Northwestern University - Syllabus Yearbook (Evanston, IL) - Class of 1981 Page 1 of 424
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I I  i ' . i SYLLABUS Volume 97, 1981 TABLE OF CONTENTS Opening 2 Dorms 16 Fall 44 Entertainment 60 Greeks 88 Sports 154 Winter 200 Seniors 222 Shoot Yourself 288 Spring 330 Groups 346 Newsprint 368 Advertising 386 Students Publishing Company 400 k ai ti 10 11 12 E I 13 14 M . ti 1 ' H z 15 ■-•■■ti 16 I Dorm Life 1 il f.OAt Of LAUUDRY 1 OR U]£LL... V AV6e WO owe: oj LL K)oTi :e:... 5 E. ff EifK y j - ! W y B OH, L00IC(X CAN} ] SEE N S UfiJ feioH ii 17 Allison Allison Residential College 18 .r.V J ' ' K : -i ) . College Of Community Studies 1 ' SiJUSl ;. - ' -■-•■-■_ 1 i « «t., ' IB ' t j ; ' tj IS i 19 Bobb Hall i 20 ' {. ' - ■BiiiiHiilHf «ll y El Ok i 11 ii Hi n I 1 in ■|i 1 [ E ::• 1 : Til 2- II ' IfiH! .- k ' ? . ..ti ' m i. m P h i k. trT:=w A M 1 ! !i M f 1 1  ' •i:,U| bfl m ■J P ' ' - - ' ' ' BB T B I ' ' ■■' ' ' M - 1 ' ■i It ■1 • • 1 1 ' ■Mk . SmJ ' « ss .] K ' s b 21 1900 Orrington Front Row: loan Donahue, Christa Reuning, Ed Schwartz, lanel Sorensen. Row 2: Steve Maiewski, Pat O ' Neill, Elizabeth Pope, Selene Simonson Jeff Spradlin, Tom Cunningham, Jamie Dierking, Janet Delicath, Mary Brown. Row 3: Howard Margulis, Richard Bell, Robin Gardner, Andres Tapia, Valaria Fabj, Anne Lynch, Chris Lopez, David Rogers, Julie Shackford, Ken Rogers. Row 4: Tim Sonder, Jean Schneider, Ebbe Ward, William Weinbaum, Robin Scala, Chuck McKown, Leroy Kim, Rita Mosley, Kathy Nelson. Not Pictured: Sara Churgin, Karen Coen, Steve Dissette, Tom Donius, Karen Golden, Cindy Hoy, Kathryn Kincaid, Brian Kossak, Joseph Lazarus, Linda Powers, Cathy Richter, Jeff Steele, Eric Stromayer, Tracy White, Marianne Wold, Peter Woods. Courtyard 22 ' i i_-_ ; ;=k--3is .-{:ij -c = ;(e ' - iw rK=- ' ;.e-- v ' -; iM A a rf . Foster House Front Row: Don Mitkey Dr. J.H. Quib Glen Sarvady Ward Johnson Dave Brunstein Dave Ging Jay Lurie Row 2: Cole Alexis Stanley Young Melvin Coffee Dan Greene Jay Schudel Ea Kosolski Kostas Lyketsas Row 3: Kaveh Safari David Fischer Paul Janicki Joe Veranth Winston Van lohn Loper Back Row: Todd Beck Roy Meyer Bob Dallstream Paul Fuligni Brian Sandquist Steve Bock Hanging: Hans Hazelton Also: Steve Elliott 23 ,-:.i l iJiLXiaajtiXlCiKiSe tr!r !i::VKi: ' - ' VVir- V- k ' . ' ' Foster-Walker Complex Mantz Hall Islam Akbar Rob Archer David Bayer Tom Beeson Bill Bell Jeb Bishop Dave Boss Mark Botti Christopher Brown E. Fitch Bullard Chip Buntinj Michael Cammon Chuck Campbell Ken Chick Richard Clough Peter Cuddington John DIouhy Mark Engstrom Joseph Fleming Michael Foley Charlie Gaston Rich Gervasi Bob Gevers David Glaess Eric Cordon Ralph Gorter Arnold Graham Bill Graham Wade Griffith Peter Hamot Burt Hara Michael FHeeger Charles Herron Dan Howard Kevin jachec Jim Jackson Jim Jenkins Mahmoud Jichi Andy Johnston Craig Jordan Edward Jutkowitz Greg Kaster Tom Keramidas Rawie King John Krachenfels John Krizmanic James Laev Stephen Laflora John Lawyer Kwang Lee James Libby Mitchell Lipka Dan Lueders Adam Machaiek Ross Marchetta Mark Marovitch Kevin Marzo Kevin Middleton David Millhiser Daniel Mitton Dante Mosely Carl Nishioka Pete Nowlen Mike O ' Connell Walter Owens Steve Parker Dick Phillips Ken Pierce Michael Plainse Tim Rebbeck Nick Reiher David Remy Marshall Rens Lance Rosenzweig David Ruckman Barry Sarvet Ed Schultz Frank Schwertfeger Steve Scott Douglas Seter Robert Sidney Peter Sills Tom Summers John Wahl Richard Walker Lester Wall Robert Waterhouse Mike Watson Shelby Webb Kent Wenger Mike Willett Jim Wood Paul Zuehike u 26 i- C-ix: iX::xsiKt: iuof iril ii ev . ii)!h- ' t ' f M Tammany Hall Klein House 27 House Four House Five 28 lL.Vi ;:-- % i-iifci ,; -V ' iI ; ' i.v. ,Vk j-Ai '  Ult« l-iUS . iMi liA ««rfcMbyf:i («nMr '  '   H - ' i .1 Latham House 29 Marshalsea Hotel Inmates for 1980-81 : Rory Butch Terrien, Nancy Schmucki, Mike Wyatt, Tom Ski Sinskj, Valerie Rook Martindale, Michele Auntie Cruelty Alfont, Dan Preacher Man Dahl, Bill Doty, Jason Cohen, Mark Modest Smith, Tom Stanley Ronczy, Ramblin ' Rick Harold, Jamie $ Pelagatti, P.C. I want to be George Noble, Dave Hallee, Pat I want to be George Murphy, John Stephenson, Don Holland, Mark Howard (Head Trustee), Carlos Arturo Jimenez, N.U.S.C. O.D., Kathy Cool Whip Kid Fagerburg, Howard Gilligan Hack, Cindy Hotlips Bennett, Greg Jaroslav Hulka, Florence Keyboard Kimm, Robbie Big Baby Johnson, Cheryl Schubes Schubert. Inmates not Pictured: Alva Akin Louis Bakos, Carol Brandt, PatBrown, Barry Pooh Budish, Jeff Cohnhead Cohn, Shelly Sugarlips Colman, Roger Damie, Ron Daniels, Belinda B-line Flljs, Greg Gorman, Keith Gorski, Kevin R.D. Haladay, Gryan Green, Gus Hallin, Bob Buck Hanmer,cris Harris, Leslie Hunter, KitMeeLim, LoriQuickdraw McGraw, Chris Morrison, Bruce Anhedonic Norris, George T am George Ribarchik, Beth Tiger Reimer, Glen Rippie, Heidi Sandling, Reema Marilynne Sanghvi, Pete Shippy, Steve Stonehands Sutton, Francine Twiney Twine, Greg Washington, Kim West, Dan Wolf, Wilfried Nachtevie Zehm. House Eight 30 Goodrich House Peter Amenda Bobby Anderson Arthur Arand Michael Asbury Edmund Bak Noel Beneke Robert Bonaccorsi Kent Brown Stephen Burton Christopher Campbell Douglas Clark Brian Davies Lester Dornon David Drouillard Mark Duffy Peter Ervin Michael Flandaca Timothy Carton Nelson Crihalde Roosevelt Groves Timothy Harris Karsten Hartweg Marvin Irby Daniel Jenkins Jerome Kohn Richard Lafollette Si Lee Michael Meyer Gerald Miller Douglas Mullins Edward Orenstein Glenn Osborn Rinaldo Petterino Robert Posniak Jeffrey Price Abdollah Rahimi Michael Rowady Marc Sanders Samir Sawabini Robert Seymour Christopher Sopata Van Bu Thanh Douglas Thomas Mark Walsh Henry Walsh James Watson Gregg Wells Alan Wolff 31 ill Hinman House Front Row — sitting: Chris Ristovski, JoeStrzelecki, George Beach, Richard Stack. Row 2: Frank Blaha, DaveTermuhlen, Eric Robbins, Rick Dipper, Julie Taylor. Row 3: Brian Strumpf, Chris Andrew, Stuart Merkadeau, Les Wong, Mike Sullivan, Dan Soussan, Tom Morgan. Standing: Zia Haq, |ohn Sidenstick, Rob Carpenter, )on OIney, Dave Oakley, Ed Chludsinski, Bob Luke, Jerry Kolarczyk, Scott Atkinson, Mike Lee, Mark Rafiee, Vivek Kantayya, John Izzo, Bruce Silverman, Evan Vassos, Vijay Hingorani, Paul Berndt, George McClellan Hobart Front Row: Cynthia Clark, Valesia Phillips, Diane Chernin, Sissy Spoerri, Pam Meyers, Catherine Brooks. Row 2: Melissa Scott, Martha Filipic, Meg Seiler, Nancy Meyers, Fred, Theresa Pistole, Joyce Garbaciak, Lori Kaplan. Back Row: Kim McKnight, Lisa Craig, Gisele Cover, Nancy Lutz, Veronica Anderson, Tori Bowen, Mary Karslen, Kathleen Sheridan, Vicki Deal, Laura Milan, Deborah Weber, Debbie Penzi. (Not Pictured Or Those Who Didn ' t Make it Outside Early on a Sunday Morning): Judy Brennan, Val Walker, Chris Strah, Sharon Weil, Mary Kay Magistad, Stephanie Raid, Maria Evola, Gretchen Shetler, Audrey Laimins, Anne Raby, Kim Webb, Muriel Neighbors, Susan Griffith, Alisa Nelson, Tracey Sampels, Katie Scott, Adrienne Kochman, Jeanne Williams, Janet Knutel, Shana Fliginger, Debbie Grove, Peggy Fennewald, Dana Herman, Llora Kendall, Sue Leach, Cinny Blurton, Lisa O ' Connor. 32 I Humanities College David Adams Caryl Athanasiades Wes Avram Brian Aylward Nancy Barker Mary Kay Baumgart Kimm Brocket! Christina Carrington Joyce Chaplin Carrie Classon Jana Cohen Catherine Connors David Detweiler David Duncombe Patricia Eggleston Robert English Leah Feldman Edwin Filipowski Cynthia Callo Jeffrey Gilden Alan Goldstein Paul Creisbach John Hanan Naomi Hasimoto Wendy Hirsch Karen Hurley Connie Hyder Timothy Johnson Paul Katz Nicholas Korn Ellissa Kovacik Marion Kramer Catherine Krane Amy Kuras Elizabeth Levy David Lieberman Michael Lindsay Douglas Litsey Karen Long Margaret Marcouiller Scott Martin David Martinez Anita McCahan Rito Michel Michelle Mecheletto Adrianne Moss Mark Murdock Steven Nelson jonathon Nydick Maryellen O ' Neil David Oskandy Suzan Pasin Andy Pippas Janice Radler J. Stephen Reed Linda Reppert Robin Ropar Elena Ruocco Matthew Russell Stephanie Saunders Janine Schenone William Schiefelbein Robert Schuette John Schwendener Catherine Seei Jennifer Selwyn Renee Shively Stephen Smith Sharon Speigel Jaye Strieker Nancy Sullivan Lois Therrien Julia Walker Sheryl Weiner Elizabeth Welch Jana Lee Weldon Robert Westley Kevin Williams Judith Wood Theresa Yuschok (II 33 McCulloch n 34 II li pi 4 Northwestern Apartments I 37 Rogers House Front Row: Gloria Sanchez, Myra Wilson, Sally Deneen, Barbara Denempont, Lisa Pope, Jeanne Peterson, Rosario Terrenes. Row 2: Cindy Stone, Janice Eatman, Cyd Prine, Ellen Smith, Melise Blakeslee, Jenny Weber, Fran Schneider, Lisa Bell, Kimberly Merenkow. Back Row: Donna Cist, Leslie Krull, Joan Bara, Ellen Westerlund, Cecilia Corcoran, Jill Oset, Karen Updegrove, Anne Kurbat, Kris- ten Cuter, Sharon Janarek, Martha Mclnnes, Cabi Waelter, Sally Husak, Kira Krechevsky, lane Raveret, Debra Madura, Nancy Srb. 600 Lincoln 38 Sargent Hall P 39 Shepard Hall Biff I ' J?! Leslie IJsjVD SosjrB Ml BkJn! Gail! Miidielg SdanntW M wW, llidiaillol ' Vidoloo fiiiivM lefttvBw VidaBmlns tindaCw ' ClurlesCIri ■mOvh Coll :«P 40 Ellen Adair Jeffrey Agron John Albrecht Leslie Allen Lisa Arndt Susan Bahme David Bailey Ethan Baliff Gail Barley Mitchell Bass Suzanne Bell Sean Bercaw Jane Beresford Beth Berkowitz Martin Biggs Margaret Bischoff Richard Bolton Vicki Boone William Bratt Jeffrey Brownstein Brad Bryan John Bryant Vida Budrys Catherine Bur Linda Carroll Matthew Carter Shiow-Chwen Chen Charles Chessler Mark Chung Leslie Cohn Daryle Conners Carol Copp Alexandra Cowen David Craig Anita Cummings Sharon Davis Madelyn Dinnerstein Priscilla Dombek Stanley Drake Mitchell Duneier Charles Duster Craig Ellis Sean Enright Jane Fillman Karen Fisher Howard Fleeter Shelley Foster Suzanne Gilligan Archana Goel Robin Goldman Michael Golemo Julie Griffin Tracy Griffith Mark Grinnell Gretchen Hakola Louise Harris Bruce Harrison James Hinckley Teresa Hui Jennifer Facobson Kathryn Jaharis Ronald Kaine Bradley Kaiser Paula Kaplan John Kelly Gerald Kenney Kathryn Kerr Nabil Khododad Sam Kim Beth Kindler Kurt Koize Claudia Kunin Kenneth Kush Daria Labinsky Marc Levy Warren Levy Susan Lewis Paul Lockwood Ben Lotterstein Mark Lutz Cheryl Manes Maureen Mann Cindy Marshall Tina Martin Mimmie McArthur Patrick McClellan Lisha McDuff William McMahon Laura McMurtrey Angela McQueen Wendy Messing Deborah Michelson Peter Millar Julie Milsten Fred Monyak Cynthia Moran Hallie Morrison Susan Myers Susan Nichols Twyala Niehaus Colleen Nield Robert Oleszkiewicz Anne O ' Neil Stephan Parker Marilyn Perlman Ronald Permutt David Perry Virginia Petry Hai Pham Lorraine Platek Jeanne Popowitz Cornelia Powers Marilyn Payner Josepn Purdy K M Quattrocki Robin Rabinowitz Christina Rainville Scott Rausch John Reed Jennifer Regen Pamela Reich John Reimler Caren Reingold Peter Robbins Dionis Roggeveen Debra Rubins Beth Rudofker Leslie Sachs Daniel Sack Alex Saharovici Debra Sandlund Lauren Schadt Caryn Schneider Eric Scholl Fredric Schwartz Jed Seidel Juliet Settlemier Patricia Seyburn Jacqueline Siegel Francine Silverstein Diane Singer Neil Smith David Snell Michael Spagna Barbara Span Drew Sprague Monty Staats Elisabeth Stanley Karen Steiner Karl Strait Gary Sugarman Jeanne Sylvester Erica Szabo Joseph Thalken Rebecca Thatcher David Timmerman Kim Vanantwerpen Christine Velbel David Vickers Yvette Walker Araby Wedekind Kathy Whalen Young Whang Priscifla Whitaker Thomas Whitthorne Lynne Williams Robyn Williams Leigh Winick Paula Wolfe Mary Woodhouse Sara Yastrow Darryl Young Phillip Zee Wendy Zeligson Lisa Zimmer til 41 « 5 illard Hall 42 I 627 Dartmouth 625 Haven 625 Noyes 43 fi i ' Vg 6aT CCeSS To THe MOST ll ' Vf 3cT1 FACIA,1Y ' 44 ' vC Got -THe: FACULTyf MOST enrC STUDgisJT RoDVf 1i Fall 60 i i 45 46 fT ' lV. 1 J 1 ., : 1 Bi S M l J, 1 • .- n . ' i V lnMr r 47 IIL Vr H ■■■■m - ' M S ' , H H H h m f 3 K. H %v P5 Cx 1 r : fl ■fi 48 50 I 51 IJ- Is 52 H9 B ' ' Kl 1 H - ' r H BVI K ' I HI i. -v ' f ■■■n M Uk| M i ' t l lgl Pumpkin Prom 53 Vli mmmmmmmmmp •I 58 ir I m • (xiHV POU ' T THgV 6K1KIG AiOV (Soco coioceftrs to ca v pus ' ? 60 Entertainment iJSx? I MAv TH BOVIM6 PDwe f TH6 Bl ACTS (So ' STEfli6HT It) CH CA60! OoeLL TTHeKJ COHAT DO OoGT poooN) th£: wall 61 «illllii 62 63 Backstage 64 : 65 T?f Project 71 - WNUR ' s marathon for M.D 67 Wonderful Town 68 Ruth Sherwood: Susan Parlee Eillen Sherwood: Michelle Nicastro Bob Baker: Bradley Keating Wreck: Kevin Haladay Helen: Cheri Butcher Appopolous: Dan Shuman Chick Clark: Thad Gentry Frank Lippencott: Tom Galantich Mrs. Wade: Renee Rogers Speedy Valenti: Chris Heuben Lonigan: Lynn Hausser Violet: Cathryn Michon Fred Hanson: Producer Wiley Hausam: Director Larry Shanker: Musical Director 69 Bekka Eaton John Goodrich Mark Lancaster Bill L opatto Julia Louis-Dreyfuss Mike Markowitz Ken Marks Rod McLachlan Sandy Snyder And Larry Shanker on piano I 71 li Phoebe Meryll: Jennifer Myers 3 ilfred Shadbolt: Dan Allar Dame Carruthers: Debra Sandlund Sergeant Meryll: Bradley Keating Leonard Meryll: Dennis QHare Colonel Fairfax: John Uhlenhopp Jack Point: Sean Grennan Elsie Maynard: Gayle Royko Producer: Ellen Dubinsky Director: Tom Illgen Music Director: David Thomas Set Designer: Walter Saunders Costume Designer: Gwyn Shopland Lighting Designer: Margaret Nelson Prince: Steven Huffines Bartender: Smash Pardee Julie: Jennifer Myers Walt: Dennis O ' Hare Debbie: Susan Wapner Ned: David Simpatico Producer: Nancy Prahofer Stage Director: Joel Baird Musical Director: Julienne Romeo A AIT UNTIL DARK Mike Talman: Michael Stevenson Sgt. Carlino: Benjamin Turoff Harry Roat: Ethan Bowen Susy Hendrix: Sarah Partridge Sam Hendrix: James Kail Gloria: Judy Kaplan Producer: Louise Adler Director: Elizabeth Ramsland Set Designer: Joel Baird Lighting Designer: Brian Bailey Costume Designer: Sara Davidson Danny: J.H. Tucker Smith Bernard: Michael Markowitz Deborah: Wendy Gazelle Joan: Annbeth Eschbach Producers: Peggy Walter Jon Nakagawa Director: Robert Knepper Set Design: Joel Baird You ' re a Good Man, Charlie Brown Marvin leby - Linus Randall Flagg - Charlie Brown Delores Brown - Patty Steven Beavers - Snoopy Candace Taylor - Lucy John Jones - Schroeder ' ' -- Story, Lyrics by lerry Aronoff Ira Besserman Dan Payne: Rob Kessler l ura Blitzman: Tara Starcevich Mel Blitzman: Harry Aithaus Gertie Robbins: Merideth Hinsler Herb Robbins: Will Tizzard Melissa: Beth Gellman Jake Finchley: Richard Samson Cindy Sprout: Smash Pardee Thomas: Rob Anderson and Chorus Producer: Ira Besserman Director: Steve Perlmytter Choreographer: Carl Sumpter Sets Lights : Walter Saunders Musical Director: Dale Bieling MYSELF, I VHT N.U.D.E. Ann Baylor Lynn Brown Yie-Hsin Hung Angela McAlpin Darren Perkins Nancy Sapian Brenda Shoss Sharon Wiggins Producer: Peggy Walter Director: Ann Baylor Lighting Designer: Laura Sunkel Costume Designers: Sara Davidson Marilyn Goldberg 72 N U Dance Ensemble ■S K ' H 73 Yeoman of the Guard 1 ] K W ' ' M i 1 1 W ' .ml Rodney Dangerfield 80 I 81 Eugene McCarthy 1 ¥ t David Broder 83 85 « 87 IS CHeC lMGOUT 6ltEEKU« TONKS«Tf V ::t y£AH He tAjEiOT TO A p5k) ' T ' Ml II 88 Hey (suis[ wete we s-aji K)-TvigMALi.! Amp we ' s 7 FLASTEREOlj Greeks frt suBss THIS meams THeV VOKi ' T UMMT Hl - JTT - 89 Greek Life 90 ' ' ' l i. ' l i ' 1., r- A £xcHA V6 - tui-ri- S(Fx ThieME To Be ANN00 IC6l ■I •■,) ' I 91 93 Acacia 94 Sm .Ipha Chi Omega Front Row: Brenda Robinson, Lori Kass, Kim Crawford, Lorraine Novas, Marian Sassetti, Deirdre McCowan, Jill Lauren, Susan Lowell, Kendra Healy, Janet Lundstrom, Laura Smith, Karen Karu, Linda Wiesenthal, Laura Cross, Leah Metcalf, Karen Hyatt, Elizabeth Slass, Susan Kennedy, DeedeeRodolitz, Nina Kessler, Catherine Brooks, Laura Dold. Back Row: Denise O ' Connor, Lisa Maras,Jeane Walsh, Donna Messina, Alisa Alpert, DanaMicucci, Susan Sharp, Sharon Spivak, Desi Sater, Leslie Cugino, Brenda Friedman, Catherine Cornell, Sandy Anderson, Tempe Twohey, Kimberly Kumiega, Jane Fillman, Patty Lewis, Linda Carroll, Dusti Demerest, June McClean, Janice Radler, Jessica Perry, Jennifer Shaeoul, Linda McManes, Alisa Stern, Ellen Pealman, Wendy de Monchaux, Diane Murk, Lori Brumond, Cindy Christianson, Margy Beclay, Cindy Jacob, Teri Berg. 95 1. Alpha Delta Phi Strata Athanassiades John Blondis Bob Bricks Brad Cartile Rich Clatch lack Cohen Mark Drusch Jim Fulton Rob Galbreath Bob Guillen David Hipfel Randy lewell Russ lohns Mike Kutchik Rick LaFollette |eff Larson Rich Lemanski Walt Lewis Dave Linder Mark Lindgren lerry Lockhart Bob Malandruccolo Eric Manzon |im Moore Gordon Moriarty Mark Murdock Greg O ' Leary Mark Pasterski Scott Rausch Greg Richardson John Roth Mike Ruse John Sinadinos John Talbot Wally Wasyliw Duncan Weber Barry Weis Dave Williams Drake Winters Howard Wolfe 96 97 98 Alpha Epsilon Phi i Front Row: Lisa Lopez, Dana Lisook, Betsy Rabkin, Susan Epstein, Carol Pegnato. Row 2: Nancy Block, Maripat Cerring, Deanne Kaplan, Jennifer Poor, Sheryl Barrese. Row 3: Andre Wastrel!, Saralee Melnick, Angela McAlpIn, Michelle Frankenstein, Robin Scala. Row 4: Ruth Rome, Jill Kosmin, Julie Schwartz, Debbie Frohman, Theresa Lipo, Kristin Burt. Row 5: Marcia Geiderman, Laura Warner, Tina Rosneberg, Sue Yarosh, Karen Mohr, Robbie Kaatz. Back Row: Sherri Piatt, June Seliber, Leah Moskowitz, Kathy Rutkowski, Karen Arnovitz, Sharon Vinikour, Holly Maxson. Not Pictured: Katie Bledsoe, Randi Claassen, Leslie Cochrane, Jaye Firmature, Judy Kaplan, Erica Lehman, Mary LeCere, Jane Norins, Lori Robb, Laurie Schatz, Andrea Blanchard, Elaine Hamrick, Ellen Holzman, Natalie Moss, Sandy Turicek. V ¥ 1 . Ellen Westerlund, 2. Kathy Willertz, 3. MyrleCroasdale, 4. Barb Stanton, 5. Karen Steiner, 6. Kathy Cox, 7. Sue Bollinger, 8. Pam Bergkamp, 9. Melanie McLean, 10. Diane D ' Antonio, 1 1 . Gail Barley, 1 2. Sue Baiyor, 13. Pam Marschall, 14. Diane Barnes, 15. Shana Fligniger, 16. Shar- on Lindner, 17. Dale Ishida, 18. Ann Schoenherr, 19. Sue Lunn, 20. Sue Lacey, 21. Linda Goertz, 22. Colette Stig- lich, 23. Nancy Arnston, 24. Jill McLane, 25. Mary Gelder- nick, 26. Vivian Keeler, 27. Barb Deacon, 28. Kelly Baker, 29. Karen Cecil, 30. Sharon Mazzarella, 3 1 . Donna Boyle, 32. Sandi Dreger, 33. Jean Lindburg, 34. Martha Stegner, 35. Nancy Nazarian, 36. Viki Lanpert, 37. M.T. Strzalka, 38. Michelle Jenquin. f vt is 99 Alpha Phi Front Row: Tori Bowen, Susan Malkoff, Patricia Magee, Robin Levinson, Lori Montgomery, Kathryn Morrison, Lynn Eriandson, Jaye Strieker, Leslie Black, Carol Helferich, Elizabeth Hingsbergen. Row 2: Cathleen Hainer, Elizabeth latarola, Lucy Sievers, Robyn Hopkins, Alison Stime, Sevgi Aykent, Cheryl Maggert, Elizabeth Meinert, Mary Phillips, Yvonne Milewski, Amy Konishi, Susan Anderson. Row 3: Caria Deaton, Marilynn Goldberg, Michelle Meininger, Joan Mulian, Belynda Dawson, Lise Miller, trudi Kahlenberg, Sue Barnett, Elizabeth Levy, Beth Baumgartner, Mary Anne Coulter, Barbara Peters, Beth Riemer, Wendy Williams. Row 4: Mary Beth Bowen, Lynne Brinker, Janet Klein, Brenda Gortney, Laurie Borgers, Darlene Gavron, Tracy Taub, Anne Paulson, Rima Prakash, Jacqueline Pongracic, Susan Baker, Pamela Meinert, Tracy Howell. Back Row: Anne Martinek, Marv Milota, Virginia Hartman, Anne Stark, Margaret Reicker, Susan Tinnish, Ann Hutchinson, Patricia Acha, Jeanne Lang, Sharon Luboff, Barbara Baker. Not Pictured: Ellen Auerback, Lynda Baldwin, Elizabeth Bandera, Melise Blakeslee, Mary Boyer, Cynthia Brightfield, Amy Caplan, Connie Erickson, Melanie Codschall, Monique Hammond, Susan Horswell, Michelle laffaldano, Elizabeth Jensen, Cynthia Juco, Ann Kotlarski, Regina Lasko, Jane Lauer, Sue Levitt, Audrey Lvon, Martha McKee. Ann McKenzie, Carolvn Marshall, Julie Milsten, Heidi Olsen, Joanne Pappas, RandaSabbagha, CherieSchoonover, KimberlySchugart, Betsy Sheets, Linda Shimp, Karen Stack, Louise Shackleton, Christi Tillman, Cretchen Wehrenberg, Beth Whitehouse, Kim Yaffee. 100 if||,Mic jliflMarikjII. 101 Alpha Tau Omega Seniors: Front Row: Steve Morrill, Mark Adrian, Brett Carver (President), DaveMantovani, Chris Patterson. Back Row: Bill Draznik, Peter Haley, Bob Fowler, )im Pannunzio (Historian), Kevin Conway, Scott Magnesen (Co-Rush Chairman), Chuck Schultz, Tom McGlade (House Manager), Tom North (Treasurer). 1980 Spring and Fall Pledges: Front Row: Peter Bellis, Tony Gingo (Pledge Class President), George Sarikos, John Bareiss, Fred Levin. Row 2: Jim Bertelsen, Mike Wiley, Markus Klimenko, Laird Kol- dyke, Carey Calderone. Back Row: Paul Tingley, Mike Mosetick, Gregg Popp, Drew Brown, Mike Taylor. 102 I Sophomores: Front Row: Mike Rudnick, Steve Gill, George Sarikos, Tom Haleas. Row 2: Paul Tingley, Neil Golden. Back Row: Mike Boehm. Juniors: Front Row: Shep Weisman (Secretary), Leon Silverstein, Malcolm Proudfoot (Co-Rush Chairman), Chris Thompson (Pledge Trainer), Kevin Comolli. Row 2: Chuck Gattone, Dave Howell, Matt Martin, Matt Taylor, Chris Smith, Gary Siegel (Vice President). Back Row: Mark Byrne (Social Chairman), Steve Bogan, John Nowakowski, Mark Levin. 103 Alpha Kappa Alpha Front Row: Naomi King, Helane Davis, Karen Brown, Donna Gist, Sonya Gunnings. Row 2: Wendy Peterkin, Jori Gillis, Adrienne l?ay, Marguerite Martin, Amber Cheatham, Theresa Willie, Jane Seawood, Linda Cornelous, Christy Shanks, Not Pictured: Debra Boone, Allyson Cressie, Charese Jordan, Linda Williams. f 104 Beta Theta Pi ill, lindi , r 105 Chi Omega The Chi Omega Symphony To live constantly above snobbery of word or deed; to place scholarship before school obligations and character before ap- pearances; to be, in the best sense, democratic rather than ex- clusive, and lovable rather than popular ; to work earnestly, to speak kindly, to choose thoughtfully that course which oc- casion and conscience demand; to be womanly always; to be discouraged never; in a word, to be loyal under any and all cir- cumstances to my Fraternity and her highest teachings and to have her welfare ever at heart that she may be a symphony of high purpose and helpfulness in which there is no discordant note. written by NU Chi Omega Ethel Switzer Howard during her pledgeship in 1904 Front Row: Lisa Bell, Bonnie Wolf, Sherry Krsticevic, Karen Moses, Beth Leech, Liz Wilson. RowTwo:Niki Nicholas, KathySandlund, DebDimon, Lori Burford, Sara Hippe, Cigi Mieike, Liane Anderson, Daria Marino, Row Three: Sar a Churgin, Paula Smith, Missy Semmes, Anne Loomis, Theresa Altimar, Joyce Larcom, Cathy Seei, Kim Hren, Marcy Roe, Toni Prestigiacomo, Julie Allison. Row Four: Barb Ringness, Pam Grove, Debbie Maura, Jackie Walsh, Joanie Bara, MollieTe Vrucht, Nanako Mura, Esther Kawano, Llora Kendall, Sue Klaren, Beth Ann Riley, Diane Singer. Row Five: Diane Barone, Debra Kampen, Jenny Myers, Arta Faramand, Lisa Palumbo, Kathy Fagerburg, Julie Froelich, Helen Moon, Nancy Sagena, Sara O ' Daffer, Denise Fleming, Susie Kravits, Barb Barsamian, Carol Want, Cathy Bur, Pam Guyton. Row Six: Cathy Deamant, Regina Shaw, Debbie Smith, Johanna deVryer, Maria Photos, Liz Lindberg, Judy Conway, Rhonda Love, Alice Robertson, Tammy Malo, Florence Kimm, Judy Mason. Row Seven: Lynn Nosal, Lawrie Graves, DeeDee Flores, Judy Hettler, Carolyn Wapnick, Cathy Grysin, Robin Remich, Marilyn Minchk, Sue Evashavik, Darlene Asp, Sandy Honsa, Tracey White. Row Eight: Conny Stimmler, Tracy Livingston, Diane Maestronzi, Cathy Porcellato. 106 ' ■' ■' !- -■' ?- ' 5 V- ' i f tfi- ' -■' . iag g ?S gftig £i WllieTe «s,W r.C l ,lllnfila (1. Diane Chi Phi I I I 1 . Landy Kampf 2. Kraig White 3. Tom Sinski 4. Ed Smith 5. Dan Clausner 6. Howie Weiss 7. Joe Levi 8. Bill McRobb 9. Ken Dickerson 1 0. Doug Bender 1 1 . Dave Sachs 12. MikeLevinson 13. Pete Sakol 14. Rob Ceiger 15. Jeff Staab 16. Fred Wilms 17. Matt Menghini 18. Carlos Zambrano 19. Terry Thompson 20. Loren Dunn21.BobHaney22.NedMurray23.RobEsser24.SamirSawabini25.KerrySmith26. Bob Fedinets27. Jerry Caruso 28. Tommy Caubatz 29. Peter Castiglia 30. Bob Hokanson 31 . Sam Lee 32. Dave Greene 33. Bob Kunimura 34. Mike Miskin 35. John Mandell 36. John Kelly 37. Rich Pallarino 38. Gary Hinnmgson 39. Alan Buchman, Not Pictured: Ted Papenthien, Marcus Carbajal, Randy Hahn. 108 ,« iib Chi Psi 109 Louise Adier Karen Albert Val Arkoosh Beth Arky Rose Armesto Lisa Arnold Beth Berkowitz Renee Betzelos Ann Bradley Carol Bradley Yvonne Broswell Ladonna Bridges Kathy Burnside Nancy Campbell Cindy Carlborg Julia Chung Ann Clock Kate Collins Laura Connor Kathi Davis Nancy Dillingham Caroline Donahue Jeannie Eggleston Maureen Ellis Peggy Folz Erma Gattie Melinda Ceertz Cathy Gilbert Jill Gilbert Darcy Cruber Sue Haberstroh Sue Hague Lisa Hammerman Ellen Herring Jill Higgins Joan Hinkes Ginger Hinkhouse Kelly Hughes Vicki Jader Kathy Jaharis Carrie Jennings Shayne Johnson Lily Jung Carol Kayser Sue Keller Becky Kessinger Julie Kim Joan King Jill Kocorirek Lori Kosberg Felisse Kotick Lani Label le Karen Larson Kim Lindstrom Kathy Mahalick Colleen Major Carol McGinnis Chris McKiernan Dana Mendel Carolyn Miller Karen Miller Carolyn Moses Allison O ' Gush Vicki Olivera Liz Olson Julie Parks Cindy Patrick Lisa Phipps Anna Pomiak Mary Helen Poivers Delta Delta Delta Caroline Prochotsky Pam Rasmusson Pam Rea Kathy Reese Sara Reynolds Joanna Rose Jane Rosenberg Jean Rutter Fran Schneider Pam Shimrack Jackie Sieros Liz Sitterly Jill Snyder Sue Snyder Jennifer Stone Nancy Srb Nancy Thomas Nancy G. Thomas Stacy Upton Karen Ursin Pam Van Summern Nancy Voigts Tina Von Cramm Peggy Walter Leigh Ann Winick Honi Woodside 110 Ill Delta Gamma Seniors: Front Row: Jane Gundell, Maureen Taylor, Margy Waller, Kathy Faber, Rachel Stahlka, Karen O ' Leary, Nilda Mesa, Renee Sedor. Back Row: Hilary Downe, Melanie Salvesen, Katie Grundin, Julie Derks, Ellen Jones. Not Pictured: Cathy Cregier, Annbeth Eschbach, Diane Reick, Caroliese Schmidt, Carrie Smith, Kathy Spitz. Sophomores: Front Row: Carolyn Spengler, Carolyn Bell, Suz McColley. Row 2: Coleen Gallagher, Jean MacDonald, Carolyn Clark, Patricia Gorman, Cathy Davis. Row 3: Roya Sohaey, Jeanne Williams, Jill Weinstock, Susan Bahme, Mary Retzler, Allison Oelbaum, Cheryl Lipton. Back Row: Darly Korotkin, Kathy King, Kathy Ray, Nancy Myers, Debbie Furman. Not Pictured: Julia Louis-Dreyfuss, Jackie Siegel, Monique Stelling, Jean Stiles. 112 Juniors: Front Row: Cretchen Bender, Lisa Montgomery, Sandy Shapiro, Nancy Haar, Mary Lee Donahue, Laura Matalon. Row 2: Olga Pribyl, Jill Goldschmidt, Beth Zur, Karina Richter, Martha Edelson, Sue Badri, Cynthia Allman. Back Row: Anne Brixie, Renu Carg, Kim Dymsza, Gayle Corthin- os. Sue Myers, Helen Aherri, Valerie Kramer, Sally Daker. Not Pictured: Ginny Croskeny, Betsy Foutch, Ruth Kang, Joan Kraft, Donna Shratter. Freshmen: Front Row: Maureen Mann, Joyce Gar- baciak, Muffy Levin. Row 2: Janet Sussman, Laura Fuhrman, Lisa Erd, Patricia Jennings, Susan Hill. Row 3: Renee Raab, Wendi Messing, Lisa Fare- marth. Back Row: M.R. Gafill, Randy Rosen, Kathryn Walker, Maria Schiff, Claudia Weissman, Anne O ' Shaughnessy. Not Pictured: Sally Kitch- en, Dagny Rutstein, Diane Sherman, Marianne Wolk. ' KuCoffl] ' ' 113 -J Front Row: Rhonda Edwards, Tam- mara Roberson, Brenda Darden, Carole White, Lucra Hicks, Renee Lenzy. Back Row: Lajeune Belcher, Vllandria King, Donna Williams, Irene Richardson, Linda Redd. Delta Sigma Theta Delta Tau Delta Front Row: Andy Dobzyn, Jeff Blackard, Peter Cohen, Jim Carpenter. Row 2: Greg Schoonover, Bill Kobak (Secretary), Nels Jensen, Chas. Weisman, LonSatnik. Row 3: Brad Berger, Dave Kawala, Mike Fiandaia, Mark Duffy, Duane Gabb, Jan Balabuszko (House Manager). Row 4: Tom Miller, Kurt von Moltke (Social Chairman), Don van der Wei I (Treasurer), John Mullen (President), Kirk Ludtke, Steve Gelderman, Keith Ryan (Rush Chair man), Lobo(Dog), Marco Burgos, Neil Chaukin, Hector Gonzales, Jim Stack, Jim Swanson (Correspondence). Back Row: BobSquillante, Bart Goldman (Pledge Trainer), DaveBertel, John Weiss (Vice President), Todd Evans, Hugh Bleemer, Paul Ross, Jim Lesch ((Pledge Class President), Bob Whitley. 115 s ■Delta Upsilon Front Row: Lou Kvitek, Steve Speranza. Row Two: Steve DeBruler, Tim Lestingi, Jim Menton, Mike Horney, Eugene Lim. Row Three: Ron Hiiicki, Gary Rosenbaum, Steve Rohr, Bob Averill, Steve Laughlin, BobClaus. Row Four Chris Reardon, Mike Turner, Jim Mayer, Steve Peterson, Mark Abrams, DaveTankin. 116 I Front Row: Mike Norman, Jon Schaffzin, Doug Anderson, Mark Freedgood, Mike Butler. Row Two: John Dosch, Tom Maul, Bill Carter, Bill Anton, Brett Cover, Bob Chamberlain. Row Three: Aaron Kvitek, Dan Starkman, Scott Clesman, Bob Chetlin, Lars Kula, Gerald Powers. 117 T Delta Zeta Front Row: Kathy Whalen, Shelly Shely, Kathy Ferguson, Ellen Lesser, Lisa Fritz, Margaret Folz, Jeanne Peterson. Row 2: Carolyn Shufeldt, Nora Fitzgerald, Helen Haynes, Ann Leine, Mona Eisman, Mimi Cranat. Row 3: Bonni Zarfos, Kathy Pidany, Jenny Lin, Naomi Sigler, Debbie Baker. Back Row: Cindy Deith,Toni Kissel, llene Knopping, Karen Baker, Barb Lowry, Debbie Medansky, jeriann Getzin, Karen Ragguci, Deb Nelson, Sue Rieck, Robin Rabinowilz. f Front Row: Lori Reineke, Heidi Rosenbaum, Cindy Le, Sherry Shoults. Row 2: Alexandra Cowen, Claire Roth, Tina Lai, Chris Ramatowski, Tracy OhI, Ellen Silverman, Estelle Beligratis. Row 3: Karen Halbach, Jane Camplejohn, Mary Beth Madewell, Maria Gonzalez, Jackie Klein. Back Row: Terry Nakagawa, Mary Beth Samuel, Mimi Lai, Janice Tonoko, Julie McNeil, Mary-Carol Kooi, Mary Lu Merkelis, Diane Chernin, Cathy Hammer. feniij 118 .yi.iL Not Pictured: Tracy Benson, Vicki Boone, Lesley Boyne, Melanie Budil, Kathy Carlis, Cathy Christoff, Kathy Engelmann, Paulette Flahavin, Julie Grosse, Sharon Grutzmacher, Karen Hagmann, Joan Hamby, Brett Martin, Sandy Moczydlowski, Lyn Munder, Cindy Murphy, Lisa O ' Connor, Leila Onbargi, Lynn Paxton, Dinah Perez, Barb Rich, Paula Romberg, Diane Ruggie, Dalene Searls, Mary Semmelhack, Jenny Smith, Carolyn Thompson, Micki Tutush, Irene Wallaert, Araby Wedekind. Evans Scholars •V Front Row: Mike Murphy, Mike Widera, Pat Morrissey, Guy Quandt, Steve Novotny, Fred Osborne, Jim Reilly. Row 2: Jay Zwieg, Larry Meger, Mark Mowinski, Carmen Dodaro, George Boudreau, Bob Moriarty. Row 3: Tim Conroy, Chuck Yancey, John McGann, Carl Cepuran,Joe Biggio. Row 4: Larry Jones, Adam Kerman, Ron Hrad, Kevin McCoy, Sean Daughtridge, Bob Berger, Richard Witt. Back Row: (alone in the corner) Pat O ' Brien. n.PauleUe iMunde ' , (Dale 119 Gamma Phi Beta Front Row: Mary Hotter, Patti Lyn Hutchings, Sarah Stelle, Linda Bloch, Carole Morey. Row 2: Beth Holmes, Cathy Soper, Nancy Shimberg, )ane Hath- away, Elise Lin, Patty WItkovich, Alta Mekaelian, Laura McMurtrey, Elizabeth Horan, Tina Rainville, Judy Dokley, Karia Kaufmann, Anne Poggemann, Stacey Shinkle, Becky Raftery. Row 3: Linda Hess, Alicia Meadois, Sandy Smith, Martha Mclnnes, Julie Kock, Terri Loderer, Laura Sokol, Karen Snyder. Front Row: Kathryn Worden, Renee Sowa, Karen James, Laura Criesmer, Barb DiGiulio, Laura Carlson, Kandace Hawkinson. Row 2: Jennifer Achuck, Bev Graf, Elaine Kondelis, Andrea Woolard, Karen Seibert, Nancy Noyes, Claudia Friederici, Elyce Zahn, Andrea Taylor, Suzanne Lockwood. Row 3: Emily Baker, Lynne Matteson, Cindy Manick, Melissa Scott, Karen Pelling, Marta Gonzalez, Ann Whinnery, Elspeth Bloodgood. Anne Kingsley, Joy Kniffin, Amv Boli, Kathy Pfister, Cherly Richmond, Lynn Houston, Sonia Verges. Row 4: Debi Spoerk, Sheila Oancea, Karen Deam, Jackie Meure, Mary Ellen Kohler, Nancy Lutz, Patty McKiel, Cathy Easter, Loyd. Not Pictured: Laura Augustyniak, Tracy Ball, Julie Calahan, Mary Karsten, Ellen Lynch, Pam Meyers, Joanne McKenzie, Anne Nusser, Mary Pelton, Vicki Rian, Carol Shure, Irene Tatara, Liz Welch. ■120 Kappa Alpha Psi Center: John Jones. Left to Right: Vincent Rhodes, Rod Archer, Gregory Hodge, Gerald Green, Danny Scotten, Wade Griffith, Brian Pharr, Steven Scott, Bryan Green. Welch. 121 m Kappa Alpha Theta Front Row: Lisa Danyluk, Barb Kershner, Cristy Burnham, Liz HubbeL Row Two: Dana Anderson, Jessica Dowell, Sue Schleif, Leann Kleinmann, Nancy Sher- man. Row Three: Linda Ettleson, Ann Dan. Row Four: Joan Colmar, Jeanne Bishop, Barb Hudzik, Sharon EiseL 122 Front Row: Patti Grimm, Ellie Sachs, Chamie Grandy, Katie Conover. Row Two: Dian Mutz, Alden Hayes, Stephanie Thomases, Peggy Bischoff, Courtney Lord, Leslie Peters, Audrey Laimans, Heidi Kuhn, Jane Kleinmann, Susan Miller. Row Three: Karen Fisher, Melissa Dougherty, Kristy Olds, Ginny Vath, Julie Hayward, Susan Debes, Cece Cox, Julia Horn, Sally Schley, Maria Koclanis, Lynn McPadden, Kirsten Tekula. Front Row: Marcy Cox, Liz Cordon, Beth Farman, Cindy Watts, Sally O ' Toole. Row Two: Chris Olson, Elaine Paul, Becky Chalk, Laurie Schadt, Sue Slagte, Anne Gordon, Row Three: Jennifer Dunn, Mar- garet Quinlan, Sue Coda, Karen Lundeen, Marci Cittleman, jane Raveret, Rebecca Purnell, Liz Brick, Cynthia Cox. Row Four: Susan Halter, Amy Nusser. LynnMcPa Front Row: Maryl Falen, Anne Thomas, Anne Schoening, Sheree Taylor. Row Two: Michelle Nicastro, Sally Bartholomay, Marie Miyashiro, Laurie Cullberg, Lydia Griffith. Row Three: Lydia Chopivsky, Julie Jacobs, Mardi Macomber, Tracy Robertson, Karen Bisonet, Ines Laimens, Birit Haglund, Robin Rabinowitz, Laura Basta. 123 ll! Front Row: Shari Sigman, Lisa Krepps. Row 2: Sarah Partridge, Melissa Page, Amy Lindburg, Cindy Bradley, Allison Cliemi, Helen Taylor, Mimi Barry, Won Kim, Pam Nuytkens, Cindy Straub, Mary Puchner, Amy Williams, Eleanor Whiting, Ellen ZIotnick, Laurie Kirschner. Row 3: Tricia Zadeik, Caria Ruben, Tina Curran, Sara Burkoff, Carolyn Bolz, Margaret Nagle, Mrs. Williamson, Marcia Andersen, Stephanie Frie, Nadine Fox, Janice Veech, Mimi Hodgkins, Karen Buetler, Amy Zadeik, Cindy Tjarksen. Mill 124 %jtA Row 4: Mary Beth Phillips, Shannon Downing, Susan Hodgkins, Virginia Hill, Delisa Artoe, Cyanne Chutkow, Liz Sherman, Ann Vartuli, Laura Lazoff, Stacie Boney, Allison Constantine, Polly Edelson, Debbie Schaulm, Sara Yastrow, Stephanie Kramer. Row 5: Sherrill Hudson, Annetta Hewko, Cathy Bolz, Beth Eames, Holly Creenberger, Sharon Twersky, Melinda Stolley, Winifred Conkling, Elisa Howard, Janet Knutel, Leigh Thompson, Cindy Franklin, Heather Winch, Ann Boucarous, Julie Settlemier, Karen Jenkins, Elyse Erickson, Georgia Kolletis, Linnea Yurick, Liz Ramsland. 125 Kappa Delta Front Row: Deirdre Shea, Cathy Cohn, Judy Chan, Maura Ward, Kathleen Yuen. Row 2: Jocelyn Beckman, Linda Moy, Valerie Young, Joy Adier, Helene Zinberg, Karen Shiffman, Tammy Gray, Nancy Prahofer, Cindy Troiano, Mary Vankerrebrook, Linda Meyer. Back Row: Jeanne Brei, Lisa Nimz, Wanda Koppenhafer, Lisa Shifrin, GIna Kaso, Carol Kramer, Ginny Stowell, Lisa Bacher. 126 Front Row: Judy Zeka, Deirdra Shea, Mary Beth Altan. Row Two: Marsha Halajian, Caria Casavecchia, Julie Romeo, Nancy Prahofer. £ Lambda Chi Alpha II Front Row: Mike Quinlan, Rasta, Rob Orlick. Row 2: Steve Schwartz, Mark Swanson, John Steward, Brett Gitskin, Terry Abad. Row 3: Jack Sommerville, Larry Ball, Don Gross, Jeff Shaw, Mike Allen, Bill Erickson. Row 4: Frank Mann (Alumni Advisor), Bob Haider, Theron Ward, John Gatewood, Andy Cox, Chris Duros, Ed Jensen, Jay Curran, Leroy Kim, Chris Wanha, Jeff Butler, Rich Hudspeth. Back Row: Cody Festerling, George Wunder, Bob Sutterfield, Jason Poe, Alex Rowady, Scott Schlagenhauf, Bob Pederson, Pete Drieske, Roger Jensen, Terry Reiff. 127 Omega Psi Phi friendship is essential to the soul The Omega Psi Phi Fraternity was organized on a cold and rainy Friday evening, November 17, 1911. Up thirteen flights of stairs in the office of Ernest E. Just, Professor of Biology, Howard University; the organizers, three students in the College of Liberal Arts met to lay the groundwork for the first black fraternity at Howard University. The purpose, to build a strong and effective force of men, dedicated to principles of manhood, scholarship, perseverance, and uplift. A group capable of giving expression to the hopes and aspirations of an unfree people in the land of the free. Today a nationwide organization. Omega Psi Phi Fraternity Inc. remains a community service organization. ; dona ■' o ' essorof f of men, fsltip, ' giving free people Pnization, Tnunityseivice Phi Kappa Sigma rr i ; • Allen Adelman Don Feliczek Chris Millen Larry Shin Scott Altmayer Lee Freedman J.D. Miniear John Skelly Constanline Boukldis Bill Borski Joe Mollick Jeff Smidt Joel Brasch Phil Hale Joe Morris Hugh Steiner Dieter Bruns Kamran Hashemi Greg Oster Frances Troppe John Bradley John Izzo Mike PattinatI Dick Voss Ron Burgess Phil Jurkowich Vinnie Petrini Bill Wilson Jeff Carroll Steve Keen Predrag Radulowacki Chris Witt Santiago Candocia Harold Keer Bob Rogala Paul Saftzman Brad Wroblewski Max Dragon! Alf Langan Phil Lathrop Dave Zaieta Ed DellicarpinI Larry Schertz Mark Zimmerman Jeff Doidge John Loper John Schramm Rob Feldt John Mikrut Greg Schwem I 129 f Phi Delta Theta 130 j 131 Phi Kappa Psi Front Row: Andrew Ade, Doug Moffitt, Mark Lillie, Paul Huckelberry, Chris Shaner, John Kovac. Row 2: Mark Steele, Kip Perry, Bill Meyer, John Enquist, Tom Errath, Mark McArthur, Jay Windsor, Mike Pierce, John Schachte, Tom Peckham, Tom O ' Neill. Row 3: Kent Newcomb, Bob Rosenbaum,Phil Donaldson. Row 4: Doug Banister, Curt Anderson, Paul Tichy, Steve Stark, Dale Raar, Bob McMurray, Mark Kirby, Doug Baike, Neal DeYoung. Back Row: Rob Rauth, John Tautwein, Paul Nordstrom, Chris Heifer, Rob Coldrich, Jim Kolbe, Rick Shedd, Larry Michel, Paul Burtis. Not Pictured: jim Lillie, Ricky Jadin, Dave Goddard, Dave Anderson, Mike Feikes, Rob Clessner, Jim Highland, Jeff Leon, Jim Morris, Mike Roy, Mike McCormick, Tim Joranko, Blake Lynch. 132 £ Pi Kappa Alpha Front Row: Ian S. Azrikan, Richard Huyge, Andrew See, Bruce E. Katz. Row 2: Geoff Arnold, Eric France, Jeff Watkins, Jay Stein, Joseph Broski. Row 3: Randall Miller, Craig Zucker, K. Thoma s McClelland, Marion Klingler, Clair Lane, Mark Lyons. Back Row: Richard McMasters, H. Brandon Guest, George Gottenbusch, Michael Cucka, David Murcek, Vincent Oberholtzer. 10 133 Pi Beta Phi Front Row: Susan Nichols, Ann Cranberry, Hil- da Contreras, Lise Lustgarten, Lori Turk, Susan Siegal. Row 2: Meg Benringen, Linda Ciprella, Mariann Wolf, Regina Morrow, Sue Maiers. Row 3: Mary Jean Witt, Judy Solomon, Chris Feldt, Susie Olt, Barb Wright, Back Row: Rosie Schumacher, Mary Vondrak, Roni Davis, Mariann Bos. Front Row: Adrienne Driftmier, Elaine Cantz, Karen Kauper, Dianna Yarzagaray, Joy Fiorini, Jennifer Julian. Row 2: Marilyn Perlman, Catherine Vojdik, Carola Del Rio, Michelle Przybylski, Julie Tatooles, Laurie Zeeb. Back Row: Amy Roberts, Lisa Craig, Jane Fingliss, Mara Horwitz, Gina Tabachi, Donna Tasch, Katie Quattrocki. front ((« 134 JCi Sigma Delta Tau Front Row-seated: Jenny Regen, Rita Bailee, Bethe Lehman, Robin Frados, Hallie Morrison, Michelle Sobel, Debbie Lee, Sheryl Schubert. Back Row: Kristin Blomquist, Debbie Regen, Jenifer Schall, Penny Jucowics, Lisa Shashek, Francie Click, Julie Dean, Laura Maione, Daria Labinsky, Jackie Lippman, Amy Hausknect, Sharon Appel, Stephanie Sugin, Rhonda Jasperson, Fran Silverstein, Vicki Boros. 135 ? Sigma Alpha Epsilon Front Row: Dave Meyers, Jack Miller, Phil Reid, Cam Findlay, Drew Lucurell,Tim Regan, Dave Slavin, Tom Schieble, Scott Peterson, Tod Francis. Row 2: Joe Kelsh, Jim Popkin, Mitch Loveman, John Bredar, Rich Finkleman, Mark Ollmann, Brett Willberg, Dan Goldberg, Mike Steen, John Ellis, Joe Balistreri, Paul Maenner, Jim White, Bill Bindley, Frank Yanan, Earl Feng. Mli( 136 Row 3: Bob Peters, Charles Potter, Roger Mader, Dave Wasson, Mike Geraciotti, Eric Mogentale, Bob Rae, Todd Porterfield, Derrick Crava, Lee Lewis, Dave Portman. Not Pictured: George Varney, Jim Lynch, Rich Lewis, Steve Bonebrake, Bob Hodgkins, Bob Howington, Bill Dierberger, Steve Quamme, Todd Newberger, Gerry Grant, Cas Griglik, John Henderson, Dave Hoffman, Chuck Kern, Bill Weir, Bruce Ringstrand, Lee Styslinger, Rob Bonebrake, James Peck, Mark Wohlgenant. i 137 T . 9 iL M Pl v , ' % 11 4 4 138 Sigma Nu Front Row: Rich Padula, Mark Conwa, Chris Hueben, Dave Elzinga, Jeff Scheib, Nicl Fluehr. Row 2: Steve Maslauski, Mark Mosch, Greg Kiray, Ben Buettell, John Murphy, Mike Sexton, Joe Plunkett, Craig Near, Mark Krieble. Row 3: Chris Near, Bob Littlefield, Joe Bernstein, Dave Larson, Pete Laimins, Devereaux Clifford, Jon Alsenas, Mark Knickrem, David Blumenfeld, Mark Mutz, Steve Huffines, Craig Sholin, Keith Johns, Tony Travostino, Alan Inglis. Row 4: John Obermeyer, Tom, Rzepecki, Jeremy Garrett, Stan Barnett, Bob Pontello, Jon Agne, David Stavropolous, Steve Neuman. Back Row: Alan Smith, Bill Rittenhouse, Taylor Abbot, Brad Schneider, Andy Alsenas, Goeff Heuchling, Jeff Shamburger. Not Pic- tured: Scott Syfert, Bill Krueger, Rich Drapeau, Rob Kennedy, Dick Phil- ps, Rob Davis, Vic Martinka. 139 Theta Chi K 140 h Hm. 1 i ' II ' % 5i pi w 1 1 .i J % ' 1 !: 1 mPfc g ' it 141 Theta Delta Chi « 142 1 V v ' t .1 rt Jl a. ■1 ' ■§ ront Row: Jim Hansen. Row 2: Ady Kendler, Rick Walker, Hai Pham, Dave Hemmings, Rich LeVine, Garland Cunningham. Row 3: Pete Hart, m Celwicks, Bill Adams, Chris Dreeson, Greg Showalter, Russ Johnson. Row 4:Terry Ferro, Nate Hays, Ed Kern. Row 5: Bill Wiersema, Ken ioehler, Joe Lesky, Frank Mroz, Dean Armstrong, Jeff Bloom, Chon Noriega, Andy Goetz, Andy Bossov, Ed Lasky, Jerry Guttman, Scott ingwald, Ben Margolis. Not Pictured: ChipCreenblatt, Steve Price, Rand Ringwald, Tim Warwick, Dan Wharton, Marty Wilde, Rich Peterson, arry Scibilis, and Kevin. 143 Theta Xi 1 . Jim Cress 2. Greg Kestner 3. Joel Harris 4. Mark Edwards 5. George Cameron 6. Tracey Shirk 7. John Kole 8. Jon Labe 9. Jim Olson 10. Eric Fues 1 1 . Scott Simon 12. Steve Riehs 13. Mike Mueller 14. Kendall Hamersly 15. Demo 16. Bill Brenner 17. Greg Sgro 18. Dave Kazel 19. Otis L. Floyd 20. Vince DuPortt 21. John Mattson22. Lance the boarder Abrahms 23. Keith Tabacek 24. John Lieske25. Dan Missing, but spiritually present: Mark Allen, Dave Cox, Guy Frable, Dave Gribben, Mike Pederson, Tim Selnick, Chris Shiveley, Lance Stevenson, Jeff Winchell. 144 Triangle jesllSconSim ■e ' Du[Wi2l-l Cuyfal)le,Dave Front Row-sitting: Brian Cohen, Al Pisani, Glen Hokama, Brian Gordon, Bill Niemic, Brian Okamura, Mitch Jordan, Mark league. Row 2: Darrell Fujiyoshi, Bill Mills, Tim Harris, Dave Middleton, Chuck Semmelhack, Don Yoon. Row 3: Dave Calvin, Dave DiGoia, Keith Hasbrouck, John Berti, Bob Bielski, Brian Sparks, Bob Markowitch. Row 4:standing: Brian Walsh, Francis Blankenberg, Jim Schumacher, Stan Zagula, Mike Wilson, Alex Gibson, Andy Yee, Andy Trout. Back Row: Jim Beit, Andy Weil, Keith Kettelson, Bill Graef, Paul Doran, Roger Ripley (pictured), Scott Stegeman, Eric Ford, Jeff Dzieczkowski, Dan Lasley, Bill Schmocker, John Ranieri, Craig Martin, Mark Jicka. Not Pictured: Jon Nakagawa, Gary Like, Rich Rovin. 145 Zeta Beta Tau 146 Jerry Asin Daniel G. Bausch Richard Berman Richard L. Biller Frederic M. Brown Kevin L. Coppola Joseph M. Deakin David Dorn David S. Effman ™ Dennis S. Fernandez Peter S. Ginsberg Jeff Goldwater Joel S. Granoff Peter Grossman Richard Heimler Andrew Hupert Scott R. Ketover P. Noel Kullavani- jaya Jeff Lapidus David S. Lefkowitz Brian A. Levine Keith W. Medansky •a Michael Melnick John E. Mitchell Martin L.J. Newman i. Russell Pass Louis A. Petrich Stephen M. Reiches Michael Rich Henry Robin David Rochlin Andrew A. Roth Brian Rowe Robert V. Schnitz Michael L. Sheldon Scott L. Simon Steven L. Solomon Ralph E. Stewart Larry Takiff Andrew J. Thomashow Steven E. Wallace Kenneth B. Weiner Gary D. Weinfeld Richard D. Zorowitz Smm V 1 1 ' « « 1 m ■- w Kk limum y - ■1 1 li 147 Zeta Psi John Gieseke, Paul Boynton, Gene Thornton, Jay Patterson, Kevin McCune, Dave Termuhlen, Jim Jackson, Drew Rusling. Not pictured: Dave Scott,) Phil Zere, Mike Sullivan. 148 li L Alpha Phi Alpha Motto: First of All, Servants of All, We Shall Overcome All. Bottom Row: Daryl Williams, Christopher Morrison, Darryl Young, Brian Smith. Top Row: Keith Franklin, Julius Hall, Vincent Williams. Not Shown: Larry Lindsey, Cavin McFarland, Kenneth Crowder, Michael Williams, Lance Wallace, Joseph Fleming. 149 Kappa Sigma 150 1 t ' f 151 Sigma Gamma Rho 152 £1 1,:l 1 ' )fi ¥ r 154 W OV3t2oe--X ' LL SET Vou T6M SOCKS uje tOSC V ' -i ' - Ji .M4 «4 . ■MOMROE, ON OJMAT LAu3 Of Ave A SE:s CAKj Vou 70SSISL.V BASe A eerr Like tmat ' THefee ' s alujaV5 ome Football 156 157 158 160 . ,l -.SWk, _ ' ' :Lvj a I ' ll 163 Ly J iA ' ' i ;, 1 I - 166 VV 1 1.11 Sailing 167 ' I ' i Women ' s Tennis 11 ;?, 171 172 «ki... 1 m— N 173 Wl •ti ' I 174 Volleyball • 176 W 178 ■JL ■' i ' A -4 « • • . ■•■, I Men ' s Basketball w •s iJm 181 L ' - mmvmfv 1 1 ' p_ V ' i.lJ 1 € I i m IddMHHK Swimming 184 • S-- iTr ri a i-r v- ' V ' t . h -II i -. ] I mm 55?? 55 =? .4 Hockey 186 . ' . L ' VI.1 ' t 187 Gymnastics ■■-v- I ' ' % . Ijt I --tJi NISSEN i a iJ a ( W i i i y|iflllta i i«Wi i« i i« w t i M iTMk ■.ma m ' - I 189 )V Softball 190 ■••v- 1 i I I m 191 Ji 192 I I 193 :l i I Baseball 194 i ,. : T4 : f 196 197 198 200 M , d Winte II 201 «Lr U_ ' M ' ■f ..- I ' 202 204 206 ' S 1 207 209 M n % ■■% - Hwi, 215 Around Town I iSBX STUDENT BOOK EXCHANGE 1? 1 IHIIIIIIIIIIWIIIII IT 1 216 217 t-- ' r.S Rm 220 £ 3S 221 i I 222 -30 QOiCKLV! A I Seniors HE e X AM; PUTT)K)6 OW MV IF ON)LV X COULD STAY Owff MORE YBAK- Jo$T on€ USAl Suesdumsbd y UlALLS OP LEAKNiMG ANJt MV 223 Anthony Ahrens Helen Akin Alisa Alpert Theresa Altimar Steven Ambrose Dana Anderson Psychology Speech Economics Psychology Medical Sciences Journalism Webster Groves, MO Chicago, IL Skokie, IL Westwood, MA Cincinnati, OH Belvedere, CA David Anderson Chemical Eng. East Lansing, Ml Douglas Anderson Economics St. Paul, MN Lynn Anderson Speech Wauconda, IL Loretta Anderson Calumet City, IL Marcia Anderson Econ Poli. Sci. N. Muskegon, Ml Susan Anderson Education Glendale, AZ 224 3«:iwe CA Terry Aronoff Laura Aronberg Lorinda Ash Darlene Asp Susanne Atanus Ann Atkinson Journalism Communication Studies Communication Studies Music Education Political Science Communication Studies Atlanta, GA Wilmette, IL New York, NY Anoka, MN Niles,IL Lincoln, NE Susan . f ' ' ' EiJucJlio i Jayne Atkinson Wesley Avram Ian Azrikan Cynthia Babin Elizabeth Bacher Linell Bailey Speech Communication Studies Communication Music Education French Political Science Ft. Lauderdale, FL Rochester, Ml Brooklyn, NY Corapolis, PA Park Ridge, IL Claxton, GA 225 Lynda Baldwin Economics Atlanta, CA Kevin Barrett Chemical Eng. LaCrange, IL Martha Balster Mechanical Eng. Hoffman Estates, IL Joyce Bang Poll. Sci. French Ontario, Canada Susan Barbee Economics Columbus, OH Robert Barnett Speech New York, NY Steven Baron Journalism Wilton, CT Stanley Barrington Speech Peterboro, NY Joanna Bassett Music Ann Arbor, Ml Mary Kay Baumgart David Bayer Stephen Bayes English Political Science Speech Glencoe, IL Baraboo, Wl Northhampton, MA 226 M.6ailR Atlanta, ca David Beard Journalism Erie, PA Jocelym Beckman History Tappan, NY Philip Becker Medical Program Cincinnati, OH Margaret Beclay Industrial Eng. Chesterland, OH Cynthia Beebe English Evanston, IL Mark Beese Economics Barrington, IL Jnlhropolog, CbEllyii,|[ Johm Beifuss Journalism Memphis, TN James Belt Economics New York, NY Jenifer Bel Economics Miami, FL Alina Beltrandy Journalism Chicago, IL Douglas Bender Chemistry St. Louis, MO Leora Benishay Psychology Chicago, IL Cite, II N Sievw Bam Icomalisin Wita,a Si(f ien8avfi Spsch W Stephen Bennett Geology Chicago, IL Terri Berg Journalism Shawnee Mission, KS Mark Berry Computer Studies Colorado Springs, CO John Berti English New York, NY Bradley Bertram Chemistry Robinson, IL Ira Besserman Speech Scottsdale, AZ John Bethel Renee Betzelos Karen Beutler Comm. Studies Econ MMSS Anthropology Grinnell, lA Glenview, IL Greendale, Wl 227 Robert Biancamane Dover, OH Daniel Bikowski Economics Rudolph, Wl Richard Biller Economics Greensboro, NC Jeanni ' Bi-iliop Journalism Winnetka, IL Jeffory Blackard Comm. Studies Decatur, IL Kevin Blackistone Journalism Hyattsville, MD. Franklin Blackstone John Blake Jeffrey Bloch Ellen Blum Timothy Bollinger Economics Mechanical Eng. Journalism Comm. Studies Speech Zelienople, PA West Palm Beach, PL Kansas City, MO Philadelphia, PA Upper Darby, PA Carolyn Bolz Psycnology Madison, Wl i,n George Boudreau Constantine Boukidis Renee Boulton Duncan Bourne Sharon Bowen MaryBeth Bowen Industrial Eng. Economics Industrial Eng. Chemical Eng. Engineering Biology Park Ridge, IL Burbank, CA Chicago, IL Lake Forest, IL Homewood, IL St. Louis, MO ristopher Bowland Anne Boyd Eric Boyd Mary Boyer Anne Braden Yvonne Braswell Geology Economics Comm. Studies Comm. Studies Political Science Comm Studies Aurora, IL Canton, OH Cincinnati, OH Sacramento, CA Carpentersville, IL Birmingham, AL 229 I CiMviaii OH David Breese Computer Science Schenectady, NY Judith Brennan Biology Cherry Hill, NJ Jennifer Bridges Physical Education West Allis, Wl James Brigaitis Economics Smithtown, NY Jeanne Briskin Chemistry Centerville, OH Cisele Brisson Tenafly, NJ Adele Brown Speech Richland, WA 230 I .si Andrea Brown French Jacksonville, ARK Joy Brown Comm. Disorders Carlisle, MA Tom Brown English Oklahoma City, OK Barbara Brooks Journalism Surfside, FL Lori Brumund Anthropology Lincolnshire, IL Karen Brumbaugh Michelle Bruner Eula Bryant Georges Buatois William Buchanan Adam Buckman Comm Studies Psychology Political Science Mechanical Eng. Education Journalism Huntington, IN Nashville, TN East Chicago, IL Cleveland, OH Cleveland,OH Philadelphia, PA Calvin Buford History Cincinnati, OH Mark Buonaiuto Chemistry Greenlawn, NY Robert Burch Nuclear Eng. Conroe, TX Valerie Burch Granville, OH Cristy Burnham Education Darien, CT Mary Burkhart Psychology University Heights, OH Leonard Burneli Speech Milwaukee, Wl Bernadette Burns Sociology Metamora, IL John Burns Graphic Arts Warren, OH Cheryl Burrows Education Robert Burton Cheri Butcher Electrical Eng. Speech Carmichael, CA Arlington Hts, IL Columbia,MD Oscar Cabanas Anita Cain Julie Calahan Political Science Computer Studies Edudation Miami, FL Camp Springs, MD Havre, MT liiicol ' 231 d Jean Galium Speech Birmington, ALA Gerald Caruso Economics Sidney, OH Lydia Camerino English Larchmont, NY Laura Carlson Journalism Moline, IL Norman Carlson Chemical Eng. Chicago, IL Jeff Carroll Electrical Eng. Huntington, IN Stuart Carron Chemistry Hazelhurst, Wl Brett Carver Communication Studies Northbrook, IL Alan Casey Education Chicago, IL Patrick Casey Joel Cassingham Peter Castiglia ' ■. - ' Ti Economics Biology History Columbus, OH Joliet, IL Clifton, NJ i Nancy Ca tfctoiy Elaine Cheng Economics Downers Grove, IL Richard Cheung Chemical Eng. Mid Levels, Hong Kong Kenneth Chlapik Chemical Eng. Cicero, IL George Christie Political Science Lake Forest, IL George Chronis Chemistry Pales Park, IL Andrew Chudzinski Speech Chicago, IL 233 01 r Mimi Chung Biology Barrington, IL Arthur Chwaiek Economics Hartland, Ml Cecilia Cicchinelli Biomedical Eng. 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Stul(HHls.,OH CynlliiaTroiano CAS PniKelonldJI letnfileTwoto Crossed f0i Wl David Tyson Rebecca Uchitelle Uduak Udofia Craig Umbaugh Ann Uresk Karin Ursin Electrical Eng. Comm, Studies Chemical Eng. Economics Russian Music Akron, OH Clayton, MO Lincoln, NE Springfield, OH Elgin, IL Glen Ellyn, IL Leon Vainikos Classics Mundelein, IL Sharon Veis Speech Skokie, IL Son is Verges Biology Winnetka, IL Mary Videka Chemical Eng. Flossmoor, IL 279 ini Ronald Villejo Psychology Arlington Hts., IL Charles Vorbach American Culture Spring Lake, NJ Gregory Wahle Economics Indianaoolis, IN Margaret Waller Comm. Studies Cincinnati, OH John Visk Mechanical Eng. Parma, OH Regina Vogel Italian Philadelphia, PA Linda Vought Comm. Disorders London, England Jonathan Vukovich Biology Waukesha, Wl Lester Wall Computer Science Lawnside, NJ Steven Wallace Mechanical Eng. East Lansing, Ml Suzanne Wallis Speech Wilmington, DE Eric V a Electrical Eng. 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Studies Overland Park, KS ' Frank Weingartner Chemistry Addison, IL Sharon Weinstein Radio, TV, Film Chicago, IL William Weir Economics Coshocton, OH Charles Weisman Radio, TV, Film Woodmere, NY Barry Weiss Radio, TV, Film Chicago, IL Gregory Weiss Theater Pittsburg, PA 281 Cfl Raymond Welling Journalism Walbridge, OH Gregg Wells Chemistry Waterloo, lA Andrew Werner Histroy San Francisco, CA Karen Westergaard Journalism Lawrenceville, GA Kristopher Whang Electrical Eng. Evanston, IL Carole White Peachie White Leslie Whi Comm. Studies Biology Indianapolis, IN History Jamaica, NY Oak Park, Kenneth Whitmore Nuclear Eng. Rockford, IL Michael Widera Chemical Eng. Lincolnwood, IL Young Whang Chemistry Brea, CA Sandra Willemain Elementary Ed. Evanston, IL flfinr U.rJ Ho jniW(ili( 282 Bradley Willen Steven Willens Michael Willett Economics Electrical Eng. Mechanical Eng. Akron, OH Warren, NJ Collingswood, NJ James Williams Math. Science Upper Darby, PA Jeffrey Williams Industrial Eng. East Cleveland, OH Mark Williams Chemical Eng. Addison, IL ywgWMg Owiisfy flemeniaiyi ' - Timothy Williams Linguistics Shaker Hts., OH Veronda Williams Human Development East Cleveland, OH Clenda Williamson Chemical Eng. Gary, IN Claudia Wintergerst Comm. Studies Lakewood, OH Scott Winters Speech Springfield, NJ Michelle Wiznitzer Biochemistry Chicago, IL Bonnie Wolf Journalism Evanston, IL James Wolf Electrical Eng. Deerfield, IL Marina Wolf Biochemistry Wauwdtosa, Wl Howard Wolfe Alan Wolff Alan Wolfson Political Science Psych Anthro Industrial Eng. Stamford, CT Wheaton, IL N. Miami Beach, FL Thomas Williamson Political Science Ft. Myers, FL Friedrich Wilms Economics Lindenhurst, IL Elizabeth Wilson Political Science Baldwin, NY 283 Sam Won Political Science Irvine, CA William Wong Electrical Eng. Kowloon, Hong Kong Barbara Wonsover Journalism Skokie, IL Norma Wood Economics Chicago, IL Honore Woodside History Park Ridge, IL mdrea Woolard Dana Worsnop Scott Woyak Michael Wyatt Journalism American Culture Political Science Econ Urban Studies Kenilworth, IL Weed, CA Caledonia, Wl Philadelphia, PA Kim Yaffe Biology Springfield, IL Frank Yanan Economics Chicago, IL Jeffrey Yee Medical Program Placentia, CA Robert Yesk Radio, TV, Film Newport Beach, CA Nerida Ynclan Journalism Miami Beach, FL Eric Yokoo Biochemistry Evanston, IL Ronaldo Young Industrial Eng. Evanston, IL Kim Yow Psych French Roosevelt City, AL 284 FdtYaoan I Economia j Cln|o,ll I I Samuel Zellner Industrial Eng. Chicago, IL Carolyn Zemer German Oak Brook, IL Mary Zilkowski Social Policy South Bend, IN Helene Zinberg Comm. Studies New Hyde Park, NY Lori Zogaib Theater Toledo, OH Richard Zorowitz Mechanical Eng. Hillsdale, NJ John Zwack Lori Zwirkoski Kiane Bazarian John Froeb Tseng-Fan Hsieh Emily Hart Industrial Eng. Biomed. Eng. Speech Tech Music Tech Appleton, VVI Southfield, Ml Lake Forest, IL Rockville, MD Montville, NJ Clencoe, IL 285 m 286 ...ISti 288 Jin nr Shoot Yourself CLICK CLICK 289 r- ' i? 290 292 Vi I., c I 293 294 296 297 299 wmmmmmmm fismm 301 mmm tsmoi 302 JL 11 1 ,1 mmm 307 mm E - r V ' 308 - 309 310 ■i 315 fil ' Vi 316 ' t- , I w 318 Jb 319 I 320 321 322 - - « ' r 323 324 ■K B l l B ■-, 1 325 326 p 328 J 329 330 ALL THo5 c jre HTTL6: WHAT we WQ spring S- su ?e A w 3LtKO Tuey BU LT THIS SCHOOL NEA A BEACH ! X OJOtoDe OOMAT U)g. WOULD DO )P THEV SHOCLD AAcvg: al - Li6 (artev our HCisg fivjEN) ©ifey6t 6 J 331 I -rJl)l m 1 ■■H p H 1 1 ' 1 iH B - -  V f : .  J . 3: H g ■ff 2J 332 334 m 335 p 338 mDI L DA ' A URD y. M r-2 340 sSI 341 342 ■' ;Si Km%: zii ' i. ' m ikT '  -v «. • ,|v;i ' L , ; . 343 GO«NXS. To youe. MEBTlKJcS THIS eARLV ? 344 )Vcue«i£eTW6 o Soe V, SA JDe ?oocie, BUT TVAeV TOCO M TO Be t sere: eacl-v thcv j st uJOuJf YSfe f N)OU), IF j Groups 345 ASG Bubba George McClellan President Peter Castiglia Executive V.P. Fiiwul V.P. ' L-S 346 347 1 IFC RHA r i 348 iftak RHA 349 A O 350 ii A O Film Board 9fm mmrmm AIESEC ■tMvfei JiflT ' ' BI ' c b ' F L 1 iA k. B ' w H P BiP ' j lk ' ijEH NCE 352 Wildcat Council 353 wmmmmmmmmmmm Arts Alliance 354 p m Alpha Phi Omega International Students 355 .A ' Panhellenic Association Junior Panhel 356 :i: :4 Chevra Hillel [ii 357 Hellenic American Students Union 358 AM Union ' ' Tau Beta Pi Martha Balster, )udy Beiriger, Terry Berns, Joseph Bianco, John Blake, David Breese, Georges Buatois, jerry Butz, Norman Carlson, Harry Cooke, Katherine Cox, Cordon Davis, David DeBoer, Gregory Dondanville, Ellen Dretzke, John Englert, Mark Epstein, Michael Fallert, Michael Fitzgibbons, Nancy Freedman, Scott Glesmann, Eugene Grabinski, Howard Guest, Robert Hanmer, Michael Hilton, Rickjadin, Norman Jerome, Brian Kehoe, Sharon Krause, Scott Lorenzin, Jonathan Luers, Peter Meckl, William Mills, James Moore, Jeffrey Multoch, Bernard Nee, Peter Nowobilski, Craig Ono, Jackie Pang, Jay Patterson, Kathy Pidany, Glenn Riese, Richard Ringwald, Donald Schwaab, Douglas Seter, Christopher Shaner, Victor Shum, Daniel Soussan, Kathleen Thomson, Debra Tree, Kevin Weber, James Williams, William Wong, Scott Woyak, Jonathan Yee, Richard Zorov itz Lithuanian Students 359 iiama The Chess Club 360 Mortarboard a CLUB NU Friends 361 i-V Interiors Core Library Art Library Office of the Dean of CAS Tech Lecture Room 2 363 364 Studio 22 McGaw Hall LU Lindheimer Astronomical Research Center 366 Anechoic Chamber 367 -wr:. PCtTico or TMT racuTivr MiHijiiw aw; UP PTN.HS.YLVAHIA A. ?WF 10 THi: CAPTIOi i  Waf KORF UPI 01-IO-3i.Xl ;55 ATS U4 f I .... DC -TLIISK 1 -iO nosTAcrs -r ftrpo UPX Cl-iO- l lit JV5 AIS . - 115 R- p . : P«-«FACAN l NI LP-PlCWiP4TM3RAf 4 1- iSt ADO All i , ; J tHF CONVtKS ATIO IH VkI t Ltir ROM Util MSf Cf DRAM IM TTIiRA S - Tfft Of -ACAII9 ArXRflCAM CAPTIV[fS . RIPORTrR$ KUiU0. H03r7ASI QUESTIONS . Ho: OnJ  i-3-:ari W ;;; viincs of Hosuit ' ' siorv- PilSB ifuaralioc of stonncdikah tlxl sa|ts,4 MtRkaedBi Cinlniil udoioffiKi tbedOBta Uialikia siiod tnl hr I CiitBitM. 11rmiia,i jofcoiic(ai(ii,ai 01 fa 1 jor, daiiicikan maiitlM oMnumi InnJisikov BaS4-«i bApiOoK ofibckooiBm Kwi]rdeaedka leindediitii aditaoidki pwnohic tiKttI AalnAiiiS, «illKdc«lKg( OnJiilTliath 368 a 4 i Newsprint k IK Hostage crisis over at last By Mark Gelatt On Jan. 20 the long ordeal ended. Fifty-two Americans, held hostage by the Iranian government for 444 days, finally were released from captivity. And the country celebrated. For the 14 ' z months following the takeover of the American Embassy in Teheran, the hostages controlled the news and influenced the politics of the nation. America Held Hostage was how one network described the story. IN THE END their release upstaged the in- aguaration of Ronald Reagan — just as their captivity had occupied much of the time and become a liability for the re-election campaign of his predecessor, Jimmy Carter. Sixty-six American diplomats were captured when Iranian student-militants, angry with President Carter ' s decision to allow the exiled Shah of Iran into the U.S. for medical care, stormed the embassy Nov. 4, 1979. Thirteen of the hostages, eight blacks and five women, were released six days later. Carter froze all Iranian assets in the U.S. and cut off direct imports of Iranian oil, while the militants demanded an apology from the U.S. and the return of the former shah to stand trial for crimes against the people. Carter refused. The two sides, neither willing to make a ma- jor concession, carried on negotiations off and on for a year, never reaching a compromise despite the intervention of the French govern- ment and the United Nations. ONE MAJOR PROBLEM negotiators fac- ed was the splintering of leadership within Iran. Just who was in charge — the militants, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini or President Bani Sadr — was always uncertain. In April, Khomeini announced that the fate of the hostages would not be decided until the newly elected Iranian parliament met. Carter responded with a severing of diplomatic ties and a ban on all Iranian imports and arms ex- ports to Iran. Carter also pressured Japan and the nine members of the European Common Market into imposing economic sanctions. And on April 25, a surprise rescue mission to free the hostages ended in the Iranian desert with the deaths of eight marine commandos killed when a helicopter collided with a transport plane. Secretary of State Cyrus Vance resigned to protest the mission, which he had opposed from the beginning. On July 1 1 one hostage, 28-year-old Richard Queen, was released by the militants for health reasons. Queen was found to be suffering from multiple sclerosis. TWO WEEKS LATER the former shah died in Cairo, Egypt. Iran said his death would not affect the hostage negotiations. On Sept. 12 Ayatollah Khomeini issued his see HOSTAGES on page 376 A flag hung from the Evans Scholars house marks the end of this country ' s 14-month dispute with Iran (Photo by Ken Newberry). 369 UkU Newsprint Reagan speaks at the O ' Hare Holiday Inn during an October campaign stop in Chicago (Photo by Ralf Hestoft). A Reagan delegate at the Republican National Convention shows support for his favorite candidate (Photo by Roger Phillips). Reagan wins election in a landslide By David Steinberg Republican Ronald Reagan wasn ' t a typical presidential candidate. Reagan was 69 years old, had received his early training in acting rather than politics or law and had a reputation as a conservative spokesman. But by 9 p.m. Nov. 4, before the polls had closed in several Western states, President Jim- my Carter abandoned his attempt for a second term and conceded the race to Reagan, who went on to win a landslide victory. Despite predictions that the race would be one of the closest in history, Reagan won more than 50 percent of the vote, while Democrat Carter captured only about 42 percent. REAGAN TRIUMPHED BY an even greater margin in the Electoral College, winn- ing the electoral votes of 45 of the 50 states. But most Northwestern students didn ' t jump on the Reagan bandwagon. A Daily Northwestern poll taken just prior to the election showed 44 percent of students interviewed favoring independent John Anderson. Carter was the choice of 26,percent of those interviewed, while 17 percent favored Reagan. Anderson, a lifelong Republican who bohed the party after his liberal platform received strong support in several New England primaries, wooed NU voters with two ap- pearances on campus in the year preceding the election. Anderson won no electoral votes and about 7 prcent of the popular vote, just above the 5 percent figure he needed to qualify for public financing. BUT ANDERSON ' S INDEPENDENT can- didacy wasn ' t the only unusual episode in the 1980 campaign. During the July Republican Convention in Detroit, former President Gerald Ford ap- peared willing to run as Reagan ' s vice presi- dent. Ford ' s candidacy, which would have been the first time a former president accepted the number two spot on the ticket, seemed so cer- tain that some papers reported the event on their front pages. But Ford backed out at the last moment, leaving Reagan to choose former United Na- tions Ambassador George Bush, the runner-up for the Republican presidential nomination, as his running mate. BUT CARTER AND then-Vice President Walter Mondale faced even greater problems. One of those benefitting from the conser- vative tide was U.S. Rep. John Porter (R-Evanston), who took 72 percent of the 10th District House vote in crushing Democratic challenger Robert Weinberger, who had lost to Porter in a special election on Jan. 22, 1980 Other Illinois Democrats had better success, however. A weak economy, a strong Soviet Union and seemingly unending hostage crisis helped lead to the downfall of the first president from the deep South since the Civil War. Reagan ' s victory led a Republican landslide, with the party taking a 53-47 majority in the Senate — the first time Republicans have con- trolled the chamber in a quarter century. Democrat Alan Dixon, the secretary of state, defeated Republican Lt. Gov. Dave O ' Neal by an almost 3-2 margin to fill the seat of retiring Democratic Sen. Adiai Stevenson III. In the Cook County state ' s attorney race, Democratic State Sen. Richard M. Daley, the son of the late mayor, edged incumbent Republican Bernard Carey, although Chicago ' s Democratic Mayor Jane Byrne had openly opposed Daley. OcttteS ' ajKlcfcdl N Abooiii maiyoflit ' maileiwii objeasirtfci ' group of i Evanitoi ' iM nxNaflpi unliriiEiM |[i|i|iiir,lMA(ri TffiNiUS, ' SodaisiPvtiof a pent to id; I tUtaK SOUglll 10 14 1 te dot pan iiivoivcdiiikb Sol(iQiiln. caMforadi iditioiiadoBa croidiiDBiii! iitJocsofai itsdf, be a Aiisdi«k Nm again an Aahai inilanidBti KaOilBUti tdioipiiar. Weimaai ressurgoictgfai. ai i. aiai I in synatoiKtirfai hthctnefil iiiasiiitoieMii Kaiis(lf((Jii| saidaoidaq sbouisofsoifgi Nonli esttni ' if, ' i prates K) 1 Park. MiMOFTiio, waimbanji ' aoodiiii edaadj jl 370 uNllional Convention iMklFlioto by Roger (oriiiiiiil from ilie wnsn- Li Rep. Jota Porter ■wk pacatoftlielllth a OBtail Demxratic ii(abap,fl liiiillo« o rid(cliaioo]a22,IW )gnas had betin success, .iWSoviet Union and il ' bottceaisislielpedleail fcO ' , .« nWifepublican landslide, i lqiiliaisliavecon ' , tta, the Kcrewy «f 15 Lt. Gov. Dave ■J ioitheseai IrtkSftAdlaaf- (i sale ' s  ttoM« iWardM. ;; 2n„«JaneBjn« ' I) ?- Newsprint Nazi rally in city protested By Bob Kowalski Facing posters containing the names of Auschwitz and Treblinka, more than 4,000 people packed Deering Meadow on a bright, October Sunday afternoon to listen to speakers and chant anti-Nazi slogans. About an hour later, that scene changed as many of the same people pressed against police barricades and threw stones, eggs and other objects while shouting Nazis go to hell, at a group of about 10 Nazis gathered in Evanston ' s Lovelace Park. The Nazis orginally had requested a permit to rally in Evasion ' s Centennial Park on Yom Kippur, but they were turned down by the city. THE NAZIS, ALSO known as the National Socialist Party of America, later were granted a permit to rally in Lovelace Park on Oct. 19. It had been only two years earlier that neighboring Skokie was outraged as Nazis sought to rally in their village, and many of those that protested the Skokie rally were also involved in the Evanston Nazi protests. Sol Goldstein, who led protests in Skokie, called for an end to Naziism as he and 13 other religious and community leaders addressed the crowd in Deering Meadow. In times of evil, indifference to evil is evil itself, he said. I shiver because of Auschwitz. Never again a swastika, never again an Auschwitz, not in any place. INDEPENDENT PRESIDENTIAL can- didate John Anderson, still on the campaign trail, arrived near the end of the Deering rally to give his speech. Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan also had been invited, but they declin- ed to appear. We have seen in recent years a dangerous ressurgence of anti-Semitic events, Anderson said, citing a terrorist bombing at a Paris synagogue earlier in October. In the face of this and more, I submit that it is a sin to remain silent, and I am here today because I feel it is my duty to be with you. he said amidst waving American flags and loud shouts of support. This was the peaceful rally, sponsored by Northwestern s B ' nai B ' rith Hillel Foundation as a protest to the Nazi march in Lovelace Park. MANY OF THOSE who attended this rally wore armbands and yellow stars of David, and others stood with tears in their eyes as they swayed and sang Hebrew songs. The rally was interupted only by the muffled shouts of several non-invited groups who pass- ed out leaflets and tried to lead members of the See NAZI on Page 378 Two rallies, two messages. Former U.S. Rep. John Anderson addresses a crowd of 4,000 in Deering Meadow, while an hour later a small group of Nazis use their swastika-marked shields to defend themselves from a barrage of eggs, stones and other objects thrown at them (Photos by Lenny Cohen). 371 r Newsprint HU athletics: Out with the old By Marcia Davis When Northwestern University Presideni Robert Strotz began looking for a fresh start, Athletic Director John Pont and head football Coach Rick Venturi had to start looking for new jobs. With a little pressure from NU trustees, Strotz equated that new beginning with the end of Pont and Venturi ' s stay at NU. While many believed that the then-month- long racial controversy was the cause of the fir- ings, trustees later said it was Venturi ' s 1-31-1 record and NU ' s new outlook on athletics that ousted the two. DESPITE THE TRUSTEES ' later belittling of the racial conflict earlier that fail. Black Athletes Uniting for the Light put NU at the top of sports pages across the country. The group, which had organized two years ago, was led by the then-tailback and senior Mike Cammon, spokesman for the organiza- tion, which was made up of the majority of black athletes on campus. More than 30 members of the organization presented Pont and Vjce President for Student Affairs Jim. G. Carleton with their grievances the Thursday before Homecoming, creating a fear that they might boycott the game. The complaints came on Oct. 9 and claimed unfair treatment of black playedrs by Venturi and his coaching staff. The group said Venturi had: •made the remark that All my nigger backs are hurt this week so I ' ll have to patch up my white boys. •dismissed black players for minor offenses but allowed whites committing the same of- fense to remain on the team. •criticized blacks for showing emotion on the field. •refused talented black seniors the chance to play and placed them on the third-string prac- tice squad. •allowed both black and white injured players to be forced back to play without being fully recovered. •said of the black senior class, I know I should have gotten rid of them before when I had the chance. VENTURI AND WHITE athletes denied the charges, claiming the complaints to be ' from disgruntled seniors who had pressured other players into supporting their lies. Nonetheless, BAUL was pleased to hear that Strotz had agreed with a list of proposals they had drawn up to help improve the athletic pro- gram. While the president did not agree to follow the proposals exactly, he said versions of them would be included in a pamphlet that the university was working on for the athletic department. ■' Rick Venturi 372 «.: Newsprint . . . and in with tlie new Doug Single By Shari Sigman He ' s young, bright, innovative, motivated, and, most of all, excited. In his job, he has to be. New Athletic Director Doug Single cjune to Northwestern last December from a winning program at Stanford University with a blueprint he hopes to copy for the Wildcats. THE 29- YEAR-OLD Stanford graduate has set a five-year deadline for an athletic tur- naround at NU. And in the process, he has cleaned out and reorganized the antiquated athletic department by bringing in a truckload of new talent and reassigning old ad- ministrators. Single ' s first act was naming former Stan- ford offensive coordinator Dennis Green as head football coach of the perenially cellar- dwelling Wildcats. Green is the first black coach ever in the Big Ten. Green has said that his first goal is to bring in a style of football that will give North- western a chance to win football games. IN ADDITION TO naming Green as a new coach. Single has picked Franklin and Mar- shall coach Nancy Stevens as a full-time field hockey coach. However, the coaching changes are just th e tip of the iceberg in the Single administration. He has created a number of new positions within the department that will help the pro- gram run more like a business — like most big- time athletic departments. Two major reassignments came from within the NU program. Associate Athletic Director Sandy McCuUough was named associate athletic director for intercollegiate athletics. MCCULLOUGH WILL BE in charge of all men ' s and women ' s programs with the excep- tion of men ' s football and basketball. She ' ll run everything from varsity sports to summer camps. In another newly created slot, former Associate Athletic Director Ken Kraft will serve as associate athletic director for facility planning. Ted Leland comes to Northwestern from the University of Houston. He will serve as senior associate director for administration and development and will run the football and basketball programs. As Single ' s senior associate, he will serve as acting athletic direc- tor when Single is out of town. Marilyn Tucker, al so formerly of Stanford, will serve as assistamt to the director for stu- dent affairs. She will assist Leland and Mc- CuUough. With the reorganization of NU ' s program, Single said he hopes to follow the success of Stanford. We ' re causiously optimistic. How the quick the programs respond is hard to say. They may lag behind the developement of the department. We have to be patient, Single said. But not too patient. 373 mmm ■.JL Newsprint Feeling of insecurity inits campus By Timothy Larimer Incidents of rape and burglary on campus sent shock waves among alarmed and stunned Northwestern students last spring and fall. An NU student was abducted near campus on Orrington Avenue, two blocks north of the Foster-Walker Complex while walking home from a party with a friend last April 12. Three men grabbed the student and drove off with her in their car, while leaving the friend behin d. The abducted student was found early the next morning in Chicago, where she had been raped by the three men and released. THE INCIDENT, coupled with a similar in- cident last March 17 when a woman visiting her boyfriend was abducted near Englehart Hall, 1915 Maple Ave., inspired students to de- mand improved campus security measures. The Associated Student Government called for a noon rally on April 16 to show NU ad- ministrators how concerned students were about campus safety. However, President Robert Strotz took the wind out of the sails the day before by announcing a six-point safety plan, which included improved lighting, in- stallation of more emergency phones and an increase in patrol officers. But 500 students did show up for the 20-minute rally. The crowd stood silent with bowed heads for a few minutes after then-ASG Executive Vice President George McCIellan told the audience, Remember someone with us today had to suffer a heck of a lot because someone had to worry about a budget. MCCLELLAN READ a letter written by the April 12 rape victim, whom he said was in the crowd. I am very sorry that it took something like this to make people take some positive ac- tion, she said in the letter. But sometimes that ' s the way things have to be, and I can understand that. The stunned crowd solemnly applauded the victim. The next night, 200 NU students marched by candlelight from Deering Meadow through the streets of Evanston surrounding campus in a Take Back the Night rally. At the Women ' s Coalition-sponsored rally, students listened to six testimonials written by rape victims. They began chanting, It just ain ' t right brother, do you care? and started the march through the streets. THE CRIME wave didn ' t stop in the spring, however. An 18-year-old NU freshman was raped at knife point Nov. 4 while taking a walk on the lakefill at 1 a.m. In October, a NU employee was charged with abducting a Chicago woman from the Foster Street El station, taking her to Willard Residential College and raping her in a fifth floor storage room. Residents of the Foster-Walker Complex were hit with mass burglaries in October, also. More than $1,500 in cash, jewelry and camera equipment was stolen in a one-week period A dim candle lights the way for a marcher in the Take Back the Night rally (Photo by Ralf Hestoft). from residents ' rooms. THE SEVEN STUDENTS whose rooms were burglarized had left their doors unlocked while taking showers between 7 and 8 a.m. The Department of Public Safety, which had already increased campus patrols after the rapes, increased its morning patrols around Foster- Walker after the burglaries. The most serious incident of Winter Quarter occurred when $1,700 worth of camera equip- ment was stolen from a fraternity only hours after it had been delivered by a United Parcel Service truck. But feelings of insecurity persisted, with one woman writing in The Daily Northwestern that she was so afraid of being attacked that she had considered getting a gun. And an investigation by several Daily reporters revealed that it was not difficult to get past desk monitors and through security doors that are supposed to bar unwanted in- truders from NU dorms. Although the protests were over, the sen- timents remained. 11 a. 374 ;: Newsprint NU gets new group of buildings By Connie Pryzant Some Northwestern buildings shot up this year as fast as several others crumbled to the ground. The $9.4 million Theatre and Interpretation Center opened in October with a star studded retinue of famous alums, including Charlton Heston and Carol Lawrence, Warren Beatty and Cloris Leachman to inaugurate its coming- out party. A week of festivities culminated in a glamorous, $l,(XX)-a-plate dinner and Gala performance. NU also started building five new dorms, which are part of a $23 million, seven-dorm project. Three of these dorms will be residen- tial colleges with suites of eight people each. THE TWO 90-PERSON dorms between the sorority quadrangles are nearly in- distinguishable in appearance from the gothic, ivy-colored covered stone buildings of their neighbors. After months of controversy with the Evanston City Council, Northwestern razed three buildings on Sheridan Road to make way for the two remaining new dorms. The city of Evanston was unwilling to allow NU to build on two alleys the city owned because it feared NU would not preserve near- Construction proceeds on one of the new dorms being built south of Kresge Hall (Photo by Ken Newberry). by historic buildings. NU was willing to build one dorm with 380 spaces instead of the two that were originally planned. But since Evanston would not vacate the alleys, NU razed the buildings which had been former offices in September. The seven-month delay in starting construction cost the universi- ty $1 million and delayed the dorm opening to fall 1982. NU ALSO OPENED 2.7 million 652-space parking lot last summer. The parking lot originally was supposed to accommodate 831 cars, but NU had to scrap plans for 179 spaces because of an Evanston zoning law that re- quires diagonal parking spaces. NU also lost the fiat-roofed, red brick speech annex, the former home of the theater department and scene shop. The departments moved into the much acclaimed new speech building. 11 Puerto Rican terrorists are arrested in Evanston By David Steinberg When Northwestern Department of Public Safety officers spotted a white truck in an NU parking lot matching the description of a vehi- cle stolen from Evanston ' s Budget Rent-A- Car, they probably had no idea their report would lead to part of one of the biggest arrests in recent years. But a few hours later on April 5, 1980, Evanston police had captured 1 1 suspected Puerto Rican terrorists, three of them on the FBI ' s 10 most wanted list. Shortly after DPS spotted the van, Evanston police arrested two of the suspects. The other nine, including Carlos Alberto Torres, the FBI ' s most wanted man since 1976, were cap- tured in a separate arrest at Evantson ' s Hamilton Street, six blocks south of campus. ALTHOUGH 19 LOADED guns were found at the two arrest sites, no shots were fired during the arrests. Following their arrest, the 1 1 suspects were taken to the Evanston Police Station on Elmwood Avenue, where a small jail was transformed into a secure prison, with officers patrolling on the roof armed with machine guns. FBI agents ' and detectives from the New York and Chicago police departments filed in- to the station to help identify the suspects, who refused to talk to police. Meanwhile, on the day after the arrest a crowd sympathetic to the suspects militant demands for Puerto Rican independence gathered outside the station, chanting in Spanish, If the Yankees don ' t leave (Puerto Rico), they will die. BUT THE CROWD dispersed quietly that afternoon, shortly before a bond of $2 million each was set for the suspects in the first of several stormy preliminary hearings. Ten of the defendants were convicted in the U.S. District Court for Chicago on seditious conspiracy and other charges. The other suspect, Torres ' wife, Marie, was convicted last year in New York on federal charges. Newsprint Section Editor: David Freedman Writers: IVIarcia Davis, Mark Gelatt, Bob Kowalski, Timothy Larimer, David Nathan, Connie Pryzant, Shari Sigman, David Steinberg, Ian Thomsen, IVIark Wangrin, Chas. Weisman and Tom Widlowski. Photographers: Lenny Cohen, Ralf Hestoft, Vijay Hingorani, Ken Newberry and Roger Phillips. 375 Newsprint HH B H W JPQ ' ' = H ' 1 IVjaSIBI . ■ii 1 uu I ' M- 1 P All ir tXPRtSN MAII vv. 3iiR l -N I H t ' ' wi 1 _:  , ' - ' - w CAS freshmen Kevin Dowling and Robert Mayer register for the draft at the Evanston Post Office In January (Photo by Vijay Hingorani). Hostages from page 369 own terms for the hostages ' release. Con- spicously. absent was a call for a formal U.S. apology. Ten days later an Iraqi-Iranain war borke out and Bani Sadr charged the United States with aiding Iraq. The United States declared its neutrality. On Nov. 2, two days before Ronald Reagan ' s election, the Iranian parliament ap- poved Khomeini ' s terms. The final round of negotiations was about to begin. The U.S. negotiating team, led by Deputy Secretary of State Warren Christopher, travel- ed to Algeria, only to face Iranian demands for $24 bilHon in cash and gold. DURING THE LAST two months of Carter ' s term, Iran modified its demands and the two sides neared agreement. On Jan. 18, two days before Carter ' s term ended, Iran announced that a deal had been struck. But a last minute snag involving the transfer of $8 billion in funds to an escrow account at the Bank of England delayed the hostages ' release. The final agreement was reached at 3 a.m. Jan. 20, nine hours before Carter ' s term end- ed. Under the agreement, Iran was to receive only $3 billion, with the rest of the $8 billion used to pay off debts or placed in an account to cover claims from American creditors. THE 52 HOSTAGES took off from Teheran in an Algerian jet and left Iranian airspace less than an hour after Ronald Reagan was sworn in. After a brief refueling stop in Athens, the hostages flew to Algiers, where they were met by Christopher and the negotiating team. The freed Americans boarded two U.S. medical evacuation jets and were flown to Wiesbaden, West Germany, for extensive medical examina- tions and rest. After their five-day stay in West Germany, the hostages flew to a hero ' s welcome in upstate New York and spent Sunday with their families at the U.S. Military Academy in West Point. AROUND THE COUNTRY celebrations were in order. New York held a ticker tape parade, Chicago released 10,000 yellow balloons and in Washington the national Christmas tree was lit, after being dark two straight Decembers. At Northwestern, the Evans Scholars displayed a large flag in front of their house. And all over the country, yellow ribbons, tied to trees and posts for more than 14 mon- ths, finally came down. The hostage crisis at last was over. Sign-up for draft instituted By Mark Gelatt When President Carter called for registra- tion of 18-, 19- and 20-year-old males in January 1980, it looked as if campuses all over the country might erupt in protests reminiscent of the 1960s. But after the initial furor died down, only scattered protests and a few anti-registration movements remained. Most of those required to register during July 1980 and January 1981 did register. Registration for males born in 1960 and I%I took place from July 21 to Aug. 2 and those born in 1962 were required to register Jan 5 to 9. IN STARK CONTRAST to the large demonstrations of the late ' 60s and early ' 70s, only 150 students showed up for a North- western Coalition Against Registration and the Draft rally May 23, 1980. The rally, held on the steps of Rebecca Crown Center, was hastily organized to protest the issue being debated in Congress at the time. During the summer registration, draft counseling services by Evanston Residents Against Registration and the Draft, debates on the need for registration and minor protests outside the Evanston Post Office were the only organized anti-registration activities. On the national level, registration was being challenged on constitutional grounds. The American Civil Liberties Union said the male- only registration was discriminatory and therefore violated the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The ACLU apparently won the first round when a three-judge panel agreed with its stand. However, that decision was stayed by Supreme Court Justice William Brennan a few days beofre the summer registration began. The Supreme Court later agreed to hear the case. THE ACLU ALSO filed another suit, stating that the Selective Service lacked the authority to ask a registrant his Social Securtiy number. Again the ACLU won the first round when U.S. District Judge Gerhard Gesell ruled that the requirement violated the Privacy Act of 1974. A higher court stayed this order the first week in January 1981 and all registrants were required to supply the information while the case was pending in the U.S. District Court of Appeals in Washington, D.C. January registration also met only limited protest at Northwestern, most of it being in the form of draft counseling. The Selective Service estimated that more than 90 percent of the na- tion ' s 18-year-olds registered. Starting Jan. 12, all males were required to register within a week of their 18th birthday. 5! i 376 .3£ik. ' ' J Wj raft tuted i forr a. ■' Hor-old males io ■ifQiiipiMsalover fipratetsraninisceiK alfmorditij down, only •fcwanti-registnita ' •MMoftliosereqiiird IjHIOandJaiiiiaiyro «l8borainl%0andl5«| 21 to Aug. 2 and those flmd to register Jan! 10 WTEASI to the large It lie ' Sis and early ' Ids, itnl up for a North- , WO. Tlie rally, held on Cron Center, was liasti; U me Rpstntion, draft b; Ewion Resideits I ad tlx Draft, debates OD ■in ud minor protests iPHOfiiceweretheoiil) HJNidivities. !Kl,R|Btnlioo was being jBitiiiiBl pomids. Hx rialilialsaidtknlai ig injoiinator; and hi qalptoUdion clause loilf KB ihefint round 11$ stand. iansst bySupw la Brm fn [ retJsMiis IxpO ' ' i Kihar the case. IjO ftd JMtte 5 ' tewSflVKtbcW ,jOTifcSocBlS««itiy logti AePiivvy Act of la ' _ wrt jtyiBBtion ' Ui District CW ' fi ' itfonlytf; iofkbflngfflll« SftSeWiveSer . Newsprint WaL,..WHODlDVOU VOTE FOR...? g : lASTW EKWASOM FOR THE WI3T0RVBO0K5. OVER- COMING AU 0t C 5 ANO HARDSHIP A SMAU GROUP Of mmcms me 6Bo VICTORIOUS. IM RICA 5AHJTK., If ...THH0AKLANt RAlPgR6! L - ' ■ni : f , -p( N)in 1 ; toirw iif S2 Z-z ■— .v««iCi © 377 Newsprint .j- Dispute heightens racial tension By Marcia Davis Last spring ' s Associated Student Govern- ment For Member ' s Only funding dispute resulted in an attempt on a student ' s life, a bomb threat, more than 3,000 books being jammed into the University Library and 7,000 copies of The Daily Northwestern being stolen. The actions were a reflection of hightened campus racial tension brought on by FMO ' s controversial attempt to get direct university funding. NU ' s black student alliance claimed that ASG, mostly white, could not fairly deter- mine FMO ' s funding needs. The organization refused to go through nor- mal ASG channels to receive student activity funds, instead asking to get 10 percent of the funds directly from the university. FMO said it should receive the money because it represented at least 10 to 14 percent of the campus. FMO MADE A formal request in a proposal to Vice President for Student Affairs Jim G. Carleton. The request came after the passage of a student referendum to reopen flnancial misconduct hearings concerning FMO ' s use of funds. Then-FMO Coordinator Tony Thompson said the referendum convinced FMO that it could never go back to ASG for funding. He called the white campus insensitive to black students ' needs. Thompson, along with more than 200 black students, later marched into Carehon ' s office to hear the no response to their proposal for 10 percent of SAF. The following weekend, a mass 3,000-book check-in and check-out oc- curred at the University Library in what Thompson called a show of solidarity. WHEN A COMPROMISE finally was reached among Carleton, ASG President George McClellan, Thompson and FMO Vice Coordinator Neil Boyer, FMO was supposed to receive at least $9,000. Assuming that things were settled, Thomp- son turned the office over to Boyer, who had been elected earlier in the quarter. Boyer, however, after reading the ASG constitution. called the agreement with Carleton and Mc- Clellan null and void, stating McClellan did not have the power to speak for Forum. The next morning, 7,000 copies of The Dai- ly Northwestern which reported that an agreement had been reached, were stolen. Students said they had seen several black men dressed in Army jackets picking up the papers as they were being dropped off at campus distribution spots. BOYER SAID HE did not authorize or par- ticipate in the paper theft, but he later said he knew of it. He added that the idea had been discussed before as a protest movement. The following day, there was a bomb threat at 1914 Sheridan Road, where FMO ' s offices are located. Before the dispute would finally end, Thompson reported that white students in driving on Sheridan Road tried to run him over. The organization received close to $9,000 for the school year, but did not formally reach a compromise until this fall. Saddened students watch the Deering rally (Photo by Lenny Cohen). from page 371 378 crowd to a direct confrontation with the Nazis in Lovelace Park. Moments after the Deering Rally ended, the Nazi marchers arrived at Lovelace driving two dented sedans. The marchers, dressed in brown outifts similar to those worn by Hitler ' s infamous stormtroopers, were assaulted with rocks and garbage immediately as they moved toward a public restroom building in the northwest cor- ner of the park and protected themselves with swatstika-emblazoned shields. AT ONE POINT part of the crowd broke through a police rope barricade and attemted to rush the Nazis. Evanston police and about 100 Illinois state police held the crowd back using riot sticks. One Evanston patrolman was hit on the head with a brick during the surge, while another was later treated for a minor leg injury. The crowd had become frenzied when the Nazis unfurled a banner that ead: The Holocaust: six million lies, but the Nazis stayed a total of only four minutes, and were finally escorted to their cars by the police. Evanston Mayor James Lytle, who spoke during the Deering rally, said he was sorry to have allowed the Nazis to rally in Evanston. Lytle said issuing the Nazis a permit to rally was the most repugnant act I ' ve had to par- ticipate in as a mayor of this city. Evanston ' s greatest asset is its diversity, he said. There is a price we pay to enjoy this. SureOieiagi andliHapM theater dirtil MikeHeegeii Varsity MEN ' S FDION (fte(l:2HB SOFTBALL VOLLEYBAli (tartOtOl SOCCER (Record: io«) WOMEN ' S TBI tart: 164 8j| BASEBWL taint 2M1.B WOMEN ' S aw WRESTUNG I !]:!!.!!! ■' .WcfForim ■' ■iiffi. ' ' H ' lllMKlisCWl ■' ■• ' ' ' fiilmnii ' oracBirtbted. •• «wld finally (jj « white stiidenis i ' fcud tr ied to mill ' wi «icloseioS9,(llKifo[ ' WiWfoniialy radii 11 U. iijdened studenls itcn the Deering rally loto by Lenny Cote). i (oBiiHiiiies,aKl « ifciasbyitePt ,taBLvile, li ' Tgidbewassonys Newsprint Sure the actors are central for any stage production. But for Josephine Louis for whom one of the theaters in the new Theatre and Interpretation Center is named, the show can ' t go on without an audience. She didn ' t have a live audience to fill her theater during the Gala week In October, so she did the next best thing— she filled the seats with cardboard cut-outs (Photo by Mike Heeger). Varsity Athletic Records MEN ' S FENCING (Record: 21-6, Big Ten 4-4) SOFTBALL (Record: 16-17, Big Ten 3-5) VOLLEYBALL (Record: 43-10) SOCCER (Record: 10-6) WOMEN ' S TENNIS (Record: 16-8, Big Ten 5-4) BASEBALL (Record: 20-21, Bjg Ten 5-11) WOMEN ' S SWIMMING (Record: 9-6, Big Ten 2-4) WOMEN ' S CROSS COUNTRY (Record: 1-0) WOMEN ' S BASKETBALL (Record: 22-12, Big Ten 8-3) WRESTLING (Record: 11-11, Big Ten 1-8) MEN ' S TENNIS (Record: 19-11, Big Ten 3-6) WOMEN ' S FENCING (Record: 18-9, Big Ten 4-2) MEN ' S SWIMMING (Record: 1-13, Big Ten 0-6) FOOTBALL (Record: 0-11, Big Ten 0-9) IM Champions Mean Dean ' s Machine P G Packers FALL 1980 Flag Football Blue Division Red Division Tennis Men ' s Myron Marcinkowski Women ' s Barb Brabec Coed Doubles Jim Gelwicks, Kathy Ray Golf Brad Phipps Coed Volleyball Blue Euphio, University Champions Red Zaprzeg Yellow Moyawr Orange Basket Cases TOB Spleenless Wonders Indoor Soccer Blue Wonkas Red Friars TOB Turkish National Team WINTER 1981 Bowling Coed Killer Minnows Men ' s Grandma ' s Teeth Men ' s Basketball Blue Wasif II Red Elder Low Lifes, Univ. Champs. Yellow Philosophy Grads Orange Finesse Mediocrity Bowl Eraserheads TOB Proven Under Stress Bench Press Men ' s Lightweight Elmer Shannon II Men ' s Heavywei ght Scott Werfel Women ' s Lightweight Theresa Goode Women ' s Heavyweight Katherine Hart Coed Elmer Katherin Broomball Hockey Bobb Hall Water Polo Spare Tire Women ' s Basketball NUWAD MEN ' S CROSS COUNTRY (Record: 1-2) WOMEN ' S GYMNASTICS (Record: 5-0) FIELD HOCKEY (Record: 18-6-3) SOCCER (Record: 10-6-1) 379 L-V Newsprint In A Glance. Movies: Airplane Coal Miner ' s Daughter Elephant Man Empire Strikes Back Fame Melvin and Howard Ordinary People Popeye Private Benjamin Raging Bull Tess The Empire Strikes Back Prices $1.38 - gallon of regular gas $20.00 - Izod short sleeve shirt $6.00 - Chinese shoes $1.25 - regular hamburger $6.50 - average album $21.00 - Levies straight legs $40.00 - Bass shoes $7.00 - T-shirt $500.00 + - ounce of gold 21.5 percent - lending rate $2.98 - six-pack of beer Popular Television: Lou Gra nt Dallas Three ' s Compamy Little House on the Prairie M A S H That ' s Incredible Happy Days The Loveboat Solid Gold Real People 60 Minutes The Tonight Show Taxi Laverne and Shirley Michigan Football (Photo by Tom Xydis) Will You Remember These?: Diff ' rent Strokes Hello Larry Magnum P.L Knot ' s Landing The Gala Show The Hill Street Blues The Brady Brides Flamingo Road The Mandrell Sisters The Toni Tennille Show Tom Snyder Coast to Coast Charlie ' s Angels It ' s a Living Bosom Buddies Top Sports 1980 Stanley Cup - New York Islanders 1980 NBA Champions - Los Angeles Lakers 1981 Superbowl - Oakland Raiders 1980 World Series - Philadelphia Phillies 1980 Summer Olympics - did not attend 1980 Kentucky Derby - Genuine Risk 1981 Rose Bowl - Michigan Obituaries John Bonham: Led Zeppelin drummer Jimmy Durante: actor, singer John Lennon: singer Steve McQueen: actor Reza Pahlavi: Shah of Iran Peter Sellers: actor Helen Strotz: President Strotz ' s wife Mae West: actress 380 II Newsprint Practice pays for volleyball team By Ian Thomsen Three weeks before school started in September, while Northwestern students were at the beach or in some other way preparing for school, NU volleyball coach Jerry Angle had his team on the court six hours a day in preparation for the upcoming season. Three months later in December, while NU students were trapped in their rooms studying for finals. Angle had his team in sunny Santa Barbara, Calif., for the volleyball national championship tournament. The Cats finished the season ranked No. 17 in the nation. The Wildcats weren ' t supposed to be a fac- tor in the Midwest region in 1980. Angle, in his second year at NU, was bringing back an 18-16 team from 1979 and was starting four freshmen and two sophomores. On top of it all, the Cats were forced to compete with na- tional powerhouses like Purdue and Illinois State. SO IT WAS NO surprise when no one listened to Angle as he talked about his Wildcats and their goal of qualifying for the nationals. But when the Cats took their first tournament of the year by beating No. 12-ranked Purdue in the finals of the Illinois State Invitational Sept. 19, people started listening. As the Cats won five regular season tour- naments, NU came closer to adopting volleyball. An estimated 2,200 showed up at McGaw Hall Oct. 5 for the Cats ' international match with the Sony team of Japan. Hundreds were appearing at McGaw by the end of the season to watch the Cats drive for Santa Bar- bara. NU peaked when it wanted to, at the state and regional tournaments in November. The Cats had to finish first or second in both to assure a berth to the nationals. NU was upset early in the double elimina- tion state tourney but came back to beat top seed Illinois State in a gutsy final to win the championship and qualify for the regionals. In Madison, Wis., the following week, NU avoid- ed the upsets that knocked out contenders Pur- due and ISU and beat Central Michigan in a grueling, pressured packed semifinal match to make the nationals. THE CATS WERE led by All-America sophomore setter Patty Walsh, who transferred from Wisconsin before the season started. Outside hitter Kim Clausen was the only returning starter from the 1979 squad. But it was four freshmen who turned a wan- ing volleyball program around in one year. Center blocker Pattijean McCahill made All- Big Ten. Liz Douglass, Lorie Miller, and Dawn Reig all provided the stability and, surprising- ly, the experience the Cats were counting on to get to Santa Barbara. Seniors Denise Weaver and Lisa Burgher provided leadership off the bench. Rosie Schumacher, a junior outside hitter, was a constant spark as a substitute and freshman Larissa Klavins proved to be a steady backcourt specialist and set herself up for a prominent role in the 1981 season. The Cats gained more experience at the na- tionals, where they lost all four opening round matches to finish tied for 17th in the country. We made it here, Angle said in Santa Barbara. We ' re one of the top 20 teams out of 157 (nationwide). Our whole season shouldn ' t be based on one tournament. The Cats ' season wasn ' t based on one tour- nament. It was a season in which a marginal team suddenly turned into a national con- tender, and it will be a long time before NU suffers another losing record in volleyball. NU ' s Lorie Miller goes up for a spike against the University of the Pacific in a match at the December nationals in Santa Bar- bara, Calif. (Photo by Lenny Cohen). 381 L Newsprint Another season in the cellar By Chas. Weisman What can you say about a team that loses every game it plays, not to mention its entire coaching staff? You can say the 1980 Nor- thwestern football season was nothing to write home about. Of course, no one expected NU to spend New Year ' s Day in Pasadena, but everyone did expect at least one or two wins. After all, it was the third year for head mentor Rick Venturi, and while the Wildcats only managed a single win his first two terms, there were signs of steady improvement. But instead, all 11 games were Wildcat losses — some by great margins, others were ac- tually close. THE PROBLEM WAS fairly obvious— the Wildcat defense was virtually non-existent. Opposing teams ran against the Cats at will; it was 17 yards and a cloud of dust. NU ' s defen- sive back field, led by omnipresent sophomore free safety Bobby Anderson, was usually reliable, but it too had its problems, especially when Big Ten quarterbacks like Mark Her- mann and Art Schlichter chose to take advan- tage of the young Cats. As for the Wildcat offense, well, often it was exciting. The Cats were a passing team and junior Mike Kerrigan emerged as one of the finest quarterbacks in the conference. His favorite targets were senior split end Todd Sheets and junior wingback Dave Bahoric, and Kerrigan also found much help from his backfield. Sophomore tailback Jeff Cohn and senior fullback Dave Mishler anchored a Wildcat backfield that got a great deal of support from a host of freshmen. Rookies Kenny Watkins, Jim Browne and Tracy Parsons were all con- tributors who give NU a lot to look forward to. NU ' S OFFENSIVE LINE, led by burly senior tackle Jim Ford, an Academic AU- American, often gave Kerrigan needed protec- tion and occasionally created holes for Wildcat runners. So what happened to the Cats? They opened their nightmarish season Sept. 6 against Illinois in Champaign. And, unbelievably, when the gun sounded to end the first half of that game, NU was on top 9-0. But 30 minutes and five touchdowns later, the Cats were losers to the 382 NU split end Todd Sheets runs the ball against Purdue (Photo by Lenny Cohen). mini 35-9. The next week the Cats faced off against the Wolverines in Michigan, a game that was sure to be a blow out. Only it wasn ' t. The game was tied at 10-10 as late as the fourth quarter, before NU succumbed 17-10. Outside the Big Ten, NU met Washington in Seattle and Syracuse in its brand new Carrier Dome. The Huskies mauled NU 45-7 and the Orangemen crushed the Cats 42-21. More of the same befell the Wildcats as they dropped their next seven conference games. That last game, a 39-19 loss to Wisconsin Nov. 15, was Rick Venturi ' s last game at NU. Three days later, he, his entire coaching staff and Athletic Director John Pont were fired by University President Robert Strotz. Rick Venturi ' s three-year record at NU was 1-31-1 — he never won a Big Ten game. NU9, [llinois 35 NU 10, Michigan 17 NU7, Washington 45 NU21, Syracuse 42 NU21 Minnesota 49 NUO, Ohio State 63 NU3, Iowa 25 NU20 Indiana 35 NU21 Purdue 53 NU 10 , Michigan State 42 NU 19 , Wisconsin 39 Youn .omens ' tokj ; iheiritoinip- ' ' jfjsojiiiliU ' Blay IlKWiitaB4 take Nlfi V llliiiois,tii 0 ikeir spol ! P again offJI iliffl coot b t dock. CiuopioaliilM ' liikioJfaaa nesottoiiiffiifc ilitClin(i«i OK or iw !■■Oopbn wH • points lijil ••?■BigTntitltiinl yean. Nonhtnmi jS r .V Newsprint Young B-ball Team Takes Regional Title Considering what they had to overcome, the womens ' basketball team did much better than their record (22-12) indicated. They began this season with a new coach and four new starting players. The Wildcats opened the season with a win against Illinois State. ISU had been expected to take NU ' s spot for the toughest team in Illinois, but the Cats weren ' t ready to give up their spot yet. They went through an on- again, off-again dual meet season, working on consistency and endurance on the court. In several games the team would fall behind and then come back, under the pressure of the clock. That seemed to be the pattern at the Big Ten Championships as well, but NU finally lost the title to Minnesota. The Cats had lost to Min- nesota earlier in the season, at Minneapolis. At the Championship, the Cats would get within one or two points of Minnesota but the Gophers would open the game up to seven points right away. NU lost 79-73, losing the Big Ten title they had held for the past two years. Northwestern made it into the Regionals on an at-large bid. Seeded second in the tourna- ment, the Cats beat three teams that had beaten them earlier in the season. The final game was against Illinois State, who had beaten the Cats in their second meet a few weeks earlier at the State Tournament. NU won the game at the buzzer, 67-66. The team got a bid to Nationals, having won Regionals. Because of their dual meet record, the Cats ' first game was away. NU was pitted against Stephen Austin University, at Nacogdoches, Texas. Nationally ranked Austin beat NU 88-67, ending the Cats ' season. A few key players, by the end, had earned national recognition. Patience Vanderbush, a junior center, made second team Academic All-American. Julie Calahan, captain of the team, was one of the thirty finalists for the Wade Trophy, the highest award for womens ' college basketball. Ending her career with over 1600 points, Calahan led the team in scoring. She made 701 points in 34 for a game average of 20.6 points. She led the team in rebounding as well, with an 8.8 average. The senior from Havre, Montana set the single game rebound- ing record at 26 in NU ' s win over Indiana. The single game scoring record also met with Calahan ' s axe to bring the record up to 33 points, set when the Cats lost to University of Pittsburgh. Connie Erickson, a sophomore transfer from Southern Ilhnois University, was ex- pected to be one of the key guards for the Cats. She played in the first five games and then end- ed up sidelined for the next eleven games with stress fractures in both ankles. Finally getting back in to play, Erickson proved herself to be a valuable asset to the team, and setting herself up as heir-apparent to the role of team leader. Amy Pritchard was the Cats ' outside threat, shooting well from the field. She was one of the team ' s toughest players with an average of 16 points a game. Pritchard was her strongest in tournaments filling her role well for a first year starter. The team will be losing three seniors next year: Julie Calahan, Julia Egan and Mary Pelton. With a strong nucleus remaining, and good recruits, the team is definitely heading in- to better times. ■jCoba). iiois35 isiiingion45 poise 42 iiBesota49 go State 63 i|dDe33 f State 42 Visconsiii39 383 Newsprint Injuries dim Cats ' promising year By Mark -Wangrin This was to be the year of promise for Northwestern ' s men ' s basketball team. Gone were the days of big and slow Wildcat teams. Instead, the Wildcat ranks were filled with smaller but quicker players, players who could keep up with the fast paced action of the Big Ten. In the early weeks of the season that promise gleamed brightly as the Cats won six of their first nine games. The three losses came at the hands of DePaul, Oregon State and Utah, all nationally ranked teams. THEN CAME THE Big Ten season. And the injuries. Sophomore forward Gaddis Rathel, who had shown signs of emerging stardom in the nonconference games was the first to fall. He injured his ankle in the conference opener, an 88-64 rout by Illinois, and he was never at full strength for the remainder of the year. The decimation continued. Freshman Marty Clary broke his foot and missed nearly the en- tire season. Sophomore point guard Michael Jenkins missed the heart of the season with a badly sprained ankle. Bob Grady, NU ' s junior center, had his year come to early end when he fractured his wrist. Freshman center Colin Murray nursed a bad back and junior forward Jim Stack was bothered by a knee injury through much of the season. BUT OUT OF ravaged NU ranks rose the development of several young players as stars of the future. Paul Schultz, given his chance at forward when Rathel was injured, proved he was ready to challenge the Big Ten ' s best beneath the basket. Art Aaron overcame early injuries, a shaky start and lack of control to work his way into the starting lineup. Aaron responded with tenacious defense, some flashy offensive manuevers and an indomitable spirit in becom- ing the fans ' favorite. Tempering the inexperience of the younger players were the veteran NU performers. SENIOR GUARD ROD Roberson closed out his Wildcat career in fine style, finishing third behind Billy McKinney and Jim Burns on the all-time NU scoring list with 1,331 points. Roberson also was named to the All-Big Ten third team. Stack, who also received all-conference mention, lead the Cats in rebounding and beat out Roberson for the conference free throw percentage title. The 6-8 junior ' s jumper in the closing seconds of the first game against Wisconsin helped give NU a thrilling 50-48 win. Despite finishing with a 9-18 record, the Wildcats did their share of giant-killing. NU downed Michigan 74-70 in Ann Arbor when the Wolverines were ranked 18th in the nation. The Cats also helped knock Ohio State out of post-season tournament play by shocking the Buckeyes 69-64 in the last game in McGaw Hall before the renovations of the fieldhouse begin. And if the play of the Cats ' younger players is any indication, the basketball team ' s renova- tion is already well on its way. Other NU teams have stars, too By Tom Widlowski They don ' t draw crowds or always make headlines, but sports like swimming, tennis, baseball and wrestling have their glory moments and stars at Northwestern. The men ' s tennis team, 19-11 and 3-6 in the Big Ten, finished second in the conference last spring. No. 1 singles star Paul Wei paced the Cats with his 17-11, 5-5 conference record. Mike Balkin, No. 2 singles, finished 15-8. In women ' s tennis, Mary Boyer, Cindy Brightfield and Aimee Conlan represented NU at the AIAW national tennis championships. COACH GEORGE MCKINNON ' S baseball team had a cool spring, finishing ninth in the Big Ten standing. The Cats ' 5-11 conference mark put them nine games behind Big Ten champion Michigan. Left fielder Mike Ouska was named to the 1980 Academic All-Big Ten team. The three- year starter earned the honors by hitting .308, leading the Cats with 41 base hits and main- taining a 3.03 grade average in economics. The fall brought new Coon Courts to women ' s tennis coach Sandy Stap and her powerful squad. The cats finished the season with a mean 8-1 record and their fifth con- secutive state title. Freshman Randy Rosen won the state singles title. Rosen and Courtney Lord captured the doubles title. The NU wrestling team played its tough schedule to an 1 1-1 1 record. The Cats were 1-8 in the Big Ten and finished eighth in the con- ference tournament. Craig Jennings was se- cond at 190 pounds in the Big Ten and Tom Janicik was third at 158. JENNINGS ' S RECORD was 23-7 with 1 1 pins. Janicik was 25-3 and represented the East at 158 in the East- West All-Star Wrestling Classic. Janicik and Jennings qualified for the nationals. The women ' s swim team had a 9-6 dual meet record. It was 2-4 in the Big Ten and finished seventh in the conference tournament. The Cats were second in the state tournament. Kim Lindstrom qualified for the nationals in the 400-yard individual medley and the 1 ,000- and 1,650-yard freestyles. Cindy Watts qualified for the nationals in the 50- and 100-yard butterfly. Lindstrom, Ellie Sachs, Cathy Rudel, and Ginni Vath made the na- tionals in the 800-yard freestyle relays. The men ' s swim team sank to a 1-12 dual meet record and a last place Big Ten finish. The highlight of their season was a second- place finish in the 11 -school Illinois Private College Championships. 384 10 rs I year Jil style, fa ■• ' All-Big Te, ■WMiKlingaiidbtat • •fmict free thro J tt ' sjiiiiiperuitlie « fci game , I Nil a thnliing %4 «WS record, the ■t i(jifflt-kiiig.mj ♦•llii Ann Arbor ! ■WUthinihenatio ' i, M hod Ohio State out ■O play by shocking lielKpnieinMcGaw wofthefieldhoiise Ik C«s uDger players tiiblliiD team ' s renova- too n-tnge in economics. I m Coon Courts lo idi Sady Stap and ha ;a:i Siiiihed the season iixi and ikii fifth cod- Freslmin Randy Rosen lOdtictcnandCouitney Mbik. I Km played its tough tniiTlie Cats were 1-8 Wtd eighth in the con- . Cnj toiings w se- ;ii lit Kg Ten anil Tom ISL [0)IDijs23-l itlill .3Md represented the East i-f S Al-Siar Wrestinj j qualified for tilt itoalada dnalnieet ikBgTenandfniislieii jgfgt looraanient. TTie I lit sBt tournament. jftd [or the nationals in ygskyandthelOW- 7iItooin,Eto Sachs, ( Vahmadetke - i tS.. rpteefcTenli J «ase n- 385 386 Attn: Banderooge Re.. Grades science oeja radfi IVo Sor Srowrv of e, science dspartment has informed us that you 3re dr in ' F ' work in hiscour . If this grade does not improve imm( ia f wevv;ll be. -krced to place you on academic probation. Stncerely, Advertising 387 - r to [ master charge the one stop place for all of your Northwestern needs, present and future. Student Book Exchange 1737 Sherman Ave. (312) 328-2718 Congratulations to the Graduating Class of 1981 szabo SZABO FOOD SERVICE, INC Serving the Norris University Center Total Food Service Management 2000 Spring Road Suite 3000 Oai Brooic, Illinois 60521 388 Jl r 390 Lefs celebrate -- this could be Northwestern University A Century in Alumni A Century in Alumni Service Your commencement is our anniversary. It marks a century of Alumni Association service to the Nortiiwestern community. There are our services to students, incoming freshmen, alum- ni, and to the University— all made possible by an unbroken chain of volunteer effort. Students, alumni, faculty and administration working together have made your Alumni Association one of the most respected in the country. We ' ve won seven national alumni administration awards since 1977 for comprehensive ex- cellence in alumni programming and alumni giv- ing. Now you ' re a graduate, thereby a member of the Association and a part of our team. Welcome aboard! Don ' t miss our events This disco party (right) was a great young alumni event. Enjoyable and informative ac- tivities are sponsored by the Alumni Associa- tion, by each school ' s constituent organiza- tion, by alumni clubs and by other alumni groups. These events range from Seminar Day to tours abroad. Others are outings on the L to see Chicago ' s architectural sights, class reunions at Homecoming, informative speakers, theatre parties and panel discus- sions of important issues. Be involved in planning future activities. Join the board or committees of your local alumni club or your school ' s association. The 50 alumni clubs are listed at the right. More are on the way. Akron-Canton-Kent Albuquerque Atlanta Baltimore Boston Central Indiana Central Ohio Ctiicago Cincinnati Cleveland Dallas-Fort Worth Delaware Valley Denver Detroit Eastern Iowa Fort Lauderdale Hawaii Houston Jacksonville Kansas City Kentuckiana Miami Milwaukee Nashville New York Northwest Indiana Northwest Ohio Oklahoma Omaha Orlando Peoria Pittsburgh Portland Salt Lake City San Diego San Francisco Bay Area Sarasota St. Louis Seattle Southeastern Wisconsin Southern California Sun City Tampa Bay Tri-State Tucson Twin Cities Valley of the Sun Washington, D.C. Western Michigan Wisconsin Capital Area KEEP IN TOUCH . . .with alumni news and events. Send your new address to: Ray Willemain, Director, Department of Alumni Relations, Northwestem University, 1800 Sheridan Road, Evanston, Illinois 60201. Telephone: 312 492-7200. JSLki lid be ' 1 Dnveiity y in Alumni ' siniversary.ij Association service ity ' Thereareoyr fltehmeMlum- Impossible by JJ effort. Students, ■■ion working ' •wiiAssoclalion ••I ! Hie countfy. We ' ve • •Wnistratlon iwtiensiveex- • • J and alumni giv- •.thereby a member ipjrtofourteam, iy. the start of something great Alumni Association Sen ice 1881-1981 Seniors: your gift lias impact We ' re proud of your leadership in presenting the Senior Class Gift— bar facilities for Norris University Center and gifts designated for school of general University use. Since 1851 the small and large contributions of thousands of friends of the University, Northwestern seniors and alumni have made your— and our— educa- tion possible. Generations of alumni who went before you built your classrooms and educa- tional facilities. Annual donations keep tuition to about half of what it really costs to educate a student. Your leadership, and the support of school alumni associations, special donor groups and alumni clubs make it all happen. Student -Alumni relations Starting with freshman welcome parties hosted by alumni clubs and Wildcat Council, your Alumni Association strives to serve students— our reason for being. When you flew into O ' Hare four years ago, we were there to help you to campus. Since then, we have had get-acquainted parties at the Alumni Center, alumni career seminars, career development workshop, the internship mart, transfer student reception, senior graduation party and other ac- tivities for you. We ' re working with the Graduate Student Association, too. The new Student-Alumni Council brought together leaders from the whole spectrum of campus life. Its goal: to address student interests in such a way that it involves students, faculty and alumni. The Council ' s first project was Crime Awareness Week. Special firesides with alumni, community leaders and faculty spon- sored in cooperation with the Alumni Associa- tion covered topics from feminism to politics. Remember your first week on campus? Your Freshman Picture Book was a service of the Alumni Association. Perhaps CAS senior Geoff Heuchling, Wildcat Council President and a member of the Student-Alumni Council, ex- pressed it best when he told us: We want to take advantage of alumni experience and knowledge. We need their career advice. People thought that the John Evans Center was just for alumni and visitors. Student-alumni events are making it a student place, too— and that ' s valuable. 391 - V THE OENERAL STORE 726 Clark St. EVANSTON Established 1967 ■)ssss- w 392 CON GRATULATIONS CLASS OF ' 81 ! Oiandlers NOnrNwcsrciiN stuocnt serving Northwestern students alumni since 1895 School Supplies - Books - Greeting Cards Stationery T-Shirts - Sportswear - NU Memorabilia 630 Davis Street EVANSTON 475-7200 hours: Monday thru Saturday 8:30 to 5:30 ATIONS 81! O ' Op Jomiii since 1895 Cards So ' lltBii(abilii [0 5:- ' NORTHWESTERN NROTC ' ' ■: w . j w 0, congratulations to the graduating class of 1981 Left to Right: )on Kay, phone receptionist; Sp)enser Lampert; Jamie Rosenthal, president; John Roth; Mike Heeger, treasurer. 393 ' ' . ■-.-it • ' ■5. ■-■■.. EflWE- iiiiiw ' !; KKia STEWL— — liToiDrWl. ' ' ' jgiunu HI in ! ! IflltlUM JUDVLU EVBinOWU IMlWMiai naeffiiiciiO 394 MiiPIIP mt i Personals LULU, HELEN and LETTUCE: You run a close second to raw spaghetti, but you ' re still the greatest. Four years of laughter and many more to go. I love you. JANE Dearest B.J.H., Thanl you for being part of my life. Love Always, P.J.H. Goodbye Room 34— Love Your B.V.M. Elsemaria, Happy G-Day. Go for it. Love, John Denver SJK— After all of these years, viie ' re final- ly together! Thani s for mal ing this year great. You ' re special! SLS Eric, Eric and flitch. Good Lucl ! I ' ll miss you! Love, Marci Delta Zeta ist mir lieb. M.A.B. ERNIE— I just wanted you to l now that the past two years have been the best of my life. Thanlts you for loving me. I love you! EllenXOXOXOXO KRISTEN ROBB, You don ' t have to be a good girl at N.U. during the next 3 years. Just use good judgment. I love you. STEVEN Amos, Dan. Ivey, Keith, Luis— You ' re the best friends ever. Thanl you! I love you all! EllenXO 600 LINCOLN RESIDENTS: Besides being showered, laked, . thrown in the garbage and bushes, 1 thinl you ' re all mega-great even if you aren ' t a bunch of NIPS. Come south and visit me next year! !!!!!! LOVE ALWAYS, NANAKO JUDY LEA, EVEN THOUGH I ' LL BE GONE I WILL ALWAYS HOLD YOU DEAR YOU ARE VERY SPECIAL TO fvIE, REMEMBER ME. I LOVE YOU. JEFF Fritz- YOU ' RE it!!! with Love and Wonderfulness— thy Valentine FINE!! PI Nu Omega Chi and Chi Omega Sigma Alpha announce their daily exchange Information Available Sex, Drugs, Wildcats— The Wicl ed-tri made my year memorable! Thanks! Jen and Liz, BBB Lives! Here ' s to a great year gone by and to keeping up the Quest Friends Forever Leslie DEAREST SCUZY, DESPITE ALL THAT WE HAVE BEEN THROUGH THIS YEAR, I STILL LOVE YOU JUST THE WAY YOU ARE!!! LOVESCHNUCKI Brian Sandquist, Just wrote to say hello. May you spend the rest of your life pondering over who the hell wrote this message. Best wishes! No one Karen Alisa— the best of friends: You have made the past two years great! We love you and wiil miss you a lot. Good luck. —Heather Rene To the GROUP APPROVING of NONSEN- SICAL GARBAGE (GANG): I love you all very much. Here ' s t o COOKIE NIGHTS! Always, Stacey the Spacey To all involved with WHERE THE SUN NEVER SHINES: Thank you for the most eye-opening experience of the year. You ' re the GREATEST! Stacey JANNE— Thanks for making 45 Ladbroke sq a ' senior-superlative ' ! MR, AS, AG— One (?) more year is not that long. ENJOY! — DJB EFB II We love ya ' The BuFu Boys Rod— You light up my life, you give me hope, to carry on. —Love Pam Sr. Jocks: 3 yrs. of being an unsung fan really took it out of me. JE, MP, BB, RM — I can ' t believe you ' re all leaving me here. I love you guys. (Sarcasm lives.) Donna Even though you come from that soot and dirt capital of the world you think up some great BALL ads. Remember the great Mick Jagger and the queen. Don ' t forget the hostage. And they asked you to stay on. Amove— M.H. Chas, I knew from the moment I saw your license plate that you were a big guy, but realty! The four of us never dreamed it could be so good. Love and kisses room 69 Jeff I love to run my hands through your blond locks of hair. I wish you would memorize the steps from the manual. CAA Judi Hope you get this far in the book. If you do It means you ' ve gone all the way again. C,M, T. J.C. Did you use our WATS line to order your beer? Gary You ' re such a jag but you know your job, sometimes at least. The Staff Quinn Semis are nice but vans are better. Drive safely— school ' s open. Heeg You big slob. I might not like your pic- tures but at least you can focus. T.F. Lenny: Here ' s a shopping list for next year: 1) learn to focus 2) learn to meter 3) learn to eliminate grain 4) learn to print. But until then I guess its good enough for the rag. C,M, T TOD, Can you say depth of field? Sure you can. I knew you could. I like the way you say Run that or I ' ll quit. Love, C BS ROBERT, I sit beside the fire and think of all that I have seen, of meadow flowers and butterflies and summers that have been. Of yellow leaves and gossamar and autumns that there were with morning mist and silver sun and wind upon my hair. But all the while I sit and think of times there were before, I listen for returning feet and voices at the door. J. R.R.Tolkien Love Always, VICKI B Linda, remember not to forget that we love you bunches! Dale, VB,SB,TP, LB. BRUCE, ERIC, JOHN, MARC, MIKE, PAUL, SCOTT, TOM, NEIL: IT WAS A GREAT YEAR! MIKE AND ROBERT, OH YEAH— DENISE, JERRY, JOE. . . LOSERS!! CONGRATULATIONS JESSICA, First alumni Chapter President of the TMC Love, T.R. and the Brickwoman ML RACING RED CONVERTIBLES A dozen red roses rained-out Joni Mit- chell The Dead The Boss Marcel Marceau. . .I ' m gonna miss you kiddo. JG, to thanks for being there when I need- ed you! LW thanks for just being you! LL 4 years already? And they still think we ' re in High School! To the bestest! KP I ' m gonna miss you too! You-N-L are the greatest! Dear Tammy, Alice, Marilyn, and Liz Thanks for three of the best years ever and good luck in the real world!! I ' ll sure miss you guys. Love, Sue TO MY SIG DELT SISTERS- THANKS! THANKS! UH— THANK YOU. LOVE,JACKI Dear Lisa Thanks for being such a great mom. Good luck and keep in touch ' cause I ' ll miss you loads. Love Sherry 395 IN CHICAGO ■•■■■■■Pliiip -jejRfc ■397 398 .M 401 The Daily Northwestern 402 JffiLk. The Daily Northwestern Editor-in-Chief: JEFF BLOCH Business Manager: JANE GUNDELL Managing Editor: DAVID FFiEEDMAN News Editor: NERY YNCLAN Campus Editor: RICH DAVIS Off-Campus Editor: MEL JOHNSON Sports Editors: CHAS. WEISMAN and ROGER PHILLIPS Editorial Editor: JIM JACOBSON Midweek Features Editor: DAVE BEARD TGIF Editors: MICHELE COHEN and DAN MALOVANY Photography Editor: MITCH JORDAN Art Editor: ROBERT LEIGHTON Assistant Editors: Elizabeth Brewster, Laura Carlson, Greg Connors, David Craig, Ed Dufner, Charles Ellis, Nora Fitzgerald, David Givens, Timothy Larimer, Jessica Perry, Andy Pollack, Connie Pryzant, Bobbi Reichert, Shari Sigman, David Steinberg, Scott Thomas, Mark Wangrin, and Bonnie Wolf. Senior Reporters: Marcia D. Davis, Bob Kowalski, Susan Jolliffe, David Nathan, Michelle Schneider and Ian Thomsen. Staff Reporters: Len Adgerson Jr., Leslie Allen, Gail Barley, Mark Blackwell, Suzanne Chazin, Dee Dee Flores, Mark Gelatt, Donna M. Gist, Nels Jensen, Sue Leach, Paul Lockwood, Alan Maass, Mike Martinez, Tom Philp, Dave Reardon, Rona Schnall, Steve Smith, Elizabeth Tracey, Mary Beth Whalen, Beth Whitehouse, Tom Widlowski, Andrea Wooiard and Wendy Zeligson. Photographers: Jennifer Achuck, Shari Casson, Alvin Chow, Lenny Cohen, Bruce Darken, Paul DeGenaro, Bill Fox, David Garfinkel, Ralf Hestoft, Vijay Hingorani, David Lefkowitz, Arthur Little, Jeff Loebl, Ken Newberry, David Shaf- fer, Scott Simon, Rob Stein, Mike Wald and Leigh Ann Winick. Copy Editors: Beth Arky, Barbara Brooks, Barbara Clifton, Laura Carlson, Robin Daughtridge, Ann Doss, Andy Goldstein, Beth Leech, David Mildenberg, Margie Mushkin, Jeff Roberts, Ingrid Sapona and Laurie Schatz. Editorial Cartoonist: Jack Higgins. Proofreaders: Cheryl Coleman, Mary deZutter, Rebecca Martin and Karen Page. Advertising Manager: CINDY CASTOR Classified Manager: BARRI ROSENBLUM Advertising Office Manager: CAROLYN BELL Mark-Up Supervisor: LAURIE MELVIN 403 404 ri ; .1 Student ' s Publishing Co. Staff 406 The Daily Northwestern Morning Ad Supervisor: JESSICA DOWELL Afternoon Ad Supervisor: D. SCOTT O ' BRIEN Ad Mark-Up: Chris Calvett, Susan Dalquest, Lisa Hogan, Jean Mac- Donald, Dudley Saunders. Advertising Representatives: Terry Aronoff, Robert Freedlander, John McEnaney, Peggy Pyle, Andrew Werner. Office Staff: Karin Butler, Ginny Sales, Kirsten Nilson, Ginny Sayles, Jennifer Stone. Billing Staff: Laurie Crump, Ann Clock, Sue Hague, Jill Lauren. Circulation: Phil Twanmoh General Manager: GRANT DUERS Office Manager: SUE KELLER Shop Manager: MARY LUBBEN Accounting Manager: STACIA GREEN Typesetting Supervisors: HELEN EGGLESTON FITCH and PATRIK OLSON Supplement Production Supervisor: KEVIN FRANCELLA Lab Director: Mike Heeger Shop Staff: Carolyn Hunt, John Roth, Pete Ivey, Beth Leech, Maret Thorpe, David Gardner, Archana Goel, Jo-Lynn Robinson, Tim Sonder, Thad Gentry, Jay Zweig, Ed Schwartz, John Schoenenberger, Barbara Clifton, Melanie Anderson, Helen Karakoudas, Sally Daker, Paul Wiggins. Proofreaders: Mary deZutter, Rebecca Martin 407 The Photographers Tod Francis 3bl, 4tr, 4b, 5t, 6ml, 6mr, 7tr, 7bl, 13b, 14b, 15t, 15bl, 22t, 22b, 23t, 24t, 26, 27t, 27b, 28t, 32b, 33, 36, 37, 38t, 40t, 41, 42t, 43t, 43m, 43b, 46t, 47tr, 48tr, 50tl, 50b, 5 It, 5Ibl, 54tl, 54tr, 54br, 55tl, 56t, 56bl, 57b, 58b, 75tl, 75bl, 75br, 75tr, 80tr, 80br, 90t, 90b, 91tl, 91tr, 92tl, 92bl, 92br, 93 r, 98, 107t, 107b, 136tr, 137tr, 149, 150t, 150b, 151t, 151bl, 151br, 157b, I64tl, 164tr, 164b, 165tl, 165tr, 165bl, 165br, 166t, 166b, I67t, 167bl, 167br, 168tl, 169tl, 169br, 186t, 187t, 194bl, 194t, I95mr, 195b, 198b, 203t, 205t, 205b, 206b, 208t, 298ml, 209t, 209b, 2l6tl, 2I6tr, 216br, 216bl, 2I7tl, 217tr, 217br, 217bl, 218t, 218bl, 2l8br, 219tl, 219tr, 219b, 220t, 220b, 22 It, 221bl, 221br, 224, 225, 227, 228, 231, 232, 234, 235, 237, 243, 244, 247, 250, 251, 253, 254, 258, 259, 261, 262, 263, 264, 265, 272, 273, 274, 275, 276, 280, 285, 286t, 287tl, 287tr, 2901, 291 tr, 293tl, 296t, 296b, 297t, 297bl, 298b, 299b, 300b!, 301b, 302tr, 304t, 304br, 305bi, 307b, 308tl, 311tl, 312br, 313tl, 314tl, 315t, 315b, 316br, 318b, 318bl, 319bl, 320tl, 320tr, 320b, 321b, 322t, 323t, 323br, 3241, 325bl, 326bl, 327b, 332bl, 333t, 336tl, 336tr, 336m, 338bl, 338br, 339br, 342t, 342b, 343tl, 343tr, 343b, 344tl, 344tr, 344b, 345tl, 345tr, 345b, 351t, 351b, 352t, 353t, 353b, 355t, 355b, 358t, 358b, 360t, 360b, 362t, 362bl, 362br, 363t, 364t, 364b, 365tl, 365b, 366, 367t, 3671, 396tl, 396tr, 396b, 397t, 397m, 397b, 398t. 408 ., ! 7 Mike Heeger 2bl, 2br, 3t, 3br, 6b, 7br, 8tl, 8tr, 9tr, 9bl, lOtI, lOtr, lOb, I It, 1 1bl, 1 Ibr, I2tr, I4m, 18t, 19, 20, 22b, 28b, 29, 30t, 30b, 32t, 34, 39, 5 Ibr, 52tl, 52b, 52tr, 52bl, 53t, 53mr, 53bl, 55tr, 55br, 56br, 57tl, 57tr, 59t, 62tl, 62tr, 78b, 78mr, 82tl, 82tr, 82b, 84tl, 84tr, 84b, 85tl, 85tr, 85b, 86t, 86bl, 86br, 87tl, 87tr, 87b, 93tl, 93b, 158bl, I60tr, 16Gb, I94br, I95t, I98tl, 202tr, 203b, 207bl, 207br, 210t, 2I0b, 21 Itl, 21 Itr, 21 Imr, 21 Ibl, 21 Ibr, 2I2tl, 212b, 213br, 213tl, 229, 230, 242, 245, 249, 252, 255, 256, 257, 268, 269, 271, 277, 281, 286b, 2921, 292tr, 293b, 294tl, 294tr, 294b, 295b, 297br, 298tl, 299tr, 300t, 300b, 301 1, 302b, 303t, 303bl, 304bl, 305tl, 305tr, 305br, 306tl, 306bl, 306br, 307tl, 307tr, 308b, 309t, 309b, 310bl, 310br, 31 Itl, 31 Ibl 312t, 312bl, 313b, 314tr, 3I4bl, 314br, 3161, 316t, 317tl, 3 1 7b, 318tl, 318tr, 319t, 319br, 32 It, 321m, 322b, 322bl, 324br, 325t, 325br, 326tr, 328tl, 328tr, 328bl, 328br, 329, 332t, 332br, 333m, 348, 349, 350, 354, 366br, 377tl, 398b, 402t, 402bl, 402br, 403t, 403b, 404tl, 404ml, 404tr, 404bl, 404br, 405t, 406t, 406ml, 406mr, 406b, 407tl, 407bl, 407br, 408tl, 408tr, 408br, 409t, 409m, 409b. 409 1 r iMii Lenny Cohen 9br, 14tr, 24bl, 24br, 25tl, 25b, 31, 35tr, 35bl, 35br, 38b, 46mr, 47b, 152, I56bl, 157tl, I57tr, 158br, I59tl, I60tl, 16It, 161 br, I62tl, 162tr, 163br, 168tr, 168b, 169bl, 174t, I74bl, I74br, 175tl, 175tr, I75br, 183, 184t, 184bl, 184br, 185t, 185b, 186b, 187b, 188tr, 188bl, 188br, 189tl, 189tT, 189b, I99tl, 214tl, 214tr, 2I4b, 215tl, 215tr, 215b, 238, 239, 284, 291tl, 292br, 337tl, 337tr, 337b, 359b, 363b, 365tr, 405b. Paula Romberg 78t, 78ml. 410 Ralf-Finn Hestoft 6t, 8br, 21tl, 2ltr, 2rbr, 46bi, 47tl, 48br, 49r, 49bl, 53ml, 58tl, 59ml, 59br, 74tl, 74tr, 74bl, 74mr, 74bl, 79tl, 79ml, 79r, 79b, 80tl, 80br, 8lbl, 91b, 97tl, 97bl, 97mr, lOOtl, lOOtr, lOlt, lOlb, mbr, 1 14m, 1 14b, I38bl, I38br, 139bl, I56br, I57tr, 161 bl, I61t, I63t, I63bi, 185ml, I85mr, 186b, 187b, 1881, I88t, 188b, I89tl, I89tr, 189b, 236, 260, 29lbr, 310t, 3l7tr, 352b, 359t, 407tr. Karl Koons I5br, 46b, 48tl, 48bl, 58tr, 59mr, 59bl, 240, 246, 293tr, 302tl. 411 Doug Crowe 42bl, 42br, 66tl, 66tr, 66b, 67tl, 67tr, 67b, 68t, 68bl, 68br, 69tl, 69tr, 69b, 73tl, 73tr, 73bl, 73br, 77tl, 77tr, 77bl, 77br, I59tl, 279, 287b, 291bl, 295t, 3l3tr, 333b. Mitch Jordan Phil Kaldon Olga Pribyl 13t, 49tl, 83t, 83b, 204b, 2I2tr, 213tr, 213bl, 23t, 202tl, 206t, 324tr. 226, 338t, 339t, 340t, 340b, 341t, 341bl, 341br. Beth Melas 202b. 12tl. Kathryn Kerr 4l, 5br, 40br. Bruce Schwartz Mark Omascik I40t, 141t. 417, Scott O ' Brien Shari Casson 1 2b, 204tl, 208br. ,43 j j r, I43tl, 143tr. Jennifer Achuck Scott Simon 283 18b, 303br. 412 Robert Leighton cndsheets; 16, 17, 44, 45; 60, 61, 88, 89, 159, 155; 200, 201; 222, 223; 288, 289; 330, 331; 344, 345; 386, 387. 413 Special Thanks To : Tom Xydis 62bl, 62br, 63t, 63b, 76t, 76ml, 76mr, 76b, 81tl, 81tr, 153, 156t, 157ml, I58tl, 159tr, 159b, 176tl, 176tr, 176b, 177t, 177bl, 177br, 178t, 178bl, 178br, 179t, 179m, 179b, 195ml, 198tr, 199tr, 199bi, 199br, 207t, 270, 278, 394t, 394b. JeffW 2t,50tr,M3t,; Xydis-Wassman 94, 95, 96, 99, 100b, I02t, 102b, 103t, 103b, 104, 105, 106, 108, 109, 1 lOt, lilt, 112t, 112b, 113t, 113b, 114t, 120t, 120b, 121, 129, 130t, 130b, 131, 132, 133, I34r, 134b, 135, 136b, I39t, 140b, 141b, 142t, 143b, 144, 145. V- i 414 1 15 , Jeff Wassman 2t, 50tr, 203t, 233, 241, 248, 266, 267, 282. I59t, 4tS Syllabus 1981 Editor in Chief: Carol Summerfield Assistant Editors: Jodi Weinstein Cindy Neu Layout Editor: Bruce Schwartz Photo Editor: Tod Francis Newsprint Editor: David Freedman Lab Director: Michael Heeger Advertising: Cindy Castor Photographers: Shari Casson, Lenny Cohen, Doug Crowe, Ralf-Finn Hestoft, Mitch Jor- dan, Phil Kaldon, Kathryn Kerr, Karl Koons, Paula Romberg, Jeff Wassmann, Thomas Xydis. Layout: Jessica Dowell, Leigh Englehart, James Hansen, Jennifer Stone. Typing: Fitch Bullard, Grant Duers, Ralf-Finn Hestoft, Jamie Rosenthal, Jeff Wassmann. Art: Robert Leighton, Jack Higgins. Special Thanks To: the Comp Shop, Mary Lubben, Sue Keller, Grant Duers, Gary Thomas, and the assorted motley crew that gathers at the SPC, and Mo Ferensen. Syllabus 1981 is printed on 80Ib. dull stock. All four-color separations were made directly from transparencies. Halftones are shot 150 line. Copy and headlines were set by the Students Publishing Company. Identification copy was set by Hunter Publishing Company. Senior portraits are by Root Photographers. Greek photos are by Wassmann Xydis Inc. Living units, greeks, advertising, and organiza- tions are all paid sections. The yearbook is printed by Hunter Publishing Co. in Winston- Salem, N.C. All rights to photographs are owned by the photographer. Address any correspondence to Syllabus, 1999 Sheridan Rd., Evanston, IL 60201. 416 nHestoft,MitchJor- Wassmanii, Thomas ' Stone, nie Rosenthal, ]ef( Grant Duers, Gan ' ndMoFerensen. Halftones are shot 150 iraiaes. ,v Hunter Mlisl eeks, advertising, ■ig [. ' .. , i , I I I
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