Oberlin College - Hi-O-Hi Yearbook (Oberlin, OH)

 - Class of 1983

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Oberlin College - Hi-O-Hi Yearbook (Oberlin, OH) online collection, 1983 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 248 of the 1983 volume:

Contents Historical Section ............................................. page 2 1983 ................................................................... page 33 Athletics ............................................................ page 68 Student Organizations ...................................... page 122 Faculty .............................................................. page 136 Seniors .............................................................. page 146 Underclass ......................................................... page 184 Lumw . Hl-O-Hi 1983 Oberlin College Oberlin, Ohio 44074 Vol. 92 M 2 Historical Sketch written by w: . Geoffrey Blodgett ' i... hanks to the Oberlin Alumni .M 4 Magazine. ww NW'W' ! ;m wit Vi km . :2, 5 whW L I mwww M ' 9w r w .. as $35 1 Sketch Oberlin College Historica 1833 Oberlin College, from its founding in 1833 has been a proud and unconventional place, distinctive in its sober moral purpose, its special sense of what was wrong about the past and present, its special vision of a desirable future. The College's first 50 years clinched these traits. They left marks on this place that are invisible but unforgettable. They shape our behavior from year to year in ways we sometimes do not fully know. A central fact about Oberlin has always been its distance, both geographical and psychological, from the ingrained habits of the outside world. In 1983 as in 1833, Oberlin often seems about 10 miles from everywhere: 10 miles from Elyria, 10 miles from original sin, 10 miles from normal American society. We're not unique in being located in a small town. Most 19th Century American colleges were put in villages. Their function was to serve as conservative oasises of knowledge and morality where children of the middle classes could be safely kept during their vulnerable years. But Oberlin's main purpose in the early years differed sharply from most other colleges, and from society at large. These differences enforced a constant tension between Oberlin and the rest of the world. tThat tension survives to the present, though we love to quarrel among ourselves about its current vitality and meaningj .Xhi Xi HltX :l'lHHI .: piiutugmpix in tin tnwlllil tullr'gr' I ihlulm . ..-..... ....r-............4. M-MA-...- Asym- .4 -.g. a w-M.Ag$gmd5.a uh rx-IJJK . :v,.;t.-...iv' V a ..,., val. . .;A has i. -A WW4; m maawmtm ' m t ' ' ' ., g i i ii 2 g T?X'W i JV. i ' ., -v 3 .4 , i 333 t . t . . ,s A ':2 i i -r a a f: f: ' i 1 2' aw ., T . t1 x22..XA.M , w 3 . '73.: 1.... 94,. AMlyT . ' M Jan ' ' .7 4:; $Mxrzx57f I ' . 594 .; I A s;' t SOME 1833 RECXHLDS OF THE OBERIJN COLONY AND INSTITI'TE M the top is a receipt for work performed on the Boarding Housc -0berliu Hall. mom originals in the Miscellaneous Archivesi PRESIDENT VA HAN'S HOl'SE by the Institute for him in I835. Occupied by him to l850 and by Professor Morgan from then until 1831. and hv t t Tonscnratory of Music from 188: to 1883 when it was demolished. It was on the site of the present Warner Hall. 1839 Oberlin's location was chosen by its founders, Reverend John Shipherd and his partner Philo Stewart, for both practical and educational reasons. It was originally a desolate swamp forest. The land came very cheap, the only large tract in the region left unsettled because it seemed to have no earthly value. The site fitted nicely with the founders' aim. Shipherd and Stewart wanted to be left alone in their clearing in the woods with their friends and followers, to work out an experiment in higher education on their own terms. Their purposes were big, and bold, and authentically radical. They dreamed of saving the popularion of the raw new American West from ignorance and degeneration. Although the College never tied itself to any specific religious sect, it was profoundly protestant and evangelical in its origins. Oberlinis founding was part of a broad wave of millenial, reform-minded Christian Perfectionism which came sweeping out of New England and upstate New York and across the Middle West during the 30 years before the Civil War. This dream of human perfectibility could take many forms. It could involve tinkering with family relationships among wives, husbands, and children; it could involve testing the idea of communal sharing of property and labor; it could inspire the drive for abolition of slavery, and the beginnings of the women's rights movement. Oberlin's early history was interlocked with many of these impulses. But the Oberlin version of perfectionism was mainly oriented toward missionary education. Underneath its theological complexities, it strove to help people cast aside their momentary imperfections and experience through personal behavior the fullest reward of emancipation from original sin tby which they meant selfishness, egotism, and pridei and so lead more moral and more useful lives. As John Shipherd gathered recruits for his colony across New England and upstate New York, he carried in his saddlebag a written covenant, which each recruit had to sign as a condition of joining. The Oberlin Covenant is a fascinating document. It is keen on plain, straight living - no smoking, no chewing, no drinking tand that included coffee and tea. Jewelry and tight dresses were renounced, as are fancy houses. The Oberlin Covenant combined with severe economic hard times in the early years to enforce the 19th Century plain style of Oberlin domestic architecture which still marks the town, in contrast to the striking variety among the buildings of the 20th Century campus. The Oberlin Covenant served as a kind of screen or filter which controlled the sorts of people who came with Shipherd to found his colony. They were a very earnest, headstrong batch of men and women. There was nothing otherworldly about them. They were determined to change people's behavior here and now. From the outset, colony and College were gathered in a common cause e education for moral service to a world in need of saving. This was the Oberlin latch-key to perfection. 5 l 840 Four big decisions in the first few years helped define the specific innovations in Oberlinis educational dream. The first had to do with manual labor. Every student was expected to contribute four hours of hard labor each day to the cause of the College and his or her own virtue. Much of this work took place on the College farm in the southwest corner of the town. The College farm lasted less than 20 years, and manual labor as an educational reform disappeared even sooner. Students proved to be no match for local farmers when it came to raising crops. As President James Fairchiid later recalled, ftTo discuss first principles became their pastime. They rested on their hoes in the cornfield to look into their inner consciousness, and the manual labor cause suffered in the interests of philosophy. But the cause lives on - in the stern motto of the College tLearning and Labori; in the concept of a sound mind in a sound body tthe governing philosophy behind the emergence of physical education as an academic discipline at Oberlin in the early 20th Centuryi; in the Farmers Co-op, an organic farm located near the railroad tracks on South Professor Street, which emerged from an ad hoc biology course in the early 19705; and in the flourishing program of housing and dining co-ops that dates from the 19505. The second big decision early on was to educate women along with the men. In light of the fame and controversy which swirled around the College for pioneering coeducation, itfs odd to discover how little local discussion it provoked at the outset. Womenis education was apparently more a means of producing as many Christian teachers and missionaries as possible, than it was a direct feminist goal in itself. Also it was hoped that coeducation would reduce the frivolous follies common to youth in those bygone days. When women were placed alongside men as fellow students, they were less likely to be regarded as sex objects. As the local pre-Civil War journal, the Oberlin Evangelist, put it: thhe idea that the young lady is a toy or a plaything is very thoroughly exploded by the practical working of intellectual competition. Coeducation proved to be a more daring invention than the founders intended. Oberlinians spent the next 50 years trying to curb the most feared consequences of what they had launched, to call the lie of the critics and scoffers who said it couldn't be done. College authorities developed an elaborate machinery of sexual segregation to keep men and women apart - the two exceptions being dining halls and classrooms. For a long time co-ed Classes were separated by a wide central aisle a males on one side, females on the other, to keep everyone's mind in proper focus. Even the library remained segregated till the 18905, with separate hours for each sex. LH tRl M LR tNDiNUX HXXIQY Ilahh I H'l'ths 5 W 5.23.3779? 17F? . s. m WW WiMax . I om IEW mil, g . l 5: la n... a... 4 u. an. :. CELEBRATION II THE ESRSKEEZSEE ABEQCBBS $1'r.1..';. ';g :22; rlns'r or AUGUST, 1 346. .M. ..... I .5: 0 :? trunnv arm. in '.'.r,t mi : u'u 1;..,.'v...'.1.., In, l i a emymmg 910mm... $EVE$ 3.3 59552535523: PRAYER. Xil' . Frcedom'n Dawn.-.xs i'umh t, Ann H.13unu t1... ye l Silvery.-.n iu-tw . leu Ilw'yu H K'umxuu 'lr ,, X l Stake...-.u im-xpn 51illlulx1,' f . Liberly and Slurry contrasted.-l Um; x ;, unwmhw g It . Ought that lhingn no to be '-tx l u llu Hum ll ltr-um ,,. . The Bondnnnll Appeal.-h mm s In . Recall- of Mainframe u mun x . Why do we rejolce to day 'w-h Law MI- liu Sruu. 1L..- RnAfr l .. . . Hanan Bmmerwah 1 nm Jinn 31mm; 1 w, RESIDENT GRA-leleES. m Baum 'An'uineue L. Brownf - . 51412111121: 8. Nolan. .41 - . 'Puuuing Theologiai Course. 1303133333 YEAZB. m m. aebecca Bcbout, . . . Savannah. Navy E. Cone, - - - Bristol. 11!. ilelen M. Cowles, - - . 06min. Hinem P. Dayton, - . Piqm. ihtris! A. Green, - . - 'rwberry. Sally Holly, - - - Rncluslcr, NFY. mud: Panache. - - - Oberlin. hrlnda Pumlee, - - Oberlin. 5L R. skinner. - - - Chelsea, V1. Lucy A. Stanton, - - - Ch'vdaud. Emacs Thompson, - - . Medina. rm Tm Mia, 11. $ .1 P H-F. FROM THE ranu 1. lllll 01.1,! . The Duty of American Women nhlivc to American . Emancipation in tn: W'eu: lndrum-Slavery in mv Umh-d lnwlh M 1huom l': r;'. . Ilvnritilrl. 1V. Y. Aim Arbor, Mich. 1849 Criss-crossing Tappan Square were narrow two-lane wooden sidewalks designed to prevent couples from holding hands. Chapel seating stayed segregated until the faculty finally caved in on that issue in 1934. Oberlin's third big decision in the early years was to open its doors to black students beginning in 1835. This was as bold an open- admissions policy as any 20th Century counterpart. And given 19th Century about racial mixing and Oberlin's commitment to coeducation, it was even more daring. White women, black men, black women, white men, all on the same campus: that was an explosive mixture, and the prospect scared the hell out of a lot of people. But John Shipherd knew exactly what he was doing. The decision proved to be the College's salvation. By 1835 Oberlin was on the brink of financial collapse. It was hurting for students as well as money. Then interesting things began to happen. The theology students at Lane Seminary in Cincinnati rebelled against efforts by Lane trustees to squelch their antislavery agitation, and threatened to leave along with two of their sympathizers, truste'e Asa Mahan and Professor John Morgan. Shipherd seized the chance and invited them to come to Oberlin. He also won a promise from the 'Tappan brothers, wealthy antislavery merchants in New York City, to finance the exodus. Mahan would become Oberlin's president, and Morgan would join the faculty. The Tappan brothers also offered to subsidize the hiring of the country's most famous evangelist, Charles Finney, to head Oberlin's new theological department. But all this could occur on one condition, which the Tappans, Finney, and Shipherd insisted on e that Oberlin launch a policy of student admission regardless of color. Reluctantly, and under great duress the Oberlin trustees finally agreed, in a tie vote broken by their chairman, John Keep. It was a near thing, but Shipherd's splendid deal went through. Thereafter, Oberlin maintained a steady commitment to black admissions, during long decades when a college education - like most other desirable things in America - was hard for blacks to come by. Between 1835 and 1965 the percentage of blacks among Oberlin students ranged from 2 to 4 percent - a modest figure, but one which resulted in Oberlin producing more black graduates than any other predominantly white college in the country. 1850 The entrenched sin of American slavery ultimately posed the most blatant challenge to perfectionist ideals. Abolition became the dominating moral cause of the 18505. It really put Oberlin on the map. The town was a main stop on the so- called Underground Railroad of places helping escaped slaves and free blacks on their way to Canada. Many of them Chose to stay in Oberlin, and by 1860, 20 percent of the town's population was black or mulatto tprobably the highest percentage of any town in the Northy I; I M w Z1, I tradile ' N- f.- eh d' 1 n ' k e I .j MV- E! u, 1'. a q, x , 4- f K Ill kl I Uh llllt lhhl Rt-RUI'VD RHLROU! Unlum N511 ti w-p' I'lut Hmum' .nui l'mL LHHx, lww nlv lnr N no hum Illt' Hnuw n! 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MW... an :19. ugh. ..-.'. . lvnfu 1.7.-.. ef.,, ' rnt .1 h' I; A... .-. u ,.. w-J' I. rm. 43' t ItH hit DHE INHI tR V HUI tkhllll' ',-. mzthrgxru, v; :1 if v 3 t t ;'AI-;AL:-L:Zk:.J:-:l.r -3;k:u.h;;;tggw5 : 'T a i S .3, $ V;- t,. s; 2. A Ww- mu-aw .ianir-lzvmtif; rm Mn RIVYHU ti HI! HI! ttmn, ypslu. --2H:. H- Muz-ih Miumi Mulrsuu li-nn I M i . Ii - . OBERIJN i'FEHALE xi L'DliX 18 0!. v. nr-i-rui nxtrxm IHE LXI l: Hl-I 1H tt! 1859 In September 1858 a small army of Oberlin wagons and horsemen thundered down the road to Wellington, 10 miles to the south, to rescue a fugitive named John Price from slave-catchers who had come into Oberlin to carry him off the night before. Some twenty Oberlin men spent three months in a Cleveland jail for their crime in rescuing John Price. The Wellington Rescue became the central legend in the Oberlin abolitionist tradition. A year later, several black Oberlinians joined John Brown in his raid on Harperis Ferry. The Cleveland Plain Dealer, an anti- Negro, anti- abolitionist paper in those days, said, tiOberlinism is abolitionism boiled down to the quintessence of bitterness. Its reputation in this respect is worldwide. The humorist Petroleum V. Nasby, explaining why the Civil War took place, wrote, Oberlin commenst this war. Oberlin wuz the prime cause uv all the trubble. 1860 The Civil War changed Oberlin, just as it changed the rest of the country. The war reshuffled people's values quite thoroughly. The fighting itself twhich cost 500,000 lives, a figure to which Oberlin contributed more than its sharei forced a reassessment of pre-war perfectionist enthusiasm. Where before the war much energy had been spent on attacking conventional institutions because they corrupted human behavior, now for the rest of the century efforts were aimed at building up and fortifying institutions in order to control behavior in the interest of peaceful stability. For Oberlin this meant building the endowment tit tripled in the 18005i, enlarging the size of the student body tit doubled in the ,BOSX and rebuilding the physical campus on and around Tappan Square almost from scratch. Another long-term result of the Civil War was a strong psychological bond between Oberlin and the Republican party, the party of union and moral virtue. All the statistics suggest an overwhelming Republican majority among students, faculty, trustees and townspeople that lasted well into the 20th Century. Though the bond began to fray after World War I and The Great Depression, it took Barry Goldwater to inspire Oberlin's first Democratic presidential majority in 1964. The town has been mostly Democratic ever since. 10 XIXRIXXXI'I PXRKER UHCUMB Hmul IHiin .u ; .1 t V: '. t7 In; I Lx; II 'N ' - JV? Japl igbqp 6M ; 2:, Amiga . 9 9:5 fa; 02:7i ,3 as, m7 $1W.,lil . - . 7? 5a? . X 0,9 1 K ', 'tyf iXX J 1;: x l . 911.1iztt'xl: . n .rv - 'f kw i dlwlgaucL. ' .4 4K... 7g JIJ r1 X r ' rigs : ; A kl: , 'II II, ' 1. Ck 9x1- o XF' i We . r, 'i J . K, imrt f 2 ,2, 1 $1.8,i: . '1 , h e as IN: I t ltURlA-l'h Hlll IUK H H Hist. lRl'Xi H INN; OBHUJN Sl'l'Dl-ZX IS UP 'l'HE CLASS OF 1852 I. R. Shipherd. Rcsuu'r and nephew of the Founder. is at the upper right. 1869 After the Civil War, when major colleges and universities like Cornell, Michigan and Harvard decided to experiment with coeducation, investigators were sent to Oberlin to see how it was done. They found out that if you were really careful about it, it wasn't so dangerous after all. Much the same thing happened 10 or 12 years ago when Oberlin reversed course and made the cover of Life magazine for its daring experiments in co-ed dorms. Coeducation at Oberlin had one other happy consequence. According to Lucien Warner, the donor for the original Warner concert hall, the Oberlin Music Conservatory tat least its voice departmentt was made possible by coeducation. Oberlin was the first college in America with enough sopranos. Musical Union and the choir at First Church were regular features of campus life by the 18405, and the Conservatory of Music formally joined the College in 1867. 11 Iii 1870 The arrival or organized athletics was another sympton of the post-civil war atmosphere. Velocipede racing on West College Street became a neighborhood nuisance 30 years before Oberlin became a bicycle town. I HHI'Y HXH .V D f0LOXIU HUI XBUFT mm, 12 xunx M 1 v 1879 In 1869 the village paper came out against baseball. HBaseball, it reported, ttis to be vetoed among students during the coming season because it has been found to have a demoralizing effect on scholarship. Football received a kinder press when it came on in the 18705. Announcing the results of the game between the College and a pickup team from Wellington in 1878, the paper notes, ttAlthough the game as played at Oberlin is much less dangerous that at other colleges, still even here there is sometimes a little excitement. 13 1880 Lab work in the physical sciences improved radically, mainly under the leadership of chemistry professor Frank Jewett. In 1886 one of Jewett1s students, an Oberlin townie named Charles Martin Hall, while working in his woodshed laboratory on East College Street, discovered the electrolytic process for reducing aluminum from bauxite. This was the technological breakthrough that underwrote the American aluminum industry. Hallis personal fortune doubled the College endowment when he died in 1914. It was also Hall's will that created Tappan Square as we know it today. He was an early Champion of open space and stipulated that the College buildings which stood on the Square tthere were once haIf-a- dozen of themi be Cleared for grass and trees. The Oberlin Arboretum is one more legacy from Hall. 14 1889 Other objects of missionary philanthropy were discovered or rediscovered. Oberlin dispatched its first missionary band to China in the early 18805. This was the origin of a trans-Pacific linkage which has lasted through good times and bad tthe Boxer Rebellion, two world wars, and the Chinese Revolutioni right down to the present in the form of Shansi Memorial Association. Oberlin's most durable overseas educational commitment. Just within the past few years, Shansi has re-established its roots in mainland China after a lapse of three decades. 15 16 1890 Another Oberlin town boy, Dudley Peter Allen, who grew up to be a prominent Cleveland surgeon with a rich wife, gave the money legacy from Hall. Another Oberlin town boy, Dudley Peter Allen, who grew up to be a prominent Cleveland surgeon with a rich wife, gave the money for the Allen Art Museum, perhaps the finest museum of its kind on any college campus in the country. Under the leadership of Fenelon Rice and his successors the Oberlin Conservatory emerged to rival Eastman and Juilliard as the nations best, and the only one to offer a lively liberal arts environment surrounding it. Its faculty and students have achieved for Oberlin an international renown matching that of the College. 1899 The main replacement for abolitionism was a long, earnest crusade for temperance and prohibition, against both tobacco and alcohol. Regional newspapers had almost as much scornful fun at Oberlin's expense over these issues as they had over abolition back in the 18503. The Wakeman Independent wrote in 1800; iiThe moral village of Oberlin is again on the rampage against the evils of society. This time tobacco has to suffer? in 1893 the Anti-Saloon League was founded in Oberlin. Over the next quarter- century the League would prove to be one of the most effective single-issue lobbies in American political history - the main arm of the national drive for the Prohibition Amendment of the 19205. The town of Oberlin remains mostly dry to this day. The disparity in prestige in our minds between abolition and prohibition obscures the strong line of continuity in motives between these causes. Both were impelled by hope for a cleaner, purer, better world where people kept sin to a minimum in their personal behavior. 17 E 1900 3 1w w 18 1909 TRACK TEAM- Within the College itself, the major thrust at the turn of the century was toward improvement in the rigor and quality of the . y 4 Oberlin undergraduate education. Students played a vital role in ' ' this campaign, agitating for changes to make their education more varied, more interesting, and more demanding. Admission standards began to rise along with tuition, which was up to $40 per year by 1890 and hit the $100 barrier in 1910. Meanwhile, the quality of the faculty tor at least the quality of their academic pedigreesi improved, as reverend clergymen were replaced in the classroom by a rising percentage of young, thoroughly secular Ph.Ds. The curriculum was completely overhauled and modernized, with the arrival in Oberlin of the elective system pioneered by Harvard's President Eliot. The social sciences emerged one by one, along with instruction in modern languages and contemporary literature. lxlmmm m Xru inxnmu u 19 . V mmwzwgv? ' V 1910 20 I1? i .m ,3, a law .I... - EQUAL SUFFRAGE College Equal Suffrage League OBERLIN CHAPTER Presidcnl. Vice-Presidcnl. Secretary and Treasurer. Marguerite Weak FAN: J. Ballot: Mary Lindsay Once Nickemn Don Packard Elizabeth H Grace ludi'ndum thu Niclenou iMath.Rboda Eunice Fulaber Cdin Janette Willdh Stare: Gents! M12: WWW PMWolfc mwam MARGUERITE WENK C ELM KAEPPLER MEMBERS Doris Steven Rose Tm! Olive French Winifred Loomis May Fitzpatrick F lorencesKent Basie Tear Laura Ruth Pearson Anna Osborn 545d: McCoy Marie Greene Dorothy Fazrchild Edith Guy Maud Morlock Genevieve North Myrtle Andrew: FACULTY Muum MiuDur-ad GRACE LEADINGHAM Nellie Pehou Lucy Weeks Manic Walk Ernest B. Whiz: Ruth Kellogg Gnce Farrell Eugenia Palm Etith Aykroyd Luke 5. Brickley Martha Gerriah Alice Ballot: Clarissa Fairchild Rhoda McCullodz Elm Pratt Lillian Dowler Em Bailly Ptofeuor Root Professor Sinclait Profane: Miller 1919 With the advent of electric lights, reading after dark became a major undergraduate industry. The College library began its long drive under Azariah Root to become what it is today - one of the two or three best college library collections in the United States. The ethic of research and discovery now charged the campus - the idea that some things were known and some things were unknown. The trick was to push bac-back the unknown. This was an enormously exciting notion, and it transformed the meaning of an Oberlin education. 21 1920 l; h, Whafs Wrong With This Picture? Going to Classes in Oberlin is a pleasure when one may ridr 1n mch mmmrl. Herr Ix wrn nm- 01 um pupulur ytulng cn-nL lrznim: her durm tn .1!!ch :m right u'clmk in .1 hnurimh x. prmuled tn tht' cullcuc tn curry studrnh tn murninu clzmm. SEND EUL'R GIRL T0 UIHIRH . 22 Ohio State Thm mine that IIII-Ium'uhlv mntiivl down at i'oiumhus. which lxxmtml Uber- iin m the nlnith of football fame and convinced the. country that the Crimson and hold had II high class I-lI-vm That m-Imational 85- yard march down tin- fivld iu the third qlmrh'l c-IIIIIIIIIIItiIIg in II pass to Purkhill mm the line for II touchdown IIiIl ever live in tho nwmnrios of Oberlin adhervntu. State scored six points in thi- first feII minutes of piaI'. when Huffman blocked a punt and carried the ball nvor. Ewrv OhI- rliII IuaII planed an unbeatable game which hrought dismay to the State team and silence to the State crowd. It was a great I'ictury. fairly earned. UIu-rlin made nine first downs while State was accumulating five. 1929 In line with past changes, Oberlin came close to turning itself into a university, complete with various graduate schools in music, theology, business, and science. But the faculty voted down the university idea whenever it came up. Instead, Oberlin began in the early 20th Century, during the long presidency of Henry Churchill King, to play the role it has been playing ever since with spectacular success tthough the role has always had its criticsi: that of a pre-professional liberal arts feeder school to the country's leading post-graduate universities. Wheras in the 19th Century Oberlin graduates typically headed in large numbers into the ministry or school teaching, now increasing numbers of them went on to graduate school to prepare for careers in law, medicine, social work, government service, and above all - higher education: scholarship and teaching. Two Oberlin graduates would one day receive the Nobel Prize for their distinguished research in physics and in medicine. They were not alone in their quest for new knowledge. Since 1920, Oberlin has been a larger source of students headed on to the Ph.D. than any other college in America. 23 O 3 9 1 24 V 411m ..-..u.mh..u.u $3. 'trztgmh' e' .. a: Wmtmmum m damp. m; . ,c. . . Srocxu Bums Musmmn Bum 1939 Oberlin also emerged in the 20th Century as perhaps the most cosmopolitan college in the Midwest in terms of the far- flung geographical origins of its students. Geographical diversity began to be matched by ethnic and religious diversity starting in the depression decade of the 19305, when Oberlints combination of high'quality education, plus relatively low costs, attracted more and more students from big cities. 25 l 940 After World War II, diversity also virtually exploded the Oberlin curriculum. Flipping through a current catalog, and comparing it with those of a generation ago, one can't help being impressed by the global dimensions of what goes on in the modern Oberlin classroom. In the beginning, Oberlin sought to transcend the Hreal world in its high-minded teaching. Today Oberlin embraces it. 26 l 949 Bunny Specter leads the FlOSh bond ccvov. Yoppcn Vov Fndoy nuth bcnhve pr: 'OHy 27 1950 As a result of all these 20th Century shifts, Oberlin became more famous for its cosmopolitanism and academic excellence than for its early moral and ideological commitments. However, our tradition of moral and social reformism by no means disappeared. - x. q : .QV . m ix: K . ; , f 28 29 1960 30 Oberlin's first undergraduate socialist club was founded in 1911, and socialist organizations have had a lively campus existence in one form or another ever since. The Oberlin Peace Society made the College a powerful pacifist stronghold in the 19305. Oberlin played a virorous part in the student anti-war movement in the 19605. l 969 i 3 5 z, 31 1970 Today, Oberlin - like most American campuses a is a future for answers. The tension between late 20th Century quieter, less turbulent place than it was a few years ago. But Oberlin and early 19th Century Oberlin - a tension between our peculiar history cannot be forgotten. the head and the heart, analysis and enthusiasm, knowledge In 1970, the faculty launched a policy of intensive minority and hope, between trying to understand the world and trying recruitment with the goal of raising the percentage of non- to save it - will never go away. At least we hope it wont. whites in each entering class nearer to 10 to 15 percent. That Because it is a creative tension, forever generating rival goal has rarely been reached, but despite the tough financial visions of what Oberlin was, is, and ought to be. We take these aid problems involved and the annual dissatisfaction about the issues very seriously around here, because we think Oberlin gap between the goal and the reality, the effort continues. What are we all really here for? As we celebrate our 150th anniversary, we will search out the past, present, and the remains different, and makes a difference. 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SAFFTY FMM SAHYV FIlM venom mum 'wh The Rogeri Trio. in Residence fall 1987 50 The Edible Art Exhibit 51 Renaissance Fair October 2, 1982 52 r ', In I. n M m 53 For six weeks this past fall semester. five actors from the Royal Shakespeare Com- pany from England performed, directed. and taught at Oberlin. The five - Sheila Allen. Charles Keating, Domini Blythe, Paul Whitworth. and Martin Best, who also per- formed as a musician during the residency - were on a demanding schedule, but their stay proved to be rewarding for them as well as for students. Courses designed around the RSC resi- dency included an acting course and a di- recting course. which resulted in four stu- dent productions of Shakespeare's plays. In addition. the company members per- formed in four dramatic anthologies, in- cluding works by John Burton. D.H. Law- rence. and of course Shakespeare. One thing the residency emphasized was the fact that British actors are not the only ones who can perform Shakespeare. As the RSC members all agreed. Americans are more physical actors, and British more ver- bal. less passionate. The RSC performers brought a number of fresh methods and ideas to Oberlin and it is likely that their influence will be felt for a long time to come. The residency was the third and longest for the Royal Shakespeare Company here in Oberlin; and many people are hopeful that it will be the start of a new Oberlin tradition. e Marc Singer 54 rhwiucvosu-ose: voyugsuonla 56 Oberlin Dance Company Studio Concerts ' mewmwr': 1,2. ,. ,,... :.1, wt; v 4 G ,v ' '$M V Gilbert 8 Sullivan Players production of The Mikado November 14. 15, 16 8 17. 1982 Oberlin Opera Theater s Production of Verdi's Falstaff November 17. 19. 8 20, 1982 Bill Monroe and the Bluegrass Boys November 20. 1982 Qeoffr; Holder November 27. 1982 Michael Cooney November 26. 1982 2 8 9 Dizzy Gillespie December 4, OSTA's dinner theater in Asia House, Fall 1983 Swing your partnerY 65 66 No Cows , Fall 1982 A Night on the Tomb TaIes from the Bible , Fall 1982 Orchestra 8 Choir Tour, Winter Term 1983 67 MMVWW$M . mwxxx mg VAR? I.WiW R A 1?: ',- -,,,- 1le ? $ ,; 1W v. VWFMMy-HV-VWIW WWIMWWMQ?nunvwmv ,W, .W, .W ,wi't'am-mo uwarW'W . N ' A thIe tics 69 7O h o 3.: u 0 '1'. 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Raw. 102 manmmw 4; , amamwggt 9 .9 C G o l- y: s: u E $ 103 104 xuzm ---a,,. ,1. . 3:4120 0 . .9. s: r: a I- .m s: a E 105 .-M.W.M.u.um..4M w tum w s!- , '5 ? NR N k FR 8 5 $ . ; o i ii g , x xi X b x V f XX ' YRXKCQ XXX ' 107 The Improvisation Troup at the Cat OSTA's production of Key Exchange 109 w 0 In S W .51; r a V Jay O'Callahan, storyteller 1H Student th theater piece. Jar by Fred Chance 112 um v .u S e F n .m S A 113 Gilbert 8 Sullivan Players' production of Iolanthe 114 115 1' S Sherry hour Faculty A8Ps A ..3$$$$x, L 116 Circle the Square for Peace, Spring 1983 117 ., 2.. .. 2.1;.llllllt1zillllil, ,JlllQipllir: College Bowl Tournament Finals, Fall 1982 3 8 9 1 m r e T r e t .m .m, S U M t h mu N b t .rl. L A 118 3 8 9 1 m r e T r e t .m LLv pl. 8 C n O C .m S r e h t O r B h t a e H e h T 120 Studen t Organiza tions 123 124 77.1w u t p Oberlin Student ii Cooperative 3 Association OSCA Experimental College EXCO h. mmv 4 125 FooMHunger Action c B 0 w 126 Aikido Club Newman 5 wxxxm- ww x ; - Students Against Nuclear Energy 6ANB Honor Committee 127 128 Executive Council Social Board g 2 i l g I' Y i . . , .. 4V , 9k rm 1., 4.. wuw'. J-v A I ., v vA . ,- y . g 'h' .. ; w- W W mN' ; a .9'? 'V4 9'? r v . z, b va Wire vav , aw. rawv'v Oberlin Film Series OFS 129 Pro-choice Oberlin Christian Fellowship OCH Sexual Information CenteKSKD 130 131 They sponsor events, speakers, parties, concerts, good food, put out publications szrrrr; :1. TLLLLV 132 134 ta Qsitssgi 4 thi! tin... KMvw-x w - W W m vwwrvw-vgmv-wwmam 137 Conducting 138 Developmental Services Economics W X 139 Geology xx$ Lx $s? $ 5 :xS , x ix n a .m s u R cu n a m r. e G Government 140 Humanities Mathematics Music Education 141 Music History Organ Wottom righo Music Theory and Composition mottom lem Philosophy w x: u mex x-ANN $ 1 x; , x M wmw . Qwv. 4E. - ix k y L was? xx xwxxx- MN Kw $ kmxxxm Q Physical Education 142 S .m S y h D. $in L v w ,w ,, ?vlvetoz,o Anu$ 3,1 . r , ? .t-; .4!.a1 b 1;, 194,17: .-y.'.t,-l..lvh.. l. 4a, A $7.? 419.31- -.-oil . ii- . a ,;k.n!2il4v nCIcavo $ xxhnnayu, .11.,.A!..'...o v l! 4 1 Psychology Romance Languages 143 Y 9 lo .m C o 8 Voice 144 145 147 148 4deyo 149 Cynthia Anne Abbott H Garrett Adams. Jr. Jann H. Adams Howard l. Albin Evan Alboum SociologWAnthropology PSYChO'OQY Psychology Government MP??? Piflizmagce' ls ory eor Susan E. Alexander Lisa Michele Alford Laura A. Allen Lisa C. Allen Wendi T. 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Cohen Debrah Cohen Lynn Cohen Adam Colson Ellen Conant Alice Conde Kim Cooke Arnold Coonin Claire Cotts Margaret Cotts Russell Curtis Linda Danovitch Jim Dawson Patricia Debney Amy Donald 187 Poppea Dorsam Tim Duffy Marcia Dustin Kathryn Dyhdahl Susan Eisenfeld Dariush Elghanayan Martin Elmer Karyn Evans Ricki Farber Thomas Faxon Brian Fehlan Karen Felton Sandra Fever Rosalind Fielder Daniel Fields Gary Fink Siobhan Flynn Heidi Foster Catherine Fox Jonathan Freilich Peter Fried Nick Gander Beth Garfunkel Andrew Gelfand 188 Julie Gibbons Martha Gilbert Jessica Gilbertson Rachel Goldberg Karin Goldstein Rob Goldstone Rob Gosselink Catherine Graetzer Todd Graves Connie Gray Karen Gray Adam Greene Jessica Greene Elizabeth Griffing Marty Gurnsey Heather Harding Andrea Hart Harvie Haun John Hegarty Greg Hendershott Willa Henigman Risa Hernandez Mark Herrera Richard Herron 189 Steve Hill Jenny Hirshhorn Bill Hirshorn Chiharu Hori Hope Houston Anne Heumer Julia Hurlbut Christian Huygen Stephen Immerwahr Ken James Herman Jenich Elizabeth Jennings Pam Jennings Jenifer Johnson Mark Johnson Carl Joklik Billy Jonas Charlotte Jones 4MW7'M Denise Jones wwwmwmm MWMWmew 9W Mary Jones Melissa Jones MmMysz 190 Anne Judson Tom Kangas Daphne Katranides Sarah Keener Jon Keselenko Elizabeth Ketchum Evan Kierstead Lee Kikuchi Nicholas Kiritz Emily Knowles Christine Kopeck James Kowalski Ann Kraybill David Kukla Pamela Joyce Carol Kycia David Lachman Matthew LaFlamme Elizabeth La Fond Carl Lamborg Andrew Langman 191 Wendy Lanxner Thea Lawton Robert Leedy Raphael Leeman Randy Levinson Adam Levison Miriam Levy Stephen Levy Erik Lindfors Karen Lindsay Leslie Little Matthew Lombardi 192 w Aeneas Long James Luckett Gregory Ludwig Barry Lynn Susan MacLean Natasha Maidoff Joan Marcus Aaron Mate Arthur Mayer lIl Peter Mayer Laura McGough Alec McKinney Beth McMahon Danny Mendelson Nancy Misener Leah Modigliani Elizabeth Morris Karen Mueiler Stephanie Muntone Diana Naparst Erik Nelson Jonathan Nissenbaum David Hother Judith Osofsky John Palm III Mark Parnaby Jenny Patterson Andrew Pearson Michael Pearson Roberta Perrow Miriam Paskowitz Greg Pflaum Harold Picken Michele Powers Adam Pressman Phillip Price 193 W wwNQ-x Lynn Proebsti Ana Puszkin Elliot Rappaport Steve Raymond Anne Reeder Benjamin Reiss :4... ,g V MVx-mmnww . Harry Remer Kate Rhine . .. 3:; ,ngns-. m: aw - n. . WK Doyle Rice Robert Richardson Dawn Robinson Jackie Robinson Daniel Rosen Ellen Ross Lori Rubinstein Christopher Ryan David Ryan Jennifer Sacher Ben Saferstein Jeremy Salesin 194 Dudley Saville David Saunders Sonie Scheffer Nancy Schiff Elaine Schmerling Deborah Schwartz James Sedlacek Isabelle Selassie Wendy Selbert Hannah Serota Steven Shaiman Meggan Sheble Peter Sherman Joshua Shuman Thomasina Sligh Paul Smith Neil Soloman Sara Speeth Kirsten Speide Karen Spiegel Steven Stalzer Amy Steingart Julie Stewart Michael Stepak 195 Cindy Straus Michael Taller Steve Tarman Peter Taschioglo Stephanie Taylor John Thomure Paul Tisdel Karla Todd Debbie Tope Katherine Trisolini Jacob Van Sant Brian Vaughn Matthew Von Hendy Thomas Von Huene Allyson Walker Johanna Walter Carolyn Walz Bruce Whitney Rebecca Whitney Daniel Widmann Lyn Willis Elaine Wolf Lorna Wood Bob Yarnall Katherine Yutzey Rose Zubizarreta 196 I 'h Kimberly Brooks Tracy Brower Mirla Agnir Bobby Alexander Lisa Alspector Christopher Armstrong Sarah Anderson Diane Baker Kate Baker Netai Basu Mark Baumann Elaine Bayless Deborah Beitch Lee Belland George Bent Jan Berridge Opoku Bismarck Tony Bowkay Julia Brezon Amisa Bright 197 James Brown Jordan Brown Jon Burger Mary Burger Brent Burke Duncan Campbell Genet Case Patricia Cateura James Chow Scott Clark David Cohen Jordin Cohen Ben Cosgrove Charles Countsal Jennifer Crayon Cassandra Cunningham David Cymbala Irvin Daley Angela Davis Lisa Davis Ray Davis Anne Deane Katie Delaplane Jennifer Detering Kwasi Diehl John DiTusa Forrest Dow Mark Dudley Diana Duffy Marjorie Edmonds Ruth Ehrenstein Mark Eickhoff Mark Ellerkman Christopher Ertolt James Farnsworth Sarah Fessler 198 Edna Fleischacker Thomas Folan Heather Fork Marian Fowler Sarah Fulton Paul Fyfield Martha Gamble Joanna Garske Michael Gayle Amy Ginsberg Michelle Gleeson Robi Gluck Jeffrey Gordon Joel Gratch Virginia Graves Amy Handelman 199 David Harris Natalie Harris Gwendolyn Haverstock Paul Heller Christina Helms Lisa Herdt Lisa Hillegas David Hirsh Heidi Hooper Teresa Howell Adreon Hubbard Seun-Mee Kang Richard Kasper Jay Kaufman Peter Jaffe Stanley Jenkins Kevin Kimata Linda Klevans 200 .Mvmw.-W..;; x '15 k; Eva Kornberg Laurence LaFond Christopher Landriau Laura Last Daniel Lee Seth Levenson Greg Levine Linda Levy Sarah Lickey Eve Lindi Michael Lomask Daniel Long Nancy Long Daniel Loschen Stephen Main Dave Maine Jamie Mayerfdd Dina McAllister Paul Medellin Eric Megli 201 Karen Melkonian Jessica Meltsner Charles Miller Jean Miller Jean Nick Milman Hannah Mitchell Charles Moffett Richie Morrell Eric Nagy Edouard Nammour Kent Nastiuk Bob Nay Alana Nelson Lawrence Novak Lydia Oey Nina Orville Brian Park Virginia Payerle Sanna Pederson Kate Pennell David Pereira Emilysue Pinnell Kestra Powell Mary Powers 202 l i Tracey Queripel Heidi Raak Wendy Reeds Jamie Reinganom Brenda Rich Jose Rios Kimberly Roberson Alluicious Rubotzky Kenneth Rubotzky Sara Rusk Matt Sanchez Roberto Santiago Nadine Schiawi Mara Schultz Joe Sefcik George Shambaugh Milton Sipp Sandra Slaughter 203 Eric Smalley John Speck Harilaos Stecapoulos Everett Stern Teddy Stever Molly Stewart Robert Stout Ferdinanda Taylor Clifford Thompson Melvin Thornton Dorothy Tilenis Peter Todd 204 w? Marcia Uddoh Sherri Upchurch Holly Van Houten Julie Van Leuven Scott Van Ness Matt Verdery Nicholas Voichick Matt Wachsman David Walton Ben Warner Jeffrey Weidenthal Kimberly Weiler John Weitheimer Wendy Weitzner Marcus Williams Dave Winkworth Peter Zimmerman 205 Juniors Greg Ackner David Adeleke Kim Annable Laurel Appel id Asch Dav Robert Ash Kate Bahlke Geoff Beach Bell me Kather Janet Benton Daniel Blume Ice Judith Bo Margaret Bonar Margot Bos Michon Boston Doug Braun Mary Caroline Brewton Ingham Smith Britt . Angus 13$. Karen Bronson 206 Michele Broguaier Richard Bronot ll Elizabeth Brucker Kevin Bullard Jeffery Camp Chris Canavan Elizabeth Carpenter Betsy Causey Melissa Chamberlin Tracy Chevalier Margaret Cook Michael Cummins Sarah Dacey Paul Danko, Jr. Mr. Darby 207 Steven Davis Jim Dawson Bernadette Delgado Gerard DelGrippo Frederick Derricks Beth Donaldson Tom Dreeben Rob Drelich David DuBois Teresa Edenholm Leanne Elmer Diana Elrod Luis Espinosa Celeste Feather Milagros Figueroa Seth Finsley Antony Fine Robert Foster 208 Michael Freire Michael Friedman Susan Friedman Tamima Friedman David Fryling Jennifer Glasscock Daniel Goldman Joshua Gonze Heather Gram Cyd Green Nancy Green Steve Hanekamp Margaret Harris Scott Harter Susan Hasti Charles Hawley Jim Hegalty Bruce Heller Ginger Henderson David Hershey Charles Heyneman Scott Hiltzik Heidi Housten Emina Huang Hugh lhlarsh Mrill Ingram Janet James Michael James Sophie Jennett MaryLou Jordan Robert Karr Randi Kelly Gregorey Kennedy Robert King 210 .ww .., ummp. . V- 50. S ' .AKA 9.? ?W' 14. 1 at. Lindsey Kirsch Susan Koch Paul Kwo Mattew Lehrman Josh Levitt Daniel Lewis Joy Lewis David Lieber Linda Lipkin Jane Loubier Brigit Macomber Lisa Mallet Carl Mandoke Valerie Marcus Paul Markgraf Michael Martin 211 MK - fw F' ! ? 'F P i 'v'?'?'r-r'rwvmvw ' ' ' ;-'3v-- v-er r+++s- QWW'VW' V M 7: . . .1. - +$wa mum' ? Sandra Mayeda Daphne Meimaridis Reed Mellor Marla Merantz Helen Mercier George Milberg Peter Miller Stephen Miller Walter Miller Jeff Mills Katherine Mitchell Meridith Mitchell Vincent Moore Richard Morel David Morey Scott Morris Traus Morse Marci Nemtzow 212 Anna Newcomb Arthur Hg Alan Oshima Keith Oster Zuma Pipkin Kathy Powell Richard Price Mary Pugsley Todd Rader Catherine Reardon Christopher Recklitis Adriana Repetto Shane Rock Lisa Roland David Rosen Dennis Rosenbaum Laurence Rosenberg lden Rosenthal 213 Sharon Ross Phil Rossoni Mark Rubino Barbara Saks David Sands Stephen Saxton Jenny Schneider Michael Schwartz Catherine Seasholes Bonnie Sheldon Zoe Sherinian Gail Shuck James Siekmeier Marc Singer Patrick Smith James Snyder Lee Spector Eric Stellwagen Mark Stempler Kimberly Sypeck Laura Tait Midori Takagi Dennis Taljen Michael Taller 214 :- David Toland Kirk Van Scoyoc Kathy Vargo Joseph Vaughan Donald Vennekotter Maria Wainer Ray Wakeland Lori Wallace Virginia Watson Cynthia Way Jim Weliky Elizabeth Wexler Katherine Wilson Alison Wing Jane Ziegelman 215 218 219 . m Egg: H w: :2; H 352:. a $. 220 ......n 222 223 Mime Troup, Winter Term 1983 225 Godspell A W WW m V$ 227 Au i .qum . M v mun M Xv Hxxx 228 Q ? 11 Oberlin, Ohio? That's swampland. Anybody ever lived in a swamp? Just wait 'til monsoon season. .me-A.Q.A;Q.Q...MW . . Q Q Q A. HHIRIIQ IIH HXH'I Hl- lHl HIDHII WlSl 229 231 V 31.12111411155 31311qu.! 1.4.4 A .liliiiiillij . SW :s 233 The Hi-O-Hi staff would like to give a special llthank youll to all the alumni and parent patrons. We would have hired an orchestra, but all of our moneyls Everybody likes to look at old yearbooks. 234 1 Q ? Parent Patrons Claire Arditi Dr. and Mrs. Ralph A. Bacon Gopal K. Basu The William Beale Family Mr. and Mrs. Nolan Bradley Thomas E. Brewton Mr. and Mrs. James E. Brown Don and Carol Browning Richard and Audrey Brysacz 57 Phyllis and Louis Budell Mr. and Mrs. Frank Burger Drs. James and Patricia Caldwell Dick and Pat Cardarelli Marguareette B. Carey Mr. and Mrs. Edw. R. Carney Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence B. Carson Mr. and Mrs. George A. Cavigelli Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth K. Chung Mr. ahd Mrs. Stephen Cohen Mr. and Mrs. Alfred F. Cooke 111 William Daggett Marlene and Larry Davis, 57 Gerard del Grippo, MD. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Deuvall Karen D. S. Dewan Mr. and Mrs. Roger J. Dietlin Dick and Sharon Dwyer Mr. and Mrs. William L. Eakin Dr. and Mrs. H. M. English Eugene English Sara G. Epstein Bruce D. Feldstein, MD. Dr. Maxime Fe thie':re Hyman and Katalin Finn Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Foster Charles and Linda Gagliardi Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Garske Dr. and Mrs. Richard Goldstein Arthur M. Golumbia Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Hankin Mr. and Mrs. William J. Harter Dr. and Mrs. Donald Hooper Mr. and Mrs. Karel Hruda Art Hurlbut l. and G. K. Kaplan Sol and Joyce Kaufman Mr. and Mrs. Oscar L. Kern Joseph and Marian Keselenko Nicholas and Deborah Kredich Dr. and Mrs. James A. Lambert Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Lamborg Dr. Susan E. Leeman Harry Chwen Lei Phyllis and Larry Levinson Mrs. Sally Salinger Lindsay Dr. and Mrs. Solomon Little, Jr. Mrs. Clara E. Lucas Mr. and Mrs. Carl J. Mandoke Robert and Katherine McWilliams Dr. and Mrs. Darrell Megli Mr. and Mrs. Ruben P. Mendez Daniel and Marlene Merrill Will W. Millen Mr. and Mrs. John W. Misener Mr. and Mrs. Worakit Mitrakul Maxwell and Shirley Money Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Morel James Morgan Sunny and Arliene Oey Salah M. Osman Harvey and Roberta Pressman Mary and John Price Craig and Polly Qwripel Mr. and Mrs. F. Ian Ravenscroft Mr. and Mrs. Marcel Rudzinski Mr. and Mrs. S. Ruttenberg Mr. and Mrs. Fundador Santiago Patricia and Siddhartha Sarkar Katherine and George Shambaugh Ill Karen, Ema, and Norma Silberstein Dr. and Mrs. Robert E. Slayton Mr. Calvin E. Smith Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Spano Mr. and Mrs. Joseph R. Stanfar Kathleen Sullivan-Stewart George L. Stewart, Jr. Wilma and Irwin Steuer Frederick and Judith Stoutland Ruth R. Taub Dr. and Mrs. Robert Taxman Foster and Sharon Tepper Drs. Ruth and Thomas Vankai Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Vaughn Carol Pauk Vilue Mr. and Mrs. Rodger D. Walker Geoffrey C. Ward Valerie Wheeler Anne Wilson Schaif Eileen and Julian Wolpert Marjorie and Aaron Ziegelman 235 ALUMNI PATRONS Class of: 1912: John Hall Kellog 1914: Helen W. Scott 1916: Pauline Munson Claggett Mary Seldomridge Price 1917: Harrol W. Baker Theodore V. Bastel Reverend Ralph P. Clagget Harold H. Clum 1918: Frances Turpin Brown, MD. Irene Hamlin Cheronis Alberta Dole Smith Ronald Q. Smith Charlotte Kelly Westerman 1919: Leah H. Johnson Oakleaf Mildred A. Kenney Rost Mrs. Benjamin F. Roth 1921: J.S. Ayers Margaret Barnard Wilson J. Clark Harold North Williams 1922: Helen L. Alderman Birdie Helen Holloway 236 Laurence D. McPhee Robert W. Metcalf Glada C. Swan Gladys Bruce Weir 1923: Mildred Morgan Osborne 1924: Gladys Newton Fiest J. Donald Hanawalt Ethel Knowlton Nielsen 1925: Earl L. Derhammer Esther Coleman Capwell Evans Stella Zieg Montgomery 1926: C.J. Amstutz Charles L. Burton William J. Butzberger 1926: Eva Taylor Cowan Mary Herr Hines Charlotte Payne Segur Franklin L. Yocom 1927: Miriam Denison Burton Lilliam Lauderdale Locke Dorothy Green Martin 1928: William D. Allen Helen Cook Coole Mary Waugh Rohrbough ii -.:.u.m..mwm.1w Miriam W. Smith Martha Tuckley Van Houten J.W. Wilder 1929: George H. Brown Helen Symons Crawford Edward F. Haskell Hilda Gurley Johnso'n A. Rufus Kydd 1930: Florence Kemery Bistline Elton 8. Cook Ruth Mortimer Goss Josephine Smith Meyer Loraine Hulley Miller Doris L. Shelby Lucy Bond Tinsley Lula L. Wilkinson 1931: Margaret F. Beloof Mrs. Benjamin F. Ellis Joseph S. Himes Stewart Dixon McKelvey 1933: Frederick F. Baur Reverend Lewis G. Fritz John A. Northrop Charles Walker Thomas Roland V. Tiede 1934: George W. Biro Lois Schoonover Kent Walter Kilrain Charles J. Krister Russell H. Lampson Elizabeth Shuman Lounsbury Montgomery N. McKinney Adele Wanner Taylor 1935: Mary Rentschler Beiswenger Charles Fisher Louis R. Kent Jo Hamilton Van Meter Alfred E. Woodward 1936: Henrietta B. Alsdorf Samuel E. Barnes James H. Bows Betty P. Jones Lucien E. Morris, MD. 1937: Ruth F. Banbury Mildred Pietschman McCrystal Blanche L. Shaffer Laura Scott Taylor 1938: Robert P. Eshelman Margaret Loye Fisher Reverend Andrew L. Johnson Lucy H. Millard Frances Lowe Slater-Hammel Harry V. Zahm 1939: Warren Kohler Braucher Carol Stephenson Butler Raymond W. Cummings 237 ALUMNI PATRONS Margaret Latran Harold Robert 8. Hunt Katherine E. Keighley Wynona Leete Morse Jane Richards Sterret Kathleen Rowles Switzer 1940: Gerald E. Cole Clarice McDonald Halfman Miriam Adne Henriksen Eva Julia Mosure Frederick C. Nichols Jeanne Dunaway Nichols Alice M. Phelps 1941: Melodia Blackmarr Darcy Charles L. Dinkins Joan Wichman Garrison Dorothy Winter Lansing William H. Lansing Leah Nelson Martin Philip G. Swartz Quindolyn Rucker Washington Barbara King Wright 1942: Eleanor W. Anderson Frederick 8. Cross 1943: Norm and Peggy Mae Banghart Priscilla Baker Cross Annette Oram Davidson Milton L. Fisher Alfred E. Halteman Dorothy Ismond MacNab Paul B. Modlish 238 James A. Naleid 1944: Wallace G. and Elizabeth C. Anderson Jerome Benson, M.D. Nancy Clay Dann Nancy Sibley Rogers Garver Barbara and Arnold Messner Virginia Amerio Swartz 1945: Faith W. Enos Ann Griswold Hotchkiss Joe Kelleher Margery and Bruce Marshall Louise Hussey Puls Leila-Jane Smith Roberts 1946: Edward Increase Bosworth Mary Dent Crisp Mary Freschl Glassner Jeanne E. Hunt Patricia Sweeney Johnson Florence F. Simons Lucile Gammon Sutterer Carolyn Slingland Truitt David S. Wax, MD. Helen C. Wright 1947: Charles R. Andrews Drs. Hugh and Louis McCorkle James W. Truitt 1948: Judson K. Albaugh Gerald B. Anderson Jean Daly Booker Mrs. Emil C. Danenberg Richard Carl Eisenhauer Nana Henderson Shirley K. Jolley Alphonse Palubinskas, MD. William R. Perlik Dorothy R. Wurlitzer Leland B. Yeager 1949: Margaret C. Giles Hal Rockey W. King Stewart 8. Robert Wilson 1950: Marion Barnard Chalfant Philip C. Corfman, MD. James W. Crawford 1950: John K. Crew Emily Alvord Gazley D.A. Henderson Bernice Veverka Kerrebrock Wendell A. Temple William R. Young, MD. 1951: Carolyn D. Albaugh Milan F. Doering Doug Eglinton Kiki Heitcamp Eglinton Arthur A. Sasahara, MD. Dr. Julian D. Wick 1952: John E. Cadigan Donza James Frasier Marilyn Milne Gallagher Albert J. McQueen Judith Senior Merrill Genevieve K. Sandona Sally Prall Wright 1953: Cedric R. Bainton Sylvia Hubacher Romulus Linney Helen Bunce McDonald 1954: Marion B. Anderson Philip C. Hanawalt Shirley Seaman Lake 1955: Norman E. Thompson Katharine Tharp Chapman 1956: Yuan Chang Paul P. Preising 1957: Thomas Gelehrter, MD. Martha Hester Laura 8. Wiltz, MD. 1958: Henry E. Edwards Thomas Z. Shepard 1978: Robert J . Crawford 1983: Edward C. Goodwin 239 240 Grace Bernadette Austin November 21, 1962 - April 24, 1983 LIF T E VERY VOICE AND SING Lift every voice and sing Till earth and heaven ring, Ring with the harmonies of Liberty; Let our rejoicing rise High as the listening skies, Let it resound loud as the rolling sea. Sing a song full of the faith That the dark past has taught us, Sing a song full of the hope That the present has brought us; Facing the rising sun Of our new day begun, Let us march on till victory is Won. God of our weary years God of our silent tears, Thou who has brought us thus far on our way - Thou who hast by Thy might Led us into the light Keep us forever in the path we pray. Lest our feet stray from the places, Our God where we met Thee, Lest, our heart drunk with the wine Of the world, we forget Thee; Shadowed beneath Thy hand, May we forever stand, True to our God, true to our Native Land! -James Weldon Johnson - . .WmmmI-anmuv- .7 ,, V . . m WawMu... .. A V. Hi-O-Hi Staff From left to right: Andrew Gelfand. co-photo editor 2nd semester, Linda Klevans, Steve Betensky. Joanna Garske, editor-in-chief, Julia Hurlbut, Marc Singer. Eric Loew, co-photo editor 2nd semester. Debbie Tope, Business Manager Barbara Distler. Photo editor. lst semester


Suggestions in the Oberlin College - Hi-O-Hi Yearbook (Oberlin, OH) collection:

Oberlin College - Hi-O-Hi Yearbook (Oberlin, OH) online collection, 1980 Edition, Page 1

1980

Oberlin College - Hi-O-Hi Yearbook (Oberlin, OH) online collection, 1981 Edition, Page 1

1981

Oberlin College - Hi-O-Hi Yearbook (Oberlin, OH) online collection, 1982 Edition, Page 1

1982

Oberlin College - Hi-O-Hi Yearbook (Oberlin, OH) online collection, 1984 Edition, Page 1

1984

Oberlin College - Hi-O-Hi Yearbook (Oberlin, OH) online collection, 1985 Edition, Page 1

1985

Oberlin College - Hi-O-Hi Yearbook (Oberlin, OH) online collection, 1986 Edition, Page 1

1986


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