gerald Polich. BACK ROW: Robert Steinbauer. Hanley Jackson, Stanley Finck, Adrian Bryttan, Robert Edwards, Craig Parker, Jerry Langenkamp. Nuclear Engineering FRONT ROW: Joseph Merklin, Hermann Donnert, Kenneth Shultis, Richard Faw. Dean Eckhoff, Gale Simons. Philosophy FRONT ROW: Michael O ' Neil, Robin Smith BACK ROW: Sarah Merrill, James Hamilton Benjamin Tilghman. Richard Scheer. Physical Education and Leisure Studies FRONT ROW: David Dzewaltowski, Robert Kraemer, Dave Laurie, Margo Coleman, Miriam Satern. SECOND ROW: Karl Rinehardt, Roy Hunter, Robert Harper, Robert Johnson, Sid Stevenson. BACK ROW: Mary McEl roy, Kathleen Williams, Martha Kellstrom, Deb Christie. Sociology, Anthropology and Social Work FRONT ROW: Karen Henderson, Tammy Henderson. Hal Orbach, Mike Finnegan, Beth Herrmann. SECOND ROW: Marvin Kaiser. Wayne Rohrer, James Miley, Dennis Roncek, Lelah Dushkin, Janet Benson, Robert Taylor, Cornelia Flora. BACK ROW: Henry Camp, Scott Frey, Patricia O ' Brien, Jan Flora, George Peters. Statistics FRONT ROW: Kenneth Kemp. Paul Nelson, Mark McNulty, Sallie Keller-McNulty. James Schwenke, S. K. Perng. BACK ROW: Arlin Feyerherm, Raja Nassar. Shie-Shien Yang, James Neill, John Boyer, James Higgins, George Milliken. Physics FRONT ROW: Michael O ' Shea, Basil James Legg, Larry Weaver, Dean Zollman, SECOND ROW: Tom Gray, Nate Folland, George Hadjipanayis. Pat Richard. Torn BACK ROW: Jim McGuire, Chander Bhalla, Dean Dragsdorf, Chii Dong Lin, Brock Dale, Chris Sorensen. Plant Pathology FRONT ROW: William Bockus. Larry Claflin, Frank White, Fred Schwenk, Douglas Jardine, Bikram Gill. SECOND ROW: Timothy Todd, Barbara Hetrick Steven Lommel, William Pfender, Jan Leach, John Leslie. Merle BACK ROW: Lewis Browder, Lowell Johnson, Donald Stuteville. Ned Tisserat, Thomas Sim. Psychology FRONT ROW: Jerome Frieman, Frank Saal Carolyn Tessendorf, Sharon Sterling, Ronald Downey. SECOND ROW: E. J. Phares, Leon Rappaport, Thaddeus Cowan, James Shanteau, Mark Barnett, John Uhlarik, Charles Thompson. THIRD ROW: James Mitchell, Patrick Knight, Richard Harris, William Griffin, Stephen Kiefer. 126 University for Man UFM offers classes unavailable at K-State by Bretton Zinger From cake decorating to electronic keyboard to tofu for you, UFM offered students courses to take in relation to a major or just for fun. Since 1966, University for Man, a non-profit organization, offered Paul Sodamann, graduate in education, his kayak while practicing his backing in the Natatorium. (Photo by Jim Dietz) courses not available at K-State. Approximately 800 people took classes at UFM each semester. Although most students came from Manhattan, UFM drew many from surrou nding areas, some from as far as Topeka and Emporia. Pat Williams, graduate in taught the children ' s fall class for the first time. It has been a great experience running the I wouldn ' t have traded it for Williams said. A $2 registration fee was assessed for each student, from which K-State students were exempt, and class and materials fees were generally kept under $10. Gary Bentrup, freshman in landscape architecture, said, I liked the classes I took, and will probably take more. For the type of classes, I don ' t mind paying. Tracey Fraser, coordinator of the Single Parent Displaced Homemaker Program at K-State, taught the for Employment class at UFM. The whole environment (at UFM) is conducive to learning, she said. Kelly Robb, 10, works on her stencil during the children ' s stenciling class. (Photo by Jim Dietz) University for Man, located at 1221 Thurston St., houses a majority of the classes offered by UFM. (Photo by Jim Dietz) 127 University for Man surgery and medicine FRONT ROW: David Leith, Micheal Clem Bruce Blauch, Robert Taussig, Marvin Samuelson, Gary Brandt. SECOND ROW: Jerry Gillespie, Guy Watney, James Chalman, James Douglass, Judy Cox. Terry Campbell, Joe Harari. BACK ROW: Roger Fingland, Tom Avery. Mark Guffy, Alvin Edwards, David Carnahah. Linda DeBowes, Jacob Mosier, Frederick Oehme. veterinary Diagnosis FRONT ROW: Colleen Donnelly, Doris Kimble, Johna Veatch, Lyn Jensen, Linda Lori Hicks, Lorraine Walterscheid. ROW: R.M. Phillips, Al Strafuss, Barbara Kelly. Duane Cole, Sylvia Osborn, Julie Cornett, Donna Rogers, Teresa Yeary-Herrick, Michele McWhorter, Pam Pace, Linda Warfe, Glen Marrs. BACK ROW: Ralph Westerman, Al Potter, Ed Daniels, Ross Hauck, Mahlon Vorhies. FRONT ROW: Anita Powell. Stephanie Morrill Kimberly Marble. Jim Koger, Elton Mayfield Pamela Besler, Sarah Cunningham. Darlene Hottman, Charlene Nichols. Charles Pearce, Latham. SECOND ROW: Christine Tucker. Shalene Davis. Tamara McCreary. Brian Howell, Mary Ward, Annette Skidmore, Paula Hauser, Marta Gonzalez. BACK ROW: Haseeb Siddiqui, Eric Siemers, Lynette Lafe Bailey, Brent Windsor, Eric Snell, Mike McQueen, Dave Casper. African Student Union FRONT ROW: Esau Formusoh, Mqhele Robert Guei, Habel Chambo, Peter Muni, Molapo Qhobela. Gerald Makhale. SECOND ROW: Wameotsile Mahabile, Florence Adam Aboubacar, Melaku Girma, Pierre Faa, Khanyisile Mabuza, Mabaitsi THIRD ROW: Elizabeth Ngo. Athman Guutazi, Ibrahima Diouf, Amin Jiwa, Ouattara. BACK ROW: Busie Maziya, Yemi Ogunrinola, Martin Ranthamane, Neiso Mokete. Alfred Dixon, Mabusane Tsiu, Funke Ilumoka. FRONT ROW: Elizabeth Ngo. Esau Formusoh, Habel Chambo, Funke Ilumoka. ROW: Khanyisile Mabuza, Robert Guei, Molapo Qhobela, Pierre Faa, Ibrahima Diouf. BACK ROW: Athman Guutazi, Martin Korotou mou Ouattara. Neiso Mokete, Amin Jiwa. 128 Late Night Seaton Late Nights A Must Students put long hours into projects. or Creating ideas by Gidget Kuntz Staying up late at Seaton Hall studios was not the same as staying up late with David Letterman. Instead of listening to comedy, students spent much of their time standing in studio in a dead wake over a project. Among the students that occupied the studios were those in the Architecture and Graphic Design classes. Most of the people in these classes were transfer students in completing the normal two years of work in only one. In order to do this, the class worked at a faster rate than many of the other classes. This increased the amount of studio time each student had to put in. This is a six credit hour class. We do a compact version of what the first year students are doing, plus everything the second year students do, Jeff Davis, sophomore in environmental design, said. David Stewart, sophomore in architecture, works on a drawing for studio after midnight in Seaton Hall. (Photo by Mark Leffingwell) The students had about two weeks to complete each project. Different varied on the time it took to their work. Since each person was different, he or she tackled each assignment differently. You can ' t procrastinate and do this stuff, you ' d get too far behind, Gary Ridge, sophomore in environmental design, said. The hardest part of this class is the thought process put into each assignment. It takes forever to come up with an idea and it seems like you ' re not getting anything done. On the wall in an advanced studio hung a poster and on it the words read, College of Archatorture and Despair. This sign depicted the kind of humor students worked in. The atmosphere was created by the individuals in each area. The studio becomes like a second home to many of us, and the people we work with are like members of one big family, Denise George, sophomore in architecture, said. continued on page 130 Late Nights continued from page 129 Similar to a home, each person had his drafting table organized and decorated to fit his own needs. Music was a must and added to the David Krumm, senior in architecture, has only his headphones to keep him company while working on a project in a Seaton studio. (Photo by Mark Leffingwell) Craig Jost, junior in landscape architecture, takes time out to catch up on some sleep. (Photo by Mark Leffingwell) FRONT ROW: Cindy Shuman. Jill Conger, Winston. SECOND ROW: Todd Heitschmidt, Marlene Tally, Randall Davis. THIRD ROW: Cheryl Tillberg, Don Rollins. Doug Speer, Lori Mikesell. BACK ROW: Dawn Jones, Michael Zirkle, Marvin Anliker, Ginny Stichternath. late night atmosphere in Seaton. Some of the students brought headphones to keep them company throughout the night. I work better at night and have always been used to staying up late, Eric Foster, junior in environmental design, said. By going through this pressure, I feel I ' m preparing myself for the the future holds, George said. Sometimes I get so overloaded, I don ' t think it ' s worth it, but it must be. Ag Ambassadors FRONT ROW: Dada Fankhauser, Janell Kay Garvert, Lora Kilgore, Terri Holcomb, Kathy Raaf SECOND ROW: Jessica Tajchman, Gregg Doud, Scott Case, Travis McKinzie, Larry Erpelding, Shawna Maechtlen. THIRD ROW: David Whetstone, Laura Webster, David Oswalt, Steven Eberhart, Julie Bartlett, Scott Schultz. BACK ROW: James Hahn, Kate Scott Shuey, Roger May, Kay Stadel, Dan Moser. FRONT ROW: Gretchen Eberly, Gail Beightel, Paul Holmes, William Graff. Jeff Schwindt, Terri Holcomb, Mary Sobba. Jim Pavlacka, Jeffrey Bates. SECOND ROW: Ted Grinter, Jeana Kleysteuber, Beth Hinshaw, Bill Holbrook, Greg McCormack, Tom Rues, Galen Barnett, Ginny Stichternath, Brett Moore. BACK ROW: Lance Cowley, Darren Hodgkinson, Gregory Chris Williams, Marc Ward, Matt Richter, Phil Burckhart. Scott Adams, John Sabatka. Ag Ecomonics Club FRONT ROW: Frank Orazem, Ron Fleming, Kim Schlereth, Gay Conley, Jill Arnoldy, Keri Haberer. James Dillon, Douglas Klahr, Arlo Biere. SECOND ROW: Darrin Smith, Brad Kuehny, Tom Lorson, Todd Sheppard, Todd Heitschmidt, Scott Benfer, Doug Speer. BACK ROW: Marvin Anliker. John Arnold, Todd Scott Gordon, Mike Wetter, William Casey, Jeff Bruna. Ag Education Club FRONT ROW: Bill Mein, Sean Towns, Sam Eichelberger, Van Dewey, Carolyn Jackson, Anne Krauss. Bruce Millershaski, Steven SECOND ROW: Frank Grosse. Todd Martin. Terry Patry, Rich Falkenstien, Lonnie Funk, Wes Ensz. John Kabus. THIRD ROW: Gary Seiler, Rick Perkins, Jeff Smith, Eric Woofter, James Barrett, Greg Carver, Kevin Bradshaw. BACK ROW: Charles Stutesman, Mark Harter, Mike Anderes. Max Keltz. Royce Powelson. Greg Reno, Jeff Snapp. 131 Late Night Seaton Setting Geisert and Hine have over 25 years of experience. For ' Physics Rhoadies by Chris Wilhelm Ted Geisert and Lew Hine may not have been household names to many students, but for students taking courses in the physics department, these men made life a whole lot more interesting than it would be. Geisert and Hine were responsible for setting up all the class for the physics department. Between the two, they had more than 25 years of experience in the field of creative demonstrations. I ' m not real technical on this stuff, Hine said. I just set them up. I started working for the University as a storekeeper for all of the physics lab equipment before I began setting up demonstrations. Geisert not only enjoyed explaining them, he was inclined to show how some of the demonstrations worked. A demonstration is worth 1,000 words, Geisert said. An instructor could get up in front of a class and explain something and it would sound like hocus-pocus to most students, but if he actually, physically demonstra tes what it is he is talking about, it makes it more understandable. Although the two men did an of more than 60 demonstration a week and more than 1,500 a semester, they both quickly agreed on their least-favorite demonstration. The chain-reaction demonstration is my least favorite, Geisert said. It takes a long time to set up and it doesn ' t work exactly the way it ' s to. Some of the kids refer to us as the ' physics roadies,- Geisert said. We sometimes only have 10 minutes to tear down one demonstration and set up another. The most frustrating part of their job was demonstrations that didn ' t go off as planned. Sometimes we ' ll set up all of the equipment and it will work perfectly for us. We ' ll take it to the demonstration room and it won ' t work for the Geisert said. Regardless of any technical problems the two might have had, they ' ll probably continue to bring reality and insight into the lives of physics students at K-State for many years. Within the massive storeroom lies a table piled with miscellaneous parts, pieces, and devices used for maintaining and creating demonstration apparatuses. For a lack of a better word, Geisert refers to the equipment as his Glitch Pile. (Photo by Jeff Weatherly) Ted Geisert fills a few minutes until classes are over by exemplifying the principle of the top. This childhood toy was actually the working principle of the gyroscopic physics. (Photo by Jeff Weatherly) 132 Behind Physics Lew Hine, storekeeper in the physics connects the air supply hose to the Air Track while Ted Geisert, laboratory education technician, checks to see if the track is level. The physics department produced more than 3,000 demonstrations during the year. (Photo by Jeff Weatherly) Ag Student council FRONT ROW: Janell Larson, Kimberly Schlereth, Beth Hinshaw, Mike Kadel, Linda Huddleston, John Riley. SECOND ROW: Mary Sobba, Lyle Hammer, Kay Stadel, Michael Coe, Laura Webster, Jill Arnoldy, Kim Buethe, Larry Tien. THIRD ROW: Mark Albin, Ron Galle, Pat Muir, Phil Kirk, Steve Berger, Len Boxler, Jeff Clark. Todd Johnson. BACK ROW: Curtis Steenbock, Matt Nichols, John CoIle, Bret Fox, Phil Bentz, Oscar West, Jim Anderson, Steve Covert, David Whetstone. Pre-Health Honorary FRONT ROW: Sue Whipple, Michele Bollier, Ellen Sinclair, Glynda Lucas. SECOND ROW: Lee Browning, Brent Steward, Laura Palmer, Jill Durnin, Brent Jones, Bettie Dale, Steve Groth. BACK ROW: Steve Girard, Dan Prohaska, Alice Jewell, Marieke Wolfe, James McAtee, Jim Lee Martin. Professional Business Fraternity FRONT ROW: Marsha Shannon, Peggy Porter, Kevin Walter, Cathy Gareis, Diane Muller, Debbie Duden. SECOND ROW: Scott Jimison, Evelyn Holle, Lori Rasdall, Laurie O ' Connel, Amy McAnarney, Rob Tann er. BACK ROW: Steve Phillips, Julie Ottley, Chris Koetting, Arnold, Sandy Marihugh, Brian Carlgren. Alpha Lambda Delta Freshman Honorary FRONT ROW: Laura Riblett. Danna Rice, Cathy Doud. SECOND ROW: Sherry Kralik. Laura James Taylor, Anne Brull. BACK ROW: Amy Blume, Alice Jewell, Kelli Ebert. 133 Ag Mechanization Club FRONT ROW: Keith Strasser, James Clark, Scott Mueller, Larry Long, Byron Long. BACK ROW: John Slocombe, Craig Benning, David Persigehl, Martin Johnson, Steve Covert, Jesse Doll, Rick Hatlen. Alpha Mu Alpha Marketing FRONT ROW: Janelle Dennis, Stacy Smith, Robin Doerste. BACK ROW: Kurt Winterman, Thad Baldock, Zachary Hamel. Alpha Nu Sigma Nuclear Science and Engineering FRONT ROW: Thomas Gianakon, Heather Haahr. Hermann Donnert. BACK ROW: Jess Gehin. Robert Stewart, Darin George, Bruce Letellier, David Whitfill. National Service Organization FRONT ROW: Anne LeMaitre, Lisa Landers, Dale Bushyhead. BACK ROW: Julie Austin. Debbie Biggs, Marty Criswell. Industrial Engineer Honorary FRONT ROW: Debbie Tauscher, Laura Cranmer, Carol Walawender, Rodney Driscoll, Eric Heinerikson. SECOND ROW: Teresa Adam Hawley, Sue Scheufler, Jon Griffin, Brenda Laughlin, Shaun Moore. BACK ROW: Robert Copple, Raymond Owen, James Hill, Thomas Skidmore, John McIntyre, Dennis Rottinghaus. Ag Education Honorary FRONT ROW: Terry Patry. Anne Krauss, Van Dewey, Carolyn Jackson, Wes Ensz, Steven Harbstreit. SECOND ROW: Bill Nein, Charles Stutesman. Rick Perkins, Rich Falkenstien, John Kabus, Kevin Bradshaw, Greg Reno. BACK ROW: Mike Anderes, Eric Woofter. James Barrett, Max Keltz. Royce Powelson. Associate professor Edward Sturr demonstrates motion poses during his lecture on figure drawing during Art for the Elementary Schools class. (Photo by Mark Leffingwell) 134 Art for Elementary Schools Art class teaches future teachers what kids will need to know. Everyone has the ability to create art, Edward Sturr, associate professor of art, said. Most people just lack motivation. Students who majored in education acquired motivation of a sort to see what they could do in art. That motivation was a passing grade, a grade required to graduate. Art for Elementary Schools, was a three-hour credit, art methods class. The course covered the philosophy of children ' s artwork at various grades. It takes a lot of work, Mary Kern, senior in elementary education, said. There is always something to do and always some way to improve previous assignments. by Gidget Kuntz More than half of the students enrolled in the class, Stun estimated, have had no art experience since they were in grade school. Because of this, the class began with very basic art instructions, and the students were able to learn as they were taught to teach. In groups of two or three, the students were given a chance to on teaching the entire class and then grading their work. If the students don ' t know how to do it themselves, how are they supposed to teach it? Stun said. According to Stun, the class was basically how to teach, understand and create art. Most of today ' s school districts did not have an art teacher within the school on a regular basis. Because of this, it was important that teachers could supply their students with a basic knowledge of art inside the classroom. I feel like this is good experience for me in case I end up teaching in a little school where there is no formal art teacher, Jolene Ostmeyer, junior in elementary education, said. Art is important for students to receive a rounded education. Actually being able to teach art skills on a basic level was the goal of the entire course, Stun said. It was the students how to make use of the skills they already possessed, and in turn, motivated them to teach. Putting the finishing touches on her sketch is Trisha Thompson, junior in elementary (Photo by Mark Leffingwell) Shannon Teufel, junior in elementary education, strikes a pose for the classes two-minute drawing exercise. (Photo by Mark Leffingwell) 135 Art for Elementary Schools Computers are an asset in creating visual images. From hand-knitted sweaters to computer-aided apparel design, clothing production has made many advancements in its technological One of the newest advancements was available to K-State students majoring in apparel and textile marketing. Bernard Rueschhoff, assistant in clothing and textiles, a computer-aided design system. This system enabled designers or manufacturers to develop a line of clothing and apply fabric color and textures to their working sketches on computer. by Nancy Hill It offers the designers the to rapidly create garment and textile variations and coordination. Also, actual fabric swatches can be instantly changed and applied to any garment or textile scan and to the Rueschhoff said. Rueschhoff said one of the main objectives of a designer was to create a line of clothing that was easy for the customer to coordinate. The computer- aided design system enabled designers to see how separate pieces of a line fitted together in color and composition. A main objective of a designer is to create a visual image, Rueschhoff said. You have to do the coordination for the customer to have a good, line. The system, which Rueschhoff was still expanding. Reuschhoff said that a phase II was in the process of being created. Phase II would enable the designer to scan a pattern into the Using an electronic pad, Bernard Rueschhoff, assistant professor in clothing and textiles, manipulates an image stored in the computer. Rueschhoff ' s goal was to design an affordable computer system that could be used to design clothing. (Photo by Gary Lytle) 136 Pattern Making computer and the computer would grade it to all sizes and body types. Rueschhoff said that the computer design system was being used by the intermediate and the advanced apparel design classes. Working sketches were introduced in the intermediate apparel design class and color variations were dealt with in the advanced class. Right now a lot of manufacturers are turning to computers because of the competition of imports, said. The computer can lower the production cost over a period of time. Students who are computer literate have an advantage because the out there now are intimidated by the computer, Rueschhoff said. need and require people who are computer literate. This University is the only one I am aware of that has this type of system for apparel and textile design, Rueschhoff said. Rueschhoff said he was creating his system to market as a low-cost package to small apparel manufacturers. According to Rueschhoff, there were systems on the market which offered many of the same features, but sold for $100,000 to $150,000. He planned to market his system at a cost of $20,000. An electronic pad and keyboard are used to manipulate garments that can be created from scratch or taken from an existing pattern scanned into the computer with a video camera. (Photo by Gary Lytle) Alpha Zeta Agriculture Honorary FRONT ROW: Amy Newton, Mark Hoskins, Sandra Lancaster, Kaylene Buller, Linda Huddleston, Donice James, Deborah Williams, William Holbrook, Michael Kadel. Frank BACK ROW: Michael Nichols. Arthur Oscar West, Steven Johnson, Dan Metz, Martin Guthrie, Steve Brandyberry, Julia Vogt. Agriculture Honorary FRONT ROW: Dada Fankhauser, Mary Sobba, Roger McClellan, Bret Fox, Howard Woodbury, Susan Hettenbach. . SECOND ROW: Kay Garvert, Janelle Larson, Andrea Krug, Teresa Kelly, Annette Hoover. Melissa Barrett, Amy Kenworthy, Pamela Peckman. Jennifer Dorsch, Theron Krizek, Sharon Visser, Dale Eustace. BACK ROW: Mary Vanier. David Craft, James Sipes, Scott Eilert, Brian Dierberger, Roger May, Patrick Splichal, David Oswalt, Shannon Wessel. Rich Falkenstien. American Association of Textile Chemists and Colorists FRONT ROW: Kathleen Moeder, Sheryl Coonfare, Barbara Reagan. SECOND ROW: Janet Blanck, Patricia Annis, Diane Hodges, Cherry Searle. BACK ROW: Lisa Paris, Shailendra Dusaj, Diana Johnson, Lois Hamilton. American Institute of Architecture Students FRONT ROW: Ana Caguin, Lisa Barry. Kathy Walde. Amy Foster. Todd Powers, Stacey Liles, Denise Dipiazzo. Tulin Artan, David Carrie Behner. SECOND ROW: Brian Rock. Tom Hanson, Michael Barolak, Joe Schnieders. Michael Noll. Efrem Rivers. Lenny Clark, Mark Regier. Neal Eidemiller. BACK ROW: Kelly Dawson, Rich Gottlieb, Ernie Fiegenschuh, David Weitz, Paul Melgren. Joel Jacobson, Jeff Spear, Tami Coash. AlAS American Institute of Architecture Students FRONT ROW: Sarah Finch. Carole Olszewski, Jerri Weckesser, George Knipp, Samantha Stopple. Lisa Clark. SECOND ROW: Leah Lukomske, Frank Blanchard, Robert Kennaley, Tim Wall. Diana Dame, Kim, Cuddeback. BACK ROW: Brent Hance. Michael Buffalow, David Schaefer, Mark Weiner, David Crutchfield. 137 Pattern Making Students Lea Class consists of common sense material. Skill While some students were slaving over massive amounts of calculus problems and differential equations, other students were learning how to survive a summer with kids at camp. Although it may have seemed to be one of those pud classes, Camp Counseling was offered to help educate students on the challenges of working at a summer camp. Traditionally, a lot of college at K-State work in camps, said Roy Hunter, assistant professor in physical education and leisure studies, who teaches the class. A lot of our leisure study students work in camps. Not only is it a nice job and a nice place to spend the summer, like it is for everybody on campus, but for our students it actually counts as legitimate, important, professional experience. We can make them better prepared for their first camp job than they would be otherwise. The course was probably split half and half, Hunter said. Half devoted to the academics of it — learning about kids, learning how to program for kids, learning how to decide what programs to offer for certain kinds of kids and learning how to deal with problems, like homesickness. And the other half is more skillsy kinds of things. We try and expose them to a great variety of things. Because camps vary so greatly, it is almost impossible to nail down that everyone in c lass is going to need skills A, B, C and D. So, we give them some kind of exposure to skills A through Z, he said. The skills varied from how to get along with children, how to properly run a waterfront, and some basic camping and first aid skills. As far as the job (of camp goes, we can never prepare them 100 percent for everything they are going to run into. But I think we give them a lot clearer perspective of what they might run into out there, Hunter said. We talk about extreme examples. Keith Burkhart, sophomore in social sciences, took the class during the spring semester because he was expecting to work at a camp in the He said he liked the course because I can really apply it. Burkhart said his parents would really like him to make a lot of money during his summer vacation, but said he chose to try to work at a camp even though it isn ' t high paying. I think it ' s very rewarding, and I love to work with kids. He explained that the class of a lot of common sense but he gained insight to problems and situations that he and the other students took for granted. Carley Sederquist, senior in marketing and past staff member at a summer camp, said she thought she would have benefited from taking Camp Counseling. I think the most challenging aspect of summer camp is trying to what kids are going through at different ages. A 7-year-old and a 13-year-old have different needs and concerns. It would have helped to understand where they were coming from so I could relate to them better. To be their friend, you ' ve got to them, she said. (Photo Illustration by Gary Lytle, camping supplies courtesy of The Pathfinder) by Judi Walter 138 Camping Skills What comes to mind when someone speaks of national rankings? Football, basketball? What about debate? Yes, debate. The K-State debate squad was consistently ranked in the top five nationally throughout the 1987-88 debate season. This was our most successful year in decades, Anthony Schiappa, of debate and instructor of speech, said. The collegiate debate ranking was done by the Cross-Examination Debate Association. The teams ' overall participation and intercollegiate debate success were considered. The squad ' s record has improved in the last two years. Two years ago the squad was ranked 80th, last year it was Steve Collins, sophomore in pre-veterinary medicine, and Marla Paul, freshman in business discuss what is being said during a debate so they will know how to best defend their statements and prove their opponents wrong. (Photo by Neal Hinkle) Dan Molden, freshman in engineering, cuts out articles that will be used to support the debate team ' s arguments throughout the season. (Photo by Neal Hinkle) Steve Woods, a graduate student in speech, assistant debate coach, talks to Tammi Holovach, freshman in pre-medicine, and Thom Walker, junior in restaurant management, in between rounds of a debate tournament discussing facts to stress during their debate. (Photo by Neal Hinkle) American Institute of Chemical Engineering FRONT ROW: Holly Bell. Elinor Price. Trenton Kelsey, Chris Becker, Steven Kohler, Laura SECOND ROW: Chloe Conard, John Lyle, Susan Smith. Adam Peterson, Brad Beecher, Walter Walawender. BACK ROW: Stephen Cary Steiner, Dave Ott. Curt Schultz. FRONT ROW: John Bayouth, Joseph Heather Haahr, Tern Shearer, Hermann Donnert. SECOND ROW: Craig Uhrich. Mike McCullough, Jess Gehin, Carol DeWeese. David Whitfill, Matthew Pohl. BACK ROW: Henley, Robert Stewart, Bruce Letellier, Darin George, Clay Walsten, Thomas Gianakon. American Society of Agriculture Engineers FRONT ROW: Steven Young, Phil Poppe, Suzanna McMillan. Todd Rokey. SECOND ROW: Jeff Thompson, Lyle Burkholder, Bradley Strahm, Jim Garrison, Kelly Klausmeyer. BACK ROW: Greg Grabs, Stanley Clark, Troy Kolb, Brian Grimm, Doug Base. American Society of Civil Engineers FRONT ROW: Jeffrey Ruby, Darren Brinker, Melinda Hamilton, Lynne Dearasaugh, James Ramm, Rex Fleming. SECOND ROW: Gary Turnquist, Todd Madison, Bryce Johnston, John Nett. Imad Rifai, Amy Hurst. BACK ROW: Jean Ishac. Kevin McLain, Andrew Watson, Richard Klassen, Kenzil Lynn. American Society of Heating, Refrigeration Air Conditioning Engineers FRONT ROW: Charles Burton, Eric Wieters, Robert Maxwell. Pamela Dunlap, Todd Stonebraker, Sheila Hayter, David Peterson. ROW: Russ Bailey, Tracey Whaley, Daniel Namee, Rosemary Seiwald. Peter Wroblewski. Ronda Bradshaw, Paul Miller, Harvey Ward, Daryl Hays. BACK ROW: Keaton McCallister, Bruce Brown, Damian Gerstner. Robert Cooper. Shawn Schrader, Ben Schrader, Stephen Newkirk, Michael Tucker. debate Team 140 Team Accomplishes K-state debate team was ranked nationally throughout the 1987-88 season. by Susan Rouse ranked 41st, and this year it ranked as high as second. Schiappa said this was due to a combination of things. We have had a couple of successful recruiting years, due to mo re scholarships, and we assembled a top-notch coaching staff, Schiappa said. The coaching staff consisted of Schiappa and three assistant coaches: Steve Woods, Dave Scott and Mary Keenher, all graduate students in speech. Keenher was added to the staff for spring semest er. The first half of the season was for the squad, which consisted of mostly freshmen and sophomores, Schiappa said. The team was awarded 12 fifth-place finishes, four eighths, three thirds, four seconds and six first- place finishes at tournaments across the United States. We are given a topic, and in less than three weeks later, we are Schiappa said. It ' s sort of like going to trial without a pretrial discovery, because you don ' t know what your opponents are going to do. I spend more time in debate than any other class, David Filippi, in engineering, said. It is a lot like sports, but instead of spending time on the field or on the court, it is in the library or at the typewriter. In each tournament two debators competed as a team. Filippi and Rich McCollum, freshman in pre-law, consistently placed in the top five. They are one of the best freshmen teams in the country, Schiappa said. 141 Debate Team Teacher Aides Gain Program is more than working with pupils. Practical by Mary Gomez Imagine spending at least four years going to college, taking those boring classes you hated but needed for your major, spending all that money on tuition and books, and finally getting a degree. After graduation, you got your first job and found you hated it. The College of Education had a requirement that tried to keep that from happening, or at least decrease the chance. All education students were required to enroll in a pre-professional lab before they could be admitted into the College of Education. This early field experience is a requirement by the state of Kansas, Michael Perl, coordinator for experiences, said. Debora Doll, junior in elementary education, was placed at Manhattan Catholic Schools, where she helped with sixth, seventh and eighth grade students. Doll went once a week for three hours and aided Sharon Schmaderer with science and math classes. Debbie helped with labs, graded math papers and made bulletin boards, Schmaderer said. Perl said there were four basic areas the College of Education wanted the students to experience. They were tasks, such as helping a teacher get ready for a science lab or an art project; routine tasks, such as recording daily attendance and papers; observational tasks, such as watching for different methods of discipline; and instructional tasks, such as lecturing or helping students with assignments. The pre-professional lab students met once a week as a class and topics such as what the student should look for while aiding, how a teacher dealt with individual problems, and different methods of discipline. Perl said he believed the teachers (at the participating schools) knew they were helping the lab students, but they also saw this as an opportunity for some extra help in the classroom. As a teacher aide, Kim Cooper, junior in elementary education, got a chance to lead the class in a math Thirty eyes were looking at me and paying attention to me. I have a more realistic idea of what it ' s like now, she said. It ' s not just working with kids. Cooper said she realized there were a lot of little things teachers do, such as doing bulletin boards and grading papers. Some of the pre-professional lab students came away with more than knowledge and realization from their teacher aide experience. Joyce Watson, junior in elementary education, said the best part of her experience was the relationships she formed with the kids. She said the teacher invited her back to visit the class whenever she could. I became more involved than I ever thought I would. I volunteered to help out with volleyball every day after school and ended up being hired for the season by the school to be assistant coach for basketball, Doll said. This teacher aiding made me more excited (to be a teacher) than ever. Lou Whipple, senior in elementary education, explains an assignment on family fun. The assignment had the students list their parents, and great-grandparents names. (Photo by Jeff Stead) Whipple teaches reading to students in Pam Zuck ' s fourth-grade class at Bluemont School. (Photo by Jeff Stead) 142 Teacher ' s Aides American Society of Interior Designers FRONT ROW: Ludwig Villasi, John Hamilton, Shadlee Cott. Marjean Regehr. Tyrone Clincy. SECOND ROW: Lori Pfeifley, Migette Janna Trout. Cathy Caudillo. Amy Treff. THIRD ROW: Rhonda Kaw, Gwen Visser, Karen Wilkerson, Karen Kroeker. Tonya Ribbentrop. BACK ROW: Lori Rinard, Shea Amy Hansen, Dorothy Chartier. Laura Fry. Gerry Paden. FRONT ROW: Mary Howell, Amy Noeth. Barb Dubrovin, Greg Langley. Lisa Rephlo. Carrie Davies, Sheila Hayter. SECOND ROW: Lara Montulli, Todd Stritzke. Grant Wilkerson, Bobby Wier. Ron Leonard, John Ellenz, Brad Mallory, John Jensen. Michael Leverich. BACK ROW: Doug Enns. Scott Jones. Doug Steele, Jeff Kleymann, Forrest Miller, Mike Reams, Keith Keitler, Galen Doud. Roger Metzler. apparel and Textile marketing Group FRONT ROW: Sandy Mills. Ann Jilka. Barbara Hale. Kim Ifft. Stephanie Mann, Beth Richter. SECOND ROW: Betsy Cantrell. Rachelle Macy, Jeannie Wit te. Chystal Reynolds, Deborah Terri Kearby. BACK ROW: Alan Tricia Nicolau, Tim Clarke. Beverly Annan. Candice Battles, Annette Engroff. Arab Student Association FRONT ROW: Mohanad Al-Koubaisi, Christi Mutwalli, Sawsan Abdul-Hadi, Rania Hamarneh, Cosima Hadidi, Jamal Dabbas. SECOND ROW: Samer Farraj, Ammar Hamid. Raouf Denise Osmon, Anwar Dabbas. BACK ROW: Ayman Issawi. Rania Farraj, Mustafa Mutwalli, Osama Al-Barrawi. ASID American Society of Interior Designers FRONT ROW: Debra Strawn, Christine Julie Fredrickson. Kathy Rottinghaus. Eun Neyer. SECOND ROW: Jennifer Schaff, Sonja Young. Denise Glenn. Elizabeth Caruthers. Jolene Pelton. THIRD ROW: Kirsten Neff. Kelly Daharsh, Pati Lord, Mary Robuck, Pattie BACK ROW: Kris Russell, Susan Butler, Kristine Churchman, Janeen Lewis. Cheryl Johnson. 143 Teacher ' s Aides When the College of Engineering computers were put into operation in October 1985, only a handful of people used them. Two years later, almost 200 undergraduate students, 150 students and faculty had accounts with Fred and Ethel, the two Harris H800 computers owned by the college. The College of Engineering owned its own computers and restricted access to them by assigning accounts to students and faculty only, said Steve Coulson, director of the computer center on campus. The reason we have our own system is that University-wide money hasn ' t been available, said. Since the financial support hasn ' t been there, we have had to fall back on our own resources. A student could receive an account by having a faculty member fill out a request. Students were then assigned an account number and a code. Even though everyone on campus had access to the more than 300 terminals, only those with assigned accounts could program and receive information from Fred and Ethel. Computers on the University data switch are easy to come by, Coulson said. You can sign on from any in the network. Most of the University terminals, located in several campus buildings, were open 24 hours a day. One of the most popular about the computer network was that there was not an adequate number of terminals on campus. According to Coulson, the problem was not the shortage of terminals, but the shortage of actual computers to process the information coming in from the terminals. We have more than enough terminals on campus to suit the students ' needs, Coulson said. The shortage we have in in computer horsepower. We feel the need for fairly good sized that can handle more at a quicker speed. When several people entered information into the same computer, the computer ' s response time was This meant it took the computer longer to carry out the demands of the operator. Coulson said the University was exerting an effort to develop a plan to improve computing on a University-wide basis. Even though the costs of computers have decreased in the past few years, enough funding from the state private donations and could not be collected to but new equipment. There is a constantly expanding range of software that makes more capabilities available to the user, Coulson said. People ' s interests tend to expand with new inventions. until we develop enough funds to buy new equipment and better our program, we will have to make the best use of what facilities we have. Ling Den, graduate student, consults his notes while preparing a computer project for data transmission. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) Engineering students reserve computer time. Financial support Absent by Linda Huddleston 144 Engineering Computers One of the computer screens displays for a program that rates the return analysis (compares interest) for Bill Nixon, junior in mechanical engineering. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) FRONT ROW: Paul Dubois, Kent Dick. BACK ROW: Tim Nagle, Bill Nagle, Sam lves. FRONT ROW: Kym Beach, Catherine Barnes Alice Jewell, Theresa Wood, Paula Maginness SECOND ROW: Steve Petracek, Dan Powers Tom DeVore, Scott Parish, Tom Townsend John Rye, Mike Hysell, David Wilson. BACK ROW: Curtis Coffman, Samuel Brashear. James Hickman, Bradley Hawk, Mike Figurski. Jeffrey Presslor, Douglas Harter. Arnold Air Society FRONT ROW: Angela Portz, Martha Murphy, Steffani Pfeifer, Shelly Vann. SECOND ROW: Andrew Olberding, Clifford Sheets, Martin Bobbie Moore, Nathan DeVilbiss, Patrick Weinberg, Mary Kompus. BACK ROW: Brett McCoy, Kip Mussatt, Dennis Van Wey, Terrill Roberts, John Braun, John Taglieri. FRONT ROW: Michael Converse. Greg Crawford, Debbie Paap, Teri Sexton, Gerald Kawa. BACK ROW: Brian Maxwell. Mary Sivyer, Maria Salas. Joe Cook. FRONT ROW: Mary Hale, Eva Chatterjee, Sara Erickson, Michele Bollier, Kay Klamm, Jill Warren, Mary Ann Brooks, Helene Higbee. SECOND ROW: Joni Everhart, Jenny Reschke, Mary Bosch, Valerie Johnson, Therese Meyer. Randall Brian Howell. Mindy Dutton. BACK ROW: Lane Tumer, Jeff Schrag, Brad Barth, Jack Taylor. Scott Fischer, Christopher Teague, Kent Letourneau. 145 Engineering Computers Arts and Sciences College Council FRONT ROW: Eva Chatterjee, Jenny Reschke, Wineinger, Brian Howell, Jeff Vaughn, Mary Ann Brooks. BACK ROW: Randall Wonderlich, Michael Morris, Jamie McAtee, Greg Skaggs, Kent Letourneau. FRONT ROW: Mark Lorenz, Matt Conners, Todd Korte, Terry Horak, Kevin Haefmer, Chris Hess, Scott Korte, Eirene Tatham. SECOND ROW: Kerry Winter, Craig Zimmerman, Foster, Jeffrey Combes, Douglas Reaser, Charles Madinger, Daryl Folkerts. BACK ROW: Greg Covington, Stephen Newkirk. Rich Stuart Schmoker, Greg Key, William Ben Schrader, Charles Roult. FRONT ROW: Karen Reese, Aziz Kapadia, Mary Gomez, Laurian Cuffy. SECOND ROW: Edward Readus. Felicia Bradley, David Metcalf, Sylvia Blake, Vanessa Galbreath. BACK ROW: Rifai, Wagar Dossani, Robert Satterlee, Walter Wright, Terry Jones, Jack Jankovich, Andrew Quelch. AUSA Association of the US Army FRONT ROW: Dana Bres, Kelly Demel, Larry Marvel. Martin Dannatt, Eugene Johnson, Scott Webster. BACK ROW: Jon Beam. Brian Almquist, Patrick Deely, John Rueger, Kevin Kolozsy, Rettig. Bakery Science Club FRONT ROW: J. D. Ponte, Jr., Janet Reichart, Valerie Love, Elaine Neises, Cindy Shuman, Catherine Stucker, Diane Demel, Dacia BACK ROW: Jon Nelson, Chris Scott Case, Gerry McMaster, Mike Dawes, Jeff Clark, Kevin Neufeld, Steven Eberhart. Association of Collegiate entrepreneurs 146 Trees for Fuel Wood Conversion Alternative Professor researches wood gasification as energy source. When many of us think of the uses of wood, we see visions of a warm fire burning in the fireplace. Most of us Wayne Geyer, professor of forestry, measures a black locust tree with a caliper to determine how much the tree has grown. (Photo by Neal Hinkle) Geyer checks the growth of young trees to find out which ones grow the tallest and the thickest in a short period of time. (Photo by Neal Hinkle) by Susan Hilt overlook the possibility of using wood fuel on an industrial scale. Wayne Geyer, professor of forestry, and Walt Walawender, professor of chemical engineering, worked on a to research the efficiency and potential of the use of wood gasification as energy. Geyer began researching tree for wood fuel in 1969 on a grant from the Ozark Regional Commission. During the energy crunch of the 1970s, he worked with the University of to develop wood fuel as an to the expensive fuel oils they were using. Geyer was studying which species of trees grow best, ideal planting density, trees that grow in state, the best soil type and climate conditions, and the proper harvest time. Data was being collected from 17 plantations. Geyer was studying the fuel of cottonwood, black locust, silver maple and Siberian elm. Studies showed that cottonwoods were the most efficient forms of wood fuel. Geyer said the project started in 1969 as a fast way to grow wood fiber. It switched to wood energy and an fuel source in the 1970s. Converting wood to gas is a chemical process, Walawender said. We don ' t really understand exactly what happens during this so the design of the equipment is based on trial and error. One goal Walawender has for the future would be to understand the process and design a gasifier based on principle, rather than trial and error. According to Walawender, 97 pounds of fuel could be made from 100 pounds of wood chips. It is a very conversion, he said. Both Geyer and Walawender believed the use of wood energy in the future would increase as petroleum reserves continued to deplete. Walawender believed wood fuel had an advantage over other fuels. When the cost of other fuels rose, especially imported oil, a wood fuel source would decrease the United States ' dependence on foreign countries for fuel. 147 Lasers provide interdisciplinary cooperation. Tech When most of us thought of laser technology, we pictured science fiction Saturday morning cartoons. At K- State, laser technology took on an entirely different meaning. The KSU Laser Laboratory, housed in Ward Hall, was a state-of-the-art facility and one of the best in the country for laser research. The laser laboratory had pulsed high-power, rare-gas halide excimer lasers; argon-ion lasers; excimer- pumped dye lasers with frequency doubling capability; and pulsed carbon dioxide lasers. The carbon dioxide laser was the most powerful in terms of the amount of energy it could put out in one pulse. Each of the lasers had a different wavelength of light. But the dye lasers were adjustable to any wavelength. The scientists wrote a research proposal asking for funding to lasers to carry their research in new directions, said Kenneth Klabunde, head of the Department of Chemistry. They received a grant from the National Science Foundation to buy the laser equipment. The laser by itself is of no value. You have to have some other things to go with it, D.W. Setser, professor of said. But, he added, the lasers were extremely useful. Klabunde was using the excimer to create hot spots in elements. By focusing the laser beam on a of an element, Klabunde said that portion would get so hot in an extreme by Mindy Robert 148 KSU Laser Laboratory Beta Alpha Psi Accounting Honorary FRONT ROW: Daniel Howard, Mary Mitchell, Ron Peters, Eric Hartter, John Seitzer, Brad George, Sarah Olsen, Tracy Green. Johanna Lyle. BACK ROW: Carolyn George, Kathy Gretchen Munson, Craig Fessenden. Douglas Nickerson, Kevin Walter, Rick Rondez, Holcomb, Libby Turner, Alice Gobel. Accounting Honorary FRONT ROW: Karma Sieck, David Rudicel, Brad Ladenburger, Christopher Vering, Janet Lee. Lisa Deibler-Vrbas, Daniel Lehman. Angela Harmison, Michele Mehlinger. BACK ROW: Nancy Stone, Pamela Fisher, Robin McClelland, Barry Hofer, Heather Varney, Thomas Haist, Jim Wondra, Michael Rich, Matthew Waters, Amy Carter, Lisa Stephenson, Jacqueline Ediger. Beta Alpha Psi Accounting Honorary FRONT ROW: Bobby Martin, Michael Briney, Amy Cooper, Kathleen Gentry, Jeffrey Stanley, Susan Griffin, Thomas Stec, Lisa Ellison. Roger Wetter. BACK ROW: Tamra Blixt, Lanh Cao, Lisa Tawney, Mark Maupin, Maurice Stark, Michael Murray, John Terrill, Susan Golladay, Julie Brown, Laura Schmidt, William MarIa Marshall. Business Administration FRONT ROW: Karen Marihugh, Kathleen Gentry, Janet Lee. SECOND ROW: Christopher Vering, Douglas Nickerson. Michael Reno, David Sell. BACK ROW: Brad George, Douglas Oetinger, John Seitzer, Daniel Lehman, Rick Rondez. Block and Bridle FRONT ROW: Shannan Seely, Bobbie Ward, Sharon Visser. Angie Voth, Staci Johnson, ROW: Janelle Larson, Rochelle Edgecomb, Scott Janssen, Curtis Stahel, Mike Bandel, Darrin Obenland, Tim Parks. BACK ROW: Jeff Rathlef, Tom Krauss, Rachel Lloyd, Todd Burnett, Frank Grosse, Mark Laverentz. short period of time that it would Klabunde was interested in studying the chemical properties of the atoms formed when the element evaporated. The practical purpose of the research was to use atoms to make new catalysts or new chemical reagents. The apparatus in the laboratory the researchers to trap intermediate stages to be studied. Setser was using lasers to study gas- phase reactions. The lasers were used to prepare reactant states and to product states. The goal would be to use it for a gas- phase laser, Setser said. There are already lots of gas-phase lasers, but it ' s not easy to get a better one. The sulfur monoxide molecule has a long lifetime and in principle, you can put a lot of energy into the gas phase, Setser said. The laser laboratory had other besides those of research. It was a good recruiting tool for faculty. Students doing research had the opportunity to work with the best equipment available. Plus the fact that many faculty work together, it allows them (the students) to be exposed to quite a number of excellent scientists and engineers on campus, Klabunde said. Most of us (professors) do research, although we help each other with instrumentation problems, Setser said. Cooperative efforts trained graduate students how to use the equipment, for they actually out the of the experiments. Illuminated by laser light, Christopher Sorensen, professor of physics, observes part of an experiment dealing with supercooled water in the KSU Laser Laboratory in Ward Hall. (Photo by Gary Lytle) The beam from an argon-ion laser can be reflected for use in any of several different experiments at the KSU Laser Laboratory. (Photo by Gary Lytle) 149 KSU Laser Laboratory Block and Bridle FRONT ROW: DeanelI DeBey. Paige Hunt, Drake, Cathy Haskin, Stacey Nanninga, Randall Davis, Bill Mein, Denise Laird, Dana Hinshaw. SECOND ROW: Kristin Liebl, Waldorf, Deirdre Hanson, Kay Stader, Susan Reid. Cara Nick, Sally Hoffman, Kim O ' Brien, Scott Francis. BACK ROW: Bret Fox, Myles Mckee, Ernie Minton, Michael Dikeman, Phil Bentz, Tim Coppinger, David Lalman, Mark Jeff Swanson. Matt Wineinger. Block and Bridle FRONT ROW: Elise Williams. Russ Bahruth, Amy Peters, Kim Buethe, Dee Gerdes, Jennifer Franklin, Anne Krauss, Charity Yaussi, Joe Darrell Vandike. Chris Kincaid. SECOND ROW: Stacey Krehbiel, Tom Linder, Jack Albright, Howard Woodbury, John Woodbury. Monty Dahl, Gregg Doud, Terry Troutt, Jeff Bates. BACK ROW: Ed Durst, Tom Oakley, Scott Shuey, Oscar West, Marc Ward, Charles Stark, Rob McCoy, Mark Harms, Mark Davied. Block and Bridle FRONT ROW: Susan Ohlde, Shawna Maechtlen. Mark Brown, Lainie Miller, Peggy SECOND ROW: Dan Moser, Todd Martin, Cindy Bohling, Carmen Day, Jessica Tajchman, Toni Eastman, Brian Hines. BACK ROW: Mark Harter, John Boyd. Clay Dalquest, Jeff Little, Darren Critser, David Sjeklocha, Mark DeWeese, Todd Wickstrum. FRONT ROW: Robin Harnden, Candise John Socolofsky, Katherine Peirce, Jada Allerheiligen. SECOND ROW: James Hill, John Bullock, Steven Johnson, Mark Buyle, Danny Owens. BACK ROW: Kent Bradley, Matt Wineinger, Bob Avery, Roger McClellan, Pat Muir. B ' nai B ' rith Hillel Religious FRONT ROW: Mathew Kwartin, Sheila Hochhauser, David Margolies, Leif Dolan. BACK ROW: Eric Weiner, Joseph Leff, Shelly Holle. Chuck Kichler. 150 Cooling Tower To Gain The importance of the project was in the building of the model. insight To Shattered pieces of concrete and broken reinforcement wires are all that remain of one side of the cooling tower after it failed at three psi. (Photo by Gary Lytle) by Gary Lytle The sound was so loud that people upstairs thought it was an said Ali Nikaeen, graduate in engineering. However, Nikaeen was very aware that Seaton Hall had not experienced an earthquake. The sound that shook Seaton Hall on Dec. 11 came from the implosion of a 12-feet concrete model of a cooling tower that Nikaeen was standing next to. The model cooling tower that failed was part of a study into the structure of full-scale cooling towers used to remove the heat from water at large electrical generating plants. Nikaeen along with Stuart Swartz, civil professor, were trying to build accurate scale models of cooling towers to get a better understanding of how external forces, especially wind pressure, affected the towers. Modern cooling towers were among the largest concrete structures ever built and costed an average $70 A typical tower was 600 feet high, 250 feet in diameter at the top and 400 feet in diameter at the base. Yet the concrete walls of the structure were only 10 inches thick. Because of this design, engineers thought that in wall thickness were a factor in the failure of a structure, since nonuniform walls distributed the force of wind unevenly. By constructing the scale model to precisely match a full-size tower and then making it fail, Nikaeen and Swartz gained insight into how the full-size tower might react. Even though the model was a 1 to 40 scale replica, Swartz said it was too large to be tested in a wind tunnel. To simulate wind Ali Nikaeen, graduate student in engineering, sits next to the remains of the failed cooling tower model. He worked for over a year to build the 12-foot concrete model. (Photo by Gary Lytle) pressure on the outside surface of the model, Swartz said the top and bottom of the tower were sealed and a vacuum was created inside. When the model failed at 3 pounds per square inch pressure, 432 pounds of wind pressure per square foot, Nikaeen was about to seal some small cracks that had formed so that the vacuum would not be lost. However, just as he was about to seal the cracks, the entire side and caved in, he said. Much of the importance of the laid in the construction of the model. Nikaeen said the importance of this model was that it used the same as a real tower. There has been a whole lot of work with the models, Nikaeen said, but most have been with plastic, copper or steel models which have different material properties. The model which Nikaeen and Swartz failed in December was the one they had constructed. It took approximately 11 2 years to build. Although the actual cost to build the model was around $1,000, Swartz said that the real cost was probably closer to $35,000 to $40,000 when his and Nikaeen ' s salaries were taken into account. Swartz also said that a University like K-State was probably the only place a project like this could be done. One of the main reasons, he said, was the fact that people involved with the project knew how to get things built without having to hire someone to do it. Even though this increased the time it took for the project, he said it reduced the cost. Swartz added that private industry could probably not afford to conduct these types of tests because the cost of having an laboratory construct and test a model of this size would be prohibitive. 151 Cooling Tower Nuclear Reactor On Campus Strict regulations are set on the Tri-GA Mark II housed in Ward Hall. Most people who walked in front of Ward Hall hardly took notice of the unassuming one-story building. But then a good number of the people who walked past Ward Hall probably didn ' t know the building housed a nuclear reactor. Located in the back of Ward Hall was the Nuclear Reactor Facility and a TRI- GA Mark II nuclear reactor, which was by Gary Lytle part of the nuclear engineering iepartment. Since the reactor was used for research purposes only, it was smaller and less complicated than a power- generating reactor like the Wolf Creek Nuclear Plant. However, the facility was licensed by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and subject to NRC guidelines. The reactor was used mainly for teaching and research, said Richard Faw, director of the facility. Every within the department had to learn to operate the reactor, Faw said. Because of a stipulation in the covering the reactor ' s students could operate the if they were supervised by one of the four licensed operators at K-State, said 152 Nuclear Reactor Jeff Daniels, reactor supervisor and graduate student in nuclear engineering. Daniels said that to obtain a license li ke his, a person had to pass a six-hour written exam and a two-hour practical exam. During this exam, the person had to operate the reactor, and this had to be repeated every six years when the license expired. Daniels also said each operator went through a less extensive annual exam conducted by the nuclear engineering department. Research, mainly for other on campus and outside groups, comprised the largest use of the Faw said. One of the most common types of research performed by the facility was neutron activation. First, a sample of material was loaded into the reactor in one of the many specimen holders in and around the core. Then the sample was which caused the elements that made up the material to give off of radiation that could be detected by spectrometers. This meant the exact composition of the material could be discovered. Neutron activation, Faw said, is used extensively by many of the departments on campus including some very unlikely ones. Faw said that the English department has used the process to determine composition of the ink in several old volumes. The textiles and interior design department used neutron activation to find out what type of fibers were used to make various pieces of old clothing, Faw said. The reactor began operation in October 1962 and has been r efueled only once since then. The refueling in 1972 was mainly to change from aluminum-clad fuel elements to steel-clad elements, Faw said. They (the new fuel elements) should last well into the next century. The core of the reactor contained 78 I of these fuel elements, which were approximately 2%2 feet long and two inches in diameter. There were two methods by which the reactor was controlled. The first involved the design of the fuel continued on page 155 Reactor Supervisor Jeff Daniels, graduate in nuclear engineering, raises one of the three reactor control rods while starting the nuclear reactor in Ward Hall. (Photo by Gary Lytle) Religious FRONT ROW: Itzhak Ben-Itzhak, Sheila Hochhauser, David Margolies. BACK ROW: Christopher S. Weberg, Leif Dolan, Shelly Holle, Mathew Kwartin. Governing Board FRONT ROW: Jennifer Powell, Kathryn Conner. Paula Schaller, LuAnn Bergner. Aleisha Bailey, Angela Miller, Tami Crook. BACK ROW: Kaylene Buller, Sarah Milloy, Cynthia Riemann, Cynthia Ann Cook, Renee Robison. Joann Beckman, Diane Brooks, Nancy Deckert, Sandberg. FRONT ROW: Karma Sieck, Teresa Butler Bryan Camerlinck. Joe Karlin, Ben McLane SECOND ROW: Stacy Smith, David Sell, Chris Mellage, Scott Darger. Jim Phalen. Angela BACK ROW: Lauren O ' Connor, Teffani Muirhead, Steve Holmstrom, Karen Clamons, Janet Lee, Tammy Hawley. Business Council FRONT ROW: Joe Kennedy, Janet Netherland, Bruce Cook. Judy Wolf. Mark Buyle. SECOND ROW: Cheryl Trentman, Liesa Gittemeier, Robin Doerste. BACK ROW: Steve Holmkstrom, Jill Fyfe. Nancy Stone. Chris Vering. FRONT ROW: Julie Woods. Kristen Schlender, Kathleen Gould, Angie Rowland, Kristi Barancik, Myrna James, Joni Everhart. BACK ROW: Josie Bernal, Kevin D. Kaff, Jenny Reschke. Delton Graves, Brian Engelken, Mandy Stout, Christopher Vering, Joseph Karlin, Karen Allen. 153 Nuclear Reactor Civil Engineering Honorary FRONT ROW: Jeffrey Ruby. Jean Ishac, Kevin Shamburg, Mark Hoober, James Ramm, Harry Knostman. BACK ROW:Jeffrey Lessman, Gary Turnquist, James Kohman, Richard Klassen. Terry Kratochvil. Chimes Junior Honorary FRONT ROW: Phil Kirk, Kristen Spaeth, Tammy Savaiano, Robin Mullin, Karen Allen, Jim Garrison. SECOND ROW: Theron Krizek, Janelle Larson, Debbie Tauscher, Lisa Pfannenstiel, Julie Woods. Gary Williams. THIRD ROW: Doug Gish, Doug Burton, Sheila Hayter, Nancy Hill. Kristen Schlender, Ray Loepp, Daniel Morris. BACK ROW: Kipp Schoen, Jeff Wing. Amy Campbell. Becky Svaty, Darren Lippe, Brent Wilkens. College republicans FRONT ROW: David Erdman, Andrea Krug, Amanda Stout, Kristy Line, David Shupe. BACK ROW: Shelly Fischer, Scott D. Fischer, Travis Stumpff, Phil Nordhus, Lisa Lugar. Collegiate Club FRONT ROW: Shannon Jackson, Tammy Eberhart, Lane Yocum, Tiffany Engelkemier, Susan Clarkson. Lynne Umscheid. Pamela Donaldson. SECOND ROW: Vince Koons, Jill Luginsland. Brenda Larson, Lisa Long, Robin Bernritter, Sharon Wienck. BACK ROW: Anita Krug, Jim Dauber, David Myers, Greg Schrock, Clay Rodney Denholm. Judy Lindquist. Ed Sandahl. Collegiate 4-H Club FRONT ROW: Kelline Anderson, Sarah Kimball, Christine Mentgen, Wes Fowler, Dana Hinshaw, Beth Hinshaw. Nancy Deckert, Shannan Seely. SECOND ROW: Lana Hammer, Steve Fisher. Russell Hasenbank, John Colle. Charles Neff, Carmen Day. MaryBeth Clawson. BACK ROW: Brett Horton, Matt Nichols, Kevin Wake. Phil Bentz. Scott Adams, Karl Allen, Marc MacHin. Nuclear Reactor 154 Reactor continued from page 153 ments. As the fissioning process of the reactor increased, the fuel rods heated up. But due to the design of the fuel The main feature of the reactor control panel is the buttons that raise and lower the control rods, starting and stopping the nuclear reaction. (Photo by Gary Lytle) Looking through over 16 feet of water used to shield the radiation, the core of the reactor is visable due to the glow given off by irradiated water molecules. (Photo by Gary Lytle) elements, once they reached a certain temperature, any increase would cause the neutron multiplication to decrease. Thus, without any other mechanical or human controls the reactor would limit its own power output to within safe levels. The fission process could be by three boron-loaded rods in the core. Boron absorbed the neutrons produced in the fission process and would decrease the process the farther into the core the rods were lowered. Two of these control rods were coupled to the motors that raised and lowered them by electromagnets. That meant in case of a power failure two of the rods would fall into the core, automatically shutting down the reactor. The third control rod was known as the pulse rod because it was used to produce short high-energy pulses of radiation. This was accomplished by bringing the reactor to criticality, a point at which the fission process would continue on its own, and then rapidly ejecting the pulse rod from the core. Under the reactor ' s NRC license it could not produce more than 250 of power during constant operation and 250 megawatts of power a pulse. This energy was in the form of heat and radiation. The heat from the fission process dissipated through natural convection of the water in the reactor tank and by the use of a small water cooling system. Radiation produced in the core was absorbed by the water in the reactor tank and by the concrete that the tank. 155 Nuclear Reactor Some K-State students may have found it unfair that rats in Bluemont Hall were treated to free alcohol. But that was what happened, for an anyway. Stephen Kiefer, associate professor of psychology, holds one of the subjects used in his dealing with how alcohol tastes to rats. (Photo by Gary Lytle) Stephen Kiefer, associate professor of psychology, was in the second year of a three-year experiment based on and rats. We ' re trying to find out what alcohol tastes like to a rat, he said. With the information from these experiments, data could be collected on why humans made decisions on alcohol ' s taste and smell, Kiefer said. This could further the studies of and alcoholism. An experiment grant was obtained through the National Institute of Awareness and Alcoholism. The experiments were divided into three phases. The first phase was to find out what alcohol tasted like to a rat. Once it was determined what tasted like, the experiment could proceed on a basis of taste for further experimentation. The two additional phases would deal with the responses of rats addicted to alcohol and responses of rats that have been sick due to alcohol. The rats were not treated to wine and beer while watching some television. Instead, the liquids were sent through Rats Studied Stephen Kiefer leads addiction experiment. For Alcohol Effects by Mary Strafuss 156 Experimental Rats an implanted tube connected through the rat ' s cheek to the mouth. We don ' t mix vodka and juice, Kiefer said. We give them grain alcohol (in different concentrations). There were two types of responses that were usually observed, Kiefer said. The ingestive response and the response. A higher concentration of alcohol usually increased the responses. Graduate students watched the responses on videotapes and analyzed the responses. It takes about 100 hours to analyze the tapes, Missy Orr, graduate student in psychology, said. We ' re trying to find the various components of alcohol (like taste) which are important in the clinical sense, Paula Bice, graduate in psychology, said. The clinical experiments could then be tied into human behavior patterns with alcohol. Although free alcohol might have sounded like a partier ' s dream, it served an important function to further research on alcohol and its effects. Collegian Fall Advertising Staff FRONT ROW: Judith Goetz. Stacey Darrell. Bill Sherbert. Cathy Doud. Donna Adelhardt, BACK ROW: Berry Steffen. Eric Snell. During Kiefer ' s experiments, rats are given concentrations of grain alcohol while being videotaped. Later the tapes were analyzed to determine the rats positive or negative response to the alcohol. (Photo by Gary Lytle) Watching rat videos, Paula Bice and Missy Orr, both graduates in psychology, analyze the tape frame by frame and log certain movements of the rat ' s mouth. (Photo by Gary Lytle) Collegian Spring Advertising Staff FRONT ROW: Joe Hsieh. Cathy Doud. Dennis. Kris Durst, Tammy McCreary. Brian Howell, Jada Aller heiligen, Donna Adelhardt Collegiate FFA FRONT ROW: Heidi Stichternath, Ginny Stichternath, Sheri Leavitt. BACK ROW: Samuel Eichelberger, Clark Egbert, Brian Dierberger, Larry Tien. Collegian Fall Staff FRONT ROW: Deron Johnson, Janet Swanson, Kirk Caraway. Lori Lindstrom. Peggy Susan Staggenborg. Becky Howard ROW: Betsy Edwards, Becky Lucas. Leonard. Jenny Chaulk, Andy Nelson, Lori Siegrist, John T helander, BACK ROW: Jeff Schrag, Alison Neely, Judy Lundstrom, Bill Lang. Jeff Rapp. Tom Morris, Chris Wilhelm. Chase Clark, Jeff Bielser, Brad Fanshier. Collegian Spring Staff FRONT ROW: Ann Iseman, Lori Siegrist. Aeschilman. SECOND ROW: Jeff Bielser. Tom Morris. BACK ROW: Brad Fanshier, Renee Shepherd, Deron Johnson. Jeff Schrag. Janet Swanson. Chad Sanborn, Downing. Chuck Homer, Chase Clark, Mike Rouse, Alison Neely, Jenny Chaulk, Judy Lundstrom, Nancy Chartrand, Karen Allen. Jackie Brazzle, Susan LEcuyer, Betsy Edwards, Mark Schreiner, Erwin Seba. Experimental Rats 157 Tom Czapla, graduate student in the Department of Entomology, was into cockroaches, thousands of them. He used the cockroaches in research that he was conducting on the process of insect cuticle, or shell. Czapla started this work five years ago in west Waters Hall and has been working on his doctoral degree since 1985, hoping to finish it within the next year. The research project had four over- all goals, with Czapla working directly with the first three. The first goal was to identify the major tyrosine-derived compounds (catecholamines) in an insect cuticle. Second was how fast the com- pounds were accumulated in the and how fast they were produced in the cockroach. The third step would be to isolate the enzymes responsible for the production of these chemicals. Then the fourth step of the research project was to inject chemicals into the cockroaches to test and develop products that would disrupt the chemical pathways that produce the compounds. If chemicals can disrupt the system, the cuticle cannot be hardened, it will dry out, and the insect will die. When an insect grows, it needs to break out of its old shell, or ecdysis. It has to pull itself out of the old shell and then expand its new exoskeleton and then harden it, Czapla said. Knowing how an insect functions was beneficial to the scientists. They worked to develop chemicals that would not be as dangerous to other life forms as current pesticides and ones FRONT ROW: Mindy Robert, Laura Renfro. BACK ROW: Todd Schultz, Candy Leonard, Bill Sherbert, John Fulkerson, Barry Steffen. Collegian Summer Staff FRONT ROW: Greg Vogel, Chad Sanborn, Trudi Burtis, Becky Howard, Neal Climenhaga, Jola Murphy, Chris Doll, Susan Baird, Pat Hund. Cricket Club FRONT ROW: Faisal Razzaq, Ali Kazmi, Ferzan Ahmed, Zaheer Ahmad, Haseeb Siddiqui. BACK ROW: Mahmood Akhtar, Ahmad Tariq, Vinod Chaturvedi, Togir Ahmad, Azfar Moazzam, Asif Ghori, Vijaya Jayasena. FRONT ROW: John Shirley, Bruce Pedersen, Mark Meyer. Greg Mantz, Charles Norton. BACK ROW: Sheryl Funk, David Myers, Martinez, Ron Rumford. Todd Williams, Dana Isbell. FRONT ROW: Lynnea Huffman. Tammi Holovach, Ted Payne, Marla Paul. SECOND ROW: Dan Molden, David Scott, Thom Walker, Rich McCollum, Steve Woods. Steve Collins. BACK ROW: Pete Gregov, Tom DeStasio, Dave Travis Stumpff, David Filippi, Patrick Lyle Tuck. 158 Czapla Experiments Why doesn ' t bug spray work? With Roach cuticle by Brett Hacker that the insects could resist after a short time. Czapla said this would be an advantage over making a chemical that killed insects, then throwing it out after they became resistant to it. The idea is that these chemicals being developed could be used in baits and traps in conjunction with birth regulators, Czapla said. Any insects that did survive the new chemicals would likely become sterilized and be unable to produce, he said. Czapla has worked with five strains of Blattella germanic cockroaches while working on his doctorate. He has also worked with four other strains — black, orange, yellow and a pale, all from Virginia Polytechnical Institute. He also studied other types of out of curiosity, such as the Madagascar hissing cockroach. Before they ecdysis, their eye color will change from a jet black (eye) to a blue eye, due to the old shell pulling away from the eye causing a of light, Czapla said. His wife jokingly told people that her husband spent late nights in Waters Hall staring at blue-eyed cockroaches. Although Czapla ' s cockroach did not infest Waters, other were a notorious part of the hall. These little brown-banded that infest Waters Hall eat continued on page 160 Tom Czapla, graduate student working on his doctorate in the Department of Entomology, holds the biggest cockroach he is working with, the Madagascar hissing cockroach. (Photo by Brett Hacker) A Blattella germanic cockroach pulls its way out of its old shell. As the new shell hardens it will turn a darker color like the old shell. (Photo by Brett Hacker) 159 continued from page 159 glue, paint and plastic. These roaches have been here longer than our and will probably be here after we ' re gone, Czapla said. Doug Burkett, graduate student in entomology, said, Once I left a quarter cup of coffee on my desk, which I do Tom Czapla looks in to one of the metal tanks which house the cockroache s in his study. The cockroaches are contained in the tank by a electrical current around the sides, acting as an electric fence for the insects. (Photo by Brett Hacker) once in a while for humor sake, to see how many roaches I will find drowned in it. The next day when I came in there were 42 cockroaches drowned in my cup, which is my record for the year. It averages about 21 roaches usually. Sometimes you reach in your desk drawer for a stamp and when you lick it, there is no glue on the back of it because the roaches have eaten it off, Burkett said. Czapla ' s part in the research grant was that of analyzing catecholamines I am working Czapla said he i 160 Roaches FRONT : Mary Hart, Linda Hall, Sherri Huffman. Cheryl Ninemire, Lucia Debauge, Frank Blanchard. Ernie Fiegenschuh, James Baldwin. BACK ROW: Kelly Gilmore, Mike Counts. Teresa Mumma, Lenny Clark, Richa Wilson. Russell Volmert. Weiner Wilding. in insect cuticles, and their effect on cuticle growth, he said. I am just the one working with cockroaches, Czapla said. Other researchers were working with flies, beetles and moths. The project was funded by a grant from the National Science Foundation Grant. With four grants since 1980, the department has received over $480,000. For every answer found, there are 10 new questions from that to answer. We ' re finding out there are a lot more chemicals involved in the hardening process than we originally thought there were, Czapla said. FRONT ROW: Terri Aumiller, Lynette Hodges Ann Jankovich. Willard Nelson. Carole Sloan Gigi Roche. SECOND ROW: Steve Osner Dolores Born, Nancy Deckert, Janet Phillips Janet Stark, Kent Jackson, Susan Dahl BACK ROW: Timothy Dean. Corbin Witt Kevin Williams, Mike Ribble, Rachel Lloyd FRONT ROW: David Delaney, Marcia Riedmiller. Becky Hellman, Shalini Gogumalla. SECOND ROW: Stuart Craig, John Flanagan, Chuck Livonia, Tom Korte. BACK ROW: Ted Smith. Paul Kaiser, David Saunders, Jerry Anderson. FRONT ROW: Teresa Huneycutt, Rodney Driscoll. Joann Buchanan. Christina Rahn, Carolyn Weith, John Nett, Warren Kennedy, Robert Wilkerson. SECOND ROW: Rodney Wise. Elizabeth Wickersham, Scott Jones, Janet Berry, Timothy Pottorff, Rodger Gresham, Johanna Bachman, Don Gruenbacher. Kimberly Warner. BACK ROW: Doug Gish, Mike Walden, Paul Hardenburger, Robert Green, Jason Kaufman. Robert Copple, Julie Horigan. FRONT R OW: Hermann Donnert, William Johnson, Rodney Driscoll, Kimberly Kappelmann, Hisham Hawari, Ira Bolden. John Dollar. SECOND ROW: Bruce Letellier. Paul Johnson, Carol Tracy. Marie Dawes, Doug Steele, Brent McNaul. Mike Reed. BACK ROW: Marshall Henley. Damian Gerstner, Christopher Reedy, Troy Kolb, Steve Malone. Scott Gardner. Don Gruenbacher. 161 Roaches Tom Czapla, graduate student, injects a with a chemical to study the effect it will have on the roach ' s metabolism. (Photo by Brett Hacker) A pregnant Blattella germanic cockroach with an egg sack protruding from the rear crawls across a page of standard news print, illustrating the roach ' s small size. (Photo by Brett Hacker) NASA Observes weather Patterns Konza The Konza prairie near Manhattan has been the scene of intensive research into the effect the biosphere has on the weather. (Photo by John Thelander) hen scientists got together to study weather patterns, one would not expect them to get together on a tall grass prairie and take readings from what was growing on the ground. However, during the summer and fall of 1987, more than 200 scientists teamed up on the Konza Tallgrass Prairie to better understand weather patterns through studying ' surface conditions and the atmosphere, said Ghassem Asrar, assistant professor of agronomy and K-State co-coordinator of the First International Satellite Land Surface Climatology Project Field Experiment (FIFE). The surface conditions, referred to as biospheres, took into account the effects of plants, animals, light and other factors. These elements could play a major role in atmospheric he said. Asrar said the models used to determine weather patterns did not consider an active biosphere. You look at the weather forecast, and it can tell you exactly what is going on during the fall and winter months, Asrar said. It can ' t do the same things during spring when the biosphere is active. It was through the study of the Prairie that scientists could begin to predict weather over active biospheres. One of the keys to studying the of the Konza was a technique called remote sensing. Remote sensing is when you study something without coming into with it, said Ed Kanemasu, of agronomy and K-State co- coordinator of the FIFE project. If you take a picture of a surface and try to describe that surface, without coming into contact with it, that ' s remote sensing, he said. Remote sensing was not new to K- State. It had been used at K-State for various research projects since 1972 and was a prime consideration in the picking of the Konza for the project, Kanemasu said. NASA, which provided about 96 percent of the funding for the project and served as the main sponsor of the research, worked a great deal on the remote sensing end of the Konza project. Several NASA aircraft were incorporated in the remote sensing. The highest flyers of them all were a group of NASA satellites that would take readings off of the ground and link up with lower craft for comparison readings. Not far beneath the satellites was a NASA U-2. This aircraft, only used occasionally in the experiment, was formerly used as a spy plane and was used to take readings from an altitude of more than 20 kilometers. Beneath the U-2, NASA used a C-130, flown between 5,000 to 15,000 feet, to take readings of its own and also link up with aircraft above and below it. The C-130 plane, used as a cargo plane in the Vietnam era, was loaded with equipment to take read- continued on page 165 NASA 162 NASA aerial photographer Dennis Colasunno reads a topographical map while senior Richard Rose tends the monitor. (Photo by John Thelander) Wilfried Brutsaert, professor of civil and engineering at Cornell University, launches a balloon to determine rates of heat and water vapor transpiration at the ground level. (Photo by John Thelander) NASA 163 Electrical Engineering Honorary FRONT ROW: James Grimm, William Shade, Kelly Kirkman. Richard Gallagher. SECOND ROW: Randy Summervill. Eric Hixson, Kevin Halbleib, Tung Ly. THIRD ROW: Phillip Bradley Chalker, Karen Rolf, Mike Eltze. BACK ROW: John Bird, Christopher Reedy, Robert Avery. David Gile. Carl Mayer. finance Club FRONT ROW: Jena Shurley, Mary McCall, Evelyn Holle, Lynn O ' Meara. Cheryl Joyce Dixon. Chris Fragale, Sandy Janelle Andra. SECOND ROW: Rodney Vogt, Doug Penka, Don Niblock, Mike Briney, Will Franken. Daren Neuschafer, Dan Noot, Greg Martin. BACK ROW: Kenny Burris, Charles Kephart. William Roy. James Hass, Dave Ward. David Neff, Kent Peterson. Carl Hart. FRONT ROW: Michael Kijowski, Kirsten Angie Ahlstedt, Kathleen Oldfather. Julie Holsapple. Diane Toby. Lois Starr, Brock Hill. SECOND ROW: Jason Bingham. Scott Jimisom. Mike Kocour, Jeff Farrell, Randy Craig Liening, Greg Winkler. BACK ROW: Bill Giltner. Robert Garcia, Russell Ray Will, Greg Weber, Craig Lutz, Dave Herbster. Chris Bancroft. Financial Management Association Honor Society FRONT ROW: Brad Rebel, Janet Lee. Greg Martin. Faculty Senate FRONT ROW: Mary Rakowsky, David Carol Miller, Lawrence Erpelding, John Keller. Wayne Nafziger. Paul Windley. Lynn Norris-Baker. SECOND ROW: Michael Jack Lambert, Richard Akins. Stephen Dyer, James Steichen. Deanna Munson, John Murray, Carol Holcomb. Robert Reeves, Sullivan. THIRD ROW: Jack Riley, Kent Bradley, Melvin Hunt, James Murphy, James Greig, Marilyn Corbin, Frank Orazem. Curtis Kastner, Richard Marzolf, Sarah Funkhouser, Bob Smith. Kenneth Gowdy. Robert BACK ROW: Robert Helgesen, David Vruwink, Jane Rowlett, Pat Muir, Debora Gerry Posler. Patricia Weisenburger. Sue Zschoche, Susan Scott, Cliff Schuette, Margery Neely. Mary Zabel. Virginia Moxley, Lyman Baker, Charles Thompson. Page Twiss. George Strecker, Walter Cash. Arthur Davis, Mark Lapping, Jerome Frieman, Aruna Michie, David Cox, George Kennedy, Veryl Switzer. NASA 164 165 NASA continued from page 162 ings of the Konza. On the lowest level was a NASA It flew at approximately 750 feet and was used to link with the C-130 and the satellites. On the ground, a bevy of highly sophisticated sensing equipment was in place, measuring everything from the rate the plants underwent photo Edward Kanemasu, professor of agronomy, measures the height of an instrument balloon while Wilfried Brutsaert, professor of civil and environmental engineering at Cornell records data from the balloon. (Photo by John Thelander) The NASA C-130, which is used as the primary airborne platform for spectral sensors, sits on the runway at Manhattan Airport. (Photo by John Thelander) synthesis to radiation from the sun. K-State students played a major role in maintaining and monitoring these instruments, Asrar said. Weather balloons were also used in the project. The balloons were released to collect data as they ascended through the atmosphere. Eventually, the balloons would burst after ascending so high and their sensing equipment would come back down to earth. A majority of these were later recovered, Kanemasu said. The scientists participating in the project hoped that once the was collected, it could be sorted out by computer. Then, this could be used to better predict the weather. 166 Parachute Club Skydiving Koni Weber, senior in office administration, collects her parachute after landing. (Photo by Brett Hacker) students in the K-State Parachute Club, choosing to descend thousands of feet in only seconds was as natural as riding a bike. And a whole lot more fun. Mike Ince, Topeka, got into for several reasons, including the fact that Kansas was too flat for and hot air balloons were too expensive. People still think skydiving is a barnstorming, daredevil stunt something you only go out and do once when your friends dare you to, said Mike Smith, senior in architecture and skydiving instructor. Smith started skydiving at K-State by taking his first jump class in of 1983 when he was He has been jumping ever since. Once people do it, a lot of them decide, ' Hey, this isn ' t so stupid after all. This is fun and it ' s safe, ' and they come back and make more jumps, he Lori Ince, a skydiving instructor from Topeka, floats slowly to the ground under her square canope at the Wamego airport. (Photo by Brett Hacker) said. Student skydivers always came away from their first jump with impressions about what they had expected. You think there is no way you are going to do it when you get on that plane, but once you get up there, you just think of what (Smith) taught you in class, Julie Horigan, junior in industrial engineering, said. When I went up there, I thought, maybe, that flying first would be enough, Angie McAtee, junior in administration, said. ' Then I was scared — I let go and said, ' This is it. All first-jump students were to a static line that pulled the parachute open for them after they exited the plane. The jump master, who was for the students ' proper of procedures, held the line until they exited the plane. The first trip started with the plane heading for a designated drop zone. The plane climbed to 3,000 feet and faced into the wind toward the drop zone. At this point, the plane was on jump run status. The jump master directed the pilot toward the drop zone, and once there, the jump master yelled door and it was opened. The jump master then directed a student to set his feet out on the gear platform. After waiting for a signal from the jump master, the then stepped all the way out. The jump master yelled dot — the command to jump. The command was called dot because of an orange dot on the underside of the plane ' s wing for the students to look at to keep their head and body in an arched position. The time between the student ' s exit from the plane and when his opens was only about two and a half to three seconds, although most students swore it took forever. All of the students ' parachutes had an emergency round parachute, just in case. If the landing is executed properly, it is like stepping off a bar stool, Smith said. K-State offered a first-jump class through the Parachute Club. It was an intensive training class that included a one-night class, a review the morning of the jump, a test and then a jump. The first-time jump class has been continued on page 169 167 Parachute Club Taking the big step, Julie Horigan, junior in industrial engineering, looks up at the dot on the underside of the airplane wing as she falls away from the plane. (Photo by Brett Hacker) Mike Smith, senior in architecture and skydiving jump master, instructs Julie Horigan, junior in industrial engineering, about proper procedure for getting out on the strut as Lisa Waddell, freshman in arts and sciences, looks on. (Photo by Brett Hacker) 168 Parachute Club Skydiving continued from page 167 in existence since the K-State Parachute Club began in 1965. (The club has) been growing in the past two and a half years since they got the high-performance square canopies which make the landing much softer, Smith said. We have been training a lot more people now that we have a couple of instructors in the club, he said. The equipment and training techniques used by the skydivers were recommended by the U.S. Parachute Association. The K-State Parachute Club trained 76 people during the fall which was a record for the club. Smith expected to train an additional 45 during the spring semester. He also said that of the people the club trained during the fall semester, 90 percent came back to make a jump and about 50 percent of those came back to make numerous jumps. Once a student gets off of the static line and on to free fall, we start them the different manuevers that they need to learn to move around in the air, Smith said, We teach them how to move forward and backward and how to do turns, basically how to get from point A to point B in the air, he said. The K-State skydiving club practices formations to be made during free fall, called dirt diving, before taking off from the Wamego airport. (Photo by Brett Hacker) FRONT ROW: Joe Swanson, Lynn Wedel. Sharon Tiede, Debra Klenda. Keith Lynch. SECOND ROW: Marianne Cline. Jacquelyn Hurst. Brian McNulty. Mark Houston. THIRD ROW: Michele Hartman. Cliff Ehrlich. Wendy Justice. Kenny Lynch. BACK ROW: Andrew Green, Mitch Guthrie, Scott Faiman. Jim Anderson. FRONT ROW: Oliva Desnousse. Pamela Brown. Rochelle Lichlyter. BACK ROW: Tamala Sherman, Helene Higbee. Sara Shutler. International Geography Honor Society FRONT ROW: M. Duane Nellis. James Kilgannon. Marion Mackay. Janette Metzler, Raymond Hoogendoorn. Erik Peterson. David Kromm. Stormy Kennedy. Kevin Page. Deyoe. BACK ROW: John Bally. Kelly Butwinski. Mark Strahm. John Turner. Gary Jones. Todd Stell. Tod Meyn, Stephen Stover. FRONT ROW: Jill Eastman. Steve Barlow. Renee Hart. Leanne Voss. Florence SECOND ROW: Yemi Ogunrinola. Susan Todd. Nabombe Chinonge, Anthony SueAnn Handke. BACK ROW: Bill Ikins. Juan Cordon, David Welch, Curtis Kastner. Chris Zimmerman. Heriberto Martinez, Gerald Zirnstein. FRONT ROW: Monica Ward, Lou Whipple Ginger Riedel. Wendy White, Maureen Darrow. Sheila Hervey. Nancy Hueftle. Stacy Cloughley. SECOND ROW: Kelly Albert. Susan Owen. Stephanie Washburn, Laurie Lawson. Tiphanie Washburn, Elizabeth Susan Reuter. Kyleen Cikanek. BACK ROW: Lisa Monroe. Sara Sayler. Kim Linin. Tammy Rodvelt, Rochelle Lichlyter, Angie Schumaker. 169 Parachute Club Project Brings Students, Animals Bill Grant, third year veterinary student, looks over the medical records of the red-tailed hawk he is holding. Records of the birds ' vital are kept for analysis during their stay at the Veterinary Hospital. (Photo by Jim Dietz) although K-State veterinary had many opportunity medicine and biology to work with animals, few experiences brought students into as close contact with wild animals as did the Prairie Raptor Project. The PRP was located northwest of Salina, next to the home of Maure Weigel, the project ' s founder and director. The project began in 1979 when Weigel cared for an injured great horned owl and realized the need for a program to care for injured birds of prey. Since its meager beginning, the project has cared for more than 200 raptors each year. The birds were housed in wooden cages and every attempt was made to make them feel as if they were out in the wild. After the birds were cared for, the ones that were of sufficient health were released into the wild. The PRP not only helped birds, it also helped give students the chance to get hands-on experience in working with raptors by offering two internships every summer. ' The internship for the PRP began out of dire necessity because of the large increase in the number of birds being handled, Weigel said. The project went from car ing for 27 birds a year its first year to more than 150 birds a year two years later. We figured that it would be a good learning experience if we helped teach students about raptors, Weigel said, adding they hoped interns would not only learn about wild animals but also learn about raptors and how they fit in the environment. The interns were pretty much left to themselves, Weigel said. I don ' t tell them what to do. I say this is what has to be done, now you do it. If they have any questions they talk to me. The interns have told Weigel that they enjoyed being left alone and have found out how little they actually knew. While working with the birds, they learned many things they could never have learned in the classroom, Weigel said. Student interns have also benefited in other ways. I made a lot of contacts that I might look up for jobs in the future, and I got to meet some interesting people, said Todd Lovin, senior in wildlife biology and 1987 summer intern at the PRP. Lovin also said leading tour groups and teaching people about the raptors added to the experience. Interns who worked at the project were paid a minimal amount for their work during the summer; however, none of them come for the money, Weigel said. ' They come here for the experience. That is going to be much more to them down the road, he said. About the ' same time Weigel was taking care of his first owl, the K-State Veterinary Hospital was beginning its own program for the care of injured birds of prey. The project got off to a slow start, but after awhile, people got used to bringing the birds to K-State, said Terry Campbell, assistant professor of continued on page 172 A great horned owl makes use of a 100-foot flight cage. The flight cages allow the birds to fly and be trained to hunt inside the cages. (Photo by Jim Dietz) Maure Weigel looks over a swainsons hawk at the Prairie Raptor Project near Salina. The hawk is severely imprinted, or adapted to humans, and will not hunt. Because of this the hawk is kept at the PRP for educational purposes. (Photo by Jim Dietz) Birds 170 Birds 171 Project continued from page 170 surgery and medicine an d coordinator of medical care program for the birds. Campbell mine into the program when students began to take over the care of the raptors. It was when Weigel showed up with some injured birds that the two programs merged. It ' s mutually benefical since we have no long-term care facilities, and he had no intensive care facilites, Campbell said. The program at the Veterinary has been in a constant state of evolution in order to provide the best care for the birds. The program changes by leaps and bounds, and every year it ' s a whole new ball game, said Kim Brawley, junior in veterinary medicine who had worked with the raptors for two years. A new program this year was for the birds to be assigned to groups when they come to K-State. This new program Three screech owls show varied expressions while resting on a perch inside their flight cage. A majority of the bird population at the Prairie Raptor Project is made up of owls. (Photo by Jim Dietz) Tracy Gentry, the Prairie Raptor Project ' s intern for the golden eagles, carries a eagle out of the cage near Wilson Lake in western Kansas. The golden eagles are being to the area with hopes they will make it their home. (Photo by Jim Dietz) allowed for more personal care. The students often had to use trial and error in determining proper care for the raptors because some of the procedures had never been tried before. However, the success rate seemed to be quite high. In terms of a learning experience, we haven ' t had many mistakes to learn from. Everything we have done has worked, Brawley said. Certain students planned to carry on what they learned by continuing to work with injured birds of prey. was one such student. I have a better idea of what is involved with raptor rehabilitation, Brawley said. Cris Meeks, a third year veterinary student, works with a red-tailed hawk trying to strengthen it after the bird suffered a gunshot wound to the wing. Many of the birds come to the K-State Hospital to receive intensive care after being injured. (Photo by Jim Dietz) Birds 172 FRONT ROW: Mary Hale. Jill Warren. Mary Christine Clark. Jodi Lehner. Carol BACK ROW: Laura Palmer. James Ediger. Klaas Doeden. Todd Kivett. Gretchen Linder. 173 Golden Key National Honor Society FRONT ROW: Elisabeth Brown. Lisa Lyndra Ukens. Sharon Hamm. Linda Huddleston, Teresa Butler. Jan Kinsler. Tracey Shackelford. Carole Sloan. SECOND ROW: Roshan Bajracharya. Lisa Bierly. Lisa Steiner. Charles Black, Bryan Camerlinck. Karen Kroeker. Chris Koetting. Jacqueline Ohm, Wayne Glantz. THIRD ROW: Darin Phelps. Rich Reiser. Robin Day. Lisa Hoffman. Andrea Krug. Deena Arnold. Tammy Hawley, Scott Eilert. Loretta Dillman. BACK ROW: Don Niblock, James Wondra. Mike Lagleiter. Michael Rich. Michael Swofford. David Oswalt. Cathy Provost. Amy Carter. Thad Baldock. Golden Key National Honor Society FRONT ROW: Jennifer Steffen. Amy Newton, Sue Blazek, Jeffrey Corder, Martha Murphy, Phillip Thurston, Linda Baker. Kirsten Johnson, Karen Anderson. Debbie Tauscher. Elizabeth House. SECOND ROW: Tony Branfort, Mark Frohardt. Janet Stark. Jennifer Davies, Carol Neneman, Christine Clark, Pam Clary, Jayne Hultgren. Tracy Merriman, Jo Thiel. THIRD ROW: Kipp Schoen. Tammy McCreary. Jerry Strunk, Scott Burgett, John McIntyre, John Bird, Michael Pankratz, Kent Frieling, Mark Rahija. BACK ROW: Kenlee Friesen, Teffani Muirhead, Janet Berry, Carol DeWeese, Jena Shurley, Molly Kinsey, Tom Asay. Michael Rottinghaus, Willard Nelson. Goodnow Hall Governing Board FRONT ROW: Suzanne Proctor, Janet Thompson. Jon Griffin, Lynda Sylvis. Lara Montulli, Michelle Iwig. Stephanie Haub. SECOND ROW: John Lawson. Carl Perkins, Haberman, Paul Hecker. Norbert Marek, Jr. BACK ROW: Susan Sandercox, David Ron Gurr, Paul Schletzbaum, Mark Harms, Lori Mangus. Graduate Council FRONT ROW: Margo Kren, Barbara Reagan, John Noonan, David Gustafson. Claire Dehon. Lynn Thomas. BACK ROW: George Ham, Richard Gallagher. Aruna Michie. LouAnn Stanley Clark, Robert Reeves. Kenneth Brooks. Stephen Kiefer. Gerald Hanna. While paramedics are inside the car working on the victim, rescue workers use the Jaws of Life to remove the car ' s roof providing unobstructed access to the victim. (Photo by Neal Hinkle) sirens screaming, the Riley County Mobile Intensive Care Unit turned onto the grassy field and sped up to the smashed Chevrolet which had come to rest just south of Memorial Stadium. Moments after the medical aboard sprang out of the unit, they determined that the young woman trapped inside the car was in need of advanced life support. Soon, two Manhattan Fire units arrived. One was carrying a crew and a Hurst Rescue tool or Jaws of Life, which had been requested to help extricate the victim. As the fire department began through the car to reach the the medical crew inside requested a Military Assistance to Safety and Traffic (MAST) helicopter from Fort Riley to transport the victim to the hospital. Within minutes the fire department had peeled back the roof of the car, and the medical crew removed the victim on a long spine board used to spinal injuries during To further stabilize the victim, they applied military anti-shock trousers to help blood move up to the vital organs and control bleeding in the abdominal area. The massive Army helicopter hovered near the scene, and the patient was transferred to the helicopter and taken away. As might have been expected, there was no collective sigh of relief from the crowd of almost 200 people who had gathered to watch. That was probably because this was not a typical In fact, it was no accident at all. It was a mock tragedy, set up by the K-State Students Against Driving Drunk chapter, a 150-member organization established in March 1987. The tragedy was designed to alert the community to the possible consequences of drinking and driving. It ' s important that the community recognize that there is a drinking and driving problem (in Manhattan), said Connie Garrison, K-State SADD and freshman in human I think the community keeps its eyes shut to the problem. I hope this program helps wake them up. said that the K-State SADD planned the mock tragedy and the program of speakers that preceded it. The goal of the local chapter was not to keep people from drinking, said, but to get people not to drink and drive, and to be more responsible with their drinking. Later, a program featuring Robert Anastas, founder and executive of the SADD program, was held in the Union Forum Hall. Anastas, an educator, alcohol counselor and author on alcohol and drug abuse, said that just warning pople about the physical and effects of alcohol and drug abuse does little to deter them fro m driving drunk. In the 22 years of using that approach to discourage drinking and driving, Anastas said he very little. Most you people already know about the physical and psychological effects and the illegality of driving continued on page 176 A mock tragedy is held to show what paramedics and rescue workers do to aid victims of accidents. (Photo by Neal Hinkle) 174 sAdd 175 SAD D continued from page 174 drunk, yet they continue to drink and drive, he said. Why? Anastas said there are two factors which account for young people death by drinking and driving — the lack of communication between young people and their parents and peer pressure. He called them the death trap — two ways death is camouflaged for young people. Anastas said the death trap begins forming as children grow older and quit confiding in their parents, telling them only the things which will be met with approval. Then, he said, when young people find themselves in situations where they know they shouldn ' t be driving or they shouldn ' t be riding with someone A director of the SADD program examines the mangled car in which three people were killed due to driving while drunk. (Photo by Neal Hinkle) who has been drinking, they don ' t feel they can call their parents for help. So they challenge death, and become one of the 20,000 who die or one of the nearly 1.5 million who are injured in alcohol related accidents each year. To prevent this tragedy, SADD promotes what they call the Contract For Life. This is a contract between a child and his parents in which the child agrees to call the parents for SADD 176 advice and or transportation at any hour, from any place, if I am ever in a situation where I have been drinking or a friend or date who is driving me has been drinking. In return, the parents agree to pick up the child, no questions asked and no argument at that time or to pay for a taxi to transport the child. The parents also agree to seek safe, sober transportation home if they are ever in a similar situation. The goal, Anastas said, is for parents and child to have an that their love for each other will be strong enough to overcome any obstacles that would make you death. To overcome the problem of peer pressure, which often causes people to go along with the crowd rather than subject themselves to being laughed at, SADD works to set up a positive peer pressure by promoting the idea that people are responsible for each others ' safety. Toward this end, a SADD Contract for Life Between Friends says that the parties involved will not drive when they have been drinking or ride with others who have been drinking and will provide safe transportation for others who have been drinking. The idea of contracting between parties to prevent people from driving drunk has contributed to a decrease in alcohol-related fatalities among 15- to 19-year-olds from more than 6,000 in 1981, when SADD was founded, to 1,710 in 1986, Anastas said. Andrew O ' Donovan, director of the Kansas Alcohol and Drug Abuse said that more than 100 K-State students were arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol in 1986. And we all know that many more could and should have been arrested, O ' Donovan said. That was just the tip of the iceberg. About half of all vehicle fatalities are alcohol related, but that percentage has been dropping since 1980. That is proof, O ' Donovan said, that the SADD movement is working. Paramedics rush the victim, after being removed from the car, to an awaiting helicopter which would fly the victim to the nearest hospital if this was a real accident. (Photo by Neal Hinkle) Graduate Student Association FRONT ROW: Sandra Sasser. Salil Sharma. Binh Yaacob. Liz King. Julie Pierson. BACK ROW: Hicham El-Tabche. Gregory Clure. Sanders, Michael Dunbar, Jeffrey John Schwindt. Elling Tonnessen. Grain Science Club FRONT ROW: Stephanie Barton, Charity Yaussi. Andrew Soukup. Deanna Renn. Marty Baker. Robert McEllhiney. SECOND ROW: Bob Ruckman. Larry Finley. George Monte Loder. Kevin Reding. Michael Wiechman. BACK ROW: Doug Keesling. Paul Blodgett. Steve Martin. Andrew Reiber, Steve Berger, Martin Guthrie, Dale Eustace. Haymaker Hall Governing Board FRONT ROW: Daren Sanders, Kenneth Bill Graff, Dave Haden. John Love. Craig Burgett. Todd Heitschmidt. Rich Reiser, Michael Smith. SECOND ROW: Don Rollins. Darren Pitts, Steve Petracek, Paul Branson. John Bed ord, David Kreller. Larry Hackleman. BACK ROW: Bruce Hardacre. Mike Legleiter. Skip Mills. Patrick Lenahan. Douglas Maxwell, Lee Weide. Home ' Economics Education Interest Group FRONT ROW: Kristine Claassen, Julie Thatcher. Stacy Wilson. Julie Kaiser. Helen Ramsey. SECOND ROW: Kimberly Guffey, Connie Kriley, Stacy Sellers. Leslie Myers, Darci Henriksen. Karen Beck. BACK ROW: Karla Petersen, Lisa Jueneman. Judy Van Loenen. Brenda Wienck, Royalyn Voss. Horseman ' s Association FRONT ROW: Bobbie Ward, Kami Huxman, Richard Stillwagon, Tracy Seastrom. Tami Dyer. SECOND ROW: Carm Lueck. Debbie Hoobler, Chris Waldy, Don Rollins, Gene Evans, Kelly Freitag, Mindy Higdon. BACK ROW: Lesli Mark Hockensmith, Dale Butcher, Ronald Smith. Landon Lugar, Teresa Pickett. Shane Cooper. Mark Albin. Rhonda Collins. SADD 177 Horticultural Therapy Club FRONT ROW: Debbie Winston. Sondra Broers, Tracy Bergstrand, Johanna Fliegel. Frank Kroeker. Patrick Williams. Charlene Engler, Gwendolyn Vinson. SECOND ROW: Cheryl Thoma. Dan Pharis, Richard Flickinger. Kathy Schafer. Robert Bottorff, Derek Macy, Rita BACK ROW: Evelyn Campbell, Richard Mattson, Penny Stober, Becky Penn. Horticulture Club FRONT ROW: Todd Strain, Linda Reida, Ruth Keil, James Robbins, Jeff Nus. SECOND ROW: Carrie Smith, Larry McGillivary. Dawn Nily. Chalk, Jennifer Jones, Rose Weninger. THIRD ROW: Marcia Pieschl, Bryan Unruh, Mark Hoskins. Michael Welsh, Lesa Lewis. Carter. BACK ROW: Kimberly Howell, Wesley Ory. Len Boxler, Kyle Pieschl. Dan Walker, Sue Reynolds, Patricia Hubbard. Hospitality Management Association FRONT ROW: Kevin Straub. Amy Nelson, Jan Cox, Lori Parks, Cathy Kolenda. Kaye Fasse. Tresa Walters. SECOND ROW: Corinne Donahue, Sandra Arnoldy, Tyler Adkins. Susan Davis, Janel Allerheiligen, Kelly Dailey. BACK ROW: Pete Marsh. Sally Hey. Julie Blanchard, Karen Brown, Jennifer Miller. Human Ecology Ambassadors FRONT ROW: Patrick Sheehan. Andrea Hutchins, Christina Powell. Lynette Jordan, Karen Pence. SECOND ROW: Patty Hays, Christi Oakley. Ann Iseman, Karna Peterson, Kristen Spaeth. BACK ROW: Rose Penn, Becky Dodson, Nancy Day. Ann Rinella. Jana Lessman. Human Ecology College Council FRONT ROW: Tammy Savaiano, Stacey Weigel, Christi Oakley, Jill Eastman. SECOND ROW: Gwen Visser. Lisa Kruzich, Michelle Claassen. Kelly Reams, Deb Oltmanns. BACK ROW: Susan Butler. Sandy Brinker, Royalyn Voss, Mary Jo Lampe, Diana Johnson, Virginia Moxley. or freshmen and tr ansfer the change from high school or junior college to a university could have been a one. One of the difficulties was being sure that the right college choice was made. However, the K-State Cares program made the transition an easier one. The Cares program was suggested to the admissions department as an effort to retain the students gained through the recruitment effort. It was a suggestion made last year through t he college ambassadors. volunteers called the newly enrolled students to see how things were going, Pat Bosco, associate vice president for institutional advancement dean of student life, said. Bosco said the ambassadors asked questions about housing and if were happy with the choices they had made. We would ask them if things were OK. We asked if they were having any particular problems with teachers, classes or financial aid, and if they knew who their adviser was. We also encouraged them to meet with their adviser and talk over their schedule with them, Joe Karlin, junior in administration and College of Business Administration ambassador, said. Ambassadors were also able to give the students the name and phone number of their advisers so the were able to get in touch with them. Students were also asked if they had 178 K-State Cares Calls Students any specific concerns. If so, we had certain people assigned to each case to follow up and help them out the next day, Bosco said. Both Bosco and Karlin agreed that the response was a success. Karlin said the responses were excellent and that most people were really pleased and surprised by the phone calls. They were very perceptive and took the time to ask questions, Karlin said. I thought it was really nice that somebody cared about how I was doing and if I needed help. They told me who my adviser was, where they could be reached and where to call if I did come up with any questions. I thought it was great because I could pick up the phone and just call, Lisa Wilcox, freshman in business administration, said. Bosco said that there were a lot of people involved in the program. One hundred volunteers did the calling, in addition to the deans organizing their ambassadors and getting the names and numbers of the freshmen and transfer students. Over 2,500 phone calls were made. We were overwhelmed by the lack of specific problems, Bosco said. The one problem that kept arising was parking and, partly because of this program, approximately 696 new parking spaces will be provided. Bosco said the program would be repeated because of overwhelming response and the fact that the Cares program gave the ambassadors a way to help their fellow students. (Photo Illustration by Steve Wolgast) 179 K-State Cares I Contributed A Twenty FRONT ROW: Stacy Smith, Ted Orth, Michelle Herl. BACK ROW: Kirk Johnson, Scott Scrogin . Von Hallauer. Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers FRONT ROW: Renee Arnoldy, Kenton Langlois, Joann Buchanan, Kevin Hochman. SECOND ROW: Heather Boss, Bob Sindelar, Jason Eric Hixson. BACK ROW: Carl Mayer, John Bird, Cheryl Bettenbrock, Karen Rolf, Mark Ummen. Illuminating Engineering Society FRONT ROW: Greg Bruns, Rosemary Seiwald. Rodger Graham, Lynn Elledge. SECOND ROW: Daniel Namee, Christina Rahn, Pamela Dunlap, Tracey Whaley, Harvey Ward, Lisa Sherwood BACK ROW: Clarence Waters, Wendy Wittmer, Celia Roop, Peter Wroblewski, Gina Pacumbaba. Damian Gerstner. Ronda Bradshaw, Paul Baker. Institute of Industrial Engineers FRONT ROW: Kim Warner. Teresa Huneycutt, Rodney Driscoll, David Logback, Danna Rice, Debbie Tauscher, Martin Mullin, Jon Griffin, Kristin Siebs. SECOND ROW: Rebecca Neelly, Patrick Mahoney. Terry McIntosh, Rex Zuel, Dennis Rottinghaus, Shari Eck, Suzanne Proctor. Wendy Sallee, Johanna Bachman BACK ROW: Shaun Moore, Robert Copple. John McIntyre, Brad Kramer Tom Skidmore, Mike Wootton, Mike Valentine, Greg Hammes. Jeffrey Woods. Interfraternity Council FRONT ROW: Jeffrey Oddo, Jerry Pritchett, Craig Liening, Michael Mravunac, Robert Brian Ritenour. Michael Nichols, John Jack Taylor, Kevin Ney. SECOND ROW: James Hise, Karl Kunz, Kirk Johnson, Tom Hemmer, Ted Orth, Douglas Gaumer, Robert Wilkerson. Edward Nickel, James Hill. BACK ROW: Stacey Campbell, John Hunt, William Gee, Robert Avery, Roger McClellan, Patrick Kellerman. Christopher Bergman. Patnck Charles McKale, The model reflects the architect ' s rendition of the Vietnam Memorial proposed to be erected north of Nichols Hall. It will be built of native limestone, and be carved with the names of the 138 alumni and students who died during the war. (Photo by Jeff Weatherly) plaque in the Union simply wasn ' t enough to recognize the 38 K-State students who died in the Vietnam War, according to bill Arck, director of Alcohol and Other Drug Education Services and a Vietnam veteran. At a 1986 Veterans Day memorial service, a wreath was placed at Memorial Stadium, a structure dedicated to veterans of World War I. Another at All Faiths ' Chapel was dedicated to World War II veterans. It was then that Arck realized the plaque in the Union was not a sufficient memorial to the K- Staters who fought and died in Vietnam. He developed the idea for a different memorial for the K-State campus. Arck took his idea to Capt. John Taglieri, adviser of the KSU Arnold Air Society, to ask for help in organizing the project. The society accepted the offer, and the project got off the ground. The newly formed Vietnam Committee, chaired by Gary Haulmark, sophomore in political science, began to work out the mechanics of the project. The committee set a goal of spending $20,000 for the memorial, and planned a contest to find a memorial design. Our idea is that if we had to build it with out-of-pocket money, it would be about $20,000, Arck said. In September 1987, a design for the 180 Vietnam Memorial Memorial Honors Veterans memorial was chosen from six entries submitted by current and former K- State students. K. Scott Enns, a 1985 graduate working in Wichita, turned in the winning proposal. Enns ' design consisted of two semicircular walls broken on opposite sides by concrete sidewalks, with a flag pole in the The structure was to be primarily of native limestone. Operation Combat Boot was the first phase of the project. Members of the Arnold Air Society and the North- central Kansas Chapter of Vietnam Veterans of America collected donations in Army boots around Manhattan and at the KSU Stadium during the K- State vs. Army football game in September. A second Operation Combat Boot was held Nov. 11 in the Aggieville area. The two efforts, along with other private donations, brought the group about $5,000 by February. Arck and Taglieri were also hopeful that a dinner in Manhattan with Gov. Mike Hayden would boost the total even higher. Tentative plans called for the memorial to be built in an area north of Nichols Hall and west of McCain Auditorium. According to Taglieri, those plans must first be approved by the University ' s long-range planning committee, then by President Jon Wefald, and finally by the Kansas Board of Regents. Both Taglieri and Arck said that the start of construction depended on donations, but the two said ground- breaking could happen as early as late summer or early fall of 1988. Donations are taken in a boot before the K-State vs. Austin Peay football game, and will go toward the building of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial. (Photo by Sarah Bradshaw) By Brad Fanshier 181 Vietnam Memorial Lt. Dana Kyle hands out guns and holsters prior to a target practice session. The program gives Explorers a chance to learn about police work. (Photo by Brad Camp) for back-up when an officer of the law was in or being involved in a chase with a speeding motorist were not two things that students typically did. However, that was what two K-State students did while riding with Riley County Police Department officers. Tom Ashworth, freshman in history, and Joshua Kyle, sophomore in administration, got a chance to participate in some of these activities sponsored by the RCPD. The Explorers, a division of the Boy Scouts, gave high school and college students the opportunity to participate in a variety of career fields they were interested in. Participants in the Explorer had to be 15 years old or beyond the eighth grade, and then became for the program upon turning 21. Kyle had been in the Explorer since 1982. His father was a lieutenant with the RCPD and Kyle started riding with him when he was 14. Kyle claimed his parents knew he wanted to be a police officer even before he did. I hadn ' t really thought about what I wanted to do with my life, Kyle said. One day my dad was going to work and my mom asked me if I was going to go ride with him. That ' s when I decided to 182 Club FRONT ROW: Chong Gi Kim, Christine Hong, Ingko Oetomo. Chiara Palazzolo. Muralidhar Theegala, Sandra Novoa. Carlos Vedia. SECOND ROW: Dajiang Ding, Lea Caffrey, Andre Angle, Gail Walker. Gary Kirk, Cindy Hong Paul Miller, Paulette Watson. THIRD ROW: Marion Mackay, Rizwan Mithani, Nancy Mah, Kevin Lew. Yoke Kim Chee, Vincenzo Pellegrino, Priti Shah. Diego Estrada. BACK ROW: James Karen Anderson. Myron Calhoun, Cheryl Soper, Srinivas Garudachar, Cosima Hadidi, Anwar Dabbas, Joy Russell. International Humanitarian Organization FRONT ROW: Asif Ghori, Sonny Tewarie, Ajit Maan, Lucy Athanasius, Olivia Desnousse, Sheikh Siddiqui. FRONT ROW: Debra Huyett, Liz Schmalzried Rick Schmalzried. SECOND ROW: Lutfallah El Nabbout, Ja mes Tracy. Julie Austin, Chin Show Jong. BACK ROW: Dale Meyer, Stephen Morey, Gerald Schmalzried. FRONT ROW: John Cunnick. Natalie Fayman, Tarek Monier, Suzanne Spring, Marlin Burt, Kenneth Aron. SECOND ROW: Kevin Lew. Tom Dorzab, Fred Nieberding, Ike Wakabayashi. Bradie Jones. Brett Sowers, Cindy Miller, Ken Samson. BACK ROW: Paulette Watson, Daniel Broussard, Forrest Daniels. Richard Mack, Heger, Jeff Weatherly, Phillip Richards, Scott Sowers. Band Honor Fraternity FRONT ROW: Darin Baldwin. Gary Manly, Timothy Slater, David Donnert. David McMillan, Steve Warren. SECOND ROW: James Gewecke, Kyle Essmiller. Mike Mitchell, Scott Rockwell. Jeff Pennington. Roger Shideler, Tim Stark. BACK ROW: Eric Hunt, Timothy Darin Baugher. Stephen Schallehn. Brad Hawk, Bradley Piroutek, Clint Baxter. 183 be a police officer and got involved in the Explorer program. Kyle would like to work on the police force in Los Angeles after graduating from college. I ' m attracted to the West Coast and would like to get away from Kansas for awhile, but Los Angeles is not a thing. I ' m going to play it by ear, Kyle said. I wouldn ' t object to coming back to Kansas after a few years, he said. Kyle and Ashworth ' s main activity in the program was riding with officers on duty, yet they also directed traffic and did community service. Ashworth planned to work with the FBI or Secret Service when he from K-State. He became involved in the Explorer program when a friend at school told h im about it. I decided to go to a meeting, and they just happened to be signing people up that night, so I joined right there, Ashworth said. Ashworth had been in the program for four years. 4 Ashworth and Kyle attended the Explorer program ' s biannual national conference in Boston. The conference consists of competitions in law areas, such as bomb scenes, traffic accidents and hostage negotiation. Joshua Kyle practices target firing on the Riley County Police Department firing range near Tuttle Creek Reservoir. Kyle was one of the senior Explorers. (Photo by Brad Camp) UPC Union Program Council has been a part of K-State for 31 years, bringing entertainment and cultural opportunities to the student body. The nine committee chairmen and approximately 120 members organized more than 300 UPC events this year such as art exhibits, forums, and spring break getaways to Padre Island. The Eclectic Entertainment plowed some new ground for K- State music lovers with the OPUS Band Competition. Replacing the Battle of the Bands contest, OPUS became the status symbol sought by local bands. OPUS means anything dealing with music, said committee head Lydee Hawkins, senior in elementary Opus, a character in the Bloom County cartoon strip, was chosen as the contest mascot because of his definition. UPC obtained from the Washington Post before the copyrighted Opus character was used. I think OPUS did really well for the first year, but the committee wished there would have been a bigger crowd, Hawkins said. People are always looking for something different to do and that provides Eclectic Entertainment with a Hawkins said. continued on page 186 Comedian David Naster shows several sides of his personality to the crowd in McCain Auditorium during the Coors Light Comedy Commandos. (Photo by Gary Lytle) Paul Bratter, played by Mitch Berry, explains to his wife Corrie, portrayed by Jill Giles, how to get a divorce, during a performance of Barefoot in the Park. The production was part of the Union Council ' s Eclectic Entertainment Dessert ■ Theater. (Photo by Rob Squires) 184 Union Program Council FRONT ROW: Debbie Hedrick, Kyleen Cikanek, Jo Westhoff, Lori Morton. Marietta Davied, Pamela Donaldson. SECOND ROW: Rachel Smith. Nancy Hedrick, Harvey Ward. Angie Arnoldy. Janet Reichart. Rodger Graham, Lisa Falkner. Melissa Luthi. BACK ROW: Doug Caldwell. Kevin Wendler. Russell Thompson. Andrew Burris. Alan Wessel, Darin Crowder, Thomas Falkner. Sondra Broers. Korean Student Association FRONT ROW: Sunah Kim. Kyung-Sook Hong, Hyesook Lim. Chang Soon Kim. Chung Hee Rhee. Chul-Ho Choi. Hae-Soo Kwak. Changmin Kim. Young Moon Kim. BACK ROW: Do Chung. Seung Lee. Koomin Chung, Minho Jo, Sun-Sik Pak. Se Sung Park, Chul Rhee, Chie Gul Kim, Hyuk II Kim. Seung Lim. K-State FRONT ROW: Su Bacon. Phil Gilbert. Joel DeHaven, Kathleen White. SECOND ROW: Renee Arnoldy. Sean O ' Connor. Marshall Jeff Vandel. Katherine Hinkle. BACK ROW: Doug Gish. Joe Barenberg, Randy Hudlin. Brian Scharping. KSET K-State Engineers Technologists FRONT ROW: Brad Schultz. Richard Siptrott. Joy Russell. John Renner. Chris Huber Doug Ridder. SECOND ROW: William Henn. Mark Skidmore, Bruce Droge. Bryce St. John, Mike Reed, Scott Miller. THIRD ROW: Dan Starns, Ian Van Der Hoeven. Charles Graber, Dean Lies. John Petry. Ray Sherley. BACK ROW: John Clark. Terry Fairchild. Keith Droge. Wayne Bogart Troy Von Lehe. David Delker. KSUARH KSU Association of Residence Halls FRONT ROW: Stephanie Haub. Ira Rundell. Amy Blitsch. Bryan Irons. Lara Montulli, Rex Zuel, Diane Brooks. SECOND ROW: Heather Porter. Tony Schmitt. Kelli Nichols, Michael Stewart. Laurie Lawson, Larry Hackleman. Tiphanie Washburn. BACK ROW: Douglas Boese. Jennifer Siebes, Todd Stritzke. Stacy Sweazy, Douglas Maxwell, Lori Mangus. 185 Union Program Council UPC continued from page 184 Eclectic Entertainment brought the Coors Light Comedy Commandos to McCain Auditorium with comedians David Nastor and Taylor Mason. A dessert theater gave students a chance to see Broadway hits like in the Park, while dining on desserts instead of a four-course meal. The Feature Films committee perhaps the most popular events this year. Box office hits shown in the Union ' s Forum Hall included the Academy Award-winning picture, Platoon, The Witches of Eastwick, and America ' s traditional Christmas film, It ' s a Wonderful Life. Tickets sold for $1.75 and UPC gave local theaters some competition. I ' d rather go the UPC movies. You spend six or seven bucks a night if you go to a regular cinema, Jennifer Reitz, sophomore in business said. UPC provided more than on-campus entertainment. The Outdoor Committee pulled students to the great outdoors for some adventure. Canoe trips, backpacking, trout and cross country skiing let test their survival skills. Backpacking through the Grand Canyon was the committee ' s most popular trip. Last year, 32 people went on the five-day excursion, and it got bigger every year. For those who didn ' t want to risk life and limb, but their charge cards, UPC sponsored a Christmas shopping trip to the Country Club Plaza in Kansas City, Mo. The Let ' s Talk About It series in the Union Catskeller gave students the chance to talk one-to-one with K-State officials, like Pat Bosco, associate vice president dean of student life, and Robert Tout, director of Lafene Student Health Center. Students discussed admissions policies, health concerns and parking problems. The series was conducted by the Issues and Ideas Committee. Hawkins said being a member of UPC wasn ' t easy. It ' s hard to know what people want for entertainment. You can spend months planning and promoting an event that fails. KSU Student Foundation FRONT ROW: Kimberly Nelson, Loralie Mitchell. Lynette Hodges. Eva Chatterjee. Jennifer White. SECOND ROW: Murray Head. Chris McManaman. Scott Taggart. Brian Howell, Edward Elder. Glennis Carlson. Latter-Day Saint Association FRONT ROW: Jay Windley. John Moore. Kathy Skidmore. Bill Hubbell. Scott Wangsgaard. Stark, Patty Lewis. BACK ROW: Marcia Dettke. Robert Parish. Thomas Nelson Tom Skidmore. Clark Mahaffey. Marcie Stamper. Lutheran Young Adults FRONT ROW: Ann Linderkamp, Christina Rahn. Evelyn Holle. Cynthia Wriedt. Karen Kroeker. Jon Beam. SECOND ROW: Joni Brockschmidt. Bob Ruckman. Greg Carlson, David Bahr. Tom Hadler. BACK ROW: Heather Schlossman. Mitzi Loughmiller. Martin Kirk Swanda. Dana Schwant. ' Malaysian Students FRONT ROW: Wan Halimah Kadir. Wan Ibrisam Ismail. Jeff Chia. Soo Jin Ong. Sze-Ting Yap. Wai Choong Wong. Rokiah Hashim. ROW: Eric Siew. Julaihi Wahid, Siti Abdul Khalid. Rashidah Rashid. Kim Chee. Yati Kenny Tan, Ravendran Parimanam. BACK ROW: Hisham Ibrahim, Syed Syed Hassan, David Ting, Kang-Ling Yong. Kevin Lew. Othman. Marketing Club FRONT ROW: Deborah Messenger, Ester Keil, Joanne Wright. Gayla White. Diane Gleissner. SECOND ROW: Brenda Vaughn. Janelle Robin Haney. Caroline Barber. THIRD ROW: Don Martin. Joanne Young. Michelle Gaines. Carrie Grater, Jamie Craft. BACK ROW: Bryan Rebel, David Erdman. Michelle Johnson. Gay Ann Tennant. Doug Skaggs. 186 Union Program Council Ventriloquist and comedian, Taylor Mason, and his partner from outer space perform as part of the Coors Light Comedy Commandos in McCain Auditorium. The event was sponsored in part by the Union Program Coucil ' s Eclectic Entertainment Committee. (Photo by Gary Lytle.) John Money, lead vocalist for the group performs during the OPUS band in front of the Union. Moneytree took first place out of the six bands in the competition. (Photo by Brad Camp) 187 Union Council if the practical application of something is the best way to learn, then the students of the marketing research class were one up on most students. The three-hour credit course had students spending about 80 hours on a proj ect outside of class working with their teams and representatives from different businesses. It is very difficult to teach and takes a hell of a lot of work, said Richard Coleman, Volume Shoe Corp. professor Talking about their plans for marketing research on the mall are Cole Ely, Richard Burke, owner of Burke ' s Shoes, Cindy Bronson, Kenton Jeff Morris and David Sell. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) Tammy Palmquist, Tami Funk, and Tim Hanson discuss their marketing research plan with Charles Hostetler, chairman and chief executive of FirstBank, in Hostetler ' s office. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) 188 Marketing Research FRONT ROW: Stephen Thomas, Rob Dieringer. David Stewart. SECOND ROW: Mike Stewart. Ira Rundell. Patrick Mahoney. Brian Ruby. BACK ROW: Michael Wiersma, Douglas Boese Kirk Swanda. Vince Morris. Craig Jones. Mexican American Council of Students FRONT ROW: Mary Diab. Iris Cordero. Ramiro Hernandez. Judith Wolf. SECOND ROW: Lisa Castillo. Cathy Caudillo, Tommy Herrera. BACK ROW: Maria Rodriguez. Uzziel Pecina, Chris Gomez. Josie Bernal. Minority Engineer Peer Counselors FRONT ROW: Karen Hummel. Bobbie Moore. Sze-Ting Yap. Eric Siew. Maria Ovelar. George Yang. Shannon Brown. SECOND ROW: Ericka Foley. Arleen Baiges. Lisa Paine, Loren Martin. Glorimar Gonzalez. John Simms. Gregory BACK ROW: Ira Balden, Diego Estrada. Eric Schott. Rodolfo Ovelar. Michel Ishac. Toan Phi. Moore Hall Governing Board FRONT ROW: Tiffany Tapia. Amy Blitsch, Michael Horton. Heather Tuck. Stephanie Christopher llcin. Jody Hundley. Jennifer McGrath, Julie Shtogren. SECOND ROW: Tony Schmitt. Don Gamble. Shawn McNabb. Susan Noe. Ralph Fichtl, Melissa Powell. Susan Smith. Thomas Townsend. Meredith Paschal BACK ROW: Kenny Marlin. Walter Lister. Douglas Murphy. Marty Beilm Bellm. Cohn Durbin. David Mike Lintz. Mortar Board Senior Honorary . FRONT ROW: Sue Whippie. Laura Memming, Patricia Marquardt. Jane Grant. Kristen Oblinger. SECOND ROW: Brock Luty. Arthur Kristin Kruckenberg. Nancy Stone. Johanna Bachman. Janice Sandquist, Jolanta Jacobs. BACK ROW: Gib Benschoter. David Wiltfong. Amy Carter. Ed Nickel. Leslye Schneider, Tim Ulrich. Marlatt hall Governing Board Uses Knowledge For clients of marketing. It would be much easier to just lecture the class than to have them go out and actually do the research, he said. Students were expected do some type of research for a Manhattan business. Different types of research were conducted, depending on the business. For example, students might study opinions, attitudes and what people may have had about a certain name, product or service. Tami Funk makes a point during her discussion with the chairman of Firstbank while Tim Hanson listens. The pair was deciding which would be the best questions to ask potential banking for a questionnaire. (Photo by Steve Wolgast Most of the busi nesses were by Coleman and agreed to allow the students to work with them. One out of three businesses had a real to research, but most Coleman digs up. I ' m trying to teach them to have a healthy cynical distrust of what they find in opinion polls, Coleman said. They found out that not all of the information printed or read was the truth. The students were able to this better if they did the research themselves, he said. Some students come up to me and say they cannot believe how much do not tell the truth. This is where the real learning of application has an effect, Coleman said. 189 Marlene McComas, instructor in clothing, textiles and interior design, assists a student with preparing her resume. (Photo by Steve Rasmussen) multi-billion dollar of fashion marketing an endless list of career opportunities for the young business person interested in the fashion industry. K-State offered a program within the College of Human Ecology specifically designed to prepare the student for a career in the fashion world. We offer one of the best programs available for someone looking for a career in this field, said Bettie assistant professor of clothing, textiles and interior design. Students had no difficulty entering positions such as a merchandising assistant soon after they graduated, said Marlene McComas, instructor of clothing, textiles and interior design. 190 Fashion Marketing NAMA National Agri-Marketing Association FRONT ROW: Tharran Gaines. Patrick Muir, Wally Brockhoff, Oscar West. Marvin Anliker. John Riley. SECOND ROW: Arman Miller. Scott Benfer, David Craft. Shawn Teichmann, Mike Huerter. Thomas Ryan. THIRD ROW: Gordon Lashell. Mark Vanbuskirk, Mark Davis, Jerry Hubener, Daniel Burton. Stephen Meyer, Mike Kadel. BACK ROW: Jeana Kleysteuber, Gail Beightel, Anne Krauss. Shannan Seely, Schlereth, Linda Huddleston. NSAE National Society of Architectural Engineers FRONT ROW: Filza Hassan. Karen Demel. Ramon Fewell. Margaret Peil. BACK ROW: Charles Bissey. Jeffrey Wells. Brad Megee. Kimberly Billones. Julie Thompson. National Society of Architectural Engineers FRONT ROW: Lisa Bergman. Gina Mary Hazell. Pamela Dunlap. Tracey Whaley, Lynn Elledge. Rhonda Zink. Rosemary Seiwald. BACK ROW: Gary Reinheimer, Shawn Schrader. Brian Hornung. Daniel Namee, Kristin Eickhorst. Harvey Ward, Troy Porak, Nicki Hollandsworth. NSAE National Society of Architectural Engineers FRONT ROW: Gregory Bruns, Kathi Robertson. Lisa Sherwood, Christina Rahn, Gregory Tristan Burton, David Bahr. SECOND ROW: David Chitwood, Robert Weidman. Shane Lutz, Brian Hulsey. Ronda Bradshaw. Bruce BROW: Paul Baker. BACK ROW: Peter Wroblewski. Sean Eickhoff, David Bodenschatz. Keith Reihl. Thomas Harner. Damian Gerstner. Edward Downey. National society of black Engineers FRONT ROW: Sandy Nicholson, Michelle Ragland. Cornetta Tucker, John Simms, Willie Washington. Ericka Foley. Jocelyn Gethers. Sharon McMurtry, Karen Hummel. SECOND ROW: Karen Hester, Ray Dempsey. David Sims, Albert Calvin, Lyndon Johnson, Michael Wilson, Ira Bolden, Vanessa Galbreath. BACK ROW: Charles Parish, Gregory Williams, William Johnson, David Roberson. William Byrd. Larry Lamette. Calvin Mayfield. Although retail was the most path into fashion, it was not the only way, McComas said. We have students entering all areas of this field. The biggest misconception for incoming students was that they all want to be buyers when they graduate from school, McComas said. Minshall said these students did not realize the amount of money a buyer was asked to invest, and the of making correct trend judgments. The apparel and textile marketing department was the largest in the College of Human Ecology. Our program is placing people all over the country, from Chicago to Los Angeles, McComas said. Kelley Keeton, senior in apparel and textile marketing, worked for The Limited Express in Oak Park Mall in Overland Park, Kan., through a University sponsered internship program. She said working as an was an excellent opportunity for her to get a taste for the retail world. While Keeton worked as a sales associate, she was also given extra responsibilities because of her position as an intern. Keeton said the department ' s interaction with the Manhattan retail merchants was an excellent learning opportunity for her. Candice Battles, sophomore in textile marketing, assists Kim Harding with a clothing selection from The Limited in the Manhattan Town Center. Battles finds that her experience from The Limited will help her future once she graduates from college. (Photo by Steve Rasmussen) 191 Fashion Marketing National Society Professional Engineers FRONT ROW: Susan Russell. Cheryl Bettenbrock, Amy Hurst. SECOND ROW: James Koelliker. Lisa Eisele, Rex Fleming. BACK ROW: Jason Kaufman, John Kittner. Eric Hixson, Darin George. Newman Ministries FRONT ROW: Jerilyn Ochs, Esther Olson, Ginny Roth. Carolyn Juenemann, Tammara Tracy. SECOND ROW: Andrea Purdy. Robert John Mick. Shen Wahlmeier. Russell Judy Wagner. BACK ROW: Brenda Wienck, Michael Pirotte, David Disberger. Timothy Pottorff. Joseph Geisinger, Jeffrey Bates. National Residence Hall Honorary FRONT ROW: Nancy Hoffman, Jennifer Siebes BACK ROW: Eric Crowell. Kelli Nichols, Todd Stritzke. Chemical Engineering Honorary FRONT ROW: Cary Steiner. Steven Kohler. Chris Becker. Laura Berry, Curtis Schultz. BACK ROW: Dave Ott. John Lyle. Adam Susan Smith, Walter Walawender Omicron Nu Human Ecology Honorary FRONT ROW: Norma Salsman, Judith Daniels. Albie Rasmussen. Heidi Ryan, Jill Eastman, Karen Kroeker, Jana Lessman, Ann Iseman. SECOND ROW: David Martinez, Pam Clary, Andrea Hutchins, Connie Kriley, Christina Sharon Hamm, Elizabeth Caruthers. Kristine Claassen, Pamela Altman. BACK ROW: Cott, Dawn Wilson. Linda Felber. Susan Davis. Susan Sommers, Mary Molt, Randy Nease. Karen Anderson. tim slowly dragged his ey es away from the television and looked at the clock. Oh no! It ' s 2:30, he thought. Time for class. His gaze shifted to the It ' s too cold to go to class. It ' s so boring, and I always get A ' s in there anyway. I think I ' ll skip again. Tim, a fictitious character, might have represented any college student. Apathy and boredom could have meant the student was spinning his wheels in a class which was too easy for him. Previous courses taken or personal experiences may have enabled a student to move ahead to a higher, more course, while still receiving credit for completion. Students interested in quizzing out of certain classes had the option of taking one of the three national credit examination tests offered at K-State. The College Level Examination (CLEP), the Defense Activity for Non-Traditional Education Support (DANTES), and the ACT Proficiency Examinations Program (PEP) tests were each available for certain courses. CLEP was cited by Martha graduate teaching assistant, as being the more prevalent test. K-State had an open CLEP Center where individuals could take any of the five general or 30 subject examinations offered. The tests were kept on file and could be scheduled through the Academic Assistance Center. Except in social science and natural science, CLEP tests corresponded to K-State courses and could be used as prerequisites for more advanced classes. The PEP exam was administered only four times each year at a ACT testing center. In some courses, such as abnormal psychology and earth science, an additional K- State exam was required in order to receive credit. DANTES offered a comprehensive list of subject examinations that were accepted at K-State. The languages and mathematics fell into the DANTES 192 Quiz Credit By Avoids Tedious category. As with the CLEP exam, a $35 fee was charged when the test was administered. According to Sanderlin, college algebra was tested out of the most often. Calculus and business courses also had some of the higher test-out percentages, she said. Kyle Rolfing, junior in business administration, prepares to take the CLEP test to quiz out of his required Introductory Marketing class. The test was taken in Holton HalL (Photo by Steve Wolgast) Although students could test out of many courses by the national credit examination tests, not all courses could be sidestepped in this manner. If a class could not be quizzed out of under the national credit examination test, there were alternatives. Credit by examination would receive letter grades or simply the of credit as decided upon by the particular department. Many departments had certain for their test-outs. The education department, for required a personal fitness evalua- tion and an exam. I would strongly encourage to test out of physical education, Tim Burnett, freshman in biology, said. The test was hard, but if you read the book and study, the extra effort is really worth the time saved. The best advice to give to anyone wanting to test out is to talk to someone in their own department about whether they have special requirements, said. I think that they (the tests) are being utilized fairly effectively. By Heather Downs 193 Inter-Greek Honorary FRONT Nancy Stone. Helene Higbee. Leslye Schneider, Kurt Bush. SECOND ROW: Roger McClellan. Susan Navrat. James Hill, Ed Nickel. Jada Allerheiligen, Tim Ulrich. BACK ROW: Susan Brent. Lisa Gast. Myrna James. Jane Lauer. Johanna Bachman. the spring of 1988 saw the highest spring enrollment in the history of K-State. The 20th-day enrollment figures, which registered 18,698 students, continued the upward enrollment trend the University had seen in three of the previous four semesters. The increased enrollment was due to the efforts of faculty, administration, admissions representatives, alumni and students, said Pat Bosco, vice president for institutional advancement dean of student life. While efforts to attract students have played a significant role in this change, our data indicate the efforts at improving retention of currently enrolled students is really paying off, said Robert Krause, vice president for institutional advancement. The enrollment increase is due to everything from a strong faculty, students and increased to showcasing what K-State has to offer, Bosco said. The eight admissions played an essential role in both the recruitment and retention of The represe ntatives were each responsible for a specific region where they visited high schools, conducted Career-Counselor nights and worked with other universities and colleges on College Planning Conferences. We really become close to some of the students, said Amy Joe Reinhardt, representative for the southwest region. We ' ve all (the admissions representatives) had a lot of the students we recruited come see us, especially the first month they were here, Reinhardt said. Reinhardt said the key to was the cooperation between all the departments involved. When prospective students came to campus, they met with people in their academic area of interest and admissions, and they took a campus tour. Department of the College of Architecture and Design FRONT ROW: Kathleen Walde, Sherri Huffman. Russell Hamlet, Joe Schnieders, Richa Wilson. SECOND ROW: Steve Stockman, Gary Tommy Hadler, Tim Wall, Diana Dame. BACK ROW: Kelly Fickel, Efrem Rivers, Paul Melgren. Lenny Clark, Diane Fox. FRONT ROW: Ali Sheriff, Emad Chaudhri, Rashida Qureshi, Asif Ghori, Ali Kazmi. BACK ROW: Najeeb Siddiqui, Ghulam Shah, Neville Patel, Zahid Mahmood, Azfar Moazzam, Siddiqi, Nazeer Shah, Sabir Ali. Pakistan pakistani Student FRONT ROW: Jerry Pritchett. Ed Nickel. Jack Taylor, Brian Ritenour. BACK ROW: Stephanie Kelly, Brenda Roach, Jada Allerheiligen, Angie Rowland, Diana Swickard, Mary Vanier. FRONT ROW: Kim Moors. Stephanie Kelly. Jill Fyfe, Ginger Cline. Angie Rowland, Janie Lauer, Lauren O ' Connor, Jada Allerheiligen, Kristen Baker. SECOND ROW: Katy Hail, Karla RedeIsheimer, Rhonda Cummins, Carolyn Weith, Janet Lee, Erin Kelly, Annie Linenberger, Herzig. Jill Bush. BACK ROW: Judy Litton, Frances Martin, Amy Purslow, Mary Vanier, Lori Ingmire, Diana Swickard, Heather Stewart. Kathy Peirce, Marnie Jordan, Brenda Roach. 194 Enrollment Increase Recruitment, Retention Boosts Enrollment In addition to recruitment, the representatives also helped with retention by teaching the Freshman Orientation Seminar during the fall semester. The class was designed to help students adjust to college life and covered topics including study skills, time management and personal said Judith Lynch, coordinator for the Freshman Orientation Seminar. During the first few weeks on campus, I felt really alone and lost. But this class gave me something to look forward to each week. I would recommend this class...it helps make the transition from high school to college a lot easier, Cindy Swisher, freshman in business, said. Getting the students on campus was an important part of recruiting, Myrna James, admissions representative, said. Approximately 200 prospective students took tours each month. When they come on campus, James said, they really get a feel for the atmosphere. The students really like to see the campus arid get a student ' s view of K- State, said Julie Woods, junior in elementary education and campus tour guide. It has become very competitive in the world of student recruitment, Reinhardt said. Through cooperation and coordination, K-State has a very strong student recruitment and retention program. (Illustration by Joe Cook) 20,000 Enrollment Figures 19,000 The ' 88 spring enrollment figures peaked at 18,698. Spring ' 88 18,698 18,600 18,400 17,800 17,600 195 Enrollment Increase of its students had not even been aware that for more than 40 years the Department of Journalism and Mass Communications had been among an elite group of accredited schools in the nation. Yet the news it had been denied reaccreditation last spring created concern among and parents about the quality of K-State ' s journalism education. But the cloud the denial cast over the department turned out to be one with a silver lining which brought a shower of money to the underfunded department. In a letter to all journalism and mass communications students shortly after the denial, Department Head Oukrop assured students that the journalism program would continue and its graduates would receive valid degrees. In fact, Oukrop said, the site team from the Accrediting Council on Education for Journalism and Mass Communication rated the K-State program as good on graduates. She said the report also pointed out that employers of K-State journalism graduates like KSU grads, constantly praise their work ethic, and report that the quality of the graduates is improving. Judy Lundstrom, senior in and mass communications and spring Collegian editor, was one who was initially disturbed about the reaccreditation denial. At first it sounded really awful, Lundstrom said, until I realized that it doesn ' t really mean that much to many people. Accreditation doesn ' t seem to be that important when you go out to get a job. The obstacles to reaccreditation were not connected to the quality of education that the K-State program provided but were, in two words, money and curriculum. Inadequate resources for the department was one of the major in the accreditation denial, said. In the six years since the last routine accreditation check, the number of journalism majors had risen from 418 to 625. Yet, the department ' s operating budget for expenses other than which had been $19,724, increased only slightly before dropping The journalism department lost its accreditation last spring. Inadequate resources was cited as one of the major reasons for the denial. (Photo by Rob Squires) 196 Journalism Accreditation FRONT ROW: Karen Klemm. William Dawes, Teffani Muirhead. SECOND ROW: Shelly Trowbridge, Sinda Wadleigh, Ron Harris, Martin Fabrizius. Connie Seyler, Kimberly Bryce St. John. THIRD ROW: Mervin Bitikofer, James Ward, Ed Goff. Jim Rigney, Joel Grimmett. BACK ROW: Bryan Seidl, Michael Smith. Sonya Martin, Shelly Bothwell. John Lask, Don Hutton. Tim Miles. Phi Eta Sigma Freshman Scholastic Honorary FRONT ROW: Kristi Elmore, Kim Schlereth. Scott Sands, Kristi White, Tamera Talbert, Tracy Skipton, Kelsi Elmore. BACK ROW: James Hart. Kate Perkins, Michael Armour, Lane Nancy Deckert, Michael Toedman. Phi Upsilon Omicron Home Economics FRONT ROW: Sandra Hoover, Nancy Day, Christine Powell, Andrea Hutchins. Lisa Gast, Stacy Myles, Heidi Zinn, Barbara Berry, Amy Graham. BACK ROW: Mary Rockers. Linda Hutchins. Kristen Spaeth, Kris Nelson, Mary Jo Lampe, Sonja Young, Janet Ediger, Susan Davis, Heather Hahn. Phi Upsilon Omicron Home Economics FRONT ROW: Cathy Bennett, Erin Murphy, Margaret Kolenkiewicz, Jill Eastman. Deborah Messenger, Kimberly Ifft, Helen Ramsey. ROW: Renee Miller, Pam Clary. Laura Keefer, Michelle Claassen. Jeanna Kohl, Jord an, Karen Anderson. Kristen Baker. FRONT ROW: Heather Haahr, Wanda Henton, Carol Tracy. Parviz Campbell, Wayne Glantz. SECOND ROW: Dave Hare. Daniel Smith, Joseph Rakestraw, Larry Weaver. BACK ROW: Bruce McLaren, John Mack, Chris Sanderson, Kent Heady, Keith Kerle. Loss to $18,700. The decrease was due to an across-the-board budget cut for state agencies by the Kansas Legislature in the fall of 1986. That tells the story right there, Oukrop said. We ' ve got more than 200 more students and less money. Even before K-State got formal denial of reaccreditation, the responded with a 50 percent increase for the general expense budget last July and pledged an $7,000 increase for July 1987. There was more irony in the other major problem cited by the accrediting council — that of curriculum non- compliance. By allowing journalism students to take up to 36 credit hours of journalism courses and requiring only 84 hours of non-journalism courses for its graduates, the was allowing students to take too many journalism courses. The department was not in with the council ' s curriculum requirements for 90 credit hours the major area. Beginning in December 1988, all journalism and mass communications students will have to meet the new requirements in order to graduate. Besides the loss of prestige, about the only negative situation created by the loss of accreditation was that it made students ineligible to compete in various journalism scholarship Oukrop said she was sure that K-State could have had one or two winners in the William Randolph Hearst Journalism Awards Program during this school year, had they been eligible to compete. That was why, though only about one-fourth of the nation ' s 350 schools were accredited, regaining accreditation w as a priority for K-State. In the meantime, the loss could be S regarded as a storm which brought a needed rain to a parched land. Wiler 197 Journalism Accreditation Press Debbie Couture, publication practice student and senior in journalism and mass communications, pastes up a headline. The completed negative and plates are made before the paper is printed. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) was a typical week night, about midnight. Fingers danced with authority across keyboards, music played quietly in the background as if not to get in the way of more pressing matters, soda cans and pizza boxes quickly accumulated, laughter pierced the air and frustration hung heavily over that one chosen soul who, for one reason or another, just didn ' t ha ve it that night. And another issue of the Kansas State Collegian was about to go to bed. Somehow a contradiction was at work in the Collegian newsroom. It should have defied logic that a group so diverse could consistently produce a newspaper that was regarded as one of the leaders nationwide. In fact, it should have defied logic that people who so readily joked and pinned fellow Erwin Seba, government editor and senior in journalism and mass communications, discusses a story with Chris Doll, special projects editor and senior in political science. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) By Deron Johnson 198 Kansas State Collegian Business Education FRONT ROW: Sue Schlegel, Cindy Panowicz, Natalie Clark, Ann Jankovich, Glenda Eichman. Karla Henne, Karol Henry. BACK ROW: Anita Brandt, Leah Atchley. Michael Pecenka, Susan Leiding, Kendra Thompson, Janet Herpich, Denise Medley. Marketing Fraternity FRONT ROW: Kevin Wright, Ed Mikesell, Perry Johnson, Angela Doyen. Amy Meade, Jayne Bukowsky, Ron Young, Michael Walden, Dan Hemmen. SECOND ROW: Shed Anderson, Peter Cannizzaro, Zachary Hamel, Scott Allen, Russell Wilson. Roy Sand. Craig Uhrich, Christy Meyer. THIRD ROW: Sandy Vogel, Michele Rooney, Jeff Lavery, Chuck Howard, Dan Greg Mikesell, Evan Statman, Juliann Watt, Melanie Schurle. BACK ROW: Derrie Ward, Dan Knappen, John Nugent, Darrin Gross, Lafe Bailey, Todd Wilke, Craig Schneithorst, Scott Burnette, Nancy Hoffman. Pi Tau Sigma Mechanical Engineering Honorary FRONT ROW: Mary Howell, Amy Noeth, Chuck Kneaves, Lisa Rephlo. Barb Dubrovin, Greg Langley. SECOND ROW: Ed Holmes. Chris Stecklein, Phillip Richards. John Jensen, Mike Stewart, Michael Leverich, Terry Shepherd, Tim Oakleaf. THIRD ROW: Brad Mallory, John Puchosic, Alan Wall, Doug Enns. Doug Steele, Scott Jones, John Ellenz. Terry Beck. Ron Leonard. BACK ROW: Roger lstas, Mike Walden, Keith Kettler, Jason Rogers. Troy Bush, Gerald Schmelzle, John Braun, Mike Reams, Roger Metzler. FRONT ROW: Kenneth Anderson, Michele Hunt, Paul Sanford, Pongchan Na-Lampang. BACK ROW: Donald Osterhaus, Wendy Voelker, Joan Cadillac, Norman Ramos. Pre-Physical Therapy Club FRONT ROW: Deanne Metzger, Julie Lineback, Rebecca Geeseman, Lisa Bierly, Troy Robert. BACK ROW: Ron Renard, Sue Blazek, Lisa Landers, Deb Miles, Carol Craig. poultry Science Club ■ staff members on their double- entendre statements could put out a paper at all. A quick glance around the Collegian newsroom normally revealed some of the real news with which most staff members were concerned, including some of the laughable things that appeared in print and the site of the weekend ' s Kedzie Kaper, the name for the occasional end-of- the-week bashes. However, the surface laughter and camaraderie belied the underlying seriousness of what was going on. The laughter only went on for so long before everyone got down to work. Actually, it wasn ' t unusual for people in the to go from one mood extreme to the other, especially under the crunch of a deadline. Although reporters, photographers and editors had deadlines throughout the day, it was the big deadline – 1 a.m. – that loomed heaviest over everyone. And it was the editors who loomed over other lower-ranking and reporters. Everyone involved with the Collegian quickly learned and, under ideal circumstances, – the chain of command. They also learned that producing the Collegian was no easy task. In fact, it was a 24-hour operation, as a typical day revealed: By 8 a.m. each day, the business office staff, ad staff members, advertising production and news editor were at work taking calls, making calls, ads and scooping out what would likely be the day ' s top stories. The editor, writers and photographers continued on page 200 199 Kansas State Collegian Pre-Vet Club FRONT ROW: Teresa Kelly. Annette Hoover, Thomas McDavitt, Lon Teghtmeyer, Kathy Raaf, Robert Zwiesler, Deborah Williams. SECOND ROW: Cindy Bohling, Debra Agapito, Tammy Winger. Angela Miller, Amy Kenworthy. Deirdre Hanson. Sandra Lancaster. THIRD ROW: Tom Bragg, Heather Metzger. Melissa Barrett, Kate Perkins, Laura Webster. Mathew Kwartin, David Callies, Travis McKinzie. BACK ROW: Rhonda Collins, Todd McCracken, Shannon Wessel, Kamela French, Andrea Gans, David Whetstone, Philip Bentz, Michael Coe. FRONT ROW: Brian Frank, Robert Nelson, Ramsden, Rachel Ring, Kristol Winston. SECOND ROW: Buck Root. Rory Goldsberry, Christine White, Janice Ballou, Jenifer Donnelly, Brenda Heimlich. THIRD ROW: Lisa Stadler, Don Rollins, John Stubblefield, Mark Namminga. Derek Smith, Tony Birney. BACK ROW: Michael Hanna, Greg Reichenberger. Michael Brown, Tom Lopp, Kent Oakley, Norman Seat. continued from page 199 had filtered into the newsroom by noon, a few hours in advance of the most hectic part of the day. That was late afternoon, when was finishing stories, processing film or tracking down reporters. By 5 p.m., the managing editor and news production coordinator arrived at work, most of the day staff went home and the process of designing pages, writing headlines and pasting up the paper began. Some writers and would remain to cover night events or late-breaking stories. By 1 a.m., the paper was taken to K- State Printing Service in the basement of Kedzie Hall where it was printed, and Collegian carriers arrived by 5:30 a.m. By about 7 a.m., the paper was delivered to dozens of drop points on Pre-Vet Club FRONT ROW: Michelle Linnebur, Sonia Serad, Susan Vanderbeke, Paul CotteriII. SECOND ROW: David S tuhlsatz, James Roth. Lori Allegri, Marianne Gallagher, Karen Hollern. THIRD ROW: Guy Kiracofe. Melissa Mead, James Christian, Katrina West, James Rohleder. BACK ROW: LuAnn Bergner, Carol Jantzi, Critser, Michael Gauger, Douglas Brandt. Psychology Honorary FRONT ROW: Ted Coyle, Jill Knust. Elisabeth Brown, Jane Grant, Andrea Booher, Monica Franz. Carol Neneman. BACK ROW: Marjorie Hinojosa, Therese Meyer, Mary Bosch, Scott Fischer, Mark German, Sandra McCoy. Daryl Handrick. 200 Kansas State Collegian Professionals in Human Movement FRONT ROW: Miriam Satern, Richard Lovins, Caroline Hackerott. BACK ROW: Greg Kaylene Klamm, Alan Marstall, Marsha Herke. campus and in Manhattan. And then the whole process would start again. It was the things like the 24-hour operation, deadlines and chain of that mirrored the real world in which most of these students would work upon leaving K-State. But don ' t think Collegian staff were just practicing while they were going to school. They weren ' t. If anything, they were trying to perfect their skills — not waste their time until they graduated. If they regarded the process of a daily 15,000-circulation newspaper as practice, the frustration of making an error wouldn ' t have been so great. The cultivation of an exclusive story wouldn ' t have been so gratifying. And the pull of the newsroom wouldn ' t have been so strong. In fact, so great was the attraction for most staff members that school sometimes became a mere annoyance. However, it usually took only one f on a test to convince them to spend more time on academics. But by no means were all Collegian members on the verge of flunking out. There were those who managed to quite successfully balance the demands of job with those of school, which was not unlike many other K-State students. For example, spring 1988 Collegian editor Judy Lundstrom had compiled a 3.94 cumulative grade point average through the fall 1987 semester. Of course, we ' ll wait and see what it is after this (spring) semester, she said with a laugh. Part of the strain on academics was that the Collegian was a full-time job for many staff members. Most desk editors spent between 30 and 40 hours per week in the newsroom, and it wasn ' t unusual for the editor to spend 60 hours a week at work. In fact, it was almost an unspoken rule that the editor wouldn ' t figure his or her per-hour wage until after the semester was over. Those who it mid-semester were faced with the shock induced by the realization that they were making about $2 an hour. Suddenly, flipping burgers never looked so good. But for most staff members, mere money wasn ' t enough to draw them away from the Collegian. Or, for that matter, the profession. After all, they had a paper to put out. Janelle Dennis, advertising representative and senior in marketing, sketches a dummy for an advertisement for an issue of the Collegian. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) Steve Wolgast, staff photographer, and in political science, checks his prints while working in the darkroom in the basement of Kedzie Hall. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) 201 Kansas State Collegian Good things come to those who wait and in the case of students at the Veterinary Medical Center, graduation and a degree came to those students with stamina, smarts and dedication. The first three years of class work were difficult, but the fourth clinical year was worth the wait. The fourth-year students clinical work for the first time during their schooling at K-State. The first semester of the senior year was broken into eight three-week units: small animal, large animal, radiology, diagnostic, feed animal, Intensive Care Unit, anesthesia and equine, said William Fortney, professor of surgery and medicine and section head for the small-animal hospital. The students utilized all of the book learning experienced in the first three professional years to treat animals and ready themselves for careers as veterinarians. SURGERY AND MEDICINE One of the senior year experiences was instruction on the surgery and medicine of animals treated at the small- and large-animal hospitals. The objectives of the surgery and medicine unit, as outlined by Jerry professor of surgery and was to prepare students to the basic skills of surgery. With these basics, students could expand their knowledge through new cases when the students were working in their own practice, Gillespie said. The senior student was responsible for the technical learning, enabling them to work out problems and explore on their own. The students learned they were responsible for life-and-death A group of fourth year students perform surgery on a ferret. (Photo by Gary Lytle) With all but a tiny portion of the ferret covered up, the students begin to sew up the animal ' s (Photo by Gary Lytle) stances on their own, Gillespie said. By challenging the students to solve their own problems the college was teaching them what it would be like doing surgery on their own. The veterinary students performed surgeries and assisted the resident veterinarians with more complex cases. However, the life of the animal is never at risk, Gillespie said. Continued on page 205 By Lori Bredow and Laura Renfro 202 Veterinary Medicine Anesthetist Gary Arroyo, left, and assistant Dunn, in back, watch the neutering of a ferret. (Photo by Gary Lytle) Two veterinary medicine students perform an operation on a cow. The procedure was to remove two pieces of wire from the cow ' s stomach and check for any damage to the cow resulting from this. (Photo by Steve Rasmussen) 203 Veterinary Medicine PRSSA Public Relations Student Society of America FRONT ROW: Patrice Macan. Loralie Mitchell, Joni Manley. Vera McMinimy. Robert Olson. SECOND ROW: Mary Snyder, Stacy Sweazy. Shelly Tierney. Lisa Nett. BACK ROW: Paul Branson. Dave Hartman. Vince Huser. Putnam Hall Governing Board FRONT ROW: Bryan Irons. Katherine Leu. Deborah Williams. Sandra Lancaster. Chuck Eberth. BACK ROW: Barry Bailey, Mark Strahm. Thomas Annis. Mike Theobald, Daniel Pesmark, Donald Conner. Rifle Club FRONT ROW: Karen Chartier. Charles Cherry, Chuck Knight. Brian Boyce, Justin Grusing. Judy. Dale Withroder, Chris Jones. SECOND ROW: Kory Webb. Albert Martin, Patrick Deely, Darren Heaton. Joseph Phillips, James Hermann, Kevin Adkins. BACK ROW: Troy Bourbon. Aaron Plunkett. Charles Bledsoe, Mitch Richmond. Christopher Droge. David Falk. Rodeo Club FRONT ROW: Robyn Cole. Lisa Keller. Kelly Freitag. Nancy Swartz. Candi Worley. SECOND ROW: Neal Woollen. Kassie Collins, Kay Deb Holthaus, Rhoda Rein. Michael Vohs. THIRD ROW: John Dunlap, Steve Esau. Gary Fuller, Don Simons. James Kuhlman. Mark DeWeese. Tad Larson, Sam Kiefer. BACK ROW: Nute Rucker, Will Williams, Jerry David Wheeler. Keith Darrah. James Todd Burnett. Mark Dahlsten. Jack Davis. FRONT ROW: Paula Vale, Teresa Purvis, Jonell Borst, Mike Honeycutt. Mary Rockers Michael Lockas, Cynthia Blaker, Dan Rose. SECOND ROW: William Buek. Kelly James, Eric Custer. Matt Filby, James Johnson. Jennifer Johnston. Tina Dewitt. BACK ROW: Johanna Bachman, Amanda Robinson. Jeff Longley. Troy Kolb, Curt Drennen, Tom Butler, Kirstin Wood. 204 Veterinary Medicine Discover Vet Wed Center Continued from page 202 SMALL ANIMAL There were also several mini- courses and clinical hands-on experiences. The small-animal hospital in the Vet Med Center utilized the talent of senior students to facilitate the operation. They end up seeing clients, animals and treating animals. That ' s their No. 1 function, Fortney said. The second fu nction, we call rounds, he said. During rounds the students Karl Weinacker and Mark Wachal, seniors in veterinary medicine, give Bo Derrick, a 7-year-old doberman, a whirlpool during physical therapy at the Veterinary Medicine Center. (Photo by Jim Dietz) Maurine Bell and Les Hatfield, seniors in medicine, hold Ginger May while the dog is X- rayed in radiology. (Photo by Jim Dietz) discussed the cases to share their information and gain new insights from others. The students then received in- depth lectures on cases, trying to bring together everything they ' ve learned in the first three years in a classroom kind of situation, Fortney said. Hands-on experience was a key aspect of the experience gained in the small-animal hospital . The examining room is a classroom too, but it ' s more of a laboratory than a classroom situation. According to Fortney, the students were involved in every aspect of the animal ' s stay in the hospital, but the animal was never put in danger. For very sick animals the Vet Med Center had a section of the hospital called the intensive care unit. Students worked in ICU for three weeks. During that time they were not required to study or work for the small- animal hospital in the clinic admitting new patients. This benefited both sets of students because the students putting in the late hours in ICU could get some sleep while students working in the small- animal hospital were able to do rounds at the hospital, Fortney said. EQUINE An area of the Vet Med Center that received much national attention was the Equine Sports Medicine and Physiology research program that had been developed at K-State over the past five years. According to Howard Erickson, of veterinary medicine, the objectives of the research program were to reduce injuries and disease in the equine athlete and to improve the performance of horses in competitive events. The facilities included an equine performance testing laboratory which housed a high-speed treadmill that could be used to test the fitness and performance of horses. It was one of four high-speed treadmills in operation in the United States. Because of the great economic importance of injury of horses in training and competition, Erickson said Continued on page 206 205 Discover vet Med Center Continued from page 205 clinical application of tests developed from this research would become a significant new service provided by veterinarians for owners and trainers. With the advent of pari-mutuel racing in Kansas, Erickson anticipated that this new approach to evaluating athletic horses would make a substantial contribution to equine medicine. We want to improve the benefits for the horse, Erickson said. Our goal is to make the horse healthier, and after that, make the horse more competitive. LARGE ANIMAL Part of the veterinary students ' fourth year was working with the care of large animals. This work experience was separated into two sections: herd health and the large-animal hospital, said Jerome Vestweber, professor of surgery and medicine. The large-animal hospital was to the small-animal hospital in that students participated in rounds and gained hands-on experience while learning. Working in the large-animal was at least a 40-hour-a-week job. The students arrived early in the morning to check their patients and assign any additional tests needed by their patients, Vestweber said. Between the hours of 9 a.m. and noon, the large-animal hospital received patients, and the students and resident veterinarians were busy assisting in the needs of the animals being admitted into the hospital. Later in the morning the students resea rched their cases. In the early afternoon they discussed the cases students were working with. This gave everyone an opportunity to experience each case, Vestweber said. The second part of the large-animal experience was herd health. During this unit the students involved studied and gained hands-on experiences in dealing with an entire herd ' s care instead of the individual animal ' s care. In this unit the students were concerned with preventive in the case of an entire farm. AVIARY Part of the Vet Med Center that was different from the traditional unit of cattle, swine and horses was the aviary unit. This was a unit in which birds were kept and husbandry techniques of birds were taught. The aviary was started in 1983 through a donation to the school from an aviculturist, Robert Travnecek. It was set up entirely by students and Terry Campbell, assistant professor of surgery and medicine, specializing in exotic animal medicine. It functions as a teaching aid to students who are interested in the care of pet birds, Campbell said. Since there was little in the curriculum for birds, Campbell said the aviary ' s function was to provide that. This is our way of learning about birds since we don ' t get it in our Teresa Bradley, sophomore in veterinary medicine, said. A calf stands below a sign placed on a pen at the large animal hospital. The sign was placed to warn people from the larger occupant of the pen. (Photo by Steve Rasmussen) 206 Rowing Association FRONT ROW: Binh Nguyen. Barbara Parker. Debbie Dinges, Patty Jones, Beth Boyle, M J. SECOND ROW: William Lin, John Price, Tom Bragg. Clay Walters. Patrick Mahoney, Brian Lin. BACK ROW: Shawn Aldridge, Sean Jendlin. Steve Neustaedter. Mike Janzen. Jeremy English, Bentley Skeie, Erik Walden. ULTRASOUND An addition to the anatomy and physiology department at the Vet Med Center was that of ultrasound used to examine the anatomy of an animal in two dimensions. With ultrasound, we can actually use live dogs and horses to see their anatomy in two dimensions and watch it move, said Glenn Hartke, professor Continued on page 208 Sailing Club FRONT ROW: Brad Stowe, Annette Allen. Jones. Melanie Schurle. BACK ROW: Richard Courtney, Angelo Evangelou, Aaron Hinrichs. SESA Science Education Student Association FRONT ROW: Larry Barnett, Elizabeth Martineau. Rick Hull. Earth Science Honorary FRONT ROW: Sandra Voegeli. Douglas Ekart, Graham Smith. BACK ROW: Ann Hinterleitner. Grant Smith, Vincent Voegeli, Mike Goydas. John Chitwood. at the large animal hospital give a blood to a steer. (Photo by Steve Rasmussen) Calvin Binns, Skip Koster and Mark Handlin, all in veterinary medicine, inspect a group of feeder pigs at the Junction City sale barn. (Photo by Jim Dietz) Building Construction Science Honorary FRONT ROW: Chris Liermann. Matthew Nordhus. Chris Hess, Matt Conners. Kevin Haefner. BACK ROW: Paul Hardenburger, Mark Lorenz, Ben Schrader, Robert Green, Scott Korte 207 Discover voi V ed Center Continued from page 207 of anatomy and physiology. Hartke said anatomy and physiology was the veterinarian students ' building block to other courses and curriculum. Classes in anatomy were set up so the students could use it in other courses down the line, he said. It (ultrasound) is here to show them how to use ultrasound in anatomy, Hartke said. According to him, the ultrasound device at K-State was the only one in the United States that was used in the first year of teaching. Hartke said ultrasound was a new phase at the Vet Med Center, since it only received the device in August 1987. During its first year, it was not an integral part of course work for students. I come here on Saturday morn- ings and whoever shows up, I work with them, Hartke said. It is a true participation, hands-on lab, he said. Plus, it didn ' t hurt the animal at all. DIAGNOSTIC Originally set up as a service the diagnostic laboratory in the Vet Med Center also provided for teaching and research. Our function is to provide to referral veterinarians and animal owners in determining causes of illnesses and death in animals, said Mahlon Vorhies, head of the and director of the veterinary diagnostic laboratory. Through this function, we teach students about pathology and methods of laboratory diagnosis. A diagnostic rotation experience was designed to improve the students ' abilities to recognize and interpret clinical signs. Seniors and graduate students worked in the lab in two- to three-week rotations through the lab. This allowed the students exposure to individual pathologists responsible for the lab on different days, thereby gaining insight through each pathologist ' s Vorhies said. Students assisted in performing necropsies, a form of postmortem examination on animals. Vorhies said the lab handled about 18,000 requests for assistance a year. This, he said, 208 generated about 200,000 different procedures. After making the initial Vorhies said the next step was to make recommendations to who sent in the request. We make recommendations as to how to treat other animals or animals they may deal with in the future, he said. The third thing we do is assist the veterinarian in recognizing diseases himself by confirming a diagnosis with him, Vorhies said. Continued on page 210 Getting hands-on experience, veterinary students work on a dog specimen in the necropsy lab of the Veterinary Medicine Center. (Photo by Gary Lytle) Groups of students dissect animals in the necropsy lab, which has an extensive system of tracks attached to the ceiling so large animal specimens can be positioned and dissected. (Photo by Gary Lytle) By dissecting in the necropsy lab, students get a better of the causes of illness and death in animals. (Photo by Gary Lytle) Soccer Club FRONT ROW: Jason Calloway, Patrick Bonnefil, Jeff Graef, Ed Bennett, John Nelson. SECOND ROW: Craig Dorroh, David Nicodemus, Bob Healy, Darin Pritchett, Michael K. Russell. John Szyhowski. BACK ROW: Ali Fattaey, Scott Zimmerman, Harold Rathburn, Jeff Suchan, David Weitz. FRONT ROW: Becky Lloyd, Kawanis Scott Jackie Counts. BACK ROW: Judy Wagner, Jill Dauner, Donna Gier, Tamra Hagman. FRONT ROW: Stan Elsea, Anne O ' Connell, David Parks, Jamie Reiserer. Todd Tibbetts, Deb Hasenkamp, Sandy Bettencourt, Lisa Anderson. Stacy Myles, Lorraine King. ROW: Charlene Hess, Angela Brockway, Eric Crowell. John O ' Brien, Bart Regier, Craig Dubois, Ronda Lamond, Brian Hoisington, Thad Baldock, LeAnn Lundeen, Rob Tanner. BACK ROW: Sylvia Blake, Jennifer Sinclair, Greg Winkler, Fran Mayfield. David Thiessen, Dirk Lehmann, Greg Zabel. David Erdman. Walter Wright. Society for the Advancement of Management FRONT ROW: Molly Clifford, Lois Starr, Julie Graber. Leanne Guyette, Carla Blain, Karen Marihugh, Cathy Provost, Angela Ahlstedt. Sara Weixelman, Dena Guyette, Daniel Hemmen, Robert Broughton, Jeffrey Mills. SECOND ROW: Angela McAtee, Stephanie Frank, Robin Feeney, Linda Hutchins, John Miller, Mary Jo Lampe, Scott Ryan, Lisa Opitz, Sharon Engel, Melanie Schurle, Jeree Marmie. BACK ROW: Tim Yount, Teffani Muirhead, Gary Heathman, Scott Rhoades, Kent Peterson, William Roy, Kenneth Burris, Dan Kolterman, Rodney Vogt, Lynwood McLean. advancement management FRONT ROW: Kristen Buchanan, Rhonda Robin Graef, Stephen Uko, Diane Muir, Nancy Blaser, Jeanna Kohl, Tamala Sherman, Sheila Hasselman, Marsha Hoard. SECOND ROW: Chris Patterson. Michelle Hattrup, Robin Haney, Mitzi Bruno, Charles Bruno, Ron Gieber, Todd Kennedy, Olivia Desnousse. BACK ROW: Chris Forrer, Stephen Brummer. Paul Jeff Haverkamp, Robert Stuteville, Rick Siebert, Robin Day, Perry Johnson. 209 Veterinary Medicine FRONT ROW: Becky Lucas, Lori Siegrist, Fulkerson. Laura Renfro, Deron Johnson, Alison Neely, Susan Staggenborg, Jeff Bielser. BACK ROW: Jim Dietz, Brett Hacker, Gloria Freeland, Brad Camp, Chad Sanborn, Judy Lundstrom, Dave Adams, Brad Fanshier, Greg Vogel. Society of Hispanic Professional Engineers FRONT ROW: Claudia Maldonado, Arleen Baiges. Gerardo Cosme, Lourdes Taladriz. SECOND ROW: Wanda Lopez. Glorimar Gonzales, Hernan Tocuyo. BACK ROW: Uzziel Pecina, Jose Castro, Diego Estrada, Marvin Polaneo, Juan Guerra. society of engineers FRONT ROW: Alvin Willems, Lara Montulli. Kothandaraman Rajendran, P. Madhusudhan, Carl Wilson. SECOND ROW: Arleen Baiges. Laura Cranmer, Jose Castro, Wanda Lopez. BACK ROW: Walter Gatsche, Nagarajan Santhanakrishnan, Matthew Wilson, Lisa Anderson. FRONT ROW: Renee Sharon Frank. Teresa Dao, Teresa Huneycutt. Kathleen Whlte, Lea Caffrey. Hermann Donnert. SECOND ROW: Rebecca Fulk, Vera White, Heather Boss, Beth Shoup. Amy Pennington. Kimberly Billones, Lorelei Page. BACK ROW: Renee Arnoldy, Eirene Tatham, Marcia Pieschl, Jill Risley, Karen Poindexter, Raelyn Clark. Wendy Sallee, Julie Boyrs. society of Women Engineers FRONT ROW: Cheryl Bettenbrock, Andrea Canelos, Nancy Berry, Laura Berry, Mary Lynne Dearasaugh. Hermann Donnert. SECOND ROW: Cindy Brosa, Carol Tracy, Becky Brown, Janet Berry, Carrie Davies, Kathy Linenberger. BACK ROW: Monica Hickert, Francie McKee, Susan Smith. Carol Deweese, Lori Vanderlinden, Filza Hassan. Paula Downey. Continued from page 209 FIRST YEAR The first-year courses for veterinary students dealt with the normal and structure of animals to form the basis for their remaining A student was exposed to four major courses in their first semester. According to Russell Frey, head of the Department of Anatomy and Physiology, these courses included gross anatomy, microscopic anatomy, veterinary physiology and animal nutrition and diet formulation. In gross anatomy, Frey said a dog was used as a model animal. Students dissect cadavers to learn the structures in the model animal. This study was expanded in the microscopic anatomy course. This course introduced students to looking at not trial tissues and organ systems via the microscope. To study the abnormal animal, a student must understand the normal animal first, Frey said. The second semester for students expanded on the first semester classes, plus added a class that wasn ' t of a typical chemical nature. It was a course in ethics and jurisprudence. This deals with the ethics and legal aspects a professional veterinarian must deal with in the practice of veterinary medicine, Frey said. He also said this was this first year the course was being taught. The attrition rate for first-year students was not high at all, Frey said. The only person that is going to take ' them out is themselves, he said. My goal is to keep them here. SECOND YEAR The second year for veterinary was a transition year, according to William Moore, head of the Department of Laboratory Medicine. Students found the instruction and thought process was reversed during their spring semester. Although most learning still took place in a classroom, the method in which class material was presented was reversed. Previously, students learned about diseases and what agents created these diseases in the animals. Then it 210 Veterinary Medicine Discovei ed Cente switched, and students had to the causes of illnesses in animals, instead of just learning about the diseases themselves, Moore said. Reversal of the thought process is a difficult transition, Moore said, but it ' s a necessary reversal if they are going to be successful clinicians. THIRD YEAR During the third professional year or the junior year as a veterinary student, students began the transformation from book work to clinical studies. The third year in the veterinary curriculum is the transition from the basic medical sciences to the clinical for students, Gillespie said. Part of this instruction was to help the student become a problem solver. This preparation is largely for their career as a veterinarian, but more immediately, for their year of in the KSU Veterinary Medical Hospital, when they will learn the application of their enlarging clinical skills, Gillespie said. First year veterinary medicine students listen to Russell Frey, professor of anatomy and physiology. (Photo by Gary Lytle) Studying for an exam the next day, first year veterinary medicine students Shawn McCoole, far left, Al Mann, Tim Sobotka and Mike Reilly, far right, go over their notes late at night in Trotter Hall. (Photo by Gary Lytle) 211 Veterinary Medicine From the Kansas State Collegian reviews Hoops, britches and proper mannerisms brought new meaning to staging a for the K-State Players in She Stoops To Conquer, performed April 17-18 and April 22-25 in Nichols Theatre. Set outside London in 1773, the Oliver Goldsmith comedy hinges on a series of mistaken identities, said director Charlotte instructor of speech. The comical production featured language, and costumes from a period when formality was of utmost importance in high society. Returning to this period required certain adjustments for director and cast, she said. The action and movement proved a obstacle to overcome. It ' s very physical, very demanding. There ' s a lot of carrying people off and on each other, said. With five and a hoop, it ' s a little different than when you have jeans on. Movement, as in all had to seem natural. The actors need to make it seem to the audience as if they ' ve always worn these clothes, MacFarland said. We ' ve had to watch our mannerisms, Victor Force, graduate student in theater, said. Gestures are more Constance Neville and Hastings, portrayed by Jennifer Hays and Paul Honigs, make plans to elope, against the wishes of Constance ' s guardian, Mrs. Hardcastle. (Photo by Gary Lytle) genteel. The women need to walk as if they ' re floating and men also kind of glide across the floor. Mary Hale, freshman in journalism and mass communications, said it was a matter of carrying herself in a different way, walking and putting herself in a totally different place in society. There ' s immense femininity, Hale said. The heels and lace are a change from jeans and tennies. All importance is placed on appearance, Paul Craig, junior in theater, said. You have to appear to be at your social standing. You have to at least appear to be rich and proper. MacFarland said the blocking was very important for this show. The staging has to be quite precise if you want the show to look nice. While blocking She Stoops to Conquer, said she had to decide the characters ' stage movements, so they would have room for women to move in th e hoop skirts and for the men to navigate around them. In order to sit down, the men have to fold one leg and sit. It ' s part stylish and part so they wouldn ' t rip their pants, MacFarland said. With costumes arriving only a week before the production opened, the cast did what it could to substitute hoops and jeans for the real dresses and britches. By working in rehearsal costumes, we came as close as we could to the real costuming, MacFarland said. Some of the costumes were designed by Lydia Aseneta, associate professor of speech; others were specially ordered. Because the audience sits much closer to the stage in Nichols Theatre, the had to be authentic, such as real satins, said. The costs for a look of the 18th century were expensive compared with other productions. Stoops to Conquer 212 K-State Players Stephanie Sikes, a member of the Techniques of Makeup class, works on attaching the wig of cast member Jeff Schrag. (Photo by Gary Lytle) Young Matthew Mazur, played by Tom Overmyer, expounds on the topic of women while Hastings and Mr. Hardcastle, portrayed by Paul Honigs and Victor Force, listen. (Photo by Gary Lytle) On the Verge The K-State Players ' A Season to Applaud raised its curtain with the opening of their first play, On the Verge. It was performed Sept. 24-26, Sept. 30 and Oct. 1-3 in Nichols Theatre. On the Verge, written by Eric Overmyer and directed by Kate Anderson, associate professor of speech, was about three Victorian ladies who set out to solve the mysteries of their world. The play was set in the past and took the women across the land and forward into time for a conquest of answers. Within their adventure, they were confronted with the mysteries of Cool Whip, rock ' n ' roll music and Mr. Coffee. One object that continued to appear throughout the women ' s adventure was the evolution of the English language. It is a futurist piece...an up piece. It ' s about how we learn and know about the future through our own sense of osmosis. Another uniqueness about this production was the special sound accompaniment that was added to the play. It allows the audience, like in radio drama, to be able to conceive and imagine whatever they want to, Anderson said. Anderson called the stage the perfect place for the play because it allowed the actors to show the time changes through their performance, environment and sound effects. We see it (traveling in time) in TV and movies a lot, but we don ' t necessarily see it on stage, Anderson said. Anderson called the play a challenge to the actors because of the small stage on which they performed and the re-creation of many scenerios in different time periods they had to port ray. The K-State Players were the first to perform On the Verge at the college level. The play had recently opened off-Broadway and had only been seen in regional theaters. The cast members for On the Verge included Beth Sherby, senior in theater (Alex); Tamara Grothaus, senior in music and theater (Fanny); Shirlyn Henry, sophomore in theater (Mary); and Thomas McLaughlin, graduate in rhetoric (Alphonse, Grover, Yeti, Troll, Mr. Coffee, Madame Nhu, Gus and Nicky). Musicians were Scott Wilber, graduate in speech, and Lara Dillinger, sophomore in special education. Victorian Fanny, played by Tamara Grothaus, examines a New York Times article about President Nixon, without even realizing the article is from another time. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) As they ascend a cliff, Mary, Alex and Fanny, played by Shirlyn Henry, Beth Sherby and Tamara Grothaus, travel distance and time in On the Verge. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) 214 A group of sailors join together to sing Bloody Mary during the production of Rodgers and Hammersteins ' South Pacific. (Photo by Neal Hinkle) Luther Billis, played by Don Pfister, attempts to purchase a boar ' s tooth worn by Bloody Mary, portrayed by Amy Hemphill, during the of South Pacific in McCain Auditorium. (Photo by Brad Camp) An exotic island, romance and glory, combined with racial prejudice and the of war, created the stage for K-State ' s production of South Pacific. The musical, presented by K-State Players, ran Oct. 23 and 24 in McCain Auditorium. A work by Rodgers and South originally opened in 1949. The plot of this Pulitzer Prize- winning musical was taken from the combination of two stories found in James A. Michener ' s Tales of the South Pacific. The musical ' s plot revolved around two love stories: that of Emile De Becque and Nellie Forbush and that of Lt. Joseph Cable and List. Both relationships were plagued with prejudice and underlying statements about moral commitment and racism. South Pacific is a musical dealing with the beauty of dreams and idealism as well as the stupidity of said Charlotte instructor in and director of the musical. T hirty-one K-State were in the cast and 11 community children were in the children ' s chorus. The cast rehearsed Monday through Friday starting the last week of August. Closer to opening night, said, rehearsals could run until midnight. The cast has had to approach the musical with total commitment and sincerity, MacFarland said. They can ' t pull back from their characters. MacFarland said the could appear to a audience as and oversentimental with love being declared quickly and strong emotions being dramatically portrayed by characters. The only way to deal with this problem is to realize that the characters are in the middle of World War II. At the same time, they are isolated in a tropical paradise, MacFarland said. The presence of death enhances all experiences and compresses time, she said. Cast members included Dwight Tolar, sophomore in theater (Emile De Becque); J.C. Harman, senior in theater (Nellie Forbush); Paul Honigs, senior in journalism and mass communications (Lt. Joseph Cable); Amy Hemphill, senior in music (Bloody Mary); and Don Pfister, senior in radio and television (Luther Billis). It ' s a really close cast, Tolar said. There ' s a definite feeling and there are no arguments between the director and the cast. Tolar, who also had the lead in the K-State Players ' musical Oklahoma! in 1986, said he still got about opening night. The first night on McCain ' s stage is a little scary for some people, Tolar said. Wednesday night we started with the set — it reminds you opening is getting closer and closer. South Pacific 215 The search for the real thing in life, love and was an adventure for the K-State Players. They performed The Real Thing Nov. 12-14 in Nichols Theatre. Written by Tom Stoppard and directed by Lewis associate professor of speech, The Real Thing was a witty play about love and marriage. In this British comedy, two characters, Henry and Annie, fell in love. Played by Mark Cross, junior in and Megan Garner, senior in theater, the characters went through the analyzing their emotions and commitment. Henry is an intelligent playwrite, Cross said. He speaks as well as he writes. Henry also likes to stick to co mmitments, he said. had an affair during his marriage, but he made a commitment to the girl he ' s in love with, not his wife. So he divorced his wife and Henry, Max and Charlotte, played by Mark Cross, Thayne Emrich and Jennifer Hays, act out a scene of The Real Thing. (Photo by Gary Lytle). the girl. This is a play that we kept finding more complex, Shelton said. It is not just a comedy of manners. There ' s a lot of passion too. Other cast members included Thayne Emrich, junior the theater (Max); Jennifer Hays, junior in (Charlotte); Donald Olsen, senior in theater Carrie Clark, freshman in theater (Debbie); and Scott Kelly, graduate in speech (Brodie). Annie and her lover Billy, played by Megan Garner and Donald Olsen, find a passionate moment during the production of The Real Thing. (Photo by Gary Lytle) The Real Thing 216 K-State Players Gillian ' s husband, David, and her daughter, Rachel, played by Dwight Tolar and Ellen Sinclair, act out the happy conclusion of the drama production To Gillian, On Her 37th Birthday. (Photo by Gary Lytle) On Her 37th It was a little spot of in the middle of a blizzard. It was the K-State Players presentation of To Gillian on Her 37th Birthday, which was Feb. 11-13 and 17-20 at Nichols Theatre. Set during the hot months, the show focused on the life of David, a college professor who was learning to cope with the death of his wife, Gillian. His friends and gathered at his Long Island beach house to help him cope during the day that not only marked her 37th birthday, but also the second anniversay of her accidental death. This is not a depressing play. It ' s not about death; it ' s really about life. It ' s about the affection that may get lost between people, but then resurfaces, and to come out and make it worthwhile, said Kate Anderson, associate of theater and director of the play. One of the interesting features of To Gillian was the audience ' s position in to the stage. The construction of Nichols Theatre, which normally places the audience on three sides, allowed for another section of seats to be arranged on the fourth side. Thus, the audience totally surrounded the stage. Cast members included Ellen Sinclair, junior in pre- medicine (Rachel); Nancy Marie Zenger, junior in speech (Cindy); Dwight Tolar, sophomore in applied music (David); Beth Sherby, senior in theater (Kevin); Donald Olsen, senior in theater (Paul); Deborah Pierce, graduate in speech (Esther); and Tamara Grothaus, sophomore in music (Gillian). Paul, played by Donald Olsen, tries to make a point during a conversation with Kevin, portrayed by Beth Sherby, who has just finishe d (Photo by Gary Lytle) 217 K-State Players Speech Unlimited FRONT ROW: Lara Dillinger, Sharon Fields, Rochelle Araiza, Andrew Racker. Jill Turner. Michelle Macha, Suzanne Auten. BACK ROW: Jay Eakins, Laura Pelletier. Tom McLaughlin, Jason Brown. Terry Smith. Susan Clarkson. Sophomore Honorary FRONT ROW: Shawna Balch, Heidi Reiling Susan Unrein, Marian Petersen, Melissa Blumel, Terry Ohlde. SECOND ROW: Kate Perkins, Mike Valentine, Mark Harms. Jim Weast. Jessica Tajchman, Lauren O ' Connor, Kent Johnson. BACK ROW: Scott Cashman, David Whetstone, Kyle Vanover. Jeff Fox, Michael Hesser, Bradley Barth, Eddie Olmstead. Sophomore Honorary FRONT ROW: Kimberly Johnson, Lisa Downing, Karin Bangle, Kim Schwartz, Tammy Savaiano. SECOND ROW: Kelley Reid, Susan Spangler, Stephanie Frey Kathy Linenberger, Kristi McCune. Randall Daws, Becky Svaty. BACK ROW: Heather Moss Anne Krauss. Ron Galle. Clay Patterson. Susan Smith, Mitch Stephen Kiefer. the basement of McCain looking students were turning into horrible monsters, ferocious animals and aging rapidly. The room where all this took place was not a misplaced science It was the makeup room where Lydia Aseneta, associate professor of speech, taught the Techniques of Makeup class. Even though the grease paint makeup used in the class felt like it would never come off, the that took place in the class were not permanent. Students in the class quickly learned that the grease paint makeup used in theater was different from makeup. Theater makeup was much heavier than normal because the lighting on stage was so different than regular lights, Aseneta said. Another noticeable difference was when it was time for the makeup to come off. Class member George LeRoux, senior in humanities, said that after removing the bulk of the makeup with cold creme, I go home, get in the shower and scrub like mad. Engineering Honorary FRONT ROW: Mike Reed. Ron Hirsch, Amy Noeth, Shari Eck, Heather Bass. Jeff Scott Korte. BACK ROW: Jess Gehin. Jason Kaufman, Rob Green, Bob Avery. Dave Ott, Chris Hess. FRONT ROW: Leslye Schneider, Kim Moors Kann Bangle, Connie Trentman. Nancy Hill Heidi Baker. SECOND ROW: Jeff Wing, Larson, Molly Kinsey, Kathy Peirce, Jada Allerheiligen, Ed Nickel. THIRD ROW: Douglas Burton. Janet Berry. Sheahon Zenger, Kent Phil Kirk. BACK ROW: Mark Lacy, Rob Regier, Roger McClellan, James Hill, Kent Bradley. 218 Techniques of Makeup The first three sessions were the hardest, Aseneta said, because the students were working on straight makeup that would look as realistic as possible under theater lights. Asentea said there was a certain technique to applying makeup so an actor will look alive and three- dimensional on stage. First the students did makeup appropriate for their age, then to middle age, and finally they used makeup to show a person in their old age. Transforming an 18-year-old to a convincing 100-year-old is very hard, Aseneta said. Lucy Athanasius, junior in political science, said she took the class as an elective because she had always wanted to know how makeup was used Looking more like a cat than a student, Lucy junior in political science, does a final check before having makeup work graded. (Photo by Gary Lytle) Putting the finishing touches on his monster, George LeRoux, senior in humanities, works on Brian Hagemeister, junior in secondary the model for his grotesque makeup project. For the project, students in the class worked in pairs using each other as models for their makeup designs. (Photo by Gary Lytle) to make people look very old. After learning to do realistic makeup, the students in the class got a chance to work on more abstract makeup. Two of the abstract projects the class worked on were animal, where the students transformed themselves into any animal they chose, and grotesque, in which pairs of students turned each other into hideous monsters. Aseneta said the students liked to play around with the abstract makeup and were especially fascinated with the different colors they could use. In addition to doing makeup projects in class, the students also worked on theater productions, assisting and applying makeup to the actors. The first production the students worked with was in McCain Auditorium. In McCain, the actors were a away from the audience so the makeup did not have to be as precise. However, Aseneta added, in Nichols continued on page 220 219 Creatures continued from page 219 or the Purple Masque theaters the actors were much closer to the so the makeup had to look more natural. Another requirement of the of Makeup class was going to the theater productions during the semester. Even though the students had to write critiques of each Aseneta said the students enjoyed going to the plays. For many students, the work required both in and out of class was a change from regular classes. In a way, sometimes they like it (working with the makeup) because it diverts them from studies like math and science, Aseneta said. In addition to teaching the of Makeup class, Aseneta also taught costuming classes. Aseneta who received a master ' s degree in edu- cation in the Philippines — enrolled at K-State in 1965 and began to get involved in the theater program. At that time, Aseneta said, there was no specific person in charge of makeup or costuming so directors would get volunteers from the College of Human Ecology. Aseneta, who said sewing was not new to her considering that almost every household in the Philippines had a sewing machine, found her niche working with costumes and makeup. In 1968, she was offered her job as associate professor with theater makeup and I ' m the original, Aseneta said. Her job was the first of its kind in the theater program. And until three years ago, Aseneta Using a magazine cover as a guide, George LeRoux, senior in humanities, works on his animal makeup project for the Techniques of Makeup class taught by Lydia Aseneta. (Photo by Gary Lytle) 220 Wiping off the last traces of makeup that her into a jungle cat, Lucy Athanasius, junior in political science, prepares to leave the makeup room in the basement of McCain Auditorium. (Photo by Gary Lytle) taught all of the makeup and classes at K-State. The job was stressful, Aseneta said, because you always had to make deadlines or the show would not go on. But even though the job could be stressful and tiring, Aseneta said she enjoyed it. Sometimes you don ' t feel it, said about the stress and hard work, because time goes so fast and you are working with young people. by Gary Lytle The back of a hand makes an easily accessible palate for the grease paint makeup used in the class. (Photo by Gary Lytle) graduates FRONT ROW: Jarvis, Ruth Heflin, Harry Donaghy. BACK ROW: James Cooper, John Morris. Student Body President ' s Council FRONT ROW: Jeff Schrag. Nancy Hill, Kent Bradley, Janelle Larson, Luis Montaner. BACK ROW: Jason Miles, Howard Woodbury. Jack Taylor. Steven Johnson, Jeff Clark, Sudeep Dharan. Student Dietetics Association FRONT ROW: Paragi Nanavati, Becky Correll, Jill Bokelman, Annie Yakshaw. SECOND ROW: Joyce McKinney. Laurie Winklmeier, Sharon Hamm. Andrea Hutchins. BACK ROW: Powell, Julie Brunner, Larry lmmenschuh, Karna Peterson, Chris Wells. FRONT ROW: George Peters. Mandy Miller Ann Daniels, Julie Dunn, Terri Stockwell. BACK ROW: Shea Boothe, Marilyn Legg, Lisa Karen Cooper, Brenda McHenry. FRONT ROW: Doaa Aldo Agisto Passylia, Tarek Mamdouh Monier, Tom Daniels, Tracy, Ray Weisenburger. BACK ROW: Tommy Herrera. Jameel Al-Souqi, Timothy Bickhaus. Jegadeesan Balachandran. 221 the soaring imaginations of Norman J. Doc Fedder and his class of diverse students found an outlet at the Purple Masque Theatre. Together, they explored Theatre for Special Populations. The class was held ever y Tuesday and Thursday at 9:30 a.m., but Tuesdays were special. According to Fedder, this was when mainstreaming in its highest form occurred. K-State were joined by Debbie Engstrom ' s class for the trainably mentally handicapped from Middle School. Role playing and group interaction were the main focuses of Theatre for Special Populations. Class members Members of a group act out a skit while Doc and other groups watc h. (Photo by Steve Rasmussen) During a skit Amy Kells pretends to give Doc Fedder a bite of spaghetti as they portray a restaurant scene. (Photo by Steve Rasmussen) were encouraged to drop their defenses and to add themselves and their experiences to each role. Each day, acting was centered around a main theme. One Tuesday, everyone boarded an imaginary plane to the destination of his or her choice. Excitement perva ded the class, and amid much laughter and talk, were buckled, oxygen were introduced and travel plans were discussed. Finally, before the noise level became excessive, Fedder called out, Bring down the silence! As if on cue, all arms rose high into the air and were gradually lowered along with a collective group sigh. Out of the silence came the voice of 222 Theatre for Special Populations Debra Bettencourt, graduate student in theater, Oh no. We forgot the movie. We ' ll have to entertain ourselves. A short brainstorming session fol- lowed in which a great number of ideas concerning flight destination poured forth. Soon, each idea was into one group game plan. had input, and everyone seemed satisfied. Then, it was show time. Approval radiated from the audience as each group acted its skit. Among much clapping and cheering, portrayed their picture of an ideal plane trip. A large smile of accomplishment brightened the face of Sabrina Manhattan Middle School as her enthusiastic audience encouraged her to, Hula, Sabrina, during her trip to Hawaii. According to Fedder, interaction such as this provided students with valuable social skills and taught them how to get along with all types of people. The class reinforces our own class work at Manhattan Middle School, Engstrom said. It is wonderful of K- State to offer this for us. Not all of the handicapped students involved in Theatre for Special were enrolled at Manhattan Middle School. The ages ranged from 15 to 21. Though K-State students could only enroll for a semester, the TMS students could attend every year. Many of the K-State students enrolled in this class were pursuing careers in sociology, gerontology, humanities and health-related fields. However, some students took the class for the pure enjoyment of it. by Heather Downs Student Sen ate FRONT ROW: Joni Hays. Charlene Nichols, Michelle Benoit, Jana Lessman, Larry Wagner. BACK ROW: Mike Kadel, Eirene Tatham, Jeff Wing, Patrick Muir, Steve Reid, Troy Miller. student Senate FRONT ROW: Justin Sanders, Liesa Becky Griebat, Janet Netherland. Jill Fyfe, Pamela Eitel. Cindy Bronson, Janie Lauer. Jim Akin. SECOND ROW: Fran Royster, Debi Steen, Doug Folk. Mary Jo Lampe, Mary Sobba. Kirk Caraway. Greg Weisenborn. BACK ROW: Tom Denzel. Stu Duncan, Tim Ridder. Scott King, Joe Kennedy, Kent Bradley, Doug Steele, Tony Duncan, Butch Rittmann. SADA Students Against Driving Drunk FRONT ROW: Chris Rexroad. Mari Stevenson, Heidi Baker. SECOND ROW: Michelle Bryan, Dara Dawes. Suzanne Brown. Melissa Blumel. THIRD ROW: Cynthia Riemann, Janie Janese Becker. Chris Viveros. BACK ROW: Wendy Hatten. Shane Walck, Seleise Barrett, Shaun Moore. Tau Alpha Pi National Honor Society for Engineering Technologists FRONT ROW: Richard Siptrott. Gordon Peters, Jeff Broyles, James Nordhus, Fred Hoppe. Tau Beta Pi Engineering Honorary FRONT ROW: Mary Hazell, Ken Bueche, Tom Asay, Dan Horsch, Richard Crabtree, William Mock, James Lebak, Brett McCammon. Karen Rolf. SECOND ROW: Troy Bush, Brit Eastman, Roger Metzler. Michael Brindley. Jeffery Kysar, Rodney White, Tony Branfort, Donald Rathbone. BACK ROW: Chris Vanderbilt. Michael Rottinghaus. Christopher Reedy. Bob Reichenberger, Mark Luetters, Fred Steinbach, Roger lstas. Shawn Schrader, John Bird. 223 Theatre for Special Populations What are you doing over break? Taking a class. You mean over intersession? Kind of. I ' m taking a literary tour of England. For students in interior design, art or English, this class offered stu dents a chance to experience the history of their majors. Students traveled to England to tour major literary sites and visit interesting tourist attractions. Gary Clift, English instructor, said not all of the knowledge gained was academic, but experience. The class was offered by the department, but other sections of the class were designed for students majoring in art and interior design. The trip wasn ' t just for students. Professors of interior design, art and English were in charge of the group and guided students to some of the most important sites. They (art and interior design have their own students, but we all go to mostly the same things. Ours (the English section) is a literary tour, Clift said. So we want to see sights associated with literature, as well as some things just need to see for one reason or another. We go to see the changing of the guard, and there isn ' t any literary Taking a break from the tour, Jessica Peel, freshman in apparel design, leans against a stone wall with one of London ' s cathedrals in the ( Photo courtesy of Celia Lustig) This stone sculpture, the changing of the guard at Buckingham Palace, the Tower of London and Westminster Abbey are some of the many non- literary sights that students see on the tour. (Photo courtesy of Celia Lustig) value in it, Clift said. The tour lasted 15 days. Toward the end of the tour there were three free days during which students could choose to travel to another country, Clift said. While in England, students saw Stratford and all the Shakespearian properties. We go to the Roman Bath and the museum of costumes, he said. In London, we go to a couple of art museums, the Tate and the national gallery The cost of the trip fluctuated due to the overseas exchange rate. The cost varies depending on what the pound is. We ' ve been pretty lucky on airfare the last couple of years, Clift said. Because the trip was a credit class, no fund-raising or financial aid was available. It ' s not a very expensive trip, to have a guided tour with all of your transportation and meals paid for, Clift said. There are also many play tickets included in the cost of the ticket. The students spend forever in the theater, Clift said. by Laura Renfro Tau Beta Pi Engineering Honorary FRONT ROW: Tim Oakleaf, Lisa Bergman, Teresa Huneycutt, Martha Murphy, Lynn Elledge, Trenton Kelsey. SECOND ROW: Sheala Hayter. Rick Kanemasu, Randy Summervill, Stephen Bell, Laura Cranmer, Phillip Thurston, Leonard Obaldo, Kathleen White. THIRD ROW: Mark Fohardt, Cheryl Terry Shepherd. Heather Haahr, Darcie Bailey, Mark Rahija, Doug Enns, Jeffrey BACK ROW: John Braun, Curtis Schultz, Gary Turnquist, Tristan Burton, Bryan Roath, John McIntyre, Kent Oldham. Band Honorary Sorority FRONT ROW: Lynette Hodges, Linda Hettinger, Tawn Potter, Pamela Paulsen. Kristin Kelley, Robyn McCabria, Nikki Haunschild. SECOND ROW: Theresa Guyon. Karyn Gukeisen, Leslie Johnson, Ruth Berges, Sarah Jewett, Tammy Mullens, Angela Miller. BACK ROW: Paula Angela Swanson, Loretta Martin, Jo Byrnes. Billie Gatewood, Julie Ball. Debbie Reusch. tau sigma delta Architecture and Allied Arts FRONT ROW: Ed DeVilbiss, Robert Kennaley, Ana Caguin. Denise Dipiazzo, Stacey Liles. SECOND ROW: Diana Dame, Wai Choong Wong, Carrie Behner, Kevin Lew. BACK ROW: Joel Jacobsen, Lenny Clark, Paul Melgren, Joe Caguin, Ronald Fiegenschuh, Mark Regier. FRONT ROW: Bobbie Flaherty, Lisa Anne Brandsberg, Jack Sills. SECOND ROW: Verlyn Richards, David Compton, Carey Leonard, John Miller. BACK ROW: Doug Gish. Steven Johnson, Rob Hanson, Tim Ridder, Jack Connaughton. FRONT ROW: LaBarbara Wigfall, Kim Thomas. SECOND ROW: Christie Wright, Raymarlyn Barnes. Sheryl Bradford. BACK ROW: Martin Grizzell, Monique Scroggins, Greta Spears, David Weyerts. 225 Trip to Europe FRONT ROW: Eva Chatterjee, Lisa Kratz. Chris Clark. BACK ROW: Tony Branfort, Lynn Taylor, Rick Roberts. 226 New Zealand Exchange FRONT ROW: Syndee Southerland, Michelle Hirschler, Amy Tumpes. Kristi Stueckrath, Dawn Piper, Marilyn Woodward. BACK ROW: Traci Walker, Greg Martin. Kendall McMinimy, Stephanie Weldon. UPC Eclectic Entertainment FRONT ROW: Richard Oventon, Lydee Hawkins, Monte Stull. SECOND ROW: Lisa Perry, Linda Mooney, Bambi Omeara, Lisa Kratz. BACK ROW: Brad Mitchell, Aaron Krebs, Blaine Savage, Patrick Berry. UPC Executive entertainment Committee FRONT ROW: Lydee Hawkins, Kathi David Stewart, Mike Ribble, Kristen Sylvia Scott, Marilyn Woodward. BACK ROW: Eva Chatterjee, Amy Tumpes, Mickael Penner, John Miller, Michael Webb, Cathy Gareis. Lisa Kratz. FRONT ROW: Marilyn Woodward, Kristi Hogan. Andrea Hutchins, Chris Dunitz. Mike Ribble, David Grant, Tish Gilpin, Tammy Schuckman, Tammy Wewers. BACK ROW: Tammy Savaiano, David Lunsford, Brian Hickman, Mike Legleiter. Vince Huser. Dale Huey, Jody Isch. Exchange places Education was not limited just to the classroom. For Karna Peterson, junior in dietetics, and Helen McGlone, graduate in foods and nutrition, education was not limited to their home countries either. McGlone and Peterson were both selected to participate in a scholarship exchange program. The College of Human Ecology at K- State, Iowa State University and the Helen McGlone, graduate student in foods and nutrition, sits at her desk in Justin Hall where she is continuing her education at K-State this year. (Photo by Jennifer Quist) University of Otago School of Home Science in New Zealand gave students the chance to attend college abroad through an international exchange program. A K-State undergraduate studies at the University of Otago, and every other year, an Otago graduate attends graduate school at K-State. In the alternate years, an Iowa State student attends the New Zealand school, and an Otago graduate attends Iowa State. I knew Boyd Holk who went to New Zealand through the program earlier, Peterson said. After hearing about his experience, when I saw the poster advertising the scholarship program, I decided to appl y. McGlone, who is from Wellington, New Zealand, said she definitely experienced culture shock when she came to America. Her definition of culture shock was when you have the same picture, but everything is just a little out of line. I was disoriented, she said. It seemed that I couldn ' t even communicate, even though I spoke English. When Peterson settled into her dorm at Otago, she said she felt right at home. The people are so friendly in New Zealand, Peterson said. I felt welcome immediately. McGlone and Peterson believe that, even though the programs were both the Otago and K-State programs were good. Both programs have their McGlone said. At Otago, there are two three hour exams given at the end of the year that count for most of your grade. That gives you a lot of time to prepare for the exams. Grades were also looked at She found most students were not as career driven as American students, and grades were not all that important. To them, a C is just fine, Peterson said. In America, more of the students shoot for the A ' s. Peterson planned on returning to New Zealand someday to bicycle from north to south. As for McGlone, she enjoyed her stay which lasted until May 1988, and would like to return someday when finances allow her. by Carol Knorr Karna Peterson, junior in dietetics, was selected to participate in a scholarship exchange program with the University of Otago School of Home Science last year. (Photo by Jennifer Quist) 227 FRONT ROW: Ann Iseman, Jerome Wasinger Adam Hawley. Shelby Shanks, Kristen Christy Meyer, Marilyn Woodward. BACK ROW: Jennifer Prather. Theodore Orth, David Watson, David Pittman, Deborah Dinges. Andrea Smading. Change Affects Gutierrez FRONT ROW: Mike McClellan, Sarah Kobs, Angie Sieffert, Sietske Saunders, David Diego Estrada. BACK ROW: Ed Bennett. Ted Wald. Mike Penner. Carol Tiemeyer. Mike Adams. Jim Phalen. FRONT ROW: Heather Moss, Susan Smith Marianne Siebert. Sylvia Scott. BACK ROW: Jennifer Jarmel, Randy Traylor, Barbara Sell, Cathy Gareis, Kevin Walter. FRONT ROW: Michael Penner, Shannon Stacy Myles, Michael Webb, Robin Hanson. BACK ROW: Doug Heller, Ron Malek, Patrick Duegaw. FRONT ROW: Stephanie Mills, Lois Starr, Kathi Robertson. BACK ROW: Teffani Muirhead Chris Forrer, Jim Gregory, Mike Penner. Nicaraguan Wilfredo Gutierrez thought being inside the American culture and knowing the American reality was one of the main advantages of studying in the United States. Gutierrez, graduate student in sociology from Nicaragua, came to Manhattan in August 1987. He said he wanted to come to the United States to experience a different culture. Gutierrez said being inside North American culture was good because he could get to know the people, their attitudes and their reality. So far, the people of Manhattan have been very friendly and very willing to help me with any problems, he said. Gutierrez attended La Universidad Central Americana before coming to K- State. He said the main difference between universities in the United States and universities in Central America was that the universities here are more oriented toward science. Here, in the United States, science is more rigorous. There is a spirit of investigation, he said. Gutierrez said that Nicaragua has a different situation economically and socially than the United States. This was the reason that universities in Central America were more ideological than scientific, he said. The university is the critical 228 Wilfredo Gutierrez of the society, he said, adding that this was true of universities here, as well. He said before his country ' s in 1979, many of the students in the universities had a principal role in forming the movement of the revolution. They have advanced more in socio- political and economic terms since the revolution, he said. They ' re very committed to the problems of the country. Gutierrez said he thought the students in Nicaragua were similar to students here, but there were a few differences. Students here were very serious, studied in different places around campus and went to class, Gutierrez said. In Nicaragua the students also but in a less formal manner, he said. They studied in their houses, but the majority didn ' t go to the library like they do here, he said. After he receives his master ' s degree in sociology, Gutierrez plans to return to Nicaragua, where his wife and children live. by Stacey Schumacher Nicaraguan Wilfredo Gutierrez, graduate in sociology, holds his 2% -year-old son Isaacs. Gutierrez ' s family still lives in Nicaragua but occasionally visits the United States. came to Manhattan in August 1987 wanting to experience a different culture. (Photo by Jim Dietz) Nassif bridges Language Barrier Some students disliked having instructors from foreign countries, but if they wanted to make the class good, it could be an experience they may never forget, said Fatima Nassif, graduate student in sociology and instructor of Introduction to Sociology. She said she believed the language barrier to be somewhat of a problem, but when it came to communicating with her students, she had no problem at all. A language reflects a culture. Different words have different meanings attached to them, but I can make myself understood, Nassif said. Nassif, from Morocco, said her native tongue was Arabic, with a Moroccan dialect. During the first class meeting, explained herself to the class to make everyone comfortable. I know I make some mistakes, but I will write on the board, draw a picture or whatever it takes to make them understand me. Nassif said she received comments everyday on how much students enjoyed the class. If they want to have fun, they have to make that happen Trying to teach in a second language causes difficulties for Fatima Nassif, graduate student and instructor of sociology. Nassif, originally from Morocco, used illustrations to help overcome the language barrier. (Photo by Pat Pruitt) with me. Nassif taught high school in before comi ng to the United States. Teaching in the United States is different from teaching in Morocco. Help outside the classroom for the students is not encouraged or approved of, but I did it. I often met the families of my students, but the could be felt, she said. Teachers kept more distance between and the students in Morocco, but as Morocco industrialized, it became more progressive, Nassif said. 230 Fatima Nassif FRONT HOW: Matthew Tran, Hoang Nguyen, Thanh Pham, Teresa Dao, Tung Ly. Phong Le, Phat Vo. SECOND ROW: Khiem Dao, Viet Dinh, Xuan Can, Thu-van Van, Huong Nguyen, Nhuan Nguyen. THIRD ROW: Robert Ngoyen, Tin Truong. Quynh Pham. Hoai Pham, Richard BACK ROW: Anh Doan, Huong Pham, Sy Nguyen. Nhan Tran, Huan Pham. west Hall governing Board FRONT ROW: Kelly Provow, Rachel Mani, Sheri Anderson, Heather Porter. SECOND ROW: Karen Sauer, Linda Carolyn Keeney, Karla Adler, Alechia Cade. BACK ROW: Dawn Wilson, Anita Wunder, Kathleen Kitchen, Shelby Shanks, Wendy Masters. wheat State Club FRONT ROW: Gerry Posler. George Rieck, Mark Davied. Richard Vanderlip. SECOND ROW: Paul Stamy, Royalee Rhoads, Patrick Splichal Jeffrey Naysmith, Patrick Henke. THIRD ROW: Brett Sowers. John Havlin. Doug Triplett. Stephen Hendrickson. Todd Schwarz. BACK ROW: Karen Sauer, Susan Hettenbach. Randall Davis. Gaylene Corley, Lora Kilgore, Kathleen Sauer. Williston geology Club FRONT ROW: Ann Hinterleitner, John Douglas Ekart. BACK ROW: Clay Dyer, Graham Smith, Grant Smith, Mlke Goydas FRONT ROW: Roberto Minvehe. Hoover Francisco Illingworth, Herbert Herman. Carlos Galdamez, Rene Suazo. SECOND ROW: Mario Daccarett. Claudia Garcia, Maria Letelier, Oscar Coello, Pablo Alvarez, David Cardenas, Jorge Estrada. Rafael Fiallos. BACK ROW: Flavio Martinez, Sharom Echeverria. Abel Gernat, Manuel Zavala, Nicolas Henao, Carlos Eguez. She enjoyed the relationship with the students here, she said. Relationships revolve around mutual respect. It makes you feel closer to each other. Nassif lacked only her dissertation for her doctoral degree in sociology. After she finishes her dissertation, she will return to teach in Morocco. The customs were different than in the United States, but she wanted to go back. Originally I was going to college in France because I knew the language. Nassif applied for a scholarship and waited. During the wait she realized she wanted something different than the same education system I was used to, she said. When the opportunity to go to America came, I took it because I knew nothing about the country, Nassif said, adding, Morocco has many differences. Nassif was from rural Morocco where education, particularly for women, was not automatic. Though her father was illiterate, he believed it was important for his children to get an education. So they moved to Casa Blanca and eventually to Rabat, the capital of Morocco. This was a big move considering my father was a farmer by profession. My father is traditional yet has a mind. My father has one wife but most of my uncles have more than one. was practiced in Morocco, she said. The normal age for marriage was 16 to 18, and women had few options, she said. Women don ' t normally get their baccalaureate, (high school diploma) let alone go on to college, Nassif said. We are very fortunate. by Deb Couture Fatima Nassif 231 Collegiate Chorale FRONT ROW: Jim Byerly, Lydia Chang, Pat Hackenberg, Angela Holman. Robert Shari Griffith. Brad Piroutek, Tina Brauer, Jeff Sawyer. Rhonda Wilson, Mark Melton, Jennifer Longley, Dennis Upshaw, Kimberly Holde Shawn Sommers. SECOND ROW: Lisa Darcy Stephenson, John Crawford, McMinnville, Steven Glover, Malinda Rob Fann, Amy Kichhaefer, Craig Dorroh, VIcki Train, Scott Thirkell, Jill Skelton, Craig Tracey Lawrence, Johnny Gaffney. BACK ROW: Shannon Jackson, Jason Carlson, Jonathan Walls, Susan Thomson, Brian Ruby, Katrina Custer, Carlita Pederson, Brad Reissig, HeidI Kruckenberg, Irving Lester, Jodi Maherman, Stacy Hunt, Paul Brooks. Angie Adkins, Becky Pickens. FRONT ROW: Scott Fears, Patty Russel. Bryon Dudrey, Sara Shutler, Lentz Upshaw, Dawn Fountain, Paol Sale, Leslie Ott, Jean Phelps, Mike Stewart, Carrie Wilkens, Steve Hilger. SECOND ROW: Mike Smith, Janell Wilmot, John Sommers. Susan Bixby, Lee Browning, Kim Pearson, Tony Black, Kristi Mitchell. Todd Alstatt, Char Hoppe, Cathy Bennet, Neal Allsup, Ginger Martin THIRD ROW: Mark Kahler, Amy Elder, Gary Stark, Karen Height, Bruce Hoyle. Andrea Lauber, Ron Hopkins, Carrie Palmer, Kent Moore, Katrina West, Kent Bohling, Aleisha Bailey, Ed Raines, Michele Pease. MIchael Toedman, Jodie Buechner. BACK ROW: Pascal, Bryan Reiners, Michelle Alexander, Chris Schnittker, Carmen Benniga, Shawn Foltz, Laura Wallingford, Dwight Tolar, Amy Hemphill, Kevin Hochman, Nancy HIll, Jason Weil, Kim Voth, Robert Clasen, Kim Parker. FRONT ROW: Adrian Bryttan. SECOND ROW: Xiao Ding Yu, Jean Krause, Libby Feyerharm, Shelley Manges, James Hawkins. John Nugent, Denise Circle, Karl Puljak. THIRD ROW: Lyndal Nyberg, Graham Dorian, Grace Robinson, Vicki Train, Barbara Dubrovin, Sara Boberg, Kathy Lamberson, Tim Paris, Kristin Fensholt, Eldon Smith, Shawna Maechtlen, Carolee Wall, Buller. FOURTH ROW: Bill Hetrick, Brenda Gutierrez. Brock Dale, Diana Bollman, Chris Turner, Shawna Stieg, Cornell Kinderknecht, Kayla Hagman, Cindy Riemann, Julie Zheng Le, Melissa Hemphill, Kyle Murdock. FIFTH ROW: Mary Stewart, Sharon Pettijohn, Sheri Robinson, Cornelia Ebrecht, JanIce Scott Sands, Clinton Riley. Leon Slater, Kathy Wogan. Mark Melton, Kevin Howe, Kiger, Amy Brooks. BACK ROW: Janell Thome, David Roth. K-State Singers FRONT ROW: Stan Cowan, Lori Ingmire, Jeff Wilson. Sherri Simmons, Kevin Mott. SECOND ROW: Doug Wetzel, Amy McAnarny. Mike Franklin, Michele Lunsway. Les Lankhorst, Ruth Flynn, Dave Harris. BACK ROW: Tim Stark, Kristi Kruckenberg. Kenney Johnson, Debi Steen, Jay Nachtigal. K-state Choir K-State Orchestra singers 232 Isaac Wakabayashi Relieved at the count of the last crunch sit-up during the warmup of Judo 1, Isaac Wakabayashi, instructor in electrical and computer engineering, will next have the class review brake falls. (Photo by Jeff Weatherly) Sport Of Fascinates Professor Isaac Wakabayashi first watched a judo demonstration as a grade He was fascinated by what he saw. In the years that followed, fascination with judo continued, leading him to learn the sport. Judo I students practice Uke-mi (brake falls) as Isaac Wakabayashi, instructor, emphasizes the importance of not tensing up, but rather relaxing to reduce the chance of injury. (Photo by Jeff Weatherly) He taught two classes, Judo I and Judo II, in which a step-by-step was used to teach the sport. This form of teaching was used to avoid injuries, he said. I learned not to push judo beyond what the students are capable of because one lapse of concentration can cause them to get hurt, Wakabayashi said. Wakabayashi said he received a personal satisfaction when he taught, especially when students start up some of the things you teach. I learned more than judo. I learned other applications, like dedication and concentration, that will also benefit my ment al fitness, Sandy Skelton, sophomore in education, said. Wakabayashi was a fourth-degree black belt. Degrees of belts were obtained in ways. In the earlier ranks, if one continued on page 234 233 Isaac Wakabayashi judo continued from page 233 was effective in competition, these ranks were obtained. When the black belt rank was achieved, then one must demonstrate the prearranged forms in judo, called kata, that were present in all of the martial arts, he said. Being a black belt allowed to present these forms to people who might not have believed judo worked. Unless students are thrown, they don ' t believe that these techniques work, such as some of the foot sweeps, he said. They think it ' s fake and when ' they get thrown several times on foot sweeps, it makes a believer out of them. Wakabayashi dispelled notions that judo and other martial arts could be quickly learned to provide self-defense. Martial arts come out and say that you ' ll be the king of the third floor dorm or you can lick anybody. It ' s not so, and it takes years for it to be on your side during dangerous situations, he said. Wende Wingert, junior in marketing, said she took Judo I because I thought it was going to be a self-defense class, but I soon figured out that judo was structured as a competitive sport. Wingert said she figured her class contained 65 percent women because they also perceived judo as a means of self-defense. I didn ' t realize that you couldn ' t sufficiently defend yourself until you ' ve had several years of training in judo, she said. Wingert believed that the women had a definite advantage in the class because strength was not the only element. Knowledge and technique come into play more for women. Because women can shift their hips and are more limber, they make up for the difference in strength. Wakabayshi said judo had become an enjoyable sport for h im in two ways. After seeing that first judo demonstration, I still have that certain for judo, Wakabayashi said. The other is that when you watch or work against a master, it ' s another experience to see the form that can be done with the human body. He believed that his occupation helped him with the sport. Judo is mechanics, you might say, applied mechanics. Being an engineer, we (engineers) are all applied mechanics to a certain degree, Wakabayashi said. by Greg Vogel and Judi Walter Women ' s Glee Club FRONT ROW: Miki Thompson. Cheri Hamon, Lynn Bridwell, Kristi Panzer, Karen Mullen. Janeen Santee. Ann Doocy, Catherine Elwood, Brenda Kittle, Stephanie Deatrick, Michelle Hoover. SECOND ROW: Debra Huyett, Pamala Mayo. Michelle Alford. Suzanne Brown. Stephanie Kroeker. Sandy Nicholson. Christine White. Michelle Guzzo, Carrie Ashcraft. Tina Morrow. THIRD ROW: Valerie Steffen, Mary Miller, Brenda Mentgen, Christie Wright. Gidget Kontz, Reese, Amy Kramer. Tammy Eberhart. Gerald Polich. BACK ROW: Susan Sandercox. Shauna L. Betschart. Susan Tracy. Nancy Deckert, Dorothy Zogg, Sonya Blank Rhonda Jarrett, Angie Hoerner, Mary Suchsland. Beth Schultz. Men ' s Glee Club FRONT ROW: Mike Nolting. Max Cooper, Jensen, Matt Haefner, Shaun Culley, Molly Kinsey. Michelle Braker. SECOND ROW: Ward Brethour, Deland Woods. Mark Dalton. Randy Short, Rod Driscoll, Evan Kenney. THIRD ROW: Randy Birtell, Richard Bartlett, Kirk Johnson, Mark Baird. Scott King, Karl Good, Kevin Weishaar. FOURTH ROW: Jeff Morris, Craig Robinson, Mike Chisam, Scott Ewing, Steve Morey, Roy Loepp FIFTH ROW: Tim Ridder, Ray Swearingen. Bryce Bellinder. Dennis Claussen, Matt Davis, Scott Schultz, Bill Hetrick. SIXTH ROW: Ted Whitson. Nels Anderson, Eric Stenzel. Kent Letourneau, Steve Read, Martin Guthrie, Chris Forrer. Vince Berry. SEVENTH ROW: Douglas Annis. Nathan Lee, Eric Tom Hemmer, Davld Johnson. Ira Rundell. Mike Tolbert, Barrie Murphy. Todd Crenshaw, Darrin Mott. Chris Velasquez. BACK ROW: Gerald Polich, Tim Johnson, Don Baker, Trent Houlden, Wes Gibson, Thomas Annis, Garrett Schmidt. 234 Isaac Wakabayashi Kenney Aron, junior in electrical engineering, acts as the Uke (receiver of the technique) while Ike demonstrates the Tori ' s (technique executers) part with a basic throw, 0-Goshi (major hip throw). To execute the throw correctly, the Tori must disbalance the Uke, keep chest to chest contact and bend at the waist while throwing in order to create maximum efficiency with minimum effort. (Photo by Jeff Weatherly) Embroidered into the Gi (Judo uniform) is the traditional Japanese symbols for Wakabayashi, translating to Young Forrest. The belt signifies the level of training the individual has. Ike is currently a fourth grade black belt in Judo. (Photo by Jeff Weatherly) 235 Isaac Wakabayashi 236 Sports Division Ahearn Field House Basketball Baseball Track Tennis Crew Kansas State University guard, Mitch Richmond, goes up for a basket over Oklahoma ' s Harvey Grant, 25, and Stacey King, 33. The Wildcats beat the Sooners, 69-62. (Photo by Greg Vogel) 237 Sports Division Players are unable to capture a win. They look to the future with anticipation. It ' s safe to say when the 1987 season opened for K-State, Stan Parrish wasn ' t expecting to be winless at season ' s end. The second-year head coach had several key starters returning from his first team, which finished 2-9, and had a hot shot new quarterback who could put the air back into the Air Parrish offensive attack. The schedule also appeared to work in K-State ' s favor, as the Wildcats played three non-conference games against foes they had a legitimate shot to beat, and had a second straight home meeting with archrival University of Kansas. When all was said and done, the record was 0-10-1, and was left shaking his head, for answers and trying to figure out what went wrong. I ' m obviously disappointed in our number of wins and losses, Parrish said at season ' s end. I thought it was important we got off well in the non- conference schedule, and obviously we didn ' t. It was tough to get anything done after that. From the conclusion of the 1986 season until Sept. 5, 1987, Parrish pointed to one game and one game only – the 1987 season opener in KSU Stadium against Austin Peay State. From that early September day on, however, Parrish and his troops were left recovering from what happened in that opening game. With just seconds remaining in the contest and K-State apparently in University of Kansas tailback Arnold Snell gains a first down before being stopped by linebacker Lorne Whittle during the K-State-KU game in KSU Stadium. (Photo by Jim Dietz) command and ready to open the with a win, Austin Peay receiver Rico Ransom pulled down a long touchdown pass over the Wildcat defensive secondary, and Austin Peay had captured a stunning 26-22 victory. Ransom ' s late heroics the efforts of the hot shot quarterback spoken of earlier, Gary Swim, who came off the bench in the second half and threw three touchdown to wide receiver John Williams to rally the Wildcats from a halftime deficit. We put all of our eggs in one basket entering the game, then came out flat and got burned for it, he said. After that, we just never really could get it together. After a one-week layoff to regroup, the Wildcats took the field again at KSU Stadium to face Army and heralded wishbone quarterback Tory Crawford. Crawford and his backfield mates ran over, around and through the K- State defense as Army rolled to an easy 41-14 win. After the loss to Army, with a big game at Iowa coming up, I just tried to stress to our guys that we had to go up there and play with pride and see what happens, Parrish said. I told them if we could make it a 15- to 30-minute continued on page 240 238 football Wildcat quarterback Gary Swim tries to recover a fumble before a Tulsa player can get to it. (Photo by John Thelander) Head Coach Stan Parrish thanks senior running back Tony Jordan for the effort he showed his football career at K-State. Jordan closed his career with 1,593 yards, which ranks him third in K-State history. (Photo by Greg Vogel) Football 239 continued from page 238 game we ' d be successful. Parrish ' s troops did just that against the Hawkeyes, staying in the game until the fourth quarter. The 38-13 score may have looked bad in the papers, but Parrish was pleased with the way his team grew up in front of 67,000 fans in Iowa City, Iowa. With renewed confidence and yet another chance to grab that elusive first win in front of them, the Wildcats returned to KSU Stadium to face Tulsa. It took a two-minute period of self- destruction at the end of the first half, however, to turn K-State ' s hopes for a win into yet another week of disappointment. Tulsa ' s 37-25 win left K-State 0-4 in non-conference action. Parrish had hoped his team might be as good as 3-1 entering Big Eight Conference play, but it just wasn ' t to be. If I made any mistakes prior to the year, it was in setting our goals too high, expecting unrealistic things from our team, he said. We obviously weren ' t as good as I thought, and injuries hurt us a great deal. One of the players nagged by injuries all year long was Tony Jordan, who put together his best performance of the year in K-State ' s 34-10 loss at Missouri in the Big Eight opener. Jordan would go on to rush for 692 yards on the year in 10 games, but his efforts against Missouri weren ' t enough to keep the Wildcats from to 0-5 on the year. Things didn ' t get any better for the Wildcats following the loss to Missouri. The reason? The next three opponents on the schedule. Oklahoma, Nebraska and State, who ended the regular ranked No. 1, No. 5, and No. 12 in the nation respectively, were the next three Wildcat foes. Oklahoma rained on K-State ' s Homecoming parade by handing the Wildcats a 59-10 defeat in KSU Stadium. A trip to Big Red country, Nebraska, was next for K-State. The Wildcats weren ' t faced with the driving snow storm they had been a year earlier in Lincoln, but the Cornhusker team they faced was just as tough. Nebraska had far too many guns for the Wildcats and downed K-State 56-3 in front of 76,106 fans in Memorial Stadium. With two teams in a row having scored 50 points or more against it, K- State went to Stillwater, Okla., looking Senior linebacker David Wallace is consoled by senior defensive back Brad Lambert after he was injured in the game against Tulsa. Wallace suffered a knee injury and was out for the remainder of the season. (Photo by Greg Vogel) to hold the Cowboys in check. They left having yielded 56 more points in a 56-7 defeat that had Parrish dumbfounded. Parrish hoped, though, that his team, now 0-8, would be ready as archrival Kansas, 1-7, came to KSU Stadium fora renewal of the state ' s biggest rivalry. Both teams left the stadium disappointed, however. A 17-17 sister kissing left both teams in a state of shock. Mark Porter attempted to win the game for K-State on the game ' s final play, but his field goal attempt was blocked. The Governor ' s Cup stayed continued on page 243 Football 240 An Austin Peay ball carrier goes down with linebacker David Wallace hanging on. (Photo by Brett Hacker) Defensive backs Randy Koch and Emmett Bradford chase down a Tulsa ball carrier in KSU Stadium. (Photo by Steve Rasmussen) Football 241 Coach Stan Parrish and a referee hold back Matt Wallerstedt after he got in a fight with an Oklahoma State player. (Photo by Steve Rasmussen) Football 242 team continued from page 240 at K-State because the Wildcats had won in 1986, not because they had in 1987. The cup doesn ' t change hands until one team wins it away from the other, but that was small solace for the K- State players. With an 0-8-1 record, K-State attempted to pick itself up from the turf once more. The Wildcats went to Ames, Iowa, for a contest against Iowa State knowing the game could provide them with their final shot at a win in 1987. Erick Harper, defensive back, celebrates after scoring a touchdown from a 64-yard return on an interception of a University of Kansas pass. (Photo by John Thelander) K-State tailback Tony Jordan dives over the Oklahoma State University defensive line to gain a first down. (Photo by Steve Rasmussen) Jeff Shudak connected on a field goal late in the game, however, and Iowa State escaped with a 16-14 win. K-State was now 0-9-1, and the for all intents and purposes, was over. I tried to get our kids up one more time, Parrish said after the 41-0 home loss to Colorado that ended the season, but the task was just too tough. The shellacking that the Buffaloes handed K-State was a tough way to end a tough year. Bright spots, however, were a second-team all-conference pick, Jordan, tight end Kent Dean and defensive back Erick Harper, all honorable mention conference picks. The biggest bright spot, however was that tomorrow was another day, and next year another season, Parrish said. This one ' s behind us, and the future ' s bright, he said. After a like this, it can go nowhere but up. by David Svoboda KSU OPP Austin Peay State 22 - 26 Army 14 - 41 Iowa 13 - 38 Tulsa 25 - 37 Missouri 10 - 34 Oklahoma 10 - 59 Nebraska 3-56 Oklahoma State 7-56 Kansas 17 - 17 Iowa State 14 - 16 Colorado 0 - 41 243 Football With the way Tony Jordan ' s season started, he should have had an that the 1987 football campaign was going to be a difficult one. When Jordan started out last for K-State from his hometown of Rochester, N.Y. — a 1,300-mile trip that normally takes 24-25 hours his car broke down three times and he arrived for the start of football practices 3 days later. Not a good start for the 6-foot-3, 220-pound tailback who Coach Stan Parrish was counting on heavily to carry the Wildcats to success in 1987. Parrish even somewhat grounded his prized Air Parrish passing attack to accommodate Jordan, who rushed for a record 218 yards against Iowa State during the 1986 season. But a persistent ankle injury and the lack of size on the offensive line took its toll on Jordan. He finished the season with 692 yards in 10 games and closed out his Wildcat career with 1,593 yards — No. 3 behind Issac Jackson (2,182) and Cornelius Davis (1,873). Jordan ' s best performance of the season came against the University of Kansas when he rushed 32 times for 147 yards. For the season, he averaged 69.2 yards per game and his longest run from scrimmage was 31 yards against the University of Oklahoma. I ' m not one to make excuses, but I played hurt most of the season. My performance still bothered me, though. There were times when I felt that I wasn ' t carrying my share of the load, Jordan said. On the 0-10-1 campaign, Jordan said, We worked hard all year long and to come up winless really hurts. It was really hard to walk on campus Wildcat tailback Tony Jordan carries the bal down field during K-State ' s game against Missouri. (Photo by Gary Lytle) and hear people say they couldn ' t wait for basketball season to roll around. The ball just didn ' t bounce our way. Coaches from around the Big Eight Conference were still impressed with Jordan, despite his less-than- spectacular numbers. The guy that kind of catches your eye is Tony Jordan. He ' s the biggest back we faced in the Big Eight this year and probably one of the best, Nebraska coach Tom Osborne said. Disappointed in Jordan? Shoot, no. If you guys don ' t want him, we ' ll sure take him up here, said Iowa State coach Jim Criner after Jordan ' s 58-yard effort against the Cyclones. He was hurt most of the season, Parrish said. It ' s difficult when you go from Saturday to Saturday and don ' t practice much in between. It ' s tough to excel. Still, I ' m proud of the way he played, and gave us everything he could. When Jordan wasn ' t toting the ball, he was K-State ' s fourth-leading receiver behind wide receiver John Williams and tight ends Kent Dean and Dan Hughes. As for the future, Jordan will try to work his way into the professional ranks through tryouts and walk-on camps hosted by NFL squads, and he will keep hanging in there. That ' s not hanging in there as in maybe his football career was almost over; it ' s hanging in there waiting for some - good luck and breaks to come his way. by Tom Morris Tony Jordan has been invited to a workout showcasing the top 300 college football players in the nation. (Photo by Brad Fanshier) JORDAN IS 244 Tony Jordan tony jordan 246 Any way you slice it, the history of college football in Manhattan has been less than bright. 1987 marked the 101st year that a college football team had played in Manhattan, and whether the team was the Aggies, the Farmers or the Wildcats, the results have been much too familiar. Only 25 winning seasons had come K-State ' s way in that time period. The Wildcats were looking for their 300th all-time victory in 1987. They ' re still looking. They failed to win a single game, thus keeping their all-time victory total at 299. It was the eighth time K- State had failed to notch a victory in a season. The last time was 21 years ago, in 1966, when the ' Cats 0-9-1. Oddly enough, their one tie came against the University of Kansas, just as it did in 1987. Wildcat football history wasn ' t all bad though. In 1905, after nine years of losing football, Mike Ahearn K-State players Jim Oehm and Lorne Whittle pull down Iowa State running back Joe Henderson the Wildcat game in Ames. (Photo by Brad Camp) took the helm as the head coach and promptly led the Aggies to six consecutive winning seasons, before Guy Lowman took his place in 1911. Ahearn ' s six seasons and no losing seasons was a record unprecedented by any other coach in K-State history. Z.G. Clevenger was the second head coach to post more winning than losing seasons in ' Cat history. He took over the team in 1916 and led the ' Cats to three straight winning seasons before posting a 3-5 record in 1919, his last as the Wildcats ' coach. Only one other coach was able to do what Ahearn and Clevenger did for Wildcat football. Chas Bachman replaced Clevenger in 1920, and in his eight seasons as coach, the team had five winning seasons. Sixteen coaches have since tried to have winning careers, and all failed. Few other bright spots had come the Wildcats ' way. In 1982, the Wildcats made their first bowl appearance, traveling to Shreveport, La., to play the University of Wisconsin in the Independence Bowl. The team, under the direction of head coach Jim Dickey, lost the game 14-3. In season openers, the Wildcats boasted an even 20-20 record since 1948, this being a much better record than their 5-32-2 record in Homecoming games for that same time period. Of the Wildcats ' 101 opponents, the ' Cats have been able to notch winning records against 40 of those schools. Four of the schools which K-State posted a winning record against were high schools including: Junction City, Clyde and Chapman. K-State ' s archrival, the University of Kansas, was another story. The ' Cats overall record against the Jayhawks was 24-56-4. K- State played KU for the first time in 1902 and gained its first victory against the in 1906, under Ahearn, head coach at the time. Before the 1906 victory over KU, K-State lost the previous four meetings between the two schools by a combined score of 4-119, scoring points only in the 1904 contest, which they lost 41-4. K-State ' s last victory against the Jayhawks came in 1986 when the ' Cats romped past the Jayhawks by the score of 29-12. All in all, K-State had suffered much through its long football history, but the high points left Wildcat fans with undying hope. There was always next year in Purple Pride Country. Since the high points were few and far between, it only made them sweeter, and the ' Cat fans of 1988 were hungry to start satisfying that sweet tooth. by garyn hoffman Though success has been fleeting, the K-State football players begin every year chasing a dream. 247 Football Robert J. Lipson has been described as one-of-a-kind, loyal, friendly, enthusiastic — even Though he didn ' t claim to be K-State ' s No. 1 sports fan, one would have been hard-pressed to find a more supportive booster. He shunned using his car unless there was a K-State road game or, less importantly, an emergency. Otherwise, he bicycled to his various destinations. Describing himself as a general laborer — whatever (work) I can find — Lipson couldn ' t really afford to travel as often as he did, but the game at Columbia, Mo., marked the 50th consecutive Big Eight Conference road football game he had attended. When Oklahoma came to town, it marked the 100th straight conference game Lipson had witnessed. Lipson, 37, was in constant contact with K-State players, coaches and athletic department officials, whether it be at practices or at games. He said he used this influential leverage to inspire the Wildcats to prevent the disaster he called losing. I am no different than anyone else who goes to a home game, Lipson said. But I do believe that even to be a sports fan, or whatever you do, you ' ve got to do it to the fullest or don ' t do it at all. He wasn ' t married, but as those closest to Lipson agreed, this was fortunate in that the current love of his life was Wildcat athletics. His loyalty is as absolute as connected with the University, football coach Stan Parrish said. In Robert ' s eyes, we have a chance to win every game we play. Robert is one-of-a-kind K-State booster, said Athletic Director Larry Travis. He ' s going to be there come rain, sleet, snow — whatever because he loves Kansas State athletics. I wish we had a lot more people with his perception of what needs to be done. Robert is probably the most loyal, never-say-die fan I ' ve been acquainted with, said former coach Jack Hartman. Lipson ' s string of road games began in 1973 when K-State lost 25-18 to the University of Kansas in Lawrence. His streak was jeopardized in 1975 when, while hitchhiking to a game in Boulder, Colo., the car he was riding in broke down in Denver. Lipson Robert Lipson anxiously watches the game against Missouri, in Columbia, with K-State ' s mascot, Willie the Wildcat. (Photo by Brett Hacker) managed to catch the second half of the game. Parrish rewarded Lipson on his 50th road trip by allowing him to ride to Missouri with the team. Since Lipson began his attendance streak, there was one obvious Why would a person go to such extremes to catch K-State football when the Wildcats have a combined 43-115 record during that time span? First, I wanted to see what the other seven Big Eight Conference campuses looked like. Second of all, I consider it mandatory attendance, Lipson said. Parrish said Lipson ' s enthusiasm did have an inspirational effect on his squad — even when it was in an place such as the University of Oklahoma in Norman. We were coming down the runway to go onto the field, and there were all Oklahoma people around. (Lipson ' s) yelling at the Oklahoma people: is gonna kick (OU football coach Barry) Switzer ' s ass. ' He gives his all for K-State, Parrish said. Lipson came to Manhattan in the fall of 1972, attracted by K-State ' s Division of Biology. He attended school through the fall of 1974, then took some time off for precious relief from the torment of studying. Twenty-six semesters later and 10 credits shy of a degree, Lipson was still around. This place had the best fans in the world and had what I wanted Lipson said. `The fans here are the greatest. I don ' t give a damn what anybody says. As for the future, how long Lipson would stay in Manhattan depended on when K-State ' s athletic program paid its debt to Lipson. Paying that debt began with the free ride to Columbia, but that was only the tip of the iceberg, Lipson said. ' These people owe me something for all these years and all I ' ve put into it, he said. The players owe me something by giving me 100 percent consistency. The players have to take into how we feel. When K-State ' s teams lost, they hurt people like Robert Lipson, who desperately wanted to win. by Tom Morris ON MAKES LIPSON UNIQUE 248 Robert Lipson 249 Robert Lipson Robert Lipson displays his tickets from his 50 straight Big Eight road games. (Photo by Brett Hacker) While listening to the ' Cats and watching action on the field, Robert Lipson cheers on K-State during the Missouri game. To celebrate Lipson ' s 50th consecutive Big Eight Conference game, he was allowed to ride with the football team to Columbia. (Photo by Brett Hacker) At K-State, attacks, kills, blocks and digs all added up to one thing: competitive volleyball. The Wildcats played aggressively this year, 17-11 overall and 5-7 in conference play. K- State captured fourth place in the Big Eight, bouncing back from last year ' s record of 12-17 and 2-8. Coach Scott Nelson had nothing but praise for his team ' s improvement. I think it was a positive step for our program, he said. Last year we were so young, we took a lot of lumps in learning. The majority of this year we played well toward our strengths. Our serving was tough, we had good defense and a much-improved offense. K-State downed the of Missouri-Kansas City in its season opener, 15-0,15-1,15-1. The team went on to win its next six out of seven games, defeating Drake University and Oral Roberts University. A minor setback occurred at the Colorado State Invitational when the ' Cats evened their record at 3-3, after three disappointing losses to Purdue and nationally ranked Arizona and The Purdue and losses were the only non conference losses suffered by K-State this season. The team bounced back after a win against Michigan State. At the Oral Roberts Tournament, it took the ' Cats only 11 games to sweep through the competition, as they defeated Oral Roberts, and Northeast Louisiana universities. K-State lost their Big Eight season opener at Iowa State, 13-15, 11-15, 15-17. A crowd of 1,650 watched the Wildcats battle it out against rival of Kansas. K-State prevailed in a grueling five- game win over the Jayhawks. Other victories came against Colorado, The Wichita State University and again at Kansas. The Wildcats won their second tournament the weekend of the Wichita State Invitational. Tulsa, WSU and UMKC all fell short against K-State, as the team took first place. Three straight losses to Nebraska, Missouri and Oklahoma rounded out the regular season. A Big Eight was not in the stars for Wildcat volleyball players Shawnee Call and Mary Kinsey dive for a ball during a game against Michigan State University in Ahearn Field House. (Photo by Greg Vogel) K-State this year, as it lost in the first round of the post-season tournament to Kansas. Several players excelled individually, including team captain Kristi Jacquart. Jacquart set a new career record for service aces. Her total of 167 surpassed the old record of 128 set by Renee Whitney, 1982-1985. Jacquart also set service ace individual season, three-game and continued on page 253 Wildcat volleyball player Tami Tibbetts scores against Oral Roberts University by spiking the ball. (Photo by Neal Hinkle) 250 Volleyball 251 Volleyball 252 KSu OPP Missouri-KC 3 - 0 Drake 3 - 0 Oral Roberts 3 - 1 Arizona 0 - 3 Colorado State 0 - 3 Purdue 2 - 3 Michigan State 3 - 1 Oral Roberts 3 - 1 Tulsa 3 - 1 Northeast Louisiana 3 - 0 Iowa State 0 - 3 Drake 3 - 1 Kansas 3 - 2 Wichita State 3 - 0 Colorado 3 - 0 Nebraska 0 - 3 Colorado 3 - 1 Iowa State 1 - 3 Kansas 3 - 1 Missouri 3 - 1 Oklahoma 0 - 3 Wichita State 3 - 1 Tulsa 3 - 0 Missouri-KC (forfeit) won Nebraska 1 - 3 Missouri 2 - 3 Oklahoma 0 - 3 Kansas 2 - 3 continued from page 250 four-game match records. She held four of the five school records for service aces. Shawnee Call, junior in animal sciences and set three individual records. She held the record for most kills, attacks and K-State volleyball players jump in joy after winning the second game of their match against No. 6-ranked University of Nebraska. (Photo by Andy Nelson) Kristi Jacquart spikes a ball during a game against the University of Kansas in Ahearn Field House. The Wildcats were victorious winning three of the five matches. (Photo by Greg Vogel) digs in a five-game match. The 1987 team set or tied 25 different records. Nelson called the the mark of a maturing team. After the season, the team handed out awards to three players. Call was voted the team ' s most outstanding player. Val Kastens, junior in pre-veterinary medicine, received the coach ' s award. It was given to the player who demonstrated academic, athletic and leadership ability. Kastens also received an honorable mention to the Lee Jeans All-Big Eight Academic Team for academic excellence. The most improved award went to Linda Harshbarger. One highlight of her season included being named to the all- tournament team at the Wichita State Invitational. Nelson will have 10 returning for the 1988 season, and he is looking forward to it. We ' ll have older setters running our offense, he said. That will enable us to step up our intensity. We ' ll work on expanding our team ' s strengths and improving our blocking. by Karen Allen Kelley Carlson, right, and Shawnee Can make a block during the Lady Cats victorious game over Oral Roberts University. (Photo by Neal Hinkle) 53 Volleyball For every athlete, it seemed there was a journey involved in getting to the top. For Mary Kinsey, that journey was a perilous one. Kinsey, junior in elementary and outside hitter for K-State ' s volleyball team, began her journey as a teen-ager at a volleyball camp in Indiana — where she first met K-State volleyball coach Scott Nelson. Kinsey, who hailed from Mt. Vernon, Ind., said meeting Nelson was her first step becoming a Wildcat. Every summer (Coach Nelson) would work camps and when I was a little kid, I would go to those camps. I just kept going for about five summers in a row and that ' s how we met. Then he started recruiting me, and he just really knows what he ' s talking about, Kinsey said. K-State was not Kinsey ' s only opportunity for a volleyball scholarship, though. She was recruited by the University of Indiana, the of Missouri and, in Kinsey ' s words, A lot of little schools in but I didn ' t want to go to a little school. So Kinsey followed Nelson, who had been a volleyball standout at Ball State in Muncie, Ind., to K-State. who also played for the U.S. National Team from 1977-78, finally got a chance to coach this girl he had seen grow up. Things went great for Kinsey at K- State. In 1984, she was fifth in the Big Eight Conference in kills per game. In 1985, she ranked third in the conference in kills, fifth in serving aces and seventh in digs. She was named Most Valuable Player of the KSU tournament in 1985, as the won the tourney for the first time since 1977. In the same year, she Wildcat volleyball team member Mary Kinsey spikes a ball during the team ' s 3-0 win over Wichita State University. Kinsey returned this season after suffering a stress fracture in her left foot. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) received Coach Nelson ' s award for athletics, academics and leadership. Suddenly, however, she was forced to take a detour on her hopeful to the top at K-State. In the ' Cats ' 1986 season-opening victory, Kinsey suffered a stress fracture in her left foot that would keep her off the floor for all but two of K-State ' s matches that season. Her junior season, then, would be 1987. And Kinsey said she struggled to get back into the swing of things, in that she barely had a chance to play the previous fall. It was just really hard for me to get back into everything and to get back into the flow of the game. I was pretty inconsistent, whereas the first two years I played I was pretty consistent and didn ' t worry about things as much, Kinsey said. It was just because I had been out of (volleyball) for so long. Kinsey, although not pleased with her performance in ' 87, did manage to set a few K-State records. She set a K- State record by collecting 26 digs in a three-game match against Northeast Louisiana University, and she tied the four-game match record in digs with 40 against Drake University. Despite her individual disappointments, Kinsey was glad to have one more year of eligibility left as a Wildcat. After two consecutive season- ending losses to the University of in the Big Eight tournament, she said K-State volleyball was ready to emerge as a power in the conference. Next year, I just think we ' ll be so much better. We had a lot of returning letter winners this year, but we didn ' t have a lot of experienced players returning. Next year we ' re going to have just that much more experience, and we ' re just going to be really, really tough. by Jeff Rapp Mary Kinsey has accumulated an impressive set of statistics as an outside hitter for the Wildcats. (Photo by Jennifer Quist) IT TAKES MORE THAN TALENT Kinsey 254 255 Mary Kinsey Despite redshirting five runners and losing another of its top runners, the men ' s cross country team placed fourth in both the NCAA District V Meet and the Big Eight Conference championships. Coach John Capriotti adopted a redshirting because the team had a lot of young runners and it would give them another year to develop. I thought this year was just going to be a total patch job as far as getting up decent guys to make us respectable, and then the people I ran just did a fantastic job, Capriotti said. There were no seniors on the team this year, only two juniors, two sophomores and three freshmen. The team tied for fourth with the University of at the Big Eight championships. After the conference meet, the team went to the district meet, finished fourth again and missed qualifying for the national meet by only 20 points. The top runner on the team, sophomore David Warders, came down with mononucleosis three weeks before the district meet. If he hadn ' t gotten sick, they would have made it to nationals, Capriotti said. When he (Warders) got mono I thought, ' Oh boy, now we ' re really in trouble, he said. But this team quit. After we lost David I thought we would be seventh or eighth, but every time we had adversity, they broke through. I was really surprised. As the year went on, I just shook my head. They just kept doing a good job. Capriotti ' s goal at the beginning of the year was to be competitive with the team he had. He said if they could be competitive the redshirts, they would be really good next year. Capriotti said he was happy wit h fourth place at the conference meet, but didn ' t want it to stop there. He thought K-State could win the Big Eight and consistently compete on the national level. Next year I ' ll only have one senior, so I ' ve got the program where I want it now. by Jeff Stead Iowa State Invitational 1st Sooner Invitational 2nd Mid-America Open 2nd Big Eight Championships 4th NCAA District V 4th In the first half of the men ' s race at the Sooner Invitational Cross Country meet, K-State runners Rob Hayes, David Keller and Phil Byrne keep pace with their competition. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) A shot from the starter ' s gun signals the start of the Sooner Invitational. The K-State men ' s cross country team finished second at the race. (Photo by Gary Lytle) 256 Men ' s Cross Country A demanding training regimen, selective redshirting, extensive in-state recruiting, and intensive involvement by the coaching staff were the cornerstones in Coach John Capriotti ' s four-year plan to bring winning ways to the K-State men ' s cross country team. Capriotti, head track and cross country coach, said he had early season expectations of finishing in the sixth, seventh, or eighth spot in the Big Eight Conference. Capriotti ' s highest expectations were met. The men ' s team had a superb day at the Big Eight Championships, Capriotti said. With five redshirts, and one of our best runners (David Warders) out sick, the team did just super. I left the Big Eight meet with one thought on my mind, ' We shall return, ' and with bigger and better things, Capriotti said. He said he made a conscious decision to forego placing higher in the Big Eight Conference this year, to ensure K-State ' s over the next years, by redshirting five talented runners. We will have to suffer sometime, and we may as well get it over with now, he said. Redshirted team included Jon Jonsson, Kevin Lashley, Pat Hessini, Todd Eggers and Matt Vavala. Some coaches are to post on a board what they want accomplished during practice, Capriotti said. I am not one of those type of coaches. I believe in personal involvement. When the guys show up for practice, they know the next 2 hours are mine, he said. Capriotti ' s training was based on running both in the morning and the afternoon, and weight training three times a week. Al l of our runners will be returning next year, and with the addition to the team of the currently red- shirted guys, I anticipate we will be in the top three in the Big Eight, and ranked in the top 20 nationally. Next year we will train harder because the team members will be a year and more experienced. Phil Byrne and David Warders both agreed with Capriotti ' s assessment. We will be tough next year, Warders said. We will have so much talent on the team, I think we will be nationally ranked. Byrne, who placed eighth in the Iowa State seventh in the Sooner Invitational and 12th in the Big Eight Championships, cited Capriotti ' s dedication and caring as the catalysts for the team ' s success. Coach Capriotti ' s focus is on helping us to grow and learn as a team, Byrne said. The budget dictated that recruiting efforts be within Kansas, but whatever was necessary for recruiting would be done, Capriotti said. Recruiting primarily in the state of Kansas is more than a matter of economics; it is also the manifestation of an objective to that you can win in the Big Eight and on the level with Kansas runners, Capriotti said. When team members were close to their homes, they tended to adapt better to the situation, Capriotti said. It takes four to five years to build a solid program, Capriotti said. We have a long way to go to where we want to be, but all the signs point to bigger and better things to come. Cross country redshirts are, from top center, going clockwise, David Warders, Matt Vavala, Todd Eggers, Kevin Lashley and Pat Hessini. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) by horner Capriotti makes future plans to rebuild the men ' s cross country program through hard training, extensive recruiting, and high coach involvement. 258 Mens ' 4-Year Plan Women The women ' s cross team turned what Coach John Capriotti expected to be a rebuilding year into its fourth straight trip to the NCAA Championships, where the ' Cats finished 16th in the country. (When) I think (back to) where this team started, (finishing 16th) was a heck of an accomplishment because I didn ' t think we would go anywhere, Capriotti said. I don ' t think anyone expected us to make it to the nationals this year. When I look at that part of it, I think we had a very successful year. Capriotti didn ' t set his goals too high at the of the season because he had a group of young runners and a transfer student. We went through the year and placed first or in most of our meets we ran. We placed third in the Big Eight Conference and the girls ran better and Capriotti said. Capriotti was Iowa State Invitational 2nd Sooner Invitational 1st Mid-America Open 1st Big Eight Championships 3rd NCAA District V 2nd NCAA Championships 16th disappointed at the conference meet because he thought they had a shot to win it. But looking back on it, he believed that third was a good effort. It also concerned him because the NCAA District meet was only two weeks away. In order to go to the NCAAs this year you had to be in the top two. I thought our chances of getting back to the nationals for the fourth straight year would be real slim, Capriotti said. The team went into the district meet with a positive attitude and followed Capriotti ' s philosophy of, If you don ' t think you can, you won ' t. If you do think you can, at least you ' ve got a shot. They beat Nebraska by four points at the district meet in Columbia, Mo., to qualify for the national championships. The girls did a great job. They ran hard and competed real well, and they qualified for the national meet for the fourth straight year, Capriotti said. We did a better job than I thought we would with all of the young girls. We only had two veterans. When Laura Haggarty turned out to be our No. 1 girl, I had no idea it would happen, Capriotti said. Haggarty transferred to K-State last year and had to sit out last season. She missed the squad ' s final regular season meet with a sore Achilles ' tendon. But she came back to finish fourth in the district meet. My goal for this year was to compete on a national level and I think we did that. I think we have asserted ourselves as one of the top programs in the country, certainly one of the top 10 or 15, Capriotti said. by Jeff Stead Laura Haggerty keeps in step with a cross country runner from State University at the Big Eight Conference championships in Okla. (Photo by Gary Lytle) Marge Eddy shares her plaque for finishing fourth with Tammy Van Laeys, who finished 16th, after the Sooner Invitational Cross Country meet. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) 260 Women ' s Cross-Country Anne Stadler came to K- State without the expectation of being a standout in track and cross country, but it happened anyway. Coming in from high school, I expected it to be very difficult. I didn ' t come in with any expectations of being good right away, Stadl er said. But consistent finishes in top places soon made Stadler an important part of the team. She was named All-American three times in track and an Academic All- American twice. Even though her performances continued to be strong, she attributed her early to beginner ' s luck. I didn ' t know what I was getting into, but I was pretty successful for a freshman. In fact, some of my best Anne Stadler ' s career in K-State track and cross country has been a long and successful one, including three-time All-American status. (Photo by Brad Fanshier) times I ran when I was a freshman. Sometimes, I think you ' re better off when you don ' t know what you ' re getting into, Stadler said. Stadler looked at other schools before coming to K- State and was close to attending the University of Kansas, but said she never regretted her de cision to come to Manhattan. She said the friendliness of the athletes and coaches at K- State were the main reason for her decision, and that held true throughout her stay here. Besides her athletic accomplishments, Stadler said the most rewarding part of being on the team has been the people she met and the close friendships she made. Stadler said of her running career, the most memorable events would surely be the Big Eight and National meets. As with any good athlete, Stadler made sacrifices in social areas to for time spent studying and at practice. But she said the pressure actually made her more efficient with her time. At times, Stadler said she regretted not having time to do other things, but a good performance at a meet could turn things around. Stadler ' s hard work has paid off with eight trips to the NCAA Nationals — three times in cross country, three times in outdoor track and twice in indoor track. After being redshirted in cross country in 1986, Stadler came back in 1987 to have her most successful season. She finished third at the Sooner Invitational, fourth at the Mid-American Open and 17th at the Big Eight Championships. She crossed the finish line at the women ' s cross country Nationals in 1987 with an 89th-place finish. One person who was impressed with Stadler was John Capriotti, track coach, who originally recruited her while he was an assistant coach under Steve Miller. Capriotti was also pleased with Stadler ' s academic performance. She has maintained a 4.0 grade point average throughout her years at K-State. Anne is a great person to work with. You wish all your athletes could be like her. She ' s someone you ' d want your daughter to be like, Capriotti said. by brad fanshier Anne Stadler made a tough decision but thefriendliness coerced her here She has never regretted her decision and great things 263 Charles Tucker, senior in apparel and textile marketing, and Tisha Pope, sophomore in administration, lead the crowd in cheers during a K-State basketball game. (Photo by Jim Dietz) A familiar sight, the K-State varsity cheerleading squad does a formation on the sidelines at a football game at KSU Stadium. (Photo by Gary Lytle) 264 Cheerleaders Leading K-State ' s spirit were a group of hard-working, but often unrecognized, individuals who K-State ' s cheerleading squad. The group included seven men and seven women on the varsity squad, five men and five women on the junior varsity squad and two alternates. We have tryouts every spring, said Scott Johnson, assistant instructor in animal sciences and industry and head cheerleading sponsor. They go through clinics and we teach them different material, such as the fight song, stunts, tumbling, a dance for the girls, and they all have a short interview. Johnson said former cheerleaders, gymnastics instructors, and new and old cheerlea ding sponsors were a few of the people who were recruited to judge the tryouts. There is kind of a judge for each of the different areas, Johnson said. The squad practiced two hours per night, five nights a week, Johnson said. They worked on pyramids, cheers, chants, the fight song routine and tumbling. We may not get to everything every night, but we ' ll hit it all sometime the week, Johnson said. Sherry Cook, junior in psychology and a member of the junior varsity squad, said that the two-hour were a little hard to get used to at first. It takes two hours out of every evening, Cook said. It ' s so hard to get used to not those two hours and having to always schedule around it. Cook said she had learned many new things by being a member of K- State ' s squad, such as learning how to stunt with partners. At first, it ' s kind of scary, and you have to set your mind to it to get the stunt down right, Cook said. You have to have trust with your partner, which takes awhile. But no one on our squad has gotten hurt that bad. There have been a few little but everyone bounces back. Cook said if the varsity did lose a member, then someone would move up from the junior varsity and an alternate would be put on junior Allen Hettich and Brian Ritenour hold up Lisa Folger and Michelle Thaemert in a diamond head formation. It is one of several stunts performed during timeouts at basketball games. (Photo by Jim Dietz) varsity. Megan O ' Hara, junior in business administration and member of the varsity squad, said that she decided to be a K-State cheerleader because she had always been athletic and enjoyed gymnastics, and this was a way to it on. O ' Hara said she gained some really special friendships with the people on the squad. And, she said, even though many people saw her cheering at the K-State games, few people recognized her on campus as a cheerleader. Cook also said that the popularity thing was different in college than in high school. I used to think in high school it was a big popularity aspect, but here I don ' t think it is, Cook said. Nobody really knows (you are a cheerleader), only the people who know you personally know. Cook credited the K-State crowd with helping the squad yell. The crowd gets so involved that they help you yell, even when the team is losing, Cook said. If you didn ' t have this backup, it would be hard. But having it makes it not so bad. Johnson said the squad competed for national recognition in San Diego at Sea World. Every night we work on routines to make our film that we send to see if we can compete in nationals, Johnson said. The film is sent to the judges, who are in Memphis, by Dec. 2. It contains shots of the squad performing a cheer, a chant and a routine to the school song, Johnson said. There is also a crowd participation segment which is a film of the with the crowd, Johnson said. We take this footage all year. Johnson said there were four main goals he wished to accomplish for the squad. I would like to work with the band a lot because we need them. Of course, nationals is a goal to shoot for ' cause that recognition helps you at home, Johnson said. We want to do more recruiting and public relations. Also, how we work with the crowd here is another goal. To get the fans behind the team, whether it ' s football or basketball season, is what it ' s all about. by Jackie Wendt HARD WORK WINS AWARDS 265 Cheerleaders 266 rugby Final loss to KU eliminates chance to attend Western Regional Tournament. V A seven-year tradition came to an end in 1987 for the K-State rugby team ' s collegiate side as the squad failed to qualify for the western for the first time since 1979. K-State rugby club member Scott Hamilton struggles to gain possession of a loose ball duing the club ' s contest against the Kansas City rugby club. The ' Cats were defeated, 17-0. (Photo by Neal Hinkle) K-State ' s Dave Luchtfield tries to escape the grasp of K-State Alumni ' s Cam Collins en route to K-State ' s defeat of the Alumni squad, 32-16. The victory came easily for the rugby team which was ranked 10th nationally last year. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) The opponent for K-State in the match that cost the team its eighth consecutive berth in the Western Territorial Championships was the University of Kansas. The only thing that differentiated this series from the series on the field was K-State ' s recent The K-State collegiate side defeated KU seven consecutive years in the Heart of America match prior to their mid- November meeting in Manhattan. We ' ve held the cup for seven years; set tradition for seven years that KU would not beat K-State, said Gregg Barnes, former team captain and team selector. There were tears on the sidelines when the guys that we wouldn ' t be making the trip (to regionals) after seven years in a row of going. The match with the Jayhawks was a competitive one from start to finish, with KU struggling to a 9-6 win. The match was a bit of a rugby oddity in that all of the scoring in the contest came on penalty kicks. Penalties hurt us. They were the game, Barnes said. We had two breakdowns where we didn ' t handle the ball well. We should ' ve had two tries, but as it was, the whole thing continued on page 268 continued from page 267 was decided by (penalty) kicks. Their backline wasn ' t able to move the ball on us at all. I think we had the superior team on the field, but it wasn ' t reflected on the scoreboard. K-State coach Danny Blea was also pleased with the effort his team in the loss to KU, and credited kicker Paul King of the KU side with a big role in the win. I was pleased with the way we We gave it a good effort all day long, playing with a lot of intensity and a lot of heart, Blea said. Their kicker had a great day, but we lost because of our mistakes. The other two matches held against the Jayhawks — the B side contest and the club match — proved a bit more enjoyable for K-State. In the club match, the Wildcats blanked the Jayhawks, 12-0. In the B- side game K-State routed KU, 14-0, with all the scoring coming on tries and conversion kicks. Bob Crow scored two tries and Shawn Hughes added another for K-State in the club side match. The week prior to the KU contest, the K-State collegiate side lost senior wing forward Dave Todd to a serious ankle injury during a 13-3 win over the Johnson County Rugby Football Club. During the match with Johnson County, K-State rallied from a 3-0 first half deficit to take the match. Barnes got the K-State side rolling against Johnson County with a kick to tie the game at 3. In the second half, K-State turned up the defensive pressure and scored on tries by senior Steve Duncan and junior Kevin Wagner. Barnes converted on one of two extra kicks to round out the scoring. The two weeks that determined whether K-State would defend its Heart of America title did not the make, but to members of the K- State collegiate side, they were all that mattered. Everything that happens prior to that match with KU is really not that important as long as the KU match determines who will go to regionals, Barnes said. This year we just couldn ' t get it done when we needed it. That spoils a pretty good year. by David Svoboda Wildcat rugby player Dave Farris tackles an opponent ball carrier into a sea of other players. (Photo by Neal Hinkle) Capt. Richard Moore, coach of the Royal Artillery Rugby Club in Great Britain, works with the K- State team at practice. (Photo by Brad Fanshier) K-State rugby player, Jack Hand, rests a moment after taking a hard hit during the alumni rugby game. (Photo by Gary Lytle) 268 Rugby When you ' re best, you ' ve got to play with the best. That was the new slogan adopted by the golf team, according to Coach Robert Sedorcek. Holding true to his word, Sedorcek and his men ' s golf team found themselves in a large golf tournament at Northern Illinois where they finished 10th in a 14-team field. Although the men ' s golf team again finished at the bottom in the Big Eight Conference, Sedorcek had reason to be optimistic for the upcoming year. Five freshmen joined Daran Neuschaefer and Jeff Sedorcek, making K-State the youngest team in the conference. The Wildcat golfers won the Nebraska Cup, finishing first in a 10-team field. It (the Nebraska Cup) was against smaller schools, but they were teams at the top of the NAIA, Sedorcek said. Sedorcek said he felt fourth in a field of 26 at the Drake Relays was the biggest confidence builder of the season for the men. It was the first time we had beaten Iowa State in a long time. It showed we could beat teams in our conference, Sedorcek said. It was a growing season for us, John Shields, team member, said. Next spring we will be better as a whole. We did accomplish some things that hadn ' t been done in a long time, said. In the conference championships the men finished only 23 strokes from seventh, which was as close as they had finished to seventh in the 1980s. Sedorcek said he still loses some good recruits to schools such as Arkansas and Arizona State, but he admitted that recruiting has gotten easier since he first took over the coaching job. On the women ' s side, it was much the same story, as the team finished a disappointing seventh in the continued on page 273 Women ' s golf team member Jill Zientara chips onto the green while practicing at the Manhattan Club. (Photo by Gary Lytle) John Shields tees off at Manhattan Country Club while teammate Jeff Sedorcek looks on. (Photo by Gary Lytle) 270 golf 272 Golf Wildcat golfer Todd Fowler tees off in front of the Club House at Manhattan Country Club as Jeff Sedorcek warms up in the background. (Photo by Jim Dietz) continued from page 270 conference. This was Sedorcek ' s season of coaching the women ' s golf team at K- State. The season wasn ' t really as bad as the seventh-place finish indicates, Sedorcek said. We had a good recruiting year for the women. Four freshman were added to the team. We ' re always looking for new recruits, Sedorcek said. On the positive side, the women ' s team captured a Wildcat golfer puts the ball down the fairway as she practices at the Manhattan Country Club. (Photo by Gary Lytle) MEN ' S GOLF PLACED Emporia State 1st Marymount 1st Creighton Inv. 2nd Nebraska Wesleyan Inv. 1st Nebraska Cup 1st Drake Relays Tourn. 4th Midwest Collegiate Championships 4th Big Eight Conference Championships 8th Kansas Jayhawk Inv. (tie) 2nd Oklahoma City University Classic 6th first-place finish at the Southwest Missouri Invitational, finishing ahead of four other teams. Individually, Paige stood out for the women golfers as she shot an score of 83.6 over eight rounds. On April 27, she shot the low score on the team, recording a score of 79. For the men, Jeff Sedorcek and Troy Keller each recorded 70s, Sedorcek doing it twice to record the low scores on the team. In 16 rounds, Sedorcek a score of 76 strokes to take his place as the top on the team. With both the men ' s and women ' s teams being so young, Sedorcek believed the future looked bright for the Wildcat golf teams. WOMEN ' S GOLF PLACED North Texas State In v. 10th Southwest Missouri State Inv. 1st Susie Maxwell Berning Classic 14th Wichita State 2nd Northeast Missouri State 1st Big Eight Conference Championships 7th Golf 273 A positive belief that the men ' s baseball team could win, made a difference in the season ' s record. Belief. It is a word like no other word. In the Thorndike Barnhart Dictionary, belief was listed as having faith and trust in something. For baseball coach Mike Clark and his 1987 Wildcat baseball team, the word belief took on a special meaning. Early in the season, the Wildcat pitching staff struggled. K-State got off to its worst start in the history of the program, going 2-12 on tour. After the break, a healthy pitching staff took the field, and the Wildcats began to show what they were made of. Behind the arms of Zack Kimbell, Mike Hinkle and Marty Darnell, K- State started to believe and started winning games. At the end, our positive attitude had us believing we could win any game against anyone, Clark said. During the last three weeks we knew we were going to win some games. It was a very special feeling. After a weekend series with Oklahoma University, which the Sooners swept, Wildcat outfielder Tony Braddock said, We got swept by those guys, but we made them earn it. The Wildcats posted a 28-24 record and had it not been for five rainouts, that win total might very well have been 33. Of the 24 losses, 20 were to teams who advanced to the College World Series. The last eight games of the season saw K-State go 4-4 against Oral Roberts, Wichita State and Nebraska universities. Even knowing that they were not going to the Big Eight Championships, the Wildcats won four of their last six games, including winning the Nebraska series for the first time since 1974. ' This showed what kind of team we had, Clark said after the series. We could have just folded. We didn ' t have to play ball today. It shows a lot of pride to win. I think the kids should be very proud to win, and I think the kids should be very proud of themselves. In the first game of the Nebraska continued on page 276 Zack Kimbell, fires off a pitch during a Wildcat baseball scrimmage at Frank Myers Field. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) Cloud County Community College ' s first stretches to put out Wildcat catcher Jeff Hulse, not pictured, during K-State ' s first baseball game of the fall season. The Wildcats won the game, 21-1. (Photo by Jeff Stead) 274 Baseball KSU OPP Missouri Western 2 - 0 Friends 2 - 0 Arkansas 1 - 1 Texas Christian Texas 0 - 3 New Orleans 0 - 2 Tulane 0 - 2 Nicholls State 2 - 0 Augustana-South Dakota 2 - 0 Southwest Missouri State 2 - 0 Fort Hays State 2 - 0 Tarkio 2 - 0 Creighton 0 Washburn 1 - 0 Wichita State 0 - 2 Oral Roberts Oklahoma State Oklahoma 0 - 4 Kansas Missouri 1 - 3 Iowa State 2 - 2 Nebraska 3 - 1 A continued from page 274 series, the Cornhuskers made it clear that it was not going to be an easy weekend as they pounded the Wildcats 8-2 behind a three-home run attack. In the second game, the Wildcats found themselves down 2-1 with one out in the bottom of the seventh. Otto Kaifes stepped to the plate and promptly tied the score by blasting a home run. Jeff Turtle batted next and when he planted the ball firmly over the right field fence, the Wildcats had a victory and had evened the series. The third game of the Nebraska series was one that no pitcher seemed to want to win, as both teams ' offenses produced high scores. The °Cats started the scoring and had a 5-3 lead after three innings, but Nebraska scored four runs in the fourth to grab a lead that would not be relinquished until the eighth inning. Down by two runs, 13-15, in the eighth, Hinkle started the inning with a home run to left. After David Chad and Turtle singled, Kaifes drove in the winning runs by doubling to left. Darnell came on in relief and stymied the ' Huskers in the final two innings to give K-State its second win in as many games. K-State wound up its season with an overall mark 28-24 and 9-12 in conference play. by Bill Lang Dan Skala is tagged out by Creighton ' s Ran at home plate after hitting a triple during the second game of a double-header which the ' Cats won, 6-1. (Photo by Brett Hacker) 276 Baseball K-State shortstop Scott Spangenberg reels around after tagging out Rodney Jones of City Kansas Community College as he tried to steal second base. The ' Cats won the game, 10-6. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) A Wildcat baseball team member is tagged out at second base by a Butler County Community player at Frank Myers Field. (Photo by Gary Lytle) 277 Baseball Each day, he was the first player to arrive at the field and he was the last one to leave. Zack Kimbell, pitcher for the Wildcats, was dedicated to baseball and K-State. I want to be the best I can be for Kansas State University, Kimbell said. He is very hard working and keeps you in the ball game, said baseball coach Mike Clark. Last season, Kimbell started off slow, but was probably the second most consistent pitcher, Clark said. In his first season with K- State, Kimbell had what he describes as a decent He posted a 6-3 mark, the most wins on the team. He has the potential to have a really good season, Clark said. This fall, in two evaluations by the coaches and teammates, he was ranked as the top pitcher on the team. The player was ranked by his value to the team. He isn ' t flashy, but he puts you in a position to win, Clark said. He doesn ' t say much. He just goes out there and does his job. Kimbell, senior in agricultural economics from Yates Center, transferred from Labette Community College in Parsons, Kan., last fall. Former coach Gary Vaught offered Kimbell a scholarship to K-State after seeing him pitch for Labette at regionals. I enjoy all outdoor sports: golf, basketball, baseball and football, said. In high school, Kimbell was a three-time letterman and received all-league honors in basketball and football. He began playing T-ball and little league baseball in third grade. His desire to play baseball came from success he experienced when he was young. I have always had with baseball, so it was the sport I picked out to with, he said. During his prep career, Kimbell had 222 strikeouts in 170 innings and a 1.80 ERA in American Legion baseball. At Labette, he put together a 7-6 career slate and struck out 38 batters in 36 innings. You ' re never out of the 11 ball game when he ' s pitching, Clark said. Kimbell ' s biggest fan, his wife Debbie, attended all his home games and as many away games as possible. Kimbell said he got a lo t of support from her. She ' s behind me all the way, Kimbell said. She ' s always told me she didn ' t want to hold me back. Kimbell hoped his baseball career would not end when he graduated. I ' d like to play professional if the opportunity arises at the end of the season. Zack Kimbell has hopes of reaching the major leagues following his career at K-State. (Photo by Steve Rasmussen) Julie key From to collegiate pitcher, Zack Kimbell has gained much in giving 278 being the best team. Zack Kimbell The 1985-86 season was a trying one for a struggling women ' s tennis team. But then it was a program on the rise, with potential for the next season. During the 1987 fall season, one could definitely say the team was on the way up. We ' re a pretty young team, but we ' re the best team we ' ve ever had since I ' ve been here, Sigrid No. 2 player, said. The 1987 fall season saw marked improvement in the program. The introduction of new talent like Thresa Burcham, No. 1 singles player, and Marijke Nel, No. 3 singles player, played a major role in the overall improvement of the team. Nel, sophomore transfer from South Africa, brought strength to the team. She recorded the only win in the Wildcats ' 1-8 loss to Oklahoma. Burcham, freshman from Little Rock, Ark., was awarded the Raymond Rebsamen Award for 1987 for her achievements in and her good sportsmanship. I knew when we recruited Thresa that she was a very good tennis said Steve Bietau, coach. But more that she was an Wildcat tennis player Valerie Rive returns a volley during a practice at L. P. Washburn Recreational Area tennis courts. (Photo by Brett Hacker) standing individual who would be a credit to our program. The addition of good players at the top spots had given the team depth. In the past, inexperienced players were assured spots on the team just for showing up for practice. Now, only the best made the squad. The team had a good fall season ending up 4-2. The Wildcats rolled over 8-1, which was a big first for the squad. They came a point closer than they ever had before against Big Eight foe Nebraska, losing by only one point. We have the potential to be better than we have ever been, Ivarsson said. Doubles are better and we ' re deeper at the lower spots. The women ' s tennis team rose to the competition, going into the spring with a bright outlook. We learned we are at this level and capable of winning, Bietau said. by Stephen Walker 280 Stretching to make a return, Sigrid lvarsson practices her strokes at the L. P. Washburn Recreational Area tennis courts. (Photo by Gary Lytle) Mistee Bitner returns a shot from a teammate while practicing at L. P. Washburn Recreational Area tennis courts. (Photo by Brett Hacker) Consistency, dedication and a positive attitude were qualities that described one of K-State ' s new tennis players — Thresa Burcham, freshman in business administration. Her real strength is her attitude...how hard she works, Steve Bietau, women ' s tennis head coach, said. She ' s very consistent, which is a mark of someone who is going to be a champion. In a short time after her arrival, Burcham proved herself to be one of K- State ' s top women players. She was seeded first for K- State ' s first dual meet. There ' s no question about Thresa ' s talent; she ' s been already and has good athletic Bietau said. You ' ll be hearing lots of things about her. Burcham came to Manhattan from her hometown of Little Rock, Ark. While at McClellan High School for four years, she lost only two singles won all her doubles matches and was overall state doubles champion for two years. Perhaps the most prestigious award she received was the Raymond Rebsamen Award for 1987. This award was presented annually to two outstanding Arkansas junior tennis players in recognition of their achievements in tennis, good sportsmanship and good citizenship, honor to themselves and credit to the game of tennis. It ' s an award that goes to real k ids, and that kind of sums up Thresa, Bietau said. If I could have more just like her, I ' d take them in a minute. Bietau said he heard about Burcham through another coach who strongly recommended her mainly because of her character as a person. I knew when we recruited Thresa that she was a very good tennis player, but more importantly, that she was an outstanding individual who would be Freshman Thresa Burcham, K-State ' s No. 1 women ' s tennis player, practices at the L.P. Washburn Recreational Area tennis courts. (Photo by Greg Vogel) a credit to our program, Bietau said. Burcham was not only recruited by K-State. She also received offers from other schools including Louisiana Tech, University of Arkansas, Middle Tennessee State University, of New Orleans and Purdue University. Burcham said she had the choice narrowed down to K-State and Purdue and ultimately decided upon K-State because, it was closer to home, the campus was great, and I felt I could fit in with the people on the team. We brought her in for a visit and not only told her she would receive a good education and would be able to contribute greatly to our tennis team, but we tried to show her how K-State is, Bietau said. You need to like where you ' re going to school, and I think the atmosphere is one of the biggest assets K- State has. According to Burcham has adjusted well to K- State and Burcham said she has no regrets about her to attend K- State. Burcham began playing tennis when she was 12 years old. My mother enrolled me in a summer city parks and recreation program. It was just something to do, Burcham said. When I was in the ninth grade, I decided my goal was to get an athletic scholarship and have my education paid for, Burcham said. Burcham was unsure if tennis would be part of her life after college. Right now I ' m just looking to play the best I can for K-State and to get a good education at the same time. by Nancy Hill Thresa Burcham passed up offers from Tech, Universities of Arkansas and New Orleans and Purdue University to come to K- State. (Photo by Gary Lytle) FRESHMAN EXCELS ON THE COURT 282 283 Thresa Burcham 284 Intramurals Whether it is for the thrill of victory or just for the enjoyment, students have participated in intramurals for 67 years. They may not have been athletes or college athletic team material — but through intramurals, athletes of all levels could compete in a variety of sports. We have over 25,000 participants in intramurals, counting each time a person competes, said Steve Martini, assistant director of Recreational Services and intramural coordinator. Intramurals were popular at K- State since the program was started in 1921. At that time, K-State was still Issa Aloan, junior in architectural engineering of the Arabo team, kicks the ball away from John Bayouth, senior in nuclear engineering of the Busch team, who won the intramural soccer match 5-4 in overtime. (Photo by Chris Assaf) Greg Weisenborn, senior in electrical goes against the back wall to return a shot during an intramural racquetball game. (Photo by Jeff Stead) the Kansas State Agricultural College and offered men ' s sports only. Three sports, basketball, baseball and were offered. Times changed and the fall schedule for 1987-88 included over 20 sports. In 1927, the sport with the highest participation was tennis, with 285 men competing. Horseshoes had the second highest participation rate with 275 competitors. Today ' s numbers were down from that, Martini said. The cross country event had about the same number of participants in 1927 as there were in 1987-88. In 1927, 140 men competed in the event. Women ' s sports were only offered since 1924, and volleyball was the first activity available. In 1926, swimming was added to women ' s sports. Participation in intramurals has always been high. Martini gave a variety of reasons for this — the first being that the average age of college coordinated with a sports- oriented age. The students are interested in staying healthy and working out, he said. He also said the the greek and hall systems were strong at K- State. Each encouraged participation in campus activities, including intramurals, Martini said. Since Manhattan was a relatively small community in terms of area, most students lived a three-mile radius of the campus, he said. This made students more interested in an activity close to With the Chester E. Peters Complex located within walking distance of the campus, it was easily accessible to most students, he said. by Debbie Lyons I ' ll play soccer ' til I die, said Ed Bennett, vice president of the K-State soccer club. It was this type of dedication one saw while viewing the club ' s roster. Players such as Ron Johnson have been playing the game for 12 years. Others, like Kip Saxon earned varsity letters in high school and both have played on select soccer teams from their hometowns. I dropped baseball and basketball to play soccer. It ' s just something I really enjoyed, Bennett said. Another dedicated soccer veteran that helped bring the team to its record of 10-7-1 was Coach Ian Anderson. Anderson,a native of Edinburgh, Scotland, brought 16 years of soccer experience to the K- State soccer team. Anderson had coached all levels of soccer. I have been very pleased with the team. We have never lost a game by more that three goals, Anderson said. Lots of the guys here have a good future (in soccer). Anderson said one of his main goals while at K-State was to get varsity for the soccer team. During the 1987 season, the team remained at club level. I would like to think we have a chance of gaining varsity Anderson said. It is just a wait- and-see kind of thing. I wouldn ' t put any time limit on it. The finale of the team ' s season was in Kansas City at the Ninth Annual Ed Chartrand Memorial Soccer Tournament. The tournament was named after Edward E. Chartrand who played for Wildcat Soccer Club ' s Greg McMahan chests a ball during the club ' s victory over Central State University in Memorial Stadium. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) the K-State soccer team. He died in May 1979, at the age of 22. The was organized annually by the K-State men ' s soccer team. More or less this is the of the season, Dave Weitz, soccer club president said. Every team that we have played this season is here. Teams competing in the 1987 tournament were: K-State, University of Kansas, University of Northern Iowa, University of Nebraska-Omaha, The Wichita State University, Iowa State University, University of Nebraska- Lincoln, and Oklahoma State University. K-State took the second-place while first place went to Iowa State. The tournament helps every team out there, Weitz said. It helps K- State a lot because it is a well-run tournament. After the tournament the team with an overall record of 13-9-1. As far as the season went, it ' s been really positive. Everyone has shown lots of dedication. Bennett said. If it keeps up like this, the team will keep getting stronger. by Nancy Chartrand 286 287 The K-State Soccer Club ' s Joe Pecko tackles the ball away from a Central Missouri State opponent during a game in Memorial Stadium. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) K-State Soccer Club coach lan Anderson talks to the team during halftime of their game against Central Missouri State University. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) soccer It was a season of getting back to old traditions and starting new ones for the K- State crew teams. The men ' s varsity eight crew started the spring at the Heart of Texas Regatta in Austin, with the first of a string of wins that culminated in a 5-1 season and a fourth-place finish in the Midwest Regional Regatta. But K-State had to wait until the final race to collect the gold medal — a medal that Coach Don Rose considered to be Texas size. I would not trade the one varsity men ' s victory for all the victories of the other teams, Rose said. The men ' s varsity eight won by two boat lengths in the six-boat field. The High School women ' s novice eight made it to the finals, where they placed fourth. Along the way, the MHS crew beat freshman crews from Notre Dame and University o f Kansas. The MHS crew was a new addition to the Kansas State Rowing Association that governed K-State crews. Rose decided to give the MHS students a shot at collegiate rowing when he was approached by several students who had an in crew. There were some women from Manhattan High School who wanted to row, Rose said. We recruited students for the summer a year ago and they practiced all summer long. They got whipped badly at the end-of-a-summer race, but came back and practiced during the fall and wound up whipping our freshman women, he said. They came along in the spring even more and whipped a good many of the freshman women ' s crews. Much of the success that has come to the MHS crew could be attributed to the fact the members were local residents and were able to practice during the summer. They are a captive because they live here in town, Rose said. They ' ve had another rowing and are going to continued on page 290 The varsity and junior varsity men ' s crew row past the dam at Tuttle Creek Reservoir during the inter- squad scrimmage that marked the end of the crew ' s silver anniversary season. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) 288 crew 289 Crew continued from page 288 be coming into their own as they get more experience. In the second regatta of the year, the President ' s Regatta, at Lake Shawnee in Topeka, K-State crews captured four first-place medals. The men ' s varsity eight won the 2,000- and races. The women ' s novice crew won and Jeff Bushey, men ' s captain, won the singles dash. The MHS crew placed fifth, but was only 1.9 seconds out of first in a close race. It was a great day for State, Rose said. That regatta was telecast live over Channel 27. At the State Champion Waiting for the novice race to begin, Steve Neusteadter and Shawn Aldrige concentrate. Aldrige ' s shirt referred to the coxswain, the person who steers the boat. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) Regatta at Lake the K-State men ' s eight had difficulties and the women ' s varsity eight was on an upswing. Washburn, Kansas and Wichita State universities competed against K-State for the Shriners Trophy, only to see it return to K-State. K-State made a clean sweep of events at the Founder ' s Day Regatta held at Tuttle Creek Reservoir. It was a dual meet with University. K-State took first in the men ' s novice and mixed eight and won uncontested in the women ' s and men ' s varsity-eight races. MHS won the women ' s novice eight. Undefeated and hungry for another victory the ' Cats attended the Midwest Regionals in Madison, Wis. More than 25 crews, including defending national champion Wisconsin and perennial powerhouse Purdue, were out to tip the boat on K-State men ' s varsity eight 5-0 record. Wisconsin came in first with Purdue in second and Cincinnati in third. K-State came in fourth with a time of 5:50.3, nearly 32 seconds out of first. The K-State boat had an equipment failure that was a minor factor in the race, affecting the time K-State finished the 2,000-meter course. This was the first year we had gone up there in quite some time, Rose said. Wisconsin was the crew to whip. In all the years they have had the regatta, Wisconsin has only been beaten once, by Purdue. We ' ve chased the of Cincinnati the last two years running. They had pulled ahead of us a little when our five-oar oarlock snapped in half, he said. Without the oarlock you can ' t row so that put us out of it. That left seven men rowing the last 30 to 40 strokes. K-State wrapped up the spring season at the Heart of America Regatta held at Shawnee Mission Park Lake in Kansas City, Kan. Crews from Nebraska, Iowa and Creighton were no match for the Wildcats as they walked away winning six of the seven races they entered. To some, it was almost embarrassing to win so much and so easily. It was a great way to wind up the season. We showed our wash four times to archrival Kansas, Rose said. After easily defeating the other crews in the season finale, it was time for Rose and the men ' s varsity-eight rowers to do some soul searching and decide about competing in the national championships in June. But with the fourth-place finish at the Midwest the spirit of the team dampened a bit and because of that and several other problems, the crew decided not to go. We did debate going to the national championship, but several of the key had other Rose said. This next year – being our 25th year – we ' ve got plans to go to Henley, England, which is a lot more (important) than the national championship. I feel that by having a good overall view of the crews, having started it at K- State and watching it for most of its 24 years, I can say that K-State is getting back to the where it used to be many years ago, he said. by Chase Clark crew Sherri Smith and Mary Rockers, alternately known as the masked oarswomen, compete in intra-squad races. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) The women in the senior-plus-one event wait for the starter ' s signal during Class Day Races. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) 291 Crew In 38 years only five men have coached Wildcat basketball in Ahearn Field House. Counter- clockwise from the bottom left are Jack Gardner, the first coach in Ahearn; Tex Winter, second coach; Cotton Fitzsimmons, third coach; Jack Hartman, fourth coach; and Lon Kruger, the last man to coach the Wildcats in Ahearn. (Photo by Phil Bays) As the sun sets, the lights of Ahearn Field House begin to shine through the south windows of the building. This is the last of 38 years that Ahearn was the home of Wildcat basketball. (Photo by Gary Lytle) Thirty-eight years. By most that was relatively new for a campus building, but when you considered the multitude of people who had traipsed through Ahearn Field House since December of 1950, it became understandable how a building could age so fast. Ahearn, more affectionately known as ' The Barn to faithful Wildcat fans and a feared place for Wildcat opponents, opened its doors to K-State basketball on Dec. 9, 1950. Since then, Wildcat basketball teams compiled a 359-93 record, or a winning percentage of .794 when playing at home. On April 16, 1940, a full 10 years before the first game was ever played in Ahearn, its legacy was born with a student rally. Probably the most effective tactic the students used in petitioning for the new field house took place in the of straw and covered with ketchup fell from the student-packed rafters of old Nichols Gymnasium. In January of 1941, a dummy made Nichols. The reason the point was taken so well was because in at that night ' s K-State vs. of Kansas game were over 100 state legislators. The first opponent to set foot in Ahearn was the Utah State basketball team, and the Wildcats sent them home with a 10-point loss. On that first night, the building was dedicated before the game. Coach Jack Gardner stood before the crowd and said, It is indeed a palace to which all of Kansas can point to with pride. To the basketball fan it will many evenings of fine entertainment watching the Wildcats against the best teams in the country. To all the athletes and students, it means not only stronger athletic teams, but A large and lively crowd, including this of Elvis, attends the last K-State basketball game against the University of Kansas held in Ahearn Field House. (Photo by Gary Lytle) adequate sports facilities for the of their physical and mental well-being. When Ahearn was built, it was the fifth largest facility in the nation and the largest in the state of Kansas. Its original capacity was 13,000, and over the years had been reduced to 11,500. In 38 years of Wildcat basketball in Ahearn, a Wildcat squad never through a sub- .500 season, and 10 times K-State earned the right to call themselves Big Eight Champions. On Jan. 31, 1951, the biggest crowd to ever watch a K-State basketball game packed itself into Ahearn to watch the Wildcats take on Long Island University. More then 14,000 screaming fans watched the ' Cats destroy LIU, 85-65. Ahearn ' s most successful year was the 1968-69 campaign in which the average attendance was 12,166 per game and the attendance total for the season was 133,831. Many great teams, coaches and players passed through Ahearn over the years. Besides the 10 garnered by Wildcat squads, six times Wildcat teams went through a whole season without suffering a loss at Ahearn. Seven all-Americans played for K- State in Ahearn, including two-time all-Americans Bob Boozer, Jack Parr, Dick Knostman and Rolando Blackman. Only five men have coached Wildcat basketball in Ahearn, Jack Hartman having coached for 16 of its 38 seasons. Hartman stepped down as the coach in 1986, leaving only two final basketball seasons to be played in Ahearn. It has been one of the all-time great college basketball structures, Hartman said of Ahearn. Not so much because of its architectural design or continued on page 294 CATS TO MOVE TO BRAMLAGE COLISEUM 293 Ahearn Field House continued from page 293 structure, but because of the people who went there to watch basketball games. Lon Kruger, from Silver Lake, took his third different role in Ahearn when he became head coach for the Wildcats. He watched games there as a boy, he was two-time Big Eight Player of the Year there under Hartman, and then took over for his coach as Hartman stepped down. They were all distinctly different roles, Kruger said. I enjoyed each of them but playing has to be what you enjoy most. The next best was coaching and not a distant third was watching. They were all enjoyable in different ways. Wildcat basketball flourished in Ahearn, and it will be remembered as one of the toughest places to play in the Big Eight. It was such a great facility to watch basketball games in, Jody Marshall, junior in psychology, said. The fans were right there on top of the floor and you know they really had to get to the opposing teams in close games or tight situations, he said. The new coliseum is going to be nice but ' Cat basketball won ' t be the same without Ahearn. The Fred Bramlage Coliseum will be the new home of Wildcat basketball beginning in the 1988-89 season. Its capacity will be 13,500, only 500 more than the original capacity of Ahearn. The cost df the new building was $17.5 million, while the cost for Ahearn was only $2 million. We are looking forward to Bramlage Coliseum, Kruger said. Obviously we are very grateful for what The south end of Ahearn Field House is pictured on the front cover of the program for the first game held in the field house. (Program cover courtesy of Sports Information) Ahearn did for us, but we are looking forward to playing in the new coliseum and making the transition as as possible without losing anything and maybe even gaining something. On March 5, 1988, K-State fans walked through the doors of Ahearn for the last time after watching the Wildcats play the University of Tigers. In the great Ahearn the fans left happy because the Wildcats ended their proud history in Ahearn the same way they had begun it, with a victory. Coach Gardner had been right. by Garyn Hoffman SOUVENIR PROGRAM Opening of the Kansas State College Field House View from the South, Showing Part of Three-Story Wing to the West Saturday, December 9, 1950 Kansas State vs. Utah State On the Campus of Kansas State College, Manhattan — 25c — 294 Ahearn Field House Severe overcrowding in Nichols Gymnasium and an increasing emphasis on sports, especially basketball, prompted demands by fans for a new field house. (Photo courtesy of Photographic Services) Even though Ahearn Field House has not changed much since it was finished in 1950, the campus surrounding it has changed dramatically. (Photo courtesy of Photographic Services) 295 Ahearn Field House 296 Elyse Funk She liked to talk and she didn ' t try to hide it. In fact, Elyse Funk, the 5-5 guard of the Lady Cat basketball team admitted that she liked to talk. It was evident that her personality matched her abilities on the basketball court. Funk, who started just two games her freshman season, moved into the starting guard position her second season and seemed to have found her niche on the Lady Cat squad. I ' m not the person to come down and score a lot of points, Funk said. My role is to come down and set up the offense and try and set the tempo of the game. Originally from Newton, Funk held 12 school When Lady Cat basketball player Elyse Funk plays at Bramlage next year, the environment will not be totally new since the basketball court from Ahearn Field House will be moved to the Coliseum. (Photo by Gary Lytle) records at her alma mater, including the single game and career assist records. Bob Graber, Newton High School girls ' basketball coach, had nothing but praise for his former star. She was a great player, very dedicated, very coachable, he said. She gave a lot of her time to basketball and was a very talented player. Lady Cat Coach Matilda Mossman had much the same praise for Funk. She ' s the kind of player you love to coach, she said. You know she ' s going to give 100 percent every time she steps on the basketball court. Funk was no stranger to athletics. Her sister was a member of the softball team at Emporia State One of her brothers ran track at Bethel College, and her other brother played football at Cowley County Community College. Although Funk moved comfortably into her role as a starter her sophomore year, it was easy to detect that she wasn ' t comfortable with the season ' s showing. In her self-assured, yet quiet way, she was about the future of Lady Cat basketball. The season was hard after our success of the year before. But having last year under our belts is going to make us a lot tougher next year, Funk said. We have a chance of even doing than we did in ' 86- ' 87, if everything comes together right. Basketball wasn ' t the only thing that interested Funk. She also enjoyed working with children and other people. Last summer she worked at basketball camps with children. I like being around people, and I love being around little kids. It is a neat experience to be able to help little kids improve their talents. Academics were also important to Funk, a of the National Honor Society in high school. Funk, a business administration major, checked out the program offered and took into account its strength when deciding where to attend college. When I came to visit, I really liked the coach ' s toward athletics and academics, Funk said. I also liked the fact that K- State had an accounting program. I also liked and the University; I felt like I could fit in. by garyn ho Whether it is academics or basketball; Elyse Funk as proven equal to the task She has ocana success in endeavors due to her willingness to ive 100 percent. 297 Elyse Funk Intently watching the action, K- State women ' s basketball coach Matilda Mossman and the rest of the Lady Cat bench wait to see if a play is successful. (Photo by Gary Lytle) Lady Cat coach Matilda Mossman discusses the game plan with basketball player Amy Davidson. (Photo by Gary Lytle) 298 Matilda Mossman Change is a never-ending fact in life. Matilda Mossman, head coach of the Lady Cat basketball squad, experienced more than a few changes since coming here four years ago. Her first challenge of changes was taking over for Lynn Hickey, who was Manhattan with an amazing 125-39 overall record. Mossman was about to get her first taste of Big Eight basketball. In four years, Mossman endured many changes at K-State and as changes go, there were highs and lows. In her first season as Lady Cats coach, she recorded her lowest winning percentage in her four years of coaching (.552). Two years later she built the to .710 when the Lady Cats went 22-9 and received a bid to the Collegiate Athletic Association post-season tournament. In the midst of rebuilding the women ' s basketball program, she got married. The 1987-88 season brought more winds of change Mossman ' s way. First, she found the team struggling through its first losing season in the history of Lady Cat basketball and also her first sub-.500 season as a coach. Second, it was the first season she coached as a parent. In May 1987, the birth of a son, Scott, gave her another priority. Having Scott has brought a new perspective to winning and losing basketball games, Mossman said. When I get home after a loss I can see that he doesn ' t care whether we won or not. Because of him I find myself spending less time brooding over losses and, likewise, spending less time enjoying victories. Whether she spent much time enjoying the victories or not, she certainly was more optimistic as the season came to a close. We were playing much better basketball at the end of the season. I have seen a marked improvement from the way we were playing at the start of the year, Mossman said. Mossman, the only woman head coach at K- State, was looking forward to playing next season in the Fred Bramlage Coliseum. The players are extremely happy to be to the new coliseum. And when the players are happy, it improves our program. The new facility will also be a great recruiting tool, she said. Mossman believed the future of Lady Cat was bright. We struggled last year because we were such a young team, Mossman said. In the next two to three years we are going to be very strong contenders in the Big Eight. The next two to three years mark the future of Lady Cat basketball. Mossman, a native of Campbellsville, Ky., came to K-State via the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville. She graduated with a bachelor ' s degree in education from Western Kentucky University in 1979, and earned her master ' s degree in education in 1980. From there, Mossman moved to Arkansas where she was an assistant basketball coach for one season before taking over the helm in 1981. In just one season, took an 11-18 team and turned it into a 26-10 squad. In the process, the team broke every single- season team record at Arkansas. The next season Arkansas finished second in its conference and finished with a .724 winning percentage, Mossman ' s best as a coach. by garyn hoffman Matilda Mossman thinks having a new baby helps in her coaching. She has a new perspective coaching and on the importance of winning and losing. 299 Matilda Mossman In his senior season at K-State, Mitch Richmond was the E.F. Hutton of Wildcat basketball. When the ball was in his hands, people stopped to watch. Here ' s some of the rave reviews he received during the 1986-87 campaign: Richmond has major-league moves. He is an inside player, he is a wing player off the dribble and he has a great ability to make the long jump shot under pressure, said former New York Knicks ' coach Hubie Brown. Richmond should be a first-round draft pick in the next National Association draft. He can do it all, the Blue Ribbon Basketball Yearbook said. If he doesn ' t make it in the pros, I ' ll eat my shoes, said former NBA star Bob Lanier. Remember, Lanier wore size 19 shoes. As the season progressed, more and more people wanted a share of Richmond ' s time. National publications such as Sports Illustrated and the Sporting News ran feature articles on the 6-foot-5, 225-pound senior guard forward. This was in addition to local and regional media coverage, but it was all part of the transition game Richmond had played his entire life. When Richmond came to K-State via Moberly (Mo.) Junior College in 1986, there was considerable attention given to Norris Coleman and his continuing struggle with the National Collegiate Athletic Association to regain his While senior Mitch Richmond was playing his last year for the Wildcats, junior Fred McCoy was his first. McCoy is expected to take over place as star forward for the Wildcats next year. (Photo by Gary Lytle) eligibility following a high-school transcript snafu. Coleman eventually said to Manhattan and hello to the pros, leaving Richmond to the media vultures. Richmond wasn ' t bothered by the hype, as he called it, as proven by his scoring average which climbed to more Wildcat forward Fred McCoy goes up fora shot as teammate Mitch Richmond watches. (Photo by Gary Lytle) than 23 points per game before the ended. I think I handled the media pressure really well. I didn ' t really think about what the media said. I just wanted to have a great senior year, Richmond said. When K-State ' s season ended, there were more transitions to be made. Questions were raised as to ability to adjust to the big guard position in the NBA. ' Cat coach Lon Kruger said there would be no problem. ' There ' s no doubt in my mind (that he can play shooting guard in the NBA), Kruger said. The bottom line on Mitch is that he ' s a player who can handle a couple of different positions very capably. He has talent, and that ' s what the scouts recognize. Richmond adjusted to making transitions. He was ineligible to in his freshman and first semester of his sophomore seasons at Boyd Anderson High School in Fort Fla., and needed a summer course to obtain his diploma. That ' s all past news as Richmond was on track to receive his degree in social sciences from K-State in May. Even with two years of junior college under his belt to help him adjust to the big time, the transition to K-State wasn ' t entirely easy for Richmond. I ' d have to admit I was kind of scared at first, Richmond said. When I got here, the coaches pretty much told me I was going to be the one that they counted on to lead this team. Yes, it was a big transition for to come to a school with a rich basketball tradition such as K-State ' s. Maybe it helped that he was a little naive. He knew about Norris Coleman and Rolando Blackman, and that ' s about it. Still, it ' s only fitting that in the last magical season of Ahearn Field House, another court wizard in the form of Mitch Richmond was here to make the transition to the Fred Bramlage Colisuem a truly memorable one. by Tom Morris RICHMOnd READY FOR NBA 301 Mitch Richmond He wasn ' t the offensive star or the best defensive player on the K-State men ' s basketball team. Some people even said he didn ' t look like a player. But Fred McCoy won the hearts of the Ahearn Field House and will be ready next season to take over where Mitch Richmond left off. Perhaps it was the hard work McCoy put in to work his way into a starting role shortly after the semester break. The 6-foot-7 junior center came into the Wildcats ' camp at 240 pounds — 15 more than his ideal 225-pound play- ing weight. When I go t here, I had been home all summer and was a little overweight, but I ran and Coach (Kruger) got me into pretty good shape, McCoy said. McCoy was eventually replaced by senior Ron Meyer in the pivot position before the season ended. It wasn ' t because of a weight problem, but because Meyer began playing better than he had in his three previous at K-State. But McCoy left his mark either the game or coming off the bench, as University of Colorado center Scott Wilke could attest. He doesn ' t look like he could score or even should be out there playing, and then this guy comes in hits he puts up, said Wilke, after McCoy scored 34 points in two regular- season meetings against the Buffaloes. Despite his size, strength and in the lane as if he were a bull loose in a china shop, McCoy possessed a soft shooting touch that led to him averaging in double figures in his K-State campaign. That ' s what impressed Lon Kruger the most. He carries his weight very well and uses it well. He ' s never going to look like a trim, fit greyhound, but he didn ' t look that bad when he came here, Kruger said. And he certainly didn ' t look bad to the fans. McCoy couldn ' t really explain why he was so popular with K-State ' s Northern Illinois forward Donnell Thomas puts the ball in over the block of center Fred McCoy in Ahearn Field House. K-State won the game, 88-67. (Photo by John LaBarge) student section. I ' m not really different than any of the rest of the guys. We just like to go out and have fun, McCoy said. It ' s great to be here. I love the Ahearn crowd and have never played in a place with this much enthusiasm. A native of Washington, D.C., McCoy earned six varsity letters, three in both basketball and football, at Howard D. Woodson Senior High School. After being an offensive standout for two seasons at Allen County College in Iola, McCoy adjusted easily to his role at K-State. He even went so far as to say he loved rebounding more than scoring. I ' m not that important. Mitch was so hot that I wasn ' t needed to score. I was just needed to get in the middle, get the defensive rebounds and kick them out, and grab some offensive rebounds and put them back in the hole, McCoy said. Kruger wasn ' t so fast to make that assumption. He remembered the few times when Richmond wasn ' t scoring and McCoy carried the offense. He contributed when we needed him most, and that ' s all we could ask for from Fred, Kruger said. McCoy spoke as soft as his shooting touch, a highly unusual quality for a man that plays so physically the basket. Come to think of it, world heavyweight boxing champion Mike Tyson spoke softly as well. it ' s best to say that action, not words, win athletic contests. All in all, McCoy ' s initial season at K-State was a living example of how hard work and dedication paid off. by Tom Morris Forwards Mitch Richmond and Fred McCoy and University of Colorado center Scott Wilke watch a loose ball sail away from them. K-State won, 83-65. Richmond scored 28 points for the and Wilke added 20 points for the Buffaloes. (Photo by John LaBarge) FRED McCOY A FAVORITE OF FANS 302 Fred McCoy 303 Fred McCoy Wildcat guard Steve Henson passes the ball out of the reach of a University of Colorado during the ' Cats ' victory over the Buffaloes in Ahearn Field House. (Photo by Gary Lytle) Mitch Richmond jumps past a Nebraska to score a field goal during the Wildcats ' game against the Cornhuskers. (Photo by Gary Lytle) 304 basketball Despite a shaky start, the men ' s basketball team fought hard and long to exceed expectations. What a year it was. The 1987-88 basketball season was the final season for the K-State men in Ahearn Field House after 38 years of magic, and it was only fitting that the team that said goodbye to the barn was one of K-State ' s best ever. The final record was an impressive 25-9. Six seniors led the way, a special foursome that comprised all but one member of the Wildcat starting lineup over the second half of the Big Eight season. Those four seniors – Mitch Charles Bledsoe, Will Scott and Ron Meyer – were the nucleus of the team that would make it to the final eight in the NCAA tournament before falling to arch-rival Kansas, and the four were extremely special to Coach Lon Kruger. This is a truly special group of kids, and our seniors are some of the finest young men I ' ve ever had the pleasure of working with, Kruger said. After a season that saw K-State overcome a bit of a shaky start and exceed the expectations of almost everyone, most K-State fans would have to admit that the pleasure was all theirs. The 1987-88 season opened with the Wildcats winning the of the Sun Met Classic in Fresno, Calif. K-State, led by Richmond ' s 28 points, downed San Diego State 79-68 in the opener. In the title tilt, Richmond, the tourney ' s MVP, scored 20 points in leading the ' Cats to a 65-50 win over Fresno State for the tournament championship. The home opener against Cal State- provided K-State with its most lopsided win of the season, a trouncing of the visitors from Reserve center Fred McCoy led K-State with 20 points as the Wildcats posted their 10th biggest win in their history. The team got its fourth win of the year against no defeats when it UMKC an 81-54 defeat in Ahearn. Richmond again led the ' Cats, scoring 21 points. Three other K-Staters scored in double figures. The final win in K-State ' s season- opening winning streak came against Creighton in Omaha, Neb., on Dec. 5. The Wildcats, led by Richmond ' s 31 points, downed the Bluejays 88-78, running their record to 5-0. K-State ' s first loss of the year came at home, and was undoubtedly one of the toughest in the history of the school. Southwest Missouri State, on its way to a second consecutive NCAA tournament berth, handed K-State an 82-80 defeat in four overtimes. Scott ' s 17 points led K-State. Southern Mississippi, the National Invitational Tournament champions in 1986-87, handed K-State its secand straight loss at home in the next contest, downing the Wildcats 71-69. Richmond led the ' Cats with 23 points. The losing streak hit three when K- State suffered its worst loss of the year, 101-72, at Purdue on Dec. 20. The loss dropped K-State to 5-3 on the year. Richmond and McCoy each had 14 points to pace K-State. The loss to Purdue may have been the turning point on the year, Kruger said. At that time, we decided to and regroup, and that made a big difference, Kruger said. K-State got back on the winning track with an 81-69 win over Utah State on the road in the next game to go to 6-3 on the year. Richmond led K- State with 25 points and Scott added 22. The Wildcats took to the floor in Kemper Arena in Kansas City for their seventh win, a 78-57 pasting of Richmond had 24 points and three other Wildcats scored in double figures in the game. K-State ' s final loss in its mini slump of sorts came at Southern Southern Miss handed K- State a 91-89 setback in overtime to drop K-State to 7-4 overall. McCoy led K-State with 26 points. The Wildcats then went on a seven- game winning streak that saw them run their record to 14-4 and gain a No. 14 national ranking. The first win was the most a stunning 69-62 upset of then- No. 3 ranked Oklahoma. Richmond ' s 33 points led K-State to its first win in Ahearn over the Sooners since the continued on page 306 Wildcat Fred McCoy tries in vain to block a shot by Northern Illinois ' Donnell Thomas. (Photo by John LaBarge) 305 Men ' s Basketball wildcats continued from page 305 1981-82 season. Wichita State was the next victim, and K-State handed the Shockers a 58-47 defeat as Richmond poured in 24 points. A road win at Oklahoma State followed, opening a three-game road swing that was successful. Richmond scored 30 points to lead K-State to a 76-60 win over the Cowboys. Win No. 2 on the road trip came at the expense of Colorado, as K-State handed the Buffs a 68-60 defeat. McCoy led K-State with 22 points. The final win on the road trip was the most satisfying, a 72-61 win over Kansas that ended the Jayhawks ' 55-game home court winning streak. Richmond scored 35 points and Scott added 16 as K-State posted its first win over a Larry Brown-coached team. Iowa State was the next victim. K- State returned home to post win No. 13 on the year, a 79-68 overtime win over the Cyclones. McCoy scored 25 points and Richmond added 24 to lead K-State. The final win in the streak was a 65-63 win over Nebraska that Bledsoe sealed with two free throws with two seconds remaining. Four K-State players scored in double figures. Missouri snapped the K-State streak, handing the 14th-ranked Wildcats their first Big Eight loss against six wins. The Tigers ' 79-75 win spoiled a 20-point performance by Scott. The Wildcats were then sent reeling even further as Oklahoma made up for its earlier defeat by handing K- State a 112-95 defeat in Norman, Okla. Richmond scored a season-high 41 points in the losing cause. K-State got back on the winning track with an 83-65 win over Colorado in Ahearn that moved the Wildcat record to 15-6. Richmond scored 28 points to lead K-State. One of two heartbreaking losses to Kansas was next up for K-State, as the visiting Jayhawks downed the Wildcats by one point, 64-63, in Ahearn. Richmond was held to 11 points in the losing cause as Steve Henson ' s 13 points led K-State. The team got a breather from the conference schedule and downed Northern Illinois 88-67 in Ahearn to move to 16-7 on the year and start a seven-game winning streak that stretched on into the Big Eight ' s post- season tournament. A road win at Iowa State was the second win in the streak. Steve Henson hit 17-of-17 free throws and scored a career-high 24 points to lead K-State to an 83-66 win. The Wildcats moved to 9-3 in the Big Eight and 18-7 overall with a 59-58 win over Oklahoma State in Ahearn in the next contest. Richmond ' s 18 led K-State. A road win over Nebraska followed. Richmond scored 24 points and added 18 as the ' Cats downed the ' Huskers 77-67. The regular season and 38 years of Ahearn magic ended against The 92-82 Wildcat win that closed the building helped K-State end the regular season with a record of 20-7. continued on page 309 K-State guard Steve Henson takes to the air to block a pass by Wichita State University ' s Dwight Pralo. (Photo by Steve Rasmussen) K-State basketball coach Lon Kruger gives quick sideline advice to Carlos Diggins during the K-State game against Creighton. (Photo by Brett Hacker) Getting tangled up, Wildcat Charles Bledsoe is called for a foul as he and Iowa State University guard Mike Born go up for a rebound. (Photo by Rob Squires) 306 Men ' s Basketball 307 Mens basketball Oklahoma State guard Derrick Davis covers K- State guard Mark Nelson during the Wildcats ' game against the Cowboys in Stillwater. (Photo by Rob Squires) 308 Men ' s Basketball wildcats continued from page 306 Richmond scored 25 points and three other Wildcats scored in double figures as K-State closed the barn in style. The Big Eight tournament and NCAA play followed, with the Wildcats finishing second in the conference tourney and advancing to the final eight of the NCAAs. All in all, it was a year to remember. With the closing of Ahearn and several big wins, it was an extremely gratifying year, Kruger said. And it couldn ' t have happened to a greater group of young men. With a record of 25-9 to show for their efforts, Kruger ' s young men established themselves as one of the best K-State team ' s of all time. The 1987-88 season was truly special indeed. by David Svoboda Driving for a layup, Wildcat guard Steve Henson goes for two of the 16 points he scored during the game with Missouri. (Photo by Rob Squires) Sounds of the K-State Pep Band echo through Ahearn Field House one last time following the Wildcats ' 92-82 victory over the University of Missouri. (Photo by Steve Rasmussen) KSU OPP San Diego State 79 - 68 Fresno State 65 - 50 Cal State-Northridge 91 - 46 Missouri-Kansas City 81 - 54 Creighton 88 - 78 Southwest Missouri State 80 - 82 Southern Mississippi 69 - 71 Purdue 72 - 101 Utah State 81 - 69 Marquette 78 - 57 Southern Mississippi 89 - 91 Oklahoma 69 - 62 Wichita State 58 - 47 Oklahoma State 76 - 60 Colorado 68 - 60 Kansas 72 - 61 Iowa State 79 - 68 Nebraska 65 - 63 Missouri 75 - 79 Oklahoma 95 - 112 Colorado 83 - 65 Kansas 63 - 64 Northern Illinois 88 - 67 Iowa State 83 - 66 Oklahoma State 59 - 58 Nebraska 77 - 67 Missouri 92 - 82 Nebraska 75 - 70 Kansas 69 - 54 Oklahoma 83 - 88 La Salle 66 - 53 DePaul 66 - 58 Purdue 73 - 70 Kansas 58 - 71 309 It was a most improbable finish to a most improbable year for the K-State men ' s basketball team, as Lon Kruger ' s squad reached the NCAA Mid- west Regiona l final before losing to Kansas for the right to go to Kansas City and the Final Four. But the loss to the archrival Jayhawks didn ' t greatly dampen the spirits of the ' Cats, a team that beat the odds all year long, especially in post- season play. The postseason journey for the Wildcats began in Kansas City at the Big Eight Conference tourney a regular season in which K-State posted a record of 20-7. In the opening round of the tourney, K-State faced Nebraska. The battle with the Cornhuskers, as had been the case as of late, was a tough one from start to finish. K-State held a comfortable 71-63 lead with just over one minute to play, but Nebraska scored seven unanswered points to pull to within one with 25 seconds left. Steve Henson, who led the nation in free throw shooting, responded by four straight free throws in the last few seconds, and K-State advanced to the semifinals. The Wildcats ' third meeting with Kansas – with one unexpected final meeting to follow – came in the semi- finals of the conference tourney. K-State moved to a 10-0 lead at the outs et and never trailed in handing the Jayhawks a 69-54 defeat and moving to the title game against Oklahoma. Mitch Richmond scored 21 points, Henson added 18, and Will Scott scored 17 to lead K-State in its convincing win over the Jayhawks. A win over Kansas at any point is nice, but we have some business to take care of against Oklahoma before we can do any celebrating, said center Ron Meyer, after the win over Kansas. There would be no celebration in the final game, thanks to the play of the Sooners, then the nation ' s No. 4-ranked team. Despite a three-point shooting barrage by Henson in the opening half, Oklahoma handed K-State an 88-83 defeat and forced K-State to hope for an at-large bid into the NCAA tournament. The Wildcats ' hopes for an at-large Mitch Richmond had his shot deflected by Chris Piper as Keith Harris helps out during the game in Pontiac, Mich. (Photo by Brad Fanshier) bid were answered while they were still on the court facing the Sooners. While the game with Oklahoma was winding down, the NCAA selection committee announced K-State would play La Salle in South Bend, Ind., in the opening round of NCAA Midwest Regional play. In the opening-round game against La Salle, the ' Cats were up against a team that had won 15 straight games. But the Wildcats used a tenacious man-to-man defense in handing the Explorers a 66-53 defeat. The contest with La Salle was also a big one for Richmond, who scored 30 points and moved past Bob Boozer to become the all-time single-season scoring leader for K-State. He broke the previous record of 691 points set by Boozer in the 1958-59 season. A matchup with DePaul, an impressive first-round winner over Wichita State, was up next for K- State . Although the Wildcats were the fourth seed and the Blue Demons were seeded fifth, DePaul was favored to beat K-State and advance to the Sweet Sixteen. K-State, as had been the case all year, proved the critics wrong and downed DePaul 66-58 to advance to the round of 16 in Pontiac, Mich. People just won ' t fully believe we ' re for real, Kruger said following the game. I ' m not sure if it ' s our physical stature, or how we look in a hotel or what. But we continue to go out and take care of our responsibilities. Absolutely no one, except maybe the players themselves and a few K-State die-hards expected the Wildcats to win their next game in the tourney, a match up with the region ' s No. 1 seed and a team that was ranked No. 3 nationally – Purdue. But the Wildcats, as had been the case all year, left mouths agape and heads hanging in stunned silence as they handed the Boilermakers a stunning 73-70 upset loss. continued on page 313 Lon Kruger celebrates with team members Glover, Ron Meyer and Steve Henson after the Wildcats ' victory over Purdue in the semi- finals of the Midwest regional NCAA tournament in Pontiac, Mich. (Photo by Brad Fanshier) ONE STEP SHORT 0 THE FINAL four 310 NCAA Tournament Trapped amid the arms of DePaul ' s Andy Laux and Terrence Greene, K-State ' s Mark Dobbins tries to avoid a turnover during the second round of the NCAA tournament game with the Blue Demons. (Photo by Brad Fanshier) 312 NCAA Tournament END continued from page 310 Needless to say, the win was the biggest of the year for K-State. It put them into the regional final against Kansas and helped convince those doubters around the nation that these Wildcats were indeed for real. My hat ' s off to Kansas State, said Purdue coach and K-State alumnus Gene Keady. ' The kids did a great job and the coaching staff has turned what could have been a bad season into a great one. Even though we had a great K-State peaked and played better than we did tonight. Richmond, who scored 27 points, and Scott, who added 17, helped make sure Purdue didn ' t duplicate its 101-72 drubbing of the Wildcats in the year. All that was left now separating the Wildcats from the most wins in history of basketball at the school and a trip to the Final Four was a third win on the season over Kansas. That win never came. KU denied K-State its first trip to the Final Four since 1964 by handing the Wildcats a 71-58 defeat. was held to 11 points for the second time in the season by a Jayhawk defense, and no one was left to pick up the slack. I ' m disappointed, but we knew it had to end sometime, Meyer said after the game. It ' s really hard because the team grew up as a family. Hopefully the team will grow from this, and the seniors will go on to brighter things. Those seniors moving on included Meyer, Richmond, Scott, Charles Bledsoe, Mark Nelson and Walter Wright. But their efforts will not be forgotten. Not forgotten in a year in which K- State went 25-9. Not forgotten in a year in which K-State was just a game away from the Final Four. Not forever. It was a team that its coach, Lon Kruger, also will not forget. Kruger, who was offered the head coaching position at the University of Texas just one day after the season ended, decided to stay at his alma mater and attempt to finish the job he had started in his first two seasons at the Wildcat helm. Based on the performance of the 1987-88 Wildcat squad, he ' ll have a tough time doing so. by David Svoboda K-State basketball coach Lon Kruger consoles Will Scott at the end of the NCAA Midwest Regional Finals after K-State was defeated by the University of Kansas. (Photo by Brad Fanshier) Will Scott dribbles past KU ' s Jeff Gueldner in the final round of the Midwest Regional NCAA basketball tournament in Pontiac, Mich. (Photo by Brad Fanshier) 313 NCAA Tournament gains In sports, there were many cliches that were overused, but the term youth movement applied perfectly to the Lady Cat basketball squad. Coming off a successful campaign in 1986-87 in which K-State posted a 22-9 overall record and a 9-5 mark in the Big Eight Conference, K-State looked to have that good of youngsters and veterans on the squad. This combination would make the team a contender again for the Big Eight title, which it shared the season before with the University of Missouri and the University of Kansas. When the season opened, it was a case of good news and bad news for Head Coach Matilda Lady Cats. The good news was the six featured returning letter winners. The bad news was that all returning letter winners were sophomores. No starters returned, including two-time letter winner Tracy Bleczinski. Bleczinski was expected to lead the team in the 1987-88 campaign. As the season began, the Lady Cats came out strong, winning four consecutive games after dropping their opener to the University of Arkansas-Little Rock in the McCall Pattern Classic at Ahearn Field House. The K-State women rebounded the next day as they rolled past Rockhurst, 82-65, to win the game of the The Lady Cats then went on to post victories over Creighton and Drake in Manhattan. The next game, an impressive 75-53 road victory over the Shockers at Wichita State, gave the Lady Cats a 4-1 record after the first five games, and dreams of another Big Eight championship seemed within their grasp. The Lady Cats, coming off the big win at Wichita, headed to Dallas for the Dallas Hilton Classic at Southern Methodist University on Dec. 11-12. K-State ' s first-round game in the tournament was against Stephen F. Austin, a team K-State defeated three of the four times they met previously. But it was not to be this year, as the Ladyjacks ran away from K-State, 82-59. After suffering that defeat, the Lady Cats found themselves in the bracket for the second time in as many Holding true to form, the Lady Cats continued on page 316 Lady Cat Janet Madsen shoots over University of Nebraska guard Sabrina Brooks. (Photo by Rob Squires) Lady Cats Elyse Funk and Janet Madsen battle Missouri ' s Monique Lucas for a rebound during K- State ' s game against the Tigers. (Photo by Greg Vogel) 314 Women ' s Basketball continued from page 314 crushed the Lady Broncs of Pan American, 110-46, the following day and posted their biggest margin of victory for the season. Freshman guard Nadira Hazim led the Lady Cats in the Pan American game by posting season highs: 25 points, 20 field goals attempted, 11 free throws and 9 steals. Sophomores Elyse Funk and Amy Davidson also posted season highs in the Pan American victory, each dishing out nine assists in the contest. In that victory, three Lady Cat team records fell as the team put up 110 points, had 29 steals and handed out 34 assists new marks in those categories. K-State finished out its non-conference schedule, 2-3, with one of those coming in overtime against Northern Arizona on the road. Conference play opened up for the Lady Cats on Jan. 12 in Stillwater, Okla., where the Lady Cats took on the Cowgirls of Oklahoma State. The Cowgirls sent the L ady Cats a rude message about Big Eight competition as they surpassed K- State by 23 points in the Big Eight opener. Things didn ' t get any for the Lady Cats as they dropped their next six games, including five games and one non- conference contest with Louisiana Tech. It became evident that the goals set by the Lady Cat squad at the beginning of the season were maybe a little high. We had a lot of goals at the beginning of the season, Funk said. Our first goal was to win the Big Eight, but as the season progressed, it got to where we just wanted to improve every game. We had nothing to lose as the season went on, Davidson said. Every game we were always the and even when it was apparent we weren ' t going to win the regular season conference title, we just looked to the tournament and set our goals to win that. We felt like we were in every game, sophomore Janet Madsen said. It wasn ' t unrealistic for us to set our goals so high because we knew we were improving every game, and we never felt like we didn ' t have a chance to win. After losing their sixth game in a row, a 52-50 heartbreaker to the of Kansas in Allen Field House at Lawrence, the team notched its first and only Big Eight Conference OPP Arkansas Little-Rock 59 - 62 Rockhurst 82 - 65 Creighton 67 - 60 Drake 76 - 65 Wichita State 75 - 53 Stephen F. Austin 59 - 82 Pan American 110 - 46 Missouri-K.C. 73 - 77 Louisiana State 73 - 61 Arizona State 73 - 75 Northern Arizona 74 - 65 Oral Roberts 57 - 58 Oklahoma State 64 - 87 Oklahoma 65 - 96 Nebraska 72 - 82 Colorado 58 - 84 Missouri 66 - 79 Louisiana Tech 45 - 77 Kansas 50 - 52 Iowa State 83 - 70 Nebraska 60 - 66 Missouri 65 - 67 Oklahoma 61 - 79 Colorado 70 - 86 Kansas 58 - 74 Iowa State 52 - 70 Oklahoma State 54 - 73 Nebraska 51 - 71 victory by beating the Iowa State Cylones, 83-70, at Ahearn Field House. This victory was the one bright spot for the Lady Cats as they went on to their conference with losses to the of Nebraska, Oklahoma, Colorado, Kansas, Iowa State and Oklahoma State, for a final conference record of 1-13. On Feb. 27, the Lady Cats played their final game in Ahearn against the of Oklahoma State. On the line was the chance for a victory in the Lady Cats ' final game at Ahearn, a building in which women basketball squads had posted 385 victories. This tally placed K-State at the fifth-best all-time victory mark in National Collegiate Athletic Association Division I history . Only eight players suited up for the contest as Kristie Bahner sat out the game with and Madsen would miss the game with a hyper-extended knee. While K-State was fielding only eight players, 10 continued on page 318 Going up for a field goal, Nadira Hazim shoots for two of her eight points during the Lady Cats ' final game in Ahearn Field House. (Photo by Gary Lytle) 316 Women ' s Basketball Louisiana Tech ' s Melinda looks on as her teammate Sheila Ethridge swats the ball away from Lady Cat Elyse Funk. (Photo by Greg Vogel) Missouri Tiger Tracy Ellis tries to block Wildcat Stacey Boyle from going up for a shot. (Photo by Chris Assaf) 317 continued from page 316 players were scoring for the Cowgirls and the outcome of the contest was never in question. A crowd of 516 watched the Cowgirls jump out to a 38-23 halftime lead in the final Lady Cat game at Ahearn, as the Cowgirls outshot the Lady Cats 47 percent to 40 percent. Things only got worse for the Lady Cats as they came out for the second half and shot only 29 percent from the floor, while the Cowgirls maintained their shooting percentage at 46. The defeated the Lady Cats, 73-54. The season ended for the Lady Cats in the first round of the Big Eight Post Season Tournament at the Bicentennial Center in Salina. K-State was matched against the top-seeded Nebraska team, which the Lady Cats had dropped the two previous meetings to in the regular season. The Lady Cats lost to the Huskers in Lincoln, 82-72, and dropped the decision in Manhattan, 66-60. The total point spread of 16 points in those games was the second smallest that K-State had suffered all season. The Lady Cats lost to Missouri by a two- game total of 15 points for the smallest margin. What looked to be a game on paper wasn ' t to be as Nebraska thumped K-State by 20 points, 71-51, and ended the Lady Cats hopes of the magic and winning the Big Eight Tournament. Despite the Lady Cats 1-13 mark in the Big Eight and overall mark of 8-20, there were many bright spots for the squad. Madsen and freshman Diana Miller were selected as mention choices on the All-Big Eight team at the end of the season. Miller was the model of consistency as she started in 26 of the 27 Lady Cat games. That was no easy feat considering the fact that Mossman started 11 different line-ups over the course of the season. I think to have a definite starting five is always better, Madsen said of the starting line-up inconsistencies. But in our case I can see why Coach (Moss- man) was forced to start people because of our team ' s inconsistency. Every game somebody was playing better, Davidson said. It was helpful because it made us compete harder in practice. The attitudes of the team members seemed to be one of optimism, as the scars of the season faded. We ' re so young, Funk said. By the end of the season we could feel the improvement we ' d made over the year. Next year we will have all played together and will have this year of experience under our belts. With everyone returning to the team next year, the youth movement for Lady Cat basketball was well under way, as the Lady Cat team members were already looking forward to the 1988-89 season. Davidson summed it up best when she said, We are going to be right there in the thick of it next year. Everyone else is losing a lot of players and with everyone coming back for us, we will be very strong for the next two years. by Garyn Hoffman Lady Cat Amy Davidson and Lady Jayhawk Sandy Shaw battle for a rebound during K-State ' s loss to the University of Kansas. (Photo by Greg Vogel) Morale runs low on the K-State bench as several of the Lady Cat team members watch the action at the other end of the court. (Photo by Steve Rasmussen) 318 Women ' s Basketball 319 Women ' s Basketball Taking a low-key approach to the indoor season, the ' Cat track teams looked to the outdoor season to excel. Coming off of the successes of last year ' s outdoor track season, one would have thought that John Capriotti, head track coach, would have been expecting big things from his men ' s and women ' s squads as the 1987-88 indoor track season got under way. After all, both the men ' s and women ' s teams were coming off impressive showings at the Big Eight Meet where they finished second to the Nebraska squads, one of the strongest track programs in the nation. The women ' s team piled up 129 points on their way to capturing place, only 63 points behind the first-place Huskers. The men ' s squad amassed 122 points, which was only to Nebraska ' s 146 first-place point total. Those two second-place finishes marked the first time in Wildcat track history that both the men ' s and women ' s teams had finished that high in the same meet. The 122 point total by the men ' s squad was the highest total in the of the Big Eight Outdoor Track Meet by a Wildcat squad. Of the 38 events at the meet, K- State athletes walked away with 13 Big Eight crowns, more than any of the other schools in the conference. We had more conference than any other school, Capriotti said. I was very impressed with our strength and showing in that meet. So one might have thought that Capriotti would have been excited as the indoor season began. But early in the season before the first meet, Capriotti was quoted as saying that his squads would take a low-key approach to the indoor season. In the University of Missouri K-State captured eight first- place finishes. For the women, junior Kim Kilpatrick led the charge as she garnered two first-place finishes. won the 55-meter hurdles with a time of 8.1 seconds and the 300-meter dash with a time of 36.41. Other first-place finishers for the women ' s squad were Joy Jones in the 400-meter dash with a time of 56.59 and Kelly Abernathy in the shot put with a throw of 44-4. On the men ' s side, Ron Stahl raced to a first-place finish in the mile run posting a time of 4:13.73; Chuckie Allen grabbed a first-place finish in the 300-meter dash with a time of 32.28; Fred Soboyejo captured first in the long jump, leaping 23-7 for the title; Kelly Williams won the high jump with a 7-0 leap; and Daryl Reichard took the crown in the 3,000-meter run with a time of 8:37.17. Although Capriotti was ready to pass the indoor season off lightly, it was apparent after that first meet at Columbia, Mo., the Wildcat track teams were ready to be noticed. We really like to concentrate on the outdoor season as a team, Capriotti said. We have much better outdoor facilities and when you add some of the throwing events, we become a much better outdoor team than we are indoors. We just take the indoor season lightly. We go to much better meets during the outdoor season so that is where we place our emphasis. In the only indoor scoring meet that the K-State teams competed in before the Big Eight Indoor Championships on Feb. 26-27, the Wildcat squads posted high finishes. The meet took place in Madison, Wis., and had K-State competing against teams from the University of Wisconsin, Illinois State University, and Big Eight Conference foe Iowa State University. The K-State teams again flexed their muscles as the men ' s team walked away with a first-place finish while the women ' s squad garnered second-place honors. Kenny Harrison again led the men ' s team as he captured two first-place finishes. He set new field house marks in both the triple jump and long jump. His leaps of 54-2.5 in the triple jump and 25-6.25 in the long jump gave him continued on page 323 Marge Eddy and Jacque Struckoff pace during a race at the Big Eight track meet at the University of Nebraska. The two proved to be the top women long distance runners for K- State. (Photo by Rob Squires) 320 Men ' s and Women ' s Track Wildcat track team member and football running back Tony Jordan runs neck-and-neck with his competitors in the preliminaries in the 100-yard dash. (Photo by Rob Squires) K-State track team member Pat Hessini passes the baton to teammate Brian Zwahlen during the distance medley relay at the Big Eight Indoor Track and Field Championships at the University of (Photo Rob Sauires) 321 Men ' s and Women ' s Track • 322 Men ' s and Women ' s Track tracksters continued from page 320 the first-place finishes in both events and also qualified him for the NCAA Indoor Championship Meet in March. The women didn ' t fare as well as the men, but they still looked good as they finished second to the University of Wisconsin. The K-State women captured six first-place finishes on the day, as they notched five individual firsts and the mile-relay team won its event with a time of 3:55.36. Kilpatrick again led the women ' s squad as she garnered two first-place finishes. She duplicated her feat of the Track coach John Capriotti talks with Jacque Struckoff after she won the 5,000-meter run at the Husker Invitational. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) week before and won both the 55-meter hurdles with a time of 7.96 and the 300-meter dash with a time of 36.19. DeDe Henderson, competing in her first meet of the season, won the high jump event with a jump of 5-8. Felicia Curry captured her first first-place finish of the season by posting a leap of 37-11 in the triple jump. Jones also won the 400-meter dash for the second time in as many tries as she put up a winning time 56.13. The next major meet for the Wildcat squads came on Feb. 26-27 as they traveled to Lincoln, Neb., for the Big Eight Indoor Championships. Less than a year before in the Big Eight Outdoor Championships, both K-State squads had finished close seconds to the Nebraska men ' s and women ' s teams. K-State had its chance to avenge those second-place finishes. Much like the year before, the men ' s and women ' s teams from Nebraska captured first place. But unlike the year before, the K-State men ' s and women ' s teams did not have as strong as showings as they had last May. The men ' s squad fared better than the women as they finished fourth overall with 69 team points behind the University of Oklahoma, Iowa State continued on page 325 Co-captain of the track team and long distance runner Ron Stahl strides around the track during a race in Lincoln, Neb. (Photo by Rob Squires) K-State trackster Jeff Reynolds edges past a University of Kansas runner to place third in the men ' s medley relay at the Big Eight meet in Lincoln, Neb. (Photo by Rob Squires) 323 Men ' s and Women ' s Track Track trainer Carl Cramer stretches out sprint runner Joy Jones in the training room at Lincoln, Neb. Jones set a national qualifying mark in the 50-yard dash. (Photo by Rob Squires) K-State ' s Jacque Struckoff leads a pack of to the finish of the 5,000-meter run at the Husker Invitational at the University of (Photo by Steve Wolgast) continued from page 323 and the first-place Cornhuskers, who racked up 114 team points. Harrison moved his total of Big Eight titles to 14, as he notched up two more titles in the triple jump and long jump. He set a conference record in the long jump with his leap of . That jump set the track record in that event and was also a national mark and a qualifying mark for the Olympic trials. The only other Wildcat man to a first-place finish in the conference meet was Jeff Reynolds as he claimed the prize in the 600-meter dash with a time of 1:09.97. For the women, it was a day as they finished sixth in the eight team field. Individually for the Wildcat women, Kilpatrick caught the only first-place finish when she did what she had been doing all year by winning the 55-meter hurdles with a time of 7.89. High-jumper John Speers shows his disappointment at not cl earing the bar at the Big Eight track tournament in Lincoln, Neb., where he finished second. (Photo by Rob Squires) Carpenter and Henderson managed second-place finishes for the women in the triple jump and high jump, respectively. At the NCAA Indoor on March 11-12, K-State had a good showing in the final indoor event of the 1988 season. Harrison captured All-American honors in the triple jump and long jump and won the national title in the triple jump. Jones also captured All-American honors as she finished seventh in the nation in the 55-meter dash. Other women placing in the meet were who finished ninth overall in the high jump, and Kilpatrick, who finished fourth in the preliminaries of the 55-meter hurdles. Our people finished very strong in the championships, Capriotti said. We are looking forward to the outdoor season so we can really see how strong our teams are. I would say that the Nebraska squads are still the teams to beat in the conference, but the Big Eight is a very competitive conference and we should be toward the top. by Garyn Hoffman 325 Men ' s and Women ' s Track Olympic track hopeful, Kim Kilpatrick warms up on the hurdles at R.V. Christian Track. (Photo by Steve Rasmussen) Kim Kilpatrick, Ray Hansen and Jacque all hope to qualify for the 1988 Summer Olympics to be held in Seoul, Korea. (Photo by Steve Rasmussen) 326 Olympic Hopefuls Seoul, Korea, 1988. That date and location could only mean one thing, the Summer Olympics. Even before the excitement of the Summer Olympics began, a host of K- State student-athletes knew they would be making the trek to the Olympic trials in July. Among those Wildcat athletes who qualified to participate in the Olympic trials were two former K-State athletes, Pinkie Suggs, who will be in the shot put, and Rita Graves, who will compete in the high jump. Current Wildcat athletes who qualified to make the trip to were Jacque Struckhoff, Kim and Kenny Harrison, an All- American and National Collegiate Athletic Association champion. Ray Hansen, an assistant track coach, also qualified for the trials in the javelin. The Olympic trials were not a new experience to all of those who would be competing for the honor of being a member of the United States Olympic team. One of those athletes, Kenny Harrison, participated in the 1984 Olympic trials for the summer games in Los Angeles. Although he didn ' t make the team, he did win a spot on the national Junior Olympics team that traveled to the Bahamas to compete that summer. Harrison was probably K-State ' s best chance to send a team member to Seoul for the summer games. He was ranked second in the nation in the triple jump and third in the world. I think I have a legitimate chance to make the team, Harrison said. I would say my chances of making the team are 75 percent at this point. Harrison was taking special care of himself this year as he didn ' t want a repeat of what happened four years ago at the Olympic trials. I ' m not competing in all the meets through this season, Harrison said. The last time I tried out for the team, I competed throughout the Big Eight season. This time around I ' m trying to get a lot more rest and letting my knees heal up so that I will be ready for the trials. Harrison would be competing for one of the three spots on the Olympic team in the triple jump event. Harrison missed the University of Missouri Invitational during K-State ' s indoor track season to compete in the Sunkist Invitational in Los Angeles. Harrison won the event by outleaping his personal indoor best by more than five inches, with a leap of . It was an important showing for Harrison and a big step toward a spot on the Olympic team, as the Sunkist Invitational was a warm-up for the Olympic trials, and was considered one of the top three meets in the nation. Struckhoff was taking a different approach toward making the trip to Seoul, via the Olympic trials in She was competing in the Big Eight Conference meets and was a very low-key approach to the upcoming Olympic trials. I ' m not looking toward the trials at this point in the season, Struckhoff said. Right now I ' m taking each meet as it comes in the schedule and looking to the Big Eight Meet at the end of the season. I ' m not doing anything different than I have in the past, and I ' m not even looking at the trials right now. Struckhoff will be competing in the 10,000-meter run at the Olympic trials, and although she was not as much of a favorite to make the team as Harrison, her outlook toward the trials was good. I ' m just taking it one day at a time right now, Struckhoff said. July is a ways off and we ' ll see what happens after the conference and national meets are over. Hansen was the third K-Stater who would be traveling to Indianapolis for the Olympic trials, although his role on the Wildcat track team was from Harrison ' s and s. Hansen, an assistant track coach, would be competing at the trials in the javelin. Right now I ' m just training with my athletes to prepare for the trials, Hansen said. I ' m doing the same things I have my athletes do in practice. Hansen ' s event at the trials will take place on July 16 and 17, with only eight men advancing to on the second day of the trials. Twelve men will be left after the first day of throwing, but then there will be a throw-off that will cut the field down to eight for the second day of throwing, Hansen said. On the second day of the competition each person would get three throws and those tosses would which three men would become members of the Olympic team. I am legitimately in the top eight people competing, so I see myself advancing past the first day of throwing, Hansen said. After that, I think I ' m in the top six throwers and that I have a pretty good chance of making the team. I don ' t think anyone will beat the top two men in the event, but after that I think it comes down to me and three others competing for the final spot on the team. With the prospect of three other individuals making the Olympic team and six other Wildcat track team members qualifying for the Olympic trials during the outdoor season, it looked like K-State could be well at Indianapolis and very could make all of K-State proud by winning that ticket to Seoul as members of the U.S. Olympic team. by Garyn Hoffman ATHLETES PREPARE FOR OLYMPIC TRIALS 327 Olympic Hopefuls 328 Housing Division Smurthwaite Housemothers Off Campus Greeks Residence Halls Apartment vs. Dorm Living While waiting for a ride to his apartment, Mark Feist, senior in engineering techno logy, uses one of his crutches to support his broken leg while sitting on a railing east of the Union. (Photo by Chris Stewart) 329 Housing Division going greek By Sheila Graber the rushees pulled into the crowded front parking lot of Hall, they saw what 572 other sorority pledges were seeing — the events of formal rush week. The number of rushees increased 21 over last year, and because of this the had to make adjustments. Our house had to be flexible, said Tammy Savaiano, junior in family life and human development and head of the rush committee for Gamma Phi Beta. Although the increase had its advantages, it also had disadvantages. Savaiano said the Gamma Phi house had one active for every two rushees, which meant visits between the rushees and the actives weren ' t as personal as in the past. Alpha Chi Omega also had to deal with a ratio of one active to two rushees. This puts a real strain on the actives because it ' s hard to include both rushees in a conversation and make them both seem equally special, Robin Harnden, senior in journalism and mass said. New Alpha Xi Delta pledge Katrina Callicott, freshman in architecture, receives a congratulatory hug from fellow pledge sister Sarah Johnson, freshman in business (Photo by Gary Lytle) After the rushees arrived, they attended floor meetings and met with their rush On the following day, they visited each house. On the final day the rushees were allowed to accept three invitations to a progressive They then had to make choices among houses that evening. As the week progressed, 52 of the rushees withdrew. One explained that she withdrew because, in her opinion, sororities were fake. Some of the actives that I had talked to during rush wouldn ' t even talk to me on campus after school started. Kathy Paden, freshman in psychology, said her rush roommate dropped out. It was really hard on me because we had been through so much together and had become pretty good friends. Eight women received no further It makes you wonder about the greek system, said one of the rush counselors. How can they (the houses) get to know you in five minutes? She went on to say the system used by K- State to interview potential pledges, however, was probably most efficient for this campus. Although there were disadvantages to rush, many lasting friendships were created. The actives had no idea that there were so many girls going through rush, but they were well organized. I met a lot of people. Those that I hang around with now are the ones I met rush, Paden said. Members of the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority greet perspective pledges. (Photo by Gary Lytle) With no room to spare, a member ponders where to put all the luggage of the newly chosen pledges. (Photo by Gary Lytle) ACACIA fraternity was founded at the University of Michigan in 1904 and has been at K-State since 1913. Forty-nine members make 2005 Hunting their home. The colors are gold and black and the flower is the sprig of acacia in bloom. 332 Kempe, Jeanne Housemother Bowker, Jeff Goodland Secondary Education SO Capps, Lale Augusta Electrical Engineering SR Christian, Jeffrey Netawaka Accounting FR Christopher, Andrew Coldwater Marketing JR Cole, Bryce Manhattan Psychology SO Davis, Scott Hutchinson Psychology SO Dawes, Derek Goodland Recreation JR Dome, Trent Ashland Engineering FR Farmer, John Russell Pre-Forestry SR Hall, Lott Kirwin Mechanical Engineering SR Hamilton, Bruce Wichita Landscape Architecture SR Hernandez, Ramiro Goodland Architecture FR Herron, David Lenexa Mechanical Engineering IR Higgins, Jim L Newton Industrial Engineering SR House, Andrew Goodland Economics Huser, Vince Syracuse Journalism and Mass Communications Jellison, Matt Protection Secondary Education FR Kempthorne, Raymond Spring Green, Wis. Civil Engineering SO Lyon, Stephen Topeka Engineering Technology JR Martin, Kevin Russell Biology Matthews, David Ashland Architecture JR McCosh, Robert Dodge City History SR McMinimy, Kendall Ashland Journalism and Mass Communications JR Merklein, Mark Logan Arts and Sciences SO Meyers, Michael Manhattan Electrical Engineering SO Nelson, Bradon Woodston Psychology JR Nichols, Michael Longford Agricultural Economics SR Parke, Douglas Prairie Village Civil Engineering SR Roberts, Kurt Casper, Wyo. Accounting SO Rude, Jonathan Manhattan Fisheries and Wildlife Biology JR Scott, Kelley Leavenworth Speech Sears, Matthew Abilene Radio-Television JR Sears, Michael Abilene Arts and Sciences FR Seeger, Jeff Denison Milling Science and Management JR Sieck, Mike Goodland Milling Science and Management JR Smyth, Joe Ashland Architecture FR Wilson, Dean Holton Computer Science 1R Cacia Girls Acacia Little Sisters FRONT ROW: Stephanie Mills, Jill LaBarge, Jensen. Amy Keith. SECOND ROW: Cheryl Sloan, Denise Morgan, Stephanie Wilkerson, Stricker, Becky Lloyd, Jennifer Prinz, Janet Howell, Becky Jones, Brenda Allen, Janie Catlin, Kelly Hansen. THIRD ROW: Kim McCrary, Vicki Meinert, Lisa Beard, Lisa Gast, Jill Davis, Vera McMinimy, Shelia Gillenwater, Angela Orr. BACK ROW: Joan Pate, Susan Lierz, Celia Roop Dara Dawes, Beth Hashman, Cynthia Riemann, Brook Filson, Julie Triplett. 333 acacia Rush, Edna Housemother Allen, Andrea Overland Park Business Administration SO Allen, Karen Shawnee Journalism and Mass Communications Anderson, Kim Wichita Psychology JR Baird, Sarah Wichita Architecture FR Baker, Kristen Overland Park Apparel and Textile Marketing JR Behner, Carrie Lenexa Architecture SR Bethel, Debra Great Bend Arts and Sciences FR Brinker, Sandy Abilene Apparel Design SR Broadfoot, Kristi Overland Park Physical Education IR Brown, Christy Lenexa Business Administration SO Brull, Anne Hays Accounting SO Campbell, Jody Topeka Finance SO Chartrand, Nancy Leawood Journalism and Mass Communications JR Clark, Robin Overland Park Journalism and Mass Communications FR Clopine, Jennifer Topeka Psychology JR Colgan, Diane Mission Business Administration JR Collins, Kim Lenexa Early Childhood Education JR Compton, Gay Liberal Secondary Education FR Dewey, Sami Hollenberg Social Work SO Dietz, Audra Preston Journalism and Mass Communications 50 Dugan, Karla Wichita Marketing IR Eberhart, Tammy Deerfield Elementary Education SO Ede, Kim Harper Computer Engineering FR Elmore, Kelsi Liberal Business Administration SO Elmore, Kristi Liberal Business Administration SO Fenske, Carrie Mayetta Radio-Television SO Forbes, Robin Roeland Park Business Administration FR Frank, Stephanie Bennington Management SR Freeman, Rhonda Garden City Family Life and Human Development SR Frieden, Cammi Hazelton Education FR Gaines, Michelle Panama City Beach, Fla. Marketing JR Gibbs, Deborah Hiawatha Elementary Education SR Gleissner, Diane Mission Marketing SR Goens, Lesley Basehor Elementary Education SO Gould, Kathleen Overland Park Speech Pathology SR 334 alpha chi omega was founded in 1885 and received its charter at K-State in 1947. The sorority house is located at 1835 Todd Road and is composed of 124 members. Its colors are scarlet red and olive green and its flower is the red carnation. alpha chi omega Grater, Carrie Leonardville Marketing SO Griffith, Shari Scott City Music Education FR Haake, Suzanne Manhattan Marketing JR Hamilton, Dana Overland Park Art FR Hanke, Jennifer Goodland Accounting SO Harnden, Robin Attica Journalism and Mass Communications SR Hartman, Lynette Shawnee Marketing FR Heimerman, Renee Garden Plain Speech Pathology SR Hoffman, Anne Overland Park Radio-Television SO Johnson, Christa Dodge City Psychology Johnson, Jennifer Augusta Industrial Engineering Kandt, Sandy Lindsborg Accounting SO Keefe, Sheila Psychology Kirkpatrick, Cindy Social Work Kirkpatrick, Sherri Business Administration Kull, Leslie Pre-Physical Therapy Lewis, Michelle Architecture Luke, Meggan Agricultural Economics Manning, Nancy Lenexa Family Life and Human Development McNaghten, Carolyn Overland Park Social Work Michel, Amy Garden City Social Work SR Miller, Jan Wakefield Journalism and Mass Communications SO Moon, Michelle Liberal Marketing Mumma, Teresa Architecture Oliver, Nicole Paola Arts and Sciences FR Olsen, Angela Fairfax, Va. Pre-Medicine Paden, Kathy Great Bend Arts and Sciences FR Puls, Sherry Anthony Landscape Architecture FR Railsback, Ann Brandon, Vt. Apparel and Textile Marketing FR Randall, Sandra Shawnee Speech Pathology and Audiology SR Redelsheimer, Karla Overland Park Radio-Television Reitz, Jennifer Salina Business Administation 50 Rinard, Lori Shawnee Interior Design Riordan, Elizabeth Lawrence Political Science SR Risser, Michele Overland Park Recreation SR Roe, Kristi Overland Park Journalism and Mass Communications 50 Root, Kyra Lyons Accounting SO Rose, Tammy Sterling Radio-Television SO Rottinghaus, Robin Topeka Business Administration FR Schomacker, Stacie Wichita Biology Schoning, Mary Manhattan Architecture FR Schuldt, Sallie Topeka Secondary Education FR Schurle, Melanie Manhattan Marketing SR Sharp, Denise Augusta Elementary Education FR Shell, Angela Topeka Nutrition Shields, Michelle Neodesha Apparel and Textile Marketing SR Shoup, Christine Eureka Elementary Education FR Smith, Melanie Littleton, Colo. Restaurant Management FR Arkansas City SO Overland Park FR Overland Park Omaha, Neb. SO Topeka Wichita FR FR Pratt 335 AXO Smith, Stephanie Littleton, Colo. Arts and Sciences SO Tatum, Anne Fontana Political Science FR Tennant, Gay Ann Dodge City Marketing SR Tinnin, Lisa Overland Park Arts and Sciences FR Venters, Kayla Dodge City Marketing FR Waite, Elizabeth Sunnyvale, Calif. Apparel and Textile Marketing Wakeman, Julie Baldwin City Arts and Sciences SO Wakeman, Shelly Baldwin City Pre-Law SR Waller, Karen Overland Park Apparel and Textile Marketing JR Ward, Mary Manhattan Journalism and Mass Communications SR White, Gayla Kalamazoo, Mich. Ma rketing SR White, Kristi Caldwell Marketing SO Williams, Lisa Eureka Business Administration JR Willis, Martha Goodland Sociology FR Wright, Joanne Manhattan Journalism and Mass Communications SR Young, Joanne DeSoto Marketing SR For A Dating was the name of the game, but this game could be difficult when trying to find a date in less than two hours. This was the challenge the Alpha Chi Omega sorority had to face when it held its first date dash at Charlie ' s Neighborhood Bar. A date dash was a social function in which sorority members could get set up or meet with a date for an party. These functions also served as study breaks. Nancy Chartrand, junior in journalism and mass and member of Chi Omega, said, Since we haven ' t had one for a long time, it was a good turnout. Everyo ne seemed to have a good time. Chartrand was in charge of planning social events for the Alpha Chis, and that included date dashes. This was an awesome date dash. It helped relieve some pressure from school, Sandy Kandt, sophomore in said. The Alpha Chis had two date dashes per semester. Sometimes a theme was carried out, depending on the amount of time given to find a date. Mary Ward, senior in and mass and art, said, We once had a date dash where we set our roommates up with we chose from a list they gave us. So they were when their date came to the door. Kandt summed up the function as quite funny, almost 50 girls wanting to use the phone at once to find a date, and only three phone lines to use. The house was going mad. I don ' t think anyone could call in or out. by Larissa Kimura Keith Leff, freshman in environmental design, and Cindy Kirkpatrick, freshman in social work, show affection for each other while attending a date dash. (Photo by Chris Assaf) 336 alpha delta pi was founded in 1851 at Wesleyan Female College. The sorority, located at 518 Sunset, received its charter at K-State in 1915. The flower is the violet and the colors are blue and white. Albrecht, Wendy Manhattan Psychology SO Armstrong, Lisa Harper Psychology FR Ash, Kristine Derby Biology FR Baker, Heidi Berryton Recreation SO Bangle, Karin Derby Industrial Engineering SO Besler, Pamela Topeka Journalism and Mass Communications SR Besler, Pat Topeka Physical Education SR Biays, Barbara Ellinwood Education-English SR Birkbeck, Paula Holton Pre-Medicine SO Boeve, Angie Hays Accounting JR Bomgardner, Stacy Dodge City Education-Mathematics FR Brace, Shawn New York, N.Y. Pre-Dentistry SO Brackhahn, Allison Lenexa Journalism and Mass Communications SO Bradshaw, Ronda Topeka Architectural Engineering JR Cardona, Tina Imperial, Mo. Architecture SO Clement, Jackie Manhattan Accounting SR Colgin, Cyndy Dodge City Pre-Optometry FR Dalton, Colleen Lenexa Speech Pathology and Audiology FR Daum, Melissa Derby Accounting FR Davison, Sandra Halstead Interior Design FR Dietz, Alisa Wakeeney Apparel and Textile Marketing FR Downey, Jill Tulsa, Okla. Fine Arts FR Edson, Gail Topeka Pre-Medicine FR Edwards, Tracy Council Grove Biology JR Ewy, Laura Hutchinson Speech Pathology and Audiology SO Fairbank, Tanya McPherson Accounting FR Filson, Brook Protection Psychology FR Fisher, Eleanor Lake Quivi ra Education-Modern Languages SR Flick, Juliann Winfield Apparel Design SR Gatz, Katie Pratt Electrical Engineering SR Gibbs, Pam Hiawatha Business Administration Gough, Tracy Wichita Food and Nutrition-Exercise Science SO Graef, Robin Leavenworth Marketing SR Green, Meg Olathe Electrical Engineering JR Groth, Jeanne Topeka Industrial Engineering FR Hamon, Cheri Leavenworth Business Administration FR 337 Alpha Delta Pi Hannam, Beth Overland Park Education-English SR Harrelson, Shawn Topeka Secondary Education JR Higbee, Helene Kansas City, Kan. Marketing SR Hodge, Raylene Goddard Education-Secondary Administration SO Huggins, Laura Olathe Pre-Physical Therapy SO Hunsinger, Sarah Little River Pre-Pharmacy FR Hutcheson, Sheila Topeka Journalism and Mass Communications SO Keller, Amy Ellis Accounting FR Kelly, Monica Lenexa Mathematics FR Kelpin, Jill Topeka Social Work FR King, Laura Overland Park Elementary Education JR Kobs, Sarah Liberal Journalism and Mass Communications JR Kramer, Kathy Leawood Business Administration SO Larson, Buffy Hays Apparel and Textile Marketing FR Lehner, Jodi Cheney Secondary Education JR Lichtenhan, Vickie Dwight Elementary Education FR Long, Tasha Overland Park Apparel and Textile Marketing FR Lons, Kristin Overland Park Arts and Sciences SO Lueck, Carmela Junction City Elementary Education JR Luling, Theresa Topeka Human Ecology and Mass Comm. SR Lyon, Katy Topeka Pre-Physical Therapy SO Marion, Melissa Independence, Mo. Finance FR Maurer, Annette Shawnee Social Work JR Maze, Sharon Lenexa Arts and Sciences SO McAnarney, Amy Manhattan Accounting JR McCreary, Melissa Salina Elementary Education SO Miller, Glenda Cawker City Special Education SR Miller, Mandy Ottawa Arts and Sciences SO Mills, Wendy McPherson Mechanical Engineering FR Monson, Lynnette Leavenworth Journalism and Mass Communications JR Morrison, Jodi Manhattan Pre-Medicine FR Mullin, Robin Clay Center Psychology JR Neyer, Eun Morrowville Interior Design SR Oconnell, Laurie Roeland Park Accounting SO Perrigo, Nikole Hiawatha Journalism and Mass Communications FR Peterson, Lori Hutchinson Arts and Scienc es SO Phillips, Erin Bonner Springs Elementary Education JR Pitman, Dona Minneola Secondary Education JR Porter, Michelle Salina Arts and Sciences FR Purslow, Amy Atchison Marketing JR Purslow, Micah Atchison Arts and Sciences FR Rathbun, Jill Hutchinson Management JR Reid, Amy Overland Park Education-Speech SO Rezac, Karen Manhattan Industrial Engineering JR Robinson, Julia Hays Industrial Engineering SO Robuck, Mary Halstead Interior Design SR Romans, Amber Danville Elementary Education FR Schoenbeck, Melanie Abilene Business Administration FR 338 Alpha Delta Pi Underwood, Shelly Kansas City, Kan. Elementary Education SO Vath, Amy Cimarron Industrial Engineering SR Viveros, Christine Shawnee Mission Psychology JR Wells, Kelly Derby Business Administration FR Wells, Lee Ann Hutchinson Mechanical Engineering Sullivan, Laura Manhattan Education-Business SO Teufel, Shannon Dodge City Elementary Education JR Thou, Sandy Topeka Business Administration FR Truscott, Tina Overland Park Food and Nutrition-Exercise Science SO Tucker, Christine Osage City Arts and Sciences FR Wikoff, Jennifer Hoxie Early Childhood Education Winans, Beth Dodge City Life Sciences SR Winterman, Amy Jo Mission Human Ecology 1R Wittmer, Wendy Topeka Architectural Engineering SR Ziemba, Jolyn lola Arts and Sciences FR Soukup, Sharla Ellsworth Education JR Stanley, Jennifer Bonner Springs Arts and Sciences SO Stanton, Jennifer Stilwell Elementary Education SO Stein, Janice Ulysses Psychology SR Sullivan, Dana Manhattan Elementary Education JR Schwant, Darla Topeka Arts and Sciences FR Schweitzer, Julie Dighton Music FR Schwermann, Susan Olathe Early Childhood Education SR Sharp, Lori Herington Apparel and Textile Marketing SO Smith, Tahnee Dodge City Physical Education SO 339 Alpha Delta Pi alpha gamma delta is K-State ' s youngest sorority receiving its chapter in 1986. The sorority was founded in 1904. Currently, there are 39 members. Its flowers are red and buff roses and its colors are red, buff and green. Beans, Katherine Omaha, Neb. Special Education SO Bullock, Susan Topeka Restaurant Management FR Childers, Laura Kansas City, Mo. Education-Business Clevenger-Allen, Janet Kansas City, Mo. Psychology SR Coleman, Leslie Overbrook Marketing Collins, Kristine Shawnee Business Administration SO Farley, Kelly Derby Elementary Education Gradwohl, Laura Roeland Park Accounting Gunnoe, Sunny Holt Pre-Veterinary Medicine FR Guyette, Leanne Derby Accounting SR Hanna, Julie Topeka Journalism and Mass Communications Hungate, Gina Larned Apparel Design SR Hutchins, Andrea Scott City Dietetics Jennings, Karen Manhattan Accounting SR Kroenlein, Stacey Manhattan Marketing SR Lee, Janet Manhattan Finance SR Meadows, Jerri Dodge City Business Administration Milloy, Sarah Doylestown, Pa. Elementary Education SR Mudd, Jennifer Alamota Restaurant Management FR Neal, Deanna Leawood Radio-Television Neff, Kirsten Mission Interior Design SO Rolfs, Susan Randolph Accounting SR Ryan, Christine Overland Park English Sampson, Peggy Shawnee Animal Sciences and Industry FR Stewart, Heather Leawood Marketing SO Tawney, Lisa Topeka Accounting SR Taylor, Karen Lenexa Pre-Nursing Taylor, Tamara Hoxie Life Sciences SR Truesdell, Shannon Englewood, Colo. Marketing SO Weixelman, Sara Baileyville Marketing JR Williams, Elise Osage City Elementary Education 340 Alpha Gamma Delta bike Bucks By Chuck Horner sun ' s rays reflecting off gleaming bicycles, and gasps from helmeted riders signaled the culmination of an annual effort by the Alpha Gamma Delta sorority to raise funds for the Juvenile Diabetes Foundation. The Alpha Gamma Deltas held their second annual fund-raiser, a bicycle race at Tuttle Creek State Park. The Juvenile Diabetes Foundation is the sorority ' s national philanthropical project, said Stacey Kroenlein, philanthropy chairman for Alpha Gamma Delta and senior in marketing. The money we collected goes directly to the Juvenile Diabetes foundation for research to find a cure for this debilitating disease, Kroenlein said. Races of six and 24 miles, and a 24-mile, four-person relay race were conducted, she said. Top honors in the six-mile race went to Nadel, graduate student in industrial psychology; second place went to Jason Lilly, senior in mechanical engineering; and Doug Enns, senior in mechanical engineering, took third place. I raced for the competition and the T-shirt; I need clothes real bad, Enns said with a laugh. Actually I did it to let people in the area see what you can really do on a bike, he said. I was very psyched that we were racing to help others. In the 24-mile race, Nadel and Lilly joined hands in a show of camaraderie, crossing the finish line simultaneously for the two top places, with Garry Bond taking third. The team-relay race was won by the Alpha Delta Pi sorority, benefiting from a cavalier concession by Beta Theta Pi fraternity, who ended up in second place. The ADPi team — Shawn Brace, in pre-dentistry; Laura Huggins, sophomore in physical education; and Tracey Goff, sophomore in food and nutrition-exercise — were sponsored by their sorority house. I was really tired but I wanted to finish, Brace said. It was for a really good cause and everyone was having a good time. Isn ' t that what really counts? The Beta team was composed of Rob senior in engineering technology; Jeff Conyers, senior in electrical engineering; Jeff Fox, sophomore in business; and Dave senior in marketing. Kroenlein cited the sorority ' s obligation to the community and the Juvenile Diabetes Foundation as the motivation to annually host the bicycle races. All speed limits aside, participants of the Alpha Gamma Delta sorority fundraiser to benefit the Juvenile Diabetes Foundation, pedaled as fast as possible around the course at Tuttle Creek State Park. (Photo by Gary Lytle) alpha gamma rho has 71 members and received its charter at K-State in 1927. The fraternity colors are dark green and gold and its flower is the pink rose. The fraternity was founded at the University of Illinois and Ohio State University. Smith, Patricia Housemother Bangerter, Boyd Leoti Agricultural Economics SO Barnes, Kindal Towner, Colo. Agronomy Beikman, James Linn Animal Sciences and Industry JR Bennett, Kevin Oberlin Animal Sciences and Industry JR Brooks, Steve Norton Business Administration Case, Scott Little River Milling Science and Management SO Conley, Dwight Gypsum Animal Sciences and Industry SR Dahlsten, Mark Lindsborg Animal Sciences and Industry JR Doud, Gregory Mankato Animal Sciences and Industry JR Dyke, Tim Dennis Chemical Engineering FR Eflin, Brian Moran Engineering JR Falkenstien, Rich Oswego Agriculture Education SR Feyh, Richard Alma Agronomy SR Fisher, Glen Harper Feed Science and Management SR Galle, Ronald Moundridge Milling Science and Management SO Garrison, James Miltonvale Engineering JR Gigstad, James Nebraska City, Neb. Pre-Veterinary Medicine SO Gooding, Chris Excelsior Springs, Mo. Bakery Science and Management SR Grinter, Ted Tonganoxie Agricultural Economics SR Hahn, James Tecumseh, Neb. Animal Sciences and Industry FR Herrs, Jon Clay Center Milling Science and Management SO Holz, Larry Manhattan Animal Sciences and Industry SR Hummel, Roger Hope Animal Sciences and Industry SR Imthurn, Dan Maple Hill Animal Sciences and Industry JR Johnson, Kenneth Assaria Pre-Veterinary Medicine JR Johnson, Patrick Erie Agronomy SO Kirk, Philip Clayton Agricultural Economics JR Korb, Philip Tonganoxie Animal Sciences and Industry JR Krizek, Theron Dresden Agricultural Economics JR Kuehny, Brad Caldwell Agricultural Economics JR Laverentz, Mark Bendeno Animal Sciences and Industry FR Marcuson, Kirk Oberlin Feed Science and Management SR McClellan, Roger Palco Agricultural Economics SR Miller, Tom Garnett Marketing SO Moore, Brett Council Bluffs, Iowa Agriculural Economics FR 342 alpha gamma rho Moser, Daniel Effingham Animal Sciences and Industry FR New, Damon Leavenworth Agricultural Economics SO Nikkel, Christopher Canton Agricultural Economics Nyp, Jeff Palco Milling Science and Management SO Ohlde, Terry Linn Animal Sciences and Industry SO Oswalt, David Little River Agricultural Economics JR Otott, Jeff Washington Animal Sciences and Industry JR Pakkebier, Kurt Prairie View Physical Education JR Pearson, James Osage City Animal Sciences and Industry JR Perkins, Rick Howard Agricuture SR Peterson, Randy Cottonwood Falls Animal Sciences and Industry SR Petrie, Eugene McLouth Agricultural Economics SO Read, Steve Derby Marketing SR Richmeier, Michael Holcomb Agricultural Economics JR Sander, Doug Stockton Management SO Alpha Gamma Rho Little Sisters FRONT ROW: Kim Dahlsten, Ingrid Erickson, Julie Thompson, Susan Clarkson, Tammy Anderson, Michelle Thole, Niki Krainbill, Sheila SECOND ROW: Kami Huxman, Sandra Kandt, Kristen Spaeth, Nancy Deckert, Candace Kats, Jill Hofmann, Misty Wiechman, Paula Robin Hummel.BACK ROW: Mary Sobba, Muirhead, Darla Schwant, Shari Henry, Amy Campbell, Connie Wiles, Mitzi Loughmiller, Janelle Rundle, Melanie Mainquist. 343 Savage, Darrel Barnes Engineering FR Shuey, Scott Tecumseh, Neb. Animal Sciences and JR Sipes, James Manter Agronomy JR Smith, Ronald Tonganoxie Agriculture Education JR Smith, Troy Canton Feed Science and Management FR Stahel, Curtis Overbrook Pre-Veterinary Medicine FR Steenbock, Curtis Longford Animal Sciences and Industry SR Stenstrom, Michael White City Engineering FR Stillwagon, Richard Chapman Animal Sciences and Industy SR Strickler, Dale Colony Agronomy SR Strickler, Todd Colony Agronomy FR Tucker, Kenneth Auburn Agronomy Turek, Tim South Haven Animal Sciences and Industry SO Vanover, Kyle Clayton Agricultural Economics SO Wickstrum, Todd Westmoreland Animal Sciences and Industry SO Rho-Mates Alpha Gamma Rho Little Sisters FRONT ROW: Bobbie Ward, Lora Gilliland, Powell, Terri Holcomb, Kristine Wilson, Karol Henry, Gretchen Eberly. SECOND ROW: Deanell DeBey, Karen Bauman, Kathi Harrington, Sandra Wiederholt, Jennifer Allen, Debra Neel,Gail Sommer Weelborg.THIRD ROW: Jill Shannan Seely, Cathy Haskin, Lora Kilgore, Jill Luginsland, Melanie Theroff, Jennifer Franklin, Sally Hoffman. BACK ROW: Carla Blain, Heidi Stichternath, Carolyn Baier, Kate Perkins, Kristin Johnson, Mary Bosch, Denise Vering, Dolores Born, Robin Haney, Amy Stockton. 344 Alpha Gamma Rho alpha kappa lambda was on April 17, 1914, at the University of California at Berkely and has 22 chapters. The fraternity flower is the yellow rose and its colors are purple and gold. Their house is located 1919 Hunting and has 24 members. Habiger, Margarette Housemother Bartel, John Overland Park Education-Physics ER Bell, James Hoyt Information Systems SR Bishop, Ron Overland Park Landscape Architecture Brokeshoulder, Gerald Gladstone, Mo. Mechanical Engineering Cassida, John Rantoul Political Science JR Decker, Emmett Overland Park Biology FR DuBois, Kirt Greeley, Kan. Architecture SO Far-Taj, Al Chicago, Ill. Electical Engineering SO Garber, Darrell Richmond, Kan. Pre-Veterinary Medicine FR Kratochvil, Terry Topeka Civil Engineering JR McKinnon, James Topeka Electrical Engineering SO Miller, Kevin Show low, Ariz. Electrical Engineering SO Mitchell, Brad Overland Park Pre-Law Pluimer, Gregory Kansas City, Kan. Bakery Science and Management SR Reynolds, James Overland Park Marketing SR Robuck, Richard Halstead Agronomy SR Schuessler, Dennis Washinton, Kan. Information Systems York, Brent Monterey, Calif. Geography SR 345 Alpha Kappa Lambda alpha tau omega McCain Lane and has 65 members. are sky blue and gold. Its flower is fraternity was chartered at K-State Webb, Dorothy Housemother Armbruster, Robert Overland Park Mechanical Engineering FR Bancroft, Christopher Kearney, Neb. Finance SR Barbour, Bradley Wichita Marketing SO Bayouth, John Wichita Nuclear Enginerring SR Beck, Douglas Corning Management SR Berends, Timothy Manhattan Electrical Engineering FR Bergner, Bill Pratt Business Administration SR Blanchat, Jeff Olathe Physics Bretz, Matthew Hutchinson Pre-Law SR Butler. Tom Salina Accounting JR Cormaci, John Shawnee Marketing SO Cormaci, Mike Shawnee Agricultural Economics Galey, Christopher Olathe Marketing SO Gibson, John Pomona Business Administration FR Gibson, Weston Salina History SR Goertzen, Scott Salina Accounting Gray, Brad Whitewater Finance SO Gray, Terrence Whitewater Business Administration FR Grimmett, Joel Salina Architecture SO Gromko, Eric Colorado Springs, Colo. Architectural Engineering JR Hall, Rod Leavenworth Electrical Engineering JR Hardin, Steven Wichita Accounting JR Haug, Gerald Corning Mechanical Engineering SR Hellmer, Jim Roeland Park Engineering Technology SR Hettich, Allen Wichita Pre-Veterinary Medicine Hood, Terry Olathe Mechanical Engineering JR Horton, Troy Burrton Management SR Hull, Troy Hays Engineering Technology JR Judah, Robert Manhattan Information Systems SR Kaster, David Overland Park Architecture SR Kennedy, Joseph Salina Journalism and Mass Communications SR Kern, Brad Shawnee Finance FR Kickhaefer, Kevin Manhattan Business Administration SO Kiracofe, Kent Manhattan Pre-Medicine FR Kirkham, Ron Wichita Architecture SO is located at 1632 The fraternity colors the white tea rose. The in 1920. 346 Tau Omega Sisters Maltese cross Alpha Tau Omega Little Sisters FRONT ROW: Tracey Ellison. Device Kearns, Denice Criqui. Tracey Edwards, Christy Scharrer. Jeanne Votsmier, Kim Sons, Eva Craig. SECOND ROW: Ann Jilka, Susan Faler, Brenda Sedlacek, Dedra Brace. Rachelle Novak. Andrea Odle. Natali Burnett, Michelle Persson, Kathy Rottinghaus. THIRD ROW: Lisa Harms. Kristie Wink, Juliann Watt, Vicki Knight, Cynthia Orth, Ginger Woolley, Robin Lynn, Karen Mosier, Loren Martin. BACK ROW: Michelle Macha, Terri Hug, Patti Neel, Diane Hasenkamp, Stephanie Hug, Kara Jameson. Kim Allen. Julie Fair, Karma Heckard. Kisner, Brandon Prescott, Ariz. Business Administration SR Klima, Darrick Belleville Accounting FR Laughman, Jeffrey Salina Physical Education JR Lipps, Hank Wichita Biochemistry Long, Douglas St. John Mechanical Engineering JR Lopez, Danny Salina Construction Science SR Mallory, Bradley Shawnee Mechanical Engineering SR Marvel, Larry Wichita Engineering Technology SR McDaniel, Donald Shawnee Industrial Engineering SR McGee, Michael Valley Falls Chemical Engineering McKenzie, Paul Salina Construction Science SR Morgison, Eric Wichita Marketing Nickel, Edward Moline Marketing SR Odgers, Dennis Olathe Construction Science Palmer, Trygve Wichita Computer Science JR Patron, Romeo Manhattan Pre-Medicine JR Perkins, Daniel Bonner Springs Business Administration SR Peterson, Greg Wichita Computer Science Pierce, Jeff Salina Architecture SR Randles, Leland Olathe Psychology SO 347 Alpha tau omega Rehfeld, Douglas Prairie Village Accounting FR Reichenberger, Robert Mount Hope Electrical Engineering Reynolds, Russell Overland Park Business Administration Ribble, Mike Salina Secondary Education Rolfing, Kyle Wichita Finance Savaiano, Greg Topeka Mechanical Engineering ER Schoeppel, Bobby Wichita Business Administration SO Scott, Brent Belleville Finance FR Seibel, Scott Liberal Business Administration SO Shaw, Stephen Shawnee Business Administration SO Smith, Tim Wichita Business Administration SO Studer, Terry Preston Industrial Engineering Taggart, Scott Salina Agricultural Economics Taylor, James Prairie Village Pre-Medicine SO Taylor, Lynn Overland Park Electrical Engineering SR Tolar, Dwight Hutchinson Theater SO Towse, lohn Shawnee Agriculture FR Wald, Theodore Prairie Village Nuclear Engineering Sisters of the Maltese Cross Alpha Tau Omega Little Sisters FRONT ROW: Angela Parnell, Amy Weixelman, Alison Hoag, Stephanie Horstman. Christy Brown, Carol Tiemeyer BACK ROW: Josie Bernal, Jones. Melissa Herzig, Rikki Novak, Hirschler. Sandy Vogel, Susan Forrest. Weiler, Paul Kenesaw, Neb. SO Witt, Corbin Hudson Elementary Education SR Witt, Ryan Hudson Elementary Education FR Zwiesler, Robert Wichita Pre-Veterinary Medicine SO 348 alpha Tau Omega Allison, Kim Osage City Business Administration SO Barben, Amy Olathe Apparel and Textile Marketing FR Bassett, Melissa Topeka Marketing SO Bishop, Dana Dodge City Journalism and Mass Communications SO Blake, Keli Wichita Psychology FR Bland, Veanine El Dorado Marketing SR Brauer, Tina Haven Psychology Bronson, Cindy Hays Marketing SR Callicott, Katrina Overland Park Architecture FR Carlson, T ' Sharra Manhattan Speech Pathology and Audiology FR Clement, Chrissy Dodge City Restaurant Management FR Cox, Nicci Almena Restaurant Management JR Cummins, Rhonda Harper Radio-Television Curran, Rebecca Kansas City, Kan. Marketing SO Cusi, Theresa St. Louis, Mo. Architecture SO Dawson, Kelly St. Louis, Mo. Architecture FR Eberwein, Ann Salina Apparel and Textile Marketing IR Eitel, Pamela Scott City Finance Evans, Kim St. Louis, Mo. Architecture SO Forssberg, Migette Pratt Interior Design SO Frank, Kim Silver Lake Secondary Education SR Frank, Sharon Belleville, Ill. Architectural Engineering SO Freeman, Amy Topeka Business Administration SO French, Leslee Pretty Prairie Secondary Education SR Hess, Kelly Goddard Accounting JR Fronce, Krista Manhattan Psychology FR Frost, Heather Hillsboro Secondary Education FR Funk, Tami WaKeeney Marketing JR Gagliano, Rachele Lenexa Marketing JR George, Stacey Leawood Arts and Sciences SO Gledhill, Jeannine Overland Park Marketing SO Grieshaber, Ginger Manhattan Arts and Sciences FR Haddock, Tina Salina Family Lire and Human Development FR Hankins, Amy Olathe Marketing FR Hefley, Joan Topeka Apparel and Textile Mar SR Hilburn, Kimberly Wichita Social Work JR alpha xi delta is located at 601 Fairchild Terrace and was founded at Lombard College in 1893. The sorority colors are double blue and gold and its flower is the pink rose. Currently there are 115 members. 349 Aloha Xi Delta alpha xi delta Hoffmans, Cindy Wichita Animal Sciences and Industry SR Hopkins, Cheryl Overland Park Business Administration SO Jacobs, Julie Leawood Business Administration SO Jenkins, Lara Springfield, Mo. Architecture SO Jensen, Kendra Overland Park Apparel Design SO Jernigan, Staci Topeka Journalism and Mass Communications FR Johnson, Catherine Lindsborg Foods and Nutrition SR Johnson, Sarah Lenexa Business Administration FR Kale, Jenny Hiawatha Journalism and Mass Communications SO Keller, Anne Ellis Apparel and Textile Marketing FR Kelly, Catherine Lenexa Restaurant Management Kelly, Stephanie Lenexa Psychology SR Kester, Jana Oakley Elementary Education Klenda, Kristine Wichita Marketing SR Kleysteuber, Jeana Garden City Agricultural Economics Krizman, Andrea Overland Park Apparel and Textile Marketing SR Mayfield, Wentz El Dorado Business Administration McClure, Jill Lenexa Elementary Education McClure, Kimberly Lenexa Apparel and Textile Marketing FR McElhaney, Liz Lawrence Finance SO Milberger, Julie Shawnee Business Administration SO Mueller, Lori Manhattan Social Work Nelson, Kim Lenexa Marketing FR Nelson, Kris Lenexa Human Ecology and Mass Comm. SR 350 Nelson, Lisa Norton Architecture SO Nett, Lisa Shawnee Human Ecology and Mass Communications Nicolau Tricia Salina Apparel and Textile Marketing FR O ' Connor, Kristin Topeka Business Administration SO Oborg, Shelley Smolan Elementary Education SR Olson, Cami Topeka Nuclear Engineering Peacock, Kimberly Manhattan Pre-Law FR Periolat, Barbara Wichita Interior Design SR Perry, Sharla Anthony Arts and Sciences FR Rahaim, Lisa Overland Park Elementary Education SO Risley, Jill Caldwell Architectural Engineering FR Rust, Ashley Norwich Education SO Ryan, Beth Overland Park Pre-Physical Therapy SO Schaff, Allyson Overland Park Psychology SO Schwartz, Jan Hutchinson Journalism and Mass Communications Schwartz, Renee Hutchinson Arts and Sciences FR Shipley, Lisa Overland Park Elementary Education JR Shoemake, Kelly Wichita Retail Floriculture SR Stephens, Gina Colby Apparel and Textile Marketing SR Stucky, Tanna Newton Psychology FR Talarico, Angela Manhattan Engineering FR Tan, Kristin Emporia Fine Arts Warner, Kim Hays Industrial Engineering Warren, Jill Olathe Modern Languages SO Williams, Heather Kansas City, Mo. Pre-Medicine FR Wineland, Shelli Hutchinson Apparel and Textile Marketing Zimmerman, Jacinda Ransom Business Administration SO Zimmerman, Janelle St. Louis, Mo. Nuclear Engineering Zwahlen, Sheila Lenexa Elementary Education FR EN GARDE. K-State Fencing Club President Randy Hanes, senior in electrical engineering, duels with club member Bill Varney in front of Ahearn Field House on a warm afternoon. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) 351 Aloha Xi Delta beta sigma psi was founded at the University of Illinois in 1925, being chartered at K-State in 1951. Currently there are 65 members. Its colors are cardinal and white and the flower is the gold rose. Annis, Judd Manhattan Journalism and Mass Communications SR Bahr, David Arnold, Mo. Architectural Engineering FR Bergman, Christopher Omaha, Neb. Pre-Optometry SR Bodenschatz, David Jackson, Mo. Architectural Engineering SO Bruning, Jon Superior, Neb. Animal Sciences and Industry FR Bullinger, Reed Canton Crop Protection SR Charles, David Topeka Architecture FR Daniels, Forrest Manhattan Economics JR Doud, Galen Wakarusa, Mechanical Engineering SO Drennen, Curt Wichita Chemistry JR Eberhart, Steven Raymond Agricultural Economics JR Frieling, Kent Gaylord Finance JR Gerhardt, Timothy Wichita Civil Engineering JR Green, Andrew Emporia Pre-Forestry JR Haake, David St. Louis, Mo. Architectural Engineering SR Hamrick, Craig Coffeyville Journalism and Mass Communications JR Hemman, Nathan Hoxie Mechanical Engineering SO Jackson, Thomas Topeka Civil Engineering SR Jorns, Tim Preston Horticulture SR Lang, William Manhattan Journalism and Mass Communications SR Lawrenz, Brad Pratt Accounting SO Lehmann, Dirk Gaylord Accounting SR Lindquist, Wesley Waterville Computer Engineering SO Manke, Alan Ellinwood Electrical Engineering FR Martin, Matthew Glasco Electrical Engineering FR May, Roger Oberlin Animal Sciences and Industry SR McCracken, Todd Rapid City, S.D. Pre-Veterinary Medicine McMurry, Todd St. Louis, Mo. Architecture FR Meier, Jamie Beloit Business Administration FR Melgren, Paul Springfield, Mo. Architecture SR Meyer, Rick Manhattan Agronomy JR Miller, Carey Agra Electrical Engineering SO Mitchell,Michael Salina Music Education Nelson, Jon Garfield Bakery Science and Management FR Oliver, Kent Downs Electrical Engineering SO Parker, Kelly St. Louis, Mo. Architecture SO 352 beta sigma psi Puls, Stuart Hutchinson Journalism and Mass Communications FR Rames, Gordie Omaha, Neb. Mechanical Engineering FR Reihl, Keith Hutchinson Architectural Engineering SO Rhoades, Scott Ellinwood Electrical Engineering SR Ruckman, Robert Topeka Milling Science and Management SO Rutherford, Jack Lakin Chemistry FR Schultz, Scott Lucas Crop Protection FR Sheets, Clifford Topeka Engineering Technology SR Skarda, John Papillion, Neb. Restaurant Management JR Skele, Bentley Garden City Industrial Engineering FR Studer, Vaughn Beloit Pre-Veterinary Medicine FR Tangedal Mike Topeka Dietetics and Institutional Management SR Terrill, John Gaylord Accounting SR Teuscher, Todd St. Louis, Mo. Apparel and Textile Marketing SR Unger, Michael Jackson, Mo. Apparel and Textile Marketing JR White, David Wichita Music Education SR White, Verlyn Stuttgart Electrical Engineering SR Wilson, Blake Topeka Fisheries and Wildlife Biology FR Wire, Andrew Smith Center Animal Sciences and Industry SR Wire, Sam Smith Center Electrical Engineering SO Yates, Scott Tuckner, Mo. Landscape Architecture SR Zabel, Greg Gaylord Business Administration JR Golden Rose Beta Sigma Psi Little Sisters FRONT ROW: Coreena Kim, Janine Overbaugh, Jenifer Donnelly, Tammy Morgan, Janet Elliott, Tammy Taphorn. BACK ROW: Stephanie Brummett, Angie Edmonds, Leslie Bookout, Beverly Meehan, Kimberley Forrest, Rachel Ring, Sarah Johnson, Wendy Shipps. Little Sisters of Gloden Rose Beta Sigma Psi Little Sisters FRONT ROW: Shelly Clark, Laurie Cox, Tammy Taphorn, Sarah Johnson, Wendy Shipps, Roberta Pyle.SECOND ROW: Teresa Sponsel, Tammy Morgan, Jenn Rempel, Charlene Hess, Susan Thompson, Amy Taylor. BACK ROW: Rachel Smith, Rhonda Fowler, Leslie Bookout, Valerie Steffen, Angela Brockway, Carrie Jost, Kelly James. 353 Beta Sigma Psi Amstein, Brad Manhattan Electrical Engineering SO Amstein, Todd Manhattan Agriculture SO Appleton, Andrew St. John Accounting SO Barth, Bradley Wichita Pre-Medicine SO Beck, Joe Kansas City, Mo. Landscape Architecture SR Beymer, Timothy Topeka Radio-Televis ion FR Binzler, Kirk Leawood Business Administration FR Bolar, David Wichita Business Administration SO Bodreau, Douglas Prairie Village Journalism and Mass Communications FR Brady, Matt Lincoln, Neb. Microbiology 1 Carlson, Scott Council Grove Pre-Physical Therapy FR Clem, Chad Mission Psychology Cole, David Arlington, Kan. Journalism and Mass Communications FR Cole, Steve Arlington, Kan. Pre-Physical Therapy SR Cozart, Craig Moundridge Computer Science FR Criqui, William Prairie Village Engineering SO Dannatt, Martin Manhattan Business Administration SR Dassow, Matthew Hoisington Chemical Engineering Devault, Larry Hutchinson Business Adminstration FR Ediger, Brent McPherson Mechanical Engineering SO Ediger, David McPherson Nuclear Engineering SR Fox, Jeff St. John Finance SO Gaffney, John Anthony Industrial Engineering FR Gaskill, Brent Hugoton Finance Gaskill, Brian Hugoton Finance SO Good, Karl Overland Park Architecture FR Green, Kelly McPherson Electrical Engineering Guise, George McPherson Pre-Medicine SO Guthrie, Kelly Hutchinson Finance SO Harner, Thomas Hutchinson Architectural Engineering 1R Heath, Matt Overland Park Construction Science 1R Jones, Paul La Crosse Milling Science and Management SO Kats, Tim Phillipsburg Pre-Medicine FR Kaufman, Jason Moundridge Pre-Medicine SR Kramer, Kyle Hugoton Engineering FR Krauss, Thomas Phillipsburg Animal Sciences and Industry BETA THETA PI was founded at Miami (Ohio) University in 1914. The fraternity colors are pink and blue, and its flower is the deep pink rose. It is located at 500 Sunset and has 90 members. 354 Beta Theta Pi Lee, Barton Prairie Village Mechanical Engineering SO Logback, Steven Hill City Accounting SO Lohmeier, Stephen Lake Quivira Electrical Engineering JR Lustig, David Prairie Village Construction Science SR Luty, Jeff McPherson Pre-Optometry JR Marquedt, Joel Topeka Architectural Engineering SR Mertz, Jonathon Manhattan Speech SR Mitchell, David Leavenworth Business Administration FR Mussman, John Prairie Village Electrical Engineering FR Otte, Russell Moundridge Business Administration FR Paske, Scott Augusta Journalism and Mass Communications FR Pratt, Brian Hutchinson Nuclear Engineering FR Proffitt, Race Chase Business Administration JR Queen, Matthew Wichita Pre-Law SR Rephlo, Douglas Overland Park Engineering FR Rouse, Mike Hutchinson Journalism and Mass Communications FR Schrag, Jeffrey Hutchinson Journalism and Mass Communications JR Scrogin, Scott Hutchinson Mechanical Engineering SR Shepard, Steven Kansas City, Kan. Chemistry FR Skaggs, Doug Pratt Business Administration JR Skaggs, William Pratt Secon dary Education FR Skipton, Tracy Omaha, Neb. Biochemistry SO Smith, Grant Garden City Geology JR Smith, Todd Moundridge Pre-Physical Therapy SR Stander, Karl Topeka Mechanical Engineering SR Steinert, Kevin Hoisington Electrical Engineering FR Stenberg, Mark Clyde Mechanical Engineering SO Stubblefield, John Kansas City, Kan. Pre-Veterinary Medicine FR Thompson, Page Lenexa Finance SO Toedman, Michael Ransom Business Administration SO Weinhold, Samuel McPherson Pre-Optometry FR Williams, Gary Hutchinson Education-Biological Science JR Woodbury, Howard Quenemo Animal Sciences and Industry SR Woodbury, John Quenemo Animal Sciences and Industry FR Zimmerman, Scott St. Louis, Mo. Business Administration FR 355 Beta Theta Pi chi omega is located at 1516 McCain Lane and was founded at the University of Arkansas in 1885. The sorority colors are cardinal and straw and the Chi Os ' flower is the white carnati no They have 170 chapters. Allen, Jennifer J Salina Foods and Nutrition JR Alstatt, Karen Overland Park Microbiology SO Andra, Janelle Atchison Finance JR Armstrong, Jennie Pittsburg Elementary Education FR Beasley, Amy Louisburg Elementary Education FR Benoit, Michelle Mankato Agricultural Economics SR Beutler, Karen Ness City Management Beyer, Kimberly Wichita Accounting SO Boone, Traci Wichita Arts and Sciences FR Breneman, Laura Prairie Village Business Administration FR Browne, Sandra Leawood Pre-Medicine SO Bush, Jill Blue Springs, Mo. Elementary Education Camblin, Kelly Robinson Marketing FR Carpenter, Teri Lamed Elementary Education SO Cassel, Kathryn Leavenworth Apparel Design SO Castillo, Lisa Overland Park Journalism and Mass Communications SO Chisholm, Roberta Laramie, Wyo. Architecture FR Denver, Kim Wichita Interior Design SR Denver, Kristin Wichita Journalism and Mass Communications SO Engroff, Kim Topeka Accounting FR Everhart, Joni Wellington Journalism and Mass Communications SO Farris, Rebecca Atchinson Biology SO Fuller, Amiee Overland Park Business Adminstration FR Gantz, Paige Ness City Journalism and Mass Communications Ginter, Teri Hiawatha Psychology SR Gregg, Jodi Overland Park Marketing FR Grimes, Karen Overland Park Pre-Law SO Gwin, Marcie Salina Elementary Education JR Hafner, Angie Tecumseh Accounting SO Hahn, Heather Prairie Village Foods and Nutrition SR Haines, Lori K Overland Park Family Life and Human Development SR Hale, Angela Haven Journalism and Mass Communications Hawkins, Lara Great Bend Interior Design SO Hedrick, Christi Lees Summit, Mo. Social Work FR Heimerman, Rochelle Garden Plain, Kan. Foods and Nutrition SR Hilt, Susan St. Francis Journalism and Mass Communications FR 356 Chi Omega Hixson, Carol Wichita Fine Arts JR Hixson, Sherry Wichita Arts and Sciences FR Johnston, Rebecca Lenexa Engineering Technology SO Jorgensen, Sheila Omaha, Neb. Apparel Design FR Judy, Barb Lenexa Pre-Physical Therapy FR Kalmar, Cynthia Manhattan Management JR Keithley, Susan Overland Park Interior Design SR Klotzbach, Tania Topeka Food and Nutrition-Exercise Science SO Knowles, Kerrie El Dorado Journalism and Mass Communications FR Koeller, Kathy Lenexa Apparel and Textile Marketing FR Lang, Cynthia Salina Business Administration SO Lechtenberger, Kayla Colby Psychology SR Leonard, Jacinda Salina Arts and Sciences FR Mahoney, Maureen Edina, Minn. Fine Arts FR Marble, Kimberly Binghamton, N.Y. Journalism and Mass Communications JR Martin, Ginger Douglas Music FR Mowry, Teresa Council Grove Fine Arts SO Nelson, Briana Horton Pre-Physical Therapy FR Nelson, Nanette Lucas Pre-Law JR Novak, Courtney Hiawatha Marketing FR Pearson, Kim Manhattan Elementary Education SO Pennington, Erin Dodge City Arts and Sciences FR Petrosky, Charlotte Wichita Arts and Sciences FR Petrosky, Janie Wichita Pre-Physical Therapy SO Pickert, Linda Overland Park Elementary Education JR Porter, Laura El Dorado Business Administration SO Racy, Kelly Abilene Apparel and Textile Marketing FR Richter, Suzanne Salina Pre-Pharmacy JR Robinson, Stacey Mulvane Arts and Sciences FR Rock, Lisa Olathe Journalism and Mass Communications SO Sandahl, Wendy Germantown, Tenn. Business Administration SO Schartz, Anne Great Bend Psychology Schrag, Tanya Wichita Pre-Veterinary Medicine FR Shenosky, Erika Ft. Riley Secondary Education JR Sinclair, Julie Atchinson Elementary Education SR Stone, Kylee Wichita Psychology FR Stouse, Carla Shawnee Elementary Education SR Stueve, Anne Prairie Village Journalism and Mass Communications SO Swengel, Jodi Kansas City, Kan. Journalism and Mass Communications SR Tabler, Jennifer Lamed Arts and Sciences FR Tafoya, Carrie Papillion, Neb. Psychology FR Tanner, Dana Lakeland, Fla. Speech Pathology and Audiology FR 357 Chi Omega chi omega Taylor, Cyndie Hoxie Elementary Education SO Troyer, Denise Hesston Journalism and Mass Communications SR Tuley, Kristin Republic Business Administration FR Uhler, Liliane Wichita Accounting FR Van Dyke, Elizabeth Topeka Accounting FR Vanbebber, Cynthia Mission Elementary Education Weith, Carolyn Overland Park Electrical Engineering SR Wendt, Jacqueline Herington Journalism and Mass Communications Williams, Becca Wichita Business Administration SO Willy, Elyn Leawood Business Administration FR Wink, Kristie Overland Park Arts and Sciences SO Withers, Pamela ' Pratt Pre-Veterinary Medicine SO Young, Amy Derby Industrial Engineering FR Zimmerman, Michelle Overland Park Radio-Television SR SHIRT SIGNING. Chi Omega members Heidi Huffaker, senior in recreation, and Brenda Nelson, senior in bakery science, sign the T-shirt of Sigma Chi fraternity member Shawn Stewart, freshman in journalism and mass communications, as he reads a in front of the Sigma Chi house. The shirt signing by the members was part of the annual Derby Days competition. (Photo by Rob Squires) delta delta delta was founded in November of 1988 at Boston College and has 150 charters. They received a charter at K-State on June 8, 1915. The sorority house is at 1834 Laramie and has 135 members. Atherly, Lura Derby Elementary Education SR Balch, Shawn Derby Accounting SO Banning, Anne Garden City Political Science FR Bauman, Jennifer Lenexa Psychology FR Bazdresch, Michelle Overland Park Animal Sciences and Industry FR Benkelman, Jami Manhattan Arts and Sciences FR Bernal, Josie Shawnee Fine Arts Berry, Barbara Shawnee Health SR Billings, Stephanie Topeka Pre-Law SO Blackwell, Pam Salina Elementary Education SO Blumel, Melissa Lenexa Secondary Education SO Brandt, Debbie McPherson Accounting Brandt, Jeanine McPherson Interior Design FR Brent, Susan Springfield, Mo. Political Science SR Brondell, Karin Manhattan Pre-Pharmacy Carlat, Cherie Pittsburg, Kan. Psychology SO Carlin, Susie Overland Park Arts and Sciences FR Christman, Cathy Topeka Arts and Sciences FR Clark, Jennifer Garden City Arts and Sciences FR Corrigan, Kelli Shawnee Mission Arts and Sciences FR Cox, Kristi Wichita Accounting FR Davis, Jill St. Charles, Mo. Apparel Design FR Dawes, Dara Goodland Business Administration FR Delong, Jennifer Emporia Pre-Medicine FR Doerste, Robin Overland Park Marketing SR Downing, Lisa Wichita Accounting SO Dunitz, Lisa Overland Park Psychology FR French, D. Renee Stilwell Elementary Education SO Freschett, Susie Overland Park Business Administration FR Fyfe, Jill Overland Park Business Administration Gardner, Christy Prairie Village Arts and Sciences SO Gast, Lisa Wichita Restaurant Management SR Gehrt, Julie Chanute Apparel and Textile Marketing SO Gensemer, Kendra Liberal Journalism and Mass Communications Gieringer, Lori Overland Park Business Administration FR Gittemeier, Liesa Prairie Village Marketing 359 delta delta delta Gleissner, Mary Mission Marketing SO Grabowski, Jann Lenexa Elementary Education SO Grant, Fern Liberal Psychology Griebat, Becky Lee Manhattan Secondary Education Hashman, Elizabeth Shawnee Journalism and Mass Communications FR Hess, Melissa Apparel and Textile Marketing SO Higgason, Julie Norton Education - Business JR Hinman, Jana Concordia Elementary Education JR Hogan, Kristi Olathe Journalism and Mass Communications JR House, Elizabeth Overland Park Business Administration JR Howard, Susan Overland Park Chemical Engineering FR Howell, Janet Ashland Journalism and Mass Communications FR Johnson, Kirsten Hays Arts and Sciences JR Johnson, Michelle Leavenworth Marketing SR Jones, Roxanne Wichita Journalism and Mass Communications FE Kreutzer, Kimberly Wichita Business Administration FR Kroeker, Karen Wichita Interior Design SR Kruckenberg, Heidi Manhattan Human Ecology FR Kruckenberg, Kristin Manhattan Journalism and Mass Communications SR Lassman, Christy Pittsburg Recreation JR Latas, Sheri Mission Interior Design FR Lavergne, Danyel Derby Business Administration 50 Lessman, Jana Hays Apparel and Textile Marketing JR Lewis, Danielle Arkansas City Finance FR Long, Suzanne Wichita Accounting FR Longwell, Carrie Overland Park Fine Arts SR Lowery, Natalie Denver, Colo. Marketing FR Malone, Shari Manhattan Architecture SR Martell, Mary Topeka Journalism and Mass Communications SR McIntire, Melinda Overland Park Accounting SO Miller, Kim Manhattan Pre-Law SO Mongil, Maria Peru Interior Architecture SR Munson, Lisa Arkansas City Pm-Nursing SO Navrat, Susan Wichita Radio-Television SR Netherland, Janet Ottawa Marketing JR Norton, Nancy Manhattan Accounting SO O ' Connor, Lauren Prairie Village Business Administration SO Perschall, Tracey Overland Park Arts and Sciences FR Peterson, Shannon Olathe Secondary Education SO Phalen, Amy Kansas City, Kan. Architecture FR Pittman, Karen Overland Park Interior Design FR Poma, Victoria Pagosa Springs Restaurant Management FR 360 Delta Delta Delta Porterfield, Charla Lenexa Business Administration SO Randall, Kristi Denver, Colo. Elementary Education SR Randall, Rebecca Shawnee Business Administration FR Reiff, Angela Wichita Arts and Sciences FR Riesinger, Laurie Countryside Social Work JR Schlaefli, Michalla Lewis Psychology FR Scott, Karyn Overland Park Social Work FR Sharp, Susan Olathe Finance SO Simms, Jeanette Belleville Apparel and Textile Marketing FR Skele, Erica Garden City Arts and Sciences JR Smith, Angela Chanute Journalism and Mass Communications SO Smith, Kelly Wichita Fine Arts SO Smith, Stacy Chanute Marketing SR Sneed, Christi Overland Park Pre-Physical Therapy FR Sommers, Susan Robinson Apparel Design SR Spears, Anne Overland Park Elementary Education SO Stapp, Sally Ft. Worth, Texas Arts and Sciences SO Steinbock, Joely Topeka Arts and Sciences FR Stevens, Lisa Wichita Journalism and Mass Communications JR Stevenson, Mari Salina Business Administration SO Stone, Nancy Overland Park Accounting SR Swickard, Diana Stilwell Education - English SR Tate, Rikki Shawnee Pre-Nursing FR Templeton, Susan Olathe Interior Design JR Thornbrugh, Sydney Garden City Arts and Sciences FR Tolley, Sheri Manhattan Arts and Sciences FR Tolley, Staci Manhattan Accounting FR Trentman, Cheryl Overland Park Accounting JR Triplett, Julie Thayer Apparel and Textile Marketing FR Tumpes, Amy Boulder, Colo. Art SR Vilbert, Marya Prairie Village Apparel and Textile Marketing FR Weinhold, Beth McPherson Elementary Education SO Weldon, Stephanie Wichita English JR Wise, Julie Lawrence Restaurant Management JR Witte, Jeannie Wichita Apparel and Textile Marketing SO Wolf, Judith Lenexa Marketing SR Zirkle, Gerise Liberal Accounting FR 361 Delta Delta Delta SIGMA PHI was founded on Dec. 10, 1899, in New York and has 113 chapters. The flower is the white carnation and its colors are nile green and carnation white. There are 69 members. Copp, Jane Housemother Armstrong, Michael Edson Political Science SR Barnhart, Breck Manhattan Architecture SO Bartels, Daniel Topeka Horticulture FR Basgall, Rob Victoria Industrial Engineering FR Baumer, Washington, Mo. Interior Architecture Becker, Eric Beloit Fine Arts SR Bird, Steve Great Bend Architecture Bodine, Bradley Douglass Engineering FR Brown, Gregory Omaha, Neb. Physics FR Brune, Robert Aurora, Colo. Mechanical Engineering FR Carr, Kevin Lawson, Mo. Architecture SO Clark, Jeff A Indianapolis, Ind. Bakery Science and Management Cox, David D Merriam Electrical Engineering SO Duegaw, Patrick Wichita Interior Architecture SR Ely, Kent Hutchinson Management SR Evans, Andrew St. Joseph, Mo. Architectural Engineering FR Fall, Michael St. Louis, Mo. Architectural Engineering SO Fuhrman, John Belleville Electrical Engineering SO Goevert, Chris Wichita Architecture SR Grable, Craig Wathena business Administration FR Grier, Donald Pratt Computer Science SR Hall, Randy Wichita Pre-Dentistry SR Heller, Doug St. Joseph, Mo. Architecture JR Himberger, Dennis Elkhorn, Neb. Architecture Horsch, Daniel Manhattan Electrical Engineering Huey, Dale Manhattan Electrical Engineering SO Jeans, Tim Canada Restaurant Management SO Kaff, Kevin Hutchinson Industrial Engineering SR Krebs, Aaron Clyde Secondary Education JR Laughlin, Chuck Canton Apparel and Textile Marketing JR McChesney, Marc - Munden Mechanical Engineering FR McKale, Charles Oak Hill Architectural Engineering SR Meyers, Troy Liberty, Mo. Architecture SO Miles, Jason Manhattan Political Science SO Moore, Eric Superior, Neb. Pre-Veterinary Medicine FR 362 delta sigma phi HIGH LIGHTS. Completing work he started six hours earlier, Paul Robinson, junior in marketing, tapes a string of Christmas lights to the roof of the Delta Sigma Phi fraternity house. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) ■ Mowry, John Concordia Electrical Engineering SR Niehoff, Chad Topeka Construction Science SO Nolan, Kyle Littleton, Colo. Architecture SO Ott, Dave Junction City Chemical Engineering SR Prohaska, Dan Atchison Pre-Medicine FR Robinson, Paul Overland Park Marketing Roemer, Patrick Arvada, Colo. Architectural Engineering FR Rohr, Todd Cunningham Electrical Engineering FR Schultz, Brad Colby Engineering Technology SR Shipman, Michael Aurora, Colo. Mechanical Engineering FR Smith, Joe Atchison Business Administration FR Svoboda, Brian Wichita Restaurant Management JR Taylor, Jack Enid, Okla. Microbiology Todd, Jeffrey Grandview, Mo. Architecture SO Veatch, Clifford Manhattan Political Science JR Whiteford, Craig Greenwich, Conn. Pre-Veterinary Medicine FR Zehner, John Mukwonago, Wis. Bakery Science and Management SO 363 delta sigma phi delta tau delta was founded in 1858 and has 108 chapters. The Delts received a charter at K- State on Feb. 19, 1910. The fraternity flower is the iris and its colors are purple, white and gold. Craig, Ruth Housemother Abercrombie, Chad Great Bend Food and Nutrition - Exercise Science SR Allen, Kenneth B Kirkwood, MO Architecture FR Bellinder, Bryce Wamego Engineering FR Bishop, Will Dodge City Engineering FR Bliss, Scott Osborne Construction Science SR Bonnett, Todd Marketing Borberg, Bob Construction Science Brethour, Ward Computer Science Brunson, Scott Pre-Medicine Cafferty, Daryl Junction City Journalism and Mass Commun ications SR Cain, Richard Cunningham Management JR Casanova, Anthony Wichita Pre-Physical Therapy FR Collins, Karl Overland Park Business Administration JR D Alessandro, Michael Palm Springs, Calif. Apparel and Textile Marketing SO De La Pena, Eric St. Louis, Mo. Marketing SR Debitetto, Richard Huntington Beach, Calif. Leisure Studies Dubois, Craig Burlingame Business Administration SR Dugan, Todd Wichita Pm-Medicine FR Fairchild, Matthew Overland Park Marketing JR Patrick Chicago, Ill. Construction Science Gaddie, James Howard Engineering Technology SO Galbraith, Dan Wichita Finance SR Galvan, Jesse San Antonio, Texas Correctional Administration SR Gangel, Jamie Louisburg Architecture SR Giefer, Nick Kingman Engineering FR Green, Sam Zenda Business Administration Hammes, Greg Topeka Industrial Engineering SR Hammes, Michael Topeka Business Administration SO Heitmann, Andy St. Louis, Mo. Construction Science FR Hinton, Ted Hiawatha Feed Science and Management FR Hise, James Prairie Village Restaurant Management SR Hrencher, Nicholas Sharon Marketing SR Hutton, Marshall Overland Park Business Administration SO Illum, Troy Shawnee Architecture FR Johnson, Robert Abilene Radio-Television SO Howard SR Lake Quivira SO Wamego Chicago, Ill. SO 364 Delta Tau Delta Johnson, Scott Olathe Business Administration FR Jurczak, James Overland Park Mechanical Engineering Kennedy, Charles Hutchinson Journalism and Mass Communications JR Kottler, Paul Wichita Business Administration FR Kulage, Jerry Leawood Construction Science FR Leitch, Michael Everest Restaurant Management SO Lentz, Charles Meriden Construction Science Lewis, Brad Atwood Journalism and Mass Communications SR Lix, Russell Wright Pre-Veterinary Medicine FR Mantz, Todd Haysville Marketing JR Martin, Don Hugoton Marketing SR Martin, Thomas Hugoton Business Administration CR McAfee, Lawrence Fort Riley Electrical Engineering SO McCreight, John Overland Park Accounting SR McGehee, Shawn Hesston Marketing JR McGehee, Steven Wichita Radio-Television JR Nichols, Chris Overland Park Marketing JR Nichols, Mark Bethesda, Md. Architecture FR delt darlings Delta Tau Delta Little Sisters FRONT ROW: Keli Blake, Deborah Seibold, Julie Uptain, Joni Bosserman, Monica Robles, Karen Waller, Leslie Coleman. SECOND ROW: Kathy Hayden, Jennifer Warta, Alice O ' Brien, Peggy Anderson, Caroline Barber, Bridget Borders. BACK ROW: Katie Meyers, Wendi Coffman, Kathleen Hoffman, Kathryn Pope, Ann Durham, Catrina Johns on, Kelly Farley. 365 Delta Tau Delta delta tau delta Oberrieder, Mark Topeka Mechanical Engineering JR Peters, Daniel Spring Hill Pre-Physical Therapy SO Plummer, Dane Hutchinson Engineering FR Rector, Bradley Olathe Engineering FR Rohlman, Kurt Zenda Journalism and Mass Communications FR Saxon, Kip Olathe Arts and Sciences FR Seibold, David Overland Park Agricultural Economics SR Strain, Todd Junction City Horticulture Suhler, Jodi Hutchinson Architecture SO Sutton, Jacob Wichita Business Administration FR Swanson, Ryan Hutchinson Radio-Television FR Tomasic, Matthew Kansas City, Kan. Arts and Sciences FR Tyler, James Sabetha Feed Science and Management SR Walker, Eric Overland Park Business Administration SO Walz, Jeff Topeka Marketing SO Wittman, John Allentown, Pa. Industrial Engineering SR Woods, Jeffrey Overland Park Industrial Engineering SR Zimmerman, Brian Hutchinson Business Administration Delt Darlings Delta Tau Delta Little Sisters FRONT ROW: Amy Hansen, Patricia Albertson, Cyd Kniffin, Debra Oliphant, Dana Schanefelt, Janelle Dennis. SECOND ROW: Kathleen Baker, Sheila Day, Stephanie Scott, Suzanne Long, Joely Steinbock, Jill Dwyer, Julie Ferguson, Jana Straub. BACK ROW: Jamie Craft, Kelly Dailey, Julie McConnell, Charla Porterfield, Julie Fabrizius, Susan Hilt, Deanna Neal. 366 Delta Tau Delta DELTA UPSILON has 108 chapters. The fraternity flower is the sapphire blue rose and its colors are old gold and sapphire blue. The DUs live at 1425 University Drive and have 87 members. Alstatt, David Overland Park Electrical Engineering SR Beaver, David Augusta Engineering FR Berry, Jeff Salina Education-History JR Bird, Stefan Albert Mechanical Engineering SR Brockschmidt, Neal Monett, Mo. English Brown, Doug C. Meriden Pre-Pharmacy SR Bugner, Darran Garden Plain Management SR Butel, Jim Overbrook Chemical Engineering FR Buttron, Bradley Kansas Cay, Mo. Electrical Engineering JR Commerford, Kurt Salina Arts and Sciences FR Davis, Rolan Topeka Biochemistry SO Dell, Brennan Overland Park Journalism and Mass Communications SO Dunn, Matt Wichita Elementary Education SO Ewy, Russ Halstead Journalism and Mass Communications SO Gentry, Todd Independence, Kan. Electrical Engineering SO Hamilton, Scott Salina Marketing JR Hansen, Robert Shawnee Computer Science Hartter, Curt Bern Mechanical Engineering FR Hess, George Hays Mechanical Engineering Hilbert, Brad Overbrook Fisheries and Wildlife Biology FR Holcom, Dennis Salina Business Administration FR Johnston, Vincent Roeland Park Electrical Engineering Jones, Andrew Ulysses Pre-Law SO Jones, Burke Wichita Architecture SO Keller, Darren Hutchinson Psychology SR Keller, Troy Great Bend Business Administration JR Kennedy, Samuel Topeka Marketing SR Keusler, James Ulysses Construction Science SO Koechner, Alan Stilwell Milling Science and Management SO Laurie, Mark Manhattan Accounting SO Lawrence, Steve Lake Quivira Journalism and Mass Communications SR Longley, Jeff Leawood Pre-Veterinary Medicine JR Lowry, Mark Logan Business Administration SE) Lupo, John Sedan Business Administration 1R McCaul, Cormac Wichita Pre-Medicine JR McGill, Joel Shawnee Electrical Engineering SR 367 Delta Upsilon delta upsilon McGlasson, Tim Wichita Psychology SO McMillen, Devin Dighton Accounting JR Moore, Anthony Lees Summit, Mo. Mechanical Engineering SR Murphy, Patrick J. Great Bend Political Science SO Myers, Chris Mission Hills Finance FR Namminga, Mark Springfield, Sd. Pre-Veterinary Medicine SO Nichols, Matt Russell Pre-Veterinary Medicine SO Nowlin, Scott Salina Business Administration FR Pomarantz, El Paul Shawnee Restaurant Management SO Pottorff, Mark Manhattan Mechanical Engineering SR Runion, Matthew Bellvue, Neb. Electrical Engineering FR Sharpe, Michael Olathe Pre-Veterinary Medicine JR Smith, Derek Meade Pm-Veterinary Medicine SO She Delta Upsilon Little Sisters FRONT ROW: Becca Williams, Rebecca Pogue, Christina Tejeda, Lydia Chang, Karen James. SECOND ROW: Susan Alton, Kimberly Beyer, Friess, Susan Bullock. BACK ROW: Jacinda Leonard, Mary Jo Lampe, Laurie Lawson, Darcy Stephenson. 368 Delta Upsilon Wiechman, Henry Overland Park E lectrical Engineering JR Williams, Keith Kansas City, Mo. Mechanical Engineering SR Woodard, Gerald Maize Animal Sciences and Industry SR Smith, Stacy Parsons Secondary Education SO Socolofsky, John Bellevue, Neb. Mechanical Engineering SR Sommers, Brian Topeka Accounting SO Stanley, Jeffrey Topeka Accounting SR Strong, Roger Bellevue, Neb. Architectural Engineering FR Tillberg, David Salina Agricultural Economics SR Turner, Lane Great Bend Pre-Medicine SO Walden, James Garden Plain Finance SO Walden, John Garden Plain Business Administration FR Walter, Eric Meade Pre-Physical Therapy SO She Delta Upsilon Little Sisters FRONT ROW: Stacy Pfeiffer, Joanne Wright, Kami Hommertzheim, Andrea Allen, Cindy Smith. ROW: Stevie Hubele, Tina Truscott, Lisa Kathi Alsmeyer, Rachel Mani, Jill Keever, Lori Lampe. BACK ROW: Christie Petersen, Kristin Denver, Chris Viveros, Suzanne Seetin, Stefanie Jackson, Sharon Spillar, Shelly Truby, Carrie Davies. 369 Delta Upsilon FARMHOUSE was chartered at K-State in 1921. There are 29 chapters and 69 members. It was founded in 1905 at the University of Missouri and its are green, gold and white. Bauer, Mae Housemother Aung-Thein, Tim McPherson Correctional Administration FR Bailey, Lafe Morrill Marketing SR Bailey, Ronald Stafford Secondary Education SR Base, Douglas Sedgwick Engineering JR Benfer, Scott Longford Agricultural Economics SO Bentz, Philip Concordia Pre-Veterinary Medicine SO Bradley, Kent Lawrence Nutritional Science SR Brockhoff, Wally Hiawatha Agricultural Economics SR Campbell, Stacey Atchison Agricultural Journalism SR Coe, Michael Soldier Pre-Veterinary Medicine SO Couchman, Jeffery Coldwater Pre-Physical Therapy FR Couchman, Monte Coldwater Secondary Education SO Davidson, Leland Oakhill Animal Sciences and Industry FR Drake, Darren Manhattan Animal Sciences and Industry SO Dubbert, Stanley Tipton Agricultural Economics SR Durst, Edward Morrowville Animal Sciences and Industry FR Featherston, Eric Whiting Animal Sciences and Industry SR Fischer, Scott Wright Psychology SR Fisher, Abe McDonald Computer Engineering SR Frisbie, Mark Kuna, Idaho Animal Sciences and Industry Gardiner, Garth Ashland Animal Sciences and Industry JR Gates, Randall Coldwater Radio-Television FR Gidney, Brian Manhattan Agricultural Economics SR Griswold, Alan Haysville Accounting JR Gruenbacher, Don Colwich Electrical Engineering Hammer,Lyle Scandia Animal Sciences and Industry SO Henry, Max Randolph Agricultural Economics JR Heyen, Robert Stafford Agricultural Economics SR Holliday, David Soldier Agiculture Education SR Hornberger, Jason Wichita finance Johnson, Steven Assaria Agricultural Economics SR Kelley, John Norcatur Pre-Veterinary Medicine FR Kemp, Christopher Pretty Prairie Business Administration FR Kippes, Christopher Colby Philosophy SO Klap, Kelly Denver, Colo. Landscape Architecture JR 370 FarmHouse Larson, Erick McPherson Agronomy SR Loepp, Roy Inman Milling Science and Management JR McGraw, Jeff Pierceville Agricultural Economics JR Moore, Kent luka Agricultural Economics JR Nordhus, Phil Marysville Economics JR Ochampaugh, Jeffrey Plainville Agricultural Economics SR Olmstead, Eddie Conway Springs Chemical Science SO Patterson, Clay Wakefield Business Administration SO Phillips, Chad WaKeeney Pre-Veterinary Medicine JR Phillips, John WaKeeney Mechanical Engineering SR Priddy, Nelson Santa Fe, N.M. Animal Sciences and Industry SR Rickson, Jeffrey Randolph Agriculture FR Rieck, George Burlingame Agronomy FR Schrag, Dave Pretty Prairie Finance JR Shaw, Richard McPherson Marketing SR Sheldon, John Holton Pre-Veterinary Medicine FR Sherbert, Greg Clay Center Agricultural Economics SO Soukup, Andrew Wilson Milling Science and Management FR Splichal, Patrick Munden Agronomy JR Steinle, Michael Topeka Biology SR Stone, Gregory Garden City Agronomy SR Sunderland, Robert Fairview Feed Science and Management JR Trentman, Kent Sublette Animal Sciences and Industry JR Vandonge, Timothy Soldier Agricultural Economics SO Whetstone, David Osawatomie Pre-Veterinary Medicine SO White, Charles Goodland Accounting SO Wilkens, Brent Bird City Pre-Veterinary Medicine JR Williams, Todd Girard Pre-Veterinary Medicine JR Wilson, Jamie Osawatomie Agronomy SR Wilson, Jon Osawatomie Animal Sciences and Industry SO Farmhouse Little Sisters FRONT ROW: Nancy Odgers, Aleisha Bailey, Jeanie Williams, Debby Johnson, Sarah Jewett, Paige Hunt, LaReina Waldorf, Julie Graber, Loralie Mitchell, Tammy Britt, Jamie Lamb, Kelly Karr. SECOND ROW: Janelle Larson, Angie Whitaker, Suzanne Proctor, Shari Eck, Sonya Schweer, Sheri Lana Hammer, Kelly Reid, Carole Sloan, Hamm, Stephanie Berggren. BACK ROW: Brenda Larson, Amy Ochampaugh, Jo Dee Thiel, Susan Graff, LeeAnn Schulte, Sarah Phillips, Buethe, Jennifer Nelson, Laura Webster. 371 farmhouse Wineinger, Matthew Alta Vista Animal Sciences and Industry SR Wingert, Harold Ottawa Agricultural Economics SR Yarrow, Daryl Clay Center Agriculture Education SR gamma phi beta was founded in 1874 at Syracuse University and now have 113 chapters. The sorority flower is the pink carnation and its colors are brown and mode. The sorority house is at 1807 Todd Road and it has 128 members. Wethington, Dana Housemother Aylward, Amy Jo Goddard Architecture SO Aylward, Jamie Goddard Electrical Engineering JR Babb, Julie Arkansas City Elementary Education FR Beaman, Diane Whiting Marketing Beaver, Kelly Olathe Leisure Studies SR Behner, Sherrie Lenexa Elementary Education FR Binkley, Cindy Topeka Elementary Education SR Boberg, Sara Lawrence Pre-Nursing SO Boley, Michele Topeka Finance SR Boring, Stephanie Shawnee Mission Psychology SR Brabec, Kimberly Greenleaf Architecture FR Brace, Dedra Moline Secondary Education FR Buchanan, Kris Overland Park Engineering SR Cantrell, Betsy Overland Park Journalism and Mass Communications FR Carter, Amy Hays Accounting SR Chaulk, Jennifer Marysville Journalism and Mass Communications SR Chaulk, Rebecca Marysville Business Administration FR Cline, Ginger Manhattan Pre-Optometry SO Connell, Lisa Harper Industrial Engineering FR Connell, Mary Harper Elementary Education Connet, Monica Manhattan Elementary Education SO Costello, Ann Hutchinson Family Life and Human Development Crume, Julie Overland Park Fine Arts SO Dauner, Jill Pratt Social Work SO Dodson, Amy Louisburg Accounting SO Dunshee, Angie Overland Park Marketing FR Durbin, Patricia Manhattan Dance Durr, Kathy Dodge City Interior Design SR Eakin, Lynne Olathe Elementary Education FR Eberhart, Dianna Hutchinson Arts and Sciences FR Ensley, Connie Topeka Marketing SR Finnell, Marcia Leavenworth Psychology SR Friesen, Stephanie Ellsworth Elementary Education FR Fulhage, Melissa Beloit Elementary Education SO Funk, Elyse Newton Accounting SO 372 Gamma Phi Beta Geist, Sharlene Oakley Elementary Education SO Gillespie, Kristi Cleveland, Mo. Arts and Sciences FR Gilliam, Kathy Greenleaf Accounting SR Gilliam, Mary Beth Greenleaf Finance SO Goodman, Jill St. John Elementary Education FR Goss, Susan Great Bend Accounting SO Heilman, Lori Council Grove Elementary Education SR Herl, Michelle Ellis Radio-Television SR Herman, Ann Mission Leisure Studies SR Hixson, Heidi WaKeeney Apparel and Texitile Marketing SO Holthaus, Monica Overland Park Arts and Sciences FR Horton, Shana Burrton Interior Design FR James, Karen Hoxie Pre-Law JR Johnson, Angie Shawnee Accounting SO Johnson, Catrina Wichita Pre-Nursing SO Kastens, Val Wichita Pre-Veterinary Medicine JR Keesecker, Laura Washington Dietetics FR Kinsler, Jan Spivey Engineering SR Knox, Lindsey Shawnee Marketing SO Kolle, Jennell Clay Center Elementary Education SO Krug, Andrea Russell Agricultural Economics JR Krug, Anita Russell Business Administration FR Lauer, Janie Sabetha Elementary Education JR Lauer, Tanya Topeka Business Administration JR Lear, Jyl Hutchinson Arts and Sciences SO Line, Kristy Russell Business Administration JR Luchtefeld, Kristen Prairie Village Marketing FR Marmie, Jeree Great Bend Management JR Mayfield, Fran Winfield Engineering SR Meier, Debbie Hutchinson Medical Technology SO Mertes, Laura Prairie Village Architecture SO Michals, Melanie Overland Park Modern Languages JR Miller, Lainie Winfield Arts and Sciences FR Morgason, Traci Olathe Accounting FR Mosier, Karen Hays Business Administration FR Novak, Rachelle Munden Elementary Education FR O ' Brien, Alice Olathe Business Administration SO Odle, Andrea Overland Park Elementary Education FR Olberding, Joyce Kansas City, Mo. Human Ecology SR Osborne, Alicia St. George Restaurant Management FR Paquette, Brenda Junction City Arts and Sciences FR Parker, Kim Shawnee Dietetics SO Partridge, Jill Wichita Family and Child Development JR Pfannenstiel, Lisa Hays Biology JR Phelps, Jean Oakley Apparel and Textile Marketing SO Pope, Jennifer Topeka Arts and Sciences FR Porter, Kris.. Pratt Journalism and Mass Communications JR Prosser, Shawna Great Bend Bakery Science and Management SO 373 Gamma Phi Beta Ralston, Elizabeth Merriam Computer Engineering FR Reese, Krista Hays Elementary Education FR Rive, Valerie Lake Worth, Fla. Accounting JR Ronen, Shelby St. John Arts and Sciences SO Savaiano, Tammy Topeka Family Life and Human Development JR Schaake, Sheila Lawrence Business Administration SR Schanefelt, Dana Decatur, Ill. Apparel and Textile Marketing SO Scherer, Heidi Olathe Interior Design SO Schneider, Leslye Logan Economics SR Scott, Lisa WaKeeney Arts and Sciences FR Smith, Susan Miltonvale Dietetics JR Stoneking, Anne Prairie Village Foods and Nutrition JR Stout, Amanda Dodge City Humanities JR Stout, Melissa Dodge City Finance FR Struckhoff, Christine Grinnell Management JR Thomas, Tammy Olathe Elementary Education SR Tillberg, Cheryl Salina Accounting JR Tomc, Janet Overland Park Marketing JR Trentman, Connie Fairview Finance JR Unrein, Susan Jennings Elementary Education SO Vanier, Mary Brookville Animal Sciences and Industry SR Veverka, Karen Lincoln, Kan. Biochemistry SO Walahoski, Annette Overland Park Interior Design JR Walker, Karen Lenexa Psychology FR Walker, Rindi Wichita Social Sciences JR Wardell, Kriste Tecumseh Business Administration SR Warlop, Cristin Roeland Park Arts and Scienes FR Wheeler, Beth Overland Park Interior Design SO White, Sharon Overland Park Journalism and Mass Communications FR White, Stasha Overland Park Arts and Scienes SO Winters, Tammy Overland Park Arts and Scienes JR Young, Cathy Lyons Business Administration JR Zimmerman, Erin Shawnee Secondary Education FR 374 Gamma Phi Beta kappa alpha theta founded on Jan. 27, 1870, at DePauw University and has 103 chapters. It received a charter at K-State in 1961. The sorority flower is the black and gold pansy and its colors are black and gold. Allen, Jennifer K Scott City Journalism and Mass Communications FR Alton, Susan Independence, Kan. Home Economics Education JR Anderson, Lisa M Liberal Management FR Armstrong, Monica Manhattan Restaurant Management FR Baldwin, Cindie Shawnee Mission Journalism and Mass Communications SR Barnett, Alice Topeka Physical Education JR Bartlett, Julie Osawatomie Animal Sciences and Industry FR Berry, Janet Lenora Industrial Engineering JR Blanck, Janet Topeka Textile. Sciences JR Blaser, Nancy Manhattan Business Administration JR Bookout, Leslie Wichita Pm-Medicine FR Bromert, Katherine Ottawa Pre-Nursing JR Bryan, Michelle Hiawatha Business Administration FR Bullock, Kathy Springfield, Mo. Marketing SR Clifford, Molly Overland Park Management Cooper, Kimberly Shawnee Elementary Education JR Darnell, Janise Wichita Speech Pathology and Audiology JR Davies, Carrie Liberal Mechanical Engineering SO Dearasaugh, Lynne Shawnee Civil Engineering SO Desilet, Sherri Wichita Elementary Education SO Domanske, Michele Omaha, Neb. Architecture JR Drury, Heather Topeka Pre-Physical Therapy FR Ebert, Kelli Wamego Accounting SO Eklund, Shanna Goodland Psychology SO Fair, Julie Alden Pre-Nursing FR Fox, Debbie St. Marys Physical Education SR Frangkiser, Michelle Branson, Mo. Architectural Engineering JR Frashier, Laura Prairie Village Interior Architecture SR Gallager, Leanne Manhattan Elementary Education JR Gilpin, Tish Russell Arts and Sciences FR Hancock, Karen Liberal Journalism and Mass Communications FR Hasenkamp, Diane Centralia Arts and Sciences FR Hassan, Filza Manhattan Architectural Engineering JR Hassan, Rima Manhattan Elementary Education SR Healy, Shelly Wichita Pre-Medicine SO Hill, Kris McPherson Secondary Education JR 375 Kappa Alpha Theta kappa alpha theta Hoag, Alison Wichita Business Administration FR Hoffman, Kathlene Overland Park Apparel Design FR Hofmann, Jill Overland Park Pre-Physical Therapy SR Horigan, Julie El Dorado Industrial Engineering JR Huck, Tami Lamed Accounting FR Hultgren, Jayne Overland Park Special Education JR Hultgren, Joan Overland Park Apparel and Textile Marketing FR Hutchins, Debbie Scott City Elementary Education SR Johnson, Sarah Lenexa Computer Science SO Kalbach, Karen Leoti Physical Education JR Keever, Jill Topeka Psychology JR Kraimbill, Niki Bern Apparel and Textile Marketing JR Kropf, Martha Manhattan Radio-Television FR Lee, Heather Partridge Arts and Sciences FR Linenberger, Annie Manhattan Fine Arts JR Linenberger, Kathy Manhattan Mechanical Engineering SO Linin, Kimberly Goodland Psychology SO Luginslad, Jill Hutchinson Accounting JR Lundeen, Leann Fowler Accounting JR McMahill, Jennifer Overland Park Elementary Education JR Miers, Cindy Overland Park Education-Business JR Moors, Kim McPherson Accounting SR Morgan, Joanna Wichita Social Work FR Myles, Stacy Lenexa Apparel and Textile Marketing Naaf, Janel Summerfield Journalism and Mass Communications JR Nissen, Lucinda Kansas City, Mo. Journalism and Mass Communications SO Olson, Esther McPherson Marketing SR Owen, Britt Osawatomie Journalism and Mass Communications FR Pakkebier, Kelly Prairie View Arts and Sciences FR Pease, Michele Manhattan Elementary Education SR Petersen, Christie DeSoto Fine Arts SO Peterson, Dana Wamego Journalism and Mass Communications Pingeton, Dina Jackson, Mich. Elementary Education JR Quigley, Dawn Lenora Marketing SO Reschke, Jenny Hiawatha Journalism and Mass Communications SO Rietcheck, Patricia Wichita Special Education SR Rogers, Elizabeth Topeka Arts and Sciences FR Schlender, Kristen Manhattan Management JR Schoneman, Stacey Kansas City, Kan. Special Education SO Schutty, Kelly Mission Apparel and Textile Marketing SR Shelden, Tamera Holton Secondary Education JR Shipps, Wendy Dodge City Journalism and Mass Communications SO Sinderson, Jill Shawnee Pre-Physical Therapy JR Skelton, Jill Larned Business Administration FR Smith, Susan Prairie Village Marketing SO Spillar, Sharon Great Bend Architectural Engineering FR Stephenson, Darcy Wichita Speech Pathology and Audiology FR Sterling, Melinda Garden City Elementary JR 376 Kappa Alpha Theta Storer, Aleta Dodge City Electrical Engineering JR Sullivan, Lorraine Prairie Village Art SO Tauscher, Debbie Hays Industrial Engineering JR Tejeda, Christine Wichita Marketing SO Thole, Jill Marion Apparel and Textile Marketing FR Thole, Michelle Marion Computer Engineering SO Thompson, Susan McCracken Music SO Thomson, Susan Manhattan Elementary Education SO Todd, Carol Minneapolis, Kan. Accounting SO Trussell , Miki Omaha, Neb. Business Administration FR Vincent, Amy Topeka Architectural Engineering SO Vitztum, Colleen Hays Pre-Nursing SO Waldeck, Kathy Wichita Architecture SO West, Amy Wichita Apparel and Textile Marketing FR Wheelock, Brenda Medicine Lodge Animal Sciences and Industry SR Willcut, Delisa Great Bend Psychology SR Woods, Jodie Manhattan Accounting FR Zimmerman, Angie McPherson Early Childhood Education FR SAND SCULPTURE. The team of architecture students who created Fred The Rock Lobster cool down in Tuttle Creek Reservoir. The team won the Golden Pail award at the fifth annual Sandcastle Charette. (Photo by Gary Lytle) 377 Kappa Alpha Theta Evans, Peggy Housemother Alonzo, Renee Eldorado Elementary Education SR Barber, Caroline Caldwell Marketing JR Barton, Renee Wichita Elementary Education SR Basgall, Julie Larned Education SO Baumann, Mary Burrton Apparel and Textile Marketing JR Bordewick, Leann Seward Veterinary Medicine FR Bossi, Carol Arkansas City Industrial Engineering SR Bradshaw, Missy Harrisonville, Mo. Architecture SO Brandsberg, Anne Manhattan Journalism and Mass Communications SR Buckley, Candace Wichita Chemical Engineering FR Burnett, Julie Manhattan Architectural Engineering SO Campbell, Tracy Topeka Political Science SR Casey, Cheri Mi nneapolis Pre-Nursing JR Caspari, Danielle Wichita Early Childhood Education FR Cure, Laura Hastings, Neb. Psychology FR Dailey, Elizabeth Fresno, Calif. Family Life and Human Development SR Darfler, Jennifer Brighton, Mich. Journalism and Mass Communications SO Daubert, Richelle Hutchinson Accounting FR Day, Sheila Kansas City, Mo. Architecture FR Dinges, Deborah Hutchinson Speech Pathology and Audiology SO Ellis, Darilyn Chanute Elementary Education SO Erickson, Sara Manhattan Psychology JR Garvert, Kay Plainville Bakery Science and Management SR Gingrich, Elizabeth Kansas City, Mo. Business Administration SO Gleue, Julianne Manhattan Biology SR Goering, Angela Moundridge Radio-Television SR Gregoriew, Lisa Topeka Physical Education JR Grimm, Sondra Larned Pre-Veterinary Medicine SO Hart, Mary St. Peters, Mo. Enrironmental Design SO Herzig, Melissa Salina Dietetics JR Hipp, Linda Great Bend Physical Education JR Holdeman, Linda Manhattan Speech Pathology and Audiology JR Holle, Evelyn Wichita Finance SR Huxman, Kami Arnold Pre-Nursing SO Jones, Patricia Manhattan Secondary Education SR kappa delta was founded in 1897 at Long- wood College and has 141 chapters. It received a charter at K-State in 1920. The flower is the white rose and its colors are olive green and pearl white. The sorority house is at 1220 Centennial Drive. 378 Kappa Delta Jones, Stephanie Mission Hills Psychology SR Knop, Lisa Ellinwood Business Administration FR Kruzich, Lisa Naperville, Ill. Interior Design SR Lee, Lori Garden City Business Administration SO Lesh, Stephanie Manhattan Elementary Education GR Macy, Rachelle El Dorado Marketing FR Martin, Angie Abilene Psychology SO McKee , Frances Kansas City, Mo. Electrical Engineering FR Medley, Denise Manhattan Education-Business SR Merkel, Amy Crofton, Neb. Interior Design SO Myers, Mindy Overland Park Mathematics SO Ott, Leslie Manhattan Elementary Education SO Page, Marsha Erie Social Work SR Peterson, Karla Concordia Business Administration FR Pettijohn, Sharon Topeka Elementary Education FR Raaf, Kathy Gridley Pre-Veterinary Medicine JR Rasdall, Lori Kansas City, Kan. Business Administration SR Reimer, Susan Kansas City, Mo. Journalism and Mass Communications SO Rephlo, Lisa Overland Park Mechanical Engineering Rupp, Joellen Hays Apparel and Design FR Scales, Cristy Arkansas City Elementary Education SR Schlaegel, Gayla Whiting Social Work SO Schuckman, Tammy Great Bend Elementary Education JR Sims, Pam Overland Park Elementary Education FR Sjogren, Tammera Concordia Speech Pathology and Audiology SR Sleezer, Lisa Olathe Elementary Education SR Smading, Andrea Independence Interior Architecture SR Swanson, Angela Clifton Modern Language SO Thomas, Shannan Dighton Business Administration FR Twaddell, Michelle Minneapolis, Kan. Apparel Design FR Vanderlinden, Lori Overland Park Civil Engineering FR Ward, Alayne Manhattan Chemical Engineering SO Ward, Karla Caldwell Accounting SO Weigel, Stacey Hutchinson Apparel and Textile Marketing SR Weiser, Teresa Norton Accounting SO Welsh, Molly Overland Park Pre-Law FR Welsh, Susan Topeka Apparel and Textile Marketing SR Werth, Carrie Topeka Early Childhood Education Werth, Sharon Topeka Marketing SR Wewers, Tammy Kansas City, Mo. Elementary Education SR Wilkerson, Karen Lenexa Interior Design SO Williams, Elizabeth Wichita Accounting SR Woodruff, Michelle Salina Psychology SR Workman, Stacy Silver Lake Apparel and Textile Marketing SO 379 Kappa Delta kappa kappa gamma was founded in 1870 at Monmouth College and has 126 chapters. The Kappas received a charter at K-State in 1916. The sorority flower is the fleur-de-lis and its colors are dark blue and light blue. Walk, Lou Housemother Albertson, Patricia Bonner Springs Marketing JR Allen, Brenda Humboldt Journalism and Mass Communications FR Allerheiligen, Jada Manhattan Journalism and Mass Communications SR Allerheiligen, Janel Manhattan Restaurant Management FR Anderson, Peggy Overland Park Elementary Education FR Bales, Janette Overland Park Accounting FR Barenberg, Jennifer Overland Park Pre-Physical Therapy FR Barker, Brenda Manhattan Elementary Education SR Beaudry, Nichole Chesterfield, Mo. Architectural Engineering FR Berends, Jamie Manhattan Secondary Education JR Biggs, Elaine Allen Pre-Pharmacy JR Borders, Bridget Prairie Village Psychology JR Brauer, Angie Haven Apparel Design FR Brown, Suzanne S. Hutchinson Pre-Law FR Brownell, Stephanie Hutchinson Early Childhood Education SR Brummett, Dana Hutchinson Journalism and Mass Communications SR Buttron, Kelly Nortonville Elementary Education FR Chatterjee, Eva Manhattan Sociology JR Coffman, Wendi Bonner Springs Radio-Television SO Coltrane, Connie La Harpe Chemical Engineering FR Cook, Rebecca Shawnee History JR Dahlsten, Kim Lindsborg Restaurant Management SO Dean, Alaxandra Kansas City, Kan. Arts and Sciences FR Dibble, Julie Prairie Village Fine Arts FR Doctor, Deborah Belleville Accounting FR Dorr, Tracy Leawood Psychology FR Downey, Gretchen Hutchinson Food and Nutrition Exercise Science JR Edwards, Anne Lawrence Foods and Nutrition SR England, Kathy Paola Marketing SO Eubanks, Megan Paola Marketing JR Fankhauser, Dacia Madison Bakery Science and Management- JR Fortner, Janet Prairie Villa e Education-Business R Glennon, Karen Overland Park Elementary Education JR Golladay, Tammy Fontana Pre-Physical Therapy FR Graber, Sheila Moundridge Radio-Television FR 380 Kappa Kappa Gamma 381 Kappa Kappa Gamma Grothaus, Tamara Smith Center Music SO Harms, Lisa Haysville Accounting SO Hayden, Deborah Concordia Bakery Science and Management SR Hayden, Kathy Concordia Accounting SO Hileman, Beth Paola Chemical Engineering FR Hill, Nancy Manhattan Journalism and Mass Communications JR Hittle, Shona Winfield Pm-Physical Therapy JR Holliday, Angela Meade Elementary Education FR Hoppe, Char Manhattan Music FR Horstman, Stephanie Boulder, Colo. Architecture SO Howe, Diane Prairie Village Social Work FR Isch, Jody Sabetha Marketing SR Jackson, Angelique Wichita Fine Arts SO Johnson, Heather Colby Accounting SO Johnson, Kristin Colby Accounting FR Jones, Sarah Prairie Village Food and Nutrition Exercise Science SO Jordan, Marnie Abilene Elementary Education JR Jordan, Mary Kate Abilene Arts and Sciences FR Kincaid, Kim Haven Apparel and Textile Marketing FR Kniffin, Cyd Overland Park Marketing Kramer, Juli Hugoton Accounting JR Kunkel, Mary Manhattan Education FR Larson, Janelle Hiawatha Animal Sciences and Industry Lonker, Jamie Medicine Lodge Human Ecology SR Martin, Alaina Wichita Psychology FR Martin, Melanie Clay Center Elementary Education FR Martin, Michele Clay Center Pre-Optometry SO McClusky, Molly El Dorado Elementary Education FR McCune, Kristi Minneola Pre-Veterinary Medicine SO McGatlin, Jodi Greenleaf Consumer Affairs SO Meadows, Sally Hutchinson Interior Design SO Menze, Lora Hutchinson Architectural Engineering SO Mills, Stephanie Hugoton Apparel and Textile Marketing JR Moss, Tiffany Salina Accounting Myers, Michelle Leawood Apparel and Textile Marketing SR Nelson, Kathleen Topeka Secondary Education JR O ' Hara, Megan Topeka Education Prairie Village Ott, Diana Early Childhood Education FR Palmquist, Tammy Concordia Marketing JR Peirce, Katherine Hutchinson Elementary Education SR Perkins, Kate Howard Animal Sciences and Industry SO Perry, Elisha Kansas City, Kan. Arts a nd Sciences FR Petersen, Marian Hutchinson Elementary Education SO Pfeiffer, Stacy Leawood Business Administration FR Pierce, Risa Smith Center Economics JR Pulford, Diane Manhattan Arts and Sciences FR Ramsey, Julie Olathe Business Administration SO Rehg, Jill Leawood Elementary Education SR Relling, Heidi I awrence Biology SO Richert, Caereen Overland Park Apparel and Textile Marketing FR Rinella, Ann Overland Park Apparel and Textile Marketing JR Roach, Brenda Overland Park Consumer Affairs SR Ross, Roseann Leawooc Early Childhood Education JR Royer, Jill Haver Pre-Medicine FR Rumsey, Michelle Salina Elementary Education SO Ryan, Kimberly El Dorado Business Administration FR Sandberg, Jennifer Wichita English SO Schindler, Natalie Overland Park Interior Design SR Schmidt, Diane Salina Pre-Nursing JR Scott, Stephanie Columbia, Mo. Architecture FR Sederquist, Carley Shawnee Mission Marketing SR Sederquist, Dawn Shawnee Mission Family Life and Human Development SO Seely, Shannan Tonganoxie Animal Sciences and Industry FR Seibold, Deborah Overland Park Pre-Law FR Sheldon, Kristin Overland Park Arts and Sciences SO Skelton, Sandra Winfield Education-Political Science FR Smith, Lisa J Overland Park Arts and Sciences SO Spaeth, Kristen Manhattan Apparel and Textile Marketing Swanson, Shelli Prairie Village Speech Pathology and Audiology JR Tarrant, Kerry Manhattan Radio-Television SO Taylor, Kelli Overland Park Fine Arts FR Teasley, Anja Abilene Theater SO Thomas, Brenda Dighton Secondary Education SO Thompson, Trisha Paradise Elementary Education JR Thurow, Tracy Hugoton Elementary Education SR Tryon, Kathryn Burlington Engineering FR Varner, Kendra Salina Elementary Education Wallace, Christine Potwin Finance FR Walter, Judi Meade Journalism and Mass Communications SR Ward, Christy Overland Park Marketing SO Warta, Jennifer Abilene Elementary Education SO Webster, Laura Overland Park Pre-Veterinary Medicine JR Weelborg, Jane Canton Bakery Science and Management FR Weigand, Nancy Ottawa Finance FR White, Jennifer Englewood, Colo. Journalism and Mass Communications SO Wingert, Wende Wichita Marketing JR Woerpel, Traci Haven Bakery Science and Management SR Woods, Julie Manhattan Elementary Education JR Woodson, Laurel Penalosa Elementary Education SR Yust, Connie Hutchinson Secondary Education JR 382 Kappa Kappa Gamma kappa sigma received a charter at K-State on June 5, 1919. The fraternity flower is the Lily of the Valley and its colors are scarlet, green and white. The Kappa Sigs live at 1930 College Heights and have 75 members. Bailey, Troy Derby Marketing SO Beck, Barry Clay Center Business Administration Bellemere, George Lake Quivera Mechanical Engineering SO Bishop, James Salina Marketing SR Brown, Michael Topeka Pre-Law SR Bussard, Timothy Hutchinson Architecture SR Carrico, Kurtis Beloit Biology FR Cobb, Doug Lincoln, Neb. Arts and Sciences FR Coiner, William Olathe Information Systems SO Doerflinger, Sean El Dorado Construction Science FR Eickhoff, Sean Manhattan Architectural Engineering SO Grame, Robert Topeka Architecture FR Ham, Philip Manhattan Milling Science and Management SR Heinrichs, Kyle Garden City Social Sciences SR Hendrickson, Don Mechanical Engineering SO Herr, Daniel Collinsville, Ill. Architecture Hoffman, Proc Hoover, Ala. Mechanical Engineering Hopkins, Darin Garden Coy Pre-Optometry SO Jacobson, Edward Reno, Nev. Electrical Engineering Jensen, Dale Eureka Finance SR Kohler, Mike Beloit Arts and Sciences FR Kunz, Karl Garden City Marketing SR Lock, Tod Hutchinson Marketing JR Marceca, Joe Oxnard, Calif. Architecture SR. Mason, Bob Salina Business Administration McCall, Dennis Concordia Education JR Moore. Derek Mission Hills Journalism and Mass Communications FR Marty El Dorado Business Administration FR Pittman, David Overland Park Chemical Engineering Rahe, Eric Shawnee Mechanical Engineering ER Reese, George Manhattan Arts and Sciences I R Rettig, Kent Hanover Electrical Engineering SR Reynolds, Clinton Derby finance Ridder, Bret Marienthal Agricultural Economics FR Ridder, Tim Marienthal Pre-Optometry SR Robert, Russell Olathe Management SR 383 kappa sigma kappa sigma Rychlec, Mark Kansas City, Kan. Marketing SR Salyer, Jeff Garden City Pre-Law JR Scheibmeir, Brian Pratt Electrical Engineering SR Schumacher, Todd Mar ienthal Animal Sciences and Industry SR Seitz, David Manhattan Natural Resources Management SR Steele, Doug Mission Mechanical Engineering SR Stone, Steven Olathe Civil Engineering SR Stump, Michael Wichita Architectural Engineering SO Sullivan, Erich Junction City Computer Science SO Terwillilger, Todd Wichita Social Work JR Thompson, Todd Coffeyville Pre-Medicine JR Treffer, Douglas Derby Mechanical Engineering FR Ward, Steve St. George Veterinary Medicine SO Warriner, Tobin Shawnee Physical Education JR Weaver, James Overland Park Engineering FR Wharff, Albert Lake Quivira Electrical Engineering SO White, Richard Prairie Village Accounting FR Wynne, Sean Overland Park Construction Science JR Zimmerman, Mark South Haven Civil Engineering JR UPWARDLY BOUND. Charles Long, associate professor of horticulture, coaches Sue Reynolds, senior in horticulture, as she ascends a tree in Quinlan Natural Area during an arboriculture lab exercise. (Photo by Brad Camp) 384 Kappa Sigma lambda chi alpha was founded in 1909 at Boston College and has 213 chapters. The fraternity received its charter at K-State in 1924 and the fraternity flower is the white rose. Its colors are purple, olive green and old gold. King, Gretchen Housemother Adams, Keith Tonganoxie Milling Science and Management Adkins, Tyler Overland Park Restaurant Management FR Arroyo, Gary Mulvane Veterinary Medicine SR Bales, Mark Wellington Physical Education SO Banning, David Garden City Civil Engineering SR Banning, Michael Garden City Finance SO Belfield, Anuk Moosehead, Ala. Electrical Engineering SR Bossi, John Arkansas City Milling Science and Management FR Burnett, Tim DeSoto Biology FR Casper, Dave Wamego Journalism and Mass Communications SR Christenson, Dakin Clay Center Chemical Engineering FR Clancy, Stephen Manhattan Mechanical Engineering SR Cochran, Zachery Marketing JR Cooley, Kelly Garden City Marketing SO Cullens, Gerald Goodland Restaurant Management JR Dowell, Christopher Overland Park Mechanical Engineering SO Evans, John M Overland Park Journalism and Mass Communications SR Fey, David Garden City Political Science JR Fey, Paul Garden City Biology SO Fitzmorris, Brent Hutchinson Electrical Engineering FR Goertz, John Hillsboro Electrical Engineering SO Hamel, Kevin Hays Electrical Engineering SO Holle, Douglas Manhattan Business Administration FR Holt, Roger Dexter Psychology Howell, Brian Arkansas City Journalism and Mass Communications SR Huck, Todd Lamed Pre-law FR Jensen, Trevor Goodland Economics SO Johnson, Timothy Lenexa Engineering FR Kettler, Keith Manhattan Mechanical Engineering SR Kropf, Bradley Manhattan Electrical Engineering SR Kubik, Tim Colby Business Administration JR Lee, David Pittsburg, Kan. Electrical Engineering SR Lind, David Overland Park Pre-Medicine FR Lippe, Darren Topeka Marketing Luetters, Mark Salina Electrical Engineering 385 Lambda Chi Alpha lambda chi alpha Maggard, Bryan Dexter Journalism and Mass Communications JR Main, Stephen Independence Marketing JR Mapes, Evan Norton Pre-Optometry SO McDonald, David Arkansas City Pre-Optometry FR McLane, Ben Derby Management SR Myers, Lawrence St. Genevieve, Mo. Architecture SR Nelson, John Shawnee Architecture SO Ney, Kevin Russell Finance SR Oakleaf, Tim Chapman Mechanical Engineering JR Olin, Rodney Overland Park Journalism and Mass Communications FR Parks, Kerry Economics Perry, Shelly Arts and Sciences Richardson, Robert Pre-Law Robertson, Charles B Horticulture Salts, Darin Business Administration Schmidt, Ken Electrical Engineering Seamans, Bryan Business Administration Siegfried, Paul Finance Smith, Brian H. Marketing MODERN DAY CHARIOT Tau Kappa Epsilon members Kelly Johnson, far left, Curt Creason and Kappa Delta chariot rider Renee Alonzo, try in vain to stay ahead of Sigma Phi Epsilon members Scott Higgins, left, and Deron Lock and Kappa Alpha Theta rider Stacy Gossett, in the men ' s finals of the 24th Lambda Chi Chariot Relays at the R.V. Christian Track. (Photo by Gary Lytle) Wamego JR Hugoton FR Hiawatha FR Wellington SO FR Prairie Village SR Wamego JR Overland Park SO Arkansas City SO 386 Lambda Chi Alpha lambda chi alpha Smith, Dirk Overland Park Pre-Optometry JR Staley, Tim Overland Park Journalism and Mass Communications SR Stark, Gary Manhattan Accounting SR Stoerman, Jack Overland Park Finance FR Stoner, Kurt Garden City Pre-Optometry SO Stuart, Robert Kansas City, Kan. Biology SR Sweat, Tracy Colby Physics SO Swords, Sheridan Garden City Mechanical Engineering FR Tullock, Stephen St. Louis, Mo. Architecture SO Van Thullenar, David Roeland Park Biology Walden, Christopher Kansas City, Kan. Secondary Education FR Walden, Geoffrey Kansas City, Kan. Psychology SR Warren, Scott Wichita Computer Science SO Wasko, Matthew Arkansas City Fine Arts SO Weigel, Colin Hutchinson Engineering SR Winterman, Kurt Mission Marketing SR Young, Bryan Cheney Architecture Young, Jason Cheney Pre-Physical Therapy SR Crescents Lambda Chi Alpha Little Sisters FRONT ROW: Stacy Bomgardner, Julie Dibble, Sandra Skelton, Tami Huck, Therese Myer, Kim Fankhauser, Marti Willis, Shona Hittle, Katy Lyon. SECOND ROW: Dayna Lockwood, Diana Ott, Diane Colgan, Amy Winterman, Martha Kropf, Danielle Lewis, Larissa Kimura, Heather Downs. BACK ROW: Jayne Hultgren, Joan Hultgren, Shari Brown, Mary Ward, Kim Pearson, Kim Parker, Janet Alexander, Melissa Wilbur, Michelle Houston, Stacy Myles. 387 By Gidget Kuntz best experience I had was being a mother, Sheila Comfort, Tau Kappa Epsilon said. I also think that you really have to enjoy young people and live the way they do. There were a variety of people who held positions as housemothers in the greek Although each of them were from various professions they all had one thing in common: They all had motherhood on their list of qualifications. Even though a large part of the house- mother ' s job was being a mother for students away from home, she had many other Within a greek house, the had authority over all other hired staff and acted as hostess at house functions. Planning the menus and taking inventory for the house were also necessary tasks of housemothers. Taking care of discipline is something I don ' t have to worry about, Comfort said. The boys make their own rules, and then they themselves enforce them. Over the years, the role of a housemother has changed within the greek system. At one time the position was considered more of a one. Today, Lou Walk, Kappa Kappa Gamma housemother, believed her position was more of an older friend who helped to see that everything ran smoothly. Mom Walk is a neat lady who isn ' t here to slap our hands or send us to bed for being bad, Patty Albertson, junior in business administration, said. She ' s not a housemother; she ' s more of a housemom. Etiquette held an important place in many sororities. Because of this, many housemoms held classes to teach the young women within their house various aspects of etiquette they believed were important. Etiquette the women learned was put to use at house formal dinners. I feel learning manners is one of the of sorority life. One of the things I enjoy most about being a housemother is the that I get to do, Peggy Evans, Kappa Delta housemother, said. Part of a housemother ' s life included of the Housemothers Club. At these meetings the Moms were able to get together with each other and get away from their hectic houses. They were involved in many different activities through their Some played bridge, went walking, visited historical sites in Kansas, or just got together to chat. Being involved in the club is fun, Evans said, and we all have the common bond of greek life. We share similar problems of our houses and other things that happen to us. Of all the housemothers, Evans has been at K-State the longest. She planned on keeping with this as long as possible. Being a house- mom, she was required to be on duty at all times if she was needed, and according to Mom Evans, the girls only had to knock if they needed her. Tau Kappa Epsilon house- mom, Sheila Comfort, shows Randy Orscheln, senior in marketing, how to fold the tableclothes she washed from the formal dinner the night before. (Photo by Chris Assaf) Kappa Delta housemon, Peggy Evans, sings grace with her escorts of the week, Lori Rasdall, senior in business administration, and Evelyn Holle, senior in finance and accounting, and the other members of the sorority before eating dinner. Evans had two different escorts each week. (Photo by Chris Assaf) Ruth Craig, Delta Tau Delta housemom, greets one of the other housemoms at the annual housesmom ' s Christmas luncheon. The housemoms met once a month to play bridge or to socialize. (Photo by Chris Assaf) 389 Housemothers _ Adkinson, Kenion Glenwood Springs, Cob. Finance SR Alexander, Wesley Olathe Radio-Television SR Barker, Brent Hesston Management SR Barrow-Hemry, Aaron Overland Park Restaurant Management FR Beutler, Kevin Ness City Marketing SR Blomquist, Brian Smolan Secondary Education JR Brosa, John Topeka Pre-Medicine FR Brun, Darin Topeka Marketing SR Burke, William Overland Park Finance FR Cabanas, Justo Roeland Park Business Administration JR Carlson, Bill Overland Park Pathology FR Clark, Keith Columbia, Mo. Architecture So Culotta, Paul Overland Park Business Administration FR Daeschner, Timothy Topeka Mechanical Engineering SO Daly, Shawn Manhattan Mechanical Engineering SR Denzel, Thomas Leawood Journalism and Mass Communication s SR Dinsmore, Steven Leawood Physical Education SR Drebes, William Denver, Colo. Architecture SO Dreiling, Dave Concordia Marketing JR Elmore, Kurt Liberal Computer Science FR Franklin, Jeffrey Arkansas City Architecture FR Gaudreau, William Wichita Pre-Law SO Gellenthien, Tom Kingman Mechanical Engineering JR Gottlob, Clint Arkansas City Political Science FR Higgins, Alan Salina Leisure Studies SR Holland, Daman Manhattan Landscape Architecture SO Howard, David Olathe Mechanical Engineering FR Husted, Dave Littleton, Colo. Bakery Science and Management SO Jones, Brent Overland Park Pre-Medicine FR Julich, Robert Overland Park Engineering FR Kennedy, Robert Manhattan Architecture FR Kittner, John Blue Rapids Industrial Engineering JR Krizman, Jason Business Administration FR Kuhnert, Todd Atchison Arts and Sciences SO Kvasnicka, Brad Manhattan Accounting JR Lamfers, Craig Overland Park Electrical Engineering JR phi delta theta has 148 chapters and received a charter at K-State in 1921. The fraternity flower is the white carnation and its colors are light blue and white. The fraternity house is located at 508 Sunset and has 72 members. 390 Phi Delta Theta Lowrimore, Michael Littleton, Colo. Construction Science SR MacCracken, Christopher Leawood Marketing JR McArthur, Colton Manhattan Fine Arts JR McIntyre, Douglas Overland Park Architectural Engineering FR McKinley, William Havensville Information Systems JR Moreno, Charles Wichita Interior Architecture SR Newell, Jeff Topeka Electrical Engineering SO Oddo, Jeffrey Leawood Construction Science SR Partridge, Thomas Wichita Economics SR Penner, Rick Newton Marketing SR Plumer, Steven Overland Park Landscape Architecture SR Powell, Michael Topeka Psychology FR Quinton, Brant Wichita Business Administration SO Razook, Chris Wichita Industrial Engineering JR Roberts, Rick Hays Apparel and Textile Marketing JR Rodrock, Brian Gardner Construction Science FR Schinsky, Timothy St. Louis, Mo. Architecture JR Sims, Steven Topeka Nuclear Engineering FR Skinner, William Overland Park Accounting SR Stanley, Chad Manhattan Electrical Engineering SR Taylor, Chris Atchison Accounting SO Thompson, Scott Overland Park Fine Arts JR Walburn, Gregory Lawrence Arts and Sciences FR Walburn, Todd Lawrence Biology SR Ward, Daniel Manhattan Architecture FR Weber, Curt Wichita Marketing SR Wiles, Gary Lenexa Electrical Engineering SR Willow, Thomas Ballwin, Mo. Pre-Nursing FR Wilson, Michael Columbia, Mo. Electrical Engineering SR Zimmer, Bryan W. Des Moines, Iowa Architecture SO 391 Phi delta theta phi gamma delta was founded in 1840 at Jefferson College and has 120 chapters. The fraternity flower is the purple crematis and its color is royal purple. The house is located at 614 Fairchild and has 68 members. Lawrence, Norma Housemother Adams, Charles Maple Hill Agricultural Economics FR Ahlstedt, Andrew Lindsborg Finance FR Blanken, Robert Clay Center Biology SR Bogan, Brett Abilene Business Administration JR Boos, Mike Atchison Economics FR Bowman, Kenneth Kansas City, Kan. Economics FR Brightbill, Chad Salina Milling Science and Management FR Brown, Shannon Lewis Electrical Engineering SO Brownawell, Jay Kansas City, Kan. Computer Science SO Burger, Luke Clay Center Computer Science SO Coble, Randy Basehor Finance FR Cristal, Neil St. Louis, Mo. Architecture SO Daugherty, Rick Salina Pre-Medicine JR Dremann, Mike Lenexa Architecture SO Edsall, P.J Topeka Mechanical Engineering Ellis, David Canton, S.D. Chemistry SR Engle, Tim Abilene Marketing SR Eustace, Tracy Manhattan Bakery Science and Management FR Fullington, Bradley Clay Center Computer Science SO Fulner, Bradley Omaha, Neb. Restaurant Management SR Giltner, Bill Salina Finance JR Goering, Ryan Moundridge Accounting FR Ham, Steven Manhattan Milling Science and Management FR Hammers, Scott Clearwater Electrical Engineering SO Hanley, Pete Omaha, Neb. Agricultural Economics SR Hartner, Corey Clay Center Agricultural Economics SO Haug, Greg Topeka Milling Science and Management SR Hokanson, Erik Marathon, N.Y. Architecture FR Hood, Patrick Seward, Neb. Electrical Engineering FR Houser, Jim Wamego Biology FR Imhoff, Corey Marysville Arts and Sciences FR Ireland, Robert Valley Center Accounting SR Kephart, Charles Salina Pre-Law FR Kjowski, Michael Abilene Finance SO Knowles, Thomas Ogden Architecture FR 392 Phi Gamma Delta Kuckelman, Tim Topeka Industrial Engineering SR Larson, James Manhattan Marketing SR Leff, Keith Shawnee Architecture FR Loder, Darrel Salina Biology SO McLeod, Mark Leavenworth Mechanical Engineering FR Mills, Sean Salina Agricultural Economics JR Morgan, Scott Lenexa Fisheries and Wildlite Biology SO Morris, Daniel Kansas City, Kan. Pre-Veterinary Medicine Opat, Shawn Salina Journalism and Mass Communications Ryan, John Abilene Business Administration FR Skwarlo, Stan Shawnee Marketing JR Stangle, Darrell Enterprise Radio-Television SR Torneden, Erich Baldwin City Architecture SO Whaley, Greg Wellington Agricultural Economics Whitehair, Mark Abilene Finance Whitehair, Matt Abilene Pre-Forestry FR Winter, Kirk Clearwater Arts and Sciences SO Yang, George Overland Park Mechanical Engineering SR Zuhlke, Paul Brunswick, Neb. Pre-Veterinary Medicine FR Fiji Little Sisters Phi Gamma Delta Little Sisters FRONT ROW: Amanda Wauters, Connie Cox, Alaina Prichard, Angie McClure, Lisa Davis, Marci Alstatt. SECOND ROW: Aleta Storer, Rhonda Holle, Kristi Broadfoot, Jill Warren, Sherri Wright, Shelly Guggisberg. THIRD ROW: Gwen Meyers, Pam Blackwell, Mari Stevenson, Melissa Heather Warren, Shari Poland, Ginger Grieshaber. BACK ROW: Kathy Hanson, Stephanie Brown, Trish Simpson, Tish Saia, Cheryn Shamet, Shelly Degraeve, Schonna Gann. Fiji Little Sisters Phi Gamma Delta Little Sisters FRONT ROW: Becky Danner, Ann Doocy, Melanie Schoenbeck, Tamara Taton, Melanie Martin, Shan Case, Jayme Bickell. SECOND ROW: Amy Wiley, Robin Clark, Cindy Kirkpatrick, Tonya Hanken, Becky Hamilton, Michelle Porter, Holly Brotherton. THIRD ROW: Courtney Robertson, Karrie Weber, Tricia Nicloau, Amanda Levin, Kirstan Harris, Suzanne Smykacz, Jennifer Lippoldt. BACK ROW: Susan Tracy, Tina Hindman, Sherri Kristi Roe, Kristen Baker, Kristen Good, Anne Brenner. 393 Phi Gamma Delta Baggerly, Timothy Overland Park Music Education SR Battiest, Robin Baldwin Radio-Television JR Buffum, Sean Burlington Finance Cavlovic, Michael Kansas City, Kan. Finance SR Coffin, Timothy LaCygne Fisheries and Wildlife Biology Dick, James Westwood Hills Construction Science SR Estrada, Diego Costa Rica Industrial Engineering SR Fabina, Joseph Kansas City, Kan. Accounting JR Fisher, Gerald Kansas City, Kan. English FR Graber, Charles Hutchinson Engineering Technology JR Hampton, William Kansas City, Kan. Journalism and Mass Communications FR Jarvi, James Overland Park Finance SR Jones, Steven Manhattan Restaurant Management JR Krstulic, Jim Kansas City, Kan. Marketing JR Lamb, Greg Lenexa Fine Arts JR Leffingwell, Mark Lenexa Journalism and Mass Communications FR Leroux, Gregory Lenexa Restaurant Management FR Melton, Dustin Overland Park Pre-Veterinary Medicine FR Mravunac, Michael Kansas City, Kan. Management JR Overton, Geoffrey Chesterfield, Mo. Restaurant Management SR phi kapPA TAU fraternity is located at 1606 Fairchild and has 35 members. The fraternity color is harvard red and old gold and the flower is the red The fraternity received its K-State charter in 1925. 394 Phi Kappa Tau Sisters Phi Kappa Tau Little Sisters FRONT ROW: Ann Linderkamp, Stephanie Deatrick, Michelle Crist, Dawn Miller, Amy Kramer. SECOND ROW: Laura Gradwohl, Terri Borders, Kristina Reece, Rhonda Serbin, Lainie Dunn, Dawn Piper, Kathy Jaskot. BACK ROW: Carolyn Arnott, Juli Ann Vail, Christine Bruce, Karen Kelley, Susan Siefker, Debora Dolly, Susan Rolfs. Podebarac, Mod Kansas City, Kan. Electrical Engineering FR Reynolds, Walter Kansas City, Kan. Architecture SR Rush, Eric Kansas City, Kan. Architecture SR Simonetti, Daniel Lenexa Fine Arts Tucker, Sanford Hutchinson Business Administration SR Ugarcina, Branko Kansas City, Kan. Computer Science FR Wilson, Chris Greenland, N.H. Geography SR 395 Phi Kappa Tau Leiszler, Stella Housemother Ackley, Steven Haysville Chemical Engineering SO Ahern, Terry Salina Industrial Engineering FR Allen, Kenneth Council Grove Political Science SO Authement, Arnold Junction City Computer Science SO Bessette, Jeff Topeka Accounting FR Blanton, John Junction City History JR Blasing, William Herington Management SR Block, Doug Jefferson City, Mo. Architecture SR Bonar, Warren Parsons Management SR Bulla, Vance Hutchinson Engineering FR Burnett, Casey Topeka Business Administration FR Cliff, Jimmy Jamaica Music SO Darby, Brian Belton, Mo. Civil Engineering FR Dillon, Kevin Manhattan Computer Science JR Downing, Daniel Wichita Nuclear Engineering SO Eshelbrenner, Doug Olathe Business Administration SO Fay, Scott Columbia, Mo. Architecture SO Fowler, Curt Rockford, Ill. Elementary Education JR Fowler, Todd Rockford, Ill. Pre-Law SO Frankenberg, Ed Topeka Electrical Engineering Greer, Rick Wilsey Agricultural Economics SR Hager, Todd SL Charles, Mo. Architecture SO Hammerlund, Raymond St. Marys Agricultural Economics SR Heinitz, Rick Lenexa Radio-Television SO Hilliard, Michael Leonardville Chemical Engineering Hollander, David St. Charles, Mo. Architecture SO Houdek, Thomas Prairie Village Pre-Law FR Hultgren, Kevin White City Radio-Television SR Hymer, David Hutchinson Marketing JR Keimig, Scot Wichita Mechanical Engineering Killian, Steven Wichita Marketing JR Kisel, Jake Wichita Journalism and Mass Communications FR Knudsen, Timothy Manhattan Interior Architecture SR Light, Douglas Florissant, Mo. Architecture SO Lutz, Shane Manhattan Architectural Engineering SO phi kappa theta is located at 1965 College Heights and has 77 members. The flower is the red tea rose and its colors are cardinal red, white and gold. The fraternity was founded in 1959. 396 Phi Kappa Theta Marion, Stephen Independence, Mo. Management SR McKee, John Manhattan Architecture FR Meares, Michael Salina Mechanical Engineering JR Meyerhoff, Kevin Linn Management SR Miller, Derek Manhattan Natural Resources Management FR Miller, Steven Manhattan Finance FR Muehleisen, Stephen Manhattan Electrical Engineering JR Myers, Richard Godfrey, Ill. Architecture JR Oberhelman, Mark Riley Pre-Physical Therapy JR Oberhelman, Michael Manhattan Marketing Pickett, Desmond Dekalb, III. Apparel and Textile Marketing SR Presslor, Jeffrey Herington Fisheries and Wildlife Biology SO Price, Charles Manhattan Natural Resources Management Pride, Shawn McPherson Finance JR Religa, Kevin Brookville Chemistry SR Rickson, James Silver Lake Architecture FR Rosa, Greg Wichita Business Administration FR Sheehan, Patrick Topeka Pre-Medicine JR MONKEYING AROUND. David Hollander, Todd Hager and Scott Fay, all sophomores in clean up the front yard of the Phi Kappa Theta fraternity house while trying on their costumes for a Halloween party the next day. (Photo by Jeff Stead) 397 Phi Kappa Theta phi kappa theta Steere, Joel Alta Vista Marketing Stewart, Robert Topeka Nuclear Engineering SR Stockman, Jeffrey Overland Park Architecture Sutton, Louis Manhattan Management JR Sweany, Michael St. Marys Computer Science SR Thomas, David Mission Management SO Troub, James Amarillo, Texas Restaurant Management SO Urban, Tim Wichita Finance SO Van Wey, Dennis Atchison Social Sciences SR Weary, Brian Belleville Restaurant Management FR Whitenack, Stu McPherson Finance JR Willcoxon, Phil Joplin, Mo. Marketing Wilson, Timothy Wichita Business Administration SO Wright, Rensloe Salina Computer Science SR aphelion rose Phi Kappa Theta Little Sisters FRONT ROW: Heidi Higgins, Tina Cardona, Tia Lemon, Kelly Provow, Rebecca Howard, Cynthia Fries, Anne Frey, Kris Furr, Lori Sharp, Monica Ward, Deanne Metzger, Stephanie Lee, Brenda Goetz. SECOND ROW: Gaye Caine, Janet Kristi Hull, Kristi Mitchell, Kelly Keimig, Lori Bott, Susan Sowles, Carrie Palmer, Roxanne Jones, Lori Heilman. BACK ROW: Kimberly C indy Meers, Sara Sayler, Lara Dillinger, Cynthia Bowen, Sandra Arnoldy, Cherie Johnson, Barbara Sell, Heather Solomon, Tara White. 398 Phi Kappa Theta 399 pi beta phi pi beta phi was founded in 1867 and has 115 chapters. The sorority flower is the wine carnation and its colors are wine and silver blue. The sorority received its charter at K-State in 1867 and has 134 members. Reynard, Martha Housemother Addleman, Michelle Oberlin Business Administration FR Alsmeyer, Kathrina Independence Marketing SO Andersen, Kerri Topeka Business Administration SO Bachman, Johanna Centralia Industrial Engineering SR Baughman, Amanda Kansas City, Mo. Arts and Sciences FR Brakeall, Patricia Shawnee Interior Design SO Brown, Laurie Salina Accounting JR Brown, Stephanie R. Salina Psychology FR Cleveland, Jane Minneapolis, Kan. Pre-Dentistry FR Dell Antonia, Karin Wichita Arts and Sciences FR Dentmon, Patti Wichita Chemical Engineering FR Deschner, Patricia Phillipsburg Business Administration FR Downing, Gina Eureka Elementary Education SO Downs, Heather DeSoto Journalism and Mass Communications FR Ellis, Julie Lenexa Apparel Design SO Fankhauser, Kim Garden City Pre-Physical Therapy FR Franklin, Jennifer lola Agricultural Economics JR Frey, Stephanie Manhattan Accounting SO Frick, Darcy Scott City Apparel and Textile Marketing FR Frick, Julie Scott City Fine Arts SR Fullington, Kim Clay Center Human Ecology FR Gallagher, Shannon Clyde Pre-Optometry SO Gensch, Kimberly Lenexa Apparel and Textile Marketing JR Gibson, Rhonda Salina Elementary Education Graham, Amy Bennington Family Life and Human Development SR Hale, Lisa Manhattan Business Administration FR Hansen, Amy Lees Summit, Mo. Interior Design SO Hanson, Kathleen Salina Journalism and Mass Communications FR Hart, Heather Independence Elementary Education SO Hayter, Sheila Manhattan Mechanical Engineering JR Hight, Karen Goddard Pre-Veterinary Medicine SO Hildebrand, Kimberly Stafford Music Education FR Holman, Angela Overland Park Engineering FR Howe, Katy Scottsdale, Ariz. Marketing SR Hucksoll, Sheri Salina Life Sciences SR Hug, Terri Derby Accounting JR Jackson, Kimberly Manhattan Pre-Law FR Jarboe, Ronda Hutchinson Elementary Education JR Jarmel, Jennifer Silver Lake Arts and Sciences SO Jewell, Alice Wichita Pre-Medicine SO Johansen, Mary Journalism and Mass Communications Johnson, Kimberly Wichita Architecture SO Johnson, Kitty Oakley Apparel and Textile Marketing FR Kieffer, Stephanie Burlington Radio-Television FR Kitch, Shauna Wichita Arts and Sciences FR Krauss, Anne Phillipsburg Agriculture Education SO Krug, Brooke La Crosse Accounting JR Lambert, Denise Hugoton Journalism and Mass Communications JR Langner, Michelle Shawnee Journalism and Mass Communications SO Lee, Stephanie Council Grove Elementary Education FR Leonard, Candise Hoyt Human Ecology-Mass Communication SR Litton, Judy Topeka Elementary Education JR Lynn, Robin Atchison Marketing SR Maechtlen, Shawna Arkansas City Pre-Veterinary Medicine FR Maxwell, Michelle Ulysses Marketing SO McAnarney, Pam Manhattan Marketing SR McGraw, Molly Hutchinson Elementary Education SR Medsker, Sheri Neodesha Arts and Sciences FR Mitchell, Loralie Circleville Journalism and Mass Communications SO Mitchell, Natalie Manhattan Elementary Education SO Morgan, Leigh Overland Park Pre-Medicine SR Morgan, Rachael Oberlin Journalism and Mass Communications FR Morrison, Amy Salina Accounting JR Moss, Heather Wichita Marketing SO Mullen, Karen Hutchinson Arts and Sciences FR Munson, Stacy Ellsworth Apparel and Textile Marketing JR Neel, Patti Windom Elementary Education JR Nelson, Kimberly Phillipsburg Family Life and Human Development SO Noller, Carolyn Salina Accounting SR Ochs, Paula Dodge City Journalism and Mass Communications JR Owen, Susan Topeka Business Administration FR Panowicz, Cindy Shawnee Education-Business SR Pendergast, Debbie Dodge City Business Administration FR Persson, Michelle Overland Park Arts and Sciences SO Pfeifley, Lori Riley Interior Design SR Pickett, Teresa Parker, Colo. Business Administration SR Ransopher, Sandra Clyde Marketing JR 400 Pi Beta Phi Reese, Amy Newton Pre-Veterinary Medicine FR Rice, Danna Hays Industrial Engineering SO Robles, Monica Overland Park Industrial Engineering FR Rohrer, Debbie Salina Elementary Education SR Rosenhagen, Kim Kingman Accounting SO Rouse, Susan Hutchinson Human Ecology and Mass Communication JR Rulo, Deborah Lenexa Business Administration SR Ryel, Shelley Wichita Apparel and Textile Marketing FR Sawyer, Amanda Lenexa Business Administration FR Schroeder, Donita Madison Marketing JR Scoby, Shelly Sabetha Speech Pathology and Audiology FR Sellmyer, Julia Lincoln, Neb. Secondary Education SO Shamet, Cheryn McPherson Marketing FR Smiley, Mindy Wichita Business Administration SO Smith, Kim Dodge City Marketing SR Smith, Rebecca Overland Park Arts and Sciences FR Steen, Debi Omaha, Neb. Pre-Veterinary Medicine JR Stevenson, Julie St. Joseph, Mo. Restaurant Management JR Stone, Jenni Wellington Pre-Medicine FR Stubbs, Debbie Wichita Business Administration FR Stutterheim, Andrea Norton Business Administration SR Summers, Stephanie Great Bend Psychology FR Sutherland, Nikki Moscow Pre-Physical Therapy SO Svaty, Rebecca Ellsworth Secondary Education Swan, Leslie Wichita Life Sciences SR Thiel, Jo Dee McPherson Mathematics JR Turner, Libby Great Bend Accounting SR Van Dam, Timirie Wichita Elementary Education Warren, Donna Wellington Journalism and Mass Communications FR Watson, Erika Winfield Interior Design JR Wiles, Jennifer Lenexa Pre-Nursing SO Wilke, Dana Hutchinson Apparel and Textile Marketing FR WilIms, Beverly Great Bend Business Administration JR Woolley, Ginger Overland Park Restaurant Management Yancey, Karen Manhattan Pre-Law SO York, Cynthia Prairie Village Business Administration SO Zientara, Lawrence Accounting SO 401 Pi Beta Phi Pi Kappa Alpha is located at 2021 College View and has 113 members. It was founded in 1868 and received its charter at K-State in 1911. Its flower is the Lily of the Valley and its colors are garnet and old gold. Aldridge, Brenton Topeka Architecture FR Allen, Scott Manhattan Marketing SR Baldridge, Steven Manhattan Fine Arts JR Barrett, Sean Ness City Nuclear Engineering FR Berry, Michael T. Overland Park Business Administration FR Berry, Tim Kansas City, Kan. Arts and Sciences FR Bird, Marshall Anthony Agricultural Economics Doley, Chris Topeka Construction Scienc e SO Brown, Daron Manhattan Marketing SR Brun, Delton Topeka Marketing Bush, Scott Blue Springs, Mo. Marketing SR Caldren, Brian Cawker City Marketing SR Clark, Todd Lenexa Architecture Cox, Steve Wichita Pre-Optometry Cunningham, Tim Clay Center Business Administration FR Deblaze, Scott St. Louis, Mo. Architecture SO Denham, Patrick O ' Fallon, Ill. Architecture FR Deutscher, Chris Clay Center Chemistry FR Duncan, Tony Wichita Architecture Foust, John Goodland Restaurant Management FR Franken, Laurence Easton Food Science and Industry SR Franken, Mark Faston Accounting SO Franken, William Easton Accounting SR French, Doug Olathe Accounting SO Frick, Chad Scott City Arts and Sciences FR Genovese, Joseph Derby Marketing Goens, Michael Basehor Journalism and Mass Communications SR Golf, Kenneth Concordia Finance Gridley, Brad Manhattan Marketing SR Haase, Scott Kansas City, Kan. Marketing FR Hager, Jeff Girard Marketing SR Head, Gary Wichita Architecture Heck, Steven Topeka Marketing FR Hedrick, Jerry Lees Summit Nuclear Engineering SR Hoober, Mark Marshalltown, Iowa Civil Engineering Jackson, Paul Topeka Architectural Engineering SO 402 shiled diamond Pi Kappa Alpha Little Sisters FRONT ROW: Marcy Walters, Paige White, Rachele Gagliano, Kim Evans, Theresa Cusi, Raylene Hodge, Lynnette Monson. SECOND ROW: Darla McIntosh, Melanie Schurle, Tammy Ronda Knapp, Lesley Goens, Anne Keller, Pamela Eitel. BACK ROW: Janet Netherland, Frick, Courtney Novak, Lisa Shipley, Dana Hamilton, Betsy Cantrell, Tam Houston, Lorie Bysel, Barb Judy. Jamison, Mitchel Goodland Pre-Optometry FR Jones, Aldrin Overland Park Business Administration FR Kerschen, Dennis Wichita Construction Science FR Knudson, Bruce Everest Agricultural Economics SO Kolbeck, Kevin Overland Park Business Administration FR Kroenlein, Jeffrey Manhattan Education-Business SR Laird, Scott Olathe Milling Science and Management Laughrey, Rick Overland Park Business Administration FR Luck, Barry Overland Park Marketing JR Mallean, Tony Clay Center Marketing Marshall, Ryan Lenexa Pre-Law Martin, Gregory Ellis Finance SR McAtee, James Ellsworth Pre-Medicine JR McClain, Montgomery Goddard Finance SO Miller, Bryan Emporia Marketing SR Miller, W.P Olathe Human Ecology SR 403 Pi Kappa Alpha pi kappa alpha Morris, Michael Salina Journalism and Mass Communications SR Neuschafer, Daran Salina Finance JR Owen, Raymond Merriam Industrial Engineering SR Phillips, Scott Olathe Milling Science and Management SR Rains, Scott Wichita Mechanical Engineering FR Reams, Michael Goddard Dance SR Reid, Steve Goodland Marketing SR Richards, Jeff Kansas City, Kan. Marketing JR Roberts, Randy Hays Finance Rulo, Mark Lenexa Business Administration FR Shipley, Timothy Overland Park Restaurant Management FR Sims, Travis Overland Park Mechanical Engineering FR Skaggs, Bradley Manhattan Architecture JR Skaggs, Greg Manhattan Pm-Medicine FR Thurman, James Cape Girardeau, Mo. Architectural Engineering SR Weis, Steve Salina Accounting SO Williams, Mike Olathe Marketing JR Woodward, Joel New York, N.Y. Architecture Little Sisters of the Shield-Diamond Pi Kappa Alpha Little Sisters FRONT ROW: Darlene Hoffman, Stephanie Sandy Thou, Natalie Lowery, Angela Doyen, Denise Lambert. SECOND ROW: Amy Keller, Denae Morgan, Karen Samson, Jayne Bukowsky, Stacey Beisel, Fern Grant, Traci Smith. BACK ROW: Stephanie Galloway, Mary Kleinholz, Anne Hutzenbuhler, Shannon Gallagher, Jenny Dinges, Stephanie Summers, Karla Ward. 404 Pi Kappa Alpha pi kappa phi received their charter at K-State on April 15, 1978. They have 120 chapters. The fraternity flower is the red rose and their colors are gold, white and royal blue. The fraternity is located at 1716 Fairchild and they have 45 members. Austin, Mike W Overland Park Finance Baron, Todd Rochester, N.Y. Finance FR Bushyhead, Dale Peck Electrical Engineering Camp, Galen Hesston Mechanical Engineering SO Cooper, William Whitewater Journalism and Mass Communications SO Destasio, Thomas Cimarron Mathematics FR Dykes, Paul Topeka Biology Fraizer, Gregory Hutchinson Fine Arts SO Franklin, Mike Osawatomie Finance SR Goepfert, Chris Manhattan Accounting Grindon, John Hazelwood, Mo. Architecture SO Hackenberg, Patrick Hesston Journalism and Mass Communications FR Hamilton, Michael Newton Business Administration FR Hochman, Kevin Geneseo Electrical Engineering SR King, Richard Overland Park Marketing FR Lammers, Andy Topeka Chemical Engineering FR Lavery, Jeff Shawnee Management Liening, Craig Topeka Finance SR Lively, Dwayne Salina English Meador, Richard Marysville Psychology JR Meng, Mike Duncan Finance SO Nunes, Robert Manhattan Business Administration SR Penka, David Ingalls Business Administration FR Penka, Doug Ingalls Finance SO 405 pi kappa Phi 406 Pi Kappa Phi Phelps, Jimmy Manhattan Industrial Engineering FR Rottinghaus, Dan Baileyville Marketing SR Ruddy, Gavin Topeka Computer Engineering FR Sasenick, Mark Roeland Park Interior Architecture JR Seufert, Michael Tonganoxie Engineering JR St. John, Bryce Prairie Village Engineering Technology SR Swenson, Craig Bloomington, Minn. Architectural Engineering SO Walkup, Richard Manhattan Accounting Winter, Scott Andale Radio-Television SO Zoerb, Eric Hamburg Business Administration SO SLIDING HAT RACK. Dave White, senior in music education, takes a break during band practice on the lawn east of the president ' s home. (Photo by Mark Leffingwell) sigma alpha EPSILON was founded in 1856 at the University of Alabama and has 227 chapters. The fraternity received its charter at K-State on Jan. 24, 1913. The SAEs live at 1015 Denison and have 83 members. Barnett, Philip Manhattan Marketing SR Bellomo, David Boulder, Colo. Architecture FR Benyshek, Thomas Cuba, Kan. Mechanical Engineering SR Bieker, Scott WaKeeney Business Administration FR Bissey, Jeff Manhattan Finance FR Blevins, Richard Tulsa, Okla. Marketing SR Boyle, Eric Olathe Pre-Optometry SO Calovich, Michael Shawnee Mission Business Administration SO Cattoor, Rodney Imperial, Mo. Architecture SR Coffman, Curt R St. Joseph, Mo. Pre-Veterinary Medicine SO Crawford, Curtis Cambridge, Mass. Interior Architecture SO Dean, Kent Derby Marketing SR Dejmal, Daniel Mahaska Mechanical Engineering SR Dixson, Darin Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. Pre-Medicine SO Edson, Gregory Topeka Life Sciences IR Elder, Todd Tulsa, Okla. Accounting SR Forge, Kurt Atchison Industrial Engineering FR Franzen, Steve Shawnee Mission Journalism and Mass Communications FR Frisch, Ben Manhattan Business Administration FR Gerber, Paul Wichita Architectural Engineering FR Grantham, Jeffrey Manhattan Physics FR Hanson, Timothy Westminster, Calif. Marketing SR Hardenburger, Paul Haddam Co nstruction Science SR Harrison, Eric Crestwood, Mo. Architecture SR Hoover, Scott Olathe Marketing SR Hope, William Overland Park Marketing SR Houlden, Trent Caldwell Marketing SO Hutcheson, Jeffery Topeka Industrial Engineering SR Jones, John K St. Paul, Minn. Marketing JR Kellerman, Patrick Westwood Finance JR Kelpin, Dale Topeka Secondary Education SR Knox, Kollin St. Joseph, Mo. Architectural Engineering FR Kocour, Vincent Atchison Marketing JR Lacy, Mark Shawnee Mission Accounting JR Laughlin, Carl Mission Secondary Education FR Lietz, Eric Eskridge Finance 407 Sigma Alpha Epsilon Livingston, Bradley Mahaska Business Administration FR Livingston, Brian Mahaska Finance JR Lowman, Thomas Wichita Restaurant Management SO Peak, Stephen Mission Electrical Engineering SR Peter, Jeffrey Topeka Business Administration SO Proffitt, Jeffrey Sterling Business Administration SO Ralston, Jeffrey Wichita Mechanical Engineering SO Reynolds, Todd Agenda Electrical Engineering Robertson, Timothy Manhattan Finance SR Schmidt, Mark Wichita Pre-Medicine FR Thomas, Edward Overland Park Journalism and Mass Communications Thompson, Jon Mahaska Animal Sciences and Industry SO Thompson, Mark Wichita Pre-Law SO Tiller, Ronald Manhattan Agricultural Economics Tretter, Bob St. Louis, Mo. Industrial Engineering SR Vaughn, Jeffrey Arkansas City Public Administration SR Wagner, Curtis Atchison Finance FR Wagner, David Overland Park Journalism and Mass Communications Wagner, Kevin Atchison Marketing Walden, Mike Manhattan Mechanical Engineering SR Walker, James Auburn Business Administration FR Walker, John Auburn Education Wentzel, Mark Manhattan Architectural Engineering JR Wettig, Edward Leavenworth Restaurant Management SR Williams, Kent Wichita Interior Architecture SR Wilson, Mike Topeka Pre-Medicine JR minerva Sigma Alpha Epsilon Little Sisters FRONT ROW: Micah Purslow, Lisa Ikler, Amanda Perkins, Gail Edson, Stephanie Billings, Lisa Downing, Ashley Haag, Krista France, Staci Jernigan, Jillaine Patterson. SECOND ROW: Jill Kelly Smith, Jill Kelpin, Stacey George, O ' Connor, Angie Reiff, Jeannie Witte, Kristin Tuley, Alisa Dietz. BACK ROW: Sandra Girard, Jenny Johnson, Kristi Cox, Kelly Daharsh, Shelley Rudolph, Amy Campbell, Sarah Johnson, Heidi Kruckenberg, Kimberly Whitfill. 408 Sigma Alpha Epsilon sigma CHI was founded in 1855 and has 162 chapters. The fraternity flower is the white rose and its colors are blue and old gold. The Sigma Chis live at 1224 Fremont and have 81 members. Scott, Virginia Housemother Acree, Tracy Manhattan Business Administration SO Anderson, Jeffrey D Lawrence Accounting JR Aschenbrenner, Nick Brewster Education-Mathematics SR Brundige, Chace Kansas City, Mo. Finance FR Burkhart, Keith Overland Park Social Sciences FR Burton, Douglas Manhattan Electrical Engineering FR Cahalan, Pat Fairway Business Administration FR Compton, David Manhattan Electrical Engineering JR Darger, Scott Overland Park Marketing JR Dlabal, James Manhattan Business Administration SO Dunitz, Christopher Overland Park Mechanical Engineering JR Ewert, Kurt Grandview, Mo. Architecture JR Fankhauser, Dirk Madison, Kan. Pre-Veterinary Medicine FR Forrer, Chris Ulysses Finance JR Fox, Kevin St. Marys Architectural Engineering SO Frebert, Eric Prairie Village Pre-Veterinary Medicine FR George, Brad Wichita Accounting SR Gooch, Steven Hugoton Business Administration SR Graef, Jeff Leavenworth Business Administration SO Gray, John Olathe Architecture JR Hanson, Robin Apple Valley, Minn. Finance JR Harsh, Rob Prairie Village Engineering FR Hill, James Manhattan Industrial Engineering SR Hormel, Mitchel Manhattan Chemical Engineering JR Jones, Roderick Emporia Restaurant Management SO Jones, Scott Benton Secondary Education JR Karr, Paul Rolla, Mo. Construction Science SR Linney, Jay Prairie Village Electrical Engineering FR Little, Gerald Carbondale Mechanical Engineering JR Lookhart, Jeff Manhattan Pre-Optometry SR McIlvaine, Andrew Manhattan Marketing SO McIlvaine, Douglas Manhattan Marketing SR McNeill, Gerald Shawnee Electrical Engineering JR Mead, Doug St. Joseph, Mo. Architecture SO Morey, Mark Delta, Colo. Marketing SR 409 Sigma Chi Mott, Darrin Manhattan Arts and Sciences SO Mott, Kevin Manhattan Radio-Television SR Murdock, Kyle Manhattan Electrical Engineering ER Nicholson, Christopher Overland Park Architecture FR Novosel, John Leawood Business Administration FR Pammenter, Kip Manhattan Business Administration SO Passantino, Jeff Independence, Mo. Environmental Design SO Perry, Heath Kansas City, Kan. Physical Education Pitts, Jeffrey Erie Milling Science and Management SO Post, Steven Manhattan Electrical Engineering FR Pruitt, Chad Edmond, Okla. Management FR Reiher, Timm Overland Park Electrical Engineering SR Schroeder, David Leavenworth Finance SO Scott, Richard Kansas City, Mo. Architecture FR Seitzer, John Overland Park Accounting SR Sell, David Overland Park Marketing S R Siebert, Rick Abilene Accounting JR Smith, Scott A Overland Park Construction Science JR Stewart, Shawn Wamego Restaurant Management Summers, Roger Vassar Pre-Law JR Turner, Scott Manhattan Marketing Vader, Jim Shawnee Mission Journalism and Mass Communications SR Vanderbilt, Thomas Wamego Management FR Welton, Jeffrey Ottawa Engineering SO CHILLING DEFEAT.Heath sophomore in physical (left), Heather Moss, in business, and Klaus sophomore in industrial engineering, try to keep warm while watching the Wildcat football team at Missouri. (Photo by Greg Vogel) 410 sigma Chi sigma nu was founded in 1869 at Virginia Military Institute and has 177 chapters. Sigma Nu received its charter in 1892 at K-State. The flower is the white rose and its colors are black, white and gold. There are 71 members. Amend, Eldon Derby Accounting SO Anderson, John A Manhattan Arts and Sciences SO Barnes, Woody Sedan Construction Science SR Blasiar, David St. Louis, Mo. Architectural Engineering JR Boos, Sean Hays Electrical Engineering SO Bowman, Christopher Wichita Bakery Science and Management SO Breit, Jeffery Hays Journalism and Mass Communications FR Cashman, Scott Hiawatha Marketing SO Cink, Jay Caldwell Nuclear Engineering FR Custer, Eric Redondo Beach, Calif. Political Science SO Evans, Kevin Garden City History SR Furgason, Stan Wichita Marketing SO Gillen, Mark Garden City Political Science SR Gros, Mark Colwich Pre-Medicine Hannam, David Overland Park Business Administration FR Hayter, Ryan Manhattan Interior Architecture FR Heiman, Jerod Wichita Agricultural Economics Holmstrom, Steven Overland Park Marketing SR Huffaker, Ryan Manhattan Construction Science FR Ives, Darrin Hays Business Administration FR Kenney, Evan Leawood Management FR Khoury, John N. Syracuse, N.Y. Bakery Science Management SO Labarge, Darin Manhattan Finance FR Lessman, Jeffrey Hays Civil Engineering SR Letourneau, Kent Wichita Mathematics JR Lett, Sam Hutchinson Nuclear Engineering FR London, Bryon Wichita Pre-Law FR Malek, Ron Bensalem, Pa. Psychology JR Malone, Steve Wichita Electrical Engineering SO McRee, Scott Hilton Head Isle, S.C. Restaurant Management SO Mellage, Chris Falls City, Neb. Accounting SO Miller, David Overland Park Accounting Nicodemus, David Derby Pre-Law FR Orth, Theodore Andale Electrical Engineering SR Reichenberger, Todd Andale Marketing FR Reynolds, Carl Jefferson City, Mo. Landscape Architecture 411 Sigma Nu Ritenour, Brian Sunrise Beach, Mo. Marketing SR Rohe, Gregory Baldwin, Kan. Agricultural Economics FR Scott, Lars Goodland Civil Engineering SO Sise, Matthew Liverpool Music JR Smith, Michael T Wichita Business Administration SO Stecklein, Chris Hays Mechanical Engineering JR Steiner, Mike Overland Park Biology SO Stone, Doug Rock Crop Protection SO Tucker, Charles Elkhart Apparel and Textile Marketing SR Underwood, Preston Derby Chemical Engineering SO Vavala, Matthew Wichita Marketing SO Venjohn, Dallas Mt. Hope Education FR Wasinger, Jeffrey Colwich Construction Science SO Wasinger, Jerome Colwich Marketing SR Welch, Christopher Derby Pre-Physical Therapy FR Wilder, Douglas Princeton, N.J. Marketing JR Winter, Christopher Stamford, Conn. Agriculture FR Zenger, Sheahon Hays English SR Little Sisters of the White Rose Sigma Nu Little Sisters FRONT ROW: Alexandra Dean, Jeana Shea Boothe, Cindy Decker, Andrea Allen, Jodi Gregg, Krista Reese, Jill Rathbun. SECOND ROW: Kelly Camblin, Tracy Dorr, Michelle Horsch, Kathleen Kennedy, Elizabeth Waite, Julie Harris, Kelli Speier. THIRD ROW: Nikole Perrigo, Cari Richert, Missy Patton, Lisa Castillo, Paula Kim Carter, Angie Padden, Carol Todd. BACK ROW: Debbie Williams, Dana Wilke, Buffy Larson, Jami Myers, Laura French, Lori Torkelson, Kristi White, Dawn Quigley. 412 sigma nu fraternity flower is the red rose and violet. Its colors are purple and red. SIGMA PHI EPSILON is located at Sunset and was chartered at K-State in 1918. The Berndt, Sean Radio-Television SO Black, Eric Burden Electrical Engineering SO Brownell, Blake Hutchinson Business Administration SO Bryan, Rick Hiawatha Agricultural Economics SR Burke, Wayne Aitus, Okla. Business Administration JR Cannon, Matthew Chicago, Ill. Radio-Television Clouse, Allen Ki ngman Physics JR Clum, Gregory Hiawatha Architectural Engineering SO Cooper, Darin Manhattan Fine Arts SR Corsini, Craig Overland Park Finance SO Crystal, Gary Mission Fine Arts JR Dahl, Erick Shawnee Marketing SR Daveline, Daniel Hutchinson Business Administration FR Dickey, Andy Haven Business Administration JR Drew, Pat Bucyrus Business Administration SO Eilert, Scott Overland Park Radio-Television SO Fabrizius, Eric WaKeeney Agronomy SO Fankhouser, Stephen Warren, Pa. Pre-Law SO Gardner, David Overland Park Architectural Engineering SO Gaston, Wes Shawnee Accounting SO Giersch, Scott Salina Animal Sciences and Industry SR Ginther, Damon Goodland Accounting SR Glover, Jerry Wichita Business Administration SO Gregg, Brian Overland Park Marketing JR Harris, David Overland Park Mechanical Engineering SR Hathaway, Michael Hiawatha Finance JR Healy, Robert Wichita Electrical Engineering JR Herl, E.G. Ellis Agricultural Economics SO Kaufman, Rex Newton Business Administration FR Kaufman, Tim El Dorado Electrical Engineering SR Keener, Mark Lenexa Dance JR Keirns, Greg Goodland Accounting SR Kennedy, Joe Colby Marketing JR Koster, Max Hoxie Radio-Television SR Krannawitter, Kevin Hoxie Psychology FR Kreutzinger, Randy Moundridge Accounting FR 413 Lackey, Ron Newton Business Administration FR Maples, David Peabody Food and Nutrition-Exercise Science JR McEntee, Chris Overland Park Electrical Engineering SO McEwen, Scott Belleville Finance FR Meyer, Rich Haven Business Administration SO Mock, William Manhattan Electrical Engineering JR Mullen, Mark Mission Mechanical Engineering SR Nattier, Darin Moundridge Business Administration FR Neustaeder, Steve Lenexa Pre-Veterinary Medicine SO Oltjen, Jay Everest Pre-Denistry SR Ostertag, Chris Overland Park Industrial Engineering SR Perrier, Daniel Manhattan Electrical Engineering SR Powell, Charles El Dorado Biology SO Ralston, Dan Merriam Fine Arts SR Regier, Randy Overland Park Pm-Dentistry JR Regier, Rob Overland Park Pre-Dentistry SR Roath, Bryan Lyons Education JR Romig, James Haven Elementary Education SO Rudicel, Dave Kingman Accounting SR Sharp, David Lenexa Radio-Television FR Shields, Jeff Neodesha Business Administration FR Snyder, Robert Wichita Architecture JR Sparks, Jonathan Oakley Management SR Sterneker, Robert Cunningham Management JR 414 Stuart, Tim Topeka Bakery Science Management SO Tarbox, Bus Loveland, Colo. Biology SO Teter, David Shawnee Restaurant Management SO Thiessen, Murray Hesston Pre-Physical Therapy SR Wall, Alan.. McPherson Mechanical Engineering Ward, Robert Kingman Mechanical Engineering SO Warnken, Troy Partridge Agricultural Economics IR Watson, David Jefferson City, Mo. Pre-Law SO Welch, Kent Boston, Mass. Nuclear Engineering SO Wiltfong, David Norton Pre-Medicine SR golden hearts Sigma Phi Epsilon Little Sisters FRONT ROW: Hawley Soden, Krista Menges, Ashley Reeder, Beth Ralston, Krista Saltzman, Lisa Jacobs, Marsha Shannon, Jan Webber, Shelly Healy, Shere Medsker, Stephanie Brownell, Sally Meadows, Laura Jacobs, Becky Curran. SECOND ROW: Amy Angel, Julie Ellis, Brooke Krug, White, Kimberley Kincaid, Lisa Hiatt, Kelli Ebert , Jeanette Simms, Linley Conaway, Lindsey Knox. BACK ROW: Vicki Ellis, Niki Poland, Ann Eberwein, Nicci Cox, Angie Johnson, Michaelane Muhlenbruch, Lisa Nett, Julie Milberger, Debi Steen, Amy Oltjen. 415 Sigma Phi epsilon sigma sigma founded in 1898 at Longwood College and has 77 members. The flower is the purple violet and its colors are purple and white. The Tri-Sigs live at 1829 College Heights and have 85 members. Trostle, Lenore Housemother Agnitsch, Kristi Lenexa Marketing Andrew, Julie Spring Hill Arts and Sciences SO Armstrong, Kimberly Hutchinson Apparel and Textile Marketing FR Bacani, Glades Junction City Pre-Physical Therapy JR Battles, Calista Scott City Family Life and Human Development SR Battles, Candice Scott City Apparel and Textile Marketing SO Bixby, Susan Larned Psychology SO Blanchard, Shannon Derby Arts and Sciences FR Bott, Lori Olathe Business Administration FR Brown, Stephanie L Garden City Music FR Bryan, Lisa Lawrence Apparel Design FR Buries, Brenda Chapman Marketing SR Cline, Cynthia Shenandoah, Ind. Apparel and Textile Marketing Cox, Laurie Silver Lake Human Ecology and Mass Comm SO Creed, Sharmon Bern Arts and Sciences FR DeVault, Edie Hutchinson Special Education SR Doell, Desiree Olathe Pre-Medicine Durham, Ann Leawood Social Work FR Fischer, Julie Coffeyville Arts and Sciences SO Foltz, Jill Raytown, Mo. Restaurant Management SO Foster, Amy Arkansas City Restaurant Management Hail, Katy Leawood Construction Science SO Hamtil, Maureen Leawood Education SO Harris, Julie Leawood Journalism and Mass Communications SO Hart, Cynthia Lenexa Interior Design FR Heeb, Julie Wichita Jour nalism and Mass Communications SO Heinrich, Amy Oakley Journalism and Mass Communications Henshaw, Julie Overland Park Marketing SR Higgins, Maria Leawood Business Administration FR Horn, Marnie Manhattan Marketing SR Houston, Michelle Overland Park Marketing Isern, DeAnn Ellinwood Marketing SR Jacquart, Jane Manhattan Elementary Education SR Johannsen, Susan Overland Park Journalism and Mass Communications JR Kaldor, Katheryn Manhattan Pre-Law SO 416 Karpowich, Elizabeth Overland Park Business Administration FR Kessler, Kim Overland Park Pre-Medicine SR Konnesky, Shelley Dodge City Accounting SR Lampe, Lori Kendall Arts and Sciences SO Mann, Stephanie Sylvan Grove Apparel and Textile Marketing SR Martin, Loren Edmond, Okla. Computer Engineering SO McIntosh, Darla Goodland Interior Design FR McIntyre, Cassandra Hays Apparel and Textile Marketing SR McMinnville, Jennifer Clearwater Music Education SO Minor, Julie Olathe Accounting FR Ochs, Rene Lawrence Marketing SR Perkins, Suzanne Hill City Business Administration SO Pfeiffer, Steffani A.P.O., N.Y. Electrical Engineering JR Pray, Melissa Mulberry Finance Schrag, Julie Moundridge Business Administration FR Sharp, Julie Kansas City, Kan. Education-Business SR Sharp, Stevi Lake Quivira Apparel and Textile Marketing SO Sieck, Kama Goodland Accounting SR Smith, Cynthia Minneapolis, Kan. Elementrary Education SO Speler, Kelli Hays Interior Design FR Sweat, Ashley Lenexa Apparel and Textile Marketing FR Trowbridge, Shelly Ft. Scott Business Administration SO Van Doren, Julia Topeka Correctional Administration JR Vest, Becky Goddard Arts and Sciences FR Wadleigh, Sinda Winfield Management SR Wallace, Bobbi Kingman Radio-Television SR Wallace, Shelly Ann Kingman Interior Design FR Walrod, Leisa Leawood Apparel and Textile Marketing JR White, Emilie Wichita Accounting FR Wilson, Terri Topeka Pre-Physical Therapy SO Wood, Martha Solomon Marketing SR Younkin, Tamera Oakley Elementrary Education 417 Sigma Sigma Sigma tau kappa epsilon was chartered at K-State in 1931 and resides at 1515 N. Manhattan. The fraternity flower is the red carnation and the colors are cherry and grey. Comfort, Sheila Housemother Adams, Chris Harper Mechanical Engineering SO Baird, Mark Arkansas City Horticulture JR Baker, Donald Anthony Pre-Veterinary Medicine SO Benoit, Doug Mankato Feed Science and Management FR Benz, John Bonner Springs Business Administration FR Blanding, Mitch Silver Lake Pre-Veterinary Medicine SO Blatchford, Eric Arkansas City Industrial Engineering Bollig, Tracy WaKeeney Mechanic al Engineering FR Bothwell, James Mankato Agricultural Economics FR Burns, Mark Prairie Village Marketing SR Creason, Curt Overland Park Education-Business JR Culley, Shaun Salina Physical Education JR Corah, Tom Manhattan Marketing SO Danitschek, Daniel Wichita Mechanical Engineering FR Elliott, Chad Chanute Finance JR Fiegel, Michael Ness City Architectural Engineering FR Foltz, Shawn Garnett Architectural Engineering FR Forrest, Kevin Lamed Mechanical Engineering SO Frieden, Linndy Hazelton Physical Education JR Friesen, Paul Greeley, CoIn. Construction Science SO Fuller, John Salina Chemical Engineering SR Funk, Chris WaKeeney Pre-Physical Therapy FR Gump, Robert Wichita Feed Science and Management FR Hatcher, Nick Liberal Marketing SR Haymaker, Roger Earned Finance SR Hemmer, Thomas Solomon Economics Heyen, Darin Wichita Pre-Medicine SO Hoffman, George Garnett Engineering FR Hummell, Brian Salina Journalism and Mass Communications JR Ireton, Matthew Salina Electrical Engineering SR Johnson, Kelly Manhattan Accounting JR Johnson, Kirk Salina Agricultural Economics SR Kanesmasu, Rick Manhattan Electrical Engineering JR King, Scott Lamed Pre-Law JR Kitt, Lance Goddard Construction Science JR 418 Tau Kappa Epsilon Koch, Randy Marysville Finance SR Krehbiel, Jay McPherson Marketing FR Kunkel, Peter Manhattan Pre-Physical Therapy SR Ladenburger, Bradley Oakley Accounting SR Lightcap, John Hugoton Psychology JR Lightcap, Robert Hugoton Business Administration FR Stephen Leawood Pre-Optometry SR Lovell, Mike Arkansas City Mechanical Engineering SR Mayfield, Aaron Winfield Electrical Engineering FR Miller, David Manhattan Mechanical Engineering FR Morgan, Greg Olathe Education-Mathematics JR Murray, James Rolla, Kan. Agricultural Economics SO Orschein, Randall Olathe Marketing SR Palmer, Perry Arkansas City Architecture JR Peck, Marvin Manhattan Engineering FR Phillips, James Marysville Finance JR Phillips, John Marysville Marketing JR Rahn, Steve Arkansas City Information Systems JR Reedy, Christopher Overland Park Electrical Engineering SR Scott, Stuart Hugoton Restaurant Management FR Shellenberger, Grant Ransom Arts and Sciences FR Siuda, Matthew Overland Park Accounting SR Smith, Stewart Olathe Business Administration FR Valentine, Michael Manhattan Industrial Engineering SO Vorhies, Robert Manhattan Biology FR Washington, James Olathe Pre-Law SO Zander, Van Topeka Electrical Engineering FR Zirkle, Michael Liberal Agricultural Economics JR 419 Tau Kappa Epsilon By Gary Lytle taking a Saturday morning trip to the zoo was probably not what many of the members of Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity thought they would be doing when they joined the fraternity. But some of the members of the fraternity found themselves getting out of bed earlier than usual one fall morning to help clean up the Sunset Zoo, while also getting a chance to see some of the animals. Doug Washington, sophomore in modern languages and fall public relations chairman for the TKE house, said that it was the third time the fraternity had spent a day working at the zoo. According to Washington, the clean up day at the zoo was one of the three or four service projects a semester that the fraternity in. He also said that even though it was not a required activity, the members of the house were encouraged to help out. It ' s been real sucessful, Washington said of the work day at the zoo, and we have a good time. Sunset Zoo Director Steve Matthews said that about six groups a year came to work at the zoo. He said that to date, all of the groups were fraternities and that no local civic groups had contacted him about working at the zoo. The work the groups did was mostly grounds work that included raking leaves and cleaning up the zoo grounds during the fall and spring. Even though the groups did only general grounds work, it made a big difference at the zoo because it allowed zoo employees to on more specific duties. The groups help us out quite a bit, Matthews said. Tau Kappa Epsilon members Lindy Frieden, Tony Jay Krehbiel, Shawn Foltz and Marvin Peck clear Sunset Zoo of leaves for the houses ' s philanthropy Photo by Steve Wolgast) theta xi was founded in 1864 and has 94 chap- ters. Theta Xis received its charter at K-State in 1931. The fraternity colors are blue and white. The Theta Xis live at 1803 Laramie and have 53 members. 421 Theta Xi Randall, Marie Housemother Armour, Michael Salina Chemical Engineering SO Avery, Robert Manhattan Electrical Engineering SR Baden, Rick Independence, Kan. Accounting SO Baker, John Stanley Mechanical Engineering SO Beggs, Dan Garden City Pre-Medicine SR Berger, Steve Pittsburg, Kan. Milling Science and Management SR Biggs, Daniel Kingman Electrical Engineering FR Burke, Zane Hutchinson Accounting SR Buyle, Mark Manhattan Marketing SR Chisam, Michael Assaria Chemical Engineering JR Church, Mike Overland Park Business Administration SO Colip, Michael Norton Pre-Veterinary Medicine FR Downey, John Brownsburg, Ind. Chemical Engineering FR Eads, Clinton Garden City Electrical Engineering SO Eilert, Doug Beloit Pre-Veterinary Medicine Fields, Oren Caney Feed Science and Management JR Gilbert, Phil Lakin Industrial Engineering SO Gish, Doug Overland Park Computer Engineering Groth, Steve Topeka Pre-Medicine Hofer, Barry Concordia Finance SR Hofer, Scott Concordia Architectural Engineering SR Hurtig, James Erie Pre-Medicine SR Johnson, Kent Minneapolis, Kars. Engineering SO Jordan, Phillip Geneseo Construction Science SO Karlin, Joseph Great Bend Finance Kummer, Steve Great Bend Business Administration Leonard, Carey Hoyt Construction Science SO Libel, Brian Wathena Electrical Engineering FR Malir, Rick Wilson Agricultural Economics Marstall, Dennis Manhattan Business Administration FR Moreland, Dana Minneapolis, Kan. Engineering SO Nachtigal, John Manhattan Accounting SO Nguyen, Dan Wichita Electrical Engineering FR Nordhus, Matthew Marysville Correctional Administration SR Ory, Samuel Mechanical Engineering FR Palmer, Brian Fort Scott Electrical Engineering FR Patterson, Rob Marysville Business Administration FR Pieschl, David Minneapolis, Kan. Pre-Physical Therapy JR Prediger, Jim Dorrance Pre-Optometry Rosa, Peter Manhattan Life Sciences SO Schoen, Kip Downs Electrical Engineering JR Schwartz, Eston Scott City Management FR Smith, Marc Wichita Marketing JR Swearingen, Jeff Hiawatha Electrical Engineering FR Thompson, Jeffrey Ulysses Political Science SO Vering, Christopher Marysville Accounting SR Weast, Jim Hiawatha Business Administration SO Wetzel, Doug Vail, Colo. Secondary Education JR Little Sisters of the Unicorn Theta Xi Little Sisters FRONT ROW: Shelli Swanson, Heather Porter, Laura Riblett, Marsha Mugler, Linda Pickert, Barker, Erin Pennington, Michelle Twaddell, Nanci Peterson, Lydee Hawkins. SECOND ROW: Kristi McCune, Joyce Watson, Jodie Woods, Paula Hauser, Karen Templer, Denise Woodbury, Lisa Altenbernd, Julie Woods, Amy Phalen. BACK ROW: Lara Hawkins, Susan Smith, Jenny Reschke, Juli Kramer, Jenny Clark, Heidi Reiling, Meg Green, Colleen Dalton, Marabeth Mugler. 422 came down to one final event. All the Theta Xis needed to do was win the obstacle course event by a large enough margin, and they would win the Ironman competition for the third straight year and take home the Samson trophy for keeps. The Theta Xis did win the event, but the Alpha Tau Omega team finished a close enough second in the obstacle course to its slim lead. The ATOs won the overall competition and kept the trophy traveling for at least another two years. We sponsor the competition each year to increase the competition and give the houses something to strive for, said Terry McKinney, campus director of Campus Crusade for Christ. The idea of a traveling trophy that can be kept if the competition is won three years in a row is to make it a tough but not goal for the houses involved. The fourth annual Ironman competition consisted of a seven-member team from the Campus Crusade and seven-member teams from the ATO, Theta Xi, Sigma Chi, Tau Epsilon, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Sigma Phi Epsilon and Beta Theta Pi fraternities, competing in eight different events. Jody Marshall, junior in psychology and member of the Sigma Chi team, said, I think the competition is a lot of fun. This is my year of participating in the event, and I enjoy getting out and competing with other guys and making new friends. He said he would like to see other housing organizations be involved in the competition. Practically speaking, we don ' t have the facilities to accommodate more than 14 teams in the competition, McKinney said. Campus Crusade started (this competition) with fraternities at UCLA and it has just always included fraternities. The competition started with the swim relay, man-makers relay, tug of war, and basketball events. It concluded with the relay, the six-mile relay, the bicycle relay, and the obstacle course on the following day. Next year the pressure will be on the ATOs to repeat as Ironman champions and move within one year of keeping the Samson trophy for good. Runners representing several living groups race along a mid-campus drive in an early-morning relay for the Ironman contest. (Photo by Brad Camp) By Garyn Hoffman triangle I was founded in 1907 and has 34 chapters. The fraternity flower is the white chrysanthimum and its colors are old rose and grey. Triangle is at 221 N. Delaware and has 37 members. Abrahamson, Carl Overland Park Electrical Engineering SR Bailey, Russell Crested Butte, Colo. Architectural Engineering SR Black, Charles Leavenworth Computer Science JR Broyles, Jeff Conway Springs Engineering Technology JR Claassen, Michael Richfield Computer Engineering FR Eisenhour, Alan Topeka Civil Engineering FR Ellison, Gregory Atchison Physical Sciences S R Farra, Jeff Fort Scott Electrical Engineering JR Glantz, Wayne Hays Physics JR Hunt, John Wichita Architectural Engineering SR Kennedy, Warren Kansas City, Kan, Chemical Engineering JR Kley, David Independence, Kan. Mechanical Engineering SO Koch, Kenneth Shawnee Mechanical Engineering FR Kohler, Steven Atchison Chemical Engineering SR Lane, David Hoisington Architectural Engineering SR McConwell, Edward Shawnee Mission Physics SO McCowan, Garrett Danvers, Ill. Electrical Engineering FR Moon, Rodger Junction City Mechanical Engineering FR Moon, Ron Junction City Nuclear Engineering FR Neumayer, Chad El Dorado Mechanical Engineering SR Page, Leroy Olathe Chemical Engineering JR Powers, Todd Ballwin, Mo. Architecture JR Ramser, Troy Topeka Electrical Engineering SO Robson, Craig Abilene Electrical Engineering GR 424 Triangle Triangels Triangle Little Sisters FRONT ROW: Kristel Weber, Wendy Hatten, Lisa Minnich, Beth Wedeman, Denise Crawford, Louise Hook, Nancy Hueftle, Tiffani Androes. BACK ROW: Donna Pfeifer, Eirene Tatham, Rita Whisnant, Diane Hodges, Susan Zidek, Diane Demel, Michelle Helm, Melissa Kyer, Mia Gans. Sipes, Jerry Manhattan Mechanical Engineering SR Smith, Richard Lamed Electrical Engineering FR Stewart, Scott Westminster, Md. Architectural Engineering SO Stuber, Gregory Viola Mechanical Engineering JR Sweeney, Michael Kansas City, Mo. Architectural Engineering JR Talkington, John Cottonwood Falls Architectural Engineering JR Thompson, Eric Overland Park Civil Engineering SR Weisenborn, Gregory Overland Park Electrical Engineering • JR Wilks, Anthony Manhattan Architecture SO 425 Triangle canoes were unloaded into the Kansas River for the annual Kansas State University Association of Residence Halls canoe race. K-State entered 26 teams and the of Kansas entered four in the 44.5 mile race. The race began at a bridge on Highway 24, east of Manhattan, and finished south of St. Marys. The canoers were timed at a series of eight checkpoints. Three or four days before the race, the whose property was to be used as the first checkpoint backed out, said Lara KSUARH committee chairperson. The night before the race, organizers thought they had found land accessible to the water that could be used as a checkpoint. After it was too late to do anything, they found out that the property was located between checkpoints two and three. Bob Felde, assistant director of housing, thought he was going five miles to the first checkpoint. It was a long five miles. Felde and almost everyone else who canoed the first leg ended up rowing 12 miles. I was pleased to know we had gone that far after spending so much time on it. I felt more confident in my abilities, Felde said. K-State residence halls rowed to a victory over the University of Kansas, winning the overall trophy. The trophy was awarded to the school with the lowest combined time of its top three teams. The winning K-Stat e team was K.A. All- Staff. The team consisted of Haymaker, and Boyd staff members. The best part was seeing our canoe come in first across the finish line, said Todd Martin, junior in microbiology and captain of K.A. All- Staff. The winning teams from both schools received a free dinner from Pyramid Pizza. Pyramid Pizza in both Manhattan and Lawerence posted a placque engraved with the team names. But winning wasn ' t everything. We didn ' t place, but we weren ' t out to win. We were out to have fun, said Bill Woolsey, freshman in electrical engineering and captain of Fish Out of Water. The canoers also helped other teams in trouble. Cory Stevens, freshman in accounting and captain of Yellow Submarine, said his canoe tipped over when one of his team members jumped out to help a woman from another team. Stevens said her canoe had sunk and she was pinned against some logs. Dan Bagunu, sophomore in electrical and captain of Ouzo ' s, said his team rescued people from a fiberglass canoe, which had broken in half. The race is a fun way to promote interaction between the two rival schools, and participants had the opportunity to meet students at another university and to see how their halls compare, Montulli said. Many KU K-State jokes were passed around in good humor. For Bagunu, the best part of the day was being out on the river, having fun with friends. By Julie Key And they ' re off! Shortly after 8 am., 31 official teams began the KSUARH canoe race with five canoes at 30-second (Photo by Jeff Weatherly) Carl Perkins, sophomore in civil engineering, and Richard junior in agricultural paddle for Brenda Allen, freshman in journalism and mass communications, as she gives a sigh of relief. The group ' s canoe was nearing checkpoint No. 4 in the KSUARH sponsored canoe race for halls of K-State and the University of Kansas. The team, representing Goodnow Hall first and second floors, unofficially came in 14th place. (Photo by Brett Hacker) Just 3.2 miles before the finish line at checkpoint No. 8, well- wishers, team members and support crews find the four-feet river bank an ideal spot to pass time until their respective canoes round the bend. (Photo by Jeff Weatherly) 427 Canoe Race boyd hall was opened in 1951 as a residence hall for women. It was named for Mamie Alexander Boyd, a 1902 K-State graduate and a prominent journalist in Kansas. Boyd houses 200 women and is located west of Manhattan Avenue. Addington, Linda Topeka Interior Design SR Bailey, Aleisha Stafford Music Education SO Ball, Julie Olathe Pre-Veterinary Medicine FR Barling, Becky Prairie Village Business Administration FR Beckman, Joann Fulton, Mo. Management JR Berg, Elizabeth Leavenworth Apparel Design SR Berges, Ruth Wamego Elementary Education Bergner, Luann Pratt Pre-Veterinary Medicine SO Bickell, Jayme Tecumseh Art FR Birrell, Laura Republic Journalism and Mass Communications FR Blanchard, Julie Wichita Restaurant Management FR Bond, Jennifer Wichita Modern Languages SR Borders, Terri Hutchinson Dietetics JR Bowden, Kelly Overland Park Apparel Design FR Boydston, Alison Lawrence Pre-Veterinary Medicine SO Bradshaw, Sarah Langdon Journalism and Mass Communications FR Brandt, Erika Papillion Business Administration FR Bressler, Traci Elkhart Apparel and Textile Marketing JR Brooks, Diane Kansas City, Mo. Architecture SO Brummer, Melissa Manhattan Engineering FR Buller, Kaylene Shawnee Pre-Veterinary Medicine JR Conner, Kathryn Manhattan Elementary Education JR Cooper, Sheila McPherson Elementary Education SO Cordero, Iris Junction City Elementary Education FR Craig, Dianna Overland Park Education-Art JR Crook, Tami Wichita Leisure Studies JR Deckert, Nancy Salina Elementary Education SO Doud, Catherine Minneapolis, Kan. Journalism and Mass Commuinications SO Droge, Jennifer Bern Accounting FR Ellis, Ellen Wichita Fisheries and Wildlife Biology SR Frankamp, Kandi Newton Elementary Education FR Gates, Kara Olathe Apparel and Textile Marketing FR Giefer, Maria Wellington, Colo. Education-Mathematics SR Gladwin, Teresa Arkansas City Chemical Engineering SO Glenn, Denise Lenexa Interior Design SR Grassi, Jocinda Overland Park Pre-Veterinary Medicine SO 428 Boyd Hall Green, Cinthia Topeka Chemistry FR Guggisberg, Michelle Mulvane Elementary Education SO Hanchett, Michelle Phillipsburg Elementary Education SR Hatten, Wendy Goodland Psychology FR Heacock, Kathy Kinsley Apparel and Textile Marketing FR Headrick, Karen Atlanta, Kan. Retail Floriculture FR Hodges, Diane Lenexa Textile Chemistry JR Huddle, Trisha McPherson Education-Art SO Hutzenbuhler, Anne Overland Park Journalism and Mass Communications FR Jennings, Betsy Hays Biology FR Kelley, Kristin Topeka Music Education SO Key, Julie Wichita Journalism and Mass Communications JR Kittle, Christa Satanta Pre-Nursing SO Kratzer, Laryssa Colby Elementary Education FR Lahti, Judith Belleville Arts and Sciences FR Larson, Brenda McPherson Chemistry FR Lawson, Cindy Lawrence Journalism and Mass Communications FR Liening, Cristi Topeka Pre-Medicine SO Lindquist, Teri Milford Elementary Education SR Linnebur, Michelle Wichita Pre-Veterinary Medicine SO Lobmeyer, Jeanette Garden City Secondary Education SO Loe, Jo Hope Business Administration FR Mead, Melissa Sterling Pm-Veterinary Medicine SO Miles, Deborah Julesburg, Colo. Pre-Physical Therapy JR Onaga Miller, Angela Ona Pre-Veterinary Medicine Morenz, Tara Pueblo, Colo. Elementary Education FR Morgan, Denise Overland Park Art FR Mugler, Marsha Clay Center Elementary Education SO Nelson, Julie Manhattan Arts and Sciences 1K Nichols, Marcia Longford Elementary Education FR Nitcher, Corene Belleville Secondary Education FR Oberle, Theresa Claflin Elementary Education JR Palm, Beverly Manhattan Modern Languages FR Pickens, Becky Wichita Accounting Fr Pickman, Kelli Atchison Elementary Education FR Powell, Jennifer Topeka Information Systems SR Prinz, Jennifer Leawood Marketing JR Prockish, Penny Wamego Psychology SO Ragland, Michelle Overland Park Industrial Engineering JR Reams, Kelly Fairbury, Neb. Foods and Nutrition SC) Rhodes, Carolyn Valley Center Social Work SR Robison, Renee Warrensburg, Mo. Architectural Engineering JR Rust, Kindra Kensington Elementary Education SO Sager, Cherri Hoxie Elementary Education FR Schaller, Paula Lewis Arts and Sciences Sr) Schneider, Angela Atchison Psychology SO Schwartz, Kim Topeka Accounting SO Siefker, Susan Moran Marketing 429 boyd hall BOYD HALL Stadler, Barbara Topeka Arts and Sciences FR Steinbach, Rebecca Clay Center Elementary Education SR Stieg, Shawna Topeka Pre-Veterinary Medicine FR Stippich, Julie Wichita Anthropology JR Stump, Jeanette Belleville Elementary Education FR Tracy, Susan Topeka Elementary Education FR Tsai, Fen-Chu Taiwan Computer Science GR Varner, Linda Englewood, Colo. Interior Design FR Vawter, Karen Rock Springs, Wyo. Interior Design SR Wallingford, Laura Effingham Education-Music FR Ward, Renee Manhattan Accounting FR Wheeler, Tammy Wheaton Management FR Whipple, Sue Jetmore Education-Biological Science SR Whisnant, Rita Liberty, Mo. Education SO Whitaker, Angie Dodge City Early Childhood Education SO Wieland, Shenane Washington, Kan. Business Administration JR Williams, Jeanie Dodge City Elementary Education SO Wohletz, Donna Topeka Elementary Education JR Wolters, Denise Atchison Pre-Physical Therapy FR Wunder, Paula Topeka Secondary Education SO Zinn, Heidi Topeka Early Childhood Education FR WET WEATHER WOES. Becky Barling, freshman in art and business, keeps dry under an umbrella while walking past the fountains near Farrell Library. (Photo by Chris Assaf) 430 . Boyd Hall Pillers, Nellita Housemother Born, Dolores Eudora Elementary Education SO Cain, Melissa Little River Food Science FR Carpenter, Loree Girard Math SR Clements, Deeneen Herington Finance SR Corley, Gaylene Westphalia Agronomy SO Dahnke, Cynthia Argusville, N.D. Interior Design JR Dahnke, Sonja Argusville, N.D. Political Science FR Daniels, Julie Salina Elementary Education FR Davied, Marietta Walnut Retail Floriculture SC) Dillman, Loretta Emporia Accounting Donaldson, Pamela Berryton Business Administration SO Donnelly, Jenifer Bucyrus Pre-Veterinary Medicine FR Edmonds, Angela Cherokee Apparel and Textile Marketing FR Fowler, Rhonda Emporia Apparel and Textile Marketing SR Hillbrant, Leann lola Education SR Hoover, Annette Abilene Pre-Veterinary Medicine Hoover, Sandra Abilene Social Work Karr, Kelly Emporia Food Science SR Kelly, Karen Osawatomie Pre-Dentistry FR Kelly, Teresa Osawatomie Pre-Veterinary Medicine Kilgore, Lora Chanute Agronomy FR Klinker, Suzanne Manhattan Business Administration FR Kopp, Jennifer Denton Journalism and Mass Communications FR Lewis, Cristy Thayer Food and Nutrition-Exercise Science SO Lolling, Paula McPherson Animal Sciences and Industry FR Maltby, Jill Winfield Bakery Science and Management FR Moore, Sandra Morrill Elementary Education SR Ochampaugh, Amy Plainville Apparel and Textile Marketing Odgers, Nancy Garden City Human Ecology and Mass Comm. SR Clovia 4-H House wa s established in 1931 during the Great Depression as an economical means of living for women. It was the first cooperative house on campus and was founded by seven former 4-H women students. 431 Clovia 4-H House 4-H HOUSE Peckman, Pamela Paola Crop Protection JR Pelton, Jolene Burdette Interior Design SO Phillips, Janet Valley Falls Elementary Education SR Pieschl, Marcia Rush Center Engineering FR Ring, Rachel Norris, S.D. Pre-Veterinary Medicine SO Roberts, Leigh Manhattan Elementary Education JR Schultz, Beth lucas Human Ecology SO Smith, Rachel Dresden English JR Theroff, Melanie McClouth Dietetics JR Wagner, Judy Downs Social Work SR Walters, Tresa Cassoday Restaurant Management SO Whelchel, Kala Solomon Bakery Science and Management SO Wienck, Brenda Blue Rapids Home Economics Education SR Winger, Tammy Minneola Pre-Veterinary Medicine CYMBAL SUNNING. Band member Theresa Guyon, freshman in journalism and mass communications, works on a tan with the aid of her cymbal during K-State ' s game against University of Oklahoma at KSU Stadium. (Photo by Gary Lytle) Clovia 4-H House 432 edwards hall was named for A. Thorton Edwards, director of housing for 37 years. It was an residence hall until 1978 when it began housing non- athletes as well. It is now a co-ed hall and is located on Denison Avenue. Smith, Ted Belfast, Maine Economics JR Van Steinberg, Susan Wichita Pre-Medicine SR Varyani, Dev India Industrial Engineering Williams, Eric Herington Education-History JR Atzpodien, Elke Germany Veterinary Medicine SR Bergstrand, Tracy Hinckley, Ill. Horticultural Therapy SR Cheesebrough, Eric Kansas City, Mo. Electrical Engineering SR Culp, Steven Topeka Electrical Engineering GR Dill, Ann Washington, Mo. Biology Escalada, Lawrence Garden City Physical Education SR Faler, Susan Independence, Kan. Journalism and Mass Communications JR Floyd, Scott Kodiak, Alaska Life Sciences SR Guislain, Yvette Prairie Village Biology SR Hemmen, Linda Salina Journalism and Mass Communications JR Korte, Tom Garden City Agronomy SO Love, Valerie Aurora, Colo. Bakery Science and Management SR Marshall, Robert Salina Electrical Engineering SR Mlotha, Manfrey Malawi Agronomy GR Morey, Stephen Manhattan Electrical Engineering SR Musademba, Wonder Zimbabwe Accounting GR Nderagakura, Gaspard Burundi Public Administration GR Riedmiller, Marcia Augusta Animal Sciences and Industry SR 433 Edwards Hall 1-- ford hall was named for Kenny L. Ford, executive secretary of the K-State Alumni Association from 1928 to 1961. It houses 650 women and was built in 1967. Ford is located on Manhattan Avenue. Albert, Kelly Beloit Journalism and Mass Communications SO Allen, Kim S Shawnee Family Life and Human Development FR Baldon, Christi Wichita Accounting FR Barnard, Staci Madison Business Administration FR Barta, Julie Topeka Elementary Education FR Berglund, Paula Human Ecology FR Bierly, Lisa Lyons Biology JR Bindel, Lanette Sabetha Elementary Education FR Blum, Elizabeth Wichita Business Administration FR Bocox, Bethany Elementary Education FR Bollier, Michele Prairie Village Life Sciences SR Brown, Sharon McPherson Medical Technology SR Brown, Shauna Kansas City, Kan. Accounting SO Bruce, Leah E Ellsworth Social Work FR Buessing, Barbara Baileyville Engineering SO Busenitz, Christine Whitewater Interior Design FR Caruthers, Elizabeth McPherson Interior Design SR Catlin, Mildred Protection Secondary Education FR Cisper, Monica Lenexa Secondary Education FR Claassen, Kristine Whitewater Home Economics Education SR Claassen, Michelle Potwin Foods and Nutrition JR Cloughley, Stacy Kansas City, Kan. Biology SO Cochren, Kristine Circleville Psychology FR Cordill, Michelle Norton Physical Education FR Cowles, Kathleen Hutchinson Elementary Education SO Craig, Carol I orraine Pre-Physical Therapy IR Cunningham, Mary Wichita Biology SR Darrow, Maureen Hutchinson Elementary Education SO Dawdy, Dawn Sylvan Grove Business Administration FR Dearwester, Shelly Mulvane Accounting FR Decker, Cynthia St. Louis, Mo. Architecture SO De lhotal, Clarissa Wichita Arts and Sciences FR Demel, Diane Atchinson Bakery Science and Management FR Denlinger, Denise Prairie Village Arts and Sciences SO Depperschmidt, Tina Derby Early Childhood Education FR Detwiller, Erika Athol Political Science FR 434 Ford Hall CROSS WALK. A Student walks through a light drizzle in front of Hall on the first day of fall classes. (Photo by Andy Nelson) Draskovich, Lori Kansas City, Kan. Engineering FR Dunn, Kayla Wichita Arts and Sciences FR Eberly, Gretchen Wichita Agricultural Economics FR Eggers, Dede Washington, Kan. Secondary Education FR Engelkemier, Tiffany Hutchinson Political Science FR Engroff Julie Topeka Political Science , FR Erickson, Kevin Manhattan Engineering Technology SR Fedde, Leslie Manhattan Architecture FR Fredrickson, Julie Lindsborg Interior Design French, Laura St. Louis, Mo. Psychology SO Gammell, Jennifer Lindsborg Secondary Education SR Gilbert, Amy Clay Center Architecture FR Gillenwater, Sheila Derby Electrical Engineering FR Girard, Lori Medicine Lodge Education FR Goodman, Darla Ness City Architecture FR Graff, Susan Pratt Human Ecology and Mass Comm. FR Grey, Brenda Topeka Arts and Sciences FR Grimm, Tina Conway Springs Elementary Education FR Haefmer, Lanelle Topeka Apparel and Textile Marketing FR Hamilton, Rebecca Salina Arts and Sciences FR Hanrahan, Jill Topeka Arts and Sciences FR Harlan, Jennifer Derby Civil Engineering FR Harris, Kirstan Caldwell Architecture FR Hartzler, Laurie Overland Park Secondary Education SR 435 Ford Hall FORD HALL Haskin, Nancy Onaga Arts and Sciences FR Hatteberg, Sherry Wichita Early Childhood Education FR Henne, Karla Roxbury Secondary Education JR Hervey, Sheila McPherson Secondary Education SO Hess, Charlene McPherson Business Adm inistration Hill, Joyce Berryton Elementary Education FR Holcomb, Terri Onaga Agricultural Economics FR Hornung, Jill Spearville Leisure Studies FR Houston, Tamara I enexa Fine Arts FR Hoving, Natasha Mulvane Education FR Hueftle, Nancy Scott City Business Administration SO Huggins, Barbara Beloit Recreation Humphrey, Angela Olathe Art FR lacovetta, Danielle Wichita Family Life and Human Development FR Jacobs, Stephanie Protection Business Administration FR Jameson, Kara Overland Park Interior Design FR Johnson, Cherle Selden Business Administration SO Johnson, Dannette Caldwell Computer Science FR Johnson, Leslie Neodesha Education-Journalism FR Johnson, Valerie Leawood Speech Pathology and Audiology SR BETWEEN MATCH NAPS. Manhattan Mud Hens Jenny Dawson, junior in apparel and textile marketing, left, Forrest Miller, senior in mechanical engineering, and Shona Larsen, Manhattan, take a nap on an available car top between matches in the KSU Foundation ' s Oozeball tournament. (Photo by Gary Lytle) 436 Ford Hall Jost, Carrie Pawnee Rock Business Administration FR Katt, Kristi Grainfield Arts and Sciences FR Keagle, Stephanie McPherson Secondary Education FR Keimig, Kelly Wichita Engineering FR Kimbrough, Susan Prairie Village Pre-Veterinary Medicine SO King, Aileen Osage City Arts and Sciences FR Koster, Nina Wichita Human Ecology FR Kralik, Sherry Ellsworth Elementary Education SO Kramer, Diane Brewster Business Administration FR Kuntz, Lisa Park Journalism and Mass Communications FR Lawson, Laurie Sylvan Grove Radio-Television SO Lichlyter, Rochelle Derby Modern Languages SO Lillich, Susan Goodland Modern Languages SO Lineback, Julie Salina Pm-Physical Therapy FR Lorenzen, Lori Garden City Physical Education FR Loughmiller, Mitzi Onaga Arts and Sciences FR Luke, Lindsay Overland Park Apparel and Textile Marketing FR McCoole, Margo Atchison Secondary Education FR McCoy, Sandra Ness City Psychology SR Miller, Colleen Republic Pre-Pharmacy FR Mills, Sandra O ' Fallon, Ill. Apparel and Textile Marketing Monroe, Lisa Prairie Village Speech Pathology and Audiology Neel, Joe Windom Arts and Sciences Nily, Dawn Great Bend Horticulture SR Olsen, Martha Clyde Business Administration FR Powell, Briana Shawnee Elementary Education FR Pugsley, Nancy Prairie Village Restaurant Management FR Pyle, Roberta Eudora Correctional Administration FR Quigley, Susan Mulvane Elementary Education FR Quinn, Mary Milford Special Education SR Quinn, Tomari Holton Journalism and Mass Communications FR Randolph, Robbie Brewster Family and Child Development FR Regehr, Marjean Newton Interior Design SO Reusch, Debbie Prairie Village Elementary Education SO Reynolds, Chrystal Overland Park Apparel Design FR Rice, Janelle Salina Business Administration FR Richter, Beth Pratt Apparel and Textile Marketing FR Riedel, Ginger Kiowa Accounting SO Roberts, Terri Atwood Arts and Sciences FR Robinson, Sheri Little River Finance FR Ryland, Amanda Sabetha Business Adminstration FR Sauer, Kay Hays Elementary Education FR Sayler, Sara Lawrence Apparel and Textile Marketing SO Schaff, Jennifer Overland Park Interior Design Schaffer, Sharon Hoxie Elementary Education FR Schlossman, Heather Holton Secondary Education FR Schumaker, Angela Topeka Education SR Seymour, Tiffany Lindshorg Business Administration FR 437 Ford Hall FORD HALL Shrimplin, Lola Holcomb Journalism and Mass Communications FR Sidener, Julie Solomon Family Life and Human Development SR Simms, Christy Belleville Food and Nutrition-Exercise Science FR Simpson, Trish McPherson Psychology FR Skidmore, Annette Ottawa Fine Arts Smith, Nancy Great Bend Fisheries and Wildlife Biology SR Steiner, Angela Arkansas City Psychology JR Suchsland, Mary Berryton Elementary Education FR Sweat, Janet Cedar Pre-Physical Therapy FR Swickard, Diona Newton Business Administration FR Thiele, Lisa Norton Pm-Nursing FR True, Renee Downs Arts and Sciences FR Trummell, Sheri Wichita Business Administration FR Votapka, Beth Oberlin Early Childhood Education Wagner, Betty Downs Pre-Nursing FR Wahl, Lori Derby Elementary Education FR Walters, Marcy Topeka Interior Design FR Ward, Monica Clearwater Pre-Law SO Washburn, Stephanie Norton Business Administration Washburn, Tiphanie Norton Elementary Education Webber, Jari Salina Arts and Sciences FR Welch, Nechelle Wichita Accounting FR Wencel, Tyann Caldwell Architecture FR Whipple, Lou Jetmore Elementary Education SR White, Christine Wichita Pm-Veterinary Medicine FR White, Wendy Kansas City, Kan. Animal Sciences and Industry SO Williams, Angelita Kansas City, Kan. Business Administration FR Woodbury, Denise Kanopolis Business Administration FR Yeates, Angelina Mound City Elementary Education JR goodnow hall was opened in 1960 and named for Isaac T. Goodnow, an early Manhattan settler and co-founder of Bluemont Central College. It was originally the first residence hall for men and is now co-ed, Allen, Annette Douglas Chemical Engineering SO Almquist, Brian Buckner, Mo. Biology SO Antrim, Lori Kingman Human Ecology and Mass Comm. SO Atrim, Susan Kingman Chemistry SR Baker, George Jefferson City, Mo. Architecture FR Baker, Kristina Bonner Springs Pre-Law SO Barnes, Debbie Prairie Village Construction Science FR Barrett, Seleise Randall Engineering SO Bearnes, Stephanie Culiver Biology SR Beaty, Jane Leonardville Pre-Medici ne FR Becker, Janese Downs Computer Science SO Berry, Laura Derby Chemical Engineering SR Betschart, Shauna Ashland Business Administration FR Black, Kimberly Bloomington, Minn. Elementary Education SR Black, Mary Burlingame Business Administration SR Blaker, Cynthia Manhattan Arts and Sciences FR Bors, Julie Overland Park Architectural Engineering FR Brentano, Traci Lancaster Industrial Engineering FR Brenzikofer, Amber Hays Architecture SO Briggeman, Andrea Pratt Psychology FR Brindley, Michael Overland Park Electrical Engineering SR Buchwald, Darrin Salina Electrical Engineering Burcham, Theresa Little Rock, Ark. Accounting FR Burns, Michael Lees Summit, Mo. Architecture SO Burns, Patricia Bonner Springs Arts and Sciences SO Coates, Scott Chanute Engineering SO Cooper, Max Peabody Electrical Engineering SR Copeland, Melanie Centralia Accounting FR Cornwall, Jane Shawnee Elementary Education SO Cox, Connie Dodge City Business Administration Crowell, Eric Wichita Business Administration Cunningham, Sarah Topeka Journalism and Mass Communications SO Davis, Charity Raytown, Mo. Secondary Education SR Davis, Gina Dodge City Accounting JR De Geer, Beth Medicine Lodge English JR Demel, Darren Hoisington Accounting JR 439 Goodnow Hall GOODNOW Deters, Gale Harveyville Electrical Engineering FR Dickens, Lucinda Chanute Elementary Education FR Diehl, Leanna Wichita Elementary Education FR Dixon, Joyce Leon Finance Doan, Donita Sawyer FR Accounting Downey, Paula Shawnee Electrical Engineering SR Dozier, Kimberly Topeka Social Work FR Eastman, Helen Coffeyville Horticulture SO Eckerberg, Lori Overland Park Architecture FR Ecklund, Robert Herington Electrical Engineering SO Engler, Beth Abilene Business Administration FR Erbert, Douglas Ellsworth Business Administration SO Fairchild, Terry Leoti Engineering Technology SR Feezor, Karla Satanta Dietetics FR Ferguson, Hallie Cheney Accounting FR Flanner, Saul Hoisington Electrical Engineering FR Fox, Diane Ballwin, Mo. Architecture SR George, Christina Wichita Arts and Sciences SO Gethers, Jocelyn Kansas City, Kan. Chemical Engineering FR Gilliland, Lora Plainville English FR Gilson, Allan Overland Park Mechanical Engineering SO Gooch, Shirley Berryton Electrical Engineering SO Griffin, Jon Abilene Industrial Engineering SR Groves, Doris St. Louis, Mo. English FR Guilliams, Caroline El Dorado Retail Floriculture Gurr, Ronald Chesterfield, Mo. Architectural Engineering SO Haberman, Wendy Great Bend Psychology Hall, Christopher Town Country, Mo. Architecture SO Hargett, Kirk Newton Chemistry SO Harlow, Tracey Satanta Computer Science SO Hamon, Richard Salina Agricultural Economics Harms, Mark Byron, Neb. Animal Sciences and Industry SO Harris, Jennifer Herington Biology SO Haub, Stephanie Topeka Business Administration JR Haufler, Matt Burlingame Agricultural Engineering FR Hays, Patricial Salina Home Economics Education JR Hayslett, Karen Emporia Chemical Engineering FR Heath, Kelly Independence, Kan. Animal Sciences and Industry SO Heflin, Roger Arkansas City Electrical Engineering JR Helmle, Nancy Johnson Pre-Veterinary Medicine FR Herdman, Sherry Kansas City, Kan. Early Childhood Education SO Herdman, Wendy Tonganoxie Theatre SO Hickert, Monica Grand Island, Neb. Electrical Engineering SO Higgins, Matthew Leawood Electrical Engineering Hillian, Terry Dodge City Business Administration Hinkle, Katherine Olathe Fine Arts SR Hinton, Jodi Leavenworth Arts and Sciences FR Hoffman, Lisa Abilene Engineering Technology 440 Goodnow Hall Hollandsworth, Nicki Brady, Mont. Architectural Engineering FR Holle, Rhonda Hanover Accounting Holmes, Michael Glidden, Iowa Architecture FR Hon, Terry Neodesha Chemical Engineering FR Hostmeyer, Beth Olathe Business Administration FR Howell, Mary Overland Park Mechanical Engineering SR Huckeby, Leah St. Louis, Mo. Architectural Engineering FR Hulsey, Brian Kansas City, Kan. Architectural Engineering SR Iwig, Michelle Dodge City Architectural Engineering SC) Jacquart, Kerri Sublette Arts and Sciences FR James, Kelly Emporia Psychology FR Johnson, Jandle St. Joseph, Mo. Radio-Television Johnson, Vicky Effingham Business Administration SO Kearns, Mary Omaha, Neb. Engineering FR Keller, Roxie Emporia Elementary Education FR Kerns, Kurt Jefferson City, Mo. Architecture FR Kivett, Todd Topeka Electrical Engineering Kliesen, Brenda Dodge City Architectural Engineering SR Kruse, Stacy Hanover Pre-Physical Therapy SO Lane, Stephanie Wentzville, Mo. Education-Business Lawson, John Satanta Construction Science Lowe, Alicia Great Bend Journalism and Mass Communications FR Lukomske, Leah Mo. Architecture FR Lyons, Amy Manhattan Animal Sciences and Industry FR Machin, Marc Russell Electrical Engineering FR WRITING HOME. Tammey Trabue, senior in fine arts, takes advantage of good weather to write a letter home while sitting in Memorial Stadium. (Photo by Jim Dietz) 441 Goodnow Hall GOODNOW Hall Marek, Norbet Westmoreland History SO Martin, George Hoisington Electrical Engineering JR Maxey, Paula Shawnee Engineering FR McClure, Angie Tescott Education-Curriculum and Instruction SO McCully, Cynthia Shawnee Theater McKain, Valorie Salina Elementary Education McLenon, Marla Overland Park Arts and Sciences FR McMurray, Janie Jewell Mechanical Engineering FR Merrill, Paula Bennington journalism and Mass Communications FR Meyer, Pamela Tampa Psychology SR Miles, Jeannette Burlingame Elementary Education Miller, Gina Satanta Business Administration IR Miller, Troy Howard Agriculture Education SO Mitchell, Kristin Emporia Education-Music FR Montulli, Lara Wichita Mechanical Engineering SO Morgan, Tammy Hanover Social Work FR Morris, Karen Merriam Business Administration JR Munday, Ann Prairie Village Radio-Television SR Nurnberg, Grant Emporia Engineering FR O ' Brien, Jane St. Louis, Mo. Architecture SO Olszewski, Carole Manchester, Mo. Architecture FR Pappan, Lori Arkansas City Dietetics Patterson, Topeka Journalism and Mass Communications FR Payne, Sandy Goddard Animal Sciences and Industry Payne, Todd Goddard Architecture Perkins, Carl Howard Civil Engineering SO Peters, Amy Scandia Arts and Sciences FR Phelps, Daren Atwood Electrical Engineering Phillips, Jeff Lees Summit, Mo. Architecture SC Poindexter, Karen Overland Park Engineering FR Potter, Angela Emporia Electrical Engineering FR Powers, Shana Oberlin Accounting Price, Travis Manhattan Marketing Proctor, Suzannne Pratt Industrial Engineering JR Purvis, Teresa Manhattan Biology FR Ramsey, Wade Leavenworth Business Administration FR Randolph, Jay Pratt Business Administration Rathbone, Lynda Manhattan Speech Reams, Mark Goddard Electrical Engineering JR Reichle, David Atchison Electrical Engineering JR Rhea, John Paola Electrical Engineering Roberts, Katherine Wichita Arts and Sciences FR Rohrer, Michael Topeka Physics Royer, Tammi Holton Education-Mathematics SO Royster, Francesca Chicago, Ill. English SR Sabatka, John Atwood Agricultural Economics JR Said, Martha Manhattan Accounting FR Sallee, Wendy Overland Park Industrial Engineering FR 442 Goodnow Hall Sandercox, Susan Leavenworth Business Administration SO Sanderson, Chris Emporia Mathematics SR Saunders, Sietske Tarrytown, N.Y. Architecture JR Schaller, Kent Kinsley Finance JR Scheufler, Sue Sterling Industrial Engineering SR Schlereth, Kimberly Jetmore Agricultural Economics SO Schletzbaum, Paul Atchison Industrial Engineering SO Schmalzried, Gerald Topeka Electrical Engineering SR Schneider, Wayne Albert Mechanical Engineering JR Schoelen, Courtney Norman, Okla. Pre-Veterinary Medicine JR Schwarz, Bernard Grinnell Information Systems SR Seeling, Tom Westminster, Calif. Journalism and Mass Communications SR Serad, Sonia Vineland, Pre-Veterinary Medicine FR Sheets, Stephanie Linwood Retail Floriculture JR Shimp, David Topeka Mechanical Engineering SR Shotton, Catherine Leawood Business Administration FR Singer, William Colo. Architecture SO Solomon, Trina Cahnute Architecture SO Steiner, Cary Overland Park Chemical Engineering SR Stenstrom, David Manhattan Architectural Engineering SR Steuart, Jim Topeka Construction Science SO Stover, Stephanie Enterprise Pre-Law JR Stritzke, Todd Caney Mechanical Engineering SR Taylor, Russell Manhattan Electrical Engineering JR Thompson, Janet Burlingame Physical Sciences JR Tracy, Carol Derby Nuclear Engineering JR Tryda, Stephanie Naperville, Ill. Elementary Education SO Tucker, Cornetta Kansas City, Kan. Architectural Engineering FR Tunks, Barry Wichita Marketing SO Turner, Chris Stilwell Horticulture FR SUN SHADE. Donita Doan, freshman in accounting, uses a card to shade her eyes while practicing for the body building event for Doan, along with others, was practicing using the cards to spell out words. (Photo by Jim Dietz) 443 Goodnow Hall GOODNOW hall Turner, David Prairie Village Marketing SR Tyree, Ingrid Topeka Marketing SR Useldinger, Lori Kansas City, Kan. Engineering Technology SR Vavrock, Allan Oberlin Computer Science SR Vering, Denise Marysville Business Administration SO Vopat, Stephanie Topeka Psychology SO Wallace, Karen Tipton Apparel and Textile Marketing SO Weaver, Brian Shawnee Electrical Engineering JR Wedeman, Elizabeth Overland Park Chemical Engineering SR Welch, David Hubbell, Neb. Food Science FR White, Kathleen Leawood Mechanical Engineering White, Mary Wichita Architecture FR Wilcox, Lisa Tonganoxie Business Administration FR Wilds, Alan Topeka Journalism and Mass Communications SO Wilkerson, Stephanie Circleville Business Administration SO Williams, Kelly Chicago, III. Business Administration SO Williams, Steven Florissant, Mo. Architecture SO Wing, Jeff Altoona Electrical Engineering JR Wing, Ken Altoona Electrical Engineering FR Wohler, Brian Clay Center Finance JR Wolfe, Marie Wichita Pm-Medicine SO Wood, Theresa Atchison Psychology FR Worley, Rhonda Wichita Restaurant Management SO Wright, James Overland Park Electrical Engineering SO Wyland, Michael St. Louis, Mo. Architectural Engineering JR Yount, Tim Atwood Management SR Zidek, Susan Beattie Industrial Engineering JR Zink, Rhonda Healy Architectural Engineering SO 444 Goodnow Hall Haymaker Hall is a men ' s residence hall and was named for Henley Haymaker, a professor in botany and teacher from 1917 to 1932. Haymaker was built in 1967 and houses 650 men. It is located at the intersection of Claflin Road and Manhattan Avenue. Abbuhl, Tim Hutchinson Accounting SO Albright, Jack Pretty Prairie Architectural Engineering FR Anderson, Jim Meriden Natural Resources Management SR Argo, Mathew Marysville Mechanical Engineering FR Austin, Michael Stilwell Correctional Administration FR Bach, James Ellsworth Accounting FR Bailey, Brian Randolph Electrical Engineering FR Baranczuk, Chris Overland Park Architecture SO Bartel, Randall Overland Park Architecture SR Base, Daniel Manhattan Agronomy Bates, Jeffrey Oakley Agricultural Economics FR Baus, Shawn Salina Computer Science SO Bedord, John Westwood Construction Science SO Begley, Vernon Hugoton Accounting SO Benson, Ron Clay Center Agronomy FR Berry, Patrick Topeka Business Administration FR Birney, Tony Bucklin Pre-Veterinary Medicine Bowman, Brian Lenexa Electrical Engineering FR Bowman, Randall Topeka Grain Science FR Bradley, Eugene Fort Riley Electrical Engineering FR Brandyberry, Stanley Hill City Agricultural Economics SO Branson, Paul Manhattan Journalism and Mass Communications Bruns, Kevin Shawnee Architectural Engineering FR Bryan, Keith Overland Park Physical Education FR Burgett, Craig Topeka Mechanical Engineering SO Burgett, Mark Topeka Mechanical Engineering SR Burgett, Scott Topeka Electrical Engineering Bush, Troy Ellsworth Electrical Engineering SR Byer, Rex Stafford Business Administration FR Byer, Roger Stafford Business Administration FR Cardenas, Greg McPherson Finance FR Carlson, Dennis Stratton, Neb. Pre-Forestry SO Carlson, Donald Shawnee Business Administration FR Carlson, Gregory Blue Rapids Grain Science FR Cash, Sean Clearwater Pre-Medicine FR Christensen, David Overland Park Accounting 445 Haymaker Hall HAYMAKER HALL Chuanrungwattana, Boonlert Thailand Business Administration Clennan, Craig El Dorado Marketing SR Cooper, Robert Warrensburg, Mo. Architectural Engineering SR Copple, Robert Winfield Industrial Engineering SR Craft, David Emporia Agricultural Engineering SR Dauber, Jetmore Accounting FR Davidson, Ron McPherson Chemical Engineering JR Davied, Mark Pittsburg Agronomy SO Davis, Christopher J Sugar Creek, Mo. Agronomy SO Denholm, Rodney Tonganoxie Agricultural Economics SO Doughty, John Lindsborg Engineering FR Driscoll, Rodney Rossville Industrial Engineering SR Dudrey, Byron Great Bend SO Duerst, David I enexa Business Administration FR Eastwood, Kenneth Fulton Electrical Engineering SO Ebbert, Daryl WaKeeney Arts and Sciences JR Egbert, Kevin Shawnee Electrical Engineering FR Eichelberger, Sam Kekaha, Hawaii Agricultural Education FR Emmot, Jeffrey Hays Secondary Education FR Essmiller, Kyle Great Bend Business Administration FR Everhart, Lawrence Paola Business Administration SO Flynn, Tom Tonganoxie Pre-Medicine FR Fowler, Wes Emporia Horticulture SR Fredrickson, Scott I indsborg Engineering FR Friesen, Brad Buhler Industrial Engineering SO Gaehle, David Ballwin, Mo. Architecture FR Gannaway, David Clearwater Pre-Veterinary Medicine ER Gauger, Michael Overland Park Pre-Veterinary Medicine FR Giefer, Todd Wellington, Colo. Architectural Engineering ER Girard, Greg Conway Springs Radio-Television FR Gleason, Kenton Kinsley Accounting FR Graff, William Pratt Agricultural Engineering SR Hackleman, Larry Sugar Creek, Mo. Architectural Engineering SC) Haden, Dave Manhattan Educational Psychology GR Hadler, Tommy Jackson, Mo. Architecture SR Haefner, Matthew Topeka Psychology FR Hallauer, Brian Holton Architectural Engineering SO Hamner, Brian Shawnee Physical Education SO Hanchett, Jerrod Phillipsburg Pre-Medicine FR Hardacre, Bruce Athol Elementary Education SO Heitschmidt, Todd Holyrood Agricultural Economics SO Hemmert, Eric Oakley Agriculture Education SO Hoch, Mike McPherson Architecture SO Hodgkinson, Darren Cunningham Agricultural Economics SR Holdeman, Steven Wichita Fine Arts FR Holmes, Layne Hugoton Animal Sciences and Industry SR Holthaus, Dennis Beattie Animal Sciences and Industry FR Hosier, Lance Atchison Accounting FR 446 Hall House, Patrick Goodland Arts and Sciences FR Huber, Matt Shawnee Business Administration FR Huber, Mike Sabetha Accounting SO Irsik, Jay Wichita Chemical Engineering SO Janzen, Jeffrey Newton Electrical Engineering SR Jendlin, Sean Wauwatosa, Wis. Journalism and Mass Communications FR Johnson, Lloyd Mankato History JR Jones, William Springhill Secondary Education Clay Center Engineering FR Koger, Jim Holton Marketing SR Kolb, Erik Shawnee Mechanical Engineering IR Kreller, David Stockton Chemical Engineering FR Lavery, Douglas Shawnee Mechanical Engineering FR Leach, Robert Bird City Pre-Optometry FR Legleiter, Mike Manhattan Agronomy Lenahan, Patrick Overland Park Architectural Engineering FR Lilley, Joseph Overland Park Business Administration FR Lillich, Timothy Goodland Mathematics SR Litchman, Gary Overland Park Psychology SO Love, John St. Francis Agronomy SR Lueck, Timothy Junction City Management FR Luft, John Bucklin Fisheries and Wildlife Biology SO Mai, Craig WaKeeney Engineering FR Majors, Rich Overland Park Architectural Engineering Mannebach, Scott Colwich Engineering FR Massock, Shawn Kansas City, Mo. Architecture SO Maxwell, Douglas Hanston Accounting McCoy, Brett Ness City Electrical Engineering FR McCray, Pat Kansas City, Kan. Engineering FR Meade, Matt Plainville Radio-Television FR HAYMAKER HANDYMAN. Roger French, junior in electrical engineering, and Reann Bantz, freshman in recreational therapy, work on constructing a bunk bed for French ' s room outside Haymaker Hall. (Photo by Brad Fanshier) 447 HAYMAKER HALL 448 Meerian, Randy Hanover Art FR Mickey, Sheldon Shawnee Radio-Television Millard, Richard Colorado Springs, Colo. Architecture FR Miller, Michael Indianola, Iowa Architecture FR Naysmith, Jeffrey Belleville Agronomy SO Nelson, Noel McPherson Mechanical Engineering FR O ' Keefe, Dennis Colwich Pre-Veterinary Medicine FR Persson, Eric Overland Park Art FR Petracek, Steven Wichita Architectural Engineering SO Pfeifer, Gerald Moreland Electrical Engineering FR Phelps, Darin Miltonvale Electrical Engineering SR Pieschl, Kyle Rush Center Retail Floriculture FR Priddle, Jeffrey Wichita Architectural Engineering SR Puckett, Todd Great Bend Mechanical Engineering FR Reiber, Andrew Omaha, Neb. Milling Science and Management JR Reiser, Richard Great Bend Health SR Ricks, Mark Topeka Geology Ronnebaum, Brian Seneca Accounting FR Rowe, Bret Great Bend Accounting SR Rumford, Kenyon Ottawa Animal Sciences and Industry SR Rumford, Ron Ottawa Agricultural Economics SO Sanders, Daren Miltonvale Business Administration SO Scarlett, Brad Topeka Business Administration SO Schmidt, Joe Sharon Business Administration IR Schrock, Greg S. Hutchinson Business Administration Schumann, John Sahetha Bakery Science and Management SO Schumann, Robert Sabeiha Feed Science and Management SR Schwarz, Todd Menlo Agronomy FR Schwindt, Jeff Timken Agricultural Economics FR Schwinn, Joseph Leavenworth Horticulture SO Seiler, Gavin Mt. Hope Agriculture FR Shannon, Jay Leawood Mechanical Education SR Shideler, Roger Topeka Radio-Television SO Studer, Christopher Quenemo Agricultural Economics SR Smith, Darrin Pratt Agricultural Economics FR Smith, Michael S Sabetha Information Systems SO Smith, Michael R. Overland Park Industrial Engineering SO Sommers, John Valley Falls Architectural Engineering SR Speer, Doug Dighton Agricultural Economics JR Stallbaumer, Joe Baileyville Mechanical Engineering FR Steinbach, Fred Manhattan Mechanical Engineering JR Stutesman, Charles Osage City Agriculture Education SO haymaker hall Terry, Charles Winchester Animal Sciences and Industry FR Teter, Steven Ottawa Business Administration FR Todd, Scott Leawood Journalism and Mass Communications FR Towns, Sean Palco Agriculture Education SO Treschl, Eric Stilwell Agricultural Engineering FR Tucker, Bryan Overland Park Geology SR Tucker, Nathan Lenexa Mechanical Engineering SO Uffendell, John Junction City Electrical Engineering FR Upshaw, Dennis Westphalia Accounting FR Upshaw, Lentz Westphalia Electrical Engineering SO Vanbuskirk, Mark Mapleton Crop Protection SR Vohs, Stephen Prairie Village Electrical Engineering FR Volosin, John Great Bend Business Administration FR Vonfange, John Lincoln Mechanical Engineering SO Wake, Kevin Leavenworth Pre-Pharmacy FR Walberg, Mike ' Shawnee Chemical Engineering FR Wasinger, Carl Hill City Milling Science and Management SO Weide, Lee Las Vegas, Nev. Animal Sciences and Industry SO Weil, Jason Great Bend Business Administration FR Welborn, Cliff Manhattan Industrial Engineering SR West, Oscar Shawnee Industrial Engineering JR Whitney, Mark Osawatomie Construction Science FR Whorton, Marc Manhattan Architecture FR Wilbeck, Jeff S. Hutchinson Engineering FR Wilson, David Sterling Architecture FR Wilson, John Sterling Mechanical Engineering SR Wiltse, Scott Altoona Arts and Sciences Wise, Steven Overland Park Architectural Engineering SO Zernickow, Craig Wichita Pm-Medicine FR Zuel, Rex Osawatamie Industrial Engineering 449 Haymaker Hall marlatt hall was built in 1964. was named for Washington Marlatt, an early Manhattan settler, minister and an administrator of Bluemont Central College. Marlatt is a men ' s residence hall, housing 635 men. Alderson, Corey Delphos Fisheries and Wildlife Biology FR Anderson, Troy Osborne Computer Science SO Aubuchon, Robert Holts Summit, Mo. Pre-Law SO Beikmann, Mel Clifton Mechanical Engineering SO Bieniek, Michael Buffalo Grove, Ill. Architecture Blankenship, Michael Medicine Lodge Landscape Architecture SO Boese, Douglas Harper Nuclear Engineering SO Borelli, David Englewood, Colo. Architecture SO Brackney, Robert Clearwater Management Brockmeyer, Don Wichita Architecture FR Brogden, Jeffery Dodge City Computer Science Brooks, David Fairway History SO Brown, Robert Lebanon Political Science FR Callen, Thomas N. Palm Beach, Fla. Computer Science FR Catanzaro, Anthony St. Louis, Mo. Architecture Clark, Chase Jefferson City, Mo. Architectural Engineering SO Darnell, Richard Shawnee Mission Radio-Television SR Davis, Gregory Osborne Chemical Engineering FR Deweese, Mark Americus Animal Sciences and Industry FR Dieringer, Rob Portland, Ore. Construction Science Dorroh, Craig Littleton, Colo. Architecture FR Dougherty, Warren Rose Hill Electrical Engineering SR Downey, Edward Shawnee Architectural Engineering FR Eastman, Brit Grenola Mechanical Engineering JR Eckels, Will Ness City Computer Science Eltze, Robert Hays Electrical Engineering SO Eterovic, Ivo Bolivia Milling Science and Management SR Fabrizius, Daniel Ellis Computer Engineering FR Fisher, Rich Kansas City, Mo. Sociology SR Flowers, Michael Ballwin, Mo. Landscape Architecture SR Friess, Patrick Spearville Civil Engineering FR Gewecke, James Russell Marketing Gillen, Scott Pittsburg, Kan. Engineering FR Gillogly, Everett Louisburg Architectural Engineering SO Glover, Steven Peabody Music Education FR Gray, Tray Salina Mechanical Engineering SR Marlett Hall 450 Greenlee, Wayne Belle Plaine Education-Speech SR Grimes, Darin Lamed Finance SO Hammond, Paul Woodland Hills, Calif. Marketing SO Harmon, Marcel Cheney Architectural Engineering SO Hatch, Thomas Sedgwick Education SO Hatcher, Dewayne Wichita Electrical Engineering SO Heskamp, Doug Spearville Mechanical Engineering SO Hessman, Tony Sublett Construction Science FR Hilger, Steven Hays Engineering FR Hlade, John Kansas City, Kan. Mechanical Engineering FR Holmes, Paul Udall Agricultural Economics SR Homburg, Tim Ellis Architecture FR Horton, Brett Kendall Restaurant Management FR Howard, Todd Norton Electrical Engineering SO Huizenga, Robert LeCompton Engineering SO Hulsing, Nick Topeka Business Administration SO Hutchinson, David Topeka Electrical Engineering SO Johnson, Paul Troy, Mo. Architecture FR Joyce, William Kansas City, Mo. Architecture SO Kiehl, Brad St. Charles, Mo. Architecture SO King, Edward Canada Architecture JR Klein, Kirk Pfeifer Industrial Engineering SO Koegeboehn, Gerald Elmdale Industrial Engineering SO Koons, Vince Lakin Computer Science JR Koppenhafer, Michael Potomac, Md. Architecture SO Kysar, Dan Bogue Business Administration SO Kysar, Jeffrey Bogue Mechanical Engineering GR Laflamme, Dean Emporia Mechanical Engineering SR Lebak, James Rose Hill Electrical Engineering SR Leininger, Philip Haviland Mechanical Engineering GR Lemay, Cory Andover Architecture FR Lies, Dean Andale Engineering Technology SR Long, Gregory Scott City Electrical Engineering SO Lopez, Estell Hugoton Electrical Engineering SR Masters, Rick Dodge City Business Administration IR Mayfield, Calvin Kansas City, Kan. Electrical Engineering FR 451 Marlett Hall MARLATT HALL McCammon, Brett Prairie View Electrical Engineering McCoy, Bradley Copeland Special Education SR McFarland, Darrin Pratt Computer Engineering SO McIntyre, John Plainville Industrial Engineering JR McQueen, John Novinger, Mo. Architecture FR Meredith, William Topeka Mechanical Engineering FR Mikkelson, Keith Merriam Mechanical Engineering SO Moore, Bruce Topeka Psychology FR Moore, Craig leavenworth Arts and Sciences FR Morgan, Monte Deerfield Geology Myer, Bradley Topeka Electrical Engineering JR Myer, Todd Topeka Electrical Engineering FR Noel, Paul Conway Springs Journalism and Mass Communications FR Novak, John Basehor Chemical Engineering SR Olberding, Andrew Leavenworth Civil Engineering FR Pennington, Jeffrey Aurora, Ill. Industrial Engineering SR Perry, David Chesterfield, Mo. Architecture SO Petersen, Sean Lincoln, Kan. Civil Engineering FR Peterson, Barry Salina Electrical Engineering SR Polanco, Marvin Honduras Civil Engineering FR Quinn, Robert Manhattan Chemical Engineering FR Rahija, Joe Kansas City, Kan. Chemical Engineering FR Rahija, Mark Kansas City, Kan. Electrical Engineering SR Rider, David Coffeyville Informatio n Systems PUDDLE JUMPING. Barry Jackson, freshman in industrial engineering, jumps over a puddle during a downpour while running from Marlatt Hall to Kramer Food Center. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) 452 Marlett Hall Riley, Clinton Manhattan Chemistry FR Roberts, Terrill Great Bend Management Robinson, Steven Platte Woods, Mo. Architecture SR Roseberry, James St. Louis, Mo. Architectural Engineering FR Ross, Christopher Osage City Architecture SR Ross, Stanton Osage City Business Administration FR Ruby, Brian Hillsdale Industrial Engineering SO Rundell, Ira Syracuse Electrical Engineering SO Salih, Morwan Sudan Electrical Engineering FR Sands, Scott Merriam Biology SO Schallehn, Stephen Prairie Village Computer Science SO Schroer, Michael Manhattan Electrical Engineering SR Sevedge, Bryan Chanute Modern Languages FR Sewell, Mark Merrillville, Ind. Industrial Engineering GR Siddiqui, Haseeb Pakistan Business Administration Simms, John Bonner Springs Mechanical Engineering SR Smith, Scott P Overland Park Business Administration FR Stevens, Derek Satanta Computer Science FR Stinebaugh, Andrew Williamsburg, Kan. Biology SR Stuhlsatz, David Mayfield Pre-Veterinary Medicine FR Sulit, James Shawnee Biology Sweat, Benjamin Syracuse, Neb. Mechanical Engineering FR Swofford, Michael Lenexa Engineering Technology JR Szulya, Bob Rome, Ga. Bakery Science and Management SO Thomas, Stephen Manhattan Electrical Engineering SR Trammell, Sean Olathe Agriculture FR Traylor, Randy Dodge City Journalism and Mass Communications SR Tucker, Robert Oakley Computer Engineering FR Turner, John McPherson Geography JR Unruh, Vance Kansas City, Kan. Mechanical Engineering Urbanik, Bruce Barrington, Ill. Electrical Engineering FR Vick, Gregory Worland, Wyo. Architecture FR Walker, Richard Kansas City, Kan, Architecture FR Weaver, Robert Wellington Journalism and Mass Communications JR White, Brian Americus Engineering FR Wiersman, Michael Emporia Engineering SO Wilson, Mark S. Hutchinson Engineering FR Worthington, David Fairway Architectural Engineering SO Young, Joseph Wichita Chemistry FR Zinger, Bretton Lenexa Arts and Sciences FR 453 Marlett Hall MOORE was built in 1965 and named after Helen Moore, dean of women from 1940 to 1957. She taught in the Department of Mathematics until 1963. Moore houses 650 men and women and is located on Road. Abston, Yvette Oxford Arts and Sciences FR Acker, Charles Gem Environmental Design FR Anderson, Karen Overland Park Life Sciences Angle, Andre Newton Music FR Anglemyer, Jay Winfield Civil Engineering JR Anstaett, Heather Topeka Accounting FR Arnoldy, Angie Tipton Computer Science FR Badke, Bradley Topeka Electrical Engineering JR Barber, Kelly Sabetha Elementary Education FR Bartholomew, Daniel West Point, N.Y. Psychology FR Blackwell, Christian Maize Engineering FR Blitsch, Amy Topeka Social Work SO Bowers, Melisa Wichita Mechanical Engineering SO Burnett, Natali Paola Arts and Sciences FR Caffrey, Lea Wichita Engineering FR Carstens, George Leavenworth English Chalker, Bradley Parsons Electrical Engineering SR Christensen, Steven Bonner Springs Engineering FR Claussen, Dennis Gypsum Business Administration FR Cully, Diana Arkansas City Journalism and Mass Communications SO Dahl, Monty Hardy, Neb. Agriculture FR Dahl, Susan Hardy, Neb. Elementary Education IR Deckman, Richard Owensvi Ile, Mo. Microbology SR Deeter, Valerie Topeka Business Administration FR Dick, April Blaine Pshchology FR Doebele, Jodi Hanover Elementary Education SO Elder, Edward Manhattan Political Science Elliott, Kathy Overbrook Elementary Education SO Elwood, Catherine Oxford Elementary Education FR English, Bret Topeka Geology FR English, Jeremy Topeka Civil Engineering FR Farr, Kerry Salina Special Education FR Fisher, Kimberly Marysville Journalism and Mass Communications Gambill, Regina lola Biology FR Gilbert, Thomas Omaha, Neb. Electrical Engineering FR Griffith, Scott J Poplar Bluff, Mo. Architecture GR 454 Moore Hall Grosko, Richelle Pre-Nursing FR Gupta, Rohit Manhattan Business Administration GR Hayes, Gregory Vestsal, N.Y. Architecture SO Heideberecht, Kerry McPherson Business Administration FR Hiatt, Vicki Olathe Arts and Sciences FR Hoerner, Angie Abilene Music FR Horton, Michael Overland Park Management SR Hotchkiss, Lisa Perry Education Flementrary FR Hundley, Jody Garden City Journalism and Mass Communications SR Hutchcraft, Dorothy Solomon Education Social Science SR Jackson, Jennifer Wichita Journalism and Mass Communications SO Jackson, Shannon Enterprise Business Administration FR Janne, Michel Gorham Mechanical Engineering SR Janzen, Michael Newton Industrial Engineering FR Jones, Toni Elkhart Business Administration FR Kim, Chong Newton Accounting FR Knight, Vicki Wichita Foods and Nutrition FR Kraai, Robert Prairie Village Electrical Engineering FR Kuntz, Cary Loveland, Colo. Architecture FR Langhammer, Raymond St. Louis, Mo. Architecture FR Lashley, Kevin Wichita Business Administration FR Leavitt, Sheri PIano, Texas Life Sciences SO Lee, Rodrick Lawrence Architecture FR Leming, Craig Topeka Finance FR Lintz, Mike Meriden Electrical Engineering SO Lord, Patricia Kansas City, Kans. Interior Design Mann, Ajit Fargo, N.D. English SR Martin, Loretta Clay Center Restaurant Management SO McCormick, Mark Topeka Arts and Sciences FR McDavitt, Thomas Wichita Pre-Veterinary Medicine JR McGrath, Jennifer Lenexa Early Childhood Education SO McKinnon, James Topeka Electrical Engineering SO McKinzie, Travis Aitamont Pre-Veterinary Medicine SO Mejicanos, Luis Guatemala Architecture FR Mense, Timothy Overland Park Mechanical Engineering SR Meyer, Cynthia Washington, Mo. Life Sciences SR Miller, Dawn Manhattan Biology FR Miller, Denise Wathena Elementrary Education FR Milliken, April Manhattan Statistics FR Morgan, Denae Hanover Business Administration FR Munden, Cynthia Bonner Springs Electrical Engineering FR Murphy, Douglas Chanute Modern Languages FR Myrick, Leslie Bonner Springs Pre-Veterinary Medicine FR Nolan, Katryce Littleton, Co. Business Administration FR Novak, Lori Paola Animal Sciences and Industry JR Oehm, Jim Marysville Correctional Administration SR Oelschlaeger, Linda Tonganoxie Finance FR Oetinger, Douglas Hesston Business Administration SR 455 Moore Hall MOORE Otte, Cheryl Moundridge Business Administration FR Padden, Angela Marysville Pre-Pharmacy JR Parker, Kristy Valley Center Political Science SR Paschal, Meredith Luray Musk Education SR Peine, Diane Greeley, Kan. Accounting FR Perry, Lisa Louisburg Elementary Education Peterson, Adam Haysville Chemical Engineering SR Powell, Melissa Coffeyville Business Administration FR Queal, Dennis Pratt Business Administration SO Reissig, Bradford Overland Park Business Administration FR Richards, Lisa Lindsborg Correctional Administration SR Ronning, Jeffrey Overland Park Mechanical Engineering SR Rouse, Holly Topeka Education-History SR Sam son, Karen Leavenworth Management FR Saueressig, Callie Burlington Arts and Sciences FR Shtogren, Julie Sierra Vista, Ariz. Interior Design SO Smith, Janet New Haven, Mo. Accounting Smith, Susan Burlington Chemical Engineering JR Sommeria, Cary Lansing Natural Resources Management Spiegel, Susan Formoso History JR Stark, Briana Newton Arts and Sciences FR Stites, Ross Abilene Electrical Engineering FR Stockman, Pamela Overland Park Early Childhood Education FR Stockton, Amy Garnett Pre-Law FR Suelter, Jeanette Lincoln Arts and Sciences FR Tapia, Tiffany Winfield Apparel and Textile Marketing FR Teetzen, Douglas junction City Journalism and Mass Communications FR Thorson, Lisa Satanta Art JR Umsheid, Lynne St. George Pre-Nursing SO Vandament, Max Downs Accounting FR Vanlandingham, Sue Leawood Landscape Architecture SR Walck, Shane Holcomb Recreation JR Walker, Danette Kansas City, Kan. Business Administration JR Wallace, Darrel Junction City Architectural Engineering FR Wallace, Michael Aurora, Colo. Architectural Engineering FR Ward, Bobbie Lawrence Home Economics Education FR Ward, Derrie Topeka Marketing SR Wasson, Cherie Lenexa Animal Sciences and Industry Weidner, Lynda O ' Fallon, Mo. Apparel and Textile Marketing SR Wickey, Michelle Tonganoxie Apparel and Textile Marketing FR Williams, Debra Hutchinson Interior Design SO 456 Moore Hall putnam hall was named for Irene Putnam, who endowed the Putnam Scholarship Program as a memorial to her late husband, Harry J. Putnam. Putnam closed in 1984 and reopened in 1985 with the RESPECT program — Residents Encouraging: Study, Peaceful Environment, and Community Service. Annis, Douglas Oakley Computer Engineering SO Annis, Thomas Oakley Computer Engineering JR Aye, Donald Allen Arts and Sciences FR Bragg, Tom Omaha, Neb. Animal Sciences and Industry SC) Bruns, Gregory Elmett, Ill. Architecture SR Chrestensen, Terry Topeka Engineering SO Conner, Donald Rock Hill, Mo. Architecture SR Conrad, Chloe Derby Chemical FR Dawes, Michael Union, Mo. Bakery Science and Management SR Dolechek, Diane Hoisington Marketing JR Eberth, Charles Basehor Engineering Technology SR Ermisch, Charles Bonne Terre, Mo. Architecture FR Flinchbaugh, David Manhattan Chemistry FR Haahr, Heather Topeka Physics JR Hadlock, Amy Longton Marketing FR Heady, Kent Erie Physics SR Hsu, Nan Shawnee Mission Apparel and Textile Marketing SR Kopoff, Loren San Diego, Calif. Journalism and Mass Communications FR Lancaster, Sandra God dard Animal Sciences and Industry JR Leep, Jana Wichita Human Ecology Liberal Arts SO Lehner, Brent Canton History SO Leu, Katherine Englewood, Colo. Political Science Mildenberger, Dennis Arvada, Colo. Education FR Miller, Keith Winchester Secondary Education JR Myers, David Abilene Animal Sciences and Industry SO Nolsinger, David Olathe Electrical Engineering FR Pecina, Uzziel Kansas City, Mo. Electrical Engineering SO Pesmark, Daniel Topeka Computer Science JR Pesmark, Ellarie Topeka Arts and Sciences FR Reinhjeimer, Gary Tecumseh Architectural Engineering SR Reynolds, Sue Manhattan Horticulture Therapy SR Royster, Benjamin Overland Park Architecture JR Southerland, Snydee Topeka Industrial Engineering SO Steffes, Jennifer McPherson History SR Strahm, Mark Overland Park Geography SR Tatham, Eirene Olathe Construction Science SR 457 Putnam Hall Taylor, Jill Manhattan Architecture FR Traylor, Ann Regional and Community Planning Traylor, Shad Architecture SR Uhrich, Craig Oakley Nuclear Engineering FR Williams, Deborah Garden City Pre-Veterinary Medicine Wright, William Cookeville, Tenn. Engineering Technology One of the first things in Putnam Hall learned was RESPECT; that is, Encouraging: Study, Peaceful Environment and Community Thinking. RESPECT provided limited visitation in the hall and stringent quiet hours. After Putnam closed in the fall of 1984, it was reopened in the fall of 1985, offering an alternative living environment. Students were required to fill out a request application if they wanted to live in the coed residence hall. The contract stated that students whose lifestyles were not compatible with the predetermined guidelines were encouraged to live in a hall. When the hall opened, it had approximately 70 residents. According to Mike Thoebald, hall director and graduate student in counseling and student development, the number of residents doubled the following year. This year the hall was full with more than 200 residents. RESPECT has been an unequivoca l success, said Rosanne Proite, assistant director of housing and small hall coordinator. The hall is full, and that speaks for the program that is being offered. The success of the program could be partially attributed to students who are pleased with their living arrangement at Putnam. I think it ' s been successful due to the numbers of students in the hall and the interaction between the residents, Thoebald said. Through the RESPECT program in the hall, Proite said students got involved in the hall, school and with each other. And, she said, involvement spelled success. A second-year resident in Putnam, Chuck Eberth, senior in engineering technology, said he chose to live in the hall and be part of RESPECT because, there is a unity here that ' s not found in other halls. He said the hall was small enough that everyone knew each other. Proite said she expected the RESPECT program to Why tamper with something that is working? by Lori Bredow Jennifer Steffes, senior in history, and Michael Crawford, junior in electrical engineering, play hacky sack while Valerie Robbins, freshman in architecture, Dan Treinen, sophomore in architecture, and Ellarie freshman in arts and scie nces, converse in Putnam Hall. Since Putnam had a respect program for being quiet, residents used the lobby to socialize and other loud activities. (Photo by Sarah Bradshaw) 458 Smith Cooperative House was founded in 1959. Irene Putnam donated the land and house to the K-State Endowment Association to be used as a scholarship house named for her brother. It changed to a cooperative house in 1977. O ' Conner, Sean Manhattan Industrial Engineering SO Rice, Tim Neodesha Electrical Engineering SR Scharping, Brian Wichita Mechanical Engineering 1R Schuler, Kirk Nortonville Agriculture Education FR Visser. Jerry Wakefield Engineering FR Webber, Michael Kansas City, Kan. SO Wilson, Russell Atchison Marketing SR Wineinger, William Hollenberg Economics SR Parr, Kellee Director Anderson, Kurt Manhattan Chemical Engineering SO Bacalzo, Rogelio Topeka Computer Science SR Bottorff, John Norfolk, Va. Architecture FR Brooks, Robert Wilson Chemical Engineering Butterfield, Charles El Dorado Mechanical Engineering SR Caudill, John Manhattan Pre-Vetrinary Medicine SR De-Haven, Joel Mucvane Architecture SO Dolezal, Vernon Kanopolis Accounting JR Duffin, Darin Spring Hill Food Science and Management SR Eltze, Mike Hays Electrical Engineering SR Frank, Brian Westmoreland Pre-Vetrinary Medicine SO Graves, Delton Cuba, Kan. Elementary Education SR Hager, Mark Scott City Education FR Hudlin, Jeff Kansas City, Kan. Business Administration SR Hudlin, Randall Kansas City, Kan. Marketing SO Mog, David Wilson Milling Science and Management FR Nugent, John Hays Marketing 459 Smith Scholarship House 460 Smurthwaite A Place By Susan Hilt If you were a female, a student at K-State, and looking for a place to live that offered a family environment, then House would have been the place for you. The Department of Housing listed Smurthwaite as an option for campus housing, but according to Kim Murray, graduate student in speech pathology and director of Smurthwaite, most women interested in the house became aware of it from word of mouth, especially from the alumnae. The girls must have a 2.25 grade point average and file a financial aid packet. When the decision is close between two girls, the girl with the most financial need usually gets accepted, Murray said. Amy Taylor, sophomore in pre-medicine and former president of Smurthwaite, said the house was founded by Extension Homemakers Units in 1960. It was originally started to help out girls who couldn ' t otherwise afford to come to college, Taylor said. Smurthwaite has kind of an informal rush, Murray said. Unlike the sororities ' rush, which is overwhelming and scary, Smurthwaite has less pressure, Murray said. Once the students were accepted into the house, they were given a big sister to help them feel more comfortable making the transition from high school to college. My big sister really helped me, especially during registration. I would have been totally lost without someone to show me what was going on, said Paula Rodell, sophomore in human ecology and Smurthwaite publicity chairman. Smurthwaite had advantages other than the big sister program. The house was designed to provide cost advantages for its members. There was a scholarship for $125 a semester offered by the alumnae to a junior or senior. Plus, living expenses were less than most housing options. It is about $400 per semester cheaper than dorm living because the women help do the work, Murray said. Smurthwaite residents dish up their plates as they move through the self-service food line. Residents helped the food. (Photo by Rob Squires) The work the residents were given consisted of two tasks. One task revolved around meal preparation, and the other required one hour of work each day. The tasks were assigned based on seniority and the students ' Duties were rotated each semester. Everyone ' s expected to do her share. I ' ve gained friendships and the ability to There ' s limited space, but you get used to it. I get along with people more easily now, Rodell said. The house had three floors. The intensive study floor was in the basement and had a noise control policy. The male visitation floor was the main floor. On the top floor, noise was permitted but males were not. If the rules of the floor were violated, residents were asked to move to a different floor. Male visitation was allowed in the living room, dining room, kitchen, on the male visitation floor and throughout the house at specific times. The house was locked at 11 p.m. and the women used a combination lock to get in. According to Murray, Smurthwaite had about a 50 percent return rate each year. Many of the older students moved out of the house because they wanted to get a place of their own. Smurthwaite ' s not for everyone, Murray said. We try to let people know what it ' s about. It ' s a neat opportunity if that ' s what you ' re looking for. Tammy Britt, freshman in microbiology, hands Cindy Ellis, senior in agricultural economics, a glass while food for the house. (Photo by Rob Squires) Smurthwaite Cooperative House was built in honor of Georgiana Smurthwaite, a K-State alumna and active member of the Extension Homemaker ' s Unit. houses 64 women and is located at 1500 N. Manhattan Ave. Berggren, Jan Clifton Business Administration SO Britt, Tammy Wakefield Microbiology FR Curtis, Gina Osage City Animal Sciences and Industry SO Davis, Glenna Abilene Family Life and Human Development FR Ellis, Cindy Florence Journalism and Mass Communications SR Fine, Kimi Fort Scott Arts and Sciences SO Good, Kristen Wichita Chemistry FR Goodman, Melissa Lexington, Ky. Architecture SO Heimlich, Brenda lola Pre-Veterinary Medicine SO Hook, Louise Hutchinson Education History FR Kubicek, Alena El Dorado Mathematics FR Myers, Cindy Clyde Electrical Engineering FR Powell, Anita Condordia Journalism and Mass Communications Rempel, Jennifer Andale Pre-Physical Therapy SO Rodell, Paula Topeka Human Ecology SO Rucker, Kelle Kansas City, Kan. Elementary Education FR Sands, Mary Valley Falls Pre-Veterinary Medicine FR Shuman, Cynthia Manhattan Grain Science FR Sponsel, Teresa Edson Physical Education SO Stutesman, Jennifer Overbrook Secondary Education FR Taylor, Amy Concordia Pre-Medicine SO Wege, Gail Onaga Human Ecology FR Wilson, Stacey Satanta Elementary Education SO Winston, Kristol Clay Center Pre-Veterinary Medicine FR Worthen, Tashia Wathena Business Administration 462 Smurthwaite House west hall was named for Bessie Brooks West, head of the Department of Institutional Management in the College of Home Economics for 28 years. It was built in 1962 as a women ' s residence hall and houses 350 students. Adler, Karla Waunakee, Wis. Public Administration GR Anderson, Sheri Wellington Marketing SO Androes, Tiffany McPherson Education JR Appel Linda Great Bend JR Archer, Veronica Lorraine Accounting SO Ashenfelter, Christine Valley Center Pre-Veterinary Medicine JR Barry, Lisa St. louis, MO Architecture FR Billones, Kimberly Bellevue, Neb. Architectural Engineering Blanka, Sonya Wamego Music Education FR Boudreaux, Nicole Prairie Village Architecture FR Boyle, Sarah Wichita Psychology FR Branch, Lorna Willis Early Childhood Education SR Brenner, Ann Wichita Arts and Sciences FR Broers, Sondra Ottawa Horticultural Therapy Bruce, Christine Kincaid Bunjes, Mellisa Bird C Journalism a nd Mass Communications City Restaurant Management SO Bury, MarIa Bismarck, N.D. Arts and Sciences FR Caldwell, Janelle Ingalls Arts and Sciences FR Carter, Debbie Topeka Art SO Cheng, Shu Bronx, N.Y. Accounting SR Clark, Arleta Barnard Restaurant Management SO Clark, Gelane Barnard Elementary Education SR Clark, Kimberly Salina Mathematics Copple, Kathleen Winfield Secondary Education FR Cornford, Tami Smith Center Business Administration SO Cummings, Ronda McPherson Architectural Engineering SO Debey, Deanell Kirwin Food Science FR Dement, Melonie Centerville, Mo. Architecture FR Durnin, Jill Gering, Neb. Biology JR Durr. Sandra Dodge City Apparel Design FR Ellison, Tracey Coffeyville Pre-Physical Therapy SO Engelking, Diana Fort Riley Business Administration FR Feeney, Robin Ness City Marketing JR Feldkamp, Janell Baileyville Apparel and Textile Marketing FR Fenstermacher, Pamela Marysville Marketing Frey, Dana Topeka Fisheries and Wildlife Biology SO 463 West Hall HALL Garcia, Lisa Conway Springs Chemical Science SO Greathouse, Cindy Garden City Journalism and Mass Communication SR Guthrie, Shelly Hutchinson Elementary Education SR Hammes, Sharon Baileyville Journalism and Mass Communications FR Hammond, Stacey Assaria Political Science SO Hanken, Tonya Hoisington Apparel and Textile Marketing Harrington, Kathi Garnett Elementary Education FR Hedstrom, Tana Lost Springs Apparel and Textile Marketing FR Helm, Michelle Conway Springs Pre-Nursing FR Herrington, Gail Tonganoxie Business Administration SO Hettinger, Linda Valrico, Fla. Elementary Education Hill, Renee Garden Plain Arts and Sciences SO Hinterleitner, Ann Raytown, Mo. Geology Hoffhines, Sona Salina Dietetics FR Hoffman, Nancy Overland Park Marketing IR Hommertzheim, Kami Garden Plain Business Administration SO Honken, Lynn Clarinda, Iowa Business Administration FR Horsch, Michelle Wichita Arts and Sciences FR Hulsman, Leanne Parsons Civil Engineering SO Hunt, Mary Stilwell Elementary Education Hunt, Paige Manhattan Feed Science and Management SC Hurley, Diana Kansas City, Kan. Pre-Veterinary Medicine FR Hutcherson, Suzanne Leavenworth English SO Istas, Jennifer Salina Marketing Jarrett, Rhonda Goodland Elementary Education Jewett, Sarah Colby Mathematics FR Jilka, Ann Assaria Apparel and Textile Marketing FR Johnson, Debby Bird City Pre-Nursing Johnson, Rhonda Ames Business Administration SO Jones, Dawn Plainville Animal and Sciences Industry SO Joyce, Mary Marysville Elementary Education Justice, Wendy Wichita Natural Resources Management SC) Kennedy, Kathleen Wichita Arts and Sciences FR Kitchen, Kathleen Valley Center Pre-Medicine SO Klenda, Debra Lincolnville Pre-Forestry FR Klozenbucher, Marian Greenleaf Music Education SR Koelzer, Jacque Baileyville Elementary Education FR KoIde, Nancy Fort Meyers, Fla. Arts and Sciences FR Kramer, Amy Topeka Special Education FIB Kuhlman, Sarah Olmitz Pre-Medicine Kuntz, Beth Abilene Journalism and Mass Communications FR Lanning, Heather Fallbrook, Calif. Biology JR Lee, Carrie Conway Springs Business Administration SO Lemon, Tia Salina Arts and Sciences FR Liebl, Kristi n Zenda Business Administration FR Link, Susan Marysville Journalism and Mass Communications Mace, Rhonda Junction City Modern Languages SR Macha, Michelle Delia Arts and Sciences FR 464 West Hall Maldonado, Claudia Wichita Industrial Engineering Mani, Rachel Mission Restaurant Management SO Martin, Jennifer Burlingame Business Administration FR Martin, John Tonganoxie Engineering Technology SR Masters, Wendy Merriam Interior Design SO McCoy, Jennifer Dunwoody, Ga. Arts and Sciences McDonald, Dana Meriden Interior Design FR Meehan, Beverly Abilene Apparel and Textile Marketing SO Messenger, Deborah Wellsville Apparel and Textile Marketing Meyers, Shannon Dwight Arts and Sciences SO Moeder, Kathleen Rose Hill Textile Chemistry SO Moherman, Jodi Arvada, Colo. Music Education SO Monahan, Katherine Wichita Business Administration FR Murphy, Martha Mesquite, Texas Electrical Engineering JR Neel, Debra Jamestown Biochemistry SO Nuspl, Juli Wheeling, Ill. Architecture FR Orth, Cynthia St. Francis Management SO Ostmeyer, Jolene Garden City Elementary Education JR Ostmeyer, Laura Garden City Art SO Page, Lorelei Manhattan Chemical Engineering FR Parnell, Angela Rossville Mathematics FR Pederson, Carlita Horton Education-Music SR Porter, Heather Woodbridge, Va. Mechanical Engineering SO Purduski, Jeanne Kansas City, Kan. Engineering FR Riblett, Laura Salina Electrical Engineering SO WEST HALL Robben, Julie Grinnell Arts and Sciences FR Rome, Christine Overland Park Dance SO Rowh, Jodi Cimarron Pre-Veterinary Medicine SO Ruder, Michelle Dodge City Accounting SR Russell, Kenda Overland Park Business Administration Russell, Renee Abilene Elementary Education FR Sammons, Stephanie Paola Journalism and Mass Communications FR Sauer, Karen Manhattan Agronomy SO Seetin, Suzanne Perry Business Administration Shepherd, Dawn Burlingame Business Administration FR Shoup, Beth Hutchinson Electrical Engineering SO Siemens, Amber Shawnee Pre-Medicine FR Simmons, Heather Omaha, Neb. Pre-Veterinary Medicine FR Sloan, Cheryl Mullinville Accounting Smith, Cheryl Winfield Social Work Smith, Deana Leavenworth Psychology FR Specht, Anita lola Chemistry SR Splichal, Lisa Munden Pre-Veterinary Medicine FR Stouffer, Tammy Salina Business Administration SO Sudbeck, Glenda Seneca Accounting SO Sunderhuse, Kathy Wamego Home Economics Education SO Swanson, Kimberly Englewood, Colo. Architecture FR Sweazy, Stacy Bird City Journalism and Mass Communications SO Swisher, Cindy Beloit Business Administration FR Tally, Marlene Oberlin Agricultural Economics FR ARMED AND READY. With water balloons in hurling position and goggles in place, members of the Haymaker West bed race team cruise down Mid-Campus Drive during the Spring Fling Bed Race. (Photo by Andy Nelson) 466 West Hall Taton, Tamara Conway Springs Apparel and Textile Marketing FR Teghtmeyer, Lori Council Grove Pre-Veterinary Medicine SO Thoma, Cheryl Edgerton, Wis. Horticultural Therapy SR Trabert, Tammy Dodge City Elementary Education Truby, Michelle Salina Apparel and Textile Marketing SO Turner, Jill Marysville Political Science FR Ukens, Lyndra Concordia Elementary Education SR Unruh, Jill Newton Architecture FR Valdivia, Rose Grantville Psychology FR Vaughn, Brenda Overland Park Marketing SR Vodraska, Karen Wilson Life Science SO Voss, Leanne Siloam Springs, Ark. Food Science SO Waller, Tina Garden City Business Administration Walz, Laura Ellis Animal Sciences and Industry FR Watson, Joyce Shawnee Elementary Education 1R West, Kimberly Eureka Political Science FR Westerfield, Paula Strong City Fisheries and Wildlife Biology FR White, Tara Salina Special Education Wiederholt, Sandra Princeton Arts and Sciences FR Wilson, Dawn Beloit Family Life and Human Development SR Wittman, Dolly Bazine Radio-Television FR Wriedt, Cynthia Chilli cothe, Mo. Architecture FR Wright, Cassie Topeka Social Work FR Wunder, Anita Valley Falls Elementary Education SO Ziegler, Susan Kingman Biology FR 467 West Hall Kirk Fromm, senior in interior architecture, finishes a paper on the kitchen table of his apartment that he shares with Paris. The light fixture, like others in the apartment, were designed by Fromm. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) and disadvantages could be found to each living style associated with college life. Each student had to weigh the pros and cons before choosing his or her new home as each year began. For students who chose not to become involved in greek life, there were basically two choices: apartments or residence halls. For many students the question was, which is more important, money or privacy? Before I decided to live in an apartment, I thought I had worked out a budget so the cost would be about the same as the dorm, Tom Antonopoulos, junior in finance and said. But now I can see it is definitely mo re expensive. As a sophomore, Antonopoulos lived on campus and was president of Moore Hall. His junior year, he decided apartment living would be less confining and something new to try. Although Antonopoulos enjoyed off campus living, there were some aspects of dorm life he missed. 468 Apartment vs. Dorm Living live? By Gidget Kuntz I miss having close contact with people, Antonopoulos said. Also you seem to be less informed about what is going on. Some students graduated from K-State without ever having stepped into a residence hall except to visit. Wanda Jackson, senior in consumer affairs, was one such student. When I transferred to K-State as a junior, I didn ' t want to live in the halls. I thought it would be more of a hindrance than anything else, especially since I had lived in an before I transferred, she said. Since I knew a lot of people (at K-State), I didn ' t have to worry about making a lot of new friends. Through many of her classes, Jackson was able to get involved in many organizations on campus. Having a job off campus also gave her a chance to become involved within the community. If I missed out on anything in college life, I guess I don ' t know about it. Although if I would have come here as a freshman and lived in an apartment, I might have, Jackson said. Some students had a taste of off campus in the summer and chose to return to the residence halls in the fall. Dawn Wilson, senior in human development and family studies, gave up apartment life to return to the dorm. The main reason I decided to stay on campus was the people, Wilson said. It ' s a great way to get to know people on campus. But, off campus also had its attributes. Distraction is one thing I didn ' t have a with living off campus. Living in the dorm, people and noises make it difficult for me to study, Wilson said. Thomas Frith, director of the Department of Housing, said in an overall view of campus people living off campus tended to have lower grade point averages than those living on campus. After comparing the grades she received while living off campus to those she received while living on campus, Wilson said they were about the same. Money, privacy, involvement, good grades. No one living arrangement could provide Each student had to pay the price to live the way he or she chose. Tim Paris, senior in English, practices his oboe in the living room of the apartment he shares with two roommates. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) Anne Hutzenbuhler, freshman in journalism and mass communications, studies in her three-person room in Boyd Hall. Two- to four-person rooms were arranged in Boyd; therefore, beds were stacked to make more room. (Photo by Sarah Bradshaw) off campus was an alternative living group to greek or dorm life. Many students chose to live off campus after their freshman year or their years in a fraternity or sorority were finished. Abercrombie, Debra Manhattan Interior Architecture SR Adams, Kimbra Manhattan Agricultural Economics SR Adams, Rhonda Shawnee Elementary Education SR Adelhardt, Donna Nashville, Kan. journalism and Mass Communications SR Agee, Carrie Overland Park Family Life and Human Development SR Ahlstedt, Angela Lindsborg Finance SR Alexander, David Burton Engineering Technology SR Allen, Michael Shawnee Elementary Education SR Allison, Angela Junction City Accounting SO Allison, David Junction City Education-Biological Science SR Alstatt, Marci McPherson Secondary Education JR Altwegg, Elizabeth junction City Animal Sciences and Industry SR Ames, Rikann Long Island, Kan. Elementary Education Amess, David Abilene Business Administration Amon, Robin Manhattan Accounting JR Anderson, Nels Carbondale Mechanical Engineering SR Anderson, Scott Norcatur Animal Sciences and Industry SR Anderson, Tracy Burlingame Architecture SR Anliker, Marvin Gridley Agricultural Economics SR Annan, Beverly Onaga Apparel and Textile Marketing Annan, Maria Onaga Social Work SR Appl, Cory Leoti Education-History SR Argiris, George Lenexa Business Administration SR Armbrust, Cheri Manhattan Elementary Education SR Arnold, Deena Holton Accounting Arnoldy, Jill Tipton Agricultural Economics SR Arnoldy, Renee Tipton Electrical Engineering JR Arnoldy, Sandra Tipton Arts and Sciences SO Arunachalam, Meyyappan India Industrial Engineering GR Asbury, William Manhattan Dietetics and Institutional Management GR Austin, Julie Overland Park Early Childhood Education SR Awad, Jihad Palestine Architecture GR Aycock, Basil Levittown, Pa. Social Sciences SR Aydogan, Serdar Manhattan Industrial Engineering SR Baalman, Gregory Rexford Civil Engineering JR Babcock, Donna Abilene Special Education SR 470 Badley, Beth Delphos Business Administration SO Baerg, David Manhattan Industrial Engineering JR Bahner, Brent Topeka Accounting SR Bahr, Randy Eureka Psychology SO Baier, Carolyn Hope Education-English Bailey, Scott Netawaka Finance SR Baker, Linda Alta Vista Elementary Education SR Baker, Marty Caldwell Milling Science and Management SR Baker, Michael Marienthal Business Administration GR Baker, Paul Manhattan Architectural Engineering SR Baker, Sondra Topeka Modern Languages SO Baldwin, Julie Manhattan Architectural Engineering SO Bales, Gregory Yates Center Journalism and Mass Communications SR Bamman Marc Kirkwood, Physical Education JR Bandel, Mike St. Francis Agriculture Education Banister, Robert Topeka Civil Engineering Barlow, Steve Salina Food Science and Industry SR Barnes, Travis Towner, Colo. Mechanical Engineerng GR Barnett, Larry Sedan Secondary Education JR Barolak, Michael Creve Coeur, Mo. Interior Architecture JR Barrett, James Manhattan Agriculture Education JR Barrett, Melissa K. Parker Sociology SR Barrett, Melissa M. Manhattan Animal Sciences and Industry SR Barrier, Carla El Dorado Mechanical Engineering SR Bartelli, Lisa Olathe Marketing JR Barth, Robert Manhattan Leisure Studies FR Barton, Stephanie Manhattan Milling Science and Management SR Bauer, Eric Hebron, Neb. Civil Engineering Bauer, Meg Clay Center Secondary Education SR Baugher, Darin Manhattan Civil Engineering JR Beard, Lisa Independence, Kan. Journalism and Mass Communications Beck, Karen Greensburg Home Economics Education SR Beck, Kevin Great Bend Finance SO Bednarz, Edward Wells Education-Political Science SR Beecher, Brad Ellis Chemical Engineering SR Beethe, Lisa Marysville Accounting SR Behrends, Janelle Jewell Social Work SR Beightel, Gail Holton Ag ricultural Economics JR Beisel, Stacey Salina Psychology SO Belcher, Daniel St. Louis, Mo. Architecture SO Belden, Phil Leavenworth Business Administration SO Bell, Julie Beloit Apparel and Textile Marketing SR Belongia, Dwayne Manhattan Biochemistry SR Bemis, Angie Haven Accounting SR Bennett, Edwin Lenexa Electrical Engineering SR Bennett, John Chicago, Ill. Management Benninga, Carmen Clay Center Education-Music JR Berg, Joanna Blaine Agriculture Education 471 OFF CAMPUS Berg, Scott Topeka Biology SO Berger, Jeff Halstead Business Administration SO Bermudez, Damaso Puerto Rico Electrical Engineering SR Bernard, Rebecca Bonner Springs Elementary Education SR Bernd, Lorie Windom Journalism and Mass Communications SO Bernhardt, Jeff Arkansas City Business Administration Berry, Vincent Rossville Finance SR Bettenbrock, Cheryl Geneseo Electrical Engineering SR Bettenbrock, Joyce Geneseo Business Administration SO Bettencourt, Sandy Havensville Accounting SO Bevitt, Laura Wamego Human Ecology and Mass Comm. SO Bickhaus, Timothy Macon, Mo. Arts and Sciences Bielser, Jefrey Norton Journalism and Mass Communication SR Biggs, Debbie Overland Park Marketing SR Billam, Dale Bartlesville, Okla. Finance JR Bird, John Atchison Electrical Engineering SR Birtell, Randall Scranton Secondary Education SR Bisping, Todd Linn Engineering JR Blahnik, Karen Kansas City, Mo. Political Science SO Blain, Carla Goodland Finance Blake, James St. George Journalism and Mass Communication SR Blake, Sylvia Manhattan Business Administration SR Blanchett, Cynthia Dodge City Education-Music FR Blazek, Sue Munden Pre-Physical Therapy Blixt, Tamra Chapman Accounting SR Blodgett, Paul Manhattan Milling Science and Management Blomquist, John Overland Park Business Administration JR Blume, Amy Wamego Correctional Administration Blythe, Susan White City Elementary Education SR Boardman, John Eureka Computer Engineering SO Bohling, Cindy Byron Pre-Veterinary Medicine SO Bolewski, Richard Leavenworth Electrical Engineering SR Booher, Andrea Fort Morgan, Colo Psychology SR Boos, Anne Atchison Speech Pathology and Audiology SR Boothe, Shea Wichita Apparel and Textile Marketing Borgen, Brian Lyons Management SR Borgen, Mary Lyons Accounting SR Borst, Jonell Manhattan Food and Nutrition-Exercise Science FR Bosch, Elise Salina Apparel Design JR Mary Salina Psychology JR Boswell, Gina Onaga Accounting JR Bosworth, Deborah Overland Park Early Childhood Education JR Bothwell, Shelly Superior, Neb. Speech Pathology andAudiology SR Paul Norway Business Administration Boyd, Kristen Bellevue, Neb. Landscape Architecture Boyd, Thomas Junction City Social Sciences SR Boyd, Todd Manhattan Business Administration SO Braddock, Antonio Milwaukee, Wis. Information Systems SR 472 Off Campus Brands, Glenn Long Island, Kan. Feed Science and Management SR Brandyberry, Steve Hill City Animal Sciences and Industry SR Brauer, Lanette Kansas City, Kan. Speech Pathology and Audiology SR Braun, John Victoria Mechanical Engineering SR Brazukas, Michelle DeSoto Industrial Engineering SR Brecht, Vicki Mound Valley Finance SO Bressler, Reid Elkhart Agricultural Economics SR Briggs, Wanda Fort Riley Information Systems SR Briney, Dianna Manhattan Business Administration FR Briney, Michael Manhattan Accounting SR Brixey, Jeffery Manhattan Animal Sciences and Industry JR Brooks, Mary Ann Frontenac Pre-Law Broughton, Todd Minneapolis, Kan. History Brown, Candace Kansas City, Kan, Marketing SR Brown, Debbie Ord, Neb. Family Life and Human Development Brown, Julie Salina Accounting SR Brown, Karen New York, N.Y. Restaurant Management SR Brown, Mark Barnum, Iowa Animal Sciences and Industry SR Browning, Lee Paola Pre-Optometry Broxterman, Kenneth Manhattan Business Administration FR Bruce, Leah Beverly Elementary Education SO Bruce, Susan Milan Apparel and Textile Marketing SR Bruckerhoff, Sherri Manhattan Pre-Law FR Brumley, Barclay Manhattan Curriculum and Instruction GR MUD BATH. Tom Hanes, junior in a break in the KSU Foundation ' s fisheries and wildlife biology, relaxes Oozeball tournament. (Photo by while soaking in the mud during Gary Lytle) 473 Off Campus ofF CAMPUS Brummer, Stephen Concordia Architecture JR Bruna, Brian Hanover Accounting JR Bruna, Jeff Hanover Agricultural Economics SR Brungardt, Darin Minneapolis, Kan. Finance SR Buchanan, Joann Lamed Electrical Engineering SR Buchanan, Karen Manhattan Human Ecology Liberal Arts SR Buckle, Kathy Williamsburg Microbiology SR Buerk, Leslie Wood River Architecture SR Buffalow, Michael Arlington Architecture SR Buhrman, Traci Ozawkie Family Life and Human Development SO Bukowsky, Jayne Shawnee Apparel and Textile Marketing SO Burris, Kenneth Cherryvale Finance SR Burton, Sheryl DeSolo Mechanical Engineering SR Buseman, Deloss Riley Architecture Butcher, Dennis Dalton, Ohio Mathematics SR Butler, Ann Manhattan Economics FR Butler, Brian Manhattan Electrical Engineering JR Butler, Susan Valentine, Neb. Interior Design SR Butler, Teresa Junction City Business Administration SR Butwinsky, Kelly St. George Geography SR Bysel, Lorie Shawnee Business Administration FR Caguin, Ana St. Peters, Mo. Interior Architecture SR Caldwell, Alec Lyons Accounting JR Caldwell, Joan Ingalls Education SR Camerlinck, Bryan Leonardville Accounting JR Camp, Frances Manhattan Accounting Caraway, Kirk Lansing Political Science SR Carl, Lisa Kansas City, Kan. Business Administration SO Carlgren, Tammy Concordia Journalism and Mass Communications SR Carlson, Christine Manhattan Human Ecology FR Carlson, Michelle Clay Center Elementary Education SO Carr, Bonnie Wamego Social Work Carr, Todd Ellinwood Finance Carr, Trent Liberal Architecture SR Cartwright, Jeffrey Augusta Civil Engineering SO Cartwright, Matt Augusta Architecture FR Carver, Greg Augusta Agriculture Education SR Case, Shan Wakefield Foods and Nutrition Casper, Lonny Wamego Arts and Sciences SO Casper, Tina Wamego Business Administration FR Castro, Jose Venezuela Industrial Engineering SR Cater, Paul Topeka Civil Engineering SR Catlin, Melissa Sedan Business Administration FR Caudillo, Cathy Wichita Interior Design SR Chalk, Jennifer Shawnee Horticulture SR Chandler, Karla Almena Dietetics SR Charland, Michael Junction City Elementary Education SR Chartier, Karen Clyde Physical Education SR 474 Chee, Kim Malaysia Computer Science SO Chehab, Hicham Manhattan Computer Science SR Chou, Maggie Manhattan English FR Chou, Song-Tien Manhattan Statistics GR Churchman, Kristine Roeland Park Interior Design SR Cisper, Marti Lenexa Secondary Education Claassen, Scott Potwin Agriculture SR Clark, James Liberal Agricultural Mechanization SR Clark, Linda Fort Riley Elementary Education SR Clark, Margaret Clay Center Pre-Medicine FR Clark, Mark Hutchinson Construction Science SR Clark, Mary Hutchinson Elementary Education Clark, Michelle St. George Elementary Education SO Clark, Natalie St. John Secondary Education SR Clark, Shari Marysville Education SR Clark, Tammy Manhattan Microbiology Clarke, Timothy Hutchinson Human Ecology and Mass Comm SR Clarkson, Susan Rosalia Education- Social Science SO Clasen, Robert Topeka Journalism and Mass Communications SR Claussen, Tammy Gypsum Accounting Clawson, Mary Satanta Elementary Education Clay, Daisy Onaga Apparel and Textile Marketing Clincy, Simmie Salina Interior Design SR Cluck, Rhonda Wathena Marketing Coats, Joan Manhattan Elementary Education Cobler, Scott Topeka Finance SR Cochran, Paula Manhattan Information Systems SR Coello, Oscar Manhattan Agronomy SR Coffelt, Scott Topeka Marketing SR Cogswell, Shea Manhattan Biology Cohorst, Lois Marysville Elementary Education SR Colbert, Leslie Olathe Elementary Education Colen, Jennifer Manhattan Education SO Colle, John Sterling Animal Sciences and Industry SR Collins, Stacy LaCygne Business Administration SR Collins, Steven Colorado Springs, Colo. Pre-Veterinary Medicine SO Colwell, Richard Hill City Electrical Engineering FR Combes, Douglas Wakarusa Construction Science SR Constable, Farren Blue Rapids Electrical Engineering Constable, Shelly Blue Rapids Elementary Education SR Cook, Cynthia Overland Park Computer Science SR Cook, Joseph Manhattan Fine Arts Coon, Krista Wamego Apparel and Textile Marketing FR Cooper, Amy Manhattan Accounting SR Cooper, Elizabeth Warrensburg, Mo. Apparel Design Cooper, Karen Salina Foods and Nutrition SR Coover, Clinton Ashland Architecture FR Cordell, Curtis Havensville Animal Sciences and Industry SR 475 OFF CAMPUS CotteriII, Paul Cherryvale Pre-Veterinary Medicine SR Counts, Jacqueline Russell Social Work SR Covell, Kamin Shawnee Interior Design SO Covert, Stephen McPherson Agricultural Mechanization SR Covington, Greg Overland Park Construction Science Covington, Jeffrey Almena Physical Education SR Cowan-Rundus, Elizabeth Manhattan Marketing SO Craft, Jamie Kinsley Marketing Cragh ead, Kent Jetmore Mathematics SR Craig, Eva Overland Park Radio-Television JR Crawford, Gregory Kansas City, Kan. Fine Arts SR Crawshaw, Joe Clay Center Management SR Crotchett, Gregory Wichita Horticulture Crowder, Darin Topeka Architectural Engineering SO Cummings, Mike St. Marys Journalism and Mass Communications Curran, Joseph Girard Agriculture Education JR Curry, Carl Liberal Mechanical Engineering SR Curtis, Cynthia Over land Park Health SR Curtis, Keith Overland Park Sociology SR Dabbas, Anwar Manhattan Political Science SR Daetwiler, Kirby Wichita Correctional Administration SR Dahl, Derrick Topeka Agricultural Economics SR Dale, Susan Manhattan Dance SR Dalley, Stan Manhattan Architecture SO Dame, Diana McPherson Architecture SR Dandurand, Doug Hutchinson Business Administration SR Daniels, Eddie Manhattan Microbiology CR Daniels, Judith Manhattan Family Life and Human Development G R Daniels, Shannon Manhattan Political Science SR Danner, Becky Abilene Elementary Education SR PEOPLE WASH. Members of the Mudslingers Oozeball team use a car wash to blast away the mud they accumulated during a game. (Photo by Sarah Bradshaw) 476 Off Campus Daub, Sheila St. Louis, Mo. Architecture JR Davidson, Tammy McPherson Elementary Education SR Davies, Jennifer Marion Secondary Education SR Davis, Jack Rantoul Pre-Veterinary Medicine Davis, Randall Louisberg Agronomy SO Davis, Shalene Hesston Human Ecology and Mass Comm. Davis, Susan Hill City Restaurnat Management SR Day, Carmen Council Grove Journalism and Mass Communications SO Day, Cynthia Lincoln Accounting SR Day, Nancy Dodge City Apparel and Textile Marketing SR Day, Robin El Dorado Marketing SR Dean, Timothy Perry Secondary Education SR Deatrick, Stephanie Hutchinson Music Education SR Decker, Jeffrey Salina Business Administration Deckert, AIysun Salina Food and Nutrition-Exercise Science SR Deckert, Karen Manhattan Horticulture SR Deibler-Vrbas, Lisa Manhattan Accounting SR Deines, Shelly Ozawkie Marketing SO Delbane, Denise Manhattan Elementary Education SO Demel, Karen Hoisington Architectural Engineering SR Demel, Kelly Hoisington Construction Science JR Annette Clyde Pre-Pharmacy JR Denham, Sheri Shawnee Business Administration FR Denk, Candy Agenda Elementary Education SR Denner, Tony Eureka Engineering Technology FR Dennis, Janelle Plevna Marketing SR Desch, Patrick Topeka Apparel and Textile Marketing JR Yvonne Manhattan Microbiology JR Deters, Steve Topeka Agronomy SR Deweese, Carol Americus Nuclear Engineering JR Deyong, Dirk Webster, Mo. Political Science SR Dick, Robert Hutchinson Accounting SR Dickens, Leandra Kansas City, Kan. Apparel and Textile Marketing SR Dickinson, Deb Chapman Accounting SO Diederich, Kimberly Colby Management JR Dieker, Delaine Manhattan Elementary Education SO Dillon, James Hope Agricultural Economics SR Disberger, David Manhattan Mechanical Engineering JR Disberger, Robert Manhattan Finance SO Disberger, Russell Manhattan Finance SR Disinger, Tina Barnes Industrial Engineering SO Ditton, Regina New Milford, N.Y. Pre-Veterinary Medicine Dodds, Susan Onaga Special Education GR Doe, Judy Manhattan Computer Science SR Doll, Debora Chase Secondary Education JR Domann, Angela Atchison Art SO Domann, Susan El Dorado Marketing SR Domnick, Linda Harper Physical Education SR 477 Off Campus Donnert, David Manhattan Business Administration SO Dorsch, Jennifer Bird City Agricultural Journalism JR Dorsch, Shawn Enterprise Journalism and Mass Communications SR Douglas, Dennis Topeka Architecture SO Doyen, Angela Concordia Marketing SR Dubrovin, Barbara Burlington Mechanical Engineering SR Duell, Susan Marysville Music GR Duff, Jeff Manhattan Physical Education FR Dunbar, Diana Geuda Springs Finance SR Dunklee, Kelly Topeka Secondary Education Dunlap, Michelle Manhattan Anthropology SR Dunlap, Pamela Manhattan Architectural Engineering SR Dunn, julie Wichita Life Sciences SR Durand, Jeff Kincaid Agriculture Education Durar, Abdulrazag Manhattan Agronomy Durst, Kristine Moundridge Art SR Eastman, Debra Garden City Accounting SR Eastman, JilIinda Coffeyville Food Science SR Eastman, Toni Eskridge Pre-Veterinary Medicine SR Eck, Shari Tipton Industrial Engineering SR Eckhoff, Cindi Manhattan Business Administration FR Ediger, James McPherson Modern Languages Ediger, Janet McPherson Family Life and Human Development SR Edmiston, Kenneth Junction City Education-Adult GR Edwards, Tracey Overland Park Business Administration JR Eggleston, Rick Mulvane Landscape Architecture SR Egidy, Antonio Greeley Electrical Engineering FR Ehlers, Jeffery Caldwell Fisheries and Wildlife Biology JR Eichman, Loretta Westmoreland Business Administration JR Eilert, Scott Beloit Animal Sciences and Industry JR Elgin, Cary Burlingame Bakery Science and Management SR Elkins-Bence, Anita St. George Horticulture SR Ellenz, John Tipton Mechanical Engineering SR Elliott, Janet Bendena Marketing JR Elliott, Kirk Delia Business Administration SO Elliott, Val Milford Health and Physical Education SR Engel, Sharon Shawnee Finance JR Engelken, Lance Seneca Electrical Engineering SR Engemann, Michelle Wathena Agricultural Journalism SR Engler, Charlene Deerfield Horticulture Therapy SR Enns, Doug Hesston Mechanical Engineering SR Erdman, David Maize Marketing SR Eshbaugh, Jeffrey Overland Park Electrical Engineering French SR Ewing, Michael Oklahoma City, Okla. Food Science and Industry SR Ewing, Scott Topeka Construction Science FR Fabrizius, Martin Hutchinson Biochemistry SR Farr, Heather Topeka Elementary Education JR Fedde, Bruce Manhattan Animal Sciences and Industry JR OFF CAMPUS 478 Off Campus Felts, Christopher Wichita Electrical Engineering SR Fessenden, Craig Manhattan Accounting SR Fewell, Ramon Manhattan Architectural Engineering JR Feyerharm, Elizabeth Manhattan Music Education Fibelkorn, Kimberly Manhattan Music Education SR Fibelkorn, Paul Manhattan Music Education Fiegel, Angela Goodland Accounting Fiegenschuh, Ronald Sidney, Neb. Architecture SR Filby, Matthew Wichita Fine, Arts Finegold, Brian Leawood Radio-Televison SR Firestone, David lola Management SR Fisher, Danny Manhattan Accounting Fisher, Pamela St. John Accounting SR Fite, Lori Manchester, Mo. Interior Architecture SR Fladung, Diane Louisburg Dietetics SO Fleming, Leeann Manhattan English GR Fleming Marche Junction City Physical Education SR Fleming, Rex Leroy Civil Engineering SR Fleming Ronald Ogden Agricultural Economics SR Flickinger Neal Pretty Prairie Mechanical Engineering Flickinger Richard San Antonio Texas Horticulture Therapy SR Folk Scott Holton Business Administration SO Forbes, Jennifer Waldo Business Administration SR Forge, Dale Manhattan Agronomy SR Forrest, Kimberly Larned Accounting SR Fort, Devrin Manhattan Art SO Foster, Marcus Manhattan Education Foster, Mary Topeka Marketing Foster, Matthew Manhattan Construction Science SR Foster, Susan Holton Business Administration SR Fountain, Dawn Sterling Music Education SR Fowler, George Cimarron Business Administration Francis, Heidi Manhattan Education-Modern Languages SR Francka, Tammy Strong City Dance SR Franke, Andrew Manchester, Mo. Landscape Architecture SR Franz, Monica Manhattan Sociology SR Freitag, Kelly Victoria Pre-Veterinary Medicine French, Kamela Sublette Pre-Veterinary Medicine Frerking, Ted Whitewater Restaurant Management SO Friesen, Kenlee Manhattan Biology SR Fritch, Jeffery Centralia Business Administration Fritsch, Becky Belleville, Ill. Chemical Engineering SR Fritzier, William Benton Physical Education Frohardt, Mark Shawnee Electrical Engineering JR Frohberg, David Waterville Engineering SR Fromm, Kirk Shawnee Interior Architecture SR Fry, Phillip Hamilton Electrical Engineering Funk, Lonnie Manhattan Agriculture Education SR 479 Off Campus OFF CAMPUS Gareis, Donna Manhattan Finance ER Gareis, Cathy Manhattan Accounting JR Garman, Colleen Burr Oak Business Administration Garner, James Highland Agricultural Economics SR Geeseman, Rebecca Manhattan Pre-Physical Therapy SO George, Dee Olathe Landscape Architecture SR George, Dee Ann Natoma Accounting Gerdes, Judi Overland Park Apparel Design Gianakon, Thomas Hutchinson Nuclear Engineering GR Gieber, Mark Belleville Marketing SR Gieber, Ron Concordia Accounting Giefer, Bernard Manhattan Chemical Engineering GR Gabel, Ursula Overland Park Journalism and Mass Communications SR Gaffey, Kimberly Lawrence Home Economics Education SO Gaither, Janet White City Elementary Education SO Galbreath, Elizabeth Claremont, Calif. Consumer Affairs SR Gallagher, Scott Concordia Electrical Engineering JR Gardner, Scott Hutchinson Industrial Engineering SR Gier, Donna Marysville Social Work SR Gilbert, Sonia Clay Center Apparel and Textile Marketing SO Gile, David Lincoln Electrical Engineering SR Gill, Jill Atchison Apparel and Textile Marketing SR Girard, Sandra Manhattan Business Administration FR Gleason, Jeanne Leawood Social Work SR Glenn, Jenny Wichita Marketing SR Glenn, John Sawyer Construction Science SR Glover, Bradley Peabody Management Gobel, Alice Manhattan Accounting SR Goedecke, Susan Manhattan Pre-Pharmacy JR Goering, Leslie McPherson Dietetics SR Goetsch, Susan Brewster Food Science Golladay, Susan Beloit Accounting JR Gomez, Mary Chase Journalism and Mass Communications JR Gonzalez, Veronica Newton Pre-Physical Therapy Goodwyn, Michael Manhattan Art JR Gorman, Lori La Cygne Management SR Graber, Julie Pretty Prairie Management JR Graham, Danielle Lyons Apparel and Textile Marketing SR Graham, Kim Osawatomie Management JR Graham, Richard Great Bend Computer Science SR Grauerholz, Christina Kensington Elementary Education JR Gray, Nena Overland Park Information Systems SR Green, Brandon Kiowa Correctional Administration SO Green, Robert Hutchinson Construction Science SR Greer, Kimberly Independence Journalism and Mass Communications SR Griffin, Heather Wichita Business Administration JR Griffin, Nancy Cottonwood Falls Marketing SR Griffin, Susan Frankfort Accounting SR 480 Off Campus Grisham, Rodger Shawnee Industrial Engineering SR Grosfield, Paula Hiawatha Restaurant Management Grossarth, Malinda El Dorado Music Education FR Grosse, Frank Concordia Agriculture Education JR Grove, Joseph Reserve Mechanical Engineering SO Guenther, Lawrence Paola Milling Science and Management SR Gulley, Rose Junction City Social Science SR Gurley, Alton Manhattan Public Administration GR Gurley, Edna Manhattan Public Administration GR Gurley, Marie Coffeyville Psychology FR Gustafson, Jill Manhattan Math FR Guthrie, Martin Jetmore Feed Science and Management JR Haberer, Keri Russell Agriculture Education SR Habiger, Julie Spearville Finance Hachmeister, Diane Lenora Accounting JR Hadidi, Cosima West Germany Psychology SO Hadjipanayis, Paraskevi Manhattan Education-Modern Languages SR Hafar, Linda Manhattan Engineering Technology SR Hagen, John Hillsboro Mechanical Engineering SR Hagen, Karl Manhattan Electrical Engineering FR Haggard, Burden Agricultural Economics SR Haggard, Jay Burden Education-History Hagman, Kayla Kensington Microbiology SR Hagman, Tamra Kensington Family Life and Human Development SO Haist, Thomas Manhattan Accounting SR Hale, Nita Fort Riley Accounting SO Haley, Monika Soloman Apparel and Textile Marketing JR Hamel, Zachary Clyde Marketing SR Hamilton, John St. Louis, Mo. Interior Design SR Hamm, Sharon Tampa Dietetics SR Hammeke, Loreen Manhattan Apparel Design SR Hammeke, Susan Manhattan Life Sciences SR Hammes, Allen Seneca Business Administration SR Hammes, Bradley Baileyville Electrical Engineering JR Hammond, Denise Clay Center Elementary Education SR Hammond, Mervyn Junction City Secondary Education SR Hampton, Douglas Yorba Linda, Calif. Business Administration JR Hampton, Valerie Cherokee Accounting JR Haney, Robin Carlton Marketing SR Hanger, Janice Manhattan Geology SR Hansen, Shon Manhattan Business Administration SO Hanson, Bill Lindsborg Business Administration SO Hanson, Deirdre Overland Park Pre-Veterinary Medicine SO Hapner, Thomas Junction City Social Work SO Harbers, Galen Almena Agronomy SR Haresnape, Amy Lebanon, Kan. Human Ecology JR Harlow, Rita Apparel and Textile Marketing SO Harms, Lonnie Whitewater Animal Science and Industry 481 Off Campus OFF CAMPUS Harold, Lori Manhattan Finance SR Harold, Rhonda Manhattan Psychology SR Harris, Jane San Diego, Calif. Pre-Veterinary Medicine SR Harshbarger, Lynda Wamego Physical Education SO Hart, Carl Oskaloosa Finance SR Hart, Russell Oskaloosa Secondary Education JR Hart, Shelly Hutchinson Family Life and Human Developement SR Harter, Mark Hoyt Agriculture Education Hartman, Michele Atwood Natural Resources Management Hartzell, Dan Erie Mechanical Engineering SR Hash, Tina Manhattan Pre-Optometry SR Hass, James Manhattan Finance SR Hatchett, Sabra Manhattan Apparel and Textile Marketing SR Hattrup, Deanna Kinsley Radio-Television SR Hattrup, Michelle Kinsley Accounting JR Hauck, Dianna Sabetha Electrical Engineering FR Haufler, Della Burlingame Pm-Nursing JR Haug, William Topeka Arts and Sciences SO Hauser, Paula Weskan Journalism and Mass Communications JR Haut, Kendra Lake Quivira Secondary Education SR Havel, Monte Manhattan Accounting SR Hawari, Hisham Jordan Electrical Engineering SR Hawkins, Lydee Great Bend Elementary Education SR Hawley, Tammy Dodge City Accounting JR Hayes, Brenda Little River Accounting SO Hayes, Don Manhattan Accounting FR Headrick, Gary Liberal Agronomy SR Heathman, Gary Lenexa Accounting SR Heckman, Hugh Easton, Pa. Architecture SR Hedrick, Debbie Manhattan Secondary Education SO Hedrick, Nancy Manhattan Biology SR Heflin, Ruth Pratt English Heger, Martin Wichita Computer Science GR Heigele, Alan Longford Agricultural Economics JR Heinerikson, Jennifer Osawatomie Retail Floriculture Heise, James Scranton Electrical Engineering GR Heitmeyer, Richard S hawnee Mechanical Engineering SR Helling, Brett Scottsbluff, Neb. Psychology SR Helmke, Carrie Wichita Industrial Engineering SR Helus, Ron Ellsworth Marketing JR Hemmen, Dan Colwich Marketing SR Hemphill, Amy Manhattan Music Education SR Hendrickson, Stephen Kansas City, Kan. Agronomy JR Henn, William El Dorado Engineer ing Technology SR Hennesy, Sheryl Manhattan Veterinary Medicine GR Hennesy, Stephen Manhattan Animal Sciences and Industry SR Henriksen, Darci Formoso Home Economics Education Henry, Karol Moran Education-Business SR 482 Off Campus Henry, Shari St. John Secondary Education SR Henshaw, Robin Kansas City, Kan. Marketing SR Herbel, Kevin Tampa Agricultural Economics SR Herdman, Michelle Kansas City, Kan. Accounting JR Herman, Michelle Atchison Bakery Science and Management JR Herrera, Thomas Garden City Regional and Community Planning GR Heskamp, Jeff Spearville Agricultural Economics SR Hessman, Michael Pittsburg Architectural Engineering SR Hettenbach, Bart Manhattan Fisheries and Wildlife Biology SR Hettenbach, Susan Manhattan Agronomy SR Hewitt, Christopher Little Riser Elementary Education Hewitt, Rochelle Sterling Elementary Education Hey, Sally Jetmore Restaurant Management SR Higdon, Mindy Prairie Village Animal Sciences and Industry SR Higginbotham, Karen Kansas City, Kan. Health SR Hill, Brock Garden Plain Finance SR Hines, Brian Manhattan Animal Sciences and Industry SO Hinkle, Larry Minneapolis, Kan. Educational Administration GR Hinkle, Wanda Manhattan Pre-Nursing JR Hinojosa, Marjorie Manhattan Psychology SR Hinshaw, Beth Hutchinson Agricultural Economics SR Hinshaw, Dana Hutchinson Finance SO Hirschler, Michelle Wichita Fine Arts SO Hixson, Eric Hiawatha Electrical Engineering SR Ho, E-ken Singapore Accounting SR Hoard, Marsha Randolph Business Administration SR Hodges, Lynette St. George Elementary Education SR Hoffman, Garyn Chapman Correctional Administration SR Hoffman, Joe Hays Management Hoffman, Sally Chapman Animal Sciences and Industry SR Hogue, John Barnes Secondary Education JR Hoisington, Brian Chapman Business Administration SR Holcomb, Gregg Leawood Management SR Holcomb, Gregg Junction City Management SO Holcomb, Patricia Overland Park Accounting SR Holland, Gailyn Manhattan Anatomy and Physiology Hollern, Karen Columbus, Kan. Pre-Veterinary Medicine JR Holliday, Leif Liberty, Kan. Civil Engineering SO Holliday, Lori Eureka Elementary Education SR Hollowell, Derrick Hutchinson Politic al Science Holmes, Eddie Wichita Mechanical Engineering SR Hong, Cindy Manhattan Engineering Technology SR Hoobler, Debbie St. Marys Grain Science SR Hood, Brad Shawnee Business Administration SO Hoops, Lynn Byron, Neb. Agricultural Economics SR Hoover, Michelle Osage City Marketing SR Hopkins, Michael Whitewater Engineering SO Horak, Terry Norton Construction Science SR 483 Off Campus OFF Hornbaker, Ron Lyons Pre-Veterinary SR Horner, Chuck Manhattan Journalism and Mass Communications SR Horton, Luann Lebo Industrial Engineering SR Hoskins, Mark Hesston Horticulture JR Hottman, Darlene Manhattan Journalism and Mass Communications FR Howard, Trevor Berryton Natural Resource Management Howell, Jason Preston Agricultural Mechanization SO Howell, Kimberly Preston Horticulture SR Howerton, Barbara Herington Secondary Education Hubele, Stephanie Assari a Speech Pathology and Audiology FR Huddleston, David Marysville Engineering Technology SR Huddleston, Linda Marysville Agricultural Journalism JR Huffman, Lynnea Pratt Education SO Hughes, Jeff Great Bend Finance JR Hummel, Robin Hope Marketing SO Hummell, Lorraine Lenexa Elementary Education SR Huneycutt, Laura Cherryvale Horticulture Therapy SR Huneycutt, Teresa Cherryvale Industrial Engineering JR Hunt, Michele Edgerton, Mo. Animal Sciences and Industry SR Hutton, Donald Oakley Engineering Technology SR Ibrahim, Hisham Egypt Architecture GR Illert, Glenn Ballwin, Mo. Architecture SR Immel, Heidi Atchison Management SR Irvine, Bernard Manhattan Pre-Law SO SOMETHING TO CHEER ABOUT. Chris Kemp, junior in political science, cheers during the first half of K-State ' s home opener against Cal State-Northridge in Ahearn Field House. (Photo by Greg Vogel) 484 Off Campus Iseman, Ann Wichita Human Ecology and Mass Communications JR Ishac, Jean Lebanon Civil Engineering SR Ismail, Ridjal Manhattan Sociology GR Ivan, Laura Shawnee Veterinary Medicine FR Jablonski, Joel St. Louis, Mo. Architecture SR Jackson, Carolyn Topeka Agriculture Education GR Jackson, Jacqueline Manhattan Apparel Design SR Jackson, Lori Glade Psychology SR Jackson, Robert Kansas City, Mo. Electrical Eng ineering SO Jackson, Wanda Enterprise Consumer Affairs SR Jacobsen, Joel Jefferson City, Mo. Interior Architecture SR Jaet, Bernardine Manhattan Psychology SO James, Mark Hoxie Mechanical Engineering SO James, Myrna Hoxie English SR Janesko, Jill Overland Park Secondary Education SO Janssen, Scott Scott City Animal Sciences and Industry JR Jantzi, Carol Hesston Pre-Veterinary Medicine SO Jaskot, Kathy Kansas City, Kan. Business Administration JR Jennings, Brian Burlingame Electrical Engineering JR Jensen, John Everest Mechanical Engineering SR Jindra, Mark Winfield Construction Science SO Johnson, Dana Fort Leavenworth Animal Sciences and Industry JR Johnson, Daniel Manhattan Statistics GR Johnson, Liesl Manhattan Business Administration SO Johnson, Melissa Prairie Village Biology SR Johnson, Paul Hutchinson Electrical Engineering SR Johnson, Sheri Kearney, Neb. Architecture FR Johnson, Susan Lawrence Dietetics SR Johnson, Troy Caldwell Secondary Education SR Johnston, Jennifer Prairie Village Architecture JR Johnston, Karla Blue Rapids Elementary Education SR Johnston, Penny Lawrence Education-Math SR Jones, Bethany Lyons Apparel and Textile Marketing SR Jones, Bo Mulvane Electrical Engineering JR Jones, Bryan Herington Education-Biological Science SR Jones, Jacqueline Manhattan Apparel and Textile Marketing SR Jones, Scott Sterling Mechanical Engineering SR Jong, Chin Show Malaysia Civil Engineering SO Jordan, Giselle Manhattan Food Science SO Jordan, Jacqueline Manhattan Journalism and Mass Communications SR Jordan, Michael Lenexa Business Administration Jost, Lance Pawnee Rock Arts and Sciences JR Joyce, Matthew Manhattan Mechanical Engineering JR Juenemann, Carolyn Oberlin Elementary Education SR Jung, Hun Topeka Accounting SR Kabus, John Meriden Agriculture Education JR Kaemmer, Robert Overland Park Physical Science SR Kaiser, Julie Grainfield Home Economics Education 485 Off Campus OFF CAMPUS Kappelmann, Kimberly Topeka Engineering Technology SR Kats, Candace Phillipsburg Elementary Education Kats, Lauren Long Island, Kan. Animal Sciences and Industry SR Kaufman, Tom Durham Engineering SR Kaus, Pamela Overland Park Elementary Education JR Kearbey, Michael Chesterfield, Mo Architecture SO Kearby, Terri Manhattan Apparel and Textile Marketing Keating, Angela Minneapolis, Kan. Social Work FR Keating, Maria Topeka Elementary Education JR Keay, Elizabeth Shawnee Elementary Education SR Keesecker, Jill Washington Secondary Education JR Keeton, Kelley Manhattan Apparel and Textile Marketing SR Keil, Esther Manhattan Marketing JR Keil, Ruth Manhattan Horticulture SR Keithley, Alan Manhattan Architecture FR Keller, Lisa Ellis Agricultural Economics SR Kelley, Karen Topeka Fine Arts SO Kelley, Lora Turon Education-English 1R Kelly, Kristin Leavenworth Family Life and Human Development JR Kelso, Jane Manhattan Elementary Education SR Kemnitz, Nancy Manhattan Psychology SR Kemnitz-Wilson, Elaine Westmoreland Accounting SR Kemplay, Matthew Beattie Geology SR Kennedy, John Wichita Electrical Engineering SR Kenneson, Robert San Diego, Calif. Horticulture SR Kenworthy, Amy Mulvane Pre-Veterinary Medicine JR Kerr, Carrie Manhattan Psychology FR Kerschen, Mark Goddard Secondary Education SR Kersting, Cheryl Offer le Consumer Affairs SR Ketchum, Robert Chicago, Ill. Music Education SR Ketter, Trina Sabetha Business Administration SO Key, Greg Wichita Construction Science SR Kiekel, Darren Topeka Electrical Engineering SR Kim, Hee Seon Manhattan Food Science GR Kim, Song Gaithersburg, Md. Computer Science GR Kim, Yeong Korea Business Administration GR Kim, Yong Gaithersburg, Md. Chemical Engineering GR Kim, Youngmoon Korea Business Administration GR King, Carmady Manhattan Secondary Education JR King, Douglas Manhattan Computer Science SR King, LeAnn Nortonville Business Administration SO Kinsey, Molly Mankato Secondary Education JR Kinzel, Katherine Odin Architecture JR Klaassen, Richard Manhattan Electrical Engineering SR Klamm, Kaylene Topeka Studies JR Klataske, Daryl Clay Center Engineering Technology SR Klein, Beth Minneapolis, Kan. Elementary Education SO Kleinschmidt, Kelli Lincolnville Social Work SR 486 Off Campus Klenda, Patricia Lincolnville Interior Design SR Klozenbucher, Gary Washington, Kan. Family Life and Human Development SR Klug, Scott Hoisington Accounting Knapp, Kellie Manhattan Business Administration FR Knapp, Ronda I cocoa Restaurant Management SO Knetter, Chris Kansas City, Kan. Social Science SR Knorr, Carol St. Francis Education-Journalism SR Knorr, Suzanne Manhattan Education-Adult Knust, Jill Peabody Psychology SR Kohl, Jeanna Marienthal Apparel and Textile Marketing SR Kohl, Thomas Clay Center Mechanical Engineering SR Kohler, Carolyn Atchinson Arts and Sciences SO Kohler, Lucy Whitehall, Pa. Psychology SR Koker, William Derby Electrical Engineering JR Kolb, Troy Parsons Engineering SR Kolenda, Cathy Kansas City, Kan. Restaurant Management SR Kompus, Mary Herndon Radio-Televison JR Kondor, Michael Winter Haven, Fla. Computer Science GR Korte, Scott Pocahontas, Ill. Construction Science SR Korte, Todd Highland, Ill. Construction Science JR Korth, Julie Wichita Apparel and Textile Marketing SR Kostelac, Michael Kansas City, Kan. Milling Science and Management JR Kracht, Amy Marysville Business Administration JR Krause, Deborah Manhattan Elementary Education SR Krehbiel, Brian Moundridge Marketing SR Krehbiel, Stacey Pretty Prairie Animal Sciences and Industry JR Kreie, Laura Ulysses Elementary Education JR Kriley, Connie Stockton Home Economics Education SR Kroeker, Franklin Topeka Horticulture Therapy SR Kroenlein, James Manhattan Mathematics GR Krumm, David Hillsboro, Mo. Architecture SR Kuhlman, Kevin Belleville Agricultural Economics SR Kuhn, Leigh Sedgwick Chemical Engineering JR Kukreja, Atul India Architecture Kukreja, Pooja India Architecture GR Kwak, Harris Korea Food Science GR Kyle, Josh Manhattan Accounting SO LaBarge, Monique Manhattan Accounting Lafferty, Kara Inman Business Administration SO Lagomarcino, Debra St. Ann, Mo. Interior Architecture SR Lahodny Leah Belleville Social Work JR Laird, Denise Kansas City, Kan. Agriculture Journalism SR Lake, Jodi Abilene Elementary Education SR Lambdin, Scott Caney Radio-Television SR Lamberson, Kathy Council Grove Education-Music SR Lambert, Vanya Maui, Hawaii Pre-Design Professions Lamond, Ronda Osage City Accounting SR Lampe, Mary Jo Kendall Apparel and Textile Marketing JR OFF CAMPUS Lang, Jeff Wamego Restaurant Management FR Langdon, Robin Horton Pre-Law SR Lange, Maria Atchinson Computer Science SR Larson, Angela Manhattan Business Administration FR Larson, Karen Lindsborg Accounting SR Larson, Robert Overland Park Electrical Engineering SR Lask, John Manhattan Management SR Latham, Elizabeth St. Marys Journalism and Mass Communications JR Stephanie Hampton, Neb. Elementary Education SR Le, Phong Wichita Pre-Optometry JR L ee, Robert Nickerson Mechanical Engineering SR Lehman, Daniel Linn Accounting SR Lehmann, Johnathan Fresno, Calf . Correctional Administration JR Leiszler, Jeff Clifton Architecture JR Leiszler, John Clifton Animal Sciences and Industry SR Leming, Doug Topeka Business Administration SR Lemon, Michelle Hill City Interior Design SR Lentz, Julie Hutchinson Human Ecology and Mass Comm SR Leonard, Carol Beattie Elementary Education Leonhard, Scott Baxter Springs Marketing FR Lesage, Todd Salina Marketing SR Lesperance, Mark Scandia Chemical Engineering SO Letourneau, Madonna Overland Park Elementary Education JR Lett, Shari Marysville Business Administration SO Leverich, Michael Bucklin Mechanical Engineering SR Lew, Choong Malaysia Architecture SR Lewis, Janeen McPherson Interior Design SR Lewis, John Wamego Electrical Engineering FR Lewis, Lesa Winfield Horticulture SR Lierz, Susan Baileyville Elementary Education JR Liles, Naomi Manhattan Pre-Nursing JR Lincoln, Colleen Marlboro, Mass. Family Life and Human Development SR Lindquist, Judy Waterville Elementary Education SR Lindquist, Tom Waterville Horticulture SR Lingg, Janet Andale Pre-Physical Therapy SR Linn, Terri Lansing, Kan. Elementary Education SR Litherland, Monique Wamego Home Economics Education SR Lloyd, Rachel Aledo, Ill. Elementary Education SR Loader, Michelle Enterprise Business Administration JR Lockard, Chet Eolia, Mo. Architecture SR Locke, Maryann Overland Park Finance Loder, Julie Salina Early Childhood Education SO Loder, Monte Salina Feed Science and Management SR Loeffler, Karen Newton Food and Nutrition • Exercise Science SR Loganbill, Chuck Moundridge Elementary Education JR Logback, David McPherson Industrial Engineering JR Logback, Laura Wichita Architecture Lohr, Gordon Manhattan Psychology JR 488 Off Campus Long, John Towanda Marketing JR Longhofer, Duane Manhattan Electrical Engineering SR Lookhart, Jodi Manhattan Political Science FR Lopez, Wanda Puerto Rico Industrial Engineering SR Lorson, Tom Hope Agricultural Economics SC) Lovell, Bill Melvern Architecture SR Lovin, Todd Sylvan Grove Biology SR Lovins, Richard Boynton Beach, Fla. Physical Education SR Lowe, Todd Manhattan Business Adminstration JR Lubore, Karyn Rockville, Md. Biochemistry SR Lucas, Becky Mission Journalism and Mass Communications SR Luga r, Lisa Basehor Secondary Education JR Lunsford, Denise Easton Line Arts JR Luthi, Melissa Wichita Elementary Education Lutz, Gerald Garnett Animal Sciences and Industry JR Lynn, Aribel Panama Secondary Education So Mabe, Debbie Manhattan Management JR Machin, Matt Riley Management JR Mack, Richard Linwood Electrical Engineering SO Maddex, Terri Manhattan Business Administration Madel, Brian Topeka Mechanical Engineering Madhusudan, P India Industrial Engineering SR Madinger, Charles Creve Coeur, Mo. Construction Science SR Madison, Todd Manhattan Chemical Engineering SR Mah, Nancy Garden City Apparel and Textile Marketing SR Mah, Norman Topeka Electrical Engineering SR Mahoney, Theresa Kansas City, Kan. Pre-Veterinary Medicine SO Mainquist, Melanie Courtland Animal Sciences and Industry JR Majerus, Michelle Junction City Radio-Television SR Major, Jerry Mentor Fine Arts SR Manges, Peggy Westmoreland Accounting SC Manley, Joni Manhattan Journalism and Mass Communications SR Mann, Stephanie Waterville Arts and Sciences SC Mannell, Carrie Manhattan General Studies SR Mannell, Matt Manhattn Electrical Engineering SR Mar, Terry Salina Arts and Sciences 489 Off Campus Martin, Jean English Martin, Todd Agriculture Education Martineau, Elizabeth Elementary Education Martineau, Rick Mechanical Engineering Martinez, Harold Nutrition and Exercise Science Maruska, Kaye Restaurant Management Marcy, Kari Leoti Home Economics Education JR Marine, Matthew Hays Finance JR Markley, Angela Mound City Marquardt, Patricia Marquart, Brent Marrs, Tammy Agricultural Journalism Chemistry Elementary Education Elementary Education Byron, Neb. Marysville Oak Hill SO SR SR JR Howard JR Herington Manhattan SR Manhattan Puerto Rico SR Perry SR OFF CAMPUS Marxen, Andrea Manhattan Pm-Optometry JR Marxen, James Manhattan Marketing SR Marzullo, Cathy Des Moines, Iowa Family Life and Human Development SR Masenthin, Walter Topeka Geology SR Mason, John Kansas City, Kan. Marketing SR Masson, John Manhattan Fine Arts SR Masters, Kim Salina Elementary Education JR Masterson, Barbara Phillipsburg Arts and Sciences JR Matthews, Marc Colorado Springs, Colo. Engineering Technology SR Mauler, Curt Great Bend Chemical Engineering SO Maupin, Mark Dodge City Accounting SR Maxwell, Robert Kansas City, Mo. Architectural Engineering SR Maydew, Troy Lebanon, Kan. Pre-Optometry JR Mayer, Carl Fairway Electrical Engineering SR Mayfield, Elton Caney Journalism and Mass Communications SR Mayfield, Gayle Caney Elementary Education SR McAtee, Angela Endicott, Neb. Business Administration McBee, Tammy Utica Fine Arts SO McCallister, Jeff Galena Mechanical Engineering SR McClelland, Robin Norton Accounting SR McCoy, Rob Whitewater Animal Sciences and Industry SO McEvoy, Lisa Russell and Textile Marketing SR Hillsboro Horticulture FR McHenry, Brenda Clyde Social Work SR McHenry, Greg Clyde Business Administration GR McHenry, Tawny Green Elementary Education SR McLenon, Matthew Overland Park Computer Science and Accounting JR McMahan, Jill Clay Center Journalism and Mass Communications JR McManaman, Chris Clay Center Bakery Science and Management JR McMillan, Sue Beloit Apparel and Textile Marketing JR McMinimy, Vera Ashland Journalism and Mass Communications SR McNamara, Carl Manhattan Social Sciences SR McNickle, Candy Wamego journalism and Mass Communications FR McQueen, Michael Hutchinson Marketing SR McSwegin, Catherine Emporia Management JR Meade, Amy Plainville Marketing SR 490 Off Campus 491 Off campus Meers, Cindy Wathena Elementary Education JR Meis, Kris Salina Finance SR Mejicamos, Julio Guatemala Architecture SR Mercer, Tammy Galena Animal Sciences and Industry SR Meurisse, Carol St. George Animal Sciences and Industry SR Meyer, Christy Sabeiha Marketing SR Meyer, Dale Herington Engineering Technology SR Meyer, Lori Leavenworth Management SO Meyer, Therese Goddard Psychology IR Meyers, Brent Protection Business Administration Meyers, Gwen Gardner Dietetics JR Michell, Kerry Manhattan Finance SR Michell, Kim Wichita Human Development and Family Studies JR Mikesell, Fred Republic Biology GR Milde, Craig Jackson, Mo. Architecture JR Miles, Peggy Lacrosse Computer Science SR Miles, Timothy Salina Chemical Engineering JR Milford, Terry Fowler Business Administration SO Miller, Arman Fallon, Mont. Animal Sciences and Industry FR Miller, Br ad Riley Journalism and Mass Communications Miller, Jennifer Fredonia Restaurant Management SR Miller, John Lisle, Ill. Management SR Miller, Laura Manhattan Early Childhood Education SR Miller, Paul Prairie Village Architectural Engineering SR Miller, Renee Frankfort Food Science Miller, Scott Manhattan Engineering Technology SR Miller, Stacy Delavan Elementary Education JR Miller, William Hutchinson Marketing SR Mills, Jeff Mission Mechanical Engineering JR Minden, Kyle Paola Mechanical Engineering SO Mitchell, James Piqua, Ohio Electrical Engineering SR Mitchell, Kevin Republic Engineering Technology SR Moden, Donald Salina Accounting SO Moeller, Gisela Shawnee Industrial Engineering Moghnieh, Ghassan Manhattan Agricultural Economics GR Mohrman, Michael Chesterfield, Mo. Construction Science SR Molitor, Lisa Zenda Pre-Physical Therapy SO Moll, James Olathe Engineering Technology SR Mongil, Bernado Puerto Rico Animal Sciences and Industry GR Monihen, Jennifer Riley Pre-Nursing SO Moomaw, Mitchel Dighton Business Administration JR Moore, Gloria Manhattan Pre-Physical Therapy FR Moore, Julie Lansing, Kan. Early Childhood Education SO Moore, Mike Hazelton Business Administration SR Moore, Shaun Levant Industrial Engineering SR Moore, Stephen Manhattan Psychology GR Moore, Tim Lansing, Kan. Geology SR Moore, Willard Scottsbluff, Neb. Economics SR OFF CAMPUS COATS OFF AND ON. With late October temperatures climbing into the 70s, Steve Franzen, freshman in journalism and mass communications, earns a few more merit points by putting a fresh coat of paint on the concrete letters the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity house. (Photo by Steve Rasmussen) Morgan, Tammy Coffeyville Education-Biological Science SR Morrill, Stephanie Journalism and Mass Communications JR Morris, John Junction City English SR Morrison, Cindy Fowler Finance SR Morrow, Tina Wichita Marketing JR Moser, Steve Marysville Agriculture Economics SO Mosher, Jaye Perry Social Sciences SR Mottison, Connie Manchester Pre-Professional Education SR Mueller, Scott Humboldt Agricultural Mechanization SR Mugler, Marabeth Clay Center Apparel and Textile Marketing SR Mugler, Marlin Clay Center Secondary Education SR Muirhead, Teffani Dresden Finance JR Mulanax, Rick Dwight Elementary Education FR Mulenga, Clifford Africa Business Administration FR Mulick, Tim St. Louis, Mo. Architecture JR Muller, Kelly Coffeyville Early Chddhood Education Munds, Gregory Hutchinson History SR Munson, Gretchen Belleville Accounting SR Myers, Alan Manhattan Agriculture Education Myers, Leslie Manhattan Home Economics Education SR Myers, Matthew Tonganoxie Chemical Engineering SR Nading, Jennifer Concordia Journalism and Mass Communications SR Naillieux, Larry Concordia Agricultural Economics Nanavati, Paragi Morton Grove, III. Dietetics SR 492 Off Campus Nanninga, Stacey Axtell Journalism and Mass Communications SR Neal, Jeanette Abilene Art-General SO Neelly, Rebecca Pratt Industrial Engineering SR Neff, Charles Lewis Agronomy JR Neises, Elaine Belle Plain Grain Science JR Nelson, Gary Concordia Marketing SR Nelson, Jennifer Shawnee Elementary Education SR Nelson, Kenneth Great Bend Information Systems SR Nemel, Jeanne Marysville Dietetics SR Neufeld, Kevin Ingalls Bakery Science Management SR Neuschafer, Pamela Enterprise History SR Newkirk, Stephen Lyons Const ruction Science SR Newton, Amy Manhattan Horticultural Therapy SR Niblock, Donald Hoxie Milling Science and Management SR Nichols, Christina Council Grove Elementary Education FR Nick, Cara Girard Animal Sciences and Industry SO Nieberding, Fredrick Marysville Horticulture SO Noeth, Amy Basehor Mechanical Engineering SR Noll, Michael Omaha, Neh. Architecture JR Noonan, Catherine Burlington Elementary Education JR Norman, Ian Africa Management Jr Novak, Lana Belleville Education-Business JR Novoa, Sandra Brownsville, Texas Family Life and Human Development SO O ' Brien, Christina Liberal Pre-Veterinary Medicine SR O ' Brien, Kim Hepler Animal Sciences and Industry JR O ' Dell, James Manhattan Management JR O ' Dell, Laura Fort Riley Accounting SO Oakley, Thomas Manhattan Animal Sciences and Industry SR Oaklief, Greg Manhattan Fine Arts SR Ochs, Jerilyn Park Interior Design SO Odle, Julie Stockton Elementary Education SO O ' Hair, Dee Akron, Ohio Marketing SR Ohm, Jacqueline Ramona Accounting JR Ohmacht, Victoria Fort Riley Journalism and Mass Communications JR Olness, Amy Mission Hills Restaurant Management JR Olsen, Doug Clyde Milling Science Management JR Olsen, Sarah Hardy, Neb. Accounting SR Olson, Alan Wichita Marketing SR Olson, April Junction City Arts and Sciences JR Olson, Robert Junction City Journalism and Mass Communications SR Olson, Steven Lindsborg Engineering Technology JR Oppy, Jennifer Manhattan Management SO Orcutt, Craig Colby Computer Science GR Orona, Tracy Wakefield Journalism and Mass Communications SO Osborne, Thomas Wichita Architecture SR Osner, Steve Kingman Education-Mathematics SR Osterhaus, Donald Topeka Animal Sciences and Industry SR Otero, Julio Puerto Rico Architectural Engineering SR 493 Off Campus OFF CAMPUS Ottley, Julie Salina Accounting Owen, Julie Merriam Interior Design SO Pacumbaba, Gina Manhattan Architectural Engineering SR Page, Wayne Manhattan Physics SO Palmquist, Lana Stanley Elementary Education JR Parimanam, Ravendran Manhattan Chemical Engineering SR Parish, Robert Manhattan Arts and Sciences FR Park, Se Sung Leavenworth Computer Sciences SR Parker, Alaina Republic Family Life and Human Development SR Parker, Andrea Shawnee Elementary Education JR Parks, Kyle Wamego Pre-Medicine FR Parr, Leroy Onaga Physical Education SR Pashman, Scott Topeka Construction Science JR Paulsen, Pamela Manhattan Music FR Paulson, Mike Manhattan Electrical Engineering SR Paul y, Karrie Sheboygan, Wis. Management SR Pavlacka, James Andale Agricultural Engineering SR Pecenka, Michael Oakley Education-Business SR Peek, Vicki Winchester Interior Design SO Peel, Melissa Leawood Accounting SO Pedergast, Robert Manhattan Business Administration JR Penn, Becky Milford Arts and Sciences FR Percival, Barry McPherson Mechanical Engineering Perico, Carl Manhattan Elementary Education SR Perkins, Teresa Wichita Interior Design SR Persigehl, David Salina Agricultural Mechanization SR Peter, Rhonda Manhattan Elementary Education Peters, Cindy Scandia Elementary Education SR Peters, James Avon, Minn. Computer Science Peterson, Eric Clearwater Psychology SR Peterson, Karna Lindsborg Dietetics JR Peuser, Michael Paola Electrical Engineering SR Pfeifer, Scott Holcomb Physical Education JR Pflumm, Garot Shawnee Finance SR Phelps, Jay Abilene Fine Arts SR Phillips, Sarah WaKeeney Human Ecology SR Phillips, Steve Abilene Finance JR Pickard, Patricia Wichita Human Ecology SR Pickard, Stacia Wichita Dietetics SR Pieper, Ricki Beatrice, Neb. Animal Sciences and Industry SR Pierson, J.D. Manhattan Business Administration SR Pinney, Janet Overland Park Apparel and Textile Marketing JR Piper, Lori Manhattan Animal Sciences and Industry SR Pitts, Julie Shawnee Family Life and Human Development JR Plaice, Ralph Manhattan Arts and Sciences FR Plotner, Diana Dodge City Elementary Education JR Poage, Kimberly Almena Apparel and Textile Marketing SR Poland, Niki Olathe Early Childhood Education SO 494 Off Campus Poland, Shari Manhattan Sociology SO Polson, Marla Marysville Elementary Education Porter, Peggy Basehor Office Administration SR Porter, Roger Olathe Marketing SR Porter, Warren Prairie Village Electrical Engineering SR Posler, Steven Manhattan Accounting Pottorf, Timothy Douglas Industrial Engineering SR Pouch, Shane Cottonwood Falls Construction Science SR Powelson, Royce Richmond, Kan. Agriculture Education Powers, Shannon Manhattan Radio-Television SR Prasad, Sanjay India Industrial Engineering GR Price, Elinor Midland, Texas Chemistry SR Price, Ian M idland, Texas Chemistry SO Priest, Diane Lenexa Family Life and Human Development SR Proffitt, Jerry Sterling Education-Mathematics SR Proffitt, Richard Sterling Secondary Education SO Provost, Cathy Burlingame Management SR Ptacek, Mel Wilson Marketing SR Pujol, Stephanie Manhattan Business Administration SR Puljak, Karl St. Louis, Mo. Architecture JR Purdy, Andrea Manhattan Medical Technology SO Quenzer, Todd Brewster Agricultural Mechanization SR Quigley, Greg Mulvane Architectural Engineering Rachman, Abdul Indonesia Business Administration GR Racker, Andrew Salina Speech SO Rahn, Christina Arkansas City Architectural Engineering SR Raleigh, Cyndi Agenda Family Life and Human Development Ramsden, Vicky Lenexa Pre-Veterinary Medicine SR Ramsey, Helen Topeka Home Economics Education SR Ramsey, Kevin Manhattan Physical Education SR Ramsey, Trent Mulvane Mechanical Engineering SO Rappold, Kimberly Merriam Elementary Education SR Reaser, Douglas Topeka Construction Science SR Reece, Kristina Industrial Engineering JR Reeder, Ashley Ottawa English SO Rees, Cameron Topeka Horticulture SO Reese, Kevin Johnson Education-Business SR Regier, Bart McPherson Finance JR Regier, Mark Buhler Interior Architecture SR Reichart, Janet Valley Falls Bakery Science and Management SR Reichart, John Overland Park Physical Education SR Reid, Susan Kansas City, Kan. Radio-Television SR Reida, Linda Cheney Horticulture Reida, Sandra Rago Marketing SR Rein, Charlene Manhattan Finance SO Reinhart, Cynthia Great Bend Business Administration SR Reischman, Catherine Tonganoxie Chemical Engineering SR Reiser, Cheryl Great Bend Accounting SR 495 Off Campus OFF CAMPUS Reisinger, Jake Havensville Engineering FR Reist, Rhonda Olathe Secondary Education SR Renfro, Michael Hesston Psychology SR Reno, Greg Cheney Agriculture Education SR Rettig, Raymond Manhattan Biology JR Reutzel, Roberta Manhattan Elementary Education JR Rezac, Kimberly Onaga Management SR Rhoads, Royalee Superior, Neb. Apparel and Textile Marketing SR Rich, Elizabeth Leavenworth Physical Education SR Rich, Michael Ottawa Accounting SR Richards, Phillip McPherson Mechanical Engineering SR Richards, Reginald Kirkville, N.Y. Physics SR Richardson, Kay Manhattan Pre-Medicine FR Richenburg, John Burns Marketing JR Richter, Matt Green Agricultural Economics SR Rickel, Melissa Manhattan Business Administration FR Riddell, Tamara Shawnee Elementary Education SO Ridder, Douglas Wichita Engineering Technology Rigney, Jim Salina Computer Science SR Risius, Dawn Longmont, Colo. Pre-Dentistry SR Ritter, Elaine Dresden Foods and Nutrition SR Ritthisorn, Netipong Manhattan Business Administration SO Rivers, Efrem Manhattan Architecture SR Robben, Douglas Grinnell Animal Science and Industry JR Robert, Mindy Manhattan Journalism and Mass Communications Robert, Troy Manhattan Pre-Physical Therapy JR Roberts, Arthur Baxter Springs Education FR Roberts, Billie Mankato Finance SR Roberts, Brad Paxico Geophysics SR Robertson, Kathi Winchester Architectural Engineering SR Robertson, Lisa Tribune Finance JR Robertson, Scot Tribune Animal Sciences and Industry JR Robinson, John Leavenworth Management SR Robinson, Ruth Atchison Biochemistry SO Rock, Brian Hutchinson Pre-Design Professions SO Rockers, Mary Garnett Early Childhood Education JR. Roe, Kenneth Belleville Music Education SR Roenigk, Don Manhattan Restaurant Management SR Roesner, Patty Salina Apparel and Textile Marketing Rogers, Jason Topeka Mechanical Engineering JR Rogers, Laura Tecumseh Journalism and Mass Communications JR Rohloff, Joyce Delavan Family Lite and Human Development JR Rolf, Karen Pratt Electrical Engineering SR Rondez, Roderick Manhattan Accounting SR Rongish, Joseph Wichita Accounting SR Rooney, Michele Lenexa Management SR Rosenow, Lynn Green Pre-Optometry SO Rottinghaus, Michelle Seneca Business Administration JR 496 Off Campus Roult, Charles Leawood Construction Science SO Roy, William Manhattan Accounting SR Rueger, John Beattie Agricultural Economics JR Rule, Bonnie Ola the Elementary Education FR Rulifson, Maj-Beth Wichita Chemical Engineering SR Rundle, Janelle Clay Center Elementary Education SO Runquist, Randy Great Bend Finance JR Russell, Mindy Olathe Animal Sciences and Industry SR Rutz, Michael Abilene Elementary Education SR Ryan, Heidi Topeka Nutritional Science JR Ryan, Thomas New Cambria Agricultural Economics SR Ryland, Corina Manhattan Pre-Veterinary Medicine FR Ryland, Lana Manhattan Pre-Veterinary Medicine FR Sablan, Nora Mae Manhattan Accounting FR Salas, Maria Manhattan Fine Arts SR Salmon, Kim Manhattan Marketing SO Salsman, Norma Manhattan Foods and Nutrition GR Salyer, Rod Hutchinson Marketing JR Sand, Roy Hanover Marketing SR Sanders, Angela Miltonvale Accounting SR Sanders, Beverly Manhattan Special Education Sandmann, Janet Marysville Apparel and Textile Marketing SR Sandquist, Janice Wakeeney Veterinary Medicine FR Sanford, Stacy Junction City Business Administration SR Santhanakrishnan, Nagarajan India Industrial Engineering Sator, Wendy Manhattan Arts and Sciences FR Satumbaga, Roberto Philippines Milling Science and Management Sauer, Susan Manhattan Elementary Education SR Sawyer, Jeff Towanda Electrical Engineerng SO Sax, Caren Merriam Elementary Education JR SUN-LIT SPRAY. Chad Abercrombie, senior in nutrition and exercise science, and Debra Oliphant, graduate in architecture and interior design, take advantage of warm weather to wash Oliphant ' s car. (Photo by Jim Dietz) 497 Off Campus OFF CAMPUS Sayler, John Lawrence Industrial Engineering SR Schartz, John Liberal Business Administration SO Schartz, Pamela Larned Health SR Scheer, Cindy Ingalls Education-Business SR Schleimer, Harold Kansas City, Kan. Accounting SR Schlesener, Tamela Hope Apparel and Textile Marketing SR Schlossman, Martin Holton Accounting SO Schmalzried, Rick Manhattan Electrical Engineering SR Schmalzried, Elizabeth Manhattan Chemistry SR Schmelzle, Gerald Oneida Mechanical Engineering SR Schmidling, Dale Easton Life Sciences JR Schmidt, Eric Wichita Architecture JR Schmidt, Laura Salina Accounting SR Schmidt, Mary Ellen Edgerton Finance JR Schmidt, Michael Ingalls Marketing SO Schmitt, Gregory Manhattan Construction Science SR Schmitt, Mike Scott City Agricultural Economics SO Schmoker, Stuart Oswego Construction Science SR Schneider, Lori Atchison Elementary Education JR Schneithorst, Craig Hutchinson Marketing SR Schnieberg, Joseph Jefferson City, Mo. Architecture SR Schoenthaler, Donna Ellis Finance SO Scholle, Tiffany Wichita Veterinary Medicine SO Schraad, Craig Seneca Architectural Engineering SR Schrader, Ben Council Grove Construction Science SR Schrick, Roby Nortonville Management JR Schroeder, Brent Newton Engineering Technology SR Schroeder, Kerry Moundridge Finance JR Schroeder, Rodney Oakley Mechanical Engineering SR Schulte, Lee Ann Victoria Education-Mathematics SR Schultz, Donna Neodesha Political Science GR Schultz, Drew Wichita Sociology JR Schweer, Sonya Garden City Agriculture Education SR Schwiethale, Jeffery Manhattan Architectural SR Schwiethale, Sheryl Manhattan Family Life and Human Development SR Scoggins, Lori Junction City Elementary Education SR Scott, Kawanis Columbus, Miss. Social Work SR Scritchfield, Janell Ellsworth Engineering Technology SR Seastrom, Tracy Abilene Animal Sciences and Industry SR Sechler, Michael Anthony Elementary Education JR Sechler, Spencer Randolph Marketing SR Seele, Michael St. Marys Social Sciences SR Seever, Robert Unionville, Pa. Architecture SO Seidl, Bryan Goddard Electrical Engineering SR Seiler, Gary Manhattan Agriculture Education JR Seiler, Leo Grand Junction, Colo. Fisheries and Wildlife Biology SR Seiwald, Rosemary Independence, Mo. Architectural Engineering SR Sell, Barbara English JR 498 Off Campus Sellers, Stacy Lyons Home Economics Education SR Serbin Rhonda lyons Business Administration JR Serra, Patricia Kansas City, Kan. Psychology SR Setzer, Kristy Kansas City, Kan. Education Business SR Shackelford, Tracey Manhattan Elementary Education JR Sharp, Karen Leonardville Human Ecology SR Shasteen, Michelle Beatrice Radio-Television JR Shaw, Christy Topeka Social Work JR Shepherd, David Burlingame Animal Sciences and Industry SR Shepherd, Michael Burlingame Secondary Education JR Sherbert, Bill Clay Center Journalism and Mass Communications SR Sherley, Janet Leavenworth Engineering Technology JR Shipley, William Merriam Construction Science SR Shirrell, Jerry Stanberry, Mo. Business Administration SR Shorter, Scott Hutchinson Journalism and Mass Communications SR Shorter, Todd Hutchinson Arts and Sciences Shreve, Beth Stillwell Special Education SR Shriner, Cheryl Ellsworth Information Systems Shukla, Ketan India Industrial Engineering Shumate, Eric Beloit Art SR Shurley, Jena Anthony Finance SR Shurley, Patrick Anthony Physical Education SR Siddiqi, Mazhar UI Haq Pakistan Architecture Sides, Kyle Almena Agricultural Economics SR Sides, Rhonda Almena Elementary Education JR Siebert, Leslie Manhattan Accounting SO Siegrist, Lori Alta Vista Journalism and Mass Communications JR Siemers, Eric Russell Journalism and Mass Communications SR Siew, Eric Malaysia Civil Engineering Simmons, Thomas Garden City Physical Education SR Simoneau, Linda Logan Elementary Education SR Sinclair, Ellen Osawatomie Pre-Medicine JR Sinclair, Jennifer Neodesha Management SR Sindelar, Robert Manhattan Electrical Engineering SR Siptrott, Richard Manhattan Engineering Technology SR Skolout, Michael Atwood Crop Protection SR Slagle, Mary Morrowville Management SR Sloan, Carole Mullinville Elementary Education Sloan, Denise Waterville Accounting SR Sloan, Ross Colby Agricultural Economics SR Slocum, Tamara Moscow Leisure Studies JR Smith, Charleton Paola Sociology SR Smith, Donald Marienthal Mechanical Engineering Smith, Eileen Hoboken, N.J. Social Work SR Smith, Janet Succasunng, N.J. Computer Science SR Smith, Jason McPherson Agriculture ER Smith, Jeff Inman Agriculture Education JR Smith, Jim Manhattan Management SR OFF CAMPUS Smith, Michael Maynard, Md. Architecture SR Smith, Paul Manhattan Accounting FR Snider, Robert Eureka Animal Sciences and Industry SR Snyder, Mary Manhattan Journalism and Mass Communications SR Sobba, Mary Garnett Agricultural Economics SR Sorenson, Sherri Leavenworth Psychology JR Sowers, Brett Murdock Agronomy SR Sowers, Scott Murdock Geophysics SR Spachek, Jeff Lincolnville Industrial Engineering JR Spafford, David Belleville Secondary Education SR Spanley, Kevin St. Louis, Mo. Construction Science SR Sparks, Suzanne Overland Park Family Life and Human Development SR Spears, Greta Leawood Radio-Television SR Spencer, Robert Fort Leavenworth Industrial Engineering GR Spiegel, Gretchen Formoso Speech Pathology and Audiology SR Spiegel, Steve Formoso Agricultural Economics SR Spring, Suzanne Bonner Springs Civil Engineering JR Springer, Jesse Manhattan Mechanical Engineering FR Sprinkle, Kendra Hutchinson Elementary Education JR Stahl, Ron New Lenox, Ill. Electrical Engineering SR Stallbaumer, Dale Baileyville Engineering Technology JR Stamy, Paul Sawyer Agronomy SR Stark, Janet Juniata, Neb. Elementary Education SR Starns, Melanie Manhattan Social Work JR FLYING BY. Bruce Cook, senior in accounting and finance, takes a first-place finish in Sunset Zoo ' s 10-kilometer road race that raises funds for zoo improvements. (Photo by Brad Camp) 500 Off Campus Starr, Lois Hutchinson Finance SR Steffen, Jennifer Manhattan Elementary Education SR Steinbrock, Bruce Salina Radio-Television JR Steiner, Daniel Overland Park Biology SO Steinert, Hilary Manhattan Electrical Engineering SR Steinert, Wayne Manhattan Management SR Steinke, Dwain Peculiar, Mo. Landscape Architecture SR Steinlage, Renee Seneca Apparel and Textile Marketing SO Stenzel, Eric McPherson Mechanical Engineering Stephenson, Lisa Kansas City, Kan. Accounting SR Stephenson, Taber Great Bend Business Administration SR Stewart, David McPherson Natural Resources Management Stewart, David Overland Park Mechanical Engineering SR Stewart, Kelly Coffeyville Architectural Engineering JR Stockwell, Teresa Manhattan Psychology SR Stonestreet, Mauria Kansas City, Kan. Journalism and Mass Communications JR Stonestreet, Paul Kansas City, Kan, Horticulture SR Straub, Jana Lenexa Interior Design Strawn, Debra Topeka Business Administration SO Streltzer, Tracie Prairie Village Anthropology SR Strickler, Melissa Manhattan Dietetics and Institutional Management SR Strong, Travis Bellevue Religious Studies SR Stroud, Jeff Wichita Secondary Education Struckhoff, Jacque Grinnell Foods and Nutrition Science SR Strunk, Jerry Wamego Electrical Engineering SR Stuart, Frances Topeka Marketing SR Stuart, Lisa Hutchinson Business Administration SR Stucker, Catherine Lancaster Bakery Science and Management SR Stueckrath, Kristi Omaha, Neb. Art SR Stueve, Mary Hiawatha Business Administration SR Stuhlsatz, Douglas Wichita Construction Science SO Stull, Monte Great Bend Marketing Stumpff, Becky Shawnee Accounting Summervill, Randy Humboldt Electrical Engineering SR Sump, Shelli Randolph Business Administration SO Sutcliffe, Brad Wichita Electrical Engineering JR Sutcliffe, Gregory Wichita Architectural Engineering SR Suter, Brian Kansas City, Kan. Marketing SR Suther, Gina Westmoreland Elementary Education JR Sutter, Jill Beatrice, Neb. Pre-Law SO Svensson, Lena Sweden Physical Education SR Sweat, Brenda Cedar Secondary Education SR Swoyer, Linda Shawnee Business Administration SR Szyhowski, John Kirkwood, Mo. Architecture SR Taha, Nabil Egypt Civil Engineering GR Tanjore, Balaji India Industrial Engineering GR Tanner, Gina Manhattan Mathematics SR Tanner, Rob Larned Marketing SR 501 Off Campus Taylor, Deborah Pleasant Garden, N.C. Business Administration Taylor, James Junction City Fine Arts SR Tedman, Kelly Harper Mechanical Engineering JR Teeple, Keith Spring Hill Pre-Veterinary Medicine Teichmann, Shawn Hudson Agricultural Economics SR Tessendorf, Lori Circleville Agricultural Economics SR Thatcher, Julie Clay Center Home Economics Education JR Theegala, Muralidhar India Industrial Engineering Thiel, Rebecca Gypsum Animal Sciences and Industry SR Thiessen, David Inman Management SR Thomas, Jeffrey Admire Business Administration Thomas, Raymond Salina Business Administration SR Thomas, William Liberal Mechanical Engineering SR Thompson, Julie Hutchinson Journalism and Mass Communications JR Thompson, Lisa Soldier Restaurant Management SR Thompson, Teri El Dorado Housing and Equipment SR Thompson, Timothy Manhattan Architecture SR Thompson, Todd Eureka Construction Science JR Thornton, John Concordia In formation Systems JR Thurston, Phillip Tonganoxie Electrical Engineering SR Tibbetts, Tami Dwight Secondary Education SO Tibbetts, Todd Salina Accounting JR Tiemeyer, Carol Wichita Pre-Nursing SO Ting, Chee Kiong Manhattan Architecture SO Toby, Diane Seneca Finance SR Tocuyo, Hernan Manhattan Information Systems SR Tollefson, Rebecca Lenexa Elementary Education JR Tonnessen, Elling Norway Business Administration Tranbarger, Marty Great Bend Accounting SR Traphagan, Penny Manhattan Management SR Troutt, Terry Satanta Animal Sciences and Industry JR Tucker, Michael Plainville Mechanical Engineering SR Tullis, Jeffery Bartlett Electrical Engineering SR Turley, Dana Goodland Accounting JR Turner, George Hartford Architectural Engineering SO Turner, Kenneth Manhattan Architecture SR Turner, Miranda Manhattan Business Administration JR Turner, Stephanie Manhattan Psychology SR Turnquist, Gary Manhattan Civil Engineering SR Tyler, Curtis Cope land Physical Education SR Ummen, Mark Great Bend Electrical Engineering SR Unger, Colleen Oberlin Accounting JR Unruh, Bryan Dodge City Horticulture JR Unruh, Lisa Hillsboro Business Administration JR Unruh, Nancy Deerfield Business Administration SR Urbanek, Jenee Manhattan Business Administration SO Urrelo, Rafael Peru Entomology Utermoehlen, Tom Manhattan Geology SR 502 Off Campus Van Fleet, Amy Kansas City, Kan. Animal Sciences and Industry SO Van Hoet, Helen Shawnee Business Administration JR Van Hoet, Phillip Shawnee Marketing SR Van Laeys, Tammy Weskan Physical Education SO Van Loenen, Judy Bogue Home Economics Education JR Van Meter, Angela Lamed Apparel and Textile Marketing SR Van Meter, Shawn Salina Electrical Engineering FR Van Rysselburghe, Kristi Wamego Modern Languages FR Vandal, Afshan Pakistan Architecture Vandal, Mohammed Pakistan Architecture Vandike, Darrell St. Francis Agriculture Education JR Vaughn, Susan Halstead Elementary Education JR Veatch, Bradley Hutchinson Engineering Technology SR Velasquez, Chris Manhattan Mechanical Engineering IR Vierthaler, Terri Manhattan Social Work SR Vik, David Manhattan Pre-Medicine SR Villazana, Elba Brownsville, Texas Fine Arts SR Visser, Gwen Wakefield Interior Design SR Visser, Sharon Goff Animal Sciences and Industry SR Von Lehe, Troy Lyons Engineering Technology SR Voran, Denise McPherson Family and Child Development JR Voss, Rene Densmore Apparel and Textile Marketing SR Voss, Royalyn Densmore Home Economics Education SR Voth, Michael Hesston Electrical Engineering SR Voth, Patty Hesston Apparel and Textile Marketing SR Wagener, Mark Warrenton, Mo. Feed Science and Management IR Wagner, Richard Kansas City, Kan. Marketing SR Wainwright, Lydia Manhattan Music Education SO Waldorf, Lareina Arkansas City Agricultural Journalism JR Walk, Darin Leoti Business Administration SR Walker, Jane Kansas City, Kan. Journalism and Mass Communicationss IR Walker, Lloyd Manhattan Computer Science SR Walker, Traci Newton Fine Arts SR Wall, Mary McPherson Modern Languages SR Walter, Kevin Cawker City Accounting SR Walter, Michele Washington Elementary Education SR Ward, David Fairbury, Neb. Finance SR Ward, Marc Argonia Agricultural Economics JR Wash, Mark McPherson Engineering Technology JR Wassenberg, Karen Seneca Business Administration SR Weatherman, Steven Colony Agronomy SR Weaver, Linda Manhattan Management JR Webb, Douglas Protection Marketing SR Webb, Michael Manhattan Management SR Weil, Stacy Edna Elementary Education SR Weishaar, Kevin Colby Electrical Engineering SO Weisner, Kori St. George Accounting SR Weldin, Jennifer Olathe Elementary Education FR 503 Off Campus OFF CAMPUS Wells, Christine Goddard Dietetics JR Wells, Jeffrey Strafford, Mo. Architectural Engineering SR Wendelburg, Kelly Tribune Apparel and Textile Marketing SR Weninger, Rose Winfield Horticulture SR Werner, Michelle Kensington Elementary Education JR Wessel, Shannon St. George Pre-Veterinary Medicine JR West, Katrina Alamoto Animal Sciences and Industry SR Wetter, Mike Norton Agricultural Economics SR Wheeler, David Maple Hill Agricultural Economics SO Whisler, Greg Satanta Veterinary Medicine SO Whitaker, Mark Liberal Journalism and Mass Communications White, John Topeka Marketing SR White, Tami Newton Art SR Whitehair, Karen Abilene Management SR Whitehair, Lennis Abilene Business Administration Whitehair, Peggy Abilene Marketing JR Whitfill, David Manhattan Nuclear Engineering SR Whitfill, Joleen Manhattan Mathematics GR Wilber, Matthew Belleville Agronomy SR Wiler, Vicki Marysville Secondary Education Wilgers, Martin Belle Plaine Political Science Wilkinson, Douglas Manhattan Social Sciences SR Wilkinson, Sharon Grantville Arts and Sciences SO Will, Ray Halstead Finance SR Willett, Michele Topeka Interior Architecture JR Williams, Daniel McPherson Recreation SR Williams, Kimberly Great Bend Horticulture SR Williams, Stephen Manhattan Radio-Television JR Williams, Thomas Elkart Biology SR Wilson, Angela Manhattan Pre-Physical Therapy SR SAY CHEESE. Dale Bryant, professor of architecture, uses a photograph of architecture and design students for a poster to raise money for the American of Architecture Students. (Photo by Neal Hinkel) 504 Off Campus Wilson, Lori S. Hutchinson Consumer Affairs SR Wilson, Matthew Eureka Engineering Technology SR Wilson, Morgan Manhattan Apparel Design SR Wilson, Paula Shawnee Electrical Engineering JR Wimer, Jorita Leavenworth Business Administration SO Winkler, Greg Topeka Finance SR Winsinger, Randall Topeka Computer Science SR Winter, Kerry linn Construction Science JR Winter, Trenton Clifton Animal Sciences and Industry SR Wise, Melissa Louisburg Health SO Wise, Rodney Shawnee Mission Construction Sciences SR Wisemiller, Bryce Sabetha Chemistry SR Wistuba, Anne Valley Falls Pre-Physical Therapy SO Woborny, Kelli Waterville Consumer Affairs SR Woellhof, Bradley Wakefield History SR Wolf, Christine Kansas City, Kan. Education GR Wolken, Shannon Garnett Accounting SO Wonderlich, Randall Osborne Pre-Medicine SO Wondra, Jim Hoisington Accounting SR Wood, Larry Manhattan Curriculum and Instruction GR Wood, Tara Manhattan Marketing FR Woodmansee, David Great Bend Architecture SR Woods, Angie Westwood Apparel and Textile Marketing SR Woolsey, Michael Cuba Secondary Education SR Woolsoncroft, Greg Centralia Agricultural Economics SR Worcester, Paul Manhattan Engineering Technology SR Worcester, Stanley Manhattan Electrical Engineering SR Worcester, Sylvia Manhattan Finance Worley, Paula Clay Center Elementary Education SO Wright, Jeffrey Muscotah Management JR Wright, Walter Manhattan Management SR Wurtz, Judy Morrowville Business Administration JR Xia, Linda China Education GR Yi, Hyon Fort Leavenworth Computer Science SR Young, Ronald Olathe Management SR Young, Sonja Manhattan Interior Design SR Youngblood, Jennifer Junction City Accounting SO Youngworth, Nancy Overland Park Early Childhood Education SO Yule, Donna Grandview, Mo. Architecture JR Zerr, Debbie Salina Elementary Education JR Zielsdorf, Mark Topeka Pre-Design Professions JR Zimmerman, Tim Wellington Electrical Engineering SR Zumwalt, Diane Kinsley Journalism and Mass Communicationss JR Zwick, Bradley Sterling Journalism and Mass Communicationss JR 505 Off Campus Abbott, Martha 109 Abbuhl, Tim 445 Abdul Khalid, Siti 186 Abdul-Hadi, Sawsan 143 Abercrombie, Chad 497 Abercrombie, Debra.. 470 Aboubacar, Adam 128 Abrahamson, Carl 424 Abston, Yvette 454 Acacia Girls 333 Acasio, Ulysses 119 Accounting 106 Acker, Charles 454 Ackley, Steven 396 Acree, Tracy 409 Adams, Albert 109 Adams, Charles 392 Adams, Chris 418 Adams, Dave 210 Adams, Keith 385 Adams, Kimbra 470 Adams, Michael 228 Adams, Rhonda 470 Adams, Scott 131, 154 Adams, William 121 Addington, Linda 428 Addleman, Michelle 399 Adelhardt, Donna 157, 470 Adkins, Angie 232 Adkins, Kevin 122, 204 Adkins, Tyler 178, 385 Adkinson, Kenton 188, 390 Adler, Karla 231, 463 Administration 100, 101 Administration and Foundation 106 Adult and Occupational Education 106 Advertising Club 128 Aerospace Studies 106 Aeschliman, Peggy 157 African Student Union 128 Afro Soccer Club 128 Ag Ambassadors 131 Ag Economics Club 131 Ag Education Club 131 Ag Mechanization Club 133 Ag Student Council 133 Agapito, Debra 200 Agee, Carrie 470 Agnitsch, Kristi 416 Agricultural Economics 109 Agricultural Engineering 109 Agronomy 109 Ahearn Field House 292-295 Ahearn, Mike 122 Ahern, Terry 396 Ahlstedt, Andrew 392 Ahlstedt, Angie 153, 164, 209, 474 Ahmad, Toquir 158 Ahmad, Zaheer 158 Ahmed, Ferzan 158 AIDS 50-53 Ainsworth, Penne 106 Akhtar, Mahmood Akin, Jim 223 Akins, Richard 110, 164 Akkina, Krishna 113 Al-Barrawi, Osama 143 Mohanad 143 Al-Souqi, Jameel 221 Albert, Kelly 169, 434 Albertson, Patty 366, 380, 388 Albin, Mark 133, 177 Albrecht, Mary 119 Albrecht, Wendy 337 Albright, Jack 150, 445 Alderson, Corey 450 Aldridge, Brenton 402 Aldridge, Shawn 207, 290 Alexander, David 470 Alexander, Janet 387 Alexander, Loren 113 Alexander, Michelle 232 Alexander, Wesley 390 Alford, Michelle 235 Ali, Sabir 194 Allegri, Lori 200 Allen, Andrea 334, 368, 412 Allen, Annette 207, 439 Allen, Brenda 333, 380, 427 Allen, Jennifer 1 344, 356 Allen, Jennifer K 375 Allen, Karen 153, 154, 157, 334 Allen, Karl 154 Allen, Kenneth 396 Allen, Kim 347 Allen, Michael 470 Allen, Scott 199, 402 Allerheiligen, Jada 150, 157, 194, 219, 380 Allerheiligen, Janel 178, 380 Alley, Kirstie 92, 93 Allison, Angela.. 470 Allison, David.. 470 Allison, Kim 349 Allsup, Neal 232 All-University Convocations 70-73 Almquist, Brian 146, 439 Alan, Issa 285 Alonzo, Renee 378, 386 Alpha Chi Omega 15 Alpha Epsilon Delta 133 Alpha Gamma Delta 341 Alpha Kappa Psi 133 Alpha Lambda Delta 133 Alpha Mu Alpha 134 Alpha Nu Sigma 134 Alpha Phi Omega 134 Alpha Pi Mu 134 Alpha Tau Alpha 134 Alpha Zeta 137 Alsmeyer, Kathi 368, 399 Alstatt, Karen 356 Alstatt, Marci 393, 470 Alstatt, Todd 232 Altenbernd, Lisa 225, 422 Altman, Pamela 192 Alton, Susan 368, 375 Altwegg, Elizabeth 470 Alvarez, Pablo 231 Amend, Eldon 411 American Association of Textile Chemists and Colorists 137 American Institute of Architecture Students 137 American Institute of Chemical Engineering 140 American Nuclear Society 140 American Society of Architectural Engineering 140 American Society of Civil Engineers 140 American Society of Heating, Refrigeration and Air Conditioning Engineers 140 American Society of Interior Designers 143 American Society of Mechanical Engineers 143 Ames, Rikann 470 Amess, David 470 Amon, Robin 470 Amstein, Brad 354 Amstein, Deanna 91 Amstein, Todd 354 Anastas, Robert 176, 177 Animal Sciences and Industry 109 Anderes, Michael 131, 134 Andersen, Kerri 399 Anderson, Alan 143 Anderson, Ian 286, 287 Anderson, Jeffrey 409 Anderson, Jerry 161 Anderson, Jim ..................133, 169, 445 Anderson, John 411 Anderson, Karen 173, 183, 192, 197, 454 Anderson, Kate 214, 217 Anderson Kelline 154 Anderson, Kenneth 109, 199 Anderson, Kimberly 334 Anderson, Kurt 459 Anderson, Lisa 209, 210, 375 Anderson, Nels 235, 470 Anderson, Patricia 106 Anderson, Peggy 365, 380 Anderson, Scott A 470 Anderson, Scott B 106 Anderson, Sheri 199, 231, 371, 463 Anderson, Tamela 343 Anderson, Tracy 470 Anderson, Troy 450 Andra, lanelle 164, 356 Andrew, Julie 416 Androes, Tiffani 425, 463 Andrus, David 122 Angel, Amy 415 Angle, Andre 183, 454 Anglemyer, Jay 454 Anliker, Marvin 131, 191, 470 Annan, Beverly 143, 470 Annan, Maria 470 Annis, Douglas 235, 457 Annis, Judd 352 Annis, Patricia 137 Annis, Patty 113 Annis, Thomas 204, 235, 457 Anniversary Section 84-93 Anstaett, Heather 454 Antonopoulos, Thomas 468 Antrim, Lori 439 Antrim, Susan 439 Anyangwe, Florence 128, 169 Apartment vs. Dorm Living 468-469 Apparel and Textile Marketing Interest Group 143 Appel, Linda 463 Appl, Cory 470 Appl, Fred 122 Applegate, Roberta 121 Appleton, Andrew 354 Arab Students Association 143 Araiza, Rochelle 219 Archer, Veronica 463 Archery Club 145 Architecture 109 Architectural Engineering and Construction Science 110 Arck, Bill 180, 181 Argiris, George 470 Argo, Matthew 445 Arias Sanchez, Oscar 6, 62 Armbrust, Cheri 470 Armbruster, Robert 346 Armour, Michael 197, 421 Armstrong, Jennie 356 Armstrong, Kimberly 416 Armstrong, Lisa 337 Armstrong, Michael 362 Armstrong, Monica 375 Arnold Air Society 145 Arnold, Deena 133, 173, 470 Arnold, lohn 131 Arnoldy, Angie 185, 454 Arnoldy, Jill 131, 133, 470 Arnoldy, Renee 180, 185, 210, 470 Arnoldy, Sandra 178, 398, 470 Arnott, Carolyn 395 Aron, Kenneth 183, 235 Arpin, Emily 113 Arroyo, Gary 202, 385 Artan, Tulin 137 Art Dept. Student Committee 145 Arts and Sciences Ambassadors 145 Arts and Sciences College Council 146 Art for Elementary Schools 134-135 Arunachalam, Meyyappan 470 Asay, Tom 173, 223 Asbury, William 470 Aschenbrenner, Nick 409 Aseneta, Lydia 212, 218, 219, 220 Ash, Kristine 337 Ashcraft, Carrie 235 Ashenfelter, Christine 463 Ashworth, Tom 182, 183 Asrar, Naimeh 162 Association of Collegiate Entrepreneures 146 Association of the U.S. Army 146 Atchley, Leah 199 Athanasius, Lucy 183, 219, 220 Atherly, Lura Jo 359 Atzpodien, Elke 433 Aubuchon, Robert 232, 450 Augustine, Lonnie 23 Aumiller, Terri 161 Aung Thein, Tim 370 Austin, Julie 134, 183, 420 Austin, Michael 445 Austin, Michael W 405 Auten, Suzanne 219 Authement, Arnold 396 Avery, Bob 150, 164, 180, 219, 421 Avery, Tom 128 Awad, Jihad 470 Aycock, Basil 470 Aydogan, Serdar 470 Aye, Donald 457 Aylward, Amy Jo 20, 372 Azer, Naim 122 Baalman, Gregory 470 Babcock, Donna 470 Bacalzo, Rogelio 459 Bacani, Glades 416 Bach, James 445 Bachman, Johanna 161, 180, 188, 194, 204, 399 Bacon, Su 185 Baden, Rick 421 Badke, Bradley 454 Badley, Beth 471 Baerg, David 471 Baggerly, Timothy 183, 394 Bagunu, Daniel 426 Baharianmehr, Claire 114 Bahner, Brent 470 Bahr, David 186, 191, 352 Bahr, Randy 420 Bahruth, Russell 150 Baier, Carolyn 344, 470 Baiges, Arleen 188, 210 Bailey, Aleisha 153, 232, 371, 428 Bailey, Barry 204 Bailey, Brian 445 Bailey, Darcie 225 Bailey, Lafe 128, 199, 370 Bailey, Ronald 370 Bailey, Russell 140, 424 Bailey, Scott 471 Bailey, Troy 383 Bailie, Wayne 121 Baird, Mark 235, 418 Baird, Sarah 334 Baird, Susan 158 Bajracharya, Roshan 173 Baker, Kathleen 366 Baker, Donald 235, 418 Baker, George 439 Baker, Heidi 219, 223, 337 Baker, John 421 Baker, Kristen 194, 197, 334, 393 Baker, Kristina 439 Baker, Linda 173, 471 Baker, Lyman 164 Baker, Marty 177, 471 Baker, Michael 471 Baker, Paul 180, 191, 471 Baker, Sondra 471 Bakery Science Club 146 Balachandran, jegadeesan 221 Balch, Shawna 219, 359 Baldock, Kale 75 Baldock, Thad 134, 173 Baldon, Christi 434 Baldridge, Steven 402 Baldwin, Cindie 375 Baldwin, Darin 183 Baldwin, James 161 Baldwin, Julie 471 Bales, Gregory 471 Bales, Jeanette 380 Bales, Mark 385 Balk, David 119 Ball, Herbert 122 Ball, Julie 225, 428 Ballou, Janice 200 Bally, John 169 Bamman, Marc 471 Bancroft, Chris 164, 346 Bandel, Mike 149, 471 Bangerter, Boyd 342 Bangle, Karin 219, 33 ' , Banister, Robert 471 Banning, Anne 359 Banning, David 385 Banning, Michael 385 Bantz, Reann 447 Barab, Jacqueline 122 Baranczuk, Chris 445 Barben, Amy 349 Barber, Caroline 186, 365, 378 Barber, Kelly 454 Barber of Seville 68 Barbour, Bradley 346 Barenberg, Jennifer 380 Barenberg, Joe 185 Barker, Brenda 380, 422 Barker, Brent 390 Barkley, Theodore 110 Barling, Becky 428 Barlow, Steve 169, 471 Barnaby, Art 109 Barnard, Staci 434 Barnes, Cathy 145 Barnes, Debbie 439 Barnes, Greg 267, 268 Barnes, Howard 119 Barnes, Kindal 342 Barnes, Raymarlyn 225 Barnes, Tony 121 Barnes, Travis 471 Barnes, Woody 411 Barnett, Alice 375 Barnett, Frank 109 Barnett, Galen 131 Barnett, Larry 207, 471 Barnett, Mark 126 Barnett, Philip 407 Barnhart, Breck 362 Barolak, Michael 137, 471 Baron, Todd 405 Barrett, James 131, 134, 471 Barrett, Kirstie 137 Barrett, Melissa K. 471 Barrett, Melissa M. 200, 471 Barrett, Sean 402 Barrett, Seleise 223, 439 Barrier, Carla 471 Barrow-Hemry, Aaron 390 Barry, Lisa 137, 463 Bartel, John 345 Bartel, Randall 445 Bartelli, Lisa 471 Bartels, Daniel 362 Barth, Bradley 145, 219, 354 Barth, Robert 471 Bartholomew, Daniel 454 Bartlett, Julie 131 Bartlett, Richard 235 Barton, David 109 Barton, Renee 378 Barton, Stephanie 177, 471 Barton, Susan 122 Base, Daniel 445 Base, Douglas 140, 370 Baseball 274-277 Basgall, Julie 378 Basgall, Robert 362 Bass, Heather 219 Bassett, Melissa 349 Bates, Jeffrey 131, 150, 192, 445 Battiest, Robin 22, 394 Battles, Calista 416 Battles, Candice 143, 191, 416 Batzdorf, Dieter 68 Bauer, Eric 471 Bauer, Mae 370 Bauer, Meg 471 Baugher, Darin 183, 471 Baugher, Earl 109 Baughman, A manda 399 Bauman, Jennifer 359 Bauman, Karen 344 Baumann Mary 378 Baumer, Phillip 362 Baus, Shawn 445 Baxter, Clint 183 Bayouth, John 140, 285, 346 Baz-Dresch, Michelle 359 Beach, Kym . 145 Beam, Jon 146, 186 Beans, Katherine 340 Beard, Lisa 333, 471 Bearnes, Stephanie 439 Beasley, Amy 356 Beaty, Jane 439 Beaudry, Nichole 380 Beck, Barry 383 Beck, Douglas 346 Beck, Joseph 354 Beck, Karen 177, 471 Beck, Kevin 471 Beck, Terry 122, 199 Beck, Todd 362 Becker, Chris 140, 192 Becker, Eric 14 Becker, Janese 223, 439 Beckman, Joann 153, 428 Beckley, Vickie 21 Bednarz, Edward 471 Bedord, John 177, 445 Beecher, Brad 140, 471 Beeman, Richard 114 Beeson, Peggy 125 Beethe, Lisa 471 Beggs, Dan 421 Begley, Vernon 445 Behind Physics 132-133 Behner, Carrie 137, 225, 334 Behnke, Keith 119 Behrends, Janelle 471 Beightel, Gail 131, 191, 471 Beikman, James 342 Beikmann, Mel 450 Beisel, Stacey 404, 471 Belcher, Daniel 471 Belden, Timothy 471 Belfield, Steve 385 Bell, Holly 140 Bell, lames 345 Bell, Julie 471 Bell, Maurine 205 Bell, Stephen 225 Bellemere, George 383 Bellinder, Bryce 235 BeIlm, Marty 188 Bellomo, David 407 Belongia, Dwayne 471 Bemal, Josie 359 Bemis, Angela 471 Ben-Itzhak, Itzhak 153 Benfer, Scott 131, 191, 370 Benkelman, Jami 359 Bennett, Cathy 197, 232 Bennett, Edwin 209, 228, 286, 471 Bennett, John 471 Bennett, Kevin 342 Bennett, Lerone 73 Benning, Craig 133 Benninga, Carmen 232, 471 Benoit, Doug 418 Benoit, Michelle 223, 356 Benschoter, Gilbert 188 Benson, Doug 125 Benson, Janet 126 Benson, Ron 445 Benton, Stephen 106 Bentrup, Gary 127, 194 Bentz, Philip 38, 133, 149, 154, 200, 370 Benyshek, Thomas 407 Benz, John 418 Berends, Jamie 123, 380 Berend, Timothy 346 Berg, Elizabeth 428 Berg, Joanna 471 Berg, Scott 472 Berger, Jeff 472 Berger, Steve 133, 177, 421 Berges, Ruth 225, 428 Berggren, Stephanie 371, 462 Berglund, Paula 412, 434 Bergman, Christopher 180, 352 Bergman, Lisa 191, 225 Bergner, Bill 346 Bergner, Luann 153, 200, 428 Bergstrand, Tracy 178, 433 Bermudez-Cains, Damaso 472 Bernal, Josie 153, 188, 348 Bernard, Rebecca 472 Bernd, Lorie 472 Berndt, Sean 413 Bernhardt, Jeff 472 Bernritter, Robin 154 Berridge, Edgar 121 Berry, Barbara 197, 359 Berry, Janet..161, 173, 210, 219, 375 Berry, Laura 140, 192, 210, 439 Berry, Michael 402 Berry, Mitch 184 Berry, Nancy 210 Berry, Patrick 226, 445 Berry, Tim 402 Berry, Vincent 235, 472 Besler, Pamela 128, 337 Besler, Pat 337 Bessette, Jeff 396 Best, Cecil 113 Beta Alpha Psi 149 Beta Gamma Sigma 149 Bethel, Debra 334 Betschart, Shauna 234, 439 Bettenbrock, Cheryl .. 180, 192, 225, 472 Bettenbrock, Joyce 472 Bettencourt, Debra 223 Bettencourt, Sandra 209, 472 Beutler, Karen 356 Beutler, Kevin 390 Bevitt, Laura 472 Beyer, Kimberly 356, 366 Beymer, Tim 354 Bhalla, Chander. 126 Biays, Barbara 337 Bice, Paula 156 Bickell, Jayme 393, 428 Bickhaus, Timothy 221, 472 Bieker, Scott 407 Biesler, Jeffrey 157, 210, 472 Bieniek, Michael 450 Biere, Arlo 131 Bierly, Lisa 173, 199, 434 Bietau, Steve 280, 282 Big Brothers Big Sisters 34-35 Biggs, Daniel 421 Biggs, Debbie 134, 472 Biggs, Elaine 380 Biggs, Lynn 11 Bike Race 341 Billam, Dale 472 Billings, Stephanie 359, 408 Billones, Kimberly 191, 210, 463 Bindel, Lanette 434 Bingham, Jason 164 Binkley, Cindy 372 Binns, Calvin 207 Biochemistry 110 Bird, John 164, 173, 180, 223, 472 Bird, Marshall 402 Bird, Steve 362 Birds 170-173 Birkbeck, Paula 337 Birney, Tony 200, 445 Birrell, Laura 428 Birtell, Randall 235, 472 Bishop, Dana 349 Bishop, James 383 Bishop, Ronald 345 Bisping, Todd 472 Bissey, Charles 110, 191 Bissey, Jeff 407 Bitikofer, Mervin 197 Bitner, Mistee 281 Bixby, Susan 232, 416 Bixler, Phyllis 114 Black, Bruce 424 Black, Charles 173 Black, Eric 413 Black, Kimberly 439 Black, Mary 439 Black, Richard 109 Black, Tony 232 Blackman, Merrill 110 Blackwell, Christian 454 Blackwell, Pam 359, 393 Blahnik, Karen 472 Blain, Carla 209, 344, 472 Blake, James 472 Blake, Keli 349, 365 Blake, Sylvia 146, 209, 472 Blaker, Cynthia 204, 439 Blanchard, Frank 137, 161 Blanchard, Julie 178, 428 Blanchard, Shannon 416 Blanchat, Jeffrey 346 Blanchett, Cynthia 472 Blanck, Janet 137, 375 Bland, Veanine 349 Blanding, Mitch 418 Blanka, Sonya 235, 463 Blanken, Robert 392 Blankenship, Mi chael 450 Blanton, John 396 Blaser, Nancy 209, 375 Blasiar, David 411 Blasing, William 396 Blatchford, Eric 418 Blauch, Bruce 128 Blazek, Sue 173, 199, 472 Blea, Danny 268 Bledsoe, Charles 204, 307 Blevins, Richard 407 Blinzler, Kirk 354 Brian Bowman, freshman in electrical engineering, and ot her members of the seventh floor in Haymaker Hall silently watch the final seconds of the Jayhawk victory over the Wildcats in the NCAA Midwest Regional Final. (Photo by Chris Assaf) 507 Blitsch, Amy 185, 188, 454 Boyle, Eric 407 Blixt, Tamra 149, 472 Boyle, Beth 204, 463 Block and Bridle 149, 150 Boyle, Stacey 315 Block, Doug 396 Boyrs, Julie 210 Blocker, H.D. 114 Brace, Dedra 347 Blodgett, Paul 177, 472 Brace, Shawn 337, 341 Blomquist, Brian 390 Brackhahn, Allison 337 Blomquist, John 472 Brackney, Robert 450 Blue Key National Honor Society ..150 Braddock, Tony 274, 276, 472 Blum, Elizabeth 434 Bradford, Emmett 241 Blume, Amy 133, 472 Bradford, Sheryl 225 Blumel, Melissa 219, 223, 359 Bradley, Eugene 445 Blythe, Susan 472 Bradley, Felicia 146 B ' nai B ' rith Hillel 150, 153 Bradley, Fred 106 Boardman, John 472 Bradley, Kent 46, 150, 164, 219, Boberg, Sara 232 221, 223, 370 Bockus, William 126 Bradley, Teresa 206 Bocox, Bethany 434 Bradshaw, Kevin 131, 134 Bodenschatz, David 191, 352 Bradshaw, Michael 119 Bodine, Bradley 362 Bradshaw, Missy 378 Boese, Doug . 185, 186, 450 Bradshaw, Ronda.... 140, 180, 191, 337 Boeve, Angie 337 Bradshaw, Sarah 428 Bogan, Brett 392 Brady, Matt 354 Bogart, Wayne 185 Bragg, Tom 200, 204, 457 Bohling, Cindy 150, 200, 472 Brakeall, Patricia 399 Bohling, Kent 232 Braker, Michelle 235 Bokelman, Jill 221 Branch, Lorna 463 Bolar, David 354 Brands, Glenn 473 Bolden, Ira 161, 188, 191 Bransberg, Anne 225, 378 Bolewski, Richard 472 Brandt, Anita 199 Boley, Chris 402 Brandt, Debbie 359 Bollier, Michele 133, 145, 434 Brandt, Douglas 200 Bollig, Tracy 418 Brandt, Erika 428 Bollman, Diana 232 Brandt, Jeanine 359 Bolsen, Keith 109 Brandyberry, Stanley 445 Bomgardner, Stacy 337, 387 Brandyberry, Steve 137, 473 Bonar, Warren 396 Branfort, Tony 173, 223, 226 Bond, Jennifer 428 Branson, Paul 177, 204, 445 Bonnefil, Patrick 209 Brashear, Samuel 145 Bontrager, Bob 121 Brauer, Angie 380 Booher, Andrea 200, 472 Brauer, Lanette 473 Booker, Douglas 122 Brauer, Tina 232, 349 Bookout, Leslie 353, 375 Braun, Dale 106 Boone, Traci 356 Braun, John 145, 199, 225, 473 Boos, Anne 472 Brawley, Kimber 172 Boos, Mike 392 Brazukas, Michelle 473 Boos, Sean 411 Brazzle, Jackie 157 Boothe, Shea 221, 412, 472 Brecht, Vicki 473 Borders, Bridget 365, 380 Breit, Jeffery 411 Borders, Terri 395, 428 Breneman, Laura. 356 Bordewick, LeAnn 378 Brenner, Ann 393, 463 Borelli, David 450 Brent, Susan 194, 359 Borgen, Brian 472 Brentano, Traci 439 Borgen, Mary 472 Brenzikofer, Amber 439 Born, Dolores 161, 344, 431 Bres, Dana 122, 146 Born, Mark 307 Bressler, Reid 473 Bors, Julie 439 Bressler, Traci 428 Borst, Jonell 204, 472 Brethour, Ward 233 Bosch, Elise 472 Bretz, Matthew 346 Bosch, Mary 145, 200, 344, 472 Breymeyer, Theresa 125 Boschetti, Margaret 113 Bridwell, Lynn 235 Bosco, Pat 101, 178, 179, 186, 194 Briggeman, Andrea 439 Boss, Heather 180, 210 Briggs, Beverly 119 Bosserman, Joni 365 Briggs, Wanda 473 Bossi, Carol 378 Brightbill, Chad 392 Bossi, John 385 Brindley, Michael 223, 439 Boswell, Gina 472 Briney, Dianna 473 Bosworth, Deborah 472 Briney, Michael 149, 164, 473 Bothwell, James 418 Brinker, Darren 140 Bothwell, Shelly 197, 472 Brinker, Sandra 178, 334 Bott, Lori 398, 416 Britt, Tammy 371, 461, 462 Bottorff, John 459 Brixey, Jeffery 473 Bottorff, Robert 178 Broadfoot, Kristen 334, 393 Boudreau, Douglas 354 Broce, A.B. 114 Boudreaux, Nicole 463 Brockhoff, Wally 191, 370 Bourbon, Troy 204 Brockmeyer, Don 450 Bowden, Kelly 428 Brockschmidt, Joni 186 Bowen, Cynthia 398 Brockway, Angela 209, 353 Bowers, Jane 116 Broers, Sondra 178, 185, 463 Bowers, Melisa 454 Brogden, Jeffery 450 Bowker, Jeffery 332 Brokeshoulder, Gerald 345 Bowles, Samuel 74 Bromert, Katherine.. 375 Bowman, Brian 445 Bromley, Kate 104-107 Bowman, Christopher 411 Brondell, Bill 114 Bowman, Kenneth 392 Brondell, Karin 359 Bowman, Randall 445 Bronson, Cindy 188, 223, 349 Boxill, Paul 472 Brookhart, Charles 113 Boxler, Leonard 133, 178 Brookhart, Edward 125 Boyce, Brian 204 Brooks, Amy 232 Boyd Hall Governing Board 153 Brooks, Barbara 119 Boyd, Johnny 150 Brooks, David 450 Boyd, Kristen 472 Brooks, Diane 153, 185, 428 Boyd, Thomas 472 Brooks, Kenneth 121, 173 Boyd, Todd 472 Brooks, Leroy 114 Boydston, Alison 428 Brooks, Mary 145, 146, 473 Boyer, James 113 Brooks, Paul 232 Boyer, John 126 Brooks, Robert 459 Byrne, David 98, 99 Byrne, Philip 256, 258 Byrnes, Jo 225 Bysel, Lone 403, 474 Brooks, Sabrina 312 Brooks, Steve 342 Brosa, Cindy 210 Brosa, John 390 Brotemarkle, Jack 109 Brotherton, Holly 393 Broughton, Todd 209, 473 Broussard, Daniel 183 Browder, Lewis 126 Brown, Becky 210 Brown, Bruce 140, 191 Brown, Candace 473 Brown, Christy 334, 348 Brown, Daron 402 Brown, Doug 367 Brown, Elisabeth 173, 200 Brown, Gregory 362 Brown, Hubie 301 Brown, Jason 219 Brown, Julie 149, 473 Brown, Karen 178, 473 Brown, Laurie 399 Brown, Mark 150, 473 Brown, Michael 383 Brown, Michael H 200 Brown, Pamela 169 Brown, Richard 106 Brown, Ronald 450 Brown, Shannon 188, 392 Brown, Shari 387 Brown, Sharon 434 Brown, Shauna 434 Brown, Stephanie L 416 Brown, Stephanie R 393, 399 Brown, Suzanne 223, 235, 380 Brownawell, Jay 392 Browne, Sandra 356 Brownell, Blake 413 Brownell, Stephanie 380, 415 Browning, Lee 133, 232, 473 Broxterman, Kenneth .. 473 Broyles, Jeff 223, 424 Bruce, Christine 395, 463 Bruce, Leah C 473 Bruce, Leah E 434 Bruce, Susan 473 Bruckerhoff, Sherri 473 Brull, Anne 133, 334 Brumley, Barclay 473 Brummer, Melissa 428 Brummer, Stephen 209, 474 Brummett, Dana 380 Brummett, Stephanie 353 Brun, Darin 390 Brun, Delton 402 Bruna, Brian 474 Bruna, Jeff 131, 474 Brundige, Chace 102, 103, 409 Brune, Robert 362 Brungardt, Darin 474 Bruning, Jon 352 Bruning, Mitch 219 Brunner, Julie 221 Bruno, Charles 209 Bruno, Mitzi 209 Bruns, Gregory 180, 191, 457 Bruns, Kevin 445 Brutsaert, Willfried 163, 165 Bryan, Keith 445 Bryan, Lisa 416 Bryan, Michelle 223, 375 Bryan, Rick 413 Bryant, Dale 109, 504 Bryttan, Adrian 125, 232 Bubendorf, Betty 88 Buchanan, Joann 161, 180, 474 Buchanan, Karen 474 Buchanan, Kim 112 Buchanan, Kris 209, 372 Buchwald, Darrin 439 Buckle, Kathy 474 Buckley, Candace 378 Buckner, Sabrina 223 Bueche, Kenneth 223 Buechner, Jodie 232 Buek, William 204 Buerk, Leslie 474 Buethe, Kimberly 133, 150, 371 Buffalow, Michael 137, 474 Buffum, Sean 394 Buhrman, Traci 474 Bukowsky, Jayne 199, 404, 474 Bulla, Vance 396 Buller, Kaylene 137, 153, 232, 428 Cabanas, Justo 390 Buller, Lee 121 Cable, Ted 116 Buller, Oran 109 Cade, Alechia 231 Bullinger, Reed 352 Cadillac, Joan 199 Bullock, John 150 Caffey, John 13 Bullock, Kathy 375 Caffrey, Lea 183, 210, 434 Bullock, Robert 114 Caguin, Ana 137, 225, 474 Bullock, Susan 340, 368 Caguin, Joe 225 Bulmann, Heinz 125 Cahalan, Pat 409 Bunjes, Melissa 463 Cain, Melissa 431 Burcham, Thresa 280, 282-283, 439 Caine, Gaye 398 Burchett, Lowell 109 Cairoli, Lou 102 Burckhart, Phil 131 Caldwell, Alec 474 Burckel, Robert 122 Caldwell, Douglas 185 Burden, Paul 113 Caldwell, Janelle 463 Burger, Luke 392 Caldwell, Joan 474 Burger, Warren 78 Calhoun, Myron 113, 183 Burgett, Craig 177, 445 Call, Shawnee 250, 253 Burgett, Mark 445 Callen, Thomas 430 Burgett, Scott 173, 445 Callicott, Katrina 331, 349 Burjes, Brenda 416 Callies, David 200 Burke, Richard 188 Calloway, Jason 209 Burke, Wayne 413 Calovich, Michael 407 Burke, William 390 Calvin, Albert 191 Burke, Zane 421 Camblin, Kelly 356, 412 Burkett, Douglas 160 Camerlinck, Bryan 153, 173, 474 Burkhard, Kenneth 110 Camp, Brad 210 Burkhart, Keith 138, 409 Camp, Frances 474 Burkholder, Lyle 140 Camp, Galen 405 Burnet, Timothy 385 Camp, H.J 126 Burnett, Casey 396 Campbell, Amy A. 154, 343 Burnett, Julie 378 Campbell, Amy J 408 Burnett, Natali 347, 454 Campbell, Evelyn 178 Burnett, Tim 193 Campbell, Jody 334 Burnett, Todd 149, 204 Campbell, Parviz 197 Barnette, Scott 199 Campbell, Ron 119 Burnham, Robert 36, 109 Campbell, Stacey 14, 180, 370 Burns, Mark 418 Campbell, Terry 128, 170, 206 Burns, Michael 439 Campbell, Tracy 378 Burns, Patricia 439 Camping Skills 138-139 Burris, Andrew 185 Campus Animals 28-29 Burris, Kenny 164, 209, 474 Campus Visitation Guides 153 Burt, Marlin 183 Canelos, Andrea 210 Burtis, Trudy 158 Cannizzaro, Peter 199 Burton, Charles 110 Cannon, Barbara 113 Burton, Daniel 191 Cannon, Matthew 413 Burton, Douglas 140, 154, 219, 409 Canoe Race 426-427 Burton, Robert 109 Canter, Deborah 119 Burton, Sheryl 474 Cantrell, Joyce 119 Burton, Tristan 191, 225 Cantrell, Betsy 143, 372, 403 Bury, MarIa 463 Cao, Lanh 149 Buseman, Deloss 474 Cao, Xuan 231 Busenitz, Christine 143, 434 Capps, Lale 332 Busch, Richard 116 Capriotti, John 256, 258, 259, 260 Bush, Jill 194, 356 381, 320, 323 Bush, Kurt 194 Caraway, Kirk 157, 223, 474 Bush, Scott 402 Cardenas, David 231 Bush, Troy 199, 223, 445 Cardenas, Greg 445 Bushey, Jeff 290 Cardona, Tina 337, 398 Bushyhead, Dale 134, 405 Carl, Lisa 474 Business Ambassadors 153 Carlat, Cherie 359 Business Council 153 Carlgren, Bian 133, 402 Bussard, Timothy 383 Carlgren, Tammy 403, 474 Bussing, Charles 116 Carlin, Susie 359 Bussing, Sandra .. 114 Carlson, Bill 390 Butchart, Shannon 5 Carlson, Christine 474 Butchart, Dale 177 Carlson, Dennis 445 Butcher, Dennis 474 Carlson, Donald 445 Butel, Jim 367 Carlson, Glennis 186 Butler, Ann 474 Carlson, Gregory 186, 445 Butler, Brian 474 Carlson, Jason 232 Butler, Daylin 122 Carlson, Kelley 253 Butler, Susan 143, 178, 474 Carlson, Michelle 474 Butler, Teresa 153, 173, 474 Carlson, Scott 354 Butler, Tom 204, 346 Carlson, T ' Sharra 349 Butterfield, Charles 459 Carnahan, David 128 Buttron, Kelly 380 Carpenter, Kenneth 114 Butwinski, Kelly 169, 474 Carpenter, Loree 431 Buyle, Mark 150, 153, 421 Carpenter, Teri 356 Bye r, Rex 445 Carr, Bonnie 474 Byer, Roger 445 Carr, Kevin 362 Byerly, Jim 232 Carr, Todd 474 Byrd, William 191 Carr, Trent 474 Carrico, Kurtis 383 Carstens, George 454 Carter, Amy 149, 173, 188 Carter, Carol 178 Carter, Debbie 463 Carter, Kimberly 412 Carter, Phillip 106 Cartwright, Jeffery 474 Cartwright, Matthew 474 Caruthers, Elizabeth 143, 169, 192 434 Carver, Greg 131, 474 Case, Scott 131, 146, 342 Case, Shan 393, 474 508 Index Casey, Bill 131 Casey, Cheri 378 Cash, Sean 445 Cash, Walter 164 Cashman, Scott 219, 411 Caspari, Danielle 378 Casper, Dave 128, 385 Casper, Lonny 474 Casper, Tina 474 Cassel, Kathryn 356 Cassida, John 180, 345 Castillo, Lisa 188, 356, 412 Castro, Constanza 122 Castro, Jose 210, 474 Catanzaro, Anthony 450 Cater, Paul 474 Catlin, Melissa 474 Catlin, Mildred 333, 434 Cattoor, Rodney 407 Caudill, John 459 Caudillo, Cathy 143, 188, 474 Cavlovic, Michael 394 Center, Melvin Central Philharmonic Orchestra China 67 Ceramics 108-111 Chadd, David 276 Chalk, Jennifer 178, 474 Chalker, Bradley 164, 454 Chalman, James 128 Chambless, Melinda 315 Chambo, Habel 128 Chandra, D.V. 114 Chandler, Karla 474 Chang, Lydia 232, 368 Chapes, Keith 110 Chapin, Tom 65 Charland, Michael 474 Charles, David 352 Chartier, Dorothy 143 Chartier, Karen 204, 474 Chartrand, Nancy 157, 334, 336 Chatterjee, Eva 145, 146, 186 226, 380 Chaturvedi, Vinod 158 Chaudhri, Emad 194 Chaudhuri, Sam 116 Chaulk, Jennifer 157 Chee, Kim 183, 186, 475 Cheerleaders 264-265 Cheesebrough, Eric 433 Chehab, Hicham 475 Cheltz, Anthony 114 Chemical Engineering 110 Chemistry 110 Cheng, Shu 463 Chermak, Andrew 122 Cherry, Charles 204 Chestnut, Lisa 221 Chi Epsilon 154 Chia, Jeff 186 Childers, Laura 340 Chimes 154 Chinonge, Nabombe 169 Chisam, Michael 235, 421 Chisholm, Roberta 356 Chitwood, David 191 Chitwood, John 207, 231 Choi, ChuI 185 Chomsky, Noam 72 Chou, Maggie 475 Chou, Song-Tien 475 Chrisman, Michael 106 Christensen, David 445 Christensen, Steven 454 Christensen, Terry 457 Christenson, Dakin 385 Christenson, Keith 109 Christian, James 200 Christian, Jeffery 332 Christie, Deb 125 Christman, Cathy 359 Christopher, Andrew 332 Chuanrungwattana, Boonlert 446 Chung, Do 109, 185 Chung, Koo 185 Church, Mike 421 Churchman, Kristine 143, 474 Cikanek, Kyleen 169, 185 Cink, Jay 411 Circle, Denise.. 232 Cisper, Marti 475 Cisper, Monica 434 Civil Engineering 113 Claassen, Kristine 177, 192, 434 Claassen, Michael 424 Claassen, Michelle 178, 197, 434 Claassen, Scott 475 Claflin, Larry 126 Clamons, Karen 153 Clancy, Stephen 385 Clark, Arleta 463 Clark, Chase 157, 450 Clark, Christine 173 Clark, Christy 226 Clark, Diane 34 Clark, Gelane 463 Clark, George 116 Clark, lames 133, 475 Clark, Jane 114 Clark, Jeff A 146, 221 Clark, leff S 133 Clark, Jennifer 359, 422 Clark, John 185 Clark, Keith 390 Clark, Kimberly 463 Clark, Lenny 137, 161, 194, 225 Clark, Linda 475 Clark, Lisa 137 Clark, Marcella 114 Clark, Margaret 475 Clark, Mark 274 Clark, Mark A 475 Clark, Michelle 475 Clark, Mike 274 Clark, Natalie 199, 475 Clark, Raelyn 210 Clark, Robin 334, 393 Clark, Shari 475 Clark, Shelly 353 Clark, Stanley 109, 140, 173 Clark, Stephen 122 Clark, Tammy 475 Clark, Todd 402 Clarke, Timothy 143, 475 Clarkson, Susan 154, 219, 343, 475 Clary, Pant 173, 192, 197 Clasen, Robert 232, 475 Claussen, Dennis 235, 454 Claussen, Tammy 475 Clawson, Mary 154, 475 Clay, Daisy 475 Clayberg, C.D 119 Clem, Chad 354 Clem, Michael 128 Clement, Chrissy 349 Clement, Jackie 337 Clement, Laurence 114 Clements, Deeneen 431 Clennan, Craig 446 Cleveland, Jane Clevenger-Allen, Janet Cliff, Jimmy Molly 209, Clift, G.W. 114, 224, Climenhaga, Neal Clincy, Simmie Clincy, Tyrone Cline, Cynthia Cline, Ginger Cline, Marianne Clopine, Jennifer Clothing, Textiles, and Interior Design 113 Cloughley, Stacy 169, 434 Clouse, Allen 413 Cluck, Rhonda 475 Clum, Gregory 413 Clure, Gregory 177 Coash, Tami 137 Coates, Gary 109 Coates, Scott 439 Coats, loan 475 Cobb, Doug 383 Coble, Randy 392 Cobler, Scott 475 Cochran, Alfred 125 Cochran, Paula 475 Cochran, Robert 109 Cochran, Zachary 385 Cochrane, Todd 122 Cochren, Kristine 434 Coe, Michael 133, 200, 370 Coello, Oscar 231, 475 Coffelt, Scott 475 Coffin, Timothy 394 Coffman, Curt 407 Coffman, Curtis 145 Coffman, James 101 Coffman, Wendi 365, 380 Cogley, Allen 122 Cogswell, Shea 475 Cohorst, Lois 475 Coiner, William 383 Colasunno, Dennis 163 Colbert, Leslie 475 Cole, Bryce 332 Cole, David 354 Cole, Duane 128 Cole, Robyn 204 340 Coleman, Leslie 354 340, 365 396 Coleman, Margo 123 375 Coleman, Richard 122, 188, 189 225 Colen, Jennifer 475 158 Colgan, Diane 334, 387 475 Colgin, Cyndy 416 Colle, lohn 337 143 Colip, Michael 194 College 133, 154, 475 Republicans 154 169 Collegian Fall Advertising Staff 157 334 Collegian Fall Staff 157 Collegian Spring Advertising Staff 157 Collegian Spring Staff 157 Collegian Summer Advertising Staff 157 Collegian Summer Staff 158 Collegiate Chorale 232 Collegiate 4-H Club 154 Collegiate FFA 157 Collins, Cam 267 Collins, Greg.. 200 Collins, Kassie 204 Collins, Kimberly 334 Collins, Kristine 340 Collins, Rhonda 177, 200 Collins, Stacey 475 Collins, Steven 140, 158, 475 Coltrane, Connie 380 Colwell, Richard 475 Combes, Doug 475 Combes, Jeffery 146 Comfort, Sheila 388, 418 Commerford, Kurt 367 Comparative Anatomy 124-125 Compton, David 225, 409 Compton, Diana 11 Compton, Gay 334 Computer and Information Sciences 113 Conaway, Linley 415 Concession Stands 20-21 Conger, Jill 131 Conley, Dwight 342 Conley, Gay 131 Connaughton, Jack 225 Connell, Lisa 232 Conner, Donald 204, 457 Conner, Kathryn 153, 428 Conners, Matthew 146, 207 Conrad, Chloe 140, 457 Jim Jesik, freshman in architecture, and Page Nichols, junior in philosophy and English, carry a couch through a crosswalk south of campus. (Photo by Greg Vogel) 509 Conrow, Margaret 114 Constable, Farren 475 Constable, Shelly 475 Converse, Michael 145 Cook, Bruce 153, 500 Cook, Cynthia 153, 475 Cook, Joseph 145, 475 Cook, Rebecca 380 Cook, Sherry 265 Cooley, Kelly 385 Cooling Tower 150-151 Coon, Krista 475 Coonfare, Sheryl 137 Cooper, Amy 149, 475 Cooper, Darin 413 Cooper, Elizabeth 475 Cooper, James 114, 221 Cooper, Karen 221, 475 Cooper, Kimberly . 142, 375 Cooper, Max 235, 439 Cooper, Peter 113 Cooper, Robert 140, 446 Cooper, Shane 177 Cooper, Sheila 428 Cooper, William 405 Coover, Clinton 475 Copeland, Douglas 113 Copeland, lames 110 Copeland, Melanie 439 Copp, Jane 362 Coppinger, Timothy 150 Copple, Kathleen .. 463 Copple, Robert 134, 161, 180, 446 Corah, Larry 109 Corah, Tom 418 Corbin, Marilyn 164 Cordell, Curtis 475 Corder, Jeffery 173 Cordero, Iris 188, 428 Cordill, Michelle 434 Cordon, Juan 169 Corley, Gaylene 231, 431 Cormaci, lohn 346 Cormaci, Michael 346 Cornford, Tami 463 Cornwell, Jane 439 Correll, Becky.. 221 Corrigan, Kelli 359 Corsini, Craig 413 Corum, Robert . 125 Cosme, Gerardo 210 Cott, Shadlee 143, 192 Cotterill, Paul 200, 476 Cottom, Melvin 114 Couchman, Jeffery 370 Couchman, Mone 370 Coulson, Stephen 144 Counts, Jacqueline 209, 476 Counts, Michael . 161 Courtney, Kimberly 398 Courtney, Richard 207 Couture, Debra 198 Covel, Kamin 476 Covert, Stephen 133, 476 Covington, Greg 146, 476 Covington, Jeffrey 476 Cowan-Rondos, Elizabeth 476 Cowan, Stanley 235 Cowan, Thaddeus 126 Cowdrick, Katharyn... 69 Cowles, Kathleen 434 Cowley, Lance 131 Cox, Connie 393, 439 Cox, David 110, 164 Cox, Jan 178 Cox, Judy 128 Cox, Kristi 359, 408 Cox, Laurie 353, 416 Cox, Nicci 349, 415 Cox, Stan 109 Cox, Steve 402 Coyle, Ted 200 Cozart, Craig 354 Crabtree, Richard 223 Craft, David 137, 191, 446 Craft, lamie 186, 366, 476 Craghead, Kent 476 Craig, Carol ............ ................. 199, 434 Craig, Dianna 428 Craig, Eva 347, 476 Craig, lames 109 Craig, Paul 212 Craig, Ruth . 389 Craig, Stuart 161 Cramer, Carl 322 Crane, Anthony 91 Crane, Brian 32 Cranmer, Laura 134, 210, 225 Crawford, Curtis 407 Crawford, Denise 425 Crawford, Gregory 145, 476 Crawfor d, lohn 232 Crawford, Michael.. 458 Crawshaw, Joe 476 Creason, Curt 386, 418 Creative Dramatics 118-121 Creed, Sharmon 416 Crenshaw, Todd 235 Crescents 387 Cress, Don 114 Crew 288-291 Cricket Club 158 Criner, Jim 244 Criqui, Denise 348 Criqui, William 354 Crist, Michelle 395 Cristal, Neil 392 Criswell, Marty 134 Critser, Darren 150, 200 Crook, Tami 153, 428 Cross, Mark 216 Crotchett, Gregory 476 Crowder, Darin 185, 476 Crowell, Eric 192, 209, 439 Crutchfield, David 137 Crystal, Gary 413 Cuddeback, Kim 137 Cuffy, Laurian 146 Cullens, Gerald 385 Cullers, Bob 116 Culley, Shaun 235, 418 Culley, LouAnn 173 Cully, Diana 454 Culotta, Paul 390 Culp, Steven 433 Cummings, Ronda 463 Cummins, Rhonda 194, 349 Cunnick, John 183 Cunningham, Frank.. . 109, 137 Cunningham, Mary 434 Cunningham, Sarah 128, 439 Cunningham, Tim 402 Cure, Laura 378 Curnutte, Basil 126 Curran, Becky 349, 415 Curran, Joseph 150, 476 Curriculum and Instruction 113 Curry, Carl 476 Curtis, Cynthia 476 Curtis, Dan 122 Curtis, Gina 462 Curtis, Keith 476 Cusi, Theresa 349, 403 Custer, Eric 204, 411 Custer, Katrina 232 Czapla, Thomas 158, 159, 160, 161 Dabbas, Anwar 143, 183, 476 Dabbas, Jamal 143 Dabbas, Raouf 143 Daccarett, Mario 231 Daellenbach, Charles 69 Daeschner, Tim 390 Daetwiler, Kirby 476 Daharsh, Kelly 143, 408 Dahl, Charlotte 114 Dahl, Derrick 476 Dahl, Erick 413 Dahl, Monty 150, 454 Dahl, Susan 161, 454 Dahlsten, Kim 14, 343, 380 Dahlsten, Mark 204, 342 Dahnke, Cynthia 431 Dahnke, Sonja 431 Dailey, Elizabeth 378 Dailey, Kelly 178, 366 Dairy Science Club 158 Dale, Bettie 133 Dale, Brock 126, 232 Dale, Susan 476 D ' Alessandro, Michael 364 Dalley, Stan 476 Dalquest, Clay 150, 154 Dalton, Colleen 337, 422 Dalton, Mark 235 Daly, lohn 119 Daly, Robert 121 Daly, Shawn 390 Dame, Diana 137, 194, 225, 476 Dana, Janice 119 Dandurand, Doug 476 Daniels, Eddie . 128, 476 Daniels, Forrest 183, 352 Daniels, Jeffrey 153 Daniels, Judith 192, 476 Daniels, Julie 431 Daniels, Shannon 476 Daniels, Tom 221 Danitschek, Daniel 418 Dannatt, Martin 146 Dannells, Michael 106 Danner, Rebecca 393 Dao, Khiem 231 Dao, Teresa 210, 231 Darby, Brian . 396 Darfler, Jennifer 378 Darger, Scott 153, 409 Darling, David 109 Darnell, Janise 375 Darnell, Marty 274, 276 Darnell, Richard 450 Darrah, Keith 204 Darrell, Stacey 157 Darrow, Maureen 169, 434 Date Dash 336 Daub, Sheila 477 Dauber, Jim 154, 446 Daubert, Richelle 378 Daugherty, Rick 392 Daum, Melissa 337 Dauner, Jill 209, 372 Daveline, Daniel 413 Davidson, Amy 298, 314, 316 Davidson, Leland 370 Davidson, Phil 36 Davidson, Ron 446 Davidson, Tammy 477 Davied, Marietta 185, 431 Davied, Mark 150, 231, 446 Davies, Carrie 143, 210, 368, 375 Davies, Jennifer 173, 477 Davis, Arthur 164 Davis, Charity 439 Davis, Dean 109 Davis, Derrick 308 Davis, Gina ... 439 Davis, Glenna 462 Davis, Gregory 450 Davis, lack 204, 477 Davis, Jeffrey 129 Davis, Jill 333, 359 Davis, Larry 110, 114-115 Davis, Lisa 393 Davis, Mark 191 Davis, Matt 235 Davis, Michael .. 64 Davis, Randall 131, 150, 231, 477 Davis, Rolan 367 Davis, Scott 332 Davis, Shalene 128, 477 Davis, Susan 178, 192, 197, 477 Davison, Sandra 337 Dawdy, Dawn 434 Dawes, Dara 223, 333, 359 Dawes, Marie 161 Dawes, Derek 332 Dawes, Michael 146, 457 Dawes, William 197 Daws, Randall . 219 Dawson, Jenny 436 Dawson, Kelly 137, 349 Day, Carmen .. 150, 154, 477 Day, Cynthia 55, 477 Day, Dennis 121 Day, Nancy 178, 197, 477 Day, Robin 173, 209, 477 Day, Sheila 366, 378 De Rijke, Helenus 65 Dean, Alaxandra 380, 412 Dean, Kent 407 Dean, Timothy 161, 477 Deans 98-99 Dearasaugh, Lynne 140, 210, 375 Dearwester, Dawn 434 Deatrick, Stephanie 235, 395, 477 Debate Team 140-141, 158 Debauge, Lucia 161 DeBey, Deanell 150, 344, 463 Debitetto, Richard 364 Deblaze, Scott 402 DeBowes, Linda 128 Decker, Cynthia 412, 434 Decker, Emmett 345 Decker, Jeffrey 477 Deckert, Alysun 477 Deckert, Karen 477 Deckert, Nancy 153, 154, 161, 197, 235, 343, 428 Deckman, Richard 454 Deegan, Ann 113 Deely, Patrick 146, 204 Deening, Rosemarie 106 Dees, Jerry 114 Deeter, Valerie 454 DeGeer, Beth 439 Degraeve, Rachelle 393 Dehaven, Joel 185, 459 Dehon, Claire 125, 173 Deibler Vrbas, Lisa 149 Deines, Dave 106 Deitch, David 121 Dejmal, Daniel 407 Del Bane, Denise 477 Delaney, David 161 De La Pedraja, Rene 119 De La Pena, Eric 364 Delgado, Alberto 122 Delhotal, Clarissa 434 Delker, David 114, 185 Dell, Brennan 367 Dell ' Antonia, Karin 399 Delong, Jennifer 359 Delt Darlings 365, 366 Demel, Darren 439 Demel, Diane 146, 425, 434 Demel, Karen 191, 477 Demel, Kelly 146, 477 Dement, Melonie 463 Dempsey, Ray 191 Den, Ling 144 Deneault, Annette 477 Denham, Patrick 385 Denham, Sheri 477 Denholm, Rodney 154, 446 Denk, Candy 477 Denlinger, Denise 434 Denner, Tony 477 Dennis, Janelle 134, 157, 186, 201, 366, 477 Dentmon, Patti 399 Denver, Kim 356 Denver, Kristin 356, 368 Denzel, Tom 223, 390 Depperschmidt, Tina 434 Desch, Patrick 477 Deschner, Patricia 399 Design Council 161 Desilet, Sherri 375 Desmarteau, Yvonne 477 Desnousse, Olivia 169, 183, 209 Destasio, Tom 158, 405 Deters, Gale 440 Deters, Steve 477 Dettke, Marcia 186 Detwiler, Erika 434 Deutscher, Chris 402 Devault, Edie 416 Devault, James 114 Devault, Larry 354 Devilbiss, Edward 109, 225 Devilbiss, Nathan 145 Devore, John 114 Devore, Thomas 145 Deweese, Carol 140, 173, 210, 477 Deweese, Mark 150, 204, 450 Dewey, Sami 334 Dewey, Van 131, 134 Dewitt, Tina 204 Deyoe, Charles 116 Deyoe, Christopher 169 Deyong, Dirk 477 Dharan, Sudeep 221 Diab, Mary 188 Dibble, Julie 380, 387 Dick, April 454 Dick, James 394 Dick, Kent 145 Dick, Robert 477 Dickens, Leandra 477 Dickens, Lucinda 440 Dickey, Andy 413 Dickinson, Deb Diederich, Kimberly Diehl, Leanna Dieker, Delaine Dierberger, Brian Dieringer, Robert Dietz, Alisa Dietz, Audra Dietz, Jim Diggins, Carlos Dikeman, Michael Dill, Ann Dellinger, Lara Dellman, Loretta.. Dillon, James Dillon, Kevin Ding, Dajiang Dinges, Deborah 207, Dinges, Jennifer Dinh, Viet Dinsmore, Steven Diouf, Ibrahima Dipiazzo, Denise Dirks, Brad Disberger, David Disberger, Robert Disberger, Russell 164, Disinger, Tina Ditton, Regina Dixon, Alfred Dixon, Joyce Dixon, Lyle Dixson, Darin . Dlabal, James Dlodlo, Mqhele Doan, Anh Doan, Donita Doctor, Deborah Dodds, Susan Dodson, Amy Dodson, Becky Doe, Judy Doebele, Jodi Doeden, Klaas Doell, Desiree Doerflinger, Sean Doerste, Robin 134 Dolan, Leif Dole, Bob Dole, Elizabeth Dolechek, Diane Dolezal, Vernon... Doll, Chris Doll, Debora . 142 Doll, Jesse Dollar, John Domann, Angela Domann, Susan Domanski, Michele Dome, Trent Domnick, Linda Donaghy, Harry Donahue, Corinne Donaldson, Pamela 154 Donnelly, Colleen Donnelly, David Donnelly, Jenner 20C Donnelly, Michael . Donnert, David Donnert, Hermann 125 161, 210 Donovan, Robert Donsho, Ron Doocy, Ann Dorian, Graham Dorion, Mark Dorr, Tracy Dorrenstein, Johan Dorroh, Craig 205 Dorsch, Jennifer Dorsch, Shawn Dorzab, Tons Dossani, Waqar Doud, Cathy 13: Doud, Galen Doud, Gregory 13 Dougherty, Paul Dougherty, Warren Doughty, John Douglas, Dennis Douglas, Mary Douglass, lames Doudy, Minida Dowell, Christopher Downey, Edward Downey, Gretchen Downey, Jill Drennen, Curt Drake, Darren Draskovich, Lori Drebes, William Dreiling, Dave Dremann, Mike Drake, Calvin Paula Downey, Ronald Downing, Daniel Downing, Gina Downing, I isa Downing, Nancy Downs, Heather Doyen, Angela Dozier, Kimberly Dragsdorf, Dean 219, 359, 412 199, 404, 478 204, 352 150, 370 210, 440 387, 399 435 390 390 392 440 109 396 399 157 126 126 Eberhart, Dianna Eberhart, Steven Eberhart, Tammy Eastman, Jill... 169, 178, 192, 197, 478 Eastman, Toni Eastwood, Kenneth Ebadi, Yar Eakins, Jay Eastman, Brit Eastman, Debra Eastman, Helen 204, 457, 458 131, 146, 352 154, 235, 334 131, 344, 435 133, 375, 415 349, 415 223, 450 177, 446 150, 478 446 372 478 440 219 122 337 Eakin, Lynne 372 232 Dressler, Robert 122 Echeverria, Sharom 231 Drew, Pat 413 Eck, Shari 180, 219, 371, 478 Driscoll, Rodney 134, 161, 180 Eckels, Will 450 235, 446 Driss, Ann Droge, Bruce Droge, Chris Droge, Jennifer 428 Droge, Keith 204 125 185 183 Eckhoff, Dean Eckhoff, Steven Ecklund, Robert Eckerberg, Lori Eckhoff, Cindi 440 Economics 440 478 113 125 109 Drury, Heather 375 Eddy, Marge 260, 318 Dubbert, Stanley 370 Ede, Kimberli 334 Dubois, Craig 209, 364 Edgecomb, Rochelle 149 Dubois, James 121 Ediger, Brent 354 Dubois, Kirt 345 Ediger, David 354 Dubois, Paul 145 Ediger, Jacque 149 Dubrovin, Barb 143, 199, 232, 478 Ediger, James 173, 478 Duden, Deborah 133 Ediger, Janet 197, 478 Dudrey, Byron 232, 446 Edmiston, Kenneth 478 Duegaw, Patrick 228, 362 Edmonds, Angela 353, 431 Duell, Susan 478 Edsall, P.J 392 Duerst, David 446 Edson, Gail 337, 408 Duff, Jeff 478 Edson, Gregory 407 Duffin, Darin 459 Education College Council 161 Dugan, Karla 334 Edwards, Alvin 128 Dugan, Todd 364 Edwards, Anne 380 Dunbar, Diana 478 Edwards, Betsy 157 Dunbar, Michael 177 Edwards Hall Governing Board 161 Duncan, Stu 223 Edwards, Jennifer 125 Duncan, Tony 223, 402 Edwards, Robert 125 Dunitz, Christopher 226, 409 Edwards, Tracey 347 Dunitz, Lisa 359 Edwards, Tracy 337, 478 Dunklee, Kelly 478 Eflin, Brian 342 Dunlap, John 204 Egbert, Clark 157 Dunlap, Michelle 478 Egbert, Kevin 446 Dunlap, Pamela 140, 180, 191, 478 Eggeman, George 122 Dunn, Claire 395 Eggers, Dede 435 Dunn, Jennifer 202 Eggers, Todd 258 Dunn, Julie 221, 478 Eggleston, Rick 478 Dunn, Kayla 435 Edigy, Antonio 478 Dunn, Matt 367 Eguez, Carlos 231 Dunshee, Angie 372 Ehler, Stanley 109 Durand, Jeff 478 Ehlers, Jeffery 478 Durar, Abdulrazag 478 Ehrlich, Cliff 169 Durbin, Colin 188 Eichelberger, Sam 131, 157, 446 Durbin, Patricia 372 Eichman, Glenda 199 Durgan, Jack 121 Eichman, Loretta 478 Durham, Ann 365, 416 Eickhoff, Sean 188, 383 Durham, Cindy 16 Eickhorst, Kristin... 191 Durnin, Jill 133, 463 Eidemiller, Neal 137 Durr, Kathy 372 Eilert, Scott C. 413 Durr, Sandra 463 Eilert, Scott J 137, 173, 478 Durst, Ed 150, 370 Eisele, Lisa 192 Durst Kris 157, 478 Eisenhour, Alan 424 Dusaj, Shailendra 137 Eitel, Pamela 223, 349, 403 Dushkin, Lelah 126 Eitner, Walter 114 Dutton, Mindy 145 Ekart, Douglas 207, 231 Dwyer, Jill 366 Eklund, Shanna 375 Dyck, Norma 106 Eldringhoff, Sylvan 113 Dyer, Clay 231 El-Tabche, Hicham 177 Dyer, Ruth 114 Elder, Amy 232 Dyer, Stephen 114, 164 Elder, Edward 186, 454 Dyer, Tami 177 Elder, Todd 407 Dyke, Tim 342 Elections 46-47 Dykes, Paul 405 Electrical and Computer Dzewaltowski, David 125 Engineering 114 Elgin, Cary 478 Elkins-Bence, Anita 478 Elledge, Lynn 180, 191, 225 Ellenz, John 143, 199, 478 Elliott, Chad 418 Elliott, Janet 353, 478 Elliott, Kathy 454 Elliott, Kirk 478 Elliott, Val 478 Ellis, Cindy 461, 462 Ellis, Darilyn 378 Ellis, David 392 Ellis, Ellen 428 Ellis, Julie 399, 415 Ellis, Tracy 317 Ellis, Vicki 415 Ellison, Gregory 424 Ellison, Lisa 149 Ellison, Tracey 347, 463 Elmore, Kelsi 197, 334 Elmore, Kristi 197, 334 Elmore, Kurt 390 El Nabbout, Lutfallah 183 Elsea, Stan 122, 209 Eltze, Michael 164, 459 Eltze, Robert 450 Elwood, Catherine 235, 454 Ely, Cole 188 Ely, Kent 362 Elzinga, Richard 114 Emerson, Jarvin 113 Emmot, Jeffery 446 Emrich, Thayne 216 Encalada, Hoover 231 Engel, Sharon 209, 478 Engelkemier, Tiffany 154, 435 Engelken, Brian 153 Engelken, Lance 478 Engelking, Diana 463 Engemann, Michelle 478 Engineering Ambassador Executives 161 Engineering Computers 144-145 Engineering Student Council 161 Engineering Technology 114 England, Kathy 380 Engle, Tim 392 Engler, Beth 440 Engler, Charlene 178, 478 English 114 English, Bret 454 English, Jeremy 207 Engroff, Annette. 143 Engroff, Julie 435 Engroff, Kim 356 Enns, Doug. 143, 199, 225, 341, 478 Enns, Scott 181 Enrollment Increases 194-195 Ensley, Connie 372 Ensz, Wes 131, 134 Entomology 114 Environmental Design 114 Erbert, Douglas 440 Erdman, David 154, 186, 209, 478 Erickson, Donald 109 Erickson, Howard 205 Erickson, Ingrid 343 Erickson, Kevin 435 Erickson, Larry 109 Erickson, Sara 145, 378 Ermisch, Charles 457 Ernst, Gene 110 Erpelding, Larry 131, 164 Esau, Steven 204 Escalada, Lawrence 433 Eshbaugh, Jeffrey 225, 478 Eshelbrenner, Doug 396 Essmiller, Kyle 183, 446 Estrada, Carlos 188 Estrada, Diego 183, 210, 228, 394 Estrada, Jorge 231 Eta Kappa Nu 164 Eterovic, Ivo 450 Ethridge, Sheila 315 Eubanks, Megan 380 Europe Trip 224, 225 Eustace, Dale 119, 137, 177 Eustace, Tracy 392 Evangelou, Angelo 207 Evans, Andrew 362 Evans, Gene 177 Evans, John D 122 Evans, John M. 385 Evans, Kevin 411 Evans, Kim 349, 403 Evans, Peggy 378, 388, 389 Everett, Brian 34 Everhart, Joni 145„ 153, 356 Everhart, Lawrence 446 Eversmeyer, Merle 126 Ewanow, Lynn 121 Ewert, Kurt 409 Ewing, Michael 478 Ewing, Scott 235, 478 Ewy, Laura 337 Ewy, Russell 367 Exline, Brock 125 Experimental Rats 156-157 Explore 182-183 Faa, Pierre 128 Fabina, Joseph 394 Fabrizius, Daniel 450 Fabrizius, Eric 413 Fabrizius, Julie 366 Fabrizius, Martin 197, 478 Faculty Senate 164 Fads 1 Fagan, Bradley 54-55 11 Faiman, Scott 169 Fair, Julie 347, 375 Fairbank, Tanya 337 Fairchild, Matthew 364 Fairchild, Terry 185, 440 Fairman, John 84, 100 Faler, Susan 347, 433 Falk, David 204 Falkenstien, Rich 131, 134, 137, 342 Falkner, Lisa 185 Falkner, Thomas 185 Fall, Michael 362 Fan, L T. 110 Fankhauser, Dacia 27, 131, 137, 146, 380 Fankhauser, Dirk 409 Fankhauser, Kim 387, 399 Fan khouser, Stephen 413 Fann, Robb 232 Fanshier, Brad 157, 210 Farley, Kelly 340, 365 Farmer, John 332 Farr, Heather 478 Farr, Kerry 454 Farra, Jef 424 Farraj, Rania 143 Farraj, Samer 143 Farrell, Jeff 164 Farris, Dave 158 Farris, Rebecca 356 Fartaj, Sayed-Amir 345 Fashion Marketing 190-191 Fasse, Kaye 178 Fatemi, Ali 116 Fattaey, Ali 209 Faw, Richard 125, 152 Fay, Scott 9 Fayman, Natalie 396, 397 Fears, Scott 232 Featherston, Eric 370 Featherstone, Allen 109 Fedde, Bruce 478 Fedde, Leslie 435 Fedder, Norman 118, 222 Feeney, R obin 209, 463 Feezor, Karla 440 Felber, Linda 192 Felde, Bob 426 Feldkamp, Janell 463 felts, Christopher 479 Fensholt, Kristin 232 Fenske, Carrie 334 Fenstermacher, Pamela 463 Fenton, Donald 122 Ferguson, Clyde 119 Ferguson, Hallie 440 Ferguson, Julie 366 Fessenden, Craig 149, 479 Fewell, Ramon 191, 478 Fey, David 385 Fey, Paul 385 Feyerharm, Elizabeth 232, 479 Feyerherm, Arlin 126 Feyh, Richard 342 Fiallos, Rafael 231 Fibelkorn, Kimberly 479 Fibelkorn, Paul 479 Fichtl, Ralph 188 Fickel, Kelly 194 Fiegel, Angela 479 Fiegel, Michael 418 Fiegenschuh, Ronald 137, 161, 225, 479 Fields, Debbie 46 Fields, Sharon 219 Fifth Year Seniors 36-37 Figurski, Michael 145 Fiji Little Sisters 393 Filby, Matthew 204, 479 File, Nancy 119 Filippi, David 158 Filson, Brook 333, 337 Fina, Louis 110 Finance 116 Finance Club 164 Financial Management Association Honorary 164 Finch, Sarah 137 Finck, Stanley 125 Fine, K imi 462 Finegold, Brian 479 Fingland, Roger 128 Finley, Larry 177 Finnegan, Mike 126, 164 Finnell, Marcia 372 Firestone, David 479 Fischer, Julie 416 Fischer, Scott 145, 154, 200, 370 Fischer, Shelly 154 Fisher, Abe 370 Fisher, Danny 106, 479 Fisher, Dave 40 Fisher, Eleanor 337 Fisher, Gerald 394 Fisher, Glen 342 Fisher, Kimberly 454 Fisher, Pamela 149 Fisher, Richard 450 Fisher, Steve 154 Fite, Lori 479 Fitzmorris, Brent 385 Fitzsimmons, Cotton 292 Fladung, Diane 479 Flanagan, John 161 Flanner, Saul 440 Fleming, Leeann 479 Fleming, Marche 479 Fleming, Rex 192, 47 Fleming, Ron 131, 479 Flick, Juliann 337 Flickinger, Neal 479 Flickinger, Richard 178, 479 Fliegel, Johanna 178 Flinchbaugh, Barry 109 Flinchbaugh, David 59, 457 Flora, Cornelia 126 Flora, Jan 126 Flover, Jack 125 Flowers, Michael 450 Floyd, Scott 433 Flynn, Ruth 232 Flynn, Tons 446 Foehse, Mark 113 Foerster, Bernd 114 Foley, Cynthia 114 Foley, Ericka 188, 191 Folger, Lisa 265 Folk, Doug 223 Folk, Scott 479 Folkerts, Daryl 146 Folland, Nate 126 Folmer, Kurt 32 Foltz, Jill 416 Foltz, Shawn 232, 418, 420 Food Science Club 169 Foods and Nutrition 116 Football 238-247 Foran, Patrick 364 Forbes, Jennifer 479 Forbes, Robin 334 Force, Victor 212, 213 Ford Hall Governing Board 169 Forestry 116 Forestry and Park Resources Club 169 Forge, Dale 479 Forge, Kurt 407 Formusoh, Esau 128 Forrer, Chris 209, 228, 235, 409 Forrest, Kevin 418 Forrest, Kimberly 353, 479 Forrest, Susan 348 Forssberg, Migette 143, 349 Forsyth, Richard 121 Fort, Devrin 479 Fortner, Janet 380 Fortney, William ...... ..... ....... 110, 202 Foster, Amy K. 416 Foster, Amy L 137 Foster, Don 89 Gatewood, Billie 225 Glasgow, Larry 110 Gatsche, Walter 210 Gleason, Jeanne 480 Gatz, Katie 337 Gleason, Kenton 446 Gaudreau, William 390 Gledhill, Jeannine 349 Gauger, Michael 200, 446 Gleissner, Diane 186, 334 Gaumer, Douglas 180 Gleissner, Mary 360 Gee, William 180 Glenn, Denise 143, 428 Geeseman, Rebecca 199, 480 Glenn, Jenny 480 Gehin, Jess 134, 140, 219 Glenn, John 480 Gehrt, Julie 359 Glennon, Karen 380 Geisinger, Joseph 192 Gleue, Julianne 378 Geissler, Winnifred 114 Glover, Bradley 480 Geist, Sharlene 373 Glover, Jerry 413 Gellenthien, Tom 390 Glover, Steven 232, 450 Genov, Velizar 121 Gobel, Alice 149, 480 Genovese, Joseph 402 Goddard, James 110 Gensch, Kimberly 399 Goedecke, Susan 480 Gensemer, Kendra 359 Goens, Lesley 334, 403 Gentry, Kathleen 149 Goens, Michael 402 Gentry, Todd 367 Goepfert, Chris 405 Gentry, Tracy 172 Goering, Angela 378 Geography 116 Goering, Leslie 480 Geology 116 Goering, Ryan 392 George, Brad 149, 409 Goertz, John 385 George, Carolyn 106, 149 Goertzen, Scott 346 George, Christina 440 Goetsch, Susan 480 George, Darin 134, 140, 192 Goetz, Brenda 398 George, Dee 480 Goetz, Judy 157 George, Deeann 480 Goevert, Chris 362 George, Denise 129 Goff, Ed 197 George, Stacey 349, 408 Goff, Kenneth 402 Gerber, Paul 407 Gogumalla, Shalini 161 Gerdes, Dee 150 Golden Hearts 415 Gerdes, Judi 480 Golden Key National Honor Gerhardt, Timothy 352 Society 173 German Club 173 Golden, Penny 75 German, Mark 200 Goldsberry, Rory 200 Gernat, Abel 231 Golf 270-273 Gerstner, Damian 140, 161, 180, 188 Golladay, Susan 149, 480 Gethers, Jocelyn 191, 440 Gomez, Chris 188 Gewece, James 183, 450 Gomez, Mary 146, 480 Geyer, Wayne 116, 147 Gonterman, William 149 Ghori, Asif 158, 183, 194 Gonzalez, Glorimar 188, 210 Gianakon, Thomas 134, 140, 480 Gonzalez, Marta 128 186, Gibbs, Deborah 334 Gonzalez, Veronica 480 Gibbs, Pam 337 Gooch, Shirley 440 Gibson, John 346 Gooch, Steven 409 Gibson, Rhonda 399 Good, Don 109 191, Gibson, Stephen 140 Good, Karl 235, 354 Gibson, Wes .................. .. 235, 346 God, Kristen 393, 462 Gidney, Brian 370 Gooding, Chris 342 Gieber, Mark 480 Goodman, Darla 435 Gieber, Ron 209, 480 Giefer, Bernard 480 399, Giefer, Maria 428 164, Giefer, Nicholas 364 Giefer, Todd 446 Gier, Donna 209, 480 Gieringer, 359 Giersch, Scott 413 Giesert, Ted 132, 133 Gigstad, James 342 Gilbert, Amy 435 Gilbert, Philip 185 Gilbert, Sonia 480 Gilbert, Thomas 454 Gile, David 164, 480 Giles, jill 184 Gill, Bikram 126 Gill, Jill 480 Gillen, Scott 430 Gillenwater, Shelia 333, 435 Gillespie, 128, 202, 211 Gillespie, Kristi 373 Kathy ............... 149, 373 Gilliam, Mary 373 Gilliland, Lora 344, 440 Gillogly, Everett 450 Gilmore, Kelly 161 Gilpin, Tish 226, 375 Gilson, Allan 440 Giltner, Bill 164, 392 Gingrich, Elizabeth 378 Ginn, Phillip 3 Ginter, Teri 356 Ginther, Damon 413 Girard, Greg 446 Girard, Lori 435 Girard, Sandra 408, 480 Girard, Steven 133 Girma, Melaku 128 Gish, Doug 154, 161, 185, 225 Gittemeier, Liesa 153, 223, 359 Gladwin, Teresa 428 Glantz, Wayne 173, 197, 424 Foster, Marcus 479 Foster, Mary 479 Foster, Matthew 146, 479 Foster, Susan 479 Fountain, Dawn 232, 479 Foust, John 402 Fowler, Curt 396 Fowler, Eddie 114 Fowler, George 479 Fowler, Wes 154, 446 Fowler, Rhonda 353, 431 Fowler, Todd 396 Fox, Bret 133, 137, 130 Fox, Debbie 375 Fox, Diane 194, 440 Fox, Jeff 219, 354 Fox, Kevin 409 Fragale, Chris 164 Fraizer, Gregory 405 France, Krista 408 Francis, Scott 150 Francis, Heidi 479 Francis, Ken 80 F rancka, Tammy 479 Frangkiser, Michelle 375 Frank, Brian 200, 459 Frank, Kimberly 349 Frank, Sharon 210, 349 Frank, Stephanie 209, 334 Frankamp, Kandi 428 Franke, Lambert 479 Franken, Laurence 402 Franken, Mark 402 Franken, Will 164, 402 Frankenberg, Ed 396 Franklin, Jeffrey 390 Franklin, Jennifer 150, 344, 399 Franklin, Mike 232, 405 Franz, Monica 200, 479 Franzen, Steve 407, 492 Fraser, Cynthia 122 Fraser, Tracey 127 Frassen, Olga 65 Frashier, Laura 375 Freberg, Eric 235, 409 Fredrickson, Julie 143, 435 Fredrickson, Scott 446 Freeland, Gloria 121, 210 Freeman, Amy 349 Freeman, Rhonda 334 Freitag, Kelly 177, 204, 479 French Club 169 French, Renee 359 French, Doug 402 French, Kamela 200, 479 French, Laura 412, 435 French, Leslee 349 French, Michael 113 French, Roger 447 Frerking, Ted 479 Freschett, Susie 359 Frey, Anne 398 Frey, Dana 463 Frey, Russell 210 Frey, Scott 126 Frey, Stephanie 219, 399 Frick, Chad 402 Frick, Darcy 399, 403 Frick, Julie 399 Frieden, Cammi 334 Frieden, Linndy 418, 420 Frieling, Kent 173, 352 Frieman, Jerome 126, 164 Friendship Tutoring 112-113 Fries, Cynthia 398 Friesen, Brad 446 Friesen, Kenlee 173, 479 Friesen, Paul 418 Friesen, Stephanie 372 Friess, Kelly 349, 368 Friess, Patrick 450 Frisbie, Mark 150, 370 Frisch, Ben 407 Fritch, Jeffery 479 Frith, Thomas 469 Fritsch, Becky 479 Fritzler, William 479 Frohardt, Mark 173, 225, 479 Frohberg, David 479 Fromm, Kirk 468, 479 Fronce, Krista 349 Frost, Heather 349 Fry, Laura 143 Fry, Phillip 479 Fryer, Beth 116 Fryer, Tom 116 Fuhrman, John 362 Fulhage, Melissa 372 Fulk, Rebecca 210 Fulkerson, Connie 210 Fulkerson, John 158 Fuller, Amiee 356 Fuller, Gary 204 Fuller, John 418 Fuller, Shannon 228 Fullington, Bradley 392 Fullington, Kim 399 Fulner, Bradley 392 Funk, Annette 125 Funk, Chris 418 Funk, Elyse 296-297, 312, 314, 315, 316, 372 Funk, Lonnie 131, 479 Funk, Sheryl 158 Funk, Tami 188, 189, 349 Funkhouser, Sara 125, 164 Furgason, Stan 411 Furr, Kris 398 Fyfe, Jill 153, 194, 223, 359 Gabel, Ursula 480 Gaddie, James 364 Gaehle, David 446 Gaffney, Johnny 232, 354 Gagliano, Rachele 13, 349, 403 Gagnon, Martin 145 Gaines, Michelle 334 Gaines, Tharren 191 Gaither, Janet 480 Galbraith, Dan 364 Galbreath, Elizabeth 480 Galbreath, Vanessa 146 Galdamez, Carlos 231 Galey, Chris 346 Gallagher, Leanne 375 Gallagher, Marianne 200 Gallagher, Shannon 404 Gallagher, Richard 173 Gallagher, Scott 480 Galle, Ronald 134, 219, 342 Galloway, Stephanie 404 Galvan, Jesse 364 Gambill, Regina 454 Gamble, Don 188 Gamma Theta Upsilon 169 Gammell, Jennifer 435 Gangel, Jamie 364 Gann, Schonna 393 Gannaway, David 446 Gans, Andrea 425 Gantz, Paige 356 Garavito, Lucia 125 Garber, Darrell 345 Garcia, Claudia 231 Garcia, Lisa 464 Garcia, Robert 164 Gardiner, Garth 370 Gardner, Christy 359 Gardner, David 413 Gardner, Jack 292, 293 Gardner, Scott 161, 480 Gareis, Cathy 133, 226, 228, 480 Gareis, Donna 480 Garman, Coleen 480 Garner, James 204, 480 Garner, Megan 216 Garrett, Burton 40 Garrison, Connie 174 Garrison, Jim 140, 154, 342 Garudachar, Srinivas 183 Garvert, Kay 131, 137, 378 Garvin, William 109 Garzio, Angelo. .108, 109, 110, 111 Gaskill, Brent 354 Gast, Lisa 194, 197, 333, 359 Gates, Kara 428 Gates, Randall 370 Goodman, Jill 373 Goodman, Melissa 462 Goodnow Hall Governing Board 173 Goodwin, Marsha 102 Goodwyn, Michael 480 Gorbachev, Mikhail 83 Gordon, Scott 131 Gorman, Lori 480 Gorton, Robert 122 Goss, Susan 373 Gossett, Stacy 386 Gottlieb, Rich 137 Gottlob, Clinton 390 Gough, Tracy 15, 337 Gould, Kathleen 153, 334 Gowdy, Kenneth 114, 164 Goydas, Michael 207, 231 Graber, Bob 297 Graber, Charles 185, 394 Graber, Julie 209, 371, 480 Graber, Sheila 380 Grable, Craig 362 Grabowski, Jann 360 Grabs, Greg 140 Graduate Council 173 Graduate Student Association 177 Graduate Teaching Assistants 102-103 Graduation 16-17 Gradwohl, Laura 340, 395 Graef, Jeff 209, 409 Graef, Robin 209, 337 Graf, Joseph 116 Graff, Susan 371, 435 Graff, William 131, 177, 446 Graham, Amy 197, 399 Graham, Danielle 480 Graham, Kim 480 Graham, Richard 480 Graham, Rodger 180, 185 Grain Science and Industry 119 Grain Science Club 177 Grame, Robert 383 Grant, David 226 Grant, lane 200 Grant, Fern 43, 360, 404 Grant, Bill 170 Grantham, Jeffrey 407 Grassi, Jocinda 428 Grater, Carrie 186, 335 Grauerholz, Christina 480 Graves, Delton 153, 459 Willie Giesler, an employee of Rinehart Roofing, Topeka, works on the roof of the new biochemistry building 512 Index ■ Gray, Bradford 346 Gray, John 409 Gray, Marion 119 Gray, Nena 480 Gray, Terrence 346 Gray, Tom 126 Gray, Tray 450 Greathouse, Cindy 464 Green, Andrew 169, 352 Green, Brandon 480 Green, Cinthia 429 Green, Kelly 354 Green, Lawrence 106 Green, Meg 337, 422 Green, Robert L. 207, 480 Green, Robert T. 161, 219 Green, Sam 364 Green, Tracy 149 Greenlee, Wayne 451 Greer, Kimberly 480 Greer, Rick 396 Gregg, Brian 413 Gregg, Jodi 356, 412 Gregoire, Mary 119 Gregoriew, Lisa 378 Gregory, Jim 228 Gregov, Pete 158 Greig, Jim 164 Grey, Brenda 435 Gridley, Brad 402 Griebat, Becky 223, 360 Grier, Donald 362 Grieshaber, Ginger 349, 393 Griffin, Heather 480 Griffin, Jill 344 Griffin, Jon 134, 173, 180, 440 Griffin, Nancy 480 Griffin, Susan 149, 480 Griffith, Shari 232, 335 Griffitt, William 123, 126 Grimes, Darin 451 Grimes, Karen 356 Grimm, Brian 140 Grimm, James 164 Grimm, Sondra 378 Grimm, Tina 433 Grimmett, Joel 197, 346 Grindell, Rob 114 Grindon, John 405 Grinter, Ted 131, 342 Grisham, Rodger 161, 481 Griswold, Alan 370 Grizzell, Martin 225 Grogan, Steve 92 Gromko, Eric 346 Gros, Mark 411 Grosfield, Paula 481 Grosh, Doris 121 Grosh, Gene 121 Grosko, Richelle 455 Gross, Darrin 199 Grossarth, Malinda 232, 481 Grosse, Frank 131, 149, 481 Groth, Jeanne 337 Groth, Stephan 133 Grothaus, Tamara 214, 381 Grove, Joseph 481 Groveman, Jon 80 Groves, Doris 440 Gruenbacher, Don 161, 370 Grusing, Justin 204 Guei, Robert 128 Guenther, Lawrence 481 Guerra, Juan 210 Guffey, Kimberly 177 Guffy, Mark 128 Guggisberg, Michelle 393, 429 Guilliams, Caroline 440 Guillory, Thomas.. 122 Guise, George 354 Guislain, Anne 433 Gukeisen, Karyn 225 Gulley, Rose 481 Gump, Robert 418 Gunnoe, Sunny 340 Gupta, Rohit 455 Gurley, Alton 481 Gurley, Edna 481 Gurley, Marie 481 Gurr, Ron 173, 440 Gustafson, David 113, 173 Gustafson, Jill 481 Guthrie, Martin 137, 177, 235, 481 Guthrie, Kelly 354 Guthrie, Mitch 169 Guthrie, Shelly 464 Gutierrez, Brenda 232 Gutierrez, Wilfredo 228-229 Guutazi, Athman 128 Guyette, Dena 209 Guyette, Leanne 209, 340 Guyon, Theresa 225, 432 Guzzo, Michelle 235 Gwin, Marcie 356 Haag, Ashley 408 Haag, Dick.. 114 Haahr, Heather 134, 140, 197, 225, 457 Haake, David 352 Haake, Suzanne 335 Haase, Scott 402 Haberer, Keri 131, 481 Haberman, Wendy 173, 440 Habiger, Julie 481 Habiger, Margarette 345 Habiger, Robert 113 Hachmeister, Diane 481 Hackenberg, Pat 232, 405 Hacker, Brett 210 Hackerott, Caroline 200 Hackleman, Larry 177, 185, 446 Haddock, Tina 349 Haden, David 177, 446 Hadidi, Cosima 143, 183, 481 Hadjipanayis, George 126 Hadjipanayis, Paraskevi 481 Hadler, Tommy 194, 446 Hadlock, Amy 457 Haefner, Kevin 146, 207 Haefner, Lanelle 435 Haefner, Matt 235, 446 Hafar, Linda 481 Hafner, Angie 356 Haft, Everett 114 Hagemeister, Brian 219 Hagen, John 481 Hagen, Karl 481 Hager, Jeff 402 Hager, Mark 459 Hager, Todd 396, 397 Haggard, Janell 481 Haggard, Jay 481 Haggerty, Laura 260 Hagman, Kayla 232, 481 Hagman, Tamra 209, 481 Hagstrum, David 114 Hahn, Heather 197, 356 Hahn, James 131, 342 Hail, Katy 194, 416 Haines, Lorraine 356 Hainline, Andria 99 Haist, Thomas 149, 481 Halasi, Kadosa 122 Halbleib, Kevin 164 Hale, Angela 356 Hale, Barbara 143 Hale, Lisa 399 Hale, Mary 145, 173, 212 Hale, Nita 481 Haley, Monika 481 Hall, Christopher 440 Hall, Forest 80 Hall, Linda 161 Hall, Lott 332 Hall, Randy 362 Hall, Rod 346 Hallauer, Brian 446 Hallauer, Von 180 Halloween 12-13 Ham, George 109, 173 Ham, Philip 383 Ham, Steven 392 Hamarneh, Rania 143 Hamel, Kevin 385 Hamel, Zachary 134, 199, 481 Hamid, Ammar 143 Hamilton, Brian 332 Hamilton, Dana 335, 403 Hamilton, James 125 Hamilton, John 143, 481 Hamilton, Lois 137 Hamilton, Lynette 128 Hamilton, Melinda 140 Hamilton, Michael 405 Hamilton, Rebecca 393, 435 Hamilton, Scott 118, 267, 367 Hamlet, Russell 194 Hamm, Sharon 173, 192, 221, 371 Hamma, Susan 481 Hammarlund, Raymond 396 Hammeke, Susan 481 Hammeke, Loreen 481 Hammer, Lana 154, 371 Hammer, Lyle 133, 370 Hammers, Scott 392 Hammes, Alan 481 Hammes, Bradley 481 Hammes, Greg 180, 364 Hammes, Michael 364 Hammes, Sharon 464 Hammond, Denise 481 Hammond, Mervyn 481 Hammond, Paul 451 Hammond, Stacey 464 Hamner, Brian 446 Hamon, Cheri 235, 337 Hampton, Douglas 481 Hampton, Valerie 481 Hampton, William 394 Hamrick, Craig 352 Hamscher, Albert 119 Hamtil, Maureen.. 416 Hance, Brent 137 Hanchett, Jerrod 446 Hanchett, Michelle 429 Hancock, Karan 375 Handke, Sueann 169 Handlin, Mark 207 Handrick, Daryl 200 Haner, Tom 473 Hanes, Randy 351 Haney, Robin 186, 209, 344, 481 Hanger, Janice 481 Hanke, Jennifer 335 Hanken, Tonya 393, 446 Hankins, Amy 349 Hankley, Bill 113 Hanley, Pete 392 Hanna, Gerald 173 Hanna, Julie 340 Hanna, Michael 200 Hannam, Beth 338 Hannam, Dave 411 Hanrahan, Jill 435 Hansen, Amy 143, 366, 399 Hansen, Kelly 333 Hansen, Robert 367 Hansen, Shon 481 Hanson, Bill 481 Hanson, Deirdre 150, 200, 481 Hanson, Kathleen 393, 399 Hanson, Rob 225 Hanson, Robin 228, 409 Hanson, Tom 137 Hanson, Timothy 188, 189, 407 Hapner, Thomas 481 Harari, Joe 128 Harbers, Carol 116 Harbers, Galen 481 Harbers, Leniel 109 Harbstreit, Steven 131, 134 Hardacre, Bruce 177, 446 Hardenburger, Paul 161, 207, 407 Hardin, Steve 346 Harding, Kim 191 Hare, Dave 197 Haresnape, Amy 481 Hargett, Kirk 440 Harlan, Jennifer 435 Harlow, Rita.. 481 Harlow, Tracy 440 Harman, Todd 131 Harmison, Angela 149 Harmon, David 109 Harmon, George 440 Harmon, Marcel 451 Harmon, Richard 427 Harms, Brian 114 Harms, Lisa 347, 381 Harms, Lonnie 481 Harms, Mark 150, 173, 219, 440 Harnden, Robin 150, 331, 335 Harner, Joseph 109 Harner, Thomas 188, 354 Harold, Lori 482 Harold, Rhonda 482 Harper, Erick 243 Harper, Robert 125 Harrelson, Paula 338 Harrington, Kathi 344, 464 Harris, Dave 232, 413 Harris, lane 482 Harris, Jennifer 440 Harris, Julie 412, 416 Harris, Kirstan 393, 435 Harris, Marion 114 Harris, Richard 126, 231 Harris, Ron 197 Harrison, Eric 407 Harsh, Rob 409 Harshbarger, Lynda 482 Hart, Carl 164, 482 Hart, Cynthia 416 Hart Heather 399 Hart, James 197 161, 378 Hart, Mary Hart, Renee 169 Hart, Russell 482 Hart, Shelly 482 Harter, Douglas 145 Harter, Mark 131, 150, 482 Hartke, Glenn 207, 208 Hartman, Dave 204 Hartman, Jack ........... 248, 292, 293 Hartman, Lynette 335 Hartman, Michele 169, 482 Hartner, Corey 392 Hartnett, David 110 Hartter, Curt 367 Hartter, Eric 149 Hartzell, Dan 482 Hartzler, Laurie 435 Harwick, Kirsten 164 Hasenbank, Russell 154 Hasenkamp, Debra 209 Hasenkamp, Diane.. . ......... 347, 375 Hash, Tina 482 Hashim, Rokiah 186 Hashman, Elizabeth 333, 360 Haskin, Cathy 150, 344 Haskin, Nancy 436 Hass, James 164, 482 Hassan, Filza 191, 210, 375 Hassan, Rima 375 Hasselman, Sheila 209, 343 Hatcher, Dewayne 451 Hatcher, Nick 418 Hatchett, Sabra 482 Hatfield, Les 205 Hathaway, Michael 413 Hatlen, Rick 133 Hatteberg, Sherry 436 223, 425, 429 Hatten, Wendy Hattrup, Deanna 482 Hattrup, Michelle.. 209, 482 Haub, Stephanie ......... 173, 183, 440 Hauck, Dianna 482 Hauck, Ross 128 Haufler, Della 482 Haufler, Matthew 440 Haug, Gerald 346 Haug, Greg 392 Haug, William 48 Haulmark, Gary 180 Haunschild, Nikki 225 Hause, Nancy 121 Hause, Richard 113 Hauser, Paula 128, 422 Haut, Kendra 482 Havel, Monte 482 Haverkamp, Jeff 209 Havlicek, Barbara 106 Havlin, John 106 Hawari, Hisham 161, 482 Hawk, Bradley 145, 183 Hawkins, James 232 Hawkins, Lara 356, 422 Hawkins, Lydee 184, 226, 422, 482 Hawley, Adam 134, 228 Hawley, Dale 110 Hawley, Tammy 153, 173, 482 Haycock, Beulah 106 Hayden, Deborah 381 Hayden, Kathy 381 Hayden, Mike 365, 38 38 Hayes, Brenda 482 Hayes, Don 482 Hayes, Gregory 455 Haymaker Hall Governing Board 177 Haymaker, Roger 418 Hays, Daryl 140 Hays, Jennifer 212, 216 Hays, Joni 223 Hays, Patty 178, 440 to King Hall. The structure is expected to be in the fall of 1988. (Photo by Greg Vogel) Hays, Robert 256 Hayslett, Karen 440 Hayter, Barbara 121 Hayter, Ryan 411 Hayter, Sheila 140, 143, 1 54, 225, 399 Hazell, Mary 191, 223 Heacock, Kathy 429 Head, Gary 402 Head, Murray 186 Headrick, Gary 482 Headrick, Karen 429 Heady, Kent 197, 457 Healy, Robert 209, 413 Healy, Shelly 375, 415 Heath, Kelly 440 Heath, Matt 354 Heathman, Gary 209, 482 Heaton, James 204 Heavey, Chris 40 Heck, Steven 402 Heckard, Karma 347 Hecker, Paul 173 Heckman, Hugh 482 Hedgecoth, Charles 110 Hedrick, Artyee 113 Hedrick, Christi 356 Hedrick, Deborah 183, 482 Hedrick, Don 114 Hedrick, Jerry 402 Hedrick, Nancy 185, 482 Hedstrom, Tana 446 Heeb, Julie 416 Heerman, Charles 113 Hefley, Joan 349 Heflin, Roger 440 Heflin, Ruth 114, 221, 482 Heger, Martin 183, 482 Heidebrecht, Kerry 455 Heigele, Alan 482 Height, Karen 232 Heilman, Lori 373, 398 Heiman, lerod 4 11 Heimerman, Renee 335 Heimerman, Rochelle 356 Heimlich, Brenda 200, 462 Heinerikson, Eric 134 Heinerikson, Jennifer 482 Heinitz, Rick 396 Heinrich, Amy 416 Heinrichs, Kyle 383 Heise, James 482 Heitmann, Andrew 364 Heitmeyer, Richard 482 Heitschmidt, Todd 131, 177, 446 Heley, Marshall 140, 161, 185 Helgesen, Robert 164 Hellen, Mary 113 Heller, Doug 228, 362 Heller, Steve 114 Helling, Brett 482 Hellman, Ed 119 Hellman, Becky 161 Hellmer, Jim 346 Helm, Michelle ........................ 425, 464 Helmke, Carrie 482 Helmle, Nancy 440 Helus, Ron 482 Hemman, Nathan 352 Hemmen, Dan 199, 209, 482 Hemmen, Linda 433 Hemmer, Tom 180, 235, 418 Hemmert, Eric 446 Hemphill, Amy 215, 232, 482 Hemphill, Melissa 232 Henao, Nicolas 231 Henderson, Joe 247, 268 Henderson, Karen 126 Henderson, Tammy 126 Hendrickson, Don 383 Hendrickson, Stephen 231; 482 Henke, Patrick 231 Henn, William 185, 482 Henne, Karla 199, 436 Hennesy, Stephen 482 Henriksen, Darci 25, 17, 482 Henry, Eric 370 Henry, Karol 199, 344, 482 Henry, Shari 112, 343, 482 Henry, Shirlyn, 214 Henshaw, Julie 416 Henshaw, Robin 482 Hensley, David 119 Henson, Steven 304, 306, 309 Henton, Wanda 197 Herbel, Kevin 483 Herbster, David 164 Herdman, Michelle 483 Herdman, Sherry 440 Herdman, Wendy 440 Herke, Marsha 200 Herl, E.G. 413 Herl, Michelle 180, 373 Herman, Ann 373 Herman, Herbert 231 Herman, Louis 122 Herman, Michelle 483 Hermann, James 204 Hernandez, Ramiro 188, 332 Herpich, Janet 199 Herr, Daniel 383 Herrera, Tommy 188, 221, 483 Herrington, Gail 344, 464 Herrmann, Beth 126 Herron, David 332 Herrs, Jon 342 Hertig, Linda 128 Hervey, Sheila 169, 436 Herzig, Melissa 194, 348, 378 Heskamp, Jeff 483 Hess , Charlene 209, 353, 436 Hess, Chris 146, 207, 219 Hess, George 367 Hess, Melissa 360 Hesser, Michael 219 Hessini, Patrick 258, 321 Hessman, Michael 483 Hessman, Torry 451 Hester, Karen 191 Hetrick, Barbara 126 Hetrick, Karen 29 Hetrick, William 232, 235 Hettenbach, Bart 483 Hettenbach, Susan 137, 231, 483 Hettich, Allen 265, 346 Hettinger, Linda 225, 231, 464 Hewitt, Christopher 483 Hewitt, Rochelle 483 He y, Sally 178, 483 Heyen, Darin 418 Heyen, Robert 370 Hiatt, Lisa 415 Hiatt, Vicki 455 Hickert, Monica 210, 440 Hickman, Brian 226 Hickman, James 145 Hicks, Lori 128 Higbee, Helene 145, 169, 194, 338 Higdon, Mindy 177, 483 Higgason, Julie 360 Higginbotham, Karen 483 Higgins, Alan 390 Higgins, Heidi 398 Higgins, James J. 126 Higgins, James L. 332 Higgins, Maria 416 Higgins, Matthew 440 Higgins, Randall 114 Higgins, Scott 386 Higham, Robin 119 Hight, Karen 399 Hilbert, Brad 367 Hilburn, Kimberly 349 Hildebrand, Kimberly 399 Hileman, Beth 381 Hilger, Steve 232, 451 Hill, Brock 164, 483 Hill, James 134, 150, 180, 194, 219, 409 Hill, Joyce 436 Hill, Kris 104, 375 Hill, Nancy. 154, 219, 221, 232, 381 Hill, Renee 464 Hillan, Terry 440 Hillbrant, Leann 431 Hilliard, Michael 396 Hilt, Susan 356, 366 Himberger, Dennis 362 Hindman, Tina 393 Hine, Lew 132, 133 Hines, Brian 150, 483 Hinkle, Katherine 183, 440 Hinkle, Larry 483 Hinkle, Mike 274, 276 Hinkle, Wanda 483 Hinman, Jana 360 Hinojosa, Marjorie 200, 483 Hinrichs, Aaron 207 Hinshaw, Beth 131, 133, 154, 483 Hinshaw, Dana 150, 154, 483 Hinterleitner, Ann 207, 231, 464 Hinton, Jodi 440 Hinton, Ted 364 Hipp, Linda 378 Hirsch, Ron 219 Hirschler, Michelle 226, 348, 483 Hise, lames 180, 381 History 119 Hittle, Shona 381, 387 Hixson, Carol 357 Hixson, Eric 164, 180, 192, 483 Hixson, Heidi 373 Hixson, Sherry 357 Hlade, John 451 Ho, E-Ken 483 Hoag, Alison 344, 376 Hoard, Marsha 209, 483 Hoch, Mike 446 Hochhauser, Sheila 150, 153 Hochman, Kevin 2, 180, 232, 405 Hockensmith, Mark 177 Hodge, Raylene 338, 403 Hodges, Diane 137, 425, 429 Hodges, Lynette 161, 186, 225, 483 Hodges, Ted 110 Hodgkinson, Darren 131, 446 Hoerner, Angie 235, 455 Hofer, Barry 149 Hoffhines, Sona 464 Hoffman, Anne 335 Hoffman, Garyn 483 Hoffman, George 418, 420 Hoffman, Joe 483 Hoffman, Kathleen 365, 376 Hoffman, Lisa 173, 440 Hoffman, Nancy 192, 199, 464 Hoffman, Proc 383 Hoffman, Sally 150, 344, 483 Hoffman, Shryll 121 Hoffmans, Cynthia 350 Hofmann, Jill 343, 376 Hogan, Kristi 226, 360 Hogue, John 483 Hoisington, Brian 209, 483 Hokanson, Erik 392 Holbrook, Bill 131, 137 Holcom, Dennis 367 Holcomb, Carol 116, 164 Holcomb, Gregg A 483 Holcomb, Gregg E. 483 Holcomb, Patricia 149, 483 Hocomb, Terri ........... 131, 344, 436 Holde, Kimberly 232 Holdeman, Linda 378 Holderman, Steven 446 Holland, Daman 390 Holland, Gailyn 483 Hollander, David 396, 397 Hollandsworth, Nicki 191, 441 Douglas 385 Holle, Evelyn.133, 164, 186, 378, 389 Holle, Rhonda 393, 441 Holle, Shelly 150 Hollern, Karen 200, 483 Holliday, Angela 381 Holliday, David 370 Holliday, Leif 483 Holliday, Lori 483 Holliday, Robert 116 Hollis, Jim 93 Hollowell, Derrick 483 Holman, Angela 232, 399 Holmes, Eddie 199, 483 Holmes, Kathy 106 Holmes, Layne 446 Holmes, Michael 441 Holmes, Paul 131, 451 Holmstrom, Steven 153, 411 Holovach, Tammi 140, 158 Holsapple, Julie 164 Holt, Don 121 Holthaus, Debra 204 Holthaus, Dennis 446 Holthaus, Monica 373 Holz, Larry 342 Homburg, Tim 451 Homecoming 14-15 Home Economics Education Interest Group 177 Hommertzheim, Kami 368, 464 Hon, Terry 441 Honeycutt, Mike 204 Hong, Christine 183 Hong, Ciny 183, 483 Hong, Kyung 185 Honigs, Paul 212, 213 Honken, Lynn 464 Hoober, Mark 154, 402 Hoobler, Debbie 177, 483 Hood, Brad 483 Hood, Patrick 392 Hood, Terence 346 Hoogendoorn, Raymond 169 Hook, Louise 425, 462 Hoops, Lynn 483 Hoover, Annette 137, 200, 431 Hoover, Jimmy 109 Hoover, LuAnn 119 Hoover, Michelle 235, 483 Hoover, Sandra 197, 431 Hoover, Scott 407 Hope, Bob 38 Hope, William 407 Hopkins, Cheryl 350 Hopkins, Darin 383 Hopkins, Michael 483 Hopkins, Ron 232 Hopkins, Ted 114 Hoppe, Char 232, 381 Hoppe, Fred 114, 223 Horak, Terry 146, 483 Horber, Ernst 114 Horigan, Julie 161, 167, 168, 376 Hormel, Mitchel 409 Horn, Marnie 416 Hornbaker, Ron 483 Hornberger, Jason 370 Horner, Chuck 157, 483 Hornung, Brian 191 Hornung, Jill 436 Horsch, Daniel 223, 362 Horsch, Michelle 412, 464 Horsemen ' s Association 177 Horstman, Stephanie 348, 381 Horticulture Therapy Club 178 Hortin, lohn 113 Horton, Brett 154, 451 Horton, LuAnn 484 Horton, Michael 188, 455 Horton, Shana 373 Horton, Troy 346 Hosier, Lance 446 Hoseney, Carl 119 Hoskins, Mark 137, 178, 484 Hostetler, Charles 188 Hostmeyer, Beth 441 Hotchkiss, Lisa 455 Hotel, Restaurant, Institutional Management and Dietetics 119 Hottman, Darlene 128, 404, 484 Houdek, Thomas 396 Houlden, Trent 235, 407 House, Andrew 332 House, Elizabeth 173, 360 House, Patrick 447 Housemothers 388-389 Houston, Kim 392 Houston, Mark 169 Houston, Michelle 387, 416 Houston, Tamara 403, 436 Hoving, Natasha 436 Howard, Chuck 199 Howard, Daniel 149 Howard, Dennis 50, 52, 53, 57 Howard, Don 50, 52, 57 Howard, Ralph 114 Howard, Rebecca 157, 158, 398 Howard, Susan 360 Howard, Todd 451 Howard, Trevor 484 Howe, Diane 381 Howe, Katy 399 Howe, Kevin 232 Howell, Brian 128, 145, 146, 157, 186, 385 Howell, Janet 333, 360 Howell, Jason 484 Howell, Kimberly 178, 484 Howell, Mary 143, 199, 210, 441 Howerton, Barbara 484 Hoyle, Bruce 232 Hoyt, Kenneth 106 Hrencher, Nicholas 364 Hsieh, Joe 157 Hsu, Nan 457 Hu Kuo-Kuang 113 Hua, Duy 110 Huang, Chi 122 Hubbard, Patricia 178 Hubbell, Bill 186 Hubele, Stephanie 368, 484 Hubener, Jerry 191 Huber, Chris 185 Huber, Matt 447 Hubert, Mark 447 Huck, Janice 113 Huck, Tami 376, 387 Huck, Todd 385 Huckeby, Leah 440 Hucksoll, Sheri 399 Huddle, Trisha 43, 429 Huddleston, David 484 Huddleston, Linda 133, 137, 173, 191, 484 Hudlin, Randy 183, 459 Hudson, Jeff 459 Hueftle, Nancy 169, 425, 436 Huerter, Mike 191 Huey, Dale 226, 362 Huffaker, Heidi 358 Huffaker, Ryan 411 Huffman, Lynnea... 158, 484 Huffman, Sherri 161, 194 Hug, Stephanie 347 Hug, Terri 347, 400 Huggins, Barbara 436 Huggins, Laura 338 Hughes, Jeff 484 Huizenga, Robert 451 Hula, David 113 Hull, Bonnie 106 Hull, Kristine 398 Hull, Rick 207 Hull, Troy 346 Hulsey, Brian 188, 441 Hulsing, Nick 451 Hulsman, Leanne 464 Hultgren, layne 173, 376 Hultgren, loan 387 Hultgren, Kevin 396 Human Ecology Ambassadors 178 Human Ecology College Council 178 Hummel, Karen 188, 191, 210 Hummel, Robin 343, 484 Hummel, Roger 342 Hummell, Brian 418 Hummell, Lorraine 484 Hummels, Donald 114 Humphrey, Angela 436 Hund, Pat 158 Hundley, Jody 188, 455 Huneycutt, Laura 484 Huneycutt, Teresa ..134, 161, 180, 210, 225, 484 Hungate, Gina 340 Hunsinger, Sarah 338 Hunt, Eric 183 Hunt, John 180, 424 Hunt, Mary 464 Hunt, Melvin 164 Hunt, Michele 199, 484 Hunt, Paige 371, 464 Hunt, Stacy 232 Hunter, Roy 125, 138 Hurley, Diana 464 Hurst, Amy 192 Hurst, Jacquelyn 169 Huser, Vince 204, 226, 332 Husted, Dave 390 Hutchcraft, Dorothy 455 Hutcherson, Suzanne 464 Hucheson, Jeffery 407 Hutcheson, Sheila 338 Hutchins, Andrea...178, 192, 197, 221, 226, 340 Hutchins, Debbie 376 Hutchins, Linda 197 Hutchinson, David 451 Hutton, Don 197, 484 Hutton, Marshall 364 Hutzenbuhler, Anne 404, 429, 469 Huxman, Kami 177, 343, 378 Huyett, Debra 183, 235 Hwang, Ching-I ai 121 Hymer, David 396 Hysell, Michael 145 514 Index On the attack, Roger Burns, sophomore in radio and television, scores a hit on his fencing partner, Richard Darnell, senior in radio and television. (Photo by Gary Lytle) ICAT lacovetta, Danielle Ibrahim, Hisham Ibrahim, Hisham F. lfft, Kim 143, Ikeda, Yoshiro 108, Ikins, William 109, Ikler, Lisa Ilcin, Christopher Illert, Glenn Illingworth, Francisco Illum, Troy Illuminating Engineering Society Ilumoka, Funke Imhoff, Corey Immel, Heidi Immenschuh, Larry Imthurn, Dan Ince, Lori Ince, Mike Industrial Engineering Ingmire, Lori 194 lnnes, Linda Institute of Electrical and Electron Engineers Institute of Industrial Engineering Interfraternity Council Interior Architecture International Club International Humanitarian Organization Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship Intramurals 28. Ireland, Robert 180 Ireton, Matt Ironman Irons, Bryan 185 Irsik, Jay Irvine, Bernard Isbell, Dana Isch, Jody Iseman, Ann ..157, 178, 192, 228 Isenhour, Thomas Isern, Deann Ishac, Jean Ishac, Michel Ismail, Ridjal Ismail, Wan Issawi, Ayman Istas, Jennifer Istas, Roger Ivan, Laura Ivarsson, Lena Ives, Darrin Ives, Sam Iwig, Michelle Jablonski, Joel Jackson, Angelique.. Jackson, Barry Jackson, Carolyn 1 Jackson, Hanley Jackson, Jacqueline Jackson, Jennifer Jackson, Kent Jackson, Kim Jackson, Lori Jackson, Paul Jackson, Robert Jackson, Shannon Jackson, Stefanie Jackson, Thomas Jackson, Wanda Jacobs, Jolanta Jacobs, Julie Jacobs, Laura Jacobs, Lisa Jacobs, Stephanie Jacobsen, Joel Jacobson, Edward Jacquart, lane Jacquart, Kerri Jacquart, Kristi Jaet, Bernardine Jahnke, Bill James, Donice James, Karen James, Kelly James, Mark James, Myrna 153, 1 Jameson, Kara Jamison, Mitchel Janesko, Jill Jankovich, Ann Jankovich, Jack Janne, Michel Janssen, Kelly Janssen, Scott Jantzi, Carol Janzen, Jeffery Janzen, Michael Jarboe, Ronda . Jardine, Douglas Jarmel, Jennifer Jarrett, Rhonda Jarvi, James Jarvis, Mark Jaskot, Kathy Jayasena, Vijaya Jeans, Tim Jellison, Matthew Jendlin, Sean Jenkins, Jim Jenkins, Lara Jennings, Betsy Jennings, Brian Jennings, Karen Jennings, Paul.. Jensen, Dale . Jensen, lohn Jensen, Kendra Jensen, Lyn Jensen, Trevor Jeon, Ike Jernigan, Staci Jewell, Alice 1 Jewett, Sarah Jilka, Ann 1 Jimison, Scott jindra, Mark jiwa, Amin jo, Minho johannsen, Susan johansen, Mary johnson, Angie johnson, Catherine johnson, Catrina johnson, Cherie johnson, Cheryl johnson, Christa johnson, Dana johnson, Daniel johnson, Dannette johnson, David johnson, Debby 27, 1 johnson, Deron.. johnson, Diana johnson, Eugene johnson, Gary johnson, Heather johnson, Ingrid johnson, James.. johnson, Jandle.. johnson, Jennifer johnson, Jenny johnson, Kelly johnson, Kenney johnson, Kent johnson, Kimberly johnson, Kirsten johnson, Kirk 1 johnson, Kitty johnson, Kristin.. johnson, Lesli johnson, Leslie johnson, Liesl johnson, Lloyd johnson, Lowell johnson, Lyndon .......... johnson, Marc johnson, Martin . johnson, Melissa johnson, Michelle johnson, Patrick johnson, Paul L. johnson, Paul S johnson, P.J johnson, Rhonda johnson, Robert H johnson, Robert L johnson, Roger johnson, Sarah A johnson, Sarah P....331, 3 johnson, Scott johnson, Scott L. johnson, Sheri johnson, Staci . johnson, Steven 38, 1 225, 370 johnson, Susan johnson, Tim johnson, Timothy johnson, Todd johnson, Troy johnson, Valerie johnson, Vicky johnson, William johnston, Bryce johnston, Jennifer johnston, Karla johnston, Ken johnston, Pamela johnston, Penny johnston, Rebecca johnston, Vincent jones, Aldrin jones, Andrew jones, Bethany jones, Bo 485 jones, Bradie 183 jones, Brent 133, 390 jones, Bryan 485 jones, Burke 367 jones, Byron 122 jones, Christie 122, 204 jones, Craig 188 jones, Dawn 131, 464 jones, Gary 169 jones, Jacqueline 485 jones, James 109 jones, Jennifer 178 jones, John 407 jones, Joy 322 jones, Kenneth 119 jones, Mike 18 jones, Patricia 207, 378 jones, Paul 354 jones, Rebecca 333 jones, Roderick 409 jones, Rodney 277 jones, Roxanne 360, 398 jones, Sarah 381 jones, Scott E. 409 jones, Scott R 143, 161, 199, 485 jones, Stephanie 348, 379 jones, Steven 394 jones, Terry 146 jones, Toni 455 jones, Travis 207 William 447 jong, Chin 183, 485 jordan, Giselle 485 jordan, Jacqueline 485 jordan, Lynette 178, 197 jordan, Marnie 194, 381 jordan, Mary 381 jordan, Michael 485 jordan, Phillip 421 jordan, Tony 239, 240, 243, j244-245, 319 jorgensen, Sheila 357 jorns, Tim 347 jost, Carrie 353, 437 jost, Lance 485 journalism Accreditation 196-197 journalism and Mass Communications 121 joyce, Mary 464 joyce, Matthew 485 William 451 judah, Robert 346 judo Club 183 judy, Barb 357, 403 judy, Jerry 204 jueneman, Lisa 177 juenemann, Carolyn...... ...... 192, 485 julich, Robert 390 jung, Hun 485 jurczak, James 365 jurich, Tony 125 justice, Wendy 169, 464 K Kabus, John 131, 134, 485 Kadel, Mike 133, 137, 191 223 Kadir, Wan Halimah 186 Kaemmer, Robert 485 Kaff, Kevin 153, 326 Kahler, Mark 232 Kaifes, Otto, 276 Kaiser, Julie 177, 485 Kaiser, Marvin 126 Kaiser, Paul 161 Kalbach, Karen 376 Kaldor, Katheryn 417 Kale, Jenny 118, 350 Kammen, Michael 72 Kamphaus, James 447 Kandt, Sandy 335, 336, 343 Kanemasu, Ed 109, 162, 165 Kanemasu, Rick 225, 418 Kansas State Collegian 198-201 Kansas State Fair 38-39 Kapadia, Aziz 146 Kappa Kappa Psi 183 Kappa Sigma 20 Kappelmann, Kim 161, 197, 485 Karlin, Joe 153, 178, 179, 421 Karpowich, Elizabeth 417 Karr, Kelly 371, 431 Karr, Paul 409 Kassebaum, Nancy 58, 60, 76 Kastens, Valerie 373 Kaster, David 346 Kastner, Curtis 109, 164, 169 Kats, Candace 343, 485 Kats, Lauren 486 Kats, Tim 354 Katt, Kristi 437 Kaufman, Burton 110 Kaufman, Donald 110 Kaufman, Jason. t61, 180, 192, 219, 354 Kaufman, Rex 413 Kaufman, Tim 413 Kaufman, Tom 486 Kaus, Pamela 486 Kawa, Gerald 145 Kazmi, Ali 158, 194 Keagle, Stephanie 437 Keane, Tim 121 Kearbey, Michael 486 Kearby, Terri 143, 486 Kearns, Denice 347 Keating, Angela 486 Keating, Maria 34, 486 Keay, Elizabeth 486 Keearns, Mary 441 Keefe, Sheila 335 Keefer, Laura 197 Keener, Mark 413 Keeney, Carolyn 231 Keesecker, Jill 486 Keesecker, Laura 373 Keesling, Doug 177 Keeton, Kelley 191, 486 Keeton, Kerry 121 Keever, Jill 368, 376 Keil, Esther 186, 486 Keil, Ruth 178, 486 Keimig, Kelly 398, 437 Keimig, Scot 396 Keirns, Greg 413 Keith, Amy 333 Keithley, Alan 486 Keithley, Susan 357 Keitler, Keith 143 Keller, Amy 338, 404 Keller, Anne 350, 403 Keller, Darren 367 Keller, David 256 Keller, Lisa 204, 486 Keller, Roxie 441 Keller, Troy 367 Kellerman, Patrick 180, 407 Keller-McNulty, Sallie 126 Kelley, John 370 Kelley, Karen 486 Kelley, Kristin 225, 429 Kelley, Lora 486 Kelley, Paul 109 Kells, Amy 222 Kellstrom, Martha 125 Kelly, Barbara 128 Kelly, Catherine 350 Kelly, Erin 194 Kelly, John 164 Kelly, Karen 395, 431 Kelly, Kristin 486 Kelly, Monica 338 Kelly, Stephanie 194, 350 Kelly, Teresa 137, 200, 431 Kelpin, Dale 407 Kelpin, Jill 338, 408 Kelsey, Trenton 140, 225 Kelso, Jane 486 Keltz, Max 131, 134 Kemnitz-Wilson, Elaine 486 Kemnitz, Nancy 486 Kemp, Chris 484 Kemp, Christopher 370 Kemp, Kenneth 126 Kempe, Jeanne 332 Kemplay, Matthew 486 Kempthorne, Ray 332 Kennaley, Robert 137, 225 Kennedy, Charles 365 Kennedy, George 164 Kennedy, John 485 Kennedy, Joe 153, 223, 413 Kennedy, Joseph 346 Kennedy, Kathleen 412, 464 Kennedy, Robert 390 Kennedy, Samuel 367 Kennedy, Stormy 169 Kennedy, Todd 209 Kennedy, Warren 161, 424 Kenneson, Robert 486 Kennesy, Sheryl 486 Kenney, Van 235, 411 Kenworthy, Amy 137, 200, 486 Kephart, Charles 164, 392 Kerle, Keith 197 Kern, Brad 346 Kern, Mary 135 Kerns, Kurt 441 Kerr, Carrie 486 Kerr, Danny 106 Kerschen, Dennis 403 Kerschen, Mark 486 Kersting, Cheryl 486 Kessler, Kim 417 Kester, lana 350 Ketchum, Robert 486 Ketter, Trina 486 Kettler, Keith 199, 385 Keusler, James 367 Key, Greg 146, 486 Key, Julie 429 Khatamian, Houchang 119 Khoury, John 411 Kichler, Chuck 150 Kickhaefer, Amy 232 Kickhaefer, Kevin 346 Kiefer, Sam 204 Kiefer, Stephanie 400 Kiefer, Stephen.. 117, 126, 156, 173, 219 Kiehl, Brad 451 Kiekel, Darren 486 Kiger, Karalee 232 Kijowski, Michael 164, 392 Kilgannon, James 169, 183 Kilgore, Lora 131, 231, 344 Kilgore, Thomas 431 Killian, Steven 396 Kim, Chang 185 Kim, Changmin 185 Kim, Chie 185 Kim, Chong 183, 455 Kim, Coreena 353 Kim, Hee 486 Kim, Hyuk 185 Kim, Song 486 Kim, Sunah 185 Kim, Yeong 486 Kim, Yong 486 Kim, Young 185 Kimball, Sarah 154 Kimbell, Zack 274, 278-279 Kimble, Doris 128 Kimbrough, Susan 437 Kimmins, Kent 119 Kimura, Larissa 387 Kincaid, Chris 150 Kincaid, Kim 381, 415 Kinderknecht, Cornell 232 King, Aileen 437 King, Carmady 486 King, Douglas 486 King, Edward 451 King, Liz 177 King, Gretchen 385 King, Laura 338 King, Lorraine 209 King, Richard 405 King, Scott 223, 235 Kingery, Scott 418 Kinsey, Mary 250, 254255 Kinsey, Molly 173, 219, 235, 486 Kinsler, Jan 373 Kinzel, Catherine 486 Kipp, John 122 Kippes, Christopher 370 Kiracofe, Guy 109, 200 Kiracofe, Kent 346 Kirk, Gary 183 Kirk, Philip 133, 154, 342 Kirkham, Mary 109 Kirkham, Ron 346 Kirkman, Kelly 164 Kirkpatrick, Cindy 335, 336, 393 Kirkpatrick, Sherri 335, 393 } Kirmser, Philip 114 Kisel, Jason 396 Kiser, Harvey 109 Kisner, Brandon 434007 Kitch, Shauna Kitchen, Kathleen 231, 464 Kitt, Lance 418 Kittle, Brenda 235 Kittle, Christa 429 Kittner, John 192, 390 Kivett, Todd 173, 441 Klaassen, Richard 486 Klabunde, Kenneth 110, 148, 149 Klahr, Douglas 131 K-Laires 185 Klamm, Kaylene 145, 200, 486 Klap, Kelly 370 Klassen, Harold 110 Klassen, Richard 140, 153 Klataske, Daryl 486 Klausmeyer, Kelly 140 Klein, Beth 486 Klein, Kirk 451 Kleinholz, Mary 404 Kleinschmidt, Kelli 486 Klemm, Karen 197 Klenda, Debra 169, 464 Klenda, Kristine 350 Klenda, Pattie 143, 486 Kley, David 424 Kleymann, Jeff 143 Kleysteuber, Jeana..131, 191, 350, 412 Kliesen, Brenda 441 Klima, Darrick 347 Klinker, M.J 207 Klinker, Suzanne 431 Klorfenstein, Carol 119 Klopfenstein, William 110 Klotzbach, Tania 357 Klozenbucher, Marian 464 Klug, Scott 487 Knapp, Kellie 487 Knapp, Ronda 403, 487 Knappen, Dan 199 Kneaves, Chuck 199 Knepper, Carol 114 Knetter, Chris 487 Kniffin, Cyd 366, 381 Knight, Chuck 204 Knight, Patrick 126 Knight, Vicki 347,455 Knipp, George 137 Knop, Lisa 379 Knorr, Carol 487 Knostman, Harry 154 Knowles, Kerrie 357 Knowles, Thomas 392 Knox, Kollin 407 Knox, Lindsey 373, 415 Knudsen, Tim 396 Knudson, Bruce 403 Knust, Jill 200, 487 Kobs, Sarah 228, 338 Koch, Kenneth 424 Koch, Paul 113 Koch, Randy .. 219, 241 Kocour, Michael 164 Kocour, Vincent 407 Koechner, Alan 367 Koegeboehn, Gerald 451 Koeller, Kathy .. 357 Koelliker, James 113, 192 Koelzer, Jacque 464 Koeppe, Owen 110, 113 Koetting, Chris 133, 173 Koger, Jim 128, 447 Kohl, Jeanna 197, 209, 487 Kohl, Thomas 487 Kohler, Carolyn 487 Kohler, Lucy 487 Kohler, Mike 383 Kohler, Steven 140, 192, 424 Kohman, James 154 Koker, William 487 Warm spring weather brought out the sporting fever in many people, including Pat Kellerman, sophomore in finance, who spikes a volleyball at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon house. (Photo by Greg Vogel) 516 Index Kolb, Erik 447 Kolb, Troy 140, 161, 204, 487 Kolbeck, Kevin 403 Kolde, Nancy 464 Kolenda, Kathy 178, 487 Kolenkiewicz, Margaret 197 Kolle, Jennell 373 Kolonosky, Patricia 114 Kolozsy, Kevin 146 Kolterman, Dan 209 Kompus, Mary 145, 487 Kondor, Michael 487 Konnesky, Shelley 417 Konz, Steve 121 Koons, Vince 154, 451 Kopff, Loren 457 Kopp, Jennifer 431 Koppenhafer, Michael 451 Korb, Philip 342 Korean Student Association...... 185 Korte, Scott 146, 207, 219, 487 Korte, Todd 146, 487 Korte, Tom 161, 433 Korth, Julie 487 Kostelac, Michael 487 Koster, Max 413 Koster, Nina 437 Koster, Skip 207 Kosti, Rick 83 Kottler, Paul 365 Koudele, Joseph 109 Kraai, Robert 455 Kracht, Amy 487 Kraemer, Robert 125 Krainbill, Niki 333, 376 Kralik, Sherry 133, 437 Kramer, Amy 235, 395, 464 Kramer, Brad 180 Kramer, Diane 437 Kramer, lohn 109 Kramer, lull 381, 422 Kramer, Kathy 79, 338 Kramer, Kyle 354 Krannawitter, Kevin 413 Kratochvil, Mitchell 345 Kratochvil, Terry 154 Kratz, Lisa 226 Kratzer, Laryssa 429 Kratzer, Rich 146 Krause, Deborah 487 Krause, Jean 232 Krause, Robert 100, 101, 194 Krauss, Anne 131, 134, 150, 191, 219, 400 Krauss, Thomas Krebs, Aaron Krehbiel, Brian Krehbiel, Jay Krehbiel, Stacey Kreie, Laura Kreller, David Kremer, Eugene Kren, Margo Kreutzer, Kimberly Kruetziger, Randy Kriley, Connie Krill, Laura Krishnamoorthi, Prakash Krishnamoorthi, Ramaswa Krizek, Theron 137, 154, 342 Krizman, Andrea 350 Krizman, Jason 390 Kroeker, Franklin 178, 487 Kroeker, Karen..143, 173, 186, 192, 360 Kroeker, Stephanie 234 Kroenlein, lames Kroenlein, Jeff Kroenlein, Stacey Kromm, David Kropf, Brad Kropf, Martha Krstulic, Jim Kruckenberg, Heidi 232, 360, 408 Kruckenberg, Kristin ...... 188, 235, 360 Krueger, Randy 164 Krug, Andrea 137, 154, 173, 373 Krug, Anita 154, 373 Krug, Brooke 400, 415 Kruger, Lon 292, 294, 301, 302, 305, 306, 309 Krumm, David Kruse, Stacy Kruzich, Lisa KSET KSUARH KSU Laser Laboratory 148-149. KSU Student Foundation 186 KSU vs. KU 22-23 K-State Cares 178-179 K-State Choir 232 K-State Engineers 185 K-State Orchestra 232 K-State Players 212-217 K-State Singers 232 Kubicek, Alena 462 Kubik, Tim 385 Kuckelman, Tim 393 Kuehny, Brad 131, 342 Kuhl, Gerry 109 Kuhlman, Dennis 109 Kuhlman, lames 204 Kuhlman, Kevin 487 Kuhlman, Sarah 464 Kuhn, Leigh 487 Kuhnert, Todd 390 Kukreja, Atul 487 Kukreja, Pooja 487 Kulage, Jerry 365 Kull, Leslie 335 Kummer, Steven 421 Kundiger, Marion 110 Kunkel, Mary 381 Kunkel, Peter 418 Kuntz, Beth 235, 464 Kuntz, Cary 455 Kuntz, Lisa 437 Kunz, Karl ..... .............. . .180, 383 Kurtz, Ray 113 Kvasnicka, Brad 390 Kwak, Harris Hae-soo 185, 487 Kwartin, Mathew 150, 200 Kyer, Melissa 425 Kyle, Benjamin 110 Kyle, Dana 182 Kyle, Joshua 182, 183, 487 Kysar, Jeffrey 223, 451 Lineback, Julie 199, 437 Linenberger, Annie 194, 376 Linenberger, Kathy ....... .... 219, 376 Lingg Janet 488 Linin, Kim 169, 376 Link, Susan 464 Linn, Terri 488 Linnebur, Michelle 200, 429 Linney, lay 409 Lintz, Mike 188, 455 Lippe, Darren 154, 385 Lippoldt, Jennifer 393 Lipps, Hank 347 Lipson, Robert 248-249 Walter 188 Litchman, Gary 447 Litherland, Monique 488 Little Apple Triathlon 10-11 Little, Gerald 409 Little, Jeff 150 Little Sisters of the Aphelion Rose 398 Little Sisters of Minerva 408 Little Sisters of the Golden Rose 415 Little Sisters of the Maltese Cross 347, 348 Little Sisters of the Pearls and Rubies 371 Little Sisters of the Shield 395 Little Sisters of the Shield-Diamond 403, 404 Little Sisters of the Unicorn 422 Little Sisters of the White Rose 412 Little Women 66 Litton, Judy 194, 400 Lively, Dwayne 405 Livingston, Brian 408 Livingston, Tammie 111 Livonia, Chuck 161 Lix, Russell 365 Lloyd, Becky 209, 333 Lloyd, Rachel 149, 161, 488 Loader, Michelle 488 Lobmeyer, Jeanette 429 Lock, Derron 386 Lock, Tod 383 Lockard, Chet 488 Lockas, Michael 204 Lockwood, Dayna 387 Loder, Darrel 393 Loder, Julie 488 Loder, Monte 177, 488 Loe, Jo 429 Loeffler, Karen 488 Loepp, Roy 154, 235, 371 Loganbill, Charles 488 Logback, David 180, 488 Logback, Laura 488 Logback, Steven 355 Lohmeier, Stephen 355 Lohr, Gordon 488 Lolling, Paula 431 Lommell, Steven 126 London, Bryon 411 Long, Byron 133 Long, Charles 384 Long, Douglas 347 Long, Gregory 451 Long, John 488 Long, Larry.. 133 Long, Lisa 154 Long, Suzanne 360, 366 Long, Tasha 338 Longhofer, Duane 488 Longley, Jeff 204, 367 Longley, Jennifer 232 Longwell, Carrie 360 Lonker, Jamie 381 Lons, Kristin 338 Lookhart, Jeff 409 Lookhart, Jodi 489 Lopez, Danny 347 Lopez, Estell 451 Lopez, Wanda 210, 489 Lopp, Tom 200 Lord, Pati 143, 455 Lorenz, Mark 146, 207 Lorenzen, Lori 437 Lorson, Tom 131 Lou Douglas Lectures 74-77 Loughmiller, Mitzi 186, 343, 437 Love, John 177, 447 Love, Valerie 146, 433 Lovell, Bill 489 Lovell, Mike 419 Lovin, Todd 170, 489 Lane, David 424 Lehner, Brent 457 Lane, Stephanie 441 Lehner, Jodi 173, 338 Lang, Cynthia 357 Leiding, Susan 199 Lang, Grace 116 Leininger, Philip 451 Lang, Jeff 487 Leis, Dean 451 Lang, William 352 Leiszler, Jeff 488 Langdon, Robin 487 Leiszler, John 488 Lange, Maria 488 Leiszler, Stella 396 Langenkamp, Jerry 125 Leitch, Michael 365 Langhammer, Raymond 455 Leith, David 128 Langley, Greg 143, 199 Lemaitre, Anne 134 Langlois, Kenton 180 Lemay, Cory 451 Langner, Michelle 400 Leming, Craig 455 Lankhorst, Les 232 Leming, Doug 488 Lanning, Heather 464 Lemon, Michelle 488 Lapping, Joyce 113 Lemon, Tia 398, 464 Lapping, Mark 98, 164 Lenahan, Patrick 177, 447 Larsen, Shona 436 Lenhert, Ann 110 Larson, Angela 488 Lenhert, Donald 114 Larson, Brenda 154, 371, 429 Lentz, Charles 365 Larson, Buffy 338, 412 Lentz, Julie 488 Larson, Erick 371 Leonard, Candise.. 130, 157, 158, 400 Larson, James 393 Leonard, Carey 225, 421 Larson, Janelle 131, 137, 149, 154, Leonard, Carol 488 219, 221, 371, 381 Leonard, Jacinda 357, 368 Larson, Karen 488 Leonard, Ron 143, 199 Larson, Robert 488 Leonhard, Scott 488 Larson, Tad 204 Leroux, George 218, 219, 220 Larson, Tawnie 121 Leroux, Gregory 394 Lashell, Gordon 191 Lesage, Todd 488 Lashley, Kevin 258, 455 Lesh, Stephanie 379 Lask, lohn 197, 448 Leslie, John 126 Lassalle, Jose 46 Lesperance, Mark 488 Lassman, Christy 360 Lessman, Jana 178, 192, 223, 360 Sheri 360 Lessman, Jeffrey 154, 411 Late Night Seaton 128-131 Lester, Irving 232 Latham, Elizabeth 128, 488 Letelier, Maria 231 Latter-Day Saint Association 186 Letellier, Bruce 134, 140, 161 Lauber, Andrea 232 Letourneau, Kent.... 145, 146, 235, 411 Lauer, Janie 194, 223, 373 Letourneau, Madonna 488 Lauer, Tanya 373 Lett, Sam 411 Laughlin, Brenda 134 Lett, Shari 488 Laughlin, Bruce 16 Leu, Katherine 204, 457 Laughlin, Carl 407 Leverich, Michael 143, 199, 488 Laughlin, Chuck 326 Levin, Amanda 393 Laughlin, Eugene 106 Lew, Choong 488 Laughlin, Stephanie 488 Lew, Kevin 183, 186, 225 Laughman, Jeffrey 347 Lewis, Brad 365 Laughrey, Rick 403 Lewis, Cristy 431 Laurie, Dave 113, 125 Lewis, Danielle A 360 Laurie, Mark 367 Lewis, Danielle R 387 Laverentz, Mark 149, 342 Lewis, Garland 119 Lavergne, Danyel 360 Lewis, Janeen 143, 488 Lavery, Douglas 447 Lewis, John 488 Lavery, Jeff 199, 405 Lewis, Lesa 178, 488 Law, Dennis 121 Lewis, Michelle 335 Law, Rhonda 143 Lewis, Patty 186 Lawrence, Norma 392 Li, Lige 122 Lawrence, Steve 367 Liang, George 109 Lawrence, Tracey 232 Libel, Brin 421 Lawrenz, Brad 352 Lichlyter, Rochelle 169, 43 7 Lawson, Cindy 429 Lichtenhan, Vickie 338 Lawson, John 173, 441 Liebl, Kristin 150, 464 Lawson, Laurie 169, 185, 368, 437 Liening, Craig 164, 180, 405 L ' Ecuyer, Susan 157 Liening, Cristi 429 Le, Phong 231, 488 Liermann, Chris 207 Le, Zheng 232 Lierz, Susan 333, 488 Leach, Jan 126 Lies, Dean 185 Leach, Robert 447 Lietz, Eric 407 Lear, Jyl 373 Light, Douglas 396 Leavitt, Sheri 157, 455 Lightcap, lohn 419 Lebak, James 223, 451 Lightcap, Robert 419 Lechtenberger, Kayla 357 Lile, Stephen 419 Lee, Barton 355 Liles, Stacey 137, 225 Lee, Carrie 464 Lilley, Joseph 447 Lee, David 385 Lillich, Susan 437 Lee, Heather 376 Lillich, Timothy 447 Lee, Janet 149, 153, 164, 194, 340 Lilly, Jason 4 Lee, Lori Lim, Hyesook 185 Lee, Nathan 235 Lim, Seung 185 Lee, Robert 488 Lin, Albert 113 Lee, Rodrick 455 Lin, Brian 207 Lee, Seung 185 Lin, Chii Dong 126 Lee , Stanley 121 Lin, William 207 Lee, Stephanie 398, 400 Lincoln, Colleen 488 Leep, Jana 457 Lind, David 385 Leff, Keith 336, 393 Linder, Gretchen 173 Leff, Joseph 150 Linder, Tom 150 Leffingwell, Mark 394 Linderkamp, Ann 186, 395 Legg, James 126 Lindly, Edwin 110 Legg, Marilyn 221 Lindquist, Judy 154, 488 Legleiter, Mike 177, 226, 447 Lindquist, Teri 429 Lehman, Daniel 149, 488 Lindquist, Wesley 352 Lehmann, Dirk 209, 352 Lindstrom, Lori 157 Lehmann, Jonathan 488 Line, Kristy 154, 373 149, 354 226, 326 487 418, 420 150, 487 487 177, 447 109 173 LaBarge, Darin 411 360 LaBarge, Jill 333 103, 413 LaBarge, Monique 487 177, 192 Laboratory Medicine 121 487 Lackey, Ron 414 122 Lacy, Mark 219, 407 110 Ladenburger, Brad 149, 419 Lafferty, Kara 487 Laflamme, Dean 451 Lagleiter, Mike 173 Lagomarcino, Debbie 487 Lahodny, Leah 487 Lahti, Judith 429 340, 487 Laird, Denise 150, 487 403 Laird, Scott.. 403 341 Lake, Jodi 487 116, 169 Lalman, David 150 385 Lamb, Greg 394 376, 387 Lamb, lamie 371 394 Lamb, Robert 113 Lambdin, Scott 487 Lamberson, Kathy 232, 487 Lambert, Brad 240 Lambert, Denise 400, 404 Lambert, Jack 164 Lambert, Vanya 487 Lamette, Larry 191 Lamfers, Craig 390 487 Lammers, Andy 405 441 Lamond, Ray 109 178, 379 Lamond, Ronda 209, 487 185 Lampe, Lori 368, 417 185 Lampe, Mary 10178, 197, 209, 223, 487 517 Index 489 Mah, Nancy 183, 489 441 Mah, Norman 489 489 Mahabile, Wameotsile 128 404 Mahadevan, Rajan 116-117 408 Mahaffey, Clark 186 391 Maherman, Jodi 232 367 Mahmood, Zahid 194 346 Mahoney, Maureen 357 489 Mahoney, Patrick 180, 188, 207 133 Mahoney, Theresa 489 114 Mai, Craig 447 312 Main, Stephen 386 489 Mainquist, Melanie 38, 343, 489 267 Majerus, Michelle 489 373 Major, Jerry 489 403 Majors, Rich 447 338 Makhale, G erard 128 447 Malaysian Students 186 385 Maldonado, Claudia 210, 464 447 Malek, Ron 228, 411 Malir, Rick 421 Mallean, Tony 403 Mallory, Brad 143, 199, 347 Malone, Sharon 360 Malone, Steve 161, 411 Maltby, Jill 431 Management 122 Manges, Harry 109 Manges, Peggy 489 Manges, Shelley 232 Mangus, Lori 173, 185 Mani, Rachel 231, 368, 465 Manigat, Leslie 83 Manke, Alan 352 Manley, Joni 204, 489 Manly, Gary 183 Mann, Ajit 455 Mann, Stephanie C. 143, 489 Mann, Stephanie R 417 Mannebach, Scott 447 Mannell, Carrie 489 Mannell, Matt 489 Manney, Tom 126 Manning, Nancy 335 Mantz, Greg 158 Mantz, Todd 365 Mapes, Evan 386 Maples, David 414 Mar, Terry 489 Marble, Kimberly 128, 357 Marceca, Joe 383 Marchin, George.. 110 Marcuson, Kirk 342 Marcy, Kari 489 Marek, Norbert 173, 442 Margolies, David 150 Marihugh, Karen 149, 209 Marihugh, Sandy 133, 164 Marine, Matthew 489 Marion, Melissa 338 Marion, Stephen 397 Marketing 122 Marketing Club 186 Marketing Research 188-189 Markley, Angela 490 Marlatt Hall Governing Board 188 Marmie, Jeree 209, 373 Marquardt, Joel 355 Marquardt, Patricia 188, 490 Marquart, Brent 490 Marr, Charles 119 Marr, John 122 Marrs, Lyn 128 Marrs, Tammy 490 Marsh, Harry 121 Marsh, Pete 178 Marshall, Jody 294, 423 Marshall, MarIa 149 Marshall, Robert 433 Marshall, Ryan 403 Marstall, Alan 200 Marstall, Dennis 421 Martell, Mary 360 Martin, Alaina 381 Martin, Albert 204 Martin, Angie 379 Martin, Bobby 149 Martin, Don 186, 365 Martin, Frances 194 Martin, George 442 Martin, Ginger 232, 357 Martin, Greg 164, 226, 403 Martin, Jean 490 Martin, Jennifer 465 Martin, Kenny 188 Lovins, Richard 200, Lowe, Alicia Lowe, Todd Lowery, Natalie 360, Lowman, Thomas Lowrimore, Michael Lowry, Mark Lubbers, Troy 48-49, Lubore, Karyn Lucas, Glynda Lucas, Michael Lucas, Monique Lucas, Rebecca 157, 210, Luchtefeld, Dave Luchtefeld, Kristen Luck, Barry Lueck, Carmela 177, Lueck, Timothy Luetters, Mark 223, Luft, John Lugar, Landon 177 Lugar, Lisa 154, 489 Luginsland, Jill 154, 344, 376 Luke, Lindsay 437 Luke, Meggan 335 Lukomske, Leah 137, 441 Luling, Theresa 338 Lundeen, Leann 209, 376 Lundstrom, Judy 157, 196, 210 Lunsford, David 226 Lunsford, Denise 488 Lunsway, Michele 232 Lupo, John 367 Lustig, David 355 Lutheran Young Adults 186 Luthi, Melissa 185, 489 Luty, Brock 188 Luty, Jeffrey 355 Lutz, Craig 164, 191 Lutz, Gerald 489 Lutz, Shane 396 Ly, Tung 164, 231 Lyle, Johanna__ ..... ......... 106, 149 Lyle, John 140, 192 Lynch, Judith 194 Lynch, Keith 116, 169 Lynch, Kenneth 169 Lynn, Aribel 489 Lynn, Kenzil 140 Lynn, Robin 347, 400 Lyon, Katy 338, 387 Lyon, Stephen 332 Lyons, Amy 441 Lytle, Gary 527 Maan, Ajit 183 Mabuza, Khanyisile 128 Macan, Patrice 204 MacCracken, Christopher 391 Mace, Rhonda 464 MacFarland, Charlotte 212, 215 MacFarland, Dave 121 Macha, Michelle 219, 347, 464 Machin, Marc 154, 441 Machin, Matt 489 Mack, John 197 Mack, Richard 183, 489 Mackay, Marion 169, 183 Macy, Derek 178 Macy, Rachelle.. 379 Macy, Sandy 16 Maddex, Teri 489 Madel, Brian 489 Madhusudhan, P 210, 489 Madinger, Charles 146, 489 Madison, Todd 140, 489 Madsen, Debora 164 Madsen, Janet 312, 316 Maechtlen, Shawna 131, 150, 232, 400 Maggard, Bryan 386 Maginness, Paula 145 Mah, Larry 11 Martin, Kevin.. 332 Martin, Lee 133 Martin, Loren 188, 347, 417 Martin, Loretta 225, 455 Martin, Mary 114 Martin, Matthew 352 Martin, Melanie 381, 393 Martin, Michele 381 Martin, Sonya 197 Martin, Steve 177 Martin, Thomas 365 Martin, Todd C. 426, 490 Martin, Todd 1 131, 150 Martindale, Ryan 276 Martini, Steve 285 Martineau, Elizabeth 207, 490 Martineau, Rick 490 Martinez, David 192 Martinez, Flavio 231 Martinez, Harold 490 Martinez, Heriberto 158, 169 Maruska, Kaye 490 Marvel, Larry 146, 347 Marxen, Andrea 490 Marxen, James 490 Marzolf, Richard 110, 164 Marzullo, Cath y 490 Mason, Bob 383 Mason, John 490 Mason, Taylor.. 187 Massock, Shawn 447 Masson, John 490 Masters, Kim 490 Masters, Rick 451 Masters, Wendy 231, 465 Masterson, Barbara 490 Mathematics 122 Mathens, Alexander 113 Mathews, Steve 20 Matteson, Diane 106 Matthews, David 332 Matthews, John 110 Matthews, Marc 490 Mattson, Richard 119, 178 Mauler, Curt 490 Maultz, Holly 78 Maupin, Mark 149, 490 Maurer, Annette 338 Maxey, Paula 442 Maxwell, Brian 145 Maxwell, Michelle.. 400 Maxwell, Douglas 177, 185, 447 Maxwell, Robert 140, 490 May, Roger 131, 137, 352 Maydew, Troy 490 Mayer, Carl 164, 180, 490 Mayfield, Aaron 419 Mayfield, Calvin 191, 457 Mayfield, Elton 128, 490 Mayfield, Fran 209, 373 Mayfield, Gayle 490 Mayfield, Wentz 350 Mayo, Michael 110 Mayo, Pamala ....... .............. 235 Maze, Sharon 338 Maziya, Busie 128 McAnarney, Amy 133, 232, 338 McAnarney, Harry 113 McAnarney, Pam 400 McArthur, Colton 391 McAtee, Angela 167, 209, 490 McAtee, James 133, 146, 403 McBee, Tammy 490 McBride, Richard 113 McCabria, Robyn 225 McCall, Dennis 383 McCall, Mary 164 McCallister, Keaton 140 McCammon, Brett _ 223, 452 McCardle, Brian 13 McCarthy, Paul 114 McCaul, Cormac 367 McChesney, Marc 326 McClain, Montgomery 403 McClellan, Roger .137, 150, 180, 194, 219, 342 McClelland, Robin 149, 490 McClure, Angie 393, 442 McClure, Jill 350 McClure, Kimberly 350 McCluskey, Molly 381 McCollum, Rich 158 McComas, Marlene 113, 190, 191 McConnell, David 116 McConnell, Julie 366 McConwell, Edward 424 McCoole, Margo 437 McCormack, Greg 131 McCormick, Mark 455 McCosh, Robert 332 McCowan, Garrett 424 McCoy, Bradley 452 McCoy, Brett 145, 447 McCoy, Fred 302 McCoy, Jennifer 465 McCoy, Rob 150, 490 McCoy, Sandra 200, 437 McCracken, Todd 200, 352 McCray, Pat McCreary, Melissa 338, 44 McCreary, Tammy 128, 157, 173 McCreight, lohn 365 McCright, Paul 122 McCulloh, John 119 McCullough, Elizabeth 113 McCullough, Mike 140 McCully, Cynthia 442 McCune, Kristi 219, 381, 422 McDaniel, Donald 347 McDavitt, Thomas 200, 455 McDonald, Dana 465 McDonald, David 386 McDonald, Richard 110, 114 McElhaney, Liz 350 McEllhiney, Robert 119, 177 McElroy, Mary 125 McElroy, Michael 70, 71 McEntee, Chris 414 McEvoy, Lisa 490 McEwen, Scott 414 McFarland, Darrin 452 McGatlin, Jodi 381 McGaughy, William 114 McGee, Michael 347 McGehee, Shawn 365 McGill, Joel 367 McGillivary, Larry 178, 490 McGlone, Helen 227 McGranahan, Patrick 158 McGrath, Diane 113 McGrath, Jennifer 188, 455 McGraw, Eugene 121 McGraw, Jeff 371 McGraw, Molly 400 McGuire, Jim 126 McHenry, Brenda 220, 490 McHenry, Gregory 490 McHenry, Tawny 490 McIlvaine, Andrew 5, 409 McIlvaine, Douglas 409 McIntire, Mark 11 McIntire, Melinda 360 McIntosh, Darla 403, 417 McIntosh, Terry 180 McIntyre, Cassandra 417 McIntyre, Douglas 391 McIntyre, John ...134, 173, 180, 225, 452 McKain, Valorie 442 McKale, Charles 26, 180, 326 McKee, Francie 210, 379 McKee, lohn 397 McKee, Miles 109, 150 McKenzie, Paul 347 McKinley, William 391 McKinney, Joyce 220 McKinney, Terry 423 McKinnon, James 345, 455 McKinzie, Travis 131, 200, 455 McLain, Kevin 140 McLane, Ben 153, 386 McLaren, Bruce 197 McLaughlin, Tom 219 McLean, Lynwood 209 McLellan, Hilary 113 McLenon, Marla 442 McLenon, Matthew.. 490 McLeod, Mark 393 McMahan, Greg 286 McMahan, Jill 490 McMahill, Jennifer 376 McManaman, Chris 146, 186, 490 McManis, Helen 119 McMaster, Gerry 146 McMillan, David 183 McMillan, Sue 490 McMillan, Suzanna 79, 140 McMillen, Devin 357 McMinimy, Kendall 226, 332 McMinimy, Vera 204, 333, 490 McMinnville, Jennifer 232, 417 McMurray, Janie.... .............. 223, 442 McMurry, Todd 352 McMurtry, Sharon 191 McNabb, Shawn 188 McNaghten, Carolyn 335 McNamara, Carl 490 McNaul, Brent 161 McNeill, Gerald 409 McNickle, Candy 490 McNulty, Brian 169 McNulty, Mark 126 McQueen, lohn 452 McQueen, Mike 128, 490 McRee, Scott 411 McSwegin, Catharine 490 McWhorter, Michele 128 McVey, Scott 121 Mead, Melissa 200, 429 Mead, Doug 409 Meade, Amy 199, 490, Meade, Matt 447 Meador, Richard 405 Meadows, Jerri 340 Meadows, Sally 381, 415 Meares, Michael 397 Mechanical Engineering 122 Medley, Denise 199, 379 Medsker, Sheri 400, 415 Meeh an, Beverly 353, 465 Meeks, Cris 172 Meerian, Randy 448 Meers, Cindy 398, 490 Megna, Richard 113 Mehlinger, Michele 118, 149 Meier, Debbie 373 Meier, Jamie 352 Mein, Bill 131, 134, 150 Meinert, Vicki 333 Meis, Kris 490 Meisner, Robert 106 Melgren, Paul 137, 194, 225, 352 Mellage, Chris 153, 411 Meloan, Clif 110 Melton, Austin 113 Melton, Dustin 394 Melton, Mark 232 Memming, Laura 188 Mendenhall, Burney 125 Meng, Mike 405 Menges, Krista 415 Men ' s Basketball 304-311 Men ' s Cross Country 256.257 Men ' s Four Year Plan 258-259 Men ' s Glee Club 235 Mense, Timothy 455 Mentgen, Brenda 235 Mentgen, Christine 154 Menze, Lora 381 Mercer, Tammy 490 Meredith, William 452 Merkel, Amy 379 Mrklein, Mark 333 Merklin, Joseph 125 Merrill, Paula 225, 442 Merrill, Sarah 125 Merriman, Tracy 173 Mertes, Laura 373 Mertz, Johnathan 355 Messenger, Deborah ..143, 186, 197, 465 Metcalf, David 146 Metz, Dan 137 Metzger, Deanne 199, 398 Metzger, Heather 200 Metzger, Stephanie 188 Metzler, lanette 169 Metzler, Roger 143, 199, 223 Meurisse, Carol 490 Mexican American Council of Students 188 Meyer, Christy 199, 228, 491 Meyer, Cynthia 455 Meyer, Dale 491 Meyer, Katie 365 Meyer, Lori 491 Meyer, Mark 158 Meyer, Pamela 442 Meyer, Rich 414 Meyer, Rick 352 1 Meyer, Stephen 191 Meyer, Therese 145, 200, 387, 491 Meyerhoff, Kevin 21, 397 Meyers, Brent 491 Meyers, Gwen 393, 491 Meyers, Michael 333 Meyers, Shannon 465 Index Meyers, Troy 362 Meyn, Tod 169 Michals, Melanie 373 Michel, Amy 335 Michell, Kerry 491 Michell, Kim 491 Michie, Aruna 164, 173 Mick, John 192 Mickey, Sheldon 448 Miers, Cynthi a 376 Mikesell, Ed 199 Mikesell, Fred 491 Mikesell, Gregg .. 199 Mikesell, Lori 1 31 Mikkelson, Keith .. 452 Milberger, Julie 350, 415 Milde, Craig 491 Mildenberger, Dennis 457 Miles, Deborah 199, 429 Miles, Jason 221, 326 Miles, Jeanette 442 Miles, Peggy 491 Miles, Timothy 197, 491 Miley, James 126 Milford, Terry 491 Military Science 122 Milkie, Paul 69 Millard, Richard 448 Miller, Angela 153, 200, 225, 429 Miller, Arman 191, 491 Miller, Brad 121 Miller, Bryan 403 Miller, Carey 352 Miller, Carol 125, 164, 173 Miller, Colleen 437 Miller, Cynthia 183 Miller, Daniel 411 Miller, David 419 Miller, Dawn 395, 455 Miller, Denise 455 Miller, Derek 397 Miller, Forrest 143, 436 Miller, George 100, 101 Miller, Gina 442 Miller, Glenda 338 Miller, Jan 335 Miller, Jennifer 178, 491 Miller, John 209, 225, 226, 491 Miller, Keith 457 Miller, Kim 360 Miller, Lainie 150, 373 Miller, Laura 491 Miller, Mandy 221, 338 Miller, Mary 235 Miller, Michael 448 Miller, Paul L 122 Miller, Paul T 140, 183, 491 Miller, Renee 197, 491 Miller, Scott 185, 491 Miller, Stacy 491 Miller, Steven 397 Miller, Tom 342 Miller, Troy D 442 Miller, Troy G 223 Miller, William 491 Miller, W.P 403 Millershaski, Bruce 131 Milliken, April 455 Milliken, George 126 Milloy, Sarah 153, 340 Mills, Jeff 209, 491 Mills, Sandra 143, 437 Mills, Sean 393 Mills, Skip 177 Mills, Stephanie 43, 228, 333, 381 Mills, Wendy 338 Minden, Kyle 491 Minnich, Lisa 425 Minocha, Harish 121 Minor, Julie 417 Minority Engineer Peer Counselors 188 Minshall, Bettie 113, 190, 191 Mintert, James 109 Minton, Ernest 109, 150 Minvehe, Roberto 231 Mitchell, Brad 226 Mitchell, David 355 Mitchell, James 491 Mitchell, Kevin 491 Mitchell, Kristi 232, 398, 442 Mitchell, Loralie 186, 204, 371, 400 Mitchell, Lowell 126 Mitchell, Mary 149 Mitchell, Michael 183, 352 Mitchell, Natalie 400 Mithani, Rizwan 183 Mizuns, Masaaki 113 Mlotha, Manfrey 433 Moazzam, Azfar 158, 194 Mock, Donald 114 Mock, William 223, 414 Moden, Donald 491 Modern Languages 122 Modigliani, Franco 61 Moeder, Kathleen 137, 465 Moeller, Gisela 491 Mog, David 459 Moghnieh, Ghassan.. 491 Moherman, Jodi 465 Mohrman, Michael 491 Mokete, Neiso 128 Molden, Dan 140, 158 Molitor, Lisa 491 Moll, James 491 Molt, Mary 119, 192 Monahan, Katherine 465 Money, Jonathan 187 Mongil, Bernardo 491 Mongil, Maria 360 Monier, Tarek 183, 221 Monihen, Jennifer 491 Monroe, Lisa 169, 437 Monschke, James 72 Monson, Lynnette 338, 403 Montaner, Luis 226 Montulli, Lara 143, 173, 185, 210, 426, 442 Moomaw, Mitchel 491 Moon, Michelle 335 Moon, Rodger 424 Moon, Ron 424 Mooney, Linda 226 Moore, Anthony 368 Moore, Bobbie 145, 188 Moore, Brett 131, 342 Moore, Bruce 452 Moore, Craig 452 Moore, Derek 383 Moore, Eric 326 Moore, Gloria G. 491 Moore, Gloria J 491 Moore Hall Governing Board 188 Moore, John 186 Moore, Kent 232, 371 Moore, Mike 491 Moore, Richard 268 Moore, Sandra 431 Moore, Shaun . .134, 180, 223, 491 Moore, Stephen 491 Moore, Tim 491 Moore, Willard 491 Moore, William 121, 210, 211 Moors, Kim 194, 219, 376 Morcos, Medhat 114 Moreland, Dana 421 Moreno, Charles 391 Morenz, Tara 429 Morey, Mark 409 Morey, Stephen 183, 235, 433 Morgan, Denae 404, 455 Morgan, Denise 333, 429 Morgan, Greg 419 Morgan, Joanna 376 Morgan, Leigh 400 Morgan, Monte 452 Morgan, Rachael 400 Morgan, Scott 393 Morgan, Tammy A 491 Morgan, Tammy J. 353, 442 Morgason, Traci 373 Morgison, Eric 347 Morrill, James 109 Morrill, Stephanie.. 128, 491 Morris, Daniel 154, 393 Morris, Jack 114 Morris, Jeff 188, 234 Morris, John 221, 491 Morris, Karen 442 Morris, Michael 146, 404 Morris, Tom 157 Morrison, Amy. 400 Morrison, Cindy. 491 Morrison, Jodi 338 Morrow, Tina 235, 492 Mortar Board 188 Morton, Lori 185 Moser, Daniel 38, 131, 150, 343 Moser, Herb 110 Moser, Steve 492 Mosher, laye 492 Mosher, Robin Moshier, Loren Mosier, Jacob Mosier, Karen Moss, Heather 400, 410 Moss, Tiffany Mossman, Matilda 297, Motsamai, Mabaitsi Mott, Darrin Mott, Kevin Mowry, John Mowry, Teresa Moxly, Virginia Moylan, Marty Mravunac, Michael Mudd, Jennifer Muehleisen, Stephen Mueller, Delbert Mueller, Lori Mueller, Scott Muenzenberger, Thomas Mugler, Marabeth Mugler, Marlin Mugler, Marsha Muhlenbruch, Michaelane Muir, Diane Muir, Patrick 46, 164, 191, 223 Muirhead, Tiffani 153, 173, 228, 343, 492 Mulanax, Rick Mulenga, Clifford Mulick, Tint Mullen, Karen Mullen, Mark Mullens, Tammy Muller, Diane Muller, Kelly Mullin, Martin Mullin, Robin Mumma, Teresa Munday, Ann Munden, Cynthia Munds, Gregory Muni, Peter Munson, Deanna Munson, Gretchen Munson, Lisa Munson, Stacy Murdock, Kyle Murphy, Barrie Murphy, Douglas Murphy, Erin Murphy, James Murphy, Jola Murphy, Martha 145, 173, Murphy, Patrick Murphy, Patrick J. Murphy, Stephen Murray, James Murray, John Murray, Kim Murray, Michael Musademba, Wonder Musiak, Thomas Music Mussatt, Kip Mussman, John Muthukrishnan, Subbarat Mutwalli, Christi Mutwalli, Mustafa Myer, Bradley Myer, Todd Myers, Alan Myers, Chris Myers, Cindy Myers, David 154, Myers, Jami Myers, Lawrence Myers, Leslie Myers, Matthew Myers, Mindy Myers, Michelle Myers, Richard Myles, Stacy ..197, 209, 228, Myrick, Leslie NRHH Na Lampang, Pongchan Naaf, Janel Nachtigal, Jay Nachtigal, John Nadel, Jerome Nading, Jennifer Nafziger, Wayne Nagaraja, Tiruvoor Nagle, Tim Nagle, Bill Naillieux, Larry Namee, Daniel Namminga, Mark Nanavati, Paragi Nanninga, Stacey NASA Nassar, Raja Nassif, Fatima Naster, David National Agri-Marketing Association 191 National Society of Architectural Engineers 191 National Society of Black Engineers 191 National Society of Professional Engineers 192 Nattier, Darin 414 Navrat, Susan 194, 360 Naysmith, Jeffrey 231, 448 Nderagakura, Gaspard 433 Neal, Deanna 340, 366 Neal, Jeanette 492 Nease, Randy 192 Nechols, James 114 Neel, Debra 344, 465 Neel, Joe 437 Neel, Patti 347, 400 Neelly, Rebecca 180, 492 Neely, Alison 157, 210 Neely, Margery 106, 164 Neff, Charles 154, 492 Neff, David 164 Neff, Kristen 143, 340 Neill, James 126 Neises, Elaine 146, 493 Nel, Marijke 280 Nellis, Duane 116, 169 Nelson, Amy 178 Nelson, Andy 157 Nelson, Bonnie 114 Nelson, Bradon 333 Nelson, Brenda.. 358 Nelson, Briana 357 Nelson, Gary 493 Nelson, Jennifer 371 493 Nelson, John 209 386 Nelson, Jon 146 352 Nelson, Julie 429 Nelson, Kathleen 381 Nelson, Kenneth 493 Nelson, Kim 350 Nelson, Kimberly 186, 400 Nelson, Kris 197, 350 Nelson, Lisa 351 Nelson, Mark 308 Nelson, Nanette 357 Nelson, Noel 448 Nelson, Paul 126 Nelson, Robert 200 Nelson, Scott 250 Nelson, Thomas 186 Nelson, Willard 18, 161, 173 Neneman, Carol 173, 200 Netherland, Janet.... 153, 223, 360, 403 Nett, John 140, 161 Nett, Lisa 204, 351, 415 Neufeld, Kevin 146, 493 Neumayer, Chad 424 Neuschafer, Daran 164, 270, 404 Neuschafer, Pamela 493 Neustaedter, Steve 207, 290, 414 New, Damon 343 Newell, Jeffrey 391 Newell, Kathleen 116 Newhouse, Robert 106 Newkirk, Stephen 146, 493 Newman Ministries 192 News 78-83 Newton, Amy 137, 173, 493 New Zealand Exchange 226-227 Ney, Kevin 180, 386 Neyer, Fun 143, 338 Ngo, Elizabeth 128 Nguyen, Binh 207 Nguyen, Dan 421 Nguyen, Hoang 231 Nguyen, Huong 231 Nguyen, Nhuan 231 Nguyen, Robert 231 Nguyen, Sy 231 Niblock, Don 164, 173, 493 Nichols, Charlene 128, 223 Nichols, Chris 365 Nichols, Christina 493 Nichols, Kelli 185, 192 Nichols, Marcia 429 Nichols, Mark 365 Nichols, Matt 133, 154, 368 Nichols, Michael 137, 180, 333 Nicholson, Christopher 410 Nicholson, Sandy 191, 235 Nick, Cara 150, 493 Nickel, Ed 180, 188, 194, 219, 347 Nickerson, Douglas 149 Nicodemus, David 209, 411 Nicolau, Tricia 143, 351, 393 Nieberding, Fredrick 183 Niehoff, Chad 327 Nieman, Donald 119 Nighswonger, James 116 Nighswonger, Lorraine 119 Nikaeen, Ali 151 Nikkel, Christopher 343 Nilson, Erick 109 Nily, Dawn 178, 437 Ninemire, Cheryl 161 Nissen, Lucinda 376 Nitcher, Corene 429 Nixon, Bill 145 Noe, Susan 188 Noel, Paul 452 Noeth, Amy 143, 199, 219, 493 Nofsinger, David 457 Nolan, James 327 Nolan, Katryce 455 Noll, Michael 493 Noller, Carolyn 400 Nolting, Mike 235 Noonan, Catherine 493 Noonan, John 173 Noot, Dan 164 Nordhus, James 223 Nordhus, Matthew......... .......... 207, 421 Nordhus, Phil 154, 371 Nordin, Philip 110 Norman, lan 493 Norris-Baker, Lyn 109, 164 Norton, Charles 109, 158 Norton, Nancy 360 Norvell, Wayne 122 Notare, Karen 64 Novak, Courtney 357, 403 Novak, John 452 Novak, Lana 493 Novak, Lori 455 Novak, Rachelle 347, 373 Novak, Rikki 348 Novoa, Sandra 183, 493 Novosel, John 410 Nowlin, Scott 368 Nuclear Engineering 125 Nuclear Reactor 152-155 Nugent, John 199, 232, 459 Nunes, Robert 405 Nurnberg, Grant 442 Nus, Jeff 119, 178 Nuspl, Julie 465 Nyberg, Ben 114 Nyberg, Lyndall 232 Nyp, Jeff 343 O ' Brien, Alice O ' Brien, Christina 365, 373 493 O ' Brien, Kim O ' Brien, Jane.. -150, 493 442 Index O ' Brien, John 209 O ' Brien, Patricia 126 O ' Connell, Anne 209 O ' Connell, Laurie 133, 338 O ' Connor, John 63 O ' Connor, Kristin 351 O ' Connor, Lauren 153, 194, 360 O ' Connor, Sandra Day 63 O ' Connor, Sean 459 O ' Connor, Theresa 408 O ' Dell, James 493 O ' Dell, Laura 493 O ' Donovan, Andrew 177 O ' Hair, Dee 55, 493 O ' Hara, Megan 265, 381 O ' Keefe, Dennis 448 O ' Neil, Michael 125 O ' Shea, Michael 126 Oakleaf, Tim 199, 225, 386 Oakley, Christi 178 Oakley, Kent 200 Oakley, Thomas 150, 493 Oaklief, Charles 106 Oaklief, Greg 493 Oard, David 109 Obaldo, Leonard 225 Obenland, Darrin 149 Oberhelman, Mark 397 Oberhelman, Michael 397 Oberle, Theresa 429 Oberrieder, Mark 366 Oblinger, Kristen 188 Oborg, Shelley 351 Ochampaugh, Amy 371, 431 Ochampaugh, Jeffrey 371 Ochs, Jerilyn 192, 493 Ochs, Paula 400 Ochs, Raymond 110 Ochs, Rene 417 Oddo, Jeffrey 180, 391 Odgers, Dennis 347 Odgers, Nancy 371, 431 Odle, Andrea 347, 373 Odle, Julia 493 Oehm, Jim 247, 268, 455 Oehme, Frederick 128 Oelschlaeger, Linda 455 Oetinger, Douglas 149, 455 Oetomo, Ingko 183 Ogunrinola, Yemi 128, 169 Ohlde, Susan 150 Ohlde, Terry 219, 343 Ohlsen, R.L 106 Ohm, Jacqueline 173, 493 Ohmacht, Victoria 493 Olberding, Andrew 145, 452 Olberding, Anthony 169 Olberding, Joyce 373 Oldfather, Kathleen 164 Oldfather, Michael 113 Oldham, Kent 225 Olin, Rodney 386 Oliphant, Debra 366, 497 Oliver, Kent 352 Olmstead, Eddie 219, 371 Olness, Amy 493 Olsen, Angela 335 Olsen, Donald 216, 217 Olsen, Doug 493 Olsen, Martha 437 Olsen, Sarah 149, 493 Olson, Alan 493 Olson, April 493 Olson, Cami 351 Olson, Edwin 113 Olson, Esther 192, 376 Olson, Robert 204, 493 Olson, Shirley 89 Olson, Steven 493 Olszewski, Carole 137, 442 Oltjen, Amy 415 Oltjen, Jay 414 Oltmanns, Debra 178 Omeara, Bambi 226 Omeara, Lynn 99, 164 Omega Chi Epsilon 192 Omicron Nu 192 Ong, Soo 186 Opat, Shawn 393 Opitz, Lisa 209. Oppy, Jennifer 493 Orazem, Frank 109, 131, 164 Orbach, Hal 126 Orcutt, Craig 493 Order of Omega 194 Orona, Tracy 493 Orr, Angela 333 Orr, Missy 157 Orscheln, Randy 388, 419 Orser, Brian 83 Orth, Cynthia 347, 465 Orth, Ted 178, 180, 228, 411 Ory, Samuel 421 Ory, Wesley 178 Osborn, Sylvia 128 Osborne, Alicia 373 Osborne, Thomas 493 Osborne, Tom 244 Osmon, Denise 143 Osner, Steven 161, 493 Os sar, Michael 125 Ossar, Naomi 114 Osterhaus, Donald 199, 493 Ostertag, Chris 414 Ostmeyer, Jolene 135, 465 Ostmeyer, Laura 465 Oswalt, David 131, 137, 173, 343 Otero, Julio 493 Othman, Zulkiflee 186 Otott, Jeff 343 Ot, Dave 140, 192, 219, 327 Ott, Diana 381, 387 Ott, Leslie 232, 379 Ott, Richard 106 Otte, Cheryl 456 Otte, Russell 355 Ottley, Julie 133, 493 Ouattara, Korotoumou 128 Oukrop, Carol 121, 196, 197 Ovelar, Maria 188 Ovelar, Rodolfo 188 Oventon, Richard 226 Overbaugh, Janine 353 Overmeyer, Tom 213 Overton, Geoffrey 394 Owen, Britt 376 Owen, Julie 493 Owen, Raymond 134, 404 Owen, Susan 169, 400 Owens, Danny 150 OZ 194 Paap, Debbie.. 145 Pace, Pamela 128 Pacey, David 109 Pacumbaba, Gina 180, 191, 493 Padden, Angela 412, 456 Paden, Gerry 143 Paden, Kathy 331, 335 Page, Kevin 169 Page, Leroy E. 119 Page, Leroy W. 424 Page, Lorelei 210, 465 Page, Marsha 379 Page, Robert 121 Page, Wayne 493 Pahwa, Anil 114 Paine, Lisa 188 Pair, John 119 Pak, Sung Sik 185 Pakistani Student Asso ciation 194 Pakkebier, Kelly 376 Pakkebier, Kurt 343 Palau, Luis 78 Palazzolo, Chiara 180 Palm, Beverly 429 Palmer, Brian 422 Palmer, Carrie 232, 398 Palmer, Laura 133, 173 Palmer, Perry 419 Palmer, Trygve 347 Palmquist, Lana 493 Palmquist, Tammy 188, 381 Pammenter, Kip 410 Panhellenic Council 194 Panhellenic and Intrafraternity Council Executives 194 Pankratz, Michael 173 Panowicz, Cindy 199, 400 Panzer, Kristi 235 Pappan, Lori 442 Paquette, Brenda 373 Parachute Club 166-169, 197 Parimanam, Ravendran 186, 494 Paris, Lisa 137 Paris, Tim 232, 469 Parish, Charles 191 Parish, Robert 494 Parish, Scott 145, 186 Parish, Thomas 106 Park, Mark 122 Park, Se Sung 185, 494 Parke, Douglas 333 Parker, Alaina 494 Parker, Andrea 494 Parker, Barbara 207 Parker, Craig 70, 125 Parker, Kelly 352 Parker, Kim 232, 373, 387 Parker, Kristy 456 Parker, Richard 121 Parker, Willard 122 Parks, David 209 Parks, Kerry 386 Parks, Kyle 494 Parks, Lori 178 Parks, Tim 149 Parnell, Angela 348, 465 Parmley, John 106 Parr, Kellee 459 Parr, Leroy 494 Parrish, Stan..238, 239, 240, 242, 243, 244, 248 Paul, Parsons 121 Partlow, Charles 119 Partridge, Jill 373 Partridge, Thomas 391 Paschal, Meredith 188, 232, 456 Pashman, Scott 494 Paske, Scott 355 Passantino, Jeff 410 Passylia, Doaa 221 Pate, loan 333 Patel, Neville 194 Patron, Romeo 347 Patry, Terry 131, 134 Pattern Making 136-137 Patterson, Chris 209 Patterson, Clay 219, 371 Patterson, Jillaine 408, 442 Patterson, Rob 422 Patton, Missy 412 Paukstelis, Joseph 110 Paul, MarIa 140, 158 Paul, Robert 122 Paulsen, Gary 109 Paulsen, Pamela 225, 494 Paulson, Mike 494 Pauly, Karrie 494 Pavlacka, lames 131, 494 Payne, Ilan 114 Payne, Sandy 442 Payne, Ted 158 Payne, Todd 442 Peacoc k, Kimberly 351 Peak, Stephen 408 Pearce, Charles 121, 128 Pearson, James 343 Pearson, Kim 232, 357, 387 Pease, Michele 232, 376 Pecenka, Michael 199, 494 Pecina, Uzziel 188, 210, 457 Peck, Marvin 419, 420 Peckman, Pamela 137, 432 Pecko, Joe 287 Pedersen, Bruce 158 Pederson, Carlita 232, 465 Pederson, John 119 Peek, Vicki 494 Peel, Melissa.. 494 Peil, Margaret 191 Peine, Diana 456 Peirce, Katherine ....150, 194, 219, 381 Pelfrey, Lisa 118 Pellegrino, Vincenzo 183 Pelletier, Laura 219 Pelton, Jolene 143, 432 Pence, John 119 Pence, Karen 178 Pendergast, Debbie 400 Pendergast, Robert 494 Penka, David 405 Penka, Doug 164, 405 Penn, Becky 178, 494 Penn, Rose 178 Penner, Karen 116 Penner, Michael 226, 228 Penner, Rick 391 Pennington, Amy 210 Pennington, Erin 357, 422 Pennington, Jeff 183, 219, 452 Pepperd, Lynn 122 Perchellet, Jean-Pierre 110 Percival, Barry 494 Perico, Carl 494 Periolat, Barbara 351 Perkins, Amanda 408 Perkins, Carl 173, 427, 442 Perkins, Daniel 347 Perkins, Kate 131, 197, 200, 219, 344, 381 Perkins, Rick 131, 134, 343 Perkins, Suzanne 417 Perkins, Teresa 494 Perl, Michael 142 Perng, J.K 126 Perrier, Daniel 414 Perrigo, Nikole 338, 412 Perry, David 452 Perry, Elisha 381 Perry, Heath 410 Perry, Lisa 226, 456 Perry, Sharla 351 Perry, Shelly 389 Perschall, Tracey 360 Persigehl, David 133, 494 Persson, Eric 448 Persson, Michelle 347, 400 Pesci, Pat 119 Pesmark, Daniel 204, 457 Pesmark, Ellarie 457, 458 Peter, Jeff 408 Peter, Rhonda 494 Peters, Amy 150, 442 Peters, Cindy 494 Peters, Daniel 366 Peters, George 126, 221 Peters, Gordon 223 Peters, James 494 Peters, Ron 149 Petersen, Christie 368, 376 Petersen, Karla 177 Petersen, Marian 219, 381 Petersen, Sean 452 Peterson, Adam ........ 140, 192, 456 Peterson, Barry 452 Peterson, Dana 376 Peterson, David 110, 140 Peterson, Eric 494 Peterson, Erik 169 Peterson, Greg 347 Peterson, Karla 379 Peterson, Karna 178, 227, 494 Peterson, Kent 164, 209 Peterson, Lori 338 Peterson, Mary 113 Peterson, Nanci 422 Peterson, Randy 343 Peterson, Shannon 360 Petracek, Steve 145, 177, 448 Petrie, Eugene 343 Petrosky, Charlotte 357 Petrosky, Janie 357 Petry, John 185 Pettijohn, Sharon 232, 379 Peuser, Michael 494 Pfannenstiel, Lisa 154, 373 Pfeifer, Donna 425 Pfeifer, Gerald 448 Pfeifer, Scott 494 Pfeifer, Steffani 145, 381, 417 Pfeiffer, Stacy 368 Pfeifley, Lori 143, 400 Pfender, William 126 Pfister, Don 215 Pflumm, Garot 494 Phalen, Amy 360, 422 Phalen, Jim 153, 228 Pham, Hoai 231 Pham, Huan 231 Pham, Huong 231 Pham, Quynh 231 Pham, Thanh 231 Phares, E.1 126 Pharis, Dan 178 Phelps, Daren 442 Phelps, Darin 173, 448 Phelps, Jay 494 Phelps, Jean 232, 373 Phelps, Jimmy 406 Phi Eta Sigma 197 Phi, Toan 188 Phi Upsilon Omicron 197 Phillips, Chad 371 Phillips, Erin 338 Phillips, James 419 Phillips, Janet 161, 432 Phillips, Jeff 442 Phillips, John D 419 Phillips, John P 371 Phillips, Joseph 204 Phillips, R. M. 128 Phillips, Sarah 371, 494 Phillips, Scott 404 Phillips, Steve 133, 494 Philosophy 125 Physical Education and Leisure Studies 126 Physics 126 Physics Club 197 Pi Omega Pi 199 Pi Sigma Epsilon 199 Pi Tau Sigma 199 Pickard, Patricia 494 Pickard, Stacia 494 Pickens, Becky 232, 429 Pickert, Linda 357, 422 Pickett, Desmond 397 Pickett, Teresa 177, 400 Pickle, Judy 113 Pickman, Kelli 429 Pieper, Ricki 494 Pier, Rene 55 Pierce, Jeff 347 Pierce, Pat 40 Pierce, Risa 381 Pierson, Christopher 114 Pierson, Jett 494 Pierson, Julie 177 Pieschl, David 422 Pieschl, Kyle 178, 448 Pieschl, Marcia 178, 210, 432 Pigno, Louis 122 Pillsbury Crossing 26-27 Pingeton, Dina 376 Pinkerton, Les 116 Pinney, Janet 398, 494 Piper, Dawn 226, 395 Piper, Lori 494 Pirotte, Michael 192 Piroutek, Brad 183, 232 Pitman, Dona 338 Pittman, David 228, 383 Pittman, Karen 360 Pitts, Darren 177 Pitts, Jeffrey 410 Pitts, Julie 494 Plaice, Ralph 494 Plotner, Diana 494 Plumer, Steven 391 Plummer, Dane 366 Plunkett, Aaron 204 Poage, Kimberly 494 Podrebarac, Mod 395 Poe, Lula 110 Pogue, Rebecca 368 Pohl, Matthew 140 Pohlman, Randolph 98, 99, 116 Poindexter, John 82 Poindexter, Karen 210, 442 Polanco, Marvin 452 Poland, Niki 415, 494 Poland, Shari 393 Polaneo, Marvin..... ............ 210 Polich, Gerald 125, 235 Polson, MarIa 494 Poma, Victoria 360 Pomerantz, El Paul 368 Ponte, J.G 119, 145 Pope, Jennifer 373 Pope John Paul II 6, 82 Pope, Kathryn 365 Pope, Tisha 264 Phil 140 Porak, Troy 191 Poresky, Robert 119 Porter, Heather 185, 231, 422, 465 Porter, Kris 373 Porter, Laura 357 Porter, Lea 338 Porter, Mark 240 Porter, Michelle.. 393 Porter, Peggy 133, 494 Pynchon, Thomas 114 Porter, Roger 494 Porter, Warren 494 Porterfield, Charla 360, 366 Portz, Angela 145 Posler, Gerry 109, 164, 231 Posler, Steven 495 Posner, Elieser 119 Post, Steven 410 Potter, Al 128 Potter, Angela 442 Potter, Tawn 225 Pottorff, Mark 368 Pottorff, Timothy 161, 192 Pouch, Shane 495 Poultry Science Club 199 Powell, Anita 128, 462 Powell, Briana 437 Powell, Charles 414 Powell, Christina 178, 192, 197, 226, 344 Powell, Freddie 83 Powell, Jennifer 153, 429 Powell, Melissa 188, 456 Powell, Michael 391 Powell, Morgan 109 Powell, Sheryl 119 Powelson, Royce 131, 495 Powers, Daniel 145 Powers, Shana 442 Powers, Shannon 495 Powers, Todd 137, 424 Pralo, Dwight 306 Prasad, Sanjay 495 Prather, Jennifer 228 Pratt, Brian 355 Pray, Melissa 417 Pre-Physical Therapy Club 199 Pre-Vet Club 200 Prediger, James 133, 422 President Wefald 96-97 Presslor, Jeffrey 145, 397 Price, Charles 397 Price, Elinor 140, 495 Price, Floyd 113 Price, lan 495 Price, John 207 Price, Travis 442 Prichard, Alaina 393 Priddle, Jeffrey 448 Priddy, Nelson 371 Pride, Shawn 397 Priest, Diane 495 Prince, Paul 121 Prinz, Jennifer 333, 429 Pritchett, Darin 209 Pritchett, Jerry 180, 194 Pritz, Frank 112 Prockish, Penny 429 Procter, Sandra 119 Proctor, Suzanne ....173, 180, 371, 442 Professionals in Human Movement 200 Proffitt, Jeff 408 Proffitt, Jerry 495 Proffitt, Race 355 Proffitt, Richard 495 Prohaska, Dan 133, 327 Proite, Rosanne 458 Prosser, Shawna 373 Provost, Cathy 173, 209, 495 Provow, Kelly 231, 398 Pruitt, Chad 410 Psi Chi 200 Psychology of Sexual Behavior 122-123 Ptacek, Mel 495 Public Relations Student Society of America 204 Puchosic, John 199 Puckett, Todd 448 Pugsley, Nancy 437 Pujol, Stephanie 495 Pulford, Diane 381 Puljak, Karl 232, 495 Puls, Sherry 335 Puls, Stuart 352 Purcell, Keith 110 Purduski, Jeanne 465 Purdy, Andrea 192 Purslow, Amy 339 Purslow, Micah 194, 339, 408 Purvis, Alan 495 Purvis, Teresa 204, 442 Putnam Hall 458 Putnam Hall Governing Board 204 Pyle, Roberta 353, 437 Qhobela, Molapo 128 Queal, Dennis 456 Queen, Matthew 355 Quelch, Andrew 146 Quenzer, Tod 495 Quigley, Dawn 376 Quigley, Greg 495 Quigley, Susan 437 Quinn, Mary 437 Quinn, Robert 452 Quinn, Tomari 437 Quinton, Brant 391 Quiz Outs 192-193 Quresh, Rashida 194 Raaf, Kathy 131, 200, 379 Racker, Andrew 219, 495 Racy, Kelly 357 Ragan, James 113 Ragland, Michelle 191, 429 Rahaim, Lisa 351 Rahe, Eric 383 Rahija, Joe 452 Rahija, Mark 173, 225, 452 Rahn, Christina.. 161, 180, 1 86, 191, 495 Rahn, Steve 419 Railsback, Ann 335 Raines, Ed 232 Rains, Scott 404 Rajashekar, Chann 119 Rajendran, Kothandaraman 210 Rakestraw, Joseph 140, 197 Rakowsky, Mary 164 Rathbone, Donald 98, 223 Raleigh, Cyndi 495 Rathbone, Lynda 442 Ralston, Dan 414 Rathbun, Jill 339, 412 Ralston, Elizabeth 374, 415 Rathburn, Harold 209 Ralston, Jeffrey 408 Rathlef, Jeff 149 Rames, Gordie 348 Razook, Chris 391 Ramm, James 140, 154 Razzaq, Faisal 158 Ramos, Norman 199 Read, Melissa 342 Ramsden, Vicky 200, 495 Read, Steve 235 Ramser, Troy 424 Readus, Edward 146 Ramsey, Helen 177, 197, 495 Reagan, Barbara 113, 137, 173 Ramsey, Julie 381 Reagan, Charles 63 Ramsey, Kevin 495 Reagan, Nancy 58 Ramsey, Shirl ey 121 Reagan, Ronald 7, 58, 78, 81, 83 Ramsey, Trent 495 Reams, Kelly 178, 429 Ramsey, Wade 442 Reams, Mark 442 Randall, Kristi 361 Reams, Mike 43, 143, 199, 404 Randall, Rebecca 361 Reaser, Douglas 146, 495 Randall, Sandra 335 Rebel, Brad 164 Randles, Leland 347 Rebel, Bryan 186 Randolph, Jay 442 Rector, Bradley 366 Randolph, Robbie 437 Reddy, Helen 65 Ransom, Mickey 109 Redelsheimer, Karla 194, 335 Ransopher, Sandra 400 Reding, Kevin 177 Ranthamane, Martin 128 Redmon, Dave 114 Rapp, Jeff 157 Reece, Amy 401 Rappaport, Leon 126 Reece, George 383 Rappold, Kimberly 495 Reece, Kristina 393, 495 Rasdall, Lori 133, 379, 389 Reeck, Gerald 110 Rashid, Rashidah 186 Reed, Mike 161, 185, 219 Rasmussen, Albie 192 Reeder, Ashley 415, 495 Rassman, Neal 121 Reedy, Christopher 161, 164, 223, 419 Celebrating the men ' s basketball victory over Purdue during the NCAA tournament, Glenn Vanderbilt, junior in electrical engineering, atop Keith Steinbrock, freshman in marketing, join a large crowd of people that gathered in Aggieville after the came. (Photo by Greg Vogel) 521 Index Rees, Cameron 495 Rees, John 114 Reese, John 114 Reese, Karen 146 Reese, Kevin 495 Reese, Krista 235, 374, 412 Reeves, Robert 116, 164, 173 Regehr, Dave 109 Regehr, Marjean 143, 437 Regier, Bart 209, 495 Regier, Mark 137, 225, 495 Regier, Randy 414 Regier, Rob 219, 414 Registration 24-25 Rehfeld, Douglas 348 Rehg, Jill 381 Reiber, Andrew 177, 448 Reichart, Janet 146, 185, 495 Reichart, John 495 Reichenberger, Greg 200 Reichenberger, Bob 223, 348 Reichenberger, Todd 411 Reichle, David 173, 442 Reichman, D. J 110 Reid, Amy 339 Reid, Kelley 219, 371 Reid, Steve 223, 404 Reid, Susan 130, 495 Reida, Linda 178, 495 Reida, Sandra 495 Reiff, Angie 361, 408 Reiher, Timm 410 Reihl, Keith 353, 191 Reiling, Heidi .. 219, 382, 422 Reimer, Susan 379 Rein, Charlene 495 Rein, Rhoda 204 Reiners, Bryan 232 Reinhardt, Amy 194 Reinhardt, Cynthia 495 Reinheimer, Gary 191, 457 Reischman, Catherine 495 Reiser, Cheryl 495 Reiser, Rich 173, 177, 448 Reiserer, Jamie 209 Reisinger, Jake 496 Reissig, Brad 232, 456 Reist, Rhonda 496 Reitz, Jennifer 186, 335 Religa, Kevin 397 Rempel, Jenn 353, 462 Renard, Ronald 199 Renfro, Laura 158, 210 Renfro, Michael 496 Renn, Deanna 177 Renner, John 185 Renner, Steven 107 Reno, Greg 131, 134, 496 Reno, Michael 149 Rephlo, Douglas 355 Rephlo, Lisa 143, 199, 379 Reschke, Jenny ..145, 146, 153, 376, 422 RESPECT 458 Rettig, Kent 383 Rettig, Raymond 146, 496 Reusch, Debbie 225, 437 Reuter, Susan 169 Reutzel, Roberta 496 Rexroad, Chris 223 Reynard, Martha 399 Reynolds, Carl 411 Reynolds, Chrystal 143, 437 Reynolds, Clinton 383 Reynolds, James 345 Reynolds, Jeff 319 Reynolds, Russell 348 Reynolds, Sue 178, 384, 457 Reynolds, Todd 408 Reynolds, Walter 395 Rezac, Karen 339 Rezac, Kimberly 496 Rhea, John 442 Rhee, Chul 185 Rhee, Chung Hee 185 Rhoades, Scott 209, 353 Rhoads, Royalee 231, 496 Rhodes, Carolyn 429 Rhodes, Richard 77 Rho-mates 343, 344 Ribbentrop, Tonya 143 Ribble, Mike 161 226, 348 Riblett, Laura 133, 422, 465 Rice, Danna 133, 180, 401 Rice, Janelle 437 Rice, Timothy 459 Rich, Elizabeth 496 Rich, Michael 149, 173 Richard, Pat 126 Richards, Jeff 404 Richards, Lisa 106, 456 Richards, Phillip 183, 199, 496 Richards, Reginald 496 Richards, Verlyn 116, 225 Richardson, Kay 496 Richardson, Robert 386 Richenburg, John 496 Richert, Caereen 382, 412 Richmeier, Michael 342 Richmond, Mitch 204, 300-301, 302, 304 Richter, Beth 143, 437 Richter, Matt 131, 496 Richter, Suzanne 357 Rickel, Melissa 496 Rickley, Mary 448 Rickson, lames 397 Rickson, Jeffrey 371 Riddell, Tamara 496 Ridder, Bret 383 Ridder, Douglas 185, 496 Ridder, Tim 223, 225, 235, 383 Rider, David 452 Ridley, Robert 121 Rieck, George 231, 371 Riedel, Ginger 169. 437 Riedmiller, Marcia 161, 433 Riemann, Cynthia .133, 223, 232, 333 Riesinger, Laurie 361 Rietcheck, Patricia 376 Rifai, Imad 140, 146 Rifle Club 204 Rigney, Jim 197, 496 Riley, Clinton 232, 453 Riley, Jack 109, 164 Riley, John 133, 191 Rinard, Lori 143, 335 Rinehardt, Karl 125 Rinella, Ann 178, 382 Ring, Rachel 200, 353, 432 Riordan, Elizabeth 335 Risius, Dawn 496 Risley, Jill 210, 343, 351 Risser, Michele 335 Ritenour, Brian 180, 194, 265, 412 Ritter, Elaine 496 Ritthisorn, Netipong 496 Rittmann, Butch 223 Rive, Valerie 280, 374 Rivers, Efrem 137, 194, 496 Roach, Brenda 194, 382 Roach, Faith 119 Roaches 158-161 Road Trips 30-31 Roath, Bryan 225, 414 Robb, Kelly 127 Robben, Douglas 496 Robben, Julie 466 Robbins, James 119, 178 Robbins, Valerie 458 Roberson, David 191 Robert, Mindy 158, 496 Robert, Troy 199, 496 Robert, Russell 383 Roberts, Arthur 496 Roberts, Billie 496 Roberts, Brad 496 Roberts, Harold 109 Roberts, Katherine 442 Roberts, Kurt 333 Roberts, Leigh 432 Roberts, Randy 404 Roberts, Rick 226, 391 Roberts, Terri 437 Roberts, Terrill.. 145, 453 Robertson, Charles 386 Robertson, Courtney 393 Robertson, Kathi 191, 226, 228, 496 Robertson, Lisa 496 Robertson, cot 496 Robertson, Timothy 408 Robinson, Amanda 204 Robinson, Craig 235 Robinson, Grace 232 Robinson, John 496 Robinson, Julia 339 Robinson, Paul 327, 363 Robinson, Ruth 496 Robinson, Sheri 232, 437 Robinson, Stacey 357 Robinson, Steven 453 Robison, Renee 153, 210, 429 Robles, Monica 365, 401 Robson, Craig 424 Robuck, Mary 143, 339 Robuck, Richard 345 Roche, Gigi 161 Roche, Thomas 110 Rock, Brian 137, 496 Rock, Lisa 357 Rockers, Mary 197, 204, 291, 496 Rockwell, Scott 183 Rodell, Paula 461, 462 Rodeo Club 204 Rodriguez, Maria 188 Rodrock, Brian 391 Rodvelt, Tammy 169 Roe, Kenny 496 Roe, Kristi 335, 393 Roemer, Patrick 327 Roenigk, Donald 496 Roesner, Patty 496 Rogers, Donna 128 Rogers, Elizabeth 376 Rogers, Jason 199, 496 Rogers, Laura 496 Rogers, Richard 93 Rohe, Gregory 412 Rohleder, James 200 Rohlman, Kurt 366 Rohloff, Joyce 496 Rohr, Todd 327 Rohrer, Wayne 126 Rohrer, Debbie 401 Rohrer, Michael 442 Rokey, Todd 140 Rolf, Karen 164, 180, 223, 496 Rolfing, Kyle 193, 348 Rolfs, Susan 340, 393 Rollins, Don 131, 177, 200 Romans, Amber 339 Rome, Christine 466 Romig, James 414 Roncek, D.W 126 Rondez, Rick 149, 496 Ronen, Shelby 374 Rongish, Joe 496 Ronnebaum, Brian 448 Ronning, Jeffrey 456 Rooney, Michele 199, 496 Roop, Celia 180, 333 Root, Kyra 335 Root, Buck 200 Rosa, Greg 397 Rosa, Peter 422 Rose, Dan 204 Rose, Don 288, 290, 291 Rose, Richard 163 Rose, Tammy 335 Roseberry, James 453 Rosenhagen, Kim 401 Rosenow, Lynn 496 Ross Christopher 453 Ross, Roseann 382 Ross, Stanton 453 Roth, David 232 Roth, James 200 Roth, Ginny 192 Rottinghaus, Dan 199, 406 Rottinghaus, Dennis 134, 180 Rottinghaus, Kathy 140 Rottinghaus, Michael 173, 223 Rottinghaus, Michelle 496 Rottinghaus, Robin 335 Roufa, Donald 110 Roult, Charles 146, 496 Rouse, Holly 456 Rouse, Mike 157, 355 Rouse, Susan 401 Rowe, Bret 448 Rowh, Jodi 466 Rowing Club 204, 207 Rowland, Angie 153, 194 Rowlett, Jane 164 Roy, William 164, 209, 496 Royer, Jill 382 Royster, Benjamin 457 Royster, Edward 223 Royster, Francesca 442 Ruby, Brian 188, 232, 453 Ruby, Jeff 140, 154 Rucker, Kelle 462 Rucker, Nute 204 Ruckman, Bob 177, 186, 353 Ruddy, Gavin 406 Rude, Jonathan 333 Ruder, Michelle 466 Rudicel, David 149, 414 Rudolph, Shelley 408 Rueger, lohn 146, 496 Rues,Tom 131 Rueschoff, Bernard 113, 136, 137 Rugby 266-269 Rule, Bonnie 496 Rulifson, Maj-Beth 496 Rulo, Deborah 401 Rulo, Mark 404 Rumford, Kenyon 448 Rumford, Ron 158, 448 Rumsey, Michelle 382 Rundell, Ira 185, 188, 235, 453 Rundle, Janelle 343, 496 Runion, Matthew 368 Runquist, Randall 496 Rupp, Joellen 379 Rush 330-331 Rush, Edna 334 Rush, Eric 395 Russ, Oliver 109 Russell, Candyce 119 Russell, Eugene 113 Russell, Joy 183, 185 Russell, Kenda 466 Russell, Kris 143 Russell, Michael 209 Russell, Mindy 496 Russell, Patty 70, 232 Russell, Renee 466 Russell, Susan 192 Rust, Ashley 351 Rust, Kindra 429 Rutherford, Jack 353 Rutz, Michael 496 Ryan, Beth 351 Ryan, Christine 340 Ryan, Heidi 192, 496 Ryan, John 393 Ryan, Kimberly 382 Ryan, Scott 209 Ryan, Thomas 191, 496 Rychlec, Mark 384 Ryel, Shelley 401 Ryland, Amanda 437 Ryland, Lana 496 Rys, Andrzej 114 Saal, Frank 126 Sabatka, John 131, 442 Sablan, Nora 496 SADD 174-177 Saeki, Sadahiro 122 Sager, Cherri 429 Saia, Tish 393 Said, Martha 442 Sailing Club 207 Salas, Maria 145, 496 Sale, Paul 232 Salih, Morwan 453 Sallee, Wendy 180, 210, 442 Salmon, Kimberley 496 Salsman, Norma 192, 496 Salts, Darin 386 Saltzman, Krista 415 Salyer, Jeff 384 Salyer, Rod 476 Sammons, Stephanie 466 Sampson, Peggy 150, 340 Samson, Karen 404, 456 Samson, Kenneth 183 Samuelson, Marvin 128 Sanborn, Chad 157, 158, 210 Sand, Roy 199, 496 Sandahl, Ed 154 Sandahl, Wendy 357 Sandberg, Jennifer 153, 382 Sander, Doug 342 Sandercox, Susan 173, 235, 443 Sanderlin, Martha 192, 193 Sanders, Angela 496 Sanders, Beverly 496 Sanders, Daren 177, 448 Sanders, Farrell 177 Sanders, Justin 223 Sanderson, Chris 197, 443 Sandmann, Janet 496 Sandquist, Janice 188, 232, 496 Sands, Scott 197, 232, 496 Sanford, Paul 199 Sanford, Stacy 496 Santee, janeen 235 Santhanakrishnan, Nagarajan 210, 496 Santiago, Emmanuel 116 Sasenick, Mark 406 Sasser, Sandra 177 Satern, Miriam 125 , 200 Sator, Wendy 496 Satterlee, Robert 146 Satumbaga, Roberto 496 Sauer, Karen 231, 466 Sauer, Kathleen 231 Sauer, Kay 437 Saueressig, Callie 456 Saunders, David 161 Saunders, Angie 228, 443 Savage, Blaine 344 Savaiano, Greg 348 Savaiano, Tammy 154, 178, 219, 226, 331, 374 Sawyer, Amanda 401 Sawyer, Jeff 232, 496 Sax, Caren 496 Saxon, Kip 366 Sayler, John 496 Sayler, Sara 169, 398, 437 Scales, Cristy 379 Scarlett, Brad 448 Schaake, Sheila 374 Schaefer, David 137 Schafer, David 109, 164 Schafer, Kathy 178 Schaff, Allyson 351 Schaff, Jennifer 143, 437 Schaffer, Sharon 437 Schaffer, Stephanie 404 Schaffer, Vernon 109 Schallehn, Stephen 183, 453 Schaller, Kent 443 Schaller, Paula 153, 429 Schalles, Robert 109 Schanefelt, Dana 366, 374 Schapaugh, Bill 109 Scharping, Brian 185, 459 Scharrer, Christy 347 Schartz, Anne 44, 357 Schartz, John 496 Schartz, Pamela 496 Scheer, Cindy 496 Scheer, Richard 125 Scheibmeir, Brian 384 Scheidt, Rick 119 Scherer, Heidi 374 Scheufler, Sue 134, 443 Schiappa, Anthony 140, 141 Schindler, Natalie 382 Schinsky, Timothy 391 Schlaefli, Michalla........ ................ 361 Schlaegel, Gayla 379 Schlegel, Sue 199 Schleimer, Harold 490 Schlender, John 109 Schlender, Kristen 153, 154, 226, 228, 376 Schlereth, Kimberly.... 131, 133, 197, 443 Schlesener, Tamela 496 Schletzbaum, Paul 173, 443 Schlossman, Heather 186, 437 Schlossman, Martin 186, 496 Schlup, John 110 Scmidderer, Sharon 142 Schmalzried, Elizabeth 183, 498 Schmalzried, Gerald 183, 443 Schmalzried, Rick 183 Schmelzle, Gerald 199, 498 Schmidling, Dale 498 Schmidt, Diane 125, 382 Schmidt, Eric 498 Schmidt, Garrett 235 Schmidt, Joe 448 Schmidt, Ken 13, 386 Schmidt, Laura 149, 498 Schmidt, Mark 408 Schmidt, Mary 498 Schmidt, Mike 498 Schmitt, Gregory 498 Schmitt, Mike 498 Schmitt, Tony 185, 188 Schmoker, Stuart 146, 498 522 Index Schneider, Angela Schneider, Harold Schneider, Leslye Schneider, Lori Schneider, Wayne Schneithorst, Craig Schnieders, Joe Schnittker, Chris Schoeff, Robert Schoelen, Courtney .. Schoemaker, Robert Schoen, Kipp Schoenbeck, Melanie Schoenthaler, Donna Schoeppel, Bobby Scholle, Tiffany Schomacker, Stacie Schoneman, Stacey Schoning, Mary Schott, Eric Schraad, Craig Schrader, Ben 14C Schrader, Chuck Schrader, Shawn Schrag, Dave Schrag, Jeffrey 221, 355 Schrag, Julie Schrag, Tanya... ......... Schreiner, Mark Schrick, Roby Schrock, Greg Schrock, Mark Schroeder, Brent Schroeder, David Schroeder, Donita Schroeder, Kerry Schroeder, Rodney Schroeder, Ted Schroer, Michael Schuckman, Tammy Schuessler, Dennis Schuette, Cliff Schuh, Wilma Schuldt, Sallie Schuler, Kirk Schulte, Lee Schultz, Beth Schultz, Brad Schultz, Curt Schultz, Donna Schultz, Drew Schultz, Scott Schultz, Todd Schumacher, Todd ..... Schumacher, Angie Schumann, John Schumann, Robert Schurle, Bryan Schurle, Melanie 335, 403 Schutty, Kelly Schwab, Paul Schwant, Darla Schwant, Dennis Schwartz, Eston Schwartz, Jan Schwartz, Kim Schwartz, Renee Schwarz, Bernard Schwarz, Todd Schwarzwalder, Robert Schweer, Sonya Schweitzer, Julie Schwenk, Fred Schwenke, lames Schwermann, Susan Schwiethale, Jeffery Schwiethale, Sheryl Schwindt, Jeff...... Schwindt, John Schwinn, Joseph Scoby, Shelly Scoggins, Lori Scott, Brent Scott, David Scott, Karyn Scott, Kawanis Scott, Kelley Scott, Lisa Scott, Richard Scott, Stephanie Scott, Stuart Scott, Susan Scott, Sylvia Scott, Virginia Scritchfield, Janell Scroggins, Monique Scrogin, Scott Seamans, Bryan Seamon, David Searle, Cherry Sears, Matthew Sears, Michael Sears, Rollin Seastedt, Timothy Seastrom, Tracy Seat, Norman Seaton, Edward Seba, Erwin Sechler, Michael Sechler, Spencer Sederquist, Carley Sederquist, Dawn Sedlacek, Brenda Sedorcek, Robert Seedle, Donald Seger, Jeff Seele, Michael Seeling, Tom Seely, Shannan 344, 382 Seetin, Suzanne Seever, Robert Seibel, Scott Seibold, David Seibold, Deborah Seibold, Llewellyn Seidl, Bryan Seiler, Gary Seiler, Gavin Seiler, Leo Seitz, David Seitzer, John Seiwald, Rosemary 191, 498 Sell, Barbara Sell, David 149, Sellers, Stacy Sellmyer, Julia Seltzer, Kathryn Serad, Sonia Serbin, Rhonda Serra, Patricia SESA Setser, Carole Setser, Don Setser, D.W. Setzer, Kristy Seufert, Michael Sevedge, Bryan Sewell, Mark Sexton, Teresa Seyler, Connie Seyler, Sy Seymour, Tiffany Shackelford, Tracey Shade, William Shah, Ghulam Shah, Nazeer Shah, Priti Shamburg, Kevin Shamet, Cheryn Shanks, Shelby Shannon, Jay Shannon, Marsha Shanteau, lames Sharma, Salil Von Hallauer, junior in marketing dribbles under the hand of Mandi Steele, junior in environmental design, during basketball action at Chester E. Peters Recreation Complex. (Photo by Greg Vogel) 523 Sharp, David Sharp, Denise Sharp, Julie Sharp, Karen Sharp, Lori Sharp, Stevi Sharp, Susan Sharpe, Michael Shasteen, Michelle Shaw, Bradley Shaw, Christy Shaw, Richard Shaw, Sandy Shaw, Stephen Shaw, Steve Shearer, Terri She DU ' s Sheehan, Patrick 1 Sheets, Clifford Sheets, Stephanie Sheldon, John Sheldon, Kristin Sheldon, Tamera Shell, Angela Shellenberger, Grant Shelton, Lewis Shenosky, Erika Shepard, Steven Shephard, Renee Shepherd, David Shepherd, Dawn Shepherd, Michael Shepherd, Terry Sheppard, Todd Sherbert, Bill Sherbert, Greg Sherby, Beth Sheriff, Ali Sherley, Janet Sherley, Raymond Sherman, Tamala Sherwood, Lisa Sherwood, Peter Shideler, Roger Shields, Jeff Shields, John Shields, Michelle Shimp, David Shipley, Lisa Shipley, Timothy Shipley, Bill Shipman, Michael Shipps, Wendy Shirley, lohn Shirrell, Jerry Shoemake, Kelly Short, Randy Shorter, Scott Shorter, Todd Shotton, Catherine Shoup, Beth Shoup, Christine Shreve, Beth Shrimplin, Lola Schiner, Cheryl Shtogren, Julie Shuey, Scott Shukla, Ketan Shull, Paul Shultis, Kenneth Shuman, Cindy Shumate, Eric Shupe, David Shurley, Jena Shurley, Patrick Shutler, Sara Siddall, William Siddiqi, Mazhar Siddiqui, Haseeb 1 Siddiqui, Najeeb Siddiqui, Sheikh Sides, Kyle Sides, Rhonda Sidorfsky, Frank Sieb, Paul Siebert, Leslie Siebert, Marianne Siebert, Rick Siebes, Jennifer Siebs, Kristin Sieck, Karma 1 Sieck, Mike Siefker, Susan Siegfried, Paul Siegrist, Lori 1 Siemens, Amber Siemers, Eric Siew, Eric 1 Sig Ep Fite Nite Sigler, Dennis Sigma Gamma Epsilon Sigma Lambda Chi Sikes, Stephanie Sills, Jack Sim, Todd Simmons, Heather Simmons, Sherri Simmons, Thomas Simms, Christy Simms, Jeanette Simms, John Simoneau, Linda Simonetti, Daniel Simons, Don Simons, Gale Simpson, Trish Sims, David Sims, Pam Sims, Steven.. Sims, Travis Sinclair, Ellen Sinclair, Jennifer Sinclair, Julie Sindelar, Bob Sinderson, Jill Singer, William Sipes, James Sipes, Jerry Siptrott, Richard Sise, Matthew Sisson, Buck Sisson, Malley Siuda, Matt Sivyer, Mary Sjecklocha David Sjogren, Tammera Skaggs, Brad Skaggs, Doug Skaggs, Greg Skaggs, William Skala, Dan Skarda, John Skeie, Bentley Skeie, Erica Skelton, Jill Skelton, Lisa Skelton, Sandra Skidmore, Annette Skidmore, Betty Skidmore, Kathy Skidmore, Mark Skidmore, Tom 1 Skinner, William Skipton, Tracy Skolout, Michael Skwarlo, Stan Slagle, Mary Slater, Leon Slater, Timothy Slaughter, John Sleezer, Lisa Sloan, Carole 161, 1 Sloan, Cheryl Sloan, Denise Sloan, Ross Slocombe, John Slocum, Tamara Sloop, Jean Sluder, Christopher Smading, Andrea Smiley, Mindy Smith, Angela Smith, Bob Smith, Brian Smith, Carrie Smith, Charleton Smith, Cheryl Smith, Chris Smith, Christopher Smith, Cindy Smith, Cynthia Smith, Daniel Smith, Darrin Smith, Deana Smith, Derek Kathy Sunderhuse, sophomore in home economics education, makes a face after being accidentally kicked by Christie Everhart, sophomore in education, during Pridette practice. (Photo by Greg Vogel) Smith, Dirk 387 Smith, Donald 499 Smith, Dorothy 29 Smith, Eileen 499 Smith, Eldon 232 Smith, Floyd 109 Smith, Graham 207, 231 Smith, Grant 207, 231, 355 Smith, Janet M. 499 Smith, Janet S 456 Smith, Jason 499 Smith, Jeffrey 131, 499 Smith, Jim 499 Smith, Joe 363 Smith, Kelly 361, 408 Smith, Kimberly 401 Smith, Lisa 382 Smith, Marc 422 Smith, Melanie 335 Smith, Meredith 116 Smith, Michael P 177 Smith, Michael R. 167, 168, 169, 197, 448 Smith, Michael R. 448 Smith, Michael 5 448 Smith, Michael T 232, 412 Smith, Nancy 438 Smith, Paula 11 Smith, Patricia 342 Smith, Paul 499 Smith, Rachel 185, 432, 453 Smith, Rebecca 401 Smith, Richard 425 Smith, Robin 125 Smith, Ronald 177, 344 Smith, Scott A. 410 Smith, Scott P 453 Smith, Sherri 291 Smith, Stacy 114 Smith, Stacy A 133, 153, 180, 361 Smith, Stacy L. 369 Smith, Stephanie 342 Smith, Stewart 419 Smith, Susan 210, 456 Smith, Susan 219, 228, 374, 422 Smith, Susan M 140, 188, 192, 376 Smith, Tahnee 339 Smith, Ted 161, 433 Smith, Terry 219 Smith, Tim 348 Smith, Todd 355 Smith, Traci 404 Smith, Troy 344 Smith, Walter 109 Smurthwaite Cooperative House -460-461 Smykacz, Suzanne 393 Smyth, Joe 333 Snapp, Jeff 131 Sneed, Christi 361 Snell, Arnold 238 Snell, Eric 128, 157 Snell, Robert 113 Snider, Robert 499 Snook, Ken 79 Snyder, Mary 204, 499 Snyder, Robert 414 Soap, Carl 106 Sobba, Mary 131, 133, 137, 223, 343, 499 Soccer 286-287 Soccer Club 209 Social Work Organization 209 Society for the Advancement of Management 209 Society for Collegiate Journalists 210 Society of Hispanic Professional Engineers 210 Society of Manufacturing Engineers 210 Society of Women Engineers 210 Sociology, Anthropology and Social Work 128 Socolofsky, Homer 119 Socolofsky, John 150, 369 Sodamann, Paul 127 Soden, Hawley 415 Solomon, Heather 398 Solomon, Trina 443 Sommerla, Cary 456 Sommers, Brian 369 Sommers, John 232, 448 Sommers, Shawn 232 Sommers, Susan 192, 361 Sons, Kimberly 347 Soper, Cheryl 183 Sorenson, Chris 149 Sorenson, Ed 109 Sorenson, OrIo 109 Soukup, Andrew 177, 371 Soukup, Sharla 339 Southerland, Syndee 226, 457 Sowers, Brett 183, 231, 499 Sowers, Scott A. 500 Sowers, Scott L 183 Sowles, Susan 398 Spachek, Jeff 500 Spaeth, Kristen..154, 178, 197, 343, 382 Spafford, David 500 Spangenberg, Scott 277 Spangler, Suan 219 Spanley, Kevin 500 Sparks, Jonathan 414 Sparks, Suzanne 500 Spear, Jeff 137 Spears, Anne 361 Spears, Greta 225, 5 00 Spears, Marian 119 Specht, Anita 466 Speech Unlimited 219 Speer, Doug 131, 448 Speers, lohn 323 Speier, Kelli 412, 417 Spencer, Robert 500 Spiegel, Gretchen 500 Spiegel, Steve 500 Spiegel, Susan 456 Spillar, Sharon 368, 376 Spillman, Charles 109 Splichal, Lisa 368, 466 Splichal, Patrick 137, 231, 371 Spohn, Jerold 24 Sponsel, Teresa 353, 462 Spooner, Brian 110 Sprehe, Nancy 110 Spring, Suzanne 183, 500 Springer, Jesse 500 Sprinkle, Kendra 500 Spurs 219 St. John, Bryce 185, 197, 406 Stadel, Kay 131, 133 Stadler, Anne 22, 263 Stadler, Barbara.. 430 Stadler, Kay 150 Stadler, Lisa 200 Staggenborg, Susan 157, 209 Stahel, Curtis 149, 344 Stahl, Ron 321, 500 Staley, Tim 387 Stalheim-Smith, Ann. 124 Stallbaumer, Joe 448, 500 Stamper, Marcie 186 Stamy, Paul 231, 500 Stander, Karl 355 Stangle, Darrell 393 Stanley, Chad 391 Stanley, Jeffrey 369 Stanley, Jennifer 339 Stanton, Jennifer 339 Stapp, Sara 361 Stark, Briana 186, 456 Stark, Charles. 150 Stark, Gary 232, 387 Stark, Janet 161, 173, 500 Stark, Maurice 106, 149 Stark, Tim 183, 232 Starns, Dan 185 Starns, Melanie 500 Starr, Lois 164, 209, 228, 500 State Ballet of Missouri 67 Statistics 128 Steagall, Kay 204 Stec, Thomas 149 Stecklein, Chris 199, 412 Steele, Doug 143, 168, 199, 384 Steele, Scott 223 Steel Ring 219 Steen, Debi. .118, 223, 232, 401, 415 Steenbock, Curtis 133, 344 Steere, Joel 398 Steffen, Barry 157, 158 Steffen, Jennifer 173, 500 Steffen, lohn 106 Steffen, Valerie 235, 353 Steffes, Jennifer 457, 458 Steichen, James 109, 164 Stein, Janice 339 Steinbach, Fred 223, 448 Steinbach, Rebecca 430 Steinbauer, Robert 125 Steinbock, Joely 361, 366 Steinbrock, Bruce 500 Steiner, Angela 438 Steiner, Cary 140, 192, 443 Steiner, Daniel 500 Steiner, Lisa 173 Steiner, Mike 412 Steinert, Wayne 500 Steinert, Kevin 355 Steinke, Dwain 500 Steinlage, Renee 500 Steinle, Mike 371 Stell, Todd 169 Stenberg, Mark 355 Stenstom, David 443 Stenstrom, Michael 344 Stenzel, Eric 235, 500 Stephens, Gina 351 Stephenson, Darcy 232, 368, 376 Stephenson, Lisa 149, 173, 500 Stephenson, Taber 500 Sterling, Melinda 376 Sterling, Sharon 126 Sterneker, Robert 414 Steuart, Jim 443 Stevens, Derek 453 Stevens, Lisa 361 Stevens, Rita 178 Stevenson, Jeffery 109 Stevenson, Julie 401 Stevenson, Mari 223, 361, 393 Stevenson, Sid 125 Steward, Brent 133 Stewart, Daniel 188 Stewart, David A 129, 501 Stewart, David C 226, 228, 501 Stewart, Heather 194, 340 Stewart, Kelly 501 Stewart, Mary 232 Stewart, Mike 185, 188 199, 232 Stewart, Pat 110 Stewart, Robert 134, 140 Stewart, Roger 398 Stewart, Scott 425 Stewart, Shawn 358, 410 Stichternath, Ginny 131, 157 Stichternath, Heidi 157, 344 Stieg, Shawna 232, 430 Stillwagon, Richard 177, 344 Stinebaugh, Andrew 453 Stippich, Julie 430 Stites, Ross 456 Stith, Marjorie 119 Stober, Penny 178 Stockman, Jeffrey 398 Stockman, Pamela 456 Stockman, Steve 194 Stockton, Amy 344, 456 Stockwell, Terri 221, 501 Stoerman, Jack 387 Stokes, Leslie 16 Stone, Darla 106 Stone, Douglas 412 Stone, Greg 371 Stone, Jenni 401 Stone, Kylee 357 Stone, Loyd 109 Stone, Nancy. t49, 153, 188, 194, 361 Stone, Steven 384 Stonebraker, Todd 140 Stoneking, Anne 374 Stoner, Kurt 387 Stonestreet, Mauria 501 Stonestreet, Paul 501 Stopple, Samantha 137 Storer, Aleta 377, 393 Stotesbury, Sidney 109 Stouffer, Tammy 466 Stouss, Carla 357 Stout, Amanda 153, 154, 374 Stout, Melissa 374 Stover, Stephanie 443 Stover, Stephen 116, 169 Stowe, Barbara 98 Stowe, Brad 207 Strafuss, Al 128 Strahm, Bradley 140 Strahm, Mark 169, 204, 457 Strain, Todd 178, 366 Strasser, Keith 133 Straub, Jana 366, 501 Straub, Kevin 178 Strawlow, Melody 122 Strawn, Debra 113, 143, 501 Strecker, George 122, 164 Streltzer, Tracie 501 Stricker, Stacy 333 Strickler, Dale 344 Strickler, Melissa 501 Strickler, Todd 344 Stritzke, Todd 143, 185, 192, 443 Stromberg, Karl 122 Strong, Roger 369 Strong, Travis 501 Stroud, Jeff 501 Struckhoff, Christine 374 Struckhoff, Jacque...318, 320, 322, 501 Strunk, Jerry 173, 501 Stuart, Frances 501 Stuart, Lisa 501 Stuart, Robert 13, 387 Stuart, Tim 415 Stubblefield, John 200, 355 Stubbs, Debbie 401 Stuber, Gregory 425 Stucker, Catherine 146, 501 Stucky, Bradley 114 Stucky, Tanna 351 Student Alumni Board 219 Student Association of Graduates in English 221 Student Bargains 44-45 Student Body President Council 221 student Dietetics Association 221 Student Gerontology Club 221 Student Planning Association 221 Student Senate 221 Students Against Driving Drunk 223 Studer, Terry 348 Studer, Vaughn 353 Stueckrath, Kristi 226, 501 Stueve, Anne 357 Stueve, Mary 501 Stuhlsatz, David 200, 453 Stuhlsatz, Douglas 501 Stull, Monte 226, 501 Stump, Jeanette 430 Stump, Michael 384 Stumpff, Rebecca 501 Stumpff, Travis 154, 158 Sturr, Edward 113, 134, 135 Sturrock, Sean 32 Stutesman, Charles 131, 134, 448 Stutesman, Jennifer 462 Stuteville, Donald 126 Stuteville, Robert 209 Stutterheim, Andrea 401 Stutzmanm, George 177 Suazo, Rene 231 Suchan, Jeff 209 Suchsland, Mary 235, 438 Sudbeck, Glenda 466 Suelter, Jeanette 456 Suhler, Jodi 366 Sulit, James 453 Sullivan, Dana 339 Sullivan, Erich 384 Sullivan, Laura 339 Sullivan, Lorraine 377 Sullivan, William 114, 164 Sultemeier, Paige 119 Summers, Roger 410 Summers, Stephanie 401, 404 Summervill, Randy 164, 225, 501 Sump, Shelli 501 Sunderhuse, Kathy 466 Sunderland, Robert 371 Surgery and Medicine 128 Surowski, David 122 Sutcliffe, Brad 501 Sutcliffe, Gregory 191, 501 Suter, Brian 501 Suther, Gina 501 Sutherland, Nikki 401 Sutter, Jill 501 Sutton, Jacob 366 Sutton, Louis 398 Sutton, William 110 Svaty, Becky 154, 219, 401 Svensson, Lena 501 Svoboda, Brian 363 Swaggart, Jimmy 80 Swan, Leslie 401 Swanda, Kirk 186,188 Swanson, Angela 225, 379 Swanson, Janet 157 Swanson, Jeffery 150 Swanson, Joe 169 Swanson, Kimberly 466 Swanson, Ryan 366 Swanson, Shelli 382, 415 Swartz, Nancy 204 Swartz, Stuart 113, Sweany, Michael 398 Swearingen, Jeff 422 Swearingen, Raymond 235 Sweat, Ashley 417 Sweat, Benjamin 453 Sweat, Brenda 501 Sweat, Janet 438 Sweat, Tracy 387 Sweazy, Stacy 185, 204, 466 Sweeney, Michael 425 Swengel, Jodi 357 Swenson, Craig 406 Swenson, Dan 122 Swenson, Robert 69 Swickard, Diana 194, 361 Swickard, Diona 438 Swihart, ludd 119 Swim, Gary 239 Swisher, Cindy 195, 466 Switzer, Veryl 164 Swofford, Michael 173, 453 Swords, Sheridan 387 Swoyer, Linda 501 Sylvis, Lynda 173 Szulya, Robert 453 Szyhowski, John 209, 501 Tabler, Jennifer 357 Tafoya, Carrie 357 Taggart, Scott 32, 348, 186 Taglieri, John 106, 145, 180, 181 Taha, Nabil 501 Tajchman, Jessica 131, 150, 219 Takemoto, Dolores 110 Taladriz, Lourdes 209 Talarico, Angela 351 Talbert, Tamera 197 Talkington, John 425 Tally, Marlene 131, 466 Tan, Kenny 186 Tan, Kristin 351 Tangedal, Michael 353 Tanjore, Balaji 501 Tanner, Dana 357 Tanner, Gina 501 Tanner, Robert 133, 209, 501 Taphorn, Tammy 353 Tapia, Tiffany 456, 188 Tarbox, Bus 415 Tariq, Ahmad 158 Tarrant, Kerry 382 Tate, Rikki 361 Tatham, Eirene 36, 146, 210, 223, 425, 458 Taton, Tamara 393, 467 Tatum, Anne 336 Tau Alpha Pi 223 Tau Beta Pi 223, 225 Tau Beta Sigma 225 Tau Sigma Delta 225 Tauscher, Debbie 134, 154, 173, 180, 377 Taussig, Robert 128 Tautges, Alan 121 Tawneya, Lisa 149, 340 Taylor, Amy 353, 402, 461 Taylor, Chris 391 Taylor, Cyndie 358 Taylor, Deborah 501 Taylor, lack 46, 48, 145, 180, 221, 363 Taylor, Jame s N 501 Taylor, James W 133, 348 Taylor, Jill 458 Taylor, Karen 340 Taylor, Kelli 300 Taylor, Lynn 226, 348 Taylor, Robert 128 Taylor, Russell 443 Taylor, Tamara 301 Teacher Aiding 142-143 Teague, Christoper 145 Teasley, Anja 382 Tedman, Kelly 501 Teeple, Keith 501 525 Teetzen, Douglas 456 Teghtmeyer, Lori 200, 467 Teichmann, Shawn 191, 501 Tejeda , Christina 368, 377 Templer, Karen 422 Templeton, Susan 361 Ten Eyck, George 109 Tennant, Gay 186, 336 Terrill, John 149, 353 Terry, Charles 449 Terwilliger, Todd 384 Tessendorf, Carolyn 126 Tessendorf, Lori 501 Teter, David 415 Teter, Steven . 449 Teufel, Shannon 135, 339 Teuscher, Todd 353 Tewarie, Sonny 183 Thaemert, Michelle 265 Thatcher, Julie 177, 501 Theatre Makeup 218-221 Theatre for Special Populations 222-223 Theegala, Muralidhar 183, 502 Thelander, lohn 137 Theroff, Melanie 344, 432 Thiel, Jo Dee 173, 371, 401 Thiel, Rebecca 502 Thiele, Lisa 438 Thien, Steve 109 Thiessen, Clara 114 Thiessen, David 209, 502 Thiessen, Murray 415 Thirkell, Scott 232 Thoebald Michael 204 Thole, Jill 377 Thole, Michelle 343, 377 Thoma, Cheryl 178, 467 Thomas, Arthur 137, 188 Thomas, Brenda 300 Thomas, David 398 Thomas, Donnell 302, 305 Thomas, Edward.. 408 Thomas, Jeffrey 177, 502 Thomas, Kim 225 Thomas, Lloyd 113 Thomas, Lynn 106, 173 Thomas, Raymond 502 Thomas, Shannan 379 Thomas, Stephen 188, 453 Thomas, Tammy 374 Thomas, William 502 Thome, Janell 232 Thompson, Charles 126, 164 Thompson, Garth 122 Thompson, Janet 173, 443 Thompson, Jeff 140 Thompson, Jeffrey 422 Thompson, Eric 425 Thompson, Ion 408 Thompson, Julie A. 191 Thompson, Julie K 343, 502 Thompson, Kendra 199 Thompson, Lisa 502 Thompson, Mark 408 Thompson, Miki 235 Thompson, Page 355 Thompson, Russell 185 Thompson, Scott 391 Thompson, Susan 353, 377 Thompson, Teri 502 Thompson, Timothy 502 Thompson, Todd A. 384 Thompson, Todd R. 502 Thompson, Trisha 135, 382 Thomson, Susan 232, 377 Thornbrugh, Sydney... 361 Thornton, John . 502 Thorson, Lisa 456 Thou, Sandy 339, 404 Thurman, lames 404 Thurow, Tracy 382 Thurston, Linda 106 Thurston, Phillip 164, 173, 225, 502 Tibbetts, Tami 250, 502 Tibbetts, Todd 209, 502 Tiede, Sharon 169 Tiemeyer, Carol 228, 348, 502 Tien, Larry 133, Tierney, Shelly 204 Tierney, William 109 Tilghman, Benjamin 125 Tillberg, Cheryl 131, 374 Tillberg, David 369 Tiller, Ronald 408 Ting, David 186, 502 T innin, Lisa 336 Tisserat, Ned 126 Toby, Diane 164, 502 Tocuyo, Hernan 210, 502 Todd, Carol 377, 412 Todd, Jeffrey 363 Todd, Scott 449 Todd, Susan 169 Todd, Timothy 126 Toedman, Michael 197, 232, 355 Tolar, Dwight 215, 217, 232, 348 Tolbert, Michael 235 Tollefson, Rebecca 502 Tolley, Sheri 361 Tolley, Staci 361 Tomasic, Matthew 366 Tomba, Alberto 83 Tomc, Janet 374 Tonnessen, Elling 177, 502 Torkelson, Lori 412 Torneden, Erich 393 Tout, Robert 52, 186 Towns, Sean 131, 449 Townsend, Jim 122 Townsend, Thomas 145, 188 Towse, John 348 Trabert, Tammy.. 467 Trabue, Tammy 441 Tracey, Karen 114 Tracy, Carol 161, 197, 210, 443 Tracy, James 183 Tracy, Susan 235, 393, 430 Tracy, Tammara.. 192, 221 Train, Vicki 232 Trammell, Sean 453 Tran, Matthew 231 Tran, Nhan 231 Tranbarger, Marty 502 Traphagan, Penny 502 Travis, Larry 248 Traylor, Ann 458 Traylor, Randy 228, 453 Traylor, Shad 458 Treff, Amy 143 Treffer, Douglas 384 Treinen, Dan 458 Tremblay, Carol 113 Tremblay, Victor 113 Trenary, Roger 113 Trentman, Cheryl 153, 164, 361 Trentman, Connie 219, 374 Trentman, Kent 371 Treschl, Eric 449 Tretter, Bob 408 Triangels 425 Triplett, Doug 231 Triplett, Julie 333, 361 Trip To Europe 224-225 Trostle, Lenore 416 Townsend, Jim 122 Townsend, Thomas 145, 188 Towse, John 348 Trabert, Tammy 467 Trabue, Tammy 441 Tracey, Karen 114 Tracy, Carol 161, 197, 210, 443 Tracy, lames 183 Tracy, Susan 235, 393, 430 Tracy, Tammara 192, 221 Train, Vicki 232 Trammell, Sean 453 Tran, Matthew 231 Tran, Nhan 231 Tranbarger, Marty 502 Traphagan, Penny 502 Travis, Larry 248 Traylor, Ann 458 Troub, lames 398 Trout, Janna 143 Troutt, Terry 150, 502 Trowbridge, Shelly 197, 417 Troyer, Denise -358 Troyer, Rod 121 Truby, Shelley 368, 467 True, Renee 438 Truesdell, Shannon 340 Trummel, Sheri 438 Truong, Tin 231 Truscott, Tina 339, 368 Trussell, Miki 377 Tryda, Stephanie 443 Tryon, Kathryn 382 Tsai, Fen Chu 430 Tsiu, Mabusane 128 Tuck, Heather 188 Tuck, Lyle 158 Tucker, Bryan 449 Tucker, Charles 264, 412 Tucker, Christine 128, 339 Tucker, Cornetta 191, 443 Tucker, Kenneth 344 Tucker, Michael 140, 502 Tucker, Nathan 449 Tucker, Robert 453 Tucker, Sanford 395 Tuley, Kristin 358, 408 Tullis, Jeffery 502 Tullock, Stephen 387 Tumpes, Amy 226, 361 Tunks, Barry 443 Tunstall, George 125 Turek, Tim 344 Turley, Dana 502 Turner, Chris 232, 443 Turner, David 444 Turner, George 502 Turner, Jill 219, 467 Turner, John 164, 453 Turner, Kenneth 502 Turner, Lane 145, 197, 369 Turner, Libby 149, 401 Turner, Miranda 502 Turner, Stephanie 502 Turner, Stephen 410 Turnquist, Gary 140, 154, 225, 502 Turnquist, Ralph 122 Turtle, Jeff 276 Twaddell, Michelle 379, 422 Twiss, Page 164 Tyler, Curtis 502 Tyler, James 366 Tyree, Ingrid 444 UPC Issues and Ideas UPC Kaleidoscope UPC Outdoor Recreation UPC Promotions UPC Special Events UPC Travel Upshaw, Dennis 232 Upshaw, Lentz 232 Uptain, Julie Upton, Steve Urban, James Urban, Tim Urbanek, Jenee Urbanik, Bruce Urrelo, Rafael Useldinger, Lori Utermoehlen, Tom Vader, James 410 Vail, Julie.. 395 Valdivia, Rose 467 Vale, Paula 204 Valentine, Michael 180, 219, 419 Van Dam, Timirie 401 Van Der Hoeven, Ian 185 Van Doren, Julia 47, 417 Van Dyke, Elizabeth 358 Van Hoet, Phillip 502 Van Laeys, Tammy 260 Van Loenen, Judy 177, 502 Van Meter, Angela 502 Van Meter, Shawn 502 Van Steinberg, Susan 433 Van Thullenar, David 387 Van Wey, Dennis 145, 398 Van, Thu van 231 Vanbebber, Cynthia 358 Vanbuskirk, Mark 191, 449 Vandal, Afshan 502 Vandal, Mohammad 502 Vandament, Max 456 Vandel, Jeff 185 Vanderbeke, Susan 200 Vanderbilt, Christopher 223 Vanderbilt, Thomas 410 Vanderlinden, Lori 210, 379 Vanderlip, Richard 109, 231 Vandervort, Gerald 204 Vandike, Darrell 503 Vandonge, Timothy 371 Vanier, Mary 137, 194, 374 Vanlandingham, Sue 456 Vann, Shelly 145 Vanover, Kyle 219, 344 Vanrysselburghe, Kristi 502 Van Swaay, Maarlen 113 Varner, Kendra 300 Varner, Linda 430 Varney, Bill 351 Varney, Heather 149 Varyani, Devkishin 433 Vath, Amy 339 Vaughn, Brenda 186, 467 Vaughn, Jeffrey 146, 408 Vaughn, Susan 503 Vavala, Matthew 258, 412 Vavroch, Allan 444 Vawter, Karen 430 Veatch, Bradley 503 Veatch, Clifford 47, 363 Veatch, Johna 128 Vedia, Carlos 183 Velasquez, Chris 235, 503 Venjohn, Dallas 412 Vera, Nancy 336 Vering, Christopher 149, 153, 422 Vering, Denise 344, 444 Vest, Rebecca .. 417 Vestweber, Jerome 206 Veterinary Diagnosis 128 Veterinary Medicine 202-211 Veverka, Karen 374 Vibert, Marya 361 Vick, Gregory 453 Vierthaler, Tern 503 Vietnam Memorial 180-181 Vietnamese Students Association .... 231 Vik, David 503 Villasi, Ludwig 113, 143 Villazana, Elba 503 Vincent, Amy 377 Vinson, Gwendolyn 178 Visser, Gwen 143, 178, 503 Visser, Jerry 459 Visser, Sharon 137, 149, 503 Vitztum, Colleen 377 Viveros, Christine 223, 339, 368 Vo, Phat 231 Vodraska, Karen 467 Voegeli, Sandra 207 Voegeli, Vince 207 Voelker, Wendy 199 Vogel, Greg 158, 209 Vogel, Sandy 199, 348 Vogt, Julia 137 Vogt, Rod 164, 209 Vohs, Michael 204 Vohs, Stephen 449 Volleyball 250-253 Volmert, Russell 161 Volosin, John 449 Von Lehe, Troy 185, 503 Vonfange, Jon 449 Vopat, Stephanie 444 Voran, Denise 503 Vorhies, Mahlon 128, 208, 209 Vorhies, Robert 419 Voss, Leanne 169, 467 Voss, Rene 503 Voss, Royalyn 177, 178, 503 Votapka, Beth 438 Voth, Angela 149 Voth, Kimberly 232 Voth, Michael 503 Voth, Patty 503 Votsmier, Jeanne 347 Vruwink, David 106, 164 Wachal, Mark . 205 Waddell, Lisa 168 Wadleigh, Sinda 197, 417 Wagener, Mark 503 Wagner, Betty 438 Wagner, Curtis 408 Wagner, David 408 Wagner, Judy 192, 209, 432 Wagner, Kevin 408 Wagner, Larry 223 Wagner, Richard 503 Wahid, Julaihi 186 Wahl, Lori 438 Wahlmeier, Sheri 192 Wainwright, Lydia 503 Wainscott, Cy 23 Waite, Elizabeth 336, 412 Wakabayashi, Isaac 185, 233-235 Wake, Kevin 154, 449 Wakeman, Julie 336 Wakeman, Shelly 336 Walahoski, Annette 374 Walawender, Carol 134 Walawender, Walter 110, 140, 147, 192 Walberg, Mike 449 Walburn, Gregory 391 Walburn, Larry 391 Walck, Shane 223, 456 Wald, Theodore 228, 348 Walde, Kathy 137, 194 Waldeck, Katherine 377 Walden, Christopher 387 Walden, Erik 207 Walden, Geoffrey 387 Walden, James 369 Walden, John 369 Walden, Mike K 161, 199, 408 Walden, Mike G. 121, 199 Waldorf, LaReina 150, 371, 503 Waldy, Chris 177 Walk, Darin 503 Walk, Lou 380 Walker, Danette 456 Walker, Daniel 178 Walker, Darrel 456 Walter, Eric 366 Walker, Gail . 183 Walker, Hugh 122 Walker, James 408 Walker, lane 503 Walker, lohn 408 Walker, Karen 374 Walker, Katey 119 Walker, Lloyd 503 Walker, Richard 453 Walker, Rindi 374 Walker, Thom 140, 158 Walker, Traci 226, 503 Walkup, Richard 406 Wall, Alan 199, 415 Wall, Carolee 232 Wall, Mary 173, 503 Wall, Tim 137, 194 Wallace, Bobbi 417 Wallace, Christine 382 Wallace, David 240, 241 Wallace, Karen 444 Wallace, Michael 456 Wallace, Shelly 417 Wallentine, Virgil 113 Waller, Karen 336, 353 Waller, Tina 467 Wallerstedt, Matthew 242 Wallingford, Laura 232, 430 Walls, Jonathan 232 Walrod, Leisa 417 Walsten, Clayton 140 Walter, Eric 369 Walter, Judi 382 526 Walter, Kevin E 133 Walter, Kevin S 149, 228, 503 Walter, Michele 503 Walter, Ted 109 Walters, Marcy 403, 438 Walters, Tresa 178, 432 Walters, Clay 207 Walterscheid, Lorraine 128 Walz, Jeff 366 Walz, Laura 467 Wangsgaard, Scott 186 Wanska, Susan 119 Ward, Alayne 379 Ward, Bobbie 149, 177, 344, 456 Ward, Christy 382 Ward, Daniel 391 Ward, David 164, 503 Ward, Derrie 199, 456 Ward, Harvey 140, 180, 185, 191 Ward, James 197 Ward, Karla 379, 405 Ward, Marc 131, 150, 503 Ward, Mary 128, 336, 387 Ward, Monica 169, 398, 438 Ward, Renee 430 Ward, Robert 415 Ward, Steve 384 Wardell, Kriste 374 Warders, David 258 Warfe, Linda 128 Warlop, Cristin 374 Warner, lill 408 Warner, Kim 161, 180, 351 Warnken, Troy 414 Warren, Ann 114 Warren, Donna 401 Warren, Heather 393 Warren, Jill 145, 173, 351, 393 Warren, Scott 387 Warren, Steve 183 Warriner, Tobin 384 Warta, Jennifer 353, 382 Wash, Mark 503 Washburn, Stephanie ......... 169, 438 Washburn, Tiphanie 169, 185, 438 Washington, lames 419, 420 Washington, Latrice 113 Washington, Willie 191 Wasinger, Carl 449 Wasinger, Jeffrey 412 Wasinger, Jerome 228, 412 Wasko, Matthew 387 Wassenberg, Karen 503 Wassom, Clyde 109 Wasson, Cherie 456 Waters, Clarence 110, 180 Waters, Matthew. 149 Watkins, Michelle 79 Watney, Guy 128 Watson, Andrew 140 Watson, David 15, 228, 415 Watson, Erika 143, 401 Watson, Joyce 142, 422, 467 Watson, Paulette 183 Watt, Juliann 199, 347 Watts, Carol 114 Watts, Don 114 Wauters, Amanda 393 Weary, Brian 398 Weast, Jim 219, 422 Weatherly, Jeff 183 Weatherman, Steven 503 Weaver, Brian 444 Weaver, James 384 Weaver, Larry 126, 197 Weaver, Linda 503 Weaver, Robert 453 Webb, Dorothy 346 Webb, Douglas 503 Webb, Kory 204 Webb, Michael 226, 228, 503 Webber, Jari 23, 415, 438 Webber, Michael 459 Weber, Curt 391 Weber, Greg 164 Weber, Karrie 393 Weber, Koni 167 Weber, Kristel 425 Weberg, Christopher 153 Webster, Laura 131, 133, 200, 371, 382 Webster, Scott 146 Weckesser, Jerri 137 Wedel, Lynn 169 Wedeman, Beth 425, 444 Weelborg, Jane 344, 382 Wefald, Jon 6, 60, 61, 96, 181 Wege, Gail 462 Weide, Lee 177, 449 Weidman, Robert 191 Weidner, Linda 456 Weigand, Nancy 382 Weigel, Colin 387 Weigel, Maure 170 Weigel, Stacey 178, 379 Weil, Jason 232, 449 Weil, Stacy 503 Weiler, Paul 348 Weimer, Rita 113 Weinacker, Karl 205 Weinberg, Patrick 145 Weiner, Eric 150 Weinhold, Bethena 361 Weinhold, Sam 355 Weis, Steve 404 Weisenborn, Greg 223, 285, 425 Weisenburger, Ray 221 Weiser, Teresa 379 Weishaar, Kevin 235, 503 Weisner, Kori 503 Weith, Carolyn 161, 194, 356 Weitz, Dave 137, 209, 286 Weixelman, Amy 340, 348 Weixelman, Sara 209 Welborn, Cliff 449 Welch, Christopher 412 Welch, David 169, 444 Welch, Kenton 415 Welch, Nechelle 438 Weldin, Jennifer 503 Weldon, Stephanie 226, 361 Wells, Christine 221, 503 Wells, Jeffrey 191, 503 Wells, Kelly 339 Wells, Lee Ann 339 Welsh, Michael 178 Welsh, Molly 379 Welsh, Susan 379 Welti, Ruth 110 Welton, Jeffrey 410 Wencel, Tyann 438 Wendelburg, Kelly 503 Wendler, Kevin 185 Wendt, Jacqueline 358 Weninger, Rose 178, 503 Wentzel, Mark 408 Werner, Michelle 25, 503 Werth, Carrie 379 Werth, Sharon 379 Wessel, Alan 185 Wessel, Shannon 137, 200, 503 West, Amy 377 West Hall Governing Board 231 West, Katrina 200, 232, 503 West, Kimberly 467 West, Loo 119 West, Oscar...133, 137, 150, 191, 449 West, Ron 17, 116 Westerfield, Paula 467 Westerman, Ralph 128 Westgate, Audrey 105 Westhoff, Jo 185 Wetter, Mike 131, 504 Wetter, Roger 149 Wettig, Edward 408 Checking the wind, Bret Carey, Manhattan, contemplates the direction and speed of the wind before launching his airplane at the City Park. Carey bought the plane to take advantage of the unseasonably warm weather in January. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) Index 527 White, Warren N 122 White, Wendy 169, 438 Whiteford, Craig 363 Whitehair, Karen 504 Whitehair, Lennis 504 Whitehair, Mark 393 Whitehair, Matt 393 Whitehair, Peggy 504 Whitenack, Stu 398 Whitfill, David 134, 140, 504 Whitfill, Joleen 504 Whitfill, Kimberly .. 408 Whitney, Dave 109 Whitney, Mark 449 Whitney, Trevor 123 Whitson, Ted 235 Whittle, Lorne 238, 247, 268 Whorton, Marc 449 Wickersham, Elizabeth 161 Wickey, Michelle 456 Wickstrum, Todd 150, 344 Wiechman, Henry 369 Wiechman, Michael 177 Wiechman, Misty 343 Wiederholt, Sandra 344, 467 Wieland, Shenane 430 Wienck, Brenda 177, 192, 432 Wienck, Sharon 154 Wier, Bobby 143 Wiersma, Michael 188, 453 Wiest, Steven 119 Wieters, Eric 140 Wigfall, LaBarbara 114, 225 Wikoff, Jennifer 339 Wilbeck, Jeff 449 Wilber, Matthew 504 Wilbur, Melissa 387 Wilbur, Scott 102, 103 Wilcox, Bob 119 Wilcox, I isa 179, 444 Wilcoxon, G.D 119 Wilder, Doog 412 Wilding, Mark 161 Wilds, Alan 444 Wiler, Vicki 504 Wiles, Connie 343 Wiles, Gary 391 Wiles, Jennifer 401 Wiley, Amy 393 Wilgers, Martin 504 Wilhelm, Chris 157 Wilke, Dana 401, 412 Wilke, Scott 302 Wilke, Todd 199 Wilkens, Brent 154, 371 Wilkens, Carrie 232 Wilkerson, Grant 143 Wilkerson, Karen 143, 379 Wilkerson, Robert 161, 180 Wilkerson, Stephanie 333, 444 Wilkinson, Douglas 504 Wilkinson, Sharon 504 Wilks, Anthony 425 Will, George 60 Will, Ray 164, 504 Willcoxon, Phil 398 Willcut, Delis 377 Willems, Alvin 121, 210 Willett, Michele 304 Williams, Angelita 438 Williams, Becca 358, 368 Williams, Christopher 131 Williams, Daniel 304 Williams, Deborah 137, 200, 204, 458 Williams, Debra 412, 456 Williams, Elise 150, 340 Williams, Elizabeth 379 Williams, Eric 433 Williams, Gary 154, 355 Williams, Gregory 188, 191 Williams, Heather 351 Williams, Jeanie 371, 430 Williams, Jeffery 109 Williams, John 238 Williams, Kathleen 125 Williams, Keith 369 Williams, Kelly 444 Williams, Kent 219, 408 Williams, Kevin 161 Williams, Kimberly 504 Williams, Larry 110 Williams, Lisa 336 Williams, Lucy 116 Williams, Mike 404 Williams, Patrick 127, 178 Williams, Stephen 504 Williams, Steven 444 Williams, Thomas 504 Williams, Todd 158, 371 Williams, Wayne 113 Williams, William 204 Willie Nelson Concert 18-19 Willis, Linden 122 Willis, Martha 336, 387 Wil liston Geology Club 231 Willms, Beverly 401 Willow, Thomas 391 Willy, Elyn 358 Wilmot, Janell 232 Wilson, Angela 504 Wilson, Blake 353 Wilson, Carl 121, 210 Wilson, Christopher 395 Wilson, David L. 145 Wilson, David R. 449 Wilson, Dawn 192, 231, 467, 469 Wilson, Debbie 43 Wilson, Fred 110 Wilson, Gwen 114 Wilson, Jamie 371 Wilson, Jeff 232 Wilson, John 449 Wilson, Jon 371 Wilson, Lori 504 Wilson, Mark 453 Wilson, Matthew 210, 504 Wilson, Michael B. 391 Wilson, Michael R. 191 Wilson, Mike 408 Wilson, Morgan 504 Wilson, Paula 504 Wilson, Rhonda 232 Wilson, Richa 161, 194 Wilson, Russell 199, 459 Wilson, Stacey 462 Wilson, Stacy 177 Wilson, Terri 417 Wilson, Tim 333 Wilson, Timothy 398 Wiltfong, David 188, 415 Wiltse, Scott 449 Wimer, Jorita 504 Winans, Beth 339 Windley, Jay 186 Windley, Paul 109, 164 Windsor, Brent 128 Wineinger, Matthew 150, 371 Wineinger, William 146, 459 Wineland, Shelli 351 Wing, Jeff 154, 219, 223, 444 Wing, Ken 444 Winger, Tammy 200, 432 Wingert, Harold 371 Wingert, Wende 234, 382 Wink, Kristie 347, 358 Winkler, Greg 164, 209, 504 Winklmeier, Laurie 221 Winsinger, Randall 505 Winslow, Chip 121 Winston, Deborah 178 Winston, Kristol 131, 200, 462 Winter, Christopher 412 Winter, Kerry 146, 505 Winter, Kirk 393 Wiseman, Denise 119 Woborny, Kelli 505 Winter, Scott 406 Wisemiller, Bryce 505 Woellhof, Bradley 505 Winter, Tex 292 Wistuba, Anne 505 Woerpel, Traci 382 Winter, Trenton 505 Withee, Van 109 Wogan, Kathleen 232 Winterman, Amy 339, 387 Withers, Pamela 358 Wohler, Brian 444 Winterman, Kurt 134, 387 Withroder, Dale 204 Wohletz, Donna 430 Winters, Tammy 374 Wilt, Corbin 161, 348 Wolf, Christine 505 Wire, Andrew 353 Witt, Ryan 348 Wolf, Judith 153, 188, 361 Wire, Sam 333 Witte, Jeannie 143, 361, 408 Wolfe, Anne-Marieke 133, 444 Wise, Melissa 505 Wittman, Dolly 467 Wolffing, Ralph 119 Wise, Rodney 161, 505 Wittman, John 366 Wolgast, Stephen 201 Wise, Steven 449 Wittmer, Wendy 180, 339 Wolken, Shannon 505 528 Index Yaacob, Yati Yakshaw, Annie Yancey, Karen Yang, George Yang, Shie-Shien Yap, Sze-Ting Yarrow, Daryl Yates, Charles Yaussi, Charity Yeary-Herrick, Teresa Yeates, Angelina Yenzer, Gary Yi, Hyon Yocum, Lane Yong, Kang York, Brent York, Cynthia Wootton, Michael 180 Worcester, Paul 505 Worcester, Stanley 505 Worcester, Sylvia 505 Workman, Stacy 379 Worley, Candace 204 Worley, Paula 343, 505 Worley, Rhonda 444 Worthen, Tashia 462 Worthington, David .. 453 Worthington, Roy 116 Wriedt, Cynthia 186, 467 Wright, Cassandra 467 Wright, Christie 225, 235 Wright, David 119 Wright, Emmett 113 Wright, James 444 Wright, Jeffrey 505 Wright, Joanne 186, 336, 368 Wright, Kevin 199 Wright, Rensloe 398 Wright, Sherri 393 Wright, Valerie 114 Wright, Walter 146, 209, 505 Wright, William 458 Wroblewski, Peter 140, 180, 191 Wunder, Anita 231, 467 Wunder, Paula 430 Wortz, Judy 505 Wuttig, Klaus 410 Wyffels, lane 106, 107 Wyland, Michael 444 Wynne, Sean 384 Wolters, Denise 430 Women ' s Basketball 312-318 Women ' s Cross Country 260-261 Women ' s Glee Club 235 Women ' s Tennis 280-281 Wonderlich, Randall 145, 146, 505 Wondra, James 149, 173, 505 Wong, Wai 186, 225 Wood 146-147 Wood, Kirstin 204 Wood, Larry 505 Wood, Martha 417 Wood, Tara 505 Wood, Theresa 145, 444 Woodard, Gerald 369 Woodbury, Denise 422, 438 Woodbury, Howard. 137, 150, 221, 355 Woodbury, John 150, 355 Woodmansee, David 137, 505 Woodruff, Michelle 379 Woods, Angie 505 Woods, Deland 235 Woods, Jeffrey 180, 366 Woods, Jodie 377, 422 Woods, Julie..153, 154, 195, 382, 422 Woods, Steve 140, 158 Woods, Walter 98 Woodson, Laurel 382 Woodward, Joel 404 Woodward, Marilyn 226, 228 Woofter, Eric 131, 134 Woollen, Neal 204 Woolley, Ginger 347, 401 Woolsey, Bill 426 Woolsey, Michael 505 Woolsoncroft, Greg 131, 505 York, Michael 11 Young, Amy 358 Young, Bryan 387 Young, Cathy 374 Young, Jason 387 Young, Joanne 186, 336 Young, Joseph 453 Young, Ronald 199, 505 Young, Sonja 143, 197, 505 Young, Steven 109, 140 Youngblood, Jennifer 505 Youngworth, Nancy.. 505 Younkin, Tamera 417 Yount, Timothy 209, 444 Yu, Xiao-Qing 232 Yule, Donna 505 Yust, Connie 382 Zimmerman, Angie 377 Zimmerman, Brian 366 Zimmerman, Chris 169 Zimmerman, Craig 146 Zimmerman, Erin 374 Zimmerman, Jacinda 351 Zimmerman, Janelle 13, 351 Zimmerman, John 110 Zimmerman, Mark 384 Zimmerman, Michelle 123, 358 Zimmerman, Scott 209, 355 Zimmerman, Tim 505 Zinger, Bretton 453 Zink, Rhonda 191, 444 Zinn, Heidi 197, 430 Zirkle, Gerise 361 Zirkle, Michael 131, 419 Zirnstein, Gerald 169 Zoellner, Keith 109 Zoerb, Eric 406 Zogg, Dorthy 235 Zollman, Dean 126 Zou, Qiso 122 Zuel, Rex 180, 185, 449 Zuhlke, Paul 395 Zumwalt, Diane 29, 505 Zschoche, Sue 119, 164 Zwahlen, Brian 321 Zwahlen, Sheila 351 Zwick, Bradley 505 Zwiesler, Robert 200, 348 Zwilich, Ellen 70, 71 A bolt of lightning strikes behind a pasture of cattle west of Manhattan during a June thunderstorm. (Photo by Greg Vogel) Zabel, Greg 209, 353 Zabel, Mary 106, 164 Zabel, Robert 106 Zamfir-Bleyberg, Maria 113 Zamoranos 231 Zander, Van 419 Zavala, Manuel 321 Zayas, Joseph 116 Zehner, John 363 Zenger, Sheahon 219, 4.12 Zernickow, Craig 232, 449 Zerr, Debbie 505 Zidek, Susan 425, 444 Ziegler, Susan 467 Zielsdorf, Mark 505 Ziemba, Jolyn 339 Zientara, Jill 270, 401 Xia, Linda 505 Zimmer, Bryan 391 529 Index COLOPHON Kansas State University ' s 79th volume of the Royal Purple was printed by Josten ' s Printing and Publishing Co., Topeka, Kan., using offset lithography from camera-ready mounting boards. The press run was 6,500 copies. All copy was composed by the Royal Purple staff using Mycro-Tek 1100 Plus System and type set on a Linotronic 100. The cover is No. 535 black with a mission grain. Copper-foil is used over a beveled cut, and No. 375 light purple silkscreen is used on other parts of the cover. Endsheets arc No. 280 snow white with No. 876 metal copper and No. 395 black. Eighty pound No. 199 dull paper is used in the rest of the book. Photographs were taken and printed by staff photographers. Four-color photographs were printed at Custom Color, Kansas City, Mo. Organization group pictures and living group portraits were taken by Carl Wolf Studio Inc., Philadelphia, Pa. The sitting fee for portrait pictures was $3.50. Department group pictures were taken by K-State Photographic Services. Cover type is Bookman and Vivaldi. Body copy is Bookman Light and cutlines are Helvetica Bold and Italic. Folios are Bookman Light and Demi. Student life headlines are New Century Schoolbook Roman and Italic, Optima, Times Roman and Souvenir. Academics and organization headlines are Times Roman and Italic, Helvetica and New Century Schoolbook Italic. Headlines in sports are Helvetica, Zapf Chancery Medium Italic, Times Roman and Bookman Light. Headlines in housing are Times Bold and Bookman Light. Housing names and the index are Optima and Optima Bold. Academics and organization names are Helvetica. The Royal Purple was distributed to students on campus during the first week of May. The book was offered to full-time students for $11, including sales tax. The price of the book to non-students is $16. The Royal Purple business office is Student Publications Inc., Kedzie Hall 103, Kansas State University, Manhattan, Kan., 66506. PHOTOGRAPHY STAFF: Jim Dietz, Steve Rasmussen, Brett Hacker, Rob Squires, Greg Vogel, Steve Wolgast, John La Barge, Gary Lytle, Brad Fanshier. Sarah Bradshaw, Chris Assaf, Mark Stead, Jennifer Quist, Mark Leffingwell, Neal Hinkle, Brad Camp. ROYAL PURPLE: Judi Walter, Garyn Hoffman, Lori Bredow, Susan Hilt, Alicia Lowe, Stacey Schoneman, Larissa Kimura, Laura Renfro, Mindy Robert, Gary Lytle. ROYAL PURPLE Editor Mindy Robert Assistant Editor Laura Renfro Photography Gary Lytle Copy Editor Lori Bredow Production Supervisor Judi Walter Student Life Editor Larissa Kimura Sports Editor Garyn Hoffman Academics Organizations Stacey Schoneman Housing Index Editor Alicia Lowe Staff Layout Assistant Susan Hilt Faculty Adviser Dave Adams Administrative Assistant Connie Fulkerson Coming up for air, Mike Fink, freshman in horticulture, takes advantage of the open swimming hours at the Natatorium to do some laps. (Photo by Brett Hacker) On an unseasonably warm February day, Ted Nagel, senior in milling science and gets in a short nap in front of Cardwell Hall before class. (Photo by Chris Assaf) 532 Closing The year is simply a now. The photographs and words printed in this book were an attempt to capture some of those memories. Although it could only capture a part of this year, it was indeed a significant touch of time. It was a time for students to look to the future, reflect on the past and appreciate the present. And although this year was not without its frustrations, it was a year to remember. One such memory was in sports when students witnessed the final basketball season in Ahearn and the men ' s journey to the final eight in the NCAA tournament. The Wildca ts missed a trip to the Final Four by suffering a bitter defeat to the University of Kansas. The campus also faced the Alan Koechner, junior in milling science and management and a Delta Upsilon pledge, spreads sand on the DU basketball court in for the fraternity ' s annual slab party. (Photo by Jim Dietz) 533 After 38 years, the last basketball game was played in Ahearn Field House on March 5. Next year, the basketball teams will play in the new Bramlage Coliseum. (Photo by Steve From a view above the campus, Jeff Jake, graduate in agronomy, looks down on campus while Catherine Fung, graduate in education, studies statistics in Farrell Library. (Photo by Steve Wolgast) never-ending internal controversies, as well as changes proposed by the state Legislature. Student Senate debated and eventually defeated a proposal that would provide student fee support for the funding of the KSU Childcare Cooperative on campus. The issue of who should pay for a child care center on campus was not resolved. The Board of Regents pressed the Legislature to pass a bill that would eliminate the long tradition of open admissions policy at all state universities, but the bill was not passed. These issues, and many which will go unsaid, all contributed to the making of history of this one year, the University ' s 125th. More importantly, the students may remember the Protesting the nomination of Robert Bork to the Supreme Court, Annie Lewis, a 3-year-old from Manhattan, carries a sign along with the rest of the protestors in front of McCain Auditorium prior to Sen. Nancy Kassebaum ' s Landon Lecture. (Photo by Jeff Weatherly) Closing 535 anniversary itself – a year that continued a developing. The 125th anniversary was not an affair with a lot of pomp and circumstance, but only a few small remembrances. There was no huge celebration on Founding Day attracting national attention, the University couldn ' t afford one. But this didn ' t mean that the students, faculty and alumni did not observe the anniversary and feel its impact. So we celebrated this impact and paid tribute to 125 years of history through this book. Our contributions now may one day seem as small as this one year this touch of time in the long history of this University but it was a significant touch of time ... gone by. A cowboy practices with his lariat on the upper bleachers of Weber Arena during the first intercollegiate rodeo of the spri ng semester. (Photo by Mark Leffingwell) 536 Closing


Suggestions in the Kansas State University - Royal Purple Yearbook (Manhattan, KS) collection:

Kansas State University - Royal Purple Yearbook (Manhattan, KS) online collection, 1985 Edition, Page 1

1985

Kansas State University - Royal Purple Yearbook (Manhattan, KS) online collection, 1986 Edition, Page 1

1986

Kansas State University - Royal Purple Yearbook (Manhattan, KS) online collection, 1987 Edition, Page 1

1987

Kansas State University - Royal Purple Yearbook (Manhattan, KS) online collection, 1989 Edition, Page 1

1989

Kansas State University - Royal Purple Yearbook (Manhattan, KS) online collection, 1990 Edition, Page 1

1990

Kansas State University - Royal Purple Yearbook (Manhattan, KS) online collection, 1991 Edition, Page 1

1991


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