Kent State University - Chestnut Burr Yearbook (Kent, OH)
- Class of 1978
Page 1 of 312
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 312 of the 1978 volume:
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I I 1 -M rn u H F lf. 4- - Ls J- 'GI 71 fdnf -.ini Q -N I THE CHESTNUT BURR When the first Chestnut Burr was published in 1914, Normal Hill fHiII- topl was covered with chestnut trees. fhese trees, many 2Vz to 3 feet in diameter, gave the annual its name. In the 1920's a blight destroyed vir- tually all the chestnut trees left on campus, but the annual remains. ig' .xiii f -I -5333. . ,4 'lk X 'S U . ' L ,wix:i,Q: 'Q. 'I'-Cx, 121:51-1 Qi HX. T' '-TGP' f' M: -r4.- tm.,--1 f 'ii University operations People coming together Sports Changes during the year Entertainment Photographers' best work Seniors 4.3, 1 .1 - ., '- Q - e A If? at N xx 'xx Q . , X . . -V 2 '11 .V -N , 9451- ww T DI X' W .4 mx Y 'r K k v-. gk . 'f'?'9f5xiz ,twiki xii mwl:-W, , vw M X PRESIDENT BRAGE GOLDING The first quarter He first saw KSU in luly of '77. And then Dr. Brage Golding came with mixed feelings of push and pull. He said he liked San Diego State and enjoyed a fine relationship with stu- dents and faculty there. I did not seek this job, he explained, but I get itchy. Moving keeps me from getting into a rut. It's good for the institution and for me. So he came to Kent in the quiet of the summer. His first impressions were of a large, beautiful campus, but he thought it looked big, bleak and emp- ty, like it needed people. Now the university bustles with life, but in the two months Golding has been in office, he has walked across campus only once. He spends most of his time tucked inside the maze of carpeted hallways and offices that branch out beyond an unobtrusive door in Rockwell Hall. He is working 70 hours a week with no days off. Most of those hours are spent on one over- riding thing: the gym controversy. f'I didn't expect what is happening now. The Trustees said this would be over, Golding said. I would have thought twice. He said that in spite of the gym dispute, he does not regret coming to Kent. He apologized for the cliche, then said, I rise to challenges. You don't take on an administrative job for love and affection, he contin- ued. What you hope to win is respect that you're an honest person. You like the kind of work, you know you'Il find a group of colleagues you enjoy work- ing with. And if you have any pride, you do it because you want to leave a place knowing it's better than it was before you came. It happened at the last two, he said, referring to his positions at Wright State and San Diego. l left with good feelings, and I want to do the same thing at Kent. But when I came I was immediately branded as a bad person. It grieves me when people get personally nasty. Besides hurting him, Golding thinks the gym controversy is going to hurt at., . .. ,, QA if-Aww 3,97 4 , X KSU graduates. lt's hurting the people of the university and the university Still, he thinks KSU is a good in- stitution. There are some unusual and unique things going on here. For ex- ample, the relationship with Blossom Music Center is remarkable. He said he doubts if that kind of relationship exists at any other university, I think most of the academic pro- grams are above average and l'm not even sure most students are aware ot it. Golding thinks students should look at university publications because they point out the best aspects of lsSU -things students do not always know He did not seem able to talk about academics for long, however The gym controversy that consumes 70 hours of his time each week also consumes Brage Golding. He remains controlled xxhile discussing it but seems, bx turns, angry, bitter, tired and sad. Golding said he is forced into decisions by his position - caught with presidential re- sponsibilities in a no-win situation where there is no absolute right or wrong. He said the intolerance of some pro- testors pains him because it indicates closed minds. The purpose of educa- tion is to develop an open and in- quiring mind where no decision is made until the facts are in. Everyone here wants to make the decision first. Practically speaking, building the gym there doesn't make any difference since the event is enshrined in peoples memories. A memory is a memory lt's not a piece of ground, it's not a name on a building. You cannot cover up a memory. Ghanting 'move the gym'means nothing to me, lt's out of date, The gym is being built. Golding said he has to believe the demonstrators have some ulterior purpose. vVhat do they really want? he asked. I do not deny their right to be disappointed, emotionally upset or teel the decision to build the gym vxas wrong, but there is no absolute, So, in his first quarter as president of KSU, Golding finds himself trapped in an emotional battle over a decision that was made long before he came here. It is his responsibility to weigh the alternatives and keep peace on this campus. Donuts delivered daily THE BAKERY It looks more like a dump truck ga- rage or a place vvhere garbage trucks are kept than a place one would ex- pect to find a bakery. The sign on the door reads All drivers enter here and one gets the distinct feeling that he's in the Wrong place. Yet in the corner of the University Supply Center in a room no bigger than a large lecture hall, Bill Severt and his staff work from early morning until late afternoon filling baked good or- ders from all over the university. Everything but bread is made in the small bakery. One hundred and fifty dozen donuts, 150 dozen dinner rolls and 100 pies are made daily. Most of the baked goods are sent to the Student Center, and the baker also supplies the dorm cafeterias. Orders are given a week in advance so Severt and his staff can gauge what has to be done. Special orders for ban- quets are also made, and some cake decorating for birthdays is done upon request. Severt has been general manager of the bakery for 18 years. A mess ser- geant in the South Pacific during World War II and a bakery shift fore- man in Akron for 16 years, he knows the bakery business vvell. He and his staff of five have been at KSU for a total of 58 years. Severt himself trained three of the four women who assist him in baking, and the other, Frances Horsefield has, like Severt, been baking most of her life. Our pies and donuts are the best in the state, Severt said. We haven't had one complaint about our baked goods. . Q ff' 5 -ru!! x 1 Au, 'W.Q 'Q ,fi T .fix x.iilg 1 gAKE 4ll . . xg 1' ,- WW THE LIBRARY That tall building As a senior at Kent State lam I really that old?j, I think it is time to examine an aspect of campus life that should play an integral part in one's educa- tion. I am not talking about Water Street, or even the Student Center, but of the towering library. According to Ken Rosenberg, assist- ant director of public services, the I,3000,000-volume library is a lot more than just books. He predicted that if the library disappeared, all instruc- tional research would come to a halt within a week. Special Collections on the twelfth floor and the Archives on the eleventh are the centers for original research here. Special Collections is open to all students, but according to Dean Keller, curator, it is used primarily by doctoral students and for various research pro- grams. The Books available range from a first edition of Walt Whitman's Leaves of Grass to a collection about Queen Marie of Rumania. The primary purpose of the Archival Service is also to facilitate research, but of another type. According to Dr. lim Geary, head of the service, if one has an urge to go in search of his roots, the Archives could be quite beneficial. It contains the local government records from an eight-county area, la- bor union records, the records of the Youngstown Diocese and such obscure documents as a 1781 Western Reserve church sermon. The late President Bowman's desk is in the Archives, and Kent State year- books, scrapbooks, catalogs, master theses and doctoral dissertations are available upon request. The newest part of the library, though, is the third floor audio visual department. It includes a graphics de- partment that produces educational material for group or individualized in- struction, a self-instruction center and a film selection service. But what does the library mean to most students? I think they know the building of which I write - it's the tall one by the snack bar. It has been known to have had sud- 'IP at 'Q den influxes in use, usually around mid-quarter and toward the end. The younger set, i.e., freshmen and soph- omores, have been known to regard it, and especially the second floor, as a giant meeting hall, The upperclassmen do this, too, but less flauntingly. Now, at the end of my college days, I hope that others do not wait, as I did, until their last year to investigate all the resources that big, tall building has to offer. THE CIVIL SERVICE WORKERS I I I They keep the university running ,if i W Stand by on the set. Open their mikes, take one and cue them, barks the director. And with these short, crisp commands, comes a whirlwind of activity that fills the oth- erwise blank screen of campus tele- vision channel two for two hours, weeknights. On the third floor of the Music and Speech Building the broadcast day is from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Programming is directed at the interests of Kent State students and includes news, sports, campus events, interviews with campus personalities, serials and com- edy. We are a student-oriented, and basically a student-run operation, said Dr. Diane Cody, telecommunications professor. Using the background knowledge acquired from classroom work, KSU telecom majors use TV 2 as a proving ground to polish talents and learn technical methods of standard tele- vision operation. What TV 2 is all about, Cody said, is to get the student prepared for what TV is really like. leff Simpson, Winter Quarter News Director, agrees, Of course you learn in the classroom, but for the telecom major, you do your real learning by actual on-air experience. Simpson believes the cliche ex- perience is the best teacher. He said his TV 2 participation has helped him mature, both as a person and a per- former. l feel that there is a four year period after high school where you have to mature and develop. I want to work in news, and TV 2 has given me the chance to do this. Simpson succeeds Rick Appleby, whose new position is Portapak Direc- tor. Appleby is in charge of Electronic News Gathering QENGJ, which will bring video tape coverage to the TV 2 news. ENC is similar to TV 5's Action- Cam , and Appleby hopes it will bring a more professional approach to the news. TV 2 News is more than just reporting on campus events. With the added use of the Portapak, , and leff Leonardfs sport staff which covers everything from the KSU Golden TV 2 An inside view Flashes to the Cleveland Cavaliers, Ap- pleby and Simpson try to bring a lor- mat similar to the Cleveland stations. But news is not the only programm- ing TV 2 provides. The Roccos is a drama-comedy serial, in the Soap, Mary Hartman, Marv Hartman mold, that tells of the lives of an Italian- American family in Minga, Ohio Pro- ducer Dave McCoy, junior, said pro- ducing the show is a lot ot work, but mostly it is just a lot of fun. McCoy wants to be an actor and feels his involvement in The Roccosw and in Tom Foder's production ot Evening Derangedn are perfect op- portunities. Foder, creative and witty, produces Evening Derangedd in the mold ot Saturday Night , utilizing offbeat ma- terial and going to any length to get a laugh. Foder, McCoy, Appleby, Simpson and others like them work long hours to bring campus-oriented programming to Kent State students, lt is a lot ot nods, said Cody, but nobody iust walks in and does things. We hope to teach in the classroom and use TN' J as a place tor students to use and develop their experience. The director says, Clive them a wrap, close their mikes and tade up on black, and open the announce booth and announce, You've been watching TX' J, located in the Music and Speech Building on the Kent State Campus, ending another broadcast day. Close the announre booth and tix the studio, says the dtrec tor Let's go eat, says Applebv W fx X :I rvqla Vlgnigi vi ' NRL! Yo 413 Xxx Vw W UNIQUE CLASSES Child Care Participation In one corner, three toddlers pile up blocks. At a table, another three or four pound on light blue Play-doh, Others race around pretending to be grown-up firemen, truck drivers or art- ists. ls it a birthday party? The home of a harried mother? No, it's Home Eco- nomics 34017. The five credit class, a requirement for home economics majors, combines three hours of lecture with four hours of lab weekly. ln lab, students play with three and four-year-olds, encour- age their imaginations and talents and keep the peace in any fights or rough play. They learn the therapeutic value of play and hovv to use positive rein- forcement instead of physical dis- cipline. The little students are the children of community and university parents. Their class is held Monday through Thursday from 8:30 to TT :3O a.m. Besides an early free period, when the children may play in the bounce room on climbing toys and mat- tresses, there are structured periods for snacks, naps, creative arts, music and stories. Home ec students plan the les- sons. Child Care Participation offers stu- dents an opportunity to see hovv pre- schoolers grovv and, at the same time, to practice teaching them. Its philoso- phy is found in a banner over the lab door, Process is more important than Product. Ki U n iversity O rientation Feeling at home at college often takes time, but fall quarter almost 1300 freshmen and transfer students en- rolled in a course designed to help, University Orientation, offered through the Experimental College for the third year, covers four major areas - getting acquainted, study skills, ca- reers and computer registration. Many of the instructors are soph- omores, juniors and seniors. Since we are all students in the class we'ye got similar interests and problems, said instructor Sharon Pala, senior, With our small group size and informal, open atmosphere, we learn from each other by our discussions. Freshman Lorie Baker said it was good to find out others were afraid of studying and taking tests, too, and freshman lohn Tarter said the class helped him meet people and be more relaxed in his other classes. The one-hour course also answers questions on campus life, student or- ganizations, academic services and other university information areas. There are general and special interest sections such as education, natural sci- ences, nursing and business, W Is busing a viable solution to achieving equality in education? Dr. Bryon Lander, Associate Professor, Political Science Current busing practice, by itself, may not promote equality in education. The Supreme Court has limited busing to cases of intentional or deliberate govern- ment segregation. In the absence of government intent, a new busing plan is not needed each year to maintain the same racial balance. As a result, white flight to the suburbs has been encouraged. Combined with a decision permitting different spending levels in school districts, minorities may be forced into an unequal education. The way to achieve more equality would be either to require busing without regard to segregation intent or to equalize school spending for all children regardless of whether they live in a wealthy or poor district. Susan Unterwagner, Teaching Fellow, Sociology Busing serves to achieve integrated school systems, not equality education per se. Equality education is a utopian dream that cannot be achieved by merely mixing black and white students. Such a dream calls for massive community, state and federal support to fund programs which will provide the settings lstructuresj, the staffing and the equipment to establish environments for quality education. Then the opportunity to experience these environments should be made available to all persons. Busing appears to be another example of putting the cart before the horse. Interracial contact achieved by busing could only lead to equality education if all schools were equipped to provide education of equal quality - a major task which has not yet been undertaken. Dr. George I. Harrison, Associate Professor, Education Can busing students for the purpose of racial integration achieve equality in American education? Yes, if busing can be regarded as a tool, it can make a contribution to the achievement of increased equality of opportunity. But equality in education must be sought in a variety of ways. Indeed, to the degree that we focus exclusively on busing as the means of achieving equality in education, our goals regarding equality may be deflected. We should not talk about busing in total disregard of the fact that commu- nities differ. Also, as Mayor White of Boston said in the City Club of Cleveland, The fact that the entire issue of busing had to be spelled out by a judge represents a failure of the political community. It will not be healthy if we come to rely on the judicial system to make social policy, Finally, it should be remembered what busing is for. The United States is, in fact, multiracial. Racial integration of schools by means of busing is an effort to make the fact that we are multiracial - and multicultural - the ideal. The white majority must learn that an American is not white. With due regard for some of the precautions I have mentioned, busing of students can make a contribution to the estab- lishment of the ideal of a multiracial and multicultural nation. llll Ill 'inf K S .- I ? I .-v . ,rg it Will the job market be able to absorb the growing number of business school graduates? Paul Pfeiffer, Professor, Marketing Yes indeed. There will always be a need for creative business college gradu- ates. Modern businesses are always looking for young men and women who show the potential and ability to be the leaders of tomorrow. William Blouch, Instructor, Accounting Business organizations today are following a trend of becoming tremendously complex. These same organizations are achieving new levels of operating efficiency and decision-making competence. Changing organizations require changing job requirements. This generates a great demand for business school graduates that are properly trained in the latest advances of computer tech- nology, management science techniques and many other areas that aid in the decision-making process. As a result, there is an abundant supply of jobs for the properly trained business student entering the job market. The graduates of our business schools today are better prepared than graduates of a few years ago. These new graduates are being exposed to all the latest developments that aid in decision-making, and hopefully, they are getting a broader understanding of the new sociological and political realities in which our businesses operate. William Bertin, Instructor, Finance The pat answer to this question would be to say that historically, the hiring of college graduates has been dependent upon economic conditions, and that insofar as continued economic growth is predicted through the mid-l980's, the job market over this period should be good for college graduates in general, Business college graduates in particular possess a valuable asset that differ- entiates them from all other graduates. They have an understanding of the basic operations performed within the corporation - a factor which should weigh heavily in favor of the business graduate when seeking employment with the business community. Thus, the iob market should be even better for business college graduates in comparison to other college graduates. Another factor that will contribute to increased hiring of business college graduates is that, in the future, they will also be in higher demand by non-profit sectors of the economy tie., federal, state and mumt :pal governments, hospitals. etc.l. Plagued by mismanagement in the past, these sectors will be hiring those graduates who can run their organizations efficiently. What effect will the May 4!gym controversy have on the future of KSU? George lanik, Chairman, Board of Trustees I seriously don't think I can answer that. I don't mean to evade the question, but basically I'm not in a position to do it justice. Kent State is not May 4, 1970. The fact that it happened here is in the past. The university will prevail because it is a fine educational institution. Dr. Thomas Lough, Associate Professor, Sociology Like it or not, we are the caretakers of a place that has become a symbol, like Wounded Knee, or Harper's Ferry. There is no question of whether or not something very important occurred here, and it will be remembered, especially by those who do not live here. But it may be a while before the people here understand this and take their historic caretaking role seriously. The issue of move the gym is a smokescreen to distract the taxpayers out of another S196 million. The gym will also destroy the evidence that the Ohio National Guard herded the demonstrators into a corner and then fired into them. loyce Quirk, Trustee The future of Kent State University will be affected by the controversy over the construction of the Health, Physical Education and Recreation building. We can be certain of that fact. How it will be affected we cannot be sure. The events of May 4, 1970, have been made even more a part of our history because of the events of the summer of 1977. They have been etched even more deeply into the life of this university. What we thought could be so easily forgotten we have been compelled to remember. Now we know that in the future we must not only remember for ourselves but also for the country at large. We now know that in our future we must claim that past. If we are wise we will mark it with respect and bear with dignity whatever burden it presents. Unfortunately, people who come to our campus in the future will not only ask why students were killed here but why the gym was built there. A court ruled that the university was not responsible for what happened in 1970, but it is fully responsible for what took place in 1977. The HPER building did not need to be an issue, but now it is a part of the May 4th event and it always will be. The building will sit where the Guard stood before marching back up Blanket Hill and firing rifles down at students in a parking lot. From the sham of the planning process has come the shame which will remain with us for years. Into the future the HPER building will proclaim that in 1977 we were not flexible enough to respond to a real grievance, that we did not have the courage to correct our mistakes. Hopefully, the gym controversy will help us in the future to listen more carefully to one another, to reach out earlier with greater understanding, and not to make critical decisions in a vacuum protected by authority. BP 1-1--.., -..-.,. vial Do you think television will ever develop into a respected art medium? Henry Van Dyke, Writer in Residence Respected by whom? And what limitations do you put on the notion of Mart? How familiar are you with the public television networks in Boston and Next York? Ever is a difficult concept. I doubt, though, we'll soon see Die Giitter- diimmerung sponsored by the makers of a feminine deodorant, nor is it likely that japanese N6 plays will sell many cans of Easy-Off. Dr. Robert West, Assistant Professor, Telecommunications For many, primarily the public, it is already a respected art medium This relates, ofcourse, to television as a popular art form, ln the classical sense, it has taken nearly a century for the motion picture to be accepted as a true creative art, and it may take another century for television to be accorded the same acceptance at that level, although even now certain television programs are considered classics, No art medium has ever been respected ir. its beginnings, including theatre and the novel. ln any case, no art has ever had the sudden and massive impact as the art of television. lust as there were forces that wanted to prevent the printing of books as works of the devil, so there are forces today that consider television a moral and social danger that must be controlled, if not destroyed. No art ever progressed or survived without similar pressures. The fact that museums and libraries, as well as private collectors, now own prints of movies and television programs indicates that, indeed, television is collectable and of historic as well as aesthetic interest right now, Richard Myers, Associate Professor, Art lt's possible, but unlikely. The money orientation of television and our society will demand that the tube remain commercial and cater to public taste rather than attempt to set any taste level of its own, Of course, there are some good things on TV now: news, documentary programs, and an occasional movie, Television is certainly not an important visual medium and does not usually allow exciting artists near it. l have seen exceptions on PBS, but these are not the standard TV fare, TV is and has been popular entertainment - low-brow tare for mass audiences that cater to its escape of violence and occasional humor. ln the 19-l0's, Maya Deren, a leading exponent of experimental film, made the following statement. Substitute the word TV for film and draw your own conclusions. lf cinema rs to take its plate besirle the others as a full-tlerlgerl art form, rt must cease merely to record realities that one nothing of their at tual existence tothe film rnstrunienl, lnsteatl, rt must tftntlt' a total expr-rrent e so mirth out ol the very instrument as to lie inseparable from its mr-ans ,. It must rleterrnine the tlistiplines inherent in the mr-rlrum, rlisroxer its oxxn structural modes, explore the next realms and rlirnensions atressrlile to it anrl so enrich our culture artislrcally as st rent e has rlone in its rixt n prox int e WX GREEK WEEK On May 17, Greeks had a Gong Show and raised S200 for the King- Kennedy Center. The next day they had a banquet where Sharon Sweebe of Alpha Xi Del- ta and Robert Schettino of Phi Sigma Kappa were named Greek Woman and Man of the Year. Greeks played games on May 20. Chi Omega and Sigma Alpha Epsilon were overall winners. Second place teams were Alpha Phi and Delta Tau Delta. In third place were Alpha Xi Delta and Sigma Phi Epsilon. Pulling together on May 21, Greeks dragged a bathtub to Chapel Hill Mall and raised S300 for the American Can- cer Society. These activities were all part of Greek Week, May 15 through 21. What is Greek Week? Nancy Hostelman of Chi Omega says, lt's a time to get together and have fun, but it's also the time to help other organizations. A member of the first place fraternity in the Greek games, Paul Block, ex- plains, We're trying to get the Greek system enlarged and this is one way to do it. Greek Week is all the fraternities and sororities coming together for a day of fun. QW I, ,sip iiuu W MAY 4, 1977 More than the usual memorial Kent, Ohio, May 4, 1977 - It was the biggest story to come out of Kent State University in seven years. Every May 4, newspaper reporters, photographers and TV cameramen came searching for it. But they usually ended up writing empty copy describing the apathy of Kent State students toward an event that had drawn national attention to the campus in 1970. Finally, after six years of uneventful coverage, the newshounds got their break. As a journalism major and Stater reporter, I probably could have gotten a share in that front page fame, too. But the only copy I could have written about that day and felt comfortable reading in the next day's paper is the kind of story l am about to tell you here. I remember being awakened that morning by Ken Hammond's voice saying, lt's seven o'clock. Vicki said you wanted to be woken up. Vicki and I worked together at the Stone lug, and I bedded down in her front room more than one night that spring when I didn't have a ride home after the bar closed. Somewhere between sleep and con- sciousness, I was aware of Ken and Annie moving around the apartment softly and speaking quietly as they gathered together white armbands, red flags and other strike paraphernalia to take to school. After they made a couple of trips up and down the stairs, they took off in the purple 71965 Mus- tang that had been parked on the street in front of the bicycle shop, Walking across the railroad tracks on Main Street to catch a bus home to Rhodes Road, I hoped the class boy- cott would be effective. As a matter of principle, I never went to class on May 4. I could not agree with the univer- sity's policy of business as usual. No one could convince me nothing un- usual happened seven years ago when four students were killed on campus by National Guardsmen. Now the university had decided to build an addition to Memorial Gym on the site of the shootings. If construc- tion proceeded as planned, it would look as if the guardsmen were sur- rounded by those so-called bums and brownshirts and were only trying to defend themselves on Blanket Hill in 1970. No one had bothered to ask any of the lawyers involved in the May 4 ap- peals case their legal opinion of this latest administrative brainstorm, ac- cording to a story in the Stater..Student Caucus, our representatives in the uni- versity bureaucracy, didn't have any in- put into deciding the location of the annex. Caucus, along with everyone else who read the Stater on Nov. 3, discovered that the trustees would be reviewing the final architectural plans at their November board meeting. iln- put from some health, physical educa- tion and recreation majors consulted did indicate that they felt the proposed addition would be quite convenient for them.l The final blow had come only days away from the fourth of May, when Executive Vice-President and Provost lohn Snyder announced a series of budget cuts aimed at the Center for Peaceful Change, a program dedicated to the memory of May 4. l climbed into a bus full of students heading toward campus. It was still early and no one was very talkative. Marketing, accounting and other busi- ness course textbooks spoke for their silent owners. lt looked like business as usual. Later that day, after doing some work at the Stater, l walked over to Memorial Gym for the rally I found my roommate lill and we sat together on the floor, listening as Alan and Chic Canfora, Dean Kahler, David Butz, Da- vid Engdahl, William Kuntsler and Dick Gregory spoke to a crowd of about 3,000 Kent State is a stark reminder of what this nation has done and may do again if we do not begin to cultivate compassion, said Engdahl, who along with Kuntsler was a lawyer for the May 4 plaintiffs. Canfora and Kahler, who were wounded in 1970, attacked the pro- posed budget cuts for the Center for Peaceful Change, and everyone at- tacked the proposed gym annex. At times rattling bleachers, spon- taneous standing ovations and cheers drowned out the speakers' words. Clenched fists rose over our heads and solid red and black flags waved throughout the rally. Gregory ended the speeches, en- couraging us in our struggle against the administration. Kent State did more for niggers than all the civil rights movements in the world because it was the first time the white folks found out they'll do it to you, too. After listening to the speakers for more than three hours, we had built up a tremendous amount of energy for the march around campus. Led by The Truth Demands lustice banner, we walked down Main Street, waving flags and yelling as we spilled out into the opposite lane of traffic. We gathered back at the Student Center fountains, still yelling and ready for action. Things quieted down a bit then, and I was thinking of going home and working on the political thought midterm I had been avoiding for days. Then l heard Ken Hammond, one of the original Kent 25, yell from the fountain, lf you want to do some- thing about moving that gym, there's a Board of Trustees meeting going on over at Rockwell right now! I thought about my midterm for a minute. No, this was much more im- portant. Hell, l thought, this is modern policital action, There were at least six Stater people there, milling around with notebooks and cameras. Invariably, each one asked me if I was there for the Stater. I was there for myself, I explained. My feelings about what was finally hap- pening that day were too strong for me to want to play the detached observer. President Olds came out of the meeting to talk to us. Aron Kay, the Yippie's official pie man, stood there staring at him, looking as if he wished he had thought to stop off at a bakery, fHmmmm ... banana cream, possibly?l With Dean Kahler interviewing him, Olds tried to answer our questions. His replies were met with looks of dis- belief, anger and frustration and pleas for something to be done about mov- ing the proposed gym annex. Board ol Trustees Chairman George Ianily, xx hen put in Olds' position, seemed at a loss for words. Confronted with a question, his most frequent response was I don't know. United by our frustration with the university administrations refusal to acknowledge the validity of our cause, we began organizing a sit-in at Rocls- well I-Iall. A lawyer was notified in case we were busted, and food was brought from the natural food store. The radio and TV stations were notified that Sou students were staging a sitfin at MU to protest the gym addition and the uni- versity's general insensitivity toxxard May -I, News reports hit the air and the yxord of the sit-in spread around Isent, bringing more supporters to the hall, This was one story I wanted to be accurate, even though I wasn't writing it. I listened as Slater editors Barbara Grubb and leannine Cuttman argued about whether the next days editorial should support the demands being drawn up by the protesters, I told Barb she was crazy if she didn't sup- port them, You're the student news- paper, I said, lf you really represent the students, you have to support us, You can't ignore 300 people? We were sprawled out all over the Advising and Grientation room, listen- ing to ideas, talking, discussing the wording of the demands and planning strategy for the next day Finally, at about Igltt am., we yyere ready to leave Rocloyell Hall, We stepped out of the building united as the May -l Coalition and presented our demands to the university adminisf tration and the reporters xxaiting to chronicle, once again, the events ot a May 4 at Isent State, I really can't describe my feelings as I stood outside on that cool evening, listening to llean lsahler read our list ol demands from his yyheelt hair. lhere could have been no better memorial to the tragedy ot the past than our decision to actiyely continue struggling lor a better Iuture at lsent state, - Isatie lsastelic WW SUMMERTIME Three students' vacations It seems I am always making adjust-- ments. No sooner do I adjust to meals of coffee and cheese plates at the Tav- ern three nights a week, little or no sleep at least four nights a week and at the breakfast after all-night vigils Kent Motor Inn tin other words, surviv- al under the most harrowing condi- tions known to manj, than I am thrown, once again, into the warm, organized bosom of family life. I ac- tually have to accustom myself to eight or nine hours of sleep and three square meals a day. Then, as I begin to lean back, relax and put my feet up, fate comes along and plops me in the middle of the workaday world. I must admit it is the most pleasant environment I have ever worked in fnone of the bustle and perspiration and aching feet of restau- rant work and no aching back from the assembly linej, but do people really sit at desks for eight hours a day with only one hour off for fresh air? I sit at my desk and type inefficiently away, answering the phone in a voice that is not mine, grateful for the op- portunities to leave my seat and file or photocopy some indecipherable finan- cial statement. I see people walk past my window, and I wish my time were my own. Gh, for the erratic schedule of university life! I start to wonder what I could do lshort of marrying a millionairej that would guarantee me the right to rule my own time. I decide that the only answer is pirating. I have always loved the sea, and I love to travel. Except for skirmishes with my victims, life might be very pleasant indeed. I type on, inspired by the knowledge that every sore back muscle, every inch my bottom spreads, every frustration with my magical typewriter is made up for the fact that I will be up to my ears in filthy lucre come summer's end. Yes, up to my ears. I am not a tall person. So, as suddenly as it began, my stint as secretary ends, and I am placed in the unreal world of the summer resort. Once again I am with my family, al- though I do feel I have reached the age when I should take my own vaca- tions. But I like these people as much as anyone else with whom I'd travel, and I am hardly eager to let go of my newly acquired money. I can relax here on the beach at the jersey shore because I am not any- where. This is not a place to go as much as it is a place to be when you want to be away from everywhere else. Time does not mean a thing, and I willingly give myself to the sun and the sand. Dark emotional waves slap at me and play with me, and I swallow a lot of them. But the breezes are cool and I have to work to make myself hot enough to brave the water's bite. Summer is end- ing. I can taste autumn when I return home and, once again, I am faced with adjusting to my wild student life. - Amy Radel The summer of '77: I wanted to do just about anything but work. I had my plans. Idaho and Colorado were beck- oning me, and I wanted to help the May 4 Coalition. But I got no further west than the lonesome plains of Iowa, where my sister got married, and I made only a token contribution to the Kent Legal Defense Fund. I'm not independently wealthy. I have to earn most of the money to get through school by the labor of my own hands tfrom Walden, Henry Da- vid Thoreauj. I thought I might work in a precast concrete factory near my home in Chardon, but working in a factory is not my idea of fun, so when my Kent neighbors Andy and jerry asked me if I wanted to paint houses with them, I jumped at the opportu- nity. Anything but the factory! As it turned out, painting was quite an educational experience. When you work for yourself you're labor, manage- ment and corporate stockholder all at the same time. Now I know why I'm not in the School of Business. I have no head for business at all! I think we started out on the right track, though. We printed flyers to put in merchants' windows and to hand to prospective customers, and the first day we were out we were contracted to do an interior for a Kent business. Then, because Kent is overloaded with painters, we learned a few basic economic principles, like the laws of supply and demand. We overbid on some jobs and lost out on many to other painting crews. So although we were never really idle, we had several disappointments, and jerry decided he would get more money working with his father than he would working with us. I can't blame him. Besides, when jerry dropped out my profit margin increased, and you can't say anything bad about a guy who lets you use his equipment. Anyway, I learned more than the basics of economics this summer. I found out that I hate to scrape chipped, peeling old paint, and that I hate to paint gutters and downspouts with oil-base paint. I also learned how to tell when Andy's pissed, He never says anything, but he has a certain way of looking you in the eyes that makes you feel like a mischievous child about to be spanked. He looked at me like that when I dropped the end of a ladder we were carrying and when I spilled globs of paint on the shrubbery. Yes, I got globs on the bushes and splatters on my face, and it made me mad when anyone asked me if l man- aged to get any paint on the house, but big deal, I got sun on my face, too, and although there were blops of Sher- win-Williams Deerfield Green in my hair, I did not use my ponytail as a substitute brush. - Andrew Mikula Finals week completed: some books are packed for future reference and others are auctioned off to a low bid- der. Crates are loaded until they overflow with all the iunk-para- phernalia that a student collects during a school year, and here and there one can discern some useful article or needed implement that will be sorted from the hodgepodge and repacked for the return trip in the fall. For many, the school year is finally over. Vast caravans honk and toot from every direction as they course their way to whatever summer havens exist beyond the realms of Kent. Business establishments suffer and close down, cruisers no longer coast down dark- ened streets in the early hours, bottles slung in drunken abandon crash less often, open parking spaces become common rather than rare occurences. The carnival atmosphere that existed almost every evening of the academic year is replaced by quiet solitude. Life at College Street passes more and more slowly. The house that creaked and groaned at the antics of twelve people all year has but two tenants left to walk her floors. The midnight squalls of lanis loplin, the disharmonious harmonica, the thud of the Bowie knife slashing into the back porch, the popping of a cork, the end- less click-clack of a typewriter and the postexam obscenities cease to be. The house has survived the on- W wi., 15 v x slaught of the year and now offers her jagged wounds for inspection and pleads for tourniquets of caulking compound to stauch the flow of plas- ter that ebbs from her every recess. I help the landlord begin a restora- tion that would do justice to the finest of plastic surgeons. Gallons upon gal- Ions of medicinal fluid fBeniamin Moore paintl are iniected into the vic- tim. Crafts are applied to the epider- mal layers of wallpaper that has been seared, burned and mutilated - by hotplates, not the burning of midnight oil. Sweepers hygienically remove dust and durt deposits from her emphysem- al lungs, and proper ventilation re- moves the stench that had come to fill areas of her body where refuse of all kinds had taken sanctuary. After undergoing treatment of this type for over two months, the house shows no evidence of her past harrow- ing experience. Perhaps it is merely a decorative facade she now presents to the world, but at least she is whole and, presumably, ready for the fall, Radiating in the glare of the early Au- gust sun, the house seems in- dominatable - able to stand against the next attacking hoarde. Rumors circulate that the enemy has women among its group, and inwardly the house smiles: this year she will have a female ally or two to ward ott the abuse and torture inflicted by the male animals who use her but never appreciate the warmth and security she proffers. - Bryon Casteel W HOMECOMING Homecoming at KSU is more than just a football game. The T977 festivities started with the traditional steeplechase Thursday, Oc- tober '13, and the VW stuff and pep rally Friday. That evening the Presiden- tial Reception and Dinner gave alumni a chance to meet President Golding, while a hay ride, bonfire, fireworks, talent show and beer-chugging contest encouraged others to join in the Homecoming spirit. A University Showcase was held in the Student Center Saturday morning. Nineteen academic departments and service areas displayed exhibits, and demonstrations were staged by gym- nastic students, the Gilbert and Sulli- van Light Opera Company, the theatre department and a modern dance group. Kent State met Bowling Green Satur- day afternoon at Dix Stadium. Added attractions were the ascension of a hot air balloon, a visit from KSU's T927 Smile Queen, Thelma lones Salvora, and the firing of cannons during the H1812 Overture. Even though the Flashes lost 14 to 10, the excitement and tradition of Homecoming seemed to be returning to KSU, with more than 15,000 attend- ing the game. Ali 1 1 , J N z Zggtffwiwfermw? , ,mM,,,,,, ,,,.,, ,,,, .,,,.. ,.,.,,: M, E 4 s 1 'Q i il l 225 -if W EBONITE BALL All Black women were queens One of the first Ebonite Queens, at the time of her crowning, stated, All Black women are queens. The crown she was honored and permitted to wear did not represent any personal victory or individual accomplishment but moreso a collective spirit of achievement that all Black women and people share. Her crown ceremo- niously represented the millions of Black women who have been tradi- tionally and historically stripped of their crowns as a result of slavery, rac- ism and oppression. This statement, though made six years ago, has served to set the precedent for each Ebonite Ball. The crowning of the Ebonite Queen Karen Taylor was a symbol of the dis- tinction and pride intrinsic to Black women since the times of Soujourner Truth, Harriet Tubman and Rosa Parks. Her crowning was in honor of the strength of unknown grandmothers of the past who crowded the holes of slave ships and gave birth to countless kings and queens who never realized their thrones. The crown stands as a tribute to the Black ancestors of the past as well as the people of the present and the unborn of the future. Ebonite Queen Taylor and her court of Lisa Stevens, freshman, Rosalyn Bar- ber, sophomore, and Sandra Gibson, junior, exemplify the unity of a nation and the love of a people. In her ad- dress to the crowd of more than 2,000 persons, she said, Blacks have done more for America than America has done for Blacks, The crowd, captured in the intensity of the moment, stood to applaud that point of reality which must have seemed personally relative to each of them. As the ceremony continued, it was evident that only the times had changed, The purpose and goals of the people involved were intact as they joined together in celebrating life, hon- oring their queens and sharing the love that proved to be as strong as the unity vvhich insured their collective future. And as the band Con-Funk-Shun performed, the party began, though .1 the ideals ot this occasion were nexei subjeCt to question Or Qomprumise This Ceremony, to many the single most important Black function of the Year, was the N77-78 Ebpnite Ball! As spirits mowed and hymns were sung, the anthem was raised and the past and present became one. It was an event, a lifetime when trulv all Black women were queens. Y glffgtw W ,K i, xif' .1 f V, ' ' 1' of '- ,,.1m..w 1 X F 1- ' 1 ' :E 'lx :W I rf X, , v X si if ' - f ,f 5 3? fl Q -,G gsm ,: . ' if Q e9'l!',?' ' 1 ' :ISIC Q. S -,.,,...z - gg , NAI 34 4 , 3 Q '- ..:s.:1au'a ::'snwa:Q:a:--v 5 ,za-A Wi 1,1 W FOLK FESTIVAL For Peg Leg Sam The Kent State Folk Festival is one of the few traditional folk festivals re- maining, Most festivals are now large gatherings that have lost the intimacy that makes a folk festival unique. This is one of my favoritesf' said Bob Sma- kula, a member of the Smakula Family, which has played at past Kent State Folk Festivals, The workshops really make this festival special, lt gives the performers a chance to get down off the stage and get with people, so oth- ers can see up close what they do and how they do it. The llth Annual Kent State Folk Fes- tival, dedicated to the memory of Ar- thur Peg Leg Sam lackson, was held February 2-l and 25. As usual, free workshops were held in the Student Center Friday and Saturday afternoons, with Sl concerts in University Audito- rium both evenings, This year, the All-Campus Pro- gramming Board QACPBJ limited the number of concert tickets and sold out by Wednesday. A lot of people were disappointed at the box office, but the atmosphere at the shows was not so high strung as the past couple years. With less heat and seats for everyone, the crowds were definitely congenial. Friday night, we arrived about an hour early, and already a few people were there. lt's a nice chance to walk right in instead of having to tolerate a drunken, back-pushing crowd waiting for the doors to open a half hour be- fore concert time. Even the people ar- riving later found no hassle, as the crowd drifted in steadily over a period of time. The hour wait passed quickly as my friend and I enjoyed mingling with the other folk-festival goers, many of whom brought their own instruments. A fellowship develops among this type of people that you don't find among most other audiences, Old or young, male or female, student or employee - people are people. This is the attitude of most everyone there, and you can actually feel the warmth. Blue jeans, flannel shirts and overalls are the usual attire, and long, straight hair dominates 1111 1111111 1111111 111111 11111111111 1711? t11111g 11ll 11111111 pe11p111 11111111 11 11Wt'If 111111 1111 11111 11111111. 11VN 11111 1111111 111 1'I1L1N1l, 111111 g1'11l1111111r11'1111, 11111111 111111 11111111 1111111 tl111 p1111p111, 1111111 1111111 l1'1'l' 111g1, 111111 13111111 G1-Ll111l1f1, 11tt11111,1111g 11111 1111111111 111114 1111111111 111 111111 131111 1111111 111111 11111 g111r1g 1111111g It 1111111 1111 111111111111 ll 11111 11111111 g11111g 1111 1111 N11 l1111g, Ll11l1111- 1111111 111111 11111111111 1111111111 11111 1t11rt1111 1111 t111111, 511121111111 ' 1111111 111111111 111 11 l111gp1p11 1111111 111111111 111 1111 lrll' 11111111 1111111 1111' 1111111111 11111 11111l11111111111 11 p111111111111r, 1D111111I11 R1llJll1Slll1 1111 I11111111111111111111111l111, CI1111 111 1111111111111111, 1111' 111111111-11111 1 11111g C1111111111111p1p1111111111l111111111111 111111 11711111111 1t11g1111111111111111111r11t1'111111g1111 111111111 111 11111g1 11r1e 11111 p1111 1111 11 l111gp1p11. 11111 111111111 I'K'lL119C1 11111 1111111111 11111t11I1p1p11tu11111 111111111 d111'Xf', 111811111 1111111111111 1111111 11 11111111111 111 H1111l1 X111 11111111 111111 11111 111111-1111111111 111111z111g Cjr111'11. 11111 11111 D111111, 11 111111 11111111111 1 1111111 11111 p11p11l111 1111111 g11111p1 I3-1111-73 111111 l111gl1tl1111, 111'111111p111111111 111111 1111 11 11111r1111111111, 11111 RL1f11fJ ,111111 11pp1111r1111 111111, 111111 11111 111111 11111111f1'l11pp111', 111111-111111111111 1111g1111, 111 11111 11111111111111 111 t1111 1111111111111 1 1111111 1111111111 1111 1111111 11111111 11111111111111111 IU 11111 11111111 1'l111111g 1111111111111 11111111 1111111 tl111 -1pp11I1111111111 H1Il1, 111111 1.11111 111111 111111 111111111111 1111111 111l11l111, 1111111111 111111 111111111111111111111111111 111111 111 H11111 M11 15111111 N11 XX111k111g C111111. l 13111 H1l111111111111g, 111111 11111 1111111111 1111gI1- 111111111111l1 p11p11l111111111 11111 111111 1111.1 111 11111111111 1.1gt111111 1111 11111 11111115111 g111t11r, 1111111111111 11111 11111111111111 111111, I11 1-111111111111111 11p11l11111111111111111g111111 11111 1111' 11111111 l'l1Kl11t'N N1l1111111l1111'g pl.111111 1111111 11 Nl'1'1111111.:1x 111111l1.11111111111 111111- 111111' 111111 1111 11111111 1111 1111111111111111111 111 11111111 111.11111 1.1g1, -1111111111111 111111 I11111 1111l1lt' 1l1111'5, 11111 11111 111111.11 111111 11111 11'111111111111 111117 1L1111'N 11711111111 111' 11111111111 11111111 11111 1111111 1 1 11111111111 .1t1111, l111 1.1111 11111111 1-1p111111111g 1111 1111111111 111111, 11111 111111 111 1111 11111111 11111111111111 1.111111 11.11 11111111 1111111 11111111 1111111-11l1111g 111111 111-11 '.1111.111 1111111.21 111 111111111 1111 1111 11111 Nl111.QI11Ll 1111111 1Xl'l1l 1111 111 111111 ll-1111 X1fc,llll1l'XN 141111111 11.111 111111 11.111 1111g1111 111111 1111-11111111111 111 111.14 1.111111 W with two others. Howdy, belted out Aunt Ethel, Were so glad to be here pickin' and kickin ', Concluding the concert was quite a different type of music, presented by Walter and Ethel Phelps of Ashville, South Carolina. They be- long to the rich and colorful genre that's come to be known as East Coast blues, Uncle Walter plays the guitar as both vocalize, giving life to blues, gospel songs and ballads. Despite their age tPhelps is 835, they were dynamic throughout the set - all the way from Muddy Water Blues to Goodnight, Irene. Saturday night was another night of true folk music. Bedlam began with songs from traditional British Isles sources. Two men who play the guitar and a woman who plays the dulcimer form the group, but a number of their pieces were sung acappella. From Southern Ohio, Cowboy Bill Stockwell performed cowboy songs, songs of the road and heart songs and kept the audience laughing as he ex- plained the stories behind his lyrics. His wife, Rhodie, joined him in his last two numbers, and the audience de- manded an encore even though she said she only knew two songs. Live Free or Die, the slogan that appears on New Hampshire license plates, was the title of one of Margaret MacArthur's numbers. MacArthur, who plays guitar, dulcimer and harp zither, was accompanied by her two sons. Clary played mandolin and fiddle, and Danny strummed a guitar which Cary had made. Ending the festival, the nationally known Hutchison Brothers Band brought the audience to its feet with the strains of true-bluegrass. The crowd clapped and hooted for more until it was time, as Lost Iohn Hutchison said, tor our boot heels to be a-ram- blin '. -I 5 Q , ' . Q. f, w- . ,1f',' A - ' Y,-feiii , , X 1 X M ,, gm N, f A -' 4 '-'7 llE. 1ln'1F..' F1 , K , ,.E1a5':.'.Jw'f s . X K 5 1 L- .. ,z . - 5'-fm. th A D , .,. 4 - se . '- . ' ' Q' ' .. 1- ' 'll 490- -1-A , Q- 1, -M p . ?7iz1E,,wt N S N15 A '-4 e 2. nw CS af. ' -Q nw 1 4 'N. V 1-. fe ,gm . .,. M.. - WX! THE OLD DEPOT At the turn of the century, Kent was a maior railroad center, and the Erie Depot was the hub of activity. Now, boarded windows and doors make the historic station a focal point for begin- ning photographers and young poets. ln May of 1977, the Kent Historical Society began a 5250000 fund cam- paign to restore the 103-year-old build- ing. NN' H 5I.s9'3' .f Libr: ' 2101 I ll 3 . I ' if 'X Sf W' .gi . ,QQ -a-'-,JQV , 4 ,ggi WW 1. , J ' V' W' wwf. x . '. if .. 'viijg' . W, ' Us I I lib. W GOODYEAR EXECUTIVE PROFESSOR Nota PR man I'm not advocating Goodyear in my classrooms, says Goodyear Executive Professor lack Higgins, nor am I knocking labor or government. I'm just bringing out the facts about American business and the concept of free enter- prisef' Mr. Higgins, the former president of the largest advertising agency in Ohio, is this year's Goodyear representative at Kent State University's business col- lege. Why have a Goodyear representative here at Kent? The answer, says Mr. Higgins, is simple. Goodyear is a big business, and it is certainly part of the business system that has come under fire in recent years. We recognize the dangers that could happen in the fu- ture as a result of this. So, this is part of Goodyear's total program, to explain to education the functions of business, and its virtues. This is the fourth year Goodyear has sponsored such a program, sending a different representative each year. Goodyear pays for Mr. Higgins' serv- ices, as well as his part-time secretary and a graduate assistant. Mr. Higgins sees his purpose at KSU as three-fold. He teaches an in- troductory course to business, lectures to other classes on business and repre- sents KSU and Goodyear at confer- ences and seminars. I think it has a lot of merit, says Mr. Higgins about the program. Here I came out of business. Hell, I had never taught anything in my entire life. But now i'm not only teaching, I'm learn- ing. And I'm starting to understand the student mind, In addition to sponsoring the pro- gram, Goodyear contributes 550,000 annually to the Kent Foundation. Mr Higgins is quick to stress that there is no heavy-handed advocacy in his classroom, Goodyear doesn't tell me what to do, what to teach or what to sayf' he says, I write a news- letter about my experiences at Kent State, and nobody edits that. That newsletter reaches 800 of our country's business executivesff 1-:-s- N '-'f'3g:c H vb - ST umm 4 if 4 ii W In one of Mr. Higgins' nexvsletters is a tribute to college business professors. In it he writes, I now have a nexv- tound respect tor today's college pro- fessor. Like manv overly-busy execu- tives I contess I used to think of pro- fessors as fugitives trom reality. Not so. These guys are 'with it' to a surprising degree. To be convinced all you need do is to sit in, as I have, on a dialogue between taculty and visiting executive lecturers. The business students at Isent are eager learners, bright and tull ot ques- tions says Higgins. kent is the most advanced in educating about tree ene terprisef' When asked about IsSLl's xvomen in the business college, Higgins replies with enthusiasm, They're damn smart, alert and alive? I believe in women in business, There's no reason in the world why their compensation shouIdn't be equal to the men, But me have these old hang-ups that the man must get more, and that's starting to crumble. I tell the guys in my class, 'Get to know these girls in your classes. One ot them may be your boss somedayf Higgins' interest in the students doesn't end with the close ot lils class. My relationship with the students tends to be a Stl minute thing, he smiles. So every Thursday night at 5 pm, I have ten students, the As I5's and Cs, meet me at the Rathskeller, I buy the beer, and we talk about anx- thing that comes to mind. Anil I Ioxe it, With the close ot the interxir-xx, Ilige gins gets a troulilr-rl look on his tate You know, hi- says, I xxish you wouldn't ieter to nit- as a publii iiilaf tions man toi tiooclyt-ai. Im not. I in ti missionary .. ti missionary lor lsenl State University. W RED RADISH Singing for your supper There are only a few lamps on be- cause of the energy crunch, but no one seems to mind. Candles glow from red glasses at every table. Dishes clate ter from the kitchen and voices hum. In a corner of the Red Raclish, Ren Freedman tunes his guitar. The RSLJ iunior in tele- communications has been playing gui- tar for seven years. He has been sing- ing for his supper at the vegetarian restaurant since lanuary. He plays country music, bluegrass, jazz and blues while diners dig into dishes boasting names like Staff of Life and Rice Medley. They drink herb teas and fruit riilsts and bite into cakes and cookies made by the Peaceable Ring- dom Bakery while Freedman launches into Dont Think Twice, lt's All Right on guitar and harmonica. When he finishes the song a few people applaud. Freedman grins sheea pishly and waves his steaming cup of Mo's 1-l at them He takes a sip of tea and goes back to his music. Freedman said the Radish is a good outlet for his guitar playing. lt teaches me not to be uptight in front of people. Freedman likes the atmo- sphere at the Raclish It's like going over to a friend's house and partying. The atmosphere is very important to Barb Lange. She opened the Red Rad- ish with another woman in September of N75 after becoming interested in organic farming and vegetarian eating. the Red Radish serves vegetarian and natural foods. Lange said she buys organically grown produce whenever economically possible. The restaurant axoids using foods with sugar or pre- servatives, but Lange said the mayf onnaise used contains both. Eggs may soon be served at the Raclish, as Lange has located a source of organically fed chickens. While she eats only vegetarian and natural foods, Lange is not big on philosophy. I clon't like to preach to people, she said. She wants people to come into the restaurant and feel com- fortable. She thinks it is important that people not feel alienated when they I is i 3 Cb' if . . N - :sf 'Z fs- 1:3 'A KX c 'X ,gf Q- 'Q X, , . Xl H - V -fwfr . ff' lt. .g ff ., Q i . . gs 5 , f 2- :sr 1-. . , ' , i I ' 'Z W ' ' .. 1 fs .LF .2 . . i ig .3 . 1' N Q, - ' f wg. Ad 'S' 5. f--,es ,..f'-J: 'A' t K F -QNX it xc . F was f-u' f .1611 'il'-ii,:'Amu.m-R fri . ,,. lm are just beginning to try foods that are good for them. lf they eat at i'vlcDonald's every day of the week, except one day they come here, that's good. Lange vvants the Red Radish to have the same casual atmosphere as the cof- fee houses she vvent to while in col- lege. She said the original reason for having people sing for their suppers was that they could not afford to pay for entertainment. People who perform get a free meal and 952, plus whatever coins people drop into a little crock for tips. I make a little pocket money, said Ionathon Miller. I have friends in kent and Akron who come to see me play, and I knovv most of the people who work here. Miller used to be the pro- duce delivery person for the Radish, other employees encouraged him to play for the restaurant Novv he works at Inner Spaces, an Akron food co-op, but he still comes to Kent to treat listeners to what he calls mainly origi- nal songs of folk blues and jazz influence - some undefinable - and other songs that people recognize. Miller has been playing guitar tor I3 years, He played at the Blind Owl when it was a maior coffee house, and he also played professionally, guitaring at concerts, night clubs, coffee houses and colleges. tvliller is currently writing a book on health foods. He is also working on getting some of his songs copyrighted, but said it is a question of whether I want to put myself out in a public way, Miller said he likes singing at the Red Radish. There is no alcohol or yelling and cheering. I even get ti little applause tlwere,xxthic'l1 is nice. W! LOOKING FOR A GOOD BAR The Outpost The confines of Kent offer an abun- dance of activities with which to oc- cupy one's mind, yet once in awhile certain interests become aroused that cannot be satiated downtown. If one heads south out of Kent on highway 43, one might find satisfaction at the Outpost. There is no profusion of neon-lighted signs to point out the post g perhaps it is a semblance of obscurity which makes it such a popu- lar watering-hole. It is not a bar and grill, for there is no grill, but it is more than just a bar. On its stage fantasies are acted out. The crowd is a potpourri of hard-hat rednecks, alcoholics, professional types and students, but they all come to- gether when the entertainment begins. Nine o'clock is signalled not by the hands on the wall, but by the scraping of chairs and moving of tables as the spectators vie for an advantageous po- sition near the stage. The dimming of lights is accompanied by the clinking of the juke-box quarters as the first dancer appears. Her often tattered cos- tume is outshone by the artificial smile that is fixed upon her face. The disco beat begins and the strip- per's bumps and grinds are accom- panied by cheers and boos from the Pabst and Stroh factions. Old men's eyes follow every move and gesture. lf it does not excite arousal, the dance at least rekindles old memories. Younger eyes trace a continuous pattern from cleavage to some point ending slightly above the knees, The dancer has be- come a headless automation which gy- rates through a three-song set. The boos become oohs as a hitherto unexposed part is seen in a flash: it is part of the ritual, Of particular interest, for one reason or another, is Wednesday amateur night, when the hard-core pros step aside and become viewers as the nov- ices vie forthe honor of being humili- ated, cursed and debased for a pos- sible fifty dollars. When the awkward, dawdling amateur finds herself in front of 300 ogling eyes, she tries to shut og.. hers and keep a bit of grace and dig- nity. Tonight the crowd becomes more than viewers tossing down bucl-va-shot drinks, each one is a Caesar thumbing up or down as the amateur gladiators pit breast against breast, grind against grind, reaching for the fifty-dollar prize, The amateurs watch each other carefully, trying to find weak points, hoping to capitalize, After awhile, at- tempts at propriety are forgotten, each contestant realizing the eventual win- ner will be the one who most satisfies the Iasciyious element. Wriggling gyrations are replaced by unacrobatic positions assumed on the stage floor, The humoresque becomes the grotesque when the Hamateurf' turns into a half-a-C note exhibition- istc One can hardly imagine whv these women let themselves be treated like livestock, but money and the need of it must be an active catalyst, Whatever the need, whatexer the cause, each of us is an exhibitionist ot one sort or another, P,T, Barnum lives, long may he live!!! l.B.'s When the Chestnut Burr asked me to write about Water Street bar I.B.'s, I was flattered enough to believe that my writing abilities had prompted the request, When I later regained my senses, I realized that I had been peg- ged for my five years' addiction to mindless atmospheres and the jazzfblues music of house band 15-60- 75. The musical abilities of the Numbers Band have long been hailed in this area. Its dedicated following and en- durance record have ranked it among such Kent institutions as Ierry's Diner, trains and Wheelchair Charlie. l.B.'s has been labeled a freak bar and, indeed, there is a notable absence of sculpted blow-dried dos and prac- ticed ancl perfected disco dancing. The dingy atmosphere is conducive to blue jeans and waitresses in work- boots. Frequent sights include the woman with the ring in her nose, the guy who dances wearing only cut-offs and hiking boots and the little man with the cowboy hat and the mustache who smokes joints like cigarettes. But informality and spontaneity are the inherent natures of jazzfblues and l.B.'s customers reflect this attitude. Blues lyrics are statements about depr- ession. The act of singingfhearing the lyricsfmusic brings about a spon- taneous release that seems to fling people onto the dance floor. There is no need to hang out in high-waisted pants hoping to attract that dream partner. Dancing is for dancing, and many of l.B.'s frequenters routinely perform solos that range from pre nod-out rocking to frantic gyra- tions. On a high energy night the dance floor often resembles a group of heathens ritualistically prancing into delirium. But with all these attractive quali- ties many people shy away from l.B.'s. The reasons vary: the place is a dive, it's too rowdy, it's a stage one goes through, or that band is always the same. Yes, it is true. l,l3.'s is a dive, it is rowdy and it can be one of those stages. But those who say that the band is always the same are not one of us addicts who over the vears have enioyed watching 15-60-75 Change and progress. i-Xnd as soon as l finish writing this, and until the band gets that long talked about big break, I will head downtown . .. Nine below zero pay the cover Charge . ,. 'Creenloacaks enough to make the man a suit weed through the crowd .., Some of these dis' Ciples are bound for their oxxn hell to the spot l always stand and wonder . ,. Daughters whv do you jump and shout? at the magic . ,. Struggling to be alive of l.B.'s. Wide-eyed blues alive? W! The Krazy Horse lt's the best disco in town and it always does good business. lt's been the favorite hangout, in years past, of establishment heroes like lack Lam- bert, All-Pro linebacker for the Pitts- burgh Steelers, jacques Accambray, three-time All American hammer- thrower and member of the 1976 French Olympic team, and joe Dubina, 1976 indoor-track All American. lt's the Krazy Horse Electric Com- pany and it has a crowd that is, at least, unusual. Maybe die-hard is a better descrip- tion. Who else would pay a cover charge three nights a week for the privilege of listening to records and playing pinball amid scores of clean- cut college students out for a good time? On second thought, it doesn't ex- actly compare with the rack or the torture chamber. lt's not easy for a stranger to find the Horse on his own, but ask most any student, and you're sure to get easy directions. Well, from the Student Center ya take a Campus Loop to Franklin Hall ...that's the fourth stop . . . and get off there. Then ya head toward Main Street Arthur Treacher's and hang a left. Ya go past the sub shop and go into the parking lot at Perkins' and it's that dinky place with the paintings on the wall hope ya make it ' And do not pass go, do not collect S200 go directly to jail. The Horse isn't a jail, but it is the closest of Kent's numerous bars to campus fthe Rath- skellar doesn't countj. And with business like theirs, it probably makes more money than Boardwalk-with-a-hotel or owning all of the railroads. Speaking of games, Captain Fantastic is probably the best of the line of pinball machines. Avoid the soccer- pinball like a plague, and watch out for the foosball hustlers . . . especially a short, blond-haired guy with a mus- tache. He'll knock your socks off. But pinball junkies and foosball hus- tlers are only a minor part of the Krazy Horse crowd. Maior categories are tra- ternity and sorority members, athlet- ically inclined folks tit's rumored that the build the gym movement was born therel, frustrated dormitory resi- dents and lazy drunks. l used to be one of the lazy drunks. l would begin my trek downtown fron the frat house and for three years, l would slide into the Horse and . , , well, so much for downtown. The Horse just seems to epitomize the COLLEGE in college bar, People go there to drink beer and meet people, they go there to drink beer and hustle pool or foosball or pinballg they go there to drink beer and do some dyn-o-mite disco, they go there to drink beer. Always the beer. By the can or by the glass, by the pitcher or by the gallon, the beer taps never stop. And the turnstiles keep turning. At 2:30 a,m the Krazyness ends, The lights are turned on, the clean-up pro- cess begins and the patrons, in various stages of intoxication, stumble out of the door and head toward the all-night eateries. Perkin's pancakes, a cappicola sub on a rye roll from lreck Subs or some chickenffish Qyou can't really dis- tinguish which is whichg it's all cooked in the same messl really hits the spot after a rough night out. Then it's shuffle stumble off to bed. As for the employees the tired- throated dj, the don't mess with me I don't want to hurt you bouncers and their wish that Cod had not created beer glasses well, thevfre out ot there too. Wf The Stone lug Ever try the food here? I don't come to bars to eat. Bar beer tastes different from your living room beer. The flavor comes from inside the bar, In a small after- noon bar the main ingredient is the bartender. He is the one who hung the blinking Busch sign and calls your brand by name when you walk in. The beer tastes easy. flimmy, is tonight's game blocked out?j But in a Saturday night bar the spices are not so clear. Inside Franklin Street's Stone lug there is an old tradition of good food and seedy journalists at the vvaterhole, blended with a strong dose of a band, a Thursday night, a barmaid and a tight crovvd. The beer has a good head on it, The bar's band: l ain't no cowboy, I'm just trying to be a good boy. Deadly Earnest and the ivvhat the hellj Honky Tonk Heroes: good for the heart and soul, hard on the liver and mornings. Another round of Blue and vve'll get drunk and screvv. Waylon, jerry leff, unbroken circles and jesus saves the Eye-lean's steel guitar, Step aside son, bell's a ringing, Train songs, pain songs, Take this story and shove it, Armadillo, l'll sing it in my sleep, but the second time around it's moth! ers up against the wall with their red necks, white socks and Blue Ribbon beer. Alvvays picking a fine time to leave you with Wills is still the king. Pick up the tempo, the fiddler is still at the bar draggin' his bovv and the drum- mer's washing his knuckles on a board. The bass is quiet on a stool and there's a rhythm guitar giving the front rovv his very best bogart. Deadly, deaf-knit-lee Deadly, blovv- ing out a flip-flop. How the hell are you anyvvay? Give my stomach to Mil- vvaukee, and forever looking for the heart of Thursday night. tlvlarty, l vvant to go homej Country punk? lt is 1978 and Deadly vvears a vvatch, looking at it novv . ., Hey, this ain't no free association. lt costs a dollar to get in, but that buys a hard working, consistently entertaining band. Deadly never fails to bring on laugh- ter. And not the smug, music-hip-trip laugh you give to some hands lts easy, yes l'm high laughter. lt's mind- less, kick hack the intellect and push the feelings forward, lt's personality. The sensation is drin- kin' good ol' boys. lt flows from the stage and stains a path to the har, The feeling is intectiousg it puts Shy boys on the dance floor and cowboy hats on heads that had only listened to the Beach Boys. lTop.l Someone else is spreading a fine feeling about the bar, Eileen, a con- stantly smiling harmaid. Almost seems unnatural for anyone to he so pleasant. She never stopsg every last set finds her tapping a bottle tor more. She seems a part ot the ranch. Then there is the simple tact ot Thursday night, Friday morning, which lends an edge to the night's drinking. It's an added grind ot pepper that helps the heels kick a little higher. It it were Saturday night, you'd expect the Crowd to he riding high, but there is still another day in the week and yet the carry-out is selling well at closing time. The Stone lug, deadlier than you thought l. W!!!! THE WINTER OF '78 An all-time low Sure, 1977 was bad. But what are sub-zero weather, a natural gas short- age and mass swine flu inoculations compared to a blizzard that shut down the state, a coal strike that necessitates 25-5094, cut-backs in electricity-use and a Russian flu epidemic? On lan. 27, 1978, the third major snowstorm of the year blew into Kent with constant winds of forty to fifty miles-an-hour and gusts of up to sev- enty miles-an-hour, leaving residents with empty window frames and frag- mented roofs, lt was the worst blizzard Ohio has seen - at least in the past 107 years. 150,000 homes were temporarily with- out heat or electricity, and thousands of motorists were stranded. The Ohio Turnpike was closed for the first time since its opening in 1955, and there was no mail delivery. President Iimmy Carter declared the state a disaster area. In Ianuary, classes at Kent State Uni- versity were cancelled five and a half days. Now, in mid-February, just as we're getting over the shock of having classes all week, we're knocked flat on our backs by the flu and threatened with talk about closing the university at 5 o'clock every day - if not shutting it down completely. No one knows what will happen next, But as l sit here in semi-darkness, feeling quilty about using an electric typewriter, I can tell you one thing: wish l were in Martinique. fu sl fif? . My 1 Ll ,- Q. i ' a , ., Y. 5 is 4 5 v' P Q fgrx I . - .5 N s V ' 4 . W f ' ig ' ' 4' '51 x. . .g ,Es-' , , N, I U, 5, v, -I: L. 2- e 1 .2 V .A '. 5 lx. Q- V wax x nag. . 1 - . , ,i.,, B fc' 'f - if ...-- ,mia Y Ovffa- , ,wiv 1. . .yr ., ,ZA 5 ' ' k ,, 9 H , 6.-1 N 0 ,. 'X fa,3Q.-,,.g,,:g'- ,I xx. -2- '- 4.3. x 11. ' V Nw 55:2-: 'f:::2'Esf:tSA . we .al . . 1, A ' Q Y' A ' - +V ' +L.- , Q , in ,. 4 4 ' S 'ET' f ,..f- EXCHANGE PROGRAMS Broadening your horizons Not many KSU students are aware that an entire world is available for them to discover- in Bowman Hall, The Center for International and Comparative Programs, housed in Room 101 Bowman Hall, is the serv- icefassistance office that aids students in their efforts to study abroad. The center sponsors nine programs, each having its own special season and significance. The Winter in Mexico program is based on a cooperative effort between KSU, Ohio University and the Univer- sidad Veracruzana in lalapa, Veracruz, Mexico. The city of Ialapa is located in the foothills of the Sierra Madre Oriental, which offers a unique setting for studying the blend of colonial and contemporary Mexico. One of the nicest features of this program is that it allows the partici- pants to live with Mexican families. This family atmosphere offers an op- portunity for students to live like the Mexican people and experience the same social atmosphere. Courses in social sciences and Span- ish are emphasized so as to offer in- sight into Mexican life and Latin Amer- ican culture. Archaeological and histor- ical sites are observed during the field trips, as well as rural and urban life. The trips emphasize the contrast and variety between the magnificent cities and provincial villages. The Mexico program is indeed fortu- nate to have Dr. Richard Craig as its director. Dr, Craig's field of special- ization in political science concerns Latin American studies, so he has been very instrumental in putting together a comprehensive and exciting program of study. The Semester in Athens program be- gins in the fall and concerns study in such areas as history, literature, classi- cal languages, art, archaeology, philos- ophy and modern Greek. Studies are given in reference to the ancient, Byzantine and modern areas of Grecian culture. Artifacts ranging from the Golden Age of Greece to the present are uti- lized during the course ot the program. The Greek Islands in the Aegean and mainland sites will be visited during field trip sessions to accent the regular program of studies. The small classes offered in the Athens programs allow for better teacher-student relations. The smaller classes also allow for lecture-dis- cussion sessions that are held in mu- seums - and even the Acropolis. This is a chance for present-day stoic schol- ars to learn in an atmosphere where the art of learning was practiced thou- sands of years ago. The Kent in lsarel and the Holy Land program replaces and expands on the old KSU-Haifa University program. This fall semester program will be centered in lerusalem, which is the political, historical and religious center ot Israel, Students are invited to talce part in this program that allows one to walk the streets of the land that has had so much significance in history and reli- gion. The area holds special sig- nificance in the Middle East culture, which has become a landmarlc area in our present decade, A core program of study includes ludeo-Christian heritage, modern Israel and Hebrew, Elective courses can be arranged in such areas as archaeology, Biblical studies and the politics, eco- nomics and sociology of Israeli The Geneva Semester is one ot the most popular programs ottered by the lnternational Programs Office. This Ian- uary to lune semester program attracts applicants from every part ol the United States and is ot special interest for those who haxe international ca- reers in minds The three components ot the pro- gram cover the United Nations tUNl system and international relations, in- ternational business and Trench stud- ii-s. International organizations such as the LIN and Red Cross are studied in the international relations component, and multinational commerce is cle- tailed in the business component lhe lrenc h studies aspect attorcls students a chance to live with lrench Iamilic-s fffff and allows them to communicate and function in a predominantly French so- ciety. The courses are taught by a com- bination of KSU faculty and a Eu- ropean staff. One of the most fascinating pro- grams offered by the center is the Summer Quarter in the USSR. This five-week program is offered during Summer Session II and com- bines two weeks of study at KSU with three weeks of travel in the USSR. The idea stressed here is to compare theory and reality as they pertain to Soviet life and culture. Seven cities such as Moscow, Odess, Leningrad and Ashkhabad will be toured - each city being culturally dis- tinct and having a special element of the exotic that can only be ex- perienced in Asia. The culturally rich areas to be visited include tours of the Kremlin, Red Square, Lenin's Tomb, St. Basil's Cath- edral and the Winter Palace, which was stormed during the October Revo- lution. The GUM, which is the largest de- partment store in the USSR, is of spe- cial interest, as well as the city of Novosibirsk, which is hailed as the new town of Siberaf' Viewing theatre performances at the height of London's theatre season is only one of the activities that is sched- uled in the London Study Program. This Winter Quarter program places emphasis on British literature, history, art and culture. Visits to the cities of Canterbury, Stratford-on-Avon and Hampton Court are scheduled, with tours to be taken at such historic places as the Tower of London and several famous museums and galleries. This program has been designed to accomodate students in English, his- tory, theatre, the arts and humanities. However, majors in any field are wel- come. Limited to KSU seniors in the School of Architecture and Environmental de- sign, the Architecture Study in Italy program makes it possible for architec- ture students to spend spring quarter in Florence, ltaly. Students will study in the Super ,4 ' .JL 5 'f , 'xirilsilfffi - ef La- ya , J ' g.fg1.'S' gfs.1a,qyf:i-Y j'f,il?'P aff l4 z-17:1 A . Xwlsf fini ..rE'lU.Cfg:Ae'g'1fcj', 4 ,W Q1, F-i'fr':1Afl? . ' fl' M A 4 'V 'ln ' 1 - -5,-ny., rr .5 .v13f.gyf- 2 .ssasit--f - 'fr 'wa ' ' -ri., 0 51, igilf- Qi .M-1 .I-Ju. -' --- ' Efrvrrzy 4 'uri QHZLL ef f -we ' . . ' v'-rl 1 1 -sw'.f'r I ,. I 4- , x -:.- Q -JIU 4104 K .1 NS Studio with lsSU and Italian protes- sors in one ot the foremost crtres or architectural excellence, Traxel throughout Italx and Europe will allow students to examine other cities tor their cultural significance and design. Lectures on ltalran cultural historx will also he included in this program. Two additional programs are lnerng planned tor inclusron in the Inter- national Programs repertoire. A Paris program, which rs planned tor the Xtrnter and Spring Quarters ot next tear, will toc us attentron on French studies and on French-kmere can comparatrxe lrterature, A program entitled jewish Studies Program to the Centers of jewish Cul- ture in Western Europe wrll he rn- rtiated, also, The locus tor this program will he on lewrsh crvrlrzation. One can olntarn a better under- standing ot hrmselt, his own culture, and ot another culture and people hx' becoming a part ot' one ot these pro- grams. One can even earn lsSU crerlrt. Anyone searching tor an experience that will change his lite should not overlook the Center tor International and Comparative Programs, lt the international scene rs not to your lrlsrng, then perhaps a more do- mestic program would be more appro- priate to tour litestxle, The Washing- ton Program, ottered through the polrt- ical science department, would lme such an alternative. Students can earn nine t redrts during this Xtrnter Quarter program lix attenrl' ing hrretrngs, with options or earning up to l' trerlrts with rntlrxrdtral rn- vestrgalrons, Nllhough this program rs open to all rnarors, one litttsl hate runror standing and meet a grade pornt rerrtrrrr-ment Participants rttttsl also talse a tollo' rrtrrurn course lietore leaving lor'XX'asl1' rngton lhree asperts ol the prograrn hate lieen prarserl lux lormer partrrrpants ll1l'tlTrllTtt'ltlSI't'lllt'lNllllllill process Irrstfhanrl, the rhalnre lu expr-rrenre the exrrtrng rrlx lrre or Xtashrngtorr, IDC and the rhanre to experrenre a srttratron, rather than rearlrng .rliorrt rt IH a lexlllrmrils HILLEL More than lox and bagels Hillel - ludaism, bagels and lox, Sabbath services, Thursday Cinema Movies, friends, good times. 202 N. Lincoln St. - that's where it's all hap- pening. Hillel is a chance for lewish kids to get together through various func- tions, explained Sue Salzman, an ac- tive member of Hillel. But it is not only for the lewish students. Anyone is welcome and can find something of interest through the wide variety of activities offered at Hillel. Hillel is not unique to the Kent campus. Many universities throughout the country have a Hillel organization nearby. But there is one thing about Kent's Hillel that is unique. lt was the first one in the country started by the students. Now celebrating its twentieth year, Hillel has moved to its fourth location. The new home on North Lincoln is the first one the group has bought, not merely rented. Hillel is definitely growing. Eight years ago it was finally able to afford a full time director. tFifty percent of the total budget comes from federations in Cleveland, and the other fifty percent is split among federations in Akron, Canton and Youngstown. The univer- sity contributes about SLOOOJ. Considering the small budget with which he has to work, Rabbi Gerald Turk, director for seven years, has kept Hillel not only alive, but expanding. Hillel can now boast of many inter- esting programs, both religious and secular. One of his proudest accom- plishments is the evolvement of the lewish Studies Program. The program began when Hillel in- vited Kent professors to teach non- credit courses at the center which would be of interest to lewish stu- dents. These courses have now been adopted into a ludaic Studies Program that offers credit and fulfills different areas of requirement. Some of the classes offered are Zionism and lsrael, American Immigration History, The Bible as Literature and The lewish Reli- gion. Hill-Sl Along with these courses, Hillel is also responsible for classes being oi- fered through the Honors and lx- perimental College, and non-credit classes in coolcing, dancing and Hebrf ew also exist. Sabbath services are held every liriday night and are followed by a dinner, All holidays are observed with services and usually a special event such as the Purim Carnival. 'There are also special events Iilce the coftee house, Sunday brunches and the Israeli Cultural Table, xxhere even Tuesday evening a different topic is presented along with a free dinner, Tall quarter one of the outstanding speakers was Ada Aharoni, a poet from Israel who is also a member of Women for Peace, an organization dealing with correspondence among women from many countries. vVhile listening to her heartfwrenching poetry, everyone ling- ered over a meal of wine, apples, cheese and bagels, enjoying the escape from the hectic eat-and-run atmo- sphere of the cafeterias. In addition to the usual activities, each quarter brings new ideas. The ma- ior event of fall T977 was an extensive conference involving this entire area as well as Central and Southern Uhio and parts of Pennsylvania and Kentucky, Israel and its development over the last Stl years was the theme. Winter quarter featured a Latlce- Hamantash Debate and latke eating contest, a marathon dance for United lewish Appeal and a free afternoon showing of The Maltese Talc on, Anyone can plan an actixitv and I will be eager to help, said Rabbi Iurlc. In Iac t, he wishes more students would do lust that. I'm frustrated with the times, Seven years ago the moocl was different. Today the apathy is terrible. Now that I go bac lx in retrospect I can't believe it, Wle would regularly have ltltl lsirls at a function But recently people are bet riliilllg more involved, I am hopeful that we can build on what vu- alrearly have, W SHORT PEOPLE The new rage Well, Randy Newman, you've really done it! You've managed to alienate all adults under 5 foot 3 with your song Short People. Many grown-ups who had finally gotten over torments incurred during childhood and adoles- cence revert to feelings of inferiority whenever they hear your song. Actually, Newman's satirical com- position is a demonstration of the ri- diculousness of certain prejudices. No- netheless, the song has spurred so much attention that people are getting together to form resistance groups with such names as Short People of Amer- icaf' I, myself, am only 5 foot 3, so I have encountered many of the disadvantages of being a short person. I don't mind being labelled petite, but I do mind some of the biases placed against short people in social circles and advertise- ments. For example, I was glancing through a Vogue magazine the other day when an advertisement caught my eye. The picture was of a tall woman fthe copy designated her as being 5 foot 85 with her face angled toward the cam- era, The headline read, Over half the women in America live under her nose. I don't care how sophisticated or chic Vogue magazine is, the idea of being found under someones nose is not a pleasant one, I continued to leaf through the magazine until I came to the fashion section, where the models were re- ferred to as vvillowy, leggy and Hstatuesquef' These are the types of words used to describe most tall women. Yet somehow, short women are variously described as shorties, shrimps or just plain puny, Some- thing really gets lost in the translation, I'm sure. When I was younger, being short was terrible in one respect - and in one respect only. Every fall, the entire class had to pose for those obnoxious group photographs. I remember those days with a fit of rage, for being short meant only one thing - being put in the first row! I never got to stand on the risers, which was somehoxx equa- ted as a measure of status and superi- ority. Being in the first row also meant that your shoes had to be relatively tree from playground mud and that bande aids were not plastered across your knee-caps - just because people in the front row were to look presentable and representative of the whole group. The tall kids in the back rows got to wear blue leans with patched knees and tacky gym shoes. Not fair? But I guess that's the way things go, Short people will haxe to continue to use chairs to get to high cupboards and shelves, and they will have to tol- erate those who pat them on the head and tell them what a cute little thing they are. And people willstillassociateage with height, so make sure, fellow fidgets, that your IDs are handy- and plastic- coated to reduce wear and tear. But in all honesty, there are - con- trary to popular belief - advantages to being short. Again recalling a facet of my child- hood, I remember that being short made it a whole lot easier to find good places to hide when playing hide'n'go seek. the best places were where the tall kids couldn't fit. Now, I never have to worry about buying pants or skirts that will be too shortand I will never be charged extra for taller styles, short people nex er worry about beds being too short, and riding in the back seat is never a problem, for there is always enough leg room f no matter how tall the driver is. Short people can also cross their legs under a desk with ease and are almost immune to sur h commands as dur k. In the tinal analysis, I can say that being short is an integral part of my litestxle f and I love it. Hut tor all the short people xxho ran't accept their diminutixe height, perhaps there is some r onsolation in the phrase, Mood things t ome in small par kages Ns tor you, Randy New man, I hope a sbtttl lJl'l'NUll ftltis up to Nutt ttwl lbtles you in the kneerap, llust kidding, ral tUlIlSl'l THE NEW IRREVERENCE Fear and laughing at Kent State Who are these guys, and what do they want from us anyway? It seems this year that the above question has been bouncing around the hallowed halls of the Adminis- tration Building quite frequently. The reference is to a group of student art- ists which has taken it upon itself to change the course of American Life. It calls itself the New lrreverence. Beware of this group, lt is rumoured that the members wish to distract the student body from its glorious purpose: achiev- ing high point averages and the never ending search for a good time and a milkshake on Saturday night. They have been known to miss classes and speak openly about University policy. Two members of the group were seen in the library Xeroxing fresh trout, while another threw the faculty at the Art Building into complete chaos by placing barnyard animal stickers over the floor numbers in the elevator. Nothing is sacred to these twisted fiends. Their method of operation is deceptively simple. They enter a build- ing where serious students are going about the business of their academic endeavors, and they begin preaching anarchistic doctrine condemning all the institutions which make America great: fast food, disco music, down vests and last, but not least, television. Imagine being without a television. We would all be forced to begin speaking with one another again, or worse, use our imaginations. The thought is enough to make one retch. They call themselves New Warriors, citing as their enemy the modern disco technology tobviously some code phrase for honest productive societyj. They claim lohn Travolta is not God, and they openly admit that they be- lieve the Daily Kent Stater does not have all the answers. Where is the National Guard when you need it? lf these monsters are allowed to run rampant on campus, it will not be long before we see students wondering about the meaningfulness of their ca- reers, and a few of the poor devils will probably be pushed over the edge of horvdoni. Avoid thc VVarriors at all costa, lhvx are easily recognized in a croxxd, Tho lvaring grin and the eyes like ielliod tiri- are thv two most di5tinguishing loaf turvs. Their xxallt is rapid hut staggvre-cl. Thaw do not seein to knoxx where- thaw arm going, but they are crvrtainlx in a hurrx' to get tlwrcx It xou spot onv ol thvw niadnic-n, go immediate-lx to your room and place! xour nose in a xxarni te-xthoolt, Attvr about titteen minute-s you will toe-I normal again. lt you arv untortunate enough to ht- in a position wlwrv you cannot re-mow' yourwll from thv onvironnwnt tin a clasxrooin, on a Campus Loopl, re-me-mln-r to iv- pc-at the- words BRACE GOLIJHNCJ on-i and ovcr again until thai clwirc- to sniilt- has vacated vour he-ing, About all, do not laugh. In spite ot the Nun lrroxv rence, remember: school ix st-rioux business. - Michael Hvaton f ORGANIZATIONS For the past six years vve have not put group shots in our book, because of the expense and the problems of scheduling pictures and covering each and every group. Attempting to give better coverage of the students at KSU, this year vve sold space in our book to organizations. The cost of the printing, photographer's time and equipment, and staff preparation of the page were covered by the cost ofthe space to the organization, We would like to thank the groups who paid to have their pictures in the book. Society of Manufacturing Engineers FRONT ROW: Thai Q. Nguyen, Rich- ard P. Kropp, 2nd vice-chairman, Rich- ard M. Passek. SECOND ROW: Clare M. Allison, treas- urerg Mark Grabau, secretary, Andrew K. McCarron, David R, Sink, Daniel L. King, lst vice-chairman. THIRD ROW: Dean T. Williams, Lavv- rence H. Ryczekg Michael A. Brodep David W. Watson, Dr. C. W. Keith, advisorg Gregory A. Pozzi, chairman. Wa mf, K 7fPiYQF.!Q',X.f1'L?QiX.VX.f'1.'J' .,,,, .. ....... xg! 1 -f rc' 4 '3l':l': f 5 L9 . . Qt4Q,X,x , - . ,,6.5,, El giu,,.'m,, 7' -fa,-I ,. ,L f 1' 1 . z. . ' x . 4 X , 5' Alpha Phi Alpha Epsilon Delta Chapter SIITINCIQ Ralph 5IlTllll'wQ Brarllc-x Dun camp Garv llaym-xg luhn llumph Mdrlx Codls. Sl.-XNIDIFNC1' Nts-xv Iackwrwg llnxurl Nlaughtc-rg Cllr-nn lllllfltlll, N! bl SHC JXXTN H.m1IclC'mhr.m KWH!!! Alpha Phi FRONT ROW: Cheryl Trumpg Anne Kozleckg Donna Mencinig Diane Manzg Traci Cuystg Shelly Longg loan Taubg Beth Rarcling Lori Mackuling Traci Wolf- caleg Nan Earlyg Elise Hazeng Vicki Pin- tog ludy Cloggz Liz Myer. SECOND ROW: Kelly Guystg Lisa Kaleyg Elizabeth Hughes. THIRD ROVV: Tina Kocherg Debbie Colernang Susan Litvving Kay C. Krockg Carla Nesbittg Terri Shupeg Lisa Hol- landg Valerie Laneg Patti Littlejohng Marybeth Eoxg lane Wineg Beth Brumbaughg Kathy l-loltong Edie Kim- mel. Alpha Xi Delta S4 FRONT ROW: Margie Nowakg Roberta McMilIang Mary Tusocng Kim Courisg SueAnn McBrideg Leslie Poilackg Sue Reiderg Kathy Linnon. SECOND ROW: Kim Harbertg Bonnie Boucherg Sue Eicherg Karen Marshallg lan Orwickg Pam Hawkinsg lulia Van- scoyg Lezlie Shell. THIRD ROW: Ioy Presfottg Ann Sohlg Donna Hillg Bonnie Mdjaskeyg Marie Wvnigerg lenny lurkog Terry Moore. FOURTH ROW: Margaret Mc'MiIIang ludy Kralg Kathy Cogdeilig Robbie lxmlg Kathy Lobsigerg Debbie Pizzinog Mary Beth Mundort. ffff!f! Delta Gamma i 'Z-.av ff .,,,,.,.,!i , Mg L Q5 4 gf ri 3 A i 4 tp 1- 3 7 i f w J T FRONT ROW: Lou Ann Sornmersg leannie lohnsong Sandy Policneneg Bet- sy Stanfordg Nancy Polichene. SECOND ROW: Cheri Schulerg Natalie Djakovichg Becky lvicfviahong Linda Sta- nikg Bernie Kingg Kathy Zaratslang Ka- ren Wiseg Cenrnarie Henniep leri la- niga. THIRD ROW: lanie Ankenbruckg Sarah Stevvartg Becky Robertsg Heidi Gut- chessg Lori Miller, DeAnna Trivellg Laurie Sneaf, FOURTH ROW: Betsy Lynng Suzanne Kindigg Nancy Wilsong Roni Buckeyg Jeannie Damiesviets. ,Y ....,..1 Panhellenic Council FRONT ROXV1 BPIIW Brur11l111ugl1, ,-XIpI1.1 Phig Elm- Haze-11, -Xlplm P1113 lim-In Lx'1111, Dc-lla Cl.1111111.1g Gm-Ilv -Xgnxim-, Chi 01114-ga. SECOND RUXN, N.111 fQ.1rIx, 'XIIJIMI Plug Cjl1l'fi 5l'IWLlI0l', D4-lla C,L.1111111.1g I.1ck11- Hmm, fXI11I111 I'I11g Nancy XMIN1111, lDvlI.1 11.1111111113 lla-I1 H111lc111, CI11 f5I1N'g.1Q I71-lmlmw KuIl.1r,C'l11 H1111-1411, Tau Beta Sigma National Band Sorority ,-4' 'Q FRONT ROW: Cindy Lodgeg Lori Rose- nbergg Donna Hill. SECOND ROW: Sharon Roseg Kathy Maukg leanette Spencerg Terry Mooreg Terri Peterson. THIRD ROW: Fran Bradleyg Genfviarie I-Ionnieg Betsy Stanfordg Leah Tosen- bergerg Marty Moinet, presidentg Sue Sell, vice-presidentg Lori Werstler. FOURTH ROW: Suellen Stilesg Annette Skinnerg Debby Aldrich. N. wm- r . . 'S ,X M... f A R EPD- , sw- 'l'?fr- - A , A 4, ,.,.! I ef Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority Inc. A 'f,w .. :Hat ,--:. ,g---' A ' 19. ,Q -..W-S'-iff1 .'ff., R - .,,,-3:. 1,5 :gf - , ,Fl jf, . a . - v.- - , rr ' - '. A , 1 , ,.,.' 5 0 ' 'Jqlwp' - V QW, xv I, 5 I I 75? I - -f .' . I '- ' . + 1 mm :an . ,J -ff-'. ' I. X 'V - -4 , 1- ,.-rf--1 . 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X Accounting Association of KSU American Guild of Organists American Industrial Arts Association American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics American Institute of Architects American Romanian Cultural Studies Group American Society of Interior Designers Angel Flight Arnold Air Society Chorale Classics Club Collegiate Marketing Association Data Processing Organization Dietetic Organization, Student Fibre Arts Organization Forensics fDebateJ Geological Society Guitar and Stringed Instruments Asso- ciation KSU Camera Club Left History Forum Minority Business Association Music Educators Club Medical Technology Club Pershing Rifles Pre-Lavv Society Pre-Med Society Public Relations Student Society ROTC, Air Force ROTC, Army Science Fiction!Fantasy Society Science of Life Society of Manufacturing Engineers Society of Physics Students The Sphinx Society Student Bar Association Studio 202 Undergraduate Art Student Organiza- tion University Advertising Group Women in Communications ORGANIZATIONS Academic!Professional Athletic!Recreati0n Amateur Radio Club Bicycle Club Cheerleaders Clippers Booster Club Division of lntramurals!Recreational Sports Fellowship of Christian Athletes Flasherettes Flying Club Frisbee Club Hockey Club, Kent State Clippers Karate Club Outdoors Club Recreation Club Rugby Football Club Sailing Club Scuba Club Skating Club Ski Club Skydivers Weight Training Club Wheelchair Athletic Club Communications Chestnut Burr lyearbookl Daily Kent Stater lnevvspaperl Kent Quarterly lcampus literary maga- zinel Weekly Publications WKSR lradiol WKSU lradio and tvl Graduate Student Association of Graduate English Stu- dents Black Graduate Student Association Chemistry Graduate Student Associ- ation Graduate Association of Students in Psychology Graduate History Council Graduate Student Association Graduate Student Senate Graduate Music Students Association Political Science Graduate Student As- sociation International Student Chinese Students Association Political! Activist American Indian Rights Association Committee Against Repressive Legisla- tion Communist Youth Organization Environmental Conservation Organiza- tion E.R.A., Student for Kent Democrats Kent Gay Liberation Front May 4th Task Force Republican Club Revolutionary Student Brigade Right to Life Society Save Our Right to Vote Socialist Educational Forum Students for Begala Students for Stahl Young Americans for Freedom Young Socialist Alliance Young Spartacus Club United Nations Affairs Council Programming!Social All Campus Programming Board Black Greek Council Colloquia Guest Series Geography Department Coffee Club lnterfraternity Council InterGreek Programming Board International Film Society Society for Creative Anachronism TM Action Club Tuesday Cinema, Filmvvorks ReIigious!Study Baha'i Campus Club Campus Crusade for Christ Campus Outreach Christian Fellowship of Nurses Christian Science Organization Gospel Rap Group Hillel Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship Hatha Yoga lehovah's Witnesses Love Light Lutheran Student Movement Navigators Pyramid Zen Society Radix Christian Workshop United Christian Ministries Representative!Governance Black United Students Commuter and Off-Campus Student Organization Graduate Student Senate Kent lnterhall Council Panhellenic Council Student Government Servicellnformation Alternative Lifestyles Collective Ambulance, Volunteer Service Black Social Workers Club Campus Girl Scouts Campus Spirit Club Council for Exceptional Children Esquire Club Day Care Center KSU Family Planning Freddy Demuth Club, Everyday Life Group Pregnancy Information Center Rape Crisis Project Recruiting Aids, KSU Students for Mobility Student Alumni Assocation Student Workers Organization Townhall ll Qhelplinel University Life Line University Theatre Veteran's Association Women Against Rape Honoraries Alpha Eta Rho, Kappa Alpha Chapter Alpha Lambda Delta Alpha Phi Sigma, Psi Chapter Beta Alpha Psi, Beta Psi Chapter Beta Beta Beta Beta Gamma Sigma Blue Key Delta Upsilon of Delta Omicron Elite Ebony Soul, Honor Society Mortarboard Mu lota Sigma Phi Gamma Nu Pi Mu Epsilon Pi Omega Pi Pi Sigma Alpha Psi Chi Scabbard and Blade Sigma Delta Chi, Society ot Profes- sional lournalists Sigma Tau Delta Tau Beta Sigma Tau Sigma Delta Fraternities Alpha Phi Alpha Bava Ujamaa Zinda Z Delta Tau Delta Kappa Alpha Psi Kappa Sigma Omega Psi Phi Phi Beta Sigma Phi Gamma Delta Phi Sigma Kappa Sigma Alpha Epsilon Sigma Chi Sigma Phi Epsilon Sigma Tau Gamma Sororities Alpha Gamma Delta Alpha Kappa Alpha Alpha Phi Alpha Xi Delta Chi Omega Delta Gamma Delta Sigma Theta Delta Zeta Sigma Gamma Rho Sigma Sigma Sigma Zeta Phi Beta uri Fraternity, lnc W WOMEN'S RUGBY Although Kent State's women's rug- by team had just been formed, it won a trophy by beating Ohio University in a tournament with MAC teams at Bowling Green last spring. Captains Tracy Ricker and jackie Brown led the team to a season record of two wins and three losses. Both the women's and men's rugby teams belong to the Kent State Rugby Football Club. Their advisors are Dr, john Kane, assistant professor of Ro- mance Languages and Literature, and Dr. David McKee, professor of Eco- nomics. 5'r'Q wiv I r 1. KX W SWIMMING After winning MAC championship ti- tles two years in a row and four years out of the past five, giving an encore performance might seem like a difficult task for Coach Todd Boyle and his KSU swim team. But Boyle really doesn't think so. Boyle said he focuses on team vic- tories rather than just winning one or two single events. We dwell on win- ning championships, he said. Our idea is to develop a team champion. Boyle's job of trying to capture a third consecutive conference title was made somewhat tougher this year as five members from last year's success- ful squad failed to return due to gradu- ation or transfers. Frank Zak was the team's only senior member. l-le and junior Mike Wohl served as the Flashes' team co-captains. Boyle said the Flashes' recruiting program did little to improve this year's team, so the burden of retaining an MAC swimming crown fell mainly on sophomore and junior performers. He stated that the Flashes were gear- ing themselves for the MAC champion- ships which are to be held at Ball State during the first week of March. The KSU coach said that his team was par- ticularly hoping to meet Miami in the championships since the Flashes regu- lar season meet with the Redskins in lanuary was cancelled due to inclem- ent weather. Boyle said that after the MAC cham- pionships some of the team's swim- mers will begin preparing for the na- tional championships being held at Long Beach, California during the final week in March. The sixth year mentor called the nationals competition very fast and said only the best swimmers get to compete. Boyle cited juniors Wohl and Kim Hammeren, sophomore Ieff Treisch and freshman Chris l-lammeren as being KSU's hopefuls of getting to the national championship. He said he feels KSU's 800-yard and 400-yard medley relay teams have an excellent chance of competing in the national's meet. We are alot better than most people think we are, Boyle explained. A third consecutive MAC crown for the Flashes would leave little doubt in anyone's mind and make that the un- derstatement of the year. EDITORS NOTE: See Intercollegiate Scoreboard for the Colden Flashes' season record and standing in the MAC. WRESTLING Perhaps one of the most difficult things for a championship team to do is win the title a second year in a row, The other teams are really after that spot: a victory against a champion makes the season. For the KSU wrestling team, staying number one doesn't seem such an im- possibility. Several key men from last year's MideAmerican Conference championship squad have returned, in- juries have been at a minimum and the team's hopes are high. lt looks like a three-team race to nie, said defending I58-lb. MAC champion Ron Michael. If vve can get by Toledo we can probably take the conference. We are strong at a lot of weights and should place enough wrestlers to take the title. The MAC team championship is de- termined by the number of points a team accumulates from its finishers. Last year, Northern Illinois had four first-place wrestlers and vve only had tvvo. We vvon the championship be- cause vve had tvvo seconds, tvvo thirds and one fourth, and Northern only had one other wrestler place. Michael said, The University of Toledo, Northern Illinois and KSU are contenders for the crovvn, Michael said. NIU doesn't have much in the upper weights and Toledo has to be considered the dark horse of the MAC,'f he continued. Assistant Coach Chuck Teagarden, a former KSU vvrestler, sees an even tighter races There's about six teams that could be logical contenders, he said. Ohio University has a shot, To- ledo, Northern, us, even Miami might give us problems. The Flashes currently rest in fourth place in the MAC. While the team's dualfmeet record doesn't carry too much vveight, the individual standings determine hovv a vvrestler is seeded in the championship. Last year I was seeded third in the tournament and that's howl finish- ed, Pete Houghlaling said. Houghtal- ing is second in the MAC this year, with a IOe3-I record that includes one pin. Txfxo finalists from last years team have been graduated, and at least one ot the xafancies was filled. lxexin Folex, xx ho xxrestled behind Teagarden at Intl lbs. last xear, moved up to Its, lbs. to replace Mark Osgood. Rick La- Manna replaces Bob Liptak at II8 lbs, Liptak finished second in the MAC in IFV' f.. Other nexxcomers are Casex Wlue dxga at I3-l lbs., Steve Rec-dy at ISO lbs. and Dave Wenger at llh lbs. Com- pleting the lx5U lineup are Milan Ya- koxich at I-ll lbs., Bob Stas at lf' lbs. and lim Ixazee al heaxtyxxeight. Michael sees the chanres ot the Flashes repeating as conterente chain- pions as prettv good. Then-'s onlx' one or two weights that are xerx' shakex. Were good bets for it non, and it we do some things at the tournament that we havent been doing during the season, were sure lo win. But xoti never know. Last vear we xxon because the QU heaxxxxeight got hurt. The same thing can easilx happen to us. 7 EDITORS NOTE: See Intercollegiate Scoreboard tor the Golden Flashes' season record and standing in the MFXC. W MEN'S INTERCOLLEGIATES Track The men's track team, under coach Doug Raymond, finished eighth of ten teams at the Mid-American Conference Championships held at Ohio Univer- sity, with Chip Breidenbach placing first in the hammer throw. The team won one meet and lost four, but also participated in four other relays or invitationals. Team captain joe Dubina qualified for the NCAA Championship in the 1500 meter run, and Neil McConnell qualified in the 10,000 meter run. .i xv, 7 Y 1 1-JX -Q-in lf!! Coached by Blan Fuller, the men's tennis team posted a 13-17, 2-7 record in matches from March until May. Rex Hunt led the team in singles play with a 14-12 record, while loe Knezevich posted the best doubles win of 17-8. Tennis Golf The KSU golf team took the MAC Championship title over ten other teams at the Ohio University golf course. Under coach Frank Truitt, the team played seven-over-par team golf for the win, Ned Weaver finished first, while team captain Art Nash tied for second place three strokes behind him. Both players were voted all-MAC, and Truitt was named Coach of the Year. Soccer Coach Frank Truitt's soccer team rolled to a 6-5-1 record in 1977. The Flashes upended five of their first seven opponents before falling victim to Ohio University and Akron. Mount Union managed to tie KSU, 1-1. Truitt's squad won by big scores on two occasions by defeating Toledo, 'IO- 1, and Malone College, 6-1. W!!! Baseball The men's baseball team, coached by Art Welch, placed tenth in the Mid- American Conference Championships and finsished the season with a 17-20 and 3-13 record. Six games were rained out. xMQ..Lf..sdH.iQ1 vg'- 1 1 AX- l ni -L 'un ' 4. dv. v-q if! i Cross country Outstanding individual performances highlighted what otherwise proved to be a dismal cross country season for coach Doug, Raymond Scott DePerro, team captain, im- pressed many opposition coaches with a number of first place finishes. luniors Bill Dunlap and Neil McConnell also contributed respect- able finishes in most of the Golden Flash meets. The team was defeated five con- secutive times and finished last in To- ledo at the MAC Championships. Raymond may expect better results in 1978 when nine KSU runners return to the squad, W Rugby The menfs rugby team managed to win three of seyen contests despite a rash of injuries which plagued them throughout the year. The Flashes displayed a tremendous offensive showing in their season finale by defeating Youngstown State, 42-18. Eight players scored in that match which also saw most of the squad's injured members return to ac- tion. Patsy Gliatta, ruby club president, spoke optimistically about the team's upcoming spring season, saying, We really started to put things together for the spring toward the end of this fall season. .,' I al .'. 'X x 4' Q -2. v 0 0 Jr .4- slf' ,. C O,-I .X ' .- I 4l.:zl' Qt . . 0 y,g4n ,u 3' ,WAN , lf .il 'Q' P13 fl vp EU N-X WI. PI -11 E, w 9 J-5 ' ,r:-. -3 'T .,. wi N ol ,.. 'e S ,S S: 7 I f J . 5 LP .3 li 'f2- . -' lv.- .- LENIJK .-r N:--. Av' -4 .I ,.,v, . 1 Uv' -,-I I 4,1 '51 -ig 1 ww- .f L . . ': . Y. , . . 's ,fl s 2 sa M, .Vx .X , vi x ' .,-.. 'Hal -'v' .3 - ' . .gk E45 - .ir X A rash of mid-season injuries to a number of key players turned a pos- sible MAC championship season into a mediocre 6-5 record. After winning five of their first seven ballgames, the Flashes felt the effects of losing the services of quarterback Mike Whalen, defensive standouts Mike Zele and Larry Caver and numer- ous other stalwart performers. Lack of depth on Coach Dennis Fitzgeralds team led the Golden Flashes to drop three of their last four games to MAC opponents. The Flashes bounced back to defeat the Toledo Rockets 23-12 in the final contest of the year, finishing the sea- son with a 5-4 conference record and a 4-1 slate on the road. Football 'Q 'i -Lnl W NE' if ' 1-4 W Basketball Unable to respond favorably to a mid-season coaching change, the KSU men's basketball team struggled through a dismal 6-21 campaign. Coach Mike Boyd replaced con- troversial coach Rex Hughes in lanuary after the latter was fired, but the Flashes showed little improvement un- der Boyd's pilotage, losing eight of their last nine games. Despite the club's internal problems, the Flashes still managed to extract some highlighted moments from the regular season. lunior forward Burrell McGee became KSU's all-time leading scorer when he tallied his 1,123 career point on March 1 against Bowling Green. McGee also extended his streak of scoring in double figures to 43 con- secutive games. Ioe McKeown, a senior guard, also etched his name in the KSU record books when he handed out a single game high of 15 assists against BCU. McGee was the team's leading scorer for the second straight year, averaging 23 points-per-game, and sophomore Trent Grooms hauled down an average close to nine rebounds-per-contest. The Flashes showed extreme difficulty in winning on the road as they earned only one victory from 13 road trips. At home, KSU finished the season with four wins in 11 tries and won on neutral courts once. Vince Chickerella, Capitol University Athletic Director, was named the new coach March 10. He resigned two days later, and Ed Douma, Lake Superior State College basketball coach, re- placed him March 17. KNO ' 412 W Gymnastics The KSU men's gymnastics team reeled off four consecutive dual meet wins at the beginning of their 1977-78 season but fell into a mid-season tails- pin to finish 5-3. Coach Rudy Bachna's Flashes lost close matches to Eastern Michigan and Pittsburgh and were defeated by Slip- pery Rock College, 167.75-'l67.7O, in the final regular season meet. KSU finished fifth in the Creat Lakes Championships. Tony Owens was the top Flash performer in that com- petition, placing third in the parallel bars event. Hockey The lxSU Clippers! first year in the newlyfforined Mid-Central College Hockey Association lMCCl-l,-Xl resulted in a near break-even season. The Clippers finished their regular season schedule with an overall ll-ll record and a Eleltl ledger in MCCHA competition KSU placed fourth in the league standings behind Miami Univer- sity, Hillsdale College and Eastern Michigan, respectivelv. Defensernan Bruce Wells lead the club in scoring with 48 points, while center Ron Smith contributed -ltl points to finish second 1 rr QP-Iigf-A. ,bn U- ' Ts 'Y-Q-.-.., I 4.., F W!!!!!! WOMEN'S INTERCOLLEGIATES Tennis The women's tennis team, coached by Scott Bittinger, posted a record of 5- 4 for the 1977 spring season and vvas tenth of 29 teams at the OAISVV meet. Ellen Grimsfelder posted the best singles record of 6-3 and earned nine of 25 points at the College Tournament at Ohio Wesleyan by winning two regulation matches. Softball The vvomen's softball team, coached by Laurel Wartluft, won the Ohio Slo- pitch Softball Tournament. Pitted against Miami University in the final game, the Flashes won ll-10 and finished the season with a 21-3 record. W In Coach ,AI Bashian's Hrst year at K5U,thexwomenE Uackteam Hnmhed with a 4-5 record, The mmnhen gMaced fwst of seven teanws at the TH-C2 VVest nweet and fourH1 of seven teanws at the Nhd- Arnencah InvHaUonaL Shidey RusseH had Hve bestrnedornwances ofthe sea- son in the 100 Under dash,the 220 dash,the 880 run,the 3000 rneterrun and the 5000 meter run. Russell and AAaureen EDeCker qualhied for the NCAAB in the 5000 meter run and the rnghjunuyrespechvew. Track :agp ,..-.......... uf.---an tflsllr 6 . . . 'fi , wvwvg, '- . I .-w wig.. I L1 Q ,. wi, nf.. ,, ' .X . tx v I an-. Qgvi ,f-i ! 'f:. ' Field Hockey The vvomen's field hockey team recorded five shutouts and finished with a final ledger of ten wins and five defeats. Coach ludy Devine's squad returned eight letter-winners from last year's 9- 6-3 campaign. This season was highlighted by a five game win skein which included a 9-O trouncing of Toledo. The Flashes bombed Lake Erie Col- lege, 9-O, and the Cleveland Field Hockey Association, 4-O, in their last two games of the year. W Coach Tod Bovle's women swim- mers shattered seven KSU records at the Ohio Association for Inter- collegiate Sports for Women QOAISVVJ State Championships hut still finished in sixth place behind a powerful en- tourage of opponents However, Boyle said he was pleased with the team's overall improvement, and added that the Flashes provided good team efforts during the state competition as well as the regular sea- son dual meets. lunior Linda Howe, sophomore Hole ly Banas and senior Margaret Brown each swam at record-setting paces in their respective events, hut a strong Bowling Green squad dominated most of the races. The Flashes compiled a 6-5 regular season ledger, losing several meets in the final events, according to Boyle. Swimming 1:1-v -' sf ,, Basketball Lead by high-scoring soplwintwes Margie Zezulewicz and lsathx ledricls, the xxomens haslsetlyall team rolled up a tashionahle I3-5 season. Zezulexxicz axeraged I-1.99 points per game and also added ILS rehounds per game, while Tedricls chipped in L55 points per contest lor coach Laurel Wartlutt. The Flashes highlighted their cam- paign with one point wins mer liimwl- ing Green and Marshall Unixersitx and closed out the regular season xxith six straight wins. Senior cufcaptain Dunna Barnhart saw limited action fur the Flashes her cause of an injury which sidelined her for most ot the year, W Gymnastics Capturing an unprecedented fourth consecutive Ohio State Championship in women's gymnastics may have seemed to be slipping from Coach Rudy Bachna's grasp as his team pre- pared forthe state finals competition. Yet, in spite of iniuries, academic ineligibilities and resigned participants, the Flashes employed some exciting come-from-behind tactics to upend a strong Bowling Cireen squad and retain the women's state crown. Outstanding performances by fresh- men Susy Baxter and Patty Dan- nemiller, sophomore Sharon Ledger and tri-captain Kim Rienour carried KSU past the second-place BCU team. The Flashes, who completed their regular season dual meet record with 15 wins and two defeats, also received ample support from tri-captains lean Taylor and Peggy Pietzcker and fresh- man Regina Walz. T INTERCOLLEGIATE SCOREBOARD Women's Softball Q21 -31 Wright State at Wright State at Miami University at Miami University Tuscarawas at Wooster Youngstown at Akron at Akron Ashland at Akron Youngstown State Toledo Toledo Akron Akron Rio Grande at OAISW Cedarville at OAISW Dayton at OAISW Miami at OAISW at Mount Union Lakeland College Lakeland College at Ohio University at Ohio University at Baldwin Wallace Men's Baseball Q17-20, 3-13, at North Texas State at North Texas State at Southern Methodist at Southern Methodist at University of Dallas at University of Dallas at Dallas Baptist at Dallas Baptist at Texas Wesleyan at University of Akron at University of Akron Oakland Oakland Cleveland State Cleveland State Ashland Ashland at Miami University at Miami University Eastern Michigan Eastern Michigan Central Michigan Central Michigan at Ohio University at Ohio University Akron Akron at Western Michigan at Western Michigan at Northern Illinois at Northern Illinois Marietta Marietta Bowling Green Bowling Green Toledo Toledo Men's Football Q5-5, 4-41 Illinois State 33 14 at Colorado 0 42 Ball State 13 12 at Ohio University 44 24 Bowling Green 10 14 at Eastern Michigan 29 13 Northern Illinois 18 21 Central Michigan 10 49 Miami University 0 25 at Toledo 23 12 Women's Rugby Q3-SJ Ohio State at 7-S 8 16 Chicago at 7-S 16 12 Milwaukee at 7-S 0 18 at Kentucky 0 4 at Ohio University 8 4 Ohio State 0 24 at Ohio State 4 12 Pittsburg 14 4 Men's Rugby Q3-Bl Notre Dame at Miami 0 10 Youngstown at Miami 4 8 at Miami 6 7 Ohio State at Miami O 24 Pittsburg Harlequins 20 3 Akron at Ohio Elimination 6 10 lohn Carroll at Ohio Elimination 16 15 at Pittsburgh Blacks 0 10 at Cleveland Blues 18 21 Youngstown 43 18 Cleveland Old Grays 0 8 I Women's Tennis Q5-41 at Bowling Green 0 Malone 5 Lorain County Community -I at Cincinnati 2 at Denison 3 at Miami University 2 Ohio University at MU 7 at Akron 3 at Case Western Reserve 6 at OAISW meet 'IOth Women's Basketball U3-Sl Miami University 36 lohn Carroll University 48 Toledo 75 Defiance College 72 KSU Stark Branch 87 Cleveland State 63 Ashland College 58 Ohio University 75 Bowling Green 73 Youngstown State 62 Akron University 66 West Virginia University 60 Marshall 65 Muskingum College 68 Denison University 69 Tri-County College 67 Malone College 78 Marshall 70 9 O 1 3 -I 7 2 2 O 1 9 52 37 55 5-I 5h In I -IFJ 72 7I -lb 78 fa-I In-I 58 -I-I -I I fab Men's Basketball I6-21, 4-12j Iowa at Pittsburg Utah tUtah Classicl San lose IUtali Classicl at Santa Clara Cleveland State at Illinois State UNC - Charlotte at ROA Montana State at KOA Ohio University at Central Michigan Western Michigan Eastern Michigan at Toledo Northern Illinois Bowling Green St. Francis Miami University at Ball State at Ohio University Central Michigan at North Carolina at Eastern Michigan Toledo at Northern Illinois at Bowling Green Western Michigan Men's Tennis U3-17, 2-7J at Illinois Benedictine at Florida State at lacksonville at Florida Central College at Flager College at Flordia Tech at Seminole College at Ohio State Notre Dame at OSU at Miami University Wright State at MU Cincinnati at MU Edinhoro State Akron at Toledo Henry Ford at UT Western Michigan at Ul at Bowling Green at Western Liberty Northwood Institute al XXX at VVayne State Northern Michigan at WS at Henry Ford at Central Mit higan Cleveland State Youngstown State Ball State Northern Illinois Ohio University Eastern Mir higan I5-I -IT -I7 59 51 56 7 I 55 Ii-I 59 ia I 57 59 -lb Inj h3 7-I 55 Ia-I 5-I 79 59 70 58 59 67 76 6 l lil I 0 I J Sl I I I 0 9 5 2 FI .2 5 i Il fi ll 5 7 In 5 9 li .2 l 5 2 82 55 50 51 I58 5 l 79 hll 8-I 7 3 FIS 5 3 IH I I5-I Inf IHFI Id 5 5-I BB hcl Bla Q3 BB IU-I 89 7l 5' I 1 3 8 Sl 1 Fi Sl Il 8 8 fl Il In 1 Il 1 -I ll I Il -I 2 l -I Il I1 I1 -4 7 Women's Volleyball Q12-12i at Ixenyon Detiance Toledo Ohio State at Oberlin Ohio Wesleyan Malone at Slippery Rock at ioungstoxx n State at Miami Universitx Toledo at Baldwin XX allat e Akron Uniyersitx Ashland College Cleveland 5tale Fdinlnoro State University ot Cint innati at lohn Carroll University at Bowling Green at Wright State Purdue Miami at OAISXN Akron at OAISW Cincinnati at OAISXX' KW Men's Soccer t6-6-11 at Oberlin 3 2 Ohio State 0 2 Baldwin Wallace 4 2 Toledo I0 1 at Case Western Reserve 0 2 Malone b l at Ohio University l 3 at Mount Union 1 1 at Akron 1 6 at Ashland 8 0 Bowling Green 1 0 at Youngstown State I 2 Miami 0 3 Women's Gymnastics Q15-21 Central Michigan 126.8110.5 Miami University 126.81022 Clarion 133.6 137.0 at Michigan State '126.5'133.1 EAU Clair 138.1 109.6 Canisus 138.01118 at Bowling Green 139.0 133.2 Youngstown State 13910 106.8 Michigan University 138.1 133.8 Wisconsin-Madison Forteited at Youngstown State 136.51125 Eastern Michigan 137.91212 Pittsburgh 137.91320 Brockport 137.51032 Slippery Rock 137.7 132.2 Ohio State 139.8133.6 VVest Virginia 139.8 128.1 Men's Gymnastics Q5-31 Miami University 160.01-19.7 Central Michigan 160.01373 Bowling Green 150.0 71,0 Canisius Eorteited Eastern Michigan 157.4 179.6 Pittsburgh 157.4 166.7 Brockport 158.3 37.9 Slippery Rock 167.71678 Men's Track Q1-41 at Bowling Green 76 87 at Penn State 61 102 Akron 92 62 Miami 42 95'z Ohio State 42 65112 Women's Track Q4-Sl at Bowling Green Invitational 7th at Miami University 39 60 Mount Union at MU 39 65 Ohio Wesleyan at MU 39 17 at Tri C 91 47 l-leidelgerg at TC 91 17 Baldwin Wallace at TC 91 7 Central Michigan 22 95 Eastern Michigan 22 43 Slippery Rock 22 68 at OSU Twilight Relays 3rd at Tri C, West 1st at Mid American Invitational 4th Women's Field Hockey Q10-6-U at Bowling Green 3 1 at Slippery Rock 1 4 Kenyon College 2 1 Hiram College 4 1 Pittsburgh 2 0 Toledo 9 0 at Ashland 3 0 at Cedarville 3 4 at Miami University 0 3 Youngstown State 3 0 Oberlin at OAISW 1 2 Ashland at OAISW 1 0 Cedarville at OAISW 0 1 at Wooster 1 2 at Lorain County Community College 4 4 Lake Erie College 9 0 Cleveland Field Hockey Team 4 0 Men's Wrestling Q7-24 at RIT Tournament 2nd Malone 43 9 at Miami University 12 24 Akron 26 11 Bowling Green 40 4 at Toledo Z9 14 at Princeton 13 26 Cornell at PC 45 2 at Ohio University 24 17 Eastern Michigan 49 3 Men's Hockey 111-12, MCCHA 9-103 Sheridan 6 O Sheridan 7 5 at Miami 6 7 at Miami 3 4 Hillsdale 4 6 Hillsdale 3 8 Eastern Michigan 6 7 Eastern Michigan 4 1 at Eastern Michigan 4 5 at Michigan-Dearborn 5 2 Cincinnati 4 I Cincinnati 7 2 Michigan-Dearborn 7 6 Eastern Michigan 3 5 at Hillsdale 5 6 at Hillsdale I S at Cincinnati 7 4 Humber Community College 2 7 Humber Community College 6 8 Michigan-Dearborn I I 3 Michigan-Dearborn 7 6 Miami 6 J Miami 4 5 Men's Swimming Q3-5J at Eastern Michigan at Ohio University Eastern Kentucky at Pittsburg Bowling Green at Oakland West Virginia Central Michigan Women's Swimming Q6-SQ at Ashland at Kenyon Oberlin at KC at Ball State Western Michigan at BSU at Oakland CC at Ohio University Wright State Slippery Rock Cleveland State at Allegheny Men's Golf Marshall Invitational Ashland Invitational Kepler Invitational MAC Invitational ttiel KSU Invitational Spartan Invitational Bronco Invitational MAC Invitational 71 46 44 74 35 69 66 77 47 57 24 69 50 75 59 89 71 59 71 5th 2nd 11th 8th 2nd 1-lth 3rd 1st Men's Cross Country Q0-St at Toledo 37 at Ohio University 35 Miami University 43 at Michigan State 39 at Penn State 48 at Ohio State 2nd at MAC Championships 10th W INTRAMURALS Take me out to the ballgame PM Y J Nm- 'EQ' 'QF 1 .. --4 I , ,. W I ,I 's ,I-'s'. fav..-f-b .- A 1' ' Z V f ' 3. ': N wff'L2,i:-,y1- vw 1 ' 'tr3'R1':--Q-- 1-- +13-55'4' - pn 'xv '- Q--.fggg ff: Wffffw-Q-Lf! 1 ,-SP 1 .,. o., s , W we 'Zta 4115? Q , 1 Q rxym if Q S W Spike it, spike it Hooplng It up I I N5 - Q . Uv at 0 I 'S .- .,-t 1 BY? ---Q 4 .21 W BasketbaH Co-Rec Average BasketbaH Teanw Dornntory GreatLakes FCS HPER Hotdogs Fraternity Sigma Alpha Epsilon KSU Old and Slow Independent SHverFoxest FootbaH Co-Rec Winless Cherry Dormitory Great Lakes FCS Wnkos Fraternity Phi Sigma Kappa KSU All-Pro Independent Hushest GOH Donnnow Appklidl Fraternity Phi Sigma Kappa Independent DaveFaHow Independent Hockey Kent B's 'Q Softball Co-Rec Dormitory Fraternity KSU Independent Track Dormitory Fraternity Winless Cherry Dunbar Devils Sigma Kappa Sigma Ameba Balls Travel Agents' Lake Hall Sigma Alpha Epsilon' Independent Volunteer Ambulance Volleyball Co-Rec Dormitory Fraternity independent Wrestling '13-l lbs. 'l-i2 lbs, 'ISO lbs, 'IS8 lbs. 167 lbs. 'l77 lbs. 190 lbs Heavyweight 'All-Uniyersi Service Team A Cedar Pub Hard Nips Phi Sigma kappa Sltyhookst Mike Corseld Mike Purdy Dennis Schall Greg Cardis Pat Walsh Phil Hatlon Mark Bigrigg lim Helm ty Champion x CALENDAR March Presidential Search Committee granted up to 520,000 to hire a consulting firm to aid in the search for a new presi- dent. Rocky tops awards as Best Picture. Symptoms of spring fever become apparent on campus. Rings of space particles discovered en- circling Uranus. April Congressional ban on saccharin pro- posed. ESP performer Russ Burgess appears in the Kiva. Government study shows pot use not hampered by stiff penalties. New irregularities found in Bermudez dissertation, KSU students Dan Stahl and Dennis Eberhart assured of Republican nomi- nations for Kent City Council-At-Large, but lose in the November election, Campus Bus Service announces reduc- tion in services. Ashby Leach acquitted of kidnapping charge. Sphinx Society members protest in the Student Center against a position in the philosophy department left vacant since Fall Quarter. All-out media effort prepared to attract students to KSU, Four vice-presidents not reappointed, but offered month-by-month contracts effective Iuly 'I. Music concert performed by Theatre of the Open Eye. American Indian Rights Association office ransacked and director Amylee assaulted. Townhall ll begins People to People program for overcoming shyness. Creeks hold Little Brother!Sis Week- end. Business College Dean Gail Mullin re- signs. Sharks Synchronized Swim Team presents There's Nothing Like a Dame. Y A . W . -.V -as-: -S N39 QQ-,BN .' s .. t X-xr. .5,.,. 111.-. May The first Nixon!Frost interview tele- vised. Air Expo '77 kicks off Campus Week. Festalsent, the fourth annual Pan-Afri- can Festival is held. Red Cross Blood Drive ends its second day with 676 donors Africa Day festivities sponsored by kent Africa Student Association held at University School, The U.S. Supreme Court virtually clears the way for former Attorney General lohn Mitchell and ex'White House aide HR. Haldeman to goto prison for their parts in the Watergate cover-up. Spectrum 77 of Human Awareness Week opens with a talk by author Su' san Brovvnmiller. Novelist and short story writer Eudora Welty reads from her works in the Riva. loseph Chaikin, founder of the Open Theatre, speaks in Stump Theatre. Cui- tarist lim Clover and Terraplane per- form in University Auditorium as part of a benefit for the kent Legal Defense Fund. Actress Mercedes McCambridge speaks in the Student Center on alcoholism A fire at the Beverly Hills Supper Club in Southgate, kentucky kills Ihr lce Fantasy '77 presented. king-kennedy-Burger-King Stuff it your way final competition won by RSU linebacker Martin Elliot. Frisbee Tournament held in Eastxx at Field. Black United Students tl3U5l members march to Student Center to protest al- location cuts. Campus Week carnixal held, Creek Week actixities kicked ott. ls5U Honors Day Prograrii, 373 stu- dents honored tor ac ademic achtexe- ment, Dr. ,Ntartin ls. Nurmt and Drs Ralph XX, Dexter awarded the Presiden- tial ,Ntedalg the old student union re- named Osc ar W. Ritchie Hall in honor ol the late professor. 5ll'lll1lNf3lXlUlJlKN held. 'lor complete coxc-rage ot Ntax -lfgxrn controxersy see chronologx on page llm-l, Summer Norman E. lackson, Chairman of the Board of the lackson Bayley Electric Co., appointed to the Board of Trustees. Dr. Lawrence Kaplan and Dr. Raymond Myers made University Professors. Construction of all-campus road im- provement program begins vvith a 513310000 Board of Regents appropria- tion. Dr. George Melnykovich replaces Dr. Frank Sessions as associate dean for the Division of Continuing Education. Dr. Glenn A. Saltzman, KSU professor, becomes Director of the Behavioral Sciences Teaching Program and Profes- sor of Behavioral Sciences in the Divi- sion of Basic Medical Sciences, North- east Ohio College of Medicine. Gerald D. Brody becomes director of the Career Planning and Placement Center. Tvvo storms create tornado-like winds, knocking down trees vvhich damage homes, apartments and cars, Kent part of an area declared a disaster. Ground- breaking ceremony for King-Kennedy Center. Office for Civil Rights recommends KSU sex discrimination complaint filed by Winona Schelat be heard before a Health, Education and Welfare QHEVVJ hearing officer. September Dr. Brage Golding takes office as lsSU president. Executive Vice-President and Provost lohn Snyder resigns. HEW reviewing an Office for Civil Rights request for the hearing of two KSU sex discrimination cases. Beginning of late registration and dropfadd through department offices. Coupon system and unlimited board plan combined to form new food sys- tem for residents. Tuition increase of S24 and bus fee increase of Sb for off-campus students go into effect. Basic Medical Sciences facility of Rootstown campus of the Northeast Ohio Universities College of Medicine opens with 13 KSU students out of 47. Dr. Michael Schwartz named to the newly-created position of vice-presi- dent for academic affairs, replacing Snyder. School of Health, Physical Education and Recreation tHPERj offers new ma- jors in Dance and School Nurse, and in cooperation with the College of Busi- ness, a new master's program in Recre- ation. Classes begin in Franklin Hall for new joint Akron Universityflsent State nurs- ing master's program. Bill Hoover, former Kent Cay Liber- ation Front chairperson, to leave for Los Angeles to defend gay rights and fight Anita Bryant. lack Higgins, retired president of a Cleveland advertising firm, begins job as the new Goodyear Executixe Profes- sor of Business Administration. The Affirmative Action Advisory Com- mittee of Ixent City Council meets for the first time for fair placement of fe- male, handicapped and minority city job applicants. Freshman week begins. lohn Lewis, director of domestic oper- ations in project VISTA, visits the Office of volunteer Services. Dr. Donald Rith resigns as chairperson of the recreation department in the school ol HPIR. Dr. Albert Blwalc of lxorea, first Ph ll in criminology in the US., becomes head of the Criminal lustic e Department. September Dr. Herbert Goldsmith, director of the University School, and Dr. Robert Dyal, associate professor of philosophy, plan a quarterly newsletter to focus on pos- sible threats or violence against first amendment rights here. Investigation into allegations of sex discrimination against Dr. lanet Kim- ball, former KSU professor of English, started by the Ohio Civil Rights Com- mission, The Cleveland Barons begin practice sessions at the Ice Arena. An air mass carrying radioactive debris from a Chinese nuclear test passes over the Great Lakes region. U.S. Budget Director Bert Lance re- signs. Administration and United Faculty Pro- fessional Association QUFPAJ officials begin negotiations to finalize a master contract The Kent chapter of the National Gr- ganization for Women QNOWJ raises 251,500 in a Walk-a-thon for equal rights. A 2-l-hour Bach-a-thon, sponsored by the KSU student chapter of the Ameri- can Guild of Grganists, raises 51,000 for a new practice organ and breaks the Guinness world record of 2-l hours of organ-playing, The Kent School of Bartending, spon- sored by the KSU Republican Club, opens. Fifteen hundred KSU veterans may not receive benefits during winter break, according to a law that says no vet who hasn't attended classes for more than 30 days may receive GI benefits during that period, Trustees vote to give the Rockwell Hall art gallery museum status and name it after lames A. Michener, author of What Happened at Kent State and Why. Trustees give Golding the right to di- rectly hire, fire and fix compensation for all university personnel except vice- presidents. Residence hall beer chug-off at East- way Center, LandsEnd plays. lohn Humphrey, senior business major, appointed to Student Caucus. ci v Lflftfitwvl' 5 55 l 55 'lmff -1 1 l- :Sv-'V ' Kfv October Marcus Raslcin, coedirector ot the lnf stitute for Policy Studs, Xtashington. DC., is the lcex note spealcer at an ls- sues Conterence presented bx the New Democratic Coalition ot Ohio and the CPC in Cooperation with the Dixision of Continuing Education lnclira Candi arrested and charged with abusing her position as prime minister ot India. The US. Supreme Court upholds a Washington state court ruling that ho' mosexuals are immoral and max be tired trom their iobs. New policy requires students to show special tood serxice identification cards when using food coupons. Two stroh Brewery Companx repre- sentatives visit campus in response to a boycott supported by Student Caucus, lsent Interhall Council llxlCl and BUS boycott stemming trom an October calendar insert in the Slater depicting beer drinlcing customs in Nigeria. Dr. Donald Wonderlv, Carol Bersani and Dr. Brian L. Price presented with Distinguished Teaching Awards at the Alumni Association homecoming luncheon. Dr. Robert Frunilcin loses a case charg- ing ls5U with xiolation ot' due process ot law' during a WTS hearing on his dismissal trom the tacultx. The btroh Brewery Companx cancels its calendar insert program. Golding extencls Fall Quarter bx one weelc so xeterans max rec eixe their De- cember benefits Barbc-rton Cilx Councilman Xlbc-rt Cantora loses his council seal in a ree call election. lhree members ot rcicls group Lxnxrcl Slwnxrcl lcillc-cl in plane crash lxSU senior .Nlilce laxloi Iinishes murals ol XXizarcl ol U1 ancl XNQC Tic-lcls in Sluclc-nl Cienter llie new lnclian ainbassaclor to the United Slttlc-s, Nan: -X Pallchixala, speaks in Unixersitx 'Xuclitoriuin Iogeaethon hc-lcl to raise nionex tor lsing'lsc-nneclx C'c-ntei. WI November lazz pianist Charles A. Hoyt performs. Professors Dr. Allan Coogan, Barbara Child, Charles Green and Dr, Timothy Manley become laywers. The Science Fiction and Fantasy So- ciety sponsor the Son of the Three Stooges Festival. Regional meeting for Society of Crea- tive Anachronism. Olson and lohnson Halls present, with KIC, a Culture Week featuring cartoon- ist Chuck Ayers and poet Alex Gilden. The Michael Hennesy Mime and Music Theatre appears in University Audito- rium. Project DOVE's Women's Day features Mona Scott of TV 3. The 10th Annual Fall Jazz Festival fea- tures Charles Baker, the Tuesday Lab Band and the KSU Lab Band. President Carter signs an executive or- der allowing veterans to receive benefits winter break. Dennis Kucinich becomes mayor of Cleveland, voters kill instant registra- tion law. Student Caucus supports a KIC resolu- tion expressing displeasure with Cold- ing's role as director of Armco Steel. Fire causes about S1500 worth of dam- age to the Sigma Alpha Epsilon Frater- nity house, 222 University Drive. Red Cross Blood Drive. Black Watch begins publishing monthly. December Carl Benton, recent KSU graduate, leader in the Blanket Hill gym protest and one of the original members of the Kent Acting and Touring Company, and loan Tymchyshyn, graduate stu- dent, killed in a car accident in ln- diana, Contract signed for Heer Hall to be converted into a halfway house for mental patients in conjunction with the Western Reserve Psychiatric Re- habilitation Center. january Dr, Milton Wilson cuts his position as human relations dean to help cut uni- versity budget. Doug Raymond, head track and field and cross country coach announces resignation, effective in Iune, Retired IxSU professors loseph Morbito, former director of the School of Archif tecture, and Victor Ciraxereau, former marketing professor receive the Presi- dents Medal. Basketball Coach Rex Hughes tired bx University Athletic Director Don Du- fek, Assistant Coach Mike Boyd as- sumes head coaching duties tor re- mainder of season. U.S. Supreme Court turns down appeal from Ashby Leach that his right to a public trial was denied, Service held in the lsiva to celebrate the memories of Carl Benton and loan Tymchyshyn. Farrah Fawcett-Majors and Linda Ron- stadt top the N78 list ot the xvorld's IO worst-dressed women. The government reports the nation's unemployment rate has reached its lowest level in more than three xears, dropping from hifi percent to b.4 per- cent in December. In response to an Ohio Edison request, all university departments reduce non-essential energy use. Grand opening of the Loose Caboose, Eastxvay's deli, KSU graduate student Bill Appelbaum performs Piece xxith Oatmeal before ZOO in the Art Gallery University budget cuts announced, with about three-fifths of the more than one-halt million dollars in cuts from the academic sector coming from the Colleges of lQduc'ation and -Kris and Sciences, Discover lxent State Llnixersity Days begin at Chapel llill and other area malls as part ot an ettort to brighten the unnersitys image, lhree mayor snoxystorms camel classes a total ol tive and a halt days, lhree vice-presiclent positions abolished ele teclive lebruarv l. fffflff February lxIC President Chuck Litzell resigns. Dickee Betts and Great Southern storm the stage a half hour too late for their cancelled ballroom appearance. Thirteen residence halls and the health center without heat, light and water for up to I6 hours. ln a Faculty Senate address, President Golding calls for a unified voice this May 4, when the eyes of the country may well be upon us. Golding addresses Commuter and Off- Campus Student Organization QCOSOJ and lxIC, fielding questions for a two and a half hour session, Arts and Crafts Fair opens in Student Center. All-Campus Programming Board QACPBQ Winter Week includes toba- ganning at Bear Creek and a Boston Mills Ski. Dr. Fay R. Biles, vice-president for pub- lic affairs and development, resigns from position she termed one of the worst jobs in the United States. Flu epidemic hits. Student Caucus unanimously appoints ludy Zimomra to replace lulia Coch- rane, who resigned. Dorothy Fuldheim, outspoken Cleve- land television commentator, espouses her views in the liiva. Buildings close at ll pm. as energy situation worsens. Dr. Raghbir Basi, CPC director, resigns to take a one-year leave of absence without pay and join ex-KSU President Olds at Alaska Methodist University as a dean. Academic Calendar Commission rec- ommends semester switch for fall 79. Blood drive begins in Student Center. Andrew Gold concert cancelled be- cause of the fuel crisis. Three hundred vote in the Student Caucus allocations referendum survey. Dr. Vladimir Simunek, creator of the controversial kent Model, an economic forecasting device, discusses his pre- dictions for 1978 in three interviews on Cleveland's VVMMS-FM. Robert Stamps, one of nine students wounded May 4, 'l97O, files suit against Cuyahoga Community College, claim- ing the school denied him a position because of this background fri..- .fe March Vince Chickerella, Capitol University athletic director, named new head bas- ketball coachg resigns two days later. Ed Douma, Lake Superior State College basketball coach, appointed in his place. Arthur L. lxaltenborn, associate protes- sor of speech, retired and is designated emeritus professor ot speech by the Board ot Trustees. US. Supreme Court rules the EB-16 mil- lion civil suit against Gov. lames Rhodes and National Cuardsmen in- volved in the May -l shootings must be re-tried because a juror was threatened during the original trial in IU75, Golding raises student workers' pay from Sljllfhour to iv2,5ll!hourg raise retroactive to Ianuarv I. United Mine Workers accept third contract otterg strike otticiallv ended, MAY 4!GYM CONTROVERSY A Chronology MAY 4 - About 3,000 attend memorial rally in gym. Occupation of Rockwell l-lallg forma- tion of May 4 Coalition, presentation of eight demands: 'l5 moving of the proposed HPER facility 25 renaming of four buildings after the slain students 35 cancellation of classes every May 4 so students may participate in me- morials 45 retention of the Center for Peaceful Change QCPC5 as a separate entity 55 official recognition by the ad- ministration of the injustice of May 4 65 re-opening of collective bargaining 75 no punitive action taken against anyone who cut classes to attend May 4 activities 85 no punitive action taken against anyone participating in Rock- vvell Hall sit-in. MAY 5 - Mass Coalition meeting, vvith about 250 attending and about 2,000 participating in march around campus. MAY 12 - Rally on Commons with about 800 attending. About 300 demonstrators attend board meeting in Kiva, vvhere trustees: let student representatives speak on four of the eight demands, vote eight to one to approve the avvarding of con- tracts, direct Olds to name a com- mittee to consider naming the build- ings, delegate coordination of May 4 activities to university-wide committee, support CPC autonomy. Protesters begin camping out at gym site. MAY 16 - Provost lohn Snyder an- nounces CPC vvon't be put under Col- lege ot Arts and Sciences. IUNE 2 - Renaming of buildings voted down by special committee. IUNE 4 - National rally vvith about 600 attending, including Dick Gregory, William liuntsler, Mr, and Mrs. Martin Scheuer. IUNE 9 - Trustees loyce Ouirk and David Dix move to have gym site re- considered, motion tabled until Tent City is vacated. IUNE 25 - Olds visits Tent City, says construction will begin soon and area must be cleared IUNE 28 - Construction contracts signed. IULY 3 - Olds tells meeting of parents, faculty, trustees and students he vvon't move the gvm and that an iniuction against the protest vvill be tiled. IULY 7 - Trustees lanik and Iohnston and Vice President Dunn meet with legislators in Columbus to seek monev to move the siteg legislators noncom- mittal, Protesters Chic and ,Ntarls Cantora ar- rested at Stopher Hall tor disorderlv conduct and trespassingg about ISU demonstrate at police station. IULY 9 - Olds reads Tent Citv protes- ters 2-l-hour notice to vacate. IULY 10 - Special trustees meeting au- thorizes university otficials to seek court injunction against those oc- cupying the gym site. IULY 11 - A temporary injunction is- sued bv Portage Country Common Pleas Iudge loseph lxainrad bars protes- ters from the site and prohibits con- struction until a lulv ll hearing on a permanent injunction, About 250 protesters vote to be ar- rested, IULY 12 - IKM protesters arrested and charged with contempt ot court: re- moval trom the site takes two hours, IULY 14 - About I5 attend Coalition rally on Commons. IULY 15 - Lv-National Ciuarclsman Lynn Stovall, who was at lxent Mav 4, NTU, arrested on the hill tor tres- tlttsslfwl. IULY 17 - National Cluardsman tiarx C Pavlcov arrested on the hill tor tres- passing. IULY 21 W Hearing tor permanent in lui tion begins at Portage C ountx Coitt mon Pleas Court, IULY 22 - National rally on Coitttttolas, with ltltl--ltltl attendingg about ISU cross over the roped-ott area tor ltl-I3 minutesg no arrests made at time. IULY 25 - ludge Kainrad rules in favor of the University. U.S. Secretary of the Interior Cecil An- drus announces a study of the HPER site for possible designation as a his- toric siteg study to be completed March 1978, IULY 26 - Trustees vote 7-Z to begin construction immediately. Sheriff's deputies pick up three persons for second offenseg remaining 24 allowed to surrend by 8 a.m. IULY 27 - 15 turn themselves in at Portage County Courthouse. IULY 28 - Coalition lawyer appeals Kainrad's luly 25 decision at the 11th District Appeals Court. IULY 29 - At 3:35 a.m. 62 arrested at the site on charges of criminal trespass. At about 9 a.m., one person arrested after crawling under fence. At about 2 p.m. five ministers read a statement at the siteg four of them crawl under the fence with one other person and are arrested. ludge Thomas P. Lambros, Cleveland Federal District Court, issues a tempo- rary order to halt construction pending a hearing. Construction begins and is halted. IULY 30 - The 11th District Ohio Court of Appeals rejects the Coalition's appeal. AUG 1 - University attempts to get restraining order liftedp ludge Lambros orders both sides to negotiate. Interior official says study won't affect construction. AUG 2 - Lawyers and clients on both sides meet in Cleveland to discuss pos- sibility of securing a US. Department of Interior Fund to change the site. The United Faculty Professional Asso- ciation QUFPAJ, representing 419 mem- bers, files an appeal in 11th District Court for an order to stop construc- tion. AUG 3 - Student government urges full support of US. Interior Dept. study. Lawyers and clients meet with Lambros TVY for almost tour hours, Lambros orders both sides to return to courthouse the next day to resume talks. AUG 4 - Portage County Prosecutor Iohn Plough announces plans to ap- peal to KSU trustees to consider moy- ing the gym because he says the coun- ty faces a bill upwards of half a mil- lion dollars from legal entanglements. AUG 8 - Talks with Lambros stop, AUG 10 - The University and building contractor Bucky Arnes ask the US. District Court of Appeals, oth Circuit, to lift the temporary restraining order issued by ludge Lambros, charging the ban is costing them an excessive amount of money and claiming Lam- bros lacked jurisdiction. AUG 18 - ludge Lambros continues construction ban, to remain in effect until Coalition appeals his decision in Cincinnati, AUG 19 - Four Coalition members and a lawyer arrested in front of a down- town bar and charged with aggreyated riot and other misdemeanors. AUG 20 - About 1,500 attend national rally with loan Baez, about 600 march- ing to university and lsent police sta- tions in protest of arrests the night before, AUG 22 - Attorneys for KSU and Bucky Arnes ask oth Circuit Court to lift court order and affirm a decision by ludge Lambros allowing resumption ot construction. AUC 24 H Trustees disc uss proposal to relocate gxm annex in Unixersitx School, UB. -Xppeals Court ttuth Cirtuitl fetuses to act on Coalition's appeal, continues restraining order for ten days to alloxx appeal to LIS. Supreme Court, AUG 26 - llth District Court ot ,Xp- peals denies request ot t,IlP.fX in J-l decision. AUG 30 - Action tiled in Ohio Nu- preme Court asking halting ol con- struction until trustees tollow proper procedures regarding proper approval ot' gx m site selec tion. AUG 31 - Bill introduced in Ohio General Assembly to halt construction until national landmark study com- pleted. SEPT 1 H Request filed in US. Supreme Court asking stay of construction pending formal request for review of case until full court decides if con- struction should take place before ln- terior Dept. study completed. SEPT 3 - Supreme Court Iustice Potter Stewart refuses to bar construction. SEPT 5 -- About 300 Coalition members hold rally. SEPT 6 - Supreme Court justice Wil- liam I. Brennan orders construction halted until Coalition lawyers file a petition for a hearing. SEPT 7 - Lawyers for Alan Canfora and Thomas Grace file a motion in 6th Circuit Court of Appeals to block con- struction, stating construction could destroy evidence if the civil trial is sent back to Cleveland US. District Court. SEPT 8 - Action filed by American Civil Liberties Union QACLUJ in 6th Circuit Court of Appeals asking that Gov. Rhodes be prohibited from pro- ceeding with construction of the annex and that he be barred from in- volvement in the project on grounds of conflict of interest. justice Brennan lifts restraining order. SEPT 9 - Legislation to preserve site until Interior Department completes study introduced by Sen. lames Abou- rezk ID-SDJ. SEPT 11 - About 250 protesters tear down portion of fence, occupying the restricted area for about 15 minutes. SEPT 13 - The US District Circuit Court of Appeals tCincinnatij orders a new trial in the S46 million Kent State civil suitg Student Caucus urges non- violent support toward moving the gym. SEPT 14 - Golding offers a 12-point plan to commemorate the May 4 shootings, SEPT 15 - Informal construction delay if ,A was granted so pictures ot' the shootings site may be talsen by the ACLU tor evidence in the cixil damages trial, SEPT 16 - Coalition tiles another ap- peal tor a delay with lustice Stewart. SEPT 17 - Davey Tree Expert Co, moves two trees and digs out roots tor others, tour arrested tor intertering with the transplanting of a tree. SEPT 19 - Construt tion begins, Rally held, with about 100 present. Faculty Senate passes resolution sup- porting Golding! llepoint plan. SEPT 20 - Golding has discussion with Coalition leader Alan Cantora, with about -150 watching. SEPT 24 - Rally on Commons, with up to 1,500 attending, ending with march around campus where buildings are named and spray-painted tor the stue dents killed May 4, 1970. Several hundred rush to site, tear down fence and occupy areas tor about I5 or 20 minutes. Four persons arrested during the rally. SEPT 27 - At trustees meeting Golding given authority to regulate use ot campus grounds and other tacilities so that law and order are main- tiainedf' Group of students opposed to gym protest clean up rally damages. University olticials consider decertitying the Revolutionary Student Brigade and the Colloquia Guest Series as otticial groups in connettion with Saturdayfs rally Gov, Rhodes tiles request in UCS Court ot Appeals ttnth Circuitl to dismiss all claims against him stemming trom the lSl70 shootings. SEPT 29 - lawyers tor Student Caut Us asls Ohio Supreme Court to set a hear- ing date tor their lawsuit tontending trustees didnt tollow statutory and university proc edure in selec ling site, OCT 5 - Construction ot a Ill-loot high tent e around site. Ohio Supreme Court orders trustees to respond to Ciauc us suit. OCT 13 - Dean tor Student Lite Riche ard Bredemeier announces RSIS wont W be deregistered, warning against fur- ther violations of regulations. OCT 18 - Barberton Councilman Al- bert Canfora defeated in a recall elec- tion stemming from his arrest on the gym site luly 12. OCT 19 - Golding issues a Presidential Notice and Order setting conditions for rallies, marches and demonstra- tions. OCT 21 - Portage County Common Pleas ludge l. Phillip lones grants the University a temporary restraining or- der restricting all rallies marches or demonstrations for the period of Oct. 22-24. OCT 22 - About 500 protesters attend rally in violation of the temporary re- straining order, 250 riot-equipped po- lice, including mounted sheriff's depu- ties, keep protesters from remaining in one place, using tear gas several times. OCT 24 - Rally held at Student Center plazag seven students reading the First Amendment arrested. OCT 26 - ludge lones grants the Uni- versity a preliminary injunction restric- ting all rallies, marches or demonstra- tions. NOV 5 - Ohio ACLU Director Benson Wolman holds a small demonstration on the Commons in direct violation of the injunction. NOV. 9 - Golding withdraws his request for a permanent injunction prohibiting rallies on campus. DEC 22 - May 4 Commemoration Committee, chaired by CPC Director Raghbir S. Basi, recommends a visiting lecture program as part of a seven- page commemoration plan. IAN 3 - Ten percent of the gym com- pleted. WX Opinions After May 4, i977 Kent State was in the news once again, and the question could be heard nation-wide: What do you think of the Kent State gym? In lanuary we took a small survey. The survey is by no means scientific, but merely represents the opinions of some of the people affected. The stu- dents, faculty and townspeople were selected at random, the thoughts given are not facts, but simply the views ofa few. DO YOU THINK THE GYM SHOULD HAVE BEEN BUILT ON THE CHOSEN SITE? Students - No, because it was an ob- vious opening for controversy. There was other ground available. It was a beautiful area and shouldn't have been destroyed. Yes. The gym is not being built on the actual site. Faculty - No. Building the gym on that site was insensitive to what happened there. Residents - Yes. That ground is not sacred in any way, shape or form. lt is not the actual site of the shootings. No. Building it on another site would have eliminated conflict. WHAT PORTION OF THE STUDENTS DO YOU THINK WERE AGAINST THE BUILDING OF THE GYM INITIALLY? Students - A very small percentage. 'lOe2O'Zi were active either for or against the gym while the other BOM were apathetic. Faculty - Very few Kent students were involved. The great bulk iust wanted to get their school work done, A large number of the protesters were from elsewhere, Residents - A small portion were in- volved, which indicates how wrong the issue was. Not enough were involved. The administration announced their in- tention in the summertime when few students were around because they ex- pected a reaction. By the fall when more students arrived, many felt it was a lost cause. WHAT DO YOU BELIEVE MOTIVATED THE PROTESTERS? Students - Rememhranfe ot the pastg nostalgia for the htl's. Anger at the injustice that had been done, It became a symbol of the estalae lishment and their red tape that many pounced on, Faculty - There was such a variety of motivations, A small portion were moved hy a radical cause, others desir- ed to preserve the site tor moral rea' sons, some had aesthetic argument and others iust xvanted to oppose the ad' ministration. Residents - They iust xvanted a cause to have something to do, They don't xxant the tragedy ot the vietnam War and the Nixon era to he forgotten. IN WHAT PERSPECTIVE SHOULD 1970 BE REMEMBERED? Students - The event should he ref memhered as a tragedy, not a murder. lt should he commemorated as an in- justice. The National Guards had no rights to have bullets in their guns. The events here at lsent thanged the course ot history. It marked the end ot the student activist movement. Faculty - The sense ot the tragedy should never he lost. Wfe should ltnoxx what happened and understand in the tuture, Classes should he Cancelled that day and a service conducted with a variety ot speakers. Residents - It shouldnt he covered up, hut it's in the past and doesnt need to he controlling Isent today There should he some lvind ol me' mortal to remind people that the gov- ernment does xvhat it xvants to, People so easily torget the had taste that xxas in everyoni-'s mouth at that time. lhe tight against Nixon and the Yietnam War should he rememluerecl. lt should he a national landmark. KWH AULD ACQUAINTANCE Brought to mind We often imagine celebrities are something more than human - that they will never die but will entertain and amuse us forever. As an unusual number of celebrities died this past year, we were hit with reality. In the entertainment world, the most mourned of deaths was that of Elvis Presley, the rebellious swinging legend of rock-and-roll. Beginning his career in the 5tl's as a singer and idol of millions of teen-aged girls, Presley won fans with such hits as Heartbreak Ho- tel, Love Me lender and Hlailhouse Rock. At the end of IEI77, he had sold 7tltJ million records - more than any recording star in history. But on August to, at the age of -ll, he died a lonely and depressed man. On October I-l, Bing Crosby, one of the most popular singers in history, died at 73. The Crooner was known for his even temper and mellow bari- tone, but he will be best remembered for his ageless rendition of White Christmas. Sir Charles Chaplin, the Little Tramp of the silent movie era, died on Christmas Day. Often called the Prince of Pantomimef' Chaplin danc- ed and stumbled his way into the hearts of millions by playing the little man at odds with the system. He re- ceived an honorary Oscar from the Motion Picture Academy of Arts and Sciences in Hollywood. Comedian Zero Mostel, best remem- bered for this role as Tevye in Fiddler on the Root, died in September at 62. His chubby figure and unfailing wit made him a favorite iokeman of his time. He, like Chaplin, was accused of Communist sympathies and suffered in his career when he was blacklisted. Movie actress loan Crawford died on May lil, ILJ77, at 69. Crawford made it from silents into talkies, which was no easy task, and was the epitome of the glamorous Hollywood star. She was best remembered for her role in the movie Mildred Pierce, which won her an Academy Award. lhe King of Insults, Groucho .x A 4, vp, Sff IF-1 ei ff: .lx .1 - If I5 YNY mm 1 ,NX 45351: A X X 1 I WN fffff ADDITIONS Gym annex 4 'J , , v L E KW NEW PROGRAMS Pan African Studies Kent State's Center of Pan African Culture, which houses the Institute for African American Affairs QIAAAJ and the Department of Pan African Studies CPASJ, is the center for black ex- pression and awareness on campus. What was once a six-room dwelling in Lowry Hall is now located on the first floor of Oscar W. Ritchie Hall. The center houses classrooms, offices, a li- brary, a lounge and a theatre which is primarily used for cultural programm- ing bythe department. Black studies at KSU is a different educational strategy for black people in particular and students in general, said Dr. Edward Crosby, director of IAAA. An increase of 420 students enrolled in courses offered this year supports Crosby's statement. Black studies is a liberation experience as opposed to a cognitive experience, he said. The value lies in the ability of young stu- dents to go into other majors and get the necessary skills that are applicable based on the students' vested inter- ests. Pan Africanism developed from two schools of thought: the Pan Africanism of Africa and Pan Africanism that is an outgrowth of nationalism. The educa- tional name for Pan African Studies is unidisciplinary. According to Wiley Smith Ill, acting director of IAAA, Pan African Studies is educational as opposed to Pan Afri- can. Through the courses offered stu- dents can embrace the educational concept of Pan Africanism, he stated. IAAA now offers a degree program in Pan African Studies under the Col- lege of Arts and Sciences. The program consists of 62 hours credit in fine arts, literature and the philosophy of being, history in social sciences, and research and community development. Anne Graves, assistant director of IAAA, cited two reasons for the grant- ing of departmental status to black studies. The psychological legitimacy is very important, she said. The fact that we were not a department fright- ened people away from taking courses S , fX':1 5 5-kfxsli 4' X7-in x, s ,X - f r in the center. Also, we wanted to give legitimacy to our faculty. Along with that comes status and the privileges that regular faculty have. Sherry Mack, a Pan African Studies major, said, I decided to major in PAS because the field is broad enough to include a study of minorities as op- posed to black people. The courses help me relate to other people's prob- lems academically, socially and culturf ally along with my area of concentra- tion in psychology and sociology. How is the educational strategy dif- ferent in the Institute? Education is every minute of the day all around you, commented Hul- da Graham, PAS instructor. We teach students that you have to go beyond the classroom experience and discover the truth. We hope that students ask and answer who am I, where am I and what is my purpose for being here. Mark White, Black United Students treasurer, stated that Institute courses provide students with the necessary motivation and personal assistance that students normally would not re' ceive in other departmentsf' Most black students view the In- stitute as their student center. IAAA is different, said Rhonda Cilling, a fresh- man student enrolled in IAAA courses. I can come to the Institute and relax between classes, or there is always an interesting conversation going on in the lounge. Women's Studies Mothers, young students and middle-aged women - some of them devout feminists, others just beginning to realize themselves as women - come together in Introduction to Women's Studies. Sharing the common bond of femaleness, they gather for personal development and academic learning. I'm not sure how much personal growth there is as opposed to in- tellectual growth in class, said Dr. Michele Zak, director of Human Re- source Utilization and chairman of the Womens Studies Curriculum Com- mittee. Fall quarter the class made its way out of the experimental division and into the College of Arts and Scien- ces forthe first time. The book used in class was a collec- tion of works that she and a colleague edited. The focus of the class and the book is interdisciplinary. One chapter deal- ing with the subordination of women traces the long history of women as the second sex and examines reasons early tribesmen might have had for domination. Another deals with eco- nomic theories on the repression of women, and one studies the social ac- culturation that molds people into masculine and feminine roles. Yet an- other chapter discusses creative women, and the final chapter outlines the history of the women's movement. Zak said she wanted her students to get a new understanding about the historical and social causes for things being as they are. I hope what will come of this is a recognition of the complexity. She said she wanted to get away from the concept of women's studies as informal rap sessions. By estab- lishing a structured certificate program of IO or more credit hours, organizing a research unit, securing catalog space in the library and continuing a film and lecture series, she hopes to make women's studies one of the most vi- able intellectual and academic pro- grams at KSU. I believe in the power of education of the intellect. I don't think there can V be personal development without it, she said. Learning a historical background helps some women feel a bond with all other women. I discovered I had sisters back in Londonderry, said Betty Willmott, a self-educated 53-year-old, referring to the poor in Victorian times. I would've helped them, or been one of them, And just as a background broadens feelings of sisterhood, the study of women also gives individuals a chance to focus on themselves. Lisa Wright, a senior sociology major, said she be- came aware that her self-image was not what she wanted it to be. Now she is trying to unlearn the old role and learn a new one. Margaret Wickmiller, a sophomore business-marketing major, said the class made her more aware of ster- eotypes, but most important is that people are people. It doesn't matter if they're male or female She said it makes her want to change the wav people feel when their attitudes are against women, Many a woman whose con- sciousness has been raised feels the same way. Some experience feelings of anger or resentment. Wright admitted to feeling a little angry. I think it was unfair to be brought up on one path of what my role should be. Sometimes I resent that I wasn't encouraged to think of myself, for myself. But I feel lucky to be learning it now. lt made me angry that l'd been stupid and allowed this to happen. I was angry with men and then came to realize that they were victims of the culture, too. Those were Willmott's original feelings when she first became aware, nine years ago, of how sup- pressed women are. Having gone through this class, I'm mad at men again. They know they're being chauvi- nisticg they know the culture has done it to them. Men need to go through this class! The students and Zak thought it might have been too inhibiting for the women if men were in the in- troductory class, but they agreed an exchange between men and women on the subject would benefit everyone, !fffff ENTERTAINMENT Spring diversions in 1 RUEIV N-.--..ux..W.A,5 .fpfm , au WW Flaunt launt w ' 'U N. . ,J xx-n.' -L .5211 1: 'e su. ral' n , -, '-'A v - 1'. wifi, . .A 4 T40 gbx 61, -11 , s Q-Y U W f 6 K im! ,f r , x ' Q-45,4 . f' N Q., '. v Alger Hiss FALL AMUSEMENTS Country Wife 75 - -5 Yuxvpsu I Q -.- ii-- X55 Picnic Andy Pratt lesus Christ Superstar X- -wii' .Iwi l ff inane---U f O Q ,J if -1 . ,gr The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in- the-Moon Marigolds sump 'Q Q + Mg 41 If X X X Q X .- QR -A f.. ' Q- x x . Je Vx ,,,,.,,Qn wsmwwxx IQ-Vey ' f' X v- 'wr' -x-.4 wx X333 Q S Larry CoryeII!AIphonse Mouzon Band Larry CoryeII!AIphonse Mouzon Band Marshall Tucker Band ,WWW Tower of Power XM Winter pastimes That Championship Season X Q 0 lx L e- X Deadly Ernest and the Honky Tonk Heroes yn- Alex Bevan 7' Candida yin. The Crusaders m,N Dave Mason XM PHOTOGRAPHERS' FAVORITES Dave Andersen Photo Editor and Chief Photographer 'N tt-Milf Dave Andersen Photo Editor and Chief Photographer Photo Editor and Chief Photographer Dave Andersen Dave Andersen Photo Editor and Chief Photographer W! Laurie Unger fl!!! Lynne Sladky Photo Assignment Editor And Jin- Lynne Sladky Photo Assignment Editor XM fi. I er S Darrell White IWW lan Weaver Gus Chan 5x94--,, .5-.aa ..2'-L ' J'LY, ,,.- 4- i -.- me-'., v' Tootie Skaarup MW! Scott Krol .v-' 0,917 . 1.l u KW!!! F k F. Zlzzo lr. P d t Editor ISO Q AND I !1PI:AK OUT ' FOR PIEACIE JUSTICE MEN ' ' fl? -.gi 2 . f WWW! Frank F. Zizzo lr. Production Editor 'Nl Y, f.,1.-M-u-w:a4lf -:zz - v'3g::f:hN-eef:-e--- , , -, ff - -.---..,-4,----f-- ----N---A--1-H: ---'VlQA--.-- -- ---. -.-- -- A -N .-4-. ,-Y-.-,:,:-...-..-,W -I-. -- in cr ---V Y 1 'gf - 5.1,-'gf' ix W Y, Y V V 4 --- ' ffl-'33 m?A:fff-Hi' :Q A- :- :::Er':?','1-ffiallar., , 11:11 ffizg, ::n.,,V - 1- , 1-L V , -- ,Tn .A ,,,.........-Y 1 . ,Y4, , ., ,,, J nsudhut H, , ...,i':: :nur wxaadinal- i W V dr-5 L- f - ,I V ,i -, 5 . Ti. - ' , Q . . 5 1,f'.:xL.,,, .- r A 5. . .. 1, , ' ' '- 51?-,gil M.. V- , , - - .V . . . . , ,, N -- w,.M.,,w- 4...n - - ., ' ' . . V 4. f f - -1 -.Q :P-' ' ' George Ducro WW!! 'mae'- T'W1 T Y !' 4 3w'Y lffv ' I ' T 'T'1f 'F 2 Y T' 'f f t g! L Y 3 Y '!'T if' 1 T9 -f.!Q T g T,T 1 - . - v -..-,...-.1,,.,. .. ,..,.,----1, 7 fl ir v ! P n Q W WK IW If Dave Watkins THE EDITORS THANK: john Urian, Raymond Tait, Tom Rees and john Sullivan of Hl!Keller, Sam Fields, Gerald Schneider and Bob Herz of Delma Studios, Student Publications Policy Committee, Doug Moore, Uni- versity News Service, Paul Mosher, pur- chasing agentg Dr. Richard Bredemeir, Dean for Student Life, Warren Graves, student accounts coordinator. Dr. Murvin Perry, director, School of journalism, Phyllis Thomas, secretary, Sharon Marquis, Mary Smith, Daily Kent Stater secretaries, Greg Moore, Henry Beck, Frank Ritzinger, journalism faculty, Charles Walker, john Buchan- an, art faculty. Terry Barnard, Sports Information, The Daily Kent Stater, Robert Malone, security director, Howard ll, Howard and Verna Lee Ficke, Neal Wisner, Anne Dorrian, Debbie Armstrong, Brenda Lang, Phyllis and Frank Zizzo Sr., Diane and Doug lones lr., loanne and Danny Nickles, Margie and Oliver Cabana, Phil Hales, Kathy Carlson, Dick and Mary lane Cone, Deadly Earnest, Amy Radel, Mark Weisman, Skip Schultz, Donald and Georgia Sladky, Thurston, Ray and Barbara Andersen, Gus Chan. WX STAFF Editors Cindy L. Ficke, Editor Charlie Brill, Advisor Gerry Allen, Business Manager Lynne Sladky, Photo Assignment Editor W. . ,,,.,, N gl E N N . 6 , M N326 01 - - Q3 ,J ilqz' 6 'W m Betsy Cabana, Graphic Designer Alice Cone, Copy Editor Frank F, Zizzo Ir., Production Editor Dave Andersen, Photo Editor and Chief Photographer lil!!! Photographers lan Weaver Dell Vouvvie Greg Lewis Doug Kingsbury Scott Krol Leon Williams Gus Chan Darrell White X loe Sleriger Steve Lerner W Writers Sharon Pala L FRONT ROW: Iudy Goldmang Denise Mellilig Doris Schwanerp Connie Schultz SECOND ROW: Marvin Stearnsg Amy Radeig Laurie Mazerovg Andrew Mikulag Shirley Sorice Debbie Armstrong Sally Burnell 1 I W YOUR COLLEGE DEGREE How much did it cost? Each year approximately 4,200 sen- iors are graduated trom kent State Uni- versity. The average graduate has spent well over Sillijtltl for his education. Only about l,5-lil seniors 132 percentl take part in the commencement activi- lies, For a cap and gown each spends Ebtijll, Those who do not take part may graduate ahsentee and have their di- plomas mailed to them. From the first thirteen cents the stu- dent spends to mail a letter to KSU requesting admissions material, the money adds up. First, the ACT fee of S5850 must be paid along with the ap- plication tee tnonretundalnlel of 535. Next, the student and his parents pay S65 to spend two days in kent during the summer viewing the campus and filling out his schedule. Dorm students are asked to dip into their pockets lor their parents'l for F5500 per quarter on the average for room and hoard ldouble rooml. This adds up to 53,1500 it the student stays in the dorm tor two years, Otf'campus living is not too much cheaper, unless you live at home. Lest one thinks commuters who live at home have it easier, the Commuter and Ollecampus Student Organization estimates that the commuter spends an average ol 55 per week to get to and from campus, which totals S165 per year. Repairs, tolls and snow tires also lighten the commuters' wallets. But the student would have to live and eat regardless ot' attending college, so perhaps I should not count this in adding up the expenses a student in- curs. However, it is common know- ledge that rent near a college is higher than rent elsewhere. Moreover, the merchants have captive customers for heer and wine. CIT the student has one pizza a week, he will have consumed at least M98 worth ot pizza in tour years.l Something else for the student to consider in adding up the bill is the lost income from not working full-time during those tour years. Approximately 'lsSl,tlUtJ is forfeited. Moreover, in some job areas other high school graduates mav gain senioritv over the College stu- dent. If the student takes out a loan for some ot his expenses, he adds an inter- est Charge ot S percent or more tde- pending on tvhere he borroxxs and when he pats the money bacskl. Turf tion and bus tees tor the past ll quar- ters at lsSU have totalled ?53,5l,3, tEac'h time the lrustees approve a 3915 tuition infrease the student pavs an extra FlQl8tl over four vearsl this xear ott-campus residents tmost uppercslassmenl paid an additional Stu per quarter tor bus service ,-Xnvtime a student dropped a class or added one late he was charged SS or SIU, respecstivelv. And those xxho changed mayors may have had to add an extra quarter or txvo ot' tuition and expenses to complete their degrees. Lab tees, gym tees and the cost ot equipment dip almost as deep into the studentls pockets as the bookstore does tor textbooks, .-X Unixersitv Bookstore spokesperson estimated the average student spends approximatelv Htl per quarter on textbooks, For notebooks and supplies the average student mav have to spend betxxeen S5 and Siu, more it he ttlusl pav to have his term papers txped. It he is majoring in archi- tecture, art or photographx he can usuf allv expect to spend an extra Sltltl to Sltltl per quarter Finally, the student must pav a tee to graduate, Alter ttlllng out an appli- cation tor graduation torm and paving a Sill tee, the student ls all set But then more expenses axxait him lt he tlaletitls lim ttllllllltlt' cali lci gtaclttcilt' school, he must pax tc-es tor graduate aptitude tests, application tees and more tuition hills It he enters the xxorld ot business, he txill need a ie' sume, lhe cost to have Stl resttntes printed is approximatelx ?'l3,3tl, Ut course, he must also but appropriate clothes tor mtc-ixiexxs. lhis could cost l1lmStatllc1lSllltl lhe graduate max xxanl lo announc c- his graduation lt will cost him S-tyll tor I-l announcements and llc each to mail them, What tltit-s this all acld .up lo' Xpproximatelx 'Sl-5,-lit! lor tout xeais ot college Vtllltdlltllt lor his el loits thc- student ic-ceixes tree cottee W and doughnuts before commencement lunless the budget is tight and that has to be cut out this yearl, and a blue diploma with his name and degree dis- played inside. ls an education worth it? That is up to each individual. But it seems lilce too much money for a girl to spend it she is only loolcing for an MRS. degree. Congratulations Seniors Mr. 84 Mrs George Aldous Mr. ti Mrs A.I. Allen Mrs, Mary Allen Mr. N Mrs. Glenn Altschuld Mr A Mrs. August Argento Hr. lilorence Austin Mr N Mrs. Franlc l. Baba Mr. QQ Mrs. lohn Benson Mr N Mrs. William E. Best Mr. A Mrs. Anthony Gapuano Mr. N Mrs George DeGrescse Mrs, Sue A. Devon Mr. N Mrs. Emilio DiGiac'omantonio Mr. N Mrs. Donald Dreier Mr. gl Mrs. lerry lortier Mr. M Mrs. Willard Garlow Albert 54 Shirley Gearhart Mr. N Mrs. Bert Gliatta lxathleen 64 Verne Goodwin Mr. 54 Mrs. Marlin Grassgreen Mr. N Mrs. Russell I. Gregory Helen I. Grey Dr. N Mrs. Wm. B. Harris Mr. 84 Mrs. Doran lmmel stanley la FFIS Mr. 54 Mrs. M. lohnson Mrs, Leland L. lones lranls 84 Dorothy lxastellic M Mrs. William P, lxing Blanche Kinsey Mr. Mr 84 Mrs lohn liiraly Mr Sf Mrs Robert L. lxotzbacher Mr M Mrs loseph Ixrupar Mr 61 Mrs loseph A. lsucelc Ch rles 8 Ava La Rocca ixll' :Nlr N M Nl F5 Mrs loseph Laveclc Eugene Lemmers Mr N Mrs ML. LlDClLllSl Mr Sc Mrs Howard W. Lorson Sr. Mr N Mrs Paul Lynch Mr 84 Mrs lohn l.ynn Mr St Mrs lohn D. Lyter Mr 84 Mrs. Victor Majestic Mr. 84 Mrs. Stiphen A. Marton 'WWW Mr. Mr, Mr. Mr. Mr Alf. Leo Mr Mr ixll' Nlf. Nlf. hilt. Mr. Mr. Arnold L. Mason 1 i VVm, T, McCann Walter Melloncamp Paul C, Menster Merrill Mossbarger Nicholas Mudriclx Eileen Nittslxoft Clillord E. Osborne Thomas Owen Edward I. Ozog William Glenn Phillips row Pitts Vincent I. Pizzino Basil Prater N Mrs. A Mrs N Mrs A Mrs A Mrs A Si Mrs, ti Mrs. Ai Mrs. A Mrs. Wood AQ Mrs. A Mrs. .St Mrs. Robin Ellen Roskoph Mr. bk Mrs. i Carl E. Randles Glen N. Routhier 54 Helen Schaub Charles Searl Nevin A. Short Paul Sieving on lohn L. Sleeman Warren Smith Leornard Stoffer Russell Stuclaey Robert Stephen Tauh Harold Thompson lack Thompson I.T. Warner Cliff Waters Leland T. Weller Gordon Wilcox Kenneth Williams Lloyd C. Wilson Matt Yanoxx William Q. Young lr. George W. Mr. 81 Mrs. Mr, 64 Mrs, Mr. 84 Mrs. Debra Sim Mr. AQ Mrs, Mr, be Mrs. Mr. 81 Mrs. Dr. Si Mrs. Mr. ti Mrs Mr. 8 Mrs Mr. 81 Mrs Mr. 84 Mrs Mr. 51 Mrs Mr, 54 Mrs Mr. 84 Mrs Mr. 54 Mrs Mr. 8 Mrs Mr. 84 Mrs Mr, 8 Mrs Mr. 54 Mrs loseph Zaman Mrs. E. l-lorin Mr. di Mrs. Samuel Frankel WW!! SENIORS Art 84 Sciences Nancy Abbott Gwen Alcorn Iskander Alexandar Carol Allen Sharon Allen William Allman Glenn Altschuld Kenneth Anderson Nancy L. Anderson Charliene Arrington Susan Augustitus Roberta Balcilq Linda Baney Karen Bankoyich Barbara Barker Frances Barnett Leslie Bass Sandra Batke Diana Bavvn Iohn Beabout Kim Beckwith Bonnie Berger Linda Bishop Dougless Bitler Richard Blakely Susan T. Bloir Henry Boltuc lane Bon William Bon lames Brand Marcia Brant Fred Breidigam David Broman Karen Brown Lisa N. Brown Deborah Bryan Gregory Bufford Paul Burke Thomas N4 Burrows Betsy Busch Barbara Busher Robert Calabretta Catrina Callison Vicki Campbell Lynne Carlstrom Scott Carson Nancy Castellucio Barbara Castner Nick Ceglia Denise Chensky Mark Cianchetti Autry Clark Donald Closter lacquelyn Cohen Eileen Colan Paul Colavecchio Iames Conrady Cary Cook lane! Coolnian Marty Couclriet WW! Van Crabtree Deborah Crawford Kip Crites Karen Cunningham Debra Cutrell William Cutshall lean Darnasiewicz Mary Daugherty leffrey S. Davis Lynn Davis Priscilla Davis Pamela Dean joseph De Capite Marianna Deeken Malcolm T. Delileice Rita Dent Chris DeStefano Daniel Diemert Lonnie Dittrick Steven Dobry Michael Donnelly Harold Downing Ted Drockenbrod Iohn Dunning Kathleen Dunning Rosalyn Ellis Scott Ellsworth Eddie Estrada loe Eerrato l-lanel First '4J1 f 753 fa-rv 479 4' 'svn' Y' .4 X7 'L' Fleming Douglas R, Folkert Faith Forchione Philip Forhan Debbie Fortney Timothy Frank Ann Frankel Kenneth Frankel Linda Fratcher Susan Freed Robert Freedman Gaylord Freshley Alan Galant lanet K. Gallavvay Robert Gates George Georgiafandis Hal Geren Susan Graham Kim Green Rob Griffith Denise Grittovv Rebecca Grunick Brenda Gruver Barbara Guidos Bernadette Habib Richard Harcsa homas Haren Sheila Hart Stephen Haupl Nanci Hayes Wil!!! Lyle Haylett Charles Haynes lohn Hazlip Wendy Hellinger Marvin Henderson Nancy Hendryx Michael Heywood Patrick Hickey Iacqueline Hicks Christine Hischak Michael C. Hoague Melissa Hobbs Nance Hockstetler Gerald Hoffman Phillip Holland E. Anne Holmes Michael Homlitas Sandra Hopwood Vicky L. Householder Patricia Huckaby Dale Huelsman Ann Hutchison Harry lacob Anita lenkins Rebecca lenkins Marie lohnson Milus lones Denise lordan David Kaye Maggie Keller 11 'tx . I f -x lull I Dorothy Kendall Patty lierek Patrick Ising Donna liissling Laura Klein Kathryn linoke Ronald Koch Dennis Koyach loann lioyacich Daniel liubiak Ioanne liwait Margaret Laing Patricia Lanese Doris Lange Charles LaRocca Peter l. Layeck lerome Lazar Vickie Lemasters Rick Lenimers Thomas Lengyel David Leyenson Wayne Lewis Charissa Lihertin Lynn Likes William Logothetis Lisa A, Lunic h Anthony A, Lusc re Malia Mc Aclanis Iames Mt Carthy lohn Mcffullotigh W Jaime McGee Charlotte McKines Elizabeth Maag lill Macoska Paul Malesick ll Andy Malitz Clary Marhofer Donald Marik Celeste Marinipietri Margaret Martelle William Marthaler Cathy Martin Rick Matas Michael Maynard David Mehosky Terrence Meissner Donald Merkel Molly Miller Nanette Miller Kathy Milligan Virginia Moore lohn L. Morrison Stewart Moser Merrill Mossbarger Lynn Murfin Nanci Nichols lohn Nisky Kevin Noon Debbie Norton Donald Oakes 13 g QU' -sl i ,J .f lo ftpx fa -W 12' QF 'I' LX A Robert O'Donriell Tim Osborne lxeRita Owens Sandra Ox ley lellrey Papa lxellie Pegorsch William iwfott Perkins Chris Petersen lames Phillips Xferonica Plwinriessee Susan Piribek lxatlwy Pittalx Bradley Pitzer Ixareri Plummer David Plute Dori Powers Thomas Powers Stephany Prezgay Mary Purola Paul Ramp lxalriie Reichert Rifomi Larry Riddle kerry Riley Rirlmrcl Rmgler Barliarci Rolnluim llieri-sa Rolnins llellra Rock Amy Roelaun lx Ri-lm ca Roll W! Sherri Rosichan Robin Roskoph Bruce Roush Ruth Ann Ruff Howard Rutstein Margaret Rutledge Mary Rzewnicki Iohn Sacco Leslie Sahbagh Rodney Sanders Karen Santoro Pamela Sargent ludy Savage Shirley Schendel Elida Schiayone Keith Schlaich Cheryl Schmid Donna Schneider Kurt Schoeppler Michael Schuh Donna Seihert Barry Seybert Susan Senchalx Nora Seresun George Sevich lay Shafer Crystal Shorter Pam Shoup Karen Simko Fred Skok ' c KH! 9 :vi 'x S' lxeith lohn Sniedi Robert Smith Robert Smith Michael Snabo Mary Lynne Soltis Cheryl Sosenko Barbara Sosnowslxi Laura Stacller Rolfe Stange Cary Stanley larnes Stein Cathy Stenroos Douglas Stewart Suellen Stiles Charles Stocknian Linda Strait Mary Lyhn Streza Nelson W, Strong lll Scott Stuclxey Lynne Sutton David Szuter Susan Stroia Susan Taft leresa lansey lxaren Taylor I'. laxlor Diane lt-clit lt l irrx It-ronie lm-rt-bi lXll'l'x llioinpson Illl lollr-x Timothy Tornabene Audrey Trout Perry Trunick Bernard Tuerler Marlene Tufts Karen Turner ShaVonne Karen Turner B. Uhlenhake Andrea Ulrich Laurie Ukelson Claire Van Aken Timothy Vandersommen Marlene Vargo Wendy Walker Mary Anne Walsh Larry Waters Thomas Watkins Kenneth Weber Paul Weber Debra Wellemeyer Pamela West Tim Westfall Michael Whalen Shelley Wheat Harold F. Wherley Ir. Brian White Margaret Whitehouse Kathryn Williams Regina Wilson Gayle Wohlers fi 82' ff-in cf' Robert Wollram Deborab Woods Lisa Wright Sally Wrklcb Maurice D, Wyckoff Mic'l1aelYaksic' Barb Young Gay Young llll Yubaniak Donna Zebroski Andrea Zeren Amy Zimmerman Glenn Zugebar Business Administration Thomas Abfall Gerald I. Allen lulie Allen lulie Anderson Scott Andreani Timothy Angbrandt Andrew Ash Craig Bailey Bradley Barnes john Beck lan Berg Russell F. Berzin Kevin Blanchard Brian Blazina Iames Bokar Richard Bondy Richard Brady Robert Brinley Lisa I. Brown Bess Bruno lamey Bryan Kathy Buehrle Penny Burdette Thomas Burr Robert Byram Margie Caldwell Nick Camino Stephen Campbell Susan Capuano Paul Cardarelli ir? Q 4 i .yx 1-5 is Philip Carlon Brian Casey Tom Chapman kevin Coe Charles Colwell Elizabeth Condon Edward Cooper Bradley Cowan Thomas M, Cowen left' Craigo Roh Crock Michael Croft Iulia Cvelbar Barbara loahhe Dailey Gregory Dalling Kathy Dehrierll loseph Destro Debra Dondrea Antoirietie M. Drda lxathy Dunham Michael Eberly Isabel l. Ehasz Mirhael Elder Georgette Elias lane Erickson Richard liay Cheryl lc-ld:-r David lc-lit e Roy lergtiwn lost-ph liiqurslxi fffff leffery Fisher Greg Flaherty Mark Flash Karen Ford Wendy Fortier Richard Fox Lynn Freitag Gladys Gaffney leffrey Gentile Maureen Gesing Mary Lou Giancola Robert Glatzhofer Stephen Glick Brenda Goldner Robert Goldsmith Lillian Gonzalez Timothy Gosline Richard Gould Brian Greenberg Roger Greene leffrey Gueulette Kevin Hannah Emanuella Harris Wyatt Harris lxenneth V. Hastings, lr. Charles Hawkins Carolyn Herren Kathy Himes Bruce Hockenberry William Hookvvay Xl Q loseph Hooley William Hoover Edward Ir Horvat Bradley Hostetler Tim Hughes Lido ldio Larry lntihar leff lronside Kathy laklitch Rhonda larrett Robert leslxe Thomas lesko Debra Kates lacob Kerns Susan lierns jeffrey King Werner liostendt David Leber Dave Ledgerwood Ray Lee lohn Lilluis Ierry Limes leanne Linquist Cathy Loudon Deborah Lowry Richard Lyter lohn Mcxklarney Rolwrl McCforinir larnr-N Mc'CH-ary, lr Mic hat-l lx'lcC,Jee- W Kevin Mcllraith Tvvila McKinnon Ioey McMahan Cary Majestic lane Marahle Laura Marchhanlq Kent Marshall Ioseph Marulli Sandra Mastran Gregory Matthews lacqueline Means lohn Melton Anita Michaels Bonnie Mitchell William Moffett Michael Monaco Rosanne Morahito Bob Morrison Kim Mullen I-le nrietta Omo-Ayo Nabulele Kevin Newman Frank Nicotera Bruce E, Noll lames D. Norman leftrey Nypaver Patrick O'Connor Buddy D. Osborne Roseanne Paika Anthony Paoletta LouAnn Partington 8' fl QT? .f' QW 40 f T Cary Pocflwiu lseyin Pelanda Michael Pi-lras Ronald Pvlmslsy Don Plath Sandra Polirlwml Steplwn Popc- David Pulls Bruce Pyvlia Patrick M, Quiglr-y Louis Radvcky le-an Ramirez Richard S, Ranalli leanne Raymondi Steve Reichert Nancy Rocco Linda Roselnlylum Philip CJ, Ross Reno Rubeis Rhonda Ruiener Mary Rung Maxinv Russ Mary Ryan lolin Rx Iandvr Slelyc Saal Micliavl Saitla Shiniclwi Halo lanic c- Sc liaadl Susan Sc hulz Sanlnrrl 5ll1XX'.lFll W joseph Sensius Susan Seyy Art Seyler Gary Shields Gregory Short lean M. Shrader loseph Sims Connie Slabaugh Richard Smallvvood lan Snyder Elya Stamm Tom Stark lulie Stefek Diane Sternfeld Robert Stevens Marcia Stice Ronald Stoudt Anne Stults Douglas Swartz Randy Szabo Arlinda Tatum Mike Terman Raieev Thakore Norm Thoennes Ann Thomas Eric Tochtermann Michael Trahert Susan Trampus Cary Urchek George Valente lll 93 -X .3-. 'S K.-fr Bruce Vanberkum Raymond Varcho Brian Vigneaux Iennifer VonAllman Gary W'ard letfrey Wayner William Wechter Daniel Weir Candace Wenzel Rick West Barbara Whitfield Doreen Williams Iohn Williams Wendell Wilson Don Wolfe Kevin Wood Lee Wood Iohn Wronkoviclw Cary Wyrick leannette Zaman Robert Zampini Peter Zeeb fff Education Michele Adkins Nancy Allcorn Lezlle Anderson Deborah Anielski Beth Apple Beverly Axe Mary Ayeni Kim R. Backus Mary Beth Baird Rhonda Barker Stephanie Beoglos Michelle Berman Melissa Bettman Karen Biasella William Bills Ieffrey Bixby Kenneth Blake Patti Block Chad Blooming Marlene Botzman lanet Bradshaw Donald Branzel Mary lo Brentin Susan Bridgeman Nancy Brienik Cynthia Brown Iulie Brown Sandra Brown Sandra D. Brown Skip Brown Carol Btirlxholder Sharri Busby Meg Callny Roheirt Canfield Christine- Carey loan Carlson Nancy Carman Charlotte Carter Irene Casino Mary Cesta Paula Chapman loanne Clark Terri Clouse Catherine Courrier Margaret Cowgill Cindy Cradis Megan Craven Marchette L, Crook Nancy Czayka Pamela Davis Mary Davis Deborah Dawkins Michvlc? DeCrcisc 1- Sandra Dellirigvr Claudia DeMoss Yvonnv De-von Lincla Dia ltson Susan Dickson Sharon Dir-hl lust-pl1lJiNuliiIv Maryellen Donnelly lettye Douglas Fran Durham Diane Durkee Cynthia D'Urso Suzanne Easterday Ianice Eberle Michelle Evanoff Amy Feinberg Audrey Felgenhauer Dayid Fell Deborah Fennell Kathleen Fenning Amelia Fernandes leff Ferrell leanne Flick Yvette Flor Marybeth Fox Elise Ruth France Gail Frech Sara Garner Donna Gerhart Marilyn Ghezzi Mary Gibbons Gary Glenn Ed Goodwin Iames N. Goson Debra Gottberg William Griffin Michael Gunther Susan Haas Susie I. Hagloch Ted Hall Robert Halnian B. lxay Hannah loanne Harrison Linda Harsar Geraldine Hayes Mighael Heald Diane Heenan lanice Hecker lafqueline Heim Pam Henry Chris Hettinger Charnita Hill Christine Hill lanies Hill Barbara Hinderscheid Lynne Hindnwan Lisa Holland Stephen R. Hopkins Virginia Horning Dorothy Hudak Cynthia Hudson leanne Hunt Carol Hyde limolhx' lnimt-I l'.itr1c ia lsaaf Sandra Israel linda lalmroc ki f Diane Iames Eric I. Jarrett Carol Iohnson Dale lohnston Douglas lones Josephine Kaminslci lanet Karasek loseph Karpinski Ann Kates Delia Katz Barbara Kays Kim Kehl Mark King Connie Kleon Sandra Kloss Debbie Knisely joseph V. Kocian Robber Koller David Koonte lody Kotys Doreen Krbaucic Richard Kreiner Mark Krieger Robert Krister Carol Krivos Kim Krizay Sue Krumeich Elaine Kubui loanne Kucek Marjorie Kucheman 1:---pf 'ff' 1 Q27 f Qi afjv' ,- C7 7' 41' AN ,.. iA lulie Kurnat Lorraine Lahman Susan Landi Barbara Lanser Susan Lemasters Cynthia Lodge Steven R. Loitz Kathleen Lovas Paula Lower Marianne Mcetlarney Lori McBee Cynthia McCartney Thomas MCClaine Maureen McCormick Susan Maher Pam Maisano Debra Malot Marjorie Martell Lee Mathey Colleen Maul Barbra Mauter Melody Mavnard Nanfx' Meanex' lohn Mehalit' Kathleen Metz lrihn Milt-N Lmilx' Miller Linda Miller l.1mesMillt-r Susan Miller Kimberly Mishler Ruth Mishler Mary Moore Marlene Morgan Dolly Munderloh Mary Mundort Sharon Murphy loni Myers Kathleen Naftzger l-lolli Nebel Rob Needham Francine Nemec Patricia Newsome Mary Ann Niemczura loann Obreza Elizabeth Olschevvsky Marian Ondrus Eileen Otter Sheryl Ouellette Mary Owen Mark Paddock lohn Palmer Ierry Parsons Rene Paschal Iames Anthony Patterson lames Pearson Mark Peecook Elizabeth Perry Barbara Peterson Diana Plecker .lf NN' ,Z ps. av- Y-1 C5 N 1 'IT' C5 -xl. , ,N i 11,19 .5 9 I-0 4-'-1' in f4A ,uv lessie Poiman Deborah Polen Nanette Pollock Virginia Pritchard Belinda Ralf Phyllis Rakevich Randall Ramsthaler Roberta Rankl Rennae Ray Sharon Reed Kimberly Ritenour Marjorie Roberto Karen Rochtord Gene Rodgers Mary lane Rogers Brenda Rose Sharon Ross Patricia Runyan Kimberly Russell Violet Russell Melanie Sayles Mary Schario Fred Schaub Cheryl Sfhuler Pamela Seesan lanite Seller Barbara Sharps- lxt-yin Shippy Dorothy 5ldl'fUINJllS Hz-len Silo lan Silver Susan Singer Lincla Sleeman Kim Slinger Leigh Ann Smeach Sally Snycler Susan Soloclky Elizabeth Speckman Cary Stefansic leri Stuchell Elizabeth Summers Patricia Surbella Terri Swartz Carol Swartzback Nancy Swetlancl Martha Streeter Deborah Stipkoyich Michelle Taclcleo Darlene Taylor Pamela Thomas David Toth Larry Toth Eileen Ulancl Pristella Usher Suzanne Uselton Michael Uszak Rusin VanDyke Russell Vanflilcler Mary Ellen Vettel Amy Wallace Bernadette Walpole Virginia Walsh Sheryl Walter Marilyn Wfawzyniak Ruth Weaver Marty Wheeler Debbie Whiddon lon Whipple Christy Williams Marcia Williams Lauri Wise Marcia Woloszczuk Carol Wood Elizabeth Wood Beth Wyman Michelle Yancy Cathy Yanovv Pamela Young Linda Zielasko Cynthia Zivoder W Kathy Agler Elaine Aldous Connie Andres Richard Appleby Anita Aquila lames T. Atkins Barbara Austin Richard Baird Cynthia E. Barch loyclyn Bates Suzanne Bates Barbara Beadle Andrea Beck Wayne Beck George Becka Stephen H. Beilstein Beth Belton Warren Bendler left Beneigh Luanne Best Charles Bluman Eugene Boron Bonnie Boucher lanice Boyee Rebecca Brannon Charles Bratton Peter S. Brill Gregory Brinda William Brocious Annie Brown Gif' , . 1 l f 'V Q,- 'Od William Browne Connie Buccino Susan Burkey Donn lx, Butkovic Cynthia Caddiclx Barbara Cady Cheryl Caldwell Tina Camino Cynthia Caporella Patrice Cathey Elaine Charvvas Yin I. Chen Glen Clark Mark Colopy Deborah Condron Alice Cone Harold Budd Conn Edward Courrier Suzanne Cox Barbara Craig Beth Cunningham David Cunningham Robin Czayka Debra Davidson Carol Davis Christina Dtivif, Linda I. Dtiwwn Myne-Ita Dawson Amir- DeBltist- Mike-l.inn DeM.ii'i.i Alan Delvlattia Catherine Dent Susan DeTano Richard DeVore lames DiFrangia Maryfl3eth DiCeronimo Diane Diso Sheila Dorris Linda Dular Carol Dunlap Gail Duro Charles Early Renea Eichelberger lames C. Ely lr. Susan Emmerich Sharon Ensinger Susan Ewing Patricia Fatrak Thomas Farrell Diane Farrer Katherine Fazelxas Pam Feicht Marilyn Feigenbaum lamie Feldman Leonard Fern Diane Ferry Cynthia Ficke Bruce Fleming Patricia Flowers Thomas Fodor 4-9' gy-4 fi if 1. V f IT' ga 1' .l 46 ff QT? .v T' v QQ? Sain Furgione SIM-Irion Freedman Pi-ggi I. Cc-hring Nurinan Gem-r Gary Cla-le-ndefr lim-ph Ciancola Calhvrinc I, Gillugly De-'nife Coe-rncil Daniefl Coldfarla Nancy Gorny Alan Grasgreen Carolyn Gray ioliel Griffin Ixim Griffith Sophia Cruzdys Clarence Gulley Ir. Thomas A. Hadala Arsenio Hall Gcorge Hanrahan Denise Hanson Iufiifh Harclc-nhurg K. Harris Bruce' Hart Kathleen Harwy Monica Halton William He-rfziig Cary He-will fxxlt'XSdI1d!'d Hur km-y Rim hard F. Hia kinan Susan Iligaki WW Catherina Hillinger Nora Hiner Beth Hoffman Maureen Hohan leffrey Holliday Thomas Hose Cynthia Huminski Annette Hunley Donald Huston Michael lackson Mark Iamra Paul lewell Patricia lob Abigail Iones Robert ludcl Elizabeth P. Kaley lames Kane Suzanne Kaszar Mary Kauffman Karen Keele Anne Keller Laura Kemp Pamela Kenyon Mark Kern Nick Kerosky loseph Kerr Thomas A. Koontz Debbie Korosi Sharon Kotrba Rob Kotzbacher l 1 I . 3' 'bf George E. Ixoyacik Ir loan P. Ixozesky Richard lxropp Debra Ixrunimel Brenda Lauthanen Daniel Lawrence Marge Lazio April Leayell Alice Leigh Elizabeth Lett Roger Evan Lewis Lynn Link lohn Lionti Patricia Littlejohn Susan Litwin Anthony LoCastro Richard P. Logan leffrey London lane! Loye lanis Loye Anthony Lukerit William Lynlx Donna MCCallion Carry McCann Andrew Mc'Carron luclilh Mcfflurt- Palric Id Mc Crmrnttc lx lx:-vin Mt Donald Sally Mc l 4-rrr-n larnt-A Mcfiurx Rita McPeak Nancy Mager Geneva D. Maiden George Marko Bob Maruna Denise Martin Diane Martin David l. Marvin Paula Mauro lohn Mazze Lynette Melcher lune Mellinger Christine Meluch lim Mershirner Coleen Meyer William P. Meyers David Middleton Bryant Miller Deborah Miller Vernon L, Miller lames Mitchell Katy Mobley Martha Moinet April Moreland Daniel Moreland Dwight Morgan lim Morgan Richard Morrison Kenneth Myers Frances Nara X , V 1-f LA U.-f' ,,f Terrence Naugle Laxxrence Nelson ludxf Nichols lxatlwy lNl9lJ9lClll1g lxandy Osborn Caren Osrin Peter Paino ArleneE,Pacl1asa Constance Pavolino Cynthia Pearce Vincent Peddle Ed Pengal Sandra Pesec Teresa Pelerangelo Ianice Phelps William Phillips Apinanl Pliuplwalana Sarilee Picard Debra Pizzino Luanne Poor Newman Posey Cary Posse-rt Gregory A. Pozzn Heidi Price Cliarlene Rayluurn loan Rayrnond Cirm-gory Reynolds Peggx Rlioarls Ciinrli Ric lxarcl lila Rim IU Ned Riegel Laurence Rodgers Gregory Rolenz Teresa Rossi Glenda Routhier Kenneth Rubin Roni Rucker Barbara Russ Linda Anne Salmond Robert Salvino Debra Schinasi Patricia Schmitz David Schrock Michael Schueller Craig Schumacher Doris Schwaner Donald Schwinn jeffrey Scott Tyler Scott Karen Searl lane Sell Suzanne Sell Mickey Shaull Blake W. Sherry Andrew Shively Ida Siciliano Ian Siebenaller Sara Siler Wendy Sims jeffrey Simpson 'Qw- fri? , XA in Carol Skrobot Bruce Smith Lizabeth Snellgoxfe Della Snider lanine Sollxoy Paul Soper Deborah Soula Linda Spaan Margaret Spindler ludy Stacy Robert Steffen Phil Steinberg Mary Robin Stephenson Kathleen Anne Stever lerome Stoltlas Rasma Sulcs loseph Sutherland Arthur Strauss Leah Squarcette Dan Tabor Patricia Talbot Michael Lee Taylor Stephanie Tepe Candace Thompson Michael Thompson Charley Toman Suxan lroyan loan Turner Clei1llreyUhlllx Nancy Ulam Brian Vance Marjorie Van Cura Rob Vayda Richard Vertolli Barbara Visocan Cail Vosper Christopher C. Wagner Gretchen Wagner Rebecca Wagrnan Randall D. Walker Sheila Walker lane Wallace lohn Walsh Cynthia Walters Kelley Walters Nancy Walters Stephen Walzer Christine Was leanne Watkins Rob Watkins Karen Weber Raynwona Weinstein Barbara Wernet Patti Wertenberger Barbara Wheaton Alexander White Iames Whitely Marcella Whittlesey Deborah Wilhelm Ioyce Williams Kathy Williams Terrance L. Williamston Barbara Wilson lohn Wilson Deborah Wiltnwan lane Wfiriclx lames Wishnek Darlene Woodward Charles Wright Dean Zawaclai lohn Zeglin Noreen Zepp Alan Zielinslci Mark Zust Scott Pease l Health Physical Education and Recreation August Argento Kathryn Bachman Ierry Beltempo Mark Benedetto Iohnett Benson Debbi Berardi Dawn Boyd Linda Brooks Elizabeth Burke William Clifford Diane Closter Cindy Copeland Katie Cox Patricia Coyle Mary Dahlman Lorrie D'Aloi5io Arthur Daniels Pamela Davenport Mary Deyore lon Dixon Terry Dunning Patricia Fellows Renee Y. Foldessy Paula Freeman Kim Galbraith Denise Cearhart Pamela Cieck Amy L. Gerbich Cathryn Goudy Iill Grasselli ff? if 'mem . .ff B' i fi . 'faq cz' yy G f.:' ,- ,AU -1 QT f? 'X---5, 1.3.-vw--..s wvf 1' loan Clrrrwlh Elle'-n Clrrmlclclvr Cxnllwra Clulwr Rallye-ua Harrrs Lua Hallwrnll Brucc Haxx lx Raxmunrl Isaclxrla Lorrarne- Ixarn lame-N lwarns lDolJlJnc- Lelppla Rusemarre- .Nlagrrn llwre-so Maloney llona Marlon lames Marvrn Terrance Mason Karen Mensler lane ,Nllceli Lilly Mrckler Darla Malls Margie- ,Xluclrnclx Cale- Nagel Daniel I. Nll1INl'f lane-I Urwvic lx Rowman Pvnna lanel Plvlte-r Ric ll l'rllar 'Suv l'raIr-r Cfrarg l'rall lion Pru 1- Palrrr ra l,LII1 an leff Riem Kurt Robinson Susan Rohr Lisa Rubin Lori Sailer Daniel Scafidi Karin Schweitzer April Showers leff Swift Deborah Taylor Randy Taylor Elisa Thornases lill Thompson Michael Ulrich Robert Utter lane Verchio lanet Verchio Kathy Volk -1555 .US X 6' QL. 1'! SP 'Ol lt' Q ' px gs-4.1 Q,-N C.. Y 1 v! l 15 Nursing Georgia Allan Elizabeth Ambrose Iovce BilliCl-X Mary Biltence loan Boron Pamela Brown Candice Burr Gayle Bruh Linda Chontos Michelle Darby Karen Davidson Melissa Duriga loy Pager! Diana Fiocca Mary Ann Forrester lxaren Garbarini Pamela Garloxx' Antonia Gowasack Susan Gress Brenda Grover Linda l-lancoclx Marianne Harm Laura Heinrlw Michelle Hull Robin l-lotbauer ,-Xmx L. llolclri-n lc-an Hubba-ll Susan Husnex l,lHUil lXl'lTlN'll Marx :Xnn li. lxmni-x W Barbara Klimas Karen Kostobryz Denise Kraus Kay C Laneye loan Leidy Donna Libbey Anneliese Long Patricia Lucci Linda MacLaine Carol Mack Anita Magoyac Nancy Malyk Kim Martell Lynne Matrisciano Deborah Mellott Denise Misenko Karyn Morgan Sbirl Morgart Linda Moyseenko Laura Nagy Ianel Neal Diane Nelson lacqueline Nicol Nancy Niehaus Lynda Nittskoff Mary Nurcbes Debra Passan Cynthia Powell Toni Ann Raftar Karen Reicbard T1 YU! G' tr' Tv 0- .in 2: vX 'f Kgw' 11 16 luv' V271 Cheryl Renker luliet Reyes Doreen Rhine Debbie Silxaroli Steve Sokell Rosemarie Spisak Cynthia Sprowls Elaine Stawnmn Carol Tegethofr Linda Tolliver Diane Tuuri Mary Ann Varga Susan Vitangeli Ann M,VVagenho1e r Ian Wfalker W The 1978 CHESTNUT BURR was printed in an edition of 4,000 copies, 9 X 12 inches, 304 pages, on 803 Mead Offset Enamel Dull, manufactured by the Mead Paper corporation of Dayton, Ohio in black ink. The 1978 CHESTNUT BURR was printed by the Hl!Keller Division of the Carnation Company at its plant in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. The cover was cased over 160 pt. binder's board by Herff jones Cover Division in Montgomery, Alabama. Type style is Optima medium, headlines are 'I2 pt. Bold, subheadlines are T0 pt. Bold, body type is 10 pt., typesetting by Hl!Keller. Senior portraits were furnished by Delma Studios, 225 Park Avenue South, New York, N,Y. 10003. PHOTO CREDITS Dave Andersen 205 21 topg 225 23 top 81 bottomg 24 top 81 bottom5 255 37 top, middle 8 bot- tom5 43 top 8. bottom5 44 top 8. bot- tom5 455 50 top 84 bottom5 51 top 84 bottom5 60 bottom5 63 bottomg 645 68 top 81 middle5 82 bottom5 83 topg 110 topg 1115 115 top 81 bottom5 116 bot- tom5 117 top 84 bottom5 1205 121 top 8: bottom5 123 top5 '12-1 top5 125 bottom5 127 top 81 bottom5 133 top5 143 topg 144 top5 145 bottom5 1465 147 top 84 bottom5 1485 149 top5 167 top 84 bot- tomg 168 top 84 middle5 169 top 8 bottom5 1775 1885 189 top5 1955 1985 199 top 84 bottom5 2055 210 top 8 bottom5 211 top 84 bottom. Cory Barbis 345 785 79 top 84 midd1e5 212 top 81 bottomg 213 top. Steve Begleiter 885 89 top GSK bottom5 130. Gus Chan 265 27 top 84 bottom5 60 top5 615 645 65 bottom5 665 805 81 middleg 110 middleg 126 leitg 133 bottomp 145 top5 178 top 84 bottom5 202 top 84 bottom. Alice Cone 189 bottom. George Ducro 9 top 54 bottom5'172 middle5 173. Dean Hein '140rT1iddle5 141 bottom. Bob Huddleston 42 top5 47 bottom5 118 top 84 bottom5 1195 140 bottomg 141 top5 16-1 middle5 1865 190 top, middle 81 bottom5 1925 193. Doug Kingsbury 285 29 top 81 bottom5 39 top, middle 84 bottom5 725 735 122. Scott Krol 38 top, middle 81 bottom. leff Kron 123 bottom. Steve Lerner 1795 21-1bot1om5 215 bottom. Bill Lewis -12 bottom5 187 top 8 bottom. Greg Lewis 59 topg 745 75 top 84 bottom5 1005 101. Laurie Mazerov 485 495 63 topg 84 top 8 bottom5 182 top, middle 8 bottom. Doug Moore, University News Service 1125 113 bottomg 114 bottom5 1285 129. Scott Pease 675 81 top right 945 955 965 985 995 Mike Scheuller 6 bottom5 16. Tootie Skaarup 7 top right 8. bottom rnght5 8 top 8 bottom5 13 top. Lynne Sladky 35 6 top5 125 13 bottom5 145 15 top A bottom5 21 bottomg 46 top, middle 5. bottom5 925 935 1065 107 top 84 bottom5 131 top 84 bottomg 1425 1445 164 topg 165 top 8 bottom5 172 topg 1805 1815 19-15 206 bottom5 2075 2505 252. loe Stenger 4 bottom5 55 47 topg 565 575 59 bottomg 76 top 8 bottom5 775 83 middle5 1085 109 top 8 midd1e5 124 bottom5 1325 143 bottomg 1715 208 top 81 bottom. Dale Tibbits 305 31 top 84 bottom5 325 33 top 81 bottom5 85 top 84 bottom5 86 top 81 bottom5 87. Laurie Unger 34 top 81 bottom5 81 top left. Dell Vowie 113 top5 114 topg 116 top5 166. lohn Watt 4. lan Weaver 36 top, middle 51 bottom5 65 top5 251. Darrell White 61elt5 53 top 8 bottom5 545 55 top5 125 top5 126 right top 81 right bottom5 13-1 top 8 bottom5 135 top 8 bottom5 149 bottom5 191 top 81 bottom5 1965 197 top, middle 81 bottom5 2005 2015 206 top ISK bottom5 213 bottom. Leon Williams 525 55lJol1or1152l13521l-1. Frank Zizzo 695 905 915 975 176521-11op5 2151op. STORY CREDITS Debbie Armstrong: 37. Sally Burnellz 385 164. Bryon Casteelz 495 72. Alice Cone: 80. lohn Delcosz 30. Anne Dorrian: 37. Cindy Ficke: 250. ludy Beth Goldman: 605 885 172 N. Christine Hart: 74. Michael Heaton: 92. Mariann Hofer: 34. Katie Kastelic: 44. Suzy Kaszar: 1125 1145 128' 119' 130 , - 1 Wayne Lewis: 52. Nathaniel Madison: 180. Maria Malandra: 42. lay Marcusfieldz 22. Laurie Mazerov: 205 7115 182. Denise Mellillia 39 84: 90. Andrew Mikula: 48. Sharon Pala: 35. Amy Radelz 48. Greg Reynolds, Sports Editor 1155 1175 1185 12115 1245 1265 12 1325133513-1513651511 Debbie Schadt: I5-1. Connie Schultz: 565 685 IT-1. Doris Schwaner: 26. Lynne Sladky: 106. Shirley Sorice: 50 Marvin Stearns: 765 1111. lohn Watt: 78. .1 - fc Tw x E Hawk' f ' Wt 'Q v -4.- 0,.,':?5'. Q 9.0 v v 0 'f . 4 I ' fm AJ: l.. e ' 0 ' J u . ' J, sp w . 'P C 'u I 'J - -4 qu. -.. 1 e I ,I o c - 4- I 5 get - r ' I ,' 2 .8. 4.4-.IXQZ v , Q ,. - z .. o 4. I v . ...- Aw. 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