Lake Forest College - Forester Yearbook (Lake Forest, IL)

 - Class of 1968

Page 1 of 248

 

Lake Forest College - Forester Yearbook (Lake Forest, IL) online collection, 1968 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 248 of the 1968 volume:

Z , Q j 1 Y' i- , D J I if Q I 'I nfl ' THE FORESTER 1968 all . Tig I LAKE FOREST COLLEGE LAKE FOREST, ILLINOIS 'rw n-Q!! -11- .-1-1-n p-1-..- .ig-..- .Tl- ...- iii - -.l--..: 1...--n EE EE! I So I ask you to join me once again and march down the road to the future l 5, k 491' 2 hrs ef- xi if The road that led to the Great Society. 3 99,95 , KF W' 11' -rf' Q 29' A yd 0' :sk . 'H X- if , Ua..xxk'M MY A road on which we found ourselves confront- ed with the tragedy of Vietnam, the festering sickness of a black ghetto population created by a white racist society, and a country where assas- sination has become the norm and not the excep- tion. Lake Forest students reacted with a new sense of commitment, a new social earnestness, no more did cries of apathy spring upon us. Yes, at long last we were IN VOL VED. ' -4 -6? 6 However deeply involved we were in the problems of the great society, we never forgot our real purpose, our avowed goals, which, coincidently, are concisely enumerated in the Lake Forest College Bulletin: Lake Forest College accepts as its primary pur- pose the cultivation of the mind in its ability to ab- stract, tojudge, and to reason, so that the student may grow in understanding, insight and wisdom . . Y' The study of economics provides no royal road to future material success . . .H 6'The liberal arts serve to free man from the bonds of ignorance and superstition . . .H Indeed, we learned the art of leadership from our judicious teachers. And, though we graduate, their words ring true: once a Forester, always a Forester. Se- ,0 e f 5. ,. .- q N ,,.-as .,s. ' . F Q 1 v'1 ' N n,v 55 ', x ,r M J x nz' .I s I 'V' Q - .-.'-M ,x 5. rxh 5,l, . A, 1 ,J, . WAR ERT 9? - 515: 8 ju N But things were not so line as they rnight have been. There are drop-outs in every society, and ours had its share. These hedonists, products of insidious Spockian permissiveness, were all around us and, though they were detested and shunned, we Foresters accepted them in the best liberal tradition. W Q QW Slut at S M675 f Eiuppurl Finally, we were concerned with each other, with developing meaningful friendshipsg ties to last us through the years. How well do you remember your identity crisis? Your first proposition? And, ah yes, can you remember chez Harlan without giving out a little chuckle? I0 1 .2 Indeed, we learned not only who we were, but how to get along with other human beings, how to react with sensitivity to the problems and desires of our neighbors, and even though there were certain sick people among us who felt the need for artifi- cial stimulation, the vast majority of Foresters still cultivated one American ideal, through it all we learned the meaning and felt the excitement of good, clean fun. gs Kr . . fs, s, C. 4- 3 . ,L. 'K P. 11,115 sM5',4, NFL 'Q ws y Q. W.-'L f- lv -x A ' ' ..-f.?'d's K 3 at N 'xi if In .wif ft. K ' 3' X 'ln 1. ' 'mfg' . ,. H-9 X In . ,lk 'V , ax ' If f 1 M ' be X - -Q w I if v ' A' ' A 3--1 X .Q 5 1 I : Cyw ' I ' Q 1 ' I 4 ' v , eu ' -.V-i4lul Fa+ Qm :! :..I.xf' .Mull , 'S avr 7 5 4 'y a -f x , 1' 'K I , S I, , ' w . -4' ', f ' . l ' , ff . , - . . . - ,. , Q ,I npr? 4 01.5 In .,.'.d, 'A' K '!'a is ,.'- . A I . ' , X4 ' O ' ' AQ? K4 , i.-?T.',.'s'A'2' V..s-x ,'I Jai- 1- I , f af ' YF.-Q A 2' -:fgff .1 . V! 1 4 , X sa ,A W l 13' ' :,f:...?f'a ' X Nb f , Q ' ' I v 'sl f 4 f . Ura- '24 . K!-r. - -f- ' '- 1' : ad. , A .Ji 6 'A' Q ww xg? fs. 8 rf - 'u' ' . .i . ' f-. Y. - ' x. Y' gf, ,1Ws.'l .:.' ,,,, wlueyklb 1 I ' -.M . lc, 'ry ,...,-F Q . 'Q ,- ' I I 'gf I' il 1I'.'. glsfw- Q' Hg.. Q ' Q ' T. - ol cn-ix. .: 1.6 . .rf I , - 'Q' 'ff-'T 3' .'.' lu 9 , 4--v ff fr-af- ' .ce if ...sf A : I Q b a ' 1 P mfs. I. fi: I Y '?'.5,,3gf',j 'fig ' .' 1' Q . , Q' , , . s . x Y . Qgll pl- ssl 4 xx : J R - 3 al Qu. 'J9: l':'3f'A1'..3 A L15 'Y' J' desi! , 13, Q lx Q' A if EQ. -.Qillg .. l ,' -4, n.g,' . r A 1 . 5 ' Q' .5 '. 4 Q gr: I M -x.V Q o I' K! 4 0 Q G , 8 0 'NA Q ., S Q 1 9 1 ' r 'x 4 A 1 o fi v re . a n D QQ of -J! F FALL Q i ,. , ,, I H I .4 . ,n . , . ,AL ' A Hx lyk! vm , . , U ,,' Qrsx , 1 T 'A Nj: ' ,',,r , - 'ICQ' wx, 1 ..w,,,, .fx .i vL,,,,,,,H-M I--' .-nity - ' 1 ' - ,. . ' .. , , ' V'f r 1'av. Vg N W -N, -w A 'jf Q .wgwb , gy 1 J --N 4, 5 if .f X' N .1 3. , ,f S. X -Q i NF :W w X Q 'A+ xk X9 Q X.. NX xxi i X 1 4+ ,Q Q XX 5 . NP? I x.' U x I ! , . Y,- f-'I' Q -5' L .N A . , .X .. Ni'P-iii? ' D ' ' - ' - .aww f'NQ'Fw1.x s. t ' , I NX .Nw - 1 . lx x. N . x .4 .- X 3 - . ,pu-P ,, 0-z-s......, --f ' . ,. l 1 , 'cn -,.. Q . . - Q3 Y- N, fa N. .. .,-W- W ' A , ,Au .Q 'T' ' '1 2 ,,,,...,.... M I 89+ A4 .- V ' as , V ., .... x h sul- . 44Q.:l '6 -f L. ' 'f -: xvf -' ' -- xm- OKQ: .- lx,-. X ' ' ' X 1 , Q .- . .. x r W . .i ---- . .iw 'xl ' mat-E X me Mwmmn Ns ,Q ,N - 6 1 fx Ap t K 1 ,Yi B -. N' sw-in uv h G ,-Q ' 'C , , ' . . . my... K 1, Y, ' s v-Wm fl , ' Q p nr '- H 1 - -S 'Q L ...fel,f 'f HOMECOMING 196 ' 'wx 0f,nsf.1.,,u:.:n.',q-f.c ' 'xfjwziv ff.-new fv XS: 'pi Q4 - f 1, W 5.8 W 'T' ' 9 K IQ ' Y f 'ti f Queen Candidates Soul Syndicate Phe Turtles -5- E i sp..- I 'xx u FOOTBALL SCO RES LFC O-17 North Park LFC 6-27 Hope LFC 6-9 Kalamazoo LFC 14-26 Concordia LFC 0-35 Elmhurst LFC 13-21 Iowa Wesleyan LFC 7-9 Illinois College LFC 7-6 Wilmington V x , -vm .rw-'fn M 1. X. N. '-w... View Nubuk Qs WE ff? A 'K -'-v 1 . . N x ,'.- P' 0+ X ,qv ff H ,.f W ,-gfdf, ,vi 'mfii' 1' , Q m' K if X -A 4 lv, . 'if' ' .jig .An ' , r .. . 1'g.!', . pw ' Q' 5,3 J H4 gf flu 1 M, , . N' - ,B 4? PXP' M? . Y' .fu 91 1982- .af SCCC ER f gf. LFC LFC LFC LFC LFC LFC LFC LFC LFC LFC LFC LFC MaCMurray Maryknoll Seminary Wabash Aurora Calvin Wheaton Hope U. of Chicago Erlham Rockford Kenyon Wooster LAKE FOREST? COLLEGL UEQRARV -,'e l , . V- A--v--1 , James Dickey Brian Silver Ralph Ellison Bramwell Fletcher FALL SPEAKERS A. Kenneth Cragg Eliseo Vivas e fc 'Si- PEACE MARCH Lake Forest, Illinois is not the usual place for demonstrations of any nature. But on October 19 when thousands marched in Washington, New York, and San Francis- co in protest ofthe War in Viet Nam some 150 LFC students walked peacefully around the Village Square. Carrying an array of protest signs, the students and faculty marched in silence while townspeo- ple looked on curiously. Comments ranged from Just what the Commies wanted and Send someone to the college to talk to these people to Very nice, very good. On the way back to campus the marchers were escorted by a Lake Forest policeman, who stated that he was simply there to protect the students. CGA For those who take student government seriously, The Community Government Association, under the vibrant if tranquil leadership of President Joel Stronberg, was a relative success. Relative, in the sense that 1967-68 CGA did about as much as any previous administration. It successfully demonstrated that the stu- dents do not like to associate themselves with long hairs and hippies who wish to destroy free speech by banning recruiters of that munihcent and freedom loving in- stitution A the U. S. Marine Corps. After preserving free speech in that fashion, CGA moved to revise it's constitution ta- gainj. Under the driving leadership ofVice President Nick Bauman. the revolutionary new blue prints for progress never got to the floor of that distinguished body of leg- islators. The only real winner in CGA this year was the perennial champion. Sturgis. whose famed Rules of Order caused enough chaos to whet the tempers of all. DEATH OF A SALESMAN Nobody dast blame this man. You don't under- stand: Willy was a salesman. And for a salesman, there is no rock bottom to life. He don't put a bolt to a nut, he don't tell you the law or give you medi- cine. He's a man out there in the blue, riding on a smile and a shoeshine. And when they start not smiling back - that's an earthquake. And then you get yourself a couple of spots on your hat, and you're linished. Nobody dast blame this man. A salesman is got to dream, boy. It comes with the territory. Arthur Miller :F 4. aa. S331 is -Vw 7 LE? A 1 and ww PUUIA4 1, v,,,1 -ww 15-km 1,13 H!':'w'-g-'fi SIYW f f' - N - . visu- .x .au- la., m I .w w yp 3 5 'O Zfi f 1 ' . if X 29 5 ' Jw ? 7 4 . t: 'f3'siiii' ' f x Q V f,-gmsf ff, . ,N ff' if ' , , .-f 'A , lgpulf saw-.-M M... i--..,. ,,,...f AM -'s,,'-sn .' 1 .af an . . ,J 0' wa Q P 4461 M , I 1 Q I 'Q ' 9. T m. f 75 '- 'E 5 of Vp I JP . . ,' f- q A . f ng! -2.1 ,rp 4 3 u- 5 'Os ...Qi K ?,zf ' z ', . , 8 044. b.. , 'Q . Q. . ,dl sn, YW Px 'W - f i.1 K , .iff 'B' 5f ' 'i. 1? - 7 Jfcffff. 5, ,if :hx ' ' 5 A 5 ,I . fi? i :f' 5'?1 1 ' X + 3 ' qt, ' 3 - fit . Q' Qs. v f Q '!. 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' AALAL B --.fel ,is 4 S.1, uggxg ,Isl ,q ,V , I 5 I . 5 ' .. - ' ' 9 l E 5F 5ff.. .7 . A ig: in f' X . iv, I 1 ! 4 . kr I an :u4?x --.':,1.'8t -Y -. J f, ,X Eta .fi f M is 4 ki . T In it, f in s-. w..- Q25 'A-.II . iq'4ff'K ram'-If-, gf 1 'Q Jfff' . f Qs :XSS 'Z ' J X l 5 1 Q - . X y 0 N -. .gr - f . P , f .xi 1 . , 5, ex- ,Q- . f, - I Q1B.g ' 1 ., V . g-'- fl' , 1 , . 'LX ' I ixzf 'h' 'JPO YL A E . 0 , - ' ' . . Q, ,t- Qxq 1 4 ei-1-' xl? I' - 3 5'5? - .1 ff. ,Kg N -: X I .dv !i .fa E '! '1 .1 A if-in '14 f- , ' X ,. . A .4.- X YN-' .ti -g '.:.'.'-iii. 1?...r1L - , Y i.-. J r.- : A ' ' 1- -.,f-1 -- 4 T -fri. , 1-fgq, ' r if7 'J - ' ':1. 1' ' ' K ov-'. 'he'-ie?-i - x V - . n I xx . . 3 .5-,. ,L ' . .A P 'f 'S . Q' ..' Ib . .s 4 .A ff X' YZ - 1. ' .afy faq , gn B ,rp fe, ai 1 'M MA., .high 7 I , Q fi 'WW Af 5.- F N, 34 i1 -' A COMM NS .Jun--Q wwe- 1 k.....L... L... A-.Ji-1. L.:..,,. .134 M MEM -L-.. ---N... ,-Av.. ,,A, . N., TM QI -x-f,...1....I . -,.,,4,..,...Ly N -......... wx x gay .fe ,Q V. SQ X ,,.. 'Q W 3 ,, X . .Mu ' ' vu -4 'J' - - ' , dh-, q 4 Rv ra, .., t. . .-ef--q-4-5 W I ,..f f5 I 'Q Q ik-1. -..-,yxw 'sg Eleo Pomare SOUL WEEK JANUARY 24-28 As I heard the panel discussion Why Be Black? with Paule Marshall, Vincent Harding, Ronald Fair. Lerone Bennett, and Sterling Stuckeyg I knew right away that Soul Week '68 was not going to be another ordinary conference -- IT WAS NOT! The panel set the stage for the conference: the stage was to be Lake Forest College but the performers were to be black. What fol- lowed the panel discussion was a series of representatives from the field of fine arts who demonstrated how the black perspective could be woven into the arts medium. It was not only enjoyable to listen to the down home flavor and idioms of the poetry read by Ossie Davis and Ruby Dee, but also inspiring and captivating in a way that boiled down to pride in Soul. The main purpose of Soul Week '68 was to present to the stu- dent body and faculty of Lake Forest College, and to members of the North Shore-at-large, a program, through the medium ofthe fine arts, surveying the various aspects of the Afro-American Culture. It was an attempt by black Lake Forest students, with the help of their non-black fellow students, to promote an aware- ness and understanding of the black in American Culture on a level less superficial than that which might have been engendered by a conference centered around political debates and the like. As a further and, perhaps more distant. end, it was the hope of blacks at Lake Forest that, through this awareness and under- standing, better relations between all members of American so- ciety fspecihcally the college communityj . . would be perpetu- ated. Carl L. Maultsby Ruby Dee Ossie Davis Dance Troupe Genefs The Blacks i Jill Harris Odetta .'A F'3 A .4, Q '1 I 1 H mffrszlf 2ml mf fm : Abraham J. Heschel .R 'll ,..bwN.l:.rNx . AN X Willie Davis M Rollo May Howard Nemerov ww' , ,. . f V vi- is fs, x..,.::q' .W N :ibm 'Q X-..,, X 'XX BASKETBALL Q' 'E ... ...... !i5l SCO RES LFC 47-68 Kalamazoo LFC 54-68 U. of Chicago LFC 84-83 Knox LFC 63-71 Carroll LFC 54-53 U. ofChicago LFC 62-68 Carthage LFC 63-83 Concordia LFC 74-66 Albion LFC 72-98 Carthage LFC 63-100 Hope LFC 60-84 Wooster LFC 76-88 Concordia LFC 70-93 Hope LFC 71-69 Carroll LFC 72-55 Elmhurst LFC 71-96 Wabash LFC 78-73 Rockford LFC 73-69 Rockford LFC 46-54 North Park LFC 94-74 Elmhurst LFC 75-97 Aurora LFC 64-82 North Park 43 M Q- ' mfg i -,A-5 A f 'W' - , .. .. ,rbi 'N , - ws. - K SCO RES LFC 21-18 Concordia LFC 14-21 North Park LFC 6-31 Carthage LFC 2-1-11 U. ofChicago LFC 15-26 Valporaiso LFC 3-30 Wayne State LFC 19-12 Kalamazoo LFC 24-11 Beloit LFC 24-8 Judson LFC 21-11 Knox LFC 12-24 Monmouth LFC 15-23 Carroll LFC 19-16 Elmhurst LFC 21-16 Judson WRESTLING HOCKEY Nei? I 'W 5 Q X 5 E I' . 'N SCORES LFC 4-0 Western Michigan U. LFC 12-0 Northern Illinois U. LFC snow Air Force Academy LFC 5-1 Ohio State U. LFC 6-2 Ohio State U. LFC 4-0 U. of Ill., Chicago Circle LFC 0-10 U. of Wisconsin LFC 10-2 George Williams College LFC 4-2 Oberlin College LFC 6-0 St. Procopius College LFC 3-6 Bowling Green LFC 2-12 U. of Wisconsin LFC 5-2 Gustavus Adolphus LFC 1-0 Northern Illinois U. LFC 6-1 U. of Illinois 46 Q E 4 GAL- 51 Wo MS! s R ,es ,9..... Rf J l x EHR? DRE f U, 1 1 Ubin. x S . lr ll:- I A .4-any TUTURIAL PROJECT Since l963 Lake Forest students have been commuting once a week to schools and settlement houses in Waukegan and Chicago to provide tutoring services for under- privileged children. Since its birth the members of the tutorial project have become increasingly aware ofthe wide cultural gap that separates them from the blacks and Latin Americans ofthe inner city. This year, in an attempt to bridge this gap by bet- ter understading its nature, students arranged conferences and discussions with social workers and teachers from the ghetto areas and with black students from the Lake Forest campus. It was clearly obvious, however, that this was only a preliminary step. With the encouragement of Dr. Arthur Zilversmit the project members formed a course to be included in the 1968-69 curriculum which would deal with specihc educa- tional problems in urban America. The course. covering such topics as teaching the disadvantaged, history ofthe black ghetto, and community resources, will be a sup- plement to the tirst-hand tutoring experience. Next year, with more knowledgeable members, the tutorial project should make a greater contribution to the campus and to the surrounding communities. Bob Armistead I N, - L'f.1' fm ll 'K s me -TENT xv. lf' Jar . wilt! nz' ti ' 1. 1' gt :f er 'A gf :Us I I I 'Xlxh lt,5Rl'ST lfOl,lEf li OF LAKE FOREST COLLEGE ESTABLISHED 1886 LAKE FOREST, ILLI.N'OIS Generation Gap: Division Street, LFC 9 The Communication Gap by Steve Logowitz This week at least two separate groups of interested students have assembled for the purpose of altering scheduled Generation Gap activities. Specifically, criticism has been leveled at the Administrations preplanning of zvents, allegedly executed with a mini- num of consultation and communica- ion with the student body. Further liscord has arisen from what has been ermed a token participation of v The Student Gap Those administration personnel di- 'ectly involved with the conference 'epeatedly emphasized that past con- .ultations with student body members iad indeed taken place. ln October 1967, three students in- :luding the President of CGA and the iead of campus cultural committee lid in fact assemble to discuss confer- ence plans with college officials. These students then aired their opinions :oncerning a preplanned listing of 9 The Credibility Gap Earlier this week, interested stu- fents consulted with Nlrs. Ruth Winter af the Cultural Office and President Dole. A list of four propositions was submitted by the group. These being: ..5 time allowance for informal discus- sion with conference participants 2.5 mrganized classroom seminars headed my the speakers 3.5 the inclusion of students in the scheduled dinner plans if these speakers and 4.5 greater al- owance for actual panel discussion by nean of curtailing speeches. On Tuesday Administration officials . . Ana' The RMI Widens A separate faction has apparently irisen in response to a very different series of inequities. Convening as per- sonally aroused individuals rather han as a specific group, this interest- ed party has sought to act in conjunc- ion with a national protest against acism and the Vietnam war. Lake Forest students within the frame- work of the conference. Sporadic but campus wide antago- nism for scheduled questions of panel discussions has been vented toward their negative character and their inapplicability forthis generation. The Development Office of the Lake Forest College administration recently issued its own schedule of speakers and events for a spring converence entitled Between the Generations: conference speakers, activities, and questions devised by an administra- tion committee. Students registered criticisms against the nature of the suggested questions: but the question of student involvement received minimal atten- tion. lt sounded fine to us. said one. We just assumed students would be involved. Two subsequent meetings followed. with the same students summoned in issued a listing of all conference par- ticipants accompanied by allotted time of their availability for informal discussion in Reid. The second re- quest for seminars was flatly denied by President Cole. It was further explained that most speakers would be the guests of fami- 'ies within the Lake Forest community. While these families have received suggested lists of students, only a few had actually issued invitations by Stentor press time. Cole noted that panel speeches are The coincidental nature of the Gen- eration Gap Conference was deemed unfortunate by one junior woman. but the series of events might prove advantageous to students desirous of dramatizing their dissatisfactions. This is not to discount the fact that The Confidence Gap. after many months of patient planning. The list of invited panelists for the three day CApril 24-265 conference is an impres- sive one, offering 28 outside experts. representing both generations, and three Lake Forest College students fdenoted in one official publication by an asterisk5. Of the 28, perhaps no more than seven of these are actually under thirty years of age. None are undergraduate students. advisory capacities. lt was noted. how- ever, that by this time. many of the original conference ideas had already taken form. The question of student participation reappeared, and confer- ence committee-men agreed to rectify the situation. Attempts Made One week ago. opportunities for students to usher. lead tours, and pro- vide transportation were presented to the student body. expected not to exceed seven minutes each. Radicals in Hiding To date, small student groups have begun to align themselves against the administration with hopes of a confer- ence boycott. As most have been oper- ating in relative secrecy, factual infor- mation has been virtually non-exis- tent. To be sure, however, there pres- ently exists a growing resentment against very real issues. some of which ironically appear among the confer- ence questions. many of these same students profess little affection for the conference in its entirety. she added. Although no definite plans have as yet been formulated, hopes run high that a significant teach-in be slated during the first day of the conference. fl .4 ' pf nun' l Nepotism Clause Forces Quitting lvlrs. Ruth Sproat. college regis- trar, has submitted her resignation and lvliss Ruth Ann Bopp has been appointed in her place The resignation is effective in June. Mrs. Sproat resigned in order to comply with an unwritten policy prohibiting a husband and wife from both being employed by the college full time on a continuous basis. Mrs Sproat married Profes- sor John Sproat. a tenured profes- sor inthe history department. last year, The Sproats. though questioning the wisdom of the policy. expected that Mrs. Sproat would have to re- sign at some point. according to Dr. Sproat. President Cole permitted lVlrs. Sproat to maintain her position through next June, according to the President Last spring Mrs. Sproat was also elected secretary of the National Association of Registrars and Col- lege Admission Directors This post entails a three year term, The Sproats were under the impression that Dean Dunn would permit lVlrs. Sproat to fill two years of that term. ln this case. she would stay em- ployed until June, '69.' Page2 THE STENTOR MEET THE BROTHERS It is time for the fraternities and sororities of Lake Forest College to be dis- solved. The administration has too long tolerated the existence of these perni- cious organizations in the midst of what it professes to be an institution of learning and personal development. This is a call to rouse the citizens of the academic community to a realization of their educational responsibilities. The fraternity is a selfish, hedonistic, divisive, discriminatory and anti- scholastic collection of people. It serves no useful purpose in itself, but de- rives its sustenance through a parasitic relationship that drains the college of much energy, time, talent and devotion. The particular mis-deeds of fraterni- ties that plague campus life each year are not isolated incidents, but rather the products of a life-style, a Weltanschauung, faffectionately referred to as fart it off 7 that is antithetical in essence to the expressed goals of any insti- tution of higher learning. When students are discriminated against, when needed quiet hours are interrupted by round after round of weekend beer- blasts, when a general attitude of self-indulgence and anti-intellectualism is fostered, and sanctioned, implicitly or explicitly by the campus as a whole. what is indicated is a general trend, a consistently harmful pattern of group behavior which demands to be brought to an immediate halt, for the inevita- ble result of such behavior is that everyone suffers, those who participate and those who merely breathe in the general climate of mental slackening and decay. tContinued On Page 35 CGA DRIBBLE We are appalled by the tremendous amount of dribble writ- ten on these pages before you by next yea r's CGA candidates. They are included in this issue because we feel it only fair that the entire student body be exposed to their views, but if you do not have a great deal of time, then do not even bother to waste it on reading these speeches. What you will find, if you do read them, are only new ideas for changing the structure of the CGA delegate system, and ways to increase student interest and concern in student government. We believe that this year's candidates are touched with a bit of paranoia. Why should they be so unhappy if the whole campus does not share their enthusiasm about constitutional revision, voting procedures, and the election of secretary and treasurer? The candidates, if they had any political sense, should realize that these subjects are of no interest to Lake Forest students today. And why should they be? It is for the above reasons that the Stentor cannot support any of the candidates for next year's offices. What CGA needs is someone with a creative mind - someone who can turn La ke Forest's student government from an organization bogged down in parliamentary procedures to one which tran- scends the normal duties of ruling bodies. In other words the CGA of today is obsolete. It no longer servesa meaningful function to the majority of students on this campus. Never- theless, most of us believe that a student government should be a part of our college careers. It does, after all, serve some necessary, although too often mundane functions. And it can do meaningful things, if the leaders would only think a little bit. We, therefore, suggest that the student body reject this pal- try slate of candidates. If you decide to vote at all, then write- in a candidate, a person whom you can be sure will not spend all of next year re-arranging votes, constitutions and housing boards. LETTERS To The Editor Honkie Holiday To The Editor: Whitey, you'll never learn. I once had hope that possibly this future genera- tion would have the awareness and insight to realize the sad course this society is taking. I felt that if there was anything to awaken the sleeping dogs that inhabit this country, it would be the tragic events of the past weekend. But Whitey, you have become so in- volved inthe somnambulism in which you live your life that I have given up all hope for you, and the sick society you perpetuate. I can hear you now, What's that boy talking about? Well, let me hip you! Classes were called off for Tuesday in memoriam to the late, great Dr. Mar- tin Luther King. This is a time when all people should be re-evaluating their self, their values, and their society. Black people have been doing this since that tragic Thursday evening. Monday afternoon, I talked to a few, and they were few, concerned whites who had donea littlethinkingthem- selves. But, that same night all my hope for this society died. The future leaders, the white college students of today, spent Monday in celebration. South Campus was a collage of drunken cheers for fireworks and buffoonery. Time that should have been spent in re-evaluation on the part of all peo- ples, was better utilized by the whites on this campus for participation in the barbaric rites and ceremonies they call fun. WHITEY, I DON'T KNOW WHAT'S ON YOUR MIND, BUT I WON'T BE SUR- PRISED IF THE NEXT THING IS A BUL- LET FROM A BLACK GUN.- Russell H. Jackson Hungry Thanksgiving THE STENTOR Published weekly throughout the aca- demic year by Lake Forest College in Lake Forest, Illinois. Second class postage paid at Lake Forest, Illinois, under the Act of March 3, 1879. Nsvnesswrso ron NATIONAL AovsimsiNc sv National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 Madison Ave. New York, N.Y. CHICAGO Q BOSTON Q Los ANGELES Q SAN rnANcisco Editor ....,......... Donald Strasser Associate Editor ..... Steve Logowitz Dear Students, Relief from Szabo food is in sight! Yes, in a short time you won't have to suffer through daily doses of jello and chicken because during the Thanks- giving break you won't be fed at all. Our Administration reasons that the Thanksgiving break is a vacation for all of us, and since students are not fed during other vacations, then we should not be fed during Thanksgiving Cin fact, the last meal served will be lunch on Wednesday, November 22 and the next meal will be dinner on Sunday, November 263. This leads me to wonder that if Thanksgiving is a true vacation, then to be consistent the Administration should charge all students staying on campus the usual S2 a day levied against all students remaining on campus during Christmas and Easter vacations. But since there is no planned room charge. then Thanksgiv- ing is not a true vacation and the action planned in reard to meals is uncalled for. We should also note that if each stu- dent is expected to go home during Thanksgiving, then an additional trav- el allowance should be given to stu- Ding Dong Dumont Goes Tooth 81 Nail Into N.H. Primary They laughed when Cap'n Don sought in vain to debate now-Senator Charles Percy about the state of world affairs. They laughed when that same Good Humor man pledged his Republi- merican energies toward the goal of President of the United States. But when Lake Forest's own Don Dumont appeared at the New Hampshire Presi- dential primary this week to declare less taxes and more pay, some of that laughter subsided. Dumont legal- ly stated his intentions as a Presiden- tial candidate with forty others, declar- ing The only thing false about us is my teeth. Who knows, they may still be laugh- ing. News Editor ......... Barbara Berzoff Sports Editor ..... Charles Wellington Feature Editor ......, Amanda Harris Special Projects Editor ...., .lan Wolff Business Manager. . . Bill Alexopouios Ass't. Business Manager . . . Alan Beck Photo Editor ,.........,. Ron Pownall Advisor .......,...,.. Gordon White The opinions which appear in the Stentor do not necessarily reflect those of the student body, faculty or administration. THE STENTOR I Page3 Bitching Turns To Bullin by Amanda Harris Last Thursday's Bitch ln should rightfully have been called a Bull Out, for it was the bull that the Ad- ministration handed out so freely, not the bitching of the students. that made the occasion memorable. The issues raised before President Cole, Dean Hoogesteger and Dean Necker were those that one expected to hear: parietals, freshman women's keys, Tusitala censorship. Hoogesteger and Cole, bypassing Necker, monopolized the floor and both gave equally evasive answers to the questions. When asked about the forced resignation of Mrs. Sproat be- cause ofthe nepotism policy, Cole shrugged and said, Ah, well, you win some and you lose some. He qualified this not-so-brilliant remark by the statement. No one is indispensable. Cole's stand on morality is that it should not be legislated. That is, not unless it is convenient. Parietals and freshman women's hours safeguard sexual morality. After all, as Hoogeste- ger so knowledgeably pointed out, women are the prey of men. Also, parents must be appeased and parents pay the bills. The student body was also greatly reassured by Cole's statement that the college does not exist solely for the benefit of our neighbors, the residents of Lake Forest. lf it were, the student body would not contain any of the extremely questionable characters from the Eastern seaboardf' After an hour and a half of Cole's wisdom, no one could help but feel that Lake Forest College is in good March Saturday April 27 - 12:30 In Chicago 0 Hungry lContinued From Page 21 dents on scholarships since travel al- lowances are allocated for other vaca- tions. Regardless- of whether or not Thanksgiving constitutes a true vaca- tion, it would be advisable for Lake Forest students to start stocking up a food supply for Thanksgiving. Also, I would recommend that all those stu- dents who had planned to work on papers in the library during this holi- day had better make other plans be- cause the library is tentatively closed for the Thanksgiving break. Joe Flowers N2-ah N hands. President Cole did not feel that the censored Tusitala cover was ob- scene: hefavorsthe abolition ofthe language comp, and he foresees open dorms for women. After all, just the fact that he is partially 'responsible for changing women's hours from 8:30 p.m. in 1960 is strong evidence of Cole's powerful leadership. One must sympathize with Cole's position, however, and agree with his closing comment, Even being God ain't no bed of roses. How tragic. 0 Brothers fContinued From Page 21 But the issue goes far deeper than noisy libraries and boring classes. Fra- ternities divide the student body itself up into arbitrary cliques that accen- tuate socio-economic disparities and exacerbate the hostilities and conflicts which result. While on the one hand each Greek community separates itself from its neighbors, a deeper alienating fissure arises between those who pledge and those who choose to remain independent. lt is through this insti- tutionalization of factualism that the students are prepared for more serious segregational practices on a larger scale in later life, for religions that abhor other faiths, for nationalism and its accompanying wars, indeed for every form of ethno and egocentrism which lies at the heart of human preiudice. regional, racial, and otherwise. It is this spirit of clannishness, of needless antagonism, which is so very constitutive of fraternity life. Yet for all the separation which the fraternity engenders. there is not a scrap of individuality. The unique person, the genuine non-conformist. is not appreciated in fraternity circles. instead, the student loses his own self to the degree to which he is assimilated by group standards, conventions. and modes of thought lt is true there are exceptions - there are those rare people who can maintain some kind of authentic existence as individuals while at the same time participating in fraternal affairs. But this is individuali- ty in spite of the fraternity. not because of it. There are many colleges that function quite well without fraterni- ties. These institutions are now freed for better things. Let us hope that the student body, faculty and administration of Lake Forest Col- lege will finally gather up the cour- age to do away with this obvious blight on the college landscape. Delay will only result in a further retardation of academic and cul- tural growth, and in further preju- dice and narrowmindedness, under Censors Art the guige of good Clean fun, TusitaIa CoverJudged As0bscene The cover of the 1968 Winter issue of Tusitala, the campus literary maga- zine has been censored by the Administration. The cover displaying a nude female exposing her pubic hair was felt to be of questionable taste. Junior Haakon Chevalier made the drawing. Censorship action was taken when the college printer, William G. Breining -decided that the drawing lacked good moral judgement. The drawing was then relayed to President Cole who did not oppose the printer's decision. On Wednesday the Student-Faculty Life Committee met to discuss the is- sue. The committee decided that a group of three faculty, three students and the Dean of Students should comprise a review board to deal with problems of this nature. At a meeting last term of the Faculty-Student Life Committee and the edi- tors of publications it was tentatively decided that any infractions by student editors should be brought before the publications board and their advisors. This motion was subject to approval by the faculty. At that meeting it was also agreed that the college printer would no longer decide on what was and what was not tasteful. Commenting about the censorship issue Dean Hoogesteger said that such matters always present very difficult problems. He said that no matter how one decides what is acceptable for publication always involves an arbitrary decision. He stated, however, that because publications are supported by college funds that the publications cannot be entirely autonomous. Hoogesteger also mentioned that there are often requests for the literary magazine from individuals outside the campus and that the college must consider the moral astes of the community. Tusitala editor, Pat Cleckner stated, The action taken against the drawing and not the drawing itself. is obscene. A new drawing by Haakon Chevalier has been substituted for the Winter Tusitala. Sorority Expires: Gamma Sisters Decline Comment Word went around in the early part of the week that the Gamma Phi The- ta. one of the two remaining sororities on campus went out of existence. The Stentor sent out a reporter to investi- gate, who encountered two officials of the organization. The girls confirmed the rumor. yet when asked for the rea- son for their closedown, they replied. The matter is our own private busi- ness, and lt just hurt's too much to talk about. tContinued On Page 43 Ed. Note: this is reprinted from North Shore Life and the Waukegan News Sun. A report that at least 15 persons at Lake Forest College have been impli- cated in the use of illegal drugs has turned out to be false. The charges arose from a letter written by a coed to an acquaintance in the East. Apparently she wanted to spice things up. said Police Chief Charles Gilbert. So she wrote certain things. using first names about certain per- sons at the college and the use of drugs. Gilbert said the friend to whom the letter was written contacted college officials. Gilbert said his department then investigated the charges, questioning all involved. There was absolutely no basis to the charges in the Ietter. he said. lt was a complete fabrication. Apparently the girl just wanted to spice things up in her letter and it backfiredf' Gilbert added. P8394 THE STENTOR L0sesA Game But GainsA Hero Suppgrt Mgcar-thy LFC Honors Fred Broda by Mike Maiman Last Monday the Foresters closed out their campaign with a loss to a rugged North Park team. The game wasfairly closethroughoutand was never out of reach until the closing minutes. What made the night was the 25 point performance by Capt. Fred Broda who now holds the Lake Forest All-Time scoring record with 1825 points. Broda smashed the old record held by Tom Lewis f61J much to the pleasure ofa loud partisan Forester crowd. Thetremendousturnout was in response to Fred Broda Night which consisted of a post game ceremony in which a truly outstanding person was honored. Coach Triptow took the role of MC and introduced many of the old alums, one of which was Lewis him- self. A basketball signed by the players was presented to Fred, followed by an appreciation plaque from the fans. and a trophy for his accomplishments. The night went off as planned except for one minor detail: the guest speak- er. Willie Davis of the Packers. was late because of a late class at U. of Chica- go. Davis arrived as the players were dressing and the activity started. Fred's eyes lit up like a light when he was introduced to Willie and proceded to tell Willie how he had lost S30 on the Green Bay Pitt game. Numerous pic- tures were taken and ,then the party moved over to Gregory Lounge where Davis entertained the crowd for an hour with his stories. Before Willie left Fred ushered him into his room to show his Packer enthusiasm in the way of photos on the walls. The physi- cal plant men are instructed to disre- gard that last sentence. Fred was last seen floating somewhere on Cloud Nine. 0 Sorority tContinued From Page 33 The girls were eager to know wheth- er the Stentor was going to print an- other vindicative attack revolving around this issue. They agreed to write a well thought-out statement, but as of now, their reaction is No comment. We can only wait to be enlightened as to why the Chi 'O's is now the only functioning sorority group on campus. End of Era The North Park game marked the end of an era. That was the last game to be played in our field house. This writer recalls the time many years ago when he sat in the stands and watched the Harlem Globetrotters perform on that same court. But the field house is beingturned into a much needed in- door hockey rink and the new Sports Center will shelter the '68 Foresters. Broda: A Star Is Born It is now proper to look back at the '68 Foresters and reflect on their sea- son. With the return of only four letter- men, Broda, Hogan Antherton and Maiman the Foresters were lackingthe experience needed to cope with many of their opponents. Height was also a major factor. 6-3 Broda had to cope with many men 4 or 5 inches taller than himself. This was also true of the other members of the team as well. The Foresters ended the season with a record of 8-14, an improvement over last year, and with a few breaks could possibly have won a few more. But that is the past now and we must look to the future. Next year 7 lettermen will be returning and with the addition of tall freshmen, the season could conceivably improve on this year. Only time and the Director of Admissions can tell. PORT Senator Eugene McCarthy is making hisfinal push inthe Indiana primary this weekend. As in Wisconsin and New Hampshire, his campaign planners have organized a blitz of canvassing and publicity in the two weeks before the election. You can help. Busses are leaving from behind Commons at 6:00 tonight and returning from Indianapolis Sun- day evening. lf you have notalready signed up, there may still be room on the busses. or you may contact Mrs. Carol Moodie. The Forester is coming. Knights Of Soccer Triumphant In Week's Exciting Contest There had been no wa rs for a week and the natives were making restless noises. So the heads of state, inter- preting this as battle thirst rekindled an old conflict with the exclusive Knights of the Calvinists castle from Grand Rapids land. The original dis- pute was a very vague issue and the reheated version was even more nebu- lous. However, everyone seemed excit- ed and occupied with the prospect of engagement. The ladies of the court were gather- ing in the gallery, the Knights were sharpening their swords on the other side of the battlefield and the Feudal- ists. suzerians of Lake Forest, in the portal were talking about last night's ball andfor brawl. Battle Commences With full fanfare, the courtier an- nounced the commencementofthe first scrimmage period. Summoned. the Feudalists, bedecked in their white regalia symbolizing virility or sterility, depending on which side you stand, crossed the drawbridge. There they met the gilded yellow armour of the Knights, fighting for the forces of tooth decay or sun spray, again de- pending on your loyalties. The ground warfare was rough though sporadic and the presiding ar- bitrator seemed to be paying more attention to the silent warfare in the galIery.The breakfortea came with no decisive action for either side, al- though there were some significant blows struck by Corp. Tomayo of the Feudalists. The resumption of the battle marked an intensification. The gate guard, Sgt. Murray, might well have been equipped with a submachine gun, so skillfully did he turn back the enemy's rushes. He didn't even falter after withstanding an evil plot of the Knights to disable the gate guard. Knights Strike First Unfortunately, of all the twenty-sev- en saves, the only one that counts is the one he missed. Capt. Cook of the Yellow Squad scored entry after a he- roic attempted rescue by Sgt. Murray. This happened in the second scrim- mage period. Flustered, the Feudalists acted, as one astute gallery observer noted, like a bunch of preppies who give up if they don't score first. Fortunately the High- way Men, mustered by enlivened patri- otism, the once snow whites, now mud and sweat whites, broke the yellow line in a rush led by 2nd Lt. Porto and as- sisted by Corp. Rankin. lt was only then that the commanding general of the Knights went: everyone else knew. Decisive Blow Dealt To avoid the enigma ofa draw, the arbitrators went into emergency rules, whereby the first fatality wins the war. United now under the Red and White flag, Lt. Lee and his regiment scored the victory point. The gallery went wild and there were even reports that a couple of court ladies fainted. Every- one agreed that it was a fantastic fight despite the heavy casualties. 6 K 1 This is for you, it is my full heart It is the book I meant to read you when we were old. Now I am a shadow I am as restless as an empire You are the one who released me. I saw you watching the moon You did not hesitate to love me with it I saw you honoring the wildflowers caught in the rocks You loved me with them At night I saw you dance alone on the wet pebbles of the shoreline and you welcomed me in the circle more than a guest. All this happened in the truth of time, in the truth of flesh. I saw you with a child you brought me to his perfume and his visions without demand of blood On so many wooden tables adorned with food and candles, a thousand sacraments which you carried in your basket. I visited my clay I visited my birth and you guarded my back as I became small and frightened enough to be born again. I wanted you for your beauty and you gave me more than yourself You shared your beauty this I learned only tonight as I recall the mirrors you walked away from after you had given them whatever they claimed for my initiation. Now I am a shadow I long for the boundaries of my wandering And I move with the energy of your prayer and I move in the direction of your prayer for you are kneeling like a bouquet in a cave of bone behind my forehead and I move toward a love you have dreamed for me. Mary Johnson The Poem That Needs No Title I Ifever a time the then is now Possibly making the universe equate to what it should had been for they hauled me in for the original sin of being December. II Stenciled dragon's wings furious in my lungs Busy being something stolen from an ancient yellow Emporer complete with handkerchiefs as contrived as urns as Renaissance Cathedrals spun from a Heet of silk worms as meticulous as a Nun's signature. The insect veil deceiving in its weaving conjuring another curtain in the Inner Show CRococo is the Internal Facadej or making no more marrow for china puppies to teethe with a porcelain yelp. XIII Finally getting shoe laces back and Waiving Extradition, Granted from a court that looks as if it moonlights as a bank at night. Pretending to be as Happy as Breast Sapping May Wine, Knowing better for this really isn't over. Having been the product of collective embraces arms that fleshly sobbed tingled as a shrine ushering its incense to the air or groaned as a bear attacking a pillar of Honey, As if Mike Nichols was directing the closing scene in SPIRIT OF ST. LOUIS and now being as Happy as Breast Sapping May Wine. truing to see a reason for I needed a reason, to lie no more to lie no more. James MCD. Trivers , if-nd.. M .H+ 'Q f 1 f2'- 1-faiww Tom Davies EDITOR Patricia Cleckner I THE BRCTHERS ... ah? Hx m allthe beautifulpeople. :Q . ,J 9' ni y f. 1 4' V 1 'U N-1 'Q X ft V.. 3? if 5:51 3' Q 75, 'S . 1-1 fb' ' . Hou doex it feel to he one ol' the hetiutiiul people? Nou that you knoyy yy hut you ure What do you yyunt to he? And have you traveled very fur? Fur us the eye eun xee. Hou doex it lieel lo he one oi' the heuutiful people? Hoxy often have you heen there? Whut did you do xy hen you were there? Nothing that doeanit shoxy. le? 4 , l, I- I 4' .1- , 5 ws- ., - 1-9411? 1. 5 4. ', -.kii:.V,'g,3 xg, X -X ,gg .f.f?u?if+N- .. in ,YB fXfX . , ggifu is x xii Y 'Q , 1 xy ., -, -:- .,, 3' ,5- X R 'YA st 'Y KEY 1' ' L 1' GREEK EEK 'ig 4 I -4 H ow does it feel? 54 A KX HF THE TEMPEST s bl 'Vvfl Wifi s N A X. 'I x 4, 1 NX ,S ls ' N 5 Q b Q, K t ' 'il if , w. ' f' Q A .Qxi 3 1 . - . Wf T rw K 'Q . 2 - wl I a ' I Qffl .rv frx xx'WN a M M . x 1 4 5 I Q . ' ,f u O Q 1 SL. 5. X 1 v N.. 5 'J Q ...OS . ' s x N' 1 N elk 1' 5 N gf! F. 1 .x'L S 3'f' hr l 'W '. v- . , 'S-WK 'lvl' fi ,gp 1 x 'r , , Q s 5 tl J 1 YN W 1 -xiii: ' xf,. :f-gi ,!ff-2'-'W W 'tb 0. ' ' -1 W X 'H ' 'Q'-. 1 QQ XX 'Q Nri SNK Q .Q ' vw' . g, pi! ft-f .-. in , t F' ' ,Tr fu it 4 '. i ' A . A 4 .gk I I Q 5 ' A 35, 5 . .hy-v 5 fyex , -. s s f '..!:',MA ' . T1f'g,h':. ' 4z.' - Y. s 'c.:f'.. 'H aw. .S :': . lx -5' xx gslbx Q. ri, w1 . ' . -o gf- ' ffl. . ' .' 'vw' X4 41 'ls' Q I H . X sigix Ei Ja- .maxi Q 'I v f 1:3 -Q11 xg 'Q ,G X V I . , . . I .. 'I I x4 .-1 , -xg 0 . l . - 1 , ' , J x S -,, A gr uv 5 - Q . xf :I Q 1 L 3, s . 6 ' t ar g 5. bf 2 k J L 5. 1 A 3 4 , - K J Q x X , . , x . 4 4 R r - 'I 3 vw ' -4- ' ' rg 'ja 'syn .IIA 1 sn! 4 . 1 ' JQ1-L-35.21 5 l v F is-t.4,LL4x.,1:u1.' Spain In The Modern World s if The purpose of the 1968 Seventh Annual Conference on Foreign Affairs was self-evident: to paint a clearer picture of Spain in the Modern World for those whose ideas of Her were vague. Through the major address of the Consul General of Spain in Chicago, the lectures on: Spain and Gibraltar by the Minister Counselor of the Spanish Embassy, Economic Relations between Spain and the United States by the Commercial Attache ofSpain in Chicago. and the Economic Development in Spain from 1939 by the Permanent Rep- resentative from Spain to the Organization of American States, Lake Forest College became aware of Spain's national and international role in the twen- tieth century, More important is Spain's future after Generalisimo Francisco Franco Baha- monde, Regent and Chief of State. Since the United States has poured many millions of dollars into Her economy, it is the hope of the Conference Commit- tees that Lake Forest College better understand Her present economic and po- litical situation and Her future. A Catholic, social and representative State, in agreement with its tradition. lSpainJ is declared constituted lonce againl into a Kingdom, fLaw Qf'SllCc'.S'- sion, ratified by the Referenda of6 .luly l947 and I4 December l966J. We trust that after a carefully planned Conference on Spain. the College is prepared to sit back, to watch from a distance, and to understand the eventual changes in Spain as they occur. George L. Speros 61 51.4- X , SK 4252 rf 5 I Lf ff A .-3 'a in l I John Cobb SPRING SPEAKERS Milton Friedman 5 gs l Q6 Joseph Heller Mortimer J. Adler 1. 1.9 Gwendolyn Brooks r I ' sf- . A ,.13'.,wL:-,,.g, . , , ,--,. .' Isaac Bashevis Singer THE OTHERS ,,,....-... ,egg 4 E ii' s.- GE ERATIO GAP Tonight, we urge you to join with us in the mourning ol' those killed in Viet Nam and in the black ghettos ofthe United States, We hope that this convocation. in its explo- ration ol' the generation gap. will strive to recognize the immediacy ol' the problems now confronting us and deal with these issues. Tl1exl1m'wz1.mf Luftt' f nI't'.y'I Cllfftjgft' Young people are deeply' concerned with what is happening in their country, and our guests will take note ol' their dis- sent and reforming spirit. lliflflilllll Gruliuni Cole, PI'c'.X'ltI't'lII Lulu' f'o1't'x1 C'ollt'ge It seems to me unmistakable that it is not simply the nor- mal or natural gap between generations. It seems clear that this one is bigger than usual. ff6'lHt'-l' Dmmvaiz. Time, 1. Ile' lfivorporulecl' Does it matter il' one wears levis or bellbottoms il' he can think. communicate and be sensitive to the problems ol his brothers? .lt'lfSlfNIt', '71 In all the photos and lilms l've seen ol Nazi otlicers every' one was neatly' groomed. well-disciplined and obedient to authority. Slllzfs Tarltel. CQIIIICLIAQU radio t'1m1niwiIt1Ior Yet their only solution to the injustices ol' today's world is 1 'QQ' nr iUC'WN 7 to distribute llowers and to suggest that the intelligentsia give up and drop out. Dr. Cjrulzuni B. Blaimf. Jr., HtlI'l't1ftffT.Nl't'hl'tlII'l'.K'I Most ol' all. they cannot respect us ifwe do not respect our- selves. Dr. Brimo Bt'1lell1c1'n1. l'11i'i'c1'xl'l,t'of C'l1lit'ugo lt is wrong to believe that anyone critical ol' the police is against law enforcement. .ltinicx lnrenherg, Huriwll l.t1u-.Stlzmzl that. yes. there is conflict and there possibly always will be. but the conllict is not to leave the system. J!lL'!.Sifl'U1lhL'flQ, 'fl-W, Pr4',y'l'1ft'III of 06.4 so for you young. your question is to devise a style not one that will be good .veniper HI iihiqzztf. but one that will be a challenge to the very best that is within our power ol' reach. and one that will make us realize. in Whiteheads immortal terms. that for us the only reality is the process. Judge Cillllfftfy' lf. ll'vi':z111.rki -FW 2 K xy ., .XX .Ir . R lvl 1 - .tiki 3 3 BASEBALL SCORES LFC 3-4 North Park LFC 7-13 North Park LFC 13-2 Trinity LFC 6-13 Aurora LFC 6-0 Aurora LFC 10-6 U. Chicago LFC 8-4 U. Chicago LFC 2-4 Trinity LFC 5-3 George Williams LFC 4-3 Judson LFC 4-3 Judson LFC 3-8 Chicago State Teachers LFC 7-13 Illinois Institute ofTech. LFC 2-1 Illinois Institute ofTech. LFC 15-0 Judson LFC 7-2 Judson 68 av -4 -H Gwif' lf . 5 fi f- I, .4 N 3 X K XSS? M05 'NA Nr X X' N-K-is xlibs' 1---4-Q . ' ' ' gh r P Q -1 Q r ,,.,f-,. Mx... ng, - ..A-pf Aw---2- ' -f SCORES LFC 3-6 Evanston LFC 5-3 Evanston LFC 5-ll Chicago LACROSSE QSSQXQ A GUIRUX NEEDED Haas: CLOROX NEEDED HERE -11 9 ff' J Q 3 'F xx vi --can Cul? o,v'5 v'MA .M . 931' ,N . '55 w-ng T ww. -new - Y ex X Y 4 , , . fb .. is .Q , 0: N wx 9 - I . , N nf , Y U . x N., ...SN , gp' f 'Ba .mm g , ,Ab . f ,X I , 5? . ty , x -v m , . ig: iv X I 'Ns , KX R ,. k 1 A R T A 1 ,. Q I Q Ni A , X , , iwQ,3xb 5 Ax fe Q t ,K 1 V I ,JR Q sfffpl fp-1 wb . . , W f, , T: C, - ' b nfl Sf: 'Q Tl li 2 , 5' 'XX 3 X. A' N - -f' '3- V , ' . . -- H' X -Wt' ' Ni 3 Q x AT Qgnlrfsx it My 533 -E ' f' Ji. htm: Q H H' Al w Knit! 'xi S., .4 if .fr Q N , . .' ' ,. ' ' YQ ' f f F ' ig + Nuff fy u. -5 ' k-S'bx5'tY? NVQ X ,.. Q X QM' iss ' - vw-ggi , w 4 X . swaps Q. . W 5 3 , f , , 1 1.95525 i Y X 0 , v 9' V FORESTER WEEKEND 3 N I 3535 17 I ,U I Q ,iii QXP ' x.j,fg f 5 3 , - ,a ,Wf' Xsgr v . ' -I -X - ,M 1, ,NYS-. K . 1'.+'f:', , -x Q 'N.?Q.'ii',l-,:f': .Q x A . . KQV: ,. ., ,, ,Q w M, QW.: 74 ARSENIC AND OLD LACE William Graham Cole, presrdenl ADMINISTRATION Norbert Necker v Lt Y 1 Ml Q S . SW HL William Dunn H4'4lll1fllLLl4IlfI1 Il I-I oward H oogesteger - -vi Q-1-wg.-v fur Gordon White . - X., . '- . , Q EEF?- Qx , .AJK Mrs. Edwin Winter ...... 1li-......- A n4,p Mrs. John DeMerritt Mrs. Claire Hoffman A- vt- if Mrs, Donald Johannsen Mrs. Joseph Mosey I 5' Mw,,,,.-- ' ,N ww .iz , ,fn- . , QV! , L. . i Martha L. Biggs Librarian IQ 'V - an Joann H. Lee Librarlan z zfff B ik if .IHHC Shillinglaw Clerk-lypist if 'Xff' igggisgfifsfx '- Ruth K. Jackson Secretary IN MEMORIAM o JACOB WARDWELL EDWARDS 1938 - 1967 .lake Edwards sitting in his olhce in Patterson Lodge may have had the otlicial title of Director of Admissions. but so much more transpired in his otlice. so much more interested him regarding his students. that the three word title is insuf- ficient. What Jake did in fourteen months here at Lake I-'orest cannot be measured in terms ofthe number of students he admitted nor the quality of this year's freshman class. but rather by a barometer. if we had one sensitive enough. to measure pressure of sentiment. We simply cannot forget the fact that Jake ate lunch with us repeatedly in Commons, Chatting with members from every segment of the campus. Jake listened to our conversations from biology to parietals with an open ear. As a very young person Jake could talk to us on our own level. There was never any barrier or block to that special communica- tion because we knew he trusted us as we also trusted him. Nor can we forget how .lake transformed the role of the Admissions Otlice. Previously many students who had an in- terview there never returned. But because ofthe atmosphere which .lake created. students did return to Patterson Lodge for counseling. moral support. or just talk. ln his ollicial capacity .lake tried to make his freshman class as di- verse as possible: and although ribbed for this by students. he did indeed live up to such an ideal. He traveled to ghetto schools in the big Cities and to depressed areas in the South to attract able students to Lake Forest. Besides this. he es- tablished the Student Honorary Society. a group of students who became responsible for leading tours around campus and conducting New Student Week. We will not only remember Jacob Edwards for the tangibles he has left us. What we will also remember was his vi- brant personality, his handsome smile. and fresh honesty. Sl IN MEMORIAM t x ,gk N LINDLEY BURTON Perhaps the best word to describe Lin would be maddening He himself would not have misinterpreted this: he would have been amused and, I believe, rather pleased. Be- cause what made him maddening was his total obliviousness to the shortcomings of us all. The rest of us found it necessary, in our battles against war, racism, and other barbarous insanities, to cultivate what we felt was a wholesome hatred of the human deviltry that pro- duced these evils. We would mumble something about hating the sin but loving the sinner, but what we said wasn't what we felt. Lin was like a small child in not having the remotest sense of the hatefulness of human deviltry that made our hearts tremble and never boiled: it was maddening. When you know you are good and your enemy is evil, it is maddening to have your comrade love the enemy. Christianity has its time and place one hour a week, in a church. lt is only hopelessly impractical people like Lin who dream of its upsetting our entire routine. And that brings me to the most maddening thing of all about Ling he was as upsetting as a bluebird coming between a sniper and his target. At first it gave us a warm glow to have him think so well ol' us, We were honest, we were brave, we were diligent in good works. Unfortunately, his unquestioning belief in us had the curious effect of creating an uneasy doubt in our own minds. ln the end. the more oblivious he was to our shortcomings. the more painfully conscious of them we ourselves became. It was maddening. I-Iarold R. Hutcheson 82 4 V4 ' ,, I L3 Q U: 2 1 fy. ' fn 5, 4.-, ' t: J 1 W -f I ML . .' f , 1 ': .M - '- .1 33. ,fray 'P 'P N ,ky 11 ' lg' A 1 f,.Z ' , ,. '1 fe ' 'I ,iN Q . f.f:l,.v'f- , , A ' V-JK i. , . V, ,K-ikiizx J 4 U 1 -I ' r V' Qi A U ,N V .A!.fti, A N , ,r'l,Yi- I 'f' iii , - Fei - :ff f M' -' QQ--5315. A U A1 ': Q- . X ,K , K . AV w .J 9, v- 4 , : 1 ik gf .g.,.,, 5 N 4 1 Q Y 'rx Iv' 5 5 lx if ' ' U.-,J Af., 1 X 'Va-wh? b 'Li X xx 'ks -inf, -, . 5'-w s'0t jf .f uf . ',, 5, ,fs Qu? ff fx' if I 365, 1 LA Y i z -ru!- gf: , , ' ' ai .74 RA' . I ' 4 ' Rim fax' Q '. Y ' ...tu 6, .Q 'A' S-C 'W' - .,- '-A 5 'H - C , by . 1 ' 1 ' - 'i ' I ur 'W . - V .u.j':f .' s , ,P --X3 ' . I Q - Q 5 I-IJ: 1 'V - ii,-V My 1-xx Y pl iv, . . N ,I - N' , A ' 8,.f1f,- :V x - W vp, , ' U. -- A-r J Q ,f - -. - , .3 . I I , ,U K 1 l 5 N 'izfry ' . 3. - Arif. ' . v,J Af ' -A'1 X if ' .EQ : ' 'Q77 L'-if .V-. --,- -4 mil '- ji? , bp fag. dv, I D, 4 VJ. M ' -11af:.E - Q, - 'If -Q' -. 6 :fix-,i l: 2.-1,,5w.- . - A 1- , V, fu. f .. W -f . if nys. l Q',f,f -, - iv! I I , f-if . 'pv A ,. wr. L '5 .I 4, 3.5.3 V -L ,. I kb mcrksxwbl- L' 3x N- , N4 Q M L , . . .. a , Q '5, 4 F l h :?.Qg.1,,fIjk,15n , 1 N Q, , if , f??4 l', sq ' , 1 f14' '., Kff ' , ' 1 n Q ','Y 9 v 5. ,'t .H - - 'A .va A, , Q I yikff' 4 .V .' UP t 'NJN b. '. 'N .' - , xi.-Kf x a ' 'lf 'r fx . f W '21, P .Luxe .I . A .Ky-,sg 1 , ',. fa' , K ' ' ' . A A - ,. . . --new . 1 x Q azlvfv 'X . A ' ' ' ,iz - . I gfffh 3' 4 , '1,a,.f1,' I I, - ' 1 ', b. v X - . . , ' ' - 'vi ' 1 ' -M J . ' ,-. V- yr' , My J' ' W -5-i-2-P-1 -f .rw 'N X' 1 -' -'fit b xg,- . .- -,L -1 L . Q BJ.:-. ., '-P 33 - 'a I 1 'L - . x,q,.5i.lE---'X - :M ' 5 9' 'x . P . , 7 - I Q 'A r' A -.13 'h , 2 1 v . 1 . . , . 5' V Q X-Zf.,'9 . -A Ah fi -Q' ri 'L K. ,,-J, l..xC ,- 1 ' f'-'Y - J ' LAKE FOREST CGLLEGE CONSIDER THE ALTERNATIVES AMERICAN CIVILIZATIUN JOHN CARROLL MOFFETT 1 Tv, 'fm BARBARA ELLEN BERZOFF of tt stone. at lettf. un unfound door. A nd of for- gotten fuees Thomas Wolfe I ,f N 1 Nt -alt' t LESLIEANN ROOTBERG Need l explain? Thats how much of life works: our friends float post: ue heeome involved with them: they llout on. and yye them completely: they float hgtelx again. and ue must either renew our friendship f ettteh up to date or lind thot they and we don't comprehend etteh other tiny more. .lohn Barth 85 must rely on hearsay or lose truely of MADELINE PORTER COYNE JOANN DIETZ MARTHA WOOD ends are beginnings with hang gn The most utterly lost ofall days, is D that in which you have not once c.c.cumm1ngs laughed. Chamfort I 4 86 10'rx 'C All f 5 JILL OLSON FARLEY Tl 'U ' . FREDERICA CAROLYN FAIRMAN Please, God, please don'l let me be normal. The Fanlustiks I RICHARD FRENCH + 87 KATHLEEN JILL AUSTIN And in the sweetness of friendship let there be laughter. and sharing of pleasures. For in the dew of light things the heart iinds its morning and is re- lreshed. Kahlil Gibran 5 ia , 3. ' it Y Vaci' 88 '? J ---....,,,,,, lglx B IQ , V xi b ALEXANDER F. MITCH ELL. Lfucullr , 5.45 6 -1- 1- EUGENIE WYNN BIRD ART HISTORY I BRENNON JONES LISA MARIA NORDLING l The old year was turning brown: the West Wind was calling, Tom caught a buchen leaf in the Forest falling, I've caught a happy day blown me by the breezes! Why wait till morrow- year? I'll take it when me pleases. This day I'll mend my boat and journey as it chances west down the withy-stream, follow- ing my fancies! J.R.R. Tolkien BARBARA BERKEL CAREY 90 -. t -. 4, 1 'a, ' fm JAMES PATRICK COON EY Art is much less important than life. but what u poor life without itl This is not aestheticism. but recognition that art as much as anything perhaps more conveys how men lieel to themselves. I love poetry und music. hut I would rather see. Robert Motherwell 91 X , . wa... .-,:.1.1-N.-Q.,.:., . - am.-ss: ,. . . 3, x N X JULIET CATHERINE GRENNAN LOUIS MUSTARI, fllfllfl 1' ANN DOWNING FECHEIMER I JANET ALLEN HARSHA EMILY KAY ECKERT li gf if Z 'QAA ,vs :,, 1 Gi' ' p 'wi f 5 555' 5453 K c 'fo ,-00, Q32 QQW 05 ff 0510 1651A-ov.-: A ' V .:o9.L ,-,Q. Q g,-0 -.. Q 00 , 961955 52.15, ,IAQ N fa'4gS2'.' .Q Q ' '- V, i,.4 roQ fs,G iii.: .dawg r.L 3L,. J, 5 mv L- o xQ,.g90.qi3fx-'O 3 MARTHA CARTER BEALL fag '23, ' lu CATHERINE ELLA BLANSHARD SUSAN DAVIDSON Voici mon secret. It est tres simple: on ne voit bien qu'avec Ie Coeur. L'- essentiel est invisible pour les yeux. Saint Exupery 'al E35 H JANICE CAROLYN WOERNER 94 ln the end everything will be found true ofeverybody. x., :QF A we 'S- lwglxqfl , NA I fu it X114-yt Xu? :E d CAROLINE MeKINNEY Whoever undertakes to ereate soon llnds himsellengaged in ere- ating himself. Harold Rosenberg li-ra. mi Si. n Q .-A-S SALLIE BEL DEN BOWEN Nearly all men are slaves forthe same reason the Spartans assigned for the servitude ofthe Persiansi lack of power to and to live alone are the only means to preserve one's free- dom and one's character. Pronounce the Syllable. no. To be able to utter that word X A Chamlort GRETCHEN WIPER HALL S 4 95 LOUISE ARNOLD STIX in the heurt's centre the only prayers ure steps receding r awv'w--rp.m-V CAROLYN RUTH SOWASI-I . MI . ,,L,,,,fv 3' ff' BARBARA VALENTINE ,-Z ir gfza 5' 4' I a.. x WE. I f , ,ff i J rm ,f . -..v!. f... I , f 'Wd I. A 1 I r GIRT PURINS. ftlfllflvl' .uf . X. . x CAROL LEVINE NASAW '75 97 FREDERICK ASHER. lm H111 Students Visiting Mayer's Collection ROBERT MAY ER ll'll,YIt'L' BIGLOGY ELIZABETH LUNN, f I TEL' L' v I I Y. 'N-A lu' ELIZABETH LUNN and KATHERINE ROBERTS JOHN R. PROBST Doth the hawk Hy by thy wisdom, And stretch her wings toward the south? Doth the eagle mount up at thy command, And make her nest on high? VN. J0b39126-28 et S 3 '91, 'Sf' GEORGE HARRIS HANDLER JOSEPH NELSON MOHR FREDERICK A. CIIERE, huwhr 1 ,, ,' t A 5-L1 ,, VIVIAN R. JANSEN. hnwht RICHARD MICHAEL ADLER soft wind. rollin' in settles down upon me: i'm bound toward the sound olsomethingjust heyond me. through the sleeping city with confetti starlight lltlling. open-eyed and moving toward the distant voice thut's culling. ijust let it take me. tehieugo und truinsj hoh lind IOI x Rx 3 ,gk N J GARY ROBERT SCHOENE in RICHARD R. RUNGE. ftzculzy NORMA E. DOMBROKE, fllfufl-1' ',f, Q F3 VIRGINIA SEELYE CHAMBERS QE' ! KENNETH L. WEIK fmullm I V We . 5, If Field Trip 2 Q41 '-fi if I Q' E' . ' ,, L h W E 5 . lx ' nh.: . CHARLES D. LOUCH, hnullx JAMES T. FUESS. JR. :DQ ' JAMES LEE KAI-IN Reading maketh 21 full man, writing an exact man. and conference il ready man. Francis Bacon 3 Q CLETUS MAKONI NGOMA The mind is restless. turbulent. strong und unyielding. As ditlicult to subdue us the wind. 1 1 4 A t l JAMES DONALD BARATTA , if . Still round the corner there may wait if ff' A new road or a secret gate: , And though I oft have passed them by, i ' A day will come at last when I Shall take the hidden paths that run Villa? IA M W' TQWNSL EY West ofthe Moon. East ofthe Sun. J. R. R.Tolkien 105 M 6 f' 3 'The Need of All Humanity' The assassin's bullet that extinguished the life of Dr. King has struck deep into the fabric of this country and has torn into the fiber of every American of every race. color and creed. Each one of us has died a little with the death of Martin Luther King, who recently wrote: Nonviolence the answer to the Negro's need, may be- come the answer to the most desperate need of all humani- WI., Dr. King's murder is a national disaster, depriving Ne- groes and whites alike ofa leader of integrity, vision and restraint. The calamity of his loss will require a maximum of self-control and steadiness of nerve on the part of all the American people. But the cause for which he died will find renewed strength and purpose in the inspiration of his memory, and it will surely triumph. for the cause isjust. New York Times, April 5, 1968 l968 by the New York Times Co. Reprinted by permission. IO6 ff' CHEMISTRY WALTER ANDREW H ILL Don'l let the birth of your goal be the dealh ofyour soul. 'F L Q F 5 LEROY M. THOMPSON, f!IL'IllIVl' 107 R V . i J f J KENNETH EDWARD MILLS Lf-4 nl' Qi --.A CAROL SUE BOCK Never have I felt so much emo- tion in addressing you: for I fancy that I am saying farewell. Robespierre M., . ,,,, M..- 1 -r Q -gf, ,N f -f 3' .IL --fs.-sr T fl I , 1 i. ,. ,, ,. .N . , . Q, WI V.: .. 3 y W- , .A ,,,,-Q,,i,,1,,.i.i., I X 5 I -, - ' f ., :ff kixihixhiw nf Hu, V, KENNETH B. KAUVAR For of those to whom much is given, much is required. John F. Kennedy IOS X JOHN W. COUTTS. fzlfllfll' Ks Q! 51-28 Nr- Sp 5. 'Ii..:1!E59'M luk,, ---cp E... ALBERT LINCOLN DESSERTINE It is dithcult ut least. I find it dithcult to understand people who speak the truth. E. M. Forster BARBARA ANN REEDY Soll ich den gegen wartigen Augenblick nicht genieBen damit ich des folgenden gewiB sei? und diesen weider mit Sorgen Grillen rerzehren goethe 109 -5 , 4 ..f .Ns JOHN BIXLER faculty his 3' H- -Q s I 1 4, 1? fi l l , l i JANET VODVARKA Watch clouds and winds . And allearth's living things unfold . . . -- each day e- a miracle Whether this is imagination or not One never really knows And it matters little for in that moment ecstacy holds the soul ll0 Gwen Frostie y! WILLIAM GORDON STEINHAUER I measure mysell' Against a tall tree. I lind that I am much taller. For I reach right upto the sun. With my eye: And I reach to the shore ol' the sea With my ear. Nevertheless. I dislike The way the ants crawl In and out of my shadow. Wallace Stevens PAT RIC IA ftlrllfll' RICHARD DRISCOLL FABER, 2 THE DQVE TH T FLUNKED HIS LOYALTY QATH The Democratic National Committee arranged this week to challenge any wayward Democratic doves who refuse to support President Johnson in next year's nominating convention and election. and this has naturally raised questions here about how the challenge would be made. Q. Do you or do you not support Lyndon Baines Johnson for re-election to the Presidency of the United States? A. Which Johnson? Q. Please be serious. Have you now or have you ever had any mental re- servations about the wisdom, compassion or success of President John- son's policy in Vietnam? A. One night when our casualties passed the l00.000 mark. the war budget went up to S30 billion. and all our old allies left us. and the race riots got out of hand. l must admit I had a momentary twinge of doubt. Q. How did this doubt express itself? A. l smiled at Senator Robert Kennedy ofNew York the next day in the Senate cafeteria. Q. And what did he do? A. I was on his blind side the one with the hair and he didn't see me. Q. Nevertheless, you feel that you have been faithful to President John- son's Vietnam policy from the start? A. Especially from the start. Q. What do you mean by that? A. At the start I was not only faithful but enthusiastic about the Presi- dent's Vietnam policy. He was against a wider war in 19641 so was I. He was against bombing North Vietnam and lighting a land war on the conti- nent of Asia: so was I. Q. What did you think about bombing Hanoi to the conference table? A. I thought it was a lovely theory Q. Yes? A. murdered by a gang ofbrutal facts. Q. When the President said that bombing would reduce the How of the enemyfs men and supplies from the North. what was your reaction? A. I was very sympathetic to that thought. Q. You shared his objective? A. Absolutely. but when the enemy's men increased in the next two years from 400 in the South to over 50.000, and they began to use big guns and rockets in the South against our men, it occurred to me that something might be wrong. Q. Ol' course. the President believed that escalating the war would strengthen the morale of the South Vietnamese and reduce our casualties. Did this not impress you? A. lt certainly did. l don't think anything has depressed me more than the morale of the South Vietnamese and the rise in our own casualties. Q. I'm afraid you misunderstood me. Surely you want the President lo keep his commitments? A. Absolutely. His commitments to the .American people to avoid a land war in Asia and light a war against poverty tn the American cities were wonderful. Whatever happened to them. by the way? Q. l am asking the questions here. Have you ever been a member ol any organization. association or conspiracy dedicated to the overthrow ol' the Administration of Lyndon Baines Johnson? A. I once went to Harvard. Q. Anything else? A. l belong to the Presbyterian Church and the United Nations Associa- tion. Q. Do you associate regularly with people who criticize President John- son's conduct of the Vietnam war? A. lt's impossible to avoid them. l see quite a lot of our beloved majority leader. Senator Mansfield: also Senators I-ulbright. Kennedy. Mcfarthy. Symtngton. Morton. Case. .Iavits. Aiken. Cooper. and of course some members of the Cabinet and people like Galbraith and Schlesinger. and Q. Stop! That's enough. Do you read any papers or magazines that sup- port the President on Vietnam? A. That's a hard one. Let me think. Well. l've turned quite a few corners in Vietnam with Joe Alsop. Also I always read Time and l.ilt'. but they'te switched now. Q. Do you read the President's speeches? A. Every one. l'm making a little red book of his sayings for the cam- paign. They run all the way' from Isaiah and the glories ttli reasoning to- gether to General Westmoreland and the kill-ratio. from calculated pacili- cation to accidental exterminationg from Q. Never mind. I think this ts enough. l'm afraid l'll hate to challenge you on this record. lt leaves me with a reasonable doubt that you would put party above peace and that you might even dump the President. Do you have anything to say? A. Well. frankly. l think this is unprecedented and preposterous. No- body s ever thought of unifying the Democratic party before. And besides. ldidn't switch: Johnson switched. I d1dn't dump him1 he dumped me. james Reston. ,Yew York Timthy. October ll. N67 lllokt by the N,-tt Pork 7-fl?lt'y Co. reprinted by permission EDWARD J,STARSHAK. fLlL'Illll' BERTHA L. REYNOLDS. fum!!! , 5 S K 5 WILLIAM CUTLER ANDERSON 5 I !'1 Wx I . CRAIG PHILIP JOHNSON 1' PHILLIP HUGH ALLMAN H ERBERT NICHOLAUS hmflrl H 1 ix? MELVIN ERICKSON, JAMES CHRISTOPHER LASH Will it not be employment enough to watch the progress of the seasons? Thoreau fllflllll' DONALD ELLIOTT SHAY Give an Irishman lager for a month and he's a dead man. An Irishman is lined with copper and the beer corrodes it. But whiskey polishes the copper and is the saving of him. Mark Twain MICHAEL METCALF CHAPMAN Ido not know what I may appear to the world: but to myselfl seem to have been only like a boy playing on the seashore. and di- verting myselliin now and then finding a smoother pebble of a prettier shell than ordi- nary. whilst the great ocean of truth lay all undiscovered before me. Sir Issac Newton 'Gil' KEITH LEAR MULLOWNEY A man in earnest finds means. or. il' he can- not tind them, creates them. William Ellery Channing fQX Axl- 'T d 1 - I . ARNOLD MAX PERLMUTTER ...yy FRANK JAMES CHMELIR The lamentable difficulty I have always experienced is saying No paraphrase ofSamuel Taylor Coleridge HARRY LEONARD HOLMES A Selection from Song of Myself' A Walt Whitman There was never any more inception than there is now, Nor any more youth or age than there is now, And will never be any more perfection than there is now, Nor any more heaven or hell than there is now. GASPER KOVACH, JR. Those things that are best said are leftunsaid. A GK. RONALD STEFAN ELLIS The exodus is an initiation. l.iI'c makes sense And who could doubt it. Ifwc have No doubt about il. Pict Hein CAROL ANN BRINK ifgifm is A J ' 'rs 1 - , -' 9- fnf V: A ,, if' if 5 , istwtif di ,pf a , BOBBYE CAROLYN FRITZ ls not life one hundred times too short for us to bore ourselves? 119 PETER RUSSELL SH ERER X In , ,J X. LAWRENCE B. HALKA I console. I sing the dirge. I repent nothing. I have done On this earth In our time The sun also rises. And we desire your speedy return to our cloudy presence In a country churchyard Where the naked stones mark out empty full lives. f- LEE RICHARD ROGALINER When I was Zl, it was a very good year. DAVID WILLIAM COCH RAN What one hopes for is always better than what one has. MARK ELLIOT STELNIK OLIVIA I-IOLADAY l2l 5' WF' H. MURRAY HERLIHY, fllfllllll' MICHAEL B. HORNER GEORGE T. WEINER, ,fllL'ZlflVl' 1 rages: A4 I 'V ROSEMA RY D, HALE. lmulll -Elks Q UBS 123 TULLIUS CICERO TUPPER III EDUCATION EDWIN C. REICHERT, javullr Student Teacher, William Pelc W ENGLISH VICTORIA SUSAN ROBECK 'L , . . But this isjust a minute specialization ol' a general brutal pity: almost any person, no matter how damaged and poisoned and blinded, is infinitely more capable of intelligence and ofjoy than he knows: and even if he had no reason to fear his own poison, he has those that are in others to fear. to assume and take care for, if he would not hurt both himself and that other person and the pure act itself beyond cure. James Agee 5 ROBERT P. STEPSIS. fuzz ii RICHARD WOOD WESTERFIELD Q ' ,WV ' an . V .X,, ,ww x 'X KINGSTON WILLIAM HEATH The hangover became a part of the day as we well allowed ff' for as the Spanish Siesta. F. Scott Fitzgerald Echoes of the Jazz Age PATRICIA HENRY Be not too hasty to trust or to admire the teachers of morality: they discourse like angels, but they live like men. Samuel Johnson WINSTON WELLER MONTGOMERY ,- FH-IPPO QUARETTI I-EE JEFFREY C. ROBINSON ftlcllfll Ciao! CONSTANCE JEAN TURNER lmpructical person: one who has both feel firmly planted in the air. l27 DAVID STUART BROWN JOAN GRADY HUDSON COURTN EY DOBYNS muy my mind stroll about hungry und fearless and thirsty und supple and even il'it's Sunday may i be wrong for whenever men are right they are not young there's never been quite such L1 fool who could fail pulling all the sky over him with one smile. e. e. Cummings -Z SAMUEL DEMING STOUT He had been eight years upon a project for extract- ing sunbeams out of cucumbers, which were to be put in phials hermetically sealed. und let out to warm the air in raw inclement summers. Jonathan Swift A ROSEMARY E. COWLER, fiicullql' 129 WINTH ROP DeWOLF FULTON it ,gh .-.. .. 4 xii' 'x X 1 If .2- Sfx 1 L ' .Q , STEPHEN MILTON BEC You never get a free ticket. Sockadillo. 13th Century Nigeri- an philosopher. Batawi tribe. K WILLIAM ROGER HEGEMAN As for me, all I know is that I know nothing. LINDSAY SCHEIFFELIN Man can live on bread alone . . . and an occasional trip to New York. B. Jones Socrates I n . DIANE B. WIESEN BARRY HOWARD HOFFMAN DQ- Thejungle is dark but lull oldiamonds. Arthur Miller x f fl ii JUDITH ANN KLO PP The discovery' ol' the alphabet will create lor- getlulness in the learners' souls. because they will not use their menioriesg they will trust to the external characters and not remember ol' themselves You give your disciples not truth but only the semblance ol truth. they will be heroes ol' many things. and will appear to be omniscient and will generally know nothing. S oerates. Pliuedriu Nw l3l ' ALAN PAUL MCCURRY A PATRICIA ANN PRICE I was the world in which I walked, and what I saw or heard or felt came not but for myself: And there I found myself more truly and more strange. Wallace Stevens A Tea at the Palaz of Hoon- l JANICE BRUCKNER WARD 34 'Y 1 X Y ml, T .Ag-., DAVID ERNEST WILBER In a drcum our youth is Hown. Poisoned in u study. Sport und folly ure youthk own, Tender youth and ruddy. Anon. X ,, K ., X, I 2 , .Q ' U ' ' ' 'vnag 5 . 4 ,--, rw t f Rx ,-:,. tg: A I 1 A , nf-lg,. JOHN CLINTON HARTONG ANN I.. HENTZ. l33 ftlillfll ,c . .J.,-.1-wwannnuu-n-n-gl ' S ' .an J Q .yi i 'll Aa . V iff 'T 5 5 I 4' 'ia . N i ?'2u'iv,pq, 4, , MW -na g s a 'Eff'- ARTHUR VOSS. fzlcllfl l' Ev... 4f h1 f GAEL KA filly., NANCY C. JUDD There is a curious paradox which no one can explain, Who understands the secret ofthe reaping of the grain. Who knows why Spring is born out of winter's laboring pain. Or why we all must die a bit before we grow again. The Fantastics. THLEEN ELLEGAARD The mind is its own place. and in itself . can make a Heaven. John Milton Parazlixc' L UNI l 34 Heaven of Hell, a Hell of lx tg, ' .' ! , 5 , 4. .rg V, ,i 1 SUSAN LOUISE REINIER The amazing thing about life is that we learn something new ev- eryduy. Q' :FV I1 f Q A , if .- -072 M THEODORE ELLIS mluln KENN ETH BENNETT, fkmzllx wA. . JEAN ELIZABETH BAUR Before I am old I shall have written him one Poem maybe as cold And passionate as the dawn. W. B.Yeats BERNARD SILVER JULIE EILEEN AMPER k io- ELIZABETH SKYREN PICOT SUSAN VICTORIA WEST Lk Ns.: if ss... ea TP' ' i mia-. SANDRA KAY DUNCAN Rage lor the world as it is But for what it may be More love now than last year. And I always less self-pity Since I know in a clearer light The strength ofthe mystery. This Place in the Ways Muriel Rukeyser. I37 5. ve 'ff V X. , :. ':j,:..zsE1- '-ff,i:-g:'fij-'f1'1:2,'j:v - ,, .: 'r5.T1 i lf .:,,!'-,.-gf -. S. 19-Q. V'3'i,I5 e.:'2N :-Q-'W:j'1., ' H v+sgbx Q1' ,i 43 r: .5 3 -51 . fl .g-f- . 152 ' Ffffilii 1 :', vx ' ' .- , ' Y fugftt-, ROBERT GREENFIELD, Z GORDON MILNE' fhru I ty -S' X . A f 1, 3 Lx! 4 Y? 4.'w,'3Vjg.. ggF'Q? x 4'-' ' ..- -H ,L H-1-'-. ' 1' if-L, 1. 31 K' -ff x f' x FAX -, , N.. 1 1 i 0 1-' DAVID W. SEAMAN. Vftlfllfll' Niiij, VI '1 wi' M FRENCH ----4 K-I ,c , be .t :N ax, VICTORIA LOUISA MARKS This above all: to thine own selfbe true. And it must follow, as the night the day, Shakespeare A Thou canst not then be false to any man. A 49-1 s KATHLEEN JANE MCDOUGALL '? as 5-I ' gf FRANC INE K. SALTOUN, -fllklllll' l4l CHARLES DANSEREAU fucullx' if . I F - E E, 'X 4 ELIZABETH PENNOYER ROBERTS f , To keep milk from turning sour keep it GRAHAM MICHAEL TOWNSEND, fmullr in the cow, fbli-vb-34, 'iw I HELENE N. GARDEL Lu pcrpcluelle attcme, delicieuese, de n'imporle quel uvenir. Gide l42 JEAN-L UC GARN EAU. fuuulrqx' ,g-1' :F DEBORAH ANN ROBBINS Qs 5? JUNE ELIZABETH COLLINGS When stepped on, a worm doubles up. That is clever. ln that way he lessens the probability of being stepped on again. In the language of morality: Humility. ERWIN P. SAN DERS ftlfllflvl' GERMAN 144 MARVIN C. DILKEY, fllL'llflvl' INGRID H. HENKELS. mtwlri AGN ES ROSOS For the apathetic existence itsell' is a mistake or a failure. For the enthusi- asts not only is it better to be than not to be. but it is always possi- ble. indeed it is their supreme inter- est in life to grow towards ever more being. T. Chardin SUICIDAL ESCALATION General Westmoreland has reportedly requested more than 200.000 additional American troops - a 40 per cent increase - in order to regain the initiative in Vietnam. Old soldiers' illusions, it appears, never die. Ifevents of the past six weeks in Vietnam prove anything, they demonstrate beyond resonable doubt that the policy of military escalation in Southeast Asia which President John- son and his Pentagon advisers have followed for more than three years is futile f and worse. Time and again. General Westmoreland and the Joint Chiefs of Stan' have asked for and received additional men and resources. each time with the promise that there was light at the end of the tunnel. Time and again they have been proved wrong. The tunnel has turned out to be a bottomless pit. going down toward nowhere. Every time the United States has sent more men and arms to Vietnam. American escalation has been matched by more men. more arms and more determination on the other side. Instead of victory. each escalation has produced a new stand-off at a higher level of death. destruc- tion and despair for the Vietnamese and at mounting costs in lives, money and respect for the United States. Mean- while. increased military activity in Vietnam has tended to undermine Washington's side of the vital political struggle, which is the heart of the problem there: it has weakened the United States both domestically and in its foreign relations. Each escalation has raised the risk ofa suicidal internation- al conflagration. The enemy in Vietnam still has substantial uncommitted reserves, plus the possibility for additional arms and man- power from deeply committed Communist allies. There is every reason to fear that a further escalation of the kind General Westmoreland has proposed will create new prob- lems of unprecedented proportions for the United States both at home and abroad. The effect will be to push off ne- gotiations. not advance them. The time has come to abandon this bankrupt policy. The American people have been pushed beyond the limits of gul- libility. Searching questions about the escalation doctrine are at last being raised by significant numbers of private cit- izens. members of Congress and even by othcials of stand- ing in the Administration itself. These questions must now be pressed at every level. The fate of the nation depends upon it. New York Times editorial, March ll. 1968 c 1968 by the New York Times Co. reprinted by permission 146 GCV ERN M ENT JAMES KEMP FOWLEY I 'mggv ui You are the listeners to the music of the spheres ol' yet to be and yet to see where the yester turns to morrow und the never allways was ANDREW MILLER LEBBY ALAN MICHAEL WEISS CONSTANCE JEAN POTTS ll'l nm not for myself, who will be for me? And ifl am for myself only, who Lim I'? 148 ALEXANDRIA MENTSCHIFKOFF 3 6- 1 GORDON ALEXANDER MLNGREGOR WILLIAM NICOLAS ALEXOPOULOS 1 if, si . . ,Nw--1 :uv , .V .0 GEORGE MATTESON C UTTS Chi vuol esser lieto sia. Che di doman Non c'e certezza. Lorenzo de Medici GEORGE ALLEN SEIDEL The value of compassion connot be overemphasized. Anyone can criticize. It takes a true believer to be com- passionate. No greater burden can be borne than to know no one cares or understands. A. H. Stainback JAMES PAUL MOEBIUS 9 Q ,424 ., ,a yt .1 DANIEL lVIacDONALD RUSSELL REED DIEHL. JR. Who so would he a nian. yyiiuld he a nun-cunllirniisl, lle who would gather mortal palms must nut he hindered hy the name olgoiidness. hut must explore ilil he gimclnesy. Nothing is at last saered hui the integrity ul' your iiyyn mind. Ahsolve you to your yell. and yuu nhall haye lhe suffrage ol' the yy orld. Ralph Waldo limerwn MARK WARDEN. l5l MICHAEL BRUCE McKEE He had his dream and all through life, Worked up to it through toil and strife Afloat l'ore'er before his eyes. lt colored for him all the skies: The storm-cloud dark Above his bark. The calm and listless vault ofblue Took on his hopeful hue. It tinctured every passing beam ee He had his dream. He labored hard and failed at last His sails too weak to bear the blast. The raging tem pests tore away. But what cared he For wind and sea He said, The tempest will be short. My bark will come to port. He saw through every cloud a gleam 4 He had his dream. Paul Laurence Dunbar MARK DAVID ABRAHAMS I'd rather learn from one bird how to sing than teach ten thousand stars how not to dance. e. e. Cummings KATHLEEN JOY PISANELLI If a man does not keep pace with his companions perhaps it is because he hears a ditTerent drummer: let him step to the mu- sic which he hears however measured or far away. l52 Thoreau HOLLY ANN BURTON ROBERT L. COLE 3 -., 'Q l .JJ A - ,. v xxx E p ,i . V-.l ,, all I-'levi 17' , 'ff' 1 ih 'S i ROBERT GOULD BULLARD ln whatever urenu of life one may meet the challenge of courage. whatever may he the sacrifices he faces if he follows his eonscienee the loss of his friends. his fortune. his contentment. even the esteem of his fellow men each main must decide for himself the course he will follow. John l-f Kennedy CHARLES S. ROOKS. fUL'lIlIvl' P WILLIAM G. BENZ. ftlfllflvl' JOHN WENUM. fllblllll '54 E 5 . JONATHAN GALLOWAY jaculll' gigs Ss. 5 ROBERT J. STEAMER, ftlnllfll .A . .. ,M - -'ff Af'-.fv,+ w.reg-Aw .. -'. v -1 w. wg:-.'i'. ' N ,. , 1-.J -',s'--,igW?:z,,f:- -.,j,g,T', 2f?Z F fkg5ffDi '2 Wx V N15 , 'HMT' :',xQ.g3,if-5141-f'.:37x,,, ,, 4 Y - 1.19-,-HN. ,,,,.7:,x.r..,- -.n i .'Vgsz4Q,. B HN. A . .stqktil 343,5,,,.w :., MN. .., ,II I. . 'W' ' ' , . 1 A '-4'm.Jff, ',-3334: 5' i'1Pf.1f'.9'g,ff.ti25l'f: .V f p . -I - -' ' .xr X - -, Y---sw ,:..ff',fn.:--u1'5g '::'-'. '. 3.Q:,s.4 ' Q'-,a-pg. I-. Nz' 'T 1g-'xL 'e.- ' ' Lg.. ' - ' ' ' ..., . . 1 1- .:.1:f,fo.' .+-1'-'1-' f 'lYI'- -,-,1F '.'- ' gp-Y: ' ' FT- ' ,.. .y,,,...-ia.-mf ' . 3--4.1f:Z? 3,, ,fff?fx,,,,,g1,,::irq-g-3 fm. ,933 ,g ,Zh A gvf' -ff-5 . rl , .. . --if1a1.,qfiLK,,,L.-...,..f,:-,v,.,,6-liffj :.,:g'-v,?,'x....5gf., -I 1 , ' fp, . 'J' ' 5, 1 K , ., . :-'smyqf'-S'-1.521A '5 5' . --r-L. .F ' A 1' -.Lf1Q31-vf2- 7' 7-f'J 3i'in'5Z1-ifs-w1f:f2Iyq-l'.'.f'.'5!-f?3f5?E3:'1angee'fmF5... 4.1: -.gig 155 'AMERICA, CUME HOME, At certain moments in history, a man becomes larger than himselfbecause he is the spokesman and the symbol of a cause. He is transfigured by events, and history in a sense speaks through him. These years of the Negro revolution have been such a time and Martin Luther King was such a man. He had his small human frailities for he was a man among men but he also had a great vision. He dreamed of an America where all men are brothers and a man's race is a small fact. not a large obsession. He dreamed of a world where armed violence would be as rare and seem as strange as human cannibalism and where no member of the family ofman would be without dignity and freedom. Martin Luther King lived for that vision. He walked for it in the streets of Montgomery and Chicago. He marched for it on the road from Selma. He preached for it from a thousand pulpits and from the steps of the Lincoln Memori- al. He suhfered for it in the Birmingham jail. He died for that vision in Memphis. He was not a prophet unrecognized in his own time. America and the world bore testament to the nobility and truth of his vision. Dr. King stood beside President Johnson when the latter signed into law the historic Civil Rights Act of 1965. King Olav V of Norway presented to him the No- bel Prize for peace. He received many a key to the city, scroll of Commendation, honorary degree. But these personal honors were not the fulfillment which he sought. Dr. Kings aim was no less than to lift from the lives of millions of his fellow Negro Americans the bitter heritage of two and one-half centuries of slavery and anoth- er century of degradation and second-class citizenship. The court decisions and civil rights laws of recent years have gone far toward abolishing the old props to a segregat- ed. inferior status for Negroesg but the pending civil rights bill with its vitally important anti-violence and open hous- ing provisions has not yet been enacted. There could be no finer gesture to Dr. King's memory than for the House of Representatives to take up the bill and adopt it forthwith. With the necessary structure of law, however, the urgent need is to make this new equality a genuine reality. This means an enormous public and private investment of mon- ey, ideas. and energy to insure equality of schooling, ofjob opportunities, of housing. An endless number of experts has spelled out the specific needsg the report of the President's Commission on Civil Disorders restated the imperative necessity for prompt action. Yet Congress and the nation have not acted. Americans by themselves cannot achieve the peaceful world of which Dr. King dreamed and preached. But it is well within their wealth and power to translate his vision into reality in these United States. They need have only the generosity of spirit and the moral imagination to affirm their common humanity across the useless barriers of race. America. you've strayed away, Dr. King once cried. You've trampled over nineteen million of your brethren. All men are created equal. Not some men. Not white men. All men. America, rise up and come home. Only when America comes home to make the promise of the Declaration of Independence the truth for every Ne- gro citizen will the world know that Martin Luther King did not live and die in vain. New York Times, April 6. 1968 c l968 by the New York Times Co. Reprinted by permission ,,,....--4 Q 2 x My. 'YES X PHI BETA KAPPA Barbara Bisbee Catherine Blanshard Carol Bock Peter Brecher Annette Casey Patricia Cleckner Patrick Cooney Barry Hoffman Joan Hudson Alan Kalter Kenneth Kauvar Judith Klopp Gasper Kovach. Jr. Gregory Linwood Yasuhiro Moriuchi Sigrid Nickelsen Constance Potts Barbara Rubinstein Lillian Steiner Louise Stix Laura Turner Paul Joe Vest Janet Vodvarka Holly Van Horn Janice Ward l58 H. HISTO RY at 1 - RICHARD W. HANTKE. fllfllfll' 159 ANN HETHERINGTON RENFRO THOMAS I. MOUDIE. fllfllfll ARTHUR ZILVERSMIT. ftlfllfll FREDERICK MICHAEL BRODA Winning isn't everything, it's the only thing. Vince Lombardi CAROL BLOOM That day is lost on which one has not laughed. I 5 MICHAEL JAMES MCRAE If those who are the enemies of innocent amusements had the direction of the world, they would take away the spring. and youth, the former from the year, the latter from human life. Honore de Balzac DEBORAH ANNE LYONS l6l PETER HIXON WILSON Books! 'Tis a dull and endless strife Come here the woodland linnet I JOHN LESLIE PRESTON ws. X -e- .- dv ' -1-A X5 PY' A N' 'I x I , , a, ,cs - W ..., if f lr . . ':f'5ff??-.': ' '-,UN S' 1 Ya. 'S Q K , -hi. -WAI WWX3 . V+ Nm. ,Q KATHRYN LOUISE BONNIE I 51? xgfw. W3 my 5 i X I, iq, EDWARD L. HAWES. fllbllfll' ffm' Las.. -f 1 lm 162 X kv. RONALD P. GROSS MAN. fLlL'llfll' ,f t 1 WERNER PESE. ftltllfll 1 It L gan - V MARSHA K. ANDERSON Every human being is intended to have 11 character of his own to be what no other is, und to do xx hat no other can do. Channing 163 KENNETH BRUCE OEL KERS The shortest way to live with honor in the world is to he in reality what we appear to he. Socrates CAROL MOO DI E. fl1L'l4fll' 'ii l' JOHN RANDOLPH ALTEMUS There is something in us that can be without us. and will be after us, though indeed it hath no history of what it was before us, and Cannot tell how it entered into us. Sir Thomas Brown l64 CHERYL HARRIET RAFF To paraphrase George Ber- nard Shaw: How can thc smoker and non-smoker bc equally free in the same ruil- road car? JOHN G. SPROAT, ,fmm JOHN JAY COGGESHALL 2-ag' Yr- . EQ, , . ,.4v'f ' j 'P r V V uh .ii Pi Q if-f A 1 I4 Magi. R' l rp as Jing 4 iw? fd U m id F? f 1 Mx 4 x gp., v S Q if g,,- , I f x V If 4 J if I , uf : 3 2 'JP L-N 1 f 1 P sy J I , ' ,Q-f,5N , A5q'J'g'l'i3r 2 Q i: Eiis' WP 'L ', ' PM 1 '., ' 1 -L 'Wil' I ' if W Q 1 ' 'ja-9.1 lx, X Vi 'W U 'f' 1 U H 5' 'iff . ..A ITALIAN -Uh MICHAEL MOORE favullv Y Y SUSAN ADELE CARLSON LATIN ,9- MATHEMATICS 1 x RALPH L. SHIVELY. lmullx LL EI! I-0 ANNETTE BETTY CASEY Hx mu dor1'tsuccccd the nthtimalry ' them + lb I r 'Tu' , I . 5 ,I M : ' :hcl fs 4 E . V ' 'M irizgx 5 A XA , 1 .- 253.-kkqeil -Ski T' 1 1 169 VIRGIL CORNELIUS DEMERY BRUCE A. MITCHELL, fdfllflll' iv L M35-2.W2iZ3i 6 5: ' 1 1 184 PAUL MALIMA MUNYOFU Mighty is the charm of those abstractions to a mind beset with images. and haunted by herself. Wordsworth NN VICTOR J. PELLIGRINI, fuvull 1' CHARLES S. SMITH fuvulll' RUTHANNE I. BOPP, ftIl'lllIVl' Q Q X -6'4 ANN D. BOWEN. ILIUZIIIAI' ..g-an BRIEN BOHN HOPKINS I want to he what I was when I wanted to be what I am now. I72 MUSIC m H. LOWEN MARSHALL. frlfllfl x' JAMES HAROLD JENNINGS 173 LOUIS WALES ARNOLD VIRGINIA CONLEY ROBERT HUHN. fzlmllx' FRANK KIRBY Qfllfllfl-V PHILOSOPHY .,,.--15' FOREST W. HANSEN, fucullr JOEL B. STRONBERG 176 BRUCE S. ALTON. fuuul I 1' CHARLES H. SEIBERT, bftlfldlll' Q-4 JP Z rn tn C' r- E Q I U rn 75 Z rn I :- L-4 FU 4. g.. 'X',-1 . 'w . s -, X XQXX ' A. 11' V SUSAN SARAH SCHERMERHORN To preserve the silence within --A amid all the noise. To remain open und quiet. ti moist humus in the fertile darkness where the ruin falls and the grain ripens f no mutter how many tramp across the parade ground in whirling dust under un arid sky. Dag Hummarskjold 177 .1 , 38 PAUL JOE VEST That is you ean't. you know, tune in, But it's all right That is I think it's not too bad, John Lennon 'QPR N m ' if BARBARA JEANNE BISBEE It is thus, if there is any rule. that we ought to die f neither as victim nor as fanatic. but as the sea- farer who can greet with an equal eye the deep that he is entering, and the shore that he must leave. E.M. Forster it A A 2 . ARTHUR LESSING, lkzculli' 178 82 . ,,,. , , NEA U 46 'X 'Q My' A GX A 1 Y ,f - . 93 g if .,,,, E HERMAN CHARLES HSHMAN Q I DAVID PAUL GONTAR Mun is tt useless pussion. .leun-Puul Surtrc M N CHRISTOPHER OCCHUIZZO l disapprove of what you say. but I will de- fend to the death your right to say it. Voltaire 179 lllcgitium non curborundum cst. Copernicus ROBERT ALAN CLARK The whole lilc ol' the individual is nothing but thc process ol' giving birth to himscllig indccd. uc should be fully born when uc die ulthough it is thc trugic lute of most individuals to die hcliorc they ure born. Erich Fromm 180 PHYSICS YASUHIRO MORIUCHI FurusulonoNz1muri Nulsukusi. Tcishabzmo Nukuc Sowokikiniyuku. Hoping to hear my home-town diulcct. I walk into the crowd ul thc lruin station. GEJVOQWS' X XA ,-. .-'. NNMELEQ. la kwa ,- .Yi FSE-L.. .A JOSE VILLAARCE lshikuwu Tukuboku ,U ' I s,.Z 4 EUGENE P. WHITE If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is be- cause he hears a different drum- mer. Let him step to the music which he hears, however mea- sured or far away Henry David Thoreau ., -W - ,sr-,E NW BAILEY DONNALLY, furulli' rl N if . X Qs' ' 'YN X. 'R Q, uni F NNN.- PETER LANGER ROGER J. FABER, favuilvi' TUNG HON JEONG. fmulli MNC JAMES HARVEY MCCORMICK Anything that the mind olimun cun conceive. and believe. ii eun achieve. J ti. Fi nm S 3 5, Q ANTHONY RHODES Don't let your studies interfere with your education. George Bernard Shaw HAROLD C. JENSEN, facully l84 PSYCHOLOGY was Xxx X A XR X5LHNixwx..,, xx , hA ,L EDWARD MICHAEL RUBIN Numquam Sudor Marcus Aurelius 'f', :Q it K. 1 A -' ' , , efgaaav 6 J KATHERINE GREGORY BARR RONALD H. FORGUS, 1 facul I-1' 'IQWN it CAROL SUE EICH Like? Liking is an emotion. Bishop Fulton .l. Sheen Love? Love is ofthe will. lf you love a person. but have no reason. be grateful. For ifyou tind a reason, you run the risk of lov- ing the reason rather than the person. Robert Short ROGER PAUL KIRMAN PETER JEFFREY BRECHER Make sure you're right. Then go ahead. JOHN R. GRAHAM. fuuull 1' Come to me. human fares. Familiar memories: l have found hateful eyes Among the desolate places. Unfaltering. unmoistened eyes. Folly alone I cherish. lehose it for my share: Being but a mouthful ofair. I am content to perishl I am but a mouthful of sweet air. O lamentable shadows. Obscurity of strife! I choose a pleasant life Among indolent meadows: Wisdom must lead a bitter life. W. B. Yeats 3 tr 3 . 3 1 E Z., ,a ' LAURA GORDON TURNER Teach us Delight in simple things. And Mirth that has no better springs. Kipling CHARLES ARAD ATH ERTON i nf Qs' 57.3, E39 R, I-I EN RY GOL DSTEIN, -fhfllllvl' DONNA LOUISE MERRILL The human race has only one really effective weapon and that is laughter. Mark Twain J. PHILIP BROOKS The mere vagrant lust ofseeing things and going places. Albert Jay Nock THOMAS GAILLARD WHITE T The whole life ofthe individuul is nothing but the process of giving birth to himself: indeed, we should be fully born when we die - ul- though it is Ll tragic fute of most individuals to die before they are born. Erich l-'romm ii DEBRA ILENE WHITE JOHN A. JACOBS Wherever you go, there you are. 4 out of IO doctors sim 4 -.'3f.-f 1 ' fm? a my Q ., 1, .. ,. .. . x 45- A f ,.- ,Mx it ggjfj Z 341 X g ' , 'jf 71 MARY LOUISE SAVAGE HOLLY VAN HORN My heart is hiding Stirred for L1 bird the achieve of, the mastery ofthe thing! GM. Hopkins l90 facu ALFRED DICK, fll' F! GAIL ANN MELTZER MARGARET KATHLEEN ALLISGN DONAL D ST RASS ER Ghosts of old things creep into his consciousness u door is torn open and for the first time he looks out upon the world. seeing. as though they marched in procession before him. the countless ligures of men who before his time have come out ol' nothingness into the world, lived their lives and tiguin disappeared into nothingness With ti little gasp he sees himsellus merely a leafblown bythe wind through the streets ol' his village. 191 Sherwood Anderson I -2? x D , Q . ' Y M ?s JOHN R. GRAHAM, 'X 8 faculrr 'Q , -0 LILLIAN OLLINGER WILLIAM JAY VALKO 192 in DAVID KRANTZ, ,faculty LOUIS J. PELLIGRINO. luuulzy SALLY SEXTON CHALMERS For thought is a bird in spa .that IH a cage of words may indeed unfold in xxingx. but cannot Hy. CH RISTOPH ER LOC KWOOD HOBBS ,nn 1 vy 5 gf A . fg 5 .4 4' J 193 Kahlil Gibran HoNoRs DAY BANQUET Emma O. Haas Memorial Awards Joan Grady, senior Erin Kenelick juniors Janet McNair Mark Coursen. sophomore Frederick I.. Stahl Memorial Award for Excellence in Science Richard Adler, Biology Carol Bock Chemistry Janet Vodvarka Yashuhiro Moriuchi, Physics McPherson Prizes Charles Atherton. Dramatic arts Barry Hoffman. English Elizabeth Roberts. French June Collings. German Paul Joe Vest. Philosophy Diane Farley, Russian Alan Kalter. Spanish xg N23 X Harold B. Curtis Prizes for distinction in mathematics Jacob Wardwell Edwards award , , forthe outstanding freshman AnnetteCasey Paul Munyolu Jed Stone Sterling Price Williams Prize in psychology Edward Oppenheimer prize Hom, Van Hom awarded to the senior man and woman i deemed to have contributed the most to Lake Forest College Scott Award for Excellence in the Study of Religion William Steinhauer Keith Cook 194 Diane Robin Farley Athletic Awards Fred Broda Seniors Bob Bullard Don Ford, Junior Bob Harris, Sophomore Al Shethar Freshmen Pete Ringsmuth Kappa Alpha, Kathyrn Mason Linda Fazio Leslie Murray Erin lienelick Alvia Parker Iron Key Richard Driscoll Mark Abrahams Mark Stelnik female campus leaders Terry Dalsemt Edna Lewis Marcia Weiss Janet McNair Mary Martini Greg Gerdel Don Ford Russ Jackson 1 Q4 c,-X, Andy Lebby Bruce Atherton Walter Hill Mike Mclsee Kevin O'Connell Chip Norton Keith Cook Dr. George Crowell Dr. Bruce Alton For the highest grades in the last three terms. these students will have their names engraved on the scholarship plaque: Constance Potts Janet Vodvarka Don Ford Charles Platt Ronald Bluestein, Joseph Biancalana Richmond Rosen Valerie Stern Seniors Juniors Sophomore Freshmen GEORGE H. CROWELL. fllflllll DAN P. COL E. flltllfll' RELIGIGN Q Q RUSSIAN GAIDA M. HUGH ES. Vfl1C'llfIl' DALE LEFFINGWELL COE Character begins to form at the hrst pinch of' anxiety about our- selves. Yevgeny Yevtushenko 9 r o if DIANE ROBERTS FARLEY l'd like lo know what this xx hnlc show is all uhoul before ilk out. '15 if , ,, Q Q ,, .E f - . I97 1, r A RKADIJ ROSSOL, fuvulli' KRISTI ANN MacCALLUM The Moving Finger writes: and, having writ, Moves on: nor :ill thy Picly nor Wit Shall lurc it back to cancel hulfa Linc, Nur all they Tears wash out u Word ol' it. Omar Khuyyam SOCIGLGGY SARAH ELLEN FRANCK Lc difticilc. c'cst cc qul peut ctrc fuit touts: dc suitcg I'in1poasihlc. ce qui prcnd un pcu plux dc temps, Suntztyunu Whats it ull about? Anyone: in doubt? n I Hunt to go. Q Until INC found it ull out. Cream 4 5 SIGRID ERICA NICRELSETN .Y ALLISON DOUGLAS DONALD SALLY GROVE FARBER Words do not express thoughts very well. They always be- come a little dilferent immediately after they are expressed. a little distorted, a little foolish. And yet it also pleases me and seems right that what is ofvalue and wisdom to one man seems nonesense to another. Herman Hesse JERRY GERISIMO W -rf, S -My x. ' X S - if l DOUGLAS ALLEN FARBER There is absolutely no inevitability us long us there is ti will- ingness to eomtemplate what is happening. BARBARA HEL EN RUBENST EIN No one I think is in my tree. I mean it must be high or low. NANCY KAREN AUDLEY John Lennon 20l .xi f-C fir- I' x ,. ,. -iit :lf L' E'-ggahi ' . , .I 'A :, -.Q .e,qrSthNew,-W. .sn V' YI.q3,- . . ,I Y , V . 77'f,,...' ' 1' , - - V' Y .,,,.,,,M.,. , it . .V -- , .- -:V . . r - Afiux.. V ..i ANDREW LATHAM HALL gl LYA HANNA BREICHA He who has hoped can never despair. G. B. Shaw JOHN NED MANN l PATRICIA THORNE I cannot walk with my ears covered. I must stand still and listen with open ears, far from the noises ofthe village, that the night may make its impres- sion on me . . . Silence alone is worthy to be heard. Henry David Thoreau BRUCE CASTLE ATHERTON ANN TEWKSBURY DEWART We must learn to discov- er the eternal novelty of being. Abraham Heschel 203 SARAH ANNE ROSS It's not this starved hound, but Giacometti seeing him we see. We'll stand in line all day to see one man love anything enough 45 LYNN FRANCES TONN ESON Lightning Exciting It stabs the eyes with wonder. Then, follows thunder. 204 4 - . . , -' ' . . Q..-A , J V J 47 --HW ' f , ' ELIZABETH ANN JOHNSON The grand essentials to happiness in this life are something to do something to love, and some- thing to hope for. Joseph Addison iii- Q - 5 Enix J' ,- y. ,, i' fav i3'??gf.a5f 'fav JACQUELINE FRANCES WILD Grief can take eare of itself. but to get the full value ol' a joy you must have somebody to divide it with. A get , -as.: Mark Twain 1, VIRGINIA SLATTER THOMAS I have observed a number ol' superlieial eontented men and women. and I maintain they are dangerous. Personally. I am glad to say there are a lot ol' things today with whieh I am not eontented. I am not eontented with myself. with the development ol' my eharaeter. and with my literary eareer, And there seems to me bery little ground lor general eon- tentment. I must repear - I fear the eontented man. I liear him because there is no progress unless there is diseontent. Without it today, I even believe. there ean be no inner peaee olimind. John. P. Marquand I I ti X? MARY BYRD MASSELINR I have no other but a w oman's reasoni I think him so. because I think him so. Shakespeare ? 'NV PRISCILLA DENNISON BELL Well King. looks like this case is closed. Sgt. Preston ofthe Yukon SUZANNE PRESCGTT at THE ESSENCE OF GEORGE MILLS 206 fb' MIHALY CSIKSZENTMIHALYI. fllL'IlfH' 1-.- 207 WENDY ELLEN LEVITT A man has his will: but a woman has her way. Holmes STITH HILTON BENNETT Now what saves primitive man from emotional anarchy is the fact that he is truly envious andjealous, a lover and hat- er: that he means all he says, but just for that passing mo- ment or hour as the ease may be, in which these feelings 7 actually represent his attitude. and for no longer. He may X have a theory ofconduct but he bases no ethical judgements upon his kaleidoseopie emotional reactions. Paul Radin ROY JAMES MCCORKLE, JR.. fllfllll-l 'Tfs. is ls'x,-'-- 1- .Ln EDWARD BENISH JANUS w ...Y uni 'ff' ' -' ... I iq , 'U' .V-1-. 'xE'?-J t, 2 , I is ., ' ff 'ss ,Agia QE' E if v Q wif.: n Q '5g,'VfgHgqQgf gaiigaiaa A ' A.. . 5-,, i ,- 1 Mug V , I 'Ef- ' -1. , 4 1 j 4 Q Q., ' 1 341 H u 5 JOHNETTE HENRIETTA DOCKINS Horn thc summit oi' ptmcr men mi Itmgcr turn their cycu upxiurds. but begin t about them. TINA TOMBERLIN U lumix .l. R. Lmwil GX 's 209 ww 5 L 'lb PATRICIA JANE CLEC KN ER For here lies the point. Ifl drown myselfwit- tingly. it argues un uct. and an uct has three hrnnches it is to act. to do,t1ndtopert'orn1. Hamlet Act V Scene l TERRENCE LYNN COOK I t1mt1n1un.und whatever con- cerns humanity is of interest to me. GARY SCI-IWARTZ faculrvr Y s aa Lft.:,8lTl:z:w.fiff1'i Terrence 210 SPANISH GECRGE SPEROS. fum ll u' xi' 5:.Ef.L'fQ 44' FERNANDO J. SUAREZ MARY P. LLOYD 2ll ..- A..-7. -1 'Ui ,M-A CHERYL ELAINE KIICK WILLIAM ASHTON STRETCH When I pray, I pray us ifeverylhing depended on God. When I work, I work us ifeverything depended on mc. Curdinul Spellman ZI2 ANTGNIA MARINA STO RPER Juventud. divino tesoro. y yu le vas puru no volver! Cuando quiero Ilorur. no Iloro . y u veces Iloro sin querer , I vs L x ,. N .g . ii ,C 1u, 12' 'Mix Lifgg 'Vp f Ruben Durlo . vi , . Q A iw X. . PAM SCHAFFNER To sec Ll world in Ll grain of sund And u hcuvcn in u wildllowcr Hold inllnily in thc pulm ollyour hund And eternity in un hour. Blake DAVID BERG, lv' MARY PHILO ROCKWOOD Give to thc world thc hcst you huvc. And thc hcsl will come buck to you. ld ! PATRICIA ADELE MILTON MARGARET F. WILTON. futulli CAROL ANNE BRENNAN In my long and colorful career one thing stands out l have been misunderstood. M ae West BRUCE GOODMAN Seeking means: to have a goal: but finding means to be free. to be recep- tive. to have no goal. Herman Hesse QW SUEKATZ A smile costs nothing but gives much. It en- riches those who receive. without making poorer those who give. Yet it cannot be bought. begged. borrowed. or stolen. for it is something that is of no value until it is given away. Some people are too tired to give you a smile. Give them one of yours. as none needs ti smile so much as he who has none to give. i I Backward. turn backward. O Time in your flight. Make me a child againjust for tonight. DGROTHYFERGUSON 71:1 iff' m X x ,J 2 1 l f 215 Ji WT 1 r 9 SIDS' 'Yew KAREN SNY DER If a man does not keep pace with his compan- ions perhaps it is because he sees a difTerent drummer. Let his step to the music which he hears however measured or far away. ALAN KALTER HH' Mx A 'wffgihgglg , 5?f'fs , QF! X ir: Recuerde el alma dormida, .... .1 , 1. . M -A :J lguruvs life- 5' QL' . my ik, 'gr . ' e fl Qsx . , 5 K ,li i , . - :Ni Ax- - wa X 1 ,. I A -,m,,,,.:-1-aww:-JS, ,Q -akhaamwau . .--Q .1 - A- u.:-,neu 1:i.I8m-A , qi K, 1.4-., N-Q. was-awwz ara., ,. N . . M ,X .,.-, as uamwuwn .,i.:m.fe1ew,nmll 'A -- , A mqm:.wxx-X ,R W. Q wmnwn me Ne... A,..:ulQvnmsm:-s .A ' sa - 'f 1, Q an-new -. saa-.,smmgssss..,.mms.,,,i..-- iw mari ., , , an-use A- new sxwv-ra-sw A 4 insane! 3 ,N H,-0. ,. an-,,..,v ,-,-aww. -fun. wus Q umm. ' M s - . we -3,181 -wg A -vs mm-- .zm .. sr: . we 1 Q .Qu Rm- g H , ., , ii In? .1 C ii -i ee S Q ' nm Q. 3 14 - - 'mi ...a E-.1 3 :lu , 3:3 V3 i :arf , . 1 4 I . . I . x 'J - V iffblwkkgs 'imx . A- , i, 1 Q gg-Q wfpx ,, -4. as J N.. X , ' W . ,-. Q1 ,., . r 4 w ,.-f , , . , 'Ya ,, , ' + -. .,...-.. . ,,.,-, 'M'-fn-.. if' VJ-3: 'Y 1- 216 S -2. ' , f-1:-. -- f ':29'P.'1 Avive el seso e despierte Contemplando Como se pasa la vida, Como se viene la muerte Tan callando. Thoreau SENIORS WHOSE PICTURES DID NOT APPEAR MICHAEL ANDEL MAN WILLARD BEHM EDWARD BIGELOW MONTGOMERY LADEW BYERS DAVID CLEVELAND DENNIS CONLEY THOMAS COOK STEPHEN DAY KENNETH FREEDMAN JAMES HATCHER BRUCE HENDERSON ROBERT KLAREN LEO LADURINI GREGORY LINWOOD RAYMOND MITCHELL ALEXANDER REDDING RICHARD SMITH REXFORD WRIGHT GRADUATION JUNE 15, 1968 HAROLD ROSENBERG f-51 XQNQ .W A H' il -..., ' A' iv .T Jaw A ,YW-M' I' f :: M1 5 J' -W,! .u,..,,.w J -L xi ' x T, :Y ' 'x,:? ' , . 1 ' . -- 7-ff Y I- ff V -'sxk:gw- .4 . . mmf -QCP X Q 5 'Cf 'x Aaron. Philip. 5030 Ally sonvtlle Rd . Indianapolis, Ind -36205 Ablon, Richard R , 7724 Park Ate., New York. N Y l002l Abrahams. Mark D , 38 Ptnette Sl ,N Dartmouth. Mass Adams, Charles R., -135 Lake Ave ,Greenwteh, Conn Adams. John M., Rt. l. Bot 158. Hartland, Wts Adler, Richard, 901 Lake Shore Dr., Lake Park. Fla. Alderson, William. ILJ3 Hamilton. New Rochelle, N Y' Alexander. Adrienne, 80 35 23l Sr St., Queens VII.. New York Alexopoulos,Wtlltam.1204 Foster.Chtt:ago, Ill Allen,Carl M., I225 Dodge Ave., Evanston. lll Allen, Marcia M., ll Seaview Ave .Netvport. R I Allen. Peter F .Farm St.. Dover. Mass Allison. Margaret K., 7543 S. Carpenter. Chicago. lll Allman. Phillip. Quarters I2200 C. Ft Shafter, Haw att Altemus, John, l0I Sequams La.. West Islip. N Y Altman, Alan, 34 Prentice Rd . Newton Center. Mass. Amalo. Alt Abdt, P O Bot 300. Mogadlseto.Somal1. Rep Amaden. William. 9CollegeCampu. Lake l-orest, lll .Amper. Julte E. 2550II Upland Rd .Great Neck, N Y Amzallag. Mtchel. M.S.. 67 B D. Alexandre lst ,Casablane.t. Moroc Anagnos, Mario. 5700 No Mozart. Chicago. lll, .Andelman. Michael. l9t40 Southrtdge. Northbrook. lll .Anderson, Charles L , 5332 Davis. Skokie. lll. Anderson. D. Sue, I 109 E 9th Pl , Cushing. Okla. Anderson, Marsha ls., I82 Mountain, Summit. NJ Anderson, YY tlltam C.. 2l00St. John, Highland Park. lll Armtstead. Robert F .6 Beachwood Park. Londondberry. N Ireland .Armstrong. Rtchard D.. ll9 So Elmwood. kansas City. Mo 6-H23 Asleld, Joan E.. 270 Edgewood Lane. YY St Paul. Minn 55lS5 Asher, Frances.-405 Moraine Rd.. Highland Park. lll Atherton, Brutr C.. 525 Fulton, Geneva. lll Atherton. Charles A.. 65 Foster. Cambridge, Mass Atktn, Jonathan B.. 5507 Uppingham St .C hevy Chase. Md 200l5 Audley. Nancy ls .33 lsnob Hill Dr .Summtt. NJ Austin. lsathleen J.. 3628 N E 80th. Portland. Oregon Ayer. David. YY alnut Rd , S Hamilton. Mass Baillie, Alfred.-H20 Lakewood. White Bear Lk . Minn Baker. Cleo, 63-19 Greenwood. Chicago. lll Baker, ls Diane, R.R Sl. lvesdale, lll. Baldtng, David C.. SI33 N Santa Monttzt, Mtltvaukee. YY tse. 532l7 Baldwin. Blatr F., 775 Park. New York. N Y Balterman. Andrew, 397I Beechwood, Ctnctnnatt, Ohio Barash,Ttmothy. Eagle Rd R D. 2. Newtown. Penn Baratta. James. I-175 Deerfield Pl , Highland Park. III Bares. John G.. I8 Harbor Road, Port Washington. N Y. Barlow, Joel H . 835 Gages Lane. Lake Forest. lll Barnes. Thomas J.. S5 ForestSt., Methuen. Mass. Barnes. Marsha. -125 Country Lane. Louisville, lsy Bames, William M . Bot JIT. Noroton.Conn. 06820 Barr. Christopher. Rt l, Bos 60. Crtstield. Md Barr, Katherine G.. I25 Merrtweather. Grosse Pointe. Mtch Bartholomay, Julta, 745 Locust. YY innetka. lll Barton. Paulette E..OS -lol Cornell Ate . Villa Park. lll Bassett. H. Lee. Baldwin Road. Mentor, Ohto Basset. Susan. 5409 Farquhar. Dallas. Texas 75200 Bauman. Dattd A .Apartado SHO. C,tra,,g,s, Ygnuugl Bauman, Nicholas N .Apar Tado 589, Caracas. Venezuela Baur. Jean. Mt. Holly Rd , lsatonan. N Y Beall, MarthaC , 2667 Berkshire Rd .Cleveland Hts . Ohio Beard,Jenntfer.ll-1 E. 8-lth Sl . New Y ork. IN Y' Bechl, Robert,-S020 YA 9lst Pl.. Oak Lawn, lll Beck. .Alan B , 279 Sussex Rd .YY ood Ridge. N J 07075 Beck. Stephen. 2 Glen Dr.. Prottdence. R l Behm. Willard T.. 320 S Slusser, Grayslake. Ill Belcher. YY'ardC.. Own Htll Farm, Lakeville, Conn Bell, Carol. 840 Brand Lane. Deertield. lll. Bell, Priscilla D.. 59 B Du Comm. Chareot. Nlly Sr Sne. France Bender.Stephen. 2-1 Helene Rd . YY ahan. Mass. Bennett. David L., II27 Forest Ate.. Rtter Forest, lll Bennett, H. Sttth. 3534 Carlton Tcrr . Louisville, Ky Bennison, John W.. 3350 Lake Hill Dr.. Kalamazoo. Mtch 49001 Benson. Carol A.. -l Christy St.. Norwalk. Conn. Benson. Robert W.,3S09 Glenhurst, Minneapolis, Minn 55416 Benttnckosmtth. Peter, Peabody St .Groton, Ylass Benway. Joan, Rt. 2, Bot 225, Long Grote. lll Berg. Stephen, 625 Mulberry PI., Highland Park. lll Berg. RichardT.. 92 Lincolnshire, Deertield, lll. Berkwttts. Jay B.. I I Lake St . White Plains. N Y Berney, David A.. I0 N. Charles. Baltimore. Md, 21209 BerzolT. Barbara, ll Willow PI.. Great Neck,N.Y' Besser, Carolyn A., II-1 Adelaide Rd., Manchester, Conn Btancalana. Joseph J.. 633 Bryan St., Elmhurst. Ill. b0I26 Bigelow, Edward L., 230 Heath St.. Chestnut Hill, Mass. Bintnger. John P.. ll, Hemlock Lane. Esses,Conn. 06426 Birch, Laura J.. 8700 Oakwood Street. YY estminster. Col. 80030 Bisbee. Barbara, American Embassy. Pretoria, S. .Africa Blatr. Steven A.. 34-1lStetttntus, Cincinnati, Ohio Blakeley. Rebecca G., l55 Heywood Ave , Orange, N.J. 07050 Blanchard, James A.. Reterte Cove, Bar Harbor. Maine Bla nshard. Catherine. 466 YYQ l0th St., Claremont. Calif. Blechman. Stephen. I9 Bellingham La., Great Neck. N.Y'. Bloom, Carol. ISIS Hewlett. Hewlett, NY. Bloom. Penny H.. 8037 N. Kenton At-e,.Skokte. lll 60076 Bluestein. Ronald. 552l Windsor St.. Philadelphia, Penn Blott. Frederick E., 2628 Fifth St.. Peru, lll. 6135-1 DEX Blundell. Penelope ,I , 67 Lalayette Ate .Sea L ltll'. N Y 1I5'v Boardman. l:t'tcL.40Y S Oak. ltasea. lll olll-53 Bock. L arol S .23-40 Yates. Dunter. L olo Bodtne. YY tllxam YY ,L ounty Line Rd . Y tlla Nota. Penn Bohm. L hrtsttne A . lktt L Iermont. Denter. L ttltt H0210 Boll. L arol, M25 lstlpatrtek. l lneolnwood. lll Bonnie. lsay l .IV3-l S llntterstty. Denter.LoIo Borcher. Deborah. l702 Lincoln. Nu L htcago. lll 6006-I Boston. Nancy l. .39 N Benton. Palatine. lll Btttktn, Trisha L . lH05 Britton. Oklahoma L tty. Okla Bowen. Sallte B . -li Amherst. Port YY ashtngton. N Y Bowen. John S . 55l5So Ykoodlawn Ate ,L htcago. lll 60637 Bradley. Leon M .2020 Joltet St . New Orleans.l Branch. James. H529 S Indt.tna.t hteago. lll Brannun1.Nataliu D ,22l 5lstSl S li .YY ashtngton. D L 200l9 Brasher. Detont1e.L hama. N Mesteo Hilo Brether. Palrtcta J . 23' L pland Ate , Ntttn lllands, Ylass It2IrtI Brecher. Peter J , 23' L pland Ate .Newton Hghland. Ylass Bretcha. l.ya H . Y A H ospttal. Dow ney. lll Brennan. Deborah A . 309 So Burton PI . Arlington Hts , lll Brennan, YYtIltam. l .ttrttew Ate . Ashburnham. Nlass Brennan.Larol A , luttrttew Ate . Ashburnhant. Mass Brewster. John D . 393 Narragansett Bay. YY artttek. R l Brtdgman. Edith YY ,'3 YYoll'ptt Rd . YY tlton. L onn Brtney. Nancy. P O Bos 375. Barrington. lll Brtnk.Larol A. l9U20 Lourt. Elmwood Park. lll Broad. Rose A . I-ll Sprtngume La . Letittow n, N Y Broadbent. Dattd. lb Resertotr Ate , L Prottdence. R l Brodhead, Deborah L .Lentral Road. Rye Beach. N H 03a'l Broda. lrredertek M , 3717 YY Mth Pl .L l1lt.agtt.lll Brodsky. Jane P . 43 Nickerson Rd . Newton. Mass Brooks. John P . 375 Contord. Holltston. Nlass Brown. Bradtordl . 2633 N E 37th Dr . Ft Lauderdale. Fla Brow n, Dattd S. lNhLlJ S YY oodland. Shaker Hts .Ohio Brown. Phtltp. 193k Burbank. Dayton, Ohio Brown, Susan Y1.73 lsingsboro Ate . Gltersttlle. N Y l20 x Brow n. Ytrgtnta A . Bot 277. Monrotta. Liberia Brow ne, Marilyn L ,300 M St S YY l'tQ1llll.YYasl'tIrtglLtI l.D C 2002-l Brow nell. Shirley. 677 Old Tratl. Highland Park, lll Bruhn. lsartn E . 3336 7th Ate . Rotk Island, lll 6120! Buckland. Marilynne, 3l2 Prospeet. Princeton. N .l BulTaltt, Robert B . Roni Porter St . YY ashtngton. D L. Bulkley. P Paige.-IU YY oodley Rd . YYtnnetka. Ill Bullard. Robert G . N6 Pleasant, hast YY alpole, Mass Burbank. Rosemary. I2-ll Poplar Ate . Baltimore. Md 2l22' Burch. Marcia L . I l-lrtl YYaterttett L Ist . Reston. Y a 220'0 Burdon. Paula H .3N2 Broadway. New Orleans, La T01 lk Burger. Neall M . 2' Bethune. New Y ork, N Y 1001-1 Burgess. YYtllittm H . I l6Stxth Ate N .Birmingham Ala Burton. Holly. Bartlett Lane. C hester Springs. Pa Burton. lsathertne, l20S Elm St . Hinsdale. lll Butman. YY tlltam L . 322 Bacon. YY altham. Mass Byers. Montgomery L , N YY heatley Rd .Old YY estbury, N Y Caesar. Y trgtnta L .lrttv East 63rd St .New York. N Y 10021 Camata. Benito, San Benito. Peten. Guatemala Caldwell. Susan E .2360 .Adirondack Tr. lsettertng.Ohtt- -15-1214 Campbell. Bruce L . 910 Lake Shore Dr .L htcngo. lll Canter. Steten L . I5 luntper Lane.Newton Ctr , Blass 112159 Lantor.SaIIy L , l'Q4 YYtndemere Dr N E . Atlanta. Ga 30321 Carey. Dattd P. 23l L Marlon. Lake kttresl. lll Larey. Barbara. 20-l' B Langley. Great Lakes. lll Carey. Richard P . 23I Last Ylarxon. Lake Forest. Ill Cargtll.Rol'1ertA .30Taylor Ate . Hawthorne. N ,I o'5fvf- Carlson, Susan A . 5530 Ltlltbet Terr . Morton Grote. lll Carpenter. Doris H .4600 E: YY yomtng. Denter. Col Carr. Thomas H .51-N Loekwood.PCrry.Ol1ttl Larrol.l Natalie. 3306 Btnz Ate . Houston. Texas OU-1 Carton. Ann .285 YY laurel. Lake Forest. lll Carter.Carol M . l06l0S Seeley .Ate .Chtcagtx lll. Oklfbul Latltn. Emily L . 73K Jane Road. Jenkintown, Pa N0-lb Casey, .Annette B . Route l. Bot I9-l. Ltbertytille. lll Cash, Dattd E .R D Box II7. l: L hatham. N.Y l2U60 Casse, lzllen M .-13 Lawrence Pkwy .Tenally. N J Caulktns. Elste.J-l Newberry Pl .Grosse Pte Farms.Y1teh Chalmers.SalIy S .3l I Grosse Pte Blvd .Grosse Pte Farms. Mtch Chambers. Y trginta S .Chambers Rd.. Hanoter. N H Chapman. Michael M . East Lake Rd . Auburn. N Y Chase. Addison B bl3 Ptteatrn Pl . Pittsburgh. Penn Chase. Jeremy H its Taber Ate . Prottdence. R I Chatttn. Mildred. 630 Melstnley. Ltbertyttlle. lll C herry. Joan S . '29 Sheridan Rd . Ltanston. lll 60202 Chetalter. Haakon. 31.133 Baker. San Pranctseo. Cal Childs. Samuel YY .-ll Main St , Farmtngton. Conn Chtpman. Artn II-l Grand Bltd . Elgin. lll Chtrtboga. .Anita F .2 Blossom l..1,YY ayland. Ylass Chnteltr. Frank .l .433 L tedale Rd . Rtterstde, lll Choy. Peggy A . 2515 Alaula YY ay. Honolulu. Hawaii Chrtsman. Jay YY .l-l I-1 E Grote St . Bloomington. Ill. Christensen. Diane. Taylor Rd , Princeton. NJ Christiansen. Nancy. I43' Florence Ate.. Racine. YY tsc. 53-102 Churchill. Mary N . I5-1-I E Goodrich Ln.. Milwaukee. YYtsc. f32l' Clapp. Douglas lr .539 Y ema Htll. Fairfield. Conn Clapp, Howard. 5159 East 3l St .Tulsa. Okla. Clark. George YY M .29 Sunswyck Rd . Darien. Conn 06320 C lark, Deborah L ,605 San Ystdro. Santa Barbara,CaIif. Clark. Robert A . 53 Lockwood. Scarsdale. N.Y, L lark. R Douglas. 3707 W, 50th St . Denver.Co1. Clarke. Carol. 2544 Casey. Las Vegas. Nev. Clarke, Kathlmn, 15 Witherbee Ave.. Pelham Manor. N Y Clausen. Kristen, 2855 Ludlow. Cleveland, Ohio Cleckner, Patricia, 3414 Rustieway, Fal1sChurch, Va Cleveland, David. Amer Consulate FPO. San Francisco, Ca. Cohhc. Coralinda, 6S20Tupe1o, La .Cincinnati.Ohio ochran. David W.. 42 Lehigh Rd,. Wellesley. Mass. Coe, Dale L , 26t12 Lincoln St.. Evanston. lll. Cotlee. Richard, 63 Valley Rd , Plandome. N Y. Coggeshall. John. 333 E, 68th St . New York, N.Y Cohn. Judith E .X6036 Marengo, Hollis Woods, N Y. Coit, Kemp Cole, Robert L , 10 Wolcott. Andover. Mass. Coleman, Emanuel, 402 E. Perry St., Demopolis, Ala. Colltngs, June E,, 49 Drum Hill. Dr., Summit, NJ Comstock. Stephen W.. 301 Green St.. Dowagtac. Mich. 49047 Conant, Jonathan. 325 Highland St., West Newton, Mass. Congdon. Alela 11,830 N. Western. Lake Forest, lll Conrad, Katrina A . 32 lvy Lane, Setauket, N Y, 11785 Conklin, Joan M ,Clark Rd.. Bernardville, N.J. 07924 Conley,Virginta M . 101 Briar Lane, Morrls,ll1. Conner. Stephen W , P.O, Box 443. Covington. La Constanuneau. Ellen. 208 Pelham St., Methuen. Mass. Cook. Keith S .97 Elliott Pl.. East Orange, N,J Cook, Ronald W .31 Alway Street, Charleston. SC, Cook. Terrence, 1516 Hamilton Ct., Waukegan, lll, Cooke, George K ,397 Rowayton. South Norwalk. Conn, Coombs, James. 1944 North Dr , Glenview. lll. Cooney, James P ,4020S Ho11y.Englewood.Col. Cooper. Amaryllis. 636 Valley Park, Libertyville. lll. Coopersmlth, 1 eslte. 335 Russel La , Highland Park, 111. Cordova, John M., Pleamares 25. Mexico 20. D F Cornwell, John J , 1533 N. Robertson, New Orleans, La. Costello. Melanie, 3134 Bellewood Ave. Cincinnatt.Ohio 45213 ostin. Susan M . KI Beech St , Framingham. Mass. Coursen, Mark A., 63 Holly Lane, Newark. Del Cowan, Gregory, 77 Seventh Ave ,New York. N J, Cowles. ThomasS ,Shelburne, Vt 05482 Cox,Chrtstopher M.. Waterville Rd , Farmington. Conn Coy ne. Madeline, 430 Essex.Kentlworth.l1l, Craig. Wendy L , ll6Old Road. Westport. Conn Crandall. Hope L ,ChoateSchool. Wallingford. Conn Crawford. Catherine E ,900 Oakwood, Wilmette, lll. 60091 Crawford. Kathleen M .2631 So. WollT Way, Denver. Colo S0219 Criddle. Raymond, 1124 Marais. New Orleans. La Cronherg.Gae1. ,2l-18 Wtlmette, Wilmette, lll. Cronberg. Kenton R.. 811 Central, Evanston. Ill. Cummens, Susin L., 3318 West 65th St..Chicago,1ll. 60629 Curry, Rosalind, X707 Cowart St., Houston. Tex. Curry. Sheldon H .257 E. Delaware, Chicago, lll. Cutts, George M .3l5Olney St., Providence. R,l 02906 Dale. John. 4946 Kenridge. Cincinnati. Ohio Daley, Elizabeth N.. 2605 Lancaster, Oklahoma City. Okla Dalsemer, Terry A .2301 Kenoak Rd,. Baltimore, Md. Daniel. April D , Calle J4Villa Caparra. Bayamon. Puerto Rico Darbee, Jeffrey T . Bok 24, North Woodstock, Conn, C C Darling, Patricia M .5146 Palidale Ln N.W.. Washington. D.C 20016 Dasher, Judith A .67 Holly Lane, Darien. Conn. Dashman. EricH , Il Riverview Farm.Ossin1ng, N Y Davidson, Susan, 1215 Frontenac Forest. St. Louis, Mo Davies. Marjorie L , 265 Forest Ave, Glen Ridge. N .I Davis, Susan J . 150 East 72nd St.. New York. N Y 10021 Datts.W1lltam E .679 Red Oak La , Kinnelon. N J Day, Stephen L ,Simon Willard Rd .Concord. Mass Deetien, Larry R , 1175 So Parkside. Elmhurst. lll. 60126 Degraffenrerd. Linda. 3725 Belle 1-ontalne, Kansas City, Mo. Dehaseth. James. 310 Onwentsta, Lake Forest, lll Delaney. Jane M .406S Evergreen, .Arlington Hts..l1l Deleon. Jon F , 64-1 Essex. Glen Ellyn. lll Demery. Virgil, 1706 E. Park Towne, Philade1phia,Pa Demmel. Wolfgang, 149 Sanborn Ave., West Roxbury, Mass. Denison. Dudley. 1401 Montgomery, Rosemont, Penn Dennler, William V., 3160 Bronson Rd , Fairfield. Conn, Denton,Sharon L .2761 S. lves. Arlington. Va Durham. Michael M .ClllT Road. Tuxedo Park. N Y. 10987 Dernehl, James U ,473 Grace Land. Des Plaines. lll Deshler. Lydia H , 7 Dunahm Rd.,Scarda1e,N.Y 10583 Desserttne. Albert L.. 738 Randolph, Abington, Mass. De Tarnowsky, George O., 2936 Iroquois, Wilmette, lll, Dewart, Ann T . l30Aspinwa1l, Brookline, Mass, Dtamond,CarolF,6-136 Bannockburn Dr.. Bethesda. Md. 20034 Dickerson, James F .GraeeCt , Williamstown. Mass, Diehl, Russell R .2470 East Ave , Rochester, N Y 14610 Dietz, Joann, 288 Stilwell Rd . Hamburg. N.Y DrPtnto. Vrto, 3202 Altoona, Cleveland. Ohio Dix. Theodore H .1610 Dominik Dr ,College Sta,, Tex, 77840 Dobyns.Courtney S .2904 Huntington. Shaker Hgts., Ohio Dockins, Johnette A , 1211 Marsha1l,Gary. lnd. Domke, Paula S , 709 Nunu St , Kailua, Hawaii Donald, Alison D,, Tunstall Rd.. Scarsdale, N,Y, Dondy. Lise E , 14 Judson St., Larchmonl. N.Y, Donnelly, Doreen G . 1246 East Jetl'erson. So Bend. Ind. 46617 Dooley, Pamela. 4444 S State.Chicago.l11 Dorr, George A .33 Summit Rd,. Newport. N.H Douglas. Edwin C ,Taft School, Watertown. Conn. Douglas, Marla, 1155 Sheridan, Lake Forest, Ill, Drake. Margaret. 643 Park Dr,. Kenilworth, 111. Draper,Sophie C W .5111 Chestnut. Boston, Mass, Driscoll, Richard H , 1333 Hagys Ford. Narberth, Pa Druliner. Mary, 1225 Dartmouth, Wi1mette.lII. Dunbar, Jerome G.. 1133 Union, Belvidere, lll. Duncan, Sandra K., 1130 Minisink Way, Westfield, N.J. Dunn, EleanorS., 324 Merriam. Weston, Mass. Duston, Sally Jane, 674 Main St., Lynnlield, Mass. 01940 Echavarria, Juan. Apt. Aereo 44050, Medellin, Colombia Eckert. Emily K., 10927 Wickwild Dr , Houxton,Tex. Edidin, Linda S., 1059 Skokie Ridge Dr., Glencoe, 111. Edwin, David H .. 2102 Aqueduct, New York,N ,Y. Eich. Carol S.. 1301 Oxford, Ln.. Glenview, lll. Eiker, Mark C., 643 Colwyn Terr , Deertield, Ill. Eisenberg, Jay M., 70 Croton, Ossining. N.Y. Ellegaard. Gael K., 4 Hewlett Rd , Greenva1e.N.Y, Elliott. Billie J.. 89 Helen St.. Hamden. Conn. 06514 Elliott, Kathryn R.. 900 N Lake Shore. Chicago. lll. 60611 Ellis, Ronald S., 118 Charles Dr.. Haverton, Pa, Elmore, Elizabeth, 525 Walnut La., Swarthmore, Penn. Elprln. Steven L.. 33 N, Forest Circle. Westville. Conn. Emlen. Robert P.. 313 Edgehill Rd .Way'ne, Penn. Engelmann,Curtis H . 201 Churchill Dr.. Wilmington. Del. Erdevig, Karen S., 5l56N. Marlborough, Milwaukee, Wisc. 53217 Erickson, Joanna. 736 Cherry' Ave.. Lake Forest, 111. Evans, Scott, 2313 Burr Oak, Northbrook, lll. Faber, Deborah L.. 225 E, Center, Lake Bluff. lll. 60044 Fagenholz. Robert, 321 Woodland. Winnetka, Ill. Fahrneyokelley, Alice. 1307 West Gate Terr.,Chicago. Ill. Falstein, Deborah J., 3106W. Jarlath. Chicago, 111. Fairman, Frederica. 105 Fern Dr., Pasadena, Calif. Fant, John F. 111.3041 Fairfax Rd,. Clvland Hgt., Oh. -1-4118 Farber, Douglas A., 1110 N. Sheridan, Lake Forest, lll. Farber.Sa11y'. 1110 N, Sheridan, Lake Forest.1ll. Farley, Diane R., 531 W. 8th St., Plainfield. N.J. Farley, Jill Olson, 914 Grand, Wausau. Wis. Farris, Ronald G., 44 Main St.. Schenevus, N.Y. Fazio. Linda G., 140 Sagamore. lsland Park, N.Y. Fechheimer, Ann, 307 Wyndcli1'fS . Carsdale. N.Y, Feinstein, Rene E.. P O. Box 436, Monticello. Ky. Fell. Neil M., 360 Vine. Highland Park, lll Ferguson, Dorothy. Kenmore Rd.. Bloomfield. Conn, Ferber. Elizabeth, 3822 Livingston. Washington. D.C. Ferris, Martha R., Rt,1,Box I79,Vtcksburg, Miss. 39180 Fetridge. Clark W .2430 Lakeview.C1ncago,1ll, Ferrell. Marilyn A., 3537 Denison. Baltimore. Md. Fick. Glen O. 1204 W Roosevelt, Wheaton. 111. Field, Harold J Jr., 9 Sttmson Ave . Providence. R.l 02906 1-illips. Carol D., Harts H1ll.Wh1tesboro,N,Y. Fineman, Charles. 189 Morris, Providence, R 1 Finkle, Westley D , 2430 Woodmere Dr.C1eve1and Hts , Ohio Finn. Newton E., 940 North Ave.. Waukegan, lll. Finsen.PeterJ.She11ield Rd., Newtonville, Mas. 02160 Fischer. Elizabeth. 6 Lochinvar La.. Oakbrook, lll. Fisher, Mina L., 2974 LakeSt., East Jordan, Mich. Fishman, Herman. 6620 N.Francisco,Chicago,11l. Fitzgtbbon. Judith A,,191 Main St., Wenham, Mass. 01984 Fitzpatrick, Carter. 594 Ridgewood, Glen Ridge. N.J, Fitzsimmons, B. Shane, 28800 Chagrin Blvd.. Cleveland. Ohio 4412 Flaningam, Carolyn, P.O Box 183.Emison.1nd. Fleming, Harry C , 107 Old Rd.. Westport. Conn. Fletcher, Ethel F., 165 Middlesex Rd., Darten,Conn, 06820 Flowers. Joseph S., 1524 Clayton Rd., Wilmington, Del, Foley. Ellen G.. 17 Brush Hill Rd.. Smoke Rise, N.J 07405 Follmer. Lynne. 709 Kittyhawk Way, North Palm Beach, Fla. Ford, Donald R , 1540 Whitney Blvd., Belvidere. lll. Ford. Frederick B., 60 Renaud Rd . Grosse Pte.. Mich Foreman. Susan E.. 453 Moul Ave . Hanover. Penn Fosse1.Les1ie.O1d New Boston Rd., Francestown. N H Fowler, Richard H , Rt. ll, Box 750, Spokane. Wash. 99208 Fowley, James K .7000 Kenleigh Rd . Baltimore. Md. Fraker, RoberL 170A River Park Apt.. White Plains. N Y Franchtne, Mary E .3904 Jumper Road, Baltimore, Md, 21218 Franck.Sarah E . 36 Taunton Lake Dr .Newtow-n. Conn. Frank, Cy nthia. 770 Sheridan. Highland Park. lll. Freedman, Kenneth, 140 Laurel, Wilmette. Ill. French, Richard C., 657 S. Pleasant, Amherst. Mass. French, William, 219 S. Stewart. Libertyville. lll Freund, Anna B.1lI Delmar Ave., Glen Rock. N.J 07452 Frey. Bonita G.. 2749 Lititz Pike. Nelfsville. Pa. 17556 Fried. Harruet. 13 10 Sunnyside Dr.. Fair Lawn, N.J 07410 Frteder. Denise. 316 N. Abington Rd., Clark Green. Pa, 18411 Frishy. Deborah R , 38 Vassar St., Springfield, Mass 01109 Frtsble, Lenora A.. Danforth Dr.. New Canaan, Conn Fries. Barry, 86 Durand Rd., Maplewood, N,J Fries. Wil1iam,86 Durand Rd,. Maplewood, N.J. Fritz. BobbyeC .. 303 Strathmore, Rosemont, Pa Fudor, Bernard. 6409 Forward. Pittsburgh, Penn. Fuente, Bonnie, 145 Laurel, Highland Park, 111. Fuess, James T.. 64 C ouchman. Rochester, N ,Y. Fulton, W. De Wolf. 284 President. Prowdencc R,l, Funches. Daryl I.. 5810 Ardmore St.. Houston, Tex Gallo. Albert J.. 31 Sunset Dr.. Manhasset, N.Y. Gansberg, Jean, 205 N Sheridan, Lake Forest, lll. Gardcl. He1eneN.. 144 W 86th St.. New York, N.Y, Garrett, Oreston, 1535 Ellington St . Memphis, Tenn, 38108 Gasner, Sherry. 1665 S, Shoshone, Denver. Colo, Gates. E Jan. 6538 Eaton. Arvada, Colo. 80002 Gehllng, Nancy B.. Middle Hollow Rd.. Huntington, N.Y, Gentry. Urania E.. 1314 Central. Evanston. lll. Gcorgevich. Ora, 694 Hill Sl., Highland Park. lll. Gerdel. J, Gregory. 765 Westleigh Rd., Lake Forest. III, Gerdel. Rejene S., 765 Westleigh Rd.. Lake Forest, Ill. Greg, Joanne S., 108 S. Genesee, Waukegan. lll, Gersh. Barbara S., 240 Cabnm Blvd., New York, N.Y, 10033 4 Gerster, John A.. Cherry' Valley' Rd,. Greenwich, Conn. Gestaut. Lawrence, 730-1 S Banks, Justice. lll. Gilford. Louxse W . 39 Valley Rd.Bronvvt11e, N Y Gt1lls.Jultel.6-10 Hunter Rd..Glenstevs.ll1. 60025 Glassman. Maureen. 5239 N Vtrgtnta, Chicago, 111 Gleason, Charles L,. 16 Middle Dr . P1andome.N Y Glossberg, Mary A.. 159 Lake St.. Glencoe. 111 Goebel. Laura A,. 171 S Clyde Ave , Palatine. Ill 60067 Gold, Barbara.-171 Pleasant, Highland Park. lll Golden. Penny. 1215 l.unt.Chteago. 111 Goldhamer. hllen L.297141 Winthrop Rd .Shaker Hgts Oh -1-1120 Golds1etn.Nteky, 7301-it Washington Ave . Neyv York. N.Y 100-10 Gontar. David P. 1-11'tllovv St,. Westport. Conn, Goodman. Bruce. 120 Beach Rd . Glencoe. 111 Goodman, Steven B .9929 ll arren Oval, Niles. 111 r-061k Goodvsell. .Ieanne. 206 Henley Rd S . Richmond. lnd Goodwin. George M . l39N Thurstott, Los Angeles,Calt1'. Goold, Lltzabeth. 5604 llltddaugh, Dovv ners Grove. Ill Gorham. Patricia. 211 Boulevard. Glen Rock. N J Gorehant. Susan. R R 3, Bov 581 hesterton. lnd Gotlredson. Christian. 1 1-1 Grosse Pte Blvd . Grosse Pte. Mtch Gould, Allan L.. 12X Alexander Ave.. Hartsdale. N l G1'L1l2.C'h11Sllf1U P . 12-12 Michigan. Ctnctnnatt. Ohio Grain. Mary E .2-100 Hather1y.C l1l1fltlllC. N C Graves. Deborah D . 1921 Harrison. Lvanston. 111 60201 Green. Cynthia M., Apt 9B,l-ahtot1Izt26A, Milano. Italy Green, Kenneth D . 3 Ptnevvood Rd.. Roslyn. N Y Green, Russell L . 212 S Maple Ave ,Orvvell, Ohio Greenough. Katherine. 3-1 Prince Street. Beverly. Mass 01915 Greer. James A . R R 2. Box L'LJ. Antioch. lll Gregory. Gerald L., 27 Beacon Rd . Sumnttt. N J Grennan, Juliet C 5101 Watson. ll ashtngton, D L Grtes. Carol. I11N -11st Street. Louisville. Ky. -10212 Grtrleth. John J., 12-15 Steel Rd.. Havertovvn. Pa Grtpe. R Thompson. 2179 Tecumseh Park.ll'estLa1'ayette, Ind Gross. Robert D., 30 Parkvvay Dr . Roslyn Hgt .N Y 11577 Gross. Robert E,. 1153 Carol Lane. Glencoe, 111 60022 Gruenberg, Paul T . 1006 Serpentine Ln . Wyncote. Pa 19095 Guernsey. Peter E . 3-1 Wheatley Rd .Old llestbury. L 1. N Y Guild, lzdward. 63 Burdttt. Htnghant. Mass Gurtan. Paul R,. 550 Spruce. Lake 1-orest. 111. Gurtolt. Lawrence l ..1 . 616 Burton Ave.. Highland Park. 111 Haac. C1t1l'ord O.. 157 Quaker Path. Setauket. N Y 117145 Habegger. Judtth. 32 S Lincoln. Geneva. lll. Hatg. ChrtstopherJ .8914 Revere Dr . Hillside. N J 07205 Haken.Mtchae1E.XH17Sundale Dr .Silver Spring. Md Hale, Luntce, 270 Butler. Lake Forest. Ill Halka. Lawrence B .-10147 E 26th. Tulsa. Okla Hall. Andrevv L, S20 L Green Tree, Mt1vlaukee.ll'ts Hall.Gre1chen. 26 ll ashtngton, Lake Forest, 111, Hallberg. Carol A . R D 2. Box -l26l1.Anduver,N J Halley, Margaret. R R 1,God1'rey. lll Ha1pren,Dante1H,.-112 Dullield House, Philadelphia, Penn A. Hamilton. Gregory. 918 N Roman St., New Orleans. La, 70116 Hammershatmb. Robin. 1015 Tyson Pl ,Syracuse. N Y Hanan.Charles.-X .Stony Brook La.. Princeton. N.J Handler. George, 302 ll Xoth St .Neo York. N Y Handler. Henry. 350-1 Perry St,. Fatrlav, Va 22030 Hansen. Elizabeth, l5Col1egeCtre1e. Lake Forest. lll Harding. Richard C . 16 Westside. Freeport. N Y Harmon. Eugene 13.2 West Main St . Leroy. N Y 1-1-182 Harney. Alfred N . 110-1 ll'lcKtn1ey.Alton. 111 Harp. B Diane, 910-1 Haviland Ave . Loutsvtlle. Ky, Harris. Amanda B,. 315 E 70th St . Nevv York. N Y 10021 Harris. Bruce ll .33 Hudson Rd . Aurora. Ohto Harris. Jtll K.. 3600 Texas,-lve. S L .ll'ashtngton. D C Harris. John M . Flanders Rd. R R 1, lloodbury. Conn 06525 Harris, Nancy' J.. 901 Hovvard SL. Htbbtng, Minn 557-16 Harris. Patricia, 920 Ptne St.. Winnetka. lll. Harris. Robert l.. 728 Green Bay Rd.. Winnetka. 111 Har1ong.JohnC .Greenstead Park Ave. Camberly Surry. Lng Harvey. Robert B , N Racebrook Rd.. ll oodbrtdge, Conn 06525 Harsha. JanetA,. 2-1 llarvvtck Rd . Winnetka, 111 Hartman. Ruth. -11 I Sheridan Rd., Winnetka. lll Haskins. Cheryl, 7253 S Pittsburgh. Tulsa. Okla Hatcher. James ll .. HHH S. Beverly P1,. Lake Forest. Ill. Hausletn, Peter D.. 23355 ColontalCt..St.ClatrSH .Mtch Hauswtrth. Elizabeth. 3601 Gramby. Hyattsvtlle. Md. Heath, Kingston ll .. 107-15 S. Hale, Chicago. 111 Heehs. Alan F.. 688 Gulph Rd., Vlayne. Penn, Hegeman. llilltam R . -10-1 Carroll. Mamaroneck. N Y Hetms, Susan E,. 45 Secor Rd., Scarsdale. N.Y 105153 Hetne. Mary K.. 26 Highlands Dr., Ktnnelen. N.J. 07-105 Hetner. George M, Jr.. -1351 Kltngle. Washington. D C Hetntg. Suzanne E.. 763 Fov Hunt. Deerfield. 111 Hetsler.Caro1ine S.. 269 Hilldale Rd..l'il1anova. Penn. Henderson. C, Bruce, 3328 N. St N.ll'., Washington. D C Henderson. Kathleen. 112 Dennison Ave., Framingham. Mass 01701 Henry. Charles W,. South St.. Middlebury. Conn. 06762 Henry. Patricia. 556 Oakdale, Glencoe.lI1. Henson. Virginia M..936S Evergreen, Arlington Hts . lll. Herman. David L.. X227 Rtdgevv'ay.Skokte,l1l, Hess. Carolyn Rae, 6-120 Burgandy Wine, Oklahoma City. Ok 73112 Hesse. Michae10..105-1 Golf.-Xve.. Highland Park.11l. Hey'1ek.Carol M.. -110-1 Ferrara Dr.. Stlver Sp.. Md. 20906 Hickman. Lucille, 2937 West Warren. Chicago. lll. 60612 Htgdon. Elizabeth G.. 2-148 A Street, San Dtego.Ca1if. 92102 Hill. Serena E.. 61701-lth Ave.. Greeley. Colo. Hill. Walter A.. 709 Ptne. No. Ltttle Rock. Ark. Htllebrand, Daniel. 917 Grey, Evanston,l1I. Hirsch. Dennis M.. 126 Lady Lane, MtchiganCtty. Ind. Hinman. Robert W., 300 Maclaren. Lake B1urT.1ll, Hirsch. Susan G . 130 ll estover Dr . -lkron.Ohto -1-1313 lltl1:.VtrglntaG.SvvcetBrtar Col1ege.Svseet Brtar.l a llobbs.Chrtstopher. Claybrook Rd.lJovC1.'l1ass Hock. Lynn L .22320-19th St N ll .ll ashtngton. Dt Hoeppner. -lnn M. l100Riverside Dr . Indtalanttt. 1 la Hollman, Barry H . H1 llqttvvlrltlywlt,5laI'tiltt1't.l.C onn Ho1l'mart.Mtchae1C .Rl-D1.Bov 631'-..ltr.tys lake, lll 60030 Holfman. Susan R .353 Oak Terrace. ll ayne. Penn Hogan,Mtchacll1.61-1 South Dunton. lrltngton Hts , Ill Holaday.O1tvta.T01,lL longvvood Dr ,I ake 1-orcst. Ill llolb. Judith A ,-1h Londenvlcrry Dr . Grcenvvtch, C onn 1lM30 Holmes. Harry 1 .29571zaton Rd .Lleve1.tnvJ.Ohto Holmes. .ludtty tl . 15 l,e 1 ever l a. Ltttlc Rock. Ark Holmes. Lynn. 102 Dovvning Rd . Dell ttt. N l Holmes. .lohn. 6l3Certtra1. ll tlmette. 111 Hoover, Donald B . 5509 GlengarryPkv1y Ldtna. 'vltnn llopktns.Brten.Amertcanlnihasvy.Betrut.l.c1'vanon Hopkins. Diana C ,R F D 2.lvy l n.Kartkakee.1II 60901 Horner. Michael B , 990-1 Old Spring Rd . Kensington. 'vld Hovey. Thomask ,RFD 1. Last St . Hchron. C onn Hovvard, Julie D .36 Bainbridge Rd . ll Hart1ord,C onn 06110 llorvvtt1.,Ie1l'rey.X50-k1tgeld,L htcago.1l1 Huber. Hale ll ,9-129 S Mann. Plymouth. Nllcll Hudson. C harles. 3333 Belvoir Blvd .C lcvc1and.Ohto llvtdson.,1oanG . 2-15 Audrey Terr , Roselle. N J Huerner.J.tcque1tne.73l lzllgen. llton. Ill Hundgen.ThomasJ . 2312 Loring Pl , Nets l ork. N l Hunter. BarharaS . 100 Park Slreet.llt1ltamstov1n. 'lla 111267 llunter. James, Buxton Hnll.lltl1tamsto-an. Nlass Hunter. Maxine, 1139N Green Bay. lake Fores1.lll Hunter, Ronald L . 213-l Gaylord. Denver, C tllvt M1205 Huntoon. Daniel.-ll Har1St , Beverly Farms. llass Hurd. Nancy G . 734 E Greenvtevv. Lake 1-orest, 111 Hurt. Charlotte -l .725 ll Maple -lve, llunde1etn.lll Huster. Randall. Box 66917. Ingleside, lll Huston.C ratg L . 3 Fort Hill La .Scarsdalu. N Y Huston. Retko. 1351 N ll estern. Lake 1 t-rest. 111 l1yde.Abtgatl lg . 329KOC reelvstde. Cleveland. Ohio -l-112-1 Hutul. Pamela, 3-16 1:astSpruce St . Lake Forest. 111 600-15 Hyman. Susan. 63-1 Llntgate Dr . Glenview, 111 llter. Lucy. 19112 ll Ba1dv1tn.Palattne.lI1 lll.Pht1ltp L . S127 l1atnS1.DovsnersCtrove.l1l Ingham. Harvey. 1-1 Briar Rd .Sta1l'orv1.Pa lngraham.Ttmothy. 106 Sargent. Brookline. Nlass lrving. Robert D . 265 ll 1slstSl .Nesv l ork. N l Isaacs. Barbara. N0-1 Greenlea1',Glencoe. lll Jaav. Thomas. 1-1 Sumner lltlls. Mankato. Minn Jackel. Stephen D .Summit Ave , Pontpton l ks . N J 07-1-12 Jackson. A1tceG.. Rt 3. Box 232. Tylertovx n. Mtss Jackson. Joyce L ,-100K 21st St N 1: .ll ash1ngton.DL Jackson. Russell H .232-l St Albans Pl . Philadelphia. Pa Jacobs, Bruce .1 . 1520 Brookside Ave . llaukegan. 111 Jacobs. John A . 1-109 S 20th, Arlington. l a Jacobs. Marilyn .I . 12-1065 limerald, C lttcago. Ill 60619 Jakelsky. Dorothy L . 3HLtrc1e Dr . Carmel. lnd James.Stdney K . 2510 l trgtnta -lve N ll .llashtngton. D C 2003 Janke, Claudia J . 13350K7th St . Dovvnershrove. 111 .lanus.f1dvsard. 10016 Frederick.lsenstngton.l1d Jayson. Diane lr 7512 Nevs Market. Bethesda, Md .lenntngs. .lames. 1026 ll htttter Rd.. Grosse Pte. Mtch Jestek, Linda L . 20-13 S Shore Dr . Holland. lltch -19-123 ,lobe. Mary F . 1-12'10South Park. Shaker Hts .Ohio Johnsen. Mary. 2020 Chestnut. ll't1mette. 111 Johnson.Cralg. P., -1231 l alley l neu, Ldtna. Minn Johnson. Lltlabeth A .9 Sheridan Dr .Short Hills. N J .1ohnson. James. General Delivery. Shavv. Miss 3a 3 Johnson, Randolph L. 17-12 S Decatur St . Denser.L olo Johnson. Timothy ll .Pottersvtlle. N .1 07979 Johnston. Deborah S .-1621 37th St No, 1-.rltngton.l a 22207 Johnston. John M .11l.527Ovsen Rd . llynnevvood. Pa 19096 Jones. Brennon. 35 L 35th St .Nevv l ork. N l Jones.D1ana M .51-1 llatson St.. Jackson. Mtss 3-+3113 Jorgenson, Laurel F .3535 Rainbow Dr . Minnetonka, Minn 553-13 Josepher. James P . -12-15 ll H3rd St.. Chicago. 111 60652 Jouett.l'1rtc H .P O Bov27l1. St, Thomas. l I 00802 .Iudd. Nancy C .Rt 1. Bovl3b.Scottsh1utT.Neb Justnskas. Ztta. 612 ll BeIdcn.Elmhurst.l11 Kadtson. Sari L.,-175 Laurel Highland P . Ark. 111 Kahn. James L.. 1512 Maple, lltlmette. 111 lsalter. -Klan L .185-1 Ktpltng Dr.. Dayton. Ohto Kaluzny. Stgtsmund. 5XOI N Shertdan.Chtcago. lll 60626 Kaplan. Mary L .1535 l'sno1lvvood.Htghland Park. 111 Kaplan. llilltam H.. 627 Dorian Rd , llesttield, NJ Katchen. LtndaC,. -l'-12 S .IasmtneSt.. Denver. Colo Katlan.A1evander, 5603K Matn St., Flushing. N.Y lsatz. Susan. 910 N Overlook Dr . Alexandria. la Katz. Susan G. 126-1 Pleasant l alley. llestOrange. N J Katzenberg. Fdvsard,-l.,l1 Lyman Rd , Brookline, Nlass 0216' Kauvar. Kenneth. 70 South Ash. Denver. Colo. Kavkevyttz. Michael.-1l6Ooean Ave . Brooklyn. N l 11226 lsay.1vy -k.,26Green Meadovv. Huntington. N.l Kearns. Judtth. 1915 E. Circle Dr.. Northbrook. Ill Keller.Chrtsttne. 225 Sheridan Rd,.lltlmette.11l 60091 Kelly, Kathleen.-l . R R 2.Stone Rd.. Xenta.Ohto Kenehck. Erin. 183 Bergen P1ke.Rtdgetield Park. N J Kennedy. Kathleen. 37-la Park Ave . Minneapolis. Mtnn Keyes. l trgtnta B , ll estmunster School. Stmsbury. Conn, 06070 K1dney.James A271112 Marion La . Bethesda. Md Ktetler. Michael J., 52 Green Valley Rd . Pttts1ord.N Y 1-153-1 Kitck. Cheryl E. 8-1-15 Matn St.. Dovsners Grove. lll. King. Richard R.. S29 Dellvvood. Bethlehem. Pa. ISOIN Ktnyanyut. David N.. PO Box 7223.Natrob1. Kenya Kirman. Roger P., 5143 Rutland Ave., Teaneck, N.J. Kist1er.AnneC.15-10San Remo.CoraI Gables, Fla. Klaren, Robert F., 220 Walnut, Ltbertyt111e,1l1. Klaren, Suzanne, 220 Walnut, Libertyville. Ill. Klein. Bonita L.. 2623 Eaton Rd., University Hts., Ohio Klopp, Judith A.. 2005 North 53rd. Omaha, Nebr. Knoche, Elizabeth, Chapelgate. Randallstown, Md. Knowles, Trudy L.. 235 Mount Vernon, Boston. Mass. Kotak. David M.. Box 316. Poms Rd., Wayne, 111. 6018-1 Kolster, Mary Lee,-153-1 W Spencer Place, Milwaukee. Wtsc. Mr A Mrs. Sidney Korey. Kornbluth Steven D., 2805 Pond Pl., Koiach, Gasper. 81005 W . 96th St . Miami. Fla Kramer, Marc P , I5 W. alst St., New York. NY Kramer. Richard K., Ridge Lane, Vteston. Conn. 1xornbluth.Steten D . 2805 Pond Pl.. Next York. N Y. Kretzschmar. John, 97 Touratne. Grosse Pointe. Mich. Krugcr. Kenneth B., 1120 Hammond Pkwy., Alexandria, Va. Kudarauskas. Aletda N .22 Farrar Street, Cambridge, Mass. Kullie, Betty, 1901 W Farm Rd.. Lake Forest. 111, 600-15 Kuhlman, Karen S.. 2705 Rural St.. Rockford, 111. 61107 Kurtz, Robert T.. 5-12 Mervons Lane. Fatrlield, Conn. 06-133 Kutchera,Sally, 3121 N E. 51 St.. Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. 53216 22302 02138 Kulmann, Haydee, Ltniers3I0701ivos. Buenos Aires, Arg, S A. lxyger, Mary K., 5Nutmeg Lane, Andover, Mass. 011510 Kyle. Diane. 21 10 St John. Highland Park. 111. Laciny.Carol E . 9-1-15 Big Bend. Webster Grv., Mo. 63119 Ladin, DeborahJ .5223 Kay Court. Annadale. Va. 22003 Ladurtni. Leo J.. 9-11 Deerlield Rd., Highland Park. 111. Lamb. Barbara T.. 72 Monument, O Bennington. Vt. 05201 Lamb, Elizabeth B.. 72 Monument, Old Bennington. Vt. Lamb, Gregory M., 6537 S. Clarkson, Littleton. Colo 80120 Lamson, James E.. 1158 G1eneo,Htghland Park,111. Lane, Mary M , 1350 N. Waukegan. Lake Forest. 111. Lange. Stuart B., 2610 Laurel Ln , Wtlmette,11I. Langer, Peter. 331-1 Patricia Apt 5. Waukegan, 111. Lanman, Norman W.. 235 S Drexel Ave.. Colum1:tus,0hto Lanman. Joseph T . 235 S Drexel, Columbus. Ohio Lamgan. Susan B., Ardsley Ate., Irvington. N Y Laser, Stephen. 565 Jackson. Glencoe, 111, Lash. James C.. 6-1 Lockwood. Old Greenwich. Conn. Laube, Beth L .3-16Glenbrook, Stamford, Conn. Lauterstein. David, 91-1 Michigan. Evanston, 111 Lebby, Andrew M.. 3616 Rawnsdale, Shaker Hts., Ohio Lederman. Lila. 1-196 Scott, Winnetka, 111. Lee, Janet. 2563 East Ate., Brighton, N Y 1-1610 Lee. Phillip. 2-198 Mandetille Cyn . Los Angeles, Calif Legum. Dougl1.o.711l Park Heights. Baltimore, Md. Leimnger, Karen A., 5505 Beard Ct.. Edina, Minn. Leong, Alelha L..19-1-1 Manoa Rd., Honolulu, Hawaii 96522 Letzring, Jacqueline, 501 Smtth. Lake Blu11',1l1 Leon, LoisS . 1-18 Trent Rd , Philadelphia. Pa Levitt, Vtendy E.. 7 Stonewall Lane. Mamaroneck, N.Y Leitin. Janis L ,239 Stoneletgh Sq., Fair1ield,Conn 0660-1 Lutyis. Edna, 9Oterht11 Dr . Madison, N..l, Leytis. EugeneC., 219 Lampert St.. Alton, 111 Lexus, Sally A.. 323 No Ridge Rd ,Little Rock, Ark. 72207 Lewis. Linda 1x.,919 Madison, Plainfield, N.J. Lidfeldt. Lawrence. 99 Oakridge Dr.. Rochester. N,Y Ltnd. John T .-155 Roosevelt Ave.. Gary, Ind -16-102 Lt1ienthal,Bonnte.-17 Powder Horn Hill. Wilton. Conn. Lincoln.Gt1bert J . 30 Braintree Dr . West Hartford,Conn Linwood. Gregory, 1360 N. Burr Oak, Lake Forest, lll Lipman. MarcJ , 100613. W ashtngton St . Evanston. 111. 60202 Lttt1e.SusanJ .67 Green St., Newbury. Mass 01950 Lttvtn, Marilyn B , 15-10 Lake Shore, Chicago. 111. Litlow. fy1argaret.70H 15th Ave S W . Rochester, Minn. Lttermorc. Thomas, Beater Pond Rd., Beverly. Mass. Lloyd. Mary P , P O. Bott IN5. Makatsao Maul, Haw Locke. Otten F . 3-114 Lafayette St . Denver. Colo. 802111 Logowttl. Stephen. 525 Elmgrote Ave . Providence, R1 Lord. Richard S., 236 Cloterly. Grosse Pointe. Mich Loverde. Charles, 36-1H N. Sprtngfie1d,Chtcago. lll. Lott, James. -1-1 Falmouth Rd., Longmeadow. Mass 01106 Lotte. Hot-ard A . l55Country' Way, Needham. Mass Lovienthal, Toni A , 572-1 S Mary1and,Chtcago. lll. Loo ry. Thomas A , 5-117 W Haddon Ave., Chicago, lll 60651 Lulaelsky. Paul N1 .2720 Grand Concourse, Bronx. N Y 10-1515 Luce, 1.tla L ,2l52 Wyoming Ave. N V1 .Washtngton. D C 20008 Lumpkin. Linda A . 57-1 L l07th.C1ete1and,Ohto Lund. Julie E .2151 Upper St Dennis. St. Paul, Minn 1 ynch, Carol T.. 6676 I Ith Ave, No ,St, Peterhurg. Fla. 33702 Lyons, Deborah A ,-1850 N Woodrulf. Milwaukee. Wts Lynch. Laurence. 31 El11otSt , Exeter, N H 03833 Mac.-Xndrew, Bonnie, 103 Vketherill Rd .Garden City, N Y MacCa1lum,KrtstiA .-1-1 Bayview. South Norwalk, Conn MacDonald. Daniel 2719 Payne. Etanston,1l1. MacGregor, Gordon, R D 1. Riegclstille. Penn Mack. Deborah L,, -10 Grape St,Pittsburg.P1i 15210 MacNamara. David. 17-1 Htllhursl Blvd.. Toronto. Ontario MacRoytskt,1'rcdcrtck, 1631 Grove. North Chicago, 111 Matman, Michael J . Bot 666. F.P O.. San Francisco. Calif Mallam, Karen 1: .3939 Perstmmon Dr , Fairfax, Va Malrrtgren. James H.. 676N Sixth St.. Canton. 111 Mange1sdor1i.Ann M , 711 Knollwood Rd,, Short Hill. NJ Mantcrrc. George. 15205. Telegraph, Lake Forest, 111 Mann. John N . 2-136 Newbury Dr ,Cletel.tnd, Ohio Mans1icld.Suxtn. RD 3. Backbone Rd .Sewickley Ht. Pa Marcum. M Christina.-175Oakwood,Hamil1on.Ohlo Marion. C rang -X ,SU-1 Laurel Rd .Yeadon, Penn Markin. Sheila A.. 23119 Sherman.-'tvc,1:tanston.1l1 60201 Marks, Y tclorta, C amplire Rd .Chappaqua, N Y 1N1.irsha11.Cynt1'tta G .207 Morlyn Ave . Bryn Mawr, Penn. 151-13 New Y ork. N.Y. Marsters. David, 12-1 Brigham Hill Rd., N. Grafton, Mass. Martin. William B.. 1785 Telegraph, Deer1ieId,11I. Martini, Mary I., 5-1 Highwood Dr.. Avon,Conn. 06001 Martz. Elizabeth. S6 Denny Lane, St. Louis. Mo. Mason, Kathryn T., 522 6th Ave.. N,A,S., Norfolk, Va. Masselink, Mary' B., 150 Midland. Bronxville. N.Y. Matheson. M. Meigs,-1675S.W. 7-1th St., Miami, Fla. Mathews, Kathryn S.,-11-12 220th St., Bayside, N.Y. 11361 Matray, James I., 9520 Francisco, Evergreen Park, Ill. Maultsby. Carl L., 725 Avondale -1, Orlando, Fla. McBean, Barbara, 52-1 Bank Lane. Lake Forest. 111. McBean, William. 72 Summit Ave.. Bronxville, N.Y. Miarthy, Kevin R., Royal Dome, Apt. 12, N. Abington, Mass. McCarthy. Peter, -10 Pcnhurst Park. Buffalo, N.Y. McCartney. Jane A.. 1215 Highland Pkwy., St. Paul. Minn. McC1ure.Elizabeth. 1107 Dryden St., Silver Sp., Md. 20901 McConnell, William C . 10 Niles Lane. Winchester, Mass. McCormick. James, 2039 McAree Rd., Waukegan.1l1. McCulloch, Brian, 8112 Wadebridge Cr., Huntington B, Calif. 92626 McCuI1y', Howard H.. 9-13 Spruce, Winnetka, 111. Mcfurry, Alan P., 250 Cherokee, Lake Forest. lll. McDonough, Michael 200 Elm Tree La. Elmhurst. Ill. McDougall, Kathleen, B909 W. 121 St., Palos Park, 111. McGowan. Rebecca, -1717 Quebec St. N.W., Washington. D.C. McGuire, Kathleen N., -1301 N, 35th St., Arlington. Va. McKay, Kenneth G Jr., 100 Wildwood Lane, Summit, N.J. 07901 McKee. Cynthia S., 112 Cherry Hill, Barrington, 111. McKee. Michael B.. 2162 S. Vermont. Gary. lnd. McKinney, Caroline, 97 W. Chickasaw, Memphis, Tenn. McKinney, Marcia L,, 33 Valley' Rd., Scarsdale. N.Y. McKinney, Joseph. 570 Acorn St., Philadelphia, Penn. McMurray. Timothy, 666 Greenvtew PI.. Lake Forest, Ill. McNair, Janet M.. P.O. Bok 363, Chestertown. Md. McRae, Michael J., 9029 Chas. Augustine, A1exandrta,V.A. McTernan, Louise T., 1-1-1 25th Ave., San Francisco.Caltf. McTwigan. James M . 1571 South -13th, Lincoln. Neb. 68506 Meader, Kathleen. 910 Read St., Lockport,1l1. Medvt11e,Ruthann, 5827 N Campbel1.Chicago, lll. 606-15 Metsenhetmer, Betsy' A., 300-1 Fernwood.A1ton, III. 62002 Melamed, Audrey V., 1502 Sheridan, Highland Park. 111. Melktn. Stephanie M .9201 LaurelOak Dr., Bethesda. Md. 2003-1 Meltzer, Gail.-X.. 131 Edgewew, Rochester, N.Y. Mendels. Ro1anda1.,3Captatns Lane, Rye. N.Y 10580 MentschtkolT, Alex, -1920 S. Kimbark, Chicago, 111. Merens, Michael, 1-1-1 Sheridan, Highland Park, 111. Mermtn, Robert, 17 SunsetDrive. No. Haven,Conn. 06-173 Merrick, Nancy L., 32-1 N. Harvey' Ave., Oak Park, lll. 60302 Merrill, Donna L., 86 Maple Grove Dr.. Pittsfield, Mass. Merryman, Kathleen, 1-105 Berwick Rd.. Ruxton, Md. Mervis, Je1Trey,-16-1 Signal Hill Rd.. Barrington,I11. Meyers, John B.. Young Rd. RFD 2, Katonah. N.Y. 10536 Meyt, Louis H.. 2533 Pentston St., New Orleans. La. Micali. James M., 189 Edgewater Dr., Needham. Mass. Miller, Gordon J., 2310 Hubbard Rd., Madison. Ohio -1-1057 Miller. S. David. -150 Fairfield Dr., Sharon, Pa 161-16 Mills, Kenneth E .Salt Pond Rd., Falmouth, Mass. MtIton.Patrtc1a, 69 Westover Ave., Bolling, A.F.B.D. Co. 332 Minton, M Kristine, AF South, Bot 136 P.P.O., N Y. 09521 Mitchell. My'ronJ , 230 Oneida St.. Denver. Colo. Mitchell. Raymond, 2627 Laurel Lane, Wilmette, 111. Moatz. Cynthia K., 2591 Guilford Rd., Cleveland Hts.. Ohio Moebtus, James P., 25-15 N Frederick Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. 53211 Motfett. John C , 3326 E. Berkshire Rd., Cleveland Hts.. Ohio Mo1Tet,Sydney L., 1515 Ltnden.Homettood,111. 60130 Mohr, Joseph N., RR 5, Dugan Rd., Shelbyville. lnd. Montgomery, Winston. 39 Merriman Rd., Stamford, Conn. Moore. Claudia A.. S Hesketh St.. Chevy Chase, Md. 20015 Moore. Dian, RR 5. Crawfordsville, Ind. Moore, Victoria L., 8 Hesketh St.. Chevy Chase, Md. 20015 Morgan. Juntus S,, Cleft Rd.. Oyster Bay. N.Y Mortuchi, Yasuhiro. 2-152 Shinoharaocho, Yokohamaosht, Japan Morris. Suzanne L., Bok 5. Naperville, Ill. Morris. Tracy M., -1128 N. Larkin, Shorewood, Wisc. 53211 Morrison. Jeanne, 612 Beacon St.. Moorestown, N.J. Morrow, Richmond, Merriman Rd.. Sewickley, Penn. Morse. Ruth K . 68 Park La.. Newton Centre. Mass. Mossbrook. Kathryn, 2109 Lake Rd., Ontario, N.Y. 15-119 Moss, Judith H .53 Bel Aire Dr.. Stamford, Conn. 06905 Moulthrop, Jane E . 1203 Ford Rd.. Lyndhurst, Ohio Mugford, Jeanne, John Wise Ave.. Essex, Mass. Muir, Nancy P.. 2236 Sherman, Evanston. 111 Mullen. John S., I1-1 South 10 St.. Marshalltoytn, Iowa Mullotvney. Keith L.. 610 N. Washington, Moorestow n. N.J. Muny ofu, Paul M., P.O. Busolwe Buny ole, Tororo. Uganda Murry, Benjamin, 63 Buena Vista, Rumson, N.J. Murray. Les1teA., 563-1 Way ne, Chicago,1l1, Murray . Stephen E., Snug Harbor Dr., S. Yarmouth, Mass. Na1'tultn,Louts, 1301 Stotesbury, Philadelphia, Penn. Nasaw, Carol L.. 3550 Lake Shore Dr., Chicago, 111. Nash,CaroI A., RFD1,Box 391, Montville. N.J. 07045 Necker. Pamela D., -1So, Maywood Rd., Lake Forest, 111, 600-15 Needleman, Lucy' R., 80 Purtton Rd.. Waban. Mass. Neill, Helene, 112-1 Waukegan, Deerfield, 111. Nelson, Steven D., 303 E. 57th St. IBB. New York, N.Y. 10022 Neumann, Robert, 22-15 Pinehurst Dr., G1enview,l11. 60025 Newell, Gerald. 53-1 E. 37th, Chicago, 111, Newman, Phtllis, Pawson Rd., Branford. Conn. Ntckelsen. Sigrtd E,. -10 Greenwood. West Newton, Mass. 02165 Nichols, Timothy, 230 Walnut, Englewood, N.J. Niven, William, Sagamore Hill Rd.. Oyster Bay. N.Y. Nogultch, Nancy' T.. 2128 Waveland, Ch1cago,l1I, 60618 Nordling. Lisa M.. 101 Tamarack, Ingleside, 111. Norgaard, James, 1311 Llnden.-kve,Deer1te1Ll.11l b00l5 Norton, Cieo11'rey M..100t4N Marton.Oak Park, 111. Norton, John C., t47La1'ayette. Prtnceton,N.J Norton, Marshall, Davtds H111 Rd , Bedford Ht11s,N Y', Notak,.1tmmey M . 1511 Marquette Ave . S Mtlysaukee. Wts 53172 Novlck. Steten. 51 Upland Rd,. Waban, Mass Oak,Jaeque1yn. 1104 Andresy, LuPorte, lnd O'Brlen, Kerry. 112 Stewart Rd., Short Htlls, N J Oechutuo. Chnstopher. Mallory H111 Rd Rl 1, Georgctoyy n, Conn O'Conne11, kevtn D.. Box H-1, Alptne. N ,1 O'Connor. Peter P . 7257 Rtdge Blvd .Chtcago, lll O'De11, James E.. 612E Xth St.,A1ton.l1I O'Donne1I, Patr1ck,620N Chrtsttana. Ch1cago,11l Oelkers. kenneth B.21b15 Mtllrnan Pl . Phrladelphta. Pa Olcott, Gage lr .40 Oakrtdge Rd . V1e1lesIey. Mass 021141 Ol1tnger.Ltlltan. I1 Hatmpsh1re,Paramus,N J O1sen.N Andrew. 22 Fraser. Pelham, N Y Olson. Penel1eJ , 4201 P1nertdge.Annanda1e.Va O'Netll, M1chue1L ,345E 1ilslSl.. New York, N Y O'Ret11y. Eltlabeth. 3920 Grand Ate , Des Motnes, Iowa Orr. Pamela J,, 5.27 Lattmer Rd ,Santa Monnxt, C A Oser, James C' , 5 Young Path, Newton Centre. Mass Padden. Sally lf, 103 Tullamore Rd .Garden C1ty.N Y PaIamountatn,Chrtsl1n. Cora Lane. Chester, N .1 Pa1m,AugustaJ.. 144 Vt MtnnehahaPktty ,Mtnneapo1us, Munn Pareells, Charles A,1 ,11XC1over1y Rd . Grosse Pte . Mtch 4151236 ParIet,Wtl1tamL1,2133 Benyamtn.ka1ama1oo.Mteh Parker, Alvta, 13211 Mtchtgan St , Memphts. Tenn Parry, John W .4t1114l'a1stone Ave .Chevy Chase. Md 20015 Parsons, kathcrtne. P O. Boy 5711. Grant111e,Ohto Patrtck. Mary L. 1609 Cumber1and.Lltt1e Rock, Ark Patterson. C ynthta. 1241 Roosevelt P1 , Gary. lnd. Pauker. Robert A , 3150 Lake Shore Dr .Chtcago. 111 Peabody, Barbara, 1529 33rd St. N W . V1 ashtngton. D C Pearl, Ward C.. 529 E Brtar Ln , Lake 1-orest,111 60045 Pea vy. l.aura, 'kptt.1o3b00N.Madrtd.Spatn Pedersen, Lynn P. 133 Mohave St . Ho1Tman Estates. 111 Petler. kenneth L., 3472 Rtdgeyyood, Prttsburg. Penn Petrce, Randall H ,Bos 3114, E Falmouth, Mass 02530 Pe1c.Wtl1tam R.3430Ca1wagner.Frank1tn Park. 111 Pemberton. Gayle R , 2611 Vtctor Blvd. KansasC1ty. Mo Perlmutter, Armtn M . 3n2 Elmys ood Ave , Map1evtood.N .1 Peters. Walker A., 745 Park Rd, N W .Washtngton, D.C 20010 Peterson, Patrtcta, Pendleton Hgts . Bethany, VV Va Peterson, Sa11yV,.41HtghSt.Yalcsvt1le. Conn Phelps. Devereauy. 290 Beacon. Boston, Mass Plcot. Christopher, 20111 Whtte Oaks. Alexandrta. Ya Ptcot, Eltlabeth S., 2001 White Oaks. Alexandrta, Va, Pterson, LloydJ F.,-115 Rock Rtmmon Rd ,Stam1ord, Conn Ptsanellt. kathleen. 50 Lake Sl . Poughkeepste. N Y Pttcher.Cathertne, 5h2h Dorchester,Chtcago,111 Platt. Charles A , 5 Bytleld Rd . Wahan. Mass Poor, Sallyann M ,WtImtngton, Vt 05363 Porter. Marlon 1- .C oo V A Hospttal, Murtreesbo. Tenn Porter, Tony, 329Crest Park Rd, Phtladelphta. Pa 19119 Porto. Bryan Posntak. John R . 5404 39th St N Xt .tt ttsltlftgtolt, D C Post. Henry A .1r,42 Dorset Lane. Babylon. N Y 1170, Potockt, Stanley J , Rt 5, Box 235, Waukegan. 111 Potter, Dtane. 5 Ftnch Ct .So Norwalk. Conn 00354 Potts, ConstanceJ . 2109 Wooster Rd. Rocky Rtver.Ohto Povtna11,.1 Ronald, Rd 111. Box 123, Hockessm. Del Povye11,Chrtslopher, 470 Voltz. Northbrook, 111 Preston, Cathertne M. 19 Meadow Lane, Syttssel. N Y 11791 Preston, John L .54 Pleasant St . Medtleld. Mass Prtee, Judtth S . 1111 Htlldale Rd . 1 ansdoysne. Penn Prtce, Patrtcta P, 1111 OslermanAt'e .Deertte1d. 111 Probost. Lynn M , 147 Ctnnamon Htl1,kmg ol Prussta. Penn Probst. John. 30 Northu oods Rd . Radnor. Pa Pu11eyn,S Robert, 103 Pool Rd .North Haven. Conn Qutntana,Va1ertne M ,214 West oth St , Walsenburg, Colo 810140 Qutnn, Brtan. 50 Hanscom Pl . Rockvtlle Ctr , N Y' Qumtero. Ciabrtel. Carrera 22A No 4075, B0gota.Colott't1'tIa Rayala. Constance A , 2213 West Acres Rd , Joltel. 111, p0-135 Ra1T,Chery'l H .547 Mallard 1.a . Deerheld. 111, Ramey. Gregory D , 47 Warren St , Lau-renee. Mass 01841 s Ranktn. John Austun.531atrgreen Place, Chestnut 111 . Mass 02Ih7 Raucet,1frank M.. 3935 V1,Dak1n.Chrcago.I1l 13 Ray, Kathryn, 23 Htllstde Dr., Lakewood. Colo 140215 Rand. Rtehard N ,204 Governor St , Proytdence, R 1 02900 Raymond. Prtsctlla. 183 Lake. Glencoe. 111 Reback. Donna. l2Ocean Ave ,Sstampscott. Mass Recht, Martha R.. 5105 Second Ave.,Cedarburg. Wts. Reddtng.A1etander M . 10500 Falls Rd.. Potomac, Md. Reder. Je1Trey R., Rtver Rd Scarborough. N Y Redszus, Alan. 5005 N Mozart, Chtcago. 111 Reed, Peter A,. 60 Btlodeau Ct . Burltngton, Vt Reedy. Barbara A.. I 1421 Caro1tna.Cleyeland,Ohto Reggto. Peter. Jr., Laurel H Rd , RFD 1680, Syosset. N Y 11791 Retch. Finca P., 3236 SE Harvey. Mt1ysaukte,Ore Reld1and.Ltnda M, 1315 S. Delphla. Park Rtdge. 111 b00bH Retnter. Susan L,. 1117 Paxton Dr . Zton, 111. Retssman, Barbara L . 186 Harbor Lane. Roslyn, N.Y'. 11576 Renlro, Ann H., Qtrs A Naval Statton, Charleston. S C Resevtck. Charles, bl Pleasant St., Brtdgewater, Mass Resseger. Vtrgtnta. 2722 Southtngton. Shaker Hts.. Ohto Resz. Lorraine J., 715 E. Milellan. Ltvmgston. N.J. Reusch. Susan H., 5 East Huxley' Dr , Huntmgton, N Y Rtchardson. Deborah. 1702 Washtngton, Waukegan. 111 Rtchardson. Alex R.. 2335 Ardletgh Dr,, Cleveland Hts . Ohto Rtchardson, DonaldS,, 154 Waterman, Providence. R.1. 02900 Rtchter, Howard B.. 2017 Palos Verdes, Palo Verdes Est,.Ca1t1. Rteth, Rtehard. I2 Woodburn St., Keene. N H 03431 . Rlggs.Jo Rt11,Chrt hn R . 1711 Elmhurst. Oklahoma Cnty. Okla sttne,?'100Conestoga Rd . Maltern, Pa 19355 Rtngsmuth. Peter D , 0031 McGregor B1yd,lt Myers, lhla ' a Rtstucct .BernardJ . 127 Holt Rd , Andover. Mass Rttter,Cjera1d1..55XOGrange Hall Rd ,Gurnec. lll Robbins. Ann 11,2634 Edgewood.Bec1.huood.Ohto Robbtns. Deborah A . 3505 YN ht Settlement.l'ortYKorth.'1cs Robeek. Stephen, 122 Sunset Hull. New C anaan. l onn Roberts. E1llahalh,2 Circle Rd .Staten Is , N Y 11901 Roberts. kathertne 1 .2 Ctrcle Rd .Staten ls1attd.N Y Roberts, YN tlltam H . 171 Bloomheld Ate . Harttord. C onn 011105 Roberts. Louw: M. .o3Atlant1c.-Xse . Hnsltxfl. Mass oil 10 Robins. Seth S . 114 Berkshire P1.1.osrence.N Y Roche, R obert.3l4I YNa1den1.a .1ht1tnette.111 Rockwood. Mary P ,329 N Cascade.1erguslalls.'y1tnn Rocsljadt.YNtdayalt,1r B1S.APO S1 .Calll 'lo239 Rogaltner. Lee R . 19541 mt1en,Htghland Park. 111 Rohn, Mart1yn.534 Wayland Aye,l'sent1storth.l11 60043 Rohr, Arthur 1 .2530 Independence. Bronx, N Y Roman. Michael R . 105 Woodstdc Dr .GreentAlclt,C onn 06330 Roos, Edvsard. 3005 Blackstone,La1irange.l11 Rootberg.l.csl1eA , 1215 Be11e1'ortc.Oak Park, 111 Rose, Dantel S . 50S Bona Rd . kenstngton. C onn Rose,Clteryl S . 5135 Eltotl St . Denser, Colo P10221 Rose. Jonathan, Ykebbs H111 Rd,,Stant1'ord, Conn 06903 Rosen. Rtchmond,15 Sunset Dr , Ltttle Rock. Ark 72207 Rosenb1att.Lou1s B .H331 Grubb Rd ,Sllter Sprung. Md Rosenthal. Dantel J.. 17 Tealysood, St Lours. Mo Rosenthal, Thomas M . 124 V1.est 9th St . Next York. N Y 10024 Rosos, Agnes, Route 2, Boy 1149, Long Grote, Ill Ross, Sarah A . East k1ngslon,N H Rovtn. George H . 11522 Neucast1e,Chtt:ago.l1l Ronley, Mary L .4516 V1 35th Ate . Denver. C olo Rubtn, lzdysard M .40 Holden Rd .V1estNewton. Mass Ruderman,RondaT.10h594thSt,BayHarbor.1'1a 33154 Rubtnstem. Barbara. 1h3 Turn ol' Rner. Starrtllord. Conn Rudolf. Paul Cl. 19 Baxter Dr ,S Norwalk. C onn Rude. Randt, 5025 Spaanem Aye . Nladlson, XY ts 53710 Rung, Ltlltan. X tnranketey 9, Copenhagen, Denmark RLtsso,ArtdI'ett.1 .801Cent.ra1,Wt1mette, 111 Rutledge. John. 719 l'ulton.WtnthropHarbor.111 Sacks, Margery E ,bi Ltncoln Sl . Belmont. Mass 02175 Sa1t1man.Merrtll.7754 B YN agner V1 ay. Phnladelphta. Penn Samuels, Harrxet, 2043 Ba1ntoraI.C htcago,111 Savage. Mary I. , 10914 RoyalOak Dr .C hagrm 1-a1ls,Oh 44022 Sav111e,kathertne,413 L llllnots,1ake F0rcst,I1l Sattlle, Lee M . 512 Mtller. Barrtngton. 111 Satm. .ludtth k . 13-in Rose Mary, Highland Park. Ill Schae1er,.-Xllen E . 577 Schuyler Y1 ay,11nton,N ,1 Schael'er.Sara M .501 N Thtrd, Maywood. 111 Sehalllner. Pam, 5604 Howard Ate , LaGrange. 111 Schetfel, Robert L . 2905 Edgewood, Alton. 111 rs2002 Sehendel. Charlotte. -1222 Mekntght Rd . YN htte l'1earLake, Munn Schendel, Judy A .4222 Mckntght Rd . Wht Bear Lk . Munn 55110 Schermerhorn, Susan. 5445 N Dentuood. Dallas. Tex Schte11'e1tn.1tndsay.31l' 72nd, Nest Y ork. N Y Schulman, John. 9746 Btg Bend Bltd ,St Louts, Mo Sthtller. Mary E .211 Oak Rtdge Dr ,Oak Harbor.Ohto 43449 Schnetder. Audrey. 700 Waterloo Dr . V1 aterloo.111 Sthoeberletn. John H .727 5th Ave. skurora. 111 Schoene. Clary R . 15 Costtn Rd. 1'ggcrtsttl1e.N Y Schoene, karen R . 15 C osttn Rd .Bu1l'a1o.N Y 14226 Schroeder, Thomas M .5-4551A C u11om.Chn1rgo. 111 Schultze. Douglas, 34 Autumn St .Sudhury, Nlass Schysartl. RobertS.h1llan1atr Rd. -krdmore.Penn SC1'1tAdfl.YY111l.11Tl. 1733 Rose Mary. Highland Park. 111 Scotl,Char1esL l1.C luett Dr . Wtlltamstoyt n. Ma 01267 5Co11.lNt:I'1d1'lek L .Lyons Plains Rd . Ykes1on.Conn Scollo. Carol. 9h LakemontDr.X1eadtrl1e. Penn Seelye, kathertne Q . 115 Locust Crrote. Rosemont. Pa tvolo Selbert.Sa11y.fX,1ht44 Nattonal Rd . ty hceltng. Vt X a Setde1.Cieorge -X . 10N Mayer. Reading. Pa Shaller. DattdC . 13 Thomas Dr . khlmtngton. Del 198117 Sharp. Susan k . 19M Brewster. St Pau1.Mtnn Shats. Patrtcta L . 3415 -krbor. Houston, Tex Shay. Donald 1: .408 Dutton Rd., Sudbury. Mass Sheard.T1mothy J ,N11unterCourl. l1tllsda1v:,N ,I 0 o42 Sheldon. John la , Jr . l253Canton Me , Xltlton. Nlass tljlsrt Shepard. Leslte. Blackberry Lane. Norvsalk. C onn Shepherd Paula G , 1733 YN tlloys Rd . Greensboro. N C 27401 Sherer. Peter R .Embassy LomeDO1Sl .Vt ashtngton. D C 20521 Sbcrltp. Jane Nl.7L1lias111l1l't Sl- New Y ork. N Y Shethar. Alan R .Carrtage Rd, -Xmherst,N H 031131 Shtye1y.Carla, 725 Hora1,Chambersburg. Pa Shopen. Margaret, R R 1,Campana Rd. Bataua. 111 Shure. Susan, 17144 LtndenAye.l1tgh1and Pk ,111 ry0035 Stebold. Robert G .415 No Row, Park Rudge. 111 M1008 Sterk,SaraJ.5105A1drtchS.Mtnneapol1s.Mtnn S1ever.Lcslte,b79 Brrch, Glencoe, 111 Stlyer. Bernard. 215N Tyson St.. Pht1adelph1a.Pa Simon, Gerard M . 5440 Press Dr . New Orleans, La '01 Irs Stms. Nhl1tam.b73 Maple. Lake Blut1'.1l1 Stnclatr. Dantel k.. 2474 N Pensacola. Chtcago, 111 Sloan. Robert. b50 Maple, Lake B1u11.111 Sm1th.Chrtstopher L.Stanu1ch Rd .Greenu1ch. Conn Smtth.Jo1yn E .216 R1dge1and.tN aukegan, lll Smtth, Peter M .PO Box1H12.Santa Fe. N Mex S7501 Smtth. Susan C .1510-1 Turnptke Dr , tkestmtnster. Col Smock, krtsten M .942 Ptnes Lake Dr . X'1ayne.N J 07470 Snavely. Donald. Rt 2, Bos tw1.Mundeletn.1I1 Snov. berger. Robert F . I Stone Barn Lane. YN tlmmgton. Del 191407 Snyder. Anne P.. 39 Edgewood Lane. Bronxttl1e.N Y 1070x Sny der. Elatne, 740 Volt! Rd.Northbrook,111 Thomas G., 2641 N E. 27th, Fl. Lauderdale, Fla. Snyder, Karen L.. 54 W Sierra Madre, Arcadia, Calif. Sohl. Brandon A .2718 Larkspur La., Hazel Crest, 111, Solomon, Roberta, 1500 Prairie, Glencoe, 111. Somers, Marjorie M . 2 Park St.. Tenaliy, N J, Somers. Sara R., 31 Scott La.. Princeton. N.J Sooho. Alan May. 220 Adams Ave., W. Newton. Mass. 02165 Sookne, Judith. 9208 Saybrook, Silver Sp.. Md. Sowash, Caroly n, American Embassy, Guatemala City, Guat. Spang, Madeleine H .Box 336, Pine St.. Medfteld, Mass. 02052 Sperber,Dor1sl., 1114 Ashland Ave.. Evanston, Ill. Spiro, Allison. 1161 Lindenwood,Winnetka,111. Sprague,Chery1.-195 Milton, Rd. Ry'e.N.Y, Steen. James E., 5032 Upton St. N W . Washington, D C. Stein, Leslie B , 1622 Wabash, Daylon,Ohio Steiner, .lulta A., 54-4 East 86th St ,New York, N.Y. 10028 Steiner. Lillian E .27 Dogwood La . Larchmont, N Y Steinhauer.VNil1iam G.. 1560 75th Sl.. Downers Grove. 111. Stelntk. Mark, 13-12 Pennington, Teaneck. N.J. Slender, Thomas W . 140 W. Highland La , Wayzata, Minn. Stephens. RevaJ .69 Timber La., Lindenhurst, 111 Stern, Va1er1P , 2480 No Oakland Ave.. Milwaukee. Wise. 53211 Stevens, Joel, 1403 Lakeland. Cincinnati. Ohio Stevens, Ann E.. 314 So Lincoln, HtnsdaIe.1l1, 60521 Stinnett. Sandra. 2254 Alabama, Great Lakes, 111. Stinson, DtlysA,. 1 Hill Pond Rd.. Rutland. Vt. 05701 Stiles, Susan A., 4095 Fenton Court, Denver, Colo. 80212 Stix. Louise.24-10 Lakeview, Chicago, 111. Stone, Jed H .238 Southgate Dr .Northbrook,11l 60062 Stopa, Diane, Box 177, Wilmot, Wis, Stoppenbach. Robert 272 Market Square. Lake Forest, 111. Storper, Antonia M.. 2200Greenery La .Si1verSprtng, Md Stout. Samuel D.. Gun Mill Rd.. Bloomfield. Conn. Strasser. Donald, 1085 Park Ave , New York, N.Y Stretch. William. 1-10 Upland Way. Haddontie1d.N,J Stronberg. Joel B , 8327 Hamlin. Skokie, lll Strong,Caro1T , 101ntervaIe Rd , Setauket. N.Y. Stroud, Marcia, 8330 Lucerne Dr ,Chargrin Fal1s,Ohto Studsgaard. Deborah L., 110 Aspenwood Dr.. Chargtn Fls., Oh. 44022 Struckman. John C . 4011 Ridgewood. Ridgewood. NJ 74508 Sturges, Lucie. 337 Cedar. Winnetka, 111 Sturm, Gordon L ,510-1 Mlllpond Place, Edina, Minn 55436 Suarez. FernandoJ . 1-148 Lake Shore, Chicago. lll Sullivan. Dorothy L.. 205-10akmere Dr . Baldwin. N.Y 11510 Sullivan, Evelyn M . 205-10akmere Dr., Baldwin, N Y 11510 Swain. David W.. 105 Worcester Ct , Falmouth, Mass. 02540 Swanson. krma J . 353 Water St . Framingham, Mass. Swayze. Robert, 240 Forest. Glen Ridge. N J Sweet. John P , 163 Hornaday' Rd., Pittsburgh, Penn Sweet. Sidney N ,494 Weed St , New Canaan, Conn. Tager, Miles S,,9000 McDonald Dr.. Bethesda. Md 20014 Tamayo. Thomas F . Rl. 2, Box 98A, Hartford, Wisc. Tarlow, Thomas J., 167 Depot St,, So. Easton, Mass. 02375 Taylor, MartinS . 501 Newport Gap Pike, Wilmington, Del. Taylor, Robert H.. 11 Mohawk Rd., Short Hills, N,J Teton. Andrew P, 1133 Michigan. Wilmette, lll. 60091 Thacher, Hugh A , Dodgewood Rd . Riverdale, N Y Thatcher, Carol M . 70 Hilltop Dr. Manhasset,N.Y Thayer. Gail W ,Hilltop Place, Rye, N.Y 10580 Thayer, Hillyer B ,12325Woodbtne Rd., Minnetonka, Minn. Thomas, Paul M , 113 Voorhees St,, Teaneck. N.J. Thomas, VirginiaS . 1124 E. Circle Dr . Palmerton. Pa Thompson, Robert. R.D I, London Tract, Landenberg, Penn. Thomson.Co11n H .41 Rock Ridge Dr., Portchester, N.Y. 10573 Thorne. Gayle. 5 Devonshire. Oakbrook, 111, Thomson, Margaret M , 10704 Alloway Dr . Potomac, Md Thorson. Charles, 50 Michigan, Highwood, lll Thrall. Amanda, 36Orchard Rd , Windsor, Conn. Thurston. Cheryl D.. 12353 Indiana, Detroit. Mich. Thorne. Patricia, 96l0Sagamore, Leawood, Kansas Tinker, Mary B., 1360 East 58th St.,Chicago. lll, 60637 Tinker, Robert B , 1360 E 58th St,, Chicago, 111 Ttttle. Cynthia B , 1604 Thompson, Woodstock, lll. Tobin, Ronnie G., 39 Maple St.. Marblehead, Mass. To1ciss.Arthur Neil, 58 23 201 Street, Bayside, N.Y 11364 Tomber1in,Tina, 4-101 Preston Rd , Dallas, Texas Tomlinson, John R.. 1515 Elk Ave , Duncan. Okla. Toms, James R , 67 Pine Tree Dr . Hanover, Mass. Tonnesen, Lynn F , 60 Eaton Rd., Watchung, N.J. Tovrov,JohnO,Champ1ain Rd., Orleans. Mass. Trainor, Julia E .3 I 130 No. Lake Shore Dr,,Chicago.111 60657 Tredenmck. Joseph B , R D. -1. Bethlehem. Pa. 180124 Tripp, Rosemary E.. 26 Parkview Place. Mt, Kisco, N.Y 10549 Tnvers, James MCD, Twin Ponds Ln . R F D.1, Syosset, N.Y. 11791 Vartanoff, lrene E.. 6825 Wilson La.. Bethesda, Md. Vaughn, Theodore 1. D., Elm Hill Farm, Hallowell. Maine 04347 Vest, Paul J., 1012 Castellano, Marion, 111. Vetter, Catherine C., 323 Bellarie St., Denver, Colo. 80220 Villa. Arm Jose. 1560 Berkeley Rd., Highland Park. Ill. Virden, John. 1525 Via Montemar. Palos Verdes, Calif. Vodvarka, Janet. 17915 Gladville, Homewood, 111. Volk, Charles, 9444 S. Millard, Evergreen Park, lll. Voss. Bruce C.. 232 Wisner, Park Ridge, lll. Vrabel, Joseph P., 392 Edgell Rd., Framingham, Mass. Wagner, Judith A., 48 Whitemarsh Rd., Ardmore, Penn. Waits, Mary, 3608 Van Ness St., N.W., Washington. D.C. Walbridge, Ryckman, 15 Sturgis Hwy., Westport. Conn. Walen. Peter G., 40 Tokeneke Dr., Hamden. Conn. 06518 Walker, Dawn E., Box 727. Honokaa, Hawaii Waltemate, Carolyn. 728 Ash. Waukegan, Ill. 60085 Walter, Betty L.. 1625 E. 30th Ave., Denver, Colo. 80205 Walton,Sharon A., Denell Dr., Crete, 111. Walz, William, 1531 N. Western, Lake Forest. Ill. Ward, Je1Trey C., 910 Sheridan Rd.. Lake Forest, 111. 60045 Ward, Janice, 1500 W, Kennedy, Lake Forest, 111. Warner, Fredenck T. I., 78 Burning Tree Rd., Greenwich, Conn. 06830 Warrick, Pamela S., 4801 Maplewood. Elkhart. Ind. Wass, John A.. 602 Forest Hill Rd., Lake Forest. lll. Watkins, Ragland T.,4ll W. Mich. Ave., McComb, Miss. 39648 Watkins. Roswell P., Spring Valley Rd.. Morristown, N.J. Watson, Doris, 843 Cherry, Winnetka, lll. Weel, Patricia R., 7910 A. Byron Ave., Miami Beach, Fla. Weingart, Dale S.. 29799 Fairmount Blvd., Cleveland, Ohio Weigel, JamesA.. 620 S. Davis. Gentra1la,l11. Weil. Randall K., 1029 Castlewood. Deertie1d,l1l. 60015 Weirich, Claudia K., 536 Wakeman Ave., Wheaton, Ill. Weiss, Alan M., 944 Judson, Highland Park. 111. Weiss. Marcia A., 81 17 Williams Ave., Philadelphia, Penn. Wellington, Charles, Piping Rock Rd., Locust Valley, N.Y. Wellman. Judith L , American Embassy. APO New York 09678 Wells, Lucinda G.. Rogers St., West Newbury, Mass. Wells, MargareL 601 Farnmorth. Bordentown. N.J. Welton, Ann F.. 3513 North Ave.. Waukegan, 111. Wennerstrom, Jack. 2100 Telegraph Rd.. Bannockburn, lll. West. Edward. 100 32 200th Sl., Hollis. N.Y, 11423 West. Susan D , 8 lngraham Rd.. Wellesley. Mass. 02181 West. Susan V.. P O. Box 203. Foxboro, Mass. Westertield, Richard, 2300 Ewing, Evanston, Ill. Wheeler. Byron W., 235 Tillou Rd.. South Orange, N.J. West, Sheree L .7530 Eliot St.. Westminster, Col. Wheeler, Wilmot F., 77 McLain St., Mt. Kisco, N.Y. White Debra 1 . 471 Lakeside Pl., Highland Park, 111. White, Eugene, 1339 MalnSt.. Hartford,Conn. White, H Joan. 126 Esherldan Pl., Lake B1uH'. lll. White, Thomas E.. 686 W, 12th St.. Claremont, Calif. 91711 White, Truesdall.Je1Trey. 18 Midlands, VN Hartford. Conn Tucker, .loan 11.2461 W Stephenson. Freeport. 111, Tuck, Coertye B , 9809 Ridgeview Dr., Oklahoma Ct..Ok. 73120 Tupper.TulIiusC , 2660 S, Warson, St. Louis. Mo Turner, ConstanceJ .7 Pilgrim Circle, Rochester, N .Y Turner, LauraG.,1306 Hinman, Evanston. lll Turner.ThomasC,, Burt Rd., Walpole, N H Tuttle. Twerda Fannie F . 12 High St., Monson, Mass. 01057 hl, Gretchen, 3F X00 Custer, Evanston, 111, TyTone,1xaren E., 160 VtneSt , Denver,Col Ukena. Jay W .2544 N W. 30th. Oklahoma City, Okla, Urban. David, 901 N Pennsylvania, Morrisville. Penn Valentine. Barbara, 111 Robbins Dr., East Williston, N Y. Valko,Wt1IiamJ .1-1203 Tuckahoc, Cleveland, Ohio Van Ness. Jessie,-195 Green Bay, Lake Blu1T,11l Van Horn, Holly S , R R 3. Plaintield, lll Vanost. Robert L . 29 Engle St , Tenal'1y,N J Vanraalte. Thomas, 26 Dupont Ave , White Plains, N.Y Vare. Victor, J . 1603 Stephens Dr., Wayne, Penn Whitlock, Dean. 12202 Turner Circle, Omaha, Nebraska 09128 Wiesen, Diane B.. 4120 Rose Hill. Cincinnati. Ohio Wllber, David E., 9 Massachusetts, W, Barrington, R.l. Wild, Jacqueline F., 5160 Eastover Rd., Cleveland. Ohio Wilkes.Carolyn, 581 Ivy Ct.. Lake Forest. lll. 60045 Williams. Charles P., 356 Hillside Place. So, Orange, N.J. 07079 Williams, David H., 11990 S. W. Butner. Portland, Ore. Williams. Lindsey, 4730 Prince Edwd. Dr.. Jacksonville, Fa. 32210 William, Orin P., 4072 Grand Ave., Gurnee. 111. 60031 Williams, Stephen, 24138 Wimbledon Rd., Shaker Hts., Ohio Wilson, Peter H., 2540 Green St., San Francisco, Cal. Wilson. Peter, 1577 N. Greenbay, Lake Forest, lll. Wilson, Rosemary L , 5005 Randall La.. Washington. D.C. Winehell, Elizabeth A.. 7l9N, Faring Rd.. Los Angeles.Calif. Windhorst, Patricia, 2418 Greenwood, Wt1mette,111. Winsor, J Michael, 3616 Flair Dr., Dallas. Tex. Winters. Louisa, 938 Rosemary Terr.. Deerfield, lll. Witten. CarolC.. 5 Observatory Hill, Cincinnati. Ohio Woerner, Janice C., 1349 Annabella. Havertown, Pa. Wolf, Stanley F.. 1306 Caddington, Silver Spring, Md. Wolfe, IKIVIE l.. 75 39179 Street. Queens, N.Y. 11366 WolFf, Henry E., 5077 N. Bay Rd., Miami Beach, Fla. Wolff, Jan, 20 E. Cedar, Chicago, lll. Wolff. Richard B.. 922 Ventura Dr.. Palatine. 111. 60067 Woloschuk. Karen A.. 170 Dana Ave., Boston, Mass. 02136 Wood, Alan P., 124 Hazel La., Piedmont, Calif, Wood, Je1TreyB.. 63 Arch St., Keene, N.H, Wood, Martha, The Philadelphlan, Philadelphia. Penn. Woodard, Thomas, North St., Medlield, Mass. Woodford, Gayle B., 3501 Minnesota S. E.. Washington. D.C. Woodhead, Thomas, 760 Prospect Ave., Winnetka, lll. Woodmansee, Jean, 1500 E. Brown Deer, Milwaukee, Wis. Woolsey. Russ D., 86 038 Hoaha, Waianae. Hawaii Worner, Linda L , 1210 Wood Ave., Colorado Springs. Col. Worth, Carol Wrona.Christine M., 1926 Newland Ave.. Chicago, lll. 60635 Wyatt, John B., 102 Hunters Ln., Devon, Pa, Ya1Te. Peter E., 36 Grant Ave.. Newton Centre, Mass. Yamasaki. Carol K . 636 Rochdale Cir., Lombard. 111. Yeager. JamesC., Box 261, RFD 1, Bethalto, Ill. Yoshizumi, Jana, 4980 N. Marine Chicago, 111. Young, Denisel Yusem, Patricia F., 92 Merbrook Lane, Merton, Pa. 19066 Zielsdorf, Julie, 1608 Port JelTerson. Sidney, Ohio Ztetlow, Martha. 37 Berkley P1.,Bu1Talo,N.Y. Zoller, Philip A.. Cove Neck Rd., Oyster Bay, N.Y. Zollner. Cynthia S.. 249 Highland Rd.. Andover, Mass. Zook, Patricia, North West Hwy.. Barrington. 111. Zuckerman, Suzanne, 27 Grange Lane, Levittown. N.Y. Zapolsky. Linda A., 146 Highland Ave.. Trenton, N.J. 08620 'ill I? xi I 2 L I.. I! f , fl r 1 I f f: 1 fd L u - i ,-Q.-A .0 .. ,wf v - - if Y if 5 -- x1.i.s:! lf4.. :I-I lnssuuwwuvi..-.-w-.f--s l ?!K11nuqp 149-s -----1-Q 3.11 I D -a-..... --..--.--... -- A 1--nuns'-v n-an www? wuvvrv--vo vnu'-IQUQ1 1-1-'-0 -A--out 3 I - I . ' ia L... Time it was, And what a time it was. It was A time olinnocence. A time oleontidenees. Long ago A it must be I have a photograph. Preserve your memories: They're all that's left you. rf. ,..- A - X 35 . 'K+-'. , 14-5 H - - , 4 ilouvx Mg,x,xu' , b 'S -- . ' A ' ' Q ' '-'.' 'J' .t -bl ifiwr' 'J N 9-V mi --+'? 'w - - - l.: E A fi 3' ,yaffffhg-ya 'ss Q A' .D 3-11. -P. 5 in Editor: Patrick Cooney Business Manager: Kenneth Kauvar Staff: Kay Eckert, Valerie Stern Above And Beyond The Call Of Duty: Barbara Berzotl, Genie Bird, Amanda Harris. Tom Livermore, Mrs. Mosey. Kit Seelye. Donald Strasser. Thanks: Bob Armistead. Pris Bell. Barry Hoffman, Jim Kid- ney, Carl Maultsby, Jeanne Mugford. Mrs. Rubenstein. Mary Savage, George Speros., Ragland Watkins. Photographers: John Atkin, Ann Hoeppner. Bill Kaplan. Tom Livermore. Steve Logowitz, Ron Pownall. 228 AUTOGRAPH AUTOGRAPH AUTOGRAPH AUTOGRAPH - , fig, ! I mg P. e , v' :-,ffm 'Y 2 if L - 313 V9 0 f i' 2 ' I 2 A h-- ' A


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