Wheaton College - Tower Yearbook (Wheaton, IL)

 - Class of 1976

Page 1 of 354

 

Wheaton College - Tower Yearbook (Wheaton, IL) online collection, 1976 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 354 of the 1976 volume:

l K i V r s r 1 4- .. -Y - 'YJ-,-5 J v jz 1 r TOWER ' published by and for the students of WI-IEATON CGLLEGE WHEATON, ILLINOIS zum: -1-- w- Y . ww- V' H Q ., V' 1 .- .w ., .X Q. . +5 W' -. - ff 'iff' -' F w-Q.-Q: ,' ' -' ,. x . g www svlfiff. ff' 1' ' 1: Qu U is F2v..'u14?43 1... ' w . . 1' f' ' ww- -A -1-xv ,iff nw. . x ' 1 '-ff -1' . - ' Q fi ...N . N K , 'b, ,mx fa,-my N t X 4 . Xp .f,.,,.-,M . . 4. - . ae.: u 311.-. ' .1 Mg 411- , . ' - , -. ' . ' ' C' 4 '+r,,1iw-9 f1'i27'.'x .. .. I iff .. f f 4' T A :fi , 'lf '45 --1. ' 2 5 ' . f . Q ' 2,6 1 -I ,fy . hxwl ... ' -G '?,-,qgflp-.'1.' x yv. 4g,g,,f, , fLg.12, ,-.Q T y ., . . -' ' . ff? ,LX ' A if 553- J.: - 1' '34 T'Z. ,S -E ' .Q A f an 1' f . r .4 , .4.,- QR- ff, Fig . .. Asvgq-vig .Z . .gf .-,W , , 4 1 If . . 'M' .' 55 1 v U . x U 'fa 4 -' fulx ' :J -' ,cf ' ' 1 ' V R- J' . V . , V, V V . 5- KA.. , ..V , , 4 ,. .T U 1 . ., .' :wr K 5- , S ,.,V-11 V .5 V V V :F V X. V f' ,.. , V 1 N .A V X. VXV F, L., . 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' -.., , feb ' - ' 2 1 , .. ' . ,W In . Q: -s 2.1. - 5. .5-.--' '- A fix I -,ai . . : 9, gg . , V. VV, ,V .. . . l3 ',,Q' .4 J x fr ey- - f..-4, af, ' - ' ' W V All. . , '79 ' :I fl si ' .f 5 f,,N.. 'J . f -1 , , Q.-, - : K x ,, . -.v.,,gr'. A , 1 . YI... ew, gifs f' X ' , ,. mio. G. fe' 5 5 . J, wr , ,. . . ,',. . 2' 4 V .,-,.A.,,1 11... -.-1n1L,,..,. ,, .,... .. ' M' ',, .f ..- Ml: 44.41, -- .J I' T UNDER CONSTRUCTION: YOU by Susan Woodcock be-come: v.i., to grow to beg change or develop into by growth. be-com-ing: n., the change from non-being to being, a coming into existence. Webster's New World Dictionary The Wheaton student, as a member of the high-caliber Christian body of Wheaton College, often feels in- adequate. The people around him seem so strong in their functions for the Lord. He forgets that growing has an i-n-g on the end . . . Well, sir, said the proverbial patient on the proverbial couch, I think I have a wounded self- esteemf' It's no laughing matter that many psychologists feel their clients' problems stem from a low view of self. And Christians may have a unique brand of that problem, due to a fundamental paradox in their faith and up- bringing. Committing one's life to Christ means two things as far as the self is concerned. In our repentance we recognize our own limitations, and our incapacity to do anything good on our own. This crushes the spirit within us, and intentionally so, because then an awareness of God's love and grace follows. Even so, the reception of grace, Uunmerited favor, leaves no room for pride, and only a seemingly usurped sense of worth. God did not elect a people to be un- happy, insecure, and depressed! Therefore a view of the Christian life that makes it unhealthily humble must not be right. The Christian has supposedly found real purpose for his existence. He deserves some good feeling about it. Assigning your little sister the responsibility of stirring the pud- ding will probably make her feel quite important. Meaning in life comes from the feeling of being useful, as well as the feeling of being loved. Paul teaches in his epistle to the Corinthians that each Christian fits into the Body of Christ for a tailored function of his own, by which he glorifies God. We are created unequal-in talents, said Dr. Mitchell in his February 27 chapel message. It seems, then, that no Christian should worry about his own value, since he has a divine commission to carry out during his lifetime. The problem might be that we Christians think of our position in God's kingdom as a role rather than a commission, as a goal to strive for rather than as a life to live daily. We think, I'll be a minister, a Chris- tian bank president, a loving mother . . . Yet even then I won't be everything I ought to be, but I'll keep trying. Does this mean that we feel of no use to God along our road to His perfection? jz God's plan for each Christian is dynamic, not static. Participants in Bill Gothard seminars each receive PHP GINF WlVIY buttons: Please be patient, God is not finished with me yet. It might help our at.- titudes to hammer a sign in the Blanchard grass reading Under Construction. Anthing helps if it helps us remember we are a flawed people, yes!-but part of a dynamic divine strategy, on our way to a glorious goal. C. S. Lewis postulates in The Great Divorce that even in the mountains of Heaven the believer ever journeys 'Lfurther up and further in. The man Jesus underwent a maturing process, according to Luke 2:40. That CSC participant, or diligent scholar, or kind friend you admire is by no means perfect. Everyone at Wheaton College is growing and reaching. Don't hide the growing pains! Instead, exult in the many ways God works in our lives. The Bible con- tains three images of God working with the Chris- tian. which TU WER offers on these pages for your insight and joy. We call the combination Bet-omingf' with an i-n-g, because it's still going on . . . 6 S Our life is created, reconciled, and redeemedg it finds in Jesus Christ its origin, its essence, and its goal . . Christ says the 'yes' to what is created, to becoming and to growth, to the flower and to the fruit .... -Dietrich Bonhoeffer I X ,gd 'X-K-...Hu srh God Our Cultivator At Wheaton certain kinds of experience include us all. We take in the same classes, the same special events, and the same chapel messages. But in these common denominators we still say sometimes, That was aimed right at me. It filled my needs. The Bible says that God is not only the Sower, but the Sustainer and the Vinedresser. He provides sun and rain, cool and heat: bread for each day's needs. He prunes our barren stalks, andpulls the weeds. Class devotions or advice from a friend can move us back on the track when we're off course. When we feel unloved, a card in CPO, a supper appointment, or a little favor from a roommate will change our mood. God provides for our every need. God also plans time for the ripening and fruition of his plants. In Psalm 1, the righteous tree brings forth fruit in its ' season. Modern Christians often get impatient with their maturity, perhaps because their instant culture offers them quick-and-easy meals and clothes, and teach-yourself-in-two weeks organ lessons and foreign languages. But our wise Farmer bides His time, knowing that as He waits, those green apples will turn red. How soon hath Time, the subtle thief of youth, Stoln on his wing my three and twentieth year! My hasting days fly on with full career, But my late spring no bud or blossom show'th. Perhaps my semblance might deceive the truth, That I to manhood am arrived so near, And inward ripeness doth much less appear, That come more timely-happy spirits endu'th. Yet be it less or more, or soon or slow, It shall be in the strictest measure even To that same lot, however mean or high, Toward which Time leads me, and the will of Heaven, All is, ifl have grace to use it so, As ever in my great Taskmaster's eye. -John Milton G od Our Craftsman When God is the Potter of our lives His workings grow even more in- dividual. He knows the material from which He formed each of us, and the functions in which we fit best. Through our learning at Wheaton and elsewhere He begins to shape us to that end. Whether the end is a career, a position, or an area of influence, rest assured of its importance. In Creation and Fall, a lecture on Genesis, Dietrich Bonhoeffer talks about molding. Yahweh shapes man with his own hands. This ex- presses two things. First, the bodily nearness of the Creator to the creature, that it is really he who makes me-man-with his own handsq his concern, his thought for me, his nearness to me. And secondly there is his authority, the absolute superiority in which he shapes and creates me and in which I worship him. Oddly enough, clay may have a will of its own. When pliant, we flow under the Potter's hands, and God has easy molding with us. If we in- sist on becoming a butter dish rather than a sugar bowl, He must take us off the wheel and knead some more. God holds the owner's manual in His hand as he watches us, and us- ing our common sense we must sub- mit to His will. The usefulness to Him makes it all worthwhile. Batter my heart, three personed Godg for You As yet but knock, breathe, shine, and seek to mendg That I may rise and stand, o'erthrow me, and bend Your force to break, blow, burn, and make me new. from Sonnet 14 John Donne sb Our Father, Our Master Designer Gordon Fee, in fall quarter Special Services, said, I love my children because they're mine. As our Father, God does not wait for the completion of our becoming to love us. And more than that, He pronounces us perfect, and uses us. In some marvelous way God has pleasure and profit from our buds, green fruit, or half-formed clay. Each student at Wheaton will grow more into his unique role of-prayer partner, astrophysicist, poet, and you- name-it! Like snowflakes we each have a different pattern. Some day fruition will come. All imperfections removed, the vessel will receive the final polish. The in- strument will fully become that which it was created and recreated to be. And we shall be like Him. Images and metaphors fail here, in that the end product attracts all the glory even when one stresses the amazing process of Christian growth. Each moment that we grow to final perfection we are perfect for God's present purposes. It is a paradox and mystery: becoming. Don't forget the i-n-gf, P 3 ' f V x ., , L . - , r .. YV,.g- --Wgl 1.1 ' Q ' -,if - ' 1' t , : -kv dawg ., n W A H lv QW, ' ' 13' I ' I kk , , U'l' 1,r T ' 4 f '- lg '1' 11.1 ev ' -H. '. . 1'5.,- ' Y. ' 1 ,pf--. . .Hp ..-f H W' J 4 41' i V - L,... 1. U, .1 V T .L . X , ' , A, , 1 -H, , . N ' vp wfz,,1:..' w- w . V 'i :5Q7 7 'l K 1 ' - -. ,- -3 'Ap : .. Q 2- . + '. , .'3-,,,.:- ' 'HH ivy? ' f-,-..,-1 .A , f hp- Ugg 'jj .,f,,-,Q -Hy., V ' Y 47 : N -:.g,'r 5,24-V, --1-jg' -v gl- ' 1 441' -W fy H , if,f--1.23 - -,Q- -:,-EL ,gf L ha, jq.Zf.ia,gfw' : w'y'6 9fj1i:2f,gi,i4 - A- Q 1 inf - . 'W -n , 4- .- W VJ- ' '- '.!v'..'- Q' -aff W -E-'5 't! ' ' ' Ty- , ,491-b. -fb R, ' 4,1 41 2, 3 5-Lg.-if A j-'WI '. , . . 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I :-. :,1:'5q1fg.i:, --,g -qs 'D f I. . -.9 . ,- rpg Q...-1 , E4 gf ? ,nj- - . ni fr .Y W . 'X 5 , - I ' fy ,, ,,,,..:'b ' fl - f 'A-,Q-3 ',.-,, ' ' 'H -'- ' -1 xr. ox '.1 w 6 -if K 'A if - -'1 I ' '.-, H .A'. ' P 1:7,- W vfjw ig yi hgh .' V5-V ,vi A if ,1,,. , e,, - 4. -,4, w -4,4 Q . U , 1 - , K . ,A . ,, , N ,1 - . 1 .77 -'vf Y'--i:,1 N,'A if ' , . ' - - .' . 'VL '.': vlfi WA, fg ' U fr-ju ,svi . . A .3 .. ..- .. , A 'W ' 1, Ni, u K . '--- 01. .. 'f :-' ' ' ,- -A I 5'y.m'5Ey1W, -2, ,'TTWqg., ' - 41 M1 uz11f,. ,N 'Qq-V-- 4 -. - f'-1hi1Sc1'! 7'9 ' , .- -,H-A -if-ffffsfr' , - .. ' , .Z 111 .X ' X ' 2 X ' . X A N af ,sn I ' , '-.1 1 ' N 'K - , 'L F 'W , b... A , -,, , ,il .,,.r ,,P.' A ,. , . Q -nf-Q. . - ' -P,-P' 4.4- - W 4 -1 4 W pf'-nf , . : ff .hx DEDICATIO We dedicate this book to Dr. Donald R. Mitchell, Vice President for Academic Affairs here since 1973. Dr. Mitchell maintains the ex- cellence of Wheaton's academic program while striving to incorporate our studies into a Christian framework. In a position which affects us all, Dr. Mitchell combines careful, yet deliberate action with wisdom and humility. He is a leader and yet a servant. While commanding our respect and admir ation, he still requires our cooperation and support. We thank you, Dr. Mitchell, for your efforts, and pledge our support as you strive to maintain Wheaton's unique atmosphere in a liberal arts framework. '- 'P fjgfkfimwl-fzw--. ,Y 1 . , .nf gm ,J -x-rfg ,.-.IJ H ,Z 51252 . 5531 j-gg, Z .125 -. 5 . ' - 55111-.12 uf:-ffqf, rapib 131 -:YPTEEYQ an , ' E15 fy Qkigflia fl was -5.l5bgf.R,2j4iw -M2 -ag-,l,i,5v,1:j, . .. i',?gi'1,i'71ff17 -inf - E .-..15g'g', 5.12 A2 xgggiff kigi 'vp fm.-. ml: .--spew, '1 i 31, 1116?-iff.. ' gfzlzgfp-3. V 11 -'.. 1?-li-51-il? 6,-.Biff 552517 f If 573' ff' -E ffQ.3S2i' MF? 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V v Q1 il- if-Hp' -,gf in 1, l.',:,- ' 'H'-4-sir.. .1 h ' x f f---- '1M ' f.. 'wif -51714 'fx ' . N-.'.,,,f' 1 1 in 34555 I, ..- . I m.,k N N Q n ' I 1 ',:'4.x, fy.-Y . Li 1 I . zr, -x,:W:wH4, ff , A: M . ,M . .,. Ai sf . . ri U5, . - i ' .M L 131, -Q. 4 .,, kv ..57f . ing, ,gf A 1. Tm , ' 25--ff ,Q -' 1' :. Lk ,N '- 1 --' , ' -H 1'?'r,i V X ' ff 1-'Mix' f5?' ffl. 'FEL . f . H: 5 Iii? .' L . 4: EWdyif+n', 4 3.-551' 4 H - K, , f,:5Pf' NX .,.g.,,,g,5iw' ?436f'W d' f ' 1' if 5' ' . . -K' 'rf ': 1' f' '3 ' -AG -- , .' -r' fl Q? rr I' ii: . ..f'Vf'5' -A :.- A ..,'v ?47 4. 4, J: .r ,Y . fig:- . . 5 J, 1 1 : 'Min P' . , af .5 .v M, .34 3 I 4 'jig ll' 5. 4 .,., L.. ll ' 2 2 -y.aP?f.-f . .a. , Z .,gJ:... ,. uni -: 'R -J Q - , ' rf . lx.- fc ,. 1 . N 4 J .5ffanf.w,'i, ,Mi 1 ,- ff 'T .Qf R. g .g,,, 1 W ff .51 3 '1 if fi , 5 .Iii , . 4, Q! ...qi X JV, . X ,gi X 1? fx. ,ff fx Q .Aw-.W I. 4.1, 6223.7 Q j iff , ,,x-Q if .Ag 9 . ' 'f .121 I X' ' wy f 1 . ' '- I . ' , ,- s 4,512 T' ' Miffl-+4 .Q .Q ,L W i .35-f ,- 1, , Q-F. N. 2'-. 1 X Q X 5' f x W, ig M ...Q srl C23 ' 557317 S3 SUITWTIS I MP X A f f ,ff n W I C1 U3 r 'EE f Qu CAS . THE FALL Today a -little boy' came pumping by the dorm, and hovering above the bar, he stretched to reach the pedals of his 'ten' spee.d. I watched him try to brake' the corner - trumpet, crinkled lunch each balanced between thumb and lhandlebar. He -missed. His wheels jumped the two-inch breech between sidewalk and lawn, Fox-holed in the grass, .a star- shapedl sprinkler head ambushed his bumping wheels and downed him like a victim of guerrilla warfare. Pinned beneath jangle of gears, his oreos ground into peanut butter apple-rcokes. The boy brushed grass crumbs off his shirt and lojoked around when he quit spinning with the spokes. Relieved that no one saw, he hugged his trumpet and wobbled away, free from jokes at his expense. There have been days we've plugged our fingers 'intof Sockets, dropped our forks, tripped up -stairs, walked into glass doors, and shrugged our sheepish shoulders - relieved we ,slipped in solitude on icy pavement. Each time we realize how easily we fall, we turn' and walk away tight-lipped like nothing happened, nakedi before hidden eyes., by Bonnie Ward ' - It W1 N ff' -A.,-I-'fhza -- -- Q ..,, n f :Q I '!o'2r X 1 'v 5 Q gig, 1 ' f- - 1- fl? LU -yi' N 5 -fhyg. . ' I, ii N.. 'Q' el L A. -t - E 420: 5 if 5' 7 ,AAG 3 'W 'S ,, . A ,. . , .. y q,..,, 1 , '53, vt-.tif Ll Wg A ry-nf'-5-QA, 6 J ' if , ff' f-V '- 4 4' 'F Ai ' ',,' .1 'ffv' 5 Af - ' 'ffx'r735 . :.. Q ,K I is , 1 4 A 6 ,N 1 ' N1 , 3.11: ' N - I '- 1 4'-Q K , ,.'. . mf qw '-1 'V . 5 ' 'savvy 533437 .ip '--'gf' 4 V X . , I H Y' ' gr -ini, ff-, A-L, 5 . - ' S A' ' 1 .fn ' w g. - -my . ' Val- . - ,, . V ' ' ' ,V f, . I 1 .Y , ,- f ' 7 , . H fm- fm- 4 -. 1 A .1 -- - --vrx -f'i 'l' Q 5. 1' fl ' ' . VV M Q V -F , , ' s' lf, , . ' .A X - 3 v 4 A . 517' .gt 'f ' L 'L F17 f ' .X - X ffl ,Q , ' ' 'Yi L i -fx ,s-J...- -G 1- , , 1- ...Aj- I.. .- ,. 4. l M i,.X ui .cf fl-J. . -' A- ff' ' . --Q ' f: 'ff V f Q- .B Q g' 'X ,. Y 5,4 -uf .N Q t 1 s '?.v, Z'--, 0' 1. .. ' L ' Q ' ',. , .i-X 1- 1-1' 14' L. . . -l 4 ,P Q -Q r' ' ' ,. , 1 I ,us ..'w.f,, 'N ,- 1'bZxEV ,fv-. ff. if li 'if ,. lfil' V dlp.. ul- . ,4 V W, ' Til .. - - ' .ul -',,, f E'9J' X, 1 - .ff ' - -'f 4 ,L - . u .W P - as? 91 igni- f - ,'5 l . ' , --. - ,nw '- '4 9fL f gf?-:4 4- . -'- ' , . --5 - 'fl -A D' :P ,-?'xr'Ng,. - -. -ff ,-.wi A X. I, , ', .-P I '-J, 3 h' 7.4, 1' ,Q . -Q , K- f. nl J . ' r X ,- , . - J- . fl. , 5 . M F ' .' w ' . ', ' .-1' 4 -sf . N R: N? ',-AT'-5 A X :,.1f, I VV vw! X 2,-lu,-I i...4, - 'lr-I. I -N -.VN X I-5 f'?f!5KbkS-gg? j . Q -V w .- .. ., . . . fr .. , 1'4 k'N N xg .5 1' 6 . 2 az- 'fgi' , - ff- , A hiv - -- - - L.,.' ,,-, xu' U Qs' x Xfv A A t fu -,,, ' 'ff -- 'Y' -'f' 'Q - ,L -rf W 'I' if ava' xl 3,951 A - 1 1 . , '-' ' r.. , J . F.. - ,. M F e.. -x S., s it . N. v ,H ' X 'Jf' 'L' ' ' ', 4 - ' 'UW Q ff 4 1' no Silwg , 'W :Tw N? '...-.,' I liked: I WI-IE TO N WI-IE TO the relaxed atmosphere-even Pre-Meds weren't competitive! everyone being in the same boat, whether lang- uage or science. the pick-up softball games. living above the guys in Traber. the midnight meetings on the stairwell. seeing Dr. Ryken in short sleeves and no tie. wearing shorts to all my classes. socializing with my profs-like once we had submarine sandwiches with Dr. Fiess. knowing I would see the same, few people every day. the whole quarter. It was one of my best. didn't like: spending my summer looking at books. physics. having girls on the top floors of Traber was . . . weird. four labs a week. having to go to the same classes every day. not having time to see my girlfriend. only having three people in my German class. I didn't have anyone to hide behind! dr V 19 .., f. J W I HP, Wiki ? T mm ummm A . gf an H 1 xx . ...M LVN, ,gl x gf J G I X W XML mx fain fi., -' 'A' s ll W' 1 Y 7 auf Rf' I I 'Ni' 'I 1 ' ' If I J 1 I cy N , iris ,lux f , - WX. 'Y ' A IIKQ' Qf f, I, Q 2 My 1 JXJ5, I tix M , , ' f ' 59 1 4 'TWA - ll ,. .1 '.'.l' w - If 31 A f .l... .... L... .1 K. '- 'X We 14' Y! K X W ,ARE P11091 LJ , Z! I R 1 X f -f , f' ,rf ,f A . 'Nm N , luv, X f XX ' ,Y f K M WX m J.L. FORM Joel Sheesley and a stat1on wagon full of students takmg a summer study tour of museums and small gallenes of art COLOR After frndmg out whlch college or umverslty we were staylng at for the mght we were each pretty much on our own for meals srghts and subways The major museums gave us a better v1ew of what we had only seen 1n books before But they were drv compared to the small gallerles that showed whats really happenlng today ln art The hours of standmg 1n concentratlon got to be emotlonally exhaustmg LINE from Chlcago to Toledo to Cleveland to Boston to New York C1ty to Phlladelphla to Washmgton to Prttsburgh and back ln three weeks of July and August TEXTURE Slttrng 1n front of the Jackson Pollock ln the Museum of Modern Art CNew Yorkl was l1ke meeting the President or somethmg I llked the museum gardens I New York and Boston It felt l1ke we were meetxng the greats The best part was not the hxstorrcal but the contemporarv We were all exc1ted to fmd that people are st1ll pamtrng ARE YOU T KI G ME FOR GR ITE'?,' Granite changes to gneiss only when it contacts heat and pressure. Black Hills '75 was an intense summer of contact, and all who went came back with a bit of inner metamorphosis. We lived in close contact with profs and their families, those great people of science who took their work so seriously . . . Doc DeVries: Can Doc come out and play? Sure, let me get my soccer shoes! Nancy Perrin: reported kidnap- ping a VW at 2 a.m. finals' night. Dr. Bruce: seen leading his' troop of Bio Beasties Crnajorsl off to the bushlands at 5 a.m. in search of the 50 bugs and 50 birds out there somewhere. Doc Leedy: frequently trailed by a marching line of Bio Beasties singing Happy Little Morons to the tune of Frere Jacques. Doc Van Dyke: overheard giving the Baby Bios Cnon-rnajorsl his famous lecture series on the sex life of the pine cone. Doc Luckman: don't know about you folks, but I certainly don't want to cook out in the rainf' We in turn took our studies very seriously. Is this rhyolitic porphyry or porphyritic rhyolite? Botany kids fell exhausted on the pool deck after a rigorous morning picking wildflowers. One unavoidable area of contact was with each other. Six kids per bunkroom, plus mice and hiking boots, called for close fellowship! With weekly campouts and field trips, we spent hours in the blue Dodge vans, literally thrown together on winding mountain roads. We worked in crews to set up camp and shivered together-10 to a tarp-under the bright Dakota stars. Some of us became instant buddies, others needed a summer of painful growth to reach a casual conversation stage. We contacted Nature, crawling, hiking, tubing, and climbing all over them hills, from the murky depths of Jewel Cave to Harney Peak's summit, from icy Rapid Creek to the jagged cliffs of John- son's Siding. Nature contacted us with a mid- summer tornado that felled trees and whipped tents right out of the ground. These daily contacts-the fellowship, studies of God's beautiful, orderly crea- tion, and quiet times alone-brought us closer to the people and the earth, close to God's own heart. We came back to the indoor campus with fossil bookends, a few cases of poison ivy, and some fresh green leaves of inner growth. j.w.Y Above: The tourists pause by Tokyo's Imperial Palace. Below: Steve Hortegas and Hong Kong friends. Fac- ing Page: The hronze Chung-hwa Buddha in Taiwan. ORIE TAL Even National Geographic Magazine doesn't begin to picture the beauty or the contrasts of East Asia. Stooped workers in rice fields and gray- suited international bankers are both distinct, vital forces in Eastern culture. Experiences alien to other Wheaton programs kept the trip ex- citing and unpredictable for Mr. Weber, the Hagners, and the fourteen students. Where else can a student climb a hill overlooking Mainland China and stand for a half hour in the rain taking pictures and dodging the ladies selling paper fans? How many Wheaton students take a quiz on a bus at 5:30 a.m.'? When else can a person OCCIDE climb through Buddahls nostril, thereby securing his future in heaven? Temples formed the common element of the countries visited: Zen temples, Shinto shrines, Buddhist temples, and Tao temples. tBy the end of the trip the group referred to this phenomenon fondly as TTT: Taiwan Temple Tor- ture.J The cuisine challenged even the most trained tastebuds. Seaweed soup, fish eyes, octopus, pigeon eggs, and fried red beans we recall as Chopefullyj once in a lifetime gourmet experiences. The distinctiveness of the Orient can- not be expressed by photographs or ar- ticles. The confusing neon signs in characters and the jabber in 4-toned Chinese took away most of the Westerner's security and confidence, but offered a new type of in- dependence. Just walking down the unfamiliar streets provided the plea- sant sensation of exploring the un- known. Like waking in a dream world, the scenes of Asia became vitally alive: 110 degree weather, the smell of open markets, the vibrant colors of Chinese temples contrasting with the subdued simplicity of Shinto shrines. The Orient is unpredictable, beyond systemization. To begin to know it, you must experience it. l l A NOVEL SUMMER QWHAT THE DICKENS?J V.. S.R. ENGLAND-THOUGHTS, FROM Oh, to be in England Now that June is there And whoever wakes in London Smells bookstores in the air, And stands in queues and takes his tea, Explores museums and history, Reads Dickens novels in the park, Sees Shakespeare after dark. When July and August follow There's Oxford, and time to wallow In the glory of the roses, Cathedrals, scholars, spiresg To see where Herbert's form reposes, And where Byron lit his fires! Let.'s punt down the Cherwell River. CKidney pie? well, just a sliver . . .J Ride a bike to C. S. Lewis' home, Visit Stonehenge, write a poem. England, ever courteous, now pompous, now plain, Keep your flowers, books, and custard 'til we return again! with apologies to Robert Browning HOME Left: Merrie Olde England liveth on. Facing Page, Above: Glast.onbury Tor. Left: Vendor on London's Portobelo Road. Right: Arthur's Round Table, maybe? 27 OUVENIR DE LA FRA CE For thirty-eight Wheaton students, France will never be the same. It moved from the state of an unknown realm whose language Cfor somel causes five quartelrs of paranoia, and materialized as a .living place, wit.h the mystery of a people and culture unlocked by the French language. flt worked, even without headphones!J The Paris streets, the chateau country, and the French Riviera became our textbooks, and Michelle, our tour guide, supplied a honafide French flavor to her lec- tures on art, history, and architec- ture. Student experienced French culture through the Opera, the Louvre, French restaurants, and ex- cursions to Versailles and Chantilly. In southern France at the University of Nice we heard lectures on gram- mar, literature, civilization, and common expressions. By the end of August as we left France for home, thirty-eight students knew that in their mind, France would never be the same. 28 5.11, mf.. I-IONEYROCK if f a,g Honey Rock Camp 'Q vos sou ua uns Ou Long lnbe of lb: MSI: Chain - Thru Labs, Wiuondn -, -'- :-'-u-:- limb fDfw4J577wm,fan1dJ MWF, WQXQMWT Jfpwgfafw PEW, Mmwffw W W W Mm . mj ww f Awfimf ww Awvmfnm W1 014, xlwww MQW Umiiww Acwfif fwmvk amd gosgwwwgf, ww? QQLOA. Ml! - fb AMOUV, fC'JCUVV?D'?JJ W , XD? Afwfzfqfwu Jf7Yf0Mx WW 140, Mmfvjk MQQf- ,wa ffzwffmw ffhywfo wgdb M10 nf fcfwww WM QOUQQQUX f0'7L M1 JOCXIHMQ guzfuj Mm gDUVL7?fZj fpmvi MQW .UJRUM .fz'm,m,U 2UTQfQTU Mlm 7 MD JWVCLLL ff1UUM0k Mm ffrfxlm 257125 MW fdbfbwfm 1h 'i,fffjf'f bw ,LLBJ Left: The 74th domino topples Larry Gilkerson's record-breaker. Right: Parousia, home-sweet-home. I TER ATIO AL 32 p.w. STUDY PROGR M SITTING on the bed, writing letters, listening to The Mail Song sung by Ukelele Mary , while a good tune by Bad Company seeped through the ceiling . . . Typical dorm scene? Where were the soothing sounds of the mastodon? They were an ocean away from the Wheaton students summering fand even studying!J in The Netherlands. In June, 1975, for the sixth summer, about fifty Wheatonites descended on the unsuspecting corn- munity of Wassenaar, near The Hague, The Netherlands. The Netherlands held a bit of culture shock for our ISP '75ers. We learned to communicate through sign language and to adapt to the public transportation system. We also had to cope with brommer traf- , . ah, fm rihgxql uf :'- ' . , , --gif-V .-,, wgilqzf 4-. .... .uni-.1.a..m' L :J fic.fBrommers, a type of small motorcycle, occasionally knock down bicyclists . . .J Of course, the group faced the challenge of learning to live together. We shared textbooks, toasters, frisbees, and new experiences that aided our growth. The fun times highlight the memories: playing soccer, going to the beach, singing Baby, Babyn around the piano, and even discovering Mr. Bartel's car parked in the classroom one morning. In the times of serious learning we observed not only the impact of World War on Europe, but also the spiritual war raging within ourselves. On tour we encountered the antithesis of old and new Germany, the awesome landscape of Austria and Switzerland, the charm yet backwardness of Italy, the majesty of France, the cultured history of England, and the old-world pride of Scotland. Long bus rides between cities provided time for Wheaton students to enjoy their two favorite pastimes: talking and sleeping. Many of us found it the greatest summer of our lives so far-not to mention that we now can ask for french fries in five different languages! Above: Jim Hicks in-action. Below: Mr. Bartel introduces Jan Tinbergen, Nobel economist. .... .an-he p.w , , .,.,, Y. ..,, Y., , ' s- - 2 -7.5, , ' iv J u Q p.w. Ill WE D0 ,T WANN In Q Q.,-.fe ,S n ' L-,' s,'.F 13 'liij' ' 5, 1-51, ,A i 1? A 95' 'll 1, H -' U X 'll ' ,: fi 'fi , ,I ' 1 ' .j, 'I r 1 51 VT ,' '7 v f. , N . , 1 .1 ftp!-'Q ,. I wiring , ,fi 'L r.:-QWWLE 1 IA. as ' 1 , ni A , N X . .,, n i J ' 1 199 ' .. ,, 'ni ' fu lulllrr A A' ,' L .,, s K , E 9 k' G 1 A il il 1111 ri 1 f fl : 5 af' 2 'x' Fr: ' :-3' 'S 7 'I S! - . '.f:g:. 4 f- 'lx rr 1'5 f 5 ll '. I wi? , lx Cl .sg gi. I Xi . , Q GO TO THE EGEV . . . Of course n . n stand on the precipice as the mist of sunset shrouds the green hills, Lake Galilee shimmering belowg ba k ' ' c to the crystal rushlng of Ein-Gedi over moss and rock. Why travel out to the desert, to barren ridges, to Bedouin wives who thro lege students? ot. We'd rather go back to Mt Arbel a d w rocks at col- Why? We had come to see and know the land-the h w ole land. And Israel is a land of desert and green pastures. It's hard to waste as well as comprehend, even now, the contrasts that the land holds. Jim Fleming patiently guided and instructed us as we bounced along on the bus, watching city after ruined city and tel-talk speed by. Driver Abbu Ali steered us past housing complexes with bomb shelters, past tanks and mina- rets, soldiers and mosaics. We watched mothers lead their fami- -..W g. ' eff' lies down dry, dusty streets, and l T ig 13 iii ' ' ffl 1 -I tourists glide through hotel lob- U' ' YQ . ' ' T ft. -. . A . . . . 513' 3 bles in glittering formals. Only ' in Israel would the plush King f if li David Hotel overlook the Valley of Death and the entry to the 7 ' 7 . f . . 5-E35 . Q 3,155 City of Peace be accompanied 4, p rg el'. mm by searches for hidden gl f 2 bombs. 'lil Titifli s 7 I fd . W' at if . ing f' Ei, Eiililifili ,r 'ie . 7719 - 5 e , 7 fl .fiif f Q ' mga J I 1 ' , all jf . .3 1 xr -6 g.w.f2 'ra. mai z e Q? ' 4 2 ' file-Fifi-r 1 gift ' A ' ' ' --' - si-1 wg ', 'f -1 . -' ,-y f. 1-:Z i-'. , +L. up M Q l : n elm ...sa . f 1-.. , i .-irq-iw bg. ,V BZf,-3,.g1:---In L, J. lg , new ww A. 'rg f Y -L: Tiff.. l -uJIw.,:,f 45.9, Ii ' ' mnmffgf : fig . ' Q -, V .-3PM ' . - ' , wt .. if g . :N f . ., ' A ' Qs. 1-lf. f'fl fi life- N 5 I , , -,xii-:.,f'-1'LhiQk1 'lr'fM Jil?-Y'1 Al l. s , . ' .. 5, sw Hg ,-Fil 'I .Q h -v:i,,.:' K- tg '. I XY H - N f g. A ' ' ,..-55 -y V'5 ,' H ' ' , .'1g W-rL,.f 1 :IZ K 1 Q' 1 calf, 1-. 2 -, 'lv 'm'4a,byg:.. -11 '- 'U' . ..,-. . ,,, . HA .. ,I uw fi, - 1 Deeper than the contrast, though, was the history: kings denying Jehovah and fallingg conquerors rebuilding Jerusalem's majestic walls. We sensed the long procession of Christians go by: martyrs-to-be huddling in chalk caves, early pilgrims worshipping on hallowed sites, and Christians who would rather split a church three ways than give up their revenue rights. We climbed hills, swam in springs, thirsted across the summit Masadag we touched the olive tree, the grape vine, the Galilean waters. We talked to Christian Jews, Moslem Arabs, Chris- tian Arabs, Chicago Jews, Armenians. But we, with travelers' checks and Kodak film, never saw the land from the perspective of a Man born in a barn. We left that city of beggars with jewelry and embroidered shirts and sheepskins stuffed in our suitcases. So in some ways we didn't really ex- perience the land -how could we? We didn't even want to spend a day in the Negev. 2 -1 -N1 ST DE TMISSIO ARYPROJECTU Annette Bleecker chums with friendly campers in Alaska. But thanks be to God, who in Christ always leads us in triumph, and through us spreads the fragrance of the knowledge of him everywhere. For we are the aroma of Christ to God among those who are being saved and among those who are perishingf, QII Cor. 2:14,15J The S. M. P. member serves missionaries in order to share Christis love in a new environment. His availability in any capacity from construction work to nursing gives him the scope to meet the needs of the whole person. Not only does he give of himself, he gains in learning about culture, responsibility, and his own potential for service. The most vital growth comes in the necessary reliance on Christ. Dependence on Him yields unlimited results. 36 While I was in the Southern Sudan I saw that there was a lot of cultural baggage attached to my understanding of Christianity. It seemed like God was trying to show me the core of the Gospel which transcends barriers and relates to all men everywhere. -Chuck Dickson I learned to live in the Spirit in everything-from glacier climbing, to camping out in the rain, to teaching canoeing, to leading Bible studies. -Marilyn Carlstrom Allow the little children to come to me . . . for to such belongs the kingdom of God. iMark 101141 I saw the necess1ty of prayer and the v1ctor1ous power God d1splays through us by Hls sp1r1t rn answer to our prayer Laura Brunmg I came to see my Ind1an frlends not as hapless objects of some mrsslonary ef fort but as people people wrth the same needs and des1res that I ex perlence Andy McQu1tty Whatever destmatlon my tlcket would have 1nd1cated would have also 1n cluded a round trxp acceptance of any respons1b1l1ty God g1V99 to H1s people and the w1sdom and strength to see lt through Karen Bryant Eager puplls welcome Karen Bryant to African school for MK s I worked Wlth a large youth group ln a small Japanese church of 17 members Smce many of the students were new Chrlstlans d1sc1pl1ng was very lmpor tant Even though I drdnt know the language lt was neat to see how the love of God crosses cultural barr1ers Jul1e Koehler We sang I Cor1nth1ans 13 and trled to l1ve It Th1S love brought many rewar dmg experrences Karen Knlght Through the staff and campers 1n Alaska the Lord showed me what 1t means to really lose yourself for the sake of Chrrst and that God by Hls grace returns to us many txmes over an abun dant overflowmg l1fe Annette Bleecker av' Z' Man they never told me about thls on the application' . ' is 71 ' , - . s , . . , . . -V , . - , -Y , l :Hy , . .., l ,M ,. .. I. - 1 : . ' ' . . . .'- ' , 7 , l , . .iff , ,1 1 v- 4- sl::a ' 1 It - - - n v . ' - H 'H Q H I ,r-I ,:f,5EEm,:j,:'w Lsfmgu, U M .',3 if'-Q , ' ' 4 . 12' mv .lg- Q ' ,Y gl , T .f. :-2 1 si .-' :'r: 31: ' 41452:im-,-13:11-1:'fjf'fw2f ,Q A fi -hiv f 2.33 l' ' Lf! ,. .1 ' E ' ,1'f:.J!'I , -.ffL ,,,:gf,vf5-.H g V'--. S ,- .-: ,.f,..ig- 1 'f,,y:. -ff ' ff 5554 1,105-E gg,-,.n,. 1 4: 4,2 ,L M. Qgwylf. I ' f 5, ,.'-' 132,535.2 5.5.1 A ,- Ei5Lf5 f 7+17 'A 'W ,F gm I' S 'YA 3 s Y J! 1 A ,- X L F-Xunffs 5- . f , ' 1, :Sf :xl 11 W 1 x 1 ',67T 1 1 A, On Vanguards life comes down to the essential and you learn to trust God for each personal need. -L. B.- And let endurance have its perfect result, that you may be perfect and complete, lacking in nothing. James 1:4 In three Weeks I experienced the most miserable and the most joyous moments of my life! In this you greatly rejoice, even though now for a little while, if necessary, you have been distressed by various trials: . . . that you may be found to result in praise and glory and honor at the revelation of Jesus Christ. I Peter I:6,7 What I learned was beneficial, however I wonder whether there's an easier way to learn the same lesson. -J. H.- And not only this, but we also exult in our tribulations, knowing that tribulation brings about perseverance, and perseverance, proven character, and proven character, hope. Romans 5.'3,4 It is good that a man should both hope and quietly wait for the salva- tion of the Lord. Lamentations 3:26 Vanguards really prepared me to start college life. Instead of leaving home, arriving at Wheaton was like coming home. -G. R. K.- VA GUARD Above: Voldelpark, Amsterdam. Upper Right: Norm Popp muses. Below: Caryn McVeigh dishtowels in Amsterdam's Eben- Haezer Christian hostel. Lower Right: Sharing lunch and Life. J I M f'ffv.g2p. 41 Y' V 2 fE :'-az' asf: , , ' kv? .L ,.l', rv '- .'1-11-'n rr' ' ,fn l 5 n. o i173?f4i I' ,Q 4 pf LI 'I Swag 1 as 4 '25 NsQm.4g--'L1,:,-?Q..:- YOUTH HO TEL MI I TRIE We packed two pairs of jeans, a pair of cutoffs, a few shirts and a five-day supply of underwear. fOur mothers would have been appalled.J There were 19 of us in all, nine traveling and ten working in Christian hostels in Amsterdam. Most of us had visions of great evangelistic crusades-after this summer Europe would NEVER BE THE SAME. Our orientation included lectures on apologetics, Eastern religions, and a list of books which we should be reading. We were prepared to wage an onslaught of verbal attacks with the greatest of victories. Arriving with expectations of philosophical and theological debate we soon found ourselves in- volved in trivia: throwing frisbees, frying egg omelets and playing with V .4 ii- young children. Momentarily our lives were confused. What happened to the heavy discussions and the swarming crowds coming to hear the Good News? Had we failed our great evangelistic mission? Surely we needed some heart-throbbing tales for the people back home . . . didn't we? Slowly, but definitely, God was teaching us. We no longer asked what sharing meals with other kids had to do with witnessing , or questioned the value of merely traveling and rooming with other young people. We had learned that evangelism is not only talking to people, but sharing their lives. After learning to respect our true personhood, people became more willing to hear our message. Youth Hostel Ministries-playing, laughing, singing, talking-all in- volves living, and living is the es- sence of the gospel. Many students travel across Europe to learn more of life. We helped them to find a lit- tle more than they had expected. 41 WAS.. 3' ,I ,.i 'Im M- af'-5 1... 'U '1 grad school 43 .v. .59 gv 1. 1 i -wmv. 7 Y g,,.,,,h- L, :FQ . .,. ,- A 4 -.V Y ,, .'q.a. s-'-'---- , .uw -, . - s. ,W ' f 5. Y--,.. :- ,, , Y -. A : If. ' f' if 1 . A .45 1 44 ie.. Q-Qvp, - r 2 A . X, x,' , .,i, ,yt,J' I I 9 I ,-T, 'ldv :Q- ,, -1 'x . aff nf' ' VL 'W 1 .,. . ai L' ,I .AQ K P' I 7 It 4 A ' J 49 ..-z-I-aa., ki X r 'K' v , A w X grad school 45 THEOLOGY RALPH ALDRIDGE if PAUL ALLYN DAVID HOWARD MELVIN HYATT SCOTT MCLELLAND MONTY MERS STEVE PACE KENT POOL BARB SUMMERS RICHARD THOMPSON 46 ROBERT JONES DON MEYER GEORGE REUTZEL THOMAS WEBSTER I DAVID BATTY MIKE BRYANT DON FISHER HUBERT JURGENSEN PHILIP BIELAWA BILL BLAKE DAVE BOLTZ JOHN DARR JOHN ELLIOTT DAN EUMURIAN 'Y' I DOUG FLOOD GEORGE GOSKO JOHN HORN LINDA KERR DAN LAKE MICHAEL MARTENS r I if JANE PACE DAN MUSICK CURT RICE DANIEL SCALBERG GERRY WHITMER TIM WIARDA JANET ADAMS BILL FAHY BILL HUBBELL KRYSTALJOHNSON SUE MCLEAN DENNIS O'LEARY CHRI TI MI I TRIE KIRSTEN ANDERSON DIANE FRY MARILYN IBSEN DENNIS JORDAN BONNIE MIEDEMA LINDA POLLEY JAY BLAZEK DENNIS GORTON ED ISLEY LOUISE KENT M1 I L. MARTHA MUMME JOHN PRICE TIM CHIBANA ROBERT HAMMOND W '11 AJ v A 9 l' Ji' 1 4 I A 1 - c , , M M1 . ROSELYN JACKSON HELEN KIDD TERRILL NELSON SARA RATICHEK V, TERESA CHUNG GARY COLVIN CRAIG EBY TRAYNOR HANSEN MARGARITA HORD CHERYL JOHNS JACKIE JOHNS I STEVE McCOLLAM RENEE McGOLTHLIN JANET MCLAUGHLIN JIM ROBERTS GARY ROBINSON ED SMIETANSKI BRIAN STUCKEY SCOTT WERDEBAUGH MIKE WILSON STEVE WHITE grad school 47 BARB BLACK MARDELLE BROWN MALCOLM BROWN lf ANNE ALEXANDER CARL BECKER DEREK CHIGNELL LINDA CHING RICHARD COMBS LOROLIE BROWN GARY BULL BILL CHICKERING ff' ANDY CRAVEN STEVE CRAWFORD DAVID DAVIS . - I , . A , .L T, T., X A gil. X H V . ,I I .' -Q.: , V ,--44 w ,' I ! 5 :., Y v ' : . I I B Y PETE DUNN REG EBENEZER DARRYL ESLINGER .. l-0 g ' ' P- My-n at X ' , Q K PAUL EVANS OSNER FEVRY LEE FREEL RICK GILLMORE 'KE wx W X' sf' I ,swf BILL GOODMAN FRANK GRAY EDWARD HALES LARRY HAMPTON M A :QQ-X 1 I . ' ' ' I I x 1 if :Q ' HOPE HUNGERFORD DON IBSEN BARB JOHNSON PEGGY JOHNSON '13, . V' RI' Qs- I D. N. MWANGI xxx . ELLEN SIMPSON L r 1 T I GRACIA TAN , .. E -1: ' ' flf',. :Y ' :s-,9 ?!45. - I STEVEN TWEH LI GRACE WALTERS ua ulnmu -4--5--144, v.- fjv' w--i A . , , .I 331 i '-R . f ,. . , ,N A. '- I ' .Q TERRY O'BRIEN EEORGE SOMMERVILLE KATIE THIELEN ELSIE VANWAGONER JEREMY YUNG ' 'ap I - 1 I . ,w. 'i STEVE-IOI-INSON GREG KINZY EILEEN KUHN H' . ' - 'f I 1 4 ' 'Ra A ' f I 1 ' I - J :- , EI - J I' If Q91 I A 4 . X ELAINE LIDHOLM PAUL LUI CAESAR MOLEBATSI BOB PATTERSON LINDA QUANSTROM GARY RICHARDSON I 'Lv' I ROBERTA RON EY grad school 49 WILBUR WHE TO FI DS A ROOMMATE by Karen Ashmus Once upon a time a wide eyed freshman and his nostalgic parents arrived in Fischer U toting all the necessary equipment for a successful year at Wheaton Ci. e., 6 suitcases, stereo, tennis racquet, snow shoes, popcorn popper and set of Barclay Commentariesj After the hassles of name tags and I. D. pictures fand orientation materials,J he lugged his parapher- nalia up five flights of stairs to his new home. Sitting 'midst the chaos of suitcases and cardboard boxes was his roommate Canother essential for an entertaining Wheaton year.l The thought of a roommate ex- cited Wilbur Wheaton. Now I can share all my deep dark secrets with someonef he thought. But alas, he and his roommate differed as much as night and day. CWilbur like to study hard all evening and retire early, while his roommate relaxed all evening and stayed up late studying? Almost the only time they saw each other awake was in Chapel. Besides, if they both were in the room, they in- evitably argued Whether to switch on Elton John or Bach. Their relationship entirely dis- IUDITH ADAMS MARYLYNN AHRE JOHN ALBRIGHT DANIEL ALEXANIAN FRE HME ANN AI FORD TERRY ALLIhON HELFN ALLMAN P I IIAHI' TH ANDFRbON I AUREL ANDERSON LINDA ANDERSON 1 I MFI ODY ANDERSON FRED AONO DAVID APOL MARC ARMSTRONK' K ARY ARNDT KAREN ASKREN IOHN AUC USTINE I ISA AVIS Ill- BRA BADIJO KI' HRIS1 IM- BAFR Ireshmen 51 I I ' , 1 a, 1 I -I- . NS , '- , H II , I A ' - NANCYALTON JACKAMIS LISAANDEREGG DEBRAANDERSON IH. I . . ' I ' S . I. . Q I' 13 . 1' t A I I . ' I E , , ,. - ,, 1 I I 1 . I 5 I I I ' I 1- ': , illusioned Wilbur, especially since his suitemates ate, studied and had classes together. But he managed to actively participate in his floor activities. Like most Wheatonites, he treasured memories of the first Floor Party when no one knew anyone to in- vite, or the open floors when not one person participated, or if they did, no one came. After two quarters of work, worry and wonder, a major decision loomed on Wilbur's horizon: whom to choose for next year's room- mate? And so the neurosis began! Not just anyone would do. Wilbur decided that besides the essentials Cstereo, popcorn popper and matching bedspreadsb, a good roommate should possess un- derstanding and concern and would remind him to take his vitamins. He would leap out of the shower to answer Wilbur's phone calls and know his whereabouts at all times. But most important, a good roommate should be pre- pared to live with his personal quirks: squeezing the toothpaste from the middle of the tube and leaving Wet towels on the floor. One day while visiting his friend Perry, Wilbur met another of Perry's friends named Sam. Wilbur and Sam quickly became good friends and decided to room together. Wilbur discovered that Sam owned neither a popcorn pop- per nor a stereo. Nevertheless, Sam's spirit of cooperation and consideration showed Wilbur that things don't make a good room- mate, but the qualities of the heart. So Wilbur and Sam roomed together quarterly ever after. 52 MARK BAKER CHRISTINE BENDA ELIZABETH BERGWALL WARREN BIRD CAROL BRADFORD NINA BUKER CH ERYL BATES CYNTHIA BATTLE PAMELA BENISTON WILLIAM BERG ,qw I aw in . c , -.1Y k..n SALLY BERNS KIRK BERTSCHE MICHAEL BLEADORN PAULA BOUMA K - fi' v up MARK BRADLEY FRANKLIN BRAMSEN A v . at 0 f-. , lt' . -J' Q ROBERT BURIJON V J . If STEPHEN BURKE CATHERINE BEFUS JOY BERGFALK l ERIKA BIEGLER BRENDA BOURNIQUE ,Q -..,, VICKI BRUNDINE JAMES BYRNE MARGARET BELL JUDSON BERGMAN ERIC BINION ff -is f' 't- ,, ., ., I 1 O x . JY ,I x .Y li. .B .J TIMOTHY BOWSER SUSAN BUCHANAN . ,.-sa DARLE NE CANON U CHRIS CHRISTFNSEN ELLEN CHRISTY JOHN CHRISTY CATHY CLENDENIN qo- S... IANFLLI' CONAWAY ROBERT CONGDON TERRI COOK MARY CORNELIUS 'Hx N-f 1 AURA CUSHMAN BARRY DAUI HTRY AMY DAVID CRYSTAL DAVIS C HARI FS CARI SON 'QT 1 -a SHFRRI1 CARI SON DAVID CHADBOURNF CA'I HI- RINF CLFVENC FR I'A'I I'Y COX I AII DAWSON vb ,Av DONALD CARLSON KATHY CARLSON A I AURA CARTER OHN CARVEY DIANE CHAPM PHILIP CHASE CURTIS CODDINI TON IANICE COLE C HRISTINE CUI BERSON BETH CUNNINCHAM AARL DEMING MARYKAYE DEPINTO freshmen 53 3 I A 7 - I I 'XI MQW . If I ,- r Q I I V. IL. II r . 'LQ X .' . It 'W I ,f I V 4 ' Q6 .W . Emu I, Q V in VR , I A n . ,A E. IF!! ' .f ' ff S , ' . , D A J , I Q, I -I .fl -- ' I I 'I Qi 'I f I .I ' Q if I 591 ' . , .1 .I 73. . . , 4 AN I , -VA A , , I IS OIAA I A 1 x . f ' .. I ' . kk - A I fi-.A 1 4 ' 4 ' 4. ' X J IT.. , 5 EI. ' ' '. ' J 1- . U ' gf N 7' X . ' I - -1 l I -, ' I, ' I I li - , A fl ff' I' ' II. 4 - I 1 Y I I S f I I A 1 I f A ., 9 I , 'J - AEI lm -I I , + A I A 13 A R I Z SI. .9 if -J ,'- V -6- ,, I , E V, , 1 . V g .M N A ' 4 , W N , A I V I ' I I I , I, 1 hu. ' ' f ' f 'A-X CAI. - .I . s F- Q, J lf' IHNNIFER DOW DY .IAM HS EHHI. DAVID HI.l.lO'I I' 5 WAYNE DREVETS TIMOTHY EHRFISMAN NANFY El.LIO'I'l' if RAYMOND DEMIC MARK DI SCIULLO VV grin- A A, iz ' .IAM ES EMERY TIMOTHY ENDEAN M IRENE DUFF MAMCU DYKSTRA RUTH EISENBRAUN CLIFFORD ELLIOTT ARK ERWIN ALLEN FAUBION FRANK FERNANDES A, l'IRAl,l7 l lRliHAl'GH MHLINDA FOON ARJORIE FRAME JOHN FRASER KRIS FRI'IDEHR'K KAREN FROMM DAVIU GAUGER 4 ' ,v' W . U ' 'xv Y X - I , ' x-., '. ' .I lg BONNIE 1 SHRIJIN LINIDSHY fPlI.Hl'1R'l' MELINDA GIPSON LAURA HUF! URI-If BURN' HOUR .IUDITH GRATION KAREN GRAVES 54 STUART GRAVES BECKY GRAY CHERYL GRAY DEBORAH GRAY SHARON GREEN I if ' ,, vfya gfzgg2'1:f,,,I 1, J KEITH GUESS CAROL GUSTAFSOM ROBERT HALL RICHARD HANNIBAL .l0DY HANSEN KATERINA HARTRR STEVEN HARTMAN ROBIN HARWOOD HEIDI HAWKINS SUSAN HECHE CAROL GRIMM SHERRIE HANSEN a ROGER HED ERSTEDT GREGORY HERMAN SANDRA HI-ISS ,II'DI'I'H HILL V LARRY GROW JOHN HARLES .JOHN HENNING Wi TQQQN O, 1 M --M HI 'TSIE HERTZBRRG W 'rl-:RRI Hllfr freshmen 55 HARLI-IS HILGI-'INHl'RS'I' .1 S' BEVERLY HILTON JAMES HOBBY ELIZABETH HOFSTRA BEVERLY HOSINGTON Y l t 1 ' kj T J 'Ki .IULIET HOUHA DALE HOVDA ANDREW HOWELL BEVERLY HOYER I ,, 1 T? , -' 'Y A .1 KEITH JOHNSON NANCY JOHNSON NANETTE JOHNSON STEPHEN .JOHNSON 56 ELIZABETH HOLLOWAY STEPHEN HUFFMAN MARK ING EBRETSEN .IOANNE JACOBSEN MARK JOHN THOMAS JOHNSON JULIANNE HOLMAN NAOMI HOSTETTER ROBERT HUG iATI-IERINE HUTCHINGS 4 DAVID JACKSON PEGGY JACKSON RONALD JACOBSON QUENTIN JAMES NAL DAVID JOHNSON DOUGLAS JOHNSON MARK JOHNSTON RODNEY JONES WILLIAM G. JONES WILLIAM I.. JONES LINDA KELSEY NANCY KENNEDY JILL KING RONALD KLIPP DEBRA KROTZ MARK KRUM BERNICE KVAN KAREN IIHMASTERS KARL LARSON LORA LARSON PAULJORDEN I A' 5 If A' J' ' MARK KIMMEL JAMES KNOEDLER JEFFREY KRUSE THOMAS LANE GERALD LAWRENCE PAUL KASKELA BARBARA KAUTZ GARY KEENEY JUNE KELLER JOHN KIMPEL LAURIE KRAUS KLAUS KUTSCHKE ROBER LANIAK MARCIA LIMKEMAN fieshrnen 57 .1 u- ,. 1 1 1 Q -.fn xx Li I L GREGORY LOEWER ELENOR LONG SANDY LOUIE JOSEPH MARTIN SHERYL LINDQUIST RACHEL LOIZEAUX BETH LONGENECKER LAURA LUDWIG Q' '--v MELINDA MARTIN SANDRA LITTAUER 'Q SHERI LON DAL 'UK BRUCE LOTT LEASA LUTES DEBRA MASLOWSKI f GREGORY MAAS N9 LINDA MASTER JON MAAS f'.L'. '.gy GUY MCCASLIN CHARLES MACKENZIE LEIGH MAGGARD MARK McCLURE KEVIN MCCOOL JOANNE MCCURDY STEVEN MCDONALD TIMOTHY MCFARLAND GRACE MCFARLANE GERALD MCKENNY ANNE MCMINN PATRICIA IVIECKLING 58 1 GAYLA METZLER CHRISTINE MEYER KEVIN MEYER ELIZABETH MILLER X, CHARLES MORRIS CONSTANCE MOYLAN LINDA MYHREN KIMBERLY NELSON 1 , STEPHEN MILLER WILLIAM MISER RAYMOND NELSON DEAN NERVIK JOAN NICHOLS JOY NICHOLSON MELODIE NYMAN DAVID O'DELL JOHN ORTBERG HELEN PALACAS BONNIE PARISEK SUSAN PARKE -Q. ' v 'Yi U, t A N 'I A WELBY MOON THOMAS NICHOLAS STEPHEN NUTTER MARTHA OLDHAM J ' m Q fllf , Vs A W Q , .f . I' . - Iv' lv I BARBARA PARDUN LANETTE PARKER freshmen .59 DEBORAH PA'I'I'ERSON SHARON PROCTOR ROBERT REESE CYNTHIA RHODES SARA RITCHIE LUKE ROBINS 60 SUSAN PAULUS TONY PAYNE MARY PENNE LAURIE PHELAN JUDITH PLUMSTEAD TORREY PRICE F PAM RALSTON KAREN RAWS PAUL REXROTH JEAN RHODE RICHARD RIEGEL FRANK RICHARD ANDREA ROATR xnvx ROBERTSON SUSAN ROMINSKI STEPHEN ROSS JULIE ROWE AMY RUTT CATHERINE SALOVICH MARSHELLE SAMUELS JAMES SAUNDERS DEBRA SCHILLING MARK SERVIS DEBRA SMITH KAREN STAHLER M IRI AM STILES ix. ix KAREN SAWYFR KATHERINE SAWYER DANIEL SCHMIDT BRUCE SCHUT 'W JANET SEYMOUR LINDA SHERMAN SHERI SMITH LINDA SMOKER WILLIAM STAM KATHI ST AMAND LYNN STIPANUK TIM STOKER If 'Q ANDY SCO'I'I' SUSAN SHOBERG CHET SNOUFFER STEPHEN STARENKO WILLIAM STOLL I: Q O' ..j DEBORAH SECOR PATIENCE SIEMENS THERESA SPRINGER 5 :- JULIE STEDELBAUER WILLIAM STOUGH HARRIS SEED RUTH SERGEY JANICE SIMPSON JAMES SKARIN MARK SPRUANCE MARY STAHL JOHN STEIN MARK STEWART SANDRA STROMBERG LINDA STUMME freshmen A H 1 1-, ' I v I 'P N if K 1 - Wi r . ., A: f 1' ,, -' H2 r. I g . fy YV J . A I . L I 1 ,,f ' 1 qw A I , L I - all L I-'. vi 'Y 1 -.1 47 A . . . ' ' A- 'F 'B 2 si u A f' . ' A ' .s V '14 A V 1 . . 1 -. f'9- 1 . . v ' v 1 N I .l .1 ' LU , M If , A : A bi is ,L :V X- I h . ' ' 25 , G if ' ' . ' 'I SHT W '-x'Ix Y ' . - tp I 1 . - 1 EL K J. 3 1' 5' . .XA '- 1 g j f ' L X X 1 2 , A f I ' . S ,A 1 , , - I 4- ,' ,E A ij - - J SCOTT TJADEN .IOY VARNER NANCY WALKER CYNTHIA WEITZEL 62 RONALD TRUESDALE REID VICTORSEN DANIEL WALLEM CHRISTINE WELLER A4 I Y . 4 , 4 5' , , , .Paw . 'L' KELLY UDSTUEN 'E I ' - I if JEFFREY STVRTECKY JANET SUDAK THOMAS SUMMER . i 1 . 4 'K-,' 1. BRENDA TELFORD J EANNETTE THOMAS HELENE THOMPSON 1 WESLEY UNDERWOOD ROBERT UNRUH ROBERT VANDER HOONING LAURA VOSSBRUCH SUSAN WARKENTIN BETTY W ELS I-I BARRY TANIS 'H 1 JANE THORNBURG NADJA VAN HOOSE SHERYL WAGNER DENISE WEAVER DANIEL WHEELER PAUL WHITE LINDA WINTER 16 LINDA WROBLEWSKI KAREN ZELEK IILL 7IEMER NICOLYN WILBUR THOMAS WITTMAN 1 Wm MARGARET WYNSTRA JEANNE ZELLER GILBERT ZIN KE E iv If J OLENE WOLFE ABBY YIN DAVID ZERBE MIC HELE ZWICKER SHARON WILSON DIANE WINKLEMAN DEBBIE WONNELL IANELLE WOODSIDE HARRY WRIGHT LOIS WRIGHT MARY YOUELL SUELLEN ZIAH freshmen 63 a -J V '. V I -f. -.t:', ,'.I.:. J.: if It Y 5' I I J P 5 .. X' g.,.- A E L I .Q ...E . I I , 02 ' ,fu , I' . ' V. 1 E W w : D 'v lj mt. Y I X -.lx u 1 X fl ' , I K 1 I , ' ' 1 I X f h-K f X - f i JE ,lxlra-5' ,.- ' l :T Q , ' I e - I ,blk X X. A I: 3 r ' Ji . I ' 1 STEPHEN BIGGER SUSAN ETZEL LINDA GIFFHORN STEVEN GRISWELL 5 A I 5 I i ! 4 88 MARK NELSON WILLIAM PORTER ALLEN ROOT RICK STOLLER PAUL SUNDBERG VELMA THIESSEN ROBERTA BRUSS STEVEN HVALE MALIA IVEY if STEPHEN LONG THOMAS MILBOURNE DANA ROWAN I ' -LL MARK THOMPSON PETER DAVENPORT ROBIN DOMINO REBECCA ICE ' THOMAS INCH WILLIAM KORNFIELD CALVIN LAUR I MICHAEL McGUILL JESSY MEYER ROBERT MINER KIMBERLY MITROFF MARLA SENN STANLEY STEELY DALE VAJKO JAMES WILKES 'I , iqfifq Wg ,wp .Q M H 3 f 4 5 I QM? fx A,-V.,.:',.,:.:, , 5. 4 XII' 'W Q QA i - K 6' :..'f':'.' I' ' ', if ax e 1 rf ., FV' la 175' .Y Q ! Y -A V .5 fx ', ,A if L ff L 1 +P , 'Tfjh px lu.. Q A A .D , lf: 'VN' 'E ,. 'S 5!f1,1??'Q 5x AY ', ' , ES.. 'X Jf igfja I! 4' xv uf... A if P ' A ' ix' ,X N' i 2. i . , 11 --ni-- QLFJQ ' , 552, M Q 5' ,RFU ' A ' M Q L-I 1-L it A 7 , l.: : fh.Jg' !M' VAS NOVEMBER PSALM The Master Metalsrnith, it seems, Forged the autumn woods in hues of bronze and fashioned leaves- -of copper, brass, and finest gold, That clashed like cymbals in the chilly winds. Then Tiring of their noise and ruddy glow, the Master Bid the leaves clatter to the ground, And forged: the Woods again of silver silence. by Susan M. Woodcock ,R hqu. ,, .. A . 'xfiiw 'M' iv : ' Q. .AL . E if A. if Sen' 2f'x'L --g5?535fg1R ,f'i5'- .,, .gf v -.-if . L I Y 43511 ... . . .,,l.,.. ?,, , nf F , 5. J 'ffwisf fve- 3 5 I K-'bw-s Q25 .v ,dye ' ' 4 . ' -,a A 1 ...--4' pv A,-I wif - 3. L '?A,6'yYL'mv7'44 ' :QW 5, -.Q vias: IWUW M343 - www WY ' 'X . ,z4'f 'f. ' ' . sting., 'W' -. . E.- 3-,K - f :mg 1 ig. I , . . ,, A ., ,ff : 'r QM, Q 0i:,.g 4s,,,,- .q ' 5 8:41. -' ., - A 1- RJ fi at , vig J - F . ' h .i,.'q.w.- ' . :A J, Q v . rj :d,,,v 555- ' ' ' .. N . ,h 332 , ,- Jin I it 'i X J'J'Xn0 Y-. ,.-PZ.. A, 1 .I ,'qi'qYn iii... .,.-my Q ., .H ,X In J ,, .U I ... -,L , .ef L: P 4 . 7+W,'i-- Y 5 N ,,. ' , 4. ex i, , ,LJ Q , K 'gag , L,g,,jf .Z 5 ' -71 ' ' ' -4- fc ' -4.f:f. ' . .-f-.-' ,- , ' - Ask,-Sw .,:,f'q..,Q. - ,: - - , .pa +P -',1-11.'- J ' -F' I -f' E '1iC'igGq ' , , .Q ?,': :,,4 -w s.Q'l-fi , N .. ' ' ll . ' -Y E ' ,,4 --'2'q,-gt ' ' 4 Q- -'A dffgirg ' .'?'w. f J ' if-. ' 'z' X ' '-fyffli. .a-, :f. - , D ' ! ' 'R 1 4. Fx- P . -. +53 .. -Sv' J 2 X ,gh '-'Q-' -' . A 1 , ' ' 'QM - W I' 4' V1 .J 55 nz. 'LVQWQKX' . .X-.lr ' fl, f U :- ' M ' V . '--Z -. .1' , ,. W h , .Au ' W A -5, ww-wfv. gfgwvgqh ,, 1 4' in ' ' 'GWR fr 'V ' . 4' .' ' . , If ,. wf Y. t ,A 1 Q La- r ,,,--'RAF . A . nf l , '. .im .ran - x..,,.-I 4 Q 0 vw-ffl 1314-ffemgiw r u ' - - - -' 'fa' L' f 'li: 'ff l:-' 4 Q H ':' - Y I V Q 1 . gf 0' f' 5-M .Pm f 'ilqw v.5i,'5,.,'-W. ' fn: A E. , M Ar lg.. M-f,,g,f , G Y. -:- A N- - 1 - .R , .,a,,' -4 x , '-15. - '- 3,-,J -av ., .. ., . 'i :.',A . 5 4 4 ,, g X .N 1 ' f' , , .g 1 us' W' 'Y Sum 'g .ow ry ' AQ- --,U L-..- ,n' A ' 1 1. 'K 54:-sn i1'. J , U , ,. , . in jw Q Q'-' 'Q ... II' M -ii.-1 ' t . ' A' I 'H'-f ,-P .4 - Ao 4 F V fffjfali , ', f' - , H. 7 72 k ..I' I fa LI, A -If I 3 fi? ' , r:-ans! st.. -Q . . . I: - f'- - I ' 1' .. s , 5. :, . -FA Je ' b WELCO E TO . .. . . . First Day frustration of weighted boxes, cumbersome trunks, lines of people, flashing cameras, and a blur of smil- ing faces all asking, What's your name? What's your ma- jor? Where are you from? till the response becomes automatic . and the cameras flash as the lines grow longer, and eyelids droop while tired backs ache, and still those endless boxes and that ever swelling blur of names and faces . . . night, sleep, morning . . . . . . beginning the week in a welter of blue plastic frisbees and flying footballs as five hundred and fifty freshmen balance bean-soaked paper plates on Fischer lawn at dusk. . . aptitude tests, meeting with advisors, bookstore raids, cour- ses to be dropped, courses to be added, courses for the sake of courses . . . at night, Pierce Chapel electric with rock music and applause ffrisbees floating downward at inter- missionl, and five hundred and fifty candles lit to the tune of praises to our God as we file out, strangely hushed And the week culminates in the Chicago skyline at night and a midnite Upajama party in the dining hall with our up- perclassmen. Wednesday night, All-School Communion in the gym, an ending and a beginning . . . The class of '79 is oriented The room looks organized now Qmore or lessj and the campus somewhat familiar, and the blur of faces has begun to separate into individuals, warm and alive, excited and a lit- tle scared too, perhaps . . . but reaching out that hand of friendship to say, Hey, we're in this together. ds ff! ds srh PECIAL SERVICE G ORD ON FEE, from an interview conducted by Sue Woodcock and Karen Ashmus . Why did you pick these topics to speak on? . I feel like we're living in a feeling generation. Most of the kids don't know the basics. Even if they know the words, and the language they don't always know what it means. They don't understand . . . I saw those kids working at calculus, and you know, I really sympathized with them. And the Word of God is for kids at a point like that. You talk in generalities and they don't hear you but hey: He's my Father, He knows how I'm doin' my calculus. . What kind of response have you gotten? . One of the nicest things said to. me was, In the balcony, they were listening. Now I've sat in the balcony and know it's hard to hear. Furthermore, it was Tuesday and TIME magazine comes out on Tuesday mornings . . . . Do you think Wheaton has a problem about Pentecostalism? . Almost the opposite . . . Many times you have Pentecostals and non-Pentecostals on the same cam- pus living side-by-side, and they're sort of feeling out one another, but nobody's saying anything out in the open. Nobody knows how to say without offending, so I thought the best thing was to just get it out in the open. Life in the Spirit: I need that, the Church needs that. But it's very difficult to say that without clearing the air first.'The main point is to get us going in the Spirit. There's basically one way, and that's by faith.. But for some people that faith also is a faith that comes through or is accompanied by experience. There are some peo- ple who are raised in a Christian home and never know what it means to become a Christian. For them it's a matter of steps of awareness, otherwise they're pretty mediocre For others, it comes as a single experience. js A comment on Pentecostals The Pentecostals saw the Book of Acts and saw the Church today, and said, I like that better than this. So they went back to that, but the problem was, their timing was wrong. That's not an apology for Pentecostals, but first and foremost, a real feel for the Biblical atmosphere. And you really need to have that. Could you put Life in the Spirit in a nutshell? That's pretty hard. I'd suggest it in terms of power and fruit. By power I mean an openness to the extraor- dinary, power to witness, power to give . . . It's not always dramatic, but dynamic. NCT DRAMATIC, BUT DYNAMIC The blond-bearded and slightly rumpled speaker Tuesday looked familiar to half his Chapel audience, since Gordon Fee, now at Gordon- Conwell Seminary, taught at Wheaton two years ago. A few words, and everyone knew him better: pretenseless, serious, and fervent above all. He gave meat 'and potatoes messages, concerning Jesus and the Christian in morning chapels, and the Holy Spirit in the evening sessions. When he spoke he tried to make us feel as well as know the truths of our faith. He drove home his emphasis on Christ's incredible love and sacrifice by vivid analogies, and a candid dis- play of his own struggles and triumphs. Pm a father, and whatever others think of my children, I love them, and I love them quite arbitrarily. I love them, not because they're good, not because they're clever, because they're not always that. I love them not because of the potential. I love them because they're mine. e I love them when they stumble, I love them when they're bad, I love them js when they're good, I love them because they're my children, and that's the way it is with God and me. He loves me when I'm wrong, when I stumble, He loves me because I'm His child, not because I chose Him, but because in a grace that is beyond my ability to un- derstand, He has come into my life and given me birth and made me His . . . Those of youwho are beginning to go through the hard core blahs of fall quarter, having some all-nighters in calculus, .let me just remind you to find those moments where you steal away and let the reality of this truth absorb your being again and again, that you're His child, and He's invited you to say 'Dear Father. ' With such intense moments Dr. Fee filled his week at Wheaton, and left here the seeds of a necessary union for the Christian: head-knowledge, and heart-understanding. 69 WRITER CO FERE CE Make raid on the inarticulatef' said Tom Howard. Words, in themselves have no meaning: only people have meaning,'l said Harriet Harrel. Gifts of the Lord left unex- pressed mold like leftover manna, said Jeannette Clift George. Help! said all the would-be ar- tists of the pen. The annual writers conference always brings to light a kaleidoscope of ideas, advice, and examples. This year, Eternity editor Russ Hitt gave tips on the magazine market. Paul Harrel of UPI and his wife Harriet, a communications prof, used their ex- periences to explain the workings of communication: message and means. On the inspirational end, Dr. Tom Howard opened the con- ference Thursday night with The Imagery, the Imageryln, a defense of velvet vs. denim, the superiority of bread and wine in Communion over spinach and Pepsi-in short, a defense of discipline, ritual, and dis- tinction. The next evening he read from Hallowed Be This House, his own expression of the Hsacredness of the ordinary in the home and shared the chapter on the bathroom, verbatim. Balancing the practical and intellectual, the vibrant actress Jeannette Clift George CCorrie Ten Boom in The Hiding Place filml en- couraged writers to work with joy, and without apology. Moving from lecture room to theater, she become her own written version of Mrs. Noah, yakking over the back fence to her neighbor about her husband's crazy building project in the front yard. Whew! said all the would-be ar- tists of the pen. l There is no question of a moral democracy any more than there is a question of a gastronomic democracy. If you eat vegetables they will do you good. If you eat toadstools they will kill you . . . We need a touchstone. We need to learn to discriminate . . . The moral vision one obtains at Wheaton College and that furnishes this touchstone that I'm speaking about is that of an- cient orthodoxy . . . The Christian vision is a vision of the eternal, that is, of majestic fixities and mysteries that stand in judgment upon our history and our existence. The Word that was incarnate in the drama played out on the stage of our history was the word that ar- ticulated order out of chaos in the beginning and that will utter the final summing up at the end. For this reason, any thinking Christian, you presumably, finds himself in a perpetually ambiguous relationship with his own epoch. He is, let's face it, what the loose-jointed moral marionettes of contemporaneity call uptight. That is, a Christian is, in fact, stuck with an attitude that will be sniffing into things and that wants to ask hard second questions, that wants to take a second and a third look at things to see how they look when you line them up next to the fixed standards. He's not quite at liberty to let it all hang out. Indeed, he suspects that letting it all hang out is what you get in nurseries, with babies screamin and vomitting, or in mental hospitals where they have failed to align their actions with accepted patterns, or at drunken orgies where inhibition and reticence have been thrown to the wind. The Christian will be forever asking how this idea or that one fits. Fits what? Fits the pattern, says the Christian-the solemn, blissful, austerely and rigorously orchestrated pattern of glory that we call creation, or the dance, as the ancient church used to call it. The Christian will be forever testing things in the light of the fix- ities that the Christian vision celebrates. This is the reason why Christians are not ordinarily found in the forefront or the van of con- temporaneity. The palm Sunday mob is the same in every century, forever throwing down their gar- ments and their palms at the feet of whatever new prophet arrives, hail- ing and exulting in things simply because they are new. Innovative, and creative, and unstructured, are their favorite words, but of course by Friday this crowd has gotten bored with the creatively unstruc- tured innovations and so the crucify them and chase after fresli ones. From Tom Howard 's chapel address Friday, October 10, 1975 xi .ua-gapurf T4 ,, ' . V ' Y' V, 1 ?' 1' ,459 :n1gn5i4pg:im.u.:uw I ' ' - .,..c' .. .,,..j T -5--SJ -2 .....a..a -..e...w - .4 -fel. 'lll 4'Ain't it good to be back home again . . . These John Denver lyrics, ringing from a McManis window, provided an appropriate theme to welcome returning 3. alumni to Wheaton's campus for Homecoming 1975. Down-home country decorations adorned the hallowed halls oflearning to set the nostalgic mood for the weekend. Activities included the following: L'Country Jamboree Ice Cream Social, American Folklore Festival, James Ward Concert, Conservatory concert, and alumni field hockey game. Although the football team lost a heart- breaker to Millikin, 3-2, the soccer team gained a shutout against Earlham, 4-0. All in all, it sure was good to be back home again! PV?-H R .nv 72 i A, f 'r'-1' Q MMM 4 laI'L ,. r'- a.l .- V U1 I wwmvw 1 Q 1 ARCHAEOLCGY CC FERE CE The 20th Annual Archaeology Conference featured Dr. Harry Hoffner KU. of Chicago: Oriental Institutej as the main speaker. His chapel address explained how he found God's han- diwork among the literature of the pagan Hittites. During the conference Dr. Herbert Wolf, Wheaton Graduate School professor, evaluated the implications of a Hittite story parallel to that of David and Goliath. Evidently, battles of cham- pions occurred in other areas of the Near East in the time of the Biblical event. The most excitement centered on Dr. Walter Rast's slides of the Bab ed-Dra excavations at the southeast end of the Dead Sea. The Bab ed-Dra site shows con- tinuous occupation Cwith pottery samplesb from 3150-2150 B.C., important for cultural traits of the Early Bronze Age there. Some 20,000 graves surround the city. Dr. Rast, professor at Valparaiso, suggested a possible name of Sodom for this site! Dr. Harry Hoffner lectured on the Hittites, his specialty l. v dr Alfred, how's about having the Archaeology Conference here next year? 74 1975 in America has been a year of preparation. Ordinary citizens, Christians, history majors, and es- pecially politicians have been planning a giant birthday celebration for the U. S. of A. In the spirit of '75 our very own philosophy department decided to plan this year's conference around several All-American topics. Dr. John Smith, of Yale, was the featured speaker. He traced the development of the community as an entity one evening, and the next even- ing its downfall and the rise of in- dividual freedom. The most thought- provoking lecture dealt with Three Amurriken Philosophers. From the beginning and on, lectures and discussion flew ever thicker and faster. Conscience, Disobedience, and the Rule of Law and an attempt to justify revolution occupied the same afternoon. HWY sd PI-IILO OPHY CC FER- ECE sd right: What do you mean, 'Where's my beard? ' above: Conrad Brunk asks, When is civil disobedience permissible? left: Merold Westphal stimulates Wheaton's philosophers. A philosophy conference provides a place for catching great ideas and meeting great thinkers, and this was no exception. All sorts of people came, and brought their ideas with them. It became obvious that the style- conscious philosopher was incomplete without a beard, but Dr. Steve Evans upheld Wheaton's honor all alone in this field. CStu Hackett, come homell Just-war theorists and Quakers, students and learned doctors, Pat Manfredi and Arthur Holmes-it made an All-American assortment for 1975. 55 75 PARE T ' DAY j.W. iw W. if Bonnie Pruett Clefti, Jane Miller fright! and Phil Butin iahuwl. relax with the folks on Parents' Day. J.w. On November 1, Wheaton College staged an all-day show starring a cast of hundreds. The audience came from across the country, and everyone enjoyed the performance. For November 1 was Parents' Day, and the students did their best to make Mom and Dad happy. The show actually opened on Friday night with the musically unsurpassed Swedish Radio Choir, under the direction of Eric Ericson. They performed a variety of avant garde music, including Gyorgy Ligeti's incredible 16-part Lux Aeternaf' On Saturday night, the show ended the way it began-on a musical note. The Men's Glee Club preceded the satirical musical review, For Heaven's Sake. No one will ever forget Roger Moss's performance as the God of the poker table. In between came a soccer victory, a field hockey loss, and a freshman victory in the 100 Runs. But the highlight of the show was the football game Satur- day afternoon, as the Crusaders turned in a 5-star victory over Augustana, 37-35. Bobby Unruh's field s.r.h left: An aspiring soccer player kicks off an exciting game. right: Cherie Syverson welcomes Mrs. Mc- Donald to Parents' Day. above: The Sweetzers and Linda Brandon enjoy half time, goal with 18 seconds left put the Wheaties on top. For the rest of the weekend, the campus buzzed with the news: The football team's tied for first place! So the blue and orange helmets stole the show, and won the Oscar. 'avi' -1' ,. ,,, srh The hope of glory through sacrifice is perhaps the subtlest pride to which Christians may fall prey. Knowing he faced inevitable martyrdom if he adhered to his convictions, Thomas Becket, Archbishop of Canterbury, struggled wit.h this same temptation: to do the right deed for the wrong reason. In Murder in the Cathedral, T. S. Eliot presents the stirring, poetic picture of Becket's ultimate triumph over these impure motives and his ability to finally face martyrdom resting humbly in the will of God. Under the direction of Jim Young, Wheaton produced Murder in the Cathedral in St. Barnabas Episcopal Church, involving some fifty students, and selling about two thousand tickets for seven different perfor- mances. The ten-person chorus, reminiscent of the Greek theater in its power to communicate the emotions of the play, created a sense of com- munity between the audience and the performers by utilizing the entire church area. The use of candlelight, Gregorian chants, and incense also enhanced the spirit of participation. The final product was an imaginative, thought-provoking portrayal of Thomas Becket and the effect his life had on the people of Canterbury and all of Christendom. MURDER I THE CATHEDRAL rlg fig THE MA TODO TAPE At 7:36 a.m. on Saturday, November 22, a sleepy student crossed the Science quadrangle on his way to breakfast. It seemed to him that Perry 's uoice was sounding odd, but itgwas too early in the mor- ning to think about it . . . Ten thousand years ago an un- suspecting mastodon was quietly grazing at the edge of a prehistoric lake, near what is now Glen Ellyn, when a fast-moving glacial mass enveloped the hapless beast in millions of tons of crushed ice. On October 16, 1963, while digging a cesspool behind the estate of Judge Perry, the workmen's giant shovels broke the mastodon's protective ice cube, and awakened the long frozen behemoth. The enraged creature frightened the diggers, who sum- moned Judge Perry from his house. Judge Perry heroically took his Remington Springfield rifle and shot the mastodon 4 times between the tusks, stunning it. When Wheaton's Department of Sanita- tion refused to cart away the sleep- ing animal, Judge Perry in despera- tion called the Wheaton Geology Department, hoping they would dig a hole for the mastodon elsewhere on his property, so that his cesspool could be completed. The Wheatonites had other plans, however. They carted the mastodon back to the campus, where the now anaesthetized animal was dis- assembled by the campus's Future Taxiderrnists' Club. The left half of the five ton beast's body was removed for use by the campus food service. Using amazingly refined life-support systems, the right half ofthe mastodon has been kept alive from the time of his discovery to the present. He has found a permanent home now here in the Edwin F. Deicke Exhibit Hall, where he spins happily all day on his glass-enclosed platform, to the delight of the public. Perry Mastodon, as he is known to his close friends, has been trained to talk, sing, do elementary dance steps, play Rook, and use a litter- box. Some statistics about Perry Mastodon: He is 1052 feet tall, 16 feet long, and weighs about half of his original 10,000 pounds. Each day he consumes 40 gallons of warm milk, 200 lbs. of prime rib fmedium rarel, and 7,000 chocolate chip cookies. He is held in place by 8 large spikes, 2 through each foot, each 14 inches long and weighing 6 pounds. His litterbox measures 3 feet by 5 feet by 3 feet, and is maintained by a staff of highly trained specialists. We conclude our tape with a word from the mastodon himself: Perry? Hello there, friends! I'd like to thank each and every one of you for stopping by to see me today. I'd also like to thank Ed Deicke, Joe Perry, Carter Cody, and all the guys in the Wheaton College Geology Depart- ment for giving me this swell place to live. It's been good seeing ya, folks, Have a nice day now, ya hear? Courtesy of the Friends of the Mastodon Society 7 b '4 , :Iv aw? w1rz,nHHH' J.. Ja .414 : ,, ,fm ' gm Rl ORA TORI OS Edman Chapel, Wheaton College. This present SUNDAY, November 30, 1975 Will be performed the Sacred Oratorio of THE MESSIA Composed by G. F. HAN DEL I End of Part I - Prelude and Allegro in G Minor by Mr. Ftephen Cufhman Madame KNIGHTON will fing, for the firft time, the Grand Scene 'There were fhepherdsf -'Rejoice greatly,'-Come unto him,'-How beautiful-8: 'I know that my Redeemerf Madame UNOSOWA 'O thou that te1left,'-'He fha11feed,'-8: 'He was defpifedf Mr. GIAMMARRUSCO the Recit. 'COMFORT YE MY PEOPLE,'-and Air 'EVERY VALLEY,' -'Thou fhalt break thern,'-8: 'Behold and fee.' Mr. SMITH 'Thus faith the Lordf-'But who may abide,'-'For beholdf- 'The people that walked in darknefsf-'Why do the nations,'-'If God be for us,' -'The trumpet fhall found.' Principal Performers, Mrs. Elizabeth KNIGHTON, soprano, Mrs. Phyllis UNOSAWA, contralto, Mr. Vittorio GIAMMARRUSCO, tenor, Mr. Gerald SMITH, bass. Leader ofthe Band, Mr. A. Katterjohn-Organ, Mr. S. Cufhman Violins, Meff, Gail Salvatori lprincipall, Armerding, Clarke, Flutes' Meff,Amf1er, Kennedy' Kmftfon Gonzales, Gray, Nelfon, Wright, Wynftra, Ahn, Bradford, Cla,-iunets' MgfQ'- Heinemann, Kingfbu,-y Daly, Grimm, Harper, Kutfchke, Miller, Nichols, Nicolai, Baffmmsv Meff, Payne' Ward Palaces, Stipanuk Double Baffes. Meff. Bannifter, Bennett, Riftau Violas. Meff. Anderfon, Arnold, Bezingue, Corey, Graham, 'fmmpetgv Meff, Hgrrifqn, Mag-fhgll, Akers Parke Horns, Meff. Ahlquift, Chriftian, Halliday, Jauhiainen, Logan Vinlencellns, Mel'l'. Beers, Brown, Capps, Ehrefman, Muel- 'l'mmh,,ne5v Meff, Meena' Rufkgm ler. Palmherg, Weller, White Buff Trombone, Mr. McWilliams Ohoes, Mefll Fernandes, Vol' Dnnhlg Drums, Mifs, Neely The remainder of the Band and the Chorufes By the maff approved Performers. The whole under the Direction of Mr. C. E. Haluorfen. Places for the Boxes to be taken of Mrs. Carfon at the Box Office, Blanchard, from One till Three Doors to be opened at SEVEN o'clock,-to begin precifely at EIGHT-FIFTEEN. CHRI TMA FE TIVAL above Concert Choxr muslcally edlfles then' audxence nght Terri Turmpseed recltes Love s story 3. 'Q' Vienna Vu.-aB ff K EI ms 1 ag. ,mf v - f- -z 'up 1 ,. . r M f V-, . , - ji'-ALTI . Q M -. X: L' MM- fiff 'W Seams' .2 -':l'2s?-W ' ' ' ,eff -:E H ng Sl' 1 r pw ds EW LIBRARY by Melinda Gipson Perhaps the most erudite addition to the '75-'76 academic year was Wheaton's new library facility. In years previous, students suffered the unpredictable climate and cramped atmosphere of the old building. Because of space limita- tion the incalculable possibility loomed that a desired book sat in storage, not available onthe shelves. Su'ch inconveniences threatened to deter even the most avid scholars. In contrast, this year witnessed a growing number of students who found study in the libes both practically and aesthetically enchanting, and were tempted to reside there permanently. flockers are actually available downstairs for grad student uselj Not even the initial absence of chairs stemmed the flow of those seeking wisdom, academic stimula- tion, or the most undisturbed sleep on campus. For reading enjoyment, the interior of the new facility has contemporary styling and plenty of study carrells designed and placed to bring students into close relationship with the materials around them. Construction costs totalled 951.85 million, and student participation in fundraising was encouraged. The Administration kept the student body posted on the steps in the final funding, culminating with a Chapel announcement in October that a gift grant of S200,000 had supplied the last necessary capital. On Homecoming weekend Miss Joy Olson, an assistant librarian here since the library was in Blanchard C201 and C301, cut the orange and blue ribbon to dedicate the building. The new building holds 176,225 volumes, and with the still useful Nicholas Building could eventually hold 217,535 books and periodicals. Spring of 1976 the expanded Music Library moved to the Nicholas Building, gaining more floor space as well as an electric piano. The growing Wade Collection fof C. S. Lewis and othersj secured an up- stairs Nicholas room, complete with a fireplace for atmosphere. Has the addition of this edifice radically altered life 'on campus? Certainly any such tool must adapt itself to the influx of additions to the world of knowledge. Meanwhile, the Wheatonites have already adapted themselves to the new building and its use. In time the composition of the term paper itself may develop into a singular enjoyable experience. Well . . . 5 l.O0 . -me b6StfaIl Clothes ever gmhow to pull them toPether so i.jou'l .lQok81 fee terrlflc 4super ' T thdt mul OW hoIeQ W Q W 2 i foll X qi I Lsowns A Psgc osks: o bond Un militoristl P LUS IN THIS ISSUE: SPECIAL FEATURES Fashions of the Holy Land by Phyllis Stein 7 The New Look in Denim by Levi Jaquet 43 An Open Look at Infirmary Gowns by Dr. Mel Practice 12 Squirrel Fur Coats: Wheaton's Own Natural Resource by B. F. Skinner 24 Psychologist Asks: Are Band Uniforms Militaristic? by Dr. Ann Alysis 35 Dressing For a Cold Chicago Winter by Wendy Braker 4 Men Wear Clothes, Too! by Tab Collar 19 Choosing a Sweater by V. Neck 38 Styles For a 1950's Revival by Bobbi Soks and Sadie L. Shoes 47 REGULAR FEATURES Do-It-Yourself Department: Turn That Homecoming Float into Exciting Paper Mache Sandals 6 Laundry Department: Getting the Cling Out of Graduation Gowns by Aunty Static 13 Removing Tough Stains by Ringo Rhonda Collar 13 Know Your Fabrics by Polly Ester and Terry Cloth 21 Care For Your'Hair by Dan Druff 17 Clothes For Tots by N. Fantware 39 Casual Corner by T. Schirt and B. V. Dease 42 EDITORIAL Wear 'Bib' Overalls When You Eat by Hudson Tailor Maid 26 STATEMENT OF OWNERSHIP Vague Magazine is published whenever we feel like. Vague is copyrighted 1976 by the Fundamental Clothing Retailers, Inc. It is printed in our offices behind the White Elephant resale shop in Wheaton, Ill. Subscription rates are S880 per quarter, even more if you want to eat and a place to sleep. Our editorial board includes Cotton Mather, Ann Villrayon, and Pan T. Hoes. Departments: Sue Whetter, Sportswear Editor: Hi Shadow, Cosmetics: Clutch Purse, Accessories Editor: Betty Cotes, Lingerie. Vague Magazine is irresponsible for its contents. Her case may be terminal, but her gown's in style. l Dress you Steve chic sheik in a headdress and sandals FOOTB LL There was a strange excitement in the air. It seemed as if the quarterbacks and receivers were hitting the driving sleds with as much ferocity as the big guards and tackles. And it was true. This late summer camp had a different character to it-an urgency, an expec- tancy-that could mean only one thing to the sweating, grunting men under those blue helmets: Football-solid, hitting FOOTBALL-was back at Wheaton College. Coach Dewey King, one man who has seen a lot of good football teams, would later say the spirit in that camp was one of the most optimistic he had ever seen. The team came out ready to prove themselves. In their first game, up at Carroll, they rolled over one of the league's favorites, 34-21. A non-conference set- back at Hope only brought their feet back down to earth, and the following week they had another tough conference contender, Illinois Wesleyan, down 15-8 with just a few minutes to go. But then it happened. Eugene Campbell ran the ball down to Wesleyan's 10 yard line with time running out. The play was called backg holding. The next play the offense fumbled the ball. Wesleyan recovered, drove quickly for a score and added two points as time expired. But this team would prove itself: with character. Bouncing back to beat Carthage 32-13 the next week, the Crusaders found themselves still at the top of a heap of evenly matched CCIW teams. A Homecoming win over conference champion Millikin would put them in the driver's seat. Behind 3-2 late in the fourth quarter, quarterback Steve Andrews took his team down to Millikin's 1 yard, Again, it looked good for the resurging Wheaties. And again it happened. The ball-and the Game-was fumbled away as the clock ticked down to 200. 3 That would have been enough for any Wheaton team of the recent past. But this group of young men rallied once again to defeat previously unbeaten North Cen- tral: the Parent's Day phenomenon. Down 28-7 at halftime, the Fighting Crusaders battled back to win 37-35 in an intense, emotion-packed finish that caused former Atheltic Director Harv Chrouser to deem the game the greatest ever played on McCulley Field. Then rumors of a Bowl-game bid were bitterly squelched by a disappointing loss to Elmhurst in the next-to-last game of the season. But this well-knit team of football players did succeed in providing one thing through their final threshing Q42-7l of North Park and the resultant 5-4 season: Football-solid, hitting FOOTBALL-was back at Wheaton College! 'N'-r s L 2110- Q, 5 Q, Yi Ov 41 fmwxx qv:-Z Q , v fNQ'w ,Q :ala 1' x b- 6 .4 ' X 'QL' . 'a Q3 TEFYQF . v W' 'X 'lj , ,l?iH.jj, E, V .1.,: V. Q I U f 1 -A ,g nM , A F-h'.,. .-- ? 'I fl 'fi ' 2 5 f -f . X A ,-,. X U, - ,,, V... .......j , ' X., Q 5, 71.1, ,.m---!- W-W , ,, . inf 5? ,Qt 4 A gr 35' 5. B if ' - gf' .. , , . ..., . - . . p 6 ,Q Q' K: ,qu Qff , x A f ,fi ' Q F K ' 30sW:4n'oEsg 73' 1 ' 1:1 v J A .af V. ,x. - f X: .,. -,hw H F AA ' F 1'ig.f,,,3! N. , . .,..... It ., , - ' 5 ' - ' ' - 5 . Q, 4, ,QQ,,.ff.ffvm-i'- uw- -- :P 4 -Y Y 4-'ff' .LZTSA-.u A- .-u ......-ag:-n-uw- ' ' , .v---f ' -- --,.1:-.--,- ..-,A:- , Y ir g,, rf, . .-f V ,V kvj T',f1ff 4 -V 'Q' W :,,:5QgjgJ.. 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W -fr' ' ' N- W 45 I' 1 Cs. af r ,,Jn.q1965'f4' , fv WJ- or-'f QQ'-. srh js I top: Wheaton defense stops Illinois Wesleyan. above: John Snyder recovers winning onside kick vs. Augustana. right: Bob Unruh kicks an extra point assisted by Mike Swider. ' i SI' OCCER In one of the most encouraging team meetings we reflected on the meaning of the team slogan 'Kopian'. It's the Greek derivative for the word 'labor', and in I Corinthians 15:58 it was used to remind us to strive until we were utterly exhausted. God expects us to strive with the intensity . - -- Rich Edwards They held a 6-2 record when the Mac- Murray game happened. Even the wind blew wrong, and in their second league match the Wheaties submerged, 5-0. Then the team discussed 'Kopian' before the next game: against Earlham on Parents' Day. They trounced Earlham 4-0, in what Coach Bean called, the finest display of team soccer ability I've seen in 7 years. After Earlham, the guys faced U. of Wisconsin-Green Bay, a top-ranked midwest team. and led 3-2 till the last 5 minutes, when U.W. turnedgthe tables 4-3. Then a winning streak began, lasting even against Division I's Northern Illinois University. 3-1 putdown of Western University of St. Louis clinched the NCAA Division III first round, Wheaton ex- perienced another game like Mac- Murray according to Bean, and lost 6-1. The final league tally was 3-2-0, and overall record 11-6-0. Five freshmen earned varsity letters this fall: John Fraser, Tom Lane, Steve McDonald, and Most Valuable Player Steve Burke. f I've never lettered more than one a year before! said Bean.l The Paul Avila award, voted by the coaches, went to senior Jon Savage. Other faithful '76ers included the captain Pete Friberg, Tom Kraakevik fthe only married man on the teaml, Rich Edwards, Bruce Jones, Don Lemon, Dale Phillips, and Steve Johnston. opposite page left: Pete Friberg dribbles past op- ponent. opposite page right: Steve Kok storms down field. opposite page below: Steve Burke demonstrates soccer finesse. below: Steve Burke outmaneuvers pursuers. right: Coach Bean par- ticipates irom the sidelines. jw Sl' I Throbbing head, cotton tongue, heaving lungs, and blurred pain in every leg muscle: the only pay-off for this agony comes from within. Running has to be a vehicle, not an end in itself, said Coach Vandermeulen. It's not worth it. The 1975 cross-country team can feel plenty of satisfaction, from making their skills a vehicle for Christian outreach, and ending their season with a 6-0 record. September 2-16 the team made a 3000-mile trip to the East Coast, running, and sharing in testimony and song. Returning to campus for a brilliant season, they scored a number of firsts : George Groezinger, first Wheatie to qualify and compete in the 26-mile Boston Marathon, the first defeat of Taylor University, 28-273 and the first dual varsity simultaneous meet, in which the team split and in separate meets defeated Grace, Trinity, North Park, and Bradley at the same time. Coach Vandermeulen attributes 1975's success to athletic and spiritual maturity in competing for Christf' Team members set up a Big Brother ministry with young boys, as well as meeting Monday nights for Bible study. November they held a 24-hour Runathon for CSC, covering 263 miles and raising 351650. Talented new-comers were junior transfer Jim Whitnah and freshman Dan Pennington. Special recognition goes to the 3 seniors: the 2 co-captains, Dale Thomp- son, All-American 5-miler, and Paul Smith, miler, and Luke Cutherell, voted the Gil Dodds Award by his teammates For unparalleled dedication in performance in distance running for and through the person of Jesus Christ. E' A E .ig ' f ' 13 4-.J 'N X x rg K- -.... i 1' kj I I ,, N x ' ' IW- xl ., we vw'-TEN .Lf -1 .+V - ff -'-Jr' Xl Hi, ii fm, ' fn ,uqx E Pl gf ,qi x Q f, 4 Ls . Q . , , ,navy - . , -,. , .,f-., .,,..A, X, ,F A 4 ' ,, - mmf ' 35:-Q 1 I V ,V - .lifq . ,:'g.f T - .,, - IWW' v. , j. if, 2 1, QV' QWL fl- V fuk! .r f , 4 I J! FE , - 4 5 'I ,af 5 V f fu , .J 1, K 4 S? S ' 5 r if- 11 .. 5 Q' J, W , -f 3: qi . ,,-ft, w3g,.!1' -4-I .-.,-. V ' .' -.a-5 'V , . vi EA ! as - -: iw. 1 1 . 1 t.3.gv--gl -' N +1 rf 1 pf- 1 X ., U, 1- M. 1 un. . u,A ' '-.W '-1 'N ,.- :find 'fig'-Q ' X :rv irka N 4 . 1 v Ea Tix 'Tr . DI MISSED l' by Jzm Helfers Say Trtle IX and what do you thmk Kal No more ROTC' QTh1s brands you as male J tbl So what'7 tYou re probably a g1r An excerpt from the Off1C13l Txtle IX Statement reads no person on the bas1s of sex shall be excluded from par trcrpatron rn be denled the beneflts of or be subjected to d1scr1m1nat1on un der any educat1onal program or ac t1v1ty rece1v1ng federal asslstance Comphance w1th thrs statement alded the college 1n reshapmg some of 1ts pr1or1t1es Men no longer had to take ROTC rf women dld not now women recerve the same rlght to equal oppor tunrtres rn athletlcs as do men Women can no longer have dorm hours 1f men do not And the 11st goes on To cope w1th these changes the college reshaped both budget and educatlonal pol1c1es The two most VlS1bl8 changes 1nvolved the dropp1ng of mandatory ROTC for men and the lncrease of the Women s P E budget Mandatory ROTC burned hotly as a campus ISSUE durlng the Vletnam years and afterward as students protested what they saw as coerc1on to take part rn a program not directly part of the hberal arts currrculum Many consc1ent1ous objectors felt harassed at the extra effort rt took to frle formally for therr status so that they could be released from a course worth only one quarter hour of credrt Thls sltuatlon eased when T1tle IX came mto effect th1s year The ROTC department sees thls government and college actron as posltrve Colonel Charles Walhs Professor of Mrhtary Scrence sard that the change would make the students more receptrve to ROTC courses because of the easmg of resentments about the mandatory program He hopes a hlgher proportlon of students w1ll stay wrth the program as a result of the change Srnce there w1ll be less pressure from fellow students more people w1ll enter the program because they really want to and the department w1ll graduate and commrssron more people The other consequence of Tltle IX 1n volves women s athletrcs The number of women s sports w1ll gradually rn crease to comply wrth the separate but equal clause of Trtle IX Accordrng to Dlf8CtOT of Womens P E Mlss LaVern Bjorklund softball track and fleld and swlmmrng stand f1rst 1n l1ne for expan slon The Women s Swlm Club thrs year was the frrst step 1n that dlrec t1on Though women w1ll have equal opportunrty for sports they w1ll probably not have the same amount of fundmg as the mens program The PE department plans to pursue a program of reasonable growth rn the women s sectlon growth that wrll cont1nue as the scope of womens sports mcreases unrversally Coach Harvey Chrouser department cha1r man of Phys1cal Educat1on hopes to see cautron rn acceleratmg act1v1t1es and begmnmg recrurtment programs He says I m not at all desrrous for the women to adopt the mens program Wrth all 1tS pressures The college wrll stress a separate but equal program of women s athletlcs so that more women wrll be able to com pete The admrnrstratron also plans change rn the athlete s leadershrp awards Where men recerve more money per caprta than women In the past the larger male athletlc programs have ac counted for the excess money but as the new law rs enforced Women Wlll get a more proportlonate share 99 - I ll ' 99 ' of? 1 ' H . . . . . - 1 1 1 ' . . . - . ' ' ' ' ' ' 7 . . Q . . ,, ' - . . . , . . ' 1 1 3 . . , ' 1 1 ' . - - cc 1 - 7 . - , . . . ,, , 1 1 1 u n u 1 ' 1 ' , . . , . . . . , . . . , . 1 ' ' y . ., - 1 1 , ' - 1 f0'8hffP 113'a1'Tx ' f ......Wf'Q :.. ' X . ' . V .N A , I 'f' r , I -f....,.l F In 'I - .X .,,. ,P W 'mf 4 ' . J I' ' . . 1' ' ,ff 1 I rr h , . . ' ' ' I .' g.' ' ' Y 5 ' . . A , .QM- ' - ' ' , :.:5' ' r .f:.g 4. - - i .'3-LES-. 'W ' '- ' 4'-.:' - .-ax V . 1 , 1, 4. ' , f .,.f Q ' .-' ' A ' ' . .- ff In 2 DR. HUDSON T. ARMERDING - PRESIDENT Dr. Peter Veltman Dean of College Mr. W1ll1am Pollard Vice President for Finance r-. I ' ,rf Q, L. , -f,. Dr. Henry Nelson Vice President for Student Affairs Dr. Donald Mitchell Vice President for Academic Affairs Ruth Bamford Associate Dean of Students 1 U' ' . .. HQ an U f f S gl l I , ul ' ,, I' ' ' . U, 1. I Ward Kriegbaum Associate Dean of Students Wi? ig., .M .i,. Richard Gerig Public Relations Director 'i , Arthur Volle Director of Counseling George Cramer Registrar Edward Coray Senior Director: Alumni Association 13 .rj'er-if-in. 'ii 2 55. A kai? 'A 'lo2,' .,ggs2gL'3':1,,3,Pi,,3 Joseph Bean Director of Admissions Leroy Pfund Executive Director: Alumni Association Beryl Price Purchasing Agent Leroy Patterson Chaplain ij' r l l 1 I I Howard White Controller A ilu'-u-1....., ing Ruth Geoffrion Director of Student Activities Harold Best Dean of Conservatory C.P.O. STAFF FOOD SERVICE F21-'wr . ,Ju Y ,vf- ' suv rf Al ' ' 44... - , H., LIBRARY STAFF ADMISSIONS AND RECORDS STAFF if V - , Uk.- uf, A -fa:-1 ,J W-......., + f . .C.: INNER CITY INNER CITY MINI TRIE The Inner City ministries reach out to poorer Chicagoans with Christ's all-powerful love and hope. Workers carry concern to Skid Row and coach basketball in the Uptown Buena Church gym. Pioneer Girl leaders organize crafts, games, and Bible-Ex for young girls. Tutors at Ingleside and LaSalle Street churches teach kids who often read more than two years behind their grade level. The school year opened with an all-out effort to get the campus in- volved in Christian Service Council. For C.S.C. President Gary Hylander, getting kids involved meant speaking on each dorm floor, conducting a chapel service, and publishing an informative brochure. Then he could only wait, as God filled each ministry with leaders and workers. If I had known last spring that there would be no faculty director for C.S.C. this fall, I would have had serious reservations about running for president. However, as the year began, it was apparent that I did have a directorg it was the Lord. God blessed Christian Service Council through each of the City, Youth, and Institutional ministries. A, , 4-r7?7X'mk 26 N ' I STITUTIO A MI I TRIE The sxck the cr1m1nal the aged soclety s response IS the 1nst1tut1on But Wheaton students respond rn love Volunteers V1S1t Elgm State Mental Hospxtal tutor mmates at Cook County Jarl and share Wlth the elderly at DuPage Convalescent Home Other Wheaton students teach classes each Sunday at the MldW6St Mrlltary Academy an mstrtutlon for bovs from broken or struggllng homes We mamlv want to galn a relat1onsh1p wmth the boys s1nce most of thelr problems orlgrnate from lack of atten t1on sard Sandy Rallens one partrcrpant There are 100 boys and few staff members Thev have become attached to us and mlss us We aren t allowed to call or v1s1t them durlng the week The best example we can be to the bovs 1SJl1St the contrast of our Joy and hope 1n Cod Wlth the depressrng at mosphere of an Instltutlon .-a . '-1' 109 YO TH MINISTRIE 5 H A v HCYEJ ro Tuff-fren--M LQ SHARE. YOUR FAITI-If 1 :.urr:'5pu'm Q 2 'bei sure 'lhfrex my mi am H1 your hte , 5, be filled uf -Nw Hal., Sfarhg, 5. 1'rgf1nrs:i'l - ' fqql nfs Go IQKI abuul Fwus I gggxgt mann!! '. z If M 1 . ' 9-' 10 wv -w ww- ,. F i dr , N: if' '- 'l '- ' Y-L 1'f5'- ,. CSC's ministry to youth challenges kids to follow one consistent model: Jesus Christ. In Aurora Mexican Church, Wheaton students participate with Spanish-speaking youth, singing and teaching. Campus Life holds clubs in 17 suburbs, where leaders try to be examples and friends to the kids. Child Evangelism reaches to the grade schooler, eager to learn. Other students meet han- dicapped children on Sunday mornings for Bible study and games. Nancy Meyers, coordinator of Youth Ministries, considers herself a resource per- son, finding the needs and problems of each group. According to Nancy, the work is worth it: When a little girl comes to know Christ in a Good News Club, or a high schooler in Young Life wants desperately to be friends, it's visual proof of God and prayer. college union presents... Y Y Y Y Y College Union '75-'76 tried to re-establish decision making on a wider scale in order to include more people, ideas, and creativity. They hoped the inner expansion would produce activities with more stu- dent involvement and social interaction: not just another concert or movie, but things with per- sonality and uniqueness. Reflection and inspiration led them to set up happenings with tradition and nostalgia: 100 Runs, Campus Square Dance, TWERP weekend, Campus Fair, and the Washington Banquet. In the spring they bid for a Carpenters concert. The services of the Travel Bureau kept expanding, and the Stupe CWheaton's hot spot? kept hot as ever . . . 3 wi ,ff A rl 1 Y, HM? K I 5 5 ' .5-'g,5f,g.Q..- - ,X X eh, ' Y-Q! , ' mf- '9 A Q QpQ3e3p,f,3g, , 5 L x - EAVE DROPPI ' IN THE STUPE Junior: I'll never get this stuff. Even the profs wonder if I can catch on to anything. Senior: Make something of yourself and then come back and sneer in their faces . . . Just sneer in their faces . . . say bleaaaah! sb T PreMed: Great . . . on the first page he states that the exam is on the 6th, On the second page it says it's on the 9th. I hate dis- organized profs when I'm disorganized because that makes two disorganized peo- ple and I don't like that. PreDent: You're worrying about the test already? I can't even get these problems. What did you get for B-24.7 PreMed: That's an even problem. Only the odds have the answers in the back of the book. Don't ask me! Grad student, awesomely: GOD IS GOD. fpausel Undergrad, blithely: Yea, Ican understand that. J. Hmm . . . German. I've got to look up this crazy compound in Beilstein. Haben sie Gold? Ich mochte some yoghurt. M: That's pronounced Geld, Geld. J: Haben sie Geld, then? M: No. K J 114 Sb Myrtle I wanted you to come here so we could be alone the two of us Well thxs xsnt very secluded Harvey My sultemates are m the next booth But It does have atmosphere doesn t It honey If you llke Cat Stevens Oh Im bemg followed by a Myrtle I came here to tell you somethmg I feel that Id lxke you to be my w1fe Moo oon shadow moon shadow Don t mumble ln my ear Harvey I m hstenmg to thls song MYRTLE' I WANT YOU TO MARRY ME' Harv you re shoutmg' The whole Stupe can hear you Oh Im so embarrassed Im so embarrassed fixeigfsiiiilmllis 2 5565? Y E755 ' 43.5, 4firE'i13f7l9. mw- Sb sb , . . , , Y - . , . -. , , - .. , - . , , ,, , . , . . L 7 1 - , . , . . , , , . , . , , - Y , l , A CHINESE EDITOR REJECTS A MANUSCRIPT Illustrious brother of the sun and moon-Behold thy servant prostrate before thy feet. I kowtow to thee and beg of thy graciousness thou mayest grant that I may speak and live. Thy honored manuscript has deigned to cast the light of its august countenance upon me. With raptures I have pur- sued it. By the bones of my ancestors, never have I en- countered such wit, such pathos, such lofty thoughts. With fear and trembling I return the writing. Were I to publish the treasure you sent me, the Emperor would order that it should be made the standard, and that none be published except such as equalled it. Knowing literature as I do, and that it would be impossible in ten thousand years to equal what you have done, I send your writing back. Ten thousand times I crave your pardon. Behold, my head is at your feet. Do what you will. Your servant's servant, The Editor. dx KODO In pursuing the manuscripts that were submitted to KODON this year-with strange combinations of rapture and dismay-most of us were initiated into the world of publications. Besides occasional hands of flegall gin rum- my Cin the Chaplain's old officell, coffee, and shooting the proverbial bull, the enlarged staff put out the first issue of KODON with a new magazine-type format around the cen- tral theme of literary tragedy. We were drawn into the con- troversy concerning the value of the arts on campus as well, and attempted to relate to the more aesthetic needs of all students who are seeking to understand the importance of the arts and creativity in their broadest contexts. TIHIE HQYCECQRD g I1 ll 9 5 9 5 6 On nine out of every ten Thursday nights in MSC a dedicated band of individuals works into the wee hours, putting together that jour- nalistic beacon of Mid-America, the Wheaton Record. They often ask themselves why they do it. What. is the strange pleasure they get out of working all night to make the headlines fit, or all the ads line up across the bottom margin? Why do they put up with irate readers who think they mis- sed the biggest story of the cen- 6 tury, or got their names printed wrong? How do they explain to their profs why they want to turn a paper in late, or delay a test? They must derive some maso- chistic pleasure from looking at the paper Friday, and knowing they helped put it together. That is if they are awake when the paper comes out. The writer will look at his story and make sure they got it right, or I2. Il I1 6 as 9 5 9 5 6 the columnist will see how much the editors cut from his essay. Once in a while, someone comes up to the Record office and gives a word of encouragement: Keep up the good work. You're doing a fine Job A lot of people Sald that after the staff rushed a page and a half on President Ford to the presses the verv same day he spoke here Verne Becker Jim Zitzman Linda Havener, Jim Townsend, Neal Williams, Roh Hromas, Jim Helfers, and of course Mr. Paul Fromer all worked to put out a first-rate paper. So from the coffee cups, Coke cans, and lingering odor of pizza emerges a prettv interesting and thought provoking product And it doesn t f1ll up the wastebaskets everv Fri day afternoon anv more ka lg. 1 rbook 93 E y O E-' Dear Student, A yearbook, by its definition, should show the activ- ities of the year in an organized manner. Even though this book is arranged semi-chronologically, its true axis is a word: Becoming. We chose this theme because it expresses so much about the Wheaton period of our lives. It is a period of change, growth, action, emo- tions, and learning. Each of us is developing into the man or woman God would have us to be. Every activity friendship, and experience guides us toward that goal. As you look at the photos and read the copy, be sure to keep Becoming in mind. I think you'll find 1975- 1976 has been a year of becoming for you. My staff members and I hope you enjoy the book and hope that it adequately portrays this important segment of our lives. Thank you for the pleasure of presenting it to you. For the '76 Tower staff, Egg Q.- . - Steven R. Hein: Editor Steven R. Hein: Editor Free samples of Mylanta available upon request! Ez-.- Sue Woodcock: Copy Editor Hmmm, how's one supposed to type? Dave Golter: Director of Photography How do I love thee . . Cheryl Syverson: Art Director But Rich hasn't kissed me all week! 1.3 H . Susan Sawyer: Layout Editor Moss humble servant velly happie to serve you . . the tower staff edltor steven r hem art dlrector cheryl syverson copy ed1tor susan woodcock layout ed1tor susan sawyer photography dlrector dave golter busmess manager sarah anderson secretary becky b1n1on advlsor dr peter veltman art pam chlssus copv karen ashmus debb1e buechner gary Comstock melmda g1pson rob1n harwood bonnle ward paul w1ll1s layout rnargaret bell laurle kraus clndy larson lorra1ne moskeland kr1s ohrman debble secor photographers steve boyenga al erlckson dan relfsnyder dana rowen J1m skarln Jon warren pete welander tDVlSlS dlane addleman bev daly cathy merrlfleld ed1tor ememtus stephen starzer lndex ken moberg tlna anderson ads J1m hlcks grad sectlon s 1Ck1 clower color photography Jun zltzman contrlbutmg artlsts dennls reynolds nancy meyer susan rasche contrlbutmglayout dan Johnson sarah rltchle stephen donehoo nuke katterjohn steve nelson buddy w1ll1arns steve hem bxll SBIYZ Verne becker mehssa huff J1m zltzman J1m whltner publ1sher s representatxve thanks to mrs mrs mrs mrs moral support greg weeks wleland wells rung geoffnon teresa taylor rlck sweltzer r1ch pearson debb1e rudy plzza bv barone s I O jane IHFSOH contributing photographers: OUL Student Organization for Urban Leadership, geared to the minority student, provides leadership positions for its members in the home mission of the urban situation. Off-campus, SOUL sponsors a local tutoring program, Students for Community Action. The summer program, STP fServe the peoplel, is like an American SMP, sending help to churches and camps across the country. On campus, SOUL holds one chapel each quarter, and an annual Black Arts Festival. This fall, SOUL brought their prisident, Al Ferguson, to the Edman podium. Winter quarter, William Pannell, noted writer and Fuller Seminary professor, spoke on Martin Luther King. Also on campus, frequent Bridge dinners bring in speakers, so that by lecture and discussion they can create a bridge of understanding. lu., 2. 1 SSOCIATED WOME STUDE TS Associated Women Students purposes to sponsor ac- tivities to meet the needs and interests of women on cam- pus. this year president Lisa Lundberg and her cabinet of six carried out several new projects with that goal. Fall quarter they provided means for helpers and friendsi' to visit childrenis orphanages weekly. A Christmas Bazaar aided United Action in raising money for missionaries in Colombia. Spring quarter AWS and the Psychology Department sponsored Kathy and Sam Weise's seminar on marriage And throughout the year AWS held dinners with speakers relevant to particular majors The Fall Bedroom Bazaar of room accoutrements launched those annual services of AWS that continue to be popular Little Sib weekend February 27 28 again brought a warm piece of home to campus Monthly prayer breakfasts continued on Saturdays while every day AWS Health Center volunteers sat desk so that patients could have evening visitors Everv woman student IS a member of AWS and the group tries to provide place of service and involvement for all who want them ai Qi' ds top: Little Sib Weekend and a happy participant. above: This year's officers: Sue Baker, Claudia Ball and Lisa Lundberg. right A friendly smile from the Health Center desk. Hg 125 Led by President Todd Gray and Vice President Doug Beers, the '75-'76 Stu- dent Government made service their chief function. The twelve representatives and several ex officio members spent many long Saturday mornings in planning toward this goal. In service to fellow students, S.G. reps sat in committees and faculty meetings, discussing and acting on voluntarization of ROTC, the validity of present General Education requirements, lab credit, and new calendar proposals. Vocalizing student opinion, S.G. spoke on such controversial topics as straight-laced film guidelines and current attitudes toward the statement. of 3 9 pw V-..L,.. .L- U wg Q 1 iff is 5 -+R' ,U 'Q ' If X - X' spd' 2 .I I.,... .W N hh., .g.., - .471 , . MN. ,512 . .,.- 1 lv :ff ff-S, . .cp- ,Q we-.- , fi: ' .qw M ' Aa' .U ,L , ' X ',., - - W- --Q - ,4 1 . , A jp Q. M-an - .,..,Mv H M I ,fff W ,nr Q , 1 Z i ' , P .' Wm Q 15, : t1T ? ,wl 'lx ' ' IV,-.1 A -1 . r, ya' , affix , F' R J, , V I H:r11,,f,,,. r , .,.. 1 --re ' ,. I- , -I rigs- , Q ,, 'W' ' 1:- 'N 'fm GOOD EVENING, WETN News presents MATRIX, a one hour community news program with reports and interviews on activities and people in the Wheaton area. This is Donna Albury and I'm glad you tuned in to MATRIX tonight. Julie Hen- drichs is with me this evening filling in for the vacationing Ed Hernandez. T 12.9 35 . THIS IS WETN . . On tonightfs program you'll hear a report on the Wheaton observance of Veteran's Day on WHEATON AT LARGEQ Mark Christiansen will be interviewing Mr. Howard Spanigle, and this week's recipe for crunchy peanut butter parfaits, and an around the world and the nation as provided for us by United Press Inter- national, and the WETN News depart- ment. . .Julie . . .H VVHEATDN COLLEGE RADIO With Stu Johnson and Program Manager Rick Sweetser at the reins, WETN continued its coverage of news, sports, and chapels this year, as well as its mor- ning and evening music shows. Their newest project this year was MATRIX. Graduate students Ron Waters, Peggy Johnson, and Paul Liu initiated the one hour feature and news program in order to reach out to the community as well as to campus interests. The show covers news, campus events, sports and art reviews, local community events, and special guests. Highlights included Dr. Gordon Fee, a special on hunger, Moishe Rosen on Jews for Jesus, a special on Title IX, and a brief interview with Governor Walker . . not to mention man-on-the-street coverage of Presi- dent Ford's visit. OPHUM ORE 'ht w- L' 4 JAMES ALBINSON qs N 1' I l 1 --X I t xl Ei.1zAaE'ri-1 ALLEN BRAD ANDERSON SHARON ANDERSON I LINDA ANDRISAN KAREN ARCHER L Y . WILLIAM ALFORD a 7 :.. -7-7372 -:Z ,-Z,,.,.- L - -, DAVID ALTIS DEBORA ANDERSON STEPHEN ANDERSON DOREEN ANTONIK X KAREN ASH M US LINDA ALIG MARK AMADOR L 'M U Y if If Q ' ll ' V -' . in LINDA ANDERSON CLASS GTE When is your paper due, Harvey? Yesterday Classes, classes . . . Remember the day you came in late to one of those overcrowded Blanchard classrooms and had to climb over chairs, people, purses, and gym shoes to get to the one empty seat in the back corner? How about the time you fell asleep and the guy next to you asked a question? In 11 short weeks you traced one or two major themes of a few Victorian novels, memorized the muscles of the frog, read 29 commentaries on Romans, and turned all your friends into guinea pigs for your psych ex- periments. Then just when you began to understand the content of your assignments and realized that it would take a lifetime of study to master the subject, you took four big fat exams. Those essay tests! The prof 5 l ,E sophomores 131 I.0RI HAHIAN LORI BACHMAN SHARON BALDWIN JOHN BALMER DANIEL BALOW DONALD BATSTONE PHILIP BAUR as .gf fn 4 x V+ I'HYI.l.IS BAYLEY PAMELA BECHTEL DALE BELCHER RUTH BENNETT . . 7' , I .ll-ZANNI-2 BENSON LINDA BENSON DEBORAH BENTON DAWN BERGER I . . .IAYH HERHQI FIST DIANE BIRKEY DAVID BISHOP WILLIAM BLACKHURN l I l'Rl5K'II.l,A BLAIR JOHN RLOM KEVIN HLUSHER KA'I'Hl.EI'lN BOSWI-ELI. Y I I 1 x' 'IN-r KAIII-IN I!ll'l'ZKO SARAH BOl'I,'I'ON MARK BOWEN SVHAN BOWEN GARY HRAA'I'I'1N ROGER BRAVE DAVID HRAIJLICY f 'ff 1'- II. ug: , '-5 . ll . ajf' ITN 9+ m .Dialer A LINDA BRANDON KARIN BRINKS ALBERT BUCHWEITZ DEBORAH BUECHNER ,XXII 2 x X - . I 6 JONATHAN FAFIS BARBARA CAINE if ., , ' lv: V f 3 MARY BROOKS MICHELLE BROOKS rc' gf , 1 rf I 'R 6 . 1 Ni . 9 , 'V , N ' A' A , ' - T.ag'llil - ' . '... -.J 5 , PATRICIA BULLMORE AMY BURKHALTER ROBERT CALDWELL 1ll.I-INNFAMI-IRON RONALD CAMPBELL GLORIA CARDELL A I I ' 4 8 -V :G X ' iv I l.AWRI'1Nl'I-IFARLSON IARILYN i'ARLS'I'ROM J i . I DEBORAH FAM ERON iff K If DAVID f'ARl.ISl,I'I BARBARA VARTER DAVID FASPZICI. l'HARI.I-1511-XS'I'O -lOHNf'I'IIJARHOl.M JAMES l'HII.lJI'IRS'l'0N PAMl lLA VHISSIN JENNIFER BROWN NANCY BROWN NANCY-IEANNE BROWN ROHl'IR'I' BURNS PHILIP BUTIN .IOHANN BUTKA gave you questions a,b, and c in advance. You studied a and b because, of course, he wouldn't ask you c, and then, of course, he did. And it's all over. A short break comes, with little time for reflection, and then you plunge into four or five new classes. Classroom learning situations provide moments of humor and times of frustration. If it's any comfort, your profs must feel the frustration more keenly than you do. How can they condense into one quarter the material they've internalized through years of study? They try to supplement class time by assigning all-day- and-all-night reading assignments, and 15-page term papers. You probably grumble, but find yourself say- ing, I wish I could have put more time into that class . . . covered more material. Classrooms, then, don't exist to fill our heads with comprehensive knowledge of a subject. Rather they are unique experiences of interaction with people and ideas. For instance, if the classroom material is presented skillfully, it will cause you to explore people, issues, and books you might not otherwise be exposed to. It may spur you on to independent study over breaks, or even to grad school. at any rate, you should leave a class with the tools to discover more, if you so desire. sophomores 133 I I L I IDANIEI,f'HRIS'I'lAN STEPHEN CHRISTIANSEIN STEPHEN CLAUSEN KAREN COON BETH COREY BRUCE CORIELL 'ri Iv T I V HEIDIDAMON JAMES CUDNEY REBECCA CUTHERELL JEFFREY DAVIS SCOTT DAVIS ARLENE DE GUES Classroom situations also put you in touch with your peersi Friendships grow from a few hours of studying together. You receive insights from class discussions that you never would have on your own, and you grow in self-confidence by expressing your ideas before others. At Wheaton you not only get to know the subject matter and your fellow students, but you also have the privilege of getting to know your profs-both in and out of class. With their years of studying and applying their knowledge, they share life knowledge as well as head knowledge. If you've ever stepped through that open of- fice door and shared a problem with your prof, or dropped in at his home for an informal class session or time of food and fellowship, you know the sincere in- terest Wheaton profs have in their students as in- dividuals. So maybe the times you typed till 2 a.m., stood number 479 in the registration line, or sat behind the pillar so you wouldn't get called on are all worth it. The subject matter, peer interaction, and dedicated professors you find in the Wheaton classroom provide opportunities for growth that you won't find anywhere else. 134 1, , x I' , MARK CLAY TIMOTHY COLE U 7 I X lla,-f: .IRI JANET CRAVEN ROBIN CRINITI DENISE DARLING ESTHER DASKALAKIE L KURT DEMING MICHAEL DENHAM DENNIS DIDEUM MARGARET DITZLER CAROL DRENNAN RYAN DUPON CRAIG EDIGER DEBORAH EDWARDS ELAINE CONRADS JACQUELINE CRISWEL WILLIAM DAVIDSON NICHOLOAS DeVR! STEPHEN DONEHOO JOHN DURHAM MARY EHRESMAN KATHLEEN CONNON L SHEFFIELD CROWDER JAMES DAVIS ES CAROL DICK RICHARD DORTCH WINSTON ECKHARDT PAUL EKSTROM .IANICE ELLIOTT X :S . BRIAN ERICSON L Xu ' I , A I I JANET FESLER 'Md DOUGLAS FOSTER RONALD ELWARDT SUSAN FABRICIUS JEANETTE FINE f -a I' , f , J . A 4 ,Ig I l .1 SUSAN FRANCIS 1 FRANCIS ERDM AN KEITH ERICKSON TODD ERICKSON DAVID FANER JAMES FLEMING DARLENE FRANK 1 f 1 PATRICE FRANZ RICHARD FRENCH CAROLYN FURMAN CAROLYN GATESON DEBORAH GERVASE I -I 7- 'f X L ,. 1 N ' Y 4 9' I4 s 4 L I wx ,. W NFPIVIRI ' Y Sl V - '-- 1 J KATHERINE GONZALEZ JOYCE GORDON RUTH GOTAAS CHARLES GRAY Ml-jl GRN-ZBENOW l f . X , V ' I 1 5 I I I5 I Fa , I. x I Al I ' A I I 'I . Ps - I' 'f , ff 1 3 GLENN GUNDERSON ERIC GUSTAFSON STEPHANIE GUTIEIIREZ POLLY GUY .IlIDl'I'H HAIJIIIY ? I PAUL FERWERDA i -I Y X T' sl I I CYNTHIA FONSECA L SELMON FRANKLIN CHARLES GILLIKIN DANIEL GOFF GEORGIA GRIFFIN DAVID GRIGEREIT STEVEN HALL BARBARA HARIG sophomores 135 -I EAN HARM ELINK l'Al'l. HAYNIE CHARLES HAYS SWB! IIOIIICWI' IIRONIAS PANIELA HVDSON PAXIEI 156 ,A Hl'N'l' BRUCE HARRO REBECCA HEATH JOHN HELFRICH SANDRA HERREHA VHERYI. HOOKER GMI. HORRAS I IIQII FAROI. HI I'l'HINS YVONNE HASTINGS .IAM ES HEIMBACH .vi .I c ,L D I n 2 s I T' I SUE HELMHOLZ STEPHANIE HILL BARBARA HOPPELL LARRY HDSKINS K.-X'I'HRYN HYMES JANE HATFIELD I WAYNE HEINEMANN DANIEL HENDERSON FRANCIS HOLSTON ' CRAIG HOPPLER DAVID HOWARD l'E'l'l-IR INHRAMS DEBORAH HAYDEN NADINE HEITZ JULIE HENDRICH WILLIAM HOLWICK JANET HORNADAY KAREN HOWARD 5 xcR1c'.ml'H1A1Nr:N MARY IAYCOX I RFC If IOHNSON D ,D IIM KABA7A X RONIAI D KFNDAI I IHRISIINI' Ixl INII' II-XX I-I KNO!-PI-I I' I XXIII A IxOI I'XHl R! 'L' KATHY IENKS CHRISTOPHER JOHNSON LINDA IOHNSON LANE KAQEN CAROI YN KFNNEDY IUDITH KNIAPP PA FRII IA KNIOWI I-S KA I HI' RINI' KOHHI' KN AS MILO JOHNSON MARK KATTERJOHN MARILYN KFRQHNPR IOY FF KNIC HT ROHFR1 KOFI I I Al DIA KRAI' ISON D O C CH L 3' CII O I Z U' O 2 Qi E -11 su 5 x 2 J' o z FRI' DI' RIC K KFFFF di LOIS IOHNSTON x MARK KELLER ROBFRT KINNFW IAMI-N KIRI HNPR CHRISTINA KFLLY SARAH KI FINMAN LINDA KI F I'I Qophomores 137 , fi Ja ' K 5' -2 I ' wg. . ' V W x , - I 4 ' 1 - ,I' . , , .. f' L: I J , F1 . 1-.515 f 1 , 'V 1 .V 'M ,I , f b j , I I , I: ' I IL I fl, I ,MBV xx I '. 1 ' - A im - ' J 1 A' WI T- X I 3 I I, ' I I .I 5 A X, I II! ' 1. my ,Il I. I3 iw ifqrw' W4 -L. I ,IV I J 'U 4 I , I ,4 H .d . - I , , I I I I , , ., J . I F 1. - V , 5 I I I I I I I ff . I MARY KRUSE JANE LARSON KAREN LARSON NOEL-PAUI. LAUR DONNA LAURIE JILL LEHN ERT 5 -...-5 .... :-f- ANN LOGAN BRUCE MAASBACH 138 I DAVID LANTZ LINA LARSON . 3. , L gf az D 4 , rg 'ff.Q33 L V Q V1'l'i:'rglXQ. TIMOTHY LECRAW LAURIE LESLIE JOHN LEVISON STEPHEN LUCAS JOANN LUDEMAN .JEFFREY MACDONALD JULIANNE MACKINNEY , P NANCY KUPKA TIMOTHY LARKIN TIMOTHY LARSON AUDREY LEE CHARLES LEWIS - f CHERYL LUFT DEBRA MADSEN TIMOTHY LABADIE DAVID LARSEN PAMELA LAUBER JOHN LEEDY KEITH LEXBY MARK LUNDBERG JOAN MADSEN -IAMES MAGNUSSON JAMES MASSON' SUSAN McCUNE DWIGHT MALTBY SCOTT MARTIN I 'RICHARD MAWI-IORTEN LAURA MAXWELL GEORGE MCDONALD LAUREL McLENNAN 5 , ' 3 I. F ' -ml N .A 'av In gi XI II' I J 9 WILLIAM MASHBURN WILLIAM MCCARY JEFFREY MCNAIR JAMES MCCAULEY DANIEL McCULLLOUGH JAMES MCNEAL DIANNE MILLER DONNA MILLER JAN MILLER JANE MILLER PAMELA MILLER WILLIAM MCNEAL ERIC MCQUITTY STEPHEN McROBERTS GAIL MELLO WILMER MIZELL .IAM ES MEENA KATHLEEN MERRIFIELD LAURA MONTGOMERY ' sophomores 139 PATRICIA MYHREN PAUL NELSON BARBARA ORTHERG SHARON OWEN DOUGLAS PENNEY CHRISTOPHER PERCIANTE 140 SANDRA MOORE W 4 P f 'ix 5- Aw-I GEORGE MORAN VIRGINIA MORRIS LORRAINE MOSKELAND PETER MULL JAMES NICODEM PAMELA NYQUTST DAVID OLFORD KENNETH OLSEN wx . . I :MAX JANET PACKMAN SUSAIN PANTLE JOYCE PAVELKO CAROL PEARSON DAVID MORAN CHARLYN MUNNIKSMA 1 P','k LINDA OLSON iii s x I 4 susm PENNER 5 ' I O , fs LISA PERKINS Q iff A ' 1 I ., 'fl ' f in X A gi A 'I' X , I ' I+ I I , - 3. 77, PAMELA PRICE JEAN RAFFENSPERUER LAURIE RAMSEY BRIAN RATHBUN MICHAEL REISLER BRUCE PETERSON JOHN PETTER 1 .M ff DEBORAH PUNCHES ROBERT QUIRING L I KATHY RAINS LUANNE RALLENS 12, A - I SCOTT RAMSLAND ROY RASMUSSEN I IL DANIEL REIFSNYDER DEBORAH REIMEL , A 3 JOHN RENO ROBERT RENCH JILL POLINO PHILIP POTRATZ sophomores 141 DENNIS REYNOLDS PETER ROBB LINDA ROWELL JONATHAN SARTELL 142 KIMBERLY RICE KATHERINE ROBERTSON DEBRA RUDY DAVID SAWYER MAVIS RICE JULIA ROGERS DEBORAH RYAN E . PHILIP SAWYER JEFFREY SCHNEIDER ELEANOR SENTS VIVIAN RICE JOHN RO LLWFTZ LINDA RYD I ROBERT SAXTON BARBARA SCHUSTER JON SHAW , - r lf DAVID RIDDER lf: ,1 CELESTE RONEY -IOHN RYSER DAVID SCHAIRER LINDA SCHWAB Eg RICHARD SHENK MARK RILLING KARYN RISLEY SHARON ROTHHAAR GAYLE ROWELL rj 1' SUSAN SANDBERG ROBIN SANDIN QI-IIRLEY SCHLEEVOIGT ROBERT SCHLOSS ,HX CYNTHIA SCHWARZ WILLIAM SEITZ NORMAN SHIRK CAROLYN SHUSTER '9- 1 is gif 1 .IEANNE SIEBERT SUSAN SKEELS MARK SMITH STEPHEN SMITH Q , , x, MARK SOUTHARD JAMES SPIELMAN BE'I'I'YE SUDLOW STEPHEN SUGARBAKER BARRY SWANQUIST MARIE SWANSON KAREN TATTER MARGARET TEASDALE PAUL SLAYTON DANIEL SMARTT MSA STEVEN SMITH JOHN SNYDER RICHARD SPRINGER MARK STEVENS ANITA SULC KEITH SULIK DIANNE SWARTZ JEFFREY SWEITZER BONNIE TENSEN MICHAELTHORNTON JOEL SMITH - 1 x STEPHEN SONESON ELAINE STICKNEY mvm SUMIDA RICHARD SZUCS CHRIS TI-IYBERG DEBRA SORENSEN VIRGINIA STODDARD i DAWN SUNDQUIST STEVEN TAK USHI K NANCY STUTZMAN SHERYL SWANLUND sophomores 143 DONALD VIDOER AVIDREY WAHL!-3'I'ROM LISA WHARTON 144 ? MARCIA VOS RW xy. . 1 A Ak' GX :1 I :I STEPHEN WAINAINA MARK WICHERN KURT TILLMAN GORDON VOSSLER AJ CHERYLTODD 1- r ' , I Illia ., a ' I - I V15 3723 - - -'--, RANDIVOTH CHRISTIE WARDLE DONALD WILKERSON III-IHI-KTA WOOD JANE Yl'NK STON -IAM ES WEATHERLY GORDON WILLIAMS CHERYL WOODWARD NATALIE ZIERK RUSSELL TOMS 3 R01-xP:R1'wAm-:NAAR SHARON WEHHER GRE! IORY WINN ROBERT WOODYARD .IOANNE ZIMMERMAN RICHARD VALPEY DAVID WAG ER RUTH WEBER SANDRA WITTIG I'A'I'I'I WI DRMAN I'I'Z'I'I-IR ZVHI-IR DONALD VER LEE LARRY WAGNER THOMAS WESTING JEFFREY WOOD I PATRICIA YEO ANNA ZUK quarter -M Ah C' m e ESCAPE Oranges shooting into the ,green fveins of maples. Summer becomes pastime, autumn-a temporary high. Sunrays are barbed needles puncturing 'the tough bark with escape. Winter's numbing claws at drab daysfgushy, ruined leaves. 'Frosty chaos eats Off ltwigs, warmth. The orange mirage is enough to get them through the months. But it his winter and time to withdraw. Kenneth George Pobo , . -n 1 ff: 1, 'Q M li I e 'im?12 , Lk' it - ,' ,qi 3 ' 'O Q' '- fs! ' mfg?-Q 3 .nf :gait-RQ ' 3 Xp- ' 3iZ42if?vff?Q,?:33 'Q - - . ?..ff,ial f.Q :4e 'gli .:z1j'- ' 'ai ! 'A' V11 ' . at -1. -1-P 9 Q f, . , ,S 55, .Y . Q 6 ?,e6g? , X q.5 4 1g Q , , .4 1' ,.. . -is-x 1 Lv 1 ' A 1 ' 1 -lp, J I 5 3 -' 'L :Y 3 .u I 4 A-94 v V LM I 'W . , is ,I ' , 1 M - 1 - 1 4 I 3 FMM -f x.,. 1 Mu 3 . . Y,,,.9- 1-' i f i 5 n v -..au-. Fw' TLT' z w A ,.: - 'fY,'.,, A f 'vu' ,....-u-l- as ,W - PAA. ' J , ,, V -S' Y ' I u ,M V Y , L Q. 1 ,.!i,.1. - s l S Z 41, F fat' q,.,gs..g .Qui F ' ' ,qv 23,85 44, ., , ., '.m -N 'f n vs. -',., .h , k J 5 dia-4:25 Q E i,,-gag '? :M-M A ' SNOW CAMP 'fu ,. 'JI ' , if ' ,ji - k,,A :ii 0' THE BIG UNWIND AFTER FIN ALS A man gets into his car, goes down two stories, asks for a glass of water and shoots his wife. Why did he say thank you? . . . being sandwiched together in this tent isn't at all like a Big Mac-at least they have warm buns! . . . Hopwood won the cookie decorating contest?-with kissing angels? How 'bout some blues, Tom? 500? Whatever happened to Rook? almost as many black eyes as busted brooms you put the red arrow pointing where, Jim? But what good is a compass without a flashlight to see it with? .... jumped into the lake? at this time of year? But -lud! I was shouting Whoa ! Cool your jets, Cathy Broken bones? I'll see-... Quick. quick! I felt it! The snipe just ran past my ankle! Well, I remember on Vanguards Is my mascara running? If only we had a Sam around camp .. 14 7 MIS SIO FOCU Directed by Marty Bennett and staff, this year's Missions Week focused into three days of ac- tivities. The committee decided to include American city missions in its scope as well as selected foreign ones. The key speakers also represented the world mission effort, as the African Osei Mensah called for a mission partnership, and the Britisher-turned-Wisconsan Jill Briscoe called for compassion toward world need. The impact of Missions in Focus was personal. Osei Mensah and the guest soloist Kim Wickes shared from their own lives in the evening sessions, and the missionaries created a one-to-one rapport with the students by staying in the dorms, visiting classes, and making luncheon and dinner meetings. Roger Hederstedt, who hosted Wilbur Chapman from the Dutch West Indies, was im- pressed by the missionaries, eager openness with students they met. Dr, Chapman is on furlough and staying in the area with his wife, so he didn't have to live with us-he just wanted to. Other students who made a point to meet the mis- sionaries got new insight into missions partnership, both in support and career availability. ji awareness challenge opportunity Ling- V . TTI I 1 Ii. in , in IJ ,, ,- - 4' ' 1 A I ' 2 iv M . 4. Ye ' -vii 671 ga I ' fr A ' :F I Ivmg M I- f ,fig ,r , n, N ,,'l.-.7 ' I V 'IJ' l.fll,l,5'l. ' Eilrrvrgm 1 r ,Q ' I , , if X . I ' .ap ,'J 453 ' 1' E, , , , , ,ma Kim Wicke is small but not frail. Blinded by a bomb during the Korean War, Kim grew up in an orphanage. At age ten, she was adopted by the Wickes family of Dayton, Indiana. At 12, she accepted Christ at a Billy Graham Crusade. She earned a B.M. and M.A. in music at Indiana University, and received a Fullbright Scholarship to the Vienna Institute of Music. In July, 1975, she was the favorite soloist at the Lausanne Congress, and she continues to minister to the world in song. 1 1 A left: A curious student questions a missionary about the world of Christian service. below: Marty Bennett, chairwoman of the Missions in Focus committee, and Mark Freemantle sing at an evening meeting. REV. O EI-M NSAI-I The Rev. Gottfried Osei-Mensah flew in and out of Wheaton during Missions in Focus week amid his many other engagements. His chapel messages Tuesday and Wednesday and the call to missions carried real freshness and enthusiasm. Part of Osei-Mensah's appeal to his listeners was his position as a voice from the Third World, and a very sage voice at that. On Wednesday morning he shared some of his life history. Born and raised in a Christian home in Ghana, Osei-Mensah went to Birmingham University in England as a teenager and earned a B.S. in chemical engineering. For five years he worked as a sales engineer with Mobil Oil back in Africa. But he began pursuing, another interest, as he became head of the Pan-African Fellowship of Evangelical Students. In 1971 he took the pastorate of the Nairobi Baptist Church in Kenya. In July, 1974, the Lausanne Congress on Evangeliza- tion chose him as one of the major plenary speakers at the conference. As of September, 1975, he was taken the job of Executive Secretary of the Lausanne Continuation Com- mittee for World Evangelization. He is now 41, married and the father of two children. 149 I .J , -. you ff top: Kathy Beers and Bill Capps admire Wheatorfs presidential couple. above: Randy York and Janet Craven enjoy entertainment featuring Concert Choir members and an oral interp. presentation. WA HI GTG QUET J, .. ': -'sv .-ws, ff .X ...gy 1 li : top: Jan Simpson and Fred Miser relax after a sumptuous repast. left: Chaplain and Mrs. Patterson model the latest in banquet. attire. above: Dave Masterson conducts Concert 2 t N Choir members in historical American songs. ds THE EFFECT OF GAMMA RAYS N MAN-IN-THE- OON MARIGOLD ,,. ...J . H is is Half-life! If you want to know what a half-life is just ask me. You are looking at the original half- life! I got one daughter with half a mind, another one who 's half a test tube, -a house full of rabbit crapg and half a corpse! Me and cobalt-60! Two of the biggest half-lifes you ever saw! Gamma Rays tells about the mutations that life effected on a mother and her dwo daughters. Elver- da Kelly, as the mother, showed battered life, battering back with all its might. Continually frustrated, alternately tender and cruel, she couldn't help being a destructive force because life was destroying her. Her two daughters were like the marigolds in Tillie's experiment, which show some of the strange effects radiation can produce. Ruth CDebbie Leveyl wallowed in the terror and ugliness of her world, manipulating it to get what she wanted. Only Tillie, fJean Harmelingl, ab- sorbed in her science, rose above the mutating effects, struggling with them rather than succum- bing. Gamma Rays, student-directed by Holly Wheeler, was an intense play. It may have scorched the audience, not with any imaginary evil, but with two piercing hours of appalling human hurt and need. 153 P. F. FLYER Sz THE SNEAKS They said it couldn't be done, but P. F. Flyer Sz the Sneaks returned to make their final concerted effort this winter, performing abundantly before a pewbound Melinda Fairchilds crowd which included Mrs. Geoffrion and a few migratory potatoes. The greasy kids' staff literally rolled Ludwig von Beethoven out of his grave, while Mr. Bud G. Erickson quietly played chess behind his saxophone. Musically the group was sound, with only a few soupy back-up vocals to spoil the broth. All that could have been hoped for was a few enamored speckled trout Hopping onto the stage, but even this climax was equalled when P.F.'s father said, Y'know, I really can't get this movie camera to work. 154 ?2'7' 1-at 5 JSE ' 'Elk f gm - mgiff ' l.i'f V' fLv . ,V-? '. 11. 'v ' ' I' ,' 1 1- 15: wx' W ' .ur - '15 , : L, X .1 Y H. L5-I - . .41 N k 1 .tif ,Q ' 1 , wi-. mf- 1 N4 Y.. fl .. -W ful' 45 .ini u Wy 57' wi Q? I' Sw. , j!T IF 545 S. so-0 f tt x 9: , .ar- ' - 41? , 4' xv,- .xfgy I Vs W. ,1- ' f'?, ,J u 'W if-511.4-,5, -f, M . 'v ff-5152:-,, , ,qw GPH ?f'Hz1VLfl1wQQfV vu j:: -fig:-:QA '31, :WJ If ' g ,Q M.-LJ ,Ll-.f4:7 , .I V .av Hwy 'I' rr iff' K' E' - 1, ,Y - -5 X1 V H nr? L, Bi U -' I If ,4 3. . - ,TX , ,x ,Q Y , i, L,- . i 1 N Qqndi' 1 L 1 .KH ,a7 !1 IDI' A fl '. 'N n ,q,-1-.f4 .' J DOW FROM THE IVORY TOWER: NEED: AWARENESS Fall 1975. The chimes bellowed bong number ten and we scattered to our soft, blue, padded chapel seats. After chapel Knot during, of courselj we flipped through our Times and Tribunes. Every issue carried news of human suffering and need. Two mortar rounds, apparently fired on aimless trajectories from un- disclosed positions, hit a street in one of Beirut's Moslem quarter where harried housewives had queued up to buy breadg 24 were killed and 40 wounded. fTime, Oct. 16, Lebanon J. But these needs were so far away . . . and besides, so many people . . . what could we ever do? In early November we skimmed our Wheaton Records after chapel and dis- covered the Tin Lanh church for Viet- namese refugees in Wheaton. The refugees had come to Chicago from camps out West last spring and summer, and by the fall ten families were living in Wheaton. Our own churches-Bible Church, College Church, Christian and Missionary Alliance, and others-helped find families to sponsor the refugees. Dr. G. Henry Waterman's family was one of these sponsors. The need crept closer to home. NEED: UNDERSTANDING The Right to Eat Week hit campus November 17. From that time on through the rest of the 1975-76 school year, the chapel slate was sprinkled with speakers and announcements of special programs designed to increase our understanding of the world's hunger and physical needs. We who listened and participated developed a growing consciousness of the reality of excruciating physical needs in a different realm from the spiritual and emotional needs we experience-the struggle for mere survival. Jonathan Blanchard Society sponsored the Right to Eat Week. Society members told us of poor countries in Asia, Africa, and South America where nearly half of the world's four billion people go to sleep hungry. They introduced us to a Christian lob- by group, Bread for the World, who wrote The Right to Food Resolution. This statement before Congress claim the right of all human beings to a adequate diet, and urges the U.S. t recognize this right as a cornerstone o U.S. policy concerning foreign spen ding and food assistance programs i the U.S. Tom Knighton of MA CMedical Assistance Programl spoke o the Third World's need for efficien long-term agriculture developmen programs. Christmas break rolled around an most of us dashed home for a mont and enjoyed huge meals with ou families. When we returned winte quarter, Dr. Donald Lake showe World Relief Commission films tha refocused our attention on the hunge and suffering of the less fortunate. Wednesday Chapel times took us t drought-stricken Africa, ravage Bangladesh, and hurricane-battere Honduras. We who grumble over lon lines in the dining hall saw thousand of homeless, starving people clamorin for their daily bowl of high-protei meal. Missions in Focus week, J anua 19-22, again brought these desolat parts of the world to our notice. Th mission board tables in MSC were stacked with pamphlets calling fo CHRO OLOGY world evangelism, but interspersed among these were many pamphlets from groups such as HEED fHealth, Educations Economic Developmentl and ACROSS CAfrican Committee for Rehabilitation of Southern Sudanj. These called for workers and financial aid to help build hospitals, rehabilitate agricultural programs, and educate people in health and sanitation as well as salvation. Thursday's speaker Jill Briscoe asked if we were ever con- vulsed with compassion as Jesus was when he fed the 5000 and showed His care for people's physical as Well as spiritual needs. February 9-13 brought HHNGR Week . Monday's chapel speaker, Dr. Vernon Grounds, president of Conser- vative Baptist Theological Seminary in Denver, reminded us that God loves all and has a special concern forthe poor CLuke 4:18J. We who grumble over long lines in the dining hall saw thousands of homeless, starv- ing people clamoring for their daily bowl of meal from World Relief. Dr. A. J. Okumu, senior advisor to the Executive Director of the U.N. In- dustrial Development Organization, informed us of the disproportion of world wealth: 93019 of the world's in- dustrial wealth goes to 3096 of the pop- ulation, while 'Wi goes to the 70'Zn who live in the Third World. We pondered these things, and many of us wondered what we could do. Then on February 4 we heard news of the devastating earthquake in Guatemala. Many of the city's homeless spent chilly nights in the streets camping under tents that had been made from salvaged sheets and table cloths . . . 'They're eating rats and anything else they can get their hands on,' said one Red Cross of- ficial . . . CTime, Feb. 16, p. 221. The week after the earthquake we gathered in Chapel, and this time we prayed. NEED: SERVICE All this exposure Cat least intellectual if not experientiall to need, suffering, and hunger demanded a response, and the Wheaton family did respond in many ways. Groups and individuals sent money to WRC, World Vision, MAP, and other Christian relief organizations. Dr. Lake sent over S5450 in student contributions to WRC after the films. Many of us wrote letters fall quarter to our Congressmen, urging them to pass the Right to Food Resolution. Andy Anderson and Jean Raffensperger urged us to write our senators and ask them to work for increasing and im- proving food aid and development programs, both foreign and domestic. The Bible never excuses us from doing something just be- cause we can't do every- thing, said Edward Dayton. The Sociology Department kicked off the HNGR fHuman Need and Global Resources? education program spring quarter. The program directs the stu- dent to a combination of classes from several disciplines to help him unders- tand the basic social, economic, and political contests that lead to hunger problems. Wheaton students organized a Serv-a- thon March 6 to help MAP meet needs of the Guatemalan earthquake vic- tims. Students, faculty and staff pledged their time and money. We helped, yet our acts seemed almost like token acts in light of the overwhelming need. But as Edward Dayton from World Vision said in HNGR week chapel, The Bible never excuses us from doing something just because we can't do everything. This servant's heart may take us out of our soft blue Chapel seats and into the lives of our suffering brothers in the glo- bal village we call the world. What can we do in the future? The in- ternational students summed up our responsibility in their chapel February 20: All that we do for others to meet their needs must start with a ser- vantis heart. This servant's heart will keep us aware of nations suffering from starvation and natural disasters. It will keep our life-styles in accordance with Christian compassion and concern. A servant's heart will search out oppor- tunities to channel money and labor into relief programs. It will remind us to pray for missionaries and relief organizations. This servant's heart may take us to the aid of a depressed roommate, to a sick mother at home-, or possibly, with God's help, out of our soft blue Chapel seats and into the lives of our suffering brothers in the global village we call the world. 157 ,M- 4--,U 'sr .E I. x GRAHAM CE TER by Lenore M arema Start with a small warehouse in north Wheaton, and begin to collect materials scattered in several cities. Article based on information available as of March 15, 1976. 158 Add an 8,000 volume set of theological books. Pour in a S21 million nation-wide campaign to raise funds. Begin to shop around for S3 million worth of furnishings. Meanwhile, drop everything and find a place for a 8500,000 Building and Grounds plant, a football and soccer practice field, and two women's P.E. fields. Have ready S18 million in pledges before you can begin your work. This is the recipe for the Billy Graham Center, to be built in Wheaton to house evangelist Billy Graham's archives and library. These materials represent a complete compilation of data covering all phases of Dr. Graham's 35-year ministry. The plan was launched during Homecoming, Oc- tober 11, 1973 after a decided effort by Dr. Amerding and the Board of Trustees to convince the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association that Wheaton was the ideal spot for the building. Since then, Dr. Donald Hoke has taken over as the program co-ordinator to supervise the development of the Center. Hoke heads a ten-man committee consisting of six members of the College board of trustees, and four members of the BGEA board. Hoke and the Billy Graham Center have taken up a temporary residence in a house at 217 North Washington Street. The future site of the Center is on the south side of Seminary Avenue, between Washington and Chase Streets. Although no construction timetable has been set, Hoke hopes that the Billy Graham Center will be com- plete sometime in 1978. When it is finished, the Graham Center will contain the archives of Graham, '43, a library on evangelism, missions, and church renewalg and expanded facilities for the Wheaton Graduate School. In addition, a museum portraying the story of evangelism in America will be opened to the public. However, for the present, one of the biggest concerns is finances. A 13- member national development board has been formed to co- ordinate a S21 million nation-wide fund-raising campaign. Moreover, Ed Norman, director of develop- ment for the Center, is scheduling lunches, banquets, and personal contact drives for next year to raise funds. Billy Graham has pledged the royalties from his latest book, Angels: God 's Secret Agents, to the Center. The royalties could bring in an estimated SB500,000. The Graham Center will cost about S10 million. An additional S3 million will be needed for furnishings, and another S8 million for a maintenance en- dowment. Hoke said no construc- tion will take place until the Center receives S18 million in pledges. However, the Graham Center was challenged from sources apart from finances. The first was an objection by the Howard Street residents to Artist's preliminary conception of the Center. having the Building and Grounds plant relocated on their street. The location of the Graham Center on Seminary Avenue necessitated the removal and rebuilding of the pre- sent plant elsewhere. The BGEA agreed to pay the costs of relocating the building. But when the College revealed preliminary sketches for the new BSLG center on October 9, 1975, at a homeowners' meeting, residents voiced their disapproval. One Howard Street resident pointed out the hazards of the building to children, the increased traffic on the street, and the decreases in property values as reasons to oppose the loca- tion of the S500,000 plant on Howard Street. The Howard Street residents threatened to go to court if the College relocated the plant in their area. Another resident, a Chicago attorney, called the present city zoning unconstitutional in that it allowed the College even to place such a building in an residential area. In January, 1976, William Pollard, Vice President for Finance, an- nounced that the BSLG center would be located on property east of the soccer fields and bordered by Presi- dent Street, instead of the Howard Street location. But this did not end the problem. The resident attorney is still an active voice in stronger city regulations on College building. By coincidence, the building ac- tivity at the College and the city of Wheaton's study of zoning, in- cluding the College's U-1 zoning CUniversity zoningl, came up at the same time. The city zoning or- dinance is undergoing a complete overhaul, and final action on it taken by the City Council this spr- ing could affect future College building. Finally, moving the B8zG plant to President Street decreased the area of the soccer practice field. Harvey Chrouser, chairman of the physical education department, submitted a proposal calling for a football and soccer practice field and two women's P.E. fields by the time the construction on the B8zG center begins. Chrouser's proposal calls for removal of three College-owned houses and the closing off of two streets. This plan is presently being given consideration by a campus planning committee. In any case, when the Graham Center is finally completed it will be one more giant step in es- tablishing Wheaton's reputation as a center of evangelism. ,WM 4 11 mm- BAD Praise . . . music-released from within us, flowing through our instruments. whispering, singing, shouting praise to God in offering and worship. Praise. . . music-God's gift shared on tour, from Motreat-Anderson College to Ohio State . . . shared with Wheaton folks, from the college family to Presi- dent Ford. Music-coaxing listeners out ol' the confining realm of words to raise exhilarated hearts in praise to God. Praise . . . the goal of Concert Band '75- '76. Seventy musicians paid the time- price to steward God-given talents, so that both the secular fCarl Orff's 'lCarmina Burana , Haydn's Concerto for Trumpetnl and the sacred CReed's Sacred Suite , Praise to the Lord , by Vaclav Nelhybel, who directed it at the Spring Concertl will be offered as our best to God. Praise . . . our lives as well-reaching out in love and witness to people we visited on tour, and in friendship and encouragement to each other. 161 Qu clg: 1 X ! . X 1,1-'W - ,g...., 1 ,E dx 219 -r. fir ' Q CC CERT CHOIR dg U r- Yes, m'sieur, this 1975-76 season of Concert Choir was a very good year. With the spice of a lot of new singers, and the tender aging of the veterans. Smell this sweet aroma, brought on by the chilling of volleyball games at Camp Willabayis winter retreat and the sunshine of the Florida tour. And taste . . . indeed even the connoisseur M. Hicks said it was an excellent season. A distinctly American taste. m'sieur, seasoned with Copland and Nelson, and bearing the faraway feel of the harps eternal. Aged for A : K- 'FRWTQ u ,ju-.-rw v-we 1- '-fiifjifvf-1- gaston--f + ' 1' 1 'e:,' ,, i1,...-'J1f- -' ., -- -- .. .Y F, Z , q , . ,f - Q .ga twenty-four delightful hours at the dining hall during the famous Sing-a-Thon, sealed in kegs made with fine wood and red-hot rivets. Perfect for all occasions . . . after a fast ride down a rocky hill on an inner tube, or at a quiet evening at an ice cream social, dreaming of far- away places with strange-sounding names like Aleria. No need to keep this vintage sealed up . . . even in the most adverse conditions, it just doesn't go flat. You will take some. m'sieur'? Merci. M. Sterling will be glad to take your money. Au revoir . . . E V, 5 F 1 I ' . I .,i'.. --Q of F , W, A U ' ' l,,' L' L' N . f - wi 1 - - . i , Y :Ye 1 v, - i f si-if ,zwgggi -1 g ' i M Q1 Zaggi ' , -gE:??HFi:'a.Z -- ,, ' . A gag 5 ,Il 1 ,i mm .V -iv. 1 ,A,,.--, --,,- ,,,,,,,l. MEN'S GLEE Think of Motherhood, apple pie, drinking Kool-Aid on a hot summer day, eating peanuts at a baseball game. Put them together and what do you get? Cal A lady with a stomach ache fbi A prize-winning modern sculpture CCD Men's Glee Club Of course, what could be more All-American than MGC? From the oil fields of Alaska, the wheat fields of Oklahoma, and the concrete jungles of the east coast, they have come to proverbial melting pot---of Men's Glee. And just as early America drew her strength from around the world, so also does MGC draw upon the Russian liturgy for inspiration, the inscrutable Orient for business acumen, and its Bulgarian heritage for strength in adversity. So what could be more fitting in a bicentennial year than Glee Club sing- ing for President Ford, and touring Washington D.C., New York, and New England in the springtime? . . . CKevin Harris and Don King dan- cing the hula in a bowl full of Kellogg's cereal, maybe?J 'x ,..-.., .- 44 WOME 'S GLEE Snowball fights . . . getting on a bus at 4:30 a.m. to leave on tour . . . wake-up rehearsals at 7:30 a.m .... singing in a magnificent cathedral . . . Women's Glee had a great year. Thirty concert performances fover three tours plus area appearances? made it an active year too. The long tour over the winter break took the group from a Chicago December to a warm reception in the Southeastern United States. One of the high spots of the year was performing for the ACDA fAmerican Choral Directors Association? in Columbus, Ohio. Women's Glee was the first Wheaton group ever selected to sing at. this North Central conven- tion. At the convention they got to meet the composer of one of the pieces they performed - a memorable moment! It was a fun year, and in every concert the girls could sing from the heart, 'iAlleluial and How excellent is thy name, O mighty Lord! 166 -A - W. ..Q.,V..,. Q x. I.. 11' 'nn-1111 11.51 ff- Q -' fa.:-a,-7-wear.-1.x-lfmvrggf' X 'w.- I ' TL, . X M ,. Wu. i--lu w N Ax, MW it ,H .W X H w H X m M X -n-na T Service characterized this year's orchestra best, as it expended much of its energies for others. In the fall the group prepared for winter tour, taking time in November to assist the Oratorio Society in an excellent Messiah performance. December found the orchestra stringing Texas-ward, ministering at John Brown University, LeTourneau College, U. of Memphis, and Dallas Theological Seminary, with a repertoire that ranged from Bach and Mozart to Copland and Tchiakovsky. ,,...,.-...s,....,-. . .,,s.,.-.,,.g.,,,55.,3 The Annual Children's Concerts, March 3 and 4, brought 4000 area gradeschool children to Edman to hear Grand Canyon Suite and more-a real educational ex- perience for all. In the spring, members formed a pit orchestra to assist in the Opera Workshop, and in May auditioned for the concerto competition. Of course, in the spirit of '76, American composers received special attention. In all this, Orchestra grew both in .membership and musical maturity and looks for an even brighter future. GRCI-IESTRA WHEATO - N-THE- EWS WHEATON'S PCET-IN-RESIDENCE During the winter and spring quarters of 1976, Dr. Robert Siegel joined the Wheaton faculty as official poet in residence , and taught courses in Poetry Writing and Selected Poets. Dr. Siegel is highly respected as a poet in the secular as well as Christian world. His poetry is commended by such notable poets as Robert Lowell, Richard Eberhardt, and Luci Shaw. Robert Siegel's images have an in- tegrity, a burgeoning density that obliterates the gap between his ex- perience and our imagination, says Mrs. Shaw. Many of his images are real enough to find a permanent home in our mind's eye. And that is because Bob Siegel is a real persong his words spring straight from his own authen- ticity. Dr. Siegel has published one book of poetry, The Beasts and the Elders, 119731, and has had numerous poems published in literary magazines around the country, including The Atlantic Monthly, Poetry, Chirstian Century, and the Humanist. Siegel's poetry shows traces of im- pressions left by Eliot, Hopkins, Thomas, Lowell, and Roethke, among others. But what comes through is dis- tinctly and most pronouncedly Siegel . His verse tends to be accen- tual in form, with a ghost of a meter-iambic pentameter at heart. Thematically, Siegelis verse is of the natural school, where primary inspira- tion comes from Nature. Much of his poetry is a reflection of the perverse societal values of our times, and their divorcement from what is natural. Dr. Siegel, a native Illinoisan, is a '61 170 graduate of Wheaton, receiving his B.A. in English from Wheaton, his M.A. in the Writing Seminars at Johns Hopkins University in 1962, and a PhD. in English from Harvard in 1968. For the past eight years he has taught at Dartmouth College. Dr. Siegel's change from Dartmouth to Wheaton this year was a bit of a cultural shock. At times he felt he was participating in an acrobatic exercise in theology with students coming from distant recesses of Christendom and diverse theological backgrounds. Teasingly, he classified Wheaton as a type of 'fspiritual smorgasbordf' When an aspiring young poet at Wheaton, Dr. Siegel participated in a poetry workshop on Wednesday after- noons at 4:15 under the supervision of Helen de Vette. The group called themselves the Poet's Corner tafter the burial section!?! for poets at West- minster Abbeyl. This year, he resurrected the workshop which has been inoperative for several years: same day, same time, with a good representation of student talent par- ticipating. Dr. Siegel feels the workshop forms a vital part of the process of becoming a poet. As a professor this year, Dr. Siegel was always extremely accessible, a highly responsive mentor, and a man of delightful disposition. As one student remarked, Too bad he was only with us for a season. SHALOM GOES TO GERMANY Shalom, a student musical group from Wheaton College, will take their mellow latin-rock sound abroad during spring quarter. Under the direction of Dave Wright, Shalom will tour Ger- many and surrounding countries for 10 weeks. According to Dan Reifsnyder, a member of the group who presently lives in Germany, There is a definite need for evangelism among the military overseas, and the Lord is let- ting Shalom be a part of the ministry. The U.S. military will be giving Shalom financial help through con- tracts and chapel offerings to help WOMEN'S SWIM TEAM STARTED Wheaton women can now swim com- petitively. Nine girls, directed by in- structor Ewan Russell, began workouts January 10, initiating the first women's swim club in eight years. The group evolved from the efforts of Coach Russell and sophomore Barb Caine. Title IX clinched their endeavors. The team swam in four meets, including the regional finals March 5 and 6, in which sophomore Debbie Patterson took 3rd place in the 100-yard I.M. and the 50-yard butterfly, and 4th in the 100-yard fly. The girls will attain team status next fall. them defray their travel costs. Transportation to and from Germany will be financed by the group itself. Shalon will start their tour with appearances on American radio and TV stations. Their concerts will range from religious retreats to youth rallies and will take them from the Bavarian Alps in southern Germany to isolated artillery posts far in the north. Shalom will travel through the country in a 22-passenger diesel bus, provided by Spinning Spokes, a European division of the American based Wandering Wheels bicycle ministry. MADELINE L7ENGLE COLLECTION by Linda H auener Madeline L,Engle's children's books, manuscripts, and papers now belong to Wheaton's special collections. She accepted Dr. Clyde Kilby's proposal to establish a collection last December, and the trustees approved it January 17, stated Dr. Donald Mitchell, vice- president for academic affairs. The internationally recognized award- winning author will add the dimension of children's literature and the stature of an author of contemporary reputa- tion to Wheaton's growing collections, said Paul Snezek, director of the special collections. Among L'Engle's awards is the Newberry Medal, the highest award for children's literature in America, which she received for her book, A Wrinkle in Time. L'Engle has visited campus twice in the past four years, speaking at the Writers' Conference and in chapel. She plans to return to speak at the 1976 Writers' Conference in October. . : 'I 'L it . 1 -w . --5 wi I ': 52 Eff' :F-3221, 'J' '51, .' ,.' .- fn-5:1 Lyi. 1- f. Q , -1- ,:.1 - . -,ra-1 fr I gk l:j, :.1 .-. ...ny f- 1 - if ps' j?-5 ,Q ll J' H5 I -. ' 1' :WY I ll sf lf .- 'al . ' r ll ,g I' 5.1 11- , . x - i . I 4:,..1.g'-.4 , , , W, Wheaton's own Olympian, Nancy Swider, redeemed her 7th place finish in the Innsbruck Olympics by setting a 3000-meter speed skating world's record at the Golden Skates meet in Inzell, West Germany on March 13. Here time of 4:40.85 was nearly four seconds better than the previous record. On March 6 and 7 she skated to 5th place in the World Spring Championships in Berlin. Spring quarter she returned to Wheaton's competition: exams and cafeteria lines. Welcome home. L DIALOGUE On a strangely warm, brilliant day in the final week of February, two young men sat quietly in front 'of Edman Chapel. The Wheaton student body, abuzz with the prospect of spending the afternoon in the unseasonly bright sunshine, had just finished rushing past. But the two remained seated, talking carefully, thoughtfully. I've been on both winning and losing teams, I guess, but never has a group of guys been as close as the guys on this team . . . At the beginning of the season we all were excited about finishing in the upper division this year. We won the Defiance Tourney in December and were really high. Then we lost nine straight conference games . . . That can get to you, game after game! The fans stop yelling so loud, the home crowds get smaller and smaller as the season wears on . . . But the guys stuck together. When one guy got down somebody else would pick him up . . . The most important thing is that we got a chance to talk to some people about our reason for playing ball. srh sr Especially up there at Defiance . . . welre still getting letters from some of the families we stayed with up there. That's what playing ball is all about . . to play for the Lord. . . . Jolly especially picked a lot of the guys up - and he's probably had the roughest season of anybody. We had some lessons to learn. Last year we won some ball games, but never understood why. This year we've learned to understand what it takes . . . that little something extra that's required for competitive greatness. One of the guys stood up. We've been told by other coaches that, next to Ill. Wesleyan, we have the best talent of any team in the league. And . . . now we know what it takes . . . get out there and play tough. The other stood to leave. One thing I know for sure. Wheaton College is a CCIW contender next year. J 1 ,,, , , 1 I 1 sU1 xi X,1i'i,,Z,, in 'Ni-L Jr, I f ifixrgfi I it A AL f f- 4... I -. 6 , X I .diff-I ' XALVS. Nm Jag' f R 4-U X 3 , - V : 5 fl, if 'Qgxii' J, .:.,. ., -Q., -fi, ' ' KJ mi X-W F , W X.,-X ,, 'F W X saw! an xl X 5 H ' 2,4 RMK A-3 Q F '52, , t X , K :ST 3 ' ' ,A K1 F- XX F . V I ,' ,-nz ?' 1, , C W 4 ps ,..,, w, Y , -1 ,Ni ,., 'm'x I R I A L x r .1 L I v , x ' AX' egg- .Q 1 ,. .r it-I .5 1 . 7 SY -J kwq A 195 'N 'ff N fN nga-A-M .YA -fg1g? J xxbavx XXX. 1 . in-, V4 Diff: 1 1 lm ru . .,. bw Q 4, .ff ' x f 44 . f i' 5 j.,J.,. 44.1 ' ., . V. A-1-Y . T 1,1 4 3-1 V. 1'- 'A 5 fr - J Rfk' ,WY y 1 A , -'..! -' ' 'f' 'V , . -1' 11 ,Q .,,,.A.,,, ,,,,A,, ,5,,11,gLl.,...L. 231 S ' ' ,, .. . 1 . f gl fx : --. , 1 .Sv ' .f , . j gi lf: -ix arg? 5 I' J I H W ,.M.k , Q F 'I' ' Hg g D: ' A 5, V, 'A,v,. Y . L, Y ' ink -1Ll,f'-,X efiwfwl 1' , ,. . K 3 L 1 , Q. . ,N M . 3 H j' , N ' ' Q-' x i'f'f . ,1 'M 'Y' 4. 5-E,'?3gqy Y . . HU L -15, 'A sf' -, iw , V ' rm 13 , ' 1 , f N g 1 WI L E. :bfi wi V, , A 'pg ,: 1,5 '?. i- Mr.: '1 :gif '. u,.E.,.Fr-.-.A. - ,- j Q ' ' , t, 111-53 1 ' Y3, ',f1':2.31 , ,w.4:,-'-'f' 11 :'.'4r AL Wai, 11.51 -.Lf,:1:F-:...,,f- ,4 ' I f A- 1 -- .c.- -.2-'j:1!1 ... '-1 -' FZ fi rr' T- , . 'Q 'I-5 4 11' .935 1 . .. W 'F fl -'-'f fs! ZF- 2 1 2 Q' . ' ,f ' lie - 22.5 -, Q gf .3 6 fa - - . ' 'f 70 f, - ' ' 1, ' 7 A Eg ,NY , - - V .X ' f a . H... ,A Qu., ,. any Iv' ' ff. fs, . ' h A . 1? f H -V P' U :D i': JT 1 -, . , ,s- ,1 iw. ,- Hu. ,. 8- 4. gm , D 4 'L-5, mem, N, : '-'Q+x,,1 ' M gbvff, N 2'-.T M -'rw --- ,W--- .a...M - f . b ' . f , X 1 X., -I-gs: 1 , ,v Q u -,,----I-5-1---,L ,' 'v--fi... - L.. -WL. V 3 sf xg V.-....,,-Neg I il. H- M H ' ,Nl - 5 .M W' nk, I .qv ' .,-J , - - fr! 4'vsf.e '- , , S V V , f U . if Q wi 1. 1 1 - ,. 9- nl' 1 Q Q 1 , 4 If ' ' , , 1 J , Y M V . -,,,,,,,, ' ' .' ' Q? Q'-1. :QI ' . ., .-.,. .- ,211 4 Y Mx ., 8 Q 'vu' 4 L F L lj-I ly' 4 1 1.4 A ' ' ' A , ff- . . ,.-.L-W M ,. iw 5-1, 1 A- f- Q ,VA-,S ,t f-,-- ... ' germ' 4 'M ..7:Ga'E4'f ' v . - 'W' A- 'Qi Y .,,,, ,ng 2. --ELS! W3 PX-f iT 'PW - 1 EC sf .am ik: 1.,?,,f' H. 1154? n 1 - I , ,.',' 1 v J. W Q-if t m ,. M- f'I 25.-V' - . 'Q -' 1,1 ., m 1 H H n .gn 'x - l -w L A, , f fl I, rf . ., XX N A, tv. ,w1 'i ' 1 L Q 4' ffl-Q, gi, 33 IA 7 ' 1,1..4,:v.:-,'- Y V ' - -al:-f F 2... , A ' kgviflr N x. .H .:q3..Y3J,15,1r . T-K ' V :im Q My--f U V: t-- ' L X xi f--5 B x , HN fha qi V U w W.. ki p Beset. with injuries and their toughest schedule in years, Wheaton's Hockey Crusaders got a slow start in 1976. However, after winning only one game in the first half of the season, the Icemen came on strong with a string of victories in the second half, including a four-game winning streak. Goalie Larry Gilkerson set the pace for the team, consistently playing well despite the barrage of shots he faced all season. Bruce Harro, Andy Anderson, captain Jerry O'Neil, and transfer Brian Fathbun played inspired hockey to cover the challenge of limited defense personnel. Alternate captain Frank Erdman and freshmen Tom Lane and Kevin Meyer formed the team's high scoring line, with Phil Baur and senior Jim Meyer backing the thrust. Special thanks go to Jamie Dudman, who skated his fourth year of Wheaton hockey, and to Coach Dick Erickson, who led this young team into a closer realization of what it means to be Christian men, playing hockey for the Lord. top: Goalie Larry Gilkerson - crouches, ready for a flying puck. right: Jerry O'Neil out- maneuvers an opponent. 180 ' v .Q nge-1 ' , .uf!!-fu w Y , . -'t:1:..: I, v .t'?Lw1 , at '14 Hl'i -' Ez. !.-'..1.. L ICE HOCKEY ,X fr , N , 1 Srh pw .gpm .f pw top left: The hockey games provided action on the ice. above: Crusader defense attempts to stop opponents. lcffl: Jerry O'Neil skates in for a well-placed goal. 181 1-Mew 4 -Gal? INTRAMURALS It's 6:30 Monday night as I jam on my favorite sneakers and run down the icy path from Smith to Alumni Gym, psyched for another night of Co-Rec Volleyball. Frantically I search for a pair of knee pads as I roll up my sleeves for a little intra-team practice. The referee walks by to ask if we have played before. We assure her that we're pros and yes we know a girl has to hit the ball once on a side. Zero serving zero. My serve rebounds off the rafters to hit an innocent bystander. The ref glares at me. Play continues but to our dismay we have difficulty returning the next six spikes. They have shattered the perfect record of our great D-1! Who are they anyway? we whisper among ourselves. The answer echoes formidably. Feast Beast? No, we're FEAST: Far Eastern American Students' Team. We're MK's from the Morrison Academy in Taiwan. We lose the first game 15-0. The ref glibly warns us that they were last year's Co-Rec champs. Champs! They should sign up for Varsity volleyball, 'or else share the wealth. I mean we could use a good spiker . . . Rule changes added a new dimension to Co-Rec '76. Guys could spike, and overhand serves were legal. For us amateur volleyball lovers Co-Rec provided the challenge and excitement of well-played volleyball fully equipped with refs and whistles, along with the fun of working together on a team. You can't beat that for a study break. 183 W sz, Y'?d22w11z2: 'iii' 'Qi-X, viii f if 3-- wx M- xwf:'f , qw ...',. , a J in J .- 1,541 U ' U -df' jv ,,f 3 F 5? . diy, - ...f- , J - .141 1 , 1 ' , . , U A Q 1. 5 4 J Rx -f ' nn. Q 5. C ,A I . n 1 O t I lf' cr? 1-1 . .-r.. 'A .9 ff ? Air, XY ,A Aw' zxgffw ' Q-gg: 'ff 154 ! L 7 51 2 V .UM af-525575 -,i 2 '0, V-1' 1 if .3 , Q-.H 'AAT fda... 'La. 'f- MEN'S VOLLEYBALL TEAM The strength of the volleyball team lies in its . . . well, in its strength, said spiker Rob Hromas. One could hardly disagree since the team took a first over eight big-time opponents Cincluding Michigan State and U. of Michigan? in the Wheaton College Invitational Tourna- ment Feb. 14. With five seniors graduating last year, three of them starting, many expected the Crusaders to do poorly this year. However, under the coaching of Paul Henry and Rob Baptista, the volleyball team overcame its inexperience with hard work. With spikers Ted Tier- non, 6'3 , Joel Smith, 6'3 , and Jeff Hochstettler, 6'1 , the Crusaders developed into a very hard-hitting team. The upset over a strong Indiana University team March 5 showed they had become one of the hardest spiking in the Mid-west. Co-captains Bill Richter and Chak Ng led the team in a stingy defense. These are the most enthusiastic bunch of guys I've ever worked with, said Coach Baptista. srh Z : ' 1 fr l -.- .-.i 'Q ,.,., .-,, .- ,.Y . wf 5.111 1 - . ' - L X ,ffm Q, , 1 -,iw - .A-L: ss? - GH cr-:'..,5QE:1: --,-wzff' -' 'f H A -.1 W1 -. f . ,., t Hip... -.E vb .., , 5.1. ':,.Y,, , 1. 1 --1 U , ,LLL i .,:1:4g: . , 3,5'Jf,., .t,.,.f ., .lf Q .f ?.QI5 ici., ' I , f by wg fs--if ' A ..,.,f... g-,-4 , - srh if ef 5. u .5 1 , I ,, Sl' , L 1 -Ci X , '-',,-- 1. . . .1 . ,-, . .,...4-'-,.-,,. W -Q :fZM.v 5.--wp.-.1 - ,---- SQ- -5- - Wife A - ,, .-mv,-. l -1 1. WOMEN'S BA KETB LL Music may be the universal language, but it's not the only one. For the women who dribble and pass their way through an entire season, basketball is a universal language, a common ground for sharing with those on opposing teams. In the name of basketball, 12 Illinois college teams assembled on Wheaton campus February 26-28 for the Women's Small College State Basketball Tour- nament. The weekend climaxed the season for Wheaton's women varsity basketball team. Assisted by Faye Leitch, Marilyn Scribner, student trainer Ann Steen, and manager Cheri Richard, Coach Carol McEwing led the squad to a 9-8 season. Senior Nancy Leet finished her college basketball career with flair. According to Coach McEwing, Nancy's finest effort came against MacMurray, as she grabbed 14 rebounds and scored a career high of 19 points. Captain Jennifer King summarized the season: Desire to win, improved skill, and love for basket- ball brought about our Winning season. Above all, the Lord made us a teamfl srh -gi 4 CI ln' ' ff! 1 Q55 L 7 S1 Xi,-,J 'X in MA 3459 N4-5 dw w I f. ., . v s 5 . V. , 5 I. 3 ff 4 9, 2 X Q I , .F,M,Vs I . . va L , Y l X X I .35 . K ai' Ag N V y' I Q 1 aff! - ' M Y' 1 C 1 'C Q x. I H, -.J N PRE IDE T FORD O CAMPU by Susan Woodcock I don't believe it. I don't be-LEEVE it! When a President comes round your mountain, unbelievable things happen. Wheaton College knows that for sure. The campus sprouted Presidential advance men a week before hand, each wearing sport coat and driving a Marquis or something. After casing the buildings and students, the President's men made things happen. So did our Administra- tion, of course. The Heritage and Kresge Rooms in Edman got new paint jobs and new curtains, and the hallways got a few new tiles. The Ed- man classroom, 203, had carpeting and telephones installed in case the Presi- dent needed an office for some paperwork. B 8L G men filled in the potholes in Edman's parking lot, while Wheaton city workers patched Lincoln and Franklin Streets. As a final touch, a large wooden press platform was con- structed in Edman, front left. The night before the grand event, the advance men roped off campus streets with colored plastic pennants. Everyone was up early the next mor- ning, except for the lucky few who had i l I 192 srh reserved seats in the front two rows. Girls wanting a shower in Evans at 6:30 found very little hot water. The line in front of the Chapel began for- ming in earnest not long after that, and by 7:30, wound past the Library and most of the way around the block. The doors opened at 8:00 to students with ID cards and faculty and staff with passes. Edman only seated 1700 general admission after the press plat- form and the reserved seats were given out. So some had to be satisfied with watching Ford shake hands on his way up the stairs. Meanwhile, inside the blue walls, the audience-to-be muttered and buzzed with excitement. A few tried to study, but it was nearly a hopeless pursuit. Security men stood along the walls, each with a small microphone and ear- piece. At about 8:30 a goup in one sec- tion ofthe Chapel started singing To God Be The Glory. Though a bit un- sure what to think at first, after a few verses most students joined in. Another hymn started up, and another: Wheaton favorites like All Hail the Power of Jesus' Name, Like a River Glorious, and May the Mind of Christ my Saviourf, For many it srh became a'time of real praise. The security men had to turn up their earphones. The press platform got more and more crowded with camera-wielding reporters. fDid you see that guy? He had FIVE Nikonsg two in front and three in back. J Record and Tower photographers, with green press passes strung around their necks, struggled to hold their vantage points in the melee. From 9:00 to 9:30 the Band and Men's Glee had the stage. But everyone was watching the clock. However, no Presi- dent appeared at 9:30, or 9:32, or 9:42. So the Band kept playing two minute Sousa marches and waiting. At 9:41 an aide hung the Presidential seal on the special podium. And at 9:50 the band struck up Hail to the Chiefi' as Dr. Armerding escorted President Gerald R. Ford through the cheering crowd to the stage. Other platform guests were Wheaton's Mayor Barger, Senator Charles Percy, and Congressman John Erlenborn. Dr. Armerding opened the assembly followed by Erlenborn, who in his welcome dubbed Wheaton the garden spot of the universe. That brought uite a few laughs. The final introduc- .ion came from Student Government i' resident Todd Gray, who thanked the resident for complying with the 'tudents' request. 'fThe President akes history every day, Todd said, 'Wheaton College doesn't. ord spoke on the topic of private in- titutions of higher education, to which l e assured his strong support in op- osing legislation that would prevent rivate donations to such colleges. rom there he moved to topic of jobs, nd noted that under his Administ.ra- ion unemployment had decreased. In onclusion, Ford appealed for par- icipation in government, claiming hat the number of student signatures n Wheaton's petition to him had im- pressed him. He referred to Wheaton tudents' lifelong commitment to God, nd said he was well acquainted with zur religious values , and with heaton alumni Billy Graham and illy Zeoli. After the applause, the President opened the floor to questions. The first ds one made the press gasp. Steve Clausen asked whether Secretary of State Henry Kissinger's possible Watergate connections would affect Ford's candidacy, and if so, would Kissinger resign? I donlt want Henry Kissinger to resign, period, said Ford, and papers all over the nation carried that headline the next day. Ford cited Kissingeris diplomatic ac- complishments, and added that he, himself, had no Watergate connec- iw 1,3 ,'..w-,.,...,--W tions. The President answered eight other questions, plus an unofficial one when Senior Donna Oerth inquired about the marital status of your son Jack. Three questions related to inter- national affairs. Ford stated that he approved a normalization process' in U.S. relations with China, but in Africa he opposed Russian and Cuban international adventurismf' In response to three domestic questions he noted that ill to keep the Social Security Trust Fund solvent could in- volve a .6 b increase in taxesg C25 that his votes against food stamp increases and other legislation for the poor were in order to limit government aid to the truly needyg C31 that he did not think that medical malpractice suits would lead to socialized medicine, though perhaps to state health insurance. Two other questions concerned the workings of the U.S. government. Ford hoped the CIA could report to him directly, and operate within concrete restrictions. And he claimed he avoided groupthink in his Ad- ministration by appointing a well- qualified and frank Cabinet. After more applause, AWS president . i srh Lisa Lundberg presented Ford with a plaque commemorating his visit, and an athletic blanket emblazoned with a HW. Lisa noted that the WH could be turned upside down to stand for Ford's alma mater, the University of Michigan. After the final ovation, Ford attended a brief reception in the Heritage Room, attended by 50 selected guests, in- cluding 18 members of Student Government. The White House staff requested that Student Government att.end the reception because President Todd Gray and Vice-President Doug Beers were responsible for inviting Ford to speak at Wheaton. Student government brought Ford to campus through a student petition, an inter- view with the President's appointment secretary in Washington, and pressure from Illinois Republican leaders as the Illinois primary was the next week. Ford signed autographs and posed for photographs at the reception. Then he left for a downtown luncheon. And Wheaton College went back to normal, or t.ried to. Classes, rearranged for the occasion, started up again at 11:00. But after all the excitement no one really got much done. 193 FABLE ' . v 1 A J ,I i I u :f1,,,e3 5 fT'1---rf-17 V A I ih'N'r ' 15 psf l ff-yn W 2. if xg!! ik-J V. ing uri? .x it , 'Q - bl r I -1,1 .:.' P7 Q Q ss- I f , . M51 1. 'i'.1ff.l- . I nfl' 515 ss Q-ft -I-A-Mfr fr-ee--7M TFNXY 'td-LJ. , je 1 , .J,L:J-N, I x I: Lg, s ft ' .:1.f Qi---,zeff il' gifs. . up ff' - f - AJ ., HPIBEKAH ADAMS DIANE ADDLEMAN DAVID ADDLETON FINIJY AHLQUIST EDITH ALLEN SUSAN ALLEN THAYI-IR ALLISON DAVID ALLYN CHRISTINE ANDERSON There once was a Young Man who had all the advan- tages. He was healthy, came from a good home, and busily studied at the College of His Choice. On weekend evenings when the Lads were wont to step out with their Favorite Girls, he could be found in front of the Television, or with a book. He took only fleeting interest in the quaint practice of the other Dateless Chaps: pretending a Magnificient Preoc- cupation with any Unaccompanied Females who might pass by. He was perplexed, for he did not feel wretched and neglected, as all his friends told him he should. He enjoyed his quiet leisure pastimes, and was inconspicuously accumulating a small for- tune on the side, not having spent his money in Riotous Living. His friends insisted that he should by All Rights ex- hibit the common symptoms of the Social Recluse, finferiority, loss of hair, and bad breath, to name but a fewl. He strove manfully to accommodate them, but failed miserably. He began to wonder, vaguely, it' there were some deep flaw within him responsible for this unorthodox sense of well-being. He pondered and ruminated and meditated and thought, until finally he arrived at a conclusion. The only solution JU IOR DEAN ANDERSON GLEN ANDERSON GREGORY ANDERSON RICHARD BAKER DEBORAH BALLBACH SHARON BALOW .mi I ' ..,. Y: - Q JIJQI5 -J if gzw A H 1' z .5 '. 1 IL I BARBARA HATES FLORENCE BEAUMONT GREGORY BEBERNITZ as to find out, first-hand, what he was missing. o one day he asked his Roommate, a bonafide entleman-about-town, if he would like to go on.a ouble date. The Roommate stared. Then, he asked 1 the date was to include girls. The Young Man said f course it was, what did he take him for? The oommate said Hotdog and Whoopee and Jeepers, nd ran out into the hall. he very next day, the Young Man happened to eet an attractive and pleasant Young Coed of long cquaintance. It occurred to him that she would do ust Fine for the occasion. She was agreeable to the roposal, and they parted, friends. he two weeks prior to the Date saw many Old Pals nd Companions congratulating the Young Man. He ried to act pleased and excited, though he couldn't uite understand the reason for all the Hullabaloo. irls were fine, though more expensive than a good ook. Some even' spoke English rather well. At any ate, it payed to Broaden ones Horizons. He ignored s best. he could the sly references to Rings and Bell I owers. Such thoughts tended to give him a mild SARAH ANDERSON DONALD BARKLEY -J Eve sscxsn .IANIS HELL CHI-IRYI. HI.0ONIPOT'I' IJONALID HRAIJSHAW 1 ,.. . 1-, e.. -Y - MOTHYANDERSON JOHN BAFFA PAUL BARNES PHILLIP BARNES D EQECOFIL' H if ! Q F? 1 I YI-IRNE HEVKER DOUGLAS BEERS LOIS BERGWALL REBECCA BINION FIMOTHY HORGSTROM LARRY HOVRGEOI!-I ANN HRAVSE FAITH BROOKS DANIEL BAKER STEPHEN BARTEI. ,I , RICHARD BEFVS il +13- ,I . ' ' I I -sp ANNETTE HI.EI-IFKER JAMES BOWEN LOROLII-I BROWN juniors 195 skin condition. The days slid quickly by, and the Big Night rolled around with the quiet grace of a trained hoop snake. The Young Man's married cousin provided the transportation. This was frowned upon by some, but the Young Man didn't worry: his cousin and her husband were Regular People. After the inevitable Awkward Start the evening proceeded smoothly. The entertainment was First-class, and the late- night dinner was a Subtle Blend of Elegance and Modesty. The revellers parted in the wee hours of the morning, having declared the venture a success. When his Old Pals and Companions questioned him about the experience, often leering and winking fquite stupidly, he thoughtl, the Young Man replied that it had be thoroughly satisfactory. And in the months that followed, the Young Man continued to Broaden his Horizons, with quite en- joyable results. Though his Old Pals and Com- panions searched for signs of Serious Involvement or Radical Change, the Young Man persisted in his quietly active life. He remained in good health and better spirits, still spending many Saturday even- ings in front of the Television, or with a book. At times, when he saw his Old Pals and Companions running up monstrous phone bills, losing much needed sleep, and making commitments of a Quite Permanent Nature, the Young Man felt some general uneasiness in regard to Fate, and such Things as the Nature of the Universe. But he shook it off with little difficulty. The quarters wore on pleasantly, and one day the Young Man received a note from his old Roommate, telling him that he had taken the Big Step. The Young Man shook his head. Then he jogged over to the tennis courts, where he was to meet a Young Woman who was Not Bad At All with a racket. Moral: Necessity is not the mother of Convention. 1,96 LYNNETTE BROWN CHARLES BURKE PAM ELA CALLAM SARAH CARLSON RONALD CASE KAREN CINNAMON MATTHEW BROWN PAMELA BURNS EUGENE CAMPBELL ELIZABETH CARRELL Y ki , F A f:7NA., L45 BEVERLY CHEYNEY SHARON CLARKE J UDITH BRUNING -f, A g' i, In ,v , at -f ,J 1-If ' MARGARET BURROWS DAVID CARLSON ANNE CARTER ANN CHURCH DOUGLAS CLASSEN --Q., JUDITH BRYSON KATHLEEN BUSWELL X, . .Alb .H Joi-:N cmrson CRAIG CARTER ROBERT CILLEY SU ZANNE COLVTN FRANCES CONG ER LAURIE COOLIDGE DALE COZORT JUNE CRAN FORD I,:4' I - S Q , . , , CLARISSA DAVIDSON ANNETTE DE BOER CANDACE DOAK 1 MARIx DODRII I TIMOTHY DROWN Y : .ia f ,- ' I EW? ' - . - ww. KENNETH DODD u J ' I ELIZABETH DRESSEL IRENE DUBERT LETITIA COSCO KENNETH CUBBERLY DEBRA DEWHIRST CARY C0 I'T'EN , 3' I J L , .lfff 5, CATHERINE CUTLER HEVEIil.Y DALY LYNN DANGLEIS I A A JAMES DE WITT STEPHEN DIGNAN BARBARA DILI. K' , In DARLA DAVID MELVIN DILLS juniors 197 -1 I'1I.IZAHE'I'H DUNKERTON PAUL HIGHLAND iv., '- . ag I I N P X T1 I CI- .. I'ARI.I'INI-I ELLIS I . . f if- I If wi'- VIRGINIA EM I-DRY 'SEQ I' 5 I XNIHIXPNI NANIJHAI-NXFARI EUGENE EPPS I SVI b'l'I' I-'fXHRI1'Il'S -II-INXII-'ER FAST HARHARA I-'HRNANIDES 198 DAVID DUNICIN VICTORIA EIDE RANDAL ELLISON I ,J-I ,. I . CHARLES FIMMERICH ROBERT ERIFKSON MARK FI'IRRI'ILI. x DEBRA DUNKLE LEE FIAKLE PHILIP EBERSOLE 2 Nag DEAN EKBERG KARIN ELDER PATRICIA ELLIOTT' lIl'IBl'X'l'A I-'EIIYANVE MARK FESMIRE SUSAN FI'I'ZWII.LIAM MICHAEL FLOCH 1 I Qx +I' ' I I v ' -' 1' 9 ., 5 MARK FREEMANTLE ka ',1 E 1 JOHN GERMAN I. DAVID GOLTER xg' I : PAUI . GREIG NI-IlHlI'I.HRANSHN LAWRENCE FONES BRUCE FOWLER THOMAS FRANKE , , f -IOHN FUTRELL ALISON GABRIEL HI-1f I'0RGARf'IA KATHLEEN FREE 3 KENT GARDNER E r Fun' s -. . I.YNNI-IGIIJDY IRWHARINSRAIJ W.-XI.l .AVE I ERHIK . Ir . 1 A K . , xx Q F F . P I I A . I I I Ig, ., I' tv I If 'Iv A . IlANII'II.lIl I'I': GAYLE HAMILTON DAVID HANIJY I':XNIIAl'I'I HANSPII. IYII.I.I,-XXI I'I.-'KRHICI' Y K GARY GIS I'A'I'RII'IA1lRI-II-INMAN . ' 54 ' I bg ff I -3 , 39 f, GEORGE GRUI-IZINGI-IR -IAM ICS HARGROYI-I juniors 199 MARY HARKNESS PETER HECK I D 1 JAMES HEL!-'ERS KIM HIGER MARK HOLLINGSWORTI 1' il L ,I P E- P-' 'X : -Y E Q I, If I -A - IU D MELISSA HUFF 200 I ANDREW HARTMAN I , , GARY HEDLUND I .IEFF HENDRICKS KIMBERLY HILL PAUL HOLMES .JEFFREY HULL is I,,,z LYNDA HATHAWAY STEPHEN HAUGEN STEVEN HEIN GAYLE HEISE ROBERT HERMANN JAMES HICKS LEON HILL STEPHEN HOLLAND JONATHAN HOOK GARY HOPWOOD STEPHEN HOWARD 4 . NANCY HUNT DAVID HUNTER JONATHAN HYSLOP JO ANN HUANG PAMELIA HUBBARD X I x k - . JEFFREY IVERSON SHERI JACKSON IX.. , 1 . 1 .: .- '51:!2.+. MARK JACOBS DAVID JACOBSON M1 I ,I ' 1 r NINA JAMES DANIEL JEFFERY I J. CURTIS JOHNSON DEBORAH JOHNSON 3 ROBERT JONES CYNTHIA KAGE DORI KARLESKY DAVID KEAZIRIAN KAREN KEENER ELVERDA KELLY REBECCA KEMERY JENNIFER KING il 1 L.. I. Hr? l , STAR KNIGHT CARL KNOX KELLY KNUDSON ANNE KOEHLINGER MARSHA JAKOBI MARK JEREMIAS TIMOTHY JOHNSON BUELA .IAM ES DAVID JOHANSEN THOMAS JOHNSTON juniors 201 A EUGENE LEE SCOTT LEE 33 NDREW LOCHSTAMPFOR SCOT LOIZEAUX LINDA MADSEN GAIL MAGNUSON VIRGINIA LIAN KATHRYN LOWN JOHN M AHADY .. JI All Lg' CYNTHIA KOESTER I .II ANNE LAINE L, BRIAN LASSEN FAY LIBERTY PAUL LUECK MARKLEY MARLOWE DONNA KOZARSKI fx. x I .. RONALD LARGENT LAWRENCE LAWLACE MARK LIMKEMAN ROBIN LUCAS CLIFFORD MARSHALL ROBERT LABELLE 1 J Q NANCY LARSON KATHLEEN LA ALFRED LINDSTEN '1'IMn'rHY LUTZ ELIZABETH MAR HALL JOHN MCCULLY SCOT McDONALD WILI IAM MEFNA DUANE MERRILL FI FN MILHAM LESLIE MILLER CYNTHIA McGRAW WES MEQKO WILLIAM MILLER DAVID MARTINEZ IUDITH MAXWELL I MALCOLM Mcf' REGOR KEITH MFYFR IOHN MII TON GARY MATSUMOTO STEVEN MAYS CARYN McVEIGI-I CAROL-IOY MICHENER KENNETH MOBERG ELIZABETH MATTHEI NANCY MCCREIGHT DAVID McWILLIAMS BEVERLY MILES JOANNA MONTGOMERI Jumors 207 'F E u- hh ' H ' . ' I I sb 1 ' I L if F '-I i ' M ' V' Y -2 ' ml -. ' ' ' fn 1. T M ' ' r I ' .4 1 X4 , I., A is K . . . Q- - 4 I Q' v ,, I. I wx I 'I T 1 ' N ' A ' N , , n Pr N I 95 - V I I ix, I N 5 I X 7 J A n V . I ' ' , L' A , I. f VE . ' 'Ia + 4 .Q ' , , A Q Q I 1 f , f'- ' ,, , 'nv ! Al y 141 r A 4 l SUSAN MOULTON SUSAN NEELY li' Q A-4 PETER MRAKOVICH LINDA NELSON ARTHUR MOREAU LISE MOSIER ROGER MOSS JOHN MOSTRANDO DANIEL MU1-LIN KERRY MURAKAMI KEVIN MURPHY JOHN MUssER SHELLY NAGEL NANCY NELSON REBECCA NELSON STEPHEN NELSON TIMOTHY NEWBRANDER JAMES NICHOLAS SUSAN NICOLAI ROBERT NIDA SUSAN NIELSEN ROY NOBLE MARY NORBECK NANCY NORBECK ROBERT NORRIS , 1 , I , A, I . ' Y' N' R A .W 5 , f -Z'Q'Q'f . , ' -,: ' ' Q -. MARY NOWACK MARTHA NOWLIN REBECCA NYQUIST RUTH O'CONNELL 204 KRISTINE OHRMAN MARY OLDI-IAM BARBARA OLSON -IUDD OLSON hllhll lllilNhh STEVE ORCUTI' JULI PAINTER X U H' 1 . BARBARA PASS DOROTHY PAUL LINDA PENNER WAYNE PIERCE CHARLES PINCI-IES BARBARA PLOETZ JOHN POKORNIK il' , A DOUGLAS PORTER DANIEL PORTIS BONNIE PRASCH CYNTHIA PRATT BONNIE PRUETI' WILLIAM PAIST KATHERINE PAULEY SHAWN POLIZOTTO SANDRA RALLENS Z .IV ki I IW I 9 '- 1 BARBERA PALMBERG RICHARD PEARSON N NORMAN POPP JAMES RANKIN SUSAN RASCI-IKE CHERYL RAWS STEVEN RAY HELEN READ CAREY REDD ELIZABETH REES juniors 205 I DAVID RIETVELD KATHY ROBINSON JACK ROGERS SUZANNE ROGERS DEBRA SCHMUCK DIANA SCHMUCK JOHN SCHOFF LAURA SELL SUSAN SHACKELFORD LAWRENCE SHACKLEY DENNIS REESE CYNTHIA REMINGTON LYNN RINKEMA if ' A ' . Q' ' .HQ '- ,ef spied 'OO A DEBORAH ROODVOETS DARYI. SCHUT RICHARD SHARBER JOAN RISKEDAHL JOAN NE RUDESILL LOIS SCOTT JOHN SIEBERT CHERLYN RICHARD ROGER RISTAU MARGARET RUSHTON NGS MARYLYNN SEARS DAVID SIEMENS MARLA RIESECK DAIVD RIVES SUSAN SAWYER GLENN SEDJO SUSAN SIEMENS EDWARD SIMONSEN MARTHA SKARIN SHARON SLIVKA BONNIE SMITH JAMES SMITH JEFFREY SMITH SCOTI' SMITH 206 F' ' -A , W I , Q , , ,. In if smanvl. STENOLEN MARY sToRcK fu? BAMBI SWENEY MARK SWENSON CHRISTOPHER TODD MARK TOMCHIK THOMAS SMITH STEPHEN STARZER R10 STEVEN STROUD WILLIAM STUCKEY .Y IHERYL SYVERSON VIICHAEL TAETZSCH K. I II , f DIANE UDE ROBIN ULER PAMELA WALKER STEVEN WALKER CLARK WALLISER BONNIE WARD STEPHEN SMOKER BARRON STAVNESS LAWRENCE SUNDEN JANICE THOMAS El.IZABI7I'H VAN ENGEN DIANE WARD JONATHAN SMOO' GREGORY STEELE DAVID SU'I'I'ON THEODORE TIERNON PAULA VINCENT PATRICK WARD JOHNSTAM 59 I ' TSX Bw 'Ii lu FLORASTEEN KATHRYN SWANSON TELVA TILLEY ELIZABETH WADE JL IA JONATHAN WARREN '207 I 3 - I W Ansel Weston MARK WEAVER JAY WENGER PAUL WILLIS DAVID WINTHI-IRS .II'II I RI'lY WOODS MARJORIE WEBB i , A JANET WESTERHOVEN PETER WILLIS KENNETH WOLF' THOMAS WRIGHT DOROTHEA WEBBER JAMES WHITENER KATHLEEN WILLSON A SHELLEYWOLF A A .A , ...- MARYYADON I 1' Q ,, 5 I , 9 f, 3, if-4, 2 J TERHI WEEDMAN DONALD WILKERSON MARTHA WINCHELL SUSAN WOODCOCK COLON R, YORK s1'sAr: vom' l.AlfRA ZIIVIMERMAN JAMES ZITZMAN -IICFF zcmxmz if 'E ' x , X Sprung I pp quarter 'L IN THIS MGNTH OF GREEN LEAVES For C. Sl. Kilby In this month of green leaves Pockets of grass with carrot fingers Grow orange with love. Syllables of White feather Sail down bannisters of Wind. I lie beneath the shimmering mintage Of trees and rinse my shadowed eyes in clouds That glide high over pricking Steeple spires. I hear a Voice saying You are all water-melons With a thousand seeds to plant And hard green shells That need bursting. by Nuala Archer . Q.. l. 1 'V' 4 r 'nity , Q 5 nf -v -3' 4 2 4' 4 :Q Ofsguwlg ' 4 J 'a 'IQ' E ' l E' 'Z :lo 1- 'iff :Q ' .' ' ' I ,Q ',.j3? s ' fgx' I- , 1 1 ' , U. . ,- -xi, 4 4' I. ' .x 'v ' bvclfz L- J :iv tp 'T - 7 fs?-'fig if 5- 7'-:f f, ' ,.'. 4... ... , Q . .,?...5iJ 1? .1 H . lf, , 533, Tai J- . 1? glib- . ,. ' 9 ,. 2 a-'i v A ', 1 'P c :V '- f - vm '-. 5258. f ' . s- 'fffl si if u 4' V 1 ' ' . '-Sd . - F. 'T QFNJAI . F W , ' -:Q s A ,s 1 ,. 521.5 I , . . yt - .gf A 159 'M - if- gr A . A. ,N it an - . 5 1153 ?8 - '1 .in x V . QW' A T 1 lfefi4 1. ' N. YW ' ' ul 5 1, Q K' K .Aly 1 ,A 4 'I ' ,WET Fiji! K Ii' . vlyzlax ggi: '-'ff' -,ipfyx il 'ff-U 'aw :iz T 2-P P+ . 1599 2:21 'rs 4 .' 'Sf'f1':' -' xl. M? , 1-ag: Q g 561351, gg, Q' 1 s 'A 1 ' f 4 f -MQ 631 M 121515 ?, ,F'z!'gs ' WWF' .iff AFM K J? f . if li. I A iff 7, tv : 11Q333f'?',' I-.'x.', . .sb 53173349 'A X A aw . U, ., ' 1, I TM -L 'Q !. Wu' '4- 42.1.61 5. Q' I- 1- ' 'plus 'a .,. . Pt. ai. B'j,g 1 Zig-X , E , , 1, 'I I W W 4, 12 '1-QQ: JQ V -4 ,A ,4-. in - V4 N - - . i'j '- - -- '- k J. M - . 1 -1 r . ., v ' -. 9 N 0- r.,,:.:g..,M' 1... 5.., Q, W. .--- --' 1 4 A 'awww , . p,-.,f3-wc -,f A s PECIAL ERVICE This spring's four days of Special Ser- vices focused on relationships-an area of life which pins down Christ's own effectual ministry in the world. The Rev. Gordon MacDonald of Lexington, Massachusetts, was the speaker. In his personable style, strolling freely about the stage, he talked on such topics as: When Adam Blew It, The Marital Zap, Communication: Loud and Clear, and Sexuality: At the Sum- mit. I hope you miss the Rapture, warned the end of an original limerick com- posed for those students inclined to tune out special services speakers. It marked MacDonald's debut on Edman stage. With such smatterings of poetry, vibrant analogies, and unforgettable il- lustrations, he instructed us in the characteristics and' expectations of male-female relationships. There was the one-liner saying A marriage without romance is like a Coke without the fizz. For sheer absurdity, no one will forget Tuesday night's Ann Landers case of a young man who kissed a volleyball for practice. Chaplain Pat announced Wednesday morning that there would be no reper- cussions if all of the soccer balls were promptly returned to Centennial Gym. In a more elaborate and striking metaphor, MacDonald described the sexual experience as the view from a mountain peak. The man and woman who stood united at the summit after several days' hard climb have a more complete joy and fulfillment than a pair who might take a helicopter for a quick bounce to the top. He also spoke on the image of the Holy of Holies, the inner sanctum each individual posseses in his spirit. He suggested we preserve it unspoiled for the sacrament of marriage, and purify it for a more satisfying commu- nion with Christ. But MacDonald's messages had broader implications than just marital advice. The three levels of relationships, To like, To share, and To serve, apply to all human ties. And it is Christ's love that a Christian marriage or friendship ex- emplifies to the world. After a week with Gordon MacDonald we are blessed with new enthusiasm as well as hard advice in our struggle for perfect communion with Christ and with others. And when we find communion, we can quote MacDonald, and the word of Adam when he first saw Eve: At last! 210 js JS v: 4 Q - .X n ,f ,ff .Z- YTT ,,:.E,. ,,-' 2 .--.-- 211 THE CAUCASIAN CHALK CIRCLE Through the medium of an ancient folk tale, Bertolt Brechtis Caucasian Chalk Circle explores the question of the rightful ownership of a Russian valley. The tale debates the custody of a baby boy. Who deserves him, the servant girl who loves him and raised him, or his haughty mother? Do the givers, the true lovers, ever receive what is rightfully theirs, or will the powerful always rule by arbitration? Does the only hope for justice rest in the twists of chance? Directed by Jim Young, the drama group celebrated the Chalk Circle. From the most noble to the most despicable the characters came alive in the festive at- mosphere of the play-within-a-play. The humor and pathos avoided sentimentality, and both amused and enraged by showing us something of ourselves. The story of the Chalk Circle pictures authentic love taking action in a world of pious pretension. It ends in a celebration which cheerfully defies the bogey-men of greed, hatred, and violence. The final dance is a dance of hope. Children will go to the motherly. The valley will bloom under the farmers' hands. by Jeff Schneider 212 f Y' '1 'XA j ,lg 'wk ,' '- Bmw ,FL , XFX .,x X., N . x-' mln . 1 , .Q 1 . FR! KX A LL . ik xox 1 I Y- A X - 1' 5- xmi fix 'Q Qi D 4 K, ns-5 : 4? I fi ,lr ff-,. 75 ,.. . , ,. . -nf, r x X I mia ,. f , N .1 1, if - W5 2? 5 I ' -' ' , 4 V .S f ,--.. - gh in 4,9 . Q? A' 5 . J Q 'Q .,1, ,Rx N X 9 , ' ' X , , I I X x X535 1 . - NFB' U QL! y J' .' .qi , HL x X iw wuif' n A, - l 5 'Ti V. K 5 B REFOOT HQTTHEPARK. Barefoot in the Park afforded an opportunity to laugh together .... at the five flights of stairs not counting the stoop out front, the neighbors that leave empty tuna cans in the hall, the six-cent law case, the epicurean terror of the knichi and Albananian poofla-poopie, the marriage counselor from AT8zT, the no-bathtub, leaky closet apart- ment and the hole in the skylight. Laughing with Steve, Debbie, Joanna, Tim, Ken, and Randy as they embodied the kooks and characters of Neil Simon. Each actor stretched in his own ways. Steve Tavani presented Paul with proper degree of rational poise to balance the zany exuberance of Debbie Levey's Corrie. Tim Bonser's gourmet flair charmed Joanna Montgomery out of her reluctance to be one of the fellows. K. Wayne Peter- son's premiere performance completed the collage of direc- tors at Nystrom this year. Together the ensemble explored the interplay of the intellec- tual and emotional behind the play's laughter. The newlyweds faced the prospect of divorce precipitated when they grew tired and angry and said things they would soon regret. While Mrs. Banks was explaining her behavior and the size 48 bathrobe, Corrie realized her need for Paul, who was walking barefoot in the winky-dink park. by Rob Quiring 214 ,Q 'sl A ds dz .VA ,wg ds 215 A CREATIVE ARTS FESTIVAL 47 ,,, ,. X I l :L ,5 s f ,., .wb-fr gn' .,,.a-we' A ' A A fa- .: , ,I MA N .,4' gt . 5 0 winning poems CHRISTMAS BREAK The house sits winkin at the passing cars. The corner's view is scant but offers light Enough to read Bleak House by, or watch star Streams flow into the fast and muddy night I could be asleep, or playing a guitar Song to some closet lover far from the sight Of pedestrians, but my eyes are far From closing and the piano can excite Me more than men. The house, a bigger flirt Than I ever am, bats its hundred-watt Eyes, hoping to entice someone or divert Their attention to the bay corner spot Where the visiting princess waits all day For one to notice her neglected stay. Beth Robinson I-80, NEBRASKA Standing, up-thumb, waiting still to go. With anyone who needs an empty ear.' Lodge-pole pine, ,the mountain, and the snow. Ourjeans are frayed. Will everybody know That l'm his friend and he's a mountaineer? Standing, up-thumb, waiting still to go. We should have eaten breakfast long ago At that truck-stop twenty miles from here, Standing, up-thumb, waiting still to go. Smiles go up with thumbs. We say Hello. Thoughts pass with each car. The elk and deer, Lodge-pole pine, the mountain, and the snow. You promised we would get a ride-so Please don't leave me here alone. I fear Standing, up-thumb, waiting still to go. Lodge-pole pine, the mountain, and the snow Patricia Davison' Brought to recognition by the editorial staff of the 1976 Wheaton College Tower. All rights reserved. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of anyone in particular, but most of us in general. Everybody was a winner this spring when the President of the United States came to campus. The week's preparation was almost as exciting as the event itself. Ford spoke to the students and was on national televi- sion from Edman. Bringing Ford was a triumph for the Student Government, who also brought Charles Colson to campus a month later. See articles on both. WINNER: Ever since Gordon MacDonald's stirring messages, not only has Record's Up the Tower been a regular feature, but helicopter rides have reached a new low. Congratulations to the Wade Collection. This year it not only gained new quarters in the Nicholas building, but it was fortunate enough to gain an invaluable collec- tion of Dorothy Sayer's manuscripts. A REAL BUMMER: The computer . . . did you ever try to log in? Most people will concede that the Record has come up in the world since last year. Some call this year's paper the best yet. Careful repor- ting, good organization, and dedica- tion made this year's paper a winner. The ten most distinctively dressed persons Cin the interest of equalityj on campus this year are: Paul Willis Dr. Henry Lisa Lundberg Linda Penner Mr. Fromer Steve Tavani Dr. Inch Gary Rundquist Collette Diller Chaplain Patterson Cnot necessarily in this orderl Archeology majors got a big lift when they discovered a possible new find: a burial mound in front of the Nicholas Building. LOSERS: The worst pranks of the year: lj. The alarm clocks during Dr. Schultz's spring chapel message, and 23. the firecrackers during chapel. Both caused a myriad of opiniong neither was widely considered funny. Most Unquotable Quote: Mr. Ford, we welcome you to Wheaton: The Garden Spot of the Universe. Thank you John Erlenborn. LOSER: Again the bicentennial spirit bites the dust as Edman chimed out patriotic songs before chapel. The students disliked it so much the chimes quickly changed back to the old favorites. 5 fl!!! fi Um LOSER: Celebrating the bicenten- nial, Blanchard Tower is now adorned with red, white and blue spotlights. We wanted to highlight this patriotic spirit by giving you a Blanchard of your very own which you can color yourself. Simply follow the color scheme provided: yffl-red, 52-white, 93-blue. Color the rest appropriately. Wheaton says Bon voyage to Dr. and Mrs. Leedy, as they retire after 38 and 40 years of professional service, respectively. While Biology, P.E.W., and Black Hills students cherish memories of their warmth and hu- mor, the Leedys plan to spend lots of time in their cabin in Norway among the lingonber- I ries. Winners! Non-utility reigned in the houses that two professors abandoned to make way for the new BSLG building. With their insides stripped to the studs the empty shells of these dwellings still wait to be torn down by B8zG. Because of delays in the construction of the Center, the houses haven't yet been razed. One of Wheaton's own competed in the Olympics this year. Nancy Swider, placing seventh, did not have the good fortune to win. However, she did win a race a cou- ple of weeks later, setting a new world's record. This was a perfect opportunity to prove her athletic ability as well as her witness for Christ. WINNER: Best prank of the year award goes to the five students who gave Perry Mastodon a new leaseion life over Thanksgiving weekend. Csee pages 80-81. also the ad section? Definitely high class! WINNER: Wheaton College trash Trays, brought to you by Neal Williams: a new member of the ever growing artifacts collection. Isn't it ironic that Wheaton College drinking steins are sold in the Bookstore? WINNER: This year's Kodon, which published two fine literary magazines under the worst of con- ditions - financial and otherwise. Good going, kids! LOSER: A sinking feeling seems to continue in Traber as the whole dorm slowly melts into the ground. Each year the 7 story dorm drops one more inch: well, as they say, from dust to dust. iv' f ,wif ' ' ..'L..,..f.-.4 - 'fj.--'- few I -5:35, ff .. fig I Er 14g-aff' I-5.gll.2'q-I e- 2. Jlvliifififgi F75 I . 3 fig-glwgg 2.5 fiiigi' i '- ' . . .3-, v.j:,j nn' za , - - -' ' !: ,.- tar! is-31-g . 1 ,Wu 1 '1 i A, , , E.f1..1Li- 'lcziiii mat! J -3 Would You Believe . . . Blanchard is quickly getting tired of practical jokes! Em Griffin ETHICS OF PERSUASION ' ' CH I'd like to think to the ethical Christian persuader as a lover, a sincere lover, tenderly wooing the affections of the undecided young girl. Lovingly he pleads his case while respecting the rights of the other person. The problem is that not all lovers are good, not all lovers are loving and just .... Let's start with the non-lover. The non-lover is a person who does not try to persuade .... We think of the statement of the sixties: I do my thing, you do your thing. And at first blush, this sounds pretty ethical .... But you see, the Christian takes seriously God's commandment to share his love. And if we refuse to tell others about Jesus Christ, if we rifuse to try and persuade others, we are limiting their c oice .... The second false lover that I'd like to look at is the flirt .... The flirt is looking for conquests. He's out to get a trophy. It's the process that's important to him, not the other per- son. The religious flirt is maybe the evangelist, personal or public, who's out looking for souls, scalps for the belt, trophies of grace. Flushed with success, he moves on to look for new scalps and leaves the person whose life he has touched adrift .... This is not the example Paul set for us. Paul spent eighteen months in Corinth. He spent over two yefalrs in Ephesus. When he left, he wrote them. He was not a irt .... The third type of false lover I'd like to take a look at is the seducer. The seducer uses deception and flattery to entice others into submission. He often appeals to our relevant desires and wishes-success, money, popularity, and easy life-presenting these as the inducements to come into the Christian faith I was a sinner and I had nothing. I met Jesus Christ and now I'm chairman of the board of Holiday Inn. And the implication is that if you become a Chris- tian, all these good things will happen to you. Just once, just once, I'd love to hear someone get up and give a testimony, I was president of this multi-national corpora- tion. I met Jesus Christ and started to apply the ethics of the Sermon on the Mount in my business, and I am now out of a job. But I praise the Lord anyhow. I think that would be honoring to the Lord and that would avoid the temptation to seduction .... The fourth kind of false lover is the rapist Rape is an act of force, and no other term, I think, so aptly describes the religious forms of coercion we sometimes fall into . . .. Put a person in a highly charged and emotional situation-you know, the campfire, the nineteen choruses of 'Just As I Am at the end of the conference-and some people are put in a situation where they lose their capacity to say nog they are no longer rational. I believe this is rape .... Guilt is an act of rape. I think guilt is used more to motivate in the Christian church than any other technique. Why? It's so easy. It's easy to make people feel guilty .... If I make you an offer that you cannot refuse, that's force, and that's rape. A fifth kind of lover is the smother-lover. That is the lover who loves you to death. This is the person who loves you so much that he won't take 'no' for an answer .... Now, when we refuse to treat people as people, that's smothering them In James 3, James says, Let not many of you become teachers, my brethren, for you know that we who teach will be judged with greater strictnessf' There's a danger in be- ing a leader, a preacher, a teacher. We may smother our people. One final type of lover I would call the legalistic lover. Paul says, If I speak in the tongues of men and angels, but have not love, I am a noisy gong or a clanging cymbal. The legalistic lover does not have love. He is passionless. He's merely going through the motions .... The legalistic lover is one who can treat a man as a thing, as a means rather than an end in itself. Well, you say, Em, where is the true lover? Yes, there is a true lover. The true lover is the one who is loving. He cares about the welfare of the other person more than he cares about his own ego. He's just, he respects the other person's rights. He's saddened if the other person says no to God, to being close to Jesus Christ, but he lets him. At the start of this message I read from I Thessalonians, and we see Paul as the true lover. Is there a contemporary ex- ample? Hard to find .... But this is no excuse for us to con- tinue immoral practices. Christ wants us to be moral in our Christian persuasion. THE FEAR OF GOD Chaplain Patterson We have a very small concept of God. But when the truth of the absolute authority and power of God really gets hold of a person, it cannot help but produce a profound sense of holy fear .... When those who do not profess to know the Lord see our irreverent and flippant attitude towards God, they are turned off, and it becomes a reproach. I sometimes wonder what visitors to our chapel think of us as a Body. HIGHLIGHT 1 AMOS: PROPHET OF DOOM I Dr. Donald Hagner Excerpt of Poem read by Bruce Larsen Each time you are kind and gentle and encouraging, Each time you try to understand because you really care, My heart begins to grow wings, Very small wings, very feeble wings, but wings, With your sensitivity and sympathy and your power of understanding I can make it. You can breathe life into me, I want you to know that. I want you to know how important you are to me, How you can be a creator of the person that is me, If you choose to. Marie Ann Hirschmann, author of HANSIE: The Girl Who Loved The Swastika I changed gods, from the God of my mother, the Jew Jesus Christ, to the god of Germany at that time, and his name was Adolf Hitler. And you know, the tragedy of it was that when I did it I believed sincerely with all my heart that I was doing the right thing Young people, you can think that you have the right way. You can be very sincere about it, and unless you couple sincerity with truth you come out at the wrong end. I didn't know that, and I paid a price .... I tell you, the Nazis taught me something that I even believe today, and more so than in Nazi school. The Nazis looked at us and they said, Remember one thing, you can do anything if you want to do it bad enough. I'm dreaming that dream, and I tell you what that dream is. I'm dreaming that I shall do great things for the Lord .... I'm dreaming to want to do great things for the Lord, not because I'm so strong and special and great. Young people, I have less than you ever had. You have the full knowledge of the English language. I don't. You have a healthy young body. I don't. You have a mind that was permitted to develop in freedom. You can think like nobody else on this globe can think. My mind is crippled. I have to check again and again, am I thinking wrong or right, for I was con- ditioned and brainwashed once and I have to be careful. You've got so much more than I ever had, young people. What could you do if you started to dream for God? The evangelical church in many ways stands as did Israel in the day of Amos. To us comes the blessing and the danger of knowing ourselves as the people of God. We are after all the Church, God's eternal purpose realized through Jesus Christ as Paul puts it in Ephesians C3':11J. We, like Israel, have been brought into existence by God and we belong to Him and He to us in a very special way. Like Israel, we too stand in constant danger of self- admiration, of complacency and pride, of self- centeredness, and a small view of God. And all of this is possible even in the midst of all our impressive orthodoxy and religiosity ..... I remain convinced that the greatest sin that evangelicalism shall have to answer for is that of blatant materialism in the face of world-wide human need. Is it right that dogs in America are better fed than people in other countries? Lo-debar, not matter, a thing of nought. Is it right that we should glut ourselves with luxuries when others lack the basic necessities of life? Lo-debar. How do we look by the standard of Amos' plumb line? Do we seem to be like a basket of summer fruit-rather overripe? Go away, Amos. Give us the almighty shekel. We'll take it despite inflation. We are the people of God-not for us your pronouncements of doom! We are correct in our orthodoxy and pious in our religious observances. Can God ask any more? Dr. Bruce Lockerbie on The Word How remarkable that Christians should come to know our Redeemer, not as the fastest gun in the west, not as the man of steel, but as the Word .... At the springing forth of creation it was the eternal Word who summoned the cosmos into being, compelled by divine will and illumined by the Light of love .... All creation received the blessing of that Light, but to man only, God gave the attributes of free will and enlightened reason and the power of speech, the rational expression of that freedom. While man lived in obedience to his creator, these divine attributes reflected perfectly the image of God-he was at one with his Maker We claim that the Person of Jesus Christ, incarnating the complete being of God, is at the very center of our lives, shaping who we are and what we say .... If this were so, would not the world then understand what we mean when we declare the integration of faith and learning? Would not the world come to know that we mean to incarnate in every area of our lives the Word in whom we claim to believe? This is the challenge facing us, to be the Word in the world, and to speak the Word. 221 M19 ? 3 ?5 A EE?EEEia SMB I 222 ERICA PRACTICALITY Or Who Needs Flowered Toilet Paper? The over two Billion sold sign flashes on almost every major intersection of America and the production of ever- wear polyester double knits multiplies yearly. Practicality is the key to American consumerism. Mass food- production fairs exhibit assembly-line cooking processes that do everything from shaping the meat to squirting the ketchup. Polyester practicality assures machine wash and no iron g minimum care and maximum durability. Even William James would probably be upset by America's expedient excuse for practicality. How many Wheaton students actually iron their clothes? How often do students read complete books? How many days a week does the average Wheaton student wear jeans? Do students ever continue to take notes when the teacher prefaces his remarks with You won't have to know this for the test, but ... ? For these reasons, the same Americans that produced the expediency of the zipper have also perfected such other marvels of practicality as veg-o-matic and space food sticks. This craving for simplicity and practicality grows out of the innovative spirit of America evident throughout history. Europeans invented many of the new machinery ideas, but American workability made the hypothetical ideas of Europeans into practical machinery. Americans of the 19th century willingly experimented as adventurers moved westward. Solutions to the problem of existence depended on the homespun nature of prac- ticality. The pioneers' make-shift creativity produced self-contained households. People adapted to being masters of all trades. It was necessary for their survival! American ingenuity simplified mass production through Henry Ford's invention of the assembly line. Various appliance companies have popularized the blow dryer, electric curlers, and the electric toothbrush, com- petitively reducing the cost to the consumer. But in following their tradition of hard, disciplined work, Americans have gone overboard to make life simple. The object of modern American society is to make things sim- ple on the outside and complicated on the inside. Dishwashers, pocket calculators, washing machines and stereo systems have become as natural to the middle class American home as the fireplace of the 19th century. But beyond this, the artificiality of American life today has destroyed some of the spirit of physical work. Big cars, electric garage door openers, massage beds fthe magic fingersl, and paint by number kit-crafts remove spontaneity by regimenting standards for society. The sterile simplicity of the shake and bake mentality could discourage the innovations that made Americans unique 200 years ago. Who needs flowered toilet paper? by Rebecca Nelson 1 l 1956 - 1976 MY ooo TRY RIGHT OR WRO or You may be drsgusted w1th B1centenn1al1sm Or you may be d1sgusted that Brcentenmal d1sgust IS so fashronable In our generatron For patr1ot1c enthusrasm seems to grow In proportron wrth age Some parents and grandparents cannot understand therr chrlds skeptlcal reactron to therr genume emotlons about Amerrca The younger generatlon cannot understand the val1d1ty of the1r elders feel1ngs So It mrght be helpful to move past Brcentennral placemats road srgns wagon trams cherry pres and red whrte and blue vamlla ICB cream to the heart of why each generatxon feels the way It does and to a com mon basrs for celebratron Take a look over the years 1956 1976 the last ten percent of our h1story Those years certalnly hold enough drsapporntments to take the wmd out of any Inflated sense of natxonal prrde They grew out of the 1953 arm1st1ce In Korea a less than satrsfactory close to the fxrst l1m1ted war In world h1story the Korean War Wlth a unlque moral m1ss1on but came out a b1t drslllusloned The F1ft1es also Introduced the c1vIl rlghts movement In force w1th the Supreme Court decrsron agalnst separate but equal educatron In Topeka In 1954 and Mart1n Luther Krng s program of peaceful demonstratlons In 1955 The anti c1v1l rxghts movement also showed force Wrth Sputnxk I the space age blasted off In 1957 John Glenn became the flrst man In space In 1962 The same year the Cuban mxs s1le cr1sIs almost l1t the Cold War Into World War III In 1962 and 1963 the Supreme Court outlawed man datory recrtatron of prayer or B1ble verses In the publlc schools In November 1963 Pres1dent John F Kennedy d1ed of an assassln s bullet In Dallas On August 2 1964 two Amer1can destroyers were attacked In the Gulf of Tonkrn and we got Involved In the Vretnam conflrct growrng from 23 000 mrlltary adv1sors In 1964 to some 900 O00 boys fightlng an un declared war In 1967 Draft dodgers and peace demonstrations erupted across the natron s campuses Mar t1n Luther Krng and Robert Kennedy fell to assasslns bullets In 68 In 1969 the Un1ted States put a man on the moon At the close of the Srxtres Rrchard Rovere of the New York Tzmes wrote It has been an awful decade a slum of a decade Not that the Seventres have been much better We got a Vretnam KWH L M28 4, It lr,-.J .--5 5 Q32 Q11 Riff kg! Lets Stack to Home Fzres For A Whtle says Vaughn Shoemaker s cartoon publtshed Ln CHICAGO TODAY In 1971 M Shoemaker Instted campus Aprzl 27 and spoke In chapel about hrs experzences as a professzonal newspaper cartoonzst Now retrred he donated nearly a hundred orzgmal coptes of hrs cartoons to the Art Department The majorzty of the cartoons capture what lS now nostalgza hard workzn good tzme Amerzca cease frre In 1973 but accompanled by the Watergate scandal that forced Rrchard Nrxon to resrgn In 1974 It s not so hard to understand the patrrotlc feehngs of our elders when we exam1ne the span of Amerrca they have known Even the emotronal atmosphere has been worse for us In the last twenty years Grandmother probably read about a samtly George Washlngton In her grammar school text but my elghth grade h1story supplement told about the ternpers and mlstresses of our natron s founders My parents ex perrenced natronal unxty In World War II but my Junlor hlgh classmates staged a moratorrum to protest U S Involvement In V1et nam Yet I m glad the Brcentennral com es to us at a pomt In our h1story where we emerge from some sordrd years Into an uncertarn future For lov1ng your country lS l1ke lov1ng your sweetheart Love based on the perfect would soon d1e In drsap orntment I the bes relatronshlps each partner knows the other s faults and vlrtues but commrts hrmself In love to support the other s growth Real patrrotrsm works at Amerrca s problems at the polls and on the streets Patrrotrsm IS wantrng what s best for the coun try sard one pOl1t1C3l scrence ma Jor here Our countrys structure grves the most freedom for Improve ment We have the best potentral we shouldn t lose srght of lt In 1816 Stephen Decatur wrote the famous lrne Our country rrght or wrong' But Carl Schurz added the rlght commltment to It In 1872 Our country rlght or wrong' When rlght to be kept rlght when wrong to be put rrghtl by Susan Woodcock ga., 2 E522 is-E . . - . 5 I - ' ' . 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I0 IQ CD W IM -all A 5935535 QS r Q I 224 'D RELIGIOU FREEDO Wheaton is a fine example of privately supported institutions that have made America great, said President Gerald R. Ford to Wheaton students. He expressed support for this type of education, and said he would oppose any laws that would cut off sources of finance to them. However, religious colleges like Wheaton increasingly ask how the government can protect and support them while enacting laws that pull the religious freedom out from un- der them. Christian colleges have added their voices to those of other private colleges in protest over federal regulations that threaten to hurt them all. So far, the fighting has broken out on three fronts: the recent IRS rul- ing, Title IX of the Education Amendments Act, and the budget battle. THE IRS AND THE RACIAL BATTLE One of the first skirmishes took place over the recent Internal Revenue Service ruling that requires private colleges to keep records for three years on all persons rejected for jobs or admission, in order to maintain a tax exempt status. The ruling allows the IRS to inspect any school's records on demand, and revoke the tax exempt status of any school whose records give evidence of racial discrimination. But Christian colleges point to the implications the IRS ruling may have for their religious freedom. Although Wheaton doesn't dis- criminate racially, the IRS would find few minority students on cam- pus. Because we are a white, suburban and middle class school, it is un- likely that minority group students will enroll here rather than at other school, said Hudson T. Armer- ding, Wheaton's president. Beside the WASP nature of Wheaton, any student must also fulfill the spiritual requirements. Are you a Christian? asks the Wheaton application. While Wheaton is known for evangelism, the college will accept only profess- ing Christians. '- However, if the IRS interprets its rule to mean that all colleges must have a quota of minority students, Wheaton could be in a bind. To get a required percentage, the college would have to search for fairly scarce students that meet both the academic and spiritual re- quirements, or lower the standards to make the college fit the students it has to accept. THE BATTLE OF THE SEXES Another area of conflict between private colleges and the government centers around Title IX of the 1972 Educational Amendments Act. This law aims at providing equal oppor- tunities for men and women on college campuses. Brigham Young, a Mormon school, has announced it will not comply with the parts of Title IX that re- quire it to violate its religious beliefs. This means that the univer- sity will continue to enforce its own dress code. At Brigham Young, men's hair must be above the ears, and women may not wear blue jeans. Title IX does not allow for rules which apply to one sex. While Wheaton has not yet raised official objections, Title IX has already brought changes to campus. Title IX meant the end of man- datory ROTC for freshmen men, and the end of hours for all up- perclass women. While the changes so far only repre- sent an annoying government pressure, Wheaton is presently making a self-study on the effects of Title IX. College officials believe that the law has potential to in- fringe on their religious beliefs. For example, the college teaches that premarital sex and adultery are morally wrong and forbids these practices as part of the college rules. A problem arises when a pregnant woman applies for admission. Title IX asks that a student's marital status not be inquired into, and thus it could prohibit Wheaton from en- forcing these biblical standards on campus. The college has set this July as a deadline for deciding how to carry out Title IX, or whether to file for a religious exemption with HEW. For failing to comply with Title IX, Wheaton could stand to lose over SB'700,000 worth of National Defense Loans and Basic Educational Op- portunity Grants each year. THE BATTLE OF THE BUDGET Private colleges claim that comply- ing with the government's demands is putting a financial noose around their necks that grows continually tighter. Pres. Armerding feels that such financial pressure could make Christian colleges an endangered species. Increasing costs could simply put a prohibitive price tag on this type of education. The only way to have free exercise of religion is to have institutions where religion is indeed taught and practiced. The extinction of schools like Wheaton seriously threatens the free exercise of our religious beliefs. by Lenore Marema CHARLE CCL C Charles Colson, once a special counsel to former President Richard M. Nixon, told Wheaton students he had a new perspective on politics and prison reform. He ought to know about both. Colson, once called the White House hatchet man , served seven months in a federal prison for his efforts on behalf of the Watergate administration. But the Colson at Wheaton hardly resembled the man who once said he would run over his own grandmother to re-elect Richard Nixon. I didn't change my life, Colson told Wheaton students. God changed it. In December, 1973, Colson's attendance at a prayer meeting in the White House basement made headlines. The press responded in disbelief in those days: They saw only a man going about his Father's business in order to get himself a lesser sentence. However, since his conversion, Colson has continued to prove that he really got religion. He has toured 36 states testifying to what God has done in his life. He also has a prison ministry, training inmates to set up prison fellowships and urging politicians to improve prison conditions and criminal justice. Yet, the press, though no longer openly hostile to Colson, still views him cynically. No one knows whether they will ever see him as more than a bad boy who learned his lesson washing un- derwear in the prison laundry. Colson is born again. But politicians usually change only with political winds from home. Colson urged Wheaton students to influence those political winds with the Christian's world-changing poten- tial. Charles Colson once had daily access to the President. Now he cannot practice law or even vote. He will continue his new ministries, but someone will have to fill his vacancy in Washington. Any Christian going into politics will benefit from Colson's Christian perspective. His warm commitment stands as a positive force against the Watergate fallout. by Lenore Marema EXCERPT FROM COLSON'S WHEATON ADDRESS, April 28, 1976 It's no time for despair ..... We live in America, in the most priceless freedom that man has ever known, because this country was begun by disciples of Christ. The pilgrims that came here came to have the freedom that Jesus Christ offers every single human being, the most radical, revolutionary experiment in the history of mankind, the radical idea that No God doesn't rule through a divinely ordained king, but God rules, His sovereign rule is in the life of every single human being, that every single human being draws his power from God, that the individual is supreme in the eyes of the sovereign God, and that government is created to provide the needs of the aggregate collection of God endowed individuals, endowed with the power of God. And look back upon the history of the Great Awakening in 1740, the cradle of the American revolution. What was it? It was a spiritual revival that George Whitfield led, riding up and down the colonies from Savanna to New Hampshire and back south again, preaching a rebirth in Jesus Christ, that every American might know the human freedom of having Christ in his life What a priceless freedom we have, and it isn't going to be saved for us by any human be- ing. We can't cop out, we can't expect Washington to do it, we can't expect the govern- ment to suddenly have the power of God: that was the very thing our forefathers rejected. We can't expect one of our number of born-again believers to lead this nation on his back unless the hearts of the American people are turned to God .... God's secret plan for the nations is Christ in you, and it begins here today, this day. May the love of the Lord Jesus be with you. Thank vou. S lv U 4, S . lr' E EEEEEEEQ te ii SES N NJ CJ! BASEB LL right: Near capacity crowd at Lawson Field watches Curtis Johnson cut loose his express. below: Dave Gritereit slides into third under a cloud of dust: safe. opposite above: Mark Habbeger shows good form but still manages a strike. opp. lower left: Bob Unruh watches as Wayne Pierce is called out on an attempt to steal home in the loss to North Park. opp. lower right: Future Crusaders watch and hope for their chance at the plate. ...li 226 I ? S, M N' TENN The sweet blend of experience and youth. Every team strives for it. Few achieve it. For coach Jack Swartz and the men's tennis team, that sweet for- mula led to an undefeated conference season and the CCIW championship, Wheaton's first sole championship in 17 years. The experience came from seniors Jim Galvin and Dave Jongeward and junior Don Barkleyg the youth from sophomore Clay Weatherly and freshmen John Ortberg, Billy Stam, Paul Jorden and Tim Holm. For captain Weatherly, it was another phenomenal year. Clay breezed through conference play undefeated, reigning as the CCIW's number one singles player for the second con- secutive year. For an encore, Weatherly joined Ortberg for the nationals in Jackson, Mississippi, where both won their first two matches to reach the final 16. Galvin, meanwhile, came out of the conference championships as the CCIW's individual singles champion at fourth singles, and Jorden took the number one spot at sixth singles. Add to this impressive list a conference number two doubles championship for Stam and Galvin, and you have quite a season. Not bad at all for a team with freshmen playing at the number two, three and six positions. Coach Swartz surely discovered the fountain of youth. dr PY' .x ' 4 Mfqgii -1 , 4: dr lg -Q w v u dr 229 WOMEN i TENNI Uncooperative weather, scheduling quirks, and lack of experience made the difference between a good and a great year for women's tennis. Rainy or windy weather stole 5 of 11 games from the team's schedule, while a general shift to fall tennis schedules stole some competition. Unfor- tunately the two toughest teams in the area stayed with the spring schedule. Playing Northwestern twice and Lake Forest once, Wheaton suffered one loss to each of the tennis powerhouses, finishing the season with a 4-2 record. Junior Barclay Taliaferro led the team from the No. 1 singles and doubles positions, losing only one match during the season. Then she traveled with junior Lyn Edwards and freshman Welby Moon for regional play at Ohio State May 21-23. She advanced to the quarter-finals. Edwards and Moon played doubles, dropped out in the second round to OSU's No. 1 doubles team. pix 6,4 M., . . .ji f W 3 k 4 ' 1, 8 ' da dz .. 1.'L,-Vi' , W -:fa'1v,Y--? Q H ,- - - -V n M :-.W V, f- sg: - ,A, 1 ' , 1 A Egflq' - .',- izfinknx 51, bm, Lu.. ' - -gf sf 4. df! TRACK Sz FIELD JW iw ,ALT fi?-4 :W 1. f. -,TI ' at Alt 'M . R1 i- ff , v- fi 6 , 'A .-'H ' D ' , X 'x A Y iw SOCCER A FCOTBALL WC!0pp Carroll Hope lll. Wesleyan Carthage Nlillikin North Central Augustana Elmhurst North Park CCI 234 W: 513 34121 9f30 15!16 3211 3 2X3 23! l 9 37!:s5 20f28 42f7 WClOpp Calvin Judson Principia Beloit Lake Forest Trinity Lewis U. Aurora MacMurray Earlham Wise.-Green Bay U. ol' Chicago DePauw Northern Ill. Washington U. Wabash Ohio Wesleyan wne:q.e:-f'- -A pi x q,g.- .a...-- c---f'- BASKETBALL lj Q - -V ..,. , Lum ,fp GYMNASTICS E 1 9 fa S 195 is tn-'wax l sl' H . fpiik mg -EQ' ,xv -4 -5 Q11 , E., Tl 'fling XF li I .E 9,4 WC!Opp Rose-Hulman 82f78 Ill. Wesleyan 70f92 Taylor Tourn. Aurora 99f54 Taylor 88f92 Defiance Tourn. lst Augustana 54!72 Calvin 79f93 Carthage 62f64 Augustana 60f76 Nort.h Park 76f78 Elmhurst 57f77 Ill. Wesleyan 71f'75 Millikin 79f84 Carroll 85f90 Elmhurst 54f55 North Park 82f53 Carroll 75f68 Millikin 57f79 Trinity Chr. 72f56 North Central 96f86 Carthage 74f95 North Central 71f87 CCIW: 3f13 tscores not availablel Mideast League: 2nd in Conference NCAA: 9th in 2nd 8: 3rd Div Most Valuable Player: Dave Watt Most Consistent: Scott Moreau Hardest Worker: Bob Valley Most Improved: Scott Snouffer WRESTLING .5 tl. N ,ya I BASEBALL I ICE HOCKEY 1 A I in-if of Q wfrf WC10pp. Southwest Coll. Morainne Valley Morainne Valley Trinity St. Xavier St. Xavier Ill. Inst. of Tech Elmhurst Southwest Coll. St. Xavier Trinity Chr. - Ill. Inst. of Tech Alumni Elmhurst Ill. Inst. of Tech Elmhurst Southwest Coll. Trinity Chr. Trinity Coll. Trinity Chr. 118 015 215 414 2116 1113 910 314 217 1113 711 511 1111 513 710 314 015 412 311 110 I .a-f -V ns Q oi' WC10pp Lewis 22131 Elmhurst 30115 MacMurray 5th 0livet1Elmhurst 29110 Concordia 29121 Millikin 7th U. of W., Milwaukee 24127 Maranatha 33120 Carroll 14130 Valparaiso 37112 Monmouth 3rd Wheaton Invit. 3rd Chicago St. 19124 CCIW lst NCAA 16th179 TENNIS - A . 3 ' WC10pp Barrington Hawthorne R.P.I. Eckerd South Florida Husson Husson Calvin Millikin Millikin Elmhurst North Central North Park North Park Ill. Wesleyan Ill. Wesleyan U. of Chicago Carroll Carroll Ill.-Circle Ill.-Circle Carthage Carthage Augustana Augustana Elmhurst U. of Chicago North Central CCIW: 3113 316 614 3111 118 4116 114 1115 1018 217 715 213 6110 415 1119 112 214 011 314 2110 213 2111 018 4111 211 0116 218 415 118 WC10pp Olivet Ill. Benedictine U. of Chicago Northwestern J.V. Valparaiso Elmhurst North Central Lewis U. Millikin Ill. Wesleyan Augustana North Park CCIW NCAA Div. III: 6th 811 215 811 217 613 811 810 9110 613 712 712 611 1st 235 HEALTH CE TER D Z wr 236 -is' B TUESDAY. A cold, wet day in Wheaton, made even less enjoyable by a sore throat and a stuffy head. For the purpose of getting a throat culture, I walked through the doors of the Health Center, not realizing that for three days I would not exit from those por- tals. The receptionist and the nurses were more than their usual friendly selves as they ushered me in, looked at my throat and took my temperature. Little did I know that it was only a set-up to catch me off guard for the bombshell line: Do you have a roommate or a friend who can get your books and toothbrush for you? We're not let- ting you back outside with a temperature of 102. Roommate'? Friend? Are you kid- ding? I live in Saint, you knowli' Despite my cries of protest they assigned me a locker and a bed, and gave me a pair of blue pajamas. Arriving at the men's sick room, I found my two fellow quarantinees dressed in the same style and color as myself, making us look like one- third of a little league baseball team. I found my first problem im- mediately: how to converse with the other inmates. The Health Center opening script begins What you got? and ends with Oh, It seemed especially hard to talk to the patient in the next bed, due to obstructing tables and room dividers I was conversing with a dis- embodied pair of legs. I had no visitors that day. My after- noon was spent doing homework and assembling a mini puzzle of a nice Outdoor scene, carefully chosen to torment me. WEDNESDAY. Temperature 102.3 and holding. The prospect of breakfast in bed pleased me, until I realized I would also have lunch in bed, supper in bed, homework in bed, reading in bed . . . But despite my bedridden state, I couldn't complain about the service, which was regal. Before each meal a smiling lady came in to take my order for food and drink. Other nurses took turns dispensing medicine, advice, and sympathy. Evening snacks were provided, and I could even receive phone calls from Outside , My bedside table was equipped with all the necessary per- sonal effects, including a battery of pills and a water pitcher. Kind friends helped by checking my CPO box, bringing me books, and best of all, by spending time with me in conversation. . Two new roommates arrived on Wednesday. We spent the evening watching TV in sterilized silence, punctured only by the sound of our sniffling and raspy breathing. THURSDAY. Despite the staffs kindness and pity, I was going stir crazy. The 2 A.M. temperature check hadn't helped my attitude any. Having finished all my homework for the next three weeks, I was left at a loss for things to do. I had three options: Staring at the bilious green walls, walking back and forth from my bed to the bathroom fa distance of three feetl, or cranking the handles on my bed, to see how much I could fold it up before my breathing stopped. Sleep was the final alternative, but my afternoon reverie was noisily dis- rupted by a crazy student who was juggling fruit to entertain one of my roommates. Finally I received some visitors of my own liberated folk who painfully reminded me of what it was like to be Outside! Life in the Health Center is truly humbling. There, the most machismo-mind male is reduced to a sniveling, dependent child, and the most ravishing beauty walks around in a wrinkled bathrobe with bags under her unmascaraed eyes. A spirit of brotherhood quickly develops there, as inmates band together to preserve the cause of human dignity. Thursday night I also spent in watching television, hoping that my temperature would stay down for twenty-four hours, the legal require- ment for release. FRIDAY. The verdict was passed. I would be allowed out, if I felt up to it. Needless to say, I jumped at the op- portunity. I thanked the crew of the Center for their good care of me, and bade farewell to those still anxiously awaiting their parole. Then muster- ing up every available ounce of strength and courage, I pushed open the front door, squinted at the un- familiar glare of the sun, and with a cough headed for CPO. by Larry Shackley 'l Ki 'l Q 4. - W-tl . ,. .I I Q -fun V 4 sr ,s2vf 'l jw QIIZFIUH WEST SUB'S NURSING PRO GRAM is w 5 A Y 1, ,. 1 EQ 5 Y - 5 .,., W 4 1 CSL 'P f M40 K .W S -fi ' rli uwi as A Fwfwwf 1 , , , : ., A ' W 351i-'EYQQ-fws Ez, 238 You may argue that a unrform doesn t make a person But as soon as she dons her unlform the West Sub student becomes nurse to the 400 patrents who occupy West Suburban Hosprtal rn Oak Park She must learn to adapt qulckly to th1s change ln tltle by domg and saymg the thxngs expected of a nurse Although she feels a b1t ln secure knowmg that her three years of moldmg through educatlonal and cl1n1cal preparatlon are yet 1n complete she IS st1ll nurse to the patrents How does thls moldlng process take place? In the freshman year at West Sub Wheaton professors teach the behavroral and blologlcal sclences for foundatlonal knowledge Bes1des studyxng students spend much tune rn the Nurslng Lab practlclng nur smg xnterventron on each other Later IH the year they are assrgned to glve care to certa1n patlents rn the hosprtal wrth gradually lncreaslng rndependence and respons1b1l1ty The Jumor fsecondj year focuses marnly on detalled study of the effect of dlsease processes as well as the physlcal psychosocral and splrxtual unphcatlons of dxsease for a patxent and hrs close assocrates The student spends even more tune carmg for real patlents and begrns to galn sat1sfact1on from the relatlon of class toplcs to chnxcal experxences Durxng senxor year students galn speclal nursmng experlences emergency and cr1t1cal care psy ch1atr1c nursmg pedratrxc nursmg and management of patxent care The drploma earned enables the graduate to take a state examma t1on for llncensure When she passes she IS legally an RN Becommg a nurse xnvolves more than a rltual It shows a gradual transformatxon from a ch1ld11ke desrre to help people to a sc1ent1f1c technlcal approach and fmally to a umque balance between objectlvlty and lnvolvement sterrle ness and earthrness restrlctron and freedom The balance IS not set but dynam1c and the becomrng IS constant May the 1deal never be set low enough to reach' by Cheryl Wzlson i meer, IA 1 , ' - 1 1 s . . . U . . . . , - . az n - - - n - . . . . . . H ,, s v ' . . . , - H . ,, . D . . . . a u l a , , , G I 1 J ' . 1 ' . . . ' u - as ' ' . J ' , . - na - n . . . ' ' s s . . . . an - 73 - . , . 1 - - - ' as - - - sy - . ln , X H H . l ' , , l ' 'A . '. :-Fifli' , 'F' r , , . , W ' 1 , , . ' If . , ll F- ' if 1 U 11:7 - -V 1' ' ,N , :T H p i T r . ff , - .V , N , :,. ' - Q t .f . x , , Q l 1' N ' Y , , Q , , A 'f ' A 2 A 4 M l' I K, V ' x . - 1 ... Z IORPA IC... by Sanda Dorland On one of those bright lazy spring days, when love fever strikes Wheaton and couples walking arm in arm dot campus, one may chance to look up at fourth floor Williston to behold a young woman languishing out the window, wist- fully surveying front campus, clutching a stack of Brides' magazines in her arms, and sighing with envy. Panic. Or the wary observer may notice, upon being entertained at one of those rip-roaring Traber open floors, several well-worn yearbooks and Bird-dog pamphlets with penciled checks and question marks beside certain smiling female portraits. Panic. Ah, the signs are everywhere. Senior panic smites the reluctant hearts. Music-haters start hitting all the i t. ...sm .-...- spring concerts with new dates on their arms. Up the Tower column becomes a full-page feature article. Resident Directors are in a frenzy as candle-passings increase by d 80'Zn. College Church chapel is booked solid for graduation week. One can hear the whispered postscripts tacked on bedtime prayers, Yes Lord, and while you're helping me finish that math requirement, I have just one other little desire before I graduate . . .,' This peculiar phenomenon permeates campus and strikes students in varying degrees, with results ranging from social withdrawal to jiffy romances. It's as traditional as Senior bench and returns every year with unfailing regularity. Amorous symptoms, however, are but one aspect of Senior panic. Although graduation promises mum x rri1iii-- lfg ds freedom from the regimentation and pressure of academic life, the prospects of an uncertain future are frightening. The more spiritually- minded may lay out their fleece or wait for the hand-writing on the wall, but most students just plain worry. The pride of accomplishment that accompanies a hard-earned college degree is often mitigated by a growing sense of insecurity and aimlessness. Just imagine the poor philosophy major trying to sell his abilities in a skill-oriented marketplace: And what has been your greatest accomplishment in college? What can you do, young man? demands the hard-boiled employer. Uh, well, I read and outlined the entire of Kant's Critique of Pure Reason in only ten weeks. You're kidding. ds I can also write a twenty-page critique in one all-nighter with only a single source book, Monarch notes, and several pots of coffee. The employer gives him a funny stare. I've studied personalist philosophy. Maybe I could be of some service in your human relations department Personalist philosophy? What in the world is that? Well, first it's essential that one formulate his epistemological and metaphysical presuppositions before embarking on a rigorous query into . . . Sure. O.K. Thanks for coming in. We'll call you if a position opens up.77 Some may avoid the no-mate no-job panic by attending graduate school. Climbing yet another stairway up the ivory tower is an appealing op- tion. Grad school dollars, of course, are the big problem, resulting in no- money panic. The bills can mn up in the thousands. Yet, thankfully, they don't have to be paid until the degree is earned. What's more, if the guy plays his cards right, he can solve the no-mate no-money panic simultaneously by finding a willing spouse. And then she can worry about the no-job panic. IOR PROMI E Be it no-job, no-money, no-mate, or no plans, Senior panic is a reality to everyone in some degree. Formerly, the choices and goals were pre- established. College was the ul- timate aim and most of us were told we'd go before we hit kindergarten. Now the future looms ahead. Mingled with the panic is sadness over a childhood and youth that is the same. This is a transition stage. They keep coming all through life. No doubt about it-They're tough. But transi- tion is only temporary, and it's always a prelude to something different, hopefully something better. Panic is a natural feeling, but not a paralyzer. forever gone. You will never belong to your family in the same secure way of previous years. Those special college friendships must change, too, with separation. You lived together and endured one another's bad habits. You shared toothpaste, dates, pizza, gossip, advice and comfort. The intimacy of the four years together won't ever be quite ds Didn't we look for something beyond mere academic knowledge in our Wheaton experience? The un- graded lessons have left their im- print. We're leaving with far more than a degree. For the right reasons, graduation is celebration. Let Senior panic be Senior promise. by Sanda Dorland srh srh sr h will bring it to completion. Phil. 1:6 RT by Collette Diller The basis of art study is learning to see. The artist ever increases his sight in terms of linear, color, and form relationships, and in terms of the significance of the visual image in twentieth century society. But no one can safely summarize what art, good art, or Christian art is because of the nature of creativity. The artist is always stretching beyond the known and seen. Art replaces the broken stones of that old order that Solomon recorded, All is vanity . . . there is nothing new under the sun. Therefore artistic creation is basically op- timistic, it always proclaims the new, not for the sake of novelty, but for the sake of hope. Solomon's decree of despair has been supplanted by Christ's declaration of hope: Behold, the old things have passed away, all things have become new . . . woe to him who has eyes to see and sees not. An artist is more than a painter, a sculptor, a printer, a ceramicist, a designer, a photographer, or an historian. He is a creative person, whose energy goes beyond a technical performance that entertains the public eye to the actual creation of something that has never been seen before. Creating art is an act of faith, the sub- stance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen. We who labor as artists hope for, search for, and are convinced of those things which through faith become seen. 246 Art DR. W. KARL STEELE K Elizabeth Baker MISS MIRIAM HUNTER Paul Baker Kathleen Barabas John Caldwell JH. if .H ' AITJ: Jig' A ... by 1' '1 ,MLN ,, f f Vi ,ggkab-2 .' ri L: P' Q Q J- bw! I - A 4? 1 fqtflw A wgffylix x X., Q 1.x . L. r . 4 . , 1, Q2 Mg., .JJ ', - 3.5-v....g 't 'Z Ms Y - fre' , f ,I Y Q L BIBLE RELIGIOUS STUDIE ARCHAEOLO GY ed. Dave McDonald Thy Word is a lamp to my feet, and a light to my path. Psalm I 19:1 05. I like the Bible major because it lets me form my own opinions. I've got personal questions, and I like being confronted with hard thinking. fRich Mengell Most of my answers have come through personal relationships as they have deepened through an understanding of the Scrip- ture's teachings. I love the Writer and through His Word I gain understanding of life. fJohn Buteral Nicodemus said to Him, 'How can a man be born when he is old? ' John 3:3. I wasn't originally a Religion major, but a summer in the Israel program changed me as I confronted the cross-cultural facets of Christianity, Judaism, and Islam. Since then I have enjoyed studying the different concepts of God and how He relates to others around the world. fDon Kingl My real reason for getting into the Religion major followed my desire to relate Christianity to others. That's what keeps me ex- cited. CRobin Bolinderl 'Sie MR. JAMES J ENNINGS 248 B1blefR,el. StudiesfArchaeology DR. ALAN JOHNSON Stephen Attaway Robert Bacon Robin Bolinder LUCY Bfmd Robert Bromhead Carol Caster Shlrley DeV0re 'pf ff Jonathan Butera J,-f jungl- Lydla Davls 1:51, Kenneth De Vrres ROBERT WEBBER 58 Charles Drckson Steven Elkms ad I X712 DR SAMUEL SHULTZ Momca Erlandson Terry Gray B1ble!Rel Stud1es!Archaeology 249 .fl Y V - .,'L M, ,,fXj',, V Z fL - 5 ,Q W-U W N 4 X X X Xi X ,- , , - I ,4 X J K , X ,, I ' . XX X , X X xi, ., 1 A r ' ' 1 X X I E E r X X 45 N I X X WS. fx XX X Rx X J, .A 'X X X x vi,-4 .0X0,r. XXDPJX' XXXXQX, X ' ' DR. 1 1 . ,, . , Q . l X ' 1 e ' , s X N x A V -V X 'xl ' , Qx ' I r X '- . X11 ' .Arie ' 14,5 ' ' X .- , , V i W A x V ', ' i XX Xxx ?X mil- 7, , , ug,-' ' 'A' I , H :fe 2. ,if Q: e. -...-. mf. rn- H AE DR. HERBERT JACOBSEN n ,,. N X -,ref l M .15 gf '- VM . ,,, , ' UQ V .N ,:f I Kenneth Hoglund Douglas Jensen Bruce Jones Donald Keeney 250 Bible!Rel. StudiesfArchaeology DR. MORRIS INCH Gene Green Richard Hess DR. C. HASSELL BULLOCK 1 Fa Donald King Richard Loerop Frank Lyons Peter Matthews 'Vis for man, his days are like grass ... Psalm 103:15 Archaeology is the broadest of the liberal arts disciplines. When you talk about mummifying you're talking about biology, and you've got art in pottery and ancient drawings. You're dealing with people's pasts and thus every aspect of their lives. fFrank Lyonsl In studying the Word of God we have to have the proper tools, and an understanding of archaeology is one of them. fRick Hessl ' A ull 1. s Clayton Mitchell Roger Netherton Kathrvn Owens Elizabeth Patterson DR. DONALD HAGNER BiblefRel Stud1esfArchaeology 251 Jonathan Peck Louis Quetel Bill Rnuntrey Daniel Scott Eric Sweitzer -,-n- Wesley Vincent if Sara Wade Richard Wagner DR. DONALD LAKE 252 Bible Nancy Watts MR. ALFRED HOERTH James Wroughton v Karen Zibell BIULO GY by Steve Rosser and Dexter Speck Although the joys of being a biology major are many, this dis- cipline requires unusual dedication. How many people do you know that are willing to arise at 6 a.m. to check on the virginity za of their fruit flies? In fact, how many people do you know that g ., if would even put up with fruit flies? Did you ever stop to wonder ,. why a biology major may refuse to eat fish for an entire quarter, , or why those in close proximity to his chapel seat sit in the L balcony on Tuesdays and Thursdays? The explanation is quite simple: the student is leaving the study of comparative r anatomy with a heightened understanding of God's creation, as he well as with the odor of the objects of study: a cat and a shark. Samuel Amsfutz Rfmald Babich gg, There are good times, however. The field trips to the sand dunes, the summers spent in the Black Hills, the lab ex- periments that work, and even the nights spent cramming such interesting topics as taxonomy all provide us with happy memories. God's creative power becomes evident as we gain a general understanding of living organisms and it is seen that each and every organism is especially designed and suited to its particular environment. Best of all, we gain insight into man's position of stewardship within God's created order. David Banfield T Eric Branch Donald Brobst Jean Carlson Daniel Chissus DR. CYRIL LUCKMAN Jonathan Congdon Barbara Cox Biology 253 ' 25:7 Luke Cutherell Donald Darling Linda Dewey Patti Dykema Marilyn Elliot Lawrence Elzinga Nelson Foose Jacquelyn Fugate Gary Hylander DR. PATTLE PAK-TOE PUN DR. RAYMOND BRAND 254 Biology we 1 Enid Isaacson Peter Kooman D-49. James Magary Marjorie Medendorp W A K3 ww- W MRS JUNE ARNOLD f ' Martha Nelson Gary Oviatt ,,n ,. in 7,-A Q4y,4l 1, U ,ff-f. X fl :aff Qi Karen Moore Chnstxan Ockenhouse DR. JOHN LEEDY Sally Olson Alan Peteison Gordon Pullen Larry Ross DR. ALBERT SMITH Biology 255 DR. DAVID BRUCE David Treanor 256 Biology Q Stephen Rosser Randall Schomrner Gail Shuler k ,f l 4' xx 1 x DR. RUSSELL MIXTER f ,Zz Scott Van Wingerden f - x Deborah Weaver MRS. SARA MILES l John Sigsbury Paul Smith Dexter Speck Dora Warren Barbara Wittekind by GCG, WLH, RDR If you were asked to describe a chemistry major, what would you say? Oh, they're the ones that scurry through Breyer with a huge stack of books under their arms and calculators strapped to their belts. Aren't they the ones who inhale their food and immediately right now after a while go back to lab? I've heard that some of them haven't been on a date in so long that when you say 'kiss' they think you mean 'I-lershey's. ' Actually, being a chem major isn't all that bad. You become close to a small group of people through all the trials and tribulations of hard classes and long labs. You learn a lot CHEMISTRY about the Body of Christ as your brothers and sisters encourage you when you're ready to throw your unknown out the window. Or about the humanness of a prof when he comes up and puts his arm around you, and asks how it's going just before three lab reports are due. We had our fun times too. Just ask the cheerleaders, athletes, CSC workers, Men's Glee or Concert Choir members, the Friends of the Mastodon Society, and others, who took time out from their chemistry studies to enjoy college. Living over in Breyer wasn't all that bad, after all. DR. HAROLD FIESS Gregory Anderson Jane Atwater 'B' DR. NEAL BRACE paula Bush Chemistry 257 I DR. LARRY FUNCK tial -'-' 55?-'.i'+?-' rl X Daniel Granquist Glenn Girffiths Scott Grubbs ml' l ,I L.. William Heck Norman Kane David Matson Y l - .A Scott Nyquist Carol Pinson 258 Chemistry ..,!, X Andrew Dudman tx 5, , W V - -.4. Jeffrey Gladden MR. DONALD EBELING DR. NARL HUNG DR. MARK NIEMCZYK 'L 277-fx I gf!! '-:::QQ-fili: R , .s-frm, :vt 7' 1, ,.,.nl,,ul, ::g,...-33.-4 L53 3 93-::I:'+:n,'2,1:.':22:. L 1 , . Duane Richardson ' Duane Rommel Lawrence Thompson DR. BERNARD NELSON 'Cn Watt Larry Wheeler MR. DEREK CHIGNELL Chemistry 259 CHRISTIAN EDUCATIO by Claudia Ball In the past few years, the number of Christian Education students has exploded. Participation in this rapid growth has given the majors a sense of both community and commitment. The profs showed commitment to their students: Howard and his personal interest in our lives, Dr. Mary's quest for excellence and in- sights into the world of children, Dr. Lois, whose example backed her instruction in interpersonal relationships, and the many part-time profs who added to our knowledge of Christian Education. Classes fostered an unforgettable sense of our community: meaningful applications for teaching the Bible, the Gospel accor- ding to Larry Richards, the Lebars, or Mark, 122 typical characteristics of the terrible 2's and tranquil 3'sg and small grouping till we were grouped out. New ideas spurred our commitment to Christian education: church renewal, mutual ministry, reality system, people-oriented versus program-oriented, beginning with needs, church-supported families, teaching for response, and the excitement of new vision. But our community bloomed most in informal growing-together times: flexibility at work in the unplanned revival at the fall C.E. retreat, Jr. High overnights at Honey Rock, Shalom for chapel, and supporting each other financially. Christian Ed means ideas about people-and it means people, too. 260 Christian Education David Cunsolo Douglas Demick Marilyn Dunn 'f u . f, 1. 1, n James Fosse James Galvin Kevin Harris .,..1,- - z , f!'l:.-'llfszl--' , .J 7.1-1 rv iw' '-5' 111- 1 - '7 .ll , Q3 - 1 1 'H Mary Juul lin. I Kathleen Kornfield 1 3 DR. HOWARD NEWSOM Tamara Kuzmenkov 1',1 , , 3- 1-f 1 iw -ii 'ill 12 '-. Karen Johnson Kazumi Kinouchi Laura Knapp Kurt Kuntz Suzanne Long Christian Education 261 Ame Linda Moskeland Ronald Muhitch 262 Christian Education ,tj Edward Newman Bonnie Sedlock ri f I 3 F-Q lr ' f r Karen McCord Deborah McCoy Richard McNear Letitia Pearson Karen Rutherford Mark Seites Bobby Joe Slinger Sandra Stevens Leslie Toms Janet Warren Karen Werner l James Walton Nancy Wilkinson CSYOI WUSOII Catherine Wooten David Wright Christian Education 263 CONSERVATCRY-IVIUSIC Variations on a Theme of ultitudinousness by Steue Posegate Disturbatory wirte an eight measure original, creative work, using these chords tape E-7, ex- ample number one you need Mrs. Constockis signature two weeks, no renewal did you get your three hours in? I can't find a practice room borrowed dominant on the juxtaposed Neopolitan of the submediant seventh huh? piano majors only , second floor dirty aah that's your problem you mean you were sight- reading? Bach, Beethoven, Brahms, Best I haven't seen my roommate since Monday there's a note for you on the board what did you ietqin solo class? have you ever considered Home c. Appreesh kids Billy Graham slept here read Harvard obviously, the skirt was not short enough oh, yeah, yeah, yeah!! next week we cover tuba not mezzo-puny cry on your own time flunkie keyboard report to Tower Door at 7:15 let's take a break and go practice musicians and singers wanna buy a ticket to is my tie on straight? Wheaton in Wheaton what do you mean, you don't have time? this is my quarter off . .. wrestling, struggling, and grappl- mg ........ I have to teach a lesson. I'm kicking you out music position open-must provide own transpor- tation ethnomusiwhat? Chopin for Junior High band? why did they get to sing for Presi- dent Ford? World Twelve-Tone Series .., well, you could always teach Podunk Centre it's a definite case of hemiola assisted by Mole Porcker what are you going to do with it? the bus will leave from Pierce parking lot at ....... Well, music is when ...... Glen Akers Susan Amsler Cynthia Barth T, .me-- ' Miss MARGARITA EVANS 264 Conservatory-Music Kathleen Beers Randall Berner MR. ARTHUR KATTERJOHN Faith Borton MR. JOHN ZIMMERMAN David Bowden MISS GLADYS CHRISTENSEN Kathryn Filkin A 4 i w Daniel Fleming Beverly Griffith Janice Burns DR. STEPHEN CUSHMAN Conservatory-Music 265 W N .k 474, ee il N wi In ,. La gl 1' Jack Harrison Michael Katterjohn Sharon Jacobsen Nancy Kingsbu FY 266 Conservatory-Music L 4, MR. REX HICKS MR. REGINALD GERIG Judith Lint Melanie Megchelson Rodney Mueller Katherine Nash Karyl Parke L x DR KENNETH MAYS '-'S-4' f X in if JI Stephen Posegate Wxllxam Pnebe MR CLAYTON HALVORSON James Rnskam Gall Salvatorx N f w Suqan Schofleld Lmda Showalter MR EDMUND WRIGHT -iff'-s... Comervatorv Music 261 Y . N pw-, - K, Y I 1, ., ,, ., , Ff , - .sa . , K . . ,Wx ' A V ----- ---- -Q-Y--- -V 2 x .' A L, a ' l.. , ' an h q .vw v . -Q' l g, ' w ' N . . 4 . .I . 9 9 Y, .' .,' . '- '4 , Q iw V b , .ll V I IN w 'L' h Q v .4 l 0 I . H, - 3 1 :- U , f. , gx L X - I l'G 1 ff rf vu' .. I 9 . L K 1: - 545 'vm ' IQ -AG A 1 x 4, , - u 1 P N I . N ' A 7 . .::? P N X ,fl N 'fl' L A ' ' . , li: W W W W Q X .3 . 268 Conservatory-Music ,, wi? Jerrill Smith MR. RUSSELL PLATZ MISS FLORENCE AVERY - ' -:na-3: -Mfg i , ' f MISS ELLEN THOMPSON n f of RAYE PANKRATZ Si Dougla Yeo Rebecca Zavala MR HOWARD WHITAKER Xe no MISS KATHLEEN KASTNER DR WILLIAM PHEMISTER Conservatory Music 269 ECONOMICS by Peter Welander Economics is a way of thinking. When the freshmen neophyte takes his first Economics course, he may have some vague concept of what supply and demand is, or what in- flation means. Little does he know what is in store. He discovers that there are nasty things called opportunity costs, and trade-offs, and above all, that there is no such thing as a free lunch. Economics appeals to all sorts of people. It harbors those who are in- terested in pre-law, and want to know how to spend the millions they will make in their law offices, those who want to go on to business schools and become the next Wall Street Whiz Kid, the fool that is looking for an easy major Cwhich he will not find in Mr. Ewert's Macro classb, and even the strange person who is just interested in economics. The department wants to make the major think like an economist. By the time his course of study is over, it is hard not to think in terms of trade-offs, opportunity costs and the effect of every national budget increase. All this is not bad, of course, as the student learns the real problems that the world faces. He learns that there are costs that others may not realize. In that way, economics becomes the science of life itself. Janet Blomberg ix' Norman Bleed 270 Economics David B0hl8I1del' Kenneth Braaten Jeffrey Briscoe Ted Carlson Bruce Duncan Chnstme Handt Hochstettler Dockum Damel Ferwerda Hatch Robert Holmes J ankow skx Lvnne Kallman Gary Knosp John Lokken RMAN EWERT Stephen Johnston 'P E' 5 It 'Yu pg :P my Economics 271 ' 1' ' ' Lf ' ' , jgiqgff- X 1 T fl va. ,-. .. - ' iia ff' 1' n r o - r .. .Lanes 1 Siqfimqgf ' . . 'F ' ' 'if' film .r 2 : - fgiiafri' f 533923 fir? 349 , A W A 1.25 - X' . 514 T A 1, A V ,EAV ? ,Zhi , 1 - -v ' L' A ,, . , ,,., V f AF 1 ' 'fffifkiiti' 1 4 , W W: W , Q- . 1 'QL ' ,I get -. N 00' 3 .W , . W 1' ,H i , , ,x . 1 , Elizabeth MacDonald lf t Nelsen Dale Sams Jonathan 272 Economics MR. ARNE HOWARD James Mark Schafer Seume Breck Swanquist Nancy Thompson W -gm Mmm ,W 5' ig . .. 4, 1 1 LJ. :W , ink J 1 xi if hi P iiiffx ' Laurance Weeks David Wilcox MR. JOHN MILLER Peter Welander David Zvara James Whitnah John Judith Turek Timothy VanDerMolen Economics 273 EDUCATIO : WheTEP by Spencer Foon and Dave Caes EDUC 20: Educational Psychology. Meet Papa Lower, BMA freak statistics ad nauseam bell curves weekly quizzes T.A. logs. EDUC 44: History of Education. Six miles of lecture tape relevant? Lower on the Amish Van's laws This is your typical well-run ghetto school how not to teach. lf EDUC 45: Philosophy of Education. Four-star rating il perennialism is alive and well in Schirnmel's office baggy suits 80 lbs ... back in Oklahoma. LIT 72: Children's Literature. Madeline L'En le EDUC 52: Methods Laboratory. Dallman, Spache, Smith, Smith-Barrett, Tinker, Zinz, Whiteman, and Busch What are we doing? frustrated guinea pigs. EDUC 55: Instructor Assistant Laboratory. What school are you at? You should see this kid in my class I.A. reports due on Fridays. EDUC 66: Student Teaching. Lesson plans advisors what methods? Dr. Harper: Captain Video Tape. g Karen Madeline L'Engle Madeline L'Engle David C868 sink. Tammy and Benji. Linda Carey Nancy Carlson 274 Education l V E Y .. ..:. . lf. .' I 1, 1 :' 'Q , 'll ' 'fl 7 W sl.1'1.. MM.. iff' lils. DR. HAROLD HARPER MUS METH 68: Music for Elementary Teachers. Prof Platz Orff music series thirty page paper. ART 54: Art Education. Pots keep the clay out of the - v PSYCH 21: Childhood and Adolescence. Mrs. Kline and MATH 21: Math for Elementary Teachers. Far-out jargon extra fair tests a unified course. Lv' Beth Christian Karen Ruth Davis Kathleen Decker Spencer Fwn DR. CLIFFORD SCHIMMELS Robert Gamble Patricia Grimm Deborah Hales Steve Hayes Nancy Head Lenice Hohnke f of Janeil Jacob .7 , l UI. MRS. ARLENE WHITEMAN har0I1 Hebele Barbara Hodel Education 275 TJ' 1 276 Education DR. JAMES Christina Loixeaux Susan Smith if A 1 1 Hz fy , '- if egg -5 2.-, fhfi H Olson Sue Snyder DR. JAMES VANDERMEULEN Julie Johnson Karen , 'T5, DR. HELEN MCCLENDON EWERT Deborah Strachan Jane Strom or .J I ' Udes Van Treuren NIU- Daniel Watkins Virginia Webster v Deborah Westing Education 277 FOREIG LA GUAGE ed. Don Cook Si vous pouvez lire et comprendre ces mots, il est probable que vous puissiez vous souvenir des escaliers inter- minables qui menent au Departement des langues etrangeres au 3e etage de Blanchard et des heures de confusion passees au laboratoire de langue ou on essaie de dechiffrer lessons bizarres sur les bandes magnetiques. Il se peut meme que vous vous souveniez d'avoir ete de ce petit groupe privilegie qui a etudie un autre monde tout en habitant a Wheaton, et qui en a appris des deux. Si sabe leer esto, es probable quie ig- ualmente puede recordarse de le mon- tana sin fin de la escalera que se ex- tiende hasta el cuarto piso de Blanchard donde el Departamento de Lenguas. Tambien se recuerdan las horas llenas de confusion pasadas en el laboratorio tratando de descifrar los ruidos extranos en las cintas para el curso de estudios lingiiisticos. Ademas quizas se de cuenta de que Vd. era parte de ese grupo privilegiado que estudio otro mundo cuando en Wheaton, y aprendio de los dos. Falls Sie das lesen konnen-besteht die Moglichkeit, dass Sie sich an die endlosen Treppentilrme, die zur Fremdsprachenabteilung im 3. Stock fiihren, erinnern und auch an das Durcheinander im Sprachlabor, die komischen Gerausche auf den sprachwissenschaftlichen Tonbiindern zu entziffern. Sie werden auch in Ihr Gedachtnis zuriickrufen, dass Sie zu einer privilegierten Gruppe gehorten, die sich mit einer anderen Welt befasste, wahrend Sie in Wheaton wohnten - und von beiden gelernt haben. 278 Foreign Languages ,-.wmv f 'd'ap Laura Altorfer DR. JOHN MILES Qj-K 'GF' ian: 3 Candace Afmosf if in H Y Bonnie Anderson Elaine Filus MR. RICHARD KRIEGBAUM Vera Horras JJ,-ll i 1. C LA Ruth McCu avi fr Janeice Hackett Ei .s v pka Karen Mathe DR ARTHUR RUPPRECHT Brenda Price DR. ROBERT DEVE'I'I'E DR. HELMUT ZIEFLE Foreign Languages 279 Shaffe DR. GERALD 280 Foreign Language H, 5 x v. L, Carla MR. GARY RUNDQUIST Jennifer Steele Trotter MISS CAROL KRAFT 'af fs xx x DR. WILLIAM HENNING -,LJ-dd DR. JAMES BOOKER GEOLOGY by Al Hunter Mention geologist and most people con- jure up the image of a dirty, grizzled prospector roaming the countryside, picking at every rock with his hammer. fThat's not a bad description of Wheaton's own resident geologists, Drs. Boardman, Haddock, and DAD DeVries.J At the Black Hills Science Station, geology majors live up to this stereo-type by hiking over pine-studded hills, learning field techniques which can be applied to mapping, surveying, and oil ex- ploration. Geology professors stress learning geology where geology is: outdoors. And the Black Hills program is only one source of solid background in a subject which encompasses everything from ancient marine organisms to earthquakes, the ocean floor to the sur- face of Mars, Florida beaches to Alaskan oil fields, tiny crystals to gigantic drifting crustal plates. In the past four years geology majors have also visited Iowa, the Smokey Mountains, Wyoming, Idaho, Montana, Colorado, Utah, and the Grand Canyon. Above all, the profs emphasize recognizing our Creator in his creation. To learn about the processes of geology which bind this planet together in complex unity and order is to grow to a deeper appreciation of the greatness of God. DR. GERALD HADDOCK DR DONALD BOARDMAN HI TORY 8z PCLITICAL CIE CE Daniel Bourgoine by Tad M indeman Ascending the well-traveled red tile steps of east Blanchard to the convenient fourth floor setting, the Wheaton student senses through the thin air the curious fragrances of coffee and old maps left decaying on the walls. Immediately, he realizes he is in that mystical world of past and present, the History and Political Science Department. Upon reciting the password CP..E..R..S..I..AJ, the student can enter this realm of scholarship where professors speak with machine-gun rapidity about the virtures of the Tories and the average height of the American Revolutionary soldier. They show slides of Hogarth prints, lead book discussions on subjects that range from the Thirty Years War to Malcolm X, and allude to anecdotes about state affairs or those of Lola Montez. With the aid of crumbling, yellowing p, , 'x ,l y sq ,, Xi V23 W James Brown Cheryl Buiten gg!! IF? nur' MR. CHARLES WEBER 282 HistoryfPolitical Science notecards and an undecipherable chalkboard script, students learn the difference between primary and secondary sources. Half-finished slide-tape projects are piled to the ceiling along with tapes of conversations with senior citizens who remember what life was like on the campus before the Flood. The casual observer notices several distinct types among the majors: closely cropped ROTC men who idolize Gustavus Adolphus, jocks who seek to synthesize the Great War with the Great American Pastime, pre-law students who always volunteer to practice their oratory skills in dis- cussions, and finally, those sincere but deluded students who want to practice the historians' craft for a lifetime. To each of these the function of the department is perceived somewhat differently, but all concede, It's not as easy as it looks, friends. David Cook Deborah DeWolfe David Dodrill Glenn Dorschler 'Y T ,Juv is v , . P gp. n 1-.. Karen Frederich Albert Graves Todd Gray DR. MARK AMSTUTZ 4 Keith Gunther Gordon Hamilton MR. RICHARD RUNG DR. DEAN RAPP History!P0litical Science 283 fe all A4 Wendall Harris Micheal Lansing Y i Michae1Maggard DR, CAIRNS L-,winless-,. .. - 1 -f .- 2.x- i Lenore Marema DR. THOMAS KAY 284 HistoryfPolitica1 Science ,gf- Tad Mindeman James Palmer Daniel Pierce 9, 1. Daniel Super 1 Daniel Vliet DR. DAVID MAAS J 5: 5 'Ng D Daniel Webster V an J Neal Williams Jon Yergler HistoryfPolitical Science 285 LITERATURE . by Steve Elkins There will be crowded into education other matters besides, far too manyg but letters will not in the end lose their leading place. If they lose it for a time, they will get it back again. We shall be brought to them by our wants and our aspirations. In his 1883 lecture-tour of America, Matthew Arnold anticipated the effect of technological progress in reshaping the long-standing traditions of classical and literary education. Time has proven his vi- siong Latin lies on her pyre surrounded by specialists trying to resuscitate her, while the average student contends with the new-born populations of scientific study. And if at Wheaton we find ourselves rushing bewildered through four years of classes, we should not blame the quarter system but recognize that the wide scope of our own world demands it. How can we get a handle on life while pushing through such a crowded education? In the English Department we affirm with Matthew Arnold the central importance of literature in deter- mining what we are about in this world, and in discovering what it means to be human in an increasingly mechanized age. Literature lets us stop in the race and examine our own experience as it is re-shaped into artistic form. It explores human values that direct all of man's endeavor, and particularly emphasizes the striving, stretching, and soaring of man's imaginative faculty toward truth. The exciting discovery in our study at Wheaton is that these written words find their final statement in the Word Himself and that perceptive writers often speak more truth than they intended. Can you see it? Lucy Blocher 286 Literature i.. I .af Donald Cook A Karen Custis .. Valerie Elliot Rosalie Fawkes MRS. HELEN lv. Debra Elliott Marybeth Franz 'Q Patricia Davison U, f 5 if Pam Dilmore David Dowdy DR. ROLLAN D HEIN Literature 287 21 j, - eff . .-. : 33-. DR ROBER V , All v, ' . 1 - x . IEGEL .. fi., Kaye Frost 288 Literature --, ,. ' J ' PAUL g x A V f Thomas Gaenzle L I I i P 5 DR. LELAND RYKEN Linda Havener Ann Henderson '-ol I fz- Y, ., ,,,,. - Vik? L ,WL 3 DR. CLYDE KILBY Harry Long Gretchen Lynn Paul Miller Terri Perkins Claudxa J one Larso David Long Literature 289 Linda Purcell Q .A I PAUL FRQMER Y ' P r T1 -- , -: r if Q ,,..... . F-L 290 Literature Beth Robinson Lauren Scott Schmidt U L Q r , x f xii, . .X Iv Smith 3 8355? Michael SLr3Cc0 DR. BEATRICE BATSON L Karen Stuart X? Taylor James Townsend Deborah VanDerMolen Alice Ver Lee lx DR. ERWIN RUDOLPH Kirk Ware DR. MELVIN LORENTZEN ,Q 16? 4 - Ji' ' Linda White Literature 291 MATHEMATIC by Dana Bouma In the Math Department the course work is designed to unfold mathematical truths, if they really exist. If you can make it through the calculus sequence and one more course, then you can probably make it as a math major. After the testing by fire, such delights as geometry, analysis, topology, and algebra open to the enthusiastic student. It's not until the Foundations of Mathematics course that the professors explain the possibility that all you have learned may not be absolutely true. Truth or not, the peculiar mix of mathematical personalities fiden- tities'?J in Wheaton's department work to help the student see some of the beauty of mathematics. flf you're wondering, the resident geometer isn't spacey, the topologist isn't always on top, the algebraist doesn't play with numbers, and the foundationist has nothing to do with department stores.J Each professor brings his unique viewpoint and insight to the world of mathematics. But all agree that at Wheaton, mathematics equals learning plus faith. wh Charles Bradley David Clausen 292 Math DR. ROBERT BRABENEC Leslie Blackford Dana Bouma Shawnee Dufendach Frank Guess Jenny Anne Keefer Thomas L0CkhHI't DR. TERENCE PERCIANTE DR. GREGORY DO qfsldlxdurlinwnsmnuevyltahpng DR. DAVID PRICE 44 'fa Barbara Smillie Laura Van Etten gan Marvilyn O DR. JACQUES LAFRANCE Douglas Reitsma Math 293 PHILO OPHY by Tary Sandquist Three stories up, on the east wing of Blanchard Hall 'there lies a small, uncarpeted suite of offices which bears the in- timidating name, Philosophy Department. The decor might persuade the visitor that its in- habitants are of a terribly stoic mind set, but a short dialogue with any of them would prove their attitude to be a bit more adequate. You see, the depart- ment has enough scope to ac- commodate any phenomenalist, existentialist, rationalist, or realist who might come its way. The conversation engendered there ranges from Marx's critique of capitalism to fairy giraffes with butterfly wings. The office walls are lined with obscure and tedious manuscripts, and the desks are cluttered with student excuses for late papers. Despite the cost of books and headaches, some of us keep coming back for more. It may be that we have a touch of neurosis. fThe history of philosophy has taught us to accept our humanity.J However, it is not idiosyncracy which is the bond and life of the department. Behind the odd- barrage of criticism and obscurity, profundity and tom- foolery is a seed of faith, and it is in the Philosophy Depart- ment that some of us have found the rich soil of understan- ding which that seed so desperately needs for growth. So when you come visit us, do not be taken aback by our par- tialities. They are only an ex- pression of our desire for the whole of life and truth. Dana Carlson Bradley Condie 294 Philosophy Charles Barker Bartel I ,1 .Vin .l.xlf' .9'i ' Sanda Dorland Peter Friberg DR. STANLEY OBITTS Nf AI sign 1 n . 11 .- 1- Peter Mason DR. MARK COPPENGER r Niel Nielson David Orth Mark Sandquist DR. STEPHEN EVANS 1 f l . A'.1 Donna Summerfield Herbert Ward Philosophy 295 I' 111 'K 1 PI-IYSIC L ED CATIO by Jan Cort ACTIVITY! Physical education ob- viously involves sports, recreation, and camping. But more importantly, it seeks to develop the total person. Spiritually, physical education creates a unique setting conducive to sharing per- sonal needs and concerns. Many depart- ment professors are both teacher and coach. Physically, participation in varsity sports, skills, classes and Honey Rock Camp demands a self-discipline to con- dition the body to perform to its greatest capacity! For mental exercise, there's the thrill of Bruce Clum EWAN RUSSELL, RUTH LEEDY 296 Physical Education mastering knowledge of body structure and function. CFor further information on the latissimus dorsi, contact your local PE major.D Socially, P.E. camp, coffee club, Homecoming breakfast, and the Spring Picnic provide fun and fellowship with teachers and fellow majors. Although physical education is one of Wheaton's smaller departments, its in- fluence is not, as each major takes his knowledge of personhood out to his world. 'lQ?si'l1If 'Y X 'S' J, s ,5,.- ,I 1 l Z ' i ' iff' , . il' il 'Za SE f' aim ',??C i ' V - 1 A A1 iii. . 1 3- ' N l 4 v 3 4 A Laurel Cole MR. BUD Cofgr '1 :i gan? ,,,..-:- Y '. .wg :-.f MR. HARVEY CHROUSER f W W I Janine Janine Cort Stewart Evans Dorcas Fittz Carol -6 X17 John Grieder K ,E v. f E'f.E MR. DEWAYNE KING MR. DONALD CHURCH if Physical Education 297 back row: LINDA CASEY. CAROL HARDING front row: LAVERN BJORKLUND, MARILYN SCRIBNER, IRENE HALL w 298 Physical Education MR. PETER WILLS ON Li .55 gg .NIV 5 George Liset -- -. .3 1 , , . MR. WILLIAM GRAVES Keith Schmitz Cheryl Steinhauser MR, GARY TAYLOR DR. JACK SWARTZ A 5533: Z 'W .1Zf3if?f2'Efiil 25953 :ai :E Randall Walker Gilbert Waterman Judith Willson Physical Education 299 PHYSICS by Mark Limkeman How and Why does this un- iverse operate the way it does? The Physics Department at Wheaton offers a tremendous opportunity for personal growth to any student with a burning desire to know the answers to these questions. Physics as a scientific discipline deals with motion, sound, light, heat, and the atom's inner workings. Like any other academic field, it can be a dull routine of book study fpunctuated now and then by an electric shock, a focused laser beam, or the tell-tale chatter of a geiger counter. It can also be a rare chance to interact in close quarters with scholarly men of God, dedicated to the worship of their Creator through the pur- suit of the fundamental truths of His creation. In the context of this personalized give and take of ideas, physics becomes the exciting discovery experience that it was to the men who first tried to answer those questions: How and Why. And, as we ra- diate out from Wheaton to the corners of the earth in our search to answer those ques- tions more perfectly, we can carry with us that same vision of our Creator that we saw here. f '25- xs, ..., .ask V DR. DILLARD FARIES . Q:- S . ' N., l u 1 Stephen Caldwell Walter Carrell 3 1 DR. JAMES KRAAKEVIK Fi ,, Y DR. JOSEPH SPRADLEY i - MFQVLHV r ' 5 -. . , 1 , ,. ' ' J file- ' ' 4 tx. ,-' -' In . -N I - T' Zum.. .. ..- ..- ,,,- 1 xl ' iii IH , ' Q, , mu Q i - --ses 'ii 'Q in fl 92 Q- ,Q -it 0 'Q ,LTU 300 Physics DR. HOWARD CLAASSEN PSYCHOLOGY by Rich Foster The intro course may teach Everything About Psychology, but the next eleven courses reveal how little you really know. Psychology means sitting in psycho-therapy, counting our neurotic symptoms. Psychology means making a roommate lie on the bunk, and sitting back like Freud to interpret his dreams. CApplied psychology means apologizing for driving him crazy with words like projection, transference, operant, and psychosomatic. J Psychology means playing with rats. CWe hated them at first, but soon found they were our best buddies.l The obstinate little critters can cause profound physiological reactions in humans, like high blood pressure and gastric ulcers. But sooner or later they achieve a bar press, and we can sense that B. F. Skinner is proud of us. Psychology is an opportunity to look at people: who they are and what makes them tick. The faculty members act both as our mentors and resident therapists, to carry us through it all. DR. DAVID SULLIVAN l 1 i Elizabeth Ackerman James Alexander Lesh DR. CHARLES HENRY Susan Baker Stephen Boisse David Brokaw Fred Becker Psychology 301 Linda Carver John Duncan 302 Psychology Laur Ronald Sharon Erickson Albert Ericson Z, Qa........ 'D..,.L....,... h-L-- h..l-,A,- xr n MRS. JEAN KLINE L A r Richard Foster Janice Franson Clyde Gill Dale Goeke Jessie Gottschall 'S-' -:- Catherine Gregory John Gryte Lona Howe Bill Johnson Jennifer Johnson DR. JAMES ROGERS Kohl Vonelle Kostelny Lisa Lundberg Robert McQuilkin Psychology 303 !r f 'ni Constance Nelson John Rleimers ff' . J if 'xi William Richardson Jerolyn Rist ' Joan Shaffer Deborah Smith 9 John Ronald VanTreuren 304 Psychology 1 . W L DR. ONAS SCANDRETTE Ji 4 - Q Mesrak Teshome Gretchen Worcester Though sociology and anthropology share the same office on 4th floor Blanchard, these two people- sciences mingle very little except for the Department's annual progressive dinner. Don't stereotype sociology as a training ground for welfare workers. S6sh majors do take many field trips to inner-city Chicago, but their study covers all social groups and institutions, from family to business to race. This year they reached out to the worldwide concern of hunger with HNGR, a program which will soon qualify as a major in its own right. The anthropology student leaves America behind more than the sociology student, as he studies cultural patterns of behavior. Most anthropology majors have some overseas experience, and enjoy pursuing their unique perspective on cultural differences. They salt their studies with lots of im- promptu discussions at the library or the Stupe. After Wheaton many choose to work in forms of cross-cultural communications like missions or linguistics. And it's no coincidence that the Foreign Language Department shares the 4th floor with Anthropology. Language and culture go side by side, said junior Tim Drown. Without proper un- derstanding of your audience, he noted, You might as well talk gibberishf' SCCIOLCGY-A TI-IROPCLCGY P! 1 l i X . K 'x -f N .vi Diane Brittain laudig B1-Qwn . 4 Y C alvin Chinen Carolyn Crail Elaine Elam DR. RICHARD STELLWAY , . -, pgs: ,f v -- ai ii:-1 Walter Hoops Steven Hortegas Sociology!Anthropology 305 DR. DEAN ARN , ,J Rita leaf- . Julie J uston I A ,. fx X H5011 MR. DAVID ROE Kent Jolliff Carol J ones David J ongeward Patricia McC all 306 SociologyfAnthropology ' 1 IT! ,Il 1 Joy McLaughlin DR. JAMES BUSWELL 'Ml Chak DR BEE LAN CHAN WANG in Q Peck L1 x LINDBLADE Donna Safstrom N 1 Terri Turnipseed Tim Underwood Margo Zeltwanger Carol Sheryl Sands Ardith Rosenau SociologyfAnthropol0gy 307 PEECH 308 Speech MISS ELEANOR PAULSON by Rick Sweetser The speech major is NOT the easiest way to get through four years of Wheaton College. In no other major do students have to show proficiency in so many areas. Speech majors are expected to be able to express themselves publicly. This is the responsibility of Miss Paulson. She will remain in the memories of speech majors as the lady at the back of the room furiously writing down the mistakes of the interpreter in the front of the room-yet never once let- ting that sweet smile leave her face. Speech majors also need to know the history of speech and rhetoric. Under the tutelage of Dr. Hollatz, students learn of Aristotle and Plato, if they can fight off the urge to applaud after Dr. Hollatz's opening prayers. Speech majors must also be scientists. While watching Dr. Lothers try to get both hands inside a model of the human larynx, they learn about the cricoarytenoids and their place in the function of speech. Em Griffin teaches students interpersonal trust, while sticking their hands in paint and taking their candy away. Stu Johnson takes students who know nothing about broadcasting and turns them into technical geniuses-or frustrated motor morons. Even after four years of this, speech majors are usually very happy. That could indicate that somebody, somewhere, is doing something right. Jeffrey Beaumont Jana Childers Donna Jeanne Clark DR. WILLIAM LOTHERS ffx ,1 Q-,ze ,V L.,M-Ev DR. JAMES YOUNG 35155 4 iggv v iii iff' Michael Gregory Elizabeth Henderson Richard Foster , K J J . .A , Keith Gardner James Hill DR, EMORY GRIFFIN i MR. STUART JOHNSON walitfyl 21 el Speech 309 uf N ,YY 'L Debra Levey Kathryn McKenzie Beth Nelson Donna Oerth Helen Oravetz MISS LYNN OEFFLING 0. 1 rn,,,-..: Richard Sweetser DR. EDWIN HOLLATZ 310 Speech James Thompson Richard Wager MAJ. ROBERT WINSLOW MAJ. ROBERT WILLIAMS I.'T',lC0l.. DAVID CARRIER CAPT. DAVID WALLESTAD ILIT RY CIE CE by Gordon Hamilton The complex beneath McManis Hall teems with students, each of a different size, shape, and background. Curiosity attracts a few and a brief knowledge of Military Science attracts others. The campus populace in- terrogates, taunts, or ignores them. Sometimes it appears that the only people who understand the Military Science program are the staff. But the majority of students are voluntary captives there. Their program involves training leaders. An officer plays the role of a parent, teacher, preacher, doctor, lawyer, and counselor, and has awesome responsibility to his sub- ordinates, fellow officers, and superiors. Because few people possess Patton's dynamic flair or Eisenhower's touch for gaining cooperation and coordination, the Military Science Department teaches these and other leadership qualities. With a basic foundation of defense knowledge, military skills, and military history, the cadets learn leadership through tactics. They prepare to assume the roles of managers and junior executives. The Wheaton program's success shows in the high scores of ROTC Advanced Camp, and in the high ranking of Wheaton's graduates in the Officers' Basic Course. COL. CHARLES WALLIS Military Science 311 MRS. JO EPI-IINE HALVORSEN March 19, 1976 Here is how Jo, as a lived-out epistle, in- structed us. She loved and served the Lord quietly. She showed us how simple it was to be neat, clean, polite, and charming, without pretense, snobbery or social legalism. She carriedher responsibilities in the Conservatory with Teal Toy. But this was blended with the solemnity that always accompanies a valid ministry. She grieved over the foundering student and gave many, many hours of extra help to such. She was always excited to find among her theory or piano students, those whose creative imaginations went beyond the norm. She was unafraid of those who were bright and not at all envious of another's success. She knew the truth of es- teeming others better than herself. Not all artists are like thisg many are afraid to compliment or applaud another's success. Not Jo. She taught us of the ease and com- eliness of professional conduct. Jo truly loved music. To be sure, there were things in music with which she was uncomfortable but they could always be traced to the less- than-good. Her range of taste was wide, not sloppy, but panoramic. Even in the trial of her last illness she thought and talked music for as long as she could. She had one face, one mind, one spirit, one attitude, one goal, and they were the same to all of us. One can ask for no better teacher. She instructed us in the ways of stewardship. Mrs. Halvorsen, assistant professor of music, joined the conservatory faculty in 1956 as an instructor in piano and music theory. A PURTFOLIO n'I1v?5 is Tir fha Lord? NOFIQ man! NWU5 Hg, fpnnq JO If Sziszzzseiiieiii ibm QSM M' E E i'1j,5.v3' El E H ' ,, Jig i 5 413 E351 E f- f TQ ff if 1 'ff y. Q59 335 ' mf ,. g . 'A ' Q J ai? vig: SQ QQ5' 421- Q ... 5 - E ' HSI E 33 EEBEE' gg FM E E E 3 1 ff Qi , f U' 9 Abu A r 2 -Q 'Q fvwlda vwc,aPQN Y ' Qjf M WW 1 W 'gd' I' ff 'Q 'E if Qjivx N Vmlxjxf RYE1'YA1' vr ' M i lf F av, X, - N Wu U, 14' J 41 ,SEM -f Ni , ....-, x I IT 'Ei' ' ' - e 4' 'J f n '3f7,.u1Q,W3M'ZfZf 1n5liilffQZf?gAf Wk 'K' M mu' -A W MM H MM my f 1 C L W . nur N I X Q xl X H 4 . ,L 314 ' I CREASE YOUR WORD POWER All-nighter. Zero sleep, 5096 awake, 10096 study. fsee verb, to pull an all-nighter J Apologetics. The art of making someone sorry for asking why you are a Christian. AWS. Association of Women Students. B.A. 1. Bachelor of Arts. 2. Born Again. 3. Bachelor Again. Bathtub. Nonexistent entity. Beef Board. 1. Legendary rendezvous point at the north end of the Dining Hall. 2. Synonym for Dining Hall hamburger. Classes: abbreviated forms. Ann-throw, Buy-O, Kem, Calc, Ee-con, Lit, Music Apreesh, O.T., Polly Sigh, Sike, Soash, etc. Conserv.. Place where music majors are preservedg Conservatory of Music. CPO. CA1so pronounced See-pol, College Post Of- fice. Cram. To cram is to study intensively, cram- ming facts into the brain, during the last hours before an examination. Cramming too soon is a waste, since by the time of the ex- amination everything learned will have been forgotten. Cramming just before the ex- amination ensures that important facts will be remembered until just after the examina- tion. Aids to cramming are a fellow crammer, hot coffee, hot showers, and fear. flnterestingly, cram spelled backwards is marc, which indicates its relationship to getting a good marc or grade.J CSC. Christian Service Council, organization in charge of off-campus ministries. Curve. Grading on the curve means ill giving a certain number of A's, B's, C's, D's, and F's, regardless of how smart or dumb the class, thus permitting a teacher to establish the mean grade and the students to refer to the teacher as a mean graderg C23 a teacher, behind with paperwork, grading while driv- ing, perhaps on a mountain road. Dean's List. C13 A list of students making a cer- tain grade average. CZJ A list of groceries the dean's wife gave him that he tucked away in his pocket and forgotf Decent. As in so decent, an equivalent to great, fantastic, neat-o, snaz, and peachy-keen. Eschatological. Having to do with the Final Ex- am. Euangelicalisrn. According to the Fundamen- talists, Neo-Orthodoxyg according to the Neo- Orthodox, Fundamentalism. Exegesis. Dissection of a Scripture passage CSee Biology And Your Bible by Yuri N. Sane.l Field Trip. Q11 Stumbling over something in a field. Q21 Visit of a class to look at flowers fbotanyj, rocks fge0l0gyl, nudes fartj, people fsociologyl. Specimens are more likely to be brought back in geology than in sociology. Field trips in English and philosophy are raref' Fundamentalism. I don't smoke, I don't chew, and I don't go with thems that do. CContradiction in terms: neither fun nor men- tall GPA. Grade Point Average. A number par- ticularly important to pre-med students and particularly disappointing to everyone. Homiletics. Preaching. HUD. Housing and Urban Development. Humility. Proverbially synonymous with Chap- lain Pat. CSee also expression, To learn humility at the feet of Chaplain Pat. J I 'M Sure! A colloquialismg you figure it out. KODON. The campus literary magazine. Laboratory. A place where scientific ex- periments are carried out. In chemistry lab, if the wrong chemicals are mixed the student may be carried out also. The scope of laboratory work is enormous, ranging from the microscope to the telescope, and, in un- dersea laboratories, the periscope. The pre- medical student works in a laboratory with a beaker and Bunsen burner and dreams of medical school, where he will have the latest X-ray equipment and his own cadaverf' Mastodon. Fossilized chapel speaker. Mid-term. Form of mid-evil torture used by contemporary college profs. Open Floor. The closest thing Wheaton has to co-ed dorm life. P.D.A. Public Display of Affection. P.E. No longer is this activity referred to as gym class.', P.E. W ill Women's P.E. Q21 Church seat, usually wooden. Pledge. Abbreviation for Statement of Respon- sibilities. Prerequisite. A course required to be taken before the student is eligible to take another course. Thus, Introductory French is a prerequisite for Intermediate French, and Intermediate French is a prerequisite for Ad- vanced French. An intriguing possibility would be to require the student to start with Advanced and wind up with Introductory, in this way getting the hardest part over first and actually being able to enjoy Introductory. Usually there is no prerequisite for Philosophy, the introductory and the Ad- vanced being equally confusingf' Prof. New title for what in high school was referred to as teacher Profs are greeted by their academic titles, as either Mr. , Ms. , or Dr. When in doubt, say Dr, R.A. Calso pronounced rah. J That jovial up- perclassman at the mercy of your floor. R.D. Resident Director of the dorm, parent and administrator rolled into one. RECORD: The school newspaper, pseudonym for all dangerous liberal thought on campus. Roomie. Term of affection for roommate CTerm of disgust is dork. J ROTC. Pronounced Rotsy. Equivalent to the Reserve Officers Training Corps fcorpse?J 0: the preferred slang. SAGA. The Dining Hall service, Soviet Attempt to Gag America. SMP. Student Missionary Project. SOUL. Student Organization for Urban Leadership. Stupe. Wheaton hot spot for the dating con- sumer without automobile, in MSC. Suitemate. One of two persons sharing a Fischer or Smith bathroom with you. Also referred to as suitie , but not to be confused with sweetie Of course, confusion is un- avoidable in such instances as: I know you! You're my suitie's sweetie's suitie's sweetie! Syllabus. Not to be confused with syllable , a syllabus contains thousands of syllables as well as such handy facts as course re- quirements and grading scales. Plural: Syllabi? TOWER: The magnanimous humanitarian organization that so kindly and creatively provided this book for you. Tribulation. Ask Dr. Lake or Mr. Katterjohn. Underclassman. A member of the freshman or sophomore class. One who looks up to an up- perclassman. fSee Upperclassman. J ' Upperclassman. A member of the junior or senior class. One who looks down on an un- derclassman. CSee Underclassman. V Validate. The rare and thrilling act of demonstrating for bluffingl enough previous knowledge ina given course or subject so as not to have to acquire any more of the above knowledge the hard way. WC. CD Wheaton College, the only campus in the Midwest with Christian squirrels. Q21 Water Closet. YHM. Youth Hostel Ministries. fHosteD and hostile are homonyms but not synonyms. With permission from: Armour, Richard, A Diabolical Dictionary of Education, The World Publishing Company, 196 9 Bowser Ali, Abbu 34 Abrams, Judith Rebecca Ackerman, Elizabeth 30.1 Adam, Janet Rachel 472' Adams, Judith 51 Adams, Rebekah Lou 194 Addleman, Diane Marie 194 Addleton, David Franklin,194 Ahlquist, Cindy Kay 194, Ahlquist, Mark David Ahn, Kee Soon Ahrens, Marylynn Roberta 51 Akers, Glen James 264 sAkhahenda, Elijah Frayldrfl Albinson, James William' 131 Albright, John Edward Jr. 51 Albury, Donna Jean 308 Aldridge, Ralph Edward 46 Alexander, Pirine Laura 48 Alexander, James L. 3013? Alexander, Jennifer A. Alexanian, Daniel Albert 51 Alford, Ann Christine 51 V Alford, William Richard IIf131 Alig, Mary Linda 131 Allen, Edith Anne 194 Allen, Elizabeth Allen, Henry Lee Archer, Karen Marie 131 Archer, Nuala Miriam, 286 Armerding, Jonathan Edwards Armstrong, John Harper Armstrong, Lesli Gail 96,301 Armstrong, Marc Townsend 51 Arndt, Gary Dean 51 Arnold, Gary. Brett A Arnold, Horace Leroy5Jr1 Arnold, Sherri Colleen Ashmus, Karen Lee 131 Askren, Karen Marie 51 Atkison, Randall Morgan Attaway, Stephen ,Gary 248 'EAtwater, Jane Kathryn 257 Augustine, John Harold 51 Austin, Christopher Jacobus Austin, Dianna Kaye 7Avis, LisaiEfAnn 51 Babian, Lori Kay 132 Babich, Ronald Paul 253 Bachman, Lori Ann 132 Bacon, Robert Coleman 248 Baddorf, Debra Sue 51' Baddorf, Sarita Baer, Christine 51 Baer, William Edwin Baffa, John Josef 195 Bagwell, Janice, Lynn A' Allen, Susan,,Margaret 194, Allison, Terry'Dean 51 Allison, Thayer Stem Jr. Allman, Helen Glynn 51 Allums, Lola Jean Allyn, David Edwin 194 Allyn, Paul Lefferts 46 if , Altis, David Eric 131 Alton, Nancy Ruth 51 Altorfer, Laura 278 Amador, Mark Carlson 131 Amis, Jack Bowles 51 1, 55. Amos, Candace Lee 278 Amsler, Susan Elizabeth 264 Amstutz, Samuel Wesley 253 Baker, Baker, Baker, Baker, Baker, Baker, Daniel Bruce 195 James Alan Jean Elizabeth 246 Mark David 52 Paul William 246 Richard Caro 195 Bryson Anderegg, Lisa Jane 51 4 Anderson, Bonnie Mae '2QZ81g Anderson, Brad Douglas 131 Anderson, Christine Lenore 30,194 Anderson, Dean Richard 195 Anderson, Debora Joy 131 Anderson, Debra Lynn 51 ,,,, Anderson, Elizabeth Ann?-251 Anderson, Glen David 195 Anderson, Gregory Lee 257 Anderson, Gregory Martin 195 Anderson, Kirsten Marief47 Anderson, Laiirel Beth 51 Anderson, Linda Jayne 131 Anderson, Linda Sue 51 Anderson, Mark Eric Anderson, Melody Kathleen 51 Anderson, Roy David ff-A Anderson, Sarah Jeanne 195 Anderson, Sharon Rae 131 Anderson, Stephen Arthur 131 Anderson, Timothy Lee 195 Andres, Garygi John Baker, Susan Lenora 301 Baldwin, Sharon Marie 132 Ball, Claudia Sue Ballbach, Deborah Elise 195 Balmer, John Morris6n'Jr. 132 Balow, Daniel John 132 Balow, Sharon Kay 195 Banfield, David James 253 ,,,Barabas, Kathleen Grace 246 Barker, Charles Wesley 294 Barkley, Donald Allen 1,195,230 Barnes, Paul Donald 195 Barnes, Phillip Charles 195 Bamett, James Warren Bartel, Timothy Walter 1294 Bartel, Steve 195 Barth, Cynthia Kay 264 Bates, Barbara Ann 195 Bates, Cheryl Diane 52 Batstone,,,Donald McCullough 1323, ffaBattle, Cynthia Denise 52 'J' Batty, David Richard 46 Baur, Philip John 132 Bayley, Phyllis Ruth 132 Beasley, Laura Beth f Beasley, William George Beattie, April Elaine Beaumont, Jeffrey 308 Beaumont, Florence Jean 195 Bebernitz, Gregory Raymond 195 'V Bechtel, Pamela Mary 3132 Andrews, Stephen Jeffrey Andrisan, Linda Sue 131 Angers, Carol Avril Antonik, Doreen Lynn 13,1 Aono, Fred M. 51 W -E3 Apol, David John 51 Aram, Richard Bruce 281 Arbo, Walter Dennis 318 Becker, Carl Robert 48 Becker, Eve Victoria 195 Becker, Fred 301 Becker, Richard Scott il Becker, Verne William'195 Beckman, Philip Mark Beers, Douglas Richard 195 Beers, Kathleen Joy 152,264 Index , Beers, Ronald Alan Befus, Catherine Anne 52 Befus, Richard Martin 195 Belcher,'Dale Allen 132 Belcher, George Delbert III Bell, Janis Glyndon 195 Bell, Margaret Anne 52 Benda,,Christine Hilda 52 Beniston, Pamela JEF52 Bennett, Martha Anita Bennett, Ruth Mary 132 Benshoof, Max Morain Benson, ,Jeanne Cynthia 132 'BensonfLinda Sue 1132 Benton, Deborah Kay 132 Benton, John Paul 231 Berends, James Owen Berg, William Curtis 52 Berger, Dawn Patricia 132 Bergfalk, Joy Annette 52 Bergman, Judson Taft 52 Bergquist, Jaye Ann 132 Bergwall, Elisabeth Cary 52 Bergwall, Lois GraceM195 Berner, Randall Scott 264 Bems, Sally Ellen 52 Bertsche, Kirk Joseph 52 Bezingue, Debra Jean Biegler, Erika 52 if Bielawa, Philip Walter 46 Bigger, Stephen Lauren 64 Billett, John Lynn Binion, John, Eric 52 Binion, Rebecca Anne 195 Bird, Warren 52 M71 Birkey, Diane Joy 132 Birky, Lois Elaine 286 Bishop, David Lewis 132 Black, Barbara Joan 48 Blackburn, William Joseph 132 Blackford, Leslie D. 292 Blackwood, Vernon Lee Blair, Priscilla Campbell 132 Blake, William Dean 46 Blazek,iJay Paul 47 Bleadorn, Michael Perry 52 Bleed, Norman 270 Bleecker, Annette Marie 36,195 Bleecker, Mark Allan Blocher, Lucy 286 ,V ,Mg Blom, John Algut Jr. 132 Blomberg, Janet Ruth 270 Bloompott, Cheryl Anne 195 Blusher, Kevin Charles 132 Bodnarchuk, StevenjJr. Bohlander, David George 270 Boisse, Stephen Joseph 301 Bolinder, Robin Ann 248 Boltz, David Herman 46 Bond, Lucy Letitia 248 Boone, Ralph Jerome W Borgstrom, Timothy Keith 195 Bork, Robert Charles Borton, Faith Elaine 265 Boswell, Kathleen Blount 132 Botzko, Karen Elizabeth 132 Boulton, Sarah Jane M132 Bouma, Dana Gwen 97,292 Bouma, Dirk John Bouma, Paula R. 52 Bourgeois, Larry Duane 195 Bourgoine, Daniel J.:?282 Bourland, Melody Ann Bournique, Brenda Anne 52 Index Bowden, Carlton Emory Bowden, David Lee 265 Bowden, Diane Lrg , Bowdish, Rebecca Sue Bowen, James Allen Jr. 195 Bowen, Mark William 132 Bowen, Susan Ruth 132 Bowers, Thomas Lambie , Timothy Todd 52 Boyce, Kenneth Dean Boydston, Ronald Lee Boyenga, Stephen Paul Boyer, Margot Dillon 274 Braaten, Gary Wayne 132 Braaten, Kenneth Roy 270 Brace, Roger Williams 132 Bradford, Carol Eileen 52 Bradley, Charles Henry 292 Bradley, David Paul 132 Bradley, Mark Raymond 52 Bradshaw, Donald Matthew 195 Brady, Keith Richard Brady, Scott William Bramsen, Franklin Erik 52 Branch, Eric Alan 253 Branch, Homer Mitchell Brand, Timothy Kent Brandon, Linda Carol 77,133 Brause, Ann Louise 195 Brinks, Karin Joy 133 Briscoe, Jeffrey Shaw 270 Brittain, Diane Louise 305 Broberg, Gail Marie Brokaw, Dave 301, Brobst, Donald Paul 253 Bromhead, Rob 249 Brooks, Faith Carolyn 195 Brooks, Mary Rebecca 133 Brooks, Michelle Ann 133 Brousseau, Estelle Brown, Claudia Millett 305 Brown, Deborah Ann Brown, James Olney 282 Brown, Jennifer Lynn 133 Brown, Brown, Kenneth Lee Lorolie Amelia 48,195 Brown, Lynnette Marie 196 Brown, Mardelle 48 Brown, Matthew Kepner 196 Browrn Brown, Brown, Brown, Melinda Lou Nancy Allerton 133 Nancy Jeanne 133 Stanley Mark Bruining, Judith Rose 196 Brundine, Vicki Lynn 52 Brunett, Jeffrey Lee Bruning, Laura Amy 302 Bruss, Roberta Lynn 64 Bryant, Karen Rosemary 274 Bryant, Maurine Delorise Bryant, Michael Richard 46 Jill Barbara Bryson, , Judith Lynne 196 Buchanan, Steven Gene 302 Buchanan, Susan Jill 52 Buchweitz, Albert Fred Jr. 133 Buechner, Deborah Lou 133 Buiten, Cheryl Kay 282 Buker, Nina Ruth 52 Bull, Garry William 48 Bullmore, Patricia Ann 133 ,V Burchett, Charles George Burijon, Robert Wilburn Jr. 52 Burke, Charles Arnold 196 Davis. urke, Stephen Douglas 52,93 urkhalter, Amy Jean 133 urns, Janice Cheryl 265 urns, Pamela Lynn 196 urns, Robert Michael 133 urris, David Albert urrows, Margaret Anne 196 ush, James Robert ush, Paula Ruth 257 uswell, Kathleen Louise 196 utera, Jonathan Rice 248,249 utin, Philip Walker 76,133 Q i utka, Johann Elizabeth 133 utterfield, Linda Susan ylsma, Peter James 89,302 yrne, James Malcolm 52 aes, David Edmund 274 1 aes, Jonathan Lee 133 iaine, Barbara Lynn 133 aldwell, John T. 246 ,aldwell, Louise Inez aldwell, Robert Martin 133 aldwell, Stephen Paul allahan, Eldon Charles allam, Pamela Ruth 196 ameron, Deborah Ruth 133 ameron, Glenn Nilsson 133 ampbell, Eugene Earl 89,196 ampbell, Mark David 286 ampbell, Ronald Michael 133 anon, Darlene Joy 52 apps, William John 152 ardell, Gloria Jean 133 aress, James M. arey, Linda L. 274 arey, Mona Lynne 302 arlisle, David Scott 133 arlson arlson , Charles Eric 53 , Dana James 294 arlson, David Alan 196 arlson, Donald Lee 53 arlson, J. Theodore arlson, Jean Ann 253 arlson, John Theodore 196 Carlson, Kathy Jean 53 Carlson, Lawrence Douglas 133 Carlson, Nancy Ann 274 Carlson, Sally Elizabeth Carlson, Sarah Elizabeth 196 Carlson, Sherril Lynn 53 Carlstrom, Marilyn Ann 133 Carney, Jennifer Krina Carrell, Carrell Elizabeth Ann 196 Walter III Carter: Anne Elizabeth 196 Carter, Carter, Carter, Carver, Carver, Carvey Barbara Susan 133 Craig Alan 196 Laura Jane 53 Donald William Linda Sue 302 John Edward 53 Case, Ronald Allyn 196 Casey, Linda Rae Cassel, David Sorensen 133 Caster, Carol Diane 249 Casto, Charles Browning Jr. 133 Cedarholm, John Carl 133 Cederberg, Kurt Eric Chadbourne, David Michael 53 Challberg, Bradley Jan Chan, Eva Yuen-Ling Chapman, Diane Gayle 53 Chapman, Elizabeth Chapman, Ruth Ann Chase, Harold Arthur Jr. Chase, Philip John 53 Cheatham, Gregory Lynn Chesney, Michael Alan Cheyney, Beverly Lynn 196 Chibana, Nobuo 47 Chickering, William Newell 48 Chignell, Derek Alan 48 Childers, Jana Lynn 308 Childerston, James Kent 133 ,- Chinen, Calvin Teruo 305 Ching, Linda Suk-Ching 48 Chissus, Daniel Roan 253 Chissus, Pamela Ann 133 Christensen, Chris Stephen 53 Christensen, Mark Englund Christian, Beth Renee 274 Christian, Daniel Robert 134 Christiansen, Kenneth Arnold 174 Christiansen, Stephen Philip 134 Christy, Ellen 53 Christy, John Scott 53 Chung, Chee-Ling Teresa 47 Church, Ann Denise 196 Cilley, Robert Edward 196 Cinnamon, Karen Rae 196 Cirincione, Florence Lor Clark, Jeanne Ellen 308 Clark, Michael James Clarke, Sharon Faith 196 Classen, Douglas Wayne 196 Clausen, David George 292 Clausen, Stephen Michael 134 Clay, Mark Roger 134 Claybrook, Mary Karen 274 Clendenin, Cathy Ann 53 , Clevenger, Catherine Marie 53 Clower, Vicki Jean Clum, Bruce Gregory 296 Coddington, Curtis Keith 53 Cody, Cynthia Kay Coffee, Russell Weldon Coffey, John Joseph Coffman, Lorene G. Cole, Janice Ann 53 Cole, John Andrew Cole, John Steven Cole, Laurel Lee 296 Cole, Sharon Colleen Cole, Timothy Lane 134 Coleman, Frances L. Coleman, Gene Grant 22 Coles, Roberta L. Colledge, Gary Lee 1 Collins, Michael Allan Colvin, Gary Lloyd 47 Colvin, Rebecca Le Colvin, Suzanne 196 Combs, Richard Newell 48 Comstock, Gary Lynn 286 Conaway, Janelle Eva 53 Condie, Bradley 0. 294 Congdon, Jonathan B. 253 Congdon, Robert Neilson 53 Conger, Frances Marian 197 Connon, Kathleen Anne 134 Conrads, Elaine Inka 134 Cook, Cynthia Ann 296 Cook, David Leroy 282 Cook, Donald Richard 287 Cook, Terri Suzanne 53 Coolidge, Laurie 197 Coon, Karen Lynn 134 Coons, Cheryl Beth Index . Cooper, Rhonda Sue Coover, Laurel Lynn Copeland, Janine Susan 297 Corey, Beth Ann 134 Coriell, Bruce Richard 134 Cornelius, Mary Jo 53 Cornell, David Gordon , Cort, Janine Patricia 297 A Cosco, Letitia Marion 197 Cotten, Cary Lee 197 Cox, Barbara Anne 253 Cox, Patty Jean 53 Cozort, Dale-Ray 197 Cragoe, Thomas Henry Crail, Carolyn Marie 305 Cranford, June Lynette 197 Craven, Andrew John 48 Craven, Janet Ruth 134,152 Crawford, Scott 48 Criniti, Robin Elaine 134 Criswell, Jacqueline Ann 134 Crossman, Gerald Peter ' Crowder, Sheffield Lane 134 Cubberley, Kenneth Allan,,197 Cudney, James Benjamin 134 Culberson, Christine Ann 53 Cunningham, Beth ,Gladys 53 Cunsolo, David Philip Curtiss, Devere Kingsley Cushman, Laura Ann 53 Custis, Karen 287 Cutherell, Luke 254 Cutherell, Rebecca 134 Cutler, Catherine Linda 197 Dahlberg, Ellwood Emanuel Daly, Beverly Marjeanne 1,97 Damon, Heidi Virginia 134 Dangleis, Lynn Cheri 197 Darling, Denise Lynn 134 Darling, Donald W. Jr. 254 Darr, John Andrew 46 Daskalakis, Esther Marie 134 Daughtry, Barry Talbot 53 Davenport, Peter Andrew 64 David, Darla.Faye '197 Davidson, Beth Ann Davidson, Clarissa Miller 197 Davidson, William Irwin 134 Davin, Amy Beth 53 Davis, Crystal June 53 Davis, David 48 - Davis, James Allen 134 Davis, Jeffrey Earl 134 Davis, Launa Ruth 274 Davis, Lydia M. 249 Davis, Scott Hathaway Thomas William Davison, Patricia S. 287 Dawson, Gail Louise 53 Dawson, Steven Timothy . De Boer, Annette 197 Decker, Kathleen 274 Defee, Emily G. 11' De Geus, Arlene Ruth 134 Della Croce, Gregory Charles Demich, Raymond Timothy 54 Demick, James Douglas Deming, Karl Douglas 53 Deming, Kurt Ernest 134 Dempsey, Denise Denham, Michael Thomas 134 Depinto, Marykayel53 Devore, Shirlee Anne 249 De Vries, Carolyn Index De, Vries,,Kenneth Howard 249 Devries, Nicholas 134 Dewey, Linda Ruth 254 Dewhirst, Debra Di Ann 197 De Witt, James Craig 197 Dewolfe, Deborah 282 Dick, Carol 134 -1 Dick, Debra Anne L. 66,247 Dickson, Charles Ray Jr. 249 Dideum, Dennis Cyrus 134 Dignan, Stephen Patrick 197 Dill, Barbara 197 Diller, Collette Adele 247 Diller, Janelle Marie Dilmore, Pam 287 Dills, Melvin Stewart 197 Di Sciullo, Mark Vincent 54 Ditzler, Margaret Beth 134 Doak, Candace Elaine 197 Dobbins, Susan Dockum, Claudia Lee 96 Dockum, Roy Kent ' Dodd, Kenneth Byron 197 Dodrill, David Eric 282 Dodrill, Mark Andrew 197 Domeck, Lynn Susan Domino, Kimberley Pat Domino, Robin Darlene 64 Donehoo, Stephen Carey 134 Dorland, Sanda Lynn 294 H Dorrow, Daniel Stephen ' Dorschler, Glenn Eugene 282 Dortch, Richard William 134 Douglas, Ronald 302 Dowdy, David Alan 287 Dowdy, Jennifer, Louise 54 Dowrick, David James Doyle, Barry Brian 283 Drennan, Carol 'Sue 134 Dressel, Elizabeth Ann 197 Dresselhaus, Elton Wayne Drevets, Wayne Curtis 54 Drown, Timothy Frank 197 Dubert, Irene Marjorie 197 Dudley, Walter Rae II Dudman, Andrew James 258 Dudman, Jonathan Robert Dufendach, Shawnee 292 M Duff, Irene Louise 54 Duncan, Bruce Thomas Duncan, ,John Edward 302 Dungan, Edward Merle Dunkerton, Elizabeth Anne 198 Dunkin, David Barnes 198 Dunkle, Debra Louise 198 Dunn, Marilyn M. Dunn, William Terry 48 Dupon, Ryan William 134 Durham, John Bradley 134 Dykema, Patti Jo 254 Dykstra, Nancy Jean 54 Eakle, Lee Ann 198 Ebel, James Harland 54 Ebenezer, Reginald Ben 48 Eberly, George Dean Ebersole, Philip'Wade 198 Eby, Craig Donald 47 Eckhardt, Winston David l34 Eckstrorn, Eric Thurston Ediger, Craig Dougas 134 Edwards, Deborah Josselyn 134 Edwards, Richard Kevin Edwards, Susan Nell Egeland, Paul Charles 198 Ehresman, Mary Ann 134 Ehresman, Timothy George 54 Eide, Victoria Jean 198 Eisenbraun, Ruth Ann 54 Ekberg, Dean Wesley 198 Ekstrom, Paul Clarence 134 Elam, Elaine Elizabeth 305 Elder, Karin Elizabeth 198 Elkins, Steven C. 249 Elliot, Marilyn Ruth 97,254 Elliot, Valerie 287 Elliott, Clifford Eugene Jr. 54 Elliott, David Eric 54 Elliott Elliott Elliott Elliott Elliott y Debra Kay 287 Jancie Lee 135 John Morris 46 Nancy Lynne 54 Patricia Jane 198 Ellis, Carlene Nerissa 198 Ellison, Randal 89,198 Elsen, David Carl Elwardt, Ronald H. 135 Elzinga, Lawrence W. 254 Emery, James MacDonald 54 Emery, Virginia 198 V Emmerich, Charles J. 155,198 Endean, Timothy Milton 54 Eng, Cynthia 198 Entwistle, David Roy Enyeart, Sandra Elaine 198 Enyia, Samuel Okechuku Epps, Eugene Richard 198 Erdman, Francis Hickok Jr. 135 Erickson, Christopher L. Erickson, Jean Marie 247 Erickson, Judith Erickson, Keith Robert 135 Erickson, Robert David' Erickson, Robert Keith 198 Erickson, Sharon Lynn 302 Erickson, Todd Henry 135 Ericson, Albert Dwight 302 Ericson, Brian Charles 135 Erlandson, Monica 249 Erwin, Mark,David 54 Eslinger, Darryl Lynn 48 Etzel, Susan Jean 64 Eumurian, Daniel John 46 Evans, Elaine Ellen Evans, Paul Thomas 48 Evans, Stewart James 297 Fabricius, Scott Douglas 198 Fabricius, Susan Kae 135 Fackler, Paul Mark Fahy, Earl William Jr. 47 Faircloth, Maryjane Faner, David Brad 135 Farley, Joy Lynne . . Fast, Jennifer Gay 198 Faubion, Allen Eugene 54 Fawkes, Douglas Christopher Fawkes, Rosalie 287 Ferguson, Alan Kim Fernandes, Barbara Jean 198 Fernandes, Frank Walter 54 Ferrell, Mankffhomas S198 Ferwerda, Daniel M. Ferwerda, Paul Gordon 135 Feryance, Rebecca Diane 198 Fesler, Janet Carol 135 Fesmire, Mark Albert 198 Fesmire, Thomas Wilmer Fevry, Osner 44,48 Filkin, Kathryn Jane 265 320 Fil'-15, Elaine Nancy 278 Fine, Jeanette Claire 135 Firebaugh, Gerald Daniel 54 Fischbach, Reinhard Fisher, Christine Marie Fisher, Don Patterson 46 Fitch, David Elmer Fitch, Karen Ruth V, Fittz, Dorcas Ellen 297 Fitzstevens, John David Fitzwilliam, Susan Sheryl 198 Fix, Cheryl Dawn Fleckles, Gladys Marie Fleming, Daniel Lee Fleming, James Richard 135 Floch, Michael Stephan 199 Flood, Douglas Lyndon 46 Flynn, Michael Joseph Fones, Lawrence Eugene 199 Fonseca, Cynthia Susan 135 Foon, Melinda Liesa 54 Foon, Spencer Whaymon 274 Foose, Nelson Fisher 254 Ford, Irene M. Fosse, James Clifford Foster, Douglas Evan 135 Foster, Julie Grace Foster, Richard Allen Foster, Richard Delos,309 Fowler, Bruce Allen 199 Frame, Marjorie Florence 54 Francis, Susan Elizabeth 135 Frank, Darlene Marilyn 135 Franke, Thomas Glenn 199 Franklin, Selmon Ted 135 Franson, Janice Lynn 302 Franz, Marybeth Ann 287 Franz, Patrice Elaine 135 Fraser, John Andrew 54 Frederich, Karen Lee 283 Frederich, Kristin Alice 54 Free, Kathleen Anne 199 Freel, Lee Gordon 48 Freemantle, Mark Edwards 149,199 French, Richard James 135 Friberg, Daniel Stephen Friberg, David Peter 93,294 Frick, Emily June Fritz, Randy Neil Fromm, Karen Elisabeth 54 Frost, Kaye Elizabeth 288 Fry, Diane Louise 47 Fry, Jonathan Henry Fuchs, Rhoda Edwina Fugate, Jacquelyn M. 254 Fulghum, Thomas Douglas Fuller, Sharon Irene Funck, Alethea S. . 71 Furman, Carolyn Elizabeth 135 Futrell, John Thomas 199 Fynn, Paul Kofi 288 Gabriel, Alison Janet'199 Gaenzle, Thomas C. 288 Gaines, Elizabeth Ann Galvin, James C. Jr. 231 Gamble, Gary Richard 172 Gamble, Robert Perry 275 Garcia, Hector 199 Gardner, Keith Alan 309 Gardner, Kent Eugene 66,199 Gateson, Carolyn Sue 135 Gauger, David Allan 54 Gavard, Jeffrey Alan Gehrmann, Daniel Wallace Index Gentry, Carol Ann 297 Geoffrion, Timothy Clarence George, John Sibley Gerdin, Bonnie Sue 54 German, John Willard 199 A Gervase, Deborah Dallas 135 Giddy, Lynne Marie 199 Giffhorn, Linda Sue 64 Gilbert, Lindsey Rankin Jr. 544 Gilkerson, Larry Bruce 32,180 Gill, Clyde Beckwith 302 Gillette, Cynthia Ann Gillikin, Charles Douglas 135 Gilman, Sarah Jane Gillmore, Rick 48 Gin, Gary Wong 199 Giordano, Peter Joseph Gipson, Melinda Moran 54 Gladden, Jeffrey R. 258 Goeke, Dale Clark 303 Goff, Daniel.,Howard,135 Goff, Laura Elizabeth 54 Goldsmith, Beverly Ann Golter, David Andrew 199 Gonzalez, Katherine Lillian 135 Goodman, James William 48 Gordon, Joyce Marie 135 Gorsuch, Gregory Scott Glorsuch, Peggy Wynn Gorton, Dennis Lyle 47 Gosko, George Kamman Jr. 46 Gotaas, Ruth Esther 135 Gottschall, Jessie A. 303 Gour, Gregory Philip 54 Grady, Richard Mark 199 Graham, Bruce Austin Granquist, Daniel Wayne 258 Gration, Judith Annette 54 Graves, Albert M. 283 Graves, Karen Lynnette 54 Graves, Stuart Randall 55 Gray, Gray, Charles Kemp 135 Cheryl Kathryn 55 Gray, Deborah Ann 55 Gray, Francis Alfred 48 Gray, Michael Edward Gray, Rebecca Jane 55 Gray, Terry Ann 249 Gray, Todd David 283 Green, Gene Lee 250 I Green, Sharon Celeste 55 Greenman, Patricia Jean 199 Gregory, Catherine Lee 303 Gregory, Michael Alan 66,309 Greig, Greig, Paul Glenn 199 Wallace Cameron 199 Griebenow, Mei Ann 135 Grieder, John Norman 297 Griffin, Georgia Lindsey 135 Griffith, Beverly E. 265 Griffiths, Glenn C. 258 Grigereit, David Hugh 135 Grimm, Carol Yvonne 55 Grimm, Patricia S. 275 Griswell, Charles Steven 64 Groezinger, George Herman 199 Groh, Grow, Ellen Christine Lawrence Charles 55 Grubbs, David Scott 258 Grubbs, Marilyn Rose Gryte, John Halvor 303 Guess, Frank 292 Guess, Keith Allen 55 Guest Index , Michele Jean Gulbransen, Ned Allen 199 Gunderson, Glenn Kermit 135 Gunther, Keith Alden 283 Gustafson, Carol Elizabeth 55 Gustafson, Eric Jon 135 Gute, Daniel 199 Gutierrez, Stephanie Louise 135 Guy, Polly Ann 135 Habegger, Mark Steven Hackett, Janeice Laverne 279 Hadley, Judith Marie 135 Hakanson, Janet Eileen Hales, Deborah Jan 275 Hales, Edward John 48 Hall, Bret Kahn Hall, Lisa Louise Hall, Robert Scott 55 Hall, Steven Michael 135 Halliday, Nancy Louise Hamilton, Gayle Edith 199 Hamilton, Gordon T. 283 Hamlett, David Robert Hammond, Robert Michael 47 Hampton, Larry D 48 Handt, Mary Christine Handy, David Allan 199 Hannibal, Richard Allan 55 Hansel, Candace Sue 199 Hansen, Jody Lee 55 Hansen, Sheryl Christine 55 Hansen, Traynor 47 Harbeck, William Andrew 172,199 Hardin, Theodore Robert Hargrove, James Archie Jr. 199 Harig, Barbara Ann 135 Harkness, Mary Ann 200 Harles, John Christopher 55 Harmelingf' Jean Carol 136 Harper, Julie Ann 97,297 Harris, Bryce Kevin Harris, Scott Daniel Harris, Wendall Jay 284 Harrison, Jack Douglas 266 Harrison, Janice Kay Harro, Bruce Edwin 136 Harter, Kristina Gwen Hartman, Andrew William 200 Hartman, Steven James 55 Harutunian, Edward James Harwood, Robin 55 Hastings, Yvonne Elaine 136 Hatch, Timothy F. Hatfield, Jane Wenger 136 Hathaway, Lynda Rae 200 Haugen, Stephen Jerome 175,200 Havener, Linda Sue 288 Hawkins, Heidi 55 Hawley, Wayne Allen Hay, Andrew G. H. Hayden, Deborah Louise 136 Hayes, Graham Stephen Hayes, Steve Bernard 275 Haynie, Paul David 136 Hays, Charles Millard III 136 Head, Nancy Jean 275 Heath, Rebecca Lynn 136 Hebele, Sharon Hope 275 Heche, Susan Claire 55 Heck, Peter Linton 200 Heck, William L. IH 258,334 Hederstedt, Roger Paul 55 Hedlund, Gary Lee 200 Heidenreich, Cheryl Jean Heimbach, James Herbert 136 Hein, Steven Ronald 200 Heinemann, Wayne Stanley 136 Heise, Gail Star 200 Heitz, Nadine Ruth 136 Helfers, James Peter 200 Helfrich, John Walter Jr. 136 Helmholz, Sus Carol 136 Henderson, Ann Judson 288 Henderson, Daniel Ray 136 Henderson, Elizabeth S. 309 Henderson Jan Carol Henderson, John Alden Henderson Otis Henderson Henderson, Stephen Gordon Steven Walter 289 Hendrich, Julie Ann 136 Hendricks, Jeff Alan 200 Horn, John Burson 46 I-lornaday, Janet Lee 136 Horner, Ann Lorraine Horras, Gail Elizabeth 136 Horras, Vera Lynn 279 Hortegas, Steven J. 24,305 Hoskins, Larry Neil 136 Hostetter, Naomi Faith 56 Houston, Rita 306 Houha, Juliet Lenore 56 Hovda, Dale 56 Howard, David Dennis 136 Howard, David Morris, Jr. 46 Howard, Karen Elisabeth 136 Howard, Stephen Gibson 200 Howe, Lona Mary 303 Howell, Amy Ruth Index Jahraius, Ruth Michelle ' Jakobi, Marsha Diane 201 James, Buela Violet 201 James, N ina Louise 201 James, Paula Diane - James, Quentin Paul 56 i, Philip Henry J ankowsk Jantzen, Marjorie Anne Jauhiainen, Eric Jon 136 Jaycox, Mary Lou 137 Jeffery, Daniel Joseph 201 Jenks, Kathy Leigh 137 Jensen, Chris Gregory Jensen, Douglas John 250 Jerernias, Mark Alan 201' Johansen, David Nels 201 John, Marks Alexander 56 Henning, John Arthur 55 Henricksen, Susan Joy Hensley, Captain Lee V. Hensley, Karen Herman, Gregory 55 Hermann, Robert Mark 200 Hernandez, Edward Fidel Herrera, Sandra Esther 136 Hertzberg, Hutsie Harold 55 Hess, Richard Samuel 55,250,251 Hess, Sandra Sue Hicks, James Lewis 33,200 Hicks, Joseph David Hicks, Todd Peter Higer, Kim Gawain 200 Hilgenhurst, Charles Grafford IV 55 Hill, James Thomas 309 Hill, Judith Susanne 55 Hill, Kimberly Ann 200 Hill, Leon Howard 200 Hill, Stephanie Jean 136 Hill, William Colyer Hilt, Terri Louise 55 Hilton, Beverly 56 Hinson, Paul Luther Jr. Hobbs, Barbara Jean Hobby, James Lafeyette Jr. 56 Hobday, Donald Kenneth Jr. Hochstettler, Jeffrey Robert 187 Hock, James Wade Hodel, Barbara R. 275 Hoekstra, Janice Ellen Hoffman, Marilyn M. Hoffman, Russell D. Hofstra, Elizabeth Margery 56 Hoglund, Kenneth 250 Hohnke, Lenice C. 275 Hoisington, Beverly Ann 56 Holemon, Dawn Michelle Holland, Stephen Lee 200 Hollingsworth, Mark Andrew 200 Holloway, Elizabeth Lewis 56 Holm, Timothy Ross Holman, Julianne Marie 56 Holmes, Paul Arthur 200 Holmes, Robert E. Holmquist, Robin Elaine Holston, Francis Lee 136 Holwick, William David 136 Hook, Jonathan Byron 200 Hooker, Cheryl Kaye 136 Hoops, Walter Allen 305 Hoppell, Barbara Ann 136 Hoppler, Craig Jarvis 136 Hopwood, Gary Owen 200 Hord, Margarita Elizabeth 47 Horie, Hirofumi Howell, Andrew Grahl 56 Johns, Cheryl Elaine 47 Hoyer, Beverly Grace 56 Hromas, Robert Alan 136,187 Huang, Henry Huang, Jo Ann 200 Hubbard, Pamelia Jane 200 Hubbell, John William 47 Hudson, Pamela Jean 136 Huff, Melissa Jane 200 Huffman,'Stephen Mark 56 Hufton, Richard Austen Hug, Robert Brian 56 I-Iuizenga, Rochelle Rae Hull, Jeffrey Randolph Hull, Timothy Wade 200 Hundley, Gary Wayne Hungerford, Hope Anne 48 Hunt, Nancy Jane 200 Hunt, Pamela Sue 136 Hunter, David Leonard 200 Hunter, Stephen Allen 281 Huson, Rowena Lynn Hutchings, Katherine Anne 56 Hutchins, Carol Ann 136 Hvale, Steven Edward 64 Hyatt, Melvin Gene 46 Hyde, Katherine Dorothy 86 Hylander, Gary Allan 254 Hymes, Kathryn Anne 136 Hyslop, Jonathan David 200 1 Hyslop, Susan Arnold Ibrahim, Christine Ibsen, Donald Gorden 48 Ibsen, Marilyn June 47 Ice, Rebecca Lynn 64 Inch, Joan Dryden Inch, Thomas Alton 64 Ing, Strather David 289 L Ingebretsen, Mark Erling 56 Ingrams, Peter Douglas 136 Ireland, Todd Mathew Isaacson, Enid Claire 254 Isaacson, Jayne Lois 232,233 Isley, Edgar Munsey 47 Iversen, Jeffrey Allen 200 Ivey, Malia Ruth 64 Jackson, David William 56 Jackson, Peggy Lin 56 Jackson, Roselyn B. 47 Jackson, Sheri Lynn 200 Jacob, Janeil Sue 275 Jacobs, Mark Steven 201 Johns, Ja 6 Johnson, ckie David 47 Barbara Ann 48 Johnson, Charlyn Kay 289 . Johnson, Christopher Alan 137 Johnson, Colleen Marie Johnson, Curtis Marshall 201 , Johnson Dan Thomas Johnsoni David Paul 56 Johnson, Deborah Lea 201 Johnson, Douglas Alan 56 Johnson, Douglas Giles 17 Johnson, Gregg Eugene 137 Johnson, Jann Lynn '- Johnson, Jennifer Ruth 303 H Johnson, Jeri K. Johnson, Julie Ann 276,306 L Johnson, Karen Lee .1 Johnson, Keith Bryant, Johnson, Kenneth Paul 212,213 Johnson, Krystal Ann 47 ' Johnson, L. Ted 4- - Johnson, Linda Sue 137 Jacobsen Joanne Elaine 56 Jacobsen, Robert Paul Jacobsen Sharon Ruth 266 Jacobson, David Russell 201 Jacobson, Ronald Mark 56 Johnson Milo James 137 Johnson, Nancy Christine Johnson, Nancy Louise 56 Johnson, Nanette Sue 56 L Johnson, Peggy Ann 48 I J' Johnson, Peter Clarence 137 Johnson Stephanie V, Johnson, Steve 49 Johnson, Stephen Mark 56 r- Johnson, Thomasl-Iudgins 56 Johnson, Timothy Louis 201 Johnson, William F. III 303 Johnston, Carole Noelle Johnston, Lois Ruth 137 Johnston, Mark Richard 56 Johnston, Stephen A. J ohnst on, Thomas Madison Jr. 201 Johnstone, Ellen.-E. 297 Jolliff, Charles Kent 237,306 Jones, Bruce Arthur 250 Jones, Carol Louise 233,306 f Jones, Claudia Ellen 289 Jones, James David V Jones, Joseph M. 5 Jones, Judith Lynn Jones, Robert David 201 Jones, Robert Lynn 46 0' Jones, Rodney Marlin 56 Jones, William Guenther 57 Jones, William L. Jr. 57 Jongeward, Dave Wayne 231,306 Jordan , Dennis Wayne 47 Jordan, Edward Russell Jorden, Paul Joseph 57 Index Jurgensen, Hubert Andre 46 Juul, Mary Alice Kabaza, C. Jim Tusubira 137 Kage, Cynthia Jean 201 Kahr, Richard Jeffrey Kaiser, Kenneth William Jr. Kallxnan, Lynne Dorothy Kane, Norman David 258,334 Karlesky, Dori Lynn 201 Karsgaard, Lynne Olive 298 Kasagawa, Tetsuzo Kasen, Lane Arthur 137 Kaskela, Paul Harvey 57 Katterjohn, Mark Steven 137 Katterjohn, Michael A. 174,266 Kaufman, Alta Fern Kautz, Barbara Ann 57 Keazirian, David Mark 201 Keefe, Frederick Lawrence Jr. 137 Keefer, Jenny Anne 292 Keener, Karen Kathleen 201 Keeney, Donald Earl 250 Keeney, Gary Ray 57 Keller, June Arlene 57 Keller, Mark Alan 137 Kells, Katherine Ann Kelly, Christina Florence 137 -Kelly, Elverda Elise 201,212 Kelsey, Linda Rose 57 Kelsey, Paul Joseph Kemery, Rebecca Louise 201 Kendall, Ronald Paul 137 Kennedy, Caroline Vaughan Kennedy, Carolyn Marie 137 Kennedy, Nancy Beth 57 Kennedy, Richard Gordon Kennedy, Scott Mark Kent, Elizabeth Louise 47 Keresey, Barbara Lillian Kerr, Linda Livingston 46 Kershner, Marilyn Louise 137 Kidd, Helen 147 Killian, Maryjane Kimbell, Richard Guy III Kimmel, Mark Douglas 57 Kimpel, John Mark 57 King, Donald Leroy 248,250 King, Jennifer Kay 201 King, Jill Elizabeth 57 Kingsbury,,Nancy Ann 266 Kinney, Robert Bruce 137 Kinzy, Gregory Alan 49 Kirchner, James Raymond 137 Kiser, Howard Wayne Kitchen, Carol Elayne Kitchen, Kathryn Joyce 303 Kleinman, Sarah Mae 137 Klernm, Gordon Roger Klett, Linda JeanW137 Kline, Christine Gail 137 Klipp, Ronald P. 57 Knapp, Judith Marie 137 Knapp, Laura Jane Knight, Joyce Elaine 137 Knight, Karen Marie 276 Knight, Star Elaine 201 Knoedler, James Howard 57 Knoepfle, Jewel Ann 137 Knosp, Gary Lee Knowles, Patricia Elise 137 Knox, Carl William III 201 Knudsen, Kevin Charles Knudson, Kelly 201 Koci, Robert Frank Jr. 137 321 i Koehler, John James Koehler, Mary Julia ' Koehlinger, Anne Elizabeth 201 Koester, Cynthia Kay 202 Kohl, George Joseph Jr. 303 Kok, Randall Arthur Kok, Stephen Robert 93 Kolenburg, Pamela Jo 137 Komolafe, Samuel Kayode Kooman, Peter Winston 254 Kornfield, David Edward Kornfield, Kathleen Ann Kornfield, William J. Jr. 64 Koser, Eugene Richard Jr. Lehnert, Jill Marie 138 Leiinington, Leslie Anne Leona Leslie Levy, rd, Maureen Faye , Laurie Farrington 138 Debra Ann 73,214,215,31O Levison, John Robert 138 Lewis, Charles Wayne 138 Lewis, Gregg Allan Lewis, Richard Elliot Lewis, Rodger Lynn Lexby Lian, , Keith Allen 138 Virginia Rae 202 Liberty, Fay Louise 202 Lidholm, Elaine Joy 48 Koshewa, Katherine Anne 137 Kostelny, Vonelle May 303 Kozarski, Donna Maria 202 Kraftson, Claudia Damaris 137 Kraftson, Nancy B. , Q Krasnopolsky, Lucy Kraus, Laurie Ann 57 Krotz, Debra Jean 57 Krum, Mark Geren 57 Kruse, Jeffrey D. 57 Kruse, Mary Esther 138 Kuhn, Eileen 49 Kunst, Kerry Lee Kuntz, Kurt Donald Kupka, Jane Allyson 279 Kupka, Nancy Elizabeth 138 Kutsch Kuzme Kvam, ke, Klaus Peter 57 nkov, Tamara Ann Bemice Jean 57 M eyer, Labadie, Timothy Robert 138 Labelle, Robert Alan 202 Labreche, Jonathan Henderson Laine, Lu Anne 202 Lake, Daniel Wayne 46 Lamasters, Karen Kay 57 Lander, Wayne Edward Lane, Thomas Knapp 57 Laniak, Robert Paul David 57 Lanphear, Ardith Reed Lansing, Michael 284 Lantz, David Arthur 138 Largent, Ronald David' 202 Lidstrom, Martha Louise Liles, Wendy Lee Lilja, Nancy Lynn 289 Lim, Adynna Yap Lirnkeman, Marcia Anne 57 Limkeman, Mark Kenneth 202 Lindquist, Sheryl Lillian 58 Lindsten, Alfred Paul 202 Linclvall, Martha Elaine Lint, Judith Joned 266 Linton, Philip Lindley Liset, George Edward 298 Littauer, Sandra 58 Liu, Paul Yan Livingston, C. Jeter Jr. Lochstampfor, Andrew David 202 Lockhart, Thomas John 292 Loerop, Richard Wayne 250 Loewier, Gregory Keith 58 Logan, Ann Adair 138 Loizeaux, Christina S. 276 Loizeaux, Rachel Lankford 58 Loizeaux, Scot Herbert 202 Lokken, John Thomas Londal, Sheri Ann 58 Long, David Carlton 289 Long, Eleanor Kennerly 58' Long, Harry Davison 289 Long, Richard Clark Long, Stephen Dalton 64 Long, Suzanne -Jeanne Longenecker, Elizabeth Lee 58 Larkin, Larsen, Larson, Larson, Timothy Morgan 138 David Arthur 138 Cynthia Alice 289 Jane Merle 138 . Larson, Karen Ruth 138 Larson, Karl Bertil 57 Larson, Larry Michael Larson, Linda Dianne 138' Maas, Gregory Warren 58 Larson, Lora Christine 57 Larson, Nancy Jean 202 Larson, Timothy Howe 138 Lassen, Brian David 202 Lauber, Pamela Jane 1338 Laur, Calvin Alexander 64 Laur, Lindalee Catherine Laur, Noel-Paul Douglas 138 Laurie, Donna Ruth 138 Lawlace, Lawrence Jay 202 Lawrence, Gerald Dwayne 57 Lawrence, Thomas Leslie Lawrenz, Kathleen Lou 202 Leafstrand, Lisa Ann 289 Lecraw, Timothy Marsh 138 Lee, Audrey 138 Lee, Eugene 202 Lee, Scott William 202., Leedy, John Berg 138 Leet, Nancy Janeen 298 322 Lott, George Bruce 58 Louie, Sandy Y 58 Lown, Kathryn Cecile 202 Luc, Nang-Yu Lucas, Robin 202 Lucas, Stephen Ray 138 Ludeman, Joann Ruth 138 Ludwig, Laura Jean 58 Lueck, Paul Curtis 202 Luft, Cheryl Anne 138 Lul, Paul 49 Lundberg, Lisa Ann 303 Lundberg, Mark John 138? Lundberg, Peter Charles Lundquist, Susan Jo Lutes, Leasa Yvonne 58 Lutz, Timothy Randall 202 Lynn, Gretchen Grace 289 Lyons, Francis Raymond HI 250,251 Maas, Jon 58 Maas, Wayne Norman Maasbach, Bruce Robert 138 Macchia, Frank Domonick Mac Donald, Elizabeth Lee 272 MacDonald,-- Jeffrey Lee 138 MacKenzie, Charles Alexander 58 MacKinney, Julianne Doris 138 Index I MacKlem, Lawrence Arthur MacLeod, Victor Arthur Madsen, Debra Lynn 138 Madsen, Joan Marie 138 Madsen, Linda Jean 202 Magalry, James 254 Maggard, Leigh Anne 58 Maggard, Michael Hall 284 Magnuson, Gail 202 Magnusson, James Andrew 139 Mahady, John Andrew 202 Mahady, Paul 295 Maloney, James L. A. Jr. Maltby, Dwight Alan 139 Manfredi, Patsy A. 295 Manto, Charles Leo Marema, Lenore Sue 284 Margroff, Marla Lynn Markle, James Renold Marlowe, Markley Edward 202 Marshall, Clifford Lyle 202 Marshall, Elizabeth Ann 202 Martens, Martha Anne Martens, Michael Paul 46 Martin, Joseph Clifton Jr. 58 Martin, Melinda Louise 58 Martin, Scott Evan 139 Martinez, David John 203 Marvin, Joy Kathleen Mashburn, William Lee 139 Maslowski, Debra Grace 58 Mason, Ralph Peter 295 Masson, James Robert 139 Master, Linda Kay 58 Masters, Curtis Gene Masterson, David Lawrence 153 Mastodon, Perry T. 334 Mathews, Karen Elaine 279 Matson, David Owen 258 Matson, Joel Frank Matsumoto, Gary 203 Matthews, Elizabeth Hope 97,203 Matthews, Peter Nathan 250 Mawhorter, Richard J. Jr. 139 Maxwell, Judith Louise 203 Maxwell, Laura Elaine 139 May, Kimberly Dean Maynard, Merrill Helen Mays, Steven Mark 203 Mc Call, Patricia Lou 306 McCary, William Wright 139 McCaslin, Guy Dean 58 McCauley, James Bruce Jr. 139 Mc Clellan, William D. Mc Clelland, Scott E. 46 McClure, Mark Robert 58 McCollam, Stephen Andrew 47 McCool, Kevin Mark 58 lVlcC6rd, Karen Lynne 262 Mc Coy, Deborah Naelyn 262 McCoy, Thomas Olin McCreight, Nancy Wilson 203 McCullough, Daniel Chester 139 McCully, John Thomas 203,155 McCune, Susan Gay 139 McCurdy, Joanne Lee 58 McCurdy, Ruth S. 279 Mc Donald, David Bruce 251 McDonald, G. Douglas 139 McDonald, Scot Anderson 203 McDonald, Steven Lee 58 McDoi1gald, James William McFall, Kathleen Juanita McFarland, Timothy Ray 58 Index McFarlane, Gracef'Elizabeth 58 McGlothlin, Renae Elaine 47 McGraw, Cynthia Sue 203 McGregor, Joan Marie Mc Gregor, Malcolm Bryan 203 McGuill, Michael William 64 McKenny, Gerald Patrick 58 McKenzie, Kathryn Lau 310 McKenzie, Marvin Andrew Mc Kinney, Beth Eileen McLaughlin, Janet Ellen 47 Mc Laughlin, Joy R. 306 McLean, Susan Kay 47 McLennan, Laurel Ann 139 McMinn, Anne Ruth 58 McNair, Jeffrey Lee 139 McNair, Sylvia Ann McNeal, James Kelley IV 139 McNeal,fWilliam Andrew 139 Mc Near, Richard W. 262 McQuilkin, Robert Paul 303 McQuitty, Eric Andrew 139 McRoberts, Stephen James 139 McVeigh, Caryn Ann 40,203 McWilliams, David Glenn 203 Meckling, Patricia Ruth 58 Medendorp, Marjorie Jane 254 Meena, James William 139 Meena, William Allen 203 Mello, Gail Elaine 139 Meloon, Ralph Chester Jr. Menard, Maureen Elizabeth Mengel, Richard Clarke 248,251 Merrifield, Kathleen Susan 139 Merrill, Duane Alfred 203 Mers, Monty James 46 Mesko, John Wesley 203 Metzler, Gayla Ann 59 Meyer, Christine Carlson 59 Meyer, Donald Galen 46 Meyer, James Emerson Meyer, Jessy Ellen 64 Meyer, Judith Ann Meyer, Keith Douglas 203 Meyer, Kevin David 59 Nancy Louise 247 Michalsen, Solbjorg Michener, Caroljoy 203 Mickelsen, Lynnell Margaret Middleton, James Clarence Miedema, Bonnie Lou 47 Milboume, Thomas Howard 64 Miles, Beverly Jeanne 203 Milham, Glen Edwin Jr. 203 Miller, Anne Lenore 247 Miller, Dianne Patricia 139 Miller, Donna Jane 139 Miller, Elizabeth Anne 59 Miller, Miller, Jan Esther 139 Jane Lois 76,139 Miller, Leslie Lee 203 Miller, Pamela Jo 139 Miller, Paul Gibbs 289 Miller, Stephen Wallace 59 Miller, Milton, William Donald 203 John Wendell 203 Mindeman, Geroge A. 284 Miner, Robert Frederick 64 Miser, William Frederick 59,153 Mitchell, Clayton Lee 251 Mitchell, Grace Mitchell,-Jill Elizabeth Mitroff, Kimberly Sue 64 Mizell, Wilmer David Jr. 139 oberg, Kenneth William 203 oberly, Christopher William ohr, Robin Diane olebatsi, Kaizer Letlhoo Caesar 49 ontgomery, Joanna Rae 203 ontgomery, Laura Marie 139 oon, Mary Welhy 59,536,232 ooney, Mark Douglas oore, Karen Sue 255 oore, Sandra Kay 140 oore, Robin 97 oorhead, David Allen oran, David Chris 140 oran, George Otis 140 oreau, Arthur Scott 204 oreland, Anita Mae organ, Michael Lee 293 organ, Robert John ork, Robert Irwin orris, Charles Howard 59 orris, Virginia Claire 140 osier, Lise Mary 22,204 oskeland, Linda Alice 262 oskeland, Lorraine Doris 140 oss, Roger Jr. 204 ostrando, John A. 204 ould, Richard William oulton, Susan J. 204 ' oylan, Constance Jo 59 rakovich, Peter Michael 204 ueller, Rodney Alan 266 Sally Kay 255 I uhitch, Ronald Emmett 262 I ull, Peter Carson 140 I ullin, Daniel Richard 204 umrne, Martha Jean 47 unniksma, Charlyn Susan 140 Munyi, Samuel Wahome 49 Murage, John Murakaru Murakami, Kerry Anne 204 Murphy, Kevin Mark 204 Musick, Daniel Duane 46 Musser, John Mc Cue 204 Muys, Randall William Mwangi, D. N. 49 Myers, Beth Ann Myhren, Linda Joy 59 Myhren, Patricia Ann 140 Nagel, Barry Thomas Nagel, Shelly R. 204 Nash, Katherine J. 266 Ndung'u, David Nwangi Neely, Susan Elizabeth 204 Nelsen, Stephen Lyle 272 Nelson, Beth Ann 310 Nelson, Bradley Allan Nelson, Constance M. 804 Nelson, Kimberly Ellen 59 Nelson, Linda Suzanne 204 Nicholas, James Robert 204 Nicholas, Thomas Everett 59 Nichols, Joan Eileen 59 ' ' Nicholson, Joy Anne 59 Nicodem, James Leonard 140 J Nicolai, Susan Ann 204 I Nicolette, Paul Richard Nida, Robert Eugene 204 Nielsen, Susan Rae 204 Nielson, Niel 295 Nobel, Roy William 204 Nola, Mike Frank Norbeck, Mary Parke 204 Norbeck, Nancy Lynn 204 Norris, Robert Wells 204 Nowack, Mary Robin 204 Nowlin, Martha Alice 204 Nutter, Stephen Charles 59 r Nylander, Charles Gary - Nyman, Melodie Carolynn 59 Nyquist, Pamela Sue 140 Nyquist, Rebecca Elizabeth 204 Nyquist, Scott Richard 258 Oates, Marvilyn Elizabeth 293' O'Brien, Terrance Edward 49 Ockenhouse, Christian 255 O'Connell, Ruth Ann 204 A Odell, David Kennedy 59 O'Donnell, Martin Monroe f Oeffling, Diane Carol M Oerth, Donna Lee 310 O'Gieblyn, John Allen.251 W Ohrman, Kristine Louise 204 Ojeda, Manuel Richard 5251 , Oldham, Martha Faith 59 Oldham, Mary Elizabeth 204 O'Leary, Dennis Lee 47 -Q Olford, David Lindsay 140 Index Parker, Lanette C. 59 0 Parker, Matthew Pass, Barbara Jean 96,205 Patiemo, Michael L. Patten, Pamela Jean L Patterson, Deborah Lynn 60 Patterson, Elizabeth 251 Patterson, Robert .William 49 Paul, Dorothy Church 205 Pauley, Katherine Wilda 205 Paulus, Susan Louise 60 Pav, Melanie Jean 266 Pavelko, Joyce Ellen 140 Paver, Richard Louis II Payne, Tony Louis 60 Pearson, Carol Lynn 140 Pearson, Letitia Joy 262 Pearson, Phillip Raymond Pearson, Richard Townsend 205 Peck, Gwendolyn Elaine 307 Peck, Jonathan Mark 252 Penne, Mary Katherine 60 Penner, Linda Marie 205 Penner, Susan Ruth 140 Q, Penney, Douglas Leonard 140 Pennington, Daniel Wayne W Punches, Deborah Kay 141 Purcell, Linda 290 Quanstrom, Linda Sue 549 Quetel, Louis Joseph 252 Quiring, Robert Allan 141 Raffensperger, Carolyn 9307 Raffensperger, Jean Ann 141 Raines, James Curtis 3 Rains, Kathy Gale 141 Rallens, Luanne Kay 141 Rallens, Sandra Sue 205 Ralston, Pamela Sue 60 Ramsey, Laurie Robin 141 Ramslandj Scott Kenneth 141 Raney, David Craig Rankin, James Warren 205 Raschke, Susan Ellen 205 I Rasmussen, Roy Martin 141 Rathbun, BrianeRJobert 141 Ratichek, Sara Jeanne 47 Raws, Cheryl Luann 205 Raws, Karen Ruth 60 Ray, Steven Elliott 205 Read, Helen Cary 205 - Reasoner, Jonathan David Redd, Carey Edmunds 205 Perciante, Christopher Mark '140 Perkins, Lisa Denise 141 Perkins, Terri Lynn 289 ,f Petersen, James'Randall 7 Petersen, Paul Martin 1 Peterson, Alan Douglas 255 Rees, Elizabeth Mae 205 Reese, Dennis Floyd 206 Reese, Richard Roy Jr. 60 Reifsnyder, Daniel Lee 141 Reimel, Deborah Helen 141 Reimer, Heather Yvonne 87 Peterson, Bruce Calvin 141 Petter, John Charles 141 Phelan, Laurie Ellen 60 Phillips, Charles Doyle Phillips, Dale W'esley,272' fr Phillips, Kevin Hobart Reimers, John Darrin 304 Reisler, Michael James 141 ReitsmafDouglas C. 293 Remington, Cynthia Ann 206 Rennard, Thomas Gordon Reno, John Louis 141 I Olsen Olsen Kenneth Paul 140 , Torrey Byron Olson, Barbara Ann 204 Olson, Judd Leslie 204 M , Olson, Kathryn Sue 276 Olson Kurt Allan Olson, Linda Ruth '140 Olson, Richard Wayne Olson Ronald David Olson, Pierce, Daniel Lewis 2,85 ' Pierce, Wayne Lseslie 205 . Pinches, Charles Robert 205 Pine, Carol Arlene it Pinson, Carol Joyce 258 Ploetz, Barbara Marie 205 . Plumstead, Judith Mae 60 . Pobo, Kenneth Georgei Pokornik, John Franklin 205 -- Polino, Jill Marie 141-A Polizotto, Shawn Beth 205 Rensch, Robert 'Edison 141 Rensink, Linda2Kay W Reutzel, George 46 Rexroth, Paul Herman 60 Reynolds, Dennis Paul 142 Rhode, Jean Marie 60 Rhodes, Cynthia Sue 60 Rhodes, Peter Marion Rice, Kimberly Gay 142 Rice, Mavis Louise 142 Rice, Ronald Curt 46 Nelson Mark T. 64 Nelson Martha 255 Nelson Nancy Lynn 204 Nelson Paul Jeffrey 140 Nelson, Raymond Robert 59 Nelson, Rebecca Ann 204 Nelson, Stephen Grant 204 Nelson, Terrill Rudell 47 Nervik, Dean C. 59 Nestor, Charles Bernard Netherton, Roger Dean 251 Neumann, Janice Ellen 247 Newbrander, Timothy Gaius 204 Newman, Edward Arthur 262 Ng, Chak Ngeng 187,307 O'Neil, Jerry Raymond 180,181 Oravetz, Helen Ann 810 Orcutt, Steven Glenn 205 Ortberg, Barbara Lynn 140 Ortberg, John Carl Jr. 59 Orth, David Allen 295 Ortiz, Manuel Oviatt, Gary Ellwood 255 i Owen, Larry Donavon Owen, Sharon Carol 140 Owens, Kathryn Ann 66,251 Pace, Jane 46 Pace, Steve 46 Packman, Janet Louise 140 Painter, Juli Ann 205 Painter, Martin Scott Paist, William Morgan 205 Palacas, Helen Estelle 59 Palmberg, Barbara Lynn 205 Palmer, James David 284 Pantle, Susan Denise 140 Pardun, Barbara Jean 59 Pardun, Gary Dean Parisek, Bonnie Jeanne 59 Parke, Karyl Mary 267 Parke, Susan 59 Pqlley, Linda Lee 47 Pollock, John Harris 3 Pool, Kent Alan 46 Popp, Normane40,205, . Popp, Richard Frederick Porter, Douglas Chalmers 205 Porter, William Calvin 64 Portis, Daniel 205 Posegate, Stephen C. 267 L Postlewaite, James Macklin 3 Rice, Vivian Ann 142 Richard, Cherylyn Joy 206 Richard, Frank Earl 60 Richardson, Gary Franklin 49 I Richardson, Richard Duane 259,334 Richardson, William James 304 Richter, ,Caroli'Jean W Richter, Stephen William 187 Ridder, David Alan 142 Riegel, Richards David 60 Potratz, Elizabeth Rose . Potratz, Philip ,Karl 141 , Powers, Kathleen Helen Prasch, Bonnie Sue 205 Pratt, Cynthia Gail 205 fi Prester, Judith Elaine Price . Price, Price . Price Brenda 279 y John Howard IIC 47 ' Pamela Beryl 141 Torrey Lee 60 is V, Rieseck, Marla Kay 206 Rietveld, David,Claude 206 Rilling, Mark Alan 142 Rinkema, Lynn Ellen 206 Riskedahl, Joan' Elaine 206 Risley, Karyn Dianne 142 Rist, Jerolyn Dee 304 Ristau, Roger Alan 206 Ritchie, Sara 60 Rives, David Brian 206 Priebe, WilliamlL. 267 Proctor, Sharon Darlene 60 Pruett, Bonnie Jo 76,205 , Pryce, Nancy Elizabeth 304 Pullen, Gordon ,L. 255, X Index Roach, Matthew Lyn Roames, Richard Lynn Roath, Andrear1Lee 60 Robb, Peter Louis 142 Roberts,,James Alan 47 323 Roberts, Margaret Sharon Robertson, Katherine Anne 142 Robertson, Merry Kimberly 60 Robins, Luke Palmer 60 Robinson, Beth Ann 290 Robinson, Gary Allen 47 Robinson, Kathy Ann 206 Robinson, Mark Conon Rodgers, Carol Miriam 307 Roeschley, Dale Alan Rogers, Jack Jeffrey 206 Rogers. Julie Louise 142 Rogers, Suzanne Marie 206 Rohman, Khondker Mostafizor Rollwitz, John Lewis 142 Rominski, Susan Marie 60 Rommel, Duane Arthur 259 Roney, Celeste Elizabeth 142 Roney, Roberta Jean 49 Roodvoets, Deborah Lynn 206 Root, Allen John 64 Rosenau, Ardeth 307 Roskam. James Allen 267 Ross, A. Larry 155,255 Ross, Stephen James 60 Rosser, Stephen P. 256 Rothhaar, Sharon Colleen 142 Rountrey, William Coates Jr. 252 Rowan, Dana Edward 64 Rowe, Julie Kaye 60 Rowell, Gayle Leanne 142 Rowell, Linda Karen 142 Rudesill, Joanne Carol 206 Rudy, Debra Lynn 142 Rushton, Margaret Ann 206 Rutherford, Karen Jane 262 Rutt, Amy Elizabeth 60 Ryan, Deborah Anne 142 Ryd, Linda Suzanne 142 Ryser, John Paul 142 Safstrom, Donna Lee 307 Salovich, Catherine Ann 60 Salvatori, Gail Y. 267 Schloss, Robert Keith 142 Schmid, George Frank Schmidt, Cynthia Lee 290 Schmidt, Daniel Howard 61 Schmidt, John David 49 Schmidt, Thomas Ewald Schmitz, Keith Edward 299 Schmuck, Debra Ann 206 Schmuck, Diana Lynn 206 Schneider, Jeffrey Daniel 142 Schoff, John Leslie 206 Schofield, Susan Nadine 267 Schommer, Randall Paul 256 Schroeder, Kathy Irma Schuster, Barbara Julia 142 Schut, Bruce Leland 61 Schut, Daryl Douglas 206 Schwab, Linda Kay 142 Schwarz, Cynthia Weber 142 Scott, Andy Lamarr 61 Scott, Daniel Frederick 252 Scott, Laurelee Faythe Scott, Lauren Carol 290 Scott, Lois Esther 206 Sears Marylynn 206 Secor, Deborah Ann 61 Sedio, Sedjo, Laurie Aileen Glenn Paul 206 Salzman, Timothy Owen Sams, Earl Jeffrey 272 Samuels, Marshelle Renee 60 Samuelson, Donald G. Sandberg, Rebecca Anne Sandberg, Susan Ruth 142 Sandin, Helen Sandin, Robin Dawn 142 Sandquist, Mark A. 295 Sands, Sheryl Janeen 307 Sartell, Jonathan Floyd 142 Saunders, James William 61 Savage. Sawyer Sawyer, Sawyer, Jonathan Dale 272 David Marshall David William142 James Robert 272 Sawyer, Karen Diane 61 Sawyer, Katherine Marie 61 Sawyer, Philip Nathaniel 142 3 Sawyer, Saxton Susan Joy 206 Robert James Jr. 142 Saylor,, Gary Bright Sedlook, Bonnie Mae 262 Seed, Harris Waller III 61 Seefeldt, Dale Ralph Seeland, Carol Seites, Mark Alan 262 V Seitz, William Frederick Jr. 142 Sell, Laura Lee 206 Senn, Marla May 64 Senter, Ruth Sents, Eleanor Ann 142 Sergey. Ruth Grace 61 Servis, Mark Edward 61 Seume, Jeffrey Jack 272 Seymour, Janet Martha 61 Shackelford, Susan Lynn 206 Shackley, Lawrence Craig 206,334 Shadid, Hythem Peter Shaffer, Marilyn Ruth 280 Sharber, Richard Cline 206 Shaw, Jonathan Eberhardt 142 Sheared, Vanessa Sheffer, Joan Christie 304 Shenk, Richard Allan 142 Sherman, Linda Susan 61 Sherrod, Spring R. Shewbridge, Alfred Norman Jr. Shirk, Norman Elwood Jr. 142 Shoberg, Susan Lynn 61 Showalter, Linda Kay 267 Shuler, Gail Karen 256 Shuster, Carolyn Jean 142 Shutt, Craig Alan Siclari, Christine Valerie Siebert, Jeanne Margaret 143 Siebert, John Weston 206 Siemens, David Robert 206 Siemens, Patience Agatha 61 Index Skeels, Susan Marie 143 Slater, Kenneth Mark Slayton, Paul Leonard 143 Sligh, D. Annette Slinger, Bobby Joe 262 Slivka, Sharon Sigrid 206 Smartt, Daniel Arnold 143 Smietanski, Edward Elmer Smillie, Barbara Ann 293 Smith, Bonnie 206 Smith, Brad Leslie Smith, Daniel Lewis Smith, Deborah Ann 304 Smith, Debra Lorraine 61 Smith Edward Alexander Smith, James 206 Smith, Jeffrey Willis 206 Smith J errill Lynn 268 Smith Joel Allyn 143,187 Smith Julie Ann Smith Mark Stephen 143 Smith Margaret 290 Smith Noelle Kaye sminfeaul Alan 256 Smith, Scott Gordon 206 Smith, Sheri Lois 61 Smith, Stephen Robert 143 Smith, Steven Scott 143 Smith, Stuart Michael Smith, Susan Joy 276 Smith, Thomas Gordon 207 Smoker, Linda Marie 61 Smoker, Stephen Mark 207 Smoot, Jonathan Frederick 207 Snouffer, Chet Alan 61 Snyder, John Davis 91,143 Snyder, Luana Sue 276 So, Shirley Kwai-Chin Soderman, David John Saylor, Mary ,Lita Scalberg, Daniel Allen 46 Schafer, Mark Nichols 272 Schairer, David Stephen 142 Schellenberg, Sandra Lee Schibli, Hermann Sadun Schiesswohl, Patti Marie Schilling, Debra Lynn 61 Schleevoigt, Shirley Elizabeth 142 324 Siemens, Susan Louise 206 Sigsbury, John Robert 256 Siml, Timothy Miles Simonsen, Edward Allen 206 Simpson, Ellen Hall 49 Simpson, Janice Eileen 61,153 Simpson, Wendy Skarin, James Gilbert 61 Skarin, Martha Jane 206 Somers, Gary Mark Sommerville, George Thomas 49 Soneson, Stephen Bradley 143 Sorensen, Debra Lynn 143 Southard, Mark Scott 143 Spaulding, Laurie Speck, Dexter Franklin 256 Spencer, John Stuart Spielman, James Howard 143 Springer, Richard Joel 143 Springer, Theresa Annette 61 Spruance, Mark Andrew 61 Stafford, Wesley Kenneth 49 Stahl, Mary Lynn 61 Stahler, Karen Sue 61 Stam, John Campbell 207 Stam, William Whitten 61 St. Amand, Kathi Lee 61 Starenko, Stephen Ronald Starzer, Stephen William 66,207 Stavness, Barron Van 207 Stedelbauer, Julie Lynn 61 Stedfeld, Eric Lawrence Steele, Gregory Hammond 207 Steele, Jenifer Lynne 280 Steely, Stanley Randel 64 Steen, Flora Ann 207 Stein, John Gardner 61 Steinhauser, Cheryl L. 299 Stenolen, Sheryl 207 Sterling, David Alan Stevens, Mark Story 143 Stevens, Sandra June 263 Stevenson, Laurel Jean Stewart, Mark Alan 61 Index Stickney, Elaine Lelia 143 Stiffler, Gregory Alan Stiffler, Lori Diane Stiles, Miriam 61 Stipanuk, Lynn Elaine 61 Stob, Vivian Lee Stoddard, Virginia Alice 143 Stoker, Timothy Dee 61 Stoll, William Nathan 61 Stoller, Rick Wayne 64 Storck, Mary Susan 207 Stough, William Paul 61 Stracco, Michael G. 290 Strachan, Deborah Jean 277 Strate, Gordon Joseph Stratmann, Rebecca Lynn Strom, Eric A. Strom, Jane Elizabeth 277 Stromberg, Sandra Anne 61 Stroud, Steven William 207 Stuart, Frances Karen 291 Stuckey, Brian Edward 47 Stuckey, William Francis Jr. 207 Stucky, Judith Beatrice Stumme, Linda Susan 61 Stutzman, Nancy Ellen 143 Stvrtecky, Jeffrey Anton Suber, Sandra R. Sudak, Janet Lee 62 Sudak, Jeanne Marie Sudlow, Bettye Joan 143 Sudlow, James Thomas 272 Sugarbaker, Stephen Phillip 143 Sulc, Anita Gail 143 Sulik, Keith Thomas 143 Sullivan, Anne Elizabeth Sullivan, Robert Francis Sumida, David Shuji 143 Summer, Thomas Lee 62 Summerfield, Donna K. 295 Summers, Barbara Anne 46 Sundberg, Paul Arthur 64 Sunden, Lawrence David 207 Sundquist, Dawn Marie 143 Super, Daniel 285 Sutton, David Blair 207 Swan, Julie Swanlund, Sheryl Lee 143 Swanquist, Barry Wal 143 Swanquist, Breck M. 272 Swanson, Kathryn Joy 207 Swanson, Marie Ann 143 Swartz, Diane Kay 143 Swartz, William Price Sweetser, Richard P. Jr. 310 Sweitzer, Eric Kenyon 87,252 Sweitzer, Jeffrey Louis 143 Sweney, Bambi Lynn 207 Swenson, Mark Steven 207 Swider, Michael Ochsner Syverson, Cheryl Anne 77,207 Szucs, Richard Alexander 143 Taetzsch, Michael Allen 207 Takushi, Steven Jay 143 Taliaferro, Marie Barclay Talley, John Sessions 304 Tan, Gracia Hee Yin 49 Tanis, Barry Everet 62 Tate, Colleen Louise Tatter, Karen Jean 143 Tavani, Stephen D. 214,214,310 Taylor, Molly Ellen 291 Taylor, Rhena Edith Taylor, Teresa Gail ylor, Thomas Robert asdale, Margaret. Mae 143 ltbrd, Brenda Jean 62 nsen, Bonnie Lynn 143 shome, Mesrak Adnew 304 ielen, Kathryn Ida 49 ielman, Samuel Barnett iessen, Velma Jean 64 Van Hoose, Nadja Camille 62 Vanoy, Melodye Ann Van Treuren, Ronald R. 304 Van Treuren, Amy Lynn 277 Van Valkenburg, Jill Ann 304, Van Wagoner, Elsie Louise 49 Van Wingerden, Scott 256 Van Yperen, James Index Weatherly, James Clay 144 Weaver , Deborah Lynn 256 Weaver, Denise Annette 62 1 Weaver , Kirk Bradley Weaver, Mark Edward 208 Webb, Marjorie 'Marlene 208 Webber, Dawn . Webber, Dorothea Faith 208 omas, Janice Eileen 207 omas, Jeannette Diane 62 ompson, Dale Allan I ompson, Helen M. 62 hompson, James Edward 310 hompson, Jeffrey Paul hompson, Lawrence D. 259 hompson, Mark Jonathan 64 hompson, Nancy Sue 272 hornpson, Richard Gentry 46 hompson, Ruth Alice hompson, Stanley Warren hompson, Victor Arthur hornburg, Jane Ellen 62 'hornton, Michael William 143 'hulson, Peter Alan hwing, Jill 'hyberg, Chris Alan 143 iernon, Theodore Carlos 187,207 illey, Elizabeth Ann illey, Telva Margaret 207 illman, Kurt Douglas 144 'jaden, Scott Kenneth 62 1 odd, Cheryl Lynn 144 odd, Christopher Howard 207 om, Peter Jan omchik, Mark Alfred 207 Varner, Joy Denise 62 Varwig, John Louis Veerman, Paul Eivind Vergara, Robert A. II Ver Lee, Alice Jane 291- Ver Lee, Donald John 144 Victorsen, Reid Alan 62 Vidger, Donald Leonard 144 Vincent, Paula Ann 207 Vincent, Wesley L. 252 . Vliet, Daniel George 285 Vock, Kimberly Ann Von Bergen, Donald Vonderhorst, Tamara Lynn Vos, Marcia Renee 144 Vossbruch, Laura Ellen 62 Vossler, Gordon Scott 144 Voth, Randi Kathleen 144 Vu, Anh Thi Ngoc Wade, Elizabeth Madelene 207 Wade, Sara Elizabeth 252 Wagenaar, Robert Boyd 144 Wager, David Allen 144 r Wager, Richard Paul 310 Wagle, Pamela Louise 247 Wagner, Daniel Harold Wagner, Joan Elaine Webber, Sharon Linnea 144 Weber, Ruth Anna 144 Webster, Daniel Lee 285 Webster, Thomas Hallowell 46 Webster, Virginia Ann 277 r Weeber, John Allen Weedman, Terri Lynne 208 Weeks, Laurance Allen 273' Weidman, David John Weitzel, Cynthia Tracy 62 Welander, Peter John 174,273 Weller, Christine Anne 62 Welsh, Betty Lillian 62,97 Wenger, Jay David 208 Wenig, Daniel Lee Wenninger, Carol Jean Wentz, Clarence Eddie Werdebaugh, Scott Michael 47 Werner, Karen E. 263 West, Michael Garrett West, Nancy Karen -Y Westerhoven, Janet Sue 208 Westing, Deborah Sue 277 Westing, Thomas Dean 144 Weston, Ansel 208 Wharton, Lisai'Marie 144 Wheeler, Daniel F. 62 oms, Leslie Ann 263 oms, Russell David 144 orjesen, John 273 owne, Anna May ownsend, James Frank 291 ownsend, Walter Arthur reanor, David Scott 256 Trotter, Carla Jean 280 Troxel, Steven Richard 49 Truesdale, Ronald Gene 62 Tsoufiou, Arlene Louise Turek, Judith 273 Turnidge, Eileen Ann Turnipseed, Terri Lee 83,307 Turnquist, Edith Irene Turnquist, Ruth Ellen Tuttle, Mark Hawkins Tweddell, Dorothy Margaret Tweh, Steve Roosevelt 49 Twigg, Deborah Lynne Ude, Diane Alicia 207 Udes, Frances Lynne 277 Udstuen, Kelly Elizebeth 62 Uler, Robin June 207 Underwood. P. Timothy 307 Underwood, Wesley K. 62 Unruh, Robert Dale 62,91 Vajko, Dale Howard 64 Valley, Robert George Valpey, Richard Sanborn III 144 Vander Hooning, Robert G. 62 Vandermolen, Deborah 291 Van Der Molen, Timothy Leigh 273 Vanderploeg, Karen 289 Vander Veen, Kenneth M. Van Eerden, Lambert Theodore Il Van Engen, Elizabeth Ann 207 Van Etten, Laura E. 293 Wagner Wagner Larry Richard 144' Michele Marie Wagner, Richard Blair 252 Wagner, Sheryl Dianne 62 Wahlgren, Craig Eric 268 Wahlstrom, Audrey Marilyn 144 Wainaina, Stephen Mungai 144 Walberg, Paul Alan Walker, Carol Bernice Walker, Douglas C. 49 Walker, Johnny Lee Walker, Nancy Lynn 62 Walker, Walker, Walker, Wallem, Pamela Jo 207 Randall Day 299 , Steven Alan 207 P Daniel Bryce 62 Walliser, Clark William 207 Walstrum, Steven Andrew Walter, Sheryl Stephanie Walters, Grace 49 Walton, James David 263 Warburton, David Bruce A Ward, Bonnie Jean 86,207 Ward, Diane 207 Ward, Patrick John 87,207 Ward, Herbert 295 Ward, Timothy Jack Wardle, Christie Alderson 144 Ware, Thornton Kirk 291 Warkentin, Susan Marie 626 Warren, Dora Lynn 256 Warren, Warren, Janet Ruth 263 Jonathan Charles 207 Waterman, Douglas F. Waterman, Gilbert K. 299 Watkins, Daniel Keith 277 Watkins, David Harold Watt, David Howard 259,334 Watts, Nancy 252 Wheeler, Holly Lynn, Wheeler, Larry Howard 259 White, Linda Lou 291 White, Paul Eugene 63 White, Stephen Victor 47 White, Steven Mark White, White, Victoria Muriel ' Wesley Warren Whited, Richard Gerald Whiten er, James David Jr. 208 Whitman, Jon Stephen 175 Whitmer, Gerald Eugene 46 Whitnah, James Tyndale 273 Wiarda,-Timothy James 46 Wichern, Mark Edward 144 Widenor, Robert Stuart Jr. Wik, P hilip Grandville Wilbur, Nicolyn Sue 63 Wilcox,.David,Kean 273 . Wilcox, Thomas Allen Wilkerson, Donald Joseph 208 Wilkerson, Douglas- Keith Wilkerson, Fort Bryan 144 Wilkes, James Thomas IV 64 Wilkinson, Nancy Ellen 263 Williams, Gordon Lee 144 Williams, Jonathan,,Douglas Williams, Lisa Wood Williams, Mary Elizabeth 63 Williams, Neal Owen 155,285 Willis, Paul Jonathan 208 Willis, .Peter Lovell 208 Willson, Judith Lynn 299 ' Willson, Kathleen Ann 73,208 Wilson, Wilson, Carol Jeanne 263 Martin Jolm 281 Wilson, Michael Neal 47 Wilson, Sharon Ruth 63 Winche Index ll, Martha Nancy 208 Winkleman, Diane Amelia 63 Winn, Gregory Mark 144 Winter, Linda Ruth,63 Winthers, David John 208 Wittekind, Barbara S. 256 Wittig. Sandra Margaret 144 Wittman, Thomas Edward 63 Wolf, Kenneth Earl 208 Wolf, Shelly Switzer 208 Wolfe, Jolene Gail 63 Wolter,aCharles Arthur Wong, Elite Wonnell, Debbie 63 Wood, Jeffreys Herbert Wood, Jeffrey Scott 144 Wood, Rebecca Marie 144 Wood, Steven Gerard Woodcock, Susan Miriam 208 Woods, Jeffrey Wendell 208 Woodside, Janelle Ruth 63 Woodward, Cheryl Anne 144 Woodyard, Robert Todd 144 Wooten, Catherine Helen 66,263, 1 232,233 - Worcester, Gretchen 304 Worman, Patti Lynne 144 Wright, David Carroll 263 Wright, Harry Christopher 63 Wright, Juanita Sue Wright, Lois Elaine 63 Wright, Mark Edwin Wright, Thomas Clark 208 Wroblewski, Linda Louise 63 Wroughton, James Francis 252 Wroughton, John Richard Wynstra, Margaret Louise 63 Yadon, Mary Margaret 208 Yates, John Leonard Jr. Yee, Wilson Yeo, Douglas Edward 269 Yeo, Patricia Jean 144 Yergler, Jon Carl 285 Yeskoo, David Raymond Yin, Abby Wen-Lee 63 York, Colon Randolph 152,208 Yost, Susan Jean 208 Youell, Mary Louise 63 Yung, Jeremy Wai-Mi 49 Yungton, Jane Carol 144 tZavala, Rebecca Anne 269 Zelek, Karen Lee 63 Zeller, Jeanne Marie 63 Zeltwanger, Margo Jean 307 Zeng, Robert Jon Zerbe, David Allen 63 4 Ziah, Suellen 63 Zibell, Karen Lynn 252 Ziegler, Randall Sterling Ziemer, Jill Elizabeth 63 Zierk, Natalie Jeanne 144 Zieske, Martha Jane Zimmerman, Laura L. 208 Zimmermann, Joanne Carol 144 Zinke, Gilbert Timothy 63 Zitzman, James Albert Jr. 208 Zohner, Jeffrey Robert. 208 Zuber, Peter Alan 144 Zuk, Anna 144 7 Zuk, Olga Zvara, David Mark 273 Zwicker, Michelle Christine 63 H Cod is faithful, by whom ye were culled unto the fellowship of his Son, Iesus Christ, our Lord. I1 coR1N. 1:91 I '1' or 1'11'1171ni 1'lT'I New International Headquarters, Nyack, New York THE OFFICERS AND THE INTERNATIONAL HEADQUARTERS OF THE CHRISTIAN AND MISSIONARY ALLIANCE Nyack, New York 10960 WRITE FOR INFORMATION ABOUT CHRISTIAN SERVICE OPPORTUNITIES The WHEATON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION CAMPUS ACTIVITIES OUR NEWEST MEMBERS it ALUMNI SERVICES .2 -kMonth1y Alumni Magazine irLocal Area Alumni Clubs 'kPlacement Bureau 'kComplete Alumni Directory 1kAnnual Wheaton Events Calendar 'kCampus Staff, Reception Office 326 6' PLURIBUS UWM, I, A '. , 55 12, I at f 1 x . I r-2, I f ipflg - '-E 1' ,'f ' It X 4 'r f 'l'g.N I I ffl' x at Homecoming ffallj-lr Founders Day fwinterj-A' Alumni Day Cspringli' ALUMNI FUND Faculty Salary Grantsir Faculty Research Grants-A' Student Scholarships-A' is l WHEATON CCLLEGE BCJOKSTOFIE Congratulations . Senior Class! vvl-lEAToN BIBLE CHURCH l lVlain at Franklin Wheaton, Illinois Dr. Christopher A. Lyons, Pastor Sunday Services 9'30 81 11:00 am 7:00 pm We welcom y t worship with us and ma e our c r ome. We have a k h h y h special c ll g g f ll ship that you ll enjoy Best Wishes Bicentennial raduates your yearbook photographer 1 Uflkvffyzffdr ,- Zn 312-78122-162 Cinica-:iv Since 1860 FQr Chrlsf and His Kingd6m - .f . ,, -,- -P 'wl-:EATON ',-'j-1 1 COLLEGE. ' -- :' WHEATON, n.uN0ns smav 2 Write Director of Admissions, - 'T.,T Dept, B 1 - , - .- . p ,, -, 4 ., - .. - - Y ' - ,., .. .- --Y .1 A 'Tw' JA . ,,1..-...-,.,.- -- ,,,,,. ..--- .u1 .in....3...., 1 . ..- - , ,av pw ,- P-v-' ,-,,,u,,.,,,...,..nn:-1 .w.... 4. --. .elm ...1-4' ,,. . ..-.- 4 19 4'-i :nuns it - Z..-4-Y.... qw, .., V, . ...., -a-W 'f ,IQ ,. qu- - -ee' -- -3. , --.111-L 11 .-,1'. 11 - .,- 1' 1 -. 1, ?. 0? .3.,,v..,, YV ,,n. : .r .im h , - , 14-a 1 .L -M., 'I I 7lf:,-' 1 'A J-. M' . ' - 19, M ' 1' 51, -1, 1J..-., . ,T qu ...,,, 1 - '-wifi. w1r,5W ing, f ,,,,Ll. , ' '11 ..4 , wr '-f ,:'P!1'wu.e-.,.-, , Tw-.15 . A, A , A,,f . , . nfs' ..,-.ffm , 'Q 151 ' 1 ,, V 1 . ,r ' ' j' 1 , ,V .J wr-'Y1 d' 111 1 , 1 , ,. 1.-'-af, '. . ' -my , A-W A , , 111 5 ', Wx 4, L 1 1 . V A 1 -,J1 . N 4.4 , 7 W' -GU., 151141, ',1g.h,:, - W I 1 f111'3-1--- ' f ,l 11' 1 ' 1ACAZ . 1' 1 1 V' 1 -1 ' 1 I . , 4 -1 1 2' 'Q , ' X S - ,'., 1 1 ' Q -I 1. 1 2 15. 'V 1 5 I ag.-: 5 .. ,f1 X I . 5 1 4r 11 11 .1 5 Q Q .Ju '. : 111 I 3 , , 1 44 H IL! 1 . 1 . , lf, 5 1 U P '- , - W , .. 1' 1 ' - ,U Y ' , A 1 . 1 Q. A 4' I 1 f., s ' 1 31 r 7 0. ' ' ' R L 'A - 1' Wi' ' s.,, U Q D g ' Q , . , Q. l 1 V.. .N ' . . . Y 1 . ,H ,I 1 , I , . ' 2 n 4 1 warmly V 33 ff 5, 5l,g,: EEE ICQ Ll HP 7 K mm HE DEI: J' ,Hz ,I - , .1-Q J 'QQ , HE snuff Bill Seitz Bob Saxton THE DELI WAS THE LARGEST STUDENT OWNED AND OPERATED ENTERPRISE AT WHEATON COLLEGE IN 1974-75 AND 1975-76. THE DELI ALSO SPONSORED THE INTRAMURAL BASKETBALL CHAMPIONS. .,h,3,7 . - El ' MED, .3 77 THE FOUR O'CLOCK SUPPER CLUB 1972-1976 By this they shall know you are my disciples. That you have love for one another. -jesus Christ MEMBERS ABOVE Ed Papa Newman Beth Stepmom Carrell Uncle Craig Schutt Brad Uncle Albert Condie NOT PICTURED jim Borgstrom john Eisenbiaun Patti McOwen Laura Mommy VanEtten Phil Beckman Bill Hafer C. J. Mihener Mark Thompson Charlie Reitsma Chuck Wolter Nancy Wolter Buffy Wade Sue Molton Alison Gabriel Sue Sandburg Chip Nylander Dawn Walvoord Tim Walvoord Uncle john Hyslop Malcolm McGregor Tim Bartel Phil Wik Debbie Baddorf A NATURAL ARISTOCRACY A true aristocracy is formed out of a class of legitimate presumptions, which, taken as generalities, must be admitted for actual truths. ls he bred in a place of estima- tion, to stand upon such elevated ground as to be enabled to take a large view of the wide-spread and infinitely diversified combinations of men and affairs in a large society, to have leisure to read, to reflect, to converse, these are the cir- cumstances ofmen that form what I should call a natural aristocracy, without which there is no nation. -Edmund Burke Let no man deceive himself. Ifany one among you seems wise in the world, let him become a fool, that he may be wise. I Cor. 3:18 iUfiZ? f41?lkIl'QZ2ELS1EI2IZZ? CDIWIUIZZZCIQEY iUI2f1IPJlPJC? C?CDl2IY?1'IllIIIIII, March 19, 1975 Colonel Charles R, Wallis Department of Military Science Wheaton College E-Iheaton, Illinois 60187 Dear Colonel Wallis: I had the opportunity recently to read your letter addressed to the Wheaton College ROTC Alumnus. Although I was not a student in the ROTC program at your college, I felt obligated as a Christian Enlisted member of the United States Army to write you this letter to voice my opinions on the great nec- essity of Christian officers in the Armed-Forces. I presently have one Christian officer in my unit, and I feel that he has been a great deal of help to me and several other men in my unit, ndtonly as an officer, but as a Christian officer, who is willing and well versed in the Christian teachings, thus enabling him to give good souni advice for some of the many problems that seem to confront the Christian members of this unit as well as the other men. I feel that the need and opportunities for witnessing in the Armed Forces is one of great priority, and I see no other way to accomplish this priority unless more Christian officers as well as Christian enlisted members join the service. I sincerely encourage those students who are now in question about continuing in the ROTC program to take a serious look at what can be accomplished for the Lord if they decide to become an officer. I feel I can speak for several Christians on this post by saying that their decision to continue in the ROTC program would be greatly appreciated. It is indeed a great challenge to become an officer, but I feel that it is a challenge that a Christian would be glad to accept. Sincerely yours in Christ, . RI' s PFC,FA US ARMY x0N Co .Y Q, ,fLlNON5 THE BILLY GR HA CE TER under development at Wheaton College The B1lly Graham Center will cooperate with and serve evangelical Chrlstians in ad vancmg world evangellzation through 7 Sp8C1f1C programs The archives of Billy Graham and his evangehcal assoc1at1on The museum display A definitive hbrary on evangellsm and mrssions The Wheaton College Graduate School of Bible Communicatrons and mis sions The Institute of Evangellsm contlnuing education for Third World Christian Leaders Laymen s Bible Training Programs Conference Mmistries The Billy Graham Center IS deslgned to reflect and extend the evangelistic mlnlstry Thousands of Chrzstzan leaders throughout the world are burdened wtth a sense of urg enq about world evangelism Thev sense that now as neuer before we must u ork to spread the Fospel throughout the world Thw Center ts born of that urgen cy I pray that the Center wzll be used of God to prepare dynamic Bzblzcal euangelzstzc leadership combmed wtth louzng lzumanztarzan concern to meet the tremendous challenges of the years ahead I am askmg my frzends' and supporters eoerguhcre to help make this outreach possible Billy Graham and passion of Billy Graham worldwide through research and training for evangelism. l l William L. Heck III Larwence C. Shackley David H. Watt R. Duane Richardson Perry T. Mastodon Norman D. Kane FRIE D OFTI-IE MASTODO SOCIETY INC Celebrating 10,000 years of service to the Wheaton community. Bringing you the true story of the Perry Mastodon. Cesspools Excavated Tusks Sharpened Litter Boxes Cleaned PRE Glves the six distinctive features and the Christian education philosophy behind Scrip- ture Press' All-Blble Curriculum-plus corre- lated materials for total-hour teaching. ln- cludes the fast-selling Victor Books Electives with Leader's Guides. Whether you now use Scripture Press All- Bible Curriculum or are interested in corre- lated materials for total-hour teaching, you will want your copy of this Prospectus. All-Bible Features Distinctive to Scripture Press Curriculum 1. Scripture 4. Guided Discovery . Learnin 2. Evangelism 5 Leadership I ' D I t SCRIPTURE PRESS 3' Depa. me 'a 6 Ceve fQf e pusLrcA'rl0Ns. rlvc. Gradmg ' Offs a 'on WHEATON ILLINOIS solar Please send my copy of the new Scripture Press Prospectus of the All-Bible Curriculum and the correlated materials lor total-hour teaching. Shlp to: Name' I If '- Address Y im- H ,Y ,WT H'-W-1 -City A' - State ZiP Church 'A Address Postage charged cm catalogs to foreign addresses. f 1 I ,f of X GLEN ELLYN 475 PENNSYLVANIA AVE 858-0555 QCARRY OUT Q O FAST DELIVERY 0 O DINING 0 WE CATER TO HOME, OFFICE AND FACTORY PARTIES AT ANY TIME FOR SPECIAL PRICES ASK FOR MANAGER N 'ff 'f ETF 'Z 'XTYTTW'Wzf3'Q N454 W N- tg -. . Y ' ,A My , K Q 4 , U ,, ' ,A ff xg xp X , X, ,mv ww www. ,,, wzwxg Mp sw- A xv M f . I I X D o , 5- ,L . . ff, Y: , 1,,., 1 ' 1 'QI WikW3f4f Ilii M. 2wQWQ X 'W ' I x - 4 . 'I I N -, Hg N fc , ' ,, H V A' X, 1 fven, Hg w ' wx: H Q, wx ,-M A A ' A- qw-saw ww W M M A- -- Y' -- H I L:-ig: X I , 'Mk if 5-31.9 f' 'Q AWN? ur , li'?Qw 3, ,, Q. l 530 Q ,Vyp sl 4 v-P 'Q uf, -, , . .'.r .1 -A ua, f af :' T Q 1 A 'LW' A 'S ' ? J 'li K, 1 4' Q ' , W , Q.. ' L up ' .' ' :iii , 1,5 V 2 ' .1 .- fm? 1 , -- sn .Aw .-m ' 3 L 1 ,S ig, Lew? 'Y , I-nl -x 'l. f i 'Q A If x L . L ,L . . ' 1 ' 'us M iq, , . 5-T1 Y K ,4...w.,,A-,: ' - nw. Y-Y 2' QP? ,J fa - J., 95.5 . v 9? fi


Suggestions in the Wheaton College - Tower Yearbook (Wheaton, IL) collection:

Wheaton College - Tower Yearbook (Wheaton, IL) online collection, 1958 Edition, Page 1

1958

Wheaton College - Tower Yearbook (Wheaton, IL) online collection, 1959 Edition, Page 1

1959

Wheaton College - Tower Yearbook (Wheaton, IL) online collection, 1960 Edition, Page 1

1960

Wheaton College - Tower Yearbook (Wheaton, IL) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 1

1973

Wheaton College - Tower Yearbook (Wheaton, IL) online collection, 1975 Edition, Page 1

1975

Wheaton College - Tower Yearbook (Wheaton, IL) online collection, 1986 Edition, Page 1

1986


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