Northwestern University - Syllabus Yearbook (Evanston, IL)

 - Class of 1980

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Northwestern University - Syllabus Yearbook (Evanston, IL) online collection, 1980 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 404 of the 1980 volume:

m — $3 « About the cover. The three photot span most of Nor western ' s history top photograph! graduating class i The second plctu taken from the 1 Syllabus. The fina Photograph, som more recent, wa toned by Syiiabu: tant editor carol Summerfieid s m Syllabus 1980 About the cover: The three photographs span most of North- western ' s history. The top photograph is the graduating class of 1875. The second picture is taken from the 1957 Syllabus. The final photograph, somewhat more recent, was hand toned by Syllabus assis- tant editor Carol Summerfield. Shoot Yourself. The fifth annual Syllabus people shoot Photo Essays. 42 People, places, events and ideas. Academics. A historical view of Northwestern. 100 Living Units. Entertainment. 114 Theatre, speakers, music and Mork Mindy. Newsprint. 270 The year in words. Organizations. 290 rntr jf«u jii f m ami a. ' funn a © 9. hjUJ jH A. - ■% pu ot n:cHitL j F t 04ett e % f smuimmwiarmam Mfl _,, _ ,. _ , Seniors. Etc. 312 374 t   . ' ■ ■?■■ Hi S jr response at the first annual Shoot Yourself Show ' tprmine the choice of photos for this section. A f, ■ - ' ■!■ ; ■ n itu  o «; ' •t  y ■ ® % %$ V W? r MflR P ■s ■ 10 M % i. : v 11 ' ■ wm 12 . r ' A I 1 13 5 0t 1 I 16 18 ■MM ■ ■■■ . — V 22 — ' ■ ■ ■ ™ _ __ — 26 : ... 27 28 32 p 34 35 36 37 38 CHOCOMO MILK 30 40 39 ■1 I 40 T ' 41 Al ' .. L i n m j t V •« 1 1 p £V r« 7| 1 • •■  _ BL I : b , j |X 1 ! 11 i 1 u •J 4 t - ■ B . KJ 4  . Ki .• - ' • EZQ CM _j uJ C ! B 4 -... tl mi - 1 .1 S; 5 l f -fc. PHr- JijtflfH III V M V m 1 ■ 1 B J v ' B People, places, events and ideas. c ttk 45 48 49 4 - ! Campus 1 4fc ■ ' v ' V-. ' HI DIMfKSIC I K-29 N   Cll FT 0.5 I M .60 US. New student week 55 f listxmr mw w ijomimmi 58 IT 59 60 Marching Band 61 62 63 Homecoming 64 65 66 life. 71 72 73 Tech Lifestyle 75 Lincoln Ave. BE COSTUME W- ' w. -.AA. h i lit ft ,■ ' 6 77 Draft Rally 78 Mini Courses Rubber Teeth Bash 82 Pumpkin prom 83 ! 86 87 Day at nu MM if 92 li i •- fc l -■■. i, . S mft HlWfl U f 14 r H t V Armadillo Day 93 kii. 96 97 aqsna snaps - 99 Robert Strotz President, Northwestern university 0: You joined NU faculty in 1947. Do you remember sitting in President Snyder ' s office as new faculty do now? A: No. I do recall though that he had a long reception and I shook hands with him. Of course it wasn ' t too long after I came that Rocky became president. They were both very busy men. 0: When you met these men did you ever entertain hopes that you might eventually become... A:(laughter) No way! 0: How did you make the transition from facul- ty to administrator? A: I think with most people in academic ad- ministration who have come up from the regular faculty ranks, it has been something not in their career plans, and not something they particularly sought. 0: How did you do it? were you drafted? A: I think that ' s a good term for it. The initial decision was to accept the offer of the Dean of the CAS because that was where my career turned. That was a full time administrative posi- tion, not just something you did for a year. I had to deliberate on that decision very thoughtfully. Once I had done that for a stretch of years and had, in effect, stated a sort of second career, then there wasn ' t the same fundamental ques- tion to be faced when I was asked to be presi- dent. 0: You might say that President Miller was remembered by nu students, even those who didn ' t know him, as a builder. By what ac- complishments would you like to be remembered? Ar(laughter) I suppose as the one who finally got the budget in balance again! An honest answer might be that there may not be any singular thing. Building in the sense of brick and r 102 • ere you drafted? term for it. The initial e offer of the Dean of where my career le administrative posi- ou did for a year. I had iion very thoughtfully, a stretch of years and on of second career, ne fundamental ques- ts asked to he presi- dent Miller was , n ts even those who Wilder. By what l you We to be tne one who finally ice ag°in! An hones L not he any brick and ,ere may not he mortar is important; academic improvements are important; raising money is important; main- taining the institution effectively is important (which is largely a matter of selecting people who can manage it effectively). I would hope something that has happened during the years I am in this office is the elevation of the image of this university as a national institution of top academic quality in terms of faculty and students. I don ' t want to say that started with me, but I think the reputation of the university has undergone a steady change for the better. 0: From what to what? A: If we go back far enough, there was this no- tion that we were a North Shore school for the children of high income parents who drove fan- cy cars, joined frats and sororities and partied. I do not wish to say that this stereotype was ever accurate, but it was not uncommon. I think to- day we ' re seen as being like most of the Ivy League schools, as a top flight place academical- ly. 0: As you see it, what do college students today want that is different from what students you taught back in 1947 wanted? A: The difference between students now and students when I came here in 1947 is probably a good deal less than the students in some of the intervening years. The thing that characterizes the students of 1947 and today is that they have a lot of career concerns. I mean that not strictly in a vocational sense; they ' re concerned about who they are going to be, how successful they are going to be.. .they are future oriented. I think they see their four years here as a real invest- ment; they ' re not just passing time until they get married. They ' re concerned that these four years should count for the rest of their lives in some important way. in 1947, the typical student was a CI who had just returned from the war and who had an op- portunity to go to college because of the ci bill. They regarded themselves as a few years older than they ought to be for a normal college ex- rjie sense oft perience, and they were very worried about what the country was going to be like and whether it would move into a severe depression. They had been stunned during those previous years by world problems. I think they regarded the years here as an investment. 0: in the intervening years? A: The generation of the fifties didn ' t relate their career orientation quite so much to their educational experience, in the fifties there was still such a thing as a Gentleman ' s C. That was the grade that the college student who wanted a well rounded social experience while learning something would settle for happily. Today it would have to be a Gentleman ' s B because of the shift in the grading distribution. My recollection was that in the fifties there were a lot of students who were content to receive a Gentleman ' s C. They didn ' t feel their educational experience was terribly vital to what they would do ultimately. There weren ' t as many premeds or students planning to go beyond the Bachelor ' s degree. I think that would apply until the late sixties. There was tremendous tension on the campus. Things changed radically; students became so ex- orcised with social problems, civil rights and the war in Vietnam that they became activists while they were in college rather than merely training to become activists later in life. They were less concerned with what would happen to them in the long run. There were not only the protesters but also the flower children here at NU. They were living much more in the present, either because they despaired of the future or they were so determined to change it. Perhaps today ' s students are a little more patient. 0: Patient rather than apathetic? A: Yes, I ' m not sure that today ' s students are in- sensitive or uncaring about social problems. But I think they feel that while here, they want to get themselves launched into future lives, future careers where they can participate meaningfully and problematically within the social structure. L. Carroll King Professor of Chemistry 0: Has your enjoyment of teaching changed since you started here? A: Yes, it has. As a young man, I was primarily in- terested in getting some research done, if you wish, just existing. You had to succeed in research before you could spend any time teaching. That ' s always been true, at least at a university like Northwestern, in my early years, we were expected to do more teaching than the incoming staff is now. At that time, the attitude was to just get through it and get on with your research. As the years went by, I began to feel that it was important to make myself as available as possible to students. I have done this and I enjoy it. 0: Do you feel that the administration ' s attitude toward research has changed? A: l know it has changed. I was one of the first people at Northwestern to receive extensive government funds. There was considerable resistance from the administration to outside funding and I had what might be considered a fight with the vice president of the university over it. Change in the administration ' s attitude began when Sim Leland became Dean of Liberal Arts. Leland was an economist and anticipated the effect of government funding on the univer- sity. He got the university into it in a big way and it has changed things immensely. 0: How has funded research changed the facul- ty? A: Funded research has changed the faculty by influencing the administration ' s criterion for hir- ing and promoting. Years ago the faculty met to 104 L was one of the first o receive extensive i was considerable istration to outside gtitoe considered a nt of tne university mrstrations attitude ame Dean of Libera oist and anticipated ndingontneumver- toftinabigwavand nsely. mgedtne faculty bv criterion forj discuss promotions for younger faculty. Discus- sion centered around whether the young man had promise, if he would do research. A few years ago this ouestion began to change. No longer were the man ' s scholarly qualities and the merit of his research considered, now the only question was whether his research could be funded. Another effect is that the faculty no longer completely controls the type of research they do. Research done is now influenced by the funding agencies. 0: Do you think that because the administration cares more about research and grants that it cares less about teaching? A: I don ' t really know what the administration thinks. I have never been consulted by any of them. I think that Dean weingartner has some in- terest in good teaching and his freshman seminar program is testimony of his interest. But l feel that he has not always done what has been in the best interest of education in the sciences. 0: how have students ' attitudes toward learn- ing changed? A: in the past ten years students have become much more pragmatic. They seem to say, Tell me what to do and I will do it. I feel that they don ' t know how, or aren ' t interested in digging for themselves and if you don ' t tell them to do something, they won ' t do it. They want to be told exactly what they need to do. 0: would you say that these students lack in- tellectual curiosity? A: l am saying that they want to know exactly what they have to do, and they will do that very well. Maybe I expect more than one can expect from every student, but in chemistry we have so many students that you ' d think that a few of them would be intellectually curious. Perhaps it ' s the premedical students, who have a strong in- terest in good grades, intellectual curiosity beyond what is necessary may be inefficient for them. Nevertheless, I like premeds. They make my job easier and force the rest of the class to work harder. 0: Do these same trends apply to graduate students? A: Graduate students are now willing to work much harder and spend more time getting their degrees than students years ago. Whereas at one time a student wouldn ' t be interested in putting in more than three or three and a half years to get a Ph.D., students are now willing to put in four to five years to get the same degree. 0: Do you think that changes and developments in science and technology have affected educa- tion here? A: Yes, but not much. I don ' t think that there has been a great increase in the amount of knowledge in science, only the detail. Over the years the emphasis in teaching changes and it has been said that each generation writes its own textbook. Each retains things it considers important from its time, adds new knowledge and information, and sometimes rediscovers something which a previous generation discard- ed as unimportant. 105 David H. zaref sky Chairman, Department of Communication Studies HH H 106 ' s I came to Northwestern in the fall of 1964. The lakef ill had just been finished, and Vogelback was the only building that even touched part of it. The Library was old Deering— a dingy place which had not yet seen the benefit of air condi- tioning or fluorescent lighting. The Reserve Room was a particularly unappealing place— in those days it could be understood why students didn ' t want to study there. Not that there was much choice; the Library was so crowded with books that it couldn ' t hold many people at any one time. A student center? That was Scott Hall, where the basement grill was the closest there was to a gathering place. A few meeting rooms on the upstairs floors, and that was it. Dor- mitories? Elder Hall was still regarded as new, and was a desirable place to live— I felt disap- pointed when not assigned there as a freshman. Classrooms? Kresge was considered the most desirable location, long before Leverone, Educa- tion, Hogan, Communicative Disorders, or the new fine and performing arts complex. The University hadn ' t yet given up In loco parentis, so dormitory life was quite a bit dif- ferent. There were no coed dormitories; in fact, there was no visitation in rooms of dorms oc- cupied by the opposite sex. The movement for parietal hours ' ' was a hot issue; they finally were approved my senior year. That was also the year that women ' s hours were effectively ended— previously, they had to be in by 11:00 (I think it was) on week nights and 12:30 on weekends. You can understand why people felt that independents on campus had a terrible social life, and also why the Creek system had many more participants than it does now! As for the students, they were more homogeneous as far as background is con- cerned, it wasn ' t until 1966 that the university began deliberately to diversify the geographic and socioeconomic base of the student popula- tion. Prior to that time, it was largely upper- middle-class, and largely from the Midwest. I came from Texas, where the university was vir- tually unheard of. The number of black students on campus was miniscule. All that changed very quickly when Roland Hinz became Director of Admissions, and his policies have been con- tinued and augmented under Bill Ihlanfeldt and Roger Campbell, in terms of background, today ' s students represent much more diversity than those with whom I went to school. But I ' m not sure that this diversity has ac- complished the educational objectives for which everybody hoped. I don ' t see much of a campus community which transcends the boundaries of residences, major, race and so on. What ' s more, the dominant ethos of the campus is still middle- and upper-middle class, pre-profes- sional. That ' s not bad, but it does depend on a set of assumptions about people and life that ought to be questioned and challenged more. There was a brief period, in the late 60s and early 70s, when this kind of challenge could be counted on. I don ' t mean to sound nostalgic for those days, because there ' s a lot about them I didn ' t like and wouldn ' t want to relive, but there was a sense of ferment on campus that really has been missing for the last decade. I think economics has a lot to do with that. During the mid-60 ' s, the national economy was in sustained expansion and an undergraduate could pretty much count on job opportunities relevant to his or her interest— if not immediately, then at least within a short period of time. Then the Vietnam war became the dominant preoccupation, and that generated plenty of ferment— though it came later here, and was less intense, than on many campuses. Now that we are in an era of scarcity, and one ' s economic future is far from certain, too much energy has to be spent on survival and personal advancement to have much left over for intellectual or social ferment. Undoubtedly students are more grade- conscious today. That ' s ironic, because grade in- flation really has come about— the average grade is probably six-tenths or more of a point higher now than then. Part of that ' s explainable by the introduction of the P N option, which didn ' t exist when I was an undergraduate. But anyway, at the very time that people are generally getting better grades, they are far more concerned about them. Perhaps that ' s because not having top grades is a far more serious problem as the average moves up. But I say it ' s ironic— because the very fact that causes students to worry more about grades causes graduate and professional schools and employers to take them less seriously. Nort hwestern is often described as a very competitive place. I don ' t think that ' s really true— both as a student and as a teacher I ' ve seen little of the dog-eat-dog, me-first-at- anyone-else ' s-expense kind of competition. I think that there are very strong levels of internal motivation to excel, and that ' s defined as get- ting good grades, and so one is in a real competi- tion with oneself. Personally, l think that ' s a good thing so long as it doesn ' t turn into an obsession. What ' s more, I think that this general atmosphere has been about the same for the last 15 years. On the whole, I ' d have to say that the campus is a much better place now than it was when I was a student here, undergraduates today are getting a better education than I did, if they choose to take advantage of it. (Now, as then, it ' s possible to go through four years at North- western and have almost nothing to show for it.) There is one respect, though, in which I ' m sure we were better off. Tuition was $1500 when I came here as a freshman, and it stayed at $1800 for my last three years. That ' s the last time that the tuition was not increased every year. 107 Martin Maloney Chairman, Department of Radio-TV-Film 0: You ' ve seen a good many graduating classes at Northwestern. Do you think that the class of 1980 will be different in any respect? A: My observation is that, academically, our students have gotten better and better over the years. As personalities, they don ' t change all that much. However, I have noticed that there are, well, almost styles in students, and that the styles come in waves. After doing graduate work here before World war II, I came back as a teacher in 1946, when I was still on my terminal leave from the Marine Corps. All of the Veterans were getting out of the service and coming to college on the CI. Bill of Rights. So suddenly we had all of these ex-army, ex- air force, ex-navy, ex-marine students on campus and we were all going around in bits and pieces of our old uniforms. That fashion in students lasted un- til about 1950, until the Korean war. Then during the fifties there was a long period when life seemed to me to be a little dull for the students— I used to feel rather sorry for them. They didn ' t have nearly as much political excitement as I did, for example, when l was an undergraduate. Outside of their studies, they seemed to be involved mostly in social life. 0: How would you describe the differences bet- ween political activity when you were an undergraduate and what happened here in the 1950s? A: I was an undergraduate at a state university in the middle of the depression. We were all involved in politics, we had the very real economic problems of the depression and the prospect of a disastrous war to keep us stirred up. I don ' t know how serious our political activity was, but we jumped around a good deal and, I suppose, said most of the right things. In the 1950s, of course, it was pretty hard to be interested in politics in that way. 0: But things changed in the 1960s. A: Oh, yes. The civil rights movement, the escala- tion of the Vietnam war, and all the other ideas and movements that followed. There was a period of ac- tivism here, culminating in the big blockade of Sheridan Road. 0: When was that? 1968? A: 1970, I think. I remember that I had a leave of absence during the winter quarter, and when I came back from Japan the campus was in quite an uproar. Our radio station, WNUR, was on the air 24 hours a day, there were revolutionary groups shap- ing up everywhere, and of course there were the No. When i appened here | the f K university m M e were aJI involved ° s disastrous pntknowhowserious twejumpedarounda atd most of the right e ; ' t was pretty hard t0 at way. B 1960s. TOvement, the escala- al( the other ideas and erewasaperiodofac- e big blockade of that I had a leave of quarter, and when I impus was in quite an IUR, was on the air 24 utJonary groups shap- ourse there were the « tf , barricades over on Sheridan. I had the feeling that everybody enjoyed it very much— except perhaps the administration. During the 60s the personal style of students changed— the long hair, the odd costumes, the folk music and the rock music and all the rest of it. That seems pretty well gone now. 0: What do you think of our present students? A: I think they ' re concerned with their careers and their futures, as they probably ough t to be. I don ' t think that they are uninterested in politics or the way the world goes, but they can foresee pretty ac- curately that they may have a long, hard fight to have a decent way of life. 0: How has your department changed over the years? A: When I came here we were a very small depart- ment, the Department of Radio. Students came here because they were interested in becoming radio announcers or actors or directors. Then televi- sion came along, and we included that in our teaching. We got an excellent man, Jack Ellis, to pioneer our film work, we have grown with the technology, which is difficult because new technology is very expensive. But still, we work with color video tape and porta-paks and computerized editing devices and the like, as much as we can. Career opportunities have broadened out amaz- ingly—in government and in industry, for example. And of course, there is now a great quantity of research and theory dealing with the media which gives us an infinitely more sophisticated notion of what we are doing than was available years ago. I think that we have been lucky to be part of the School of Speech. We ' ve had total freedom to develop our courses and teach them as we saw fit, in the best interests of our students, we ' ve also had strong financial support from the school and University administrations, especially in recent years. That ' s important, because our kind of educa- tion is very costly. 0: Do you think that NU has become a better University during your time here? A: Decidedly. There has been a continuing Universi- ty policy to make it so. There have been many im- provement ' ' programs, most of which looked very ponderous and academic when they were first put down on paper, but which have had an effect. Our graduate school, for example, has become very strong academically. 0: Do you have any advice to offer the graduating class of 1980? A: No. When I was first a graduate student, I used to make commencement addresses at small country high schools for S1 5 and expenses. I was ashamed of myself, but I needed the $15. Since then I ' ve never told anyone that the world is waiting for you, and I ' d just as soon not start now. 109 Richard w. Leopold William smith Mason Professor of American History 110 (Editors Note: The Spring of 1980 marks Professor Leopold ' s retirement after 32 years at North- western, we asked him to reflect on his ex- periences.) When I arrived in 1948, Northwestern was, physically, very much smaller than it is today. There was no Allison, Shepard, Sargent, Bobb, Mcculloch, Elder, Foster-Walker, Dryden, or Engelhart; the Northwestern Apartments hous- ed only faculty, staff, and a few graduate students. The chapel, Rebecca Crown, Kresge- Centennial, Parkes, Leverone, Anderson, Pick- Staiger, Regenstein, Hogan, Lindheimer, Com- municative Disorders, and the Allen Center were all in the future, as were Norris, McCaw, Blom- quist, and the infirmary. Deering was the sole library, and it had long outgrown its original pur- pose. A computer center was undreamed of. The faculty, too, was much smaller, in 1948, the Department of History had nine full-time posi- tions; today the number is thirty. Course offer- ings, inevitably, were less rich; but since the stu- dent body was almost as large as now, teaching loads were heavier, in 1948-1949, 1 offered eight courses— five lecture courses (two of them enrolling over 400) and three graduate seminars. In the last two decades I have rarely taught more than five courses each year. I have often been asked why I came to North- western after having taught at Harvard since 1937. The answer is simple. Although I had been given my own lecture course and graduate seminar while an instructor— an unusual honor at Harvard then— there was no permane nt future for me, since the four tenure slots in United States history were filled by men more than fifteen years away from retirement. By coming to Northwestern, I raised my rank from assistant to associate professor, increased my salary from $4,500 to $6,500, and could hope for tenure if I proved my worth. By 1953, 1 had been promoted to professor and had tenure. I have also been asked why I have remained at Northwestern. Again the answer is simple. Although l have had opportunities to move, no offer or overture ever promised a more enlightened administration, a more congenial department, a more gifted student body, and— since 1969— a more usable library. It has been an exciting experience to watch President J. Roscoe Miller, Provost Payson S. Wild, and Dean Simeon E. Leland build an outstanding College faculty, and it has been reassuring to see their successors maintain that quality. It was challeng- ing to join with Cray C. Boyce, Ray A. Billington, Franklin D. Scott, Arthur S. Link, and Clarence L Ver Steeg in assembling a Department of History preeminent in scholarship, unsurpassed in teaching, and democratic in operation. The stan- dard thus established in the 1950 ' s has been upheld in recent years by Lacey Baldwin Smith, Robert H. Wiebe, James E. Sheridan, Conrad D. Totman, and many others too numerous to list. Since 1948, I have had many contacts with students outside the classroom. I served five years on the Council on Undergraduate Life (predecessor of the Northwestern Communty Council), two terms on the General Faculty Com- mittee (as chairman in 1959-1960), three years on the University Discipline Committee (forerunner of the present judiciary), and two years on the Subcommittee on the Student Community of the Educational Policies Committee. As chairman of the last, I helped draft a plan for restructuring the freshman year that would have deferred fraternity and sorority pledging to the Spring Quarter and obliged the university to provide better living, social, and recreati onal facilities for all freshmen. The plan was not adopted, but some of its goals have been realized in the residential colleges and the faculty associates program, in recent years I have been chairman of committees to oversee the university Ar- chives—a badly neglected key to preserving the record of undergraduate as well as faculty and administrative activities— and the Department of Naval Science. For two decades, I seemed to be the only facul- ty member to pay attention to the NRTOC pro- gram, begun in 1926. 1 urged curriculum change so that more courses would be taught by civilians and fewer by officers. Then in 1968, outraged by the Vietnam War and frustrated by their inability to alter government policy, facul- m 112 J a ty and students struck at the symbol of govern- ment on the campus and demanded that the nrotc be abolished. I argued against sacrificing on the altar of a mistaken policy in Indochina a program that for forty years had benefitted the nation, the university, and the students who chose it voluntarily. With the aid of others, I was successful and one reason was my knowledge of students who might not have come to North- western if it had not been for the Navy. They in- cluded two presidents of the student body, two editors and one managing editor of the Daily Northwestern, two football captains, class of- ficers, members of Phi Beta Kappa, and— in 1960— the heads of both the Young Democrats and the Young Republicans. Those who do not remember the undergraduates of the 1950s and early 1960s tend to underrate their concern for studies, for campus reforms, and for the world outside. Not all were characters in Happy Days. If there was no Vietnam or Kent State to arouse emotions to fever pitch, they did oppose Senator Joe McCar- thy and his heirs, protest the Soviet invasion of Hungary, and join the civil rights movement. At Northwestern, they sought a student union, an honor system for examinations, contacts with the faculty, and an end to discriminatory prac- tices in the Creek system. They may not have come as well trained as today ' s undergraduates. They tested less well and spoke less readily. But they wrote better, were graded more strictly, and did not play games with P N. Nor did they expect at least a grade of B for simply register- ing in a course. A Daily columnist once referred to me as the guy who teaches that American foreign policy course at the ungodly hour of 8 a.m. Actually, I have taught many courses at many hours. Until 1960, l was best known among undergraduates through a survey of United States history (B10) which l taught each Winter and Spring at ten. There I was heard every year by about 600 students. Until 1974, 1 offered many courses for graduate students and directed twenty doctoral dissertations. Since 1971, 1 have taught annuallya one-ouarter course (C03) on the role of the armed forces in our government and society. For the last three years I have given a freshman seminar on biography and the study of history. Still, my three-ouarter history of American foreign policy (C13) has brought me the most satisfaction over the longest period. Begun as a lecture course at Harvard in 1938, it retained the format until 1962 when I put my lectures in book form. I was then free to transform the course in- to one conducted entirely by discussion— a method of teaching best calculated to stimulate independent thinking and effective expression. Since the only room suitable for discussion could not comfortably hold more than forty, I had to limit an enrollment that had previously aver- aged about sixty-five. To make it less likely that I would have to turn away any large number, I scheduled the class at that ungodly hour and would not accept P N registrants. I did not worry that some grade-conscious individuals avoided the course as too demanding, for I had too much respect for the students I did attract not to challenge them to do their very best. And their best they did. Successive classes responded with outstanding work. Even more satisfying has been the camaraderie that develops over three quarters and proves that a quest for excellence need not engender cutthroat competition or personal animosity. With coffee and tea available, about a third of the members refused to schedule a course at nine and continued to discuss until I cleared the room for my ten o ' clock class. Even then, further arguments resounded in the cor- ridors of Harris Hall. Passing years brought tradi- tions: a group picture, a birthday cake, an honors day with a citation for each, a softball game with the preceding class, a spring picnic, and— in 1979— champagne after the final ex- amination. Collectively, the C13 classes merited the citation given to one superior individual in 1976: The David Halberstam Award for The Best and the Brightest. Many of my Northwestern students have gained distinction in law, medicine, business, academe, and the ministry, but their names would mean little to the class of 1980. Some, however, might be recognized, in the national government: Senator George S. McCovern of South Dakota, Democratic candidate for the presidency in 1972; Congressman Richard A. Gephardt of Missouri; former Congressman John B. Conlan, Jr. of Arizona; and Richard Wiley, former head of the Federal Communications Commission. At the state and local level: former comptroller and candidate for governor Michael J. Bakalis of Illinois; state senator James T. Kolbe in Arizona; and Richard Elrod, sheriff of Cook County, in the world of learning: Lawrence w. Towner, President of the Newberry Library in Chicago, and Benedict K. zobrist, Director of the Harry S. Truman Library in independence, in the world of journalism: Lee w. Huebner, publisher of the International Herald Tribune; Samuel w. Jameson, Tokyo correspondent for the Los Angeles Times; and John w. Kolbe, chief political writer for the Phoenix Gazette, in television: John S. Palmer, White House correspondent for NBC, and Garry K. Marshall, creator of Happy Days. On the Northwestern faculty, David H. Zarefsky, chairman of the Department of Com- munication Studies in the School of Speech, Ken E. Kraft, Associate Director of Athletics; and James E. Avery, University Chaplain. Among the athletic greats of bygone days: Jack Ellis and Jeff Brooke in football, Dick Mast and Joe Ruklick in basketball, Chuck Lindstrom in baseball, Jim Golli- day in track, and Dave Pemberton in swimming. These are some of the memories and friend- ships that l will carry with me into retirement. I hope that when the members of the class of 1980 reach their retirement around 2030, they will be able to look back upon their years at Northwestern with the same loyalty to the university and the same affection for the faculty that taught them and for their contemporaries with whom they studied, worked, and played. 113 ' - - |-TiT ' ll Entertainment -_ • - - g 3 3 I ■Mil 3 124  I 125 i I o 3 fl O a) a) N 126 D O 127 Play it Again Sam NU Talent Show 129 130 - NU Dance company JS} ' -V ; m Mee-Ow waa-Mu msm ou seKeeplh a %  nside Gossii P«THW65T6RN UNIVERSITY y EVENING P0S7 MK fc ARCHITECTURAL DIGVSl 134 . - 135 136 FT 1 The Merchant of Venice This Time it ' s the Big Time ■ - 1 L 1 k 139 Is f • The School for Wives 140 1 A Funny Thing Happened o 141 r S i : : 1 J MP X J Iff ' V 2 V _ 7 1 B IHtai e i Dorm Life 144 145 Off Campus 146 ' I 147 148 i - Allison Hall Allison Residential College Humanities College Chapin Hall 151 152 I B College of Community Studies 154 courtyard Hall Foster walker complex House 1 m House 2 House 3 157 House 5 House 7 ■ •mil I SUCKS House 6 159 House 8 _ Hobart House Hinman House 161 Lindgren House 1 m •4 ! fil 600 Lincoln J Northwestern Apartments 165 166 167 Rogers House 625 Haven 625 Noyes 627 Dartmouth tmouth Sargent Hall 169 Shepard Hall 170 willard Hall l ' m , y Ken Kraft Associate Athletic Director 174 Northwestern athletics my Freshman year, 1953-54, was not vastly different from many others. Although the football team was just four years past its Rose Bowl win, it struggled through the Big Ten season with an 0-6 record. Basketball provided me with the first of many NU upsets. The defending NCAA champions, In- diana, (Bobby Knight was yet to attend Ohio State) came into McCaw expecting a comfortable win. The Wildcats played them as if there was no tomorrow and won going away in an overtime, 100-90. Jack Riley coached the wrestling team and had outstanding credentials: Ail-American in football, two-time NCAA wrestling champion and a silver medalist in the ' 32 Olympics. Two of the spring sports coaches fit the mold of the others; track coach Rut Walter was a former NCAA cham- pion in the quarter mile and Sid Richardson, golf coach, was a two time NCAA champion. The Northwestern student population during the early ' 50s did not have many minority students, although Jim Colliday.a black sprint world record holder, was on the track team. A black classmate of mine, Fred Duhart, played on the football and basketball teams, it wouldn ' t be many years until we would see a change in the number of black athletes at NU. After the 1954 football season, Lou Saban (cur- rently coaching at west Point) was named foot- ball coach for the 1 955 season. The Wildcats went winless in nine tries although they salvaged a tie in the final game with Illinois. The cry was for Northwestern to get out of the Big Ten because we could not compete. New Athletic Director, Stu Holcomb, decided to bring in a young coach from Miami of Ohio, Ara Parseghian. Ara ' s first team m ade an im- mediate tunraround with a 4-4-1 record, winning the last three games. His staff included a young assistant named Bo Schembechler. The wrestling team put together a fine year upsetting Michigan, the first win over the wolverines since 1931, when Coach Riley was competing. The baseball team won the Big Ten championship and went on to play in the NCAA championships. At the end of my senior year, Stu Holcomb ask- ed me to serve one year as wrestling coach while completing my Masters work. I accepted and began a one year position that lasted for 22 years. The 1958-59 year was filled with excitement and success. We won our first four football games, including an electrifying 55-24 upset over Michigan. The score at halftime was 43-3 and stadium pressboxes throughout the country were checking their Western union lines for malfunction as that score came in. I witnessed an awesome display of athletic intensity that day. That team also shut out Ohio State 21-0 in Dyche, a year after losing to them 47-5. During that winter, l watched the basketball team win two upsets in a row. Just three years earlier there were some that said we couldn ' t compete with the best in the country. The next year was not upset time for NU but for other teams as the football team was rated Number One in the country for six straight weeks. The student body and all of Chicagoland was on a football high . Dyche Stadium was fill- ed to the limit for the seventh game, Wisconsin. It was a classic with NU trailing late in the game 24-19, with the ball on Wisconsin ' s 11 yard line, 1st and 10. Ron Burton, All-American halfback, carried to the 5 yard line. Burton carried again but the ball came loose and Wisconsin recovered and ran out the clock. It was an extremely disheartening loss which played a major part in the final two games, we lost both, another by a 5 point margin. One win and it would have meant Rose Bowl. That year was also one of progress for the wrestling squad, 6-2-2 in dual meets, best in NU history and a 9th place finish in the country. My brother, Art, won an NCAA championship and Rory Weber was third. Changes came again as Bill Rohr left after the 1963 season and a few months later Ara went to Notre Dame, a school he never lost to while at NU. Larry Class took over in basketball and a former Evanston High School player and univer- sity of Illinois All American, Alex Agase, became football coach. Both experienced some difficult years but then in the late 1960s and early 1970 ' s put together some fine teams. John Pont became football coach in 1973 and Tex Winter was named basketball coach that same year. The big wins came, but not as often as hoped for. Players such as Randy Dean, Pete Shaw, and Greg Boykin went from those teams to play in the nfl. Tex was a superior coach and won games because of that fact, including the one over Michigan in 1977. Another major change occurred in the mid-70 ' s when NU entered women ' s inter- collegiate athletics, we started off with im- mediate success, nu won the State champion- ship in tennis and swimming, and a Big Ten championship in basketball in 1979. Rick venturi and Rich Falk are currently heading up the foot- ball and basketball programs. It is interesting to note that student attendance was considerably higher for the 1979 football season as well as for basketball and other sports. The teams are on the move but we must have patience. 175 176 _L MM 178 ■ ■■ Cross Country 180 181 i 182 Sailing 183 ugby 185 , _ 186 187 _- volleyball — Hockey Men ' s Basketball 194 women ' s Basketball 198 199 203 wrestling 204 J 9 f 206 i ZIEZBI 207 209 I , v iff 210 211 Gymnastics 212 214 - 7T 216 217 J. Edgar, Treas. Phi Delta Theta Sweetness, Consul Chi Phi Otis, Proconsi Theta Ki Elmo Evans Scholars (Deadly viper) Sigma Nu Rastafarian Lambda Chi Alpha 7T Otis, Proconsul Theta Xi ZETA UPSILON Founded in the belief that all Greeks are not animals, but some animals are Greek. 0B Snarf Evans Scholars Sweetie, Pledge trainer Sigma Chi __h_ Hopkins Sigma Nu Tom SigEp o fl 219 hti iJ L TT 224 r i f t m 225 Acacia irti : • a «w !?d M  Hit Tynan Tracy Ward Weidle 226 a Catty k Alpha Chi Omega KM Linda Vought lean Walsh Wendy Zimberoff llissa Zimmerman 227 Alpha Delta Phi Frohnan Ctf 228 IF Alpha Epsilon Phi Jane Zimmerman 229 Alpha Kappa Alpha V Alpha Phi Mary Julie Milota Milsien i H Pam Randa Rothermel Sabbagha Ik Susan Vavak Gretchen Wehrenberg Patricia Wrona Carolyn Yoch 231 Alpha Phi Alpha Left to Right, Standing: Vincent Williams, Aaron Hamb, Larry Lindsey, Michael Williams, Julius Hall, Lance Wallace, Randall Flagg. Middle Row: Michael Jackson, Keith Franklin. Seated: Cavin McFarland and Julius Washington. 232 tlrlhW CM Sen M •wiwt ■a Alpha Tail Omega Rundr.) Caine Tracy Carlson Brett Carver Michael Fischer Patrick Gallagher Charles Gattone Salvatore Indomenico Steven Jacobs Carey Knowles Magnesen David Mariwn Thomas McClade John Karl McCuinness Mitchener Stephen Morrill William Nelson North k) I FU Middle Row: Michael 9 l John Nowakowski Robert Palley Steven Pals lames Pannunzio Chris Patterson Pollack Malcolm Proudfoot Mark Rodosky Michael Rudnicki A 111 1A Bradfey Larry Schner Silverstein Christopher Smith Gary Siege) Thomas Sweeney Christopher Thompson William Thompson Sheppard Weisman Westreich Thomas White I Williams 233 Beta Theta Pi CM i 11 J tote ' ' -•■:■- 234 Chi Omega ' ,1 Kimberly Carol Tillotson Want White Elizabeth Elizabeth Williams Wilson 235 Chi Phi I. Bert Cox 2. Rick Burling 3. Tom Caubatz 4. Ken Dickerson 5. Ted Papenthien 6. Bill McRobb 7. Jeff Staab8. Doug Bender 9. Bob Fedinets 10. Mike Levinson II. Kerry Smith 12. Matt Menghini 13. Dave Lansky 1 4. Jerry Caruso 15. Dan the Man 16. Jeff Perelman 17. Ned Murray 18. Rob Esser 19. Ed Smith 20. Fred Wilms 21. Gary Henningsen 22. Juan Lopez 23. Rafael Espinosa 24. Loren Dunn 25. Pete Castiglia 26. Bob Kunimura 27. Dave Greene 28. Carlos Zambrano 29. Marcus Carbajal 30. Neil Golden 236 Chi Psi .V ; assss 237 Delta Delta Delta Sitterly Jacqueline Jennifer Sieros Stone 238 Utah L shwnl Delta Gamma Marey •Valler In, ill Kraft Julia Lou is- Dreyfus SMB lean Cheri MacDonald Magee Lisa Leslie Makarewich Marcus Matalon Cinnie Susanne McClintok McColley Nilda Weiner (ill Joanne Weinstock Weiss 239 Delta Sigma Theta nil 240 Delta Tau Delta Bailey Berger Blackard Conti %f % f, Douglas Ritter Craig Rosenberg Paul Keith Ryan Lon Satnick Fred Schindler Sherman Peter Shippy Smith Stack Donaid Van der Wiel Charles John Joseph Wilczynski 241 Delta upsilon fed ■ Keith Stenberg 242 ! Delta zeta I ( • Oisuta ill Hi ._ 243 Evans Scholars Robert Joseph Biggio k ' -, Ait Richard lay Zweig G w r II ' It. tat to to 244 Gamma Phi Beta Dm MM W ' 7 Mrs, Emily Badstuebner Baker Julie Calahan Melissa Callison Nancy Caracciolo Laura Carlson Kathryn Courtright nm Karin Deam Barbara DiGiulio Kathy DinVes Calhie Ea ster Claudia Friederici Joan Gohla Marta Gonzalez Philene Gotsis Beverly Graf Laura Griesmer Kandace Hawlcinson Deborah Hill Karen fames Sandy Jankiewicz loy Kniffin Julie Kock Karen Langer Theresa Lederer 3 m Annie Lin Suzanne Loclcwood Shari Logan Doris Lotz Sheryl Loyd Margie Lozano Nancy Lutz Lynn Matteson Joanne McKenzie Alicia Meadors lacquelyn Meuse Kathy Miller Lilly Moon Durinda Mullins Anne Nusser Sheila Oancea Regina Paolucci Mary Pelton Kathy Pfister Mana Portela Roann Rabinovitz Victoria Rian Cheryl Richmond Melissa Scott Karen Seibert Shames Shariatpanahi Nancy Shimberg Stacey Shinkle Carole Shure Laura Sokol Sujata Somani Renee Sowa Irene Tatara Andrea Taylor Sonia Verges Vicky Voss Liz Welch Elizabeth Werner Suzanne Williams Andrea Woolard Kathryn Worden Elyce Zahn 245 Kappa Alpha Theta ■1 1 1S PK • r Jennifer Swan Kimberly Swanson 246 k,« Dia hi ! Ka mm Miiit WU MwH Kappa Delta 247 T Kappa Kappa Gamma Laura Skeel I 248 Kappa Sigma Lambda Chi Alpha Phi Delta Theta Thomas William Kevin Todd lames Walter William Ahern Benson Berg Carnicom Crowder Currie Daniels 1 MlM i it Douglas Clara Scon Patrick John John Michael j- !5j- I Dorsev Dzurick Duncan Erdman Ericson Finn Fiedler MAf.lSA Kreider lames Michael Andrew David Walter Warga Wuellner Young 251 Phi Gamma Delta UAZllW Herbert David Steven Neal Boss Burton Cerne Lawrence Patrick Clifford Connor Joseph Stephen Daniel DePalma MlAiA Jonathan Stephenson John Doane Emery Robert lohn David Joseph Gregory Steven )edd George Maguire Mielcarek Mosher Nabonsal Nevitt V kVi Jonathan Gus Charles Osborne Paloian Petersen Steven Robert Keith Price Ravasio Rollins % % ■ a i l Daniel James Rooker Roth Robert Larry Rusinko Schwartz Sessions Sharer Peter Scott Ska I a Snyder Richard Jeffrey Spangler Spoerk Christopher Stockwell 9 ft fy OQ ii r . i Carl Thomas David Christopher Jonathan Allen Bradley Edward James Tanner Taylor Vernon Vukovich Wasserman Willen Williams Wolf Zeeb 252 u Mta Hi MCSe Mm Hren l Ik % fc Ha m Got Mm M SkWI Phi Kappa Psi XM.W, iM Andrew Ade Curt Anderson Douglas Bdnisler Douglas Blake Neal DeYoung Shaner Shedd 253 Phi Kappa Sigma ■fli | j i David Mark Zaleta Zimmerman i Ml f W nBJO| Km m T)  ««! «m Pll 254 Pi Beta Phi ■ m S B 255 Pi Kappa Alpha 256 ? | J w cw Raymond W Fotta Cm AflnOlfc j v 9 Ifi Hub Pp •id Dad I EVji QA l Qt Psi upsilon j iiif im? Bafkin Franklin Blackstone John James Butler Christopher Chambers Robert Chefitz John Cleave Daniel Simpson Daniel Sullivan tMM Gregory Daniel Williams John Zwack 257 Sigma Alpha Epsilon Philip George Varney Ollmann Peterson Philip Bruce Rings trand Jeffrey Schaider Schmidt lohn Spence Mike Steen Daniel David William Lee Styslinger Tracey « Cxa Willberg Yanan 258 Sigma Delta Tau 259 Sigma Chi a. § ill Ashley David Brad Jeffrey Busby Lanthie I Mark Leipold Maury Lynn f mr w i Larry Miller Jon Nydick @ % iat - Eugene Podrazik ifflq 260 Nick Wright John Wunderlich ftp) 1 ri lueben i . .y i £ )wd Victor Lew Hrihfi if J totfli j -j Munitea i inn v.- Xt .1 h JOfei Sigma Nu Dwd . ' . Jeffrey Shamburger David Stavropoulos Svfert 261 Theta Chi Kenan Frank Mark Abosch Baniewicz Beese Bradley James Bertram Bock Roland Young Arthur Randal Christian Chung Chwalek Cox is; ,ti it Bruce Ronald James Robert Curtis Lachenauer Lavery Litzow Longbottom Loos liiJ j II Paul Jeffrey Mahowald Miller Charles Mark Timothy Obmascik Peck Jeffrey Thomas William Jonathan Michael Steven Perrotti Piskula Purdy Reder Rose Richard Scott Rubinstein Shiffman li.iG i Peter Brett Bruce Sitz Spencer Starr . AM i Thomas David Stock Straub Timothy John Stubblefield Tobin Richard Tom Tor ok Tucci John Wold 262 . Theta Delta Chi if 1 1 Okudt w |p 1. Disco Dave Kaleel 2. Steve Boyer 3. Jim Hansen 4. Rocky Mountain Golden Boy Rick Walker 5. Benji Margolis 6. Chris Mr. Smooth Dreeson 7. Rich Levine 8. Art Wholesome Weaver 9. Greg Big Bird Showalter 10. Kaiser Koehler 11. Steve Hartman, Steve Hartman 12. Amarillo Howie Federer 1 3. Eduh Kern, B.M.O.C. 1 4. Terry Ferro 1 5. Ed Damien Lasky 1 6. Marty ' s food 17. Frank Zorm Mroz 18. Russ Schnapps Johnson 19. Dave Hood, man of intrigue 20. Rand, not Scott, Ringwald 21. Marks. Roth; Historian, China Scholar, budding diplomat 22. Wild Bill Adams 23. Purd 24. Marty Wilde 25. Garland hand through the window Cunningham 26. Brendon Hat trick Alexander 27. Red You can ' t put a price on brother- hood Eubell, Chi ' 21 263 Theta xi ; ' ::;-:• „ In H 0«-j, 264 _ im . . Triangle Marshall £M 1, J iinai Okamura Projahn Ripley Schmocker Schumacher Schumacher JKr 1 Chuck Semmelhack Scott Stegemann Brian Sparks Mark Teague Wilson Wittsche 265 zeta Beta Tau iMJ Bressler Cantor I JU Joe Deakin Effman Robert Eiseman iMiM,Mi Greg Tak«a 9„ Richard Zorowitz 266 ) lit I Jmir zeta Psi 267 Alpha Gamma Delta Debra Terry 268 MrSM IctaHfue « •Ok Osteon, to Cm Sigma Epsilon Chi Bwana Leopold Polaosky IM Chairman Colleen Caswell Paranoid Dave Palten Minnow Dick 269 Newsprint n 272 College is usually described with the words ivory tower. it is an ex- istence unto itself. The campus becomes the world. One recognizes that there is more going on out there but one really doesn ' t care. What does matter? Getting that philosophy paper done on time. Which band party to go to on Saturday night. Those are the important concerns. Are the people who call college an ivory tower really right? it is hard to believe that university students don ' t have some idea of what is going on out there in the real world. More impor- tantly, it is possible that university students care about what is going on in the real world. One purpose of the yearbook is to capture what was important to the Northwestern student body in 1980. Newsprint is included in the 1980 Syllabus because the facts about the world around us are quite important. More than the 129th year of Northwestern university, 1980 was a watershed year. The world ' s attention suddenly shifted to Iran where Iranian nationalists overran the American embassy in Teheran and took over 60 American hostages, it was an election year, it was also the year that saw the Pope come to America, and for the first time ever to Chicago. What goes on in Iran, Cambodia, China, Washington, and Chicago does matter to the Northwestern student. Any given student is not an ivory tower academician, but a serious pre-professional. Syllabus documents the NU community on several levels. The news is one of them. Clark Federer Editor-in-chief DB Carteri Hostag b,biiyMy« ' One year a , tow an A? 1 Bui by Novate 4 - 1 admorewoe ofaUAnKricans.OiW«« students seized = American Embassy «w The student dena ■ ■ ikkari „„, administnoia  • for lymph cancer. In the first fc •eeta « seizure, which was am « E«fc by the Ayatoii Wo Amerkan d spiayed a soidar World War II. Protest ax American rallies dndapel 1 try, including one at Nortii Organized by Speech sew M ' students burned aat efBe in an attempt to get other enough to take saoiar acooi As the hostage sirtatiai months, various efforts to i captives failed. Kplcaan: i sanctions by the L.S. toots military action, and ate apology did DOthaog to aher ; ;ute ■Hal hi v - face criminal charges, aad pn at the hands of the Aratatah Some change id oar elected a new, sttppasedry bo Abolhassan Bani Sadr. Soa released. Iran cm orToi sapaf President Carter cat off da) The shah was moved to a iobi and eventually oa of tit cm And the there wi L or 3 The lOon _ ■ of choices, but the fidelk-? fcchoesby T to ' fceveoffcTV . r JT 1 fall «iotakT Newsprint 273 mex- nizes ore. time, rant r eaily ome wr- joing nt to nttie Quite rsity, Jd to y in year, rtfie ago snot ft! neof lerer chief Hostages in Iran spur campus rallies by Kenny Myers One year ago, most of the world did not know what an Ayatollah was, where Tehran was, or that the Shah of Iran had a real name. But by November 4, 1979, all these things and more were indelibly etched on the minds of all Americans. On that date militant Iranian students seized about 65 diplomats in the American Embassy in Tehran, the capital of Iran. The student demanded the return of the deposed shah, Mohammed Reva Pahlvi, who had been allowed into the United States by the Carter administration to undergo treatment for lymph cancer. In the first few weeks after the embassy seizure, which was apparently being controlled by the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, American displayed a solidarity not seen since World War II. Protest movements and pro- American rallies developed all over the coun- try, including one at Northwestern. Organized by Speech senior Duane Moore, NU students burned an effigy of the Ayatollah in an attempt to get other students riled up enough to take similar actions. As the hostage situation dragged on two months, various efforts to free the American captives failed. Diplomatic efforts, economic sanctions by the U.S. against Iran, threats of military action, and alleged messages of apology did nothing to alter the situation; the students wanted the shah returned to Iran to face criminal charges, and probable execution at the hands of the Ayatollah. Some changes did occur, though. Iran elected a new, supposedly moderate president, Abolhassan Bani Sadr. Some hostages were released. Iran cut off oil supplies to the U.S. as President Carter cut off all imports from Iran. The shah was moved to a hospital in Houston, and eventually out of the country, to Panama. Protests were a common sight on both sides of the Atlantic while Iranian students held 50 American hostages in Tehran. From there, he was received for permanent ex- ile into Egypt, by President Anwar Sadat. Eventually, Carter severed all diplomatic relations with Iran and expelled all Iranian diplomats. After more that five months of be- ing held at bay, Carter ' s patience and restraint were wearing thin. He began to threaten fur- ther economic and even military actions against Iran if the hostages were not freed. The hostage crisis also had political implica- tions. Carter, battling for re-election, refused to leave the White House to compaign as long as the hostages were being held. This angered Carter ' s opponents, especially Senator Edward M. Kennedy (D.-Mass.), who had watched his seemingly invincible lead in the polls disappear almost overnight when the hostages were captured. Kennedy felt Carter was hiding behind the hostages, refusing to come out on the campaign trail to discuss domestic policy issues. After almost six months, the situation con- tinues to be confusing and complex for all Americans, including President Carter. His main goal has been to bring the hostages home alive, but at this point in time, it is not clear he will succeed. In the meantime, more than 50 Americans sit in the American Embassy in Tehran — the victims of a problem to which there seems to be no solution. And then there were 2... or 3 By Liz Agnello The 1980 presidential race gave voters a lot of choices, but the field had dwindled to a handful of echoes by April. On the eve of the Pennsylvania primary three Republicans and two Democrats still wore their running shoes and the finish line loomed ominously close for one former U.N. Ambassador and the last of Rose Kennedy ' s boys. Liberal Republican John B. Anderson declined to take part in the Pennsylvania poll. But the representative from Rockford ' s hopes remained bright, after he gained support from Democrats across the nation who switch- ed party allegience to vote for him. Anderson was considering placing his name on the November ballot as an independent candidate. His competition there would likely be Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan. Carter ' s White House campaign seemed effective enough to have dimmed Edward Kennedy ' s chances of winning the Democratic nomination. Tense situations in Afghanistan and Iran strengthened Carter ' s image as a firm leader and reinforced his incumbent advantage. Former movie gunslinger Ronald Reagan ' s last showdown with a Republican rival was to be with former U.N. Ambassador George Bush in Pennsylvania. Bush, who won the highly publicized Iowa caucus in January, was running a poor third in nationwide polls, behind both Reagan and Anderson. But the race didn ' t begin quite so predic- tably. The Democrats originally on the cam- paign trail included California Governor Ed- ward (Jerry) Brown, who grabbed some headlines by raising funds through rock con- certs led by his girlfriend Linda Ronstadt and top-name groups. Brown was forced to drop out of the primary race after the Wisconsin primary due to lack of support and funds. Perennial (Socialist) Lyndon LaRouche put his name on the Democratic ballot in 1980 in order to qualify for matching federal election campaign funds. But his candidacy seemed destined to remain an asterisk on the vote total charts of history. Numerous Republicans also found the going too rough. Texan John Connally refused to ac- cept federal campaign funds and still spent more money than any other candidate while he was in the race. Connally ' s millions didn ' t translate into votes, however, and he left the campaign trail after the South Carolina primary. Senator Howard Baker, early considered to be a viable contender for the Republican nomination, took his leave after New Hamp- shire, throwing his support to Reagan. And the first candidate to declare his intentions, Rep. Phil Crane dropped from the scorecard after a poor showing in his home state of Illinois. 274 Newsprint Draft registration plan meets student opposition by Dan Malovany The Iran, Afghanistan and Middle East crises never felt close to students until Presi- dent Carter called for the registration of men and women in January. Responding to the present international scene, growing unrest over the economy and a faltering image in election year, Carter tried to get the country — specifically 18 to 20-year- olds — to rally around the flag. He also wanted to look tough to the Soviets. But what began as an expedient solution to some of the President ' s problems ended up be- ing a potential political time bomb in the coun- try ' s college campuses. Students immediately split up into two groups: the Hell no! We won ' t go types, and the God Bless America faction. Those students who joined the opposition chose either to help organized protest marches or wondered if winter in Canada could be any worse that it is in Chicago. Those who favored registration rarely ex- pressed the thought of owning an Iranian oil well or chatting with an Afghan nomad before they had finished college. Rather moderation and silence were the keys. Most Northwestern students (54 percent) felt that registration and the draft should be used only when the U.S. had declared war on another country, according to a January 18 Daily Northwestern poll. A resounding 85 per cent opposed a peacetime draft and 82 per cent felt they deserved college deferment from military ex- perience. Students at other universities— such as Berkeley and Columbia — made national news after holding anti-draft rallies that attracted more than 10,000 protesters. Pro-registration groups called these rallies an overreaction. Protesters called the registration an overreac- tion. When Carter proposed to include women in registration, he caused problems not only for Congress, but also for the women ' s rights movement. Although a majority of NU student prefer- red to let the men do the fighting, most felt that women should do their share for the coun- try at home. Opposition to the registration and the draft is deep-rooted in college campuses. In May of 1979 a Daily Northwestern poll showed that 87 percent of the students opposed the return of the draft. Almost 38 percent said they would leave the country to avoid conscription. Two weeks later, more than 500 students at- tended an anti-draft rally at Rebecca Crown Center, organized by NU ' s Progressive Students Coalition. Although activity at NU was fairly low-key since the May rally, a silent majority continues its battle against joining the army. Efforts to reinstitute draft registration for 18-20-year-olds prompted vocal reactions from college students across the nation, including an NU rally at Rebecca Crown Center. President James Earl Carter Olympic boycott? by Larry Mark In protest to the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in late December 1979 President Carter urged the United States and all its allies to boycott the Summer Games in Moscow. One week later, in early January, Carter ad- dressed the nation about the Soviet invasion. It was then that he first raised the possibility of an American boycott to protest the Soviet oc- cupation. In an appearance on Meet the Press three weeks later, Carter declared that if the Soviets refused to pull out its troops of Afghanistan within a month the U.S. would seek to have the Games pulled out of Moscow— and, failing that, would try to get as many nations as possi- ble to join in boycotting the Games. Carter himself did not have the authority to call off the U.S. participation in the Olym- pics — only the U.S. Olympic Committee had that authority, which it exercised in mid-April. The Soviets were still in Afghanistan in April when USOC supported Carter ' s call by voting to boycott the Games by more than a 2-1 margin in an April 12 vote. The issue had divided athletes and other Americans throughout the winter, a controver- sy intensified by the success and popularity of the Winter Games in Lake Placid, N.Y. At Northwestern, a poll taken by The Daily Northwestern in January found students op- posing the boycott by an overwhelming ma- jority. One student more affected than most was second-year medical student Craig Brigham, who was on a two-year leave of absence train- ing for the decathlon in Eugene, Ore. Brigham, who planned to return to NU after the Games, supported a boycott. From my standpoint, as an American citizen and an athlete, I think we should boycott as long as the Soviet Union is in Afghanistan, the 25-year-old athlete told The Daily Northwestern in a February inter- view. re !hi flags mark ik la 214 die WOst ltwasFriday,fchy25.lfT weekend and a oae for kev % ' s wate n, | slties— perfea flying caodu totatricnAiriBr  °P to Los Auk, a, offftMnOTtniK, ■ !«■• n Persons on apta, ■ W pound. ThecrashofthtDC-iOjo l«i engine ripped off j ?• ■ won tec;::::;,:- 4 ' f abrctaboiT mfc||Dt tat J Earl Carter i 10 the Soviet invasion of is lie December 1979 Presita the United States and all iis allies e Soamer Games in Moscow. bur, in early January, Carter ad- Kioa about the Soviet invasion. I . tke first raised the possibility of boycott to protest the Soviet oc- m ceon Mea the Press three Carter declared that if the Soviets i ott its troops of Afghanista: Kh the U.S. would seek to have dkd ots of Moscow— and, failing r to get as many nations as poss - , boycottiog the Games. off id not have the authority to U.S. participation in the Olym- k U.S. Olympic Committee had  whkh k exercised in mid-April. jwerestiTluiAfghanistaninApril sopported Carter ' s a ■ te Games by more April 12 vote. y divided athl etes and other —-j nt the winttr, a controver- ccessandpopf) ' ' i-no in Lake Placid, N Y. JJ found fflfc« byanoverwhelmingma- - -ore affected than most was iSstudentCraigBngham, raft . than a M Newsprint 275 o o c o. 33 o § Bright flags mark the location of 274 bodies found in the rubble of the crash of DC-10 American flight 191. 274 die in crash; FAA grounds DC- 10s by Jeff Gilbert It was Friday, May 25, 1979— Memorial Day weekend and a time for heavy air travel. Chicago ' s weather was sunny with clear skies — perfect flying conditions. But American Airlines Flight 191, scheduled nonstop to Los Angeles, crashed seconds after taking off from O ' Hare International Airport. The nation ' s worst aviation disaster killed 274 persons on impact, including all crew members and passengers and two persons on the ground. The crash of the DC-10 jet occured when the left engine ripped off and tumbled over the wing as the plane took off from Runway 32 right. The plane reached an altitude of 200 feet, stalled, rolled to the left and nose dived into an abandoned airfield. Federal Aviation Administrattion officials found in the wreckage a broken bolt from the pylon engine mounting on the DC-10. The FAA then ordered the grounding of the nation ' s 135 DC-10 planes because of grave and potentially dangerous deficiencies in the mounting of the engines that are suspended from the aircraft ' s wings. As the FAA ordered the grounding, a team of Northwestern dental specialists worked at the crash site to help identify victims of the na- tion ' s worst air disaster. Doctors Steve Smith and Larry Pierce of the NU dental school ' s oral diagnosis department compared teeth and jawbone remains of the victims — most destroyed by the plane ' s explo- sion — with dental records provided by their families. Law suits totaling billions of dollars were fil- ed against American Airlines and McDonnell Douglas Corp., manufacturer of the DC-10. The National Transportation Safety Board Dec. 21 ruled that the DC-10 jet crash was caused by a 10-inch crack in an engine mount and that American must bear the major blame for the accident. The board named McDonnell Douglas and the FAA as contributing causes, because of the design of the pylon and the failure of the FAA to inspect the crafts more carefully. A nationwide inspection of the grounded DC-lOs found 37 of the jets to have some type of defect in the engine mounting. The FAA also ordered investigations of the other two The crash...occurred when the left engine ripped off and tumbled over the wing... wide-bodied planes that use pylon moun- tings—the Boeing 747 and Lockheed Aircraft Corp. L1011. As much excitement developed when United Airlines, resuming operation after a two- month strike, and American Airlines offered half-fare coupons to increase air travel. Some people took inexpensive flights short distances just to get the coupons. JOHN PAUL II VISITS He was called a pilgrim in our midst. In seven days, Pope John Paul II visited six American cities and celebrated mass with more than seven million Americans. Two of those days were spent in Chicago. The highlight of John Paul ' s stay in Chicago was his mass in Grant Park. Described as a sermon on the shore, as many as 1 .2 million people filled the park. Stretching from Randolf St. below the Standard Oil building to Buckingham fountain they heard the Pope praise the unity of this nation of immigrants. You have traveled ' from sea to shining sea ' to find your identity, to discover each other along the way, and to find your place in this immense country. The other cities the Pope visited while in the United States were Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Des Moines, and Washington, D.C. Upon his arrival in Chicago, Mayor Jane Byrne welcomed John Paul II to the largest Roman Catholic archdiocese in the United States. Representatives selected from Polish- American parishes throughout Chicago received Holy Communion from John Paul II when he offered a Polish language Mass outside Five Holy Martyrs Church. This was the only Mass for Poles that he celebrated during his American trip. The 17,000 that attended were chosen by lot- tery at the various Polish parishes. This was John Paul ' s third celebration of the Mass at Five Holy Martyrs. As the Archbishop of Cracow, Karol Wojtyla came to Chicago in 1969 and 1976. The Pope also conducted some business while in Chicago. At the Quigley Preparatory Seminary he met with more than 350 bishops from throughout the country. After speaking to the seminarians at Quigley South, John Paul was presented with a soccer ball which he bounced around on the stage. Culminating 24 hours in Chicago with the demanding schedule that required six different speaking engagements and the celebration of two major liturgies, Pope John Paul was entertained by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Sir Georg Solti conducting. The concert of sacred music took place in Holy Name Cathedral. ..w °P of Cracow, r ,lrac ° .KarolW ta  «BB«ii W Newsprint 277 AMERICA, CHICAGO ° WPS from throughout tk ,ter s P e aking to il, HJohnfe •niwarbdiSu mm on the stage. 1 24 hours in Chicago  i| KMf schedule that required sii ' ealci ng engagements and tk of r o major liturgies, Popt I Westra, Sir Ceorg L g- The concert of sacred music : in Hoiy Name Cathedral. photo by Tom Xydb 278 Newsprint Byrne takes city on roller coaster ride By David Freedman For Jane Byrne, the events of her first year in office as mayor of Chicago closely resembled the path of a roller coaster. There were ups and downs, but the drops were much sharper than the upswings. Byrne was swept into office April 3, 1979, taking more than 80 percent of the vote over hapless Republican candidate Wallace Johnson. Five weeks earlier, she had scored a narrow upset victory over incumbent mayor Michael Bilandic, riding a wave of protest against Bilandic ' s mishandling of the winter blizzards. The new mayor had campaigned on a slogan of One Chicago. But she now appears to have alienated almost every group that sup- ported her. In one year the city has had three budget directors, three mayoral press aides, four police superintendents and strikes by the city ' s transit workers, teachers and firemen. And the controversies surrounding Byrne have extended far beyond the Chicago city limits, touching two Northwestern professors as well as national politicians. Shortly after receiving the Democratic nomination, Byrne named political science Prof. Louis Masotti, director of NU ' s Center for Urban Affairs, to head her transition team. And later she appointed Donald Haider as budget director. Haider was working at the U.S. Treasury Department while on leave from his position at the Kellogg Graduate School of Management when he got the nod from Byrne. But neither man lasted long in his position. Masotti was back at Northwestern less than four weeks after the general election. And Jane Byrne ' s popularity was at its highest point on election night. Haider resigned in mid- January following a dispute with Byrne over a $29 million city pro- perty tax increase. Masotti said he and Haider left the Byrne administration under similar circumstances. You could either convince her to change, or you could leave, he said. I did the same thing Don did. A professional has to have some independence and not be interfered with. Byrne ' s latest political setback came as a result of the March 18 Illinois primary when the two candidates she supported, Sen. Ed- ward M. Kennedy for president and Chicago Aid. Edward Burke for Cook County state ' s attorney, both lost by wide margins. And her popularity has steadily eroded since her election, with a poll conducted in April by the Chicago Tribune revealing that only 28 per- cent of those interviewed think Byrne is doing an excellent or good job as mayor. Masotti said Byrne ' s performance in her first year in office does not augur well for 1980, and that ' s only the second year of her term. A lot of people are wondering whether the city ' s going to make it through to 1983. Gacy sentenced to death for murders of local men By Ken Sugar John Wayne Gacy, a suburban building con- tractor, was convicted March 12 of murdering 33 young men and boys — a conviction un- paralleled in the nation ' s history. Gacy committed 33 murders between January 1972 and December 1978. Twenty-six of the bodies were unearthed in a crawl space of his home at 821 W. Summerdale Ave. in Norwood Park Township. Four others were found in Illinois ' rivers and three more bodies were discovered on his property. Gacy ' s sanity at the time of the murders was the only real issue in the trial. Thirteen psychiatrists and psychologists were consulted on this issue. A Northwestern Medical School faculty member, and staff psychiatrist, Dr. Richard G. Rappaport, testified for the defense. Rappaport said that Gacy was not in control of his actions at the time of the murders. Gacy acted on irresistible impulses during the murders, Rappaport said. He thought he was killing himself. The prosecution asked the jury to ignore the testimony of the defense psychiatrists on the grounds that there is no evidence to support a defense of insanity at the time of the crimes ex- cept the crimes themselves. The jury rejected the insanity plea and sentenced Gacy to die in the electric chair. Two weeks after the trial The Daily North- western printed an editorial asking its readers to avoid getting carried away by their ap- petites for revenge. The editorial encouraged a rational, level-headed response as opposed to one obscured by emotion. A shadow, not a spotap special Congrtssmil 1 District in January ' - f Evanston defeated D Robert A. Wata « highly-prized « j 2?f nnaMicMi J AbnerMitva,tbeforBwCa federal judge, out of t or ■ TlieiraagettfcniB theJ 22spetfeiecMi forareptantJtfalft gressman. Mikva left Coapo acceptanaprmiiiV ' J umbia Circuit Com of App Weinberger, 1 35-jar-oi lured tie fancy of Mf i liberal vim and itbia Despite his 6,000-vote la established himself as the Ha Porter, who lost to Min District election, busk ija campaign, and hddi The i induce of several teak suburbs, plus an aerate i students for the moderate vided afro Man ftr wagon to begin rn:.:; But the budvam i Weinberger focused as jntea during the first few web t cutting into the A r i bit. Porter hoag oa, tan hpferjaapfaaj 10th District since in For Porter, the fat n NEWSPRINT MtaKiclWwtaj, Sufi: Chas. •Mi K2 Ua l XV — iftfeB (taiaWTi,, I? for president and Chicago rke for Cook County state ' s anr ' has steadily eroded since i a poll conducted in April by tine revealing that only 28 per- Tviewed think Byrne is doing Dod job as mayor. Byrne ' s performance in ha a does not augur well fot only the second year of her topic art wondering whethei o sake it through to 1983, calmen BdthaiGacywasnotincootrd a the tinie of the murders. on irresistible impulses during a pp a portsaid. Hethoughthe aonaskedthejurytoign iedrffflsepsyctoW ' to „ e«denceto « ttedmeofthecrunesei- i themselves. tcd the insanity plea and , carried away by their ap- efflooon. 1 Oth District bids adieu to Mikva By Chris Brennan A shadow, not a spotlight, fell on the 1980 special Congressional election held in the 10th District in January. While Republican state Rep. John E. Porter of Evanston defeated Democratic candidate Robert A. Weinberger of Glencoe for the highly-prized seat in Congress, most North- western students couldn ' t shake thoughts of Abner Mikva, the former Congressman turned federal judge, out of their minds. The image was formidable, enough to turn the Jan. 22 special election into a search more for a replacement for Mikva than for a Con- gressman. Mikva left Congress in Sept. 1979 to accept an appointment to the District of Col- umbia Circuit Court of Appeals. Weinberger, a 35-year-old attorney, cap- tured the fancy of many students with his liberal views and articulate, polished style. Despite his 6,000-vote loss to Porter, he established himself as the heir-apparent to Mikva. Porter, who lost to Mikva in the 1978 10th District election, built up an early lead in the campaign, and held it. The strong Republican influence of several wealthy North Shore suburbs, plus an increase in support among students for the moderate NU alumnus, pro- vided a firm foundation for the Porter band- wagon to begin rolling. But the bandwagon nearly derailed. Weinberger focused an intense barrage on NU during the first few weeks of winter quarter, cutting into the substantial lead Porter had built. Porter hung on, though, piling up a larger victory margin than any candidate in the 10th District since 1972. For Porter, the future was clear; a rematch Newsprint 279 Rep. John Porter finds himself in the limelight following his victory in the 10th District Congressional race. with Weinberger in the November general elec- tion was virtually assured. For Mikva, the future was stable; an appointment to the federal bench is for life. But what of the 10th District, where students nearly gave the Mikva! shirt off their backs for their favorite candidate? Students had a close feeling for him even if they never met him, said Larry Kamer, Mikva ' s 1978 NU coordinator. It was more than political. Friends, relatives and neighbors were all tied by one common denominator — Mikva. Now he ' s missing, and a lot of people won ' t be brought together again. Kamer himself is a sign of the changing times. He now is Weinberger ' s campaign manager. NEWSPRINT Editors: Rick Wamre and Chris Brennan Section Coordinators: Liz Agnello, Dale Kasler, Larry Mark, Jean Rutter and Chas. Weisman Staff: Chas. Weisman, Tim Larimer, Connie Pry- zant, Larry Mark, Mark Wangrin, Mark Roth, Dale Kasler, Kevin Gale, Kenny Myers, Dan Malovany, Jeff Gilbert, Ken Sugar, David Freed- man, Chris Brennan, Liz Agnello, Jean Rutter, Mike Kuchta 280 Newsprint China-Vietnam war The ethnic antagonism between the Chinese and Vietnamese dates back several thousand years. Chinese encroachment on Vietnamese territory caused numerous wars in the past. The fact that both regimes considered themselves Marxist-Leninist, and that China supported Vietnam during wars with the French and Americans, did little to lessen the hatred. Since 1978, Vietnamese officials drove more than 250,000 ethnic Chinese north across the border into China, while thousands more of the celebrated boat people fled by sea. A February 1979 war between the Asian com- munist countries was in a state of truce, but armed border clashes were common. North and South Korea The 26-year-old truce between North and South Korea was the world ' s oldest on-going armistice, and even by 1980, the war had never officially been declared over. Nearly 1.2 million troops, backed by about 6.7 million reservists and militiamen, stared each other down day after day along the divided penin- sula. In addition, the U.S. Army ' s 2nd Infan- try Division and two wings of F-4 fighter- bombers were stationed there to help keep the peace. Reports also placed about 600 tactical nuclear weapons in South Korea. Puerto Rico The Puerto Rican Armed Forces of National Liberation was a small group calling for the total independence of Puerto Rico from the United States at a time when many of the country ' s people wanted the nation to become America ' s 51st state. The FALN, as it was call- ed, lost II of its top ranking American members during an April 1980 raid on Nor- thwestern ' s campus, during which police un- covered evidence that the group planned to disrupt both the Republican and Democratic national conventions later that year. Prior to the arrest, the group carried out bombings at more than 300 locations across the country, in- cluding major explosions in New York City and Chicago Laos This once-quiet southeastern Asian country went the way of Communism in 1975, as the fall of Cambodia and South Vietnam accom- panied the Pathet Lao and North Vietnamese troops crushing Laos. But the war didn ' t end with the government ' s fall — small bands of anti-communists and ant i -Vietnamese Lao- tians continued to operate in southern Laos, cutting down communist troops. The guer- rillas, who numbered less than 1,000 and were predominantly mountain tribesmen who fought with the CIA ' s secret army in Laos dur- ing the 1960s and early 1970s, showed no signs of giving up. i Afghanistan A full-scale guerrilla war by conservative Islamic tribesmen battling with ancient equip- ment against the modern -equipped, pro- Moscow Marxist regime literally exploded on the world political scene near the end of 1979. The Soviet Union sent nearly 100,000 troops in the country, which borders the Soviets on the south. Fighting was reported in every segment of the country, with rebels controlling the countryside and Soviet forces manning the capital city of Kabul and several other major cities. Up to 250,000 people have been killed by early 1980, and more than 50,000 political prisoners were being held. In addition, the bla- tant incursion by the Soviets prompted Presi- dent Carter ' s call for an Olympic boycott of the Moscow Games in 1980. Thailand A country delicately steered toward democracy but surrounded by a sea of communism, Thailand seemed in danger of being overrun by insurgents in 1980. Several thousand com- munist guerrillas, who had been operating in the country ' s jungle since the mid-1960s, showed signs of making headway against the government. The problem was exacerbated by a flood of Cambodian refugees, fleeing the repression in their own country, but causing problems for their Thai hosts. Responding to the threatened hostilities between the Thais and the Vietnamese, the U.S. rushed addi- tional military equipment to the country. Cambodia Few people had heard of Cambodia prior to 1970, and by 1980, few people lived in the country anymore. Most had fled, and many of those who chose to remain during the tur- bulent 1970s were blown to bits by bombs dropped from American, North and South Vietnamese bombers. In addition, the country had been torn by full-scale civil war and revolution — with estimates indicating the total loss of life at nearly 4 million. The nation was in total disarray, with only about 10 percent of the farm land being planted and threatened mass famine hanging over the country ' s re- maining 4 million people. In 1970, seiges by Vietnamese backed troops succeeded in driv- ing bloody dictator Pol Pot ' s genocidal regime from the capital of Phnom Penh and destroyed most of the Khmer Rouge army units. But the new regime didn ' t appear to have a much better human rights record and American news stations— and students on North western ' s campus— spent much time and money drumming up sympathy and relief funds for the Cambodian refugees. v. s. J, ! v J- i i 1 wj ' 1 World Turmoil 1980 Philippines Dictator President Ferdinand Marcos was do- ing what he did best in 1980— putting down guerrilla revolts against his bloody, repressive regime. During the seven years preceding 1980, more than 30,000 had been killed in the Moslem revolt in the south Philippines. At- tempts to call a cease-fire had failed and no settlement appeared in sight. The campaign had actually begun in the days of Spanish col- onialism 400 years earlier, but time had not treated the guerrillas well. In addition, both Marcos and the guerrillas faced another threat — communism— as an estimated 5,000 communists were active in several parts of the country. Edited by Rick Wamre ••tan . «• tw, w Zr ,, « Newsprint 281 la ii,,. ■• r «m,ii ' «« flia| Northern Ireland The conflict in Northern Ireland was both a national liberation war and a low-level civil war between competing Irish factions. The Irish Republican Army ' s primary goal was reunification of the six counties of Northern Ireland with the Republic of Ireland to the south, which was freed from British rule in 1922. The Protestant majority in Northern Ireland seeks to remain tied politically with Great Britain. The current round of fighting began during a Catholic civil rights drive in 1967-68. Bombing and sniping incidents caus- ed nearly 2.000 deaths through 1979. Israel Responding to the 1979 Israeli-Egyptian peace accords, engineered by President Carter at his Camp David retreat, the Palestine Liberation Organization stepped up terrorist attacks and commando raids into Israel. The Israeli military reactions to these attacks were always quick and precise, and generally involved cross-border raids, air attacks and or naval gunfire against Palestinian camps and staging areas in southern Lebanon. In addition, hard- line Arab neighbors threatened -constant retribution against the Jewish state unii an autonomous Palestinian state was established. Sects of violence, including bombings by Palestianians within Israel and the occupied territories, were likely to increase. Argentina Terrorist action by Left and Right-wing groups, and police state repression by the military government, made Argentina the state with the most violent civil conflict in southern Latin America. More than 5,000 guerrillas were killed following a military coup in March 1976, which resulted in the imprisonment of President Isabel Peron. In addition, up to 20,000 people were detained or imprisoned without the benefit of due process of law— or just disappeared without a trace after being picked up by police. El Salvador El Salvador is one of the smallest, poorest and most densely populated nations in Latin America— but those problems did not exempt its people from political turmoil. A military regime, which took over the country in 1931 and was backed by an oligarchic coffee planter elite that controlled 85 percent of the country ' s arable land, lost out to another military regime in 1979 during a struggle that killed 30.000 people. The new revolutionaries— a bloc of rural and urban poor, labor and students— refused to lay down their arms after the uprising and spent much of their lime de- nouncing the junta for repressing the country ' s population and failing to keep its promises. Lebanon Between 1975 and 1980 frequent armed clashes between Christians and Moslems in the coun- try killed an etimated 50.000 people. The struggle between the Christians and the ma- l jority Moslems, allied with Palestinians, was limited by an ineffectual cease-fire after Oc- tober 1976. A 30,000 man Syrian and a 6,000 man United Nations peace-keeping force was unable to control the bloody feud. Turkey Violence in this NATO member-state grew steadily worse during the mid-1970s. More than 1,400 died in acts of political violence in 1978 and an additional 1,000 were killed in 1979. Leftist hit teams attacked Turkish political and business leaders and American servicemen, but a greater threat came from conservate Islamic elements and Kurdish na- tionalists, stirred up by religious conflicts. Iraq The staunchly anti-American government of President Saddam Hussein faced a number of guerrilla threats during the period. Kurds in the north— more than 2.5 million of them or one-fifth of the country ' s total popula- tion — were continuing their struggle for na- tional independence while Shiite Moslems led urban disruption campaigns throughout the country. In addition, Iraq began rattling its war sabres early in 1980 after Iran ' s ruler, Khomeini, openly encouraged Moslems to overthrow Hussein. Both countries were oil- rich states, so American political attention turned on each leader ' s verbal threats. Africa Throughout central and southern Africa, political turmoil spread like wildfire from one backward poverty-stricken country to another. A civil war in Chad— a country the size of Texas— raged without progress for 15 years in the late 1960s and throughout the 1970s. The struggle began between Islamic tribesmen and southern black Africans, but conflict switched late to that between a govern- ment coalition of blacks and Arabs against Islamic guerrillas. Angola, a southwestern African country, also had problems with guer- rilla warfare. A civil war in 1975 between three black liberation movements resulted in victory for a Marxist regime supported by 20,000 im- ported Castro ' freedom-workers ' from Cuba. During the war, the United States chose not to overtly offer military support to any of the liberation movements despite then- Secretary of State Henry Kissinger ' s appeals to the contrary, since the country was still engag- ed in a massive political debate over the Viet- nam war. Meanwhile, white-controlled South Africa struggled with black guerrillas in Namibia— a former German colony — by at- tempting to hold an election in 1978 after the United Nations had ordered the country to pull its 28,000 troops out of the territory. The election turned out to be a farce when it was boycotted by Namibia ' s largest black na- tionalist group, which vowed to continue its struggle until whites had been drive from con- trol. Further to the North, another long libera- tion struggle dragg d on through the 1970s and into the 1980s. Guerrillas originally led by the late Emperor Haile Selassie took over the country in the early 1960s, but have since been fighting rebels backed by several Arab states and Cuba. Unfortunately again, there ap- peared to be no end in sight for this struggle either. Finally, sporadic war between the two Yemens threatened to draw the superpowers into the area. Both states, brutally poor and underdeveloped, were plagued with violent political instability, and border clashes had been continuing since 1950. North Yemen was being supported by Saudi Arabia and the U.S., while South Yemen was backed by the Soviet Union and Cuba. Iran Conservative Islamic and leftist revolutionary elements ended a long campaign in 1979 when they deposed the Shah of Iran, ending his family ' s 30-year stranglehold on the nation. But no sooner had that war ended when numerous regional conflicts broke out. Kur- dish, Arab and Turkoman rebels attacked the ruling council ' s revolutionary guard in the north; Afghan and other minority groups sought greater local autonomy, occasionally staging violent protests to air their views; and Iranians along the country ' s western border endured frequent border conflicts with Iraq. I n addition, the long-running American hostage crisis at various times strengthened and weakened the Islamic group ' s hold on the country, which depended upon a Western European appetite for oil to fund the country. There were a lot of guesses about the political outcome of the showdown with the U.S., but the only likely benefactor seemed to be the Soviet Union as the regional turmoil threaten- ed the West ' s economic healthiness each day it dragged on. Italy Italy was plagued with just about every kind of political and economic problem a country can have in the late 1970s. The country, which had 40 different governments in the 35 years prior to 1980, suffered from double-digit inflation and constant political turmoil. Politically motivated kidnappings, robberies, assaults, and assassinations — including the celebrated 1978 Aldo Moro kidnapping and slay- ing—were increasingly common. Also com- mon were so-called knee-cappings, where prominent business and political leaders in the country watched in horror as guerrillas shot holes in their kneecaps and left them in pools of blood on the country ' s city streets. The most prominent extremist group, the leftist Red Brigades, attacked wealthy businessmen, journalists, judges and lawyers, as well as leading politicians. 282 Newsprint NU built like it was going out of style- bui lding on the Lakefill. -including the theatre department ' s Speech Block NU loses its first lady and No. 1 intramural fan by Dale Kasler Several years ago, Northwestern President Robert H. Strotz was being interviewed on WNUR ' s Town Meeting program when he was asked about the heavy workload of a university president. At one point, Strotz complained that univer- sity president ' s wives don ' t get much credit for the work they do as surrogate fundraisers, hostesses, advisers and confidants — all for the universities. Helen Berry Strotz obviously was one of those university presidents ' wives who didn ' t get any recognition. But when she died Feb. 8, the campus was reminded of the work she did forNU. Mrs. Strotz, 51, died of a heart attack while on a fundraising trip with her husband in Hilton Head, S.C. She was someone we could turn to when we were troubled, and many of us did, economics Prof. Robert Eisner said in a eulogy at a memorial service in Alice Millar Chapel. We must focus on the permanent and the liv- ing. . .1 think Helen would say now. Friends and family recalled her devotion to NU. I have this image of her in the kitchen, working on a list, doing some sort of paper- work for the university, said Mike Strotz, the president ' s son from his first marriage. If a wealthy trustee were going out to help find funds. . .social contacts had to be involved. But what interested students most in all the praise and recollection was the fact that Mrs. Strotz took such serious interest in an in- tramural Softball team named after her. With her baseball background (her father had been a major league umpire and catcher), that team meant more to her than the students realized, Mike Strotz said. NU builds firm, costly foundations by Connie Pryzant Northwestern had a hammer this year. And it hammered in finals week mornings , in sum- mer evenings and all over the lakefill. Construction on two buildings — the James L. Allen Center and the Speech Block Building— was completed; renovation of fire- damaged Annie Mae Swift and newly purchas- ed Courtyard Hall occurred; the Bobb- McCulloch connection was completed and construction is underway for seven new dorms, a two-level parking structure and a dining room. The total planned cost for all completed and planned buildings is $49.6 million. The buildings have encountered several delays in construction: one delay threatened the entire $23 million seven-dorm housing pro- ject. Conflicts between Evanston residents and NU administrators over site choices for a Sheridan Road dorm and lakeview cafeteria delayed construction up to one year. The Evanston City Council agreed in March to a compromise that will vacate Hinman Avenue at Sheridan Road and save two of the five academic offices on Sheridan Road, in- cluding Dennis Hall, which has been cited as an architectural landmark. The $4.7 million James L. Allen Center is a combination hotel facility learning center for business executives in technical education. The $9.5 million Speech Block Building houses all theater and interpretation clases and is the home of the Block art gallery. Annie Mae Swift, the home of WNUR and Radio-TV-Film department faculty offices, was remodeled for $400,000 after fire damage in October 1979. New paint and carpet were added everywhere as part of the building ' s complete facelift. The Bobb-McCulloch connection, a $750,000 project that created 84 undergraduate housing spaces, was delayed three months, but was completed in time for students to move in winter quarter. The cafeteria section of the Norris Universi- ty Center concourse level was also remodeled into a program area. The $180,000 project was completed in the spring. NU also spent $100,000 on renovations in Courtyard Hall, which was purchased from the National College of Education in July to house undergraduate students. father !? Eig l t -WeDo t « W On the pro side were ■ ' Glow and, to tet 1 Nuke tie Whales. 1,« the year thaw Springsteen, Jan T «« David Crosby, StepW  Nash gave concerts agaw ■■ Ii was also the ja Corp.Comnion«aUIJ B Energy Contrmsswi pawl safety conference sp Northwestern ' s Depetaea and Nuclear EosiHenv- Abou 90 NU statau, protested the ccataact tj Norris University Cean to Institute, the sites of tae ooaif Noting the group 4a NUspe by Dale faster Wen Northmen ' s pre Strotz announced ii undergraduate nubos ■ ( following year, the has i pus reaction wis ok of rek That ' s because the antra the increase wasgong to he the 10.5 percent— S5.415 After all, tint i cat universities was going ap bv percent, and Mi officials a opea the same am. The reasons the cde am NU, gave fniooaat rati flation and more inftatioa. in •J Tiai Larimer candana,,,,-, the reins of at _ wemmentml979 aadikn theshatterediinagecrfrionhi government. PerebBnJV ive ! Fonill,  astnWt. n. ndations m ' hammer this y y ■™ «k mornings, ««J aB over the lakefill. •wtwobuildings-thejaK 8ad the Speech bd ! c f ia «l;wvaiionoflm. ue Mae Swift and newly purdos- i W occurred; the 1 ■on w completed and iHdttmy for seven new dorni, ■ ■! structure and a dini ■ed cost for al completed iid «P is 549.6 mion. ip have encountered several Won: one delay threatened ■fct seven-dorm housing pro- two Evanston residents artel raters over site choices for i d dorm and lakeview cafeteria ■flcrioo up to one year, x Gty Council agreed in Mard ■be that will vacate Hint 5idan Road and save two of the offices on Sheridan Road, is- s Hal, which has been cited as li landmark. tec James L. Allen Center is a ad faJty learning center for r«s in technical education. Ik students. lerpreution clases and is the lodt art gallery. jwift,thehomeofWNlM i department faculty offices, for S400.000 after fire damsie 19, New paint and carpet wt urt as part of the WW I -McCulloch connection, i aihataeatedWundergraduate lcts was delayed three  -as completed in tune for ve in winter quarter. onelevd was also remodeW area.lneS180,000projectwas To nuke or not: The new question by Kevin Gale It was the year that pro and anti-nuclear slogans became popular. On the anti side were slogans like Heck No. We Won ' t Glow and Two, Four, Six, Eight— We Don ' t Wanna Radiate. On the pro side were Nuke ' em Till They Glow and, for the consumate conservative, Nuke the Whales. It was the year that Jackson Browne, Bruce Springsteen, James Taylor, Carly Simon, David Crosby, Stephen Stills and Graham Nash gave concerts against nuclear energy. It was also the year that the Westinghouse Corp. Commonwealth Edison and the Nuclear Energy Commission participated in a nuclear safety conference sponsored by Northwestern ' s Department of Mechanical and Nuclear Engineering. About 90 NU students, faculty and staff protested the conference by marching from Norris University Center to the Technological Institute, the sites of the conference. Noting the groups that attended the September conference and the lack of an anti- nuclear spokesperson, PSC co-coordinator Leaonard Jenkins said, When the title of a conference like that is safety— that ' s a white wash. NU students also joined off-campus nuclear power protests. About 80 of them were among the 1 ,500 protesters at the Zion nuclear power plant on Sept. 29. The protestors fears may have been partly justified by a March 31 leak of 700 gallons of radioactive water at the plant — although plant officials said the radia- tion never reached a dangerous level. CAS senior David Eifler, who also joined nuclear power protests in Washington and Seabrook, N.H., said the pro and anti-nuclear forces were probably evenly divided at NU during the year with most of them not being very active in either case. Jenkins noted, I don ' t think people around here are as concerned as they should be. They ' re apathetic even though this is only 10 miles away from one of the worst nuclear reac- tors (at Zion) in the country. People had their feelings about the use of nuclear energy written all over their faces — especially the demonstrators at the Zion plant. NU spells relief with $5,985 tuition by Dale Kasler When Northwestern ' s president Robert H. Strotz announced in March that undergraduate tuition was going up $570 the following year, the largest increase ever, cam- pus reaction was one of relief. That ' s because the university had hinted that the increase was going to be even more than the 10.5 percent— $5,415 to $5,985— that Strotz announced. After all, tuition at comparable private universities was going up by as much as 13.3 percent, and NU officials had said NU could expect the same amount. The reasons the other universities, as well as NU, gave for increasing tuition? Inflation, in- flation and more inflation. However, Strotz said NU tried to limit the tuition increase — the 13th consecutive hike — for financial reasons. The more you go up, the more we have to plow back in terms of financial aid, he said. At some point, it becomes silly to increase tuition, because you have to return much of it in terms of financial aid. Graduate students weren ' t quite so for- tunate. Increases in those schools ranged from 12.7 percent in graduate journalism to 14.4 percent in the Graduate School. Medical school tuition was boosted 12.8 percent to $8745, the highest at the university and one of the highest medical school tutitions in the country. Meanwhile, NU raised house rates 14.5 per- cent and food rates 1 1.2 percent, increases that were the largest that I can recall, said William C. Tempelmeyer, director of universi- ty housing. The housing increase included a 3 per cent increase to help pay for new undergraduate dorms that were being planned. Of course, not every one was happy about the tuition hikes. Students, as usual, grumbled about it. Parents, as usual, wondered when it was all going to stop. But the somewhat ironic campus reaction was voiced the next day by The Daily Nor- thwestern, which said in an editorial that the increase was probably the best news of the year, simply because it had the potential of be- ing the worst news of the year. Humor Hits Politics in A.S.G. by Tim Larimer A comic and a man who would be king took over the reins of the Associated Student Government in 1979, and they vowed to repair the shattered image of Northwestern ' s student government. The comic, Georg e Bubba McClellan, is a legitimate stand-up comedian who wanted to bring ASG closer to the students. Jeffrey Gomer Perelman, who gained popularity as a write-in candidate for Homecoming King, wanted to eliminate the pre-law nature of ASG Forum legislative sessions. Forum was trimmed from 150 to 72 members this year, and an emphasis was put on committee work. But while McClellan, Perelman and Forum Speaker Beth Pollner managed to add a touch of comic relief to Forum meetings, Forum began to act as rubber-stamp body. In October, ASG first practiced what it preached about being a student service organization. It sponsored the Pumpkin Prom, which attracted about 3,500 students to Norris University Center. The Prom was an ASG attempt to bring several campus groups together to sponsor an all-campus party. But one group of students felt they had been ignored. Black student groups complained that the interests of black students had not been con- sidered. Their complaints led to a series of meetings between black campus leaders and ASG officers. Forum responded by passing legislation re- quiring three meetings a quarter between black student leaders and ASG officers and members of the Activities Organizations Board. ASG also pinpointed the lack of adequate recreational facilities as NU ' s number one pro- blem. To try and correct that problem, ASG officers presented a pitch to two members of the Board of Trustees in February. The of- ficers urged the trustees to immediately begin a major fund-raising drive for new recreational facilities. 284 Newsprint T he NU Look: 1980 ■ Newsprint 285 o i ! 286 Newsprint U!S!A! good as gold on Olympic ice By Chas. Weisman U!S!A! U!S!A! U!S!A! For the latter two weeks of February, that chant sounded in homes and taverns from Maine to Hawaii. Jim Craig, Mike Eruzione and Mark Johnson became household names and na- tional heroes overnight. And then, of course, there was also that college kid from Madison, Wis., named Eric Heiden. The 1980 Winter Olympics held at the tiny village of Lake Placid, N.Y., were very special to most Americans. No, the U.S.A. didn ' t win the most medals; it finished far behind the Soviet Union and East Germany. The U.S.A. failed to win a medal in the luge, the bobsled and the cross-country skiing events. And the U.S.A. couldn ' t even manage a medal in the biathlon. But what a bunch of young Americans did do was beat the world ' s best ice hockey team. The U.S.A. ice hockey squad, a conglomera- tion of players from Minnesota and Massachussetts, defeated the Soviet Union at a time when tension between the two nations was at its greatest in a decade. The U.S.A. entered the Games as a dark horse, in the darkest sense of the word. The Soviets were the defending Olympic gold medalists who had handily defeated a bunch of National Hockey League all-stars not long ago. But when the two sides took to the ice at Lake Placid ' s Olympic Ice Center, the U.S.A. came away a 4 — 3 winner. A 4 — 2 victory over Finland secured the U.S.A. its first gold medal in ice hockey since the 1960 Games. And while twenty Americans were capturing one gold medal for the red, white and blue, there was one American netting five of those very same medals. Speed skater Eric Heiden set a Winter Olym- pic record, between bowls of corn flakes, by winning five golds. He won every men ' s speed skating event: at distances as short as 500 meters and as long as 10,000 meters. He truly became America ' s Golden Boy. Eric ' s sister Beth, also a speed skater, didn ' t Campbell, Cats get kicks in respectable 10-17 year By Roger Phillips The basketball was snapped by Nor- thwestern senior Larry Lumpkins. In one mo- tion, Cats ' senior Mike Campbell swept his foot across the dusty McGaw Hall court and kicked the ball high into the student section. It was the culmination of a festive evening in which NU ' s men ' s basketball defeated Wisconsin to finish 5 — 13 in the Big Ten. Overall, NU was 10—17, the first time all con- ference teams accomplished double figures in the win column. The victory meant something else, especially to eternal optimists. It meant that the Cats, unlike DePaul, Notre Dame, and UCLA finished the season with a victory. But there was more to it than that. The Cats were respectable in most of their games. Besides Wisconsin, they defeated NCAA Final Four member Purdue, -defending NCAA champion Michigan State twice, and Michigan on regional television in triple — overtime. Aside from those games, NU almost won at Purdue before losing 68—63. The Cats blew a 25—9 first— half lead at Wisconsin, and they lost to Iowa at the buzzer in McGaw. NU was led by Campbell, who was high in the national rankings in field goal percentage through most of the season, and by junior guard Rod Roberson, who apperaed as the season closed, to be ready to join the first rank of Big Ten guards. One of the highlights of the McGaw Hall basketball season did not involve NU. It came in the first round of the Chicagoland Col- legiate Cage Classic during a game between Loyola and Bradley. The Ramblers ' Kevin Sprewer soared to the hoop for a dunk and brought glass and basket down with him. A delay of more than one hour followed, as the backboard was replaced. Many of the thrills did involve NU, however. The Cats were encouraged by the fine play of Chicago— bred freshmen Mike Jenkins and Gaddis Rathel. When senior center Brian Jung ' s back wasn ' t acting up, he was a strong contributor. Senior guard Brian Gibson went out in style by playing his best game of the season in the finale against Wisconsin. Finally, there is the lasting memory of Campbell putting up bombs and watching them swish. So it was appropriate that Camp- bell, named on the first team of the All — Academic team, should boot the final ball into the crowd. NU basketball was alive and starting to kick in 1980. fare quite as well as her brother but did win a bronze. And another American speed skater, Leah Poulos Mueller, brought home a pair of silver medals. In figure skating, Linda Fratianne of the U.S.A. got off to a slow start and was forced to settle for a silver. The greatest blow to the U.S.A. came in the pairs competition, when defending world champions Randy Gardner and Tai Babilonia were forced to withdraw after Gardner pulled a pair of muscles. Phil Mahre, with a fractured ankle held together by only four tiny screws, raced in the slalom to become the first America male to win an Olympic Alpine medal in 16 years, a silver. The Olympics at Lake Placid were a glorious winter carnival for the U.S.A. But while all the world was skating and skiing for medals, the Soviet army invaded the nation of Afghanistan. President Carter declared the United States would boycott the Summer Games in Moscow. And it left us all wondering whether we had just seen the U.S.A. in its final Olympics. Gaddis Rathel scores against Bradley in the Chicago Cage Classic. Alinda Con shoots ow tk tonsil io bring NU don Ten title. NU tean produce few wim 5 Nil T season. Once k : fch ;| pic ice ■ •w tkonieapairof «««, Linda Fratianne of the ' ?•  aai and waforai . ••fctratsblwiiife a the pairs coiopetitita, vbes «i aanpions Rand, Gardner n w forced to withdm twDed a pair of muscles. • i fractured ankle U Jy four tiny screws, raced inthe Kthe first America malctom pine medal in 16 years, a sitw. 3 a Lake Placid were a glorious for the U.S. A. But while aD the ting and skiing for medals, the invaded the nation of iner declared the United States the Summer Games in Mosco . ail wondering whether we had ..S.A. in its filial Olympics. Ill I i. 3] d scores agau Cage Oassic- i Bradley 1 Newsprint 287 Alinda Cox shoots over the heads of Wisconsin to bring NU closer to the Big Ten title. NU teams produce few winners By Chas. Weisman It was another not-so banner year for Nor- thwestern ' s minor sports — too few were win- ners and too many took a beating. Neither men ' s track coach Don Amidei nor women ' s coach George Gabauer was able to lift his troops out of the Big Ten cellar in the indoor season. Once again the problem was that NU had too few runners to score well in Four-year success story ends with S. Carolina loss By Mark Wangrin After four years of standout performances, one of the most successful acts in Nor- thwestern history closed on the hardwoods of McGaw Hall in the winter of ' 80. A heart-breaking season ending defeat at the hands of the South Carolina Lady Gamecocks closed the book on the outstanding careers of three seniors who helped form NU ' s women ' s basketball into the winningest program at the school. In 1976, head coach Mary DiStanislao recruited the three players who were to form the foundation of the program-Martha Megill, Mary Murphy, and Vicky Voss. And while the trio helped the Cats compile a not-too-shabby record in their first two seasons, it was during their junior year that rewards really came roll- ing in. The Big Ten and Regional champion- ships and membership in the AIAW ' s final eight provided the topping on a 25 — 4 cam- paign. And, with all five starters returning, it became apparent that 1980 was to be the Year of the Cat. The season started off disastrously for NU as they dropped games on an Eastern road trip, including a 92—74 loss to top-ranked Old Dominion. The Cats rebounded quickly, however, and won 16 of their 17 games, in- cluding a 86 — 72 win over Minnesota for their second straight Big Ten crown. A goal that had been very elusive to the Cats was captured in Champaign as NU held off a stubborn DePaul squad, 65—54, for their first state title. The following weekend in Terre Haute they re-enacted the previous year ' s Regional win by again downing Detroit for the championship, this time by a 74 — 67 verdict. But, a week later on the court at McGaw, the Cats ' road to the AIAW final four came to an end against USC. Thirty-two points by South Carolina ' s Sheila Foster, coupled with a serious knee injury to Megill and a 20-point deficit in the second half were more than the Cats could handle, and they lost 64 — 67. But even though the defeat signalled the end of their NU careers, the seniors went out with many pleasant memories of their four years at NU. It was very gratifying for me to see the pro- gram develop, Megill said. For me that was the climax. It was tremendous, Murphy said. We had a great time with each other. I hope we won a little respect along the way. People asked me why I wanted to go to Northwestern, Voss said, I wanted to go to a program that was building and make something out of it. The three seniors were not the only players to wrap up their Wildcat careers this year. I think about all the times we had, said Alinda Cox, who is bound for NU ' s Med school next fall. But we ' re just all moving on now. It ' s kind of sad, but you ' ve got to move on. As for DiStanislao, she also has some fond memories of the season gone by. If they could all be like this one I could stay in it forever, she said. I just wish all coaches could have a group like this to coach. meets. Cross country was equally dismal in the fall but the Cats remained eternally optimistic in hopes of a solid outdoor season. Jack Bolger and his men swimmers also sunk to the bottom of the conference, but Sally Marshall ' s women did stay afloat for awhile. Wildcats Patti Roth well, Cindi Watts, Sara Johnson, and Kathy Burnside all swam their way to the AIAW National Championships, however none made it past the preliminaries. Under first-year coach Tom Jarman the NU wrestlers rose to seventh in the Big Ten. Wildcat juniors Tom Janicik and Craig Jenn- ings placed third at the conference meet and earned a trip to the NCAA Championships. They were eliminated in the tournament ' s early rounds. Another rookie coach had a tough time; Jerry Angle watched his volleyball players fall to fifth place at the states and a second- division finish in the Big Ten. Sharon Drysdale and her field hockey squad couldn ' t quite eclipse the .500 mark, but her softball team was already on its way to a much improved season this spring. Both the men ' s and women ' s tennis teams were headed for big springs. After Vandy Christie ' s men placed second at the Big Ten championships last year, they were ready to challenge Michigan for this year ' s top spot. Another first-year coach, Sandy Stap, was rea- dying her women for the conference title as well. Wildcat baseball got off to a mediocre start this spring but George McKinnon ' s ballclub was still eyeing a first-division conference finish. NU pitchers Carl Shellenback, Mike Sjoerdsma and Dan Kovacevic were throwing to their favorite receiver, Third Team Coaches ' All- American catcher Bill Dierberger. Soccer, lacrosse, rugby and ice hockey all blossomed as club sports but NU ' s varsity golfers had trouble getting the ball off the tee once again. 288 Newsprint NU football makes small step forward , beats Wyoming, holds OSU, Purdue The administration tried just about everything to make Northwestern football look and sound exciting in ' 79. First of all they came up with a catchy slogan— Showtime ' 79 . But the fans wanted football, not vaudeville. Then they imported the San Diego chicken to be the Homecoming Grand Marshall and cheer the Cats on to victory against Iowa. The result fell short of what the administrators wanted, both on the scoreboard and at the gate. Finally, the Cats went back to basics, resorting to an improved defense, a solid, if not spectacular, recruiting class, gutsy play against two conference powerhouses and a win to create excitement. Outside of some personal things, this is the happiest moment of my life, Rick Venturi said after his squad broke the 11 -game losing streak that ushered in the Venturi era by beating Wyoming 27-22 in the season ' s second game. It was also the Cats ' only victory of the season. The defense also came to play as the season progressed, giving the Cats ' op- ponents more to worry about in the se- cond half than just beating the point spread. The Cats found themselves in more games at halftime than they did the year before. Venturi also came away with another banner season in the recruiting depart- ment to match his crop from the year before. A poised and confident freshman out of Rockford, Illinois, Bobby Anderson, made his presence felt at the expense of opposing receivers and ballcarriers and helped solidify a defensive backfield that lost its only experienced player, Tom McGlade, early in the season. Anderson received an All-Big Ten honorable men- tion for his play. But Anderson was not the only rookie to draw raves for his performance. Keith Dennis ran and blocked with NU 7 - Mich. 49 NU 6 - Iowa 58 NU 27 - Wyo. 22 NU - Ind. 30 NU 21 - SU 54 NU 16 - PU 20 NU 8 - Minn. 38 NU 7 - MSU 42 NU 7 - OSU 16 NU 3 - Wis. 28 by Mark Wangrin There is I authority before a knee injury sidelined him early in the year. Jeff Cohn dazzled NU fans with his spinning, darting runn- ing style before he too was sidelined by in- jury. Chris Hinton, Roosevelt Groves, and Dave Callaway were some of the other freshmen who saw considerable action on the gridiron. But Venturi also had veterans to lead his team. Linebacker Chuck Kern and wide receiver Todd Sheets joined Anderson on photo by Tom Xydta the All-Big Ten honorable mention list, while seniors Norm Wells, Bruce Robinett, Scott Duncan, Jim Miller and Mike Fiedler also distinguished themselves. But perhaps the real highlights of the season were the games against Ohio State and Purdue, in which the Cats battled their opponents to a standstill before bowing by scores of 16-7 and 20-16 respectively. But the best part is that the Cats could have won both games. Now that ' s excitement. « No one 01 is to turn s NU 13 111. 29 jgn on the  I coach Rid V that reads in part, I P succeed. his says tow  ,1,0 would assume toe W= team that is a have-not ' full of haves. And  « been persistent in bis effort w ■ sagging fortunes of Nortw ball, the outward signs of s«a matched his efforts. The 32-year-old Venturi rem alma mater from Illinois, tk in assistant coaching poawa the head coaching job fob ' s resignation in Deca After a winless season hstjc ted his charge to a 1-10 stair tk Hove Northwestern ad p then we won and I knot i again, he said. I honesth ' (fa have a winning football proj That ' s what our staff works i dock for. I won ' t sleep until we becc 4 Hie self-proclaimed Rocky the Big Ten, set two goals for T9: to win and to comeofTtke ter team. And while the WU •Iways realize these goals, V( afll able to see progress. Ton may not be able to i « ' ve made a lot of progress ttmistic Venturi said after tke G finile, a disappointing S- fcois We got over a h« anaU hump. We have a lot of We ' r « ten times a more a  Wteamthanwtttrti, And then there wen a, h |«tnts. I M y largest disappoiaiMe- r ohavebca,, P Venturi said. B«A r «ceh ' ked««b L No « on the o3 « bepasoil : v nsaJdBjs photo by Carol San ? ' « Newsprint 289 ) , ' | No one on the outside knows how hard it ■ ™ is to turn a program around - Rick Venturi plclr , li I I I Ten honorable mention Is, niors Norm Wells, Bruce Scott Duncan, Jim Miller and iedler also distinguished i h K the real highlights of the re tie games against Ohio Stat! ae, in which the Cats battled roots to a standstill before y scores of 16-7 and M y. But the best part is that the I have won both games. it ' s excitement. y Mark Wangrin There is a sign on the wall outside of head football coach Rick Venturi ' s office that reads in part, I will persist until I succeed. Perhaps this says much about a man who would assume the leadership of a team that is a have-not in a conference full of haves. And while Venturi has been persistent in his effort to upgrade the sagging fortunes of Northwestern foot- ball, the outward signs of success have not matched his efforts. The 32-year-old Venturi returned to his alma mater from Illinois, where he held an assistant coaching position, to accept the head coaching job following John (Pont ' s resignation in December 1977. After a winless season last year, Venturi tied his charge to a 1-10 slate this past fall. I love Northwestern and played here when we won and I know we can win aagain, he said. I honestly think we can rhave a winning football program here. That ' s what our staff works around the cclock for. ' I won ' t sleep until we become a win- ner. The self-proclaimed Rocky Balboa of ithe Big Ten, set two goals for his team in ' 79: to win and to come off the field a bet- ter team. And while the Wildcats didn ' t always realize these goals, Venturi was -still able to see progress. You may not be able to see it, but we ' ve made a lot of progress, an op- |t timistic Venturi said after the Cats ' season finale, a disappointing 29-13 loss to Il- linois. We got over a hump today, a small hump. We have a lot of humps to go. We ' re ten times a more competitive football team than we were a year ago. And then there were the disappoint- ments. My largest disappointment is for my seniors who have been through four hard [years, Venturi said. But they still go out and practice like champions. No one on the outside knows how j hard it is to turn a program around. When 1 1 took this job I knew exactly what I was j getting into. The toughest thing a coach j has is the pressure he puts on himself. You ' ve got to crawl before you can I walk, Venturi said in summing up his team ' s progress. My kids left battling and that was im- pressive to me. photo by Tom Xydb i PMVJ L iM -• : ; w -- £ u? k H Bf H M JV r r £ ions A O Associated Student Government iVJLVLtk ■ ' ■ m 1 J Jeff Gomer Perelman President 294 Donald Cam Findlay Academic Vice President Karl Armstrong Treasurer Beth Pollner Speaker of the Forum panhellenic council W hPota .IPottheForum Junior Panhellenic Council 295 Arts Alliance 296 297 Phi Eta Sigma 298 . ■ Wildcat Council Tail Beta Pi 300 p Northwestern Society of Black Engineers 301 Northwestern Community Ensemble If  302 NU Garde 304 Alpha Rho Ukranian Club IFC Executive Board: Rob Loos, President; Rick Rubinstein, Treasurer; Rob Gasaway, Secretary Alumni Relations; Steve Rowles, Provost- Hugh Bleemer, Vice President. Absent: )ohn Beeder, Central Rush Chairman; Kurt Koenig, Vice President for Special Services. interf raternity Council 305 The Daily Northwestern HHkiw nmm MFttKaiflMMTl trnttmnwrnmi asm «   Himwn Ear ; , SCOnsiMOH MUMttrtnu SgassS 5 lMMi tajJu.frZ ' ■_r .;, . .. . m£22 1 n The Daily Northwestern General Manager: ED ZOTTI Acting General Manager: MARY LUBBEN Office Manager: SUE KELLER Editor-ln-Chlef: RICK WAMRE Business Manager: DANA ANDERSON Managing Editors: CHRISTINE BRENNAN, MARC DAVIS News Editors: MICHAEL KUCHTA, ELIZABETH AGNELLO, CHRISTINE BREN- NAN AcctsJBIIIIng Manager: STACIA GREEN Advertising Manager: HUGH HALLER Typesetting Supervisor: HELEN EGGLESTON Night Production Supervisor: PAUL BAKER Supplement Production Supervisor: LARRY RUBIN Ombudsmen: JEFF SIEGEL, SCOT O ' HARA, CINDY SCHAFER Staff Editors Campus News Editors: DALE KASLER, KEVIN GALE, TOM KELLY Assistants: JEFF BLOCH, RICH DAVIS, ROBIN DAUGHTRIDGE, SCOTT THOMAS Off-Campus News Editors: LARRY MARK and DALE KASLER Assistants: DAVE BEARD, DAVID FREEDMAN, JEFF GILBERT, MICHELE COHEN Editorial Editors: JEFF GILBERT and LARRY MARK Midweek Editors: PAUL SAGAN, MARC DAVIS, HOWELL WESCHLER Assistants: SHARI SIGMAN and DAVID BERNKOPF TGIF Editors: JIM LOOTS, SHERRY KRSTICEVIC, KENNY MYERS Feature Page Editor: KEVIN GALE Sports Editors: BOB THOMAS and DAN MILLER Assistants: ROGER PHILLIPS, JEAN RUTTER, CHAS. WEISMAN, CRAIG BUSTIN Photography Editors: JEAN RUTTER and MIKE HEEGER Assistant Photography Editor: L J. ROSENBLOOM, DAVID LEFKOWITZ, SCOTT SIMON Assistant News Editors: MIKE WALDEN and SUE GRIESER Art Editors: ROBERT LEIGHTON and JIM COHEN Night Editor: ED MCILMAIL Senior Reporters: David Craig, Ann Doss, Ed Dufner, Susan Jaeger, Mel Johnson, Tim Larimer, Dan Malovany, Dave Mildenberg, Kenny Myers, Andy Pollack, Connie Pryzant, Mark Rosenfelder, Michelle Schneider, David Steinberg, Andy Thayer, Mark Wangrln, and Nery Ynclan. Staff Reporters: Elizabeth Brewster, Carl Brlggs, Suzanne Chazln, Sandy Cohen, Marcia Davis, Charles Ellis, David Givens, Andy Goldstein, Julie Gseil, Brad llko, Susan Jolliffe, Bob Kowalsl, Paul Lockwood, Schu Montgomery, Dave Reardon, Paul Ross, Ingrid Sapona, Laura Sokol, Ian Thomsen, Chas. Weisman, Mike Wllbon, Bonnie Wolf, Julie Wood, and Andrea Woolard. 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Fillmore, Cal. 360 John Scheerer Jeffrey Schellentrager Charity Schiller Debra Schlossberg Susan Schmeichel Physics Applied Mathematics Theatre Biology Psychology North Muskegon, Ml Euclid, OH Chicago, IL Akron, OH Etryn Mawr, PA 4 Debra Scott Biochemistry Charlotte, NC Richard Sedlock Geology Evanston, IL Angela Severino Economics LaGrange, IL Roberta Seyffert Debra Shalinsky Journalism Overland Park, KS |ohn Shannon Civil Eng. Temple Hills, MD Beth Shapiro Political Science Butler, PA Michael Shapiro Radio-TV-Film East Lansing, Ml David Shlapak Political Science Lorain. OH DanSilm ■ Music !■ Cleveland US.. OH M Biology Richton Park, !L Michal Shapiro Music Wilmette, IL Shames Shariatpanahi Industrial Eng. Mill Valley, CA Karen Sharpe Social Policy Chicago, IL Karen Sherer Chem. Biochem. Rock Hill, SC Jean Sheridan Economics Louisville, KY Julie Sherman Radio-TV-Film Harrisburg, PA Helen Smttfi Elementary Ed. Greenwich, Thomas Sherman Classics Darien, CT Linda Shields Speech Lang. Path Brawley, CA Carol Shifferfield Botanical Lit. Three Mile Island, Ml Scott Shiftman Biology Tustin, CA Eric Shirey Biological Sci. Poland, OH John Shiro Biochemistry Chicago, IL Si Social Policy n, ' 0 I 362 oiochemistrt Charlotte. K fi ? n ts A- 1 m.A.fki David Shlapak Carol Shochet Martin Sholder Howard Siegel Stephanie Sigall Political Science Journalism Biology Neuroscience Economics Lorain, OH Chevy Chase, MD Flossmoor, IL Northbrook, IL Columbus, OH Randal Silbiger Chemistry Coral Springs, FL Dan Silver Music Cleveland Hts., OH Douglas Silverstein Learning Disabilities Buffalo, NY Steven Simington Industrial Eng. Chicago, IL Annette Simon Economics Evanston, IL Kenneth Simpson Sociology Chicago, IL Michael Sittinger Electrical Eng. Park Ridge, IL Ml Michael Shapiro . n m Radio-TV-Film PA East Lansing, Ml Michael Sjoerdsma Biology Richton Park, IL Laura Skeel Economics Bridgeport, WV Thomas Skleba Biology Elk Grove Vil., IL if A George Skinner Radio-TV-Film Chicago, IL Nina Skriloff Theatre Larchmont, NY Mark Slater Computer Science Morton Grove, IL julie Sherman Radio-TV-Film Harrisburg, PA Helen Smith Elementary Ed. Greenwich, CT 9 w id, OH John Shiro Julia Smith Social Policy Farmington, CT 363 Su i a Somani MwillvilejN Eric Stahl Music Performance Minneapolis, MN Leslie Stahl Physical Ed. Staten Island, NY Hene Spergel !nd. Eng. Mat. Sc ' . Kl El Paso, TX , plg William Sprinj to History 7 Ardslev NY Corinn Staley Linguistics Spanish Short Hills, N) Jonathan Starr Geography Minneapolis, MN Paul Steege Computer Science Naperville, IL Melinda Steffey Radio-TV-Film Addison, IL I ' ■ — N J mL yfa Am d t Gregg Steigmeyer Speech Grand Rapids, Ml Lucinda Steiner Journalism Dayton, OH fliiX David : Electrical Eng. Cleveland, OH Mary Stenger Biology Psych. Encinitas, CA Mark Stepanek Biomedical Eng. Arlington Hts., IL James Stephens Mechanical Eng. Naperville, IL Anne Stern History Glencoe, IL Richard Stevens History Flk Grove, IL Cecelia Stevenson Economics Chicago, IL 365 Lorraine Stewart Journalism Canton, OH Susan St. Louis American Culture Cincinnati, OH Susan Stocco Biology Wilmette, IL David Straub Political Sci. Econ. St. Louis, MO Steven Stuart Biochemistry Highland Park, IL Timothy Stubblefield Psychology Belleville, IL £ ■ £ ' i IP) 1 k i km ft i mki IL Deborah Sturges Patricia Sullivan Robert Sullivan Communication Studies Communication Studies Park Ridge, IL Edina, MN Park Ridge, IL John Summerville Biology Highland, Ml Carl Surma Political Sci. Royal Oak, Ml Marilyn Susek Biology Normandy, MO Jtkmmm Howard Suskin Political Sci. Skokie, IL Kay Swaar Mathematics Mason City, IL Susan Swain French Pol. Sci. St. Charles, IL )ohn Swallow Economics St. Louis, MO Lydia Swan Psychology Chicago, IL Thomas Sweeney Comp. Studies Econ. Worcester, MA Adrienne Sweet English Chicago, IL Ashley Swint Theatre Special Ed. Portsmouth, VA Paul Sykes Chemical Eng. Chicago, IL C-r- 366 EDITIONS Matthew Tabak English Dallas, TX Katherine Tabor Radio-TV-Film Brookings, SD John Tafuri Pre Medicine Dix, Hills, NY Kristi Taillon Urban St. Sociology Evanston, IL Greg Taketa Industrial Eng. Denver, CO Carolyn Tank Psychology Evanston, IL I? Virgil Tavas Org. Behav. Pers. Warrenville, IL Julie Taylor Political Science Port Clinton, OH Stephan Taylor Philosophy Cincinnati, OH Margaret Teitsch Music Cazenovia, NY Robert Tennessen Chemical Eng. Wauwatosa, Wl Michael Tetrick Economics Omaha, NE David Thomas Music Penfield, NY Michael Thomas Radio-TV-Film Harvey, IL k iiMsfk r, Susan Swain FrencJVPd- Sd- St. Charles, IL Robert Thomas Robert Thomas Steve Thomas History Political Science Journalism Whiting, NJ Antigo, Wl La Mesa, CA PaulSyle Srft C tenicaW Chicago. IL Anne Thometz Chemistry Chicago, IL Stephanie Thorp Comm. Disorders WyckofT, NJ Kimberly Tillotson Economics Butler, PA Dominick Testa Electrical Eng. Skokie, IL )ean Togikawa Chemical Eng. Peoria, IL Chris Tokunaga Biology Chicago, IL Steven Totland Interpretation Hutchinson, KS Stacy Towles Biology Fort Wayne, IN Allison Travis Chemical Eng. Pittsburgh, PA Jennifer Troutner Music Columbia, MO Brian Troxell Journalism Thurmont, MD 368 I (33P It Scott Tucker Journalism Great Falls, MT Andrea Vargo Journalism Wheeling, IL Michele Tuck Journalism Teaneck, NJ 4 I Kimberly Tunney American Culture Lake Forest, IL AcnVnid Ornish r« BR Stephen Vetter Communication Studies fl r u ™ ' e Mankato, MN i v Tudcr Kimberly Tunnev im American Cjltme |HkM Lake Forest. IL Thomas Vravick Chemistry Park Ridge, IL Dana Wade Piano El Paso, TX Michael Walden Journalism Albuquerque, NM Kay Walker Political Science Indianapolis, IN Valerie Walker Political Science Augusta, IL Stephen Wallis Psychology Phoenix, AZ Catherine Walsh Communication Studies Park Ridge, IL James Walter Econ. Poli. Sci. Akron, OH SiephenVetK! Commumcatton WW ' Rick Wamre Michael Warga Daniel Wascher Amy Washburn Julius Washington Gregory Wass Journalism Biology Biochemistry Speech Lang. Path. Eco nomics Economics Detroit Lakes, MN Glenview, IL Lawrenceville, NJ Terrace Park, OH Chicago, IL LaCrange, IL ,_ 369 Allen Wasserman Political Science Bellmore, NY Jeffrey Wassmann Political Science Mars, PA Lisa Weber Philosophy Wellesley, MA Howell Wechsler Journalism Bronx, NY David Weiner Philosophy Waukegan, IL Juli Weiner Communication Studies Coral Cables, FL Sherry Weinstein Biochemistry Prairie View, IL Elizabeth Werner Biology Mundelein, IL Jeffrey Wertheimer Political Science Beachwood, OH Kathleen West Biology Flossmoor, IL Charles Whittaker Journalism Chicago, IL John Whisnant Economics Rochester, MN Gloria Whited Personel Work Chicago, IL Deborah Wieri Pre-Medicine Wantagh, NY Michael Wilbon Journalism Chicago, IL Robert Wildstein History Atlanta, GA Kevin Wigell Mechanical Eng. Bourbonnais, IL Richard Wilhelm Math. Poli. Sci. Evanston, IL 370 ftM MaWAk Evanston. IL Beverly Williams Communication Studies Chicago, IL Jay Williams Philosophy Lombard, IL locelyn Williams Chemical Eng. South Plainfield, N) Marc Williams Suzanne Williams William Williams Medina, OH Communication Studies Pre Medicine Wallingford, CT Huntington, NY Dennis Wilson Computer Science Amherst, NH Lee Wilson Terry Winsett Peter Wisch Electrical Eng. Psychology Psychology New York, NY Memphis, TN Quincy, IL Gary Wiseman Chemistry Elkhart, IN Gretchen Wismar Electrical Eng. Cleveland Hts., OH Linda Withers Elementary Ed. Chicago, IL Michelle Wiznitzer Political Science Chicago, IL Sarah Wohlenhaus Theatre Atlantic, IA Therese Wojcik English Calumet City, IL Patricia Wrona Psychology Edina, MN 371 Toya Wyatt Speech Pathology Shrewsbury, NJ Thomas Xydis Biomed. Eng. Ele.Eng. Evergreen Park, IL Lori Yampol Communication Studies Chicago, IL ■ • ' 1 J M- . V[ M e «♦■ m W 1 m 1 HIS H 1 Bryan Yanaga Mitchell Yawitz Nili Yelin Biology Ele. Eng. Com. Sci. Theatre Chicago, IL Rockaway Beach, NY Port Chester, NY Andrea Yellin Elementary Ed. Highland Park, NJ Carolyn Yoch Chemical Eng. Belleville, IL James Young History Philadelphia, PA Jeffrey Young Chemical Eng. Council Bluffs, IA 372 Joanne Young Journalism Amesbury, MA Philip Zadeik Biochemistry Mt. Prospect, IL William Zavitz Chemical Eng. Arvada, CO Jane Zimmerman Communication Studies Maumee, OH Theresa Zingery Elementary Ed. Oak Park, IL Electrical fng. J Theresa ii o ak Park, IL John Zinky Electrical Eng. Milwaukee, Wl Alan Ziter Journalism North Adams, MA amie Zucker Biomed, Eng. Ele. Eng. South Euclid, OH Julius Zuehlke Chemical Eng. St. Charles, IL  •• .= ?. • Sarel Zummer Education St. Paul, MN 373 f Advertising 376 377 Challenge NOW AND IN THE FUTURE. Let FirstBank Evanston help you meet the challenge of successfully managing your personal finances. i FirstBank Evanston We care more. ■ First National Bank and Trust Company of Evanston 800 Davis St. | 901 Grove St. | 2550 Green Bay Rd. - A Unit of First Illinois Corporation Member FDIC Evanston, Illinois 60204 | 866-5500 i 273-4200 -Opening in 1980 ■ I (f s STUDENT Serving th Community JE CA For Photog 1601 EVANS1 3 378 -; H K Id de lau of 1980 STUDENT BOOK EXCHANGE Serving the Northwestern Community for over 40 years JERON CAMERA INC For all your photographic needs 1601 SHERMAN EVANSTON, ILLINOIS 328-0111 THE GENERAL STORE EVANSTON Established 1967 NORTHWESTERN NROTC congratulations to the graduating class of 1980 379 r 1 V 172(1 380 I T-Shirts Printed T while-u-wait 1726 ORRINUTON EVANSTON ILLINOIS 60204 HOOS DRUG STORE 1745 SHERMAN AVE. EVANSTON. ILL 60201 ORRINGTON totel EVANSTON, ILL The Orrington Hotel The North Shore ' s Luxury Hotel Complete Banquet Facilities 1710 Orrington Ave., Evanston, Illinois 60201 864-8700 381 ofcu Sv OF EVANSTON , %f (Of i tfJS fO tA ' 1501 Sherman Avenue Evanston, Illinois 60201 (312) 491-6400 ■ «2S Collection... Sure you might not miss the old alma mater next year. Maybe not even the following year. But someday, you ' re gonna look back and say hey, wasn ' t it great back then . That ' s when you ' ll wish you had a few mementos to remind you of the good old days. Before that happens to you, stop down at the bookstore and take a look at the great collection of mementos we ' ve got right now! norris • (-( ' liter Mori ' Northwestern University • 1999 Sheridan Road • Evanston, Illinois 60201 Congratulations to the Graduating Class of 1980 r wxni TaUy-Ho Pub 1951 Howard St Chicago ! is; r 382 THINK 1 ' EM TASTEBUPS AWyWAY? WATCH ME TASTEBUDS (in actual commercials) ON ' SATURDAY NlGHT LIVE U I Congratulations to the Graduating Class of 1980 szaboL SZABO FOOD SERVICE, INC. Serving the Norris University Center Total Food Service Management 2000 Spring Road Suite 300 Oak Brook, Illinois 60521 (312) 242-3540 384 THE MOST LIKELY TO SUCCEED AGAINST THIRST. Cokeadds life. Coca-Cola and Cok aia r gi which Wonilty in tamo product ol Th« Coca-Cola Compan; 385 . ¥ ■h J r J r V First the book, then the movie . . . SYLLABUS! starring Laurence Olivier as the Ed • candace Bergen as the Assistant Ed and saving grace to the publishing industry • The Sports Ed is wiley and handsome Omar Sharif and the Croups Editor is the sensual Gina LoiaDrigetta • Shawn cassidy as the kid Ad Man • Cilda Radner as the Senior Ed • Robert Redford as the studly and sophisticated lab director • The suave and sex driven Photo Ed is woody Allen The balding but dashing ex-GM is Burt Reynolds • Bette Midler manages the comp shop, played by the Village People • Michael Landon is the reassur- ing yearbook rep. • Production supervisor is John Travolta • Kermit the frog and Miss Piggy lead Sha-na-na as the Daily ■ Sally Fields plays Mrs. k and Goldie Hawn is the accounting manager • Bo Derek plays the exciting SPC business manager • •Also— Special Short Attraction SHOOT YOURSELF MOVIE QD DOLBY STEREO TECHNICOLORS PANAVISION® R RESTRICTED Support the Arts! In wild celebration of his 1980 Bachelor of Science degree in Radio-TV-Film, Ed Ditmars, filmmaker extraordinare, announces the availabili- ty of his film work to the ideologically oppressed, mise en scene craving, visually starved, role playing public. Bring back those memories of nights in McCor- mick and Tech Auditorium with your own print(s) of the short subjects that made you shout from your seat, A genius walks this campus! Experience the intense lyrical pleasure you felt during such works as Untitled, Polonaise, C85-2, and the immortal, Shattered. See the flowing beauty of Ed ' s visual work in his sad, contemplative vision of Chicago, Rape in a Plastic World, a film where all notions of con- tent, narration, and patriarchal aesthetics are courageously rejected. Laugh at Ed ' s ironic parody of Hollywood com- edy in Road to Utopia, Kansas, his first 16mm color film. Buy films and help Ed to pay back the $15,000 in student loans he owes NU. Give Ed the chance to live with the respect and dignity due any Nor- thwestern alum. Buy one film or the complete col- lection. Call 869-8073 or write to Ed Ditmars, 643 Library PI., Evanston, 111. 60201. Treat yourself to a film by Ed Ditmars today; your understanding of image will never be the same. F JuOfff- future. km « • ■? uftisj«raj!5 l!5i--- OTHRffWS-WWH  GSM ♦ I IB B B IBM C 1 MMiararCHHM KMMWBMM lAUOU , MrtMM mm mmn t rnm- MSHHtMUl MSWSIBITUHdWr ICOUUMTBEAHm PEliOW. KCdUSE ■«•:. strips, and wjBBCttii t To my fnenas saw m ■MilMM tariwyMMM MI to i aj nonon 9 N : J. 5l . ...... .. .. . DfitofewM} HRwumnna ' •i - ' nspnmuoM flW.inwtlngRttM mittfin! . Mine- Yoa n w m tm twmm ■ Mtvfamxtm ■ mnrmmmmte wiaMciierws «K BKS wiscirwi ix m W goofy qg. i II miss you turta. •♦OiidrS 11 . personals N Al •mm ■: ■..:■::•- ' ■ ■ ■ ISOiterTOon- ■MM R RESTRICTED- ' fteAfcl of his 1980 Bachelor of lio-TV-Film, Ed Oilman, e, announces the availabili- he ideologically 01 isuallv starved, rol nories of nights in McCor- ium with your own print(s) to made you shout from alks this campus! se Ivrical pleasure you felt -Untitled, Polonaise, onai, Shattered. v of Ed ' s visual work in his n of Chicago, Rape in a where all notions of con- aesthetics are parodyofHollywoodcom- rKansas, his first 16mm itopaybacktheS .OOOin KveEdthechance md dignity due any Nor- rftoorthecampleteco  Tite to Ed Ditmars, 643 ilm by to the Mattle. May Cod bless you and keep you in His love always. Doug. Nanc, Keith. B-Une, Dan, and Miss Humanities— Thanks for a super yean Dear Lulgi Flnkelstein and Company, Thanks for being such great roomies. You made my first year at NU great. Love ya. Captain Turtle Plnoch y Cosa have always been at N.U., but you never knew It till we got here. Lulgl Flnkelstein and Company To the 3rd floor residents of the NU Apts.: its been a great yean Special thanks to Rm. 304, Jay H. and my roomies. But Laura, you ' re the greatest. Julie 316 Judith- Hl Reams Hey crab— You are not a loser. Much luck In the future. A slimy friend IGOR— Best always from the root beer ragamuffin with a cracked face. x-roomie— Love lasts. Why shouldn ' t we? ' Life is weird. Teddies aren ' t. WNUR Folk— thanks for standing bv me. other friends— for standing up for me. You ' re the best. Thankee. Balk A GERMAN + A GERMAN EQUALS HUNGARIAN ONION NOODLE BAKE To Lee Youngjohn— I ' m going to miss you, kid. Good luck! Love, Vicky CHI PHI FOR TWO GREAT 5-2 SEASON! IN- TENSE, FUN. SHIRTS! WHO COULD ASK FOR MORE! KEEP ON WHOOSHIN — CAPTAIN BALLOU Boo Boo— Es Teui Miiui I would like to go for a walk on the beach with you and never return! Beee— Love— JC THIS MOON IS A BIG YELLOW THE STARS UGHT UP MY HEART I COULDN ' T BE A HAPPIER FELLOW, BECAUSE I HAVE YOU AS A SWEETHEART -LOVE BB SNYDES, pigs, apricot brandy, bacon strips, and weekend in votingest village. Have a great life! — WlZ To my friends Sanford, Karen, Pete, Stacey, and Dave: Thanks for making this year a very Interesting one. You ' ve all made a big Impression on me (unfor- tunately?) And through it all, make the best of everything. Elliott HEY TOM, JOHN, RICK, HUCK Thanks for inspiring me to study on 4th floor, i never thought it could be so much fun! — Nanako Sunshine: you are the woman of my dreams. I ' ll always remember you. Thank God for cinnamon donuts. GER LITTLE PICASSO YOU ' RE A GREAT KID EVEN THOUGH YOU ARE A PEE WEE. EVERYTHING WILL TURN OUT OK NEXT YEAR SO KEEP SMILING JENNIFER Lamb you re a very special person. Love you so much. . J.J. Dear Sinful— Goodbye and Good Luck. From your goofy roomie, PEE-WEE. (Alias— your Little Picasso). TO ALL YOU COMMUTERS— I ' ll miss you. Maria. Thanks, NU, for getting me Into law school; thanks, Mom Dad for footing the bills, mortgaging the house, the cars, and my sister; and extra special thanks to Mark, Ann, Anne, Kent, Sheri, Jodl, and the Wlllard Seniors ' dinner table for mak- ing 3 years at NU a memory to cherish! Good luck you guys! Howard S. HIRSCHBERG: Let ' s face it, you can ' t fall off the floor! Thanks for a great year WlZ TO JA, MKB, RE. TE, JRG, MJK, MM, NO, AP, er, jas, ks of the HC: You made me feel especially welcome— JSR Also thanks: Ka.cc.ec, do, hw,ty—|sr Say hey! I ' m glad a Hunka Spaghetti goes so well with a Big Mac! ZTA, You have your own special way! Steve Kaskovltch— wishing you the best life has to offer! Love, Mar WOW! 4 years of NUMB, clarinet, SAGA and MF+CO, and I ' ve still got my friends and sanity! Really— thank you for being there and for being in our family por- trait. LOVE. JC T-Bones, weevil, swamp, JC, Barbie, Deblet (AKA Hobart Honeys) Congrats on another year! To next year: for some of us the last, for all of us the best! Love you all, LL Dea, T„ ll, Dane, J.C., Barb, Deb: without you the DSFFD, papers, classes, late night chats about THAT and most of all the swamp would never be the same. Always, TPO Cohen-Dog, Fowles, Trlck-Monst, Bogs, B. Sex, We ' ve been through It all come up smiling. Thanks for the memories. Bergy. Dearest Paul, from fall to winter to spr- ing and summer, l love your (furry) face . . one-four-three Beth l came In saying Jock Turk Hossface. I leave saying, Society ' s problems? make EVERYONE A CAPITALIST. Clearly I ' m educated although the uneducated, un- thlnklng may not agree. Lizard Lips L. Let us learn from the Past, enjoy Today together, and pray for the Future. Will always love you Grr. AL-LM-Y LOVE BEAVER - - - FUTURE BEAVER MATE Goodbye Northwestern! SMV loved It! YARD CLUB WHAT SOUND DOES A GOLDFISH MAKE WHEN IT IS DROPPED INTO JELLO? BUT MORE IMPORTANTLY, WHAT COLOR IS THE JELLO? JEFF (RN): l wanted something that might last as long as l hope we do. One of the most beautiful people I ' ll ever know. I LOVE YOU! Helen CLEO— You ARE the World ' s Greatest Pledge Mom. Love, Your Three Sons THE TRUTH CAN NOW BE TOLD! Andy A. Is not a slob. Neither am l SHARKA There really is nothing like cold pizza In the morning, Is there? Here is to friend- ship coleslaw and mushroom and onions —An Ex-GDI To Jon Brooks, John Lewis, Ron Mahla, Jeff Burds, Hetzal Hartley, John Nelson, Howard Price, and Nate Curry. Thanks for all the good times. From your room- mate. Brad Hennenfent THANK YOU DAN, MOM, JOE, PAUL, FRANK, FRED DORENE Gall: I ' ll always remember these sadsalad daze. I have only the sound of your footsteps to guide me in this wilderness (Peter Klappert) There is more ahead! Love always ____ DUJY APA ALL THE WAY! IN LUST WE TRUST! Bob the Snob; Reality is a bitch and so am I ...but nevertheless, thanks for everything. Love always, Sweetfart INTELLIGENT DAILY OUOTE OF THE YEAR: I could have made all-street at the UCLA of hockey, but we weren t even drinking Chris, Dale, Larry, Jean, Mike. Ed, Mike, Kevin, Tom. Bob, Jeff, Kenny, Jim, Paul, Marc, Sherry, Dan, Mrs. K, Howell and Liz: Thanks for a good daily and an In- terestlng year. Rick Emmet died, ira showed up. idi smiled, Bob took the threats, we played musical edit board and everyone said OHHH nooo. Yea DNU! Moved: Chris, Kevin, Larry, Dale, Marc, jean (to Lexington), Jeff Oult: Dan, Howell, Marc, Kenny, Sherry, Teej, Liz Stable and boring: Rick Brylcreem Award: Mike K. WHAT S NEW? WHAT ELSE? JG Soup: it was a good 4 years, but the last 2Vi were best!! Thanks for the Ice cream, b-ball games, and of course, the lists . I too kept track of it all. Let ' s add a million circled stars to the collection! I love you. Ethel. Ark Pribbs to having one of us set the alarm for 5AM and then sleep through the ringing: to having the other ward off window guests and spend hours on the phone to Betsy, it was good freshman year, but we have to keep in touch now that we ' re getting old and growing apart. Play your cards right and I ' ll put your pics in the yearbook. Love C.S. OX: Been a lot of fun - too bad we had such ups and downs - but what ups!! keep in touch P Roberto: Sorry for all the trouble l have given you - but what are friends for. PL MRX Thanks for being a bird lover. You are my bestest friend even if you are a slob. Love Pidgeon Dear Peter, I know they say it ' s not the size of the boat but how the captain steers the ship, but in the sea of yachts you are a small dingy. L ove, The Comp Shop Blonds Ellen, Patty, and Elizabeth— Thanks for making our first year at NU so special to me. I love you all! Sarah Tau Delta Phi You Guys are the Greatest! This year with you has been a shriek. Each one of you is a super, special, ter- rlfic, splendrlflc person to me. Gigi Dear Jeffrey, Your love has made for a perfect senior year. I hope the world is ready for the two of us. Love Lorraine Lory, This has been the best year of my life. I owe it all to you. I would like to place an order for 100 more years. OK? Allen DRAGON, Your squirrel toasted by your fire! loves being TO THE CHI OMEGA PLEDGE CLASS OF 1979: You ' re terrific! Thanks for helping make this a great senior year. Love, FT PlDG, i love it when you ' re silly. Thanks for making cold NU a little warmer. Love, X SYLLABITES! imagine what a drag it would ' ve been If Tom wasn ' t there to abuse us, Carol to Intimidate group treasurers, Peter Jeff to maintain moral standards, the Neusk to demand peanut M M ' s, Jodl to worry about all those crazy senior pics, Andy to throw to the lions (advertisers), Bruce to save the day, Tod to pick up the soap, Rlillck Ed to keep us inundated with memos , Mike to laugh at that moun- tain of BS, Jean to be abused, Chios In general, Milk cookies Chris to tear up Kennedy posters, Phil to start a por- nography ring, Jim to debate Marxism, Ann to be SO wholesome, Mary(Beth) to ride the interim, the Daily to set aesthetic standards, and your editor there to enjoy every minute of it. Thanks. CF Benjl, Rick and Art— I often worried about you guys. You hide in your rooms and study while hating this place, we all may have made a common mistake but at least it threw us together and l sup- pose that ' s all that really matters. Art, en- joy St. Louis. Maybe well cross paths again. Benji and Rick, you two have got a lot of lost time to make up for next year. Adlos!— Clark HEY RICK, MY BUDDY! I publicly apologize for all of the 8 page papers, small midweeks, lack of edit pages, ads on page 3, late dummies, complaints about B.T., and nominating you Homecoming King!!! But didn ' t we have fun? — dana To all of SPC— A big thank you for three glorious years of working with you all. From Bregman sitting drunk in the gar- bage can to my nautical Syllabus photo— here ' s three cheers to Larry Luntsford, Michael Kaplan and Ed Zotti! £RA Ethel: For four years we have shared for- mals, frost-bite, Fourth of July, festivals, films, football games, food, family, friends, french fries, fingers, flowers, failures, and frolicking! would you like to share Forever? Love, Soup Jen not without trying! Pigs of the world unite! it was a great yean Friends when were 64. Leslie Ann Great things come in small packages! To the best Mom even Leslie Debbie— I ' m going to miss you more than you know next yean There are a lot of good things about NU but the best thing is the way they managed to assign us as roommates. Good luck at Med. School, you know I ' m only a phone call away! L ove always, JODI xydis— Four years Is enough of your sports photos— Get a job— Love Bub The Photographers Clark Federer 34T, 34B, 35T, 35BL, 35BR, 36T, 38BL, 36BR, 37TL, 37B, 38T, 38B, 40T, 40BL, 40BR, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45T, 45B, 46T, 46B, 47TL, 47TR, 47B, 50T, 50M, 50B, 51 B, 51T, 60T, 60B, 61T, 61 B, 62T, 62B, 63T, 63B, 78TL, 78TR, 79T, 79BL, 79BR, 90M, 90MR, 90B, 91 T, 91 B, 92T, 92B, 93T, 93B, 1 05T, 1 1 4, 1 1 5, 1 1 8TL, 118TR, 118B, 119TL, 119BL, 119BR, 120TL, 120TR, 120B, 121T, 121 BR, 121BL, 1 29TL, 129TR, 129BL, 129BR, 182T, 182B, 183T, 183B, 232, 263T, 298, 304T, 312B, 313T, 313B, 324, 330, 332, 336, 348, 358, 360, 363, 364, 368, 373, 388, 398BM, 399BM, 399BL, Cover 388 38 T, 38B, 39 40 ,61T.i !HNl,123Tl SSa 345,355 357,365 ,3 araphers Peter Loeb Cover, 4, 5T, 5M, 6TL, 6B, 7T, 7BR, 8TL, 8TR, 8BL, 8BR, 9TL, 9TR, 9B, 10M, 10TR, 10BR, 1 1TL, 1 1TR, 11BL, 11 MR, 12T, 12BR, 12BL, 13TL, 13TR, 13BL, 13BR, 14T, 14BL, 14BR, 15TL, 15TR, 15B, 16BR, 16BL, 16T, 17TL, 1 7TR, 17BL, 17BR, 34T, 34B, 35T, 35BL, 35BR, 36T, 36B1, 36BR, 37TL, 37M, 37B, 38T, 38B, 39, 40T, 40BL, 40BR, 41, 44, 45T, 45M, 52, 53M, 53R, 54M, 54TL, 54BL, 54BR, 55T, 55BL, 55BR, 60B, 60T, 61 T, 61 B, 82TL, 82TR, 82ML, 82MR, 82B, 83T, 83MR, 83ML, 83BL, 83BR, 84T, 84MR, 94ML, 84B, 85TL, 85TR, 85M, 85B, 102, 103BL, 103BM, 103BR, 104T, 110, 111L, 111R, 112T, 112M, 112B, 122BL, 123TL, 123TR, 124T, 124B, 128TL, 128TR, 128BL, 128BR, 132T, 132L, 132MR, 132BR, 133TL, 133TR, 133BL, 133BR, 139TL, 139TR, 139B, 140TL, 140TR, 140BL, 140BR, 141TL, 141TR, 141 BL, 141 BR, 154B, 155M, 155B, 164B, 165T, 165B, 168T, 168B, 169B, 240, 292, 294T, 294MR, 294ML, 294BL, 294BM, 294BR, 296, 299, 300, 301, 302, 312, 328, 329, 335, 338, 339, 341, 343, 344, 345, 355, 357, 365, 369, 371, 389 389 Jeff wassmann 26M, 26BR, 26TR, 27TR, 27TL, 27BR, 27BL, 28T, 28B, 29TL, 29M, 29BL, 30TR, 30B, 30TL, 31BR, 31BL, 31TL, 31TR, 86T, 86B, 87T, 87B, 94, 95T, 95B, 98T, 98M, 98B, 99, 125TR, 125BR, 126B, 142, 143, 146T, 146B, 147, 148T, 148B, 149T, 149B, 180TL, 180TR, 180B, 181T, 181 BL, 181 BR, 249, 264, 305T, 319, 323, 374, 375, 390, 396B, 397B 390 1 TC 23T, 75TI 89T1 1361 1771 1881 191! 1961 2001 2061 2141 2231 237 3041 Jiff 333, 399 ' Tom xydis 2, 3, 20TR, 20TL, 20B, 21 BL, 21 BR, 21T, 22BR, 22BL, 22T, 23BR, 23BL, 23T, 24TR, 24BL, 24TL, 24BR, 25B, 25TL, 25ML, 25MR, 74T, 74B, 75TL, 75TR, 75B, 76T, 76B, 77TL, 77TR, 77B, 81 TL, 81 TR, 81 B, 88T, 88BL, 88BR, 89TL, 89TR, 89B, 100, 101, 106, 122TI, 122TR, 122BR, 136BR, 136BL, 136T, 137TL, 137TR, 137B, 172, 173, 174, 175, 1 76TL, 1 76TR, 176B, 177L, 177R, 178T, 178B, 1 79TL, 1 79TR, 179MR, 179ML, 179BL, 179BR, 188B, 188T, 188L, 189TR, 189TL, 189BR, 189BL, 190TR, 190TL, 191T, 19 1 BR, 191BL, 194L, 194T, 194B, 195TL, 195TR, 195BL, 195BR, 196TL, 196TR, 196BL, 196BR, 197TL, 197TR, 197BL, 197BR, 199T, 199B, 200TR, 200TL, 200B, 201TL, 201TR, 201 B, 204, 205TL, 205TR, 205B, 206T, 206M, 206B, 207T, 207M, 208T, 208BL, 208BR, 209T, 209B, 21 4T, 214BL, 214BR, 215BR, 215BL, 216T, 216BL, 216BR, 217TL, 217TR, 217B, 223TL, 223TR, 223B, 224T, 224BR, 224BL, 225, 228, 229, 230, 232, 236T, 237, 270, 271, 290, 291, 293TL, 293TR, 293B, 297, 298, 303T, 303B, 304B, 305B, 308TL, 308TR, 308BC, 308BR, 309TL, 309TR, 309BL, 309BR, 310TL, 310ML, 310MR, 310B, 31 1T, 311B, 314, 317, 322, 326, 327, 332, 333, 356, 359, 361, 370, 391, 398BR, 398TL, 398TR, 398BL, 399TM, 399TL, 399TR, 399BR 391 - Tod Francis 68TR, 68TL, 68BL, 68BR, 69TL, 69TR, 69BR, 192T, 192BL, 192BR,193TL,193TR, 193ML,193MR,193B, 202T, 202M, 202ML, 202B, 203T, 203ML, 203MR, 203BL, 203BR, 21 2T, 212BL, 212BR,213TL,213TR, 213BL, 213BR, 213ML, 220T, 220M, 220B, 221TL, 221TR, 221BL,221BR,222TL, 222TR, 222B, 256, 304T, 306T, 306B, 307L,307T,307R,315, 316, 318, 320, 321, 334, 342, 350, 351, 352, 353, 354, 362, 367, 392, 397R, 397T, 387B 8 Hi I Bill Cork 152T, 152B, 153T, 153B, 156, 157T, 157B, 158T, 158B, 159T, 159B, 1 60T, 160B, 161T, 161B, 164T, 164B, 165T, 165B, 1 70T, 170B, 171, 173, 392B 392 Phil Kaldon 32T, 32B, 33T, 33B, 184T, 184BL, 184BR, 185T, 185B, 393T Mike Heeger 130TL, 130TR, 130BL, 130BR, 131T, 131BL, 131BR, 138TL, 138TR, 138BL, 138BR, 215, 267, 295T, 295B, 393M Karl Koons 701, 70BL, 70BR, 71 BL, 71 BR, 71T, 72T, 72BL, 72BR, 73TL, 73TR, 73B, 108BL, 108BR, 109L, 212T, 212BL, 212BR, 213TL, 213R, 213M, 213BL, 213BR, 234, 250, 393B 393 Anne Fishbein 80TL, 80TR, 80BL, 80BR, 376, 394T Doug Crowe 66TR, 66B, 67T, 67MR, 67ML, 67B, 6711, 340, 366, 394M Paula Romberg 18B, 19T, 64L, 64M, 64B, 65BL, 65M, 144TL, 144TR, 144B, 145TL, 145TR,145BL,145BR, 331, 394B !S U, BL 394 p - ? - Paulette Flahavin 18L, 18M, 18TR, 19B, 48TL, 48B, 48TR, 49T, 49BR, 395T Daniel Lee Beck 237B, 237T William D. cordes 218, 219 Scott Simon 346 David woods 116TL, 116TR, 116BL, 116BR, 1 1 7TL, 117TR, 117B Laurie Birschbach 126TL, 126TR, 127T, 337 Robert Dubose 96TL, 96TR, 96BL, 96BR, 97TR, 97TL, 97B Bart Srebnick 58T, 58B, 59T, 59B 395 Cindy Neu, Groups Editor L to R: Jeff Wassmann, SPC Lab Director; Tom Xydis, Sports Editor; Peter Loeb, Photography Editor. 396 • Mike Heeger Syllabus 1980 Editor-in-Chief: Clark Federer Assistant Editor: Carol Summerf ield Photography Editor: Peter Loeb Croups Editor: Cindy iMeu Senior Editor: Jodi weinstein Sports Editor: Tom xydis Advertising: Andrew Trout SPC Lab Director: Jeff wassmann Photographers: Laurie Birschbach, Bill Cork, Doug Crowe, Rob DuBose, Clark Federer, Anne Fishbein, Paulette Flahavin, Tod Francis, Mark Crinnell, Mike Heeger, Philip Kaldon, Karl Koons, Peter Loeb, Jay Orlander, Paula Romberg, Jeff wassmann, Tom xydis. Layout: Ann Apalsch, Lisa Arndt, Amy Caplan, Sue Costanzo, Patti DeMar, Rachel Fein, Dee Dee Flores, Anita Gonzalez, Jim Hansen, Mary Jadhon, Ed Kern (BMOC), Lucia Marini, Martha Mclnnes, Trish McMahon, Mary Puchner, John Rockwell, Claire Roth, Bruce Schwartz, Peter Wisch. writers: Ann Apalsch, Laurie Birschbach, Jim Hansen, Mark Roth, Mark wangrin. Special Thanks to: Sue Keller, Ed, Mary, Pat, the Crew in the Comp Shop, Paul, Liz Agnello, and uncle Mo Ferensen. Syllabus 1980 is printed on 80 lb dull stock. All four-color separations were made directly from transparencies and halftones are 150 line. Headlines are set in Antioue Olive Bold, and body copy is Antique Olive. Headlines and copy were set by the Students Publishing Company Composition Shop. Hunter Publishing Company set all identification copy which is Optima. Newsprint copy was set in English Times by Students Publishing Com- pany. Living Units, Creeks, ads, and Organizations are paid sections. The yearbook is printed by Hunter Publishing Company of Winston-Salem, North Carolina. The press run was 4050. Senior portraits by Root Photography, Chicago, Illinois. Entire contents of Syllabus are © copyright 1980, the Students Publishing Company of Northwestern University. Further rights to photographs are owned by the photographers. Address all correspondence in care of the Students Publishing Company, 1999 Sheridan Rd., Evanston, ill., 60201. 5th Annual Gold Lens Cap Award Recipient: Peter Loeb 2nd Annual Eagle Scout Award of Merit Recipient: Jeff wassmann 400 ield in m, Rob DuBose, cis, MarkCrinneM, y Orlander, Paula mzo, Patti DeMar, , Mary Jadhon, Ed jn, Mary Puchner, i. Mark Roth, Mark 3 ID dull stock. All four-color ■ecdv from transparencies leadlines are set in Antique is Antique Olive. Headlines jdents Publishing company Puotshing Company set all s optima. Newsprint copy , students Publishing Com- mand organizations are J ' s printed by Hunter ston-Satem, North Carolina senior portraits by Root ,v Entire contents ot Students Publishing rtvuSV Further nghts to Stographers.«dress MfflaH 801 - :er Loeb ff vvassmann r


Suggestions in the Northwestern University - Syllabus Yearbook (Evanston, IL) collection:

Northwestern University - Syllabus Yearbook (Evanston, IL) online collection, 1977 Edition, Page 1

1977

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1978

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1979

Northwestern University - Syllabus Yearbook (Evanston, IL) online collection, 1981 Edition, Page 1

1981

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1982

Northwestern University - Syllabus Yearbook (Evanston, IL) online collection, 1983 Edition, Page 1

1983


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