Northwestern University - Syllabus Yearbook (Evanston, IL)
- Class of 1989
Page 1 of 418
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 418 of the 1989 volume:
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':-.,:.a1g..Q.f, ,.., , ,-- ww 3- , gsq,sgg.:2'g .., .,,v. - ,.., Ng, ,N ' JQHW Rza' I 54 by ' vim. . ' 4 QazM c6a:'1 . , if f, Ki: 1 X5 ea :Q 2:14 :S ' 2 N Q-:nf X Q Ng' A YA 6 2 ,,,,, . M, lk., 9' f :N'?f5'-1:5 W? 9 Y if NAS, 29 3. ig N x 35 X X J x 4 -9 25? Q 3515 J :Q v 5 X rl K - ..,-- W , ,SEQ ' ' - ' ' ' M gf ..-xv - 2ff'?:sqg. ' .I ,s Lf - .4. 'mlyft 41' fy' ig 6 AZ '47 ' 0 Q A ,vw Le ff -. , ,, . , . ww, .. ,M , fm , fy f N f ,f fa 42. , M i f' ,iz , 1 'vm Ii? ALEUIEDUIES 1989 5 'Q ,V 3 'Iggy 'zfWfQ'Qg .. fc Ji Q .Q .vw 'U W' ' f Q V1 - , - ,- , ,V w fs J Q, 2, - 1 . Q91 4 va. N XEURGE BG Since Associate Professor George Bond began teaching at Northwestern in 1974, hundreds of students have enrolled in his courses on Buddhism and Hinduism. Bond, director of undergraduate studies in the History and Literature of Religions department, feels that students' interest in studying Eastern religions has grown in past years. Professor Bond sees the study of religion as a way of studying a very important aspect of human life that strongly influences cultural outlooks. In his classes, Bond emphasizes how religious texts can be interpreted in light of the specific social and cultural settings in which they were written. His research focuses on Theravada ..,a,., , Buddhism--that which is practiced in South Asia as opposed to China or japan. His studies have led him to exotic locales, most recently, he traveled to India and Sri Lanka. Professor Bond has had even more contact with students outside of the classroom. Soon after arriving at Northwestern, Bond became a faculty associate at the Humanities Residential College, and in 1987, became the Master of Willard Residential College. As Master of Willard, Bond attends faculty-student wine-and-cheese receptions, leads excursions to ethnic restaurants in downtown Chicago, participates in all-dorm philanthropy projects, and advises the dorm government on financial matters. He feels that his involvement with the residential college system allows him to see a different side of the university that a lot of faculty don't see. Professor Bond, known as George to many Willard residents, is a familiar face at the Willard SAGA. The residential college is an ideal place to bridge the gap between the dorm and the classroom, he says. Yam ila PW? W 38 journalists always have room for improvement, says Medill professor Roger Boye. We are all apprentices in a craft where no one becomes a master. Part of my job here is to instill in our students a healthy respect for the profession. Boye has been working at Medill off and on for 17 years. He also has written the weekly coin column for the Chicago Tribune since l974. However, Boye did not originally plan to become a journalist. In his senior year of high school, he had an open slot in his schedule and no idea what class to take. The journalism class met during his open period, so he took it. Later, as a student at the University of Nebraska, Boye was unsure of what to major in. The local paper gave him the incentive to major in journalism by offering journalism scholarships. Boye worked for the Lincoln journal during college as part of the scholarship. At school, he worked his way up to business manager and later editor in chief of the Daily Nebraskan. He worked at the Omaha World Herald before coming to Medill's graduate program for his Master's in journalism. And he's been here ever since. This year he teaches RUGER BQYE Newswriting, the second-year journalism class. Over the years, Boye has taught classes ranging from Basic Writing to introductory graduate-level courses. He says his favorite class to teach is Newswriting best because it allows him to see the weekly improvement of his students. Watching students progress is what Boye says he enjoys most about his job. He has the opportunity to see this since he works with some students for as many as six years--from the National High School Institute program, ,QQ-3 is r :- Q . is . sa. .... ...t Nx if-.-. I -,f-.l:V5.,' 5..:5.,Mg1,, xi. U 1 .2 5 which he heads, through graduate school. In a teaching career, more than any other, you work with young people to the nth degree. You see them when twey can't find their way to the restroom at their first basic writing lab, when twey can't manage a typewriter let alone write a sentence. And you see twem come out of here as journalists, as our colleagues, young adults entering tweir profession. No other career has twat kind of gratifying experience. '7 '-.A S. HQLLIS CLAYSQ 39 35, Kftlltj I During her freshman year as an undergraduate, Hollis Clayson found her introductory art history class endlessly interesting. Now, as Assistant Professor of Art History at Northwestern, she teaches her own courses--and with no less enthusiasm for the discipline. Since she began teaching at NU in 1982, Professor Clayson has received a CAS Teaching Award and has been listed on the ASC Faculty Honor Roll three times. She attributes the popularity of her classes partly to her teaching style, and partly to the subject matter itself. Professor Clayson's research focuses on 19th-Century French painting, emphasizing problems and images of sexuality and domesticity. Although she spends much time engaging in research, Clayson considers teaching to be an integral and exciting part of her career. My job is to encourage students to be critical about whatthey see and read, she says, while exposing them to the complex social and historical factors that have influenced the production of works of art. She describes her field as history with an extra added attraction piled on, and believes that students who major in art history are provided with a classic, solid humanities education. The walls of Professor Clayson's office are lined with books and, not surprisingly, several small reproductions of post-Impressionist paintings. But the item Clayson values most is a picture of her husband and their three-year-old son james--who keeps his mother very busy. Family responsibilities, departmental meetings, and involvement with the Organization of Women Faculty add to her hectic schedule. But Clayson manages to squeeze in time for exercise, and often heads north of her Kresge office to swim laps at the Henry Crown Sports and Aquatics Center. I really try to keep active, she says. 4 ET DESAUL IERS Literature seduces you into believing you can see and understand the world according to your own intuition...People who write fiction get the opportunity to make sense of the world, to order the world with their own singular kind of grace and meticulous sense of what things mean. lanet Desaulniers, who has been a faculty member of the English Department's Writing Program for five years, is a published author of short stories. Desaulniers says she thinks the Reading and Writing Fiction classes are so popular at Northwestern because students want to express themselves...It's a way to make everything they've seen and done so far mean something, add up to something. She sees the creative act of writing fiction as an emotional, seductive experience--and one that she wants to share with her students. I consider teaching a part of my art. just as my fiction I hope will move people, I hope my teaching will move people. For Desaulniers, the most rewarding part of of someone who devotes herself to the teaching is watching her students learn tenets of the craft I take it very more about themselves and the world seriously around them. I watch people's sensibilites become refined. For Desaulniers, a good story moves someone. For a moment, the reader is moved by someone else's experience. Through fiction we experience the world through a character we aren't. In her classes, Desaulniers helps students overcome early obstacles in writing. She feels that writing can be taught, and that fiction workshops can help students with certain aspects of literary art, such as diction, dialogue, and characterization. I have the ability to imagine what the work wants to be. I ask the questions that allow the work to become more like itself. Desaulniers encourages her students to develop a sharper, more acute sense of experience, and to find those things that inspire and move them. My students are in the presence RIC GREE Associate Professor Richard Green joined the Music History and Literature department at Northwestern in 1976, after completing graduate studies in Berlin, Germany. Last year, he became chairman of the department, which includes scholars of Western music, ethnomusicology, and music administration. Professor Green teaches undergraduate and graduate courses on 19th and 20th century music, as well as seminars in music research and bibliography. Although most of his courses are designed for music majors, he recently team-taught a course called The Romantic Period in the CAS Humanities Program. This course was such a positive experience for Green that he will be teaching it again this year. Professor Green's primary goal in teaching is to cause the mind to be engaged in the music. Through listening to and studying a piece of music, it becomes more alive...it becomes a more meaningful and motivating experience. ln his classes, Green demonstrates how individual pieces are related to one another, and shows how the historical context of a piece is relevant to the experience of that piece today. In this way, music 41 Professor Green feels that the atmosphere within the School of Music is very cordial and rewarding because the faculty members within the school have a high regard for one another as teachers, scholars, and as people. He believes that Northwestern's music school is distinctive because music students must compete with applicants to all the undergraduate schools. Here, our students are literate, articulate, and intelligent as well as musically gifted...Very few music schools have this double standard for admission. ln the past, Green has served on several faculty committees, including the General Faculty Committee for academic affairs. Last summer, he participated in the Alumni College, a week-long program for alumni featuring lectures, discussions, and films. In his leisure time, he enjoys reading 20th- century literature and attending the theater--when he's not being a father to his two children and fixing dripping faucets around the house. becomes a factor of cultural history. 42 B. CLAUDE THIS As Professor in the School of Education and Social Policy since 1956, B. Claude Mathis has long addressed the concern of quality teaching in higher education. In addition to teaching courses on human development and adult learning processes, Professor Mathis directs the Center for the Teaching Professions, which he describes as a service and development center dedication to improving the quality of teaching at Northwestern. But Mathis' extensive research and experience have led him to a surprisingly simple definition of what teaching is all about: lt's just being yourself in front of a class. Mathis feels that the best teachers put a little of their own personality into their teaching. For Mathis, good teaching is not pretentious, nor does it involve fitting oneself into a certain prescriptive role. Successful teachers display a sense of personal authenticity in what they do, he says. Professor Mathis practices what he preaches, as he often discusses his own personal experiences to illustrate concepts in class. Mathis feels that the study of education extends beyond the classroom--a belief that led to the formation of the Human Development and Social Policy program over ten years ago. Mathis, who helped design this interdisciplinary program, says that the HDSP major offers students interested in education in a very broad sense the opportunity to prepare for educational roles in society at large. The program allows majors to gain first- hand experience with policy-making during internships at family counseling centers, banks, hospitals, and other service institutions. Professor Mathis believes that Northwestern students and faculty are exposed to some of the best minds in the country. To summarize his feelings, Mathis said, I don't know of any place in the world where you could work in a more exciting place than a university. l w xiii .wr x i I CAROL SIMPSUN STE Professor Carol Simpson Stern, chair of the Performance Studies department in the School of Speech, has taught at Northwestern since 1974. She describes her field as the study of literary and cultural texts through performance, and teaches courses on the performance of works by james joyce, Virginia Woolf, and modern poets such as Yeats and Eliot. ln her classes, Stern emphasizes discussion more than lecture. l want my students to learn to think...I want them to care about this material permanently. Professor Stern's commitment to the study of literature and the arts extends beyond her own research, classes, and even her own department. For four years she has been the Master oflones Residential College, where she has enjoyed a fruitful relationship to 118 students in the fine and performing arts each year. This experience at jones spurred her interest in developing the new Integrated Arts Program at Northwestern--an interdisciplinary certificate program that involves artists and scholars from four or five different art forms to be put into play with each other. Stern, who wrote the grant proposal for the program and serves as its director, says that the new program will allow non-arts majors to do more than just dabble in the arts as they explore theater, visual art, music, dance and other art forms. But Stern's involvement in academia extends beyond the Northwestern campus. She is currently the President of the American Association of University Professors, an organization in which she has been active since 1970. She has served on many national committees promoting academic freedom and equal opportunites for women in higher education. One of her goals is to encourage academically inclined students to become professors. Teaching is an extension of knowing, she says. 44 Assistant Professor lan Taylor, a faculty member of the R-TV-F department since 1984, began her career in television production only after exploring some of her other interests. Raised on a farm in Oxford, IS T YLQR involve hands-on experience with Professor Taylor enjoys teaching as television cameras, Taylor also much as she enjoys her work in incorporates theory and criticism in television itself I believe in the looking at television as an artistic educational process she says medium as well as a medium of mass communication. In television, you are Ohio, Taylor studied physical 6dLlC3tlOn asking 'how d0 you tell 3 5t0ry and in college and took a year off as a ski bum before doing graduate work in interpersonal communication. In 1979, she came to Northwestern and later earned her PhD in R-TV-F. Taylor's career focuses on television production and direction, but she also teaches courses on special effects of computer animation and film and video production. In her classes, Taylor tries to create a positive learning environment, which will allow her students to feel good about themselves as they learn necessary technical and creative skills. Although her courses emphasize production and what is your passion about that story? ' Professor Taylor feels that successful R- TV-F students are perservering, creative, and articulate in speaking and writing. They have to take initiative, she says. Taylor is also involved in extracurricular programs involving TV production. As executive producer of the Creating for the Media Program, she has directed three annual large-scale television productions called Project '86, '87, and '88. These projects, which have produced professional- quality sitcoms and soap operas, have involved hundreds of students. She also serves as the faculty advisor of Studio 22, a student-run TV production. JAMES VAN NESS 45 After being here for 36 years, Professor james Van Ness says that the one thing that has consistently impressed him is Northwestern's ability to attract excellent students. The biggest thing Northwestern has going for it is the student body, asserts Van Ness. We always get top-notch recruits. Van Ness cites the high academic level of the students as the reason for the difficulty of the Electrical Engineering and Computer Science program. You don't get through the program without working hard...but we work on the basis that if everybody works hard they will get through. Professor Van Ness feels that more emphasis should be placed on developing the communication skills of Tech students. Almost all of the company representatives I talk to...say that students need to be salesmen lof their ideasl, he says. To this end, Tech faculty members are considering requiring writing and speech courses for all Tech students. Van Ness has had quite a hand in the history of Northwestern, and has served on just about every committee. For five years he served as chairman of the University Computer Committee, which founded the Computing Center. But he warns I could get buried in administration. lBeing a professorl is the best job in the University. I love teaching and I love research. I enjoy everything I do. He does wish, however, that he had time to work closely with all of his students. Van Ness works with his office door open at all times, and says that if students come by I'm never too busy for them. This is going to sound corny, but there is a great feeling of family here, Van Ness says. I think NU is a great place. 126 Although Professor Daniel Weeks has only been at Northwestern for three years, he has recently been appointed Executive Director of the Chemistry Department. But despite his new role as an administrator, Dr. Weeks still finds teaching the most enjoyable aspect of his profession. You come back to teaching time after time because once in a while you make a difference in someone's life, he says. Convincing students that they are better than they think they are is one of the most rewarding things. Weeks tells jokes and stories to lighten the mood in his organic chemistry classes. I love being in front of a class...and to direct the flow of what's going on, he says. And if I live what I'm doing ,... that's bound to come across to the students. Professor Weeks is disappointed that more students do not take science classes. He believes that the methods IEL P. WEEKS taught in science are useful to everyone, no matter what his or her intended major. Chemistry has values far greater than the study of science, he says. What we teach better than anyone else is how to attack and solve problems. I use that ability everyday in my job, the only difference is that I work with people instead of numbers. Weeks remains active outside the academic world as well. He sings bass in the University Chorus, the largest vocal group on campus. An avid baseball fan, Professor Weeks traveled south last year to visit some spring training sites. Here at Northwestern, he often watches the softball team play. The fact that five of his students play on the team is an added attraction for him. Dan Weeks enjoys the blend of academics and activities at Northwestern. When I first came here I said to myself 'l've just gotta grow roots here, ' he recalls. Northwestern is a great place...and I'm just happy as hell to be here. -iti- oazwf? X .. A I '- f ty. 3 7' X' -v , ff- ff 5-32 Nw um . A f X., I 1 an -,:' 1 ,X s M 'Wi ff My 17f 9 .. 1. 'im .. V za gf .,,, , ff , -- Miz: ff A .,,., .-' IX ....dFW' gl 4:,f-1. l ,.,. ,. I 7, iw, , .. mah? V as 4,5 Af W5 'Om ,- Q 1 4 V xy 32 8' W A ' 1 A ' 4? 5 'wt f,,. ' ff! s is 4 4 If , , ff 0 4 ,g 95? 4 6, 1 3 gi ggi 1 5 5 ga Q 4 , 5 4 1 , fx 1 1 3 if 5? 4' if , . ,. wee .Ap f 4 X c m ' 1 3. W ff. - , -1, -V,-iq,-.,: m- ' f , , 45 A Q ,' fi f 1 1 . , , f 1 X Q 1 f 1 'ii 4 M, 4 f , , , f . ,Y . 1 ff Q vw? Af Q Q 9 My ,S X 1 , V , A : , ,fl f 4 'u 1' 53, Q 'Q , , 5 X 1 6 X 9 Q9 , ,Af 'cv 1 K W X 4 , V X , f A fe ,z . ,..,,..- :T . . t' . , 'S ' jp. R , ' 1 ,14 fin: af, -- . -.:,:.'g:. ' . , Qf.f3.f 3 Q35 45 , Q' 5 P, E Vu. 2 -fy n IHWFERHEHBUHEDKF 1989 5 Waa-Mu T988 tackled such perpetual Northwestern problems as whether DPS would let students catch squirrels in the park to take home to eat? The answer was simple: of course not, that's taking food out, and that's illegal in Evanston. On a warm April 30, the curtain went up on the 57th annual Waa-Mu show. The student-run musical played to sold- out audiences of students, faculty, alumni and friends through May 8. What's in a Game satired life at NU, from the recent addition of lights at Wrigley Field to the abundance of squirrels to DPS. This year's show broke the rules by including a parody of Greek life at Northwestern. Of course, the fun of the show started in October when students camped out for days in tents and other make-shift residences in front of Cahn Auditorium waiting for tickets. After all, isn't that part of the game? WAA- 4 lima Ez no ck ADMIT 7 www, 1 l LLJ I Z 5 Q Q Q 1 L 52 A vvhole week of partying, celebrating, waiting for the end of classes. fvlayfest. In VVednesday's Maysing competition, Phi Kappa Psi and Delta Gamma took group entry honors and Acacia vvon in single entry. Comedian jerry Seinfeld Thursday. Arts Alliance's version of the rock opera, Tommy Of course, the Senior un-mixer at the Bar lThe Gathering Placei. All built up to the ultimate spring tradition--Armadillo Day. 'LQ QE' e- 2 Q5 Friday night at the Lakefill...'Dillo Eve...masses of people everyvvhere. With their friends. Eating. Talking. Drinking. And drinking. And vvhatevering. Going to see the blues band, even if you vveren't a fan. The mood continued into 'Dillo Day. Everyone back at the Lakefill. More eating. More drinking. More talking. Watch the band. Try something nevv. Tie-dye shirts, make a bracelet, see people in a different state of mind...RELAXED. Mayfest, Northvvestern's time to come out and play. YFE ST fi? E4 ft M4 ml 5631 - K 54 g Q.. 1' 41 'IG 'Mi E in '-'LII QC E- Ez DO GREEK WEEK gmac Membership Has Its Privileges, Greek Week 1988, was Northwestern's first week-long Greek celebration. The expanded Greek Weekend included the traditional exchanges and TGs, with cups given away to those takers who had visited 8 fraternities. Also during May 2-7, Greek teams competed in the Greek Games, which gave everyone a chance to race on a tricycle among other similar challenges. Later that week, the Greeks had a chance to hit a Cubs game. The week concluded with the annual games with about 75 children from Evanston's Off the Streets program. It was often hard to tell who had the most fun that afternoon in the fraternity quads, the kids or the group of fraternity and sorority volunteers. :rn Ez no QC RQBERT BQRK Robert Bork lashed out against his opponents in the U.S. Senate in a speech delivered to an audience of 800 in Cahn Auditorium. Bork claimed that Senators and interest groups distorted his positions on civil rights. Those distonions, he believes, led to his defeat l58-427 for a seat on the U.S. Supreme Court. Bork described himself as heavily pro- civil rights because the lavv is that way, not my politics. Politics also played a role in Bork's defeat, he commented. Bork said he fears that future judicial appointments vvill be based more on politics than on the individual's qualifications. A810 and the Conservative Council brought Bork's lecture tour to campus on Wednesday, May ll. GALE RAITH 57 For some economics majors it was a dream come true, the chance to hear Harvard economist lohn Kenneth Galbraith speak. In his talk before a packed Tech Auditorium, Galbraith told students that a knovvledge of past events provides a useful tool for understanding the economics of today and of the future. He also discussed the capitalist economic system, challenges to the system and the system's failures. We can provide the rather disreputable clothing that people novv vvear, but capitalism does nothing to this day to provide good, inexpensive housing or mass transportation or good health care, he said. Galbraith offered many solutions for the economic problems of today, many of which are linked to past events and policies, he said. He advocated increases in taxes when necessary and spending less on defense. A840 and the economics department sponsored Galbraith's speech on Friday, April 8. in as QL' 58 Tommy can you hear me? Can you feel me near you? Tom my. . . Tommy... Tommy... In 1969 as The Who toured the music of Pete Tovvnshend's opera Tommy, the shovv was hailed as the vvorld's first rock opera. Though there has never been a full-blovvn professional production of Tommy on stage before, much experimentation has happened to the piece over the past twenty years. Arts Alliance based their version of Tommy on a mixture of these different versions of the rock opera. In some ways, they were also forced to develop their ovvn opera, since Tommy has no vvritten score or text. The intimacy of the Norris Louis Room was literally built into a stage that involved the whole audience in a production capturing the emotion and spirit which has made Tommy a unique experience. TQMMY 'LIJ QC P-1 Ez :nc GRAF FIT I DAN CERS Graffiti Dancers aim to make dancing fun. The ensemble produced a spring recital designed to allow the audience to interact with the dancers. Part of this mood stems from the experimental aspect that makes Graffiti a free-form interpretation of dance. The group is student-run, student- choreographed, student-produced, and student directed. Graffiti Dancers are sponsored by Arts Alliance. They feature mostly modern dance and jazz, with tap and ballet included for variety. The group also performed at Dance Marathon and 'Dillo Day. , . , :X R -.V N, b - x ' 1, , 'Q - .52 1 , ,,'- is wt 'v ':is.f V, Q 'x. , . We ,Z .nxt - 5,4 s -'fag QW, a W '-- 1 ' ,LV , 'l A K A , A fi I 1 ' s 50 SPECIAL OLYMPICS Unlike the 1988 Olympics, these athletes were not necessarily going for the gold. For some of these Olympians, the battle just to compete was trial enough. For these reasons, when the Special Olympics comes to Northwestern each May, students turn out in the hundreds to make the day unforgettable for the athletes, mentally and physically handicapped children. About SOO Northwestern students sold T-shirts, coached and hugged athletes, refereed events, decorated Dyche Stadium and raised the necessary funds for the llth annual Northwestern University Special Olympics. The games were held May 15 for 604 Chicago-area children. Every child received a medal for the various modified track and field events. And more importantly, every child got a chance to try and succeed. fr , ,'- ,.'.s.l . ' , get an, A 2356 -zir- f5 V 4, Q. Q im as QE j Eurnha ' 359 , f' A-1. -1 .Ai -. aff i 4. ,V -6 , . 1: 31 'ngihfsfl f 'I v.A. 1'rf- K, ' ' ' ' , . ,,- 'I tfz- x 'tl' - ff . ,M f 4 'fr 2,4 1 , wqiw I HU ,V 5 4 I.. 'I -:SS A 'U Q ? -Q I X Ng: 5 X gg X -x 'lm z if! 5 I, 62 MICHAEL DU Many students were disappointed by Democratic presidential candidate Michael Dukakis when he visited Northwestern Tuesday, October 4. Aides advertised his visit as a major economic policy speech. They emphasized that it was not to be a rally and banned students from bringing signs to the speech at McGaw Memorial I-lall. With the election only a month away, the economic policy talk turned into a stump speech as Dukakis spoke little of his general economic policies, but spent most of the half-hour speech blasting his Republican opponent, Vice President George Bush. I'm running for president on my record, Mr. Bush is running away from his, Dukakis said. Dukakis pointed out that Bush's term as vice president was plagued with failures. Mr. Bush was given five important missions by this administration and he failed every one. And that was before they asked him to D..-wal 11' 1 2-2 5 4 Z pick a running mate in this election, he said. Dukakis also commented on the infamous Northwestern football team: I'm not going to say anything about football except I was a cross country runner, he said in his opening remarks Dukakis was in town for a breakfast meeting with business and labor leaders. A810 and ASG worked with the Dukakis campaign to bring him to campus. TESC 2 JACKS DN Keep hope alive. Keep hope ALIVE.. KEEP HOPE ALIVE! The Rev. jesse jackson visited Northwestern Friday, October 21 to rally support for Democratic jackson reminded the packed Cahn Auditorium that America's youth have always been active. When young America comes alive, America always gets better, jackson said. For Members Only, the Democratic presidential nominee Michael Dukakis. Council and A840 sponsored the speech. FMD made jackson an honorary member of Northwestern's black student group. Accompanying jackson were his sons jonathon and jesse jr. jackson urged young idealists to get involved with the Dukakis campaign on campus. I-Ie finished his speech by shaking hands with students, who eagerly crowded around the stage. jackson commented that he chose to come to Northwestern because it has a great amount of youthful energy. . :LQ f i Ee l ff l bit After a week of Painting the Town Purple, Northwestern turned to Homecoming weekend, kicking off the celebration with the traditional parade. Right before the trip down Sheridan Road, fraternities, sororities and dorms scrambled to put last-minute touches on the floats and kept their fingers crossed that a week's worth of work would all hold together. Finally, the 77th annual Homecoming parade started. William Daniels and HOMECUMIN Bonnie Bartlett of NBC's drama St. Elsewhere served as grand marshals. Both graduated from the School of Speech in 1950. Sigma Nu Fraternity and Delta Gamma Sorority teamed up to design the winning Greek float. Shepard Residential College won for the residences. The parade wound toward the North parking lot for the pep rally. The football team sang its version of Go U for the crowd and Head Football Coach Peay gave his annual pep talk. The next day, though, the Cats broke with tradition and brought home a victory by defeating the Wisconsin Badgers, 35-14. Later that night at the Homecoming Bash on the Norris lawn, Mark Ledogar and Pamela Swedlow were crowned 1988 Homecoming king and queen. Y' -if , 35 'QQ . V , in E-1 E2 QC l-' 9- -Lu Ez DO Q: 66 Em cf Hi Q2 QQ MASQUERADE A8403 Pumpkin Prom took on a disguise of its own this year as the annual Halloween bash was renamed Masquerade, Masquerade, held at Norris University Center, featured three bands, palm readers, magicians and the traditional time-warped flick, The Rocky Horror Picture Show. However, the party fell flat due to midterms and the fact that Wednesday, October 26 landed in between Homecoming and Parents weekends. A840 said they scheduled the dance before Halloween so students could go to the traditional Halloween parties at other campuses. Masquerade only drew about 250 students. Those that did go, though, said overall they had a great time and Norris Center looked sufficiently spooky. 67 Shanley Pavilion took on a nightclub atmosphere for the set of Death is an Acquired Trait, a series of vignettes hy Woody Allen. Throughout the performance, an easel stood on one side ofthe stage, announcing the title of each skit. A live hand played in Shanley's close quarters. One skit Centered on a vampire, who carrie out during a total eclipse to murder a baker and his wife, hut died when the eclipse was over. In another skit, a team of scientists interviewed a hick, a general and a New Yorker about UFOs. Arts Alliance sponsored the show, which went up Octoher 28 and 29. Em I EE ill Qt., f GB The Berlin Symphony Orchestra of the D.D.R. presented an evening of music by Beethoven. The orchestra opened with Overture to Egmont tOp. 84l. Violin soloist Michael Erxleben was featured in the performance of Concerto for Violin and Orchestra in D Major tOp. 617. Symphony No. 7 in A Major tOp. 92D rounded out the concert. The orchestra was under the direction of Claus Peter Flor. The Berlin Symphony Orchestra vvas brought to campus through the School of Music as part of their Performing Arts Series. The Orchestra played Thursday, October 27 at Pick-Staiger Concert Hall. BSO tra ae QC UB O Although lJB4O is known to most of their fans by their old standbys like Cherry Oh Baby, I Got You Babe and Red, Red Wine, the band whipped through these songs early in the concert. UB4O informed their enthusiastic audience that at this concert the band would teach them some new songs. About 6,700 fans attended the show at McGaw Memorial Hall. So many students were interested in attending that A810 had to increase the original number of seats for the November 4 concert. During the 45-minute show on Friday November 4, UB4O had the packed hall dancing where they could amid strobe lights, red lights and smoke. L11 E Ez an Qc FILM IS EVIL . Film Is Evil, Radio ls Good might be the only production in Northwestern history in which a live duck and the head of a dead pig are featured prominently. The play blended those props, live performance, music, movement and a film by a Chicago performance group, The Oxygen jukebox, to show one man's struggle between good and evil. The nine-member cast included three featured actors and a Greek chorus. Film Is Evil was written by New York- based Richard Foreman, a founder of ontological-hysteric theater and a leader of the American expressionistic movement for more than 20 years. Arts Alliance sponsored Film is Evil, Radio is Good, which ran November 4 and 5 at McCormick Auditorium. P-1 2 E? ffl 'J' ffl? fc iw Z' -5-, I 1 in ': st-Q.,--Q S if' ,N m - Q wg x .5 W 1 -'T-' 'F' ,-, 1 ' ,.r ,..-......,. 'I . . I llllnunv AV , 'FDI-ww -..., ..., yi Ji, wan 1 ' . ,W -. L V. .EMM 5' X U.F'6 --f-v-w XY? f X N-K Nl ' Bfnifngs r , I M I , 9 5f.f... .f 9. ...fr P' ':::..'-...... '72 S L LGEB To Marshall Loeb, managing editor of Fortune magazine, the most important social change of the 1980s was the large influx of women into the labor force. With women in the marketplace future recessions will be milder than in the past. If one person loses his paycheck there is another in the household to bring the paycheck in, he said. However, Loeb noted the need for more women to get involved in America's labor force. Looking at the American economy, Loeb said, Our biggest problem is the federal deficit. To solve the problem, Loeb predicted that higher taxes will be placed on consumer spending, not incomes. Taxes will probably go up on cigarettes and alcohoI. Loeb came to campus Monday, November 14, 1988. l-le was honored as this year's losephine B. and Newton N. Minnow visiting professor in communications. Previous recipients included Charles Kuralt and Walter Cronkite. QC im Ez no A CHQRUS L In most Broadway shows, the stars get the attention and the applause. A Chorus Line takes the reverse approach and makes a very realistic show of those who dance in the hackground. A Chorus Line spotlights the trials and trihulations of dancers trying out for a Broadway show's chorus line. The cancers vary from the up-and-comers to tue experienced trying to recapture tweir past careers. Suhtle humor and color come out with the individual cancers' personalities -- as much as the cancers try to put on a big smile even after hours on their feet, one can't help twinking out loud her need to get a czrink afterwards. When the dancers who make it are finally announced, the audience is put on edge as much as the dancers were. Arts Alliance sponsored A Chorus Line. It ran from December 2-4 at Cahn Auditorium. i F2 Q . E 5 eg l l Q U9 I. 74 YAKQV SMI LIJ 42' H 22 QCD Most American citizens don't appreciate the little things the United States offers. But to comedian Yakov Smirnoff, a Soviet emigre, these are the things jokes and humor are made of. In one of Smirnoff's routines he notices hovv America is such a great country -- vve have Freedom in a box. Unfortunately, Smirnoff is not sure what to do with his new found Freedom, whether to wear them as svveatbands around his head or not. Smirnoff entertained his audience with several Soviet-bashing jokes-- The Soviet Union Express Card...Don't leave home. Smirnoff came to campus during New Student Week as part of the annual comedy evening for freshmen. QPF MEE-GW 75 TT 5: F ,.,,. , , ., .5551 ', N 'f ' 'F-i5'ixiij fji5 ,219-f'l 'i' ,y '7f.'i'.'l7: Qff fi 1'-ff'.:Y f2 4377 V .f ,- i, i .,,.,,..r,,,f.f,,,Q, ,xo g' 2 ,A 1 A! ,fig t ,3 ,, ,,,jf: f , A If 423, , 4 Q , 1 r ., ,ik ,,,,,,, i- 1- ww ,M fy, S 5 Although it took the surrealistic title Salvador's Deli, the 1989 Mee-Ow Show served its audiences much more than a corned beef on wry. The Mee-Ow players kicked off the show with their own rendition of Lola and the show girls from Copa Cabana. Other skits included satires of an NU alumni party, airline crashes and two . Y iw 1 2x ,., -lg!gV b ' .six Tlltiifb . . o- . if ' K 11' , I , f:,,h,p , V ,, ,v N ' rw 'slr ff' Q fi .:..'- I ., 2' , g j . P: I. 9 if .2 ,,i 4 i H Wisconsin housewives talking as well as the Mee-Ow rendition of fractured fairytale Peter Pan. The cast's real strength was its quick thinking and acting during the crowd- pleasing improvisation games. The audience was more than willing to con tribute its off the wall suggestions for word tag and freeze tag. ANCE MARATHO 77 The annual all-campus philanthropic event raised over Sli 5,000 in cash, ser- vices and prizes, its highest amount ever. Over 572,000 of the money will directly benefit this year's charity, the Leukemia Society of America. Over 70 couples danced representing dorms, residential colleges, Creek houses and campus organizations. The overall top money raising group was Zeta Beta Tau fraternity, vvho teamed up vvith Kappa Alpha Theta sorority. The Gay and Lesbian Alliance raised the most money for a student organization. Shepard Residential College raised the most money among dorms. Dance Marathon was held at the Norris Center the weekend of February 3. 78 Texas has a whorehouse in it! So did Cahn Auditorium as the 1989 Dolphin Show, Best Little Whorehouse in Texas, opened on january 27. Cahn's simple set became the Texas Chicken Ranch, whose proprietor, Miss Mona, attests that there's nothin' dirty goin' on in her whorehouse. However, Watchdog Melvin P. Thorpe resolves to reveal to his devoted TV audience and all moral Texans the actu- al goings-on behind closed doors at the Chicken Ranch. The show was filled with energetic dance routines, fairly realistic Southern draaawls and, of course, Fredericlds of Hollywood lingerie. Miss Mona sang sweetly, counseled wisely and weathered the storm of her closing business with realism. Sheriff Ed Earl Dodd faced the changing times of his former sweetheart's business with humor and hot air. WHGREHQUSE. . I ,f T ff' Q me F an I fig MACBETT Something goofy this way came--and went--during the Arts Alliance produc- tion of Eugene Ionesco's drama Macbett, an absurdist parody of Shakespeare's tragedy Macbeth. Macbett condenses the drama of ambi- tion and revenge into two acts packed with non-sequiturs, slapstick and gener- al weirdness. The story is set in a world where time and place are ambiguous, nothing is l certain. Lemonade vendors wander through the middle of a war zone, offer- ing refreshments to the audience. True to its absurdist roots, Macbett fea- tured many things that Shakespeare would most likely consider blasphe- mous, including the hip tunes of the Existential Blues Band. Macbett was performed in the round in the Louis Room at Norris Center. The show ran the weekend of February 17. I .' Fw ax T 5 Y S 5 , .Q c s I 5 sl X -. . -,ye 'vskix 4 .W -aw-,.g .15 -, 'IX 5 5' f . 19' l I 'A f Q 5 l 1 sf 1, .Y6 51, , mf' ,,, .1 xr Av v x K : . Q i ' ,Q ' 1 ' : l ,fm-f-A iz 'X , .L ,,. x . . H I. v. r-5' ' iw' wkmwx- ,eg iffivi-fffiv Fra-F -ef, .,-1 :.! SLN E4 K' FX 2 For the first time ever, the annual A840 Ball sold out. The Norris box office ran out of tickets around 2 p.m. February 17, the day of the ball. A couple hundred students headed downtown to the Riviera Hotel to wait for the 150 remaining tickets to be sold at the door. Reports filtered out to the unlucky NU students denied tickets that students from other schools and even Evanston Township High Schoolers were admit- ted before they were. For the fortunate ones inside, Ziggy Marley headlined the show. He sang in front of an anti-Apartheid banner. Included in the set was Buffalo Soldier, a song made popular by his late father, Bob Marley. The Riviera, a converted movie theater, provided students with a dance floor, a fully stocked bar, balcony seats and bil- liard tables. As always, students raved about the diversion to the winter blahs. : EE 0 BALL , , h.', V AN. f tg N 6 1 1 H levi, 1 Y!'u' in K4 if 'VSV K. UMW' Pt 4 x X 'f P 3 J' 1 Il f '. X: '1 .s +V 1 E ll ,f S Ylfikvf xy Rf 1. PL YBILL MAC BETT Mary Tensing Paul jensen Nicole Sullivan Chip Becker john Dalton George Brant Shulie Cowen Colin Doly Charlie Strater james Martucci jay Rosenbloom DEATH IS AN AQUIRED TRAIT Ron Baslovv Whitney Blakemore George Brant Derek Goldman jennifer Noclar Matthew Richter jonathon Taylor Nikolaus Volgenau Meredith Zinner TOMMY Demetra Adams Arch Alcantara Ron Baslow Martha Ann Bozeman Mark Brodie Clark Scott Carmichael Elizabeth Caskie David Cook Shulie Cowen Bob Dugdale Adrianne Duncan Doug Hara Dawn Hillman Andrew Horwitz Stephanie Howard Kevin lepson Kerry lerke Megon Knox Mike Kroll Teresa Mayorga Amy Meyers Ami Mills lan Murray Philip Pawelczyk jeff Porper Kathy Randels Don Rice Stephanie Rogers Michael P. Rohd Eve Ryser Spencer Shapiro Kameron Steele Elizabeth Temin Gloria Dunn Van Vlack E-1 aa st A CHURUS LINE Kevin Borrovvs Charley Knapp Mike Poutrelli Kyle Hall David Plunkett Kathryn Velvel Ilyse Robbins Lauri Hamilton Deidre M. Smith Feff Porper Bobby DeWitt Matthew Pestorius Elliot Cady Brian Van Der Wilt Susan Derry Karyn Pauli Susan Craig Eser Ozdeger Scott Spouster Guy M. Ponko Lori Reiter David Cushino Andrea Sabisch Amy Love Becca Kaufman Carrie Cadle Sarah Mays F S LM IS EVIL... aaron Pabst Tom Kane P wilip Pavvelcyzk Heather Brooks A ly Christ S arah Knovlton Cwristina Thodos P atrick McNully Nathanial Buch MEE-OW jill Cargeman Ana Gasteyer Mary lackman Spencer Shapiro Bo Blackburn Eric Letsinger j.P. Manaux Philip Pavvelczyk WAA-M U Randi Altschuler Susan Bachman Victor Benedetti Scott Benjaminson Scott Beveridge Kevin Burrows Carolyn Cadle Lynette Calucin Susan Craig Susan Deming Robert DeWitt Scott Ferguson juliet Funt Eugenie Godula Laura Greiner Stephen Gundersheim Kyle Hall Laura Heim Robert Helms james Irwin Brian james Kimberly johnson Stephan jones Rebecca Kaufman Lori Kettner Lori Longstreth Karen Luehne Luis Mangubat Scott Mikita Michael Murray jody Plotkin Michael Pontrelli Amanda Rogers Andrea Sabesin Michael Schnabel Steve Shedd Scott Sponsler Kathryn Velvel Robert Wolcott Victoria Zuffoletti BEST LITTLE WHOREHOUSE... Elizabeth Burstein Stephan jones William Brown Kate Dowe Tiffany Boorn joy Rosenthal Peter Glawatz Steve Shenbaum Ross Rubin Gloria Van Vlack David Cushing Andrew Clark Lynn Zimmerman Hilary Bell Stephanie Fagin Patrick McNulty Elliott Cady james Detwiler Dan Gold Stacey Lynn Marleigh Moscatel jeff Porper Leslie Stephens Brian VanDerVVilt Patrice Whitten Roben Wolcott Vickie Zuffoletti Adam Chase GRAFFITTI DANCERS Christina Carmody Karen Chiv Dave Clapper Michelle Conway Stephen Crundersheim Stephanie Howell Robin Irwin Charley Knapp jane Lacher Denise Lee Zoe Lieberman Sarah Mays Heidi Neal Eser Dzdeger Guy M. Ponko jeff Rago Sarah Rich llyse Robbins Laura Tubell Natasha Witkin 1 X-1 ,W 3. 5 5,119 ,g W , 4, ff TE S6 L24 ,Y , re-I fa v f 1 4, 'Z ge W J' ,1 . ff 'w.....-w..- . 4, ., V W Tx, 8 -'ly sz ' '97 .ff ,ya ,' 33 K - 11 A ,W , Emir' if , A -,H ,, 3 It ,wtf tk ,gf ? f- A :flfj o f ' 'tif .1 1 fu W- .- ., ff 'i1 ' -1'T: 7ff-if -' ' f Mm il. 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A ,,. ,,5:,,X ,: X , N 0 E ' LIVING IINIIS 1939 .WI ALLISO The vomit Club--wanna audition? -- We are but lost puppies in the kennel Suzanne and Cameron of life. --Lillie Hubseher Soud. --Greg Meffullogh Eat me. l'm a Twinkief'--joe I-Iipskind There once was a man from VVhat? --Suzy Puccinelli Nantucket... --Stephen Bishop If a tree were to fall down in the woods My dating problems would be solved without anyone around to hear it, who with a good sheep. -- anonymous Cares? --Leighton Peterson junior male 3 BOBB CCT LLOCH 91 I Quick, Call Marty--We need another keg. Is there dorm dinner tonight? Did jae get the Cash advance? I'm a president, not a garhagemanln I-Ielpl I'rn locked in a stairwell! This new lounge is great. All we have to do to Clean it up is hose it off. It's furniture by Goodyear. UIIEUC DECZQ UQZIQ USCIS fmmiii LW Y gi 9' Ja., .. r-5 0 -. - CCI lk My xx. CRC '-Ng. T' il Q3 l +i,- ,,,..- -wa ij! Q, Mix Zblufeg! Get thee to a nunnery...Gol WHAT! The Duck Look at the duck floating out on the lake like a lilly-pad. Float duckie, float. Don't drown for you will die. A Ptool 4 you. EDEC, lDUCFF DECKS lmmiljil IlClEElQl 94 Qmtjiim Duomo El ll fl Cl i E U if lol fl U Eli CHAP ln the process of gaining our rightful Don't worry about things being in place, we must not be guilty of context. wrongful acts. Paul reflected that big trouble really Obviously, there was a lie being was finding something to believe in. reported for the American public during l'd like to end this with a sweeping Vietnam. The'question is what was the generalization, but generalizations are lie. stupid. 12 'fr 41+ 95 Dfli QLQ , 1 SILT pw'-ff'-Q , -J Q. L. i+ J, if-fr-Ki X. 96 183 IN Need to relieve stress? Throw a Chair Q: Why are the RAS at Hinman so outa vvindovv. rich? A: Because the residents keep locking VVhere's the mail? VVhere's the mail? themselves out. Where everyone rides the elevator, but The Condos by the Lake...VVe just get NOBODY has a key. by. Do you have a single?! No, I live in a Closet. , I , 1, ,J r TD iii E ti ti Vi lil Ui ii ii ii tii Fil iti ti ini ini iiil ii i ti ti ld tai l ii y iii , fg'N:,'3lf Usa 5 . ELDER That's the sunken garden? Elder parties rule! ls it a real fire or what?! The flood of '88 f'MaiI on Saturday? Never! QEEEC DECKS EDCQQ 1 Uiifn mmiijr Pi 95 FCDSTER-WALKER The Plex, new and improved, nothing dry about it. Foster-Walker, the Plex, a legend in the making. The Plex. Yes, we like it. Gotta quarter? I need to do laundry. ff W M no ,V gl ., e ,f Vx Q , 1 if 'U Q Fi Pr U V: new U, U Q Lf r r M fl C Lf N My U rg Q U ,S QM J A GO OI JRICH .1 Z1 T' That's Goodrich I-louse? I always thought it was a fraternity that never had parties. I want some, dammit. A good man is hard to find, BUT a hard man is good to find. --Third Floor The Olandos and BamBarn IM teams love PSI UI Why are you always on the phone?I EEE Q on L 2 I-1 I if! f 'f ki.. Are we eating in the back room or are we going to be social tonight? --Lisa Williams Lisa, you're so cute...you and Snoopy are wearing matching gowns. Munchies! Bring a fork. Bring a cup...Bring your own food. We live to share?--Pam and Megan -. -Q-s W... . , ,., ,,,,,.,. . A 0 v W. E HGBART I've lived at Hobart all four years. lt's such a warm and friendly houseg there's no other place on campus where I'd want to live. --Lisa Williams From WSRC to WRC5 We've come a long way, baby! Freeclom's just another word for nothin' left to lose. --lanis joplin nur, g i L. t,c ' v ' Q a .cg ' ff ' ,K .1 ii in 'eras S A 181 5 Q, 1 ri, w f, ti Bit ,ii Ei ti tai ri D til rt F ta U W F H rig .Gi fe? Q, O1 A f J W' ' W ?f:4p,lf 5,3QE 1 H. 535563, Ezffwbti' . I .Ao . .f .mera -.-.np-Q9-. -.--. SUEDE UDEZC Qmiij 5:35133 ESIiI Qi-L.f ' 102 LMS: ' ? fx lj E E LI Tl H H m UL:l,51w H Ll L I ' U VV LJL, PHIV' 1 L ,, L,,w 1 ma M I ,JK X199 ,LA nn ZZ, N, ORTH MID-QUADS E U3 5113555 QECLEQI EQCQQ vm W w+1..,4p. DECiI ' 4 T 14 aw ,K Mew'- FW wyifi' t ...was lj U U D ij UT U Q Q U ji E U E D U S 's X9 Q X X Y :X - . Q ,bedlbg 'fe A jk vs X ,xx 5 x ..f,g-39, K Q E U U Cl U 'Q w S ,W- A S .V 5 YQ .Q . , 31, .n ge . - ' 'Y ' ' '-Ms 'QA15 5.-i.'-vu, qi ,f '15 Q? aw AJ ','r..!-f RUCIERS . N H, .sf is s Q ,sf 4? .. w W 5 ' .f.F.N..fiX5 5' . Q 'N' VX A f'. Q. . X f A Q it gm: Bw H- VW .. .qw mm, f if P- 'X-.kwi-41-, N Q V Ks v 2 3? X fi A SM 5. Q- 1- rf. i2i'g.v,3,s -'Qfgffi .,.,.g3g,,f xg X 1 ' . 4 X Z - x ' ' ,q ,, 1 1 v vi ' , ' ' ' x' ,ga .-wifi g'5'7Qa'.5x-f.Y,KfS'gs'-fl? .fs F,if'5,x 4? 3,-1' .. - I M Spf 'f K 'Q' - -5, -f Q, -M 3 SH .af -' sp-'ky 1 XXX?-.51 ,,,'5 f'kgs 155' .12-5.2 f ' af : s,-'ig fulggpv V- - ,ff -' . ., l Y ' ' I zx z t H l 4 K ,, V A , x ,nm . f . N if .Q Y . if -Hf f I 1 X P W F 5 ,' ' me MQ, 1' X r .1 vi, tw XP...-1.3 Q Egg- 'iff W ,. 'A' 'W f' A Q., P walfzgffmif ,ng f 3ffl?s,g'+i'.,5'5 wif s isVw'k'1qi 2' 5 Q5 w1rmw?wnmf9 , vi ' ' ':.. ,,.. rig - -:, ' F L: ' N' 'f . 1 4 4 hs, Q x L. we Q I ,V mr . .i I.. ,. u ' -i .NT ' yy Q PF Q X X I ,Af 1 F nl . - 'ffm , ' ' 'ff VK V ,M . MM , 1 J-'QQ , ,Ib A Z ' z.. -- A 9 1, 106 SARGEN -2 2 2- 2 - 3 3 3? ,,,..,..l PM-p-qp K.. 5 , EE UD Q U U Vu U VT F1 N A SHEPARD 107 Ginger come home! GCOS says, just Relax. I'm so happy I could sponge. Frank!!! SPLOOSH! This place is a dump, but the people are happy. . 17333-a I' 1 -622' ,QI DEW ammiii EDDIE EQQQZ lmmiii li 108 K4 M ,XA r'---...,.,,,, '..i,.f Af. Q.. gg .,, , ri .AWK fjil Vx M 'V' - 1. an i ,vntw .- 'if ... ,,'-..v..d ff . W M NNW ,,.,. ,f--'+ MQW . ....,:.., .,.. ,,,...-ff-W' -,,,,.-W'-A- vN NXV , .f+ 7 E QEEM F D U U U U U Q in E1 Rm U Q W 1 I H1 SoUTH MID-QUADS 109 That class was so boring all I ever did was balance my checkbook. I-lovv am I supposed to get all this work done and still have any kind of life? This .... is Rush. This .... is your brain on Rush. Any questions? My thighs are begging for it. HZUPUJIPS 'aguens Suiulatuos asuas nofl oQ,, We at SMQ party like wild dogs just released from captivity. To which I had nothing to say, so I said nothing. --Camus If you are not to be the martyred slaves of time, be perpetually drunk! With vvine, with poetry, or with the virtue, as you please. --Beaudelaire 4,1 91 n .9 Q- Le? 9 .ali lx W It 1 IQ sf ' f ' -af, -rj Q 9, '1'7 X .4 EEESS IEEEEE EEEEE IEEEES EESEEI I K 0 WILL ng Q--as V. a . 8 in .,.,. , ' + i,,. b-asm.-!LZ?1pg.g jf, ,l 8 ' M -.M--!..... ' , . , -v-f-----7,45-.nga , , .-I 5 . rp-5,,,.,. V. ...f,.b,.,...,, ,, M, H W ,mm I W'- ,.,.1,x,5,,JM' TWA r . .L.,a.' '. L A-was-dv ., - .ea-.Q'1v.., M4454- r2' xl sm' L 'X ,gi H1988-89 Wag VViII3rd'5 50th Willard ....... woooooooo anniversary. And we did it up right .... volunteering in the cornmunit sharing wisdom with professors, and continuing our ever-unique social existence. It was a year of which we Fifi are proud. U Q Kill if lj lvll E U igi tj U Ll y, I'm not sure people understand us. Eighteen thousand isn't all that had for 3 social life. 111 u f X X .nm MORRISC. ffl .f 2 f 5 -If ,V 5 fiuisrv ' ., I wen 'ilfifa' rf 8 :,-43, waz, f 'nth A... I KXQH :igkr ' ' YV xl 1 ii ,f' L 1'-',... ,,-2 1 i-np. A l ,'i'i .Z- ff u ln.. -- fmmmimi UEEQ5 EDDIE 14111-. EDU321 112 5 In Q E U E, , , , N1 m U U C Q ' U U P f 2 H - , ,p, U Fl V3 D my N , L, U Ll E Ll Q W l Q f' 7 rf fi Q 2 Where else can you learn to svvea six different languages? ISRC: The Center of the known universe or at least south Campus. ISRC: We do it all over the world ISRC is the best place to have an international affair. Efjllioi- EUC moi 53: moi 'l, 11 1900 O GTO Will you take a shower with me? Get a clue Are you in? We like it here, we like it here, Kappa Sig get out of here. 'Down with capitalists! Down with Greeks! VVe're just a bunch of super- freaks! VVe're a Combination ofthe MacNeil- Lehrer Newshour and the Twilight Zone. EETEQE Qmtlijm ljtammm immmmm Nmtiitimm me F -ff ' gnfied ,,. f' lig i ,-N.::.f -N - wwf Vik ' -sa g-. t - QQ.: X , SN X X ASX X . N . xx N '+ . -' 'i Ski . ,,.. - ' me rg X., A 2 age. .W .. ig., , 'KE We CCS f fw- Giisfiiffii' 4, aim 41 7 'gif pr- .nf- , ff ef - Ss- 1 ,, F, 1 ,wlf Il f 1 XJ R? ., X 5 x 2111 4 .,.ffM U D1 fn U 0, 1 W' w Il CW 1' Ui E W al 1'5- my Q ri I I M'-N QPF-CAMPUS 3 2 ,JZ Z ffi 1 ,f 5 1 7 - . , 1 a , 5 I ,wir ,441 51 1+ x- -,. 4.-.M .-.,., Q --.,-. A--,.. ..... . .. - wwmryx- Q, 4 '1 1 V7 1 Q f' ' 13,151 ., 4 fy , Ewa is W ...ff Q ' a Q EEE U Q 1 'w W. ,.. 4 I C T L.. VT w L-. fag, R . - 1 ms-.4 . . Wag.--..4:VF-SV,fg,..f....-V.,7.5V.,V,.4. .VL ' 1-fake I V- V: V f - ' 2. 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'j 1 f ' ' ' 1 ww 'V ' 'fs V - ' M 'EER' ' Q z. -W V V .Q 'WV-.1--V . - ' 5' V' f fx . ,, , .. , ,f f ' 1. , V 'M' V 1 W, xxx . . V .. , r ' w V Lp .mf . , -,.wfV , 32 . , 52:25 . ,f'?'s-1. , ' .fi 'A' , ' 4' ' . ff-I W .nw-,,nfW1,a,,'V1w f., ' , Q V f . ff -V . wf'n,f3:Vqe,-w, , ' 'V A Vx ' 'L . ' V, w ' 4 f - V y V wi V.V V If Q, V4, lm V AV V, A V 15,36 .?,,,5,.,VV . . sy wh: 1 QV, X. ' V. V35 A- Q V- V . V1 l L. ' W ' , ' ,sys-ay Q V.: .f34flff' ' -A , F3 ' 5 2 , - ' Q ' f A Q 1 ,,f'-L- 1' 'Q .su , 5. . 3 V m.VVwV-45 ' , ,JV V' Va, ' , ' A I V M V., w g., -V Vg, V, -'P V, .QIW .3 ,T .. V , . 63 A ,- , - V-, -V 'V u ' V31 .4-1 + ':A ' V .3 '11, . V'V ,grigg 4, ,rx . -' , W V V 5 WV: Qc' - :V . V--Vg , .V W-V, V - ,S rug., 1 .qw-m .V V1 s QV , 4. .V - . , . V .Vg VV H, ,V V V Q AV. -ff . k h- A, ,uf V V L :X Y V .J gf , .- 'Q V, 1 VV, V ,. , - V WMS .V Q - - V: Hg. V Vi, K FV V ,' ' f V.,f 'fin ' V if V-ff ' 44 , VM-.. V, ' V V V. M-V -V., . . V +VV .,,:- .4 -,V ,kwa-,, . V -V ww' W- 3 .U ., M. . fx -fl - 'VL V 'V V W ' Yr ,, 'sg ,. fn-Vi- , .Mb , l 74, g,:?V:va 'V v m VV' A 'wa 'f T! , - HSV V V' , V 5435 V..- -V ' .na ' 1 ' 3 v .1 WV,-is Vw ' ' ,' V V , 4 ' -.-..1.-.M pf-VJ . -. ,M ' . W 4 .r:'VV,., ,. 1 W- ,Q V an GREEKS 1989 20 ???f? LA ' f .I v A ,J 1' n,.,,, 1 U . 7- 5.2 W ,K if , fa I i 'd 4594 ,fm '.f M' I - 5 M f if :sf 5 . Y 122 5 x 1 Eff ,--wx? A -Q ,- 3 fx .3 ' ,Nl AA.: tg x 1 Mfsg ff' is .JT - x w,SZ, ACACIA rx 3 .1 xi X. Xi P ju ww Q Ag -la4'z1nz...s.M,. ,. ,. ,, A NX 1 ,fe R i K... uv X 325 -1 v. V -QS. I iDma 5 , . f MW , , 11 ku' I mx 9, .- Gm? I il fi ' ':-x 'ol' li 1 Ilvggagiifh y k--.9 . .1 X 'i 4Q, U ,4- 31 1 l A A-5 A Quan v wi' X 124 ALPHA CHI QMEGA .cauttqsge Q . F X Lf , x -5 A it hiv MI! lIIIi' . R Q mi HIHIII 25 ' jf . .wa 'N Dina Bair, Sarah Barth, Betsy Bodker, Lisa Bornstein, Stephanie Chang, Ginger Deimer, Barb Distad, Amy Dvvyre, Laura Eason, Ann Falstad, Holly Firfer, Traci Fraungruber, Sili Fridrich, Korine Fujivvara, Michelle Galman, Hillary Haft, Michele Hakimian, Debbie Hammond, Beth Houck, Wendy Hovver, Carrie Hsu, Cathy johnson, julie johnson, Merri Kaye, Shirene Nourbash, Eser Odzeger, Sridevi Rao, Cindy Ravvson, janet Schaper, Charlie Schroeder, Kristin Stang, Cathy Strother, Michelle Toscas, Tansy Wills, Wendy Wilson, Patti Wolter, Suzy Abrams, Lisa Barnett, Hilary Bell, Sue Briante, Becca Carchman, Vicky Coniglio, Bryn Dessent, Nikki Dinner, Debby Finklestein, Caryn Franklin, Nina Garces, Cindy Goldman, Sheeri Handler, Eleanor Laws, Michele Lerner, Amie Levin, Arden Levy, Nancy McFlicker, Carrie Michals, Kelley Murphy, jody Plotkin, Eve Ryser, julie Selsberg, Laura Shermer, jasmine Shotland, Morgan Smith, Sherri Spear, jenny Svvanson, Allison Altman, Cherry Avila, Davvn Becker, Susan Bihrle, Alycia Borer, Molly Brovvn, Lisa Cavallari, Kris Conness, Beth Cornell, Camaro Elliot, Kris Farley, Aileen Gibbons, Eve Greenbarg, jody Handler, Kirsten Heutsche, Abbey jacobson, Stacy johnson, Patty ju, Sarah Kenney, Maryann Lorusso, Emily Marti, Laney McVicker, jodi Medell, Bonnie Nevvald, Andrea Orzoff, Felicia Ostrick, Laura Pruden, Sara Pullan, julie Rabinovitz, Tina Rovick, Nancy Slavin, juliet Sonkin, Laura Tubelle, Bonnie Wattlevvorth, Liza Zimmerman, Lynette Anderson, jennifer Ayres, Elizabeth Blumenthal, jossie Blumenthal, Stephanie Brueggeman, Emily Cambridge, Sara Davis, Lorna Denger, Katie Dudzinski, Abbey Epstein, Stephanie Fagin, Melissa Feldstein, Karen Friedman, Holly johnson, Maryam judar, Anastasia Katinas, Alice Kiem, Lauren Knudsen, Sunny Lee, jen Martens, Michelle Marion, Liza Mazansky, Nancy Neims, jen Nichols, Maria Pellegrino, Shara Porter, Tonya Roper, Stephanie Saull, jessica Scheibach, Elaine Shimkin, Lara Siegel, jenny Smulyan, Anne-Marie Suarez, Laurel Thompson, Wendy Walters, Ann Wright, jessica Zeldin ,g 1 ,. l R iii, flll g Q0-ooocso 4 126 ALPHA DELT PHI 5, ,,g -. bf x f , QM W 'IW X Zh.. ,tif 5, I X M .31 ,f , N X lu gx A H+ ,M , , D ww--,A,4.-V 27 I X XX N x NX .1 1' jz-X lp as 4 f s 'ff' ' 'rv x 4, W E fm ALP GAM DELT .4 ,fs m fx The tide recedes but leaves behind bright seashells on the sand The sun goes down but gentle warmth still lingers on the land The music: stops, and yet it echoes on in sweet refrains For every joy that passes something beautiful remains MD. Hughes She builded herself into so many lives, she can never die. i ,Z HZ.. ',, ' i far-we , , if' '26-J ,i wrwn xr. .1 a.4if54lf f'lvg' fx,-txl.4.f'f ,l Q, 2,224 fi Tfif ki,-.fl.' , fig U Jw ig' -,l' ,, M V' V ,fi 'li l .l ,y U -irg ,J gl rf- zllli' Q1 ,Tzxxk Q- 1ll,l'i we s iii V, tif H 'P l 129 ii ,. f 3- , 2 f , 3 V V . X . V 5 ' . 5 QV 9' W y 1 1 , ' V l L '4 ., x 5 I l l ,QA -ii 3 f P jennifer Abrams, Lara Abrams, Randi Alexander, judy Anthony, Vivien Avella, Lesile Bailyn, jenny Berner, Sarah Buescher, Suzy Bures, Emily Cherniak, Nicole Christopher, Anne Cosnovv, Delida Costin, janet Cross, Tara D'Lutz, M.j. Darnell, Carrie Davis, Gail Davis, Heather Dickenson, Nicole Dokton, Luanne Ducett, joan Dugan, julie Duncan, Sheryl Edwards, janet Ferguson, Karen Ferguson, Lana Fleishman, Rachel Guderman, Tracy Guth, Dawn Hagerman, Shelly Hall, Christine Hanaburgh, Tanya Hoole, Louise Hunter, Laura jansen, Gretchen johnson, Moira Kinsella, Laura Kirrin, Barb Kittridge, Valerie Krause, Lisa Krissotf, Colleen Lehane, Ricki Levenberg, Tracy Lim, Melea Lusk, Chrissy Madden, joan Marchese, Colette Marine, Michelle Miller, Maureen Moynihan, Laurie Noonan, Amy Nye, Ellen Odesser, Allison Park, jodi Patterson, Christy Pedersen, Cheryl Perera, jeannie Pizzuto, Danni Purkett, Anne Quick, Kathleen Ralph, Hally Redeker, Patti Rice, Kelly Riordan, Gretchen Rogge, Laura Rossovv, julie Sanders, Elena Schinasi, Beth Sherarcl, Kathy Sieclel, Audrey Skvvieravvski, Lena Smith, Beth Snider, Holly Staten, Karen Strickland, Patrice Sutton, Sheila Svvanson, Becki Svvinehart, jackie Tevv, Robin Ungerleider, Bliss Webb, Ellie Weiss, Heather White, Elizabeth Whitten, Hillary Wicai, Liz Wilhelm, Elaine Williams, Chrissy Wu, Dianne Zambrella, Liz Zoller. Butter up those NROTC men. Like a big dog. Q ,ig . jk, r-jg: ,-1 L it-asf Q :, s .C g M jbhob j ,H it '11, Q' ix-tic. .X yiltxkv JC I gui E ' is .r' ' , Nt- ' - 'Sli V' '-3l'1L A-4'QXfQ'f1L7, X ill 'I' ilh '+LE 130 UA QA I . I P ' 0 ' 4, 1,40 1618 MU' Yf1N ' X ,v,,, PHA P ALPHA - If 'sf-wvfu.'r' 'S' ATG? Pfffq-we F ,wif 5 QC Q .-' - ' '.' u A ,., - ' 5-k.4 Ili' r v , Air fs PW r 'Z lk 4 Q ALPHA PHI 131 1' K ms -- X '13 X':li I ,' .V - ,. iiibrw. X Mi. M.. Ny., . XQQZWE 132 . cgi? tmiriii iggkswsQYVZPQSEJLWSQQQ W. x , W. 1 V, ,- -P ? .w5 - .f ax Kgs ff -12 ni A . M ALPHA PHI ALPHA '- x x ,,.,...-'sv' it .,,. ,-5' 1' v.. .Q...',... ggspvw.-W,-0-,.wf--'www-e--f,..,,.., Mw- f + 3 41 . f ,yn .,. q ..,.. , H. W.,-,,.,. ,,.., .A ,.,,.,f.v, X -vw x V 4. ' A ,s--... '38 v wi f' X M . '+Mvs'W'1w.Xvwfon.wn 1 BETA THETA PI ., . uf -ww, . V 134 ALPHA TAU GMEGA A 5 414 f 1? if 'f ,K 1 1. ,iv 'Nan iw mm N X YG, i wx- ' : . . i.. wlx K- A NX . I v 4+ 1 ,,.,,..!,. 135 CHI DMEGA .,.! , Kirsten Barber, Cheri Barnard, Vesla Bemis, Senta Berggruen, Becky Bollinger, Kate Bradley, Becky Brown, Leslie Vhin, Carolee Clayton, Amy Clouse, Lisa Collins, Christy Conroy, Rowena Cruz, Amy Davis, Angela Demas, Lisa Elliot, jenny Engle, Chris Enk, Beth Ennis, jennifer Erickson, Cassie Evans, Mary Ann Eerencevich, Sarah Finney, Debra Fogarty, Kimberly Forsberg, Stacey Ciarfinkle, Marti C-ates, Elizabeth Grant, Lauren C-reiner, Sandra Grimm, Barbara Harris, Ann Hendry, jamie Hodges, janelle Hoekstra, Audrey Honig, Meredith Hubbard, jane Hudson, Stacey Hyland, Kathy Ingraham, Lauren jennings, jennifer johnson, Michelle jones, Pam Kaskel, Lisa Kivirist, Stacy Lawrence, julia Lee, C-inny Levi, Debi Lewis, Kristen Lofgren, Maria Loukaki, Michele Maiken, jodi Malis, Beth Maloney, Marcy Marttila, Laura McNally, Sue McNally, Lara Mehlhaff, Shanlee Miller, Cameron Morgan, Emily Muly, Kelly Murray, Alex Ness, Kelly Oberle, Mary Osswald, Heather Partrey, jackie Park, Kim Paul, Alex Pelkan, Rhea Pimentel, Susanne Pitts, Beth Platko, jennifer Po, Monica Powers, Kathy Quain, Pam Ro, Deb Rochlin, Laura Rucker, julie Schiltgen, Ciwen Schuyler, Karen Sell, Ronnie Silverman, Katie Stenseth, Charmaine Stopka, Kris Strunk, Chrissy Svenson, Leslie Sweeney, Libby Trychta, Andrea Van Hull, Cathy Venable, Valerie Vinyard, Suzi Wahl, Lynn Walker, Pauline Wei, Nickki Wilslef, Beth Zelinski, Vickie Zuffoletti ! C I can do that!...It's a Flood Night! Mop for your lives!!...l-ley you guys, did you forget to finish the float or something?...Rhonda...Do Charlie's AngeIs...Are your pearls real?...l don't need mittens, my sleeves are long enough...Are you rich?...VVhy are lunches so much better than dinners?...Chi-O Congrats...She's very vicarious...She's a way cool chick...Big, hot double date...But of course, I am one with the earth...VVhy did vve call? Well, Boz told us Charlie would be there...VVe'll be in 4-Gold...Vitamin C...Dadadadada .... Have trailer, will travel...Biggest, burly vvench...Boy jennifer, don't you look cute in Amy's clothes!...What are we going to call the Pit if we get new furniture?...l'm so excited...Chi Omega Playhouse lact your agel...Marti, l think l'm going a little over budget...VVell, isn't that special! Novv vvhose favorite color is red?...Days v. Kids--a fight to the finish...l vvasn't bothered...Are vve having F-U-N yet?...SuZi, you smell...l love my sisters because they're ...Don't drink and drive. Stay overnight...You've signed your name in blood...Seven and a half...The back door is that vvay..Boy Hovvcly...The Phi Kap contingency lives...VVho is Mary jane Vessuvio?...No, we didn't steal Phi Kap's composite. You can let Kiv out of the closet now...ls there going to be a lot of mobbing at the party?...I-li, my name is and these are my breasts .... Hi, Is this Kappa?...ls there a pizza man there?...Really, you don't know me. I prefer to remain anonymous...Five Chi-O-lometer Run...No.l Homecoming Bannermlvlarti sings at Wrigley Field...VVhat Chi- Omazing pledges 13 V-gf .s 'W fx j g 138 CHI PHI Z? 1 . . ff?-if .diff P ga. 11 N .-W f-xr: ffwfl .NHAL fx-.4 ltwrgfi- - 65.14 tm ' f ' 1? Q mf MT I 'fy . M, .f 41 04, A ' QF Tnuf 1 329 r-X , fx: O if sg ef, A F ,ze- nazi 140 CHI PSI It's the Chi I-louse, dude..Snausages!...A.F. is doin' the compo5ite...That'II leave a mark...VVhat are we trying to say?...Much buffoonery x to he hacl...Shut up, Ron...Go hack to f L-+G sleep, VViIIie...Cut it out, i i E F Adam...MonopoIy Party...B0at 'Q QA 004250 9 St e W LJXWQ . ,N W 'Y ,Der mx 'o'2f3i i, ' 0 BaII...Lumpy...Diana's Opa!...VVhere's Mary?...PFR...Chi Psi leopardy...Pass him around!...H.B. Pipes...I met him on Tue5day...Back off!...H0mer Formby...VVhere are the pledges?...Ma, y0u're such a good pers0n...GentIemen in Search of excellence. K lil 4. if if 5 89121 s, , 142 DELT DELT DELT Tri-Delt cleans up...Lisa, it's 3 am., do you want to go to jewel?...and then he asked what salad dressing I vvanted...God! I didn't know what to say...I'm soooo Buzzed...to live and die in LA .... hominess: it's not a state of mind, it's a way of Iife...I can't decide if he's strong and silent or just big and stupid...it has been three years since we had a man. What are we to do?...Tning5 are going svvimminglyi ' i 6-'fn 41 ,ef X1 --arf' , W i , 7 , . leaf WP! .. .4 si 9 Qf - 'x Siu, ' gf f X rf I Im HQ-If 'N ff' -1 IHIL-Twwi ,Tj X x SR, af f 1 C' omwv 144 DELT GAMMA ,443 .Ne INIQ11 X ' 51, F bp , lil -- Zi fl lift i . U i Q MY if W, W g . . ,L i ,,, -' BU, --'il ,, 'Y lgtfl So here's a toast to DG's old and nevv...Anything goes...AnChor SpIash...DeIta Iamaica...6l 8 Emerson Street...l-lannah...DG-FUI Pl Party...Getcha somempassing the Candle...shooters... AII My Kids vs. Days of Our Lives ... 2 a.m. Movie Club...Rice Cakes...l3eer in the Coke maChine...The UgIy Softball teammvvalkout to U. of I .... Diversity...No talking on the page!...Hon1eComing Queen...The minute you walked in the joint...Live your life as a Tvvinkie...HaIIoween Party for the blind...Eggnog and Mistletoe...DG Night at the Bar...Mugs of bronze and blue...L.A. Lavv...Anchors Avveigh...C-orp...Sisterhood...Times to remember...Memories to Cherish...VVE LOVE YOU SENIQRS! W, U, if For there is no friend like a SISTER In calm or stormy vveatherg To cheer one on the way, To fetch one if one goes astray, To lift one if one totters down, To strength whilst one stands. -Christina Rossetti Are you having fun? Good, because fun is the best thing to have. -Dudley Moore in Arthur 14 1-sk Q- .fx n -un 4'5 an . 'Uni 'X XX. ,, Y .' hfqbf Q' C' .J 5' wgfkif, V Q iff ,M QTFM1 -. - 1 E Fx., , 74 1.4 f,+ :A fix . ,nf H,-, xg? .N- 145 DELTA T AU DELTA .EE GI 47 Party hats...Keep it down, Paul... Cheer up, Nuge... When I was at the Gras...VVoof...Mr. Indiana...Oven mittens...Scooter, It's the principle of the thing... ...Lawrence, is there a point tothis?...Tailgates .... Where's my door?...Contra...just come talk to me...Sweet joe...The Bush...The hair, watch the hair...The Alpha Phi pledge class...Sense...I'm on it...Beauty School Dropout...Roberts Rules...Chickenhead...Backstage at Miss America...VVere you the guys who came in the VVinnebago?...Crotch...Let's go to the Club...Roof testing...Monday night chicken...Two guys named Vytas...VVoody...You don't even know her name?...Babykiller...Scotch...Push- puppies...You walk like you're from Kansas...You dance like you're from Ohio...Sparty...Slimes...leez Fritz, you're enormous...Burrhead...Bud...GTP...Hatin' it...Power, povver...Bar, guy?...Rush guru...But I did lock the trunk...Seafoam green...Steiner...Fl 4 Tomcat...ls it two- thirds or three-fourths?...Homecoming and Gamma Phi...Hugh Shields...Low risk guidelines...Lessleee...Pl Race, indoors. Baldy, Boomer, Charles, Butera, Paul, The Don, Scooter, Huss, Steiner, Brad, LA, Lindell, Nuge, Okie, Peebs, Mason, Vytas, Stuart--Goodbye, Good Luck, Good Riddance. :QAM g si ' -2.2.5 t E43 DELT UPSILO IQ , iff - 1 HJ L! PIA7, 41.-I -4. f 1' 1 , Hp ng' ififb ' Lf' , If I ' ' fu 7 lg' f 951,203-JW'A ' If 49 m am LEM f'i -f 3' S T-, .f--5 i , J- Q .X 1 ,R 3 . fi -Q :J QJJ.ijJ 1 1 iff E5 Zeta hahes...lt'II he fun it we all do it...Oh, reaIIy!...Don't worry, he happy...Cool heansml recognize him by his thighs...Cumhy Iives...DZ roCl4S...l-loly awesome pleclgesmlf the glass slipper fits, wear it!...I love 'em during hay-baling season...Oh, Happy Song...Stand By Me...You must do the things you think you cannot. DELTA ZET QV- -' ,' Q-six, M- nf, like fx : ' 'V ft' 'f X lf f'iit:'g.t 'X' o .j ,. X, ' Au. , W le 6,33 , lt tl on S,- -.1 ,,.,, vs N -4 w,-1 E4 'C qs ur si ,N gig 153 4 0, -a if , 7 L X...A...... ,Q k P 3 1:-43 55 3 W f if f lv 1' Q E Q: W 1 vw 1 i -f Hi f'7ff3'?f l ff'- X155- 3 2 GAMMA PHI BET w X -7, K .4 - J' Q RP' Kristin Berndt, jennifer Betts, Holly Blackford, Susan Bokun, Megan Brady, jennifer Bradt, Kalee Briggs, Cathy Brooks, Amy Butler, Lara Butler, Maureen Cameron, Susie Cho, Gwen Coleman, Leslie Corbett, Allison Deaver, Teri DeBacco, Lynn Delar, Melissa Dell'Aringa, Cathy DePew, Kiane DeVilbiss, Liza Diaz, Carrie Donaldson, Kim Egerman, Susan Elderkin, Kathy Erdmann, Rachel Fagen, Betsy Ferber, Aimee Feuer, Anne Fitzsimmons, Wendy Fox, jonna Frasor, Paula Fujimoto, Amy Gatewood, Karen Gerbosi, Laurie Gerdine, Lisa Giandomenico, Linda Giordano, jennifer Groves, Wendy Gudeman, Holly Hall, Sarah Hall, Kristin Harley, Charon Harris, Courtny Harris, Christine Harshman, Debbie Hazuka, Stacey Hecker, Heather Hollenbeck, Ginny Hopley, jodi james, Chris johnson, Monica joseph, Sally joshi, Carrie Karsten, Amy Keith, Kaki Kelly, Stellar Kim, julie Klappas, Heather Kmetz, jana LaSorte, Eileen Lazazzera, joAnn Lee, D.D. Lieberman, Amanda Lightfoot, Lisa Long, Katy Marino, Alane Masters, Kelly McDermott, Kim McGaw, Heather McGibbon, Christy Miller, Stephanie Miller, Deidre Mountain, Patty Moyer, Melissa Mulrooney, jennifer Norten, Stephanie O'Connell, Martha Parsons, Sarah Parsons, Alisa Paulsen, Laura Peres, jean Petrides, june Pfeifer, Lisa Pitner, Stacey Pochis, julie Potts, Tiffany Ramos, jill Rennert, Michelle Robinette, Kathy Ruffalo, Amy Ruhl, Debbie Rzasnicki, Anne Salzman, Seema Sanghavi, Karola Schwartz, jenny Scott, Kat Scudder, Diane Seaberg, Ami Shah, rachel Silver, Vicky Singh, Kerry Spooner, Sandi Stranne, Kari Thresher, Lisa Torrance, Angela Townsend, Sandy Wahi, jennifer Wang, Mary Wasyliw, Kim Wilhelmsen, jodi Willard, Virginia Willard, jill Yule, Charlotte Zarter, Sally Zettergren iz? ,,, 4 Qi J 153 .'-'. Q---Y sf Q Q-. f 'PS Q, Ta if 9' Vs. ,.-, . ifkl. 'Q 4' K N ,- ,. if L X I-1 i 51, E 17 J' 154 ALPHA THET Amelia Addison, Denise Ambre, Liz Bisch, Ellen Blanchfield, Katie Brick, Amy Burlingame, Maria Camoletto, Colleen Christopher, Tamara Coursey, julie Daw, Marni Dillard, Laura Euest, Maria Henke, Lunn Hoare, Courtney Hodell, Cynthia lacobsen, julie ludelson, Kate Kligora, Dianne Koberg, lane Mendelsohn, Tracy Millar, Amy Modisette, Ann Moe, Martha Morgan, Heidi Neel, Bobbie Peterson, Nancy Reding, Kristen Roberts, Kristin Schmidt, Molly Scott, Katie Sullivan, Molly Swanson, Mary Wickersham, Susan Winchester, Eden Abrahams, Linda Alberici, Debbie Bernstein, Michelle Berman, Mary Beth Breyer, Kathleen Christensen, Andrea Cornog, lulie Darrah, Alison Elliot, Elaine Farnsworth, Louise Crainey, Sasha Harvey, Rebecca Hirsch, Susan Ho, Caroline Kelly, Darby Maloney, Whitney McKay, Anna Osborne, Ramsay Ringo, Patricia Rodriguez, Eleanor Rouse, Kiran Sedhev, Laura Stasior, Meg Sweeney, Beth Traeger, Amy Van Den Broek, jenny Varland, Renee Weaver, lngrid Wertz, Brigette Whisnant, Liz Zuege, Amy Auster, Lisa Bainbridge, Stephanie Beltzer, Valerie Blin, Kitt Bockley, Danielle Cass, Amy Charnes, Kelly Dooley, Kelly Dowd, Kristin Ethier, Mia Eiglio, lenni Gosnell, Sue Green, Susan Hassig, Cindy Hill, Kelly Kalich, Kathryn Kincaid, lane Klineman, Kelly Lamm, lenni Leman, Angela Lutz, Shannon Marquis, Susan Mosser, Alisa Regas, Stefani Relles, Kristi Shackleton, Amy Strauss, Heidi Swanson, Melinda Tilly, Tracey Williams, Louise Alberici, Sarah Arnett, Stephanie Black, locelyn Belice, Laurie Bonney, Kathy Blackburn, Kristin Burke, Krista Catlett, Mandy Cohen, Megan Conway, Catherine Crossland, Colleen Curtin, Susan Derry, Christine Ereedland, Pilar French, Cindy C-alloway, Nancy Hartung, Barbara Hayes, Chris Kolosov, Shira Levine, Kelly Lierly, Catie Marshall, Lindsay Matthews, Stacy Mattingly, Maia Papich, loan Papke, Debbie Prince, Margaret Pugh, len Roe, Shannan Satkamp, Keely Sikes, Shar Tadjbakhsh, Daniella Terrizzi, Anne Tolpegin, Barbi Tornay, Nancy Taggart, Becky Wolfe . fqiwa of-.TIL x ,j' Q' nQ 36T's-' QTf-' A E If 55 K!-XT girls...just a bunch of Cornfed girls...Wow! You're taller than my boyfriend...l love this old bean...l swallowed a bug...Let's do PROBE aerobiCs...Cuys, she was wearing a brooc3h...VVooglin lives...StiCk that in your VCR and suck on it...midnight kitchen raids...There's no Cream Cheese this morning...nesting...beasting...nerd turns stripper at the Club...Let's go to an off-Campus Osco...PFF...PFD...Did you danCe?...Pump up the volume...you were a nightmare tonight...lt you Can't be with the one you love...long- distance relationships--has Illinois Bell repossessed your phone yet?...Hives is dead...Should I get my raincoat?...Pledge formal dates from I-lelI...Cubs games and Murphy's bleaChers...SOTVV...lumping out the guest room window...TNTl!...Otters are had Thetas...ln the room...in the house...lust say No! to Class...l-li boys, thanks for Coming...Don't fear the reaper...Is this a Planetarium? Buford rules...That baby! You are the spring chicken ofthe eastern moon...babysitting little boys at Haunted I-louses...I know! VVe're going to the Laserium...How you do?...Bye, bye Suzy, bye, bye...Don't worry, be happy...one way or another we're gonna get ya! get yal, get ya!...lam on it!...We've got it, yeah baby, we've got it .... Don't you love her as she's walking out the door...Theta for a lifetimemremember the black and gold, dear...remember the blind boy and the tug of the kite...and always remember our little Corner of the world. LEH- in 355 KAPP DELT Qs M Amy Ackermann, Lynn Addington, Lisa Amoroso, jamie Backstrom, Kerrian Bard, Suzy Berg, Marnie Boardman, Cindy Burch, Kim Callery, Candice Chaplin, Vicki Chen, jenny Chuang, Susie Clower, Angela Conway, Susan Crowley, Maria Davalantes, Tracy Dowler, Paige Duncan, Anna Ellis, jen Ferrell, Patricia Fischer, jennifer Flamhaft, Kathy Ererichs, Debbie Eugate, Emily Gmerek, Brigitte Greenberg, Rachel Hamilton, Debbie Hueter, Robin Irwin, Martha jefferies, Laurie johnson, Sally johnson, Mary Kalish, Yuri Kang, Katherine Kao, Lisa Kenner, Anna Kim, Pam Konigsberg, Sheri Lambert, Melissa Lang, jucly Lansky, Cara Levret, Laura Light, Catherine Lundregan, jennifer Marcus, Wendy Marshall, julie McCullough, Lesley McKinnon, Karen Mellow, Heidi Memmel, Marnie Merovitz, Debbie Motland, Lena Nikolas, Vanessa Nishikawa, jenny Oelbaum, Linda Pearson, Kelley Pederson, Carol Rahn, jelena Raskovich, Colleen Regan, Amy Replogle, Rita Schwantes, Wanda Scott, Ellen Sfikas, Karen Skalitzky, jill Smith, julie Smith, Sandi Soellner, Mary Lou Song, Rochelle Storm, Melissa Teibel, Lousia Triandis, Cindy Varlamos, Kirsten Voelker, jen Walsh, Effie Zounis, Anita Antenucci, Kate Baur, Gretchen Biesecker, jacqueline Bougher, Michele Choe, Susan Clair, Riza Cruz, Sarah Dahlgren, Katherine Davis, Lisa Eagan, Norma Eiedotin, Heather Haak, Donna Haddad, Stephani Halleen, Beth jacob, Katherine jensen, janice Katz, Heather Kenny, jacqui Kluft, Suzanne Kolb, Charlotte Manning, Bridgett McCarthy, Marty Moore, jennifer Mulqueen, Suzy Put c inelli, Beth Rickson, Nancy Rodenbeck, Sue Schwartz, Elizabeth Scott, Eden Segal, Kimberly Statler, Suzanne Summers, Holly Tabrah, julie Tojek, Karen Trzaska, jennifer VanHorne. X396 Q i Hi!! I like you!...man on the floor...M 84 M nightsmpledge team unite... I cringe at the mere thought ...You I'm on the rebound...Taekvvondo's most beautiful ninjas ..... 250 MILLIQN!!...smitten!...Lil' Thangmtraffic jam on the back staircase... I don't do ambiguity ...GlRLFRIEND!!... No, he's just furniture ...Lou Baby Lou Baby Lou...lsn't jimi Hendrix a founding member?...Kappa Svelta ... I bet his little thing's crooked...You know those industrial strength brownies---3 of them!...I-Iomecoming with Phi 157 Kap... Okay here's the situation ...VVe love you, IeweIs!!...DoubIe the pleasure, double the fun--at the Wrigley BuiIding...A candle passing for vyho?...n'APT pas.. anyone for a roll in the hay? ...Iust for PLEASURE--don't you want to give me a ride?... I am a nightmare walking, psychopath taIking...' '... janet. Miss jackson you're nasty...there's an orange flashing horse in my room...Hey Mike!...can I PIN life?...Dance Marathon with Lamda Chi... make me an Offer... ...GRADUATE--but why??? 0 a sf' 'l' if f KA 'vjs ,. T A AKAPP GAM puma wr Ei F ig W tl 1 Els' i X E Qi ya A Nia i i i 1 2 3 i 5 e . 2 .. i 5 'Q '1 A f, xjx H -. S ,4 Beth Baron, joy Bartolini, Meredith Bergman, Maelissa Brauer, Beth Brebach, Nancy Brigner,lSue Caulton, Stephanie Cohn, Monica Copeland, Kristy Davison, Wendy Dworkin, Kristin Landis, Sarah Mays, Liz McDermott, Kiana Moon, Cathy Murray, Luanne Musser, Anne Nelson, Laura Petrie, Katie Rogers, Laura Rosch, Page Rosenberg, Danielle Shriber, Shari Stade, Wendy Wilf, Melissa Bailey, julie Bathori, Nancy Braham, Suzette Bross, Susan Bulley, Susan Cherin, Liz Denevi, jane Francis, Sofia Ghachem, Lisa Giblin, Christina Katris, jenny Kelly, Tracy Kepler, Amy Keroes, Kristin Killey, Amy Labowitz, Allison Logie, Kathleen Marshall, Ashley Mendoza, Amy Meyers, Katherine Neitzel, Kristen Sammon, Yvette Siu, Carolyn Starmann, Shawna Switzer, julie Waterman, Leigh Barker, Ellen Beckman, Hilary Branom, Mandy Brebach, Katie Brooke, Lee Copeland, Kelly Coveny, jill Dietch, Kristin Dunlap, Cindy Felsenthal, Leslie Frost, Gina Gardini, Amy C-reen, Nikki janzen, Abigail johnson, Stefani Klemm, Marnie Larson, Shannon Martin, Kelly Mohs, Laura Munro, Simone Nelson, Wendy Nelson, joeli Nelson-Payne, jane Dh, Leslie Pearlman, Emma Pilkington, Daisy Pommer, Sara Brown Riggs, Laura Sims, Sara Smith, Christie Vail, julie Alfred, Courtney Bickert, jamie Boris, Shereen Boury, Kari Christopherson, Caroline De Langhe, julie Dykema, Laura Forbes, Shari Harris, Megan Heinze, Pam Hirschson, Eve Holbrook, Seana Kofoed, Lauri Lowenbraun, Sue Malek, Blanca Martin, Margaret Nadler, Catherine Nelson, Lilly O'Neill, jenny Orenstein, Kristin Peterson, Tori Rhoades, Ingrid Roper, Nikki Sbarra, Andrea Scoggan, Allison Shapiro, Molly Shriver, Elisabeth Steifel, Sarah Stranberg, Sally Tannenbaum, Kristin Tegtmeier, Marlow Tessmer, Libby Unger, Heather Welch, Leecia, Kristina Wollan, Sharrie Zwelling s a We are the Daughters of Ira ...VVho says Kappas never stay out late... His friends laughed at him--I loved itl' '... Slightly drunk...RoCkin' at UB4O...ExCuse me, but the secret agent clocked you at 97 m.p.h...Mash and Cruise--a rule to live by!...This is going to make a great Kaper... My name is Allison Logie and I'm a senior' '... You Can't rent a VVillie!...Ash neatly...And then she went wHoosH!... SiSreri ...Trudy... 1 -2-an Run! ... When you look up boring in the dictionary... ... Ssh! You'll wake the damn birds! ...I know what I know if you know what I mean...AII I wanted for my birthday was a Cartier watch. N N -at .1 A- 9-F -vb, 5 'S at X-,,w' im, O-11 I 5 t a v'f UN 150 KAPPA SIGMA Matt Almeda, Angus Anderson, Todd Anderson, Kourosh Arami, Chris Austin, Matt Baron, Todd Behme, Corky Boyd, Chris Bush, Tim Carmichael, Victor Chang, Mike Cho, Mike Combopiano, Mike Coughlin, Dave Dietz, Alex Djuricich, lay Edwards, Scott Forrey, Mike Gensler, Peter Harlan, Chris Handzlik, Mark Holsloo, Scott Howie, Wells Hutchison, Worth johnson, Eric Klofstad, Curt Kreklau, Larry LaTourette, Ion Lim, Bill Liming, Marcus Lowes, leff Luce, Mike MacFarland, Paul McComb, Pete McMahan, Tim Perry, Steve Reck, Geoff Reisch, Doug Schnelzer, Aaron Scifres, Kanwar Singh, Craig Spohr, Hans Steckly, Scott Stone, Dan Talarczyk, Manish Tanna, Chad Thomas, Rich Thuma, Chris Torkelson, Ken Valder, Tony Velovski, Matt Watkins. N f ,rm .fi -1 139. i CIN Q ,I U' Outstandingmthe master of interactive TV...Superpledge...ooo, uh, rah...CCS? There go the property values...Yippy, Skippy and Dippy...Dear Cheese: Formal is great. Wish you vvere here...the Urban Turban...the end of vvide open spaces in Slough john...does Cho still live here?...tempering action vvith wisdom...hey, they really do give trophies for Homecoming tloats...alvvays assume yes...The vvord forthe week, gentlemen, is tact ... I hear Evanston First is pulling for Bush, Chad...BUEMIL...nickel-and-diming us .xl At to death...bouncing Cherubs -- in more ways than one...shot for fun, Angus?...I'm sorry, sir, this is a private function...a vvrenching ceremony...Miles buys another case -- of moussemanybody feed Elmwood Iately...you should seriously question vvhy you're in a fraternity...you know it's bad when you're not even clued in to your ovvn life...it's become very easy to say something constructive about our neighborsmsemper, brothers, and AEKDB. mg '1 52 PI BET PHI 53 , , 1, ,Q 'Y ,J -5 5, 9 Tig, .qk ' . in ., i ge 1. Q A X 1 Fixx J. .v 4, ., My , , 4 y t. it D bm i :Is B. sig' kg 2,1 af -P .. al X Q?fiXk,x X1 X X :R ' P W i ws Q Hg., 'vs' 9' t .Y Q 1 4 . vfnrfqglaw Sv. g Q ., 'gsaewg' ' Ke J it , ' I x Q V Q -1- . Fishcastrohooger...VVhen the moon hits your eye...jelIy gooolsmcheesy Mexican hats...VVhere's Edna?...quaIity takes longer than quantity...That's Amore!...Goggles--the man ofthe deCade!...No, she's at Psi U formaI... They were all geeks in high school ...Gooher...You only live oncie!... Give a yell, give a Cheer! ... If they have to shovver, please have them use the ones on the Fourth floor at non- peak hours ...BIottola, Blottocha, Blottoleong!!!...Moo-Moo, lt's Bertha...TeII him it's the secret handshake of Pi Beta Phi...Calamity lane strikes again!...R-E-S-P-E-C-T...M and P and Tvvigs and Brownies...VVear clean white undervvear...You smell smelly...l think, therefore I am Confused...Ohmigod!...Firedrills at opportune moments...I never--... You have a Caller, no, you have a life! if Vi st ,i . QS? f' it Q - Q., 1- H? -H+-...L.. ,,. 1 '., - 2 fl. , 'A 'l .. . 4 N ff .. X i .K .4- N Q its t --,.., M , ' ' Q 3 a X .: ss Qwx ,S J 163 Chris Arand, Carolyn Barth, Marci Bernstein, jen Bjork, Laura Blaney, Shannon Brickner, julie Bridges, Cassie Brown, Karin Brueckner, Suzanne Bukinik, jen Campbell, Mary Beth Cash, Sandy Cha, Alyssa Cohen, Holly Cook, Lillian Crippen, Neelee Cymbal, Greta Dembaugh, Robin Dimling, Andi Durbin, Miriam Epstein, Stephanie Ferrell, Laura Fischman, Michel Fisher, Carol Fuhrman, Tammi Gahimer, Barb Gallagher, Rachel Gandin, Carolyn Ginsburg, jen Ginsburg, Becky Gould, Kim Granik, Leslie Greenberg, Leslie Gullahorn, Susie Hahn, Heidi Heller, Lori Heller, Laurie Hollingworth, Maria Hondros, Lindsay Hunter, Ann Kidd, jenny Koo, Emily Kriegel, Liz Lapkin, Christine Lavelle, Toni Leong, Becky Lies, jenny Linderoth, Megan Marsh, joni McMechan, Molly Mitchell, Susan Morrow, Laura Norwalk, Meg Nottoli, jean O'Mahoney, Nancy Ortenberg, Cara Oster, jenny Ottolino, Allison Pay, Sara Pickens, Tracy Pumilia, Erika Putre, Mollie Reiter, Carsi Richards, Elisabeth Ritter, jill Rodkin, julie Sandor, Amy Scallan, Susie Schima, Lynn Schnaiberg, Mary Beth Searles, Karen Senffner, Carrie Shapiro, Lisa Shim, Shelley Simon, Petra Sindt, Christine Stephens, Courtney Stevens, Liza Stryjewski, Pennee Tsangalias, Robin Tucker, jackie Varge, Laurie Zerwer, Karen Alezander, julie Bencic, Leslie Caldarelli, Danielle Crawford, Mollie Damhorst, Brigitte Dayan, Senta Gaertner, Karen Gliwa, Mimi Goel, Amie Goldman, jessica Harris, Lora johnson, Melanie jubelirer, Millie Kellam, Kris Kerbel, Lana Lazarus, jackie Lee, Mary Beth Leisen, Katy Marringa, Tami Neuhausel, Penny Penniston, Miriam Pollard, Lisa Robinson, julie Schoenberger, Nancy Schory, Megan Sheehan, Lisa Smith, Mayva Solinsky, Sarah Stolper, Amy Sugarman, Nadine Takai, Vanessa Taylor, Phoebe Timan, Chuti Tiu, Anne Tyler, Sarah Weersing, Abbie Willing .95 ,Clk ' Xi .fly , Pit 'r -1 xfk I J ' , Q47 ,Ni M kb 6 if 2 3' J , gm gr i..,,, I EVANS SQHQLARS fs.,xx 166 Qi '5 - Bk,- ww V.-IA PHI GAMMA DELT 157 ' ' unset fi if M4 I In L I fax Q ff mga' ai W in :Qi 1 ,JS 'f?L 1 'V -4 AM - 'flfq -w' T' JS RET :sei nl :Sw in 1 I I V, wwf 53 PHI KAPPA PSI Q9 169 Milli The A Game...l am the Sweetest, I am the Smoothest...No! No! F--- no!...The Order of KSC...VVhisper-Leopold...Late Night Heavy Metal...Open the f---ing door, Buddha...The talent is top tonight...jay Kapp meet Leon Spinks...DanCing Machines...Traveling Bar...I wanna rock with you...Ken and the night ofthe living hormone...Sinatra, Cigars, and fine sipping whiskey...Do we like rubbers? No!!!!...Do you like to munCh...Hey Don, when are you gonna graduate?...Kirk!...jB!...I like Bing, he's my friend...Dinner is dinner...Sam is the dumbest pledge Phi Psi has ever had...And then there's my sister un 'Q , 33.v..a.L Mandolin...yes! Yes! YES!...That's beat man...That's Amore...That's Spanada...Stain...VVaIly...Hey Kowalski, how's the view from down under?...VVhat's the Box SCore?...Set goals -- get rid of KlenCk...AcComplish them -- AMICI .... Dr. P .... lvledwig's got TWO formal dates...Robinson and the Illinois Bat Girl-their fourth anniversary...Hooray for the little hippie pig...The Accordion Player from hell...ClutCh...Elliott the pizza boy...The Love Pit...CCChowdy doody...The rise and fall of Guns 'n' Roses...United by women, sustained by booze, we lived and flourished--thanks for all the memories. ? gilt 1. V? M, l .. E, O 1 Ima! 170 PHI KAPPA SIG Arif Ahmecl, Noel Archarcl, Arthur Aulisi, Than Axtell, jeff Brauer, Rich Draege, Craig Foucht,lAIex Garcia, Kurt Gibson, Scott Griffith, Michael Gutkin, Tim l-layward, A.j. Horner, Steve jones, Charles Keagle, jeff Keune, Matt Kill, Chris Kimm, Mark Klitgaard, Benjamin Lawler, Paul Leisen, Dave Lockett, jean-Paul Manoux, Mark Meyers, Greg Moerschel, Scot Montrey, Rajiv Moorthy, jim Nelles, Collin Glclham, Russ Pochop, Harlan Powell, Eric Ruger, Bert Sheard, Craig Simmons Scott Smith, john Sonnenberg, jimmi Stowers, jeremy Strauss, Roy Tan, Ben Thalrose, Mark Vajdik, Bill Barnes, Bill Bowman, Scott Cho, Pat Demoon, Russ Falstacl, jason Heiling, Chuck Wren ,ga Q SPH 7m K x X ! if News X142 And whose birthday is it, McGregor? ...Chaw Du Iour...The Schlitz Award this week goes to...Bert again?...Don't believe the hype...What time's dinner?...Karen and Than, Karen and Benji, Karen and Bert, bloddy bloo bloddy bloo, bloddy bloo... You want me to make him come back? He'll bip ya a good one! ... VVe're tripping, and your strobe light is in our eyes ...You mean those chairs are OURS?... And you must be Fatana...Alex's Cuba paper...Fourth floor fire escape...Gibson's playmate ...Slack- jawed faggots...The Opium Den...VValkout to UVA...Lindadog, Ritafrog, and Vanessahog...Pat DaMoan does not...Axl and Sluclge...Dyin' ain't much of a Iivin', boy... It's coming straight out of social -Than...That's all love is, really, thoughts... RIGHT! You don't know me...VVhassup?...I would rock her body so hard...The Wisconsin Air Slam... I-lang Noel, love Dooger! ...BDX!!!...Three strikes and you're out, asshole!...Tally ho-o-o-o- o...Don't tell Doug I'm smoking...Where are my keys?... Our shitty float ... In 365 A.D., the Kimm family bounced its first check...4 times 171 a day...3 nights, 3 guys, 8 cases, and I hummer...A complete fandango at Nordic Hills, with your hosts TZ3, The Keg on Legs, Opher, Dufus, Dooger, Dag, The Sleestack, Meat, Coon Dawg, McC.aerlin, Mr. Kimm, Boom Boom, B.l., Roy Tan the Trigger Man, Bo jimmy, Skipper Chuck, Phallex, Mexico, Biff Malibu, Norm, Reefer, Giblet, Dr. Brauer, Kallin, Cuz, Big lim, DaMoan, The Gimp, Steve BMOC jones, Craig I love Red Man Foucht, Mark Delight Myers, LeBeaux, Hayge, Sonnenbong, Paulie, Vai-dik, Creggles, Skeets, and the Sullen Indian. ' 5 Z'f'f t ., ,xc , 3 y X T vi J' 'Wx' ' 172 PI 7 KJV! .1 -fl x, ' ,JJ P ALPHA PHI MU ALPHA 13 A AVA Kirk Anderson, Philip Austin, Charles Beier, Nathan Berggren, joseph Bincleman, Chris Boldt, Andrew Boltax, Mike Bonin, jared Brame, joel Bruninga, Roland Bueno, Robert Cleary, Lionel Cole, jon Crowe, Brian Donaldson, james Dunning, james Ellzy, David Fabish, Robert Fetchman, Kurt Gibson, Brett Gillam, john Goodman, Brock Groth, james Haigler, Charles Harrison, Fred Hemke, Phil I-Iomiller, Sean Ivory, Ken jones, joseph Kim, Ron Kos, Robert Langewisch, jim Lapidus, William Laugher, David Leicester, Chris Leyba, Pater Lograsso, Brian Lutz, Matthew Mailman, joseph McCullough, Mike Mehler, David Mikolajczak, Aaron Minnick, Steve Newman, Eric Newmark, Mike Noble, Daniel Novak, Cyrus Parks, Duane Peiffer, Donald Pile, Peter Reynolds, Mark Rohwer, Anthony Ryan, Raymond Schmitz, William Selliger, Ronald Seiman, Garth Simmons, Winn Soldani, jeffrey Squire, Troy Steege, Aric Stock, Mark Switzer, jerod Tate, Brayer Teague, Darrin Thornton, Scott Townsend, George Washington III, jeff Weinstock, Peter Wilson and Gary Yee. Dean Paul A. Aliapoulious, faculty adviser. The Iota chapter of Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia was founded at Northwestern University on April 14, 1910. Currently, Iota chapter has 70 active members representing every school at Northwestern. The 1988-89 school year marked Iota's first year of residence at 626 Emerson Street on South campus. Within the chapter, members form a chorus, jazz ensemble, brass ensemble, saxophone quintet, barbershop quartet and various other ensembles that perform throughout the Nothwestern campus and the Chicago area. Sinfonia performs annually in Maysing, and this year the jazz ensemble performed at Dance Marathon '88 and at the Gamma Phi Beta Fall Formal. Homecoming, Christmas, and Valentine's Day caroling for Northwestern's sororities has also become an Iota tradition. W fm efe- limit Q. 1 ' Y' lf' ,,.-.v-1' 4'N'H' WiiQiQ:. , XlXxWx,.fff Nh 175 ' A , . AQA 5 T I T . A 175 BDA CHI ALPHA , G new rvQ,,A,H .vim W ,J .I . s 'T' 5 X' X 1. 0 5 VIR VIR Tf ' bf 5. 51, Q ,,-, . . ,T QQ 'Ma-I' Tube Room SIugs... Baaaarrrss ...Stephanie's so hot!...CB8fBJ...The King...Grace before dinner...Screaming Orgasms...Big Ten Scoreboard. Tongue : victory...BQNE head!...Brickwail...Ruth -- 36 years...Unh. Alf me...Seth, Lauren caIIed...VVa, Wu and Wo .... Rawhide ivvhipped7...Cee-reat caII...Mongers!...Kecky, did you ask Diane yet?...Dern get out...George ienough saidJ...the when will Kevin Freeman crash his Porsche contest...Long lohn...Cobra! Sssss...Aaah tell yooo sum- mmm...Don't touch me. Especially not you...Go Caines! iShut up, TuIpinsJ...Guy Rosta-Bufu Bennett..Yer pissin' me off...Baki: Cheese is a pussy. Don't hurt me, Cheese! .. .Dude...Dude...the Belzer Iegacyniloust me...the Guest Speaker .. .Koobsz It's 3 a.m. Time to do pots. ...Everybody freeze. Everybody down on the ground...The Fraternity of Honest Friendship. SIGMA ALPHA EPSILO I A ! 3 5 'fi w 03 V TX! QM 62 'Q 1-1 , 'ZW4-'AN 51,9 'HR 4s4s 'ik,M', NH 1-E1 , , . .mini o ' X, .. ,PX 05? H26 19 A ,Wxxxlx Q j wi 1 N '-7 NS SIGMA ,.,. 5 if 11+ WST 5? .-w 8 -Q ,S Tis hw. m ff II A. '- v sw- ' 1C .,a: 'f 5 wg? 1 Qiwv i .Wg A fQ R2 Q ff W X X K H! X -'X We I F T it ffkr SM K V 79 4 30 SIGMA CHI 181 132 TI-IETA CHI . - ' ,. sm:-ggfyxwri' - 1 . L 'K'Y'5,. ,. .W,,..,,-- ' sEgf,2L'g,w- 5 'i'Y-31 :.:,:.v5.r?.?:-iezvs'-vi:sim,CQ,3.w3?e.sfQfM::.'1.....h....1g.w., , f--A-X - lx-K X ,, . .X V . X 6 5- ylmw 1 ' - A V A ' . in . Z. .4 t Q.. Jr.. 9 , , k . 3 Q. 'VF 'T ti, 6 bv' . Q -W i -u-f N1 6 'lun -new ' R fir, E T ,x NS -A ' Q 1 2Ql!lI!i lG . 1 .E gs s ,II,a' 5: 16 THET DELTA CHI 13 LJ 1 ,vw .,,..A VV. -,J - ' Q ' 'V 1 dl' 1 HUCiE!!...Like a ZeelJ!...GiGi...Yabl3a Dabba Doo...Cheeky, C-oo, Tiffany...Cool People Have Dark Hair!...Quotal!l...Yeah, uh-huh, Sure!...The Dark Side...Rajeesh- Punulaha-Sunil Why You Tormentor!?! ...YBT... I-Iello Phoenix Inn! ...Suspicious Minds...D-Day is Near!... VVe are 5'9 And Under! ... Seth...Bevvare ofthe 34 ZET BET T U President...RAILROAD!l...PonChaIIar...Z IP IT!!...And there you go...Zeke is God...We should play more metal...Iesse!...Voyage!...Go Tormentors!!...BFMAVVOBl The tripod...I Could do it forever...PIease Feed the Animalsmjohn Riggins got some more CD's...Ah, the beauty of a slider...Look out, Courtney!...What's that you're wearing? Eau-de-doo-da- day?...Hair?... Oh, I really had a nice time tonight. ...Al, where are the stats?...IamaiCan Bobsled...Nationality Irish Croatian... VVhat do I look like? Rand-MCNalIy?? Let's go to Room 222... Ten dollars? Green you're not going to Bermuda with this? ... Seth, I taut I saw a Birdy Shat!...Es Mi Barrio, I-Iomes...You did what in the Waa-Mu tent?... VVe're Going to VVinl!! ,ahhh F all B 70 I UC X g It , X? kk- V9 izssa KAPP ALPHA PSI 13 ww , X 1 -fx -sg? x Qi it 'QS c 'Q ts: X Xwefjk U1 v mf v ' y X Qin 3 E Serge Adam, Kerry Gray, Alfred l-Iarris, VohAndre Hester, Christopher I-lolliday, Phillip S. Montgomery, Terrell Tate. Not Pictured: Christian Feamah, Michael Floumoy, Phillip Pardo. 86 3 .-A Q2 , M 5 mi? E5 ff' e i I f 3 tx XX yi Lf TX X 4 RK f. Q -.XM fm 1- ' ,- , qw Kim. IN- 'r -- 7 vi f ,.f ' I 1 4. grmxisxwfi t ' J.. ww V: , ,K A n: .' . ww' ac .ff haf , V ,-.,' w!.fw.f.,f'I 'X 'TW y 1 .fm fs V -Qi Q- ' --WW if T rw My .6-Lggzfy 4,1 of , , ,Z W Wifh' p hung, y 5-.Y W y Me ww .ew-ww, V, E ,ww qgffm 1 ,Y' f '22, A ' . Q 31337 ' .' 4 eg ' f 'fr' 'S 87 88 K' Q .P . ..,. . ' .,.,.. , L SY Q -. ' . , ' X A Q ' ,Q 'A f Q f ? nk r 1' X I F1 Ii-:f h.. x X, ..- ws. 'Q .. E I 1 v, .Q . 5' f F52 1. V34 . f 3-. . ,E 1,5 Q A. 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'f -',-'ff--75.l ' 'X' 'rgfq3xgsf:11-154 , ,ffl-,5gff'fE:f1,l1ifZf:'1E', af' 1 Wg 1 , 711'-'iA2. ?3:?1EvE1.lw!w '+'1:1.'?f'v2zf:f ' .cv ma-.7552frfygeemi-xg.-'X1,1125 1. I , ' .,1, . I ---, ,,,,4., ..,, A ,,.,L, 1, , ., N, ,' 9,-Q, - 3.1-1-y.-,,55':' .2 , 4 . 1 ,:f,4r1:,. ,Qgugf 'Egg ,1i1'.:9f,f ir, 1- f. 43:-' 2' ' 7 ' , ,fpgzi-axluzpt--'f1g: 411.-' . , ' 'fi-A971141-, f','.f:?'F .J 7. 1 PU q ' fxlue-nfuk-s1f.ff1'-mf-:rv-. tra 1 - ' -'x-,V-5552351,-5afggqz:fr W, ' 1 ..f'i.'3I'i :'.f1i'f-wr :-,A Y yiefqh' mfg.-.,1,, , ,. agar: gffg:.1g'f,f.',s1:u ,Yr 6' ,,,' 7- 5. V w.'fEQ,Sr,nff:2's'fdw-iLP:?.'.L, X r mm' -- ,:' wLiJJ'.1f- ZS: f...1-' yd, 1, Hg?-531' H. ,J.,,,L -. --,W g,,grgf.:. . .T!f'Y2.,,.rf. ,. . , ... A-f. gm: 1 ,. ..., -. .. . ., BNF ,L fp , 1 4 f - ra ' ' . aff 4 .. .. a,,r,vs .QE SHUGT YQURSEL 1989 fp-Y 192 3 4 A f x V N 1 43 N-vw-Q ,A V..-. as mv Qi- xl QM 1 . 'N x- , 9 r 14,1 -A lr . V9 ,,. . ,.,. , - ,,4.,zf:.,.,,.,,, ,,7,,, .,,,-AA. ., ' '- M A. 5 i2'C A- mv. .5 1 4. .K , ' ' ' f, . N Q,,4jgj, , I '- A ' My wgv, , ' ' ' Ati. :wif-yu' 4 5,,,,,,3g4f,g,, f ,- ,m.A...J,-Q, 4. 1 -...N 'MQ' ' w , 9 -,- 5? QL, wf Z, , wg Q, . A f ' H-- ' , ' 7 'gs' 35,3 ' 1 '-:hx - H , ' h 5 H - - qi an . lx. - f'-A . -NV Q Q . .. ,qv ' 4 .avnf .Y 5 Q, vi, xx , L iff-f '- his J H 3 .f ,f,-. Zrf' nggx 1.-- 1' '04 .v w ,4...n.n fha gel, u-Aw: .- us - , -.3 iii!! . 441, vm, .1 f Je, 'it 4.14 Y Ii !'1 T.: ' a 'irq , ns' ,-ff' 94 'wi 'f'-F f ,ii ff' , I 1 3 1 , . ll . ., ,inf 9 '47 pan we , ? llhnnummau-md' 4 , 5- , Lf, f V, WNQFQ? ' K v ' 4 fc, .V vm, M434 'HM Lint - .,,.,w'y,,. rmy., L as-7 'n 4 15 M . Jn.: I .nf- a. ,. wt h.,,,.,,-,Mwww W4 .ggi ii- 'ijt 2 Maj LJ Jbfzt EETQ2 MTVN ..g,, VF F N s- 3. v.: X .-xr 97 N-. .....-n-new-www ,T -... .... -..... .-....,-Qnwunm Q8 n M- , 3 1 Q ,,,, vwmwmmawgwg ' Q, Q f' 1 ' gf ' A . ' xi 253 A W In ' s xi 'Q A I Z fr'5f fl ' IQ: 2 1 . f . '. ' , - - -- I -- .. .L li in ' t 'Q Sf. ,K , V. . W gi I I .,.. A A , 12 asf-Q-iw 1 0. W' Kr i Z , EQ fnv' 1 ,slim-LAR Q9 OO . A ,. ,,,.,,.,, MMM A f 'f 'wp .,k, gl My .43-. ,. f' AUPJI. M 1'HN'Tl'ZR 5 Q' 'T -XX gl I W i A ...wt , ,,,.,. -.,..,, ,,,,, ,, , 1 , . ' 7 a ? Uf'u ' I l 'lb 'vNs..... 21 Q of' 407 9 Q9 v In I-fa sq E19 ' J 4, K WL L ' 352535353 YW? .. Q lv L-rl fin 3 'Q-f gn.. .J X gf T NLE W .WWF SHOULD LEAVE THE CAFETEQIA TT lS THE REGULATIONS t Q ,.,. ,, ! . QIX V, f 1, '51, 1 eg. V 2527, ,, , R l 1, ,,. 4, H , if 4 'gf km MW? I f U-1. 1' HY' f f , . ,J -. , ,.,..,.. , f MX' O3 5 20 ,adams-g:::r1:J., .f ff sg f- X f JK' xzuzgqb VJ, 1 A 5 M5 X ll ,.- :S P 4 1 -vii: A 574 x fx ws, . .9 3 N All YN: -s1':'3'1fZ,'1h ' ' ,qi f X N' -ff2'yQx-.:::1x3iEi,'- K: 091 -- I X f- f.'ff-mia.: -1,15 ':5.j,:,'5sv1 K X ' .fi .f :Jff--Aqg:fqwffvrbrwlc-fg+..N. W,-ww MQ , - f ' f-v ' ' '--'-Weaan.-.-f9:Es2?sXSQ?Q5lwaSifxf.. A A! . W-:fig 4' Tl - 365 ffff'?:'59 ., x.-,, --f:'f3ti i4 X. 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K 'Q f 1 , 'am XL. ive .1 .R, :mmf --.ff by-1 .,. f 1 49 1 .,, ,V Q . ,A ., , 'iw - 1 11 7 af . f 1 , , f z, 1 9 r y f 1.14.5 Q V14 4 'yn-ng.. :lj ' 4 f .fr K5 mi ..,..,.......f-,f-f---X-.-.-...-.......Q.,.,........-..... 1' 4555 :- '4 ' as Agni' , Gai 'mkz 3 11 Wx: 5' ..', 21 l'- 11 - 4 Q.-... , Q ge:-...fu w. Vw . . A. ,. W..-........m q..:..,ff --W Tff--w+w,- -' M' 'ff M- C'l ' -A ' y 5 - ' E, 1 ' I J ,. Q 1 ' ,wg '- , . :f-W A ,,. N -,W G7 3252 fr, 4, A, , . -I X xi X X AX YN X -X l xl N gl I 5 A BIRD! Q 3 Irs A PLANE! ITS AN 1 AA-X EU, STUDENT I C-Mlm TU cyLA55 um A 'W , TVPsc'.AL EVANSTCAI J -V. A www DAW i T ,pgI5,,,.,,f,5-t.k,5- flag ., , X' ., uv 1 . . - .S n. , 4 ,.- Q -1,, li Niyf. K Iv., A is 4 1 'Prix . ,Y .5 0. ' ,fl ,fYfjV . , I, ,Im I - ,V . X, . -5 'x Q, . 3, , ' v ,, x ., ,, um- , KX ' ' '21' ' S-iifff' 'if-55 ' , Y I u-X, -' - X h ,- :,.3,.. - f ag QW: ,.: ,::s,.:f:-f, K 4 , Q -.',. , - ' wi ,-Y.,.9,- ,.,, .- .1 ' gg 1A4,..,.,,- 2,1.73,-- wma- Q:-.,., . . rvqsffv ,Z-ymqg,-,f ,A ,avg --jg: ,. 1'9 ' '-,,, :+ ' - nm . .. ,in ,, , f, - I 5 I, ff 'Qi Q nf. , , wi? 5 JYEL iv. SPCJRTS 1989 ,4 ,Nfl V 1 . A M x A .ij ,K -.1 . 'm SK, . :Haig ,W a ,...1 K S H, . ,,. '91 1 r-w-ie?'H44f -- - ..-3552 ,'hH1If-. . ,-M., , - .4 x f ' fg2?.i' 1291- aw'fwzx'?2E,wg W ww , mv 'f : -wa, H-5'f1,.-M-f-A-. . if-A 1 .1 ,V ' x gl-risk, fa Qgffggggb- QQiwg,af,i :. 4r.a,weW, ow. n-.,:.m,Ii:.,,- Q rf..Q,,k,g7Eiw .. uw- '55,--Eviff 21,-. gv . Q4-,sg:E5f'56 f'i sifw f Q wwggggggv-X ww., musk. 4-ssm, Qag6m,gi .' Ia v,5,...,-3W,g,g WST--id iw- ,M Q. Aggaegefsezggggfifizm , 1' ., -f A fa -1 5 .-:wi?3f2i??'555i9:Ft' Qu, w1?zQ1,, . ' - ' w:-,1'i'5w2c:eff2:sQf2 'K ' , ,E as ,uw-1 f. .p,,w.,Q ,G , A -wx: ,wa ' .1-W J ,. W1 fv ...f.'C.,f,,f, --1 V ' -affix? Y ,lm-MW-:,:, M xrwrai -Hspkifr ' r ' em-,-.-giegeizigfgsmgf ,,,, :. '.fi'f.bm1'3L , , L .. .x.,,Z A ' -f -, - ' A We ?Qg g:, f ' ' ' 1 V L 7 4.-w - , 1 f I 5' ,,f--- , ' HQ ,fgggwrgzfff , ,Jn- Q iii. . . ,-., .X 1:,'WIg . -w'K' fic ' Q 'E s, '71 V sk Q Aw L 1 'x f.. ' ry W ' . 'I' -,1 N f 4 4 Q' ' i' ' W ,v ? V' , , 7 9 ' a V4 1' 3 'ff -, s - ' , v -A - 3 'I . , has F ' 9 'V N fb' d A N Q' H 5 Q .H Q ., - 2 ,. . . ,I in Q TM Z Lg.,-4 ., :ga f., 4. . vp D ala., V' j .. M H K ,-XX g J A wa ng il ' , . I ' - ff' ali? . A-vw 1 N 'K ' ., 1 1 , Q ' K - 1' ,1 -N Z., W, 4' ' 1 4 f' , Q W .3 ,VZ 3 - E Iii H-, L' .. e Y ng ,J I , X . ff - 1 ,' A am. Q W., - . .- nwfvi 3 . - ry A 9 . , t 1 Q3 mi. i ku - .L W ' 1 ,- mf' 4. '15 gl fr 'IK xx . 1 , 1 ...wmuwfll 'GL -:Y X M vi r -, v' A ' M 'rl U4 2 mm R E e 5 1 4 ., 'x ' in 1 V .- Q -u.y.,wf - ' fi .V , , 1 AH? , ,I Q, ' I. 'I ' . .Nu f ' I -,A '-fqazzi X 5 A -,:w:,ggf- :aw ,ii W A 17 R X ' S M 3 up 2 N: in A 1 A-.. O 1 Q A . me Neg L51 whiim wig .-I' 9 'e y 4211 Al' an -was-ww 1 70 ,,-gf ' 5 n ues E2 -V x. . ' -.mrQsr:f'E' Wx uffibw fgk-wx xx E4 X5 1 'gi' , ,. v 't xw. .. 4, ga f W 1:3322 :,f..g?m4-, .-'YS'-'I ,f,,.,w-y w A ' . - '2 xx vs' I, ,Vi N , - X Q 4 , , X I ' '5 v- .2 QE W fl W 1, V, 4 F ' Q, I ' ' 1 1 X .,- , ,I ,H , M. J, .yam- A 'W' ,, ..,.f' 1' '.' ' y M, Q 'A 1 ,. .W . , . VXA, V- wt, 1 'W 1 7I'?5t'f'f .. 1' -x in :I t wx w S QW lg J: . 3 B' ,--W, W 5 .Ti 37 V-Hx:-,V . 5 , 1 Ex Q4 few E, ws QV if Mr fig, if 5 I QW ...xx -4' f agijiff i q. ff ,: A ,xv ,: Jw v JK. ,,l. M2525 , ,X ax-X Y' X X , ww. df, Q -'E X,-4 'kv' -it F3 A 1 Q Y -fa. ff A P . ' , .. r, ' Q, ff' .,x., , '41 5 ss Q if 'I i-'yi 'F-,W xx H.. ,A 222 l ? 5 I I 3 ' 1 1 , .- 1 P1 2 2 iJ f f I ,-v .gf Q ww' T... , , : f I .DQ sf YQ. .mutex ..ut , W- r-mms -, 'KP .FU ' 06235 '-ml ' 63' .1- 33 'gf ,rf 225 Ani ,f-av +--,N f 'isnf f-3' , lf: ,mb --1-x 3 Q11 A 22 TRACK .... Nqgm .V A Aw-,v h3l5Nw..,e., ..,N,,,, . . A K fl-sw A awgvxkt -i . ww - gf. ..Q,MW... Huw-,X t. .t,3wtQ,:. :I-Q I . 'sishivfvm we. Wav ,,. .mt-wwsfs, ft-W - ' .Q Qi: .s, .wwl , 1. .,wg.s1t-W., ILLIMQ Bswsnttftft muhgusim is 3' B2 P s, t Z . 5. X- ,, ,. .-..w.-...,, .-.,...,.-. .M ...Nw .. 1987-88 marked the final season for the Wildcat track teams. During the summer of 1987, President Arnold Weber announced the track programs would be cut. In doing so, he eliminated six sports: men's and vvomen's outdoor track, indoor track and cross country. The cuts came, Weber said, not because of poor records, but due to financial reasons, The team and coaches reacted bitterly as members scrambled to find out about scholarships and transferring. A petition was even circulated in an 5 --ix. 4 s, Sf 's S 1 - 1 l T 5 t ff 7 . 3 Qt , 3 , - . x . , WHS fig- ,, -ai... 1, .,,... L., A l attempt to reinstate the programs. Many athletes vvent to other Big Ten schools where they could continue to run. Others went to programs such as those at Stanford, Penn State and Georgia Tech. Women have run track at NU since 1976, but the team has never won a Big Ten championship. They have finished last in the conference for the past nine years. The men's track program began in 1911, but has finished eighth, ninth or 10th in the past 11 years. Both teams finished 10th this year. - '-1 is ae -..t MW , all bn... H .,s,. Q ...:,:., - 'r 21535 ' ' 1 ff. ?f 'S ra ...-1: is-' i23?ii', .f L ' -31251755 w.t.,f. ' g- f f j..r,:i33g: 4-as-at f -2 , V P? - 1515. fi 'Ff:: .3il:i3 H .. . C- 'S'.rfvki A ,U 4, M W , ,- A f ' 1 ,W 4-I' if 1,- 4' W me A5 A-'f ,. 'R A A EMM af , -..--.t , .. . gr'19.2,,.',' -f gt-,, ,I , . -. 1- cr?- .'i?5-if -'f j.j.5,..G:: 'J'3.:- tf'g,z1igff2r23Q922t.4. 1 .L ,g,.jf 1. ' Q, 2 ., g'-' f'L,..,Q4 . ,' - ' - 1 . ,, , ' : ' -' 'S-.ffwwi-W I V - '..,: X- V 36? 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Q '1..71.LiL-1-ff -'f1 'Z.x:' A Y f ' ' ' 71n'qw'. 6 v 4 1 5 tv 1 , , 3'-40 ,a ffiwiw- on : ,M liozmnrarxwwwff-'- wr:-fmeumnr' '. nwwKMwNw..,w , V ,,,,,,,,,,,,.,., V ,,, -an .5,q::-,gg,gggw5,,,,,' ff X ,qv N .. .L ..-, X .M gfdgf-.AhximK.sg4.:Lv, N X3 'S . 5 in .1 . 'MEAQSN ' - . , ' I 4 '- w.,xQ,.N:.x-rv Q K '- -f - 3 SQFTBALL 5- f, X u qi ..,- . . gh. A ' 'ii 1 3,31 we cg . I g m ' Q 'iii if-Mfg ' - X' 4. -Q . 5 'ig 'L , AJ M V , AN -., ,bw , , .W , 4 Q ,f ,, 1, j 'T . ' N- M.. N ns- A U21 The Wildcat softball team could not beat the supposedly weak conference teams this season, although it did well against povverhouses Purdue and Michigan. The Wildcats finished third after four years of winning the Big Ten title. Despite losing All-American pitcher Lisa Ishikavva, the Cats did not lack talent in that department. NU topped the Big Ten with a 1.11 ERA on the season. The Cats hit second in the conference, behind first-team All-Big Ten catcher Ndidi Opia's .333 average, 51 hits and .405 slugging percentage. The young team is still adjusting to losses due to injuries and graduation, but expects to puII it together as a team next season. s fQt11Df3-'Gf,7, , 20 230 The baseball team prefers to overlook its .SOO record and its eighth-place tie with Indiana in the final Big Ten conference standings. Instead, first-year coach Paul Stevens points to the last month of the season, when the Wildcats split big conference series with Minnesota, top-hitting Ohio State and Illinois. NU capped conference play by taking three of four games from Iowa and knocking the Hawkeyes out of the playoff race. Injuries hurt the Cats early in the season with center fielder Mike Stein and utility player Frank Appice out for the season after preseason injuries. Southpaw Tony Ariola was out of the pitching rotation for two weeks with a shoulder injury and was plagued all season with a sore shoulder. Bob Brucato, a transfer student from Santa Ana junior College in California, boosted NU's run production. I-Ie had a .340 batting average, 51 RBI's and scored 45 runs. He also broke the single-season home run mark, with I5 clingers. If V I , I if :ma I rff hpxuildita sia 4 s. isir it , rs r I s --1, :i', ' 5' .: li ,ai A15 - bww ':' -s hu a fy 3 A, , ,-.N Z!-2 BASEBALL . - V 1 I .s. .Asn 'Q l' 'J' ,W -' , '- ' 4. I AA 1' ff Ura! .I K xx-.fm b 4:-, -1'-'uf .,,..,..f W .mmm kk, ,, JJ - .broeifhigm , A - . . 5 ,Q ,P 'fi z . , n .Ha :ff fv- x. iq , wi Q X. . md. . wife F- - 43 W ff 1 V f, VL f H., , 4414 If V.- sw Wg A My - . Q 'Q -ww. ' an Q w J' dh- 1. A N nf' f b 5- P 4 5 a ' M ' 9- . , . 4 , 4 ' I' -, Y U . K : : ,, .,. ' 5' Q' 'P ab , . Q .,,, , is , Q, 0, .idx AQQMQ- .. g15.5.:L ' , , Q 1:-: -arf-g,M A Z fi' 3 it ffiT?ii3 X 1 ,, . , ,M ' . N g A-, ,. . A, J, Q..,,,1fP2f 1. . .14-' ,a ' in-5 we L v.......- . , 4 V ,,, V ' , ,-,jj V,f V! ,, - ..,,.f.,5V,,,,s-.V..,1-5:::N.',-.M-iv. f t--zf... 1f.:i' . w r. : 15,,.,:..1g wi1:'f5k'i5:P:3'-':':1 -' f ' iff' ' fur: ,:-,f'ai22:asg. , ., c ' 'H ' V 'J M yi The lacrosse team expected a rebuilding year following the graduation of All-Americans Kate Olekowski, Robin Clark and jennifer Averill. Instead the 13-member team finished with a TO-5 record, a No. 5 ranking and an NCAA tournament bid. The Cats upset then-No. 4 Maryland, then-No. 6 Virginia and then-No. TO Richmond all in one weekend. l-lovvever, when the team faced undefeated, top-ranked Temple, the Cats fell to the Qwls, 19-9. But, the Cats survived and faced Penn State in the first round of the NCAAs. They were eliminated by the Nittany Lions, losingl 2-6. Goalie lohanna Kung, defender Pam Welder and defender Amy Kaplan graduated after the season, leaving a fairly young team behind for next year. wif fsvuev:m1v.f:.-ff.,- ,- f , .,,,,,,,.,,,,f,.,,.f,f, .-..m.w,w,.vwasuw--,'- V VV V,,,,W .-,,,,,,'.,.4wmf 7 - W , s ,.,. ,,:,3f, .,- ,, ,..,, ,, g , .am V V , .,: ' ,,, ?'.5. f.f- il' 'Q 'M - ,Zg. ', ' fffff-iff g,,:g w-mf- . , ,,,, T, ' ,, '- yn V , ' V ' ' , , ' ' ' - ,, V 1-ff' V, 6 1 VV V V , . .4 , V: N 'qu :H-7' ,J 1 , I ,i..'-..,, 4 f'-. M . .z ..-. .-.. T ......- ' fi t , if . r r A' , , , . - www V. .,.., .. .. ..-- V '- - , , A .. , - - by J , . 4--ff., .v.' r ,,.,, ff ' 'feqai:5Le':.,fr- 1 1,5324 A , V.:,V. . 35, A s ..3.-13131. , ,sw 3 , gg :,' jg: ,,.'r i ll ft P ffl fW i3x3fjVf rr A , 1 , , , , v . 2 . ,K V, -A f'-ffzwmw' ' 4-iv' W SFETV, ,V uf-Wzew-mvQ4-.uw--vi-un nsavxawssanm g. mn: -utqv - -:M Mmm s- .. ,VA CROSS A 33 'ii-V x wanna, mmf I . ff 'f'T7-'ffwf www.: , 'zwrgwzmf' ' 'I f,Aag,,.,g,w . , y Cwmwr. , , Q , A-..T Z v. 2, F nib 't?Y f -f'- rw, A -wx -I V , ,W ,fn 'swf if 6' 1 1 il , , atb, 2 1 32 gp: 3 -X , I 1 A 4 . A ,md ow, VL Wm 9 44,42 I 104 ,.. ,,, ,2,f.w., ' ,M .f ,,1 ,ASW-l.,',., -a-h 234 WO N78 TENNIS A year after doubles team Diane Donnelly and Katrina Adams won the NCAAs, the women's tennis team struggled to third place in the Big Ten. The team won the title in 1985 and 1986 but could not repeat the feat this season. The team has not finished lower than second in the conference since 1980. This season, the Cats ended with a 11- 18 overall record, 8-3 in the conference. NU earned six consecutive NCAA bids, finishing fifth overall last year, but couldn't overcome Indiana or Wisconsin this year. Soyoung Lee, a former Kansas high school champion, helped lead the team. Of the eight players, five were freshmen. After taking the doubles title, Adams left NU with two years of collegiate .1 ig WJ! . , .,, . . 'flgf-'Q' C, , n iii 7 pf' fill: ,San-us eligibilty remaining to jointhe A Q l i Z 0 professional circuit. 1 cn -1. A .1 .5 U, 4, 4, 15 ..g...,q,. . ..-V. ,-. ar- f ima .. 'A igy, T, 1 L , L .T:.,,t -'iii ' JT '65 .- ' ' f f- , 1f 1 , -'A- - -'--'-i4 - - . ..---. .1 .i-.- R fa... ..-- '.. I fwfr l... I t h :Q ' 3 'J 'M 5 '5'W 'i :., ., -- Jas itll gig ' ' NU -- re N' Q Q Q . 3 , , r , -T'-I ,- Pl 1-5' Lf? ' M ', M if 11 .NR LX A 1 i if: L 1 1 -'U' ' 'A he Wi ' i--fri . , '- J I 1 - , . , Q. . 1- L 1 1 1 1 1 1 QT? 1 lA A 1 pi 'lei 1 1 1 1 1 f f 111 1 1 i 1 1 1 A-fi rr llffi 1 iinlf 1 1 1 1 1 1 i 2 tc. 'iff' 1 19 fs 9. 1 1 ei,-ir i 19 1 .l i ' il Lt111' 1 1 W1 lr 'T' ,, l ' l .. ,, L, 1 1 ,--- 4 , . 1 . P f -rf-of fav - i 1 flli , VHF .. . l1.z1,.-...-.,. A lllilll yllgflklllli lftf1,l1-tlfli i i 1 ' f r-+1 1-3 1,1 11 ,, ,,, 1 1 i i 1 , , ,H -.-5 lxztvy---wix 'li' Mt i i 1 . . u . a +...,.. as f ,Wm .W + ++1 ,i dl! I ' I Ili !!!2!21l'1EXS.---L E ::::::::'.: .. E. MEEEEEEEEEEE? 'ffiiiiiiiiiiW - f I fr wwf---wwffwzf,W,,,, Wx i XXX' gfmlrff 'MMR A! I .. ----I-I- WL Wf -' r Q, 1 'E 4 A sf ,. I uf I f . Q 'F I I :: 1 ' . 1, A ' JE 5 if X 3 235 N S TENNIS The tennis team took on a younger look, carrying three freshmen, two sophomores and two seniors. This youth also carried the team to a 21-ll mark. The Wildcats finished seventh in Big Ten play with a 7-6 record hut took fifth in the conference tournament. Despite the loss of seniors Matt Ackmann and Scott Bindley, NU is looking forward to next season and recruit Todd Martin, the top-ranked Midwest player. The team is also looking forward to play from transfer student Chris Gregerson, who will he able to play after sitting out a year. Freshman Steve I-lerdoiza was one of four players from the Midwest selected for the NCAA tournament. an Q S was gl .:s::z:z:::gsf'-ia. 2 H 'l::: 1 :-3613...--Q ln- 2 ':: 555g-:5.'?555..,, hlllig I 2 --in Wilq- 'I limi il-g:: lu -Ins ':lllu l 2 'viiiiiiiiirr' 237 1 MLM' hw ,fu :lar .'l'l4.-fl' , 4 '0J 4f I VII Orig! HH: V , nf. 54 -.lfla :f,,.ny ,,, 4,5 94' 15,4 fwfr 9 ,. , . -'Q I u 1 4? 40 9 rv O ,ng 4, 'aa 3 2 7 '52, ,V ig fuk- :, 'L71,,, 4 -1, c ' ' f 1 f 'lg ff T wi? S 1 1 A , 1 ,ff L, ' J . 44: ng,vh4?Au4 -'f,-'v,g-,wif-1 -1 ,, f AP, 'g, . Hg, A ' 4.,,, f.,,.n 54 , , , 2 .nw 59. 3 S1 ., fu.: Q, A1 ,A ,L Q ' fi, H4 , ' 'eff' ' ' - ' fa . ,z 4 -lbw, ilk .N 14,5 ff as SX A ' 5' W' N- we F . -'i 233 FCDUTBALL fQ,f.f.-' tl'N:'f'33 . J no ilfo VFR W V-V'1'. - l N X .1 x A. ., :VJ . MTM? ', If a X ,:.x . ,. .--- -m'- , f 5.1 0 x., :,- 3 ,.,. , -' I- M t: - ,:::A', V ' , 1 s . li .- .. 5-QQ Q Q Wf fi ff el Q Q W0 www is 3? au- iw J :.f, s X A if A 'L xx E K my W W ' 1 'I M Q aaa I S , .W Am, ,M W' 4 -'NN' 4K-Lf sig -.- --...am-Q '1-.4 gn, - f 5 :': .- 5 -was-..., v , 89 2 f 2 3 if Wu , f wah f, The Wildcat football team finished with a 2-8-1 record, 2-5-1 in the Big Ten, for the second consecutive year, in a season that Coach Francis Peay said contained no surprises. The first victory came in the seventh game of the season, a 35-14 Homecoming romp against Wisconsin. The second tally in the W column was three weeks later as the Cats demolished Purdue 28-7 at home. Byron Sanders turned in 1,000 yards rushing, the third Cat ever to do so. He rushed for 100 or more yards seven times during the season, tying Mike Adamle's 1970 record. Quarterback Greg Bradshaw held his own for the Cats, finishing ninth in NU history for passing yards with 2,288. His 2,437 total yards on offense were enough to put him 10th on the NU all- time list. Sophomore Richard Buchanan led the Cats with 41 pass receptions, tying for 10th loest in school history. 1 i clfg wha ,f X Q -cf ig ' w. -an-.1 , 3 wx X A f ., , l?A ..,, ,, , vf .-::a,,,- - 42 ,,,, z'3,f .,fAf 'lf 3, at 'Q K I H.. v:,,M,!,W , N, V , A , V , , I f ,f '- N K:-.f,5m.:g,..f wf F x an ' , if f 5 9 ' ,f Q , ' vz- 7 7 . L.-1, Q, -v-- ' x ' - 7 P Z 9, M M l ,f rw 'W' 2 Ya , , V , 3? MQ 5' , x 8-wm'M 5, ii. 6. fa a , W Y . ffm .M:f 'F ' G fs?-TN , 1 My v- Y ay - -x ,. -,, ,,.. Xu . get X2 f-:QQ - :.,.f.,5- - 1 k v ,Q -jk ' H' ' ,A-.ax X --....,mv v 'ind' ESQ at .5 .N R Q ' -IVE X ,,, ',.22'1 3 2 1 ' E 5, X M Q N 'N if N-.Q .A 1 X ,.,:, N 'U N , 1, W 242 if., , 5: - 1 .,.., f v:mm X nw im' . K-': 'L . x f- X 1 wb lx - sa .. - -- FV 5, I mg wal? New J 'hnunswx ,QPF-F 'L in ...M .F Qs. 1 V . ,L 'Y .47 Q' 1 V sg -1 ' . sf 1 ' ,' M. fee, I 1 5 1 E V A 1 f 3' ,, ,,Vf, 1', Q -x , ,J Z : , Y .ay Lf' P fi 'i l 8' 1 Q. , sfigl. .gi fiififzff V WWW . , 'F ,..1V. N , 1 -,N 17?:yQbxvJL,A- jg '- fp , 1 . ' 335 54.1. ,f:rZ,J F1 WF- 2 fa ,545 WM' gV V, K A I' - Af? ' , , 0 1,8 .W Maw, . K ff ,. .A 4, V : W, 4 i: ff1 ,,F'Y If ' af! L, ,Q z W1 VILL-, V 243 .., 1 ' , ,. 1-1 1... Q 4 .5.-I . 'ae'-.1 .M-,Q-Vw va' - ' Q ' VwiiiL?:2i.i?..,V, 11- 41 'I ' V 4 : zf-2 .c 'r:wQ..1,Q-5 V I, L., V . f mf ff'V -A - V ,- ' .. -4' '4 51iP3:--2':l,,V1 1 N:-Mtf V 1 'f , A r V - 1 'A Hi g Azn44'1r:ffV ,-,'4 ITN' 7 ' , ' . v -,ff 4, Vw' -13 ,V 1 . V - . A ay L VV W NWZ,F.,l5b?k2,?3i,,5i5,5,,,,5vg 5-Vgggkfgg - --Lf 'jg'-,-3::'g'.i-Zfwu ' ,j . -- E ,111 , fn V V 'eu . Q- 1,11 wwe-' 'z :az E: P zz , L. v-mfr V, ' ' . I f.V:1f 5 , 2 Q w,tV ,,. f, s- 'V-' 'V wi: Vr'?2f2i':,-fv??f'?51Q?g.ff-hff7i6:'W'ZW 4ifjrffifgfifg,-.Afg'.fQfff ,g5,g' 1 .VV,','p,g:Qfg1f.gaf'Vlm: , Jn , J 6'1g,'f?QwQ,.i5,-h?g:Vf,'j' - ,riff 1 2,1 f:1?2p5g+:k,,j'Lf43.1, rp 'jg-',Vg',:5g '4'g 1 z'y'Vf3'.y :jf,+ 'y.?: 72, :,1,wg,V1-4. -,V -, 1ffQgf21,h,?, X , , . I , ,V K M, . 7372: 'vf:i?5,f,gZ' ' V -sf'g,wV,-'fv1531::4:',, f, 1 -A J ,.:mV'.:'?f:L:?'-QV -494' mfg---f1:15, ' W5 '1 '?2:E'Zf! f24i:'?Jf V'Af' 31ffv.f1g,f'fi'?fQ31ffA?1E3'QEf5j2-we 5 - 1.5 QVA-rfzzggifizcsg-f's.:f4iidffgiiflyfil,'19vilfwigi-ju-il ff' 'FAQ- 5 w fff ' i J ?FTfi L21 Vfigiff 'fi i ff? ' ' E' If 244 VULLEYBALL The Northwestern volleyhall team l finished with its best record since hack- to-hack league titles in 1983-84. They posted a 20-14 overall mark and ll-7 in the Big Ten. The Cats clawed their way to second place in the conference, despite a season filled with injuries and inconsistencies. Senior setter Andrea Proos missed most of the season with a stress fracture, but Renee Duckmann got her chance to fill in, Middle blocker Stephanie Kammes was hampered all season hy a painful right shoulder. jill Wagner played with hack spasms while mlclclle hlocker Tricia Tadin was out of action alter an operation for a torn rotator cuff. Still, lanine Makar was named Big Ten Player of the Week during the season and earned All-Big Ten second team honors. 3' ' M5 ' ' ffff T. gWw'mQg-f,a-amafsj-ff w.,.,. Y , , A ' , , 5, .anna sa-Q.-...4.,.,.a-41 A' my' yi -VV-Aff: 5 , . 35 , ' 2 Aez ww-4 are ,Wa . l aww l lump ' I s as 551 -' ' 4 ., ' x .-,- V x , my , ,ax 24 The Northwestern field hockey team beat Iowa twice in the regular season to go 8-O in Big Ten play. The Hawkeyes, though, proved too powerful for the Cats in the NCAA regional tournament, winning 4-3 in overtime. lowa went on in the tournament to face Old Dominion for the championship, while the Cats came back to Evanston to ponder a magnificant season that did not go quite far enough. The Cats finishedl 7-Z-l overall, losing only one game in the regular season: 4- 1 to Old Dominion, the eventual NCAA champion. Season highlights included a l-O victory over defending national champion Maryland and the l-O road victory and 2-l home victory against Iowa. After the 1988 season, the Big Ten is disbanding its field hockey program because Purdue dropped the sport, leaving only five teams in the FIELD HQCKEY conference. mugggkw- .,.- s, Hin- 2427 Ml hli viilkfdffi' Q 'V X V 4't x x 5-.T Q A J PM-'fin WNWH0? ,I an -.., ww-A Q . f 5 Sir ,iv w, 'RL P Qg?i'L -mf- lady.. , , - pr.. 5 48 Aw -. X , .,- - J. 321921 ,434 U .,g?:,5,91 izfy- .:, ,fiat - - A f f?'LIu'1 -inf? 5 Q A. A -f A W , .72?if. 1 ,lf t br ,Eiga ggi? I mf 72 WT . V , I 2247 , egg - ,IW,,,f-vf+w'- ' ' .-fafgg' if E in LA 43 , 4 w '1n,:e'm..'f'V 3 WNW' 1- - ' . Af ,, .,,, , V w . 1, , I . fc: ,A 1. T 'fi -af 2I-X ., . 'PG-Y 512' if W ,, A ,J ,.. 7 if a - W J, . .f 250 SOCCER ,IQ As the soccer season progressed, the moved from defense to the attack. With records came tumbling down. It the return of defender Dirk Klemm, seemed nearly every previous mark was who missed last season because of an topped. internship, Hall could go back to what These records included most wins in a he does best--scoring. season, most consecutive wins, single- He broke the single season goals record season scoring, most goals in a season, of 12. He scored the most points in a fewest goals allowed in a season, season and moved onto the lifetime The Cats decided before the first game career chart mainly on the strength of that they would surpass TO wins, the this season. most any squad ever had. And on The records might stay for a while since October 29 against Illinois, NU won its the team graduates goalkeeper Brad llth game with three games remaining Barbara, forward Paul Cirino and in the season. menacing defender Steve Egresits who In what might have been the team's headed in several goals this season. best move all season, junior jon Hall br 'IF' .- ,K :, i 'P 'N -' .Q .,.- ETF:- X i 3 1 A as.: as . , t Hitiiiittfzgsss, ' A' f' ' 2.3!-':f,fl.-fvfxqbtaq FENCIN f 1 1' an-M was tg SNS V-c -...Nw f XA, .1 f W, Women's captain lanel Ohenchain highlighted the fencing team's season. She was one of three women in the country to qualify for the junior World Championships. Otherwise, the rest of the fencing season was viewed as a dis- appointing experience. Both the men's and women's records hovered around the .500 mark, as the teams struggled for concentration and consistency. 252 MENS BASKETBALL B' . rw . V A,'.v .J Q 'N 25 8 . Welsh-Ryan Arena shook with more crowd support during the 1988-89 sea- son than in past years. Nobody wanted to miss the miracle. The first two games promised an exciting season as the Wildcats powered past Chicago 101 -45 and Illinois Wesleyan 100-61. Then NU stuck close to No. 1 Duke, despite a lopsided 86-62 final score. Guard jeff Grose then led the team past Rutgers 75-69. The Cats headed into conference play with a 7-3 record, which,equaled the total number of wins for last season. But, the team ended with a 2-16 confer- ence record I9-19 overalll, as the Big 5555- Y ' 3 A M- f iff-144, if f' . S- .-ai-Q-' , , , 1 7 M .,,.,,,,,, . i,.i , W r . 'mtvnttwl 1 ,,,m1-Q L, Ten became one of the best and most Chg: Al improved conferences in the nation. NU kept within five points of No. 5 Illinois, losing 75-70, but managed to win just two home conference games: Minnesota and Ohio State. The Cats narrowly lost two other home matches against Michigan State 164-621 and Wisconsin C59-58l. Every Big Ten coach noticed that a trip to Welsh-Ryan was no longer an auto- matic win as Wildcat fans helped to lfinallyl create a home-court advan- tage. However, some controversy arose with this new spirit. After the Illinois game, the crowd was accused of being elitist, racist and out of line because of the cheer, State school, a banner reading, Kenny Battle, how do you spell Stoopid, and objects that were thrown at the Illini bench. 1 1 V , il, j ' ' ' .-zeiiwivi ',.,, -' 'Q,4,,,Q,., .1 B3 ik E- Wl X . 415' V QQQUQ 2- ' 'W ' 255 0606! 3 if-If-ai 257 Wm 6 x 5 W0 MEN ' S BASKETBALL The women's basketball team was all set to have a banner year with a strong returning squad and a fantastic fresh- man class. But, on the eve of confer- ence play, junior guard Kelly Cole and freshman forward Donna C-roh were injured and freshmen Michelle Savage and Heather Ertel were declared aca- demically ineligible. Freshman point guard Nancy Kennelly stepped into the hole, running the Wildcat offense in Cole's absence. In the frontcourt, senior Carrie Lawless, who lead the conference in scoring for most of the season, and center Mya Whitmore accounted for more than half of the Cats' scoring, after losing leading scorer Savage. 5 , f 1 a Af , , , ,W 1,14 A ll in AFI' W Q . V 1f:JaVi1'.,a -1. . ,-1 4, .Mlm 260 The wrestling team soared to eighth in the nation behind a best-ever regular season record of 14-5, 9-5 in the Big Ten. Senior Mark Whitehead paced the Wildcats with a second-place NCAA finish in the 190-pound division. The highest Northwestern had placed before was No. 9 in 1960. lack Griffin tll8l and Mike Funk tl 679 joined Whitehead as All-Americans and NU's first Big Ten Champions in 15 years. loei Bales, Funk, Griffin, Brad Traviola and Whitehead were ranked in the Top 20 throughout the season. Yet the season ended on a bittersweet note because it was 8-year coach Tom larman's last year. He left after the sea- son ended for a combined athletic director and wrestling coach position at Manchester College in Indiana. f N 'W .. SVVIMM 6 Lori Holmes powered the vvomen's svvimming team. She qualified for the NCAAs while most swimmers were waiting for the end of the season to pare their times. The women loroke 10 school records in the NCAAs and quali- fied for nine NCAA events. The team finished with a 4-3 overall record, 3-3 in the Big Ten. The men had a slower year, finishing O- 7 inthe Big Ten, 3-10 overall. 42' yn 52 MARCHING B Us ',,,,.' V ,Lg -IA 1 'AL ., x 4'--. P Q. L v i fig? ,Q 4 R. Q c, 'f FL, I q -M' . S f 1 5 113 -41. ,Q r,.,. .. ff - -v ,M 5 C7725 1 Q J 43 nmillwmyq Q, ,Q ii. A 0,1 .. .. 2 we j - MQ ,L , I M 1- -5 ' 2 63 54 CHEERLEADERS Q 'S' J .mv , ' .' ' . ' lwfgijq : b N. F v i Q ' W I 1 , QU QB ,0A5Ef99'A'fWf'P2 ,A ,., V way ,,...--1.--5292 Z ' 4.- v WCG,-4 ,was-sf 'L ,bw 32? LADY CA V.: - -' --L ,-+, V :::,:f:+ xievaassi 'bi 25 .f' 55 T RAMURALS ff. ,M nw, fp 1 ,nr ! , .. ,X Q I 14.4, al ,, , i 67 68 :alps- , .A ' 'MPX CLUB SPQRIS 269 N 'g ' hgQ' N 5 Q 1 ga: L , 1 ,Ab , Q gig f1f'f'- 1 . Nt P ,M ,N N ,, , O 271 z ' 9 'Diff'-mvnqaq 'lift .Mgr n.. ,H -Q- me A Ab 1- ...af MV..-.,...,.w-' - x 4... N' - Q-gh. wg .,.!,m , -' ts -.t w- ,.,.fL Q s ..... . .,-. .... - iff:--. ' N. , .-ag.. ,..,,,,.... mf- . .- IL A . -P ,M WW 'W jx' vw... ' .. 5 3, , 5 ,K , L ,-W, La ...- ... '-- , . Q. ...V -..-. -' , V ,,,,, . 'V-, . +- Q -h v,.h-.- .,.,, ' -W ...sw-, , ...N- ... .K .. .NU ar- -fu: .. :rms :'.'gQf:.gvy'-W5L,5-f?- ' ... . ,.,,.,..... ' --'-7 , ' ' ' , ' ' ' .. V.. NN-.mam , ...W Y .. H V , . par ,,-Q, , .. V V Ku . nun- --W. A..,.,.,... ,,g,,,,,, wr-A .., + 6, V-ww. -.N h.. .-....,,, I wan., ... .47 9' . M -v-' , r- r- '- Q H- ......, --5, --.-.. ,9,...-.... 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M ., 6' Q ,A -- fy +1 gym 'Egg' 'WIP' f -gwxv ., I., he 22 MEN'S SWIMMING Dennis DeBobes David Eite Matt johnson Matt Keller jai Khanna Karl Kriegsmann john McGuire Marcus Mueller Chris Ritter Chip Rubin Greg Schoofs Steve Shewfelt Scott Stone David Walls WOMEN'S TENNIS Tonya Evans Cindy Galloway Ann Hendry Soyoung Lee Lynn Nabors Wendy Nelson Christina Schuschel julie Staples Kristin Willey WOMEN'S BASKETBALL Barb Arndorfer Kelly Cole Heather Ertel Diane Finnan Robin Garrett Donna Groh Nancy Kennelly jennifer Kroll Carrie Lawless Wilha Lee Michele Savage Lainna Shaw jeanine Wasielewski Mya Whitmore RD STERS FOOTBALL Dirk Adams Ira Adler Mike Allaway Darryl Ashmore Mike Baum Mark Benson Brendan Bentley Frank Boudreaux Greg Bradshaw john Broeker Andy Brooks Richard Buchanan Brett Buckner Tobin Buckner D.R. Callentine Bob Christian Thor Christianson Marlon Collins David Cross jason Cunningham Walter Ding Bret Dirks Dirk Disper Eric Dixon Brendan Dowling Matt Dzierwa David Eaton Greg Fisher Craig Forman Dan Freveletti Earl Gatch Vlad Gleyzer Bob Griswold George Harouvis Dave Helding jeff Hiller Stan Holsen Thomas Homco Greg Horner john Ivlow Dwight james Doug jorndt Corky Kane Kip Kelly Tim King Kevin Krebs Marcus Lang Mike Lowe Kurt Lundergreen Greg Manis Doug Martin Ron Maulding Bill McCann Randy McClellan Todd McClish Rod McCrimmon Steve McFarlane Bill McLaughlin Dave Merenkov Kurt Minko Dave Mitidiero Alec Morris Chip Morris Pat New Butch Newhouse Tim O'Brien Darren Olson Torrio Osborne Kyle Palmer Mihailo Panovich Craig Perry Kevin Peterson Greg Pierce Todd Reeves jeff Robinson Steve Rosholt Randy Rowe john Ruden Steve Sacks Byron Sanders Adam Schell Greg Schultz Mike Shares Steve Siewert Curtis Spears Ed Sutter Terry Thomas Brian Tichy Dennis Tuza Derrill Vest Mike Vickery Andre Walker Grant Walter Robert Walton Tom Wells Eric Wenzel Sheridan Wilks Leroy Windfield Matt Will David Woollard Curt Zipfel 5 Q . :, V A, 1 .fr Z ' . ,.: ',,.,- I2 ,pnffi . .Nm -N V. . WRESTLING joei Bales David Blanke Brian Burgess Matt Case Thierry Chau Mike Cheatham Shane Edgington Mike Funk Robert Gonzalez jack Griffin Rod Heiser Neil Kohlberg Rick Lenth Tim McGrory jason Scarpone Scott Shoemaker Tim Spence Kenny Thompson Brad Traviolia Matthew Von Enfelda Mark Whitehead Toby Willis - Sv .. 4 grey? 1 f, v , -ff,-5 .,,3,Qe:5 . -'0z2Qf 'u4i 4.46, Q,4q?r,.-.,, -fe' 3495 f.?9'wff- W. way.. , if I Wi' V. rv 1. - f F f 1 '37 29116 wa, 5 f 1 7... it yi -DL, . ' 'eff 1' '+- .....:T... -+- SOCCER Brad Barbera George Kokodynski Bobby Padera Phil Barth Steve Egresits jeff Stuecken Tom Hospel jim Muldoon Dana Shreeve Sean Carlin Dirk Klemm Paul Cirino Kurt Kunert Kevin Ford Derek Sherk Keith Martino Dan Segel jonathan Hall Mike Clay Austin Gibbons Matt Kelly joe O'Toole FIELD HOCKEY Kimberly Metcalf Lisa Verzella Tamara Neuhausel julia Haabestad Debbie Ulrich Lori Staley Sue Novack Rosie Seelaus Antoinette Lucas Kathy Seelaus jennifer Ginsburg Lorette Vorstman Colleen Senich Betsy Myers Sannie Van Dijck Maureen Mullen Shana Fineburg Erin O'Toole .1 I .Q ,K Lv V ay-fy . .X . .wf-- L. .. .. . EL ' A , .Q -r '- , . . 1 A-ww ' , ' -f . L4 9' -L ' f Q, . .1-L an-, .M ,,., -I E fr, .,.. Xiu., , . Q : L '-- . ..,, M. - , ' ' lvflxza: ' . fun, , -if M, , ...E-,.,.,:5 ' - 1' arm- ef-2,15-5::kw.QL,,av i-:ff ' v ' .. ,,, a. - .., L.-'rfft If .,.fna.g,K.,s3f,R:x'4..2'.Q f 2,-f.. -.., ., , 1: f 7..3.-'J Q,-ng---,393 - - ' ,.'.....91 U5 a4,,e'.a.kw.xn 'Nx '- ,ff xd- 1172-,5- :fi MEN'S TRACK Clay Barnes jim Bender Daniel Blackburn David Braun Bob Cull Terence Davis jim DeBeers Pat Dillon Steve Duncan Stephen Frech Steve Hanley Andy Huggins Pat jackson Charles Keagle Mitch McCormick Greg McCullough Kevin McKeever Greg Malleck Bob Mau Steve Miller Aaron Mobarak Mike Murray ,im Nielson Tim Philips jeff Probst Mike Robotham john Rosa Charles Splete joe Stegbauer ,eff Thomas Craig Van Dyke Marvin Washington Bryan Waxman Erik Webb VOLLEYBALL Shelley Brzozovvski Renee Duckmann Heather Fredin Anya Harelik jennifer jostes Stephanie Kammes Amy Loose janine Makar Andrea Proos Miriam Stariha Tricia Tadin jill Wagner WOMEN'S TRACK Andrea Angell jackie Arnold Amy Bannister Carol Boyd Terri Costello julie Foertsch Christie Gipson Sue Keeney Tammy Marshall Angela Miller Alena Palmquist Darleen Reichmuth Brenda Schumacher julie Waterman Loretta With rovv Q:-U2 Dan Wright x li H, E 5 - 1 -a, , -as x,.,:, N MEN'S TENNIS Matt Akman Scott Bindley Gary Cohen jimmy Cushing Pat Han Steve Herdoiza Todd Mansfield Brian Saltzman john Sullivan MEN'S BASKETBALL Terry Buford Rob Ross Phil Styles David Holmes Rex Walters Don Brotz Kevin Nixon Bryan Ross Walker Lambiotte Lucis Reece Brian Schwabe jeff Grose Don Polite Evan Pedersen Larry Gorman WOMEN'S SWIMMING Betsy Aushvvitz Kim Barnes Lenore Burnett Amy Charnes Lori Holmes Holly Hutton Sally johnson Simone Morovitz Marilyn Peck Teri Ross jennifer Smith Nadine Takai Kristen Usovvski Laura Vitcenda Sarah Weersing Paige Wright Vivian Yamada FENCING MEN'S Brian Caza Alex Chuang Tom Chwojko Chris Gaul Mitch Granberg Alan Hall Andrew Hyncik Ken jones joel Kickbusch Mark Mallchok josh Marlin Trent Rosenbloom Travis Seymour Felicien Sirois Greg Sumi Colby Vargas Dennis Wong Steve Wong Ray Zenkich WOMEN'S Carolyn Barber Bernadette Burke Suzanne Casemen Danielle Diehl jill Frank Debby Hinch Laura Hunt janel Obenchain jenny Saunders Gloria Su SOFTBALL Suzi Spotleson Kelli Horton Candace jeffrey Sue Phillips Shannon Walsh Kris Cieslak Ndidi Opia Karol Dodd I Kerry Muehlenbeck Kelly Oberle Chinazo Opia Kelly Davidson Nanci Clement julie Greenberg Amy Redmer Pam Ernst 2 BASEBALL Frank Appice Tony Ariola Chris Beacom Tom Borgula Bob Brucato Tim Buhe Brian Chisdak jim Conzemius Steven Crabbe Everett Cunningham Tom Dodge Todd Frese Charles Frizelle Lance Hartshorn Tim jackson Gary Kipper Todd Drueger Dave Margolis Gregg Martin Tony Niezyniecki Ryan Oetting joseph Perona jim Robinson Michael Stein David VanWinkle LACROSSE johanna Kung Tami Neuhausel julia Haabestad Sara Pickens Amy Kaplan Rosie Seelaus Antoinette Lucas Kathy Seelaus Diane Wood Pam Welder jessica Harris Tracy Strazzella Maureen Mullen Shana Fineburg 1 l ' a f ' . , ' H ,LLQ-,gwv .s 'LQ 1 -1 :ini 'fx' fLlRf'fx'5,: ' 5. - ,. .- .:ygwQ2 - 2. - . , K. 1 Sims.H21-.:q'f.waxw.fif Vx . ' , fg3gw9 b?iwz 341:52 ' ff --15. , - W m!-f.?' -. Ti' if-1. , :.F'i'Q:wfA?95f5fS Z' as-saws'-agfmis..-A,. '.45.v.'z. ww- . , ,- Q- .. 1 - M Q:-5!5ifw5!5'e.yfAsW :ig-g? 31:4. gfQ::s..fmfrfg,',q '.:,:gfQ4,: :.,f .x f V'-A' -4 1 A .w QS x.-Y-'91:v,'ra'w-'M- 1- -' . ,,. . ,, A J. ,-Q ., Q. .am-1. ,. . .bb J'f21iff',.5f,,9 ' ' -'-1 2 4 2.3 ' 6-1 ,35E'gf53 l ' .1 1'- Lff.Zi2Pf+f'1' ,. 1 ' V Nb Re- ,F ' ' '- fflilf-i'f:'.'-'f. ':I. f'- fn 4-,ygm-if ffg:-W-4f:.f.4:,:1'f..-...V fur-,' 1: :- . -' wg. -31:-5.-V -f- ,113-2 . ,.:. ., ::152f,aG,.4'2y.fA'f.'?'f -am. ' ff Eiiggy-1m'.:w1t. ,1:is3'J 'f ' , 2:2 A-fr-Kwai-.1.f .--,wifi ww?-1EkS'E'91!12 si--f n P2- nrryy5!,i,3?.2,,...,..-x.. A., . '15-155115 Q':-1 1' ' g.,w.P,, .. .I ... :Q : 'f5.q1k:5fg1::1.. 18513152154 1z?'1.:.' :gffjia Q ,. x. f-1. U- .Q 12 If 11 - A - ' 1 cv, f x - . . Q 1 9 1,-X :- Ly S ff 7 1 M, W, 5. JL yM ,w,,,., , Y. mfzvvf. . ., Q :mmf . f- f- bi? 5:15913 f ': . ' ' M Jawa Nm . ff? 'fa 2 2 - Q- wg ,V J 1 t' 'xf - fi , . V . ,Ibn h. Q 29 1 figs , E .. if 'M E . . V 195 ' ' , my --' 'V ' . ..W,,,M.,.,V.-.1. 5 ,. , wif.. rf' 2 Z'?lM'iiL'xh1 1 , A, If 1 .,h .,fL,. , . pi . F 1 4 ,.A-'Hifi' ' .43 an I. .,QgN:5l53,,h I 1 , f Jz'f ' .. ' wifi My f gy 'Q 14.24, izjfl ff - , , ff v,fff?-p ie , 1' ff 14: 55, 1 1?-'qs M , .,, 5575192 N,-'aff qw: if .- V A i,1,3y-gy A 1-'Af' P, - 1?,gV5f: ffgf ' V ,.,isW, ,, 4,54 ., 4 ,hx 4 . . ' ' Va, . ' we V ., Mg, EH' . 1 . A-'J f 12 Hman ,- ' ',:,jg,,Q1 'fa 1, '-1f'3'f' ,af ' i' 21, :gf -.I f . X 51 N' Z 39 bf-, ,ff A 1 v. u,uQ,f sf wif? f-H56 f' X-K . QRGANIZATIQNS 1989 n 278 y ,. . f , k 1,1 sz, f fwi- ,, fit, 59 , ,-5 45 ' , c Executive Board: Rick Marks, chairman, Greg Nikitas, director of production, Greg Graeber, director of finance, john Delaloye, director of promotions, josh Protass, director of marketing, David Goldberg, director of concerts, Hunter Smith director of speakers, Pamela Swedlovv, director of special events. Ken jones, Steve Koers, Mark Mitchell, Mark Godsey, David Strickland, Andy Piepgras, joe Yang, Hank Chilton, Randy Blaugh, lnci Ulgur, Eric Herz, jeff Rupert, Steve Goode, Arthur Rooks, Ron Bernstein, Dave Ebroon, Kurt Dammerman, Abbey jacobson, Chris Arand, Debbie Fellman, julie McCullough, Deana Benishay, Brigette Whisnat, john Saaty, jim Weis, john Nieman, Erik Selz, Lisa Scheiderman, Craig Erwich, Pam Konigsberg, Nadine Padawer, john Miyasota, David Roark, jill Deitch, Rajesh Shah, julie Matonich, Debbie Yerman. .M 32 5 sn This is the event from Heeelll ...Big guy, don't scare the poor girl!...just FAX it!...Schoolvvork is really starting to Cut into my extracurricular life...Close the door, locker room taIk!... NoIoody feels sorry for me. ... He's so Charlie Brown. ...Pam Svvedlow, I am a diCtator. ... VVell, it's sort ofa meeting ... Sure...VVhat...0ops! ...DyCh show?!!... AII right, who peed on my tree? Ez 'X--il? 'I ,W- . i 280 l i O FILM BQARD Sex in the aisles and lots of bagel throwing...VVhat do you mean we made money?...VVhat do you mean we went into percentage?...Do those people look a little tall and skinny to you?...Great - we're showing an X-rated cartoon on prospective weekend!...You're babysitting the Blob this weekend...Somedays you just can't get rid of a bomb...Ivan'll do it!...Now this is what being on Tech Flicks is all about!...Does that look focused?...Relax! Film is your friend...Yes, that projector costs thousands of dollars, and yes, it will explode if you sneeze...567's - are those the gold things, the black things, or the big green things?...Thing One, Thing Two, and Cousin lt...Is it a sell- out?...l-low far are you willing to go?...We're a lean, mean, fighting machine!...Oh my God - They know my name!...Blasphemy Night Revisited!...l don't see you - now, get in there before l change my mind...Ah, the good old days, when Chairmen were beige, projectors were faulty, and every Tech flick was a poker game...,There's no point in going upstairs - Iet's do it here...Is that horse anorexic?...Lots of hay stuck in zippers and the cows wouldn't stop mooing...Wait a minute - why is that in color?...It was a long, long, LONG day's journey into night...We are experiencing minor technical difficulties. .Q l l l l i ALPHA PHI QMEGA 'Z' if W ..l 3, , , ,i w 5, , v ?1jQ'25?Zft 1 ffl' 7354- , 1 ,',,.f1Q.1 L . lvl' 4 A ,- I I 1fQ4iyQZ1?'4fZ , , ieabk 1252 if If ' g!!,x4if,.'IJffffFf Aff., , I 32.5 ,itwpfziqevjgi jj ,1 -5 yu f ., ..,,m,5 I 4 f 4 af 314' gr 'J' , 2, Gr? -5 f'! , 7.4 , I - ,ri ' .1 s , ,M Alpha Phi Omega is the nationally- sponsored coed service fraternity on campus. A member of the Northwestern Volunteer Network, the group participates in service projects on- and off-campus. In the past we have volunteered at soup kitchens, worked with underprivileged senior citizens and children in the area, and helped collect thousands of dollars for charitable organizations. We continue to grow each year, and as a result the range of volunteer opportunities we are able to do continues to expand. 282 Asa - A L ' i f , 1 xml, . ,, .. I I , ,, W 3 -A ..- V ,I .PG .- ,i M, si px, st. .L Randi Ostro, Francis Ostian, Megan Sheehan, Soni Mehta, Scott Forman, Barry joseph, Scott Myerson, Lee Branstetter, Pamela Hicks, Sue Sylwester, Vicky Singh, Kathy Dunn, Cheryl Duchovv, Srinivas Reddy, Richard Shin, Boris Prentiss, Marnie Glickman, Richard Froome, Chris Lisotta, Mike Beyer, Calvin Peete jr., Tim Carmichael, jay Udani, jeff Koertzen, jim McCoy, Rochelle Newman, Bill I-lorner, Tiffany Osterhout, Cori Ryan, Rynn johnson, Brian Nafziger, jason Scarpone, Stacey Rabinovvitz, Amie Goldman, Michael Donley, Amy Kegley, Lokesh Arora, jeff Mitchell, jon Gary, Carolyn Ginsburg, Kris Farley, Amy Strauss, Sue Funk, Laura Norwalk, Lisa Bainbridge, Amy Segal, Scott Stone, Kathleen McCarthy, Tom Weber, Ray Lukosiunas, Peter Malinowski, Marcy Marttila, jenny Leischner, Petra Sindt, Seth Task, Erin Dugan, Don Evans , ,vast lm' ' T ct i 25 J li , 1 i 2 r get 11 I?4.af l4? .-J? a lv V ,f .V-gi -is . 'F ,N . , ,.., , ,,,. .V.V l fl', 'i3k' ' nw-tryna . ,q-3 of - 5 K A R K , iv ,I :Z if f ct 3, , -first A' '5f3ix.'Zi, In Y l ll i .1 1 ,Z - I Yam A t' H f- A GUVE MENT Allison Pay - President, Bobbie Peterson - Executive Vice-President, john Lambros - Academic Vice-President, james OlHara - Student Services Vice-President, Kurt Kaliebe - Financial Vice-President, Adam Hartman - Speaker of the Senate, Kenneth Pace - Rules Committee Chair, Scott Marcotte - Public Relations Co-Chair, Allison Barnes - Public Relations Co-Chair, Tom Katzenmeyer - Community Relations Chair, Sharzad Tadjbakhsh - Treasurer, Karin Norington - Secretary l 283 2 L? E ALLIANC TS AR 234 Z THE CCJMP SHQP 28 ' , -ff 44,- , .. A .W . . -' .-.....,., Q,fmfg,-1'.,f4:g-,-,.z1y6a4,L-L,,,51A:. ,W ? mf'z'f':,?1T'!ff , -af'fTT f'-1'v:'17'-::zf . ' mwwuuu hmwwfmnwwy I l ' 1 : , L ag: 4' X ' s lf va .Z 1 . ,J 4 ff ,ff JE! sf' Wqmgn N252 X T? n I f X X 'fm if ,ULLEGE REPUBLICANS A g 4- 45 A 3. 4' i Q DEMQCRATIC CQUNCIL Brian Nafziger, Treasurerg Dave l-lolian, Students for Dukakis Vice-Chairpersonp Allison Little, PR. Chairpersonp lirn McCoy, Secretary john Lambros, Students for Dukakis Chairpersonp Bill Horner, Special Events Chairpersonp Heather Carver, Vice- Chairpersong Gary Rintel, Chairperson THE DAILY 237 ,,,,..-' .... - W.. ,c.f'-Q- .- .. ,ff fur ff 3 Z 283 THE DAILY AD QPF ICE ,M J 1 E 1, F , - ...A- . N KLM If Z 'fr ANCE THQ 89 I , g fi-'.,,,? lst row: Lisa Messinger, Skip l-lilton, Mary Farrell 2nd rovv: Rollie Ransom, Steve Cross, jason Manketo, Kate Kligora 3rd row: Alisa Regas, Alane Masters, Molly Swanson, ,ohn Passman, Krissy Berger, Meredith Kolsky, Laura Shermer, lim Arnold,Debby Finkelstein 4th row: lay Novak, Alan Lebovitz, Bob Else, Brad Sherman 1989 Inspirational Quote: Doing this kind of work for a long time can make you a very strange person. - Field Foundation Representative X 290 HUMECOMING IFC ' u- i jeffrey Heinzmann, President, Scott Rehl, Rush Chair, Philip A. Branshaw, Vice-President, Greg Moerschel, Vice- President for Special Services, Richard Froome, Provost, Pat Carroll, Treasurer, Tim Simonds, Secretary Through the Inter Fraternity Council, the 23 full-member chapters and the 2 associate-member chapters pool their talents and resources for the betterment of the fraternity system and the entire university community. The IFC President's Forum, consisting of all house presidents, act as a policy- making body deciding various issues concerning the fraternity system. The seven-member Executive Board acts as a steering committee for the council's 1,400 members and carries out the policies of the President's Forum. 291 Z 292 MCDRTAR BGARD r ,jr-, 1 ul PLE.-A-1 Lynn Addington, Andy Armacost, Beth Babcock, Katie Brick, Holly Copeland, Amar Das, john Delaloge, Brian Elliott David Foley, Rachel Hershfang, Skip Hilton, Laurie johnson, Kurt Kaliebe, Lisa Kivirist, Janine Makar, Stephanie O'Connell, jane Skinner, Brett Thomhs, Heather Vallier, Henry Vogel, Meg Wessling, Kim Wilhelmsen, Doug Wolter, Patti Wolter, lane Zerhi DERU NSBE 293 , V ..,.,. 4 The executive board is comprised of 17 members: Denise I-louser, chairperson, Marvin Washington, vice-chairperson, Angela Mullins, administrative director, jackie Brovvn, financial directory Michelle Cantrell, regionalfnational liaison. Co- chairpersons of committees: Tamarah Duperval and Willie Horton, academic affairs, Leslie Bass and Alicia Boler, admissions, Kimberly Thomas and Leslie Danley, banquet, Denise Wade and Garth Anderson, directory, Zefferine Stallvvorth and Sean Nix, liaison, Marnya Avent-Randolph and lamal Morris, public relations. 294 Northwestern Student Television produces five shows telecast on local cable in Evanston and Chicago. The five shows, Now We're Talking, Weekly Edition, Take A Peek, Get A Cluel, and Undercover Films, are entirely student- produced and involve members ofthe Evanston community. Studio 22 is Northwestern's student video production group. Its high-caliber, semi- professional projects provide invaluable experience for those who seek to further their careers in video - related industries as well as those people who simply enjoy being a part of the production process. This year's projects included a satirical look at news and investigative journalism, and a half-hour children's television show. Q NSTV X j M 5 '-,ky gt ' A V 5 A K f td , .,.-tg .w ,T vm . - v STUDICD 22 is fix. f W , A, We're here to help...really...For a good time call 491 -761 O...Volunteers do it for free...Because it could be you someday...Volunteering...Do it 'cause it feels good...We're huge...4OO people doing it together...NVN 'nuff said. Few of us will have the greatness to bend history itself, but each of us can work to change a small portion of events, and in the total of those acts, will be written the history of this generation. -- Robert F. Kennedy zz -. ' .4 ., 1 4 ' 4 4, '- ,, 96 , 2'-' f X iefrd fx , .,............a,.m........u. .. SPECIAL OLYMPICS GENERAL CHAIRS Greg Graeber, Deneen Costa SPORTS COORDINATOR Mark Dooley SPECIAL PROjECTS COORDINATOR Mark Ledogar Andy Piepgras, Mitch Solomon, Stephanie Belzer, Ben Maxwell, Tracey Williams, Chrissi Bloom, Greg Smith, Wendy Fox, Adam Saltzman, Anne Heiberger, Alan Stotts, Derek Sammann,Amy Ruthmeyer, Rafi Wilkinson, Susan Hassig, Debbie Merfeld, jessica Harris, Amy Segal, Molly Swanson, Kathy Ochsner, Gordon Scott, Cindy Hill, Laura Petrie, Tim I-luskey, Kim Lewter, Linda Bastiani, Anne Nelson, Amy Clause, Greg Nikitas, jeff Fitzer, josh Levinson, Martha Morgan, Sheila Swanson, Beth Traeger, Michelle Berman, Scot Montrey, Kristin Zimmerman, Scott Ortega, Kristin Dunlap, Suzy Puccinelli, Seth Neulight, Wendy Gudeman, Laura Ditzler, Cindy Goldman, Lisa Reed, Ellen Blanchfield, Sue Green, Stacey I-lecker, Dave Sigman, julie judelson, Stef Relles, Rich Stearns, Brad Marks, jill jacobson, Brad Sherman, Carolyn Kelly, julie Einstein, jen Varland, Gail Asleson, Kristina Berger, Trasha Embry, Sandi Stranne 298 WI LD CAT CQUN J dI 'Q fg f 693 '1'1 l11111 G Q ll lII111 'II111 lllll lllIl1lfII1I1 1'1'1'1'1'1'1':'1 I'1'1'1'1'1'1':'1 I'1'1'1'-'1'!' 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In order to contain vandalism, that included Delta Gamma's Pledge Class painting trees and a paint battle between Allison Hall and Delta Upsilon over rights to The Rock for Parents' Weekend, University officials and stu- dent leaders discussed a plan to move The Rock about 30 feet either east or west from its position by l-larris Hall. The plan also included provisions to install a brick plaza, benches, trees and walkways on the present site of The Rock. . X A Z V . ff , sf' Task Force report examines NU The final report of the Task Force on the Undergraduate Experience stated NU must reevaluate and restructure administrative policies to improve the quality of education for students. The 115-page document, released Nov. 7, was the first comprehensive study of undergraduate issues at NU since 1968, when the Faculty Planning Committee Community of Scholars made its I-lagstrum report. Among other changes, the report pro- posed abandoning the current quarter system for modified semesters, deferring fraternity and sorority rush until Winter Quarterg and building additional student housing. l Students fight parking restrictions Some students returned Fall Quarter to find new parking restrictions keeping them out of university lots without the chance to buy a parking sticker. Under new guidelines established by Northwestern's Parking and Traffic Committee, students living in non-uni- versity housing in a designated campus zone could not purchase parking stick- ers. Angered students staged a demonstra- tion to block off the two-deck parking lot between Fisk Hall and Lake Michigan to show their displeasure at the University's new policy. Officials then temporarily repealed the policy and announced in October that students in the campus zone could pur- chase. parking stickers for the remanin- der of Fall Quaner. The rule was officially suspended by a unanimous vote ofthe student-faculty committee on parking in November because students were not given notice of the new rule before returning to cam- pus. Students protest grapes California grapes became the target of a student-organized boycott. Through the protest, Northwestern became part of a successful nationwide movement in support of the United Farm Workers. Grape consumption in NU's cafeterias plummeted by two-thirds after students from Peace Project distributed leaflets written by the UFW. Peace Project also demanded a boycott, as they cited the dangers of pesticide spraying to those who eat the grapes as well as the poorly paid migrant workers in California. Even though the grower that supplies grapes to NU's food service maintained that its field conditions were safe, week- ly expenditures for grapes in campus cafeterias dropped from 51,800 to 5600. Many students also boycotted the few grapes that were offered. Peace Project President Sean Maher was optimistic about the campus action. This is a concrete blow to the myth that NU students are apathetic and unwill- ing to change things, he said. X X- fr lv ZONF 5 303 ,lv pf W X! 30 Fraternities close, move After patterns of declining membership and consequent financial difficulties, Theta Delta Chi fraternity closed during Winter Break with the promise of a future reorganization attempt. Theta Delta Chi is the fourth Greek house to close in the past two years, fol- lowing Triangle and Theta Xi fraternities and Alpha Epsilon Phi sorority. Theta Delta Chi's house at 710 Emerson St. will not be available for another Greek unit and for now will remain university housing. The fraterni- ty has the option to reorganize and attract new pledges. The members could then return to campus and their house. The closing of Theta Delta Chi was not the only movement within the Greek community. After petitions to the University and much discussion, Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia gained the right to live together in a house. The group moved to South campus occupying the house that temporarily housed Sigma Chi last year. A .I .ffp l i I if ss. T Q7 ,ij , - fr Medill, Music deans resign In january, Medill School of journalism Dean Edward Bassett announced his resignation and his decision to accept a new position as dean of the School of Communications at the University of Washington. Bassett, who took the top position at Medill in 1984, cited person- al and professional reasons for the move. In the same month, Music Dean Thomas Miller announced his resigna- tion. Miller said he finally tired ofthe administrative duties of dean he had performed for 18 years, but he planned to stay at NU as a faculty member. As Bassett and Miller leave, School of Education and Social Policy Dean David Wiley will be left as the only remaining undergraduate dean to have served with Chancellor Robert Strotz, Northwestern's president before Arnold Weber. Computer virus hits NU In time for the cold and flu season, a computer virus attacked computer sys- tems across the country as well as sneaking into the Vogelback Computing Center. Officials first thought Northwestern had escaped the virus. However, it was discovered in November that the virus had made its way to Vogelback through a computer mailer. Phil Draughon, a computer communications analyst, stayed up until 5 a.m. fighting the virus. The University lost over 100 work hours, Draughon lost several hours of sleep, but the computers at Vogelback remained undamaged and the computer system quickly recovered. Students arrested in CIA protest On Nov. 14, 1988, Evanston police assisted DPS officers in making 16 arrests during a protest against CIA job recruitment on campus. What began as a peaceful demonstra- tion outside Scott Hall turned into a shoving match between protesters, counter-protesters and DPS and Evanston police officers. Protesters accused the CIA of violating people's rights around the world and held that these people's rights were more impor- tant than the organization's right to recruit. University President Arnold Weber said the CIA is a legal entity of the U.S. government and the issue of job recrui-' ment on campuses should be worked out in the U.S. Congress. The students arrested were charged with disorderly conduct and disobeying police officers. All were released on their own recognizance that same night 30 iff if 'S as f 'ff x A ff 1 S 1 l 7' 1 i g li 55x fe Vxafgrqv XX X S NN +1'N5i ,v - V F 306 Denver boot fails to kick students Evanston City Council was upset with the ineffectiveness of the Denver boot to nail Northwestern students for park- ing violations. In a report presented to the council in Dctober by the Administration and Public Works com- mittee, the Denver boot was said to have been placed on 366 cars in T7 months. The council found the report unsatis- factory because it did not specify who the offenders were. The boot program was targeted at NU students. The Denver boot is a device designed to immobilize cars. It is later removed when the car owners pay their parking fines. Evanston police wait until a car LD CAL EWS gy g vm .. f ,-'?'f'::' . - . .Y . gf. his X. ., -I , f .'..,,--,rxiifxifreisk , . . . gg has 20 unpaid tickets. On the 20th, iliggislti g, 5, offenders are issued a warning sticker. lf 1 Q in f S, cars are illegally parked after the 20th, the cars get the boot. Evanston wanted to place the boots on cars after the 10th ticket, saying students may leave town long before the 20th. The counciI's attitude seemed to be summed up by Ald. Evelyn Raden f4thl who said, We want to get all you Northwestern students. You can quote me on that. CTA changes Evanston service In an attempt to cut costs, the Chicago Transit Authority proposed a plan to eliminate late-night el service to Evanston and all weekend service to Skokie. At the budget committee meet- ing, though, the plan was rejected. This decision came as good news to Northwestern students who often rely on late night el transportation home after an evening in Chicago. Had the proposal gone into effect, an estimated T50 night el riders would have had to seek alternate rides home and about 7,000 riders of the Skokie Swift line would have been affected. Riders of the Evanston Express were not as fortunate. Three new stops, at Belmont, Fullerton, and Chicago Avenues, were added to the Express .-W.,-... x -wwmwsrm,.,W.waiaQ,q - .Ii FEj:f.:2ff'K'- -' vs .- 3 1 5. .f..t:.,:.:'. 1 D Wx line. These downtown stops meant more passengers and fewer seats for Evanston-bound riders. Along with the new stops, the CTA plan also penalized passengers who do not pay the Express surcharge at the ticket window by adding 20 cents to pay the conductor. .1 it 'H-l nlxxt it Sears Tower for sale The world's tallest building went on the block. However, there were no tak- ers for the Sear's Tower--not even multi- billionaire Donald Trump. Sears, Roebuck and Co. announced it would sell the 110-story skyscraper to the highest bidder as part of a corporate restructuring designed to increase sag- ging profits. Meanwhile, the headquarters of the nation's largest retailer remains unsold. Maybe, the tower will appear in next year's Wish Book catalog. Evanston samples new restaurants The Evanston restaurant business has taken on a roller coaster image, with closings and openings occurring over a short period of time. During the early months of Fall Quarter, four restaurants closed their doors--Steven B's, Haagen-Dazs, Leslee's and the Bodega Bay Cafe. In response to the seemingly large demand for Evanston restaurants, four opened up over the next few months to take their place. Andrew Antonczyk, president of NU Eats Corp., experimented with a more casual atmosphere and affordable American cuisine in his new restaurant, the Open End Inn. An informal atmosphere was also the goal for Fondas Konsolakis, who opened an international coffee house, Cafe Pappagallo. The Evanston Galleria in the old Marshall Field's building also saw the opening of two new restaurants: Le Peep, a breakfast and brunch place, and The Varsity, a 1950's style diner. 'i ' I -W-3gQfsftgr,Qg5,:sfz'1v+'ig3,,l . .A , 307 Yesterday's gets to stay While Fall Quarter saw the closing of several Evanston restaurants, Yesterday's fought in court to keep its doors open. The City of Evanston filed a lawsuit against the building's owners, Thomas and Nannette Barber. In the end, the court ruled in favor of the Barbers, allowing the building to remain stand- ing and to continue to serve as a popu- lar NU student hangout. The court case erupted when Evanston claimed that the neighorhood was zoned for residential use in 1960 and the owners were given 25 years to halt commrcial use. The Barbers argued that a 1975 amendment to the ordinance extended commercial use until the year 2000. In 1986, City Council failed to pass a recommendation by the City's Zoning Board of Appeals to overturn the 1960 decision. Evanston bans skateboarding In October, Evanston City Council banned skateboards, bicycles and other self-propelled wheeled devices from Fountain Square. The Square, located in downtown Evanston, was built as a memorial to U.S. veterans. Skateboarders say the abundant steps, ramps and benches provide a perfect skating park. The city, however, disagreed and voted to keep Fountain Square a memorial, not a play- ground. J gb 'T . I flyj, .A k Kai. I Cflll :f!TX F , X X , ,1, g ff if 398 ELECTID '88 Poor George! I-le can't help it, he was born with a silver foot in his mouth. -- Ann Richards, Texas state treasurer, in her keynote address to the Democratic National Convention held in Atlanta. Where was George? --Sen. Edward Kennedy, in his speech to the Democratic National Convention. I don't know what his problem is with the Pledge of Allegiance, I can't help but feel his fervent opposition to the Pledge is symbolic of an entire attitude best summed up in four little letters: ACLU. --Bush on Dukakis's veto of the Massachusetts bill requiring the Pledge be recited in schools. I don't think America can risk youth- ful indiscretion in someone who could become our president at any moment. - -Lloyd Bentson on Dan Quayle's nomi- nation. I can stand the heat and I'lI stay in the kitchen. --Dan Quayle on comments that he should resign from the Republican ticket. Forty-seven years ago this very day, we were hit and hit hard at Pearl Harbor. And we were not ready. In a Bush administration that lesson will not be forgotten. ---Bush confusing Sept. 7 with Dec. 7 in a speech to the American Legion. Bobby Knight told me 'There's noth- ing that a good defense cannot beat a better offense' in other words, a good offense wins. --Quayle confusing listen- ers in an off the cuff statement. xg He tries to read Plato's Republic every year. --Marilyn Quayle on her husband's intellectual abilities. A thousand points of light... --Bush in his first debate with Dukakis. I'm also very tough on violent crime. --Dukakis's debate response which evoked laughter from the audi- ence. Hello everybody, I'm Dan Quayle. -- Robert Redford as he introduced Dukakis at a rally. I knew lack Kennedy. I served in the Senate with lack Kennedy. lack I Kennedy was my friend. And you sir are no jack Kennedy. --Bentson to Quayle during their debate. Read my lips. No new taxes. --Bush. I must confess, it's nice to be home. - -Dukakis on his post-election return to his hometown. The Secret Service is under orders that if Bush is shot, to shoot Quayle. -- Sen. john Kerry, who later apologized for repeating the current Washington joke. There are only II84 days to the Iowa caucuses. --Ronald Reagan greeting Bush after the election. I have seen more Bush-Quayle bumper stickers since the election than during the campaign. --Mark Goodin, Bush campaign press secretary. ' 'maf- , ..y4x.,' Q , -,. -,,,, gs. A - ,, my ,Ni 'V-va 'Q QA- . N v L' 1 1 w haw X X .ff N Ytfgg + , V W' X35-fx qw-5 'sb Q, ' T A V: -261, 1. ne w ma 0 r SIQ Rf? 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Morton Downey, lr. screamed exple- tives at a panel of skinheads and slapped a gay rights activist on a show about the Roman Catholic Church. Geraldo Rivera suffered a broken nose when a fight broke out on the air between a White Aryan Resistance Youth member and a black activist. While the ratings for tabloid TV soared, advertisers balked at having their prod- ucts associated with the emotional top- ics. . A 'BX Z Michael has No. 1 album, single 1988 was the year for George Michael. l-le was selected as Billboard's top pop artist. His album Faith was top album and the single Faith was top single for the year. Guns 'n' Roses burst onto the scene in 1988. They were Welcomed to the jungle of rock 'n' roll as best new artist for 1988. Albert Goldman offended lohn Lennon fans with his provocative book, The Lives of lohn Lennon. He portrayed the former Beatle as reclusive, anorexic and homosexual. Fans and Goldman critics protested the book as loosely based on fact and exaggerated. Lennon's wife, Yoko Gno, helped to salvage Lennon's image by allowing a film, Imagine, to be made based on his personal films. Gretchen Elizabeth Carlson was named Miss America 1989. The 22- year-old Miss Minnesota became the first classical violinist to win the crown. SI celebrates 25 years of swimsuits The Wall Street lournal celebrated 100 years as the leading authority in the economic and business world. People magazine passed its 15th year with enough picks, pans and personalities to fill a double issue. The ever popular pin-up edition, the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue, marked its 25th year. 'lf i, X213 9 - , 1 'I fbh .l A f 311 Givens, Tyson's marital problems It was one of the big marriages of the year--and one of the most publicized separations and divorces of the year. Heavyweight champ Mike Tyson mar- ried Head ofthe Class star Robin Givens. But the stormy marriage of the 22-year-old rich boxer and the 23-year- old beautiful actress lasted less than a year. Givens filed for divorce, after claiming her marriage was a nightmare. After being accused of marrying Iron Mike for his money, Givens refused to take a dime of his money. 'Temptation' protested, hailed The wrath of thousands of religious men and women nationwide was con- jured up last summer with the release of Martin Scorsese's film, The Last Temptation of Christ. The film depicted Christ as a confused man struggling with his destiny as a world savior and his desire as a human being. Denouncers protested outside theaters and churches claiming demoralization of the Christ figure, while supporters stressed an enlightenment into the human side of the divine. 5-if 'F 'Satanic Verses' sparks controversy Salman Rushdie received more than rave reviews on his book, The Satanic Verses. The book featured a fictional Mohammed-like protagonist and an international gang of terrorists. After refusing to accept the author's formal apology, the Iranian Ayatollah put out a contract on Rushdie's life, accusing him of blasphemy against the Islamic reli- gion and culture. are ii' 'l l 312 Yellowstone survives damaging fires In the midst of one of the hottest and driest summers, as many as ten separate fires destroyed 582,401 acres of Yellowstone National Park's 2.2 million acres. Fires also raged over four adja- cent national forests and Grand Teton National Park. Lightning ignited drought-ridden land. Flames threatened some of the Park's most beautiful and popular sites, includ- ing Old Faithful. The National Park Service's policy of allowing spontaneous fires to burn unimpeded unless they seriously threat- ened lives or property sparked a major controversy between park offi- cials and fire fighters. Officials claimed that the fire fighters should only contain the blazes, not extinguish them. Critics argued that the policy directly caused great destrucion of Yellowstone's beauty, which could have been prevented had fire fighters been allowed to keep the natural fires under control when they first began. Cold spell sweeps across the nation Despite the summer's unbearable heat, winter temperatures plummeted across the country in February. In some parts of Alaska, temperatures dropped to 80 degrees below zero. The same cold system pulled temperatures in Helena, Mont., from 44 degrees at 6 a.m. to 6 below zero at 8 a.m. Trapped by a dome of extremely high atmo- spheric pressure, the cold air from Siberia eventually escaped Alaska, only to sweep across 48 other states. While Alaska fought snow banks mea- suring up to four feet, snow showers hit cities across the southern United States from Los Angeles to Qrlando. ., , 'l F51 l 249' 2 F ff W' AIDS quilt remembers victims Kraft agrees to takeover bid Thousands of people who died of AIDS were memorialized in ceremonies, which centered on a huge quilt made by friends and family members of the The largest merger ever of two U.S. non-oil companies came about in November when Kraft Inc. agreed to a 5519.1 billion buyout by Philip Morris victims. Each panel measured three feet Co. Inc. Philip Morris agreed to pay S106 in cash for each outstanding share of Kraft. According to Philip Morris officials, the by six feet. All 50 states and a dozen foreign nations were represented. The 375,000 square-foot quilt was assem- bled in Washington, D.C. amid tears, two food giants merged to create a U.S.- grief and many memories of the AIDS based food company that would be able victims. to more effectively compete in world food markets. fi W .J -Jzpmf-,V F' fix ,gag - V A :M u?:.a,4:-:ti 4 -gi Ag-1, kgj t,1,F11? 3- Sv Qi.-f -N ja-Wai, ':,5:s?f,7g 3g1,,f?WA'x,w--jf? hdffil . I--ua3'f:'4g'2'Q ji+f'?'f+1'fii 1l:f-iT:'Ff'igir :ifigiff A-Mir. ,,54.-7' tiff f'itf+'f- X FT , A Sift , , J' ' Q A vi., I' 1: -, Q. An: N.. f1,Lv5 ' -- ' may ' -1 4 ,., KN 554: 'Wg-'I -gash-ft, fi N . ' T lj, i .- 4ff5i I lg! 1 .f'fixa,j?Qr,:1kQ7i,-5,3 .w.,: As, .sfiwwgp ,.,4l,,If'-in lkipgffg rff' s-.218 V, - 2 T3 ,- f. 'Ii gf. . :hJy:,.u1f'?cf,. 1 ,c y r 1 mt' vi-1 1:14 'K -- , 11!i w ygizfy,-'13 ..s. ?t 4? H r:'?3j3z,, -P? - -cfft .Q '?Z! .. ff' -swag vpfapf asf' 3 01 59' 'Q I 5.1 g ' su -Rv, A fx Agvfvf- . ? A U. - , W X 'H 'Q ' I s g Y-Y - f. '.y- -kv 4,4-. 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The United States signed an agreement with Soviet negotiators call- ing forthe Soviet Union to buy at least 9 million metric tons of grain each year. This gave the Soviets a 27-month extension on the previous five-year grain export pact that expired in September. The pact was an attempt to stabilize grain trade between the two nations while providing Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev with an additional stepping stone in his plan to modernize Soviet agriculture. Under the plan, the Soviets agreed to buy at least 4 million metric tons each of wheat and corn as well as 1 million metric tons of any combination of wheat, corn, soybeans and soybean meal annually. Drought parches farmland Along with record breaking tempera- tures and scorching winds, this past summer saw the most widespread and devasting drought North America expe- rienced in 50 years. The drought stretched from California to Georgia, from Canada to Texas, with- ering crops and parching land, lakes, livestock and people. Federal emergen- cies were declared in 30 states as grain farmers lost up to three-founhs of their crops. The drought came as a further blow to farmers, who were just recovering from a decade of low crop prices and high interest rates. Many farmers were driven out of the agriculture business and into cities to find other work. North Dakota alone reported a loss of nearly 52.7 billion crops, lower federal farm subsidies and reduced farm spend- ing. Dodgers win World Series The Los Angeles Dodgers captured their sixth World Series title with a 5-2 victory over the Oakland Athletics in the fifth game of the October series. 49ers win Super Bowl The San Francisco 49ers edged past the Cincinnati Bengals in the last minute of Super Bowl XXIII for a final score, 20-16. The winning touchdown came with a 92-yard drive, mastermind- ed by Quarterback joe Montana. It was the fifth straight win for an NFC team and the third Super Bowl win in 10 sea- sons for 49ers Coach Bill Walsh. Court rules on one abortion issue In October 1988, the U.S. Supreme Court refused to give husbands the legal right to prevent their wives from termi- nating a pregnancy. At a time when controversy over the abortion issue raged nationwide, the Supreme Court upheld rulings it made in 1973 and 1976. Three years after the legalization of abortion in the landmark Roe v. Wade case in 1973, the Supreme Court overruled a Missouri law requir- ing spousal consent before a woman could obtain an abortion. The decision to uphold this view came after Erin Andrew Conn of Elkhart, Ind., tried to prevent his estranged wife, jennifer, from having an abortion. The Court, however, made no attempts to reopen the abortion issue. TERNATIO EWS Hurricane Gilbert rips through Gulf Hurricane Gilbert, the most powerful storm to hit the Western Hemisphere in this century, raged through the Caribbean Islands and the southern United States in September. Gilbert purged across jamaica, leaving 500,000 homeless and virtually destroy- ing the island's economy. It demolished many of the coastal tourist resorts on Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula, including Cancun. By thetime the storm reached the southern borders of the United States, much of its force had been muted. Texas, Louisiana and Mississippi still suffered severe flooding and high tides as 100,000 people were forced to flee their homes. Quakes shake Soviet Union Nature humbled the world on Dec. 7, 1988, with the devastating Armenian earthquake. Measuring 6.9 on the Richter scale, the quake destroyed buildings and homes and killed 25,000 people. Medicines and supplies were flown to the Soviet Union from nations around the world--expressions of concern that reached beyond political boundaries. Less than two months later on jan. 23, a second earthquake in Soviet Central Asia hurled a 50-foot-high wall of dirt and mud, burying a mountain village and killing 1,000 people. QW g y gggy yi lf JA ' zgklilw rrr mir xrf J, X 3 ., 9 ' , , Li ' I ' -. 'L 1 wi. ' .V ,Egfr ' . .-xv - - P. '.:-'.' 1-1 . fig . if s 8 . if as K U 'X lim: 1 japan mourns Emporer's death The 62-year Showa reign in japan ended with the death of Emporer Hirohito on january 7. The funeral for the great emporer, who died of cancer at age 87, was held February 24. World leaders and nobility representing 163 countries attended the funeral. Hirohito was considered to be one of japan's greatest rulers. He carried his nation through the rise of japanese mili- tarism, the crushing defeat and atomic bombings of World War ll and a remarkable post-war transformation of japan into one of the world's leading economic powers. His sucessor, Emporer Akihito, will usher in the imperial era of Heisei. N Pan Am flight ends in tragedy Tragedy struck on Dec. 21, 1988, when a terrorist bomb exploded on board a 747 jetliner, Pan Am Flight 103. The act of terrorism killed all 258 peo- ple on board. The plane, en route to New York, crashed in the town of Lockerbie, Scotland. Thirty-five of the passengers were Syracuse University students who were returning home from a semester abroad. The bomb, made of plastic explosives, was planted in a hand-held tape recorder. While families and friends around the world mourned the loss of loved ones, the American public came to question the safety of international air travel and the seriousness of terrorist threats. Z-' ., ... A p i,e,w.i,te,-sg, A -v ,-at Q. . ,, ,.. ,,,Q 5 . , 5.-Sauk ff .. .... A-A . 'jim bs.-,35,::s,.21'.:.g1.wW,.-,, F' , ? - sf fax is-rs. -. i ff: 5 1 , r i Sf : .- A! . Q s 1. ,'rI,2'il. Wc,w,.,-,. . -gi 1 YQ all ,NN 3 LA. . 15 Vw Ss XJ? 'em at 9, is Jaap Q S xx 11-Iff41i79 Tl f , -- -115 -. M I ll-f. f ffif tJ'i-3525 . NJ.-4' t om ' es ... , - .. ,. . ,N .- ,,, . t..,-.'5',1f -Q..-no at . w 'fv- .v.:.,-:, -.e-, .x,. W . -1 ., gs Y 'f tgli ' .. .Zgi:1:.m. 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Vg. ., 5 2- ' -' - - ' ' ' .-.,,,.,, ,if .. we-ii --1 -1- 'f'-,sis-ef:-we . ,.f,,v,N,,1..,.k,.,,. my .- as-G+., 0-. Q----.-W--tsx.1,mmW:q,v.. H-iw'-I -W fs-,-:ze-f i.'5?if'-5 ifIT'i5'?fi5': vi x -m.-w---s-sf-s-'fr1- . -ei-sang.-.zrm..Jxt,,L43....ms.....,...2..1..g. 1,4-. . ....:.::V L:,- z-Left' x:,.x.f ' - 5- X ' W . ,..,....a..f.-1 317 Trapped whales freed Three whales became the object of international interest when both the United States and the Soviet Union banded together to save the animals' lives. The whales became trapped in ice by freezing temperatures and shifting ice packs off the Arctic Ocean in Barrow, Alaska, in late November. For nearly three weeks, they breathed through air holes created by Eskimos while scien- tists wondered how long the whales could survive. The whales remained three miles form the nearest lead to open water until both nature and human intervention provided help for at least two of the whales. Favorable eastern winds pushed ice away from the coast, open- ing spots along the path toward the ice- free waters of the Chukchi Sea. The rescue was further facilitated by Soviet and United States efforts to make channels through the frozen areas. Olympics bring world together The 1988 Summer Olympics opened in Seoul, South Korea, with a colorful, three-hour spectacle mixing ancient Korean rituals with space-age technolo- gy. The dramatic and dazzling ceremo- ny launched 16 days of athletic competition. The dazzle of an Olympic victory quickly vanished for Canandian runner Ben johnson. johnson won the gold medal for the 100-meter race, but was later disqualified after traces of an anabolic steroid were found in his sys- lem. The United States celebrated its gold and silver victories. Diver Greg Louganis won two gold medals. Track and field star Carl Lewis won two gold medals iincluding one after johnson was disqualifiedi and one silver. 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Williams Wendy Willis Tansy Wills Brian Wilson ' Anaheim, CA Ashland, OH Chicago, IL Crescent Springs, KY Rochester, MN Sociology HDSP Industrial Engineering Art History Electrical Engineering 1 l l 'l li W l wr-M7 1 l Wendy Wilson Susan Winchester Edward Winstead Gregory Wirth Lauren Wittenberg Diyernon, IL New York, NY Baltimore, MD Midland, Ml Sudbury, MA English Economicsflirench Political Science Physics!Astronomy!Math Economics Nada Wolff Douglas Wolter Patti Wolter Maplewood, Nl Steubenville, OH Englewood, CO EnglishfAnthropology Econ!Political Science journalism X, l il ll fair' 1 hwy 'l l Andrew Wombwell Tim Wong Cheryl Wood Louisville, KY Salt Lake City, UT St. Louis, MO RXTVXF Chemical Engineering Electrical Engineering lt ii rl i l lil ll .I fan-f H. iii - ' fig, ., 'ri' 'U f ww ,T I ,il N KX 38 Bradley Woods Carter Woodworth Daphne Woolfolk Maurice Wright Michael Wu loe Yoo Tulsa, OK Boston, MA Rochester, MN Flossmoor, IL Wheaton, MD Demarest, NI Computer Science History I-IDSP Flute Performance Music Biochemistrv fs' C , ' ffvm-Ii 'T 1F3- i' g, -, Ellen Yoon Andrew Youel Ricky Young I Patrick Yu Warren Yu David Yuen Des Plaines, IL Richfield, MN Englewood, CO Greenhills, Philippines Potomac, MD Palo Alto, CA Biomedical Engineering Slavic Studies journalism Electrical Engineering Biomedical Engineering Comm StudiesfPoIi Sci Dianne Zambrella Dina Zand Flavia Zappa Chicago, IL Ann Arbor, MI University Heights, Ol-I l-IDSF' l-IPMEXBMBCM Music 'SS '7' Erik Zehender Alicia Zepeda lane Zerbi Lake Leelanau, MI I-Iouston, TX Warren, Ol-I CAS HDSP I-Iistorv!Political Science N. K wil 382 Laurie Zerwer Craig Ziegler Robert Zielinski Effie Zounis Garren Zuck Chicago, IL Chicago, IL Louisville, KY Chicago, IL Prospect Heights, IL RXTWF Political Science IEXMS Communication Studies Economicsffvlathematics lames Zucker Nancy Zuffoletti Anthony Zummer Dawn Zurell lames Zwick Chesterlancl, OI-I Schenectady, NY Ixenilvvorth, IL Medina, OI-I Lemont, IL Electrical Engineering Theatre Economics Vocal Performance Mechanical Engineering J: ga U .JA . , W I I -,ar . 4. ,, ::1f 'f:IZ--fri? I , ,f I , , 'Q A' . , ,mm ff .r VIL wg5,,4,,', - Ia ','i I I I, I E f 7' f 44' 1411 X Zffyfgi, , f eg ,I ,,f .I f lf f , it . ,, , - V 54 ,f.ffg,z1,, 45, . I , ' si ' I 'fiif lv I ,g f Q r'-' 2 ' me - 1 ,53 1 'J neg, ,-,M ,f j ' 4 , 1 1, ,.g,,, ,Z ll, ' ef - . 9' , n : 2 -, .fig-,m,,,.,'jz,,, 1 3' ' I P354-A Y 1 ' X . -jfs--' Q' 3 : C,my ' 1 . 'M' ' I 'Wa' ., -g r. ff 'fulf- r-Lw' 2 ' , '- ng - ! -M, . ,, 1, - -:Q I gan?-I 0 ' ' f 4 y . ' , '- . 5 AW? W as , . we . , We . , i. ' ' , .gf-:. If ' ' ' ff -1,11 , , V 4- -rr V. W 5 ,- V .,. Q S , V Y .. 'V 1 dill: ,N 15631 EMM . It PM smat- ,K ,- LM, . -v ,www C.-1. an I V :isa 'Q-r'X'1Wft x ,.,W,v5, If, f nw 383 . -igfaz, I ,.,,- , .yffeiif fm , eff' ,W , - 551, - .. . ' , ggi 4 IVERSITY CO1 LEGE lanet Burnstine Glenview, IL F14 9' es i t x 3 A 1 'gil fi I ' XE 'firw ' , ' ' , ' A A mi X N- af, in AN-'xx r T K ' -er , 0 f '- X-S-' 1 is if , iii: L- Ll Laurie Allen lohn Andersen Laura Anderson Mary-Kay Bourbulas Chicago, IL Glenview, IL East Lansing, MI Oak Lawn, IL Organizational Behavior Organizational Behavior Art History Economics Carol Erickson Donald Fachet Audrey Freigang Debra Forman Prospect Heights, IL Hoffman Estates, IL Chicago, IL Evanston, IL Communication Studies Organizational Behavior Economics Psychology X X I 5 5 CQ A ' we ra 'C S N S . E? R K? ' ' L SY Organizational Behavior Constance Garner-Cohen Wilmette, IL Engl ish Lisa Horak Addison, IL Communication Studies em, A XX, C7 ,.,. Betty lane Koeller Chicago, IL RXTVXF Donna Clark Chicago, IL English I x X K f Q r : - .- ,'-- . xii. Nxi. . Ba., Helen Hammond Chicago, IL English Dan Kixmiller Tallahassee, FL Organizational Behavior Linda Kurth Chicago, IL Organizational Behavior 38 : LQ ' If 1 1 F' ,t .V., . ,, gi ii El fi i I ,'-iv, Diane Laux julian Lobigas Phyllis Long loy Muerch Michael Neustadt Katherine Olsen Wildwood, IL Chicago, IL Wilmette, IL Chicago, IL Chicago, IL Chicago, IL RXTVXF Mathematics Organizational Behavior Organizational Behavior Accounting RXTVXF Q 'I' Enide Paulette Francisca Pedros Lisa Petro Mary Frances Prince Mary Reynolds Suzanne Rose Chicago, IL Chicago, IL Lincolnwood, IL Holland, IL Chicago, IL Chicago, IL Economics Psychology Communication Studies RXTVXF Psychology Psychology Silvia Schmelzer Katherine Scoulas C. ludith Seime Barbara Shafer Cynthia Stegmann Christine Tadish Skokie, IL Glenview, IL Chicago, IL Chicago, IL Chicago, IL Evanston, IL Organizational Behavior Communication Studies Organizational Behavior Psychology Organizational Behavior Mass Communications .3 ' ww., Fredric Tatel Erma lean Thomas Maria Thomas Thomas Wilborn Kathleen Williamson Northbrook, IL Chicago, IL Northbrook, IL Chicago, IL Chicago, IL Fine Art Organizational Behavior Humanities Sociology Organizational Behavior -fvyfgt , ffwwwilfiw-v.,, :-, sayin-nw : ' jfgfgiz ' 4 ,x,Gv4u'5 4 5,1 V 4 2.3 . y 3, ,v 14,343 . I E1 ' 531 4 1 . 0 2 , K A . ' - .5 ' g i v-Lf 4 . 1 x .4-94 5 .,' , lm . if , . , yt. my , 7. ,A i, 2 ,.f. ,MM ww, ' 'M' :W PERSPECTHHKS 1989 1--'vrii-c In ,rw Q .,. f.,': gj:eiQ' M, Afwkggg 'Hotel 8 Car Reservations- 8 Ai' Tickets fi M M 2 i P 3 9 5 . ......- W.- ..- - f 5 if 5 2. 13' . 3 . l I . 'A A . -' . '- :'- 2 ,r ' 4- ' . - 4 . .. .I . 5,,,.,,w Q W.. ..i..,, '.-.,... 1 1. .ef57'Tf 'f L is 3 .. .gy ? W , my A V. 4. 'I 5, -.- v s'z'.Q' 'ang-l-if - . si W 3. X Q . 2.. Y-.M . .. . A 1 , . - +.-f...,- . .,z,Z,,,i 'fs 4 Mfg... .f , 'j9fm'wE,, - .421-'7m .y iff- . 'J Jf 7' N 5 ' if 'ff 75tf'7. '34'iQ?'i'f1t 1'A '.. .2'f' 'A' 'i'5J5 -'if'. W -. .f-L11 as if V I . v . Quiz.: ' , iq. , Mflgx, ,f.. .V.-.ff- 5 1 :31 ..:,-,,:,..4,' 'qu of ' f'f?l 1:' ffizdif .. :faw2g 92e '95, ' ?f'M5,w-rw ,. 4. ' f.',f5 f1': 1 ff sffrffrz:.W.L' ff V r sf. e-.. ,g?'f . I - ',,'f,y1!'- gif ': N15-fiv?-?CifZ.' ,ive ,Nasa QAQQF-ng,g,, ,. .. 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Paz ' 1 H fa.. 3 1, - , 2.31.3 4.,,,,.5, , ,mf 3 51, Ag.. ...ng 5? f ',,gf,.,ffm,,:,g J 1 few ? :V V. H ff QL 2 1 ' gg wi.. . 1 . ?4'inW'Lin I'1-fl' ' 510 .- - 'JV J -. ggi. rc-,1'.,y--w1,Jf.'qfff 11,737 c '- 'i...1f2f21A-'4?B'SZ2.y?fg , 2 r,.3-ai'-if .fffff...fff'A5? ,, at v-4 .1 'fr-V ., ,fr',ffa..-2'if'fA'z,:g ' jf f, 1'L,,,.1g,,gg::.1'rr.i1M 1 . f ,.,. ge . .,.. ..,y-rag.-'W fa, .- in ,.1-16.89. gg, , ,. .sf ,,- v,fv1, 'gwzi af -g,v!'f '. ,+.f2.' r - H' -:P-,1f 53!4-5' rw. Bgy mapagga it' ' H15 'rg-.,. .Vg .ggrxfr - 55,4 . 549' 2 .5 ' -w.,,,r ..- ' - P, z. 'fi' flrf mf: kg 40. 13 . ' ' nw- .w,,,..w- I as li, g.. Q A' 'Q 2 KQl's25f1fi1'frSif.9f1 V, ...jg if A .. ff .1 ,6fQ:: i s l ll i l I. l l 4 'i ir I E1 Everyone is leaving someone in the cheapest way they can on the Greyhound bus today. Phil, her seat mate, is a dropout from the University of Chicago's program in comparative literature and presently teaches karate to people he describes as afflicted with 20th-century anxiety. He tells her vaguely about a ballerina he kicked out of his apartment long ago and the parallels between their relationship and The Charterhouse of Parma. We were discussing it in class. Everyone knew l couldn't get my own story out of it. Standing naked in grad discussion group...you can't hide something like that. She talks about Danny, her ex- boyfriend. The beer he drinks, the music he listens to, how she could not spend another weekend in the same dorm as him. Phil tells her anyone who drinks Corona is hardly worth her time. She does not tell him Danny also saves the bottles. The Greyhound pulls out of the cement cave with bare light bulbs where it sometimes gets to spend the night. The bus smells like Danny: Doritos and Speed Stick and semen. She can taste whatever perfume or deodorizer is riding recirculated air. It must just pick up some food remnants or toothpaste or cocaine as it goes in and out of the noses of 63 other passengers. lt tastes sweetand artificial. It is the kind of air you can feel going down your lungs, chilled and heavy. She wants to open a window, but the long panels of glass on both sides of the bus are sealed shut. The steady hum of the air vents lulls her into a state where her thoughts seem distant and inaccessible. People are snoring and breathing heavily through the barriers of fall colds. Some of them mutter to themselves. She and Phil are the only people having a conversation. A skinhead on the couch-size seat guarding the bathroom bobs his head to imaginary music. She walks up the brown rubberized aisle toward him. He cannot be older than 13. He says, 0ccupied, chickie. She leans against a seat. Everything is done in 70s colors: brown and variations on the brown theme. The seats are upholstered in brown plaid on the front and brown vinyl on the sides. Beige-brown arm rests and a tan foot rest wait to be flipped up or uncomfortably used. Gold flecked linoleum spreads across the floor. Even the two lights above each pair of seats have a yellow-brown cast. She knocks on the bathroom door. A minute, says a weak voice from inside. She goes in and shuts the door, then wills herself not to breathe when she recognizes the sickly smell of vomit. Don't use the bathroom, she tells Phil upon returning to her seat. He is lost in reverie, stares at nothing in particular out the window. Don't cry over people who drink designer beer, he replies. Anonymous CAS 1991 After an empty, forced travel through a desert of dry and cold weather, the bright and sunny day of Nov. 14 became an oasis. NU is typically known to have an apathetic student campus. The 1968 take-over of the bursar's office is as foreign as terrorist attack in Lebanon. But when l arrived at Scott Hall that morning, 30 students were already marching in a circle. Ten minutes later, the number was 60, then 80. For the next two hours that we were gathered in front of Scott Hall, a grand total of 250 to 300 students participated in the protest, with a general constant of 150. Sitting on the edge of the circle linked to other protestors by my arms, I watched and observed and was moved. l closed my eyes and listened to chanting voices. Their words were aggressive, but there was compassion in their voices. My eyes were closed, but my heart was open to their warmth of concern for human rights--and the warmth of their presense. An ecstatic feeling of love and accomplishment swept through me--that one-ness. The protest had not ended, but already an internal conflict had been won. We had all united for a single cause...Northwestern students had united...apathetic Northwestern students had united for something they believed in. For so long, students have ignored. the removal of individual rights in our country and in others. They have ignored the dangers of nuclear weapons and nuclear waste, and they have ignored the destruction of the Amazon rain forests and the predicted end of the world to follow. But after this desert of dry and cold weather, the bright and sunny day of Nov. 14 was an oasis. Barry joseph CAS 1991 QS: r 3311. S4 ., .Q rsQ.j 5:ff Wt' -Q. QW Ht ' fi-32-92 li W ' 'Awe-ff,V' jf M J' if I 0' , Y' fi . x , fs jf' 1 4 1.9 L-A Question: Which was the best Brady Bunch episode? Was it the one in the Grand Canyon? The one with the volcano? Stupid patrol? The dentist? lvIarcia's nose? Which was the best Brady Bunch episode? None of them. They were all bad. I'm not trying trying to be mean. I really don't remember a thing about the show. I haven't watched it since I was twelve. I couldn't tell you which actor had which name nor where they are now, nor could I care less. And I really don't feel any need to remember the show. I wasted enough time in the seventies watching television. A whole decade of my life watching crap. I never missed an episode of HlQ,DOI1fTX and Marie Show. It's embarassing to admit but it's true. So, when I look back to my younger days, does a feeling of nostalgia come over me, a longing for simpler days of wholesome television fare and family viewing? Hell, no! I look back now and think of all the books I never read because I was sitting staring at the TV, and I think to myself, How could I have been so stupid? So I've spent the 1980s trying to forget the 1970s. Those of you who have seen that picture of my brother Chris and I in leisure suits know we have good reasons for doing so. But back to my story. When I got to college, I was so excited to be living in an intellectual environment. I eagerly awaited the free and open exchange of ideas that the university extolls for at least pays lip service tol, not just in the classroom, but in the dorm as well. Here was the chance to meet people from different parts of the country, with different academic, cultural, political, and religious backgrounds, and to talk to them. I don't need to dwell on my disappointment upon discovering that late night bull sessions and the free and open exchange of ideas consisted of comparing favorite episodes of 1970s sitcoms. Such discussions, however, are not without their value. They serve to remind educators and social critics alike that today's students share a common cultural literacy, one that centers around the highest rated TV shows of the I97Os. In this light, the intellectual crisis that Allan Bloom describes in The Closing of the American Mind is not so much a failure of the university system to teach the classics, but a failure to understand the need for academic guidance in the study of such modern day intellectual achievements as What's Happening and Get Smart! I'm not bitter. But I estimate that about 4O0!0 of a college education takes place outside the classroom, and a significant portion of that in one's residence hall. And with the amount of time I've lived in dorms, I have this nightmare. It's graduation, and Dean Zarefsky hands me my diploma which reads: Timothy john Ereneta, Bachelor of Science in The Brady Bunch. And even worse, I graduate with highest distinction in my class. So if you're sitting around my suite or the dinner table discussing IvIarcia's crush on her dentist or giving Tiger a bath, please don't be offended if I don't join in. You'll know that it's not because I don't care, it's just because I don't remember. Apart from and The Carol Burnett Show, all I retained from the 1970s was on public television. But everytime I try to reminisce over my favorite episodes of Miva or Qiglg Cavett, people usually decide it's time for them to go study. Oh well. I've learned to make adjustments. Remember this? Bradford for prom queen! Bradford for prom queen! or the one where Nicholas runs away to meet Santa Claus, and Susan meets Merle for the first time...that was my favorite .... Tim Ereneta Speech 1989 IvIummy's Dress For whose peals of mirth did I yearn to hear? Whose tender skin did I wish to brush? At whose very name was I seen to blush? Whose eye did I catch when joshing through the halls? For whose respect did I yearn when blowing cat calls? The news was posted in the hall, the upcoming Christmas Ball. Ciirls gathered gossip like bees with nectar. The men moved with caution, an audience in an auction. The school seemed to teem with guiles, locked in a ritual of promise and denials. As the gruesome date approached, to myself I weakly lied: Despite the public's claim that we are clearly matched, 'tis far more impressive to appear unattached. And so it was that I came alone, unbearably independent, miserable to the bone. The cafeteria was a scene of hysteria, like a hideous cathedral that smouldered from within, stainglass spotlights whirled in the din. The synthesized throbbing dragged at the walls. The void in the floor opened and closed with each new track the DJ. chose. Guests danced and collapsed, reeling senseless as time elapsed. Ladies waiting in shrouds of tulle, bodies skirting the room, each preparing to execute a self- fulfilling prophecy of doom. The slow dance had stung the room. The floor was strewn with taffeta and tince, couples, like floating lillies, bathed in the mirrored glints. Then came a vision that pierced the bogus lights. I was disarmed by her touching china frame, lost in shot silk, fig green, I was captivated by a dream within a dream. Yet, sadly, her movements revealed a fleeting awkwardness, knowing her frock barely touched the flesh, stiff like a knight in battle dress. Would that I could I prayed for early womanhoodp wishing her glands could disobey Time's steady hand. Perhaps a slightly larger cup, if only to make the straps stay up. Hazed in disappointment, I bothered not to see, the tiny hands clenched, nor eyes fixed on me. Choosing, at her expense, to make light of a pride so intense. Supressing each nurtured intimacy, never persevering on her behalf, merely shrinking away, paying out line, sharing a laugh. Time cellophanes splintered recollection, dilutes remembrance in sleep, gathers each mildewed vision, fusing in the rotting compost heap. Now she conquers all wearing lemon juice locks, with a giving smile that tingles down to the socks. C-rown fine and full, her's is the vintage kept in glass, no longer a mere sapling of a lass. My sickened heart still aches at the hindsight of youths blind mistakes! For even now I rue the thoughtful glee we share with such familiarityg such is the haunting certainty mummy's dress was worn for me. lason Berry CAS l992 'X A.. nm x A ' 3 X ?'v S?-M -,,,W :X 4mxmm54w.gzev.f nz- iff-:azz-,fmmwvfw quil- I' I' R125 - L, Y-X. The game was over. The Wildcats trounced the Purdue Boilermakers, 28- 7, in the final home game of the T988 football season. There was only the post-game concert left. Four drum clicks. Forward march, down the thirty-five yard line, twelve steps over the hash. Freeze .... Band, instruments up! AND UPll ... Alma Mater Praise be thine May thy name forever shine Hail to purple Hail to white Hail to thee, North-wes-stern AND DUVVNIV' Singing the alma mater on the turf at Dyche Stadium for the last time as a member of the Wildcat Marching Band caused tears to well up in my eyes. But I didn't worry about being visibly sentimental--the few people left in the emptying stands would be unable to distinguish the tears from the rain dripping down my face. As I sang, I thought about the exercise I got at band camp, the patience I developed during band rehearsals, the sportsmanship I learned at football games, and the friendships I made through them all. Then I stood up a little straighter, pulled my shoulders back a little farther, and stuck my chin a little higher inthe air, feeling pride and guts and sadly realized that only forty-five of us--the seniors on that field with hats turned backwards for the Wildcat victory and long, purple warmers zipped tightly for the Illinois weather--would graduate with the privilege of knowing Northwestern University in this special, but largely unexplainable way. Gail Wheaton CAS 1989 5 ' Q Q, ,,,, V, ,.,, ,.,, , ., Q '53 Z?-gY'?'Q'32:'3fvy5S? S 1 ,- gf if -' 5 'f,V V1 72.x:gx, Q fa ., 91. Q . ..,:3,V,,- Hy. 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'-P 7 , 'V S H - :f:: 5-2.5 .H , V V .,..4 ,, V 4 2- ' ,. fa,-.,,4pb:.av i: - fi fx'-V .,,.-5 1,1 .:..0-,-,.- V . -3 g,AVg.w 1 1 ' ff 'L - Vgg, Q .- 'fy Q.,-ish . -V24 -E'g.'gVlW 2 , -E . 1 . 5 Q ,,.',, , , ,.-,, f,,., I .4 I - V, A 3-2: 5 ' . V . . :-Vg - . ,2V,l-.gt-f, V- If , ,I H 3 ,ig I A .E , ,,. . , V , ..V., , , ,V J . V'V- J --V- s ? ' V 2 11'-E2 ..:-23' ' 'SQL'-1 4, 5 H. 5 -,Q - ni . T, lx will ,H Q V41 ' ...Y VE . - , 3. 1 ' 'Y Z 5 VX 4' , 3 a fi , . .iss .3 1 5 . +S' Q X , ,Q ' 9 ' V fu... fr Z?-a 'Q 1 ,x l X 2152 0 ' R . A Q 3 2' V 1 - 5 V 3 1 9. V A I . 1 v . '. .5 1 Q 2 F . K . 1 , , K . , V 4 . ' .h.A.v' ET CET ERA LIU EDIT BOARD l Life at the bottom of the totem poIe...The human tripod...If it's too big, vve'll crop it off... You can't pull out at the last minute. ...Agitate meI...Der Swedish yearbook...Bork!Bork!Borkl.... For sale: pictures of Shepard...The Peanuts dance...VVe did itat registrationmon fiIm...in colormgraphically...vvith 1370 seniors...on deadline...at distributionmlvlake love to the camera...coulcl you please back date this?...sure, order a diet Coke at the Club...Meechai, how do you make meatbalIs?...I hate Greeks, dorms and organizations...Alex's bed in SPC...don't touch me I haven't shovvered...Working til the wee small hours ofthe I morning...Hey guys, thanks for the memories. LYNN A. ADDINOTON EDITOR IN CHIEF I QS' I to . it 'tt iw v Q I I I I 3 as-,I I r I ,lt li l- I I L, I l DEBI LEWIS MANAGING EDITOR I l I I I HEATHER A. DAVIS , LAYOUT EDITOR I TONI MEDER PROMOTIONS EDITOR :J ' xbi' ALEX GARCIA PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR I Cvmaw 4242 40 DONNA BERKELI-IAMMER COPY EDITOR ' 5 ,MI 9' gi-5 Avf Ri BILL PFEIEEER GRAPHICS EDITOR 1 Academics Lori Rotskoff Entertainment Randi Alexander Fraternities Roya Rezaee Sororities Kathleen Glynn Living Units Pat Letsos News Amy Clouse Mary Lou Song Organizations Gail Griffin Pe rsgectives Saima Siddiqui Seniors john Logan Sports Eugene Garcia Layout Staff Karen Levin Monica Powers Ronnie Silverman Meechai Tessalee PHGTQGRAPHERS 403 Pump up the contrast, pump up the calls--if l'm up, you're up...Nicole-- contrast, dance, dance!...Oh photo-guy, Aren't you guys embarassed? Go U take our picture!...No, I'm not NU...Can I have some prints? Take a Empire...and I'm not Omega number...Y'know, your prints look either...Squeeze our bulb...The Dawn of better and better as the deadline Man--he learns to stand, to run, to love nears...The short but sweet Shoot on the lakefill...The Speedatron Lighting Yourself Show...lason, yes, I shot some- Units are possessed...Syllabus? geeks...Kristie earns two free Logistically? No way in hell...Kathy meals...Let's make Boo-Boo brings her pillow to deadline No. proud...Chris, I need a fix...Eugene-- 2...Greg--a legend in his own silent, but deadly with the infamous mind...Reprints, reprints, reprints, etc., 300mm lens...I swear those aren't Phi etc., etc...Alex's reasoning for wake-up Kaps...Game over, man...Nikon rules. '41 l I' Still photography is almost passe...and cameras have gotten so good even old ladies in tennis shoes can shoot. Medill Dean Edward Bassett, as quoted by The Daily Northwestern, May 23, 1988. Assistant Photography Editors: Kathy lngraham--academics and organizations Eugene Garcia--sports Nicole Dokton--entertainment and shoot yourself Rachel Hamilton--seniors and dorms Greg Schaffer--greeks Photography Staff: jason Berry, Corinne Stagen, lun Ro, Kristie Burns, Marc Pastor, Saima Siddiqui. 3194 GALLERY EUGENE GARCIA 5t, 15, 22, 2313, 25, 32, 361, 4213, 5113, 52t, 5411, 54m, 54131, 55t, 55131, 5513r, 60tr, 60br, 621, 62r, 63t, 69t, 6913, 102t, 10513, 115131, 1201, 187, 189t13, 204t, 216, 218t1, 218tr, 21813, 219, 220t1, 220tr, 22013, 221tb, 22t13, 223t13, 224t, 224131, 22413r, 225tr, 226t13, 228t1, 228tr, 22813r, 229t13, 230t, 230131, 23013r, 23113, 232t13, 233t, 233131, 23313r, 234t13, 235t, 235131, 23513r, 236t1, 23613, 237t1, 237r, 238tr, 238t1, 23813, 239t, 239131, 239r, 240tr, 240t1, 24013, 241t, 24113, 243t1, 244t, 244191, 245tr, 245t1, 24513, 246t13, 247t, 247131, 247r, 248t, 248131, 24813r, 249t, 249t1, 249rn, 249br, 250t, 250131, 25013r, 2511, 251131, 25113r, 252tr, 253t1, 253tr, 253b, 254t, 25413, 255t, 2551, 255r, 25613, 257tr, 25713r, 258t, 258131, 2591t, 25913r, 261 r, 2611, 262t1, 266t, 267t, 26713r, 26913, 271131, 271 br, 2731, 273r, 274t, 27413, 300, 305, 311r, 318, 320, 359, 360, 386, 388, 391, 392, 404, 412. 1? .f A, f Y- . ' , X 5 . . if - ,Q 4 4 0 NW R xx, .AA V 5- X 4- v 'A . if A xl'-ix x-A W - lu 4 K ,N xx 1 ,, K... - 'las-iiwx., -As f-T' ,, ,-A . --.iq A V'-,A . 1 A A A A 'z'. '7 k ' ' 1 A V. 3 Z N' 1 H Q elf 5 'T'ji.,w.. --f' ' ia! MA A4-,A A A, X - 1 A, . 4. - A . 4. 1 ,..,A av-f WA 1-1 1 . - A A .A A W 4 1 ' Tf 1 ... k'Q Y NNE4af-GQ., ' W ' AA 1' ' N A- 'f A 1 1 'W1'- ' ' 7 '3 3- 7. -A, 1 ' 4-.,,A' A A 1 -iw., 4. A 'sm - M 3 1 A 'SQVA , ,A 1-4 ' A 1.,A.,,.,,.- 2 U .W . 'FRYE7 5. -'-+97 Niif- f .A 1 4. .l ,X... - 1 1-12 '3' f 'BN A 1- - ...wx 'Iv 1 ' ' - -1- X ,M-1. X ,.A A W A Ak-xuj' Ax., '-,.J 'w.. ,M W., -- , I-.gg -Qi 1 Q , 'lg .i ,st X ,X w -X... Y N, S A h - -i.,,TT:iit tix, V-Ni, NA., . A, 3.12 Q. A ..- . 1. V A S , ' x., V , I .N H- 1, :X-r .. , A -3,-1 1. A A H' F. 1, K W A A ww 4-51 -vfwf-0AA 1 - -1 f ,MAA MA - KAA Y 1, ,sf , MMA V A wk .., -,SQA M, AN -N,,:SN . I yy ,N A 74.3 '- 'kj-A'ew - 'wr' Qwwwviql-'qw' 3 af.. NM.. 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I -- ,K ,K wxw 4' N ' A 153' M - 1 'A - -A Aw AA: CNN-1, 'f1 ' 'WN . -' 1 A -V ALEX GARCIA 1, 411, 511, 6, 10, 1113, 1213, 131, 14, 17r, 181, 20, 21, 24, 26, 271, 30, 331, 3311, 361r, 3713, 381, 3811, 4013, 431, 4411, 451, 4513, 461, 4611, 48, 501, 50131, 5013r, 511, 52131, 5211r, 531r, 5311, 53r1, 561, 60131, 641, 6413, 6511, 651r, 6511, 741, 74r, 76a11, 77a11, 8411, 97, 121131, 12113r, 124113, 125, 135b,136,137,1391,13911, 141r1,154,1551,15511,1641, 16411, 174,175,17911, 1791r, 17911, 181, 183, 18611, 18611, 18711, 187111, 18813, 190, 19311, 19413, 19513, 1961, 196r, 1971, 1991, 19913, 20811, 21113, 21517, 22511, 22513, 2271r, 22713, 2421, 24213, 2431r, 24313, 2521, 252br, 25813r, 255131, 2601, 260111 26013r, 2621r, 2621, 26213, 2631, 263m, 26311, 26411, 264rn1, 264131, 264r, 2651, 265111, 26513r, 26613, 267131, 270, 2711, 276, 2871, 28713, 289, 290, 2921, 302, 3071, 308, 344, 355, 367, 376, 380, 381, 395, 396, 405. 2106 CHOOSE X 1111111111111 K... Q 4353 , if 2 Qi 8 . IKTRUIT YN!! T0 ' ous func pu-:us is N, IASON BERRY 7t, 7l3, 913, 36br, 39b, 41, 61t, 6113, 67t, 67br, 67bl, 7Otr, 7Ob, 73bI, 73br, 78tl, 78tr, 791, 79111, 79b, 841, 651, 6513, 661, 91, 93, 96, 96, 99, 101, 10511, 11215, 113b,114b, 126, 127,131,133,138,146,147,148 149,152,153,156,157,1,68,169 170, 171, 172,18O, 1621, 16211, 164, 165, 1921, 1931, 19715, 2011, 20113, 2021, 202111, 202131, 202111, 20213, 203, 2061, 20615, 207t, 2101, 2141, 2151, 260, 265, 288, 296, 298, 299, 340, 364, 396, 402, 406 1 an -5. K 1 6 5 i 19' 1 NICOLE DOKTON 3t, 16t, 1613, 1813, 2317, 5613, 58t, 58191, 58br, 59t, 5913, 661, 6613, 73t 81t,86b,115t,130,140,160,161 162t, 16213, 163, 176,177, 178, 1941, 195t, 200tr, 200b, 205, 209t 209b, 212t, 213t, 2136, 278, 279, 281t, 281 b, 294t, 295, 409. 407 1108 MARC PASTOR 41, 9t, 19, 28t, 29, 3113, 71t, 7113r, 71131, 88, 106, 109, 111t, 141t, 20413r, 20713r, 207131, 21213, 26813, 30713, 408. SAIMA s113D1QU1 391, 4313, 471, 47101, 90, 100, 103, 108t, 110, 1221, 12211, 20011, 213011 291, 293, 297, 351, 371, 408. KRISTIE BURNS 2,1313,171,311, 6313, 68, 92, 1141, 24413r, 2561, 2571, 303. KIRK LENTZ 8, 121, 75, 87, 323, 329, 334, 348 LINDA HWANG 111. GEOFF ELLIS 121t,150,1511,151b,167,186, 22711, 2311. KATHY INGRAHAM 371, 411, 421, 441, 80, 83151, 831Jr, 104,107,10813,111b, 11513r, 1281, 12813, 129, 132, 1341, 13413, 142, 143, 144, 145, 165, 1661, 16613, 173, 1881, 192r, 204131, 2081, 284, 2861, 29213, 29413, 347, 356, 368, 372 409 , 8 4109 IUN RO 401, 10511, 1131, 198, 207151. KRISTIN KILLEY ASSOCIATED PRESS 47101, 339, 375, 383, 384. 310, 311, 312, 313, 314, 315, 318, 317. ERIC CHU 313, 821, 951, 9513, 10213, 326, 333, BECKY WOLFE 352, 383, 379, 403. 21013, 21413. BRIAN BAHR CORINNE STAGEN 72, 8213, 8311, 8311, 135, 2691, 30613. 1121, 2111. FRANCOIS-DAVID NEHAMA 57. PROFESSOR COLE 94. THE DAILY NORTHWESTERN 3041, 30413, 3061. i , C51 F JL RESQQDLUU MQ QQ if-U K ' :av fi' 7, ' f A A , 2: Wiz? 6 2? 1 '91 f 7 .1 ' 'fn f! .,-,Nif A A A, ,,,,, V Mg.-::,-. ,My ,. QW Af .f x 4, i- 17354613 i, 1 . 1 I If N , f 3 5' 6' Hmmm wrangimg ieaafes sow afteriafsie ZW g3Ef533zCjg'q5':, fi fasts-'u,uy 19565 2 ig , H ,V 12, ,VN ,,' Nfl., ,1,1, xtL. .,. , v,,, 1-14.7 A., wry nf, E E k 1 exmadms qw y may e 1,251 Zmiwm waz! eff'fE,1?6f iw if f 1 M-L, Qsagwwanaf- ' 'keimaiw-K A M3 A Agency renews lvl-xwd,-imfiebvdfhwul' 1 1-.ny-, W ,, X , 31.51- .1 ' wir, wwf ' 2, f . 'I 9115021 ,. ,MSG in O Q-'E 0 si C 5 3 ...Z U' 3 S3 PQ' 5' '2- Q, Q :E Q Q S 3 've .www H ! nk Q C A1 N my Qs f ', .- , S mfz3faff1,,ff2f2w nf! Florida Ke 9 11 ff 5 .5 i fig- 23 h '.A,A. M ggzpmg.1,J:41:gL,A4.,:g,4p:zw..L',,f,-,.':1'i,,1:g44 ,.., : '.1,..1,, 1 ,x.Vf 3 ,, J ' , CminQCh1c'ag0 Buvzrzefw Q A it r r A r fiilifzorp lacea V Aa Qing! , Qnwmk rw-z':vl-fn? d lg 9,5 4 'll ' I V 3. W, 4 y ll. A ff - . 'Af A A , . Q ' 4, , V lpggk . A 17: , . ' if 4 f '?fff:fg,1?L,f' mmer women A43 Y Y l .7715 f - ' 6.3f,g , , Sz, W Q, w, I A VL I 2,1 ..,.,.,., ' 'v , ' L! l 1' J f- 45- E'!UW at ' A Y' -- Jmll? S ? .I l ,,, l J, Dtrolt I , L1 m. . ,J , ,. VLISIHGSS ' hm If M Aulompwfs News ,,m3 .ri V jaganls grill? public deals? S. Hams looks is CIW 5 pw' Twcntvffwc lmsincss, trade :md consumer pulwlicatium backed by the strength of 1.000 employees lmavc lwlpcd propel Crain Comxmmications into one of ills w0rld's largest privatelyfopcratcd lmsirlcss publishing companies. A Crain reporters, editors, sales, production, circulation and support profef-zsionzlls are the primary ingredients All 931955 QU iowa Ewa.. 11, -j-ugly: , MA Q. ,414 .4-al 'S I' ,Q Xl 1, .V 2, ak -l tate 3-' -Xgfv And 'lheygre Q 4 l 2 X- A.- jx, Q23-'pl f f gg.. -Alf , W' QF , 'Puhlifq ll :wks R . 1.3. I .JAH I. . QW' lwllind the Crain SLlCk'L'Sh sturv. Tllcv wvrlx togctlwr around thc world. sharing skills and information. Thur utilizc F-9f2'lfC'UlC'll'tC'2'lI'f communicntiom, cditing and graphics svstcnzs, nmking Q-wry iasuc of cvcrx' PlllWllC11llOH za little: llit lwcttcr tlmn tluf our before. Thu resollrrw- ul Crain arc Fl puxwrful cmnlwination of pulwlicnliuus amd pcoplc working togctlu-r xxorldwidc. Crain COITIITI f1'C8f l Chicago - Detroit -I New York - Los Angeles - Cleveland - Washington. DC. - Dallas - Nashville - Florida Keys - Akron - London - Frankfurt - Tokycu 1.1512 ,gsm ffm-1-mgm i- I' ,, . ?. , Syllabus 1989, vol. 105, was printed by Hunter Publishing Company in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, in a run of 3,000 copies, Morris Ferenson, campus representative. lt was printed on 80 lb. coated enamel matte finish paper in black ink. Color pages were printed on lustro color paper. Copy was set in Optima and Tiffany Light type styles. Artwork was created by Bill Pfeiffer and cannot be reproduced without consent ofthe artist. All rights to photographs are owned by the photographer and cannot be used without permission. Senior portraits were taken by Vardens Studios, Inc., of Rochester, New York. Syllabus 1989 was published by Students Publishing Company, lnc., of Northwestern University, Stacia Campbell, General Manager. Thank you to the edit board and staff who made this book a reality. A special thank you to my parents and family for their support and advice and to my very best friend who believed in me. Best wishes to all! 1' ' I -fx 'Av wg ,W . , ..,, , V..H,H,, Lf. ,. , . . . . ,'-' ' , I gf up . .Y.ft..w,.. . . WY. . . 5 J, . 4 in P O 9 k - ,.. 0 -' U fa! ' - L , 4 -' : . . .X . Y .,1.+..p... . 1 N A . V. , . ' l Q:-S 0 if . 45. -- Q Q Q ' ., ...,., . .ml Y- . .. ...WMM 7 . is 1 . . 1 '............. 1. 1. 5' 1' if A 1 1 iis11f'f'fE1.11f i W Q-gi? as.i..i.d 1. -1 1. W rg mm 4, E V Q 31151 Q 1 . . 'Q..QE?fY .,i.fI..Q 3, .. '1'f.U111.T..?111 F511 Iii. . Q... 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Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.