Knox College - Gale Yearbook (Galesburg, IL) - Class of 1969 Page 1 of 232
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Re CE en. 125 ro ey ae Te we ee ce RE ILA LLL or A ef : Gs ve bf eos ee 135 136 ™ foe) b | i +] Samaton TERT saad faagrrena2 th 24379 PSAREE SEARTAATES Fo Lb gERBE SI pean gagesarse RiarEt ap sepeaa genes Rent ener? apenarsebT ees RaEOTEAE Ptah green eheses pED TUE De BESET ATT 3 : Z e Zs Ze ; ‘ : 2 : Se Se ’ o = : ; cS Oran epanwiies i Z Oe Se g CHK LG A Bays ernwe sett ese . i ss : ‘ Tyens exe Sc : AE perecnr Pees reins SS ye . y : = . e US Bei Dat - . 148 Sometime during the 1920’s my father, Abra- ham Pollack, discovered that God had passed away and after a decent period of mourning he found that he was still depressed, but by that time so was the entire country, greatly. A B.A. and a world war and an Auschwitz and a Hiroshima later my father knew that God hadn’t merely died, He’d committed suicide. Man, Abraham decided, is neither good nor bad but only incredibly stupid. Under one banner or another Man had murdered fellow Man for twenty thousand or so years, and it seemed rather pointless to call this right or wrong. Value labels would do little to help his German relatives who had caught the fatal “it can’t happen here” syndrome, and had been there when it happened. A prophet finds truth in FORBU, and all true believers seek to establish FORBU in place of the existing GARNIB, and all those who believe in GARNIB must be done away with, whether or not doing away with is good or bad in FORBU. The missing link isn’t lost, he’s hiding. As to God, His corpse and His world, the meek shall indeed inherit the earth, but not until they have meekly slaughtered the oppo- sition. Thus Abraham came to a metaphysical mental peace. His world view was simple: social justice and truth are unattainable because Man is just too dumb, he never sees what he is doing until he’s done it. But if there was no thought worth thinking about Man, there were many worth thinking about man. A human being, after all, is a package of 96¢ worth of chemicals, which is hardly impres- sive except for the fact that similar packages exist and they can interact. One man can seldom af- fect more than his immediate environment and then not for very long. There is meaning to be found in the perceptual and intellectual pleasures of art, music and literature, in the cultivation of human beings and their peculiar beauty. The only things really worth labeling are that self-perfection and love are good, hypocrisy is bad. All this I knew, umbilically as it were. At least I knew it until I got to grammar school and learned that I was a kike, and that North America didn’t exist until a white man found it, and that while Europe had nations, ministers, kings, diplo- mats, and Wars with Names, Africa only had tribes, chiefs and tribal skirmishes. How could you respect a people who hadn’t even been able to de- velop the rifle for themselves? And in high school I learned about the plagues of communism and atheism, and how slavery wasn’t so bad because someone had to take care of these simple, rhyth- mic folk. And in high school I learned that you ought to get all you can off a girl unless you’re serious about her, and then you ought to respect her more than that. And in high school I learned that niggers smell bad, are stupid, but have large dicks which they use a lot, and how chinks lie and don’t respect human life except for people over 90 and how the women have crooked cunts. And in high school I learned that one always obeyed his parents, teachers, city, state, and na- tional governments because there were some things which one simply did not question. And I saw the light and saw that it was good. Yet adolescense is by definition a time of in- consistency for while believing all those things as I did, I was in fact an atheist, and I can’t count the times I got beat up for writing an editorial suggesting that the relationship between Salem and Selma is more than that they are spelled with the same letters, and I did make love with girls I respected. Most of all I was not obedient. As a junior I became an official behavior problem and had to see the official school psychologist. At first I thought that I'd shock the old bitch and tell her about my shoplifting, cutting classes, smoking, screwing and other sordid traffic in illicit goods, until I saw that here, in this woman, was the world impinging upon my privacy. I played it straight telling her how much I loved the senile dolts who were my teachers and could tell me where, when, and how to speak and act, for in- deed I had seen the light and had seen that it was good. . In high school I never acted, only reacted. I had no morality nor need of any. For America has chosen to make its young adults impotent, and they behave in kind. My adolescence was a constant search to be recognized. At home it was the rhetoric of hate for which Abraham had no use. At school it was the rhetoric of brotherhood for which my friends had no use. In all it was a time of emptiness, of feeling guilty, and dirty, and very small. At the unlikely age of 16 I found myself a freshman at the University of Michigan. I did a lot of things instead of studying at Michigan, and not a one of them less valuable. I learned to live outside the womb. I fell in love with a girl whose 149 150 beauty was exceeded only by her mental anguish, a girl so afraid of her body and sensuality, so constricted by the regulations under which fresh- men women must live, and so ashamed that she lived while others died, that she ate while others starved; that the pain in her eyes almost hid their vitality. Her perception of reality was more than she could face so she ground out cigarets in her flesh and stayed awake for four days in a row and turned finally to drugs. As I helplessly watched her systematically destroy herself, for the first time the world had outsmarted me, had gotten through, and I learned, and paid in full for the learning. For her pain, America, I blame you. The world’s next victory took the form of a polite request not to re-register at the University of Michigan. I worked as a stockboy in a Chicago ghetto dimestore during the long break from April to October, wearing the label “dropout” like a ball and chain. Sweeping the sidewalk in the early morning sunlight I would look into the black faces and the pain in their eyes almost hid their vitality, and there was something in their eyes stronger than the pain, something I had never seen before. And riding home on the bus when the rocks and bottles came flying through the windows I learned that the something else was hate. So during the lunch hour I would read the paperbacks which the store sold, by Malcolm X, James Baldwin, Dick Gregory, Martin Luther King, and Lenny Bruce, and it struck me as strange for the first time that a white boy should be working for a white owned store where all the patrons were Black. And one morning I stepped off the bus and a woman leaned out the window of her ten- ement and vomitted on me in the humorous sense of justice which white America has never known. And I saw your light, America, and I saw that it was bad. In October I came to Knox where the world doesn’t have a chance to get through. I turned for the first time to studying. Because of all those people with hate and pain in their eyes I majored in psychology. “Black people take heart for I love you. I will give you freedom and equality.” The ensuing rejection by Black students taught me that I could not give them their freedom, and that even if I could it wouldn’t be worth a damn. And I discovered the depth of the racism in me. For this too, America, I blame you. In the summer I worked in the steel mill on a furnace repair crew. In grammar school I had learned to hate, in high school I had learned to love, in college I had learned to hurt, but in the steel mill I learned fear. When you're standing three stories below a furnace, with the air at 130 degrees and everything else at around 500, with the steam so thick that you can’t see out of your goggles, a hundred feet into a four foot high tun- nel with a pick, shovel, and wheelbarrow between you and fresh air, and a train goes by overhead and the hot bricks around you begin to crumble and fall down your back; you learn fear. Some days I'd be so scared that Pd just stand there and whimper for fifteen minutes. My junior year at Knox blended into the next summer in exactly the benign way Abraham used to say, “And this too shall pass.” Working for McCarthy and being gassed in Grant Park and seeing Humphrey get nominated and seeing the support for Wallace, that summer, I re-learned hatred and pain in the form of bitterness. America the beautiful, whose ever-greedy industries are poisoning the air we breathe and the water we drink while the technology exists to eliminate pollution tomorrow. America the just, not finding it enough to keep Afro-Americans in slavery, to rob them of their lives, productivity and human dignity, spends half its time supporting similar Oppressions around the world. America the good, after committing genocide on the American Indi- an deems it proper to repeat the performance on the Vietnamese people. America the pure, who teaches children to hate their own bodies, their own sexuality, replaces this need with either violence or the artificial sentimentality of the sit- uation comedy. America the free, whose name- less, faceless bureaucrats keep close tabs on any- one deviating from the norm. America the honest, who, perhaps worst of all, covers these atrocities in the smug, smothering hypocrisy of God and the American Dream. I wear a peace symbol but it’s a heavy rock on a strong leather strap. “This country must change, dear father, its in- _Stitutions, its people, its very fabric, the short- sightedness of Man notwithstanding. Some steps must be taken ’cause things can simply get no worse. Where labor unions fight a long battle for their rights and thirty years later turn around and support a demagogue of hate, surely, dear Abra- ham, it has come time for change. And this change can only succeed by the use of the violence which created its need. Why is it my aging, middle class parent that the 400 years of white violence is more justified than Black violence now? Tell me, how effective at social change has the tactic of appeal to the popular conscience ever been? NO, ‘there is a revolution forming around you, it is needed, and violence as foul as it is, must be used to triumph over the greater tyranny.” There I was, telling this man who worked his way through college during the Depression, even though it took nine years to do it and he hardly got a grade above a C; telling this man who has spent 35 years in that same steel mill; this man who helped organize labor unions when companies hired scabs to club their way through the picket lines; telling this Jew who had seen six million of his people slaughtered yet opted to work sixteen hours a day in the steel mill rather than take up arms against the Germans; this man who has somehow managed to memorize most of the sym- phonies and operas written since the Renaissance and develop respectable tastes in art, literature, and drama. There I was telling him that things cannot get any worse. The effect, to say the least, was mellowing. Here I had, in my nineteen years of experience and my infinite readings, discovered a set of truths so blindingly right that ten, twenty, thirty, or forty million people could correctly be sent to their deaths in its name. Have these people sinned? Yes, this point I will not relinquish. After cen- turies of crime, of robbing people of their per- sonal freedom, America, do not cry out “personal freedom” when you are asked to pay for your tyranny. These people have sinned. In their smug and affluent apathy they add the overwhelming support of their silence to America’s crimes. Yet this sin by and large, is one of stupidity not evil. For this they should not pay with their lives. Teach them, threaten them, scare the fuck out of them, but for God’s sake (aleph sholem) don’t kill them, and don’t rob them of their humanness. Cause the sum total of Man’s progress on this planet is the capability to destroy it, and without significant change, that capability will soon be employed. Cause the universe is just one big void with a little dot of life every infinity or so, and the thought that one of those precious little dots would willfully remove itself is the most monstrous evil conceivable. Believing these things, as I do, I must be com- mitted to two courses of action, resistance and education. Immediately, resistance may mean go- ing to jail; ultimately it means opposition to op- pression wherever it occurs, opposition by legal means where possible, illegal means and ensuing jail where not possible; in short it means complete refusal to comply in any way with a social, eco- nomic or political institution which is practicing crimes against humanity. Education means spread- ing the word, explaining to idiots the evil which their idiocy perpetrates. And if all this were to succeed beyond my wildest dreams, the world is yet left with the need for social change. Violence be omitted from the face of the earth, there is left the source of vio- lence, competition. By competition, here, I do not mean the loving process by which two people in- spire each other to greater productivity, I mean the process by which one man’s physical and mental well being is obtained at the expense of another’s. The adjustment of the human psyche such that this fundamental and universal sadism is no longer needed for fulfillment is my great hope for the science of psychology. But as Abraham has said more than once, “Not in my lifetime.” 151 152 x eee eT a } ' : . z Oe seein Seana 4 | SC Tear anges noe RRR oe eee peetuammmmntnarnenccsennmennnnncntnnan ON al Ne rieittmnentesisic chee We, ee — xe Zi Wadd cet as Bee ZS aes aig Kye ene ‘s ¥ fseosneedog Wea ek reeeeres TT ] s | : a . 2 q RDD ad q 4 a Candace Rose Ach San Francisco, California Art James P. Allison Galesburg, IIlinois Psychology Kimberly Ann Adams Thomas Paul Adams Woodbury Agar Richard W. Alexander Peoria, Illinois Wilmette, Illinois Galesburg, Illinois Galesburg, Illinois Spanish Sociology Accountant English The process of education consists of nothing more than covering the marshlands of the mind with the fill of human experience. By that token none of us are complete; we are all evolving into a person which we may yet be. The abyss between igno- rance and knowledge is not bridged any better merely as a function of the passing of time. Time, indeed, lends a neutrality unknown to position, or power, or wealth and these in and of themselves are meaningless. We are a product of revolving orders — the coming to be and the passing away of that which is sacred. The jolting change of those orders shocks us as would immersion in a northern lake in early Spring. We gasp for breath, startled by our immobility, and we do not succumb easily to newness in our world. We go on and finding ourselves renewed gain the strength to watch some dreams crumble while others are born. The darkness approaches and yet we are not diminished. The bright and guiding star that shown over the Medieval University has burned itself nearly out. We must realize now that a new star is shining and ours is the great task to view it with gladness, not apprehension. There is a world revolving with human beings living upon it and they are in as dire need as we are to under- stand. The petty distinctions and the protocol and the criterias belie our stated beliefs in equality within the academic community. We are professors and students and administrators and the sum total of our achievement here will be measured by how well we educated one another; how human we became. Who’s Who in America will not record it. The number of Ph.D.’s may not be a result of it. The edifices to come will not complement it. It is real and it is now and it is all that there will ever be. Carl P. 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Moore Lawrence Wilson Moore Galesburg, Illinois Minneapclis, Minnesota Galesburg, Illinois Galesburg, Illinois Verona, New Jersey Speech Sociology English Geology Political Science 193 194 Warren Morris Helen Mower Hermann R. Muelder Galesburg, Illinois Galesburg, IIlinois: Galesburg, IIlinois Librarian Director of Placement History Dennis Lee Myers Harvey Evans Namarika Christine Anne Nelson Ogden, Illinois Luchenza, Malawi, Africa Alexis, Illinois History Economics English Harry J. Neumiller, Jr. Edward L. Niehus Walter M. North Galesburg, IIlinois Galesburg, IIlinois Galesburg, Illinois Chemistry English Director, Student Assistance Robert J. Oberg Thomas C. O’Keefe Carolyn Anna Oster Galesburg, Illinois Galesburg, Illinois Evergreen Park, Illinois Mathematics Military Science German Kenneth R. Pahel Harold Mason Palmer Paul Papke, Jr. Galesburg, IIlinois Coloma, Michigan Galesburg, Illinois Philosophy Speech Physics Owen Muelder Daniel Joseph Murray Galesburg, Illinois Kenosha, Wisconsin Admissions English David L. Nelson Donnie Eugenia Nelson Galesburg, Illinois Alexis, Illinois Chemistry Chemistry Edward Frank Novak David Alan Novis Berwyn, Illinois Manhasset, New York Political Science Chemistry Robert Keith Ottum, Jr. Peter Darlington Overton Port Washington, New York Chicago, Illinois English Art | John Raymond Parrott Alfred Partin American Embassy Galesburg, Illinois APO NYC, New York Physical Education | History Lorelei Stephanie Patey Marjorie Louise Pearson John Nyle Pedote Eugene A. Perry Isaac O. Peterson Springfield, Illinois Dundee, Illinois Galesburg, IIlinois Galesburg, Illinois Galesburg, IIlinois Spanish Political Science Economics Biology Art REFUSED TO BE PHOTOGRAPHED John McFarlane Phillips Dawsie Pierce Wilbur F. Pillsbury Elaine Nancy Pohl Linda Carol Pohle Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Galesburg, Illinois Galesburg, Illinois Stillwater, Oklahoma St. Louis, Missouri History Biology Economics Mathematics English ws Martin Davis Pollack Janice Rose Pope Velma Diane Powell Jorge Prats Robert Allan Presman Chicago, Illinois Midlothian, Illinois Chicago, Illinois Galesburg, Illinois Chicago, Illinois Psychology English Spanish Modern Languages Economics Herbert Priestley - John Thomas Pschirrer Julianne Quann Mary Ellen Quanstrom Svetozar Radosavljevic Galesburg, Illinois Canton, Illinois Washington, D. C. Abingdon, Illinois Galesburg, Illinois Physics Biology Art Biology Modern Languages Albert Reilly Richard Reno James Sebastian Reynolds John Ashhurst Richards, Jr. William C. Ripperger Galesburg, Illinois Galesburg, Illinois Chappaqua, New York Greenwich, Connecticut Galesburg, Illinois Physical Education Physics Speech English Director, Computer Center 195 196 Eileen Marie Rivers Jean Gordon Robertson David T. Robinson Mary Ann Robinson Kristine Carol Robison Bartlett, Illinois Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Galesburg, Illinois Littleton, Colorado St. Cloud, Minnesota Mathematics Art Assistant to the President Biology Modern Languages January Victoria Roeschlaub Pamela Lee Rose Momcilo Rosic Kyle Walter Rost Lawrence A. Rupley Denver, Colorado Franklin Park, Illinois Galesburg, Illinois Glen Ellyn, Illinois Galesburg, Illinois Political Science English Modern Languages Chemistry Economics Se James Robert Ruppel 2 Nancy Lochner Sadow Lewis S. Salter Sharon Platt Samuelson Donald W. Sanville | Northlake, Illinois Elgin, Illinois Oneida, IIlinois. Galesburg, Illinois Galesburg, Illinois Physics Art Dean of the College Spanish Associate Dean of College John V. Sauter William Andrew Schiesser Mary Alice Schlenker Peter Schramm Jerrold Clay Schwartz Galesburg, Illinois Mount Prospect, Illinois Bloomington, Illinois Galesburg, Illinois Forest Hills, New York Economics Mathematics Modern Languages Biology Political Science Shirley Lorraine Schwiesow Richard William Scovie Tarillis Jane Seamans Robert F. Seibert Philip George Serafini II] Steger, Illinois Dolton, Illinois Boyds, Maryland Galesburg, Illinois Denver, Colorado History Political Science Art Political Science Political Science Bruce Stuart Shadbolt Norwalk, Connecticut Biology Mina Jean Shupienis Fargo, North Dakota Psychology Ellen Smith Bushnell, Illinois Education Suzanne Christine Stannard Manitowoc, Wisconsin Music John L. Stipp Galesburg, Illinois History John A. Shea Galesburg, Illinois English John James Simko Galesburg, Illinois Sociology Mary Stephany Smith Decatur, Illinois Mathematics Virginia Dale Steen Norwalk, Connecticut Chemistry Fred Anthony Strodtbeck Claremont, California English Robert Shellenberger Janet Shelly Sandra Kiddoo Shoch Galesburg, Illinois Galesburg, Illinois Kewanee, Illinois Philosophy Modern Languages Economics Nancy Moultrop Simko Sandy Arthur Simon Merrill Joseph Sklena Galesburg, Illinois Fort Lee, New Jersey Oak Park, Illinois French History Thomas Alvin Smith Arthur Church Spires Wayne Allen Stanley Wichita, Kansas Galesburg, Illinois Pryor, Oklahoma Psychology Economics Economics Ne a eo we o Rothwell Stephens Peter Folger Stetson Mary Kay Gaunt Stinson Galesburg, Illinois Barrington, Illinois Marissa, Illinois Mathematics History Education Russell Sutton Elizabeth Louise Svec Cheryl Gene Swanson Galesburg, Illinois Homewood, Illinois Dundee, Illinois Chemistry Art Political Science 198 : f Thomas Estes Sweeny Russell E. Swise Michael Robert Tang Mary Kathleen Tarpley Clare Eileen Theobald Darien, Connecticut Galesburg, Illinois Champaign, Illinois Greenville, Illinois Chicago Heights, Illinois American Studies Director, CFA and Union Economics Political Science Chemistry Gregory Allen Thomas Marguerite Mary Thomas Donald L. Torrence Anita Manette Traher Dean S. Trevor Rochester, New York Galesburg, Illinois Galesburg, Illinois Denver, Colorado Galesburg, Illinois Anthropology Mathematics Dean of Admissions Education Physical Education Donna Marie Tribolet Diane Susan Tyrrell Sharvy G. Umbeck Ross Vander Meulen Elaine Margarette Vogel Highland Park, Illinois Chicago, IIlinois Galesburg, Illinois Galesburg, Illinois Park Ridge, Illinois Education Mathematics President Modern Languages English 4 ta . o Peter Franz Von Meister Pamela Ann Wait Gerry Henry Walter Ralph Collins Walter III George H. Ward Peapack, New Jersey Decatur, Illinois Skokie, Illinois Western Springs, Illinois Galesburg, Illinois English Biology Sociology Mathematics. Biology Charles Parker Washburn IV Sheila Beth Webb Michael Roger Webster George Alexander Weigel James L. Weiler Middleboro, Massachusetts Denver, Colorado Colchester, Illinois Olympia Fields, Illinois Galesburg, Illinois Mathematics English Political Science Psychology College Physician Rita Ann Westermark Charles R. Wetherbee Alvin C. White LaBrenda Earl White Patricia Alice White Great Falls, Montana Galesburg, Illinois Galesburg, Illinois Indianapolis, Indiana East St. Louis, Illinois History Vice Pres. for Development Economics Spanish Robert C. Whitlatch Jean Louise Wilhelms Galesburg, Illinois Teresa Moulton Williams Thomas W. Williams Douglas L. Wilsen Freeport, Illinois Cedar Rapids, lowa Galesburg, Illinois Galesburg, Illinois Psychology Music English Howard A. Wilson Joel Etiel Wilson Galesburg, Illinois East Meadow, New York English Economics Robert Thomas Wilson St. Louis, Missouri Political Science Carol Ann Wimmer Deborah O. Wing Elm Grove, Wisconsin Galesburg, Illinois Education Dean of Women OR EA YE Bs ; 7 oe 3 ¥ Richard Huntley Wissler Raymond Craig Wolf Thomas Gene Wolf David H. Wollman: Donna Aiko Yamasaki Woodstock, Illinois Granville, Ohio Galesburg, Illinois Chicago, Illinois Speech Political Science History English Middlebury, Vermont Art Albert Charles Young Frank H. Youn Belleville, Illinois History Peter B. 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FEIGERT 215 THE NATION'S INNKEEPER® nna a, ; coven HI Mar. diencertccer (7 nyt Py ed air Sacluls favors 4 minutes from Knox College Route 150 North 342-2151 PIZZA HOUSE Loves The 216 Gale PARTY ORDERS @ Hamburgers wmeDonald’ s @ French Fries HAM iBURGERS e Fillet of Fish ——— e@ Cheeseburgers e@ Doubleburgers @ Milk Shakes Open 7 Days a Week 1100 N. Henders 343-8340 Daily 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Fri. Sat. 11 a.m. to 12 p.m. famous name brands untlimite men’s - ladies’ - boys’ cloth downtown galesbur ae the 7 dale le Sica THE GALE Loves Pizza House s) veo TS IJudex 18-23 30-31 32237 38-39 41-43 44-45 46 47 . 48 . 49 oO Frontpiece drawing by Jean Gordon Rob- ertson earth as seen from the moon Hawaii San Isidro, Costa Rica Chicago, Lake Mich- igan Crab Tracks, San Isidro Beach, Costa Rica Lizard, Costa Rica Mekong Delta, Viet Nam Chicago Skyline International Amphitheater, August 1968, Chicago Chicago Chicago Picasso Lake Michigan, Chicago New York City Subway Knoxville, Illinois Ilinois corn R.R., Illinois Wilburforce, piglet Tllinois farm Burlington R.R., Galesburg Galesburg Burlington R.R., Galesburg, Illinois Galesburg, Illinois Old Main Fine Arts Center Old Sigma Nu House Cedar House Post Hall Fine Arts Center Old Main South Street Mailroom Old Main Fine Arts Center Gymnasium Whiting Hall the Quad Christine Poelma Skip Sanders Howell Lind, Michael Grunze Jill Cross Steven Malamud John Burek, Patricia Galligani Nick Peneff, Larry Smerin, Paul Teichert, © Bob Leadbetter, George Dimitroff, Hermann Muelder John Phillips Cathy Thompson a) ig) ae) Te 64-65 66 207, . 68 69 70-71 Ths a3 . 74 18) LO veh Susan Cahill Gail Carabine Grant Cyrus Judy Bowker, James Geschke Bob Dylan Mason Palmer Tom Hogarty K. T. Johnson William H. Howell (2) T. Paul Adams T. Jane Seamans Sara Wetherbee Harland Goudie John Shea Peggy Ryerson John Shea Robert Shellenberger Robert Borden Mary Borden Carrie Borden (2) Laurie Kahn Rachel Krause Ron Stockert John Patterson Terry Froman Kenneth Pahel Jean Robertson Dick Wissler Jean Wil- helms Nancy Miller Susan Isono, Larry Aspin Dan Logan Mary Ann Robinson, Dick Wissler, Peter Stetson Ray LaForge Laurie and Jenifer Hane, Lisa and Ronnah Metz, Richard Daley Jennifer Hane Roy Erickson, Allen Swisher Kathy Meyer Steve Messenger Greg and Nancy Houser Mike Burns, Sue Stack Patricia Drummond Peggy Judson, Alonzo B. See, Judith Woll Christopher Jones Beulah and Dee Gizmo Tom Ackley Charles Morin Mary Borgia Thomas Huntsha Pam Rose Betty Crane Pam Rose Jeff Katz Bert Collins Skip Budnick Mary Ann Robinson Fred Strodtbeck John Parrott Louie Kontos Linda Guckes Gail Moe San- dra Berger, Robert Coggeshall, Dale Train Jacobson Robert Kooser, Virginia Dale Steen Angela Asta Mina Shupienis Jeremy Gladstone, Dick Wissler Mike Webster, Ernest Kimball Edsel Littleton Harry Dalsey, John Martin Ann Chamberlain 217 218 78 ao p. 80 teh! rey 83 . 84 85 86 . 87 . 88 p. 89 p220 of OD 5 s p. 94 p. 95 aoe vine! ack 3 so 2k Res, 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 Lorelei Patey, Jim Hallock (2) Karen But- ler, Shirley Schwiesow, Clare Theobald, Peter Kirkpatrick Mike Goetsch (5) Alice Schlenker Bernie Braun Kathy Lanham Dave Ladner Doyle Clark Lorelei Lashin Kristine Robi- son Suzanne Agee Hickey Kerry Krumsiek Bob and Barb Hirsch Larry Lewis Judy Dudley Peter Von Meister Jim Reynolds (2) Ron Lasner Susan Isono (6) Michal Drabs Jim Irwin Bob Ottum David Bell Jeanne and Judd J essup Bill Garr Nancy and Jim Simko Ed Novak, Ray Howell Merrill Snoopy Sklenar Peter Folger Stetson (2) Jeremy Hamilton John Hofsas Carol Fren- dagayle Donald Sanville Frederica Musgrave Vicki Henderson David Sloan Susan Henze William Brady Paul Teichert Richard Armstrong Margie Zeiser Ida Gnowe Linda Kuczka John Pritz Vin- cent Throop Barb Groebner Jeanne Heller, Sandy Deutsch Mike Shain Peggy Moberg Janice Pope, Colleen E. Kel- ley Linda Pohle William E. Howell (07 Mike Tang Dick Hoover La Brenda White, Velma Pow- ell Mary Tarpley, Dick Greyson Laura Dempsey Ruth Gilson Janet Watson Sammy Maier, Sandra Hanna ate Barth, Dick Moffatt Mary Maddox Gail Carabine Jane Langer Danica Hurley Ann Fischer, Glenn Berntsen Lucy Mitchell Jill Cross Laverne Leuelling David Sloan Kathy Bair- stow Michael Grunze Bill Allison, Bill Hiatt Herbert Priestley Skip Sanders Michael Polite Janet Koran Mark Keller Howie Wishne p. 104 p. 105 . John Houston . Bill Allison Pauls Veichert . Ann Fischer . Sam Moon, Lawrence Rupley . Jim Meader . Jack Peterson . John Pritz, Ronald Markby . John Pritz . Jack Patterson . Richard Reno . Rachel Krause . Mike Polite . Claudia McFadden . Glenn Mrjenovich . Glenn Noel Paule . Paul Christiansen . John McMillan . Ken Michalik . Nick Peneff, Larry Smerin, Paul Teich- ert, Robert Leadbetter . John Durham, Maria Ippolito Jim Geschke . Paul Teichert . Toni Freed . David Dodd Monty Abbott . Rachel Krause . Margaret King . Nan Porett . Joe Heumann, Sue Henze . David Daniels . Rothwell Stevens . Rognvald Hourston Duane Moore Sherman Brown Jorge Prats Momcilo Rosic Harlan Knosher Carol Augustson Lynne Liebforth Peggy Ryerson. John Hubner Ron Stockert Paul Christiansen Mickie Bolotin Sara Wetherbee, Al Stanek Sara Wetherbee, Al Stanek, Bob Woel- ler Sara Wetherbee Mike Mannix Mike Mannix Mikiso Hane Mikiso Hane Becky Riddell, Joyce Tucker Bill Treacy Bill Treacy Dierdre Poste Dierdre Poste Mark McIntosh Larry Smerin Margaret Zeiser Henry Joe, Isaac O, Peterson Sheila Guter, Judy Ludwig Tom Michels p. 106 pel07 Marilyn Mortimer John Tracy John Tracy Vincent Throo Mark Hamman, Dick Wickman Katharine Finlayson Margaret Durkin Marlene Goodboy Jill Concannon, Tom Crabtree Suzanne Convery Joy Ott, Tom Docter Barb Groebner Alvin White Mary Hyman Christie Lemaire Alvin White Harry Neumiller Albert Gordon, Suzanne Convery Robert Shellenberger Jorge Prats Jorge Prats Jorge Prats, Sherman Brown “ Gary Francois William Kilkenny Carol Fefferman Carrie Borden Carrie Borden William Brady, Fred Jacobs William Brady, Fred Jacobs Mrs. Jacobs, Howard Wilson Howard Wilson Ed Niehus Carrie Borden Carrie Borden Hermann, Muelder Hermann Muelder Hermann Muelder Steve Echols Steve Echols . Harland Goudie, Albert Gordon, Rus- sel Sutton, Suzanne Convery, George Ward, Henry Joe Laureen Gizmo, Ron Lasner Wendy Scherwat, Dan Ford Jim Reynolds Dan Murray Tom Hogarty, T. Paul Adams Peter Overton, Kathy O’Connor Haw- kinson, Merrill Sklenar Ron Lasner Dan Barron, Dave Kenis Dan Barron, Dave Kenis Mary Ann Robinson Long, Steve Mey- ers, Mason Palmer, Tom Hogarty Jon Gradess Nancy Warner, Bill Combs Jon Gradess, Charlie Rice Dick Wissler, Jim Reynolds, Ann Maxfield Judy Dudley, Ann Chamberlain Mary Maddox, Larry Baldacci Laurie Kahn Peter Overton, Mary Ann Robinson Long p. 108 p. 109 joa Dapulets p. 112 30. Marge Pearson, Phil Serafini 31. Marge Pearson, Phil Serafini 32. Bob Swenson, Don Wilson 34. Isaac O. Peterson 35. Isaac O. Peterson 36. Ann Maxfield, Jeff Katz 37. John Burek Freshman Orientation Enrollment and Pumphandle Wallace Rally, Central Square, Galesburg, Illinois, September 25, 1968 Soccer: Harvey Namarika, John Martin, Karl Immenhausen, Steve Smith, Jon Kim- mel, Rich Toll, Phil Graff, Larry Nichelson, Jim Bilhorn, John Carlin, Harry Dalsey, Judd Jessup, Bruce Shadbolt, Jerry Schwartz, Harry Anderson, William Breeding, Rich Gleason, Fred Forbes, John Carbary, Larry Dunham, Steve Stump, John Marsalek, Dave Dodd Homecoming 1968 p-113-117 Football: 5 Dick Schwartz, 8 Topper Steinman, 10 Randy Purdy, 14 Doyle Clark, 25 Dennis Farrell, 28 James Rhodes, 31 David Jachim, 33 Max Utsler, 41 Wickie Lyons, 42 Cliff Senkpiel, 44 Delbert Camp, 46 Dave Ladner, 50 James Bauer, 52 Rich- ard Lahann, 62 Randy Black, 64 John Flood, 67 Wayne Stanley, 68 Arthur Ra- mirez, 71 Jerry Tatar, 72 Charles Morin, 75 William Cirone, 76 Terry Denoma, 77 Terry Froman, 81 Jim Doyle, 82 Neil Blevins, 83 Jim Hallock p-116 lower Homecoming Dance, Queen Jean Faloon, Escort Barry Bastian p.118 | UL Herbert Aptheker, National Director of American Institute for Marxist Stud- ies, speaking on the topic “The Nature of Revolution: A Marxian View;’ Oc- tober 16, 1968. UR Jesus Salas, Director of Obreros Uni- dos, an affiliate of the United Farm Workers, AFL-CIO, speaking on the topic “The Plight of the American Migrant and the Meaning of the Del- ano Grape Boycott;’ October 3, 1968. LL William Clark, campaign speech, Stan- dish Park, October, 1968, Galesburg, Illinois. LR Everett McKinley Dirksen, campaign speech, Galesburg High School ruins site, October 1968, Galesburg, Illinois. p. Lio “The Caretaker” by Harold Pinter—directed by James Reynolds, October 5-6, 1968. UICK ee ee te ee Re Sandy Simon ASION Bore Cee ite eae 2 ere Mason Palmer DAVIES aapeeen tet tates Richard Hoover p..120-121 “The Alchemist” by Ben Jonson—direct- ed by Robert C. Whitlatch, November 7-16, 1968. ‘ nip pai22 p. 123 Subtle = canon. ae ene Sandy Simon Face ots ah ieen ike Mason Palmer Dol, Commons Carol Marik Dappet:tjaetetor ea es ae: Howie Wishne Abel Drugeer sie eee Doug McDonald Sir Epicure Mammon ..... Paul Schrieber Pertinax:Suricy a scenes Larry Baldacci Anlanias® $2) ssieene eee Richard Hoover Tribulation Wholesome ..... Dave Dague Kastriltecg: tte eames eee Tom Minion Dames Plant) eee eee Mary Maddox LOVeWitso aoe cic eee John Hofsas Birst: Ne1ghbO ramen eee Kathy Masek SecondsNeichooree ane Rita Goldman Third :Netshboree ee Steve Malamud Parson! Seer ee Elliott Vizansky Officer 22 e eee e Charles Rice “Keep Tightly Closed in a Cool, Dry Place” by Megan Terry—directed by John Hofsas, October 26-27, 1968. Jaspers Erase ie nce Steve Malamud Michaels) a ee Dan Murray GLC ZOLY ee, sea ae Ray La Forge “Long Days Journey Into Night” by Eugene O’Neill—directed by R. Craig Wolf, No- vember 21-24, 1968. James siylonc ee James Reynolds Marya l yiones ee or Peggy Moberg Jamie=l yrOne waar eee Gerald Coleman Edmunds iyronee ee Sherwood Kiraly Cathlecnies ate sear .. Lucy Mitchell UL Nicholas Nyaradi, Professor of Eco- nomics and Political Science at Brad- ley University, speaking on “Election Day and the American Way;’ Novem- ber 5, 1968. . UR_ Robert Coover, faculty, University of Iowa program in creative writing, pre- senting a reading of his short story, “A Cat in the Hat for President}? October DI 9GS: LL The Pair Extraordinaire, October 17, 1968. LR Freshman Talent Show, October 17, 1968, Joy Ott, Suzanne Urban, Mar- garet Sweeney, Leslie Johnston, Pa- tricia Mabry, Carole Fefferman, Hel- ene Stanonik, Susan Henze. p. 124-127 Election Day, November 5, 1968—Amer- p. 128 ican Guerilla Vignettes. UL Lou Diskin, representative of the Illi- nois Communist Party, November 11- 12, 1968. UR and LL Michael Eisenscher, executive secre- tary of the Wisconsin Communist Par- ty speaking on the topic, “The No- vember Election: A Communist In- terpretation;’ November 11-12, 1968. CR Reid Buckley, speaking on the topic, “Can Conservatives Be Progressive;’ November 7, 1968. LR Anna Marley, guitarist, November 13, 1968. p. 129 Christmas Party, December 7, 1968. Santas @1 ats een een Tom Ackley Satitasi helpeiie, aa ee eee Betsy Bradt p. 130-131 Rush, January 17-19, 1969 palsi Helen Douthat, Wendy Scherwat, Liana Cope, Kim Smith, Sammi Maier, Sue Henze, Kay Boardman, Sandy Hroziencik. LL Carol Cravens, Barbara Dunn LR Neil Blevins, Danny Farrell, Mark Massey Paul Jensen, Steve Carpender, Clark Ames, Mike Polite, Bob Shullaw, Dave Hartman, Mark Hall, Mark Widmer, Bill Durall, Bob Robeson. LL Bruce Ackermann LC Karen Sanders LR_ Carol Marik p. 132-133 Basketball: 20 Tom Pschirrer, 21 Bill p. 134 pxl35 136 ee) B18 %85 xe) Ge) ae) ae a Daploo Fuerst, 22 Tim Heimann, 23 Kyle Kennelly, 24 Walt Davis, 25 Randy Bendrick, 30 John Park, 31 Jim Leech, 34 Bert Collins, 35 Marty Dybicz, 40 Terry Denoma, 41 Mike Nelson, 42 Rob Mentzer. Varsity Swimming: Ted Boecker, Ken Bur- dek, Haakon Bruun, Bob Butler, Casey Downing, Jim Graunke, Steve Harris, Bill Holway, Andy Hoyne, Lee Miller. Wrestling: 123 Daniel McDougall, Eric Twachtman, Ron Weingart; 130 Fred Keep- erman; 137 Mike McClay; 145 Peter Bas- tian, Mark Goodwillie; 152 Clarence Echols; 167 Dennis Farrell, Phil Serafini; Hwt. Arthur Ramirez. . 136-137 Modern Dance Exhibition, March 1, 1969 Mollie Miller, Sheila Webb Karen Kooser, Janis Dybdahl Karen Kooser UL Groundbreaking for the new Science- Mathematics Center, February 15, 1969. John Fairbank, President Umbeck UR Poetry Reading, February 7, 1969, Bill Kowinski, Nick Brockunier, Mike Shain LL Sidney Lens (2), Political Analyst and Author, speaking on “The Explosion in Africa and American Foreign Poli- cy, February 5, 1969. LR Mark Kac speaking on “Chance and Regularity,’ January 13, 1969. Top, CL “Mime Life” by Jim Reynolds— directed and performed by Jim Reynolds, January 11-12, 1969. CR, LL, LR “Act Without Words” by Samuel Beckett—directed and performed by John Hofsas, January 11-12, 1969. p 140-141 “The Master Builder” by Henrik Ibsen— directed by Peter B. Young, February 20-23, 1969. , p- 142 p. 143 p. 144 Flalyardssolness aaa ae James Reynolds Hildeaw ance letra et se Beth Willson (Aline sO OlDCSSaene ee Peggy Moberg Kajare OSliveene sa a ee Robbi Wilson Ragiai BlOVi ka Richard Riddell IDOctOtiier algerie eer ee Steve Suskin ICCC es OV kame ee Stephen Clark IDR Jay OVaMOY (oo ee Ann Baird Mrs Arboles ee Julie Morrill “The Balcony” by Jean Genet—directed by Sandy Arthur Simon, March 6-9, 1969. Lhe Bishops Doug McDonald (Lhe) Ud ce me eee. Richard Hoover rhe: Generales ta. Gna es Stephen Clark PpheceEXeCULIONC! aaa Peter Overton The Chief of Police ....... Mason Palmer Lhe; Beg oataeesne: eee! Howard Wishne IROGCE ee pete 2G... Jeremy Gladstone Hq he Cour nvOy as eiae Sherwood Kiraly ese NOtogra Neier nee. Al Fyfe Deis arta tee oa ee Jeremy Hamilton iE HesSinnec rear ae Mildred Culp ‘Lhesihiel Geer. «ora ula Mary Maddox LDetHOrsGaene ee acta Carol Marik Garmen gare ey a ee, he Rita Goldman CTA a eee ee ee ee Cathy Thompson The Tramp’s Girl ..... Jeannie Robertson ‘The Reyoltionary sane Ronald Lasner Top Ronald Terchek, Professor of Political Science at University of Maryland, speaking on “Civil Disobedience, Some Reconsiderations;’ March 6, 1969. Student Senate Presidential Candidates GUA CREEL CL Bill Holway (Running mate not pic- tured Bill Larkin) CR_ Steve Miller, Steve Doherty LL John Podesta (Running mate not pic- tured Dinny Mears) LR John C. Griffiths, visiting geological scientist, speaking on “The Problems in the Petrogenesis of Detrital Sedi- ments; “The Method of Multiple Prejudices;’ February 16-19, 1969. Top The Knox College Choir: Bottom Row, Nancy Scott, Rachel Krause, Gail Moe, Laura Fredenhagen, Mary Lou Wil- son, Dierdre Poste, Carole Fefferman, Pam Triebe, Jill Hazelbauer, Rita Shragal; Row 2, Vicki Henderson, Gaye Reiser, Shirley Covington, Deborah Howard, Jill Concan- non, Wendy Scherwat, Colleen Metternich, Diana Mueller, Vicki Behan, Karen King, Sammi Maier, Judy Dudley; Row 3, Sue Billett, Rhayma Blake, Beth Willson, Evan Jones, Bruce Erickson, Kerry Krumsiek, Bob Wetter, Dan Den Beste, Brian Allen, p. 145 p. 146 p. 147 p. 148 Dals2 p. 154 p. 156 jab ey p. 158 Alicia Jackson, Penny Wells, Charlotte Allen; Row 4, William McConnell, Greg Smith, Merrill Sklenar, Michael Martin, Jim Bilhorn, Ron Lord, Paul Jensen, Larry Brown, Dan Ford, Curtis Snook, John Clay, Bruce Shadbolt. LR Knox-Monmouth Wind Ensemble, pre- concert, November 24, 1968. Four in the Morning—Alan Spear, Vicki Henderson, Skip Sanders, Mark Keller. CL R_ Ferrante and Teicher, Duo Pian- ists, October 22, 1968. LL Skip Sanders A.B.L.E. Talent Show, January 10, 1969, Oak Room, starring: Carver Center and the Allied Blacks for Liberty and Equality. ‘Racial Crisis” Symposium speaker Bernard Carey, Undersheriff, Cook County, speaking on the topic “Law, Order and Justice?’ January 23, 1969. “Racial Crisis” Symposium speakers Father James Groppi speaking on the topic “Racism in America;’ January 29, 1969. Charles Hamilton, Chairman, Dept. of Polit- ical Science, Roosevelt University and co- author with Stokely Carmichael of Black Power speaking on the topic “Black Power,’ February 3, 1969. Paul Jacobs, co-author of The New Radicals, author to Prelude to Riot, candidate for U. S. Senator on the Peace and Freedom Party ticket with Eldridge Cleaver, friend of Laurie Kahn, speaking on the topic “The White Radical’s place in the Black Move- ment;’ February 12, 1969. “Black is Beautiful”—Brenda Butler, Pa- tricia Ware Marty Pollack Muff Swanson Susan Buckner (2) Peter Overton Jim Bilhorn (2) Clarence Echols Joel Wilson Tom Sweeny, Andy Hoyne Jim Graunke, Bob Butler Pam Rose Mike McCandless, Todd Crandall John Richards (2) Larry Moore Dane Guzzetta Pat Martin Jerry Boyers Ann Ehrich, Jim Rogers Jane Miller, Carol Wimmer Barry Burren Pat Kelly, Pam Wait Ed D’Aleo (2) Ed Novak, John Martin, Wayne Stanley Diane Aull Nick Brockunier Guy Clements Alfreda Dortch Candy Ach Connie Bond, Rich Conway Paul Behnke, David Delaw- der Sara Meister Steve and Carol Dilks Sheila Webb Janu- ary Roeschlaub (2) De Witt Brown 221 ae bey) . 160 mal6l mlOZ 163 . 164 e165 00 wLOT 6S SSD ale © all m z 6 ES Phil Serafini Jean Benzies Donna Yama- saki Kathy Bailey Alex Weigel Tom Pschir- rer Jean Faloon Rita Goldman Page Latham (7) Rita West- ermark Glenn Altman Don Dixon Elaine Hershman, Wayne Stanley Bob Kiss (3) Mick Fiocchi Anita Traher Del Camp Dan Murray Hunter Knight Marcia Hammond Monica Lund Gary Barnhart Dale (Train) Jacobson Sue Bar- croft, Jean Faloon Gary Barnhart, Sue Bar- croft Gary Barnhart (3) Martin Anker Susan Kay Donaldson (2) Steve Biesanz (2) Jeff Fobes (2) Anne Hinchliff David Delawder, Paul Papke Mary Hart Diane Tyrrell Steve Biesanz (1) Laurie Gasior Steve Es- tey Phil Frumyail, Mollie Miller Jim Dean, Mollie Miller Diane Tyrrell Tom Smith Jannice Hinchliffe, Bill Balla Robin Petrie, Ira Gold, Jan Koran Evan Jones, Kathy Bond Charles Washburn Mariann Lulich Denise Derning Bob Mignion, John Foulkes Robin Petrie, Ira Gold, Jan Koran Elaine Pohl, Gary German Al Kovarik, Linda Bernhard, Tom Driscoll (3) Ed Novak, Jim Hill, Ann Chamberlain Rich Scovie Car- lotta Hill Richard Creath Mary Gambill Suzanne Stannard Al Young, Steve Gabler William Schiesser Donald Beard (2) Steve Burns (2) Mick Fiocchi John Gardner Jan Carter Carole Canik Edgar Andreas Mary Quan- strom Carla Johnson Eileen Rivers Jerry and Lou Hess Craig Wolf (2) Donnie Nelson Elaine Vogel Bob Bidstrup Mar- guerite Thomas Donnie Nelson The Stinsons The Green- walds Angela Lanzolla Dave Booth (2) Bob Wilson Kathy Bailey Steve Hurley (2) Kyle Rost (2) Bill Combs (2) Dave McMillin Carolyn Oster Gerry Walter Joni Diner (2) p. 174 p. 175 p. 176 pe bv7 p. 178 p. 179 p. 180 Credits: Mike Goetsch Mary Ann Yurkonis, Sheila Webb, Marge Pearson Pershing Gooselaw Nick Brockunier (2) Sara Gummersall, Bill Treacy Noll Evans Penny Smith Mikiso Hane, Sam Moon, Doug Wilson (5) Ralph Walter Jim Dean Gerald Coleman Irene Deaville Steve Meyers Laura Gasior Toni Gummere Dave Luery Dave Novis Van Covington Dave Booth, K. T. Johnson Lorelei Patey Mike Burns Connie Mathisen Karen Knox Donna Chase Celeste, Jason Todd and Sandy Simon (6) Jon Gradess (2) Greg Thomas Julianna Quann, Terry Wil- liams Johann Kucik Henry Hulseberg Scott John- son (3) Rich Scovie Sandy Simon (212) Jim Ruppel Muff Swanson Jerry Schwartz (2) Mike Hosford, Ed Kucera Ellen Smith Bruce Shadbolt Michael Budds Donna Tribolet Jean M. Faloon (2) Marge Pearson Jon Gradess, Karen Miyake, T. Paul Adams (3) Carol Klimick (2) John Pedote Pam David- son Pat White Tom Wolf Bob Thompson pg. 112 photograph CR by Anne Ehrich pg. 124 photograph L by David Yount pg. 172 photographs of Kyle Rost by Dona Bryant pg. 180 photograph of Mike Hosford by Bob Mignin pg. 180 and 181 photographs of Ellen Smith and Donna Tribolet by Linda Pohle The essay appearing on pages 149-152 is the ontological autobiography of Martin - Davis Pollack. the opinions herein ibe are pot necessarily those fF the College or of | the Student body kunier SteveClark pales orice Grunze _ or Byte Sra eae Crea Thomas, Mare J. Wollman ial Visiting Phetagea gher — Koger S.Grdess Special octs — Nema Gamlontebertscn : Faculty Nduicor — Gene De Vite Creative Advisor — Robert S. Kiss Legal Counsel ys Aa Mane Phebegaghers — Rad isthe Dax Bratton 223 Co-Lditors Koren Miyake , Jon Gricless Associate. Sditore Susanl So no Lam Kose, sTaeillitianelseucans Coordinating Editor Joe Ansel( Tedustion Assigtets “Toy ae o¢ku nie oe rudy” aloon. ae Adler See: ee epipeler John ¥ eee Bes KOSS Manager Teter | thers MeShare Crechive Mavertising — Chrie Bela SteeDoherty “Bosiness Steff ashe udersor, or Aydorson Fhales Stale yess hee Ts ration nny Nears « Sim Grounke 224 FoF rans a Fane ‘ ‘ apes oa RETO TITS 2 =) ict eh Le a Stn Sp RNS eS = Sees SS ee Ream ichiger ee Le eS ree An aw Pi be nude ‘f Saar ‘av ee nie os : : : . =a ie ; : Se SS ie BS eae = eae ‘ ae St oti oe o : 2 + ent idkand re: 3 = a mm eee Se ame A ag i eT Sn See eg
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