Portland State University - Viking Yearbook (Portland, OR)

 - Class of 1968

Page 1 of 168

 

Portland State University - Viking Yearbook (Portland, OR) online collection, 1968 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1968 Edition, Portland State University - Viking Yearbook (Portland, OR) online collectionPage 7, 1968 Edition, Portland State University - Viking Yearbook (Portland, OR) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 168 of the 1968 volume:

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The year at PSC is nine months of time and whatever several thousand people do with it. Along the way knowledge in varying amounts is exchanged between students and professors. Of course, what else happens is momentarily or perma- nently memorable. Through it all the camera Iumbers arbitrarily, like a dino- saur, and where its feet fall, these few prints become the only record of the time. ln the end, the individual remem- bers only his small world. His story is not divided into years but into the memories of people, In these memories remains what was and what might have been. ln these recollections are judgments of the world and of the time we shared. .lf l.'7 F 141 ' i . 5-WT, - - - .ur , R t 13 : fr i-lll A 1 t ,. ,Ay-Q52-' -1 ' Q-A z. .I A ., 'fs-1 i . f 1 st- ' 'F it -S. 7 s L' - .-w-FL., ,div ,li ' M r- IG.f', , V ,.1,. I V1 .W V . . N. . - rs Ak i... ll , ' ,- V' .' 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Right now I'm most interested in Zoology and it's not my major. lt's nice to open up an animal and find everything inside that the book said would be there. I think getting through school is more than being involved in school. You begin by getting involved, then you find you're not involved any more. But you go ahead and do it anyway. That's the way I am now. I suppose that's the way I'll be the rest of my life. I guess that's strange when I think back about the things I've thought. Last year I was taking a class running rats through mazes. This year I worked on a research project on a grant with one of the professors. I'm not involved in the psychological side of psychology at all, just research. A lot of the kids don't like to kill their rats when they're done. There's a whole bank of full cages from last term. You get attached to the rats. One girl even names hers. Steve, my husband, and I are kind of withdrawn. But we do go out. We go to all the good movies and when we've run out of them we see the rest. We've even gone to dances. Some of the kids go to dance, we go to stand and watch. Barbara Martin is a senior, majoring in psychology, and a transfer student from Reed College. FFF, 14 1'-v fe--,W ----f- -fr -1-.-11 rv 'gi P. :F wtf, 1.135 XJ, ' W Yi V ln, pl l snug ,1x5.5,r,,,.r -.,1.4. . ' ww 1'-rviit--.'...Z51 W' ' ' , . .... .A N,.. . if'1-af v A ' uf vb mf :.r 4,1 ,, . 514 ' ,, 15 my y y . ' ,fi av 1 w N .fl lil ,if n 1 ,. 4. . -11.1-, ..1 W. , .uv 1. 1 ' r Y '4 - . V in 9, , 3 :5 5 , K' 351-f ' -- 1' , A I -A , rw ' ' ' lmgfoiifu 5' e,'2 i-f'v J' '12,-13' V .,x V., Y 4 w .bl 4 .L ..f ff, Hai' ' 'nal 'I ,J1f ' ' -.,b4.,, . J: A ' . w I f-mf' 1 v f'. uv f' H li 44 f 2 '14, Q ' ' , , I J it ' ,: J ' ' , Anffvgy' Y .- ,ww 'N w ' 'AM-V' ' 'if 6 ' ' as , ,g..., w - 3, 752 Q55 ,M Q.. L A . ,.2:. 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I ff. - .v jQf'.97i. , fn? ,fu-'.Q,Q ' -..' -1-75 .- -'-ig ...v --S..-, ', fs-gf- . yi 9' .a , f Y. i, QL. . J, 9' --1 ' 1--'K ,Y J, 'Q -1 . 'Q 's .f 1 'rm - -' J 1' 47543, .2 - . F4232-.j: P .. lp, E n.. 'L , , ' , 'f'iF. if--1'r7:fi?f'1f' , 14139-, xg- .. . 'J' 1 ,fl, Q - vf' 'L 4 . J I J., ..- vs ,. .M . . Q V- ,v,.' f U .J .X -s, , 41, --:Q-,Z .- .f Q - '. ir'-. ' ,,z.-5.11 ,fggfp , fl' - -ff- 4-.--g L 'c- '. J' -'. -r ' 5 f'-f.-1' . J' . . A511 lx., . -, -1.-.-' . -. ', . .'- 'H 4.--ff. mpc: A - V -.QV ..',. . -:V 7 -Q. 3.1! . A -14.5 .'4a 44 .P :gf .-1 . . '- ' r, , 'r 'ff . v - 2' fig '- .yup 1 157' - . Lf -,. . f-'pw-av.:-, .. 1 .3 ...Q . 6. - ., . . l,, . .. . 5- 14'- ,Q 15?-I: -5 ..ff,1. N ,.'. Q ,-1211 , y. ' .: ..:f.-,QQ-, f- G ,L -, I, .- ,HL Nj.. g ' ' v U . 1 1,1 4-13. -ff iff, 1 . 1 4 I0 1-5 v .il . '1 fc ' . Ii af, .k c r-. 1 .49 .pf .4 U., H au. ,.. 1 .r-I l S -if nv x,w You have to study the other team. It isn't just a matter of getting into shape. A lot of the work is preparation, a lot of that is psychological. You study their films and you try to learn their team. You study your guy and you get to know the way he thinks. That day you think about it a lot, but you try to relax. We play everything in the locker room from Lawrence Welk to the Rolling Stones. Then we go out there and try to win. Tom Oberg is a senior majoring in PE and a member of the football team. I've done better in school since I started playing football, I guess that's funny. But even when I'm studying, I start thinking about football. When you're playing, you're pretty much involved. You don't hear the peo- ple in the stands and you don't care about them. Sure you care a little, busi- nessmen give scholarships if you win. But you don't play for them. You play for yourself. Some guys'll play for the glory, they want people to know who they are. Other guys play because they want to hurt people. I play because I want to be a coach. I've never played on a team that had a winning season. This was my last season and we should have made it. But we were beat out this year. L 'W PSC 36 .......... Southern Oregon 13 Montana State 52 .............. PSC 7 Linfield 24 ........... .... P SC 0 Sacramento State 23 ........... PSC 13 PSC 21 ....... Western Washington 16 PSC 61 ......,.... British Columbia 0 PSC 13 ......... Central Washington 6 Weber State 40 ............... PSC 21 Montana 55 .... .... P SC 7 Idaho State 22 ..... ..... P SC 21 Barton, Hank ..... .... T Birenbaum, Dennis ... ....FL Calkins, Tom ..... .... C Cook, Dick .... . . .LB Cooper,Bill ....G Cripe, Barry ..... .... G Crouser, Brett ..... ..... T Davis, Gene .... .... T Dearborn, Tom .... ..... E Donaldson, Steve . . . . . . .C Fee, Tom ....... .... T Frazier, Billie .... ..... D B Gorman,Ed... .....QB Harvey, lim .... ..... E Heard, lim .... ...FB lahns,lohn .....DB lanes, Bruce ..... .... G Kelley, Bob .... . . .LB Leeds, Garth ..... ..... H B Livermore, Terry .... ..... E Oberg, Tom ..... ..... D B Pfleiger, Dale . .. ...LB Raddle, Ken .... ..... T Ranstad,john . .. . . . . .E Silva, Rick ...... ..... H B Somner, Brent .... .... T Stone, Terry .... ..... T Suloff,Don... Talbott, joe ..... ..... H B Thompson, Val . .. . . . . .DB Vuksich, Duncan ... . . . . .E Wilson, Vince .... .... G Withers, Dan ... . . . .FL Wright, Clarke .... .,... T Young, Rick ..... .... G 'ww Q , 'inmw 1 'L -+ ,+. -?:.?'. ' 1' ww WCW' NNW . W Wisfeiafif. I A 7 G xkvxfxm X X -EX 'V' bf N X. mi ' Loretta Rielly is a sophomore in The- atre Arts. She lives away from home. It seemed more practical, I was at school so much rehearsing. I have a one room apartment. My refrigerator doesn't work so I keep my linens in it. But it leaks gas anyway. I wash my dishes down the hall in the bathtub I share with three other people. I have an an- tique wheelchair and an antique board- walk chair. That's my furniture. I cant' remember how many plays I've been in here, nine, I think. I like acting with the French theater, Les Planches du Pacifiques, best. Most peo- ple don't appreciate what Mr. Wiltshire, our director, is trying to do because it's new. We don't have much experience, but he has the guts to carry us through. It's a very exciting kind of theater. It started with about ten people and now there are more than thirty. eat., 'H x 'i 1' I. W,-4 71. Az Q . H1 ,, 15151, 2 . me-T Ziifl? 3-31 .25 ' F find: 1 'nu ry -,., , L ., 1- H If Q . re if-3f,gt ' ,- ,ga -vu -yr-t , f , V.. . q.1,g.,n-,REP-- 1 4 ,Q H-P-E' 41 , 1,1 K . 51335 .fi mai? -'IHQEQ 'J 5.15. .pf ' 1-r A' , :Efefh-..,,?i . afiu-1- ' I --Lg!+11s., 15 - ' 1' '11 J 9133 . 5'a.1l1', K , , I- H Wy' , I?.,.1f,, A, X-T' Z.: ,, X 241: A Y WR' 1' f ' .fm -Wa. N WL- +I' Jr X ' -1' 4 V 'I-,Ea , .. :7f f LI. . -- ' . '2v,. T-.2 ' Af., :Q-fr... ,Iss-,,,. V,--q x Vi' --W... -,, '2 lptQW'fu ' W- Nu' '-55' V 1' in . ..i, . ng li. jl'Tf ,1f: ,, -L - ' 1 ' :In-' .'jv1'Fff3,,-wi. . xilfgbfwkg, 1 V v 'si .- Q'f'l','3 V' '11-wiht ' ' :'Q'iiF3E?' e'5'xf'E'E' . '-Eve-f Q .gh If ' 3 xc 3:53 ' 5,235 V f,f:g23g, . M f' ' , . -4 .QA K 'fbi' - A L, ,L .,,, V5 , 1 TQ , ,4Li'P ' .53 Gu QM., 3 xg 2 T piI'4'?fS'iY THORNTDN Our 'R?W.9 Eavhw I . 546 tch Hail S3 yr- Loretta worked as rehearsal secretary for the American Theater Company, a group of professional actors under the direction of Thomas Hill. At first we felt we wouldn't have a chance to meet them or get to know them. But they were the nicest people. They came into the acting labs and helped the kids with the scenes they were working on. They taught us lots of card games too. We learned a lot from them. They had different approaches to acting. Some were very Method and internal and others were more interested in tech- nique. But they didn't do odd things like sit in the corner and hold their heads. , Q-T !'z ,j r .. T' , ., li I fi - A 4 - -nd 1 3 Tw ' ' ff- ' si If r I I 1 x MM?- A .'.'3'-t 'Fig' j 8 .4 .4-.. , . .V - al Ning In .. .- 'llllb-IH ,, ,,- 1, f.. -Ultima 5 . If you can't master all fields, you have to be at least aware of them. Most of us have to be satisfied with mastery of one area. But we should be interested in other fields of study if only in a pas- sive way. The man I worked for on my doctorate said you should spend the first half of your life studying your field, then branch out. It would be more ideal to do it all your life. Dr. Dennis Boddy teaches general science, a class in biology and a class in the history of science. These classes are taken mainly by non-majors. I ask my class once a year how they feel about the science requirement. Quite a few of them don't like it. People outside the field of science tend to re- sist science. I have a tendency to say they hate it. That's part of the challenge in the classes I teach. I think they like the labs least. Ideally all classes should have labs. The lab work is the real experience of learning. If you are studying poetry, you should learn to write as well as read it, it's almost necessary. Learning is probably best when it is an informal experience. Somehow the word becomes confined to Biology 101, which meets from nine to ten on Tues- days and Thursdays and begins in janu- ary and ends in March. The formal part of education is only a means to an end. x 1 I If 'xi I .N zln- 1. ,- 1' l 1' - twirl X K K xl , I ' I x -.. .N ,L I f . Tiff ' R! va . A . . ,aww 1 T4 I N Hi' ...Q-.vp Y 2,-yn21,,..,...., . --Y. I ,- hybrl, ,pv--41, re-,, .. M, ,I '-.anus f I ---12'-1' ' E ' , ' . nv ., 4.-: 5- Y- an .. A ist, - , .,,., ,gy .,...,.- -1 . lvl m.u?1,i.,. j rf'--' za...-.,-if '-wh . . A ,,,,........,344A -. . V354 W-,.,,qv'.. - .Q -I ,-- . . I w V ., L,:,JL': 1431. -.. ' - .I gf- I lf ' 1 '- . . I ' A wi 1 1 l . I f N. s ' . ,ern .,'7g..,4. ,.,. .. . 4 9 Y' ' .'5C0r'vl if , I . .- . ,UA 5,4 J, . 41... , t . I 5 .51 .ivlr-,1 ,nf Mn 'Vila 5'-s --' - zqwvrfdz-,-4 ,fi KI N W4 ' f A.- ' -1 N1 .-. 1,3.,,n,f- '. if -1 L., - -:ji '. ' 4' , .' U F?' I R ' -X. r l'S.w..', 'l g.. , . v ' -A- ' ... U A' I 4 1. .f f' A ' 'Y I . l ,, ' .' , .wt , xv.. ,r an 1 , ' L: .. 4. . I .- . . 4, if '. gi' z.. -fl ' 4 ..-' ..,- ., , .., ,. Ln .- ,- ..:,.-+.fj!.u' ,. ' X-.' , 1.. . tv ' ,:.2,.5.., 1-f 'Wir 'T Lx fl--I'-.'Tf',', 1'-62 ',.- P A tu' .F fav-ff 'v'f,:f'.. , iv AT-J 1. 1 ' 'IL f ., ,sv .. ,. . . . rx M, ,...-gn -5- . . ....., 1, r iw.. J' ., is .,,,f kgifgmafc-.-,. .g H .-1' X .r .' T' ' A-sl--4 - ..v 5 T' zifilfa. .AQQQS-TSC' I like to read books, swing on swings, ride the merry-go-round upside down, and I'd like to go skinny dipping. I never have. I also like power. I want to control the school, maybe the world. Sarah Edelson is in student govern- ment, and still a poetess. l'm the ASPSC senator from Arts and Letters. l'm the only on-going member of both administrations. If you look at last year's senate, you'lI notice they all look like business administration ma- jors. They were a straight group. This year we have a wider range in the senate and we should get wider support. I'm working with john Nolan, the new presi- dent on the SEARCH program and we have a lot of hope for the school. I keep my coat and purse in the Re- publican Club office, because my boy friend is the secretary. But I haven't paid my dues yet. I want to be a politician. But I also write poetry, so I might be- come a writer. My favorite writer is Rod McKeun because he writes like me. Maple leaves Lower their branches When leaves weep. Tears shed On tender Green shoots, That grass May grow, Not burn away. .'1x'Xf fl' . f..-- 1 .54 ' i A 1 0 V - x H I Yu , . .I I faii- , im ' Q..sQ .5 59,5-gg., , , . siss y, - A . 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U6 ' ?v'y: A4' Jn ? of wen- N W 1-f' an 'vp'ff,w.. w-.-Q1-. ' lj 'um gIgg:f II, 1.,3I. s fiqpgQI'ffI,.3Iw 29 : I I Ihf2 fII : I ' I Q MH wif S j ' r 0 . . .,,.f '- ,. . 1 ..p',?i3?5' , ' 5. ,f , I A fp 7, ,- I,,,, . .1 7,,'3.,Q , , 0 , , x, . -Al.,-4 ,,b,p1q -Q - 445,15 5 -, 411 1,1 I, 05520 .,fv 'i,g,hgIi,gf j!??' . 1 Kusfm f JL Lygfg - -1' fkngqi ,. ' J Adm? f. ' -W' 5 I I I IJ, ,MQ ILII ana, J, 2 , 5IRlII,gf I I IBM I, I CWL SK ' gm a il ,' We ?7fc?f ,5w-v23.VW,w.,,'Ej L X L I - . ', 4 ' ' , . 'f I, wx , 'I .257-In ng. - ,550-' -. 1 -, - 1 ff , U .. , , F , l ' X . .. , I X I I. If I XI X, . X ' 'I . 'H - Ifgljl ' Q A I . I ' , ,I.,. X Y- . 2 I 'fx . g I '? 87' 'Q ' , .f fIkX s i wi' Rh A .. 5'1Q,L,'f L' F X '- N 3. 'fmIa1.-,'9, ,3' - . ' , .L ' 'f i I , feb ' pry .I x I 1 ' -' 1' ' .. ' I Y' V . . 'n 1 -. -2 x - Q .. . . N -. ' .. ' . ' M- ' . , , .PX . ' 'f' ,jl 1 ' J ' my ,fl L 1 -' V . ,Q I IMI '-'A-III. ': - 'I I f . 'QI .III4' I iII,III I J' 'rn 'I':IQ.' I . - gif: ' I' t I A 5313 Q ggi--X - . . - 1, . MSI :Az QII . II . III. . EWS - A . 1 M fx - F-,L , - ' I . - .5 I ,I .ZXIIIH Ax II -Pj: I I ' uf I ' , . . 121 . Q .Q f .- 2 ' , .ge , W3 1 192.5 1125 . a T 'f'!,1, ' I' 1 ,, JILQ' '.S '1' 9 ii.. .. - ' I? 13' P I . . ' gm, ,532 , -. A .Q Spf '1 Jw ' ' II. I I I MJ , F if f', 1 If I .III , Y I 1 I if .I J 1 III 5 :III I 1.:-f? ' ffl .-A . '. ' - G? ,LAI ,PII ,ZQILI II -I I . I ' '25 ' x iii -if ' we ,. .A I ,III ,I ., x 'Ll 1, II , . I Q f lif- . ,II Q k 1 wa .KI I 4- ff- J . f f ' 5- ' Mfr JY' ,', K fu f . m, 3 .-mu g' sq ,av I, A I ,H 'mzfl RI M n fx , , ,. I S- um LQ n J , IIA I 3 1 L X IIIIIIIIQI rI ' . I K X N 'I- ' x :I wx 'Lu X f,a l Y YW' iff ij T .Im ... Y ...hug ! A fr--1 64 1 ,IW ' e fi r 1.4, 'aa Z ng if .E fs. ', .ka .' 73' . 1 ' 11 in f , , v , f . WC Qui? ,V Ulm 7 ' 5-,B - .- .MEN NOT il, Denise jacobsen teaches anthropolo- gy at DCE. Last year she received the john Francis Cramer award to a student outstanding in student activities. She is against the war and protests frequently in public and in her daily life, Perhaps the eloquent part of protest- ing is the sign, but its mute partner is the futility of being unable to do anything more. The demonstrator also suffers the misunderstanding ,of the uninvolved. When the Vanguard called the pro- test against Dow Chemical's napalm a failure because students had left their sit-in because a college adminis- trator asked them to move, Mrs. jacob- sen replied, Perhaps a militant action would now serve to crystallize people's feelings about the war, would force some substantial debate. But moral courage must be informed by more than sheer stubborness in the face of an ad- ministrator's request. .. QNING , . p, ., 3 5 .,l.,,,. .un u 1 ' 2 f f 'If : 5 . 5 . :l..g 5 . ' Ik-, 1 . .2 ,xn n ' Qi lx U31 ' . X ,Q nlaifh ' FL 1 .- our ,'x ' ' .' K ff , . - '37, f' 'Wi 4 4 0 g . I ' si . . o :I , 'ffl ,ai ' 1' I a- 1 ' us- Nxfh'-YK-'Eg - . v . , .,, ,V S r uv' Z -rf ' i gain 'G Q ro L ' me . fi 'mff, 1 Q -,, . . fig? H gql A '. .f- ' Y M 1-V , I -W ff!-V:-Q -...pq v,,.f,.:. 1 ' X' Av, ' af , V A U, E P 11 5 Q. Y ff all-.. ' !,1 w Amp-.,1,1 -1 !,'j. 5 -V., -, my 1 : Taffy' ,fl-5'-2' . 4 4 3,-Q ,,.,4-.-.f.'s- L' 5-.1 , 4 , , , 4.. 16091. ,f 1-1 anim! 9 .aa l 'Hama -, n -K., f,,.J:.' r 3 -vxfv PP' Hin- ' Q ' -wr? I-. RQ 1 fv- . A , ' .FLM wg .1 QT' ..v, f.. , . J 1 1 f .V f, sry.. 'f' v- 1 ff' .Lg an6.u: h .Q- il -77' R-'vs T. W- ' - ., .. Q I 4 11 sg-QL is PW Q Q , .Q e. P A .X - . . ,r Aust ,1- 3 Q :JN 1 ' A..- .,., 5 J: A-xi ,. ' 4, 'SHI Ei? 'f4 an fl 771 ff-5' V QF31 ri I Q 'l fr ws-X iii Q .r ,, 4 ., ,,-v'4-' . 'if ,,Ley..- II:-if-i -8- .4 F a i -I v '- www 1 'H .,.A I. V a M 1 Of.-Y 'S 5 A eli- ggi. 1 V U A Q - it wg-f.e fL ' x ' ivggnf k A x 5 -7 ' 4 ii - -j . - ,K . , Y ixrxf Wi. 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Q-. . . 335 A - f. 5 ' S . ' Ji. -1' w v Q ,N , . h.. - b. :4.',1'vV 4 Ai.--'Q' - - . , 1 ., A , N f.A hs:-' 'f 'ui- ': ,.'-f , :wjf V ,h 'fa,! wg,fj1 ganIi Y fl, w .Vs e, ' 1, '. ,,' f'Qv'A'Q 'f'af ..-,'. f:, I ,, .-rf'-s f 1-. 'Rf' ',.g'-fi-ALT! M'-' .. Af .lf .., 'hd: !!.'Ufg,'i ' , .. '. ' ., I - -.-M A ' . l. 'A 1 PtW3f .WJ '+-, ' 'N ,QNT , A Mo' wi .WAI Y ' 'V ', , f 5'-, N--. Q.- ' ' ,,.,l.'f- --'x' 'mg . V '- ..1-1w?S. ff.f' , , -vwgp .1 , ' , w ., ,,,.. x I. nw- 1. Jw - . W- 1 rw.- PNQQW f-MQV -4' 'wg Y, 1 . Q U . 3. I. ,b s ., . N- I+.. . , . , ' girvnf- 4'm.'lr . .1 ,Z .g, 'f - '. 4 ,,, .U v L4 -Mgay , ,-,,g+,, P 4 . --. -ew. ., .,.. I , maui . , - , . -u A, xl -,-,qwhfg-x'X'-X121 1 . .,,--sn ,L . W W. --sq 'YJ' !,n4,l '-Y'-sg 9 f'..'-T' ' ' 4. - -':, -ae-, Q, , ji I n. l ' -Q AJ, . . - . . , . . . -'4s?w gJ if - ' , 5 -'Nu' , ' viiffk ' mp --1 x -. -. 7.4. :A n. K, wg4,N.x1. . .Hfinl 1 f. ,'+ 4 ,, -vqhiq t 9 v . 1 az u -1.45 N A L w . Y.-A , v 'ufpf' ,fu-4th V '.. 11' I , 4 . . ' Q, 35'-!Kz.5vf'5a4Pg 1 -,,.'f '!g, l . A - - ' ' -2.-21 --.'f f Q.. ,4vv- .nfl ' .91H 'r f p 5 Y. 1 91 'H 34 , .2' J-,.v ,. P !2'I. .wk ,l, .Q ,Q- 44. 1 A-', C X I o Ya, wth Q! fi Q f . iris- X 'YN ,' , In ge. .I . 0 f gr .' fn I :yi 'qv . li ', - R J 1 ,, o u' 1. . . ,s Q :- ' r ' I! '.,o I -' 1 F. 'l -4' ,Ia in - -I-f-H-vvfwnim-qnavulinl F I An artist ought to be and is sensitive to what's happening now. Artists are like aerials if they're good. I'm interested in living a life of gen- teel poverty - while my pocketbook may not expand, I hope that my vision will be ever expanding. My real career interest is painting, and I see everything else in that context. I'd like people to see my work, but I feel it's more neces- sary to do the work. One problem I find is that with times so critical-politically and socially-it disturbs my concentration. I don't want not to be involved, to shut myself in an ivory tower. For an example, Botticelli suffered severely from the religious un- rest in Florence in the 'I490's. Sometimes he burned his paintings. His paintings were full of wild gestures. The influ- ences were evident. When people are upset, it shows. These tensions are affecting my work. I'm not sure how, just now, maybe two months from now. There is a definite tension in my approach, an awareness of crisis. Harold johnson is finishing his second year at Portland State after leaving Port- land University with a bachelor of fine arts in English and is now working to- wards his masters. He and his wife live in the Southwest area in what Harold calls a regular irregular home. I wish I had more time for Art His- tory, it's been sort of a revelation since Kimbrell returned from Sabbatical. I think I've learned more in Art History than in painting and drawing--how cur- rent movements fit into context. And Dr. Kimbrell is able to give a wide back- ground that provides a context. w 41 I I N- 'K -4 -'-an -L hr!! 4.. 93 3.5 .-vs---,ui .4 .L Q g1L4g,, - .? w?Ff9,,,,., 1 1 - l 3 fl 11,23 1111 ' V . ,1 , 51: . ,J yi. Q, -3 nn 1 am.. f r. ,. V. ln- -41:-'nw nun -.--in 'E ,,, A.- '- '4-, ..-. f'-A . ,.. wylnql in.-. J3 mQ0lP ' mm- 'wry f Mwf .1, -,uf X 1 -NT mm .nr ,guna -L I-951-u cuuglnvl g-.ry ' 4.2. A 'M 3 rf v. , in '4 if f -W1 ' -..- -:1f., . nr .,,.,-::.- ,,.-r,,, ,, 11.. ... R14 family.-af,i'!. ,'5t 44,51 .f,.f lr.N ,Q gk .Kgi,.gg,..r ,ir .5-..: . qflagmgig ' ' ' 3 '5' I - - . 91-.51 51,15 Jw' my .V-,Lk-QA Mi. .- 915 1, ,Ll P751 f 1- i '.'? ' 'Z' ..'. ff i'72',-1.1 - - F L Wiki .Ana .-191' Q 14: 47 vc , , 1 1 we H' i L x 1 f,., 1'lI- 1 ,ww- 49 . 6-Q X - f' X l fp' ,nun r-1 ,. . ,N : f - I 3 - . W . . 1 f:-.2 'iv-.f 1-sf 32: .V ' , . .:, . . ', 5 1 -4 2 . -si, . . 5 .. 21,573 . i, A ,1- .' -c 4 J' V 5 LF 1, X ' .f x ' ,FW ,1 . Q ' z.. I 5 l X 1 E5 x A' Vgx 7.7. , . ' 4. L N ,lvl r ,x --3. .,i5,1,fi Q'41-Zigqtgg-Zviq 2g5f- .Q,'- -xQeEa1uQ ' X I tgji ,, . 'ig-1.j'f 3- ,-.fn Egg- ,Q w:,.,.,5.,q,.. -. 1 53, , W1- li f Q ' ' 'A X -, Q fs . , ,. . f-?i, x ms Qgw, 'xii-'P'Xf Us 4 .Ti ', mI'l nr I xl, 'Al- -.u K w ' K ,, . . eq .so 'sv , 'n 5 E I, I I suppose I've changed while I've been in school, a lot of things have hap- pened to me. But l've become some- what self sufficient, and that's changed me too. As you get older you appreciate the simple things in their own right, like cooking well, and they become a large part of your reality. You make some- thing and you eat it, and it's worthwhile. Robin Tibbets, a twenty-th ree year old art major says l'm a striving person, but l'm just learning to strive gently. l'm becoming a low pressure striver. Robin came to PSC four years ago after studying at the Portland Art Mu- seum for two years. I wasn't really sure what I was even after I enrolled. I sort of needed a babysitter for a few years, but I've grown out of that. Ironically, Robin first became in- volved in the English department I Because I wrote a lot of poetry J. She worked on the college poetry series and became The Review's poetry editor. The Review doesn't arouse enough student interest. The students who know about it and support it are generally the students interested in getting published. It seems like the student body finds it hard to identify with it. Maybe it's be- cause it comes out only once a year, maybe it's too formalized . . . On the other hand, the quality of the Review is generally good. Student apathy toward poetry, Robin believes, may stem from the English de- partment. There is no really inspiring poetry teacher ilike Roethke, or Staf- fordj at PSC. There are inspiring writing professors, like Conaway, but there's no poetry teacher that has the charisma that would really attract students. Robin hasn't written much poetry this year. Costuming and sewing for bou- tiques are her current interests. The dinosaur and mammoth costumes for the American Theater Company's first production were designed and con- structed by Robin. I consider the job the high point of my career. Robin works in the college costume shop, un- der the work-study program. She heads PSC's Arts Festival fashion show. This costuming, fashion thing-I don't know where it will go. Right now l'm involved with the crafts of the thing. l'm learning how to sew better and how to make my own patterns. I like the idea of working for myself. l'm not really trained for a job. Robin lives within a few blocks of PSC, in a three-room apartment stuffed with books and her own paintings. Her closeness to the college is limited to geography. I don't feel intimately connected with the college. Rather than identify just with the college I identify with the community. Living in an apartment, rather than living on a campus where I would associate only with college stu- dents, has given me a more realistic picture of life. And I like it that way. There are a few things l'm intensely interested in but my approach doesn't get me in college. I go to the art and theater department and drink coffee in the cafeteria . . . l'm not in love with college life. College is something l'm passing through on my way to some- thing better. However, a low pressure striver makes few definite plans. l'm just becoming myself. l'm just finding out what I want to be doing... I feel like I have enough time to do what I want without having to run to get there. I like to take the time to enjoy what l'm doing. CREAM MUFFINS Mix 'I cup cream with the stirred yolks of two eggs. Add 1 cup sifted flour. Beat until perfectly smooth. Then gently fold in the beaten whites of 2 eggs. Bake in well buttered muffin tins for 12 minutes in a 415 thot ovenl temperature. Makes about 20 muffins. 5 110 Q df, ' U x A 1 M1 , VJ ' Uv! N1 Am 1 lieth gl f. .-f , 1 14 I 4 .III II I :J L 'T' N ' V' f we L I Q, , 1 1' . 'LTQN , 25 li. ' . . Q3 NWI .IL- v ,f 1 g ug, , ' . ' Ekbf- 3 ' I' 1 Q. .N qu-,. -wi.. -'11 v ., ' u::5.gI :Q ' -11: V' .4 .I. 2, jvfglf IK ' ':'3'L9 lv f ,'1 W. ' lfhvz -' :Sf ' 'S ,' 'VTJL5 if 'Ir' I I IELI II r fl- uw-V' e,-1 A - 1 .Q vw 2-I .' JI, , -ALI 'J A . , 4,4- ffif e I .55 'h I . W, - 1 ., '1 . 11. .jay ,559 I V, V ' FU 'ilk' ...u- ua:- - --ff 'S.vI.Ig yr? ,. QQ. I 7:35 , ,521 .I, - 3515 , , M. H-I J .J If . - '- 35 1 If. 1 P ' ',, r1'?F' . , ggfggff, ',,:Lj1,f: , ' ' H 'hr f g-'Z Qin, f ' I f A' ,-. -. 5 '-I P A ' 19513 . .Ig QQ: . 4 I 7 I 3 , 1 I I i,-r 3 P 43,2 I 5 ' I as .- ' ': '-'I' W, W , s .. . we 'r N., - - ?T'...,,-',. x,'Ug, N Y I ' ,if , ' - ' I . . I ,I , 5 I 7. f , !?3g.,A, 1 3 Q H., --. '24- Q ' . 3 I tl. A K E F I I Y. -,I .VII . V. ,, I A12 -. 45 2' Eqlfrp, ' :lj ' , ' ' It -1 - -' K , J- 701 , Q I . A ,,,I . I I 312,53 - -. ' Q - 'E' ' , .2293 ' ,f ,f -. X . gg 11 :ig 'rugs Q1 ,I x .. 1 A . PPM' .y ffkk ,N 5, . . 'fy s A E 'U It may ge z - .Af 75'-f ' Q. 5 Q- J , , I: .fx 5 xw I , ia fy ,xii I f , -- S I ' I? K gtk I II PGI: e I . N 'ny ,III I. QL.,-? U 911'-, ' , 415: -Q -- ,wzrrl ' 3. I, f 517 . I ji f 55-W rf ,In- E ...J 52 ,I A Y 1 k 4 , ,. Ha,- th. ffu 1 f '- ,fury-. IZLQ Q, Ai- V , 5-I In the Uris year 1966-67 Timothy Leary visited Portland State College, selling his particular brand of snake oil and a three-step guide to happiness, turn on, tune in, drop out. Most stu- dents listened, some took him literally, and dropped Western Civ., listening in- stead to the two-billion year evolu- tionary history of their own cells- especially the hair follicles. But by the end of spring term Mr. Leary was all but forgotten, and most of those who didn't want to rush back to the Establishment adopted a new hero, one Sgt. Pepper whose message could be played by the hour wherever the alienated chose to meet. But even the Beatle's masterpiece grew scratchy and hum-drum by the end of summer '67, Everyone got by with a little help from friends but there was need for a new anti-establishment hero for the 1967-68 chase. For Portland State stu- dents one, indeed, emerged. His name, already well-known, is Branford P. Millar, president ofthe college. Dr. Millar announced to almost everyone's surprise that he, in effect, was dropping out. Not moving to a more prestigious position-at least not immediately-nor resigning under fire, but just retiring from the grinding de- mands of the academic executive in order to devote time to cherished per- sonal and scholarly pursuits that gen- erally must be forgotten as a man moves up from faculty to administration. In an interview he summarized his reasons with a characteristically wry smile, Like a whale, l need to surface now and then, get some fresh air. Throughout his presidential tenure here-almost ten years-Branford Mil- lar has been noted for his wit which ranges from folksey, ironic anecdotes X , to understated but effective sarcasm. Over-inflated speakers, most recently Robert Kennedy, are likely to be subtly needled as introduced by Dr. Millar. interviewers for television, newspapers -and college yearbooks-are often frustrated by the constantly changing pace of his rhetoric. A question on the progress of the college brings an intricate five-minute reply. The following question-how his family reacts to the drastic shift in his plans-brings a smile and one word, Fine, This is characteristic of the man. He is enormously proud of the college and of the achievements of the past ten years. Yet his personal life has a sanctity-and separation-of its own. Minor health problems entered into his decision to step down. Though again, it was his need for privacy and a growing fear of becoming a typical, thoroughly insti- tutionalized college executive that prevailed. Dr. Millar quickly illustrates the changes in the college during these ten years: in 1958 it was a college of 3500 with a library of 30,000 volumes, a state allotment per student only one-third that of the downstate campuses, and a reputation as a school for Eugene and Corvallis flunkouts. Degrees were given to few, for most transfered elsewhere. Even the degrees given were limited to divisional majors-Social Science, Hu- manities or Education. The Division of Business Administration didn't even exist as such. ln 1968 it is a college of near 10,000 with a library of 230,000 titles, a state allotment per student still not equal but approaching that of the state's campus schools, and a reputation of having an undergraduate program as challenging as any in the State. A range of academic majors is now offered, and almost a full range of master's programs. A strong start has been made toward doctoral programs and university status. Each of these programs, unlike the prefabricated academic booms in Cali- fornia and elsewhere, had to be fought for all the way, virtually forced upon a legislature and a State Board of Higher Education dominated by people highly suspicious of urban education. lt has been a challenge for Dr. Millar fraught with potential disaster. As late as 1964 there was still talk of moving PSC to the suburbs or drastically re- stricting it. But reason prevailed and publicity, including the nationwide im- pact of PSC's record breaking College Bowl team. t My greatest personal achievement in office, jokes Millar, Winning the College Bowl. J Now he can laugh off the rigors of the ten years, saying, l've had my fun, I'll leave the real work to my successor. lt's been interesting. I've had it, on to some- thing else. Q- J fw- . . L. . 1' ' -5 e 9 ' 31 5. Q .41 ,Pd .v ll y n, '- - . 'YB' f , ,tv .. .4 -P ww 1. J' Y ,fn gf Q- ' .-. f. mv, '-'uf Jw A911 J! xv! 2. wg. , 'J i' 'gixl.QLf,:.giti'. x - .,, H 144 .,... -x..::'-if . I, Wf 'f'W ' L ff2e 43fx n1v:1e4:r v? ffifiifsiii 4 5' -is 0 f D 'Q - Q J -,-wx away . , J,..,'r,L5-5' K nu. A 58 Q.. - - 4 LN, -.,-f-,-4- --Ar'-gn-rs'g3,',', .,-,'.-.Q5,:.z:p VW,-Y :qv In 1-4, v.,::' fx: -gy 'v'owo1.4 -L. .Rf-ff-., :Ha n-,.- '- 1 , ,L-xx-.M . N.--i26:E::1,- I l :P 'tw Ji 135mg 'Kp gflrqf Q I enf- 2 rfzag Don Austin .... Tony Campbell .... Terry Carragher .... Wayne Clemmer Gene Davis .... Tom Garber .... Yoshio Kojima . . . Toshi Kasahara .... George Mohler .... john Neelands . Gary Onchi .... Flip Reade ... Rick Sanders .. Chuck Seal .... Koji Watanabe .... Masaru Yatabe .... PSC 21 ......... Oregon State 18 PSC 25 ..,......... Central Washington 1 PSC 20 ........... PSC 19 .. PSC 26 .. PSC 26 .. PSC16 .. PSC 22 PSC 20 .... PSC 31 ,......... ...191 .....177 ...152 .....177 .....Hvy .....123 ...16O .....115 .....167 .....Hvy .....123 .....167 ...123 ...152 ...137 ...145 ....Oregon 13 ....PSC 17 ......Stanford 8 9 ....... PSC 15 astern Oregon 19 ..Washington 14 . . . . .Wyoming 9 Brigham Young 9 ........Utah 14 ...Fresno State 8 . . . . .Cal Poly 11 Southern Oregon 5 Washington 17 .............. PSC 14 PSC 23 ....... Central Washington 11 PSC 26 .......... Washington State 7 Oregon State 23 .............. PSC 6 PSC 25 ........ ..... O regon 5 2nd Place, NCAA College Division 5th Place, NCAA University Division 59 g 57553 N5 1: Y R: ' A H--If. ,. . jayrff - X'- Yllfw rfzaf- ,zlfi ygiigl- 44' , 1'Z,1.1 Vi- J .L-., ,z-Ar. s, ,A,. V. L- - .U 1 L kj' ,A l:,s'1-J. ,' 'fx fx .11 , ,X , . f, -'., , ,,. N W f I . v w 1 , 'I 1 1 HH, 5 Jw- A - -Ei. iff . ,--Q. -. ,, ' ' . -.,-ln, T 5 - 1' w- r M29 60 .ZLLY 4' ' 'ir f in -MW , hw-fawfs l'51YuliS H' vw. -,-1 ,,..',.f1,'v.g' ' ,fy ,g,, ,VI , . --V-,,',,'x 'xii '- .H.A,-.gai ,, 5-1 , , 1 --v---vm '- 11 Q -1 ' 4. az-, .gl .. W Frodo Lives. PSC's favorite little man, Rick Sanders can often be seen dreaming in the haze of smoke, pizza, and coffee vapors at Montague's coffee shop. Here he can retreat into a relaxed degree of anonym- ity and escape those who pretend to recognize him as a wrestling celebrity. He can be seen gazing out the win- dow, slouched in the back row of an ad- vanced poetry writing class, developing another facet of his little known per- sonality. It is Rick's wrestling prowess that has resulted to a large degree in national recognition for Portland State as a cita- del of winning wrestlers. Indeed, suc- cess becomes a by-word when it's San- der's turn on the mat. Walking down the hall, he wears on his letterman jacket a little button. It says in Elvish script Be Happy. He is, after all, the wrestler who reads THE LORD OF THE RINGS, in the locker room before his match, '- ......., 111 , N4 .- ,, 1 1 .,L. M. 4 ALM-, ,nm f- ,. f 1-. uf 4 - u A 55,-,,-1.4 r, ,J ' 7' 1,f'iw- 2+ '. .Sm v- '-'-.gi- . mf' ' ., ff vm- 'f .- 1 1 'Q 1 if fljwdilr. 5 , 145- f W .'F,':M4g -13, X V' :- . -xg -7' 1 , . 1l..E,5-lv-- X . 4 J r-' 54' A -a 1 , . -N. .,,x- ,, 3, :ting A C! grm '5 R --yqrtx-sw fill' xxx Yfupnth ' ' 1 F 1131572- -V ..., ' A - - 'f'P: ih'P ',i ':1 ,. gp b .N .. - -, ' ' ' +A 41- 'ffrh-zv455?'.'2'?guu-K? 'f'!'i.Q --XJ 13? +17-T '-1'-'idlvg ., -- -x -'Q wr, X 1 ,- A fri 4, --: sf. .4--fa ' Misa: W- 'f 'iii-5w',E1n-31:,: -' f y . ' n.ff'-,5B,?w' , :fum , 1-2iJ'g'Qg4.Lf+ waffle 1 -as:42BH -flaky., -. ' .N '+'?:w,-fl-1-4 v1+.--ww ff '. ...-:'-f. fr: . a.4: ,u -N. ' -, XXL- 5 . ' f. u'?f '--TJ'-:1...'- ' Aff.---gyg 'Y :'gQ:,-V' 'ill Q' ---,JM - X -pgsql CX. 3 1 -yi fg gfla, N: ,ET'LvF4,-E.?-Egg L-f-,esfz I 'j,5LY x T. xvzw. : 5, 'T-Q 'rx' -T-' 1 - -..- ' 'FF' 16 ,v , :gif -:Kew '- ' ' A 'S .5a'5,Q.rg f 4. ,. VN- -4 'TF ?f9 5. !v . ix,--figk..-ef - - UQ- vw. J,,. 1,3 - 1' ad : ,, ,343 V , 1.+ ..V .Afg- il wi-?'s,-L f.jf5'i5,,f11'.,. Af-Q-:,.,4.,. --J-' - A , 'Y--wif, . - -Y' w A , r l . H : 'Jk.':1'M'3, ,K A5 g R W., : 'L.1lw xiii: A ' V, 7 ,gifs . 'N N - .5 x fx 1, I ' xo Q- Q2-' Ffh Nl' 'WTA .xi N1 8. i '1 ,- L., 1, W J I, K 4,-V 4 E V , 4 w C ' ali Ax Fawzi Khoury is an instructor in rabic Grammar at PSC. He comes to he U.S. from the Middle East. His first ears here he lived with a family in Lake rove, but he got married and moved to ake Oswego. Fawzi also instructs what must be the nly class in Arabic Calligraphy in the ountry. Knowing Arabic is not essen- ial, he reminds his students, But you ust keep in mind that you are working ith two colors, both the black of the etter and the white of the paper. The etters must flow from one to the other nd off into the white spaces. Calligraphy is not difficult, but it equires sensitivity and practice. Fawzi is involved with the middle east enter and the Arab students at PSC. his year they co-sponsored a debate on he Arab crisis. We thought our man made a good howing and we wanted to bring him ack but Cohen in student activities asn't sympathetic. Fawzi moonlights in the old section f the new library. We have more oom since the change. He catalogs ooks in Arabic for the library. We ave the largest Arab library in the ountry. He is an enthusiastic teacher, but otes red tape. This year l was sched- led for an eight o'clock final in Arabic. came at eight thirty. He didn't shave. 'a- 'ff' f .1 .M f Q 9312! X .J- 5 lie fx, , '-Uiwnfgglkgl :xi 4. f a- infix X If Z Vlll Q sr A ,ff H' yf' g . thu: 0 WW-116' g Ql em L CJ Q tfqd,-. V , - f i5g.?gi7'31sg:L3 , E ,. ,, + 13 c , rl ' ii V 9 XF 3 FI 0 1 I DOY g 9 'fm I sv- . I llik In fn.. .V 4 . l 1 i ' wa 1 mu -:A ' fi I l f 71 mn hu F4314 - .5 --,-5,9 U .y Y, -' ,ul ,Ygvrrf'1:-'P-xfgwgfvfP-,FQQZSQ,f2?:1l:2:1s,g5,93f. mm . - - '- . . -., A15 ., -1 .:,,. -VL. L, .. 4 . , . . ...K ,...,.,.,.,,,- , ' - X- 1 t lv- 'He 1- T,..A..::. ,. T .S f ,A . 1 V K . 'K wg is 2 r avi- U:- 1 , I S 5 , i . g . ' - I ' ' A 'T7 !2'Ix.,f. 11' 'rm -jr . 1 --1'f: 1'F .5 ' J - .. .,-r.m.. E f 1 x 1 i, Kevin Robinson looks around. He looks at you and thinks. lf you know anything about the mental conditions of writers, you will know they are in bad shape. This was written under a lot of stress. THE YAPPISTS . . .WHO WEAR THORNLESS LAUREL WREATHSY' This is an invitation to all those of you who are for some reason afraid of si- lence, too timid to speak, and don't like it, who have been silenced and for various other reasons present in our culture have not been able to com- municate sufficiently. f. 'K W 'Qi-4 t . 1 3 ,ah Q- ' .' ,hx . N ' r, , . .ph ., ,, - . . , .1-J, . - X 24 . .av-,tif -- I ,V fr t '14, .,. . . - ' .gn V.--1 - -. - ff .- . ,.,fgx'13- an ..' 'wh at .I .1 .,,,, ,,,,. x ,J.id,,, V V., , V ' I - .: ,g,.:' r, - r, t',., .1 - , fy-,5 - l - - . , - f 'N 4' vu.. it ' P+. .'-C-N ' 6 5 on v . ,-. b 1 -- --'Q ,.,. f .J' ,af 5, ,R .3 ft - -1-Y ' .. .',, f l 'li' ' i xii lb , V . 1 . I 1 Away lr' '51 -i ilifvif f GT. ' 5, 1 ,R . A K . I Q gh , any 1 X , , ' 7 y .ll ' all .-.ILA Q,-Qs., 'Gig s f 'fn 1 fr If -t is .. -- , M, 1,3- 1 f in ,--' X , if kia. f-...ii .--,,, S, YJ I- ,hi 5. ix - 2 , My-C '- T its . ' v 4 ,.g- . , ' .N - I .1 19 .. . 'xt ' .. 'E' .sa 'S T l I have good reason and qualification to invite you, nay, urge you to join in I this organization. My tale, I will be short, is moving. .PW i ' A 4- 3, of-iq fl . A499 .ii-1 I was raised a Catholic and was taught to think and say, tespecially sayi, the proper things. Through the many years of training I said many things properly. I said that I wanted to be a priest. The indoctrination was powerful and I went through the process of being a servant to God. Towards the end of my stay at the seminary, I was introduced to the idea of further study and dedication. You may imagine by now that my method and facilities to communicate were well stunted, rather handicapped. Becoming a Trappist was easy. Be- cause I quickly said the right things, by not talking, the orders were promptly bestowed upon me. For about two years I meditated, mused, and prayed for something to pray about. During these years I wondered about my own life and the situations of others at the monastery. It was strange, how every- one could appear so happy, yet so quiet. How could we be pleased yet not show it? Despite many tries at mental telep- athy, covert sign language, etcetera, I knew talking was my only resort. How- ever there had to be something worth while to blurt out before breaking the code. 3 :I Halle' 71 Perhaps l would have never realized it if it hadn't been for some unnerving occurrences which happened so close together that they formulated a plan in my head. Brother joseph, a resident of over ten years, walked by me in vespers and mumbled something, not quite Latin. I was haunted for days. Then again at lunch he mumbled something which sounded like Pass the salt or This has to halt. -The excitement was al- most too much. A few nights later another strange thing happened. Brother Robert, one who kept more silent and aloof than the others, unintentionally awakened me. He was actually standing at the end of my bed jabbering away completely in- coherently. 15H2'f. 2J-x- 7 Q ' '9'ff'i ' - , -7f9'i'i7' fifff gf2:E1'.7 7 'Ac J .,:- 2-ifzigg. vin-3 satfiw- i:f'fiif5Y-:?:j 2'i1k-1Ci - A ,.,. f,g115f.1a , . ,J-.i,Zy?a4.f+,r5,3g infix-5.l-52:15--,e-PS - jfQ0w'?r :gc 'N QV- 1 I:lJ..14f6.f' ',, 127, .- 1,' w-'51, ,gf ,72..- -4,rg5,g g 'N-'-Lpfgfgf-i-'E'Q ig' .q,- 5 4--,w.ig.y , 1 Y .fe :,,.ff.Y54g,-gf -R-4413, irc.-.L 4.15.9 53, . .45 2,15-J I ' --..,, 4 ,- La -gmf' f gg-if- l QtffS, , M. .. 1- ' 'g'i+3vlsj':i-2' fs - --'4 syjijb- 4 b ' . ' M .,.g:-f?3i2Li11?w'f- A ,saw '-fugqyliifgz , I , ,1:4.s1'3-,eg 31?-F' Y uni.-.','5-?'Jf.g: -31513: A ,vc-:H 4 .1- 'ni'-iz 'WL w wf5v.f-,sw W ws'-'.aP:'.f:w-+9:w,2 rfb 'w ' wa . i - ' i'W?ik-.A2Va'f? vifflhlii'-l'fL'37Qfi5Qf4-2'-'f'3 E fi.f'f.,,L- - J 1 ' f - , f wr fC1l Lf . fllifs ' ri H . Aff' if '4ff'.' 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' ' 1' uw, .V xr L, '-'JF-.. . wf 'A -3 , Q.: .F V 'F ,.-' J' J' ' ' -...mqg -, ,. ,.1g, xl., ,A-V -Q - -.- ' Qllw :Q :a?,I1 a, . I 3: 'Ls-1 1 5- ,. 44 wg, Mig. QV' f i s :-- 3.941 A ' .4-21 rilfpf. W'i,fg'f 1 w Lifff. -'ifyifh N '? --Q.. A Si 'V 0. - ' 3 1 ' J -- Y 'iff'-I-gklv A. ' My Ki 'ff' 3' fra. ,Q , , 5 Lid - ,1 'f ,yflsf- 7-1131 , ' - 4-f A f. -1, FSL- N '5l ' frf':+ . .L W -.,::! LJ! , s,fg1.g 1.-,,. 1' ,, 2 f 4 jr, .bn-ff ,, .I k. , 1- sf.. 4 l -iffy l V I X U -I.-A at ak JE. , fs. iw if va P1 ,Q H+' - fo if, i:,,,, I, A ... 3-,-, -, - T . Q, l .gk . 'fl V F ' , ftir5,?,:Qvths - f ' 'Qian ,. . :I I l-4. I ffm, -I lg, ' .19-T . ' Y ..,. N I bw ' -Y Lili,-a :I ll lrtt 4 . I .. W N A My understanding was getting clearer. He was blurting, but he didn't know what to blurt about. My motivation was also getting stronger and I resolved to find the words to express my frustrations and my hopes. That time came shortly. It was oppor- tune since I felt ready and I imagine there was a ready audience. We were assembled for a work session in which we were to carry sacks of grain to the bakery, and then load empty yeast bar- rels in a U-haul truck. Ordinarily we would be signaled over to the locale and a few glances over the scene would indicate what needed doing. The su- perior sometimes snapped his fingers at us. I now assumed that this was a sign of impatience to speak. I loaded a sack of grain over my shoulder, carefully making sure that a slow leak would be quickly seen. A few brothers pointed at me. I con- tinued. I heard snapping fingers on my heels, but walked on quickly all the way to the bakery. Once inside the scene was set. In stormed the superior, the other brothers standing ready to pray for me. The su- perior pointed to the trail, at the bag, and at me. This was the time. In a steady tone that echoed on the ears and faces of everyone there I spouted, I didn't hear you. After this my spell was broken-like a magic kiss, I was a transformed silent beauty. My talking lasted a full three weeks. My expulsion took one week. The Bishop looked upon my case with leniency, for that reason I remained fairly religious. Several former Trappist's now work with me in the formation of what I consider to be the answer to all Trappist-like traps. One may now expend his full re- sources, free his soul and free his tongue -the ultimate in expression-become a Yappist. If you join now you may be a con- tributing founder. join later and you can say you were a founder as many times as you want. An America for the tongue tied-a promised land for re- pressed sounds-there is novv a Yappist Sounduary. All sounds are welcome, in the hope that they will lead to fuller communication. Already we have stu- dents who come to us as grunters barely able to say Let me in, who now could talk their way through iron gates and silken screens to any boidoir. Some have arrived in a state of utter confused chatterg after a month or so their sentences became clear, pre- cise, and curiously enough they start thinking. Talking is a mental broom which clears repressed mental cobwebsg at the Yappist Sane-ter we raise not bread butvoices. l can't promise you complete happiness, but we'll talk about it. What else do we do? We make drip- ping candles that burn brighter in the land than any other.l 3 A seventh grade team, took it over the coach got sick. Then in the e grade I coached it myself. We across the street from a jewish te and we almost lived in the gym, pi basketball every evening. Pericin and his family, a wife and children, live in Southwest Port The Portland area is beautiful. We a lot of trees around our home. I the outdoors and the trees give us feeling of privacy with Nature. Political leanings? No, not really. father and mother were Democrats, I not. Over the years I've changed views, I vote for the man I think is This is the way I feel about it. I think the students here at Por' State should take more interest in school government. Let's face it, a students can show a lot for the scl If you don't care who's elected to government, this can change a lot things. He should be an individual represents the school, I don't believe long hair. I don't think long hair c categorize ninety per cent of students. Back in grade school I coached y I I 1 - It--'N Z ff' ,ff If 4+-. 4 ' 4 N it . 'ms' ik. ' 'Klux-' - y ' ffl-'2Pff rr-,.T. I -L I -1' i ' I was brought up with strict disci- pline and I feel my own family should abide by my rules as long as they're in my house under the family roof. X 'I 1' 7 fb , r ' -.-.A :ff f - i X X' X A A ' 1. Qu 51 - .aa-aaiiif' 11' i,,1..., i e f 'h,'.,..y. as cry, P' Q ' ' ' 'AL ' 1 'K' , x.1, , 1,tgg,gYi4 ' '5' fi? ' L S, 'bn - -' ,mg Qf-in if ' ' ' .'z'1- , Y - . -,.....--1-mi-Mig V . , . WF' 51 Q--:Q-M -A---M ---V--f f----fa, 1--vf--WV' f We L - . , 7 - - - ' ' '5'1?ff.r-151.7-r ' C!-- ?glf 'Qf',f :-QLSIAJQS1' fly 'wf fxldwfiii 'K-ig . ig ' ' 'IV - - . A 5- ,'. V9. 5 ,-1, , ,Je-!1..,f,.,. Y :Q wir,-,N - -4 - 3 .3 A ,- .d 'l v ,- ' 5. 6.515 J ,-tix., I 'L ' ,Y V, r, Qs. , . . ,. ,ff ,, vm. 1--gin ,rf ,t sql: , . -4 , A .E :assi A - 'A ' , i H.. :- ,.,. -J. .,.. -. ,. , ,.' I 'lf- .fif ,L ' 1 'til ' ' 4' , .I- Y : 418-Y I think Ithe hippiesl are really a very minute group, but the thing is, any area that's kind of freakish, the newspapers blow it up. I don't think we have as many as we did before. This comes back to Student Government. I'll say that even though the prob- lems today's young people are faced with are more numerous than those when I was young, mine were most cer- tainly as serious. I grew up with World War Il, the Berlin Crisis and was in- volved in the Korean War-life is very short anyway, you don't know that yet. When I was in High School and Col- lege, we knew of drugs, but the idea of testing them, well-This goes back to the background of the family. If a survey was taken concerning young people and drugs, they would be sure to find some moral breakdown in the family fibre. When you feel you must jump off the Marquam Bridge to prove to yourself that you can fly. . . The facts . . . Though they weren't as erratic then as now, we had levis' and peacoats and things, but the Idea of long hair, really eccentric clothes, I don't know, l'd look at the kid and his family. ,Q .1 lp' - 4- L1 5 R , 81, ,, 56.4, I' . ' vu, I ' K1 . V Q at .W h -.A' W. s . 3 . I, -'37 .my K 4 ,. 4' 'wr' ' fi-I- ' 4 I I 4-B-9 ,4 ,E , i In 16-M 51 LU. 34 Urn .AL .-',,,. SS5- .ff ,.-v A Av Q X fn ff- ,.,x X , file. 'A ,Q gs ,- SSM ling' f 1-' Pericin finds time to listen to music, classical. I always enjoyed classical mu- sicg my wife graduated from College in music, I guess that shows that athletics and music can combine. Popular music Like 'rock and roll'? Some of it I enjoy. I think certain beats in some songs are pleasing to the ear- none that stands out. I asked Coach Pericin what his fa- vorite sport was- Well of course bas- ketball, but I'm also interested in foot- ball and baseball. I excelled in baseball in High School. I got smashed by a line- ball that impaired my vision somewhat in one eyeg otherwise I would have liked to have gone on with baseball. I think basketball is a great spectator sport, too. It's in an enclosed area and this makes the enthusiasm intense. 1967-68 varsity basketball scores California State 95 . . .... PSC Pacific Lutheran 100 ... . ...PSC Seattle Pacific 109 ........... PSC PSC 73 ....... Central Washington PSC 114 ......... Humboldt State 1 Pepperdine 103 .... .... P SC Fresno State 89 .............. PSC PSC 100 British Columbia PSC 103 British Columbia PSC 79 ......... Alaska PSC 68 ...... Alaska PSC 74 ...Puget Sound PSC 95 .... .... S t. Martin's Gonzaga 68 . . . ........... .PSC PSC 83 British Columbia Montana State 110 .... ....... P SC PSC 68 .......... .... C hico State PSC 95 . . . . . .Seattle Pacific PSC 90 .... Hawaii PSC 93 .... Chapman St. Martin's 97 . . . .... .PSC PSC 108 ........ ..... P omona Seattle Pacific 67 . . . ....... .PSC PSC 114 ... ....... Puget Sound PSC 80 ....... Central Washington lf? if 1 -wb , A - - v . -ws K E. K W!- f. ft I K ah W' V sr ui? kis- x ML I F , ,..--1 ,U-gx.w,5s:f',,.-W , , . :-.- - Aa ,pp-. z .5- qzxt, . X sl 2 Lf' mt' .A.., WEA eg F rg : f --pr? .w ,gl vi ,1 -lg .LH 5, . f 'Qs- -' dx q - , A fi' .gi .Lg 1 lv' ,V :cg - 'Jlfff nf. ' ,' N ASL? n C ,il - ' nz L. '51:iT1g'c'3i?EQg'.1'w ,in 1 . ,, -' 'v --., 'w' ,-v-.uf 24? - 5 V . 14. - .- 'J' ,S gn 1. .1 x , a-of. li ,- m. s ,.',, J rw V- ,,-' 'v 111, ' 4 I -l nu 1 ,, r .-' L A-:'-. A '53, 'J X 1' . . I, J, av 11. , . AA.: ' up M 4. Q F -35-faq . Q42 .A nb f if , 1. ' . . Q 4 ,.n a l 1 'X ,I . A. Q' Q., ' 5 ,g Af P' ' - A 1, 15145 u.gwf?S 3g- , .gk vgezfgwxg-. -' wg- 5: W1 Af ffTf'ff1 -.' k .4 -' -1 ' A- if . :rg . 15571' ,I 4121 -50' M5221 23,3 T -. I ' 44d: ,Q ff' f a ,, Q 1? Y Uv. ' A flaw V4.3 ...- xl- E 'x A . s 158. N l . l i i f ., .1 4. f. x s .gt l li E. L . 1 fx T il ' . .-,Tx, Sill . 'fifty i 3.,lV.AM.x: Nui.- 5 '- ' 4 1 ',-'l f'v.iK ' .2425 I like the looks of the people who go here-their features are on the plus side. These students are independent, self-sufficient. They work, most of them, so they value their spare time-they get a lot out of it. From a background of wide variety, leading a life of wide variety, Nina Low- ry is what is called an advisor in educa- tional activities. She superintends the Film Committee, the Art Committee, the Festival of the Arts, groups brought to PSC like the San Francisco Mime Troop, and a lot more. Nina has a cynical sense of humor. She's businesslike, yet open and friend- ly.She keeps tabs on the myriad ofthings going on about her, the phone rings while she is conversing, somebody comes to the door. Without fail, the visitors lean against the doorjamb and wait for recognition. Nina looks up. E .ng nf: ?.. ..y. IG! .3 3 4 . .F v - '. 1:15 als fir 38 Hi, is the usual opener. There is a short silence, and then the callers launch into whatever they are going to say with, Ya know. . . Then, everyone's gone . . . the phone doesn't ring. There is a short vacuum si- lence. Nina shrugs it off. Organized confusion. Now, where were we? hy-.-:jf ' 1 X l h o . . 1. .ggi .,v. ,f' Q ,f X i' .... f Ht.,-,l.,i . -. ii- iw-figt,-.' 41,-.-.i i Y ,..,f.1- -. N J T ' Lf-'tire fri S2 il ,'..ill': if?1eb!EW She has her own interests in the arts. I'm a pianist, play the classics for en- joyment. My madrigal society meets every week, I direct. She takes callig- raphy at the art museum and reads voraciously. I loathe TV, I am most in- terested in the performing arts-theatre and music. Nina was one of the people who waded knee-deep in grain to shape the now famous Barn Theatre at Oregon State. On music, Bach is my favorite, my most absolute favorite. I went to the University of Cincin- nati-I was raised in Cincinnati as a kid -and out here, outside the big cities, there's less opportunity to hear a wide variety of music. You really stick your neck out to get a professional acting company here. You can't get a dancing group out here long enough for them to teach for even a day or two. if -M., A,,. H., 21 'l 3 U Q ' f 5'3- 55 , y ai -., JF 49? ' . ,L , :N- , ,. K, iiv? .. L, H .15 V 3 U1 .9573 -' x V .f,,-V f .ff tif? .f, ,5 x 571 ,AZ ff 'qi Sf' , , k , 'Y 'aZ-' . -' 'ff ,mhf+Jg jIfI?jh - ' 1, . .- 1121--4 A . .SE .1 A. w' F x M 2, J 1 '- ' ' 111 Q I fu Hi' W, v : f 1 1-1 ' 'g:f'v1'2: fr: ' ' ' t Q . l. i I r xfy, ,4 if N . H. v 'L X 315. if ', ff rs 15 A can N ' - Ni' f x . 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Vocality is for the I got nothing to say, motions T visage inscrutable, bedroom - I ' elusive. ---------1 AMAZAV6 1 A0 Q414y4,, pg,y,y MA 7' 752 Wf'f47' Aff? WE' pf' 475425 jfyj O 6714? Wi 5Z2'3 'C ff! 5 ...... 7' A555 fO 5105-4ff X AVP SURWVE' f N-....., . 'Nl 1149? off 'v' .Q-EF' ag.. ,sf . V-...J-0 ga Jfy., 74975 . :rv - V1 W wc N .19-. mg 95 ' 96 x P . Y.,A-1 .!4'fl' .. -' fa.r43.,,giL , ,.. ,. HJ, U . -7: Mui., .1.-.mg 17' Wu: . .,. , -1593 ' ' '.3'1.'.rr: - ' .. . .3 'r . gf . l -Y, 1.3, 'f' .-' '1f..Si:r': IL .rv ' . ' ' if-.vi 1'vl f- f 14 . gy 1:93 AZ 554 34 X-ff' , ...TQ .- ,L.- .1,Vg-1- 1 . ,-L... ,fr q , . , I T .Q X x if J ' 4 L . A I ' ,. . , f ' I- 51 . ... f . f-.f.. f- 1 1' . g- , - ,Q . , F' ., .,, , , . V , . 14' .lvf . Q- 4 . . ' in , U , ,P . Q 2 ' ' Y A 'L Y . ul i ' A F K 1 ,1.vI' I, ,' L W,'Ef5 .. z , '. J 1 '-'fra-ff .4 fm ' 11, . ,-.,,, jc, . - gif-I '-fr., ' ' , , .v ,Lgn ju i ' I '-,- -' .1 . ' 'Ly ,-.- - '7 f -1 1 ' H14-'lf f .fi-2.12 '- ii! 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'in l N. , , 5 . 1 , -:. -,-..x,1.AH .I,., ,.,fOr-3,-.f.,3 -JUL x , . , ,, 1. A. x ,if .- ...f ,3 ,, 4 -QL-I59Q.A.w,.,4,':3.g.A-5 . 1. it 5 Y, Y - ' A f . A 'ftik . . YL H . ' . frjg ,I l l. . Y'-,. l. ,x.A. fffLe.1fv M N ' -.U V ,V ,fig ,6 1 Y 511.553 X fv.2.w ' -A . .V .1f:i..es. .. , Arg.. Q 1.-.r .--5-gf.: g.-'.-:,g1,. ' - -'. w..v,4?':f:,-'.:.mv..1.1.. - r re -. ' . A' 45!'.','m..- e . --.1-, , .. .L M'-.L 1. .-..f - v 441. - ' -r. '-'QL 4- H4 ' . ' 1' 'mr u,' ,1 '..,.,j,,,: 1 yv . A. Q.,-U.: lR.l 1L LS, . I: 4 ' 55' -,,- 4, -...',.-1' .:' -H '5--35:1 .F5p...fJ-j-. :1'l'1: .'.-YAY .Ln - X- - . YM- 7'Y, ':':-.. -. 'i'-. ' , ff-', Fix'-1-'f' ' -'-'M f ,. V ':H:r 11- MJ,.-'v5.P.7:.,:if:5'! 'sy-Z' 1: , Q,Ar Yj'4Lf . ' ,il'i.f.' ' 1 - A ' 7 f 7.-1,'5.'f. ,-wiv ,f.iQ.1.- -'.Wj.g 1,l-fr. V N 1 ' Y f, ' Hg..-2-.4-. 1, . 1 t F . -. 'Egg 9 'LP ,. L . . I T I . . . ig, .ai L I I-.,... ,': .-e '--s i rm-rg At the word Kegger, Olson perco- lates. At the word jock, Olson per- colates but in a different style. He hands you a note, Ever since l've been in this place, I keep hearing the word virginity. Someone says, he looks weird and he talks funny. Terry stumbles back to the swimming pool, puts on his tank suit and says I'm never whizzedf' '..:v? 9 The one with the legs is how the Vanguard describes Mary Lou Wendell, rally girl, Miss Raindrop '67, and Home- coming Queen '68. Mary Lou, 21, is a junior majoring in secondary education with a degree in social science. I want to teach the older kids, seniors, that they're the new citizens. They'll be going into the world, taking over the road. I'd like to impress on them that they're the future of the world that lies ahead. Mary Lou attended Linfield College for one term her freshman year. She transferred to PSC three years ago and is content with the change. I like a large school. It's like the world. Here there are a variety of stu- dents. At a small college you get about the same type of student. And you're babied along-it's not nearly as hard academically. You're not going to be babied out in the world. A lot of kids are at a disadvantage staying at a small col- lege four years. PSC has its disadvantages. It's very impersonal. You really don't have a feel- ing that anyone cares if you're here. Everyone is so wrapped up in his own af- fairs. Starting out here is rather hard. Mary Lou attends PSC because it is convenient, She lives with her family, has her own car, and prefers the privacy she gets at home to a college dorm. A rally girl for three years, Mary Lou can capsulize the college's sports atti- tude without hesitation. If you have a winning team the students will support you. If you're not winning forget it, no support. That's Portland State. What makes a rally girl run? I love to dance and I love to be in front of the crowds. I am a ham from the word go. The more people there are in the audi- ence the better I like it. ..l.-..- OX. P Y ' Jfgsdl ,. 41 z 1 , 4. fi TQY' 'wi Q. , 4 .,,.e,.' , , ' e I 1 A 4,1 ,Qu 1 I ' L , 7 . ' 5 A , .fl . ? - w-,gffggl 5-1 41.- 0. -r-1' ', 'O r I ' 'S' x ,f . V vfrwz-,if Y al, 1-4, W e.,-Sw - 'L -A ,f- 14 .5 e 'R ggi? an , ,az-ff' 3 . Ml T,- -: N fgpvn T l A ' Jil- . ' ' 5: Q, - df- MG? . , W J 1 21 11? . N VK. 15- if f I Qegiffr - W' . val, . 1.13 113:13 5.!:if,g ni .-V gf, 9, , a'7i ':Fi -V K A P 'QL . ' J :Q-L-,:,1..Zfi - I' . 'i -' ' ' 1 .- 'Yi . 'si - 2 1 -if ff. , V Sfnfvan-h v K+ ' A ' ALI ' ak .' 4. 'L.:..,', - 'ez gk-QNFIQYIQ K V Qi' 11 Q .,,aVT.v, . .., 1 f. . A C - . : ,R L . h 'Q' 'I .. --: ..- ' 'Q 1 - 2 'L V 1 -Lt1Mi5i-X, 11-T L L: W ixe ,JZ K I I may . CJ' 'Z U .,,.f' ...Q f . 524 ' 1 LLM I3 X if if 41' 5 x 3. 1- if I Y X, V gl , f v P qrx. 1.4 1. ill T . a ' f. Most of Mary Lou's clothes are self- made. I drown my sorrows in sewing if l don't go out. Mary Lou skis, and works at the telephone company during the summer. She is engaged and plans to marry a biology major in September. Future plans include another year of schooling at PSC, then a teaching job in the Portland metropolitan area. l want my education not only as a job opportunity but as something that applies to mein life, about being a citi- zen. We need concerned people. This is why you've got to get to the high school kids. If you don't impress upon them that as citizens it is their place to see what's going on, what's the world to come to then? Mary Lou crosses those legs of hers and smiles. Older teachers say l'm idealistic. Maybe they get run down and disillusioned. They think I'm a fresh young teacher with all these idealistic ideas. They figure l've got a lot to learn and l probably do. 105 'H-if ' 59 1 A fi ' L be JV? 4--. ,. Aga ', ' ,gi : N53 in 1 ll W 1 'X t S, ' f A' Everyone's got an opinion but me, says Melanie Formway. I don't know much about politics. Most people I know have opinions but I don't think they know what they are talking about. When I came to P.S.C. I made up my mind I wasn't going to be involved in all the activities the way I was in high school. Activities are a lot of headaches and not much satisfaction. Ninety per cent of the people involved in these organizations are in them for what they can get out of them. Along the way they trample a lot of peopleg one of those people was me. I'm a nice guy, she says. I got burned in every project I got into. I don't fight back, It's funny though, I don't feel busy without being involved in a group. Although Melanie's family lives in Beaverton, she lives in the Viking. Let's just say I eat and sleep there. There's no place at the Viking to store art supplies. The lighting's terrible too. I'm not nec- essarily for it and I'm not necessarily against it. It's just a place to live. Melanie spends most of her time alone. Right at the moment I'm making two bridesmaid dresses by Saturday night. I like to sew, Iet's leave it at that. My walls are plastered with pictures of Vogue. 2 famfjys. V , ,,...,a -,....-. --..a a f.,.. , , .,,v 4.'T .,. I-Jn--9. .L .I l 1 T... 1'- '1f. .-af...4' . ff 'iii -,..iV' 'IO8 .,,- . ..1..wl 2' I I don't feel sure of myself, I'm not sure what I'm going to be. I feel I'm being pushed into an education too soon, that I'm not ready for. At eighteen I don't have the foggiest notion who I am. Informality is what I like about P.S.C. The U. of O. is horrible, it's so socially inclined. I'm not a social kind of person. Most of the kids are working their way through here. Fun is something you do in your spare time. Like, me, I couldn't go to a beer party each week end!! I if I WELCOME Q. - 'S ' ll II' .1 I 1 5' ,, f ftzz .5 Q I-...Sh ', - Eri n' '- ' '- Q Hill--. .I gi I, ' Y +5 v I V . f :5 I , . -1-V I I 4 l A N Y 1 V l - Yi I V . A I ' I ini' . . I 1 V I, - -.. . f ., I S I. 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'.1,,.':4iA ' ' 4414 Q ' A V7 Q , f' ,Z af X 1f::j5JFl'A 2 :' -'9f 1Lw',.. ,- 1 Alf T -.42 . - 'Q 1-Jr-M 2--V-4 '?P'2Eff5.,1, '. - .. X. .. 1, 'Y ,f,.f,1 A -,-Qs, 1, 4 .v.h:,L,f..,5 ., , ' lf Ff,51t f -' M 5 1 11.-QHTQIR - '5LZ'. . V- , - I J . V. 1:2 fi. .v Ai .,L.g:b1j,'?.- , FL ? :wifi-i,:f.-grxvii7,f5,.g3flg55' in H ,V H V- 4 13 ---v,-kv T5 . 2-2.1 :- -,-., 1:44 ' Lf' , : 4- ff .V f. I ,fr ,:- r, S..1 'if9 ' --2 - i?:?f:1wifmf-5 ' 5-mzfx cp: - .f, aj:::.rW,f' ' gy ' g I ,:'Q'! 219.-Qi'-,1 2-xg4:fJi' ,wr L'pgi? 4 -1a:i,,g3-- M 'ff-' I A , W . ,- .- ' , 1 S':lw,.-1:3 , 'Y' A53g:i,-a'.i:,?f12rA - , , 1- Q - .- ' ' y51?,.,5:': fjgkk 2,355.3 . ' ' . K ' Q V1--5 - .I . fmj.',.-,f-.ai.-4.54. ' . V . f. x , ., ,W , ,, . . 11-' I guess I'm anti-American. I don't care much for baseball or football. I don't know what that makes me. Pretty bad, I guess, pretty bad. Walter Kramer wears an easy smile. This smile he uses in his teaching of traf- fic management, retail management, and water transportation classes. Really, I find my occupation so exciting I'm not interested in much else. Kramer is from Atlanta, Ga. He brought his occupation to PSC three years ago because of his interest in Port- land and what Governor McCall calls 'the quality of life.' It's the last opportunity we have of keeping our streams clear. We've gone so far down the road so many places, there are only a few places, like Port- land, that haven't been spoiled yet. It's about to be spoiled. Kramer believes the actions of an in- dividual, ofa college, can determine the future of our cities, our society. Speaking as a member of the facul- ty I really think that PSC can be whatever I like it to be. It can be as good a school as I'm willing to make it. It can be a re- flection of my own meagerness and sloth. Whatever its shortcomings the faculty has the power, if it wills, th rough hard work, to overcome them. sr hw' is 'MMZXQ Y POWER MOTOR OFF u- - U fe D '1 If V -- V- Q- .: . ... . .. . .' ., 1 L X , . . , 9 . , ' I .1--0.-,fu 4 , r- Hail, 1.9 .- I . . -- 1 . .- ,J YV Y . ,.,. 1. 1 V , , ,, 7 191' U, ' ' -' -F I ' , 'f --3m2':1,ff'9!1v-.15 , ,,,.,,, -,,.-A ,,,, . ' . , - ,ru .L . az :r'I':a -.ZS 'E dll -, Y - '-'xx-21' ' V 'L I '-1-i f Wiz-51i34 ECf.f1'17z1-.,eI1wx,-.' , :I L . f , ' ff' - iff-5 -.,..:.-Jig:-.-'e:'LiL,.,-4,'gg2g,,5f-AQ ,MH - lj L., gg- QQ!! cHf .Y 5-1 I Q Y, I 5---1. ' Eff, g.,32jj:-.,31v,Q::j-P' ...,-'..,.., ....,..f.-,-':fQ1L. g..:1::12-P.4,,uif.',L.1y,,-11, w 'QQ-1, :. - I 1 , , I I 15 .1 - I ng: fx. -- - . 4 4 x x qu-- 1-H.. ff funn.,-ff funfnu 'nu vi 1.11- uh- I.. -L una. u- 1. r. 1. n 1. -. my any-v '1 role as the urban college in the tional system. It arrives on the when the great domestic problem rapid urbanization of society. This thing that causes riots-we re 1 so close together. There's reall potential here. We can help built thing in a meaningful way To be a professor at PSC is an tunity to be part of the creation of a university Kramer is delighted by the and dedication of the new unive student body. It's not a brilliant body, gradewise, but it's a great body to tackle problems. They and protest, I may not agree with but I admire their vigorous invol We have a viable student body kind of reflects the faculty. Many wise. Many are very stupid. Kramer is an example of what he efforts to bring the resources of faculty to bear on the problems of community. He is chairman of shippers' committee of the Chai ' Commerce. His students, too, are volved with the community. The Marketing Association staged a show with Lipman's and White Kramer lives in the Laurelhurst trict. He has been married for ' one years, has four daughters, and the average we've moved every years. He is looking forward to down in Portland. After all you tired of moving around. What does he do with his spare I have 75 to 80 rose bushes. I around the yard a lot, and I checkers. Kramer smiles and fir red, white, and blue bow tie. The great advantage of PSC is is is c ,y K . 1 f J i '-1 1 sv il 1 l.,.-..L...Tg J! kiln.. M 'Mig fri: . ll ! I pi , -I X XKXXXX 4 A ? ig, , mf ---7 'MMT 1 ' , -u . , pf? ' j Nf- M u P wg5g3 'FE wm:HEEEeH -Lf, , ., -, 6 ,A , - .z .4 H Y Y -T .v , LAM A J j W? : -.din 1 0 .V ...,...,,,...... f 1, ,' I if Af.l'..i::l-- 4 H it E5 Qm. w 1aQr1fs . g 5533155 75 QQ gbg Q Q G UI' Nf 2Lx , f-,, b jg QQ A ff M QQ f f W 7 7797 K fr Q' f . W FN! ,f QQ' g f? A ' Q QQf wQjf?9 I 1 c6i?f1Sf 1 0fs?f was' 'kj ' f' 2, , ,, A f m w 21 1 . ,A ff ,f,. ,'- 9155 kxtv . 1 , - , L - A ,A Y U 575, 2, 1575 x L ' lx, Q rl ,x ,f , , T fy , ' ' f .,,,x. n , .li RX ,, 1 x xk WLT M-J 1 - ..3g .- ,I ak-.xx 1 Q---7 V- ., Q NN ' X wx 1 - . j - Q fs, 1, X-. W' h 7 V ff- A. 4 ' ky V- A W . -, ,H x ' M. , 1 , I u ' . 4 is-1' ,ff x j W Mrk 'wg Fifi' 3 1 Thom Porterfield is a sophomore at P.S.C. majoring in Graphic Design. He belongs to the Outdoor Program. This year Thom was production editor for the '68 Viking, while he waited for in- duction into the army. I wanted to go into the army but not right away. I think I can get some good out of itg more than I could if I continued in school at this point. Thom writes. I wrote this in high school, but I rewrite it every time I read it again. It's still basically the same, but better . . . 52154 V .,, . if bg, gl ,. ,. -W: Y. 1 xv.. Q4 E D OF DISASTER Prologue It was a bad year for four-leaf clovers. Where they had been there was nothing. Ashes. The ashes were everywhere. They continued to sift down from the poisoned sky, and they too, were poisoned. In his mind was a curtain, drawn. It shut out all but ashes. And they continued to fall. Fall. Down into nothing. Into more ashes. And onto him. And he stood there being covered with ashes. And the curtain shut out all thought, all thinking. His mind was as dead as the ashes. There was no light. There was no darkness. It was not cold... it was not hot. It wasn't anything. After a long time there was something. A corner of the curtain in his mind lifted -moved back by some infinitely small cosmic exhalation. And. . .he perceived nothing. tFor the ashes were everywhere, and they were nothing.l And that infinitely small exhalation from some universal thing grew to a great typhoon. tAnd it stirred nothing. Not even the ashes.l The eternal dust still fell. lt fell on the man standing on that end- less waste of a bare stage. And the curtain fell back. And the wind stopped. And the ashes fell. After a long time the man was gone. The stage was empty again. Sudden booming brightness. A brightness without any noise. A great, omnicient, permeating bright- ness that burned into the ashes. It found the man. And it turned the ashes red, white, black, nothing. It burned at the curtain inside his mind with great, large flames. Away from inside his mind it burned. And it fell in ashes inside his mind. And yet he perceived nothing. For he was covered with ashes. CInhale.l Smoke swirled into his lungs and poi- soned them. He moved. Arms beat at the dust. Hands clawed at the ashes. But the ashes yielded to his movements and swirled about him in clouds of gray nothing. He exhaled and cleared out the ashes that were poisoning his lungs. He inhaled and filled his lungs again... with ashes. He moved a foot. A step. Step, step. One, two, three. And the stepholes he made filled with ashes as soon as he made them. And he walked. And there was no end to the void. The bare stage was infinite. And the ashes fell. rand he walked on in a sea of dust. of cremated people. of cremated houses. of cremated trees. of cremated dogs and cats. of a cremated rubber doll with its stuffing coming out.l of cremated love and cremated hate . . . Here all was extinct. After a long time the man stood no longer in ashes. He stood in a sea which the ashes had turned into gravy. Where fish with white eyes swam on their sides on the surface. And the man turned and walked out of dust into more dust. Out of ashes into ashes. And the ashes fell. IV After a long time it was not gray anymore. The nothingness was gone. There was whiteness in front of him and darkness behind him and toward the whiteness he walked. He came into a warm goldenness. And he stepped on a greenness. And over his head was a blueness. And the ashes stopped falling. The man walked forward. Through confusing kaleidoscopes of green, blue, gold. And before him the earth bulged. He climbed up the hill with great effort. His effort was of thousands of eons. And he was a primordial being emerg- ing from an ancient ooze. And he stood on the crown of green- ness. He turned to see the ashes. He looked at where he had been. There was a wall of ashes to the left. And there was a wall of ashes to the right. And to the top was a wall of ashes. But where he had left the ashes there was no opening. arpet of ashes came up the hill to where he was standing, covering the greenness. if it had been put there for him to make his grand exit on. entrance . . . whichever. d the man stood for a long time there on the hill and looked at the ashes. en he turned about slowly. r his walk through the falling ashes had made him very tired. ad made him as weak as the sun on a foggy day. ithout as much strength as a dead, brown leaf desperately clinging to its life source in autumn... turned and saw greenness. the hills, and valleys, and the sea before him was greenness. d with tired eyes he surveyed that which was before him. saw it and he drank it in and his eyes closed and he fell down on his face . . . r all he saw was beyond his percep- tion. e ashes flew up from him when he fell. e flies from meat left in the sun when you stamp. s two-dimensional sphere of aware- ness began to spiral away into non- awareness. e green blue, gold, kaleidoscope and his being merged into a brown un- consciousness. iifm , -MQ? -5 W-f 'ISS 2 4-l'-iw ,QS-xv qw if '-'1 in .ar P ag, - ...J iimii' J' ' t '- '4-9 I ig, , .'-' l, .- --r.. I 34, . it f .fir , r .aiaf .agp I. .. F .r.,I1vNI?. I 5.94 sw II I Ica A - lf ,- 1' Iugbivv- - - - ' 4,-r.. ,. ,gl I . 1 ' ' .1 la. , . an 1 ., . gr .A . I, png I I s I, A, I rw-.. ,fs ' ' . '. s -1-gr'--.-QP . I Iii I .- 'W-,av at W' - Pa I, 4- ,I I, f'.-.4 if l - IxI I' ,I 1 I ,II .I . ma - I II EI! ,,,,p,..aaf' a s. e'r '? flf -' ,, MS B .12 v 1. . 1 . U ' .W V 'I ,AQ .. , ak. . , f ,- 1-,,g.r,. - ' 'L+ .f.1:?-tiff'-. r g - ' ' ',.I..:t':-'-' V- - iam L1 ' ff'rvnagwfifi W . vigi- I. vmq,v-ii'..g..f.55'?:'illfQ,2 . g i '11, gm -5-l ,ii - -.T .It ?g.. I . ' .iz J . 'H-.M .. I qw. And the ashes swirled about him in clouds and rained down about again. Behind him the ashes fell and b him the goldenness shone thi the greenness and poured down him. Epilogue His eyes saw red. He opened them a bobbing, golden spot of light ti the blue beyond the green to brass the redness was gone. He closed eyes and the redness returned. He alone and he was glad he was alive. moved a muscle and nothing happ He was sure he could move. How had he come out of the city and from his pulverized friends? Of c he could move. . . but he con move. He opened his eyes slowly this time the redness changed to blue green. squinted against the sun and saw grass. Beyond, was green grass. He dered about the gray grass because was supposed to be green and be the grass beyond was green. He c his eyes and let the redness wash him and cover the gray and the and the blue and the gold and the And the little gold sun in the gray bobbed in the breeze. . ','?'0-1. ' ,rv ,,'?-N- da,-n. .vas . l K I, Y -A AV V 4.3-,, ug- 1., 4,-2 - V , Yf ,s AQ 3,3 -- -H , .: -- .U ,- -.Y , i. V. 1 .-' -wr 'Q-ff'?',,'fsn-ww Uwlyqs' '-' '. V ' ff 'll .1-r..., , ,, ...w ' '.L 1144-W . . ' li. -, .-v-if'-f ---1-fs .ff-- l Y ' rf bf- .- A is-,,.,f1 ' wr- .NM .A . . ,5,,..5w,Q,nf ,Haunt-una' a J whim. W ,fd ,.ni.i,i,.' inf:-fyggagq.-xg,-,,,J9,,, A ,,,,,... I V .' ' . . - M, 5- a'1-'.. ..C'.- '.wv4f l5 .f'., H, J ,-' N , 'W ..' ' 4 ' ' . ,. ,-i 9'fff,, .,ff'?--1 f 'r?7 1711 V' .3-ui? ' -'F' ,-. . 1 - 'J , , 41- ivvy ,cpu -A--+ ,- ' 'L.,. ' , A l' ' - A ?..-Jfm ..g V ,,f L'1 r!e:sf g'? s e f's:ise. ss: Q-'we ...f 1' - Q- ..:--ff? - 'M' -A' ' - , , ' , . ' , 5 ,334 l :rf-at . nf, A rf- I My .. gf ,- , . .fr ' 4.-rw '.,-.- .y -ff' - -,tt ' MF - ' ' ---- LF- V-3 ' - 15 , ,. , fu ' -, i H- ' i P if- f.,.- ft Qilflfji ra if if M a9,.- ff H' . H s . - W vfrfq' ' - J .N v ag JM!! 115- : z -, .. .A . K - f .V -'.-' , .r . . ,1 ur 144 . -a Y 1. V -. N-4: J VV HA- .V U ,' L sf,-Q, 4 - . Fgwg 'TW ' Pg' i ,. . f- . f-far: 'f' A 4 l'T,:7!-f'Zw ' . ,471 , wr' .1 ' ' ,-,f 3:17 ., ,gf --1 . Egg-,,.L, 'rf I 2 -:fail , . V V WW I J, I X, ,.,:..sA , , iiwfixy QQ A, vm- Q -vjfP,,,,:v. ,- V . 'P ,av .-ff. , L. -J-. Aga ' '., , , - , ' ' gag Ly:-H . 15, , . ,fy if U: Y --H ' A Q5 . .1 . . ,. A n- U .- ,- 35 .- V1 '.-' -, 5. ,fi V ..f-- , - :, , i .. - ff as-V ,fs -r a r . Q i 'L ' ,fr -. 'ff ' a f:'rv,,.. fs. ilk, r an . v-' i ,i,..-p s 1' 1 ' f' 1 r .. f I -f 'f H fa. , ,AM ' K? Q - - ' 'H Y f -- ' fi' P' . -Y ' ' f 1 , ' . ' I . fn .4 '.f1'4 - ' - . ,f ,w ' -' 'L 2 ff .rf .- y -Q-' 1 ,, ' , N .ff af' .,-r ' , . ., -4 WY L ' .LM -T , ' -- -41 .s . 'ff - ' ' f . ' -' -' ' , . vd ' .. V -vff' . if .4-:'f'. Y-ff 4 -s - ,g ' ..A- s- f ' I si--' Tzflhm-1:f5,3u,y.uwiM!:i-,fYLDL,,P A t -rh,,M JT.. f A X- -r .IJ 1 ,- PM v P J' i . -Y f'...i- ,I' Q, 'ff-:ff -V-'-A Q nw ..m,5,-fr 1 ' ,a- , ,,,, ,-'J I' .cv-.Qiff ,fy . pf,--,ar J, if 'F' I - . fl-' - ' ' ' 1 I ' 4 . .JA .4 ' A 51 J . 4 . r 'I ' i- ' , if-- 'V I --' ' '.. - - -' Q ,ihyf v' Y - , L., i, , -' '53 LW, 1' V' ' hifi ' F .i A ,, . - 'fe - ..- ' V w' .,,, ,iq :,, ,r A V g,,,M5H'.A:lif t' , i' ., - J, Y -M, ' - A . ,,. . ,-,M-,-. ' .- iw., '-. ':L,E'4J3zi1ljfMLhgf. ' l':, ' , 45 I 1 ,A ' .4 -qv , ' fnsifbi-V ' .w..- ,.5.gL+ ggi? - jj., Mi I V Y : H.. H, ' H . Y ,Tr J . . V 'Lk' S - ' ' '-'gas W 4 Y ' T' ' . V .. fel. --i..Qi'55 '. H 'fjvf . N . . 5. ' 3 V -4' 'i . ' ' . ' ' ' '-k,1ni:'iff, - 'lffgfp ET ,. ,- l-'pf,v?':-f- .1 55.1-J --1' it ' l a -,-. s. ' . ' . 1' -af t- W- V 3 ,U , 1 - ,A-v . lFi.:. ,,, yt ' fl- A .A A' I i. 1 -.ff , - f H-F - r- , - -i ' f -7 i.. -A . . , ' r,. r . , ' . ' ' - ar' f limi A g 3-2.- 1 i . e-, , 4 V , - ,f .,.l' 'P V V v.siFl'l -' 'J I 'bv 1' , , fl ' '- i . iwe ' 1 - J ,wfgnilhflg i- .. Hat ,A 4: rl X. 1 ' r - .- - ' I - I K . 1 A, -14 ,TA '. 1 V- . fr :F F l TY' , , Q .,, 4' 'Af rx T A ' I I x X lx , u ' - '. ' t .gf 1 .,, pf. ' - 'Yr Q' F l .' I -' J g ' f. XT ' .P X I ' 7 0 5 Tx A . ,AX W ly l U V If '. ' 4 ' . 4 ' 'y' A JA' 1.8 . ,- , 5 ' ,fr .' Q- ' .. - '55 'O 1 rH s 1 1 ' D , K 7' - Q QQ ., I .1 if : - . X X . V gc' ' 'R 'gk V fs LN. .Q 3 ,Q L ff 1 n - . V , . J. M s ' N1 ,T. . .f- .- Q, t . .- s -5 - I . A ' 3. - . Y v - N U n , 3.1 Q Q 'Y' ' N - v . l ' 1 5- ' : 'f. . x- , x X ' X ' ' .' u 1 ' l .YL P - I 5? C36 ' V f H ' 1 ,xr - k Ik, Af- .W 'r 54 ' K'--A 91 1. 'l Q- T Q- . T ' T , ,, Q T- D--y?F, 1. K Q, f '- ' f '- fly.. i - .3 9- '-' I 5 0 . if Y ex 1 ' S I . i t ' -lf Lgfg .V ' 5 L ' , A X T ':'fffe . ,HK T 4 iv 'QP' X54-tsl ' ' ' 1lLf'f'f? 4 ' R, ki. .'- l -KL, ' . .. . U .. - - 15+ s. 'R 1 '-4, T . It's still there. The ashes are still gg, ' ' KJ' Sqn' RF. ,. 5. 4 I ' falllng' - A ' ' ' A x '1mX ' i' ' ' ' N n 'Why don't they ever stop?' 'Q , P X ' if ' ' fx , ,M rl' R. -.A 1 'Because they are coming out of hell! rg 1 .5 ' I f e V id xxx T 'P ' T if 'Whoever thought that hell would be TJ , - .Ts -- 1 5 x .,, ' -,.-J - x , T V ' in the Sky? ' L . Y' . Q viii I :fl MA- I V 'Whoever thought that hell would be fy ' J-.Fi A U fx: . ',. . f g V' . gray? Over there, look. 'ax vs ' 1' T, s -. '1 ' is i f :Q What's that?' -5 Q T 1 , 1 Nl . 5 ' . T, ' Wt- Ks 'lt's an extra large ash that walked - 1: A... X ' 5 i gl 1' , , , fi' ' T, f, v, Q rightoutofhell to fall down on this -si , ,xv hx ax ' . f , fe-lf ' ' - ' I . , 1,1 S. Q7 - T , ,t - 'ef - T . hill and turn the grass gray. Q, v. - X Q Nh ' ' A r. T . 1 if 1 ll T ' f Q , -, ' t So thats why the grass was gray, g .- - .L thought the man, I turned it gray. But '-Q Q ., T N G '4 Q Q l'm not an ash, because I can think and ,Xxx ' 5 gf 1 3 , L ' l' ashes can't think. --5 1 T. V .3 A . He heard a needle that he couldn't feel ' 1 Q, ,,- ? , Taye . Qi . .T ' ! 'i. .. Q being pushed into his skin.. It rnade a , , J T , i y -'--I , , -5.5,-,,5, ,. high sound that echoed-ping, ping... - Q 1 V - 4, uf , Pg, . ' , 3 ' ' ', - .43 ing...ing...HewasIifted upand the N,4,,L'Zf VI' 'K ,- ,fri vf Q r A earth fell away from him. v, i', ' '- A1 - . '4 'I wonder if there are an h ' 'pi' ' ' W ' 4 T 'W --'-- 4 - ' l f A X' y ot ers ,- ,, an ,f.-, .I 1 -..-. . ,M , . Q , I l K Qi T I- G ,.-rv-Us--ff W' qx d W , There are others. The ashes are the .T ., My ' - 2 5 if . 5 --fwL,,,,,, si uh G. ,V -:-,ig 4,4 Al others.' f '- wigs'-WA - -. P ' '..4.2?' 1 I ' 1 ' . lf ,' T 'p 1'-' ' ' B , - ,, ,f' 1- a-4 ' lxfooh tthey ever stOP falling? Z1 AV L' L3 7:4-4 ' ' . ' rf -- ., . - ' Q' . Ti. '4 .f T 7 if A' T 'vvhyr' . 2 .T T. Hs. f ' 3, nl ' .. 4-f Tf. -T T T-- 'Because hell is eternal! 2.4! I 75-' Tb ',, A Qgff s 'if rx : li l Q' 1 ,'?f6:a?QTf4 fl-ikehirn.1 .if ATS T! I1A'Li.' J . -: ivy 111 n . ' Tv, 3 ' 'He's eternal because he's poisoned ,inf 4, 1 T 'G 7X'?'.11. 'U ?-5 ' I ,P i -lj 1 ,. by eternal ashes.' lf .1,l.'pT.- Y I fa ' p A. lx., x 'i-rib T -.0 - try, 4 'Let's get him back! L, -f 4 l . i ng Sv glam ,- -- . ,, 'f'-Aj' 51.3, O in -s,.t8.V' mf . After he was gone the leaves of grass ,itifaf-s..'T fig 3 5 .. , ,, ,L11f-difvf. rg Twawiqtgligw v:.L,,f-' 5415, .Fifi s- lt' , which had been bent under his weight ,gfy ,.. . 's 'fy 'T '-3,xa:f5wh'4i,?'.g . U, sprang back to where they had once T . 77 . if-' .jf ,- 'lf' '-H y? , 5..2fsfl'f?2'i7F21fQjgf?!5af,,y:6f?.f 4 T' 'fi reached for the sky.AdandeIion nodded f:,'f -5',f'f2' f ' - TT f.. t ' ' .4-gq'4,gf-.-T ., ' .. '2'4-trash? 'QT' , U W' --E uijl-,'l,l.. 'T'g. '- ' , if Tw '.T . . f J .1-rf' - 1:'f'lli-'-3..v1'Z'ff: '.,-. f ak.. CW' '-'C' . ,T -C' :il -iff! H its head and a four-leaf clover opened T V J T, ,,, , 4. lyk.-K, , at -4- -.. .:.,. qT,.,'4,4,,WnTT- .Agp il, dwg' ,Ty gi T .L .. ,. ',j.p.' .f ' ,1 -' ,at :-'gran - ,, 1 G , 3 its hands to the sun. V wig? r. Q, I To , 4-'02-xf,:.7171.T. gt? r Il vig? .H.f 'a'r':?i-fr-'-1. iff.-1-f l , f ' ' Tn ' ' - V Za' TQ? .1 'rf N T f 'Q' f rf '- :T J--1 , .,y , 'T 'f--.1 ,Ima f. ,' T tziaams 'sat + Wi . TTU , f4Q'3J'?'Q ,affad T ,w'+ ' 4 .f T 9' F 9'.ffY1.:'fssbigi1. 3' ' fr' T f ff iwff ' 'f' '- ':f7 . 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VIE. .I JI, .A A I5 I K-'. 1 T' , '1'vi.:l ' xl 'L IIIvI,w 'IV ' Bm f, 4'ffw :.T5 'k- xiv' I' 3.4 '. xl ' ' A!! 'Jia git ,iw , l ff? III -1 .II -. E 'J2q .,,i'f'I r,' 5,-,Q . JI 55: ' .5I 5 . ,y,.I -II-Ir!-.4 I:fg QI5L'qII,,'iI IQI'f1'!Sq gi 'YP':.,l'?Q,II II F . fi? :W V vs' Nix, Xa N , -A ff'iNQ?1 ,3u4 i.:v'43' :iw Ts as . -1'-an , . I , - II I I L-I SEIIII Is:I .II-A 1,x,I:III?,, I -4 IX IAIJ3 I Yagi: I- I 1. EI .- Y - . ar- f ' I.I' - ' . '- . fj I Ii I -.- , . :I ' , ' 4 I 1 ns' 1.-e'6 025. .gm gg, xi'-,HVXQIS .Ig 61 Wg, ', 4 I- 4 xI,!II,,.I- X ffl, .-1' f x I Q v. J nhl' Hy r 1 ,aft IBA 'U .LT .71 i' 'fx --ffsisd ., ' I ' ,RM -bfi!-1'lI1l.b -. rx. 1 Q 2-Zi ' .I 'L l' 'FG ,fn WLM - A ' f' J Mike Smith is a senior in English and Psychology. He represented Portland State College as a member of the Col- lege Bowl team on television. In his spare time Mike writes poetry and the following is one of his free lance articles for the Vanguard. William Butler Yeats has said it is his poem Easter, 1916 : All changed, changed utterly: A terrible beauty is born. Yeats, of course, was speaking of the changes manifest in his acquaintances as the Irish revolution was stirring. Port- land State students could use the same words to describe the transformations of their college-past, present and fu- ture. Those who have attended P.S.C. for five years or more could best notice the change. As late as 1962, P.S.C. consisted of a mere four buildings surrounded by a tree-lined residential area dotted with small shops extending from the West Hills almost to the river. Row on row of turn-of-the-century housing, some drab, much ornate, many family homes and apartments of varying ethnic groups, especially jewish. Chil- dren and dogs were abundant in the Park Blocks near what was then Shattuck Grade School. More importantly, many of the boarding houses, homes and apartments near college were open to students-and they were cheap. P.S.C., then unloved by the state leg- islature, was loved by its students for one major factor: it was a good, cheap place to go to college. Students could live quite comfortably sans automobile, for less than S70 per month. Rooms with private bath and kitchen could be found for 535, and entire seven-room houses, admittedly run down, could be rented for S40 to 3560. No parking meters then, always someplace to move if you got kicked out of your place by an irate landlord. And you didn't have to get up till 8:45 for your 9 a.m. class. Those who stayed long in the P.S.C. neighborhood learned where the action was. A large, somewhat bohemian col- ony flourished in Cable Alley, and in a renowned community dwelling on up- per Hall Street known as The Village. The roots of Portland hippiedom can be traced here. Pot, Peyote and LSD were in vogue, or at least given a try here by some long before the public or the police became concerned about hallucinogens. For those less radical, many other types of living experience were avail- able, from squalid boarding rooms to the tidiest of apartments overlooking the park blocks. Fraternities were able to provide cheap living facilities and good times, though they often had to move after the times got too good. Those who stayed long found, if they wanted to, intellectual companionship, scholarly isolation, tavern philosophis- ing, a good part time job, a lover, a self- discovery-all independent of the col- lege, yet all facilitated by its proximity. By allowing no easy barrier to exist between that which was learned in class and that which went on in the commu- nity, the P.S.C. environment afforded students a unique experience in living. Some even got a degree. 4.1 19 A 'v F A Q 9- 4,,. , ' B. 4 5 .: ,, 1 1 'x Y 'I 5 .-f-m7H'-as hui .Ml 53: r , A J 1: 1. X A 'f .Ed .Nfl , nh . wiffsgi. :.qngff1fQg: ,4--' x iw, A? , , Ang, ...Jax 'Y ,fx -, fm Q R, is f . 1 ' WA. 1' N- ., .. .f-A..-4.-:., . ..,.-..1., ,. a r 5 , 'A .nw if '- -. 53- . ' 97' . Q ggi. , . .mb Q , , 'I Mil' - . , ff, ., fx 1-152- 1 -bf 'f A, A 5+ N. ' ? ? rv' ,' 1 .1 K .A Q, :A-:A A Q 53' - 55391 Those who stayed long realized that it was the very atmosphere of the place, the independence, the cosmopolitan relevance of the environment that pro- vided the real education at the college -something lacking at other colleges, something that suburban life and an ivory-towered, green-lawned campus could never provide. By 1963, however, the new die was cast. Block after block of housing top- pled, families were displaced, students chased from dwelling to dwelling as the great chasm of the West Hills Free- way began its progression through the heart of the residential southwest. Urban renewal cleared out block upon block of dwellings near the river. The Village was condemned and Cable Street began a slow death. P.S.C., finally assured of its permanent existence, be- gan its inexorable expansion. From the north, the commercial world en- croached, building banks and insur- ance offices along campus borders. Next to Old Main, a parking lot replaced ancient gingerbread houses. During the years of flux since 1963, speculation about P.S.C.'s ultimate ex- pansion has been rife. With congres- sional approval this year of federal matching funds for redevelopment of the area immediately surrounding P.S.C., the speculation has ended and the work begun. '-- N, x 1 S S -.R -uf-f: f r I ' ...--A ,A- ...v r 'S LU x Q, 52: ik .f Z9 WG 125: The area of expansion will be roughly from Market Street on the north to lack- son on the south, extending from sixth on the east to the freeway on the west. All will become Portland State domain with the notable exception of the lone Plaza-too expensive to subsume. P.S.C. will rise here, skyward, appear- ing to be part of the commercial com- plex of buildings that will surround it. Concrete, steel and glass, vast garages below. Progress. The legislature loving. But what of that displaced? Many of the familiar landmarks of the old P.S.C. neighborhood have gone already, in- cluding Hassons' market, several taverns including the Spatenhouse, Bianca's Coffee Shop, the Broadway Apartments, the Vedanta Society House, the old St. Helens Hall, the George Washington Apartments, the Town House Apart- ments, the boarding houses on Tenth and Eleventh and Clay, two synagogues and dozens of other homes and shops that one could remember only if they reappeared. Among them will be Papa lohn's, Montague's Pizza Corner, The Trieste, Montgomery Gardens, the Chocolate Moose, Lydia's, Varsity Bookstore, Town Talk Market, Hillison's and the Plaza Cleaners, The Green Spot, The Corner Drugstore, several garages and gas sta- tions, Young's Gown Shop,Sherbourne's Barber Shop, a shoe repair shop, a furni- ture store. Among the apartments de- stroyed will be the San Rafael, the Martha Washington, the Elmwood, the Queen Louise and the Blackstone, The King George, the Northampton and others, named or nameless. But much more will be destroyed. i Things are changing, utterly. X T Within five years almost all that is lt X familiar within P.S.C. boundaries will be it Q, gi.: gone, with the exception of the campus g . A .- buildings themselves. A partial list of T, apartment houses and establishments in N removed should suffice to show the ' ff 1 magnitude of that change. -' - XX I ' T XX l XX A' 1 ...N 'N X 1 l . f i F., ffl l x , . f D ,x f l f NP '1'Y?!L'iZL':.i'r-fm-, :.' ' . The loss of the business community around P.S.C. will perhaps be tolerable, though certainly unpleasant. Those who continue to live in the neighborhood will have to shop elsewhere, perhaps downtown. Those who want to visit a tavern will have to walk several blocks further to do so. Much of the sponta- neity of P.S.C. living will be gone, but new commercial development, if un- dertaken before the land prices sky- rocket, may alleviate that by a few strategically placed taverns and a small market. The real tragedy of the situation is that there may, in fact, be no indepen- dent student community around Port- land State. The closing-in of the city around the college is now so rapid that there is little hope for development of anything other than skyscraper dormitories. The land is too expensive for standard apart- ments. Already it is almost impossible to find bachelor housing with cooking facilities and private bath for under S60 a month, within five years with the de- struction of most of the larger apart- ment houses and boarding facilities near P.S.C., it will be impossible to find any truly independent housing within rea- sonable walking distance ofthe college. The managers and proprietors of these apartments and businesses have, in many cases, considered themselves part of the college community, and rightly so. In conjunction with them, students lived, bought their food, worked and drank their beer. Many are bitter about their impending displace- ment, though most are resigned to it, having expected the expansion for sev- eral years. One of those most bitter is Papa John Vlahos, proprietor of the City Grocery for the past half-century. Moved from his original location years ago by the construction of State Hall, he feels that the State is a bit immoderate in their plans to move him again. They're nothing but a bunch of hogs, says Papa, anger in his eyes. They just condemn your place and take it to build another school building, and there isn't anything you can do,'f he said, gesturing toward the brlckwork on College Center. Hell, I was here before any school. l don't have anything against the col- lege, but they could get a thousand acres of land somewhere else for every two they take away from businesses here. They're nothing but a bunch of hogs. 133 This admittedly alarmist view, of course, is only relevant in terms of the poor student, and especially the poor student who wishes to be independent. Dormitories of any kind are too expen- sive and too restrictive for most of this type of individual-and yet it was pre- cisely this independent and creative type of student who, in the past, has sought out P.S.C. and helped make it the unique institution it has been. Without inexpensive, adequate inde- pendent housing near campus, these students will be forced to move to the northwest or southeast of town as many are doing already. But automobiles and buses imply a scheduled life and the end of the student mystique. College, to all who stay long, will be- come integrally associated with bus drivers, frozen windshields, tokens, gas pumps, grey streets, traffic reports on the radio, tall buildings and fumes in the air. Or, alternately, dorm counselors, small rooms, meals on the hour, rules for dress, and the return to the auto- mobile for expressions of love. The barriers between the classroom and the community will again be sub- stantial. Alienation will prevail. Perhaps P.S.C., after all, is not meant to be an intellectual center offering a liberalizing, urban living experience to its students, but rather a training insti- tute for professionals and a general day- care center for those less serious: an automated community college that dares to give post graduate degrees. But whatever the result, with new, gleaming buildings and geometric con- crete forms about us, we must all look up one day and exclaim, agreeing with Yeats, that things are changed, changed utterly: A terrible beauty is born. l W f--'-1 '-l n IQ .v'v. 'us .-,Za 1'-2 , , 1 S.--' 4 1 -v. '.' vw .He- . ' 5.-y.f7'.g5 3 1 5 lu fix-Q fl r. 1' ,ia 1 I Marilyn Camp is a graduate student in a special program in teaching the mentally retarded. She works for the Portland Bureau of Parks in the capacity of Director of Specialized Recreation. The Park Bureau reaches about 650 of Portland's 12,000 retarded each week in programs of swimming, bowling and physical fitness. Marilyn became interested in the problems of the special individual through volunteer work in high school. Since her graduation from the U. of O. in 1965, she has been a recreation direc- tor for the Park Bureau. Marilyn plays bridge, tennis, golf and skis in her little spare time. One of her hats is teaching a class at P.C.C. in specialized educa- tion for mentally retarded children. l hope to go into college teaching even- tuaIIy. D12 , 'vin 5: .gn . ix 5. .Att 1 .. 1 1, in .5 - -' ,.,t. c I, Ur' A J ,ni lT 'r' . ,, in .. !' 'nfl' ., ...amilifit Marilyn explains her philosophy of education. I look at mentally retarded children first as individuals, then as per- sons of ability, and the third thing I con- sider is that they have handicaps. I consider recreation one of the most important facets of their educa- tion. It develops the individual in his role as a member of the community. Perhaps it is one of the most applicable phases of classroom learning in relation to their life experiences. Watching Marilyn teach her children how to swim is a warm and moving ex- perience. It is easy to see that her work is very rewarding, to her, and to the community she is building. f'Y,Q,.,.c. ,. , 1 .A X V Sr 1 l . .. V, , ,i I., Larry Smith. He's weird. Out of sight. l've always hated school. It's a big waste of time-keeps you from coming out in the world and doing things. I've had only four good classes at P.S.C. They were acting, weaving, playwriting, and swimming. He's been here six years. His majors have been: theater, art, so- ciology, English, languages, and general studies. LH V llfflf- fn' - A ,M-V--Q ': .. .- - . M'.5:.,1 .5,.4.:! ,. ,,- '- 4 l ff' 4 v N nu. -ammfanuuhl -r' I ,,r.., Z? 4. ' M .2511 -4 is 1 N 1 9 ff' . , .. rp--. .W N , , s .-.'. u 11 xt ,653 A. T-fx A sf ' w ,' .-N t , V L Q P N His first claim to fame was his par- ticipation in the College Bowl. He ran a theater group for two years and worked in the Albina district here in Portland. He went to New York for a year. I decided not to be an actor or a stockbrokerf' I took a course in film making and decided not ever to make another film. Studying film reaffirmed my faith in the theater. I used to be a poet but I don't trust words anymore so now I'm a play- wright. I take better care of myself. I don't take drugs anymore-like Don- ovan andthe Beatles. I don't know why. Drugs are out of fashion. They don't have any valueg they don't teach you anything. J N . -tiliw ,+I ., 1 He ran for president of P.S.C. on the love ticket in 1967. 'flt was really stupid, but it was fun. We hoped we wouldn't win and we didn't. I think the world's changing. People's attitudes are chang- ing. People are more open than when I started here-young people and old people. That's what I try to put in my plays. The new world. X5 a 5525! I, 4 fb -Aff ff 4 Q' 'l if 5 ,fa 1, Monologue-Speech for one actor: Well it's morning again, we got through the night. I don't think we got through it on faith though, we got through because we had to. And here we are. Dirty, yes, and probably have bad breath. It was a long time coming, morning I mean. The birds are singing. Very loud. Raucous, I might have said. And the dawn is coming. There is, well, a kind of silence though. I think, some- times when I'm swimming that we kind of swim in the air, that the air is as alien as water. That we drown all our lives. I think we really do. I don't know why really. Art. Books. Poetry. They drown us too. They rot the mind. April, April morning. I used to write. I don't any- more. I used to read, too, but that was when I was young. I didn't know any better. A long night. Yes. Yes indeed. But we made it. Although we sometimes didn't think we would. We were afraid. Yes we were. But the sun is on the hills and we made it. No more singing in the dark. Not for us. We made it. But it's quiet now. Even quieter. I guess we'll have to leave soon. It's morning. The sun will be out. It will be warmer. Wind from the sea. A cool breeze. Cool breezes. Morning. Yes. It's almost time to wake up. i f.i ..- ,IA ff, L I rf ' 1 , Qi V 1 H ti W f I ,. , Q uf? ' - .uf . -'aux - ' - ' 1 1 49 Q. 1 1 . ,, I La r' II -. L , 11' g l I X .42 gi , Y if l . ' -4 , . ff. A n I A4 1' , ,. 1 4 'Q ag L . 5' I M F 'I X Y 1 Bt' -B P' ff 1 .,,,, . W i . M, ,. - ff' ' VHF ,,,,. , --.fn 1,,. -- v , 'A . - f? , , .1 , . 4 ,yy i lv . ... ' . .111-1,-2-.fg1' I in v , V H1 r fz. V 'F 4 V '. J... , , S 'f 'H' ' Q Q 'N . I F 1 I I , L1 , G' ' Q f .. D- 4 g ,Qs L ' ,, -'wg r , X.-M .1155 3' , H Q F 'W , ' ,,z,:-,if-'f.,253,,.5,:.:,,,,j if , .. ., ww, L,.,!,I -2, :mu--g 1aTf19f 'vf, 1--iff:-Ewvanq' g WWW , ,. 1 1'-' TW '.,i.?f1+':'if-fT'i5f1f,.1:.:! gun' , '2 ' .1 5L': ,-13,-'f t -aaa ,,J.1'. 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A 7 'JfQfi5EiQ7i'l2!1ff,a,.fEglzllgggfw, .1 ,a3,' 1 f 4 ,, 5 ' -11 , ,, - ,- 4 ..5 ' - egrlsvsf- 13,1 1-qw . , 'gg t 1 .gg ..fh-w w agn .gf.c'U:l3'4f'- -Kid?-,'.-f'2fiw.1 n-fififf-2: 3?Qf fini' Hug . X A 'ffm 'iw ' H . . f-nfii---: 'Q ' f:.'5:'I'-Li 5:1 f,uj?g6fSX 'l,igmNZj4 .-.5Y,'f-vfakl..-Q,-fL5-ir-E' '3,':,i212?1wp+. ' ICJ, -1, ' X N f ' A V - -- ' - L- -- 1-5' Q i. '1','t ' A If ruff Q ' . ' 1 ' - J 1- .5g1S'-rn... -Q -,?:-1,'F3,-I-mi.,-:lsw..r1..--1' f 2-'3,.ff,' -1.-gf-'fazff 1 -3 ' 4. -:.'i:::i w'f.f1.' Z 19'LN?-32?2+2fTQ4 fW- 'f' f,:11f'i6f?rziT,' ' f 'f vig, In I :www dig.. , .. . . ',-1:,.,5.,5-wir.: :H -1- X- 1 .f', . - -. I' --.,'- J if-.. 31.3,-x,,Tq-'fy . . .- .17-Y ,. .,.- -.v, '-f rm? 11:11. 1 fr' 1. ' v' ,. , 1 ' 'J 'r f-.Um 71'-.. 4,l.:'.i'i' ' lll.L, ,i ' ., 4 7 ' .- . P , V q n ' . 'W - V ' 'f f ' A., , rf - 'If' - - , 4 A - . 65 , 5-,ff-,,gwT?' 'P fax slum U 'Q f 1 A N ' , ' ,,1vjg1:v'k . -' 1 f1f' 1542-qs-Lg1:,f 'ip4,,.'f J-'N ' -, va, . P.. g, ,Ji . 5. s.'ffQQ'f5'f 4 . ' wg-. '?Nf:?2'Zif,ffc1 ' 11- A ' h A , M ----'fm 4 f A ' M. M ' ' ,ATE - iv -1' L A qw'-'- ' ' ff-2 , ,mix 5-fe-,AQ . -. ,- A - ' ,R - t 1 yy-V' 43.7. A,- . 1 -1 4 + n 'I4 4 f aw nl I I 1 Q E , 'J f' C A A ff. J- Y .or ,'nXi: - W - . if I think the old and the young people are basically the same. Perhaps the older generation brings out the bad more. The younger generations have a chance to bring things out in the open. David Calkins is a freshman majoring in business education who belongs to the marketing association. He works part time as a shipping clerk in a whole- sale distributing company. College is a lot different from what I expected. lt's a lot more liberal than high school. No one stands over you and says 'get your home work done children! You can do what you want. Not only in studies, but the whole so- ciety ot college is more liberal. You can be more what you want to be. I'm not sure about the hippies. I guess I think they're mostly phoney. If what people said about them were true, if they believed in world peace, if they were sincere, it would be fine. But I don't think they are sincere. I think most of them do it because that's the way they are. David came to Portland State because he wants to stay in town. I'd never go to P.S.C. from what I've heard about it. When l get out of school, l'll go to work I guess, I don't know. What I'd really like to do I guess is travel. I have to work this summer for my tuition money but I'm going to do some traveling. It's easy just to get in your car and just go somewhere. You dont' have to stay in good hotels and eat in fine restaurants. I sleep in my car. I'd really like to go to Europe, New York? I can practically taste it. If I had a lot of money, all I'd do is travel that's what I really like to do. 145 I ,ff Q ... Vif ,,.f- -...X g ll Z , r I P r 1 ' EI7'?l . wr-f ' irq- r ia vu -3+ x f i v az gfififi N , Ja ,nfs Z? V , fi.: ' i 1 k. A M f QQ z gi R W' Y ' 1 'Rug 17451 -rg K. V J 1 F . . 1 v 'Y 51937421 fi Qxbfll., ,ik ff' ' .Vi , ., :-,M I- w 4 E 'o fi mg: E 5-04 E20 QC r ww vi'3'4 54: mmmi . N70 fm -502.2 V26 -gm,-5 mnmgig er d e Ri el 4 -CE -.CD 5,4-5 41... .JUZFUQJNC 4 51,530 2291155 v E mm-3-gmc. ' 'U 'c'o--:c:. E, E E I-I-IE 444444 aa.: .93 '5 ... E -' ua 'U . U'U 'U i.uI N ...u.r-UELAG -omq 34: LUULA Lum UEEQU79' E03 mmkgxfv owe.: ,O aa'-'HDD V? q5,:,cvE4 U1,r.T.,3.,fU1 Er: cn: I-mqffff Tm -cn-- TWU? ..: ? 4-N,:: cn vm--emu? mmm .DQ U,:mmU?D5 'CDVY--m - N mvxsex Uieevffx 'Dimes Sgfim-5:2 :I-gm!!! SCS! ,C ,CC5'5, -95'0a?A. 'U U5:2E'.: .SSSNLJ UDENCNS s E4D4 Ou-I 4-- : .sisuoce E200---E .14-1- a: ' Z+-'+-'g--- mscgacx- --H+- ,C- 4aacu.-'Qcu .:.:q,--NCD EQQEUE .fcccmuo eeriivi :magma 655521-,E 4444com mmmmmco cnmmmmm 4 2 '4 N' si ' S? CANDIDATES FDR DEGREES .i u. O Bi -I rthur, B.S oom, A Bl Bus Adm 'I Bonneau, john, B.S C 8: u.r.:: Tn. V? 4 mf gal WJ N xxa- Q, E cu Eno :Vu on: II PE H84 Brown, Karen, B.S., us Adm Econ 8ePE 4-' .22 I 4 CD C4 fu ': an 5 as :N 2:5 US 'Eff U1 QD Emi Tui Wd? 1 G1 af: UCD b...D oo -xgm i: , .hd .fr-'f.5.2 midi 3 4 ' u 'C 1--up 'i an E cu 2 .C 4.1 G5 M :IT .E b 2 no B 'I a, B.S HT1 own, No Br 'I own, Terrence, B.S Br 'G an -5 a. 'U 'Qc ms ,JE m'c mu.: '.: Ecu I5 Um DD mm Sci 'I man, Eva, B.S ush B H 'I Butterfield, Pat, B.S 41 w Q.. A8fL -r Cereghino, Dorothy, B.A nces, B.S., Anth T3 Cockrum, F , B' Donne, Dianne Driggs, Charles, B.S., Bus Adm Driskeil, Margaret, B.S., Art DD C LLI fi oo nf .E 4 '6 C 3 :E u.: no O cv O 4 E CU, T6 D C. O ..- ua 2 DD D0 LU 'G U7 E D. 'C an of ': o .. .2 P -C, .LG To c LL! Bio -I rvin, B.S Entze, Ma hil P -1 ke, B.A rt, Mi Erwe Bio u.: n. Q25 I han, B.A., at N If eokol Ez V? M Q: C 'a th ': .C U 5 CU DD F3 LL. E.- 'G u an U- m 'UV' ,,, , .: Ev c: 43, vi .1 11 'OW-5 cu IAQ. 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App Sci 'I Heald, led, B.S Helbock, Robert, B.S., Soc rge, B.S., Psy derson, Geo EU H Ed ., Elem Higgins, Norma, B.S ggy, B.S., Bus Adm aertner, Pe llg E SP Pol Sci 84 'I Hirsch, Robert, B.S rt A -I Sci E us Adm App Sci 'I ruce, B.S johnson, B A8IL 'I nson, Ellen, B.A oh l johnson, Robert, B.S , Math Ed ohnson, Sue, B.S., Elem l Soc Sci Pol Sci SI 'I ohnson, Terry, B.S l 8IL ohnston, Maryellen, B.S., A l Sci 'I jullum, Eleanor, B.S SY P 'I Kamody, Ronald, B.S Fred Karlln, Soc 'I Doug, B.S aki, BS W Ka Fl O Sc B .S rth EO C I B G O I Ea I S B.S FH -I I H .S .S lm rb B B B.S el Ba I rl EY, T, SI 9 Pa l' b BSS Kenn C O B Fl, YT b R O bs, h ITI L VII ks lo ol ol 6 Y, lu C O U fu E 'G E59 '59 .A Ea gmc, 3 .35 ,233 sf 333-'fm 5 mr tno5u1'm 9-V? mr: I-50305 viii ndjniu-5 i.5 cn? oBSvz1,-LS? Nm ... 2-5 222522 'EE Li-U55-IQ 'D Wai:-DN1i -ri 5+ '4-'.':- SO .cczicm -.,, -5 ..o.:E: EE Ln -O mum.- O xx EE'-U 333333 as E -ogg up-ag fu? 'QI'-'i . ca r 300 50222 -of mme V200 -C452 cog Q-ma: .:aa i'.3'5'U 'EU V134 x m N Q-S c.:.:Q r:.-cuu5q, C125 gg 'OO Dm -V' 255 00 mmm M! ..i.i.J 0 E 352 TU .aquag . em wand N winds mE.5m1 .sfigg -ggmo K-, 185.15 9-.Ewa Cx3E :mms a.Io.c.- bd!!! H H la 3 la C! Qi I Q v 'B -- . li' 'l5'l , Pol Sci Maloney, Timothy, B.S. 'G an 73 D. qi I rf .C O -N .Q .E C :S :- cuff E Ed ., Elem anet, B.S oen, I M .Q cn W ca -ci 1: .Ls -6 QC Ta 9 O Hist 81 Pol Sci x V? no e C .x: O -. E N E .c O U an cz. Q. 4 Ui an 'Dbl FQ gm QI 5: O 52 OO rengo, john, B.S., Soc Sci O .., Soc Sci 'I Palmer, David, B.S S U '-cn .- uu 'X 'U .c-'28 U U U-1 -f O r oc 3 ' E milf .-cn mm . IE Q Etr- Gfir ,U .4 8:05. --:-, '?m rv! ,ful ul ov!-552 'id-uiqgmuf Lqm .. x Lum .Cd.-C CQ, cn'-'T Qiu,rru5 Vlfixmgc CZC mr-Ep: 'S vaaeeu ,gm Q, aimvfm Uocmfgoa C....3E-D :mgD.:N gr-1:--C wma-E Tu :cf.n'QuJ!Zi ms.-OU gghm-S: euzuaccinc 6353652 cn-L'- 'O QQVTOSDE ..- o vw Neg c :: .c:u 592625. SO-5::. P-Zjtcc -n 'ruO'- X-C41Jq UaJ 23 4-'cum -.:i::::9.E- wvzaao QN-Q-OWU' sassy: 358885 E Massa 'U 4 .c .J U1 be 'U 3 in E CD cz. r T vw 4,507 ad 3422 'E omni rv PYT: O 'Q G3 O x5 :Q nz ,gccw - , '-WEr: rv gms! -5 . muamu.: .- ncococcz na Ava Prodehl, Barbara ., Sci Quade, Ronald, B.S Adm Bus -1 Quan, Mike, B.S Speech -I ndle, Gary, B.S Ra JL hard, B.A Raschio, Ric Qjp Xue- i ath Steve, B.A., M Rosenfeld , PSY s Adm Bu 'I Rotous, Efrossini, B.A ar sh, Gary, B.A Sa tm .S , Math , B .C fl' GJ M .C FU 'U C ru rn Schmutzler, Vernon, B.S., Bus Adm Span -1 mm, Dora, B.A F3 Sch Soc Sci -I hrunk, Judy, B.A Sc u .91 ,- 'U ww E 852 Uiallfi mug!! :cn D Qsgg 'UZ' rv S :J EUruaa .l'.:0'U M5625 uu.c.: mcnmva .1 025 4: vi an E N - .: L' 3 .:: U5 1 -s Art 'I ai, Ruth, B.A Sin Bus Adm -I arra, David, B.A Sk Sci 'I anker, Susan, B,S Sl P'- en D. B.S. iger, Dot, 71 E 'c ff U1 :J no V? an E Solberg, David A -W. g- ., F.L. rge, B.A 60 Sonera, G Ll-I D. OES I if? m ei- CJ .so -,- ii 33 C.-E 2:5 OO CD01 Bus Adm -I le, Ron, B.S Spag Soc -I ul, B.S Spence, Pa Spooner, joseph, B.S Art Ed ., Elem arr, Ellen Gay, B.S St Eng 'I arr, Janice, B.A St 'G U7 Q.. D. fc 'I hard, B.S Stein, Ric E an .c U 'I phens, Donald, B.A Ste I1 Eco -I orse, B.S art, M Stew Pol Sci -I Stolte, Richard, B.S Bio d LU 'QE '52 mu.: N N .S. .S. Swanberg, Robert, B Swanson, Sherran, B Bus Adm -I as, Gary, B.A Thom H8fPE -I Thomas, Ruth, B.S Ed mpson, Betty, B.S., Elem Tho s Adm Bu pson, Larry, B.S., Om Th E 'U 4 U1 3 E aiu mo aim CT P-U? gan .gi C 23 QE EE .CE i-i- -o I-Ll E 2 LU ai? D- . v2 VTE mm .1322 SQ '1f -,gm 'UE oo i-i- Q 'iv P B' Q.. Fc, S f! ef, , 1 -- . l -..- -, PE H84 'I ravnick, Sharon, B.S T E 'D :Gt W3 goo U, ..J .UYDZS 'nm 'Hai 'USVI -Um Sz: . SEE? E.g 5.3 E -.. .- 223 l-l-:J 'ITP ll' r- , Ed ancy, B.S., Elem sdel, N Van O Soc Sci -I allig, Gail, B.S W U O U5 'fi cn .22 O .1 'ln 2 LU D- G5 I vi no ai 'E .- C o E uf E -E C fc as TE I fi an 5 .E b 3. U7 :E 9 E f ,0- 4-up Ed ebber, Edward, B.S., Elem W Psy -I I, B.S Bil erson, Wilk 'N L5 . b -fs. ' H: 5' , rl-K H, my f Q, .-'J'-' , , , A, - F Lia: f rv' f va-Q,,E, - , A , 'Sn 4 , 'J ' 'lx I? ,gi 1, H if Q .L 'y A 1 'Neff - V ,kd ':!..,,,q Pai! , ,'- ' 5141 -'X .i if l 'H v I J xx '- . B- if . 1,4 , E Q '11--.E ww-A 42 ' ,145 . 2' 1 I 1, , 1 . ,N I .1 -1-M., ,e.,,,- na -I- Q 11 Ip 'Tig sq 'li if-gk-3 ' Runnin 'n nz, 1' w , .Q M in V ' R filflfi x, if , - 1 , ,.l,i',w ' W '11 ,nf . -'fi'1.'Si4 'm '1fl! E -Eng , A-- 5 , 'Ma- lik 'ff W , - -ff . 41155 if ,r ' 1 I ,fa '.: 'E , 'fr ff T -I I L- A Hr , -f Q35 ji ' :- , f' f 5 Q , . it ......-.-..,.,, ,.' xg, wr : . fi , . I-.. gr Q -.' .H A l CANDIDATES FOR DEGREES Abbott, Shirley J., BS A 84 L Adams, Robert Sterling, BS Bus Adm Adams, Virginia Ellis, BS Elem Ed Akau, George Jr., BS Pol Sci Aklin, Colleen Carol, BS Elem Ed Alavezos, Emil L., BS Sci Alberg, Marvin August, BS Soc Albert, Nurit, BA FL Albertini, Richard Arthur, BS Bus Adm Alderton, John Charles Jr., BS Soc Sci Alexander, Merrill William, BS Geog Alexander, Richard Loren, BS Phil Allegre, Frances Suzanne, BA Elem Ed Allen, Roger Lee, BS A 81 L Allman, Gilbert L., BS Soc Alspach, Kenneth Eugene, BS Elem Ed Alvarez, Stephen Leonard, BA H 84 PE Ames, Arthur John, BS Bus Adm Ames, Barbara Jean, BA Elem Ed Amundson, Randolph Ernest, BS Bus Adm Andersen, Gary Dale, BS Earth Sci Anderson, Bryan David, BA Math Anderson, Carolyn Lee Jones, BA Sci Anderson, James William, BS Soc Sci Anderson, Janice M., BS Elem Ed Anderson, Jay Preston, BS Math Anderson, Karen Esther, BS Speech 84 TA Anderson, Linda Mae, BS A 84 L Anderson, Lorin James, BS Pol Sci Anderson, Robert Ray, BS Sci Andra, Laurie Jeanne, BS Sci Andrews, Helen Elissa, BA Eng Angell, Adelaide Townsend, BA A 81 L Arensmeier, Earleen Kay, BS A 81 L Armstrong, Ehrman Edmondsjr., BA Mod Lang Armstrong, Sharon Ann, BA Eng Arnstein, Herman Edwin, BS A 84 L Arrell, Judith G., BS A 8f L Arthur, Chester Allen Jr., BS Bus Adm Atkinson, Terry Wayne, BA Eng Atseff, Ronald, BS Chem Atwood, Veronika Gerda, BA Chem Aukerman, Terry Lee, BS Bus Adm Avey, Al V., BS Psych Aylor, Gerald Lee, BS Bus Adm Back, Paul Vincent, BS Pol Sci Bailey, David A., BS Soc Sci Bailey, leanne, BS Soc Bailey, Robert John, BS Earth Sci Baillie, William Robert, BS Elem Ed Baird, David Lawrence, BS Bus Adm Baker, Ronald Arthur, BS Sci Balkan, Terry Lee, BS Bus Adm Bancroft, Terrance Lee, BS Speech 84 TA Barker, Thomas David, BS Bus Adm Baronti, Diana Lynn, BS Soc Barrett, John Roderic, BS Pol Sci Barthel, Barbara Ann, BA Math Bartholomew, Maralyn DeBok, BS Elem Ed Bartlett, Wayne Lee, BS Sci Bauer, David R., BS Bus Adm Beasley, Kenton Andrew, BS Soc Sci Beasley, Ronald Alan, BS Earth Sci Bebee, James Lee, BS Bus Adm Beck, Sammy, BA FL Becker, Gary Alan, BS Bus Adm Becker, Mark, BA Eng Beckley, Glen Brooks, BS Bus Adm Beeler, Joan Diehl, BS Elem Ed Behm, Larry Craig, BS H 81 PE Behrend, Douglas Lee, BS App Sci Belknap, Robert E., BS Phil Bell, Judith Ann, BA A 8. L Bell, Samuel Fredrick, BS Soc Sci Bellingham, Dianna Marie, BS Elem Ed Bennett, Marlene May, BS Elem Ed Bennett, William Raymond, BS Earth Sci Benville, Linda Jewell, BS Elem Ed Bergmann, Kenneth Lee, BS Math Berry, Betsy Burita, BS Elem Ed Beyl, David Windell, BA A 81 L Biggs, James Duncan, BS Soc Sci Billeter, James David Jr., BS Bus Adm Billups, Dale A., BS Sci Bingham, Arthur Glen, BS Bus Adm Birt, Carolyn Jean, BS Psych Soc Birt, Sidney Kay, BS Soc Sci Bischoff, Jamie Mayer, BS Soc Bjelland, Pamela Ruthann, BS Elem Ed Black, Katherine Elizabeth, BA Eng Math Blake, William Patrick, BS Adm Bleything, Dennis Hugh, BA Psych 81 Pol Sci Bliese, Bruce Burson, BS Soc Sci Bloch, Joanne, BS A 8: L Boileau, Beverly J., BS Elem Ed Booth, Barbara Edna, BS Soc Sci Booth, David L., BS Bus Adm Bosch, William Bruce, BS Bus Adm Boscole, James T., BS Soc Bosowski, Thelma C., BS A 84 L Soc Sci Botsford, Charles William, BS Bus Adm Bouscher, Edmund Henry, BS Elem Ed Boyce, John W., BS Hist Boyd, Robert Thomas, BA Anth Boyer, Jefferson Chelcy II, BA Anth Boyer, Nancy Jean, BS Sci Boyle, Robert James Jr., BS Phil Bracco, Merry Decker, BS Psych Brackett, Alan E., BS Bus Adm Brady, Jeffrey, L., BS Sci Brame, Luise, BA Mod Lang Branagan, Dennis F., BS Bus Adm Brault, Karen Marie, BS Elem Ed Braun, James Joe, BS Bus Adm Bravinder, Sherry Lee, BS Bio Breitenstein, Christy Irene, BA Soc Brenner, Arthur E., BS Bus Adm Bridge, Sharon Diane, BS Art A 81 L Bridgeford, Robert G., BS Anth Brockl, Carl Hermann Rene, BA Chem Brockl, Cheryl Anne, BA Elem Ed Brooks, Winslow C., BS Geog Brouillard, Darlene Marie, BS Bus Adm Brower, Carolyn Mae, BA Eng , Charles W., BS Bus Adm Brown Brown Brown I I Kathleen Lucille, BS Bus Adm KayJo Anne, BA Elem Ed Brown, Roger Eugene, BS Bus Adm Brown, Timothy Patrick, BS Soc Sci Browning, Judith Ann, BA A gl L Bryant, Thomas Edward, BS Bus Adm Bucknum, Donna Lou, BS Soc Buell, David E., BS Bus Adm Buller, Freida lone, BS Elem Ed Bulletset, Janice H., BS Elem Ed Burchfield, Charles Randal, BS A 8: L Burke, Phillip Eugene, BS Sci Burke, Thomas F., BA Eng Burkett, Leo B., BS Math Burnard, Kareen Louise, BS Soc Sci Burnett, Barbara Ann, BS Speech 81 TA Burnside, Bruce Ward, BS Bus Adm Burton, Dorothy Mae, BS Soc Sci Busby, Mary Kathleen, BS Soc Bushell, Geoffrey Stephen, BS Bus Adm Byrne, Robert Vincent, BS Soc Sci Calandra, Gary Bruce, BS Sci Callis, Frieda Marlene, BA Art Callis, Thomas Chester Jr., BS Art Cameron, Denman Roy, BS Psych Cameron, Joanne Lee, BS Soc Sci Cameron, Mary Dorothy, BS Soc Campbell, Linda Lee, BA Speech 81 TA Campbell, Virginia Wallace, BA Art Cannucci, John Vance, BS Soc Caplan, Ronald Martin, BS Bus Adm Capri, Michael James, BS Bus Adm Carbone, Frank Raymond, BA Econ Card, Sheila Ann, BA Eng Carlson, Dianne Michelle, BA Anth Carter, A. Russell, BS A 8: L Carter, Thomas Glenn, BS Soc Sci Cave, Shirley Rae, BS Elem Ed Cawley, Richard Angelo, BS Bio Chamberlain, Floyd G., BA Elem Ed Chamberlain, Ronald Marvin, BS Bus Adm Chan, Tai Yuet, BS Bus Adm Chandler, Jeffrey Kurt, BS Bus Adm Chaples, Bob Eugene, BS App Sci Chapman, Donald B. ll, BS Soc Sci Chastain, Suzanne Louise, BS Soc Chattin, Linda M., BS Soc Sci Cherney, Alan Jan, BA Anth Chow, Clark Keelock, BS Chem Christiansen, Barbara Ann, BS Art Christianson, Neil Bruce, BS Math Church, Bonnie L., BS Soc Sci Clark, Donald Earl, BS Soc Sci Clark, Geneva Edna, BS Elem Ed Clark, James Alan, BS Sci Clark, Norman Reginald, BS Sci Clasby, Gary N., BA Eng Classen, James Norman, BS Bio Clayton, Geof D., BS Psych Clement, Ronald Walter, BS Psych Cloud, Michael Anthony, BS Sci Cohen, Jerome Barry, BA Anth Cohn, Patrick Graham, BS Soc Sci Cole, Georgia Ann, BS Hist Condon, William Theodore Jr., BS Soc Sci Cone, Cheryl Ann, BS Bus Adm Cone, William Carl, BS Bus Adm Conger, Jon Charles, BA Chem Conley, Mitchell H., BS Bus Adm Cook, Marilyn Helen, BA Art Cooley, Arlene Kay, BA A 84 L Cooper, Gail Eileen, BA Elem Ed Cooper, Roger William Jr., BS A 84 L Cornelius, Darryl Frederick, BS Soc Corvi, Alfred Stephen, BS Bus Adm Coulter, Marjorie Ann, BS A 84 L Council, Charles Lewis, BS Bus Adm Cowger, John Robert, BS Math Crabtree, Erin Cecile, BS Elem Ed Craig, William Charles, BS Bus Adm Craigmiles, Patricia Ann, BA Span Crawford, Scott LeRoy, BS Soc Sci Crenshaw, Stephen D., BA Eng Cressy, Barbara Elaine, BS Soc Sci Crocker, Larry Clarence, BA Art Cullen, Max Leonard, BS Bus Adm Cummins, Carol Sue, BS A 81 L Curran, Thomas E., BS Psych Curtis, Cheryl E., BS Elem Ed Curtis, Juanita Marie, BS Elem Ed Curtis, Richard Donald, BS PE Custis, William G., BS Elem Ed Dacy, Marie Helene, BA Elem Ed Daggett, Michael Huston, BA Pol Sci Danielson, Gary George, BS Soc Sci Daue, Lee A., BS Soc Sci Davidson, Kirtland Frederick, BS Bus Adm Davies, Mary Christine, BS Soc Sci Davis, Arthur N., BS Elem Ed Davis, Eugene Kenneth, BS Soc Sci Davis, John Francis, BS Math Davis, Michael Dewey, BS Psych Davis, Theodore Michael, BS Bio Dayton, Nancy Anne, BS Soc Deaver, Robert L. Jr., BS Bus Adm DeBlaisio, David H., BS Pol Sci Deckers, Linda Lee, BA Pol Sci DeGraff, Stephanie Jean, BA A St L Dehn, Patricia Ann, BS Elem Ed Deisch, Donald Leon, BS Soc Sci Dekay, Earle C., BS Bus Adm Delich, Daryl Eugene, BS Bus Adm Deloff, Darlene Fay, BA Eng DeMartino, Louis John, BS Soc Sci Denning, Jay D., BS Bus Adm Densmore, Albert Harry, BS Pol Sci DeVere, Charles William Jr., BS Bus Adm DeVere, Iris DeJuan, BS Elem Ed DeVito, Albert Curtis, BS Phil Diack, Samuel Latta Jr., BS Math Dickinson, Charles Gail, BA FL Dickinson, Donald Lee, BS Bus Adm Dillman, Carol Dawn, BS Psych Dimick, Jean Irene, BS Elem Ed Dingler, Alyce Glaettli, BS Pol Sci Dingler, Orville Lynn, BS Pol Sci Dinse, Noble Thomas, BS Speech 84 TA Dirrim, Gary E., BS Bus Adm Divens, Merlyn Gene, BS Bus Adm Dixon, James M., BS Elem Ed Doht, Dennis William, BS Bus Adm Donaca, Ronald Lawrence, BS Geog Donaldson, Bruce William, BS Bio Donkers, Gail, BS Soc Sci Dorosh, Tim Clark, BS Bus Adm Econ Dorsey, Vera Mae, BS Soc Douglas, James Grahame, BS Bus Adm Downey, Troy James, BA Math Downey, William Charles, BS Soc Downing, Dennis Lee, BS Sci Soc Sci Doyle, Diane Nina, BS Soc Sci DuFrene, Kathryn Elizabeth, BS A 84 L Dulay, Gerald E., BS Bus Adm Duncan, Norman Wesley, BS Soc Sci Dunn, William Charles, Jr., BS Sci Dunton, Kathleen Mary, BS Soc Ebert, Terri Lee, BS Math Edgington, Michale S., BA Hist Egan, Susan K., BA Eng Egbert, Theron E., BS Sci Eggiman, Robert Earl, BA A 81 L Eggimann, Beverly Ann, BS Elem Ed Eggleston, Theresa D., BS Sci Ehrsam, Jack, BS Pol Sci Eide, Kristbjorg, BA German Elder, Paul Richard, BS A 81 L Elliott, Lawrence Andrew, BS Bus Adm Elliott, Sherrol Levon, BS A 84 L Ellis, Robert Lawrence, BS Soc Emmerson, Ronald E., BS Econ Empey, Gary Ward, BA Econ English, Michael Zane, BS Econ Erickson, Judy Evans, BA Eng Erwin, George William, BS Math Eyer, Delano Douglas, BS Econ Fahey, Leslie Raymond, BS Bus Adm Fajardo Ugaz, Angel Elias, BS App Sci Falk, Kerstin lngegard, BA Phil Fallgren, Curtis Philip, BA Eng Fantz, Ronald Bruce, BS Soc Farag, Nadia Raouf, BS Pol Sci Farrow, Jeanne Harper, BA Eng Fast, Robert Lewis, BS Bus Adm Fearn, David Garth, BS Bus Adm Feller, Douglas Edward, BS A 84 L Fendel, Richard Michael, BA Speech 81 TA Ferguson, Robert Bruce, BS Math Ficken, Robert Edwin, BS Hist Fiedler, William Paul, BS Chem Field, Gary Donald, BS Psych Fife, Brent Allen, BS Bus Adm Fish, Gary Robert, BS Bus Adm Fisher, Sara Lea, BS Bus Adm Flego, Michael Stuart, BS Hist Fleming, David Wayne, BS Bus Adm Flenniken, John C., Jr., BS Sci Flenniken, Susan Penelope, BS Soc Sci Fletcher, Robert E., BS Sci Foley, Douglas Lee, BS Psych Foley, Kathleen A., BS Soc Folkerts, James G., BS Math Follstad, Richard Gene, BS Soc Foote, Kenneth Alan, BA Math Ford, Lawrence Charles, BS Math Ford, Robert Charles, BS Hist Forsberg, David M., BS Elem Ed Forsythe, Larry D., BS Sci Foss, Richard Allen, BS Hist Foster, Larry Eugene, BA Sci Fountain, Mazie Green, BS Soc Sci Foust, Marvin John, BS Physics Fowlks, Virginia Johnson, BS A 84 L Frame, Patricia Elizabeth, BS A 81 L Frank, Gayle Allison, BA Art Franklin, Geneva Ann, BS Elem Ed Franz, Robert Lewis, BS Bus Adm Franzen, James Lloyd, BS Bus Adm Franzke, William Bert III, BS H 8f PE Fraser, Dixie June, BA Art Frasier, James Paul, BS Bus Adm Frederick, Robert Paul, BA Hist 81 Phil Fredericks, Roy Walter, BS Pol Sci Freeman, Sheila Hughes, BA Eng Frengle, Douglas Vincent, BA Bus Adm Friedemann, Katherine Anne, BS Elem Ed Friedman, Carol Elaine, BA Hist Fritchman, Kirby, BS Math Fritchman, Ralph Robin, BS A 84 L Fuchs, Shirley Kay, BS Elem Ed Fuller, John Edgar, BS Hist Fuller, Rae Weir, BA A 81 L Fullerton, Herschel Fike Jr., BS Bus Adm Furukawa, Janie Mitsuye, BS Elem Ed Fye, joelle Mildred, BS Hist Gaddis, Martha Henrietta, BA Anth Gannon, Richard Harold, BS Soc Sci Ganzel, Mary, BS Hist Gardner, David Roy, BS Hist Garmon, Paul F., BS Pol Sci Garside, Stanley S., BS Bus Adm Gassner, Richard Harry, BS Bus Adm Gatto, Kathleen Pearl, BS Soc Sci Gaunt, Richard Adrian, BS App Sci Gearin, Peter Raleigh, BS Bus Adm Gentry, Patricia Leslie, BS Elem Ed Gilbertsen, joanne, BA FL 84 Eng Gilchrist, Alan Leroy, BA Psych Gilchrist, jeanne, BA Psych Gilles, james Walter, BS A 81 L Gillette, Donald Allan, BA Phil Glantz, Ralmen Samuel, BA Bus Adm Glaske, Neal Rodney, BS A 8: L Goebel, Rudiger Carl Hans, BA Econ Goetz, Linda Lou, BA Eng Goodmonson, Courtney Weldon, BS Psych Goodner, Nancy Ann, BS Elem Ed Goodrich, Michael Scott, BS Sci Goodwin, joseph Byron, BS A 81 L Goold, George Charles, BS Geog Gorder, Patricia Lynn, BA Eng Gordon, jerry C., BS Bus Adm Gorman, Vicki Lynn, BA Soc Gorrell, David Guy, BS Sci Gott, William Richard, BS Physics Graham, Karen Ann, BS Hist Graham, Nicholas Stuart, BS Pol Sci Granquist, Gary Walter, BS Bio Grant, Gladys Pearl, BS Bus Adm Grant, Lawrence Patrick, BS Bus Adm Gray, Allen Francis, BS Soc Sci Greco, Fredric joseph, BS H 8: PE Green, Kathleen Diane, BS Elem Ed Gressinger, james Ernest, BS Anth Griffith, Leslie Rae, BS Hist Griffith, Teresa Ann, BA Eng Grignon, Michael, BS Soc Grimes, Larry Lee, BS Appl Sci Grimwood, Olga Gentile, BS Soc Sci Gronsand, james Kurre, BA Eng Gross, E. Aleen, BA Elem Ed Grossi, Margaret Charleen, BS Hist Grubb, Samuel Peter, BS Sci Gulledge, Marcia Louise, BS H 81 PE Gumm, Celia Frances, BS Chem Gunderson, Barbara jeanne, BS Bus Adm Gunther, james Clifford, BS Math, TF Math Gwynne, Rosalind W., BA F L Haas, Phyllis Ann, BS Soc Sci Hack, Gladys Eleanor, BS Soc Sci Hagestad, Karen Sue, BA FL Haglund, james W., BS App Sci Hall, Patricia Lee, BS Psych Halloran, Daniel Patrick, BA Pol Sci Hamann, Thomas, BS Bus Adm Hammock, james Robert, BS A 84 L Hanawalt, David Eugene, BS Psych Hancock, David Maxwell, BS Sci Handyside, Nolan Alfred, BS App Sci Hanken, Shonene Roxy, BS Elem Ed Hanna, james William, BS Bus Adm Hanna, john Norman, BS Bus Adm Hannam, Perry A., BA Pol Sci Hansen, Greta Marie, BS Elem Ed Hansen, Michael jerome, BS Math Hanson, Earl Wayne, BS Math Hanson, Patricia Lee, BA A 81 L Hanson, Richard Lawrence, BS Bus Adm Hanson, Susan Rountree, BS Elem Ed Hardegger, Karen Lee, BS Elem Ed Harding, Larry james, BS Soc Hargreaves, Edward Franklin, BS Pol Sci Harlow, William Hayward III, BS App Sci Harnar, Douglas C., BS Bus Adm Harper, Richard Wayne, BS Art Harriman, David Lee, BS Art Harrington, Terry Lee, BS Psych Harris, james Dennis, BS Art Harris, L. Dale, BS Elem Ed Harris, Sheila Mae, BS Psych Hart, William, Clarence, BS Math Hartley, Gary Lewis, BS Art Hatcher, Shirley Diane, BS Elem Ed Hatfield, Catharine A., BA Art Hauser, Sarah jane, BA Eng Hayes, Ace R., BS Psych 81 Soc Hazen, Harvey Lee, BS Hist Hebert, Michael Gregory, BS Bus Adm Heck, Stephen john, BA Soc Sci Hedges, Delton Laud, BA Psych Hefflinger, Gerald Richard, BS Bus Adm Heim, Steven Lawrence, BS Earth Sci Heiney, Robert Alan II, BS Bus Adm Heintz, Theresa jane, BS Elem Ed Heisler, Kathryn Cynara, BA Psych Heitkemper, William Charles, BS Bus Adm Hellgren, Irene Gertrude, BS A 81 L Hemphill, Marcia Valerie, BS Elem Ed Henley, Linda Grace, BA Eng Henricksen, Larry R., BS Bus Adm Henry, Elizabeth Anne, BS Soc Sci Hensley, Marna Lee, BS Elem Ed Herceg, john Matthew, BS Bus Adm Heringer, Eldon Waldemar, BS Bus Adm Higgins, Dennis Dean, BS Bus Adm Hill, Ray Vernon, BS Elem Ed Hill, Timothy Lauri, BS Bus Adm Hiller, Eldon Dean, BS Geog Hills, Dorothea Nell, BA Soc Sci Hinckley, Chip Nolan, BS Bus Adm Hines, Verna jean, BS Elem Ed Hoagland, Gary K. BS Sci Hobbs, Craig Stanton, BS Bus Adm Hockert, jerry William, BS Appl Sci Hodges, Ronald Vern, BA Psych Hoffart, Linda Ann, BS Elem Ed Hoffman, Gene Albert, BS Pol Sci Hoffman, Rozetta K., BA FL Hogue, Gary Wayne, BS Bus Adm Holland, Nancy-Ann, BS Soc Sci Holm, Arlee jon, BS App Sci Physics Holt, Dayton L., BA Bus Adm Holt, Robert W., BS Econ Homola, Corinne Colette, BA Soc Hood, George Franklin, BS Speech 84 TA Hopkins, Dennis Lee, BS A 8: L Hopkins, Ronald Basom, jr., BS Bus Adm Hopper, David Graham, BS Pol Sci Horn, james Arden, BS App Sci Horns, jane Alice, BS A 84 L Hornstein, Barry David, BS Bus Adm Hosack, William David, BS Sci Hosaka, Yumi Mitsuse, BS Art Hostetler, Ronald Boone, BS Bus Adm Houston, Charles Robert, BS Sci Howard, john B., BS Bio Howell, Herbert McNail, BS Psych Hreha, Kathleen Lucille, BA Eng Hubbard, Glenys Maxine, BA Eng Hughes, A. Richard, BS Art Hughes, Carole Ellen, BS A 81 L Huitt, Claudia Ann, BS Elem Ed Hull, Barbara Case, BS Sci Hundley, Patricia Kuczek, BA Pol Sci Hunt, Louanne, BA Hist Hurd, Paul Gemmill, BS Pol Sci Hutchins, David A., BA Pol Sci lmholt, David Andrew, BS Bus Adm Ismail, Marilyn K., BS Soc Sci lsseks, Winifred Mary, BA Eng jackson, jarilyn Louise, BS Psych jacobs, Georgia Marlene, BA Elem Ed jacobsen, George Robert, BS Soc jakobsen, Shelley Kjer, BA Art james, Donald E., BA Hist james, Michaele Coleen, BS Pol Sci janes, Bruce K., BS Psych janke, Laurence Lewis, BS Sci janz, judith Rees, BA Psych jenkins, Donald Pauling, BS Anth jenner, M. jean, BS Elem Ed jensen, Eugene Floyd, BS Sci jensen, joyce A., BA Eng jewett, David Glen, BS Bus Adm johnson, Francis Lee, BS Soc Sci johnson, Ben Eugene, BA Hist johnson, Carol Boone, BA Art Hist johnson, David Albert, BS Sci johnson, Diane Marie, BA johnson, janice M., BA Anth johnson, joni Ruth, BS A 81 L johnson, Paul P., BS Soc Sci johnson, Peggy jean, BS Art johnson, Susan Gay, BS Elem Ed johnson, Willard Allen, BS Bus Adm johnson, William james, BS App Sci johnston, Serena Pedersen, BA Art johnstun, Mary P., BS Elem Ed jolin, jean Eileen, BS Sci jones, Daryl Christine, BS Bio jones, Helen Kolemaine, BS Math jones, Severn B., BS Elem Ed jorgensen, Leslie Michael, BA Eng jorgensen, Larry Neale, BS Bus Adm IOY, John Turner, BS Bus Adm judd, Michael Perry, BA Psych jung, Douglas Allyn, BS Psych justen, Wolfgang Heinrich, BA FL Kakashita, Mark Yukio, BS Bus Adm Kalberer, Rosemarie Ann, BS Hist Kanzler, Kathryn jean, BA A 84 L Kaseweter, Ronald jon, BS Geog Kasper, james Robert, BS Soc Kato, Brad Koichi, BA Eng Kay, Ronald Walter, BS Bio Keiter, john Bowes, BS Math Keller, joseph Lloyd, BS Soc Keller, Larry Lee, BS Soc Keller, Michael David, BS Art Kelley, Douglas Wayne, BS Bus Adm Kellogg, Bruce Clemens jr., BS Hist Kelly, Barbara Ann, BS Hist Kelm, Ronald Gordon, BS Sci Kelner, Larry Thomas, BS Bus Adm Kelsey, Daniel Thomas, BS Sci Kemp, Richard Douglas, BS Bus Adm Kennedy, john Arnold, BS Econ Kenny, Judith Keyes, BS Soc Sci Kester, Barbara jo, BA FL Killen, Sally Anne, BA Eng Kincaid, Bruce Leeland, BS Bus Adm Kinch, Michael Paul, BS Bio King, leffrey Harold, BS Econ Kirk, Mary Beth, BS Elem Ed Klein, Friedrich Herman, BS Anth Klint, Paul F., BS Soc Sci Knepper, Michael j., BS Bus Adm Kness, james D., BS Soc Sci Knutsen, Charles Theodore, BS Pol Sci Knutson, Phyllis Wright, BA Eng Koch, Donnie Miles, BS Bus Adm Koncel, Edward L., BS Physics 81 Math Kondo, janet Makino, BS Math Kornegay, Michael Ray, BS Art Kraft, Richard Dale, BS Bus Adm Krager, Patricia Ann, BS Elem Ed Krause, Pamela R., BS Math Kreps, Terry Denton, BS Bio Kretschmer, Louis Frank, BS Sci Kriesten, Richard E. jr., BS Bus Adm Kropf, Stanley Eugene, BS Bus Adm Krueger, Charlene Becky, BA Soc Sci Krueger, Herbert Bismark III, BS Bus Adm Krueger, William Fredrick III, BS A 84 L Krug, David Allan, BS Elem Ed Kruger, Kathleen joyce, BA A 84 L Soc Sci Kyllo, Harry N., BS Bus Adm Lass, Gordon Barry, BS Soc Sci LaFarge, Paul Wayne, BS Bus Adm LaFond, Philip Albert, BS Math Laman, Robert Willis, BA Eng LaMarche, Gary Douglas, BS Bus Adm Lamka, Charles Dewane, BS A 81 L Landfair, Daryl Lynne, BA FL Hist Landfair, Michael D., BS Pol Sci Lane, Myron Lewis, BS Math Lang, Richard Lee, BS Art Lang, Rodgerjoel, BS Bus Adm Langer, Clarence Dean jr., BS Elem Ed Laplace, Ernest, BS Physics Larkin, Marci Georgiana, BS Hist Larson, Madeline Kaye, BS H 84 PE Larson, Virginia Gladys, BS Elem Ed Larvik, Kenneth Edward, BS Bus Adm Lathrop, Susan Ann, BA Soc Sci Lawhorn, Lynne Kathryn, BS Soc Sci Lawrence, Robyn Adele, BS Bio Laws, Larry A., BA Soc Lawson, Andrew Peter, BS Hist Layman, jeanne Charlotte, BS Elem Ed Leach, Loren R., BS Hist Leach, Mary Louise, BS Soc Sci Leaf Ann Louise, BS Art Lee, Diana jeanne, BS Soc Sci Lee, Esther Grace, BA Music Lee, Lewis Yuen, BS Math Lenon, William Welker, BS Hist Phil Leonti, janice Frances, BS Elem Ed Leshgold, Barrie R., BS Elem Ed LeVee, Norman jay, BS Bus Adm Levy, Ike, BS Pol Sci Lewis, Terry Donald, BS Bus Adm Lewis, Wayne Larry, BS Hist Libeck, Diane Sylvia, BA Eng Liljeholm, Theodore Efraim, BS Hist Lindblad, Clarence Eugene, BS Bus Adm Lindquist, Nora Ann, BS Soc Sci Little, john Morris, BS Soc Sci Little, George Fisher, BA Anth Litofe, Lynne Harriet, BS Bus Adm Livingston, james David, BS Soc Sci Livingston, Leslie Thomas, BS Bus Adm Locke, Linda Carol, BS Math Long, Dwightjerrold, BS Bus Adm Lood, Oie, BA Psych Lotzenhiser, Wendy jean, BS Elem Ed Lounsbury, l0hn William, BA Psych Lovely, julie Millington-Ryan, BA FL Lowe, Larry Stephen, BS Bus Adm Lowe, Roberta justine, BA Geog Lowry, Gary Eugene, BS Bus Adm Lowry, Heath W., BA Hist Luce, Ellen Willoughby, BA Eng Ludwick, Alene Linda, BS Soc Sci Luepton, Edward j'., BS Sci Lund, Robert john, BS Econ Lundquist, Rodney E., BS Soc Sci Lydon, Eric William jr., BS Soc Sci Lynn, Helen Elizabeth, BS Anth Maass, Richard Gary, BS Bus Adm Matfei, Gary Ronald, BS Bus Adm Mage, Betty jean, BS Pol Sci Majovski, Sonia Anne, BS Elem Ed Malady, Anita Kathleen, BA French 8: Soc Sci Malensky, Roy jeffery, BS Soc Sci 81 Math Manassau, W. Dan, BS Bus Adm Mangelsdorf, Virginia Evans, BA A 81 L Manning, Kathleen jean, BA Earth Sci Marcum, Mary Lee, BA A 81 L Marks, Diane Kay, BS A 84 L Marriott, Lynn Ann, BS Soc Sci Mohr, Sue Ann, BA F L Marsh, Diane Helene, BS Elem Ed Marsh, Marion jay, BS Elem Ed Martinez, Pegi jean, BA Eng Martin, Lillian Lea, BS Elem Ed Martin, Kenneth Scott, BS Pol Sci Masten, Chaterine Loretta, BS Elem Ed Mathis, Polly McCotter, BA Eng Matthews, Richard Paul, BS Hist Mattson, Dorothy joan, BA Eng May, janice C., BA Phil Mayo, Gray C., BS Bus Adm McCall, Robert Evan, BS Bus Adm McCaIlister, james Howard, BS Bus Adm McCarthy, Terralyn Rae, BS Elem Ed McClure, Miriam Grace, BS Soc McCord, Edward Loyd, BS Soc McCarthy, john Francis jr., BS Hist McDermott, jerrold Patrick, BS Bus Adm McDonald, Isabel, BS Elem Ed McEIligott, Michael james, BS Pol Sci McGee, janet McGregor, BA Eng McKenzie, Maureen Mary, BA FL McGinnis, Ann Kathryn, BA Hist McMahon, Michael john, BS Bio McGuire, judith Vanebo, BS Psych McKay, David joe, BS Bus Adm McShatko, Steven D., BS Bus Adm McWilliams, Daniel Franklin, BA Pol Sci Mead, Kenneth Eugene, BS Bio Meeuwsen, Ronald john Anthony I, BS Soc Sci Melton, Shirley Ruth, BA Math Merlo, Kenney Harvey, BS Psych Merrill, Michael Floyd, BS Bio Metzger, Maryann, BA Psych Meyer, jarry john, BS Earth Sci Meyer, Larry Gene, BS Math Middal, Michael Alvin, BS Pol Sci Millen, Marcia Leath, BS Art Miller, Elizabeth Ann, BS Psych Miller, Lester Leroy, BS Bus Adm Miller, Michael Harold, BS Pol Sci Miller, Michael Raiff, BS Pol Sci Milner, Rebecca june, BA Psych Minor, Earle Aloysius, BA A 81 L Mischke, Michael Eugene, BS Psych Mitchell, james Allen, BS Soc Sci Mitchell, Renee Marie, BS Elem Ed Moberg, Rudolph joseph jr., BA Soc Sci Moentenich, Wendy Anne, BS Hist 81 Soc Sci Moffenbeier, Robert Francis, BS Bus Adm Moisio, Susan jane, BS Soc Sci Monroe, Billie Ferne, BS Elem Ed Montgomery, William Dale, BS Soc Monroe, Michael Louis, BS Sci Moody, Linda L., BA Elem Ed Moore, Barbara Ann, BS Sci Moore, Barbara Elizabeth, BS Sci Moore, Kathleen joanne Gaskin, BA A 84 l Moran, Charlotte Helen, BS Psych Moran, Mary Louise, BA Pol Sci Morgan, Bonnie jayne, BA Eng Morgan, Donald john, BS Bus Adm Morrell, john Harrison, BS Bio Morrisey, Mary K., BA Eng Morrison, Russell Bernard, BS Hist Morton, Melvin Clifford, BS Soc Sci Mosar, Robert Allan, BS Chem Moser, Shirley Ann, BS Elem Ed Motley, jean Van de Akker, BS Art Mouser, janet Rae, BS Speech 84 TA Moy Tom, Georgia Ann, BS Soc Mulvey, Marcia Alice, BS Soc Sci Murawski, Stephen james, BS Bus Adm Murphy, Karen Dee, BS Soc Murray, james R., BS Bus Adm Muune, Andrew Waweru, BA Bus Adm Myers, Gerald Eugene, BS Bus Adm Myers, Hugh Albert, BS Soc Sci Nakata, Ronald Kazumi, BA Chem Nash, Patricia Ann, BS H 84 PE Nastrom, Rodney Alfred, BS Ap Sci Neelands, john Andrew III, BS A 81 L Neaphen, Norman Martin, BS Soc Sci Nelson, Lucy Marie, BS Elem Ed Nelson, Raymond Denny, BS Psych Nettleton, Alan Thomas, BA Hist Neville, Patricia jean, BA Pol Sci Newman, Patricia Ann, BS Elem Ed Newton, Frederick Douglas, BS Bus Adm Newton, Gary Hunter, BA Math Nicholson, Max LeRoy, BS Elem Ed Niemi, Ruth Ann, BA Art Nolan, john Stuart Nolan, Mary Maxine Boyce, BS Soc Sci Nolan, Thomas james, BS Appl Sci Noone, Sharron Margaret, BS Soc Norlin, Linda Ruth, BS Sci Norton, Michael john, BS Bus Adm Novak, Maria Ellena, BA A 81 L Novinger, Mervin E., BS Bus Adm Nowak, Diane Thelma, BS Bio Nyberg, Gordon H., BS Elem Ed Nyholm, Sandy Gail, BS Pol Sci Oberg, Thomas Harvey, BS H 81 PE Oderman, Keith A., BS Psych O'Donnell, Kathleen Anne, BS Sci Oga, Leslie Teiko, BS Chem Ogilvy, james Patrick, BA Soc Sci Olds, Gladys Christine, BA Soc Oliver, Virginia Lee, BA Eng Olson, Dennis Arthur, BS Geog Olson, Terry Kevin, BA Pol Sci Olson, Timothy Parker, BA Eng Olsrud, Annette Marie, BS A 84 L O'Rourke, Charles james, BS Econ Osborn, john E., BA FL Ostomel, Ronald Bruce, BS Sci Oswald, Stanley Richard, BS Math O'T0ole, Michael Kim, BS Econ Oulman, Lynne Carol, BA FL Owen, Mary Margaret, BS Elem Ed Owenby, james Kenneth, BS Sci Oxford, Bradley Dean, BS Geog Packard, jerrold Michael, BA Pol Sci Page, Alyce Viola, BA FL Pade, Richard Gorham, BS Pol Sci Pagano, Gary john, BS Sci Pappadis, Paul T., BS Chem Park, Rosemary Ann, BS Sci Parker, Alfred Scott, BA Eng Parsons, Paul Thomas, BS Soc Patterson, Robin M., BS Elem Ed Patton, Sharyle Martiel, BA Soc Sci Paulsen, Pennyjo, BA Eng Paulson, Ricky Ray, BS Pol Sci Pavlinac, Dennis Michael, BS Sci Pearl, William Robert, BS Bio Pearson, Sally Lynn, BA Eng Peery, Trusten Edwin, BS Math Peets, Robert Harry, BS Hist Perkins, Edward Royce, BA Pol Sci Peters, james L., BS Bus Adm Peters, Lindsay Carole, BS A 84 L Peterson, Conrad Scharles, BS Pol Sci Peterson, Donald Kenneth, BS Bus Adm Peterson, judy joy, BS Psych Peterson, Terrance Willard, BS Math Peth, Peter Robert, BA Psych Petruzelli, Stephen john, BS Bus Adm Pettichord, Ronald Eugene, BS Soc Sci Petty, Linda Kay, BS Bus Adm Petzoldt, Mary Ann, BS Soc Pierson, Ralph Douglas, BS App Sci Piper, Richard Abram, BS Pol Sci Playfair, William L., BS Sci Plympton, William Merton, BA Art Poindexter, Forrest Ray, BS Sci Polehn, Donald Frederick, BS Bus Adm Pontius, Robert Marshall, BS Bus Adm Pope, Gary Robert, BS Bus Adm Pories, Evelyne, BA Elem Ed Pounder, Gary Lee, BS Hist Poutala, Arnold Carlo, BS Bio Powell, Carol Elaine, BA Eng Powell, jerald Morrison, BA Bus Adm Powell, joAnne Susan, BS Math Powell, Lewis Reed, BS Sci Price, Douglas Arthur, BS Math Price, Marvin james, BS Pol Sci Primiano, Michael Peter, BS Soc Sci Pullman, Eileen Marie, BA Eng Quackenbush, Donald Frank, BS Pol Sci Quale, Thomas Rudolph, BS Chem Radakovich, Martha jane, BS Psych Rademacher, juan Antonio, BA Bus Adm Rafferty, john Boyd, BS Bus Adm Ragan, Ronald Kent, BS Bus Adm Raikoglo, jeanne Carole, BA Psych Raley, Larry Loren, BS Bus Adm Ramey, Carol Lyn, BS Elem Ed Rangila, Raymond C., BS Geog Rankin, Richard Charles, BA Soc Ray, james Shevlin, BA Psych Ray, Phillip Dale, BS Bus Adm. Raz, Trudi Marie, BS Elem Ed Rea, Larry Dean, BS Sci Reichlein, john Bradley, BA FL Reid, David William, BS Soc Sci Reierson, Noel F., BS Elem Ed Reiley, Edward Michael, BS Soc Sci Reisbick, William Brian, BS Pol Sci Reynolds, Ronald R., BS Bus Adm Reynolds, Sara Elizabeth, BS A 81 L Reynolds, Susan Laurel, BS Soc Rice, james Nelson, BS Soc Sci Rice, Paul L., BS Pol Sci Rich, Ruby Mae, BS Psych Rich, Samuel john jr., BS Soc Richard, Peterj., BS Pol Sci 84 Hist Richey, Dennis Michael, BS Elem Ed Richmond, Roy William, BS Phil Riddell, Terry L., BS A 84 L Ridenour, james, BS Earth Sci Riley, Glenn Marion jr., BS Pol Sci Riley, joseph Edgar, BA Art Robbins, William Henry Ill, BS Bus Adm Roberts, Roger Earl, BS Bus Adm Robinson, Carol Ann, BA Art Robinson, Darrell LeRoy, BS App Sci Robinson, Margaret Catherine, BS Elem Ed Rominger, Donna Rae, BS Bus Adm Rondeau, Helen Cushing, BS Elem Ed Roning, james Edward, BS Bus Adm Rosen, Ronald Aaron, BS Bus Adm Ross, james Patric, BA Math Ross, Lloyd Vernon, BA Econ Roth, Bruce G., BS Bus Adm Roth, Paul E., BS Geog Roth, Watson Samuel, BS Soc Rousett, Karl Sherwood, BS Bio Rousslang, Donald j., BA Econ Royer, Robert j., BS Hist Rubio, Robert Louis, BS Bus Adm Rupert, Ronald Wilcox, BS Math Russell, Rebecca Diane, BS Elem Ed Ryder, jon C., BS Psych Saad, Leila Erian, BA A 84 L Sachtler, Kristine Blaine, BA Art Saito, Norio, BA A 84 L Salmonson, Linda Marie, BA Eng Saltmarsh, Sandra, BA Eng Saltveit, Noreen Ann, BA FL Sampsel, Roy Hunter, BS A 84 L Samuel, Cortez, BS Physics Sanderson, Charlotte Louise, BS Math Sandretzky, Nancy Margaret, BS Elem Ed Santee, Elnora Eileen, BA A 84 L Sanville, David K., BS H 81 PE Sargeant, Gerald Leroy, BS App Sci Sargent, Susan Margaret, BA Eng Sarto, Barbara jean, BA A 8: L Sasaki, Alan S., BS Bus Adm Sasaki, Laraine Aiko, BA Elem Ed Saulsbury, Richard Lee, BS Elem Ed Saxton, Donald Keith, BA Bio Scarpelli, Linda jeanne, BA A 84 L Schandel, Terry Keith, BS Bus Adm Schar, Gregory Alan, BA Psych Schatz, Robert William, BA A 81 L Schecter, Robert jess, BS Psych Scheeland, Richard Anthony, BS Speech 8: TA Schenk, Kathleen Mary, BS Elem Ed Schenk, Michael joseph, BS Bus Adm Schestak, Robert john, BS Sci Schlieter, joyce Ann, BS Math Schmiedeskamp, Ashley W., BS Bus Adm Schnacky, Michael D., BS Sci Schneider, Curtis james, BS Geog Schoenborn, jerome, BS Math Schoppe, Paul Hizer, BS Bus Adm Schott, David Michael, BS Bus Adm Schroll, Sharon Lynn, BS Soc Sci Schultens, Gary Michael, BS Bus Adm Schwartz, Linda jean, BS Soc Schwartz, Shirley Maxine, BS Elem Ed Scofield, Harold Eugene, BS Bus Adm Seaman, Everett Dale jr., BS Soc Sci Seely, Douglas Everett, BS Bus Adm Semprevivo, Edward R., BA Soc Serry, David Peter, BS Psych Severson, Frederick Ernest, BS App Sci Shaklee, Robert, BA Bus Adm Shanks, Margaret jean, BS Bus Adm Shapira, joan jorgine, BS Soc Sci Shatto, Norman Lee, BS Chem Shaw, William Donald, BS Bus Adm Shawe, Mildred Barbara, BS Elem Ed Shearer, Gerald Brian, BS Earth Sci Sherwin, Dwight, BS Phil Shogren, Stephen Kent, BS Phil Shreve, Paul Manley, BS Soc Sci Shumaker, Robert Raymond, BS Bus Adm Sickler, Gale Hanley, BS Sci Siebenthal, Fred john, BS Sci Siegel, David H., BS Elem Ed Siegrist, Betty jo, BS Elem Ed Simmons, Carl Edward, BS A 81 L Simonson, Donald Gerald, BS Pol Sci Simpson, Kenneth Norman, jr., BS A 81 L Sizer, Carole Ann, BA Eng Skelton, Hazel Ruby Gay, BS Speech 81 TA Skewis, Richard Edward, BS Bus Adm Skipton, Craig Vern, BS Sci Slaughter, Wayne Russell, BS Bus Adm Sletta, Ronald Lawrence, BS Psych Slifman, Marvin A., BA Math Smith Smith Smith Smith Smith Smith Smith Smith Smith Smith Smith Smith Smith Smith , Scott Warren: BS Psych Smith, I Bonnie Doris BS Elem Ed i Cheryl Kay, BA Eng Fred Manly, BS Bus Adm Gordon Ervin, BS Bus Adm ,jack Warren, BS Math , jeromek Vanden, BA Pol Sci Kit Dean, BS Bio Laurence Thomas, BA Eng Lonnie G. BS Art j Michael joseph, BA Eng 81 Psych Raymond Ernest, BS Bus Adm Richard Earl, BS Hist Robert Lester BS Bus Adm Thomas Edward, BS Bus Adm Smrkovsky, Michael C., BS Bus Adm Snider, Lawrence David, BS Soc Sci Soderholm, Paul David, BS Bus Adm Soika, Raylene Anne, BS Elem Ed Soller, Richard Valentine, BS Sci Sommers, Doris E., BS Elem Ed Soper, Elmer Gail, BS Psych Soth, Phillip Glenn, BA Eng Southard, Lonnie LeRoy, BS Soc Sowles, Douglas Pinkerton, BS Hist Speck, Nancy Burgin, BS Anth Speilberg, Bonniejean Baker, BA Eng Spring, Terry j., BS Bus Adm Stadheim, Lyla Vivian, BS Elem Ed Stalons, Don R., BS Bio Starnes, joan Roberta, BS Elem Ed Stassens, Marjorie Ann, BS Soc Sci Stayton, Barbara jane, BA Eng Steele, Lynne Marie, BS Elem Ed Steen, Charles Freeland, BS Physics Steen, Robert jr., BS Hist Stein, Richard jacob, BS App Sci Steinmetz, Marvin Duane, BS Psych 84 Soc Stempson, Pamela Kay, BS Elem Ed Stephens, Gary Francis, BS Math Stern, Bruce L., BS Bus Adm Stevenson, Ben Alvin, BS Bus Adm Stewart, Lavonne Delores, BS Elem Ed Stites, Robert R., BS Sci Stone, Robert Lee, BS App Sci Stone, Shirley Lorraine, BS Geog Strand, Norman Harold, BS Elem Ed Stratton, joAnn Isabelle, BA Eng Streb, Forrest R. jr., BS Chem Strom, Sharon jeanne, BA Hist Stroud, Sharon Lee, BS Art Strubel, james Robert, BS Hist Stump, Fay LeVal, BS Math Sue, Tim, BS Bus Adm Sulloway, Donn Winter, BS Bus Adm Sundquist, jon Terry, BS Pol Sci Swails, Helen Marie, BS Elem Ed Swanson, Bertha W., BA Speech 81 TA Sweeney, john Michael, BS Elem Ed Sweeney, Lyle james, BA Soc Sci 84 Hist Swenson, john G., BS Bus Adm Tanaka, Eileen, BS Elem Ed Tanaka, joyce T., BS Soc Sci Taug, Richard Bruce, BS Sci Taylor, Peggy Coon, BS Elem Ed Taylor, Robin Reierson, BA Elem Ed Taylor, Stephen Bruce, BS Soc Taylor, Thomas Elwood jr., BS Bus Adm Tehle, julianne, BS Soc Telizyn, john Scott, BS Bus Adm Tenison, Susan j., BS Elem Ed Tester, Gail Elizabeth, BA Eng Thomas, Richard D., BS Soc Sci Thomas, Robert Francis Il, BS Econ Thompson, Delmar Lynn, BS Hist Thompson, janis Rae, BS Mod Lang Thompson, john Everett, BS Bus Adm Thompson, Loraine K., BS Soc Sci Thompson, Russell Eugene, BA Pol Sci Thompson, Sally jane, BS Soc Sci Thompson, Val A., BS App Sci Thune, Karen Evelyn, BA A 81 L Tibbetts, Peggy Robin, BS Art Tiffany, Richard james, BS Bus Adm Tompkins, Karen A., BS Art Tong, Dennis Harvey, BA Psych Townsend, Paul Graham, BA Math Treyve, Barry Louis, BS Psych Tribby, Edward Lee, BS H 81 PE Tripp, Robert Edward, BA Math Trost, Lynda Darlene, BS A 81 L Trull, joyce Marie, BS Elem Ed Trusky, Alberta Anna Van Beek, BS Elem Ed Turner, Larry Webster, BS Bio Turowski, Edmund joseph, BS Soc Sci Turpen, Doreen Hope, BS Hist Tuttle, jon Rogers, BA A 81 L Tyler, Casey, BS Soc Sci Tyson, james Dwight, BS Bus Adm Udo, Nseobong job, BS Geog Ungrodt, john Blake, BS App Sci Upchurch, Carolyn Louise, BS Elem Ed Utberg, james David, BS App Sci Utter, Karen Louise, B5 Econ Utuk, Nyong john Udo, BA Soc Sci Van Den Bosch, Pamela, BA Eng Van Hoorn, Gale Wayne, BS A 84 L Veenker, Charlotte H., BS Bus Adm Velander, Barbara Lee, BS Elem Ed Vick, Harold Gregory, BS Sci Vidan, Michael Anthony, BS Soc Sci Vidan, Robert Nick, BS Bus Adm Vingelen, Rodger Lee, BS Bus Adm Vogel, Gary C., BS Sci Voiles, Carolyn Delight, BS Elem Ed von Hinckeldey, Carl Christian, BA Hist Von Seggern, Fred P., BS Bus Adm Wagner, Paulette Ann, BS Elem Ed Walhood, Wesley Cyrus, BS H 81 PE Waibel, jeanne Bertha, BA A 81 L Walker, Marilyn Anne, BS Soc Wallace, Wallace Winfield, BS Bus Adm Wanner, Matthew joseph, BA Bus Adm Wagner, Dorothy Ann, BS Elem Ed Warren, john Ronald, BS Soc Sci 81 Pol Sci Watt, Donald joseph, BS Bus Adm Wayland, Russell james, BS Math Weaver, Albert S. lll, BS Bus Adm. Weaver, Donna Newton, BS Bus Adm Webb, Elissa jo, BS Elem Ed Weber, Larry Delbert, BS Elem Ed Weibel, Mary Margaret, BA Soc Sci Weichel, Erwin, BA Sci Weigandt, Wayne Willis, BS Bus Adm Weil, Margaret Seidler, BA Eng Weiler, john Lee, BS Anth I Weiler, Norman Eugene, BS Bus Adm Weinandt, judy Marie, BA Soc Weinberg, Nancy Lee, BS Elem Ed Weisgerber, Robert j., BA Bus Adm. Weldon, George Thomas, BS Bus Adm Welker, William Harris, BS Bus Adm Wells, Fredrick Gene, BS Bus Adm West, lla Ilene, BS Elem Ed West, james Kenneth, BS Soc Sci Wheeler, Larry Orlie, BS Soc Sci White, Annabelle Edmonds, BS Elem Ed White, Beverly Marie, BA Mod Lang White, Leslie Dean, BS Bus Adm Whitlock, Barbara L., BA Eng Wick, jan Merlin, BS App Sci Wiencken, john Gilby, BS Bus Adm Wiener, Robert joseph, BS Pol Sci Wierson, Shaun Michael, BS Bus Adm Wigg, David George, BS Econ Wilde, William V., BS Pol Sci Wilder, Ronald Dean, BS Soc Wiley, Marci Lynne, BA Eng Williams, Dickie LeRoy, BA Eng Sr FL Williams, jerry Maxwell, BS Bus Adm Williams, Patricia E., BA Math Williams, Roger Dale, BS Bus Adm Willis, john Monroe, BS Psych 81 Bus Adm Willis, Richard Lee, BS Bus Adm Wilson, judy Lee, BS Hist Wilson, Sonja Lee Alice, BS A 81 L Windust, Frank Archerjr., BS Bus Adm Winegar, Victor Eugene II, BS Math Winkley, Teresa Marie, BA Sci Winningham, Lloyd Eugene, BS Psych 81 Soc Withers, Robert Harrison jr., BS Bus Adm Wittman, Frederica Margaret, BS Elem Ed Wong, Robert, BS Bus Adm Wood, Charles james, BA A 8r L Woods, Wayne C., BS Speech 84 TA Word, Susan Ann, BA Eng Worobey, Alexander Lee, BS Bio Wright, Douglas E., BS Pol Sci Wright, Gary Bryan, BS Bus Adm Yaden, David Verlin, BA Pol Sci Yeo, Carol Lynn, BS Elem Ed Yorks, Claire Calkins, BA A 81 L Young, Gary Dean, BS Soc Sci Yturri, Larry Eugene, BS Bus Adm Zachary, Kathleen joan, BS A 81 L Zakovics, Ilona Brigita, BA FL Zakrzewski, Karen Rae, BS Elem Ed Zenner, james Paul, BS Bus Adm Zimmerli, Lee Richard, BS A 81 L MASTER'S CAN DI DATES Adams, Gary Wade, MAT TA Aleckson, Darrell Manly, MST Hist Anagnostou, William U., MST Ed Anthony, Charles Allen, MS Ed Arthur, Benjamin Keith, MS Ed Balmer, Louis Edward, MS Ed Balsiger, Carol Hilda, MST Art Barker, Sandra Lee, MAT Eng Barnard, Fern E., MS Ed Barnard, john T., MST Soc Sci Bartholomae, Annette Martha, MA Hist Berkis, joan E., MS Ed Black, Carol Anne, MST Bus Ed Blankinship, Terrence D., MST Bio Bowman, Stanley Samuel, MS Ed Boyl, Evelyn Larsen, MST Ed Brod, Patricia Lee, MS Ed Brown, Barbara Carol, MST Ed Brown, Mildred A., MA Ed Buck, james Edward, MS Ed Buxton, Ina Collins, MST Bus Ed Calhoun, Roger Lee, MS Ed Cammack, Phyllis Claire, MA Eng Camp, Marilyn G., MS Ed Campbell, Maryann, MA Eng Carandanis, Perry Theo, MST Art Carr, james Patrick, MA Hist Cartmill, Lawrence David, MST Math Case, Mary Warren, MAT Sp Casey, Donald Dean, MS Phys Casey, Helen Marie, MA Eng Christensen, Marian C., MST Bus Ed Church, Sheryl j., MAT FL Clark, jack LeRoy, MST Sci Cohen, Davene S., MS Ed Collins, Ann Marie, MS Ed Cohn, josephine, MST Sci Conrath, Gerald H., MST Pol Sci Cook, john R., MS Ed Cook, Sue Carol Winstead, MAT Eng Coryell, janet Marie, MA Eng Cox, jessie Ann, MST Sci Crittenden, Marellen W., MS Ed Cross, Ruth E., MS Ed Crumpacker, Ann Winkler, MS Ed Cundiff, Walter Fountain, MST Sci Dardis, Eugene F., MST Math Daugherty, Sarah G., MST Ed Deichmann, F. Arthur, MS Ed Delich, Diana Lee, MS Ed DeVere, Charles William, jr., MBA Dixon, Beverly jane, MST Sp Dragich, William George, MS Ed Eastlick, Dale A., MS Ed Ebert, Wilma Ann, MS Ed Edwards, Eileen Victoria, MST Sci Elliott, Germaine Catherine, MST Soc Sci Ermence, Bennie Edward, MS Math Estberg, Eva Mary, MS Ed Estes, Hayden Ray, MST Ed Farmer, james Albert, MST Music Fields, Charles R., MS Ed Fitz, Loren E. 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Duane, MS Ed Metzentine, judith May, MA Ed Moar, Donald Anderson, MST Bus Ed Morey, Erma Fern, MS Ed Morgan, Robert Allan, MS Ed Moss, Donna june, MS Ed Moss, Frank, MS Ed Myers, Carmelita S., MST Ed Nees, Wilbur Lee, MS Physics Nelsen, Ralph Thomas, MS Ed Nelson, Marion S., MS Ed Neuschwander, A. joel, MS Ed Obermeyer, Gladys, MS Ed O'Dell, Donald Ross, MS Ed Olson, Barbara Braun, MS Ed Olson, Beverly jo, MST Soc Sci O'Toole, Mary Ann, MST Soc Sci Ottman, john Sherman, MST Soc Sci Otto, Nancy joan, MS Ed Parrish, Calvin Godfrey, MST Soc Sci Pasternack, Merle Ian, MS Elem Ed Pauler, Walter j., MA German Pepworth, janet Kaye, MAT Pol Sci Peter, Sally Ann, MST Soc Sci Petersen, Walter Anton, MS App Sci Peterson, Edward H., MS Ed Peterson, Ronald Hugh, MST Bio Pickett, Bonnie jean, MST Bus Ed Pohl, josephine MS Ed Pollock, David james, MST Hist Pope, Betty Locker, MST Bio Porter, Geneva Arlene, MS Ed Porter, Shirley Peironnet, MAT Eng Priest, Victoria M., MS Ed Prindle, Virgil MCB, MS Ed Prosser, Dorothea Irene, MS Ed Pruitt, Edward David, MS Ed Purcell, john H., MST Hist Reed, Berniece Gretchen, MS Ed Reeves, Mary Agnes Guthrie, MS Math Regula, Charles Richard, MS Ed Reitz, Martha L. Tapp, MS Ed Remington, Bettye jo, MST Soc Sci Rhodes, Doris Elaine, MS Ed Richter, Audrey Smith, MST Hist Roberts, Verna jean, MST Bus Ed Roby, Lois Grasmehr, MST Bio Robinson, james Daniel, MS Chem Roddy, Arthur A., MS Ed Rondthaler, jane D., MA Ed Rooney, Edward, MS Ed Ross, Barbara I., MS Ed Running, Helen M., MST Soc Sanchez, Victorina Andres, MAT Pol Sci Sattler, Beatrice Walter, MST El Ed Saunders, Merle L., MST Soc Sci Saxon, William F., MS Ed Schuler, Iris F. Hickman, MS Ed Scovil, Gerald George, MS Ed Seine, john Richard, MST Soc Sci Serell, Rosemary E., MS Ed Sesar, Robert Royce, MS Ed Seward, Samuel Marion, MBA Sewell, john W., MST Hist Shaw, David james, MS Ed Sheets, Donald L., MS Ed Shin, Young Hie, MST Art Simantel, David Allen, MS Econ Simantel, Marcus Edwin, MS Ed Smith, Elinor Kinsella, MS Ed Smith, judith Carolyn, MAT Eng Smith, Peggy Lee, MST Math Snyder, Dennis Howard, MST A 81 L Snyder, Michael M., MST Ed Sowle, Clifford john, MAT TA Sparks, Ernest Leroy, MS Math Sprague, Arlene A., MST Soc Sci Sprague, Thad W., MS Ed Stahlnecker, Marlin Irwin, MS Ed Starkey, Louisa A., MS Ed Stevens, Daniel Lee, MST Art Stewart, john Patrick, MS Physics Stewart, Melissa, MS Ed Stickel, Doris Marie, MS Ed Stommel, jean Kuczmarski, MA Eng Strassel, Sister Rose Marie, MST Art Stromquist, Henry A., MA German Sturdevant, Margaret j., MST Music Taggard, Anne jones, MA Eng Taylor, judith Lynne, MST Soc Sci Teeny, Abe D., MST Soc Sci Thompson, Bob L., MST Math Thompson, Bruce Linden, MA Eng Thompson, Victor Wayne, MST Soc Sci Tinsman, Many L., MS Ed Tobie, Myrna LaVelle, MS Ed Townsend, Clifford R., MS Ed Travers, Nancy Ann, MST Art Tuller, Larry Erwald, MS App Sci Tunks, Roger Bird, MS Ed U'Ren, Marjorie Burns, MA Eng Valentine, William L., MS Ed VanScoy, Gerald Roy, MST Bus Ed Van Woerkom, David Dean, MS App Sci Vaughn, Lenard Doyle, MS Ed Velsink, Rita j., MA Ed Verment, Arthur Albert, MS Ed Warner, Carol L., MA Ed Waters, Bonadine Ann, MS Ed Waters, Ralph C. jr., MS Ed Wexler, Lillian K., MS Ed Wilkins, Larry Dean, MS Ed Williams, Norma N., MST Soc Sci Woodard, joan Cruise, MST Elem Ed Woodford, David Wayne, MS Ed Woodrum, Oliver Lawrence, MS Ed Wray, Barbara jean, MST Bus Ed Young, Robert Donald, MST Geog Andress, jan, MSW Bullock, janet Elaine, MSW Dejardin, Thomas W., MSW DeLong, Mildred Smart, MSW Dieckhoff, Flora Alice, MSW Ellsworth, Helen Ann, MSW Epley, james Bruce, MSW Eubanks, Theresa Ferris, MSW Everson, Bradford L., MSW Gurrola, josephine jeanette, MSW Hansen, Barbara joan, MSW Hoyt, Mary Frances, MSW Ickes, Steven john, MSW Landye, Donna M., MSW Lane, Carol j., MSW Lowther, William Everett, MSW Marshall, Ronald Martin, MSW McNeil, Sara Rogers, MSW Morasch, Robert L., MSW Oliver, Enfvin Frank, MSW Poirier, Sandra Mae, MSW Roth, Roberta DeBlasio, MSW Rowe, Norma, MSW Sakai, Shizuko Hayashi, MSW Staat, David Frederick, MSW Stowell, Richard H., MSW Swain, .Marian Louise Boatman, MSW Swan, Fredrick Howard, MSW Swiberg, john W., MSW Wadsworth, joanna Marie, MSW Walker, Patricia Barlow, MSW Zeigler, Aurita Charlotte, MSW Cowne, Donald Raymond, Cert Pub Health Kittleson, Clarice Solberg, C Eur Studies Cert Editors- Dave Gregg Dan Long Larry Smith Photography- Benny Abrams Eva Bushman Craig Hickman Dan Long Dave Martin Dick Phillips Thom Porterfield Gary Shuler Doug Sowles Alan Toman Writers- Bob Rice Larry Smith Mike Smith Lauren Van Bishler Bev Walton Marty Westerman Graphics- Bruce McGillivray Bill Plympton Lila Rothrock joe Spooner Advisers - Wilma Morrison Arvid Orbeck Gerald Penk Acknowledgements Photography- The Portland Oregonian The P.S.C. 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' gf- to something else-if ou ,g - - 1 - for a long time as we v ff' A slow sort of country! - 1 Queen. Now, here, you see, it takes all the running you can do, to keep in the same place. If you want to get some- where else, you must run twice as fast as that! Lewis Carroll


Suggestions in the Portland State University - Viking Yearbook (Portland, OR) collection:

Portland State University - Viking Yearbook (Portland, OR) online collection, 1965 Edition, Page 1

1965

Portland State University - Viking Yearbook (Portland, OR) online collection, 1966 Edition, Page 1

1966

Portland State University - Viking Yearbook (Portland, OR) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 1

1967

Portland State University - Viking Yearbook (Portland, OR) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 1

1969

Portland State University - Viking Yearbook (Portland, OR) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 1

1970

Portland State University - Viking Yearbook (Portland, OR) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 1

1972


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