Princeton University - Bric A Brac Yearbook (Princeton, NJ)
- Class of 1980
Page 1 of 342
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 342 of the 1980 volume:
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BRIC-A-BRAC 1980 VOLUME Cll PRINCETON UNIVERSITY August 1971 February 1972 Trouble in Northern Ireland Nixon in China Ours was the Age of Aquarius. Ours was the frontier of a more just and humane world. At last, the advent of humanism (which we thought would sweep us up and carry us into that frontier) was over. The time was now. We were ready. We drew deep breaths and anticipated that humanism which would sweep us up and carry us into our new frontier. We waited. The blue sky was fading into grey. We grew impatient. Steel-reflected light of a setting sun blinded us and our eyes turned away. The sky darkened. Mouths agape, eyes now protruding, we turned to look at one another and saw only the May 1972 June 1972 September 1972 Attempted assassination of Gov. George C. Wallace Victims of war in South Vietnam Terrorism at the Munich Olympics ■Joyous return of our POW ' s outlines of our faces. We were betrayed. Through the fifties and into the sixties, there was a sense of betrayal in America. Our world view placed us against them since they had betrayed us. We fought them in Korea and had to fight them in Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia. After a while, we could not determine just who they were. It was not they who had betrayed us, it was our own leaders. In the distance we saw the burning of torches. Fireballs moved through the twilight and came together to form a large fiery glow. The cool wind carried the April 1974 April 1974 August 1974 Hank Aaron ' s 715th homerun The Patricia Hearst kidnapping Nixon ' s farewell to the White House sound of voices and then the cracks of rifles firing: My God! My God! They ' re killing us. — The large fiery glow was again split into fragments which scattered into the night . . . And so, Abraham held the knife at Isaac ' s throat as the decade began. 1973 brought peace, though it was not necessarily peace with honor, when formal U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War was ended by the Paris treaty. The war was won in the end, and Saigon became Ho Chi Minh City. Monuments to the new regime flourished on the land and countless more floated on the seas. Antibusing violence in Boston I am not a crook, he said, but he was forced to resign anyway. Poor Nixon Quixote flashed a V sign before boarding his whirling stallion and then flew away, leaving behind Watergate and an indelible mark on American politics. The Chinese, at least, would still have tea with him. The world was moving with great speed and we began to feel how fast it was moving. The Symbionese Liberation Army kidnapped Patty Hearst and she adopted them. Turkey invaded Cyprus. Eleven were killed and 75 injured at the main terminal of LaGuardia Illinois marches for the ERA America ' s Bicentennial celebration  : iri ' hu h m hsJs ' niSSn ER S «i  i YE! j - tu i refconeste In f National Rally for Equal Rights Top to bottom, left to right: Hubert Humphrey Lyndon B. Johnson Harry S. Truman Pope Paul VI John Wayne Elvis Presley J. Edgar Hoover Charlie Chaplin Groucho Marx Bing Crosby Nikita S. Khrushchev Mao Tse-tung Golda Meir Chiang Kai-shek Top to bottom, left to right: John Dean John Mitchell H. R. Haldeman John Ehrlichman Billy Jean King Ian Smith Anita Bryant Yasser Arafat Karen Ann Quinlan Fidel Castro Leonid Brezhnev Henry Kissinger Indira Gandhi Alexander Solzhenitsyn The world ' s worst aircraft disaster Black prisoner in Rhodesia 10 November 1977- November 1978 Flight of the Vietnamese Boat People 11 September 1978 October 1978 Ali recaptures the heavyweight title The election of Polish Pope John Paul II Disco madness at Studio 54 January 1979 February 1979 September 1979 The Shah ' s departure from Iran Ayatollah ' s Khomeini ' s return from exile The test-tube baby visits Chicago Airport. The CIA ' s romp in Chile, Inflation and still more inflation. The violence in Northern Ireland. A fragile Israeli-Egyptian peace in the Middle East. There was so much we could not control so we tried to gain control of ourselves. Eastern cults and pseudo- and para-religions began taking root. Self-improvement programs, movements and ideologies urged us to be assertive, to meditate, to jog and to eat health foods. The American woman evolved from the status of housewife and subordinate to that of careerist and to relative parity with men. A Parable: Ten girls took their oil lamps and went out to meet the 13 March 1979 March 1979 Handshake for peace in the Middle East Nuclear accident at Three Mile Island bridegroom. Five of them were foolish and five of them were wise. The foolish ones took their lamps but did not take any extra oil with them, while the wise ones took containers full of oil with their lamps. It was already midnight when the cry rang out, Here is the bridegroom! Come and meet him! The ten girls trimmed their lamps. Then the fool- ish ones said to the wise ones, Let us have some of your oil, because our lamps are going out. No, indeed, said the wise ones, there is not enough for you and us. Go to the market and buy some for yourselves. So the foolish girls went off to buy oil, but since it was an odd day they could not get any. In the Grand Mosque at Mecca, the faithful processed about the Kaaba, while in San Diego, California, motorists per- formed a similar rite. And in Iran: Good Shahs don ' t, Good Shahs don ' t, But he did! The wind which sways the branches of the trees in Firestone plaza and on the lawn of Nassau Hall is not a Princeton wind. We, Prin- cetonians, have not es- caped the realities of the outside world. The new decade had dawned, and challenges still abound. Our lives can surely make a difference. 14 May 1979 June 1979 Gas lines across the nation Refugees in Nicaragua 15 16 w. J. •a ACADEMICS PLEASE RETURN L TW0 SIGNED ?i£C - OURSE CARDS 5 DEPARTO flr 0 - Irp v D£C7 _ I pay . jri- :- ft 7vJi ■' , . r . - . . ADMINISTRATION [ ' Ml F ' ■i i I (iii 1 - M • • • • 1 • • • I • • • y ■• William G. Bowen President Bruce Finnie Registrar Joan S Girgus Dean of the College Robert L. Geddes Dean of the School of Architecture Donald E. Stokes Dean of the Woodrow Wilson School w . v V . « ••■' , , . ' . ■ . • - . ' •  ♦ i - s - H J Anderson Brown. Jr Dean of Student Affairs Ernest Gordon Dean of the Chapel James W. Wickendon Director of Admissions; and Don M. Betterton Director of Undergraduate Financial Aid Louis A. Pyle, Jr. Director of University Health Services Robert J. Myslik Athletic Director Donald W. Koepp Librarian Chemistry 303 Organic Chemistry Organic Chemistry is a course with a definite reputation. It is known as a • ' killer course, perhaps one of the most difficult on campus, and it is supposedly teeming with grade-hun- gry pre-meds, whose presence adds an atmosphere of pressure and com- petition to the lecture hall. While this image may contain a good deal of truth, it is but a small part of the entire picture which is Chemistry 303 304. Organic Chemistry is more than an impossible course; it is an interesting and challenging subject taught by a knowledgeable and en- thusiastic man, Professor Kurt Mislow. Mislow is a teacher placed in a difficult position; he is trying to trans- fer his enthusiasm for and knowledge of Organic Chemistry to a large body of students, many of whom do not take the course out of any interest in chemistry, but only because it is a medical school requirement. Placed in this situation, Mislow per- forms admirably in lectures. This soft- spoken man, with his combination of absent-minded scientific wit, vast knowledge, and genuine concern, manages to pack 60 minutes of infor- mation into a 50-minute lecture and still have most students enjoying and (at least partially) understanding the material presented. Admittedly, it is difficult to under- stand an entire lecture as it proceeds, since one barely even has enough time to copy down all the material presented. But Mislow ' s running com- mentary on his lectures (i.e. I like that comparison . . . this is a bad drawing ... let me use the eraser here, I ' m tired of using my hand ), and his half mumbled excursions into the more truthful details of a subject that he has just painfully over- simplified for the class, help slow down the hectic pace of the lectures and make them more enjoyable. This very same personality quirk that cannot allow Mislow to be con- 24 t „ ___. — «j SPEAK UWDH NOISY FANS ABOVE t tent with offering edited versions of the truth, also cannot allow him to write anything but highly challenging, well-integrated, and for many people, impossible, exams. In many ways tak- ing an exam prepared by Mislow is similar to sight-reading all the parts in a symphony; one must not only be proficient with every instrument but also capable of combining them in new and unforeseen ways. Mislow makes the course both more bearable and more unbearable; bear- able (and even interesting) for the quality of the lecture, unbearable for the quality (and often, extreme difficulty) of his exams. This course is rare in that one can faithfully attend the lectures, do the reading and the problem sets, learn a great deal about organic chemistry, and still fail. But even the prospect of failure should not scare off the prospective orgo student; the course should be taken if only so one can be taught by Profes- sor Mislow, a man who can, in one lecture, discuss the relative stability of a t-butyl group in axial and equatorial positions on a cyclohexane ring and say a kind Oh, hello there to a yellow balloon at rest on the ceiling of the lecture hall. 25 Creative Writing 202 Short Story Workshop Shortly before Christmas break I picked up the copy of The Washing- ton Post which was littered about my room and began to leaf through its grey-and-black pages. Much to my consternation, I noticed on the front of the Style section a plug: Joyce Carol Oates ' grove of academe, D12. There are few courses at Princeton which could prompt this type of epi- sode, but such was creative writing with Joyce Carol Oates. The weekly hour-and-a-half workshops were by most accounts the mellowest classes the ten students in each section had ever participated in at Princeton. Three or so students each week — more at the end of the semester since people began to worry about failing — would photocopy their short stories and distribute them in advance of the class meeting. We would sit around and casually chat as all the students wandered into class late and then, after a long si- lence, Ms. Oates would initiate the discussion by asking in her soft, spacey voice: You all liked that story, didn ' t you? Another long pause would follow, broken eventually by comments agreeing with her assess- ment. By gauging the length of the pause and the positiveness of the comments, you could judge whether the class truly enjoyed the work or in fact loathed it. Yeah, I really liked it, one student might volunteer, while others would gradually offer more substantive comments. There were times when you would be sitting silently on a blue sofa in the funny room in 185 Nassau Street where the class met, and the dis- cussion would turn to somebody ' s lat- est work. Before you had a chance to criticize the story, which you thought was utterly abysmal, the rest of the students would be praising it as fine literature. And sometimes while you were preparing to describe in detail why you really loved a piece, the class 26 would begin to tear it to shreds. Once Ms. Oates drolly remarked, You cer- tainly get a lot of suggestions in this workshop. Not one of them is any good. You were never quite sure whether to take what she said se- riously. In truth, everyone enjoyed the course. Participating in a writing workshop with Joyce was like taking a general relativity course with a Nobel laureate — there was always present the knowledge that we were dealing with one of the most important as well as prolific contemporary American writers. Part of the problem with writ- ing seminars is that you ' re never really sure whether to take the criti- cism you received as meaningful. At least in this course, you knew your work was being complimented or cut down by someone who is good at the game. Sometimes you might choose to ignore the fact that Ms. Oates thought your piece was incoherent, but very often you would find she offered valuable insights for improving a character or redirecting the empha- sis of a work in progress. And then there was Joyce ' s bizarre but amus- ing sense of humor. A random sampl- ing of gems she told our creative writ- ing class: Last year I suggested as an ex- ercise writing in a sex other than your own — if you can find one. I know what a psychological and emotional investment writing a novel is . . . it ' s like when you ' re in the Gobi Desert and you reach for your flask and there ' s a hole in it. I could write a short story every two weeks — I have that kind of per- sonality — but most of my (writer) friends couldn ' t. They ' d be paral- yzed. If one can turn off creativity, it ' s easier to lead a somewhat normal life. And for those who found their works being bombasted by Joyce for no apparent reason, who saw the oth- er members of the workshop missing those points in his or her stories which had seemed so clear and ob- vious, there was always room for con- solation. The Post review of Joyce ' s new novel was a complete and utter pan. 27 Economics 318 Corporate Finance You are sitting around a large, dark stained wood table. If we tender Aztec now for $40 a share, it will only take $100 million to gain effective control. Yes, but how will the market react? If we finance the deal using equity, it might be viewed as diluting our shares. That could ruin the offer be- cause we could drop a few points. I think the combination equity- cash deal is the best. We could float a bond to raise the capital. Also, don ' t forget, we have to file that anti-trust suit against Houston to block their offer. The above is not a transcript from Exxon ' s latest board meeting, but a sample of the type of conversation that transpires among students in- volved in Corp. Fi. ' s Aztec Game. It is a series of acquisitions and merger attempts masterminded by the student. The game, like the whole course, offers one the chance to ap- ply the formulas and concepts in a real situation. In fact, that is the appeal of this course and the reason for its large enrollment. It explains the real world. You learn how Slippery Sam the Flim-Flam Man can give you a loan at 6% and wind up owning your car or house. A student explained it best. In the 28 midst of all the academia, Corp. Fi. brings me back to earth. Now I under- stand what all the things mean that I hear about every day: stocks, bonds, interest rates, mortgage rates, depre- ciation, mergers, and tax loopholes. A great deal of the success of the course is due to the teaching of Mr. Richard Spies. He is not an academi- cian, but a member of the University administration, Assistant to the Pro- vost. He brings much of his daily ex- perience to bear on the material at hand. His first hand experiences include watching dollar meters clock off in law- yers ' eyes, the economics of his courtship and marriage, and how to get the most bangs for your bucks. Mr. Spies is also a senior partner in the firm of Filey, Smiley, and Spies, a corporation that presents annual awards for distinction and imagination in the Aztec exercise. This year ' s kudos included a perfect market award (a dartboard), an I like to play God-Daily Princetonian award, and a Creative Accounting award for the Aztec management (now residing in Allenwood) who started their own company and acquired over $150 million worth of another company ' s stock for virtually nothing. Oh well, all ' s fair in love and high finance. 29 English 307 Chaucer Professor Durant W. Robertson, Jr. is about to end a long and dis- tinguished career as a University pro- fessor, although his life as a scholar will continue after his retirement. Long noted for his controversial atti- tudes toward medieval literature, and for his book, A P reface to Chaucer, Studies in Medieval Perspectives , Robertson has attempted to imple- ment, as a professor, a revisionist ap- proach towards Medieval Studies that has yet to become standard. After his retirement he plans to complete his next book, tentatively titled An In- troduction to the Canterbury Tales . Robertson ' s fascination with the Middle Ages began while he was in the graduate school of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. A teacher there suggested to him that he concentrate in Renaissance Liter- ature, and added that he might begin in the Middle Ages in order to proper- ly understand the roots of the Renais- sance. Robertson promptly became so interested in the Middle Ages that, in his words, he was never able to leave them. Robertson ' s viewpoint is, basically, that attitudes toward the Middle Ages became unduly influenced by the nineteenth century Romantic move- ment, so that medieval literature be- came viewed through a sentimental haze that refused to recognize a stringent moral code that formed the foundation of medieval philosophy. Robertson sees the characters of me- dieval literature simply as moral or immoral forces, rather than as psy- chological entities possessing person- alities. How well the characters ad- here to that moral code becomes the basis for an audience ' s approval or disapproval of the person described. Where turn-of-the-century critics saw Troilus and Creseyda as a touching love story, Robertson viewed it as a tale of two morally flawed lovers who become so blinded by lust that they 30 become incapable of discerning right from wrong. Robertson ' s beliefs are still the ob- ject of often violent criticism, but he refuses to teach his students other approaches to medieval literature, simply saying that I don ' t want to teach my students something I don ' t think is true. Students have some- times been startled by the amount of levity that Robertson uses in order to explain his viewpoints. Robertson, however, believes that Chaucer ' s hu- mour has too often been neglected by scholars in favor of sentimentality or aesthetic considerations. Robertson argues that you have to have a standard of values against which to see when the characters are being ridiculous. If Robertson has a favorite tale, he refuses to admit it, conceding only that his favorite tale depends upon how I ' m feeling at the moment. Rob- ertson will admit, however, that teaching at Princeton has been a great privilege; Princeton students are incomparable. 31 French 207 Studies in French Language and Style French 207, Studies in French Lan- guage and Style, is not a class which students can take for grante d. Al- though it may be possible to come to class unprepared, the prospect of being pinned under Professor Andre Maman ' s sharp eyes as he fires ques- tions is enough to prompt all but the bravest and most foolhardy students to do their work. One of Professor Maman ' s more difficult duties in connection with French 207 deals with its organiza- tion: with four teachers, six class sec- tions, and seemingly innumerable pre- cepts, it is no small task to keep the course running smoothly. Maman strives for a democratic consensus and friendly relations in the team of teachers, which changes each term. However, he insists on their strictly following the syllabus; it is the only way the large number of classes and precepts can keep abreast of one an- other. The syllabus encompasses a variety 32 of texts, including modern works by Albert Camus and Christiana Roch- eforte, articles in French magazines and newspapers, excerpts from Victor Hugo, Voltaire, and Flaubert, and, everyone ' s favorite, the Larousse Grammaire et Exercices de Francais. Maman believes that the attention stu- dents pay to their work is the key to success in language studies; partici- pation is essential. Maman makes sure that each student knows that at any given time he or she might be asked a question; daydreaming could be fatal in French 207. This class is unique not because of its syllabus and organization; what makes it special is the personality of Professor Maman. He emanates energy and goodwill. When he enters the classroom he blocks the outside world out, and is 100% for the stu- dents; he respects them and takes them seriously. Maman maintains a steady flow of questions, answers, and discussion which is entertaining as well as academic. Professor Maman does more than teach French at Princeton University. He is a distinguished member of the Higher Council of Frenchmen Abroad, and is the president of forty-five French associations in New York, New Jersey, Chicago, Boston and Washington D.C., among other places. Members of the Council are elected every three years by the French associations in designated ter- ritories, and Maman has served in his post since 1972. He advises his con- stituents on laws and legal questions as well as on personal problems. He travels to Paris nine or ten times a year to represent these Frenchmen abroad; the Higher Council is at- tached to the French Senate and re- ports to that body. Maman feels a responsibility to the outside world, but he finds that his political activities make him better informed and provide him with a lot of information which he uses in his teaching. It is his teaching that comes first for Professor Maman. It is often difficult and time-consuming, but he believes that a key problem for the future is the education of youth. Maman is seeing to it that the youth of Prince- ton who are lucky enough to take his course are educated — and that they enjoy it. 33 History 383 The United States Since 1940 If our four years teach us anything (and that question is, sadly, not alto- gether rhetorical) it is this: what we learn matters not so much as how we learn it. Oh yes, there is always the course in macroeconomics that we really should take, even though the Professor can ' t speak the English lan- guage. Yet as the old notebooks be- gin to stack up in the bottom of the closet - the ones with eight pages of notes, a few tired doodles, and the rest empty space — as our academic dreckpile grows, we begin to pay more attention to the way a course is taught, and less to the specific topics it covers. This is particularly true in liberal arts courses, where so much of the material is the professor ' s own inter- pretation — and not by any means the first and last words on the subject. Nevertheless, megalomaniacs abound. The most valuable courses, therefore, are those in which the pro- fessor presents several different points of view, and thereby encour- ages the students to participate in- tellectually to the extent that ultimate- ly, if they wish to achieve any kind of synthesis, they must make one them- selves. Such courses are also the most interesting, and, happily (for stu- dents still enjoy the mental challenge, cynical alumni) the most popular. His- tory 383 falls into this category. Many of the g ood things about this particular course, a history of the United States since the 1940 ' s lie in its structure: two professors instead of one insure a constantly shifting perspective, a refreshingly unpredic- table approach to events that most of us already know something about: the Cold War, the Cuban Missile Crisis, Vietnam. Richard Challener ' s and Nancy Weiss ' contrapuntal lectures combine to produce a common theme: that the historian invariably in- terprets, rather than renders: that what really happened often differs 34 greatly from the historian ' s perception of what happened. On each issue, students have a choice: Nancy Weiss the polemical liberal, or Richard Challener the calm revisionist. The ef- fect isn ' t always that of point-counter- point — often these two eminently respected historians agree — but the alternate styles of lecturing, methods of scholarship, and of course different experiences are enough to stimulate the students ' analytic facult; to show them that in all cases the final word must be their own. The reading is substantial but often fascinating, particularly in those areas — the late sixties and seventies — in which the students can weigh their own opinions against those of the scholars. Movies each week like Dr. Strangelove and Hearts and Minds offer yet another perspective: history as seen through the contemporary media. Finally, a stimulating group of preceptors, all of whom are engaged in important scholarship work in some area of the course, make classroom discussions lively and enriching. There are questions so central to any academic field, be it the liberal arts or the sciences, that they can not possibly be ignored: these are who we are, where we are going, what we have done, and why. History 383 con- fronts these problems head-on; its popularity is a measure of its success in doing so. 35 Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering 421 Mechanical Design and Analysis Up the Creek Without a Paddle. When the professors of this year ' s MAE 421 design course assigned us to a competition with that name, we had no idea they meant it as the theme of the entire course. And little did we realize the symbolism the com- petition would provide. Given a bag of sundry items such as Venetian blind slats, rubber bands, styrofoam, and paper clips, we had to build a little boat which would travel in water against the wind. Without a Paddle carried a figurative sig- nificance as well: even when we pleaded, the professors did nothing to help us. Outsiders thought it must have been fun. But then they didn ' t spend over fifty hours trying to build a boat that would only go backwards. On the morning of the glorious competition in October, one classified ad in the Prince hopelessly begged: SAVE THE BOAT PEOPLE: helpless victims of the design requirement. Out of the twenty distraught emo- tional refugees, only six had boats that moved forward, and these were all of the same design — which was stolen from Scientific American . This event (disaster? calamity? fiasco?) proved so momentous that public television came to film it. It was comforting to find out from an inside source that the professors themselves were up the creek for a while when a student proved to them that making a boat move against the wind was theo- retically impossible. They had to con- sult another professor to make sure the kid was wrong. Anyway, we learned two lessons: (1) the more elaborate the design, the less the boat moved. (2) it pays to look in Scientific American . For the rest of the course we had to go upwind — against hot air. First we had to design a method for measuring the heat resistance of four walls. One group stuck an elaborate arrange- 36 merit of metal plates all over the walls (they might as well have used irons) and sent heat through them for hours. Although their method could never work for life-size walls — unless they had life-size metal plates and lots of heat — they somehow got the right answer. Of course they destroyed the condition of the walls and everyone else ' s results. But that ' s OK; they were being creative. Creativity was the key word of the course: the professors continually urged us to demonstrate it. (that ' s great, but they taught us nothing about design) Finally, we had our chance. Required for satisfactory completion of the course were two design proposals, one of which we had to present orally to the rest of the class in eight minutes. While one of the professors got his kicks by tinkering with a little alarm clock which would ring in the middle of our presentation, we sat and in- spired ourselves with the creativity of our classmates. One design pro- posal was to stick a tube between a refrigerator and the outside air to draw in cold air during the winter in- stead of using electricity. (Implicit as- sumptions: no rain or snow, no dirt in the air, no freezer.) Another creative design entailed sticking insulation to your ceiling as well as to your roof. (Where ' s the design?) Other designs were quite the prod- ucts of creative minds — so what if they couldn ' t work? The shower head which instantaneously adjusted the water teamperature. The treadmill that you could use to run in place (right in your own home!) which you couldn ' t possibly get started without breaking your neck. (Something REMCO would advertise on TV for only $10.99.) Then there was the safety cap with the easily breakable tube: if a nervous type acci- dentally broke the tube for his tran- quilizer bottle, he could have a heart attack. In the end, it was the professors who proved to be the most creative. For yet another year, they had man- aged to persuade the MAE depart- ment and the university as well that they were teaching a design course. They had also managed to make us work. And I mean futile work: trying to design something with no knowledge of design is like trying to read Shake- speare with no knowledge of English. Or something like that. This course is best sent up some creek without a paddle — and forgot- ten. 37 Music 103 Introduction to Music What can you say about a course where the only homework consists of one hour of easy-listening a week, the only required text is the score to Beethoven ' s 5th Symphony, and the tests are actually fun to take? Why, that it must be Music 103, of course! Music 103, a.k.a. Siesta Sonatas is one of the courses that almost every Princeton undergrad manages to fit into their schedule sooner or later, and once you ' ve sampled the course it ' s easy to see why. For jun- iors and seniors struggling away on their JP ' s and theses, Music 103 pro- vides a welcome break, for it is one of those courses which in addition to being informative is also enjoyable and at the same time easy. In other words, it is the perfect gut. While many may take Music 103 because of its Classic Gut reputa- tion, there are a number of other 38 good reasons for taking the course. The first is of course Lecturer Profes- sor Ken Levy. At first glance it ' s easy to see that Professor Levy knows what he ' s talking about; as well, he manages to convey it all in a lecture style that is both crisp and amusing. Relying largely on musical diagrams to illustrate his points, Levy livens up the monotony of pointing from section to section by singing a snatch of mel- ody here, conducting a bit there. Al- ways intent on getting in his full 50 minutes worth, Levy often calms a restless group by giving them a countdown of the amount of time left in the period. In addition to Levy, the other big plus in Music 103 is the music itself. Levy exposes us to the best of Bach, Beethoven, Mozart, and a score of other masters and helps us see the music on a different level, so that we grow to not only appreciate the beau- tiful sound, but also the style and the intellectual aspects of the works. In all truth there is only one bad thing to be said about Music 103. Since it is offered at 12:30 p.m. the combination of beautiful music and a full stomach acts as a sedative that even Professor Levy can ' t overcome. However, when we can manage to stay awake, Music 103 provides an enjoyable introduction to four cen- turies of western music that can be taken and enjoyed both by the musi- cal novice and by all of us frustrated musicians who crowd the course each year. 39 Physics 103-104 General Physics The bane of any aspiring freshman engineer or pre-med, Physics 103-104 provides that sensation of impending doom which is all-too-familiar to many a Princetonian. However, while some may ask if it ' s really worth the pain, student ratings show that lecturer Pierre Piroue more than justifies the existence of the course. From the first freshman week mag- ic show to the last Tuesday morning entertainment hour, Piroue keeps his audience duly dazed, amazed, and sometimes crazed with his flamboyant lectures. Explaining everything clear- ly in his delicious French accent, Piroue proves that even physics can be fun. As if on stage, he whirls from demonstration to blackboard to dem- onstration, providing us with ex- planations for everything from why the hunter always gets his monkey to how the moguls on ski slopes are an example of a resonance phenome- non. However, while at times highly en- tertaining, no one mis takes Physics 103-104 for a gut. The weekly learning guides keep us off the streets at night, the quizzes keep us in constant pain, and the hourlies keep us in pending academic and psychological trouble. But, in spite of it all, spurred on by those ever-daring flying mon- keys, old faithful, and a host of other wonders, the nerds and even us ordi- nary people seem to succeed in pull- ing through and even manage to look back at it all nostalgically with the consolation that we ' ll never have to see another physics book again! 40 ; fc a !Ri Politics 305 Constitutional Interpretation Politics 305, Constitutional Inter- pretation, is one of the most difficult courses an undergraduate at Prince- ton can take. Often referred to as writs for twits , Politics 305 is widely known as the Orgo of the humanities. The course is composed of about 160 students: aspiring sophomores, departmental juniors, brave and curious upperclassmen, and a few continuing-education students. The course consists of an hour-and-a-half lecture by Professor Walter Murphy, and a two-hour seminar with Murphy or one of the other professors from the department. Murphy, McCormick Professor of Jurisprudence, has been with the Princeton faculty since 1958, and was chairman of the Politics Department from 1966 to 1969. While famous among those outside the University because of his recently published bestseller, The Vicar of Christ, Mur- phy is best known by his students for the electronic calculator he invariably brings to lectures, and his work- aholic article for the Princeton Alumni Weekly. Prior to each lecture, Murphy programs his calculator to play a short tune at the end of an hour, so that he can keep track of the time. In the PAW article, Murphy ex- pressed his belief that Princeton stu- dents work less than they have in past years and that each student should devote 16 hours a day to studying and the remaining 8 to meals and sleep. In keeping with these beliefs, Murphy refuses to contribute to gradeflation at Princeton, liberally handing out C ' s to students who have worked long hours on papers. Basically, a week ' s work in Con- interp consists of reading and exten- sively briefing about a dozen Supreme Court cases which the students are expected to be able to discuss in de- tail in seminar. The two papers as- signed take the form of moot courts in which students in each seminar are 42 assigned to act out counsel for the defense or prosecution or as justices for the court. Despite the huge workload and difficult grading, Coninterp is a valu- able course. While occasionally pom- pous and name-dropping, Murphy ' s lectures are, in general, amusing and entertaining. Not too structured, they are full of diverting anecdotes, which make them fun to listen to. In addi- tion, both the book he co-authored for the course, Courts, Judges, and Politics, and his lectures are packed full ot enlightening information. Even the students who dropped the course after receiving discouraging first pa- per grades (the day he returned the papers, Murphy further intimidated his audience by heading the blackboard with the words Dies Irae — Day of Wrath) admitted that Politics 305 was one of the most relevant courses they had taken at Princeton. It shed light on the whole process of justice in the United States and presented the sys- tem which many consider eternal and immutable in a truly dynamic light, helping us to see how our whole, complex government meshes together. 43 Politics 320 The Politics of Modernization In the Near East and North Africa As we entered the Woodrow Wilson School Bowl in the beginning of Sep- tember for our first Politics 320 lec- ture, we all came in with somewhat different reasons for taking the course and expectations of what we would get out of it. Politics majors were there looking for a departmental, en- gineers were looking for a gut, still others were there because of a grand passion for the Middle East. Whatever we were looking for when we arrived in September, I ' m sure everyone was pleased with what he ' d gotten out of the course by the end of the semester. The reason for this is two-fold. First of all the subject matter of the course, the Mid East, was both interesting and topical. The second plus was course lecturer Professor Fouad Adjami. While many went in expecting the course to be largely concerned with the Arab-lsraeli-Palestinian problem, as things started happening in Iran, aware of class interest and concern, Adjami proceeded to focus many lec- tures and precept discussions on the crisis there and its roots in both Iran ' s past and our own past dealings with that nation. What helped make these discussions so intersting was the background of Professor Adjami him- self. A self-described cool Arab , Lebanese by birth, living in the United States by choice, Adjami is a man with a foot in each of two worlds. His involvement in the politics of the Middle East both by birth and profes- sions led to a series of lectures with a slant not normally found in the news- papers or in the speeches of Ameri- can experts on the area. In addition, all of his lectures were given in the inimitable Adjami style — a mixture of readings from his own writings and those of other authors (often in- cluding articles taken from the new New York Times ) and ex- temporaneous speeches often trig- gered by students ' questions and re- marks, all laced with Adjami ' s own brand of humor. 44 While some professors have a whole course planned out before it even starts, Adjami did not rely on the usual tried-and-true syllabus. Rather he tried to make use of whatever was available to him at the time in order to give the class a feel for the region. While this sometimes led to semi- disasters such as a site-unseen Egyptian movie which Adjami had to kill before his audience died of bore- dom, his loose syllabus also provided for some interesting guest speakers and sometimes ev en more interesting student speakers — fellow classmates who submitted to Adjami and then read in class articles of their own ei- ther to rebut or to add to some fact or opinion the professor had presented. All in all, Politics 320 provided a fitting swan song for Professor Adjami who has sinced moved on to Johns Hopkins. It was a truly enjoyable course for those of us who took it, yet at the same time we learned much that will stay with us when we leave Princeton. Although it provided no simplistic answers to the problems of the troubled Middle East (in fact, a sometimes pessimistic Adjami claimed that he could see no solutions to these problems), Politics 320 gave us a taste of life in the Middle East, bringing us closer to an alien culture. By doing so it not only taught us something about the people there but also succeeded in teaching us a little about ourselves as well. 45 Sociology 320 Social Disorganization, Crime, and Deviant Behavior Sociology 320 is better known as Nuts and Sluts . Very little time is spent discussing nuts, however, and sluts are never mentioned. Rather, Social Disorganization, Crime and Deviant Behavior, as Professor Rob- ert A. Scott chooses to call the course, examines the whys and wherefores of deviancy. Soc 320 takes its examples from criminals, ad- dicts, the handicapped, and the men- tally ill. Professor Scott is an animated and personable lecturer. The humorous stories which he uses subtly to clarify his points help account for the course ' s popularity. For all his humor and wit, however, Professor Scott takes his course seriously and consid- ers the subject matter to be most rele- vant. Unlike many other Princeton professors, Scott has an insightful un- derstanding of his students. Thus, he is able to tailor the course material to their interests. He discusses mari- juana usage and the lifestyles of the handicapped with a personal ap- proach. His expertise in the sociology of the blind adds depth to the more theoretical parts of the course. The most valuable aspect of the course is the insight the student ac- quires into himself. Most students have been outsiders in one situ- ation or another; therefore, Scott ' s points were often too familiar to his students. While Sociology 320 is not a gut flambe, it is an enticing pass-fail. Pro- fessor Scott ' s students leave the course with a new sympathy for any nut or slut they may encouter in Pros- pect Garden tonight or in Central Park during intercession. r 46 ..—, .« - — McCosh Hall .0, i J i ii ii ... — i - ' ■r mMHHKB 47 m STUDENT LISTS Moving In Nails for carpet Get stuff out of Holder Storage Clean fireplace Buy beer Open account in town Call maintenance to fix door Get a new couch I can ' t believe I ' m back . . . This is a pretty good room — can ' t lock the door — still, it ' s a lot better than I thought it was at Room Draw . . . odd thing Bill ' s not coming back with the stereo ' til tomorrow . . . maybe maintenance will fix the door by then . . . This is going to be a great time! Party Central! ... I never realized we had so much junk in the room last year. It ' ll take all day to move that stuff from Holder down here ... I think I ' ll wait ' til Bill gets here . . . Gotta get a new couch . . . beat the hell out of the old one last year ... I could check out the Furniture Agency . . . Nah, only Freshmen buy their stuff . . . Later in the week I ' ll go to the Salvation Army . . . think I ' ll go to town and get the beer and nails . . . That was a blast — sitting in the court- yard, listening to tunes, tossing a football, and quaffing brews — then going for a dip in Woo Fountain. Those guys are crazy . . . Party tonight in Steve ' s room — should be fun. Maybe I ' ll catch a movie first — Jenny ' s back (and looking great with that California suntan!) — I ' ll ask her. It sure is great being this side of Paradise . 52 1 . v -— I ■! : f: . ■- I ■f ■- . .  T 55 8:30 A.M. Breakfast meeting, People ' s Front organizing committee - TWC 9:30 A.M. Call printer about lettuce boycott leaflets; buy material for black armbands; read Prince, start Forerunner article — subject? 12 noon Pick up box lunch and 12:15 P.M. PROTEST - subject? Think about new chants: Bowen, Bowen, you can ' t...? 1:30 P.M. Lecture — Slaby 2:30 P.M. Audit Pol 320 lecture - Atrocities of the Shah 3:00 P.M. Rap with Andy, JH : , Karen, Peter — subject? Work on Women ' s Center newsletter Pick up anti-draft buttons Interview Falk for J. P. 6:00 P.M. Dinner at 2 Dickinson Street — help with stuffed eggplant 7:30 P.M. Read Marx 11:00 P.M. Pick up and distribute anti-draft leaflets After staying up until 4:40 A.M. arguing with some narrow-minded preppies (they just think what their parents tell them to), waking up at 8:00 A.M. isn ' t easy. But there is so much to accomplish today!!! . . . Front meeting: A. C. had great ideas, the guy ' s a born leader. Prince, Forerunner, Women ' s Center newsletter — maintain objectivity, but be persuasive, ... If time, I ought to make a sign for protest . . . Slaby always fires me up — no B.S. and he believes what he says. Priorities — never time to do laundry, wear sweatshirt again . . . another great meal at 2 Dickinson — how can any rational human being eat red meat? . . . Leaflets distributed — time to crash. Life on this campus is such an uphill battle. 56 m Ty ' rT32Ss Sftf W f ft -I - ' Do Russian translation Drop off sweaters at cleaners Read the Brothers Karamazov Clean scotch glasses Buy Pilot pen Meal exchange with Lindy for dinner Buy Saline Solution Change Major? Why couldn ' t I have been an econom- ics major like everyone else? . . . So you study Russian? . . . ooh, ah, wow, a whole different alphabet . . . Yes, it ' s very interesting . . . keeps me out of trouble, you know, (drives me out of my skull) . . . Why couldn ' t I have been an economics major? . . . draw all those silly intersecting curves and lines . . . marginal propensity this, marginal propensity that . . . beer stains on my beige crew neck . . . those economists have it easy ... all economists are two-handed . . . time I had it cleaned ... it was cleaned last four parties ago ... or was it five parties ago ... in two parties I ' ll have to have my navy blue cleaned ... I don ' t believe it. They don ' t have sa- line solution at Nassau Pharmacy . . . a blue pilot pen or a grey one . . . take the cap off, check the point. Does the pen snap on with a tight seal? . . . grey or blue? . . . might as well buy another legal pad . . . blue doesn ' t look bad on the yellow . . . why couldn ' t I have been an engineer? . . . engineers don ' t have to read the Brothers Karamazov . . . they don ' t have to speak anything except Eng- lish . . . they don ' t even have to speak English . . . Marsh ' s ... no saline so- lution . . . great, maybe I could make it myself . . . Morton ' s, when it rains it pours . . . will iodine hurt the con- tacts? . . . Red Cross, it ' s cheaper . . . have to call Lindy and warn her that we ' re serving Hungarian Goulash tonight . . . Goulash, Stew, Elephant Scabs . . . the big three ... I should have checked the menu first. 60 61 63 Things to do tomorrow: 1 Get up at 6:30 2 Take a shower — quick — get to club 3 Serve breakfast 7:30-9:30 - hope I don ' t goof it up 4 See advisor about J. P. topic — 10:00 5 Class at 11:00 6 Lunch — study after lunch 7 Chem lab (ick) Hope I get out before dinner this time 8 Study 7-12 I hate my alarm clock. It sounds just like the smoke detector. It ' s still dark outside — it can ' t be time to get up . . . Maybe I set the alarm wrong? . . . Oh, God, breakfast ... I can ' t sit up ... I ' m too dizzy . . . Maybe I ' m sick — it hurts when I swallow. I ' m hosed. If I skip my shower I can sleep for an extra 20 minutes — there won ' t be any hot water anyway . . . I ' ve got to be there in 15 minutes . . . Why did some- one steal my bicycle? When I stand up I black out ... What does one wear to serve breakfast? My throat is killing me and I have to cough. I can ' t be sick. I have too much to do today. I won ' t be sick. Serving breakfast is awful ... I hate the smell of the grill ... I ' m going to give whatever I have to the whole club ... I ' m holding on to the counter so I won ' t fall down . Good thing my advisor is under- standing ... I knocked over his brief- case in a coughing fit ... Class is great — the chairs are sooo comfort- able . . . Huh? Oh, I hope I didn ' t snore too loudly . . . Maybe I ' ve got sleeping sickness. Backgammon is a lot easier to concentrate on than His- tory ... I don ' t really need to study — I can study tonight: besides I ' m sick. Why won ' t my eyes stay open? I ' ve never fallen asleep while pipetting buffers before ... I can ' t go to dinner — it ' s too far away ... I have to take a nap ... I have to at least lie down before I fall down . . . Why can ' t I get into the top bunk. I ' ve done it all year . . . Maybe if I step on my desk . . . Why isn ' t my roommate here? I could step on her . . . Oh, Thank God . . . amazing what lying down can do for you ... I can ' t open my eyes . . . definitely sleeping sickness . . . I ' ll sleep for an hour or two then I ' ll get up and study . . . What time is it? 10:30!! Oh no! Well, I ' m sick, dammit! 64 5 FUM 66 67 January 7th Reading period, begin studying January 8th Begin studying; buy Econ text buy Econ text; RA application January 9th Begin studying; Orgo; write out Study Plan: plan A 9-5 Study plan B 9-12 sleep 1 2-2 eat 2-5 buy course books, prepare to study plan C Pray the world will end tomor- row Open Orgo book, fall asleep on SN2 reactions . . . close Orgo book make WaWa run; read Prince three times January 10th Orgo Find a friend to write out an RA recommendation Find a friend? Go to Pub and make friends January 11th Orgo-shmorgo Go to Career Services, look for a job Do I really have to type to be a secre- tary? Washington internships need a 3.6 GPA . . . sure . . . Can you say that . . . 3.6? Who has a 3.6? At Mercer County College, well, maybe not. I bet everyone has a 3.6 at Rutgers (Rut- to big-time football stays with big-time that Econ text is . I wonder if I really . it ' s too late to really learn anything anyway . . . Well, I have to write my RA application . . . Why I would make a good RA? Huh? Next question - Why I wouldn ' t make a good RA . . . they really expect me to answer that honestly? . . . Oh, God, I ' ve got to think of a reason that isn ' t too damaging ... I really should study Orgo ... the exam ' s in two weeks I ' m starving ... | can ' t study on an empty stomach ... I ' d better go to WaWa. gers moves on while Princeton education) . . twenty dollars have to read it 68 Hill 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 - ' 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 111] ! I 1 i y i UK fi ■69 70 Ways to Have Fun at Princeton: Walk through Prospect garden during tulip season Party in a friend ' s room Party on the Street Mellow out in your room Have a date Have two dates Go to the movies Overpay N.J. Bell 1C Meal exchange Go to the Pub Roadtrip Go to a football game Listen to a Whig-Clio speaker Invite old friends to come for a week- end Play hoops in Dillon Have a cook-out Play rugby Play a game of squash Hand in your thesis Go to Reunions Play tennis outside Befriend a roach Go into the City Sleep late — blow off class Watch Bill and Andy play squash Get a date for Houseparties Go to the Triangle Show Make a yearbook Toss a Frisbee Pump some Iron Have a 2-hour lunch Play with your food at Commons Play Space Invaders Take a nap Wake up your roommate Sneak a punch-bowl out of Commons Go traying on the golf course Wear your club tie Have a food fight Go to Quaker Bridge Mall Make popcorn (illegally) Listen to an Arch-Sing Erase Monday from the calendar Buy a new album Go to the candy store Join the 21 Club Make a Wawa run Climb the Grad School Tower Steal the Clapper Play Hearts ' til dawn Have breakfast in the middle of the night Light a fire in your fireplace Go for an ice-cream cone Go to Landau ' s Sale Play Backgammon Read the Prince classifieds Deface a political poster Ace one course (four aces = one nerd) Leave for the summer 72 73 75 March 3 See Advi sor Chemical Bank interview 10:00 Meal exchange with Kathy Should hear from Bankers Trust by today 4:00 squash court Call home for money Petition for Alumni Trustee due Do Econ problem set My advisor hates me. Fortunately, I ' ll be able to write my thesis without him. I ' ve got lots of time. Besides, I work better under pressure. I hope my blue pin-stripe suit is ready at the clea- ners; I ' ve got to look my best for Chem Bank. I wonder if Kathy has ever eaten at Tl before. I hope she enjoys it. I ' d better get my petition for Alumni Trustee started right away: it ' s due today. I ' ll bet no one else bothers to run. I also better do that Econ problem set; it was due last week. But what the hell — I ' m a senior. March 4 Buy notecards Ask at library for carrel combo Make up new resume Call Kathy to apologize Do Econ problem set My advisor really does hate me. I guess I ' d better get started with my research. I have no idea what my car- rel combination is. I hope they can tell me at the library desk. The Chemical Bank interview was a disaster. Bank- ers Trust hosed me. That makes twelve hoses and one Call us if you graduate. It ' s time to make up a new resume. I wish I was an engineer. I hope Kathy isn ' t too upset. I ' m sure those guys just didn ' t realize there was a lady at the table. I ' d better call her. April 10 MORE NO-DOZ!!! If I can get someone to type the footnotes and someone else for the bibliography, I just might make it. I wonder if they can bind it in half an hour. I can ' t believe I ran out of No- Doz. I think I ' m addicted to caffeine. April 18 Buy suntan lotion Check on reservations Laundry Econ problem sets I can ' t seem to get rid of the bags under my eyes. My suntan should fix things up. I hope it ' s nice and hot in Jamaica this time of year. I ' ve got about six loads of laundry to do be- fore I go. I also better do a few of those problem sets. Oh, what the hell — my thesis is done! 76 ill w -7 ' £ ' ■W 1 1 r • ' V jj 78 ViHL flLjUBJl .4MBMB ft ■f ' r 79 PRINCETON NINETEEN EIGHTY PRINCETON NINETEEN EIGHTY PRINCETON NINETEEN EIGHTY PRINCETON NINETEEN EIGHTY PRINCETON NINETEEN EIGHTY PRINCETON NINETEEN EIGHTY PRINCETON NINETEEN EIGHTY PRINCETON NINETEEN EIGHTY PRINCETON NINETEEN EIGHTY PRINCETON NINETEEN EIGHTY PRINCETON NINETEEN EIGHTY PRINCETON NINETEEN EIGHTY PRINCETON !  J I k 1 am. ™ BB1 1 1 11 1 l S 1 K m NOTES £ $ .■€ : u -.;V.V. ' -t .jf-f .f «r. ,.W. V ' -, :12 ■re w .. •: PERFORMING ART fflA KATZENJAMMERS KATZENJAMMERS The Katzenjammers, Princeton ' s only co-ed a cappella singing group which performs both popular and classical music, spent a busy year singing from Florida to New England. With an undeserved reputation for wholesomeness, we entertained alumni groups, high school students, and of course, our fellow Princeto- nians in football arches on those crisp fall afternoons and those cold winter nights. The Chapel candlelight Serv- ice of Lessons and Carols was a De- cember highlight, and our inter-ses- sion trip to Florida was probably the peak of the year. Three days in Sarasota, freshman tenor Mark Lowitt ' s home town, were capped by a stay at Key Largo ' s Ocean Reef Club where Harper Sibley ' 48, (a former Nassoon!) played host and Santa Claus to a bunch of frost- bitten, exam-weary singers. Under the leadership of our three seniors, President Doug Boles, Music Director Eric Hausmann and Business Manager Chuck Cummings, the group spent a building fall — working to recover from the heavy loss of seniors and leave-of-absence takers last spring. Doogie, Eric and Chuckles will leave three holes in the group that will be tough to fill. As the Katzenjammers enter our third generation of singing at Princeton, we ' re working to maintain the spirit that started us. We still give great backrubs, and we ' re more sure than ever that the best sound around is that of men and women together. 84 This year was a fun year for the Footnotes. We had some fun times, saw some fun places, sang some fun songs, met some fun people and some funny people. We learned: how thousands of people lose their appe- tites each day; how math majors roll in the mud outside of Fine while pull- ing out their hair; how there are more foxes at Princeton than in all of Bro- tislavia; how to perform when due to the convergence of forces beyond our comprehension we found our- selves without a music director; and how to keep our heads up after diastrous spontaneous skiing colli- sions, miraculously involving the en- tire group. We tried always to contin- ue such important Footnote traditions as being tastefully late to each con- FOOTNOTES FOOTNOTES FOOTNOTES cert. It will be especially hard to part with our seven seniors: Leonard Galla, Cliff Wilson, Paul Hauge, Gary Gross, Andy Nikurs, and past presidents Steve Duson and Duff Ashmead. With their graduation we will regretfully be losing many key phrases, such as: What a bummer! , ... , incred- ibly bogus, and Hey! What is this, Crouch! However, these losses will be more than compensated for by the redistribution of hundreds of longly monopolized solos. In closing, we would like to subtly remind our fans that each exciting moment of the last few years can be rendered immortal by the mere pur- chase of our newly-recorded album, Best Foot Forward. -i — _ _£ i 85 NASSOONS NASSOONS NASSOONS NASSOONS There is little that is more unique to Princeton than a late night arch-sing, and the Nassoons proudly continue the tradition they started over forty years ago. Through all those years, the music of the group has remained fresh, varied, innovative, rich and sweet. Yet for all those people who have come to know them well, the ' Soons are mostly fine singers and good friends who do it all for fun. SFC, etc. Blax, Dude, Boo-Boo, Buster, ' Seer Reed, Beef, Scout, Fly, Cosmo, Bear Mitch, Astro, Hex, Fish, Twink, Wuss, Blax. David C Blaxill, Mark F. Blaxill, Taylor S Bodman, Craig P. Bushong, James G Cavanaugh, David R Fischer, Robert F. Flippin. Stewart L Harris, Timothy P. Heidmann. William W. Hunter, W. Barry McRae. T, Kevin Massey. Oscar E Mertz III. Timothy W J O ' Brien, Joel D. Rood. Rick Spina, E. Reed Wilbur, John J Wood 86 OFFBEATS OFFBEATS OFFBEATS OFFBEATS D. Beamish, D. Boles, J. Carelli, S. Condiotti (not pictured), P. Deyo, H. Elish, R. Flippin, D. Forsberg, P. Francis, M. Juliano, J. Kidd, A. Lance, M. Nunberg, J. Packman, J. Paolini, B. Thomas, C. Wadsworth Spring, 1978. We were young tykes then. We had no knowledge of music, dancing, or even personal hygiene. We were 14 Triangle rejects, with a few dusty disco records, a second- hand pitchpipe, and a crazy dream. Dick gave us the pitches, we sang, and he winced with pain. Does it sound good if you close your eyes? Only if I close my ears. But we laughed in the face of ad- versity. Ha ha, adversity, we all said. In six months we learned two songs. (Should we put out a single?) Harry had his hands full thinking up dance steps. We ' d done disco, bunny hops (Macho Man), an aerial magic trick (Nights in White Satin), a funeral procession (King Tut), and other ab- surdities. By June 1980 we had five songs! We can put out an LP. every five years! I can see it now . . . solo con- certs at Alexander Hall . . . then the Garden . . . then Dinah Shore . . . Hey, is that Robert Stigwood on the phone again? Put him on hold! 87 TIGERLILIES The Princeton Tigerlilies is the Uni- versity ' s only all female singing group heralding from the long Princetonian tradition of small campus singing or- ganizations. The group is composed of twelve members of the freshman, sophomore, junior, and senior classes. We perform four-part close harmony musical arrangements which range from the traditional Barbershop Quartet of Sentimental Journey to Bert Bacharach ' s Walk on By , from George Gershwin ' s Summertime to the Beatles ' When I ' m Sixty-four. Throughout the academic year we perform on campus and around the Princeton area. We have many en- gagements at clubs, restaurants and private parties, as well as traveling to schools and other colleges along the east coast. Our most recent tour took us to Maryland, Washington, D.C., and Virginia, and during which we performed at boarding schools and had the new experience of performing during the half-time program of a bas- ketball game. TIGERLILIES TIGERLILIES 88 TIGERTONES TIGERTONES TIGERTONES Alexander ' s, 4:18 A.M. . . . Hey, Tone . . . Cuddles, Quack, and Bobby . . . from the University across the street . . . Moon Roffer . . . 9-7, you suck! . . . Tones and Tones . . . bowl- ing (Scorpion and Tiki) . . . singing a Coop . . . Bedouin College S.R.O. . . . Little Saint Nick (featuring the Bobby Box-Step ) . . . group hump . . . all we need is a cover . . . we were, like, SO incredible . . . Mad Dog and the Bird . . . thankyuuuu! . . . Foner and the Coney Island Baby . . . scubie-dat-do, scubie-dat-frodo . . . roadtrip! . . . scat that gig, dig? . . . Alice . . . rum and fun at the ' Pub . . . Beerilla Warfare at the P-rade . . . T ' LFN, TK?, T ' SSATLTS, TFAG, AYFAMTMS - WNT? Tones — The times with the Tones have all been very special. We have shared experiences and friendships that will last us until we really are dead Tones. There is so much more that should be said, but why bother? Scubie thanks you, Foner thanks you, Ned and Freddie thank you. We all thank you. Thank you. Glee Club The Princeton University Glee Club has traditionally held a prominent position in the musical community of Princeton. Under the leadership of conductor Professor Walter Nollner and associate conductor Sheila Heffernon Sullivan, this choral group is comprised of sophomores, juniors, and seniors chosen on the basis of yearly auditions. The Glee Club has long been known for its ability to provide a combination of fine musical skills with a spirit of fun and enthusiasm which is quite contagious to a listening audience. Among the Glee Club activities this year have been the time-honored, semi- competitive football concerts, one in Boston in conjunction with the Harvard Glee Club, the other here in Princeton with the Yale Glee Club as our guests. Other highlights of the musical season were the performance of all three parts of Handel ' s Messiah, the first time that the entire work had been conducted by Prof. Nollner; Houseparties Concerts of light music; and a spring concert featuring selected works of Bach, Brahms, and Bartok, which was repeated at a concert for the National Presbyterian Church concert series in Washington, D.C. A major cause for excitement is the upcoming summer tour; many Glee Club members are scheduled to travel to the Far East, with concerts planned in California, Hawaii, Japan, Hong Kong, and Taiwan. This tour should prove to be a memorable occasion for all concerned. ' Mm W I- i ft Afefc : ♦ m t SM O Gospel Ensemble The Princeton University Gospel En- semble was established in 1972. It focuses on traditional and contemporary arrange- ments of Gospel music. Dean of the Chap- el, Ernest Gordon, serves as advisor, and Gerald Folkes, a graduate of Westminster Choir College, acts as the director. They were assisted by Gisele Thornhill ' 80 and by president Marie Borum ' 80, vice-presi- dent Vanessa Payne ' 81, treasurer Kenneth D. Holmes ' 80, and secretary Rosemarie Burnett ' 82. Major university concerts for the Gospel Ensemble this year were the Christmas Concert at the Chapel and the Annual Spring Concert at Alexander Hall. The choir had a very successful musical tour in the Boston area during March and also recorded its first album this year. The Gospel Ensemble is clearly a positive addi- tion to the range of musical groups at Princeton University. 92 Freshman Singers Under the direction of William R. Trego and assistant Robert Crites, mem- bers of the class of ' 83 joined together to form the University Freshman Singers. Since tryouts during Freshman Week, the group has been meeting every Mon- day and Thursday eve- ning, practicing for various concerts and presentations. The Singers introduced their works by com- posers such as Mo- zart, Shutze, and Bruckner in their first concert in early De- cember. The group also performed for University Chapel serv- ices and held a spring concert with the Uni- versity Orchestra. A singing tour to Boston, arranged by travel manager Cori Whitaker, highlighted the Singers ' year. The group sang in several churches and commu- nity areas during their April trip. Funds for the trip were raised through their annual Valagram serv- ice. Freshman quartets went door to door, and even long distance, delivering singing Valentine messages to friends and loved ones. Other activities in the life of a Fresh- man Singer included Christmas caroling throughout the campus and parties, or- ganized by social chairman Arleen Cal- houn. Other officers include President David Eaton, vice-president Helen Blue, treas- urer Lydia Marti, secretary Dana Boo- cock, publicity manager Stephen Koo, and librarians Judy Hunter and Adian Avery. 93 The Princeton University Marching Band The Princeton Band celebrated its 60th anniversary this year, making it the oldest marching band of its kind in the country. Witty, crazy, often controversial and sometimes bizarre, the Band loyally provides support and entertain- ment for the Tigers and their fans, raising spirits at football games each week in the fall. With sheer enthusiasm, lots of imagination, and a little help from the Chancellor Green Association, the Band goes beyond precision marching and rigid formations. Its halftime shows touch upon current and historical topics of general interest: Ten years of women at Princeton ( ... while many underclassmen watch their sex lives slip through their fingers. ); the adventures of wide-eyed Sue Pyne and her beaus, Phillips Andover Hotchkiss VIII and T.I. Hewlett Packard ' 51 A; Emperor Andus the Brown and his shield, the Flaming A; the Call of the WaWa. Traveling to other schools for away games, the Band serves as an unofficial ambassador of good will: Harvard - admit that you are the Stanford of the East. Thou shalt not offer sheep to Dartmouth men. It takes a lot of imagination to believe that Penn is in the Ivy League. After football season ends, the Band can be seen liv- ening up basketball games, hockey games, and an occa- sional swim meet. But it is the crisp and cool autumn days that bring out its unique blend of marching, music, merri- ment, and mirth. 94 96 ORCHESTRA For the third year in a row, the orchestra is performing a Mozart opera. After The Magic Flute in 1978 and The Marriage of Figaro in 1979, what could we do but tackle Don Giovanni in ' 80? As of press time, the production is coming along well. The Princeton community is responding enthusastically to the annual operas: this year, the number of performances and the amount of patron support have both doubled. Most agree that the orchestra ' s success is due not to any individual, but to the cohesion of the group as a whole. But this cohesion, in turn, is clearly attributable to the labors of conductor Michael Pratt. In the three years since he has come, Michael has time and again had the orchestra play pieces far over its head, and play them well. During this period, moreover, the technical skills of onductor and orchestra have grown together. On another front, also, the orchestra has seen hopeful signs. After years of indifference, the University has I finally begun to show interest in having a J concert hall. With a little luck, we may see J Alexander Hall ' s abominable acoustics improved by a fancy baffle system. A technical report on the subject has been prepared, and now the biggest question is where the money will come from. Besides the opera, the orchestra performs two concerts a year. This year ' s fall concert was mostly light music, and in the spring we will present an all-Beethoven program. Here again, the orchestra has doubled the number of performances of each program. We are forever growing. In general, things seem to be looking up for the orchestra. Perhaps the only dark cloud on the horizon is that we are rapidly running out of Mozart operas to play. Next year we will have to break with tradition and broaden our repertoire with an opera by Ravel, Tchaikovsky, Verdi or Weber. We have mastered much, yet more awaits. 97 Theater Intime Intime (etim) adj. — intimate, close, cosy. Anyone who has ever sat in the tiny theatre in Murray-Dodge and listened to the man in the third row unwrap a cough drop while the crinkling reverberates throughout the house, will certainly attest to t he truth of this description. So will anyone who has listened to the actor barely whisper his lines, while the audience, balanced on the edge of their seats, breathed with the actor on every word. The theatre is small, but the power and intensity of the intimacy is immense. It is electric, wrapping the actors and audience in a shared at- mosphere of words, actions, emo- tions, thoughts. This is the unique thrill of Theatre Intime - it is so little, but it encompasses so much. The past season has truly set a vast range of moods in the Theatre, creat- ing varied demands on the small space, the talented actors, and the skillful techies. Opening with a direc- tors ' workshop production of the two one-acts, Welcome to Andromeda and Homefree! , the season moved quickly to the disturbing Pinter play, The Birthday Party. The mood re- versed itself with the British situation comedy, The Norman Conquests, by Alan Ayckbourne, and was then again reversed in Ibsen ' s classic, Hedda Gabbler. Finally, the Spring season included Joe Egg , a pro- vocative modern comedy by Peter Nichols, and ended with the Anouilh adaptation of Sophocles ' great trage- dy, Antigone. The year was diverse, demanding, and most successful. To those who have devoted their time and themselves to Theatre Intime over the past year, Intime has come to mean far more than just a stage in Murray-Dodge — it signifies warmth, work, whimsy, and a lot of wakeful nights. Intime stands for the intimacy of actors, technical crew, and au- dience. _. 99 Fall Managing Board: Spring Managing Board: Erica McFarquhar Stephen Condiotti Elsbeth Collins Susan Butcher Brian Jones Kenneth Saunders Caroline Turner David Cardinal Patrick McEvoy Milly Massey Holly Hockett Chuck Gosse Jay Massimo Carolyn Katz 100 101 • V Jewish Theater Project Incident at Vichy t ■!,i The Princeton Mime Company ' s fifth year was productive and suc- cessful. The troupe performed two separate shows, traveled to elemen- tary schools, performed at the School for the Deaf, and did street mime at weddings, parties, and fairs. Larry Pastor taught an introductory mime workshop first semester. Members of the class and the company together performed a show for an elementary school. The winter show, In the Mime- light, was performed by troupe members Phil Baldwin, Julie King, Sa- rah Markovitz, Burns Stanfield, Isa- belle Tokumaru, and Larry Wiener. Bonnie Eisenberg was the Easel, The show was given at the Wilson College Theater, and consisted of all new pieces. This was the first winter show for the company. The spring show, Prime Time Mime, marked the fifth annual spring show, and was performed at Theater 8 30 pm Intime by company members Bonnie Eisenberg. Julie King, Maureen La- verty, Sarah Markovitz, Mark Schaef- fer, Burns Stanfield, Isabelle Toku- pnmDPnu maru, and Larry Wiener. Eliza Ailing UUIInTlllY was the Easel. All the pieces were original and had themes that ranged from the very serious, dealing with old age in Alpo and Bag Ladies, feminism in The Awakening and 1 HURS 51111 M1RY8II man ' s developing use of weapons in 8 30 Pffl Evolution of Man, to the very com- I — - ical, such as Frog in the Throat, The Microphone, The Guru, and The Arcade. Sarah Markovitz head- ed the production. Lydia Hood was Stage Manager and Kevin Hensley ran the lights, which were designed by Tom Pennington. Both the winter and spring shows were very well received. The troupe hopes to give matinee performances during Reunions week- end and is talking of performing across the country late this summer. 1 t II - pmncETonmimE [Fifty 9 ' ftStTifefl ■V - ■ . v 4H _ ,0 r 30 30 1  ' Si li iflHKfl • 1 t 1 U Jl li m itu,; W Mill ! M ' •■i  fell B ' ■! !!! ft iH - ' 1 H s £ • ■h ..; — r C «5 wZar ££ £ J - T-Tr-T- - V • J Nrw Princeton Inn Theater 110 THE MIKADO The Cast The Mikado of Japan Jordan Simon Nanki-Poo, His Son, Disguised as a Wandering Minstrel, and in Love with Yum-Yum Glenn Paul Ko-Ko, Lord High Executioner of Titipu Paul Wieman Pooh-Bah, Lord High Everything Else Matt Hutchison Pish-Tush, A Noble Lord Jim Cavanaugh Yum-Yum, Pitti-Sing, Peep-Bo, Three Sisters, Wards of Ko-Ko Kristi Frank, Lorraine Goodman, Meg Spencer Katisha, An Elderly Lady, in Love with Nanki-Poo Christa Rounds Chorus of School-Girls, Nobles, Guards and Coolies Cara Vanoni, Elissa Weiss, Donna Eng, Tracy Pogue, Ted Bickford, Andrew Foster, Scott Petrack, Russell Gold, Roger Lustig Director Fred Ebert Choreographer Donna Eng Musical Director Tony Cummings The MUSICIANS Dan Arovas, Hobie Earle, John Field, Jim Mathewson, Dale Chao 111 Wilson College Theater Wilson College Theater has a thread running through each produc- tion, every year, and that thread is the word amateur , in its true sense: one who loves to do something. The ac- tors who tred the stairs to the base- ment of Wilcox Hall for the first time come into the Truckstop . It ' s a sec- ond home, and a place where being an actor or a techie is something more than what you expected. You bruise your thumb hammering togeth- er your set. It ' s yours, and your sweat has to be there. You meet people who are new too, for most of our cast and crews make their debut with us. There ' s something about fresh blood that makes for good ideas. Good cast parties too. The place has been called experimental and it is — for we ' re just as interested in what happens before the curtain rises as after. Oh, we don ' t actually have a curtain; the Truckstop is a little too small for the fancy accoutrements of Broadway. The shows are very intimate, with the audience only a foot or two from the actors. At W.C.T. it ' s the smell of the crowd, the roar of the greasepaint. The 79- ' 80 roars went up for Vero- nica ' s Room , Butterflies are Free , Charlie Brown , Trash , by Raoul Rosenberg ' 80, and Three Adapt- ations from Gertrude Stein. The last one went to the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in August 1980. And, as al- ways, it was all free. W.C.T. is funded by Wilson College and it ' s a gift from the college to everyone at Princeton. 112 113 RESUME BUILDERS  .. T j A -r • ' i (3 OPE.N - Men 10 - j.io Tu«s IO-t 3. 30-5 w« i I0-3 ' 3o 3 30-5 TVwra -5 Trt il. 3o - 3 3o PU TWw - (vlWcViMes iwn Cf « He- «s mJR ... , , ..i. ui f J ill inn •••■•■■1 B E I Hell e e « « i % t t ill!! U V ' t £ 3 c o o o o o o o o o • . • . z i i : ? ! HE . ' . « ■  -  • M lii i 116 Bric-a-Brac Nassau Herald 117 118 The 1980 Bric-a-Brac Nassau Herald suffered an inordinate number of birth pains for a 102 year old organization. It had deteriorated quietly, yet extensively, during those comatose years when anarchy reigned but, in 1979, goodness per- severed and an illegitimate dynasty toppled. The Brie Herald, however, was left without a rightful heir to the chairmanship. The power struggle that ensued insured that the Brie Herald management would learn as much about collective bargaining as we would about the publishing business. From this lesson in tactical compromise we have grown wiser, but it is from the books themselves that our fulfillment is drawn. We are proud to have produced for our friends and mentors the 1 980 Bric-a-Brac . Despite the distractions, the book has been published without delay. Students are interested in the organization and our budget is balanced. For these accom- plishments we would like to thank all the members of the University community who expressed inter- est and cooperated with us. The majority of the credit, however, should go to the Bric ' s hard- working staff. A good number of A ' s have been sacrificed for the publication of this volume. Steve Schmitt was the best help the Prince ever gave to the Brie. Steve organized sales campaigns, sought advertising, pinch-hit as a photographer, and, in keeping the Bric ' s books, kept us all out of debt. Bill Werther and his verbose brothers (Jon, Elijah, Mohammed and Paul) wrote more sports articles faster than their professors could imagine. Lesley Peebles collected and typed enough copy to enable her to submit the Brie as her senior thesis. Lloyd Chao is the best photographer Nikon and the architecture studio ever produced. He depended on Joe Woods, Mike Rivers, Jeff Soons and his sister Claire to man the darkroom. Connie Monitto and Ellen Chajson provided invaluable help at deadline time. Thank you. The Managing Board The Class of 1980 has graduated: Barry is still arranging pictures of that sculpture, Ken is tracing another misplaced photograph, Joe is doing layouts, and Eileen has just made the Bric ' s 711th list of things to do. All in all, we ' re not just another Brie in the wall. 119 Press Club A Press Club alumnus once esti- mated that about 90 percent of all newspaper stories that circulated the country under a Princeton dateline could be traced to a Princeton string- er hustling journalese under the Press Club aegis. And he was right. For the Princeton University Press Club, unbeknownst to many, has a great deal to do with what the outside world reads and hears about Prince- ton. As a fullfledged, albeit part-time, newspaper reporter, each Press Club member is responsible for covering anything from plasma physics re- search, campus demonstrations, and student theatre productions to women ' s rugby and Olympic hopefuls. Sometimes that means stumbling over to interview Noble Prize winner W. Arthur Lewis at 7 a.m. in order to meet an early morning deadline or posing incognito as a prospective Playboy Bunny for the infamous Ivy League issue. And as a result, Prince- ton stays in the news — for better or for worse. Press Club itself consists of twelve students who collectively report cur- rent campus events, features, and sports highlights for about twenty metropolitan newspapers and wire services. Each reporter works for one or two newspapers and, according to his editor ' s interests, will produce speech coverage, faculty research updates, play reviews, sports profices, town politics, briefs, or just general campus news and features in return for bold-print by-lines and profes- sional clippings. Stories by Press Club members appear in The New York Times , The Daily News , The Phila- delphia Enquirer , The Evening Bulle- tin , The Newark Star Ledger , and The Washington Post, as well as In many other area papers that use its serv- ices. On something of a changing of the guard at midyear, freshman members were admitted and seniors graduated. Carol Phethean ' 81 replaced Marc Fisher ' 80 as President, while vice president Alan Safran ' 80, treasurer Larry Ausubel ' 80, and secretaries Hank Hersch ' 80 and Debra Liv- ingston ' 80 surrendered their posts to Chris Schuck ' 81, Carol Ann Siciliano ' 81 , and David Remnick ' 81 . So far the club has not found a replacement for basketball coach Alex Wolff ' 80, but sophomore P.C. ' ers Alison Cowan and Todd Purdam or perhaps new members Grace Ayscue, Tom Cott, Craig Forman, Todd Fredrickson, Ted Lembert, or Mark Sherman are all vying to fill Alex ' s shoes. The Nassau Literary Review Founded in the 1830 ' s, The Nassau Literary Review is the oldest college literary magazine in America. Continuing this long tradition we print original student work twice yearly; going beyond this tradition we publish translation, creative criticism, interviews, architectural drawings, conceptual artworks, found imagery, collage and xerography. 121 The Daily Princetonian In 1979, a staff of 12 editors and about 50 reporters worked to present all of Princeton ' s news on a daily basis. Stories ranged from strikes to clubs to committee meet- ings. The commitment of staff members ranged from an occasional story to upwards of 50 hours a week. Many of the Prince ' s activities remain the same from year to year: recruiting new writers, photographers, and business staff members, digging up investigative series and feature stories, and daily news coverage and arts and editorial writing are examples. Some exceptional stories, however, provided challenges and broke up the routine. A 26-day food servicesworkers strike in May and June, the discussion and acceptance of the revised CURL report, and the annual December drug bust were among the stories that required tough, careful reporting, long hours and late presses. The result of the hard work, however, was a gradual but steady increase in the quality and depth of news coverage in 1979. News board innovations during the year included Kiosk magazine, which provides in-depth articles on issues, both on-campus and off, of interest to the Prince- ton community, a Media and the Law conference that drew eminent journalists from all over the country to take part in a day of talks and panel discussions, daily arts coverage, and expanded news photography. On November 30, the news staff elected Steven L. Bernstein ' 81 to the position of Chariman after a 15 hour long session of speeches and discussion. A week later, the business staff held a four and a half hour election to name Gary Walters ' 81 as Business Manager. The business staff of the Princetonian kicked off an extremely successful year with a circulation drive and an increased emphasis on bringing in local and national Some exceptional stories, however, provided challenges and broke up the routine. advertising. The staff also resumed the Daily Princetonian movie series after a lapse of some years, and held a number of staff parties which, along with the daily work, resulted in staff enthusiasm that was the highest I ' ve seen in my years on the staff, according to Business Manager Gary Matthews. A number of special sections, including an Arts and Entertainment special, football pull- out sections for each of the home games, and a Christmas supplement were among the projects produced by the board. Ttu. PRINCETONIAN Anne C. Mackay-Smith ' 80, Chairman Gary S. Matthews ' 80, Business Manager 1980 MANAGING NEWS BOARD Peter J. EHrind ' 80, Editor-in-Chief J. Todd Weber ' 80, Editorial Chairman David N. Schultz ' 80, Managing Editor Thomas R. Bowne 80, Sporti Editor News Editors Robert P. Fletcher ' 80 Martin F. Murphy ' 80 Andrew B. Steinberg ' 80, Editorial Editor David B. Bachman ' 80, Arts and Entertainment Editor Kirk S. Petersen ' 80, Projects Co-ordinator Van T. WaDach ' 80. Sports Features Editor Nancy C VanMeter ' 80, Senior Editor 1980 MANAGING BUSINESS BOARD Joseph S. Weening ' 80, Advertising Manager Steven M. Lieberman ' 80, Advertising Director Sharon M. Keld ' 80, Production Manager Comptrollers David L. Abrams ' 80 Amy Kopp ' 80 Michael H. Schill ' 80 Circulation Managers John E. Walsh ' 80 Stephen F. Young ' 80 Carter C. Chinnis ' 80, Assistant Production Manager Aprincetonian Soviets invade Iran, Pakistan Carter demands declaration of war: announces military draft resumption •._• • ■MM rw . « n ... Un. _i_i. p m • NATO  M, MtMM. — ■ - — ■i  ■■Nap j V3. ■.—  .■. « -. Q - M_ ' -£ Fresco ' s book sparks controversy rri author maintains truth of claims 122 TfTI 124 FORERUNNER The Forerunner is Princeton ' s al- ternative news magazine. Established in 1976, the paper has weathered a period of troubles to become a regu- lar and self-sustaining monthly in the spring of 1979. The members of the Forerunner are committed to exam- ining Princeton ' s role and responsi- bilities in society and to creating a forum for third world, feminist, and other minority views and perspectives which are often overlooked in other campus publications. A basic prin- ciple of the paper is that all reporting is subjective, and that it is therefore the obligation of the reporter to make clear to the reader her his framework of analysis. Moreover, the press is necessarily an instrument of social change, and cannot be a mere report- er of it; it is essential that this role be recognized in the use of the news- paper and its editorial policy. During the past year, the Forerunner has fo- cused upon investigative reporting, printing reports on battered women at Princeton, nuclear hybrid research at PPL, and wage rates for University workers. In addition to its coverage of campus political events and news, the Forerunner has featured a series on music, theatre, and film, and original short stories and poetry by campus writers. The organization of the Forerunner is perhaps as important to its mem- bers as the paper which the commu- nity receives. Members work in a non- hierarchical structure, gaining ex- perience in all of the skills necessary to publishing a paper: editing, busi- ness, production, writing. New mem- bers are welcome to take an equal hand in deciding the course of the paper, and all editorial issues are open to a decision of all members. 126 Nassau Weekly Nassau is a weekly campus news- magazine which was started in the fall of 1979 as an alternative to existing student publications, providing a fo- rum for in-depth news reporting, fea- ture interviews, opinion pieces, and articles of general interest to the Princeton community. Profile of a re- tiring Dinky conductor or the founder of the American Civil Liberties Union, investigative pieces on drug use and the dearth of rock concerts here, theatre reviews, an extensive arts cal- endar, and a sports page with a per- sonal touch combine to give Nassau its distinctive character. Nassau is written and published by students, for students — it ' s a different sort of campus journalism. 127 mil TIBEfl ■- ppncit „ W T -- ' «.■•  , •■!• ; 1 ■■. 128 The Princeton Tiger Since 1881, The Princeton Tiger magazine has been the Voice of Hu- mor at Princeton University. Take it on faith. Its objective has been to hold in check the rampant seriousness that has reached endemic proportions on campus, particularly in the past dec- ade. To this end, Tiger allows the aspiring lunatic a chance to emerge from the depths of Firestone and with the help of his Comic Muse, wreak havoc on its pages. For the aspiring businessman, Tiger offers the chance to bring an organization to the brink of financial disaster and miraculously back again. Missed deadline, irreve- rent graphics, all-night brain-storming at a local bar, organized chaos, ribald poetry, last-minute inspirations, con- troversial articles, long discussions with President Bowen; all this has gone into producing a magazine that the Tiger ' s staff hopes has brought more than a few chuckles to the oth- erwise serious and upright routine of Princeton life. If not, to hell with ya. 129 Business Today Student attitudes about business have come a long way since BUSI- NESS TODAY magazine was first pub- lished 12 years ago. At that time — the turbulent Spring of 1968 — the idea of creating a forum for commu- nication between business and aca- demia seemed daring and unlikely. The challenge was met successfully by several Princeton freshmen, how- ever, and the product of their efforts is today the largest student publica- tion in the country, reaching over 200,000 college juniors and seniors nationwide. m4b This was an outstanding year for BUSINESS TODAY, highlighted by several acclaimed issues of the maga- zine and by an ambitious national conference program. Under the direc- tion of President Bob Chartener and Vice-President Katie Hall, more than 300 carefully selected students and top-level corporate executives were gathered in Atlanta in November for BUSINESS TOMORROW V: ISSUES OF THE 80 ' s. The focus of the three- day program was the problems and prospects which face corporate America for the coming decade. A huge success, the conference more than anything else demonstrated the need for a continuing dialogue be- tween students and business leaders. The mood of the country has indeed changed immeasurably since the heady days of the 1960 ' s, but there is today perhaps more than ever before a need to question, criticize and un- derstand the business community and its unique and central role in Ameri- can society. 131 Focus on Youth 132 FOCUS ON YOUTH , the nation ' s largest radio public affairs program since 1977, enjoyed further successes during the 1979-80 academic year. Produced entirely by Princeton stu- dents, FOCUS ON YOUTH presents half-hour interviews each week with prominent national figures from the worlds of politics, business, entertain- ment, and the news media. In December, our station group grew from 200 to 300 affiliates with the addition of 100 stations in the ten- state Rocky Mountain area. Also dur- ing 1979 and 1980, we presented ex- clusive interviews with, among others, Jimmy Carter, Gerald Ford, Mary Tyler Moore, Ralph Nader, Jimmy Stewart, George Bush, Walter Cronkite, and Norman Mailer. In addition, our radio magazine pro- gram, Kaleidoscope , continued its pattern of unprecedented growth. Only two years old, the program (combining music, interviews, and features) is now heard each week in twenty-five of the nation ' s largest cities. This year, as in years past, THE FOCUS ON YOUTH NETWORK pro- vided Princeton students with unique opportunities in the fields of broad- casting, journalism, and advertising, and, in the process, served a national audience with the finest in radio pub- lic affairs programming. 133 WPRB WPRB is your station. We play your music. That ' s how the freshman guide described us to incoming students this year. WPRB, 103 FM, belonged to 200 staffers in ' 79- ' 80, and their hard work helped us realize our aim of providing quality listen- ing in the Princeton area. Located in cramped, flooded quarters in the Holder Basement, made bright with recent renovations, the Holder Broadcasting Complex was home to newsmen at 6 a.m. and 6 p.m., scores of progressive airpeople — from Jocks to trainees — and a dedicated and domineering crew of techies, who really knew what was watt. WPRB came into the homes of thousands throughout New Jersey as its 17,000 w atts beamed better and better sounds. This year saw a new professionalism. Classical, jazz, album rock and specialties stayed on the cutting edge without getting lost in space. For our listeners WPRB was the Magic of Radio , Another Green World , The Crest of the New Wave , an Afternoon Concert , and Music You Can ' t Hear on the Radio. For our staffers, it was a helluva lot of fun. 134 135 , Gone are the days when Whigs and Clios don ' t speak to each other except for the pur- pose of frenetic debate; but The American Whig-Cliosophic Society, affectionately known to its members as Whig-Chio, is still alive and functioning as the largest on-campus student organization. As the oldest collegiate political, literary, and debating society still in existence, Whig-Clio sponsors activities ranging from cur- rent popular films and humorous debate to a Model Senate and a Model United Nations and to the annual banquet where this past year the James Madison Award for Distinguished Public Service was given to Roger Nash Baldwin. Debating comprises a large part of the society including The Debate Panel, The Woodrow Wil- son Honorary Debate Panel, and The James Madison Humorous Debate. The society, how- ever, is not only debating but also includes a Speakers Program which this year has brought prominent political figures to Princeton such as Hodding Carter III and William Webster. In the political arena, Whig-Clio also includes Project Update and Project Manhattan in which groups of students visit political and literary figures in Washington, DC. and New York City. In- tellectual and literary aspects of the society are Princeton: Personality and Perspective, which sponsors seminars led by faculty qnd adminis- trators in their areas of expertise, and Col- umns , the society ' s political and literary maga- zine. In future years, as in this one, it is hoped that Whig-Clio will continue to play a prominent role at Princeton in bringing figures of national inter- est to the University and in providing entertain- ing evenings at the movies. 136 A The American Whig-Cliosophic Society The Oldest College Literary, Political, and Debating Society. Whig 1769 Clio -1765 137 Undergraduate Student Government 138 mm The Undergraduate Student Government this year expanded its activites and began to play a more important role in the formulation of University pol- icies in some areas. As it has in the past, the USG continued to provide social activities; the annual P-Party and numerous school-wide functions were organized by the USG, and a system of Dorm Associations was created to foster greater intra-dorm communication and spirit. Several services were provided for students, in- cluding the publication of the Student Course Guide , the creation of the Hide-away Cafe, the sub- sidization of buses to away football games, and the renovation of lounges in Laughlin and Lockhart. It was in the realm of policy that the USG most expanded its role. As a result of the USG ' s efforts, a major review of the precept system was undertaken and it is hoped that substantive recommendations were included in the final CURL proposals which were endorsed by the USG. As well, the USG voiced its opposition to several elements of the Trustee report on the Chapel, and efforts were made to insure that the University ' s relationship with organ- ized religion was based on a non-sectarian founda- tion. The USG also attempted to increase student input in the tenure process, to improve the course evaluation system now used, to expand student rights before the Discipline Committee, and to create a responsible University policy towards corporate ac- tivity in South Africa. Because both the Trustees and the Administration have increasingly viewed the USG as a valid spokes- man for student concerns, the USG has expanded its ability to influence University policy markedly in the past year. Children often find their fun in fantasy: as doctors, teachers, mothers, or astronauts, they fulfill their aspirations in the games that they play. Some chil- dren who arrive at Princeton carry along their desires for role-playing and continue to engage in their fan- tasy games. One such game played on campus is the game of Undergraduate Student Government. In U.S.G., a child assumes the persona of the politico. The politico is a character who, in seeking to garner the admiration of his peers through the conquest of titles, the endorsement of policies and the provision of petty services, translates his feel- ings of insecurity, and perhaps, social inferiority onto the plane of student afairs. As junior bureaucrats and bureaucratesses in the game of U.S.G., the children delight in producing marvelously nebulous studies and reports, and carping at the official titles of uni- versity Deans. (For example, one might disparage the title, Dean of the Chapel and prefer one more in keeping with haute politico chic, such as Dean of Religious Affairs ). To play a good game of U.S.G, the child must be shrewd enough to know when to cater to great humanitarian causes, such as strikes by food service workers, and when to dismiss more trivial matters, such as University funded abortions. The politico is careful to check adjacent study car- rels before whispering to cronies in the bowels of Woody Woo. The politico is fond of hearty back- slapping and of toothful saluting. Above all, the politi- co is unabashed to show how highly he appraises his worth to Princeton, to the world, and to the Universe at large. In the game of U.S.G., pomposity sets a precedent. Accomplishments must always appear to be greater than they in fact are, and what little that is done, must be done in the least efficient way. Committees of committees of committees form the borders of the politico ' s Shangri La, and as long as the politico receives the credit, his euphoria is endless. How unfortunate that the University, as an in- tellectual community of young adults, should accom- modate any such children and their games. The University Council I The Women ' s Center In this tenth year of co-education at Princeton, the Women ' s Center provides women and men with an op- portunity to examine the experiences of women at Prince- ton, their impact upon the campus as a whole, and the administration ' s responsiveness to their particular needs. It works to provide an atmosphere in which women can speak freely with each other, learn from each other, and act together. 1979-80 was a year of activism and education. WHEN? (Women ' s Studies Hiring and Education Network), a facul- ty-student coalition working out of the Women ' s Center, was formed following the resignation of the Chair of the Faculty Committee on Women ' s Studies over the minimal status of Women ' s Studies at Princeton and the low num- ber (10) of tenured women faculty teaching at the Univer- jsity . WHEN? has sponsored several educational forums on IWomen ' s Studies as well as researching tenure figures for women at Princeton and other universities. The ultimate goal of the group is the establishment of a Women ' s i Studies Program, and an examination of the hiring and tenuring process. The Women ' s Center itself sponsored a lecture series on Feminist Approaches to the Liberal Arts featuring graduate student and faculty women. In addition, a well- attended feminist theory study group met regularly; task forces on various issues of concern to women have formed, and weekly meetings of the Center continue to take place. The Collective Meetings are some of the most popular of regular Women ' s Center programs, covering such diverse issues as Reproductive Choices , Mothers and Daughters , Women and Aggression , and Life- styles for Women . The Women ' s Center is also a place to relax, to enjoy the company of old friends, and to make new ones. Regular programs include Open Houses, poetry readings, films, and informal meetings. February marked the second annual open Women ' s Center Party. 141 , 142 Can you tell me where Albert Einstein lived? Where ' s Admissions? What ' s an eating club? How do I get to the E-Quad? Ridiculous questions for any Princeton student; but for a prospective applicant or a tourist, these queries are only natural. Orange Key is open 359 days a year giving tours, hosting high school students, and answering every imaginable question about Princeton. All the guides are student volunteers who explain their commitment to OK as fun, interesting and even exciting. (George Segal and Wayne Rogers both took tours in 1979.) Through snow, sleet, freezing cold and Princeton ' s everpresent slush and rain, Orange Key showed the University to over 15,000 people last year. From concerned prospective parents — Co-ed dorms? they tremble — to returning alums with their stories of PU past, the campus visitors provide their share of OK anecdotes. Orange Key guides are professionals in the art of reflecting on their experience at Princeton, remembering trivia, and at deflecting the inevitable questions from prospectives — How did you get in here? What were your scores? All in all, though, giving tours is a great way to keep in touch with the outside world and show off a campus, which deep down under all the complaints and grumbles, we all really love. 143 Although there are no stockholders or silent partnerships in the Princeton Student Agencies, the agencies do bear some of the complexities of big business. The student entrepreneur works in conjunction with the Univer- sity in setting his prices, location, and system of distribution for his busi- ness. The usual business headaches of holding inventories, hiring (student) workers, and keeping payroll records are just a few of the many worries the student manager must deal with in running his business. Because the operation of student business is vulnerable to competition from outside business, the University gives the agencies monopolistic con- trol of their markets on campus. Once a student has come up with a reason- able idea for an agency that is both original and economically feasible, the University gives that student a min- iature slice of the American Pie — his own business at Princeton under con- trolled conditions. Students sell everything from beer mugs to bagels, wall banners to weenies. They peddle their wares to interested buyers on campus for a fee which is often less than the price which would be charged in a com- petitive market. While some of the prices are higher than in the outside world, the dollars are going to students who most often need the money to finance their edu- cations at Princeton. With the exis- tence of a strong system of student agencies the University financial aid people have less difficulty in locating campus jobs for student workers. De- livery services, like those provided by the highly profitable pizza agency, also seem to offset the slightly higher cash outlay when midnight munchies set in. The Princeton Student Agencies are not big business, but they are profitable, time-consuming, and highly bureaucratic in their dealings with the University. They exist in a perfect mo- nopolistic market with most agencies being run by top workers or good friends of graduating managers. All in all, the agencies represent both a necessary and a constructive form of the Princeton experience. Like athlet- ics and other extra-curricular activi- ties, the Princeton Student Agencies represent just another educational tool, which will better prepare us for the real world we all face after gradu- ation. 144 — 145 20.000 6000 s V 1979 Campus Fund Drive The Student Volunteers Council is a student-run organi- zation, sponsoring numerous social service projects, train- ing sessions, student-initiated seminars, and conferences on related issues. Our projects bring together students and community children, adolescents, adults, and the el- derly. The nature of the projects are educational, recrea- tional, correctional, and administrative, including working with the disabled. Most SVC members feel that our activi- ties not only contribute to our education, but also serve to remind us that there is a real world outside of Princeton University. We have found that taking time to take some- one to a movie, to play basketball, or just to visit and talk can be one of the more rewarding aspects of our Prince- ton education. 146 Student Volunteers Council SPORTS 5sKr w ■' • ' . ' t ■■! - 4 AthJ wm L Although all but one player returned from last year ' s 9-3-3 squad, success did not come very easily to this sea- son ' s Varsity Soccer Team. Injuries to three starters during the pre-season, including All-Ivy midfielder Rich Alito, and to key players throughout the year kept the Tigers from attaining their highly touted potential. But the soccer team did manage to have an extremely successful season regard- less. In 1979, the varsity compiled a 12-4 overall record (setting a new sea- son high for wins), they qualified for the national tournament for only the second time in their history, and, for the first time, they won a post-season match against the highly-rated Phila- delphia Textile team. Hard-nosed de- fense and opportunistic offense were the keys, and with them, Coach Bill Muse achieved his fourth consecutive winning year and brought the Tigers to 14th ranking in the final national polls. The season began against Rider College in the opening round of the New Jersey Classic Tournament. For ninety minutes and two overtime periods, Princeton held their oppo- nent scoreless, and in the shoot-out to determine a winner for the tourney finals, seniors Marc Lovecchio and Bob Bradley each netted their shots, making their team the winner. Al- though everyone immediately saw the effectiveness of the Tiger defense, led by tournament MVP and All-American Charles Stillitano, they had to wait only one day to see what the offense could do. Five different players tallied once in the finals against Trenton State, and the Tigers won the tourna- ment without surrendering a goal. During the next game, the Prince- ton team showed their followers something new: for the first time in several seasons they came back after being behind in a ballgame. Trailing Franklin and Marshall, 1-0, with twenty minutes remaining, Jim Bowen knotted the score. Then, with only five minutes left, senior Dave Maldonado went way up over his defender and nodded home the game-winner. Bow- en ' s second goal in the final minute sealed the scoring, and the Tigers were 3-0. The same strong defense once again was the key against a tough young Dartmouth squad. After a scoreless first half, John Bowen blasted one by the opposing keeper, Men ' s Soccer H (r ■y H and the defense, with Stillitano and senior captain Mark Mulert in the middle, Lasse Brauteset and Scott Messel on the outsides, and senior goalkeeper Jamie Brickell in the net, held on for their third shutout in four games. The midfield began showing their dominance the next game, controlling play and converting from offense to defense and back very well. A one- sided match against East Stroudsberg State ended in a 2-0 win for the Tigers and sent them on their way to Brown with an impressive 5-0 record. The game against Brown has al- ways been one of the highlights of the Princeton Soccer schedule. This sea- son was by no means an exception. Playing under the lights in a pouring rain up at Providence, the Tigers went out to a 1-0 halftime lead, amazingly enough on a goal by their own keep- er, Jamie Brickell. After a routine save, Brickell let go with a long punt that, getting caught by the wind, trav- elled far over everyone ' s head toward the opposing goal. When the Brown goalie rushed out to retrieve the ball, it bounced high off the wet turf and into an open net. In the second half, Bob Bradley finished the Tiger scor- ing with a diving header off a rebound from a Rich Stringfellow shot. The Bruins kept intense pressure on the Princeton team in the final twenty minutes, but managed only to hit the crossbar and posts several times and score once on a penalty shot. The Tigers were now off to their finest start in decades, 6-0 overall, and 2-0 in the Ivy League. When Princeton took the field against defending Ivy Champ Colum- bia, it was built up by many as one of the crucial games of the Ivy League season. Unfortunately for the Tigers, this was just not their day. As luck had been with them the week before, it seemed to be against them as good opportunities just went wide and shots caromed off the woodwork. The Lions outplayed the Princeton team and earned a hard-fought 2-0 victory. Had it not been for the fine play of Stillitano, who many times covered up mistakes of others and stifled Colum- bia opportunities, the score might have been much worse. As it turns out, losing to Columbia is something many teams seemed to do this year. In perhaps their own finest year, the Lions won twice in post-season tour- 150 John Bowen begins the attack. Rick Raber dribbles upfield. FRONT ROW (L-R): John Bowen, Jim Cousonis, Dick McCabe, Lasse Brautaset, Charlie Stillitano, Rick Raber. Duncan MacNichol, Tony Chu, John Mohrmann. BACK ROW (L-R): Coach Bill Muse, Dave Maldonado, Touraj Touran, Mark Mulert, Scott Messel, Jamie Brickell, Marc Lovecchio, Rich Purcell, Rich Alito, Craig Stahl, Rich Stringfellow, Jim Bowen, Jack Blair, Bob Bradley, Trainer Bobby Sinkler. 151 J nament and made it to the national semifinals before losing to runner-up Clemson. As for Princeton, the most impor- tant thing was to put this game be- hind them, because the games to fol- low were not going to be any easier. That is exactly what they did. The next week the Tigers absolutely domi- nated a good Rutgers squad, and in what Coach Muse called one of the finest wins in his career as a coach, the booters knocked off 9th ranked Philadelphia Textile 5-2 on their own field. Princeton showed great poise in the first half, coming from behind twice, and again in the second half, when they were forced to play forty minutes with one less player after The Princeton team . . . cracked the national top-twenty Stillitano was ejected for rough play. Not only was the defense outstanding, but strong help from the midfield, sen- iors Marc Lovecchio and four-year Bob Bradley struggling for position as Jim Bowen runs offside ■Touraj Touran challenges Cornell midfielder as Raber and John Bowen anxiously await outcome Tiger substitutes anxiously awaiting a call for action -K. •.„  I Raber looks to teammates for help at midfield starter Rick Raber, sophs Jack Blair, John Bowen and Tony Chu and fresh- man John Mohrmann allowed the Ti- gers to break out of their defensive shell and notch a second-half goal while keeping their opponents score- less. Despite losing to Harvard in what could only be explained as a letdown after their win at Textile, the Princeton team, for only the second time in their history, cracked the national top- twenty. With only a few weeks left in the season, the booters reached 2nd place in the all important regional standings and 17th nationally. Wins against regional opponents Pennsyl- vania and Delaware boosted the Ti- gers ' record to 10-2 and their ranking to 14th (highest in Princeton history). All that was left to seal a play-off berth against top-ranked Penn State was Yale. Unfortunately, the Tigers had one of their poorer all-around performances and lost 3-1. The selec- tion committee, judging from the over- all record and schedule of the teams involved, found Princeton to be sec- ond best in the region; nonetheless, and their second chance against Tex- tile, both this year and in the tourna- 153 merit (their first tournament appear- ance was a 3-0 loss to Textile in 1977), was forthcoming. Although the NCAA prides itself on being an amateur organization, a very interesting factor about Princeton kept the Tigers from hosting in the opening round of the tournament. Princeton, it seems, does not own a soccer field of adequate proportions, at which NCAA could collect a fee. Regardless of the fact that the Princeton team was sec- ond and Textile a wild-card choice by the national committee, the game was to be once again on Textile ' s home field. The second time, it turned out to be a much different game than before. Both teams played cautiously in the first half and did not score. In the second period, most of the play was in the middle of the field until the 74th minute, when frosh John Mohrmann beat two defenders to the end line and crossed the ball to Bob Bradley, who neatly flicked it into the net past an onrushing Textile keeper. Despite pressure in the final moment the Ti- gers fought off the Rams ' desperate attempts and held on for a 1-0 win. For the first time ever, Princeton had won a tournament game, and they had done so without a fence around their own field. Although the season ended the fol- lowing Sunday at Penn State, perhaps the only upsetting thing about the loss was that the Tigers and all who 1 979 was ... a step towards a national title - saw the game realized that the Nittany Lions, who eventually finished third, after knocking off a tough Indiana team in the quarterfinals, were really no better than the Tigers. They did lose 3-1 but the game was very close until the final moments and the only difference was a misunderstanding between two defenders, which led to the winning goal. The Tigers will graduate several tal- ented players next year. Rick Raber, after four years as a starter, finished sixth on the all-time scoring list de- spite playing his last two years at half- back. Dave Maldonado scored several key goals this year and, had it not 154 VARSITY SOCCER (12-4) A Rider W 1-0 A Trenton State W 5-0 H Franklin Marshall W3-1 A Dartmouth W 1-0 H E. Stroudsburg W2-0 A Brown W 2-1 H Lehigh Cane. H Columbia LO-2 H Rutgers W 2-1 A Phil. Textile W5-2 A Harvard LO-2 A Pennsylvania W2-1 H Delaware W4-0 H Yale L1-3 H Cornell W2-0 A Phil. Textile W 1-0 A Penn St. L 1-3 I All American Charles Stillitano dribbles from opposing forward away All-Ivy Jack Blair leads teammates in formation jen for nagging inuries that have agued Dave since freshman year, he obably would have been that extra ark to the offense that every great am has. Dick McCabe played very tie after the first four games, but jring those four he filled in ex- ;ptionally at fullback. Lasse Braute- it was perhaps the most underrated ember of the Princeton squad. His  eed and skills stifled many fine op- ting forwards as well as created any good scoring opportunities. Bob adley was not only tied for leading orer on the team (8 goals, 3 assists) bd a member of the All-Ivy Honor- He Mention Team, he was in- isputably the hardest worker on the iuad. This year ' s winner of the lickett Award for dedication, jadley ' s contributions will be sorely jssed next year. Goal-keeper Jamie jickell earned recognition as a mem- r of both the All-Ivy Team (HM) and 3 all-Regional team (2nd team) and tied the school career record for shut- outs with twelve. Marc Lovecchio, af- ter two years on the self-proclaimed Comedy Squad, made the Varsity la st season and this year proved to many people that he could play a high caliber of soccer. Last and most was Mark Mulert, whose leadership and hard play as team captain was an in- spiration to all. But this year will definitely not be the end of success for the Princeton Soccer Program. Despite the loss of eight players to graduation, returning next year are Jim Bowen, tied for team high with Bradley for points, who had also been chosen to the All- Regional 2nd Team; his brother John, HM All Region and All-Ivy; sophomore Rich Stringfellow and junior Touraj Touran, a three goal scorer, on the front line. At midfield, the Tigers hope to have both Alito and Dave Lubitkin back from injuries to play alongside Chu and Mohrmann.ln the back, Stilli- tano and Messel will return; Stillitano a member of the All-Ivy and Region 1st Teams and a legitimate All-Ameri- can pre-season next year, and Messel an All-League defender. Competing for the final positions will be juniors Jim Cousounis and Mark Brown, and sophs Scott Strausser and Scott Deal. In goal will be either Rich Purcill or Craig Stahl, both of whom have var- sity experience and have shown their ability to play the highest caliber keeper. To many, it seems as if 1979 was the final step in a long hard climb into the national picture for Princeton soc- cer, but to those who see the poten- tial and understand how close this team is to the best in the country, it seems as if 1979 is more of a first step toward a national title within the next few seasons. This past year has been a very good one for Princeton soccer, and the next few should be even better. 155 VARSITY FOOTBALL Crissy takes a handoft from QB Reynolds and follows the blocks of Van Pelt, Baily and Senft 156 Larry Van Pelt leads interference for Lew Leone on a kickoff return. (|); QB Steve Reynolds rolls out in search of his receivers, (r) Russ Moyer and Phil Prosapio converge on a Rutgers ball carrier The 1979 Varsity football season started off on an impressive note. Senior quarterback Steve Reynolds directed a versatile Princeton attack that accumulated 360 yards in total offense, pacing the Tigers to an im- pressive 16-0 victory over Dartmouth in Hanover, N.H.. It was the first time since 1947 that an Ivy opponent had defeated Dartmouth by a shutout on its own home turf. The Tigers had 255 yards rushing with tailback Cris Crissy leading the pack with 106. Re ynolds carried for 77 yards, sophmore Larry Van Pelt for 54 and each rushed for a TD as well. Reynolds also passed for 105 yards. Princeton ' s defense also had a fine afternoon, limiting the Big Green to just 77 yards rushing on the day. Dartmouth crossed midfield only twice and never moved beyond the Princeton 32. Princeton appeared to keep the mo- mentum going against Rutgers, as they drew first blood in the contest on a well executed 61 yard drive. It was the first Princeton TD against the Scarlet Knights since the 1975 con- test. Princeton was able to move the ball well in the firsthalf with the help of 90 yards of Rutgers penalities. The first half ended in a 14-14 tie, as the Tigers executed a second impressive drive, this one of 78 yards. High- lighting this drive was a 29 yard recep- tion from Reynolds to flanker Lew Leone. The second half was quite different from the first, however. Rutgers, initial- ly helped by a couple of Tiger mistak- es, registered a touchdown and field goal in the third quarter. More impor- tantly, they controlled the ground game. The impressive Rutgers squad went on to nail down a 38-14 victory. Princeton suffered its second set- back of the season, bowing to Brown 31-12 in Providence. The Bruins ground attack was the story of the game. Quarterback Larry Carbone en- gineered an offense that chalked up 157 266 yards rushing and 422 yards in total offense. The Tigers had 189 yards in total offense for the day. Af- ter spotting Brown a 10-0 lead in the first period, the Tigers got back in the game when QB Reynolds hit flanker Vince Battaglia with a 2 yard toss early in the second period. Brown came right back, however, and It was Brown ' s Seventh Straight win over Princeton marched 76 yards in 12 plays to lead 17-6 at the half. On Brown ' s first pos- session of the second half, fullback Marty Moran fumbled at the 12 and Princeton ' s Steve Rowles recovered. On the next play, Van Pelt bolted 12 yards for a TD and the Tigers were back in the game at 17-11. Brown put together drives of 72 and 51 yards the next two times they had the ball, to set the score at 31-12. It was Brown ' s seventh straight win over Princeton. Against Columbia the Tiger offense racked up 466 total yards in routing the Lions 35-0. The score can be de- ceiving, however, as the game was close through three quarters. After a couple of stalled drives, the Tigers finally got on the board in the first quarter on a three yard Reynolds plunge. Van Pelt, who had a fine day rushing, followed with a one yard run in the second quarter to make the score 14-0. The Tigers were plagued by penalties in the third quarter. It was then that Columbia gave the Ti- gers their only real scare, on a blocked Ken Buck punt that was re- covered on the Princeton 17 yard line. The defense held strong as the Lions could only gain 7 yards. Princeton killed any further comeback hopes in the fourth quarter with a 21 point out- burst. The first TD was set up by an interception by defensive back Chris Boudreau. Leone caught two passes, for 16 and 18 yards respectively, for TD ' s. The other score came on a one yard run by sophomore Mike Neary. Against Colgate the flashy Prince- ton offense fell dormant. The game started off close, as neither team could manage a first quarter score. Colgate opened the scoring in the second quarter as QB John Marzo began to show off his passing arm, that was to be the Princeton nemesis the rest of the day. Colgate threat- ened again in the second quarter but the Tiger defense held tough, led by Steve Hart and linebacker Russ Moyer, and an interception by Henry Milligan. Colgate added a field goal in the third quarter and iced the victory on a three yard TD pass by Marzo in the fourth quarter. Princeton regis- tered its lone tally when QB Bob Hol- ly, replacing Reynolds, completed 10 of 13 passes, including a TD toss to Fred Rosenberg. Battaglia snagged 4 of Holly ' s tosses. The Tigers followed the Colgate loss with a lackluster 9-7 victory over Harvard. Princeton started the scoring with a 48 yard drive which ended in a three yard Reynolds Keeper. The PAT failed and Princeton had to settle for a 6-0 lead. In the second quarter how- ever, Reynolds suffered a knee injury, and Holly took over the QB duties. The half ended at 6-0. Harvard took QB Bob Holly calls huddle vs. Harvard the signals in th Chris Boudreau and Dave Chandler catch a Rutgers running back in mid-air 158 Tailback Cris Crissy leaves Harvard defender frozen in his tracks the lead in the third quarter however, as their offense moved well in a 64 yard, 10 play drive. The Princeton de- fense proved decisive in the fourth quarter, as blitzing linebackers Moyer and Joe Clark stymied the Harvard attack. Princeton pulled out the game in the fourth quarter. Holly marched them from their own 26 to the Harvard 23. The drive stalled here, but kicker Lou Vaccarello came through with a clutch 40 yard field goal, that pro- vided the margin for victory. The following week against Penn, the Tigers raised their Ivy league record to 4-1 with a 38-10 win over Penn. The 38 point total for the Tigers was their highest offensive output in five years. Princeton, however, did not take control of the game until the third quarter. The Tigers had a slim 14-0 lead at halftime, on touchdown runs by Van Pelt and Holly. Both were long jaunts, set up by the offensive line of Pete Bastone, Mark Rifkin, Mark Bailey, Ted Sotir and Mike Senft. They were to continue providing big holes for the Tiger backs all day. Princeton started the rout early in the third quarter. With the ball on the Penn 44, the Tigers called a screen pass, anticipating a Quaker blitz. The strategy paid off well, as Van Pelt took Airborne defenders — Dave Chandler and Bob McNulty try to block a Rutgers extra point attempt Joe Clark makes a big hit on a Rutgers receiver. 159 the screen and romped 44 yards for the TD. Vaccarello booted a 32 yard field goal 5 minutes later. After anoth- er 5 minute interval, Van Pelt capped a 48 yard drive with a 4 yard scoring plunge, his third TD of the day. The final Tiger score of the day came early in the fourth quarter on a one yard plunge by running back Jonathon Berry. The Tigers ended the day with 397 rushing yards, to Penn ' s 133. The rout of Penn set up a show- down for the Ivy title the following week against perenially tough Yale. The Tigers went in with high hopes for the title, but it was not to be. Yale dominated the contest at rain-soaked Palmer stadium, routing the Tigers 35- 10, to extend their winning streak to 13 games. Defense was the key to the Yale victory as the number one ranked na- tionally Bulldog defensive squad con- tinually stymied the Tiger offense, forc- ing several mishaps. Despite the large margin of victory, the game was close through three quarters, at 14-2. Yale scored first on a 64 yard Ken Hill romp in the first quarter. Princeton followed by capitalizing on a poor Yale snap on a punt, as the Yale kicker was forced to run the ball out of the end zone. Yale added a third quarter score on a clutch fourth down and 8 pass for a TD. Yale scored Place kicker Lou Vaccarello attempts an extra point vs. Rutgers Princeton defenders Scott Wright. Steve Hart, and Russ Moyer read and react 160 Linebacker Russ Moyer discusses defensive strategy with Frank Navarro again early in the final stanza on a 19 yard run and it appeared that the game was out of reach when Yale again threatened to score a few min- utes later. However, Tiger safety Chris Boudreau intercepted an errant Yale pass deep in Tiger territory and re- turned the ball 92 yards for a TD. The Yale offense squad quickly doused any hope of a tiger comeback as they scored two unanswered TDs to close out the scoring. The tiger squad went into their final contest against Cornell with quite a bit at stake — namely their first win- The Tigers had quite a bit at stake, namely their first winning season since 1970. ning season since 1970. The squad was not to be disappointed. Big plays were the key to the Tiger victory, as they overcame a 14-6 halftime deficit to defeat a tough Big Red. Cornell took an early lead on a TD pass, and the Tigers countered with a Cris Crissy TD, his first of the season. The Tiger tally was set up by a Cornell fumble that was recovered on the Big Red 9. The extra point try, however, failed. Cornell tallied again in the second quarter to close out the first half scor- ing. The Tigers came roaring back at halftime, though, as they scored 20 unanswered second half points. The deluge began when Mike Moran ran back a booming Cornell punt for 65 yards and the touch down early in the third period. On Cornell ' s next pos- Steve Reynolds, following blocks by Ted Sotir and Mark Rifkin, cuts upfield Lew Leone runs for daylight as Larry Van Pelt clears the way 161 session, Henry Milligan intercepted an errant Big Red pass, setting up anoth- er short touch down plunge for Crissy several plays later. As time wound down, Cornell was forced to pass. Backs Dave Chandler, Milligan and Russ Moyer continually stymied the Cornell quarterback ' s attempts. Moyer iced the sweet Tiger victory with an interception that he returned 25 yards into the Big Red end zone. The strong Tiger finish seems to indicate that Princeton football is on the rise. The Tigers lose a fine quar- terback in senior Steve Reynolds, but a knee bruise to Reynolds permitted sophomore Bob Holly to see a great deal of duty over the latter part of the season. Reynolds completed 51 of 97 passes for 574 yards and four touch- downs while finishing third on the team in rushing with 203 yards. Holly was 35 of 79 for 426 yards and two touchdowns. When Navarro opens training camp next August, he will greet a receiving corps almost totally intact from this fall. Only flanker Vince Battaglia, who had 13 catches for 135 yards, is lost through graduation. The squad ' s leading received, flanker Lew Leone, will be back. Leone caught 20 passes for 267 yards. Wide receiver Tom We were the worst of the worst when we started, but now we are in the middle of the best Michel and tight ends Tom Trkla and Scott Oosdyk all return. The offensive line will lose tackle Mike Senft, center Ted Sotir, and guard Pete Bastone, while guard Mark Bailey and tackle Mark Rifkin return. On defense, the Tigers will lose to graduation Matt McGrath, a fine tackle, linebacker Russ Moyer, and three of four starters in the secon- dary: free safety Dave Chandler, strong safety Mark Goldstrom and cornerback Dan Bennewitz. Moyer led the squad in tackles, with 80, while also notching a team-high five inter- ceptions. End Steve Rowles also graduates. The Tigers will return a solid defen- sive interior line next fall. Junior Paul Van Pelt will be at one end, while juniors Steve Hart and Bob McNulty are back at tackle and middle guard, respectively. Sophomore Jono Hel- merich saw a good deal of playing time at tackle this year and should step into McGrath ' s spot next year. Junior Joe Clark and sophomores Phil Prosapio and Scott Wright saw a good deal of action at linebacker this year. Junior John Kistler started the entire season at one cornerback spot, while juniors Henry Milligan and Chris Boudreau saw plenty of action at cor- nerback and strong safety respective- ly. In summarizing his two years at Princeton Navarro said, We were the worst of the worst when we started but now we are in the middle of the best. It has taken a great deal of work to achieve what we have, but we all realize that we will have to work even harder to reach the goal of winning an Ivy championship. Our degree of success this fall makes us feel like we are moving in that direction. Gymnastics? Wrong in action Princeton cheerleader Yale defenders swamp QB Holly 162 Varsity Football (5-4) A Dartmouth W16-0 H Rutgers L 14-38 A Brown L 12-31 H Columbia W35-0 H Colgate L6-17 A Harvard W9-7 A Penn W 38-10 H Yale L 1 0-35 H Cornell W 26-14 A pensive moment for Head Coach Navarro OOTBALL ROSTER: Larry Arata, Rick Baer, Vince Baglio, Mark Bailey, Paul Bartlett, Pete Sastone, Vince Battaglia, Den Bennewitz, Jonathon Berry, Chris Boudreau, Jerry Brady, Ken Buck, ee Campos, Craig Carvin, Dave Chandler, Joe Clark, Dan Corrigan, Cris Crissy, Rich D ' Angelo, Uan Darling, John Difalco, Wayne Dustman, Bob Ehling, Chris Fickett, Gerry Fiore, Stan Freck, 3ary Giallonardo, Dave Ginda, Mark Goldstrom, Ed Green, Dave Gutzke, Steve Hart, Jono Helmerich, Jim Hilbert, Rick Hillman, Bob Holly, Jeff Idler, Marty Johnson, John Kistler, Dick Klein, like Kurtz, Lew Leone, Mark Lockenmeyer, Chris Long, Chris Malick, Rob Malin, Bud McDonald, Skip McGee, Matt McGrath, Bob McNulty, Marshall Merrifield, Tom Michel, Doug Miller, Henry lilligan, Mike Moran, Russ Moyer, Tim Mulvey, Ed Nardi, Mike Neary, Jim Nicholas, Ed O ' Brien, Ceith Ohnmeis, Scott Oostdyk, Mark Parrish, Phil Prosapio, Steve Reynolds, Mark Rifkin, Fred Rosenberg, Steve Rowles, Jeff Salter, Jim Santos, Mike Schiller, Kevin Schlosser, Mike Schloth, like Senft, Doug Smith, Pat Sorek, Ted Sorit, Jeff Sports, Jim Starnes, Ben Starrett, Chris hompson, Don Tomaszewski, Tom Trkla, Lou Vaccarello, Larry Van Pelt, Rick Wise, Scott Wright, im Yaggi, Joe Voightsberger 163 1 50 ' s FOOTBALL Both at the beginning and the end of the 1979 Lightweight Football sea- son, second-year coach Tom Murray described his team as one with a lot of potential and, I think, the best in the League. The 150 ' s clearly had the opportunity for top honors in the six-team Eastern Inter-collegiate Lightweight Football League. After losing their first game to Navy, 47-12, the Lightweight ' s season highlight came the next week with a 14-0 shut- out over Army. Both games were played amidst heavy rain and under extremely muddy conditions. Two more victories against Penn and Rut- gers, both one-sided and expected, gave the Tigers the momentum and the 3-1 record that set up their final crucial game against Cornell. But Princeton suffered a humiliating 17-9 defeat when, as it turned out, with Army defeating Navy, a victory would have given them a share in the title. The team was a mature and ex- perienced one, so their final 3-2 record must be viewed with some dis- appointment. Nevertheless, several players turned in outstanding season- al performances. Two time Tiger-Ath- lete-of-the-Week this fall, Sam Mes- sina was Princeton ' s, and perhaps the League ' s, outstanding player. The junior running back was voted unani- mously to the League ' s first offensive team. In five games, he led the team in both rushing and scoring, racking up 451 yard in 91 carries, scoring four touchdowns, and fumbling only once. He has become known for his ability to gain an extra two or three yards by shaking off tacklers. An incredible 172 yards on the ground against Rutgers was his best performance. Senior guard Steve Ritz was anoth- er top performer, as the mainstay of the offensive line. He also garnered a spot on the League ' s first offensive team. Senior fullback John Cheng was second to Messina in rushing and scoring. In four games he notched 226 yards on 51 carries, and scored two touchdowns. Co-captain and quarterback Brian Laporte ' s top re- ceivers were senior Rick Furchs and junior Larry Hawkins. Furches, named to the League ' s second team, led the team with 8 receptions for 121 yards, while Hawkins ' s nine catches totaled 94 yards. Co-captain and guard Steve Williams also received a second team designation. Sophomore punter Mar- shall Merrifield, an unsung offensive hero, went the entire season without a blocked punt, had a 30.2 yard kicking average, and consistently rescued the Tigers from tight situations. Defen sively, linebacker Mark Blaxill and defensive end Stuart Gray were the obvious standouts, and both were named to the League ' s first defensive team, Blaxill for the second time. Blaxill, the silent, off-the-field leader, but ever the aggressor on the grid- iron, was continually stopping the op- ponents on the big plays. Gray ' s posi- tion coverage and tackling abilities were second to none for the Tigers. Defensive backs Tim Pfitzer and Clinton Winters, second team design- ees, were extremely effective at hal- ting any passing attack with two and three interceptions, respectively, in addition to several deflections. Middle guard Dave Stone received an honor- able mention from both the League selectors and coach Murray, who credited him with always giving 100% and being tops in my book. Murray looks to 1980 with optimism, noting that a large number of starters are returning. In addition, he de- scribed sophomore Chris Brennard as easily having the potential to be the best in the League. The 1980 Light- wight title should again certainly be within the Tigers ' grasp. 164 1 50 ' s FOOTBALL (4-2) A Navy L 12-47 H Army W 14-0 A Pennsylvania W14-7 H Rutgers W16-7 H Cornell L9-17 A Rutgers W13-0 165 166 « w FIELD HOCKEY In her third year at Princeton and her first season as head coach of the Woman ' s Field Hockey team, Betty Logan saw the Princeton team break into the national field. The varsity players lay claim to only a 7-5-1 regu- lar season record; however, in tallying their seven wins, the squad displayed some fine team efforts. Princeton ' s first big win came against Glassboro State. The Tigers defeated a con- sistently strong Glassboro team for the first time ever. Lisa Pratt scored both goals in the 2-1 effort on the way to her best season, finishing only two goals short of the school record. Princeton then went on to upset na- tionally ranked Ursinus College. The Tiger defense, led by seniors Jean- nette Raymond, Sissy Wallace, and Fifi Laird, battled the aggressive Ur- sinus offense to allow the single Princeton goal to be the game winner. Princeton suffered a disappointing loss in the Third Annual Field Hockey Doubleheader played under the lights on the astro-turf at Franklin Field. This event attracted over 4000 spectators. Princeton has been invited to take part in the doubleheader again next year and will be looking to make a better showing against a tough Penn- sylvania team. In the war of the Ivies, Princeton came out in second place with decisive wins over impressive Yale and Harvard teams as well as victories over the Brown and Cornell squads. With this 7-5-1 record, Princeton entered the Division I Intercollegiate Field Hockey Nationals to compete against the top 15 ranked teams in the United States. As host, Princeton opted to take an automatic berth in the tournament and in doing so had to play number one seeded Penn State in the first round of play. Prince- ton lost in an uninspired effort and entered into consolation play. During the next three games the Princeton squad put together three of their best performances to become the first automatic berth team to ever advance into a third round of play. Sophomore Sue Koehler, a tough defender in the cage, along with an incredible six- player offensive attack, captured sixth place for the Tigers in nationwide Di- vision I play by defeating such top-ten favorites as Orgeon State, San Jose State, and Davis and Elkins College. We are happy to report that next year ' s prospects should top even this year ' s superior performance. We ex- pect ten returning varsity letter win- ners, including freshmen starters Car- rie Dolan and Linda Riefler, and the return of Heidi Berman to the Tiger attack. Finally, Congratulations to Jean- nette Raymond ' 80, Lisa Pratt ' 80, and Sue Koehler ' 82 for being named to the All-Ivy League Field Hockey Team. The Tiger ' s Field Sportsman Award went to this year ' s captain Ann Clark ' 80. .!. -• .• 167 WOMEN ' S SOCCER SOCCER (8-5) Vassar w 5-3 Manhattanville w 7-2 Franklin and Marshall W 3-2 Villanova w 1-0 Lehigh w 5-2 Yale L 3-2 Rutgers W 7-0 Penn State L 2-0 Harvard L 3-0 Pennsylvania W 3-0 Ivy Championship Dartmouth w 2-0 Harvard L 3-0 Yale L 2-0 J MP ' ? t 168 asp , ft A f  , i '  ' «« ,  . u .  W The 1979 Women ' s Soccer team got off to a convincing start with an easy 5-3 win over Vassar. Frosh wing- er Kathy Brewer and junior center for- ward Carey Crutcher each had a pair of goals in the opening contest. The team followed the Vassar win with a strong performance against Manhattanville, in which the Tigers executed a 7-2 rout. Crutcher again played strongly, picking up three goals and an assist. Frosh halfback Jeanne Panek added two goals. The team continued its strong play with two hard-fought wins: 3-2 over Franklin and Marshall, and 1-0 over Villanova. Panek picked up the deci- sive goal in the F and M game, while halfback Nnena Odim had the single tally in the Villanova contest. Ellen Ross ' 80 and Cathy Barnet ' 82 shone on defense. The Tigers followed up these tough contests with a relatively easy 5-2 win over Lehigh. Julie Kellog ' 80 was instrumental in the victory, as were Marcia Hart ' 81 and Odim, who each had a pair of goals. The Tigers opened the Ivy season with a tough 3-2 overtime loss to Yale, despite goals by Brewer and Hart and an excellent game by Sue Knauer ' 81. The Tigers rebounded by destroying Rutgers however, by a 7-0 score. Shelley Ingram ' 80 recorded her sec- ond shut-out in goal. In their next contest the Tigers fell 2-0 victims to a tough Penn State squad. The team recovered well, how- ever, dominating Penn, 3-0. Nnena Odim had a hat trick, accounting for all the scoring. Princeton, however, was overpowered in their next contest by defending Ivy Champs Harvard, 4- 0. The Tigers entered the Ivy Tourna- ment with high hopes and soundly defeated Dartmouth 2-0 in their open- ing contest. Kellog and Odim record- ed the scores while Ingram and Panek led the defense. The Tigers were not able to maintain their momentum, though, and again succumbed to Har- vard, 3-0. Sue Knauer again played well defensively. Three hours later, on a rain-soaked field, the team ended the season with a tough 2-0 loss to Yale. The Tigers had five All-Ivy selec- tions, including first teamers Odim and Knauer, second team selection Crutcher, and Ingram and Brewer, who both received honorable men- tion. Senior Ingram was awarded the MVP award for her outstanding play and leadership. Robin Bennet ' 81 re- ceived the Don Betterton Award for sportsmanship, and Cathy Barnett re- ceived the Steve Leon Award for her constant hard work and effort. 169 The major obstacle which faced the 1979 Women ' s Volleyball Team was its new classification as a Division I team. Although the squad lost only two players to graduation, it was faced with much tougher competition than during the previous years since more large scholarship schools were included in the schedule. However, a good group of incoming freshmen promised to strengthen the team as did the returning players ' improve- ment during spring and summer train- ing. Princeton got off to a slow start, losing its initial match to a weak Kent State team. In fact, during the first two weeks of play, the team displayed inconsistency and entered its first tournament, the Princeton Invitational, with a 2-2 record. However, at this tourney, the squad gave an indication of its offensive power and defensive quickness as it cruised through its first three matches without dropping a game, but a loss in the quarterfinals to Navy forced the Tigers to settle for a 5th place finish and a 4-1 tourna- ment record. After trouncing Trenton State the following week, the team began com- petition in the Princeton International Invitational Tournament, which boast- ed one of the strongest fields the squad was to face all season. It turned out to be a long weekend for the Tigers, who showed a lack of ex- perience in playing top notch teams. The team compiled a 2-3 record, beat- ing George Washington and Queens of Canada and losing to Cincinnati (eventual winners of the competition), Charleston, and, in a stroke of incon- sistency, Queens. The tournament did, however, prove to be a learning experience since in subsequent tournaments the Tigers showed greater poise, strength, and toughness. In the Dela- ware Invitational the team lost heart- breakers to strong Rhode Island and Delaware squads, but crushed a re- spectable William and Mary. The fol- lowing weekend at the Maryland In- vitational, in its opening match, the team fell two points shy of defeating 1978 regional champion Rutgers. Af- ter crushing American University and avenging the earlier loss to Navy, the Tigers fell to powerhouse Penn State 170 WOMEN ' S VOLLEYBALL iand to University of South Carolina in [the first round of the playoffs. In the jend, however, the team placed within the top 10 of the tournament, quite an (achievement considering that the best Iteams in the East were competing. In the next week of competition, the [Tigers trounced Rutgers-Newark in [three straight games in a display of brilliant offensive and defensive net play. Two days later, the squad was ien route to Brown University, host of ithe Ivy League Championships. Princeton entered the tournament needed number one and went on to jprove that it was indeed the champ of ' the Ivy League. In its first match, the team overwhelmed Barnard in two jgames. The following morning the Isquad faced number two-ranked penn, and lost a close three game |Tiatch. However, the tournament ' s double-elimination system placed the ;team in the semi-finals against 1978 Champion Yale. Facing a 14-2 deficit ;n the first game, the Tigers roared lOack to win the match 16-14, 15-8 and advanced to the finals against Penn. ;3ince Penn ' s tournament record bet- tered Princeton ' s by one match, the Tigers had to make a tie-breaker game in addition to winning the three game final match. Showing offensive strength which had previously sur- faced only on occasion, Princeton won the final match in three games and was superb in a 15-13 triumph in the tie-breaker. Three players were named first team All-Ivy, one honor- able mention, and Princeton gained its second Ivy League Volleyball Title in four years. Three days later, still riding high on the Ivy Championship, the Tigers faced Rutgers in the final match of the season. Although displaying skill and power, Princeton lost an exciting and superbly played match to the tal- ented Scarlet Knights. However, the match proved that Princeton can now play head-to-head with premier teams in the East. Considering the impressive play of the team the last three weeks of the season and the fact that only one player will be lost to graduation, the outlook for the 1980 squad is very bright. 171 WOMEN ' S CROSS COUNTRY With the front running of Lynn Jen- nings, a group of agreeable freshmen recruits and the hard work of every- one else, the 1979 Women ' s Cross- country Team proved that their na- tional ranking from 1978 was not a case of beginners ' luck. Behind the mature coaching of Peter Farrell, Lynn Jennings went undefeated until the Nationals, convincingly beating former world record holder and two time AIAW champion, Kathy Mills, to win the Easterns in 16:55 over West- chester State ' s killer 5000 course. The season opened with a clear one-point victory over Auburn that saw surprisingly strong performances by freshman Kim Ginder and senior Jean Kerr. At the large Rutgers In- vitational, without Lynn Jennings, the team ' s depth of talent was demonstra- ted by Eve Thompson, Debbie Schulte, Jeanne Hoenicke, Becky 172 Goldburg and Nina Zollo as Princeton placed third behind Florida State and Maryland. In the J.V. race, freshman Elaine McClarnand finished second overall pacing Princeton to victory. By the championship half of the season the orange tide could not be crushed. At the ever intense Harvard- Yale-Princeton meet, the Tigers again brought home (or almost) the in- famous winged lady trophy. Unfor- tunately, captain Jeanne Hoenicke further injured a hip condition and was lost for the season. Nina Zollo, however, came through to more than fill her shoes, finishing in 7th place. On November 9, the team con- vincingly won the Ivy title. Eleven per- sonal bests for the Princeton women contributed to the 40-75-92 trouncing of the nearest competitors, Harvard and Yale. At the Eastern Champion- ships, a strong performance from Eve .Thompson helped qualify a tired and injury-plagued team for the Nationals where Princeton ' s season culminated in a sweaty 12th place finish. Despite Florida State ' s heat and a poorly run meet, Lynn finished third and con- sistent senior, Becky Goldburg im- proved again, topping off her Prince- ton career with a flourish — 5th woman for Princeton and 110th in the overall team scoring. Many thanks to: the super sophs, Lynn, Debbie, Nina, Eve, and Nancy; the training room crowd Jeanne, Barb, Kelly, Sue and Elaine; sprinter and bobbsey twin Chris, plus better- half Midget MJ; cheerful frosh, Kim, Christiane and KC; Princeton ' s annual anemic Mary; survivors and roomies JK, JH, and BG; and especially, Pooh Bear Coach, Peter. -.•i CROSS COUNTRY (8-0) Montclair St., Queens, Cornell, Penn, Auburn W6-0 Rutgers Invitational 3rd Temple Invitational 1st NJ State Champs. 3rd Harvard, Yale W8-0 EAIAW Champs. 3rd Ivy Championships 1st AIAIW Championships 12th 173 CROSS COUNTRY The Princeton Men ' s Cross Country team, riding on the wake of four straight Ivy Championships, had a somewhat disappointing season. The Penn meet was fairly typical. Arriving along with an undefeated Penn squad was a steady downpour of rain, turn- ing the Princeton course to mud and reducing the crowd to a handful of diehards. Penn placed five men be- hind Princeton freshman Dave Olds, the individual winner, and trounced the Tigers 20-38. It was Princeton ' s third straight losing effort in what would come to seem an endless sea- son. They finally managed a 6-7 sea- son — their first losing season in memory and worse, finished sixth in the Heptagonal championships they had won the four previous years. The result was unexpected, to say the least. Princeton had winning tradi- tion on their side, the most recent episode being an incredible Heps (Ivy League and Army and Navy) upset victory the year before. And they had returned the top three from that team — juniors Dan Challener and Dan Hei- merdinger and co-captain Royce Flip- pin, all of them All-Ivy selections. Co- captain Steve O ' Connel was hoping to rediscover his own All-Ivy form of sophomore year, two years ago. Sophomore Brad Rowe, twice Prince- ton ' s top finisher as a freshman the year before, was joined by classmate Barney Costello, and a host of talent- ed freshmen. A successful season needed a foregone conclusion. But bad luck hit early. Flippen suf- fered a preseason injury which would eventually keep him from scoring throughout the season. The rest of the team had to open against always- strong Fairleigh Dickenson. The Princeton team could only scrape a third place finish in the four-way meet, losing to both FDU and St. John ' s. Sophomore Costello had the best day for the Tigers, running sixth. The next meet, against eastern power Bucknell and three other schools saw the emergence of Prince- ton ' s other bright light: freshman Dave Olds. Olds battled Bucknell ' s number one runner up until the last quarter mile, finishing second in an 174 excellent time. Dan Heimerdinger was the next Tiger into the chute in 15th place. But virtually everyone in be- tween wore Bucknell orange — and Princeton actually emerged with wins over St. Joe ' s, Lehigh and Temple to balance their crushing defeat. A week later it was Olds again in the mud against Pennsylvania, with Costello continuing a strong season in seventh place. Nevertheless, Princeton had been soundly beaten by a team which, on paper they could have beaten. It appeared in their fourth meet of the season that the Tigers might start to get it together. The Tigers lost to a very strong Manhattan team. The top five Princeton runners finished within twenty seconds of each other. Just as significant were the times, which were approaching competitive levels. Chal- lenger tied Olds for fourth, and ap- peared to be on the rise. Heimerdi- nger was seconds behind. Freshman Matt Farmer finished eighth an unex- pected boost, and O ' Connel was only eight seconds behind him. Then all faith was shattered on a Friday afternoon in Boston. In the tra- ditional HYP competition, Harvard left Princeton reeling from a 20-36 loss, sending their front runners out fast and never looking back. Again a freshman led the Tigers, but it was Farmer — Olds was not even in Princeton ' s top five. The final blow was a one-point loss to Yale, Prince- ton ' s first loss to the Bulldogs since 1967. The team entered into the Heps, the biggest meet of the season with high hopes of salvaging their season. They finished sixth, well behind winner Co- lumbia, the next day at Lehigh ' s Sau- con Valley Course. Olds ran a spar- kling fifth for Princeton, and Costello was 17th, clinching the team ' s Rose- ngarten award for his season-long performance. Despite the disappointments, the fu- ture still appears bright. Princeton loses several seniors — O ' Connel and Flippen, track captain Joe Swenson, George Maguire, Mark Nunberg and Billy Goodman. But returning, headed by captain elect Dan Challener, are practically all of this year ' s varsity. If horsepower can match spirit, that championship tradition should live again. Jm. I CROSS-COUNTRY Fairleigh Dickinson L 36-20 St. John ' s L 35-20 Seton Hall W 18-44 Lehigh W 21-34 Temple w 16-45 Bucknell L 45-19 St. Joseph ' s w 27-31 Pennsylvania L 38-20 Fordham W 15-50 Manhattan L 22-33 Marist W 15-45 Harvard W 27-32 Yale w 22-36 Heptagonals sixth NCAA District 2 fourteenth of 23 Zijr Mfl ' •  r 175 WOMEN ' S BASKETBALL The Princeton University Women ' s Basketball Team ended a frustrating season under new head coach, Diane Schumacher, with an uninspiring record of 8-20. Yet despite this in- auspicious season, the Tigers have gained much of the experience that is necessary for them to reassume their reputation as the strongest force in the Ivy League in the future. One of the factors that contributed greatly to the team ' s trying year was the loss of graduating senior, CB Tomasiewicz, the second all-time scoring leader among both men and women in Princeton ' s basketball history, who finished her 4-year career with a total of 1622 points. It was up to the re- maining Tigers to fulfill the scoring and rebounding responsibilities that suddenly appeared as awesome and nearly impossible tasks. It wasn ' t until the end of the season that the Tigers finally gelled as a team and began to play the kind of ball that they were evidently capable of throughout the year, achieving a series of unex- pected upsets and a culminating third-place victory in the Ivy Tourney. And it was in these impressive vic- tories that the victories that the future leaders of the Tiger squad emerged as strong hopes for the future. Leading the club in scoring, steals, and assists was Sophomore Ellen Tomasiewicz, CB ' s youngest sister, whose consistent performances in the final games acted as a catalyst to spark the rest of the Tigers to victory. Ellen, a two-time First Team Ivy League selection became the fourth all-time women ' s scoring leader in her 2-year career with a total of 686 points. Her quickness, speed and finesse enabled her to average 15.2 points per game and emerge as one of the future offensive threats on the team. Another significiant bright spot that can not be ignored was the strong rebounding contribution of re- turning Junior Judi Seldin. Although 5 ' 9 , Seldin was second in team re- bounding with a 5.1 ppg average and third in scoring with a 8.1 ppg aver- age. It was Seldin ' s strength under the boards and her ability to convert many chip shots into 2-point plays 176 : ' v -. -- - M that took pressure off the young 6 ' 22 Freshman center, Carol Puza. Puza, second only in scoring to Tomasiew- icz with a 12.5 ppg average, clearly demonstrated her leaping prowess by leading the team in blocked shots re- bounding with a 8.1 average. Puza ' s foreboding presence helped the Ti- gers establish a credible inside game and decreased the effectiveness of many opposing centers. In addition, it was the leadership ability of Senior Darcie Lebau and the strength of Meg vVinfield off the bench that accom- plished the monumental task of retain- ing harmony within the nucleus of the team and restoring the respect of the Tigers amongst the rest of the Ivy Leagues foes. Point-guard Darcie Lebau, the most experienced Tiger, started every game and captained the team with a sense of determination and fortitude throughout the year. It was Lebau ' s unselfish play and Winfield ' s spark that appeared as su- preme examples of success for the younger members of the Tiger squad to emulate. .._ ... It has often been said that a tough schedule can lower a player ' s morale and lead to the defeat of even the most talented of teams. Well, it was such a schedule that awaited the P.U. Women ' s BB Team in the 1979-80 season. The season opened up with a 116-43 loss to nationally rated Rut- gers, one of the present powers in the East. The Tigers then lost to both Amherst University and William and Mary in the George Washington Uni- versity Tournament in Virginia. Led in scoring by Sophomore Sue Zak, who was voted to the First Tourney team with a total of 35 for the two-game stint, it was apparent that the in- experience and youth of the Tigers would be little excuse for the lack of early-season successes. After a 68-54 loss to Fordham, the team first tasted victory by defeating a young Franklin and Marshall club by a score of 66-44 and Ivy League for Barnard by an overwhelming 68-31 margin. Led by Ellen Tomasiewicz in scoring, things began to take a turn for the better. After losing to Keane College by a 68- 60 score, the Tigers defeated a strong, well-disciplined Manhattan squad by a 60-56 margin. Again Tomasiewicz led the Team in scoring, followed by the strong rebounding performance of Carol Puza. However, the Tigers followed these strong performances with a four game drought, including a last-place finish in their Christmas Tourney. After suc- cessive tournament losses to Ohio State and Duke University, the team began to be battered with devastating injuries. It was after the loss to Mom- nouth by a score of 79-72 that Sue Zak, the leading scorer up to that point with a 14.7 ppg average was lost for the season with torn ligaments in her ankle — an injury she incurred during a practice session. Following another defeat to Monmouth College, the Tigers coalesced and gained an impressive 62-50 victory over Glass- boro State. But this win would be the only one for a while, as the com- petition in the First Division became too strong for Schumacher ' s in- experienced squad. Af ter successive losses to Seton Hall, Paterson, and Montclair State, the Tigers mustered together a respectable offensive game and gained their first victory among the Ivy League teams by defeating Cornell by a score of 63-26. Although they lacked depth, Princeton was led by a balanced scoring attack as sev- eral players gained double figures. 177 The Tigers then seemed to lose all momentum and heart as they ex- perienced defeats to Harvard, Dart- mouth, Penn and Brown. These loss- es and the serious blow dealt to the squad with the loss of Carol Puza for the Penn game due to ankle injuries, led to the poor seeding of Princeton in the Ivy Tournament at Yale. The team then lost to Lafayette by a close 88-72 margin, followed by another loss to nationally rated Villanova. The Tigers then went on to defeat Trenton State 75-58, led by Tomasiewicz in scoring with 22 and Judi Seldin in rebounding with 12. These 2 players continued to make their presence known as Tomasiewicz scored 20 and Seldin snagged a game-high 8 rebounds in the 71-53 loss to Yale. The Tigers, seeded 6th in the Ivy Tournament began to unite and pick up momentum. They defeated Penn in a close and exciting game, 55-54 sur- prising many fans and at times, even themselves. Princeton then lost to the 1980 Ivy Champions, Dartmouth, by a 63-47 margin. In the final game, the Tigers played what may well be com- sidered their best game of the season. With perfect execution and precision, they beat a strong Harvard squad by a score of 75-54 — a team that had beaten the Tigers by over 20 points 178 and Judi Seldin was the high reboun- der with 10. This victory earned a third place berth for the Tigers in the Ivy League, and Ellen Tomasiewicz was named to the All-Ivy Tourney Team for her second consecutive year. Thus, while struggling through what began as an extremely frustrating and disappointing season for first-year coach Diane Schumacher and the Ti- ger squad, the year ended on a vic- torious note. It is hoped that, with the nucleus of the team returning (the Tigers only lose Darcie Lebau and Meg Winfield) and the strong recruit- ing successes, the Princeton Univer- sity Women ' s Basketball Team will again become an imposing force in the Ivy League and will meet the chal- lenge that their difficult schedule offers. BASKETBALL (8-20) Rugers L 43-116 American U. L 56-63 William and Mary L 69-71 Fordham L 54-68 Franklin and Marshall w 66-44 Barnard w 68-31 Kean College L 60-68 Manhattan w 60-56 Ohio State L 5887 Duke L 61-66 Monmouth L 72-79 Wisconsin L 44-74 Glassboro State w 62-50 Seton Hall L 28-49 William Paterson L 59-80 Montclair State L 47-87 Cornell w 63-26 Harvard L 49-73 Dartmouth L 52-67 Penn L 49-98 Brown L 47-60 Lafayette L 72-88 Villanova L 61-70 Trenton State W 75-58 Yale L 53-71 Ive Championships Penn w 55-54 Dartmouth L 47-63 Harvard w 75-54 I WA 179 1 MEN ' S VARSITY BASKETBALL 180 The 1979-80 men ' s basketball team knew that they had a tough road ahead of them from the beginning of the season. The team was young, with captain John Rodgers being the lone senior. The Tigers also faced perhaps the toughest schedule ever for a Princeton hoops contingent, with big- time basketball names such as Mich- igan State, Duke, St. John ' s and Louisville included in their schedule, among others. It appeared for the first part of the season that the inexperienced Tiger five were going to live up to their advance billing. In the Lapchick Tour- nament in New York City in early De- cember the Tigers dropped two games — the first to Michigan State 60-46, and the second to Oral Roberts 70-62. In both contests the team was unable to play two consistent halves of basketball. Coach Pete Carril did a lot of shuffling with his line-up in both contests, as the Tigers seemed unable to find the right combination. Forward Randy Melville ' 81 and Cen- ter Rich Simkus ' 83, however, estab- Princeton ' s Two All-Ivy Selections lished themselves as the men to be relied upon for rebounding and scor- ing. The Tigers ' next contest, against the Blue Devils of Duke, seemed to completely confirm those pre-season expectations, as the tough Duke squad trounced the Tigers 81-45. The listless play carried over into their next contest, and Northeastern trounced the already bruised Tigers, 74-52. It was a game of records — the first time a Princeton team had lost their first four games since 1953, and the largest margin of defeat at home for the Tigers since a 1958 loss to Cornell. The Tigers surprised their next op- ponents, as they lost to eastern power Villanova by two points in the final seconds. Finally, in their sixth contest of the season, the Tigers executed a well- fought 53-43 win over Fordham. The squad continued their winning ways against Manhattan in the typical Princeton style, lulling the fans as well as Manhattan to sleep in a 41-28 de- fensive battle. Melville led the often- sive with 18 points. The streak of wins was not to continue however, as Princeton was out-classed on the first leg of their Christmas trip to Hawaii, bowing to the University of San Francisco by a 76-57 margin. And the team ' s trip to sunny Hawaii for the rainbow classic would prove to be no different, as the Tigers lost all three of their contests, to Louisville, Army, and Nevada-Reno. Only the Army contest was close, at 53-52. Princeton hoped to regain some winning form for the start of the Ivy League season, which was to start with a game against arch-rival Penn- sylvania. Although a vastly different team from last year ' s NCAA semi- finalist squad, the Quakers easily drubbed the Tigers, 58-42. The only bright spot in the game was the con- sistent hustle and rebounding of Christel. And things only got worse as Princeton followed up with a tough loss to St. John ' s 44-42, to lower their record to a dismal 2-11. Blatt and Simkus led the scoring against the Redmen. Again the Tigers refused to com- pletely die, as they rebounded to two wins in the friendly confines of the Ivy League, 65-57 over Yale and 62-45 over Brown. In the Yale contest Mills was the key offensive player, as he tossed in a personal high of 19 points. Melville followed with 17. After a listless 55-43 loss to Seton Hall, the Tigers Squeaked by St. Jo- seph ' s 56-53, as they prepared to move into the bulk of the Ivy sched- 182 ule. The preparations seemed more than adequate as the Tigers pounced on Cornell, 68-42, and crushed Co- lumbia, 77-50. The Tigers continued to gain mo- mentum as they defeated Rutgers 65- 63. The game was won on two foul shots in the last three seconds by Iron Man Dave Blott. The momen- tum carried into the following week- end as Princeton subdued Ivy foes Harvard (57-53) and Dartmouth (49- 28). The following weekend the surpris- ing Tigers, who seemed to be in the thick of the Ivy battle, had their hopes totally deflated with a 58-50 loss to Brown in Providence. However, the following night, as the Tigers were defeating Yale 61-57, Penn was upset by the upstart Brown squad. The see- saw Tigers were again in contention. Next weekend, the Tigers set the scene for a showdown with Penn, as they crushed Harvard 68-56 and then beat Dartmouth 34-28. Melville com- pletely dominated the Harvard contest with 26 points and eight rebounds. Both games saw tough work by the Princeton front line of Simkus, Christ- el and Melville. The scene was now set for the showdown. The Quakers were one game ahead of the Tigers, so that the contest was live or die for the Tigers (or so it seemed). And the Tigers were not to be denied, as they won in double overtime before an untypically vocal home crowd, by the score of 78-69. Foul shooting was the key in over- time, as Blatt and Knapp helped in connecting on 8 of 8 attempts from the line in OT. If Princeton only won its next two Ivy contests, there would have to be a play-off for the Ivy title. There was never a dull moment for the Tigers as they closed out the Ivy schedule with a weekend split. Cornell trounced the Tigers 67-47 and it ap- peared that the Penn playoff would be unnecessary. However, the Quakers blessed the Tigers with a loss to Co- lumbia. Both teams won their closing contests, the Tigers beating Columbia 57-47, and Penn beating Cornell. The Tigers ' Cinderella come-back season was not to end on a perfect note, however. Penn gained the Ivy bid to the NCAA playoffs, as they pulled out a 50-49 heartbreaker over the Tigers. Despite this tough loss, the Tigers have to be content with how they progressed over the season. Next season should prove very successful, as the young Princeton squad will have the experience of the roller- coaster 79-80 season. 184 — Head coach Pete Carril had two All-Ivy selections to work with this season: Second Team pick Dave Blatt, and First Team pick Randy Melville, both Juniors Blatt Manuevers towards the hoop Mills skies for two Christel puts up a short jumper over a Villanova defender Freshman Craig Robinson works inside as Rich Simkus looks on 185 1 1 VARSITY BASKETBALL (15-15; 11- 3 Ivies) H Poland Nat Team (ex) 62-68 A Lapchick Tourney Michigan State L 46-60 Oral Roberts L 62-70 A Duke L 45-81 . H Northeastern L 52-74 H Villanova L 55-57 A Fordham W 53-43 A Manhattan W 41-28 A San Francisco L 57-76 A Rainbow Classic - - Hawaii Louisville L 53-64 Army L 52-53 ; Nevado-Reno L 58-68 A Pennsylvania L 42-58 H St. John ' s L 42-44 H Yale W 65-57 H Brown W 62-45 A Seton Hall L 43-55 A St. Josephs W 56-53 H Columbia W 77-50 H Cornell W 68-42 H Rutgers W 65-63 A Harvard W 57-53 A Dartmouth W 49-28 A Brown L 50-58 A Yale W 61-57 H Dartmouth W 34-28 H Harvard W 68-56 H Penn W 78-69 (OT) A Cornell L 47-67 A Columbia W 57-47 A Penn L 49-50 Ivy League playoff game VARSITY B BASKETBALL (1 H Brandywine CC W 65-57 H Penn State W 62-55 H Lehigh W 43-41 A William L 64-70 H Lafayette W 58-44 H Mercer CCC L 48-56 H Delaware W 60-45 H Camden CC W 58-55 A Pennsylvania W 60-54 H Columbia W 65-54 H Montclair State W 69-62 H Middlesex CCC W 51-50 A Navy W 62-58 A Yale W 65-63 A Mercer CCC L 62-65 H Keystone CCC W 82-75 H Pennsylvania W 66-49 A Columbia W 61-55 186 4 WOMEN ' S VARSITY SQUASH VARSITY SQUASH (8-0) A Dartmouth W 6-1 A Williams W 7-0 A Harvard W 6-1 A Howe Cup 1 st place A Trinity W 7-0 A Pennsylvania W 7-0 H Yale W 7-0 H Brown W 7-0 s 188 The women ' s varsity squash team ended a season second to none in the history of women ' s squash at Princeton. Winning all of its seven team matches as well as capturing the Intercollegiate Team Championship — the Howe Cup — and only losing four individual matches the entire season, the team couldn ' t have asked for much more. Led by captain and number one player, Nancy Gengler, who has a beautiful playing style and exhibits great sportmanship, and coached by Betty Constable, six-time national squash champion in her day, the team members had many places to look for inspiration and advice. In fact, be- cause three players (Gengler, Kinney, and MaGuire) on the seven-woman squad rank in the top five inter- collegiately, the daily practice com- petition was almost as keen as the actual season match competition. The top four players (Gengler, Kin- ney, MaGuire, and Susan Foster) rep- resented Princeton in the National In- tercollegiate Individual Champion- ships held in Jadwin Gym. All four left the tournament with silver — Gengler for being runner-up in the finals, Kin- ney for Fourth place winner, MaGuire for winning the Feed-In consolation and Foster for winning the Second Round consolation. All and all it was simply a coach ' s dream of a season, and Mrs. Con- stable is counting on more good dreams to come. With four of the sev- en players graduating yet still leaving Kinney, MaGuire and Louise Ober be- hind, prospects look promising. October 15. A group of individ- uals make their way down to C- floor of Jadwin: the squash sea- son has begun. The sounds of human voices, bouncing balls and running feet quickly pervade the courts, yet all are drowned out by the empty gallery, which seems to shout a team cannot graduate four of its top six play- ers and still hope to win. With the difficult U. of Western Ontario match fast approaching, the squash team is still just a group of individuals despite strong efforts by the coach and the older members to instill real team spirit. The magic necessary to bring the players together comes sometime during the trip to Toronto, or possible at the Bay Street Racquets Club where we play evenly with some of the finest pros in the country. Or perhaps it comes with a very sweet 6-3 victory over Western Ontario. The team is now in high gear and setting its sights on the Har- vard match; however, the squad that arrives into Cambridge knows that the final result will be close. Unfortunately, the match is too close. With the teams tied at 4-4, Harvard takes the decid- ing match 15-13 in the fifth game, handing Princeton its first Men ' s Squash dual-match defeat in four years. Although very disappointed, the Varsity maintains its com- posure and sets its sights on the U. of Pennsylvania; the Yale team is simply a tune-up and is easily disposed of 7-2. Penn, however, has built their season around the Princeton-Penn dual match and we know that they will play well, especially in their own courts. Again the score is sud- denly 4-4, only Hunt Richardson, at position 9, down two games to none, stands between a victory and a loss. Under tremendous pressure, he narrowly wins the third game and gets a five-min- ute rest at the 1-2 break. When he returns, his play has jumped several levels and he easily de- feats his opponent in the next two games to give Princeton the match and a highly successful season. The future is Princeton ' s. With only Seniors Gary Fogler, Jason Fish, and Mary Prescott gradu- ating, next year ' s Varsity Squash Team will have both depth and experience, qualities that were instilled this season both on and off the court. If we did not bring home all the trophies this year, we certainly built a strong plat- form to put them on in the com- ing seasons. .. t MEN ' S VOLLEYBALL The men ' s Volleyball team contin- ued the Tiger tradition of greatness, finishing 7th in the East and second in the Ivies. The Tiger offense, engi- neered by Blenn Mr. Coach Nelson, was slower than in previous years, requiring that the Tigers rely more on individual performances. Captain Pe- ter Dunbar Van Cleve proved to be the key offensive weapon, utilizing hit- ting tactics as well as aggressive voc- al maneuvers. The Tigers also found that the hard hitting Charles Karch Morris could pound the ball past any block, and usually maim anyone who tried to get in his way. Freshman Bryan Galoot Wilson excelled in both hitting and blocking, and led the Tigers in galootizing. Scott Amo Willinbrock played opposite Bryan, and managed to block a few hits be- fore he injured his ankle. Peter Cliff Greenhill, who mastered the Maggo- tization technique, battled blockers with his antics, and showed that he is clearly one of the best middle backs in the nation. Rounding out the start- ing six is George Uri Boychuk, whose back threes helped him earn respect throughout the league. The Tigers were fortunate to have great depth, which helped them be successful in Tournament play. Neal Spazball Meropol led the team in T.D., with some awesome horn solos and song writing. Freshman Johnny Bad Hair Rodgers, besides pester- ing the pet galoot, proved that he can bump the ball with the very best, and was important to the Tigers ' back row play. Rik Special Dinners Parker provided consistent hitting and block- ing, as well as encouragement. Wil- liam Boutie Lucas led the team in LaCoste shirts, and, despite missing half of the season with mono, played great defense and hit consistently well. Marc Carpenter Nixon was the team treaurer, keeping track of every- one ' s money. He was voted Most Improved Player by his teammates, and was stellar in the Ivy Champion- ships. Miss Holly provided the team with moral support as well as choco- late chip cookies. WATER POLO f % In a slight two years since its foun- dation, the Princeton Water Polo Club has proven itself to be a great suc- cess. The foundation of a strong pro- gram picks up from the 1920 ' s, when Princeton last had a Water Polo team. Under the organization of Dan Per- elman ' 79, and Paul Macht, GS ' 79, the team enamored itself to various money making bodies such as the Athletic Department, the USG and the Alumni. The product of this effort was the flourishing program we have today. Not only is the team financially stable; it is also a Division II powerhouse. Behind the goaltending of Captain Pe- ter Lansbury, and the incredible depth of the team, championship after championship rolled in during the 1979 Fall season. After humoring Monmouth by taking second in the League championships, the Tigers got serious and ran roughshod over their opponents, capturing both the Mid- Atlantic Conference title, and (to wrap up the season), the Big One, the East- ern Championship. This success is essentially due to the fact that the team is deeper than a Faulkner novel. The team list reads like a Who ' s Who of Eastern Polo. Potential All-east selection Chuck Yort sacrificed all personal glory with his aggressive style of defense. Tim Koons and Brent Bilquist had a great- er selection of shots than the family doctor. Gerald Denning and Don McKee would always forgo a trip to Atlantic City for the better odds at the tournaments, To them, lucky seven meant six players and a goalie. Fresh- man Roger Romani was instrumental in calming down classmate Bill Ab- bott. Bob Rutsch was always around to lend a Hans, and so were Bob Heymann and Eric Hooper, to Boot. With his expert technique, Marshall Wallace taught the brand new Women ' s team the ins and outs of the sport. Obviously, the list is incomplete. Robbie King, Bob Brennan, Tom Eby, and Reese Thompson contributed im- measurably throughout the season. Perhaps the key to the team ' s suc- cess was the coaching of Paul Macht. Paul ' s expert guidance, discipline and Buddy Holly imitations inspired the team to victory. 193 WRESTLING WRESTLING (17-3-1) Montclair State East Stroudsburg Rider Lafayette Tourney Army Springfield Rutgers Lafayette Navy Kings Point U. Mass. T 19-19 W 23-13 W 27-16 1st place W W L W L W w 17-16 23-19 14-19 20-18 11-24 48-0 29-12 Glassboro W 45-6 Morgan State w 23-14 Lycoming w 22-15 Va. Commonwealth w 38-10 Yale w 22-14 Harvard w 25-13 Cornell w 20-16 Columbia L 12-23 Duke w 32-6 Penn w 46-0 Cortland State w 27-10 EIWAs 1 1th place 194 195 The 1979-1980 wrestling dual meet season was a very satisfying one. The Tiger team finished their dual meet season with a 15-1-3 record. Non-Ivy League losses came to Rutgers and the Naval Academy, while a loss to Columbia kept the grapplers from win- ning the Ivy League title. In addition, the team captured first place in the annual Lafayette Invitational, in which seven other top caliber teams in the east participated. The major dis- appointment came in the Eastern In- terscholastic Wrestling Association (EIWA) qualifying tournament for the NCAA ' s. In this tournament, Princeton finished in the bottom half of the 16 participating teams. The success of this year ' s season was due to the extremely hard work of every individual on the team. The freshmen on the team were a very talented group of athletes. Rusty Fiste, a freshman from Silver Springs, Maryland, finished his season with an overall varsity record of 18-4 at 118 lbs. He will certainly be one of the stars on the Tiger team next year. Other freshmen seeing varsity action this year were George Vergis, Bob Garthwaite, Scott Simpson and Paul Steliotes, and they too should be very promising contenders next year. Freshmen wrestlers on the B team this year who have varsity potential include Paul Oullette, Vic Ruterbush, Ludlow Clark, and Glenn Reinhart. Chester Peters, a freshman from Sud- bury, Massachusetts, suffered a shoulder injury this year, and was unable to contend for a varsity posi- tion. Glenn Ely was the only sophomore member of the team. He also saw varsity action and should help the team next year. The junior class con- stituted the majority of the wrestling team. Jim Fraivillig, Ned Pelger, and Henry Milligan were the most suc- cessful members of their class, all three finishing the season with im- pressive records, and placing in the EIWA tournament. Milligan (hwt.) was the only member of the team who qualified for the The returning mem- bers of this year ' s team are very moti- vated individuals, and a talented group of incoming freshman recruits will certainly help toward a winning season next year. 196 197 Karate The Shotokan Karate Club of Princeton University trains Tuesday and Friday from 4 P.M. to 5:30 in the fourth floor of Dillon Tower. It is asso- ciated with the Japan Karate Associ- ation of New Jersey, Chief Instructor Katsuya Kisaka. The Dojo is in Tren- ton, and University club members also have training privileges there. The campus instructor is Dr. Roscoe White, a second degree black belt. Student officers are Peter Chin, Jac- ques Duranceau, and John Hutchin- son. 198 Examinations are held at least twice a year, covering the three aspects of Karate: Basics, Sparring, and Kata. The belt system consists of Dan (pro- fessional) and Kyu (student) ranks. They are, starting with the advanced levels, the Dan ranks (black), 1 , 2, and 3 Kyu (brown), 4, 5, and 6 Kyu (green), and 7, 8, and 9 Kyu (white). A reasonably coordinated student who trains regularly will spend approxi- mately one year at each belt color, and can attain black belt in three or four years. The club participates in tourna- ments, but they are not emphasized, and student participation is according to individual interest. The most impor- tant tournament is the Mid-Atlantic Karate Championships, held in Sep- tember, which had six Princeton par- ticipants in 1979. Princeton did well at this tournament, collecting a first place in Collegiate division Kata and second place in Collegiate division sparring. The Princeton University Karate Club is a part of the Shin Karate In- stitute under the leadership of Master Shin, 7th degree black belt. Karate training aims for development of con- centration, reflexes, flexibility, endur- ance, and techniques involved in mar- tial arts fighting. Perhaps the most important qualities of a martial artist, however, are dedication and a sense of honor. When most Americans think of the martial arts, they imagine Bruce Lee figures destroying a flock of oppo- nents with amazing techniques. The Karate Club, however, cannot be set in this image. The club is composed of students with widely varying de- grees of athletic ability who study the martial arts to develop their minds, condition their bodies, and gain confidence in themselves. These con- cepts are what make karate very much an art and a philosophy as well as a competitive sport. The Karate Club practices five days a week, throughout the entire school year. The only membership require- ment is dedication. The main com- petition is in the spring and members compete in both individual and team tournaments. During the 1979 year the club was under the leadership of Mr. Dennis Eardley, 2nd degree black belt, Monica Bertagolli, president and 2nd degree black belt, John Small- wood, vice-president and senior red belt, and Randy Mamiaro, secretary- treasurer and senior red belt. WOMEN ' S SWIMMING For the first time since women ' s swimming was recognized as a varsity sport at Princeton in 1971, the team not only went undefeated in dual meets (which it had done in 1971-72) but also won both the Ivy champion- ship (which it had done in ' 77 and 79) and the Eastern (which it had done in ' 74 and 75). Much of the team ' s suc- cess in the 1980 ' s will depend on maintaining the depth necessary to win dual meets and to defend the Ivy and Eastern titles. Princeton crushed Rutgers 109-30 for its first win against the Scarlet Knights in six years. The 200 medley relay contingent of Beth Mauer, Char- lotte Tiedemann, Julie Clarke, and Nancy Conroy set a school record of 1:50:59 and thus qualified for the AIAW national championships. Indi- vidually Conroy established two school records in the 100 and 50 yard freestyle and Mauer broke the 50 yard back record in the lead-off leg of the relay. Princeton returned from rigorous Christmas holiday training in North Palm Beach, Florida to face the 1978- 79 Eastern champs — University of Pittsburgh. Princeton ' s 400 Yard med- ley relay of Beth Mauer, Charlotte Tiedemann, Donna Goldbloom, and Nancy Conroy set the pace of the meet as they established a new school record in a 4:01:51. The Ti- gers ' awesome depth was displayed as the versatile IM ' ers were led by standout Charlotte Tiedemann ' 82 to take a sweep in the 400 yard I.M., finishing second and third respective- ly were freshmen Karen Smyers and Pam Phillips. The 400 yard free relay contingent of freshmen Goldbloom, Heusner, Habernigg and Conroy ' 81 also set a new school record in a time of 3:37:35 as the Tigers defeated Pittsburgh 80-51. The team next de- feated Harvard 82-49. Probably the most exciting and emotional dual meet contested was against Penn State in early February. The Princeton team won 11 of 14 swimming events and records were established in two individual events (Conroy ' s 100 yard free and 50 yard 200 fj ' ree) and in the 200 yard free relay — i record which had existed since 1973. Princeton easily overwhelmed its re- naming opponents by defeating St. lohn ' s University 84-22; the Tigers oared past Yale 101-30, winning all )ut one event and capturing two div- ng events (Mary Lincer ' 83). In its last wo meets, Princeton again crushed Vest Chester 104-36, and Monmouth 10-30. Pri nceton ' s awesome depth showed Nearly in the championship meets: }47 points to second-place Brown ' s 163.5 in the Ivies, and 560 points to unnerup Pitt ' s 456 in the Easterns. s expected, sophomore Charlotte Hedemann won three breaststroke md two I.M. events in both meets as veil as assisting the winning medley elays to victory in record time. Also, ;o-captain Beth Mauer gained first )laces in two of the backstroke jvents in both meets as well as swim- ning on the winning medley relays. Dther outstanding performers in both neets were freestyler flyer Nancy Donroy ' 81, freestyler IMer Ann Ha- jernigg ' 83, and IMer Pam Phillips 83. In the Ivies, Princeton captured first places in all five relays and won the two medley relays and the 200 yard free relay, but narrowly missed wins in the 400 and 800 yard free relays at the Eastern championships. Records fell continually throughout the season, culminating in the AIAW championships in Las Vegas, Nevada. Top individual qualifier for the presti- gious national competition was Char- lotte Tiedemann. Also qualifying in in- dividual events were co-captain Beth Mauer (50, 100, and 200 yard back), Nancy Conroy (50 and 100 yard free) and freshman Ann Habernigg (200 free and 100 yard IM). These four individuals were joined by Pam Phil- lips and Ann Heusner as members of five strong Tiger relays. All six team- mates received All-American honors as Princeton finished 15th in a field of 80 Division I teams. The talented Charlotte Tiedemann propelled the Ti- gers as she earned 37 of the Tigers ' 70 points. Perhaps the most exciting achievements were Tiedemann ' s fourth place 200 yard breast and the 400 yard medley relay team of Beth Mauer, Nancy Conroy, Ann Habernigg and Tiedemann ' s eighth place finish — . s WOMEN ' S SWIMMING VARSITY SWIMMING (10-0) A Manhattanville W 99-32 H Rutgers W 109-30 A Pittsburgh W 80-51 A Harvard W 82-49 A Northwestern W 93-38 H Penn State W 84-56 H St. John ' s W 98-41 H Yale W 101-30 H Westchester W 104-36 H Monmouth W 110-3- H Ivy Championships 1st place A EAIAW Championships 1st place A AIAW Championships 15th place  in the final championship heat (3:56:11). Coach Jane Tyler ranks the Tigers ' 1979-80 season as one of the most impressive and exciting in women ' s swimming at Princeton Uni- versity. This year we will be losing two seniors to graduation: Beth Mauer, a top-ranked backstroke, IM, and fly swimmer who will be most difficult to replace and Tina Test, a versatile and talented swimmer who was the keyscorer in several events. The 1979- 80 Princeton women ' s record is definitely a season to remember. 201 ' . A A 202 ■. MEN ' S SWIMMING VARSITY SWIMMING (7-2; 7-1 EISL) H Columbia L 54-59 H Penn W 82-29 H Alabama L 42-71 A Brown W 69-44 H Dartmouth W 69-39 A Harvard W 65-48 H Navy W 68-44 H Yale W 80-30 A Cornell W 70-40 A EISL (Philadelphia, PA) 2nd place 203 204 205 FENCING How does a team replace one Ail- American, one All-East and two All-Ivy performers? That was the problem that faced the Princeton University Fencing Team this year. Last year Coach Stan Sieja ' s team had com- piled a 9-1 record and had captured the Eastern Intercollegiate Champion- ships, but the loss of four starters to graduation left many holes for Coach Sieja and Captain Dave Nocenti to fill. The team opened the season with a narrow 14-13 loss to Navy, despite six wins from senior Chuck Helms and junior John Berson. They then re- bounded to crush William Paterson College (16-11) and CCNY (18-9), aided by strong performances from seniors Gary Gruber and Tom Hutka. 206 Next the team traveled to Cornell to open the Ivy League season, and again dropped a close 14-13 match. Although this loss dropped the team ' s record to 2-2, it seemed to help pull the fencers together. Soph- omores Dan Baxter and Robert Pav- lovich led the team to victories over Harvard (15-12) and Rutgers (15-12), and the team followed this with a 18-9 drubbing of Army. Senior Glenn Gwozdz turned in a strong perform- ance as the fencers knocked off MIT, and the winning streak was extended to five as Yale fell, 17-10, with junior Dave Mebane leading the way. The Tigers ' next meet was probably the most important of the year. They faced Penn, who had won the Ivy League title the past four years. For the first time since 1975 the Tigers defeated Penn, 16-11, and they then needed only a win against Columbia to clinch a tie for the Ivy League title. They did this with ease the next week- end, defeating Columbia 18-9 as sophomore Paul Schmidt was unde- feated for the day. The Tigers closed out the dual meet season with their eighth straight victory, a 19-8 crush- ing of NYU, upping their season record to 10-2. In that meet senior Larry Pastor went 3-0, extending his winning streak to a phenomenal 18 consecutive bouts. The Tigers had high hopes going into the Eastern Inter-collegiate Championships, but simply could not put it all together and they finished fourth. The best performance at the Easterns was turned in by Paul Schmidt, who took third place in the foil competition. The team then sent their three best fencers, senior Larry Pastor and Chuck Helms and junior John Berson, to the NCAA Champion- ships. All three fenced very well as the Tigers ended up seventh in the nation. The Tiger foil squad dominated the rest of the league this year, compiling a 76-32 record, including 31 of their last 36 bouts. Thus it was no surprise that the three top men, weapon leader Larry Pastor and sophomores Paul Schmidt and Robert Pavlovich, were named to the All-Ivy squad. The team was so strong this year that there is little doubt that the fourth and fifth men, senior Gary Gruber and junior Dave Mebane, could have started on any other team in the league. Pastor ' s final record was 25-4, the best on the team and the best of any Princeton fencer in several years. Both he and Schmidt were named to the All-East squad as well. The sabre and epee squads both had up and down seasons. Epee, led by weapon leader Chuck Helms, sen- ior Glenn Gwozdz, sophomore Dan Baxter, and freshman Brian Lee, en- ded up with a 61-47 overall record. Helms was named to the All-Ivy squad for the third straight year, capping off a great Princeton career. He was a three year starter, and besides his two All-Ivy mentions were All-East and Ail- American his junior year. His career Ivy record was 31-13, the best on the team. Gwozdz was also a three year starter, and next year ' s team will have a hard time trying to replace these two fine fencers. The sabre team finished the season with a respectable 57-51 record. Cap- tain Dave Nocenti and junior John Berson led the way, combining for 39 of those wins, and Berson was named to the All-East squad. The third spot was shared by weapon leader Tom Hutka, junior Ron Lisan and freshman Seth Hamot. Nocenti also finishes off a fine career, a four year starter who was All-Ivy his sophomore year and All-East his junior year. He leaves Princeton having a compiled a 61-31 overall record. The graduation of the Class of 1980 marks the end of one of the finest eras in Princeton Fencing history. The seniors, Helms and Gwozdz in epee, Pastor and Gruber in foil, and Nocenti and Hutka in sabre, have seen the team win one Ivy League title, win one Easterns Championship, and four times finish in the top ten in the na- tion. Together they compiled one Ail- American, three All-East, and seven All-Ivy awards. The team ' s record this year was 10-2 (4-1 Ivies). 207 ICE HOCKEY (13-4) Penn W 15-2 Wesleyan W 7-0 U. of Connecticut W 6-0 Yale W 6-0 Northeastern W 4-2 Boston State L 4-3 Harvard W 5-0 Middlebury W 4-3 Vermont W 3-2 Dartmouth W 7-3 Cornell L 6-2 Penn W 10-1 Colgate w 2-0 Brown w 1-0 Providence L 10-1 Dartmouth w 5-3 Ivy Championships Cornell L 6-2 t M WOMEN ' S HOCKEY 208 t+JL. 209 210 J MEN ' S HOCKEY The Princeton skaters entered the 79-80 season with a fairly young team, and with high hopes of improving on previous seasons ' accomplishments. Despite a seemingly unimpressive 11- 15 finish the squad did indeed vastly improve. The Tigers started off the season rather impressively with a 10-3 blow- out over Holy Cross. Soph Roy Casey had a hat trick, while freshman Ron Dennis was brilliant in his first Ivy start. The Holy Cross rout was fol- lowed by a 4-2 triumph over Dart- mouth in Hanover. Sophomore co- captain Drew Forbes gained the vic- tory for the Tigers with two third period goals. The Tigers increased their winning streak to three games as they nipped Yale in overtime. Dennis continued to be impressive in the net, as he turned aside 34 Bulldog shots. Junior Dave Tweedy provided the winning margin with a 30 foot slap-shot early in the overtime period. The winning streak was to end in the next contest, how- ever, as the Black Bears of Maine subdued the Tigers 4-2. The young squad gained valuable experience in the loss, as they went up against not only a hard-checking Maine contin- gent, but also had to contend with a very vocal crowd. Showing their strength under pres- sure the skaters tallied a 3-2 defeat over Merrimack, the game winner coming in the final period by Grant Hansen, on a perfect give-and-go with Casey. Tweedy and Soph Kevin Be- han added the other two goals for Princeton. However, the dogs had the better of the cats in the next two contests, as the Huskies of North- eastern and the Terriers of Boston University both handed the Tigers de- feats. Another loss followed those, this one to Boston College, as the Tigers traditional third period heroics fell short in a 7-5 defeat. The squad rebounded against Brown with a 3-2 victory, raising their Ivy record to 3-0. The remainder of Christmas break would not prove to be too joyous for the Tigers as they dropped the next four contests. In the Blue Tournament in Durham, N.H., the Tigers bowed to host New Hampshire, and followed up with a 3-0 loss to Bowdoin. The skaters followed up with a not too pleasant trek through Michigan, losing 6-1 and 4-1 to Mich- igan State and Michigan University. Over the break, Casey established himself as the leading scorer with sev- en goals, and Dennis continued his excellent net play. The losing streak was ended against Harvard as the Tigers won 5- 3. Dennis had an amazing 42 saves in the contest. Tweedy, Forbes and Ken Koenig scored in quick succession in the first period to set the tone of the game. Sean Sherman and Forbes added the final two tallies. The break from losing would prove to be short lived. It was followed by three losses (5-3 to Cornell, 4-3 Vermont, and 6-2 to RPI) The Tigers still refused to fold though, as they came up with a sec- ond win over Brown. This time by a 4- 2 margin. The game saw goals by Twee dy, Dave Clark, Jim Farrell, and Keith Benker. A disappointing 5-1 loss to Harvard and a 7-4 defeat at the hands of Dartmouth followed, despite the fact that the Green had previously been defeated by the Tigers. Another streak of three losses was completed with a 6-5 loss to Providence. The Tigers followed with a two game split to New York foes St. Law- rence and Clarkson. The fighting Saints fell easy victim 6-3, while Clark- son came from behind to win 6-4. One impressive sign that emerged in these games was that the Tiger skaters played well in the first period, some- thing that had previously eluded them. Two Ivy wins followed over Yale and Cornell, by identical 7-6 scores. Perhaps the sweetest victory was to follow, as the Tigers surprised play-off bound Colgate by a rousing 6-1 mar- gin. This win seemed to indicate that the young Princeton squad will be fired up and ready to improve on a satisfying 79-80 season, with a year of experience under their belts. The young squad was ably lead all season long by co-captain and lone senior Pete DeLorey. His scrapy de- fensive play was an inspiration to all who followed the team. Defenseman Todd Hewitt was named a second team all-Ivy selection, while Ron Den- nis was named co-Ivy League rookie of the year. Chuck Huggins, Dave Clark, and Jim Matthews, as well as co-captain Forbes, Tweedy, Koening, Hansen, Farrell, and Sherman all con- tributed heavily to the success of this year ' s team, and all return next year. Head Coach Jim Higgins was joined this year by Dartmouth graduate Brian McCloskey, who as assistant coach played not a little role in Princeton ' s success. It should be noted that both coaches did an outstanding job this year, and both deserve a great deal of credit. Doctor Don Christie and trainer Bobby Sinkler, integral parts of Princeton ' s team, again performed admirably. VARSITY HOCKEY (17-15) Holy Cross W 10-3 Dartmouth W 4-2 Yale W 4-3 (OT) Maine L 2-4 Merrimack W 3-2 Northeastern L 2-3 (OT) Boston University L 3-6 Boston College L 5-7 Brown W 3-2 Blue Tourney at UNH U of New Hampshire L 1-6 Bowdoin L 0-3 Michigan State L 1-6 Michigan L 1-4 Harvard W 5-3 Cornell L 3-5 Vermont L 3-4 RPI L 2-6 Holland Olympic (EX) L 5-6 Brown W 4-2 Harvard L 1-5 Dartmouth L 4-7 Providence L 5-6 St. Lawrence W 6-3 Clarkson L 4-6 Yale W 7-6 Cornell W 7-4 Colgate w 6-1 i 212 WOMENS ' FENCING 214 EQUESTRIAN CLUB When interest in polo and the Cav- alry declined in the early decades of this century, horses left the Princeton Armory and campus. Recently, how- ever, the equines have returned under the auspices of the Equestrian Club of Princeton University (E.C.P.U.). The Equestrian Club was reborn six years ago as a co-educational, club- varsity sport. While instruction in clas- sical equitation has always been a prime focus of Club activities, infor- mation on all aspects of horse- manship and equine care are readily available to members individually or through Club-sponsored field trips. In the past, these have included day- trips to Belmont Racetrack and the National Horse Show, in addition to several weeks of International Com- petition and touring on horseback in Europe. The 1979-80 season has seen many changes and improvements in E.C.P.U. programs. The officers over- seeing Club developments are presently as follows: Elizabeth Gores, ' 81, President; Jacqueline Hegedus, ' 81, Secretary; Barbara Moore, ' 81, Treasurer; Kathy Kaye, ' 80, Public Re- lations; and Tanya Furman, ' 82, Team Coach. Through several donations to the University, the Club has accepted the pleasures and responsibilities of owning its own mounts. In past years, members have rented horses for in- struction at stables in the area. Mem- bers now have much greater freedom and opportunity to learn, and to invite qualified guest instructors from time to time. The Club ' s advisor, Ms. Pat Rhinesmith, currently teaches part of the weekly lessons, while competent students also volunteer their time. Club members ' abilities span a broad spectrum, from the beginner who takes his first lessons, to the advanced rider fresh off the A -rated show circuit. For riders of all abilities, lessons stress the training of the horse. Always an ongoing project, this training is for many the most reward- ing aspect of horsemanship. In addition to Club activities, E.C.P.U. is involved in the Inter- collegiate Horse Show Association, which offers competition at all riding levels. Between ten and twelve horse shows are held every year, with the hosting school providing all mounts for competitions. In our Region there are over twenty schools that we ride against regularly. Princeton has hos- ted a show annually for the last three years, and hopes to continue this tra- dition. At the conclusion of each spring season, Regional and National competitions are held, with those ri- ders who accumulate sufficient points through victories in their divisions representing their schools against the Intercollegiate best from across the country. Every year since the found- ing of the Club, we have sent at least one rider to Regional competition. The Princeton-Yale football game brought E.C.P.U. to the Princeton campus for the first time. Yet, to a few dozen devoted equestrians, the horse world is very much alive. Hopes are high that at some time in the future, horses will once again be stabled on campus, to alleviate the burdens of travel and finance which plague the Club. If improvements continue at the present rate, the enthusiasm of E.C.P.U. will carry it both forward, and back into Princeton ' s past. 215 !.■BASEBALL As has come to be traditional, the baseball team faced competition in the early season not only from other schools, but also from Mother Nature. The Tigers played well on the south- ern swing, demolishing Hampden- Sydney 10-0 in their opener. Mark Lockenmeyer threw a 1 -hitter in that contest. Lockenmeyer, John Corelli Rod Shepard, Kelly Martin and Bill Miller provided the offensive punch. Freshman Paul Steinhauser, started off his Princeton career on the right foot with a home-run. The Tigers faced tough pitching against Rich- mond and lost 4-1 , but rebounded to beat William and Mary 6-4 on the pitching of freshman Steve Kordish, with relief help from Chris Pez Cas- cia. Clockwise from above: Kelly Martin makes the put-out at first as Rod Shepard looks on; Paul Steinhauser awaits a pitch; Steve Kordish prepares to throw smoke as third baseman Don Parker eyes the plate; John Corelli talks strategy to Coach Len Rivers. 216 Lockenmeyer picked up his second win of the year with a 6-hit, 10 stri- keout effort over Rutgers, by a 5-3 margin. Steinhauser was tough again at the plate, going 3 for 4 on the day. The Tigers fell victims to Montclair State in their home opener, however, 2-1 . Bob Holly picked up the loss de- spite pitching brilliantly, as the Tigers were not able to muster any offense. The following weekend, the squad rebounded to hold off highly ranked Navy, 1-0, but lost in the nightcap, 2- 0. Lockenmeyer threw a two-hitter in the first contest, while Kordish took the tough loss in the second. A 3-0 victory over Wagner followed, with Bob Holly the recipient. Steinhauser had two R.B.I. ' s. The Tigers ' lack of offense caught up with them, however, as they dropped contests to Yale and Brown, 4-2 and 3-2 respectively. The offen- sive punch returned to the team dra- matically as the Tigers demolished Brown (10-1) and destroyed Manhat- tan (16-0). Everyone hit in these two contests, with Ted Frangos and outfielder Tom Michel leading the way. Although the offense continued to produce, the Tigers once more dropped two of three Ivy contests, losing 6-5 to Harvard and 7-6 to Dart- mouth, before coming back to defeat the Big Green 12-8. Mike Judy got the win in relief. In their next contest the Tigers beat perenially tough Temple, 5-4, on a sixth inning three-run homer by Ted Frangos. Lockenmeyer again picked up the win. The Tiger batter followed with two more wins, a 5-3 victory by Holly over Long Island University, and a 5-2 win over Columbia. Two close losses to Pennsylvania, 6-5 and 5-4, seemed to take the fight out of the Tigers, as they went on to lose three more contests; 5-4 to Villa- nova, 7-6 to Cornell, and 6-4 to Army, 217 BASEBALL (16-13) Hampden-Sydney W 10-0 Richmond L 4-1 William and Mary W 6-4 Rutgers W 5-3 Montclair State L 2-1 Navy W 1-0 Navy L 2-0 Wagner W 3-0 Yale L 4-2 Brown L 3-2 Manhattan W 16-0 Harvard L 6-5 Dartmouth L 7-6 Dartmouth W 12-8 Temple W 5-4 Long Island Univ. W 5-3 Columbia W 5-2 Penn L 6-5 Penn L 5-4 Villanova L 5-4 Cornell L 7-6 Army L 6-4 Army W 6-2 Fairleigh Dickenson W 12-6 Fordham W 15-3 Lafayette W 13-5 St. John ' s L 7-3 St. John ' s W 5-4 to complete a five game slide. The Tigers seemed determined to erase all possibilities of a season such as last year ' s 8-22 effort, however, as they went on to win five of their last six games. A 6-2 win over Army was fol- lowed by a 12-6 trouncing of Fairleigh Dickinson. The Tigers cracked four home runs, led by Rod Shepard ' s two round-trippers (one a grand-slam). Kelly Martin and Lockenmeyer had the other two homers. Shortstop Tom Hagerstrom had another good all- around day, with his hustling style of play. Princeton trounced their next two opponents, Fordham (15-3) and La- fayette (13-5). Mark Cascia, Frangos, Lockenmeyer, Lrelli, Shepard, and Miller were the big offensive guns. The Tigers closed out the season with a split against St. Johns, losing the opener 7-3 before coming back to close the season on a winning note, 5-4. Clockwise from above: Kelly Martin out by a hair; Tom Michel snags a short fly; Steve Kordish bears down on a Columbia batter; Ted Frangos muscles a hit; Steinhauser turns the double play. Hi ,-.... j 219 LACROSSE The Princeton Lacrosse Squad en- tered the 1980 season with high hopes and promptly lost their opening contest to Baltimore, 8-6. The squad rebounded however to rout a pow- erful Duke squad, 15-9, in the rain and snow. Bob Thomas ' 80 had an outstanding 6 goals, 1 assist effort, while Co-captain Dave Huebeck added three goals. The offense con- tinued to roll against Franklin and Marshall as the Tigers built up a 9-1 third quarter lead and cruised to an easy 14-7 victory. Huebeck drilled in four more goals, while George Brush ' 81 and Carl Nissen ' 80 each had a hat-trick. The offensive tirade was to stop against highly-ranked Johns Hopkins. The Tigers played well, however, and entered the final stanza down 4-2, mainly on the efforts of Pete Cordrey in goal. This effort was not enough though, as the tough Hopkins defense stymied the Princeton attack. Prince- ton then fell to the 9th ranked Navy 9- 6 despite being tied at the half 4-4. The only bright spot was Co-captain Boota Debutt ' s two goals. Offense was anything but absent in the Ivy opener, as the Tigers deci- mated a hapless Yale squad, 21-6. Brush and Huebeck had four goals apiece, Thomas, Lacy Rice, Paul Hol- lis, and Kelly Doherty all had a pair of goals in the rout. Rip Wilson and Fran Smyth played well in holding the Elis to six goals. The winning ways were to be short lived however, as the Tigers promptly dropped an Ivy contest to Brown, 16- 10. Huebeck had a goal and five as- sists, as he moved in on the all-time Princeton scoring mark. However, the following win, 7-6 over 7th ranked Harvard, almost in itself made the Ti- gers ' season. Thomas led the offense with two goals and two assists. Nissen scored the winning goal with 1:12 left in the game. The Tigers followed the dramatic Harvard victory with two lackluster losses, 16-11 to Rutgers and 11-3 to Cornell. However, the Tigers evened their record with a defense 7-2 victory over Dartmouth. Nissen, Gerry Ronon and Steve Delligatti led the offense. The Dartmouth victory set the stage for the Tigers ' final contest, against Delaware. The Tigers were up to the occasion as they crushed the Blue Hens 19-6. 220 LACROSSE (7-6) Baltimore L 6-8 Duke W 15-9 Franklin Marshall W 14-7 Johns Hopkins L 4-8 Navy L 6-9 Yale W 21-6 Brown L 10-16 Penn W 13-8 Harvard W 9-8 Rutgers L 11-16 Cornell L 3-11 Dartmouth W 7-2 Delaware W 19-9 221 WOMEN ' S LACROSSE The women ' s Lacrosse team en- joyed a good 1980 season, as they compiled an overall 7-4-1 record. The season was not without its anxious moments. The campaign started on a very bad note, as the Laxwomen trav- elled to Harvard and were soundly trounced by an unexpectedly tough Crimson squad, 11-3. The Tigers came back however to do some trouncing of their own, with a 14-5 thrashing of Trenton State. Freshman Natalie Bocock led all scorers with five goals; Sue Wilkins ' 82 had four as did classmate Ann Evaul; and Wiz Lip- pincott ' 82 had two goals. Captain Sissy Wallace and Goalie Sue Kohler also had five performances. The Tigers continued to rack up the goals against Glassboro, as they eas- ily won, 12-3. Evaul had five goals, while Wilkins had three. Bocock added two goals and three assists. The squad continued its winning ways against Dartmouth, with an 8-6 win, which raised their record to 3-1. Maryland ended any hopes of a prolonged winning streak by soundly defeating the Tigers, 11-1. However, the Laxwomen again came back strong after their loss, this time dis- posing of Cornell 12-4. Their next contest was certainly not onesided, as the squad lost a heart-breaker to Yale, 7-6. As seemed to be their style, the Laxwomen came back strong to tie a powerful Penn squad, 5-5. The Quak- ers had entered the game undefeated. Two strong victories over Brown (7-2) and Lehigh (8-4) followed. The team lost their final regular season contest, however, 11-7. The Tigers entered the Nationals (held on Finney Field) unseeded, yet they came away with a surprising 5th place finish. The team lost only their first match, 10-4 to New Hampshire, then went on to beat Temple. The Tigers then faced Harvard, who had soundly defeated them early in the season. Princeton proved that they had indeed improved a great deal since then, as they surprised the Crimson team with a 7-6 victory. Freshman Kris Brower gave the Tigers the win with a goal with under a min- ute remaining to break a 6-6 dead- lock. The squad beat William and Mary to secure their 5th place finish, and cap off a very successful season. • ' ' WOMEN ' S LACROSSE (7-4-1) Harvard L 3-11 Trenton State W 14-5 Glassboro W 12-3 Dartmouth W 8-6 Maryland L 1-11 Cornell W 12-4 Yale L 6-7 Rutgers W 8-5 Penn T 5-5 Brown W 7-2 Lehigh W 8-4 Lafayette L 7-11 223 lmJ 224 WOMEN ' S GOLF 225 «- ' .- - it •;•« MEN ' S GOLF The Golf Team capped a successful 1980 season with an appearance at the NCAA Championships in Colum- bus, Ohio. Although the squad had faltered early in the season by losing three close matches, it gathered itself for a strong finish. At Cornell, Prince- ton outclassed the rest of the field in the Ivy League Championships. Two weeks later a fine individual perform- ance by sophomore Steve Loughran helped the Tigers to a second place finish in the Eastern Intercollegiate. In the coming years we will remem- ber the 1980 golf campaign not by the scores shot but by the jovial atmo- sphere which persisted at all of the team ' s events. It was truly the best of times, and the nucleus of fine players which make this year ' s team a winner on and off the course will stay on to tee it up in the coming years. : f. 226 VARSITY GOLF (13 ) Seton Hall W 387-513 Hofstra W 387-472 Columbia W 399-419 Perm L 399-389 Harvard W 401-400 Yale L 401-400 Villanova W 402-429 St. John ' s W 402-410 Lehigh L 402-401 William Mary W 405-404 Navy W 415-406 Salisbury State w 405-412 Americana w 405-423 Rutgers w 382-390 F.D.U. w 382-390 Army w 371-387 Lafayette w 371-410 227 CREW j The Varsity Heavyweight boat in- cluded: Sam Whalen, Greg Love, Doug McCaig, Ridgely Johnson, Tom Nadbielny, Dan Roock, Bill Sommer, Tony Horvat, and Tom Blum. The Ti- ger heavies finished with a fine 6-2 season, capped by a sixth place showing at the 35th Annual Eastern Sprints. Dave Mastrianni was elected captain for next year. 228 229 The Varsity Lightweight boat includ- ed: Bill Doyle, Chris Gaylord, Paul Koontz, Wilson Ervin, Sam Speers, Steve Morss, Tom Pounds, Bob Van Cleve, and Fergy Anderson. The Lightweight squad finished a strong third overall in the Eastern Sprints, to top off a strong 7-3 overall season record. 230 ■- • -__ ft fS .t s 231 MMi. WOMEN ' S TRACK We have finally arrived! The hard work and determination of those who sought to build the Princeton women ' s track program has finally paid off. This winter the women ' s track team fielded a full squad. Not only were we able to cover each event, the team is also young. Joining the six seniors were thirteen soph- omores and 18 freshmen. Track strategy has characteristically been to use indoor season as a prep- aration for outdoor season. As Coach Farrell often says, Real track is out- doors. Keeping in line with this phi- losophy, Princeton ' s women ' s track team sought to consolidate and strengthen its talent, while focusing its attention on the outdoor season. We did, however, plan our season around the H-Y-P meet. Important points were won for women ' s track by Stephanie Reves and Monica Thompson in the shot put. Thompson achieved school records each time she threw. Her record now stands at 397 . As usual the distance runners were strong in their indoor campaign. Sen- ior Jean Kerr set the tone for an ex- cellent season with her personal best of 4:54.3 in the 1500 against Rutgers. Becky Goldberg lowered her two mile time to 10:57. Rounding out the team in the long races were freshmen Carla Bressler, Kim Ginder, Mary Jane Briody and Mary Rees. Bressler made exceptional progress during the win- ter, reducing her high school best time from 11:44 to 11:03. In the middle distances Senior Jeanne Heonicke was joined by fresh- men Christianne Saada and Sue O ' Connell, and sophomores Eve Thompson, Debbie Schulte, Barbara Quackenbos and Nancy Rappaport. Although hindered by injuries the half milers managed more than a respect- able season. Hoenicke ran a season ' s best of 2:18. Saada managed a 2:22 despite her sprained ankle. Tendonitis did not stop Thompson or Qua- ckenbos as they eaked out excellent times of 2:14 and 2:19 respectively. O ' Connell ran superbly against Har- vard and Yale recording a 2:17.9 for 3rd place. Debbie Schulte matched her personal best running a 4:49.0 in the mile at AIAW Eastern Champion- ships. Schulte also ran on the two mile relay with O ' Connell, Qua- ckenbos and Thompson which placed WOMEN ' S TRACK OUTDOOR (5-0) Cornell W 94-52 HYP W 78-47 Ivy Championsh ps First Place EAIAW at Pitt Fifteenth N.J. AIAW Second INDOOR (2-0) Harvard W 72 ' 2 -45 , 2 Yale W 72V 2 -16 ■« •!+ fii n il ii ■m i 6th at Easterns. Rappaport finished a strong indoor season with a personal best of 2:30. Except for senior veteran Beth Van Cleve all the faces in the hurdles were new. Van Cleve was accompanied by freshmen Sally Andersen, Chris Stell- ing and Carol Wingard. Andersen had an excellent indoor season, winning the hurdles against Harvard and Yale, and at the Heptagonal invitational. With a season ' s best of 8.3 seconds, Andersen progressed as far as the semi-finals at the Eastern Champion- ships. Van Cleve, Stelling and Wing- ard added long needed depth in the hurdles. Freshmen Betty Newsam, Dawn Booth, sophomore Julie Forrestal along with Senior Jill Pilgrim com- prised the quarter mile team. All had a good indoor season, recording times of 57.9, 59.4, 59.9, and 57.5 respec- tively. The mile relay performed best at the Eastern Championships run- ning a time of 3:52.0 in the finals. (At Easterns Stelling replaced Pilgrim.) The jumping events were totally dominated by youngsters. In the high jump Freshman Sally Andersen and Sophomore Kathy Wydner were Princeton ' s representatives. Andersen achieved a season ' s best of 5 ' while Wydner jumped 4 ' 10 . In the long jump Wydner leaped 16.1 feet and freshman Newsam gained a school record of 17.2 feet. In all, seven school records were broken during Princeton women ' s in- door track season. Thompson tossed the shot 2.1 feet further than the old record of 39 ' 7 . Bressler lowered the 3000m record from 10:21 to 10:18. Schulte ' s 1500 m time of 4:34.8 was a marked improvement over the old mark of 4:41. Andersen ' s time of 8.3 at Easterns shattered the old 60m hurdle record of 9.9. In the 400 m Pilgrim reduced her record to 57.5. Newsam ' s leap of 17.2 feet out- distanced the old mark of 16.9 feet. Last but not least, the 3:52.0 mile relay run by Newsam, Booth, Forrestal and Stelling was a phenomenal achievement. Oops! I almost forgot to mention the Most important members of the team — Managers Rosemarie Burnett and Chris Johnson. Without them, we wouldn ' t know what times we ran. Thanks. The men ' s Track team added on to a successful undefeated indoor sea- son with a very respectable outdoor campaign. The Tigers compiled a 2-2 dual meet record, placed third in the Heptagonals, and won the New Jer- seys for the first time in five years. The Princeton squad was particu- larly strong in the field events, led by co-captain Dave Pellegrini, the indoor champion in the 35-pound weight event and hammer thrower outdoors, and sophomores Mark Rifkin (discus) and Tom Meyer (javelin). In the running events, the Tigers were led by Manny Modu ' 81 in the 100 and Remo Biagonni ' 81 in the 200. Tim Pfitzer ' 82 was fifth in the Heps at 400 meters, while Peter An- duino ' 83 was undefeated in dual meets and placed first in the Heps in the 400 meter Intermediate Hurdles. In the 800 Brad Rowe ' 82 led the Tigers, along with Joe Swenson ' 80. In the tough 1500 Dan Challener ' 81 and Robert Smith ' 82 usually dueled for first place. Barney Costello ' 82 and Dave Olds ' 83 always ran hard in the 5000, while freshman Matt Farmer steadily improved in the steeplechase. The Tiger squad was also helped out in the field events by Tom Brost- rom ' 80 in the triple jump, Kurt Schulte ' 82 in the high jump (who had a personal best 6 ' 10 leap in the Army meet), Mike Ciavarra ' 81 in the shot put, and Brad Urschel ' 83 in the long jump. 234 MEN ' S TRACK AND FIELD 1. 236 TRACK (10-2) INDOOR (6-0) Seton Hall W 61-50 Manhattan W 61-59 N.J. College Champs. Second Place Navy W 71-63 Harvard W 91-58 Penn W 75-61 Yale W 91-21 Heps First Place ICAAA Sixth Place OUTDOOR (4-2) Penn L 58-105 Harvard W 95-68 Yale W 94-68 Heps Third Place N.J.C.C. First Place Army L 76-87 237 SOFTBALL 238 SAILING 239 240 It was a rugby season like any other rugby season; we drank beer and played rugby. At one point we played too much rugby — ten games in three weeks. And at another time we didn ' t drink enough beer — the cookout spawned but one nude runner. Naked New York To be more specific, we did not win any titles but we did capture some seconds, thirds and had a lot of strong performances (naturally). We beat some good teams — Monmouth, Virginia, and that Northern football factory in New Haven. Charles Harper was our fearless leader. Come, lads, let us run a few stadiums. Dave Boyer was president. He sang and got beer from Tiger. 241 Souren Ala (a rugby god) and Rick Barth (a Long Island Legend) were officers, too, but they are juniors so we ' ll praise them next year. We can, however, pay homage to those semi- god seniors who will leave us. First, John Marsh-Man Marsh, a rambling 200-plus pound eight man who scored more tries than we can re- member. Steve Maritz, a gruesome prop, used to hug cute John Hendo Henderson. Hendo, a hooker, how- ever, was rendered helpless by in- fectious mononucleosis and scrappy Steve Bawol assumed the position. Chem engineering robbed us of veter- an prop Ray Lorenz, the superb sen- ior who was often mistaken for a brick wall. Rounding out the scrum were Dave Givnish, Harper and Boyer. Oh, yes, Mark Menin and Steve Hirschfield were two simply awesome second rows. They, however, are but wee lads who will return next season and are, therefore, not yet entitled to unadulte- rated worship. Nor is Reed Marsh. In rugby, there are also backs, and so we give kudos to a few who played those positions. To be honest, the backs were quite phenomenal. Dan Bennewitz had the defense, Jeff Pyros the jets, Todd Cronan the foot, Steve v. Blaydes the moves. Strength and cun- ning were provided by Dan James, Ala (a rugby god, see paragraph 3) and Paul Martin. And so we leave our 1979-80 rugby season. Some veteran warriors mov- ing on, new cadets rising in the ranks. Yet we shall return to the bloodied field which lies beneath an overcast New Jersey sky. The spilled beer fer- ments while somewhere in the wind drift our memories and the last linger- ing notes of song. 243 244 net - WOMEN ' S TENNIS The women ' s Varsity Tennis Team had another outstanding season in 1980 under head Coach Louise Gen- gler. The team warmed up for the season with a trip to Florida, in which the Netwomen won two of three con- tests, a 9-0 loss to the University of Miami being the only loss all season. Palm Beach C.C. and Broward C.C. were the two victims, by 9-0 and 8-1 margins, respectively. The squad came back north to eas- ily defeat Penn State 6-3. The next contest was not so easy, however, as the Tigers barely squeaked by Yale, 5- 4. Princeton was hurt by an injury to Captain Sue Repogle, which stopped her attempted comeback from being down in first singles, while also drop- ping her out of doubles competition. Trailing 4-3 in the match, the double teams of Anne Renfrew and Kris Kin- ney, along with the team of Catherine Van Cleve and Emily Preyer, over- came tremendous pressure to win their doubles matches to secure the victory. The netwomen followed with back to back shutout victories over Penn- sylvania and Maryland. Jan Devereux played extremely well in both match- es. The prestigious middle-State Tour- nament was to follow, with Princeton entering Repogle and Devereux at singles spots, and Kinney-Renfrew at first doubles. The Tigers couldn ' t have asked for a better performance, as the doubles teams finished 1-2 (Kinney-Renfrew and Preyer-Van Cleve, respectively). Repogle took the singles title for the second time in her career. The Tigers easily defeated West Chester State in their next match. The Ivy Championships were to follow, and Princeton tied nemesis Yale for the title. Repogle won the A division title, while Kinney took the A con- solation division. After three more easy wins, the Ti- gers ended the season with a first place showing at the EAIAW Cham- pionships at Penn State. By virtue of their performance, the squad gained a berth in the Nationals, to be held in June at Louisiana State University. 246 WOMEN ' S TENNIS (10-1) Palm Beach CC W 9-0 U of Miami L 0-9 Broward CC W 8-1 Perm State W 6-3 Yale W 5 1 Perm W 9-0 Maryland W 9-0 Middle States First Place Tournament West Chester State W 8-1 Ivy Championships First Place Trenton State W 8-0 Harvard W 8-1 Dartmouth W 7-2 EAIAW at Penn State First Place 247 MEN ' S TENNIS The 1979-80 season draws towards a close as still another successful journey through college tennis for the men ' s tennis team at Princeton. High expectations were realized in the Fall 1979 ECAC tournament as the team rolled to its seventh consecutive title. Stalwarts Jay Lapidus and Co- captain Steve Meister won the A and B crowns, respectively. Fresh- man Flip Ruben proved himself a ca- pable competitor by reaching the C final. Princeton hosted the National In- door Team Championships in Febru- ary 1980. The Tigers began by demol- ishing 12th ranked Houston, 7-2, but then fell to eventual champion Ber- keley, 6 ' 2-2y 2 , and U.S.C., 7-2. In March, the team traveled to the West Coast and battled three national powers. Despite some encouraging moments and great fun, the team was turned away by U.S.C., 5 4; U.C.L.A., 7%-1%: and Pepperdine, 7-2. Toughened by the stiff California competition, the team returned home to romp through its Eastern League opponents. Rebounding from a dis- appointing 7-2 loss to 9th ranked Clemson, the Tigers dispatched 17th ranked South Carolina, 6-3. The win propelled Princeton through its re- maining Eastern matches and into an ominous showdown with the Harvard Crimson in Cambridge. Despite the vociferous crowd and psyched-up Crimson players, Princeton emerged convincingly victorious, 7-2. Through- out these Eastern matches, Steve Feinberg played a strong number 5. Princeton ' s Eastern League record, now unblemished for four consecutive years, may well be the team ' s finest accomplishment. This continuity of success transcends and highlights the team spirit and pride which have always pulled the team through difficult times. Although the assort- ment of backgrounds and person- alities has always been diverse, the teammates have always been close. Together, they are perpetuating the dominance of Princeton tennis . . . something which subsumes their indi- vidual accomplishments. Coach David Benjamin, the patri- arch of this motley crew, is nothing W -U i short of exceptional. His thoughtfu approach to tennis and l-can-do-any thing attitude have been essential to the team ' s success. Under him, less- er-known junior players have con- sistently blossomed and reached the upper levels of college tennis. Behind Dave and his team, Eastern League tennis has climbed to new heights. Our manager, Margaret Bellamy, re- joiced and suffered with us through- out the season. Her pleasant demea- nor and loyal service were greatly ap- preciated. Thanks, Margaret. 250 MEN ' S TENNIS (13-5) San Diego State W 8-1 use L 4-5 UCLA L V t - 7 1 2 Cal. State, LA W 9-0 Pepperdine L 2-7 Yale W 8-1 Brown W 7-2 Duke w 9-0 Navy w 9-0 Clemson L 2-7 Columbia w 5-4 Penn w 8-1 South Carolina w 6-3 Cornell w 7-2 Army w 9-0 Harvard w 7-2 Dartmouth w 8-1 NCAA L 4-5 .... r I ?. - -. • • • 251 H CAMPUS CLUB After winning the intramural championships in the fall the Club was riding high. Hey stud, called Donna, and all heads turned. After the Elf and Reindeer party at Christmas the club was riding even higher. Hey Keith, we called, and all heads buzzed. Christmas time was filled with joy, peace, and the exploits of those courageous junior men. Just remember if we get caught, Weber made us do it. After Christmas came the trip to Sugarbush: good friends, good food, great skiing and Slow down, Trill! March saw the spirit of intellectualism descend upon the Club, and birth was given to some unlikely nerds. Culver spent long nights writing his thesis; Slick spent long nights reviving his fruit flies. Of course, Glen still spent long nights holding a cue stick, and no one will ever know what Jay Kidd spent his nights doing. April heard the recurring question, When ' s it due? or e Royce, when was it due? I ' ve got  o much work became the common cry, but how many of us still had time for just one game? Toward the end of the month the sun came out, and as we flocked to the porch, funnelation season was declared officially open. May began with Houseparties and, of course, our picnis I down at the lake. May ended with many memories: What no seconds? . Ellen ' s red punk pants and white plastic boots, How boutcha? , Somebody answer the phone! , meltdowns in the kitchen, war games in the basement, Vulcan mind probes — Did you really think you ' d never drink again?, and the ominous clink of glass and fork during dinner. Yet the most important memories of all were those of friends with whom we shared so muc the people we will never forget . . . CAP AND GOWN CLUB M i v . CHARTER CLUB It definitely has been a good year for Charter, and we can point to what happened during sign-ins week as exemplary of this year. Our party with The Now was such an incredible success that all the other clubs were left empty for that night. Remember, there were so many people that it took a good 15 minutes to get down the stairs! Needless to say, the interest in Charter was such that 156 sophomores wanted to join — an all-time record on Prospect Avenue. The end of that week was marked by our notorious sign-in ceremonies. As our sophomores went over the rail, as President Frank Moya and Vice- President Julia Philipp passed away after toasting with champagne over 80 sign-ins, House manager Pete Bavarian Border made the final arrangments for our successful chicken-moose raid on Dial. Who can forget the surprise we got when Quad ' s moose was delivered to us by mistake — thanks to Joe Levitzky ' s sharpness in giving the wrong directions to a man delivering Quad ' s moosehead. Quadrangle, yeah, that ' s 79 Prospect Avenue, the gray building at the end of the street ... Moose!! Anyway, we all had our share of fun at Charter this year, and we sure are going to miss Steve ' s cooking and good ole ' Flea-bag. For the 24 seniors, I ' m sure Commencement will not be the last they will be seen around Charter. Charter, Charter, Uber Alles ... In Memoriam After we returned from Thanksgiving break in 1978 we learned that Janet Cruikshank had been killed in a tragic automobile accident while on her way home to Rochester, New York. Although she is now gone, we at Princeton remember her as the warm, friendly, and good humored individual she was to all of us who knew her. 256 Janet L. Cruikshank ' 80 257 CLOISTER INN Alan ' s excellent food is a given; the champagne party was a bonus. Football brunches, gourmet nights, and dining in the Cloister Room. Now if we can just get rid of the yellow pudding. Sophomore initiations; Commander Knox would rather be comatose than mellow! The Christmas Party with CI Santa. New officers and a promise it won ' t be all New Wave. Finally, a permanent weekend cook; John and his omelette wiggle. J.B. Hutto and blues to cure the thesis blues. Houseparties Dinner. If the headwaiter wears a tux, you can at least wear a tie. The New York Soul Syndicate returned to Cloister to show just how many people can fit on CI ' s dance floor. Sunday started with Champagne Brunch, dining in style with food we couldn ' t pronounce, and ended with a trip to McCarter for the Joe Quinn Show. Next year we ' ll all miss Kathy Leathers ' distinctive volleyball style. Hope to see you seniors next year at Reunions or brunch during Harvard weekend. COLONIAL CLUB So much has happened here that it ' s almost pointless to try to sum up all the parties, barbeques, and frisbees flown past. And so much is about to happen out there that it ' s hard to look back instead of forward. We ' ll try to remember Medieval Night, looking for pinball quarters, Ginny, caption contests, raw meat vs. veggie, the Cool Hand Luke egg-eating contest, countless piano players and a few pianists, Gorch shaving off his beard, non— dietetic ' ' brownies, Jackie and Ron in the disco kitchen, the unanswered telephone, raisin bread and English muffins, Russ and Frebsie being generally Foolish, The Geeks, Bennett reciting insurance claims, the Al Jones look-alike contest, Lou ' s brief announcements and Fred ' s letters, Mega-Doodah parties and everything else that was just so excellent. But perhaps that ' s not what ' s really important. So many events have happened and so many more will; that ' s only so much weather. What really matters is what we take with us — faces, feelings, and Fred jumping out a window. If we ' re lucky, we may be able to keep up with one another throughout our far-flung lives. But even if we can ' t, there will be many times when an old face fades in through the mist of memory, when in the silence of our thoughts we recognize a voice we haven ' t heard in years, and when we feel a familiar warmth in our hearts. These are the things that matter. 258 I ' ( i 1 V t .- - - V I 5$ ■■1 ti i - jN ito ' % ' ftl V 1 ► '  . % i , ftif v .£ , w COTTAGE CLUB Cottage is a place where friends ease the passing of time by simply going around it. In the face of that somewhat humbling experience that is Princeton, here we have found a haven where men are measured mainly by what they do for and as friends, and where a sense of humor tempers all differences so as to forge a spirit made all the stronger by the acknowledgement that we may differ and err yet remain friends. The year was a memorable one. A victory in blow-pong, the rise and fall of Speed Ball, french fries and hamsteaks, Casino Night and the D.U. ' s, it ' s wired once back, and John Valby. He ' s a Cheeser!, Officers ' Bahamas Raffle, trials and tribulations, hours by the juke, 4 a.m. Diner runs, and Schaefer hangovers. These fond memories became even more meaningful during Houseparties when we danced under the moonlight to Sinatra, partied in the sunshine on our back lawn to the sounds of Johnny White, and realized that the Cottage years are truly unique. What we have enjoyed at the University Cottage Club will be forever in our hearts. The moments pass quickly, so, Don ' t let the rain get you down, it ' s a waste of time. Have your fun, live every day in the bright sunshine ... Be young, be foolish, but be happy! Thank you Matty for thirty years of friendship and dedication, and for being such a special part of it all. i DIAL LODGE Describo Pete-o I won ' t touch the pig. O.K. Helen, where did you put my room? I can have any girl on campus. Kiss this. Want bacon? It ' s Ya-BLON you f-k. We all hate ourselves, except for . . . Hey Mom, your kids have funny names: Weasel, Hondo, Glengel, the Snake, Dr. Z, LaRouche, Wah, Goober, Elf- man, Wicky, the Teenage Idol, Three-arm, the Colonel, Schmeebs, the General, the Beast, and Brad. Carm and Larry. Disco Pig and Dial-like cups (DLC ' s). The invasion of the giant squirrels. A tribute to Dial ' s athletes: an NCAA champion dentist, the world ' s greatest fire-eater, and a goalie who scores as well off the field as on. Bergian Logic and Joelian train of thought. I ' m taking life pass-fail. My name is Tom Clark Bonnell. Yeeeearright. As presidential as you may be, Cathy Johnson is The Lodge. I ' m rolling now. There are two amoebas at this bar . . . Dial Fashions — a mohawk, leather, and fur. Remember to tip those waitresses and bartenders. Sarah, it ' s Miller time. How ' s the seafood, TC? Spare me! Soap opera fanatics. We ' re not girls, we ' re women. The Pittsburgh Pah-rits. Doesn ' t anybody have the desire to go to a museum? This life is a test. 260 ■b I !l : AIM mymttntm itmtrrmttt RfmuttftfM 1 . • «dsapCD ft A V , ' tf %.6-J k c ■WOk , Ll Mfti •— ' ' • ■- - — ' t - u _- ELM CLUB Class ol ' 80 Debbie Alfred Bill Ash Bruce Baker Jill Baron Brenda Bazan Todd Beaney Andy Bechman Tom Blackadar Mark Blaxill Benno Blumenthal Liz Bonancini Chris Boyman David Bylund John Carelli Angela Carmella Lucy Carter Steve Condiotti Mary Ann Consantino Mike Cooper Doug Coventry Dean Dennis Ruben Diaz John Dolan Doug Eberhart Bruce Edelman Laura Ellsworth Greg Faris Amy Forbes Wendy Gerber Steve Gewirtzman Blanca Gonzalez Anne Goodale Gary Cross Warren Hamel Paul Hauge Tim Heidmann Amy Henrich Ivan Irizarry Kathy Kamins Rob Kasdin Jeff Katz Kathy Kaye Bob Kent Phil Klein Bob Klitzman Dave Kosten Jeff LaBaw Pushpa Lall Andy Lance Robert Levy Bob Lewis Jerry Licini John Little Barbara Matton Amy McMillion Ben Monderer Andy Nikurs Kim Noble John Paolini Donna Powell Ruby Ramirez Mike Rubinstein Win Schaeffer Gabriel Seymour Sarah Sheon Sidney Shiroma Skip Smith Warren Stone Mollie Thompson Mark Title Cathy Van Straalen Clyde Wadsworth Jennifer Ware Class of ' 81 Jennifer Adams Kirsti Aho Aram Arkun Hunter Baker Rich Baumann Meredith Beers Andy Blackburn Francois Bond Carolyn Calmes Peter Chase Joyce Cohen Brad Dunbar Linda Dunbar Steve Eckman Alexander Ellis Gigi Enriquez David Felsenthal Liz Foster Helene Freeman Randy Girer Karen Goldshine Ruth Greenholz Ellen Grider Beth Guilfoyle Lili Hanna Monica Hargraves Marcia Hart John Hamilton Joe Harvey Miche Harvey Dan Hawkins Karen Hertz Beth Honomichl Kathy Hov Rena Hozore Kathy Humphreys Susan Jonas Karen Karp Eric Keller Emma Kiviseld Gallia Kuharsky Fifi Laughlin Madalyn Levinson Tillie Lim Jim Ludemann Nick Martitsch Liz Mason Madeline Maxwell Allison Mazzola Dave Mebane Howard Merten Jonathan Miller Barbara Moore Steve Morss Cathy Mueller Rick Nash Tim O ' Brien Heather Potter Dave Pullman Nick Reeder Dave Roberson Claudia Sauerman Doug Schleicher Doug Schloss Greg Scott Beth Shapiro Jane Shapiro Mike Shapiro Brad Smith Amy Sommerfeld Terri Steinhaus Sara Stern Kathy Surace Scott Tilley Kathy Udavchak Patricia Vaughan Frank Wefald Paul Wieman Jon Wonnell Dick Wotiz Steve Yelenosky Amanda Young Chuck Yuen Diane Wynter IVY CLUB • « s. ■r.-H 1 ' F ' , ■: €■f. 1 -4 r f - ii I m ' Ml P VJ ry tm W- _ fV 1 1 Pt Xti to • fib ■l. ' : t ' . : • ■ ' ' ■- ••■■- -- -w- QUADRANGLE CLUB From the haute culture of the Waltz Ball to the decadence of the women ' s blow pong champions, from the orangerie atmosphere of the new dining room cafe to the red lightbulbed officers ' quarters, pie kills and 9 on New Jersey, ' ' the best of both worlds — sheep and cowtipping, eggs hidden at eastertime and juggled at the talent show to the strains of PDQ Buck at the piano, the petition system, Walter Mitty, pinball, ski trips, the generosity of the Christmas Committee manifest in chess sets and bicycle seats, and late night SOYN and Spades games, the memories of Quad are fond ones. Quad erat demonstrandum. TERRACE CLUB The club that faces a different direction. People come, they eat, they leave, day after day, eating and leaving, hanging up their coats (temporarily) One foot in front of the other, one after the other, shifting into the dining room. Chomp, chomp, upper teeth against lower teeth, over and over day after day. At Terrace Club we face the void. 264 TIGER INN Yes, we are still all-male, and yes, we are still rocking. The jocks regained the all-sports trophy from the curds across the street, and it ' s better than that stupid little boot. Of course, the chess team maintained its dynasty, Hey Lovec, where ' d you leave the brains? Young Bawol preserved the social suspense, as we dived from the sky, lashed out against the OPEC cartel ( Say the Pledge of Allegiance in Persian, Hadji ), learned provocative dance steps, gambled away modest fortunes, waited for Rousseau Presley to rise from the grave, saw imports become deterred by the snow but we were not afraid, and had a pimps and hookers night and nobody came, and we didn ' t run out of money ( Put it all on red ). Thank God for the therapeutic Sunday bloody transfusions. T. Franz treated us right at off meals, and we sang a farewell to Rosalee, which was composed by a budding they stole the best girl I ever had singer songwriter, and was orchestrated by President Now more than ever Axilrod. Lots of stories to tell, but we wouldn ' t want to confuse them with the facts. Jack Webb came by and said, the club. Tiger Inn but he bought the plaque — thanks Eve, and he told us ties were only a misdemeanor in L.A. Swim team rallies in the card room and the double-card bigtime wrestling in the ladies ' room. Club fares to Hawaii. Bachelor party for me and Sharon Sharalike, and yes, we would like another round of kazes. Your turn to bat. Honorary memberships to Buck, Souren, and Romo, it was your mistake. Have to stop now, lest it become serious. Besides, I have an interview, right. See all of you in ten, so remember: So fill your cups, your loving cups, and fill them to the brim; So long as love and liquor last, we ' ll drink to the Tiger Inn. T lllllllll. T MINIMI TOWER CLUB What can you say about the year at Tower? Blow-pong with Coach Pet de Sange (another loss, another year) . . . field hockey with Captain Kim . . . Officer ' s Party at Gilly ' s (anyone need a new blouse?) . . . Women ' s B-P (at least you looked better than they did) . . . but what was with all that mouth-to-mouth resucitation afterwards? . . . Spike and the Heels and that oh-so-famous Awards banquet . . . Jimmy Bishop (hey Otis!) and St. Thomas — boy, weren ' t they a great couple? . . . those zanny boys with the beer-pong mallets . . . Pen and Nose meetings in the dungeon . . . and Bill, just when we found you another retread, you left us . . . Hammer and Herm send their love anyway . . . jungle ball on the volleyball court . . . water balloon artillery practice . . . say goodbye for the binders . . . let ' s watch Dance Fever for some new steps ... I don ' t like your hair that way, Andy . . . and Houseparties (no accidents this year, kids) . . . super job with the EBA tourney boys and girls (but next year keep your clothes on) . . . Hey chief! . . . Once is a challenge, but what ' s eight, Gary? . . . and that ' s about it . . . another year under the belt for Archie, and Angie, and of course, Rita . . . and Plit finally ended an epic . . . and Mill-Mill tried to become one . . . and Gilly went off to New York to become an accountant. And what of Tower, without which it wouldn ' t have been? ; ; v MM 1 - m v v w 0- -4 £ « • v f. • ' i jk i l •Sfe £ i i j a ■ra i . COTTAG-E. CLOISTER EFUJT;] CAMPUS TOWER CAP£ GOtVM CHARTEF m m$fm ELM f X7 C f V DIAL TERRACE ' Commons For an upperclassman to cringe and grimace at the recollection of eat- ing at Commons is more of a cliched response than one of a genuine reac- tion to an entirely unpleasant ex- perience. Unquestionably, Commons was noisy and poorly heated, and the food reflected the gothic atmosphere of the hall ' s architecture; yet, taking meals at Commons provided the op- portunity to socialize with a large number of one ' s classmates. From the early days of Freshman Week, when countless introductions were made over plates of mystery stew , to the final days of sophomore spring exams, when it was still possible to make a new acquaintance, Commons ' food was awful, but there was always plenty of good company with whom to share the misery. 270 1 I i 271 Princeton Inn College While the phrase Princeton Inn College may conjure up in the minds of many students images of long cross- campus treks to get to anything, it is not true that Prince- ton Inn is cut off from up-campus . Rather, it seems that up-campus is cut off from Princeton Inn. This is the case because Princeton Inn offers a style of living unmatched by any other dormitory or social facility on campus. Where else but at Princeton Inn can one study, mix with faculty at cocktail hours, go to dinner, take in a movie or a play, do laundry, and work on computer terminals — all without leaving the building? Princeton Inn ' s special pro- rather it seems that up-campus is cut off from Princeton Inn grams have also included something for everyone: Sunday afternoon classical music concerts, computer workshops, parties, baking and pottery classes, on-and-off-campus speakers, art exhibitions, receptions, topical workshops, field trips, Santa Claus, and the best special dinners on campus. There is a special sense of community in the midst of diversity at Princeton Inn, engendered by factors other than having the rest of the campus cut off from it. While it is primarily a freshman dormitory, many persons from the other classes have found the Inn desirable and have come or stayed. The interclass interaction is mutually beneficial. Ongoing programs such as the Black Thoughts Table, the Foreign Students ' Table, the various language tables, the Madrigal Table, and some rather fearsome intramural squads provide ample opportunities for mixing with others of similar interests. Perhaps Princeton Inn ' s greatest asset has been and remains its Master, Lou Ann Garvey. It would take too long to praise her enough here. Let it suffice to say that her sincerity and spirit leave an indelible mark on the Inn and its residents. With a proud and distinctive past, and a bright and promising future, Princeton Inn looks forward to contributing to the experience of generations of Prince- tonians to come! 272 Wilson College Contrary to popular opinion, Wilson College is not a small game room in the basement of Nassau Hall that President Bowen uses on Sundays. Foosball, pinball and Wilcox are the first things that come to mind when someone mentions Wilson College. It is a place to eat, pick up your mail and maybe even study. Some of the things you might not think of so quickly are the trips to New York City, an Andres Segovia concert and tick- ets to an opera — in other words, contact with the real world. Wilson provides all of these things. 274 When it comes down to it, though, Wilson is a residential college made up of five dormitories, in addition to Wilcox. As a smaller, closer-knit com- munity than the University, it gives the 400 people who live in it a chance to relate to and learn from each other in an open, relaxed environment. It offers an outlet for people who nor- mally would be eaten up by the vast- ness of Princeton. Whether it be in a music society, a non-credit dance class, or playing pinball, people get to learn about themselves and others. That, after all, is what the Princeton experience is all about. 275 Dining Societies 276 Two hundred lucky Madison Society members dine in the Student Center. Breakfast and lunch there are widely praised as being far better than the meals at Commons. Dinner is served in the Rotunda, better known as the pub. This room was once the reading room of the Chancellor Green Library. Madison Society ' s candlelight dinners are accompanied by music or live entertainment in contrast to the clatter at Commons. The society also sponsors activities such as skydiving, seeing plays in New York, and dining with special guests. Princeton ' s picturesque sunsets are the highlight of dinner on the seventh floor of the New South building. Freshmen and sophomores who live down-campus join the New South Society to escape Common ' s Gothic atmosphere. The Department of Food Services is responsible for the menu, but the small number of members creates an intimate and friendly milieu at New South. The Society also offers free movies and parties to its members. 278 Independents Independence . . . such an impressive sounding word. I knew I could out-cook any club on the street, spend only half as much money, and eat the kinds of food I like to eat. Armed with my aunt ' s old set of Fine English China (Made in Japan), my mother ' s recipes for meatloaf and beer stew, and every spare pot and pan in the house, I was ready to wage war on my appetite. In the beginning, my culinary repertoire consisted of hot dogs, cheese omelettes, and peanut butter and jelly sandwiches. Instinctively realizing that there is strength in numbers, I teamed up with some other guys from similar kitchen backgrounds. Our joint menu expanded to include tuna fish sandwiches, chili, and Cream of Wheat. 1 J __ r J Interaction is the key to success. Other independents are always more than willing to share a meal and lend a helping hand. Wherever you look, from sparkling kitchens of Spelman, to the dungeons of Laughlin and Blair, you can always find someone to share his or her own brand of food magic — the Vegetarian, the Meat and Potatoes Man, the Salad Queen, the Everything-Tastes-Good-lf-You-Add- Enough-Garlic-and-Soy-Sauce fanat- ic. Gradually, I ' ve developed my techniques to the point where I ' m almost ready to rival Mom ' s home cooking. I can whip up a quiche in no time, fry my own onion rings, prepare a sit-down dinner for twelve or a candlelight dinner for two. Now, if I could just find a cure for dishpan hands! 279 280 Stevenson Halls Through the Hole in the Shoe: Memories From the Year Past. 1979 brought us the first championship Intramural team in three years (table tennis) and brought the victors a champagne shower. The first Stevenson Ski Trip came off with no broken bones, but several expert skiers. Several refugees from PIC joined us. Study breaks at Dorothy ' s and Jody ' s lasted from 10 P.M. until 2 A.M. And Friday Night at the Movies was standing room only. Stevenson — a haven for engineers no longer. Calculators short circuited in a flood of beer (thanks Joe!) . . . Another Wine and Cheese Party a smashing success (remember any of it, Andy?) . . . Arlene and FDR, the only three-term presidents (ooops! Sorry, Dan) . . . Jody for Dean of the Chapel . . . may the foot be with you. I ' M il W W,— WW 281 Third World Center 282 The Chancellor Green Pub, located in the Student Center, plays an important role in the lives ol undergraduates during their years at Princeton The Pub is open nightly except Saturday, and serves as the ideal place to take a study break, or just to grab a couple brews with some friends There is always a surprise to be found at the Pub and special events occur a couple of times a week Class Nights are always fun, and the traditional Thursday night gatherings always include new faces. This past year, the Pub underwent a growth spurt We initiated a beefed-up entertainment schedule, providing a wide spectrum of artists — from the jazz excellence of Timepiece to the southern rock tunes of the George Dickel Band As well, Princeton ' s Pub has the only winebar in the Ivy League, which adds yet another dimension to a dynamic, lively watering hole Every Princeton student passes through the Pub doors at one time or another, to drink some beer, play some pool, or just to have a good time Its traditional architecture and friendly staff of students combine to provide a unique environment where many Princetonians have shared a true learning experience. 284 The Chancellor Green Library 285 Come down the stairs. Enter a room softly lit by candles. The tables are covered with checkered cloths. Around them sit people talking and playing with candle wax. In the back room, a lively discussion is always going on. Art, politics, philosophy, religion, life at Princeton . . . You are invited to join in. Someone is by the sink washing the cups while another bakes munchies. Everyone eagerly awaits the fresh cookies or break. Grab a cup of coffee or herbal tea. Red Zinger to tingle the tastebuds, Morning Thunder to help you through a long night ahead, maybe Sleepytim e to lullaby you to bed. Drop a coin in the donation can if you have some spare change. Returning to the other room, some evenings you may come to hear musi- cians offering their art. Or a play, or a poetry reading, or even a mime show. Tonight is a quiet night ' . Someone is reading at a table and sipping tea. At the next table, everyone is in a circle giving each other back rubs. At another, two friends are deep in conversation. Meanwhile, someone has joined the reader, and then one more sits down, and then two more enter the discussion — ' organic dialogue ' . Down here, in this basement with low ceilings, you can relax about the papers and pages you have to tackle. Down here you are meant to spend time talking and laughing and arguing and just taking it easy. This is a very special place. Welcome t o cafe. 288 CAMPUS BASHES P-PARTY DANCING in the MOONLIGHT 289 House Parties HEElCS tfttt ' i 292 293 EVENTS SPQStf . A % FRESHMAN WEEK Arrival on campus . . . lugging boxes up three flights of stairs . . . seeing roommates have already taken the best closets and the desks with the most sun . . . dinner the first night . . . talking and trying to act outgoing and cheerful . . . swim tests . . . class meetings in Alexander Hall . . . learning the words to Old Nassau . . . and why it is infinitely superior to other Ivy League Alma Maters . . . choosing furniture and rugs . . . writing samples . . . club meetings . . . departmental meetings . . . choosing class schedules . . . losing room keys . . . huge parties in the courtyards . . . meeting new people and forgetting their names the next day . . . missing appointments . . . What ' s your name? . . . Where are you from? . . . Why am I here? . . . feeling a little out of place and unsure of yourself . . . thinking of home . . . long talks with roommates . . . meetings with RA ' s . . . placement tests . . . Chapel Service on a beautiful Sunday morning . . . Tennis . . . brunch . . . plants for sale in the arches . . . the Freshman Herald . . . getting to be independent . . . buying books ... the first day of classes arrives. 299 Long, long ago, in the deep dark history of Princeton University, up- perclassmen — sophomores, juniors, and seniors carried thin wooden canes carved with their friends ' signa- tures. Freshmen were not allowed to carry canes, and one year the whole class got together and stole the soph- omores ' canes. During the next few years, cane-stealing fast became tra- ditional, until finally the adminis- tration, rather than let the two classes kill each other off, created a new sport, cane-wrestling, which had only a one-day season, early in the fall. After all, any sophomore who had his cane wrestled away from him by a freshman didn ' t deserve to carry one! Over the years, more events were added to the day until the festival, Canespree, had evolved. Modern competitors engage not only in cane- wrestling, but in basketball, football, ultimate frisbee, softball, soccer. swimming, and tug-of-war. Another tradition, which came into being about the same time that ultimate frisbee was added to the list of sports, is that of the Tee shirts. Each partici- pant wears a black-and-orange tee- shirt with his her year printed on it, and after every event, the loser hands over his her shirt to the winner. Canespree is one of those things, like stealing the bell clapper, which unite a class at Princeton. Canespree Stl V ani !or a So ler 300 , brings the Freshmen together for the first time in loss (not to mention in- stilling a proper feeling of humility af- ter the triumph of Freshman Week), and it unites the Sophomores in vic- tory, allowing them to begin the year in the proper frame of mind — for Canespree is traditionally won by the Sophomores. This year ' s victory dif- fered from those past only in its total- ity. Although many of our classmates were already rooted to their Frick chairs and organic model sets, the class of ' 82 won ultimate frisbee, soft- ball, soccer, basketball, and swim- ming, and lost only football. We even won tug-of-war twice! The day ended with a barbecue at Poe Field. Even though the Freshmen had lost, they enjoyed the party after- wards just as much as the Soph- omores — after all, next year it would be their turn! 301 DOGNAPPED On November 6, 1979 — the Tuesday before the Princeton-Yale football game — Rod Shepard ' 80 had an idea; almost certainly the only idea of his Princeton career. He would ab- scond with Handsome Dan XII, the bulldog mascot of Yale University, thus giving the Princeton team a needed lift to break the eleven year dominance of the Elis over the Tigers. Using a friend ' s phone to avoid long-distance charges, Shepard called the Yale Daily News and dis- covered the name of a Mark Mac- Intyre, one of Yale ' s head cheerlead- ers. This name would later prove to be useful. In need of someone to share the blame if something went wrong, Shep- ard enlisted Mark Hallam ' 80, a noted wheelman in semi-retirement, and Jamie Herbert ' 81, a junior with a pen- chant for assuming false identities. Posing as a Mike Rivielli, a free-lance writer from the west coast , Herbert conducted a telphone interview with a Yale athletic director and discovered that the mascot was the property of a Professor Emeritus of History. Still insecure about numbers, Shep- ard enlisted two more, Mark Zimmer- man ' 80 for his brains, and Scott Thompson ' 81 for his fearlessness in stealing dogs from old men. At 6:00 p.m. on Thursday November 8, Shep- ard, Hallam, Herbert and Thompson were ready. Herbert called the Profes- sor, informing him that he was Mark Maclntyre and that the mascot was needed for a publicity photo session with the cheerleaders. Arrangements were made for Maclntyre to pick up the bulldog at 9:00 p.m., to be re- turned within the hour. Handsome Dan was picked up at 9:08 p.m. — and returned two days later. Although this might have seemed to be a carefree adventure — and one which was not sufficiently inspiring — it was not without its dan- ger: the risk of felony charges, the worry of an asthma attack from the dog, and above all else, the danger of asphyxiation each time Handsome Dan XII broke wind. Thompson, Herbert, Hallam and Zimmerman were sentenced to terms ranging from 6 to 19 months in New Jersey for their involvement in this escapade. Shepard received a sus- pended sentence for cooperating with authorities. 302 DAY 227 As we go to press, fifty-three Americans are being held hostage in Iran. The months since the takeover of the United States embassy in Tehran have angered, frustrated and bewil- dered this nation. The Iranian militants ' act of terrorism has spawned an aborted rescue attempt and revealed our allies ' reluctance to offer us assistance. To the hostages and their families we offer our support and prayers. For them, and for the nation, this has been a time that has changed our consciousness and shaped our future. I MM WINTER OLYMPICS One of the most exciting events of the winter of 1980 was the Olympic games in Lake Placid, New York. Many Princetonians took a break from their studies to watch the competition on television, but at least four people went one step further. Tom Michel ' 81, John Muldowney ' 81, Jim Santos ' 81, and Rick Fernandes ' 80 decided to become a part of the spectacle themselves. After watching the U.S. hockey team upset the U.S.S.R. on the last Friday of the games, they began to speculate on what it would be like to watch the games in person, and a few beers later, these four intrepid adventurers set out for the games. They left at 2 a.m. with $60 apiece, plenty of warm clothes, and plans for a great weekend. At 10 a.m. they arrived at John ' s house in Saranac Lake, N.Y., about ten miles north of Lake Placid, which was to be their base for the weekend. After breakfast, they headed out to the ninety meter ski jump competition. It never occurred to them that they might have a problem getting in without tickets. At the ski jump, they were immediately caught up in the aura of the games. There were different languages being spoken at every turn, and people of every age and nationality were all enjoying themselves in this winter carnival. They bribed a ticket taker, and they were in! Along with a few thousand other people, they spent the afternoon watching the athletes jump, fly, and land (some not as successfully as others). They cheered the Americans, and watched as spectators bet on the outcome. When it was over they walked back to the Olympic Center amidst the thousands of athletes, journalists, and spectators. 304 They then managed to sneak into the ice arena where they watched the rehearsal for the closing ceremonies which were to take place the next day. They needed a way of staying in the building to watch women ' s figure skating which was scheduled to begin in three hours. Bribing a janitor made this task easier, although only Rick made it to the hiding place before the arena was emptied. All was not lost for the juniors because they watched Eric Heiden receive his fifth gold medal on Mirror Lake as Rick watched Linda Fratianne win a silver inside. They returned to John ' s house after buying tickets for four man bobsledding to be held the next day. They had all but given up hope of seeing the U.S. hockey team play Finland for a chance at the gold medal, but at least they would be around for the anticipated celebration. After a much needed night ' s sleep, they arrived at the bobsledding where they managed to climb into the stands at the zig-zag curve, the best part of the course. From their vantage point they saw the course record broken by the East German team, the eventual gold medalists in that event. As they left the bobsledding they heard that the U.S. was losing in hockey. Feeling that their support was needed, they made a desperate attempt to infiltrate the arena. After much perserverance (and with the help of a pocket knife and a fork), they made it into the game just before the third period began. They joined in the cheers as the U.S. scored three times to come from behind and win the gold. They celebrated outside the arena, and later that afternoon watched the jubilant U.S. team receive their medals. The quartet returned to Princeton the following day, each having spent $17.50 for tickets but with a total of only 21 C in their pockets. Although the cash with which they arrived was minimal, the memories of a once-in-a- lifetime experience that they carried with them will make great stories at some future Reunions. CURL J The Committee on Undergraduate Residential Life (CURL) issued its final recommendations to President Bowen in June of 1979. During the sub- sequent twelve months, CURL ' S pro- posals, which promise to have more far-reaching ramifications than coedu- cation, generated an amazing amount of discussion, debate, rejection and acceptance. The Princeton University Board of Trustees, in its October meeting, pro- vided the impetus for the progress which CURL has made since the final report was issued. At their meeting, the trustees, with an almost unani- mous vote of support, approved the principles underpinning the CURL proposals. The wording of the resolu- tion was broad, thereby allowing the administration to explore the feasibi- lity of more residential colleges and to enter into negotiations with the thir- teen Prospect Street eating clubs. With this mandate for serious explora- tion of the issues, both the proposals for underclass colleges and the nego- tiations with the clubs entered the second phase of their development. The underclass proposals were catapulted forward in January, 1980, when Mr. Lee Butler ' 22 contributed a substantial gift to assist in the con- struction of a residential college in the New New Quad. Along with the Princeton Inn College and Wilson Col- lege, this residential college would be another of the five colleges envisaged as the cornerstone of dining and so- cial life for underclassmen at Prince- ton. Before the academic year ended the University had hired architects to modify some of the existing dorms and design a new building which will house the variety of facilities which a residential college includes. Although lightning doesn ' t strike twice in the same place, philanthropic alumni do. In April, Mr. Lawrence Rockefeller ' 32 again demonstrated his commitment to undergraduate life. (In the beginning of the 1970 ' s he had donated Spelman dorms.) As the 1980 ' s began, Mr. Rockefeller made a major donation to the University which will change the complex of buildings known as Commons so they can serve as the final two residential colleges. The CURL report recommended that a unified eating club system for upperclassmen complement the col- leges for underclassmen. According to the proposal, the University would enter into contractual arrangements with each club. The contract ' s major tenets stipulate the University would assist in the clubs ' physical mainte- nance and guarantee minimum mem- bership levels for each contracting club each year. In exchange, the con- tracting club would have to be coedu- cational and open to students on a nonselective basis. A great number of people, however, foresee problems with the upperclass proposals. They envision alumni sup- port for the clubs falling off as the University starts picking up some of the tabs. Additionally, the all-male and selective clubs would lose the tradi- tions that have given them their unique continuity and flavor through the years. In any case, positive negotiations are continuing. All members of the University community realize the need to upgrade and stabilize the social and dining situation and each one is acting as he feels will best meet these needs. H . ■■f •i XI fi  M tt m. V A V | ' J !£ 80 ' s Oth ♦ - r asm .$ Vsv. v% . w w • 4 i Hh f VV 4? ' 9 W ' J i ; ' % Y ' ' 313 The Love Song of J. Alfred Offbeat (With apologies to T.S. Eliot) Let us go then, you and I, With our college years spread out against the sky Like Commons food decayed upon a table. Let us go drink six or seven beers. Honoring four years Of sadistic professors and psychotic pre-meds And infrequent sex in very narrow beds; Beers that follow like a poorly organized J. P. To lead you to an overwhelming urge . . . The bathroom — yes — where is it? Let us go and make our visit. In the room the women all convene Talking of Playboy magazine. 314 315 316 And indeed there will be time For the raising of comprehensive fees And baiting alumni trustees; There will be time for police to sit in thirst, Anticipating December First; Time for Sally Frank to sue And time for Bruce to sing For You, Time to protest for greater Third World power, And time for women to invade Blair Tower, And time for every flier that ever slid under your door, For the anti-draft movement to prevent future war And for all of the hawks who ' d prefer to keep score, For the PEF to combat against sin And for the People ' s Liberation Front all to sit in. There ' s time for CURL to make our social lives better And just enough time for CAP to write them all a letter; Time for you and time for me Before the taking of a degree. In the room the women come and brood And ponder the thought of posing nude. And indeed there will be time To wonder Do I dare? and Do I care? Time to turn back and ascend the stair, And read the Prince, and sigh, and cough, And blow a nine-o ' clock lecture off. [They will say: You must get a job! ] My three-piece suit, my banker ' s grin, Some good connections and I ' m in — [They will say: When are you going to start looking for a job? ] Do I dare Plug in my hot pot? I have known it all already, Known it well enough to speak Of a time long past when our minds were weak And food was still something to be enjoyed, And we thought screwing was fun since we ' d never read Freud; When, armed with Dad ' s check and a peck on the cheek, We walked into something called Freshman week, When the freshman guys drank to maintain their poise And the freshman girls looked for sophomore boys, And Bill Bradley showed us all the light When he talked about Afternoon Delight. So how should I presume? 317 318 Shall I say, I have gone at dusk to Dickenson Street And watched the sweat rise on the brow Of Andy Brown in shirt sleeves, chasing cats? . . . I should have been a pair of ragged feet Lying on a J. P. Stevens sheet. And Bill, the President, sleeps so peacefully! Soothed by careful practicality, Asleep . . . tired . . . exercising moral neutrality, Stretched on the floor, here beside you and me. Should I, after suffering Herpe ' s simplex, Have the strength to join the Nude Olympics? But though I have wept and procrastinated, wept and prayed, Though I have seen my report card [grown slightly putrid] placed behind bars, I am no Pete Carril — I don ' t like cigars; I have taken Budweiser for communion, And I have seen the 25th Reunion, And, in short, I was afraid. 319 yy And would it have been worth it, after all, After four years of Freddy Fox And Psych 101 and Rocks for Jocks ' %i r£ «.( And losing football games to Yale And taking Music 103 pass-fail, To say, I am an alumnus, come from the real world, Come to make a living — If one should reply, Why yes, But what about Annual Giving? And would it have been worth it, after all, After ninety-five pages of painful scrawl, After the coffee and the No-Doz and the sleepless nights — And this, and so much more? It is impossible to say what I think! But as if a magic typewriter turned the bullshit into ink: Would it have been worthwhile If an advisor, smirking at the wall, Should say: This isn ' t it at all, This isn ' t what I wanted at all. No! I am no cynic, nor was meant to be; Am a simple undergraduate, one that will do To sit in precept, sleeping halfway through; To be seduced by women; no doubt an easy lay, Full of high spirits, but a bit verbose; At times, indeed, almost comatose. I grow ill ... I grow ill . . I must pay my U-Store bill. L Shall I transfer to Cornell? Shall I stand and make a speech? I shall wear my crotchless blue jeans, and lie on Holder Beach. I have heard the Nassoons singing, each to each. I have a sinking feeling they will sing to me. I have seen the class of eighty gathered on the green, I have felt their love both day and night When the pigeons turn the statues white. We have lingered in the halls of Old Nassau Led by friends to wisdom ' s brink Till someone hands us liquor, and we drink. SPONSORS Rimi 4j s I ' VE always been aware that Prince- ton holds a special place in the hearts of its students and alumni, a kinship of spirit and purpose which has allowed a very small university to compete suc- cessfully in the big leagues. I believe without qualification that Princeton of- fers the finest undergraduate experience in the United States, and perhaps the world. The extraordinary quality of its faculty, students, and physical plant has created a unique educational environ- ment with an international reputation for excellence. Even as an undergraduate, 1 was aware of how much the quality of my experience depended upon the loyalty and generosity of alumni, and now, for the sake of present and future students, I feel something of a moral obligation to do whatever 1 can to repay that debt. Be- cause Princeton ' s great benefactors of the past are, for all practical purposes, being taxed to extinction, it is especially important that those of us who can give only modest sums make an extra effort to do so. Only by sharing the philanthropic burden more broadly will we be able to continue to provide Princeton with the financial resources necessary to maintain its preeminence. Though Princeton remains as strong as ever, higher education is going through some difficult and trying times. Few universities are better prepared to oAnnualCjiving William Hassebrock ' 68 meet these challenges, but Princeton has, through the years, set for itself in- credibly high standards which have be- come increasingly expensive to live up to. Alumni support has always been the critical difference, and my active associ- ation with Princetonians of all ages gives me confidence that our alumni body will continue to be proud and supportive of our university. Now more than ever, higher education, particularly the kind which Princeton offers, requires the con- cern and financial commitment of all its alumni and friends. Please send your gift to: Princeton University Box 46 Princeton, N.J. 08544 pays for quality at Princeton TO THE MEMBERS OF THE CLASS OF 1980 The Alumni Council, located in the John Maclean House on the front campus, has existed since 1826 to serve all Princeton alumni. One of the great strengths of Princeton ' s Alumni Association is that it is continually renewed each year by the addition of another alumni class. Interest in purely social activities has declined in recent years, and each year more and more young alumni have come forward to serve the University in a variety of ways. Whether it be work with a Schools Committee introducing students to Princeton or working on be- 1® ■ft half of your class for Annual Giving, serving on a regional Young Alumni Committee or helping under- graduates find jobs, the opportunities to help Prince- ton importantly are numerous. Please let us know how you would like to put your ideas and energies to effective use. The Alunmi Council salutes the Class of 1980 and invites you to stop by Maclean House whenever you ' re in Princeton. Let us know what you ' re up to and how we can help. DAVID G. BAHR ' 60, Director, SYDNEY G. TRITSCHLER 79, JOTHAM JOHNSON ' 64 and DANIEL N. WHITE ' 65 THE ALUMNI COUNCIL THE JOHN MACLEAN HOUSE Box 291 , Princeton, New Jersey 08544 609-452-3350 KEEP IN TOUCH The best way to keep in touch with Princeton is through a subscription to the ' Prince. ' It ' s the only way for you to get a comprehensive report on Prince- ton news, sports, and activities. Remem- ber the mornings when you ' d wake up to the ' Prince ' ? Go back to Nassau Hall. It ' s so simple ... all you do is drop us a line ... the essence of Princeton, five days a week, throughout the school year. When you think about it, isn ' t it a small price to pay? 2%PRINCETONIAN 48 University Place Princeton N.J. 08540 GROVER LUMBER CO. A Full Service Yard Since 1922 Quality Building Materials Masonry and Hardware Supplies Mouldings Insulation Paneling Plywood Flooring Ceiling Roofing Brick Flagstone Combination Millwork Mahogany - Fir Cedar - Pine Redwood - Spruce Andersen Windows Terra Cotta Pipe Slate Railroad Ties Gravel Sand Doors Screens 194 Alexander Street PRINCETON 924-0041 Free Delivery Weekdays: 7:45-4:45 Saturdays 8:00-12:00 36 University Place Princeton, New Jersey PATRONS Bruce M. Alden Cynthia Ash Dr. O.W. van Assendelft Richard G. Baer Robert G. Baer Mr. Mrs. James C. Barnett Mr. Mrs. Nicholas Bartillucci Mr. Mrs. Stephen W. Becker Mr. Mrs. Arthur Beckett Dr. Mrs. Alan Beeman Mr. Mrs. David C. Behnke Frank A. Bersani M.D. Mr. Mrs. Robert M. Bleiberg Thomas D. Boyatt Mr. Mrs. Mario Brassini Norm Marjie Brauer Dr. David E. Brown James B. Brown Jr. Dr. Mrs. Kenneth A. Brown Lawrence R. Brown Mr. Mrs. Gary L. Bryenton Dr. Mrs. Ned H. Burns Rick Irma Call Mr. Mrs. Thomas F. Callaghan Peter B. Cannell Richard A. Clames ' 54 James B. Clouse Dr. Mrs. Robert H. Collier Victor M. Conte Mr. Mrs. Richard D. D ' Angelo Rodrico De Llano Troy M. Deal Mr. Mrs. Crawford B. Dowdell Mr. Mrs. A. Elles Mr. Mrs. Edward Elukin Mr. Mrs. Robert M. Ewing Dr. Mrs. Saturnino Fanlo Mr. Mrs. Dennis N. Fasman Mr. Mrs. Ray Fischer Helen Fish Mr. Mrs. William Clay Ford Jerry S. Fowler Mrs. H. Frantz Dr. Mrs. Irwin Fridovich Dr. Harold Galef Mr. Mrs. W.B. Galvin Mrs. Eulogio L. Garza James J. Gavin Jr. Mr. Mrs. Ron M. Giallonardo Dr. Fernando B. Giustini Mr. Mrs. Lawrence Kusik T.S. Glikbarg Robin Smith Godfrey Richard S. Goodman M.D. Mr. Mrs. Glen H. Gould Mr. Mrs. William E.W. Gowen Mr. Mrs. F.A. Grisanti G.W. Halt Jr. Joyce Crofton Hangartner H. Carey Hanlin Mr. Mrs. Paul Hatfield Prof. Mrs. Paul C. Hausser Terry E. Hawkins Mr. Mrs. William H. Hecht John F. Heimerdinger Mr. Mrs. Otis J. Henderson Louis O. Hertz Elizabeth Berlot Mr. Mrs. James Hillhouse Mr. Mrs. J.C. Hoeger Mr. Mrs. Edward H. Hoenicke Mr. Mrs. James D. Hogan Roberta A. Holiday Mr. Mrs. Norbert Ignelzi Mr. Mrs. H. Alden Johnson Jr. ' 53 Albert Felice Josephson W.D. Joyner Mr. Mrs. Donald L. Kafka Dr. Mrs. Robert J. Kaiser Mr. Mrs. Martin L. Karp Dr. Mrs. Henry L. Kazal John A. Keefe Mr. Mrs. James F. Kelly Capt. Edward T. Kenny USN Dr. Mrs. Mansho T. Khilnani John L. Kidde ' 56 Ruth S. King Mr. Mrs. George L. Koehler Robert R. Korfhage Mr. Mrs. Maurice Labbe Dr. Frank M. Lapeyrolerie Maury Leonard William J. Lemon Mrs. Jean G. Lewis Guillermo Licon Thet Tue Lim Dr. Werner Liniger Jose R. Lopez-Cepero Wm. James Lubic Dr. Mrs. Anthony G. Lubowe Mr. Mrs. Grant MacLellan Mr. Mrs. Lewis J. Malamut Dr. Thomas K. Mangelsdorf Robert L. Kuebler Mr. Mrs. O.W. Marshall Owen F. Mattingly Dr. Mrs. Ray H. McCard Patrick F. McCartan Mr. Mrs. George C. McFarland Hugh McGee John J. McHugh Dr. J.F. McRae C.F. Meier Margarita Salaz Gloria S. Moore Jesse H. Motes ' 58 Mrs. F.E. Mygatt III Richard C. Nagell Dr. Mrs. George L. Nardi R. Pabon Nevarez M.D. Anthula Nicholas J.J. Nicholson Thomas H. Nimick Jr. ' 45 Penny Nixon Mr. Mrs. Thomas R. O ' Connell Dr. Mrs. Gerald O ' Gorman Mr. Mrs. Thomas Osborn Russell E. Palmer Mr. Mrs. Fred W. Pardee III James C. Parham Jr. J. Richmond Pearson Mr. Mrs. Arthur Peters Mrs. Richardson Preyer Frederick C. Prior William R. Purvis HE. Ramonat Jr. ' 57 Mr. Mrs. Thomas J. Reilly Dr. Mrs. Edward C. Remnick . Mr. Mrs. Gary Roam Ted L. Robinson Mr. Mrs. Walter Robinson Jr. Mr. Mrs. Roland Rousseve Norman F.S. Russell Jr. Mr. Mrs. Alex Sanchez H.C. Schmidt Mr. Mrs. F.E. Schmitt Mr. Mrs. Ben Schneider Dorothy Schulte Dr. D.A. Scialabba Dr. Mrs. Robert Seminara Mrs. John Sensenbrenner Peter Sharp Dr. Tetsuo Shimamura Myrna Donald Sigman Judge Mrs. Ernest L. Signorelli Mr. Mrs. Robert L. Sillcox Dr. Mrs. Andrew Skumanich Marshall E. Sligh Dr. Mrs. Edward A. Smeloff Mrs. Adrian Smith Dr. Mrs. William Davy Smith Mr. Mrs. Ezra Solomon Earl C. Sparks Jr. Mr. Mrs. Herbert Stark Mr. Mrs. Charles J. Steinbugler Jr. Richard Stevens Mr. Mrs. David Subar G.F. Sutter D. Logan Tait, B. Com., C.A. Dr. George F. Thomas Mr. Mrs. Jay Thompson Thomas Pryor Turner III V.R.R. Uppulari Jimmy P. Vincent Joseph N. Walsh Mr. Mrs. Paul Walter Lt. Col. Mrs. Clarence D. Ward Mr. Mrs. Jack Weinberger Eileen G. Whitlock Myrna S. Weiner Dr. Mrs. Robert E. Williams Judge L.F. Wingerter Dr. Mrs. William J. Wise Mrs. T. Wisepelway Sanford Wolfson Bing Wong Dr. Mrs. Herbert H. Wotiz Robert P. Zabel 1980 Bric-a-Brac Managing Board Barry J. Deren ' 81 Joseph S. Durkin ' 81 Kenneth H. Fasman ' 81 Eileen A. Reilly ' 81 Business Manager Stephen E. Schmitt ' 81 Photography Editor Lloyd Chao ' 81 Copy Editor Lesley Peebles ' 82 Sports Editor William E. Werther ' 81 Printed by Keller Herff Jones Yearbook Division of the Carnation Company, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. Paper is 80 pound bordeaux, with the exception of the first signature which is ivory colortext. Basic type style is Helvetica with medium. Cover material is leatherette,  1075, with a pin morocco grain. Official yearbook photography is by Beim Photog- raphers, Irvington, New Jersey. Pictures on pages 2 through 15 are the property of WIDE WORLD PHOTOS. Thanks to The Daily Princetonian, Mr. John Simpson, and Ms. Alison Graham for the use of their photo- graphs. Special thanks to Mssrs. Robert Davine, Robert Wea- ner and John Sullivan of Herff Jones for their in- valuable assistance in the production of this volume. Contributors Elizabeth L. Ailing ' 80 Lawrence M. Ausubel ' 80 Herbert D. Axilrod ' 80 Frederick H. Barth ' 80 Richard M. Beamish ' 80 Hope R. Blackburn ' 81 Alex N. Blanco ' 82 Louis M. Bograd ' 81 Marie L. Borum ' 80 Jamie M. Brickell ' 80 Katherine W. Burleson ' 82 Ann W. Clark ' 80 Joseph P. Clark ' 81 Thomas R. Clark ' 80 Steve Cochrane ' 81 Nancy V. Conroy ' 81 Taylor J. Crouch ' 81 Kirk Dabney ' 80 William H. DeButts III ' 80 Frederick J. Ebert ' 80 Bonnie Eisenberg ' 81 Glenn Engle ' 80 Richard Fernandes ' 80 Gary S. Fogler ' 81 Felix M. Fujishiro ' 81 Charles S. Gosse ' 81 Timothy P. Heidmann ' 80 James D. Herbert ' 81 Jeanne E. Hoenicke ' 80 Bonna Horovitz ' 82 Anne Mackay-Smith ' 80 Michael Mantell ' 80 Mildred W. Massey ' 81 Seth J. Masters ' 81 Jason B. Meyer ' 80 Bryan W. Miller ' 80 Brian S. Morse ' 82 Jon J. Moses ' 81 Frank X. Moya ' 80 Carla Muenzen ' 82 Catherine M. Norman ' 81 Stephen V. O ' Connell ' 80 Andrew R. O ' Hara ' 80 Barbara S. Oppenheimer ' 81 Douglas W. Elmendorf ' 83 Sharon A. Galvin ' 81 Annamaria Garcia ' 81 Photography Staff Claire T. Chao ' 83 Michael C. Ciavarra ' 81 Hampton Deck ' 81 Matthew P. Farmer ' 83 William E. Goodman ' 83 Katherine T. Kreitler ' 81 Lawrence C. Manson, Jr. ' 80 Michael Rivers ' 81 Jeffrey P. Soons ' 83 M. Wistar Wood ' 83 Joseph M. Woods IV ' 81 Production Staff Harry Aldrich ' 82 Richard A. Bazarian ' 82 Ellen S. Chajson ' 81 Florence F. DiStefano ' 80 Helaine Friedman ' 82 Steven D. Hirschfeld ' 81 Michael A. Manganaro ' 81 Constance L. Monitto ' 81 William J. Pommersheim ' 82 James R. Shay ' 80 Bevan Yueh ' 83 Carol A. Phethean ' 81 Jill E. Pilgrim ' 80 Katherine Raisz ' 80 David Rollock ' 81 John M. Seabrook, Jr. ' 81 Mitchell R. Semel ' 81 Carol Ann Siciliano ' 81 Renata M. Sos ' 82 Eliot L. Spitzer ' 81 Kenneth L. Telljohann ' 81 Selma Thompson ' 81 Ann L. Thorsell ' 83 Maged G. Tomeh ' 81 Marshall C. Wallace ' 81 Scott S. Willenbrock ' 80 Amanda K. Young ' 81 James E. Zimmerman ' 80 Photographic Contributors Carol H. Akers ' 81 Elizabeth A. Akers ' 81 Robin A. Bennett ' 81 Paul E. Kazanjian ' 83 Bruce Key ' 81 Robert C. Manlowe ' 81 Melissa Marek ' 81 Philip F. Maritz ' 83 Lee G. Mestres ' 81 Marshall Metzger 82 Jason B. Meyer ' 80 Edward W. Moore ' 81 Howard K. Nam ' 81 David M. Siegel Steven S. Sklar ' 80 Alan G. Thomas ' 81 Winston E. Weinmann ' 80 John Wetmore ' 80 Angela B. Wu ' 83 Artwork Christopher A. Chambers ' 82 Class of ' 80 Poem Royce N. Flippin III ' 80 335 Three cheers for Old Nassau
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