Stanford University - Quad Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA)
- Class of 1975
Page 1 of 344
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 344 of the 1975 volume:
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QUAD STANFORD UNIVERSITY VOLUME 80 Wo wanderers, ever seeking the lonelier way, begin no day where we have ended another day; and no sunrise finds us where sunset left us. You may give them your love but not your thoughts. For they have their own thoughts. You may house their bodies but not their souls. For their souls dwell in the house of tomorrow, which you cannot visit, not even in your dreams. You may strive to be like them, but seek not to make them like you. For life goes not backward nor tarries with yesterday. o 4 tntro You have been told also that life is darkness, and in your weariness you echo what was said by the weary. And I say that life is indeed darkness save when there is urge. And all urge is blind save when there is knowledge. And all knowledge is vain save when there is work. And all work is empty save when there is love; And when you work with love you bind yourself to yourself, and to one another, and to God. lr tro 6 lnlro Some of you say, Joy is greater than sorrow, and others say, Nay, sorrow is the greater. But I say unto you, they are inseparable. Together they come, and when one sits alone with you at your board, remember that the other is asleep upon your bed. Intro 7 It was the boundless in you; The vast man in whom you are all but cells and sinews; He in whose chant all your singing is but a soundless throbbing. It is in the vast man that you are vast. And in beholding him that I beheld you and loved you. For what distances can love reach that are not in that vast sphere? What visions, what expectations and what presumptions can outsoar that flight? Like a giant oak tree covered with apple blossoms is the vast man in you. His might binds you to the earth, his fragrance lifts you into space, and in his durability you are deathless. Saintro InfroBS Uainlro Your daily life is your temple and your religion. Whenever you enter into it take with you your all. Take the plough and the forge and the mallet and the lute. The things you have fashioned in necessity or for delight. For in reverie you cannot rise above your achievements nor fall lower than your failures. And take with you all men: For in adoration you cannot fly higher than their hopes nor humble yourself lower than their despair. And if you would know God be not therefore a solver of riddles. 12 And he answered, saying: Your hearts know in silence the secrets of the days and the nights. But your ears thirst for the sound of your heart's knowledge. You would know in words that which you have always known in thought. You would touch with your fingers the naked body of your dreams. peciXl vents lnlro l3 A seeker of silences am I, and what treasure have found in silences that I may dispense with confidence? If this is my day of harvest, in what fields have I sowed the seed, and in what unremembered seasons? If this indeed be the hour in which I lift up my lantern, it is not my flame that shall burn therein. Empty and dark shall I raise my lantern. And the guardian of the night shall fill it with oil and he shall light it also. Text Adapted From Kahlil Gibran's The Prophet. IntroaiS 7 BRAMNER HALL 1. Ricky Hall 2. Vickie Hahn 3. Andy Hsi 4. Tom Hernandez 5. Kathy lubar 6. Nancy Wattman 7. Jackie Bryan 8. John MacWilliams 9. Chuck Jones 10. Susan Coleman 11. DeWayne Pursely 12. Bob Thorquist 13. Moose Shuman 14. Jim Lutz 15. Marsha Robertson. I to R: Rob Sondreal, Dave Hunt, David Lang, Kennan Kashima, Mark Sexton, Tim Clarke, Barbara Jones, Tracy Hudson, Kevin O'Leary (partially hidden), Jim Favaro, Sue Hoover, Jo Sauer, Wendy Wornham, Jenni Humbert, Sue Hodge, Megan Hornsby, Scott Rutherford, John Toenjes, Wendy Franz, Tom Hatsu-kami. (Back Row) I to R: Jeff Cerecke, Paul Ruddy, lisa Freeman, Karen Ehrhardt, Meera Viswana-than, Mark 8reitcnbach, Debbie Folloni, Scott Mayer, Jon Klein, Jon Barth, Pete Wirth. (Front row) L to R: Neil Kohatsu, Palma Strand, Patti Konicek, Holly Hansen, Ellen Cone, Carolyn Manning, Terry Elms, Jeff Kleiner, Mari Slack, Judy McKeehan, Jon Posvell. 18 ■Brjr.-u-r THE BRANNER ZOO Minding, L to R: Craig Smith, David Carlson, Brent Davis, Tiger Allyn, )avid tappen, Dan Dale, Al Sheats, Dave Larsen, Steve Russell, |im Kin-aid, Russell Mcchim, |im Wciscr. Above the crowd: Jim Jett, Dave igerter. Bill Doyle, Garth Neuffer, Mike Watt. Standing, I to R: Dick Dohrmann, Gary Kipnis, Bob Fikso, Randy Tucher, Wendy Findlay, Rick Sapp, Darlene Dunn, Michele LaMarche, Betsie Bremer, Nancy Hood, Carl Johnk, Fred Brickman. Sitting on will, I to R: Luis Garza-Medina, Grady Smith, Sherry Cassedy, Rick Navarette, Pete Bay, Wendy Heffner, Dennis Markus, Murray Pick. Sitting on ground, L to R: Margie Benedict, Wendy Blum berg, Randy Livingston, Honey Hillman, Linda Powell, Dan Penrose. Stmding, I to R: Mike Tanaka, Amil Gadre, Nicole Fiori, Hector Gonzalez, Kelly McGovern, Dave Shapiro (above), Charlie Menghetti, guest. Wail Malaty, Scott Thompson, Greg Hirsch. Sitting, I to R: David Kimelman, Connie Kceran, Sue Kauffman, Jim Wagstaffe, Vicki Kafferstein, Jayne Cross, Dcde Mendenhall, Kathy Tormey, Leslie Henner (above), Anne Marie Gonzalez, Irma Alvarado, Kim Hallam, Alice Hill. lunnrtt |9 MIRLO 1. Bill Knickcl 2. Albert Ting 3. Scott Sperlich 4. lisa Moncrieff 5. Judy Ace 6. Jim Tilley 7. Seth Fine 8. Kent Holubar 9. Nino Motta 10. Ricj Hazcy 11. Sandy Mitchell 12. Mike Vender 13. Josh Koestenbaum 14. Bill Walter 15. Ferris Fletcher 16. Cindy Jarvis 17. Barry Gray 18. Joe Wong 19. Steve Lof-chie 20. Joe Schwartz 21. Chris Fulford 22. Janet Spreiter 23. Carol Carpenter 24. Julie Hiramatsu 25. Kathy Higuchi 26. Garry Rosekind 27. Janice Miyakawa 28. Meredith Chuck 29. Willie Lew 30. Mark Tashima 31. Kyle Mashima 32. Charlotte Christiman 33. Phil Vargas CARDENAL (first row, L to R) Kim Hauner, Neil Erikson, Jeff Brandon, Gary Marenzi, Joe Hayden. (Second row) Ken Favaro, Pam Srike, Steve Shepherd, Jacqueline Heslop, Brooke Smith, Chuck McKay, Mark Fitzner. (Third row) Lori Haniman, Lisa Brooks, Alicia Rodriguez, Jamey Cohen, Cathy Truax, Gordie Rosenburg. (Fourth row) Gordon Thrupp, Lynn Tennefoss, Wizzy Fays, Elisa Hastrup, Seleste Wiser, Robert Vobejda, Charles Hailing, Bobby Vargas. (Fifth row) Bill Kennard, Dan Delgado, Jim Montoya, Busby Howell, Kelly Thompson, Sue Kingston, Larry Scarborough, Sue Mensinger, Rebecca Blach, Karen Meengs. (Bjck row) Alfred E. Nueman (Ruben Sanchez), Dave Sylvester, Alex Hsu, Toby Schneider. FAISAN (Front row. Sitting) Celia Carlson, Susan Cromwell, Mike Bruner, Theresa Isaacs, Bruce Blakely, Maddy Bloom, Rod Trevino, J.J. Chao. (Middle row) Craig Olson, Ping Ho, Paul Naver, |erry Salo-mone, lisa Lau, Akemi Chang, Kent Rowetl, Kathy JO ■flortntt Moort Aguilar, Lyndon Slambler, Libby Rosenthal, Dobbin Chow. (Back row) John Strand, lisa Savori, Luke Frocb, Roy Johnson, Doris Harkson. (hidden) Sue Rogers, Jeff Cook, Pat Peckham. (Climbing in tree) Toby Schneider. (Standing in tree) Alex Hsu. LORO (front row) David Georgette, Ken Rcmson, John West, Matt Robinson, Mark Wieland, Tom DeSantos, Carol little. (Second row) Rob Spitzer, Susan Hall, Dorean King, Andrea Hirsch, Kathy Mleko, Jamie Monson. (Third row) Meredith Britton, Anne Henckcts, Violette Cavelli, Sfor a. (Fourth row) Ruben Griego, Joni Christianson, Fran Chiang, Linda Bernhard, Janis Azar, Aamir Farid, (fifth row) Rick Ward, Lynn Pittinger, Bob Rowen, Clay Hall, Betsy lovekin, Lucy Nielson, Scott Parker, Bill Newman, linzee Weld, Sheila O’Rourke, Laurie Maxwell, Curtis lee, Rob Quick. (Bjck row) Tom Guardino, John Baity, Mark Kuok, Jeff Neubarth, Steve Powell, Marilyn McLoughlin, Frank Nelson, Lisa Horn. (lormt r Wooff ■Z1 I 1. Edward Levi 2. Michele Koo 3. Dianne Edgar 4. Tom Pian 5. Kenny Baker 6. Diana 8ettencourt 7. Karen Strormmoe8. Frank leone 9. Hugh Kuhn 10. Frank Markowitz 11. Stephanie Khott 12. Susan Tespake 13. Tate Adams 14. Sally Wheatland 15. John Staley 16. Mark Watters 17. lissy Abraham 18. Tom Wainwright 19. Dyan Conway 20. Geoff Fong 21. Carl Reading 22. Mike Kohrman 23. Janet Funk 24. Hclga Ding 25. Camille Majzoub 26. John Finley 27. Joan Bradus 28. Mike Kita 29. Bill Connell 30. Gordon Endow ALONDRA (to rn r Moorf 2J 25 EUCALYPTO 1. Louise Bertao 2. Gary Chan 3. Aris Gredenz 4. Bruce Goldstein 5. Sharyn Brotz 6. Candy Mintz 7. Farice Nabti 8. Barbara Parness 9. Karen Wyle 10. Warren Cordell 11. Larry Hollister 12. Ben Tyson 13. Bob Degrass 14. Geegee Pfeifle 15. Paul Sobotka 16. Dick Butkus 17. Steven Krausz 18. Nolen Curtis 19. Alan Galbut 20. Jim Gibson 21. Fred Cohan 22. Rory Maclean 23. Garret Moddel 24. Gary Kurtzman 25. Christine Yang 26. Vince Warren 27. Jeanie Stauffer 28. Phil Raymond 29. BarbaraAllen 30. Lori Hodgson 31. Melanie Broida 2fc U unlU 1. Goly Yazdi 2. Marjie Au 3. Rica Liedcrman 4. Laurie Vibert 5. unidentified 6. Sean Rhatigan 7. Wayne Smith 8. Marci Epstein 9. Richard Meyer 10. Bear Bowen 11. Chris Vosseler 12. Beth PI etcher 13. lanet Stavosky 14. Bill Guns 15. Jo Valenti 16. Kit Weld 17. unidentified 18. Martha Anderson 19. Karen Mueller 20. Tanya Presnall 21. Cosmo Geracke 22. Kevin Wherry 23. Liz Harrison 24. Mark Blincoe 25. Harrison Liz 26. Elmo Geracke 27. Steve Stewart 28. Bert Webb 29. Elaine Christians 30. Dana Gray 31. Libby Wood 32. Quinn Mayer 33. Lizzy Lambert 34. Pete Knuepfer 35. Jeff Stelzner 36. Dick Kleeberg 37. Betty Cohen 38. Ross Slotten 39. George Cole 40. Kris Halverson 41. Mike Thiemann 42. Debbie Tong GRANADA Standing, L to R: Rod McCauley, Marie O'Gara, Eric Dorsey Diane Alaia, Mervin Greene, Kris Knudsen, Vince Bellows Rick Hjelm, Gary Lynn, Bill Perrine. Wa , L to R: Cara Jonas sen, Alan Soneda, Jill Liebcr, Leslie Zinkand, Tom Culhane Dave Derrington, Steve Hake, Megan McCaslin, Mark Had ley, Dale Peters. Sitting, I to R: Peter Winik, Lucia Tuffanell Mike Cunningham, Carol Detweiler, liane Pitts, Libby Ver non, Allen Roberts, Charles Cosgrove, Jim Van Antwerp Keith Orty, Henry Woods, Tom Pfeffer. tjfu itt 27 OLIVO — MAGNOLIA 1. lee Rosenbaum 2. Prince Riley 3. Greg Sturgis 4. Tom Steele 5. Leslie Henderson 6. |on Ellis 7. Gene Robinson 8. Andrew Holz 9, Andrew Marcus 10. Reggie Mason 11. David Mundy 12. Marsha Broussard 13. Don Arima 14. Rita lewis 15. Jeff Neubauer 16. Skip LaFetra 17.. Lamar Nelson 18. Teri Petlitt 19, Dave lennert 20. Petel Van Oot 21. Lyse Strnad 22. lauri Loomis 23. Robin Reed 24. Lari Caaper 25. Jacqui Bowles 26. Kitti Norris 27. Kathy Ishman 28. Arba Goode 29. Mike Heideman 30. Paul Paulis 31. Keith Johnson 32. Barbara Bellaire 33. Frank Poturica 34. Bob Horn 35. Jennifer Talson 36. Alan Maloney 37. Debbie Kingsland 38. Jeanette Carlock 39. Nathan Richardson 40. Valerie Bowman 41. lames Lofton 42. Pamela Barnes 43. Charles Ogle-tree 44. Donna Armstrong 45. Tyrone Powell 46. Jeanie Ishman 47. Greg McEhreen 48. Arthur Gray 49. Vincent Johnson 50. Mike Welch 51. Belinda Edwards 52. Terry Shelton 53. Kenneth Riley 54. Carol Tuge 55. Mary MaArtin 56. David Mayer 57. Margaret Owens. 28 ■tixuniU AD ELF A 1. Donna Storm 2. Mary Dageford 3. Tryg Stratte 4. Ted Porter 5. Ellen Porter 6. Creg Sturgis 7. Todd Hut-cheon 8. Dave Hoyt 9. Ed Klein 10. Steve Cobbe 11. Dave Ashkenas 12. Ann Walker 13. Shane Harrah 14. Steve levictes 15. Bill Stephenson 16. Mike Levine 17. Dave laxson 18. Mike Fodor 20. Hamid Moinpour 21. Nancy Kennedy 22. Bruce Miller 23. Kim Lairson 24. |amie Boswell 25. Alice Pronty 26. Sue Jeliffe 27. loan Cashel 28. Diane Campbell 29. Suan Hayase. I Jguniu ■n 1. lack Handy 2. Dan West man 3. Libby Goldman 4. Tom Winokur 3. Mark Schoenrock 6. Peter Rysavy 7. Bruce Fast 8. Lonnie Kroo 9. Patricia Thompson 10. Don Brunstein 11. Nan Thompson 12. Bill Whiting 13. Beth Wood 14. Paisal Shusang 15. Greg McIntosh 16. Mark Feinerman 17. Dave Sutton 18. Tricia Heaton soasirrn 19. Beth Wagner BURBANK 20. Wayne Minobe 21. Anne Doyle 22. Barry Abramson 23. Perry McCarty 24. Anne Gabriel 25. Steve Walt 26. Thierry Not 27. Glenn Billman 28. J.P. Zahn 29. Dave Wong 30. Jiri Weiss 31. Karl Ruddy 32. Kim list 33. Lisa McCrimmons 34. Mark Weltzel 35. Steve Wahn 36. Fred lui 37. Leslie Gordon 38. Karen Gjerde 39. Steve Knabe 40. Meagan Beechler 41. Bruce Ishimoto 42. unidentified 43. Bob Shanner 44. Bob Trumball 45. Kathy McNair 46. Petra Weidemann 47. Andy Combs 48. Jeff Popma 49. Robert Nishinaka 50. Rosemary Howley 51. Teresa Ashburn 52. Gail Tetien ■t LARKIN 1. Francis Draper 2. Ginny Maurer 3. Bob Carr 4. Kate Garvey 5. Mary Carrizal 6. Maggie Nelson 7. Preston Du Fauchard 8. Juse Woythaler 9. Howie Zack 10. Nancy Scholgalla 11. Maureen Haight 12. laura Parks 13. Pepe Hinojosa 14. Renee Lyons IS. Robin Schmitz 16. Aly Click 17. Amin Al-Mufti 18. Jeff Segal 19. David Worms 20. Ken Poulton 21. Nancy Bartlett 22. Jim Melamed 23. David Parker 24. Jim Motulsky 25. Larry GetzoFF 26. Matthew Wcingcr 27. Janice Warne 28. Cheryl Hines 29. Susie Herbst 30. Joe Galgano 31. Jeanne Schacht 32. Ken Sutherland 33. Hank Sanchez 34. Roy Holliday 35. Bob Werle 36. Dave Olson 37. Frank Koenig 38. Doug Apostol 39. Jake Young 40. Stan Shoemaker 41. Dave Larson 42. Stuart Jacobson 43. Peggy March 44. Ted Nace 45. Eric Turner 46. Doug Yoshida 47. Mary Bliss Finlayson 48. Chris Mings 49. Tina Gwatkin 50. Dennis Shanager 51. Weston Press 52. Randy Wong 53. unidentiFicd 54. Bruce Turner 55. Jim Smits 56. Jim Toscano 57. JeFF Tanji 58. Alison Parker 59. JeFF Merkley 60. Mike McDonald 61. Lisa GoldFien Slrrnajl TWAIN 1. Hal Elgie 2. Scott Dailey 3. Cary Hendra 4. Jeff Hook 5. Jane Hysen 6. Sandra Holmes 7. Rick Everist 8. Beth Tropin 9, Celia Moreno 10. Lori Poniche 11. Mark Chin 12. Diane Van Schoten 13. Ahmed Calvo 14. Marilyn Driver 15. Bill Jordan 16. John Cardosi 17. Bob Aster 18. Jan Agosti 19. Anita Newell 20. Annette Parness 21. Dave Woodards 22. Cary Masatsugu 23. Nelson Davis 24. Lynda Helmstadter 25. Greta Turner 26. Marc Judson27. Marcy Stovall 28. Cheryl Wedlake 29. Lynne Minos 30. Leslie Cunn 31. Elisabeth Hillcbrant 32. Rob Valdez 33. Ann Pierce 34. House Guest 35. Erik Hedberg 36. Vic Hargrave 37. Ted Zayner 38. Ray Chan 39. Sue Nicol 40. Mark Lillo 41. Steve Hcfter 42. Mike Kositch 43. Malka Kopell 44. Charlie Richard 45. Sara Barnum 46. Liz McArdc 47. Lucinda Mercer 48. Dave Brown 49. Steve Tight 50. Jane Soyster 51. Ann Lowery 52. Barb Blodgett 53. Wanda Collier 54. John Fess S5. Tom Pitchford. DONNER ZAPATA 1. Unwel Cumst Ranger 2. Greg Sidak 3. Jesus Juarez 4. Robert Bersin 5. Robv Wood 6. Linda Morales 7. Ursula Friedan Ormst 8. David Hubbard 9. Randy Schutt 10. Michael Fahey 11. Jose Castellanos 12. Christina Franco 13. Bill Eckert 14. Ricardo do la Rosa 15. Caroline Peck 16. Meredith Lobcl 17. Walter Kloefkorn 18. David Herberg 19. Elena Robles 20. Jamie Hoover 21. Carlos Pastrana 22. Kevin Lesko 23. Rob Don't 24. Ramiro Sala an 25. Debra Reed 26. Jose Duran 27. Gretchcn Henny 28. John Baum 29. Bob loeffer 30. Noelia Saldana 31. Dolores Bravo 32. Gayle Turner 33. Rudy Garcia 34. Rueben Casarez 35. Ann linvill 36. Eric Tellas. JUNIPERO 1. Peter Gordon 2. |o elyn Wong 3. Brian Masutani 4. Sue Hammond 5. Myron Namba 6. Ernest S eto 7. William Kobayashi 8. Alan Chock 9. John Wolhoupter 10. Don lum 11. Vince Ho 12. landis lum 13. Rick Everist 14. Mike Yee 15. Hilary Davis 16. lily Young 17. Terry Brandt 18. link Hochnadcl 19. Debbie Crossan 20. Dennis lowe 21. Dennis 22. Carol Chen 23. Dave Asai 24. Kathy Kelvie 25. Jeff Brees 26. lynn Nakayama 27. Jon Eichelberger 28. Chuck Jameson 29. Jim Warlick 30. Mary Koskovich 31. Mary Jane Chase 32. Jon Kobashigawa 33. Warren Dang 34. Jeff Wald 35. Roger Tang 36. Mark Cohen 37. Pal Worthington 38. Marcia Makino 39. Bruce Wear 40. Eric lee 41. Harvey Chang 42. Roger Ihomp-son 43. Paul Williams 44. Ted McClusky 45. Scott Leckman 46. Mark Vyehara 47. Reynold Wong 48. Jett Ogden 49. Vin Nishino 50. Bob Hillman 51. Paul Collopy 52. Doug Eorseth 53. Elaine Date 54. Hank Wo 55. Ann Chao 56. George Sycip 57. Tom Chao 58. Jeff Ogata 59. Mike Hammond 60. Walt Pyka 61. Greg Sue 62. Cathy Drury 63. Scott Strickland 64. Meika fang 65. Cheryl Kojina 67. Julie Hatta 68. George Brandle 69. Russ Cato 70. Kin Mo Ng 71. Terry Nip 72. Todd Greenspan. M • Wilbur 1. Andy Williams 2. Peter Koehler 3. Steve Robinson 4. Gail Killefer 5. Steve Buckley 6. Pete Starr 7. Beverly Standing 8. Kathy Gross 9. Chris Sherry 10. Alan Twhigg 11. Peter Economy 12. Emily Eggebroten 13. Peter luttenbeger 14. Brad Phillips 15. Nancy Kirkner 16. Sheila Lynch 17. Rene Gontales 18. Cheryl Hall 19. Leslie Bretell 20. Sharon Cogle 21. Ken Armstrong 22. Karl Yorston 23. David Mark 24. Phil Benfield 25. Libby Birnie 26. Andy Engler 27. Melinda Gibson 28. Anieka Davis 29. Debbie Blacker 30. luanita Villalobos 31. MA Freeman 32. Bob Clark 33. Tom Wood 34. Sarah Grosvenor 35. David Holtquist 36. Rickie Zimmerman 37. Margie Weisz 38. lack Tinkler 39. Leslie Brown 40. Michael Anne Browne ARROYO lanet Waggoner 45. Gail Omiya 46. Marcus Wood 47. Carrie Breiner 48. Jim Absent McGraw. CEDRO 1. Steve Holve 2. Bill Hopkins 3. Seth Murdock 4. Luis Buhler 5. Evans Whitaker 6. Howie Klein 7. Mike Wright 8. Sandy Doo 9. Dave Horth 10. Ted Mitchell 11. Missy Taylor 12. Bill Ledeen 13. Ron Young 14. Marilyn Kellar 15. Alan Twhigg Mascot 16. Steve Berthene 17. Marcy Hikida 18. Greg Evring 19. Rosario Del-storre 20. Nick Kouletsis 21. Brad Jones 22. Betsy Stolte 23. Anne Morton 24. Chuck Nelson 25. Joe Wu 26. Erik Pearson 27. Julie Haugen 28. Ann Mortimer 29. Stan Abeshire 30. Peter Bronsteen 31. Linda Golley 32. Bugess Johnson 33. Bill love 34. Katie Solomon-son 35. Hector Chaparro 36. Tran Furtner 37. Steve Sawyer 38. Eric Rystrom 39. Rick Freedman 40. Laura Kennedy 41. leana Alvera 42. Lise Pfeiffer 43. Marie Mookini 44. VIM Wilbur all 1. loe McCoy 2. Sim  n Sanchez 3. Karen Martinez 4. Pat Flinn 5. Randy Cape 6. lack Vaughn 7. Ann Amioka 8. Steve Thurin 9. Su i Ehlesham-Zadeh 10. Chuck Corder 11. David Defren 12. led Hamilton 13. Dave Cannon 14. Peter Jones 15. Matt Lut ker 16. lack Joseph 17. Peter Meic 18. lim Sheehy 19. John Ba a 20. Rick Heather 21. Julie Fgan 22. Su ic Jackson 23. Mike Christie 24. Kerry Wagner 25. Sarah Donnelly 26. Chuck Duggan 27. Terry Becker 28. Alan Schwab 29. Jack Spruill 30. Steve Baumbgartcn 31. Cliff Jue 32. Steve Carter 13. Cinda Ncsbet 34. Tillie Garay 35. Mark Green 36. Larry lannacone 37. John Mayes 38. Ed Noble 39. Den-nid Small 40. linda Mitchell 41. Barb Dubbert 42. Ed Parker. OTERO )6 ■Wilbur MADERA 1. Jeff Bailey 2. Marshall Gannon 3. Janet Stewart 4. Erin Smith 5. Tom Maynard 6. Marie Earl 7. Tony Becker 8. Ray Johnson 9. Stephen Jacobe 10. Beth Kerttula 11. Ann Krumboltz 12. Anne Coughlin 13. Michelle McKinney 14. Bill Allstcttcr 15. Dave Erickson 16. Meade Murphy 17. John Oval 18. Carol Finney 19. Donna Woodard 20. John Markus 21. Linda Bridgeford 22. Evan Eibaw 23. Joan Larkins 24. Rich Genirbcrg 25. Jeanis Campbell 26. Vicky Baylon 27. Pete Peters 28. Larry Cerf 29. Charlie Hepworth 30. Mike Bristow 31. Sonya Jarvis 32. Tom Haywood 33. Kirt Kirtland 34. Greg Hodson 35. Dave Bailard 36. Ralph Phillips 37. Charlie Nager 38. Les McDonald 39. Matt Seaman 40. Sean Casey 41. Fred Kahan 42. Larry Latourette 43. Fred Tejada 44. Bobbin Ladd 45. Kristi Jordi 46. Kim West 47. Margaret Sampson 48. Kathy Weinman 49. Adrian Sher 50. Carrie McColl 50. A. Laurie Miller 51. Hadley Bramel 52. Matt Yee 53. Peter Hausknecht 54. David Eisen-berg 55. unidentified 56. John larmer 57. Larry Gersten 58. Ron Yuen 59. John Schechler 60. Kurt Zischke 61. Dave Perez 62. Dwight Donovan 63. Joe Coelho 64. Rick Johansen 65. Ka uo Hirai umi 66. Wendy Jalonen 67. Rich Johnson. WillKira XT TRANCOS SOTO 1. Clark Carroll 2. Marshall Bryan 3. Vince Fanucchi 4. Jim Oddie 5. Tony Finnerly 6. Pete Bronec 7. Jerry Cisneros 8. Sue Kinder 9. Sherri Bube 10. Glenn Mendleson 11. Joan Trusly 12. Betsy Do ier 13. Bruce Tonn 14. Jim Tearse 15. Jason Chang 16. Alan Achor 17. Lynn Runzo 18. Ellen Merrick 19. Steve LaPointe 20. Greg Scammel 21. Brian Con 22. Carol Larson 23. Tom Gulick 24. Jamie Edwards 25. I ed Ong 26. Card Jameson 27. Andy Lcuchter 28. Mele Meyer 29. Dave Lawton 30. Brad Baker 31. Ralph Drury 32. Barry Parr 33. Dave Straut 34. Jeff Dorflinger 35. Diane Johnson 36. Lorna McRae 37. Melinda DeBriyn 38. Bob french 39. Stan Murashige 40. Dave Catterlin 41. Tom Bede carre 42. Roger West 43. Bill Wernecke 44. Steve Fitzgerald 45. Rowena Wildin 46. Fbet Chee 47. Norma Garralda 48. Janet Bates 49. Jim Liu 50. Chris Thomsen 51. John Warren 52. Jim Johnson 53. Wayne Oba 54. Jane Bucchel 55. Melissa Dossi 56. Tim Williams 57. John Eaton 58. John McClaskey 59. Lori Hucbner 60. Gina Hubbell 61. Karen Clark 62. Mike Glafkides 63. Sandy Smith 64. Pat Mortell 65. Lynn Yip 66. Sonny Okumoto 67. Mary Powell 68. Jim 8lessing 69. Adam Siever 70. Kathy Yokobata 71. Irene Calvo 72. Stan Sheft 73. Bill Halper. 18 • W-lh-.r 1. Joel (i enunn 2. Cary Kdsberg 3. Scott Setra-kian 4. Allen Amen 5. Brute Barker (Arroyo) 6. Mark Manqueros 7. Art liu 8. Dour Bargar 9. Dexter lee tO. Rob King II. Larry Brossnstein 12. Tom Scarpino 13. Keith light 14. frank McCarthy IS. Carol Slebbins 16. Randy Rosenberg no 17. 18. Marie Williams 19. Sabrina Marline 20. Judy Schwimmer 21. laurie Fan 22. Scott Graham 23. Kyra Subhotin 24. Diane Warren 25. Joan Tompkins 26. Sandra laundermill 27. Jim Boysen 28. Kevin Klecspies 29. Jordan Schwartz 30. Hank Bohnhoff 31. Matt Cobb 32. Jim Friesen 33. Peter Morris 34. Mike Newell 35. Michelle Primeau 36. Juanita Fenton 37. Nancy Rudd 38. larry Aidem 39. Karen Telleen 40. larry Barnett 41. leah Ashton 42. Kristy Herrera 43. Kathy Nitta 44. Bob Heintz 45. Carolyn Underwood 46. Cay Moeller 47. Alice f ischer-Colbrie 48. laura Nelson 49. Alfredo Mendoza 50. Ron Williams 51. Glenn Hudson 52. Roger Henneberger 53. Mike Ricci 54. Terry Tatum 55. Rick levy 56. unidentifiable 57. Hank Johns 58. lloyd Dixon 59. John Chaldek 60. John Iwanski 61. Steve Keene 62. Andy Baker 63. Ignacio lazo 64. John frb 65. Tony lowe 66. Bill Christopher 67. Dan Kain 68. Cathryn Ma 69. Betsy Suits 70. Dick Stark 71. Jim Goughran 72 John Berti 73. Susan Hockbergcr 74. Pam Dcmetrakes 75. Nancy lovvold 76. Nancy Warner 77. Mark Hoffman 78. Tom Killeen. RINCONADA 1. Damaris Skouras 2. Roily Emmerick 3. linda Bammann 4. Renee Masi 5. Andy Lowe 6. John Wataha 7. Dan Wood 8. Web Augustine 9. Bill Casto 10. Craig Dennis 11. Tom Kimball 12. Jeff Howard 13. Dave Ansley 14. liz Choy 15. Meg Durbin 16. Melissa Patton 17. laura Pastre 18. Natalie Naftzger 19. Cathy Kovacich 20. Mary Ann Roscvcar 21. Robin Stratton 22. Mark Altsertson 23. Joo Foo 24. Geoff Kieburtz 25. Prudy Shepard 26. Jenny Olncy 27. Cathy Herrera 28. Sara Shumway 29. Kerry Macintosh 30. Barbara little 31. lisa Heidorn 32. Carlos Crummelt 33. Kim White 34. Steve Jawetz 35. Kathy Trafton 36. Collin Park 37. Don Imamra 38. Sally Bray 39. Dave Hall 40. Jack Martinez 41. Stephanie Young 42 Jim Moroney 43. Jim Hazlehurst 44. Dave Ingram 45. Dan Fiduccia 46. John Kirst 47. Bob Scarlett 48. |oe Rominger 49. Chris Foster 50. Tom “Tuna Price 51. Mike De lapa 52. Jerry Thompson 53. Wilson X-100 54. Brad Bettman 55. Kristen McGhee 56. Dave Dick 57. Wilma Wong 58. Peter Bakst. W.lburan LOSARCOS I. Sandy Biagi 2. Ernie Inacay 3. Mike Phillip 4. Sue Stout 5. Tom McCormick 6. Don Rogal 7. Susie Klug 8. Heidi Munzinger 9. John Gonzales 10. Tracy Tavel II. Wayne Shaw 12. Paul Courtney 13. Dan Carrol 14. Scott Miller IS. Dave Voss 16. Ted Dinnerman 17. Marlha Hardwick 18. Nea Brown 19. Craig Falkenhagen 20. Joe Karger 21. Bruce Yaeger 22. Debbie Rutter 23. Ann Reichart 24. Jeff Little 25. Phil Kurjan 26. Kelly Button 27. Dave Rodrigues 28. Molly Murphy 29. Steve Ruddock 30. Doug Bedard 31. Lucy Harding 32. Bob Semba 33. Dan Bressler 34. Shawn Hoover 35. Ray Slice 36. Nancy Singleton 37. Jim Barstow 38. John Roos 39. Ted Gazvis 40. Sally Dayton 41. Matt Messner42. Riech Watterson 43. Joan Kagawa 44. J.D. Head 45. Jane Hayes 46. Mimi Wyche 47. Diana Hu 48. J.L. Morris 49. Wolfgang 50. Dave Kantor 51. Kim Brown 52. David Weinberg 53. Dave Maron 54. John Banvelos 55. Tricia Baldwin 56. Everett Egli 47. Mary Beth Mills 58. Nick Schlotter 59. Lois Carroll 60. Chris August 40aio«on BREAKERS 1. |ane Benjamin 2. Carey Peabody 3. Andy Dannenbcrg 4. Rick Greer 5. Bea Human 6. Jane Wilhelm 7. Dave Haflich 8. Tom Moore 9. B. Hymen 10. Vic Rogers 11. Don Bluh 12. Dan Schmidt 13. Tim Tight 14. Kathy Clark 15. Fred Sammarlino 16. Steve Townes 17. Fred Layman 18. Shep Kinsman 19. Gary Reiss 20. Andrea Voinot 21. Lois Corrin 22. Bob Cronkite 23. Casey Carhart 24. Joe Clift 25. Chris Bcrka 26. Jimmie Hinze 27. Sid Gospe 28. Joe Heffern 29. Mark Hogan 30. Jeff Manheimer 31. Dan Castro 32. David Paulson 33. Deborah Friedman 34. Gregg Everhart 35. Henry 1. Betsy Morris 2. Ann Omachi 3. Steve Shi 4. Bob Moorchead 5. Doug Wilson 6. Tony Haney 7. Jeff Charonnat 8. Bob Hickman 9. Bob Schier 10. Sandy Dirkx 11. Andy Siegel 12. Marge Kunzler 13. Eric Monke 14. Mindy Bokser 15. Fred Bailey 16. Sue Kneedler 17. Becky Burchell 18. George Redden 19. John Allured 20. Holly Russell 21. Tim George 22. Lourdes Hernandey 23. Linda Gorin 24. Charlotte Mason 25. Tim Polidorf 26. Jil Winegardner 27. Greg Wallace 28. Darrow Thom 29. Beth Anderson 30. Holly Davidson 31. Scott McDonald 32. Randy Strickfaden 33. Jess Leon 34. Steve Kirkpatrick 35. Carol Cavan 36. Liza Kinsell 37. Mary Buttner 38. Sharon Sanner 39. Paul Bauman 40. Ron Shapiro 41. EllenEllen Adamson 42. Liza Kinsell 43. Evin Potter 44. Dave Obar 45. Ann Hoffman 46. Corrine Chan 47. Jeff Angwin 48. Micki Bryant 49. Margaret Marshall 50. Sandy Briscoe 51. Brad Fischer 52. Dick Baumgartner 53. Bryce Parry 54. Dave VanValkenberg 55. Clara Teyssier 56. Mike Sperberg 57. Julie Nixon 58. Randy Hulet 59. Beverly Baily 60. Charlie lockerby 61. Rick Sultzmann 62. Tamiko Theil 63. Sue Wilson 64. Rad Wagner 65. Dan Gonzalez 66. Ron Smith 1o 00 41 1. Mark Eaton 2. Dean Thomas 3. Rob Robinson 4. Steve Haggblade S. Scott Kim 6. Rich Karlgaard 7. Katie Solow 8. George Noroian 9. Ralph Brand 10. Jasmine Mantay 11. Ralph Kowalik 12. Jane Mitsumori 13. Terrill Tanaka 14. Jo Landcfeld 15. Mary Phelps 16. Raymond Coutncy 17. Kathy Craig 18. Dave Evans 19. Robin Mirov 20. Kim Nordstog 21. Raul Pino 22. Mary Hansen 23. Amy Christen 24. Ken Doxsee 25. Sebelle Von Hafften 26. Mona Behan 27. Miles White 28. Ursi Peters 29. Jan Powers 30. Bill Lubart 31. Shelby Siegel 32. Jennifer Purcell 33. Mary Erickson 34. Kurt Bausback 35. Linda Giesler 36. Diddy Leuchs 37. Beverly Hashimoto 38. unidentai-fied 39. Glenn McDavid 40. Phil Logan 41. Dave Farris 42. unidentified 43. Camille Tang 44. Linda Vento 45. Jim lake 46. Rick Wood 47. Jon Morris 48. Seuna Gaw 49. Carol Cox 50. Andrea Chan 51. Tim Minor 52. Scooter Townsend 53. Bob Latta 4 «lo on 1. Craig Hoops 2. Rich Auerbach 3. Martin Conner 4. Car-vin Marvina 5. Sam Spiegelman 6. Barry Sloan 7. Don Petersen 8. Peter Samsel 9. Dave Mcnieassy 10. Zach 11. Carl Dalton 12. Tucker P. Fudmouth 13. Dan Bohcy 14. Sto Corliss 15. Craig Corneliuss 16. Monty Makous 17. Ken Cannonbaum 18. Steve Nossier 19. Marty McGrath 20. James I. Buckley 21. Rick Anderson 22. Charlie Masch 23. Chuck Harding 24. Kraig Williams 25. Joes Feliciano 26. Kirk Duncan 27. Rev Howard 28. Loren Bersack 29. Steve Smith 30. Club Guest 31. Partially Obscured 32. Jim Noonan 33. Mike Jeung 34. Jay Miller 35. Kevin Schofield 36. Mark Brown 37. John Levy 38. Ernie Tai 39. Newby Her-rod 40. David Basri 41. Bruce Bennett 42. Loren Ostrow 43. Steve Pascal 44. Jeff VVy 45 Eric Havian 46. Drew Keeling 47. Chris Baldwin 48. John Russell 49. Kim Sunder-mayer 50. Karl Nakamura 51. Ken Gorman 52. Scott Olmstedt 53. Tim Guth 54. John Yanacopoulos 55. David “Tommy Thomas 56. Mike Best 57. Veesy Torr 58. Duke Uhannabha 59. Mark McDonough 60. Steve Kopanski 61. Brook Phifer 62. Ron Crosby 63. Randy Mar 64. Les Olsen 65. Peter McCook 66. Richard leyshon 67. Phil Kur mer68. John Smith 69. Al Nicora 70. Dave Wilson 71. Charlie Wunsch 72. Mark Eaton to on t] MIRRIELEES UaMinMm MANZANITA PARK Min iniU fjiVUS CROTHERS MEMORIAL 1. Maryanne Iordan 2. Concepcion Lara 3. Elisa Martinez 4. Robin Feincr 5. Marjorie Payne 6. Dorothy Coleman 7. Rick Mills 8. Bruce Smyth 9. Steve Vegdahl 10. Oliver Buckley 11. Nancy Me Hale 12. Norman Dupont 13. Janice Garret 14. Peter Storey 15. Frank Chang 16. Vicki Cert 17. Tom Erbin 18. Cliff litvak 19. Steve Michaels 20. Mary Childs 21. Mel Chavez 22. Janice Bor-gersor 23. Bart Higgins 24. Vicki Hsia 25. Bryant Seaman 26. Doug Sterne 27. Julianna Rogers 28. Eric Daniels. HURLBURT lb ■CtOM Mem — Rem Houtrt DURAND 1. Wendy lilten 2. Diane Doggilt 3. Rory Jaffe 4. Tim Boles 5. Kent Keller 6. Tim Logan 7. Dave Jeggc 8. Kay Nagatani 9. Nancy Moore 10. Pierre Lanthiez 11. Judy Staschover 12. Kim Kroener 13. Yolanda Galvan 14. Roberta Culler 15. Anita Lewis 16. Sid Bounds 17. Carol Gilman 18. Cindy Scott 19. Steve Swanberg 20. Tom Ringo 21. Keith Archuleta 22. Dave Orlean 23. Mike Schwartz 24. Christy Juergens 25. Gordon Crim 26. John Augsberger. Row Houin ■47 LATHROP 1. Sandy Mitchell 2. Ceorgc McMillan .3. David Wu 4. Cappy Coleman 5. Betsy lasaro 6. Amy Tada 6. Bill Hodden 8. Martha Dern 9. Mark Pigott 10. Bruce Robbins 11. Frank Lcnk 12. Bonnie Senko 13. Mike Khaw 14. Roy Tolies 15. Roger laut enhiser 16. John Rafferty 17. Mark Brown 18. Amory DeSaussure 19. David Garvin 20. Bob Clarkson 21. Andrea Smith 22. Darrell Brown 23. Kathy Siena (directly below Darrell) 24. Kathy Hansen 25. Mac Taylor 26. Jeanne Hamel. 8 ■Rov Houvm ROTH 1.1 eslie Myers 2. Celeste Evans 3. Mary Ann Toman 4. Nancy Harris 5. Shirley Olsen 6. Emily Polis 7. Sharon Biagi 8. Anita Mcisler 9. Leslie Mannan 10. Pat VVakyk 11. lorene Martinez 12. Becky Rosenberg 13. Marji Baker 14. Cindy Conroy 15. Kathleen Capps 16. Wendy Slobe 17. Janet Ramsey 18. Linda Thomas 19. Debby Webster 20. Emily Huss 21. Jamie Grodsky 22. Shawn Williams 23. Marcy Zingaro 24. I indy Dubois 25. Janet Daseking GROVE AND LASUEN 1. Richard Yankwich 2. Jay Gellert 3. Carrie Wilson 4. lorrie Duval 5. Steve Herum 6. Kathy Cunningham 7. Marlene Veach 8. Terri Sklar 9. Mike Minieka 10. Sue Goldlinger 11. Jan Grassmuck 12. Shellie Hadley 13. Jim Sweet 14. Susie Phillips 15. Cathy Kenworthy 16. Irene Gilbert 17. Nancy lundeen 18. Mariam Harmatz 19. Nancy Read 20. Derek Allison 21. Denise Ostgarde 22. Jay Wagner 23. Paul Clark 24. Marti McCulloch 25. Ray Sten 26. Tom Cooper 27. Bob Hager 28. Steve Jensen 29. Kent Wilken 30. Tom Eby 31. Philip Chides-ter 32. Chuck Larson 33. Steve Reiss .34. Ed Du Bray 35. unidentified. 36. Alan Andrews 37. Steve Helfand 38. Chris De San 39. Miren Etchieverry 40. Bill Larkins 41. Mike Wherley 42. David Knowles. (to Mourn a 49 GUTHRIE front row, I to R: Carol Sawyer, Angie BonaquiMi, Carol McClure, lulie Kepler, Anne Crary, 8arb Heinen, lorri Anderson. Middle row: Barb Absl, Marsbia Powell, Sandra Bucha, Cynthia lackson, Anna Rchbock, Margie Simon, Debbie Bloom, lisa Daniel, Vivian Krai, Eva Struyvenburg, Emily DiMaggio, lisa Heylor. Back Row: Madeline Shaw, Susan Strickland, Tracy Todd, Stacey Yoon, Karren Royal, Wendy Petersmeyer, Katherien Watson NEW ROW HOUSES PLANNED This year, with the university facing a serious housing shortage, planning has entered the final stages for the construction of three new Row Houses, housing approximately 150 students. Preliminary guidelines indicated an emphasis on developing the individual nature of each house, while striving to maintain some degree of continuity between the structures. Divisive influences within the houses were to be minimized, while the creation of a house identity is to be encouraged. Major elements of the plans included a separate kitchen and dining facilities for each house, secluded areas set aside for students who desire a quiet place to study, a room capable of serving as a meeting place for all held within the house, and recreational ares in which students can gather without creating an excessive disturbance to those rooms nearby. In implementing these goals, a sustained effort has been made to become acquainted with student preferences in living arrangements. For example, auto parking and bicycle storage are being studied before their inclusion in the plan. Construction is slated to begin in June, 1975 and the residences are to be ready for occupancy in September, 1976. SO ■Row Hou« front row, L to R: Joan Gregware, Risa Shimoda, Carol Schillacci, Cindy lewis. Gail Greely. Middle row: lorri Falconer. Kathy Batts, Jill Cornell, (rica Trimpi, Lynne Andrew, Lynn MtClaskey, Sharon Kirkpatrick. Sack row: Ursula Burton, Sheri Anderson, Lori Haberman, Polly Clark, Kerry Morrison, Chris Demon!, Annette Waterman, Susan Graham, Penny Combs, Terrie O'Neill. STOREY Rim □ SB ALPHA TAU OMICRON 1. Chris Donner 2. Randy Fong 3. Kathy Gheleta 4. Lark Ohta 5. Linda VVeisel 6. Dean Hashimoto 7. Peter Wilbur 8. lisa Stephans 9. shoulder 10. Diane Tanbara 11. Mario Moreno 12. Laurie Kirkwood 13. Alison Work 14. Lyman Black 15. Alison Shearer 16. Chris Hendricks 17. leslee Lewis 18. Dave Shore 19. Cary Richardson 20. Jim Barnes 21. Joy lerner 22. Lee Peterson 23. Diana Cheek 24. John Axlell 25. Mark Hoffman 26. Keiko Shimada 27. Lienor lynds 28. Leo Ramek 29. Ralph Petroff 30. Steve Bengston 31. Becky (isenberg 32. Cary Wol-ens 33. Kris Chinn 34. Rick Shephard 35. Roger Fraley 36. Randy Manley 37. Bill Rifkin 38. Jonathan Horton 39. Bob Cullen 40. Nancy Ihelen 41. Stan Doty 42. Mark Pick 43. Amy Schwartz 44. Anne Peters 45. Tom Payne 46. Bill Madsen 47. Cerald Suniville 48. Sue Farrell 49. Joanne Woo. COLUMBAE Columbae is a cooperative theme house on the Row. Our theme has been enshrined as “social change through non-violence,' this has been interpreted in different ways by different people. When Columbae was founded, it represented a humanistic approach to opposition. Today the issues have changed. Much of the efforts of members of the house go to education on issues often forgotten — the continuing war in Indochina, the struggle of the farmworkers for decent wages, the destruction of our natural environment, the plight of political prisoners around the world, and the oppression, both subtle and overt, of women. But perhaps our first and most basic political expression is living in a cooperative community and trying to make the idea of a non-violent social system a reality in our lives. By living and working together we try to maintain a heightened consciousness of the problems facing the world and at the same time embody our goals in our day-to-day living. 11 ■Indtprd Ii One of the ways in which we try to he responsible for our own lives is by cooking and cleaning for ourselves. By cooking together, we learn from each other and from experimentation how to cook food that is cheap and healthy. By limiting our consumption, growing some of ouir own food, and recycling and composting, we try to minimize our exploitation of the earth and people of other countries. But perhaps the most important investment in non-violence comes in our dealings with each other. In our house meetings we try to always be willing to hear both sides of an argument, to work it out, and to ultimately come to a decision that is acceptable to everyone. We also try to extend ourselves and make Columbae a place where strangers can come in and talk, eat with us, crash for the night, and make themselves a little bit at home. The foregoing is a statement (by no means comprehensive) of what we are and what we hope to be. Sometimes we fail miserably, and it gets very frustrating. But at our brightest moments, we can feel that we're at least on the right track, and although we don't always succeed in fulfilling our own goals, the journey we are embarking on is in itself part of the goal. PHI PSI Sitting, I to R: Mike Kamler, Marcia Babson, Fred, Lonnie Rosenwald, Sally Harris, Sheri Ross, Barb Booth, Emmy Goldstein, |ohn Storch. Standing, I to R: Ben Martin, Steve Taylor, Tom Gidwitz, Mike Cummins, lane Golden, John Magee, Michael Barthelow, Brian Beger, Ramiro Miranda, Peter Fox, Jack Stalker, Oave Flamm, Steve Brourman, Ted Flato, lack Deppe, Peter Davis, Dave Maron, Mary Ann Granieri, Valerie Dow, Amy Eisenfeld. 1. Terry Sprcitcr 2. Steve Hall 3. Joan Glasser 4. Dave Antonuccio 5. Jim Margotis 6. Mike Schumacher 7. John Paul Roberts 8. John Rogers 9. Dan Spikes 10. Milford Zasslow 11. June Okazawa 12. Betsy Griswold 13. Bill Knoke 14. Lllen llise Chambers 15. Dale Gray 16. Dave Grandin 17. Johnny Louie 18. Judy Gonzalez 19. Melinda Leonard 20. Cathy Koplin 21. Halite Katz 22. Dara Jwaideh 23. Id Geary 24. Joan McFarland 25. Nick Nyhart 26. Max Waldo Ford 27. Jon Swerdlow 28. Rich Domich 29. Jim Doyle 30. Toncred Styblo 31. Dick Lewis 32. Ronnie Beck 33. Janette Taylor 34. Connie Howell 35. Bob Bell 36. Il e Berins 37. Mark Colville 38. Lise Braden 39. Claudia Temby 40. Forest Blanton LAMBDA NU M ln kpeodfnls 1. Sharon Isonaka 2. Erin Moore 3. Karen Peterson 4. Rom Watson 5. Anita Addison 6. Cary Phillips 7. Gwen Davidson 8. Dianne Delucchi 9. Doug Goto 10. Paul Shires 11. Peggy Boris 12. Terry Huffington 13. Neal Savage 14. Lance Friedmann 15. Mike SnouFfer 16. Peggy Stevenson 17. Julian Nikolcev 18. Maddie Buckskaum 19. Aaron Weiner 20. Mark Savage. KAIROS lndrpcn J«fll S5 1. Andrew Yang 2.Joe Chan 3. Rudy Kelly 4. lorenli I u 5. Richard Simnel 6. ody McVitte 7. Susan Flower 8. y: Chang 9. fran-cisco lames 10. unidentified 11. Cynlhia ackson 12. Mohammad Saudi 13. Marie• Francisco Rouet 14. Michelle Collins 15. Ashok Shenvi 16. Winnie luk 17. Chun 18. Dennis Pinto 19. Roz Hines 20. Eduardo Bustamante 21. Michael Ping Pong 22. Satoshi Hara 23. Hock leow 24. Ursula Pogany 25. Jim Hicks. HAMM A RSKJOL D 1. Ion Davidson 2. jim leIhcoe 3. Lori laplouiIz 4. lohn Burke 5. Sue Busleed 6. Ann Willardson 7. Nancy Lethcoe 8. Deborah Cowley 9. Chrisly Wise 10. Alan Bush 11. Ron lepperson 12. Mark Dexter 13. Kurt Hunciker 14. David Stern 15. Alice llo 16. Maura Haggerty 17. Chris Elms 18. lose Iglesias 19. Terry Ehrel 20. Cindy Cima 21. Brian Anderson 22. David Slimmer 23. Susannah Jones 24. Betsy Bingham 25. Mark ticker. 26. Greg Proven ano 27. lose Louis Lopei 28. Mike Murr 29. lisa Lang 30. Tom Deremigio 31. Abby lassen 32. Rick Peters 33. Wendy Max 34. jifl Klein 35. Brue Ryhal 36. Jim Green 37. Janet Lasey. WHIT- MAN lent PHI SIG 1. Ken Bloch 2. Mark Bauer 3. Danny Scher 4. Tom Halpenny 5. Joyce Miller 6. Boh Viener 7. Dan lee 8. Doug Graham 9. Cammillo Fcnzi 10. George lenes 11. Becky Manning 12. Don Groundwater 13. Tom Sever 14. Diana McComber 15. Russ Riter 16. Terri Hurst 17. Tom Burt 18. Rich Montcverde 19. CharlesBeyer 20. Suzanne Austin 21. Dave Rudman 22. John Nuanes 23. Charlie. SYNERGY Indrpmdrnu • 7 Bob Alou lene Mary Bonham Maddog i Mill Euler Alai Jeff Martov + TR (u.,k,u.) - 0 John Brewpies Maddog Cecilia Fitzerman Tiger Lady Pamela Brown Ram Pool Rotma Binso Norm 'Chingate Dad Peron -ti- lO 4Vt Terry Clofh Dhaeve Dingelbalz Brar The Alabama Xid Chris Gronzniac Devin Broccoli Lane Van Heusen III Brown lightning Maddog Pass the butter Crant Burglars Woods of the Wren Greg Muir Lois Ruffensor Shorts Big Red Bite' Marcia Matetsky Grier Girkins Runt Maddog Barb Dennis Doright Hodabbeldernober Dudley Bergershaykinfr-eiz Arnold Biffnoll Carolyn Mitka Ferd Floyd 8 ■lodrpcndrof % ZAP (Standing, L to R) Susan McClung, Primo Santini, George Pettinger, John Rhodes, Alan Schiffer, Paul Davis, Carol Ferguescn, Sybil Hudson, Barb Finin, Dave Nyberg, Bill Conway, Ann Wageneckt, Rich Frankhu en, Geoff Wilson, Barbie Hill, Denny Dalton, Brian Raischy, Robi Patterson, Kathy Krieg-shauser, Micki Klearman, Doug Olson, Mary Horn, John Norville, Dan Pyne, Paul Pabst, Dan Branner. (Sitting) Marta Jasberg, Alison Brown, lisa Peschke-Koedt, Mike Zahn, Ann Brainard. TERRA 1. Lynn Littlefield 2. Andy Beasley 3. Doug Archerd, 4. Mark Kennedy 5. Stephanie Liness 6. Miriam Schicnfield 7. Diane Harold 8. Wally Prugh, 9. Dick Kaufman 10. Vicki Bier 11. Keith Milne 12. Amber Wong 13. Jim Abrams 14. Suzanne Stockfish 15. Doug Frost 16. Maurin O'Rourke 17. Emmy Goldstein 18. Chris Wilhelm 19. Michael Henehan 20. Lynn Gordon 21. Pete Bucnostros 22. lisa Friednjan 23. John Sutthoff 24. Dan Rubenson 25. Bardini 26. Mitch Anscher 27. Pat Litzler 28. Janet Fox 29. Mick Litte-stone 30. John Backes 31. Mike Manlove 32. Eric Strombcrg 33. Jim Coates 34. Quigley Peterson 35. Lorraine Hariton Indtpcodtfil ■S9 BETA THETA PI t. Pam Bagley 2. Alex Ratiey 3. John Harris 4. Steve Pickerall 5. Jesse Trevino 6. Dave Fairbank 7. Randy Davis 8. Doug Boy Stevens 9. Rod Wendt 10. Dave Bohrman 11. Tex Haines 12. Barb Boothe 13. Mike Trevino 14. Craig Boniface 15. Nobody Special 16. Brian Roux 17. Henry Spencer 18. Paul Sounders 19. Matt Stiefel 20. Tom Boothe 21. Doug Matthew 22. Mike Murray 23. Mort Ser-etan 24. Richard Cook 25. Rich Cortez 26. Wayne Larorque 27. Wall Sinclair 28. Steve Wheeler 29. Old Man. 1. Matt Elsen 2. Charles Hill 3. Dug Stewert 4. Bill Dawson 5. Sam Schwarz 6. Bill Hill 7. Randy Lee Fcldt 8. Andy Carmel 9. Dave Dew 10. Kurt Cunter 11. Casey Sheehan 12. Dave Drizen 13. Ted Schlafly 14. Rich Wetzig 15. Glen Jones 16. Bob Wilder 17. Mark Evans 18. Peter Carton 19. Bob Anderson 20. Louie Montoya 21. Larry Mann 22. Jeff Wieland 23. Casper 24. Fred Behling 25. John Minks 26. Jon Holman 27. Dan Slattery 28. Peter Ashcnbunncr 29. Randy Haier 30. Dave Galligan 31. Tim Yeakel 32. Paul Zenitzov 33. Derek Bertocci 34. Jim Kienitz 35. Bob Narver 36. Bill Shafer 37. Tom Hocker 38. Hal Melzer 39. Rich Cohen ALPHA DELTA PHI ALPHA SIGMA PHI I. Jack Radin 2 Peter Vilken 3. Bruce Goodman 4. Brad Vancher 5. Dick Havrilak 6. Wayne Easter 7. Mark Percy 8. Sandy Feldman 9. Sam Darby 10. Steve Benuelos II. David Iheim 12. Nick Pound 13. John Doe 14. Sandy Milles 15. Mark Shot 16. Don Burgh 17. Roger Gladstone 18. Rick Quan 19. Sean Libaw 20. Marty Moroski 21. Cindy Porrs 22. Jennifer Eagleston 23. Mary Means 24. Sarah Burton 25. Unidentified Stranger 26. Lynn Mumby 28. Ira Ruben 29. Pat Cannon 30. Nancy Moot 31., 32. Wendy Rabinoff 33. Roland Burchard 34. Lisa Fiedler 35. Ron Nes-sim 36. Julie Fiedler 37. Mike Sexton. frjtffiwlleiafcl DELTA KAPPA EPSILON (Front row) Doug Burish, Skip Mueller. (Second row) Dave Giser, Duncan While, Charles Colman, Todd Linsenmeyer, Greg Chang-Tung, Caesar Wacker. (Third row) Scot! Whilely, Ken Callander, Steve Hansen, Glen Golden, Randy Jester, Loring Lynch, Mark Mearill, Rick Henry, Christian Halaby, John Percival, Jeff Rowe. (Fifth row) Mark Pelish, Paul Menchini, Henry Koo, Biu Christeson, Jeff Stone. (Back row) Blaine Palmer, Jack Barloon, Tom Fowler. (rfafrjtemitit DELTA UPS I LON (Top row, L to R) Tom Gordon, Walter Robb, Wilson Stafford, Bruce Armstrong, Jeff Sicmans. (Second row)Tetry Fry, Escoria Coli, Mike Miille, Mike McBride, Jack Ames. (Third row) Tom Earthman, Seb Fic-cadenti, John Sprole, Don Stewert, Duncan McDuffie, Chris Dorst, Ed Fischer, Mike Nugent, Kevin Koni-cek, Dave Vance, Peter Bennett, Charlie Hansen. (Fourth row) Jeff Rohn, Dave Hansen, Bob Sorenson, Skip Pfeiffer, Paul Gibson, Ben Hahn, Jeff Kamins, Herb Hahn, Scott McCarty, Frank Shanley, Carl Middleton, Bill Dickinson, Brad Smith, Marc Enrich. (Bottom row) Rogue Taylor, Rick Parsini, Jim Sloane, Pat Donovan, Larry Frye, George Addington, Bill Barnum, Sandy Miller, Scott Setrakian, Clark Pothoff. DELTA TAU DELTA (Front row, L to R) Van Day, Rob Olson, Chris Burke, Greg Smith, Alberttcn Bruggencate, Curt Fujii. (Second row) Tom Obcrhclman, Calder Mackay, Bob Hertenstein, Rick Bclison, Art Estrada, Kevin Fetterly, Beo Farr, Bob Flint. Back row) John Carroll, Todd Anderson, Rich Merlo, John Baumgartner, Bruce Cardenal, Mike McGovern, Andy Kolesnikow, John Harris, Mike Langford, John Glenchalk, Jim Smythe, Alex Karakazoff, Dave Morrison, Guy Benjamin, Mr. Barnes, Brad Williams, Scott Wigginton, Mike Bratz, lacy Atkinson, Bruce MacDonald, Tom Tipton, Brian Lee Wilson, Kevin McDermott, Kent Lightfoot. KAPPA ALPHA (Back row, L to R) Bill Schweinlurth, Barry Ccrnock, Rick Jewell, Mark Bluhm, Paul Vogen, Norm Frcwin, Chip Underwood, Jim Myerson, Craig Class, Fred J. Bufu, Wes Hampton, Mark Burdett, Scott Horbeck, Ccno Flores, Bruce Falkenlagcn, Rusty Dawe. (Second row) Mike Mahoney, Mike O'Rourke, Bob Kus-tel, Tom Perry, Mike Eaton, Bruce Miller, Steve Murray, Steve Anderson, Mitch Cohen, Cus Hawkins, Dave Bruzzone, John Shutt, Rob Bike, Niel Toribara, Pete True . (Third row) Wayne Kegel, Bruce Craig, Steve Pratt, Bill Lynch, Tim Conway, Tony Ong, Warren Satler, Jeff legge, Jim Miller, Steve Cramer. (Front row) Steve Meyer, Chris Seaman, Mike McCourt, Joe DeFrancis, Greg Densmore, Sam Pappert. M ■IratffnitiM KAPPA SIGMA (Bottom row, L to k) Jeff Panetti, Dave VVU, Cary Tyran, Mike Cant-rill, Phil Meredith, Mark lieb. Bill Euphrat, Greg Williams, Greg Brown. (Top row) Paul Frurtz, Jeff Phillips, John Dillon, Brice Wymore, John Lio, Kevin Porinnon, Martin Ralph, John Suillie, Paul Leaveau, John Howell, Randy Stokes, Glenn Rodrigue , Howie Rearson, Steve Critchlow, Charlie Hudson, Joe Dietzen, Mike Lynch, Dave Drake. SICMA ALPHA EPSILON 1. Ugly My Carpenter 2. John Hencken 3. Robert Spees 4. Monty Bossard 5. Harold Kahn 6. Sparky Sorenson 7. Clark Johnson 8. Mellow Gordy Kauhanen 9. Baby Bull Lambert 10. Easy Ed Cogan 11. Boy litller 12. Tom Tuna Price 13. Mike Dorsey 14. |ohn Ambler 15. The Hume Job 16. Jim Taylor 17. Beel Sanderson 18. Dick Day 19. Bill Headapohl 20. Bob Dogdoe Rondeau 21. Gary Bennett 22. Bill Shorts Baker 23. Erank Stony Johns 24. Chris Carlson 25. Dave Krakower 26. Steve Anderson 27. Dan The Senator Cummings 28. John Harrison 29. Steve Tenner 30. Jim MacGregor 31. Tom Havcrty 32. Wayne-Baby Wager 33. Mike Morel 34. Bill Weenie Weinstein 35. le Mad Dog Clouatre 36. Mike litis 37. Rick Stringbean lanman 38. Mike Rondeau. WWW WWW aUkUIihUUIil. rrrrrrrTT WMWW WWWW WWWW4 ddtkldddddtkkltk PHI DEL TA THETA 1. Bruce Cardinal 2. Mark Winkler 3. Glenn Procter 4. Kurt Peterson 5. Sam Simeon 6. Aly Trompas 7. Sean 8. Steve Braggonier 9. Al Arthur 10. Bill Elliot 11. Paul Eischer 12. Glen Goethal 13. Jeff Morris 14. Ed Elordi 15. Bob Oshetsky 16. Jerry Waldvogel 17. Dave Tenn 18. Tom Mason 19. Doug Redding 20. Todd Wagner 21. Robert Woo 22. Robert Loit 23. Joe Urquidi 24. Tim Wyler 25. Woody Bennet 26. Neal Harvey 27. John Yandle 28. Bernie 29. Greg Pyke 30. Skip Grodail 31. Dave Luther 32. Erank Uribie 33. Bill Berg 34. Rick Runkel 35. Chad Huston 36. Roger licht 37. Brad Johanson 38. Dan Summers 39. Rich Leonard 40. Doug McKa lin. fcf • Irjlrrnilifs SIGMA CHI 1. Kurt Borgwardt 2. Rich Rector 3. Sweetheart Jill Henderson 4. Al Hiti 5. Terry Ginelli 6. Brad Jones 7. Mario Vasque 8. Dave Haugh 9. Dick Newth 10. Steve Abdo 11. Phil Barnes 12. Rob Randall 13. Bill Parsons 14. Tom Maravilla 15. Scott Jones 16. Dud Kenworthy 17. Dave Vargas 18. Marc Fein-stein 19. Greg Hall 20. Glenn Kaiser 21. Ed Streeter 22. Jim Dudley 23. Greg Hoberg 24. Tim Ferguson 25. Ted Albert 26. Jim Simpson 27. Dave Sharp 28. Mark Morrow 29. Kirby Duvall 30. Mark Needham 31. Bill Robertson 32. John Ingram 33. Bob Ottilie 34. Mark lucich 35. Jimmy Jones 36. Tim Portwood 37. Roger Moore 38. Scott Clifford. (Missing) Gary Desmet, John Serbein, Rik Helmke, Mike Peterson, Bob Kunt , Bret Logan, Greg Dasvson. ffjltfn.lln  67 THETA DEL TA CHI (front row, t to R) George EMBO McPheeters, Mike B.J. Bogyo, Tony Chango Sandoval, Reg Taco Bell, Pete the Greek Bhatia (with Nerl, the dog), Mike Horny Todd, Carl Chink Ho, David Boy Bagshaw. (Second row) Matt the Rat Willard, Frank Minora Boutin, Rob Nit Witt, Bob Bush Segar, Jeff Popping fresh Johnston, George Jelly Fisher, Darian America Morray, Pete Mazz Abate, Scott Sphinx Wingo, Jack Molto Bellah, Scott Mellow Trobbe, Jay Tut Tuthill. (Third row) Jim Blue Scott, Mark Vag Shurtleff, Joe Suty Budy Suty, Dan Majora Boutin, Bruce Wheaties Richards, Steve Sow Dow, Al Nips Grobman, Doug Clam Whittemore, Al Muff Carnbro, Jim Living Baugh, Mark Clint Totoritis, Jeff Wanna Maldonado, Rick Y.A. Tuttle. (Back row) Kevin Pudit Inright, Mike Plman Simons, Jim lance Bassett, Willis Beepbeep Wagner, Willie Bufu Mannon, Rich Ore Wohlstadter, Ed Geek Schweitzer, Jim Corn Holbrook, Tom Vista Sadler, Mike Guice Shepherd, Dave Moaner Suliteanu, Joel Dick Plaisance. (Front row, I to R) Jeff leicher, John Maynard (holding Ralph), Jake Warde, Paul Saunders, E. Y. Snowden, Craig Johnson, Bruce Robinson, John Whitlinger, Rusty Duquette, John Mendez, Joel Erickson, Rich McDonald. (Secondrow) Mark Yancey, Dave Frycfield, Tom Baver, Gary Bei, lee Kraus, Paul Jacob, Ken Grolle, Kevin Sullivan, Bob Shaffer, Ken Dewey, Gary Malkasian, Mark Mitchell. (Third row) Dave Easton, Jeff Heinnen, Pat Dupre, Jeff Marusin, Bill Ralston, Rick Brand, Scott Kirby, Ron Pclligrini, Tom Purcell. (Back row) Gary Pitchford, Erik Osenbaugh, Jim Erickson, Drew McDonald, Chris Cline, John Everett, Norm Meide, Joe Block, Bernie Hittner. THETA XI 1. John Wesley Wilson 2. Jell Dykes 3. Toby Seggerman 4. Paul Buenostro (laundryman) 5. Chuck Vitek 6. Bill Wick 7. Dave Adams 8. Jim Muller 9. Dan Burd 10, Peter Kim 11. Bob Tiffany 12. Steve Baker 13. Kerry Sich 14. Brooks Morgan 15. Joel Kohn 16. Charlie 17. Jeff Wood 18. Dave lewis 19. Mike Williamson 20. Rick Whittier 21. Kent Blumberg 22. Steve Marinello 23. Doug Graff 24. Otto Rossner 25. Allan Chinen 26. Tom Bonducci 27. John Murao. ZETA PSI ff Jlrrnitici ■69 OVERSEAS STUDIES Bored with Stanford dorm life? Well, there are more alternatives than just getting an apartment off campus. You can live in an Italian villa, on a farm with a German family, in an apartment on the Rive Gauche, or in a tent by the Gombe Stream in Africa. And if you like dorm atmosphere, you can live in a European, Asian, or South American recreation, all under the protective wing of the University. These are only a sampling of the repertoire of the Stanford Overseas Campus Office. Inviting as it sounds, studying in a foreign country is not a vacation. Except at Cliveden in England, the student needs a working knowledge of another language. And at the Universite de Paris and the Universidad Catolica del Lima, students attend a foreign university. For those with little or no language preparation, there is an intensive pro- gram which enables students to feel at home in a foreign country. There is a European Experience — good or bad — that each student will remember. In almost every case, he has been called upon to represent American ideals, culture, or Stanford University. Overseas study ought to be regarded as a necessary extension of the education offered in Palo Alto. And if returning students aren't publicity enough, the Overseas Campus Office has printed material on the campuses and programs in Austria, Britain, France, Germany, Italy, and Spain, as well the Universidad Catolica del Lima in Peru. Volunteers in Asia is a unique learning option in Taiwan, Japan, and Asia. But, if you really want to take a step away from Palo Alto, you can join Jane Goodall at the Gombe Stream Research Center in Africa. 70aO r irjtStu J«t La belle Italia . . . you could spend all six months in Florence and still not see it all. Every day there is a sciopero — buses, banks, mail, restaurants, the government — they all go on strike. There's also the craziest monetary system in the world. But, that's Italy — a country that you can't help but love. Pizza . . . calzone . . . chianti . . . Vivoli's . . . Bionda's. Just take the No. 17 bus from the villa to see the masterpieces of Michelangelo and Leonardo da Vinci. Need I say more? La bella Italia . . . Firenze . . . it's addicting! Ciao! STANFORD IN ITALY 0 f CivSlodi« 71 Experiencing Germany means savoring dunklos beer (ein Grosses), smelling Mutti's Apfelkuchen, sipping neuen Wcin, and linking arms with the locals at Basenwirtshaft. Germany is fussball, walzing, polkaing in the Rats, Frau von Schnapp's, schnitts and fritts , yogurt Ritter Sports, rowdy trips to Andeshsers, and the icy Fussweg, toped off with the simple joys of touching and being touched by the Beutalsbach families. Was fur einen Erlebniss! 71 ■Otmwi StixJin STANFORD IN AUSTRIA Mann kann, wenn wirss rccht ubcrlegcn, Wein trinkcn, (unf ursachen wcgcn: Einmal um cincs Festtag's vvillvn, Sodann, vorhand'nen Durst zu stillen, Ingleichen, kunftigen abzywehren, Fcrner dem guten wein zu Ehren, Und endlich, um jeder Ursach' willen . . . Prost Otmrit Sludm ■7J STANFORD IN FRANCE The Tours campus consists of half a hotel in the middle of the Loire Valley complete with chateaux, French people and sunsets. It has everything you could wish for; Kronenburg at a buck a six-pack, patisserie, crepes, and the finest rot-gut wine you'll ever have for thirty cents a bottle — before the refund. Want history . . . it's got history from the Romans on; want life... try crossing a street at rush hour and see if your heart doesn't beat a little faster; want action . . . hop a train to Paris. What can I say — try it yourself. . . 74 ■Ovm 4t Studirt STANFORD IN ENGLAND Cliveden. . . Coming up the long driveway, turning the corner by the fountain and viewing that beautiful mansion, its playing fields, woods, and clock tower. We called it home. Late nights in the pub with Jim, hearing him utter, “What's happening here? , after six or seven pints. The Ledgers — giddy Ginny, who never knew what was happening, and “P.K., smoking his pipe and mumbling, mmmmright. Qtrnrjt Studio ■7S At 8:00 in the morning, confusion, weariness, and possibly a lingering hangover from the night before confront a Stanford student. One might be gradually awakened by the breeze, when a redhot whips by at 55 m.p.h. on his way to an organic chemistry class. Whether in engineering or art history, one usually notices the Stanford Daily rustling down the aisle, used mainly for morning catnaps or early exercises in eye concentration. Slowly the reality of academia becomes all too apparent. For many, rising at 7:00 meant getting up to go to sleep. However, there are a few lucky people who will enjoy an enlightening class or discover why they went wrong on their midterm. As the 9 and 10 o'clock classes disperse, activity seems to focus on the perimeter of the quad as tired bodies and puzzled minds blend into the slipstream of the pedestrian-bike war. As a result of clever manouevering, or just plain luck, a series of potentially dangerous mishaps remain only as entertaining near-misses. Nonetheless, the covergence of all those foreign jobs and innocent bystanders during those ten minutes makes peripheral vision a prerequisite at Stanford. Noontime Stanford is either a break between classes or the start of a myriad of outlets and diversions. White Plaza swells temporarily with students scurrying to the bank or the bookstore, stopping to visit with their friends or wondering whether the morning was lost or just seemed that way. They day is finally unfolding. Assuming the unspoiled sunshine will continue, bikers and picnickers initiate their afternoon excursions. Tennis courts become mobbed, and Frisbees spin their course relentlessly across the campus. However, those students who sacrificed a studious weekend for parties and the diversions of San Francisco might wander accidentally into the library, sulking at their escapes from the miday sun. Libraries in the afternoon actually deceive the student public by sometimes being conducive to studying. 7t Clovn|t At this time of day, they can even resemble a mausoleum. Night approaches the campus, and Stanford now exhibits a weird dichotomy. Residence halls become networks of closed doors and intermittent silence. Many seem to be at UGLY where quiet is almost unheard of. Trying to lock one's mind in a book becomes increasingly difficult as boredom and sleepiness arrive. College life and lingering thoughts of her or him tend to reduce an already diminishing attention span. Nonetheless, pages somehow turn and papers are written, if not from diligence, then by divine inspiration. However, one certainty concerning work at Stanford is that it is continual. When relief is needed, it is usually found either at the coffee shop or in the company of others. Studying, when finally finished, or temporarily suspended for the evening, is usually followed by a release of energy characterized as stir-craziness or an insanity hour. Spontaneous parties evolve as well as poker games or perverted rap sessions. These midnight encounters have a strange knack for creating friendships and throwing unsuspecting human beings together. Chance relationships can strangely evolve into more meaningful relationships. Both humorous and humorless happenings now become funny as the borderline between relief and exhaustion is finally crossed. Perhaps now Stanford goes to sleep . . . perhaps it doesn't. Occurrences like these magnified over 8 months or so weave the fabric of campus life. Clown h 77 FACULTY AND ADMINISTRATION During the past year we have witnessed the effects of long range developments, not only in education, but throughout society, that have brought into the open a series of tangled conflicts whose implications perhaps have not yet been fully appreciated. The stage has been set for a long needed examination of the relative importance of various criteria for the selection of tenured professors. (Are they to be teachers of undergraduates? Or would their talents and the university's resources be better utilized through research and publication?) This dichotomy over research, long a fact of life in the science departments, many of which thrive on the funding provided by the Department of Defense and private industry, provoked shocked responses from a more sensitive public when the question of criteria surfaced in the Religious Studies and Classics Departments, after a refusal to grant tenure to Jerry Irish and Ronald Mellor, among others. Economic and social realities have sapped the resources available to a wide range of studies and operations. Last year, a drawn-out labor dispute publicized the conflicting aspirations of a large population of employees with little or no concern for perpetuation the unique demands of a university community, if it meant low salaries augmented by a dubious array of fringe benefits. Money is tight and the pinch is being felt by even the most insulated and consistently funded departments. Agonizing fund-raising programs and stock market fluctuations can make or break most university projects, and while the athletic department remains self-sufficient, perhaps the only department that can make such claim, wrestling and gymnastics are threatened by the increasing demands of women's athletic programs. The fund allocators walk in mysterious ways, their wonders to perform; useless overhead lights and 80B|jcult toilet stall doors are installed in the dorms, while Serra Street remains a cratered mine-field. Programs such as SWOPSI, SCIRE, and Undergraduate Specials are threatened, and talented scholars are relegated to presiding over second year foreign language classes. Scholastic integrity and excellence, especially in the field of the Humanities, have been threatened not only by the scarcity of funds, but by the increasing reluctance on the part of many students to pursue such interests when their future financial security hinges upon the acquisition of marketable skills and advanced degrees. Sometimes one gets the feeling that Stanford is nothing more than an elegant trade school, where a huge inventory of taped biology lectures now rivals the record collection at the undergraduate audio library. These attacks on the ivory tower of so called private education have provided food for thought among the cocktail sociologists, while short-circuiting communication between budget-conscious administrators, idealistic scholars, tuition-paying parents and students, and a large population of support system workers. Today, Stanford suffers from an overdose of government intervention, increased demands from students and staff, and telecommunication systems that threaten to render the printed word obsolete. Nevertheless, Stanford has contributed much to hastening these very developments. Now, like a businessman who trades in his Cadillac for a VW, administrators are being forced to eliminate certain amenities of scholastic life, and students are finding themselves paying more for a narrowing range of offerings. One can only hope that, if this is indeed the wave of the future, if the private university is to become a thing of the past, the development of alternate institutions will be accomplished by administrators, faculty and students with the insight and the power to achieve such a transition gracefully, if not painlessly. MullY«ei Professor Daryl J. Bern Psychology Guest lecturers at formal occasions can often be dull and sleep-inducing. Professor Daryl J. Bern is anything but a dull lecturer. On most such occasions, (e.g., freshman orientation) I typically lecture on Women's Liberation or Gay Liberation. These give me an opportunity not only to represent topics of my specialty area in social psychology (attitude and social change, stereotypes, treatment of deviants in society, etc.) but also to liberalize opinion on the issues themselves and give legitimacy to individuals who may be trying to change their sex role behaviors and need some moral support. It also makes a nice preview to college for new students by challenging their thinking in areas in which they may still hold to unquestioned traditional views. Professor Barbara Roscnblum Soc iology Professor Eleanor Maccoby Psychology Professor Sandy Dornbusch Sociology Professor John W. Meyer Sociology Professor John I. Mothershead, Jr., Emeritus Philosophy Professor William L. Rivers Communications Professor Bill Chace of the English department is one of the most popular men on campus. This enlightened lecturer views the relationship between past and present literature In various ways: imperfectly, obliquely, directly, through a glass darkly, belatedly, prophetically, nervously, awkwardly, tyrannically, with hat in hand tugging at forelock, with subpoena, looking for confirmation, looking for blood, looking out, narrowly, obsoletely, diplomatically, with erotic designs, meekly, in horror, with bemusement, in a spirit of resignation. Professor Bill Chace English la ull SS Though American politics is not Professor Nannerl O. Keohane's speciality, she offered some insight into the possible effects of Watergate: The optimistic prediction is that the American citizens will become more sophisticated about politics and compel their leaders to behave like ordinary mortals. The pessimistic prediction is that they will decide that the whole thing isn't worth the effort and let matters develop along the course they have been taking, while they tend to their own affairs. Professor Nannerl O. Keohane Political Science Professor Peter Stansky History Professor John Kaplan Law 8hafi ullt Professor David M. Kennedy History Professor David M. Kennedy is one of Stanford's most popular instructors. He feels that the study of history compels the use of our highest human faculties, intelligence and imagination, to discover meaning in the chaos of human experience. Second, we study history in order to comprehend our own brief historical moment. . . It allows us, in short, to transcend the present and see how different men thought and acted in circumstances different from our own. U(ull 87 Emily M. Olmsted, Lecturer Italian W  «utty ■rrr Dina Viggiano, lecturer Italian Mr. Robert P. Bernard Music Lecturer Mr. David Abel Music Lecturer Prof. Mark Starr Music 0ai4 ultv Prof. Albert Elsen Art History Prof. Matthew Kahn Art Prof. Nathan Oliveira Art Prof. Kurt Forster Art History Professor Mary V. Sunseri Mai hematics There has been much discussion over the merits of the so-called new math. Professor Harold Bacon feels that it makes a reasonable attempt to present elementary mathematics as a logical structure, so it does try to teach the reasons behind mathematical processes - the Old Math (!) when well taught also did this. 92«fi u ty Professor Robert Hofstadter Physics Professor Harold Bacon, Emeritus Mathematics Professor Mason R. Yearian Physics Professor Walter E. Meyerhof Physics Professor Karel delceuw Mathematics Prof. Leonard Ortolano Civil Engineering According to Professor Leonard Ortolano, the key challenge (for engineers) is to integrate a humanistic perspective on the top of a sound technological base . . . Part of this perspective involves the need to recognize and appreciate the environmental and social effects of proposed systems. The limits of nature must also be recognized. Dr. Herb Ludwig points out. The engineer faces the challenge of preparing to work in a world of diminishing resources , necessitating the development of new techniques and methods to cope with this problem. Ma|j ultv Professor Don Knuth predicts that among the many social changes resulting from increasing computerization there will be: improved communications and ways to find information; laws protecting privacy, more than we had before the days of computers; more use of T.V. displays to save paper; possibly in most homes there will be a way to hook up the T.V. set to a computer for messages and mail; increased appreciation of what people can do and computers can't; better systems for reserving seats, etc.; and people will begin to learn how to use computers properly. Prof. Donald Knuth Computer Science Prof. David Tuttle Electrical Engineering Prof. Channing Robertson Chemical Engineering Prof. Robert Compton Geology Professor Robert Compton sees a dual role for the geologist of the future. Not only will he be involved in his classical role of finding materials (metals, fuels, water, etc.) , but he will also have the role of helping the rest of society understand that these materials are limited in supply, and that some of their uses are destructive in the long run. The future scientist will have to understand the total interrelationships among such materials and processes, including human induced processes. Geophysics professor, Allan Cox, feels that the basic tools for accurate earthquake prediction are already available. Geophysicists at the U.S. Geological Survey in Menlo Park were able to predict the earthquake that occurred near Hollister last Thanksgiving. However, major advances in our basic understanding of earthquakes will be needed before we'll be able to predict them as accurately and reliably as weather is predicted today. In seismology, we are roughly where meteorology was 20 years ago. Prof. Allan Cox Geophysics I 96 l«ult Prof. Irwin Remson Geology, Applied Earth Sciences Prof. Sullivan Marsden Petroleum Engineering Prof. John Gurley Economics Professor John Gurley is one of Stanford's formost professors in Marxian Economics. For him, it is interesting to watch the long-run decline of the world capitalism . . . The main challenge today and tomorrow for economists is the study and analysis of the various ways in which the world's present-day poor will transfer wealth from the present-day white rich to themselves. Prof. George Bach Economics ljculn 97 Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite, who seeing his creation used to inflict great harm, bequeathed $9,000,000 to honor those who had most benefited mankind in the fields of chemistry, medicine, physics, literature, peace and economics. The Nobel Prize, among the most coveted and prestigious awards, has honored seven Stanford professors over the years, the latest being Prof. Paul Flory who received the 1974 prize in chemistry. Flory, a professor at Stanford since 1961, was recognized for his pioneering research in the field of polymers and macromolecules. He originated many of the theoretical concepts now used in this field. Prof. Paul |. flory Chemistry Prof. Norman K. Wessels is both Professor and Chairman of the Biological Sciences department. For biologists, he says the world food problem and the biological responses of human beings to stresses imposed by the deteriorating environment will be our paramount problems. High quality among practicioners of practical biology will be essential if the complex problems are to be resolved. Eric Hutchinson, a professor in both the Chemistry and Values, Technology and Society Department, views the future concerns of the chemist and possible preparations: Almost certainly it will be necessary for chemists, and for governments, to make carefully considered decisions about the use of alternative starting materials, in place of fossil fuels, for energy resources and for large-scale synthesis of widely used chemicals. A serious attention to possibly dwindling resources will also have to be accompanied by serious attention to recovery and recycling of many of the chemicals in common, and usually wasteful, large-scale Prof. Eric Hutchinson Chemistry Prof. Hans C. Andersen Chemistry Prof. Robert Simoni Biology Prof. Donald Kennedy Benjamin Scott Crocker Professor of Human Biology Assistant to the President William E. Stone Whatever else it may do, whatever other and more mundane chores it may undertake at society's bidding, the university bears a unique responsibility for stretching the human potential to the outermost limits, by training, stimulating, and using that magnificent instrument, the human mind. We have in this troubled century, all but succeeded in per-suadiong ourselves that the human animal is nothing more than a singularly ingenious mischief-maker that somehow scrambled to the top of the animal kingdom for a brief while, but whose passing in favor of some creature less at war with itself is inevitable and perhaps not far off. If any institution in society can do battle against such cosmic pessimism, it ought to be the university. Not because it doesn't contain human animals, or sordid and trivial human scramblings, higher level or intensity than any other kind of institution with those powers of the mind and spirit that have made us human, and may yet make us what we would like to be — genuinely humane custodians of this planet. President Richard W. Lyman 100 Administration Vice-President and Provost William F. Miller Vice-President for Business and Finance Robert R. Augsburger Robert Rosenzwieg, Vice President for Public Afairs, sees himself as more of a political scientist than a PR man. Named to the post last December, he is responsible for dealing with the state, federal and local goernments on matters of policy involving the University. Stanford's interests and that of its neighbors are intermeshed . . . this always causes problems because we often have conflicting goals. As a result, we must accept our different views and realize that nobody is going to win or lose all the time. Unconditional surrender is a disaster-ous policy in politics. He worked closely with the News and Pub Service which he calls the most comprehensive university news service in the U.S. Mr. Rosenzwieg's policy is to reveal as much as possible, and conceal as little as possible. To many men, this type of policy is unthinkable, yet Robert Rosenzwieg concludes that in the long run, it does more good than harm. Vice-President for Public Affairs Robert M. Rosenzwieg Admiim«fJtlon«101 Dean of Undergraduate Studies lames L. Gibbs, |r. One of the important ends of a Stanford education is becoming a committed person. Each graduate leaves the Farm to rejoin the pluralistic wider society where he or she faces a kaleidoscope of viewpoints and life styles. If we have done our job well, that liberally-educated young graduate will make a series of examined choices, the kind of affirmation that William Perry characterizes as personal commitment in a relative world. Again, if we have done our job well, our graduate is aware of the relativity of the examined choices. These insights become pivotal in a society as pluralistic and rapidly changing as ours. For whatever the pattern of one's choices and one's commitment - one is surrounded by others equally attached to other patterns. As Gordon Allport put it, commitment involves being whole-hearted (although) half-sure. Nevertheless, each of you must make examined choices and act on them. Acting on one's commitments is where the whole-heartedness of Allports axiom enters. The key concept is responsibility, the willingness to be involved inspite of the inherent uncertainty of commitment in a diverse society. It is the opposite of being detached or copping out. Vice-President for Budget and Planning Raymond F. Bacchetti 10r Adm ni tri!ion Dean of Student Affaire James W. Lyons Director of Overseas Studies Mark Mancall Legal Advisor to the President James V. Siena The challenges of a new age speak to us from the future, an age in which a new independence of cultures, societies, and economies in all corners of the planet are giving rise to new institutions and new arrangements that are modifying, in a fundamental fashion, the world in which we live . . . The acceleration of the rate of change in the world and in our own society is startling, and if formal education is to play a necessary role in the preparation for creative participation in this new world, it must adapt to a mode of operation that will allow the development of the knowledge, the values and the skills that the future requires. Such an education must be Janus-faced in two senses: It must be throughly both in the experience of the past and in the environment of the new, and it must combine great intellectual rigor with that openness to the variety of human experience that promote humility. Studying overseas takes place in an environment uniquely suited to these purposes, because it encourages the growth of the ability to distinguish between what is universal and what is unique; and the recognition that other human beings have found different, and equally successful or unsuccessful, solutions to the same problems that we face. The construction of a more satisfying culture, which the future demands, must begin with these perspectives. In this regard, Stanford, with an overseas studies program is part of the general studies curriculum, provides a unique opportunity for an education that is both retrospective and prospective. AdmiftiitrjtionaiOJ r Dean of Admissions Fred A. Hargadon It is difficult for me to think of a more interesting job than that of being Dean of Admissions at Stanford over the past half dozen years. The personal philosophy I have brought to that task is best summarized, I hope fairly so, by a quotation from Princeton University philosopher, Walter Kaufmann, who wrote in Without Guilt or Justice: These were our criteria, which are obviously debatable. In time we shall probably revise them. Meanwhile we have done our best, first to make them known in advance and then to stick by them without being swayed by considerations of very doubtful relevance. We know from experience that even so we make mistakes at that level, too, but we tried hard to avoid them. Registrar Sally Mahoney James B. McClenahan, director of Cowell Student Health Center, is optimistic that the center can maintain its present services in spite of planned budget cuts. With personnel costs being one of the clinic's largest expenses, McClenahan sees hiring of nurse practicioners who can perform minor medical tasks usually handled by doctors as being one way to cut costs without sacrificing service. In hopes of reducing the time patients must wait before being treated, the center will go to a combination system of taking appointments from less urgent cases and maintaining the present drop-in system for more serious ailments. Cowell currently handles about 60,000 student visits per year. The most common ailments among Stanford students are colds and other various infections, and trauma (accidental injuries.) As an internist, McClenahan does some teaching and treats some patients himself in addition to his responsibilities as director. He is also on a University committee which must approve all human experimentation conducted by Stanford, and serves as a general medical safety and health advisor for the University. He has been Head of Cowell since 1967. Director of Student Health Services James B. McClenahan AdmirmlntionBIOS SECOND DIMENSION 106 K m)u Jtr Studiet I I I  ' 1 i Who are the graduate students at Stanford? They are the same people who recently were undergraduates at colleges and universities throughout this country — augmented by about 20% who come from other countries. At the graduate level, Stanford is more of a “national school, and much more of an international school than at the undergraduate level. Graduate students are here with very diverse goals, and their experience follows diverse patterns. Last year (1974) we gave about 1250 master's degrees, mostly to students who were in some one- or two-year degree programs; we gave about 150 law degrees (J.D. — a three-year degree) and more than 500 Ph.D.s, a degree which may take from three to seven, or even more years to acquire. These Ph.D.s were given in more than forty fields. The Ph.D degree prepares a person to do research — to develop new knowledge — in one field. For twenty years, the primary career placement for the new Ph.D. was college teaching. This avid demand was the result of a large fast growth in the number and size of colleges; that growth was a response to the baby boom and a higher propensity for high school graduates to go on to college. Those demographic factors have run their course; the college age population is not larger each year; higher fractions of the high school class are no longer going to college; the faculties of a doubled national higher education enterprise are now all in place — and the majority have tenure. The Ph.D. is no longer a course of study which results in life as a faculty member. It is, as before, the degree which prepares one for a career in research in an academic discipline — and perhaps for a more widely defined research career. The intellectual and social well-being of our generation, and the next, depends in some esential part on the development of knowledge, on the researching of old questions, and on the identification and study of questions which, though not seen as yet, inevitably lie before us. A small flow of very able, dedicated persons into lives of academic research is a priceless asset. Stanford will continue to exercise one of its most important functions in deucating — as well as is known how — such students for those exacting careers. Then, as now, the graduate years will be times of hard work, growth, and strain. Then, as now, Stanford will dedicate much care to seeing that the carefully chosen student who is studying effectivesly will be enabled to continue studying without dropping out for financial reasons. Then, as now, the University will benefit from the presence of her graduate students in many ways, just as they themselves will benefit from research training (doctoral education) here at Stanford. MICHAEL SOMERSCALES Painting is really my bag. It's a life time love — you either want to do it or you don't. In the final year of the Masters of fine Arts program, Michael Somerscales enjoys painting because of its versatility in color and texture of the paint and the size of the canvas. He does not especially like painting abstract It doesn't pin me down enough. Instead, he prefers painting more realistic scenes of the surrounding studio areas, this forces me to come to grips with usual phenomena, it's more direct than abstract painting in which I just had too much freedom. ART JUNESOBELL I'm a culture consumer: I enjoy taking it all in. With this attitude about herself, June Sobell, a first year grad student working for her Masters in Art, enjoys her experience at Stanford. Having recently moved out to California from Skidmow College, she feels that there is not such a frenzy about work here as there is in New York. After she attains her degree, June hopes to make the most amount of money possible with the least amount of time and effort so that she can be free to concentrate on her interests in painting. June keeps a journal of her impressions of California: I see California as the best place to do art. California — the land of artifice prefabricated plastic vistas of transient integrity — an El Camino Unreal juxtaposed to areas of awesome beauty, fearful ocean, silent desert, lush green, and glib sunshine. ANN MALMLUND I do everything everybody else does, artists are just regular people — we're not all that different. We don't have a 9 to 5 job, but we do think about our work all the time. In this way, Ann Malmlund, a second year art graduate student characterizes her feelings of the artist. In her paintings, Ann uses imagery which is biological in nature, utilizing microscopic animals rather than abstract forms as subjects. She feels that the university is an ideal place for an artist to work because of its diversity. m EUGENE FOORD I, myself, definitely like the general university atmosphere. I enjoy meeting people in the different areas and fields at Stanford. There are many options open to me on campus. You can do research at many places, but you can't get the university environment just anywhere. It's an open atmosphere here. It isn't stagnant, there's a lot going on. These are the reflections of Eugene Foord, a Ph.D. candidate in geology. Eugene is currently in his sixth year at Stanford, working on his doctoral thesis which involves the formation of composite layered oplite-pug-matite dikes in the area of Mesa-Grande, California. CHARLES SMITH AERONAUTICS AND AST RON A U TICS If we used smoke, the wind tunnel would look like downtown London. Charles Smith, a fourth year aerodynamic fluid mechanics graduate student, is completing his doctorate involving experimentation with the subsonic wind tunnel. His work focuses on the reduction of aerodynamic noise generated from surface interaction on the wings and flaps. He is particularly interested in the development of the waves generated. Charles has already accepted employment with a comsulting firm in aeroacoustics in which he will be doing contract research on industrial noise. RON DeHOFF Ron DeHoff, a fourth year grad student in Guidance Control, is working on the development of a control system for a drag free satellite. Ron, who did his undergraduate work in Aeronautical Engineering at Princeton, is developing a control device which makes use of one rocket thruster instead of two, thereby saving weight. Ron feels that he won't have any problems in obtaining employment. A Stanford graduate in my area will have little trouble in getting a job. Once you know something about guidance control, you can apply it to almost anything. Kno and Atfro  113 JAMES A. MOORER James A. (Andy) Moorer, a third year graduate student, is working on the transcription of musical sound with the aid of computers. One of his aims is to have a computer write the score for music which is played into it. He is also trying to get the computer to synthesize as well as analyze music. Andy maintains, however, that man is still the most important element in the composition of music. In the future, he feels the computer will be used as a performing instrument, being able to mix perfectly reproduced sounds. In regard to combining work with pleasure, Andy comments, the only problem is sometimes I get lost in my work and lose track of my friends. I try to keep the two seperate and not talk shop to my friends. The only trouble is not becoming overly committed to my work. RAY FINKEL This is not a preparation for a future job but an end to it. Thus, Ray Finkel summarizes his work in robotics at the Artificial Intelligence Center. Ray, a third year graduate working toward his Ph.D., is in the process of developing a new language for a computer-controlled mechanical arm. When not indulging in his work, Ray teaches an exotic linguistics course in Yiddish. Ray still regards computer science as an avocation rather than an occupation. I like to keep my interests on the side. When you become too involved in them, you learn you liked them for the wrong reasons. PSYCHOLOGY KEITH HOLYOAK Keith Holyoak, a third year graduate student in psychology is currently investigating the role of memory in language, concentrating on how vocabulary is stored for future use. As far as his future is concerned Keith would enjoy teaching on the college level. Regarding the Stanford atmosphere and social life, he concedes, Stanford isn't one of the most exciting places when it comes to social life. Thesidder, as a student union, is at a loss for activity. JERRY BALZANO I'm glad that there is sort of an independence between graduates and undergraduates. The undergraduates are more politically and socially concerned as a whole. The graduates are more interested in getting work done. So Jerry Balzano defines the relationship between grads and the university atmosphere. Jerry is a third year grad student and Ph.D. candidate. His work concentrates on cognative psychology, specifically dealing with word and music perception. Jerry deals with the effect of word form and sound on analyzing their meaning. One of his main theses in music perception revolves around the belief that perfect pitch is related to memory rather than the ear being able to distinguish finer differences in sound. In summarizing his reasons for working extensively in psychology, Jerry states, Once one finds a field of interest, then one gets really turned on to acquiring knowledge. Most of them are foreigners. They grew up in their own universities and look at Stanford as something to be indulged rather than enjoyed. After three sets of finals they're halfway done. How much longer can three years last? Oh, Lord, how much longer? The University is scheduled for the undergraduates. When we start, they don't — and neither do most of the University services. Our lives are measured in semesters. We curve to a 2.85. Even the bells don't jive with our schedules. But it's nice when the others aren't around. The reckless Stanford bicyclist is our classic first year tortfeasor; the feckless Stanford exprofessor, our classic First Amendment defendant; the luckless Stanford law student, our classic bankrupt. The law school relates to the University in as many ways as there are law students. They have their own dorm, their own almost-building, their own descipline. Positions of responsibility at the University are peopled with them — SWPOSI, RA's, student councils. From a passionate interest in Stanford Law Review brownie points to Legal Aid's noblesse oblige, they are all out to touch The Real World, either for the greater good, or for their own. Law is as I've told you before. Law is as you know I suppose, Law is but let me explain it once more. Law is The Law. Others say. Law is our Fate; Others say. Law is our State; Others say, others say Law is no more Law has gone away. And always the loud angry crowd Very angry and very loud Law is We, And always the soft idiot softly Me. — W. Ft. Auden, Law Like Love Although I consider myself a scientist, and most of my friends are scientists, I enjoy going to the theatre, seeing plays, reading, and participating in other endeavors. In this manner, Didi Robins, a second year biology graduate student, describes her basic interests. Her graduate work focuses on cellular biology, specifically dealing with an analysis on the effects of artificially regulating and introducing the hormone, estrogen, into the reproductive glands of chickens. Didi, while working for a Ph.D., is unsure of her future after that. She is interested in doing some teaching and research, but is doubtful of the job market there. As far as her characterization of the Stanford community is concerned, she says, people are not as culturally or intellectually involved as I thought they would be. ELIZABETH LUNA Teaching chemistry, sure, I like it. It gives me great emotional satisfaction to feel that maybe the students really learned something. That is Elizabeth Luna, a grad student in Biophysical Chemistry, summarizing her feelings toward teaching. When not instructing students in the art of laboratory chemistry, Elizabeth works on a team effort in Dr. McConnell's lab on the investigation into the protein composition and interaction in the red blood corpuscle membrane. Her part of the team effort, which is also the subject of her thesis, is the examination of the structural and functional properties of spectrin. She feels that graduate students are the forgotten people. Perhaps, it is our own fault in that we tend to narrow ourselves down. It is like learning a foreign language. To really learn it, one has to emerse oneself in the culture for a while. BIOLOGY DIDI ROBINS chemistry JAN SIMEK I have a skill and I hope that other countries will need me ' Practicality, in addition to humanitarian ideals, convinced Jan Simek, a fifth year graduate in Organic Chemistry to join the Peace Corps upon completion of his work. Jan is finishing the second part of his thesis: the synthesis of a new molecule, 3-deu-terocyclopentanone, which will hopefully be optically active. The first part involved research at the Artificial Intelligence Center, where he investigated and formed a pedagogical tool for the computation of the number of isomers for any given formula. Jan feels that there is more to being a person than just being a Professional; the things outside the lab are just as valuable as the subject inside. Jan enjoys teaching as well. Because his prospects for finding a job in this country are rather slim at this time, he is planning to eo to Malaysia, a heaven on earth, through the Peace Corps. Officially opened in 1959, the Medical Center houses the Stanford University Hospital, Clinics, School of Medicine, and the largest medical library in the western United States. The School of Medicine and Hospital are centers of education and training for 390 medical students, 70 Ph.D. candidates, and more than 600 interns, residents and fellows, plus others receiving training in paramedical fields. Its faculty is also deeply involved in patient care and research. In cooperation with the university scientists in physics and engineering, they have contributed to the development of many innovations now used in medicine. For example, the linear electron accelerator, developed by Stanford physicists and engineers, was adapted for cancer therapy by Stanford radiologists headed by Dr. Henry S. Kaplan. Also the laser, whose co-inventor is a Stanford physicist, has been adapted by Stanford and Palo Alto Medical Clinic physicians for the treatment of detached retina and other eye diseases. Currently, another potential cancer treatment device which uses subatomic particles called pi mesons is under development. In addition, Stanford Medical School is heavily involved in regionalized continuing education programs for physicians. The undertaking is based on an informal federation of five hospitals located in Stanford's geographic district. The goals of this project are the improvement of health care and the invigoration of intellectual pursuits of practitioners. The project has also been designed to allow the School to investigate in a scientific way the process of continuing education of physicians. Under study is the analysis of the steps involved in the initiation of such extramural programs, the indentification of areas of educational need, and the evaluation of effectiveness of various educational methods as judged by their impact on health care. The program is predicated on a long-term relationship with about 1,000 physicians in northern California. 1 120 ___________ SECONDARY TEACHER EDUCATION PROGRAM The Stanford Teacher Education Program in cooperation with the Stanford Center for Research and Development in Teaching provides comprehensive preparation in designing individual educational programs for working with students and others. These programs stress self-evaluation. Applicants who accept admission into the program also accept the responsibility of cooperating in research projects related to STEP and the Stanford Center for Research and Development. Step is a twelve-month, fifth-year program which leads to a California Single Subject Teaching Credential and, in most cases, to a Master of Arts degree in Education. It begins in June with a summer quarter of intensive preparation in the processes of teaching, with experience gained through participation in summer programs in nearby schools. During the academic year, students take courses in academic areas and in professional education, while teaching part-time in local schools. i u ttl uo ir npj N0I1VDI103 BUSINESS SCHOOL Nestled among the palm and eucalyptus trees by Frost Amphitheater, the Graduate School of Business stands as a sea of purpose in the otherwise ambling academia of the University. Students often approach the school with a certain amount of anxiety in recognition that the GSB does have something of a ferocious reputation and not everyone wants to be associated with the Great Robber Baron profession. Such is not the case, however. The broadest view of the school is that it seeks to provide students with the skills to become first-rate managerial problem-solvers in either the private or the public sector. As such, the program is future-oriented; it seeks through its curriculum and faculty research to anticipate the roles of managers 20 or 30 years into the future, and to expose students to the skills necessary to fulfill these roles in a rapidly changing environment. Not is the school just classroom tools or particular instructors. It is an environment in which one is exposed to the kinds of minds that challenge an individual. The divergent nature of the student body makes most difficult any attempt to develop a feel for what the school is like. Hetergeneity is an important adjective, not only to describe the entering class, but the graduating class as well. It is this synthesis of program and people that has become the hallmark of the GSB experience, and has made it one of the top schools of management education in the world. CHEMICAL ENGINEERING STEVE JOHNSON You have to be in what you're doing in the lab. You can't think about your wife or your plans for the weekend. You have to be in one thing or another. These are comments from Steve Johnson, a second year grad student who spent his undergrad days at the University of Illinois. Steve's experiments aim at discovering the basic characteristics of catalytic surfaces. This is achieved by covering a surface with one layer of a compound and then heating it, and following the reaction in an ultra-high vacuum. Steve hopes that this research will ultimately be a boon to industry in choosing the most efficient type of catalysts. When questioned about the transition from leisure to a complicated scientific atmosphere, Steve replied, There is a definite mental changeover. You shift into different modes. The rough part is taking the data and numbers you've obtained, and then figuring out what's going on. It's creative. It's a completely different mental process. In regards to his future, Steve responded, I'd like to work in industry. There aren't many openings for teachers in chemical engineering. In contrast to other departments which have a lot of positions, chemical engineering is limited for teaching possibilities. Also, the money is much better in industry. ROBERT WATKINS I have some hobbies like electronics and photography which are related to what I am doing, but I participate in these because I like them. Robert Watkins, a third year grad student, relates the seemingly intangibility of chemical engineering to the reality of the everyday world. Bob, a graduate of the University of California at Davis, is working on protein absorption to various surfaces through the surface specific florescent technique. The application of his research deals with the development of blood compatable materials and the study of the diffusion process and suspension. Bob has also set up laser-Doppler experiments concerning the velocity profiles of fluids. Commenting on tne choice of projects. Bob says, When you choose your project, you have quite a bit of freedom. This freedom allows you to pick a project that conforms to your own interests. 126aC xm.(ng. BRUCE BEECLE We don't do mind-bending research here all the time. After we figure out how to solve our problems, which methods to use, and generally how to attack them, much becomes routine. We alter them from time to time during the course of the experiment, but generally they stay the same. Bruce Beegle, a second year grad student and product of M.l.T. Bruce is currently doing research using the metal, palladium, testing its reaction with combinations of hydrogen and oxygen. Bruce hopes his experiments will improve the efficiency of industrial processes. He doesn't try to justify his research as a part of the entire university picture. My work here really doesn't relate to the rest of the campus. The only people I ever talk to about it are people in the lab or other people in chemical engineering. PARTING SHOTS 128 ■MnJii.ll School COMMUNICATIONS The Department of Communications summer program gives students a chance to develop their skills. Three workshops are offered in the areas of mass media, broadcasting, and filmmaking. The mass media workshop involves a general course in all forms of communication. The broadcasting workshop provides experience working in a television station. With the cooperation of station KPIX, Stanford students have the opporutnity to produce the Sunday News Report. This required that they direct and film the taped news stories as well as do the camerawork and reporting. The film workshop consists of a wide variety of individual projects. These include a film on medical services in China by Diane Li and a documentary on the American Nazi Party by Keith Critchlow. Ken Sunder is working on a film on brass instruments, and Ralph Maradiage and Julio Rossetti did a film on engineering to be shown on the junior high and high school levels. The summer institute is headed by Jules Dundes, a former vice president of C.B.S. Many of the program's graduates have gone on to take positions in broadcasting. Newsman Ted Koppel of A.B.C. and director Lee Mendeldon, creator of the Peanuts television series, are both graduates of the program. This quality of faculty and students has helped the program become one of the finest in the country. JOEL FRITSCHE It's all just basic skills which anybody can learn. Putting them together in the right combination's the thing. Joel Fritsche is a product designer. Recently he's been working on a prototype of an electric local anesthesizer. Joel explains that the final mock-up you see is perhaps the 100th model I've done, pointing to scattered styrofoam and cardboard shapes. In other words, an idea doesn't just present itself to me. I go through stage after stage of decision. 1 MMHJnign THE DESIGN LOFT If Stanford gave out an award for the most cluttered, piecemeal, patchwork area on campus, the Design Loft would have no competition. Most dorm rooms look immaculate by comparison, and if it weren't a center of learning it would be declared a firetrap. Some 15 of the most talented and diverse people on campus have office space in this beehive, and walking through is a visual Disneyland. There is work going on in every field from car designing to medical products research. CAMILLE MAJZOUB “Design influence has always been a part of my life. Camille is a first-year grad student who majored in Pre-med at Michigan. She decided to double major in design as well, and took a fifth year at Stanford to receive it. Camille's interests are varied; she works in graphics, corporate design, weaving and jewelry design, and is getting her degree in a combination of product design, mechanical engineering, design management and art. My whole family are doctors, and I realized I'd be depressed if I did that the rest of my life. JOEL SIMON Does it really look like all we do is sit around and play games? Joel, like the design loft itself, is a little beyond description. When not teaching undergraduate courses, he's likely to be found passing the time away balancing on a wheelchair up in the loft. He too is a first-year grad student, and did his undergraduate work at UCSB and Stanford in Marine Bio and art. I'm into design because it's a viable synthesis between analytic and creative thinking, though I don't like to say it that way because it sounds too much like a text book. OJSIGS-1II SPORTS THE ATHLETIC ACADEMIC DICHOTOMY is thriving on the Farm. Stanford University is rated one of the top three academic schools in the country, and also competes successfully in the toughest conference in the NCAA. In the past century Stanford has graduated almost as many All-Americans as it has Rhodes scholars. One can't say that Stanford is a typical Pac-8 jock school. Yet, two out of three students participate in at least one organized game a year, a phenomenon among the Farm's Ivy League counterparts. The most widely publicized athletic activities on campus are the Men's Intercollegiates. Cardinal teams are followed locally, nationally, and even internationally by a host of sports fans, as well as students and alumni. While each participant enjoys many well-wishers during competition, the athlete receives no extra attention in class. Other schools try to segregate jocks from the mainstream of student life with team dorms and training restrictions. Stanford, however, treats its athletes like any other students with specialized talents and interests, who are entitled to develop them within the framework of the University. In essence, Stanford is one of the few Pac-8 schools that doesn't live and die by victory. 1 M Spom S portions ittaSportt Club sports, individual by nature, require not only a physical output from the participants, but often a financial one as well. Some clubs draw only a handful of members, while others attract as many as ninety. Although not as widely publicized as those sports sponsored by the Athletic Department, the enthusiasm and devotion of players and fans assures the continued growth of club sports on campus. Women's athletics can no longer be called Dollie Diversions. The Women's Recreation Association and the Women's Physical Education Department field a wide variety of teams every year, and progress is being made to provide more financial assistance for women's sports. Meanwhile, the newly formed Organization of Stanford Athletes is working for improved coaching, greater opportunities, and increased use of facilities for the women. Spor1  1J7 Coed intramurals, drawing over 7,000 participants, are the most popular athletic diversions on campus. Here the non-recruited athlete can play an organized game once a week for fun, or devote himself to practicing and playing for blood. Fortunately, the former outnumbers the latter, and IM's often rekindle memories of street football and blacktop rivalries. Everyone is invited to play on the men's, women's, or coed teams in a variety of sports. Accommodating the wide range of athletic activities at Stanford has its own problems. IM football practices often run into women's field hockey scrimmages, volleyball games are broken up by frisbees, and basketball games slowed by grapevining folk dancers. But at Stanford there is always aother field, pool, court, or open grassy area just waiting for something to happen. All this, in addition to the Roscoe Maples Pavilion, the deGuerre swimming pool handball squash complex, the stables, and a golf course ranked in the top 100 by Golf Digest make Stanford University the best country club for the price. If only there weren't any classes DSaSpom MENS' INTERCOLLEGIATES THREE QUARTERBACKS AND 30,000 COACHES (Top row Coachci Jim Kjffcn, Gunther Cunningham, Hudson Houck, Doug Single, George Seifert, Willie Shaw, Norb Hecker, Jack Christiansen, Pete Kettela, Don Frease, Dave Currey. (Second row lacy Atkinson, Bill Hubbard, Bill Singler, Sig Ostrom, Ted Pappas, Jim Smyth, Ramsey Blackburn, Gordon King, John Harris, Alex Karakozoff, Gary Anderson, Tom Tipton, Jon Langford, Rob Blanche, Tom Pike, Mark Hoaglin. (Third rotygohn Olenchalk, Rich Merlo, John Pigott, Steve Oils, Joe Baumgaertner, Ron Inge, Gerald Wilson, Roland Young, Tony Hill, James Lofton, Ken Shropshire, Mike Conner, Glenn Hoit, Larry McGovern, Duncan McColl, Geoff Kieburtz. (Fourth row)Craig Heaps, Andy Kolesnikow, Dan McCann, Bill Kcllar, Don Stevenson, Jerry Wald-vogel, Jim Jenke, John Finley, Marv Holmes, Ron Himes, Dan Francis, Drew Palin, Geb Church, Jeff Siemens, Guy Benjamin, Tom Lynn, Ray Cardinalli. (Fifth row) George Dobbins, Dave Tenn, Art Estrada, Ron Goss, Steve Kemper, Duf Sundheim, Drew Noseworthy, Paul Skrabo, Mark Hill, Chip Underwood, Mike Yancey, Rich Waters, Tom Ryska, Mike Cordova, Todd Anderson, Al TenBruggencate. (Sixth rowJKelly Walker, Rudy Bergthold, Rob Olson, Scott Laidlaw, Doc Blanchard, Brad Williams, Eric Test, Pat Donovan, John Snider, Terry Pape, Gordie Riegel, Roger Stillwell, Dave Walker, Forrie Martin, Keith Rowen. (Not pictured)Ray Anderson. was the only way to describe the pressure on Jack Christiansen in the 74 pre-season. Benjamin, Cordova, and Waldvolgel -each game saw a new combination. The pre-season quarterback-shuffling forced the other members of the squad to adapt not only to the opposing team, but to the man calling the signals. Coach Chris watched the offense and the defense game by game, play by play, noting the inconsistancies. Minor injuries and the flu caused many excellent athletes not to play up to their capabilities. And there was always the question of whether the 74 Cards had overestimated their talents. But their experiences with Penn State, Illinois, and San Jose State paid off in Stanford's best pre-season game, a 27-16 loss to nationally ranked Michigan. Cordova was then chosen as the man to lead the Cards for 1974, and for the first time since 1968, Stanford went into Pac-8 play without a win, but ready for one. The emergence of a truly balanced offense reflected a change from the days of Plunkett. The forward pass was still alive and well on the Farm, and will be as long as there are wide receivers like Bill Singler and Eric Test, in addition to tight ends and backs who can catch the ball. In the past, an explosive running attack had decided many games against Stanford. This year, however, the Cards came up with a few explosions of their own with Scott Laidlaw, Ron Inge, Sig Ostrom and Dave Tenn. But it's what's up front that opens the hole and sets up the screen. Seven returning lettermen including Keith Rowen, Cary Anderson and Todd Anderson, cleared the way for the Cardinal offensive drive. When discussing Stanford's defense, it's difficult not to name every player on the squad. But one can't overlook the likes of steady performers Doc Blanchard, Pat Donovan, and Roger Stillwell. (Or is it Roger Donovan and Pat Stillwell?) Augmenting this constantly improving defense were nose guard Drew Palin JV Standout, Duncan McColl and ex-Marine Lacy Atkinson. (Top left) QB Jerry Waldvogel hands off to running back Ron Inge. (Top right) Wide receiver Tony Hill. (Bottom) Offensive guard Alex Karako off blocks for quarterback Mike Cordova. rootbjliaui THE PAC-8 TEAMS were so evenly matched this year that no one team could be taken lightly. And if this was to be another Rose Bowl year, the offense, the defense, and Lady Luck would have to get together. Saturday at the Coliseum, for 59 minutes and 59 seconds,Stanford put it together. Well-executed, consistent play by both offense and defense gave UCLA a good look at defeat. Relieving an injured Cordova in the second quarter, Benjamin completed 6 of 7 passes, implimenting a scoring drive. But the win-starved Cardinals left the field unsatisfied after a tying field goal with one second on the clock. Hungrier than ever for a win, the Cards ate up Universtiy of Washington the following Saturday. Coach Chris said it was the type of performance we'd been waiting for. Winning isn't all it's cracked up to be. The next week's victory over Washington State was a costly one, ending the season for running back Sig Ostrom. The bruises, sprains, and pulls told what a hard-hitting game it had been, and Christiansen praised virtually every member of the defensive unit for their fine play. MWtxHtljll (Top lc(l) Forrie Marlin. (Top (enter) Sig Ostrom, running back. (Top rrgbfJOefcnsivc back Gerald Wilson trips up U of Washington runner. (Bottom cF JFullback Scott laidlaw. (Bottom center) All-American Pat Donovan. (Bottom right) Drew Palin, Rich Waters, Larry McGovern, and Roger Stillwell Stop Wolverine ball carrier. looibjimu) 1 4 1.  ltull (Top left) Mike Cordova pitching out to Sig Ostrom. (Top right) Gordie Riegel harrassed USC's Pat Haden. (Bottom left) Ray Cardinalli and John Olcnchalk. (Bottom center) Tom Lynn throws a block. (Bottom right) Roger Stillwell runs down Washington ball carrier. ROSE BOWL TALK was dangerous. Every game could have decided if Stanford was to play on January 1st. The next Saturday's win over Oregon was keyed by the defensive unit. Gordie Riegal's fumble recovery that led to a Stanford score and a successful goal line stand highlighted the game. But next week the Cards hosted Big, Bad USC. 83,000 people waited to watch this game, enduring water balloons and the rowdy fans. What happened on the playing field, however, no Stanford fan really expected. There was a resounding crash as the quick, strong, USC defense and Anthony Davis came in line against the Cardinals to produce a 34-10 yawner as Stanford got bowled over again. There would be no more talk of Pasadena for the rest of the year. ASK FOR FENIIBOIL ! GLOOM TO GLORY IN 23 SECON DS vue n Some Stanford fans sat with head in hands, stunned. Some cried. Some stared bitterly at a scoreboard which read California 20, Stanford 19 with only 23 seconds to play, or at a California crowd exploding with joy. A few blamed Cordova, a few blamed Bartkowski, while most mourned the apparent realization that the Cardinals had done it again, blowing another game they should have won. Down below this pocket of depression, some guys on their own 24-yard line were trying to move the ball 40 yards downfield into what barely passes as field goal range. All in 23 seconds. Stanford's favorite quarterback, Guy Benjamin, first threw an 18-yarder to Ted Pappas, who raced out of bounds. But Benjamin's next pass came closer to interception than completion, so the Cardinals were left ina hopeless situation of being on their own 42 with but 11 seconds to play in Saturday's 77th Big Game. Under the rhythmic countdown of the seconds, Benjamin threw to tight end Brad Williams. Williams made the most of the last reception of his college career. He bowled over the Cal defender and race to the sideline. Williams apparently had both a clock and a field-goal-calculator ensconsed in his head, as he dashed out of bounds as far upfield as he possibly could before time expired. So with two seconds left, it was all in the hands, or foot, of an obscure junior college transfer kicker named Mike Langford. Holder Eric Test calmed Langford, telling him to keep his head down and follow through. So Langford, head down, kicked it. The ball wobbled, drifted to the right, wobbled some more and finally arched over and between the soon-to-be-destroyed goalpost. 146 ■Kg Cunt (Top led) Guy Benjamin was poised under pressure. (Top center) Ray Anderson gels upended. (Top right) Anxious Stanford fans gaze at the scoreboard. (Bottom led) Soph Duncan McColl sacks Cal QB Steve Bart-Vowski. (Bottom right) Mike Langford kicks the winning field goal. ■i«r Coach Marshall Clark lack Bellah Doug McLean Art Brown Mark McConnell Jell Parietti Frank Boutin Tony Sandoval NOT ONE STAR, but five well-trained runners must reach a physical and mental peak simultaneously to win a cross-country meet. This year Cardinal harriers ran 6-mile circuits varying from the Stanford golf course to Sunset Boulevard. And so, it was the group performance that led to the fourth place finish in the Pac-8. This is not to say that Stanford did not have its stars. Anthony Sandoval, Jack Bellah, and Mark McConnell were in the top ten all-time field. Sandy, who was the 73 MVP, came back after foot surgery to win his first race, the Fresno Invitational. Team captain McConnell, the only senior on the squad, took the Stanford bid to the NCAA's in Indiana. With Sandoval, the leading cross-country runner in Stanford history. Jack Bellah, who was in the Stanford top three, and the rest of the squad all returning. Coach Marshall Clark can't help but be optimistic about the 75 season. Frank Boutin vie I or position in Pac-8 finals. M ■Cron-Country UPDOWN, AND UP (SUnding)lim Stokes, Bill Ralston, Orv Gonzalez, Frank Johns, Bob Bonaparte, Robbie Robb, Mac Taylor, Mike Kellogg, Phil Wright, Glenn Cristofori, Herb Schmidt, Coach Fred Priddle, Burt Balduccini. (Kneeling) Marty Glickfield, John Murao, Jim Mulamed, Derk Mendel, George Pfeiffer, Rick Morrow, Bruce Mos-bacher, Charles Hall, Mark Judson, Bud Peters. was not only the way the soccer ball went this year. The season, like the ball, fluctuated, with a good opening series, then a string of losses after a 4-0 rout by UCLA. The upward surge resumed with excellent team play that led to the 2-1 defeat of Santa Clara. The 74 team did not fulfill its pre-season prediction that it would have the best season Stanford soccer had seen since 1962. The loss of two 73 top scorers, and variable team cohesiveness were factors that contributed to this inconsistency. Returning lettermen Marty Glickfield, Robbie Robb, Phil Wright, and Mac Taylor led Card scoring. Stopping the opponents' point-making was a job headed by goalie Bruce Mosbacher, aided by sweeper Taylor. Though not the nadir of Stanford soccer, the season was disappointing. Fans and the soccer team await next season and the fulfill ment of the 74 predictions. (Above left) Jim Mulamed fights Davis player for ball, Glenn Cristofori looks on. (Below) John Morrow. So«tt ■149 n w (Top) Paul Clark, Rick Johannsen, and Drew McDonald await pass by teammate. (Bottom left) Tom Elson. (Bottom center) Coach Art Lambert counsels his players. (Bottom right) Stan Johnson and goalie Chris Dorst. Rick Johannsen, Paul Clark, Keith Ortiz, John Goepp, Tom Purcell, Craig VanZandt, John Paul Roberts, Tom Elson. ISO WUcf folo NEW Pi A YERS, a new coach, and new hope set the Stanford water polo into the running for the NCAA championships. Art Lambert, fresh from his winning seasons at DeAnza, led the Card poloists out of two consecutive 0-6 seasons for third place in both the Pac-8 and the Northern California Tournament. With the mid-season losses to Los Angeles giants UCLA and USC, the hope dimmed a bit. Although scoring was consistent throughout the season, the poloists suffered occasional concentration lapses and spurts of lackadaisical play. Freshman Rick Johannsen, with other leading scorers Paul Clark and Craig Van Zandt will all return for another year under Lambert. Only top scorer Dean Anderson will be lost. Add to these returnees juniors Stan Johnson, John Paul Roberts and sophomore transfer Frank Forencich and Stanford might soon see the beginning of its first water polo dynasty since the sixties. Frank Forencich, Stan Johnson, Drew McDonald, Chris Dorst, Ken Favero, Brian Avery, Marly Davis. Wt tr folo ■1 SI (At poolside) Jeff leicher, Jin Chiang, Jim Gaughran, Steve Powell, Dave Fryefield, Chris Whalen, Stu Seiff, Tom Pedreira, Steve Strong, Coach Jim Gaughran, Manager Keith Ortiz. (In vvater) Paul Clark, Dean Anderson, Dave Fairbank, Rick Gerbers, Marty Davis, Jon Powell, Bruce Goodwin, Mike Bruner, Craig vanZandt, Jack Connelly, John Hencken, Ron longinotti. Bill Chao, Brian Roux, Matt Sullivan, Stu Corliss, Richard Cook, Randy Whitchurch, Jack Deppe. (Not pictured) Diving Coach Clyde Devine, Bruce Craig, John Croll, Rick Lambert, Eric Rasmussen, Wayne Wager. UNDERSUNNY Hawaiian skies, the Stanford Swimming Team trained during winter break. In a few weeks, however, the Cardinals were in the snow, and the season was well under way. The new sensation on the flipper brigade was freshman Mike Bruner. Bruner, showing no respect for established records, broke the freestyle marks for DeGuerre pool in the 200, 500, 1000, and 1650. (And he still has three more years. . .!) While Bruner was tackling the freestyle, Olympic gold medalist John Henken was breaking his own breaststroke marks. Henken was the Cards only defending Pac-8 champion this year, having won the 100 and 200 Breast in 74. Though the Cards were not a very deep team, they did enjoy a wealth of sprinters. Sophomore All-American Dave Fairbank placed first in the 50 free against 74 NCAA champions USC with a time that was the fastest recorded in the nation. Augmenting Fairbank' sprinting attack were senior Dean Anderson and junior Bruce Goodwin. The butterfly events were ably handled by Bruner, Fairbank, Brian Roux, and Paul Clark, while leading backstrokers Randy Whitchurch, Rich Gebers, Jack Deppe, and Matt Sullivan swam well with their competition. Diving events, which give a needed relief to gunfire at a swim meet, are linked to swimming inasmuch as they require water. Two Stanford divers, Wayne Wager, and Steve Powell, traveled to the Pac-8 Conference Swimming Championships. 1S2 • Swimmiojt I ( Top left) Wayne Wager. right) Dave Fairbank. (Top right) John Hencken. (Bottom left) Brian Roux. (Bottom 4 Swimming ■1SJ TWO CHAPTERS of a book ended on the same page as the end of the 1974-75 basketball season closed the cover on two Stanford careers. One career, that of Coach Howie Dallmar, spanned 528 games. Retiring after 21 years on tne Farm, he won some big ones and lost some others, hut never lost sight of the fact that, after all, it's only a game. For this, Howie Dallmar leaves basketball as one of the great gentlemen of the game. The other career now concluded is that of the Class of 75, a group of seven players who had brought with them the promise of big-time basketball — the ability to compete with the UCLA's of the sport, people said. Four years and a 37-30 record later, the promises remained unfulfilled, the titles still unclaimed. For four seasons the words disappointing and erratic were used to exhaustion. Nonetheless, the Class of 75 did fulfill one promise; they brought the big-time to Stanford that people had been longing for. It was the kind of story that will be retold till boredom. UCLA and USC came north to the Farm with plans of putting a win apiece in their suitcases before heading south. But something went wrong. When the madness had finally subsided, the Cardinals had added a 1 to the loss column of both the second-ranked Bruins and the fifth-rated Trojans. The Maples Miracle was complete. 1W (Top left) Rich Kelley. (Top center) Melvin Arterberry. (Top right) Retiring Head Coach Howie Dallmar. (Bottom for left) Ed Schweitzer. (Bottom left) Mark Gilberg. (Bottom right) Tim Patterson. (Bottom for right) Scott Trobbe. BjtVrttM’i ■1SS (Right) Mike Simons grabs the rebound amid Dale Peters, Ben Bluitt, Dick Dohrmann, and Tim Patterson. (Bottom left) Frosh sensation Jay Carter. (Bottom (enter) Ed Schweitzer, Rich Kelley, Jay Carter, Scott Trobbe, and Mike Brat . (Bottom right) Mike Bartz. 1S6 ■BitWHull (Sanding) Rich Wohlstadter, Mark Fitzner, Dick Dohrmann, Ed Schweitzer, Tim Patterson, Head Coach Howie Daltmar, Rich Kelley, Dale Peters, Scott Russell, Scott Trobbe, Melvin Arterberry. (Kneeling) Asst. Coach Percy Carr, Mark Gilberg, Mike Bratz, Jay Carter, Mike Simons, Ben Bluitt, Asst. Coach Bub Bowling, Manager Mark Florant. IF ANY ONE person deserves credit (or the turnaround in Stanford basketball, it is without a doubt Rich Kelley, the first seven-footer in the school's history. His statistics were impressive: 18.4 scoring average, 12.4 rebounds per game, 78% from the free throw line. His accomplishments, no less awesome: All-American, three years All-Pac-8, member of three U.S. All-Star teams. And the lists don't stop there. But to fully realize the impact Kelley has had, one has to have seen him duel UCLA's Bill Walton and intimidate him and so many other big men. You had to see it all. And so Rich Kelley leaves the Farm, his accomplishments forever etched in the record books, one of the finest basketball players, if not the finest, ever to play at Stanford. To say that Kelley was alone, however, would be a mistake. Starting alongside Rich were three other seniors. Mark Gilberg. a tenacious ballplayer, did most of the ball handling for the Cards. Mel Arterberry, while not a prolific scorer at guard, was heralded as one of the finest defenders on the West Coast. Scott Trobbe, a starter in all 26 games, contributed eight points per game, including a couple of twenty point efforts. Playing in Rich Kelley's shadow is something less than enviable. Yet junior Ed Schweitzer did just that and did it very well. For his efforts he was named All-Pac-8 for the second consecutive year in 1974-75. Next year, Ed Schweitzer will have to be the team leader. He will be helped by returnees Mike Bratz, lay Carter and Tim Patterson, but patching and plugging the holes left by the graduation of the Class of 75 and the retirement of Howie Dallmar may take some time. Bavirtbjll ■1S7 (Top row) Tom Moore, Bob Anderson, John Burnett, Mike Faria, George May, Leo Hollberg, Bill Madsen, Hector Neff, Greg Williams, Shop Kinsman, Ted Marcy, Asst. Coach Seth Anderson. (Secondrow) Head Coach Sadao Hamada, Bob Farb, Al Ncmcek, Mike Tanaka, Al Lorenz, Robin Uyeshiro, Brad Bett-man, Todd Hutcheon, Ken Gorman. (Notpictured) Steve Fierberg, Clay Hall, John White. lS8 G mniilk NEW RULING by the NCAA created new problems for the Stanford Gymnastics team this year. The twenty man team was scored four deep this year, instead of three, and in view of many outstanding personal performances this rule could have turned the tables in more than one meet. An example of the superior ability of Coach Sadao Hamada's Cardinals was the Chico State meet which Stanford won 202.68 to 193.11. Freshman Bob Farb, a polished gymnast, won the all around in addition to the vaulting. Senior Bob Anderson, who completed the entire season though not fully recovered from a shoulder operation, won the still rings, parallel bars, horizontal bar and placed second all around. Leading the team throughout the meets was 1974 NCAA side horse champion Ted Marcy. A junior, he received an almost unheard of score of 9.7 in the side horse against Cal, and competed through the NCAA's for the second time. Senior Hector Neff, juniors Bill Madsen, Leo Hollberg, freshman Al Nemcek, and |ohn White joined Farb, Marcy and Anderson in the Pac-8's and Coach Hamada should be proud of the quality his 75 team exhibited throughout the season. GRAPPLING is finally becoming a word that Stanford is familiar with. Behind All-American Chris Horpel, the Card matmen finished with the best record Stanford has ever seen: 15-9. On the eve of the NCAA championships. Coach Joe DeMeo expressed his confidence in his three entrants, John Govea (190), Ken Krebs (142), and Horpel (150), saying that All three are very tough competition. I expect our contingency to make a good showing. As always, the team was plagued by injuries to key people, which put meet strategy in a state of flux for half the season. Nevertheless, the squad had tremendous depth and was able to offset these losses. Malcolm Scott (118), injured early in the season, was capably replaced by Dave Schmelling. Gary Lynn (167), a talented freshman, made a successful comeback after breaking his nose in an early meet. After Mark Yancey (134), last year's Most Outstanding Wrestler, was knocked out of competition. Bob Keating filled in at that weight class, using his unorthodox but effective moves. Doug Stamm, the heavyweight, next suffered injuries. First Art Estrada, then Gary Thorne handled the heavyweight duties. Thorne, who usually wrestles at 167, proved to be a more than formidable opponent. As Captain Horpel said, the bigger they are . . . On the brighter side, Krebs, Horpel, Govea, and Roy Tolies led the team with consistently strong performances. Craig Reynolds (158), who took third in the Hayward Invitational, and freshman Lester Yoshida (126) provided the last two components for a very successful grappling group. ! (Top row) Trainer Stanley Scott, Asst. Coach Tom Potts, Pete Bay, Mark Marsing, Roy Tolies, Doug Stamm, Marc Frelier, John Govca, Asst. Coaches Rich Zweig, David Thomas, Paul DuBois, Head Coach Joe DeMeo. (Second row) Dave Schmeling, Kep YVhitcford, Jim Moreci, Garth Neuffer, Mark Taguchi, Craig Reynolds, Emmett Stanton, Gary Shamshoian, Gary Thorne, Rich DeFrancisi. (Third row) Malcolm Scott, Bob Carr, Jim Rappaport, Bob Sweetman, Chris Horpel, Charlie Masch, Bob Keating, Ken Krebs, tester Yoshida. (Not pictured) Mark Yancey, Art Estrada, Gary Lynn, D'Van Myles. Wrestling ■161 (Top row) Tom Guardino, Jim Scharffenberger, Bruce Robinson, Ken Grolle, Mike Williamson, Gary Morton, Al Arthur, Bornie Hittner, Pitching Coach Tom Dunton. (Second row) Coach Mark Marquess, Bob Hampton, Kevin Sullivan, Gary Pitchford, Dave Perez, Rusty DuQuette, Steve Davis, Bruce Davis, Kent Caldwell. (Third row) Head Coach Ray Young, |oe Lamoure, Gary Bei, Pepe Hinojosa, Gary Malkasian, Randy Wong, Jerry Argust. (Hot pictured) Dave Baker, Ed Malta, John Yandle. PROMISING PLAYERS BUT ERRATIC PLAY characterized the Stanford baseball team in 1975. The squad's strength lay in its pitching, defense, and speed. Al Arthur, Mike Williamson, and Ken Grolle laid the foundation for a pitching staff that was one of the best in the Pac-8. Sophomore John Yandle, as well as relievers Kent Caldwell, Bernie Hittner, and transfer Ed Matta provided depth on the mound. I As far as hitting was concerned, the Cards were a streak club. However, Steve Davis, an AII-Pac-8 player, was a consistent hitter throughout the year. Although suffering the loss of slugger Mark Lucich, Stanford was not lacking for firepower, as Bob Hampton and Bruce Robinson contributed plenty of artillery while accumulating substantial RBI totals. The Cards were also blessed with the addition of freshmen Tom Guardino, Pepe Hinojosa, Randy Wong, and Dave Perez to the lineup. It was this combination of inexperienced and veteran players that sent several opponents running for cover, as in the 27-run barrage in the three game series against Fresno State. Perhaps the most outstanding aspect of the squad's play was defense. Anchored by the ever-present Steve Davis, the infield made many crucial plays, and the outfield, not to be shown up, were often seen making diving catches of sinking liners. Undaunted by injuries to catcher Dave Baker, pitcher Jerry Argust, outfielder Kevin Sullivan, head coach Ray Young had an aggressive, solid club. Considering the young prospects on both the varsity and junior varsity teams, he can look optimistically to the future. 162 ■Bmtu Iitebill 163 IM ■Batrhall (Top left) Kevin Sullivan. (Top center) Catcher Bruce Robinson at bat. (Top right) Joe Lamoure. (Bottom left) All-American short-stop Steve Davis. (Bottom right) The team takes the field for infield. BJirtull ■If. FOUR AND SIX is not the kind of won-loss record of which championships are made, but considering that several of the losses were to the nation's top teams, Stanford's 1974-75 rugby team can be called anything but a failure. Starting fast with a 33-4 drubbing of St. Mary's in the season opener, the ruggers won once more before heading into a losing tailspin which didn't end until their record stood at 2-5. Among the losses were a 42-0 pounding at the hands of the Bay Area Touring Side, a team amply supplied with Stanford alumni, and a 12-9 loss to Santa Monica, a team coach Pete Kmetovic called one of the best in the country. Of the ruggers final two wins, one was destined to end in a tie, but some fast talking by Lawrie Lieber-man convinced USC to play overtime. It was an offer the Trojans should have refused, as the Cards left the L.A. Coliseum with a 12-6 victory. Outstanding all year for the Cardinals were Bill Conway and Lieberman in the backfield and Dave Morrison and John Carroll in the scrum. lM.aR.4by Y. (Top lc(l) Chris Spieller. (Top center) Marty O'Donahue and Dennis Shan-agher. (Top right) Bob Shaver, Chris Spieller, and John Carroll. (Bottom led) Mike Yancey, Marty O'Donahue, Al TenBruggencate, Steve Berna, and Jack Green. (Bottom center) John Carroll and Mike Yancey. (Bottom right) Bob Shaver. Rugby ■167 IN PURSUIT of speed, height, and distance, the Stanford Track team exhibited amazing versatility. Coach Payton Jordon's thin-clads were supplemented in the 75 season by a wealth of newcomers, giving the Cardinals new depth and flexability. Returning veteran Anthony Sandoval brought an impressive record into this season, showing promise in the 1, 2, 3, and 6-mile runs, while distance runner Mark McConnell, Stanford's first four-year letterman in both track and cross country, added a great degree of experience to this competent team. Stamina was provided by junior Jack Bellah, as he continued to live up to his reputation as a big event performer. IWlBIrMl (Top left) Bob Flint. (Top center) Marv Holmes and Dave Schrciber. (Top rightfTom Ellis. (Bottom) Mitt Hogsett. (Top row) Scott lones, Pete Witt, Jeff Parietti, James Lofton, Dave Schreiber, Randy Tucker, James Bordoni, Roger Greer. (Secondrow) Coach Payton or-dan. Manager George Berry, Jamie Morgan, Stacy Geiken, Jeff Norton, Jack Bellah, Steve Crowley, Matt Hogsett. Scott Wingo, Alan Cummings, Carl Johnk, Trainer Stan Scott. (Third row) Charley Hardwood, Kimble Smith, Reggie Mason, John Olenchalk, Alan Sheats, Mark McConnell, Rich Mcrlo, Matt Seaman, Mike Hall, John Macrorie, Anthony Sandoval, Tom Ellis, Coach Marshall Clark. (Fourth row) Tom Pitchford, Doug Me lean, Mary Holmes, Monte Makous, Gregg Oensmore, John Foster, Boh Flint, Mark Hill. (Notpictured) Mark Hadley, Otto Rosner. Jenk • W (Top left) Stacy Geiken and lack Bellah splash through the water obstacle on the steeple-chase course. (Top center) Coach Iordan with sprinter Alan Sheats. (Top right) Mark McConnell leads Anthony Sandoval, lack Bellah, and Doug McLean. (Bottom left) John Olenchalk. (Bottom right) Charley Hardwood. 170 •Trj l THE ARRIVAL of freshman James Lofton, a promising long jumper and sprinter, and Bob Flint, a state record holding pole vaulter, provided a breath of fresh air for the Cards. Other field events were aptly executed by newcomers Rich Merlo and Mark Hill in discus, and Big Game Hero Mike Langford in the javelin competition. Junior Matt Hogsett dominated the intermediate hurdles, having been proclaimed one of the best in the nation, while Dave Bag-shaw and John Foster were strong in the high hurdles. The relay teams were very tough this year, having great sprinters and quarter-milers to draw from. In an exciting win over the relay team of San Jose State, Hogsett, Lofton, Scott Wingo, and freshman Alan Sheats showed the kind of poise and confidence that marks every one of Coach Jordon's teams. He expected considerable dedication from his teams and they responded with outstanding individual and team efforts throughout the season. Tn k a 171 I A DYNASTY is in the making on the Farm. Under Coach Dick Gould, Stanford's Men's tennis team sought to defend their NCAA Championship for the second consecutive year. Leading the returning onslaught were 74 All-Americans John Whitlinger, Jim Delaney, and Nick Saviano. Whitlinger, the reigning NCAA singles champion, started his year off in England with the victorious U.S. team in the 75 U.S.-British Petroleum Cup Meet. Joining Whitlinger on the 74 NCAA doubles championship team was Jim Delaney, who competed this year with Saviano and Pat DuPre for the number two singles position. Other returning lettermen, including seniors Chip Fisher and Tim Noonan, juniors Craig Johnson, Jake Warde, and Mark Mitchell, and sophomore Gene Mayer added tremendous depth to the Cardinal camp. Challenging these men for starting positions were freshmen Bill Maze and Perry Wright, two highly touted prep stars last year. Experience was the key in keeping Stanford's team on top. Four Cards were in the U.S. Men's rankings and almost all have been in international competition. Coach Gould, Wilson Sporting Good's “Coach of the Year in 74, can't help but be proud of his tennis program and players. Their trademarks of depth, ability, and experience should insure the Stanford dynasty in the future. (Top left) Jim Delaney. (Top center) Jake Warde and Tim Noonan. (Top right) Nick Saviano. (Bottom left) Pat DuPre and Coach Dick Could. (Bottom center) Craig Johnson. (Bottom right) John Whitlinger. 172 • Irnnit (Top row) Manager Julie Fiedler, Jake Warde, Perry Wright, Jim Delaney, Bill Maze, John Whitlinger, Manager Bill Moore, Head Coach Dick Gould. (Second row) Nick Saviano, Pat DuPrc, Gene Mayer, Tim Noonan, Chip Fisher, Craig Johnson, Mark Mitchell. tmnis ■173 (Top fir left) Conrad Nilmeier. (Top left) Jay Johnston. (Top right) Aly Trompas. (Top far right) Mike Peck. (Bottom left) Jay Johnston and Mike McBride cross the footbridge. (Bottom right) Wade Nonnenberg. A HOT-SHOOTING team, the Stanford men's golf squad boasted an almost perfect season against nine area teams. The six-man team was to have hosted the Stanford Kick-Off Tourney, but it was cancelled by rain, as almost were the Fresno and Stanford Alumni Invitationals. But Stanford, led by senior Aly Trompas, won with ease. Head coach Bud Finger said with a grin, If Aly keeps that up, he'll make johnny Miller look bad. Seriously, considering the weather conditions we've been playing under, the entire team has been shooting excellent golf. Dave Baskins and Conrad Nilmeier were numbers two and three, respectively, with the rest of the positions continually changing hands as freshmen and seniors vied for the remaining spots in the starting line-up. But thank goodness for those freshmen, for the top three places were occupied by graduating seniors. 174 ■CoM (Standing) Coach Bud Finger, Conrad Nilmeier, Dave Baskins, George Pcttinger, Jay Johnston. (Sitting) Aly Trompas, Mike Peck, Mike McBride. Co« ■175 (Top row) Coaches |im Kaffen, Doug Jena, Sieve Hagata, Doug Single, Don Frease, Sieve While, Dave Ollmar. (Second row) Ben Hallock, Cary Lynn, Slu Center, Tom DeSanlos, Ken Rcmson, Chip Underwood, Jim Erickson, Joel Erickson, Glen Hoil, John Kirsl, Tom Steele, Geoff Kieburtc. (Third row) DeWayne Pursley, Bill Christopher, Sieve Dils, John Pigolt, Dennis Shanagher, Mike Glafkides, Charlie Tannin, Ted Chester. Steve Shupul, Bruce Barker, Greg Smith, Jack Green, Gordie King, (fourth row) Ken Shropshire, Rich Turner, Dave Small, Brad Fox, Tom Maynard, Tim Grolle, Tom Pederson, James Lofton, John Baer, James Gallanatti, Bob Valde , Tom Pike, Dan McCann, (fifth row) Paul Navar, Choochung Chao, Ralph Phillips, Mark Hill, Tom Oberhel-man, Ken Barkle, Lee Kraus, Orlando Mayes, Al Perry, Dave Diffley, John Maynard. (Not pictured) John Finley, Kent lightfoot, Mark Hoaglin, Rich Kuljian, Drew Nosworthy, Mike Yancey. AWESOME was their byword and offense was what they lived by. The junior varsity football team, playing a schedule depleted by cancellations, finished the season undefeated, 4-0, and on the way averaged six touchdowns per game and outscored their opponents 167-82. Beginning the season in Weed, that metropolis in the shadow of Ml. Shasta where Interstate S meets U.S.97, the JV's survived 40 m.p.h. winds and downed College of the Siskiyous, 34-21. Coach Doug Single's Cardinals then outpointed Cal Poly San Luis Obispo twice, 20-14 and 31-21, and ended the year with an 82-26 explosion over the California JV's in the little Big Game. Starring for the Cards were rushing leader Greg Smith with 487 yards, scoring leader Gary Lynn with 48 points in addition to his 226 yards on eight kickoff returns, receiver James Lofton with ten receptions for 192 yards and six TD’s. Anchoring the defense were Drew Nosworthy, Mike Yancey, Dan McCann and Ralph Phillips. 1?ba |V loo bill (Sanding) Coach Ken Morgan, Jim Erickson, Tony Hill, Howie Marion, Dick Dohrmann, Mark Hoaglin, Scott Russell, Ken Baker, Mark Eit ner, Sven Walker, Head Coach Percy Carr. (Kneeling) Asst. Coach Bill Whiting, Manager Jeff Maldonado, Terry McCartin, Rodney McAuley, Reid Butler, Warner Session, Bill Christopher, Rodney Buie, Weston Press. (Not pictured) Ace Edwards. IT BEGAN like it was £oing to be the worst of times when the junior varsity basketball team lost three of its first four games, but it quickly became the best of times as the JV's won thirteen of the fourteen to finish the year at 14-4, the best record since the Rich Kelley-led all-frosh team of 1971-2 ended at 16-3. First-year coach Percy Carr maintained all along that the key to success was balance: balance in scoring, rebounding, and playing time. As evidence, consider that in a 111-66 win over UC Medical School the top scorer for Stanford totaled only 17, that the leading scorer for the season averaged just under 14 per game, that no one averaged more than seven rebounds per game, and that seven players averaged better than six points per outing. There can be no doubt that the 1974-75 JV's lacked a star, but at 14-4 they were hardly left wanting. (lop left) Scott Russell and Jim Erickson. (Top right) Terry McCartin drives past Sven Walker. (Bottom left) Cary Lynn. (Bottom right) Tom Olterhelmtn. IV BjWnbill ■177 A TEAM'S ATTITUDE can be just as important as it's athletic ability in determining the course of the season. In the case of this year's JV baseball team their attitude may have been more important. On the first day of practice both players and coaches were cautious, not optimistic as Coach Jon Crosby put it. The group was a mixture of JV returnees, freshmen who had played fall ball, and a handful of football players who wanted to compete in a second sport; no one knew what to expect. The year began discouragingly as the JV Cards lost their first four games by wider and wider margins. However, through the rest of the season (brief as it was), the team gained momentum and confidence in themselves, winning five out of their next six games. The coaches credited this turn around to the growing self-assurance of the players and a good attitude that was fostered and developed as the season progressed. The players on the bench, as well as the players on the field, kept their heads in all the games , no matter what the score, and the resulting team cohesiveness strengthened the program. Although no one outstanding individual effort was responsible for the overall success of the team, several players were noteworthy. Frosh outfielders Ray Cardinalli and Paul Stewart, and second baseman Kevin Triggs impressed the coaches with their hitting and hustling, all putting in playing time at the varsity level.while Dave Johnson showed himself to be a promising young pitcher. Sophs Steve Abdo and John Mendez also played well in the outfield and at third base, respectively. (Top) DcWayne Pursley, Tom Cook, Joel Erickson, Rick Bruzzone. (Back row) Coach Jon Crosby, Coach Dean Stotz, Tony Garcia, Steve Abdo, Ray Cardinalli, Paul Stewart, Rik Helmke, Dave Thompson, Brad Fox, Tom Pederson. (Front row) Ken Barkle, Mike Anderson, Gary Marenzi, Dave Johnson, Fred Bernhardt, Kevin O'Leary, Neil Erickson, John Mendez, Kevin Triggs. (Top) Conference on the mound between John Mendez, Kevin O'Leary, Coach Jon Crosby, and Rick Bruzzone. (Middle) Gary Marenzi with your basic chaw-in-the-cheek play. (Bottom) John Mendez makes the put out at third. You betcha!!! 17SBfatrtMll CLUB SPORTS 180 M«1i l Am KICKING ASS and busting boards, is, unfortunately, what many people associate with the martial arts. The Stanford University Martial Arts Association sought to correct the half-truths about the six member groups, both in the University and in the community. SUMAA has existed for many years, but 75 saw the emergence of the organization as a true community working together. The people of the six clubs were drawn together to spread the true spirit of their arts - martial arts as a means of developing human virtues and character in the spirit of world peace. While other organizations of this type nave disbanded, SUMAA ignores the petty differences of style and politics, and strives to maintain the ideal of Tau or Do, the spiritual way or path. They have been able to spread the teaching of each individual genre without hindering the cohesiveness of association. Hence, the martial arts clubs-Judo, Kempo, Aikido, Sho-takan, Tae Kwan Do, and Tai Chi Chuan- were drawn together in a spirit of mutual trust, respect, and friendship, to promote the various arts. With this tenet, they will become known, not only for what they can do physically, but also for what they believe in as a way of life. Mjrlill Alii 181 IF INJURIES were an asset, Stanford's Club volleyball team might well have been undefeated or at least better than even. In no less than three matches, with the Cardinals ahead, sprained ankles to key players quickly turned the tide and possible victories became losses. To put it mildly, things didn't go smoothly. With the major portion of the season com- Eleted, Stanford had won only two matches, oth over Santa Clara, and had lost seven. Playing perhaps the finest volleyball of the year, tne team finished 13th out of 24 in the All-University Tournament held at Santa Barbara. In contrast to the men's infrequent successes, the women's team, though relatively inexperienced, did quite well. The first team, playing in AA competition, placed 2nd in a tourney at DeAnza, 4th in a Southern California tourney, and looked to improve on last year's 17th place finish at the Nationals. The second team fared just as well, placing 2nd in a tournament at San Francisco State and 3rd at DeAnza. With many of the women playing in only their first year of organized competition, the future can only be called bright. Volleyball ■18J ON THE ICE, they practice weekly throughout fall and winter quarters. Who are they? The Stanford Hockey Club, composed of Stanford students, faculty, and staff who share an interest in ice hockey. Membership in the Stanford Hockey Team is open to Club members with prior experience who wish to supplement the weekly practices with a competitive schedule. The team, now in its sixth year, schedules contests with other college, men's, and junior teams. The hockey team got off to a slow start, losing its first four games, but recovered to post a respectable 5-7 mark for the season. Highlights of the season included a game played against the Santa Rosa Hockey Club in the Oakland Coliseum, immediately prior to a California Seals-Montreal Canadiens game. Coach Pat Baldwin's squad then traveled to Boulder, Colorado, for a three-day invitational tournament where the Cards finished third overall, due to the combined leadership of cocaptains Quigley Peterson and Tom Heckler. Leading scorer for the season was Jay Johnston. The team had two pleasant surprises in the excellent play of transfer students Mike Sexton and Peter Bronstein, who were playing with the Cards for their first year. 18 Ice Hockey table I nni  18S LAKE LAG'S desiccation notwithstanding, the 1974-75 Stanford Sailing Team competed faithfully in the Northern California Sailing Association against ten other Northern California schools, including Berkely, San Jose State, UC Santa Cruz, and UC Davis. The competition was held primarily in Flying Juniors, a 14' sloop, with limited competition in Shields 30'sloops and Lasers, a single-handed boat. The team made one out-of-state trip to New Orleans for Tulane's Windjammer Regatta on Lake Ponchartrain, but finished a disappointing sixth. It being Mardi Gras weekend, however, the trip was considered a resounding success despite the sailing. The Windjammer also seemed to spur the team on to better sailing during the rest of the season. 186 a Sailing Screw U had a lot to look forward to in 1975. With four varsity returnees, another five up from JV, with a schedule much the same as '74, and six members trying out for the National team, coach Dick Dreissigacker's squad's goal of winning medals at the Western Sprints could hardly be called wishful thinking. The strong crew team was headed this year by captain Sam Francis and co-cap-tain Dick Benster. Scmv'U 187 BLACK, SHINY entities floating in the ocean can be either seals, or, if there are waves, members of the Stanford Surfing Club. Any day of the week found one or more of its 52 members making the journey over the hill, looking for waves in Santa Cruz and up and down the coast. The goal of the club, according to president Norman Chandler, was to draw surfers from the University together for surfing and fun, not for competition. And the club members, from both coasts and Hawaii, probably agreed with Chandler, unless he happened to be taking off on the same wave. IDA ■Win WOMEN'S ATHLETICS (Standing) Suki)ickson, Onnie Killifer, Ann Walker, Betsy Morris, Jancll Edmund, Dee Cates, Coach Shirley School. (Kneeling) Suzi Shatzman, Jane Soyster, Jane Schultz, Carol Ferguson. (Sitting) Cappy Coleman, Kathy Levinson, lyse Strnad. AN ENLIVENED Stanford field hockey team exploded behind Captain Janell Edmund and right wing Cappy Coleman to rack up five straight wins at the start of the season. With dependable scoring from freshman Onnie Killifer and a rigid defense anchored in front of goalkeeper Betsy Morris the team produced an overwhelming 30 goals to their opponents' 4 in the first half of the season. The demands of the second half of the season took their toll however, as Stanford faltered and suffered two one-goal defeats to Humbolt and San Jose State. The re-match with Humbolt at the close of the season ended in a tie, giving the eight of eleven returning starters something to avenge next fall. (Top) Jane Soyitcr. (Bottom) Onnie Killiier. 190 ■flew Hockey (Top row) Onnie Killefer, Martha Anderson, Kelly Thompson, Margaret Nelson, Coach Cay Coburn, Sonia Jarvis, Stephanie Erickson, Asst. Coach Shirley Schoof. (Kneeling) Nancy Lavsold, Kathy Levinson, Frances O'Meara, Karen Stromsmoe, Sue Jackson. TWO-HANDED chest shots are what people expect at a women's basketball game. Anyone who saw Stanford's Women's Basketball team in action, however, missed shots like that. In their place were inside hooks by Maggie Nelson, well — executed perimeter shooting by Kelly Thompson and Kathy Levinson, while fancy (Gilberglike) dribbling by Levinson and Stumpy O'Meara made this Cardinal team an exciting team to watch. Leading scorers Suki Jackson and Nelson, who also, with Onnie Killifer, led in rebounds. The Cards were a very close team, due mostly to their coach Gay Colburn. She gave every player on the team equal playing time, something almost unheard of on a team that places fourth out of nine schools. Almost equally respected were team Captain Sonia Jarvis, and Trainer Debbie Jeffries who taped the players before every practice and game. All the girls will be returning next year and the games can only get better than great. (Left) Kelly Thompson. (Above) Kathy Levinson. BjulrdMllattl FOR THE THIRD time in as many years, the Stanford women's swim team, coached by Betsy Weeks, sent a delegation to the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW) National Championships. The nine-member contingent, largest ever sent by Stanford, was headed by defending national champion Vicki Hays, cocaptains Cathy Kriegshauser and Mei Ong, Liz Lambert, Anne Brodell, Megan Edwards, Kathi Heinze, Nan Leuschel and Holly Houston. (Top row) Diane Dillon, Vicki Hays, Anne Brodell, Holly Hutchinson, Becky Burchell, Julie Fagan, Jane Mit-sumori, Beth Trupin, Mei-lin Ong, Holly Edwards. (Second row) Jan Pepper, Renee Masi, Megan Edwards, Nan leuschel, Liz McArdle, Dara Jwaideh, Cathy Kreigshauser, Liz Lambert, Joan Zweip, Holly Houston, Clara Teyssier. (Seated) Asst. Coach Kathy Sackman, Head Coach Betsy Weeks. (Not pictured) Kathi Heinze. 192 Swim min Coach Curly Neal, Lele Forood, Tracy MacNair, Andrea Barnes, Audry Kemp, Nancy Rudd, Marcy O'Keefe, Jane Hayes, Joy Hahn. ANOTHER DYNASTY is in the making at the Roble courts in the form of the Stanford Women's tennis team. Pre-season scores left the team undefeated in 5 matches, in large part due to the talent-packed freshman, Lele Forood, and number two sophomore, Marcy O'Keefe. Forood, winning the singles in the Tucson Tournament last year, appears to be well on her way to national convention. Inexhaustible, Coach Curly Neal expressed great confidence in the way her team was shaping up for the season, commenting: I expect Tracy MacNair ( 3), and Andrea Barnes ( 4) to be definite contenders again this year in doubles, at both the Pac-8 and the Ojai tournaments, along with Lele and Marcy. The coach projected an even further reach than that, however, when she graded the team as one of the five best in the nation. The only question remaining then is, should this women's component of the traditionally male sport at Stanford be viewed as a possible pacer to the men's team in the tennis dynasties of Stanford?? ON THE BEAUTIFUL greens of Stanford's excellent golf course, the women's golf team practiced for their tournaments. Even in inclement weather the women, led by Coach Carroll Diaz, perfected their strokes and putts. It all paid off in a fine season, highlighted by two golfers, Pat Cornett and Pam Palmieri who had excellent games in the San Francisco City Golf Tournament. (Above) Pal Cornell. (At right) Sue Hoover. (Standing) Bob Wilder, Mirk Eaton, Stephen Walt, Dennis Leybold, Madison Grose, lack Handy, James Crumly, Williams Syme, David Moyer, Lee Vander-vald. (Kneeling) Scott Manning, Coach lean Helliwell, Susan Yoon, Anne Williams, Marie Fiatarone, Claudia Temby, Christopher Burke, Philip Logan. THE TASTE of winning is sweet, they say, and one need only ask members of the Stanford fencing team for attestation. Cardinal fencers in 1974-75 put together impressive displays, both individually and as a team, with various firsts in the Northern California Championships and Western Regional. The men's foil team captured the title in both events. Individually, captain Jack Handy took first in the NorCals while teammate Madison Grose placed third in the Regionals. The eppe team duplicated the foil squad's efforts by winnine the NorCals, with Steve Walt taking individual honors, and finishing fourth in a field of twenty at the Westerns. Walt and captain Mark Eaton finished fourth and fifth respectively in that competition. Led by captain Marie Fiatarone, Claudia Temby, Anne Williams and Stacy Yoon, the women's foil team, headed by captain Lee Van-derveld, Chris Burke, Dave Moyer and Mark Eaton placed sixth at the Western Regionals. Much of the success, team members are quick to confirm, was due to the efforts of Jean Helliwell, whose capable coaching and dedication will inspire the sweet taste of victory in years to come. (Above) Stephen Walt and Mark Eaton. I M'S FOR THOSE ATHLETES, and non-athletes too, to whom the intensity and demands of intercollegiate competition are unattractive, there are intramurals. You know, playing a touch football game that quickly degenerates into tackle in the mud, or climbing out of bed at 8 a.m. on a Saturday morning for a soccer game which you find out, much to your chagrin, has been cancelled. You remember. — running up and down a dusty Maples Pavilion floor whil hollering at teammates and screaming at officials, or stepping up to bat in softball with one eye on the pitcher and the other eye on the keg on the sidelines. To some of the thousands who participate, intramurals are just another diversion, a pleasant way to get some exercise. To others, the competition is life-and-death. And in between exist a variety of approaches beyond imagination. Theta Delta Chi, in search of their fourth consecutive overall IM title, was closely followed by Biz II, Junipero Ringer's Association (JRA), and a host of other fraternities. Major winners through winter quarter were Biz IIA, eventual victors over Cal's football IM champions, and Seek and Destroy, who survived a protest in the quarter-finals to win the “A basketball championship.  • , ■IMS (Top left) Caution: Children at play. (Top center) Two-man volleyball. (Top right) Los Arcos' women's football team beat the Cal women (?) in a Big Came of their own. (Bottom left) Class A powerhouse Seek and Destroy. (Bottom center) Soccer — Pele, watch out! (Bottom right) The first annual Raping, Pillaging, and Looting competition. IMS ■W7 STANFORD ! STANFORD STANFORD , STANFORD STANFORD ?00 ■An tillj pj f Oh — jnothr citfi pjg ■201 202 L'h-oh — Kill another rtf ri pige Oopt! Four t1rj pigtn ■20) Peter J. Abate Commun. Judith Pattisonain Math. Abbey Brandon Williams Psych. Albert Theodore Charles Hist. Stuart E. Ackerman Bio. Psych. Peter L. Aleshire Journ. Hist. John Todd Allan Comm., Span. Edward V. Anderson Econ., Pol. Sci. Douglas W. Archerd Hist. Barbara Oakley Allen Music Jay M. Anderson Ind. Engin. Michael S. Armer Comm. Toni D. Allen Soc. Richard Lynn Anderson EE., Bio. Bruce Charles Armstrong Econ. John William Allured Poli. Sci. Robert G. Anderson Psych Eugene R. Armstrong Econ. Thomas S. Almeida Hist. David Oliver Antonuccio Psych. James Lee Armstrong Creative Writing Anita Louise Addison Soc. Terry Lee Alkana Bio. John Sterling Ambler Psych. Susan Hall Arbuckle Anth. Barney Armstrong Psych. David). Asai Chem. Anne Ayres Psych. Barbara Arschenbrenner Psych. Marcia M. Babson Hum. Bio. Robert W. Aster Math Sci. Patrice Badstaubner Psych. Marjorie Au Jane Augsburger East Asian Stud. Chinese Barbara Shelby Steven L. Balch Baetz Econ. Hist. John Robert Augsburger Anthro. Timothy John Boles Anthro. Linda Marie Barajas Pol. Sci. Christa Battelle Hum. Bio. Kathy Louise Bennett Humanities James Bardin Ind. Eng. Thomas Christopher Bauer Econ. Ted Bergstrom Hum. Bio. Jack W. Barloon Econ. Barbara Bauman Hist. Rudy Bergthold E.E. Pamela A. Barnes Psych. M. Baumgarten Bio. Carl A. Bertelsen Bio. Dennis Dean Barnette Econ. Marilyn Beach Psvch. Peter K. Bhatia Comm., Hist. Laura Beth Bartell Hist. Kathryn S. Beaumont Hum. Bio. Sharon Allene Biagi Psych. ■207 Sharon Jean Binkley Psych. Romualdas V. Brizgys Chem. Barbara L. 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Corralejo Marta T. Corsiglia Psych. Econ. Psych. Donald T. Cox Sallyeana Coyle Caroline Campbell Elec. Eng. Psych. Craig Hum. Bio. Pamela Gene Raymond S. Brian L. Cox Cosby Courtney Philos. Civ. Eng. Hum. Bio. Charel Delina Patricia Ann Crary David D. Crellin Pol. Sci. Creighton Psych. (interdepart.) Ronald Wynn Crosby Civ. Eng. Daniel Ross Cummings Chem. Jon J. Crosby Econ. James D. Crumly E.E. Daniel Joseph Debra Joan Cutler Custer Engl. Hist. Anne J. Cruz Span. Michael P. Dacquisto Econ. Thomas E. Robert J. Cullen Culhane Engl. Bio. Gwen B. Davidson Mary I. Dageforde Art french •m ■212 Douglas Daley Pol. Sci. Warren K. S. Dang Civ. Eng. Sam Darby III Comm. Susanna B. Day Soc. Richard C. Day Hist., Pol. Sci. Van Day Psych. Janet Lynn Daseking Arch. James Marsden Davis Bio. Sci. Sally Ann Dayton Hum. Bio. Hector N. de la Rocha Hum. Bio. Paul William Davis Christina Marie DeMont Bio. Peter Andrew Demopulos Bio. Laura J. Dorman Engl. Electra B. Ducommun Art Hist. James K. Dewell Hum. Bio. Michael A. Dornheim Math, Aero-Astro. Jim Dudley Econ. Kenneth W. Dewey Econ. Christine Sanders Douglas Engl., Commun. Norman A. Dupont Hist. Emily C. DiMaggio Comm. William G. Dryden Pol. Sci. Eugene F. Duval Mech. Eng. George Alan Dobbins Engl. Linda Dubois Hum. Bio. Kirk Alan Duncan Chem. Melanie Sue Donahoe Commun. Curtis Theodore Dubost Engl. James Robert Eastep Comm. Joanie Eaton Psych. Carol Ebele Arch. Mark Craig Eaton Hist. Thomas L. Eby Bio. Thomas Tyne Earthman Intern. Relations Belinda E. Edwards Econ. William Robert Easton Psych. Martha Edwards Psych., Hum. Bio. Ken Equsa Soc. Bill Wun Eng Chem. Jennie Lee Farber Psych. Rebecca S. Eisenberg Econ. Barbara J. Evatt Soc. Thomas Edward Farr Civ. Eng. Celine C. Ellett Psych. Celeste M. Evans Hum. Bio. Brian Farrell English Marcia L. Ellis Psych. David J. Evans Mech. Eng. Marc. S. Feinstein Econ., Span. Lloyd E. Emerson Submarine Racing Mark Evans Urban Studies, Pol. Sci Patricia M. Fels Eng. Lexie I. Endo Bio. Brad J. Fancher Bio. Luzann Fernandez Art Hist. Hit Renee A. Felice Psych. Barbara Finn Psych. DanaG. Fisher Psych. Devorah A. Fisher Classics Mary Lucie Franich English Rick Frankhuizen Econ. Barbara). Franks Med. Microbio Pamela Jole Franks Hist. •214 Daniel Jack Fitch Mech. Eng. Kathleen Marie Fitzpatrick Hum. Bio. Kelly Flanagan Hum. Bio. Ferris Ann Fletcher Psych. Curt Alan Flory Physics Robert Flynn English Martin A. Fogle Hum. Bio. Daniel Forte Comm. Caryl $. Foster Undeclared Hugh M.Foy Hum. Bio. Mary Ann Frantz Econ. Marc Robert Frelier Pol. Sci. John G. Frelinger Bio. Roger D. Fraley English Lawrence John Frye Mech. Eng. Koji Fukumoto Econ. George D. Galbraith Bio. S ci. Louis Anne Canahl Econ Rudy Flores Garcia Physics Sylvia Marie Garcia Bio. Sci. Norma Garralda Psych. Janice Garrett Math Sci. Glenn Gravin Comm. Christopher Guy Garwood Pol. Sci. Whitney Earl Goodrich Elec. Eng. Betty Gene Goodwin Comm. Jo Carol Gordon Hum. Bio. Lynn Kathryn Gordon Bio. Dionisio Garza Ind. Eng. Richard R. Gebers Pol. Sci. Brad B. Geery Poli. Sci. Irene D. Gilbert Soc. Armand Gilinsky jr. English Roger Gladstone Econ. Craig Glass Econ. Sue Sharil Goldfinger Psych. Richard Gonzalez Jr. Arch. Peter Wood Gordon Bio. Douglas N. Goto Chem. Eng. Sallyjean Grab An thro. David P. Graftstein Econ. David E. Grandstaff Psych. Whitney Grant Hum. Bio. Mark T. Gratten Bio. Dale F. Gray Geophysics Ruth Anne Gray Art Sarah Goodan English ■2IS Douglas S. Green Bio. Edith Greene Psych. Jill Greenwood Art Hist. Elaine Gross Psych. Susan Greenspan Hum. Bio. Jeffrey T. Grubb Econ. Jeffrey I. Greenwald Econ. Sandra K. Grubb English, French. Niel Everett Grunberg Med. Microbio. Benjamin W. Hahn Econ. Norman Halleen Hist. Peter G. Gudrais Bio. Pamela Hackley Hum. Bio. Louise Halevy Psych. William Benton Halper Elec. Eng. Gregory James Hall Econ. Roger P. Hamada Math. Sci. Steve Haggblade Hist., Econ. Julie W. Hall Hum. Bio. Rob Hammel Comm. Christine Haggenmacher Psych. Michael A. Hall E.E. Robert Craig Hampton Hist. James Stanford Hagey Pol. Sci Richard S. Hall English John Thomas Hankerson Civ. Eng. ■21 Lee Hanley Econ. Lucy E. Harding Ceo. Carol A.Hansberger Psycy. Martha Hardwick Mech. Eng. Charles Henry Thomas E. Hansen Hansen Hum. Bio. Nancy J. Harris Miriam Harmatz Arch. Social Thought Phillip Scott Hara Civ. Eng. Charles Cummings Hanwood, Jr. Econ. Satoshi Hara Ind. Eng. David William Hanson Bio. Sci., Psych. iran C. Hawley Jane Leslie Hayes Craig Heaps David P. Hebrn Phillip M. Barbara Gale Arch. Bio. Comm. Med. Micro bio. Heimlich Heinen Stephen L. Jill Sifton Lynne N. Clark L. Henry Pol. Sci Psych. Helfand Henderson Henderson Hum. Bio. Patricia Reid Kathryn Flynn Bio. Soc. Pol. Sci. Joan E. Hinman Comm., Pol. Sci. Herold Herschel Robert J. Barbie E. Hill Richard N. Hill English Hum. Bio. Hertenstein Comm. Psych. Econ. Alan L. Hiti Bio. Susan Ann Hoffman English ■217 Mary I. Holder Music Lincoln David Holland Econ. Micael Holubar Hist. Mary Diane Horrall Psych. Holly M. Houston Humanities Constance Howell History, Art History Deborah A. Hroncich Art Andrew Chiang Hsi Bio. Robert Daryl Huerta Psych. Alexander Julius Hulanicki Comm. Erik Alan Humber Econ. Douglas D. Hume Psych., Bio. Helen C. W. Hung Jane L. Hysell Michael T. Itis Ernest A. Inacay David Ingraham Jeffrey Alan Ipsen Chinese, Anthro. Bio. Pol. Sci. Bio. Econ. Math Alexia L. Jacobs Art Hist Glen R. Jacobs Engin. Urban Systems Teresa Jenkins Psych. J. Randall Jester Bio. Warren Jacobus Hist. Rodney Allen Jeung Econ. Frank G. Jameson Relig. Stud. Rich Jardslovsky Pol. Sci. Brenda Marie Job Clark W. Johnson Hum. Bio., Psych. Physics Stephen Paul Jenkins Psych. Mark D. Johnson Pol. Sci. •218 Raymon W. Stanley R. Johnson Patricia Leigh Johnson Hum. Bio. Jones Psych., Bio. Music Ruth Marilyn Jones Hist. Alan Charles Kabaker Psych. Karen Kafader Math Harold David Kahn Econ. Katheryn Lea Kenworthy Psych. Robert M. Kamemoto Econ. Richard Kerbaraz Bio. Sciences Robert David Kaplan Hum. Bio. 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Lyman Bio. Loring Clifton Lynch Econ. Eleanor Shawn Lynds Art Hist. Ronald Lowe Mak Math. Sci., Comput. Eng. Randall Lewis Manley Math Sci., Psych. Lawrence A. Mann Poli. Sci. Donald Erwin Marcy Econ. James W. Margolis Econ. Gary A. Martin Psych. Randall Emmet Marx Hum. Bio. Scott M. Matheson Econ. John William Mathias Engin. Connie Lynn Matsui English Jim Robert MacGregor Econ. Susan Gerard Mackin Pol. Sci. Tracy Cary MacNair Psych. Miriam M. MacVicar Psych. Kathryn Joyce Matteri Hum. Bio. Douglas Paul Matthew Econ. Scott Alexander Matthews Physics Carol A. Mattax Math Sci. •m Christine Marie Maurer Span. Nancy Goober Mayer Rodeo Stompin' Quinn B. Mayer Poli. 5c . Victoria Maxwell Michael Xavier McBride Econ. Carol D. McClure Pol. Sci. Ted McCluskey Chem. Mark McConnell Econ. Mary A. McCready English Catherine A. McCulloch Kerry G. McGuinn Psych. Judith Lynn McKeehan Bio. George McPheeters Bio. Mary Lee Means Psych. Maria Melendez Psych. Martin J. Mendoza Psych. Richard A. Mesher Hum. Bio. Steven H. Meyer Civ. Eng. Stephen Louis Michaels Chem., Eng. Chris Michel Psych. Mary McDermott Art, Hist. john McDonald Karen McGanney Poli. Sci. till McGill Bio. Teri L. Michner Med-Micro. Betsy Miller Pol. Sci. Michelle D. Miller Soc. Ross Michael Miller Bio. •m VI Bradford Treece Mills Econ. Luis A. Montoya Math Sci. Richard Bruce Mosbaucher Psych. Leslie A. Myers English Kathy Ann Neuman Pol. Sci, German Richard Alan Mills Urban Planning Gail Moore Bio. Pricilla Misner Psych. Michael Morel Ind. Eng. Gregg N. Mitchell Econ. Sandy Mitchell German John Bernard David F. Morrison Morris Comm. Pol. Sci. Marjorie Mangers Psych. Michelle Anne Morrison Bio. Skip Mueller Civ. Eng. Andrew H. Naegeli Elec. Eng. Lynn Louise Mumby Pol. Sci. Kiyonori K. Nagatani Econ. Anne Marie Murphy Hum. Bio. Yasue Rebecca Nao Japanese Mary Suzanne Murphy Hum. Bio. Julaine Hoffman Neff Chem. Eng. Michael R. Murr Bio. Sci Lamar Albert Nelson Chem. Dorothy J, Niccolls Comm. Robert Alan Nichols Psych. Clare Marie Joyce Carol Niland Conrad P. Nilmeir Nidwer Hum. Bio. Pol. Sci. Psych. 2J4 S«nior Robert Sheldon Nishinaka Pol. Sci. Mary Angela Nomellini English tl: Charles J. Ogletree Pol. Sci. Richard G. Osburn Eon. Steven O'Hara Bio. Scott F. Oswald Econ. Shirley Ann Olsen Hum. Bio. Mel-Lin Ong Econ., Oper. Res. Martha )an Paul James Pabst Ourieff German Psych., Hist. Gail N. Omiya Psych. Julie Anne Parsons Hum. Bio., Psych. Michael R. O'Rourke Civ. Eng. Robin O. Patterson Art Hist. Matthew J. Peake Jerold E. Pearson Mark L. Pelesh Scott Lewis Gail Elizabeth Lewis Taylor Chem. Comm. Hist. Pennington Peterson Peterson Physics Psych. His. •2K - Timothy Dunne Peterson Hum. Bio. Bradley S. Phillips Hist. Victori Marie Petari Hum. Bio. Eric Hugh Phillips Bio. Ralph Gregory Petroff Comm., Pol. Sci. G. Scott Phillips German Studies George P. Pettinger Arch. Susie Phillips Hum. Bio. Lisa A. Pfeiffer Art Hist. Thomas W. Phillips Psych. Mary Virginia Phelps Econ. 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Jay Winograd Music Gary A. Wolens Econ. John s. Wood Bio. Peter Winokur Mech Eng. Wendy A. Wolstoncroft Art Hist. Patricia S. Worthington Math •m Judith K. Wright Amy Wurtzburger Andrew B. Wyatt Bruce Wymore Michael Yancy Psych. Psych. Hum. Bio. Econ. Econ. Christine L. Yang Mech. Eng. Marcia A. Zingaro Kenneth T. Zwick Joan L. Zwiep Comm. Soc. Hum. Honors Photo by Jett Johnson University Life 5 ABOUT YOUR UNIVERSITY Taken from the '36 handbook. Leland Stanford and his wife, Jane Lathrop Stanford, left their home in the east in the 1850's to make their history a part of the state of California. Stanford became Governor, Senator, and president of the first transcontinental railroad. The Stanfords' only son, Leland Stanford Junior, was in his sixteenth year when in 1884, while studying in Florence, he was stricken with malarial fever and died. Grief-stricken, the parents determined to make “the children of California their children, and to that purpose devoted the rest of their lives and fortune. Casting about for a suitable location the founders saw that for inspirational beauty and charm few spots could surpass their own farm in the Santa Clara Valley, so on the farm the university cornerstone was laid in 1887 . . . Following Senator Stanford's death in 1893 the life of the new university was seriously threatened by the Government Suit as all the funds of the estate were tied up during several appeals. An appeal to the Supreme Court resulted in victory for the estate. An even more severe trial was in store for Stanford in the form of the earthquake of 1906. Only one student, was killed but the buildings were considerably damaged. A new gymnasium and library were destroyed, the chapel made a shambles, and most of the rest of the buildings more or less seriously damaged. Fire was averted through the heroism of an employee who, while the building was crumbling about him, had presence of mind enough to throw the control switch and shut off all the electricity before he was killed. Since its early trials the life of the University has been comparatively calm . . . iJ8 Yet in the years that followed, the administration, the faculty, and the students were denounced as being bigotted, immoral, violent, and sexist. The University became the focal point for dissent. Now, it is the focal point again, but not for negative activism. The student body is just as critical as in the sixties, but there are no more glaring issues. Problems are more subtle, resolutions almost ambiguous. How can you throw a rock at inflation and recession? Seven years ago, the students saw themselves living in an age of anti-heroes, non-ideologies, and a dead god. We still may not be able to recognize our heroes nor define our ideals, but there is a visible rebirth of faith on campus. The students themselves are reinstating some traditions. Although there was a bonfire, the Senior Class no longer places flowers on the Stanfords' tomb. And so, Stanford is evolving into a nice place again, more open, more personal. On the Farm there exists the opportunity to discover one's identity in the midst of a mechanized and computerized world. Perhaps it is the school's motto, The winds of freedom are blowing that has maintained Stanford through radical and violent changes. Since its early trials the life of the University has been comparatively calm... If so, then calmness must be a fluctuating rate of change. 2 UNIVERSITY LIFE; ART. . .MO Unlvcr .tyll(e Why isn't the Rodin Collection packed with students? . . . Is Mem Claw art? That much art you can get by sticking a sprinkler in a dead tree ... Is it true that the Law School Fence is a slice of Stanford's artistic talent?. . . LOOK — this place is beautiful! . . . Grass, a concrete alcove next to the Claw, the benches in front of Mem Chu, or a shady spot on the perimeter of the Quad — It's all so subtle that you might not realize the alternatives to a dorm room . . . Was Tresidder really built to keep the rain off the ASSU Council of Presidents?. . . Red tile roof, arches, sandstone, red tile roof, arches, sandstone . . . Stern Hall a la 1950 cinderblock . . . Did you know that there are orange trees in the inner Quad (Where is for me to know) . . . Red tile roof, arches, sandstone. . . UnilriMt life 241 242 ■Unhct ity life INSANE Do you go to school here?. . . Calling Hoo Tow, Hoover's last erection. . . This dorm is becoming Peyton Place!. . . Two couples strolling hand-in-hand in the Old Union courtyard. Must be alumni. . . How come so many people at Stanford are cynics?. . . Who ever heard of ripping off an I.D. Mail truck. . . This is going to be another chapter in my book. . . INDEFATIGABLE. . . Unitmity life 241 After Stanford profs finish infinity they will begin creating life. . . Wouldn't you know it was a Physics student who plotted the trajectory of the USC bound water balloons (H20 capsules). . . Another Nobel Laureate on campus — congrats!!. . . What is really going on in all those mythical labs in the Chem building?. . . SCIENCE. . . WiWmmmtm i-- 2 4 • UnWmMy life ENTERPRISE. . . ENTERTAINMENT. . . If anyone would stop to read a kiosk, he would realize just how much goes on at Stanford. . . The Dollies arc, well, entertaining SU is almost as good as SFO for people watching. . . I hear where you're coming from, and that's where we're going to . . - Gordon Starr ASSU: Breeding ground for future ward heelers and political wire pullers - A practical adjunct of the Poli Sci Department. . . Competition in heading for the lifeboats is notoriously cutthroat. . . — President Lyman BUREAUCRACY. . . 24 . Urmrnit life TRADITION. . Dio luft der friehert weht: University motto. Translated, it means: Make all checks payable, etc. Depending on who you talk to, tradition is either the downfall of the University, or the greatest thing since sliced bread . . . Who really wears pledge pins anyway. . . Pre-final cramming: tradition or way of life?. . . . . .STANTORD UNIVERSITY Unnmitt life ■247 LIBRARIES Booking, in almost any other community, is a police identification procedure. And red-hot, well, every kid knows what a red-hot is. At Stanford, booking as well as red-hot have become part of a new liturgy; a reflection of the enhanced role of studying as either a passive or grandiose undertaking. But, it is an undertaking which, if nothing else, gives Stanford a sense of community. Much of this booking takes place at Meyer Undergraduate Library. UGLY, as its name implies, looms at the end of Escondido Road, the newest guardian of Stanford's volumes of knowledge. UGLY also houses the mid winter frisbee and paper airplane throwing tournaments. The librarians may not like, but they never complain. Yet, for all the furious booking and red-hottedness, UGLY has the sandstone, the arches, and a red tile roof, so it is part of home after all. Augmenting UGLY and the dorm room as the places to be if you're a red-hot is Main Library, Home of the Stacks. Still nestled in the back are remnants of 1892 math majors who are solving Zeno's Paradox. Like something out of THE PAPER CHASE, the glass floors and labyrinth of foot-wide passageways seem to be hiding the secret to a 4.0. Take note, however, that the floors are not attached to the walls and in case of an earthquake, maybe UGLY is the place to be. lihrjrtctB 249 LELAND STANFORD JUNIOR UNIVERSITY MARCHING BAND LSJUMB is: a) the Lethargic Stoic Jingoist Uniform Martial Battalion b) an integral part of the academic community c) a group of foot-weary trou-badors d) a wacky, zany group of frollicking rowdies e) all of the above f) none of the above. Popularly known as the Eastern Michigan Buffalo Orphanage, the LSJUMB saw its finest day in its victory over USC. Goose-stepping into the stadium, the Band proved that they could march just like the Trojans if they were so inclined. But then they played and it was the Imcom-parables all the way. There is nothing lackadaisical in the Band's manner or approach. The formations slap the audience in the face, and the music, rather than stale renditions of John Phillip Souza, is today's, played with body and soul (and probably something illegal). While year after year the Band improves, it also proves to ABC censors, to visiting teams, and to Mom and Dad, that music is just as much a release as sex is. 1.S.I.U.M il. ■2.1 DOLLIES Terry Bowman, Jr. Linda Buddenberg, Soph. Denise Gallardo, Soph. 2S2 Oollio 'dammit! We've been mowed down by tubas, hussled by dirty old men, put in fifty hours a week and together close to sixty routines, performed in the mud with pulled muscles and limp pom-poms, run ragged by the band and stereotyped by the students. . . Why? The same reasons the crowd boogeys in the stands after a football game: the band's a kick, we like the music, and enjoy dancing. The smiles were real, we loved it! 74-75 Dollies Dollltt ■2S1 Loretta Churchill, Sr. The political activism and social awareness that so vividly marked the past decade have faded, replaced not by complacency, but rather by increased academic fervor. This year, demonstrations took place with neither the frequencynor the magnitude of earlier years and were indeed only a token of the past. CAMPUS POLITICS One movement, the United Farmworkers Support Committee, countered the trend toward tokenism. As in years past, the group encouraged the boycott of non-union grapes and lettuce. More recently, they organized the boycotts of Gallo wines at area liquor stores and continued fund-raising for support of the Huelga School and building of a retirement village, both in Delano. Reflecting the trend away from political activism, ASSU Senate candidates ran on pledges of enhanced student services. The Council of Presidents set about fulfilling forty pages of campaign proposals. Skeptics notwithstanding, lecture notes appeared, while the ASSU mainstays continued to operate Another bureaucracy, this one Back East, produced a document in June of 74, Title IX. It soon carried the subtitle: Horton's Housing Headache. It was he who applied this bill to the fraternities' draw exempt status, and soon Larry Horton became a target of verbal, editorial and law-school-fence abuse. Horton insisted it was just a matter of housing shortages. Yet, the issue was soon complicated and confused by fraternity alumni donations, the absence of sororities and a myriad of other factors. Whichever way the winds of the turmoil blow, the dust will be a long time in settling. Gimpin Polilkt ■255 V With membership now nearing 40,000, the independent Stanford Alumni Association continues to move ahead as one of the country's leading alumni organizations. The Association received the 1974 Ernest T. Stewart Award, highest honor given by the American Alumni Council, for its Portable Stanford books, a series of works by Stanford faculty authors. In other efforts to bring the intellectual substance of Stanford to its alumni, the Association expanded its popular Day Colleges held with the cooperation of local clubs throughout the country, conducted a successful 10-day Summer Alumni College on campus, sponsored an Advanced Management College at the Stanford Sierra Camp at Fallen Leaf, and C FA IC AD FT staged alumni conferences on campus and in Los Angeles. Another new venture, O 1 IV _Jl LJ the twice-a-year Stanford Magazine, is a top quality, four color publication unique among alumni magazines. Reconstruction of the Stanford Sierra Camp, J j j where the student staff is as big an asset as the scenery, continues a pace, and the Alpine Chalet is now attracting tennis buffs as well as skiiers. The Associa- a I A TI I tion's popular Travel Study Program now includes, in addition to trips abroad, A I V_' more low-budget Suitcase Seminars and exciting Stanford Expeditions, with faculty members along to add learning to the fun. And Bowman Alumni House, a hospitality center on campus and headquarters of Stanford-in-Covernment, continues to enjoy a reputation among students, “as the place to go to get things done. 256 ■lowiun ASSU PUBLICATIONS BOARD The ASSU Pub Board, a little known and largely mysterious body, is composed of representatives of the various publications on campus. The Board's main responsibilities are its allocation of space in the Storke Student Publications Building, to approve any new publications soliciting advertising on the basis of campus distribution or using the Stanford or ASSU name, to arbitrate inter-publication disputes, and to fund and foster a variety of small publications. ALIYAH CHAPARRAL CHICANISMO DAILY QUAD REAL NEWS SEQUOIA REVIEW THE BLOTTER STONE CLOUD LIVE OAK COURSE REVIEW PubBojrd  2S7 ASSU COUNCIL OF PRESIDENTS Early last year, the Mayer-Herman-Carter-Mackey ticket won a close race to lead the student body as the Council of Presidents. Since then they have set about implementing their 40 pages of campaign promises with surprising success. The ASSU lecture note service, the Council of Presidents Bulliton, ARLO (Action Research liason Office) and other student oriented services were offspring of this energetic group, or revitalized by them. The ASSU Senate, though plagued by marathon sessions and infrequent meetings, still had a (Top): Quin Mayer; (Upper left): Mike Herman; (Above) Len Mackey; (Left): Ann Carter. ASSU SENATE, FINANCIAL MANAGER productive year. The Senate, chaired by Lee Rosenbaum, revised the ASSU election code and filed a class action suit against the University's parking fee system. Also acquiring new zeniths of power was the Student Financial Manager. Frank Oliveri defended the apoliticalature of his position, cautioning against mixing politics and finances. Still, his office was the strongest opponent in the Record Co-op's defeat was responsible for closing down the Chapparral over the summer and ran the '74 Senate elections that were marked by the disqualification of five candidates. Financially, Oliveri left the ASSU a multimillion dollar corporation with the highest operating profits and reserves i its history. (Top) ASSU Senators Tim Conway and Kelly Lindsey; (Left) Lee The Scowl Rosenbaum, Senate Chairman; (Above) Frank Oliveri, ASSU Financial Manager. SENAimS9 o (Above) You-know who who rjn with Whjt's his njme (Top) Andy luchlcr Speakers Bureau (flight) Djnny Schcr; Special Events. AkItSSlitl AU SPEAKERS BUREAU, SPECIAL EVENTS, SUNDAY FLICKS, There was something for most everyone. The message-filled folk of Joan Baez and the dynamic country sound of Doc Watson. ASSU Special Events brought us all this and would liked to have brought more, but there are limits. As director Danny Scher said on the possibility of bringing Crosby, Stills and Nash, Is that negotiable? Of course that's negotiable, but not very! Resurrected last year from a temporary death, the ASSU Speaker's Bureau sought to bring guests that would enhance the awareness of the Stanford community. The free lectures featured topics and guests of incredible diversity. Activist-comedian Dick Gregory, Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry, San Francisco supervisor Diane Fienstein, Julian Bond, and Sissy Farenthal drew full houses and turnaway crowds. (Left) Rocky Barber; Sunday Flicks Manager My Rair Lady  •« « 0 • iCaUht i.uot JUKYHIteHl KIHM JANUARY 6 6 00. 9 oo AL PACINO SERPIGO†JANUARY I? 7 00.9 30 SMC'AL !H CO'IJVHCTIO'I mTH ASSU SPCA KiRS BUttCA U EHECUTIUE ACTION TUESDAY. JANUARY !« 7 00 CUB8ERLEY AUOITORIUM 9 IS THE LAST DETAIL ,TAO MOC'.SON SI...I DvSIwpVrsl JANUARY 19 7 00,9 15 Whether it be Bananas or Butch Cassidy, Paper Chase or Paper Moon, for film fans there is always the Sunday Flicks. It's the one thing on campus you can set your clock by, fly your airplanes at and still afford to take yourself to. SUNDAY IIIC K$ 261 ARLO THE ACTION RESEARCH LIASON OFFICE (ARLO) is an experimental program initiated last year to enable both graduate and undergraduate students to do original research in response to the needs of community organizations and agencies. ARLO projects are accomodated within established courses and seminars, conducted as independent study, or developed as offerings within special studies programs such as SWOPSI or SCIRE. 26I A lO POTPOURRI Pol Powri ■263 SWOPSI, SCIRE, UNDERGRADUATE SPECIAL PROGRAMS (Above) Andy Parne . jovial SWOPSI director. (Above Right) Mer-lyn Paine, explaining the vast and complicated SWOPSI program to an interested student. SWOPSI, Stanford Workshop on Political and Social Issues, was formed by students in the late sixties. Nearly 1,000 students a year participate in SWOPSI workshops that are designed to involve the students in contemporary political and social problems. Through the workshops students evolve viable solutions to these current problems. Yet, this exciting stable campus will be dissolved as a budget cut, even though the whole cost of the program is only $8.00 a unit. SCIRE, the Student Center of Innovation in Research and Education is a distinctly student oriented program in the midst of a generally depersonalized university. Through SCIRE, students can challenge themselves with new subject matter, innovative learning approaches, and creative research. 26 SWOP$l (Left) The Undergraduate Special Programs directors. Merlyn Paine, Alice Supton, and their intrepid secretary. SWOPSI 2«.S (Left) Mike Closson Assistant Dean of Undergraduate Studies INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL Composed of representatives from each Stanford frat , the Interfraternity Council serves not only as a forum for fraternities to exchange ideas, but also as an organization to promote community services. Some of the projects undertaken this year include the organization of the Big Game Bonfire, the donation of blood to the Red Cross and the provision of student police and ticket takers at Stanford Athletic events. Further, I.F.C. representatives contributed to the formulation of the contraversial housing proposal by The Committee on Student Services (COSS). With the current resurgence of interest in fraternities the I.F.C. will become an increasingly important liason between the fraternities and the University and local community.  6«irc Civil Engineering is generally acknowledged as a free ticket to a good job. Civil Engineers are needed all over the world, and the pay and security just seem to go along with various glamour job sites. Stanford's Student Chapter of the American Society of Civil Engineers are more relaxed than are other pre-professional groups on the campus. They produce an entry in the Mid-Pacific Concrete Canoe race anu-ally, last year garnering second place (1973-74), as well as sponsoring the ASCE — ASME Football Game (ASCE — 28, ASME —7). ■Unnmitr llimrtvt ■169 CAREER PLACEMENT How to fit a Stanford diploma into the real world is a question every student will face. The graduate may find his answer in grad school, in the unemployment line, or in the files of the Career Planing and Placement Center. The services offered by the CPPC have become increasingly important in view of the current shrinking job market. The Center offers counseling on a personal level to discuss career direction and options, job hunting and interviewing techniques, and specifics about employment contracts and personal goals. Also, each year several hundred industrial, government, business and institutional employers hold interviews through the CPPC. Every Monday, a new list of interviews is published and students attend in search of part-time, summer, and career employment. In addition, lists of these opportunities are posted and revised daily by the center. The Career Planing and Placement Center stands as a reminder that all undergraduates will be faced with career decisions that will effect their lives. VO • Ciff rr PUt t-menb Ctnlff Ctrrti rU «ncnt Ctntfrt ■271 OLE FIREHOUSE CAY PEOPLE'S UNION AT STANFORD The Gay People's Union at Stanford (GPU) offers gay people in the Stanford Community and the Peninsula area a chance to learn about themselves and each other in an atmosphere of pride and self acceptance. We provide an alternative to the casual oppression of daily contact with straight society and, through educational services to the community, are working to end that oppression. GPU members are working with the Palo Alto Human Relations Commission, the city's Affirmative Action Program, the Police Department, public libraries, and other community groups and organizations. GPU has a good working relationship with the Dean of Student Affairs Office and can provide assistance for those gay students who see a need for change in the University structure and have suggestions as to how to make it more sensitive and responsive to their needs. —GPU. 272 «04dfirrtou« STANFORD IN LA W MEMBERS Mike Winder — President les Niemi — V.P. of Service Russ Ritter — V.P. of Membership Liz Bueno — Secretary lynn McClusky — Treasurer Beth Hesselmcyer — Red Cross chairman Barbara Rizzardi — Time Subscription chairman 8rucc Ryhal — Ride Board Bill Sarafan — Book exchange and recycling Tony Becker, Ralph Bravo, Sharon Cagle, Bruce Converse, Anne Coughlan, Tricia Crooke, Pete Economy, Wendy Frieman, Sara Grosvenir, Holly Hausmann, Mark Hodapp, Gale Hurd, Dave Juhnke, Dennis leybold, Martha Seaver, Beverly Standing, Byron Toma, Kathy Wineman, Chuck Wunsch. -at £LSS 15TrtERETOP0ON A Si FRJ 4P HA6 LEFT HOO 5ET 15 ANP JC601H6 50lT IN THE U)A5H ? GIVE BLOOD ALPHA PHI OMEGA Zeta chapter of Alpha Phi Omega is Stanford's co-ed service fraternity. On campus, the club organizes and runs the quarterly used-book exchange and registration pack stuffing, the year-round recycling project, the Red Cross blood drive, and the Tresidder Union ride board. A-Phi-O's other services include weekend projects at two Boy Scout camps in the Saratoga Hills and the Santa Cruz Mountains, visits to Beverly Manors convalescent home, and a donation of Thanksgiving and Christmas turkeys to needy families in Alviso. Zeta combines projects with camp-outs, ski trips, and pizza runs, providing a needed balance between work and good times. ASCC' MECHA, BLACK STUDENT UNION The Stanford Asian Students Coordinating Committee (SASCC) is an organization representing Asian American concerns and advocating action in the interests of Asian Americans on local and national issues. The SASCC serves as a communications center for Asian American students and acts as a leision between Asian American students and the administration and the outlying communities. At Stanford, the organization promotes the interests of Asian Americans in the areas of admissions and financial aids policies, ethnic studies, counselling needs, and fair media representation. 27 • ASCC. MtCHA The Black House is the building located behind the Bowman Alumni House. It is under the direction of the Black Student Union, and it presently houses the offices of the BSU, the Black Pre-Law Society, Sisters in Stanford, the Society of Black Scientists and Engineers, the Black Yearbook and the Real News. It also serves as a place for small meetings and study breaks. This year one of the main foci of the BSU was the renovation of the Black House. Renovation Days were held, during which students volunteered their time to wash walls, paint, tile floors, wash windows, make curtains and do general cleaning. We made the Black House a building that is useful and comfortable to Black Students and worthy of the name Black House. J The activites of M.E.C.H.A., the Chicano student organization at Stanford, center around whatever issues concern the Chicano students. Mecha is hearquartered in Zapata house in Stern Hall, is led by a student board, and publishes a quarterly newspaper called Chicanismo. Five sympathizers from the house walked all the way to the Gallo winery in Modesto, to show their support of the Farmworkers' Union as representative of Gallo farmworkers, as part of a February march that lasted several weeks. Mecha also co-sponsored an overnight vigil and fast along with other Third World minority students to show their support of the farmworkers. ■U k Mouw. MtCHA  Vi I-CENTER The Bechtel International Center is a meeting place for students and senior research scholars from throughout the world and for Americans on the campus who are interested in international affairs. The 1-Center emphasizes the international dimensions of the University, the contributions to campus life by the many nationalities represented and to the opportunities for American students for service, study and travel abroad. A variety of social, cultural, and educational programs utilize the 1-Center facilities. Through these programs, students and scholars in the university and the community are brought together in activities of mutual interest. OPERATION SHARE Operation Share is an orientation to teaching and general education practices through tutoring children in the elementary school system. However, it is much more than just instruction because it allows for the development of interpersonal relationships between Share people and their tutees. Most of the kids range from the second to the sixth grade, all coming from assorted environments and life styles. Share tutors have the opportunity to work in or outside of the classroom. The Share program is not just a humanitarian and helpful effort, it is also an enjoyable and educational experience for all involved. $ uemV9 RELIGIOUS ORGANIZATIONS REFORMED DRUIDS Reformed Druidism had its beginning at Carleton College in the spring of 1963 as a protest to the college's requirements that all students attend a certain number of religious services or meetings. The Reformed Druids of North America proposed to test the degree of freedom permitted under this clause. Druidism was ideal for this attack. It had a perfect combination of exotic ritual, plus some relevance to the so-called Judeo-Chris-tian tradition. In June, 1964, the religious requirement was repealed. Even though the Druids rejoiced at this triumph, they recognized thet their job was not over. For many members, the movement had come to represent a valuable part of their spiritual lives. So they saw the importance of continuing the RDNA as a protest against all coerced religion, and as a religion in itself. Since that time, Druids have left Carleton to form groves in other locations, including Chicago, Berkeley, and Stanford. 280 imiGICHJS ORGANIZAIIOSS SEM 70 Seminar 70 offers a unique opportunity to worship the Lord and fellowship with other Christians on campus in a relaxed, inrmal atmosphere. Structured around small group discussions, Sem 70 stresses the practical applications of living the Christian life in a campus situation. Sponsored by various campus organizations such as Campus Crusade For Christ, Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, and the Stanford Christian Fellowship, it is above all a place to discover how God works in the lives of the people around us. 1974-75 saw the expansion, both physically and spiritually, of the Stanford Hil- HILLEL FOU N DA TION lei Foundation. With more active Jews than ever before, within a Jewish student body of from 1000 to 1500, Hillel responded with the formation of the Hillel council. The student, faculty and staff members of the council added to an enriched program of Jewish activities including a free film series of award winning films, weekly Israeli folk dancing, bagel and box brunches. Kosher lunches, Shabbat services, and even good old Stanford parties. — Rabbi Familant RfllGIOUS ORGAM7AIIONS  l STANFORD DAILY II - Sun ' 282 • Otiy (Below)Ray Chan, co-editor of the Faculty-Administration section, exhibited the patience of a saint. (St. )ude mostly, the patron saint of lost causes — in this case lost pictures and lost copy editors). (Below) Rick Mondrian Gibran Everist, small town boy who came to Stanford U. and made good, worked as the mild mannered editor of the Stanford Quad. Endowed with the organizational speed of an IBM 370, the stamina of a powerful locomotive and the ability to leap tall buildings at a single bound, Rick fought a never ending battle against reluctant photographers, deliquent deadlines, errant editors, paper snatchers, ad hatchers, bad printers. Pub Board splinters, staff quitters, copy spitters, frat rats, fat cats, time slime, grime, and rhymes like these. (Right) Jeff Gerecke, Carrie's good egg, did the ingratiating job of editing Student life. This means that Jeff can idem tify every student on campus. He was part of the coterie of the night that produced finished layout by deadline morning, I'm a nice guy, you just have to understand how my mind works. (Below) Tim Portwood was the Biz Manager, but around deadline time he did layouts and even wrote copy. Tim is the kind of guy your mother would love you to bring home. Even at the most difficult times he remained a gentleman and an efficient businessman. Tim was the man in 75 who took the Stanford Quad from the Red to the Black. (Above) Chris J.T. Seaman edited the University life section. To accomplish this Chris had to gather information on every group, activity and organization on the Farm. After he turns over his files to the CIA, Chris plans to seek refuge in Florence. (Above) Mystery Woman — Liz Harrison — helped immensely with the inevidable shit work of the yearbook: typing, phoning, last-minute copy scrambles (or is it scrablesf), and keeping picture-hungry frats at bay. She was the epitome of good sense and good taste — finding dark room supplies on sale in Walnut Creek and discussing the finer points of quilting. (Below) Carrie Breuner was one of those people whom we couldn't have made it without. Her original aim was to help out anywhere on the yearbook, yet she ended up running the office, scheduling half the photos, supplying the dark room, and eventually taking the pictures she couldn't schedule and printing them herself. Carrie evolved from a rookie who didn't know a quad-pak from a technicropper into a pro — without having to be taken by the hand and shown how. The Quad's expert at snappy abbreviations, which no one could decipher, and sensational telephone jargon, Carrie has truly been a driving force behind the pages of the 75 Quad. (Above) In addition to stealing scotch from the editor, Jim Reitzes ran the Grad Studies section. Amazingly enough, this rookie from Kansas City put together an organized and efficient 2-week campaign that saw every graphically presentable Master's thesis captured on film. He did a great imitation of Rick's leaping through the window, and is another master at telephoning improvisation and wheeling and dealing. (Above) One deadline at 5 AM, a fresh-faced lady clad in long johns and bathrobe found herself in the Quad office, in search of a Daily. Soon, the lovely and talented Connie Howell was caught up in the dcadlilne rush, and became part of the family. Quid ■as (Right) Jim Tearse, Photographer (Left) Frank McCivern (Below right) Sandy Wop Biagi was the sane (sort of) half of the sports staff. She was charged with a trying task — trying to run down the names of faceless team members, trying to figure out where Taylor went wrong, and worst of all, trying to calm down a hysterical co-editor. Is it any wonder that the poor girl escaped to Florence before the final deadline? (Above) Bob latta is a volleyball star, ladies man and sports photographer par excellence, not necessarily in that order. Bob took time out of a very busy schedule to initiate novices into the mysterious world of the darkroom. Rumor has it that he gives sensual backrubs and that his favorite line is let's go into the darkroom and see what developes. Hmmm . . . (Above) Jon Morris, Photographer (Above) Katie 8owen, Copy Editor ! Pfc - m (Left) Heidi “Sports Munzingcr was truly dedicated to her job. When she was not slaving away on the sports pages or hassling Dave and Bob for more of their top-notch photos, she was out keeping stats for the )V basketball team ... or the varsity baseball team ... or the |V baseball team . . . and in her spare time — she blinked. (Above) One fine day when certain dissolutioned and sick-of-it-all editors were worrying themselves silly over the 'Second Dimension' section, Chris Harvie strolled in and announced that he would be glad to help. After this bit of excellent timing Chris proceeded to learn everything about the book within a week. Chris added an immeasurable amount of effort in those crucial days. Quid 287 KZSU From the recesses of Memorial Auditorium eminate the waves of KZSU. . . 90.7 FM 880 AM 288 KZSU KZSU 2 1 SEQUOIA Sequoia is a literary magazine, edited by Stanford undergraduates, and published quarterly. Sequoia contains fiction, poetry, artwork, and photography. Interviews with authors and poets were included in the magazine for the first time this year. Sequoia has two objectives: to provide the Stanford community with a collection of some of the finest poetry and fiction being written today by young writers, and tojoffer an accessible outlet for Stanford students who are attempting to publish their work for the first time. The editor is Michael J. Smith; the associate editor is Melissa Baumann; the business manager is Bill Parsons. The faculty advisors are Nancy Packer and Diane Middlebrook. — Sequoia Stquoii ■291 Stanford Alivah Stanford Aliyah Editors: Jonathan Braun, Richard Mills, Shelley Smolkin Photography: Richard Mills Photo Lab: Jonathan Braun, Dean Hanley, Rudy Kelley Contributors: Peter Borden, Kim Brown, Mitchell Cohen, Jon Groner, Victor Gross, Yehudi Hamitpallel, Richard N. Levy, Dennis Prager, Eddo Rosenthal, Shelley Smolkin, Sheryl Spitz The word aliyah usually refers to emigration to Israel. Its root meaning, though, is to go up, to ascend to a higher level. In this broad sense, we use it as a sign of the rising Jewish consciousness and awareness at Stanford. The Stanford Aliyah encourages opinions and features from all readers in the community. Contributions may be sent to The Editor, Stanford Aliyah, P.O. Box 9183, Stanford, CA 94305. A member of the Jewish Student Press Service The Stanford Aliyah entered its third year of existence in 1975. A quarterly newspaper, the Aliyah helped dispel the notion that Stanford lacked a Jewish community. The work aliyah, usually meaning emigration to Israel, is used by the Stanford Aliyah in its root meaning, to rise up, to ascend to a higher level, as an indication of rising Jewish consciousness and awareness at Stanford. t%r wioiy to statistical mtiro Or a-d c dru frc Oa laltUI aulyili, (Ma (Mrn (9 be •• vUoly • fr«lN4. vlt Mrr IM aa • tudra.l alllo« It tbe Mril MrH I Karr kw at ftoafard. aove.r r. there «(« f  i p« lM« Protestor M C«a v  •• b  r decyly concerned far liWNta,† vr« tv«u v Ml ortantiadcn wm iwHIaHelj f r. •Ml (M T-M W rr MaM ilWll jfl « for ii Ih mrjiMat fro complete rvIn by clearing ? a 1M the profraaara waned up tW day before. Onfoctuanfely. FrofesaorX v  Vaelly crltlclred by all ilndrMi for Vrancrra and ra lile I «o t In l«UfU|. at vail aa roadtaual harptnf wfaa tW ia paUu foe daya Fay K Je iy M va Moderate In alia, ccfaiad of a craal many M cN lify w)mi. t .c with (M al flty of i ta«adr«U raatM f •• n lneer l p a «MaUi, MiKmtlii, a-d fOyalca. at aril aa blolagy and knaan biology. Caaolnatto«i Miard co be ona «f IW aura frill lee Mf«li of |K (Mil . i(w (Kay arrv often fralnd for nraa-arln| actual Imvlrdfr of the coerae. bat tla (radii atoadarda of tha profaaaora •ere deoerlhed aa arbitrary and eeetfutln . The baa ward fac IW o roa re-caload nlard rrvlcvi. b ( all agreed tKat It eaa fMfly coordinated vltb the conraa Material fm«M d Ua lecture . CVw of tha na)te frnaral rrltKIaa of the courae vaa atroeg dtalUe of Frofeaaor X'a repeated. mnul-at trulat In ornttoa of 1.0. In terop of rwrytM . Knrvar, cMi react lot al|M W eaplalned Ip Cam of lb a  r •IrdrMi A tee till courae offcrl aa a rlforoua conror In atatlatlca ratbar I ban «• « paycholegy courae. aa aeon euldent fro iKr m)m dtatr lb ( Ion. U tbfp aaa. tHa polrolca. useful In a ftfcKflefforlmtrd cloaa. anld a aa coopletely Irrelevant to a Ml na JM fMarratad In inference anf darlatlm fra tKa or on. la rovapant In iW courae could ceece trebly bo produced by bailor or anlintto , claarar vlrv of toela. •ora rlcorono taorMn of atotlatira. and lovraved coordlaetlao vlth eba reading material. (Above left) Cliff Schire-son. (Fur left) Paul Sobotka. (Left) Valerie Tonal. t mtix-. n r.v«K i .r 4ia xnuwin mumo C.lft. Jk.1. ■  M THi cowrie vlll l.mlnv.r fc. (..(fit by Pi. Clfl. .. |W «P.| . «im i .« !(«. .1 Ny.V.locy 40: II will U lw«.r h. I.VM ■. ....rat. cc,,,«. !.«.. 4111. C.l(« . wv fil ol tl..I .l.ll.llc. «iw hh. IO 4w lu|M . (r.al .l  t c.lfcw.l... ..4 cmr.l rr«.r (or 111 .wv tome. . l. l 4..I ol v |ch daily.. In. IW ntWilaai. inftMn,  ■iiilMr .1 IW jrol.ito. hlwli, w.ro «l .a,lll« In iWlr cowor.l... C.llrw iW Loc.r.r .a. v.rlenly 4.K.IW4 .. i.-|r.,.ci.. . l. Mukl .- ’.u«llm In Uctwlln, .Mlnr «ll .law. a. w, 11 a. a ,„w| ,t.r 44t,t to IW |. ',.  ' r««tl«4.- UW. 4 .l WO.!. t. Kk«lullv ' ° • «•' 1  wlllcla to h, of „ „w, ,„,K. tor thf ' 'vr «« ■fW.1. l.-v o in irotlr.  v.ai too 5|Tf: ' !! ■†thJ ‘ ,N N J. e  f -.Krlal or.ir.1..I ... „,,,£cj . Illllc loo a?a... lot .. i.ih. OlalrlWllMi of V loo. will, a fr .it “WM l 141.  all cl.M KM ,aM llwwlll.l Klimi an Malar. KvOlIC.  l Hravlly « loo rrctoil a MT- in tha Courtr Rniow ■29} 2 MaMuvk At the beginning of each fall quarter, a motley collection of students of all ages, classes and voice qualities assemble at Dinkelspeil Auditorium on a Tuesday evening. They are brought together by their common love of music and laughter, and by the fact that they have been selected to sing in the Stanford Glee Club. The work begins immediately, and following an October weekend workshop in the Santa Cruz mountains, the club is well on its way to becoming a well-integrated singing unit. By the end of the school year, the group has mastered a dizzying range of musical styles, from classical to folklore to pop. At the same time the many hours spent together in work and play have built unforgettable friendships. This, then, is the Glee Club Experience — music, hard work, laughter and sharing, combined to make every singing year unforgettable. Darian Morray Glee Clulb 74-75 A- i Mink ■M7 roaD'Jm CEDRO-FINIANS RAINBOW DRAMA H.M.S. PINAFORE Drimj ■299 300 ■Dumj ELECTRA OnmiaJOl NOAH AND THE ARK 302 ■0 imi Drjmj ■30J BUSINESS STAFF Tim Portwood, Business Manager Rod Jeung, Sales Manager Bill Wernecke, FalladManager Lynda Helmstadter, Winter Ad Manager Kevin McDermott, Liason Mason Blather, Advisor Frank McGivern, Taylor Rep. TH€ QUf D 7975 EDITORIAL Rick Everist, Editor Chris Seaman, University Editor Jeff Gerecke, Student Life Editor Heidi Munzinger, Sports Co-Editor Sandy Biagi, Sports Co-Editor Kim Bowen, Copy Editor Jim Reitzes, Second Dimension Editor Judy Staschover, Intro Editor Ray Chan, Faculty Administration Editor Chris Vosseler, Seniors Editor STAFF Mary Horrall, Kathy Aguilar, Jack Crummcy, Liz Harrison, Carrie Brenner, Connie Howell, Crhis Harvie, Carol Ebele. PHOTOGRAPHERS Darragh Davis, Glen Hudson, Jon Morris, Dean Hanely, Jeff Johnson, Mark Fischer-Colbrie, Jim Tearse, Dave Farris, Bob Latta, Stuart Jacobson. DARKROOM Stan Murashige, Bob Torassa, Dean Hanely, Bob Latta, Dave Farris. SALES John Wesley Wilson, Nelson Noguch, Joanne Woo, Rick Whittier, Ron Yuen, Bill Hopkins, Sheila Lynche, Steve Cook, Sara Barnum, Deb Harrison, Diane Harrison, Ussy Abraham, Carol Silalli, Phil Vargas. THA NKS TO: Gary Cavalli, Sports Information Director, Mrs. Nancy Ray, History Dept., Larry Aikins and Kim Dumkriegier, Keith Cole Studios, Fred Glover, Bill Stone, and Don Carlosn. Special thanks to Gloria Caring and Robert Haughton, Ref;istra's Office. AND TO: Carrie Bruener, for her two prime virtues; patience and diligence. JOS PHOTO CREDITS Professional Photography in this yearbook was done by Keith Cole Studios, Redwood City, California. SOUTH PALO ALTO 421 CALF. Ave. PH. 327-7662 MIDTOWN 702 COLORADO PH. 326-5914 THG ounbT ble DOWNTOWN 263 UNIVERSITY PH. 322-2893 ALMA PLAZA 3407 ALMA ST. PH. 494-2928 307 A bit i . Pete Abate, Pete Abbey, Brandon Abdo. Steve Abdo, Steve Abet, Prot. David Abevhire, Stan Abraham, lissy Abrams, Jim Abramson, Barry A bit. Barbara Ate, Juty Achor, Alan Ackerman, Stuart Adams. Dave Adarm, Tate Adarmon. Ellen Addington, George Addis. Anita Addison, Anita Advtubner. Patrice Agovti, Jan Aguilar, Kathy Am, Judith Al-Mufti, Amin Alai, Diane Albert, Iheodore Albert, Ted Albert von, Mark Aleshlrc, Peter Alkana, Terry Allan, John Allen, Barbara Allen, Toni Allivon, Derek Allstetter, Bill Allured, John Allyn, Tiger Almeida, Thomas Alvarado, Erma Alvcra, leana AmbJer, John Amen, Allen 68 206 206 8,17 67 90 35 22 59 30 SO 20 38 206 69 22 41 63 206 ss 207 32 20 206 31 27 206 67 39 206 206 206 26,206 206 49 37 41.206 19 206 19 35 66.206 39 Ansther. Mitch AnUcy, Dave Antonuccio, Dave Antonuccio, David Aposlol, Doug Arbuckle, Susannah Arc herd, Doug Art herd, Douglas Archuleta, Keith Argus!, Jerry Arima, Don Armer, Michael Armstrong, Barney Armstrong, Bruce Armstrong, Donna Armstrong, Eugene Armstrong, James Arterberry, Melvin Arthur, Al Arthur, Al Asai, Dave Asai, David Aschenerenner, Barbara Ashburn, Teresa Ashckenas, Dave Ashcnbunner, Peter Ashton,leah Aster, Bob Aster, Robert Atkinson, lacy Au, Marile Au, Marjorie Auerbach, Rich Augsberger, John Augsberger, VP Business Augsburger, Jane Augstsurger, John August, Chris Augustine. Web Austin, Su anne Avery, Brain Artell, John 59 39 54 206 31 206 59 206 47 1,62 2$ 206 206 63,206 28 206 206 155,157 66 1,62,63 34 207 207 30 29 60 39 32 207 63,140 27 207 43 47 101 207 207 40 39 57 151 52 Bakst, Peter Balch, Steven Bald ucc ini, Burt Baldwin, Chris Baldwin. Tricia Balrano, Jerry Bammann, linda Banvelos, John Barajas, linda Barti Bardin, James Bardini, X. Bargar, Doug Barker, Bruce Barker, Bruce Barklc, Ken Bartoon, lack Barnes, Jim Barnes, Mr. Bames, Pamela Bames, Phil Barnett, larry Barnette, Dennis 8arnum, Bill Barnum, Sara Barslow, |im Bart ell, Laura Barth, Jon Bart helow, Michael Bartlett, Nancy Baskins, Dave Basri, David Bassett, Jim Bates, Janet 8attelle, Christa Batts, Kathy Bauer, .Mark Bauer, Thomas Baugh, |im Baum, John Bauman, Barbara Bauman, Paul 39 207 149 43 40 IIS 39 40 207 287 207 S9 39 39 1,76 1,76,78 62.207 52 63 28.207 67 39 207 63 32 40 207 18 5 31 1.74 43 68 38 207 51 57 207 68 33 207 41 Designers of Fine Jewelry Gem Consultants Member American Gem Society Ames, Jack 63 Amioka, Ann 36 Anderson, Belh f. 41 Anderson, Bob 60 Anderson, Brian 56 Anderson, Dean 152 Anderson. Edward V. 206 Anderson, Gary 140 Anderson, Jay 206 Anderson, lorrie 50 Anderson, Martha 27,191 Anderson, Mike 1,78 Anderson, Ray 147 Anderson, Richard 206 Anderson, Rick 43 Anderson, Robert 206 Anderson, Selh 158 Anderson, Sheri 51 Anderson, Sieve 64,66 Anderson, Todd 63,140 Andrew, lynne 51 Andrews, Alan 49 AnRwin, |efE 41 Ayres, Anne 207 A ar, |anis 21 Babson, Marcia 54,207 Bach, Prof. George 97 Backes, John 59 Bacon, Prof. Harold 93 Badslubner, Patrice 207 Baer, John 1.76 Baet , Barbara 207 Bagley, Pam 60 8agshaw, David 68 Bagyo, Mike 8ailard, Dave 68 37 Bailey, Fred 41 Bailey. Jeff 37 Baily, Beverly 41 8aity, John 20 8ake, Andy 39 Baker, Bill Shortv Baker, Brad 38 66 Baker, Kenny 22 Baker, Marji 49 Baker. Sieve 69 Baumgaertner, Joe 140 Baumgartcn.M. 207 Baumgarten.Sleve 36 Baumgartner, John 63 Baumgartner.Kkk 41 Bauvhack, Kurt 42 Bay, Pete 19 Bay, Pete 1,61 Baylor, Vicky Ba a, John 36 37 Beach, Marilyn 207 Beasley, Andy 59 Beaumont, Kathryn 207 8eck, Ronnie 54 Becker, Terry Becker, Tony 37 36 Bedard. Doug 40 Bedccarrc, Tom 38 8ecchler, Mcegan 30 Beegle, Bruce 127 8ehan, Mona 42 Behling,Fred 60 Bei Gary 1,62 HOURS Mon. — Sat. 8:30 A.M. —5:30 THE STANFORD BOOKSTORE P.M. — Textbooks — Stationery — Posters — Art Supplies — Gifts — Records — Writing Supplios — Film — Stanford Souvenir Items — Typewriters — MANY MORE........ Helicon, Rick 63 Bluh, Don Bell, 8ob 54 8luhm, Mark Bell. Reg 68 Bluill, Ben Bell jh. Jack 68. 169,170, 148 Blumberg. Kent Bclljire, Barbara 28 Blumberg, Kent Bellowt, Vince 27 Blumburg, Andy 8em. Prof. Daryl J. 82 Bohey. Dan Benedict, Magic 19 Bohm, Richard Benetton. Steve S2 Bohrman, Dave Benjamin, Guy 63,140, 147 Bokelman, Jean Benjamin, lane 41 Bnkser, Mindy Bennet, Woody 66 Boles, Tim Bennett, Bruce 43 Boles, Timothy Bennett, Gary 66 Bnnaoquisti. Angela Bennett, Kathy 207 Bonaparte, Bob 8ennetl, Peter 63 Bonaquisti, Angie Benuelov, Steve 61 8onducci. Tom 8erg. Bill 66 Bonhoff, Hand 8crger, Brian 54 Boniface, Craig Bergstrom, led 207 Boone. Bette Bergthold, Rudy 140,207 Booth, 8arb Berka. Chris 41 Boothe, Barbara Berna, Steve 167 Boothe, Tom 8ernard, Prof. Robert 90 Bordone. lames Bernhard, linda 21 Bordondi. lames Bernhardt, f red 1,78 Borgeardl, Kurt Bernie 66 Borgersor, Janice Berry, George 169 Boris, Peggy Bervack, loren 43 Bossard, Monty Bersin, Robert 33 Boswell, Jamie Bertao, louise 26 Bounds, Sid Bertelven, Carl 207 Boutin, Dan Berthe, Steve 3S Boutin, frank Berti, |ohn 39 Bowen, Bear Berlocci. Derek 60 Bowen, Katie, Copy Id. Bcr ins, ll e 54 Bower, Tom Best, Mike 43 Bowles, Jacqueline Bet, Gary 68 Bowles, jacoui Betlencoutt, Diana 22 Bowling, Bub Bellman, Brad 39 Bowman. Roberta Bellman, Brad 1,58 Bow man, Valerie Beyer, Charles 57 Boysen, Jim Bhatia, Pete 68 Braden, Lise Bhatia, Peter 207 Bradus, loan Biagi, Sandy 40,286 8raggonier, Steve Biagi, Sharon 49,207 Brainard, Ann 8ier, Vicki 59 Brainerd, Sherry 8iltman, Glenn 30 Bramel, Hadley Bingham. Betsy 56 Brand, Ralph Binkley, Sharon 208 Brand, Rick Bishop, Barbara 208 Brandenburg, Mark Bitsonnette, Shawn 208 Brandle, George Blach, Rebecca 20 Brandon, |eff 8lachty, Linda 208 Brandi, Terry Bl.uk. Lyman 52 Branncr, Dan Blackburn, Ramtey 140 Brat , Mike Bljc kvhaw, lulie 208 Braun, David Blakely, Bruce 20 Braun, Jonathan Blanchard, Doc 140 Bravo, Dolores 8lanche, Rob 140 Bray, Sally Blanion, forest 54,208 Breitcnbach, Mark Bleet, Cynthia 208 Bremer, Belsy Blessing, |amet 208 Brenner, Merrill Blessing, |im 38 Bressler, Dan 8lincoe. Mark 27 Breuner, Carrie Bloch, federico 208 Brie kman.f red Bloch. Ken 57 Bridgeford, linda Block, Joseph 208 Brinton, Mary Blodgett, 8arb 32 Briscoe. Sandy Bloom. Debbie so Bristow, Mike Bloom, Maddv 20 Britton, Meredith 41 Bri gys, Romualdas Brodcll, Anne 208 M 192 156,157 Bronec.Pete 38 69 Bronsteen. Pres. Peter 35 69 Brooks, lisa 20 19 Brot , Sharyn 26,208 43 Brourman, Steve 54 208 Broussard, Marsha 28 60 Brown, Alison S9.208 59 Brown, Art 148 41 Brown, Darrell 48.206 47 8rovvn, Dave 32 207 Brown. Greg 65 206 Brown, Kim 40 149 Brown, Mark 43,48 50 Brown, Nea 40 69 Brownstcin, Larry 39 39 Bruist, Michael 209 60 Brummitt, Randy 209 208 Brunengo, Matthew 209 54 Bruner, Mike 20,1S2 60 Brunstein, Don 30 60 Bru one,Dave 64 208 Bru one, Rick 178 169 Bryan, Jackie 18 67 Bryan, Marshall 38 46 Bryant, Micki 41 55 Bryson, Susan 209 66,206 Bubbell. Gina 38 29 Bube, Sherri 38 47 Sue ha, Sandra 50 68 8uchel!i, Vice-Prcs. R. 102 68,148 Buckley, James I. 43 27 Buckley, Oliver 46 286 8ucklin, Sue '209 68 Bucksbaum.Maddy 55 208 Buechel, Jane 38.209 28 Bueostro, Paul 69 157 Buenostros, Pete 59 208 Button, Kelly 40 28 Bufu, fred J. 64 39 Buhlcr, Luis 35 54 Buie, Rodney 1,77 22 Bure hard, Roland 61 66 Burchdl, Becky 41,192 S9 Burd, Dan 69 208 Burdett, Mark 64 37 Burdinski, Douglas 209 42 Burgeri, Stephen 209 68 8urgh, Don 61 208 Burish, Doug 62 34 Burke, Ctuis 63 20 Burke, Christopher 195 34 Burke. Dana 209 59 Burke, |ohn 56 63,156,157 Burnett. John 158 208 8urt, Tom 57 208 Burton, Sarah 61 33 Burton, Ursula 51 39 Bush. Alan 209 18 8ush, Alan David 56 19 Bushnell, Ronald 209 208 Bustamante, f duardo 56 40 Busteed, Sue 56 35,285 Butcher, Barbara 209 19 Butkus, Dick 26 37 Butler, Reid 1,77 208 8uttner, Mary 41 41 Byron, Jeff 209 37 21 Caaper. lari Cahill, Deward 28 209 Caldwell, Kent 1,62 Callan. lames 209 Callander.Charlcx 209 Callander, Ken 62 Caldwell, Kent 209 Calvo, Ahmed 32 Calvo, Irene 38 Camacho, Albert 209 Camarillo, Carol 209 Cambell, Diane 29 Cambre, Al 68 Campbell, lanis 37 Campillo, Alejandro 209 Cannon, Dave 36 Cannon, Marshall 37 Cannon, Pat 61 Cannonbaum. Ken 43 Cantrill, Mike 65 Cape, Randall 209 Cape, Randy 36 Capps, Kathleen Cardenal, Bruce 49 63 Cardinal, Bruce 66 Cardinalli, Ray 140,145 Cardinalli, Ray 1,78 Cardosi, John 32 Carharl, Casey 41 Carl, Daniel 209 Carlock, leanelte 28 Carlson, Celia 20 Carlson, Chris 66 Carlson, David 19 Carmel, Andy 60 Carpenter, Candice 209 Carpenter, Carol 20 Carpenter, Ugly lay 66 Carr, 8ob 31 Carr, Bob 1,61 Carr, Percy 157 Carr, Percy 1.77 Carrizal, Mary 31 Carrol, Dan 40 Carroll, Clark 38 Carroll, Daniel 209 Carroll, |ohn 63,167 Carroll, lois 40 Carter, Ann 209 Carter, Christine 209 Carter, Jay 1S6,1S7 Carter, Steve M Carton, Peter 60 Carver, Claudia 209 Casarc , Reuben S3 Casey, Janet 209 Casey, Sean 37 Cashel, Joan 29 Cassedy, Sherry 19 Castellanos, Jose 33 Castillo, Diane 210 Casio, Bill 39 Castro, Dan 41 Cato. Russ 34 Catterlin, Dave 38 Catterlin, Russel 210 Caul, Pefferies 210 Cavan, Carol 41 Cavelli-Sforza. Violet 21 Celum, Carol 210 Center, Stu 1,76 Ceres eres, Cecelia 210 Cert, larry 37 Cervantes, Albert 210 Cesaro, Shelley 210 Chase. Prof. Bill 85 Chaldek, |ohn 39 Chambers, Wen 54 Chan, Andrea 42 Chan, Corrine 41 Chan, Gary 26 Chan, Joe 56 Chan, Ray 32 Chandler, Norman 210 Chang-Tung, trie 210 Chang-Tung, Greg 62 Chang. Akemi 20,20 Chang, frank 46 Chang, Harvey 34,210 Chang. |ason 38 Chang, Karen 210 Chang, Y-Squared 56 Chao, Ann 34 Chao, Bill 1S2 Chao.Chsioshung 1,76 Chao,Coo-Chung 20 Chao, lorn 34 Chaparro, Hestor 35 Chapin, Barbara 210 Charlie 69 Charonnat, Jeff 41 Chase, Mary Jane 34 Chavez, Mel 46 Chee.fbet V. 38 Cheek, Diana 52 Chen. Carol 34 Chester, Ted 1,76 Chiang. Iran 21 Chiang, Jin 152 Chiang, Andress 218 Chidester, Philip 49 Childs, Mary 46 Chin, Mark 32 Chinen, Allan 69 Chinn, Kris 52 Chosk, Alan 34,210 Chosk, Galen 210 Chow, Dobbin 20 Chown, David 210 Choy, liz 39 Christen, Amy 42 Christcson, Biu 62 Christiansen, f laine 27 Christiansen, task 140 Christiansen, |oni 21 Christie. Mike 36 Christiman, Charlotte 20 Christopher, Bill 39 Christopher, Bill 1,76,77 Chuck, Meredith 20 Chung, Marion Church, Geb 210 140 Chursh, John 210 Churchill, loretta 210 Cima, Cindy 56 Cisneros, Jerry 38 Clark, Dean 210 Clark, Karen 38 Clark, Kathy Clark. Marshall 41 148,169 Clark. Paul 49,150,152 Clark, Polly SI Clark, Sharon 210 Clarke, Tim 18 Clarkson, Bob 48 Cleuatre, The Mad Dog 66 Clifford. Scott 67 Clift. |oe 41 Cline, Chris 68 Coates, Jim 59 Cobb, Matt 39 Cobbe, Steve 29 Cobum, Gay 191 Cooke, Joe 68 Cockrum, Dale 211 Coelho, Joe 37 Coelho, Prof. Joaquim 88 Cogan, fasy fd Cohan, Fred 66 26 Cohen, Betty 27 Cohen, lamey 20 Cohen, Mark 34 Cohen, Mitch 64 Cohen, Mitchell 211 Cohen, Rich 60 Cohn, Mark 211 Cohn, Steve 211 Cole, George 27 Cole, Susan 211 Coleman, Cappy 48,190 Coleman, Catherine 211 Coleman, Dorothy 46 Coleman, Susan 18 Coli. Isceria 63 Collier, Wanda 32 Collins, Michelle 56 Collopy, Paul 34 Colman, Charles 62 Colville, Mark 54 Combs, Andy 30 Combs, Penny SI Compton, Prof. Robert % Cone, Ellen 18 Connell, Bill 22 Connelly, lack 152 Conner, Mike 140 Conncy, Martin 43 Conroy, Cindy 49 Conway, Bill 59 Conway, Dyan 22 Conway, Tim 64 Cook, Jeff 20 Cook, Richard 1S2 Cook, Richard 60 Cook, Tom 1,78 Coonan, James 211 Cooper, Tom Corder, Chuck 49 36 Cordova, Mike 140, 141 Corliss, Sto 43 Corliss. Stu 152 Cornelius. Craig 43 Cornett. Pat 1.94 Corralejo. Robin 211 Corrin, lois 41 Cortez, Rich 60 Cosby, Pamela 211 Cosgrove. Charles 27 Coughlin, Anne 37 Courtney, Paul 40 Courtney, Raymond 211 Coutncy. Raymond 42 Cowley, Deborah 56 Cox, Brian 38,211 Cox, Carol 42 Cox, Donald 211 Cox, Prof. Allan 96 Coyle, Sally 211 Craig, Bruce 64 Craig, Caroline 211 Craig, Kathy 42 Cramer, Steve 64 Crary, Anne 50 Crary, Patricia 211 Creighton, David 211 Crettin, Chard 211 Crim, Gordon 47 Cristafori, Glenn 149 Cristofori, Glen 149 Critchlovv, Steve 65 Cromwell, Susan 20 Cronkite, Bob 41 Crosby, Jon 211 Crosby, Jon 1,78 Crosby, Ron 43 Crosby, Ronald 211 Crosigjia, Marla 211 Cross, |ayne 19 Crossan, Debbie 34 Crowley, Steve 169 Crumly, lames 195,211 Crummett, Carlos 39 Cruz, Anne 211 Culhane, Thomas 211 Culhane, Tom 27 Cullen, Bob 52 Cullen, Robert 211 Cummings, Alan 169 Cummings, Dan Senator 66 Cummings, Danid 211 Cummins, Mike 54 Cunningham, Gunther 140 Cunningham, Kathy 49 Cunningham, Mike 27 Currey, Dave 140 Curtis, Nolen 26 Custer, Daniel 211,211 Cutler, Debra 211 Cutler, Roberta 47 Dacquista, Michael 211 Dageford, Mary 29 Dageforde, Mary 211 Dailey, Scott 32 Dale, Dan 19 Dallmar, Howie 155,157 Dalton, Carl 43 Dalton, Denny 59 Dang, Warren 34,212 Danid, lisa 50 Daniels, Irk 46 Dannenberg, Andy 41 Darby, Sam 61,212 Daseking. Janet 49,212 Date, Elaine 34 Davidson, Gwen 55,211 Davidson, Gwen 1,94 Davidson, Holly 41 Davidson, Jon 56 Davis, Brent 19 Davis, Bruce 1,62 Oasis, Hilary 34 Davis, James 212 Davis, Marly 151,152 Davis, Ndson 32 Davis, Paul 59,212 Davis, Randy 60 Davis, Steve 1,62,65 Dawe, Rusty 64 Dawson, Bill 60 Day, Dick 66 Day, Riclvard 212 Day. Susanna 212 Day, Van 63.212 Dayton, Sally 40,212 De franc is, Joe 64 De la Rocha. Hector 212 De la Rosa, Ricardo 33 Delapa, Mike 39 De lapa, Mike 39 De San, Chris 49 Debriyn, Melinda 38 Defrancisi, Rich 1,61 Defren, David 36 Degrass, 8ob 26 Dcnoff, Ron 113 Delaney, |im 172,173 Deleeuw, Prof. Karel 93 Delgado, Dan 20 Delstorre, Rosario 35 Delucchi, Diane 55 Demeo, Joe 1,61 Demetrakes, Pam 39 Dcmont, Chris 51 Demon!, Christine 212 Demopulos, Peter 212 Dennis, Craig 39 Densmore, Greg 64 Densmore, Gregg 169 Deppe.Jack 54,152 Deremigio. Tom 56 Dern. Martha 48 Derrington, Dave 27 Desantos, Tom 21 Desantos, Tom 6,17 Desaussure, Amory 48 Oetweiler, Carol 27 Dew, Dave 60 Dewell, lames 212 Dewey, Ken 68 Dewey, Kenndh 212 Dexter. Mark 56 Diaz, Carroll 1.94 Jrs. Petites Cute Clothes OLD STANFORD BARN PALO ALTO 326-7373 SFRGlOS A ScuvJu VV «5, SolaAs, and Xhlfa-Ykliohal QntKti-S  ved o 3 xj in a Ovkrm M () Um y t Atmojfkrc UnncVv, 0 innar b$ I po 4e fxxrs £ UK U- TPft 211 OnWr «tcj W TyliolTlZ J12 Ad — Indri photo by Bob Kahlcr 5$£2282S fc2 2S32;S!$ :S32SS?2R22aKS £:K£S3S22SS3Sa32S2?S2 222 22?££“23 2S3:;S;a SS£3332S3332Si£!S£2Ss£8'.r2S232£ 2K$?££gK:??:S£ NN N ••  N N N N N N  ■“ Nr •■% W r r NNNNN r « r «r« N N N « N r« N N N N f“ f N S' = 3S=SS2SS2S5:S=S2a23Sa = S gft3tR5Rg3SS5S325f253CS?2agSSR3SS?3S22SSSa322R!?282858«S233228SftS:g3 = a3 3Sa322SKS;2sS2SPi2S? s' 5 s ? s a $ 5 ■5 R33JSS2Sgat??53g !f2ftfc3S SftS3SSag8gaSKSC?SSXJJ!8£ S3SSRSSSS«S8S$3SSSa8SS3Sf;S3aftS53$3ft£3S3$SSS=3SS5aSS!S8«SS8{ ?:tSS8 RRft • r« n •• n r« n fN M N N  N  N N N N N N N N t N •“ N f S' f' i 3 S' 3 S S' I .2.2 .: = = .■= = CCCCCCO Hill 1 c c c c i i E i § oaaas cccccacccocQecDQeaoQoacDOQaaaaocaocaocQQQOo'iJJl uJJJ ’uSSSiiSSSSSSSi: iL. Ad — lnd« ■313 27 66 87 217 42 52 20 18 34 35 67 20 37 66 43 61 64 217 29 20 217 192 37 20 39 40 66 217 36 30 217 140 32 48 41 32 28 39 217 50 217 39 217 49 195 ,78 32 21 153 217 28 217 67 32 52 S9 39 19 33 217 62 37 33 31 41 18 217 39 39 43 217 63 217 49 20 50 41 36 46 20 35 19 217 60 60 169 1,76 217 .141 1,77 32 34 19 140 68 31 56 217 31 1,62 41 37 20 19 21 217 67 68 1,62 27 215 Griswald, Betsy 54 169,170 Crobman, Al 68 49 Crodail, Skip 66 37 Grodsky, Jamie 49 41 Grolle, P. 68 21 Grolle, Ken 1,62 27 Grolle, Tim 1,76 27 Grose, Madison 195 152 Gross, Elaine 216 18,284 Grounwater, Don 57 37 Grubb, Sandra 216 46 Grunbcrg, Nicl 216 31 Gruardino, Tom 1,63 52 Guardino. Tom 1,63 102 Guardino, Tom 20 26 Guardino. Tom 1,62 63 Gudrais, Peter 216 St Guerbner, Lori 38 42 Gulick, Tom 38 15S, 157 Gunn, Leslie 32 49,215 Guns, Bill 27 215 Gunter, Kurt 60 47 Guth, Tim 43 67 Gsvatkin, Tina 31 62 Habcrman, Lori 51 30 Hacklcy, Pamala 216 61,215 Hadley, Mark 27 38 Hadley, Shellic Hafllch, Dave 49 1,76 41 64,215 Hagata, Steve 1,76 54 Hager, Bob 49 63 31 Hagcv, lames Haggblade, Steve 216 42,216 149 Haggenmacher, Christine 216 37 150 Haggerty, Maura Hahn, Ben 56 63 66 Hahn, Benjamin Hahn, Herb 216 62 63 St Hahn, Vickie 18 31 Haier, Randy 60 49,215 Haight, Maureen 31 30 Haines, Tex 60 26 Hake, Steve 27 54,59 Halaby, Christian 62 35 Halevy, louise 216 40 Halken, Norman 216 215 Hall, Charles 149 19 Hall, Clay 21 41 Hall, Dave 39 19 Hall, Gregory 216 54 Hall, lulie 216 149 Hall, Michael 216 215 Hall. Mike 169 28 Hall. Mike 169 61 Hall, Richard 216 215 Hall, Ricky 18 21S Hall, Steve 54 152 Hall, Susan 21 21S Hall, Greg 67 30 Hallam, Kim 19 59,215 Hailing. Charle Hallock, Ben 20 34 1,76 215 Halpenny, Tom 57 63 Halpcr, Bill 38 41 Halper, William 216 43 Halverson, Chris 27 1,58 Hamada, Roger Hamada, Sadao 216 41 158 140 Hamel, Jeanne 48 55 Hamilton. Ted 36 215 Hammet, Rob 216 39 Hammond, Mike 34 172,173 Hammond. Sue 34 1,61 Hampton, Bob 1,62 215 Hampton, Robert 216 68 Hampton. Wes 64 69 Handy, Jack 30,195 215 Haniman, Lori 20 $7 Hankcrson, John 216 39 Hanley, lee 217 51 Hansberger, Carol 217 54 Hansen, Charles 217 215 Hansen, Charlie 63 54 Hansen, Dave 63 215 Hansen, Holly 18 49 Hansen, Kathy 48 215 Hansen, Mary 42 215 Hansen, Steve 62 28 Hansen, TJsomas 217 20 Hanvon, David 217 54,21S Hara, Phillip Hara, Satoshi 217 27 217 215 Hara, Satosho 56 26 Harding, Chuck 43 51 Harding, Lucy 40,217 56 Hardwick, Martha 40,217 216 Hardwood, Charley 169,170 167 Hargadon. Dean Ered tot 1,76 Hargrave. Vic 32 36 Hariton, Lorraine 59 216 Harkson, Doris 20 216 Harmatz, Mariam 49 27 Harnutz, Mariam 217 34 Harod, Diane 59 216 Harrah, Shane 29 216 Harris, John 60,63,140 41 Harris, Nancy 49,217 169 Harris, Sally 54 66 Harrison, Elizabeth •285 21 Harrison, John 66 Harrison, liz Haney, Neal Manic, Chris Harwood, Charles |r. Hashimoto, Beverly Hashimoto, Dean Hastrup. Elisa tlatsukami, Tom Hatla, lulie Haugen, lulieann Haugh, Dave Hauner, Kim Hauskcncht, Peter Haverty, Tom Havian, Eric Havrilak, Dick Hawkins, Gus Hawley, Kieran Hayase, Suan Hayden, Joe Haves, Jane Hayes, Vicki Haywood, Tom Ha ey, Rich Hazlehurst, Jim Head, |. D. Hcadapohl, Bill Heaps, Craig Healher, Rick Heaton, Iricia Hebrn, David Hecker, Norb Hed berg, Irik Hedden, Bill Heffcrn, Joe Hcfter, Steve Hcideman, Mike Heidorn, lisa Heimlich, Phillip Heinen, Barb Heinen, Barbara Heintz, Bob Holland. Stephen Helland, Steve Hcllisvell. Jean Helmke, Rik Hclmstadter, Lynda Henckels, Anne Henc ken, John Henderson, Jill Henderson, Leslie Henderson, Lynne Henderson, |ill Hendra, Gary Hendricks, Chris Henehan, Michael Henncberger, Roger Henner, Leslie Henny, CretclK'n Henry, Clard Henry, Rick Hepworth, Charlie Heiberg, David Herbst, Susie Hernandey, Lourdes Hernandez, Tom Herold, Patricia Herrera, Cathy Herrera, Kristy Herrod, Newbv Herschel, Kathryn Hertenstein, Bob Hertenstein, Robert Herum, Steve Hestop, Jacqueline Hevlor, lisa Hickman, Bob Hicks. Jims N. Higgins. Bart Higuchi, Kathy Hikida, Marcy Hill, Alice Hill, Barbie Hill, Bill Hill, Charles Hill, Mark Hill. Mark Hill, Richard Hill, Tony Hill, Tony Hillcbranl, Elisabeth Hillman, Bob Hillman, Honey Himes, Ron Hinan, Jell Hines, Cheryl Hines, Roz Hinntan, Joan Hinojosa, Pepc Hinojosa, Pepc Hinze, Jimmie Hiraizumi, Ka uu Hiramatsu, lulie Hirsch.Creg Hirsch, Andrea Hiti, Alan Hiti, Al Hitner, Benie Hittner, Bernie Hielm. Rick I ) 115 (Left) Bill Wernccke, the fall ad manager, sneak-reading a Sports Illustrated. (Below) Lynda Helmstadter, the winter ad manager, wheeling and dealing ads for everything from cars to pi? a. or†1 Ho, Carl 68 Ho, Ping 2,20 Ho, Vince 34 Hoaglin, Mark 140 Hoaglin, Mark 1,77 Hocnnadd, link 34 llockberger, Susan Hocker, Tom 39 60 Hodge, Sue 18 Hodgson, lori Hoffman, Ann 26 41 Hoffman, Mark 39,52 Hoffman, Susan 217 Hofstadter, Prof. Robert 92 Hogan, Mark 41 Hogsett.Matt 168,169 Hoit, Glen 1,76 Holt, Glenn 140 Holbrook, |im 68 Holder, Mary 218 Holland, Lincoln 218 Hollberg, Leo 158 Holliday, Roy 31 Hollister, larry 26 Holman. Jon 60 Holmes, Marv 140,168,169 Holmes, Sandra 32 Holubar, Kent 20 Holubar, Micacl 218 Holve, Steve 35 Holyoak, Keith IIS Hoi , Andrew 28 Horn, Mary 59 Hood, Nancy 19 Hook, Jeff 32 Hoops. Craig Hoover, Jamie 43 33 Hoover, Shawn 40 Hoover, Sue 18 Hoover, Sue 1,94 Hopkins, Bill 35 Horbeck, Scott 64 Horn, Bob 28 Horn, lisa 21 Hornsby. Megan 18 Horpel, Chris 1,61 Horrall, .Mary 218 Horth, Dave 35 Horton, Jonathan 52 Houck, Hudson 140 Houston, Holly 192 Houston, Holly 218 Howard, Jeff 39 Howard, Bev 43 Howell, Busby 20 Howell, Connie 54,285 Howell, Constance 218 Howley, Rosemary 30 Hoyle, Dave 29 Hroncich, Deborah 218 Hsi, Andy Hsia, Vicki 18 46 Hsu, Alex 20 Hu. Diana 40 Hubbard. Bill 140 Hubbard, David 33 Hudson, Charlie 65 Hudson, Glenn 39 Hudson, Sybil S9 Hudson, Tracy Huerij, Robert Huff. Dir fin AidsR. Huffington. Terry Hulanick, Alexander Hulet, Randy Humber, Erik Humbert, |enni Hume, Douglas Hunciker, Mark Hung, Helen Hunt, Dave Hurst, Terry Huss, fmily Huston, Chad HuUheon. Todd Hutchinson, Hotly Hutchinson, Prof, fric Hutchion, Todd H tnen, B. H)-tcn, Jane lannaoone, larry lech, Kerry Iglesias, lose litis, Mike litis, Michael Imamira, Don Inacay, frnic Inacy, Ernest Inge, Ron Ingraham, David Ingram, Dave Ingram, John Ipsen, Jeffrey Isaacs, Theresa Ishimoto, Bruce Ishman, leanie Ishman, Kathy Isonaka. Sharon Itancy, Tony Ito, Alice Isvanski, John Jackson, Cynthia Jackson, Sue Jackson, Suki lackson, Su ie Jacob. Paul Jacobe, Stephen Jacobs, Alexia Jacobs, Glen lacobson, Stuart jacobus, Warren jaffe, Rory jaloncn, Wendy james, David james, Francisco Jameson, Chuck jameson. Card Jameson, frank James, David Jardslovsky, Rich jarvis, Cindy Jarvis, Sonia Jarvis, Sonya Jasbcrg, Marta Jawet , Steve Jegge, Dave Jetiffe.Sue Jena, Doug 18 218 KM 55 218 41 218 18 218 56 218 18 57 49 66 1,58 192 99 29 41 32 36 69 56 66 218 39 40 218 140,141 218 39 67 218 20 30 28 28 55 41 56 39 50, S6 191 190 36 68 37 218 218 31 218 47 37 59 56 34 38 218 S9 218 20 191 37 59 39 47 29 1,76 (Le(l) Rod Jcung, sales manager, Jenke, Jim Jenkins, Stephen Jenkins, Teresa jensen, Steve jepperson. Ron jester, Randy Jester, J. Jett, |im Jeuma, Rodney Icung. Mike jew ell. Rick |ob. The Hume lob, Brenda Johannsen, Ricj johansen, Rick Johanson, Brad lohnk, Carl 19 Johns, Frank Stony johns. Hank johnson, Burgess Johnson, Clark Johnson, Craig johnson, Dave Johnson, Diane johnson, Greg Johnson, Jim johnson, Keith johnson, Ray johnson. Rich Johnson, Roy johnson, Stan johnson, Steve johnson, Vincent johnson, Clark johnson, Stark johnson, Raymon johnson, Stanley johnston. Jay johnston, Jeff jooasscn, Cara jones, Barbara Iones, 8rad Jones, Chuck jones, Glen jones, Peter Jones, Scott Jones, Susannah jones. Brad Jones, Jimmy jones, Patricia jones, Ruth Jones, Scott Jordan, Bill Jordan, Maryannc jordan, Payton jordi, Kristi Joseph, Jack Juarez, Jesus Judson, Marc Judson, Mark Jue, Cliff Juergens, Christy jvvaida, Dara jsvaideh, Dara Kabaker, Alan Kafadcr, Karen Kaffen, jim Kaffen, jim Kafferstein, Sue Kagavva, Joan Kanan, f red Kahn, Hafold Kahn, Prof. Matt Kahn, Harold Kain, Dan Kaiser, Glenn Kalcy, Douglas Kamemcio. Robert Kamins, Jeff Kamler, Mike Kantor, Dave Kaplan, Prof. John Kaplan, Robert Karaka off. Alex Karako off, Alex Karge, Joe Karger, Joseph Karfeaard.Rich Kashima. Kennan Katz. Hallie Kauffman.Sue Kaufman, Dick Kauhanen, Mellow Gordy Keating, Bob Keeling, Drew Keene, Steve Keeran, Connie Kegel, Wayne Kcil, Marilyn Kellar, Bill Keller, Kent Kelley, Rich Kellogg. Mike Kelly, Rudy Kelsberg, Cary Kelvie, Kathy Kemper, Steve Kemper, Stephen Kendrick, Carol Kennard. Bill making a fast sale. 140 218 218 49 56 62 218 19 218 43 M 66 218 150 37 66 66 39 3S 66 172,173 1,78 38 68 38 28 37 37 20 150,151 126 28 218 218 219 219 1,74 68 27 18 35 18 60 36 169 56 67 67 219 219 67 32 46 169,170 37 36 33 297 149 36 47 S4 192 219 219 140 1,76 19 40 37 66 91 219 399 67 212 219 63 54 40 86 219 63 140 40 220 42 18 54 19 59 66 1,61 43 39 19 W 35 140 47 1SS, 156,1S7 149 56 39 34 140 219 219 20 117 We’ve Only Just Begun You've got a long way to go. We’d like to help you get there. CROCKER BARK MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION JIB MORE THAN 280 OFFICES STATEWIOE • MEMBER FEOERAl DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION 58? 8afe fea«5fi’a 9 8Raft85R®8S8?Sft8; ?8a3S!® 8;g‘J8 «?i ! awftfe«8R?: R5! ! fti88SS,,!’R R5 S RftR Sa55SfigsS SS5ft«R5 as, a5a I i 4 4 s , .‘Ssrrsl i? K. 3 £ £ t 6 S SR68:«g£ SSSSgf?|SnSfj5Sg5§Rgf$3R2?2SgSJ5JSgS8;S££?5;£RR}5ftRgS!RgRS  S£S23£?g838Sg3gSifi!f!S gfi82$RSSSSSSa3fiSSSSR3«§a§§§SS8 s'†? 5 If 5 Q Q - £ -9 2 u —• —• i 3 2.322’5i(-'0 °. f7iTfoI?ig“3 cescc_-iS {£ 3 £££££££E£8S-t JL .JLjCjCjCjLJLJLJLjCJL Lynch, Mike lynch, loring lends, Elcnor lynds, Eleanor lynn, Cary lynn, Cary lynn, Tom Lyons, Dean lames Lyons, Renee Ma, Calhryn Mac Donald, Bruce Maccoby, Prof. Eleanor Macgrcgor, |im Macintosh, Kerry Mackay,Calder Mackin, Susan Maclean, Rory Mac nair, Tracy Macrorie, John Mac vicar, Mariam Mac williams, lohn Madsen, Bill Magee, John Mahoney, Mike Mahoney, Registrar S. Maizoub, Camille Mak, Ronald Makino, Marcia Makous, Monte Makous. Monty Malaty, Gail Maldcnaldo, Jelf Maldonado, Jeff 1,77 Malkasian, Cary Malkasian, Cary Malmlund, Ann Maloney, Alan 65 222 52 222 27 1,76 140,145 103 31 39 63 83 222 39 63 222 26 222 169 222 18 52,158 3 64 105 22,131 222 34 169 43 19 68 68 1,62 111 28 WouMiv’tYow KeMj R iW. . . UUCCJ BUICJ6 - OPEL 550 El Camino Real Menlo Park Mangers, Marjorie Manheimer, Jeff Manley, Randy Manley, Randall Manlove, Mike Mann, Larry Mann, Lawrence Mannen, Willie Manning, Becky Manning, Carolyn Manning, Scott Manqueros, Mark Mantay, Jasmine Maravilla, Tom March, Peggy Marcus, Andrew Marcy, Ted Marcy, Ted Marcy, Donald Marenzi, Gary Marenzi, Gary Margolis, |im Margolis, James Marmello, Steve Marion, Howie Markowitz, Trank Markus, Dennis Markus, lohn Maron, Dave Marquess, Mark Marsdcn, Prof. S. Marshall, Margaret Marshall, Prof. Hubert Marsing, Mark Martin, Eorrie Martin, Mary Martin, Cary Martinez, Elisa Martinez, Jack Martinez, Karen Martinez, lorene Martinez, Sabrina Marvin, Carvin Mar , Randy Marx, Randall Masch, Charles Masch, Charlie Mashima, Kyle Masi, Renee Mason, Charlotte Mason, Reggie Mason, Tons Masutani, 8rian Matheson, Scott Mathias, lohn Matsui, Connie Malta . Carol Matters, Kathryn Matthew, Doug Matthew, Douglas Matthews, Scott Maurer, Cinny Maurer, Christine Mausin, Jeff Ma , Wendy Maxwell, Laurie Maxwell, Victoria May, George Mayer, David Mayer, Gene Mayer, Quinn Mayer, Scott Mayer, Nancy Mayer, Quinn Mayes, lohn Mayes. Orlando Maynard, John Maynard, John May nard, Tom Maynard, Tom Maze, Bill McBride, Mike McCarthy, Perry McCarty, Scott McCaslIn, Megan McCauley, Rod McClenanam, lames McComber, Diana McCormick Tom McCourt, Mike McCrimmons, lisa McDermott, Kevin McDonald. Mike McDuffie, Duncan McEhreen, Creg Mcfarland. loan McGovern, Mike McIntosh, Creg Me lung, Susan McNair, Katie McVitte. lody Mcardc, Liz Mcardle, Liz Mcauley, Rodney McBride. Mike McBride, Michael McCann, Dan McCann, Dan McCarthy, frank McCartin, Terry 224 41 52 222 59 60 222 68 57 18 195 39 42 67 31 28 158 1,59 222 20 1,78 54 222 69 1.77 22 19 37 S4.40 1,62 97 41 87 1,61 140,143 28 222 46 39 36 49 39 43 43 222 43 1,61 20 39,192 41 28.169 66 34 222 222 222 222 222 60 222 222 31 223 68 56 21 223 158 28 173 27 18 223 223 36 1.76 68 1.76 37 1.76 173 63 30 63 27 27 105 57 300 64 30 63 31 63 28 54 63 30 59 30 56 32 192 1.77 1,74 223 140 1.76 39 1.77 PATRONS HEWLETT-PACKARD MR. AND MRS. THOMAS B. PORTWOOD JR. ROCKY BARBER MR. AND MRS. GEORGE D. SHARNINGHOUSE McClaskey, John 38 Mettncr, Matt 40 Morel, Mike 66 McCloskey, lynn 51 Meyer, Mele 38 Morel, Michael 224 McClure, Carol SO Meyer, Prof, lohn W. 83 Moreno, Celia 32 McClure, Carol 223 Meyer, Richard 27 Moreno, Mario 52 McCluskey. Ted 223 Meyer, Steven 223 Morgan, Brookt 69 McCluskey, led 34 Meyerhof, Prof. Walter 93 Morgan, lamie 169 McColl, Carrie 37 Michaelt, Steve 46 Morgan, Ken 1.77 McColl, Duncan 140. 147 Michaelt, Stephen 223 Moroney, |im 39 McConnell, Mark 148,169,170 Michel, Chrit 223 Morris, Betsy 41,190 McConnell, Mark 223 Michner, Teri 223 Morris, 1.1. 40 McCook, Pci er 43 Middleton. Carl 63 Morris, Jeff 66 McCoy, Joe 36 Mieko, Kathy 21 Morris. Ion 42 McCready, Mary 223 Mille, Mike 63 Morris, Jonathan 286 McCulloch, Marti 49 Miller, Bruce 29,64 Morris, Peter 39 McCulloch, Catherine 223 Miller, lay 43 Morris, John 224 Me David, Glenn 42 Miller, |im 64 Morrison, Date 63 McDermott, Mary 223 Miller, loyce 57 Morrison, Kelly 51 Me Donald, Drew 68, 150,1S1 Miller, laurie 37 Morrison, Kelly 51 Me Donald, les 37 Miller, Sandy 63 Morrison, David 224 McDonald, Rich 68 Miller, Scott 40 Morrison, Michelle 224 McDonald, Scott 41 Miller, VP, Provott W. 101 Morrow, |ohn 149 Me Donald, John 223 Miller, Betty 223 Morrow, Rick 149 Me Donough, Mark 43 Miller, Michelle 223 Morrow, Mark 67 MeCanncy, Karen 223 Miller, Rott 223 Morteil, Pat 38 McGhee, Kristen 39 Millet, Sandy 61 Mortimer, Ann 35 McGill, till 223 Millt, Mary Beth 40 Morton, Anne 3S McCIvcrn, Frank 286 Mills, Rkk 46 Morion. Gary 1.62.63 McGovern, Kelly 19 Millt, Bradford 224 Mosbachef, 8ruce 149 McGovern, tarry 140 Millt, Richard 224 Mosbacher, Richard 224 Me Garth, Marty 43 Milne, Keith 59 Mothershead, Prof, lohn 84 McGraw, |im Abvent 35 Mings, Chris 31 Motulsky, John 31 McGuinn, Kerry 223 Mimeka, Mike 49 Moyer, David 195 McHale, Nancy 46 Minks, lohn 60 Mueller, Karen 27 Mdlreath, Ian 59 Minobe, Wayne 30 Mueller, Skip 62 Me Kay, Chuck 20 Minor, Tim 42 Mueller, Skip 224 McKcehan. |udy 18 Minos, lynne 32 Mulamed, |im 149,249 MeKechan, ludilh 223 Mint , Candy 26 Mull-ifd. Timothy 221 McKinney, Mickelle 37 Miranda. Ramiro 54 Muller, jlm 69 Mctean, Doug 148,169,170 Mirhen, Mark 68 Mumby, lynn 61 Me LOirgh tin, Marily 21 Mirov, Robin 42 Mumby, lynn 224 McMillan, George 48 Mitner.Pricilla 224 Mundy, David 28 MePheetcrs. George 68 Mitchell, linda 36 Mun inger, Heidi 40.287 Me Pheeter ■s. George 223 Mitchell. Mark 173 MuRao, John 69,149 McRae, Lorna 38 Mitchell. Sandy 20,48 Murashige. Stan 38 Meant, Mary 61 Mitchell, Ted 35 Murdock, Seth 35 Meant, Mary 223 Mitchell, Gregg 224 Murphy, Meade 37 Mearill, Mark 62 Mitchell, Sandy 224 Murphy, Molly 40 Mechim. Rutted 19 Miltumor, Jane 42 Murphy, Anne 224 Meengt, Karen 20 Mitsumori, lane 192 Murpy, Mary 224 Meic, Peter 36 Miyakawa, lanice 20 Murr, Mike 56 Meide, Norm 68 Moddel, Garret 26 Murr, Michael 224 Mel tier, Anita 49 Moeller, Cay 39 Murray, Mike 60 Meitler, letlie 49 Moinpour, Hamid 29 Murray, Steve 64 Meitler, IW 301 Moncall, Dir Overseas 103 Myers, letlie 49 Melamed, |im 31 Moncrlef, lisa 20 Myers, letlie 224 Melende, Maria 223 Monke, Eric 41 Myerton, Jim 64 MHrer, Hal 60 Monson, Jamie 21 Mycrson, Jim 64 Menchini.Paul 62 Monteverde, Rich 57 My sell, lane 218 Mendel. Derk 149 Montoya, |im 20 Nabti, f arlce 26 Mendenhall, Did 19 Montoya, louie 60 Nace. Ted 31 Mender, |ohn 68 Montoya, luit 224 Naegeli, Andrew 224 Mender, |ohn 1,78 Mookini, Marie 3S Naft ger, Natalie 39 Mendleton, Glenn 38 Moore, Bill 173 Nagatani. Kay 47 Mendo a, Alfredo 39 Moore, Erin 55 Nagatani, Kiyonor 1 224 Mendora, Marlin 223 Moore, Nancy 47 Nager, Charlie 37 Monghetti, Charlie 19 Moore, Tom 41,158 Nakamura, Karl 43 Memcatty, Dave 43 Moore, Gall 224 Nakayama. lynn 34 Mentinger, Sue 20 Moore, Roger 67 Namba, Myron 34 Mercer, tucinda 32 Moorehead, Bob 41 N'ao, Yatue 224 Meredith, Phil 65 Moorer, James A. 114 Napolitano, Prof. A. 89 Merkley, Jeff 31 Moot , Nancy 61 Nars er. Bob 60 Merlo, Rich 63,140,169 Morales, linda 33 Navar, Paul 1,76 Merrick, Ellen 38 Moravosik, Prof. |. M. 85 Navarette, Rick 19 Met her, Richard 220 Moreci, |lm 1,61 Naver, Paul 20 Needham. Mark a Nell. Hector 158 Neff, lulaine 224 Nelson, Chuck as N el too, frank 2t Nelson, lamar 28 Nelson, Laura 39 Nelson, Maggie 31 Nelson, Margaret 191 Nelson, 1 amar 224 Nemcck, At 158 Nesbit, Cinda 36 Nessim, Ron 61 Neobarth. |eff 21 Neubarth, |ef 21,302 Neubauer. |elf 28 Neuffer, Garth 19 Neuffer, Garth 1,61 Neuman. Kathy 224 Newell, Anita 32 Newell, Mike 39 Newman. Bill 21 Newth, Dkk 67 NG, Kin Mo 34 Niccoli , Dorothy 224 Nichols, Robert 224 Nkol, Sue 32 Ni« ra, Al 43 Nidwee, Clare 224 Nielven. luev 21 Nikoloev, Julian SS Niland, Joyce 224 Nilmeier, Conrad 1,74 Nilmeier, Conrad 224 Nimmer, Dvid 56 Nip, Terry 34 Nithinaka. Bob 30 Nishinaka, Robert 225 Niihino, Vin 34 Nitta, Kathy 39 Nixon, Julie 41 Noble, Id 36 Nogale , Irma 225 Noguchi, NeLson 225 Nomeflini, Mary 225 Nonnenberg. Wade 1,74 Nonnenberg, lane 225 Noonan, |im 43 Noonan, Tim 172.173 Nordstog. Kim 42 Nordian, George 42 Norris. Kiti 28 Norton, Jeff 169 Norton, Kathleen 225 Norxille, John 59 No ier, Steve 43 No worthy. Drew t40 Not , Thierry 30 Nuane , lohn 57 Nugent, Mike Nybcrg. Dave 63 59 Nyhart, Nick 54 O'Donahue. Marty 167 O'Gara, Marie 27 O'Keefe, Marcy 193 O'Leary, Kevin 1.78 O'Meara, France 191 O'Neill, Terry 51 O'Rourke. Maureen 59 O'Rourke, Mike 64 O'Hara, Steve 225 O'Leary, Kevin 18 O'Rourke, Michael 225 Oba, Wayne : Obar, Dave 41 Oberhelman. Tom 1,76 Oberhelman, Tom 63 Oddie. |im 38 Odell, Timothy 225 Ogata, Jeff 34 Ogden. Jeff 34 Ogletree, Charle 28 Ogletree, Charles 225 Onta, lark 52 Oka awa, June 54 Okumoto, Sonny 38 Olenchalk. John 140,169,170 Olinchalk, John 145 Oliveira, Prof. Nathan 91 Olmvtead. Prof, fmily 88 Olmvtedt, Scott 43 Olney, lenny 39 Olsen, Shirley 49 Olven, Shirley 225 Olvon, Craig 20 Olson, Dave 31 Olton. Doug 59 Olton, lev 43 OI on. Rob 63,140 Omachi, Ann 41 Omiya, Gail 35 Omiya, Gail 225 Ong, Mci-lln 192 Ong, Ted 38 Ong. Tony 64 Ong Mei-lin 225 Orlean, Dave 47 Ormst, Urvula 33 Ortiz, Keith 150.1S2 Ortolano, Prof. Leonard 94 Ovbum, Richard 225 Ovenba ugh. Irik 68 Ovhettky, Bob 66 Ovtgarde, Deni e 49 Ostrom, Sig 140,143.145 Oitrow, Loren 43 Oswald. Scott 225 Oltilit, Bob 67 Ottmar, Dave 1,76 Ouric-ff, Martha 225 Oval, John 37 Owen . Margaret 28 Pabst, Paul S9 Palin, Drew 140,143 Palmer, flame 62 Palmieri, Pam 1.94 Panetti. Jeff 65 Pape. Terry 140 Pappat, Ted 140 Pappert.Sam 64 Parietti, Jeff 148.169 Park, Collin 39 Parker, Aliton 31 Parker, David 31 Parker, (d 36 Parker, Scott 21 Parkt, Laura 31 Parne , Annettee 32 Parnc . Barbara 26 Parr. Barry 38 Parry .Parry 38 Parry, Bryce 41 Parvini, Rick 63 Parson . Bill 67 Parson , lulie 225 Pascal, Sieve 43 Pastrana, Carlo 33 Pastre, Laura 39 Patterson, Robi 59 Patterson, Tim 155,156.1S7 Patterson, Robin 225 Pauli , Paul 28 Paul on, David 41 Payne. Marjorie 46 Payne, Tom 52 Peabody.Carey 41 Peake, Matthew 225 Pearvon, Irik 35 Pearson, Jerold 225 Peck, Caroline 33 Peck. Mike 1.74 Peckham. Pal 20 Pederson, Tom 1,76,78 Pcdreira, Tom 152 Pelesh, Mark 225 Pel ish, Mark 62 Pellegrim, Rem 68 Peniche, Lori 32 Pennington, Scott 225 Penrose. Dan 19 Pepper. Jan 192 Peroival, John 62 Percy, Mark 61 Perez, Dave 37 Perez, Dave 1,62 Perrine, Bill 27 Perry, Al 1,76 Perry, Tom 64 Peschke-Koedt. lisa Peters, Anne 52 Peters, Eud 149 Peters, Dale 27,156,1S7 Peters, Pete 37 Peters, Rick 56 Peters, Ursi 42 Petersmeyer, Wendy 50 aWWomi ? iMMSSEfl Featuring: -import ana iom stic cheese SarkJu ich«S -atUrift} atxi portij planning hrt fOo is †kVi; italian,and WsW mcat6 0C6 Rooimsou wh SWoppUj Center ift the Y O.1 tWlttt Hot V. S'7 men-sat 11-5 50 1 r tupw c: iwtisxb Palo AJio. San Mateo El Toro SPORT vudu S..„nn SHOP P.O Son 519. Polo Alio. Co. 94302 T l.pho« (415) J23-4651 ray Peterson, Don 43 Peterson, Karen 5S Peterson, Kurt 366 Peterson, lee 52 Peterson, X. 59 Peterson, Call 225 Peterson, lewis 22S Peterson, Timothy 226 Petlitt, Teri 28 Petri, Victori 226 Pet rod, Ralph 52 Pet roll, Ralph 226 Pettimger, George 59 Pettinger, George 1,74 Pettinger, George 1.74 Pettinger, George 226 Pfeffer, Tom 27 PTeider, Ceorge 149 Pfeiffer, lise 35 Pfeiffer, Skip 63 Pfeiffer, lise 226 Pfiefle, Geegee 26 PhHps, Mary 42 Pheips, Mary Phifer, Brook 226 43 Phillips, Gary SS Phillips, Jeff 65 Phillips, Mike 40 Phillips, Ralph 37 Phillips, Ralph 1,76 Phillips, Susie 49 Phillips, Bradley 226 Phillips, Eric 226 Phillips, G. Scott 226 Phillips, Susie 226 Phillips, Thomas 226 Phillipson, Margaret Pian, Tom 226 22 Pick. Mark 52 Pick, Murray 19 Pickerall, Steve 60 Pierce, Ann 32 Pigott, John 140 Pigott, John 1,71 Pigott, Mark 48 Pike, Rob 64 Pike, Tom 140 Pike, Tom 1,76 Ping,Micheal 56 Pino, Raul 42 Pinto, Dennis 303 Pitchford, Gary 68 Pitchford, Gary 1,62 Pitchford, Tom 32,169 Pittinger, lynn 21 Pitts, lianc 27 Plaisauce. loel 68 Pletcher, Beth 27 Poaany, Ursula Polldocf, Tim 56 41 Polidorod, Constantine 226 Polls, Emily 49 Ponder, Michael 226 Poneman, Dave 226 Pong, Michael 226 Popma, |eff 30 Poroskl, Marty 61 Porras, Cindy 61 Porras, Cindy 61 Porter, Ted 29 Portssood. Timothy 284 Port ssood, Tim 67 Post, lames 226 Pothod, Clark 303 Potter, Evin 41 Potts, Tom 1,61 Poturica, Trank 28 Poullon, Ken 31 Pound, Nick 61 Powell, Jon 18,152 Powell, lirsda 19 Powell, Marshia 50 Powell, Mary 38 Powell, Steve 21,152 Powell, Tyrone 28 Powell, Marsha 226 Powell, Tyrone 226 Powers, |an 42 Pratt, Steve 64 Presnall, Tanya 27 Press. Weston 31 Press, Weston 1,77 Price, Tom Tuna 39,66 Price, Thomas 226 Priddle, f red 149 Primeal, Michelle 39 Prina, Dean 226 Procter, Glenn 66 Pronty, Alice 29 Proven ano. Greg 56 Puente, Martina 226 Purcell, Jennifer 42 Purcell, Tom 68,150 Pursely, Dewayn 18 Pursley, Dewaync 1,76,78 Pyka, Walt 34 Pyke, Greg 66 Pyne, Dan 59 Quan, Rick 61 Quick, Rob 21 Quigley, X. S9 R 30 Rabinod, Wendy 61 Rabst, Paul 22S Racin, Jack 61 Radock, Willism 226 Rafferty, John 48 Raimondi, Renee 226 Raischy, 8rian 59 Ralston, Bill 68,149 Ralston, William 226 Ramek, leo 52 Ramirez, Tomasa 226 Ramsey, Janey Randall. Rob 49 67 Rappaport. Jum 1.61 Rasmussen, layne 226 Rattcy, Alex 60 Ray, James 226 Rayas, Maria 226 Raymond, Phil 26 Read, Nancy 49 Reading. Carl 22 Rcarsob, Howie 65 Reavley, Maria Rebholr. Prof. Ronald 227 84 Rector, Rich 67 Rector, Richard 227 Redden, George 41 Redden, George 227 Redding, Doug 66 Reed, Debra 33 Reed, Robin 28 Reed, Christine 227 Rehbock, Anna 50 Reic hart, Ann 40 Reidy, Brendon 227 Reiss, Gary 41 Reiss, Steve 49 Reit es, James 285 Remson, Ken 21 Remson, Ken 1,76 Remson, Prof. Irwin 97 Reyneke, Robert 227 Reynolds, Craig 1,61 Reynolds, Craig 1,61 Reynolds. Kathy 227 Rhatigan.Sean 27 Rhodes, John 59 Rhodes, John 227 Ricci, Mike 39 Richard, Charlie 32 Richards, Bruce 68 Richardson, Gary 52 Richardson, Nathan 28 Richter, Catherina 227 Rider, Elizabeth 227 Riegel, Gordie 140,14S Rifken, William 227 Rifkin, Bill 52 Rike, Robert 226 Riley, Kenneth 28 Riley, Prince 28 Riley, Thyra Hinder. Sue 227 38 Ringo, Tom 47 Riter, Russ 57 Rivers, Prof. William 85 Roach, Jennifer 227 Robb. Robbie 149 Robb. Walter 63 Robbins, Bruce 48 Robbins, Bruce 227 Roberts, Allen 27 Roberts, John Paul 54,150 Roberts, Janet 227 Roberts, Kingsley 227 Roberts, Nancy 227 Robertson, Marsha 18 Robertson, Prof. C. 95 Robertson, Bill 67 Robins, Didi 118 Robinson, Bruce 68 Robinson, Bruce 1,62.65 Robinson, Gene 28 Robinson, Matt 21 Robinson, Rob 42 Robinson, David 227 Robinson, Peter 227 Robles, Elena 33 Robles, Elena 227 Rodrigues. Dave 40 Rodriguez, Alicia 20 Rodriguez, Glenn 65 Rodriguez, David 227 Rodriguez, Maria 227 Rogal, Don 40 Rogers, |ohn 54 Rogers, Julianna 46 Rogers, Sue 20 Rogers, Vic 41 Rogers, Angel Rogers, Barbara 227 227 Rogers, David Rohn, Jeff 227 63 Roland, lexann 226 Romingcr, Joe 39 Rondeau. Bob Dogdoe 66 Rondeau, Mike 66 Rondeau, Robert 226 Roos. John 40 Rosekind, Garry 20 Rosenbaum, lee 28 Rosenberg, Becky 49 Rosenberg, Randy 39 Roscnblum, Prof. Barb 82 Rosenblum, leremy 226 Rosenburg, Gordie Rosenfeld, Daniel 20 226 Rosenthal, libby 20 Rosenthal, Marian 226 Rotenwakf, lonnie S4 Rosenzwicg. Vicc-Pres. 101 Rosevear, Mary Ann 39 Ross, Sheri S4 Ross, linda 226 Ross, William 226 Rosskopf. lames 226 Rossncr, Otto 69 Role!, Marie-f raise isco 56 Roux, Brian 60,152,153 Rosve, Jeff 62 Rowe, Marianne 226 Rowen, Bob 2,21 Rowen, Keith 140 Rowett, Kent 20 Royal. Karen Ruben, Ira 50 61 Rubenson, Dan 59 Rubin, Daniel 226 Rubinelli, Joseph 226 Rudd, Nancy 39 Ruddock, Steve 40 Ruddock. Stephen 226 Ruddy, Karl 30 Ruddy, Paul 18 Rudman. Dave 57 Ruelz, Joseph Runket, Rick 226 66 Runzp, lynn 38 Russell, Holly 41 Russell, John 43 Russell, Scott 157 Russell, Scott 1,77 Russell, Steve 19 Rutherford, Scott 18 Rutherford. Ceorge 226 Rutherford. Timothy 226 Rutter, Debbie 40 Rytial, Jill 56 Rytavy, Peter 30 Ryska, Tom 140 Rystrom, Eric 35 S 305 Sackman.Kathy 192 Sadler, Tom 68 Saiidi, Mahammed 56 Sakaguchi. Scott Sakahara, Steven 226 226 Sakitt, Prof. Barbara 81 Salazan, Ramiro 33 Saldana. Noelia 33 Salego. David 226 Salomone, Jerry 20 Sammartino, fred 41 Sampson, Margaret 37 Samscl, Peter 43 Sanchez, Hank 31 Sanchez, Ruben 20 Sanchez.Simon 36 Sander, Ricardo 226 Sanderson, Beef 66 Sanderson, Brian 226 Sandoval, Anthony 148,169,170 Sandoval, Tony 68 Sanner, Sharon 41 Santini, Primo 59 Sapp. Rick 19 Sailer, Warren 6 Sauer, Jo 18 Sauer, Jo 226 Saunders. Paul 68 Savage, .Mark 55 Savage, Neil 55 Saviano. Nick 172,173 Savori, lisa 20 Sawyer, Carol SO Sawyer, Steve 35 Sawyer, O. 305 Scammel, Greg Scarborough, larry Scarlett, Bob 38 20 39 Scarpino. Tom 39 Sc hacht, Jeanne 31 Scharffenberger, |im 1,62 Schatzman, Suzi 190 Schatzman. Susy 226 Schechter.John 37 Scheible, Ben 226 Sc her, Danny 57 Schienfield. Miriam 59 Schier, Bob 41 Sc hier, Robert 226 Schiffcr, Alan 59 Schireson. Cliff 293 Schireson, Clifford 226 Schlafly, Ted 60 Schlotter, Nick 40 Schmeling, Dave Schmidt, Dan 1,61 41 56 STOWS 6 SERVICES EOR YOUR CONVENIENCE OPEN EVENINGS SUNDAYS a SHNFORtf SHOPPING CENTER Schmidt, Herb 149 Schmitz, Robin 31 Schneider, Toby 20 Schncil. Deborah 229 Schoen rock, Mark 30 Schofield, Kevin 43 Schongalla. Nancy School, Shirley 31 190,191 Schottemtcin, Iddic 266 Schreibcr, Dave 168 Schultz, lane 190 Schumacher, Mike 54 Schutt, Randy 33 Schwab, Alan 36 Schwab, Lawrence 229 Schwartz, Amy 52 Schwartz, |oe 20 Schwartz, Iordan 39 Schwartz, Mike 47 Schwartz, Sam 60 Schwartz. Amy 229 Sc h ween. Donna 229 Schwcinfurth, Bill 64 Schweitzer, td 68.1SS, 1S6,157 Schwimmcr, |udy 39 Sc ilaooi, Carol 229 Sc illacci, Carol 51 Scott, Cindy 47 Scott, Jim 68 Scott, Malcolm 1,61 Scott, Stan 169 Scott, Stanley 1,61 Scott. Stanley 1,61 Scott, Cindy 229 Scott, Jame 229 Scaly, loan 229 Seaman, Bryant 46 Seaman, Chris 64.284 Seaman, Matt 37,169 Seaman, Bryant 229 Sean 66 Sean, Richard 229 Seed, Marie 229 Seet.liz 229 Sefferman, Toby 68 Segal, Jeff 31 Segar, Bob 68 Seggerman, Toby Seifert, George 69 140 Seiff, Stu 152 Server, Adam 229 Semba, Bob 40 Senko, Bonnie 48 Senko, Bonnie 229 Sorctan, Mort 60 Scrnock, Barry 64 Session. Warner 1,77 Selrakian, Scott 39,63 Sever, lorn 57 Sexton, Mike 61 Shaffer, Bob 68 Shafer, Bill 60 Shamshoian, Gary 1,61 Shanager, Dennis 31 Shanagher, Dennis 167 Shanaghcr, Dennis 1,76 Shanley, frank 63 Shanner, Bob 30 Shapiro, Dave 19 Shapiro, Ron 41 Shapiro, Larry 229 Shapiro, Ron 229 Sharp, Dave 67 Shaver, Bob 167 Shaw, Makeline 50 Shaw, Wayne 40 Shaw. Willie 140 Shearer, Alivon 52 Shoals. Al 19 Shcats, Alan 169,170 Sheehan, Casey 60 Sheehy, lim 36 Sheehy, Tim 229 Sheft, Stan 38 Shelton, Terry 28 Sheng, Diane 229 Shenvi, Ashok 56 Shepard. Prudy 39 Shepard. Ruth 229 Shephard, Rick 52 Shepherd. Mike 68 Shepherd. Steve 20 Sheport, Jill 229 Sher. Adrian 37 Shi, Steve 41 Shimada. Keiko 52 Shimdon, Risa 51 Shires, Paul SS Shoemaker, Stan 31 Shon, Ronald 229 Shore, Dave S2 Shotz, Mark 61 Shouse, Lari 229 Shropshife. Ken 140 Shropshire, Ken 1,76 Shuman, Moose 18 Shumway, Sara 39 Shuput. Steve 1,76 Shutleff, Mark 68 Shurtleff, Mark 229 Shusang, Paisal 30 Shutt. |ohn 64 Sidak, Greg 33 Siegal, Shelby 42 Siegd, Andy 41 Siegfried, Virginia 229 Siemans, leff 63 Siemens, Jeff 140 Siena, Kathy 46 Siena, leagal Advisor 103 Siever. Adam 38 Sikes, Terry 229 Simaon, Joel 131 Simek, |an 119 Simeon, Sam 66 Simnet, Richard 56 Simon, Margie so Simon, Leslie 229 Simons, Mike 68,156,1S7 Simons, Prof. Robert 99 Simpkins, Diane 229 Simpson, Jim 67 Sinclair, Walt 60 Sinclair, lames 229 Single, Doug 140 Single, Doug 1,76 Singlcr, Bill 140 Singleton. Nancy 40 Sklar, Terri 49 Sklar. Teri 229 Skaurav, Damaris 39 Skrabo, Paul 140 Slack. 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Dave 68 Sullivan. Kevin 68 Sullivan, Kevin 1,62,65 Sullivan. Matt 1S2 Sullivan. Kevin 231 Suit zman, Rick 41 Summers, Dan 66 Sumner, Michad 231 Sundermaycr, Kim 43 Sundheim, Duf 140 Sundhelm, Goerge 231 Suniville, Gerald 52 Sunseri, Prof. Mary 92 Sutherland. Ken 31 Sulthoff, John 59 Sutton, Dave 30 Suty, Joe 68 Swanberg, Steve 47 Swanbcrg, Janet 231 Sweet, |im 49 Swcetman, Bob 1,61 Sweetman, Karin 231 Swerdlow. |on 54 Swift, Carlcton 231 SWN 308 Sycip, George 34 Sylvester, Dave 20 Syme, William 195 Szcto, Ernest 34 Tada, Amy 48 Taguchi, Mark 1,61 Tai, Ernie 43 Takahashi, John 231 Talson, Jennifer 28 Tanaka, Mike 19,158 Tanaka, Mike 1,59 lanaka, Terrill 42 Tanbara, Diane 52 w DICK TENGE Owner Bo . Phone 323-0251 328 129 Tang, Camille 42 Tang, Roger 34 Tjng, Paul Tanji, |c(f 231 31 Tannin, Charlie 1,76 lathima. 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Albert 20 Tipton, Tom 63,140 Todd, Mike 68 Todd, Tracy Toenjes, John 50 18 Toliver, Derek 231 Tolies, Roy 48 Tolies, Roy lolmatolf, Robert 1,61 231 Totton, Orian 231 Tom, Terry 231 Tom, Terry 231 Toman, Mary 49 Tompkins. Joan 39 Tonal, Valerie 293 Tong, Debbie 27 Tonn, Burce 38 Toribara, Neil 64 Tormet, Kathy 19 Torr, Vcesy 43 Toscano, Jim 31 Totoritis. Mark 68 Townes, Steve 41 I owntend. Sc otter 42 Trafton, Kathy 39 Trevino, Jesse 60 Trevino, Rod 20 Tribby, David 231 Triggs, Kevin Trimble, Myra 1,78 231 Trimpi, Erica 51 Trivino, Mike 60 Irobbe. Scott 68.15S, 156,157 T rob! e, Scott 68,155,1 S6,157 Irobbe, Scott 231 I rompas, Aly 66 Trompas, Aly 1,74 T rompas, Steven 231 Truav, Cathy 20 True , Pete 64 Trumball, Bob 30 Trupin, Beth 32.192 Trusty, |aon 38 Tucher, Randy 19 Tucker, Randy 169 Tuffanelli, Lucia 27 T uge, Carol 28 Turner, Bruce 31 Turner, Eric 31 I urner, Gayle 33 Turner, Rich 1,76 Turner, Vincent 231 Tulhill, Jay 68 Tuthlll, lay 232 Tuttle, Prof. David 95 Tuttle, Rick 68 Tuttle, Catherine 232 Twhigg, Alan 35 Tyran, Cary 65 Tyron, Carry 232 Uhannabha. Duke 43 Underwood. Carolyn 39 CONGDON CROME, INC. Underwood, Chip 64.140 Underwood. Chip 1.76 Underwood. Gerald 232 Uribie, Erank 66 Urquidi. Joe 66 Uyeshiro, Robin 158 Valdez. Bob 1.76 Valdez, Rob 32 Valent, |o 27 Valenti, Jo 232 Valeriote, Catherine 232 Van Antwerp, Jim 27 Van Schotcn. Diane 32 Van Valkenberg, Dave 41 Vance, Dave 63 Vane her. Brad 61 Vandervald, lee 195 Vanderveld, lee 232 Vanduten, Joanne 232 Vanoot, Peter 28 Vanzandt, Craig ISO. 152 Vargas, Bobby 20 Vargas, Phil 20 Vargas, Dave 67 Vasquez, Mario 67 Vaughn, lack 36 Veach. Marlene 49 Veach. Marlene 232 Vegdahl, Steve 46 Vender, Mike 20 Vento, linda 42 Vernon, libby 27 Vibert, laurie 27 Vlener, Bob 57 Viener, Robert 232 Vilken, Peter 61 Viswanathan, Meera 18 Vitek. Chuck 69 Vobcjoa, Robert 20 Vogen, Paul 64 Volnot, Andrea 41 Von Hafften, Sebellc 42 Voss, Dave 40 Vossder, Chris 27 Vosseler, Chris B. 287 Vyehara, Mark « WaldvogH, lerry 66.140,141 Wacker, Caesar 62 Wagcneckt, Ann 59 Wagcner, lay 232 Wagenknecht, lynn 232 Wager, Wayne 153 Wager, Wayne Baby 66 Waggoner, lanet 35 Wagner, Beth 30 Wagner, Jay 49 Wagner, Kerry 36 Wagner, Rod 41 Wagner, Todd 66 Wagner. Willis 68 Wagstaffe. |im 19 Wahn. Steve 30 Wainright, Tom 22 Wakyk, Pat 49 Wald, Jeff 49 Wald, led 34 Waldvogel. lerry 140,141 Walker, Ann 29,190 Walker, Dave 140 Walker. 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