Marquette University - Hilltop Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI)

 - Class of 1981

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Marquette University - Hilltop Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1981 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 328 of the 1981 volume:

Pere Jacques Marquette, from Father Marquette and the Indians by William Lamprecht Past Part One: Marquette College (1848-1907) Part Two: Marquette University (1907-1930) Part Three: Depression and War (1930-1945) Part Four: Intermission (1946-1964) Part Five: The Marquette Plan (1964-1981) Present p. 50 Environment p. 52 Student Living p. 74 Administration p. 92 Academics p. 102 Events p. 114 Sports p. 132 Recreation p. 152 Arts p. 166 Communications p. 182 Organizations p. 196 Future p. 212 Seniors p. 214 Freshman Candids p. 290 Sophomore Candids p. 294 Junior Candids p. 298 Senior Candids p. 302 Help: A Glide To Life After Graduation p. 305 Past Perhaps (here is no significance to the fact that the idea of Marquette University was conceived in a period of stress. And then perhaps again there was somethng of an omen in this circumstance which may have forshadowcd events to he narrated in this history. — Raphael J. Hamilton, S.J.. in The Story of Marquette University 5 Below: Marquette College's first graduating class, 1887 Bottom Right: Stanislaus P. Lalu-miere, SJ„ the college's fourth president, and president at the time of the first graduation. Pcre Jacques Marquette stopped only briefly in what is now Milwaukee on his famous expedition of 1671. Hut 208 years after the French Jesuit explored Wisconsin and the upper Midwest, a college bearing his name opened in Milwaukee. To this building is attached the name of one who is held in veneration by pagans and Christians, said Rev. H.F. Fairbanks, a Milwaukee priest, at the dedication of the first Marquette College building. Students will be taught and edified, and they shall possess and communicate the spirit of Marquette. Thar first building has fallen victim to time, but the spirit of Marquette lives on. Parr One: Marquette College (1848-1907) 18-18 — The first attempts at starting a Jesuit college in Milwaukee are unsuccessful, but they are nonetheless important in the Marquette story. Only two years after the incorporation of Milwaukee, the city 's first bishop. John lienni. initiates efforts to establish a school. The Jesuits arrive in Milwaukee in 185.1, and open Sr. Aioysius Academy in 1856. The Academy folds after a few months, bur theJesuits remain. In 1864, the Wisconsin State Legislature grants them a charter for a college. 1850 — Bishop lienni obtains a $16,000 grant from Belgian businessman G.J. De- Boey, to be used in founding a Jesuit college. The money is used to purchase land outside of the city, on the hill. ” at 10th and State Streets, in 1856. 1880 — Construction begins on the first Marquette College building, on the land purchased 24 years earlier. 1881 — In September. Marquette College opens its doors to 77 students, all male. Tu -irion is $60 a year, and remains at that figure until 1916. 1882 — Semester examinations are admin -istered for the first time, on January 27. — The Marquette Sodality is formed. The purpose of the voluntary religious organization is to develop Christian character under the protection of the Mother of Christ, and to cultivate the apostolate by promoting activities involved in Catholic action. It immediately becomes one of the most popular organizations on campus. In 189.1. the Sodality is divided into junior and senior divisions in order to accommodate everyone who wants to be a member. The Sodality remains popular until the 1960s. when interest declines rapidly, and the organization folds. — In June, the first Annual Fxcercises are held. No degrees arc conferred, bur honors, promotions, prizes and awards are announced. 1881 — Two laymen are employed by the The first Marquette College building, at 10th and State Streets, was the home of the college and high school Built in 1881. it survived into the 1970s At Marquette 100 Years Ago When Marquette opened in 1881. it was foreign languages and Christian doctrine not only a college, hut also a high school were required classes. The entire curriculum took seven years to In 1906. the college and preparatory acad- complete, with four years in the preparatory emy separated. The academy, later called academy followed by three years of either Marquette University High School, remained liberal arts or commercial training. under the direction of the Jesuits for several Many of the first 77 students of Marquette years after the separation, although it had its College had little or no previous education own principal and faculty. The nine faculty members, all Jesuits, even After the college became a university, were faced with several students who had not there developed a trend to specialize By yet learned to read and write! By 1887. 1916. most of the independent colleges with - though, five men finished the whole seven- in the university had been founded Even the year course, and were awarded bachelor of schools that were founded after 1916 had arts degrees. their roots in this period. Nursing courses, for Until 1907, when the Medical College was example, were offered long before the Col- established. the college offered liberal arts lege of Nursing became independent of the education only. Classical studies, philosophy. Medical College in 1936. Sing To Old Alma Mater From the beginning Marquette has produced great creative minds. One of those minds, whose name has faded into anonymity, wrote a song about his alma mater in 1902. The song itself is about as well known today as the author is. V . - fr. “Marquette” There's a college that I know By Milwaukee's crescent bay. Round whose name in brightness glow Hallowed lights of boyhood's day. 'Tis a place you'll not forget, If you chance within its halls; For the spell of Old Marquette With its charm each heart enthralls. Chorus: Marquette, Marquette, we are the boys, you bet; In it to stay, that is our way; Hearts that are faithful and bold. Baseball, football, whichever game you may call; Always on top, never a stop; That is the motto we hold. V college, to do clerical work and typing. 1884 — Commercial certificates are awarded to the first students who have completed the commercial, or business, course of study. 1887 — In June, the first five baccalaureate degrees are conferred by the college on stu -dents who have completed the liberal arts course of college study. 1892 — Intercollegiate football gets off to a bad start at Marquette as the newly formed team loses its first three games. The first victory comes in the fourth and last game of the season against St. Ignatius College of Chicago. Baseball, however, is still the most popular sport on campus. 1893 — The Marquette Alumni Association is founded in June. The purpose of the organization is to ... maintain a fellow feeling among the former students of the institution, to further the interests of higher education, to promote the welfare of Marquette College. ’’ The association, formally in -corporated in 1921, pledges support of academic and athletic scholarship programs. 1894 — Gesu Church is dedicated on December 16. 1904 — The Marquette Journal commences publication. 6 + 1906 — Marquette College celebrates its silver jubilee with a pontifical Mass in Gesu, and with an alumni convention. Alumnus Henry F. Hillman says in the commencement speech: ”1 remember how on the First morning, going north on 10th Street, I approached with awe and reverence that tall cream and red brick building at the corner of State Street. — Local businessman Robert A. Johnston funds the construction of a new college building. The building contains the latest educational facilities: a library, science laboratories, classnxims and an auditorium. In 1907, the college moves to the new building at 1131 W. Wisconsin Ave., while the preparatory academy remains at 10th and State. There is some consideration given to renaming the college after Mr. Johnston, but it is finally decided that the building will be named in his honor. 1907 — The dentistry, medicine and pharmacy departments of two small, private medical colleges become affiliated with Marquette. forming the Marquette School of Medicine. The Marquette charter is amended, and the school assumes university status. Top Left: The first home field for Marquette football was next to the building at 10th and State. Above Gesu Church at the turn of the century. Left Robcn A. Johnston, whose generosity helped Marquette expand into a university in 1907. 9 Right: Engineering students built their own school building as pan of their education in 1910. Below: A 1916 chemistry class takes a break for a photo. Bottom Right: Until Sensenbren-ner Hall was built in 1924, the S.J. Mackie mansion housed the Law School. Bottom Left: These mansions were purchased from the Plankmton family in 1919. They were razed and were replaced by the Engineering Building. 10 Part Two: Marquette University (1907-1930) The new status gave Marquette the incentive to specialize even more. New programs were developed, and existing programs were expanded. Enrollment doubled in a decade, and the university had to purchase or construct buildings to accommodate all the stu -dents. A larger faculty was needed, and non -Jesuit instructors were hired to fill new positions. By 1930, the university already little resembled the Marquette College of a half century before. During these years, Marquette evolved into a dynamic, thriving and modern institution of higher learning. 1908 — The Marquette University Law School is established when the Milwaukee Law School merges with Marquette. In 1912, the S.J. Mackie mansion, next to Johnston Hall, is purchased to house the Law School. The Law School's current home, Sensenbren-ner Hall, is completed in 1924. — The College of Engineering is established. Gasses are held in the basement of Johnston Hall until 1910, when the college purchases two old buildings on Michigan Street. The students refurbish the buildings and build another concrete structure as part of their training. The College of Engineering occupies these buildings until 1941. 1909 — Daisy Wolcott is the first woman to receive a degree from Marquette. — Marquette organizes a summer program, a first among Catholic schools. 1910 — Marquette ends a short affiliation with the Wisconsin Conservatory of Music, and establishes its own College of Music. The college closes in 1930. — The Robert A. Johnston College of Economics opens. The college is divided into two schools, business administration and A Graduate from the Jazz Age Only one person showed up at the MXh reunion of the Class of 1922 — Peter). Ver-meulen. Mr. Vermeulen, 89, graduated with a degree in mechanical engineering. In his day, he told the Hilltop, engineering students had all the school spirit. “I remember Marquette playing Notre Dame in football. Some of my engineering school friends and I made huge signs and hung them across Wisconsin Avenue in order to get the students fired up, he said. But Marquette lost the game anyway. He had friends outside of the engineering school, too. One was Victor McCormick, who studied law at Marquette in the 1920s. and who donated the money for McCormick Hall, the men s dorm on 16th and Wisconsin. I would ride my bike to school, Mr. Vermeulen reminisced, and Vic would be driven by his chauffeur. Mr. Vermeulen is now retired and lives in Milwaukee, and he still is enthusiastic about his alma mater. Campus Camaraderie After 1907, there was no longer a central meeting place on campus for the students of the various schools. So in 1920, two students suggested that a mansion on Michigan Street behind Johnston Hall could be used as a union. The renovated house provided a place where men, and men only, could sip soft drinks and have a bite to eat together. Peter Brooks was the first president, and Charles Cobeen was the first manager. The union was such a financial success, that land for a new union building at 631 N. 13th St. was purchased. A $60,000 union was completed in 1923. The first floor of the two-story building featured a cafeteria. A lounge and soda bar, and several meeting rooms and offices made up the second floor. The union was financed by income and sale of shares. The loan for the new building was paid off in 1937, and after that, the Union's profits were used to establish a men’s dormitory. That dorm was opened in 1941. The Union was still a thriving business in 1953, when the alumni funded the building of a new all-university union, named after the old Union s first president, Peter Brooks. The Student Union at 6)1 N. 13th St., about 1924. 12 Opposite Page: Eleventh Street and Grand Avenue as it appeared in the 1920s. Grand Avenue was later renamed Wisconsin Avenue. Left: Basketball didn’t become an intercollegiate sport at Marquette until a quarter of a century after the first football season. But 43 years later, basketball became the most important sport on campus. Bottom Left: At the time of its completion, the Dental Building was the second largest dental education complex in the world. Below: The Marquette Hospital was closed in 1930. Original plans were to build a new hospital, but the Depression determined the hospital's fate never to be reopened. opens. The college is divided into two schools, business administration and journalism, as an experiment (business and journalism as independent courses of study are not common at this time). The experiment is successful, and from 1916 on, the schools operate separately as the College of Business Administration and the College of Journalism. 1915 — The first Hilltop is published. 1916 — Football is now the most popular sport on campus. Track and bowling are also popular. Basketball becomes an intercollegiate sport in 1917. — The Marquette Tribune begins publication. 1918 — The Carnegie Foundation offers the Medical School $500,000 in matching funds for a new building. The additional money is raised by 1922, and Mrs. Harriet Cramer donates another Si million to the cause. Until the Cramer Life Sciences Building is completed in 1932, the medical and life science schools are located in various parts of 'he city. — In the previous school year, enrollment had climbed above 1,000 for the First time. In 1918, enrollment is at 977 because of the war. 1920 — The campus consists of Johnston Hall, the Law School (still in the Mackie house), and some of the houses behind the buildings. For the purpose of expanding. u Right The Marquette Gymnast was one of several buildings that went up on campus in the early 1920s. Opposite Page Above Marquette radio station WHAD's first broadcast was in 1924. The station had to be sold in 1935 because of the De-ptession. and is currently opcnti in Delafield. Wisconsin Opposite Page Bottom: A view of Gesu, Johnston Hall and the year-old Law School. 1927 . Vhe Gym rasiurn ng JVar jue14e l rrivarsity What Price Fame? In 1929 there was an all-campus popularity contest. A group of law students, alumnus Evan C. Schwcmcr recalls, thought they could turn the contest into a real fun thing. Here is Schwemer’s account of that contest: We decided to put up a Law School candidate, and we selected Gardiner Roeber as our boy. He was a reticent, shy and awkward sort of person, and one of the most unlikely persons ever to be the winner of such a contest. We were able to talk him into thinking he would surely be selected as the most popular man on the campus. We then proceeded with a full-scale campaign to elect our boy. His candidacy was announced in the Marquette Tribune and Milwaukee Journal with all the plaudits we could think of as to his more than superior qualifications. Posters were plastered all over the campus, Roeber was scheduled to speak at university functions, there was a parade of 40 Checker cabs down Wisconsin Avenue, and the Milwaukee Journal ran several stories on the campaign, Mr. Schwemer recalls. To clinch the election, Schwemer and his friends stuffed the ballot box. Gardiner Roeber was easily elected Marquette’s most popular man. The whole affair, however, had a tragic end.” Schwemer recalls in the letter he sent to the Hilltop. A few months after the victory. Gardiner drowned while swimming. It ended without Gardiner ever knowing why it began in the first place. 14 Marquette buys all the property on Wiscon -sin Avenue between 15th and 16th Streets, and south to Clybourn Street. Within a decade, Marquette erects a dentistry building, a gymnasium and a medical building on this property. The dentistry building is at the rime the second largest building for dental educa -tion in the world. 1922 — The Graduate School opens. Masters degrees have been offered at Marquette since 1889, but this is the first organized post-graduate program. — The speech curriculum, which concentrates on the treatment of speech defects, is organized as a separate course of study in the College of Liberal Arts. The School of Speech is established in 1926, and after further upgrading of the program, the College of Speech is established in 1973. 1924 — A football stadium is built at 37th and St. Paul Streets, Sponsored by the Alumni Association, the stadium originally is to seat 50,000 spectators. Support dwindles, however, and the stadium plan has to be revised. The finished structure holds 20,000 people. 15 A Different Kind Of Victory Marquette track star Ralph Metcalfe did not win his 200-meter race in the 1932 London Olympics. But in the way he took his controversial defeat, he earned the respect of people all over the world. The 200-meter race was run on a curved track that year. The starting line in Metcalfe's lane had been erroneously marked, so that he had to run farther than the other contestants. Nevertheless, he finished so close to the man who was declared the winner, that many judges disputed the outcome. Films later showed tht Metcalf indeed had finished first, but the judges' original decision stood, without protest. 16 Opposite Page Left: At one time there were open spaces on the Marquette campus. This is the practice field next to the gym. about 1930. Opposite Page Right: This garden was behind Johnston Hall until the late 1930s. Left: Where the Legal Research Center currently stands there was once a greenhouse. Parr Three: Depression and War (1930-45) In its first half-century, Marquete had developed a good, solid base. It had been a well-run school, and the future looked bright. Then came the Great Depression. Marquette's Golden Anniversary year. 1931. was one of the worst years of the Depression. Some of the university's solid base was damaged, but the administrators proved very adaptable and innovative. Marquette Came out of the distressing Thirties a much stronger institution than it had been before. And then the Second World War began. Again Marquette had to adapt, not only in order to survive, but in order to help the United States in the most terrible conflict of all time. When it was all over, Marquette, like the rest of the world, was ready to rake on the challenges of modern times. 1930 — For the spring semester. Marquette's enrollment is 3,512. The number of women enrolled nears 1,000; Business Administration is the largest college. 1931 — In its 50th year, Marquette starts to feel the effects of the Great Depression. Enrollment drops below 3,000. Especially affected by the financial pressures of the day are women, as female enrollment drops about 50 percent. 1932 — These are hard times for the nation and for Marquette, but good times for the track team. Ralph Metcalfe, one of Marquette's biggest track stars ever, participates in the Olympic Games, held in London. — The Cramer Life Sciences Building is the only structure built in Milwaukee this year. 1933 — Because many students cannot obtain enough cash to pay for their lunches, they are allowed to charge meals. 17 1934 — The Federal Emergency Relief Association provides money for jobs so that students can continue their education. More than 400 people apply for work, but only 233 jobs are available. Tuition is S20-1 a year. 1936 — The Marquette Medical Review, the first journal of its kind, is first published. — Nursing has been a program in the Medical College since 1907, bur the College of Nursing becomes independent in 1936. 1937 — The football ream is the best ever, bur an upset loss to Duquesne University in the final game of the season costs Marquette a Rose Bowl bid. Marquette’s 7-1 record is good enough to draw an invitation to the 18 Left: The cluster of buildings in this view was known in the 1930s as the lower campus. Bottom Left: The Dental Clinic. 1932. Below: Marquette's first dorm. Alumnae House. Bottom Right: The Alumnae Association did things right in acquiring Alumnae House. Response to advertising was good, and 83 women lived in the house its first year. Never Cross A Marquette Woman It took the efforts of a group of disgruntled female graduates to open the first dormitory on the Marquette campus. The story begins in 1921, when the Alumni Association, an informal group since the 1890s, was formally incorporated. Women were not allowed into the organization, so the alumnae formed their own association in 1924. The preliminary purpose of this rather informal group was to secure housing for women who came from out of town to attend Marquette. The original Alumnae Association folded in 1931- In 1937, however, the alumnae regrouped, and were formally recognized by the university in January 1938. During the next summer vacation, the Alumnae Association leased a house on the corner of 12th and Kilbourn. It housed 85 female students that year, and it made a profit. By 1948, the Alumnae Association owned the building. Impressed by the efficiency of the Alumnae Association, the men’s organization called for a merger of the two groups, promising that women would have full membership and representation in the Alumni Association. The merger was completed in 1949. The first men's dorm was opened two years after Alumnae House was opened, although efforts to establish one had begun during the 1937 38 school year. Run That By Us Again, Father . . . Until the mid-1960s, all students were required to attend at least one retreat annually. Alumnus Roland W. Bogenberger, 1942, recalls that at a retreat in 1941, a priest told the young men that women are the root of all evil. The statement drew reactions from many groups and individuals on campus, and it even made the local newspapers. The embarassed priest evaluated what he had said, and admitted that it probably would have been better to have said something like The hand that rocks the cradle rules the world. Somehow, it just didn't come out that way, Bogenberger recalls. Above Right: Grandmora Hall, the Science Building and Gesu weathered many cold Wisconsin winters together, until Grandmora was demolished in 1977. Right; Part of the three-day pageant celebrating the tOOth anniversary of the birth of Pcrc Marquette Opposite Page: The 1937 football team had tough act to follow. The 1936 team had played in the Cotton Bowl. 20 The only bad things that can be said about holidays during the school year are that there are not enough of them, and that they come too far apart. But in 1939. Marquette students got two Thanksgivings — and they were only a week apart. That year. President Franklin D. Roosevelt declared that Thanksgiving would be held a week earlier than usual, on the second to the last Thursday in November. Wisconsin Gov. Heil, however, declared that Thanksgiving would be observed on the traditional day in Wisconsin. This presented Marquette students with a dilemma. Students whose families lived in other states had to decide whether they would miss spending Thanksgiving with their families, or to miss classes and make the trip home. Fr. McCarthy, Marquette's president, made the decision much easier. He announced that Marquette would observe both holidays, and classes would not be in session on either of the Thanksgivings. first Cotton Bowl ever played. Marquette's opponent in Dallas is Texas Christian University, whose quarterback is Sammy Baugh, one of the game's greatest passers of all time. Marquette loses 16-6. — A new enrollment record is set as 3.634 students sign up for the fall semester. The number of women enrolled approaches its previous record, set in 1930. — Marquette and Milwaukee throw a big three-day party to commemorate the 400th anniversary of the birth ofPere Jacques Marquette. A 20-foot-high candle with a six-f(x t-high flame is erected on Wisconsin Avenue. A cast of 1,000 elementary, high school and college students acts out scenes of Marquette 's life, and 25.000 people attend the celebration. 1938 — Most Marquette students still live with their families within walking distance of school. Bur recognizing a growing need for student housing, the enterprising Alumnae Association leases an apartment building at 12th and Kilbourn to accommodate 85 women. It is aptly named Alumnae House. 1940 — The four-hundredth anniversary of the founding of the Society of Jesus is celebrated with a large Mass in Gesu. 1941 — Brooks Hall, the first men 's dorm on campus, opens. Funds to purchase a bachelors' hotel on 13th Street were obtained from the income of the Student Union. The 21 Above: A view of the upper campus. looking south on 16th Street, including the Dental School. Hospital Annex, Medical School and Gymnasium, about 1944. Note the barracks between the Medical School and the Gym. Opposite Page Above: Registration. 19J8. That year, less than one-third of the students were women. Fighting The War At Marquette The battlefields of the Second World War were thousands of miles away, but Marquette played an important role in the war effort. By the fall of 1941, more than 1.000 male Marquette students and faculty members had been drafted. Most of these men received deferments until actual fighting began. The fighting began on Dec. 8. 1941, the day after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. The effects of the war were felt almost immediately. The military literally took over the campus. Students in the medical, dental and engineering schools became members of the armed forces almost automatically. Most of the liberal arts, journalism and speech students were drafted for combat duty. In order to graduate students more quickly so that they could participate directly in the war effort, Marquette adopted a trimester calendar. Until 1946, there was no summer vacation, and a class was graduated every four months. There was such a rush to get students through Marquette that, alumna Eunice Grobe I.anbrecht, 1948. remembers. New Year's Day was a triple-absence day. By May 1943, 2.300 Marquette students and faculty were in active duty. Although many of them were decorated, one Marquette alumnus received a citation for his innovative and unique service. Lt. Emeron F. Bachuber, who graduated from the dental school in 1937, pioneered dental treatment in battle. He had inadequate equipment to work with at the front, and had to improvise with spare tools and salvaged parts. The military occupation and trimester calendar continued through 1946. After that, the military remained on campus, offering programs that proved to be forerunners of the current ROTC program. In 1946, the campus was inundated with new students who were taking advantage of the G.I. Bill, which aided veterans in getting a college education. 22 dorm is named after the first president of the Union, Rev. Peter A. Brooks, S.J. — The engineering building is completed. Because of the increasing threat of war, the building has been hurried. Since all of the fund-raising goals have nor been met. the interior walls are of bare cement block. — The threat of war becomes the reality of war as the Japanese bomb part of the U.S. fleet at Pearl Harbor. For the next four years, the armed forces virtually run the campus. To graduate students more quickly so that they may serve in the military, the school adopts a trimester schedule until 1946. XAHyirn, ir.MWKsm He grabbed my by my elender neck I couldn’t cell nor scream, And dragged me to his dingy room Where we could not be seen. He tore away my filmy wrap and looked upon my form, f —1 I was so cold and damp and peered While he was hot anc warm. Hi8 feverish lips he pressed to mine. ; Sr 1 •, I couldn’t make him stop, I - — He drained me of my very self. I -—«■ I gave him every drop, He made me what I am today, That’s why you find me here, A broken bottle thrown away mh t once was ull of beer. Alumna Mary Klctt Dunphy shared her college scrap was on a trimester schedule. This report card is for the book with the 1981 Hilltop. July semester. Note that report cards have not really Left: Apparently the student mentality hasn't changed changed very much since 1944: the grading system is much over the years. Beer even finds its way into fine basically the same, but back then, absences were re-literature. ported! Right: During the Second World War, the university 23 ' Part Four: Intermission (1946-19M) Finally, after 13 years of hardship, the country took a breather. Along with the rest of the country. Marquette entered a new era. The Forties brought rampant inflation and consumerism. The Fifties brought the Red Scare, the McCarthy hearings, the emergence of television and rock n' roll, and the beginnings of the civil rights movement. In the early Sixties, the baby-boom generation came of age. All of these social phenomena profoundh affected Marquette as it was forced to bring its ancient Catholic tradition into a rapidly-changing. anti-traditional society. 1946 — Enrollment reaches an all-time high at 4.732 as the campus is flooded with veterans making use of the G.l. Hill to fund their educations. To ease the overcrowded conditions created by the sudden influx of students, pre-fabricated barracks are installed behind the Science lluildmg (currently called Marquette Hall) and the Medical College. A library, a larger union and more classroom space are desperately needed. 1917 — Enrollment jumps to over 7.(XX). Plans to permanently ease the overcrowding 24 The Student Handbook Every year it's the same. Freshmen come to Marquette from hundreds of situations having to make the transition to college life. The 1953 Student Handbook listed eight rules for making the transition to college easier. 1. You are in college now. so forget about your past glories in high school. Don't strut around campus wearing emblems or sweaters from high school achievement, but start all over to win college recognition. 2. Study hard the first year and you will discover your other three years will be much easier because you have gotten accustomed to making good grades. 3. Budget both your time and your money. 4. Money is nice to have, but it isn't necessary for success. Many campus leaders are partially self-supporting. 5. Learn to use university libraries. 6. Observe ordinary courtesy. Brush up on etiquette — it will save you needless embar-assment. 7. Get into student activities, for you cannot obtain a complete education from courses alone. l ake advantage of the numerous cultural and social advantages. 8. Learn the schtxd songs and turn out for athletic games. The teams deserve your support. Opposite Page Above Passing through a slidcrulc arch at the Engineers Ball. 1946. Opposite Page Bottom: The I'nion, a male stronghold on campus. about 1947. Left: Batracks which had been built to house military personnel during World War II were switched to classrooms during peacetime, as the campus was inundated with veterans who took advantage of the G.l Bill. are made. 1948 —Joseph McCarthy, a 1935 graduate of the Marquette Law School, is a member of the U.S. Senate, where he gains infamy. 1950 — The plans of 1947 to ease overcrowding begin to bear fruit as the College of Business Administration building is completed. — The Association of Marquette University Women, an alumnae group, finances a new women's dormitory on 18th Street. It is named after the then current president of the university, Rev. Edward J. O'Donnell. S.J. 1952 — The Program in Physical Therapy is approved. 1953 — A new university library is completed, replacing the old library on the second floor of Johnston Hall. — A new student union is completed. Unlike the old union, which was maintained by income and the sale of shares, the new union is a university project, supported by the alumni. 1954 — The Medical Library is built, and Wasting Time In The Fifties Alumnus Charles Librizzi told the Hilltop he remembers spending too much time playing bridge in the union. Bridge, he said, was the big activity on campus when he was at school in the mid - 1950s. Librizzi said that when he and his friends needed a fourth player, they would ask one of the kids hanging around the jukebox to play. One of the kids who was always hanging around and available to play, Librizzi recalls, was Tom Snyder. Snyder, of course, is currently the distinctive host of NBC's Tomorrow show. Snyder signed Librizzi s yearbook with a suggestion that Librizzi brush up on his bridge game over the summer. Opposite Page: These murals were painted in the Union Grill in 1956. Above: Looking west down Wisconsin Avenue in 19V) The dark building behind the Biltmore Apartments. Bcllamare Hall, was demolished in order to make room for Brooks Memorial Library, which was completed in 195). Left: The library on the second floor of Johnston Hall. 1949. Right: Construction began on a new library in September 1951. Opposite Page Above: O'Donnell Hall's lounge, early 1950s. Opposite Page Bottom: The women were thrilled with their modern dormitory, O'Donnell Hall, which replaced the aging Alumnae House. . . . But What Were They Saying? Every year famous and important people speak on campus at Marquette. But perhaps no year brought such notorious speakers as 1956. In that year, Adlai Stevenson, who twice ran for president and lost in final elections, spoke. So did Richard Nixon, who twice won presidential elections, and probably wishes he had not. And if those characters were not enough, Sen. Joseph McCarthy, a Marquette Law School graduate, made a campus appearance as well. There was one guest who is worthy of mention because of the positive things he did. Konrad Adenauer, Chancellor of West Germany, received an honorary degree from Marquette in 1956. n space is added to the Medical Building for dental and medical students. 1955 — The College of Journalism gets a new home. Alumnae House. The historic building is razed in the 1970s, after Johnston Hall is renovated to house the Colleges of Journalism and Speech. 1956 — Enrollment exceeds 10,000 for the first time, at the start of the fall term. — The Marquette Plan begins with a thorough three-year study on the future of the university. — The dress code is modified, allowing women to wear slacks to some school events, and to class on some days. 1957 — Actor Yul Brenner speaks on campus and tells the students to live by the 10 Commandments. 1958 — Schroeder Hall, an eight story n men's dorm on 13th Street, is completed. Two more floors are added later. — Closed-circuit television debuts at Marquette. It is sponsored by the College of Speech, but instructors from several fields participate. — The Medical Technology program is approved. I960 — Rev. John P. Raynor, S.J., comes to Marquette as an education instructor in the College of Liberal Arts. — Football and track are dropped as intercollegiate sports. — John F. Kennedy, the first Catholic president, speaks on campus in his election campaign. Classes are cancelled on Nov. 22, 1963, the day Kennedy is assassinated in Dallas, Texas. 30 Opposite Page Above: Copus Hall, at 13th and Michigan, was the home of the College of Journalism until 1955. In that year, the women vacated Alumnae House for O'Donnell Hall, and journalism vacated Copus Hall for Alumnae House. Opposite Page Bottom: Marquette football still drew large crowds in the post-war years, but by 1957. the program was in debt. Above: Brooks Memorial Library in the final stages of construction. I .eft: Football Homecoming, 1949. 31 A College Without Football We want football!” the crowd of angry students chanted as they marched down Wisconsin Avenue the day Marquette announced it was dropping its intercollegiate football program. But the support was too little, and it came too late. On Dec. 9, I960, it was all over. For the first time in 68 years, no football team would take to the gridiron representing Marquette University. There was a time when football had been very much alive at Marquette. Until the mid-1950s, the team had been known as the Golden Avalanche. It was changed to the Hilltoppcrs. In the thirties, both names had been appropriate. John Sisk, a 1932 graduate, was an All-American halfback for Marquette, and went on to play professional football. Marquette players who also went on to the pros in the 1950s were Art Krueger, Gene Ronzani, Wayland Becker and Ward Cuff. The 1930 team was undefeated, and the next year Marquette lost only one game. The 1956 team played in the first Cotton Bowl game. In those days. Marquette held huge Homecoming festivities, including a parade down Wisconsin Avenue. Many Milwaukee high school marching bands entered the parade, and the sidewalks were jammed with spectators. Sisk recalls that during his playing days. Marquette football generated interest from the student body and the general public. Like basketball today, football then paid for other sports, he said. Games were played on Saturday afternoons in Marquette Stadium at 37th and St. Paul Streets. Almost all the games were sellouts, and on several occasions, extra bleachers were placed near the end zones in order to accommodate more than the 20.000 fans the stadium could hold. After World War II, it was obvious that the glory years were over. The teams were not bad, but support was dwindling. What happened in the 1950s is described in a Catholic Herald Citizen article written by Milwaukee sports writer and announcer Earl Gillespie on Feb. 11, 1961: Who is to blame for the dropping of football on the Hilltop? . .. It’s a tough question to answer ... It seems to me that the blame should be placed squarely on the shoulders of the students and alumni and friends of Marquette. All Marquette would have to have done is draw an average of 17,000 a game to save the program, he explains. But after 1956, that did not happen. By I960, the football program was costing the university $50,000 a year. Gillespie continues: Marquette tried to compete in fast company in 1957 and 1958, scheduling games against top college teams. The Warriors (the name had been changed again) had some attractive games set for Milwaukee and 32 scheduled them to be played in County Stadium with its football seating capacity of 40,000. A couple of large crowds would have solved the financial problems, he contends, but one game against powerful Penn State drew only 4,000 spectators. The year I remember the most vividly, Gillespie writes, is 1953. Marquette lost to Wisconsin by two points, 13 to 11; lost to Indiana by one point 21 to 20 and lost to mighty Michigan State. Rose Bowl bound that year, 21 to 15. Heartbreakers all of them. But, not as heartbreaking to the players as it was when they came charging out on the turf at Marquette Stadium to play before the home crowd, only to find the stands half filled. The dropping of football had an impact on the lives of more people than just the players. Coaches and concessions workers lost their jobs, too. The marching band was eliminated. And in that year Marquette also dropped track, placing the schools’ NCAA status in jeopardy. Since then, there have been efforts to revive football at Marquette. There is a club football team, but not a varsity. 'Til still try until I die to revive varsity football, Sisk said. But there are no more parades, no more games, and no more stadium, by Jeannine Klein and David Thome Left: It may look like a tricky play, but it's more likely that just some tricky photography resulted in this picture of the Hilltoppers in the late 1940s Above left: Marquette Stadium at 37th and St. Paul Streets was the place to be on Saturday afternoons, until the late 1930s. Today, the stadium is gone, but the club teams still practice on the field at that location. 13 1964 — Basketball is emerging as the most popular sport on campus. Al McGuire, who has had great success as head basketball coach at small Belmont Abbey College. North Carolina, is hired to coach the Warriors. His Marquette coaching debut is spoiled as the freshman ream, coached by Hank Raymonds, defeats the Varsity 70-66. — For the first time, tuition is more than $1,000 a year. The $1,100 fee is twice that of the 1917 figure. The Marquette Plan In the late 1950s. it became clear that it would be beneficial to plan the growth of the university. An in-depth study was done, and in I960 The Marquette Plan was unveiled. The plan originally was to consist of two five-year phases. But the fundraising goal for the first phase was not reached until 1967, and the second phase had to be delayed. The Greater Marquette Drive, which ended in 1967, raised over $17 million, and the Advance Drive, which ended in 1974, raised $31.5 million for the purpose of improving Marquette's educational facilities and physical campus. Along with the Marquette Plan, the Marquette Urban Renewal Project was devised to transform the urban campus. McCormick Hall, the Wehr science buildings, the library' extension. Cobeen Hall and the Legal Research Center were born of the Ubran Renewal Project. The renovation of Johnston Hall, the addition of the 9th and 10th floors of Schrocder Hall and the three campus malls were also in the plan. The campus has been improved, but the old has often had to make room for the new in the process. The Plankinton mansion at 1492 W. Wisconsin Ave. was one of the last old buildings to be demolished as part of the project. As early as 1968, Tribune files show controversy surrounding the fate of the house. It finally fell in October 1980. The Urban Renewal Project still includes the construction of two buildings, an art gallery, and a nursing school. Above Right: Looking northwest over the campus in 1956. The broken line marks off the areas designated as part of the Mar- I queue Plan. Notice that the ex- j pressway ends at Uth Street. Bottom Right: The campus map. taken from the 1980-81 Combined Un- I dergraduate Bulletin. 35 Parr fixe: The Alarquette Plan (196-1-1981) And so. Marquette entered the space age. New challenges constantly were facing the university, and the first efforts to meet those challenges were mapped our in the Mar-quette Plan. Since the plan was pur into action in 1960, the university has grown as never before. Graduates of only two decades ago remember when the union was on I Irh Street, when basketball was a secondary sport, when the legal drinking age was 21. and when the Avalanche and the Gym were only half as large as they are now. By 1981, most of the task of building the modern campus has been completed. Still, we are living in the era of the Marquette Plan. 19b5 — Fr. Raynor is named president of the university. — Enrollment reaches a new all-time high in the fall. The record of 1 i. 789 in all divisions stands until the fall of 1979. — Marquette purchases the Varsity Theater. The 1.000-person capacity theater is used for history, biology and psychology lectures and for movies. The offices are occupied by administrative personnel, and the first floor is converted into a bookstore. — The Marquette Honors Society is started. Later, it receives the approval of the prestigious Phi Beta Kappa Society. — Led by Marquette's all-time leading scorer. George Thompson, the basketball team takes second place in the NCAA Tournament. — The Marquette Interchange links Marquette to Interstate 91. I X 8 — Schroeder men boycott dinner, because they don't like the cafeteria food. — McCormick Hall, a men 's dormitory on 16th and Wisconsin, is completed. The new A a? Above This tv how S Jinn of Art Chapel looked arrived at Marquette. Marquette Gets A Landmark In 1966, Marquette became the home of a 500-year-old landmark. On May 26. the Chapel of St. Martin de Savssuel was dedicated and renamed St Joan of Art Chapel The chapel had been brought from Chasse. a small town in I ranct It was dismantled there, shipped to Amenta, and was rebuilt on Long Island under the direction of its owner. Mrs. Hill Gavin Mrs. Gavin sold the chapel along with its chateau in 1962 to Mr. and Mrs Mare B Rojtman. Rojiman. a former Racine. W is businessman, had planned to retire and live in the chateau, but it was gutted b fire. Rojtman donated parts of the chateau s facade ■hen ir anti roof to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, and the chapel to Marquette The chapel was dismantled again and shipped to Milwaukee at a Cost of S160.799 According to legend. Joan of Arc worshipped at the chapel at the time of her meeting with Dauphin C harles VII of France She prayed to the Virgin Mother, anil when she finished, she bent down and kissed the stone on which she was standing That stone has ever since been five degrees cooler than the rest of the building Science has no explanation for this phenomenon. bv Karen Glasener Due To Riots, There Will Be Student unrest in 1970 had been running high because of President Richard Nixon's Cambodian policy. Demonstrations, some violent, were staged on campuses across the nation, including Marquette. On Monday. May 4, four Kent State University students were killed when guards shot into a crowd of 3.000 demonstrating students. Across the United States, students responded to the killings with a strike condemning the Vietnam involvement and the Kent State incident. Marquette students joined the protest.and ASMU voted to strike. Fr. John P. Raynor, Marquette president, issued a statement to 800 strikers congregated in Brooks Memorial Union urging charity, not violence: You as students arc not alone in viewing with great distress the present situation in Cambodia and what happened at Kent State. I share your concern for this unnecessary-suffering and death. On May 6, there was a fast and prayer vigil in front of St. Joan of Arc Chapel. Friday. May 8 was the last day of classes, and the first day of a tumultuous weekend. No Test Today Fire bombs wrecked offices and a classroom in Marquette Hall, and damaged the College of Speech. One office was gutted by fire, and irreplaceable work on instructor Howard Geer's doctoral thesis was destroyed. Students disrupted traffic on the Tory Hill approach to the expressway during the Friday evening rush hour. At 2:30 a.m. Saturday, demonstrators threw bottles and cans onto Wisconsin Avenue from Heraty Beach (across from Memo-rial Library), and then advanced onto the street. Police were called in to break up the mob, and no one was hurt. On Sunday, 1,300 students marched on campus. Concerned for the students' safety, especially those who lived in the dorms, who had been victimized by fires and bomb scares. Fr. Raynor cancelled final examinations, and announced a grade option policy. Seniors were assigned a final grade in order to graduate on time, and undergraduates had the option of accepting grades based on their semester's work, or taking final exams in the fall. by Libby McGinty Like other college campuses across the nation. Marquette was caught up m the causes of the 1960s. Besides the Anti-War Movement and other national issues of the time. Marquette students were concerned with issues such as revising the dress code and intervisitation rules in the dorms. There were marches, rallies, protests and rock concerts, but the students also spent time as their parents might have, in the Ardmore Bar (below). Bottom Left: Sports mascot “Willie Wampum was dropped in 1970, because he was determined to be demeaning to American Indians. dorm houses 730 students. 1969 — In response to civil rights demands by the students, Marquette adopts an F.duca -tional Opportunity Program to provide financial aid for minorities who meet entrance requirements, but who lack the money to attend school. Financial aids programs are expanded throughout the late Sixties and early Seventies. — The traditional schedule, with two semesters running from September through January and February through June, is aban-donned. The new schedule consists of two semesters running from August through December and January through May. Courses are concentrated, and students find that they have to spend more time studying than they did before. The number of extra-curricular activities doesn ‘t drop, but students find that they have less rime to spend on them. — Lalumiere Language Hall opens. — For the first rime in Marquette history, laymen are allowed to serve on the Board of Trustees along with Jesuits. — Two communes are established on Nth Street. They become centers for radical activity on campus. Campus unrest over various issues continues into the early 1970s. 1970 — The dormitory intervisitation policy is revised. Lights in dorm rooms must be kept on and doors must be kept open while visitors are in; counselors are to be present on each floor, and student hosts must sign in guests. Students arc required to live in dormitories until age 21. — Campus Ministry is founded as an interfaith religious organization. — The basketball team wins the National Invitational Tournament, but does it without traditional mascot Willie WampumThe J9 university decided to drop the mascot because it was determined to be offensive to American Indians. 1971 — Fourteenth Street is closed and the center campus mall is built, at a cost of S3 million. 1972 — A bill of Congress changes the age of majority from 21 to 18. 1973 — Marquette’s club football team extends its losing streak to 34 games. In the first game of the next season, the streak ends. — For the first time, women are admitted to the ROTC program at Marquette. 1974 — Heraty Hall, formerly the Hotel Stratford and a women's dorm, is renovated and renamed Jesuit Residence. 1973 — Two female students are raped near campus, spurring complaints to the administration by students about safety on campus. A petition is signed by 1,300 students calling for the creation of a campus safety department. Quentin Quade, executive vice president of the university, answers the petition: The university doesn't have to be told to be sensitive to student safety — it is. ” But student demands increase, and the Cam -pus Safety Department, currently Public Safety, is created. — Twenty-two faculty members participate in the first sabbatical leave program offered by Marquette. — The Helfaer Recreation Center and the Helfaer Theatre open. University theater productions previously have been held in the small Theatre Maria, which had been heavily damaged by fire in 1970. 1976 — The speech and journalism col-leges get a new home as Johnston Hall is renovated. The Science Building is renovated and is renamed Marquette Hall. 1977 — Marquette's basketball ream wins the NCAA championship by defeating North Carolina 67-39. Marquette's final season record is 23-7. Al McGuire, the most prolific coach in Marquette history, retires at season s end. — Coughlin Hall, which houses the history, English, philosophy and rheology faculty offices, opens. A Holiday Inn at 2611 W. Wisconsin is leased to ease crowded dorm conditions. It is renamed West Hall, and is purchased by the university in 1980. — Marquette Stadium, once the home field for Marquette football, is tom down. 40 Opposite Page; The Helfacr Recreation Center opened in 197V Left: One of the most novel-looking buildings on campus, Lalu-miere Language Hall, opened in 1969. Below: Coughlin Hall opened in 1977. These three buildings are part of the Marquette Urban Renewal Project. Growing Up Overnight The first time is always the best. For about three-fourths of the people attending Marquette in 1972, the best taste of beer came earlier than expected. On Thursday. March 23. the Age of Majority Bill went into effect, giving 18-year-olds adult status, and the right to drink alcoholic beverages. The law went into effect at 12:01 a.m. By 12:10, the Avalanche was out of cups, and a line in front of the Meet Market (currently the Circle Inn) stretched more than a block down 16th Street. More than 2,000 new drinkers partook in the free beer offered at that bar alone, and four other bars in the area also offered free beer. The change in the legal drinking age obliterated the booze black market in the dorms, of course. And although alcoholic beverages could not be sold on campus, beer was permitted in the dorms and on the malls. Wisconsin Gov. Patrick J. Lucey said the bill should provide an expanded awareness of the seriousness of adulthood and the need for responsible action on the part of all citizens. regardless of age. That may have been so. But the law also made local tavernkeepers aware of the need to expand their establishments in order to be able to serve their new customers. 41 Champions Of The Nation We are Marquette. We are the number one college basketball ream in the nation. The celebration did nor begin as the thou -sands of victory marchers crowded 15 blocks of Wisconsin Avenue after the game. Nor did it begin at the airport where 5.000 screaming fans awaited for their team to come home. It all began on Thursday. September 21st, when the first tent went up for the ticket sale on the following Saturday. And the season ended with more excitement and a ticker rape parade on March 50. 1977 Hilltop It was called Al's Last Hurrah. The great coach of the Warriors had announced that he would retire at the season's end. Just when that would come, no one had any way of knowing. Since McGuire was named coach, Marquette basketball teams had made it habit to extend the season beyond the final date on the schedule. The team started out strong that year, winning their first four games. Then they suffered the first of two lapses, losing consecutive contests to tough Louisville and Minnesota. The lapse was followed by a 10-game winning streak, and the Warriors were back in the Top 10. Then came three straight losses. The first was to DePaul, a team Marquette had easily beaten earlier in the season. The second was to Detroit, a respected team. The third was to lightly-regarded Wichita State. The Warriors recovered from that lapse, and eventually won 20 games. In order to get an NCAA bid, they would have to beat Michigan in the final game of the season. Marquette did not win that game, but the bids were turned in right after halftime. Fortunately, Marquette was winning at the half. They got an invitation. It was a tournament of Cinderella teams. The usual favorites were knocked off as the tournament progressed. Marquette beat Cin-cinatti handily, and then pulled off a one point victory over Kansas State. Marquette beat Wake Forest to become one of the final four teams. In the first game of the final round. Marquette beat another underdog, the University of North Carolina-Charolette, by two points. The final game, against North Carolina, was close all the way. When it was over, A1 had his Last Hurrah, and the Warriors had their only NCAA basketball crown ever. 42 Opposite Page Left: Waiting for basketball tickets in the camp out. Opposite Page Right: Bo F.llis, one of Al McGuire's favorite players of all time; also a very good one. He played on Marquette's NCAA Champions. Top and Left: The players who made the championship. Above We re number one! 41 A Legend In His Own Time One day you're in the dumps, the next day you're up high. I wouldn't advise anyone to get into this business, said the Warriors' new head basketball coach A1 McGuire after his team won the consolation game of the 1964 Marquette Classic. But McGuire didn't do so bad in the coaching business, and he wasn't in the dumps too often, either. The 1977 Hilltop lists his accomplishments as Marquette's head basketball coach. His teams played in 11 consecutive post season tournaments. They won two of those: the National Invitational Tournament in 1970, and the NCAA Tournament in 1977. He was named coach of the year in 1971 by the Associated Press. United Press International. Sporting News and the National Association of Basketball Coaches. His record at Marquette was 293-80. Those of us who have observed the man from afar don't really know too much about him. We do know, however, that he is both a realist and an optimist. That is a rare combi- nation. Even after only one year at Marquette his personality was well known. The following arc excerpts from the 1965 Hilltop: The biggest change in Marquette basketball was the introduction of the McGuire brand of ball. McGuire introduced what he called the free lance” offense ... The free lance” requires all players to be in constant motion although they may not be moving in any set pattern . . . Although his first season at Marquette was mainly a rebuilding year, McGuire's dynamic coaching won praise. Early in the season, the Chicago Tribune said, ... in a year or two he may begin proving what some in the profession already feel — that he has a special genius for coaching. His genius made him by far the greatest figure in the first century of Marquette athletic history. It will be difficult to surpass A1 McGuire's greatness in however many centuries lie ahead for Marquette sports. Opposite Page: Bernard Toonc after the big game. Left: Al McGuire directs his team. Bottom Left: The Victory Parade down Wisconsin Avenue. March 30. 1977. Below: McGuire is intense near the end of the North Carolina game, while his successor. Hank Raymonds. next to McGuire, relishes the thought of manning the helm of the National Champions. 45 During the Seventies, the stadium had been subjected to vandalism, and a fire had caused several thousand dollars damage. 1978 — The Olin Engineering Center opens. The medical school moves off campus and becomes the Medical College of Wisconsin. The old medical school facilities are updated for use by the School of Dentistry, the Programs in Medical Technology and Physical Therapy, the Student Health Center and the Health Science Library. The building is renamed the Walter Schroeder Health Science and Education Complex. — The first Al's Run is held. Two thousand persons participate in the fundraiser. 1979 — Enrollment for the fall semester is 13,932, breaking the enrollment record set in 1965. The four largest freshmen classes in school history are enrolled at the same time. 1980 — A new record freshman class enrolls. The faculty has 535 full-time and 365 part-time instructors. — Marquette purchases another motel, at the corner of 19th and Wisconsin, and renames it Mashuda Hall. 1981 — Marquette celebrates it centennial. Researchers and writers: Mara Cichosz, Mary Anne Colovic, Nancy Cusick, Karen Glasener, Libby McGinty, Jane Mentink, Maureen O'Brien, John Seeck, Jeannine Klein. The Hilltop would like to thank all of the alumni who were kind enough to share their photos, stories, anecdotes, facts and memories with us. We enjoyed your contributions, and we wish we had enough space in include all of them. We extend special gratitude to the Marquette University Archives, and especially to Fr. Robert Callen, S.J., who is the person to talk to about Marquette history. Layouts by Laura Mueller Copy by David Thome Photos redone by Cindy Zirbel, Steve Frawley and Mr. Keith Wald. Alumni contributions and research coordinated by Mary-Liz Mcany 46 47 Present From your earliest youth choose instruction, and till your hair is white you will keep finding wisdom. Cultivate her like the plowman and the sower, and wait for her fine harvest, for in tilling her you will toil a little while, but very soon you will be eating her crops. Ecclesiasticus 6:18-20 Environment espite its central location on the busiest street in the city, Marquette is easy to overlook. It doesn't really look much like a college campus. And really, Milwaukee isn't a college town. It's an industrial city in which most of the people are workers, not scholars. Living on campus during the summer, one gets the feeling that Milwaukee could get along just fine without Marquette — probably better. Traffic to and from downtown flows faster in the summer without the cars of Marquette commuters and the streams of students crossing the avenue between classes to hinder it. The police take a break when school is out. They don't have to write as many parking and jaywalking tickets in this area, and they don't have as many young people to contend with at the lakefront and Summerfest. The local innkeepers take a breather, too. For a few months they can sit back and enjoy some good conversation with their customers — that is, when the customers aren't (continued on page 54) 53 (continued from page 53) already enjoying good conversations with themselves. For the most part, life in Milwaukee without Marquette simply goes on as usual. Downtown is as busy during the day and as deserted at night as ever. Busses still stop in front of the Jes Res. The East Side business women still window shop during the noon hour, and try to ignore the stares of wide-eyed crazies, who seem to have no occupation other than staring at normal people, riding busses, digging through garbage cans SOCIETY Sf and listening to gigantic portable radios. Even during the summer, those radios blast Journey and Van Halen courtesy of WLPX, WQFM and WZUU. The Cars, the Boss and Neil Young are making an impact on Milwaukee, but Milwaukee doesn't seem to be overly interested in artists at any level. There is a Performing Arts Center and a symphony, but the size and enthusiasm of their audiences don't (continued on page 58) 55 (continued from page 53) equal those of Bowling with the Champs. There is a fine arts radio station, WFMR, but it is entirely likely that many people listen to Ron Cuzner after midnight not for the jazz he plays, but to hear him, in his distinctive way, announce the last evening's baseball scores. The Brewers draw nearly two million people to County Stadium each year without the help of Marquette. The Brewers have had good years of late, but a lot of the people going to the games aren't fans at all. They are MIRY goods party shacks WUUtTY ITEMS liquor WINES beer-soda W M COLO 6-PAKS V tCASE BEER - □ CtiikcL WINES people looking for an excuse to have :a cookout and drink a few beers. This, at least, Milwaukeeans and Marquette students have in common: they like to drink beer. But the Milwaukeeans who drink in the bars around Marquette are not typical. Most of them probably are not even Milwaukeeans. They are vagrants who can appreciate a 30 cent draught, even if it does come in a plastic cup. Vagrants are an important part of (continued on page 60) 59 (cominued from page 59) our neighborhood. They keep us humble ( Hey, isn't that your theo prof over there? ), and they keep us on our toes ( Buddy, can you spare a quarter? ). During the summer there are quite a few more around here than during the school year. Why do they leave in the winter? Maybe they head for warmer places, or maybe they just don't like the crowds at the bars. Of course, there are some students who hang around all summer. It's a different kind of Milwaukee exper- 60 ience then. At once the student's world both expands and contracts: the whole city is there to explore, but there are relatively few people to explore it with. Finally there's the good weather and time to explore Mitchell Park, the zoo, the lakefront, the East Side or a Brewer's game, but inevitably, everyone winds up at the 'Lanche or the Gym. In the summer the bars are truly relaxing places to be. There is room to move, air to breathe and enough (continued on page 62) (continued from page 61) quiet to allow conversation. A week before the school year begins, however, the neighborhood goes through its annual transformation. The students reclaim the bars, the streets, the buildings. At first, the process is slow: a few come back to get their apartments in order or to plan orientation or to take a week off before the crunch is upon them. The city people and vagrants see the invasion coming, but they hang on as 62 CO long as they can. The traffic gets a little thicker, the police get out their ticket books again. Once orientation begins, the neighborhood belongs to the students. The freshmen come like the Goths who sacked Rome, destroying one culture and making room for another. They are the first to trample the lawns so meticulously manicured by Buildings and Grounds in June and July. They are the first to disturb (continued on page 66) IM 6) 64 CZ 65 (continued from page 63) the sleepy nightlife of Wells Street. They are the first to fill the air with frisbees and high-powered stereo. It's no wonder that when the upperclassmen arrive, things are pretty much the same as they left them. It's not exactly the same, though. Each class makes its own mark on the environment, and each year the environment is noticeably different than the year before. Perhaps it really does change, or perhaps we just get older, but anyone will tell you, 66 whether he last attended Marquette in 1929 or 1979, that things are not the same anymore. The last quarter century has brought many physical changes to Marquette, but some things endure. Johnston, Marquette and Sensen-brenner Halls, the engineering and health sciences buildings and O'Hara Hall all have witnessed many eras in Marquette history. These are the collegiate buildings on campus. They are the ones with ivy climbing their walls, the ones that were here two generations ago, and probably will be here two generations from now. The newer buildings look more like offices and condominiums than lecture halls. Some of them — Olin Engineering, Coughlin Hall, Helfaer Theater, the Rec Center, the library and Lalumiere were built to look nice. And they do, at least, from the outside. Then there are the buildings erected during the metal-and-glass (continued on page 71) It was old, but not older than the university. So when it was decided in 1964 that the university was going to expand, it was also decided that the Plankinton Mansion (more recently known as the Knights of Columbus building), 1492 W. Wisconsin Ave., was going to have to come down. There was a long, hard fight to keep it up, but finally, down it came — oddly enough on Columbus Day, October 13, 1980. Regardless of how beautiful it may or may not have been, the campus will never look the same. 67 68 70 (continued from page 67) functional era: the biz-ad and psychology buildings, the union and McCormick Hall. They aren't pleas-int to the eye inside or out; they don't fit in with newly paved, tree-ined malls. They are, however, more ittractive than the parking lots. All of these buildings, new or old, ow or high, beautiful or ugly, are dwarfed by the one that lords over :he whole neighborhood, Gesu Church. Grey, piercing the grey Milwaukee sky, its clock tower stands timeless as the Almighty. It stands guard over the Marquette world, it shelters the old women who cower in its doorways, it can be seen from everywhere — a constant reminder of the Catholic tradition of this school. But its lordship enjoys a dubious legitimacy. For not only does it shelter the humble, but also it hides O'Hara Hall from our view. And so we may sometimes wonder if the God of Marquette's religious tradi- (coniinucd on page 73) 71 72 (continued from pjge 71) tion is no more than an omnipotent oppressor. That is a shallow conclusion. To find the real God of Marquette, we must go to the heart of the Marquette existence. Not surprisingly, then, it is in the heart of the campus, amidst the buildings, the bars, the books and the bums — and yet apart from all these — that we find Joan of Arc Chapel. It is a place for individuals, and a reminder that it is each individual who ultimately determines the environment at Marquette. The environment is not a city or a campus, it is a feeling. In the middle of a city that barely knows we exist, we make a home for four years. Milwaukee is not a college town, yet for most of us, the campus is Milwaukee. For us, Milwaukee would have no meaning without Marquette, and in turn, Marquette has no meaning without us. During the summer, the campus is just another cluster of buildings. by David Thome c z V 73 Student Life 74 h! College life — what better years do we have than these? Always much to do and so much time to do it. On Sunday, there's Mass at 5:30 or 10 p.m., preceded by football and followed by movies on TV. On Monday, more football. Tuesday is a mellow day, a chat around the kitchen table with the roommates. Wednesday is the primer for the weekend, and Thursday the weekend begins. Friday it's a grill concert, a movie and the bars. Saturday begins at noon and ends at 4:30 in the darkness of Sunday. And, too, there are diversions from the routine. One evening it is an impromptu softball game, 7th McCormick against 5th Schroeder. The next noon-hour there's a trip downtown, and a special trip through Gimbel's bargain basement. That night it's off to Brady Street. On the weekend, a trip home via Madison, and upon the return to Milwaukee, a block party. The next morning is time to sleep. With all of this going on, who has time to study? 75 So what dorm are you living in? I'm not. Not living in a dorm? — oh, you have an apartment. No, don't live in an apartment, either. Well then where ... oh ... you mean you're a commuter? Yeah, commuter, what's so bad about that? Around here, the term commuter is used as a label. Like all labels, it is unfair. About one-third of the undergrads at Marquette are commuters. But not even they are aware that they constitute such a large percentage of the student body because they are constantly coming and going. Some commuters hurry through a shower and breakfast, stuffing provisions into a knapsack as they go, in order to get to the busstop by 6:45, only to find that the bus-driver is trying to set a new land speed record that day. Even the 20-minute wait in the cold doesn't seem so bad an hour and three transfers after having been in the company of giggling high school girls, garrulous grandmothers, babbling bums and aggressive gays. 76 The bus commuters are lucky compared to car commuters. Marquette and the Milwaukee Police Department have ensured that finding a parking space is a real joy. The rare spots that open up are always on the other side of the street, and then the meters are always out of time. The spaces without meters aren't much more desirable. It's a bother to have to erase the chalk marks the cops make on tires every two hours. If life in the streets is discouraging, there are always Public Safety's many conveniently located parking lots. (Does anyone know where E is?) Regardless of the mode of transportation, arrival on campus in inevitably just a few minutes before class. It's a hassle, but at least running with 25 pounds of books on the back eliminates the need for bothersome trips to the Rec Center. And for the biceps, there are the handy lockers in the union and the library, into which the 25 pounds of books must be crammed. Commuting to school has its advantages. Many commuters appreciate being able to remain in touch with high school friends. (continued on page 78) cz 77 (continued from page 77) Commuters can keep their part-time jobs year-round. Despite all the time spent on the road, commuters apparently have more time to study: their GPAs are, on the average, higher than other students'. It's easier for a commuter to escape the campus scene — and a trip home is cheaper, too. But the plusses don't always make up for the hassles. In 1977, the Milwaukee Journal quoted an ASMU commuter senator: Commuters have particular needs that most students don't see. We'd like to get a discount on the busses, we need more parking space and we'd like to get more activities scheduled in the afternoon. Unfortunately, four years later, the same problems are being discussed, and they probably will be discussed for a long time. Maybe some day the administration will recognize these needs; and then commuters might be able to spend less time traveling and looking for places to park, and spend more time participating in the Marquette experience. It's easy to forget, but for some of us, commuting is a way of life. by Cheryl Dejewski and Lucy Vogl ■ 78 79 Dorm Life Ted E. Bear, a yellow highlighter tucked tightly under his fuzzy arm, stares at the bio text propped in front of him. It's late — almost 3 a.m. — but he doesn't touch the cold coffee or cream cheese bagel next to him. The elevator door opens, and a tired young coed, her pony tail hanging limp after a long day and half a night of studying biology, giggles at the sight of a teddy bear reading a book. She's lucky, because she can get some sleep before the test. Ted E.'s owner still has two chapters to read. When the rest of her Cobeen Hall dormmates are waking up, she'll just be finishing chapter five. • • It's the Saturday before Labor Day, and the hallways of McCormick are quiet. Most of the guys have gone home to tell their families about their first week at college. The guys left behind grumble because the Yankees aren't on TV this weekend. So they decide to have a party. It isn't like the party they had last Friday, though. Some of their friends come over to listen to the floor guru play a few Stones tunes on his guitar. They drink orange juice and eat popcorn and hit the sack early. One of them wakes up early the next morning and, having nothing else to do, checks out a vacuum and cleans up the mess — a small job compared to the one required after last (continued on page 82) cz 81 (continued from page 80) week's super-destructo floor mega-party. • • • Murder in the Dorm. In Schroeder it's a game, in the Y it's a reality. It gives me the creeps. I leave my light on whenever I go out, and I open the door very slowly when I get back, a resident said a few days after a man was killed in the lobby September 11. The victim wasn't a student, but it could have been. A lot of creeps hang around the Y. At the new dorm — what's it called, Mu-shudo? Mashiki? — a guy grabs a book and a teddy bear and walks down to a woman's floor. In one of the rooms there, a girl waits for him in her nightgown. She lets the guy into her room and then climbs into bed. He reads her a story from the book, hands her the teddy, gives her a good-night peck on the cheek. That's all that goes on as the guy leaves promptly. But who knows what might be happening in the next room. Eight blocks away, another teddy sits propped in front of a bio text. No goodnight kisses there. It'll be hours before he'll get to sleep. 83 84 You're going to have a few people over to the apartment tonight, so you have to get the place in shape. You vacuum all the tough corners, and you even make your bed. When the party starts, everything's in order. Wouldn't mom be proud? sr 85 cz Your roomate's friend has a friend of a friend who has an apartment to sign over to you. It's perfect! OK, maybe somebody did paint the woodwork electric green, but it has leaded windows and wood floors. Such potential! Best of all, the previous tenants are willing to throw in the orange couch and green armchairs for just $30. The rent is only $76.48 a month after you divide it among the roommates, and at that price, you can't lose. So what if the rent doesn't include heat, you only need it in the winter anyway. You come back to school a week early to fix the place up a bit. Armed with mops, pails and Better Homes and Gardens, you begin the attack on the apartment. But cleaning is hard work, and the fixing up takes a lot of money. So instead of stripping the woodwork, you just paint over it, and leave the living room ceiling, which looks like Route 80 in Ohio, until next week. After a few trips to the hardware store, your roommate's parents' basement and the Salvation Army, the apartment is furnished. You're ready for the inaugural party. It sounded at first like a good idea to have the party after the bars closed. Who could' have forseen that simply dancing on the $1.95 coffee table would have broken it? And why did it have to break with three pitchers of beer, two bowls of popcorn and six ashtrays on it? The next day, your roommate reminds you that it's your turn to do the grocery shopping. Scooping the electric bill, the phone bill and garbage off the kitchen floor, you head for the grocery warehouse. Tuna, macaroni and cheese, peanut butter, lettuce: you'll eat like a king! No pot pies this time — the oven is broken, and it may be three weeks before it's fixed. But the time passes all too quickly. One of your roommates is studying in Spain next year, and another found a place on the East Side. You and your remaining roommate are moving into a newer apartment a little farther from campus. As you pack the surviving glasses, you notice that you never did paint that ceiling. By now you know every twist and turn of Route 80. It's strange, but that place, grimy as it is, had become home. But you realize that it no longer is home when the new tenant carries in two cans of paint: ceiling white and electric green. w 87 88 Last Words Fashion means restaurants. Between 11th and 17th on Wells there is a widely varied menu: hamburgers, chili, bacon and eggs, pizza, lasagna, Chinese food, gyros and ice cream. There's also the liquid diet. There are three liquor stores and five bars on that same stretch of Wells Street. And there's a liquor store on about 33rd and Cly-bourn that offers Marquette students a 10 percent discount, and at least five bars within a few blocks of campus where Warriors have been known to prowl. (One Wells Street proprietor said his keg sales dropped after the new dorm rules on beer at parties were made, but he's made up the business in case sales. So much for alcohol de-emphasi-zation.) Then there are those other necessities, such as movies, concerts, records, posters and phone bills. Phone bills are almost always four-digit payments: $10.50 a month, plus long-distance phone calls to Afghanistan and sales tax. Where do the bucks come from? Some It is an unpleasant sound, a cash register ringing up a four-digit sale. Students hear that sound quite often, though. They hear it at registration when the bursar rings up $1810 for tuition, and they hear it time and again after that: $20.00 for lab fees, $25.75 for a train ticket home, $99.95 for books, not counting two hard-cover texts and three paperbacks that the bookstore didn't have. The bells ring most often, though, in the food and drink department, beginning with $40.00 for a pint-sized refrigerator rental. That's just the beginning, for of what use is an empty refrigerator? The 1979-80 Marquette Journal printed an estimate that Marquette students spend $17.5 million a year in Milwaukee. A lot of that has to be on Tab to fill those 'friges. There are times when a person just couldn't survive through another macaroni and cheese or hamburger-and-overcooked-noodle dinner. That's when Wells Street comes in handy. No, this doesn't necessarily mean a liquid diet at one of the bars. It people live ascetic lives in the summer, working six or seven jobs to earn enough for school vacation. Some people get checks from mom and dad. Other people work dur-ng the school year. They say that working through college builds character, but at 3.35 an hour for a work-study job, it doesn't juild bank accounts. Paychecks barely make t into the four-digit category: two weeks, our hours ... that's $12.40, minus 17 cents or Governor Dreyfus. After two weeks of wanton poverty, the question is, where to spend the bucks? Twelve dollars used to buy four records, or 12 movies at the Varsity, or 1,200 pieces of bazooka, or six six-packs, or 16 macaroni and :heese dinners. In 1980, $12 buys two re-:ords — with a student discount card, or right movies, or 400 pieces of Bazooka, or hree six-packs, or 12 macaroni and cheese linners — or maybe, just maybe, $12 buys ne of those three paperbacks the book-tore didn't have earlier. Administration here is this thing called the administration? Some believe it is housed beyond Gesu, on the fringe of our civilization, in a fortress called O'Hara Hall. Others have seen it moving amidst the people in Tower, the union, 1212 W. Wisconsin Ave., the Varsity Building and Marquette Hall. Its presence has been Felt at floor parties in the dorms, in the Mugrack, in the parking lots and at the basketball games. There are those who claim they have been haunted by the administration for payment of debts, ana others who praise the administration for wondrous miracles like credits on the registration fee card. Where is this thing called the administration? Where is this spirit which giveth and which taketh? which helps and hinders? which is responsible for so mucn pain and for so much pleasure? It is not housed in any building. The administration is everywhere. 93 94 The jar of jelly beans is out of place in the same office with a wide, dark-wood desk and a Persian carpet. The jelly beans keep me from fainting dead away, said the man who works in that office, 101 O'Hara Hall, Fr. john P. Raynor, as he popped one of the little shots of sugar into his mouth. Being president of Marquette takes a lot of energy. We at Marquette will always know — or not know — Raynor as the president. But he has another role, the role of servant of Jesus Christ. Raynor reflected on why he became a priest. He smiled and said, For that you have to go back to the womb. The Holy Spirit works through secondary causes. Those causes — serving Mass, attending a Jesuit high school (Creighton Prep in Omaha, Neb.), the influence of young priests he knew and a strongly religious family — led him to Marquette. He joined the Society of Jesus in 1954, earned his Ph.D. in higher education at the University of Chicago in 1959, and came to Marquette in January of 1960. During his early years at Marquette, Raynor held administrative positions in the College of Liberal Arts, and taught education classes. His administrative experience apparently qualified him to be chosen president of Marquette and leader of the Jesuit community in 1965. There is no job description for the office of president. There's never a laundry list, said Raynor. You have to create. People don't know you exist unless you knock on their doors. He found it difficult to evaluate his performance as president: I'm still around, though, he said. Many of the goals he set for the university in 1965 have been fulfilled. I have a deep feeling I try to push. It's that you can't invest in anything more valuable than the education of tomorrow's leaders, the president said. He said he likes to get to know some of tomorrow's leaders personally. I like to be with students. If I'm to get their support. I've got to talk with them and get on their wavelength. He said he knows about a thousand students by name. I invite them over; some come, some don't. I get to know a lot of them at basketball games. I dearly love to attend those. Obedience to God has put him here at Marquette, he said. God willing and good health prevailing. I'll keep doing it. As I get older (he is 57), I think of people as wayfarers and pilgrims. We have not here a lasting city. What we do have, he said, is an opportunity and a responsibility to imitate and give witness to Jesus Christ. You have to be careful in talking about these Jesuit values. It sounds so damn conceited, he said. I just want to be the best dang president I can be, play the best dang golf game I can play, and to achieve those values the best I can. Any regrets, Fr. Raynor? Yes. I never got a hole-in-one. by Amy Ginther Above: Rev. Bruce F. Biever, S.J., vice president of university relations. Upper Right: Dr. lames H. Scott, vice president of student affairs. Below: Dr. Quentin L. Quade, executive vice president. 96 Left: Mr. James L. Sankovitz, vice president of governmental relations. Lower left: Dr. Edward Simmons, vice president of academic affairs. Below: Mr. Roy O. Kallenberger, vice president of business and finance. 97 Bureaucracy I'm not going to study Cor my Russian History mid. I want to study, but I don't have the book. I don't have any books because I don't have any money. I don't have any money because my financial aid check hasn't come yet. My car got towed because I couldn't pay off the tickets, and my phone is disconnected, too. I called the Bursar's Office from a pay phone to find out what happened to the check: Hello, Bursar's Office. Where's my check? What check? My loan check. Do you realize it's been six weeks since registration? Did you sign a refund request slip? Yes. Did you sign a loan application? Yes. Did you sign a financial aid acceptance form? YES. Did you sign your loan acceptance form? No response — I hung up. After looking under the tables and around corners to make sure no more forms were chasing me, I sneaked down to the Bursar's Office to sign (pray to God) one last form. That was a while ago. Still no check. I tried reasoning with the girl at the Bursar's on the phone again: Hello, Bursar's Office. Do you realize that my car has been towed, I have a Russian History test tomorrow, and that I'm calling from a pay phone because my phone is disconnected? No response — she hung up. So I'm not studying for my Russian mid because I don't have the book. If I flunk the test, I'll have to drop the course. And that means I'll have to fill out a class waiver sub-stitution form. by Michael Macchione 1 1 99 Like a famous peanut farmer thrust into a similar position, ASMU President Dan Duffy had to prove he could do the job. Shortly after the freshman defeated a heavily favored junior candidate in the spring of 1980, Duffy was widely criticized. After a shaky start, Duffy was able to settle down and set some goals for his administration. Some of those goals were realized early. ASMU took the initiative of bringing national, state and local politicians to campus. Presidential candidates John Anderson, George Bush, Jerry Brown, Barry Commoner and Ed Clark spoke here. There was a debate of the Republican senatorial candidates before the primary. Fifty students were deputized as voter registrars, and 2,500 students were registered to vote. Without an increase in the $10 activity fee, ASMU was able to add some services as well as provide most of the past services. A discount card for use at local establishments was reinstated. A student legal card with information on rights in case of arrest and landlord tenant laws was introduced. In re- sponse to requests for legal assistance, the Student Consumer Education Program was expanded. ASMU and IRC took over sponsorship of the Alternative to the Bars program. The block party recorded its highest attendance ever — 4,000 — in spite of the smaller quantities of beer there. The success of that event prompted ASMU to plan, for the first time in two years, a spring block party. Also, the student store was scheduled to open in January, and rape seminars were scheduled for the dorms. There was a push for longer intervisitation hours and for more programming (the latter may require a $5 to $7 increase of the activity fee). After the smoke cleared and Duffy was able to get his administration going, it was apparent that he, being a sophomore, was no more nor less worthy of praise or criticism than any of his predecessors had been. Like all presidents, he will stand on his record. by Dennis Shelton and David Thome 101 Wr iliui. fsilr fell asleep in econ agaih. When I came to, the teacher was looking at me. He almost called on me, which would have been a pretty mean thing to do, since I had no idea of what was going on. I wish I hadn't fallen to sleep; he was talking about the test we're having next Tuesday. It wasn't my fault, really. I was up until 3:30 memorizing the theology I had to know for the test I had in that class at eight. It's a drag. I was up until two the night before finishing an English paper — the one I started at 8:30 that night. I think it was a pretty good paper, at least, it better be. It was six pages long, with small margins, and I wrote about everything the prof said in the lectures. I need a good graae on that paper. At least an A B, I hope. Tonight ... tonight I have to study for a bio test. I think I have to memorize about 325 terms. I hope I don't have to know any of the terms from the last test — I've forgotten them all. Gee, with ail this studying to do, who has time to learn? 103 Classes- The Learning Experience 104 105 106 cz 107 109 Oil Studying — Knowledge Through Osmosis MC ill The Library Every student knows that the ideal place to study is the library. With just barely adequate lighting, rock-hard chairs and the silence of a morgue, it's the perfect place to get work done, as the story of this good student illustrates: Annie Coes to the Library Annie, a very conscientious student, always makes a beeline to Memorial Library when the homework piles up. It seems as though she ends up there every night. There is always English to read, an accounting problem or two to finish, a philosophy paper to write or a computer program to decipher. On one particular night she has all four to do — by the next day. So Annie assembles her provisions. Food is the most important one: it gives her energy and stops her stomach from growling and distracting her. She buys a couple of candy bars and a bag of chips, and a can of cold Tab to wash it all down. Other provisions, not quite as important, are pens, highlighters, textbooks and notebooks. Once she has all the things she needs, she takes another look at the clock. Just as she expected, getting ready has fulfilled its secondary function of wasting time. Upon arriving at the library, Annie heads for the second floor. She always studies there, because that's where her friends study. Annie believes it's important to study with friends, especially the ones who are studying the same subjects, because they can help her with the material she doesn't understand. If all else fails, she at least can copy from them. And she might also need them tc awaken her if she falls to sleep. Most important, friends are good to have around for study breaks. Annie finds it hare to concentrate for a long time without at least one break. The way Annie breaks, one is all that's necessary. She doesn't take 10-minute cigaret or bathroom pauses — Annie likes to go to the Mugrack with her friend: for beer and popcorn. It took a while tc develop that style, but it just came naturally She knows that the success of her studying depends on the quality of her breaking. Before Annie realizes it, her time has rur out. No more time for studying or breaking because the library closes at midnight. Sc Annie, feeling quite satisfied at having spen another entire evening in the library, say-goodbye to her buddies and heads foi home. by Susan Budnik Events Sunday monday oePTerr N)o eoc jot 1 fuesday Wednesday thui 2 3 GkEE K U)EE 7 8 9 lO (H c.u 14 15 16 17 T V 21 22 tV,i k r k 23 24 mail cUcJC 7R 99 Naif c of .“in I still remember my GDI. He was blond and skinny, a disorganized kid who barely made it to the meetings. He wasn't very good at conversation, and for the first couple of days of orientation I had no idea what his major was. I had never heard of a PT before. The meetings were helpful anyway, as I recall. That skinny, disorganized kid really cared, even though he really wasn't very good at showing it. And although I had nothing in common with anybody in the group, they were my first friends at Marquette. I recognize some of those people still, but most of them I wouldn't remember. My GDL graduated a year ago (I thought he was much older than that, even), and I assume he's practicing PT somewhere. I'm a senior, and I guess I know the ropes pretty well. It might have been fun for me to have been a GDL myself, but my summer jobs never allowed it. My GDL, disorganized as he was, did a pretty good job of getting me off on the right foot here. Yeah, I guess I'd say orientation is a good thing. 116 .J E V STUDENT ORIENTATION AND INFORMATION CENTER HOTLINE MU ;-335 BROOKS MEMORIAL UNION 117 119 V Beer Hamburgers Beer Block Party Beer Fun Beer Music Beer Hamburgei eer Friends Beer Popcorn Beer Hot Dogs Beer Brownies Beer Friends Bee 121 Rabbit's Day 125 1980 was the year of the conservative, led by Ronald Reagan. What pollsters thought was going to be a close race for the presidency turned out to be a landslide. Republican Reagan beat Democratic incumbant Jimmy Carter by one of the largest electoral margins in history, 489 to 49. In the popular vote, however, Reagan won by a relatively much smaller margin of 8 million votes. At 69, Reagan is the oldest man ever to be elected president. The American people, young and old, expected a lot of this former actor when he took office in January 1981. We haven't seen the whole movie yet, but surely this will be his toughest role. Carter was called a victim of circumstance. In his four years as president, he was faced with high unemployment, inflation and rising oil prices in the worst economic recession in 15 years. Things were even worse abroad. There was the continuing hostage crisis in Iran, the continuing occupation of Afghanistan by the Soviet Union and a decline in U.S. military respectability around the world. All of this spelled disaster for Carter, and success for Reagan. Reagan's coattails proved long, too, as several other Republicans defeated Democratic incumbants. One was Robert Kasten, who defeated three- 126 term incumbant Gaylord Nelson for one of Wisconsin's Senate seats. The Republican victory turned out to be a nation-wide sweep. For the first time in 26 years, Republicans controlled the Senate. Many Democrats were understandably bitter. Milwaukee Mayor Henry Maier, whose office is non-partisan, but who usually supports Democrats, said after the election that he and other big city mayors have got some damn awful problems, now that a Republican was president. Carter's state campaign chairman Douglas Colter said Reagan's victory was the result of voting against Carter. Reagan's state campaign chairman Helen Bie, on the other hand, said the Republican victory was a positive mandate to government officials. The people are crying for leadership, she said. This election saw the rise of a new kind of leadership. Rev. Jerry Falwell and his Moral Majority campaigned against candidates who did not oppose abortion and other so-called moral issues. Through churches and by distributing pamphlets, the Moral Majority set out to defeat Democratic and liberal incumbants, such as Senators Birch Bayh and George McGovern. The Moral Majority was successful in these two cases and many others. The Moral Majority was very partisan, but in the 1980 election, John Anderson ran for president as an independent. He received no electoral votes, but he was able to pursuade eight percent of the voters to cast their ballots for him. Anderson drew much of his support from college-age voters. Neither Reagan nor Carter visited the Marquette campus, but Anderson made two appearances here. His running mate was former Wisconsin governor Patrick J. Lucey. Nevertheless, Carter carried the Marquette districts, as well as Milwaukee. Anderson's visits were not as influential as were Marquette's Young Republicans. They hosted candidate forums, held voter registration drives and campaigned vigorously for Reagan. When the beleaguered Young Democrats showed the Reagan film Bedtime for Bonzo, Young Republicans attended en force, and it looked as though they had staged the event. But students were not nearly as politicized as they had been in other elections, Colter said. That was apparent to anyone who had been around campus as the campaign wound down. by Craig Heiting You May Say I'm A Dreamer Who are the really important people of the Twentieth Century? Politicians? Sure, there have been a few, but by the time their rhetoric was sorted, their motives were examined and their impact guaged, they were out of office. War heroes? Not in this, the bloodiest century in history. Inventors? Well, Albert Einstein was important, but he's not the kind of guy most people would want their kids to be like. Rock stars? Maybe .. John Lennon? In a search for the really important people of this century, why not? He was the inventor of a new kind of music; he called for peace in the midst of a century of war; and he was not full of rhetoric. He lived for love and peace. Even today he makes us laugh, makes us dance, and sometimes, like a bratty little brother, makes us blush. But most of all, a decade after he wrote his most famous music, he makes us think. Lennon believed in love and peace so strongly that he spent the last 10 years of his life showing the world, in very unique ways, how important they are. Most of us at Marquette in 1981 don't remember when the Beatles were still creating. But we were children when they were in their weird phase. We were adolescents when Lennon was spreading his message by doing outlandish things, hoping his meaning would be seen through all the nonsense. And we became adults during his retreat, when he sought peace in his personal life. He was always a non-conformist. That's what bothered his detractors most: he used his prominent position to advocate individuality. On the night of December 8, 1980,1 criec for the first time since I was eight. That nigh I lost a friend; it was finally something worth crying for. Anyone who had heard his message felt the pang. Lennon devoted his life to peace, something we might all do when we leave thi school. He was stolen from us in the viles way, but he has at least achieved the peace he so heartily deserved. by Michael Macchione DW 128 Twenty years ago: Jan. 20, 1981: On this day in history, Ronald Reagan was sworn in as the 39th U.S. president. Also, 52 Americans held hostage in Iran for 14 months were released. The day the hostages were freed, after 444 days of unjust captivity, they instantly became heroes. Americans had been unjustly held in foreign prisons before, and Americans had been murdered in El Salvador only weeks before the Hostage Crisis ended. But the hostages were different than all the rest. When they were captured on Nov. 4, 1979, America was suffering from Vietnam Conscience , and was looking for a right place in world affairs. We had too many peacetime problems on our minds: inflation, crime, lack of trust in government and fuel shortages. The hostages helped to pull us together, probably because they reminded us that we have survived rough times as a nation. Before the Americans at the U.S. embassy were taken captive, the whole Iran thing was a joke. We mocked the Down with the Shah protestors who wore paper bags over their heads so as not to be recognized by secret Iranian agents. We scoffed at the irrational Ayatollah Khomeini. Even after the crisis began, we didn't really believe it. Marquette students, in a drunken rally, carried signs down Wells Street after midnight that read Eat Me Iran and The Ayatollah Sucks. But 14 months sobered us. Marquette joined in the celebration with parties and yellow ribbons when the hostages were freed. Television sets stayed on all night as the slightest developments were coming in. Maybe we will remember these national heroes for a long time. More likely, though, they will be replaced by new heroes. Hopefully, though, we won't look back twenty years from know and ask Remember the hostages? and have to look in a history book to refresh our memories. by David Thome 129 James Whitmore While Americans were choosing a new president on Nov. 4, Tony award-winning actor James Whitmore brought two former presidents to Marquette. And to boot, he threw in another great American. Alone on the Varsity stage, wearing only simple costumes and using few props, Whitmore portrayed Teddy Roosevelt, Harry S Truman and Will Rogers. The show was a bit pedantic at times, but the crowd of 600 left feeling entertained, and enriched. F. Lee Bailey The man who defended the Boston Strangler spoke at Marquette. On Jan. 20, F. Lee Bailey, who also defended Patricia Hearst and Dr. Sam Sheppard, told 850 people at the Varsity that the judicial system in the United States is not all it's cracked up to be. The United States judicial system is one governed by evidence, not truth, he said. He told young lawyers to concentrate on the future, but he also warned that they may not see many changes during their lifetimes. no Gloria Steinem Gloria Steinem tried to stir up some trouble when she came to Marquette on Sept. 21. She challenged the Catholic tradition of infant baptism, arguing that it unconsciously takes the right of birth away from women. She questioned the tradition of not allowing women to say Mass. She asked why Marquette doesn't have a child care facility for employees. All this she did, of course, in the name of the revolution. She said, I want to make sure there's trouble here tomorrow. But, for good or for bad, there was no trouble, and the traditions continue. John Dean John Dean, legal counsel to President Richard Nixon, spoke on Oct. 19 on the long-range effects of Watergate. After Watergate, people said the powers of the president should be defined. Yet, since Watergate, nothing has been done to change the role and duties of the president, he said. The 1980 presidential election was only two weeks away, and so interest in the lessons of Watergate should have been high. There were at least 475 students who were interested, but the Varsity holds more than a thousand spectators. 131 Sports arquette is a sports campus. Of course, everyone knows about the men's varsity basketball team. It draws larger crowds, gets more press and brings in more revenue than any other sport. But it isn't the only sport around here. Marquette has 10 other varsity teams, five of them for women. Although they don't bring in as much cash as basketball does, they are important not only to the people who participate in them, but also to everyone on campus. Many of the minor sports programs have not been around very long, but all of them are gaining support. There are also five club sports. These teams don't offer big scholarships, nor do they play in NCAA tournaments. But the enjoyment the players and spectators get out of these sports cannot be measured in dollars and cents. For the first time in 11 years, the Marquette men's varsity basketball team did not play in the NCAA post-season tournament. But they did get a bid to the NIT, which they had won in 1970, where the competition was tough. Marquette lost to Syracuse in the opening round. Among other good teams. Big Ten teams Minnesota, who Marquette had beaten during the regular season, and Purdue also went to the NIT. The season certainly had its low points. There was a one-point loss to Pan American in the first round of the Rainbow Classic in Honululu, Hawaii. There was a loss to Southern Mississippi, and consecutive defeats to South Carolina and Dayton. The season had high points, too, though. The Warriors won the Milwaukee Classic by defeating Clemson, and gave Big Ten power Illinois a scare in a one-point contest. The biggest thrill of the season came on January 10. On that day, the Warriors held Notre Dame to 52 points in a two-point victory. Somehow, that made the whole season worthwhile. ic ic 135 MU Opponent 106 Charleston 58 MU Top Scorer Schlundt (15) MU Record 1-0 69 Stanford 58 Rivers (16) 2-0 68 Illinois 69 lee (16) 2-1 92 at Minnesota 84 lee (30) 3-1 Milwaukee Clastic: 95 CS-Bakersfield 60 Wilson (20) 4-1 68 Clemson ....... 67 Rivers (19) 5-1 79 W Michigan {ot) 74 Green (20) 6-1 Rainbow Clanic (Honolulu): 70 Pan American 71 Lee (28) 6-2 91 Lovola-Mary mount 80 Lee (25) 7-2 80 Louisiana Tech 66 Green (18) 8-2 72 $ Mississippi 84 Rivers (26) 8-3 54 Notre Dame 52 Marquardt (15) 9-3 86 Memphis State 67 Schlundt (18) 10-3 76 at Creighton S. Carolina 66 lee (24) 11-3 89 91 lee (28) 11-4 73 at Dayton 85 Lee, Rivers (16) 11-5 78 at Xavier 59 Wilson (19) 12-5 58 at Cleveland St 54 lee (19) 13-5 60 at Wake Forest 83 Rivers (14) 13-6 75 at St. Bona 65 Lee (24) 14-6 65 Detroit 42 Schlundt (14) 15-6 78 Xavier 62 Wilson (19) 16-6 60 Louisville 79 Lee (28) 16-7 58 at UNC-Churolette 61 lee (16) 16-8 71 at DePaul 78 lee (26) 16-9 63 Loyola 62 lee (18) 17-9 73 Valparaiso at Florida State 58 Wilson (14) 18-9 78 81 lee (16) 18-10 91 Stetson 58 Lee (18) 19-10 64 at Wisconsin 53 Rivers (23) 20-10 81 Syracuse (NIT) 88 Rivers (28) 20-11 136 With six games left to play in the regular season, Marquette's women's basketball team had a 13-6 record. After those games were played, the record was 13-12. Coach Tat Shiely wasn't making excuses or apologies for her team's year-end performance, however. We play very tough teams, she said. We want to develop our program and our players, and the only way we're going to do that is by playing better teams. Shiely singled out senior Mary Spellacy, who was among the Warriors' top scorers and rebounders,’or her great defensive play. Junior Lisa Morin broke the team record for assists in a season and for a career. Among the team's tough losses was a one-point defeat to St. Francis, one of the state's top 10 NAIA teams, in the last game of the regular season. Marquette finished with a 13-14 record, after losing in the regional qualifying tournament in March. 138 139 140 Sophomore Peter Skorseth again led the men's cross country team, winning the Most Valuable Runner Award for the second straight year in 1980. The team kept up Skorseth's pace by finishing first in five of their eight regular season meets. Skorseth wasn't the only one who won an award. Coach Jim Allen was the 1980 National Catholic Cross Country Coach of the Year. Allen said his proudest moment came when the team won the first National Catholic Cross Country Championships at the University of Notre Dame. Out of the ;115 runners who competed at that meet, Skorseth placed second, Dave Uhrich, Outstanding Freshman of the Year, placed seventh and captain Joe Korevec finished twelfth. Allen said he has two objectives for the 1981 season. First, he said he wants to make the schedule more competitive. Second, he said he wants to reach the goal he set five years ago when he became head coach, to get to the NCAA finals. In 1980, the Warriors just missed making the finals by finishing seventh of 18 teams in the qualifying meet. by Mike Gasper Men's Cross Country In three years, the women's cross country team has gone from rags to riches. The 1980 squad had 19 runners, 17 more than in 1978, and finished fourth of 22 teams in the AIAW National Championship in Seattle, Washington. Eighteen of those runners were either freshmen or sophomores. Only senior captain Tina Vigilis will be leaving the squad this year. The girls really looked up to Tina, said coach Elliot Kramsky. She doesn't have as much talent as the other runners, but she worked twice as hard. When she came out for the team two years ago, she was nowhere near the runner she is now. Freshman Tracey Skorseth was the team's Most Valuable Runner. She gave a spark to our team. Tracey was the difference between us being a good team and a great team, said Kramsky of the team's number one runner. Skorseth, along with other freshmen teammates Laurie Hottinger and Diane Held made all-Wisconsin Women's Athletic Conference. The cross country team finished first in the Warrior Invitational, and earned a top spot at the AIAW Qualifying Meet. I honestly say that I didn't expect us to be one of the top teams in the country in only three years. I give all the credit to the girls for their effort, Kramsky said. Women's Cross Country by Mike Nieto 141 Vilis Cakans, a former All-American tennis vlCl l d player at the University of Wisconsin — Osh-TG n n i S kosh, looked toward his second year as Marquette's men's tennis coordinator with high expectations. Cakans, who is better known as Willie, said, Last season's (1980) record was actually pretty good. We played many tough teams. The schedule was too long, though. For 1981, the Warriors trimmed four matches off their schedule, to 23. Cakans said he hoped the team would finish above .500, but he added, I emphasize scholastics first. The tennis team lost two fine players be- fore the start of the season, but freshmen were expected to fill their slots. Half of Marquette's six starters in 1981 were expected to be freshmen. There were also two returning lettermen, Pat O'Connor and Greg Boyer. Cakans said that the younger team of 1981 seemed more concerned about tennis than the team of the previous year. He said that with an emphasis on fundamentals and with renewed intensity, the men's tennis team should easily net a winning season. by Mike Gasper Women's Tennis For the second year in a row, the women's tennis team went undefeated in WWIAC Division II play. Overall, the team finished with a 9-4 record. The team is to make its second consecutive appearance in the WWIAC regionals in May 1981. In 1980, the team finished third there, and missed going to the nationals by one-and-one-half points. Coach Sharon Randolph, whose six-year coaching record is 52-17, said no player was singled out for the MVP award in 1980 because every member of this team is valuable. There is not one person who is solely responsible for our success. Three players did have outstanding seasons, however. Sophomore Mary Cornell and junior Robin Barksdale won first place in WWIAC doubles competition. Andrea Foeller, a sophomore, also had a good year. Randolph said, There was really no problem winning the league again this year. Our goal is to reach the nationals in June. Home meet attendance was excellent, Randolph said, and the team is gaining notoriety all over the Midwest. by Mike Gasper 142 The 1980 season was the first in the NCAA Mid-East region for Marquette's varsity soccer team. Coach Joe Born said his team had one of the toughest schedules in the region. The team made it through that schedule with a 10-8 record, its fourth winning season in a row, despite losing star offensive player Hayden Knight to the Edmonton Drillers of the North American Soccer League. In addition, half of the players in 1980 were freshmen. Born said some of the teams Marquette played in the last two seasons are refusing to the Warriors again. The key, Born said, is od recruiting program. Two of the play- ers this program has netted over the last three years are Peter McIntosh and John Dueker, who were high scorer and Most Valuable Player, respectively, in 1980 The chances for further success might dwindle, however, Born said, if the scholarship funds are cut off. That might happen if the team doesn't become financially self-supporting in the near future. The team hopes to find a campus location for playing games. Until 1980, games have been played at 36th Street and Clybourn Avenue. by Mike Gasper Men's Soccer Golf coach Charles Nader said the 1980 season was characterized by inconsistency. We would play well at one meet, then the next meet we would slack off, said the coach, who has been at Marquette for 27 years. The golf team's dual meet record was 2-1, the loss coming to the University of Wisconsin — Parkside by one stroke. They defeated inter-city rivals UW — Milwaukee and Milwaukee School of Engineering. Senior Tom Reuter was the team's medalist in 1980. Nader said, He was our number one man all year. Tom was our most consistent player. Reuter was one of only two returning players. The Warriors acheived moderate success in invitational meet play. They placed fourth of 16 teams at Stevens Point, fifth of 10 teams at the UW — Parkside Invitational, and third of nine teams at the Lawrence Invitational in Appleton, Wisconsin. Men's Golf by Mike Nieto 143 Women's Volleyball The women's volleyball team finished second in the Division II Wisconsin State Championship in 1980. The team was plagued with injuries during the season, and finished with a 26-25 regular season record. Four of our six original starters were out with injuries, said coach Tat Shiely. Sophomore Katie Van Derhoef played injured, and she and senior captain Janet Kulinski were named to the all-WWIAC team. Katie has come a long way since coming to Marquette. She was our most consistent player until she was injured, said Shiely. The team also finished second of eight teams in the University of Wisconsin — Whitewater Tournament in October. At the end of the season we won with determination and perseverance, Shiely said. by Mike Nieto 144 Men's Wrestling It's difficult to win a wrestling meet when you start six points down. But that's what the wrestling team had to do in 1980-81. Before the start of the season, the team's only heavyweight left the team, and so the Warriors had to forfeit at that weight class every dual meet. Yet, with four meets left, the team had a 6-6 record. Coach Dan Jones said his most consistent performers were 142-pounder Bruce Purdy and 177-pounder Curt Lock. Lock, a junior, is a former freshman All-American. The highpoint in the season, Jones said, came when Marquette took second in the 11 team National Catholic Invitational Tournament. Jones said that although there was some fan support, most people don't even know we have a team. People aren't aware of what great spectator potential wrestling has. We've had some really exciting athletes. I think that if people would come out to watch just one meet, they'd see how much fun it is, and they'd show up for more meets. 145 146 Men's Track The men's track program at Marquette is on the rise. It's been two decades since this campus has had something to cheer about in track, but in 1980 the record books were rewritten. During the outdoor season, 10 records were set and one was tied, and during the indoor season, 12 records were set. Among those records, the ancient record in the 200-meter race, set in 1932, was broken by captain John Rydeski. Peter Skor-seth, Wisconsin high school distance running champion of 1979, set four outdoor records in 1980. Marquette's cindermen took first of 16 teams in the Carthage Invitational, and won both of their dual meets. Coach Jim Allen explained that the team competed in Division I in the NCAA for the first time last year. We also placed respectfully in the Central Collegiate Conference, he said. In 1980, Marquette finished ninth of 21 teams. The year before, Marquette finished eighteenth of 23 teams, and finished last in 1978. The program is certain to continue to improve, since the Warriors have 21 lettermen returning for 1981, and Coach Allen said he had an excellent recruiting year. Also, captains Rydeski, Jeff Grant and Pete Armbrus-ter will be seniors next year. In 1981, the Warriors hope to leave the opponents standing in the dust. by Mike Gasper It takes a long time to build a track program, said women's track coach Elliot Kramsky. On the other hand, in just three years, Marquette's women's varsity track team has gone from last in its 14 team conference to one of the three best. The 1981 season followed a good recruiting off-season, and the team started fulfilling MC its coach's great expectations immediately, winning its first two dual meets. Kramsky said he expected the team to be strongest in the distance events. Freshman Laurie Hottinger is the leading runner, he said. Hottinger qualified for national competition in the two-mile run this year. Women's Track 147 Club Soccer Soccer arrived at Marquette in 1980! Actually, there had been a women's club soccer team in each of the previous three years, but in 1979, Marquette had a difficult time fielding a team for some of its scheduled games. But 60 women came out for the 1980 squad, said coach John Sweeney, and if they all showed up at practice, they all played. A lot of these women came out not knowing that a soccer ball is round. The goal this year was to teach them the fundamentals, and to have fun, Sweeney said. The team finished with a 4-5-1 record, not bad considering that a large proportion of the team's members had never played the sport before. Enthusiasm was so great in the fall, that informal practices and games were held during the spring as well. It was the first time the club functioned at any time other than in the fall. 148 Club Football The club football team lost all seven of Its games in 1980. That's enough to discourage most people, but not coach Charlie Potts. Potts said he has researched the history of the club football program at Marquette. He said that since its inception in 1967, the club football team has a cumulative record of 4-64-1. The main problem is that there hasn't been much continuity from year to year, he said. In addition, the club has developed a bad reputation. Potts said he is starting a recruiting program of sorts. He said he will contact players coming out of area high schools, and from cities in the Midwest that traditionally send many students to Marquette. The efforts will aim at players who still want to play football in college, but who probably could not make a large college team. I've talked to a lot of people, and I've found that my concept of the football team playing on a small college level — Division III teams within two miles of Milwaukee — is basically sound. There's support for it at the school, and around Milwaukee, he said. But it will be quite some time before the team will be even close to that goal, he said. 149 With four regular season games remaining on the 1980-81 schedule, the club hockey team was undefeated in conference play, and had a 15-2 record overall. Coach Lou Caputo said junior Dave Sar-nacki and sophomore Mike Costello deserved a lot of credit for that excellent record. Sarnacki was leading the team in scoring, with 28 goals and 10 assists, and goalie Costello was allowing only 3.5 goals per game. Caputo said the team probably peaked in 1980-81 because most of the players were seniors. He added that Marquette had some developing stars whose play should keep Marquette near the top for several years. He singled out freshmen Phil Manning. Everybody's convinced that we can compete as a varsity team, except the powers who decide those things, Caputo said. Our program here is run better than a lot of NCAA Division II and III teams, and we generate a lot more interest than most. The main problem the team has had to deal with, he said, is lack of publicity. Most people don't even know we have a hockey team, he said. Club Hockey After a few tryout sessions, club baseball :oach Rick Freeman said he felt good about he prospects for his 1981 team. He expected hitting to be the team's ■trong point throughout the season. We ;now we'll score a lot of runs. If we don't get hem early, we'll get them late, Freeman •aid. Pitching was the team's weak spot during he 1980 campaign, when Marquette was 15-13, and second in its conference. Seventeen players from that team re-urned to play in the 30-game 1981 season, hat schedule included four games against tate champion Milwaukee School of Engi- neering, and state technical school champion Milwaukee Area Technical College. In addition to the returnees, Freeman said the new players, who played in several practice games in the fall, seemed to have something to add to the team. Our pitchers were inconsistent last year, mainly because they were inexperienced. There were seven freshmen on the staff. Also, our pitchers get better as the weather warms up. Most of our opponents are able to go south to practice, but we have to stay here. It takes a while to get warmed up, he said. Club Baseball AC 151 Recreation Cl verybody's always complaining about all the work there is to do around here. If it's not phil, it's accounting, if it's not Spanish, it's physics. And what's worse, there's never enough time to do it all. And why is this? Are we suffering from Homework Overload? Are we being crushed beneath the wheel like the poor protagonist of Herman Hesse's novel? Or is it that we are just too busy having fun to notice that the Tuesday that 10-page paper is due on is in fact next Tuesday? We all seek a happy medium between studying and recreation. If we study now, we must recreate later, and if we recreate now, we must study later. Both, it seems, are inevitable. Not tall enough to make the basketball team? Well, then how about a pick-up game, or some tennis, raquetball or swimming instead ? Got nothing to do but gurgle beers on a Friday? There's Alternative to the Bars. Even the tennis courts are free. Got a score to settle with the third floor? Get into the same intramural league, then. But make sure you get the right sport — there are 37 intramural sports. Your game getting a little shabby? Then take a few lessons, or, if you don't have the cash, take in a free clinic. Getting a little flabby? There's no excuse around here. Even if you're not a jock, there's jazz dance, and yoga courses, too. And all of this is right on 16th street. You couldn't even work up a sweat if you jogged over there, to the Rec Center, that is. 1S6 CI It be the winter of the night as five hip malchicks trod refrigerated Wells Street — newspaper lies strewn and grey, insulating vagrants' worn clothing and adding to the aura of it all. What say we hit Hegarty's? inquires Mr. Spanks, he of the Our Gang face job and quick rhetorical comeback. Not a chance, loser, responds Pugnacious Pete, a manic droll type who deals with words like Jimmy Cagney on crystal-meth. The beer's flat, there's too many law students, and it's a loser's Nirvana. Not so, replies Wally Jones, a bemused character who is given to drunken blackouts, lost causes, and wants to go back to the Joi-sey Shore. At least they got Dion and the Belmonts on the jukebox. Trash, says the Pug. Westward on Wells head the malchicks, coming to a spot formerly occupied by Ker-nan's Tap — home of the Grateful Dead and the Eddie Cochran Memorial Juke. Now be it called O'Donoghue's, new, refurbished, crowded. Abbie the Barkeep runs this ship. Let's meander, says Tex the Ladies' man as the boys herd themselves past Charlie the Bouncer and into a Schroederized mass oi down jackets. Wally punches up Yardbird on the juke, Michael the Coke (prez of the Straw, Blade, Mirror and Old Style Club grabs a beer, Tex grabs a freshman wench and the Pug looks for the lavatory. And now the 'Lanche, announces Pug as the malchicks move their Cons and Top-Sid-ers across 15th Street. Broken bottles encrust the floor inside. Coke heads for the bar, Tex goes for the pool table, and Wally checks to see if Archie is gonna kick him out. No such situation occurs as the malchicks wedge into the crowd that they've seen for three years, and will see for at least one year more. Wally engages a bottle of Mich in conversation. Tex shoots stick and tells assorted 158 ladies that something's just come up. Coke spews out a plethora of one-liners and tugs on his cardinal down vest. Mr. Spanks converses with the Bull at the bar, while Pug threatens bodily harm at anybody not of this liking. Trash, he mutters. The five malchicks scoot west from the 'Lanche and move on, passing Grunt's — an amalgam of what they once were and won't be again. To the Gym, cries Coke, and the others reel off behind him in a drunken winter's fog. And what of the Gym, me groobies? — with its rivers of floating people, suffocating temperatures and assorted status of mind games. Hey Kano, yells Pug to the keep-bar, how's about some refreshment? Kano, happy to oblige, slams down the bottles, takes the green tender, and the malchicks drain 'em. They are ready for more. but the little hand's on the one and the big hand keeps moving faster. Showtime, people, goes the disconnected voice. Mr. Spanks has already wobbled home, unscrambling his brains as he went. Coke doesn't know where he is, and Tex has departed with the female of his choice. Wally's passed out in a snowbank on Wells; Pug is in another fight — keeping control of the situation. Other droogs go and catch Attack of the Screaming Blondies at the Real Chili cinema, but the malchicks just float home. It's time for them to rest the eyes for a while, since it's already Saturday morning. Saturday night's just around the corner, and they'll play the whole scene over again — unless they get wheels to the East Side. by Tom Sal Salley 160 When 25 students stuff themselves into an partment with about nine half-barrels, it in't no history exam study session going on. t's a party! Let me tell you about this guy Higgs I .now, who throws the absolutely most ex-ellent parties. Like last week. He comes in late — to his own party — arrying this big shopping bag from Kohl's, te says he had to go get the essentials. So he goes into the bathroom and puts this pink plastic submarine into the toilet bowl, and next to the toilet he puts some steel wool — out of toilet paper, you know. Then he pulls out about 10 cans of Hi-C and four quarts of vodka, and dumps them into the bathtub. Voila, wapatuli! After the potion is mixed and iced, Higgs buzzes into the kitchen, where the barrels are kept, and passes out the official party buttons. They say: Kohl's, home of the price Cutters. continued on page 165 SINCE IS24 INTERIOR DECORATING CAHrCTS-ORAeeRIES-SUPCOVERS-UI HOLSTEHy.WAULPAPER.8EOSPneAOS 6634 w. NORTH AVENUE-WAUWATOSA. Wl. 53213-PHONE: 771-5370 163 164 continued from page 163 But the bag ain't empty yet. Out of it he pulls a twelver of Pabst. Hey, I didn't buy it 'cuz of the beer, he explains. He dumps the cans on the floor and punches a couple of holes in the carton, and then puts it on his head. Whoah — a party hat! Sliding into the living room, he puts the Stones' Shattered on the stereo. It's time to jam. So he puts these two empty ice bags on his feet, grabs a plunger and jumps up on the couch: Shattered, sha-doo-bee. The song ends, and it's time for some Cheap Sunglasses. After about a hundred hours of jamming and continuous consumption of beers and Nacho Cheese Doritos, Higgs decides to pay a little tribute to the Porcelain God, only to find that some jerk flushed the pink sub down into the sewer system. Oh well, that sure ain't all that ended up there on that night! And it sure wasn't the worst, either. By Sue Budnik 165 The Arts ine arts? At Marquette? Sure, we have them. In fact, art is a part of our daily experience. We have, of course, a fine collection of works from all ages and from all over the world. But that's only part of the Marquette artistic experience. We also have movies at the Varsity and the Mugrack, and the plays in the Helfaer Theatre. We have the chorus and the various bands, and the grill concerts almost every Friday. Not everyone might agree that all of these fit into the category of fine arts, but they all are nonetheless art. And on this campus, there is enough art for everyone — all we have to do is look for it. cz Above right: lean Fabre, a Belgian conceptual artist, gave two performances in October. Above left: A recent acquisition, from the Chagall Bible series. Right: Another recent acquisition. Opposite page top left: Dr. Curtis L. Carter, Chairman of the University Committee on the Fine Arts, and Dr. John Pick. Opposite page top right: Rudolf Arnheim, President of the American Society for Aesthetics. Opposite page bottom: Dr. Carter takes a close look at a prospective gift. 1M It was a good year for the fine arts at Marquette. The University Committee on the Fine Arts hosted the annual meeting of the American Society for Aesthetics, several new works were added to the university collection, and Dr. John Pick gave a series of lectures in the fall on fine art. Dr. Pick retired from Marquette in 1975. He was chairman of the University Committee on the Fine Arts, and had been named winner of the teaching excellence award for 1967. He joined the staff as a visiting professor in 1980. He died of a heart attack on Feb. 6, 1981. 169 170 MU Chorus 171 MU Band 172 Right: Thomas Schimmels and Lisa Lonergan played the main roles in Tartuffe. Below: Schimmels during a dramatic moment. Opposite page top: Robert Brink, a guest professional director from New York, offers Thomas Cound and Cindi Desmond a few pointers. Opposite page bottom: Another scene in Tartuffe. The Marquette University Theatre 1980-81: MU Tartuffe, September 24-28 and October 1-5: Theatre Moliere's study of hypocrisy. A Man for All Seasons, November 12-16 and 19-23: a moving drama about Sir Thomas More, and his faithfulness to God during the reign of Henry VIII. Ah Wilderness!, February 11-15 and 18-22: Eugene O'Neill's comedy of adolescence and small town life. Guys and Dolls, April 8-12 and 22-16: Damon Runyon's Tony Award-winning musical comedy. 175 Varsity Theatre Concerts Music In The 'Grack 176 177 Yipes!- A Rock Band 179 There wasn't a film controversy in 198 and that's news. In 1978, the university banned Last Tanf in Paris from being shown on campus. Tl reasoning was that it contained scenes offe sive to Marquette's Catholic tradition. Tt much sex, in other words. The masses revo ed: This is censorship! The next year the school did not ban ' Clockwork Orange. The reasoning was th it had passed through a new screening pr cess. Some students, however, decided practice a little self-censorship. Too mu violence, in other words. The masses revo ed: Why do you make us look at su filth? 180 There was no controversy in 1980, but Monty Python's The Life of Brian was shown at the Varsity. Nothing offensive to the Catholic tradition of the university in that flick; no reason to walk out. No sex, no violence, just plain old blasphemy of Jesus Christ and Christianity. The irony, the irony. The selection process begins with a student, the Popular Films Commissioner, who looks over a bunch of films and picks 30 or so that may interest the masses. These 30 are submitted to the Council of 600, a group of sage students, who having been chosen at random, vote for the movies they want to see. The Top Ten pass on to the next test, the ASMU Programming Board. From there, it's out of the students' hands. The Student Activities Office gets the next crack at 'em. The guts and grades of the films are given a thorough going-over. If the Motion Picture Association of America or the Catholic Office for Motion Pictures thinks a movie is too naughty, it's back to the old catalog for an alternative. As if the poor films haven't gone through enough already, the director of Student Activities gets one last shot. If HE likes them, they're in. Then it's up to the students again. m POPULAR FILMS mar $£P 5 Meatballs n Being There 70 Breaking Away 76 The Seduction oi Joe Tymon OCT 3 The Jok n The life of Boon 18 Ton 24 ...And Justice For All 31 The Fog NOV 7 All That Jan 14 Interiors 15 Annie Holt 77 Kramer vs. Kramer DCC 5 Ha location- Vanity Thoatcr Tim -. rOO 930pm Admissions SL50 under graduates S 2.00 others 1XM1H Utlll UT US IMTIRTAIM YOU I ™ HI M CLASSICS “ U •. 21 1 In- Hikes 1 ik-rel 1 1 . .1 I ril4w- l-JH-an III 11 - Uiw iImI Kntirvtl 1 Imss i iirl ill im N«i|i 17 1 hiiiin lrr«ll MJi.i k 31 ( riim iiml 1‘iintdiiiitsM «k;i; i 1 him; 1 Km II In Kin - liV Uni s 1 .IU ,onU Ukl 15 • ll.nus-l M tin 1 illlil IMftuk 22 IV iik • ! iIk 1 nil... y W lc utter 1 linviKij m Halts .liner M A. 5 Stilts III lln 1 nirei 13 Itidu- III Ul 1 ltt;li l 'MivHirrv ii Vlints KiIiInoi 1 HI. 1 il«T .il S|H 1 ll HUIrl III 1 mini: Ms Hus si iy SNUYS mu. nuersiinii jmismsi . I «iu i it hi i MMIISMJ UMIY«l cz 181 Communications n u ]l I 11 • • • u- ------- —1 wf our •”Pl4 In m lutrnliw „ in '111’ • MttaM m r« a{ our co u . toaptorf u u r U M n •mmn . I 1 11 r« ll| Ull't, And • ver since thev were founded in the early part of this century, Marquette's three publications have been closely identified with the College of Journalism. MUTV, and more recently WMUR, have been linked to the College of Speech. But the goal of each is always to oe in touch with the students and to present the news and features important to everyone on campus. It's not an easy task. The communications operate under severe limitations. Any editor or director will tell you there's never enough money in the budget, and prices are going up. Either talent is scarce, or perhaps many of the talented people just don't bother to volunteer. The hope is that enough talented and dedicated people will volunteer to get the job done right. No matter how many people show up to work, however, the communications' staffs are made up of students. They learn by doing, and sometimes they learn by doing wrong. And after a big mistake or during a crucial deadline, when the day stretches far into the night, it doesn't seem worth the bother. But in the long run, we all know it's been worth it. WMUR 184 18$ Picture One — Entertainment Dept. Bottom Row: Laurie Tibbs; David Danielson; Patricia Haven; Mark Lawlwer; Dan Bark (Director). Second row: Chris Or berg; Kathy Fealy; Kathy Faber; Wendie Zimmermann; Rick Duplanticr; Tom Miskelly; Bob King; Dolly Kerekes; Heidoi Olingcr. Not Pictured: Bob Henke; Mia Macareno (Assistant Director); Jim Mitchell; Mary Heekin. Picture Two — Promotions Dept. First Row: Tim O'Connor (Promotions Manager). Second Row: Robin Richardson; Patricia Haven. Picture Three — Department Heads Bottom Row: Duncan Macdonald (Production Co-ordinator; Lauri Gastler (Sports Director); Dolly Kerekes (Sports Director); Karen Morrison (Assistant News Director). Second Row: )ohn Ferder (Technical Services); Brian Kahn (Station Manager); Terry Prosser (Traffic Manager); Tim O'Connor (Director of Promotions). Third Row: Brian Wensel (Business Manager); Patrice Barton (General Manager); Dan Bark (Entertainment Director); Bob King (News Director). Not Pictured: Mia Macareno (Assistant Entertainment Director). Picture One — Technical Services Bottom Row: John Ferder (Technical Services Director); Bill Sodas; Nanci Pileggi. Second Row: Terry Prosser (Traffic Manager); Duncan Macdonald (Production Co-ordinator). Not Pictured: Joe Pausback; Marty Gianotti; Beverly Reda; Mike Hctzel; Rob Fisher; Robin Farmer; Paul Rasky; Fritz Krornschnabcl. Picture Two — Sports News Dept. First Row: Dolly Kerekes; Susan Kleincrt; Bob King (News Director); Rebecca Reeves. Second Row: Marcia Thurnbauer; David Danielson; Jeff Iordan; Bob Sarver; Nanci Pileggi. Third Row: Keith Adams, Elaine O'Grady; Mike Nieto; Brian Hanley; Eric Skiba; Tom Christensen; Kathy Droz; David Rice; David DeGracc (Assistant Sports Director); Kathy Fealy; Karen Morrison (Assistant News Director); Chris Traxler; Lauri Gastler. Not Pictured: Bill Mercuri; Kris Hutchinson; Steve Muckerheide; Joe Pausback. CZ 186 87 Bottom Row: Rich Core (News Editor); Tula Connell; Jeanninc Klein; Peter Tvarkunas. Second Row: Lauren Stanley; Helen Ernst (Managing Editor); Tony Kennedy (Editor); Len laCara; Ann Dorough; Stephen Downes; Carol Zaz aro; Roberta Pa-Icnica; Jon Drummond (Editorial Editor); Teresa Hines; Tom Mor-phet; Greg Miller. cz T88 TRIBUNE Tribune Ad Staff: Diane Kovark; Tom Salvatore; Carrie Klug; Dave Barnet (Ad Manager); Tom Waldk-rich; Eileen Mallen; Michael Cody; Ann Dougherty; Bill Van Paryv 189 Journal Bottom Row: Mike Nadcl; Nancy Mon-roc; Maude Campbell; Andrea Brox; Julie Santapoalo; Craig Helling. Front Row: Kathy Murphy; Helen Miller-night; Laura Foote. 190 191 192 Hilltop What am I gonna do now? Laura Mueller asked herself shortly after being named Hilltop editor. This job is too big for a naive West Allis girl like me to handle alone. In despair, she sat down in front of the Plankinton Mansion and imagined her own destruction. Moved by the sight, Mary Liz Meany, who just happened to be walking by, offered Laura to share in her bottle of cheap wine, and to panhandle a dime off of the sullen editor. After a few snorts, Laura told her new friend her story, and Mary Liz said, I just happen to be very insterested in the history of this school. And so she became alumni coordinator. The two rejoiced, and this attracted the attention of Robin Rosentreter. Hey, what's the party for? she asked the happy twosome. They told her, and she said, But won't you need someone to sell the book? Why not me? And so she joined the staff. At that time. Sue Pace and Cindy Zirbe were walking past, and they wanted to get ii on the party, too. When they found out wha the celebration was for, they said, Won' you need pictures in the yearbook? We cat take pictures, and so can all of our friends. So they joined the staff. It just so happens that they had been t« Cousins a few minutes earlier, where the had picked up six sandwiches. So the shared their food with the others. But the didn't know what to do with the remainin sandwich, so they decided to be charitabl and give it to a poor soul who was diggin through the rubble looking for food. He ex plained that he was a starving young writei Hey, Laura said, we need a copy editor -I how would you like that job? And so Dav Thome became copy editor. And together they toiled to produce really good yearbook. It wasn't easy, but the did it. And there was much rejoicing. The Vivid People -= Left: Laura Mueller, editor-in-chiel. Bottom left: Robin Roscntrctcr, ad manager. Bottom right: David Thome, coordinator of verbiage. 193 Organizations eing involved is a kind of therapy. We all know the value of being able to divert our energies into things we like to do, and despite what people say about Marquette, there is plenty to do. There are athletic organizations, musical organizations academic organizations, social organizations, pre-professional and professional organizations, and the list goes on. Organizations take time and energy, but the efforts pay off. Most of all, it's comforting to know there are other people who like to do the same things we do. The bars, the Rec Center, the parties, the Varsity movies, the grill concerts and the studies all would wear on our nerves a little bit if we didn't have organizations to participate in. Twenty years from now, we all probably will remember our frats better than our philosophy and our clubs better than our accounting. Phi Kappa Theta Fraternity Brothers (in no particular order): Michael J. Ardoin (Administrative Vice President); Michael Bensing; Fred Botta; Joe Bretl; Kevin Burke (Director of Perpendicular Fun); Keith Campbell (Treasurer); Michael Cashin; Chris Clem; Larry Dolder; Thomas Fahey (Weasel Master); Terry Fitzgerald; Leo Ford; Fred Geldcrman; Neil Gibbs (Director ol Nocturnal Activities); Buzz Haas; Fran Hagen; Bill Hagcrty; John Haynes; Rick Hepperla; Lindsay Jones; Steven D. Kennedy (Secretary); Joel Metz; Michael Muzi; Daniel R. Poranski (Executive Vice President); Dennis Poranski; Terry L. Relzke (President); Mark Schoenenberg; Terry Spencer; D. Bert Swartz (Weasel Master); Mi- chael Uriel; Bob Weidman little Sisters (in no particular order): Debb Barth; Ellyn Barry; Cheryl Dejewski; Kelly Flatty; Kathy Griel; Debbie He land; Barb Jalovec; Jackie Levy; Becky Rockwood; Lucy Yogel; Peggy Andc son; Sue Boesch; Collette Campbell; Bonnie Capitani; Kathy Dejohn; Dc bie Deleon; Peggy Dentinger; Sue Dewalt; Sharon Dzikowski; Cathy FI herty; Peggy Finnegan; Mary Gozder; Betsy Hand; Mary Hepperla; San lignon; Karen Lucas; Mary Meunzing; Liz Murphy; Ann Park; Sally Raft; S Schmidts; Nancy Stcll; Sue Sullivan; Liz Wagner. Phi Kappa Theta fraternity represents a standard of excellence at Marquette University. Dedicated to a program that combines community involvement and an active social life, Phi Kappa Theta brothers and little sisters aspire to widen the intellectual horizons of the campus and seek to inspire in each fraternity member creativity, justice and leadership. Phi Kappa Theta is a social-service fraternity, and with over 60 brothers and little sisters, it is also the largest at Marquette. 198 Delta Chi Fraternity Worn Row: Pam Rush; Kimmy-Lou B. ladcsic; Jackie Parolck; Liu Mlmcr; Barbara Bergen; Daw Miller (Alumni Advisor); Charles Vincent Maloney I ncy Oriatti; Martha Cilge (Sweetheart); Laura ferronc. Second Row. (President); Jim Pettay; Rick Loschetter; Frank Bielewtcz; john Wmklcman. ssy Heinsclman; Laura Pauly; Margaret Parolek; Mary Ann McFadden; Fourth Row; Tim Burkart; Myron Vitucci; Ernie Foster (Recording Secrc-I) Colcn (Assistant Pledge Master); John Lang (Vice President); Vincente lary); Mike Gates; Mark McLennon (Corresponding Secretary); Steve Hen-rio (Foreign Correspondent); George Bach (Treasurer). Third Row: Mike nessy. Filth Row: Bruce Bode (Sergeant at Arms); Chris Howard; Tom Tracy k (Pledge Master); Rick Kozlowski; Paulien White; Renee Maribell; (IFC Representative); Steve Monte; Ed Wells. The Delta Chi Fraternity was founded on October 13, 1890 at Cornell University. The Marquette chapter was established on April 30, 1977. A social-service fraternity, Delta Chi promotes brotherhood, academics, community service and various social events. The brothers of Delta Chi are supported by a little sister organization that shares all benefits. The chapter house, located at 1615 W. Kilbourn, serves as an ideal focal point for all fraternity functions. GET THE ITCH. Mock 7 Pollock; Clyde Foster; Jungle-Boy Bachorski; Char-leans Barrio. Second Row Dickey Koi; Pledge Rrck; Gazebo Vtnkleman; tang-Wang Third Row: Bool Bode; Tim Burkart; 'bet The Jet Miller; Baby Huey; Steve Hen-Dong; Jimmy Row: Steve Stosh; Johnny Cashed; td Tort-Babes; Frank 'icturedI 199 Triangle Fraternity Bottom Row: Cathy Markwiesc; Sue Voith; Cathy Frid; Connie Pirrung; Karen Danielson; Shawn Skiba. Second Row: Bob Cross; Pat Swartzell; Ber-nie Crisostomo; John Dombeck; Steve Weber; Scott Calhoun; Tom Sielicki; Jim Beyer; Pete Behrens; Steve Michalski; Dave Bonin; Mark Servi. Third Row: Joseph Agvon; James Kristapovich; Terrence Baker; Scott Bergeman; Mike Schutten; Tim Kobb; Tom Sparacino; Rafael Fernandez; Marc Shantz Not Pictured: Mike Freyer; John Follett; Steve Cage; Cedric Gardner; Pa Cries; Mutsumi Ishii; Clyde Mathews; Chris Novak; Ross Purdy; Mari Rinaldi Ann Copps; Marie Ferris; Josey St. Louis; Mary St. Louis. Triangle Fraternity — The fraternity of engineers, architects and scientists. 200 Evans Scholars Bottom Row: Dennis Bartimoccia; Eileen Haggerty; Kathy Halm; Grace Shaughnessy; Mary Carroll; Tim McGann; Mike Krumbein Second Row: John Potocki; John Petik; Kevin Brady; Ken Filippini; Tom Michalski; Pat Me Long him. Third Row: Tom Gocppncr, Chip lens; Tom Roth; Tim Anderson; larry Brady; Kurt Regncr. Fourth Row: Jim Halm; Kevin Barrett; John Dahlquist; Mark Shelfer; Jim Shaughnnessy; Jim Mahoney; Mike Chiutti; Terry Hartl; Terry O'Keefe; Steve Szottak; Dave Ferry; Mike Carroll. Fifth Row: Mike Coeppner; Phil Conrardy; Tom Morrissey; Mike Moran; Mark Fur Janie; Jim Murphy; Dan Roche. Seventh Row: Pat McKenna, Bob HrvoJ; Jeff Jones; Mark Snicgowski. The purpose of the Evans Scholars Fraternity is to develop scholarship, fellowship, initiative and a Christian spirit among its members so that they may become true gentlemen and scholars, assets to this fraternity and assets to the university. 201 Zeta Beta Tau Fraternity Bottom Row: Pat Farrell; Barb Hawk; Amy Falcone; Mark Siettmann. Second Row: Lenore PihRoffer; Steve Condit; Cyndie Thompson; Thomas Mariinsky; Thomas “Chopper Russo (Treasurer); Joseph Bennett (President); Mary Slawnikowski. Third Row: Timothy Carvey; Michael Short; Jeff Gorski; Nick McManus; tarry Frank, Michael Sposito. Not Pictured: Vincent Ingrilli; •_ David Butsch; John Scndik; Dave Burant; Mark Cronin; Jim Nader; Jerry Numrich; Frank Grossman; Dawn Lower; Patty Kopp; Bobbie Zimmerman., 202 Latin American Student Association Bottom Row: Edwin Cardona; Cyretha Irving; Maria Rivera; Luis Garcia. First Padre Bill Pauly; Eddie Fernandez; Carlos Remedio; Orlando Nieves (Secre Row: Marcela Angelo; Evelyn Garcia; Connie Angel; Rafael Fernandez tary). Third Row: Jorge Rodriguez; Carlos Garcia; Francisco Besada; Hilton (President); Edith Calderon; Madeline; Roberto Stuart. Second Row: Jaime; Perez. The Latin American Student Association of Marquette University was founded during the school year of 1975-76. The founders of the Association were Manny Quevedo, a Chicano, and Victor Goicochea, a Puerto-Rican. The Association's membership has increased from approximately five students in 1975-76 to about 60 active members in 1980-81. The Association's major goals are: (1) to foster a relevant and positive understanding of the Hispanic Culture by the Marquette community; (2) to provide an organized and productive base for the Hispanic students at Marquette University; (3) to establish productive channels of communication between the Association and all other segments of the University; (4) to increase Marquette's awareness of Hispanic contributions to all segments of American society. The Association has sponsored programs such as: Hispanic Heritage Week, films, art displays, panel discussions. Speakers, community service events and Spanish Masses. 203 Sigma Tau Delta And English Association Bottom Row: Nancy Wdowicki; Brooke Barker; Linda Prodzinski; Cathy Markwiese; Anne Mikutas (President); Lynn Bcitz (Secretary); Mary Clare Kozlowski; Patty Chcmers (Vice-President); Katherine Kappas. Second Row: Neil Super; Eve Adamczyk; Maureen Brock; Therese Andres; Rock Rickcrt; Lee Bromberger; Dr. lames Stephens (Moderator); lack Conrad. Third Row: Barbara Neuwald; William Foy; David Danner; Matt DeWaelsche; Robert Duffy; Bob Lorenzo. Not Pictured: Jennifer Amend; Elizabeth Cleary; Catherine Cmiel; Paul Dwyer; Paul Falk; Amy Ginther; Frank Kavanagh; Lisa Kaechele; Ann Kosta; Charlene McEvoy; lames Niguet; Anthony O'Brien; Mary Pungercar; Ann Strassman. Student's Society For Science And Engineering Bottom Row: Clyde Matthews; Pamela Hadnot (Treasurer); Ra-chcllc Smith; Diana Acevedo; Terrence Baker; Second Row: Walter Fayne; Phil Browne (NTA Advisor); Ken Moone Jr.; Gary Becton; Tony C. Rivers; Darryl D. Davidson; John Betties (Secretary). Third Row: Greg Matthews (President); Eric land (Vice-President). Faculty Advisor: Dr. C.| Crandall 204 Business Administration Student Council The Business Administration Student Council represents the student body in the College of Business. Major activities sponsored by the BASC are a freshman faculty get-together in the fall, the pumpkin sale for charity at the end of October, a career night in November for all university students and the Bus. Ad Dinner Dance in February. Bottom Row: Mary Keane; Lynne Laverman; Danna Ko-zerski; Anne Nichols; Philip Tar-ashuk; Jim Ryan. Second Row: Allen Chovinard; Michael Car-nock; Jerry Madigan; Henry Becker; |ohn Burns; Edwin Stremlow; Judy Smith; John Walter. Third Row: Tom Wcntlmg; John Simonis; Mark Strauch; Crg Krauska; Steve Karson. Not Pictured: Mary Kay lacke; Colleen Roberts. Alpha Delta Eta -A professional organization devoted to promoting social development and providing academic advancement for the profession of dental hygiene. -May we all reflect upon our fond memories of this past year and cherish them in our hearts. -From Hell Week to Hayrides, From Circle Inn Parties to Mary Kay Demonstrations, From Children's Dental Month to Dinner Dances ... And let's not forget those Bagel Sales! Bottom Row: Patty Evchuk (President); Cheryl Wilkins (Treasurer); Pat Barsamian (Vice President); Sue Birdsall (Secretary). Second Row: Diane Katzer; Laurie liegel; Kerry Dwyer; Sharon Thompson; Sarah Godcrsky; Vicki Vcscio; Third Row: Rita Lake; Sandy Rokavcc; Liz Kon-rath; Gail Roznik; lynelle Gred-Icski; Dawn Liss; Beth Becker; Michele Danaher. Not Pictured: Jodi Bagdasarian; Eileen Cronin; Trish Tone; Mrs. Barbara McMillan (Advisor). 205 Leo's White Row Loonies Bottom Row: Dan Scsil; Mary Stefanic; James Stebane; Ray Glaser; Tom Ourada. Second Row: Mike Thelen; Mary McCabe; Chris Bedford; Tim Harney; Lynn Rosenberg. Third Row: Joann Carey; Li Gorski; Carolyn Eder; Terry McGrath; Bea Bacchic; Mike Stowe. Fourth Row: Mike Kozlowskl; Randy Tomsyck; Linnie Morrissey; Mary Heekin; Jim Mitchell; Debi Newton. Fifth Row: Juanita Ull sperger; John Huebncr; Mary Beth Roesser. Not Pictured: Lynn Schulz; Jennifer Cheyne; Tom Schaefer; John Hogan; Mary Kay Horton; Phil Bain. Women's Club Soccer Bottom Row: Mary Bensing; Jennifer Mount; Sandy Fischer; Lisa Fohey. Second Row: lean Kun-kel; Sheila Miller, Nancy Burns; Jeanette Luccy; Charlene McE-voy; Jean Buckley. Third Row: Janet Golden; Sharon Squinto; Jenny Beck; Mary Beth Schwaller; Nancy Braun; Monica Schlickman. Fourth Row: Mary Beth Roesser; Sun H. Cho; Suzanne Trapp; Treacy Beirne; John Sweeney; Mary Jo Polanski; Susie Muscch; Maria Zanoni. Not Pictured: Sally Jo Barron; Jean Crampton; Julie Tobin; Lisa O’Hearn. 206 Phi Beta Phoxes Bottom Row: Kim Austin; Gina Duggan; Second Row: Connie Kastenhob; Paula Milke; Susan Sehring; Lee Kwjtcrski; Heidi Suttncr. Third Row: |inet Swanson; Bridget Millonig; Wendy tvenson; Terri lessup; Hansine Schumacher. Rabbits Athletic Club Bottom Row: Robert Hawley; John Hcaly; Robert Smith; David Karcher. Second Row: Ken Griffin; Tony Floramo; Chris Pedroli; |ohn Halek; Roman Pauley; Kurt Malz; Ion Cyganiak; (Original Alumni) James Jarocki; David Gray; Frank Koelsch III. Not Pictured: Robert Gonderman; Mark Kosikowski; Chris Kobe; Mike Bastion; Dr. Robb, Advisor. The Rabbits Athletic Club was founded in 1959 by Roger Abbott for the purpose of promoting both social and intramural activities on the Marquette Campus. The Club was built on and has kept going because of the pride, determination and enjoyment which many young men have found through their participation in and affiliation with the Rabbits Athletic Club. ow 207 Delta Sigma Phi — Professional Business Fraternity Bottom Row: Kevin Dittmar; Marvin E Hist on; Amy Barry; Barbara Rausch (President); Linda Gardner; Tina Moy; Patrick Wait. Second Row: Sandy Poppe; Beth Randall; Kyung Kucharski (Sr. Vice President); Susan Wilhelm; Bcrnadett Sedlak; Chris Biesack; Kitty Kevin; Terry Jessup; Leslie Fox. Third Row: Marty Wolf; Todd Mokwa; Joseph Dorlack; Chris Swain; John Ledvina; Mike Calteaux; John Roche. Not Pictured: Gary Bieda; John Glynn; Joyce Hayden; Elizabeth Hei-dmgcr; Simon Joseph; Connie Kastcnholz; Janet O'Hern; John Oliva; Jim Peterson; Ann Schnorbbach; Don Slowik; Mary Stefanec; Rick Wiegand. Sigma Phi Epsilon Bottom Row: Carolyn Horton; Liz Nowlan; Debbie Winner!; Cindy Zirbcl. Second Row: Kathy Sullivan; Nancy Munroe; Mike Jackoboicc. Third Row: John Brennan (President); Laura Sweeney; Jason Johnson; Alec Dobson; Carolyn Geeene; Steve Karson. Fourth Row: Frank Schirack (Vice President); Laurie Tibbs; Karen Petrovich; Lori Simon. Fifth Row: Charlie Phelan; Pete Sumnicht (Recording Secretary); Robert Frank; Tom Slater (Comptroller); Chris Reeves; Ed Manning; Charlie Parrilli; John Golden; Matt Dale; Scott Cannon; Tricia Dillon; Steve Luczak. Sixth Row: Pam Paige; Tom Westphal; John Kelly; Brien Cos-tigan; Mike Williams; Larry Cox. Not Pictured: Andy Squitieri; Gregg Stewart; Greg Wagner; Mary Heekin; Marga Luglio; Sue Pace; Mia Macareno; Marcia Rowley. 208 Marquette University Cheerleaders Bottom Row: Carmen Caviles; Kathryn Alheid; Dawn Spinell; Tricia Collins; Martha Johnson; Sandy Rokavec; Linda Krysiak; Tricia Dillon; Dianna Dentino (Co-Captain); Barb Carpenter. Second Row: Rick Ursitti; Steve Crasley; Phil Hendrick (Co-Cap-tain); Bill Fantry; Tony Piucd; Shannon Saulsborry; Jim Wellman. Third Row: Rondell Sheridan; Ashley Avery; Thom Moore; Nick Voegeli. Sigma Delta Chi — Society Of Professional Journalists 209 210 Inter-Residence Council IRC is the Inter-Residence Council which acts as the governing body of the students living on the Marquette University campus. We are composed of an Executive Board consisting of an Executive President, an Executive Vice President, Recorder, Treasurer, and a Corresponding Secretary. A representative from the Office of Residence Life serves as an advisor also. Filling out your Council are the individual hall presidents and representatives from each of the housing facilities on the Marquette campus. Above: Bottom Row: Jack Rhodes, Vince Vcntlella, Mike Williams, Rick Poirier, Elmer Mathews. Second Row: Meg Nesbitt, Mary Abunassar, Trish Faucher, Fran Fata, Lynn Wers, Pacia Caswell, Flora McMartin. Third Row: Denise Neville, Jenny Smith, Ann Cocks, Steve Pellctien, Simone Perusse, John Glazier, Dan Brodrick. Jim Beck. Fourth Row: John Frank, Tony Floramo, Tim McDonnell, Ron Rothfusz, Rick Rabs. Fifth Row: Jeff Lowrey, Katie O'Donnell, Liz Ryan, Ron Kurprers, John Milbrankt, Charles Reader, Tim Breen, George Rhyner. Right: Bottom Row: Flora McMartin (advisor), Steve Pelletier (pres.), Denise Neville (recording secretary), Second Row: Ron Rothfusz (corresponding secretary), George Rhyner (V.P.), Tony Floramo (Treasurer). Carmel Hall Residents Bottom Row: Daniel Hurricane Bertram. Second Row: Tom Ho-dag Sabol, Mary Sullivan, Laurie Hohmann, Marcie Levy, Michelle Quinn, Nancy jo Barr. Third Row: Alan Goslowski, jill Huhn, Tom Slater, Chris Creulich, Mary Lamor-eaux. Fourth Row: Bob Giescn, Dirk Decker, julia Mark, Mike Weebs Weiby, Dan Kelly. Laura Mueller. Fifth Row: Leo Grill, Dominick Picc Piccininni, jlm Cowboy Drury, Amy “Ames Krebs, Pam Lulu Bieiefeldt, Jeff Pryor, A. Raino Trifinoff. Sixth Row: Kevin Bang Bang Meredith, John Skatch, Paul Herrick, Bob Sebire. Italian Club Bottom Row: Mary Bonfiglio, Josephine Palazzolo. Second Row: Nancy Giardina-Papa, Nancy Mamone, Rob Bartolonc, Jerry Cacciotti, Ann Talamas, Ann Bilotto. Third Row: Bob Lorenzo, Rick Ursiti, Linda Pas-cucci. Alex Gulotta, Peter Sorini, Joanna Russo, Carmclo Giardina-Papa. 211 Gatsby believed In the green light, the orgiastic future that year by year recedes before us. It eluded us then, but that's no matter — tomorrow we will run faster, stretch out our arms farther_____And one fine morning — So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past. — F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby 21J Business Administration Marquette has offered business education since 1881. and in 1910 the Robert A. Johnston College of Economics was established. The College of Economics offered both business and journalism training until 1916. when the two disciplines separated. In 1923. the school was given its present name, the Robert A. Johnston Coiege of Business Administration. The objectives of the college, to prepare people for careers in marketing, banking and advertising, haven't changed much over the years Today, the college offers Bachelor of Science degrees and a minor in business administration. Masters of Science degrees are offered through the Graduate School. Dr. Thomas A. Bausch was named dean in 1978. He earned his B.S. in economics at John Carroll College. Cleveland, anc earned his M.B.A and Ph D. at the University of Indiana He is a member of the Betc Gamma Sigma Board of Governors and the Standards and Initial Accreditation Committees of the National Association of Coiege; of Business. Dean Thomas A Bausch FRAf AIBANO PETER AfiMBPUSTER MARY ARTZ DOW ATANASOFF «AL J BAROElE 1633 NNCl W65NW St Jc r Av 10 NorthCt 630 Smt Ay W20 W P n tio Ay tm ooa Pat 1 60636 C Oatw0 WI MO 2 D C u I 62626 ton Ay M 40036 MN«xA WI 63225 THOMAS BAWNA DAVD BARNES MCHAEl BASS) SUSAN BAUSCHELT HENRY BECKER 1 013 W Moh c 104{«ym $1 2644 H Slwr Estate Dr 6215 J ft r cn 660 N 67lh St W j««a9o a WI 53226 Uv nnor CA 04560 Spring U 6 . M 40466 Mkhttw H 46321 MN-O WI 53226 WAN BECZWEWCZ SUSAN BERGMANN GARY BCOA WUIAM BTOER ERC BLAZE VC 1300 S t2tn St 36?? W BrodK 0 O t?06 W lcmoj t 346 S Wooto 16024 Vtartn ion A.UM WI 53216 Bnrsr yom M 46010 M PtOSO C1. I 60066 lo G ong I 60526 Hatr+wooa I 60430 NANCY BLM 1? Coyugo O NorttOroO I 6006? RCHARD G. BLOSSFELO 466 Ator, ftrtKM l 60’26 MARK BOBAK t04 tattoo Po CcMn l C«y. I 60400 OWSTOPF€R BOCCUMN 35 N wd Av DcOtM fart. NV 106?2 i0 4ARK BONAHOOM 614 Eor lt Par WO n N 46606 DARLENE HAYES BOOKER ?043N 6m St Ww x wi 6321? STEVEN BORKENHAGEN W231S6047 Mala Or WcxA ma Ml S3t«6 MCHAEl BRACKN t32?0 v 0d ltom ooa l 60430 PAUL G BOEMER I 7666 NavOtO 00 Mfexx Ml 63317 THOMAS BREDEMAW 0300 N QUo way Evanston l 60303 Frank Abano — btramura . ASMU. Student Welfare Committee. Pre-low So oety. Deans Uil Peter Armbrjjtef — Alpha Sigma Nu. tr o 6 10 Apho PH. Vanity Track. Onentaton GOL Mary Art - SAM Dorm Atanasoft — Oub Ski Team. G t btramud Footbal cooch. tv nberjock QJb, The Ranch Neal J. Bar dele _ SAM. Pep Band. Concert Band. Jaw Ensemble Thoma Banna — Beta Apho P . Bela Gamma Sgma David Barnes — Alpha Sigma Nu. Pre-Law Society. Trtxne. ad manager Bui Ad Student Cotsicl. Boca 8a« champ Susan Bauscheit — Pi Sigma EpsAon. SAM. Wednesday Nfipt Cbb Henry Becker — Apho Sigma Nu. Com-mutercafions; CSA. dr act or ot special activities Scean Bergmam — Beta Alpha PH htro- rrudi Gary Bieda — Delta Sigma PI. W«am Bnder — btrarrxAa . EOP Tutor; AMA Mm Weekend, supervisor RA Enc Bkuevc — SAM tredi. AMA urn-mate Frsbee Tounament, coordno-tar. htrarrxxals Mart Bobafe — htranxrah Christopher Boccumini — McCormck RA. btranx ab Jed Knights Royal Order tor Preservation American Beon Pad Boemer I — btramaali MUSC. pres . AMA Mark Bortcboom — Ba etbal manager Danone Hayes Booker — Apna Kappa Apho Steven Borkenhagen — Beta Gamma Sgmo. Beta Alpha Psi Mchoei Brockb — Beta Apha Ps. AMA MUgeti Thomas BreOemann — Deorganaotion ot Semi Touch Baikefba btramurae. Avalanche champs. SAM Snorvsy Fan JON BRENNAN €LA BRENNAN LOWS BRtSKA DAVO BUDOE THOMAS BUDNK 3315 Hddsn Cr 1007 N Moron Avo 3740 N 10H1 Si ? Swan vd 2966 Souin 48tn Si Grand Doodi m 49S06 xretveo Wl 53545 Wajwoicaa Wl 53222 Wouwotoio Wl 53226 MwolAM Wl M219 John fireman — Slgmo PN Epslon. pet. Ski Out). Hodog CkJo Sheio Brennan — ntramurals. Sid Qub; SAM Louo Brak a — Beta Gammo S gmo Beta AphaPe DovW Budde — Alpva Sigmo Nu. Beta Gamma Sigma. Beta Apho PH: Honors Program. Student Conduct Board Robert Bun. Jr — Beto Alpha P Band. Busnen Honors Yolanda Byrd — BSC. V P. and sec . Student Conduct Board. Orientation. GOt and asst drector Thomas Byron — AMA. Orientation GCL ntranxrcSs. Dorm Floor Programming Thomas Campbel — Beta Apho PH; Aj-pho Sigma Nu. Varsity Go Intramu-cft. Schroeder j-boord A'earn Corley — MBA. MDA. FAlS; PC. Dir 01 pub c relations; Schroeder pes, Senior Week. Recreation Dir Mcheto Cartomogno - AMA Theresa L Carter — Delta Sigma Theta HMtoo; Tribune, mtrampats. ©C; ODorme Hal Could Pres Steve CastefcM — Soccer coach. Karate John CNrtchlgno — Soccer. Orientation. Pep Band. Concert Band. Jau Ensemble. De fj Who. ASMU Budget Committee Kevn Chopp - EOP Tutor. Rugby So-cer Peter Clark — Prelaw Society. Varely terns Dean Cognettt — Beta Apho PH. btro-mtrals Brian P ConooSy — Nurses Fan CPb. pes-. Wombats Ptemohond V P Mary-Jo Cooper — Beto Alpho P JUOY BURRll ROBERT BUSS. JR. LAURA BUTTEREELD YOLANDA O. BYRO THOMAS BYRON 920 E. Mown 4111 Dome 3 2211 TrawOOd C 723 W 92nd 31 104 Owe MtwOAee Wt 3202 lot) Wl 54427 B Paso. Tx 79935 Ocogo I 60920 1 MAUREEN CAMPBELL 907 toquce St Grand Bapdk M 49506 THOMAS CAMPBELL 1191 Showano Awe Green Boy Wl 54303 WILIAM CARLEY 1213 lefce hn Dr N tomgion l 60010 MOELLE CARLOMAGNO 661 NW 73rd Terrace Ramaton ft CHRISTOPHER CARPENTER 2179 N 481ti St MKwaAee WUXI RUTH CARRNGTON 336 N 17ih $1 MhwaJieo Wl 53209 THERESA CARTER 2175 leonard Awe CaLrrfeus OH 43219 STEVE CASTEIAZ 4547W Norwich Awe Mtwauiee Wl 53220 JOHN CHRCrtGNO 8109 MBwOLAoe Ave Wauwatosa Wl 53213 KEVN CHOPP 1848 Candewick S . lout MO 63131 PETER W CLARK 01 3 PheoMM Bui DEAN COGNETT1 213 ATOP Pthbudi PA 15220 PATRICK CONNELLY 6329 N Bo, Boge MtwoAee. Wl 53217 BRIAN P CONNOLLY 1664 OkJ Tamery Qd MARY-JO COOPER 2224 N 67lti SI Wouwaioia Wt 53213 216 Beaver Dam. Wt 53916 MudWV OH 44236 ANN R CORPS TMOTHY COSHGAN LAWRANCE L COX ROBERT CRAtG DAVD CREAGAN 6041 H Ben Otto 2861 N 46m St 9910 Pomono ft 3460 Aneou Btvd 3045 Pomer C UhvoAee. Wl 53212 MhvouAee. Wl 53210 Bemovoa MD 200)4 Bm Grove Wl 53122 Hoseroor I 60422 GEMMA CREMERS SUSAN CRONN JAMES B CURRCR ROBERT CURTIS STEPKN R. DAK. 1719Ungme« w t 5 l cwn Bo. 11 B1 3 359 Putry $1 «755 lo.ng cn Ct 9mr 0w 160026 CMCOQO I 60643 «rionv«e W 54944 Oorendon H ( St Pod Ml 56116 SUSAN DALTON JAMES M DALY I ROBERTA DAMANO DALE DANAKY DEMSE DEANS 6902 Yo tf o Dr 700 leu Ave 2000 Fond du IOC 13489 lake Ave 212 M ary J Pniitx 0h. PA 15206 Wlmetie I 60091 MtwaAee Wl 53218 lekewood. OH 44107 Don VM 53529 Ann R. Copps — Tnongte lithe Safer Lowronce I Co • Sigma PN Epsion AMA Robert Craig — EOP Tutor tn Spanah David C eagan — Intiamuoa Club 112 Gemma Cremers — Speak-Out Oub James B Carter — AMA Band finance V P . Symphonic Band. Pep Band Deja Who Stephen R DaN — Rugby, htranxsab Water Pdo Susan Dalton — Women's Cross Country Women's Trock James M Daly I — Computer Society, pres; Onentahon Data Ptocessng Management Association Dale Danchey — AMA htrarrvrah Weghftttng Oub Dense Deans -Omega Sorority VP; AMA. Executive Programming Board Marketing ntemshp Greek Week ChrstopherA Demse - 9r. CXb Pb S-g mo Epston Samg Club. ATs fluv PC AMA Jeffrey Dereszynski — Beto Apho Psi Vctono Dckman - Tower Hci J-8oard btramurals Cnanes Drtter — htranxrcSs. Concert Band Pep Band Dovid Bold — German Honor Society. Tower, dorm pros Ray W Donapowsfci — Beta Gamma Sigma Beta Apha Psi Marshal Doney — AMA David Doody — Beta Apha Pit Club Hockey KENNETH DELLEMAW 1020 Murray tans £ HjBertiA Wl 53033 CHRISTOPHER A DEMSE 416 W Wocaren Ave Oconomowoc. Wl 53066 JEFFREY DERESZYNSKI 3925 S Toy Ave MSoOjioe Wl 53202 JOHJ DESANTIS Bt t Genoa CXy. Wl 53126 VICTORIA DfCXMAN rarest lane Meredoeo I 63666 CHARLES DITTER DAVO DOLD 1901 IWwood 2225 W Jettonon St laJara Wl 54130 ScriVhekS I 62202 RAY W DONAJKOWSKI 1566 Scott Pd pi Wakwigton Wl MARSHAL. DOB€Y 6660 CancA Crete FfCrtrtn Wl 53132 DAVO DOOOY 1029 N knch Pen Qtape l 60066 217 PATRICIA DOOOY 6006 S ParkwM Cncqoo. 1 «0Mf JOSEPH DORLACK 6030 Gienwood o OmtOM Wl 53129 ROBERT OORSCH 00 Cl Mcmony. PA 16G37 MARYANN DORSt€R PETER DRlSCCXl 2637 OidO 0660 J oyr Glenview I 60026 Cheapo I 60643 Potrtoo Doody — SAM Joseph Dortock — Delta Sgmo f chart-cetor. Beta Gamma Sigma. Pre-law Soaety Maryam Donher — Alpha lamda Delta. Pr Eta Sigma Beta Gamma Sigma. ASMJ. out treat. treat. EOP Tutor Peter Dreed — Avdanche Society; Rugby ©A James Dory — AMA. Samg CkA Jamet CXncan — ntramuab Club 98. charter member Jom Dirk — ama lenefte Footbd Mdgets 906 CUD. Clarke Dark Anma Houle. Trou-Oroopers ltd franco CArr — Beta A£ho P . btranxr-ab, Coed Footbd and Battetbd Stanley Dyt — Marquette Ofhcicto Asto elation, btramurah Frank Fabetti — btramurats AMA SAM Kerry Fischer — Beta Alpha P . Beta Gamma Soma. EOP Tutor Nancy E Faher — Alpha Beta Avalanche. Student d Loyota Rome Center. Students for life. Campus Mrtstry Mark FitzGerald - btrarrxxds Ski Oub. Samg Oub. BTC fudge Tmothy Fitzgerald — Oub Footbd. Pugby. t9th Street Athletic Oub. A ko-txxxto Club, apprentice Paul Fletcher - NROTC Footbd. MJOTC lesle I Fox — Dona Sigma Pi Samg CkJb. CSA Mary A Fnttche — Dean's Uit; Tutoncf Assistance Program. Vokriteer Baby sting Sharon Gatocfier — Student Store. Board d Drectors Undo Gardner —- Detta S mo Pi AMA Diane Gartzke — Women's Soccer JAMES DRURY JAMES DUNCAN JOHN DUN FRANCIS DUNN STANLEY DYl 607 Seventh St hw Ot 1 Box 066 122 Hartxv Or 170 Coney Club Or 76 ftchocWcn Ave Austn K 56912 iee uo A 32746 tomgton I 60010 Warwick. 026M Norton MA 02766 FRANK E FALSETT1 12636 S Store MhvatAee. Wl 63207 SANDRA FEUS 3619 N Uth St WwUM Wl 63206 KERRY FISCHER t 3WS633i Kemt lone Menomonee lok Wl NANCY E Ft$ «P 10 lauei St KhQston NV 12401 MARK FITZGERALD Aooetree lane Spnno lake M 49466 TMOTHY FITZGERALD 4 Portland r Si lout MO 63131 PAUL FLETOtR 44 Gateway Ave Mkn HJ 06630 LESUE L. FOX 6636 Joe son Pan vd Wauwatoka Wl 63226 MARY FRtTSCHE 301 W Bnar lane Green Boy Wl 64301 RONALD FRITZ 633 N 21st St MwaAee Wl 63233 DA VO FULLMGTON 6430 S Sirran O New 6er v Wl 63161 MARK FURJAMC 11036 Avenue J Chcooo I SHARON GAUAGHER 63 Foretl Ms 0d ic o Burt I 60044 UNDA GARDNER 5644 w Aienon Ave Greenketa Wl 63220 DIANE GARTZKE 2726 N 72rxJ St Mhrtxeee Wl 53210 218 ELLEN GARVEY 2428 H 97m Si Wojwo oto Wi 63226 TMOTHY J. GARVEY 1B3B0 Tarroce Or Brookfeta WIU006 JAMES GERMANOS 1729 N 75m Avo ftnwood 1 60636 RANDAL GEROSA 12406 WrcJ txm M Bti Grove WI 53122 r l G68S 654 WaoObne Od •VWndM I 60035 JOH9 GLYNM 29 • B (avOT HJ 07002 ALAN GOSLAWSKJ 3000 Mr 66m St Otcago I 60632 PETER GRAY 442 N 49m $1 4wa w WI 63223 MARY GRMES 076 Etrabem S lorroord 1 60146 DOUGLAS J. GRUBER 2220 lcfee A vo weconkh Dapa Wi PAULA GUNDERSON 3663 Boyard Or CbA Oho 45206 ARMEN HADJMAN 206 Marmot Avo Soum MKvaAoo WI JOSEPH HAERTLE 6201 Homer MhrOukee WI 63207 CUFFORD HAGGENJOS JR. 2456 W Norm Snort Cheapo l 60645 MAUREEN HASKELL 14600 HMOeM Etn Grove WI 63122 DANfL MAUGH OO 7 6 bar« 00 Hopewol act NV 12633 JOYCE HAYDEN 2190 Brttlany Cl Brook AMO WI 63006 ELIZABETH 7€OMGER 1666 N Van ftsen $1 MKrOAM WI 63202 MCHAEL COKE HELLER flp i Tomonoo I 61779 Elen Garvey — Beta A ma Ps. Coed btrarrx cl Footbal Acccxning btem Tmothy j Garvey — Zeto Beta Tau cUm fcec or. EC. MJtple ScfercMOt Society James Germanos — AMA ntramurab Randal Geroso — Protown Care lands capng oartmeriMp Frank Ghergirovtcn — bfranvc . BF. Fan CUo Orientation Net Gtob — AMA. Pink Floyd Club. V P; Phi Kappa Theta. V P John Glynn — Beta Alpha P . Delta Sigma Pi. VP Pubic Acccxmtng mem m© SAM Alan GodawAi — btramurcb, Trtxme. photo edtor. Computer Sciences, techrkcoi aide. MJTV Mary Gnmes — Srg Ep Uttle Sater btro-mxtM. Douglas J. Gruber - ASMJ associate dkector ot corrmmcohons. AMA Armen Hodfnian — Sam and Groce Fan Out). Treat CVford Moggenjos Jr — Alpho Sigma Nu. Beta Alpha Pe. Busmess Admbatro-tton Counci Gym Club Moreen Ha el - AMA, SAM. Ski Club Daniel Mougpi — AMA btiamurals Joyce Hayden — Delta Sigma V P . pro tessonai octrvitles and special tasks chairman Elrabeth Heidnger — Beta Gamma Sigma. Delta Sigyno pi. sec Mchoel Coke Meier — Avalanche Society. PC. McCormick Hal BOG. MDA. MBA meida Hi — Dean's let. TAP Peter Moett — btranxrcfc Ski Ckjb. Moo seman. Gym Club. Little Brother ot FT Beta Foxes Richard Hoehne — AMA. Ski Club; btro-murals 219 SEAN FCNNESSY PO Boi 70 JOHN rtCKEY 1945 Chevy Chase BrookOMd Wi 63006 MELDA HI 5678 5 27th Sr k oJtee Wi 63221 PETER HOEFT 516 Tenonew Or Green Boy. wi 64X1 RICHARD HOEW 26 W BervteyOr Artngton Hepmt I THOMAS HOGAN 2006 Cottterfcne Cl WoOoVo W1 53 86 LAURA HOHMANN 2416 Orchard Beach M McHenry. 1 60060 KARLA HORST 3322 W Vera Ave Mh«x ee W1 53206 MARY KAY HORTON 2606 Or tf Ave Bocne. Al 63403 HUGH HUGHES 1122 S 65m 51 Watt A wi 53214 Thoma Hogan — R A. Tower Hal Loua Hofmann — AMA Avalanche SW CU Kano Horn — L« umouarw Mary KOV Horton — Bota Gamma Sgma. Alpha Srgma Mu. Beta Alpha P . Vanity Tam Onentatwrv G(X Hrgh Kjcrie — AMA. Programming chairperson ritrarTx afc ASMU. student activities programming Tem Jessup — Phi Beta Phoses. Delta Sigma Pt, Dorm Cound Richard Jcrtberg — Italan Club. Pome Center. Btcyde Club Edward Kodet — ntranxratt Ski CXb, Computer Society. E B Gym Mark Karbownk — Honon Program. Student ' Association of Marquette Ur -venity Joseph Kanch — Beta Alpha P . Pre-Law Society Steven Karate — AMA; Computer Society. Ski Club: btromuats. E B G Y M Steven Kanon — AMA. president EOP Tutor. Inrer-Ffatemrty Footbal. Judo Club: Intramural Eugono Kasper - AMA Vanity Chorus Connie Koatenhob - PM Beta Phoset. Delta Sigma Pi. Softbd. Bowing Club, ptramsacfc. Onentation Steven Katerinos — Beta Alpha P . president. Sean Keley — Rugby. In trams cfc Mke Maddock Run tor Fun Kenneth Kemofer — Beta Apno P Mark Kng — AMA. hframuds. Rugby: Wegh tiffing Oub West He Soacf Committee Gregory J (Orscteng — AMA Ptramucto. McCormick Hal. Boor governor Jean Klngeeen — AMA Anne leste Knight — Dorm CouncL VP; SAM. VP Joanne Korerac — AMA. publaty chairman. SAM. Vaety Chorus Wbam Krekei — Animal House Croquet Team, captain. McCormick Hal Dorm Cound. Schroeder Hal Drom Cosand TERRI JESSUP RICHARD JORT8ERG EDWARD KADLET7 MARK KARBOWMK JOSEPH KARtCH 424 Magra St 1315 Orford 501 BancroTt 5367 8 21 1 SI 1207 Wovorty Qr Pan Foreii. I 60466 Glenview. I 60025 Kngdord. M 69901 MwoJm W1 53221 ChampaQn I 61920 STEVEN J KAROLE 41 Weagewooa O W Herptorv MJ 07646 STEVEN KARSON. JR 2635 N 0cM A eqlon I EUGENE KASPER 175 Brehwood IM 0 3 Tacton A 07675 COhf KASTEhWOLZ KngtfonO Ocetvoce I 60621 STEVEN KATERNOS 4840 S Mem Way New Sadr W 53151 SEAN KELLEY 920O «r«b vadw. PA 16067 KEW'JETH KELMOEER 7221 W Banna Aye W ms Alt W 53216 MARK KNG 186 Ockrusr Ave Oarsni Hi GREGORY KPSCrtJNG 472 Sfcytng 9 vd Green Boy . W1 54302 CAROL KLEN 4221 S6lor A6 Mhvaukee W1 53221 JEAN KLNGEISEN 2541 S 62nd St Miwouee Wi 53216 ANNE LESUE KMGHT JOATNE KOREMC 322 W Man 7623 W Wtou Ave Cheere CT 06410 Mhvautee WI 53220 ANDREA KPAJACK WU1AM KREKEI 49 N Pars bvd 514 anon Ave Gen fhn l Sheboygan wi 530B1 220 NORA KRONER DAVD KRYSCK KYUNG KUCHARSXl ANN MARC KURTN STEVEN KUSTERS 010 N 14m St U31 s Slit St 5624 S Ktono vo 5625 S QuaSty Ava 2800 Twn Wot«n MMmm Wi 53233 . xaoo WI 63214 CutWiy. WI 52110 CoOchy. WI 53110 trarfctv 6. W153126 MCHAEl P. LADD 6815 W HhdOMPd CrystcS ICka. I 60014 PHLP J LARDNER 613 GraantoaT Ave W nat1e I 40091 MARK IAVN 15236 Cardan St PcSotna I 60067 GENE LEAR Of 18oi ISO Coflott. WI 54727 LOUS ANTHONY LEH? 2520 W CoyW Cheapo I 60643 MARK LEMBERGER PO 9o. 187 W laW r WI 54247 STANLEY L LEVEU.S 3406 N 14m S WI PETER K. LLOYD 010 N 62nd St MKWXA Wt 63208 JEFFREY LOtSELLE 011 H ITffiSt MK«XA« wi 53223 GABRCL A LORENZO JR. 1344 Hawmoma ion Gtwwww.l 60025 Nora Kroner — Dean's list. mtramurOh Baikoioal champcns. Pocquotbal David KryMk - Ski Club Ski Team Dean's List. AMA Kying Kuchanki — EOP Tutor. Detta Sio-mo Pt V P . AMA Ann Marie Kurfin — Pi Detta PN. French Honors Society. Band, sooct charman. VP.. Acodemic Senate. V P Steven Kusters — RC. Dorm Assignment Commrttee. ntram ats Schroeder Hoi go vet net. pres. RC Mchoet P Lodd — AMA. mtramutft Prep Lardner — ritramuaH. AMA Mark Lavn — Pt Sigma Epsion Vanity Bosketbai member 1977 NCAA Champions. Monogram Club. Thanks mom and dod Gene Lear — Vanity Chorus. Orient o-ton. Escort Service Lois Anthony Lehr — PI Gamma Mr Peter K Uoyd — Band, equpment marv ogor. Jeffrey Looele — AMA Gabnei A Lorenzo Jr — ptram ots Scott Lucas — Pt Kappa Theta Margarita Luglo — Sigma Pt Epston. ut-tte Sister Saang Club Mary Ame lynskey — SAM Ardmore CUb AMn Lyom — Onego Psi Phi, preedent. EC. MJOTC. BkJCfc Greek Couid treas BOCk Student Coiftci Canos Mocai — Stapharriner, erktor Manager Scperstaph Competition. C Maroos Annual Tequlo Sum Party 8ASC PA. htramuc Kift Mau — ntrarrxxcfc. Rabbrts Athletic CXb. atr ehc cnaman prevdent Stephen M Manden — Beto Apho P Brian Marco — htranxrah. MASH Club Daniel Marquente — ChaSef by the lanch STAMEY J. LOWE 2043 s our St WM AIs WI 63227 CARLOS A MACIAS 4906 Mcuwoi a Paso TX 70004 scon LUCAS W223 N7516 Cherry Hi Sussei. VS 63080 MARGARITA LUGLIC 4164 W Labon Ave MlwaAM. WI 63208 MARY AM LYNSKEY 320C lAxlson St Skefce 1 60077 ALVW LYONS 146 Granada Ave Ooosavart NV 11675 KURT MALZ 5161 W Oa o Snake I 60077 STEPHEN M MANDERS N70WI6776 Ctunw St Menomonee fdfc WI BRIAN MARCO ITOOTovkX Jolat. I 60436 DAMEL MARGUERITE 1004 Greenwood MWts I 60001 ParxWf Mart — htramurab. AMA. Moosemen. Oean'i Lit Mary Eton Markowiki — Woman's Vasty Tenna Team Timothy McOoncfcJ — Beta Alpha P . Beta Gamma Sigma. Honors Program, htramuah. Jam© McDonough — Apho Sigma Nu. Beta Gamma Sgmo ASMU Judad Admmstrator Mcheto L McKenna — AMA PC Floor kxx( chairman Jm McNamara — Pershng Met Simper Fi. Intramurals; UTE Loao McQjhn — Omega. AMA. htro-nxxab. Watson Out Kevin Meredth — Beta Alpha PS. Intro-mu ah. AvOanch© Ski Oub Jerome Meyer — Tape Kego Do. Student leadershp steering board. Campus Mnlstry; Pre law Society Tom Mezera — Sooal Director 4 Boa Schoreder; I Groduoted. AMA. Manager vasty Baskettx Geer go Mchoot — Beta Afha Ps. Beta Gamma S«gma pres. Alpha Sigmo Nu. htramurah: ASMU trea Mchool Mtas - Army POTC-OMG. NPOTC Pistol Team. CSA pres James Mlman — K of O. kitramurah Barbara Mscko — Sigma Pt Delta uttle Sater intromaah SAM. ASMU. Dorm Comet Vm Mitchel — Varsrty Soccer. Daniel Moakley - AMA. MU Pre law Society John Mooney — htramurats Gregory Moser — MU Chapter of the Royal Oder to Prevent the Extraction of the Am Boon Tina Moy — Delta Sigma Pi AMA Mrs Victoria Mroczkowski — Beta Gam-mo Sigma Mary T. Mueter — Beta Gamma Sigma Notional Nona Society VP. TAP Thomas Mirphy — Mugrocfc asst man; Rugby C ub. htramudh. West Hc4 RC rep. DoNy’s Deinquests JAMES MCDONOUGH 446 late Met A vo Crystal Lc o i coot-! TMOTHY MCDONALD 911 4 JSI xortxna w 53140 MCHELE I. MCKENNA 74 Mac Partway Sparta NJ 07001 MAPY ELLEN MARKOWSK) 3166 S 50 S RANDOLF MARK 1925 Eastwood Avo JM MCNAMARA 12 Ovortxoc Qd Bandoph Ml 07001 LAURA MCQUNN 0026 Wost «m St Palo MS. I 60466 BARBARA ME 7760 N 51st St 0to n Door Wl 63223 KEVN MEREDITH 3630 Greenro’ 1 Tortaco Now Sortn Wl 63151 JEROB MEYER OR «3 Green Boy. Wl 54301 TOM MEZERA FRAM( MCALE GEORGE MCHAH MCHAR D. MLAS JAMES MU MAN 16460 Scnro Mono 6237 1 0th S 240 Kenwood Avo K t S Knotwood C 0075 Woodto. Brooktou Wl 63006 MwaAee Wl 63221 Lbertyvee I 600 0 Sairvee. Wl 63060 St LOU MO 63127 BARBARA MSCKA 1437 CyOo Dr Napervte. 1 60640 TM MTCHB.L 1400 Codiy S LOUS MO 63131 DANEl MOAKLEY 16065 wiowood Ci Broofcfioia Wl JOHN MOONEY Pf i BtvorvWw Bd Plymomh Wl 63073 MCHAEL W MORRIS 603 Trod St OtfAOlh Wl 64001 GREGORY MOSER 646 Mcrtpan Avo Auara I 60606 TNA MOY 2700 n Canton A MhvoAoo Wl 63210 VICTORIA MROCZKOWSKJ 6010 W Morgen Ave MwaUi«e. Wl 63220 MARY T MUELLER 4170 Paadse Or. West West Bend Wl 63005 THOMAS MURPHY 5064 larrt Dr Oc town I 60463 222 KATHLEEN NAMOVC THOMAS NASH JUDITH MGGEMAW 7057 WK J 6900Norwdiao. 3210 S 39 S . M t. I 606M New Conara CT. 06 40 Wl 63215 LYNN O'BREN 2606 W Jworr Cheapo L 60646 JOFN A O'CONNELL 6110 W W PVwy V woM e Wl 63219 JANET OT€RN 56 ropM la. ScrrgMM I 62 04 JON OUVA 2621 N Mellon St Ummn Wl 63212 CHRCTOPVtR OTCU. 6222 6 ndanapobSi. Tun. Oua. 74136 EIEENPAD0EN 2760 lanowe a Nonrtxoc . I 60060 JOSEPHNE PALAZZOLO 43W161 OotoauQor la. Ebun i 60119 SARA PANTUSO UNDA PASCUCCl LEONORA PATTON LEN PAWLAK T MO THY PE ARSE 2607 Partnag 1536 Boro 823 N 24th 51. 2672 S 1916 S 2612 1911. Ay . ManrwM Wl 64143 6 rt« y I 60163 MKyauio Wl 63213 MhroU. Wl 63214 Roeiilcrt. I 61106 MARK PEDERSON JOESPH PEEPER RAMONA PEREZ EMANlEl PETERSON JAMES R. PETERSON 662Ch n ian M0 North 5 . 714 But Oy vd. 10146 S Vernon A v 138 South Ooy SI Ao'wvto OH 43666 BeiQKm Wl 63004 BQb. I 60120 Cheapo I 60626 D FW . Wl. 64115 Kathleen Namovic — ASMJ. exec sec . Dorm Corel Pre-low Society. J A Advaer Thomas Narfi — btramuab Beta Atm Pe. RC. proo dr ■ Orientation. GOl, W«1 HOI P A Judth Nggemann — Alpha Sigmo Nu CSA V P . pres . Student loodenhp Steemg Board lyrm O Boon — Sg Ep4 little Safer. SoAng CXfc btranxrab John A O Camel - MU Chorus. sooc coordinator. IntromuroU; Vornty Chorus Theatre Foosbal John Ova — Beta Apha P . Delta S«gma PI, frees , btrarntrab Christopher O NeA — btramurab Eieen Podden — Co-ed toottxs Onenfaton. GOl. Pre-low Society, treas. co-charperson Jo Pataodo — Pi Sigma Epston treat. btramurab. SAM. sec . rtcfcn Oub Sara Pontuso — Omega Sorority, Panheaervc Couid. pres . AMA Uido Poscucci — Germanstic Naftond Honor Society leondra Patton — Alpha Angel treas Pre-Low Society len Powiak — AMA Timothy Pearse — bframerds EOP Tutor. Floor Social Organizer Joseph Peiffer — Club BaseboB; miromurah. mtervorsity Christian Felowihip Pomona Perez — Pi Sigmo Epsion. AMA. SAM Emanuel Peterson — Apho Phi Alpha. Black Student Corel James R Peterson — Delta Sigma PI. AMA: btramurab: Rugby. Icemen John PtarAuch — Salng Oub: Ex-Cops AtNetic Oub btiamiAds Domwck Piccimn — AMA tec treat. VP.; Pre-law Society, troas . btrcmAOb Pedro Pwda — btramurab Beverly Pier oca — Sigmo Phi Delta, lithe Safer. PI Sigmo Epdon CSA exec bd Ski Oub Catheme Pbtoa - Beta Alpha PslVP. btramurab. Dean's Lot. Dorm Cound JON PFANKUCH 260 BcMkTMn rd Gr n 6oy. Wl 6430- DOMNCK PtCCNNM 6707 OtwoodDr Now MOO Hi N V 11040 PEDRO PEDRA 5707 KM wood P Batwna M3 20016 BEVERLY PtRACO 1231 S 37b St MwaUi Wl 63216 CATF€RNE PNTOZZI 3717 W Hah MeMorry. I 60060 THOMAS PlOOZEN PATRICK PROSSER PATRICK QUICK CRAJG QUT J RENEE RAOOATZ 9023 N M w-l 3297 r oydo 0d 41 P-ospocl Avo 525 N 20m Si 1222 S Onedo St Me . 1 60649 Shc oiMti.Or o 44122 Hartford WI 53027 Wwt 4« WISBJ3 Green Bov. Wi 51304 Thomas PkxlMn — Happy House 016 N 20tfi S . member Patrick Prosser — htromuds POd dub. MugtOCk Patrick ©uck — Bota Alpha Psi. hftamu-ah Roooo PodOotz — htramuds AMA Btjan Rasodi — Iniematiood Students Av-ioc.; Fraternal Odor of the Inflatable Sheep Ariheo Pads — Fiao Footbal. Block Student CouxH VP. FOP Tutor Barbara J Pausch — Oeja Blue Delta S ma Pi pres; AMA. Dean's Student Advisory Course Stanley Razny — Beta Alpha Pe Daniel Ped - DPA. V P HPS pres Wdter Rebenson — Rugby Intramuds. Onentonton GBl George Reuter — SAM edtor looking Gloss edtor mtramuds. ret. Ardmore Stein Club Thomas Reuter — Varsity Golf, captain Table Tenno unrveriity champion Peter Rchardson — Pus lor Ufo. chor- BUAN RASOOl 151 Boy 702 Kt) 7T2 Onawo-Ontano Canada ALTFCA RAULS 0653 Joe CO Or St icon MO 63136 BARBARA J RAUSCH 1661 Chdoewood lane St PaJ. MV 55113 STANLEY R RAZNY 712 tOctkiQ Cl .160172 DANR REAL 3661 Sfnoco St Stow. Oho 44224 man. WCCl. Senior Week. PC ASMU. P A Selection Committee Robert Ped — Beta A oha Psi Co een Roberts — Chestie Wostto s. 8ASC Euchanstc Mkvater West He Desk Pecep Rita Poquemore — J C Ponny htem-«Np Thomas Sdvalori — Trtxjne Ad Staff Mark Santocroso — Beta Afcha Pv. mtro-muds; Pre-law Society V P Tmottiy Seaton — Hockey David j Scheder — Zeta Beta Tau. Oub Footbal Marie Schmitt— Dorm Coutcf treas ; SAM Arm Scfmcrtxjch — Delta Sigma Pi. sec WALTER REBENSON 16452 S 165m 51 Tnefy Pan I 60453 GEORGE REUTER 623 la Ave Wlrrelle. I 60001 THOMAS W REUTER 400 Vernon Ave Thensvee WI 53002 PETER R1CHAROSON 11 Coochwood in Oocnetler MV 14623 ROBERT RCOl 2026 Mtytno Wammo on Or MhvaAee WI 53213 COLLEEN ROBERTS RITA ROQUEMOGE 35091 W Farvew l?d 032 W Hodey Occnomowoc. WI 53061 UtwoiAee WI 53206 THOMAS SALVATORI BRUCE SAMUEL MARK SANTACROSE 176 W Adam 11331 W Pome Ave 0443 Sueot Bdo Ermait t 60126 Hdes Comers WI 53130 G onvWw t 60025 JAMES J SAROMA JR 3614 W Manon MtwOUee . WI 55216 TMOTHY SC ALL ON 1140 Donegd in Nortrerook I 60062 DA VO J SOCOER 104 Cneokee Od 6eov«r Dam. WN 53016 MARC SCHMITT 1004 E OanddlAve Apcttton WI 54011 AhM SCHNORBACH 2615 W He cry in MedJOn WI 53002 MARK SCHUSTER Ml Oak Str t Soum MKvOlAoo wt 53172 RUSSELL SCHWEI 2451 S 44m Site ' WM1 AM. Wl 53227 ROBERT SCOn Hfm n Mi i ■ v rm oraarora DOVrojth MA 02747 VNCENT SCOTTO 20 Mcna % OV QOTMV. KJ 07446 JEANNE SEMROW 430 taico« «oce Part Dae l 60060 MO€LL£ SERWW 5335 S Moyknol Qrv ■■ MA S3461 DA VO SHORT 644 Com o Jo I 60435 NGRO SLADt 5244 Grandview Drtv Onoaxi Wl 53 26 RICHARD SWB8A w 62 4245 Tamaock Onv Menomonee N . Wl 53061 BLAP SLATER 4035 W Avert Sulfato Ny 44213 THOMAS SLATER DONALD SLOWK ROBERT SMITH MARK SNEGOWSKI JEFF SOfOAY 1626 5 T fc h 4200 5 36m Str l 4221 N Oloofi 10616 5 Sawyer 01 4 AocMton Wl 54911 ftanfckrv W4 53132 Mm 1 60644 Cheapo I 60665 Oitawo. I 61380 Marti Schuster — btramuctt Ru el Schw - Beta Apho PB. btro-mud Robert Scott - W1CUSA PR drector; AMA. ASMU. drector of government relation . Jaeger. TVO. Tne Howk. G Bu h Vbceni Scotto — AMA. btramurato West Hal Scoc Commrttee Jeanne Semrow — Schroeder Hoi. load chaBman. executtvo board. AMA. EB-GYM Mcneie Serwb — Beta Apho P Mar-cedettes. Ski Club David 9wrt — Rugby, btrarm d . Sti . dents tor life bgria S od — Beta AJpna P Bar Slater — MU Yodig RepuMcam Newsletter, news edtor. WMUR. News dree or MUTV. CSC. McCormick. DR Thomas Skater — Sgma Phi Eps on Mu Ooehs he Dondd StowBc — Delta 9gmo B Robert Smith — AMA btramsefc. Rabbits AWefic Club, freaiuer. load choBman Mark SnegowBa — Evan Scholars. ICEMEN Jeff Sondov — ASMU. ait dr ol govt, relation , pres election campdgna treasuer. Young Democrats. WSC. USSAC Stephanie Spotaro — Pi Sigmo Ep 4on. Treasurer. VP. NSO-GfX. asst dr R-nancid Aid Committee, secretary Dade Sperbor — Beta Alpha Ps Mary Stefanec - Delta Sigmo Pi. AMA Advertising CkJD Mchoel Steppe — Polticd Science Honor Society Mark Stout — Alpha Sigmo Nu. Honors program. RA. Pre law Society. if S Edwin Stremtow — Beta Alpha P Alpha Sigma Nu. btramuaB. BASC. class rep. CSA, vice president Kent Sutton — Ski Club. Ski Racing Oub. president Ski Racing Coordnator. Ski Racing, btramudi Wfcrn Sweeney — Beta Apha Pb. Acc ntemshp Oub Footbal btrarrwds. ASMU. senator. McComsck Hot. Gov STEPHANE SPA TARO 4263 AJet Onv Bprv 160120 DANEl SPERBER 7646 H 30m Sir ' MhvaJi . Wl 53210 MARY STEFANEC 2120 Arrowhead Ct Bm Crov . Wl 53122 NICHAEL STEPPE W452 NS427 Badge CW Monemcnee ( M Wl 53061 MARK STOUT 4401 WBamsOd Groveoort Oho 43126 emor Paul Thesmg — AMA EDWN STREM.OW 4604 N 43rd Street Brown Deer Wl 53206 KENT SUTTON 806 Heathen on Naperv . I 60640 WUlAM SWEENEY 1366 N Quentin 9a PdOlb . I 60067 JEAN TENNESSEN 2462 A N 60th Street Wauwatosa W 53213 PAUL THESTJG 1133 4t tanv MS Payton. Oho 45456 22S Mchoel Thimrrtg — Beta Alpha Pa. Fating Oub: Fraternal Oder of the Infioti-txe Sheep Rojo Thro — ASMU Programming Bd. PC; Floor Gov . YMCA. Hal prei asst hoi dr. RA Randal Tomsycfc — Beta Apha Ps Daniel Truetdde — Handstand Out) pres Janet A. Ufcperger — AMA. htramurcto Tutor Paul Umentum — Alpha Sigma Nu. Beta Gamma Sgma Dean' u 1; Intramu-ctt Foundation for Economics Education Richard Ursitti — AMA Varsty Cheer-leodng Mcftoei Van Handel — Beta AJpha Pa. htramuol Joanne Vergetts — Boto Gamma Sigma. fttramuals. Dorm Coinct AMA WWty”. Mar Wart — Hockey Patrick Wat — Brood of the World. EOP Tutor Kothloon Walsh — Beto Alpha Ps. mtro-muds. Campus Mrwtry Thomas Walsh — SAM AMA Intromaoh; West HOI. v P. social chairman John Walter — mtramaab. BASC Junior Rep . puWcity VP. Orientation. GOL SAM Terry Weinshem — AMA Gregory Wee — Varsity Thr eater, super of operations; Orientantion. GOt. Doard. SAM VP EbaDeth Weis — AMA Party Freaks. BSC. cdtural commeaoner Danei Welsh — Rugby CXb, htromura Senor Week Committee. MBA Patricia Wendlandi — Beta Alpha PS Brian Wensel — SAM. MUTV buslnots mgr, promotions mgr. Vanity Theater. rim Commtooner Richad Wiegond — Delta Sigma PI. SAM Randy Wlfong - AMA SAM. Ononto-ton AP. Zeta Beto Tau Thasday Nght Ardnore Oub Brvan Writer — ASMU MCHAEl TF WWG 1 20 Htcnno For tost laranp Mcfigon ROSE THJO RANDAU TOMSYCK OANEi TRUESOALE 411 Shody lane S66 W15223 Woodand PI 18611 Weitrm Ave CrFcfcn. MO 63366 Vtekepo Wl 55150 Hcxnewood I 60430 JANET A UUSPERGER 225 W Voder Od Foi Pont Wl 53217 PAUL UMENTUM 332 F Briar lane Green Boy. Wl 54301 RICHARD URSITTI 305 Dormer Avo A-COCSO CA 01006 CHAEL VAN HANDEL JOANNE VERGETIS 170 CreUwood Ct «0 Kog Oooa theoovoan f M Wl Martiora Wl 53027 MARK WAR 0056 O bcroudi Ba Bttcmingion. Kfi 55437 PATRCX WAIT 3240 N Knot Ter Wauwatota Wl 53222 KATREEN WALSH 345 Coteen Dr lombard I 60148 THOMAS M WALSH 1322 S Porlwnoulh Wetichetter. t 60153 JON WALTER 11356 WoodKno loop S lAcksorMte R. 32225 TERRY WENSFCM 1565 lookout lore Vookflekt Wl 53005 GREGORY J WEB 4461 S Moorland Bd New Mr Wl 53151 ELIZABETH A WRlS 2800 W MdMndVrd MhvaJceo. Wl DAMEL WELSH 10025 S Mamron Cheops I 60043 PATRICIA WENDLANDT WW Snckney Ave Wojwofoia Wl 53226 BRIAN WENSEL 22 W Avon Pd Partkde. PA 10015 RCHARO WEGAR) 853 N 10th Sr Mhvode Wl 53233 WILIAM WEGAND 070 Veroo lone lefce Forest. I 60045 RANDY WlfONG 641 w fary Chaen Mtwoukoo Wl 53217 BRYAN WNTER 700N SherKJan Pd Wodregan l 60086 TMOTWY WTTKOW1AK 4021 W Madecrett Or 226 Ftankln. Wl 63132 TRACY WIZG 0 007 Contra Av i aoooi MCMAa WOlFE 720 S WM, Ocfc Part. I 00307 TERRY WORGU1 505 CapNot Or (Wx m Wl 53072 JAMES WRIGHT i 3 i« m Hom «woo l I 6000 MARK ZEILMER 3933 S 69m St. M«roJiM Wl 3230 Trocy WtfOtd — AMA Mcfto ! WoMe — ASMU Senator; JEW Fan Club. Rugby pr . btranxrcB Terry Wotgu0 — Trt S gmo ftg Broth ; Fraternal Oder of the inflatable Sfeop. Typ etter Shepard Gar Jam Wnght - SAM. MUFB Steohen 2o«t ch - AMA Martt Zuehfce — Dean let Wacoran Federation of Young RepuMcan Thoma 2ymanefc — MJOTC Footbc . Or Team. Dept of Pubic Safety.; Porthole. Gouge student advisor Mark ZywtCki - AMA Scott Zywtcfcl — AMA STEPHEN ZOUJTSCH MARK ZUEHIKE THOMAS ZYMAf K MARK ZYWCXl scon ZYwiaa 11226 Country View 2400 W A« ewoocJ 157 f sr1h long St 3921 N 70 St 3921 N 70 St Meojon Wl 53092 GMroate Wl 53209 W arr«ve. Hi 14221 M wa e . Wl 53216 x oo Wl 53216 Joseph W. Aliota Kenneth J. tsamenick Thomas Nolan Elizabeth A. Baranowski Laura J. Karel Nel M. Novak Mtchaei W. Bassi Robert J. Kern Robert W. O’Brien Francisco M. Bayot Mary K. Kevin Christopher J. Ohmes Lawrence E. Benjamin Jeanne M. Komkven James P. Olson Randall L. Bergholz Lawrence F. Kraus Tyrus D. O'Neal Sarah M. Bircher David P. Krysiek Kevin P. O'Shae Joseph E. Bretl Bryan M. Kurdziel Mark P. Palmatier Randall H. Brown John J. Ledvina Wiiam A. Patch John J. Bruckner Martha C. Lewis Emanuel Peterson James E. Buehler Steven L. Light Gary J. Pollock Susan C. Cuene Lawrence M. Lopina Patricia A. Puccinei Michael D. Curtis Diane M. Lutsch Anthony P. Quartaro Charles M. Daly Daniel R. Martin Barbara J. Reynolds Thomas K. Davis Gerald L. Martin John J. Salamanski David A. Depas Mary K. Martin John E. Scherper Robert S. Dohe Mark J. Matt Stephanie B. Schmitz David S. Dries Patrick A. McKenna Linda K. Scott Russell A. Erickson Patrick J. McKenna Carol A. Sikich Edward J. Farr el John F. Melinger Charles E. Sislo Patrick M. Feely Barry D. Meyers Brian T. Skalski John M. Fox Masceha E. Miranda Patrick W. Smith Robert J. Fox Todd L. Mokwa Peter C. Sorg Charles M Gajan John P. Moriarty 1 Patrick K. Stanton G. D. Garrard Rosemary A. Noegele Susan A Stamper John P. Giery Kathleen A. Namovic David P. Stich Brian D. Grams Nancy A. Npper Donald J. Stone Alexander G. Greenberg Thomas Nolan Jeffrey A. Stray Leonard J. Gregory Nefl M. Novak Karl L. Strutz Randy D. Hanson Robert W. O'Brien Patrick J. SuSvan David J. Houser Christopher J. Ohmes Thomas W. Supplee Marie T. Heinen James P. Olson Luann M. Szymanski Robert G. Heinen Tyrus D. O'Neal Thomas J. Taylor IV Peter C. Hemmer Kevin P. O'Shae Paul J. Thome Mary M. Heneghan Mark P. Palmatier Albert G. Thompson III Mark T. Hershey Wiiam A. Patch Rose D. Thro Barbara L. Hoepfl Emanuel Peterson Edward J. Tomkovich Jerome W. Hotzheimer Gary J. Pollack Rosa M. Torres David W. Hume Patricia A. Puccinei Kathy J. Tsuchiyama Robert O. Hutchins Anthony P. Quartaro Bergen J. Voros Charles D. Ingrii Barbara J. Reynolds Stephen P. Walsh Steven W. Jacoby John J. Saiamnski Jeffry D. Weber John J. Jaeger III John E. Scherper Jere T. Wickert Simon J. Joseph Stephanie B. Schmitz Andrea M. Zaccagni 227 Dental Hygiene Orectoc I © D. Ginsbug The Program m Dental Hygiene was opened in 1923. Bachelor of Science degrees were first offered in 1950, and in 1975. a four-year curriculum was introduced. The program includes courses in the arts anc social sciences. Miss Tiflie D. Ginsburg was named director of the program in 1969. She received degrees in dental hygiene and public healtt from the University of Minnesota in 1955 and in 1966 earned a masters degree ir education at Marquette. Before coming to Marquette, Miss Ginsburg started her teaching career at the University of Tennessee, and worked as c consultant with the Minnesota Departmeni of Health. She has served as president of both the American Dental Hygienists' Associatior and the supreme chapter of Sigma Phi Alpha. She is currently a consultant for the Commission on Dental Accreditation 228 JOOt BAGDASARIAN PATRICE BARSAMLAN DEBORAH BARTH 56 5 CoSaga Port Ct. 2401 3rd Ava. 11425 N Towor Lana Poena W 5J40? So Mtw Wl 83172 Magjon. Wl 53092 MARCA BAUWENS KAREN BELLUCQ M0 N MontOar 3 4 Mj on Ava . Chicago. « 60666 Saatord. MV 11783 INDA BEVEl 8817 W Oowlord Ava MKvcxAae W1 83728 KAREN BBOfi. 3717 fa i®r Pd loCfOM Wl 54601 SUEILEN 8RAHM 6484 N 85m Sf MK xAa« . Wl 53224 NANCY BRAUN 1218 Weft wood loro Mariowoc. Wl 54220 USA BRENNAN 730 Granby H. E.. Wot’orv ONo 43061 DONNA BRti 511 Mark ! Si Mcrcrtncrv Wl MARLA 8RNGE Bou! 4 WOdJO. Wl 54065 ►CLENE BRODGNSW 56MTXMOCT rwToonou Ci 06677 DEBORAH BUSSEWITZ B B 4. 10 hoofcwood Cr BaOvW Dam. W 53976 USA CALBA 1428 A goma Or Graan6oy. Wl 54304 Jod Bogdosonan — Alpha Delta Eta. soc . J-Board. ADHA, Deni My Counci r'atnce Barsamian — Alpha Delta Eta. V.P. Deborah Barth — Phi Kappa meto, Utne Safer. Marcia Bouwera _ Dent Hy Counci, tec . VP Karen BoAjcci — Program Outreach; ntrarrxrah Undo Bov ol — Dent Hy Corel Chorus. ASMU. commuter senator Karen Bhchei — Alpha Sigma Nu; Class V.P.. treat.. ADHA. Orientation Nancy Bran — jadha. WramiAc Onentoton Lita Brennan — Dorm Pep Donna Br — JADHA Marta Bmge — Chorus Helene Brodgrukl — htranvols. ADHA Escort Servce. FFA Stephanie Choconas — Ctxxus Anne B Crawford — Senior Class pres ; JOHA. pres.; ntramuch Eleen Crortn — Alpha Delta Eta Debbie Ci ran — Alpha Delta Eto. Inframurals. Judo Wenda Dobbert — Alpha Delta Eta STEPHANE CHACONAS 8720 W Dalai Si MKraaea. Wl 53224 CAROLYN CUr£ 41 OailvWw Dr Acctaton Wl 54911 ANNE B CRAWFORD ElEEN CRONN 4521 63rd Si. 407 W Get Bd Kanotto. Wl 53140 Lbartyvea i aoow DEB8C CURRAN 8 79. Graanlofca. Wl 54941 MARY CYR 1542 9m si Boy. Wl 532344 MARY DEBARTOLO 10841 Condo Waiichonar. I 60153 WENDA DOBBERT Bta 4. Ptnandga Or . New London Wl 54961 DEMSE DOOGE MARYANN EILENZ 611 Whon 806 CWfwood Lano Downed Grove I 60615 lo Crouo Wl 54601 229 ELLEN ENG8HNG 15151 S MUT(J vewotAa Wl 53207 PATROA K. EVCHUK 4200 tackaro Awe St Ffoncm. Wl 53207 WENDY EVENSON Bt 1. Bo «1 V t a Wl 54245 KELLY FLATLEY 4291 mean st ■Vxtxr WU 53063 BARBARA FRONT CZAK 2041 OMtwood Cawoono Wi Pamela K Evctx — htramuaB. Jr. AOHA Wendy Evenson — Apha Delta Eta; Irv tramuab. Pr Beta Phoxes. Kety Fiofley — Phi Kappa Theta ittte se-ter. htramurds. Chethe Weshe West Ha partiers Barbara Frontcrc — Alpha Delta E i. Jan Mane Gabnel — Omegas pres; DentcS Hygiene Cocnd member. DO Dorm Dand Pakia Geaer — Apha Delta Eto; Intro-mk ab. Tovwer Dorm Cousd Pamela Grel — SU Oub. Amy Gross — mtramk aB Bnagete Haley — ntramurab; KBer ana me Gang Champs Sandy Harttey — Alpha Delta Eta MJ-JADHA Jeanne A Helmann — JADHA. mtramu-C l Barbara Hetpas — Intramurals Ho y 8 Joyce — PtramucSs LORI FRITZEMECR 6SM W Carman MhrtXkoe Wl JAN MARC GABRCL 350 SeOert 00 Ptmurch P 4237 PAULA GEtSER 730W am wd SomgfteM ( 62704 MARIYN GEYER 3130 Corvod t Boer Wl 53214 PAMELA GRELL 1604 JOCk ion St Mad W 54452 AMY GROSS 3500 Cottage 0r land Du Lac W 54036 ANN VLAZNY HAESE 0t 3. Bo. 60 MAwonago VW 53140 BROGETE HALEY Pan Yoc Pa Kaneanee Wl 53130 MRS PAMELA R. HANSON 1602 S WaconenAv Soane . Wl 53403 JAN HARE 27210 Garden Way Frankkv M 40025 MRS SAfOY HARTLEY 2327 W Mchgan St NewdiA Wl 523233 JEANNE A FtMAhN 205 E Penhng S Appeion. Wl 54011 BARBARA METPAS 4l5Pn awnt Out «x OLna wi 54130 HEO LYN HOWALD 3056 An Awe Farretfon I 61030 JUDITH (WANS 40 ( Comfort in Pent . I 60067 HOLLY B JOYCE 3463 Trenton Bd CoUreui. OM 43227 ELIZABETH KOhPATH 0214 Santo Menco bird FosPont. Wl 53217 VOO KRAFT 5006 N 41st St MtwaAee Wl 53200 KRISTM KRUEGER 710 fructer St Madtord W 54451 KM KUNDMGER 603 W 41h tAamreo wi 54440 230 RITA LAKE NOREEN LAZZER1 AMY LEN2 MAROE LEVY MOMCA LOOMS 450 N Sherman St 720 N Sm SI Woosonl la 19338 rxycrr. Pi 2 So. 1 5 Jogto WIM1TO SpringMed. t 62702 « OCIn . W1 53406 Uvcnta M 48152 SAAwonooo W 53149 DONNA MSCWtCZ 4151 S 3rd St M7waiA.ee Wi 53207 RAO€L OPGENORTH 4123 N 50m $i Swoovoon. WI 53061 KAREN PALK RSE«M 655 S 92nd St -ar jv«o WI 53126 NANClPlEGGl 1000 S ?5m St MwMM WI 53214 KAREN POMERSK1 826 0® Pond Upertyvie. I 60048 SUSAN SALAMON 8016 N tocfjcm 0d BavwM wi 53217 DEBRA LEE SCALES 8480 W (dgorton Av« GreendcSe WI 53120 DANA SCHROEDER 6100 Twh O® Or Oeendaie WI 53120 JENNFER KCFER-SWOBOOA 7711C Welt ShtnMn A® r x ee WI 53216 Rita icfce — Alpha Dona Eta. jadha Noreen lazzen — Alpha Doha Eta Amy Lenz — Alpha Dana Eta JADHA Marco Levy — Afcha Dona Eta Monco Loom — Doan's lot. Coboon Dorm Cound. Resident Advisor Racnol Opgonorth — httamuah Kaon Pamenhem — htramuds Nanci Ptegg — Alpha Sgmo Nu. Sgmc. Ptv Aph hftamurds ASMU senator; MUTV. WO. RA Kaon Porrvonfci — Aipno S jma Nu. ciois rep free Susan Sosamon — ADHA Jomtfor Kiefer-Swoboda — Alpha S«gma Nu. niram cb. Secretary of Oats GDI freshman Orientation Patricia Lee Tone — Afcho Derto Eta. JADHA Lorn Trettn — Doan's Lot. Alpha Soma Nu doss rep; Dorm Couk rep Koltryn Vuefc — ADHA. AMLTW f rop .Oo dub. DC. Dorm Couid pres. Sugar Roy Fan Club Lortwanezek — htrartxfds treat tenor class Katy Rub-Waiters — htranx ah Cnoryi weens — Aphs Derta Eta. Who's Who is American Cotoges doss pres 2. JADHA PATRICIA LEE TONE LAURI TRETTN 363 l®t Overtxo® Dr 1138 O® cre t Or l®QO Hondo 33640 Appleton. WI 54911 OCRYL WIKENS 488 E NM® Or wee tend. WI 53095 KATHRYN VIZEK LORI WAMIZEK 1224 WoorSand Cl 3612 Saemarh Ave Appleton. IM 54911 Shehoypaa WI 53081 Card S. Avon Karen M. Btschel Mary F. Chatham Bonnie M. Chishdm Cathy N. Cook Janice L. Faitage Barbara L. Frontczak Maryann T. Grelwicz Rebecca A. Jorgensen Kristine A. Klink Joan M KugStsch Eileen M. Langyel KATY RUB-WATTERS 605 Homesteod Jotet l 60435 Kristen A Markakis Lisa H. Markisen Lucy C. Podruch Sandra A. Rokavec Joan M Schaper Rita M Schitz Gloria J. Swik Deborah A. Valley Ann D. Vlazny Rose M. Weis Susan M. Zblewski Mary L. Ziegler 231 Dentistry In 1907. the Milwaukee Medicol Colege's Dentistry Department became affiliated with Marquette University. Six years later, the Marquette University School of Dentistry was created. Russell V. Brown. D.D.S.. was appointed dean of the Dental School in 1970. He received a Bochetor of Arts degree from Car-roll CoBege. Milwaukee, and a D.D.S. from Marquette in 1947 He earned his Masters degree at the University of Iowa in 1955. Dr. Brown joined fhe faculty In 1957, after five years as an assistant professor at the University of Iowa. He is a member of the American Dental Association, and is currently vice president of the American Society of Dentistry for Children. Dean Russell V. Brown JUDY ADAMS 1724 W Sugby (W xmowto Wl 53645 MCHAEl CARY 3655 N Iuck«rR M6.oji w Wl 52111 DA VO CHARITON 1411 WMttm A VO Oafton fo M 7 DAVD A COOK 113 Umpfvoy Odo Sooth Sowio Wl 54166 THOMAS E DANEl 4CWi C Oora m Avo lot Vogoi W 0121 DA VO DEGRAVE 2314 Sandy I an® Gf®®n Boy. Wl 54302 WUIAM M DCM3AFF 2 Bov Place For Do loc. Wl 54035 GARY DUBESTER 1724 c ory S Orton Wl 54001 ROBERT GRANT 610 S Ofton Part Otago I 6006 BYRON HADJOKAS 1453 Control Av® BMOrt Wl 53611 TOD HAMMES 2010 Knotamt C Bumglon Wl 53106 CHRISTIAN KAMMER 4800 Shwwooa 0o Moaton Wl 53711 ARLYN KOULA 103 Canlrd Av® Coon Vcrty. Wl 54623 DONALD KRATZ 1234A S 201ft Si MKrtX ®®. Wl 53215 GARY KRUEGER 37203 Uibon oa Oconcmowoc. Wl David A Cook — Domes School Student Counci Dovtd DeGrove — Theta Program MU-CAP Gary Dubester — A0ha Omega Project Outreach Robert Grant — The Anmats Vochcrv em. honorary mnefer Christian Kammer — Phi Beta Kappa. Dry Sockets mnertube Waterpoto Ardmore Voieybc . AT Pin Rick lagerman— ocas pres Richard lofthouse — ciost trees Daniel Mulonboch — Delta Sgma Delta lorry Nfcsen — ADSA. WDA Mary E Stotski - WDA student lason RtCX LAGERMAN 23131 M®do va 5rwr®wOOd Wl 53211 RICHARD LOFTHOUSE 2046 S Khickmc Av® MKvol ®® Wl 53207 DANEl A MUILENBACH 3326 S 28tti loOou® Wl 54601 RONALD NELLEN 2000 N 44 SI MhviXA®® Wl 53210 LARRY NLUSSEN Ri 2 Wm®nb®rg. Wl 544W THOMAS J NOCKERTS 2691 S WetH'or Av® Gr®®n Bay. W 54301 JOSEPH SETMCAR 03 S ftnwooo WaiA(®Qarv I 60065 T MO THY W SHEEHAN 774 G4®r©tTd W on E yn. t MARYE seisw 5000 S IPS MTwol ® Wl 53221 OXFORD SPRUNG 7014 Man St M®non Wl 53066 Mcnoet Sr mansu — D«no Sgmo D«Ha American Dental Association lout T rarer — ASDA. American Society of Dentmty lot OiMren. ntramua James Utoarrak — Delta Sgmo Delta: Society of Dentmtry for Chk en PoJ Vensei — Delta Sgmo Gerald Vogler — Delta Sigma Delta. Alveolar Process Tnomas WcActy — Delta Sigma Delta JOHN STOOONGER VICHAEL SZYMANSXI LOUS TRAJNOR 1234 S 20 n SH« t 11864 W Apoetcn 1248 S P t«x Cf MtwaAM W! 33204 Wl 53224 tun. OK 74112 JAMES UR6ANAX to. 311IX Nsoogamon. Wl 34840 PAUL VENSEL 5774 N K ni Wr 1W.6ov. Wl 33217 GERALD VOGLER 4363 W OoonBa 164 ►own DMI Wl 53223 Robert P. Ambrookiar THOMAS WALCZYK 1860 Pr«tM Avsrve OMnSoy Wl 54302 Robert G. Kern ROBERT WMTER 7353 W fommonl WXMM Wl 53220 James M. Rodriguez Uoyd E. Kempka Robert A Klement Jeffery A. Kohler Jeffrey G. Romenesko Richard J. Rotter Dale R. Roznik Charles M. Rubash Nicholas R. Russo James F. Ruzicka Jeffrey S. Ryther William R. Baggott Robert C. Barbiaux Timothy S. Bernard James L. Btak James M. Bishop William C. Blank Stephen M. Brown Kevin B. Cook Michael L. Costello David J. Crewe Gary W. Czubkowski Peter M. Damico Peter M. Delos Robert E. Dennison Michael C. Ebben Paul J. Engibous Abert C. Exner Jr. Andrew G. Garratt Joanna Geldner Bradley J. Gerdes Hueychung Ghi Philip M. Grownick Daniel C. Haman David C. Hammer Charles M. Hanneman Richard C. Harrison Robert T. Harrison Bradley A. Hartjes Michael J. Helmbrecht Richard P. Hdubowicz Daniel L. Hove Paul K. Hovis Ronald W. Hul Gary F. Hupp Nancy R. Ippel Michael J. Kaurich Gregory M. Krainik Thomas G. Kujaski Peter C. Labudde Robert C. Lang John A. Lewis Scott J. Lewis John H. Liu Donald G. Lloyd David G. Lloyd Jr. Wiliam G. Lounge Thomas C. Lovlien Mark C. Lyman Thomas A. Macak Jay L. Mockman Glen A. Magyera Daniel J. Mayer Timothy A. McNamara Kimberly J. Meter Carl F. Memhordt Mark B. Metz Kevin M. Mikel James L. M«er Paul R. Miller Gordon Murray Melvin K. CHson Maurice R. Polermo Jr. Eileen K. Panacek Gene L. Pascucci Lawrence K. Pizzitola Frederick C. Prehn Richard J. Rely Robert K. Rely John F. Richardson Paul M. Sandvtck Joseph R. Schaub Paul J. Scheunemann Michael J. Schneidler Timothy B. Scholbrock Joseph M. Setnicar Suzanne M. Sikora Paul R. SmagSck Catherine A. Stomas Christopher J. Stevens Randal H. Straub Charles F. Straehlow Douglas J. Strong Joel A. Supita Thomas A. Tanski Richard R. Taylor Jerome M. Tec law Lionel R. Vochon Scott L. Vandahuvel Stepehnen R. Vaness Gerald M. Voelker John P. Vogl Bradley D. Wessels Joseph L. Wittig Douglas A. Wolk Robert L. Wyler Stephen T. Youniss This section has been sponsored by Irak OMNI VHVSS!7 oraphis HAPTlATO HABTfOCO A DIVISION OF HY CITE CORPORATION 525 NORTON DRIVE • HARTLAND. Wl 53209 • (414)367-8012 Engineering The College of Engineering was estab-shed in 1908. and the four-year study :ourse began in 1912. The Engineering Build-XJ was completed in 1941, and the dm ngineering Center was added in 1977. Having doubled Its enrollment since 1974. he engineering college, under the direction f Dr. Raymond J. Kipp, is one of the most opidly expanding programs on campus. Dr. Kipp was appointed dean of the Col- ge of Engineering m 1971. He received his [.$. from Marquette in 1951. He was award-id an M.S.C.E. from the University of Wis-:on$in in 1957. and a Ph D. from that school 3 1965. Dean Kipp has been a diplomat to the merlcan Acodemy of Environmental Engi-eers, and has been appointed to the Me-opoStan Sewerage Commission by two Visconsin governors. The college offers Bachelor of Science legrees in civl. electrical, mechanical and •iomedical engineering. Dean Raymond J Kipp 235 GERALD AGNEW DEBORAH ALRUTZ ABOUILAH ALSAIH MCHAEL ARDOM 300 Garfield St 204 FXxta 261« N. Fredrick 3009 Sum t St Bubtfon Wl 53106 incob.1 62666 ‘ woukoe Wl 532it Ft FWco Flo 3MS0 Gerdd Agnow — ASCE NSE Co-op stu-oenf. Semi-Tough. Bogus Wombats Athletic Ckjb. MUCAP. Or«ototon Debar ch Arutz — Alpha Sigma Nu. ASME. SWE SAE. PI Tau Sigma. Open Mouse. GM Schdd Abddah Atsarn — Soccer. Horse Ridng Michael Ardob — Phi Kappo Theta Michel Ayoob — Eta Kappa Nu VP Tou Beta Pi. Alpho Sigma Nu, Eng Blueprint bus mgr. bfiamurds. Doans Ust Patricia Bokty — Delta Tau Delta wtie sister; btromdds John Bafce — Eta Kappa Nu. Gl Joe Cod Sana. Rigei Poctor. UMmoie Frtsbee Bodmmton. Moosemen Nods. Dsc-Gustng David Bongassor — ASCE Chi Epston; Hockey Robert Bannon — ASCE. Avdanche Ski Club. Pre Low Society Kut Bar dele — Tou Beta Pi. Pi Tau Sigma ASME. SAE; BJueprmg sto«. Open House PubBcity Vcente Barrio — Della Chi CEE member Marc Basreo — Frotemd Order of the bflatabto Sheep. Edtor. Ssepord's Gazzehe btramurds Christopher Becker — ASCE. Intramural . Mchoel J BensfiQ — Phi Kappa Theta. ASCE Kevin Biandn— ntramurds MJComputer Sooety. Avalanche Ski Club. SAE CEE. EBGYM John Thomas Boston — CEE. BESS Uttv-mote Fnsbee Oec-Gustng Floor Ho-key. Le Souvogot Peter Bourgeons — ASME. Blueprint; WJOTC Ardmore Preservation Society; Procrostnahon Club James F. Boyle - ASME. SAM. btramu-ctt. Co-op program Joseph Brand — Chi Epslon Tou Bota Pi. ASCE. ITE Joseph Brazo — Tou Beta Phi. ASM h-tramurals Kevin Brissette — btrarrwds; Co-op; ASCE W am Bnttan — Pi Tou Sigma VP. ASME; SAE; A Vanoodei Club, Open House Pado Budde — Eta Kappa Nu. Tou Beta Pi. Alpha Sigma Nu. GM Scholar. Blue print. Oriental on. Tutoring Scott Cabrxn — Triangle Frot; CC btra-muds. CEE DovldCanitz—ASME. SAE. ESC VP. sec Eng Knights, btramurds Co-op PATROA BAIEY 774 fucfcJ Avo [Mull I 60126 JONBAUE 3Bo« 110 CbtonvBo. Wl 64920 DAVD F. BANGASSER 7600 5th Avo So mchtieia mv 66423 ROBERT BANNON 815 KtoVhv Jdet. I 60456 VCENTE BARRO 1615 W ODOun Wl 53233 MARC BASTCN 629 Harvard Ocancmowac. Wt CHRISTOPHER BECKER 8700 Frontage Marion Grove. I 60053 MCHAR J. BENSNG 1861 15m Ave NW New Brighton W 55112 JOFN THOMAS BOSTON SO Tenoce Or EnPT. NY 11731 PETER BOURGEOIS 14 Aro« M No Beodng Mats 01864 JAMES F BO VIE 293 Slow St Fend Xj IOC. Wl 54935 JOSEPH BRAND 7433 N Mcnowk 00 WoOAM Wl 53217 KEVN BRISSETTE 652 Poane in. vakxxa o n 46383 WILLIAM BRITTAIN 174 S Brighton PI Arbgton His. I 60004 PAULA BUDOE 125 Paritwoy Cl Fon Du loc. Wl 54935 SCOTT CALHOUN 818 Marrtubo Ave $ Mhvodee Wl 53177 MTCHELL AYOOB 69 Worron St Revere. MA 02151 KURT BARDELE 9029 w Pameiio Ave Mn.oJ.oo Wl 53226 KEVN BlANCN 22K) Granger Mantowoc. W 54220 JOSEPH BRAZA 5607 Buev Way DuvnooOv GA 30338 0AVO CAMTZ 2825 S 130 New Beito. Wl 53151 236 PAUL CANTWELL 7100 41 Avo Konoba Wl S3 (42 CHARLES J. CHECK 1317 5 25m S Manitowoc. M 54220 RONALD C ?ZANOW$K) 4323 Patatvu pi HonoUU H06A1 STEVEN CHYBONSKJ 6284 W Van Norman G'oorr'ov) W1 53220 PATRICK QR1ACKS 3131AS lOmsi h«vxx4 M. Wt 53215 MARK COUJNS 5001 jam Hi 0d tt«nng. OH 45429 JACK CONRAD 7544 31 A VO Konorna. Wl 53142 DANEL CONWAY 325 Corrtrc Avo HgNand Par . I STEPHEN COOLEY 3024 N 64m Si MwaiOoo. W1 53210 KEVN COURSN 5406 W Portao Avo MWOJioo. Wl 53223 KEITH ClMSKY CARLO DANE SI JEFFREY DARLEY 1423 N PwxrmJo Avo 420 Pratt SI 231 A Hgion Now Smyrna H Hammonfon. NJ 08037 ftrlwit 160126 MCHAEL M1IS PETER DOTTE ROBERT D DOG 86 Mamor Avo 440 N GortteO 404 N 38m St fcOCfcSOn. MA 02401 JorrotvOo. W 53545 MhvaAOO Wl 53208 GEORGE D6JARLAIS 4555 N 65 St hOwcxAoe. Wl 53218 MCHAa DK5IACOMO 4643 N 103rd St MtwaiAoo. Wl 53225 LARRY DOLDERI 1128 Hajot Doortlotd I 60015 ROBERT J. CXJERO 17740 WtxJomoro Bd EVocA'ord. Wl 53005 Poul Coniwe — Animal House. Eta Kappa Nu. htramaab. CEE: Open House. Cooperative education plan Charles J Check — Sgma PM Delia SAE. Engineering Knignts. sec . ASME. VP.. Engineering Qxncl. VP: hlro-nxrcfe Ronald CMionowski — miranx ah, RA. Student Leadership Steenng Board. J-Board: McBeen AfMetic Club Steven Chytsomski — Sigma PM Delta CEE Patrick Chocks - PM Beta Phoxes. lithe Brother. rtCN; Tou Beta PI. Mark Coins — Men s AfMefc Traner; CEE. ntranxrah Jock Conrod — Alpha Sgmo Nu. Tau Beta P : Eta Kappa Nu. Sgma Tau Delta PSO: MU MOBE. Co-op Counci Darxel Conway — Tau Beta PI. Beta Epsilon Gamma. I lived with the Rats Stephen Cooley — CEE Kevin Coirtn — Sgma PM Delta: Engineering Knights: Engineering Student Comd Keith Ccnbky — htrarrvcfe: Rorin Doan Ckjp. Escort Service. Homecomrg Carlo Oanes — InlrarTxxcfe. Outdoor Roc Jeffrey Dartey — Delta Tau Delta, htro-murals George DeJartats — PI Tau Sigma. Tau Beta Pi. Co-op Program. Honors Program Mchoel OtGiocomo — Sgma Pm Delta, pres: Roan Doan CXJo. Open Houso. Engneering Picnic; htromuraB Mchoel Dd — Cross Country, htrarrxx-ab. b It a Bostorian MOwostem oc-cent or vice versa? Peter Diotte — Pi Tau Sgma ASME. SAE. htrarm ab. ASME Student Paper Presentation. first pioce Robert D Dog — CSA. Ski dub tarry Dokler I — Pm Kappa Theta; ASCE 1004 CM) Robert j Duero — ASCE. Ski Oub; htro-muab W«am Dunbar — Animal House. Pi Tau Sgma. Tou Beta PI ASAC htramscto Brian (XPont — ASCE; Open House Coop Program David DuPont — intramu ab Patrick J. Durkin. Jr — CEE CSA. htro-rtxrab. Co-op Program Mchoel Dwyer — Intramurab ASME: Eucharistic Mrxster — Gesu Chuch WlUAM DUNBAR 4801 83rd St. Konomo. Wl 53142 BRIAN DUPONT 1435 S 72nd St w MS A . Wl 53214 DA VO DUPONT 3227 S 68 St MNvcxAm Wl 53227 PATRICK J DURKN. JR 8826 W Orchard St WMl Ata Wl 53214 MCHAEL DWYER Rp 1 Od«4 160460 237 SUSAN DZ1ADOEWCZ 2620 W St Jome lA U «jon Wl S3W2 MARK ELLENA 1126 102 Ave w A m Mm sseoe CHARLES EVANS 52H MKxr Od HnM Wi 53129 JOHN FLECXENSTEW 2M0 Sarto Warn O Brookflatd. Wl 53005 JAMES FONTANE 2231 CweenSi MwtxAeo. Wl 53212 Sown Daoddewic — Pi Too Sigma. sec. Open Homo. A$K€ Marit Elena — ASCE. MU Hockey Toam Chart (Chip) Evan — Band. Pop Berta Ram Jam Fan CXb. pres John Fleckenstein — ntramurah FC ASME Jam Foniane — Roan Doan Club. CEE. Arimd Houso Rooert Fotich — Tou Bo’a Pi. pro . mtro-muarab Bruce Goedke — Intramuab. ASCE. SAE. Computer Society. Avdanche SU Club Joseph L Gdatowitsch — Co-op Cornv d. Co-chorman. 80eprmt. wntor. Coop student. Intfamuob; Avoidng library Boon Gate — The MU Engineer Steve Gerhart — rttrorrxrab. ASCE Dorset F.GekJermann — ASCE. pres and VP. NROTC. Eleen Gflespie — Biuepnnt. tunmer od tor. ntramuaB. ASCE John B Golden — Sigma Phi Ep ion. Ho-dog Club John Gressott — Eta Kappa Nu. ntro-mmali. CIom rep. student government. Thomas Grist - CEE. TAP. EOP Tutor. MU Engneer. Beta Epsfcm Gamma. Chtef Chet. BESS. V.P.; Croamette. Boy Bluo Kimberty Gogn — CEE. J-board Francis D Mogen I — Phi Kappa Theta; ASCE; Co-op. 417 Club, at largo rep; HOW. Intrarrxral ; Varsity Partying Mark Hammer — Eta Kappa Nu; Tau Beta Pi. 8iueprlng. Co-op Program; Honor Program; Band Tmothy Hamey — Lahn Oub. B G Society. V P. kitranxrah Orbwralth Harry ;tar ch — Eta Kappa Nu; Tou Beta Pi Honors Program. CEE. Cdege Age Bbio Study ROBERT FOTSCH 1545 Greenway Tr Em Grove. Wl 53122 BRUCE GAEOKE Rt 2 Tpeton. Wl 54435 JOHSI GAGUAROI 6322 Penhno 8Nd eno«ho Wl 53142 JOSEPH L. GALATOWITSCH 1282 CHcecso St Pol Mm 55105 BRIAN GATES 3718 S 3ra St WwaiM Wl 53207 STEVE GEARHART 780 Carton Or dam. 160120 DANEl F. GELDERMAW 4356 Cheoiee Dr booh too. Wl 53006 ELEEN GUESPt 22W741 Sycamore O Glen Etyn. I 60137 JOttIB GOLDEN 8 ApneOO Norwood. MA 02062 JOHN GRESSETT Rt 4 Tomen. Wl 54660 THOMAS GRIST 24 WSiono Cl. CP e10n. Wl 5461' KMBERLY GUGM 2127 taps Or Wauiema Wl 53186 FRANCIS D. HAGEN. I 10610 36m Ave Non Ptynexrm. tJH 56441 MARK HAMMEL 6406 W Carpenter Ave GreenAetd. Wl 53228 ANTHONY HANDZU 2356 N 80m Wouwatota Wl 53226 JEROME t€NZ 3810 S 84tt Apl 6 Mhvouree. Wl 53228 2M TMOTHY HARNEY 8124 S Women® Ovcoao. I 60662 HARRY HARSCH MARK F€ €N 866 N BrlremereOr. Em Grove. Wl 53122 THOMAS F€UD 2561 N 65m SI Wauwatosa Wl 53221 RICHARD HEPPERLA 12750 Stacman Pi Bn Oova wt 53122 RHONDA PC Y TENS 4312 € 2na SI fcpefel Wl 54860 THOMAS HIDEBRANDT 5o. 1006 T r icfces. Wl 53151 MARTHA HLIEN 257 Smonat Si G aan Bor Wl 5«201 RUTH HNES 10305 W BuamwrdlW Wouwofcaa W 53226 JAMES HOLLAND MYRON HOOO SCOTT HORNER PAMELA HORVATH SUSAN HUDAK S Hotand So 2735 Norm 12 Si 2130 N 71 St 5604 5 Kad a 5036 Otooa Dr Worran. t 61087 MfeoiAao Wl 53206 WouwoIom Wl CftccQO. I 60652 ShonQivea OH 44136 RANDALL JAfCAK LUB J. JARAMU.O OANCL JOOA JOF l KEBSEK JOSEPH KNSEUA 10113 UJbany Cola 57 43-17 3644 N8WS 12700 Wamttav Oa 5308 W tOSm Pi OcfcOwn I 60453 MacMn CdorrtM Wl 53222 Vockfatt wi 53005 OOdown I 60453 DA VO KROCR JOSEPH KLN MCHAEL KNOELKE CWJlSTOPFBR J. mark kOPCZYNSKJ W S r«r lc a Bo 83 Naamoo PI 2 Kroaha KOLBE 1944 S Wrong In loono. Wl 54641 bJtcto. NV 14210 Cheitartorx N 46304 2e055 N ITwarwy Dr MfcroAaa Wl 53204 Woufcatho Wl 53156 Richard Hepperta — Pin Kappa Too fa. ASME. EC. troos. Intramuab. Rhondo Heytens — Eta Kappa Nu; Too Bota PL EEE; SAE; SWE Thomas M HfcJotxandf — CM FpSton. edlor and pro Tou Bofa PI: Sen -Tough B-Baf niramurab. Open Home Martha HBen - EEE. Open Home. Bot-mecica Enginoemg Society. ntramm-cfc Ruth Knot — Tou Bela Pi. ASK Jamet Holand — Aces Ploce. ASCE AMA mtromu« SAM. V P : CM Epe-ion Myron Hood — Inroods WUconsn Telephone Internship. Scon Homer - SAE. ASME Pamela Horvath — BES. EEE Susan Hudcfc — EEE. SAE RtyyJaiJandcfc —MLFTV. AStvE.SMOub IUS J Jarameo — SAE. ASME Daniel Jodo — Eta Kappo Nu. CEE. Bond, Jazz Band, VP John Kefceek — EEE Joseph KrueSa — ASCE. inter Varwty; In-trammab David ' Woose Wrchor — Zelo Beta Tou. ASCE. The Ranch. limberiocks. V P. htramurc : Thor You Eamies Joseph Kir — ITE. pres . ASCE. Intramu-ah. Co-op Student Panoi Mchoel Knoeke — btramuab ASCE. treos. SAM. Homecomng Corns. Ace’s Place Christopher j Kobe — Bond. WT, MV's Mark Kopcrynski — System Safety Sod-ety. Mary E. Kasta — Eta Kappo Nu. Tau Beta Pi. Co-op Program. Activities Board. Engneemg Tutor Program Jorry Kowahky - Open Home: CSA Ski Club Mary F Kozboski — BES. treos, Open Home James Kmtapovch — Triangle Fraternity. pres: ffC: bttamurcto. Open House EEE. sec . Harvestboi. Sprit Week Kerm Krupinjkl — ASME. AAAS Avo lanche Ski Oub. CSA MARY E KOSTA 6463 MkrOOCh SI Lorn. MO 63109 JERRY KOWALSXY 4211 N 78th Si Mtaomaa Wt 53222 MARY F. KOZBOSKI 5385 Hoc I ana GraandcSa Wl 53129 JAMES KRJSTAPOVCH 2929 w HoNondSvd KBTH KRUPNSW 3253 S 119 SI Watt MU Wl 53227 2i9 MNrouiaa Wl 53206 THOMAS KRUPKA 2501 S M ddowm r Now Bortrv Wl S3 (51 MARY KUEMMEL 2731AN Cordon P! MmoAm. Wl 53210 JAMES KUKLA 2616 N Mornoc Av Chcogo I 60639 THOMAS KUNTZ (00 N Mercer $ New Came. PA 16101 BRADLEY LANKA 223 Mane fro Cryitd icke I 60014 Thomas Krupko - ASME. SAE; Worked my way through Engnoering Co-op. Mory Kuemmel — Pi Tou Sigma. hiro-nxroh. Engineering Cound: ASME. Engnoering Sweethan Brodtey Lanka — Pi Taj Sigma, pres. m-tramacto. ABAS. Pres. Co-op. ASME Thomas J lauterboch — ASME. Co-op. Intromurab Sent -Tough Basketoal Club. CXb 112. WN0C. Daniel lemng — CEE. Engineering Open THOMAS J. LAUTERBACH 2526Qv nta £ Beiert. Wl 53511 DANCL IEISNG Pi 6016I6 East Troy. Wl 53120 JAMES LEPKOWSW 122 2 W Howard GroonftoO. Wl 53220 DANCL LEWNSX) Pi 3 Bjerstea lane ONer FOh Wl 5 022 JOSEPH L06UONO 7 Kubota Avo Carl ere! j 07008 Dental lewmskl - ASME Joseph LoBuono — HKN. mtramurals. CEE Co-op. A gonna Nat'l laboratory James lorsele — Animal House Bind Bowing loogue. iniramuats. Co-op Student Councl Co-op John N Long — Pi Tou Sigma. Co-op Thomas Lososso — Screaming Competition: Orientation; B.F. Fan Oub. Mu-grock Concert attendee John Lucas — ETa Kappa Mu. CEE. SAE Mchoel Lue-Hng — Phi Beta Sigma Block Student Cound. pres ; ASCE Trock. captain. Duncan Macdonald — CEE. Intramucf PC. MUTV. production Coordnator; Varsity Chorus John Mogee — Icemen. Ottering. Troo Jumping. K of O. founder, inframucto Al aioind n ce guy David Martinson — Eta Kappa Nu. Tou Beta PI. ntramurafs Pad Mortem — Intramuab. CEE. Natl Dean's List Theresa Maude — ASME. SAE Shawn McGuan - Dean's Ut. Rugby; Club Footbal Demis Mentor — tnirarrucfc Osc-Gust-ng Uttimai© Frabee Team. PC. Cam-pus Safety Commrttee Jerome Merz — E JAMES LOtSaiE JOM N LONG THOMAS LOSASSO JO J LUCAS JAfcCS LUCZKA 2505 N Protaoci Av 008 inden 1619 76 n Av 1617 Moron Avo 2 68 S 83 $1 MhvdUie . Wl icfc via. I 600 6 anwood Pars I 60635 S MhvaA Wl 53172 W «1 AM. Wl 53219 WCHAEL LUE-HYG 616 H umsi MhvaA Wl 53233 DUNCAN MACDONALD PO 6o« 00 Bodor d NV 10606 JOEM MAGEE 8659 Bock F«r «t St LOUS. MO 63123 JOSEPH MAER 999 D arpam lefc Porort t DA VO MARTNSON 36504 long W Oconomowoc W 53066 PAUL MATTERN 1283 Mom Av Manama. 1M 5 952 TVCRESA MAUDE 3 0E Howard Av Si Franc Wl 53207 SHAWN MCGUAN tdEhnSi Mowffon. Wl 600 7 DEfWS MEtSTER N70W13674 Bronfwood Dr M nomon o C Wl 53051 JEROA€ MERZ 2203 N 64m WauwatOM. Wl 53213 240 MCMAR MLLEP tfi Boyt'OC larw OdbrtX 160621 PAUL MLLER 1315 N 63rd 51 WoamjIom W 53213 WlUAM MLOT 10 h wo St T xmor WA 02780 KEMsfTH MOORE JR 5224 Oown Pont Avw SHARON MOORE 2504 N 15m 51 Ml« x aa Wl 53206 MCHAEL J. MURPHY 41 Comoron Avo Cambndoo. Mom 02140 MCHAEL MUZI 1004 W Ktooun Mk xJ.aa, Wl 53233 JAMES NADER 332 N 02 SI MhtxAoo W1 53226 ANDREW NATANEK 4561 $ Oocow AVO Lyons I 60534 DAVD NAU Pi 2 8o« 225 MJiwonago. W! 53140 JEFFREY NETTES M 217 W Doom St Hamom wi 53027 MCHAEL NOVAK 26580 Doan Warron M 48003 CHAREE OUVER 813 Aytattxry Conn Arrow NO 21012 DANEL PAPROCKl 2463 S 16m Pioco MKVOLAOO Wl 53215 JAMES PARRA 2001 Aiamoeo Or Santa Fa Now Masco 87501 PaUM er — TouBetaPI VP . Alpha Sigma Nu. GM Scholar ASME treas. Salrg Club. Honor Program W am Mtot — SAM. Info Center coor-dnator. Escort Serve© WMUF. MU-CAP. West Hal Dorm Corel Kenneth Moore Jr — Party Freaks Social Club ores. ASME sec Student society for Science and Engr. Karate Sharon Moore - CEE Mchool J Murphy - ASCE Mchoel Mua - MAK Fan Club: Cocktai Club, Mugrack. Kkxxxn Hlton head mgr; Wo Wo polo: Ultmate Frtsbee James Nodor — Zeta Beta Tou VP: Eta Kappa Nu. intramurab. CC Exec Board. Sr open Charman: Banana House Vet Andrew Natanek — Orientation. J-Board. chm. EEE. McCormick Hal Yearbook David Nou — EEE Vee Chairman Jeffrey Netteshom — Basobal. htrama-cto: Ski Club: ASCE. The Ranch, tirrv berjock dub: Emte Forever. Mchoel Novak — kitramurcte: Ex-Cops Athletic Club; K of O; Specie thanks to Mom and Dod. Friends and Chi. Charoe Over — Co-op Student. ASME. Third World Engineemg Society. Inter -Vanity Chmhan Fetowship James Parra — AED. Prtti Patel — MU Computer Society. Ex out EEE James Pavtk —- ASME. Hockey. Rugby. David Plotter — Coop. Dean's List Animal Home David Pumger — Tau Boto PI. McCormick Dorm Counci EEE Gary Pregont — EEE Coop: Dean's list W am Raasch — Alpha Sgma Nu. Tou Beta Pi VP; Pi Tou Sigma pres ASME VP SaBng Club Gregory Rader — EEE. ARA Food rep Darnel Roder — A ho Tou Ometo Mchoel Rodnewtci — GOL. K of O:. Excops. kitramuab Jomes Reoder — rntramucb PRIT1 PATEL POBo. 306 Bdcret. Kenya JAMES PAVLK 933 W 66m SI Chcopo. ( 0620 DA VO PFEFFER 6903 Fax MaDd Frank svea. W 53126 DA VO PlZMGER 2415 w Stole Si, MKvoiAeo. Wl 53213 GARY PREGONT 1714 Birefc Ava Woutou. Wl 54401 WILIAM RAASCH 1003 s loom st West Am Wl 53214 GREGORY RADER 329 weams St Mor — Wl 53060 DANEL R ADLER 14640 San Dapnoer eoc NXd. Wl 53005 MCHAEL RADZEWCZ 1514 (vergeeri Tarroca G ar v«aw. I 60025 JAMES READER 118 E Holy Ava Oeatyn NJ 08107 JOHN REARDON 846 N- 15m St drwOLke W1 53233 ORtSTOPVCR REEVES M06 7m Avo •(enema w UMO GEORGE RHYNER 126 Morpjom« Si Scnoftekl W1 54476 JEFFREY RICHMOND 165 Monon lofc For 1. I 60045 RONALD RlEY 1206 E W ton Whedon. I 60167 Christopher Reeves — ASCE The Rdn Hoods. The Rtwieionder Hodogs. Sigma Phi Epslon George Rhyner — BFRC; ASCE; Intramd-ab West Hal. pres.; PC. V P Ronald Rtey — ASME WKU? Robert J Rupeto — ASCE. pros SCUBA dver Bow Hunter. Mountain Clmber. Cross-country skier Mchoei Rochelcn — varsity Trock. ASCE Raymond Rokm — Tou Beta PW. Dean s l t. Natond Dean s list Robert Rynkieveci — Comnxnrty Por-formng Arts StOvan Ensemble. Sunset Ptaytiouse. Mhvodcee Opera Company Russel Sabo — titranrxrab. Pathfinders. Headstart; Northcot Neighborhood House, phys ed dree tor Mark Schooler — Co-op Program, chairman Co-op Counci Inst of Transportation Engineers, pres; ASCE. MJ Bona Joseph Schmmob — Tau Beta ft. Intro-mucfc. Sigma A ha Epslon. ASMF Timothy F. Schroder — EEE Robert Sobre — ASCE. Patrick SekJ — mtorvaruiy Christian Fellowship; ASME Dane! Sea — ASCE; CM Epslon Brian Skoraki — Pistol Team. NROTC. EEE John Skoch — EEE. Carmel Hal Charter Member. that's my pictdo. I must havo a degree. Thank mom and dod Aphonso Smith — EEE Vanrty Basketbal wafc on. hframuds Richard Sportieto — Orientation, steer-ng board. Student Judod Board Pod Stork — ASMJ. senator; Mechantcd Engneemg Honors Society. CSA, MU Bond. Jau Ensembie James Stebane - B G Society. Weght-Vting CPb. Mark Stomfco — Senior Bar. Intramud . EEE. Engineering Open House George Stevens — Samg CkJD. ASA Navy. CEC-Colegiate ROBERT J. RlOPELLE W141 N7547 laHOu Dr Mtncmin rok. W1 53051 ABCHAEL ROO€FORT 81 Map Av Barr VT 05641 RAYMOND ROKM 5426 N Mohan Av CJoroaw. Wi 53217 ROBERT RYhMEWtCZ 12456 Sispun hoc n C ov . WI 53122 RUSSELL SABO 3231 For 1 Or Ch v m . WV 62001 MARK C SCHAEFER 7676 $ lenoi Av Oak Creek wi 53154 JOSEPH SCHMMELS 312 Ralph St. luterreug. WI 54217 TMOTHY F. SORADER 216 S Edton Ave Lcrroard L 60146 ROBERT SEBGE N72 S7465 8 Ch S CocMttug. WI 53012 PATRICK SEOL 4660 Nowcatno War Anchor OQ . AK 66503 DANEL SESl 420 EIt 5 Arwoo. WI 54406 BRIAN D SKORSKJ JOW SKACH 3016 Michel Av 1056 Cooper Dr Woco. Team 76780 Pdain I 60067 ALPHONSO SMHH RICHARD SPORTtUO 6312 Pm 17532 Hawthorn Prea PA 16143 Country Out) Mi I PAUL STARK 1177 Irwig Pt Wadtetfo. WI 53186 JAMES STEBANE R4 Koukaina Wi 54130 MARK STENKf 1343 W Weconwi Av MPmxa Wi 53233 GEORGE STEVENS BO 1 Napes. NY 14612 WILIAM M STOCER 3714 N 66m St Mwtx WI 53222 242 KACHAEL STOWE 363 Wtew Wood Or PWJtno I 60067 CHARLES SUESSE 637 born 8 o Down G Ove. I 60516 IWCHAEL SULLIVAN 33 Eu i O Coroopofc. PA PETER C SUWJCHT UifvvScK U) Cpt 'cr wi 54911 JOWTAUSOC? 215 am st Down Grov I 60515 DANtL TlGHE MCHAEL TOBN BRIAN TOPOL SW ROBERT TOROOfF A RAMO TRfONOFF 101 Pnea ar.t Dr 4206 23rO S 3379 5 16 St 5152 Mam Cm Ba 1106 Pan.i Avo Fcna OulOC. W1 54935 San Francsco. CA 94114 Mr« x o W 53215 Jane . Wt 53546 Morton. I 61550 BRIAN TRUSKOWSKI 1346 Kkx o Ba SobMki. Wl 54171 THOMAS VALENTYN 144 Jotfonon Ptoce Orrt , Wl 54136 WUJAM B VAN VIEET I 611CoOtdg P1 Boartord. I 61107 PWJ L. VITALE 2913 N Boymoro Dr toOoa W 54601 JO AhNA C VOSSLER 610 H 17m Si WrxxtH. Wl 53233 BRIAN K. WAGNER 3266 N Nowtv St MhwtxAM. Wl 53211 RICHARD A WAGNER 334 t WarrgionAy CWvWana Wl 53015 MKXAEL WALKER 9 VaMntn CartW Dr $1 Anatw. Jama a. Wl RONALD WARANOWSKI 6429 Mai w l Or Wooooj I 60515 WLUAM WARNER 543S Moctoon loGrano • 60525 Menaei Slowo • Inframuab. Tenrvi Club; B G CkJD. V P Chan® Soouo — ASCE. Englneonno Coop Program; Inlramucb Peter C Sunnicht — Sigma PN Epstan: Hodog Club John Tomcher — Handilond Oub. V P Darnel Tighe — Chi Eptfon; Oub Hockey; ASCE. Engineering Co-op Mchoel Tobin - «E Bnan Topoiski _ Co-op. counci chan-mon. ASCE. ec . Open Home-Co-op chairman; Concrete Canoe Robert Tordoft — Club Footbal A Rono TiUonoff — HE. We t He Carmel HOI, chartor member. Sport Car Oub. SAAC. SCCA Brian Trmkowiki — Eta Kappa Nu. RA. Blueprint. McCormefc Hal. a t dree tor Thomo VWentyn — ASCE. Blueprint; Free Throw Champ. Intramural , chomp . Dean li t W am B Van Vloot I — IKE; Co-op Couid. Anmal House, ortgmcJ mom-Dor Dean List. ftueernt Joanna C Vouter — ASCE. ec. VP; ntronxrah Brian K Wagner — btramuab. Concert Commrttee Ricnord A Wognor — Chi Epslon. ASCE. Sancnoi Brother Mchoel Walter — Co-op; Christian Anar chilli. 12 OO Rondd Waranowski — EEE. mtramuab. Rugby W am Warner — ntramuab Tom Webb — Vonrty Tonne, ntramu cc Ben Wermnger — Rugby. T € Oub Derma Wer — EEE Co-op Coird. charman. kitramucto Dean A Wflams — ASCE. Coop. Rugby, ntramuab. Open Home. Concrete Canoe. Certified Hold Out Kemyt Wfttenbug — Co-op engneer TOM WEBB 10206 W Ipham Avo Halo Com , wi BEN WENNNGER 625 N 15m St B waifc« Wl 53233 DENMS Wtfi 610 Maole PorV Dr 51 PdU. KH 55118 DEAN A. WILIAMS 1513 Gr ncW« Par 900 I 60069 KERMT WITTENBURG a ca Star Bout Pan Poe sw 56470 243 EmMt C Wono — PN Stoma. EEC. ritro-maaK Potty YocxAowtci — Anmai Mouie. Gong Show. mtranx Ob. SaxJay So-ode Squod Footbol leaguo. C oquot Club Richard Zabawa — Alpha Sgma Nu. Pi Tou Sigma btfamuaH. EOP Tutor. Coop Program; Open House. ASME ERNEST C WONG 2$tago«W Wo n NJ 07470 PETER YACUKOWCZ 6107 46tn Avo Mnoro W1 53142 R1CHARO ZABAWA 731 iPih Av« So Wkoot Bapift W1 RONALD ZABOROWSW WOOS 21st $ OeA Ooo W1 5J154 Joseph A. Abel Gregg C. Achtenhagen Joseph E. Aguon Linda Alexander Dominic Ambroses Katherine A. Anhalt Reza Aparviz Raymond A. Auger Eugene M. Bednarz Michael J. Bensing Britton E. Berek Mary Ellen L. Bernauer David M. Berry Soud M. Blehed David J. Bonin Gregory P. Bonin Venessa A. Brown John D. Buckley Margery J. Burrage Kevin P. Campbell Jeffrey CescN Jose f. Cifuentes Raphael R. Clark Matthew W. Cleary David R. Coates Martin J. Crnkovich Neil Cyrus Fred Darington III Fahd A. Darrab William R. Davis Laurence J. Dietrick John A. Dombeck Wiiam J. Dombrowski Mark P. Feilen John P. Femal Anthony R. Flores Stephan R. Freundl Steven K. Gage Christopher D. Galecki Ahmed K. Gettani Eileen A. Giesple Gregory J. Goetz Jeffrey A. Gorski Jeffrey D. Grant Stanley J. Greene Robert J. Gross Edward W. Haberkorn Jr. Patrick J. Harney Robert G. Harp Duane P. Hase John J. Hayes Joseph M. Heiberger Terrance Hensler Terrance M. Hess Bruce E. Hojak Shaun P. Horan Theresa Horton Cary Y. Hsia Gai E. Huhnke Frank J. Janiszewski Michael S. Johnson Edward G. Kass Larry J. Koehler James F. Kohli James M. Krause Alexander S. Krouska Edward E. Krusemark Charles C. Ksicinski Eric F. Maas Michele M. Manning Mark S. Matias Robert G. McBride Brian J. McCauley Mark K. Morello Joseph P. Moro Mary C. Neumann Michael C. O'Dill Daniel K. O’Neil Charles T. Overeem John G. Palasz Demetrius J. Pallas Ronald J. Patrick Ray A. Pili Harry E. Profio Amna G. Quereshi Karl W. Reisei Debra D. Richards Mario R. Rinaldi David L. Robley Randoif L. Romenesko Ronald R. Rothfusz Timothy M. Rowan Michael A. Rowley PhHHp F. Salditt Larry W. Schiffer Timothy A. Schmidt Dennis A. Schulz Michael J. Schutten Stephen B. Servias Archie W. Shaw Brian D. Sikorski Brian L. Skrade Sue Stephan Robert J. Sullivan Kelly D. Talcott Michael F. Thompson Brian W. Truesdale Gerald R. Tyrrel Emmanual E. Ubom Kurt A. Unangst Brian Vonderwarn John M. Van Dyke Scott P. Voiss Michael J. Wagner Susan J. Wallenslager Christopher J. Wieloch Michael G. Williams Gregory P. Wilson Christopher J. Wolfkiel Gene J. Wong Theresa M. Wrape MARQUART BUS SERVICE, INC. P.O. Box 103 • Cedarburg, Wisconsin 53012 244 Journalism Dean James F. Scotton The first journaism courses at Marquette were offered in the Robert A. Johnston College of Economics in 1910. In 1916, the College of Journalism became independent, and in 1917. the curriculum was expanded to four years. Dr. James F. Scotton was named dean of the College of Journalism in 1978. He received his Bachelor of Arts in English from Boston University in 1953. He earned his Masters degree in political science from the University of Wisconsin in 1967. and earned his Ph.D. in mass communications from that school in 1971. Dean Scotton's career as an educator and professional journalist has taken him to places like the University of Uganda, and the University of Lagos. Nigeria He has been a free-lance correspondent in Africa and Europe, and has worked for the Associated Press in Chicogo 2 5 E MCHAEl ABLER 746 Waconjm Av« North Fen du loc. wt ROBERT ALBERT 43 Gordan Tarroce Ectoor NJ 06817 BEA BAECHLE 1226 Graanwood Ave Pocktord t 61107 TOOO BEAMON 2 00 Wmi Gcteno SI WTwOuk Wt 53205 MCHAR BELMONT 206 fkxtcn A vt Wax agon l 60066 E Mchoel Abler — SPJ SOX. Trtxne. out. now edtor. manogng edtor Boa BoecNe — AJpho Sigma Nu. Kappa Tau Alpha. Trtxne. ecttoriai board. !•-top. J-Coad. pro Todd Beamon — Counterpoint MCC Newspaper. Trtxne. city editor. Block Student Card. Legit VP Mchoei Betnont — Ply Kappa Theta City ot Mlwaukee ntermhp. ntrama-ah. AUnrt Homecoming, saservsar Patrco Boeiter — Trtxne. Double major In pottical science Effte Brando — Sgmo W EpOon. Little seter; sox. MUTV. WMLR Intramacto Tn Kappa Buzz Andrea Brox — AMA Ad Oub. Journal, an edtor Barbara M Butler — j-Coad. treat focutty rep, newsletter gen. manager; EOP Tutor. Honors Maude Campbol — SOX. ec . Po hcd Science Honorary Society. Joanal poetry and hction editor. Trtxne Sheena Carey — EOP Communication Club, pret. advisory board, voknteer tutor; Pre-Law Society Maribeth ClarV — Pershing Orflo (Marco-dettes). Joumd WMLR Janet Cleary — Httop. ntramurab. Ad Club; AMA. A kanoodte CUD Thomot Conroy — Httop. intramaah. 714 Oub Nancy Cuhck — O'Domel. RA. Band ntramaals Vrgn o Davidson — Kappa Tau Alpha. Harry J Grant Scholar. Peggy Degorhart — ASMU. senate comrmncations Cheryl Dejewski — Phi Kappa Theta. Kappa Tau Apha. Dean- lat. Honors Program. Orientation. J-Cound Alexander Dobson — Sigma Phi EpiBon. Trtxne. Joumd. htranvah. EOP Tutor; Hodog Ck b. Tim Dodge — Trtxne. Joanctf. Httop. photo erttor Kevn Drhcol — Fitae MdniQht BBO; tvth Street Athletic Oub; Natl Astoc Ot Krto Flyers Jon Drummond — SDX. J-Coud. Tribute. edtonai edtor. Susan Mointn Fan Oub Frank Dzurfc — Trtxne. Mtwadcee Sentinel. Christian Coaler. Club Footbal, Bruno and the Mopedz Helen Emtt — Trtxne. manogng edtor. SHEENA CAREY 525 N 20 51 •AwoAm Wt 53233 MAR6ETH CLARK 710 N 74th St Wauwotoaa Wi 53213 JANET CLEARY 2207 Pasoan OocMord I 61103 THOMAS COM?OY BO 474 Mdothan L 60445 NORA COOPER 4016 CXjOxSd oa lyrrJuil OH 44125 NANCY CUSICX 22 John AOan Pd Fa ’ Greerwech 02818 VPGWA DAVDSON 7620 Wamoc Ct JOVton. OH 45424 PEGGY DEGENHART 268 S wso ooa Kankaaoo I 60601 OCRYL DEJEWSKI 2348 5 34 51 MhwxAae. Wt 53215 ALEXANDER DOBSON 5406 N 21l S ArSngton VA 22206 TMDOOGE 4 i Adam 51. Via Pan. 160181 KEVN F. DRtSCOU 27346 Santa Ocra Or Watnxa. OH 44145 JON W DRUMMOND 1664 S 62nd St UTwolAoo Wt 53214 FRANK DZURK 2611 Farmoait Oovaand Mts. Oh HELEN ERNST 1224 Noftonct A ve Bock lord I 61103 246 LOS EVANS 4340 w looms Pd G«« r d Wl 53220 TMOTHY EWERT 10445 W Howard Av« GrMrMU W’ 53226 LAURA FOOTE 1341 W Crownor Ai oro. t 60606 WILIAM FOY 1569 f Bttckthom PI WvrtWM. Wl 53211 LOS FRANKIN 1725 S WaWnQion Part BOO I 60060 STEPHEN FRAWIEY OCKruoDo Qamstord. MA 01024 JANE GETTEL 2701 £ N wton Shorewoorl Wl 53211 DEAN GUJTZER 5214 S 23 S MtwOtAM. Wl 53221 AMY GATHER 1013 N«p uw Av (Joe no Wl 53404 CHRSTNE GOOOMAN 325 Vori Horen Si NW Wamo xi DC 20015 BRIAN GOSIZK WILIAM GRW€S I USA L. GRUBS TM HALLEY LAURC HANSEN 208 Oonwood Ave 3Q80 Gym S N 551 joctewn St. 6202 W 25m St 1564 N 4Qih St fcrtiflton. NJ 08016 St Potomug f 3370 Fremont. OM 43420 CX ango, CO 01301 MtwtxAee. Wl 53200 DONNA HAROPULOS longvlew Qd Soulhamplcn NV 11060 JOHN HEALY J006 chDr leowood. Its 66206 CRAIG HETTI'JG 6575 K 05 St MhoiM Wl 53224 GERALD HORAITIS 7320 Wart ten Ave Wauwatosa. wt 53213 KATHLEEN HUESTJG 6621 Mode o Mis Modern CM 45243 Lo« Evans — Hit op Ad Club. Wort Study Timothy E wort — Tribune WBam Foy — SOX. Trtxne Lois Frank in — Beta Theto Zeta. htro-muab. Bod Girts Dance Troup. Christian Anarchists Stephen Frawtey — MTCop. osst photo edtor. Loyoio Unvenrty Rome Center. Ad Club. AMA Jane Gettel — Pi Beta Phi. PEO Amy Gnther — SOX. RA. Tribute, rtrtop; David Thome Fan Club, sole member Chnstne Goodman — J-Comd. Campus Mr try AJurm Homocomng W am C Grimes I — Trtxne. Wtop. WMJR. MUTV. Cross Country. Trock Sports Wormohon Usa L Grubs — Trtxne. ntrarrxrcSs. ASMU. programmng board. J-Comd. sec . Senior Week dree tor RA Tim HaBey — Kappa Tou Apho Trtxne. edtorid board. Journal fknky Lauie Hareen — Sigma Delta PI. Honors Program. SOX; Trtxne. Modrtd Program Domo Haropuos — Trtxne. EOP Tutor: Ad CXb. WO John Heafy — Trtxne: ntramuah. Moo-semen Rabbits Athletic Club; Oriento-tion. Crag Herring - MUTV. WMlR. HKop. Jound. Trtxne. asst news edtor: SOX. freos: Varsity Chorus Gerad Hor arris — Ad Xb. pres . Vanity Chorus Journal. Natl Assoc 01 Armchair Phiosophers Kathleen Huesing — SOX. Trtxne; WMUR. traffic dree tor MUTV. asst news drector Mke Jockotoce — Sigma Phi Epaion. pres Alpho Sgmo Nu. VP.. Spocfcora Unimited. Pre-Low Society. Hodog Marybeth Jacobson - Kappa Tau Alpha. Trtxne. copy editor. Orientation louro E Johnson — Sigma Phi Epsion. Little Setor. Alpha Sigma Nu. Kappa Tau Alpha. Trtxne ASMU. Roderick Kety — WMUR news. Intramural! Coed Footbal Anthony Kennedy — Trtxne. edtor-n-ctxef MKE JACKOBOCE 7151 Dm wood Grand RapkJi M 46506 MARYBETH T JACOBSON 01 4 5606 CrarCerry Pd Burtngton Wl 53105 LALPAE JOWSON 24 Garcmer Qd N So uc e. MA 02060 ROOERICK KELLY Oo i 216 Koewam VW 55753 ANTHONY KEfsNEDY SOQAN 20m S W a w. Wl 53233 247 rntmmam STEVEN KENT£DY 9d 3 9 Hi BO Monroe bn 10950 LORI KWG 7606 S Eurtd Ave CncOQa l 60649 BARBARA K06KOL 3356 S 16 S MTwaukee. W1 53215 JANET KOZMNSW $ i 5 nest Fror t Wi 53132 PAMELA KUEBER 9l 1. Bo. 242E Vino Crav . KV 40175 Steven Kennedy — Phi Kappa Theta, toe Lori Kng — Counterpoint; Httop: Tribute. Ad Club Janet Koimnskl — SOX. Kappa Tan Alpha Pamela Kneper — SOX. Sigma Delta Pi. Tribute, speed protects edtor. Intro-muds: MU P Modrid Timothy Joel Uwewiki — Ptramuab. STB Fomdation co-founder. IRth Streof Ghetto Dweter John Lockhart — Tribute. Ski Team. Schttz Ski Team; ASMU. spedd projects coordnator. W1CUSA. pres Thereto Loftut — WMU? news Stephen Lucid — Sgma Phi Eps on. V P; AMA Roodtrip Internal'I. Crow Coutfry. Hodog Oub; Pabst rep Mchoei Mocchone - W1CCA. Y-Lampoon. Trtoute. Hit op. Jound. Christian Anarchists, pres Peggy Mochak - HKop. oa. sec ; ML's AJeymate Feena MocLaverty — htramuds; Tt€ Club. Campus Mnttlry Kristine Mojdodc - SOX. VP . Trtoute arts edtor. Pre-law Society Francis X McBoy — Ad Club. tec.. J-Coutd Daniel F. Mate! — Tribute, rttramucta. Dean's Utt Helen McCarthy — rttramudt. ASMU; Orientation. WMUR. MUPR W«am McCoy — Tribute; Progressive Student Organization. Codtlon (or Di-vestitue: Weedpatch Community Aieen Mdnnls — Kappa Tau Alpha; SOX. Tribune. MU Plgrimoge W«am McKermey — SOX; Tribune, sports edtor. Orientation: Schroedor. BOG Mary-La Meany _ O'Dormel Dorm Coutd. EOP Tutor. J-Cound. PR Club. V.P . AMA; Ad Club; HMop Kathleen Mehr — MUTV Brion Meyer — WMUR. co-gerterd man oger. news dree tor; Kenneth A. ShUer Award recipient Pomelo Meyer — WMUR. pubic relations drector; Dean's List. Nat l Dean's List. Helen Mtterrtght — Jound. assoc edtor; MKvadree Sentinel, stringer. Tribute. Wadcegan News-Sun. Intern TMOTHY USZEWSXI 3491 W 127 Oeveiana. Cho 44111 JOHN LOCKHART 2610 E 3rd St DUuffi. Mr 55$12 THERESE LOFTUS 133 Amend Purer Forest. I 60305 STEPt€N LUCZAK 1009 XXtpo« Ton. Glenview. I 60025 MCHAEL MACCHONE $26 N 151h Si Mhvauoe W) 53233 PEGGY MACHAK 2409 Poortd Picwy WoUeoon l 600$5 FEENA MACLAVERTY 126 DoWnot Pd wnrwfta l 60093 KRtSTf€ MAJOAOC 1535 Co «« Ave Shooovoon. Wi 53061 FRANCIS X. MALLOY 2436 H 91 51 Wouwoiwa. Wi 53226 DANR F. MATH 3364$ 17lhSi MMUh Wi 53233 HELEN MCCARTHY 1902 W Xfeoun. Wi 53233 WUIAM MCCOY 605 N 25lh 51 MS-OJ.ee. Wi 53233 MAUREEN MCGEOWN 146 Lloyd 9a Monies . NJ 07042 ALEEN MCWS 511 Meyer si Morion WI 54950 WILIAM MCKENNEY $06 E Bard SI Hah M 4 442 MARY-UZ MEANY 1 BrchBood Well Mortlord CT 06119 KATHLEEN MEH? 22 S t0 h AveN 9tveri.de l 60546 BRIAN MEYER 722 N 131HS1 Mhvaj.ee Wi 53233 PAMELA MEYER 722 N. 13lh SI MwaJ.ee W 53233 t€L£N L. MITTERMGHT 2595 N Proroeci Ave Mwoj.ee Wi 53211 246 GERALD MORTELL 15QPotn Dr oo Bor WI 5001 LAURA J MUELLER 12301 W Oovotarvl Avo w«l AM WI s ; KATHLEEN MURPHY 6280 ( far Av« ng wt5od CO 80111 ROBERT NASENBENY 602 Hfcoo Antioch I 60003 JAMES NOWOGROCIO 6410 laraing Ave Cleveland ON 44106 CLARE O'BRCN 4834 N Mmv Bvd MMMn WI 63217 SHANNON O'GRADY 66 f uv Wlr lla l 60093 GAYLE PAPROCK) 3749 W 69 Sf CNCOQO. I 60629 MARY PUNGERCAR 4726 K Mv«Mm WI 63311 ROOM ROSENTRE TER 80 80. 369 Tw ic M. WI 63181 JOANNE RUSSO MARGARETE ST THOMAS P SALLEY JUUE SANTAPOALO DENMS S7€LTON 2«S06 McWvcrih Oood LOUS 186 PlwWnn Bo 3113 23k! S 524 si UJv enee O Beochwood ON 44122 4160 N ftcftaro ODn Dock NJ 07462 «nono WI 63140 Joexon TN 37080 Wxmm Wl 63312 ANGELA SEROCUK ROWENA A SIVA SHARON SWNhCR SUSAN STUMUN JOUSJ STRUB 6447 S-116 S 4756 Hchtcan Lon 2417 W Oooaeveff O 9303 Stanton Ave 55 Perorooyt pi hom Comen WI 53130 Ohemo M 48864 MeoAoe WI 63309 ffderhem PA 19118 N no’orv WV 11743 Gerdd Mortal — Vanity Taro Htro-rTx aS Laura Mueier — MB!op layout edlor. ©tftor-m-cNaf; Tribune Commutor Handbook, edior. AMA CSA. Ad Oub Kottnoen Mi phy — Jourd edior-n-cttef. J-Counc . Towor Dorm Councl. oral Roberi Nateoeny — Society tor Cote got® Joumabts Trtxne Mtwodee Sentaraal. Tanro. ntramudt jam®! Nowogrocki — Trtxne. niramm all: STB Oub 19th Snoot Athlete Oub Oore O'Bnen — SOX. ASMU. programming board, odrtrwtrative auiiant to V P. Orientation Shannon OGrody — Hockey Gayle Paprocki — Dorm Coind MaryPungercar — Alpho Sigma Nu SOX. Kappa Tou Apha Hit op Trtxne. Commuter NewBetter. CSA Robn Rotentreter — trtxne Hit op. ad manager. Ad CkJD treat AMA Joanne Rutto — Trtxne. Study Abrood n Rome, itakn Oub. Studentt tor Life. Coo Marquette Margaret® St Lou — Tnangie. Little Sitter: Trtxne. Bfciepmt Thomai P Sd SaBoy — Tappa Kegga Bru Spleen Lot. Trtxne «top. Greentree Pub Pool Team nnamucti nebroton. ASMU Pret Aao-Ran AAe A Santapoato — Aboard SOX. pubtcrty drector rtaBan CkJD. pret: Jound. graphics edtor Denra Snerton — Progressive Student Organuaton. Trtxne Rtxnheodt Rowena A S va — Trtxne MUTV WMUR out newt drector. newt d-rector Goto lector PA. Admucns tout Sharon Skrmer — CSA. tec MCC. Judo Club Sutan Mario StBmm — Alpha Sgma Nu Kappa Alpha Tou. WMUR. newt dree tor. drector of ipocd programrrsng John Strub — Trtxne Jound WMUR newt. MU Chorus Wlsconen Symphony Chorut Lon one Symonette — ntemotiond Student! Atsociotion David Thome — Trtxne. On Second Thought H top. copy edtor, WMjR Popdar Oppressive Party, detator Maiteen Tobn — SOX. Trtxne. photo edtor Jasnd. associate edtor Mary Ill’s Roommate Club Cynftto Townaend — Trtxne Aipno Angels MUTV news writer Chratopher Trailer — Trtxne MJTV LORRANE SYMONETTE P O BCO W 334 Nauau Bahamas DA VO THOME 1101 Pesamho Dr Docre wi 63402 MAUREEN TOBJN 4206 23rd St Sanfranceco. CA 63203 CYNTrtA TOWNSEND 610 N 17 SI I8MUM Wl 63233 CHRISTOPHER TRAXLER 20686 N Long Meodows Or Odee L 60047 2 9 Kathy Trader — Bricks and Boards Pay Vereipei — Kappa Tau Afcha. Trt-txne ASMJ peat, newt oOtor. Dean's Let. 417 Oub Thomas Wcfcfcirch — Trtxne eratoncX and od Hah rttramurab. Brooks Union Advisory Board IPdo Woiand — S omo Delta Phi Roger M Wls - Ad Oub. J-CouKl. V P Deborah Wlnnert — Sigma Phi Epskxi. Little Sater. Hltop. Trtoune. Journal. SOX. Photo Lab Assistant Mary WoNgemjth — Trtxne Varsly Chorus. Ad Oub: btemshp. Promotion Dept MKvaJcee Joi ncl KATHY TRAXIER 1400 Wocv rb Bd St Pod. MN 56116 RAY VERESPEJ 390MgM Dr WfcXWCk. CM 44094 THOMAS G. WALDWRCH 667 St franc Oa Do Par Wt 54115 UNDA WEIAND 13746 W forest Knol Or Now Bertn WI 53151 MARY WHTNEY 1«00 S Gartokl Avo WaJiosha Wi 53166 ROGER WLLS 413 Man St CuOO C y. WI 53607 DEBORAH WNNERT MARY 7 forwnoro Lana WOHLGEMUTH St Dowds PA 10067 1705 38 St Konoeta. WI 53140 Michael C. Buelow George A. Cleveland Thomas J. Curtin Virginia Frazier Mary B. Giaimo Christopher F. Howard David A. Ingber Lisa A. Kaechle Mary E. Krakora James P. Longo Stephen F. McEleney John F. Mansing Jr. John P. Murphy Jr. Craig A. Oswald Christopher A. Peppas John G. Pierschaia Joseph A. Trivisonno Janice M. Vidic Christine M. Vigis Eizabeth A. Wokmann Donna M. Voltner Michael D. Wendel Scott F. Wyler The section has been sponsored by centnoL przess MILWAUKEE 250 PRINTERS TYPOGRAPHERS Law In 1908. the independent Milwaukee Law School became the Marquette University Law School. In 1912. the curriculum was changed to three years from four. Law School graduates are automatically admitted to the Wisconsin Bar. Robert F. Boden was named dean of the Law School in 1965. He received a Ph.D. in liberal arts from Marquette in 1950. and graduated from the Marquette Law School in 1952. Before coming to Marquette as dean. Boden practiced privately in Milwaukee. specializing in bankruptcy and trial law. 251 Dean Robert F Boden JON ANDERSON 2137 Kenreton WaiWo WA J186 ROBERT BARTEL 5 21 N Shoroona Ave Mhvadcee Wl 53217 SEClDON BERNSTEN 4600 N 70lh SI V wOL oo Wl 53218 PATRICK BRENMAN 1007 N MOW janMvto Wl 53545 RONALD BRITTON 8747 W Own WooO T« OC MhvOJ.ee Wl 53224 Jon Anderson — Pr Delta PM. Thomas More Scholar Robert Bartel — Tau Eps on Rho. office ; Student Bar Association. Mu Law Review, Ronald Britton — Bock American Low Student Assoc . pros. treos Frederick J Bat — Tou Epsioo Pno. Men m Law. V P Robert E Cc an - Tou tpslon Rho. pres Men in Law. pres Robort Cmkovich — Gamers n the Law. Eta Chapte . Dereicts n the Lax Catherine L Car an — Appelole Advo cocy Society. MU Low Review, executive ocStor. Donai Domot — MU Law Review, ocStor Jeffrey Fertt — Mu Low Review. Thomas More Scholar. Notionc Moot Coat Team. Gctohan PubfeNng Schoiarsho Ramona A Gometez — ntomahona Law Society; Student Bar Associco-tion. ABA ISD Representative Mchoel Hayes — MU Law Review, leod articles ecltor. Project Outrooch Janet Moehnen — MU law Review, managing editor. ABA ISD Moot Coat Team Mark J Molihoue — Phi Delta Pin. Law Review. ABA ISO Moot Coat. Thomas More Scholar. Appelate Advocacy Lenore-Mane A lonigro — Portia Scholar. Law 8 Women, pres . Tutor; mtemahond Low Society Patrick Memgan — utramaali. Phi Delta PN Jeffrey Morgan — MU Law Review FREDERICK J. BUR1 722 N 13m Mhvoaoe Wl 53233 ROBERT CALLAN 668 N 78 St Wauwatosa Wl 53213 MARK CHAMBERLAW ROBERT CRNKOVCH 115 CUfwood In 6840 W 8k momd BO icOoue Wl 54601 Wauwatosa Wl 53213 CAT €RWEL CURRAN 310 Tremor St Mouston. Wl 53048 donaldef t 2415 E Wyomno Pi Mhvojiee Wl 53202 KARL DOVNK 2921 E Carpenter Ave Cudahy. Wl 53110 r charo dufour 535 N 113 St Wauwatosa. Wl 53226 JEFFREY S FERTl 6166 N. lyOel Ave MKvaifcoo Wl 53217 THOMAS GLEMBOCKI 222 W trpot Ave MtwoiAoe Wl 53207 RAMONA A GONZALEZ 1570 N Prospect Ave MhvaJ.ee Wl 53202 DOUG HAW Man St MenCM Wl 54152 MCHAEL HAYES 8665 W Waconen Ave Wauwoioso Wl 53226 JANET HOE WEN 3000 N 86 Sf Mhvaukee. Wl 53222 MARK J. HOLZHAUER 7013 W Ceaar St Wauwatosa. Wl 53213 JAMES JACOBSON 822 n tern irtwaJcee Wl 53233 DONALD VICTOR KOZLOVSKY 3 Denman. Wl 54208 LENORE-MARE LOMGRO 670 Orchard Cf Oosete I 60172 PATRICK MEHJGAN 5850 N Manana Ct MhvoJ.ee Wl 53217 JEFFREY MORGAN 726 laoPoe Pon Warfington wi 5307 MARY E. NEESE 337 lc o Or ooroom l o. Wl 53075 J BUSHNEU NR SEN MM N 541h S MhwxA e. Wl 53216 JOHN R. ORTON 311 S Taylor lancaitw. Wl 53813 DAh L J. RAYMONDS 1642 N. 72tv3 Si Wauwatota. Wi 53213 MARY READ 929 N Aitor Mh ou ©« Wl 53202 PHLLP SANTERRE CYNTHA SCHOTT JOSEPH SCHUBERT MARY L. SCHUETTE DAVD SCHULTZ 45 E Frank 1211 wm (6 Dr 1443 S 6 Si P O Bor 160 2565 N LAy Bd Barron Wl 54812 Pori Ed-arch Wl 54469 Mkwxfcoo. W 53204 Halted Wl 53027 BroakftoM Wl 53006 MaryE Neese — MUlowRovi w. Thomas Store Scholar. American Artpru-aence Book Award J Buirmel Neton — Sto law Review JohnR Orion — SAJ law Review. National Stool Coal; Appelato Advococy Daniel J Raymond) — titrartwab. Men m low. Tutor Group l©Oder. Phdp Santero — MU law Review Story I Schuette - AJpho S oma Nu. MU law Review. Thomo Store Scholar David Schultz — Thomo More Scholar Kathleen A Sneedy — Ph Dodo Phi S1U law Review. Alpha Sigma Nu Thomai Store Scholar: S8A Qau Rep John Snider — Tou Epjton Rho. ec John Stuber — Thoma Store Scholar. Student Bar Association, pro Ralph Tea © — Phi Dodo Phi Maryiee Tuuyntki — Phi Delta Phi. ABA lSO Stool Oxn Team lowrence VosoN — ABA lSO Stool Court Team, Appelate Advococy Society, pres KATHEEN S €EDY 107 f fo.oao Da Mr a « . Wi 53217 JOW SNDER 176 Stocmev Avo CMahvfll. Wl 54929 JED SONSTROEM 4427 N 641h Si Wv,ol o« Wl 53225 RICHARD STAFF 1031 f Shore Qa tail Troy. Wl 53120 JON STUBER 810 N 12W. s(MUM Wl 53233 RALPH TEASE MARYIEE TUSZYNSKI LAWRENCE VESELY DAN WERLEtN 1948 MoroB St 5739 W F ncr« Or 1202 Whdalo St 2100 S 61 St G en Bay. Wl 54302 Weil AM Wl 53219 Martfona wi 54220 Woit AM. Wl 53219 David W. Boraoow David B. Bartel Kay T. Benson Elliot H. Berman James A. Bolt Kathleen E. BonviBe Terry J. Booth Robert M. Brabham Jr. Ronald J. Buchhotz Cal R. Bumton Mary B. Colon Christopher M. Cook ley Kevin D Corrigal Rodney L. Cubbie Michael T. Day Duncan C. Delhey Eugene E. Detert Robert A. Dudek JuSanna Ebert Jocqueline J. Eisenbrandt Christina M. Engel John M Flachek John D. Fitzgerald Jr. Debra S. Forsaith Lynne M. Gehrke Ronald R. Hofer Michael T. Hopkins Maurita F. Houren Kay A. Hunt James M. Kalmy Mark D. Kely Dean J. Keyes Mary H. Klesmet Barbara A. Kieer Pamela J. Kontowicz-Schroe Patricia A. Ku)awa Douglas Leppanen Mary A. Lubinski Gary D. Mahkom Mark D. McGarvie Wlkm A. Moeler Karen P Monday Michael J. Morse Steven P. Morstod Kerry E. Mutdowney Nicholas J. Nedeou David L. Nchois Jodie L. Nowotny Denise M. O'Donnel Jose A. Olivieri Bruce A. Olson John J. O'Neil Scott E. Pederson Mark L. Pedriani Henry R. Pinekenstein Jeffrey A. Reitz Daniel A. Riedl Paul E. Rumler Deborah K. Scheid Jeffrey E. Schetole Barbara S. Smith Mary K. Sommers Harry A. Stein Mchoel H. Strefca Jo A. Taraszewski Steve L Vdmer David D. Wlmoth Liberal Arts Marquette has always had a liberal arts onentation. Before 1907. Marquette College was basically a liberal arts school The College of Liberal Arts came into existence when the school charter was amended in 1907 and Marquette became a university. Today, the College of Liberal Arts confers Bachelor of Arts. Bachelor of Science and Associate in Arts in Law Enforcement on students who have completed one of the prescribed programs in the college Rev. Frederick J. Dillemuth. S.J. was named dean in 1979. He earned a B.S in chemistry at Spring HSI College. Mobile. Alabama in 1948. and an M S. in chemistry at Boston College in 1951 He received his S.T.L. from Woodstock College. Maryland, his Ph D. in chemistry from Fordham University in 1960 and spent a year as an A.E.C. Fellow at Columbia University. Since Dillemuth has come to Marquette, the College of Liberal Arts has initiated a program of thematic studies for students who wish to cluster electives In a specific field 2 4 Dean Frederick J. Dilemuth, S.J. TM AHERNG 1347 Sanford 1ft GMnvww I 60025 ROBERT ALEXANDER 240 Coaiiry Qub D lake Geneva Ml S3147 MARK P ARENS 12132 Jmrm in nonMom MO 63033 REGKA ARTHUR 7636 S Vemon Cncaoo i 606« STEPHAN C. AUSTRIA 20i Ledbetter M Xena ONo 46365 GEORGE BACH PHLP BAJN JAN BALKE GARY BANCW MCHAEl BARRETT 1615 W «xwn Geneva Soy Estates Bi 3 Boi 110 540 t rat o Av« 2327 E 4 n WwdAoe Wl 63233 u GerwvO. Wl 63147 CSnKnve W1 54020 CArr+t C y. ( 60407 CXA n PATRICK BARRETT ROBERT BARTOLONE LEEDEU. BEAN SUE 8EDNAREK R LYMM BEIT2 1607 S 57 $1 005 Oevefcno 6440 W Shendan 5456 Oryrrpio C 556 W23634 Maplewood W«i A6s Wl 63214 Parti Dido I 60066 MwatAee Wl 63216 GreendcSe W 63129 WaAwna. Wl 63166 SALVATORE BEU.OMO 179ModS0n .« hatenon NJ 07524 WILIAM BETVtfE 34380 Scn 1 Or Oconomowoc Wl 63066 CANDANCE BCSENTHAL 002 Mark-on w 63046 ANNAMARC BLOTTO 2117 35 Pi uraro wi 63140 WILIAM 8LAUL 6101 Sorr Oa CrrM u e. I 60014 MARK G BLUM MARK BOOAMER CH?tSTOPI€R BONK PAUL BONNE SON FRED BOTTA N10W31602Pi y«iPkwv 3267 W 06m 2441 Pick Dr 3215 CM laMem Dr 20632 Summer in Oeanek) Wl 63016 Cleveland Ono 44102 GtorwWw l 60025 8roo e« Wl 63005 srtngfon Beoch CA Tim ANeong — kitramurds Rugby RA Schroeder Mai Board of Governors. Ski CMS Robert Alexander — Intramuals: Karoie CM Mark Arena — Frotemd Order ol the kv-notoWe Sheep: reporter. Shepherds Goiette Regno Arthu — BSC. off-campus rep Delta Sigma Theta. VP. Pearts of Omego. Pres. Sock Work CM Stephan C Austria — htramurafe. MU Bor Association. Pres George JB. Boch - Delta CM. Pres. R Sgmo Alpha EC ntramud Greek Week charman. J-Board Phkp Ban — infram ah Bread lor the World. Afcho Epslon Delia Sgmo Eto Sgma Pw Jan Bake — Marquette Chorus Gary Bancki — Wresting. Frotemd Order of me inflatable Sheep. Pres., kv tramLrcSs. Prelaw Society MJOTC Mchoel Borrett — Delta Tau Delta kitro-irnds. Patrick Barrett — CM) Foottx . French Honor Society; Potted Science Honor Society Robert Bartdone — mu italan CM). pres. ntramuab. AEO Dean’s let leeaei Bean — Pre- Low Sooety. CM) Footbai. Thrd-World Pre-Law Sooety Sue Bodnarefc - P CN. Pi Delta PN. EOP Tutor, moth tutor R Lyvm Be t — MSSha. Sgmo Tau Delta. sec . EOP Tutor Dean’s list WtSam Bethke — ntramuafc. ASMU Student Altars, asst pres. 3rd Boor McCgrmcfc Board of Drectors Candance Biesenma — Pi lambda Theta Psi Chi btramaals. RA. EOP Tutor. MU Symphonic Pep Band Amo Mane Blotto — Italan Club. VP sec . RA. Social Work CM). MU Students for Ufe Mark Bodamer — Psi Ot. track 904 CUb Christopher Bonk — Em Cops Athletic CM); kitromads Speed marks to Mom. Dod Friendship. Dove Paul Bonneson — Pt Alpha Theta. Pi Sgmo Alpha Pre law Society Fred Bono — EBGVM. Pink Floyd Club. FTs Kappa Theta 25S ELIZABETH BOYCE 700 Hamrton Kryjilord. M 49801 BARRETT C. BREUCKMAN 508 W«4trO00 Ave ft mgron. WI 53108 MARC BROWN 2318 Morey Cvarwon. I 60201 ROBERT W BRYAN. JR 970 Mormon In Moflman fi'afftt l 60195 MARIANNE BURDA 161 S EuckJ Ave BeM'rtjo PA 15202 Elrabem Boyce — Pi lambda Theta Dean u t. EOP Tutor Barrett C Breuckman — ASMU. speakers photographer; RA. Asst Hal Director. MU Con-cut or Socioty. Dean List Marie Brown — Advertising Oub Robert W Bryan. Jr. — btramuds; MSNF: NSOS8; MU Poet . R -8or. CO-founder Marianne Buda — NSOSB. J-8oard. Dorm Counci blramuds Jerry Cocctoftl — itafan Club, treas Carol Cardy — P l CN. Siomo Sigma Soma. treat tec ; Terns Club; btro-mud . Panhe . treat Mchod David Cathn — Pry Kappa Theta btramud ; Smash “ Kim Casteks — Phi Alpha Theta. ec. Eta Sgmo Phi; ASMU. jeootor. ito Art Student Cornel LXJVXj OITOtQnO — ■mOnX OB. OTnOnC drector; RA. a t hd drector. Eucho-rtttic mrviter, italan Club. Patricia Chomer — Phi Beta Kappa. Sigma Tou Delta; Omega; Senior Week Worker; PfC. Leonard C Cheitnut — BSC. legislature: btemattond Tatter - Dinner Committee; btramud Kattieen Oark — MJOTC Rile Team. SAACS; Frotemd Order of the bftat-ode Sheep, btenheeo Event Catherine Cmiel — Sigma Tou Delta; MJOTC Porthole, layout edtd: biro-mud . team manager Thereto CoBer — Vanity voleybal Jean Coins — Thl Sigma Tau. btramu-ah Arkonoode Oub Mfchoei Comerford — Inframuds Mchod Condon — Polticd Science Honor Society, btramud John I Cornel —btramud ; 417 Club — Altemattve Senior Bar. pubic rotation rep mo thy J Cooney — Pre-low Society; ASMU. onator PATRICK BURNS JERRY CACOOTT1 CAROL CAROY MCHAR CASHN KM CASTRAZ 3tt9N Newhc Si 2607 N Mon St 7014 N Iona 25 TWon Si 6423 Powel Pi Mmum Wi 53211 Boone. Wi 53402 Chcago t 60646 Nmnuo. Ml 03063 Wojwa o a. W153213 DA VO CASTELLANO 1929 Part wood Dr Scdcn Pk r . Hi 07076 RICHARD CEMAN 2444 N 63r 3 Si W x.wo o a Wi 53213 PATROA OCMERS 1312 S Oetcerr Pan out, l LEONARDO. CHESTNUT 62 Mowiand Awe leaned. NJ 07666 PtCP J CMELLO 1232 S 74m Si wetf AM wi 53214 JUUE a ARK 2545 N srowet Avo MlwoUee. WI 53211 KATHLEEN CLARK 159 AJ AngM Hi Rd Wappngor fcM HI 12590 CATTtRf J. CMEl 400 Comity Oub Or Penobom Beocn. Delaware 19971 TVCRESA COU.tR $76 W20103 Sumy Hi Dr Muwogo W 53150 JEAN COLINS 5001 James Hi Bd Kenemo. Oh 45429 MCHAEL COMERFORD 1111 lefce Shore Or h Barmgton I 60010 RENE CONCAhNON 36 Pine St Wettorv Mcm 02193 MCHAEL CONDON 515 W farvww A ington ”1 . I 60006 JOWL COf ELL I 20 Depot St Wetford MA 01886 TMOTHY COONEY 424 W Krtx Wooanoc i 60098 256 DEBORAH COSTELLO KATHLEEN CROWLEY SHAWN CROWLEY SKLA M CURTN DA VO DAWER 714 E townwnd 2 Goyorwood Uv 727 McrxJoc 534 Pork ion 18665 Oowjjon Od •AfwcxAoo W153212 SMouk. MO 63131 Wausau. Wl 64401 ia o M Wl 53551 8roc ftoW Wi 53006 TERECTTA DEAN C«K DECKER KERRY DEMET MATT €W DESHLER TTCRESE DCRtVGER P o 6o« N3382 9606 Bui Votoy W 2415 E Wyooirxj 10609 WWf W 5916 N Rtvw Boy Oa NastOu Bahama Woodstock. I V w xkoc. Wl 53202 Bmmqham. M 48009 Woierfora Wl 53165 USA DRli. BRIAN DUFFY ROBERT DUFFY JANET DUGAN PAMELA DYER 447 W Ilf St. 1343 W Wnconin Avo 4001 W Dam y Avo 6625 W Doaoo PI 711 N 16th Si Now acwncoa Wl 54017 MhvaAoo Wl 53233 Groenfwa Wl 53221 MtwaiAoo Wl 53220 MtwaAeo Wl 53233 Kathleen Crowley — Dorm Store, mg' Oo Oncer. PT Coud. pres.; Orientation, GOl Shawn Crowioy — Dean s List, EOP Tutor Snota M. CtAth — Pi Sigma At ha. RA. Dean let. Acodemlc Senate. Young RepuMcans. Senior Week; Httop David Dannor — Sigma Tou Delta. Phi Aloha Theta; EOP Tutor Tereota Dean — Apha Eps on Delta Drk Decker — McCormick J-Board; Student Appocfc Board Kerry Demet — Ski Oub Matthew Deihier — Ps On. Student Conduct Committee. Dorm Intramural Champ . Student Alumni Committee. PA Thereie Diertnger — Pt Beta Kappa lisa Dr — Honors Program. Chorus Varsity Women's Baskettd. mtiam ats Bnan Oufty — Dejo Who Musicd Experience. mgr. Mnd Expandng Chanp. Honorary Polar Bear. PiJer Robert Duffy — CSA Transportation dk . Hstory. Engbh. PWosophy honor societies Pamela Dyer — Pi Gamma Phi; French Club. Ski Club; Eucharistic Mnster. BTC. honorary pres. nframuc s Jeffrey Ek — Eta Sigma Pt . Pi Sigma Al pha. hfrarrxrah. MU C ouquet. ASMU. Pre-law Sociefy Marvin Efcon — Delta Sgmo Pi. MU Computer Society. V P. SSSE. SAM. Ub Arts Student Counselor. James S. Enghh — Psi Chi; Krtch of the MSB WMLR Jean Patrice Ennis — Alpho Kappa Apha Sorority, he.. Third Worid Engneemg Society. Craig R FaBco — Sigma Doric Pt MU h Madrid Program Potor A FaBucco — AH). Pre-law Society Margaret Fiorerva — Campus Mnistry, Pre-law Society ORAN DYETTE LORI ECEMANK JEFFREY EK MARVN ELLISON JAMES S ENGLISH 43 larcnmont St 1433 W Cudahy Avo 531 WokwiQlon St 2233 N Tort 8029 Nowcoino Oorchotror MA 02124 fc«w x ee Wl 53221 Oconoto Wl 54153 hOanapata. N 46218 Butxr . I 60459 JEAN ENfsBS KAREN EVANS 2420 Soon St 2536 N 38 Now Orieora. IA 70117 MhvoiAoo Wt 53210 CRAIG FALUCO 525 tOpomcnl In Pan Hugo l 60068 PETER A FAUUCCA MARGARET 3054 n Hockeii Avo FOREN2A VOwaAOO Wl 53211 8186 N Warwick Cl Brown Door Wl 63209 257 STEVEN FLOYD 365 7 North 66th Street MhXXAee Wl 63216 TOM FLYNN 30 03 ShxJO Rood New Cananrv Ct 06640 BERNADETTE FONS 040 Norm 60ih St Wavwo o a Wt 53213 KERRY FORMAN 717 Lomond Onve UnMMn. 1 60060 GEORGE FORSTER 3872 Norm 54lh BNd MlwaiAoe. Wt 53216 Steven Floyd — Pi Gamma Mu; Pi Lambda Theta Bemodetle A Fora — 1002-1904 Club. Kerry Forman — Rugby Club. Foreign Study George Footer — Dorm Government. Mary Gogtardo — Thanks. Mom and Dod' I Love You Camel Gannon — Strock 2 Apts. asst mgr.. Mugrock. Ski Club Thomas G Garmon — Phi Alpha Theta. PI Sigma Alpha, htramual . Band, concert pep. Coind Mtohaei Geeheker — Symphonic Band Pep Band. Jaa Band V P De o Who. J Copus Memorial Jazz Band. Arkestra Phkp Gelotl — Mil track team Nuooto G ardno-Papo — Pm Derra Pm. ttcAan CXb. pres and treas. French Honor Society Robert G osen — Mranxjrals. Knights of Coksnbus Juke Gigot — Phi Alpho Theta. Ub Arts Student Comtek rep. Exocutfve Committed for School of Education Thomas Gigot — PI Mu Eptkon. MU Students For life Run For Life I. ■. IV Raymond H Glaser - MU Band. B G Society. SAACS Eicon Gieeson - Pi Delta Pti: P O Sarvner Program in France Thomas M Gieeson — htramurds Escort Service David Gnodt — mtramucks Thomas Gorman — Rugby James Gorski — Pi Gamma Mu. Pt Alpha Theta. VP. Honors Program. Honors Counci John Gosbee — Honors Progrom. SAACS. sec -treas Thomas GaJd — Pt Alpha Theta. Pi Gamma Mu. V.P.: Pre-law Society. Floor Governor Thomas Grant — Phi Kappa Theta. kitro-murats: Orientation. AMA; Pre-Law Society. EB.GYM JUUE FRISCH 625 Soum Park Bhd freeport I 61032 RtTAM GABK y 7S C Deit r Avwx Ocfc Creek. Wl 53154 MARY GAGUARDO 7437 GreerAeU River Sorest. I 60305 DANEl GANNON 136 Edward Drive Bng ood NJ 07466 THOMAS G. GARRISON 1225 Soum 63rd Street Wei! am Wl 53214 MKXAEL GE €KER 4223 W SpoUdng Pvjco UtwoAoo Wl 53208 PHIP GELLOTT 3316 Eon Pood Hrcn.OM 44836 NUNZIATA GtARDfNA-PAPA 2213 Norm 52nd Street MwOLAee. Wl 53308 ROBERT GCSEN 3132 WakSon lane wsamette l 60061 JUUE GfGOT 3256 Btter't Coul Green Bay. Wl 54301 THOMAS GIGOT 1636 AJto Veto yyauwoiosa wi 53213 RAYMOND H. GLASER 6533 Green Poge Cnve Roche. Wl 53406 ElEEN GLEESON 737 North 21 t St 4 Mr oj ee Wl 53233 THOMAS M GLEESON 6336 South PaAno St Chicago. 1 60630 DA VO GNADT N96W17061 NgNand Ct Menomonee l . Wl 63061 THOMAS GORMAN 2120 Stomway Bocktcrd 161107 JAMES GORSKI 6030 W Aimou Greenfield Wl 53220 JOFti GOS8EE 4726 North Green Boy Rd Rocne Wl 5340t THOMAS GOULD 146 cookdge Avenue Lte-V.ee I 60048 THOMAS GRANT 3 Borne Broo tksoao. I 60631 258 SUEILEN GREEN 3d Tw tn Sfroot lOwol MA 0 .8S0 CHRtSTM E. GREUUCH 106 Fora Pood Cl v«ana. OH 44124 LEOGRLL Rout 1 Bmamwood Wl M4U JAMES J GRfdM 7633 Norm 5 th $v t MhvaA . Wt S3? tO TXOOORf J. GRONSW. JR. 6001 S PcOon Aronuo Cudahy. Wt S3110 MCKIAS GROSKOPF ALEX R GUOTTA 13475 fVooar Dr.v 1017 Pin Vah y Oitv ttnGfOv Wl 53172 Rockford 1 61W RONALD G. GULOTTA ?1W Jercm Otv Goa v. t 62035 MARK HABER8ERGER 2100 South Layton BNd MhriMw W 53215 JEFFREY HAMS 2565 Parkad Court N w Bonn Wt 53151 TMOTWY HAMR.TON 240 TNomp cn Orve Wtwaion I 60167 MARGARET HANLON 722 Norm 13m St MNrtaJ. Wl 53233 JUOEM HARTWlCK 2330 North 44th Stro t Mhot IM 53210 ROBERT HATCHETT 740 Oofc Avoruo Ajaa. I 60606 CHERYL HAYES 1040 North 1«lh $tr«ot MTooaoo wi 53206 USAN HAYES '11 North 16«h Shoot 4twa oo Wl 53233 ERNEST HAYWARD. JR 01 15. 6oi 1060 Foy tfov o NC 25306 MARY E HEADLEY Bor 105 AIN . N H 03600 SALLY FCRGEL 1232 North Tta Ai ora L 60505 THOMAS HERSOEL 6 S 207 Suiian Woe HntacM. I 60621 Sueten Green — Pr Apna Theta. EOP Tutor. Pre-Law Soooty Chnstne Eteabeth Greulch — Psi O . BPOTC: Porthole 5 Gauge. Erhtrlton OR Drfl Teams Rifle Team Leo GH — PI Sigma Alpha. MU Band. TAP; ntramixaS Theodore J Gronski. Jr — Ps CM Nckios Gr oik opr — btramgals; EOP Tutor. Dean s List Ale R GrJotta — Theotogcd Honor So-aety, ntfamuab itatan Oub. Campus Mnistry. MUCAP. Ronald G GvJotta — Theotogcd Honor Society, acting pres. Campus Mntstry Mark Haberberger — Ptn Beta Kappa, Alpho Sigma Nu. Pi Sgma Alpha. SockJ Services Honor Society. VP . ASMU Jeffrey Haines — Theta Alpha Kappa Timothy HamHon — Oub Footbal. intro murats Margaret Hanlon — intromurcn TAP JuOeM Hartwtck — German Honor Society. pres . Hstory Honor Society. Beer Chuggors Hal ot Fame, btrarrxrals Robert L Hatchett — Alpha Epslon Delta. Varsity Baskefbal. ASAAJ Student WeBare Coordnator. MACC Fvnd Susan Hayes — BTC. V P. Pi Doha Phi. Pi Sigma Afeha. ASMU senator. French Oub. Ski CKjO. ntramaab Ernest Hayward. Jr — Apho Sigrro Nu. pres . Chorus. EOP Tutor. RA. BSC; Honors Progam. Socp With Substance Mary Efcrabem Heodey — Delta Pts Ai-phi. sec Saly Hergel - Sigmo Delto Pi. EOP Tutor. Pre-Law Society. Orientation. MU in Modnd Thomas Herschei — AMA varsity Soccer. btramuofc. Floor Governor. Ardmore Stem Oub. Orientation. GOL Mary Oare Hetzel — Women's Soccer; ASMU Senator. Omegas Sorority Jody Hckey — Beta Theta Zeta. TTEB8. Bod G ts Dance Troups. Fshng Oub; Freworks Committee. Christian Anarchy Mary Hckey — Bread for the World. pres Student leodershp Award W am Hckey — Alpha Kappa Delta. ASMU EOucahond Commssaion. btro-rrucM. Pre-low Society. Fretfrnan Adviser Jeffrey Htchcock — Honors Progam Orientation, btramurds MARY CLARE HETZEL 3447 North 60th Sh« t MTwoAoo Wl 53222 JODY HCKEY 6343 Cypr M 5 «t Portag Mcngan 4906 MARY HCKEY 1045 Ch vy Chat BrocafWd. Wl 53005 WILIAM HCKEY 4221 Tios Mqa l an Urotorsa MN 55343 JEFFREY HTCHCOCK 2320 Fart Newton Avorxjo Sho ewooa Wl 53211 259 MARY 8 HOVEL 233 Dowoy Sweet Soi Proria Wl 53233 CELESTE HOZE 4276 North 48th Street MtMMM Wl 53216 ROBERT HRVOJ W S Evorgroon Wotkegan L 60006 JUOTHHUOEK W9 Goiter Otvo KrnToa OH 450U JOWHUEBfER 620 S. Jockson Stret Green Bay. Wl S4301 Mary 8 Hovel — Sgma Della PI. V P. Intramurals. Spanish Plays. Campus Ministry. MU r Modnd Robert Hrvoj — Phi Apha Theta. Evans Scholars ASMU Senator. ATs Pm: Save Cavec SchotarsNp Fusd Judth KxJok — htramurcto. CXDomel Hal t'eca . tutor, hasprtd vointeer John Huebner — Y Lampoon, co-foerxSer. NSOS8. Phi Zappa Krappo. O 0 U1 8ro. Honors Program. Poemon jam. Homme's Toni Nor — intramuah. Moshuda Dorm Counci Edward Jocob — Alpha Sigma Nu. PI Sigma Alpha, Honors Program. Pre-Low Sooery. ntromurais. MUCAP Greg Johnson — AAAS John Kcluzny — Phi Sigma Too. Apha Kappa Delta. Robert Kane — St France Meal Program. Intramurcft. McCormick Floor Governor; Bread for the World Katharine Kappas — Sigma Tau Delta. Pre-Law Society Patrick M Keane — West Hal. pres . PC. executive assistant Leo Keegan — Campus Mnotry. music. dance. Itugy planning; RA, B U N Kovm Kety — PM Alpha Theta; htramur-ats Patricio Kennedy — Delta Sigma Theta. Countorpoint. MCC Drama CJub David Keller — Intramuats. Pre-Law Society David Kruer — Pi Mu Eps on Sigma Pi Sigma, FT Beta Kappa. InframurcSs. Physics Qub Christopher Kiehege — Rome. Italy Jody Wumto — Alpha Kappa Delta Varsity Votoybal varsity Baskofbal. EOP Tutor. Social Work Club. Dean s list Jane Korducki — Chorus. PM Sigma Chrtstian Fetowshp. Banana Club Mark Koss — Dean's Let; EOP Tutor TOM HiR 08 100 Menorwee. U 40858 EDWARD JACOB 4708 Hcnnalord Crtvo ' o oOo OH 43623 GREG JOHNSON 24426 lyrrOtr Efctxxt Mono 46614 JOHN KAIUZNY 1313 Movtiow Avert Jo et 160435 ROBERT KANE 320 Basswood t M Napervee. I 6C640 KATHARNE KAPPAS PATRICK M KEANE LEO KEEGAN KEVN KELLY MARTHA KELLY 201 W Hawa'tio Tral 10 uncoh Avonuo 1664 W Fares Gion 1632 South Memo 1267 Pine Street Ml Prospect. I 60066 Bhahamplon NV 13905 Groon Boy W) 54304 8erwyn I 60402 GWWlw. I 60026 SARAH KELLY 990 Sunmt Deertett I 60015 PATRICIA KENNEDY 7286 $ Carpenter CNcogo. I 60621 DAVD KETTER 3002 Fronds Strooi St Joseph MO 64501 DA VO KMZER 1045 Apple Tree lano Brock ! W) 53006 CHRISTOPHER KLEMEGE 191« ortve. CXne Acre Chesterton. N 46304 JOOY KLUMB STEPHEN KNLOTEN JANE KOROUCKI MARK KOSS JAY KOUCHCH 1936 Cdgewaier Owe 4107 North take Drive 5457 W jockson Pork O 11326 West RnoOor Avo 5716 Oodjfono icne Gralton Wl 53024 Shorowood. Wl 63211 Mtoakee Wl 53219 FrarttSrv Wl 53132 GreerdOe. Wl 63129 260 MCHAR. KOZLOWSX1 109 McweamBd Man Heod. KO 20640 TM KRAJACK 3015 S MQd OckBroc . I 60631 AMY KREBS 6335 5 133 rd Si Ham Comm Wl 53IX ANNKRESSN 760 W Mar S' Waimowrv W 53094 DONALD KRETIOW 19901 W NonontJ Ave New Mn Wl 53151 FREDRCKREUL DA VO KU6E DA VO KURUDZA MCHAEL LADE TERESE LAGNA 100-12 1 SI Bt 6 Bo 191 5230 S 100 S 317 N H0 i St 300 Sheridan Boer wi 53403 Watertown Wl 53094 Hem Comm. Wl 53130 W x wato a Wl 53326 KngHora M 49901 DON LEBLANC 94 HgTfcjnd Si JdKm. m 03051 LORETTA LEDERER 211 N Mori Pan Bag i 60069 NANCY LEMKE 362? f Armou Cudahy. Wl 53110 Mcnoei Koztow i — Men's Vanity Bas keibaii monager. AROTC Dorm Could. V P . J-8oard. Grasshoppers Tm Krojoc — Delia Tau Della FreOlc KreU — So Club. Satng Club David Kube - MU Band. SAACS frecn David Kuudra — Eta Soma PN Luca lamocbd — btramuals. PA. Root Governor Loretta Lederer — Phi Kappa Theta, little Ssier Social Work Club. AMA. E B - GYM Nancy lemfce — P CM. EOP Tutor Poyce Lewis — btramud tootbd ret. R Gamma Mr. EOP Tutor Peter umberotos — AED. Tutomg Jeanne Iptcomp — btramuds. Samo Club. Sid Club. Variety Oub for Chl-dren Robert Lorenzo — intramurals. Pre-low Society. Lb Arts Student Counc . J-Board. V.P.: Student Adviser. GtX John Lowry — btramuds: Pre-Law Society Joel G luedefce - AED. intramurals. EOP Tutor; Sa ng Club Jordan Ldir — btramuds. EOP Tutor, Upward Bound Tutor. Biology Lab Techrtoon Christopher lurm — btro-uab: Satuday Mombg Uve Soccer Warren A Lutz — btramuab. Club Lo-tno Estudantl ROYCE LEWIS JANET LCS 229 w Wofcer si Mh t Aee. Wl 53304 PETER LIMBERATOS 2330 N 56«h SI MTwaiAeo. Wl 53210 JEANNE LPSCOMB 1040 W Green Tioo 9d MhvAkoe. Wl 53217 ROBERT LORENZO 3 Temwood Rd W Hontord. ct 06119 JOW LOWRY 1117 Brook MMOd Rocktord. I 61107 JOEL LUEDEKE 912 9lh $ Monama Wl 54953 JORDAN LUHR 6806 Mamma Cl fteirmdo WD 20034 CHRISTOPHER LUNN Nouou. Bahamas N-3467 WARREN A. LUTZ C-O-16 Orb San a Mono Son Germd PR 00753 261 Potrioa Mense-Mato — Sooal Work Out). Noll Assoc of Social Workers. Dorm Course! htramurals Mary Makowski — Pi Gamma Mu GM Malcom — Orector of Acodemcs. Studeol Wolf are, Special Projects. ASMU son . Academic Board. founder. Vnco Maloney — Defto CM. pros. Phi Boto Kappa Pi Stgma Alpha, sec-treas; Eta Sigma Phi. troas. Pi Gamma Mu Timothy P Mann — Phi Beta Kappa. Pi Mu Epston; Lutheran Cotegians. Edward B Mamng Jr. — Sigma PM Epsilon. Rhmetarvder Hodog's Rimheods htranxxcfc. Alcohol Use Committee Cathenne Markwsese — Tnangle Lit tie Sisters. Sgmo Tau Delia. Pts Alpha Theta. CSA. LA$C Commrttoo John McArtlxr — AROTC. battaion cmmdr. Tm McBncJe — MU Rugby. Hockey Patrick McCarth — PM Alpha Thelo. In-tramuroh Gerald McCoy — NROTC Rifle Team; Ardmore Preservation Socioty Charlene McEvoy — Sigma Tau Doha. SAM; hframuab. Women’s Soccer Club; TAP Kevin McLane — Psi CM. sec.-trees; Bread for the World; MUCAP Cute Me cko - Fraternal Ordor of the inflotctole Sheep. Shepherd's Gaz-zette. heod staph writer Grover D Memtt — Pi Sigma AJpho. Pi Gamma Mu. ASMU. oducatond com-missen. ORL octrmetrative asst; OSA Anne Mkulas — Sigma Tau Doha, pres . Pi Lambda Theta. PR dk.. ECP Tutor. Education Advisory Committee Rene Mnz — A ha S ma Nu. Band; RA. intramurab. Honors Program Connie Mohor - Pi Doha PM. Alpha Sigma Nu Gregory Moore — Phi Beta Sigma. BSC; Interdenominational Student Church, dr . Block Greek Council, pres MCC. Michool Moran — kitramurais. Evans Scholars, sec. and executive VP. PATRICIA MENSE-MA30 i;if E Locust St MhvOJtoo. Wl 53211 MARY MAKOWSK) 3834 S Ml ST MTwOukoe. W1 5320? G M MALCOLM 310 N Mclocn a HOe I 60120 VNCE MALONEY 326 E. Ccrhard Avon t 61415 TMOTHY P. MANN 4130 N 78lhSt MtwaAoo, Wl 53272 EOWAROB MANNNG JR 4820 W 211 Farvtew Pan. Oh 44126 CATHERNE MARK WE SE 12151 W GoawiAv haes Comers W 53130 JOHN MCARTHUR 2405 E Wyoming hoc® M .o_ oo Wl 53207 TM McBROE 65 MewdOwttOOk Btvd Fend CXI loc. Wl 54835 PAUL McCABE 311 N Prana S JO ei 1 60435 PATRICK McCARTN GERALD McCOY CHARLENE McEVOY COLLEEN R McGURE KEVN McLANE 10041 S 15 P«0O View LA 1068 5 SnW) PI 1. Bo. 157 5030 W AcSor S! Worth I 60487 DOytesfOWV PA 18001 W Si Pai. KH 56118 Bro-nfowv Wl 53522 Mtwad.ee Wl 53214 MCHAEl McNEl 3815 W GoodMopoOd 10 Mwoaoo. Wl 53200 CURTTS MEIICKE 1310 N WiSl SheOoygon. Wl 53081 ROBERT MELLOR 1421 Dcn e Dr tA vSeieh. t 60060 GROVER D MERRITT PO 501247 Gorrereo M3 21054 ANNE MKULAS 604 N 52 si Mtwodee Wl 53208 RENE MNZ 114 S 8th A VO Went Bend Wl 53066 MCHAEL MOCK 178 Forest G en Wooa Date. I 50101 CONNE MOL TER 6372 N 86th St VVwaAeo W 53255 GREGORY MOORE 6417 S PoiAno St CMCOQ0 l 60636 MCHAEL MORAN 3453 W 67th St fvwgroon Park. I 60642 26? AMY MORRIS 1147 AjrtxfV Avo WVmefko. I 60093 SANDRA MURAWSKJ 2431 S 62nd « MwaiiM Wl 43219 CONWAY MCKERSON 43 Man Si Norton NJ 07430 TON JEAN REED-NO VICK 240 W Hodey si MK«x e« Wl 43206 1 DOUGLAS OLSON 1514 Taylor St LffleCW Wl LNDA A MORRISSEY 21 Monson Or W Peabody MA 01960 TOM MOU.E 7151 SCW SI b4o3 |DhO PA MARK MOYNHAN 2350 S 4th T Low ) Tacoma WA 9 433 DIANE MUCKERHEDE 2325 W TrCo4 Avo MtwoiAOO Wl 53221 MARK MURPHY 3601 W 97lh SI (vorgroan Pa t OGtSTOPHER NASSAUER 145 oy Avo Boyport NV 11706 THOMAS NELSON 4214 Boynor Avo UW Grove Wl 43152 DEBRA NEWTON 1724 W «sCA n 67 MIwolA oo Wl 43233 ELLEN NEMECR 7 0 S G on Boy Led foroit I 60045 JOHN NJESOER 2102 VMO Si Pf OO 0ha PA 14152 EARL MSSEN 2142 W MehQan 51 Mtwouoo Wl 43233 FRANK NOVAK HOftkJgo loporto N 46350 Amy Moms — Delta PM Afeha. mtramw-ah, volunteer work Undo A Morrissey — Gemologicc kefi-tuto of Amenca. Vaintary Action Center; tutor. White Row Club Mark Moynhan — Pi Sigmo Mpha Diane Muckomoide - PM Sigmo. exec V.P; PM Sigma Tau French Club; AAAS, AAMT. Banana CXb Sanaa M awski — Alpha Sigma Nu. iec SCA. sec; SAACS. Avafance Ski Cub Chrvtopher Nassauer — Defta CM. Band. Jazz Ensemble. Escort Service. FC J-Board. htramucto Debra Newton - P CM. VP. vanity Chorus. Afcha Sgmo Nu BiJetln of the Psychonomic Society Conway Nckenon — Dorm rep. BSC. Gospel Char. Wisconsin Society of Professional Engineers John (Mescier — btramurab. Trock Eon Nbsen — ASMU Senator Chorus John Novotny — PM Afcha Theta; Delta PM Alpha Gregory Nytteier — Intramurals Anthony O'Bnen _ Sigma Delta PL MU Jounal poems. Sanchez Brother. MU in Modncl Donna Oldham — Alpha Kappa Aloha, pres Patrick OMara — Sigma Delta Pi. MU in Modrtd. Intramucto Salng Club. Prelaw Society; Broad for the World Cheryl Ortiz — Intramuals. EOP Student Advisory Committee; Summer Tutor- Coussotor JOHN NOVOTNY GREGORY NYFFELER ANTHONY O BPCN DONNA OLDHAM 1507 N 55m S 1 61 Waoor uv 741 Borotford Av 4662 N 49m 1 Wl 43208 Eatf troy. Wl 53120 AtkntO GA Mtwau Wl 5321 PATRICK JAMES OMARA 208 Pew Mutoa M 49728 RICHARD EDWARD O'FH. rtghand $1 Norwood MA 02062 OCRYL ORTIZ Bo. 57 { 8ah Od WearraBoy Wl 43191 THOMAS OUR ADA 712 foum Ave Annoo Wl 54409 263 MARY OWENS SKIA OWENS RO0ERT PACHECO MK £LE PA06ERG STELLA PAYNE 152 t. Man St 12820 Shownoo Od. H Webster St 4133 Kocfc W 3610 W Gctono St Brodtora I 61421 Poos Height! I 60463 UKOH B 02665 St IA . MO 63129 M «OkA X Wl 63206 Mary Owens — Fraternal Oder of the hflotabte Sheep. Gotor Safer Photographer. Shephords Gazette Sheto Owens — Pec Cornet Boycott Society. Mary-lc's Roommate. Mugrock VP Robert Pocheco — Alpha Kappa Delta: Pi Gamma Mu. mtramuab: PA. Ste a Payne — Afcba Angels. VP. pres. BSC. rep Brian Pederson — Brood tor me World Pre-taw Society. Ub Arts Student Coord. Youig Democrats, sec., tutor James Peters — Mstory. Socd Science, ona PotScl honors societies: Rugby, kv tramurcfe Scott Peterson — Phi Sigma Tou. ASMU Tenant GsJdo producer: Intrcmxais. ASMU Son . Dir of Gov't Richard Phl-ips - Weigh tkftng Oub Wendel W Ph ps — Alpha Pt Apha. pres Gospel Chou. Block Greek Councl. Union Baking Supervisor Eugene Pigotti — Deffo Sigma Nu. PoSc, Sociaf Sd. and Econ. Honors Society, htramurab. Athletic Dir.. RA, EOP Vaone Piotrowski — Pii CN MAP. Limoges Program Mario Pitta — Phi Alpha Theta Pi Lambda Theta. Dean's List Amy Plank — Phi Sigma. Banana Club Mchoei J. Piankey — Sigma Delta Pi. Ptn Delta Pt: ASMU Csitual Commissioner MUlnModria Eleanor Powers — Pi Delta Phi Ph«p Premotx — Intramn ab. Gorman Club Undo Prodznski — German and Englsh honor societies. Phi Lambda Theta Laurel Pukoc — Chest ) Wosliot Matthew Quodo — MatoncS Gorman Honor Society. Gorman Summer Program Ahmed ©uoresht — Pv Ct . Apha Sgma Nu: Band 2 ULEMA PAYTUVI 914 N em Ave Maywood l 60163 BRIAN PEDERSON 601 Tenth B Kenosha Wi 53140 JAMES PETERS 318 Cottage Ave Fen Xi loc Wt 64936 SCOTT PETERSON 3656 E 4ih$ fXAAh. VN 65804 ANNA ROSAUE PT€LPS 2628 Oefc Si Norirtxoofc. I 60062 RICHARD D. PHI IPS 590 Magnoko In G-ove. I 60002 WENDELL WOODROW PHLLPS 4318 Dunfnmei Ode I anting. M 48912 EUGENE PtGATTl 4116 Cuevnan Bockford. I 61111 VALERt PIOTROWSW 210 £ loylan Mh«x oe WI 53202 MARIA PITTA 3161 N Menomeneo Over Wauwatosa WI 63222 AMY PLANK 498 SmnteBoy Od Neencrv Wi 64966 MICHAEL J. PIANKEY 4813 Monchoj Bd Cctgoie. WI 63012 ELEANOR POWERS 424 Webster St Poaaana ma PHLP PREMETZ 13145 Carandoiei Cncago I 60633 tWCHAEL F. PRICE 11201 W M Vernon Wauwatosa Wi 63226 LfOA PROOZNSW 1945 1 54th SI West AJa WI 63219 LAUREL PUKAC 3566 Shodybook Ct Brook fleid. Wi 63005 MATTFCW OUADE 2326 Maple Tenoco Wauwatosa Wl 63213 AHVtDOUERESH 2259 N 68m 51 MTwaJiee. Wi 53210 NETTC QULES 1436 W Womngton MfcraAee. Wl 53233 264 TRACY RAASCH 7136 N 0 c W U«gan 1 60065 MARY RAOZMOWSKI THOMAS REDON 2047 $ lib St 9410 WHOfi Blvd IftwaAee. Wl 63704 WomoIom Wl 53776 DOUGLAS REED 3544 W 2l3bPI MoH«on I 60443 I CHAEL T. RH.LY 342 N Otoga $ Waucontjo I 60064 CARLOS REMEOOS Ell Son Anfor o 7 0415 Pane PB 00731 MCHAEL REMY l3t nS Camege PA 5106 SALLY RICH 3549 N irmfl Shorvwooa Wl 53711 CHARLES RICHARDSON 777' Wjwoo SJ Grand Bop M 46506 TIM(GAVN) RICHAROSON Bt 1 Bo 376 I CM Geneva Wl 53147 ROCK L. RCKERT JOHN ROOERtQUES 11S0S BO0 W 33 Marouem S Gcoen Boy. Wl 54304 tamovwi WA 02719 RONALD ROGERS 6575 W 6 dwSl W r AM Wl 53727 THOMAS ROSENAK 460? Ne-port Ave Wowgw DC 20016 JEFFREY ROYCE 669 Pomree In lt 7l«fv I 60047 Trocy Roasch — Soac Wort Club. Ard more Oub. Potted intern Mary Rodflmowski — Pt Aipna Theta ft Gamma Mu. Lb Art Student Card tec -neat Pre-Low Society Thomo ReOcJn — Pi S jmo Afcho pret Sctvoeder RA ASMJ Atrtefc Board Douglas Reed — Amencon Crmncct Socaty. tom commrtlee. V P pret Carlo RemeOos — SigmoDeito ft. btro-maols: Oub latno FstucSantl Mchoel Remy — rfranx cM txakottxjl AJ-Star Team SoBy Rich — AlphaGammo Delta Pi S g mo Tau. PNosophy. honorary Oanej Richardson — birom ok. Wombat SoWx . S8A Project Tim Richardson — wombat btemotion al. pres Rock L Ricked — Enghh Honors Society, vanity Soccer Oub Batebal btro murals. Oub 96. Rumheads Ronald Rogers — German Not! Honors Society Thomas Rosenck — S«gmo ft Eptlon Jeffrey Royce - Jesut Honor Soaety. Baopcd Honor Sooety. pres MU-CAP. Campus Mrwtry Dean s let. Bo- nano Ckb Mary Russel — J-Boards Roteneoth Rosebuds Glenn Sato — btramacb. MCS Bowing Cbb Franca Santscf — vanity Soccer. Soccer gromcfccrew. Oub 96. btramaa Mchoei Scanton — btramudt Frank Schrock — Slgmo Pt Epston VP. Mk dacht be . Hodog Club DonOd Sctmeekiotn — btramaak. RA Donctd Schoen — bavtdud Stucents of Amenco. pres ASDS ASMU election campogn Jeanne Schoonenberg — ft Sgmo tec VP btramuafc MARY RUSSELL JUUE SABATNO GLENN SAITO FRANCS SANTSCH MCHAEL SCANLON 1172 Van SI 2724 Oeywvw BO 99-1369 AUowa Sr 9931 S SmMv 291 Orchcro Sr 740000 Wl 54151 WoJejan I 60065 A«a H 96701 Owrago I 60643 Bo mom MA 07767 MCHAEL SCHAEFER 77JO Bayed Ave I rwwGrove His MN 55075 FRANK SCHPACK 2437 CXs i Dr Canton 0 44706 DONALD SCHNEEKLOTH lakebore Ba Bo 506 Veborpan Wl 53061 DONALD SCHOEN 1323 S Oattnjr Av« A bo on 4 .l 60005 JEANNE SCHOONENBERG 1409 SI PaU MN 56116 2 5 JOSEPH SCHREI8ER 69 Sloe ton Or Hom 3 l 60093 NANCY SCHULTZ 2311 Prospect Evaraton t 60201 JEFF SCHUTT 1644 N 27th St Shetwoon Wl 53081 MARY EtEEN SCHUTZ 2936 A South 16lh Pi MtMXllM Wl 51215 TERESA SCULLY ASBuoDyPO Vortior NY 10210 Jeff Sc huff — S«gma ft S«gma, CPS. htra-rrxrab. Hal Government lancho Stephen Serving — Ski OJb. Onentoton. G0L. Mooseman Anne Seaser — Evan Scholars, little Skier. Temnai Mna of Amenca Infro-nvc D T 0 Breakfast Club Robert Sherry — Honors Student Association. ntramucSs Harry Simmons — Certificate from MU Ccxnselno Center . Mt Sna Social Be honor Medcrte Dept Mchoel Smger — Band laaie Scpei — Rm for Lie. Students for Lie. board member Mchoel Smith — ft Sgma Alpha ASMJ West Hal. pres Ccxraesng Center paraprofeseonai Robert Spicer — Club Softbal, Rugby. PC ASMU senator Jufto Ann Spieno — ASMJ. dreefor of governmental relations. Mugrock; SAM Mne e enough “ Tmothy Sprosfy — PH Chi. pres. ft Lamb-do Theta htramucfe Ex-Cops Athletic Oub. Tower. J-Board Randy Story — Trtxre od staff Gtifar group for SuxJoy Iturgy Mchoei Steme — Law Sooety Thomas S’ekiei — Phi S jma Bdogicd Honor Sooety Marta Stephens — Intramurcfe. Saeng Oub Jane Todych — ft Delta Ph sec . Alpha Sigma Nu, French Oub. pres Xncn Vear in France. Rutgors U. GARY SEAVERS 45 N 1 lhSt 9 •WwiXAee Wl STEPHEN SEHRIYG 2061 lost 0a«hr 9a DePere Wl 54115 ANNE SEfSSER 735 N Pt 59 icee via 160046 PAUL SERO 1776 Pre twck rwemeu | 60067 LOLETA SHERMAN 1451 N 3 th si Wl 53206 ROBERT L. SFERRY HARRY SMMONS MCHAEL SNGER LAURC SFPEL ELIZABETH SMTH 1715$ Greenwood 516 Jones St 0621 W Kau Ave 31509 Wcennafon Ave 3 1 PosrtcW Ct Pat OdO I Oocne Wl 53402 UhxMM Wl 53225 krtnoW Wl 53105 Carm ft 46032 MCHAEL SHAUN SMITH 1316 nesan swxnd W ermnepam. M 48010 ROBERT SPCER 10711 Red Bam Uv Potomoc. UO 20854 JUUA ANN SPEZO 86 Ahame Av« MoMOpeaxj Pt. NJ 11762 TMOTHY SPROSTY 1122 Ajrsand Avo Sh oovgar Wl 53081 RANDY STARY 2360 GreenwOd St Green Bar Wi 54301 MCHAEL STENLE 931 Mowinomein Cedaoao Wl 53012 THOMAS A STEKEL 2495 Whccxe Tree In BoctM Wl 53005 MARTA STEPVENS 3007 W 84th pi leowooa id 66206 JANE TADYCH 3216 S Ouncv Ave tewa ee Wi 51207 MARK TAYLOR 321 w PSymouei Bremen N 46506 266 SF€IA THAKOR 1222 Ptono BnmarV. 80 56501 AMTA USLER 226 Cocnfry CX4 jGan va. I 60134 MARY VONDERHAAP 7542 Tcn tv O CQ00 I 60646 SCOT WETCRT PO Boo 766 fat’ Troy Wl 53120 JOHN W1CKERT 1806 N 40m Si •Mwaj.no Wl 53208 MARK THUNDERCLOUD 2123 W Of 0 Avo MKVOA6 Wl 53215 JUUE TRANKINA 1418 Morroo v«y • . I 60305 SUZANNE TRAPP 5743 S anon Ave Cusahv Wl 53110 VICHELIE TREVNO 5731 JO Meowo 8 Pato tx 76624 JOSEPH J VASCFTTl 207 Mmkxi Meodo O Nm Catno PA 16105 THOMAS E VERTOVEC 561 Poc a Brftxil. I 60126 ANA VOAL 1021 rtdan OH G r vt w. I 60025 LUCY VOGL 4246 N 67m 51 WMAM Wl 53216 TERESE S WALL SCR AEGER 1355 He Or 0«tM Wl 53006 WEN-SHAN WANG 1028 N i3m $i •AIwcxJxk Wl 53233 THOMAS J WATERS 6812Ne OottC Bemetdo %K 20034 NANCY WDOWCX1 6271 s 15m Avt Oc a , wi 53154 Sneto ThakOf — mrrcrrxxats. ASMU. Academic Tutor. University Budget Com-mrttoo Anita Us or - Sooot Wortc Club: paro-CXOfewooal program asst Joseph j Vojcotti — Pi Gamma Mu. Prelow Society. Basebal Ana Vidal - YMCA Soad Orector Lucy Vogl — Phi Kappa Theta little Sister. Ski Club Social Work CU) Mary VonderHoar — Evan Scholar ut-tie Sister, intramural Won-Shan Wang — Chinese Student Aj-ioc . pre . international Student Assoc . SAACS. Chermtry Teochng Aut Thomas J Water — ft Sigma Alpha Nancy Wdowtdci — ft Lambda Theta, recordng sec . Sgma Tou Delta. EOP Tutor Scot Wonert — De Who Rootfe Terrence Welsh — Fraternal Order of the Wtatabie Sheep. Rugby Robert Whaion — Intrarm c . EOP Tutor. Saron WTxtng — Alpha Kappa Delta ft Gamma Mj. Band. Sodct Work C Jd: MU Students for life Paul Whitfngton — Apha Xi Delta, ntro-murot . Pentake Team, captain NROTC: Young Middie-ot-the-Rooder John Welt on _ Ph Beta Kappa Phi Alpha Theta EOP Tutor. Com w ams. - BSC VP . Varsity Soccer. co-captan Trocy W am — Alpha Kappa Al-pha.V P Omega P Pt Peon Oub: Party Freak . Block Greek Oxnd Ph P J Woost - ft Mu Epator MJ Computer Society. SAACS. Pts Sigma TERRENCE WELSH ROBERT WHALEN SARAH WNTNG PAUL WHTTNGTON 125 E Wneoma$t 2312 Vrorro In 2C x n Od 5616 Chevy Cha Pky lancoww OH 43130 Sengi Mt 56102 lc i Ml 56750 Wa vnglon OC 20015 COUN WILIAMS 16 St rmt Or k VMon. Jamaico TRACY WlUAMS 4856 Ae«crv Eat' Chcogo N 46312 ANTHONY WtSNEWSKI 6514 Manctwt'w t Gr««ncM Wl 53126 PHLP WOEST 4156 N 20m St MMWHO wi 53206 2E7 2M So® Marie Wc — Honors Program, P Chi. Pi lombOo Theta EOP Tutor; TMCABOG Christopher ZieParth — Pi Sigma Alpha, VP. ASMLl. Governmental Odotoos Committee. West Hal. pres. PC Doug Zmotek — Infranx cfc Jan Zodrow — Alpha Sigma Nu. Pi Sgma Alpha Intfamurab David Zor — Avalanche Slo Club. V P.. EOP Tutor WAam Barscki — National Honor Soa ety APOTC. battalon cmmpr. Wotec Polo. Elenton Cout Oub SUE MAR€ WOLF CHZtSTOPHER 214 wa wiQ on oa ZCBARTH Oconomowoc WMOM M24 Wanan S NW Waemgton DC DOUG ZMCH.EK 1914 Haw 0 0«h W1 54901 JAN ZODROW 5925 S Doben a vo Cudchv. W1 53110 DA VC ZOR V26 + Avo Snoeofoan wi 53081 Mark A. Gordon Coleen M Gelshenen Steven A. Goedderz Michael T. Goeppner Katherine Green Catherine M. Greisch Steven G. Gray bow sky John E. Habermann Yerchank H. Haita WILIAM BAMCKI MARY ESTERHAMMER 3 703 noon Pa 11051 S Moyne Qncnoin Om 45215 Chicago l 0543 Barbara L. Albee Emma Aden Carlos A. Angulo Michael J. Armgardt Perry A. Barrette Terrence J. Beecher Geoftrey R. Benson Thomas R. Berndt Mark H. Bidus Thomas P. Biebel Richard A. Biemann Thomas A. Bodner Philip D. Boettge Diana M. Boyd Patricia E. Boyd Robert T. Brebrick Fernando G. Briones Daniel J. Broderick John P. Burns Robert J. Carey Brian G. Carrol Coleen C. Casey Timothy E. Celek Nicola M. Charlton Michael L. Clement At ert J. Correa Gina L. Daniels Wiliam B. Daus Charles W Debettignies Michele R Deprest Anne G. Deshotels Judith E. Deshotels Lawrence R. Dick Ph p M Diehn Roy A. Dugan Jeannette M. Eichholz Paul G. Engel Deborah E. Estroda Frank W. Fenno Karen A. FSnk Joseph B Flynn Michael J. Folts Timothy J. McCormick Joseph J. Mikos Steven C Miszkiewicz Thomas A. Morrissey Charles R. Most Gregory A. Mueler Thomas G. Mueller Raymond A. Munch Laura A. Nagawiecki Shan Nelson Celeste A. Nero Timothy J. O'Brien Robert P. Ochowicz Elzabeth L. Ohlendorf Carlos Otero Robert L. PavBc Gary M Peebles Patricia S. Pink all Frances M. Pitts Momcilo D. Popovic Lucy Porada Joseph D. Powers Richard J. Rajtar Carol A. Rank Domel J. Roche Henry J Rodrique Jeffrey J. Rozwadowski John G. Rydeski Jeffrey Saitow Robert M. Sather Timothy G. Schafly David A. Scheldt Jan M Schlichting Mark D. Schneider Edward J. SchoenfekJ John L. Schuett Mattie V. Smith Kathryn A. Snediker Peter M. Sorini Ronnie D. Spann Michael P. SpHane Steven R. Sterling Michael J. Sweeney John W. Thiele Kathleen Ford Joseph G. Freeman Nicholas A. Freres Bryan Gapson Mary L. Hammes Basil G. Haniotis Detphine D. Hatchett Richard J. Held Lori J. Henkel Jerome L. Hennen Catherine M. Hohl Andrew C. Hyams Doniel M. Ivans Jeffrey B. Jackson Susan Jaronski Juianne J. Jennaro Robert J. Jicha Maryann Joerres Eileen A. Jones Patricia J. Karthaus Frank X. Kavanagh Kevin M. Kelsay Michael P. Keyes Sheiendra Khipple John V. Koch Catherine A. Koepp Kristen L. Korte Edward S. Koutnik Cynthia L. Krema Richard T. Kurpa Melinda K. Lawlor Gregory Leftwich Robert F. Lipo Scott M Lohrke Paul G. Lovinus Timothy P Marsho Thomas J. Matelski Sharon A. Mattson James W. Tolbert IV Shawn A. Toole Michael D. Toye Timothy M Treacy Daniel J. Wadzinski John D. Wajer Michael C. Waters William J. Weigel Susan E. Wilson Patricia T. Wojnar Frances R. Wood David M Wrend Gregory L. Young Steven M Zenkovich Thomas G. Zovnic Medical Technology Marquette has been offering courses in Medical Technology since 1917. The first program which led to a degree in Med Tech was organized in the College of Nursing in 1938. Alice M. Semrad was appointed Director of the Medical Technology Program in 1958. She received a Bachelor of Science degree from St. Mary Coflege in 1951. ond earned a Masters degree in Medical Technology from Wayne State University in 1958. Mss Semrad was an instructor at St. Joseph's Hospital of Nursing before coming to Marquette. Director Alice Semrod MARY LUKASK BEDNARSW JM2s 7smsr Wl 53220 SHARON BLAP 3477A left O Hanford Wl 53027 MARYBOUGE 023 Vrgrw O' OeT'ere WSHI5 USA BUNKS 1425 f NevddO Ave 0 0 L A 54901 NANCY GREENTHANER 1500 Meodowc ee« O WN W 53072 Mary Bednarski — Alpha Delta W Mary Boupe — Mea Tech Student Comd LeoBmfcs — Mea Tech Student Coud Karen Janowifci — Akrm Assocrahon rep Med Tech Student Cornel pres MU Band. MU Chorus. ASMT Valene Kogut — Med Tech Student Couid Maureen I oughr an — Med Tech Out-standmg Anor Student. Med Tech Student Camel CoPeen PA. intro-murals Luo Parodae — Trt Kappa Bum. mtramm ah S V OuP Ann Schaui — Med Tech Student Cornel pres Samg OuP Mchoel Skupten — intramurals. Med Tech Student Cornel V P. Kntghts o CoMnPus. Campus Mnstry LeiAe J Spoce — ASMT Susan M Vorth — Trwngte. utne Sister; Med Tech Student Cornel. V P . Var -ty Chorus DePro Washpum — Mod Tech Student Comes Jocoueine Wysocto — Honors Program. Campus Mnsfry-Sfurgy Jeffrey ZonOo — Med Tech Student Cornel treas. ASMT ASMJ PAMELA HARMANN 1520 Steew Sr Algomo. Wl 54201 KAREN JANOWSK1 5770 vesm Woodand CA 91367 ElEEN KENNY 0401 S Mora Oddowrv I 60453 VALERC KOGUT SMSMwtra Chcogo L 60617 MAUREEN LOUGH? AN 619Hcxmoae Peham Mancr NV 10603 USA PARADISE USSA RADEMAKER MARI ROSZKOWSW ANN SCHAUS NICHAEL SKUPCN 2666 Van norm Ave 42i Stver Bend 9d 1713 Cherry Si 1101 Sum 919 N 17m St LESUE j. spece 3536 S 15m Pttce Wl 53221 LORI STECKER 3917 N 60m St Wl 53216 ANNSTIGUTZ 11317 S Marten Chcaoo l 60656 SUSAN M VOITH 7725 N Choose Od Cmnoa Wl 53121 DEBRA WAS €URN 112 Often St . Non wi 53121 JACQUELNE C WYSOCW 2041 Co J Cutler Wi 54423 JEFFREY C ZOfCLO 6125 t n Lone Or Morion Grove Wl 60053 Doge 267 270 Braoetta bronson Joyce J. Fit2ner Margaret M. Glembin Linda M. Gluck Kathleen M. Limmex Dtane M. Lynn Reine K. Makiya Nancy A Nowicki Joseph L. Pope Mark S. Popoutsis 271 Nursing m 1889. the St. Joseph's Hospital School of Nursing was opened by the Franciscan Sisters. In 1936. the Sisters and Marquette effected an agreement, and the school became the Marquette University College of Nursing. The College of Nursing building adjoins St. Joseph's Hospital, in a residential area northwest of the campus. Sr. M Rosalie Klein was appointed dean of the college in 1970. She received her Bachelor of Arts m Nursing and her Masters In Nursing from Marquette in 1952 and 1960. respectively. She also has eorned a Masters in Medical Science and Doctor of Science from Tulane University. New Orleans. Sr. RosaSe has been affitated with the American Association of Cofleges of Nursing. Sigma Theta Tau. and is a past president of the Wisconsin Association of Colleges of Nursing. She feels her position at the university is a part of her religious mission. Dean M. Rosalie Klein 272 ANT BARKLEY 1961 Marrp on Bocfcy fitvey. OM £4116 NANCY JO BARR 902 Centra v«V W nette I 60001 MARY PATRICIA BEATY 1509 HW ; Slreel Boca Baton H 33432 JOYCE BEAUDRY 231 Eart Famvw A .«nuo M Boy. W1 54301 AMY BEDESSEM 2061 Cherry lane NorWtirOOk I 60062 DOROTHY BEEFNER 222 We em Avenue SheOoygan foil. W1 53065 JANET E BITZAN 4122 W Good Mope Rood MwlUM Wl 53200 DAWN BORCHAROT 0361 South 5 lit Sheet frar wi 53132 LAURA BROWN 333 W (dan Oeefc Cl MwcxAee wi 53212 LNDAM BROWN 333 W hdan Cr—k Cl MtwoiAee. Wl 53212 LOUISE BROWN 2316 Morey A e {van too I 60201 LORIBRUCK 1130 CarM Coat Artrgicn HU I 60004 KAREN BRUNO 8622 W Acooa Sheet 14-OA wi 53224 KRlSTNA BRUX 306 iBm Sheet KaUraaia Wl 54130 LIZBETH BUONK 2546 WM hcmel Ave WwOAM Wl 53221 Ann Bawioy — Super Na os Club. Oh Karen Car Oub. Pilgrim Shoe of America Unite Club Nancy Jo Barr — Samg Club Mary Patricio Beaty — Student Nase A woe . AppcfcxNo Experience. A P. GOL. Mondeapped Service . Snobtds Joyce Beaudry — MraiQ Card. ec . Student Nate Anoc Amy Bedetiem — Naung Coaid. Super Nate Club. Fred A Ginger Fan. OD Pit Crew, love A Thanks to Dot A Bob' Dorothy Beehner — htramaat Fin Pais: St Franca Mod Program. Bread for the World Dawn Bor char at — Alpha Theta Tou. Natl Student Nate Anoc . Nasng Honor Society loao Brown — Acoderrac Excelence Committee. Dorm Cornel Asst Hal D ; RA Nursing Counci rep Lori Bruck — Thank you. Mom. Dod. and Nanny. MU Croquette. Honorary Nasng Sorority FFA. Jed Pmcecs Wng rep Karen Braio — Student Nases Association Krishna Baa — Na ung Coax lobeth Bud — Natl Student Nases Assoc Karen Coley — Campus Crusade for Chmt. pres Cf. Escort Service. EOP Tutor Cottiy Coins — Croquette CXJD Sax Nase. Stamp Out PBgrlm Shoes Suiome Cutler — 5m Floor Schroeder Sood Charman Karen DeGregono — Super Nase Oub. Oh Karen s Cor Cbb; Plgrm Shoes of America Unite Oub. Those Damn Hops' Mary DePoche - Super Nase Club. Oh Karens Cd CXb. Plgrim Shoe of Amenca Unite Oub. Those Damn Hops' Thomas Engoi — ntramaab. ATs Pai. Campu Mrwtry Mary Bern Feety — Student Nases Assoc CAROLYN CARTER 1821 S Mchowt Appleton Wl 54911 LORI OCRNEY 2666 S 21 St WmMm Wl 63219 KAREN COLEY 121 Monlag Cr Omand Beach, a 32024 CATHY COINS 2264 (dgerton Urwenrty He d n OM SUZAFNE CUTLER 3409 W RMeroO Merjajn. Wl 53092 KARENDEGREGORlO MARY D6ROO€ LALRA DLERR THOMAS ENGEL MARY BETH FEELY 53 DarViglon Ove 25 Eaemower Street 1910 Norm low Sh e 6H 20m Si S W 512 FtfvWw Avwyj Mowlhom wood l 600S2 Caitehana Oi 02664 Appleton. Wl 54911 VM 56912 Sodh MwoUcee. Wl Z73 PATRICIA FlEMNG MARY KAY FRBS USA FREY BONTJE GBOWSW MARGE GOHLA 4170S 16 hS 2124 N 7lit St 4606landou« 3763 5 64 h St «07 Pa Ave Pwoovoan, wi 63061 Wouwotoso. Wi 63213 Bocktard. I 61111 MwolM. W1 63220 Wixooco. WI 6 681 Lao Troy — Evan Scholars Utile Sisters. V P. ntfamuab. Greek Week. Nusng Counci. PTBO Bonne GOowski — Nurang Cound Marge GoTio — Student Muses Atsoc : Campus Mntttry Lao Guefx — kttramuah MU Chorus Campus Crusode for Chrat Roseam Gugiotri — Oh Karen's Car OuD. s pef Muses Out). NovomPor 29. 1978 Mary Hoeme — Nat l Student f v« Assoc Suzanne Hanamann — Band. Pep Band Janet Hansen — Sigma Theta Tau. Student Nines Assoc Dorm Cornel Campus Mnatry tutor. M Jurtth Howorth — Student Nixses Assoc . sec . stole delegate. Ski CM), treat. intramucis. Al t Run CtmstPo Hayes — Evans Scholar Little Seters. Delta CM Little Sisters. ASMU Seaotor Jucith Horbort — Sigma Theta Tou Ann Hemnch — Apha Sgma Nu: Nat l Student Nines Assoc Sigma Theta Tou. Server Week Worker. Homecoming PoJa Hfce — Phi Beta Phoxes Nix sing Coutd Patricia Home — Much Thanks to Mom and Dad. 8TC. Mary Andre Huspen — RA: Student Muses Assoc JuSe Jocques — TAP. Nusng Cound. Nat'l Student Muses Assoc Corirme Jedynak — Sigma Theta Tou Lynn Kaui — Ski CM). Alpha Tou Delta. Nat'l Student Nusos Assoc . Tutor Irv tramucis JOAN GORMAN 4228 N Ardmore w wxw WI 63211 ANNA GRESK 424$ wee Wheaton I 60167 USA GUETZ 2663 N 64th St Wouwatota. WI 63213 ROSEANN GUGUOTTI 2214 N Man St Wotertxxy. CT 06704 MARY HAERTIE 620 £ Homer St MturoiAee WI 63207 SUZANNE HANAMANN fit i Aigomo wi 64201 JANET HANSEN 4440 Coutry i no Od Cdoote. Wi 63017 ROBERTA HARTMANN 636 N 76th St Wauwatosa. Wi 63213 M JUOTH HAWORTH 3463 N fredoncx Ave MtwaiAee WI 63211 CH71STMA HAYES 803$ Man Waiooca Wi 64681 JUOTH HERBERT 24 W HgNand CurOenana 0 02864 AW HEMJ1CH 706 Mead Ave Sreeoygan Wi 63061 AW HELLER PAULA HIKE 2117$ I07ih$t wen am Wi 63227 PATRICIA HORNAK 620 N 117lh$t Wauwaiora Wi 53226 MARY ANDRE HUSPEN 00 3 Bo. 306 Carrpoeatxjrt wi 63010 JUUE JACQUES ♦010 Lowe St Kokomo Wi 54130 CORNNE JEDYNAK 7266 Aqua ae Aponoc M 4600« MARY KAY JEIAC1C 4560 Paved Ct WauwatOM WI 63226 LYW KAUN 10661 W Forett Home naes Comea Wi 63130 274 MAUREEN KEEFE 639Mfc t LMrtyvl I 600 8 DEBRA KNEDLE 281 DoMOwn G n Bov. Wl 5 301 MARY CURRY K£M3 CK 29S$m woo0 Snyd . NV U226 BARBARA KOPUN 3217 $ 68m si MTwOl ih Wl 53219 CARR€ PETERSON-KNG 3706 S Borreoy Aw Si francs. Wl 53207 ANNE KORTSCH 320 N CarronaosAw wau Wl 53211 ELLEN KRBY 1240 S r ions IoQom Wl 54601 LORI KOSCHAK 5615 Hansen Qa Gums . I 60031 PATRICIA KISSNGER 1228 Gwstkmooo wmoti i KATHY KRtSMER 34822 W «l WrO Od Bullion Wl 53«06 MARIEE KWATERSKI USA LAGERMAN MOMCA LAWLESS TERRY LENME DIANNE LEPLEY 2700 S Van Bur«n 105 trocM lan 29 0 A4a 2303 E Bstovew 12600 Sr ph n Pi Gr n Boy. Wl 5 301 BnxfefWkJ Wl 53006 Ms om Pat I 6016 Mh au Wl 53211 Br Grow Wl 53122 KATHRYN ULLEY 27W046 Cwfvn Aw WViftsW t 60190 SUSAN UTTRELL 231 S W ssv Oc Pat l 60302 MARCIA LUND 5 Stuan lan Paoins 160067 CONS8RMA A MARTM 11138 S tonowood Dr Chicago. I 606 3 JO MATTTCWS 1 11 Msnaron Aw S MwAm Wl 53172 Mary Cirry Kemck — Campus Mnatry. Weconsn Conservatory ot Muse Symphony Ctiorus MU Chen Cam Petorson K«g — Student Nurses ASSOC Patnao K srQot — Student Nurses Assoc Oebra Knecto — Nats Student Nurses Assoc Arne Kortsch — Tri Koppa Buu. S U CXP. Florence Good Mght Goto Annual Marlee Kwatento — Pm Beta Pnoies. S ma Theto Tau. M vng Cornel V P Lao logerman — Student Nurses Assoc Monica lawless — Bncks and Boards voile yOal team Oamo lepley — Sigma Theta Tau Kathryn Hey — Ajpho Sigma Nu. Natl Nursing Honor Society. Chorus. Honors Student Assoc . V P. Campus Mnetry Marco Lund — FFA. Swimming CM : Dorm Rep. Thank You Donna 6 George. Jed Pmcest. Dean's list. Escort Service Jo Matthews - Sigma Theta Tau Jon Mayer — Nail Student Nurses As-toe Nursng Councl pres . ntrarmr-css. Ski CAP Ann McAuitte — kitranxrc Cathome M McCartn — Delia Tau Delta Lit ho Sister mtramurals Therese McGrath — Campus Mnetry. singer. MU Chonjs. Nancy Metko — Campus Mmsfry JON MAYER 728 H 10em Si WauMWtOM Wl 53225 ANN MCAUlf FE 37 6 W 60tn pi ChcapO. I 60629 CATHERINE M MCCARTN 12931 Streamer lan Pao Hegh’s 1 0 63 Tt€RESE MCGRATH 23 MMtno 00 Newport N wv VA 23606 NANCY fc€TKE 9632 S wn M Bd Iran I v Wl 53126 275 LAURA MSKE 30 Joslman $f Plymouth W1 63073 MAUREEN MORR1SEY 6680 N AtwaNOt Gw xJc e Wl 63200 JANE MUELLER 260 S On Grove Bd MARIANNE MURRAY 231 Oofcooro M eomgton. I 60010 MARY NACJUS 631 Wamnglon Pk WaAegon I 60085 Laura Mske — Stgma Theta Tau. Tulor. mtrarrx ah Dorm Ccxrtd. Student Nurses Assoc . trees Ma een Momsey — Sigma Thota Tau; Nursing Honor Society, c harper son Bylaws Commtroe. Nall Nasmg Assoc Jono Mue«er - intramural : Orientation, GDI. E M Marianne Mirray — Intrarrxrah Mary Nacius — mtrarrxxah Student Nurses Assoc Mary Naper — Student Nases Assoc . 1902-1 304 CJub Undo Orth — Sgma Theta Tau Varsity Voseybal Lnda Piatt - Natl Student Nurses Assoc . Dorm Course . VP O'Donnel. Student Ndies Assoc Undo Ptoussard — Delta Chi Uttte Sister. Honors Program, ntramurals Mchoto Qurm — btramurals Pamela Romenesko — intramurats. GTG. pres Lynn Rosenberg — Student Nurses As-soc .pres and co-pres ; Gopher Girh Jennifer A Rutter — Sigma Theta Tau Barbara Schmat — Slgmo Theta Tou Natl Student Nurses Assoc ; Nirsng Councl; Dean s let Kofriteen Simmons — MMA Dorm Councl. Housng Charperson Monica Smith — BTC. Much Thanks to Mom and Dad Mary Steffen — Alpha Tou Delta, sodc chairman MARY L. NAPER L ©A ORTH LfOA PLATT LNDA PLOUSSARD 75800 W Grant Hwv O CONNOR 1731 Skyvew Avo 116 ManOol in 1343 Pat Ct Maronoo. I 60152 200 Cherry Ml In Oshkosh. Wl 54901 Prosoect Mt I 60070 Momewooa I 604 Broomal. PA 10008 MOBILE QUNN JEANNE RECUPITO SUSAN CORPUS REF PAM ROMENESKO LYNN ROSENBERG 22W666 Hocfcbony Or 3300 Susan Or, 8118 W Fowl Gordon 6 2008 N Kgano St 6355 Mmt OuO Rtf Gsanthn. I 60137 Kokomo H 46001 Groonhetd Wl 53220 A« ron. Wl 54011 Pacne, Wl 53402 CHERYL ROSS 637 N low 8X0 LaCross . Wl 64601 JENNFERA RUTTER 4730 N 81st St MhMXAoe. Wl 63218 DEBORAH RYAN 0637 S Trtoo Odr lawn I 60463 MARY ELLEN SADLER W172N10815 Ovwon BO Germantown. 1M 63022 MARY SCHAUER 185 Cottage Pan Ov lac. W1 54035 BARBARA SOMDT KATHEEN SIMONS MOMCA SMTH BETH SOMERS MARY STEFFEN 2730 N Shotos Avo 2 ?52 N 40th SI 0410 Hardng BtvO 22 N. lanCOH 4727 N Hopkns Si MhvarAoo. Wl 53210 MtwaUroo Wl 63210 Wauwatosa, Wl 53226 Mom! Project L .v«o oo Wl 53200 GNA STEMCE PAJ?OA JOY SWAN MARGARET TADDY GAYLE TANEl 40 S l uno on Or SLAUVAN XMWOaiMtCI 24W Wotfingion St iJOMOorw [ JartMvf . W1 SJM1 100 5 Ouy Lon MK oU «o. Wl 53210 TwoON n Wl 54241 Wauwatow W 53226 WMtchwtv. I 601 S3 Gna Stwnfce — Vanity Basketed. Vanity Trock. Intramud . GTG. V.P Patnda Jean $u van — Student Nuses Assoc . Nusng Couid; BOG. Mj Student for He Jsame Mane Treu — Ft Kappa Theta Little Sister gOerdre Wtnegard — Irv tramucto. Natl Student Nurses Assoc Shan E Woydt — Scper Nuses Club; Much Thanks to Arine Mary Youig — Sigma Theta Tau; Nat l Student Nurses Assoc Elen Ztgnego — Nat l Student Nuses As soc JEANh€ MARC TREU ANNE TYSON W14SWMaOPoWciOPI 5204 Wamng'or. Btvd Manorrwnoa lad Wl MMUm. Wl 53061 VICTORIA ANN VANS 4«7 W Scenic Ave Moquon . Wl 53092 DEPORE WINEGARD ee?5nam Ba Morton Grove I SHARI E WOYDT 2500 N 124th 471 Wouwo o o Wl 53226 MARY YOUNG 3001 f Koenig St France. Wt 53207 ELLEN ZIGNEGO 10503 W UDham notes Comer . Wl 53130 Michelle M. Bielefeld Anne I. Bochecinski Jean P. Buckley Julie T. Cavey Richard R. Darvich Anna N. DeSalvo Carol D. Eaton Michael W. Eskou Rebecca S. Gilling Mary Kay Glowing Kelly M Gonderman Joan M. Koskie Joan C. Lieberman Sandra A. Menting Susan P. Milewski CarrieEHen Myers Therese M. Ostrander Mary J. Panucci Nancy A. Payne Carrie L. Peterson Terese Poblocki Nell T. Reiland Shirley P. Ross Janet A. Schwaiger Mary B. Steinhafel Jeanne M. Walsh Heidi J. Weber Patricia L. Welcenbach Catherine A. Wilbert Jeanine M. Zakrzewski 277 Physical Therapy The Program in Physical Therapy was instituted in 1952 upon recommendation by the Community Welfare Council of Mdwaukee. The first Physical Therapy class graduated in 1956. The progrom maintains a special relationship with the Medical Co ege of Wisconsin for educational programs and facilities. Richard Jensen. Ph.D., was named Director of Physical Therapy in 1978. He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in science and mathematics from the University of Northern Iowa, Cedar Falls, in 1963. He has a Masters degree in Physical Therapy and a PhD. in anatomy from the University of Iowa in Iowa City. He is a Licensed Physical Therapist. Dr. Jensen is a member of the Cardio Pul-menary APT A. the Americon College of Sports Medicine and the American Association of Anatomists. 278 Director Richard H, Jensen. Ph D. KURT ALT 8345 W Ooyo PI Wait A Wl 53219 TNA ARWGO 3432 Pottaocn st nw WaewtQton DC 20015 CAROL ASELAGE 128 UXJue 0 1 Or SI to MO 63141 KMBERLY AUSTN 11547 Criterion SI U MO 63138 ROSE BJORKLUT© (ttatro SD 57234 LUCY BURTElOW 760Brnwooa GrondOe. MO 63122 ELLEN BUTLER 1455 ApptaOy P( n® l 60067 LAURA CANTER BARRY CARLSTEOT 11537 AmtocJo O' Gwnantown. Wl 53022 MARGARET CAROL AN 281? W lawn Ave. Pocne. Wl 53406 KATHY CHRtSTlANSEN 112 lawn in Wheaton. I 6018? 0€RYI CONARO 01 2 Groartoot Wl 54126 WILIAM CULLMAN 53 loa Tanoca SomarvOa. NJ 08876 JOAF € CZAJtOWSW Mil W Gddcrest Ava Mwomee. Wl 53221 PATRICIA DAMER 2 Crescent cr Pam l 61354 VPGNA D6ATRCK 1827 Breasted Oownea Grovo I 60516 SUSAN FAERBER 1311 N Pra Artrgton Mts I 60004 HOLLY FORRESTAL 202 S Harmony Dr Jonatvto Wl 53545 CAROL G1UGAN 1131 Huber Ganvtaw. | 60025 DOROTHY F€OEL Kurt An — APTA Carol Aseioge — Inlranxrab. ASMU Sen-ator Tower Dorm VP . APTA Kirrfcerty Austn — Pty Bela Phoxev PN Kappa Thota Little Sttiers. APTA. Soccer Rose Bjorwund - APTA Lucy Burtetow — Soccer. APTA mtro-nwats Elen Butler — Alpha Sigma Nu; GOt Iojq Canter - APTA Margaret Cardan — APTA. Dorm Com-cl ntramurals Kathy Ortstiansen — APTA Cheryl Conard — kitramurab PT Coav d W am a nan - APTA Jo Arm Czajrowski — APTA Patnoo Darner — APTA. Student Fociity Re© Vrgrxa Deotnck — APTA. titramuroh Susan Faeroer — APTA Holy forrestal — APTA; Lbrary Club Carol G gan - Delta CW T; APTA Brian Houswtrth — APTA Barbara Kouac — Chorus. Cam©u Mn istry. PT Oa VP. APTA Gtarto K ascn - Ski Oub, RA APTA Orientation. G0L. ODonnol Comer, sec Kim Kiiovllz — APTA. YMCA BOG. Tower Comet, sec. Senior Week Worker. ASIA? Comnxxscotont Art Asst Lauen Lenartz — Tn Kocpa Buzz. PT class v P . PT comet pres . APTA BRIAN HAUSWRTH 3892Ke yDr Soororo NY 11783 BARBARA KAUCIC 1239 Vtctorto St North Cncago. I 60064 GLORIA KRASON 129 Center St Ctocoeee MA 01013 KM KULOVTTZ 6930 t Penhng Ave ScotttdcM. AZ 85254 LAUREN LENARTZ 2164 SwtO Ventura Dr LOS Altos. CA 94022 Z79 MARY MAHER 161$ South 5 d Street W MwoiAeo W1 63214 TERRI MARTM 16l0-26tn Street Mencvnnee M 49658 BARBARA MATHY 12Modtcn(tac« loOOM. Wl 54601 MARGARET MCOOtfdl fto« 36? Grand Mtxrtl IA 52751 CATHY MCGUT €SS 400 5th Street Comtoat nj 07072 Mary Mchor — APIA Tom Morin — APIA Bartsaro Mothy — hframurcfc. APIA. Dorm Counci Margaret McOomel — Sigma Pin Delta little Safer htromdab. APIA Corny McGuness — APIA. GIG Club. treos. ntromurab Mfcholo Morin — Cantus Mnatry. MU-CAP; MAP. tntramuab. APIA Theresa Mi vaney — APIA. Dorm Cornel Mory Ness-nger — Student-Alumni A -ioc.. Acodemic Recognition Committee rep Karen Ohero — Alpha S«gma Nu. APTA Are O'Shea — APIA. Womon’s Soccer. Maura Kay Parker — APTA Elo Mono Pkxrde — APTA Journal, htro-rrx aS Kathleen Robertson — APTA. Lea Saharyan — PI dan sec -trees.. APIA Marilyn Schober — PI doss sec -Ireas; APIA Martyr, Schober - TAP. APTA Therese Schroeder — htramuals RA. J-Board Advaer. Cobeen J-Board M Patnce Schwermer — htranxrab. APTA Cynthia Stodedu — Ortentoton. AP. APIA, newsletter Adaptive Aquatics, rutructor Mary Spelocy — Varsity Basketbal Susan Stenke — APTA HeW Sfrigeru — women's Soccer. captain. APTA. Christine SsAvan — kitrarrxrals. Campus Mnatry, Eucharistic Mneter. APTA. Ori-emotion Adaptive Aquatics Undo Swan — APTA Deborah Wagner htranxrab. APTA Mfce Wendan — APTA. Rugby, loom physician, htramurc ; A A MOCLLE MORN T €RESA MUIVANEY MARY NESSNGER KAREN OHERA ANN O'SECA 115 Chettaut Shoot 269 Bhodo Wand Avenue 8369 South Voter 2929 South 62 Shoot 5622 W Notre Drmo Ct Southtytdge. MA 0t650 MoNoeeqjd NV 11768 CNcogo I60617 MtwoAoo Wi 63219 MtwaAee Wi 53208 MAURA KAY PARKER 546 Morgan Dove l owater Hi 14092 ELIA MARC PlOURDE 596 Mon Street 7 Moddwaea Vf 04756 KATHEEN ROBERTSON 14825 PVWo Oefc roes- t 60452 USA SAHARYAN 169 Oetervor Ovo Boontan. NJ 07005 MARI YN SCHOBER 18376 W BentRd New Bedr, Wl 63151 THERESE SCHX5EOER 731 S incoh Park Pago I 60068 M PATRICE SCHWERMER 3520 Green Garden Ode VA Beach. VA 23456 CYNTHA SttXECW 6670 Branard Comnyede l 60525 MARY SPEllACY 16667 Inglewood Pocky Btvei. OH 44116 SUSAN STEhXE 6860 iceoviow Cove Groonddo. W 63129 HEO STR1GENZ 0«6TT€ SUUJVAN INDA SWAM DEBORAH WAGhCR E WENDAK 2956 N 89m Shoot 442 Averse OP 1 Bo 185 189 Wareqton Sheet 156 Putiedge Pood MwaAee Wi 53222 EtrtKrst. I 60126 ►Xntngfon n 46750 CartxrOde PA 1840? Greenwood SC 29646 280 Dawn WooOnan — PT cta V P . pres. PT Counci APTA Kathleen Zwers — Intramurals. APTA. Campus TAnotry DAWN WOODMAN KATHLEEN ZWERS 7730 Kngston Or 36016 Jotrtttov n Wheaton. I 60147 farrreigrcn HU. M 44010 Wiliam G. Hartmann Andrew G. Loir Susan L. Murphy Lisa M. Neiezen Elizabeth M. Pondel 281 Speech Alfred J. Sokolnicki. Dean of the Marquette College of Speech since 1969. is retiring at the end of the 1980-81 school year “When I became dean. he said. “I set certain objectives. Most of them have been achieved. Under Sokolnicki's direction, the speech program at Marquette has developed from a cluster of relatively small programs known as the School of Speech into a modern and respected college When he took over, there were 290 speech students at Marquette. now there are more than 500. Sokolnicki. a native of Milwaukee, joined the faculty as Supervisor of the Speech Clinic in 1945. In 1947. he became the first supervisor of the Hearing Laboratory. In 1950. he was appointed Director of the Speech Clinic, and later was named Administrative Assistant to the Director of Speech. Sokolnicki. a specialist in communicative disorders and phonetics, holds Ph.D. and M.A. degrees from Marquette. He did postmasters work at the University of Wisconsin. Among his honors, he holds an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters from Alliance College. Pennsylvania, and has received the Wisconsin Communication Association's “Outstanding University Teacher Award. Speech courses were organized as a departmental unit in 1910, and the School of Speech was established in 1926. The school was designated the College of Speech in 1973. The college confers Bactielor of Arts or Bachelor of Science degrees on students who have completed prescribed courses of study. cz Dean Alfred J. Sokolnicki LOURDES AGUON PO Bo 2211 Agana Guam 96910 SUSAN ANDREA 613 7 a Si Keno«ha Wi 53140 PATRICE BARTON 1222 22nd Ay g Ujoeret wi 54680 EUGENE 8LAUM 244 fOON si W «V6CT0. pa 18702 JEFFERY JOHN BOMSTALU 449 S fogewood loCVcmo I 60625 MAUREEN BRADY 659 Arrtxx Jock fc wn MO 63011 LYNT M BRANDT 227 Auitn Park 009 I 60068 HELEN BRENTRUP 430 Pndnew m Sneecgari. WI 53081 MARGARET BROEREN 802 S MadoDr Mi Piotpeci. I 60016 MATTHEW BROWN 3310 Pvrardr Ci MeguCn. WI 53092 PETER BRUSH 17150 Wooane e Or Oogm fa Oh 44022 SANTI BURGOS 1427 S 31H SI MKnoAoo. WI 53215 MARY VERNE BUTLER 21315 Kenwood Bocky vef OH 44116 RUTH ANN BYERS 5515 Everoti Amarto TX 79106 DEBORAH CAITHAMER 23071 w lak Vx o C AWwcM 60008 ALTHEA CALLAHAN GREGORY CERGOL JOSE E CHAPA JR DENSE CHAPMAN ANN COCKS 5416 N 1916 $ MhwxAee WI 53209 149 Coarui Ave £ Normoort. NY 11731 1612 N 741hAve Ekrrwood Pdrtr . I 60635 1019 Maptonol 4729 S Wav' Aye W Doi Mono (A 50265 fl Woyne. fr loudes Aguon — Zeta Phi Eta Patrice Barton — MUTV. genord mon-OQ WtSN infomah©: Spooch teoch-ng ojsi . Shuler Schotanhp Eugene Bkxm — Intramural . referee. Put : Petal cm Club. AMA. Computer Sooety. Avalanche Ski OuP: EBGYM Jeffery John Bonrstai — Inttamuati Chotot by me lanche Moureen Bro3y — ASMU: R A. PPA's. Spot and Andy, he Lynne Brandt — Coboon Dorm Cornel, pres. IRC. executive asst. RA; NSSHA Helen Brentrup — Alpha Sigma Nu. Speech Student Counci, pres. Tower. R A . Orientotion. Aksnni Homecom- mg Margaret Broeren — Intramucfc. NSSHA. art emote delegate. J-8oard. R A , MU-CAP. Eucharistic Mnator Poter Brush — Rugby, co-coptom. WMUR. Pre-Law Society Santi Burgos — NSSHA. htornational Student Organization Mory Vorne Butler — NSSHA. Arkanoode CXjP Rum Am Byers — Dorm Coutci Deocrah Camamer — MUTV. Ski Oub. Somg Oub. Ad Oub Althea Ccfchan — Somg CLb. ASMU. senator. Speakers Untmrted Gregory Cergd — WMUR. MUTV. Escort Service. West Hal floor rep.. Club Basebal, captan pres.. Dean s List Jose Chapa Jr. — Coed Soffbai cham-piom Dense Chapman — Derto Sgma Theta. Mnortty Student Hartabook; Gospel Cho . Orientation Board Mark C Curts — WMUR, asst program droclor. co-program drector Barbara Danner — MU Players. Student Representative. Jamos Edward Stagecraft Club; B K BkdwaicNng Society Angota Deboane — Alpha Sigma Nu. Who’s Who m American Coleges; kv rramuratj; O Domol Hal Counci Pamela DeMark — Orionfottan A P . Dean s Us!. SAM. Aa Oub Donna Dentno — Flog Foofbal. Cheer-■oodng, coptan Guys and Do«s. Theater. Leodorsh© Award MARK C CURTS 13305 flnVMit (tm Prove WI 53122 BARBARA DANTCR 6603 W Weh Si Wouwoloto Wi 53213 ANGELE DEB8ANE 166 £ iarway Or Homron OH 45013 PAMELA DEMARK 1935 N Green toy Rd Pocne WI 53405 DtAhNA DENTNO 17523 Mer, Ooks Tial Chotm rail OH 44022 KKI DETTUNG WO Pocfctffo Or WetHcfco. OH 44 45 JAMES DOGMN 423 N Kn t Port. IW0© I CC068 TERRI LYNN DOUCETTE LEE DRCS W64N362 MocJson A vc CoOanxjQ Wl 53012 GNA DUGGAN 925 WbCnOr Dei PV3T«M I 600 6 9733 Motdno Btvd Wouwotota Wl S3226 James I?. Dormn — btrarrx ab. Icemen . Veteran Mjgger'. Ad Club; MUTV AMA Tern Lynn Doucette — mtrarrx cfc Varsity Chorus. ombudsman, charperson ASMU. NSSHA. CSA Lee Does — NSSHA. Spoecn Covsd Gma Duggan — Pt Beta Phoxes John Eckel — Intramuab. Dean's List. Ad Oub Rita Ersfew — Coed RocquetCx ehanv pan. ASMU. governmental '©totems c -rector Karen Evans — Tn Kappa Bum. O'Don-net. rep. PC. correspondng sec . Schttz cotego rep JocS Fischer — ASHA. Ski Club Louro Gostte — blramurali MUTV. sports cirector. SaSng Club Drone GCan - MUTV Chi S 0S flunky's Fan Club, pros Sue Gris — Trtoune. btromuab. Alpha Beta Avotancho Co«een Golembiewski — NSSHA. Speech Councl Mary Kathleen HaSahan — NSSHA. EOP Tutor Veronrca Hanley — MJTV. Bndget Hortney — International Student Associoton. pros . Women's Advisory Board. NSSHA: Intranx ah Vary Heekn — Sigmo Phi Epslon Little Sister btramurab, Gopher Girt. Orientation GtX. Campus Mbafry e Hochg el - NSSHA btramuab Lbdo Hitt — Spoech Cornel WSHA. nsha. Women s Soccer Ckjb BRlGO DWYER 6013 Alto WO Dr Noervee. tn 37205 JOtN ECKEL 542 Jame Lane Ocfc Form . L 6M62 RITA ERSFELD 99 N lOre St Foret leke. MN 56025 KAREN EVANS 231® Boncnerdng Lane S loot MO 03 31 JOOI FISCHER 1474 Coengi OOd Docktora I 6 103 KRISTI FOGARTY 870 fog® 9wgo Dr MenrJoio Heights. MN 56 8 CATHERINE GALLIVAN 3 Woodovnn S Poi. MN 56 05 LAURA GASTLER PerrreaHiBa Pomona. CT 06480 DIANE GUAN 2479 N 88m Sr Wauwatosa Wl SUE GITS 30 Oevcnthro Dr Ock Brock. I 6052 COLLEEN GOLEMBCWSK1 6635 Mon'ooomery Dr Greenoote. W 53 29 JANET GRtS8ACH 025 WooOana Or Menoba Wl 54952 MARY KATHLEEN HALLAHAN 52 tsgprooke Avo Peham try 0803 VERONICA HANLEY 92 tbfeara da Wfrretfe. I 6009 LAJAYNES HARRIS 29 N Jocxton $ Mtwoutee Wl 5320? BETH JAEGER 3821 S Grtt AW Mhvoukee W1 53207 T MO THY JOHN 317 N 77ln St Mf.oj.oo Wl 53213 MOMCA JOK'JSON 204 S fort WOAeihO. Wl tedoc jot s 1524 Maryland Gary. N 46407 EUGENE T JOYCE 400 foresl A VO Oak Park. I 00302 BRIAN A KAHN 526 £ 20mst N w V0«V. NV 10000 JOANN KALLENBERGER 6570 N Diver BO Glenda . Wl 53217 JEAN KANtA 2B04W WMccmn Avo MIwoAm Wl 53208 DA VO K ARCHER 9431 W OmdoCt MUOkA Wl 53224 WILLIAM KAVULA 1S01 Sherman Parmo. OH 44137 DOLLY THORIEEN KEREKES 1639 f Acom Lana Gtondora CA 91740 FRANC KOO 6113 N Groan Boy MhvaJrea Wl 53209 CATFCRf KMG 1509 Vcrtffve Brmncham. M 49008 T MO THY KMG 7706 Oaary Tree Lane W«Oet rOOk . I 60514 JOAN KOZNA 8432 W ByanBd harem. Wl 53132 SHANNON LAMBERT 2806 no wood lano Glertvew I 60025 o«is LEWANDOWSKI 12231 Cooch fia Baas Hegwv t 60463 CAROLYN LEWIS 2512 N 39m St MtwaiAee Wl 53210 EDWARD D LEWIS I LISA LON6RGAN B1 5 Bo. 39A 3048 ParadM t BoiatvOe MS W«l Bona Wl 53095 Bern Joeger — Ela Srgma Pr« cixxui Timotny John — Out) Football. Bread lor the World Todao Jones — JC Ponney System Deot. internship; Pro-Law Society. V P.. Communication Club. Computer Soo ety Eugene Joyce — l Folio Thl Rugby; Intro-murals. Mjgger Brian Kahn — MUTV. station manager, tportt droctor. Intramurcb; WMUR. ASMU AS-Unrversty Commit foos Jo Ann Kalenberger — Alpha S«gma Nu. Marquotto Players, pres Jean Kan a — NSSha Dawd Karcner - Reports Athletic Club, mtramuals TGfU Club. Beor Chug png champion Senor Skip- Out Club, pres W am KawAa — 904 Club; Rugby. Schroodor R A Senior Weok Chairman Doly Thorieen Kerekes — Alpha Epsfcxi Rho; Alpha Soma Nu. MUTV. asst Station eng. station eng . sports dr Catherine Kng — Pi Sigma Nu; Senior Week, drector of publoty; Pubic fio-lohons Dept internship Tmothy King — btranxraB Joan Ko2ina — MUTV Shannon Lambert — ntramurcto. NSSHA. pres. DCt. treos Carolyn Lewis — TNrd World Pre law Society. Block Student Senate. Hostess Soaety. MUTV hostess. Inttamurcte. Edward Lews I — Intramurcto; Oriento-non. GOt. Mnority Student Courtcl Ralph Award. Dorm roprosontative Lisa Lcnergan — University Commit too tor Fr e Arts. MJTV, Campus Mnistry. Theatre. Ton lodse Mocon — MJ Players, sec- troas: Theatre Sidney Manor — Commurscoton Club Richard Marccxi. — McCormick Yearbook. edtor. SAM. Mugrock Supper Club; MRA. FALS; Club 11. SLED Lisa Mane Marmo — Classics Society NSSHA Students for life, Rui for Life TON LOUISE MACON 8-2C Bo. 250 BO 3 HOCkessn a 19707 SCNEY MANER I700f 92nasr Chcago, I 60617 ROSE MANOR 3617 Hamewood Toledo. OH 43612 RCHARO MARCOUX Ouaddc Ba Thorrosorv CT 06277 USA MAR MARMO 9125 N. Lpow River Bd Mkmxkoe Wl 53217 285 JOSEPH MCCORMACK 431 5 PotAfarm Pd WOOdtfOCk. I 6000 JOAN MCDONALD W Wamoton Ava Woodbuv. NJ 08033 FRANK MCQVERN JR 5858N ShonduiRd CMC ago. I 00626 KEVTN J. MCGURN 953 N 191hSl MTm-cxJ aa W1 53233 BROGET MLLOM6 9305 langiord Cl Polomoc SO 20554 Joseph McCormack — MJ Plovers, sec treat Joan McOoncBd — Women s Advisory Board, Financial Aid Schoksrstvp Commit toe; Studonf Leodershp Board Frank McGivern Jr — MU Ptayors. Karcher Office Club. Jones Modtotion and Relaxation Qub. Kevn J Me Gun — Senior Week sooal dree tor. Creative Broodcastmg. pres. MUTV. program drector. Psi Phi Pi Bridget Miontg — Swim Instruction for Adaptive Aquatics. March of Dimes internship, Phi Kappa Theta Little Sis, James Mitchel — WeghtHtng Ctub. MUTV. Dean s List Louse Nowokowski — Alpha Delta Pi. NSSHA, SaDrna Nucoarone • Club Hockey P R asst ; Pub c Relations Club, froos. Southom Cd Vising Par tiers Patriot) O'Boyle — RC; Ardmore Club Derdre O'Connel - Server Week. Ardmore Club Judith O'Connor — Apha Sigma Nu. NSSHA. ntramurals; Who's Who in American Colleges. OSA Budget Committee Timothy O'Connor — MUTV, promotion drector; Campus Mnistry; A Rec Center BS, Bus and B8 Production Ruth Owewski — NSSHA, Speech Cousel Mary Podden — R A . Vugrock Amateu Mghf. WtSN-Rodo promotons Intern-ship Mar pat Pyotok - NSSHA treas sec Teresa Rede — SAM. freas. Brooks Union Advisory Board; West Hal Dorm Cound, trees . Orientation GCX. Thanx parents Maroarot RotXoo - NSSHA. MUCAP Spoech Couvci. ntramuds Jocquekne DuVor Rogers — PM Chi Theta; Omega Psi Phi Pearl. Women's Advisory Board Mchete Sandoval — Parents Organoo-tlon. co-dr ector Alpha Beta lane he. btramuob. R A. ORL Advisory Board JAMES MITCHELL 1105 JuVpor lane M rvwpoci. I 60055 LOUISE NOWAKOWSKI 3600 S urn St Mr.-o o wi 53221 SABRTJA NUCOARONE 6761 towonoveo Dr Hjnfogton Booch. CA 92648 PATROL O'BOYLE 7848 tipo Av« Skotoo I 60076 DERDRE O'CONNELL 1223 G oonwood St Evarufon i 60201 JUOITH O'CONNOR 42t Sroay lano Wscorun Ponds Wl T MO THY R O'CONNOR 856 Patsoo Ave VOr n NV 10703 DAPtf OSBORNE 835 n 23en si Mh.oJ.AA Wl 53233 RUTH OLSZEWSKI 6447 N Sis SI Mraou ee Wl 53223 MARY PADOEN 2760 landwAhr Pa Norirerook L 60062 PAM PAULUS MARPAT PYATOK 1005 143 16 St NcnokaPi CAdcrtxjQ. Wl 53102 Pod Bar NJ 07701 TERESA REOLE 5 9 Orlando Ava Akron. OH 44320 DIANE REOCRT PHLLJP REITZ 7376 N 42na St 537 N S Uy Portcwoy MK«x aa. Wl MhvOUAA Wl 53208 GEORGE ANA RIGGO 642 Odor lano OowfkWJ I 60015 MARGARET ROBLEE 208 Myoo Park Or Kitcfmson. K$ 67501 JACQUELINE DUVOR ROGERS 3iio w woe si MTnOl A« Wl JEAN A ROGERS 504 E Cornel tr Ml PtoipacI. I 60056 IVICHELLE SANOOVAL 1067 wrnnosoy lore Pockv Rivor, Oh 44116 286 T £RESE $AN OVfTZ 4057 N Proiooct AvO MwOAOO W! M211 DEBRA SCHAEFER P O Box 52 I yon . Wl 53(40 MOMCA ANN SCHJCKMAN 1219 E OoronOon Aitnglon rtegnti 160004 HANSNE SCMUMAO€R 1360 Fo River D OePere. WI54115 JOAN SCUUION 17100 Giant 51 lamng I 60430 JOHN M SEECK SUSAN SEH3NG RONDELL SHEROAN DA VO SNKER SUSAN M SMTH 5N184 WBow lano 2061 loif Dojohn (M 7443 $ Kftg 441 To morock Si 920 N 16m 51 Si Cham I 60174 DoPoro Wl 51115 ChcopO. I 60610 UttCO NY 13502 MMMm. Wl 53233 BARBARA SOVEY 5952 N 30m St Mh«o oo. Wl 53209 CYNTWA SPANER 2742 ICkovnw Avo SI Poii. NV DANCL SPfS 25146 W Tower O Borrgtoft. I regnald SPRECHER 144 Ptvoivww ParOoov o W 53954 DEBORAH A STEC 4129 W Forojl Hcrrv. wtx oo Wl 53215 SUSAN STROBLE 7640 5 Bock Si Id . MO 63123 MARY STRZaCZYK 3326 W v a Cl MeOJCr Wl 53092 SK€R1 SUCHYTA 1115 Pdamno Or Oocne Wl 53402 MARY TARANTMO 2091 3rO Si DoPwo Wl 54115 MRS LOUSE TESKE 2207 N Mmoint Mhvouee Wl 53206 Thorese Sanfcovrt — Sigma Pm De«a little Safer; IntfamuaK: NSSHA Debra Schaefer — I Phetto Thi; Speech Could. MUTV; Web St Sooci Out) Judo Club Rosenoath Rosebuds Monica Ann Schkdcman — Women's Soccer Oub. Pofoprofetnonal Program Awn ton I, Mugger Hugger. ASMU HanjJne Schunochet — Pm Beta Phoxes NSSHA John Seeck — Pre-Law Society. McCor-mck V P . Tower floor rep Susan Sehmg — Pm Beta Phoxe Rondel Sheridan — Alpha Pm Alpha Who's Who Derta Sweothearl. Tribune. Jouno Cheerieodng. captain David Sinker — Tribune cartoonist; ASMU. prog V P. senator. Orientation SDL. Ardmore Stem CSjP BarDaro Sovey — NSSHA. WSHA Cyntmo Spamer — NSSHA Rocquetbd Daniel Sp es — Knowledge Deborah $tec — Alpha Sigmo Nu. Campus Mkwtry; Counseing Center. PPA. Dean's Ust; OSA Leadership Award Susan Strode — NSSHA, IniramuraB Coed VoHoybofl. Coed Footbai. Dean's List. Mary StrzeiCTyk — NSSHA. Speoch Cound; Dona Zola Shen Suchyto — NNSHA. Dean's Let. ATs Rui helper. Mashuda wing rep . dorm Mosses and Servicos Comrmttoo Mary Tarantino — Htramurah. Theatre Louse Teske — Pm Kappa Theta uttie Safer Patricia Thomos — Block Student Couv d. Leadership Workshop Jon Thornton — WMUR. MU Players Debarcn Trotter — NSSHA Ame Treocy — Intramurcto. NSSHA. V P PATRICIA THOMAS 2807 W Uchgan St MKvoaoo. Wl JON THORNTON 1690 irYTMit Dr t n Oove. Wl 53122 DEBORAH S. TRATTER 4911 Quoeouy vd lyncrwt. OH 44124 AtWE TREACY 8026 W tbt-noi Avo MhvOi eo. Wl 53220 JOrt VNCENT 73 Twn Ockt Rd Magewoter. NJ 00907 287 Timothy Ward — Seoor Bar Rep 417 Ckjb Edward Wofc — Delta CM. Alpha PM Omego. regional vco charman; kitro-murcfc. MU Players Jane Weis - AMA Ad CU . treas. NCO internship. Senior Disoheniohon Sherri Whdey — Doha Sigma Theta. Angel Club; Block student Caste . MJTV. R A Seiectcn Board Jeftrey Worochek — MUTV. Dean s usf Mcftoei Yeatman — n framerab Schitz Campus Rep Wend Timmerman — htramurati. MUTV. pubic attars drector. Onento-tion James Zinfcy — MU Players, six Scene Shop schoianMps. Chldren's Show scene designer TMOTHY A WARD EDWARD WELLS 4003 Ok) Mi 9 j 730NOcMandSt ft Wayrw H 46007 Artrgron. VA 33303 JANE WELLS W144N4936 stone Or Menomonee tab. W SHERRI WHALEY JEFFREY WORACHEK 0339 S Maryland 017$ 1191 51 Chcago I 60619 West Wl S33S4 MCHAEl YEATMAN 9313 Oovown St Co ege MW M3 30740 WENDC L. ZNP RMAN $319 S Fortew Chcogo I 60663 JAMES Zt Y 364 5 74W1S1 MMrt ee Wi 63230 Thomas Adter Margarita Alamo Mary J. Boggot Samuel H. Calondrino Robert M. Cartwright Herbert E. Centeno Thomas A. Conway Lawrence L. Danner Anthony T. Davis Jerry J. Deshazer Maura E. Dwyer Richard J. Freeman Cindy S. Hasenzahl Robert J. Henke Carol A. Jardanowskl Daniel A. Kely Christine B. Kubicki Mark J. Lowe Paul H. Luedke Michael A. Mohnke Nancy S. Menard Toni L. Mitchell Ann E. Moore Kent S. Morin Wendy M Nies Mary A. O'Brody Philip O'Kane Kathleen A. Pazak Randall J. Raymond Gregory J, Ross Robert L. Simpson Joanne T. Tierney Kimberly A. West Robin E. Zaborski 288 Act One (Scene: Dave and Ray. two freshmen at any Midwestern Catholic university, are lying around in their cramped dorm room. The stereo is tuned in to an AM station, and' 'Jve Talkin' is blaring. Ray is combing his hair in a full-length mirror, and probably has been for hours. Every now and then he steps back to get a comprehensive view of himself.) Dave: So what are we gonna do tonight? Ray: I don't know, what is there to do on a Friday night? Dave: Well, we coukj hit the bars (at the sound of the word bars four more freshmen file Into the room) and drink megabeers. and then go over to O'D and write dirty words in the snow, and then maybe we can sneak in and panty-raid the second floor. Ray: Hey. yeah. Too good. Come on, guys, we're gonna do it al man, to the max. (Scene fades. Later, they fan into the room, Ray going directly to the garbage can and holding his head over It.) Ray: Hey, whoah. How come the room's spinning? (He gets up and runs out of the room, covering his mouth.) Dave: Too excellent, man. Too excelent. 291 292 293 2 Act Two Scene: A year later. Ray has a shadow of a mustache on his upper tip, and he and Dave ore wearing acrylic sweaters over plaid shirts. The radio is tuned into an FM Top 40 station, and Only the Good Die Young is playing softly.) Ray:... so. like, this teacher, he's a real jerk, y'know. I mean. ike. he wouldn't even listen to me and stuff. My mom and dad. they're gonna ki me If I don't start getting good grades and stuff. Dave: So. like, you think you got problems and aH? Like. I haven't had a date longer than you haven't had a good grade. It's like women don't even go to this school. Ray: So what're we gonna do tonight? Pick up women, or study, or what? Dave. Well, we could go to the bars, and then come back here and maybe make a snowman with some babes from the seventh floor, and then they'l invite us to their rooms, and then ... Ray . And then you'l come back to the room at about three and It'll be no big deal. Blow It off man. I think I'm just gonna watch Saturday Night Live” and stuff, and maybe hit the books a little. I just can't handle this place, y'know? Dave: Yeah. I hear ya. 295 296 mm 297 298 Act Three (Scene: A year later. Dave and Ray ore sitting on a couch that has more holes than material in their shabby apartment. The television, which looks as though it was made when GiKgan's Island was on prime time, is on. but the sound is turned off. The stereo is tuned in to an album station . and The WaO is playing.) Ray: So here It Is. Friday at last, and It's 11 o'clock at night, and w©'re stl wasting time studying. Dave: Yeah, and we even forgot to watch “M A S H . Ray: I can't take It. There's too much to study, and not enough other stuff to do. I can't be expected to be reading phil and English all the time. I need a break. Dave. We could go to Florida during spring break. But I'm low on bucks. (The doorbell rings. It's Zinky. a freshman friend of Dave and Ray's other roommate. Wazoo.) Zinky: Gentlemen, greetings. Is the Big W.A. Zoo present in his humble abode? Ray: Yeah. He's in the kitchen feeding his fat face. Probably with my food. Dave: Hey Z inkola. what're you gonna do tonight? Eat Wales on Wells? Zinky: Very, funny. We're gonna hit the bars and get rowdy, and then we're gonna have a snowbal fight with some babes at the freshman guys' dorm, and then we're gonna sneak into Cobeenie and have a panty raid. Too excellent. Dave: Yeah. Sounds very exciting. Ray: You stupid freshmen are always doing stupid things like that. I can't see how Wazoo can stand you. 299 300 Seniors 302 Act Four Scene: Dave and Ray. a year later, are again lounging in an apartment, a quaint place on the East Side. On the record player Is a Frank Sinatra record, and My Way is playing over and over.) Dave: You gonna study tonight, for a change? Ray: You kicking? I haven't bought my books yet. Dave: For which semester? Ray: Which semester is It? The second one? Oh my God ... it's only 11 more weeks. What's worse, school, or the real world? Dave: I don't know. man. I need to forget both. Hey what're we gonna do tonight? What did we do last night? Ray: What was last night, Sunday? Oh. yeah — I stucfced for last semester's finals. We could go to the East Side. Dave: This is the East Side. How about the campus bars. When was the last time you went to a campus bar? Ray: It was. wen... 1979. There was glass all over the floor. Dave: Yeah, that's right. Hey. remember the time when we closed that place, and then we went over to O'D and wrote dirty words In the snow ... Ray: And then we snuck in and had that panty raid. We got kicked out of that place for about a hundred years. Dave: And then we ate two bowls of Chi and a slice of Ski's, and then we got sick. Hey. let's go back and do It one more time. Ray: We can't. They closed down Ski's. Dave: Too bad. It was great pizza. Just excellent. (The scene fades, and so does the music: ... and this, much more than this. I did it my way ... ) Sf 303 With the help of the following photographers, the 1980-81 Hilltop encompassed a larger and more accurate perspective of life at Marquette. In order to give due credit to those who contributed pictures, the initials of the photographers caption their work. Special thanks are also extended to Keith Wald, Photography Lab supervisor, who devoted considerable time and energy helping with reproduction of archive pictures. Through the photographers' lens we have tried to capture the essence of Marquette life. We hope our endeavors have been rewarded with a collection that will not only express our views of Marquette, but provide a stimulus for your reflections. - Cindy Zirbel, Photo Editor Ray Badua Brian Brown Mike Calteaux Greg Campbell Jim Currier Cheryl Dejewski Charlotte Flanagan Steve Frawley Al Goslowski Lcn Gregory Tom Ingrassia Chris Kleihege Kelly King Lori Koschak Ingo Mahn Stephen McEleney Nancy Munroe Amy O'Marro Sue Pace Maureen Tobin Pete Tvarkunas Debbie Winnert Graduation. The event you've all been looking forward to for at least four years. Marquette was a great experience. A lot of hard work. A lot of fun. But now you're on your way out ... ... And into the REAL WORLD. You know things are going to be different. But do you know how different? HELP: A Guide to Life After Graduation 30$ The Resume- You're out of school. You wont a job. You need a job. Where do you begin? Because stars, four-leaf clovers, and wishbones aren't 100 percent reliable, you'l probably have to take a more conventional route. Everything in the quest for your job originates with the resume. It's a foot in the door. It's your own self-written invitation to a job interview. It's difficult to understand that a single piece of paper summarizing your past possibly holds your future. But a resume does just that. Opinions about the right’' format for a resume vary. A chronological format is probably your best bet. through. It is a chronologicai summation of your ife in descending order, with the most recent events first. Whie there are diverse ideas about resume styles, there are certain factors that should be common to aH resumes. For starters, neatness counts. Often times it is up to your resume to make your first impression on a prospective employer. And it better be a good one. Bent corners, wrinkles, and smudges have no ptoce on your resume. Slop just doesn't cut it. A neat. esumes COMPLETE, EXPERT SERVICE VERY REASONABLE PLACEMENT SERVICE AVAILABLE ASK ABOUT GIFT CERTIFICATES DORIS APPELBAUM PRESIDENT Call for Appointment or Details (including Evenings and Weekends) RESUME PROFESSIONALS, INC. P.O. Box 804 Milwaukee, Wl 53201 (414) 352-5994 well-organized resume will demonstrate your qualities of neatness and organization. , Your resume should be easy for any one to read. Arrange it logically to guide the reader through it. He is probably skimming it. along with many other resumes, so the highlights of yours must be spotted easily. Be brief and to the point in your resume. It should be no longer than one or two pages After aB. it is not your autobiography, just a summary of you. Your resume should be complete, listing the most pertinent information first. Divide it into separate sections on your education, work experience, personal data and career objectives. Don't be modest. It won't get you anywhere. Make sure to include all achievements and qualifications. They are your selling points and possibly the benefits your prospective employer is looking for. There are a couple other things to keep in mind obout your resume. If you are applying for more then one job. you miaht want to prepare more than one resume. This way you can taikx your resume to the job you're, applying for. Also, keep your resume current. Outdated information, like day old bread, isn't worth near as much as fresh. When you write your resume take some time with it. Write it so that it Is unique ond interesting to read. You want your resume to stand above and beyond your competition's. The amount of care you put Into your resume could mean the difference between employment and unemployment. And you need a job. — R.l. Rosentreter INSTANT COPIES 7 EACH Resumes Duplicated on Our New 8200 Xerox Excellent Quality Printing .• - 432 W Wisconsin Ave. Milwaukee. Wis 53203 Phone 271-3553 121—12J OST LAURA J. MUELLER 610 N. 17th St. Permanent Address: Apartment 306 12201 W. Cleveland Ave. Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53233 West Allis, Wisconsin 53227 Telephone: (414) 272-1856 (414) 543-2541 PROFESSIONAL OBJECTIVE An entry level position in graphic designing for a magazine or an advertising firm EDUCATION MARQUETTE UNIVERSITY, Milwaukee, Wisconsin: major, journalism-advertising; minor, marketing; expected date of graduation: May 17, 1981 PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE 1980-81—THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL, Milwaukee: vital statistics reporter, court convictions 1979- 81—HILLTOP, Marquette University, Milwaukee: yearbook editor-in-chief, layout editor 1980- 81—NEWSLETTER, American Marketing Association, Marquette University, Milwaukee: editor 1978-79—COMMUTER’S CUIDE TO MARQUETTE. Marquette University. Milwaukee: editor-in-chief 1976-77—sales representative and receptionist at Photography By Cilento, West OTHER WORK EXPERIENCE 1978-80—editorial messenger at The Milwaukee Journal 1977-78—Circulation Administrative Clerk at The Milwaukee Journal: customer service HONORS 1977-78-79-80—Harry J. Grant Scholarship ACTIVITIES 1980-81—American Marketing Association, Marquette University 1980-81—Marquette University Advertising Club 1978-79—Commuter Student Association, Marquette University PERSONAL INFORMATION Born: October 23, 1959 Marital Status: single Health: excellent REFERENCES Janes F. Scotton, Dean, College of Journalism, Marquette University, 1131 W. Wisconsin Ave., Milwaukee, WI 53233, (414) 224-7132 Gary Byrne, Sales Representative, Josten's Amcrican Yearbook Company, P.0. Box 357, Rochester, WI 53167, (414) 534-5367 Rose Cofield, Business Manager, Student Publications, Marquette University, 1131 W. Wisconsin Ave., Milwaukee, WI 53233, (414) 224-7057 a sample resume PRINTING ltvc Resumes Letterheads Invitations Envelopes Business Cards Office Forms Booklets Posters Newsletters While-You-Wait Printing o nderson graphics, Inc. Typesetting • Camera work • Printing 521 N. Eighth Street Milwaukee. Wl 53233 (414) 276-4445 Free Parking! AN END There was a time when a college degree could be considered an end sufficient education for the job ahead. OR A BEGINNING? technology and intense individual competition. Now, whether you’re planning on a career in science or the humanities, the requirements arc much the same — special knowledge, special skills, special tducahon. And that means post-graduate study. The decision is yours. Make it carefully, for it will be one of the most important you’ll ever make. We at Allis-Chalmcrs hope it will be for further study. Being deeply involved in space-age technology, we know first-hand the importance of special skills and education. Just as you will, in the future — when 11 counts. ALLIS-CHALMERS NOW WE ARE ONE . . . GOOD SAMARITAN Medical Center Deaconess Hospital Campus 620 North 19th Street Milwaukee, Wisconsin 5 3233 (414)9)3 9600 Lutherjn Hospiul Campus 2200 West Kilbourn Avenue Milwaukee. Wisconsin 53233 (414)344 8800 One great medical center 309 The Interview They were crazy about your resume, our resume! They want you to come in and talk with them! Yes, you're going to be interviewed. But before you open your mouth, you better know what you're going to say. You need, need, need to be prepared for interviews, if for no other reason than the fact that the competition for the top jobs gets tougher every year The person who knows himself best and can present his case honestly and with the highest degree of ease wi get the job — and keep it. Interviews usualy last about 30 minutes. This time is broken down into several major pieces — time for getting acquainted and general conversation; time for the recruiter to present his company's opportunities and positions; and the remainder for the evaluation. The evaluation can be a give-and-take affair, with the recruiter asking his favorite questions, and you asking pointed questions about opportunity for growth with that employer. You might think that 30 minutes is a long time. Actually. 30 minutes in an interview can be an eternity if you're not prepared ... if you are, it only seems like a few minutes. Like onything else that Is worthwhile your interview requires careful planning and preparation if it is to be weH executed. Preparation includes a thorough self-evaluation, so you know where you want to go. what you have to offer, and why you think you deserve the pay and position you seek Preparation also involves doing some homework about the employers who may be visiting your campus Try to find out some important facts about the companies you'l be interviewing with so your interview time need not be eaten up by the transfer of nonessential information. Here are some guidelines on what you might find out: 1. How large is the company? 2. What are its assets? 3. How long has it been in business? 4. How diversified are its products or services? 5. Does the firm have branch offices that could offer you a geographic preference? 6. What kind of reputation does it have locally? Nationally? 7. What kind of management breakdown does the company have? (Wi there be room and encouragement for you to grow, or is there a possibity of getting into a deadend job?) 8 What is the nature of the company's business? Is it in a period of growth? In preparing for your interview, in meeting the recruiter, and in conducting yourself during the interview, your own good taste and discretionary behavior are your best guidelines to suc- cess. Common sense is all it takes. Preparation involves getting your attitudes in order, too. Recruiters look for self-respect, direction, and a sense of responsibility. As In most other areas of life, assuming a courteous, mature, and generously outgoing posture will take you far. One thing to do is show interest. Listen carefully, folow the recruiter's leads and follow up on his conversation and questions. Ask questions of him. including questions that you want to answer, such as: “Would you like to hear about my extracurricular activities? Remember to make sure that your good points come across to the interviewer. He won't know them unless you stress them. There are certain questions commonly asked in interviews. Listed below are some often asked by employers. Read the questions and formulate your answers Remember, nothing beats being prepared. 1. What are your long-range and short-range goals'? 2. What do you see yourself doing five years from now? 3. How do you plan to achieve your career goals? 4. Tel me about yourself. Why did you choose the career for which you're preparing? 5. What do you consider to be your greatest strengths and weaknesses? 6. What motivates you to put forth your greatest effort? 7. Why should I hire you? 8. What do you think it takes to be successful in a company like ours? 9. In what ways do you think you can make a contribution to our company? 10. How do you work under pressure? 11. Why did you decide to seek a position with our company? 12. What do you know about our company? 13. What two or three things are important to you in your job? 14. Which is more important to you — the money or the type of job? A tot of work wifi go into preparation for your interviews. Spend some time with it. If you are well prepared, it will be wel worth your while. You'll be more composed and you'l sweat less. You'l be able to anticipate the situation and the questions to a greater degree You'l be able to sit back, relax. and impress the hel out of your interviewer. Good luck! Nothing Succeeds Like Success. We want our nurses to succeed. That's why we became one of the first hospitals in the nation to change from team to Primary Nursing hospital-wide ... and why we have a Staff Nurse career ladder ... and why our orientation is so inclusive ... and why we operate a special department which provides the best in-service classes available ... and why 60% of our Clinical Coordinators, Head Nurses and Nursing Administrators came from our Nursing staff. Don't be anything less. Let St. Michael Hospital give you a chance to be a Nurse. Call us for an interview or more information soon. 2400 West Villard Avenue II VlllCHAEL Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53209 - (414) 263-8114 OSPITAL an equal opportunity employer }10 — Josten's 8t R.L. Rosentreter The Interview Suit You'll make a great first impression by looking great. The right appearance for your Interview will give you that power. The first thing to tackle is your inner appearance. Relax and be confident of what you've got to offer. A shaky voice, a sweat-dotted brow and a nervous twitch are aB indicators of a lack of self-confidence which is something interviewers don't look for in an employee. Outward appearance is important, too. To begin with, you should be clean and well-groomed. If you've ever practiced personal hygiene, now is the time to put it to good use. Don't dress like you needa job. Dress like you're serious about getting one. Conservative is the name of the game when it comes to your interview suit. A suit and tie are appropriate if you are male. A tailored, skirted suit is best if you're female. Good colors for your suit are navy, grays, brown, beige, camel, black, maroon or rust. Choose your shirt or blouse accordingly. Don't go crazy with impractical shoes or jewelry either. Your interview suit should indicate that it is packaging a quality product. Appearance also includes your sense of composure, your at-ease conversation and your handshake. These are intangible things that convey sociabity and confidence — the very things that you look for in other people and the things that they want to find in you. —R.L. Rosentreter Josten's Congratulations from A Trusted Name In Men’s Clothing • --------------1 Schmitt-Orlow Stumpfs i Milwaukee, Wisconsin Has Been Happening For Over 100 Years! St.Joseph’s Hospital is a major teaching hospital where size is measured by the care we are able to provide for people, rather than the 571 beds those people occupy. As we begin our second century we offer a complete range of health care services. As a member of our staff, you’ll discover that we extend our philosophy of people care beyond our patients - to the men and women who deliver the quality health care we’ve become known for. Depending on the type of nursing you are most interested in, you can explore the openings we have in any one of the following areas: SURGERY ONCOLOGY CRITICAL CARE ORTHO NEUROLOGICAL TREATMENT EMERGENCY OUTPATIENT SERVICES GYNECOLOGY SURGICAL MEDICAL EENT LABOR DELIVERY POSTPARTUM NEWBORN NURSERY NEONATAL NURSERY ICU NURSERY PEDIATRICS HOSPICE No matter which path you choose to follow, our clinical career ladder will help you shape your career exactly the way you want it, ana our excellent orientation and in-service programs will help you accumulate the knowledge and skill you’ll need for any type of work. We’re anxious to talk with you about all the possibilities you’ll be able to explore here, so let’s get together and discuss the details. Contact us by phone at (414) 447-2157 or write to our nurse recruiter at: St Joseph’s Hospital 5000 W. Chambers Street Milwaukee, WI 53210 Equal Opportunity Employer MAYNARD STEEL CASTING CO. • Carbon steel, alloy and manganese steel castings • X-ray Gamma Kay •Complete heat treating and pattern shop facilities 2856 South 27th Street, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53246 — 414 645-0440 Banking You mad© It past the interview and got the job! Now what to do with your new. steady income? Wei. you can either spend every last penny of it or you can spend only some of it and save the rest. What about a place to save it? Your money isn't too safe and won't draw interest resting in the befly of your piggy bank. Consider the bank. Yes. there is a world of banking beyond your checking account. A bank is a member of the federal reserve, so your hard-earned dollars are backed by the Federal Depositors Insurance Corporation (FDIC). Also, a bank pays you money for letting it take care of yours. The simplest way to save your money is to put It into a regular savings account. There your money wil draw simple interest which is not compounded. You earn interest eoch day and it is added up semi-annually. The NOW (Negotiable Order of Withdrawal) account is an alternative to regular savings It is a convenient combination of your savings and checking accounts Simply, you earn interest on the money in your checking Interest is compounded daily and received monthly in a NOW account. This means that you earn Interest everyday and. thereby, earn interest on your interest. The only drawback with a NOW account is that you can get at your money too easily. Once you've saved up some money. you may be interested in investing it through your bank You can buy into a repurchase agreement or a certificate of deposit (CD) with an investment of under $10,000. In a repurchase agreement you buy a portion of a larger total investment and your money earns the same interest rate as the total Investment. For example, if you bought into a $100,000 investment for $5,000, your money would earn interest at the same rate as the $100,000. currently between 12 and 18 percent. You can purchase a CD from a bank for as ittle as $500. The interest rate on a CD is currently 12 percent. Your money is held for two and one-half years to earn this rate. There are also CDs available for over $10,000 which yield higher interest rates over shorter time periods As you can see. the bank is your friend. It helps you save and protect the money you worked so hard for. It also helps you to make more money without working too hard at all. — R.L. Rosentreter Checkers Have A Choice At ■t CONTINENTAL ' BANKS CONTINENTAL BANK TRUST CO. 735 VW S1 Wises jns« Awi 27? 5000 CONTINENTAL BANK MIDAMERICA 131 W st L.tyton Av « -4H2 :«XJ CONTINENTAL BANK HAMPTON 7600 HwtiAim Avmxjh 4fi4 90(X) CONTINENTAL BANK GUARDIAN 33 5 VAnil Av.nn-4626700 314 Mrmbr.% FCHC Marine Banks we’re there when you need us 35 Wisconsin locations Members FDIC Ynire close to your n 'HcritagcBanks Milwaukee 435 East M.im m Strrrl 422 East Mason Strrrl Wauwatosa 232:1 N Mayfair Hood 10605 W North Avenue Waukesha 2208 East Moreland Road Lake Country W280 NI593 Highway S§ Menomonee Falls Village MaJI Shopping Center N78 W14545 Appleton Avenue Racine 4001 North Main Street 5901 Durand Avrnur 5220 Washington Avenue Whitefish Bay 177 East Stiver Spring 318 East Sliver Spring Glendale 231 Wrsl Silver Spring Fax Point 8740 North Port Washington Rd Southridge 5454 South 76th Street Northridge 9001 North 76th St net West Bend 868 South Main Street FOIC BUTTERS-FETTING CO., INC. 1669 South First Street 645-1535 Serving The Milwaukee Community For 55 Years Heating-Air Conditioning-Plumbing-Ventilation Sprinkler Fitting — Sheet Metal — Certified Welding — Pollution Control — Process Piping — Collection Systems Residential-Commercial-Industrial Commercial — Industrial Maintenance Service Design and Engineering Services NURSING STUDENTS AND GRADUATES Veterons Administrotion Medicol Center Wood (Milwaukee). Wl 53193 The Wood VA Medicol Center is on active teaching hospital with the following speciality areas: Telemetry; General Medical; General Surgical: Surgical Intensive Care: Medicol Intensive Care; Rehabilitation; Orthopedics; GU; EENT; Neurology-Neurosurgery; Psychiatry; Drug Treatment; Alcoholic Treatment; Operating Room; Hemodialysis For more information contact: VA Medicol Center 5000 W. Notional Avenue Wood (Milwaukee). Wl 53193 Phone: (414) 384-2000 Page 5-316 Irene Lenz 800 bed General Hospital 28 Nursing Units 316 ------------------------—— We help you succeed in the business of dentistry. Dentistry is an art. It's a profession And it's a business. At Healthco. our goal is to help you succeed in the business of dentistry. The Healthco dealers throughout the United States and Canada offer you our years of expen-ence in all phases of starting and managing a successful, productive practice. We do much more than deliver equipment and merchandise on time. We also deliver on service. Your personally-assigned Healthco sales consultant. backed by a full-service facility, keeps you informed on the latest products and techniques. He helps you buy your supplies efficiently and economically—both the name brands and Healthco's own fine-quality brands. He helps you minimize lost chair-time by providing speedy repair service; and because he and his service department know your equipment and your office, they can often assist you by phone to make repairs yourself. Your Healthco representative can set up an inventory control program to insure an adequate supply on hand of your basic consumables. He can design a Custom Acquisition Program that will guarantee prices on consumables and small equipment for a full year. And he can set up a Healthco Custom-Leasd' to enable you to buy equipment in the most economical manner in terms of your tax bracket. Only a full-service organization can meet all your needs. Let Healthco help you succeed in the business of dentistry. You'll be glad you did. -Healthco Dental Supply The practical way to run your practic Healthco Krause Dental Supply 16300 W. Glendale Drive New Berlin, Wisconsin 53151 (414) 784-0552 That's Entertainment One© you've graduated, the old campus bars just won't seem the same any more It's good to know that Milwaukee offers many alternatives beyond the boundaries of the Marquette campus Here in the heart of the city, we are surrounded by a myriad of great places to go and things to do and see The entertainment radius is almost infinite. Each section of the city — the north, south, east and west sides — brings forth a unique offering to the pleasure seeker. So now is your chance, you pleasure seeker you. to explore Milwaukee to its limits. There is no reason to be bored in this city. You're out of school. You've got a great job. And you’ve got some extra bucks to spend on yourself Indulge. — R.L. Rosentreter 2575 NORTH DOWNER 963-0220 FOOD SERVING HOURS: 11:30 AM-9:30 PM MONDAY-SATURDAY 11:00 AM -3:00 PM 4:30 PM -9:30 PM SUNDAY LOWER LEVEL FEATURES DANCING WEDNESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY 44 Thee Night Club 500 N. Water Street Milwaukee, Wl 53202 765-0891 MILWAUKEE’S PREMIER NIGHT SPOT! 318 Wenninger Company, Inc. 1728 W National Avenue Milwaukee. Wisconsin 53204 671-0192 Plumbing, Heating, Air Conditioning. Sheet Metal and Process Piping Contractors CONGRATULATIONS! YOU’VE EARNED YOUR PIN ... YOU’RE A NURSE! The entire staff of Northwest General Hospital would like to extend to you the.r congratulations on your fine accomplishment NORTHWEST GENERAL HOSPITAL .. Is a 169 bed. general acute care hospital We are a progressive family cere oriented facility The services we provide Include Medical. Surgical. Petiatrics. Obstetrics, a combined Intensive Care Coronary Care Unit and a 24 hour Emergency Room Service Because of our site, we feel we can offer you the opportunity to provide Individual ized Nursing care and become a valued member of our Nursing Team SPECIAL BENEFITS TO GRADUATES • TUITION REFUND of up to 1.000 per semester for your Junior and Senior year intensive PERSONALIZED Orientation program CONTINUOUS In-Service programs to keep you Informed of the newest evelopments m the health core industry 'lO SHIFT ROTATION JITION REIMBURSEMENT for continuing to Improve your education find out more Information about becoming a member of our special rsing Team, contact the Personnel Department at (414) 447-8663 or the rslng Office at (414) 447-8588. S Northwest General Hospital SJIO Weu Of l0 Drive Milwaukee. Wiunnuo 5UI6 Thank you to our advertisers and sponsors for their generous contributions to the 19S1 Centennial Hilltop. - The 1981 Hilltop Staff Patron Directory 1


Suggestions in the Marquette University - Hilltop Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) collection:

Marquette University - Hilltop Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1977 Edition, Page 1

1977

Marquette University - Hilltop Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1978 Edition, Page 1

1978

Marquette University - Hilltop Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1979 Edition, Page 1

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Marquette University - Hilltop Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1980 Edition, Page 1

1980

Marquette University - Hilltop Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1983 Edition, Page 1

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Marquette University - Hilltop Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1986 Edition, Page 1

1986


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