1981 Arbutus Yearbook

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00 00 Indiana University Bloomington, Indiana 1980-81 Volume 88


00 ao

ARBUTUS HIGHLIGHTS ar.bu.tus (ar byodtas)n. 1. a trailing plant with clusters of white or pink flowers. 2. the yearbook of Indiana University, named in 1894 for the tiny woodflower indigenous to Bloomington, now on volume 88. Two main feelings have gone, into the production of this book: One of being a creative historian/anthropoligist. The other, of laboring a child for nine months. This book is very personal. And it should be. The staff has put too much of themselves into it for it not be be. Each photographer lets you see the way they see. Each writer interprets the events for you. And the graphics staff frames all this in a style of the time and their tastes. This book should be personal, too, for those people at IU when all this happened. We have worked long and diligently to collect souvenirs and remnants that will spark memories of 1980-'81. Our cover is a reflection of this time. We are seeing a resurgence of past values and ideals in order to model the present. Some criticize saying the past wasn't as idyllic as it is made out to be. Others say that we are finally learning from history's accomplishments and mistakes. On the cover we are greeted by "the grand old man of IU," Chancellor Herman B Wells, who has fought to preserve the natural beauty of the woods bordering the Well House and the Student Building in old campus. The Well House, behind him, has long been a romantic setting for couples to cuddle. And behind it, the stately Student Building chimes each hour and its bells ring out concerts and tradition. In the very back, we have the as-yet-to-be-opened Fine Arts Academic Museum. It was completed this year and holds a promise for the future of IU. And, in case you hadn't noticed, we won the NCAA this year. May these be good memories.

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4 Welcome to Bloomington

A pictorial essay on a "College Town, USA" vs. its "rural southern Indiana" other half.

28 Gros Louis moves in

IU has a new vice president. He's got a winning smile and some fresh ideas on how to keep IU number 1.

66 American hostages released After spending two

Christmases in Iran, the 52 hostages were finally allowed to come home to yellow ribbons, ticker tape and tears.

82, 286 We're Number 1! IU wins the NCAA. A player

turns pro. Bobby Knight has a grin on his face . And the streets of Bloomington are a mess. The last time it happened was in 1976.

102 IU Loves New York

The fairy tale of a college music department performing at the Met comes true. The IU School of Music packed their bags for a month's stay in New York and rave reviews at the Metropolitan Opera House.


STAFF

DEPARTMENTS 16

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CALENDAR A cronological order of the major events in 1980-81 that affected the IU community. Everything from fall registration to graduation. From Octubafest to John Lennon's death. From elections to Little 500.

PEOPLE It's people that to ke up It". Administrators at rl their secretaries. Who who in students and pro f 'ssors. And a lot of students who "shot themselves!"

GREEKS Sisterhood and brotherhood — it's a family away from home. Minority rush. Sorority rush. Serenades and housemothers. It's all Greek to IU.

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COPY EDITOR Kathy Hoyt

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FEATURES Articles on different perspectives and lifestyles. dorm room contest. Draft registration. Alternative papers. Bars. Student cops. Coffeehouses. A fiction contest. And Herman B Wells' hook.

PORTRAITS This is the section where we get all dressed up and force a smile so that our grandchildren, or someone else's, can laugh at our funny hairstyles and clothing. Seniors. Underclass. Great moments in student life with cartoons and photos.

ACADEMICS EDITOR

ACADEMICS It's what everyone comes to IU for. You end up learning something here — even it's by diffusion, Bobby Knight teaches a class. The fine arts department isgetting a new Fine Arts Academic Museum. And the placement services help to get a job after graduation.

134 ARTS The culture and entertainment of a metropolitan city is found in Bloomington, Ind; The San Francisco Ballet. Lillian Gish. Beatlemania. And the IU Opera Theater performed here as well as in New York City.

Cover design by Lewis Ryker Cover illustration by Robert B. Burnett, Jr.

238 SPORTS It was a winning season all around. Basketball came in number 1. Soccer came in number 2. There were "Champions" everywhere and the Mr. IU Contest.

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inexpensive.

GROUPS Ever wonder what "SAB" stands for? Or Where your roommate went rcry other week? Could be l meeting of a dorm floor, of an honorary, semi( or recreational clic? w.

INDEX Names. Names. Names. If you can remember them. Some final photos of the moods of our time. And our advertisers keep the book

EDIT OR Larry Levin ASSOCIATE EDITOR/ART DIRECTOR Lewis Ryker MANAGING EDITOR Robert Wickens BUSINESS MANAGERS Rick Davis, Rob Mintz

Megan Byrne

GREEKS/SENIORS EDITOR

Julie Fleming

ORGANIZATIONS EDITOR

Renata Viskanta

SPORTS EDITOR

Bruce Martin

ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR

Eric Benawur

OFFICE MANAGERS

Sheri Fulfaro, Julie Gibbs, Carla Miller STAFF WRITERS

Ellen Webber, Lynn Vagnone, Rick DelVecchio, Dan DeCamp, Lisa Lanham, Susan Polakoff. CONTRIBUTORS Paul Wiseman, Theresa Oakley, Scott Waters, Sheri Pular°, Cynthia Wade, Janet Marvel, Meg McNichols, Heather McCune, Lynne Shattuck, Kathy Borchers. Ann Auberry, Charlotte Ruhe, Christina Zee, John Buds, Tammy Lytle, Celina Spence. Karen Kirsh. Blair Clef/in, Beth Misner, Emily Lawson, Betsy Litchen, Russel Jackson, Lisa Watson, Paul Buergler, Gregg Ladd, Martha Walsh, Jim Slater, Sherri Fishman, George Papajohn, Bill Klaes, Carolyn Kramer, Mark Kellam, Susan Paulin, Steve Ball, Mike Woiinsky, Ray Boomhower. STAFF PHOTOGRAPHERS Jeff Morehead, Dennis Chamberlin Jeff Greene, Hans Scott, Joe Kus, John Terhune, Paul Scudder, Craig Babbage, Phil Sears. CONTRIBUTORS David Schreiber, Alan Dorow, Shawn Spence, Andre Peyrot, Jim Callaway, Joe Myers, Dean Rutz, Terry John, Puff Anderson, Jenny Comann, Michel duCille, Jennifer Jecklin, Lisa Watson, Jim Rider, Alan Rich, Dan DeCamp. Brian Reynolds, Karen Dunivan. Rill Counts. GRAPHICS STAFF Joe Myers, Janet Witek, Karen Gustafson, Michele Roth Stephanie Jarvis. ADVISER Pat Siddons

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Welcome to Bloomington, Indiana .. .

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. . home of the Kinsey Institute and Bruce's Cafe

photos Dennis Chamberlin

loomington — all the comforts of a small home town and the diverse culture found in a large city — a college town set in south-central Indiana. Town population 40,000. University population 32,000. The conservative life of the rural midwest co-exist with an internationally acclaimed liberal arts university. "It's gotta lotta cutters." Sons of quarry masons drive their souped-up pickup trucks, with wheels three feet off the ground, down the Kirkwood Street drag. "It's a party town. Sin City. I came here to party." Sons and daughters of businessmen arrive with color TVs, stereos, refrigerators, Trans Ams and preppy clothes. Hair dryers humm and razors buzz to turn out well-scrubbed collegians. Bruce's Cafe, a small, family-owned diner, typifies the hard working permanent Bloomington residents. It seats no more than 40 people at a time, and the owners live above it. Bruce's is a typical small town lunch counter. What makes it different is that it is open from 3 AM till 3 PM, and almost every inch of the restaurant is littered with IU memorbilia, including All-American basketball star Kent Benson's playing shoes. The III Institute for Sex Research, also known as the Kinsey Institute, illustrates the liberal ideals of the university. The institute was started in the 1930's by Dr. Alfred Kinsey and initially sparked great controversy. But because of Kinsey's approach and scholarly determination in the research of sexual behavior, the Institute and his ideals have survived. The latest publication by the Institute is "Homosexualities: a Study of Diversity Among Men & Women," printed in August of 1979. In the fall of 1981 the newest publication will be on "Sexual Preferences." Bloomington. Some just tolerate it, others can't tolerate living anywhere else. It has a lot to offer, but it favors those who make the most of its offerings.'ag

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. . . to better ourselves and govern tomorrow


Dennis Chamberlin

Alan Dorow

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Homecoming Spirit of Sport Little 500 New York

p. 34 p. 70 p. 90 p. 102



Summer During July, people in the Southwest and the Midwest got a severe case of "hotfoot." With temperatures ranging in the 100s (right around 110, to be exact), the southern regions suffered the third worst death toll in this century resulting from sizzling conditions. All told, the heatwave claimed more than 1,265 lives and caused nearly $20 billion in damage. Summer, 1981, passed in a wave of heat and excitement, paving the way for the events of the fall.

AT HOME

Ronald Reagan, Republican presidential nominee, celebrates his victory with the two men who both had been potential choices for Reagan s run ningmate . The selection of George Bush over Former President Gerald Ford (left) was such a close decision that the Chicago Sun Times ran the morning headline: "It's Reagan and Ford, at about the same time George Bush was selected.

SPORTS were big during the summer. Maybe the biggest news was the 22nd Summer Olympics, held in Moscow. In 1980, it was the Olympics that wasn't for the United States, nor for more than 30 other nations who boycotted the games in protest of the Soviet Union's invasion of Afghanistan. The Soviets received the most medals. Jack Nicklaus made his comeback attempt real as he shot a last round 68 to secure his record-matching fourth U.S. Open. His 8-under-par, 272 bested his own open record 275 set in 1965 when he won his second national championship. Mike Woodson and Butch Carter, the graduating seniors from IU's Big Ten Championship team, were drafted into the professionals. Woodson was a first round choice, drafted 12th by the New York Knicks. Carter was picked 14th in the second round by the Los Angeles Lakers. It was one of the wettest, most frus-

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trating Wimbledons in history. Nonetheless, Bjorn Borg rolled to his fifth straight title, winning a record 35 straight matches in Wimbledon play. The 24-year-old Swede defeated American John McEnroe in a thrilling four-hour, five-set match. McEnroe fought off match point for Borg seven times in the last set before succumbing, 18-16 in the dramatic tie-breaker. Evonne Goolagong Cawley disposed of Chris Evert Lloyd in the Women's finals to gain her second title in the 94th Wimbledon Championships.

NATURE took its toll on the American people during the summer. On May 18, Mt. St. Helens erupted in Washington state. Belching a plume of ash and steam over 50,000 feet high, the explosion killed 31 people and left 33 others missing and presumed dead. The volcano erupted five times more during the summer, spreading its volcanic dust for hundreds of miles.

it was disclosed that Billy Carter had arranged a meeting between President Carter's national security advisor and,a Libyan official in order to gain Libya s support for the release of the American hostages in Iran. Billy registered (under protest) as a foreign agent, and acknowledged accepting $220,000 — a loan, he contended — from the Libyans. The U.S. watched helplessly as negotiations to free the 53 Americans held in Teheran remained in a stalemate. The half-year mark of captivity came and went. Ramsey Clark, former U.S. Attorney General, defied President Carter's ban on travel to Iran, urging the U.S. to apologize for past interferences in the country's internal affairs. Although Clark had faced criminal penalties for his behavior, he was not charged. The prevailing pessimism turned to relief as the first hostage was released. On day 250, Richard Queen, a U.S. Vice Consul, was sent home with what turned out to be multiple sclerosis. In June, the Senate voted to require an estimated four million men to sign their names in the first peacetime draft registration since 1975. The process was carried out over a two-week period at 34,000 post offices across the country, for those born in 1960 and 1961. Toxic Shock Syndrome became the most-discussed disease of the summer. TSS, a sometimes fatal disease, is caused by a common bacterium and was linked to tampons, but the more than 40 deaths among tampon-users didn't deter most women from the con-


venience. In July, a federal grand jury indicted Senator Martin K. Edwards, a New Castle Republican who, until midNovember was also Senate president pro-tempore, and two other men on charges of bribery to influence proposed bail bond legislation during the 1979 General Assembly. Members of the IU-Black-Student Union and IUSA rallied outside the state capital to protest cuts of money in the State Student Assistance Commission of Indiana's educational grant program. The state scene found Anderson, Ind., having, for several months, the worst unemployment rate in the country, peaking at an astounding 22 percent monthly rate in June. By the end of May 20, 875 Hoosier autoworkers — about a third of the total auto industry work force in Indiana — had been sent home.

PEOPLE seemed to care more about the sequel to Star Wars than the impending presidential election, and flocked to see the film. Luke Skywalker, Han Solo, Princess Leia, Darth Vader and all the gang were back in big fashion in The Empire Strikes Back. They picked up where they had left off, bringing back the droids and adding a muppet mentor, Yoda. The biggest mystery of the summer was who shot J. R. (J. R. Ewing of hit TV soap-drama Dallas, that is). He was gunned down by an unknown assailant when the series ended in May, leaving people all over the world to mull over whodunit" until September. It was the best-kept secret of the summer, making Dallas number one internationally. Richard Pryor always has been known for his outrageous comedy, but it was no joke when an explosion, caused when Pryor was "free-basing cocaine, rocked his bedroom. The black comedian started running to the hospital. When the police arrived with an ambulance, Pryor was running still, shouting: "I'll die if I stop!"

The Blue Lagoon was originally supposed to be rated "PG" so that the whole family could see "a very natural love story." The result though was an rating and controversy as to whether the movie was "sexploitation" of teenagers.

nderson proves experts wrong. Reagan anticipates the climate of opinion.

— Everything was. The only sure bet was that Republican Ronald Reagan would win his party's nomination for President. He did, in overwhelming fashion, at the GOP convention in Detroit. For a suspended moment during the convention, it seemed as if former President Gerald Ford would be Reagan's VP pick. The Chicago Sun Times was so sure of it that its early morning headline read: "It's Reagan and Ford." It wasn't. The convention united around Regan with a common goal: "Beat the Democrats." The Democrats, it seemed, needed no help carrying out the GOP directive. Where the mood of Detroit's convention was jovial and confident, New York saw Senator Edward Kennedy and President Carter argue bitterly. In May, John Anderson, the senior senator from Illinois, rose swiftly. Though not winning a single Republican primary, he proved the experts wrong by getting on the ballot in all 50 states. 88

Robert Wickens

U.S. Geological Survey

May 18: Mount Saint Helens in the state of Washington spews smoke and ash with unexpected ferocity. The eruption was responsible for at least 31 deaths in the area, initially. After the first outburst, 33 other people were missing and presumed dead. 19


Summer views

Quarries provide a hot spot to cool down 0lsa n i q7ne uesatt hsermh T dhere's e g r just o et iinngi labout that instills unique energy in people. Classrooms take on a restless atmosphere as students daydream about taking advantage of the season. A typical student, in the middle of a class, might see himself lying atop the hill at Griffey Reservoir overlooking the lake and soaking in the sun. One of the most traditionally popular "getaways," Griffey is a man-made lake which serves as a pseudobeach. This summer, the city of Bloomington erected a fence surrounding the dam in an attempt to prevent motorcyclists from riding along its top. Disgruntled Griffey regulars, apparently assuming that the fence was intended to keep all visitors out, did their best to impede construction of the fence. Although swimming is prohibited in the lake, authorities' efforts to enforce this have been to no avail. Sun bathers and picnickers can hardly resist the refreshing temptation of the sparkling water. The uncontrollable urge to swim draws swimmers to Bloomington's old stone quarries as well, since "The Quarries" have been a tradition for nearly half a century at IU. Breezy, warm afternoons, calls for cold beer and scantily clothed bathers baking on a warm slab of limestone often prove to be an unresistible temptation to many students. These mammoth holes represent the removal of the limestone used to build such landmarks as the Empire State Building. Just as the supply of limestone is itself inexhaustible, so is the future of skinny-dipping in southern Indiana. Monroe County is well known for its vast forest areas and variety of national parks. For many students, these wooded areas serve as a means of escaping the classroom blues and "Getting Back to Nature." Driving west-northwest from Bloomington on State Route 46, near Spencer you will see the majestic entrance to McCormick's Creek State Park, whose 1,055 acres are crowded with recreational facilities set against a background of natural beauty. If you are seeking close-at-hand outdoor entertainment — head east, my friend, head continued on page 22 20


warm days Above — Enjoying one of the last remaining of fall, Nancy Sutton, Jim Fowler, Andrea Friedman, Tom Karsnick and Beverly Greenhunt spend an afternoon at the quarries, a traditional "getaway" spot for IU students. Left — Limestone used to build such landmarks as the Empire State Building has been removed from area quarries, but these local youths seem oblivious to that fact as they prepare to try out the refreshingly cool water.

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Summer views

continued from page 20

east. Directly east of Bloomington on Route 46, near Nashville, is Brown County State Park. Famous for its splendid autumn colors, Brown County Park covers more than 17,000 acres of rolling, wooded hills which are annually explored and enjoyed by IU students. Cascades Park, because of its accessibility, is a popular place to spend an evening. Several sororities and fraternities take advantage of the sheltered sights during the first warm months of the fall. A sorority may typically build a campfire and kidnap its pledges, bring them to the sight and announce their initiation date. Lake Monroe, with its public beach facility, naturally attracts the sunlovers on those 80 and 90 degree days. Fairfax beach, however, is not always available to those who frequent Lake Monroe. The beach closes for the year, usually the week fall semester students return, despite the sweltering heat that lingers through most of September. Desperately uncomfortable students, however, seek other entrances to the soothing water the lake holds. A spontaneous trip to the nearest discount store to purchase a raft is often the beginning of an afternoon that will climax as a couple of people float carelessly about, having launched their rafts from a previously unexplored clearing. And thus, the fed-up, harried students escape to the peacefulness of the outdoors. There they find amusement, restoration of reality and tranquility which enable them to return once again to the classroom. 9E--,'; Ellen M. Webber

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photos/Dennis Chamberlin


Far left — Liz Hicks, a sophomore majoring in social work, and Jackie Rob, visiting from North Carolina and staying with a friend, soak up some September sun while waiting for classes to let out. Left — It's circus time in Bloomington. Members of the Hoxie Brothers Circus raise the big top signifying the opening of the circus Below — Though coming from a swimming class, Kathleen Boggess, a Bloomington resident and her two daughters, Angela, 5 and Laura, 3, try to keep dry during this summer shower. Jeff Greene

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Autumn ELECHOHDAY 14f54

ably warm temperatures into November, fun-filled weekends of football and soccer games, keggers, hay rides and Thursday nights at Nick's. The leaves began to turn, and temperatures to drop, and the chaos that always surrounds the beiginning of a new semester slowly disappeared. The first year of the new decade ended with the end of the fall semester. As it passed, with it went regret at promises unfulfilled, as students resolved to make 1981 the best year yet.

CONTRAST

TRAGEDY

seemed on the rise with falling temperatures. For much of October and November, brush fires raged out of control in Southern California, leaving hundreds homeless in their wake, and millions of dollars' worth of property damage. On Nobember 21, an arsonist set multiple fires in the MGM Grand Hotel in Las Vegas, killing 84 people and injuring more than 700. Mt. St. Helens erupted again on December 14, spewing steam and volcanic ash for miles. In Atlanta, the number of young black children victimized by an unknown and relentless murderer reached 15 by December: parents lived in fear; a nation looked on in shock. A silent vigil of another type was kept also. For the second Christmas in a row, 52 Americans remained hostage to militant Iranian students. Yellow ribbons, in a campaign known as "tie to remember," adorned trees on campus as well as throughout the nation. 24

The national Christmas tree in Washington, D.C., remained unlit, save for its crowning star of hope. The militants surrendered control of the hostages to the Iranian government, and negotiations improved consistently throughout the fall. By the end of December, it looked as though an agreement might have been at hand. However, Americans had become only cautiously optimistic in a situation in which their hopes had been dashed so many times before.

MEMORIES

of autumn, 1980. To each student, a unique myriad of recollections, the common experience at academic life unifying a group who, for a few years, would call Bloomington home. Time not absorbed in class or studying was spent in a variety of ways: flag football and frisbee in Dunn Meadow, tennis on the Woodlawn courts, basketball in HPER, basking in the sun at Griffey reservoir or the quarries. Special memories include the unseason-

was sharp between the relative serenity of the campus and the restive international scene. The stability of the U.S. economy remained in question as unemployment and interest rates continued to climb, the latter hovering near 21 percent by December. Inflation continued to erode real income, as Americans struggled to retain what seemed to be a vanishing standard of living. One of the greatest challenges to Soviet authority in recent history occured in Poland in late August. Staging one of the largest labor strikes on record, Polish workers demanded the right to form a union independent of the Communist Party. Led in negotiations by a 37-year-old electrician named Lech Walesa, the demands were met. The Solidarity union was born, but the unrest only had begun. In September, centuries of dispute came to a head as war broke out between Iraq and Iran. The conflict revolved around the Shatt-al-Arab waterway, relinquished by Iraq to the Shah five years earlier. Western leaders eyed the situation nervously, as 40 percent of Western oil supplies were shipped through the Strait of Hormuz. With both nations facing a limited supply of arms, the duration of the way appeared limited. The fighting in Afghanistan continued and the death toll rose, as Russian troops occupied several key cities. In Liberia, a coup toppled the government once again, and in India Indira Ghandi was elected to the office of prime minister, after being ousted


almost five years earlier. Bloodshed in El Salvador continued, as right-wing and military factions attempted to purge the government of the left. U.S. aid was halted and an investigation begun when three American nuns and a laywoman were murdered in December. November brought a shart turnaround in leadership here at home. The political mood of the nation swung strongly to the right, reflected in the landslide victory of Ronald Reagan. For the first time since 1954, conservatives gained control of the Senate, and the margin of Democratic leadership in the House of Representatives decreased. In Indiana, four-term senator Birch Bayh was unseated by a rising young republican named Dan Quayle. Other noted liberals, such as George McGovern and Frank Church also were defeated. American hoped that his "new leadership" would materialize quickly.

(s, DEATH

Stuff a size 7 wearing 15-year-old into a size 5 pair of blue jeans and you have one of the hottest-selling and most controversial advertisements. The model, Brooke Shileds, has been on the cover of most of the major magazines. Time dubbed her "the look of the '80s.'

. . I n Georgia, a city confronts a child murderer. A nation confronts itself.

STUDENTS returning in late August encountered the humidity and temperamental weather so characteristic of southern Indiana. New students managed to find their way through the maze of construction to classes, while veterans made the all-too-familiar trek from Ballantine Hall to the Main Library. At the Bloominton campus, a new vicepresident was appointed and construction of the new fine arts museum and renovation of Woodburn Hall neared completion. In pre-season baseball, after a season in internal conflict between players and management, the Philadelphia Phillies pulled together to win the World Series. The 'lucky stars' did not shine as brightly in Bloomington. Coming within a hair's width of clenching the NCAA soccer title for the third time in five years, Jerry Yeagley's Hoosiers lost to San Francisco, 5 to 4 in overtime. For Lee Corso and the Big Red, the football season was not a triumph.

came unexpectedly to several notables endeared by the nation. John Lennon, legendary rock-and-roll star and former Beatle, was gunned down outside his Manhattan apartment by a crazed psychopath. Yoko Ono, his wife, requested a 10-minite silent vigil in remembrance of him. A rare form of lung cancer claimed the life of actor Steve McQueen in November. His gutsy on - screen performance reflected the zest he felt for life. One of Hollywood's greatest legends, Mae West, passed away in December at the age of 87. December also brought the first snowflakes, final exams and the longawaited Christmas break. Freshmen breathed a sigh of relief at having survived the first semester and seniors anticipated commencement while wondering about employment possibilities in a tight job market. SP

Martha Walsh

Jim Rider

Terry Lolla, Indiana University Black Student Union executive, speaks out in protest of the killings in Atlanta . On the lawn of the Black Culture Center, Lolla pauses after a march, with a stop for a special Baptist service,

which ended at the Center. 25


photos Dennis Chamberlin

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The start of another year

Mythical student "experiences" registration

Left — A long line begins to form for mathematics classes during registration in August. This may be the lastyear for the mass confusion in the field house as a computerized registration plan has been adopted. Top — Gail and Bob Ilarris of Indianapolis wait outside of Forest Quad for their daughter, Brenda, to pick up her key and start moving in. Above — Mary Ellen Anderson, assistant to the dean of the university division, explains the student data card to incoming freshman during a mock registration.

olli woke up at 6:20 — the earliest H she had been up since her freshman finals — with a groan. "My god, it's the earliest time on the last day of to register," she said. "Well, at least things can't get worse. Unfortunately, Holli had been lulled into a false sense of security over the summer break. She had forgotten the hours of frustration and loneliness she experienced as a freshman at registration. One thing she didn't forget was that the fieldhouse was a half-hour walk from her Willkie double. She looked out the window. It was raining. Soaked and dripping, she made it to the fieldhouse doors; to say the least there wasn't a crowd straining to get in. Holli proceeded down the hallway leading to the registration floor. The gray and groggy day made the hall seem dark and longer. She pushed the dreaded anticipation of the morning out of her mind, thinking instead of how nice it would be to take a long, hot shower and start partying. After several papers, coupons and bumper stickers had been pushed upon her, she finally reached the door leading to the fieldhouse floor. "Now for the fun part," she joked, knowing that chances were not good for getting most of her classes. Two hours and three classes later, Holli needed only one more course. "Geology would be nice," she thought, heading toward the geology table. All Courses Closed, read the sign above. "The story of my life," she muttered. She already had crossed of geography, psychology and sociology. No one was even at the speech table. That left philosophy. "Sounds interesting," she lied to herself "We have a P100 class at 7:30 a.m. on M,W, and F," said the lady with the beehive hairdo and the pearlrimmed glasses who was manning the table. "But I already have a 7:30 class on those days, and Tuesday and Thursday too," she wailed. "Don't you have any other intro class at a decent time?" "Well, there's always Introduction to Phenomenology and Existentialism . 88

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Gros Louis moves in

New IU VP begins a new administration e're living, I hope temporarily, at a very hectic pace," said Ken"W neth R.R. Gros Louis. "We have the type

won't change. Regarding his approach to the vice presidency, Gros Louis said, "My desire is to be clear to the students and to the people of Bloomington and also the citizens of the state, that I am accessible." To nurture better relationships, Gros Louis set a time to receive calls on a toll-free line. Response to the WATS line has been very good but the vice president was surprised to find many of the calls came from the Bloomington area. He generally replies to such calls, "Why didn't you just call me at my regular number?" J8

of life that if anybody gets ill, it's a real disaster." On September 15, 1980, Gros Louis was named vice president of IU-Bloomington, to replace Robert O'Neil, who left to become president of the University of Wisconsin. The former dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, Gros Louis said the transition period was somewhat mindboggling as his initial obligations entailed meeting contacts and reading extensive reports about aspects of the campus. Ellen M. Webber In starting his job, Gros Louis said, "Today for example, I'm going out to give the staff awards at 3:30 at Assembly Hall. Then of course follows a reception that will probably last till 5:00. But then I have to go home and change, because at 5:30 we're giving a reception for 200 people at Woodburn House. Meanwhile our younger daughter has to get to a movie by 7:00 for a birthday party she's invited to . . . . Of course tomorrow night we're giving a reception again at Woodburn House for 150 people . . Gros Louis' appointment has had somewhat of an impact on the entire family. "It's also affected my wife's life style, perhaps even greater than mine," said Gros Louis. His wife, Dolores, has been an associate professor in the Honors Division at IU for the past seven years. She decided to take a leave without pay in order to see what her — Kenneth R.R. Gros Louis responsibilities would be. While she thinks it's necessary to do, she's also anxious to get hack to her teaching in Women's Studies, - commented Gros Louis. The Gros Louises have two daughters, Amy, 13 and Julie, 10, who are both very active in swimming. They compete in agegroup swimming, traveling around the state on weekends. This has long been a Kenneth R. Gros Louis, who became the new vice part of the vice president's activities and he president of IU-Bloomington last September, strides said, for the most part, that part of their life to his office to begin another busy day of work.

y desire is to be clear to the students and to the people of Bloomington and also the citizens of the state, that I am accessible.

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C7) N


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RHA Week

Left — A team from Willkie Quad competes for the grand prize during the RIIA Days bed race held in September. Below left — Kathy Pencek, RHA Days coordinator, deals cards to tense gamblers during Casino Night at Read Hall on October 3. Casino Night was just one of the many events held during RHA days. Below — RHA staffers prepare hamburgers and hot dogs to feed 3,000 people taking part in the RHA Days picnic behind Read Center.

Students fed and put to bed during RHA Days

Larry Levin

o get students interested in dorm T life, the Residence Halls Association put them to bed. The second annual RHA Week, held in late September, was a series of events organized by the RHA, including a bed race, a free picnic and a coffeehouse, intended to spark student interest in dorm activities, according to RHA Days coordinator Kathy Pencek. The first annual bed race was the week's biggest event. Teams of five members, one riding a rolling bed, and the other four pushing it, raced in heats on Seventh Street behind Wright Quad. The competition went smoothly except for the occasional interruption of IU buses which could not be re-routed for the event. Jon Sargent, a freshman from Wright Nichols House, said of his team, "We don't have power. We don't have speed. To tell you the truth, our chances of winning are about one in a million, but we're here, and that's what's important." Those who did have the power were the "Buffalo Bed Springs" from Foster Quad who won the event and were awarded trophies and gift certificates. Second place finishers were Briscoe's "Bed Busters. Other RHA Week events included a free Sunday night picnic in the field behind Read Center. Foster Quad president Donna McGee, coordinator of the event, and her staff served hamburgers, hot dogs, lemonade and potato chips to about 3,000 people. Junior Sue Calvert from Read Center said that the RHA was successful in promoting dorm life. "Teter and Wright are right next to us, and I don't know anyone from there," she said. "The picnic brought people from the different dorms closer together. Karie Edwards, a senior and member of the Teter Boisen Three bed race team, summed up the RHA philosophy. "I really had fun," she said. "RHA week represents unity and getting people involved." Janet Marcel

31


Right — Octubafest founder Harvey Phillips grasps the instrument of celebration on the last afternoon of the week-long event. Below — Sophomore Lori Horton and Senior Mark Fruedenberg twirl to tuba tunes. Below right — The German band performs under Professor Lewis Van Haney's direction for nearly 400 listeners. Other bands which played were a brass quintet, a bluegrass band, two dixieland bands and the Bloomington High School Marching band. photos/Larry Levi*

32


Octubafest promotes talents

Listeners rustle notes from Phillips' Tubaranch summation of Harvey Phillips was A made best by a friend of his, "If you're going to love Harvey, you have to stand in line." Phillips, distinguished professor of music, began Octubafest in 1973 in recognition of the tuba. The purpose of the event is to give tubists the opportunity to perform and share their talents with the general public. Phillips believes that there is a need for audience support and understanding of the greatness of the tuba. 'The mission of Octubafest is to enlighten the general public and to appreciate the incredible young talents," said Phillips. "The tuba is made up of 95 percent flesh. An instrument cannot make music without a human being." Octubafest takes place at Phillips' "Tubaranch." Phillips and other tuba enthusiasts perform tuba recitals the week before Octubafest. During the festival, music is playing continuously. Diversity in music ranges from blues to baroque and ensembles range from trios to sextets. Food and drink come in almost unlimited quantity. German beer, wienerschnitzel, sauerkraut as well as traditional coffee and cake were available throughout the day for tuba connoisseurs to choose from. Phillips also began TubaChristmas and TubaEaster. For TubaChristmas, tuba players dress up as Santa and play for the general public. Phillips travels from New York to California to conduct TubaChristmas. "The inspiration for TubaChristmas comes from the fact that William Bell, the late music professor, was born on Christmas Day," says Phillips. "He began the greatness of the tuba and we are trying to continue this." Phillips' idea of Octubafest, as well as TubaChristmas has now been utilized all over the country. In essence, Harvey Phillips has done for the tuba what Benny Goodman did for the clarinet. B Lynn Vagnone

33


Red Skelton serves as grand marshall

IU victory is no joke as Hoosiers down Badgers for Homecoming olitical preference held little ground P during Homecoming, 1980. -Cast your vote for a Hoosier victory" was the theme of the spirited Hoosiers. The Alumni Association and the Student Athletic Board hosted a week's worth of red and white spirit. Starting with the frisbee Olympics in Dunn Meadow on Tuesday to Thursday's co-sponsored Campus Cleanup with Union Board, the S.A. B. prompted school spirit. Windows of local shops surrounding the campus allowed for creative spirit to flow in tempera colors. Lawn floats and displays by various houses urged a Hoosier victory favorable to all political platforms. Friday brought the clowning antics of Red Skelton who opened the day with a press conference, visited with people in the Union, and served as Grand Marshall for the annual parade that evening. Skelton exchanged jokes with Coach Lee Corso and IU President John Ryan at the pep rally following the parade. Numerous sororities and fraternities held alumni welcomes to add an air of Hoosier spirit that weekend. Phi Gamma Delta fraternity hosted their graduates with a pre-game lunch and then celebrated the victory with their third annual Octoberfest. Fiji president Don McMahon said their tradition has become a big success. Saturday, the big game against Wisconsin was preceeded by announcing the overall winners of all related Homecoming events. Junior Allison Rogers and senior Todd Maddocks were announced as Homecoming Queen and King. Again, Red Skelton did the honors by crowning the new Hoosier royalty. Coming true to every Hoosier fan was the victory of the fighting Hoosiers over the Wisconsin Badgers. 24-0 was the final score as cream and crimson overpowered their red and white to account for the sweet smell of success. Halftime gave way for returning Marching Hundred and Redstepper alumni to show off routines of their past Bloomington days. The University of Wisconsin band shared the halftime show with our own continued on page 36

34


Left — Comedian Red Skelton and IU football coach Lee Corso share one-liners as senior IU football members look on during the pep rally at Sembower field. Below left — Shaking hands and meeting new people are all part of HI's homecoming parade. Sheila Franklin, a senior, and Diane Brown, a sophomore, greet three 50-year "I" Men Alumni. Below— Todd Maddocks and Allison Rogers share a royal laugh after being pronounced 1980 Homecoming king and queen. photos/Larry Levin


Homecoming

Jeff Morehead

Michel duCille

Jeff Morehead

continued from page 34

Hoosier Hundred. Fifty-year "I" Men were escorted to the field by Student Alumni Council representatives. The evening climaxed Homecoming weekend with 'The Red Skelton Variety Show" in the main auditorium. In addition, the School of Music offered "Rigoletto" and the Theater Department presented "The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie' for alumni who wished to see the performing arts and reminisce of their days on the stage. Parties, reunions, nostalgia: whatever the class year, Homecoming 1980 proved the victors of the Hoosier platform were always guaranteed their vote of confidence. Gregg Ladd

36

Left — Comedian Red Skelton smilingly returns his autograph to a fan shortly before the 1U Homecoming parade, held on Oct. 10, the day before 1U's game against Wisconsin. Above left — Skelton waves the - Go Big Red' flag prior to Saturday's Homecoming game. Above — 1U Chancellor Herman B. Wells watches 1U go on to trounce the Badgers, 24-0. Above right — Senior fullback, Jerry Bowers, holds senior tailback Lonnie Johnson aloft after Johnson had "ran one in" for a touchdown against Wisconsin. Right —Jerry Bowers, a senior, pulls a pack of Badgers with him as he strains for first down yardage in his final Homecoming game.


Jeff Morehead

Michel duCille

37


Radiation or pollution? Up to people, asserts Commoner he American people should control T the major investment and resource decisions of today. That control should be as decentralized as possible and implemented immediately, said Citizen's Party presidential candidate Barry Commoner at Whitenburger Auditorium on October 12. "The country is being run by decisions made by the major corporations," he said. Americans are "being wrecked by the grip that the corporations have on our lives.' There is nothing wrong with making profits or with private ownership, he added. What is wrong is when "private interests and not the public good determine how we live." The standing-room-only crowd gave Commoner a standing ovation when he said, "the time has come to take those three turkeys (presidential candidates Ronald Reagan, Jimmy Carter and John Anderson) and make it a people's campaign — tell them we want peace and not war in

the Middle East. "I don't really expect to be elected president," said Commoner. "But I am running in this election, not to win, but to draw attention to our platform." The 63-year-old candidate is a biology professor at Washington State University. He believes that the public should control the energy industries and blames the oil industries for the United States' international difficulties. "The decision to increase profits by exploiting foreign oil-producing nations has led to the instability in the Middle East and the capture of the American diplomats in Iran," he said. Commoner wants a swift halt to nuclear power and a strong push instead for energy conservation and the development of solar energy. "The people should decide what we will suffer — radiation or air pollution," he said, referring to the nuclear power versus burning of coal debate. A major goal of the Citizen's Party is to

work for an immediate and sharp reversal in the rate of military spending, said Commoner. "Protecting the United States from aggression is worthwhile, but building and exporting unneeded new weapons systems has already escalated the arms race to the edge of disaster." Times have changed. Our economic system, which in its infancy spread prosperity across this continent has become gradually outdated, he said. Clearly it no longer fits our needs and that is why the Citizen's Party is raising the issues the existing parties ignore, Commoner contended. None of the major party presidential candidates, announced or unannounced, are discussing these issues. Thee Citizen's Party is a new party," he said. "But we will strive for change and will continue to run until we become a major party." 88

Robert Wickens

Kiker relates politics and other such crimes of Washington S roiling and waving, he greeted an audience of nearly 200 at the IU Auditorium on October 20, offering insight and guidance to the 1980 presidential election. Douglas Kiker, NBC News correspondent covering the 1980 elections, joked about American-style politics in a lecture sponsored by Union Board and the Residence Halls Association. Kiker was first assigned to Washington in 1971 as a correspondent for NBC-TV. In 1972, he covered the Democratic and Republican conventions. Kiker is now the national political editor at NBC. The audience, composed of students, faculty and Bloomington residents, laughed as Kiker filled them in on the Washington news scene, joking and speaking of the great importance of the presidential election. Laughter and applause greeted him when he told the audience that "politics and other such crimes" are the main news in Washington. 38

Putting on his glasses and changing to a more serious note, Kiker said, "Our political system is changing before our eyes." He said the binding primary eliminates the chance of a dark horse candidate. Over the last 10 years, Kiker said our country has seen unprecedented changes: the loss of our first war, a president resigning in disgrace and the rise of political terrorism. But Kiker said the American people have survived all this and have continued to have faith in the democratic system" "If we can harness the pride of the American people, there is nothing we cannot do," Kiker said. The main problem of the Carter administration was inexperience, Kiker said. "It boggles my mind, how he could come out of nowhere in Georgia, capture the whole party, and win the most powerful office in the world," Kiker said. He said if Carter had had better relations with Congress, a more experienced staff, and more frequent

consultations with other politicians, things would be different today. Kiker acknowledged, however, that problems such as Iran, the energy crisis, and the decline in productivity cannot be blamed on President Carter. The next president of our country will face many problems, Kiker said. He must solve the energy crisis, retool the national industrial machine, improve productivity, and put America back into the competitive economic market. The next president, Kiker said, will need "guts, instinct, intelligence, great ability, but most of all, luck. Our world is changing faster than we can deal with it; the times call for a greatness of leadership." When asked who would win the election Kiker said, "Hell I don't know, I've never seen an election like it. I'm settling back and saying the hell to both of them."SE

Heather McCune


Fall lectures

Barry Commoner, Citizens Party candidate for president, points out differences between his platform and "conventional party" platforms in Whitenburger Auditorium on October 12.

NBC political editor, Douglas Kiker, answers questions from IU students in the MRC lounge after his lecture in the IU Auditorium on October 20. 39


Dick Gregory urges social change and peaceful strength itty and humorous, angry and sadW dened, Dick Gregory brought his unending battle for human rights and justice to an inspired audience of about 450 people at the IU Auditorium on October 30. He criticized almost every aspect of the human race, bringing laughter to the captive audience one moment and passionate shouts and applause the next. Gregory, whose appearance was sponsored by the Black Student Union, stated his message clearly: Our society needs to change but can begin to do so only when individuals change their attitudes. "You don't have to sit back and watch people manipulate you," he said. "You can make a difference. Gregory then switched to the apathy of American voters. "Most of the people voting in this election won't be voting for something, but against something, he said, referring to the Carter-Reagan race for the presidency.

Commenting on news reports stating that Carter and Reagan had been rehearsing for their impending debate, Gregory said flatly: "The thing about honesty and truth is that they need no rehearsing." Gregory turned to the discussion of the turmoil between the U.S. and Iran over the 52 American hostages. "People do funny things over money," he said, referring to the billions of dollars of Iranian assets the U.S. was holding and could return for the freedom of the hostages. Gregory expressed his anger and disappointment with American society. "We live in a society today where we can ship tanks all over the world but we can't ship turnips to hungry people who are starving to death. "How long can you tolerate a system that destroys all that is human in you and makes you something lower than animals?" he asked. "The whole problem in our land is the male chauvinistic mentality — that we've

been treating Third World countries the same way we ve been treating our women for one hundred years." Gregory declared that most of the universities in the United States are racist and sexist institutions, adding that one day we must decide that we are "no longer going to tolerate a handful of greedy old men determining our fate. He has been called "un-American" for such criticism. To this, Gregory responded that it is his great love for this country that gives him the courage and energy to continue fighting to make it better. "We can make it work right," he said, "but first we have to admit that a strong nation is not a nation with a mighty army: a strong nation is a nation that has the healthiest people, mentally and physically." The controversial comedian-crusader came to IU and shared some of the wit and undying spirit that has won him worldwide respect and admiration. Dan DeCamp

Jeff Greenfield cautions that T.V. projects distorted images ost popular myths about politics M and television just are not true, said Jeff Greenfield in his speech, "Politics and the Media," November 19 at the IU Auditorium. The real danger television poses to politics is the lack of discourse, he said in his speech sponsored by Union Board. Greenfield is a political commentator who appears regularly on the CBS news program "Sunday Morning" and on William F. Buckley's "Firing Line." The key to the danger of television coverage of politics is that television is great at transmitting personality and terrible at transmitting abstractions, Greenfield said. "In politics, what has happened is that politicians have come to believe that what will convince you of their merit is not where they stand on the issues, but what nice guys they are. Politicians use the media, not to see an idea or cause, but to sell themselves." Greenfield pointed outexamples examples like Ronald Reagan as a guest on the 40

Show, - Jimmy Carter appearing on "What's My Line?" and the later Hubert Humphrey cooking in Dinah's kitchen. "People who attempt to understand politics by looking at television are looking through the wrong end of the telescope. As you know if you've ever looked through the wrong end, things appear distorted," he said. Television, he says, transcends every traditional path to political notoriety."You do not need party bosses and a party structure if you can go into American homes and take a few minutes of their time to tell them who you are." The real danger of television, said Greenfield, is that TV covers only one aspect of the campaign — the race and the positions — "because TV wants and demands excitement," he said. "It's easy to show a campaign of airplanes, crowds and balloons ... but how do you make a long discussion about energy policy visually interesting?"

This is the fundamental difference between the print media and television, Greenfield said. If you do not want to read a story about energy policy, you can turn the page. If television viewers do not like the news, however, they turn to another channel. "If you are looking for what is wrong with television as a medium for transmitting politics, look for what we no longer have — a debate, a discourse. Television is ideal for the communication of ideas and I think the evidence is there that people want them. If, however, television continues to fail to transmit discourse, we're in for a very, very grim time ahead," Greenfield said. "Seventy years ago the politicianswere at church socials and parades because the people were there," he said. "Today, people are in front of their TV sets and that is why politicians are on them." Charlotte Ruhe


Fall lectures

Dick Gregory pauses after poking fun at the nation s recently established nobel-laureate sperm bank. Gregory said he would like to ask donors, "How did you all get that sperm out of yourselves?" Gregory appeared at the IU auditorium on October 30.

Jeff Greenfield leans forward to emphasize his view that television only projectspersonalities and not ideas. Greenfield's lecture, sponsored by Union Board, was held November 19. 41


Election '80

Local Republicans not surprised by big victory n a shadowy corner of the Banquet I Room in Bloomington's Holiday Inn two elderly gentlemen sat alone, docilely sipping whiskey sours. The room around them was a blur of anarchical movement. It was Election Day night, November 4, 1980, and Monroe County Republicans crowded together good-naturedly; cocktail glasses splashed happily in every hand. An unmistakable air of festivity permeated the room. Obscured by the crowd was a tiny blackand-white television set on which a network anchorman was gravely relaying the results of the presidential election. But no one was listening. The issue had been decided hours before. Ronald Reagan had been elected the 40th president of the United States in a stunning landslide. The victory had been so fast, so overpowering, that it was almost anticlimactic. By 10 o'clock the room was almost devoid of political discussion. There was simply nothing left to say. The election night apathy of Bloomington Republicans was a surprising contrast to their energetic campaign rhetoric. College Republican president Mike Johnson commented several days after the election about the nationwide intensity of the Republican campaign. "It was very crucial not only for the country as a whole, but for the party. We'd had quite a setback in '74 after the Watergate difficulties, and our party basically had been seen as a dying breed. So it was time for us to do something .. . We had to make a move." Senior Tim Row, who coordinated the campaigns for Reagan and senatorial candidate Dan Quayle at IU, was not surprised by the outcome of the election. "People are seeing that the philosophies of the Republican Party offer a reliable alternative for our country in the 1980s." This was evidently the case; around the nation Democratic incumbants at all levels of government were swept away in the fervent republican tide. Longtime Democratic spokesmen Frank Church and George

42

McGovern lost re-election bids in their home states, while in Indiana three-term senator Birch Bayh was easily ousted by youthful Republican challenger Dan Quayle. But on the IU campus the liberals died hard. Republican leaders knew all along that there was a strong liberal core here, but, according to Johnson, "There's quite a conservative core here too. So our goal was to tap it, find it, get 'em out to vote. And we found it." Perhaps, but the county clerk's office revealed that in student-only precincts, Reagan garnered only 35 percent of the vote, compared to Carter's 41 percent and independent candidate John Anderson's surprisingly healthy 20 percent. Dan Quayle fared nearly as poorly as his presidential counterpart, gathering a meager 40 percent of the student-only vote. The only major Republican candidate to secure a majorority in those precincts was gubernatorial candidate Robert Orr. He outpolled his democratic foe, businessman John Hillenbrand, 50 to 41 percent. But the College Republicans remained undaunted. They knew they could count on the rest of the state. Elsewhere in Indiana, Reagan, Quayle and Orr were overwhelming winners. And when it was over the only challenge that remained for the Republicans was that of the next four years in office. "It's almost a 'do-or-die' situation for the conservative philosophy, because now we've got someone who's in office, and we're going to be able to see what he can do," said Rowe. For the time being, however, the battle was won. And back in Holiday Inn's emptying Banquet Room the two old men summed it up best. "Well," said one, "What d'ya think, Arch?" "I think," replied his observant companion, "I think that it's over." SP Paul Wiseman

Shawn Spence

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Top — Holding his daughter Corinne in his arm, newly-elected Republican Sen. Dan Quayle waves to the crowd at Republican headquarters in Indianapolis. Quayle defeated incumbent Birch Bayh in the November election. Above — Sue Cochrane, a part-time student at IU and full-time employee of the Bloomington HeraldTelephone, waits to post results of the Nov. 4 election in the H-T newsroom. Right — Gov. Otis Bowen congratulates Governorelect Robert Orr after Orr's victory in the Indiana gubernatorial race. Orr defeated Democrat John Hillenbrand to take over the job of Bowen, who stepped down after two terms.


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Garry Trudeau's Doonesbury comic strip made the news just before Election Day. The Indianapolis Star was one of two newspapers in the nation which pulled the strip's series on -Reagan's Brain" calling it an "unfair and unwarranted" attack upon Ronald Reagan. 43


Election '80

College Democrats make comeback during conservative era ineteen-eighty will undoubtedly be N viewed by Democratic Party leaders as a lost year. Deluged by a wave of conservatism which swept the nation on election day, the Democratic Party lost the presidency, majority control of the U.S. Senate, numerous seats in the House of Representatives, many state posts — the list goes on. For the IU College Democrats, 1980 was not so much a lost year as one of revival. Under the direction of senior Tom Fox, the group's president for the fall semester, the College Democrats were resurrected and became one of the more active organizations on campus in the few months preceding election day. Interestingly, the College Democrats had been essentially nonexistent for several years before 1980. During the summer of 1979, Fox worked in former U.S. Sen. Birch Bayh's office in Washington D.C. While there, Fox said he "came into contact with some people in the national College Democratic Office. We kept up correspondence over the year and they helped me get this club started, and it's just kind of grown from there. The IU College Democrats are chartered with the College Democrats of America, the official student wing of the Democratic National Party. "Our job is to represent the Democratic Party on campus, to get across the beliefs of the Democratic Party, to represent Democratic candidates to the students, and to bring as many Democratic candidates on campus as possible," Fox said. In September, Fox, along with more than 300 young Democrats from across the country, attended the Carter-Mondale Youth Leadership Conference at the White House. "It was basically a strategy session . . . as far as the national campaign was concerned,- Fox explained. The strategy outlined for them reflected Carter's predicament. Step one was anti-John Anderson (the independent presidential candidate); step two was anti-Ronald Reagan; step three involved stressing that a 44

vote for Anderson would be a vote for Reagan; and lastly, step four was proJimmy Carter. The national campaign staff apparently recognized that there simply wasn't much merit to be found in Carter's record. Although Fox and the other 20 to 30 active members of the IU group were fully aware of the futility of their efforts on Carter's behalf ("Ronald Reagan could die tomorrow and still win Indiana in November," Fox said in an ids article on the College Democrats), they nevertheless gave him their support in the form of posters and literature. Much of their effort was focused on denouncing Anderson, who drew a large amount of his support from America's universities. With Indiana's 13 electoral votes all but signed, sealed, and delivered to Reagan, the group concentrated chiefly on the gubernatorial, senatorial and local races. Only the local panned out on election day. Marilyn Schultz (D-51st District), a popular figure on campus, soundly defeated IU law student Wayne Greeson to retain her seat in the Indiana General Assembly. Democrat Vi Simpson was elected County Auditor, and Democrats Charlotte Zietlow and Warren Henegar won in their races for County Commissioner. In the gubernatorial race, the "team image" projected by Republican Bob Orr and his entourage proved too much for Democrat John Hillenbrand to overcome. While Orr easily defeated Hillenbrand, Republican Dan Quayle ousted Bayh, an 18-year veteran of the Senate, by a substantial margin. Quayle's victory left Fox mystified. "I really did think that Senator Bayh would win, or if he didn't win it would be very close," Fox said. Bayh, always popular at IU, did carry Monroe County. He made several appearances on campus, showing up at a voter registration rally held by the College Democrats early in the year, and participating in a public forum with Quayle at Wittenberger Auditorium. Scott Waters

Jeff Morehead


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Above Left —A double exposure photograph enables Republican Ronald Reagan and Democrat Jimmy Carter to face off during the 1980 presidential debate. Above Right — IU students fill the IMU Trophy Room, watching the 1980 presidential debate between Carter and Reagan. Reactions ranged from skepticism to humor. Few admitted to changing their minds afterward. Left — A television relates the news of incumbent President Jimmy Carter's defeat to unused Democratic election balloons in the Indianapolis Democratic Headquarters on Election night. Above — Birch Bayh and his son, Evan, who was Bayh's campaign manager, show their disappointment to Bayh's loss for a fourth term in the U.S. senate.

45


Elections '80

Election Day voters reject Anderson alternative very four years the U.S. elects a presE ident. The candidates elicit all their political know-how and expertise to gain the public's support throughout their campaign and most importantly, the public's vote on Election Day. Historically, presidential races have been close contests. But Election Day 1980 found the race that was "too close to call" over before it had really begun. The entire campaign for the presidency had every indication of being a close, down-to-the-wire race, with the added choice of a substantially active third party. John Anderson, a congressman from Illinois, ran on the newly formed National Unity Campaign platform. He was viewed by his supporters as a refreshing and exciting choice for a thinking electorate. The long, bitter presidential race between Republican Ronald Reagan, President Jimmy Carter and John Anderson ended at 8 p. m. on November 4, when Carter congratulated Reagan for his victory despite the fact that polls in 13 states, including California, had not even closed. When all the votes were tallied, the result was in: Ronald Reagan had won an astounding majority of electoral votes and the presidency of the United States. It wasn't even close. Even though Anderson ran in the primaries as a Republican, his platform was more liberal than his conservative counterpart's. Anderson believed strongly in the ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment and disfavored any legislation banning abortions. He was concerned with the economy, but advocated no tax cuts. "Inflation is the cruelest tax of all and that is the tax I intend to cut," Anderson said. His defense policy was to keep the military lean and flexible, not costly. His energy plan advocated finding alternative fuel supplies and accelerating the development of renewable energy-source technologies. People started perceiving Anderson as a

46

top choice, but only if he had a chance of winning in November. In early September, an ABC-Lewis Harris poll indicated that if Anderson had a genuine chance to win, he had enough support to lead in eight major states: New York, California, Massachusetts, Illinois, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Ohio and New Jersey — which comprised 216 of the 270 electorial college votes needed to win the election. But since none perceived him to have any chance of winning the election, he hovered around the 10 to 15 percent mark. Thus, he was captured in an ironic Catch-22-type situation. Millions of Americans would vote for him if they thought he had a chance to win. But unless he was backed by those millions in the polls which showed him being able to win, he could not win. A statement on one of Anderson's pamphlets read, "Most polls show that if people believe John Anderson can win, he will win." But in 1980, the majority of the electorate chose to vote for the more conventional Democratic and Republican parties. However, through the efforts of Anderson's supporters, like those at IU, who held benefits to raise votes and money for his campaign, he received seven percent of the popular vote in the election. This put him in the rank of legitimate party candidates. Not only will he be eligible for federal reinbursement of funds for his campaign, but the National Unity Campaign is assured a place on the ballot in the next presidential election. This assurance will contribute to a stronger third party in four years. John Anderson lost this presidential race, but he acknowledged defeat gracefully and in true Anderson form told over a thousand cheering college students in Santa Barbara, California a few days before the election, "Don't ever let them tell you (this fight) didn't mean anything." OF Theresa Oakley

Jeff Greene


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Left — Speaking to a St. Patrick's Day crowd in Chicago, then Republican candidate for president, John Anderson, urges his homestate listeners to vote for him in the upcoming Illinois Republican primaries. Top Left — There were many Anderson supporters on campuses all over the nation and IU was no exception as Sarah Parsons, a senior and an Anderson campaign volunteer, passes out brochures before the IU-Michigan football game. Above — After not receiving the Republican nomination, John Anderson turned independent and ran as the National Unity Campaign for president. He didn't win but surprised almost all the experts, by getting on the ballot .• :1 in all 50 states. 47


Pranks and puns

Halloween is not just for kids toe Kus

belief that cats were once human but A changed as punishment for evil deeds is one of the superstitions connected with the history of Halloween, the "holy evening" before All Saints Day. The history of Halloween is not remembered by IU students as they revert back to nostalgic day of adolescence. Every holiday is an excuse for a party at IU and Halloween in no exception. For IU students, Halloween falls midway between the beginning of school and Thanksgiving break. It is an opportune evening to let loose and release the pressures of school. Freshmen through seniors donned costumes to join in the carefree, youthful evening. Bars, dorms and fraternity row were frequented by the Pope, nuns, babies, Egyptians and ladies of the evening. The American custom of playing pranks was recollected by students as they mischievously toilet-papered trees, broke jack-o'-lanterns and soaped car windows. At the close of the evening kids, clergy and call girls ceased their clandestine capers and returned to their "normal" lives — as IU students. 88 Lynn Vagnone

Right — Norm Newman, a senior, clamps down on an apple after several attempts. Apple bobbing was only one of the many activities at the Union Board Dusk-tilDawn Halloween celebration held at the Union. 48


photos Jell Morehead

Top Left — The remnants of unknown pranksters greeted Jim Olson, a graduate student, on his way to class early

Halloween morning.

Top — A local cat keeps a wary Ilallo-

ween watch before the traditional rush of costumed kids and students begins. Left — John Belushi and Dan Aykroyd they're not. These would-be Blues Brother impersonators enjoyed a Ilalloween dinner at Willkie Quad . In real life they are Keith Nichols, a freshman, and Todd Stafford, a sophomore. 49


Religion in American politics

Moral Majority Inc. denounces homosexuals, marijuana legalization oral Majority Inc., in the person of the Rev. Greg Dixon, pastor of the Indianapolis Baptist Temple, and Vice President and a founding member of the Moral Majority, came to the IU campus on the eve of the presidential election which would determine Moral Majority's success in mobilizing the nation's evangelicals against Jimmy Carter. "I think we have neutralized the (proCarter) vote," said Dixon, in a panel discussion on "Born Again Politics 1980," to an audience of 50 persons. The discussion was held on November 3, in the Frangipani Room of the Indiana Memorial Union and was sponsored by the Interfaith Society for Law and Religious Freedom, the Department of Religious Studies and the Center for University Ministry. Criticizing then-President Jimmy Carter as a "theological liberal" who supports homosexual civil rights and marijuana legalization, Dixon said Carter received 90 percent of the evangelical vote in 1976. Dixon predicted Carter would get only 50 percent of that in the 1980 election. "We do not give a religious test to those running tor office. We do give a moral test to those running for office," said Dixon. The wide-ranging panel discussion covered many topics involving the role of religion in American politics and, specifically, the influence of the Moral Majority in this election year. Professor Patrick Baude, scholar of constitutional law at the IU Law School discussed the historical precedents of the separation of church and state in American constitutional law. He said that only the government, not any particular religious group, can violate the separation of church and state. "If the pope himself, Billy Graham, the chief rabbi of Indianapolis and Jerry Falwell (leader of Moral Majority) got together and formed a club, they could not violate the Constitution," Baude said.

50

"Religious involvement at the local level in politics is probably inevitable and certainly not evil," he continued, pointing to Martin Luther King, Jr. as an example. Mary Jo Weaver, an assistant professor in the IU Department of Religious Studies and director of the Institute of Religious Studies, placed the Moral Majority within the historical tradition of activist American religious movements. Like Baude, she did not see Moral Majority as an unusual phenomenon in American political life. She did, however, assert her feminist perspective on Dixon s manner of speech. At one point, Weaver corrected Dixon's use of the word "man" as a generic term. Dixon turned to her, his eyes aflame, and exclaimed, "Lady. When I say man, I refer to all mankind!" There were several boos and hisses from the audience. Although the pre-election eve audience was not entirely sympathetic toDixon's presentation, the Moral ,Majority spokesperson aggressively defended his organization's stand on public issues such as abortion, national defense and homosexuality. "I believe that homosexuality is not only a sin and morally wrong — but should be a felony. I am sorry that it still isn't a felony in Indiana," Dixon said. Describing how the federal government has "run over our families, businesses and churches," Dixon asked: "How long are we to remain silent? I think it's about time for people with moral convictions to stand up and be counted." Moral Majority stands for "pro-life, he family, pro-morals and pro-America, he declared. He quoted a Bible verse that states: "When the righteous bear authority, the people rejoice; when the wicked rule, the people mourn. "When the righteous are in authority, they lose their righteousness," Baude retorted. 8 Lewis Ryker


nly the government, not any particular religious group, can violate the separation of church and state. Prof. Baude

Jeff Greene

Left — Moral Majority leader of Indiana, the Rev. Greg Dixon, points out differences between the policies of then-President Jimmy Carter and the Moral Majority philosophy during his speech on born again politics on Nov. 3 in the IMU's Frangipiani Room. Above — The not-so-massive crowd take part in airing the issues during a panel discussion about the effect of the Moral Majority on politics.

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Left — These four IU fans don't need to look at the scoreboard to be reminded of the Hoosier's heartbreaking Oaken Bucket loss. Far left — Purdue tailback Jim Smith unsuccessfully tries to gain first down against the IL' defensive line. Below — During the final moments yardage of play , fres hman deive fens end, Lou Cristofoli remains seated as fellow teammat es helplessly watch IU's last minute attempt to retain the Oaken Bucket.


Oaken Bucket game

photos/Jeff Morehead

IU kicks the bucket as Purdue wins by a point EST LAFAYETTE — The deW jected members of the Indiana University football team slowly walked up the hill to the visitors locker room at RossAde Stadium on the Purdue University campus. Behind them, the field was litered with hundreds of Purdue fans tearing down the goal posts in exultation of the Boilermakers' triumph over intrastate rival IU. As the players took each deliberate step up the hill, the huge scoreboard at the end of the stadium showed no time and the forlorn outcome of the game — Purdue 24, Indiana 23. Each player had his head bowed while listening to tantalizing comments hurled at them by the Purdue crowd. But one voice rose above the surly comments by the Hoosier-haters. It was the voice of a woman dressed in a black and gold Purdue jacket with a Purdue hat. "Hold your heads up! You guys played great!" the woman yelled to the dejected Hoosiers. And indeed they had. The Hoosier football team had come within 10 inches of completing a pass which would have won the game for them and thrust them into the team's second straight bowl appearance. The Hoosiers had been told by the Peach Bowl Committee in Atlanta, Ga., if they won the final regular season game against Purdue, they would be the visiting team in the January 2, 1981 Peach Bowl game. With 17 seconds left in the game and the Hoosiers facing a fourth-down-and-goal situation from the Purdue 10-yard line, IU senior quarterback Tim Clifford fired a pass into the arms of senior split end Steve Corso for a touchdown to make the score 24-23. It was a picture-perfect play as Corso leaped high to grab the pass between two Purdue defenders. The Hoosier bench exploded in pandemonium. They were one play away from defeating Purdue and reclaiming the Old Oaken Bucket which has been held captive in West Lafayette since 1978. But the

tumultuous excitement experienced by the Hoosiers was short-lived. IU coach Lee Corso decided to pass for a two-point conversion which would have put the Hoosiers ahead with 17 seconds left. As the 71,629 fans, the largest crowd ever to see a football game in the state of Indiana, intently looked on, Clifford took the snap from center. Rolling to his right he saw that sophomore tight end Bob Stephenson was open. Clifford threw a pass that was on the mark. But one desperate lunge by Purdue linebacker Mike Marks deflected the ball away from Stephenson no more than 10 inches from his craving hands. The area behind the goalpost immediately began to swell with Boilermaker fans. The Hoosiers still had one desperate chance left at the victory but it proved to be futile. IU recovered an onside kick and Clifford hit senior tailback Lonnie Johnson for a six-yard gain. With time running out, freshman Don Geisler attempted a 59-yard field goal that wasn't even close. So the Hoosiers lost the game after leading 10-0 in the second quarter. There would be no bowl trip but few Hoosier players could feel ashamed of their performance. Johnson ended his Hoosier career with a 224-yard performance, his second straight 200-yard game. But on this day individual performances meant little. "I don't think, in my 20 years of coaching, that I've ever had a team play like that," Corso said. "That's as good as we can play. If you were an IU fan who saw the game you were disheartened. If you were a Purdue,fan, you were in great joy. But if you were a college football fan, you werejust happy to have witnessed one of the best games in the Old Oaken Bucket rivalry. It was a classic. Bruce Martin

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Sports Law

Cheating exists, asserts panel, but is difficult to detect one of the four members of the panel N discussing recent scandals in collegiate athletics denied cheating exists. But each, representing various levels of the college sports hierarchy, disagreed on the extend of the cheating and how it can be deterred. Panelists Bob Knight, IU basketball coach, Wayne Duke, Big Ten commissioner, Jack Wentworth, IU professor of business and chairman of the Big Ten faculty representatives, and Mike Glazier, National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) enforcement representative treated a half-full Whittenberger Auditorium to some insight on the situation, mixed with wisecracks and obvious disagreements on November 17. Glazier prefaced his remark, saying, "We do have more than a minimum number of violations, but cheating takes place on various levels. The theory about money and automobiles being given out just doesn't exist.' Knight responded, in turn: "There's big money involved. I'm talking $10,000 to $15,000 to sign a letter of grant-in-aid . Players are guaranteed four season tickets, as an example, and can sell them for $1,000 or $1,500 or $3,000 apiece." Knight called for stricter measures to be taken against a school caught cheating. Knight's measures ranged from giving a scholarship athlete an extra semester to complete his degree to suspending athletic programs temporarily to encouraging college presidents to take a more active role in controlling athletic programs. Glazier said some of the proposals mentioned at the discussion will be considered when the NCAA meets to make rule changes. Duke pointed out that certain elements in the NCAA approval system might prevent quick action. "The NCAA is 750 colleges and universities with a myriad of views. It's not easy to attain approval for the proposal," said Duke. j,-5 George Papajohn

54


Left — Four sports experts, (left to right), Mike Glazier, NCAA representative; Wayne Duke, Big Ten Commissioner; Jack Wentworth, IU professor and Big Ten faculty representative; Bob Knight, IU basketball coach and a WTIU channel 30 host. Above — Bob Knight, (right) called for stricter measures to be taken against a school caught cheating during a forum discussing athletic cheating on Nov. 17.

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Indiana in NCAA soccer finals

Hoosiers not impressed by Dons, drop final by one an Francisco substitute, Fidelis S Atuegbu, shot the ball into the net from 10 yards out past IU sophomore goalie Chris Oswald. The IU players collapsed on the field; their third national championship had been taken away by the Dons, and, unlike in previous encounters, this time instantly in a 4-3 overtime verdict December 11. Like the finals in 1976 and 1978, San Francisco beat IU. But this game was different. Unlike the past shutouts, this national trophy seemed to belong to IU, at least for a little while. The Dons and the spectators in Tampa Stadium were awakened in the first half to find IU leading 2-0. The early dominance by the Hoosiers was a surprise to many who thought San Francisco's only competition in the final four would be against Alabama A&M in the semifinals Dec. 10. But in the final, goals by sophomore Pat McGauley on a header at 20:53 and junior Gregg Thompson at 33:35 showed that IU could do more than just keep up with the Dons. "We were underestimating Indiana because we were mentally down after the A&M game (the Dons won 2-1 to face IU in the final). They (IU) played a good game," said San Francisco's Erik Bisser. A 'good game' would be an understatement. After IU outshot San Francisco 24-9 in the first half, IU came hack from a 3-2 deficit in the second half to put the game into sudden death overtime. "We played the best soccer that any Indiana team has ever played," IU coach Jerry Yeagley said. "We were running the game until they scored their first goal." That first Don score was a shot by Bjorn Tronstead which was initially stopped by Oswald but eventually rolled into the goal. Less than 1 1/2 minutes later the Dons evened the score at 2-2 on a penalty kick by Roar Anderson. "The first two goals they scored weren't well-earned goals," said senior co-captain

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Steve Doerr. He wasn't the only Hoosier less-thanimpressed by the No. 1-ranked San Francisco team, which finished undefeated. "As old as they are and as big as they are, they didn't impress me that much," senior Robert Meschbach said on the sidelines as the Hoosiers went up slowly, one by one, to receive their second place awards. The IU players who were not sitting on the bench, stared ahead, laying quietly on the grass field in Tampa Stadium. "We showed we could play in their league. Play with the old guys. Play with the foreigners," Oswald said, referring to the Don's team of older, foreign players. "We outplayed them the whole game." Outplaying and outshooting simply wasn't enough, and IU's early dominance made it even harder for Yeagley to watch the San Francisco celebration at the other end of the field. "Each time it gets a little harder (to take), especially when weplayed so well and were in control," Yeagley said. "This game we had. We had a two goal lead. That's what hurts the most." As the rest of the team huddled numbly on the sidelines after the finishing San Francisco goal, Doerr broke the silence. "We played our best and you can't be ashamed if you play your best and lose," he said. Doerr and senior co-captain Steve Westbrook could not forget the 0-1-1 start of their season when the Final Four seemed an impossible dream. "I thought we should have won," Westbrook said. "I thought we deserved to considering how hard we worked this year." Although the luck that helped the Hoosiers produce 22 wins gave out during the overtime, Schmid said the young team will be back in the Final Four next year.

Tammy Lytle


Left — IU goalie, Chris Oswald (left) and forward Pat McGauley both sophomores, dejectedly sit on the sidelines, moments after San Francisco scores the winning goal in sudden death overtone to win the NCAA soccer championship, Dec. 11. Below left — Greg Thompson boots the ball out of trouble during a semifinal game against Hartwig. The Hoosiers went on to win, 5-0, to advance to the championship game against San Francisco. Below — Armando Betancourt (10) tries in vain to head the ball past two San Francisco players in second period action. Betancourt was later named the game's offensive most valuable player.

[IMF 111111% 111110.11111111111111111111MIMMIMMEI 11111111111.11111111111.1111.1.1111111111111.1.1

4471041. -` )100?

photos/Terry John

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Madrigal Dinners

Christmas connoiseurs served a king's feast trumpet fanfare accompanied the A madrigal singers as they entered the candlelit hall which hinted a Renaissance atmosphere. The pageantry of the 32nd annual Madrigal Dinners at Indiana Memorial Union's Alumni Hall retained the festive tradition of musical performances and seasonal fare reminiscent of the years 1400 and 1500. In flowing apparel typical of the period, the vocalists proceeded among the "aristocracy," the dining audience of the evening who stood at elaborately decorated tables. The aristocracy were served an Old English style feast by maids and waiters dressed in the costumes of the 15th century and were treated to songs and merriment performed by the "nobility," members of IU's School of Music. As the second fanfare echoed throughout the hall the singers drank from the traditional goblet, the Wassail bowl accompanied by the dining aristocracy in a toast to the Christmas season. The third fanfare brought forth the procession of the Boar's Head as the diners were served roast sirloin with Yorkshire Pudding. With the fourth fanfare, the heads of each table lit the famous plum pudding in ruin sauce — a traditional end to the festive meal. Announcing the madrigal concert of seasonal baroque music, the fifth fanfare was followed by the magic tricks of a playful jester. The entertainment, Christmas songs of all ages and from many cultures and countries, were performed by the IU School of Music's Chamber Singers and Pro Arte. Audiences have been entertained since the annual dinners began in 1947 when 200 guests were served for one performance. This year more than 6000 guests attended the 14 evening performances from November 30 to December 13, continuing the festive holiday tradition in a courtly way. Celina Spence

58


Left — Silhouetted against a bright backdrop, the court jester performs for the audience at the Madrigal Dinners held in Alumni Hall in the Union. Below left — A toast to good food and good cheer by the nobility started off the madrigal festivities. Below right — Two madrigal singers share a joke during the meal. The presentation also included magic tricks, and Christmas carols of all ages and from different countries. photos/John Terhune

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John Lennon 1940-1980

People's hopes and dreams destroyed by assassin's bullets read the news today, oh boy . . . — A I Day in the Life

The radio and television stations announced, "John Lennon has been shot and is dead." What followed was pandemonium, confusion and devastation for millions of people around the world. It was inconceivable that the 40-year-old musician suddenly could have been the target of an assassin's bullets. The senseless murder occured shortly after Lennon had released his first album in five years, Double Fantasy. On the album is a song that symbolizes Lennon's life before his murder: "Starting Over." Lennon finally had taken charge of his life. His family and home life had become assemblance of normalcy and his career once again was on a successful climb upward. Lennon and his wife Yoko Ono had survived the tolls of their outspoken political views, their use of drugs and their fame. When Mark David Chapman shot Lennon on December 8, he crushed the hope of a Beatle reunion. The cultural impact that the Beatles implanted during the 60s era never would be relived. After the abrupt murder, tributes to Lennon prevailed throughout the country. Double Fantasy sold out, as did other Lennon and Beatles albums. In Washington, D.C., hundreds crowded in a silent vigil on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial. At IU, hundreds of mourners gathered in Dunn Meadow to shed their grief, sorrows and tears on the designated Sunday afternoon. A loudspeaker played some favorite Beatle melodies while people remembered the man who was part of the group that pushed for societal change, the group that made conventional the fads of the 60s: the peace movement, drugs, transcendental meditation and the youth movement. The Beatles' impact and probable immortality are best summarized by composer Copeland: "When people ask to recreate the mood of the 1960s, they will play Beatle music." db Lynn Vagnone

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Jeff Greene

Top Left —A John Lennon mourner holds a special tribute section from a newspaper. A vigil, called by Lennon's widow Yoko Ono, was held in Dunn Meadow, Sunday December 14, as well as across the nation to mourn Lennon's death. Left — we are saying is give peace a chance," was a Lennon song sung out at the 1U Sunday night vigil for Lennon. More than 100 people assembled at the Auditorium to pray and sing Beatle songs in memory of John Lennon. Joe Kus

Far Left — John Lennon fans gathered in mourning at the IU Auditorium to pay tribute to John Lennon, who was assassinated on December 8, 1980 in front of his apartment in New York. The vigil at IU was organized by Rob Mohr, a senior. He announced it over radio station WIUS . Above — Bobby Parks, a worker at the Princess Theatre, places a black cloth on the Princess' marquee in memorium to John Lennon.

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TubaChristmas

Tubas bring holiday merriment for all oung children looked on with amazeY ment as 24 tuba players dressed in Santa Claus costumes played Christmas carols on Bloomington's town square. This is Christmas, tuba style, says TubaChristmas originator, Harvey Phillips. Led by head tuba Santa (Phillips), the tuba players rode aboard a fire truck from the Musical Arts Center to the town square on a chilly December afternoon, spreading the Christmas spirit by playing favorite carols. After entertaining the audience of both children and adults, the tuba players walked down to the fire station to finish their concerts. Phillips, an IU music professor, started TubaChristmas to immortalize the late William Bell, a professor from IU. Bell was born on Christmas Day. The purpose of TubaChristmas is, first, to catch the public's attention, said Phillips. He added that once he had grabbed their attention, he could then enlighten the general public and instill both awareness and knowledge of the tuba. Phillips said that he owes it to the students he teaches to generate more job opportunities by gaining more popular support for the tuba. It is a great way to have fun while accomplishing a task, he said, referring to tuba events he sponsors. They range from Octubafest in the fall to TubaEaster in the spring. TubaChristmas is an established event in Bloomington, as well as in cities all over the world. Phillips travels from New York to California to conduct TubaChristmas annually. He conducts the performances with the tubists of the respective cities. The biggest tuba celebration was on December 21 in New York City's Rockefeller Center. Over 600 tubists performed in front of a crowd of 25,500 people. SP, Lynn Vagnone

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Jeff Greene


David Schreiber

Jeff Greene

Far left — Tubas and outfits wait for their Santa owners. Above left — Christmas brings the best in siblings. Tim and Chris Aslin of Bloomington get caught up in the Christmas

spirit while TubaSanta senior Ted Cox concentrates on the music. Left — Head Santa Harvey Phillips leads the other 23 TubaSantas during TubaChristmas. Above — TubaSanta Amy Bobbit, a senior, strained to see the music through her santa costume, while playing in the TubaChristmas recital on the courthouse square.

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I


Spring

fire was a serious one. The cinema was destroyed completely. Although arson was ruled out in the Towne Cienma fire, crime excalated elsewhere throughout the nation, prompting Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, Warren Burger to speak out against the "reign of terror" that is crime in the cities. In another fire, at the nation's largest hotel, the Las Vegas Hilton, arson was a possibility. A questionable account of a busboy led to his being charged with arson and eight homicides late in February.

WORLD

ktith

I

■ 1,1

No one yet knows the implications for the United States of the successful journey of the space shuttle, Columbia . At Cape Canaveral, Florida, Captain Robert L. Crippen (left) and Captain John W. Young relax for a moment and discuss their upcoming voyage. Columbia waits in the background, lie nose, described as -porpoise-like,pointed heavenward.

REAGAN

busied himself at the start of the year, setting the scene for his "era of national renewal" as well as for his evening of formalized (and privately funded) hoopla: the eve of the Inauguration. Soon after, he went into action, grinding at the federal budget and activating an extensive, expensive plan for military increases. Aides suspected that he wouldn't have more than a few months to prove to Americans his ability to turn the economy around. Columbia shuttled into 1981, behind schedule and over budget, but despite cries of "would she fly? the spacecraft emerged, a success and a booster to at least a portion of the nation's morale. Secretary of State Alexander Haig, as well as arguing with Vice President George Bush as to who was number two, announced vigorous plans to flex some of America's muscle, most notably to the South, in El Salvador, where the Reagan Administration sent

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military advisers and other aid to assist the junta in power. An economic downturn accompanied the new year, only five months after the worst of the last slump had passed. Attempts to "overhaul" the CIA were discussed in the wake of one Phillip Agee, a former agent who made it a practice of following the agency around the world and exposing its activities. The CIA claimed that "crippled recruitment" and damage to its operations would result, and moved to escape public reaction.

FIRE

swept the Towne Cinema, 226 N. Walnut, on Monday night, April 27. The blaze began in one of the building's second floor apartments. Moviegoers and tenants were evacuated, leaving firefighters to battle the flames with nearly three-fourths of the city's firefighting equipment. Caused by an overheated exhaust fan in the attic, the

affairs, more than ever, played an important role, and though news sources too often generalized the eventful turns as being a general rise in terrorism, the situations in the world's "hot spots" proved to be, underneath, more complex. Months before — and after — the release, by a group of Iranians, of its 50-odd hostages, the Iranian-Iraqi war raged. Israel and Syria fired weapons over Lebanon, Israel demanding that Syrian missles and Palestinian refugee camps ("terrorist bases") posed serious threats to Israeli security. Giving up the Sinai, Israel's "early warning zone," has left Israelis bitter and Egyptians much less than satisfied. Poland (and the Soviet Union) watched the development of independent worker unions in the satellite country. Lech Walesa, leader of Solidarity, visited the Pope, who refused to allow Walesa to kneel before him. The worker strikes began as a result of a push for a five-day work seek instead of six. Workers hardened after they perceived a government back-off in the face of possible Soviet intervention and an economic crisis. "Who will tell the truth about El Salvador?" wondered a March article in Rolling Stone magazine, while state department officials claimed that the Central American story was getting several times the coverage that it merited. It was a bloody situation, nevertheless, and no side seemed to have a monopoly on violence. Journalists and


missionaries, rightists and leftists — people were dying, some said, at random. In France, Socialist Francois Mitterrand was elected President — a man interest in literature and philosophy, who sees politics as one in a scheme of things. It was in March that Prince Charles, future King of England, announced his intention to marry 19-year-old Lady Diana Spencer. She soon was dubbed "Shy Di," and American periodicals acquired a positively British tone when discussing the upcoming event. While the princess-to-be studied the finer aspects of royal protocol, hunger strikers of the Irish Republican Army starved themselves in an attempt to gain political prisoner privileges. The most-publicized, Bobby Sands, was actually a member of Parliament, elected in protest by a Catholic constituency. The IRA protests British rule of Northern Ireland.

SHOTS were fired twice, within weeks of each other: Two leaders escaped assassination by fractions, or by God, and the numbed reaction to both was — why? In April, it was President Reagan, by a drifter from Denver who "did it for the love of Jodie Foster." In May, it was Pope John Paul, whose attempted assassin was a right-wing terrorist from Turkey who thought that shooting the Pope would make up, somehow, for the attack on the Grand Mosque in Mecca. In Georgia, city administrators were worried about the bad publicity. Reagan was worried about the charges of bigotry. But Atlanta feared for its children — its black children, who were turning up murdered at a terrifying rate. A killer or killers? Male or female? Young or old? Black or white? Able to elicit federal funds from the Reagan Administration (as well as to attract groups of concerned citizens from around the nation), the people of Atlanta continued their vigil. But the bodies continued to turn up.

The Reverend Jerry Falwell, leader of the Moral Majority, Inc., threatened to sue the magazine when an exclusive interview of him showed up in the March issue of Penthouse. He claimed he did not grant the interview to them. The issue sold more copies than the interview of President Carter in Playboy last year.

ould she fly? Despite computer malfunctions, Columbia is a success.

was running out of time, and its proponents feared a concerted shift to more conservative ways of thinking. The Moral Majority was plowing along, firm in its commitment to a moral America, and right-wing Senator Jesse Helms was holding his ground, despite a plea in a letter to Time magazine: plea coddle this redneck, Mr. President. He'll undo us all." Abortion had become the decision of the new decade. The hard-line "rightto-lifers" argued "murder" and "sacrifice," the unyielding "pro-choicers" retorted "freedom" and "privacy, and somewhere in between lay the reality of medical cost for such an undertaking and the hint that abortion, be it "baby killing" or a "right," will not stop in the face of prohibitive legislation. And, to cap an eventful news year, American broadcast's father image retired at the age of 64. Walter Cronkite, familiar as family braodcast his last edition of the CBS Evening News early in March. QP Kathy Hoyt

Dean Rutz

Walter Cronkite prepares to read his last news broadcast as anchorman of the CBS Evening News. Cronkite stepped down several months before turning 65 in order to make way for his replacement, Dan Rather. Friday, March 6, Cronkite ended his 18-year career by saying: "I'll be away on assignment, and Dan Rather will be sitting in for the next few years. Good night,


American hostages released

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State officials, family and friends are among the hundreds of people who greeted former hostage Rick Kupke after his arrival at Indianapolis International Airport. Kupke, hoosier native, was one of the 52 American diplomats taken hostage by Iranian militants on Nov. 4, 1979.

Shawn Spence


41111111111111r

American hostages hostages released

Kupke given Hoosier welcome upon return to Indiana restless, buzzing crowd of Hoosier A well-wishers inside Indianapolis International Airport gazed through the large windows at Gate 36, their eyes peeled to the sky. Babies sat hoisted on shoulders. American flags were carefully unfurled and homemade signs unfolded. Two school bands waited in anticipation, while a throng of students cheered: F-R-EE-D-O-M!" As TWA Flight 565 descended to the ground, the crowd shrieked and shuffled. Amid the conglomeration of yellow ribbons tied to doors, walls, columns, ponytails, suspenders and wooden sticks, children wriggled closer to the podium where the long-awaited hero was about to stand. After 444 days in captivity, former hostage Rick Kupke was home. One of the 52 Americans held hostage in Iran since November 4, 1979 by militant Moslem students, the 34-year-old State Department communications specialist from Francesville emerged from the plane's ramp bearded, wide-eyed and smiling. His parents and sisters, obviously pleased, followed close behind. "I'd like to thank you all for coming," Kupke said after ascending to a podium covered with large yellow ribbons and reporters' microphones. His voice slightly strained, Kupke added, "It's great to be back in America. God bless you all." Then the presentation of gifts began. Dressed in a yellow sweater and dark pants, Kupke received a key to the city of Indianapolis from Tom Henry, an aide to Mayor William Hudnut. "Rick and his family have captured our hearts," Henry said, handing the key to the Kupkes. "They have the key to our hearts and we want to make sure they don't forget it. Next, it was Gov. Robert Orr's turn to honor Kupke and his family. "I don't think the Ayatollah (Ruhollah) Khomeini would understand this at all, but Hoosiers do," Orr said, handing Kupke a

68

certificate. "From now on you are a Saggamore of the Wabash." The award is the highest the governor can bestow. Orr then pinned a yellow corsage on Eleanor Kupke, mother of the former hostage. The crowds' cheers reached a crescendo as Kupke prepared to speak one last time. "I really don't have anything to say but thank you very much — from the bottom of my heart. Now I'm gonna go home," he said, still smiling. Accompanied by state troopers, Kupke descended into the crowd of reporters, photographers and well-wishers. Acknowledging those who wanted to get closer to the celebrated hero, Kupke reached into the jammed aisle, shaking hands, seemingly in awe of the size of his reception. "Well, I shook his sweater," one woman said, as Kupke passed through the crowd. Outside the terminal, the former hostage and his family boarded a recreational vehicle, provided courtesy of an Indianapolis television station. People lined the terminal driveway, stretching to get another glimpse of Kupke. On Interstate 65 north, between Indianapolis and Rensselaer, the welcome continued. Scattered groups of people, some having parked their cars and trucks in cornfields, gathered to wave American flags or giant yellow ribbons. Others stood atop highway bridges, clutching cameras and ribbons as they shiverred in the cold. As a car carrying photographers passed the Kupke vehicle, a proud Mrs. Kupke moved to a window in the back of the vehicle, joyously waving a yellow ribbon and mouthing the words, "I'm his mother!" One determined youth balanced himself atop an expressway railing, clutching a "No U-Turn" sign with one hand and a yellow ribbon with the other. If there were hundreds of yellow ribbons at the airport, there were thousands along the streets of Rensselaer. Once within the

city limits, a throng lining the streets of this city, just west of Francesville, was visible on the horizon. As the church bells of St. Joseph College rang, hundreds of students anxiously prepared to greet the hero's procession. "Is it coming yet?" one girl asked. "I don't see it," a friend replied. As the motorcade approached, the crowd suddenly roared. Peering out an open window on the passenger side of the vehicle, Kupke smiled and waived. Further down the road, a group of men from the local American Legion Post saluted. "How do you feel, Rick?" one of the men yelled. "Just great," Kupke said, grinning. On both sides of the street, signs reading, "We Toast Your Freedom, Rick" and "Welcome Home, Rick" covered store and business windows. In front of the Monnett School, where Eleanor Kupke teaches remedial reading three days a week, children and their teachers waved ribbons and flowers. Although Kupke never stepped outside of the vehicle, he paused to greet a throng of reporters descending upon the motorcade traveling through the town's business district, expressing his amazement at the size and extent of the celebration. Propped on the lawn of the Van Rensselaer School, one of the final gathering points on the road to Francesville, was a life-size report card constructed by students. It read: NAME Rick Kupke DAYS ABSENT 444

PATRIOTISM BRAVERY PATIENCE HONOR COMMENTS

A+ A+ A+ A+ We are proud of you

Rick, Welcome Home! .4>

Karen Lusson


Left — Flags, yellow ribbons and overall enthusiasm greet Rick Kupke as hundreds of people join in the welcome home celebration at Indianapolis International Airport. Below left — Former hostage Donald Sharer, a guest of honor at an IU basketball game, pauses with coach Bob Knight and the team to sing the National Anthem and pay honor to America. Below — A small American flag and a yellow ribbon on the antenna of a car near Read Hall symbolized the hopes throughout the country that the 52 American hostages in Iran would safely be returned to freedom. Sham Spence

Jeff Morehead

ro

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Spirit of Sport

Students enjoy pulling an all-nighter here is one night out of the school T year when IU students don't mind "pulling an all-nighter." In fact, most students enjoyed staying up on the night of February 6. Instead of cramming for an organic chemistry exam or memorizing the highlights of the Cultural Revolution, students could be found playing everything from basketball to underwater hockey and doing everything from riding a mechanical bull to stuffing their faces with pizza. On February 6-7, the sixth annual SpiritOf-Sport All Nighter, sponsored by the student Recreational Sports Association in cooperation with WTTS, gave 14,000 people a chance to observe and participate in the many sports activities that are available to the university community. The 24-hour event also raised $9,500 for the Indiana Special Olympics program. The majority of funds came from tournament entry fees and from donations by businesses and individuals. The mainpurpose for the SOS All Nighter is, according to Recreational Sports superviser Kathy Bayless, "to provide a diverse sports opportunity for the university community while raising money for the Special Olympics." In past years, more than $24,000 has been raised for the Special Olympics. "The Spirit-Of-Sport is sort of a showcase for recreational sports in a 24-hour time period," Bayless said. IU Basketball coach Bob Knight, serving as 1981 Honorary Special Olympics chairman, kicked off the event. "I'd like to challenge any country in the world to come up with a group of people, ages 18-22, who'll do what you guys do when you're asked to do it," he said during the opening ceremonies at Wildermuth. Immediately after Knight's speech, 1000 paper airplanes bearing the autographs of campus athletes, coaches, student leaders, and administrators, were launched into the air.

70

SOS participants released their athletic energy by competing in a variety of tournaments. Racquetball, tug of war, volleyball, inner tube water polo, and of course, basketball, were just a few of the many successful tournaments. IU's sports clubs also were represented. Most clubs gave demonstrations, but the most popular demonstrations were those given by the world class Hurryin' Hoosier Cloggers and by IU's several martial arts clubs. Bayless commended the 250 student volunteers who helped with the sports extravaganza. "There is strong student leadership here," she said. "The volunteers put in a lot of hard work and effort, but they did it joyfully! There is a lot of hard, physical work in putting up, taking down, decorating the facility and in organizing a safe, visible program. It's quite an undertaking. Senior Beth Coleman, SOS chairman, also praised the student volunteers. "It is fulfilling for me to see 250 volunteers come together and put on an event like this," said Coleman. "I'm very pleased because now we have made Special Olympics visible in the Bloomington area. We have also raised the largest single donation in the history of the Indiana Special Olympics." 88 Susan

Polakoff

Right — Spectators watch as a brave soul take to the saddle on JR the mechanical bull during the Spirit of Sport All-Nighter to benefit the Special Olympics, held February 6-7 in the Wildermuth Center. Top — Sandy Hollander, a senior, (left) and Shelley Weber, a junior, participated in the traditional Mother's Bear pizza eating contest. About 50 other students entered the contest . Marcus Mattioli, a sophomore, won the competition by chomping his pizza in 45.6 seconds.


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Spirit of Sport Dennis Chamberlin

Right — Gail Padish, a graduate student, screams while riding JR the Bull. Top Right — Residents from Willkie and McNutt quads competed in a 24 hour rocking chair rock-athon to raise money for the Special Olympics . Bottom Right — Residents from Wright quad rode hikes on rollers for 24 hours during the Spirit of Sport All-Nighter..

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No stopin"em now

McNutt slips IU Sing a 'Mickey' here was no stoppin' McNutt Quad T as they swept top honors in the 52nd annual IU Sing, February 20 and 21. The theme of the evenings, "No Stoppin' Us Now," was exemplified by McNutt Quad as they delighted the sell-out audience with "Universityland," a story about a new freshman student entering IU for the first time. Mickey Mouse and company playfully confronted registration, dorm food and new roommates in McNutt's presentation, a take-off on Walt Disney themes. McNutt received first place in the small division category (39 people or less), and took overall first place as well. Ken Ball, a junior and an IU defensive tackle, played the lead part as Mickey Mouse. Ball said he wants people to see football players in a different light. "People have a stereotypical idea about football players," Ball said. "People think we don't go to school, we don't get involved, and we get all the breaks. I want people to see that football players participate in extra-curricular activities." Teter Quad won top honors for the second year in a row in the large category (40 people or more), and also won the choreography award. Contemporary times were creatively depicted in Teter's show, "Employment." The show looked at the anxieties of unemployment and the conflicts of working wives. Delta Delta Delta and Sigma Chi captured 2nd place with "It's Just A Dream," which portrayed the realization of casual drug problems. Delta Upsilon won first place in allchoral category (unlimited membership without any speaking parts). The fraternity members won the hearts of the audience by tap dancing and singing barbership quartets in "Getting Our Acts Together. Kappa Kappa Gamma and Kappa Sigma received 2nd place with "Registration Blues," and also received the production award for genuine enthusiasm and cooperation with the IU Sing staff members.9O Lynn Vagnone

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Phil Sears

Phil Sears

Top — "Druggy," Brenda Ladin and "Horny," Mia Goldblatt, fall into character aboard thegroup's bus outside the IU Auditorium before going in to perform their IU Sing skit, "Universityland ." Left — The God,spell gang from MRC-LLC rehearse in their cafeteria for IU Sing. Above — Once is not enough for Teter Quad as residents Scott Harstough, Maureen Janson, Betsy Gynn and Mike Riggins thrust their trophy in the air after capturing the division B (large) category. The quad also won the best choreography award for their skit, "Employment."

is

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No stopin"em now

Jeff Morehead

76


Left — Pre-performance jitters don't seem to affect Delta Gamma members Ginger Schneider and Mary Logan as they prepare to gw on stage for IU Sing. Below left — Alpha Phi members take the spotlight during their IU Sing skit with Alpha Epsilon Pi, "It's Just a Fantasy." Below right — The cast of Sigma Phi Epsilon and Kappa Alpha Theta are caught up in their own thoughts as they wait to go on stage. Phil Sears

AND THE WINNERS ARE .. Overall winner McNutt Quad, "Universityland" Choreography award Teter Quad, "Employment" Production Award Kappa Kappa Gamma and Kappa Sigma, "Registration Blues" Division A (small category) 1stplace: McNutt Quat, "Universityland" 2nd place: Wilkie Quad, "Gone With the Breeze" 3rd place: Alpha Sigma Phi, "Compositions on the Keyboard of Man" Division B (large category) 1st place: Teter Quad, "Employment" 2nd place: Delta Delta Delta and Sigma Chi, "It's Just a Dream" 3rd place: Alpha Phi and Alpha Epsilon Pi, "It's Just a Fantasy" 4th place: Kappa Delta and Alpha Tau Omega, "Celebrate Us Home" 5th place: Delta Zeta and Sigma Pi, "Umpire Strikes Back" Division C (all choral category) 1st place: Delta Upsilon, "Getting Our Act Together" 2nd place: Kappa Kappa Gamma and Kappa Sigma, "Registration Blues"

77


McGuire lectures as coach, commentator, businessman l McGuire, former basketball coach A at Marquette University and now a color commentator for NBC's college basketball coverage, held a large crowd in the IU Auditorium enraptured for nearly two hours on January 19 with anecdotes, analogies and his philosophies on life. Much of McGuire's speech emphasized recognizing life's opportunities and taking advantage of them. His account of an episode of a banana set the tone for the entire evening. While visiting his grandparents on the West Coast as a youngster, he was offered a banana by his grandmother. He wanted to eat the banana, but he also wanted to go back and swim. He turned the banana down. "I wanted to eat the banana, but I didn't want to sit out of the water for two hours because of cramps," he said. "So I went back down to the oceanfront, and the wind kicked up. It got too cold to swim. I sat on the boardwalk and I said, 'It's too cold to go

swimming and I didn't eat the banana. "That stayed with me for awhile, and when I got to be 19, I said, 'For the rest of my life, I will eat the banana.' McGuire was introduced by IU basketball coach Bob Knight, a long-time friend. Knight used the occasion to get in a little good-natured ribbing, saying, "What is this about a lecture series? Have you ever heard Al McGuire speak? He's a broadcaster now, and he makes millions of dollars saying not a damn thing.McGuire, who seemingly wrote the script to his last Marquette team which was NCAA champion in 1977, appears to be exercising the same type of control over his own life. Even though he has been offered a coaching position by at least 11 pro basketball teams in the last three years, McGuire said he had no desire to coach again. "I have a gift of being able to pack things away and move on." McGuire classified his life into four careers. His first career was when he was a

bartender. "I learned more from being a bartender than from anything else," he said. "I learned not to rate somebody on their name or whether they've got a cap on or a tooth missing. You rate people." His second career was coaching, and his third, business, is now unfolding. "The business world is a cakewalk," McGuire said. At first, however, McGuire wasn't really sure if he could be an effective broadcaster but now feels comfortable with his peers in the booth. "Take Billy Packer for example," he said. "Working with Billy is like pushing a rope. The other day he was counting the top six teams on one hand." His final career will unfold about seven years from now in New Zealand, where he wants to spend the rest of his days. "My wife isn't going," he said, "so I'll probably go sooner. 88 Scott Waters

McGovern's common sense answers Moral Majority attack he traditional political process in the T United States is under attack from a well-organized, well-balanced group of right wing extremists known as the Moral Majority, George McGovern said April 15. McGovern, a former senator from South Dakota and the 1972 Democratic presidential candidate, spoke to a crowd in the IU Auditorium which interrupted him by applause 31 times and gave him a standing ovation at the conclusion of his lecture. The Moral Majority, he said, targets for defeat candidates who do not pass the group'ss moral index," which is based from zero to 100 percent. A senator or representative who voted for the Panama Canal Treaty loses 10 points, for instance, McGovern said. A vote against an increase in military spending loses another ten points. McGovern 78

scored a zero on the report card, he said. "They will knock you off no matter what your record is, even if you disagree with them on one issue," McGovern said. The Moral Majority has accused McGovern of being "anti-family," he said. Some of the reasons were his opposition to state-mandated prayer in public schools, his opposition to a proposed constitutional amendment banning abortion and his support of the Equal Rights Amendment, he said. McGovern denied that he is anti-family, pointing out that he has been married to the same woman for 37 years and is the father of five children. He was defeated in the 1980 South Dakota senatorial race by James Abnor, a 57-year-old bachelor, McGovern added. McGovern said that a right-wing group

in South Dakota known as "Target McGovern- built a major campaign against him, running 72 radio commercials a day and 200 television commercials a week. Some television ads and leaflets pictured a target with McGovern's heart as the bull's-eye. These tactics were considered unacceptable even by some conservative newspaper editors, he said. McGovern has formed his own group to oppose the New Right. The group, known as the "Americans For Common Sense," has two goals. The first is to build a "grassroot network of Americans across the country" to counterbalance the right wing. The second goal is to find better answers to the issues facing the nation, he said.9E Rick DelVecchio


Spring Lectures

Ex-Marquette University basketball coach Al McGuire stresses a point during his lecture at the IU Auditorium in January.

George McGovern, father of five, has been called -anti-family" by members of the Moral Majority, a group that McGovern terms right-wing extremist. The group, which opposes his liberal political philosophy, was the subject of the former senator and 1972 presidential candidate's lecture on April 15.

79


Chisolm solution is more women in political authority 've been in the political arena for the I past 21 years, and I've come to the conclusion that the only way to solve the problems of the world is to have more women in authoritarian positions on the local, state and national levels." Addressing an audience of about 500 people in the IU Auditorium on Sunday April 5th, Shirley Chisolm was in Bloomington to speak about a few of the more serious concerns facing women in society today, and to share a little personal philosophy, based on 22 years of experience in American politics. The lecture, which was co-sponsored by the Indiana Memorial Union Board and the IU Student Association Office of Women's Services, was part of Women's Awareness week. Chisolm spoke at length about discrimination faced by women who are part of

the work force. "Women's salaries are 16% lower," she said, and they earn only 590 for every dollar a man makes." She advocated payment to women judged by the qualities and tools necessary for the job, eliminating discrimination against women based on false premises. On feminism, she said "Feminists have made a mistake. They have confused equality with masculinity. Why should successful women scorn compassion, trying to emulate the 'good ole boys'? Never believe that women have to become men to make it in a man's world." But she stressed, "We need a world built by honest men and women." Concerning human rights, she advocated consistency in American foreign policy, but pointed out hypocrisy in the human rights attitudes in America, especially

where children are concerned. "We need to save our children. There is no advocate in government to speak up on behalf of America's children. This is why we can't move ahead with our human resources," she said. On women in politics, she said, "Women have to get together and run for political office to change a lot of things in America . . . if you feel that you have the contribution to make, accept the challenge. What is life without a challenge? I'm black and a woman. I did it, you can. Have courage and prepare well." In closing, Chisolm stated that "services of the highest type must be the right that you pay for room on this earth." Martha Walsh

Lecture on captivity ironic to teacher-superintendent mericans faced with unjust represA sion are simply irrepressible. The nation has emerged with a stronger sense of unity and patriotism since the 53 Americans were taken hostage in Iran on Nov. 4, 1979, said Dr. William Keough, a former hostage and superintendent of American schools in Teheran. Keough came to IU on April 7 to speak about his experiences as a hostage in Iran. He spoke at Whittenburger Auditorium for no fee, but to raise money for the Simon Fund which was set up to pay the education expenses of the 17 children of the eight helicopter crewmen who lost their lives during the attempted, and ultimately aborted, hostage rescue mission. "It is ironic that I was asked to speak, not because of my 30 years as a teacher and educator and not because of the 20 years completed as a school superintendent, but because most of the last year and a half of the twenty have been spent in prison. No other superintendent in America can make that statement," Keough said. 80

Keough said that the memory of the eight men who were killed during the rescue attempt and their sacrifices will remain with him and his family as long as they live. "My wife told me the most difficult of all 444 days was that futile day at Arlington National Cemetery when she stood and looked into the eyes of the wives and mothers of the eight brave soldiers who died trying to bring me and 52 other Americans from bondage. Keough brought chuckles and smiles from the audience when he recited some of the methods the hostages used to "get back" at their captors. "I learned to be a hassler to my captors and I learned to utilize all those clever little moves teachers have observed in student behavior for generations. Keough said the hostages were constantly hungry for news and would grab any newspaper they could to get it somehow to one of the captives fluent in MiddleEast languages. Because of his fluency, he was kept in solitary confinement.

"When he read the newspaper, he sang "America the Beautiful" only the words he sang were the week's news instead." Keough said he and the hostages were surprised by the great show of patriotism which greeted them after their release, but soon came to accept it. "We accepted somehow and in some way that we were responsible," he said. "It isn t that the hostages in that situation did something special, they did what they would want other Americans to do in that same situation. We were merely accedents of history. "Through all that has happened, this nation has emerged with a stronger sense of unification and national pride. If this renewed spirit can heal old wounds; if it can bring respect for those who died defending it to preserve an orderly way of life; if it can keep this new sense of patriotism and national direction going, then 444 days in captivity were worth it." Robert Wickens


Spring Lectures

on behalf of "There is no advocate in government to speak up DAmerica's children," stated Representative Shirley Chisolm, t delivered a lecture to IU students, discussing Chisolm i4 New York . America. 2. feminism, human rights and state of affairs in

Former Iranian hostage Dr. William Keough chats with IU Chancellor Herman B Wells after his lecture in Whittenberger Auditorium. Keough spoke of his experiences and observations during the 444 days of captivity, including the means by which the captives maintained their morale.

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Celebration

IU style

Right — Beating most IU fans, as well as JUPD officers, these students were so confident of an IU victory, they arrived early to Showalter Fountain to celebrate an IU victory. They listened to a portable radio as the final seconds ticked off . Far Right —After the Hoosiers beat North Carolina the streets in Bloomingtonfilled with celebrating students. Many gathered on Kirkwood and Dunn Streets. Below — The beer was flying, the fans went wild at Nick's English Hut as the Hoosiers defeated the North Carolina Tar Heels to capture the NCAA Championship.

Puff Anderson

Jeff Morehead Phii Sears



NCAA Champions

Campus turns into one big party; give champs grand welcoming his is what you come to college for," T Sue Boyle, a freshman, said. Jayne Kidwell, also a freshman, called it "Hoosier hysteria at its best." Both were expressing their joy during the massive celebration at Showalter Fountain following IU's 63-50 victory over North Carolina in the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) championship game. An estimated 8,000 to 10,000 people poured on to Seventh Street near the fountain and on to Kirkwood Avenue downtown. The day had been marred by the news of an assassination attempt on President Ronald Reagan. Spirits at IU were lowered only temporarily as people began filling up local bars in mid-afternoon, several hours before the game's 8:30 p.m. starting time. Nick's English Hut was filled by 3 p.m., Jim Mathias, manager of Nick's, said. "People began coming in at noon to find a seat, he said. Three extra bartenders, three extra managers, and an extra doorman were brought in to help with the overflow crowd at Nick's, which sold out of all its carryout liquor, Mathias said. Bear's Place also called in extra help, Ray McConn, manager, said. Business that night was like "two good nights wrapped into one," he said. George Huntington Jr., chief of the Bloomington Division of the IUPD, said that $10,000 damage was done to Showalter Fountain. "About eight" arrests were made by the IUPD, mostly for vandalism, William Conder, an IUPD captain, said. Carl Wert, a patrolman for the IUPD, said that he was stuck with patroling the fountain. Wert had to start enforcing the laws once people started doing damage, he said. That's when he got hit over the head with a few beer bottles. He was wearing a helmet, however, and was not injured. "It was ridiculous," he said. "I knew everyone would be in a partying mood.1 Rick DelVecchio

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NCAA championshi p , the part of the net from the site of the Left — WithSpectrum, Philadelphia draped around his neck, senior center Ray Tolbert tells rally that they are number one. For once, fans gathered at a pep the over 10,000 however, the fans disagreed, shouting "You're number one, Ray!" Apparently Several weeks later Tolbert was named the most valuable player they were right. Ten. Knight looks over the thousand of people gathered in Assembly in the BigBobby Below — receiving a standing ovation for several minutes, Knight led a cheer of Hall. After on the day after the Hoosiers defeated the North Carolina Tar Heels "AC Who?" basketball crown. Referring Referring to the Big Ten versus the to capture the NCAA ACC says they are 6-0 Atlantic Coast Conference rivalry, Knight said, against Big Ten Teams, but I'll take last night anytime." Dean Rutz Phil Sears

4-, • )4,•:4.11h


Spring Break '81

Florida provides refuge before finals s the winter snow melts and the A brisk, chilly spring air moves in, there is one word on the lips of IU students: Florida. During spring break a major population shift occurs; thousands of students flock to the sunny beaches and warm climate of Florida. This year, IUSA sponsored a spring break getaway. Six bus loads of IU students found their way to Daytona Beach to spend their break. Florida, however, is not the only state where people try to forget about school for 10 days. The slopes of Aspen, Vail and other resorts have lured students in the past but this year a mild winter closed many of these resorts. New York — the city — also is popular. Broadway plays, thousands of sights and millions of people, NYC has more things to do than one could fit into six spring breaks. New York — the state — is becoming a popular spring break get-away. The scenic Catskills and Appalachian Mountains provide the perfect camping refuge with scenic bike trails to enjoy. One doesn't have to become a snowbird and fly down to Florida to enjoy spring break. There is always something for everybody, even if you spend the 10 days at home with your f'amily and friends. One thing for certain, make plans for the next year as soon as you get back from this year's break! 8s Bob Wickens

Far Right — Seagulls soar high above the thousands of students that visited Daytona Beach, Florida during spring break. Right — J ann V erheye and Nancy Sharpe, both freshman, enjoy the sun at the Plaza Hotel, on Daytona Beach. Top Right — Students prepare to leave Bloomington on the IUSA's Daytona Spring Break Trip. 86

photos/Hans Scott


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IU Soul Revue

The audience got down in the aisles Tf you wanted to lose a few pounds, you should have gone to the IU Soul Revue. The excitement and exuberance the group generated to the crowd made the audience a part of the three hour song and dance show. The IU Soul Revue is composed of a group of students who audition for a class, A392 Soul Music and Performance offered by Afro-American Studies. The five-man, four-girl group traveled last fall to the University of Louisville to perform and during spring break they traveled to Alabama to perform at several universities. But the big night was returning to IU April 18 to perform in front of fans and friends. Whether the group was singing selections from the O'Jays, Earth, Wind & Fire or the Commodores, they gave an inspiring performance. "The show was very good. From the beginning of the show until the end I was never bored a minute," said sophomore Nancy Cross, a crowd member. The performance was worth the price of a professional concert." A ticket cost $2.00. One of the best aspects of the IU Soul Revue was that the members looked as if they were genuinely having a good time. The crowd seemed to recognize this responding by clapping to the beat, singing along or standing up dancing in the aisles. The IU Soul Revue is backed by a band composed of a rhythm and a horn section. The band was featured during "Funkin' For Jamica" and "Always There." The IU Soul Revue ended the evening with a spectacular finale by singing "Celebration" by Kool & The Gang. The group then asked for all Soul Revue alumni to join them on stage. As balloons were dropped from the ceiling, horns and noisemakers were thrown from the stage, the song began and everyone jumped on stage to join the group. It was truly a celebration. -.)8 Lynn Vagnone

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Far Left — The Expressions in Ebony, Donna Allen, Victoria Clark, Michelle Douglas and Gwendolyn Hall sing a Spinners medley in the first part of the Soul Revue. Left — Mark McClure, left, is accompanied by Steve Moore in Dreams of Lovin' You. Below — The Lovemen, consisting of David Jennings, Derrick Lilly, Dwight Macon, Norman Thompson and Jack Williams Jr. sang one of their more than 20 selections during the 10th Anniversary IU Soul Revue.

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Little 500 Week

Below -- The Cream team, left, took on the Crimson during the 1981 Little 500 IU Football team inter-squad game at Me morial Stadium. The Cream took the honors this year with a 21-6 victory. Middle — The Spinners posefor a picture before going on stage during the 1981 Little 500 Variety Show at the IU A uditorium, April 25. Right — Dianne Tingle, Tim Huskins and Lori Murphy dance country-style down the aisle during the annual Little 500 Style Show. The three were modeling western wear for 1981's -Cel ebration," held at Showalter House. Jeff Morehead


in his dressing room poses for a picture Spinners at the 1981 Left — David Letterman Letterman joined the . at the IU Auditorium April 25. Little 500 Variety Show,member Tom Robbins lifts a team member Below — Kappa Sigma the Mud Pit Competition at A Day on to the greased pole during April 11 at the Tenth at the Forum. The all day event held on and women competing Street Stadium involves teams of four men in various races and events.

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Mini 500

Sixty three teams vie for trike race victory mid colorful, floating balloons, a 10A foot walking bottle of "Hoosier Ale" and a bobbing bass of even greater proportions, the Wild Wheelers captured the 22nd Mini 500 trike race in big fashion. The Wild Wheelers, an independent team comprised of seniors Jan Dean and Vic Denbo, junior Cathy Weiss and sophomore Cindy Luebbert, pumped out a winning time of 39.92 seconds to oust Delta Zeta in the finals. The Wheelers, having the fastest qualification time coming into the race, had a fairly easy time advancing through the 63 team field. "We were saving the best for last," Dean said. "We took it easy the first three races when we knew were ahead." The final race was close and exciting all the way, pitting the Wild Wheelers against Delta Zeta and Kappa Delta. Kappa Delta and Delta Zeta, who had the fastest time of the night (39.88), were wheel-to-wheel with the Wheelers for the first lap of the two lap race, but the Wild Wheelers poured it on in the second half to leave no doubt as to who the champions were. "I told the girls that they've got the fastest second-half time of any team," said Kevin Welton, coach of the Wild Wheelers. "They didn't feel any pressure. They were excited and confident — we just didn't want to foul." It is surprising that the team even qualified for the race, let alone that they took the pole position. The team had practiced together only three times, including the one practice before qualifications. "We practiced our exchanges and turning patterns on the Friday between qualifications and the race," Welton continued. "When I clocked them at a 39.4 and a 39.8, well, there wasn't much more we could do. Indeed there wasn't — but when the four girls standing on the winner's stand were asked what was next, they yelled in unison (in true Little 500 spirit): "party!"0,9

Robert Wickens

92

Jeff Morehead


Top Left —j an Dean, Cathy Weiss, Cindy Luebbert and Vic Denbo raise their 1st place trophy for winning the 1981 Mini 500 Trike Race. Far Left — Large banners dominated the view of Assembly Hall during the Mini 500. Left — Greg Hicks, a junior, screams encouragement to the team from Teter Rabb II. Below — Margaret Alber prepares to hand off the trike to teammate Merry Sanders, the third rider for the Ashton-Stempel I team. photos Jeff Morehead

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Larry Levin

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Little 500

Delta Chi's domination continues in the new stadium he only thing really in doubt was T how nice the weather would be for the 31st annual Little 500, as Delta Chi breezed to their seventh Little 500 win in the last nine years. With temperatures ranging in the mid 70s, Delta Chi lived up to all pre-race expectations by winning their third straight title in a record time of 2:05.17, the goal of the four senior teammates according to captain Bill Brissman. 'We set a goal of three in a row in 1978," said Brissman. "We set it, and this year's victory was the culmination of three years' hard work to achieve that goal." Actually, the race looked very close for 199 1/2 laps. There was one tight pack throughout the race, but Delta Chi never was out of the top five, and led, in fact, for most of the race. On lap 191, D-Chi made their final exchange and Brissman moved very quickly back in front of the pack. Coming into the backstretch of the 200 lap race, Brissman, who had logged 68 laps already, poured on the steam and had almost a quarter-lap lead before he reached the fourth turn, coasting in with a two-second margin of victory. It was simple: no one could catch him. Perhaps the biggest news of the day was the fact that the race was the first held in the new Soccer/Little 500 stadium. "There is nothing like this track anywhere in the United States," said Dr. Bernard Loft, chief steward of the Little 500. "The track is the ultimate in safety and is superior to almost any track of its kind anywhere." A record crowd of 27,412 turned out in the not-as-yet-completed $3 million stadium to watch one of the fastest, safest races in Little Five history. "The track went beyond my expectations," said Allen Williams, a D-Chi teammate of Brissman.

"It seats more people (than the 10th St. Stadium, site of the previous Little 500s). It's much more satisfying to compete in front of 27,000 people." This year's race was different from past races in many respects. The cinder and gravel track was fast and smooth, and was one of the main reasons for the record time, despite the fact that it was nearly a mile longer than previous races. The race now is actually 50.98 miles, the extra .98 mile required so that the soccer field would meet NCAA requirements. "The track was really fast and fun to ride on," said Brissman. "It was also nice that everyone could finish together." There were only four serious wrecks during the race. The first turn quickly became the trouble spot as three wrecks on the 21st, 50th, and 78th laps occured. The first wreck claimed the most riders, wiping out eight teams from the back of the pack. Overall, it was a safe race, and, though disappointing to the 32 runners-up, this year s race probably previewed what it will take to win in the future. Inexperience probably was the cause of the first two crashes, as the track announcer warned the riders that turning their heads to communicate to each other was the cause of the first two accidents. "You must keep your eyes in front of you at all times," said Loft, who has been associated with the race since 1956. "I receive a lot of satisfaction from being associated with the Little 500 and the IU Foundation," said Loft. "To have such a facility as the new stadium is really great. The fact that it will be used for other events is good. We are the only university in the nation to have such a facility. "IU is the home of bike racing," he continued. "The Little 500 is the Rose Bowl of NCAA collegiate competitive bike racing." 88

Robert Wickens

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Mel Sears Top — Extra bicycle parts were available if the u supplied with AMF R nexpected happened. Each team is Little 500 races. oadmaster bicycles . AMF has supplied the bikes for all of the 31 Middle — Delta Chi rider Chris Gutowsky watched the led throughout p ack as he and his teammates the race. G utowsky rode 67 out of the 200 lap race. The Delta Chis won the race in record time of 2:05 .17 . This was nine years. their third win in a row, seventh in Above — Pi rider Phil Scheidler got a handshake and a hug from Cindy Alvear for hisKappa effort Phi in the race. Right — The pace car leads the 33 team pack out of the second turn at the start of the race. A record crowd of 27,412 packed the thr 500/Soccer Stadium. ee-million dollar newly built little



Little 500

Below Left —junior Mike DeVito reclines wearily on a matress in the Pi Kappa Phi pit area after completing an exchange with a te. Below — ammate Members of Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity cheer as their team finished in sixth place. The team started in position Bottom — 25. Members of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon team make an exchange during the race. Each team has four riders that switch throughoe ut race. Right — One of the four serious wrecks took place th in the first turn. Overall the race was a safe one," co mmented Randy Ochs, a rider from the second place Chi Phi team.

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Little 500

Far Right — Members of the winning Delta Chi bike team display the W ham S. Armstrong and the sterling silver Borg-Warner trophies. The Delta Chis won the 50 mile race in a record time. Bottom Far Right — No one was allowed to bring any alcoholic beverages inside the stadium. Hence, bottles and cans piled up near the front gate. Below — Delta Chis celebrate after they won the race. Right — Delta Chi Bill Brissman, a senior, exults as he crosses the finish line. Brissman rode 69 laps out of the 200 lap race. The Delta Chis averaged 24.40 miles per hour through the race. Jeff Morehead

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Will Counts


IU in New York

IU live at the Met a once in a blue moon affair here is something about being a stuT dent at a university at a time when its music school, rated first in the nation, takes a group of some 300 students to perform in the major concert halls of the Big Apple. “IU Loves New York" was their motto as they boarded the buses that would take the students to the planes that would set them down in musically sophisticated New York City to be the first university students ever to present an opera at the Metropolitan Opera House. In a series of five musical performances entitled "Music From IU," representatives from IU's School of Music demonstrated their impressive talents, and professional character. Their spirit shone as they threw the safety of less-complex pieces to the wind, favoring ones that displayed their true abilities. As for the opera, "The Greek Passion," it was performed with only a brief rehearsal on location — the afternoon of the Sunday evening performance. Nearly 200 students were part of its cast and choruses, and the adjustments from MAC to Met — acoustical , emotional and technical — were made in a matter of hours. Reaction to the performance generally praised the performers and called the opera "weak. The popular opinion was that IU did everything that could have been done with it. Four other performances completed the program: a concert of chamber music in Carnegie Recital Hall, a concert by the IU Philharmonic Orchestra in the Lincoln Center's Avery Fisher Hall (home of the New York Philharmonic), a performance of the IU Chamber Choir and a New Music Ensemble, both in Abraham Goodman Recital Hall. Said the New York Post's Harriett Johnson: "We would be far richer artistically in this country if there were more companies like this." 88 Kathy Hoyt

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Far Left — Most of the group had never been to New York before. Between performances and rehearsals, they found various ways to amuse themselves. The subway: the shortest route to anywhere, and typically New York. Far Bottom —I U loves New York, and the feeling is mutual. Several of the group pause at the entrance to Carnegie Hall, where they are to perform. Left — IU musicians demonstrate a little Hoosier spirit" on the steps of the Metropolitan Opera House in preparation for the most important performance ever ." The Met seats 3500 people — nearly twice as many as does Bloomington's Musical Arts Center. Bottom — The midwestern musicians fit in comfortably with the sophisticated atmosphere of the city "where opera comes alive." On their way out of the Met after a Sunday afternoon rehearsal of "The Greek Passion," the students catch a glimpse of their surroundings. photos Will Counts

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Graduation

The final hurrah for 7,356 graduates av 9, 1981, will be long rememM bered by the 7,356 students who graduated on that day from IU. How could they forget? Trying to wake up after partying with all your friends the night before, you quickly get dressed for that lunch with Mom and Dad. You arrive afterwards at Assembly Hall, and try to put your robe and cap on in the parking lot. Of course, your cap is blown off by the wind, but Mom comes to the rescue with a bobby pin, which makes you feel like a fool until you see your best friend's mom doing the same thing. Some things never change. As you hurry to get in line for the procession into the fieldhouse, the adrenaline is flowing. This is it: you're finally going to get that degree. The speakers address the crowd, but you are not listening. You are thinking back on those four, five or more years in Bloomington, and of the many things you'll miss: your friends, your professors, the allnighters and the parties that followed, the sports and activities and all those weekend plans. Finally, President Ryan asks your section to rise and confers the degree you've earned, believe it or not. Suddenly your friends are throwing their arms around each other and singing "Auld Lang Syne." And your folks look so proud. Or incredulous. Believe it. You graduated. OF La rry Levin

Far Top — Julie Melander, a business graduate, posed with her family in front of Showalter Fountain before graduation ceremonies. Far Left — Jon Sullivan received some help from his mom with his cap. Middle — The 152nd annual commencement was held in two ceremonies, one in the morning and the other in the afternoon both in Assembly Hall. Left — Three friends expressed their loyalty to IU by placing letters on their graduation caps. Above — Carmen Jones and passenger are two of the 7,356 graduates to go through ceremonies. 107


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Academics is what it is all about nother semester begins and A again there are fifteen hours to take. You flip through the schedule of classes, hoping to find some inspiration. Prerequisite after prerequisite stops you from choosing the classes that look halfway appealing. Friends are no help at suggesting courses that could help bring up the or grade point average. With all other sources exhausted, you decide to look in the Arbutus. Welcome. Academics encompasses every person at IU. Classes are the main reason we all go to IU, but sometimes we tend to forget that. However, there are so many interesting and valuable courses to take. IU has many departments that you may not have realized exist. Academics are more than classes

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we need to graduate and get a job. Look over on Seventh Street and witness the construction of the Fine Arts Museum. Listen to virtuosos practicing inside the School of Music. Take a hike to Assembly Hall to learn how to coach basketball. If studying is hard for you, there is the Learning Skills Center for help. Is there a big test coming in your SPEA class? A visit to the Tutorial Center may provide you with a tutor to help you get that A you deserve. If the normal classroom scene just doesn't appeal to you, try Learning at Leisure for some fun and informative lessons. The IMU Craft Shop offers an experience on creativity. Sometimes you want a quiet

place to study. Sometimes you need to study but you want to socialize too. The Main Library is at your disposal offering a central location guaranteed to give you the quiet atmosphere in some parts and a weeknight social opportunity to check out the life on campus. Finally, when senior year is at your door, and job anxieties set in, the placement centers within the schools can help alleviate those fears. Academics at IU isn't always fun and games. However, there is a lot here that can help make the struggle easier and a lot more interesting. Turn the page. See just a small sample of what IU has in store for you. Megan Byrne, Academics Editor


Left — Nancy Block, a freshman, sat on the Fieldhouse floor while she was trying to decide her class schedule during registration. Below — In order to get the class one wants, one must wait in line to get it. Sometimes the line can get very long and hectic during registration.

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Sophomores Felicia Lewis, Amy Wagner and Betsy Sullivan blow off studying for a while to soak up some sun on the library's steps.

Library one of nation's best but not all students go to study he main library, the 15th largest of T the nation's academic research libraries, has a great deal to offer academically-oriented students at Indiana University. Although a good number of people dread walking in the front door, there comes a time in every student's college career when he must break down and make use of the main library's abundant resources. Serious studiers seem to frequent different places in the library than do those students who are not quite as intent upon their books. Many an earnest student can be found hard at work in the graduate stacks, especially on the 10th floor. The microforms room is another popular spot for the more determined. Not only is it quiet, but foreign language newspapers are available as well. Government publications is another favorite quiet spot. Set off from the rest of the library, it proves extremely useful to paperwriters. If a student is dead-set upon staying up late to study, he can move over to the 24-hour study room which never closes, and is almost always crowded. Not only are there convenient areas in which to study, but the library also has an extensive number of resources for research purposes. There is an entire room devoted

to periodicals, which are used frequently by many students. The library has a large assortment of books pertaining to nearly every subject. In the main library alone, there are 2.4 million hooks, and almost every newspaper imaginable is provided for the library s patrons. The audio-visual section is extremely well equipped with microfilms, microfiche, films and computer terminals. All of the resources provided can prove very helpful to the student, but if it were not for the staff one might never be aware of all of the opportunities available. Any student can be assured that when he visits the library, he will be given first-class assistance in any area he requires. The library staff, capable, knowledgeable, and — most importantly — available, are willing to aid the student who is researching, or merely searching. or the enterprising collegian, visiting F the library is a social event comparable to a night on the town. The biggest social scene at the library is the cafeteria. Between 8:30 and 9:00 every evening, the library cafeteria is "the place to be." The place is so crowded that many of the patrons must stand rather than sit at

the tables. Of course standing is the best way to see and be seen by everyone else there. Another activity that the library easily facilitates is -scoping," otherwise known as Watching Members of the Opposite Sex. The best scoping action seems to take place on the undergraduate side, especially on the main level and on the third floor. Rather than sit still, many of the -scopers" would prefer to wander from floor to floor. This way they do not have to limit themselves to a small number of people and can take full advantage of their evening in the library. Many students go to the library either with friends or on dates. They take this opportunity to use the "soundproof' rooms located on the undergraduate side, where they are free to speak openly in a normal tone-of-voice about whatever they choose. These soundproof rooms often prove to be very entertaining for those seated nearby, as the soundproofing is largely ineffective. Students need not avoid the Main Library. Who knows? Perhaps frequent visits to the library might even improve a student's social life! Ann Auberry


Left — Mary Riggs, a junior, prac-

tices sign language on a videotape machine for her class. Three times a week students from sign language classes go to the videotape monitors in the undergraduate library for their lessons. Above — A harbinger of final exams week, the IU Library Cafeteria is crowded with students cramming for tests, finishing papers and completing group cases. 113


Fine Arts Professor Ronald Markman evaluates and discusses Gwen Smith's portfolio with her. Close supervision and cooperation are two major ideals behind the Fine Arts program at IU.

Fine Arts dept. awaits opening of new museum 64 W e're not really associated with the new Art Museum," said Stephen Murray, chairman of the fine arts department, "and that's what most people don't realize. We're completely different." Murray, who took office last July, said that his main concerns are the upkeep of the fine arts building and the assignment of individual studio space to all graduate students. "You can't really paint in a dorm or an apartment," he said. The fine arts department is currently trying to become a member of the National Association of Schools of Art in its drive to become a school of fine arts. Its faculty has been awarded many grants and has received many honors in the past year. Two such faculty members are Jerald Jacquard, who was awarded the NEA Fellowship for Sculpture and Molly Furies, who took a year s leave from IU through a fellowship from the American Council of Learned Societies.

Virginia Marsh, public relations administrator, said that hopefully one gallery in the new fine arts museum will be open by the fall of 1981, but the formal dedication is set for April, 1982. When completed, the museum will house four galleries. three of which will house permanent exhibitions. The fourth will be a changing exhibition gallery. The museum will also provide space for the fine arts library and museum offices. Moving into the new museum will mean transporting some 17,000 art objects, so traveling exhibitions have been halted at the fine arts building. However, the permanent exhibitions are still on display. now, we're just planning the move," Marsh said. "We're talking about moving objects ranging in size from tiny gold earrings to large sculptures which have to be moved by trucks." The last traveling exhibition at the museum was called "In Her Image." A

mother/goddess exhibition, it ended August 12. Other traveling exhibitions last year were a Royal Benin African show from Nigeria and a contemporary glass show. Traveling exhibitions will resume once the new museum opens, yet what is most exciting for many people in the department is getting the permanent collections on exhibit and out of storage. Molly McGraw, a graduate student, said that the storage spaces in the fine arts building are extremely cluttered. "I can hardly wait until all of the works are on exhibit, so anyone can see them at any time," she said. Until then, would-be viewers must make an appointment to view the stored works. By 1982, McGraw may not have to wait to view a sculpture or a painting. Hopefully, no one will have to. And, since the museum is privately and state-funded, admission to events hosted by the Fine Arts Museum will always be free. Mark Kellem

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Left — The new Fine Arts Museum constructed by state and private funds will house three galleries for permanent exhibits and one gallery for travelling exhibits. The official dedication is planned for spring 1982. Bottom — Caryl Hoskins, a senior, takes notes from a display in the Fine Arts Building for a test in her A206 class, Art & Archaeology of Ancient Greece.


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Putting the tuba in the car would seem a cinch compared to taking along the music, but to Kevin Atkins, a sophomore music major, it's just another note on the wall.

Competition is fierce; keeps music school #1 hat would lure 1,683 students from W Maine, Hawaii and from five continents to the cornfields of the Midwest? The top music school in the country would — and it does. Indiana University is the home of the nation's number one school of music, which attracts musicians and vocalists from all over the world. "What was once a major strike against us — being in a small town in the middle of nowhere — is now a big plus," said John Nagosky, director of admissions for the IU School of Music. "Parents today feel safer when they know that their son or daughter is studying here, instead of someplace like New York." According to Nagosky, being in a small town is not the only plus. The faculty, he said, is one of the school's many attributes. "The faculty makes us great. Of course you must have good students and good equipment, but our faculty is great — and the students know it," he said.

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Most music school faculty members have had brilliant careers before coming to IU. Nagosky said the turnover rate for professors is nothing out of the ordinary, despite the much publicized resignation of former opera star Eileen Farrell last year. Although the school had been pressured to recruit students, it is not a practiced procedure. The majority of students audition on a pre-arranged date. Once at the audition, students perform before a committee of departmental faculty members, which then makes a recommendation to the School of Music admissions committee. One student recalled his IU audition: "I remember when I auditioned here, I had to play in front of about 10 people. I almost died! At the other school that I auditioned for, I only had to play for one trombone teacher and that was it." Nagosky said more than 285 students a year are accepted out of 1000 who audition. Once in the school, assessments of the student's progress are frequently made.

At the end of a student's fourth semester, an "upper divisional exam" is given. The exam consists of a predetermined piece played by the student in front of a committee made up of faculty members from the student's area of study. After evaluating the student's performance, the committee decides if the student should continue into his or her junior year. "Most kids make it past this," Nagosky said. Music students must also pass a keyboard proficiency exam, maintain a minimum cumulative grade point average of 2.0, take lessons, fill core curriculum requirements and have 120 hours to graduate. Stiff competition at the school seems to ce desirable results, Nagosky said, roduce p produ here is absolutely fierce. But I think competition is good, because students just keep getting better and better. -J6

Susan Polakoff


Right — Artwork on the side of the Music Building, home of one of the most highly respected school of music in the world . Below — John Scott, agraduate student in the School of Music, realizes a figure bass using one of the pianos in the Music Building's practice rooms. Jeff Morehead

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David Schlundt, a graduate student, views Tony Marlin and Wendy Baumal, both freshmen, taking part in a social perception experiment for P101. All students in introductory psychology must take part in three hours of experiments as a class requirement.

Psych students seek social solutions ow does alcohol consumption affect H an individual's response to stress? What causes depressive moods and how can one overcome them? What accounts for anxiety in social and dating situations for many individuals? These are just a few of the questions IU Psychology faculty and graduate students are currently seeking to answer. IU's Psychology department, the fourth oldest academic center in the United States for psychology research and teaching, is the setting for hundreds of experiments yearly. Studies range from identifying the mechanisms responsible for the perception of acoustic communication signals by various species of monkeys, to research dealing with social support and stress management. Because the science of psychology is dependent upon constant experimentation and analysis of human and animal behavior, psychology students at the introductory level must participate as subjects

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in three hours of experimentation as a class requirement. The student subject pool is composed of more than 4000 students who take part in over 80 research projects each year. As subjects, students gain first-hand experience with techniques, procedures and devices employed in the psychology lab. In turn, faculty and graduate students are able to test hypotheses, analyze behavioral trends and gain new insights into the human condition through the services of the volunteers. Graduate student Oliver Oyama is studying physiological responses and behavior and how they relate, with the help of student subjects. Oyama, in his experiments, provokes a specific behavior within a research set-up and then records the physiological responses associated with that behavior in order to see how the two relate. Daryl Butler, another graduate student utilizing the subject pool, is conducting a four-year federally-funded research project in the area of visual perception. Butler

foresees a robot capable of perceiving depth in the three-dimensional world if the dynamics of depth perception in humans can be pinpointed and then applied to robots' vision. In the case of a bomb scare or nuclear attack, robots, instead of humans, could be used to disengage a bomb or scout out enemies, Butler explained. Currently in the production stage is a new mobile lab in a renovated bus, equipped with video and audio equipment, two soundproof rooms with one-way mirrors and furnished with children's furniture and toys. The bus will enable IU researchers to reach children at field cities and to travel to nursing homes to conduct experiments with the elderly and those unable to come to the psychology building facilities. This traveling psychology lab will open new avenues of experimentation and provide new opportunities for advancing a science whose discoveries affect the lives and wellbeing of us all. Meg McNichols


3 Dr. Richard Rose, professor of psychology, conducts a simulated hand pressure test to twin Diane Vojel, (left) as Donna Vojel looks on. Both are IU students and are part of an experiment investigating genetic properties of twins.

Twins are used to determine

heart disease causes

t is well known that Indiana University I is a learning institute. But educating the thousands of students who come here is not the only purpose of the University. Aside from dissemination of fact, IU is heavily involved in research in all fields of study. One department that conducts extensive research is Psychology. A genetic study involving twins is one of the most important topics that the department is exploring. Richard Rose, a Professor of Psychology at IU, has been investigating genetics in twins for the past eight years. The primary area that Dr. Rose and his associates are exploring in genetics is how genetics relates to high blood pressure and heart diseases. High blood pressure is one of the top five diseases killing Americans every year. Specifically, Dr. Rose's main purpose is to discover how genetics and environment interrelate in causing the disease. The ultimate goal of the study is to find which element, genetics or environment, is the

greater factor in determining whether or not one will suffer from high blood pressure or heart disease. Dr. Rose and his associates refer to this study as "behavior genetics," since they hope to determine the part that genetics plays. More than 1,600 sets of twins were recruited for the experiments. Identical and fraternal twins are used as well as unrelated subjects drawn from the University student population. Dr. Rose predicts that the results of his study will be used as a screening procedure to determine whether or not a person's genetic make-up could serve as a signal for him or her to watch out for high blood pressure and heart disease. Because of the variety of stressful tasks used, the experiments can also be used to determine what sort of treatment would best control the diseases. According to Melanie Muir, a research associate working with Dr. Rose, the study

will help to pinpoint who most likely will be subject to high blood pressure. She said that this study will help determine what kind of person will most likely suffer from the diseases. One question that the research team hopes to answer is "Who is likely to have high blood pressure — a 40-year-old businessman in a high stress situation or a 15-year old boy whose parents both had heart attacks at the age of 32?" The data will be compiled during the summer. Though the results are not in, the research team is positive that there definitely is a concordance between genetic make-up and diseases of the heart. In the future, Dr. Rose and his associates hope to do follow-up studies on the offspring of the present subjects. This will help to determine what role genetics play in whether or not one will contract heart disease or high blood pressure. SE

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Annette White, a senior doing her SPEA internship at the Department of Human Resources, listens to Volunteer Resources placement coordinator, Evelyn Jackson.

SPEA offers solutions, research and careers ost everyone's life is touched by the M men and women who create and manage public policy. The complexities of the '80s affect homes, schools, water, taxes, and even air. The School of Public and Environmental Affairs (SPEA) dedicates itself to preparing people for this challenge by giving them the knowledge and tools to tackle the task at hand. Entering its ninth year, SPEA has earned respect and recognition across the country with its unique curriculum that embraces both public and environmental analysis and decision-making and has rejuvinated professional public service education nationally. SPEA focuses its academic programs, research and services on finding solutions to problems created by people interacting

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with their environment. Such problems have social, political, economic and physical ramifications. Because of this breadth, SPEA's academic programs range equally far. These programs aid career goals such as environmental health, public safety, planning and urban affairs, management and policy analysis and city and state financing. To relate classroom studies to hands-on experience, students intern with a variety of public agencies. Similarly, faculty research often concerns the well-being of the society or they participate in public service projects addressing any number of concerns throughout the state or nation. "Water Quality Assessment" was a project incorporating a major component of Indiana s Water Quality Program. This project

compiled and computerized existing water quality data on Indian's streams, assessed the streams' water quality, and evaluated the state's water quality data collection. Another project was the study of synthetic fuel development in the Midwest. This study observed the optimal use of selected land sites in Indiana, Kentucky, and Illinois for the purpose of energy production. SPEA represents Indiana University's involvement in the dynamics of social change. For SPEA, this new dimension encompasses research and public service which complement innovative academic programs united with ongoing research capabilities of approximately 200 faculty and staff members at six campuses in the state of Indiana.

Lynne Shattuck


Christina Palmer, a sophomore spanish major, lis ens to instructional tapes in the language lab. The lab is located in Ballantine Hall and offers instructional tapes in many different lang ages.

Spanish dept. is respected nationwide espite budgetary problems, there is D much pride and optimism in the department of Spanish and Portuguese. "We have money problems," said chairman Merle Simmons, "but I've traveled enough to see how lucky we are to have the facilities we have.- This is one of the most respected Spanish departments in the country," he added, "and opportunities for overseas studies are greater at IU than at any other university in the nation." The department offers year-long programs in Madrid, Spain, in which students may earn 28 to 38 credit hours; and in Lima, Peru, where they may earn as many as 34. There are also summer study programs in Mexico which offer four-, six- and eight-week courses. Enrollment figures for the spring semester were another source of optimism for those in the department. More than 2,000 students enrolled in Spanish and Portuguese courses that

semester, the largest enrollment in the last decade. Much of this increase can be attributed to the new foreign language requirement, which consists of two years of a foreign language and two culture classes. According to Simmons, there has been a general tightening of standards by universities across the nation. The reason for such changes, he said, is "an awareness that retreated from requirements in the '60s and was having an adverse affect on education." Retirements in the department will force faculty members to make some difficult decisions before the 1981 fall semester begins. The Catalan Studies program could end with the departure of Professor Josep Roca-Pons, who began teaching at IU in 1958. A native of Barcelona, Spain, RocaPons feels that the language and culture of Cataluna is a vital area of study because Catalan is an important romance language and has a tremendous history. Spoken in northeast Spain and parts of

France, Catalan has been a handicap for those who speak it as their native language, says Roca-Pons, and for this reason few translations exist. "My mission is to promote knowledge of the Catalan culture, he said. "I will continue working in linguistics and promoting Catalan, but I will not be teaching on a regular basis." Simmons himself has asked to be relieved of the chairmanship, though he will still be a professor in the department. Now 62, Simmons began teaching at IU in 1942 and has been department chairman since 1974. A chairman, he says, is "responsible for everything. The main things to worry about are scheduling classes, recruiting faculty and designating jobs. And you are entirely responsible for the budget. Simmons has traveled extensively in the Spanish-speaking world and has made 35 trips to Mexico alone. Upon retiring, he plans to spend more time operating a ham radio, a hobby since 1934. Dan DeCamp

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A concept might he difficult to pick up from a book, but with someone to point out the steps, mathematics becomes easier. Phil DiLavore, a junior majoring in computer science, tutors Tracy Carey, a freshman, by helping with her math homework.

Tutorial program offers aid for classes or many students, the college years F are not only a learning experience, but a frustrating one as well. Pressure to obtain or sustain a certain grade point average haunts students whether it be from meeting professional school acceptance standards or just one's own. Located at the Black Culture Center on 109 North Jordan, the IU Tutorial Program exists to help any student desiring a tutor. Twilla Lewis, coordinator of the program since 1978, single-handedly runs the whole program: she meets with the students desiring a tutor, hires and assigns the tutors, handles all business matters, deals with any problems of students and tutors and is herself a math tutor. Although most students feel a pressure to "make grades," that pressure fluctuates during the semester. Disappearing like ghosts, students who seek tutors at the beginning of the semester tend to fade out only to re-emerge after their midterms, Lewis explained.

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The tutorial program is funded by AfroAmerican Affairs. It is a funded program and is free of charge to IU students. Tutors usually take as many as 15 students each and work a minimum of eight hours each week. Although it can vary from year to year, mathematics of practically every level has been the subject students have sought help in most often for the past two years, Lewis said. Business courses such as accounting and finance, science courses like chemistry and biology and basic requirement courses such as economics, psychology and sociology are also areas in which aid is popularly sought. To provide assistance in the subjects, Lewis first looks for graduate students. "I prefer to hire graduate students who are majoring in the subjects they plan to tutor in, ' Lewis said. "Although it is not a criterion to tutor only in one s major area, the student must be proficient in the area, as indicated by professors in that depart-

ment," she added. Also, graduate student status is not mandatory to be a tutor; however, that status is considered a bonus because graduate students tend to be familiar with the textbooks and need not acquaint themselves with them, thus saving time. "My tutors are of a variety of backgrounds," Lewis said. "Many tutor because they feel it keeps them on their toes and because they all could use the money. Likewise, those who are tutored request it for different reasons. "Needing a tutor does not indicate a dunce, - she said. "Some students really feel they need a tutor, while others use tutoring for reinforcement.Above all her responsibilities as coordinator of the tutorial program, Lewis favors tutoring. "I think I enjoy tutoring the most because when a student does well, it gives me an excuse to pat myself on the back,she beamed. '" Christina Zee


During his methods of coaching class, Bobby Knight tells students how to prepare for job interviews after graduation.

Coaching class likes the Knight life want you to write down five impor- allowed to ask questions, but there usually tant things about coaching. If you is not much student input. can't think of five important things about "At times, Knight is very intimidating," coaching, you sure as hell have a poor intel- said John Stubblefield, a junior who took lect of coaching. Don't write what you Knight's course. "A few students would think I think is important — write down contest a point of Knight's sometimes," he what you think is important," said the said. "He took it pretty good, though. He would ask them their point of view, then he teacher. This kind of exercise is taught in the would tell them what he thought about basketball section of a series of coaching their point of view and he would just reemclasses for HPER majors. The teacher is IU phasize his point." Knight proclaims to be a teacher first of basketball coach, Bobby Knight. Knight's class is only one of many all. He said that the ability to teach is the coaching classes offered to HPER majors. ability to communicate with both students All of the other varsity sports are offered in and faculty. Knight teaches the funthe series, and each HPER major must damentals of basketball and offers the class select four of them to take before gradua- his philosophy of coaching, yet he encourting. Each class meets for eight weeks of the ages students to learn from it, not copy it. Most the students seem to prefer Knight's semester. The basketball coaching class is run dif- philosophy, finding it more logical than ferently from the standard instructional their own, said Stubblefield. course. Knight lectures a class of about 70 "IU only runs one kind of defense — students twice a week. Students are also man-to-man, and that is it," he said. required to attend two lab sections a week. "Knight believes that if you've got one During the lecture section, students are thing that works, then stay with it. Why

take the risk of trying to run so many things and get confused?" Knight requires no homework from his students, but insists on good attendance. There are no tests to take, but each student must type up the class notes and turn them in as a notebook at the end of the eight weeks. This is how the grade is formulated, said Stubblefield. Knight offers his students ample time to talk to him after class, and one can even go and watch the IU basketball team's practices during the first two weeks of the season. After the course ends, Knight offers each student a little extra help that can really add a lot to that person's resume. "Knight told us that if we got a good grade in his class, he would write us a recommendation based upon our performance in class," said Stubblefield. With a recommendation like that, who needs experience? 88 Megan Byrne

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I

Taping up members of the women's gymnastic team before practice is one of the many tasks of graduate athletic trainer Brendy Huchney..

Trainers are more than ankle tapers he athletic training program at IU T has been in existence since 1949 and is one of the finest in the country. The program is one of the first of its kind. Over the years, the department of Health, Physical Education and Recreation has facilitated the change needed to allow the athletic training program to change with the times. The program is equipped with a competent staff and the latest technology. Both of these elements make the athletic training program at IU respected by potential employers in the field. The stall, comprised of five trainers, is headed by John Shrader, coordinator of the athletic training program. A bachelor's degree is required for one to be on the staff, and four of the five trainers have a master's degree. These trainers are aided by two HPER graduates. They assist in instruction as they gain confidence in their role as trainer. When most people think of athletic training, they think of taping ankles and

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handing out salt pills. While these are also functions of a trainer, the field has expanded far beyond these duties. In fact, athletic training is a combination of many sciences: medicine, anatomy, and biomechanics, to name a few. The trainer's job is to take the knowledge of each of these fields and apply it to his work in sports. It is that practical application that makes the job so difficult. The National Athletic Trainers Association recognizes the importance of having qualified trainers. NATA has an approval process to evaluate training programs. IU is one of only three universities in the nation that is approved by NATA. Although IU does not offer degrees in training, the NATA-approved program here is what is more important to employers. Judging from the growth of the program, it won t be long before majors in the field will be available. Although there is no major in the field, it is possible to graduate with an emphasis in

training. A series of training courses is coupled with other classes in the HPER department that provides a solid background in all areas of athletic training. Along with classroom work, students receive on-thejob training. Potential trainers spend 20 hours a week in the training room. Here they get a feel for what may be one day their job. Job possibilities in the field include teaching, coaching and training on the grade school, high school, college or professional levels. Since there is a variety of jobs available and only a few NATAapproved programs, there is a good chance that graduates will find employment. As sports staffs get larger, there is also the opportunity for upward mobility. All of these factors make the athletic training program at IU a stepping stone to a rewarding future. Paul Buergler


Ann Crowley, an associate instructor for the Learning Skills Center, teaches a Reading and Learning Skills course. More than 2000 students took advantage of the Learning Skills Center.

Learning skills lab is not just for freshman re your lecture notes useless? Are A your term papers "waste" papers? Is your library research a loss? Perhaps it is time for you to sit up and take notice that IU's Learning Skills Center is not just for freshmen. Located at 316 N. Jordan, the center offers non-credit programs, prep sessions for graduate exams, services for dorm floors and Greek houses and more for students from freshmen in English compsoition to graduates preparing dissertation. Sharon Smith, director of the Center and associate professor in the School of Education, estimated that 2000 IU students use their facilities every year, in addition to the students they see when they give presentations outside of the center. Most of the courses at the learning center are taught by doctoral students from a variety of fields. "Our instructors include people in education, reading, student personnel of higher education, law and counseling. It s nice that we can present

different fields," said Smith. "We have courses that are mostly aimed at freshmen, but students at other levels take them, too," Smith said. Work that students do in any of the Center's four courses transfers to other courses students are taking, Smith said. Students read about "how to study" and instructors present them with learning techniques. They practice the skills, such as notetaking and reading comprehension, in their other classes and bring back the results. For feedback about how courses can better help students, the instructors check with students throughout the courses. The LSC is also doing a follow-up on some randomly-selected students who took courses last year. "There are a few things that helped me," said Tami Sells, a sophomore in nursing who enrolled in general skills and selfmanagement course. "We'd spend a week on each different topic, but I remember note-taking best because it helped me the

most in my other courses. All the techniques are helpful, but everyone is supposed to pick out what they can use," she continued. In addition to courses, the learning skills center offers services that all students can use. The LSC has a free non-credit work program, which is an individualized program where a student can come in and talk to a counselor to set up a learning program which will be followed independently. "This gets into whatever areas students think they need to work on, like notetaking, time-management or a combination of different areas," said Smith. "They pick out the areas they want to pursue." The LSC is prepared to help students with any academic problem they may have. It provides some answers about what to expect from college courses, graduate exams, and how to improve study habits in general. `ab Charlotte Ruhe

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To change a spark plug, one has to know how to get it out. Instructor Tim Naulty, a junior, shows freshman George Thomas the basics in an auto mechanics class. The class was taught in the IUSA car co-op and met one night a week for three weeks.

4

Leisure learning is fun and practical

S hould I take `Bartending' or 'Stock We might have an intermediate bartendOptions'? Then again, there's an ing class at one of the local bars. That would car co-op. "What the instructor did was auto mechanics class that might come in be actually show them an engine and let them a one-shot deal," she said. handy. - This might be the dilemma facing work with its different parts," she said. In accordance with the University's noa student decking which courses from "We've been very fortunate to have the Union • Board's Learning at Leisure to take. alcohol-on-campus policy, the bartending people from the Reading and Study Skills was to be taught without booze. Center accommodate our needs in 'MemThe courses, which vary with each class However, ran into a little trouble. "The ory Training' and ` semester, are all informal, non-traditional instructor it Speedreading'. They had so much fun teaching the would get an overhead projector and and non-credit. According to Audrey first class that he decided to bring some of summarize basic techniques Scheiber, director of Learning at Leisure, and forms of own liquor to the next class," said memory training and also help students the Union Board's goal is to offer inexpen- his Scheiber. become motivated," Scheiber continued. sive and enjoyable classes in areas of parA total of 125 IU students signed up for ticular interest to IU students. People took classes for reasons that classes semester. "Next time we're ranged from needing help with schoolSome of the courses offered were "Bike going tofirst aim for 250," said Scheiber. work to wanting to know how to make a Maintenance and Repair," "Election '80," To obtain instructors, Union Board really good martini. "We tried to find a "Let's Get Organized," "Self Defense for looked for qualified IU students to give balance between practical and fun Women," "Modern Dance" and "Memory them practical teaching experience. "It's a courses," Scheiber said. Training. multi-purpose program. We had a ballet Classes lasted three weeks for the fall student "We handed out some evaluations in the teach a ballet class, so it was a classes session. In the past, there were six three- learning experience and our feedback was pretty good," for her as well as for she added. week courses and two five-week courses, her students," Scheiber "Now we're conjuring up our said. next session said Scheiber. "Next time around we're How were some of the courses taught? next year."9-of classes and working hard for going to deal with each course individually. "Auto mechanics" was taught in the IUSA Charlotte Ruhe

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Beth Wamsley (center), an instructor at the craft shop, gives instructions to a basic ceramic techniques class. The six-week class is one of the many courses offered by the IMU craft shop.

Craft shop offers exhibits for show and sale any Indiana University students M may not be aware of it, but the Indiana Memorial Union Craft Shop offers a wide variety of classes, exhibits and services. The 17-year-old craft shop is located in the west wing of the mezzanine floor of the union. "The craft shop is most known for its courses," said Regina Miller, craft shop director. The shop offers courses in basketry, quilting, chaircaning, photography, macrame, woodworking, pot throwing and more. "We have classes on a popularity basis. If I can generate enough interest in a particular course, we'll have it," Miller said. "Everybody — our students, the community and our staff— has tremendous input as to what they want to see happen here." The most popular courses are quilting, pot throwing, photography, darkroom and stained glass, Miller said. "Our response for courses this year has been much better than in previous years." She attributed this

to public recognition of craft shop courses as a good way to save money. "IU students can come in and use the shop anytime we're open, which is really good for those interested in arts and crafts who do not have access to other facilities. Even if they are not taking a course, they can come in and work on personal projects on our equipment," she said. How do the craft shops' students feel about the courses? "It's really cheap for what you get," said Tim McSoley, a senior business major. "I'm just disappointed that I haven't been able to practice more," he said of pot throwing, which is making clay pottery on a potters wheel. "These classes are really good for relaxation," said Martha Waliga, a Bloomington resident. "I like my weaving class real well so far. I think the craft shop is the best way to get your money's worth on campus," she commented, after signing up for her third course at the craft shop. Jim Andrews, gallery director for the

craft shop, schedules the shows and exhibits. The shows, which run every three weeks, include the work of community, faculty, students and staff artists. The craft shop also has several thesis shows, which are exhibits of the work someone has done in finishing a master's degree. Artists may sell their work from here, too, once it is judged. While the people at the craft shop are looking for new courses, exhibits, and other things to interest the community, IU students can look to it for a good way to spend leisure time without spending too much money. The courses are great for learning skills and meeting people in a low pressure environment. Besides offering courses, the craft shop provides the do-ityourselfer with equipment to use free, an interesting exhibit to see and a nice selection of gifts for someone special. `dE

Charlotte Rohe

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r....IU Football defensive-back, Steve Mitchell receives help in preparing for a test. Tutors are provided by the university for athletes, to help the student-athlete perform not only on the field, but in the classroom.

Athletes required to perform in class ust after you've watched IU beat Purdue, you think about all that work you still have j to do for the next day's classes. Don't feel sorry for yourself — instead, think how lucky you are that all you gave up was the time it took to watch the game, instead of the time it takes to play. Athletes at IU have a much heavier load to carry as far as classes go. Besides having to practice, athletes have to attend classes and struggle over the same term papers you and I do. "It is difficult for an athlete to go to school and carry a full load and participate in games," said Elizabeth Kurpius, an academic counselor for IU athletes. All athletes are encouraged to carry fifteen hours every semester and maintain a 2.0 grade point average to remain eligible. Although the NCAA requires a 1.8 GPA of its athletes, the Big Ten is stricter, according to Kurpius. "Athletes of the Big Ten have to work on their degree. IU

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doesn't have many problems because all of our athletes must be working towards their degree. The only hours that count for eligibility are the hours towards their degree." Some students don't find participating in a sport hurts their academic performance too much, according to cross country and track team member Jim Spivey. Spivey says he doesn't find it hard. to keep his studies separate from his sport. He runs in the afternoons, usually from 3:00 to 6:00. "If I'm not running, I don't do anything anyway, so I run," he said. Spivey, a marketing major, spends his evenings studying and finds that gives him plenty of time to keep up with his assignments. He allots his time during the day so that he has enough time to practice and enough time for homework. `I can't say that running comes before studying, Spivey said, "but each has its own value to me. I guess it depends on the time of day. At 3:00 in the afternoon, it's not time for

studying, while at 7:00 in the evening, know it s not time to go and run." Many athletes are not as organized as Spivey, however, and the athletic counseling service provides tutors to help them out. There are 180 tutors, who are primarily graduate students, to help the athletes out in any area. Kurpius said she thinks that the tutorial system is beneficial to the students because it can help them keep their grades up. If a student starts working with a tutor early in the semester, whether he needs one or not, he'll tend to get , a higher grade because he's studied more," she said. "He tends to be more prepared for class." The athlete at IU seems to have a lot going for himeself. With all the help one receives from the athletic department to keep the grades up, maybe more students will begin to go out for IU sports. Megan Byrne


As part of her junior practicum, Connie Weedman, a junior, works at the Bloomington Headstart program. She spends time working with children and other family members.

Student input molds Social Work School lmost everytime someone hears that A I'm majoring in social work, their reaction is 'So, you want to work in the welfare department?' " said Carla Miller, a sophomore social work major. Majors in social work know job opportunities extend far beyond the welfare department. "There won't be enough social workers to meet the employment needs for the next ten years," said Dr. Leonard Schneider, dean of the School of Social Work. Social workers are found in a wide variety of job settings. They work in hospitals, public health and welfare departments, and schools. Industrial social work is providing many new openings for recent graduates. George Pardo, an associate professor of social work and social work program coordinator, explains that social work is a profession where social workers help people with social functioning in areas in which they live their lives. "Helping is more than having someone who needs help and someone who gives

help," said Pardo. The social work school is one of the newest and most competitive. The program began in 1977 and last year accepted 80 students from over 180 applicants. The School of Social Work teaches the integration of various theories from different social sciences and how to apply them in their work. One of the trademarks that sets the department aside from other departments is that it encourages criticism from students. "Students should participate in their own education," said Pardo, referring to the hands-on work experience required by the school, known as a practicum. The junior year practicum is a result of such student input. Until last year, social work students only had a one semester practicum in their senior year. Now, with two semesters of practical work experience, IU social work students graduate with ample knowledge and skills in the field. The practicum, in the junior year, consists of students spending eight to twelve

hours a week in an agency. Students are treated as trained social workers except that they have supervisors. The help that supervisors give the students gives them a chance to use the problem solving skills they have learned in class. The practicum has proven to be helpful to students in adjusting to an actual work situation. "I feel through working at the probation department I have matured a lot in dealing with people," said Tina Cordova, a junior. She did her practicum work at the Monroe county court house as a probation officer which "opened her eyes" to what working at an agency in a business setting is like. Cordova said that she wished she could have spent more time with her practicum than she was able to. Otherwise she had no complaints about the practicum. "I feel I have gotten use out of the theories which I have learned in class," she said. "I'm really beginning to feel like a professional social worker. A; Sheri Furfaro

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Lawyers have a right to question perspective jurors before a trial begins. Third-year law student Jeff Richards practices the mock

jury selection with classmates.

IU School of Law produces future leaders very year the Indiana University F School of Law opens its doors to about 200 recent college graduates. Upon entering the large limestone building on Indiana Avenue, law students enter the world of torts, contracts, civil precedures and constitutional law. Six semesters and approximately 25 classes later, each student who survives is ready to take the bar exam and become a lawyer. The school does not emphasize the law of any one state. Some classes are taught by practioners who specialize in fields of law such as trial practice, appellate advocacy, tax law and trust and estate. The 33 faculty members take pains to assure that the curriculum meets contemporary needs. New material is often added and electives offer study in new areas of law. Beside classes, a variety of activities are provided for law students. The Indiana Law Journal is published four times a year. Other activities include Moot Court, Student Bar Association, Black American Law Students Association, Latino Law Students 1

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Association, Women's Caucus, and various professional legal fraternities. A variety of students attend law school at IU. Last year's entering class consisted of graduates from 72 colleges. The median grade point a average for entering classes ranges from 3.3 to 3.5 and the median LSAT (Law School Aptitude Test) scores, from 630 to 640. However, these aren't the only qualities considered in determining whether or not an applicant will be accepted into the school. The evaluation committee looks at the applicant's undergraduate school and the difficulty of the undergraduate program. Letters of recommendation, undergraduate employment, and postgraduate experience are also examined. The basic degree offered by the Indiana University Law School is the Doctor of Jurisprudence, which can be obtained by completing 82 semester hours at the law school and maintaining at least a 2.0 grade point average. The school offers two other degrees

which are combined with other fields. A Doctor of Jurisprudence and Master of Business Administration degree represents a law degree and a graduate business degree. A Doctor of Jurisprudence and Master of Public Affairs degree is obtained by first acquiring a Doctor of Jurisprudence degree, then continuing to study law by enrolling in graduate law programs such as the Master of Laws and the Doctor of Philosophy Program in Law and Social Science. Both are offered by the IU School of Law. The IU School of Law operates with a philosophy that an attorney should serve in the public interest. An attorney should show both political and civic leadership, and the school tries to prepare its students for the responsibilities of elective and appointed offices entrusted to an attorney by a community. 9F; Betsy Litchen


David Newby, a graduate Music Theory student, cleans the tape heads on a reel-to-reel equipment in the Telecommunication School Lab.

Telecom. experiences growth in expanding field he electronic media age is growing at T IU and the telecommunications department has grown from under 100 majors in 1953 to 706 majors in the 1981 spring semester. Just in the last ten years, the telecommunications department has grown by 500 students. These figures ranked the department as the second largest single department in the School of Arts and Sciences at IU; the biology department has 816 majors. "It's a national trend," said Rolland Johnson, chairman of the telecommunications department. The reason for the department's popularity is that graduates have an excellent chance of getting a job since telecommunications is currently an expanding field, he said. Graduates can pursue three areas: industry which includes film and radio production, law and continued education in telecommunications.

Because of the increase in majors, the future could bring a need for cutbacks in enrollment, according to Donna Beeker, undergraduate advisor for the department. "We're going to be more selective," she said. Beeker said entry requirements such as minimum GPA may be enforced by the department. Also, professors may start hand picking students for some classes. The reason for these enrollment cutbacks is lack of facilities and equipment for the students. Presently, telecommunications programs are spread out over four buildings, and the radio and television building is shared with WTIU and WFIU, Ill's television and radio stations respectively. Johnson said a new facility probably won't come in the near future either. "Unfortunately, we're growing rapidly at a time when the University isn't, - he commented. However, the department is planning to add two more faculty members next

year. From the equipment aspect, the telecommunications department has been growing quickly, and will continue to grow as long as funding will allow it. The department bought four new mini-cams this year, said William Croll, general manager for WTIU and WFIU, which will allow the students to leave the studio to complete his or her assignment. Students are using video tape instead of film for assignments. "Video taping is an excellent teaching tool. There is no waiting for the film to be developed. We just play it back," he said. Croll said that the future will depend upon technology, and the department will keep up with the new developments. Perhaps there won't be as many students in the department as time passes, but it is plain to see that the telecommunications department will always be growing in one way or another. 93 Mark Kellam


Caroline Schulman, a senior, received help in writing her resume from Arts and Science Placement Office counselor, Pam Houston.

A & S grads get placement advice nemployment awaits the Arts and U Sciences graduate.- "A Liberal Arts major is worth next to nothing.- Such pronouncements concerning IU s graduating Arts and Science students are dismissed as nonsense by Wayne Wallace, director of placement in the College of Arts and Sciences. "Indiana University's Arts and Sciences department is held in high regard, based on employer's comments. We do very well — less than two percent are unemployed," he said referring to a survey of IU alumni who had come to the placement office seeking job opportunities. Wallace feels that the outlook for A&S graduates is encouraging, especially in the strong skill areas. The so-called strong skill-oriented majors are in great demand, including computer science, engineering and geology," he said. The liberal arts major should expect to do more looking for employment, Wallace cautions and therefore he strongly advises students to make extensive use of off-campus resources. "The on-campus re-

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cruiting system is a small piece of the job market," he said. While recruiters favor the skill-oriented Arts and Sciences graduate, the open job market is more varied and offers more opportunity for the liberal arts major. Wallace says his placement center provides a great boost for those "dazed and confuse students with majors in the College of Arts and Sciences who are unsure where their future is going. The Placement Center, located at 326 N. Jordan, offers instruction in interviewing techniques, holds resumes on file for referral by prospective employers or graduate schools. A bimonthly news sheet is published, informing students of job vacancies. And what of the beginning undergraduate who is not sure what courses to pursue? According to Wallace, serving these students is an immediate goal of the Placement Center. "We'd like to be able to help them out while they are here and need help in making some tough decisions about their futures.'

Just what sort of future can a graduate look forward to? "It is likely that we will find a very promising market for the future grad," said Wallace. "If the high rate of college bachelor of science degrees (one million) in the 70s continues into the 80s enrollments, then grades should ease down. Thus we will find less competition, perhaps causing today's freshman to be looking forward to a different labor market," he said. The 'quality' of today's graduate is not the same as it was in the past and the quality of tomorrow's college graduate may be worse. The quality of graduates who enter the work force is not a stable commodity, according to Wallace. If you are having problems deciding on a career or will be looking for a job soon, the COAS Placement Center may he your answer. Karen Kirsh


Senior business majors await their interview in the Business Placement Office, located in the Business Building. The IU School of Business' reputation attracted 1,030 interviewers during the 1980-1981 school year.

Business students find jobs espite the worst economic slump in D recent history, a record number of businesses came to Indiana University this year offering jobs to qualified students. The remarkable success they had in finding each other was largely due to Ill's famed School of Business, and especially the Business Placement Office. Jeff Deal, associate director and operating manager, explains that the office provides "an opportunity for the student and the company to get together in a neutral environment.' All sorts of varied businesses send representatives to IU with openings to be filled. As Deal puts it, "The purpose is employment." According to Deal, six weeks after the viewing process is completed, upwards of 80 percent of the students have found a job. The final result, he says, is virtually 100 percent employment. Loaded with jobs in all fields, some 1,030 companies from all over the world came to interview in 1980-1981. According

to Deal, around 3,000 companies are actively recruited, but "the 'Fortune 500' are our bread and butter customers." (Each year Fortune magazine lists the world's 500 top companies.) Some smaller businesses also interview, he adds, but surprisingly few from Bloomington. Getting a job through the placement office rated fourth in the nation by theWall Street Journal is a long process, but relatively simple. According to Kim Kirkeiner, a December graduate in finance who has taken a job with Proctor & Gamble, an interested student registers, waits for a computer to print a list of companies, then requests those he or she desires. All this is done a month before the actual interviews. A student is allowed to meet with 15 different representatives each semester, but, says Kirkeiner, they all adhere strictly to one rule: Anything goes. "You have the job of selling yourself,' she said. One highpressure interview Kirkeiner remembers involved a request to "describe a crisis

situation that you handled." About three weeks later, the company notifies those they wish to see again. This second interview usually takes a student to the company itself and involves meeting several higher-ups. Some time after that, the job is actually offered. Deal thinks this process is successful so often because of "all the services we provide." The business faculty, whom he calls "very placement-oriented" also offers its support and cooperation. But the real importance and success of the operation can best be appreciated by the students themselves — those ambitious yet frightened job seekers who depend on it for one of' the finest recruiting programs in the country. As Lonna Wilkes, a marketing major recently hired by 3M, puts it, "The Placement Office makes a lot of difference." JE Russell Jackson


Ain't Misbehavin' Greek Passion West Side Story Jackson Browne

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IU welcomed Alvin Ailey Dance Theatre he 92nd Street Y. M.C.A. in New York City seems a humble origin for a theater company, now 30 members strong, with a T repertory ensemble company, a workshop and awell-established school. Thanks to the Indiana Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts, the IU Auditorium welcomed the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theatre for two performances on September 8 and 9. Since their 1958 debut, audiences across the world have been mezmerized by the force of Ailey's magic. The company won first prize in the International Dance Festival in Paris. The dancers have appeared in the Far East, South America, Europe, the U.S.S.R. and Africa, as well as in the 1977 Inaugural Eve Gala for the President. Only their acclaim exceeds their traveling. But travel they do, because it's Ailey's philosophy to bring together people and dance, which he defines as the "positive expression of the qhuman spirit of people who reflect life." "Revelations" is perhaps the uintessential work of this mission. Inspired by black American religious music, "Revelations" depicts the spectrum of a people's woe and triumph. The response of the views was as moving as the rendition of this 1960 masterpiece choreographed by Ailey. It was a response that signified a work that will remain a classic. Ailey not only immortalized his c horeographs', but the artists whose music he celebrates dance, include such performers as Otis Redding, Duke Ellington, Pink Floyd and Keith Jarrett. 86 Lisa Lanham 136


Ballerina Paula Tracy performed the Mass In C Minor, choreographed 24 &by 25.Michael Francisco Ballet IU performanc e October Smulin, during the San

San Francisco Ballet visits IU he San Francisco Ballet is a company of firsts. It is the oldest in the United States. It l Classical ballet company professiona is this company that gave this country its first "Cappelia" in T 1940 and its first full length "Nutcrack1933, its first "Swan Lake" in to provide dancers for the San Francisco 1933 Created in y west er" in 1944. Opera, it has grown to be the largest American ballet compan it provided two first-rate of the Hudson, and on October 24 & 25 um. evenings of performance at the IU A uditoriks by Lew Christensen Friday's repertoire was comprised of wor and Michael Smuin, co directors of the ballet. The performance included Christensen's "Scarlatti Portfolio," set in the tradition of "Commedia dell'arte," Smuin's inventive physical celebration of Mozart's music, "Mozart's C Minor Mass" and one of the ballet's most successful pieces, Smuin's "A Song for Dead Warriors." d the full range of its Saturday's performanc e further demonstrate ion and Allegunique repertoire. The fireworks included "Introduct ro,' a fluid neoclassical piece by ballet member Tomm Ruud; "Quany original work set to the music of Dimitri Shostakota," vich;a astunningl revival of William Christensen's "Nothin' Doin' Bar"; and "Psalms," a tribute to the history and religious ceremonies of the Jewish people, choreographed by Robert Gladstein to music by Leonard Bernstein. As New York Post dance critic Clive Barnes wrote: "For a ballet lover it would be very easy to leave his or her heart in San Francisco." sp Lisa Lanham 137


Dennis Chamberlin

Larry Gates Phyllis Thaxter, stars of the Gin Game, pose backstage ((ter their Se ptember 30and p erformance in the IU Auditorium. Gingerbread Productions. lad Presents

A gin game is the set for an award winning play eisty" is not the word for senior citizens with a solid grip on life. Fonsia Dorsey (Phyliss Thaxter) and Weller Martin (Larry Gates) of "The Gin Game," presented September 30 in the IU Auditorium, seem vivacious andin more i mportantly they are perceptive and human. dependent, but Pr The two "old folks," the only characters in D. L. Coburn's Pulitzer ize-winning comedy, meet over a game of gin rummy. As games do, the diversion takes them through a range of behaviors, from laughter to competition to un derstanding. Dorsey and Weller rail against life's injustices and reminisce.

By D. L.Coburn INDIANA UNIVERSITY AUDITORIUM Tuesday September 0-8'00 m Tickets SIO 00, $7 50, Sa 00 Box otime (812) 337.1103

Thaxter and Gates are "Broadway favorites of long standing. Thaxter made her Broadway debut in "There Shall Be No Night," with Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne, and Gates, who has appeared in other plays, on TN' and in film p roductions, was seen on Broadway in "First Monday in October," with Henry Fonda and Eva Marie Saint. "The Game" has been praised highly in the United States, not only forGin its Broadway performances, but around the world as well. In addition to its success in Europe, "The Gin Game" is one of the few American plays to tour the Soviet Union. 98 Kathy Hoyt

138


"Private Lives," Noel Coward comedy, was presented at It' October 13, by the Long t. Wharf Theatre, a repertory company from New Haven, Connecticu

Noel Coward's most witty comedy or more than half a century, Noel Coward has held audiences entranced with his songs, his plays, his films, and, above all, himself. Few people can name more than two or three Coward F his comedy about marital infidelity, one titles but, as in Private Lives, is left with a vivid image when the man is mentioned. A man in his early fifties sat chuckling sincerely as if he could "relate" to the married couple bickering on stage. An elderly woman, obviously familiar with the feature, continually nudged her husband, "This is my favorite line." y entertained its audience Noel Coward's Private Lives delightfull at the IU Auditorium on October 13. The Long Wharf Theatre brought its production of the English play set in the 1930's. Barbara Sohmers and Rex Robbins exchanged wickedly funny lines as they portrayed a divorced couple, who, after years of separacollide at a resort hotel. The circumstances tion, unsuspectingly g with smacked of humorous irony, for they were both honeymoonin newly wedded "spice." Supported by Donna Snow and Dugg Smith the spice — and I do mean spice — the couple evoked laughter throughout the performance. Sohmers and Robbins end up reuniting as they flee from their which originally newlyweds to Paris. Gradually the idiosyncrasies deteriorated their marriage vows re-surface, and the audience was quite receptive. The triumphant Noel Coward possessed a talent to amuse. But even greater than that, he was a musical and dramatic sounding board of public taste and emotion. His plays reflect a flavor of history, a difficult and rarely accomplished task. 06 Ellen Webber

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The Broadway play Ain't Misbehavin' came to the IU stage at the IU Auditorium . Cast members (from left) are Adjora McMillan, Clent Bowers, Adrienne West, David Cameron and Michelle McCain.

BEST MUSICAL 1978 TONY AWARD WINNER!

Broadway hit pays tribute to Fats Waller. in't Misbehavin' "? Well, not much anyway. The musical production of Thomas "Fats" Waller's compositions and recordings had the audience singing and swinging right along with their resounding jazz. Featuring melodies such as "T'Ain't Nobody's Bizness If I Do," "Your Feet s Too Big" and 30 other memorable tunes,Ain't Misbehavin' portrayed "Fats" Waller's career as a great pianist, comic and composer. One couldn't help out nod one's head or swing a foot to the "fascinatin' rh ythm" of Waller's legendary jazz. Starring Celeste Annette, Clent Bowers, Michele McCain, Adjora Faith McMillan and Milton Craig Nealy, the five enthusiasts filled the auditorium to capacity and delighted most every ticket-holder. Ain't Misbehavin' has won several awards including the Tony award for best musical. The tribute to "Fats" Waller took the audience through his life, from childhood days in Harlem, through his later years, becoming one of the most respected musicians of all time. Waller's lively music had the entire audience joining in u , the chorus of "Your Feet's Too Big," as Waller's lookalike Clent Bowers strutted around stage. Produced by Irving Siders, the International Touring Company performed the musical for IU. Ain't Misbehavin' received wide publicity while playing on Broadway, which called for a sell-out at the Auditorium. At Siders' last minute request, 75 orchestra pit seats were made available to the public. Ellen Webber

140


Senior Mike Davis (left) and Elephant Man Courtney Burr discuss the hit play at a reception held at MRC-LLC after the cast's performance.

Elephant Man overwhelms IU audience

he grossly distorted John Merrick, bettern-known asThe Elephant Man, played by Courtney Burr, touched the audiT ence in the IU Auditorium with a feeling of compassion on January 26. The respectable Dr. Frederick Treves, played by Kenneth Garner, discovered The Elephant Man as a freak show attraction, whereupon he decided to take Merrick to the London Hospital, where he would remain until his death, four years later. The play was set mostly in the hospital where the audience watched the progress of Merrick learning about the life and love of which he had been previously so deprived. Merrick became increasingly well-known, as Dukes, Lords and Princesses visited frequently, showering him with gifts and "donations." The true story of The Elephant Man was complete with every emotion — happiness, sorrow, love, hate and a condusion of all. Merrick experiences for the first time in his life the warmth and passion of a truly beautiful woman — the experience cluminates as the actress who had grown quite fond of him reveals her bosom to him. Indeed, there was a moral issue at stake when Dr. Treves questions his very own motivation behind his good deeds. Was in fact the Doctor serving his own reputation? Or was the hospital using John Merrick as a fund-raising gimmick? Merrick died in his hospital bed, peacefully. But he did have the chance to love before his death and Indiana University did have the chance to see the compassionate production by the American Theatre Productions, Inc. ;P Ellen Webber 141


Nero is the Horowitz of the his sheer piano popular field cleanliness of exeand talent" technique ell his fantastic —Houstor cution sp

"Mr.

henry Mancini poses for a picture in his dressing room after his performance with the Louisville Orchestra, in the II! Auditorium January 25.

Auditorium Pop Series offers variety from Dukes to Hamlisch to Mancini to Nero ill the administration mind the renaming of Showalter Fountain to W Bourbon Fountain? Possibly not as September 13 marked the premiere performance of what hopefully will be a long line of Pops Series concerts with the toe-tapping sounds of the Dukes of Dixieland. How appropriate that we look to this proud tradition of Dixieland music to begin our own tradition of pops concerts. Teamed with the always-enjoyable Indianapolis Symphony conducted by Kenneth Kiesler, the audience was treated to an evening of contemporary and traditional jazz as well as light classics. Often the two types seemed to blend; the opening selection, Dvorak's "Carnival" overture, emerged a hand-clapping Dixieland tune. The Dukes, all born and raised in New Orleans, pride themselves on the musical legacy that they keep alive so engagingly. They preserve the music of Dixieland, Blues and Ragtime through their "takes-you„ home renditions of "Bourbon Street Parade,” "Basin Street Blues" and "The Entertainer." But their repertoire is not limited 142

strictly to the Dixieland beat. Contemporary numbers such as "Cantina Suite" fromStars Wars bridge any generation gaps. The original Dukes of Dixieland were comprised of members of the Assunto family and gained international fame in the 1950s and 1960s. After the death of the last member in 1973, the band was reorganized by their manager and two of the widows of the Dukes. All of the present-day Dukes are accomplished musicians. Their adroit improvisations and solos were the highlight of the show. There could have been only one way to top an evening of bubbling rhythms . . . too bad there was no Mardi Gras. Lisa Lanham

arvin Hamlisch. Ah. the prophetic lyrics: "They're playing my song. M Everyone is playing his songs. But to see him, to see the 35-year-old wunderkind, three-time academy award winner is to be amazed, not only at the thought of where he stores all of that hardware, but at the

brilliance of his craft and rapport with the audience. Hamlisch has grown from a child prodigy into a musical Renaissance man. His extremely varied career demonstrates the scope of his talent: He has been a Broadway rehearsal pianist, an accompanist and straight man for Grouch() Marx, and a guest artist with symphony orchestras. He has been a "top ten" song-writer, television theme song-writer, Broadway composer, and philanthropist all before he was eleven. His concert at the IU Auditorium opened with Exxon Arts Endowment Conductor Raymond Harvey and the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra. The near-capacity crowd was treated to several well-executed, favorite pops selections of Bacharach, Rodgers and Morris Albert. Hamlisch came on in the second half with the confidence and wit for which he is so well known. Offering himself for a game of "Rent a Composer", he challenged the audience with a vow that he would compose on the spot a song to any given title. The titles suggested were "My Dog has Worms" and "Blue Ammonia". To this day he


The Dukes of Dixieland laugh it up after their performance on September 13, 1980 at the IU Auditorium. The band delighted the audience with their jazzy sound and musical versitility.

wonders if that was typical of a Bloomington audience. Hamlisch's opening number, "Music and the Mirror," from a Chorus Line proved immediately that he is not only a composer extrordinaire, but a skilled pianist as well. Each time he touched the keys was magic: "The Entertainer," "Nobody Does it Better," "They're Playing My Song," and "The Way We Were." Perhaps greater than the enjoyment of these legendary works was the knowledge that here was a man who knows and appreciates success to the fullest yet comes through, in the words of one critic, a genial and sincere guide, an artist who has grown from boyhood prodigy. 88 Lisa Lanham

enry Mancini's 1981 performance began with the promise that the H audience would all be home in time to watch the Superbowl. From the first moment he impressed the audience with his warmth, wit and most importantly, his in-

credible musical versatility. He has mastered everything from ragtime to popular movie themes and has been nominated for 14 Academy Awards. He left a lasting impression of a very talented and celebrated musician who simply enjoys performing and his music. Mancini appeared at the IU Auditorium on January 25, commenting that his first Bloomington performance was 16 years ago. Appearing with him was the Louisville Orchestra, under the musical direction of Akira Endo and Peter Leonard, conductorin-residence. Mancini, who arranges all his music, seems to create a magic to any piece he performs. His narrative was thoughtful and entertaining. When he introduced a selection entitled, "Portrait of Arthur Fiedler," Mancini remarked that we'd all recognize the tunes if not the names declaring that he didn't know what the Talking Heads were doing these days. The orchestra and Mancini were a superb combination, all afternoon, working to perform the music to perfection and seeming to

Larry Levin

thoroughly enjoy the performance. OF Leslie Shaw rom Moussorgsky to Manilow — hail the conquering Nero!" Bloomington's F audience echoed the praise of the twotime Grammy Award Winner Peter Nero, the pianist, arranger, composer and conductor who, with the Louisville Orchestra under the direction of Peter Leonard, presented a fitting final concert of the Pop Series Season on March 8th in the IU Auditorium. Nero illustrated the breadth of his versatility by: conducting an original piece, by performing his own arrangement of a tribute to Richard Rodgers and by appeasing the Top 40 lovers with a rendition of "If' by David Gates. Nero, a charming, articulate performer, with a dry sense of humor said he discovered the most widely recognized song in the world for the U.S. Bicentennial. No, its not Mozart, but McDonald's! Clearly, nobody can do it like Peter Nero can. ' Lisa Lanham

143


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THE ILIAD, Play by Play INDIANA UNIVERSITY AUDITORIUM Saturday. February 28. 8 p.m. Tickets $8 00 and 56.00

rendition of "The Illiad" — Greeks and Trojans battle it out on the fContemporary ootball field to claim Helen of Troy.

American Sign Language presents Illiad ost of us, at one time or another, have pondered the thought of being handicapped in some respect. The sight of M a handicapped person iorings a feeling of respect and admiration to one's heart. This very feeling was present throughout the IU Auditorium on February 28 as the audience watched the National Theatre of the Deaf perform 'The Illiad, Play by Play'. The production itself deviated from the norm as it was performed in American Sign Language. The non-signers present also heard the play in English, as well as experiencing some fine acting, miming and a little noise. But even if the production had been completely silent, theco mmunication those on stage intrigued and captivated those who did not "speak" by the language. The play accents the tale of Trojan war with aco ntemporary twist: a football game. The two teams prepare for the field of battle, the Greeks vs. the Trojans — their goal each being to completely defeat the other team to claim ownership of Helen of Troy. The production was complete with drama, comedy and tragedy in a clever plot. But most i mportantly, a number of people whousually are unable to understand the goings-on on stage were enabled to appreciate an evening at the theatre. -, Ellen Webber 144


Brian Reynolds

"1 was just up there at the right time," insists the modest Miss Lillian Gish, who first appeared on stage at age five.

Lillian Gish and the art of silent films legant, modest and charming was Miss Lillian Gish as she appeared on stage at the IU Auditorium to speak on the art of E silent films. Miss Gish, 84, has outlived most of her contemporaries of motion picture's most memorable era. The ever-poised actress appeared at a on March 15 to presentation of her 1919 film Broken Blossoms address her fans and to answer their questions. Her great passion for silent film leaves little room in her heart for self-praise. "Film is important. I'm not important. I was just up there at the right time. It's the film that's the power," Miss Gish told the audience. The audience responded with laughter deep from the heart as they experienced the magic she spoke of — the silent film and music of Broken Blossoms. The event was a benefit for the Bloomington Symphony Orchestra. To honor Miss Gish for her contributions in the creation of the art of film, Joanne Orr, wife of Indiana Governor Robert Orr, presented Miss Gish with the Sagamore of the Wabash award. This award is the highest honor which an individual in Indiana can receive. Miss Gish is modest, at the very least. Her love always has been for film — she never married. Originally from Springfield, Ohio, Miss Gish made her stage debut as a girl of five and began making movies in 1913 when Hollywood Angeles.88 was little more than a fig ranch on the outskirts of Los Ellen Webber

with

MISS LILLIAN in person

GISH

Musical accompaniment Bloomington Symphony by the Keith Bro wn, ConductorOrchestra with Dennis Ja mes at the organ Sunday, March 15, 8 p.m. IU Auditorium Tickets; $8, $5, $3 Cal/ (812) 337-1103 An Ill Auditorium presentation

145


Jeff Greene

Martha Levenson and Tom Richards practice their routine during rehearsals for the Singing Hoosiers. Their performance at the 111 Auditorium was March 14th.

Hoosiers' performance begins with a bang

0

ne of the many fine traditions carried out at IU is the Singing Hoosiers musical ensemble. Doused with choreography, the Singing Hoosiers presented a diversified and colorful program of some forty songs in their annual spring concert. The show started off with a bang as the lights came up and the Hoosiers "Eased on Down the Road" to the theme song of the Broadway hit, "The Wiz". Marvin Hamlisch's "They're Playing Our Song," was recognized as the audience heard "Fallin' " from his recent spectacular musical. The Singing Hoosiers had a song to please everyone. From Hoagy Carmichael to Irving Berlin and Kirby Shaw to the contemporary Boz Scaggs — the program was complete. A flute solo enhanced the second act as Kari Beth Burks sang a solo to Chuck Mangione's "Soft." The fourth act earned a standing ovation for the pianist's superb performance in "Polovtsienne Dances," from the well-known opera, "Prince Igor." Following an intermission, the audience was indulged with what was apparently one of their favorites. A genuinely vigorous round of applause ran out at the end of "Ole Man River," a well-known tune from "Show Boat." The Hoosiers tapdanced their way down the stage to the theme of "42nd Street," in the sixth act. For the finale, the Singing Hoosier alumni were summoned to the stage to join in the singing "The Battle Hymn of the Republic," accompanied by the pipe organ. :,='8 Ellen Webber 146


Philharmonic conducts the Carlo Maria Giulini, music director of the Los Angeles orchestra. The concert at the IV Auditorium in November was the orchestra's only Indiana appearance.

Evening with Giulini delights audience

t was quite a coup; the only performance of the Los Angeles Philharmonic in the state of Indiana took place at the IU AuI ditorium on November 24. Sponsored by the Bell System's American Orchestras Tour program, the Philharmonic's appearance and subsequent master classes was perhaps one of the most significant concerts ever held at IU. Founded in 1919, the L.A. Philharmonic, now under the direction of Carlo Giulini, stands in a class with few others. Since 1978, with the ascension of Italian maestro Giulini to music director, the orchestra has entered into a new dynasty. As the eighth conductor in the orchestra's history, "Giulini, wrote the Chicago Sun-Times, "has taken an orchestra that was already of exceptionally high quality and imprinted the distinctive features of his mind and art upon its playing." Guilini's Bloomington appearance reaffirmed this praise. The music throughout the evening was sweet and soft, melancholy and majestic; a delight for the ears. His program included Haydn's Symphony No. 94 ( 'Surprise"), "Quiet City' for trumpet, English Horn and String orchestra by Aaron Copland, Verdi's overture to "La Farza del Destino," and Brahms's Symphony No. 2, Op. 73. As an added treat for IU, members of the Philharmonic critiqued pieces performed by selected student musicians. Conducting two of these master classes were former IU students Heiichiro Ohyama, co-principal violist and Daniel Rothmuller, associate principal cellist. The euphoria for a music lover after an evening with Giulini is like the NCAA championship victory for most IU students; we can only be hopeful they will both be repeated. 9 P, Lisa Lanham

,Thiutini %Jr1980/81 Season Carlo Maria

Music Director

Only Indiana Appearance,

INDIANA UNIVERSITY MO NDAY AUDITORIUM NOVEMBER 24 8 In „”vation wah INDIAN4 Sett

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Karen Dunivall

Holly Near talked with reporters before her spring concert at IC. The concert was to benefit the North Central Women's Study Association.

Idealistic goals inspire singer

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aving the world may seem like an idealistic goal beyond anyone's reach, but Holly Near's inspiring performance makes the S seemingly unreachable a little bit closer to reality. Near's lyrics and comments between songs during her concert to benefit the North Central Women's Studies Association dealt with human potential for resolving issues like world peace, ending racism and anti-semitism, dangers of nuclear power, preserving the environment and equal rights for all people. Near insists that access for the handicapped and an interpreter for the deaf be present at all her concerts, and her IU performances was no exception. An interpreter stood next to her and translated her every word into sign language. Near has completed five albums. Her voice has been compared justly to' Joan Boaz's, is also reminiscent of Anne Murray and Carly Simon. Near's lyrics, very much her own, revolve around various aspects of womanhood as well as non-sexist topics as unemployment and old-age. Her variety and apparent comfortableness with her audience help Near express her hopes for a brighter world. To prevent her act from becoming too serious in nature, she mixes in an adequate number of humorous notes, as in her rendition of "Has Anybody Seen My Gal?" Near received a standing ovation on an encore of "Imagine My Surprise," an earlier song that has become a favorite, based on the audience's response.

Susan Paullin

148


Bunny Weinberger (Lynne Perkins) shocks her neighbor's "lady friend" Lucille Pompi (Caren Browning) in Gemini, a farcical and unusual love triangle play, which appeared in March.

T300 series provides assorted season he 1980-81 line-up of T300 productions was assorted from Edward Bond's contemporary attack on man's society to T Don Nigro's tribute to Shakespeare. Probably some of the most dedicated and hard-working people in theater, students compose the cast, directors, costumes and set designers, promotion people and virtually every ingredient that makes a successful production. T300 is a class — and a difficult one to get into. And once you're in, you still are not guaranteed a part in a play. Consequently, the T300 group is known for its natural enthusiasm. The prison set for Getting Out performed in October was typical of the tight space alloted for productions and adds to the intimacy between actors and audience. Richard Koch, Jeff Coussens, Rick Whitmore and Lisa Was conveyed the condescending messages of Edward Bond's Stone, that attacked society's political, religious, social and judicial structures. Gemini, a farcical and unusual "love" triangle, followedPatches in the Dark, which appeared in February. As a grand finale, a tribute to the 417th birthday of Shakespeare, the troupe produced Love's Labours Wonne, wherein playwrite Don Nigro creates a thoroughly human Shakespeare. The season's itinerary proved successful and of course, a learning experience. 88

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149


Audio/Visual Dept.

The Singing Hoosiers joined the eleven cast members in Mrs Opera Theatre production, "Prince Igor" in November.

Singing Hoosiers join Opera Theatre production

INDIANA UNIVERSITY SCIFOOL OF MUSIC Two Hundred Eightieth Program of the 19SRSI Season

The Indiana University Opera -Theater

as its

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Prince Igor Opera Ina prologue and halt Acts Text and Mos.. by Al.VXANDER BOBODIS alto

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ith the help of all 120 members of the Singing Hoosiers, the IU Opera Theatre opened their production of AlexanW der Borodin's Prince Igor in November. Eleven principal cast members were supported by an unusually active chorus of serfs, warriors, slaves and citizens. Max Rothlisberger carefully designed the opera's sets and costumes which added a most important ingredient. Borodin actually died before he completedPrince Igor, but friends and col legues — Ri m sky, Korsakov and Glazanov — with the aide of Borodin's notes and sketches, finished and premiered the opera in 1890. All the original ornate sovereignty of early Russia was depicted in the IU Opera Theatre's production of Borodin's most famous work. In a prologue and four acts, Prince Igor takes the audience back to the 12th century battle between Igor, Prince of Novgorod-Seversk in south Russia, and the invading infidel Polovetsia nomads of the central Asian steppes. The Singing Hoosiers, composing the Russian populace, served to accentuate the richness and variety of the choral arrangements. The true spirit of 12th century Russia, in its height of conflict, was depicted in IU's adaptation of Borodin's fine arrangement of plot poetry and music. 1; Ellen Webber


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or those who attended their first opera in February, when the IU Opera Theater presented The Love for Three Oranges, F their stereotypical image of the opera was eroded. The brilliant Russian opera by Sergei Prokofiev is a wry fairy tale in which the composer uses his harmonic and melodic gifts to teach a prince to laugh, save the life of a princess and poke affectionate fun at theatrical convention. He does this using an opera-within-opera effect in which there is an audience on stage. The various members of the audience portrayed the different forms of theatrical entertainment, making fulluse of their make-up and costumes. Representatives of eccentrics, a herd of zippy busybodies dressed in red T-shirts and blue jeans kept popping in with unexpected morsels of wit. Vibrant and expressive costumes of energetic green devils and a blue-haired witch complemented the simple setting to convey the theme of each character. It was not the use of color in the performance that differed from the "typical" opera. Rather, the lively humor, almost to the point of silliness, made The Love for Three Oranges just plainly entertaining for almost every type of audience. The IU Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Thomas Baldner, maintained the continuity throughout the performance.SE Ellen Webber

151


Jeff Morehead

The newly acquire help, demanded by the unfortunate Don Pasquale's bride, take advantage of the Don's absence during a scene from the opera.

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on Pasquale is an opera buffa — a comic opera — centered around the escapades of a young widow and her beau. In early March, the IU Opera Theatre took the stage to bring the performance of the Italian composer Donizetti's popular masterpiece to the Musical Arts Center. Kathryn Case, Ray Liddle, Randall Black and Lewis Schlanbusch — all graduate students majoring in voice — were cast in the principal roles for Don Pasquale. Case, playing Norina, posed as her lover's sister, right out of the convent, to trick Don Pasquale, her lover's uncle, and win her man, Ernesto. Conniving with Ernesto, played by Black, Norina enters into a false marriage with the wife-seeking Pasquale. Pasquale was portrayed by Ray Liddle, who finds misery in involving himself with the likes of his pranksters. He eventually is persuaded to withdraw his request that his nephew marry the woman Pasquale had chosen for him so that Ernesto and Norina may have their happiness together. Donizetti was virtually a mass producer of operas; at one time during his early career, Donizetti wrote 23 operas in eight years.Don Pasquale was written in less than three weeks. However, this does not detract from the meticulosity of his works. The performances were conducted by Robert Porco, head of the choral conducting department of the music school. Jack Eddleman acted as guest director of Donizetti's comic masterpiece. '_ Ellen Webber


copyright © 1981 Dave Repp All rights reserved

The first university company to perform at New York's Metropolitan Opera House, the IU cast pauses during a dress rehearsal of "The Greek Passion ."

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ne of the productions in this year's IU Opera Theater reached a zenith through its efforts. It was the first university company ever to perform at the Metropolitan Opera. IU Opera Theater's rendition of The Greek Passion took the stage at New York's Lincoln Center on April 26. The American premiere production of the Czech composer Bohuslay Martinu's Greek Passion starred tenor Larry Paxton, a graduate student, playing the lead role, the shepherd Manolios. His performance culminated with the end of the opera, wherein he assumed a mysterious Christ-like air, after portraying the part of Jesus in a village passion play. He is condemned further by the village priest for his demeanor and is eventually killed. A mixture of fantasy and reality and the concept ofa play-within-aplay characterizes the type of works created by Martinu, andGreek Passion fits the style. Martinu spent more than four years working on the opera, and took great pains to learn about Eastern liturgical music and Greek folk music in an effort to lend to his work an authentic ingredient. Many considered Greek Passion Martinu's finest opera, even though it did not premiere in Zurich until two years after his death in 1959. The IU Opera Theater's premiere American production was conducted by Bryan Balkwill, designed by Max Rothlisberger, and directed by Lofti Mansouri. Greek Passion was presented for IU in the Musical Arts Center in April, before traveling to New York. 8k

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"Rigoletto" an opera in three acts, by Verdi opened the IU Opera Season in September and October at the Musical Arts Center.

rtorrned March 11, 1851 HigOUW twhesT"eatrpoeLa Feince in Venice

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154

Rigoletto opens IU opera season igoletto is the hump-backed court jester to the wicked Italian Duke of Mantua. Rigoletto, it seems, delights in malicious R jests against anybody who catches his or the Duke's eye. The Duke's eye, however, is drawn more to the scenic side of life — the female side — and it is up to Rigoletto to play pimp and direct the Duke's attention to new women. Such behavior is the basis of Verdi's opera, Rigoletto, the opening performance of the IU Opera season. The lavish renaissance set added to the splendor of the opera and the sensitive direction of Bryan Balkwill, professor of music. The Duke's routine goes smoothly until the Duke decides to pursue the beautiful Countess Ceprano, openly defying her father, Count Monterone. To remove obsticles, the Duke orders the Count thrown in jail. Rigoletto taunts Monterone endlessly, but falls withering to the floor as Monterone curses him. Unknown to any, Rigolleto has a beautiful daughter hidden away. The Duke ultimately discovers Rigoletto's daughter, Gilda, and secretly meets her. Rigoletto finds out about the Duke's aspirations and orders an assassin to kill the Duke. The assassin's sister, however, is attracted by the Duke and convinces her brother to kill someone else and substitute that person for the Duke to show Rigoletto. Thus, Monterone's curse held true and Rigoletto, returning to gloat over the death of the Duke, limps away a broken man.;,Robert Wickens


Lim. Levin

Cast members of "The Marriage of Figaro" rehearse their parts in the MAC. Bodo Igesz, Met stage director, served as guest stage director.

Servant employer conflict theme of Figaro

elightfully preoccupied by the comic aroma and flavor of wit exploited by the directors and cast in Mozart's The Marriage D of Figaro, many viewers tended to overlook the serious underlying theme of the opera. The Marriage of Figaro is based on a conflict between a servant, Figaro, and his employer. The battle for the young lady prize, Susanna, reveals the class struggle by clever musical dialogue between the servant and the aristocrat. Senior Mathew Lau played the title role as the man hound-anddetermined-to-win-his-bride, Figaro. Powerful and clear was his voice, tying together the dramatic ensemble, Susanna was sung with confidence by Gwynne Geyer, a graduate student. Bodo Igesz, a resident stage director with the Metropolitan Opera in New York, served as guest stage director of the IU Opera Theater's production of Figaro. He called the feat a small miracle and was amazed by the ability of the Theatre to block all of Figaro in just two weeks. Igesz has visited IU two times prior to the production ofFigaroto direct last year's La Boheme and Don Giovanni. He has enjoyed working with the students, and credits their genuine enthusiasm for their accomplishments such as the "small miracle" ofFigaro. Figaro was conducted by IU professor Thomas Baldner and was designed by Professor Max Rothlisberger. The minor characters of Marcellina, played by Susie Girardi, and Don Basilio, played by Albert Neal, added to the strength and transition of the performance with their great volume and diction. b'E;

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Larry Levin

The girls want to know everything about Miss Brody. her pupils watch attentively as she describes some of her escapades.

Brodie brings stories to her students

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er girls are the "creme de la creme," and they worship their teacher, Miss Jean Brodie. Portrayed by Denise LaCroix, H Jean Brodie is a player in the theater of her own imagination. Her pupils are her attentive audience. "The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie," from the novel by Muriel Spark was presented by the University Theatre in October. The play takes place in Edinburgh, Scotland in the early 1930s. Miss Brodie teaches at the Marcia Blaine School for girls where her values conflict with those of the headmistress, Miss Mackay, played by Leigh Taylor. Miss Jean Brodie, a single woman, describes her escapades to her pupils, paying special attention to four girls in particular — Sandy, Jenny, Monica and Mary MacGregor, the only one who defies Miss Brodie, and involves them in her relationships with the two men in her life — Teddy Lloyd, the handsome, charming artist and Mr. Lowther, the scholarly music teacher. The dashing Teddy Lloyd, played by Tom Gaitsch, is Miss Brodie's true love. When Mary MacGregor succumbs to Mr. Lloyd's charm, it creates more entangled passions. The entire story is told to a reporter, Tim Wesley, and by a nun, played by Barbara Blewett, who recollects her days as a student of Miss Brodie's. Cynthia Wade


Characters from -The Cherry Orchard" re-create a scene from the IU production at the IU Auditorium Theater, November 20.

Tradition maintained on Russian estate warm old-fashioned room; adorned with a hobby horse, a beautiful doll house and an antique book case set the scene A in the children's room for the opening act of Anton Chekhov's comedy, The Cherry Orchard, the University Theatre production presented in November. A prominent Russian family is faced with the sudden loss of its estate, including a large cherry orchard which the family adores. The owner of the cherry orchard, Madame Ranevskaya, played by graduate student Suzanne E. Mills, was a generous woman who wanted to hold onto the perfect life she thought she enjoyed on her estate. Beau Phillips played the role of the wealthy merchant, who stabilized Madame Ranevskaya's impulsiveness with his even-tempered portrayal of Yermolay Alexeyevich Lopakin. Excellent supporting performances were given by graduate student Bruce Longworth as the Student Trofimov; senior Kate Doherty as Varya, the adopted daughter of Madame Ranevskaya; freshman Jeffrey B. Sadoff as Yepikhodov the clerk; and Jerry Dickey as the mistress's brother Gayev. The character who won the heart of the audience however, was Firs, the old man who shuffled in and out of the script as the valet. Graduate student John Sipes played the role of Firs quite skillfully from the beginning to the very end. Directed by John Farris, The Cherry Orchard was a poignant tale of a family striving to maintain a tradition. 8E; Cynthia Wade 157


Jell Morehead

Vince's grandfather, (John Sipes), center, and father, (Thomas Gaitsch) right, are criticized by the grandmother (Rebecca Geible) in the play -Buried Child," that appeared in the IC Theater January 30 through February 7

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Family life queried in Buried Child ust as Norman Rockwell produces artistic images of the traditional American family, a recurrent trend in theater productions focuses on the family. Contrary to the comforting work of Rockj well, Sam Shepard's Buried Child which opened January 30th at University Theater repudiates the typical family image and further questions the most basic beliefs upon which this nation is built. The family is midwestern and eccentric. When the grandson, played by Bruce Longworth, unexpectedly returns home for a visit, he discovers that neither his father (Thomas Gaitsch) nor his grandfather (John Sipes) recognizes him. The family is intact, with a domineering grandmother (Rebecca Geible) and a psychotic uncle, Bradley (Charles Wilson). Mentally stable the characters are not, which apparently is representative of Shepard's typical family. The director, Howard Jensen, and his cast cleverly prevented the homecoming from falling into a predictable and light family situation. The use of a powerful theme contributed to the assets which earned Buried Child and Sam Shepard the Pulitzer Prize for drama in 1979. The ingredients, however were not exclusive. The characters, each caught up in his own world and eccentric mannerisms, are humorous. Shepard's point was well-made. But he did not leave the audience with a feeling of hopelessness. "At the end of the play we see a small light shining which lets us know that this is an optimistic play and not just an American Gothic horror tale without hope," said director Jensen. -.=.6Ellen Webber


A.V. Department photo

A fan, young lady and young man create an incident that causes a small village to

conceal, borrow, steal and gossip in the University Theater production, The Fan,which was presented in early March.

A fan drives village crazy young lady drops her fan as she rises to answer a young man's greeting. Sound simple? Carlo Goldini's classic comedy, The A Fan hilariously complicated the incident and the University Theatre entertained audiences with it's version of the play in early March. Around the simple occurrence, the 18th century playwright wove a web of jealousies, rivalries and misunderstandings until everyone in the peaceful little village of Case Nuove was involved in rescuing, concealing, recovering, borrowing and even stealing the fan. Many of Goldini's plays were initiated by interesting and often unique characters. The Fan seemed to bring the best of his characters together in somewhat of a grand finale, as it was one of his last plays. The IU production of The Fan was directed by Professor Marvin Carlson — his first production since he joined the IU faculty last year. He accomplishes a challenging task, which is to evoke, successfully and believably, chaos out of order and to resolve the disorder to produce again in three brief acts. Revolving around a pair of love triangles, the plot was increasingly energetic through the second act. Retracing the path which the fan had taken in the first two acts, the cast heard chuckles of approving satisfaction from the audience. The costuming for the stage, an element ofthe theater which sometimes goes unnoticed and unappreciated, was vivid and detailed. The setting and the costumes provided a foundation for a fantastic theatrical accomplishment. SE

rFebru arY 22, 28, and March rcketts are.$3.75. Cu in; in at fhCP7p s available at thretalu A 2uditoriul Box

41

University Theatre

Office

Ellen Webber

159


Andree Peyrot

With his pe onnance of -The Jet Song," Riff (Charley Wilson) inspires Jets Baby John (Jaime onegan, right) and Action (Jeff Coussens, left) to confront the Sharks in Act I of -West Side Story.-

Sharks and Jets battle at IU he University Theatre ended its season with an all-around dynamic performance of the 1957 Broadway musical,West T Side Story. Somewhat of a modern day rendition ofRomeo andJuliet set on the West Side of New York City, the action centers around a conflict between two rival gangs, the Jets and the Sharks. Their dissidence is rekindled with the romance of one of the Jets, Tony, and one of the Sharks' girls, Maria. The couple was played by Don Bernadini and Catherine J. McQueen, both graduate students at IU. The choreography for the entire production was a mastering of difficult maneuvers but seemingly was executed with ease by everyone in the cast. Director and choreographer Michael Sokoloff called for many long hours of rehearsal which payed off with glistening energy in the performance. All eight performances were sell-outs which was possibly at least partially due to the popularity of the story. Jerome Robbins' dramatic concept of West Side Story was set to music by composer Leonard Bernstein and lyricist Stephen Sondheim. Backing Sokoloff in the direction ofWest Side Story was Bill Bartlett on lights, Wes Peters, an assistant professor of the theater department, designed the sets, and Skip Gindhart tailored the costumes. Musical direction for the production was provided by Michael Dixon, a graduate student of choral conducting at the IU School of Music. Ellen Webber 160


Jeff Greene

"Pippin" goes on: Backstage at the Spotlight Dinner Theater, members of the cast anticipate the evening's performance.

Despite stage change Pippin successful 44

T

he show must go on" was the motto of the cast and staff of the musical Pippin. A musical sponsored by the Union Board is tradition at IU. Pippin was originally sponsored by Union Board and was to be performed at the IU Auditorium. However, because of technical difficulties, the show found itself at a new place and under new sponsors. The new scene for the performance was the Spotlight Dinner Theatre. The theater was in-the-round which seemed to cause some difficulties for the student-made cast. The story of Pippin, directed by Douglas Hartzell, is about a young man, Pippin, who feels a need to find a perfect life. Pippin, portrayed by graduate student of theater Jerry Grayson, states his longin& to find his fulfilled life in the mournful song, "Corner of the Sky. Another high point of the show was when Pippin and Catherine, the woman with whom he falls in love, sing the melancholy "Love Song." Catherine, portrayed by Tracy Eula, harmonized well, expressing a genuine type of old-fashioned love. Overall, the show was very successful, playing to a sell-out audience at every one of its seven performances. The show was enjoyable and left one with a good and happy outlook on life. The cast, crew and staff proved to themselves that through determination and hard work they could "survive IMUB." CO Lynn Vagnone

161


Copyright © 1981 Dave Repp All rights reserved

Patrick Bissel and Gelsey Kirkland, formerly of the American Ballet Theater Company, pause for a moment during a dress rehearsal of "Swan Lake."

Ballet Theater performs romantic classic

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ne of the greatest romantic, classic ballets of all time— Swan Lake was performed by the IU Ballet Theatre in the IU Auditorium on March 6. The play featured guests Patrick Bissel and Gelsey Kirkland, formerly of the American Ballet Theater Company. Swan Lake, written by Peter Tchaikovsky, was considered a failure when it was first performed in 1875. Since that time many revisions have been made to improve it. The ballet is a story of a princess, Odette, and a prince, Siegfried, who fall in love after Odette has been turned into a swan by an evil sorcerer. Odette can be changed into a human again only through the love of a sincere man. Siegfried's efforts to transform Odette through his love are intercepted by the sorcerer until Siegfried kills him in the end. Odette and Siegfried live happily ever after. IU's version of this classic was choreographed by Nicolas Beriozoff, chairman of the ballet department. The atmosphere set by the excellent music, costumes and scenery was evidence of the large amount of effort which went into the production. The audience thoroughly enjoyed the enchantment of Swan Lake..,i-',b Sheri Fufaro


Hans Scott

Masked faces, painted expressions and controlled, repeated movements highlight the IU Dance Theater's performance, "An Evening of Contemporary Dance

Contemporary dance is unusual program n Evening of Contemporary Dance pleasantly surprised its audience with a program that was unusual and entertaining. A The program was presented by the IU Dance Theater in the IU Auditorium, March 18. Admission was free for all. An Evening of Contemporary Dance consisted of recently composed pieces which were choreographed by different people. The dance company consisted of 14 members. As the audience entered the Auditorium, all of the 14 dancers were dressed in warm-up suits, rolling, jumping and playing a giant game of "Scramble". This was titled "Dance 104" and was choreographed by Vera Orlack Twohig. "The Boy and the Dolphin" was one of the more notable pieces in the program, choreographed by Michael Smart and performed by Nathan Montoya and Walter Strange. It was a story of a boy's agony and ecstacy of love for a dolphin. Mark Wheeler's choreographed piece, "Something Old, and Something New," was a statement of how society traps women into norms of behavior. It featured the music of Glenn Miller, Vivaldi, Tangerine Dream, Eberhard Weber and Lennon/McCartney. The last piece, "The Harvest", ended the program with an example of how well modern dance can entertain. Ed4 Cindy Sleeth and Larry Levin

Indiana

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Auditoriurn March 18, 1981 8:00 P.M.

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Dennis Chamberlin

Jackson Browne pauses while guitarist David Lindley (sitting) picks out some notes from -Rosie" during Browne's concert in Assembly Hall Sept. 14.

Jackson Browne rocks Assembly Hall he lights went out and the crowd began to cheer as Jackson Browne took the stage in Iti's Assembly Hall on September T 14. Browne took the audience with him throughout the two-and-a-half hour show. From such mellow tunes as "Rorie" to rocking songs like "Here Come Those Tears Again," Browne displayed his vocal, as well as musical, talents. With the assistance of the high-pitched singing from back-up vocalist Rosemary Butler, Browne's sound excited the crowd to the point of rowdy cheering and dancing on the seats. Browne's comments throughout the concert and jokes with the crowd seemed to delight both him and his fans. Before kicking into a rowdy version of "You Love the Thunder, Browne kiddingly referred to IU as a party instead of a school. Browne showed his creativity as he added several new verses during "Cocaine." With pianist Billy Payne on the synthesizer and David. Lindley on the electric fiddle, Browne won the crowd over and over again with his humorous lyrics like: "Cocaine's for horses, not for men. They say it can kill you but they don't say when." By the end of the concert, both the band and the crowd were exhausted from Browne's continuous energy. After a couple of bows with the band, Browne disappeared amid the standing ovation in Assembly Hall. 9P-) Megan Byrne


Jim Kurzdorfer, bassist with Spyro Gyra, picks out notes during "Morning Dance" song, during the group's October 1 appearance at the IU Auditorium.

Spyro Gyra brings some sun to IU ith sprightly rhythms, catchy melodies and a bouncy spirit, the jazz-fusion group Spyro Gyra performed before 2,356 jazz W enthusiasts Saturday night October 1 atthe IU Auditorium. Noted for their fusing of jazz, rock, rhythm and blues, slasa and funk, the latest tour was in support of their latest album release,Catching the Sun . The career of Spyro Gyra reads like a Horatio Alger novel. Releasing their first album on an independent label, the band hit the big time with the hit single "Morning Dance, - which broke into both the jazz and top 40 charts. Led by the writing and performing skills of saxaphonist Jay Beckenstein, who fluently played solos on all 13 songs of the concert, percussionist Gerardo Velez nevertheless entertained the crowd with his energetic personality. Wearing an orange tank-top and white draw-string pants, Velez moved like lightning across the stage, dancing and jitterbugging in time with the songs. There seemed to be a method to Velez's madness as the crowd responded by calling back the group for three encores and giving them four standing ovations. The third stop on a 34-city world tour, the band gave the Bloomington audience a moment in the sun with their sunny melodies and engaging playing. Settling in for a long, cold winter, the band's efforts of putting a little sunshine into their performance was a welcome respite from things to come. eo Ray Boomhower

165


John Terhune

Members of Blue Oyster Cult and Molly Hatchet after teaming up for the finale, take a final bow after an exhilarating performance October 26.

The Cult plays pong with unexpected crowd he lights went out and the audience's cheers increased to a roar as members of Blue Oyser Cult took the stage. Lead T guitarist Donald "Buck Dharma" Roeser has just started screeching out "E . T. I. (Extra Terresial Intelligence)" when suddenly a stream of Ping-Pong balls rained from above. "You'll have to forgive us for being a bit crazy," apologized BOC vocalist Eric Bloom, referring to the constant pour of balls being thrown by the roadies. "This is the last stop on our tour and we're just having fun." Those who went to see BOC and Molly Hatchet at Assembly Hall on October 26, however, didn't sound as if they minded at all. In fact, judging from the enthusiastic ovations the audience gave the bands and the sound of clinking bottles as the crowd exited, it was hard to determine which group had more fun. But the excitement of the crowd seemed saved for the Cult. From the 10-foot Japanese monster shooting out smoke and flames during "Godzilla," to Bloom riding onstage on a motorcycle with a topless female companion behind him to start off- Born to be Wild," the Cult seemed to impress at least those who could still remember the concert the day after. The highlight of the show, however, was the finale, when BOC teamed up with Hatchet members Jimmy Farrar, guitarist Dave Hlbek and drummer Bruce Crump for a "rockin' jam' of the Rolling Stones' "Satisfaction" and the Doors' "Roadhouse Blues." -Robert Wickens 166


Boz Scaggs strums his guitar keeping the audience enhanced with his soft and rhythmic melodies.

Boz Scaggs presents a mellow but jazzy concert he lights dimmed, the curtains opened and the crowd went wild as Boz Scaggs entertained more than 3,000 people in T the IU Auditorium November 17. Opening with "Breakdown Dead Ahead" from his latest album, Middle Man, Boz Scaggs presented a tightly packaged performance. As the 36-year-old performer moved into new songs such as "Middle Man" and "Look What You've Done to Me," the crowd came alive, clapping and singing along as Scaggs played the traditional favorites "Georgia" and "What Can I Say. Scaggs, in the center of the large plexiglass stage, stood out alone as his band was tucked away, out of the spotlight. The crowd came alive as Boz began the moving, romantic ballad, "We're All Alone." Backed by vocalists, Venetta Fields and Paula Brown, Scaggs singing at times seemed overwhelmed by the band's instruments, but no one seemed to mind. Scaggs ended the show with "Lido Shuffle" as guitarist Michael Landow and drummer Jeff Porcaro blended together keeping his mellow, jazzy tradition alive. After the performers left, for what seemed to be the end of the concert, the crowd stood on chairs, lit lighters, and clapped furiously until the band returned. The extremely enthusiastic crowd warmly brought back Scaggs for two encores which included "Lowdown" and "You re Mine." ss, Lynn Vagnone

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Chuck Mangione poses before his performance at the IU Auditorium November 1.

Mangione's swinging brass mesmerizes audience row of dim lights spills pools of color onto center stage. The audience waits. From the shadows, a small figure appears at A the left of the stage and an explosion of applause fills the air. Chuck Mangione begins to play. Playing for a full house at IU Auditorium on November 1, Mangione and quartet kept the audience electrified throughout the evening. Beginning with the lively "Eleventh Commandance," the audience immediately took to the blended sound of bass guitarist Charles Meeks, lead guitarist Carl Lockett, James Bradley, Jr. on drums, Chris Vadela on saxophone and flute and Mangione on the piano and flugelhorn. Other rhythmic tunes included "Chase the Clouds Away," "Give It All You Got" (1980 Winter Olympics theme), "I Never Missed Someone Before," the title sons from his newest album,Fun and Games, "Land of Make-Believe and "Hide and Seek." "Children of Sanchez" quickly changed the pace and was followed by the song that sparked Mangione's commercial success and popularity, "Feels So Good." After the performance, Mangione's father, Papa Mangione, sold albums, T-shirts and programs at a display in the lobby. Wearing a black hat like his son, the white-bearded man says that Chuck is "a chip off the old block." Kathy Borchers 168


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Sonny Rollins entertains the audience by exploring the many dimensions of jazz. The concert was held at the IU auditorium November 21.

Sonny Rollins is saxier at fifty hen Sonny Rollins plays the tenor saxophone people listen. This was no exception when he played November 21 W at the IU Auditorium. People didn't come to see just a jazz concert; they came to see a living legend who is recognized as the most important voice in jazz today. Rollins seemed never to run out of musical ideas as he controlled his instrument with the finesse of a magician. One almost expected him to pull a rabbit out of his sax. His performance was extraordinary but pianist Mark Soskin, bassist Jerome Harris and drummer Al Foster showed that Rollins is not alone in his musical prowess. The sound was almost omnipotent. It was the melody of leaves blowing in a warm summer breeze or the hollow wind of winter. It was the busy streets of the city or a peaceful field in the country. It was musical imagery at its best. Rollins' career, which began in the late 1940s, has been characterized by an ongoing experimentation and exploration of the jazz sound. Much of the concert was an esoteric display of musical metaphors. But Rollins also played more melodic and well-known tunes, including Stevie Wonder's "Isn't She Lovely?" He also charmed the crowd with songs like "Alfie's Theme" and "My Little Brown Book." His rendition of "Autumn Nocturne" brought the crowd to its feet. The 50-year-old musician used his saxophone quite well to tell of his discoveries. It was a classic exhibition he painted with his horn.. 86 Dan DeCamp

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Jeff Morehead

No these aren't the Beatles, rather the cast of Beatleinania who appeared on April 10 at the IU Auditorium. Representing the Fab Four (1 to r) were Lenny Colachino (Paul), Richy Gomez (George), Bob Forte (Ringo). and Joey Pecorino (John). UNION BOARD CONCERTS PRESENTS

Bloomington experiences Beatlemania t wasn't the typical anti-establishment crowd associated with the Beatle's concerts of the 60's who attended. But for over two hours, Beatlemania was in full force, giving the audience the closest thing to a Beatle's concert in the 80s. No, it wasn't Shea Stadium or the Hollywood Bowl — just the IU Auditorium where the fab four performed April 10. The cast of Beatlemania, was a Broadway hit featuring John, Paul, George and Ringo look and sound-a-likes. During the performance a massive 4000 slide show flashed upon three giant screens behind the performers. The show was a chronological display of the events and Beatles' songs from the '60s. One must give the four credit, they do look and sound like the Beatles. But, there is no comparison. One didn't even have to hear the cracked vocals from Lenny Colachino (Paul) being drowned out by the taped orchestra during "Yesterday," or the sloppy play from Joey Pecorino (John), Richy Gomez (George) and Bob Forte (Ringo) to distinguish them from the Beatles. The band played all of the Beatle favorites; "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds," "Sergeant Pepper — Abbey Road," the actors came alive and started to display some personality with three hard-rocking renditions of "Come Together," "Revolution" and "Hefter Skelter." The hand won the audience over and left them wondering what would it be like to experience the real thing.as Robert Wickens

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170


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Kenny Rogers delights IU crowd of Assembly Hall were filled to capacity as Kenny Rogers and Crystal Gayle provided an evening of A energetic country and western music on May 15. Rogers delighted the crowd with his well-known ballads "The Gambler," "Coward of the County" and "Lucille." While Rogers sang "The Gambler," clips from his "Gambler" made-for-TV movie were shown on movie screens lowered on all four sides of the center stage. This further delighted the crowd, especially some of the female members who, throughout the concert, ran up to the stage to hand Rogers red roses. Dressed in a slick, three-piece suit, Rogers also performed such popular hits as "She Believes In Me," "Lady" and "Ruby, Don't take Your Love to Town." Crystal Gayle preceeded Rogers, singing some of her hits, "Talkin' in Your Sleep," "Don't it Make My Brown Eyes Blue" and "Ready for the Times to Get Better," a song which she said has special meaning today. The comedy of Gallagher entertained the crowd between acts.98 II but the balconies

Rick DelVecchio

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Administrators Students Professors Shoot yourself 172

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a■UD.N1*\ t_UM1\ COUNCIL

Hans Scott


University Chancellor Herman 8 Wells, Houseman Ed Blanchard I ' :

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To all Administrative Staff: We just want fo lef you know that we number 1! appreciate all you do -to keep 1U

Thanks

IU News Bureau

Board of Trustees First Row — Dr. Joseph Black, William H. Mohr, Clarence W. Long, Harry Gonzo, Richard B. Stoner. Second Row — Robert E. Gates, C. E. Harrell, (secretary), Carolyn Gutman, William G. Bannon, Betty Blumberg, President John Ryan, Executive Vice President W. George Pinnel. 175


President Jain Ryan, Secretary Donna Summers

photos Dennil Chamberlin

176


Executive Vice President W. George Pinnell, Secretary Antoinette Simpson

(not piclured)

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Vice President Kennetiz Gros Louis, Secretary Norma Fox

Vice President of Administration Edgar Williams, Secretary Vicky Flinn

178


Bursar William Walters, Secretary Linda VVeidemann

Treasurer J ohn Mulholland, Secretary Deborah Allvnayer

Dennis Chamberlin

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Director Student Activities Dick McKaig, Secretary Priscilla Osborne

Dean of Student Services Thomas Schreck, Secretary Anne Hennessy

180

photos Dennis Chamberlin


Larry Levin

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Foundation President Bill Arn-Istrong

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Vice President of Budgetry Ward Schaap, Secretary Rachel Wilkey

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Joan Pearson

500 Queen eing the Indianapolis 500 Festival B Queen doesn't change life drastically, said the 1980 queen, Joan Pearson. Pearson, a 21-year-old senior, has many other activities that keep her busy. She loves all kinds of sports, especially swimming and horseback riding. Modeling is another of Pearson's many interests. However, she says she must keep them all part-time due to her obligations as a student and reigning queen. Pearson says she found serving as the 500 Queen a pleasant and educational experience. "One of the many benefits I had is a scholarship that paid for my last year in school," she said. "I also had the opportu-

nity to travel around the U.S. to represent Indiana and the 500." Despite the excitement of her title and all its benefits, Pearson's main focus during her senior year is her future career in recreational therapy. After serving an internship in the pediatrics ward at St. Francis Hospital in Indianapolis last summer, she decided that working with and helping people to overcome their physical handicaps was her main goal. Pearson hopes to attend the University of Chicago for graduate work in recreational therapy. In the past year, Pearson said she has come to realize "that modeling and being a beauty queen are fun for the moment, but recreational therapy is a career that will last a lifetime." Pearson's reign as 500 Festival Queen ends May 1981. She says her life has been busier, more exciting and very hectic. However, all of her role's side-effects have begun to "dwindle" with time. As she said, "I am a college student first, and the 500 Festival Queen second' "OD Ann Auberry

Jeff Stanton

Student President hen the future IUSA president announced his candidacy on Lincoln's birthday in the winter of 1980, no one listened. He had held his first news conference to an empty audience. One would think of this as a bad omen. Not Jeff Stanton. The twenty-year-old junior went ahead to lead a successful campaign. During his term in office, Stanton achieved several things that helped the average IU student. Stanton and IUSA helped to prevent the Bloomington Faculty Council s proposal to change the pass/fail grading system. "There were a lot of students voicing disagreement with the Council's proposal. Instead of arguing, we got together with the council to give them ideas about how the students felt," he said. Stanton and IUSA also worked out the campus escort service and improved relations with the IU administration. Stanton said he first became interested in the presidency after being a senator from Briscoe Quad his sophomore year. "I found it pretty neat up here (in the IUSA office)," he smiles as he stuffs envelopes for a future mailing. "I thought I'd have a good chance to get elected president. Dean Rot,

182

Stanton feels he has done a lot while in office, although his major downfall was getting the word out about IUSA and what it can do for students. However, Stanton tries to emphasize the good he's done. "We tried at IUSA to work closely with other student groups," he points out, "but there's only so much you can do." He looks up and nodded, "I think we did a pretty effective job." Also, Stanton was involved with WQAX, a student-run radio station. A telecommunications major, he loves radio and broadcasting. "My dream is to do play-byplay for the Chicago White Sox, he insisted. Stanton a native of Glen Ellyn, Illinois and an avid White Sox fan says he loves to relax by watching the team play, either on TV or at Comminsky Park in Chicago. "I'm a great spectator of baseball," he said. Stanton's dream could come true, but there is a catch. What if his play-by-play turns out like his first news conference? Megan Byrne


Larry Holtz

Bouncer hat would it be like if your father W owned a popular campus bar? Easy to get in, easy for your friends to get in, and beer, beer, beer! For Larry Holtz, Jr., whose father owns The Hopp, on Third Street, this isn't exactly the 'picture. Holtz finds that being the owner s son is more of a family responsibility than a novelty among his friends. But sometimes his friends don't always realize this. "If you were in my position and your

father owned the place, you'd see," he explained, "Friends expect you to do favors that could cause you to lose your own family's business, and if you don t do the favors, they don't understand." But this problem alleviated itself for the twenty-three year old senior after his freshman year. He began to work as a carder for the bar to earn money for school and to help his father out. Since then, Holtz says he has met a lot of people people but has six or seven close friends. try to help people out when they try to get in The Hopp," he said. "I can smell an excise man in town, and I won't let anyone in who is going to get in trouble." Although he claims he's the hardest carder in town, Holtz professes to be low key and shy at times. "I just want to be happy, he smiles and scratches his chin. "I'm the type to stop and smell the roses." ra7111":aa swarras ,st4peme

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Holtz, an advertising-marketing research major, is still unsure of his future career. He professes to be a salesman, and even hopes to own a bar in Bloomington like his father does. However, his philosophy of a career is not what might be expected of a salesman. "I don't want to be rich and I don't want to be successful," Holtz stressed. "I just adhere to the policy of live and let live and you can't take it with you. Why bust your butt all your life so that you can't take it with you? Holtz has a style that is unpredictable to many. There is more to him than most people see. Behind the hard- ply exterior of the "hardest carder in town,' and the son of the owner of The Hopp, there is someone who is just like anybody else, except he doesn't pay the cover charge at The Hopp. 88 atart.A.IMONEEif

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183


Anne Fay

Larry Levin

IMUB President er name is the first one on the marH quee outside the Union Board Office. The poster board sign taped to her office door reads, "pres." Her small office is cluttered with everything from books by Shakespeare to copies of the Union Board's annual budget. These may be the only visible signs that the person sitting behind the desk in that cluttered office is Anne Fay, president of Indiana Memorial Union Board. Union Board sponsors a wide variety of events on campus, such as films, concerts and lectures. "I had no idea I would be president. I had no desire to be president," Fay said. When she was nominated by the board, she said she was flattered, "I was not geared up mentally for the fact that I was going to be president. Shunning away from assuming the leadership role was a problem for me at first," she said. Fay started working at Union Board as a freshman. She decided to run for a position and won. She served as Minority Concerns and Fine Arts Director her first year, then took control of the Club Lautrec Discotheque her second year. Fay accepted the nomination for Union 184

Board president a bit reluctantly. "When I was a director, I had somewhat nebulous feelings about the presidency," she said. Fay added that she wanted to "tone down the presidency" and give more power back to the board. "I didn't realilze that the board really needed to have a leader," she said. "I was turning to them because I thought they wanted t•t responsibility to be viewed as campus leaders themselves — and they did — but as soon as I realized that need for leadership, I quickly changed things." Fay said that the board has been very supportive of her, thus making her job an easier one. "I don't think a president can be worth a plugged nickel if you don't have a good board behind you," she said. Giving herself a pat on the back is a hard thing for her to do, yet she is proud of her accomplishments. "Our budget is a piece of art. Fiscal responsibility is the key to sanity in this office," she said. "It's really hard to say what I did," she added, "because what I did was done through other directors. I never did anything alone. Whenever you do anything alone, you have a breakdown in communication."

Fay, who is as thin as the cigarettes she smokes, believes that one of the most important things she has learned has been, patience. "I learned not to act without thinking and also that valuable element of patience. You come across such a wide variety of people, and you can't govern or judge all people by a certain set of rules," she added. Ann Fay, who once scrupulously avoided being labeled "president" has managed to accept the office and responsibility of the office. "Everything I wanted to do, I did. I sure didn't expect this, but it was probably one of the best things that ever happened to me." 88 Susan Polakoff


Referee ntramural basketball referees take a lot I of verbal abuse from players. But how many of them ever argue back? Jim Ferree, a senior, who has been officiating for four years, did. Ferree first became interested in officiating "eight or ten" years ago while he was watching NBA games on television. He began his officiating career working at a Boy's Club in his hometown, New Albany, Indiana. A player once complained to Ferree about the quality of the calls he had made during an IU intramural game. When the player continued complaining and saying certain obscenities to Ferree; Ferree counterattacked, telling the player that he played lousy. The player was "stunned," Ferree said in an interview before he officiated the Cream Division intramural game between Kappa Alpha Psi and Omega Phi Psi.

Verbal abuse by intramural basketball players has been the worst that Ferree can remember. At times, Ferree has even considered quitting. But he uses "logic" to keep going, by saying to himself that he will not be conquered by the abuse. He defends himself against those who feel that his officiating leaves something to be desired. "I wouldn't be on the floor if I felt I didn't know the game or the rules," he said. One reason for the increased hostilities of the players toward the refs, Ferree said, is that the intensity and competitiveness of the intramural games is much greater than a few years ago. The teams are "obsessed" with winning, he said. "I do the best job I can," Ferree said. "Teams should realize that. I tell them, 'I realize you're good. You should realize that I'm good, too. Of' the group he began officiating with

four years ago, Ferree is the only one that remains. The others have quit after becoming "bummed out," he said. Also, Ferree works high school, junior high and city league games. "You have to officiate outside (the intramurals) to be good in intramurals," he said. Intramural games have to be officiated differently than high school games, he said, because intramurals are much less disciplined. "You can't call everything out there or you'd be blowing your whistle all night," he said. Rick DelVecchio

185


Frank Haney

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Radio D.J. ince he was a boy, Frank Haney has S loved radio. Much of his time during junior high school was spent with a friend and a tape recorder doing an imaginary radio show. Called "The Reject Hour, their pretend program was essentially a forerunner of today's Dr. Demento Show. Haney, now 26, and a 1978 graduate of IU, has finally realized his childhood ambition — to work in radio. He has been a production manager and a disc jockey, Surfin' Frank" at Bloomington's WBWBFM since the summer of 1980. He finds the job exciting and thoroughly enjoyable. "What's neat is being able to play music and get paid for it, and be the jerk that you normally are," Haney said. Haney, who plays 12-string guitar and sings, headed a rock group, Frank Haney and the Farmers, in 1978. Though it only lasted a little more than a year, they made quite an impression on the central Indiana music scene. The group cut an LP, played in clubs and did a lot of work in Indianapolis. Haney was surprised at the group's success. "It was real strange," Haney said. "We put together a band within two weeks, and all of a sudden it just took off. Everything just clicked real well. But everyone in the group wasn't headed in the same direction. The group split up in early 1979. In late 1979, he recorded an hour's worth of surf music, dubbed the band Astro-Surf and in the summer of 1980, approached several record labels with the recording. He was turned down by every one. "They were not looking for surf music," Haney understated. "I think it's still the wave of the future, though." ' Dan DeCamp

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Body Builder he men he lives with have jokirwly T nicknamed Steve Barth, "Arnold. A picture of every weightlifters idol — Arnold Schwarzenegger, in full flex, adorns his room, as a challenge for Steve to look like the man. Steve Barth placed third in both the 1980 and 1981 Mr. IU Body-Building Contest. Also, Barth won the challenge of the 1980 Spirit-of-Sport All Nighter Physique Championship. "Maximum size, strength, and definition are the keypoints judges look for in competition," explained Barth. "Maximum weight capacity will further define the muscular structure that is already present in my upper torso, back and arms, he said. A month before competition Barth works out for four hours a day, every day. He has been body building for the past three years, since he was a sophomore. But Steve Barth can in no way be considered another "dumb athlete." In fact, he may have put an end to the myth. Steve challenges his mind, as well as his body. He is ranked in the top 5 in the School of Business, where he is a finance major. He was named one of the five recipients of the Elvis J. Stahr Senior Award for academics and extracurricular activities. In his senior year, Barth was elected as the Chief Justice of the Intrafraternity Council Judicial Board. Also, he was actively involved with the Student Athletic

Steve Barth

photos Larry Levin

Board, Student Recreational Sports Asso- petition. I just don't let myself get behind ciation, Young Republicans, Finance Club in studies when I workout four hours a day.'' and IU Weightlifting Club. Barth manages his time by priorities. Bill Klaes "These priorities change throughout the semester, but whatever I set my goals on, I make sure I get it done . . . I'm a student before a test and a weightlifter before com-

Julie Ryan

Panhel Leader eeping the GPA is enough for most K students, but Julie Ryan has done that and much more. Ryan, a psychology major with a minor in math and computer science, received the Elvis J. Stahr award before graduation. The award is granted to five seniors each year for academic excellance and service to the University. A member of the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority, she has served as rush chairman for the Panhellenic Association her sophomore year and as its president her junior and most of her senior year. As president of Panhel, her responsibilities were to run the executive board meetings and the representative council meetings, both held weekly. Also, she was in charge with overseeing internal operations, such as programming, budgeting and interviewing for new directorships, rush counselors and executive positions. "Trying to coordinate studies and meetings," she said, "and working and being involved with my own house activities were some of the hardest things about being Panhel president.

"Being president," she said, "can be very difficult in the sense that you have to make decisions for the whole greek system and not just your sorority." This was exemplified when there was a crackdown on alcohol in the sororities this year, "I believed in that position and I had to enforce it," she said. It was frustrating because I was the go between the students and the administration." One of the most enjoyable things about being president of Panhel, she said, "is not only meeting girls in other sororities but also meeting non-greek students and working with them. Ryan, who will attend Northwestern University as an MBA student, has also been named to Mortar Board National Honorary, Blue Key National Honorary and Outstanding Greek Woman.

Dan DeCamp

187


Ralph Ewell

Drum Major edication, directing, rehearsals and D responsibility. All these dissimilar items add up together as part of the assets of Ralph Ewell, IU Marching Hundred drum major. Ewell has been field commander of the Marching Hundred for six years. Ewell was the assistant drum major his freshman year. He then earned the part of drum major for the next three years. Ewell graduated Phi Beta Kappa and entered medical school at IU-Northwest last fall. However, he quickly learned that music was his main interest, not medicine. Returning to IU-Bloomington the same fall to work for a music education degree, he re-

sumed his duties as drum major. Ewell spends many hours a day preparing for the pre-game and halftime shows. He meets daily during class time rehearsing the direction of the band. He is responsible for 289 band members during the performances. Rehearsals for Ewell are not restricted to class time numerous hours are spent in the originating of his routing. "I work on a personal routing of an hour before the band meets," says Ewell. "I also take a ballet class in order to help my coordination, posture, bearing and to stretch my muscles." All the work and time is worth it, Ewell said. "This is the biggest thing I've ever done. I'm proud to be a part of the fantastic band and music school, Ewell says. "The main goal I have as drum major is the band as my group. And if I ever don't achiex e this goal, I would not want the job any more because the band always comes first." Lynn Vagnone Larry Levin

Phil Sears

INDIANA UNIVERSITY 825 E. EIGHTF ST. PROFESSIONAL

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Kay Alm

Volunteer he takes about a dozen other volunS teers, piles into a university van with them almost every Monday night, and drives to visit children at the Indiana School for the Deaf in Indianapolis. Her name is Kay Alm and she has headed the deaf program of the Volunteer Student Bureau, VBS, since January. She got interested in speech and hearing because, at the end of her sophomore year, she still had not decided on a major. A friend got her interested in deaf education. Alm, a senior, is majoring in speech and hearing. She spent four semesters working on the VSB. The students that Alm's group visits are boys - -aging from 12 to 16 years old.

The volunteers, who are mostly women, are often challenged to games of basketball by the boys, Alm said. Other favorite activities are arts and crafts and games, such as "skin the snake." But the popular games, Alm said, are any games with "close interaction," in which the boys are able to "talk" through sign language. "It's good for them to communicate with some hearing people," she said. "When we go in there, we're in their shoes." Alm explained that the children have mastered the sign language so well that the volunteers often have trouble understanding them. They have developed their own sing language "slang," Alm said. "These kids have never had volunteers to work with them before," Alm said. "They're really happy to have us." -F; Rick DelVecchio Phil Sears

Dawn Griffin

Intern alf-way through her college career, H Dawn Griffin lost interest in Indiana University. Griffin, a senior business major, found that the confines of IUBloomington did not satisfy her scholastic needs. By removing herself from the classroom, she felt that she could solve her problem. A friend's encouragement led Griffin to ask about internships through the Profes-

sional Practice Program. After a series of interviews, Griffin chose to work for International Minerals and Chemicals in Des Plains, Ill. Before beginning her job, Griffin had to make some kind of living arrangements. After a long, frustrating search, she rented a room in a dormitory at Barat College, located within 25 miles of her job site. Griffin and another woman were involved in internships and remained as long-term boarders. An Italian woman merely spent weekends there. And because large groups such as VISTA and ACTION, among others, held weekend workshops at Barat, Griffin met people from all walks of life. Griffin's first day on the job was hectic. She awoke early and dressed impressively. Griffin started her car, hoping it would warm up while she scraped the ice off her windows. When finished, she reached for her door handle. It was locked. Griffin had locked her keys in the car. Her day had

begun. Her job experiences did improve, though. Griffin was assigned to her own project. She gathered data and developed a marketing plan for her product, formaldehyde. She traveled to the East Coast, consulting with the main office people about her ideas. She spent these visits surrounded with the best — fine hotels, good food and warm people. A waitress in the dining room of one hotel knew Griffin was alone and offered to show her the sights of the area. She took Griffin home, introduced her to her family and proceeded with the tour. Moving to an unfamiliar city and traveling across the country were learning experiences in themselves. Griffin mentioned that even the trivial day-to-day occurences were meaningful. "Just walking along the shore of Lake Michigan was an experience," she said. I. Beth Misner

189


Deborah Bailey

Larry Levin

Activist eborah Bailey gets involved. To say D the least. The senior from Gary began by playing the piccolo in IU's Marching 100 (in her freshman year) and at the end of four years has become an integral part of the Black Student Union (as president in her junior year) and the IU Student Association (as Minority Affairs Director in her senior year). From an all-black high school, Bailey says, "I was thrown into the real spirit of IU, - by joining the Marching 100. She added, "Meeting all the different types of people helped me make it at IU." With the BSU, Bailey worked to coordinate the efforts of the 11 dorm BSUs and the Black Greek system. In her term as Minority Affairs director, she established the office as a resource for minority organizations, creating a clearinghouse for minority students, IU campus organizations and the IU administration. Bailey and a staff of 15 helped to promote minority groups and activities. Among other things, Bailey and other minority groups sponsored a Minority Recognition Banquet, a trip to Atlanta to march against the killings of black children there, a campaign to make Martin Luther King's birthday a national holiday and a Gil Scott Heron concert in Terre Haute. As well, Bailey wrote a weekly column in the Indiana Daily Student newspaper, discussing issues of general concern. Bailey hopes to attend law school after working in Washington for Congresswoman Shirley Chisholm. As a word of advice to other students, Bailey commented "People need to take advantage of everything that is possible at IU. "Get involved," she says. "You have to watch your grade point average, but get involved." Larry Levin


Dan Howell

Joe Kus

Consumer Advocate s staff director of the Indiana Public A Interest Research Group (INPIRG), Dan Howell is an idealist. A person has to be to work for a $8,000 a year, he said. InPIRG is primarily a volunteer consumer group that fights for consumers and trains students to be knowledgeable, active consumers. InPIRG is looking for idealistic students to work with the group, Howell said. There are few monetary or material benefits, but Howell said knowing he has helped produce change and has helped teach students how to be effective citizens produces a great deal of satisfaction. The 25-year-old Mitchell native has been working with InPIRG since 1977, when he started as a part-time work-study employee. He was a full-time student and political science major at the time. "I first became involved because I was in

a student organization and we were both fighting the check-off issue," Howell said. He became InPIRG staff director in May 1979, and was paid $6,000 a year plus health and life insurance, he said. His current salary is the highest ever for an InPIRG staff director. Although he admitted it is difficult to live on such a salary for an extended period, especially after marrying last September, he explained he believes the satisfaction is worth the sacrifice. He said he has given up things that students normally look forward to after graduation, such as a car. No other staff director has remained with InPIRG as long as he has, he said. But he added that he plans to leave the group when his wife completes her studies at IU next year. Howell said he wants to work with another consumer group or move into a job

in journalism. InPIRG has been an important influence in his life, he said. His ideal is to make it influential in the lives of the students the group is training, he said. "We want students to know that we're working in an area that's going to affect their lives now and in the future," he said. "And there aren't too many other groups doing it anywhere." ,98 Carolyn Kramer

• 191


Dan i),,

Wayne Greeson

Politician gainst insurmountable odds, IU law A student Wayne Greeson made a gallant effort in trying to unseat Democrat Marilyn Schultz for state representative of the 51st district in the Nov. 4 election. Greeson, who managed to take 42 percent of the votes, said he was not disappointed a bit by failing in his first attempt at becoming an elected official. "I did everything I wanted to do," he said, but cited his late start in the campaign and lack of party support as reasons for the lopsided margin by which he lost. Despite constant badgering by campaign manager Bob Salzarulo for more help, Greeson said, "the state party did absolutely nothing for me." Greeson, who is in his final year of law school, praised Salzarulo for his hard work and dedication. "He managed to squeeze about $450 out of the county party for the campaign," said Greeson. Greeson said the party had little hope

192

that he would win in the 51st district, which has belonged to Schultz for the past eight years. "I felt like a fallbuy," he said. "The party's attitude, was, Promise him anything; just get him on the ticket,' - he said. "I realized I was a straw man but I wouldn't act like one," said Greeson. Instead he said his attitude was, "Damn the torpedoes, I'm going full speed ahead." Despite the late start and lack of party help, ` I put everything I had into it,' said Greeson. Missing over a month of law classes, he said he had to do some intense cramming for his finals. The big issue in the election was education. Greeson said he thought it was worthwhile to run against Schultz because of their differences on this issue. He called Schultz an advocate of special interests. "She represents educators whereas I would have represented education. There is a difference between educators and

education," he said. Although the student voters compose a small amount of the electorate in the 51st district, Greeson was pleased with the success he had with them. He was not so pleased with the results in Owen County, however. Although he won in Owen, he expected to get 500 votes there but only got 200. He said it was in five or six precincts that he was really hurt, where he lost by a total of about 2,700 votes. Of the 42 percent of the vote which he won, Greeson said about 30 percent was guaranteed by party loyalties and other factors. "The rest I earned," he said. All in all "campaigning is tiring, dull and unexciting," said Greeson. "Losing hasn't killed my interest," he added. Dan DeCamp


Bill Brissman

Little 500 rider fter the 1978 Little 500 race, freshA man Bill Brissman and his Delta Chi teammates made a pledge to themselves: They would devote 100% of their effort to winning the next three Little 500 races. For each of the following races, Brissman and the Delta Chi's trained extensively. Each year, with longer hours and distances, they out-trained their competition, and, in each Little 500 — 1979, 1980 and 1981 — the Delta Chi team won in record times. Brissman, an Indianapolis native, started cycling when he was 15. He rode in a bike-a-thon and has been riding ever since. IU's School of Business attracted Brissman to the Bloomington campus. The Little 500 was secondary, even though he knew that he would ride in the race. He joined the Delta Chi fraternity in his second semester. The Delta Chi s strong bike program and a good friend attracted him to the fraternity. The marketing major did not find that training detracted from his school work. He said, "I had better grades in three out of four of the spring semesters compared to fall semesters. When a person is in good shape, one can succeed with less effort.After graduation, Brissman accepted a job with Xerox corporation in Arizona as a sales representative. He plans to go into marketing management, and has "shifted gears," putting serious cycling "on the back burner in order to achieve career and other goals." Nevertheless, Brissman still rides 20 to 30 miles a day to keep in shape, and can't rule out racing in the future. Brissman also was a rider for the "Greek" team in the movie "Breaking Away." But from now on the veteran Little 500 rider will watch the race from the stands. 88 Larry Levin

Ldrry Levin

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Joe Kus

194


Nicholas Beriozoff

Ballet 66T

o work with young people with so much spirit makes me very happy. I am very lucky to be a ballet master.' Nicholas Beriozoff, chairman of the IU School of Music's ballet department, has dedicated his life to ballet. Beriozoff choreographs three ballets a year for the IU ballet theatre. This year, he recreated a ballet by Michel Fokine, the "L'Epreuve d'Amour." When Fokine created that ballet in 1936, Beriozoff was a dancer in the Ballet de Monte Carlo, the company that gave birth to "L'Epreuve d'Amour. Beriozoff said that Fokine has been the biggest influ-

ence on his life. "I studied with him and he work with them. People devote everything was pleased with my work. I have tried to they have to ballet,' he said. The increased popularity of ballet, remember his work," he said. Beriozoff was born in Lithuania and cre- according to Beriozoff, has brought "a baldits his place of birth for helping to initiate let company to every town and the 'Nuthis interest in dance. "It's in my blood to be cracker' to every other second town!" Bea dancer. There is a lot of national dancing riozoff is glad to see that more and more where I am from, and that is how I got Americans are discovering ballet, but he started." His first professional dance per- also would like to see American operas and formance was in Prague, Czechoslovakia, ballets financed as they are in Europe—by at age 18. the government. "There are 60 opera Beriozoff first came to the United States houses in Germany — 60! With programs in 1939 to work in New York. After World all year around," he said. GovernmentWar II, he returned to Europe with his financed ballets and operas in the United daughter, who is an accomplished balle- States wouldn't be such a bad idea, Beriozoff said. "It's so expensive to run a rina. "We're a ballet family, he said. Ballet Master Beriozoff continues to fill show. You have to pay the orchestra, the obligations all over the world, The National stage crew, everybody!" Ballet of Canada has asked him to work on Although he would like to see more two full-length productions. Beriozoff financially stable opera and ballet comhinted that he also will be working in Italy, panies, Beriozoff realizes that this probably South Africa and Switzerland in the near will never happen. future. "I am always away," he said in his Nonetheless, Beriozoff is content with his life and his career. "I have been a ballet thick European accent. Why would he choose to work in master for 35 years. The young people's Bloomington instead of Zurich? Beriozoff enthusiasm attracts me. It is wonderful said it is the enthusiasm of the students that to be a part of this beautiful, physical keeps him at IU. "Students give me so training. Susan Polakoff much pleasure. It is such a big pleasure to

Lisa Watson

English

Albert Wertheim nglish professor Albert Wertheim E finds satisfaction in teaching because he can share his "enthusiasm and knowledge in the area of dramatic literature." Professor Wertheim received the Distinguished Teacher Award (Herman Frederic Lieber) on Founder's Day and also the IU Alumni Teacher of the Year Award (based on the senior class evaluation of teachers). Wertheim explains his philosophy as an educator: "A good teacher is one who loves his subject and wants to share that love with his students." Wertheim feels that the teacher is at a disadvantage because there is no immediate feedback of knowledge that the student acquired. "You don't know if you've touched them or if at the end of 10 years they say, 'Hey, that was a great

class.' One ironic characteristic about Wertheim teaching English is that he learned to speak German before English. He was born in New York and still retains an accent. He received his bachelor's degree from Columbia University in 1961. He studied at Yale to complete his master's and doctoral degrees. Wertheim's interests center on 20th Century American, Irish and British Drama and contemporary British and American novels. Professor Wertheim is the chairman of the English Faculty Board of Review. He is the chairman for the IU and West Germany student fellowship exchange program. He also directs the English honors program. He feels it is important to demonstrate to students the importance of literature and reading. "Reading enriches and widens one's mind, regardless of one's occupation." Professor Wertheim's office is filled with stacks of about 1600 books. He adds that this is nothing compared to his collection at home! Lisa Watson


Marjorie Hershey

Political Science rofessor Marjorie Bandon Hershey is p the kind of professor who is not hard to find. That is to say that she is always available to her students, not that she isn't an exceptional instructor. Hershey, an IU professor of American politics and environmental policy in the department of political science, coordinates department evaluations of courses and counsels undergraduate students. Professor Hershey is a petite, softspoken woman who smiles when she talks. She originally had intentions of becoming a journalist but she "sort of got swept-up along the way." Hershey graduated with high distinction from the University of Michigan and she received her master's and Ph. D. from the University of Wisconsin. Professor Hershey stresses the importance of computer class evaluations. "We evaluate the courses in the middle of the semester and also at the end. It's kind of a consumer protection for the students. It helps the student know beforehand if the course will fill his needs." The most difficult challenge she encounters in teaching is the large class — her "Introduction to American Politics," Y103. "It's hard when people take required courses and they say 'come on and thrill me with this course.' They don't care about what you're teaching." Hershey has an astounding seven-page curriculum vita with the following achievements to her credit: two books, 13 articles, 15 teaching experiences, 5 research grants and 19 teaching and academic awards and honors, including one of the five 1980-81 IU Alumni Association Teacher of the Year Awards. She also provides editorial services to over 15 periodicals. Professor Hershey is married and has one daughter. She spends from 8 pm to midnight during the week writing her hooks and preparing her lectures, and on the weekends can enjoy her gardening, entertain her friends, and "pick up the pieces from the week." :3 8 Lisa Watson

Lisa Watson

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Larry Levin

Mike Metzger

Business e looks somewhat like a modern-day H Abraham Lincoln, with his dark beard and wire-rimmed glasses. But the similarities end there. Mike Metzger, Professor of Business Law, brings to life a subject considered rather dry by undergraduate sophomores in a way that only one with his personality and wit could. Those characteristics, along with a welldeserved reputation for a sense of humor, make him one of the best-loved professors in the School of Business. Although he has never tired of teaching, he admits to tiring of certain things that go along with a professor's job. When asked in what ways he changes the course from year to year in order to add a little variety, he said, "I am constantly addressing new material, and try to use contemporary

issues that are applicable to the areas of law taught." To the students in the School of Business however, he is probably best-known for the jokes with which he opens each class period. Although most of the jokes he tells wouldn't be condoned by the Moral Majority, the reaction from the class has been generally positive. Even students who shake their head in disgust and/or embarrassment often end up laughing in spite of themselves. However, Metzger warns the students what to expect from the class before the semester begins. "I tell them that they are in the R-rated section, and if they don't approve, to please change sections," he said. And although no one has ever complained in person about his sometimes offcolor humor, on occasion students have written on the semester's teacher evaluations that he will burn in hell for his jokes. He also has earned the respect and admiration of students outside of the classroom. He served as a advisor to the Weight Lifting Club for several years, and

as a member on the Board of INPIRG. Currently chairman of the honors program in the School of Business, next year Metzger will be faculty advisor to the business fraternity, Delta Sigma Pi. This year he was given the Outstanding Teaching Award by Delta Sigma Pi, and a Teaching Excellance Award from the MBA Association. Interests include bicycling, weightlifting, collecting oriental art and antiques, and reading (of which he does quite a bit). But one of his greatest interests is, obviously, people — as exemplified his dedication to teaching and his concern for helping students in whatever way he can. His advice to students is, "Enjoy yourself while you are in school, but look to the future; strike a balance. Try everything that you want to do, for the most tragic thing is those who have regrets, or say 'I wish I had done that'. The most fortunate are those who enjoy where they are and what they are doing." '6'6 Martha Walsh

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Journalism

Phil Burton

eaching is like acting — you have the same verve for the 101st performance that you do for the first," said Phil Burton, professor of advertising at IU's School of Journalism. Phil Burton has plenty of verve because, despite his admittedly severe grading habits, he teaches before "sellout" crowds in all of his classes. One of the reasons that his classes are so popular is the interest students have in advertising. His copy writing class this year parted with no hard feelings, as evidenced by the cake they gave him. It read, "Hey Burton, thanks for the memories, we'll miss your D + 's!" That must be enough for most students, because Burton's classes seem to advertise themselves. Burton is hesitant about this reputation, though. "That always worries me. It gives you something to live up to that you may not be able to do," he commented. He needn't worry; his qualifications speak for themselves. Burton began his teaching career at Syracuse University in New York. He also taught at the University of Iowa in Des Moines. Even after he left Iowa, he wasn't forgotten. His former students flew Burton and his wife, Ellen, back to the campus where he was the guest of honor at "Bring Back Burton Day. Burton liked Bloomington from the beginning. "I thought it was just absolutely marvelous. Nothing has changed me ever since. I was in love from the minute I got here. I'm nuts about the students, the faculty, the buildings, the campus and the athletics," said Burton. "I work out in the gym every day. I have all kinds of people to play raquetball, handball and tennis with. I couldn't be happier than I am here," he said. He doesn't have any trouble getting around either. "I ride a bicycle so I can ride anywhere in town. I never drive — I let my wife use the car. I don't think I'm happier any time than when I'm riding my bike around Bloomington," he added. Every summer, Burton packs his bike and heads back to Skaneatele, New York. But his summer months are not spent just riding his bike. He works for a small advertising agency and writes for a medical research outfit. He also reviews two or three books in a weekly newspaper column. It only takes him 20 to 25 minutes to do a review. He needs more time to add to his list of 12 advertising textbooks, 150 freelance articles and an occasional travel article for the Christian Science Monitor. Burton's career has taken him to many Larry Levin

198

places and many professions but he haS had to make up my mind about what I want to to write in all of them. Before getting into do." advertising, he was an editor and a reporDavid O'Dowd and Betsy Litchin ter. He covered topics ranging from general news to sports to City Hall. He wrote a column for his high school newspaper when he was a freshman. fie hasn't stopped writing. He loved teaching, newspaper work, and advertising and doesn t see an end to his involvement in any of them. Says Burton, "I'm still trying


Robert Ferrell

History

n mid-December of 1978 IU professor I of History Robert H. Ferrell said he stumbled upon some material that he "knew was publishable." In less than two years he transformed this material into a best-selling book, "Off the Record: The Private Papers of Harry S. Truman." As of March 1981, 42,500 copies were sold. The material consisted of a private diary and about 1,100 to 1,200 boxes of memoranda and letters sent and unsent by President Truman. Ferrell, who was the first to make an organized search through the papers, said others who had seen them "were essentially blind." I was told by one of Truman's former assistants that the manuscripts didn't amount to anything," he said. But Ferrell realized their value. "I knew the Truman literature fairly well and knew this stuff was new. The most interesting manuscripts in the Truman files, said Ferrell, includes an unsent letter by Truman criticizing the cabinet he inherited from FDR, the firing of Secretary of Defense Lewis Johnson, a letter to Supreme Court Justice Douglas and several letters to his wife Bess. Through

these manuscripts, he said, "One could really get a feeling of the enormous complexity of issues. In general, you could see what it was like to be president." Ferrell rates Truman as one of the great presidents, "right up there with Franklin Roosevelt, Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson and Eisenhower," he said. "He was a very bright guy and that comes out in the papers. 'Seeing the successes of many of our IU graduates" has been one of his most rewarding experiences since coming to IU said Ferrell, who started teaching at IU in 1953, the same year Truman left office. He is proud to mention that 17 of the 25 doctoral students with whom he has been associated at IU have published or are about to publish. Ferrell, who has a wife and 12-year-old daughter, said he saw Bloomington in 1948 during vacation trip. During that visit he said, 'I never thought I would spend the rest of my life here. ' Dan DeCamp

199


photos produced by Paul Scudder

Top Left — Isiah Thomas, sophomore LeeAnne Schmude, junior, Peter Reardon, junior Above — Rose Jones, senior, Donna Lewis, senior Right — Katie Killinger, sophomore, Sue Breidster, sophomore

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200


Top Left — Dave Pauley, junior, Dave Evans, senior Top Right — Linda Elliott, junior, Derek Szabo, junior Left — Mike Flavin, MBA Above — Kellie Lyons, freshman, Tami Mellinger, freshman, Cindy Huot, freshman 201


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Rennee Trainer, junior, Mark Earnest, sophomore, Terri Ciochina, junior Right — Sophomores Sheri Klein, Marcia Banks Above —

202


Left — Ona Zilenas, junior, Julie Nunn, senior, Wendy Chiogioji, junior Below — Jane Orman, junior

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Dorm Room Contest

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Draft Registration

p. 212

Alternative Papers

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by Dan DeCamp fter President Carter's State of the Union Address in February of 1980, Bloomington Against the Draft (BAD) was formed in response to the federal order that all eligible men, 18 and 19 year-olds, must register for military service. As the name indicates, "BAD", is an anti-draft organization which also provides information to possible draftees about their alternatives. With the draft issue fading throughout the 1980-1981 school year, another organization and a different but related issue has attracted interest on campus. The organization is called the Committee for Democracy in Latin America (CDLA), and was formed in response to the United States intervention in El Salvador. BAD was shrinking in size while the CDLA was growing, but the two organizations remained closely related. "El Salvador has become the most salient issue since draft registration," said Debbie Dover, a member of the CDLA, "and because these issues are so closely related, a lot of the energy of the people that were in BAD is now in the CDLA." She said "I'm opposed to the draft because it is an excuse and a step along the way for intervening in the affairs of other countries in which we have no business." Dover said the purpose of BAD is to "educate students and people in the community about the draft, foreign policy issues and increasingly draw the link between the draft and El Salvador and to mobilize and build a movement." All 18 and 19-year-old males are required to register for the draft, and failure to do so could result in a 10 year prison term, a $10,000 fine or both. "The decision of whether or not to register is a personal one but it is necessary that we educate as many that are supposed to register as possible about the alternatives so that they don't sign that piece of paper not knowing the alternatives are," said Dover. On the issue of El Salvador, Dover said, "The media has greatly over-simplified the problem. They haven't reflected enough of what the truth is." She added, "The U.S. is founded and the American revolution happened on the principle of selfdetermination. I think it is hypocrytical for the U.S. to be turning to smaller, lesser developed counties and say 'no you can't have self-determination; were going to determine your destiny for you.' In the last 14 months about 17,500

deaths have been provoked in El Salvador, a country of 4.8 million people. The junta is moving gradually with a land reform program, too gradually for the revolutionary leftists. And many of the wealthy landowners, who make up about 3 percent of the population but earn about half of the nation's income, do not want to see any change. The problem is distribution of resources and the U.S. has sided with the junta, while the Soviet Union and Cuba have come to the aid of the revolutionary forces, Another CDLA member, Steve Miland, said, "We're interested in getting people interested and informed on this issue.' In

The CDLA does not stand without opposition, however. Although the CDLA and BAD are probably the most vocal and most heard groups on campus with regard to the draft issue and El Salvador, another campus group, the Collegiate Association for the Research of Principles, has formed the Committee to Save El Salvador. This organization, better known as CARP, has advocated U.S. intervention in El Salvador because it believes that Cuban and Soviet involvement there poses a threat to our nation and the world. "Our stand is anti-communist," said Jules Hack, Director of CARP in Bloomington. "We feel that communism is an evil. It's a false

VTO hrnig Nn WC? whscr8 ahounig pl asC% psam p)88c% man mks happan trying to do this, Miland has been showing a film on campus and to high schools and other institutions, around the state. The film is called "El Salvador: Revolution or Death." It is a documentary on the violence and the unstable conditions in El Salvador, which was filmed last spring summer by French and Dutch television crews. "We've shown it 80 times to approximately 5,000 people," said Miland in early April. On April 18 the CDLA sponsored an anti-intervention rally which started at Showalter Fountain with a march to People's Park at the corner of Dunn and Kirkwood. About 150 people participated in the rally, many carrying signs reflecting their anti-intervention sentiment. "There is a strong foundation of the peace movement, ' said Dover. "Things are really moving all over the country.'

Messianic movement

that can't work." In answer to the CDLA rally, CARP had a rally of its own on April 23 at Dunn Meadow. The pro-interventionists were enthusiastic but their rally did not draw as many people as had the CDLA rally, held five days before. Referring to the land reform policy of the junta in El Salvador, Hack said, "The reforms, I think, are frauds." "I agree that the people of El Salvador are oppressed," said Hack. "It's an awareness we all have." But he said that communism is not the answer. "I feel the communists do not want the government in El Salvador to succeed." The difference between our nation and communist nations, said Hack, is that, "We are not forcing our ideals down someone's throat." Hack believes that the anti-intervention movement is based on shallow, selfcentered concerns and fears. "The U.S. esponding to a question on how can't retreat from the world and the probmuch impact such activities might lems of the people in the Third World," he is have the 21-year-old journalism said. "I feel if we must fight communism student said, "It's hard to say how much directly we should be willing," said Hack. the peace movement is having an effect on "We're living in a world where shouting foreign policy certainly it is some kind of peace,'eace, peace, won't make it check." she added, "The name of the game happen. in the 80s is going to be coalition-building."

213


photos Phil Sears

Michael Redman, "Real Times" editor, said that although he's been a Bloomington resident for 12 years, he still finds fresh topics to write about for the alternative newspaper. A veteran of the now defunct Primo Times," he is no stranger to alternative papers, having edited "Real Times" for two years.

Alternative to alternatives papers provide different perspectives

hen Michael Redman began his college career at IU in 1968, a certain type of person enjoyed reading W the local "alternative newspaper. - That reader, he said, was typically the 18 or 20-year-old student who wore long hair, took drugs, and attended rock concerts. That limited readership of this growing new type of publication represented the cleavage that existed between the IU student and the Bloomington townsperson back then. "Students would never go past this point, because only hardware stores lay beyond here," Redman recalled as he relaxed in a booth at the Village Deli, 409 E. Kirkwood Avenue. Today, Redman, editor of - Real Times," a bi-weekly newspaper with a print of

214

10,000 which covers city politics, cultural events, and human interest stories, remarked that those same hardware stores which surround Bloomington's town square are owned by former IU students. And "Real Times," like other young alternative publications in the Bloomington area and across the nation today, appeals to a wide range of readers now. Begun in 1978, the paper has a "high readership" among Bloomington High School students, and also among the elderly in the city's nursing homes, said Redman. "Real Times is one of a number of publications which fit in the alternative newspaper category, a term which is both a very broad and a somewhat inaccurate label, according to editors of the papers. "Alternative newspaper' can encompass any kind of publication," remarked Peter

Lopilato, editor of "Ryder," a Bloomington paper which covers the popular arts. 'We re an alternative to other alternative papers, and to the "Herald-Telephone" or the "IDS," said Maryann Ruyle of "Womensource," a local women's publication, in expanding the realistic definition of the Bloomington alternative paper. But despite their labels, alternative newspapers are growing in numbers and size of circulation across the country, according to one local editor. Serge Perkins, editor of "Streets," which is perhaps the leader in coverage of local artists, is part of that growth. Perkins, like Redman, is a veteran of college campus who, in the years following his graduation from Weaver College in Utah, and from UCLA, in 1964 often discussed with his friends the possibility of starting a publishing corn-


views that "Womensource" expresses. "Women still only earn 590 for every $1.00 that men earn for the same work," she said, typifying this desire for change. She added that the force of the women's movement has not dissipated since it became the object of much exposure in the early 1970's. And she said that "Womensource is the only regular feminist publication in Indiana," she remarked, "I've heard from several people that our existence is essential to the women's movement." "Womensource," which extends its readership with subscribers across the country, bases its financial support on contributions from the IU Women's Studies department and several IU women professors, in addition to its advertising and subscription revenues. "Womensource," said Ruyle, also receives donations • 1..1,1 from former Blooming.4421916 ton residents who have moved out of town. Like other types of alternative newspapers, "Womensource" is experiencing continuing growth as it joins the thousands of alternative newspapers across the country — and at least 7500 such papers now exist, alternative news and opinions as an out- according to Perkins. "Streets" is definitely growth of that purpose, according to a part of this new wave of small publicaRuyle. The magazine, which publishes tions," Perkins said of his magazine, "fulmonthly, receives story contributions from fills a purpose which the nationally-based both men and women, but everything, said magazines have not because they reach the Ruyle, has a feminist perspective. The people that the national magazines canissues it covers for its readers range from not, he said. How long will the wave last? Perkins features on women in the arts, like Holly Near, a recent visiting actor, singer, and can't say for sure. "I don't know," he said, political activist, to coverage of local issues "but hopefully it will last forever." 8b) John Buts such as the rising rape rates in the Bloomington area.

pany. His dream became a reality in 1978 when he started "Streets," a magazine which, he said, fulfills a need among its readers. Describing the magazine as one which "covers in-depth issues of community interest, but is still dependent on University readership," Perkins said he has opened up "new doors" for a certain type of writing. "I think there's a dialogue between readers (of poetry) that is very much like news dialogue," remarked Perkins of his paper. "But most people who read poetry aren't interested because there aren't any poetry publications."

plained. "Ryder's" style of writing is open to "new possibilities of verbal expression," according to Lopilato, because it is very unstructured and non-linear, and "Ryder is a socially-oriented magazine, known for its appeal to a broad readership. Another Bloomington magazine with a growing readership, one which is strongly politicaly-oriented, is "Womensource. Described in its "statement of purpose" as a "community publication with a feminist perspective aimed at those interested in all aspects of the women's movement," "Womensource" looks to its readers for

erkins has worked to attract poets and p visual artists from the Bloomington area and across the country by advertising "Streets" in a nationally-recognized literary magazine, and by inviting the artists to perform in readings at local Bloomington locations. His task has not always been an easy one, he said. "Poets have been very skeptical about success by publishing in a magazine for thousands of readers," Perkins remarked. "Some of them thought no one would read it." But Perkins said that he now publishes more than 8000 copies of "Streets", and distributes the free publication to Bloomington bars, restaurants, and grocery stores, as well as to more than half a dozen dorms. "Streets," said Perkins, serves to provide "a middle ground for the literary and visual arts," but isn't intended to be a magazine filled with critical reviews of artists. "You can publish an arts magazine, and it will have long essays on the measure and value of work," he explained. Typical of "Streets" role in the local artist scene is its "Artist Speaks" section, in which artists and writer express their views and concerns about their works. Perkins has great aspirations for the future. His goal, he said is to establish a nationwide college readership — first, by selling subscriptions to campus libraries, and, later, by selling over-the-counter on campuses. Perkins has begun this process already by sending out letters describing his magazine to more than 1000 university libraries across the country. Another local publication which reviews the arts, Lopilato's "Ryder", also has been in existence for about three years. "Ryder" reviews the "popular arts," including current films and music, and concentrates on both film review and theory, Lopilato ex-

he first of those topics is one example of the strong emphasis that `Womensource places on women artists, professors, and athletes, and their contribution to their fields. The second topic is the subject of a center spread in the March Womensource" issue which discussed the present IU escort service program, a service for women students who cross the campus at night and desire an escort, and the usefulness of self-defense techniques in the prevention of rape. "The escort service may be the potential backup for other programs," Ruyle remarked of the service, "but self-defense is the answer to the rape problem," she added. Ruyle's philosophy on the changes which are needed for women to reflect the

ri

215


WOMENSOURCEJ .P.O. Box 762, Bloomington, IN June 17, 1981 Vol. 5, No. 5 FREE!

I.U. clerical workers organize by !Michelle Quackenbush

"The Indiana University clerical technical union will give us a voice in work situations. Without a union the workers have absolutely no input." stated Albi Ott. president of the new Indiana State Employees Association (ISEA) Chapter 180 (I U. clerical technical employees union). Formal recognition of the clerical technical union was granted last month by the I.U. administration The union is the result of an 18 month organizational campaign to enlist ten percent of the 1,860 clerical technicals required for formal recognition. The union now has payroll dues deduction and campus mail pr. lieges. Union representatives will be able to meet with the I.U. administration on collective problems and represent members with grievances. The clerical technicals have been attempting to organize for a long time At one point they considered affiliating with the American Federation of State and Municipal Employees (AFSME)--- a national organization. Another option was organizing an independent union. The clerical, technicals finally decided that the ISEA was the most workable solution. The ISEA is known for its successful lobbying in the state legislature on behalf of public employees. By affiliating with a state organization, the clerical, technicals will be able to keep their union dues in the state for such lobbying. This is especially crucial in a conservative and antiunion state such as Indiana.

The union plans to re 30 percent of the nicals on campus. This lish the ISEA as the ex sentative of the den and thereby ttu:reaaeih power. At present the Stal advisory group to th istration, also represe technicals along wit faculty employees. the Staff Council is the needs of the urn ment, not to the empl also incompatible gr.

Freedom Week '81 by Beth Williams

June 20-28 marks the third annual Bloomington Lesbian Gay Freedom Week. Representatives from the Bloomington Gay Lesbian Alliance (BGLA), the Lesbian Feminist Connection (LFC) and the Gay Lesbian Speakers Bureau, along with interested individuals, have been meeting regularly. The week is intended in part as a remembrance of the Stonewall riots in New York City which broke out on June 28, 1970 in protest of police harassment of gays and lesbians, and also a political celebration of lesbian and gay lifestyles. Lesbian Gay Freedom Week has been endorsed by IUSA, Union Board, Bloomington Against the Draft, Womensource, Xanthippe, NOW, the International Socialist Organization, the Feminist Socialist Collective, the LFC, the BGLA, Integrity, and the Gay Lesbian Speakers Bureau. Attempts were also made to get endorsements from various elected political leaders. However, due to the "sensitive" nature of the issue, none of them would come out of the "personal closet" to jeopardize their future political careers. Several workshops and special events have been scheduled for the week, which culminates in a statewide conference June 27 and 28. Sat-

216

urday June 20 with a lesbian sof party to be held 2 p.m., and a S (women only) Hygeia's Grove a scheduled Mond include "Lesbia

The wee of the st police politic Separatism; and Gays," in the Lesb ities." One of t will be th 27) perfor by Woma' India napol Brooks of forming t lists ap Brooks

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Opposite — To raise money for their alternative newspaper "Womensource," the staff held a yard sale in early June. Becky Field and Adell Lenart watched over the pay table as Jeannine Blackwell made a purchase. Left — The staff of the alternative newspaper "Streets" includes, (from left) Michael Phillips, Rick Wilson, Assistant Editor, Serge Perkins, Coordinating Editor, David Wade and Donna Storm. The newspaper is published bi-monthly and began in November 1978. Below — The wall of the "Real Times" production room lends a sort of journalistic atmosphere to the alternative newspaper. Buttons, layouts, and ads cover the office, which is located on the second floor of Dunkirk Square.

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BAR

aat — springtime and the bar scene at IU go together A hand in hand. After traveling through five of the betterknown bars in Bloomington on the Thursday before Little 500, we have a story to tell. Two photographers and two writers were assigned this story. They accepted grudgingly, of course. It was a hard job, but someone had to do it. Here is their story: ... The first place we stopped was Bear's Place, located on the corner of 3rd and Jordan streets. The small restaurant/bar offers sandwiches, salads, beer and mixed drinks, and caters to the over-21 crowd. The music is played low, making Bear's an ideal place to take a date or to talk with friends. "Bear's is easyve been comgoing and relaxing,. I've ing here for years, said Chuck Sha7 whan, a Bedford resident and manager of Radio Shack. Bear's also has a big screen television, and there is no cover charge. Our next bar was the Bluebird, located on Walnut Avenue. The Bird's main attractions are the featured hands. The crowd differs with every band. The atmosphere at the Bluebird is down-toearth, fun and relaxing. The New York-style bar is unique in Bloomington, with its neon lights,, original black-and-white photos (of former performances) and brick beams.

Abuse—Robin Miller. a junior, tends bar at the Y e Olde Regulator on Walnut. She has worked at the bar since the beginning of school began this year. Overall — The Ye Olde Regulator Taverne located on Walnut is a bastion for drinks and dancing, with a live DJ providing the tunes.

continued on page 220

photos Jeff Greene


. . '


It was packed on that night, due to the combined eflects of "having Duke Tomatoe and the All-Star Frogs playing and people getting a head start on Little 500,. weekend," said one Bluebird employee. The Bluebird has a cover charge that varies with each performance — approximately r next stop was Nick's English Hut. The four level bar offers sandwiches, beer, mixed drinks —1 and some of the best popcorn in town. Nick's atmosphere is comparable to that of Bear's Place. "I like Nick's because it is quiet and relaxing. You can sit down and visit with people that you come with," said Vicki Cotsoviles. "Plus, the older crowd likes to come to Nick's — the younger crowd tends to stay away. Nick's does not have a cover charge. Ye Olde Regulator, almost directly across Walnut from the Bluebird, is known for its "Greek" nights. The dance floor and. continuous music make it an easy place to" meet people. "The Regulator is les crowded than most bars," said senior Brian. Davis. "Dancing makes it easier to meet people. Then you can figure out if you want to talk with them." The crowd is diverse at the "ReF," differing with the nights of the week. Wednes-: day and Thursday, mostly "Greeks" come to the Reg, but on Friday and Saturday nights, the crowd is diverse — there are wall-to-wall bodies," said Greg Cooper, one of the bar's disc jockeys. The Regulator has a dollar cover charge. The Hopp was our last stop, and perhap* the most memorable. To say the least, was a typical Thursday night there. Peopl occupied every inch of floor space, whic was fine unless you wanted to do some7 thing — like move. The Hopp was soj crowded that the owner had to limit the number of people coming in. People walking from one end of the bar to the other had to contend with people and flying beers,. but no one seemed to mind. Maybe they were just used to it. What attracts so many people to th Hopp? "It's like one big party. We play rock n' roll and blues," said Rick Farber,, one of The Hopp's disc jockeys. The Hopp charges a dollar cover charge. Why do people go to bars? The reasons vary as widely as do the labels on the bottles behind the bar, but one thing is for. certain: There is a wide variety of bars in Bloomington, enough to satisfy almost any personality or social quest. Robert Wickens and Lynn Vagnon

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,

Far Left — Local patrons relax in the front room in Nick's English Hut on Kirkwood. Nick's is perhaps the most popular bar in town, Its relaxed atmosphere and good food have been a tradition for over 50 years. Far Bottom — Duke Tomatoe, a favor-rite among IU bar goers performed at the Bluebird Tavern on Walnut in April. A mix of students and locals have been filling the "Bird" for various popular performers. Left — Tim "Waldo" Miller, a junior, holds two pitchers high before plunging into the sea of bodies on his way back for a refill at The Hopp, on Third Street. Bottom — Tom Chitwood of Unionville, flies off J .R. the Mechanical Bull at the Dallas Connection located in DunnKirk Square. The Dallas Connection, had a western atmosphere . The Bar closed its doors second semester.



photos Jeff Morehead

ave you ever wondered who those people are who leave those tickets on your car? The ones who wear the blue uniforms that are so threatening? They are students just like you and me, but they are also police officers in the Indiana University Police Department (IUPD). Betty Ann Rowe, Devon Davis, and Christine Hoover each sought and enjoy different things about being a police officer. For Rowe, the experience of being a police officer and learning to relate to people in a new way is the most important reason for her involvement in IUPD. She also hopes it will help her in her plans to attend law school. Both Davis and Hoover hope to work someday in law-related fields. Davis would like to remain in the law-enforcement business, but at the federal level. Hoover feels the experience on IUPD will help her, as she wants to be a part of the police force in Logansport, Ind. People seem to be the most enjoyable part of police work for Hoover and Rowe. part people I meet are so nice, they make it fun, ' Rowe said. For Hoover, her fellow officers provide a close-knit group of friends. You get real close to the people you work with and they are always willing to help you," she said. Davis has an added dimension to his job. Since it is his third year on the force, he is now in charge of the police academy. "I handle the business end of the academy, work schedules, payroll and recruitment, and I try to get away with as little typing as possible," Davis said. Davis likes the variety of working in the dorms best. The job is never repetitive, he said. All three agreed that the biggest problem they have to deal with on campus is alcohol. "People tend to be real congenial when they are caught with liquor," Davis said. "I tell them and they dump it out. They want to avoid any more trouble." Rowe said, "I've been lucky. All year I have only had to dump half a beer." A large part of the officers' job is dorm patrol, in which the officer checks all doors, dorm equipment, and patrols the parking lot. Ticketing and towing cars that are parked in the wrong area provide a lot of work and some interesting tales for the officers. While working one night, Rowe had written a ticket and called a tow truck to come get a car that was improperly parked. Just as the tow truck arrived, the owner of the car came out. A car owner who is present when the tow truck arrives must pay for the towing. Having no money with her, the owner had to give the driver her col-

lege ring as collateral. "Oh jeez, she got hysterical and I felt like the biggest heel," Rowe said. One night, after a basketball game, Davis was directing traffic out of the purple lot at the stadium. It was a snowy evening, so the roads were slick. The lot was almost empty when a station wagon made a flying start for the exit. Unaware of the snowfilled ditch that lay ahead, the car plunged nose-first into the ditch. "It was funny. We waved to try and stop the car but it didn't work," Davis said. "We called a tow truck to get the car out, but didn't wait around until the car was out. It was freezing." Fun as police work is for these three officers, they all assume and know the responsibility they have when they put on their uniforms, no matter what they do when they are off duty. "At times it is hard, but when I put on that uniform, I must assume the role of apolice police officer," Hoover said. Davis agrees. that uniform on I am a lot more liberal," he said. "It's a lot easier not to have to support a uniform, but I have to, so I do."88

Heather McCune


Below Right — Taking time to get to know some of the students who live at Read Center, Cadet Officer Rowe eats dinner at the quad's cafeteria, instead of her own dorm. The radio beside her is always with her on patrol. Left — Student Betty Ann Rowe does some research in the main library, as she hopes to go to Law school. Bottom Left — Cadet Officer Rowe gives some directions to an IU visitor. Rowe's duties include patrolling the campus and dorms, issuing tickets and helping people.


photos Jeff Morehead

Ca t Officer Betty Ann Rowe



COFFEE HOUSES s the morning sun pours in the window, the smell of fresh-roasted cofA fee and the soft strumming of folk music entices passersby — from businessmen in three-piece suits to students in hiking boots — to stop in and read the morning paper, study for a class or just talk with friends. The warm, rustic coffeehouse atmosphere has become increasingly popular for coffee-sippers to savor imported drinks, international menus and local entertainment. Bloomington is the home to many such coffeehouses. Coffee is the mainstay on all the coffee houses' menus, but there the similarity ends. The atmosphere and the mood of each coffee house vary with the uniqueness and individuality of the coffee's flavour. A remnant of the townhouses of Greenwich Village in the 1960's, Bloomington's oldest existing coffee house is the Gathering Place in Dunkirk Square on Kirkwood Avenue. With rows of personalized coffee cups hanging from the ceiling, the Gathering Place serves its frequent customers their favorite drink — from Tibetan Tea to Brandy Mocha — in their favorite mug. The Gathering Place's visitors — among them Jose Luis Borges, the famous Argentine poet — can also choose from a menu offering Eggs Wellington, Alaskan Snowcrab and even Bagelwiches. On the back of the menu a quote from Borges, who has his own chair for his Bloomington visits, reads: "The Gathering Place is like the Mississippi. It has rivers of good coffee." Started by an IU archeologist as a place to get away from academia, The Runcible Spoon on East Sixth Street has become an

"old I me" to visitors with native cafe cultures rom Europe, South America and the Medi rranean. Th coffee, including Turkish blends from the Mediterranean and Balkan region is roasted daily, using a locally uniq e process. Served outside on a tree- . haded patio or inside among Columb' n coffee sacks, the coffee house's fare inclu es three-egg omelettes done to order of fir ` ' ness and freshly baked English muffins an d Lied curtains, antiques, floral carpets, carved ceiling beams and classical music give he Magic Horn creperie on the corner ' f Fourth and Dunn Streets a unique sett1 g. The Grasshopper Crepe, a chocolate pecialty with Creme de Menthe and Cre e de Cacao topped with whipped crea , is served with Columbian "Supremo-soffee, a special European blend. B far the most popular coffeehouse B am ' g students, is Kiva, housed under the C OI mons of the Indiana Memorial Union. Kiv is a delightful weekend coffeehouse whioh presents the best of local entertainment. Sponsored by Union Board, Kiva began as a ini-concert after football games in the ear 1960's when folk music was king. day, students sitting at candlelight tab s with checkered tablecloths and basket of warm popcorn, listen to a wide variety flocal entertainment. Chosen in rigorou. auditions, Kiva books folk singers and m icians, bag-pipe players and jugglers, bl grass singers and stand-up comics. ith this good entertainment in a relaxin atmosphere, Kiva has the enticing ingr ients that are luring a growing number of ,eoffee-sippers to coffeehouse doors tociay. -,-

Opposite — For some people, solitude and the chance to catch up on a long-neglected book are the enticements that lure one into a coffeehouse. At the Gathering Place, 430 E. Kirkwood, on a sunny Saturday morning, a lone woman takes time to read over a cup of coffee. Above Left — Not all coffees are alike, and at some of the local coffeehouses the choices of exotic coffee beans is displayed for the scrutiny of the finicky Java drinker. These bean jars are from the Runciple Spoon, 412 E. 6th Street.

story Celina Spence photos Jeff Morehead 227



photos Jeff Morehead

Top Left — A hot cup of coffee to warm the hands can be just the thing to make a cold day more bearable. Bottom Left — Students listen to a local group at the Kiva Coffeehouse in the Memorial Union. The Union Board sponsored Kiva books, through rigorous auditions, folk singers, musicians and other entertainers to perform on the weekends at Kiva. Below — A waitress serves two patrons at the Runcible Spoon, 412 E. Sixth. Left — A woman shares her yogurt with her son at a local coffeehouse.



CHI KASAW t'ARK by Al Wiggins hey were walking along the top of a long mound of grass-covered T dirt. The young man chafed, anxious to finish the interview and be away to more important and glamourous things, things worthy of a journalist trained at Columbia University—class of '80. His interviewee was not a college graduate; in fact, had dropped out of high school in his senior year. But the old man had done extremely well; probably, thought the young reporter through no fault of his own. He chided himself mentally for the lapse into envy, certain that he, too, could be a millionaire at fifty, should he decide to do so. But the young man considered himself above such crass apirations. He wanted something to last, something to merit a bronze plaque, or even a bust, displayed in a prominent place at his alma mater. He wanted the Pulitzer Prize, and there was no way an afternoon wasted in rambling, meaningless conversation with an old man still clinging to memories and life could help bring this about; there was no earth-shaking story here, no human-interest appeal, no substance for provoking tear-brimmed eyes. He'd been sent on this assignment merely to give him something to do. But that was to be expected from a weekly rag like the Defender. It wouldn't be long though. An old classmate had put in a word with a paper out in Fresno. Not much, but near enough to San Francisco to be attractive, and it was a daily paper. Deadline pressure every day, the kind oflife he'd thrive on, he though, if he ever got the chance. "Just let him talk," his editor had said, "we may use it as the feature piece in the special Black History insert next week." Talk about what? All his friends at the nursing home? How nobody can beat him at checkers, Why, with all his money, he still lived in the house he'd been raised in? All that was

Al Wiggins is a graduate student with a Masters degree. He is currently in the department of theatre. The illustration is a paper and graphite collage done by Robert

B. Burnett, Jr.

interesting about the old man, in the young report is opinion, was his money — the mone e'd never get to spend because he was to old to enjoy any of the worthwhile things t could buy. Funny; the old man didn t ok anywhere near seventy-four. In his o way, he was quite dapper. Those shoes, mused the young man, must have cost a ice piece of change, and the windbreak looked like a London Fog. Th old man stopped, hands in pockets, looking out over the park as though it was his own private garden. The reporter unslung his recorder, hoping for at least one Golden Moment, the kind he'd been told journalists dream of, but seldom get. He'd

tinued. "Across the road, beyond the tennis courts, are the swings we used to play on back when the park through our eyes was as big as the Sahara Desert." Nice touch, thought the reporter. "The swings are all still now, all the Black kids are going to the white parks. That's too bad, because there's a lot of history hiding out here among the trees and leaves." The reporter took his notebook from his pocket to write down the salient points in the old man's narrative, wondering again how fifty-thousand people had derived any kind of equitable use or satisfaction from a fifty-acre park. It was, he decided, an impossibility.

r---1-1 he reporter unslung his recorder, hoping for at least one Golden L Moment .. . mad sure to bring two-hour tapes, an hour each ide. Might as well get started. He turn on the tape. "You can just say whatever ou want, Mister Steart. I'll write it up when I get back to the office." Motioning to the young man to join him, the old man sat on the edge of the foodwall, legstretched down the sloping side, and lit a garette. "I remember when they put this I, oodwall in Chickasaw," he said, tenrly 1 stroking the grass at his side. "We rod ur bikes at full speed along the top of the ound, kicking up yellow-red dust and scattering the grass seed the construction company had planted. Summertime in Louisville, we used to sit up here and watch them play tennis. I used to play tennis, but I gave it up a long time ago; too much money." The old man took off his jacket, laying it next to him. He looked off to the left, down to where the floodwall met the fence that bordered the refinery, seemingly hoping to see something of someone known only to him, then con-

Something about the old man's voice. It had changed, becoming almost melancholy; yet, it was vibrant, forceful, even youthful. "Just past the swings, the ground slopes off sharply, plunging down to the Ohio River." Not bad. "Many's the time we swam in that big stretch of muddy water where some of us drowned, lying to Momma about where we'd been, and getting the cowboy pee beat out of us for scaring her half to death." Might have to delete that. The old man's eyes were shining. "Back up a ways from where we used to swim is where Lovers Lane winds down along the river bank, half-hidden in the summertime by the dense growth the white Parks Department workers wouldn't cut because they was scared some nigger would leave them laying there. Boy, you talking about busy! Lovers Lane used to look like White Castle on Saturday night after a dance at the Labor Temple!" Quaint; nostalgic. "I mean, they was steady goin' in and out, in and out." The reporter winced, the old continued on page 232


man had thrown grammar to the winds. "When I got older, I went down there, too. "Course, the first time I tried to go down Lovers Lane I got in serious trouble. I — aw, never mind! Shoot, I get talkin' sometimes and don't know how to stop. Musta got it from my brother; they used to call him 'mouth' in high school. Anyhow, just up the road from tennis courts — did I say this before?" The reporter shook his head. "There's a traffic circle, just a little drop where people can go in and unload their picnic baskets and stuff. My brother got arrested one time for riding his bike around that loop, the wrong way." The reporter grimaced, glad he hadn't opted for broadcast journalism; this would never do. "Only reason we was over there was 'cause we lived right across the street. Anyhow, this old colored cop was down there, sittin' on the lodge steps." The old man waved his arm toward a brick building across from the traffic circle, is a bare flagpole resembling a broad drumstick from some forgotten high

v

li

bite cop says, 'Mister Hawthorne we've got to take your son downtown.

school band. "They used to send the colored cops down to Chickasaw to finish up enough time for retirement. Back in them days, the old man said with a sage nod, "colored cops couldn't arrest white people. Well, this old cop grabbed my brother, took his bike, and called a squad car. Pretty soon, here come this black cop car with two white cops in it. They put my brother in the back seat, and I took his bike and ran home to tell Daddy. They was just pullin' up when I got there, and one of the white cops got out of the car. Daddy had seen the cop car through the window. White cop says, `Mister Hawthorne, we've got to take your son downtown.' Daddy looks in the back, sees my brother and says, 'What did he do, officer?' The white cop told him about ridin' the bike around the circle, and how the old colored cop wanted to arrest him. Daddy opened the car door, and told my brother to get out and go on in the house. The white cops didn't say nothin', just kinda smiled, but the old colored cop got real mad, talkin' 'bout what all he would do. Daddy never did take too kindly to cussin', said it was the mark of an uncivilized human being. Anyhow, Daddy looked at the old colored cop a long time, real hard, and said, `If anybody goes to jail, it'll be me, not my fourteen year-old son. And believe me, officer, when I go, it will be for something other that riding a bicycle in a deserted park.' The white cops told the old colored cop to get back in the car, and they drove off. Daddy went on back in the house and started readin' his book again." In spite of himself, the young reporter was becoming engrossed in the old man's

232

whimsical narrative. "You mentioned a lodge, Mister Stewart?" The old man grinned boyishly, white teeth gleaming against his bronzed unlined face. Oh yeah, the lodge. There used to be this recreation building they called the lodge, where everybody would have all their dances in the summertime. I liked that old place! It had screens all around, and a veranda. We used to sneak in and watch the couples doin' the dirty boogie. That was a dance! Way folks dance today, it's all lips and no hips. But back then, man, them people knew what to do! The lodge burned down my junior year in high school. They put that new brick one up where the old one used to be, but it wasn t nothin' like it; smelled like cement and pee all the time. Never did go there much." The old man's voice was sad and hushed, like a mourner at a family funeral. Perking up, he took some crumbs from a wax paper bag in a jacket pocket, and threw them down to the base of the floodwall, where

some sparrows were flitting about in search of food. "The old concession stand is still there. "See it, down in the corner at the parking lot behind the lodge? That thing must be old as dirt. Bet they made a million dollars in the summertime, 'specially on Labor Day weekend, when every Black face in Louisville was down here. You ain't seen a Labor Day 'less you seen one back then. Anxious to maintain the flow, the young reporter asked, "What was it like, Mister Stewart?" Smiling, his voice sounding far away, the old man said, "Negoes — pardon me, Black folks — wall to wall; babies mothers, young girls, young boys, old women, old men, chicken, barbecue, potato salad, music, cards, softball, whiskey, beer, wine, and God knows, a bunch of love! Some people get embarrassed when folks talk about love; not me. Chief, if I coulda got hold to some love every time my ass was kicked, I'd be a much better person today." Probably could be left in, it's not gratuitous; put an asterisk there. "People talk 'bout everything but love; it ain't hip to talk 'bout love. Like your momma didn t love you she was just a compassionate person. I tell my momma somethin' like that — rest her soul — and I be lookin' for my face; she be done slapped it off. But back in them days, we were eager to be loved, ready for it, beggin' for it. And we know the only place we could get it was from each other, so we gave it, and we took it — some more than others. But it all balanced out." That's good! "I look around at some of the people who were growin' up when I was growin' up, and

some younger ones, too. They was loved, and you can tell it. Oh, we got our butts skinned, and regular, but we was loved. Not the kind of crap you see so much of nowadays, where the kids are tellin' their parents "You don't know how to relate!' I always thought there was somethin' wrong with a grown man or woman tryin' to talk to a kid like he was on their level." The old man snatched up a handful of grass, throwing each blade methodically back over his head. "Just don't make sense. How a fifteen year-old girl gonna know what a forty year-old woman is talkin' 'bout? Ain't no way! 'Specially any lip! Hell, I been in schools here lately where they actually have armed guards — you hear me? Armed guards, patrollin' the halls like it's some kinda San Quentin or somethin'!" The old man was straying from the subect, and the reporter wanted to interrupt, but feared throwing him off his stride, thereby missing a possible moment. He let the old man ramble on, keeping an eye on the tape and the time. "When I was at Central High, and any of my class will tell you the same thing, we didn't need no guards. If you was late gettin' to class, you went to the office. If you was out on the street durin' school hours, the colored cops picked you up and brought you in. And when your parents found out, it was 'Nearer my God to Thee!' We had a bunch of serious teachers at Central, they wanted us to learn. They'd work with you forever, if you really tried. But don't ever try to bullshit 'em, they'd drop your ass in a hurry!" The old man hesitated. was I?" "You were talking about school." "Oh, yeah. I think parents these days are too worried 'bout whether their children like 'em. Shoot! What difference it make? They got to feed the little criminal, anyway! Why not do the kid some good; give him a sense of decency, discipline, and values, but most of all, a sense of fear." "Fear?" "Sure! If you put a loaded gun to your head and pull the trigger, you know that gun is gonna blow your brains out. Same with kids. If more parents acted like loaded guns, there'd be a lot fewer kids stuck off in prisons, there'd be a whole lot more colored kids who know how to read, write, and count. When I say loaded gun, I'm talkin' 'bout ready, willing, and extremely able to powder that kid's butt when he or she gets the least little bit outta line." The reporter glanced at his watch; time to wind it up. "Mister Stewart, about Chickasaw Park. Why is it so important to you now, when hardly anybody uses it, and the city is seriously thinking about closing it for good?" The old man was somewhere else. "Where was I?" "Chickasaw Park." "Chickasaw Park, that's right. I guess all I can really say 'bout Chickasaw is this: I wish colored — I mean, Black — people could be like they was thirty-five years ago, when Chickasaw Park was so important to


em. So much pride, so much togetherness, so much love." Curious, the reporter said, "I notice your grammar changed once, you really got into what you were saying. "Yeah, I guess it did." "Why is that?" "Don't know. That mean you can't use the interview?" "Of course not Mister Stewart. Just a few minor changes, and —" "Change it?" "Yes, but only where certain verbs —" "For what?" "For benefit of our readers." "Who gonna be readin' it?" "Black residents of Louisville." "Then what you gotta change it for?" Patiently, the young reporter began to explain. "You see, the English language is probably the hardest language in existence to relate to written form. In newspaper writing, we have to be aware of structure, especially with regard to syntax and grammatical correctness. This is doubly true for a publication like the Defender, which serves a goodly number of people who rely on certain basic principles. For them, everything we write must be structured properly.' The old man looked away. "son, we better forget 'bout puttin' it in the paper." Embarrassed, the young man tried to apologize. "I'm sorry if I've wasted your time, Mister Stewart, but . " "No son, you didn't waste my time, but I always thought the Defender was a Black paper. Miffed, the young man turned off the recorder. "It is, Mister Stewart, but language is universal. We can't run —" The old man swung round to face him, eyes bright. "Oh is that right?" "What I mean' is, there are just some things we can't print as-is, no matter how much we like the person or the story. The image of the paper demands that we . Tears welled up in the old man's eyes; his voice was hoarse with emotion. "Well, thank you for that! Thank you on behalf of all colored folks who used Chickasaw Park before you were born; thank you for all the tired old women who sweated over hot stoves and hot irons all day tryin' to get somethin' together for their family to eat and wear on a special day like Labor Day; thank you for all snotty-nosed kids who didn't grow up to be what you are, who didn't forget all the ungrammatical love they got each and every day; thank you for the proud Black men, tired and old before their time, who poured a lot of the iron and steel in death-trap foundries for cars just like yours, and felt guilty on paydays when they d sneak and but a pint of Old Crow when they cashed the check." Tears streamed down the brown cheeks, causing the reporter to turn away, away, but the old man continued as if driven. you for all the beautiful young Black women who never stopped dreamin' and hopin' and wishin' for a tomorrow they knew they'd never see, but you would, and kept those hopes and

dreams alive, sittin' in little neighborhood bars sTezin' drinks, wearin' that pitiful little s at-stained dress hidden so lovingly in the closet all week and brought out on Saturday night, too proud to hide those mangled fingernails, too practical to shave her underarms, too tired to hear the whispers of the uninformed, too selfless to be angry when she has to go home early and pick up the baby from next door; and thank you for all the people who knew, way back then, that love is somethin' to be done, not spelled or pronounced." Steeling himself in the sudden silence, the young man turned back around. "You're crying, Mister Stewart; are you all right?" The old man ran a sleeve over his face, but the tears continued. "No, son, I'm not — that's a lie; I am cryin'. Don't worry 'bout it, I'm not about to have no stroke or nothin'. I just feel good." With the rapier-like thrust of a good journalist, the young man asked, "Why are you crying, if you feel good?", and turned the recorder back on. Gazing out toward the river, hidden behind a distant row of trees, the old man said, i oftly, "You ask me why, and I suppose could give you a flip answer, but I'm think ' you've had enough of them, so I'll tell you straight. I'm cryin' because once, a long time ago-when little girls were inside when the street lights came on, when Central Highs' Mixed Chorus was invited

I mean, Black — wish colored people could be like they was 35 years ago. I around to white schools to sing and be examined, when holding hands was serious business for a boy and girl of sixteen, when the Globetrotters were the only team a boy from Central could hope to join, when friendship was an extraordinary thing, when eleven o'clock was too late to be cornin' in — I was loved. I was loved then, son, and I can't go back. That's why I'm cryin'. I cain't never go back." After a few moments, the reporter turned off the recorder and scrambled to his ;feet. "Thanks for talking to me. I'm sorr, but I've got to get back now. Can I give you a ride over to your house?" The brown eyes seemed to look right thribugh him as the old man replied, "What? Oh, that's all right; you go on back tour office. I know you got a lotta work to do.' Don't worry 'bout me, son, I'm gonna sit ere a little while longer. I'll be all right. I got a lotta friends here, son, a lotta friends . . . " The reporter hurried back along the floodwall to his car, parked on the grass net to the rotting picnic table, thinking, ok out, Fresno! Here I come!" He had hi Golden Moment. Copyright 1981 Al Wiggins

233



A ME MORY by Scott A. Bullock anuary 5, 1980. A group of a half dozen, we set out on a mission. Marching single file, boots j not fitting the prints of my comrades, I fell out of step. Sexually obsessed and thoroughly frustrated, pimply adolescence, swollen pituitaries secreting bewildering, problematic chemicals, we trudged onward. The snow was ankledeep, and sparkled as if encrusted with rhinestones. We marched in the jungles and rice paddies of Viet Nam, but slung over their shoulders were M-16s, not flexible flyer sleds. I fell out of step. I fell out of step as we entered a clearing that opened and led up to the summit of the slopes. I turned and walked in the opposite direction that my bootprints indicated, and my eyes followed the steps of our path until it became indistinct in the white glare and vanished into the shadowed darkness of the woods. Then turning, swiveling about-face and trudging on, I gloried in the freedom of the day. It was a moment of inexplicable fear, accompanied by a twinge of guilt, transcended by an individual sense of identity and youthful exhiliration, though I didn t bother to think of it in those terms then. I lived securely in Midwestern middle class America and Viet Nam existed only in the newspapers and on television. Why Viet Nam was in my thoughts that day seems odd to me now, because it was not supposed to be. Viet Nam should have been thousands and thousand of miles away from that winter Midwestern scene, as it geographically was, not in the heart and mind of a pre-pubescent juvenile who was attempting to come to grips with the reality and responsibility of intruding into manhood, and was out on perhaps the last of his childhood adventures. No I wasn't to trouble myself over Viet Nam — after all I was

going t college and would be safe; no need to wor And o the topic of discussion, as we mount our flexible flyers, was a certain cheerl der's anatomy, which we alluded to with opographic analogies. Then, with an unf h omable sense of challenge, dignity and ) ride, we launched off like determined sperm, with no other reason or purpose that to be the first to reach the bottom of the hill, the valley of our metaphorical goddes Janu y 23, 1980 Ame ican Film Culture 1-295 had just conclu ed the evening's documentary file — Hea s and Minds — when I realized I

of making our University men stand at erect attention. Unfortunately, I was soon to discover that this was a premature ejaculation. President Carter gave the State of the Union Address. After he was finished, I went to the nearest bathroom, took a seat, and scribbled this graffitti on the wall: The state of the union is in duress Charlie's Angels are getting undressed President Carter is just a ham The State of the Union? Who gives a Damn! When I was a freshman in high school,

President Nixon announced that it would be no longer necessary for young men to register with the government for military

iet Nam should have been thousands of miles away from that Midwestern scene. I

would ave to hurry to get to a television in time t( ear President Carter's State of the Union ddress. I shuffled with the crowd out of he auditorium in Ballantine Hall, blew nose, tucked my chin, and was off in an 1-out sprint. Tele ommunications Majors call it the Union TV Room. HPER Majors properly refer t'it as the Trophy Room. ROTC Majors m ght entitle it the Reserve Recruitment Room, their tongues drooling as Farrah Fawcett wiggles across the screen, her body an example of what they would call "U.S. D.A. prime choice". When I had the audacity to facetiously ask, "What do you think of the state of the Union?", the fellow standing next to me identified himself as an Anatomy major. He sneered, and with compll!to contempt stated, "Farrah's peetoral ajors are the major interest at the Scott A. Bullock is a senior majoring in mome t." Recognizing a superior, I saEnglish. luted and barked, "Excuse me, Sir!" As an The illustration is a paper, xerox and English Major, my mind erupted with the graphic collage done by Robert B . Burnett, ironic thought that only Farrah was capable Jr.

service. Therefore, I was never a proud possessor of a draft card. On the television and in the newspapers I had seen many proud young men demonstrating the dangers of this highly flammable government document. I assumed the new issues would be fireproof. Before graduating from high school, I had read Civil Disobedience by Thoreau, and, like Gandhi and King, I was deeply impressed. Undoubtedly there would be meek attempts made at organizing mass demonstrations, but if the spectacle I'd witnessed at the Student Union was any indication of the temper of what Tom Wolfe has dubbed "the me generation," there was no question in my mind that these efforts would meet with failure. Love beads, long hair, peace symbols, and flower children's embroidered, patchworked flair denims have been replaced by 14k gold unisex necklaces, the fluffy disco hairstyle, the Izod LaCoste alligator status symbol, and designer jeans. Near the point continued on page 236


of extinction during the sixties, fraternities and sororities now turn away applicants. The Business School churns out IBM and ITT cogs in record numbers. Commodity fetishism has produced such items as the Pet Rock and Edible Underwear. Student elections have degenerated to the level of national politics, and People's Park has been sterilized (sic). With the common denominator being apathy, and with cynicism on the left, I attempt to remain an idealist, despite the pain, sustained by the image of Thoreau, the proud individual. January 24, 1980. Convinced that picking up a government pen is the symbolic moral equivalent of taking an M-16 in hand, I head into campus to see the circus. I remember a fellow with a megaphone, surrounded by flag-waving zombies, shouting support for draft registration, intermittently denouncing hecklers as communist sympathizers. I remember whispering in his ear, "If only you and

munism and applauded the virtues of capitalism to the delight of the audience. When Alex stated that, 'I have read the complete works of Marx: unfortunately," the audience exploded with laughter. I found the audience more interesting than Alex. When the microphone was opened to the audience for questions, I asked, "Mr. Ginzburg; In expressing the horror you witnessed during your recent visit to Cambodia, you neglected to mention that this deplorable situation is direct result of American foreign policy. With the presidential election upcoming, many candidates are calling for increased spending for military hardware, and for a reinstatement of the draft. As a human rights advocate, do you believe that this is the proper policy for America to pursue?" As the interpreter smiled and translated my question, I attempted to anticipate Alex's response. I assumed that Alex would recognize that I was aligning myself with

have read the complete works of Marx: I unfortunately your militaristic constituency would individually conform to your own ideological dogmatism, there would be no need to force others to pick up the pen that is waiting for you at the local recruitment offices." I remember a headache, temporary deafness, a large megaphone, "commie faggot," and American flags swirling about my head. February 10, 1980. When it was announced that only 18-20 year olds would be required to register, and when it was hinted that congress would only require males to register, the energy on campus was factionalized. April 16, 1980. "Twenty years as a human rights activists have earned Soviet dissident Alexander Ginzburg nine years in prison camps, the loss of his Soviet citizenship and exile in the West." (IDS) I decided to hear what Alex had to say. Early in the lecture Alex mentioned that with the help of Amnesty International he had recently visited Cambodia and was outraged at the appalling situation and suggested we pick up pamphlets on our way out the door. Alex also condemned the Soviet intervention in Afghanistan. Applause. The CIA supplied Alex with a topnotch interpreter, and in the course of the lecture, he condemened the evils of coni-

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him in that I was proclaiming that I disagreed with my government's ideology and was outraged by the senseless genocide which continues to this day in Southeast Asia in the form of millions of starving refugees. This in the name of "Peace, Prosperity and Freedom." What I was asking of Alex, was to recognize that America is not the benevolent saviour of the world, though he and the audience might like to believe in that image. Alex disappointed me. Perhaps nine years in prison had warped his thinking or maybe, under his present circumstances (owing the U.S. government a favor) he had forfeited the ability to criticize the United States. His response went something like this; "If you strap on a gun, you are sending out signals. You are telling them (apparently Russian Officials) that they shouldn't attack you. (applause — what this had to do with American imperialism in Viet Nam and Cambodia, or for that matter the possibility of intervention in Afghanistan, I don't know). Fortunately, America has learned not to use them (did he mean nuclear weapons, and if so was he referring to Hiroshima or Nagasaki? And at this point Alex felt it necessary to personally insult me). That's the way I see it. It might not be good, enough for you. (applause and laughter): I threw my hands up in disgust.

Afterall, who was Ito disagree with Alexander Ginzburg. Did the audience not recognize the absurd hypocrisy of advocating human rights on the one hand, and the building of implements of death and destruction on the other. The audience wanting so desperately to believe in the righteousness of America, was easily misled by the Soviet human rights advocate who had escaped the tyranny and hellish oppression of the evil element Russia, with the help of our divine angels of mercy. And suddenly everything clicked. The cold war rhetoric was still with us today, the clear-cut black and white, good versus evil distinctions were bred by the very same people advocating human rights. Mr. Ginzburg, like Mr. born-again Carter, and the distinguished tuxedoed gentlemen of the world would gladly send me into the open arms of death, a sniveling pubescent juvenile, a flexible flyer sled slung over my shoulder, racing down a hill, like dutiful sperm, to sow the seeds of America's metaphorical goddess — Freedom. 38 Copyright 1981 Scott A. Bullock


Being Lucky erman B Wells, a grandfather of sorts to Indiana University, published his memiors in the fall of 1980. The 493-page book is his perception of IU. Wells worked on the book for about three years in order to provide, "for the future history student when I'm not around." Chancellor Wells said he named the book, "Being Lucky," because he feels he has been fortunate throughout his IU career. Wells received his B.S. degree from IU in business in 1924 and then a Masters of Arts degree in economics in 1927. He taught classes until 1937 when he became University President for the next 25 years. Wells retired in 1962 and has been Chancellor of the University for the past 19 years. 06 photos Demos

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Football Soccer

p. 240

Basketball

p. 270

Champions

p. 324

p. 256




Super season not to be. IU's defense shuts down okponents Bruce Martin his was to be the season when the Indiana University football team T firmly entrenched itself in the upper echelon of the Big Ten along with Michigan and Ohio State. But it was not to be. True, coach Lee Corso's Hoosiers had posted their second successive winning season with a 6-5 record. But that record paled compared to the high expectations for the team at the start of the year. After all, the Hoosiers had come off their first winning season in 11 years when they were 8-4 in 1979 which culminated with an unbelievable 38-37 victory over Brigham Young in the Holiday Bowl at San Diego. Most of the key players form that squad returned including senior quarterback Tim Clifford, who was awarded the Silver Football Trophy from the Chicago Tribune as the Big Ten's most Valuable Player in 1979. The defense was led by Junior cornerback Tim Wilbur. In just two seasons Wilbur was already Indiana's all-time leading interceptor with 14. The Hoosiers opened the season against Iowa and were greeted by the largest home-opening crowd since Corso's first season in 1973. But the 50,173 fans were in for a major disappointment. Iowa came onto the field with a burning vengeance remembering the 1979 opener when the Hawkeyes were leading the Hoosiers, 26-3 at halftime, only to lose 3026. The IU fans expected an offensive display by the Hoosiers only to be lulled to sleep by ineffectiveness of Clifford and company. Clifford completed 15-33 passes for 205 yards, but threw two interceptions. Meanwhile, Iowa tailback Jeff Brown ran for 176 yards in 31 carries to lead the Hawkeyes to a 16-7 victory. So the Hoosiers spent the next week Engaging in a pre-season stretch, Brent Tisdale, a senior defensive tackle, limbers up on Memorial field the week before the season opener against Iowa.

tryin to regroup in time for their first road game t Kentucky. By he end of the week Corso believed his t m was ready to meet Kentucky at sold-out Commonwealth Stadium in Lexington. This was a chiller that would have madei any IU or UK basketball fanatic proud of a football game. After the Wildcats jumped ahead 14-3 in the first quarter, Wilbur returned a punt 79 yards for a touchdown to narrow the deficit to 14-10. Wilbur made two interceptionreturning one for a touchdown as 1

Deep" Lundy connected on touchdown passes of 75, 74, and 43 yards, a new IU record. Clifford passes for 345 yards, tying Bob Hoernschneyer's single game record set in 1943. After the Colorado bombardment came a meeting with Duke at Memorial Stadium. Many of the Hoosiers looked at this game like a six-year-old looks at a big luscious lolley-pop. And in the first half the Hoosiers were satisfying their gridiron appetite by surging to a 17-0 lead.

U had just come off their first winning season in 11 years the I oosiers built up a 30-14 lead with 9:14 left in the game. But the Wildcats scored 16 points in the last 2:30 of the game to knot the score at 30. The game may have ended in a tie, but the coaches son, IU senior split end Steve Corso craddled a 27-yard pass from Clifford for the decisive touchdown with 18 seconds left in the game. The Hoosiers had their first victory in thrilling fashion by a 36-30 score. The next week the Hoosiers travelled to the Land of Coors beer, Rockie Mountain Highs and the woeful Colorado Buffaloes in magnificient Boulder. Of the 40,129 fans who came out to watch Coach Chuck Fairbanks' pathetic crew, they saw the biggest Hoosier offensivell explosion in recent memory as the Hoosiers stampeded the Buffaloes, 49-7. In the process, the Hoosiers broke four IU records and tied four others. The Hoosiers led 35-0 at halftime after Clifford and IU senior flanker Nate "Dr.

The Blue Devils put a scare into the Hoosiers as they closed the gap to 24-21 with 7:56 left in the game. But an interception by IU junior linebacker Marlin Evans, and an ensuing touchdown by IU senior tailback Mike Harkrader gave the Hoosiers a 31-21 victory. The 43,120 fans saw IU senior tailback Lonnie Johnson run for 211 yards tying the single game record set by Courtney Snyder in 1975. homecoming crowd of 51,029 greeted the Hoosiers for the WisA consin game. The fans were treatated to the Hoosier's first all-around performance of the year as IU shutout the Badgers 24-0. An inspired Hoosier defense sacked Wisconsin seven times for a total loss of 33 yards. "We worked hard this week on the defense preventing the big play," Corso said. "This is the second straight shutout over continued on page 242

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continued from page 241

Wisconsin. Any time you shutout a Big Ten team twice in a row the team is going in well prepared and is executing with great efficiency." Clifford completed 17 of 25 for 186 yards and two touchdowns. It was the tenth consecutive game Clifford had thrown for a touchdown pass. The Hoosiers travelled to Columbus, Ohio to face the Ohio State Buckeyes in a key Big Ten game. The Hoosiers had a 4-1 record, identical to the one they had last year before they were soundly whipped 47-6 by the Buckeyes. But this year was different. Many of the Hoosiers were native Ohioans and this was their moment to show Buckeye fans that Hoosiers can play more than just basketball. For Clifford and Harkrader, this was the last time they would play in their native state as collegians. The Hoosiers matched the powerful Buckeyes for most of the game. But the Buckeye running game, led by tailback Calvin Murray's 224 yards, proved to be too much for the Hoosiers to contain. The Buckeyes and Hoosiers each scored on their first two possessions in the first quarter. But Ohio State took the lead for good when tailback Jim Gayle scored on a 20-yard run with 11:39 left in the half. The Buckeyes scored two more times to take a 27-10 lead before the Hoosiers closed the scoring gap, when Johnson ran two yards for a touchdown. Ohio State collected 405 yards rushing compared to IU's 171. Harkrader accounted for 117 of those yards in his finest game of the season. He also became the seventh Big Ten player in history to rush for over 3,000 yards with 3,004. "We have nothing to be ashamed of," Corso said. "This was a football game between two outstanding football teams, and I'm proud of the way we played. This was a very sharp Ohio State team. We stuck it to them a couple of times but that wasn't enough. "Nobody in the Big Ten had scored on them before us. I just thought I'd mention that," Corso said. One could assume that if the Hoosiers played so well against Ohio State, they would surely bury Northwestern — a team that had not won in 16 straight games. pparently the team was looking forward to the Michigan game and A forgot all about the Wildcats. Northwestern decided to remind the Hoosiers that they can play football and ran past the sleepy IU defense for a 17-7 halftime lead. After some vocal encouragement in the lockeroom by Corso, the Hoosiers responded in the second half with 21 points and ended the Wildcats' dream of a victory, 35-20. The game no longer was the main attraction as the San Diego chicken entertained the fans more than the combatants. Then came the game most Hoosier fans had awaited for a full year — Michigan. The painful memory of the 1979 game still lingered. In that game, the Hoosiers had fought back to tie Michigan at 21 with 242

less than a minute to play before over 104,000 fans at Ann Arbor. But the Hoosiers lost that game on the final play when Michigan quarterback John Wangler hit wide receiver Anthony Carter on a 45-yard touchdown pass. The Hoosiers vowed they would get revenge. Corso closed all practices for this game and instructed his players not to speak to the press. On game day, 52,071 jammed into Memorial Stadium expecting to see an upset. What the IU fans saw was upsetting.

touchdowns. Wilson was expected to pass against the Hoosiers and he did collecting 403 yards. But the Hoosiers outgained the Illini in rushing by a 264-116 margin. Lonnie Johnson accounted for 237 of those yards as he set a new IU single game rushing record. The Hoosier running game helped Corso clinch his second successive winning season with a 26-24 victory. That set the stage for the Hoosiers' regular season finale at West Lafayette against Purdue. More than the Old Oaken Bucket

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With only 4:25 seconds gone in the first quarter the Wolverines already were winning 14-0. At halftime the score was 21-0 and many of I U's fans muttered rhetorically, "Corso closed practice for this?" The Hoosiers never did score as they lost 35-0. Corso stated the obvious when he said, "It was obvious that Michigan was the better team today. All facets of their game were excellent. "We dug ourselves into a hole early and could not get untracked. They beat us in every way. The next week was a continuation of the Hoosiers' downfall. IU met Minnesota on a cold, gloomy, grey day in Minneapolis. The game was regionally televised by ABC. After the game many fans back home had wished they had found alternate entertainment on CBS and NBC as the Hooser offense was listless while the Gophers offense was not much better. The Gophers' defense was the key as Minnesota sacked Hoosier quarterbacks four times for losses totalling 47 yards. One of the sacks sidelined Clifford for the rest of the day and IU lost 31-7. Minnesota had completed only 1-12 in third down conversions. The Hoosiers closed the home season on a cold, damp day at Memorial Stadium before 38,128. The opponent was a muchimproved Illinois team led by sensational quarterback Dave Wilson. Wilson had shattered the Big Ten single game passing record the previous week against Ohio State when he threw for 621 yards and six

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was at stake in this game. The Hoosiers had been informed by the Peach Bowl committee that if they defeated Purdue, an invitation to appear in the January 2 bowl game would be theirs. The Hoosiers took heed to that statement and put together their best allaround game of the year. But it was one point short. Purdue reclaimed the Bucket with a 24-23 victory in one of the most exciting Big Ten game of the season before 71,629 fans — the largest crowd ever to witness a football game in the state of Indiana. After the Hoosiers led 10-3 at halftime, the Boilermakers fought back to take the lead at 24-17 behind the superb passing of quarterback Mark Herrmann. The Hoosiers, however, did not give up as Clifford hit Steve Corso on a fourth down pass in the end zone with 17 seconds left to pull the Hoosiers to a 24-23 deficit. But a pass for a two-point conversion was batted down by Purdue linebacker Mike Marks preserving the victory for Purdue. "I don't think, in my 20 years of coaching, that I've ever had a team play like that,',1Corso said. "That's as good as we can play. So the Hoosiers ended the season at 6-5 — a good season by IU football standards. Clifford was named the team's most valuable player for the second year in a row and Johnson led the team in rushing with 1108 yards. Both players are gone now. And the memories of what the 1980 season could have been will still linger in many memories.


1980 Indiana University Football Team

Below — Row 1: (left to right) AI Carpenter, Brent Tisdale, Al Darring, Tim Clifford, Lonnie Johnson, Gerald Michko, Dave Harangody, Mike Harkrader, Terry Galloway, Jerry Bowers, Chuck Alexander, Gerhard Ahting, Lucky Wallace, Kevin Speer, John Taylor, Jeff Goldin, Eric DeBord, Terry Tallen, Marty Young, Kevin Kellogg, Steve Corso, Mike

Otto.

Row 2: Kent Crider, Kevin Frye, George Milligan, Mark Smythe, Greg Brown, Mark Rodriguez, Dart Ramsey, Nate Lundy, Chad Huck, Denver Smith, Craig Walls, Steve Mitchell, Bob Taylor, Chris Burtis, Bob Stephenson, Chuck Gannon, Brett Andrews, Steve Tillery. Row 3: Jim Sakanich, Michael Angelo, Kevin Burke, Dave Weir, Kevin Kenley, Rod Walden, Jerry Lee, Greg Brooks, Steve Smith, Steve Moorman, Glen Brooks, Mike Marchewka, Mark Filburn, Pete Korellis, Tony Ahrens, Jeff Gedman, Mark Kaiser, Marc Longshore, Brian

Tillery.

Row 4: Duane Sizemore, Mark Sutor, Terry Brady, Tim Wilbur, Kevin Larriwn, Mike Greenstein, Steve Heuser, Ken Ball, Marlin Evans, Jimmy Hunter, Jim Flake, John Kenning, Duff Adams, Kevin King, Cam

Cameron, Al Christy, Tony Michalek. Row 5: John Christy, Lou Cristofoli, Steve Rohe, Rick Payne, Mike Kazanowski, Ed Swanson, Craig Kumerow, Rick Salvino, Brendan Dolan, Jeff VVieball, Bob Krause, Doug McCoy, Tim Dugan, Steve English, Doug Swafford, Chris Dezelan, Tom Van Dyke. Row 6: Jack Walsh, Tom Walsh, Mike Guinan, Don Geisler, Mark Weiler, Scott McNabb, John Roggeman, Bob Swinehart, Rob Harkrader, George Gianakopoulos, Dennis Mills, Curtis Hill, Dave Zeoli, Dennis Edwards, Terry Smith, Mike Budney, Jim Toulon, John Mineo . Row 7: Glen Spinks, Len Kenebrew, John Boyd, Mike Rose, Graduate Assistants: Jeff Phipps, Mel Patton, George Doehla, Greg McIntosh, Bob Tillery. Brian Lewis, trainer, Student Trainers: Roger Coin, Dee And,onov, Manny Ecommos, Rett Talbot, John Supp, Torg Tyner, Brad

Mishler, Mike Bass. Johnnie Salters, Mike Pendleton, Jim Weinberg. Row 8: Managers: Joe Pokorny, Larry Sakol, Dave McCauley, Mark Frushour, Dave Adkins, Sean Conley, Randy Arthur, Keith Robling, Brian Miller, Todd Marshall. Ray Shands, assistant coach; Morris Watts, assistant coach, Father James Higgins; Lee Corso, head coach; Gus Pachlis, assistant coach; Bill Doba, assistant coach; Trent Walters, assistant coach; Harold Mauro, assistant coach; Bob Otolski, assistant coach; Rich Coachys, assistant coach;Jim Shuck, administrative assistant; Bill Montgomery, strength coach; Ted Huber, part-time coach.

Below — Mike Pendleton, sophomore cornerback on the IU football team, psyches himself up in the Memorial Stadium locker room before the IU-Illinois game on Nov. 15.

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IU football coach Lee Corso and the varsity football team kneel for the traditional pregame prayer in the Memorial Stadium locker room before going out against Illinois. The Hoosiers went on to squeek by the Illini for a 26-24 victory.

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Jet M orehead

Above —Wildly thrashing pom-

pons disguise the identities of enthusiastic pompon girls before the ICJ-Duke game on Oct. 4. Right — Members of the football team take the field for the first time of the 1980 season against Iowa. The Hawkeyes stunned the Hoosiers, defeating them 16-7

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Larry Levin

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Above — Senior quarterback Tim Clifford leads the way through the traditional breakthrough in his last home opener of his collegiate career against Iowa. Left — Football players, blurred by a slow shutter speed rush on the field before the beginning of the IU-Duke game .

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Hoosiers play monopoly with opponents

I.

n the heart of the Big Ten season, it began to look as if several college football teams were looking for ways to prevent the monopoly the Indiana University football team had on the Midwest Defensive Player of the week award by the two national wire services. During a three week stretch, three different Hoosier linebackers won the award three weeks in a row. It appeared that the only thing that could have stopped the IU linebackers was the Sherman Anti-Trust Act of 1980. The Sherman Act prevents monopolies and the Hoosier linebackers were monopolizing the awards. But if any Midwestern football coach was going to file suit against IU, linebacker coach Gus Pachis would argue in defense of the Hoosier defense. He had the distinction of being the only coach in the country who had three of his linebackers win the award three weeks in a row. Junior Marlin Evans, senior Terry Tallen and junior Craig Walls won the honor for their performances against Duke, Wisconsin and Ohio State. Evans had 11 tackles, including four solos, and two interceptions totaling 33 yards in the Hoosiers 31-21 win over Duke. That performance, which came one week after IU senior quarterback Tim Clifford won the Associated Press (AP) Midwest Offensive Player of the Week award for his 345-yard, four touchdown performance against Colorado, earned Evans the AP Midwest Defensive Player of the Week award. The next week, Tallen won the United Press International (UPI) Midwest defensive honor for his 11 tackles in the Hoosiers' 24-0 homecoming win over Wisconsin. Finally, Walls had 22 tackles, including 11 solos, against Ohio State, earning him the UPI honor. Ironically, when the season started both Tallen and Walls, the Hoosier defensive co-captains, were on the second unit. But when junior linebacker Kevin Kenley suffered a hip-pointer against Duke, Tallen was given the opportunity to start against Wisconsin. Then Tallen suffered a

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sprained ankle on the second play of the third quarter against the Badgers, giving Walls the starting job against Ohio State. Evans' award did not surprise Pachis. But Tallen's and Walls' did. Tallen played half of the Wisconsin game and Walls' effort came in IU's 27-17 loss to Ohio State. Pachis, however, said all three deserved it. "They're playing well," Pachis said during the season. "Everybody's proud of the fact that the linebackers are getting the individual honors. It's not everyday that you get that award at any particular university." It was also not everyday when Pachis had the difficult job of deciding who would start when all three were healthy. But it was a pleasurable dilemma. Walls was incredulous when Pachis told him of the honor over the phone. He just wanted to play better against Ohio State than he did in 1979, when the Hoosiers

lost, 47-6. For Evans, the recognition motivated him to the point where he was pressing the other linebackers to see which one would win the honor twice in one season. None did, but he admitted that he was surprised with his selection, which coincided with him taking the Big Ten lead in interceptions at that time. And he gave a good deal of credit to Pachis. "I like the way Pachis coaches," Evans said. "He knows what we can do and he doesn't push us too hard. On Mondays and Thursdays he lets us take it easy and get our strength back. He lets you make mistakes and corrects you. He shows you what to do but doesn't put any pressure on you." Bruce Martin


t appeared that the I only thing that could have stopped the IU defense was the Sherman Anti-Trust Act.

Jeff Morehead

Larry Levin

Above — The Hoosier defensive line sets up in position against the Michigan offensive line on Nov. 1. Michigan won the game, 35-0. Above right — Senior linebacker Terry Tallen rests on the sideline during the Iowa game. The Indiana humidity combined with the September heat on the articifical turf to make the season opener a real hot one. Right — Three IU defenders break up a Wisconsin pass play during the game on Oct. 11. IU defeated the Badgers, 24-0.

Michel did:die


Larry Levin

Above — Senior quarterback Tim Clifford prepares to fire away against Illinois on Nov. 15. The pass was completed and part of a scoring drive that contributed to the Hoosier's 26-24 victory against the Illini. Right — Lonnie Johnson, a senior tailback, leaves an Illinois defender behind as he scrambles for yardage in the Hoosier's last home game of the season. Johnson was impressive as he netted 237 yards for the day.

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Left — Some people just don't seem to get into the spirit of Homecoming. Even though the Hoosiers demolished Wisconsin, 24-0, this person wearing the number of IU fullback Bob Taylor doesn't seem too caught up in the festivities. Below — Quarterback Tim Clifford (14) is elated to find Lonnie Johnson's goal-line plunge is good for six points against Illinois on Nov. 15. Larry Levin

Jeff Morehead

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LIIIN IA NI:1

Left — Security

personnel keep curious onlookers from getting too close to Memorial Stadium's north goal post, preventing further damage to after Wisconsin fans had poured onto the field to join their band in a post-game celebration . Although the Hoosiers had defeated the Badgers, 24-0, enthusiastic Badger fans climbed onto the goal post, causing one side to bend down almost touching theground. frie Al Carpenter, leave the Above — IU coach Lee Corso and his nd, locker room after IU's opening game loss to Iowa.

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Inner spirit motivates band members hree whistles and a growl, they're off? Marching down the field, makT ing the crowd excited and proud: The 1U Marching Hundred band. The Marching Hundred got its name in 1927 after a trip to Harvard University. Eastern sports writers thought the band was the best band they had ever seen. They labeled the band "Indiana Marching and Playing Hundred. - It was then shortened to the Marching Hundred and through tradition the name has stayed. IU was the first university to have 100 band members. Now the band has enlarged to 220 musicians, 28 flag corps members, 38 red steppers, two baton twirlers and a drum major. Conducting the band is Ray Cramer, assistant director of bands, and Wilber England, associate professor of music at IU. The band generates its spirit through pride. Its members have the pride of working together for a common goal — a performance, says Cramer. They have the spirit within themselves and they transfer that spirit to the group that they are supporting. 'The best thing is that the band is spirited among themselves," said Becky Tredway, a junior. "They show a spirit that's not shown in the rest of the student body. I know the student body really appreciates the Marching Hundred." Part of the reason the band members have so much spirit themselves is that they are under more pressure than any other musical group on campus. The band members must perform almost every week in front of 50,000 people during football season. -The band has the desire and the time to excel in preparation for a show," says Cramer. They have the inner spirit to keep on going." Before classes start in the fall, band members work outside for eight hours a

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day during band camp. New members come two days earlier than the veteran members. At that time, the pre-game show, as well as the first home game presentation, is put together. Also, the new members learn the marching techniques traditional to the Marching Hundred. At band camp this year, even the veteran members had something new to learn — the band had changed its marching style. The result was a transition from a theme show presentation to a drum and bugle corps show. The new marching style is cvilled the "chair-step," where the marcher's legs move up and down in a pattern resembling a chair. "Few people realize the time and effort that goes into a show," says Cramer. "The band practices in the snow and rain knowing that they have responsibilities to fulfill.However, the football team as well as the students appreciate the band. "We encourage the band to make noise," said IU linebacker Eric DeBord, a senior. "The band is supportive and the football team appreciates the spirit and enthusiasm that they generate. Ray Cramer says that the band is like a family. "Not many people can say that they have 200 friends on this campus, but with the band you make that many friends the first day of band camp," he said. "The band is the quickest way to establish new and lasting friendships." -6 Lynn Vagnone

Above right — Members of the IU Marching Hundred play catch with the San Diego chicken during the IU-Northwestern football game in Evanston, Ill. Right — The Marching Hundred demonstrates precise marching maneuvers during halftime of the IUIllinois football game. Above — A trombone player for the Marching Hundred dresses for the occasion during a Halloween day practice. The band was preparing for the IUMichigan game on Nov. 1.

Jenny Comann



Larry Levin


Soccer team pays no attention 'to predictions, finishes successful season runner-up in the NCAA Championships. Paul Wiseman

hen San Francisco's Fidelis Atuegbu scored with eight minutes into overtime, the fairy tale finish to IU's 1980 soccer season fell to earth with a numbing thud. The goal gave the Dons a 4-3 victory and the NCAA soccer crown. It was the third time in five years San Francisco had knocked off IU in the final game of the NCAA Soccer Championships. But this match was especially heartbreaking. Coach Jerry Yeagley's Hoosiers were not even expected to win half their games in the 1980 season. Seven 1979 starters were lost to graduation. The new squad was young, inexperienced, and as it turned out, highly unpredictable. The team had only one proven star, junior forward Armando Betancourt, who Yeagley labeled the best player in the country. Of course there was also talented senior wingman Robert Meschbach, who in his three years at Bloomington "didn't play up to his potential," according to Yeagley. "He'd show periods of greatness, then he'd revert back to some inexcusable performances." Things took a sharp turn for the worse when ace freshmen recruits Dan King and Keith Meyer went down with injuries early in the season. King was lost for the entire season. And so this rag tag team of inexperienced young men went into the season hoping the right combination of luck and intensity would enable them to slip into the NCAA tournament. Predictably, the season opened on a sour note. The Hoosiers opened with a disappointing road trip to Texas, tying with SMU 1-1, and losing to North Texas State An I U soccer fan shows his approval to a goal scored during the IU-Penn State game. The Hoosiers beat Penn State, 2-0, the same score, ironically, which Penn State knocked IU out of the NCAA tournament last season.

1-0. But Y agley never lost faith in his brassy young am. Early in the season he told Indiana ily Student, "We are not going to be a lo ing team." His fait was justified as the Hoosiers roared back to beat highly regarded Connecticut 1-0, and reel off eight straight victories. The streak ended with a 3-0 loss at the hands of the powerful St. Louis Billekins, but not before it included wins over Penn State, and defending national champs SU-Edwardsville. Yeargley even 1

necessary for team success. There was also the magnificient Betancourt, Ill's All-American forward. Playing with a painful groin injury dining most of the season, Betancourt scored 17 goals and 16 assists. But according to Yeagley, Meschbach "was the big difference ... We knew Armando was great before the season started. Robert was the unknown quantity." With Betancourt fighting injury, Meschbach took charge of the Hoosier attack, booting an IU season record of 27 goals and

e are not going to be a Yeagley losing team." considered the loss to St. Louis a blessing in disguie. 1 That loss "brought us back to reality . . we worked a little harder, got the cone ntration and from then on we really started to progress," he said. The Hoosiers put together eleven straight *ctories, and swept into the pla y -ofswithregulancodf19-2. Many fac ors accounted for the team's surprising s ccess. "We w re a makeshift outfit for much of the year, ' explained Yeagley. "We had to press pe ple, who we didn't even know were goi g to be on the team, into action." l■ reshme Greg Kennedy and Mark Laxgang helped pick up the slack when awarded starting roles. Yeagley also praised the team's patient veterans. "People who had been paying their dues for the last two or three years as subs, all of a sudden were pulling starting roles and responded much better than we ever anticipated." Seniors Steve Doerr and Steve Westbrook provided the leadership

9 assists. The IU defense was characteristically tough. Anchored by sophomore goalie Chris Oswald, the Hoosiers recorded 17 shutouts, one short of the NCAA record established by IU in 1978, giving up and average of .64 points a game. The defense was indeed surprisingly tough, but Yeagley said the team had "an 'intangible' going for it, a cohesiveness, a blending, a coming together. - It was this ability to play together as a team that made the 1980 Hoosiers great. And they never came together more intensely thanin the NCAA tournament. The tournament began with a rematch against Cleveland State, who the Hoosiers had squeaked by 1-0 early in the year. IU proved more than equal to the challenge, shutting out the Vikings 3-0. On December 7, the Hoosiers administered a 3-1 vengeance on Penn State. The Nittany Lions had eliminated the Hoosiers continued on page 258 257


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from the tournament in 1979 by a 2-0 margin in the quarter finals. The Hoosier victory did not come easy, however. The score was knotted at one-all at halftime, before two unanswered second-half goals by Kennedy and Meschbach put the game away. The victory sent IU to Tampa, and the Final Four for the third time in five years. Their opponent in the semi-fimals was surprising Hartwick the 1977 national champs

— who had upset Conneticut to earn a berth in the Final Four. But the Warriors were no match for the pumped up Hoosiers, and the game quickly became a rout, with IU winning 5-0. The easy victory propelled IU into the final game against undefeated San Francisco. The teams had paired off twice before in the championship contest of 1976 and 1978, with Dons winning each time, 1-0 and 2-0 respectively. Yeagley also made it clear that he wasn't enamored of Don coach Negoesco's exclusive recruitment of foreign players. Understandably there was no love lost between the two teams. The Hoosiers opened up an early 2-0 lead, before falling behind in the second half 3-2. A goal by Betancourt, voted the tournament's outstanding offensive player, tied the score at 3 apiece with 75:50. Neither team could score again in regulation, and the game went into overtime. Eight minutes and 17 seconds later Atuegbu scored and the goal ended IU's dream season. Two months later after that game in his Assembly Hall office Jerry Yeagley's watery, blue eyes cloud when he discusses the championship game. His team, he said had "played the best soccer that any Indiana team had ever played. Everybody at the stadium . . . all the players knew that day the best team did not win." These words were not simply sour grapes. IU out shot San Francisco 24-9 in the final. After the game, Yeaglev received dozens of letters assuring him that his team deserved to win. When he speaks of next year, however, Yeagley's youthful face lights up momentarily. He is excited about the prospect of coaching a team that loses only three starters. In addition, the Hoosiers will be playing in a brand new soccer stadium. Yeagley is eagerly awaiting the 81 opener at home against San Francisco. He hints that IU may show a few surprises in the game which Yeagley predicts will be an "epic" contest. But leaving the tidy office one can't help but feel that Yeagley may never quite forget the frustration of the 1980 season; a season in which an unpredictable, cocky young team chased a dream all the way to Tampa before having it slip through their fingers in the finals.

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Above — IU's Armondo Betancourt jumps over Penn State's Greg Dennis for a head shot during the Hoosier's win over the Nittany Lions at Memorial Stadium. Below right — Freshman Manuel Gorrity (13) dribbles past a Western Michigan defense during the game on Sept. 24. IU went on for the win, 4-0.

The 1980 - 81 Indiana University Soccer Team Front row (left to right) — Pat McGauley, Dan Biggs, Mark Goldschmidt, Mike Getm, Roger Wicker, Steve Doerr, Steve Westbrook, Robert Meschbach, Chris Peterson, Tim Walsh, Pete Gallagher, Steve Meyer and Joe Schmid. Second row — Head Coach Jerry Yeagley, assistant coach Joe Kelley, Greg Kennedy, Roffo, Orestus lung. Gregg Thompson, Dan King, Mark Laxgang, Rick Potts, Armando Betancourt, Chris Oswald, Harris Hall, Ray Keller, Willy Martin, Tom Ferland Steve Kabanas, Manuel Gorrity, Shashi Roy, Sam Pogoni, manager Greg Mauch, trainer John Schrader and assistant coach Don Rawson.


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Right — Playing with a bandaged right arm, ICI sophomore Pat McCauley drives around Paul Piotrowicz during the Sept. 24 game against Western Michigan. Below — Senior forward Robert Meschbach fights with a Connecticut player for control of the ball during the game that ICI went on to win, 1-0. Far right — Center midfielder Steve Doerr advances the ball against a defender. Doerr, a senior co-captain was the quarterback of the Hoosier attack. John Terhune Larry Levin

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Far left — Steve Westbrook (8), Tim Walsh (5) and other IU players celebrate after their 6-0 win over Dayton on Nov. 7. Left — Robert Meschbach (9), Joe Schmid and Mark Goldschmidt (4), show their jubilation after scoring the only goal in their 1-0 victory over Cleveland State. Below — Coach Jerry Yeagley, voted 1980's college soccer coach of the year, jumps for joy after IU scores the gameclinching goal in their playoff victory against Penn State. The Hoosiers won 3-1. Michel duCille Jeff Greene

Jeff Morehead



Larry Lenin

Far left — Junior forward Armando Betancourt signs a little soccer ball for a fan. The balls were thrown to the fans during halftime of a game. Left — Senior Robert Meschbach shares a moment with his family after IU's victory over Penn State in November. Above — Starters, (left to right), Robert Meschbach, Chris Oswald, Gregg Thompson, Coach Jerry Yeagley and Pat McCauley watch from the bench as the second team finishes the 2-0 victory over Penn State.

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Sophomore runners fill gaps he season looked pretty bleak. The squad's two top performers T from a year ago were plagued by injuries which would eventually rule them out for•the season. The team was young, and without much experience. One couldn't blame Sam Bell, track and field coordinator for both men and women, if he was a little apprehensive about the coming women's cross country season. But two sophomores filled the gaps and salvaged the women's cross country season. Junior Kelly O'Toole and Sophomore Leigh Kincaid led the women's cross country team last year, but came up with injuries before the start of the season. Sophomore Roseann Barnhill and sophomore Cindy Brown were called on to try and fill the gap left by the absence of O'Toole and Kincaid. And fill it they did. In the first meet of the year, the Kentucky Women's Invitational, Brown led the way with a 22nd place finish. The Hoosiers finished seventh out of 13 teams in the meet. Barnhill struggled with a pulled muscle and finished 36th. But in the Eastern Michigan University Invitational, IU had a health y Barnhill and she came in fifth individually to lead the Hoosiers to a second place finish behind Ohio State. Brown finished 14th and freshman Joan DeMaat placed 16th. Barnhill followed up that performance with a seventh place finish in the Indiana Invitational held in Bloomington. Brown was the next Hoosier finisher in 20th place. The two runners led the squad to a third place finish. Barnhill placed 19th in the Big Ten meet and Brown 31st. But in IU's final meet of the year, the Indiana Athletic Congress, Brown and Barnhill were passed by another newcomer. Freshman Johanna Reneke slipped by Brown and Barnhill to win the event. Brown and Barnhill finished second and third. The Hoosiers were the only team to participate in the meet.

Jeff Greene

Blair Claflin

Jeff Greene

Top — Coach Stephenson, left, consoles sophomore Leigh Kincaid after she ran in the Indiana Athletic Congress Meet. Above — The IU Women's Cross Country team leaves the starting line during the Indiana Athletic Congress meet held in Bloomington. IU had the only women's team participate. 266


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ndiana University coach Sam Bell's men's cross country team appeared to be reaching its peak when it traveled to Wichita, Kansas, for the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) championships in November. But the result was a disappointing 11th place finish. In a season that began in late September at the Kentucky Invitational in Lexington, and ended in the cold air of Wichita, the Hoosiers had consistently improved from meet to meet. Western Kentucky, with its duo of Larry Cuzzort and Dave Murphy topped IU for the team title, but IU junior Jim Spivey took the individual title to begin a streak of victories that wasn't to end until the NCAA finals. Bell's runners returned to Bloomington for the Hoosier's home debut in the Indiana Invitational on October 11. Spivey again took the individual title, shattering the course record by 15 seconds in the process. But Western Kentucky, with Murphy and Cuzzort finishing second and third respectively, topped IU for team honors for the second time in the season. After a two-week rest, IU finally performed close to its potential, as the Hoosiers tied Michigan for the Big Ten title. Spivey became Ill's first Big Ten cross country individual champion in 34 years. The Hoosiers put their finest performance of the season together the next weekend at the NCAA District IV championships at Illinois, winning by 15 points over Michigan. The Hoosiers were flying high, healthy and strong going into the November 24 finals in Wichita. At the NCAA championships, Spivey fell back in the pack early and was never able to recover and get into contention. He duplicated his 1979 finish of 21st. The 1980 season found the Hoosiers again finishing below expectations, leaving Bell and Hoosier fans, again, looking forward to next season. '),9

Mark Massa

Jeff Greene

IU world class long distance runner, Jim Spivey, a junior, completes the last 100 yards of the Hoosier Invitational. The Hoosiers have never won their invitational, and it was to be no different this gear. Spivey took the individual title, shattering the course record by 15 seconds, but Western Kentucky, with second and third place finishes, topped IU for team honors. 267


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he cliche "rebuilding year" duly describes the plight of IU's T women's volleyball team. Coach Ann Lawyer had only three returning players on her squad, which compiled a 22-24 season record. IU finished second in the Indiana Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW) tournament, behind Big Ten champion Purdue. At the Midwest AIAW tournament, the Hoosiers finished 12th after losses to Michigan State and Illinois State by identical 0-2 scores. Six players will return to Lawyer's team next season and will help IU continue the rebuilding process. Lawyer described her team as having a good year. Good blocking, excellent defense, mobility in the backcourt and the ability to run a varied offense and different net attacks were some of the positive aspects of this year's team, said Lawyer. Among the six returnees will be sophomores Cindy Alvear and Deb McClurg, who were both named to three alltournament teams this season: the Cleveland State Invitational (Oct. 31), the Hoosier Classic (Nov. 7-8) and the Indiana AIAW tournament (Nov. 13-15). Sherri Fishman

Above — Deb McClurg, a sophomore, saves a volley during the Hoosier Classic volleyball tournament. The Hoosiers went on to defeat Ball State in this match . Right — Cindy Alvea r and Deb McClurg, both sophomores, set up a block against Ball State's Karen Granning.

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Women conquer season U's field hockey team ammassed its seventeenth winning season out of I the last eighteen, compiling a 12-10-3 record in 1980-81. But the road to the winning season was loaded with obstacles for coach Pat Faboz., zi s squad. The 25-member team was having trouble finding a decent field to play and practice on, as their normal practice field behind Foster Quad often was torn up by people using the field for flag football and for driving across in cars. The field hockey team finally found a home, albeit shared with the track team, on the infield of Billy Hayes Track. Another chuckhole in the team's trek to success was struck early in October. Beth Burr, an assistant coach, quit the team on the third week of October, citing personal reasons for the move. The day after, October 14, senior four-year goalie Angie Paul announced that she was quitting the team, citing dissatisfaction with the coaching as her reason for leaving. But the season went on, and the Hoosiers won the Indiana Invitational and finished second in the consolation round of the Big Ten tournament. IU hosted the Midwest Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW) tournament, where the Hoosiers lost to Miami of Ohio in the first round, 1-0. Experience may be the key to another winning season for the Hoosiers, as 23 of 25 team members will be returning for the 1981-82 season. gr Sherri Fishman

• Jeff Morehead

Above — 1U's Karen Norris receives a pass from teammate Megan McHugh (31) during a play-off game against Miami of Ohio. Unfortunately, this was the last game for the Hoosiers, as they lost 1-0. Left — The women's field hockey team proves it takes determination to gain a goal as they score against Eastern Kentucky. Karen Norris (7) is ready to score with help from Kathy Chappel ( 28) and Greta Wimer. . The Hoosiers won 3-2.

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A Season to Remember Bruce Martin "There is no doubt that a man is a competitive animal, and there is no place where this fact is more obvious than in the ring. There is no second place. Either you win or you lose . When they call you a champion, it is because you don't lose. "To win takes a complete commitment of mind and body. When you can't make that commitment, they don't call you champion anymore ." — Rocky Marciano, former world heavyweight champion

second round at Dayton. Then the basketball tradition long will be rememHoosiers came home to Assembly Hall and bered. There was IU junior forward Landon defeated Alabama-Birmingham 87-72 and St. Joseph's, 78-46 to win the Mideast Re- Turner, who came on strong at the end of the season to pace the Hoosiers' late season gional title. The Hoosiers returned to the Spectrum surge. There was IU junior forward Ted in Philadelphia as a member of the Final Kitchell, who excited many with his magFour. It was the same arena in which the nificent outside scoring touch. There was Hoosiers won their last NCAA title, in IU junior Randy Wittman, a player that 1976, with a 32-0 record. IU defeated may have been the steadiest on the team. Louisiana State, 67-49, in the semifinals. And there was IU sophomore guard Jim TheHoosiers won the NCAA title with a Thomas, who always could be counted on 63-5b victory over North Carolina to earn to come off the bench and provide the team

he IU basketball team never lost sight of its commitment. The team T rebounded from the depths of adversity to win the 1981 National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) basketball title. It took more than just talent. It took a complete commitment of mind and body. And, in the end, it paid off. Even the most ardent Hoosier basketball follower may have dismissed the Hoosiers' title hopes in December when the team had a meager 7-5 record. True, the Hoosiers had lost to perennial basketball powers Kentucky, Notre Dame and North Carolina, but they also lost to Clemson and Pan American. As the season progressed, the team gradually matured until it was one of the best teams in the land. After winning the Big Ten championship on the final day of the season, the Hoosiers beat their five tournament opponents in awesome style. The Hoosiers average winning margin was an incredible 22.6 points per game. Maryland was the first to fall to the Hoosiers, 99-64 in the NCAA Mideast

rom depths of adversity to win the NCAA title

Left— Senior center Ray Tolbert out jumps Minnesota's 7-2 Randy Breuer to win the opening toss. The Hoosiers went on to beat Minnesota and win the remaining nine games and the NCAA title.

their fourth NCAA title and Knight's second as a collegiate coach. Ill's outstanding tournament performa ce gives the Hoosiers the top winning pe entage in tournament history, with a 27- record for .794 percent. The Hoosiers' fou NCAA titles places the team behind U LA's 10 titles and Kentucky's five. onsidering the Hoosiers' slow start, this may have been Knight's greatest coaching performance. But there were plenty of heroes throughout the season. Ray Tolbert earned the Silver Basketball, emblematic of the Big Ten's most valuable player. IU sophomore guard Isiah Thomas became IU's first sophomore consensus All-American and was the NCAA tournament's most valuable player. Thomas decided to leave IU after his outstanding so homore season and join the National B. ketball Association. But the contribute s Thomas made to IU's outstanding

with outstanding rebounding. The list of heroes could go on and on, but when the season first started, there were many question marks. Gone from the 1980 Big Ten champions were forward Mike Woodson and guard Butch Carter. The Hoosiers opened the season against Ball State on November 29. Isiah Thomas was unable to play because of a pulled groin muscle. Tolbert and Jim Thomas scored 14 and 12 points each, and the Hoosiers defeated the Cardinals, 75-69. The 14,682 fans in attendance saw a remarkable display by Ball State's 5-foot-9 guard Ray McCallum, who befuddled the Hoosiers all afternoon, scoring 25 points. Ill's next opponent was Murray State, one of the quickest teams the Hoosiers faced all season. Behind the scoring of Kenny Hammonds, Murray State led the Hoosiers by a 33-30 halftime score. The Hoosiers came out in the second half and continued on page 273

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held the Racers scoreless for the last eight minutes of the game to give IU a 59-41 victory. The Hoosier defense held Murray State to just 10 shots in the second half. Tolbert led all scorers with 21 points.

The Hoosiers beat a very tough Kansas State team, 51-44, and Rutgers, 55-50 before disaster struck at the Rainbow Classic in Hawaii. The Hoosiers lost to Clemson 58-57, and Pan American, 66-60. Knight brought the team home early and put the he first real test for the Hoosiers Hoosiers through a week of very tough came on December 6 when the practices. He removed the captain honor T Kentucky Wildcats came to from Tolbert and gave it to Isiah Thomas. Assembly Hall. A very local crowd of He also benched Turner, who was not to be 17,254 came to see if IU could defeat the highly touted Wildcats. With the score tied at 62, the Hoosiers had a chance to go ahead but Tolbert missed an alley-oop play. Kentucky clinched the victory when Sam Bowie and Kirk Minniefield each hit one free throw to give UK a 68-66 victory. Fred Cowan and Bowie led Kentucky in scoring with 14 points each while Isiah Thomas led the Hoosiers with 20. Kitchell surprised many Hoosier fans with 12 points. "I don't know how a win could be any sweeter than that," Kentucky coach Joe B. Hall said. "I'll cherish it for the rest of my life. " The Hoosiers traveled to South Bend on December 9 to play Notre Dame. Notre Dame sophomore John Paxson led Notre Dame with 18 points in the Irish's 68-64 victory. Turner and Thomas scored 23 and 22 points repectively, but the Hoosiers' inability to score at the free throw line cost them the victory. IU was 10-19 at the line heard from again until later in the season. and committed 26 fouls. Notre Dame was The moves apparently worked, as the 22-32 at the line and that more than made Hoosiers opened the Big Ten season, with up for the difference. two straight wins. Michigan State was the "It's always tough to beat a friend," first to fall when Thomas scored 20 points Notre Dame coach Digger Phelps said. in a 55-43 win. "Come playoff time, Indiana will be one of "I don't feel we lost to a great team. We the best teams in the country." lost to a very good team," Michigan State The Hoosiers found time to re-group as coach Jud Heathcote said. they met California in the first game of the Indiana Classic. The Hoosiers could have been held for grand theft as the team stole llinois was next and the Hoosiers won the ball at will. With 14 minutes left in the a surprisingly easy game, 78-61. game IU was leading 60-37. Knight deKitchell scored the most points of any cided to add a little excitement to the Hoosier all season with 40. "I didn't even game, when he was ejected with three min- know I had scored that many until a manautes remaining. He turned the team over pr told me after the game, Kitchell said. to former assistant coach Roy Bates and "I thought he was joking. But when I found watched IU clinch a 94-58 victory. Kitchell out he was right I was stunned." led all scorers with 22 points. Many Hoosier fans were stunned in the The next night, the Hoosiers won the next game when IU lost at Michigan, 55-52 so-called Classic with an 83-47 victory over in overtime. The Hoosiers made several Baylor. Turner scored 23 points and won costly turnovers late in the game. But the the most valuable player award. team rebounded the following game when Oral Roberts was the next opponent to IU played Ohio State at Columbus on fall when the Hoosiers won, 65-56 at Mar- national television. IU senior Steve Risley ket Square Arena in Indianapolis. Kitchell was a surprise starter and his defense was 8-12 from the field for 16 points, most helped the Hoosiers to a 67-60 win. Risley of the baskets coming from the perimeter. led the team with eight rebounds, while Then IU traveled to North Carolina Tolbert scored 17 points. where they lost 65-56, in a preview of the The Iowa Hawkeyes came to Assembly national championship game. Hall on January 22 in a key Big Ten game.

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Iowa often had been on the short end of many lopsided Hoosier victories in Assembly Hall. But this game was a chance for Iowa coach Lute Olsen to gain some revenge. Late in the game, Olsen had Iowa spread its offense in an effort to draw fouls. It worked as Iowa won, 56-53. "It was a heck of a win for us," Olsen said. "It showed a lot of poise. and we made no mistakes in the

four-corners offense. The way we played tonight is what we need to do the rest of the as A 93-56 Hoosier victory at Northwestern followed the Iowa loss as sophomore guard Tony Brown scored 16 points in a surprisingly strong performance. Thomas led the Hoosier scoring with 23 points. The Hoosiers went to Minnesota and won their first close game of the year, 56-53 in overtime. The Hoosiers finally were able to go the wire and win, something they hadn't been able to do all year. Tolbert led all IU scorers with 17. Two wins at Assembly Hall followed as the Hoosiers defeated intra-state rival, Purdue, 69-61, and Wisconsin, 89-64. Thomas scored 26 points to lead the Hoosiers to the win over the Boilermakers while Brown scored 18 points in the Wisconsin win. The Hoosiers then travelled to Purdue's Mackey Arena, a place where the Hoosiers are as welcome as an American in Iran. The Hoosiers had not won at Mackey since 1976 and this year would be no different. The Hoosiers led by as many as 14 before a furious Boilermaker rally gave Purdue a 68-66 victory. Purdue guard Kevin Stallings calmly sank two free throws with five seconds left to give the Boilermakers the victory. continued on page 274


photos Larry Levin

Above — Before practice officially began,

members of the basketball team run on the cross country course at the golf course to prepare for the season. Left — ILI coach Bob Knight watches his team scrimmage in Assembly Hall. There was only one practice session opened to the public all year, it was prior to the Mideast Regional. Far Left — The IU Basketball Team — Row 1 — Steve Skoronski, manager, Eric

Kirchner, Ray Tolbert, Glen Grunwald, Steve Risley, Phil lsenbarger. Row 2 — Gerry Gimelstob, Asst. Coach, Jene Davis, Asst. Coach, Chuck Franz, Randy Wittman, Isiah Thomas, Ted Kitchel, Jim Crews, Asst. Coach, Bob Young, Trainer. Row 3 — Dr. Brad Bomba, Team Physician, Bob Knight, Head Coach, Landon Turner, Mike LaFare, Steve Bouchie, Tony Brown, Jim Thomas, Steve Downing, Volunteer Coach.

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The constant verbal assaults hurled at Knight and the Hoosiers led to the season's biggest controversy when Knight called a press conference two days later ridieulins the institution for its - Purdue Mentality. Verbal darts were thrown throughout the season between Knight and Purdue athletic director George King. This feud was highlighted when Knight brought a live donkey, resplendent in a Purdue cap, on The Bob Knight Show, as a representative from Purdue. Wins over Northwestern and Wisconsin followed before the Hoosiers travelled to Iowa City in what had been billed as the biggest Big Ten game of the season. The Hoosiers were tied with Iowa for the Big Ten lead and many thought the winner of this game would win the Big Ten championship. Despite a fine game by Turner, who returned to the starting line-up for the first time in the Big Ten season, the Hoosiers lost, 78-65. It would turn out to be the final time the Hoosiers experienced defeat. ehind the improved play of Turner, the Hoosiers defeated Minnesota, 74-63, Ohio State, 74-58, and Michigan, 98-83 to enter the final week of the season one game behind Iowa. In order for the Hoosiers to win the Big Ten title, they would have to win twice while Iowa would have to lose twice. While IU was beating Illinois, 69-66, Michigan did the Hoosiers a favor by upsetting Iowa, 71-70 in overtime. Iowa then lost at Ohio State, 78-70. The Hoosiers clinched the Big Ten title that night when they beat Michigan State, 69-48. The momentum carried on into the NCAA tournament as the Hoosiers added another championship banner to the other three in Assembly Hall. It was definitely a season to remember.%

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David S hreiber

Far Left — Junior forward Ted Kitchel goes around Michigan Wolverine Ike Person. Kitchel scored 13 points in the 98-83 Hoosier victory. Above — A view from atop the Assembly Hall floor shows Ray Tolbert's positioning for a rebound against the Minnesota Gophers. Tolbert grabbed five rebounds and led the team in scoring with 19, in the 74-63 win over Minnesota. Left — Isiah Thomas wipes sweat from his face during a break in the action of the Purdue game. Before the start of the Big Ten Season Coach Knight removed the captain honor from Tolbert and gave it to Thomas.

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Far Left — Ray Tolbert goes up for an alley-oop against two Kentucky opponents. However, the Wildcats beat the Hoosiers 68-66. Left — Coach Bob Knight shouts encouragement from the bench. Over his ten year tenure at IU, Knight has led the team to a 231-68 won loss record (a 77% winning percentage), six Big Ten Championships, one NIT Championship and two NCAA titles. Below — One of the 17,072 fans at the Michigan games cheers for the Hoosiers. In 16 home games, 257,797 Hoosier fans saw the t e am compile a 14-2 home record. Alan Dorow

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Top Left — Martha Webster, the IU mop-up lady who sings the Indiana song before each game on television, performed at halftime at many home games. Left — The IU cheerleaders led by Bill Patterson and Sonnie Sicklesmith spread Hoosier spirit at a home game. Above — Tenacious defense was one of the keys in coach Knight's playbook. Randy Wittman closely guards a Michigan opponent in the February 28th game. Wittman was second in steals with 24; Isiah Thomas led the team with 58 steals. Right — Sophomore Steve Bouchie goes up against Northwestern's Jim Stack. Bouchie has been hampered by injuries during his two years at IU. However, he saw action in 29 games this season.



Isiah Thomas

t the age of three, Isiah Lord Thomas was the youngest player on Chicago's Our Lady of Sorrows' junior basketball team. At the age of 19, he was IU's youngest All-American — leading the Hoosiers to the Big Ten Championship Title and the coveted NCAA National Championship. In June, 1981, he was chosen second in the NBA draft by the Detroit Pistons. He passed up his last two years of college eligibility in order to help his family and his economic status. Thomas is the youngest in a family of nine children. His father left when he was three-years-old; And that left Isiah's mother, Mary Thomas, to support and protect the family in Chicago's west-side ghetto. Isiah, as the baby of the family and its hope, was warned by his older brothers about the pitfalls of ghetto life. Isiah was encouraged to do well in school in order to someday leave the life of the ghetto. The photographs on these four pages were made throughout the1980-81 basketball season. They are a tribute to a fine human being and good friend, who took the advice and hope of his family and someday hopes to become a lawyer and return to his neighborhood. Isiah allowed me into his life in December,1980. I followed his family and his efforts in the 1981 push towards the NCAA National Championship. He was always very honest and open with me. We shared many moments and cherished feelings. These photographs are for Isiah, his mother Mary Thomas, Coach Bobby Knight and for you. IU will never know another player like him. He is indeed one of a kind.38 David Schreiber, June 1, 1981. 280


Left — Isiah Thomas reminiscenced about his high school, St. Joseph's in Westchester, Illinois, with his brothers in the Bloomington apartment. Below — A family oriented person, Isiah took the time to show two of his nephews and niece how to shoot baskets.


Right — Isiah Thomas was a leader. Before the Big Ten Season coach Knight made Thomas the team's captain. He led the team in steals, assists, minutes played and scoring. Below — Thomas and Randy Wittman started to celebrate the win over St. Joseph's in the NCAA Mideast Regional, before the game was over. Far Right — Isiah's mother, Mary Thomas, has been a very big influence in his life. She tried to make all the games throughout the year to cheer or sometimes scowl at Isiah's play. Bottom Right — Thomas was one of the Hoosier fans' favorite player, he often spent many hours after games signing autographs.

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Tolbert

hen Ray Tolbert was an IU freshman, someone told IU coach Bob Knight that Tolbert would not last in the program for more than two weeks. "At that time, Tolbert thought that everything in basketball revolved around the 360-degree slam-dunk," Knight said. "But Tolbert was able to develop into the type of player that we want at Indiana." Tolbert culminated his career as the 1981 Big Ten's Most Valuable Player. His defensive prowess and intensity impressed coaches and players throughout the Big Ten. North Carolina forward James Worthy said Tolbert is the best defensive player he has ever played against. But it's the slam dunk that most Hoosier basketball fans will remember as Tolbert's trademark. He had the ability to electrify the crowd with his backboard vibrating clunks. Tolbert looks like an eight-year-old on Christmas Day when he sees the basket unattended.His eyes light up and a toothy smile appears on his face as he drives another dunk through the rim to the howling delight of Hoosier fans. Tolbert has contributed more to the outstanding tradition ofIU basketball than his dunks. He started 123 of 127 games throughout his career. He scored 1427 point for a four-year average of 11.23. His last season he averaged 12.2 points per game and won the Big Ten field goal percentage title, shooting .626.88 Bruce Martin 284



The Road to Philadelphia Bruce Martin

HILADELPHIA — The IU basketball team had just defeated North P Carolina, 63-50, to win the 1981 National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) basketball championship. The Hoosiers were wildly celebrating their victory. Amid all the celebrating, the back slapping and the high fives there was a warm, touching moment shared by a family just a few feet away from all the madness.

especially after the Hoosiers' 7-5 start in December. But the Hoosiers went through what Knight called, "a maturing process" as the season progressed. The Hoosiers saved the best fbr last and it payed off with the Hoosiers' fourth NCAA title. The other three came in 1940, '53 and '76. Only UCLA's 10 NCAA titles, and Kentucky s five surpass the Hoosers' four NCAA crowns.

he team has been on a T year long maturing process IU coach Bob Knight was met by his wife, Nancy, on the Spectrum floor. The iron mask fell off Knight's face as his eyes welled with moisture. The two embraced for a short moment before Knight extended his arms to grab his two sons, Timmy and Patrick. The four were united in a warm hug. -That's two championships for us," Knight said to his family. For that short moment, Knight was able to find solitude with his family as he once again had reached the pinnacle of his profession. Meanwhile, Hoosier sophomore guard Isiah Thomas had a disbelieving look on his face. "I don't even realize what we've done," Thomas said after his 23 point performance which helped lead the Hoosiers to the title and himself to be noted the NCAA tournament's most valuable player. "I really haven't felt it yet." Few thought that Knight and Thomas would be sharing that moment on the Spectrum floor the night of March 30 — 286

And Knight is now a member of a select coaching fraternity that have won the NCAA title twice. It was Knight's third title overall, counting the 1960 NCAA title team that Knight played on at Ohio State. In winning his second title as a coach, Knight also became the first to repeat since the John Wooden dynasty at UCLA ended in 1975. The NCAA championship also solidified his position as the premier coach in college basketball. Some basketball observers conceded that this was Knight's greatest achievement. Unlike his 1976 title team that featured Scott May, Quinn Buckner, Kent Benson, Bobby Wilkerson and Tom Abernathy, this year's Hoosier squad had to learn how to crawl before it could walk. The progress of the Hoosiers surprised even Knight. "This team probably won't reach its peak until somewhere later down the road," Knight said. "The team has been on a yearlong maturing process. We are closer to

our potential now simply because of maturity. The Hoosiers used their maturity to win the Big Ten title on the final weekend of the regular season after the league-leading Iowa Hawkers lost their last two Big Ten games. That s when the road to the Philadelphia began. To the astonishment of many, the road was devoid of chuckholes and sharp turns. The Hoosiers' first opponent was Maryland in the second round of the NCAA tournament at Dayton, Ohio. Many Hoosier fans expected this game to be close. Nobody expected the Hoosiers to put on a basketball clinic. To use the word awesome to describe the Hoosiers' performance may be an understatement. Maryland jumped out to an 8-0 lead before the Hoosiers caught fire. And when they caught fire, the Hoosiers engulfed Maryland like a towering inferno. IU took the lead at 14-13 when Hoosier senior center Ray Tolbert, later to be named the Big Ten conference's Most Valuable Player, hit a jump shot. From there, the Hoosiers took the game and hid. If ever a team played a game near perfection this may have been it. The Hoosiers led at halftime, 50-34. In the second half, the closest Maryland came to the Hoosiers was 54-42. The Hoosiers set what must have been a team record for slam-dunks as Tolbert scored a career-high 26 points in the Hoosiers' 9964 victory. I. Thomas tied an IU record when he recorded 14 assists with no turnovers to continued on page 288

Right — Amid the confusion of winning the NCAA title in Philadelphia, Senior Ray Tolbert holds a NCAA decal as he talks to reporters.



continued from page 286

supplement his 19 points. IU junior forward Landon Turner added 20 points as the Hoosiers shot a phenominal 65 percent in field goal shooting. just got whomped," 4 4 T 4 T eMaryland coach Lefty Driesell said. "Indianajust played great. They were super. They dominated everything. They killed us, ran us out, beat on us, whacked us, everything. We just got our fannies beat. They were awesome. "That's by far the best any team has ever played against one of my teams. I ain't never got beat that bad," he said. "You can check the record book." Knight downplayed the Hoosiers' outstanding performance after the game. "A lot of things really broke for us today," Knight said. "We just had things going our way. We must have had three or four baskets where we missed the shot, got the rebound and put it back in." And Isiah Thomas issued fair warning to future IU opponents when he said, "I think we can play better." By virtue of winning at Dayton, the Hoosiers advanced to the Mideast Regional semi-finals at Assembly Hall. When the NCAA tournament seeds were announced, many expected the field in the Mideast to consist of IU, Kentucky, DePaul and Wake Forest. Kentucky was upset by AlabamaBirmingham, DePaul fell to St. Joseph's and Wake Forest was surprised by Boston College. The Hoosiers met the Gene Bartowcoached UAB Blazers in front of 17,091 fans at Assembly Hall. Most of those fans expected UAB to be pushovers. But those fans were surprised when they found the Hoosiers trailing the Blazers 25-19 with 9:24 left in the first half. But IU junior guard Randy Wittman scored two baskets in a row that got the Hoosiers on their way to a 42-37 half-time lead. The Hoosiers used a scoring trio of I. Thomas' 27, Wittman's 20 and Tolbert's 17 points to defeat UAB, 87-72. UAB showed a great deal of determination but discovered it was not enough to overcome IU's machine-like characteristics. "There was a point in the second half when I thought things slipped away from us," Knight said. "We were seven points up and we missed a shot. I told Jimmy Crews (IU assistant coach) that we should have been up by 11 and instead they might cut it to three or five. But then we came back to take control again." In the press interview room after the game, Bartow told Knight he didn't mind losing to the best, and reiterated that he believed Knight's team is the best. "Indiana's sreat defense was the key," Bartow said. They're tough, physical and very smart. We didn't shoot well, probably because of their defense. We felt we had to shoot at least 50 percent to win." The Hoosiers met St. Joseph's for the Mideast Championship and the right to

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advance to the NCAA Final Four. St. Joseph's was gaining fame as the giant killers of the tournament as the Hawks had upset Creighton, No. 1 ranked DePaul and Boston College. They had won three games by a total of four points. But the Hawks proved to be no match for IU as the Hoosiers led from the beginning. By halftime, IU's lead was 32-16. The second half was more of the same as the Hoosiers won the Mideast title with a decisive 78-46 victory. The Hoosiers shot an incredible 68 percent from the field to set

So it was off to Philly and a return to the scene of the Hoosiers last NCAA title. The Hoosiers joined Midwest champion Louisiana State, West champion North Carolina and East champion Virginia as members of the Final Four. The Hoosiers would meet 31-3 LSU in the first semi final game at the Spectrum. Knight said LSU was a quick talented team that could do many different things on the basketball court. "They have all the physical attributes that a good basketball team has to have," Knight said. The game also featured a match up between two outstanding guards — IU's I Thomas and LSU's Ethan Martin. Both teams played an extremely close first half before Thomas was whistled for his third foul with 3:14 remaining in the half. He was replaced by sophomore guard Um Thomas. Rather than utilize Martin during Thomas' absence, LSU coach Dale Brown made a questionable move when he brought Martin out of the game for a rest. The Hoosiers stayed close to LSU and trailed at halftime, 30-27.

Larry Levin

an NCAA tournament record. The aggressive IU defense held the Hawks field goal shooting to a feeble 33 percent. "Indiana is a terrific defensive team," St. Joseph's coach Jim Lynam said. "They took us out of what we tried to do very early. When you fall behind very early like we did, any kind of a spread offense becomes that much less effective." Turner and Tolbert led the Hoosiers with 14 points and five rebounds apiece. Every Hoosier played and scored.

4 4 I'm very pleased for our players,"

Knight said. "This is what it boils down to. It's a great accomplishment to go to the finals. There's riot very many players who have played this same who have had the chance to do that. '

he Hoosiers were uptight and overanxious. They missed a lot of T shots and were failing to set up an offense. Rather than yelling at his players, Knight told the Hoosiers to sit back and relax. The tactic worked as IU came out in the second half and scored 11 straight points, all by Turner. The Spectrum crowd was stunned and LSU could not recover as the Hoosiers won by an incredible score of, 67-49. The Hoosiers only shot 36 percent from the field but the defense held LSU to a meager 32 percent. Turner led the Hoosiers with 20 points but the key to IU's comeback may have been Jim Thomas who came off the bench and pulled down nine rebounds, tops on the team. "Jimmy Thomas did a great job going to the boards in the second half. He has been doing a good job for us all ,year. He was our leading rebounder today' `, Knight said. "I didn't expect it (the awesome comeback), but in my wildest imagination I thought it was possible," he said. "I have a wild imagination." But Knight's coaching genius showed through with his tactics at halftime. "At halftime coach Knight came in and told everybody to just sit back in their chairs and relax," Turner said. "He said we can't go at them the way we did in the first half. "We were a lot more patient than in the first half and things just started going right. We played bad in the first half but were only down by three so we knew we could take control of the game if we settled down," he said. "We went out in the second half and played good, tough, solid defense and helped out whenever we had the chance." The Hoosiers now had a chance at the continued of page 291


am ges up for a sl -f ot-10 junior Landon T urner o nal against St. Far Left — Sixo Regio dunk during th e final game in the Mideast Joseph's. center Left — Coach Bob Knight gives some encouragement to Ray Tolbert during the Mideast Regional championshi p game 78-46 and earned against St. Joseph's. The Hoosiers won the game the right to go to Philadelphia as one of the Final Four. Below — Some of the 17,112 fans who were part of the sell-out crowd watched and cheered the Hoosiers to a Mideast Regional victory over St. Joseph's. Larry Levin


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continued from page 288

Left — The fans and the media gathered around the Hoosiers as Ray Tolbert took the honors in the traditional net cutting ceremony after IU beat St. Joseph's. Below Left — Maryland's all-american forward B. King shakes hands with Isiah Thomas and Ray Tolbert after he fouled out during the IU-Maryland NCAA regional in Dayton, Ohio. IU won .99-64. Bottom — Coach Bob Knight talked to the press after the Hoosiers defeated Alabama-Birmingham 87-72, in the first game of the Mideast Regional. Below — Ray Tolbert, Isiah Thomas and Randy Wittman (who bruised his knee during the game) started to celebrate when it was evident the team would beat St. Joseph's and advance to the Final Four.

photos Larry Levin

crown jewel of their sport — the NCAA basketball championship. But first, they would have to beat North Carolina. The Tar Heels Earned a shot at the title after they beat Virginia, 78-65 in the second semi final game. Tar-Heel forward Al Wood had set a semi final scoring record when he scored 39 points against Virginia. So this was it. The game had all the earmarks of a classic confrontation. It was Bob Knight against Dean Smith — both considered the top college coaches in basketball. It was the Big Ten vs. the ACC. And it was IU vs. North Carolina — two universities with rich basketball traditions. North Carolina struck first when the Tar Heels built a 16-8 lead in the first half. But Turner scored two straight baskets to ignite the Hoosiers. The score was tied at 20 and at 22. When Whittman hit an 18 foot jump shot from the baseline at the buzzer, the Hoosiers had their first lead of the game, 27-26. The second half saw a remarkable display of basketball talent by Isiah Thomas. He opened the half with a driving lay up after a steal, and followed that with another steal a lay up one minute later. IU had the confidence and the lead. The Hoosiers continued to build on the lead and controlled the tempo of the second half. North Carolina could no longer play their type of game. And there was Thomas, whirling, twirling, spinning, and scoring with the greatest of ease. The Hoosiers had the championship at hand with a 63-50 lead with four seconds to go. Isiah Thomas took the inbounds pass, held it for a few seconds, and lofted the ball toward the Spectrum rafters when the final buzzer sounded. The Hoosiers were basketball's NCAA Champions. Amob scene began on the Spectrum floor as the IU players went wild. Tolbert had a grin from ear to ear as he coddled the NCAA basketball trophy. Like a patented Tolbert rebound, nobody was going to get the prized object out of Tolbert's hands. I'm not ever going to let go of this baby," Tolbert said. "Words cannot describe my feelings. That's it. It's the ultimate. We earned this." And indeed the Hoosiers had earned the championship. They rebounded from adversity and won the championship. At 26-9, the Hoosiers became the losingest team ever to win the NCAA. But the Hoosiers outscored their tournament opponents by an awesome average of 22.6 points per game. This was not the same team that started the Big Ten season at 7-5. The team that ended the season in Philadelphia may not have been beaten by anyone. This was a champion in every sense of the word. 88

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photos Shawn Spence

Opposite — Steve Bouchie (54) and James Thomas struggle for a rebound in the closing minutes of the IU-LSU game. Thomas, a reserve guard, was named to the all-Final Four team. He was later nicknamed by the press IU's "other Thomas." Left — Junior guard Randy Wittman passes the ball against LSU defender Howard Carter. Wittman's 8 points from long range helped break up LS U's zone defense. Far Left — Landon Turner battled for a rebound against LSU's Howard Carter. Turner had 20 points and eight rebounds in the 67-49 victory over LSU, in the NCAA semi-final game. Bottom Left — (left to right) Chuck Franz, Mike LaFave, Phil Isenbarger, Glen Grunwald and Ted Kitchel shout encouragement to their teammates.

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Larry Levin

Opposite — Landon Turner (left) and Ray Tolbert cut down the net after the Hoosiers defeated the North Carolina Tar Heels 63-50, to win the NCAA championship. Above — Fans in Bloomington gathered anywhere there was a television to watch the game. These people waited since three-o'clock at Bear's Place in order to get a good seat to watch the game. Above Right — Isiah Thomas was guarded heavily by North Carolina players. But that di not stop him from leading all scorers with 23 points and dishing out five assits. Thomas was voted the tournament's most-valuable-player and all-Finals team. Right — There were plenty of Hoosier fans among the 18,276 Philadelphia Spectrum sell-out crowd to cheer the team during the final game.

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Gagers set records Alan D tros%

aryalyce Jeremiah came to IU to do a job. She had left the UniM versity of Dayton because she had done her job in her second year as head coach of the Lady Flyers, Women's basketball team, she led the team to a Division II national championship. In her first season at IU, Jeremiah put together a team that finished 22-16. Included in the win column was the Indiana AIAW Championship, which the Hoosiers won for the second time in a row, defeating Purdue, 61-47. The Hoosiers also placed fourth in the Big Ten Tournament in February, the highest IU has finished in years. IU had four players averaging in doubles figures for most of the season. Three players finished the season with averages of over 10 points per game. Senior Sue Hodges led the scoring, averaging 12.6 points per game. Hodges, hit 202 field goals this season breaking the record of 196 set by Barb Krieger in the 1978-79 season. Two freshman forwards were neck and neck in the scoring race, Rachelle Bostic finished with 11.7 points per game and Denise Jackson was close behind with 11.5 points per game. Jeremiah lost three players during the season. Junior Lori Burroughs and senior co-captain Joan Ryann quit the team on December 11, in unrelated incidences. Both players claimed that they no longer could contribute to the team. Sophomore Dorothy Raffel, the Hoosiers leading scorer last season, was suspended and subsequently dismissed from the team by Jeremiah for "disciplinary reasons" on February 15. The Hoosiers started out the season with five wins in a row and built up an 11-game win streak in late December and early January. Sherri Fishman

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Left — Senior Sue Hodges grimaces and Melinda Sparkman, a sophomore (left) and Melissa Leckie, a sophomore, watch the second half of the 1U-Miami game, January 28th. Miami won 70-67. Below Left — Sophomore guard Kim Land dribbles past a tenacious Detroit player, during the 1U-Detroit game February 20th. Below — Freshman Denise Jackson feigns two Detroit players. Despite Jackson leading the Hoosiers with 18 points the Hoosiers lost 67-65. Alan Darow

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Hoosiers win Big Ten title or years, IU's women's swim team was drowning in the depths of the v Big Ten. The following chain of events led to a rapid surfacing at the top of the conference: The first full-time coach for IU women's swimming, Pat Barry, was hired; next former Olympic freestylerJennifer Hooker, a Bloomington native, added credibility to the program by choosing to swim for IU; then, for 1980-81, Barry recruited what is widely believed to be the best group of freshmen in the nation. Consequently, this year the Hoosiers accomplished one of Barry's major goals for the program — winning the Big Ten Championship. They did so by beating five-time defending champion Michigan by the tight score of 933-903, at the conference meet in Madison, Wisconsin. It would have been a perfect season for Barry and his team if they could have broken into the nation's top ten. However, they fell short, as they placed 12th. Sophomore Amy McGrath, 1980 national champion in one-meter diving, placed fourth in the three-meter and seventh in the onemeter diving. Hooker, while swimming a time that would have won the event the previous year, placed fifth in the 500 meter freestyle. On missing out on the top ten, Barry said, "We blew it. No, I blew it. I rested the girls too much. - (a Steve Ball

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photos Larry Levin

Left — Ann Cremin, a freshman, leaves the block as Theresa Andrews, a freshman finishes her leg of the 400 relay, during a meet in Royer Pool. Top — Chris Sattelberg, a sophomore, comes up for air while swimming in the IU versus Michigan dual meet in January. Above — The swimmers leave the blocks during the dual meet against defending Big Ten Champion Michigan. IU won the meet 71-60. The team went on to defeat Michigan in the Big Ten Championship to gain the conference title.

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Left — Doug Maley, a freshman, flies off the starting block at the Indiana Invitational. Below — Senior dicer Niki Stajovic placed 2nd on the one-meter and 3rd on the three-meter board at the NCAAs. Above — IU swim coach Jim - Doc" Counsilman prepared for his swim around Alcatra San Francisco Bay; which he completed in November.

Big Ten dynasty ends isappointment was the byword for the IU swim team in 1981. The D Hoosiers' steak of 20 straight Big Ten titles was broken by Iowa and IU's tie for 12th at the NCAA championship meet. It was the worst finish for the Hoosiers since swimming coach James "Doc" Counsilman came to IU 23 years ago. Diver Rob Bollinger captured some glory for IU, winning the one-meter board at NCAAs. In fact, divers scored 54 of IU's 61 points at the nationals. Senior Niki Stajkovic ended his IU career by placing second on the one-meter board and third on the three-meter at NCAAs. The Hoosiers' third diving All-American was sophomore John Schulte, who placed 1 1 th on the one-meter board. Aside from the diving efforts, IU fared poorly at NCAA. Senior Chuck Sharpe was the Hoosiers' top swimmer, placing eighth in the 200-freestyle. Senior Djan Madruga, an Olympian from Brazil, placed 11th in the 200-back-stroke, joining Sharpe as an All-American. In 1981, the Hoosiers went 12-0 during the dual meet season, which included victories over Iowa (10th in NCAAs), Arkansas (13th) and Southern Methodist (4th). IU successfully defended its home meet win streak, as the Hoosiers now own 110 wins in Royer Pool since it opened. Individually, the team set many new swim records. Senior Ken McLaughlin broke Mark Spitz's 50-yard freestyle record with a 20.25 swim at NCAAs. Djan Madruga's 400 individual medley time at NCAAs was a new all-time Big Ten record, as was Seth Bretscher's winning time in the 200-breaststroke at the Big Ten meet. Sharpe set new IU standards in the 200 and 500 freestyles, while Jim Halliburton set a new record in the 100-butterfly, an event where he won his third straight Big Ten title. Losing the Big Ten title was disheartening for the Hoosiers. IU led by five points

after the first day, due mostly to its diving strength. At one point the IU advantage hit 93 points but the Hawkeyes rallied to cut that to 14 after the second day and then swam to victory on the final day. IU had beaten Iowa 70-36 in Royer Pool early in the dual season before 1,100 fans, the largest IU swimming crowd ever in Royer Pool. The reason for IU's drop in stature remained a mystery to the swimmers, although Counsilman said the lack of a large pool at IU is a crucial factor. The proposed recreational sports center is supposed to house a 50-meter pool for the Hoosiers, but whether or not it actually will be built is uncertain. Scholarships were also a tight spot for IU this year as Councilman had only one to give out to prospective recruits. There are seven graduating seniors from the 1981 team, Niki Stajkovic, Ken McLaughlin, Chuck Sharpe, Djan Madruga, Jim Halliburton, Dave Phelps and Dan Rogers. In the, regular season, IU followed Councilman s rhythm method of training through many single meets. The Hoosiers disposed of Pittsburgh and Ohio State with little trouble and ripped Iowa and Arkansas, both in the same weekend. Then came a trip to SMU where the Hoosiers used a last relay sprint by Halliburton to edge the Mustangs. Illness began to overtake IU as they went on a weekend visit to Michigan and Michigan State. The Spartans fell easily against the IU reserves, but the Wolverines lost 60-53 in a thriller that was decided in the last event. Purdue, Cincinnati and Illinois were easy victims, as was Indiana State in IU's season finale. But between the wins came a 58-55 squeaker at Wisconsin, where IU clinched the meet with two events left and coasted home, despite the close score. (98 Jim Slater

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Best season in 45 years 11 thing considered, the 14-6-1 IU wrestling team had a good season. A They lost some matches they should have won. They could have finished higher that sixth in the Big Ten Wrestling Tournament. They could have received more than one All-American at the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Wrestling Tournament held in Princeton, New Jersey. But IU coach Doug Blubaugh was happy at season's end and that is saying something. He has said before that he is never satisfied. "I'm happy with the season," he said after the NCAA's. "It was good because the last 13 matches we won in a row and the fact that all the kids but two will return next year (senior 150-pounder Ken Sheets and senior heavyweight Rod Chamberlin will not). We've got Deutsch (freshman Todd who was ineligible this year because of grades), for Sheets and we need to recruit in the upper weights. I'm looking positively toward next year.Blubaugh was not so positive during the season. IU, returning from a 15-9 record (its best in 44 years), and losing only one starter, the Hoosiers started off 1-6-1 against mostly Big Ten competition. It was a frustrating start, because the wrestling team kept pleading that they were better than their record. The scores at the meets were so close. They lost to Nebraska, 19-18, to Michigan State, 20-18, and to Ohio State, 23-20, and tied Illinois 22-22. But things picked up for the Hoosiers, as they won their next 13 meets in a row to finish the season 14-6-1. Those six losses were the fewest in Blubaugh's eight previous season at IU. While it was true that some of the teams IU defeated were weak this season, such as Indiana Central and Taylor, earlier IU would not have beaten all of the 13. Along, the way IU had one of its most satisfying wins in many years when the Hoosiers defeated Indiana State, 24-11. ISU finished No. 14 in the NCAA Wrestling Tournament. Even with its 13 wins in a row and its 14-6-1 record IU had something to prove at the Big Ten Wrestling Tournament. The 302

Hoosiers finished in sixth place, but not as high as Blubaugh had hoped. However, it qualified six wrestlers for the NCAA's. At the NCAA's, IU had one AllAmerican, junior 126-pounder Mark Galyan and finished in a tie for 36th place. "I thought we might end up with three All-Americans," Blubaugh said. "But its damn hard to win (at the NCAA's). You've got to win early. If they lose I tell them to lose to the best guy. "I think we did all right this season. The four guys that are coming back (freshman 118-pounder Jeff Bentley, Galyan, junior 134-pounder Keith Saunders and sophomore 177-pounder Mike D'Ambrose) know more after the NCAA's. There is nothing like experience. "People realize we're coining up. They've told me the team is looking up. I know we are on our way up. - Eric Beninour


Left — Heaveyweight Rod Chamberlin, a senior, wrestles against a Purdue opponent. Chamberlin had a 38-11 record including 19 pins in his last season. Above — IV wrestling coach Doug Blubaugh gives Mike D'Ambrose some instructions before meeting a Miami of Ohio opponent. D'Ambrose finished the season with a 18-10 record including 2 pins.

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Team looks to future

1)e,

fter losing eight of twelve starters from last year's squad, including A three All-Big Ten performers, coach Jim Browns' Hoosier gymnasts struggled through a 2-9 season, filled with injury and inexperience. Despite the lowly record, the young Hoosiers made tremendous strides throughout the season, increasing their scores from 220 early on, to a respectable 250 by season's end. Before the season began Brown said, We're not going to be bad at all; in fact, I believe that we will win some meets and be very competitive in others. But as a whole, we are a bit too inexperienced." Dominated by underclassmen, the Hoosiers started four freshman and two sophomores. Brown believes that he has brought in the best recruiting class that Indiana has ever had. "We have an exciting freshman class, one that will bring potential for the future," Brown said. In the Big Ten championships, the Hoosiers did not expect to finish very high, but felt that they could do well individually. Unfortunately, Indiana fell to the bottom of the conference, capping off a disastrous weekend. Sophomore Tom Gould led the Hoosiers at the Big Tens, with a 7th place finish on the still rings, claiming All-Big Ten honors. Gould was the lone Hoosier to secure a position in the coveted top eight of the Big Ten. The future appears bright for the Hoosier gymnasts as only two senior will be graduated from the squad. Coach Brown anxiously awaits the arrival of next year. "Forget what happened this year, because next year will be different," Brown said. With ten starters returning, Brown's prophecy just might become reality. OR Mike Wolinsky

Jennifer Jecklin

Top — Dan Stanely, a freshman, performs on the pommel horse at a meet in Assembly Hall. The team was

dominated by underclassmen, starting four freshmen and two sophomores.

Above — Bob Hill, a senior, finishes his routine on the rings during a meet. Hill also performed on the pommel horse scoring a season best of 8.95 and on the parallel bars scoring a season best of 9.05.

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Hoosiers set team record Jeff Morehead

he IU women's gymnastics team finished the 1980-81 season with a T 7-4 dual meet record and a new team record in points. On March first, IU beat Kentucky with a team total of 136.2, a new school record. The old record was 134.05. IU opened the season with a win over Western Michigan. The Hoosiers won every event at the meet and took first and second place in the all-around. The team then won the next three meets, but was forced to reschedule the January meet with Ball State after several mishaps. First, the floor plate on the uneven bars broke. After the meet was moved to the Health, Physical Education and Recreation building, Hoosier Cynthia Rogers collapsed on her dismount from the uneven bars because of an injured knee. IU's Liz Landshof sprained her ankle during her floor exercises. On February 20-21, IU competed at the Big Ten championships in Columbus, Ohio, and finished fifth. The Hoosiers finished second in a controversial AIAW state championship meet at Indiana State. IU women's gymnastics coach Diane Schulz, the Ball State coach and the meet director complained about the fairness of the judging. IU finished the season with a dismal 11th place finish at the Midwest AIAW regional championships in East Lansing, Mich., with a score of 131.5. 88 Emily Lawson Right — Melissa Murin, a sophomore, completes her routine on the balance beam in a meet at Assembly

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Individuals shine during .500 season he IU women's track team had a so-so outdoor season but lost only T one team member to graduation, All-American Karen Wechsler. The outdoor season began March 20 at the Lady Gator Relays in Gainesville, Flor-. ida. IU won the mile relay with a time of 3:49.8. Junior Reba Jackson placed second in the 200-meter dash and fourth in the 100-meter dash at the meet. IU won the triangular meet at Illinois on April 4, beating both Illinois and Southern Illinois. April 18, IU traveled to the Midwest Open Eastern Illinois track meet in Charleston, Illinois. Sophomore Gretchen Baker won the 400-meter hurdles with a time of 1:01.67, and placed third in the 100-meter hurdles. Sophomore Sheila Montgomery won the 800-meter run with a time of 2:12.09. Freshman Betsy Grizzell placed third in the seven event heptathlon. Two team members were injured in an automobile accident on the way to the Becky Boone Invitational track meet in Lexington, Kentucky, on April 24. Junior Kelly O'Toole and sophomore Jeanna Polonchek were taken to the hospital after the car in which they were riding was involved in a chain reaction with the two team vans. O'Toole suffered a compressed fracture of a vertebra in her lower back and Polonchek received a deep gash in her forehead. IU finished the season with a sixth place finish in the Big Ten and then failed to qualify in any event at the AIAW national meet in Austin, Texas. iEmily Lawson

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photos Phil Sears

Far Left — Gretchen Baker, a freshman, receives congratulation s from track coach Sam Bell, after she won the 400 meter hurdles at Billy Hayes Field, in May. Top Left — Roseann Barnhill competes for position at the Billy Hayes during the /,500 meter run Invitational track meet held in May. Barnhill 4:37.09. finished in third with a time of completes Above — Cyndie Brown, a sophomore, run. Her finishing one lap during the 3,000 meter time was 10:24.3. Jeanna Left — Sophomore javelin thrower, at the Polonchek adjusts her shoe after performin g Billy Hayes meet. She won the event and set a school record with a throw of 133 feet four inches.

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Trackmen set records T

Imes were the essence of IU's men's track team, and it met the clock's challenge early in the season. Some old, familiar faces led the team in striving for NCAA championship qualifying times, while some new faces made their mark on the track and in the field. Freshman Dave Volz, a Bloomington, Ind. native, vaulted himself into the limelight and the record book by establishing a swarm of records with a pole vault of 18-31/4 in the Indiana Intercollegiate meet April 18 at Billy Hayes Track. Volz set an IU, Big Ten and a national junior record with his vault, the second time he had vaulted over 18 feet during the outdoor season. Senior Nate Lundy, a four-year track veteran, shattered his own times each time he entered a race. He qualified for the NCAA finals in his first outing of the season in the 400-meter intermediate hurdles, but lowered his initial time of 50.65 set in the Sunshine Relays March 20 to a career-best 49.49 at the Drake Relays April 24. Lundy defeated the 1980 NCAA intermediate hurdle champion, David Lee, of Southern Illinois, running his best time ever. The sprints and relay teams each excelled at various times, led by the 1600meter rela y team of freshmen Gary McGhee and Sunder Nix and seniors Tommy Hughes and Lundy. The team set an IU record with its 3:05.29 time at the Drake relays in a second-place finish. The Hoosiers won an important meet at the end of the outdoor season, a 73-71 victory over the University of Michigan. In the past three outdoor seasons, the loser of that meet has gone on to win the Big Ten title. That trend continued as Michigan edged out IU to win the Big Ten 134-100. IU trailed Michigan by 35 points after the first day, but strong performances by junior Jim Spivey, Nix, Volz and Lundy helped IU gain second place. Spivey won the 1500-meter run with a time of 3:42.55, a track record, and he also won the 5000-meter run with a time of 14:01.76, also a track record. Spivey had

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been red-shirted for the indoor track season with ankle injuries, and his performances at the Big Tens and later at the nationals helped IU. Volz continued to amaze people by jumping 18-011/4, a meet record, to win the pole vaulting title. Nix won the 400-meter dash with a run of 45.56, a time which he would break at the nationals. And Lundy won two hurdles competitions, the 100-meter high hurdles (:13.95) and the 400-meter intermediates (:49.92, a new track record). The Hoosiers continued their fine individual performances. Four IU men placed at the nationals and one, Volz, took a national title. Volz vaulted 17-811/4 and helped IU to a ninth-place finish, the best finish in IU track coach Sam Bell's 12 years

11...

■41

at IU. The other freshman in the finals, Nix, ran a :46.01 in the 400-meter run, finishing eighth. Spivey set an IU record in the 1500meter run with a time of 3:38.33. Even with the record, Spivey finished third, which was good considering the short amount of time Spivey had been back since his ankle problems. Lundy finished in fifth place at the nationals in the 400-meter hurdles with a time of :50.25. (db Sherri Fishman


established Far Left — Freshman pole vaulter Dave Volz g a 18-foot-31/4 vault several records during the year, includin which set an IU, Big Ten and national junior record. Volz also took the NCAA title in the nationals. right, and Brian Brase hit Below — Seniors Nate Lundy, intermediate hurdles in the IU their second hurdle in the 400 as well Invitational Track meet April 18. Lundy won the 400 as the 110 high hurdles. Left — Senior Kevin Higdon, right, and junior Robby Pierce lead the field in the steeplechase during a dual meet with Southern Illinois University. Higdon won the race in 9:17.9 and Pierce finished third in 9:22.3.

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IU survives a .500 season

Below — Torn Rogers, a senior, team captain and number one single returns a serve during a home meet. Rogers finished the season with a 11-13 record. Jeff Greene

he Scott Greer era of tennis at IU is over. Greer completed his final T year at IU, guiding the Hoosiers to an even 13-13 campaign. Greer came to Indiana in July of 1972 and led the Hoosiers to instant success, as the 1973 Hoosier netters finished 19th nationally. In both 1974 and 1977, Greer led the Hoosiers to second place finishes in the Big Ten. In nine seasons at Indiana, Scott compiled a 131-78 record, but failed to produce a Big Ten Champion. After the Hoosier netters of 1980 turned in an outstanding 18-4 dual mark, troops looked forward to the 1981 season with much optimism. Only one starter graduated and two good newcomers joined the camp. After jumping out to a quick 10-5 start, the Hoosiers met a mid-season dry spell. intensified by key injuries that saw them drop eight of their last eleven dual contests. Hoping to improve upon 1980's seventh place Big Ten finish, the Hoosiers lost all three doubles teams in the first round, en route to a sixth place tie with Illinois. Senior Tom Lockhart finished his career in style by placing second at the No. 5 singles slot, the highest Hoosier finish of the tourney. Junior Mike Dickinson added a third place at the No. 3 singles position to round out the Hoosier efforts. Despite a mediocre Big Ten finish, Coach Greer commented, "We probably finished about where we should have, but we lost those doubles matches early, and that really hurt us. If we had done as well as I thought we could, we might have sneaked up to fifth, or even fourth. With Greer's retirement, Indiana tennis begins a new era under Steve Greco, club pro at the Aurora (Ill.) Tennis Club, Greco hopes to turn around a faltering program that has not placed better than third in the Big Ten since 1977. Mike Wolinsky

310


Team ranks in Top 10 he IU women's tennis team had the best season of the team's hisT tory this year, achieving a 32-5 win-loss record and a No. 10 national ranking. The Hoosiers won three championships this year: the conference, the state and the regional. IU won the Big Ten women's tennis tournament this year for the second year in a row. IU routed tennis powerhouse Northwestern 7-2 for the title. Four team members were selected for the All-Big Ten team. IU's No. 1 doubles team, sophomore Heather Crowe and senior Tina McCall, and No. 2 doubles team, junior Bev Ramser and sophomore Jenny Snyder, each made All-Big Ten first team doubles. Crowe and McCall made first team singles. Snyder also was chosen for second team singles, making her the only No. 4 singles player to make either team. The Hoosiers won their fourth consecutive Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW) State Championship this year. IU defeated Purdue, Indiana State and Ball State in the tourney, losing only one of 18 singles matches in the process. Indiana also won the Midwest Regional AIAWs this year. Three Hoosiers were chosen to the all-region team by the regional coaches: Crowe, McCall and Ramser. In May, at the national AIAW championship tournament in Tempe, Ariz., IU was ranked No. 10 by the Women's Intercollegiate Tennis Association. "We're pleased to be in the top ten," said IU women's tennis coach Lin Loring, after the rankings were announced. "Our goal at the start of the year was to be in the top 15.In a pre-tournament poll, the Hoosiers had a national ranking of No. 6. Crowe and McCall made it to the final eight in doubles competion at the AIAWs, but then lost to the University of Texas. Crowe was voted All-American in singles at the tournament, and she and McCall were voted All-American at doubles. 88 Emily Lawson

Pirjo Ojala, a freshman from Finland, practices in the fall at the Varsity Tennis courts. By season's end the IU tennis team had a 32-5 record and was ranked number 10 in the count?). Also, Coach Lin Loring was named Midwest Coach of the Year.

311


New coach. takes over .1

t wasn't the action on the golf course as much as the action off of it, which highlight the IU women's golf season. A solid performance by senior Mamie McClure was overshadowed by a change in coaches for the team. Bruce Cohen started the fall season as coach, but Sam Carmichael, club pro at the Martinsville Country Club, took over for the spring half of the season. Cohen said he resigned after he had a "falling out" with IU Associate Athletic Director for Women's Athletics, Isabella Hutchinson. McClure paced the Hoosiers through every meet in the fall half of the season. She lead IU to a fourth place finish in the Midwest AIAW Golf Championships. McClure and Lynn DeSmet, a junior, shared fourth place. But the play behind McClure was often inconsistent. One tournament, Maria Sera, a junior, would play well, and DeSmet would play poorly; the next tournament might find just the opposite. Carmichael probably looked for some consistency in his squad when he took over in the spring season, and he found it in the play of Jan Kleiman, a sophomore. She had the lowest stroke average on the team for the spring season. Kleiman had an 82 average, just passing McClure, who had an 82.1 stroke average. The Hoosiers started the spring season with a 22nd place finish in the Lady Paladin Golf Tournament. In May the Hoosiers placed sixth in the Big Ten Championships led by McClure 11th place finish. The Hoosiers finished the season with a 14th place finish in the Lady Kat Invitational, Kleiman led the team with a 41st place finish. OR Blair Clajlin Right — Concentrating on her stroke, senior Mamie McClure putts the ball during practice at the IU golf course. Above — Members of the IU golf team, Mamie McClure, Monique Bernard, Debbie Bullard, Lynn DeSmet, Elana Larrazabal, Karen Marencyk. Jan Kleinman and coach Sam Carmichael.

312

photos Jot. Kos


Season improves team hroughout the 1981 spring golf season, the IU men's golf team T found itself chasing Ohio State. The Hoosiers ended the season only one stroke behind Ohio State at the Big Ten golf tournament, almost enough to catch the Buckeyes, but not enough to allow IU to continue in post-season action. IU started out the spring season with a sixth place finish in the Auburn JuniorSenior Tournament in March. Then the Hoosiers finished 14th in the Southeastern Intercollegiate Tournament in early March. After that it was on to the Kepler Invitational where the Hoosiers had broken Ohio State's six-year hold on the tourney title in 1980. This year they could only manage a seventh place finish, 69 strokes behind champ Ohio State. After that, IU coach Bob Fitch said, "We need a lot of work." It looked like it. After the Kepler, senior Tim Koressel had the lowest team average with a 76.2. The Michigan Invitational followed and -IU finished in first place. They won over Big Ten competitors, Michigan, Minnesota, Michigan State, Wisconsin and Northwestern. Fitch was happy with the team's performance, and the team lowered it average to under 75. The week after, IU finished third in the Northern Invitational which marked the emergence of freshman Jeff Cook. IU was 24 off the pace of victory Ohio State. The Hoosiers finished only nine strokes behind the Buckeyes at the Sparten Invitational. That was the last regular season tournament, before the Big Tens. In the Big Tens, Koressel finished the four-day tournament with the fourth best total. The scores improved since March. Cook finished with a 74.1, senior Yves Tremblay had a 74.6, senior Gary Stickly had a 74.5, Koressel had a 74.4, sophomore David Thomas had a 74.8 and Senior Eric Kaufmanis had a 75.7. 88 Eric Benmour

photos Joe Kus

Top — Senior Eric Kaufmanis, right, jokes about the putt missed by teammate, sophomore David Thomas, during a practice session. Above —Judging the accuracy of his shot, senior Eric Kaufmanis, was practicing his chip shot on the ninth hole of the IU golf course.

313


Hoosiers denied in tourney he women's softball team came into the 1981 season as the runT ners-up in the national softball tournament. They were the defending Big Ten champions and had finished second in the Redbird Invitational the year before. But the Hoosiers' hopes for another successful season were doused by rains and the fact that the team couldn't qualify for the national AIAW tournament. One analogy to the season may have been the four-game series that IU played with Texas A & M. On the season-opening road trip to Texas in March, the Hoosiers lost twice to Texas, 4-0 and 4-1. IU played the Texas team again, this time before the Indiana Invitational in late April. IU, then ranked No. 8 in the country, defeated Texas A & M, then No. 2 in the nation, 1-0. In the invitational, Texas A & M defeated the Hoosiers 2-1 in the bottom of the first extra inning. The Hoosiers had finished in second place at the Redbird Invitational on the campus of Illinois State (Normal, Ill. ) for the past two years, and IU was looking to take the Invitational. But rains cancelled the event and was out of luck. Even the Big Tens could not help IU. The Hoosiers had won it in 1980, but in 1981 they finished in a tie for sixth place. But there was one last hope: the regionals and nationals. IU finished in third place in the Midwest Regional tournament and afterward received an at-large berth to the national AIAW championships in Norman, Okla. in late May. It was all set: an awful season and a chance to forget it all in the nationals. In fact, IU was set to play Texas A & M again. What could be better? Unfortunately, a protest filed by defending champs Utah State knocked the Hoosiers out of the tournament. The protest was based on a rule only allowing three teams from each region to go to the nationals. The AIAW decided that Illinois State should go and IU should stay home. Individual performances, however, made up for some of the frustration. Senior

314

catcher-pitcher Diane Stephenson was named to the AIAW All-American team. Stephenson was the first IU woman to receive a softball scholarship at IU, and was the first to be named to the All-American team. Not only did she catch and hit a teamleading .359, but she also had a 10-2 record as a pitcher. In addition, she had a .940 career fielding percentage.

The other leading pitcher was senior Pam Amabile, who finished with a 13-9 record. The other leading hitters, behind Stephenson, were senior Jan Scholl at .330 and Freshman Linda Allen at .300. 8f), Eric Benmour


Larry Levin

Jeff Morehead

Top — First baseman Trish Tapley grimaces as she catches the ball in time to get an Indiana State opponent. The Hoosiers beat ISU, 4-0, to win the Indiana AIAW Championship. Top Left — Meg Seng, a senior, applauder her teammates as they accept the award for winning the Indiana AIAW Championship. Above — Members of the women's softball team brave a chilling wind during the April game against Purdue. Right — Pam Amabile, a senior, pitched a four hit shutout to help her team win the Indiana AIAW Championship. She compiled a 13-8 win-loss record in her final season.

315


Hoosiers building with new coach ]c8 toa he id

he IU baseball team ended its seas on with a 23-25-1 record, T finishing under .500, as it has since 1976, when it was 23-17. But IU baseball coach Larry Smith wasn't satisfied with a season in which the team tied a school record for most wins in a year. Why? Because Smith isn't used to losing. Before coming to IU, Smith coached at Texas Wesleyan (Fort Worth, Texas), where in seven years he had a 233-95 record and a .710 winning percentage. From 1972 to 1977, Wesleyan was ranked in the Top 10 nationally. That is not to say that Smith was totally disappointed with the season. "The big thing was the players never gave up," he said. "Sometimes they were out-manned, but they never gave up. I saw them make great strides from September to now. When I consider some of the players that are coming back next year, I get excited." Some of those players had outstanding years in which they tied or broke IU baseball records. One was junior outfielder Bob Waite, a Big Ten first team selection. His 52 runs smashed the old record of 34, his season batting average of .437 put him second on the IU season-batting-average list, his 66 hits broke the old record of 54 and his 11 doubles put him second on the all-time list. The team was not without problems, though. In many games IU would give up a big lead and lose the game. Against Purdue, for example, IU gave up 10 runs in the second inning and lost, 12-3. Smith attributed this problem to a lack of winning. "When you're not used to winning, confidence is so important in how you take a lead or give up a lead,' he said. "There's pressure involved in winning. Confidence gives you the freedom to do your own thing from the beginning to the end. And our kids struggled with this." IU also struggled with its pitching. The team finished the season with a combined ERA of 5.96 (versus 5.54 for IU's oppo-

316

nents) and an ERA of 7.57 for Big Ten competition (versus 4.46). IU finished with a 5-9-1 Big Ten record, 51/2 back of No. 1 Michigan. IU finished eighth in team batting (.263) in final Big Ten statistics. It finished ninth in team pitching (7.57 ERA) and tied Ohio State for sixth in team fielding. IU has not won the Big Ten title since

1949 and it never has won the national title. But that does not lessen Smith's optimism for taking IU to a top 10 national ranking, like he did with Texas Wesleyan. "It has to be proven to me it can't be done," he said. "I definitely like our potential.Eric Benmour


Far Left — IU pitcher Bob Hicks keeps his eyes on the ball as it rifles towards the strike zone of a Butler University opponent in April. Left — IU second baseman, Howie Pattis, tagged an Anderson College opponent during the second game of a double header. IU won both games, 2-1 and 5-1 . Below — Outfielder Jim Bradley dives for the safety of the first base bag during a game against Butler University. Michel duCille

ke4102ksl44 317


IM provides over 65 activities Right — Jerry Mayes goes over the outstretched arms of Jim Brugenschmidt during the Championship intramural basketball game. Below — Sigma Alpha Epsilon sophomore Jim Fissinger and Doug Smith, celebrate after Fissinger scored thefirst goal of the intramural all-campus final at Woodlawn field. SAE beat the independent team, Mr. Narutral, 2-1. Phil Sears

Brian Reynolds


Paul Scudder Phil Sears

Top — Terry Miller, a member of the Phi Gamma Deltafraternity, gets a hit during the softball finals. The Fijis finals of the all defeated the team called Traveling All-Star Show in one extra inning by one run. Left — Jim Bruggenschmidt, a Wendy's team member, pulls down a rebound against David Carmichael of the dormitory team, Magee II. Wendy's won the game 59-46, to retain the championship for another year.

319


Jeff Morehead

Top — Victorious Tri-Delts express their elation at

winning the intramural women's football playoffs, allowing them a shot at the championship. Above — A member of the Tri-Delt football team rushes past her own sideline to evade being tackled during the women's intramural playoffs. Right — Tri-Delt football team members prepare for the next play.

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Men's Flag Football

1. Sigma Nu

Women's Flag Football

Keg Belly Delta Delta Delta

Men's Soccer

Sigma Alpha Epsilon Mr. Naturals

Women's Soccer

Delta Zeta Bryan II Bomber Babes

Men's Cageball

1. Puffs Fragrant Weeds 2. Delta Tau Delta Women's Cageball

1. Alpha Chi Omega 2. Misfits Minature Golf

1. Dale Albertson, Patty Albertson 2. Terri Garrison, Mike Greenstein Frisbee

1. Gary Dern, Stephan

Madson, Tod P rson 2. Stephen Madso , Dave Leath, David Hope, Todd Pierson

1. Kappa Alpha Theta

Co-Intramural Jogging

Co-Intramural Bowling 1. Alpha Epsilon A/Sigma Delta Tau

Co-Intramural Tennis

1. Loren Martin, Kenny Strong

1. Jason Levitt, Angela Mathias

Men's Racquetball Doubles

Women's Racquetball Doubles Karla Quinton, Jeff Poff Julie Schwem, ally Keim 1. Sally Derengoski, Kathy Steffey Men's Intermediat Tennis Men's Handball Doubles Curtis Ono 1. Mark Desmond, Greg Brad Case Martin Women's Tennis Men's Tennis Doubles Jody Hendryx 1. Jack McArdle, John Julie Schwem Carlson Women's Intermed ate Tennis Women's Tennis Doubles Laurie Pehrson 1. Linda Rauch, Ruth Ann Jill Duncan Allen Women's Table Te nis Men's Table Tennis Doubles Nancy Pugliese 1. Anthony Jones, Charles Diane Hunter Dobson Women's Racquet II Women's Table Tennis Barbara Bielski Doubles Jeannie Barr 1. Bev Schwarz, Carol Co-Intramural Racquetball Rademaker Paul Lipson, Sharon Brody Men's Softball Andy Brown, ary Helen Phi Gamma Delta B Irvine T. A. S. S. Golf Women's Softball Individual: Jay Sti ebaugh Skidmarks Team: Over The ill Gang Thompson 3 Men's Basketball Co-Intramural Softball Wendy's Snapper Turtles Kappa Alpha Psi Tequila de Oro Women's Basketb 1 Men's Kickball Hopeless Doz Thompson 4 Minks Dejoya II Thompson 4 Weasels Co-Intramural Ba ketball Sorority Kickball Wilkie 919 Kappa Alpha Theta Undecideds Delta Gamma Men's Billiards Independent/Residence Hall 1. Ramon EsquivOl Kickball 2. Eddie Williams Prairie Dogs Women's Billiards Harper 7 1. Martha Egger Men's Water Polo 2. Vicky Hensley Fred's Deli Co-Intramural Billiards Alpha Tau Omega 1. Alpha Epsilon Pi/Sigma Women's Water Polo Delta Tau 1. Space Invaders 2. Co-op Shockw ves 2. MRC Men's Bowling Men's Basketball Freethrow 1. Curry 5 Jeff Nelson Women's Bowling Pat Lindlay

Women's Basketball Freethrow

Linda Angell Lois Johnson

Men's One-On-One Basketball

Greg Evans Robert Goshen

Women's One-On-One Basketball

1. Lois Johnson

Track and Field: Men's Long Jump

1. Jody Jarecki

Women's Long Jump

1. Michelle Yates

Men's High Jump

1. Peter Arato

Women's High Jump

1. Tina Osting

Men's Shot Put

1. Bob Brunnelli

Women's Shot Put 1. Elizabeth Taylor Men's Mile

1. George Medler

Women's Mile

1. Marianne Guiney

Men's 70 Low Hurdles

1. Brad Wood Women's 70 Low Hurdles 1. Dani Schneider Men's 100 Yd. Dash 1. Jim Weniberg Women's 100 Yd. Dash

1. Lynn Hays

Men's 440 Yd. Dash

1. Peter Arato

Women's 440 Yd. Dash

1. Michelle Yates

Men's 880 Yd. Dash

1. Gary Smith

Women's 880 Yd. Dash

1. Cathy LaBracke

Men's 220 Yd. Dash

1. Stuart Sims

Women's 220 Yd. Dash

1. Chris Smalley

Men's 2-Mile Run

1. George Medler

Women's 2-Mile Run

1. Shelly Weber

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Martin wins title he crowd was sparse, but the Seventh Annual Mr. IU contest T was one of the best-performed contests, according to Carl Lamb, IU Weightlifting Club president and contest organizer. The contest was an all-day affair. Seven contestants spent the morning showing the judges their well-toned bodies. The five judges, including Marc Bennett, Mr. USA 1980 and Mr. Indiana 1981, had to decide awards in catagories such as Most Muscular, Best Legs, Best Arms and Best Chest, as well as Mr. IU. In judging, the pose is the deciding factor. "Adjusting the pose to fit your body type is most important," said participant Wayne Martin. During the intermission, the IU Weightlifting Club sponsored a bench press contest. Over 40 participants, including three women, competed for trophies in various weight classes. Also, Marc Bennett gave a demonstration. The second half of the Mr. IU contest was mainly for show; the judges already had made their decision. Wayne Martin, a junior forensics and computer science major was named Mr. IU. Martin did not really decide to enter the competition until the morning of the contest. The 5-foot-9, 190 pound body builder has been lifting weights for the past three-years. This was the fourth time he competed in a body building contest. "There really isn't a normal way to pose. I just do it on my own, look at pictures of others who have the same body type and imitate and adjust the pose to fit my body, - he said. Martin started to lift weights in high school because he was "always skinny." Besides winning the Mr. IU title, Martin also won the trophies for best arms, legs, chest and most muscular. The second place winner was Dan Winship, third was Steve Barth, fourth was Keith Murray and fifth Ron Morris. 88 Larry Levin

322

photos Jeff Morehead


Top Left — Wayne Martin, a junior, poses for the judges and fans at the Mr. IU contest. "I like to excite the people and impress the judges," said the 5-foot-9 190 pound winner. Left — All of the seven contestants match up for the judges. The seventh annual Mr. IU Contest was held at the University Middle School. Above — Putting a light coat of baby oil or suntan lotion is the final step before appearing on stage. Keith Murray, left, and Brad Chitty apply oil to their body so that the lights will highlight muscle tone.

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Mike Harkrader

ike Harkrader has done more for the IU football program than his statistics indicate. True, Harkrader is IU's all-time leading rusher with 3,257 yards and fourth in career touchdowns with 19. But Harkrader is a person whose middle name should be desire. He has rebounded from two broken legs and numerous knee injuries. IU football coach Lee Corso said he has never seen a player with a bigger heart than Harkrader. Pain or no pain, Harkrader would go out every Saturday and devote all his energies to the good of the team. Harkrader has gained more yards on sheer second effort, than, many players gain throughout their college careers. Harkrader stands 5-foot-7. His knees are scarred from many operations. His legs creak and snap in the morning as nagging pain in his constant companion. In 1976, Harkrader became the first freshman in Big Ten history to run for more than a 1,000 yards. Harkrader was redshirted the next season while having knee surgery. In 1978, he ran for 880 yards. But in 1979, his 807 yards led the team to their first winning season in 11 years with an 8-4 record and a Holiday Bowl Championship beating undefeated Brigham Young, 38-37, for the Hoosiers' first bowl victory. Harkrader closed his senior year with 567 yards. His biggest day was against Ohio State, where his father Jerry, was the Buckeye's starting halfback in the mid-fifties. Harkrader gained 117 yards but the Hoosiers lost 27-17. It was an emotional day for both Harkraders.88

Bruce Martin


Shawn Spence


t [eschbach II 0

Robe

obert Meschbach performed in 1980. The IU soccer star concluded his senior season by leading the Hoosers to the number two spot in the NCAA. Meschbach, a native Chicagoan, was named to the 1980 All-American Soccer Team and led the Hoosiers in scoring. Meschbach teamed with junior Armando Betancourt to form the most powerful two-man scoring attack in college soccer. Meschbach's speed proved to be his greatest asset. After three seasons of injuries, disappointments and performances below his reputation, Meschbach put everything together in a single season for IU. He led the team in scoring and ended his IU career by scoring two goals in the final game of the season to put him second in career scoring. He passed Angelo DiBernardo, now a professional soccer player. Meschbach's five goals in IU's 9-0 victory over Cincinnati tied him for the single game scoring mark with four other Hoosiers. Not only was Meschbach prolific, but he was also spectacular. In IU's 2-0 regular season victory over Penn State, he took a Betancourt pass at midfield, sped by the defense and face Penn State goalie Angelo Nickas. Meschbach lofted the ball over Nickas, who helplessly watched it bounce 20 yards into the goal for the NCAA's goal of the week. Meschbach was the first choice in the Major Indoor Soccer League draft, picked by the Chicago Horizons. However, he was the first pick of the Ft. Lauderdale Strikers in the North American Soccer League, the team he signed with. 88

Jim Slater

326



Pam Strickland he IU women's gymnastics team had some problems this year. Some of its equipment broke down in a meet with Ball State and the Indiana AIAW gymnastics meet was protested because of the officiating. The team also suffered from numerous injuries during the year. In such a season it's nice to have an athlete the rest of the team can look to for stability and steadiness. That was Pam Strickland for the IU women's gymnastics team. Strickland vaulted, did floor exercise and competed in the all-around competition. But she specialized in the vaulting and floor exercises. She was a hard worker who practiced three hours a day, five days a week. She said she worked out to keep her mind off of all the school work she had to do, but she was a good student, who won the Varsity Club's scholastic achievement award her senior year. Her coach, Diane Schulz said, "She is a born leader. Pam is a competitive, unique and dependable person." Her senior year she was team captain and a stablizer fbr the team. Throughout her years at IU she proved she deserved the scholarship she was offered at IU. She set IU records in the vault, floor exercises, all-around and balance beam. And though those records were later broken Strickland will be remembered for other things. "Pam gets better every meet," Schulz said. "There is an amazing difference between her performance now and her freshman year." Even though Strickland will not continue gymnastics as a profession (her major was marketing) she said she would like to continue gymnastics as a hobby. Perhaps in judging or scoring. 328

Eric Benmour



Rob Bollinger hen the 1981 swim season began, junior diver Rob Bollinger predicted that the National Collegiate Athletic Association diving championship would come down to himself, teammate Niki Stajkovic and Iowa's Randy Ableman. His crystal ball was perfect. His diving was close to it. Bollinger finished a season-long battle with Ableman at the NCAA Swimming and Diving Championship in Austin, Texas. Bollinger won the NCAA three-meter diving title and narrowly lost the one-meter competition to Ableman. Bollinger led the one-meter entering his final dive, but did poorly, and fell to fourth. The Rockford, Illinois native came back from that heartbreaker to win the three-meter dive in much the same way, as Ableman missed his final dive. Bollinger's forward two-and-a-half with two twists put him on top in the final round. Bollinger became the first NCAA swimming or diving champion from IU in four years. The last IU NCAA winner was Brian Bungum, who also won the three-meter diving event. Bollinger's championship season was also highlighted by a Big Ten title on the three-meter dive. The competition with Ableman at the Big Tern Meet was similar to the NCAA battle. Ableman took the one-meter championship. Bollinger feels his main asset in diving has been his trampoline experience as a youth. He turned to diving to get a college scholarship and IU diving coach Hobie Billingsley is still smiling over the investment. 86 . 330

Jim

Slater


.


Nate Lundy ou could say that Nate Lundy was always ahead of his time. Each time he set foot on the track during the 1981 outdoor season, the senior hurdler and sprinter lowered his times in his main events — the 110-meter hurdles and the 400-meter intermediate hurdles. Lundy qualified for the NCAA championships in his first time out in the 400 intermediate hurdles with a time of 50.65 in the Sunshine Relays in Talahassee, Florida, March 20. And it was all downhill from there. Lundy chopped times of his performances left and right, running a career best 49.49 in the 400 intermediate hurdles in the Drake Relays. He defeated his nemesis, David Lee of Southern Illinois, the 1980 NCAA champion, in that race. Lundy made a clean sweep later in the season, qualifying for the NCAA finals in the two other events. He ran a 13.96 in the 110-meter high hurdles in the Indiana Intercollegiate meet at Billy Hayes Track April 18. And he was a member of the 1,600 meter relay team that qualified and set a new IU record at the Drake relays with a time of 3:05.29. Lundy continued to set records at the Big Tens. He won the 400-meter intermediate hurdles with a track record time of :49.92. He also won the 100-meter high hurdles with a time of :13.95. He finished his season at the nationals by taking a fifth place in the 400-meters hurdles with a time of 50.25. Lundy, also was a wide receiver for the IU football team. In the 1980 season he gained 459 yards, scored four touchdowns and was nicknamed Dr. Deep for his long receptions. The longest was 75 yards. Lundy a most versatile athlete has left his mark at IU. Sherri Fishman

332



Tina McCall

U women's tennis player Tina McCall finished her senior year with an impressive win-loss record and an All-American doubles title. McCall came fo IU three years ago, after starting her college career at the private Shorter College located in Rome, Georgia. McCall compiled a 15-0 record at Shorter but then transferred the next year to Seminole Community College and gave up tennis for awhile. The tennis coach at Seminole, Larry Castle, began sending out letters about McCall to schools with good tennis programs, and McCall was recruited eventually by IU. Despite hand and elbow problems that sometimes caused her to switch her racquet from one hand to the other during competitions, McCall finished the year with honors. She won the Big Ten at No. 2 singles, the Midwest regional tournament at No. 2 singles and the state Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for women (AIAW) at No. 2 singles. McCall also won the Big Ten at Nc 1 doubles, with her partner, sophomore Heather Crowe. McCall sat out of the state and regional doubles because of injuries. Another important competition that she was forced to watch from the sidelines due to injuries was the national AIAW singles tourney. McCall bowed out of the invitation — only championships in order to rest a troublesome elbow for the doubles competition. McCall and Crowe then made it to the final eight of the national AIAW doubles before being eliminated. McCall made first team All-Big Ten at singles and doubles this year. She also was picked for the All-Regional team for the Midwest Region number five. She finished the year with a singles record of 32 wins, 6 losses and a doubles record of 24-7. "Her win-loss record speaks for itself," says IU women's tennis coach Lin Loring. "Tina had a very good 334 year." 88

Emily Lawson


4


Indoor: 34 1st 4th Outdoor: 1st

12 18 36 18 13 17 20 22 38 33 24 25 24 26 25 38 35 47 25 27 22

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Illinois Triangular

Nebraska SIU-Edwardsville Michigan State Wisconsin Minnesota Ohio State Illinois Indiana Central Taylor North Dakota State Tennessee/Chatt. Indiana State Eastern Illinois Illinois State Ball State Northwestern Cincinnati SIU-Carbondale Miami Purdue Sixth Big Ten Championship

7-9 6-1 10 6-7 3-8 1-3 0 2-5 4 11-13 10-16 3-16 4-4 7 5 5 2-5 4-0 3-11 2-1 4-1 7-3 3 1-15 5-11 6-7 4-2 4-7 3-11 3-8 0-1 12 3 9 3 3 2-5 6-2 5-18 4 3

Wisconsin Home Meet Big Ten

35 19 13 20 19 27 23 22 6 13 14 14 11 14 15 6 15 4 17 12 16

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touisvi le Bellarmine St. Louis St. Louis Texas/Arlington TCU Midwestern North Texas State Texas Wesleyan Texas Wesleyan St. Joe Notre Dame Louisville Butler Butler Purdue Anderson Purdue Wright State Michigan Michigan Indiana State Kentucky Michigan State Michigan State Evansville Ohio State Ohio State

Sam Houston Texas A&M Baylor Stephan F. Austin UNC MSU Oklahoma St. WIU WIU Purdue Northwestern MSU St. Francis MSU Michigan Ball State Texas A&M Kent State St. Louis Illinois State SIU Texas A&M Illinois State ISUE Ball State ISU CM U Illinois State WM U MSU First Indiana AIAW Championship Third Regional AIAW Championship

9-5 3-5 3 5-5 6-14 2-7 5 3-1 5 5-6 6-6 4-14 3-7 11 5 5 1-1 3-12 1-0 6-8 3-9 4-9 7 6-2 10-10 4-8 8-3 5-5 4-3 2-3 4-4 4 1 8 5 4 1-4 2-0 0-2 1 2 3 5 5

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9 9 7 8 9 8 9 8 8 5 5 1 1 5 4 6 8 5 6 7 5 6 6 6 7 6 9 9 9 8 7 2 6 3

75 59 66 64 94 83 65 56 51 55 57 60 55 78 52 67 53 93 56 69 89 66 86 59 65 74 74 98 69 69 99 87 78 67 63

Pittsburgh Ohio State Iowa Arkanasas Southern Methodist Michigan Michigan State Purdue Illinois Cincinnati Wisconsin Indiana State Second Big Ten Championships 14th NCAA Championships

37 35 46 36 52 53 50 39 38 46 55 49

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DePauw Purdue Northwestern Ohio State Louisville Michigan State Western Michigan Michigan Iowa South Carolina North Carolina Trinity Southern California Florida Miami Wisconsin Minnesota Northwestern Ohio State Miami of Ohio Michigan Purdue Michigan State Michigan Northwestern Purdue Indiana State Ball State Western Michigan Michigan State Northwestern Florida Princeton Miami First Big Ten Championship First Indiana AIAW Championship First Midwest AIAW Championship Tenth National AIAW Championship

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69 41 68 68 58 47 56 65 44 50 58 66

43 61 55 41 60 56

56 53 I 61 64 68 52 52 78 63 58 83 66 48 64 72 46 49 50


57 61 75 67 66 47 62 65 78 58 63 51 43 78 90 79 81 89 67 66 61 72 82 67 76 70 58 81 89 77 56 60 65 87 61 54

6th tie 14th 7th 1st 3rd 2nd 3rd

7 36 49 31 24 17 35 0 7 26 23

Morehead State Cincinnati Southern Illinois Dayton Kent State Illinois State Kentucky Pittsburgh DePaul East Carolina Pittsburgh Virginia Temple Massachusetts Marshall Florida State Florida South Florida Ball State Michigan State Ohio State Michigan Western Michigan Miami of Ohio Wisconsin Purdue Northwestern Illinois-Chicago Circle Michigan State Northwestern Ohio State Louisville Detroit Ball State Purdue Ohio State First Cincinnati Classic Fourth Big Ten Championship First Indiana AIAW Championship

34 54 61 58 67 67 93 70 54 59 64 58 36 77 59 76 51 47 59 58 42 68 72 70 86 62 74 87 71 78 58 66 67 58 47 60

Iowa Kentucky Colorado Duke Wisconsin Ohio State Northwestern Michigan Minnesota Illinois Purdue

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28 231/2 10 1/2 62 1/2 271/2 8 46 44 421/2 25 85

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66

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Notre Dame Miami Oral Roberts Illinois State IUPUI Illinois Wabash Notre Dame Illinois State Ball State Valencia Rollins Seminole Flagler Middle Tennessee Minnesota Wisconsin Illinois Purdue Southern Illinois Northwestern Iowa Michigan State Michigan Indiana State Ohio State Sixth-tied Big Ten Championship

1

Indiana State Ball State Cincinnati Wisconsin Drake Morehead State Purdue Notre Dame Indiana State Ball State Tennessee Big Ten Indoor Championship NCAA Indoor Championship Southern Illinois Michigan Indiana Intercollegiate Big Ten Championships NCAA Championship

102

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Auburn Junior-Senior Southwestern Intercollegiate Kepler Intercollegiate Michigan Invitational Northern Intercollegiate Spartan Invitational Big Ten Championships

0 2 6 0 1 1 1 1 0 1 1 4 0 4 2 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0

Southeast Missouri St. Louis Eastern Illinois Notre Dame Alumni Game Indiana State Illinois State Southwest Missouri St. Taylor Purdue Central Illinois Club Lockhaven State Ball State Penn State Iowa Wisconsin Northwestern Eastern Kentucky Bluegrass Assoc. Bluegrass Assoc. Louisville Indiana State Purdue Midwest AIAW Regional: Miami (Ohio) Ist in State 4th in the Big Ten

3 1 4 5 0 2 0 1 4 0 3 0 1 0 4 2 2 3 2 1 3 1 1

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62 71

128.45 115.65 112.60 137.15 124.90

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225.25 229 225.95 236.79 240.35 237.20 233.95 246.75 243.95

Kentucky Invitational Eastern Michigan IU Invitational Big Tens

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Miami (Ohio) Purdue Purdue Eastern Illinois U. of Missouri Southern Illinois U. of Iowa Western Illinois Western Illinois Indiana State U. of S. Carolina UNC/Chapel Hill Northern Kentucky UT/Martin Eastern Kentucky Miami (Ohio) Northern Kentucky Western Michigan Ball State Ball State U. of Cincinnati Illinois State U. of Miami (Fla.) U. of Alabama Rutgers U. of Illinois Purdue U. of Iowa U. of Minnesota Bowling Green Cleveland State Northern Colorado U. of Michigan Northern Colorado Miami (Ohio) Lewis U. Ball State Northern Kentucky Cleveland State Northern Kentucky Indiana AIAW Championship

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Illinois Wheaton Indiana State Wisconsin/Oshkosh Ball State Iowa Ohio State Eastern Kentucky Michigan State Wisconsin Tenth Big Ten Championships

262.50 187 241.30 239.75 228.01 259 269.10 231.90 261.60 249.70

Southern Methodist North Texas State Connecticut Purdue Penn State Portland SIU-E Western Michigan Akron Notre Dame St. Louis Cincinnati Michigan State Ohio State Eastern Illinois Wisconsin-Milwaukee Cleveland State Ball State Evansville ISU-Evansville Dayton Wisconsin Cleveland State Penn State Hartwick San Francisco Second NCAA Championship

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First Row — (left to right on Ko man, Scott McKnight, Todd McAnly, Jef Richards, Tom Jurgonski, Tony Siderits, Jeff Stanton. Second Row — Bill Beck, Rick Ferrie, Mike Portlese, Ted Dunbar, David Huber, Rick Rafanello.

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Briscoe 4A

First Row — (left to right) Chris Lang, Mike Smith, Tim Fallen, Phil Spottiswood, Eric McKeever, Mike Goldfarb, Theofolis Galoozis, Jud Fuchs, Jeff Cook. Second Row — Bob Strawer, Jim Miller, Wayne Ewing, David Smith, Devon McGuire, Scott Lesile, Terry Smith Third Row — Jeff Lane, Mark Cage, Damon Baker, Mike McLalarid, Yosiyuki Tashaki, Mike Zimmerman, kraly Kelner, Mike Bralski.

340


Briscoe 5A

First Row — (left to right) Bill Funk, Bill Cole. Second Row — Scott Andree, Mike Howard, Steve Smith, John Furgenson, Tim Ramberger, Fred Jones, Bob Russel, Warren White. Third Row — Dean Nugard, Larry Balverdt, Lee Woodward, Chris Brown, Dan Olds, Tony Bell, Hal Ritter, Bruce Schumacher. Fourth Row — Lee Deeg, Mike Brown, Brett Rapapaort, _John Carson, Alan Burke, Ron Wilson, Mark Figel.

Briscoe 8A

First Row — (left to right) Patti Wang, Laura Manous, Patricia Reynolds, Anne Bustamente, Carrie Johnson, Karen Burk, Christine Hill, Brenda Peskin. Second Row — Barb Duncan, Julie Hall, Christy Curtis, Liz Rytel, Sally Windnagel, Karen Lucas, Dawn Kuhns, Jennifer Levin. Third Row — Shelley Mix, Stacey Bush, Marcy Braucht, Lisa Weaver, Margaret Dickenson, Jeanna Poloricek, Beth Sterling, Patti Van Deering, Becky Curtis.

341


Briscoe 9A

First Row — Shannon Mattingly, Sharon Hoffman, Shelly Barnes, Deb Earls. Second Row — Margaret Clements, Debbie Darby, Mary Jane Ruff, Jody Lynn, Linda Sobosan, Dannette Angermeyer, Sharon Gasper. Third Row — Barbara Gillis, Greta Wimmer, Rebecca Frieberg, Mary Maxwell, Kathy O'Brien, Jeniffer Ruf, Lisa Stein. Fourth Row — Sue Pepin, Tammy Kalinoski, Karen Naum, Lauri Hawkins, Tasha Trunk, Sandra Davidson. forma Cat alicr

Briscoe 10A

First Row — (left to right) Jeff Geralde, Jeff Williams, Tim Hoover, Michael Cushingberry, Jim Tritle. Second Row — Paul Graham, Tom Sibal, Alex Stone, Brad Moore, Mark Moore, Steve Jacobs, Mark Russo, Chris Miller, Pat Clough. Third Row — John Bellamy, Lonnie Johnson, Willie Bush, Tom Truman, Lon Lewis, Bill Reed, Gary Stickna. Fourth Row — Dennis Joyner III, Ben Julian, Carl Heckman, Robert Small, Bill Stack, Mike Wagner, Paul Wiseman, Tim Gleason .

342


Briscoe 1 1 A

First Row — Gwinn Eddings, Kathy Jackson, Diana Powers, Fay Whitney, Bonnie Pegg, Vickie Smith, Debbie Cassidy, Roberts Rankin. Second Row — Maria Blankenberger, Margaret Welsh, Belinda Reynolds, Teresa Chambers, Cathy Shaffer, Susan Benjamin, Mary Ann Holt, Mary Traub, Maggie Harazin, Miriam Melendez, Kristen Carlson, Clare Campbell, Toi Burns. Third Row — Kristen Bott, Andrea Eck, Julie Alfred, Theresa Bosetti, Linda Kucharski, Debbie Barry, Jean Raines, Theresa Past, Anne Schmidt, Kathy Ivanyo, Jennifer Gillen, Margaret Nutter, Cindy Rozzo.

Briscoe 1B

First Row — (left to right) Alexis Wright, Roni Mortemoyer, Pam Kesonovich. Second Row — Keri Adams, Lynn Kedik. Third Row— Marsha Houston, Tammy Bruner, Kathy Wellman, Amy Acton, Bonnie Shankle, Kathy Pencek.

343


First Row — (left to right) Rob Johnson, Rudi Marquez, Mike Pauly, Jeff Lancaster, Kevin Morris, Mark Fritz, Ted Simkins. Second Row – Greg Caruso, Tom Goode, Jeff Troup, George Towers, Dan Badger, Dave Westerhaus, Kurt Thiel, Todd Lawrence, Steve Rupenthal . Third Row — Bob Costo, Daon Walker, David Hunter, Pete Nugent, Mike Mott, Steve Davis, Frank Kenny, Dick Neumann, Dan Adamovich.

Briscoe 3B

First Row — (left to right) Tim Thomas, Jeff Helminiak, Tony Geiss, Andy Hallowell, Bruce Grwinski, Mark Murphy, Brian Burke. Second Row — Antonio Wiltberger, Wayne Malcolm, Scott Pearson, Richard Stevenson, Michael Newnham, John Gill, Michael Conway, David Simpson, Andrew Cohen. Third Row —John Guerretaz, Craig Kudea, Pat Hayes, Kevin Huckabone, Jon Feicke, Brad Case, Alex Christoff, Mark Clapper, Scott Locey, James Hale. Fourth Row — Robert Gjerswald, Keith Solbrig, Barron Orr, Michael Piotrowski, Mark Talbott, Robert Colter, Greg Austin, Pat Pipp, Melvin Hart. 344


Briscoe 4B

MO

First Row— (left to right) Susan Welsand, Pam Whitaker, Lynn Zuccarelli, Cheryl Kochl, Becky Stutsman, Kara Mason. Second Row — Cindly Randle, Natalie Jackson, Chris Smalley, Betsy Kosenka, Chris Ransdell, Nelie Lau, Maureen Schrader, Sharon Deatrick. Third Row — Mart Traub, Giselle Defourneaux, Alicia Bertolino, Yvonne Burress, Chris Ha er, Nancy Stortz, Sunda Obendo

Briscoe 6B /IN

First Row— (left to right) Kim Fuchs, Marian Hallanan, Debi Briner, Penny Reardon, Barb Carr, Deby Schepers, Sheri Mills, Tammy Meyers. Second Row — Cindy Hallows, Mandy Carey, Kim Hadley, Kathi Steele, Sandy Beuke, Bonnie Hurst, Beth Evans, Sue Britt, Ellen Miruck, Kelly Stafford, Annette Schnaufer, Cindy Heck, Eva Hylin, Anne McGeney.. Third Row — Sue Strongin, Suzanne Peackock, Pan Vos, Marianne Stitz, Kathy Rogers, Cindy Harper, Janice Perkins, Sue Short, Kathleen Laughlin. Fourth Row — Janelle Carow, Rhonda Wilson, Sue Rosenfeld, Sarah Bleeker, Beth Beutter, Maria Saro.

345


1 Briscoe 10B

First Row — (left to right) Wade Thrall, Tim Lankenau, Tom Yao, Dave Pullford, Ron Roberson, Shawn Parks. Second Row — Tim Snyder, Ted Wehrenberg, Mark Igney, John Fung, Mike Duke, Mike Clar, Mike Y onts, Todd Ryan, "Ox". Third Row—Steve Pankow, Bill Ray, Pat Terrell, Tom Pedauoli, Dwayne Eldridge, Dave Lee, Mark Roger, Randy Bennett. Fourth Row — Mike Strycker, Gary Lung, Paul Adams, Jeff Litetstine, Dave Hatfield, Gerry 0 Brien, Steve Chambers, Wayne Weaver.

Briscoe 11B

First Row — (left to right) Valerie Terschluse, Sara Weller, Jackie Smith, Sue Lebenson, Chris Waldroup, Eleanor Charlton, Cheryl Beck, Donna Del Priore. Second Row — Tracy Ryan, Kathy Ray, Chris Greenwalt, Ellen Starishevsky, Wilena Mines. Third Row — Tammy Wagner, Melanie Daniel, Deb Pribibki, Barb Dillingham, Robbin Rozhon, Felicia Hendrix, Micci Ferrare, Robin Curtis, Jane VanConey.

346


Briscoe 7B

First Row — (left to right) Cynthia Murphy, Jacquelyn Holm, Sarah Hoger, Carol Reynolds, Margaret McHugh, Sandra Grondziak. Second Row — Tamara Hamilton, Lolita Zwetter, Joan Przybylinski, Vickie Hearn, LaVerne Spencer, Sandra Ford, Delores McCool, Karen Austin. Third Row — Kimberly Brodsky, Kathleen Tierney, Catherine Hanlon, Susanne Morario, Melissa Haskell, Dawn McGinn, Gretchen Brickman, Kate Freehill, Elizibeth Deighton, Bridget Hughes, Patricia Mazurek, Laura Labeots. Fourth Row — Trudie Scott, Linda Patrick, Sandee Poole, Anne Springman, Laura Colbert, Sue Horvat, Macy Hargitt, Brigitte Weaver, Melissa Murin, Mary Barker, Susan Zavartkay.

44111111111111111111111111111■1111■11117

First Row — (left to right) Karin Mirolla, Debbie Weis, Betsy Boman, Stacey Johnson, Carolyn Green, Kris Miller, Karen Kovacik. Second Row—Alicia Broglin, Linda Clements, Kim Barrett, Melissa Kaman, Jennifer Small, Lisa Marshall, Janet MacKay, Kris Schmidt, Mary Gibbons, Kim Sullivan, Donna Evans. Third Row — Julie Pewell, Tammy Henke, Annette Schaekel, Linda Sanders, Lisa Scheele, Beth McCorlde, Diane Ilinn, Lise Melbye, Brenda Montgomery, Kathy Horvat.

347


U

Phi Beta Kappa

he Society of Phi Beta Kappa is the oldest academic Greek letter society in existence, having been founded in 1776 at T the College of William and Mary in Virginia. Throughout its long history Phi Beta Kappa has held as its primary objective the recognition of excellence in the academic performance of undergraduate students who are candidates for degrees in the liberal arts and sciences in American colleges and universities. There are at present 224 chapters of Phi Beta Kappa. Indiana University's Chapter, Gamma of Indiana, was established in 1911. 8

Aders, Katherine Anne Anderson, R. Christopher Angermeier, Kenneth Wayne Apsley, Raymond Kent Baker, Dan Micheal Barker, Jane Ellen Bax, Constance Christine Beach, Ann Marie Bea11, Scott Nelson Beiter, Mary L. Benard, Lisa Lea Blesener, Susan Claire Bodney, Stephan Anthony Bonser, Catherine Anita Brandeis, Jennifer Ruth Braunlin, Kathryn Diane Brenner, David Whitfield Broumand, Stafford Roy Brown, Renita Ann Burris, Kevin Dean Canon, David Theodore Chez, Michael Gene Chomski, Eri Christman, David Paul Collier, Lelia Anne Cotner, Kenneth R. Cottingham, Sandra Lee Cox, Mary Carol Creveling, Sandra Lee Criswell, Jeanne Sallade Crittenden, Jennifer Kay Cua, Cynthia Rose Lee Dalrymple, Deana Kim Davis, John Warren Day, Robert Leslie Deavel, C. Christine Deitch, Steven Douglas Dickey, Nancy Ann Dillon, Francis Xavier Dodd, Gregg R. Dolson, Patricia Draper, Mary Ann DuBois, Kent William Duff, Timothy A. Duncan, Brain Wayne Duren, Bruce R. Eby, Clare Virginia Echt, Gregory Allen Eckman, Catherine Ann Elliott, Sheila Anne

348

Eula, Tracey Ann Feikes, Steve Lee Findley, Keith Alan Fojtik, Carole J. Fridenmaker, Amy Gans, Susan Joanne Garmon, Joel Phillip Gibson, Jonny Lorraine Ginsburg, Janet Anne Goodwin, Steven Kent Gough, Mary Pauline Gray, Jeffrey Philip Greenberg, Andrew E. Greespon, James R. Griswold, G. Alan Gudkese, David Brian Hayward, William Chris Hoffman, Mary Margaret Hoke, Stephan Horwitz, Edwin Mark Howard, John Dale Hupfer, Janet Marie Hurt, Teresa Johnson, Edward Milton Johnson, Robert Christopher Jones, Marc Alan Judy, Mary Ballard Keller, James B. Kellum, Lynn Marie Kelly, Caitilin Ketcham, Kathleen A. Kline, Samuel Charles Kvale, Leslie Kaye LaBash, Michael Scott Lane, Charles E. Lathrop, Brian Keith Lawrence, Judith Lynn Ledger, Stephanie L. Lenn, Tracy Michelle Lilko, Robert John Loftus, Lee James Mabry, Robert Todd Manubay,James C. Martin, Julia Lee Martire, Ralph M. Marvin, Charles William Mayfield, Ethel Jean McChesney, Eileen Marie McCracken, Coleen Ann McKay, John Richard

McMahon, Gayles Marie Meek, Donna Jean Miller, Julayne Marie Moss, Rozann Mullin, Matthew B. Murray, Elizabeth A. Nill, Thomas George Nolan, Carol Aileen Nortillo, Susan L. O'Leary, Barbara Ann Olson, Kevin W. Ottenweller, Karen Edith Overfelt, Kara Jean Pachovas, Marina Parker, Janie Lynne Parker, Stephen G. Perugini, Francesca Pfister, Catherine Jean Pottschmidt, Janet Kay Pugliese, Nancy Jean Ray, Kent Stephen Reed, John Day id Robinson, Scott Francis Roush, Matt Sandy, John Leslie Scheid, David Daniel Schwartz, Steven Howard Scott, Kimberly Kay Sebacher, Sandra Lee Shannon, Randall James Sharp, Scott Michael Shirey, David Addison Siminski, James Thomas Simmonds, Scott Simmons, Sarah Jane Simpson, Juliet Elsie Smerk, Caroline Mary Smith, Sally Joan Sonner, Donna Evelyn Speer, Kevin Paul Steinhoff, Rin Christine Sturdevant, Debra Jo Tamkun, Mark Victor Tetzloff, Christine E. Tischler, Mark Daniel Van Der Pol, William, Jr. Ventresca, Laura Mary Viti, Debra Anne Walsh, James Paul Weir, Robert Howard

Wellman, Michael S. Weisman, Randy Sue Whiteman, Thomas Scott Wilhite, Jeffrey Alan Wininger, Anne Marie Withnell, Anthony J. Wolff, Brett David Wulfsberg, Rolf Wester Wyss, Susan K. Young, Michael Jay Zartmann, Andrew Duane Zdenek, Constance Jean


Originally a men's honorary, Blue Key honors a total of 35 juniors and seniors each November. Selection is based on leadership, scholarship, and service. Nominations are solicited from the faculty and the leaders of student organizations each fall.

Blue Key

First Row — (left to right) Gail Rissler, Kitty Aders, John Davis, Mindy Clawson. Carol G ray. Jeff Wilhite, Cyndee Graf. —. Second Row —Joyce Mulholland, Mark Oates, Nancy Pugliese, Deborah Bailey, , Mike Davis, Beth Coleman, Luke Teskey, John Talley, , John Weihe, Dave Evans, David Shirey, Jana Loudenback, Julie Hosier, Mary Dragoo . Third Row—Jeff Gray, Bob Loudermilk, , Dave Neumann.

Alpha Lambda Delta, a freshman honor society, serves to recognize outstanding scholastic achievement and to serve the University community.

Alpha Lambda Delta

First Row — (left to right) Mary Ellen Anderson, (advisor), Wendy Ohiogioju, Debbie Bennet, Jan Webber. Second Row — Chris Teeter, Bob Tolan, Steve Rappin.

349


Board of Aeons

First Row— (left to right)Mr . Peter A . Fr. aenkel, advisor; John McKay, Secretary; Steve Adams, President, Kimberly Brown, Vice-President, Greg Cozad, Treasurer. Second Row — Bob Loudermilk, Carol Gray, Kent Apsley, Mark Oates, Jim Tanner, Todd Huntley, Mary Beth Terschluse, Dave Neumann.

he Board of Aeons is a twelve member advisory group to current University Pres. John Ryan and his office. The members are selected on the basis of leadership, scholarship and faculty/ T administrative recommendations. The Board represents varied concern over the operations and business of the University, and regularly meets with administrators, faculty, and key student leaders to both gather information and to present their findings as input into current and future decisions.8c9

350


Pleiades honorary rewards past and fosters continuing scholarship, leadership, and service on the campus and in the community.

Pleiades

AP. First Row — (left to right) Andy Thomas, Scott Jones, Leah Ryan, Carol Haffner, Jane Voelkel, Sandy Clem, Charyl Regan, Tim King, Michelle Eisele, Kelly Bowen. Second Row — Dannett Cisowski, Shelley Irwin, Nishi Swarup, Mary Bishop, Christina Palmer, Laura Maish, Tammy Franke, Theresa Rader, Cathy Cook, Mary Morgan, Angela S treater, Barb Moorman. Third Row—Donna Segal, Gloria Hammes, Nancy Abramow, Michelle Chandler, Sue Chintes, Kathy Molitor, Cathy Zindich, Shari Owen. Fourth Row — Bernie Kemker, Terri Crouse, Lorraine Becker, Brian Graf, Curly Hanowski, Jill Zingler, Mike Jacobs, Bill J oy, Alan Spicer, Neil Funkhouser, Michael Luker, Tom Kkptz, Laura Russell, Wendy Chiagiaju, Donna Dillon, Cheryl Dishler, Janeen Thomas, Micki Maisischky, Cindy Harris, Cathy Carr, Kris Randall. Fifth Row — Chris Teeter, Yvonne Rich, Jim Vincent, Dave Cowen, Steve Bassett, Donna Williams, Mark Stein, Bruce Zuelly, Greg Payne, Alan Bercovitz, David W ilson, Erick Ponader.

The MENC, IU Chapter, has the second largest chapter, nearly 200, in the nation. The chapter is dedicated to promoting the finest quality of music education in American schools. They hosted the first National Convention this year.

Indiana University Music Educator's National Conference

First Row — (left to right) Robert Baca, Vice-President, Leslie Cengel, Undergraduate Representative, Marilyn Ergas, President, Leah Ryan, Secretary, Mark Eisele, Graduate Representative. Second Row — Dr. Robert Klotman, Chairman of Music Education, Drew Gorby, Publicity, David Lamb, Treasurer.

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Indiana Daily Student

Below Left — Tim Nicken was the spring news editor. His job was to place the words and pictures on each page. Above — The IDS newsroom is located in Ernie Pyle Hall.

arch 30, 1981 turned out to be anything but a typical news day. Indiana Daily Student staff members were devising their own game plan as the IU basketball team prepared for the title game in the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) M .... tourney. A half-dozen IDS reporters and photographers in Philadelphia were ready to capture the action on the court and in the stands. Staff members in Bloomington were set to canvass the streets and the bars in search of colorful comments from loyal fans. Editors were contemplating how to put it all together in a special four-page section devoted to the NCAA. Then the bells began ringing on the wire machines in the newsroom. Student journalists clustered around the teletypes and crowed into the conference room to watch ABC's videotape of the shooting and to hear Frank Reynolds recount what had happened outside a Washington hotel. The assassination attempt cast a pall over theIDS editorial offices as did over the nation as a whole. Staff members began revising their plans for the next morning's paper. The special NCAA section was scrapped as stories from Washington began streaming into theIDS' computer system. Staffers in Bloomington and Philadelphia waited anxiously for news of the President's condition and of the fate of the championship game. IDS The President survived and the Hoosiers won the game that almost was not played — and the newsroom was no less hectic than hundreds of others across the nation as reporters, editors and photographers worked feverishly and tirelessly to construct a complete and accurate account of the day's events. Although IDS staff members are students, they tackle the complex news of the campus, nation and world with as much gusto as their professional counterparts. The result most days is one of the best college newspapers in the country — a newspaper that frequently rivals "real" newspapers in news quality and quantity. Solid reporting, creative design, precise editing and compelling pictures have been the trademark of the IDS since it began serving the IU community 114 years ago. The paper has won the top two national awards bestowed on college newspapers: the Pacemaker in 1973 and 1980 and the Mark of Excellence in 1973 and 1979. Individual editors, reporters, photographers, artists, and advertising personnel have received dozens of awards in contests with other college journalists as well as with professionals. A judge in one contest called the IDS one of the nation's "premier" college dailies and said it compares favorably with some of the better professional newspapers. The IDS is a five-day-a-week paper with a circulation of 14,000. It has been free of interference from the faculty and administration since 1969, when a charter revision approved by the IU Trustees made the paper an auxiliary enterprise of the University. Nearly 150 student journalists edit, write, make pictures, sell ads and lay out the pages of theIDS . With an annual budget of nearly $1 million, theIDS provides students with the opportunity to write stories and make pictures, as well as the authority to make editorial decisions comparable to those made by fulltirne professionals. TheIDS isn't just student paper; it's a NEWSpaper. 353


Larry Levin

Above — (from left) Bridgette O'Connor, Secretary, Barb Redding, Assistant to the Publisher, Patrick Siddons, Publisher. Far Right — Michel duCille, senior, was a staff photographer during the spring and fall. His pictures have won many awards for the paper. Far Bight —All the copy that appears in the is edited through a computer. The copy desk has two editors and several people who help edit copy. Below — Curtis Krueger, a city reporter, takes notes over the phone for a story.

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IDS Production staff — Joan Cavanagh, Carol Wright, Systems Coordinator, Debbie Tappen, Tina Leathers, Lloyd Swango, Production Manager, Ben Smith.

355


First Row — (left to right) Leslie Kapel, Donna McGee. Jill Zengler, Kathy Pencek, Mindy Clawson, Robin Christie, Lou Benson, Marsha Miller. Second Row— Dave Neumann, Hank Westcott. Tom Kleptz, Bill Loftus, Terry Lolla, Joe Shoemaker, Jim Nelson, Tim King, Bruce Ward, Robby Farmer, Brad Wilks, Tim McNulty, Mike Lanham

First Row — (left to right) Kathy Pencek, External Affairs V.P.; Marsha Miller, Recreation Director; Jill Zengler, Communication V .P .; Lou Benson, Internal Affairs V .P .; Robin Christie, Research and Planning V.P. Second Row — Dave Neumann, RIIA President, Brad Wilks, Education V .P .; Pat Terrell, Summer RIIA President; Jim Nelson, Director of Student Services; Tim McNulty, Judicial Board Chairperson; Tim King, Orientation Director; Mike Lanham, MIA Treasurer.

356


Residence Halls Association ver 11,500 students lived in the Indiana University residence halls during the 1980-81 school year. Each was a member of the Residence Halls Association (RHA), ne of the largest and most important campus organizations. RHA provides students with an opportum to have input in determining how the halls are run, RHA legislates and coordinates inter-residence hall policies and function . Each of the ten undergraduate residence centers has its own student government that facilitates cultural, social and educatio ial programming in their respective center. The presidents of each center compose the Presidents' Council. The 1980-81 Presidents' Council was instrumental in setting many policy decisions that greatly affected the residents through effective programming during the year. The 1980 RHA Executive Council took office Deceni'her 13, 1979. Composed of seven individuals, the 1980 execs gained their strength by utilizing the diversity of the characteristic of each officer. The 1980 RHA president was David A. Neumann. Dave's fiver vice-presidents and treasurer were: Lou Benson, nternal-Affairs, Kathy Pencek, External-Affairs, Robin Christie, Research and Planning, Jill Zengler, Communications and Public Relations, Brad Wilks, Educational, and Mike Lanham, Treasurer. The executives in conjunction with the RI IA Presidents' Council were instrumental in achieving man y goals fiir RI IA. The Execs coordinated a variety of programs during 1980 that ffected all the residence centers. The functions included: on April 20th and the Fifth nnual RHA Intramural Sports Banquet, RHA Energy Conservation Week, the establishment of a Center Store Advisory Commit ee. Also, the housing contract was revised during the course of the year the Residential Education program was strengthened. RHA started the 1980-81 school year with RHA Days, September 28th, with a picnic. There were many a activities for students who lived in Residence Halls. The week conclude on October 4th with a Spyro-Gyra concert. Members of the Steering Committee were: Mike Lanham, Financial Director, 'Kathy Pencek, Production Director, Mindy Clawson, Promotion Director, Donna McGee, Picnic Director, Mike Yohler, Southi Quad Director, Robby Farmer, North Quad Director, Dawn Higgins, Middle Quad Director. RHA Directors were: Tim King, Orientation, Jim Nelson, Student Services, Marsha Miller, Recreational Sports, Tim McNulty, Judicial Board. The RHA Executives would like to thank Dr. T1 >mas Hennessy, the RHA Advisor, for his devotion to the Association. 88

Kathy Pencek

Jeff Morehead

John Wilson, a junior, waits for his laundry to dry in the Willkie South laundry room. Laundry facilities are provided in each dormitory by the Residence Halls Association .

357


nvolvement, promotion, participation are three good words to describe the role of the Student Athletic Board (SAB), a special part of Indiana University. Charged with the task of promoting IU's intercollegiI ate athletic program, this group of students is involved with bringing bigger crowds to games, selling programs and souvenir merchandise, arranging half-time show and generally raising enthusiam at all IU athletic events. SAB also had a record year in the area of programming and merchandising,. With over 100 students selling such things as IU cowboy hats, T-shirts and buttons at Soccer, Football and Basketball games. The students who compose SAB generate a positive spirit fbr the university's intercollegiate athletics. They help unite the alumni, administrators, community and student body in on large cheering block. Not only did these students decorate locker rooms and publicized events, they sponsored Parent's Day and . Homecoming. This past Homecoming's Master of Ceremonies, Red Skelton, directed the events in the theme, "Cast your vote for a Hoosier Victory. - Over 500 students were involved with the parade, pep rally, King & Queen contest, float building and window painting. This past year SAB helped to increase student football sales by 85%. Although the major sports, football and basketball, get most of the glory, SAB spends a great deal of time promoting non-revenue sports. Four of the fourteen SAB directors are given the task of promoting women's athletics and non-revenue sports. The Students who are the SAB are loyally committed to spirit and support of Ws athletics.

The Sprit Behin IU Athle ics

1,11 (.■■

358


Student Athletic Board

First Row — Brenda Barrett, Secretary, Mary Beth Teursc use, Vice-President, Cathy Reiman, President, Wendy Beile, Marcy Carlson. Second Row— Mary Rappe, Todd Overton, Kevin Stanutz, Ti Springer, Treasurer, Tom Klootwyk, Scott Everroad, Mike Salerno, Kate O'Neal, Chuck Crabb, Advisor.

Left — John Marsh, a junior, sells souvenirs during pre-g l me activities of an IU home football game. SAB sponsored the sales. .

359


Panhellenic anhellenic Association was organized in recogp nition of a need to maintain high standards of sorority life and good relationships among the sororities. Panhellenic organizes rush, compiles rules for pledges, initiation, and the organization of new chapters as well as providing a forum for discussing questions of mutual. interest and concern as a way of spurring intersorority spirit. The Executive Council is composed of seven elected officers and twelve directors. The Representative Council, composed of one representative from each sorority, is the legislative body. h.i

Panhellenic Executives. First Row — (left to right) Lori Newton, Julie Ryan, Erika Schwartz, Becky Tredtcay.. Second Row — Katherine Young, Beth Klingaman, Kim Sasko, Nancy Bretlinger, Barb Lacke, graduate advisor, Lynn Vagnone

Panhellenic Representatives. First Row — Sarah Kincaid, Lisa Clausen, Mindy Wohlfled, Sue Stanley, Julie Hanna, Jacqueline Miller, Robin Alexander. Second Row — Suzanne Sampson, Dianne Mattingly, Laura Sanford, Renne Trainer, Carolyn Unger, Gayle Gaydos, Jane Peterson, Diane Vislisel, Ann Auberry, Sheri Salin, Terri Garrison, Susie Hicks, Jonnamarie Affeldt, Alice Botthof.

360


Interfraternity Council

First Row — (left to right) Mike Schardein, Advisor, G eg Oltman, Dennis Dommer. Second Row — Randy Garrett, John Ruckleshaus, Jeff Gray, Joel

Wilmoth.

he fraternities continued to make contributions to the overall strength and reputation of IU. As the chapters and the Interfraternity Council were highly recognized through the honor of T receiving national awards. IFC received the highest national award, the Jellison Award, for excellence in programming and leadership. Also, many IU fraternities received honors, as the top undergraduate chapters. IFC programming was highlighted by the Jackson Browne Concert. Receipts from the concert supplemented the newly created Greek Classic. The Classic was initiated to bring other student organizations into the traditional Greek programs. IFC and individual fraternities increased their educational and community programming, by involving faculty and administration. The Greeks challenged other campus groups in fundraising, Jog Day, blood drives and the Spirit of Sport, for the Special Olympics. As the end of the year approached, the year was a huge success, yet was tinted by the issue of alcohol use. The conflict continued throughout most of the semester. The Fraternity President Council and IFC worked together with the administration to create a more comprehensive alcohol policy. o0

361


Indiana University Student Foundation

First Row — (left to right) Dennie Avril, Lisa Lanham, Ann Bartlett, Sally Jo Tardy, Lisa Sevier, Susan Mattos, Pam Hamilton, Lisa Patterson. Second Row — Patti Johnson, Penny Peterson, Debra Hovde „Amy Klekanip, Lynda Brant, Jill Coutz. Third Row— Tom Svenstrup, Sherman McMurray, Dave Kubley, Scott Evans, Dave Shirey, Pete DeLone, Paul Shike , Pete Turk, George Radakovich, Mike Gilmore. Fourth Row — Steve Elrod, Doug Greer, Tom Enright, Brian Smith, Mark Oates, Jeff Dugdale, Andy Brown, John Kautzman, Jeff Morgan, Jim Shook, Greg Frans.

he IU Student Foundation was created in 1950 out of a need to familiarize the student body with fund-raising needs and opportunities. Each year, the IU Foundation asks Indiana University T alumni to support research programs, grant and scholarship funds, or any of the educational opportunities which perpetuate the IU margin of excellence. Since its inception, the student program has generated inspirational energy and interest throughout Indiana University. At the same time, the program encourages each individual student to develop in a creative way. Filled with dedication and loyalty for their university, these 700 junior and senior men and women represent the most influential and active campus leaders. They command this unique program with a winning spirit, which has earned them a reputation for results. Each year, these students work closely with the admissions office to recruit the best Indiana high school students for each freshman class. They raise scholarship funds for distinguished Indiana University students. They travel statewide with information concerning opportunities at Indiana University. They sponsor the Little 500 Bicycle Race, through which more than $400,000 in scholarship funds had been raised. The students mastermind a long line of successful activities and projects. Here are just a few: IU Sing, Telefund, Red Carpet Days, Toy Drive, Metz Banquet, The Worlds Greatest College Weekend, The Little 500 Bicycle Race, The Mini 500 Tricycle Race, Little 500 Golf Tournament, Little 500 Style Show, Little 500 Tennis Tournament, The Variety Show, A Day At The Forum, Cream and Crimson Football Game. The Indiana University Student Foundation and the parent Indiana University Foundation enjoy a level of coordination and communication which complements each project and enhances every result. `,E, 362


The Redsteppers perform with the Marching Hundred at all home football games and a few home basketball games. This year they performed the opening and closing number at IU Sing.

IU Redsteppers

First Row —(left to right)Terry Kearns, Susie Lloyd, Michelle Johnson, Kelly Bowen, Sharon Kobus, Karen Thomas, Judy Kruekeberg, Lori Denney, Robin Coleman, Kathy Alt. Second Row—Jamie Wilkins, Cindy Harrell, Kathy Rose, Kathy Caruthers, Gail Amster, Pauls Tatooles, Diane Nicholson, Tamhy Wikle, Lisa Nomreiler. Rita House, Carrie Henck, Cindy Thomas, Sue Lehman . Third Row — Denise Rush, Judi Shoup, (co-captain), Nancy Logan, (co-captain), Karen Bailey. (choreographer). Donna Sleek. Janet Bishop. Laura Fos.

Student Alumni Council Student Alumni Council is involved year round in joint programs with the Alumni Association to promote a better understanding between alumni and present students. SAC participates in activities ranging from Homecoming to Finals Survival Kits to Student Recruitment. The annual Careers Program has achieved national recognition and has become a model for similar programs at colleges and universities throughout the nation.

First Row — (left to right)Jana Loudenback, Julie !foster, Sandy Herron. Second Row — Cathy Axtell, Marc Yesberger, Jim Wark.

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Women in Business Women in Business is an organization designed to help guide undergraduate women in making career choices.

First Row— (left to right) Rose Jones, Torey Barnes, Jeni Dickinson. Second Row — Monica Staaf, Laura akh Carolyn Stanforth .

Student Health Advisory Committee

To provide student input to the operations of the Health Center.

First Row — (left to right) Dan Thomas, Doung Zale, Bob Loudermilk, Mark Johnson, Lee Anne Schmude . Second Row — Belinda Dizon, Kenya Koontz, Alan Hemlich, Dale Tucker, Brad Wood, Schoel Konezor, Nancy Maylath, Dave Kinney, Mary Molnor, Brian Davis, Susan Girod .

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:1■11111•11■=

Bloomington Gay and Lesbian Alliance The purposes of the BGLA are to improve the political, social, recreational, cultural, and educational environment of the Bloomington Gay Community, and to encourage a better understanding of lesbians and gay men among themselves and throughout the general public.

First Row — (left to right) Bill Rammel , Christopher Walker, Lewis Ryker. Second Row — Fritz Lieber, Steven Cuniberti, Ed Conaway, Norris Peters, David Clark, R .B . Banschbach . Not Shown — (in closet behind left) Sean Hammond, Duncan Mitchel, Jim Taylor, Tonya Hayes.

The Indiana University Black Student Union is the official voice of the black student population of IU. It creates a forum for the political, social, and artistic and academic expression of the black student.

Black Student Union

First Row — (left to right) Cynthia Oda, Nathaniel Holland, Vice President; Janet Henderson, Dion Foulkes, President; Latanya Overby, Treasurer; Terry Lolla Second Row — (left to right) Charlotte Free, President of Read BSU; Micheal Ross, President of Teter BSU; Janet Morgan, President of Wilkie BSU; Anthony Slaughter, President of Wright BSU, Kendra McFarland, President of Forest BSU.

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Tae Kwon Do Club

First Row — (left to right) Mark Bailey, Jeff Greene, Cameron McLay, Pat N'Guenna N'Dang, Don Burns, Richard Nannini, Young-Chan Kang, Ken Iluffer, Greg Flower, Harvey Mull. Michelle Williamson. Second Row — Chung-Jer Lee, Laura Stephans, Kenny Hays, Mary Foster, Shau-Shi Lee, Kim Sullivan. Candy Smith. Angela Mathia, Mark D. Miller, David Czerny, Mike Drake. Third Row — Gregory Isaacs, Scott Marsh, Allan Weiner, Brian Ramsbey, Ted Fall, Stefano Branca rdi, Jeff Thomas, Paul J. Graves„ Kevin Jackson. Teri Whiner, Michael Alexander, Alexa , Kelly Roche, Fourth Row — Anne Rinefort, Stacie Sandlin Janke lwata „ Stephanie Becker, Ritchie, Lisa Wagner. Steven Yount, Jeni Dickinson, Bill Goffmet „ Susie Wilzhacher. Fifth Row — Cindy Thompson, Eric Foreste,

he IU Tae Kwon Do Club is dedicated to teaching Korean martial arts. It is a form of Karate which utilizes 70% feet techniques and 30% hand techniques. The Club has approximately 100 T registered members. '',

366


Student Recreational Sports Association RSA is the student association which represents stuS dents in all areas of recreational sports needs and programming. Recreational sports at IU is the largest day-to-day student activity on campus, and SRSA is the group committed to furthering the excellence of the facilities, everyday programming, and such special programs as IU Fit and the Spirit-of-Sport AllNighter. :.

First Row — (left to right) Mary Helen Irvine, Secretary; Dave Evans, President; Kelly Powrie, Vice-President; Jim Moser, Treasurer.

First Row — (left to right) Mike Villa. Jim Moser, Kelly Powrie, Dave Evans, Mary Ilelen Irvine, Beth Coleman. Second Row — Sheri Short, Duane Martin, Dave Pauley, Loren Martin, Carl Lamb, Steve Mendelson, Wendy Fried, Mike Gossman.


Minority Rush Sorority Rush Housemothers 368

p. 370 p. 372 p. 395



MINORITY FRATERNITIES GET INVOLVED ON CAMPUS

Above — Kappa Alpha Psi members meet with rushees to acquaint them with fraternity life . The smoker" was held in the Sassafras Room at the Indiana Memorial Union . Right — One thing about phone booths are that they are quite small. A Kappa Alpha Psi member takes a minute to use the phone after the smoker was finished.

U's fraternity s ystem, according to Michael Scharclein, Interfraternity I Council (IFC) adviser, needs people like the minority members to make a difference in the fraternity system. "In the last 12 months, there has been more action from these fraternities (Alpha Phi Alpha, Kappa Alpha Psi, Omega Psi Phi and Phi Beta Sigma) and from the black population on campus than I've seen in a long, long time," Schardein told a group of potential rushees. The rushees were taking part in the spring minority rush program, held in the Frangipani Room in the Indiana Memorial Union. William Hawkins, minority rush director, Dion Foulkes, president of the Black 370

Student Union and representatives from the four minority fraternities joined Schardein as speakers at the program. The theme of many of the speeches was black unity and overcoming what Rodney Miller, vice-president of Kappa Alpha Psi, termed racial prejudice that still exists in white America. Everett McDonald, president of Alpha Phi Alpha, said that "people don't appreciate people's inner feelings," and that the black fraternity system sets the groundwork for individuals to begin speaking to each other and thus help them to understand each other. Black fraternities have taken part in many community and university programs. Curtis Jones, an Alpha Phi Alpha

member, said that his fraternity sponsors religious awareness programs as well as snow-shovelling and leaf-raking for the elderly. Alpha Phi Alpha also held doughnut sales and other fund-raising events for the NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People), the Muscular Dystrophy Association and the prevention of sickle-cell anemia. Willie Bush, of Omega Psi Phi, said that they were planning a Mardi Gras weekend in April. Chapters from all over the state would be here taking part in the festivities, he said. This is the first year that the IFC has sponsored a minority rush program. Hawkins said that this was due to lack of interest by the minority fraternities. He said that


he hoped the four fraternities would continue to become more active in campus activities, such as entering bike teams in the "Little 500" race in the spring. The minority rush program was somewhat different than those of the other fraternities. Jones pointed out that Alpha Phi Alpha's programs and interviews were held in the house of three members because Alpha Phi Alpha has no house of their own. Many fraternities plan "smokers," informal gatherings to give the rushees a chance to get acquainted with the fraternities, according to Mike Pearson, president of Phi Beta Sigma. Pearson added that his fraternity has a bill of rights for the pledges. He said that it

pointed out the specific rules for pledges and guaranteed that there would be no hazing. Michael Artis, a sophomore pledging Kappa Alpha Psi, said he joined because the minority fraternities "bring unity among blacks. Clinton Metcalf, a freshman who went through the rush program, said he planned to join a fraternity mainly "for the brotherhood." Hawkins said that minority fraternity membership was increasing somewhat, but leveling off. He said people were becoming more aware of these fraternities because the fraternities were becoming more involved in community projects than they have been in the past.

Bush said that Omega Psi Phi's membership "rose immensely," basically because "our doors were more open. People were beginning to realize our purpose. Rick DelVecchio

371


SORORITY RUSH IS AN OPPORTUNITY TO MAKE SISTERS

Paul Scudder

Above — Excited at the prospect of living together next fill. Roommates Jenny lierendeen and Sallie Scudder embrace after receiving bids to join Kappa Kappa Gamma. Right — While talking to her mother on the phone, juli Browne receives a hug from Kelli Rose. Both girls received invitations to join sororities. Far right — A typical invitation to join a sorority.

orority rush is the most important function in which chapter members S participate. Rush preserves the standards and traditions of each sorority from year to year. Girls go through sorority rush for various reasons. Zeta Tau Alpha pledge, Lori Davison, said that sororities seem as if they provide a family atmosphere. "Sororities are more like a home away from home," she said. "There is more caring between sorority sisters than girls in the dorms. "I went through rush to be more active on campus," said Kelly Moran, a Gamma Phi Beta pledge, noting that sororities offer more extra-curricular opportunities. "Greeks seem to do more and get more involved.'

372

In November, 1980, 1590 girls participated in sorority rush. The rushees visit all eighteen sororities where they are entertained with skits, tours of chapter houses, and warm conversation by house members. Girls visit the chapters in order to get an overall view of sororities. After a whirlwind weekend, girls are bewildered and confused as to what they want from a sorority. For many, the open houses provided the first opportunity for them to see a sorority. Rushees look for different qualities in sororities. "I was looking for sisterhood," said Moran. "I wanted to be in a house where there was a group who were proud to be in their house." Lori Davison was looking for a place

where she could be individualistic. "I wanted to be where I could feel most comfortable," said Davison. "I wanted somewhere that I could be myself." Rushees cut their Christmas break short in order to participate in formal rush. The girls received bids from the chapters and then decided where they wanted to visit next. The girls cut their choices from eighteen, to eight, then five, three, two and finally one. In the meantime, there are girls from each chapter serving as rush counselors for rushees. At this time, rush counselors are not affiliated with their chapters, live at the IU Foundation and meet the needs and wants of the rushees on their assigned floor. Rush counselors become close to the


UAIY

. .,T4i au Is p l eased to irifom you that you have deep ext ended an in v itation to .. men out memdoship. Ou't Fledge di nner is Tuesday,

garivay 1 3th at 5: o0 Concnatulatioris

and (Welcome to -Phi Tu. / Puff Anderson

girls on their floor. Also, they never reveal to the girls which chapter they are from. The rushees are thus assured that their. counselors would be objective. The rush counselors inform the girls about bus schedules, party times and rules and regulations. The counselors also are responsible to give the girls their most important cards for the week, their party invitations to sororities, which determines what chapter they would eventually pledge. One rush counselor, Penny Peterson, a senior from Delta Gamma, said that the job was rewarding. "I really enjoyed the girls on my floor," said Peterson. It was interesting to look at the rushee side of rush after all these years. I wouldn't have passed it up for anything."

members assembled in the auHowever, the job of rush counselor also chapter ditorium to be pledged into the Greek syshad its pitfalls. As the Panhellenic Creed was read by "I got real close to the girls on my floor," tem. all, the pledges found the meaning of being said rush counselor Debbi Kruszweski, a part of the Greek system. senior Zeta Tau Alpha. "When some girls "I felt I was acquainted with Panheldidn't receive party invitations, I took it as lenic," said Kelly Moran. "I found that we're a personal defeat." ap Peterson and Kruszerski agree that as all part of one system." Lynn Vagnone rush counselors, they enjoyed the jobs because they were able to meet girls from other chapters. "I felt I became Greek-oriented as a whole," said Kruszewski. "I now know what is the true meaning of Panhellenic." After the formal rush week was over and the rushees turned into pledges, a formal pledge ceremony was sponsored by the Panhellenic Association. The pledges and 373


ACACIA

cacia was founded in 1906 in Michigan. The IU chapter was A established in 1920. Acacia's colors are black and gold. Acacia received an award for the best chapter publication of all Acacia chapters in the country. The fraternity placed first in intramural cross country and received second place in intramural wrestling. Acacia holds a Night on the Nile dance bi-annually . The dance has an Egyptian theme with a sphinx and pyramids displayed in front of the house. The members also sponsor an ice cream social during Little 500 weekend each year. The 1980 president of Acacia was Tom Kim and Ed McGrath was elected president for 1981. '

374

Chris Poteet Steve Howkinson Bill Buhenzer Ernie Jouriles Brett Nelson Ed McGrath Hooter Brian Essary Todd Tharp Scott Houston Ed Walzak Brad Heseman Bruce Rougraff John Rogers 15. Jon Morgan

Tom Kim Pat McCleary Jim Ficken Bob Garrow Jeff Manhart Mike Kramer Jeff Stutler Randy Edwards Pat Wise Sam Smart Chris Richardson Todd Cannon Rick Kiaser Tom Hennelly 30. Fred Hess

Gary Shell Doug Bade Brad Brown John Zubak Jeff Satterfield Craig Horton Mike Potter Kevin Kramer Jack Fogel Rich Hooker John Montgomery John Dickerson Jeff Johnson Doug Gill 45. Ted Adlam

46. Chris Lowrey 47. Bob Shell 48. Mark Brinegar 49. Scott Hackett 50. Carl Dankert 51. Jim Martina 52. Kirk Eggebrecht 53. Gary Milliken 54. John King 55. Mike Akers 56. Steve Bellefuil 57. Tim Powers


ALPHA CHI OMEGA

1. Sandy Albers 2. Dawn Helphinstine 3. Lisa Krassick 4. Julie Bymaster 5. Kim Turk 6. Renee Severson 7. Melissa Proffitt 8. Sheila Schroeder 9. Laurie Boomer 10. Jenny Reynolds 11. Laura Bennett 12. Susan Manos 13. Susie Hicks 14. Bridgett Knowles

15. Kim Todd 16. Julie Brown 1-,'. Donna Meek IS. Mom Harve y 10. Chris Labog 20. Rhonda Burnham 21. Melissa King 22. Julie Johnson 23. Janice Gregory 24. Liane Lisle 25. Cindy Miller 26. Shawn Fowler 27. Diane Dupler 28. Beth Caldemeyer

29. Jane Martin 30. Lisa Eissler 31. Tracy Ryan 32. Leah Rust 33. Linda Katz 34. Cindy Gramman 35. Chris Reutebuch 36. Bridgett Hillis 37. Joan Broshears 38. Sue Lehman 39. Marsha Cox 40. Joyce Mulholland 41. Wendy Mulholland 42. Jenny Baker

43. Lynne Allbee 44. Nancy Pugliese 45. Tan Hughes 46. Julie Richards 47. Lisa Nisenbaum 48. Stephanie Blair 49. Diane Valentine 50. Kris Randall 51. Julie Melander 52. Guppy Resze} 53. Teresa Richards

1pha Chi Omega was founded at DePauw University on Oct. 15, A 1885, and has been at IU since 1922. The Alpha Chi symbol is the lyre, and colors are red and green. Alpha Chi has become known for its IU Sing performances. In the 1981 show they along with Phi Kappa Psi won the award for best theatrical performance. They sponsored a "Fun Run" during Homecoming with the proceeds going to the Arthritis Foundation. Alpha Chis finished second in football intramurals. The Alpha Chis have a Barn, Christmas and pledge Dance. The chapter president for 1980 was Lynne Albee, and Laurie Boomer was elected president for 1981. 'OR

375


ALPHA EPSILON PHI

1pha Epsilon Phi was founded at Barnard College in 1909. The A sorority has been at IU since 1958. AEPhi's mascot is the giraffe and its colors are green and white. For its philanthrophy project, AEPhi sold Donation Cards with proceeds going to the Chiam Sheba Hospital in Israel. This project was started by the AEPhi's at IU and has now been adopted by the sorority nationally. The sorority held an informal dance on Valentine's Day at which tickets to New York were raffled. It also held a St. Patrick's Day carnation sale. Wendi Beile was 1980 AEPhi president and Joan Brimer was elected as president for 1981.

376

1 Jodi Gibbons Wendi Beile Wendy Dann Stacy Epstein Debbie Ziker Laura Fox Judi Shoup Ellen Schankerman Suzy Schneider Stephanie Pinkus Marilyn Goldberg Charlotte Frvdman Ellen Kantor Debbie Hochman Mary Beth Stamos Marcy Roth Julie Weiss

I5. Connie Bracker 19. Sharon Fivel 20. Sheri Muchnick 21. Arden Kaplan 22. Audrey Appelsies 23. Bobbi Levin 24. Melissa Miller 25. Anne Kushen 26. Robin Fogelman 27. Patti Heyse 28. Nadine Fingert 29. Amy Gabel 30. Leslie Weitzman 31. Lisa Nelson 32. Tracy Turner 33: Lisa Rachman 34. Carol Hirschfield

35. Lisa Sickinger 52. Liz 1■emstein 36. Janet Madden 53. Jamie Grossman 37. Caroline Schulman 54. Sharon Magdovitz 38. Judy Hefter 55. Shelly Nahmias 39. Paula Tatooles 56. Lisa Levy 40. Lida Nonweiler 57. Vicki Green 41. Lori Watzman 58. Julie Decker 42. Susan Hyman 59. Lisa Steinberg 43. Carolyn Lev y60. Melissa Gottlieb 44. Vanessa Urch 61. Sharon Cohn 45. Carolyn Unger 62. Julie Frank 46. Joan Brimer 63. Debbie Beiser 47. Ronna Friedman 64. Leslie Kraft 48. Julie Joels 65. Amy Ross 49. Robin Goldberg 66. Jodi Bergman 50. Amy Rosenbaum 67. Sue Block 51. Lori Drechsler


GREEKS SHOW STYLE AT HOLIDAY FASHION SHOW

ixty-two models from both fraternities and sororities lined the aisles S with glitter and spark at the Panhellenic Holiday Fashion show, December 6 at the College Mall. Nancy Brentlinger, social director of the Panhellenic Association and coordinator for the days events, said she was pleased how the show came out. "The show was successful because there was participation by all twenty-two sororities plus fraternities as well," said Brentlinger. "The stores gained publicity from the show also. Fifteen stores participated to present a wide variety of clothes. Included was lounge wear, ski wear, western fashions, formals, cocktail dresses, tuxedoes and furs. A large turn-out came to support their respective fraternity and sorority members, as well as to hear disc jockey Dave

Dugan from KISS 99 serve as announcer for the afternoon. "The crowd enjoyed Dave Dugan," said Brentlinger. "He gave out two dinner giveaways plus albums from KISS 99." Brentlinger said that the crowd seemed to enjoy the finale the best. Santa Claus, escorted by two models, walked down the fashion aisle adding to the festive mood. Brentlinger said that although this is the first Holiday Fashion Show, she hopes to make it an annual event. Lynn Vagnone

Pretty faces add to the merriment of the holiday season. The Holiday Fashion Show, sponsored by the Panhellenic Association, displayed new clothing styles on December 6 at the College Mall.

377


ALPHA EPSILON PI

1pha Epsilon Pi was founded at New York University in 1913. The A fraternity was established at IU in 1958. AEPi's colors are gold and blue and the fraternity's symbol is the lion. As a philanthropic project, the AEPi's sold coupon booklets at fall and spring registration to help raise money for the American Cancer Society. The fraternity has ranked first on campus in scholarship for the past 18 out of 20 semesters and was named an Outstanding AEPi Chapter nationally. The fraternity's major dance is the Valentine's Day Massacre. It is a casual dance held in the house. Steve Paskin was AEPi president for 1980 and Richard Friedman was elected chapter president for 1981.

378

1. Larry Stern 2. Rob Mintz 3. Terry Ginsburg 4. Dan Kahn 5. Elliot Lewis 6. Bill Feldman 7. Mark Behr 8. Ricky Yale 9. Brad Steinback 10. Howard Green 11. Dave Seigal 12. Brian Kaplan 13. Tom Emoff 14. Dick Friedman 15. Paul Kraft

16. Keith Jacobs 17. Gary Pavlovsky 18. Neil Shamis 19. Rich Kolman 20. John Lebendiger 21. Steve Paskin 22. Steve Block 23. Mike Mintz 24. Hal Nagel 25. Jeff Speilberg 26. Scott Gray 27. Marc Kaufman 28. Steve Fivel 29. Bruce Warshauer 30. Phil Frank

31. Harley Korman 32. Scott Baruch 33. Jeff Nianick 34. Bruce Seidman 35. Steve Mizell 36. Ron Behm 37. Jeff Berk 38. Steve Horwitz 39. David Schwartz 40. Bryan Korros 41. Bob Goldstein 42. Greg Bolotin 43. Craig Gordon 44. Dave Novit 45. Stuart Levy

46. Tom Johnson 47. Paul Lande 48. Howard Fishman 49. David Fivel 50. Joel Garmon 51. Mike Shankerman 52. Steve Rappin 53. Larry Blatt 54. Mitch Emoff 55. Jay Wilensky 56. Greg Miller 57. Mike Wolinsky 58. Craig Gutman 59. Mitch Stuck


ALPHA GAMMA DELTA

1. Liz Olson 2. Sallie Halsey 3. Lisa Coleman 4. Cami Nichols 5. Debbie Bergmann 6. Susan Frank 7. Laura Dorenfest 8. Mary Kerns 9. Bess Eleftheri 10. Karen Hughey 11. Kathy Alt 12. Lori Newton 13. Traci Brown 14. Sally Booe

15. Jackie Baker 16. Tracy Green 17. Kelly Barrett 18. Lisa Hunt 19. Monie Moghari 20. Lynda Brant 21. Joy Carr 22. Vickie Kolias 23. Becky Spiegel 24. Andra Martin 25. Mrs. Isabel Whitt 26. Cindy Weidemann 27. Cindy Kissinger 28. Debbie Hughes

29. Meryl Bronson 30. Cindy Meyer 31. Sue Huelskamp 32. Janet Bastin 33. Mary Yarbor 34. Diane Vislisel 35. Maureen Killila 36. Nancy Dugan 37. Nancy Ford 38. Lisa Agee 39. Beth Mason 40. June Quillen 41. Anne Saywitz 42. Nancy Paradise

43. Karen Hillenburg 44. Heidi Watkins 45. Beth A. Jones 46. Dianne Porter 47. Barb Hardy 48. Debbie Phillips 49. Jackie Mangas 50. Lisa Brown 51. Barb McDonald 52. Cindy Hiatt 53. Shelly Shenefield 54. Lynn Staser

1pha Gamma Delta founded at Syracuse University in New York. A The chapter has been at IU since 1963. The mascot for the sorority is the squirrel and their colors are red, buff, and green. Alpha Gamma Delta sold Easter baskets with proceeds going to the Juvenile Diabetes Association. The women sponsored a Kiss-Off with Sigma Alpha Epsilon at Ye Olde Regulator. Alpha Gamma Delta won the spirit award at the Delta Gamma Anchor Splash. The sorority had three dances this year. Included were, a barn dance, a Christmas dance, and a spring pledge dance. Nancy Ford was president for 1980 and Bess Eleftheri was elected president for 1981.8

379


ALPHA KAPPA ALPHA

1. Nekeita Bvrdsong 2. LaChelle Mabry 3. Cynequa Robinson 4. Lonna Owens 5. Cynthia Madden 6. Teresa Wheeler 7. Victoria Clark 8. Deanna Bates 9. Anita Burge

1pha Kappa Alpha was founded at Indiana University in 1922. Alpha A Kappa Alpha was the first black sorority to receive a charter at IU. The sorority's colors are salmon pink and apple green, the ivy leaf is their symbol. Alpha Kappa Alpha sold candy and doughnuts with proceeds going towards many charitable organizations. Alpha Kappa Alpha also held two canned good drives before Thanksgiving and Christmas. The cans were contributed to the Second Baptist Church in Bloomington. Alpha Kappa Alpha holds their annual ball in the spring. Mary Bacon was the 1980 president for Alpha Kappa Alpha and Cynthia Madden was elected in 1981.

380

10. Anita Bulge 11. Diane Sewell 12. Sadie Roberts 13. SiYona Johnson 14. Kim Poindexter 15. Serita Tatum 16. Jody Duncan 17. Sharon Hidalgo

lb. Elizabeth Gardner 19. Mary Bentley 20. Lyneice Lee 21. Jeanette Preston 22. Pamela Jones 23. Belinda Cooper 24. Cassandra Russell 25. Walaa Idris

26. Sharon Li e nct 27. Alicia Helm 28. Faye Ward 29. Julie Lockett 30. Tori Marshall 31. Lorelle Brown 32. Gwendol yn Hall 33. Holly Hill

i4tiPitr

ff.


MINORITY SORORITIES ARE PROSPERING

Above — Common to all black sororities is the neophyte line dance. The dance is a joyous occasion, where the new initiates are presented to the campus. Twenty-five Alpha Kappa Alpha initiates known as the Heirs of Mystique sing and dance sorority songs. Bight — Sharon Hidalgo, front, Deanna Bates, and Lonna Owens sing during the Alpha Kappa Alpha Neophyte Dance.

lot of students don't realize all the time and effort the greek sororities A devote to the community. Delta Sigma Theta, Zeta Phi Beta, Sigma Gamma Rho and Alpha Kappa Alpha, the four minority sororities, have a strong commitment to helping the campus and the community. The full name of Delta Sigma Theta, for instance, is Delta Sigma Theta Inc., a public service sorority, said Terry Harris, dean of pledges for the sorority. Delta Sigma Theta is geared towards serving the minorities, the elderly and students who are in need of financial assistance, she said. The sorority held a dance to commemorate the birthday of Martin Luther King and collected signatures for a petition to declare King's birthday a national holiday. The petition was sent with an IU delegation who participated in the Martin Luther King rally on January 15 in Washington, D.C. The sorority also visited nursing homes, gave three $100 scholarships and held a raffle to raise money for sickle cell anemia, said Harris. The top prize of the raffle was six hours of I U tuition free. Another plus for Delta Sigma Theta was

adding 14 new members to the chapter, she said. Sigma Gamma Rho, on the other hand, has a very small membership. The reason that the sorority has only six members is because Sigma Gamma Rho is studyoriented and does not attract very many people, said Renee Kallom, a chapter member. "Large crowds attract large crowds," she explained. Sigma Gamma Rho also held dances and other fund-raising events to collect money for the needy, said Kallom. At one dance, the admission was some kind of canned food. The food was later distributed among the needy. The sorority also raised money for the March of Dimes, who in return, gave an IU scholarship in the sorority's name. Cynthia Madden, president of Alpha Kappa Alpha, said that her sorority's main concern was service to the black community. Alpha Kappa Alpha makes donations to the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, the United Negro College Fund, and to the Cleveland Job Corps, a technical school.

Zeta Phi Beta participates actively in March of Dimes projects. "Our sorority is the only sorority nation-wide which is linked to the March of Dimes," said Harper. Zeta Phi Beta is one of the few sororities which have chapters worldwide. One can find Zeta Phi Beta chapters in Switzerland and Africa. "We're not that visual on campus, but that is due mainly to our low membership," said Harper. However, having only four members didn't stop the chapter from sponsoring a successful reception for campus black athletes on November 16. The reception offered an opportunity for black students on campus to get to know and talk to black athletes, she said. Although they are not very large, IU's minorities perform a very big and much needed service, helping people. Rick DelVecchio

381


ALPHA OMICRON PI

1pha Omicron Pi was founded at Barnard College in New York in A 1897. The Beta Phi chapter of Alpha Omicron Pi was chartered at IU in 1916. The mascot for the sorority is the panda bear, their color is cardinal red, and their flower is the jacqueminot rose. Alpha Omicron sponsored their third annual Rock-A-Thon. The women made over $200 which they donated to the Arthritis Research Fund. The sorority also sponsored a "Best Legs" contest f'or both males and females. Again, proceeds went to the Arthritis Research Fund. Alpha Omicron Pi held a barn dance, a Christmas dance and a spring pledge dance. Elaine Luebbe was the president for 1980 and Beth Kaser was elected the president for 1981.

382

1. Jane Shuey 2. Cheryl Evans 3. Clarissa Hanson 4. Cindy Reuter 5. Julie Mittiga 6. Teri Kelly 7. Lorraine Becker 8. Kris Burgart 9. Jennifer Hessong 10. Kriss Ernsting 11. Greta Gerberding 12. Teri Crouse 13. Mary Mahon 14. Jo Ellen Kramer

15. Karn Dunn 16. Carolyn Cochran 17. Laura Elliot 18. Susan Smith 19. Bobbie Viar 20. Lisa Wolf 21. Beth Kaser 22. Julie Shonfield 23. Ann Winkeljohn 24. Terri Gallagher 25. Nanette Jones 26. Peggy Hernicz 27. Laura Castetter 28. Tina °sting

29. Susan Wagner 30. Becky Alber 31. Beth Mitchell 32. Sarah Griffis 33. Ruth McLachlan 34. Sarah Kincaid 35. Beth Mitchell 36. Dorice Kelly 37. Kelly Callender 38. Cindy Feld 39. Becky Reuter 40. Leigh Dye 41. Becky Bartels 42. Cathy Ohnemus

43. Karen Eckert 44. Mary Sue Norris 45. Vicky Peter 46. Linda Himelick 47. Laurie LaRosh 48. Diane Neuenschwander 49. Jeni Shrote 50. Nan Victor 51. Julie Ellsworth 52. Cathy Craig 53. Cheryl Regan 54. Denise O'Sullivan 55. Elaine Luebbe 56. Sandy Martin


ALPHA PHI

1. Maureen Hallagan 2. Melody Fox 3. Janet Bishop 4. Jean Wesling 5. Jeannie Olson 6. Sue Hagar 7. Clare Wade 8. Karyn Custer 9. Harriett Scarpelli 10. Beth Chestnut 11. Kit Westerkamp 12. Missy Ellis 13. Ann Beatty 14. Denice Lambert 15. Cindy Hoelscher 16. Linda George Kathie Vernon Audrey Shimp

19. Diane Brunsell 20. Kerri Brink 21. Judy Williams 22. Renee Trainer 23. Lorrie Wildman 24. Paula Webber 25. Karen Stark 26. Jennie Dickey 27. Lori Cooney 28. Cindy Hines 29. Mary Vondrar 30. Carolyn Brandt 31. Leah Coville 32. Shelly Warrick 33. Lynn Gottschalk 34. Mary Kay Ross 35. Kim Day

36. Debbie Farreu 37. Lori Van Duyn 38. Toni Thomas 39. Shirley Alexander 40. Tracy Love 41. Linda Goodman 42. Linda Hauch 43. Janet Marvel 44. Dale Pehlke 45. Teresa Gray 46. Cindy Woodman 47. Pam Buchanan 48. Wendy Wagener 49. Lori Arnold 50. Lori Gaeth 51. Shelly Miller 52. Teresa Gooldy

53. Dana Pehlke 54. Kathy Wheatley 55. Leann Perkins 56. Tena Weaver 57. Alice Arndt 58. Sherri Syses 59. Debbie Bennett 60. Kathy Acheson 61. Susan McGarry 62. Kimm Sturm 63. Suzy Kays 64. Gretchen Wahl 65. Anita Spitz 66. Laura Russell 67. Linda Baer 68. Jan Messick 69. Julie Rippe

yracuse University in New York was where Alpha Phi was founded in S 1872. The sorority came to IU in 1947. The symbol for Alpha Phi is the ivy leaf and the sorority's colors are silver and bordeaux. Alpha Phi has been involved in many philanthropy projects. Alpha Phi sold lollipops around campus to raise money for the local heart fund. The sorority placed third in IU Sing, with Alpha Epsilon Pi. Alpha Phi received second place, along with Alpha Epsilon, for their float in the Homecoming parade. Alpha Phi's president for 1980 was Cindy Hoelscher and Susan McGray was elected president for 1981. ,96

383


ALPHA SIGMA PHI

ale University was the founding college for Alpha Sigma Phi in y 1845. The chapter established at IU in 1968. The fraternity's colors are cardinal and stone. The Pheonix is their symbol. Alpha Sigma Phi won the National Service award for their service to the community. The fraternity sponsored the IU Show Us Your Tan contest in March with the proceeds going to the Red Cross. An Egyptian dance and toga party, Cleo's Asp, takes place in the spring. In the fall Alpha Sigma Phi, along with another fraternity and two sororities, feast on roasted pig, Alpha Sigma Phi carried on a national fraternity tradition by hosting the annual Black and White Christmas dance. Dirk Vause was the house president. ,..=

384

Clint Marshall Steve Siar Colin Watanabe Don Ariney Jim Totton Charley McClary 7. Angel Mark Stoecklein Bob Byers Bill Teer Curtis Brinegar George Shattuck Kevin Foster Chris Buls Bill Kiszla

Tim Graham Les Meredith Steve Kucharski Tim Potts Andy Simon John Bennett 22. Doug Morin Matt Berkson Greg Heiman Curt Miller Brian Hittinger Chris Koch Bob Daniels Brian Presnell Tony Sloan

Dirk Vause Brad Frye Don Curtis David Struhs Eric Thompson Pat McDonald 37. Jeff Anderson Eric Stoll Mike Nicholas Bob Madden David Happle Dave Shirey Brian Dick Mike Goonewardene Jeff Bowers

Mike Struhs Brian LaRue Mike Fricke Bill Elliott John Haussecker Jeff Nelson 52. Phil Orsborn Jeff Bond Steve Owen Louis Zee Mike Tomkiewicz Matt Mullin Dale Allen Al Conrad Jeff Mitchell


CHI PHI'S GET HIGH FOR MUSCULAR DYSTROPHY

Left — Vincent Lillon, a sophomore, takes his turn at the top of the pole during the Chi Phi/Phi Mu Pole-A-Thon for muscular dystrophy, while curious passers-by investigate the strange sight. Below — Kevin Logan, a senior, picks up the phone during a brief stay on top of the pole at the Chi Phi house.

photos/Jeff Morehead

magine a person sitting on top of a 28-foot pole in the middle of the exI tension of fraternity row. Numerous Chi Phi and Phi Mu members sponsored the philanthropy project called Chi Phi Pole-A-Thon to help raise money for muscular dystrophy. The idea of the pole-a-thon originated from a Chi Phi chapter in Florida and has been tradition at IU for many years. The pole-a-thon was co-sponsored by WFBQ in Indianapolis which helped to publicize the 192-hour event. The pole sitters had telephones with them up in the crow's nest so donors could call in pledges.

Other fraternity and sorority presidents helped the cause by sitting on a dump tank. The event was designed to raise funds by giving money for each attempt to dunk the greek presidents. Randy McNutt, senior Chi Phi member, said that they raised $2,000. ,;8 Lynn Vagnone

385


ALPHA TAU OMEGA

1pha Tau Omega was founded in 1865 at the Virginia Militar y InstiA tute. The IU chapter established here in 1915. The fraternity's symbol is the Maltese Cross and their colors are azure and gold. The ATOs held a Run for the Bucket to Purdue, a relay race to raise money for the Heart Fund, before the Oaken Bucket game against Purdue. Alpha Tau Omega's major dances are Night on the High Seas, a fall dance with a pirate theme and in the spring holds the formal Great Gatsby Dance. In 1980, ATO won the all-fraternity water polo championship, placed fourth in IU Sing and won the Homecoming banner contest. Jack Koehn was 1980 chapter president and Mark Fulton was elected for 1981. ci,=--

386

1. Frank Czeschin 2. Leo Magrini 3. Dave Fleming 4. Steve Reising 5. Bob Rice 6. Dave Neal 7. Matt Reed 8. Ed Mulcahey 9. Doug Copley 10. Randy Kellogg 11. Jeff Ethridge 12. Blair Keelison 13. Tim Spears 14. Not Identified 15. Kent Bowman 16. Scott Blake 17. Jack Koehn 18. Al Busse 19. John Kegan 20. Barry Brown Jeff Heller Jack Pearson

23. Greg Gordan 24. Dave Couper 25. Mike Kirb y 26. Scott Funk 27. Lance Beehler 28. Don Albers 29. Chip Butzko 30. Mark Fulton 31. Chris Wehlre 32. Jim Saban 33. Mike Akin 34. Jeff Rearick 35. Bob Paridv 36. Rick Whip 37. Skip Walters 38. Steve Shorter 39. Mike Raper 40. Tim Wade 41. Tim Hunter 42. Mark Yesberger 43. Don Schafer

44. Tim Medenwald 45. Mike Regan 46. Bill Hennellv 47. Don Herendeen 48. Dan McGrain 49. Ken Ernstes 50. Scott Moss 51. Roger Vandergenuten 52. Dave Reene 53. Craig Citti 54. Jay Hornbeker 55. Jim Hammond 56. Tom Hunter 57. Phil Hammerstrom 58. Kerry Cunningham 59. Bob Fabrizio 60. Jim Nicodemus 61. Tim Thomas 62. Scott Salzwedel 63. Rich Birkhold 64. Josh Reed

65. Steve Way 66. Alex Duarte 67. Tom Long 68. Jon Hollingsworth 69. John Olin 70. Chis Proffitt 71. Ken Edwards 72. Conrad Tuerk 73. Mike Martell 74. Chuck Rudman 75. Todd Bradford 76. Steve Johnson 77. Ben Verhalen 78. Dan Davis 79. Mike Evans 80. Paul Paslaski 81. Jim Deist 82. Gary Kramer 83. Darren Gray 84. Gordon Bulen 85. Bill Voitlein


BETA THETA PI

1. Scott Hiland 2. Rob Crisci 3. John Hoywetae Succo 4. Parker Moss Steve Swanson 5a. Josh Scott McIntyre 7. Mike Happy Harrison Gordy Waller Brian Glass 10. John Vito Viterisi 11. Tim Walter 12. Bob Jackson Gallant 13. Rick Gasaway 14. Mike Minnick 15. Merrick Mossman 16. Bob Pugh 17. John Levinsohn 18. Bruce Cox

19. Chris Deveny 20. Ron Lauter 21. Tim Sullivan 22. Steve Hoagburg 23. Scott Long Charlie Lozow Brent Rookie Morris 26. Mark Wright Warren DuBois Rob STP Stiehl 29. Steve Tomich 30. Paul Hammelman 31. Stuart Genung 32. Jeff Garrison 33. Mike Miller 34. Ralph Howard 35. Frank Caito 36. Jeff Hatfield 37. Mike Hawkins

38. Dave Morrical 39. Jim Hetland 40. Bruce Roach 41. Dave Stouder 42. Mark Walker Steve Klayman Tom Collins 45. Rob Wright Matt Maddog Miner Bruce Perry 48. Greg Wyant 49. Jeff Lembke 50. Bill Holland 51. Brad Mason 52. Kent Eddie Gaskill 53. Tom Challman 54. Fred LaSalle 55. Don Miller 56. Greg Jones

57. Jeff Hamilton 58. Bill Foy 59. Dave Fleisher 60. Mark Stanley 61. Chris Holmes Greg Waples Jim McDonough 64. Greg Mueller Jeff Mueller Scott Gladdish 67. Jeff Johnson 68. Dan O'Meara 69. Dave Troy 70. Bruce Everett

eta Theta Pi was founded in 1839 at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio. B Established at IU in 1845, the fraternity was the first Greek organization on campus. Beta Theta Pi's colors are pink and blue and its symbol is the dragon. The Betas won the trophy for best allaround fraternity in sports, with first place titles in tennis, bowling, basketball, wrestling and softball. The fraternity's philanthropic project is the Beta Blind Fund, for which members raise money for the new Blind Center in the IU library. Beta Theta Pi's major dances are Roman Orgy, a toga party held in the fall, and the Honeymooner's Dance in the spring. Kent Gaskill was 1980 Beta president and elected for 1981 was Rob Wright. 98

387


CHI OMEGA

hi Omega was founded at the University of Arkansas in 1895. The chapter at IU was founded in 1933. Chi Omega s symbol is the owl and colors are straw and cardinal. The Chi O's had an unwelcome surprise during Sorority Rush in January - a fire broke out in one of the rooms, causing all 80 members to move out of the house temporarily while repairs were made. As a philanthropic project, Chi Omega sponsored a "Show Us Your Tan" contest and a Greek Night with proceeds going to American Red Cross. In sports, the Chi O's won second place in sorority track and volleyball intramurals and third place in football. Sue Trinkle was president for 1980 and Ami Tully was elected president for 1981.

388

Mrs. Sue Baringer Holly Bartley Carrie Goldsmith Anne Gherardi Susan Meredith Karen Enders Maria Rosado Nancy Needham Cindy Kil Ann Dygert Karen 0 Neal Paula Fyffe Jackie Solmos Liz Cline

15. Lynn Hillenburg 16. Lori Baurnunk 17. Betsy Dukes 18. Beth Berman 19. Marie Pelt 20. Jamie Crane 21. Vicky Vial 22. Sharon Cooper 23. Sally Merar 24. Kris Rollison 25. Becky Willsey 26. Debbie Perlman 27. Kathy Hornak 28. Kathy Casey

29. Terry Langdon 30. Kris Davis 31. Ami Tully 32. Caren Cooke 33. Dawn Rand 34. Maureen Crowe 35. Shannon Raney 36. Wendy Wasmuth 37. Liz Sweezey 38. Tracy Shanks 39. Linda Lange 40. Dawn Vanarsdall 41. Cindie Huffman 42. Shari Andenbruck

43. Chelli Irvin 44. Ann Litherland 45. Michelle Leonard 46. Kim Brown 47. Jody Stevens 48. Lisa Matheson 49. Diann Begley 50. Patty Henderson 51. Susie Boler 52. Corinne Kucharski 53. Linda Niepokoj 54. Polly O'Bannon 55. Pat Cayot 56. Linda Angell


CHI PHI

1. Scott Mazius 2. Joe Morris 3. Scott McKnight 4. Mike Rossenheiski 5. J.D. Asbell 6. Terry Gobart 7. Kevin Custer 8. Chris Dewsnap 9. Kerry McGammon 10. Greg Rutzen 11. Craig Hall 12. Mike Wilczynski 13. Kevin Johnson

14. Jon Curry 15. Dennis Dommer 16. Matt Haller 17. Kelly Gelarden 18. Kevin Logan 19. Brian Cushing 20. Dave Jansen 21. Dave Damere 22. Dave Martino 23. Mark Sutherland 24. Cory Campbell 25. John Baines 26. John Warner

27. Eric Rossok 28. Bill Eck 29. Mark Sharpe 30. Scott Dull 31. Dave Hilnbrand 32. Brian Hinton 33. Vince Dillon 34. Chris Pahlke 35. Jim Rinaldi 36. Mark Carroll 37. Doug Givan 38. Mark Hanusin 39. Jon Hammond

40. Tom Warner 41. Al Finley 42. Jerry Berebitsky 43. Phil Houk 44. Randy Ochs 45. Scott Stonier 46. Scott Curry 47. Randy McNutt 48. Scott Krueger 49. Eric Boeck 50. Sean Miller 51. Mike Brown 52. Joe Wicker

hi Phi was founded at Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey C in 1824. The IU chapter established in Bloomington in 1958 has been living in their present house since 1964. The fraternity colors for Chi Phi are blue and scarlet. The Chi Phi's sponsor a Pole-A-Thon every year. The members take turns sitting on a pole and take donation pledges by phone up in the crow's nest. All proceeds go to Muscular Dystrophy. For the second consecutive year in a row, the chapter received the Philinthropic National Chi Phi award for raising the most money for Muscular Dystrophy. Randy McNutt served as chapter president for both 1980 and 1981. ae,

389


DELTA CHI

elta Chi was founded in 1925 at Cornell University in Ithaca, New D York and established at IU in 1925. The fraternity's colors are red and buff, the symbol is a white carnation. Delta Chi tried in 1981 to make it three in a row, having won the Little 500 in six of the last eight years. The American Cancer Society was the recipient of the proceeds from Delta Chi's haunted house in October and their Hoosier Run for Life, a marathon cosponsored with Kappa Alpha Theta. Delta Chi holds their spring formal called Blue Champagne at Jeremiah Sweeney's. Kelly's Wake Dance uses a gangster theme including a "shootout" in the Union and a coffin processional to the house. Sam Thompson was Delta Chi president for 1980 and Mike Shane was elected for 1981. 390

1. Pete Paris 2. Brian Peters 3. Kip Tew 4. Craig Rossworm 5. Rich Earl 6. John Cecere 7. Harry Voyles 8. Baby Green 9. Papa Green 10. Mike Shane 11. Andy "Cook - Smith 12. Stu Dowden

13. Steve Lewis 14. Jim Piskura 15. Todd Fleenow 16. Hollywood Hyman 17. Maddog Davis 18. Steve Hooper 19. Chris Gutowsky 20. Brian Kinnaman 21. John Doe 22. Jason Smith 23. Mike Bergen 24. Dave Bond

25. Jim Morris 26. Jeff Hedges 27. Glenn Susdorf 28. Eliah Kahn 29. Blas Mammaril 30. Randy Girod 31. Pete Biagioni 32. Sam Thompson 33. Jim "Traks Mark 34. Rocky Slusser 35. Randy Strong 36. Rich Kapp

37. Randy Mitchell 38. Adam Giles 39, Tom Massengale 40. Jay Coy 41. Pizza Man 42. Kevin Burke 43. Matt Judge 44. Bill Brissman 45. Quinlan Arnold 46. Harold Platt


DELTA DELTA DELTA

Sue Orlebake Lisa Greene Kasey Cusick Cindy Smith Nancy Bast Toula Smyrniotis Cindy Detherage Kathy Jones Lisa Witten Lou Ann Witten 11. Janet Atkins

12. Holly Kallick 13. Melanie O'Mara 14. Roni Figueroa 15. Kim Morris 16. Bev Miller 17. Kim Kilander 18. Ann Heusinkveld 19. Cindy Peter 20. Holli Dennis 21. Julie Rogers Jill Johnson

a.

23. Mom Dillman 24. Amy Beja 25. Peggy Duchon 26. Rennie Avril 27. Janet Kirschner 28. Dodie Avril 29. Ginny Caldwell 30. Jen Coridan 31. Alison Streiff 32. Carrie Henck 33. Troy Troeger

Julie Jacobus Ellen Whitehead Lynn Gorski Kemery Bloom Lisa Toretto Shawn Colquitt Suzie Bruner Ronna Pritikin 42. Martha Daniel

ounded in 1888 at Boston University, Delta Delta Delta has been at IU F since 1918. With stars and crescent as symbols and silver, gold and blue as colors, the inside of the Tri Delt house on 3rd Street is designed in multiples of three representing the three triangles, their Greek letters. In sports, the Tri Delts placed first in the 1980 Mini 500 race and won the all-campus women's intramural football title. They sponsored Oktoberfest at the Hopp with proceeds going to blind children for their Philanthropic project. Ginny Caldwell was 1980 house president, and Lou Ann Witten was elected as president for 1981. dB

391


DE LTA GAMMA

1. Kris Walters 2. Kris Fesler .3. Kvm Fesler

elta Gamma was found at Lewis School in Oxford, Mississippi in D 1873. The local chapter was founded in 1898, and the sorority s symbol is the anchor with bronze, pink and blue as colors. In sports, Delta Gamma has won Sigma Nu's February Follies, a competition between sororities, for the past six years. In the fall, Delta Gamma sponsored an Anchor Splash in which fraternities competed against each other in swimming events and a contest for the best eyes on campus. Proceeds for both events went to the Foundation for the Blind. The president of Delta Gamma in 1980 was Jay ne Lentz and Lisa Newhouse was elected as president for 1981: ,

392

4. Amy McClure 5. Amy Haerle 6. Anne Haerle 7. Susie McQuigg 8. Missy Halle 9. Julie Mason 10. Missy Jacobsen 11. Donna McNeely 12. Leslie Strauss 13. Julie Oxford 14. Susan Kinnett 15. Julie Eade 16. Holly Hyatt

17. Beth Klingaman 18. Mary Sale 19. Jayne Lentz 20. Penny Peterson 21. Mom Bayse 22, Suzanne Horn 23. Julie Wilson 24. Lisa Sevier 25. Jenny Ryan 26. Kim Miller 27. Alice Saint 28. Mary Rappe 29. Tammi Thotnmen 30. Wendy Fried 31. Eilish Leene 32. Nora Mervar

33. Mary Logan 34. Jill Shissler 35. Trisha Gozad 36. Patty Dooley 37. Mary Anderson 38. Shele Wruble 39. Agnes Groh 40. Pam Walters 41. Marti Timmerman 42. Nancy Herendeen 43. Ginger Schweider 44. Julie Dummich 45. Carrie Edwards 46. Jennifer Hooker 47. Laura Welch 48. Lisa Donnelly

49. Barbi Slade 50. Jessica Donnelly 51. Mindy Deister 52. Suzie White 53. Risa Mervar 54. Karol Lee Malovany 55. Laura Rohm 56. Sheri Salin 57. Angie Beer 58. Mary Helen Irvine 59. Betsy Strenck 60. Teresa Nasser 61. Anna Mamalakis 62. Lynn Jesse 63. Lisa Newhouse 64. Katie Killinger


DELTA SIGMA THETA

MINIM MIER Mona Derico Renaye Sims Sharon Dupree Donna Harris Terry Harris Debra Malone 7. Jackie Reed

Lannie Jones Norvetta Wills Bridgett Holt Rose Wright Aundi Bushrod Crystal Myers 14. Grace Bates

15. Rosalvnn Ross 16. Pamela Hall 17. Betty Ross 18. Patricia Walker 19. Carmen Cain 20. Angela Tubbs 21. Deborah Derico

Melva Sanders Jackie Golden Nina Quarles Leila Ford 26. Evelyn Louis

elta Sigma Theta was founded in 1913 at Howard University in D Washington D.C. The chapter has been at IU since 1947. The sorority s colors are cream and crimson and their mascot is the elephant. Delta Sigma Theta raffled off six hours of tuition and a $75 gift certificate from TIS. The proceeds went to the Sickle Cell Anemia Association. Also the chapter members give out minority scholarships annually. Delta Sigma Theta held a Christmas party and a Sadie Hawkins Dance. In the spring, Delta Sigma Theta sponsored sorority seminars in dormitory lounges. Donna Harris was the Delta Sigma Theta president in 1980 and Patricia Walker will be president for 1981.

393


DELTA TAU DELTA

elta Tau Delta was founded in 1859 at Bethany College in West D Virginia. The Delts came to IU in 1871. Their present chapter house, which was built in 1965, was the first greek house built on the extension of fraternity row. Their colors are purple, gold and white. Delta Tau Delta sponsored a road run around Bloomington. The proceeds went to the Heart Fund. Delta Tau Delta won the competition during the Red Cross Bloodmobile blood drive. They had the largest amount of donors, approximately 60 members. The Delts go Hawaiian in the fall when they hold a Luau dance. They also have a Valentine Day dance. The president for 1980 was Keith Kovacik and for the 1981 term, Ted McGraw was elected. j'cr--.;

394

1. Don Marsh 2. John Haffner 3. John Alexander 4. Dave Vignolo 5. Jerry Davis 6. Jeff Ferraro 7. Bert Harrison 8. Jeff Howard 9. Gary Carter 10. Doug Smock 11. Andy Wallace 12. Todd Boney 13. Fred Wittman 14. Chris Manella 15. Scott Wittman

16. Fred Kauffman 17. Kent Schari inghausen 18. Pat Egenolf 19. Jack Shanahan 20. Jim Allen 21. Kevin Moyer 22. Doug White 23. Matt Webster 24. Mark Dugan 25. Mike Goeller 26. Pat Carter 27. Scott Kamman 28. Jim Wagner 29. Mike Edwards 30. Brian Clark

31. John Gall 32. Kris Klepper 33. Andy Oexman 34. Tony Vermillion 35. Brad Kamman 36. Duane Clark 37. Tim Scheerer 38. Monty Warrick 39. Greg Wolljung 40. Brad Bucknam 41. Ted McGrew 42. Greg Evans 43. Jim Hines 44. Tim Hoffman 45. Ed Cramer

46. Wayne Friedman 47. Brian Guastella 48. Dan Manella 49. Joe Smolar 50. Darryl Collins 51. Dave Shoup 52. Mark Frushour 53. Randy Smock 54. Greg Elsner 55. Nick Roknich 56. Brian Collins 57. Chuck Albers 58. Ben


HOUSEMOMS' JOBS GO BEYOND OFFICIAL DUTIES

Larry Levin

1111111111111F/980-81 House Mothers: Top Row — Isabel Whitt, Elaine Harvey, Eve Seitz, Frances Hunley, Eileen Zerke, Betty Dawson, Wilda Scott, Sue Baringer.. Bottom Row — Sally Ilarnden, Jacqueline Brummet, Marjorie Overman, Shaw Basye, Polly LaRoche, Ruth Young, Bebe Schachter.

ow many mothers do you know have 40 or more children in colH lege between the ages of 19 and 22? At IU, this is not unique, for a housemother of a sorority or a fraternity, that is. A housemother has many duties and responsibilities. She must purchase food, plan meals, serve as an adult role model, enforce university rules and serve as an official hostess. However, housemoms' role goes beyond "official" duties. Sigma Kappa housemother, Mrs. Mimi Walters, said that she is a friend to the girls. "I have a good rapport with the girls," said Walters. "I attend candlelights, serenades and many social events." Phi Delta Theta and Sigma Phi Epsilon are the only fraternities with a housemother. To the fraternity members, the

write her notes, send flowers and present housemothers are pseudo mothers. "Our housemom, Ada Garner, does just skits. But beyond that one week each about everything," said Phi Delta Theta semester, Mom always comes with us to member Greg Smith. "She irons shirts for everything we are involved with: Sigma Chi Derby Days, style shows, intramurals, dances and hems jeans and suits." Alpha Epsilon housemother Rusti Smith and social events." Be Be Schacter said one of her fondest said she strives to help make the chapter a memories as Sigma Delta Tau housecomfortable place to live. "One of my greatest goals, is to make the mother was being presented with an honor chapter a home away from home. Also, I pin. "The girls gave me a Sigma Delta Tau am always around for counseling," said pin. This was an outstanding honor. So now Smith. The chapter members also honor house- when I go with them to their various mothers to remind them they are always events, I have a pin like the rest of the girls," said Schacter. 88 remembered. Lynn Vagnone Zeta Tau Alpha calls one week of each semester, "Mom Ryan Appreciation Week," for their housemother. "During that week we honor Mom to let her know that we truly appreciate her," said ZTA member Ellen Dye. "We all 395


DELTA UPSILON

elta Upsilon, founded in Williamstown, Massachusetts in 1834, has D been at IU since 1915. Their colors are old gold on a field of royal blue. Delta Upsilon's well-known mascot is a fire truck given to them after their house burned in 1922. Delta Upsilon has worked with the American Red Cross on the Blood Drive for the past four years. In the spring, they held Greek Night at the Hopp, with the proceeds going to the American Cancer Society. The fraternity's major dance is the Fall Fireman's Fling. Delta Upsilon was also the first fraternity to invent the lawn pool party in the '40s. The Fling was featured in Life magazine. James Hildebranski was 1980 president and Randy Borror was elected to serve in 1981.

396

I. Victor Derdek 2. Tom Slivousky 3. Todd Stark 4. Phil Hipskind 5. Dan Klubusnik 6. Doug Dickmann 7. Brian Kimura 8. Hans 9. Jay Fletcher 10. Ken Speed 11. Doug Zook 12. Brad Karch 13. Mark Odier

14. Randy Hazel 15. Rob Thompson 16. Jim Hildebranski 17. Ed Marshall 18. Jim VanRenterghem 19. Chris Carlson 20. Ed Blanchard 21. Mike Lockhart 22. Dennis Gentry 23. Don Piety 24. Chris Levato 25. Eric Ward

26. Fred Warren 27. Mike Kalb 28. Bart Roberts 29. Steve Bartek 30. Alan Bradley 31. Garry Karch 32. Kent Mitchell 33. Bryon VainRib 34. Ron Perkov 35. Dick Williams 36. John Beauchamp 37. Matt Blanco

38. Mike Schultz 39. Jim Peck 40. Dan Ladendorf 41. Dan LaBrash 42. Bill Beaumont 43. Craig Wilde 44. Randy Borror 45. Russ Larko 46. Greg Katzman 47. Scott Schuttle 48. Dan Church 49. Brian Kelley


DELTA ZETA

1. Barb Moore 2. Sue Hill 3. Nancy Van Luik 4. Cindy Sorgen 5. Wendy Sabul 6. Vonda Stierwalt 7. Gina Mead 8. Julie Fountain 9. Linda Ferris 10. Terri Aebersold 11. Sue Garon 12. Terry Vaughan 13. Diana Christian 14. Tammi Aebersold 15. Dani Schneider 16. Cindy Fuchs

17. Lisa Lowry 18. Becy McAdam 19. Nancy Logan 20. Jonnamarie Affeldt 21. Jacque Aaron 22. Sheila Tanner 23. Kay Schaber 24. Brenda Weekley 25. Cincy Durcanin 26. Jane Wudell 27. Terry Klarich 28. Joan Foret 29. Tracy Overgaard 30. Karen Gustafson 31. Sonnie Sicklesmith 32. Elaine McKenna

33. Karen Plunkett 34. Alice Hilligoss 35. Susie Ferguson 36. Cindy Lenburg 37. Sherry Snyder 38. Sally Moore 39. Carla Levy 40. Meg McNichols 41. Leslie Knoll 42. Suzanne Painchaud 43. Michelle Johnson 44. Cathy Jackson 45. Beth Petrucce 46. Shelly Barnes 47. Beth leenor 48. Cind Thomas

49. Mary Myers 50. Judy Krueckeberg 51. Marcia Kauchak 52. Anita Cofer 53. Mary Jane Reinhold 54. Susan Roberts 55. Carolyn Doyle 56. Alberta Alexander 57. Kathy Moyers 58. Pam Wyss 59. Susan Prentice 60. Ellen Van Stone 61. Kathy Sisinger 62. Karen Thomas 63. Kelly Pierce 64. Nancy Piccolomini

elta Zeta was founded in 1902 at Miami University of Ohio. The D chapter came to IU in 1968. The mascot for the sorority is the turtle, the colors are rose and green, and the flower is killarney rose. Delta Zeta received a national award for the best pledge program of all Delta Zeta chapters. They also won the best Greek and overall float award during Homecoming festivities. Once a month, Delta Zeta members hold events for the Stonebelt and Hospitality House, reaching young children and senior citizens. Delta Zeta sponsored a "Think and Drink" trivia contest with Sigma Pi at Ye Ole Regulator. Julie Fountain was the president for Delta Zeta in 1980 and Beth Petrucce was elected for 1981. fe

397


EVANS SCHOLARS

harles "Chick" Evans was the founding golfer of Evans Scholars C at Northwestern University in 1930. The fraternity came to IU in 1969. Their colors are white and green. Every Evans Scholar has been a golf caddy for at least two years. The fraternity's members are those who have excelled at scholastics and golf. Evans Scholars have won the Cream golf intramurals for the last four years. They also participate in the Medinah Country Club Golf Tournament in Chicago. Evans Scholars sponsor a Golf Ball formal dance every February in Chicago and put on a Sunglasses and Hat all-campus party in the spring. Drew Prusiecki was president for 1980 and Patrick Hawkins was elected for 1981.

398

1. Fred Dickman 2. Jim Linnane 3. John McNicholas 4. Kevin Burke 5. Mark St. Leger 6. Larry Crouch 7. Hugo Salazar 8. Brendan Killeen 9. Dave Pilat 10. Tom Enright 11. Ed McCormick 12. Martin Brown 13. Ed Brizzolara 14. Tim Ellsworth

15. Claude Czaja 16. Pat Sharkey 17. Brendan McCormick 18. Chris Gerardi 19. Tony Czechorski 20. Bill Rohan 21. Patrick Hawkins 22. John O'Connor 23. Jeffrey Owens 24. Matthew Miller 25. Jim Onak 26. Mike Zupec 27. Joe Farnan

28. Doug Greer 29. Drew Prusiecki 30. Gary Shoenbeck 31. Darrell Dennis 32. Tom Oury 33. Guy Larsen 34. Scott Sablich 35. Theodore Skirvin 36. Tom O'Malley 37. Brad Bobowski 38. Bruce Benifiel 39. Jim Brice 40. Martin Gallagher

41. Tom Pizzato 42. Kevin Haggerty 43. Mike Ostrowski 44. Tony Sekula 45. Daniel Brogan 46. Liam Ford 47. Dean Gentuso 48. Mike LaMontagne 49. Matthew Spartz 50. Peter Welch 41. James Moran 52. Edwin Hall 53. John Nedelka


GAMMA PHI BETA

Marietta Taylor Megan Byrne Karen Whitman Gail Sheeler Terri Smith Donna Simmie Theresa Oakley Patty Hammes Ann Cullar Diane Linskey Amy Teghtmeyer Laura Boehm Sue Umiker Kerry Taber

15. Eileen Vercamp 16. Donna Raymond 17. Judy Cobb 18. Judy Ratajczak 19. Linda Gibbs 20. Jane Callahan 21. Cheryl Duffy 22. Ann Auberry 23. Julie Martin 24. Kathy Roberts 25. Polly Plant 26. Kay Prentice 27. Holly Poer 28. Donna Landon

29. Patty Palmer 30. Susan Gee 31. Kathy Sater 32. Linda Dyerly 33. Karen Russell 34. Tracy Ferris 35. Debra Landon 36. Chris Widner 37. Joann Pastorello 38. Sarah Wirts 39. Holly McNulty 40. Amy Hoyer 41. Janice Chaplan 42. Betsy Hoffman

43. Jenny Branco 44. Janice Temme 45. Monica Shelton 46. Shelley Johnson 47. Melissa McGuan 48. Kathy Rose 49. Laurie Small 50. Becky Black 51. Denise McGinn 52. Susan Able 53. Mary Kane 54. Nancy Kuper 55. Anne Hinkley

amma Phi Beta was founded in 1874 at Syracuse University in G New York. The chapter has been at IU since 1957. The symbol for the sorority is a crescent moon, their colors are brown and mode and their mascot is the koala bear. Gamma Phi made Christmas a little merrier for the underprivileged children of the Headstart School, throwing a Christmas party and donating gifts to the children. The women also participate in national philanthropic projects by helping to sponsor two camps for underprivileged children in Vancouver, Canada and Vail, Colorado. Madeline Yucevicius was president for 1980 and Holly McNutty will be president for 1981. 9,9

399


KAPPA ALPHA THETA

appa Alpha Theta, founded in 1870 at DePauw University, has K been at IU since 1872. The sorority's symbol is the kite and colors are black and gold. Kappa Alpha Theta was the recipient of the IU Panhellenic Sorority Award of Excellence - a new award given to the most outstanding sororit y chapter on campus. In sports, the Thetas placed first in sorority racquetball, bowling and diving intramurals. For their national philanthropy project, the Thetas sold carnations during Homecoming with proceeds going to logopedics. Kate Brennan was Kappa Alpha Theta president in 1980 and Jane Black was elected president for 1981. g,k

400

1. Elaine Hrisomalos 2. Jamie Wilkins 3. Anne Bennett 4. Kara Lash 5. Sue Stanley 6. Lisa Ahlbrand 7. Diane Nicholson 8. Ann Luzadder 9. Kelly Leer 10. Donna Dillon 11. Andrea Fekkes 12. Nancy Achleman 13. Anne Engelmann 14. Nancy Milligan 15. Julie Schwem 16. Holly Henderson 17. Mary Ellen Gates 18. Jane Black

19. Becky Snowberger 20. Julie Hiatt 21. Tori Banghart 22. Suzanne Kaiser 23. Cathy LaBracke 24. Ariel Kochi 25. Kitty Aders 26. Patty Ebbinghouse 27. Meg Naulty 28. Karen Hrisomalos 29. Cindy Olson 30. Sandy Herron 31. Beth Bloomstrom 32. Marcey Smith 33. Lynn Baggott 34. Lori Rosenthal 35. Carol Lyons 36. Karen Walker

37. Christie Myers 38. Renata Viskanta 39. Mary Dragoo 40. Margaret Blackwood 41. Linda Baltus 42. Lisa Smith 43. Dede Esque 44. Patti Johnson 45. Betty - Mom D" Dawson 46. Julie Fleming 47. Helene Moore 48. Alisa Hendrix 49. Marcy Carlson 50. Cathy Axtell 51. Joyce Michael 52. Dorothy Mrzlock 53. Kris Evans 54. Peg Elsner

55. Sue Pulliam 56. Sarah Shirley 57. Debbie Leyda 58. JoEllen Daily 59. Marianne Guinney 60. Katherine Young 61. Martha Griggs 62. Kate Breenan 63. Julie Hoster 64. Nan Wilkins 65. Amy Spence 66. Wendy Guthrie 67. Amy Klekamp 68. Elizabeth Earnhart 69. Kathy McKee 70. Mary Ann Cain


SWITCHING ROOMS IS A CHANGING EXPERIENCE 4 very ten weeks a strange and intriguing event takes place at the GamF ma Phi Beta sorority on North Jordan. At the stroke of 9:30 p.m., the women begin pulling out their dresser drawers. They yank clothes from their closets as if possessed by madmen. Stuffed koala bears and study pillows are flung out into the hall as the women try to carry their precious stereos from room to room. What causes this strange behavior? What is in the minds of these 65 women who take apart their rooms just to reassemble them again? It's a tradition in every sorority on campus that happens at least once a year. It's called Room Change. At the Gamma Phi Beta house, every ten weeks the women move into another room in the house to find not only a new room but a new roommate. A few weeks before room change, each pair of roommates decides between themselves which member will move into a new room. Then each women chooses a new roommate. Anyone may live with whomever she wants, except new pledges, who must live with their sorority "moms" for the first ten weeks. Changing roommates doesn't bother anyone, according to Karen Whitman, a member of the sorority. "We change rooms to get to know more of the sisters in a better way," she said. "It's kind of sad when you move from your sorority mom because you've become so close, "but it's fun to move in with another sister that you don't know that well. That way you get to widen your circle of friends." Once the day of room change arrives, the women usually begin early to gather all of their belongings and pack them in small boxes and drawers. If they aren't moving, they usually help their old roommate move out and their new one in. Room change is always fun, but also a mess, according to Nancy Kuper, another member of the sorority. "When everyone, begins to exchange drawers and bring all of their stuff into new rooms, it gets pretty messy!" she said. "People run into each other with armloads full of clothes and stuff, and the halls get so full of junk from the rooms that you can barely squeeze through with all your belongings." Once everything is moved, the house begins to quiet down as the women rearrange their new rooms. This process can take anywhere from a few hours to a few days, according to Whitman.

"When I moved into my new room, everything was fixed up before we went to sleep that night," she said. "But some of the girls didn't finish rearranging their rooms for about four days!" Although room change can be a tremendous ,hassle for the women, on the

whole it's one of the funniest nights in the house, Kuper said. "Even though we have so much to move and it gets so messy, it's the craziest time," she said. "I'm glad we do it twice a year." 8E; Megan Byrne

A conglomeration of private possesions lay in disarray on the Gamma Phi Beta floor as members spend hours changing rooms.

401


KAPPA DELTA

appa Delta was founded in 1897 at Longwood College in Farmville, K Virginia. The sorority's local chapter was established in 1923. Kappa Delta's symbol is the dagger and its colors are green and white. From its national chapter, the sorority received a Progress Award for 1980. Kappa Delta made yarn dolls for the Crippled Children's Home in Richmond, Virginia. The sorority also performed their IU Sing act and made Easter centerpieces for the Bloomington Convalescent Center as a philanthropic project. The president of Kappa Delta for 1980 was Dede Markey; elected as president for 1981 was Ann Martell. qF

402

Mona Zarndt Frances Kayman Kathy Beaver Tracy Balbirer Julie Hanna Paula Graves Gayle Gaydos Lisa Patterson Debbie Conrady Amy Earnst Jenny Mitchell Laura Robbins Julie Maddox Amy Hembree

15. Sue Steager 16. Diana Schroeder 17. Ellen Slifka 18. Linda Hendrvx 19. Jodi Douglas 20. Diane Goering 21. Carla Scissors 22. Laura Brantner 23. Debbie Kennedy 24. Jayne Cedarbaum 25. Fortis Myatt 26. Kim Shobe 27. Kathy Norman

28. Jodie Sainopulus 29. Cheryl Eisele 30. Annette Tofaute 31. Carolyn Turner 32. Ann Martell 33. Joy Bade 34. Ruanne Berger 35. Deanna Young 36. Anne Rinefort 37. Kim Corbett 38. Janie Berger 39. Laura Mulbarger 40. Beckie Wools

41. Gretchen Rinne 42. Shelly Irwin 43. Karen Jensen 44. Helen Swarbrick 45. Sue Thompsen 46. Kris Quince 47. Connie Downey 48. Janet Hupfer 49. Karla Rupprecht 50. Mary Sykes 51. Melanie Hatch 52. Danette Cisowski 53. Laura Stevens


KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA

.11 Julia Farson Mary Ann Barlow Beth Boyer Lindley Peterson Ann Wulf Erin Gannon Jennifer Young Cathy Reiman Debra Hovde Sarah Lynn Lisa Lanham Priscilla Scott Pam Hamilton Laura Gardner Beth Gaunt Julie Foley

3 17. Molly Whitney 18. Marcia Banks 19. Karen Tardy 20. Julie Foulke 21. Linda Cline 22. Cynthia Wade 23. Miriam Kniess 24. Claudia Henny 25. Mindy Moores 26. Kathy Jones 27. Sue Clark 28. Lisa Steckbeck 29. Elizabeth Kimball 30. Gabby Weckle 31. Wendy Young 32. Mary Tierney

33. Libby Given 34. Sharon Sammons 35. Leslie Shaw 36. Beth Garvey 37. Cathi Frey 38. Diana Kabelin 39. Dawn Jenkins 40. Julie Stewart 41. Betsy Heidler 42. Becky Tredway 43. Michelle Howden 44. Joni Johnson 45. Stephanie Jarvis 46. Karen Wuenker 47. Carol Nelson 48. Kathy Scheid

49. Leslie Reiman 50. Sue DeCraene 51. Shannan Sellers 52. Paula Marple 53. Cathy Pollert 54. Melissa Libke 55. Susan Zaremba 56. Amy Conrad 57. Leslie Stricker 58. Chris Kramer 59. Gayle Shaw 60. Jane Rogers 61. Susan Brannan 62. Kathy Miller 63. Shelley Young

appa Kappa Gamma was founded in 1870 at Monmouth College, K Illinois. The chapter arrived at IU in 1872. The chapter's colors are dark blue and light blue. Their symbol is a key. The Kappas held a Kappa Bazaar in the fall. Kappa alumns came to IU and bid for homemade crafts, with the proceeds going to various local charities. Kappa Kappa Gamma also sponsored a Balloon Derby, the sorority sold balloons with the proceeds going to the Hemophilia Foundation. The balloon that went the farthest netted the owner a hundred dollars. The Kappa house is the home of the Kappa Pickers, a professional singing group. Jenny Young was the 1980 president and Joni Johnson was elected for 1981. 8E-

403


KAPPA SIGMA

appa Sigma was founded in 1869 at the University of Virginia in CharK lottesville, Virginia. The chapter came to IU in 1900. The colors are scarlett, green and white. Kappa Sigma held a Branch McCracken Memorial banquet in honor of the former IU basketball coach. The banquet was attended by coach Knight and the basketball team. For a philanthropy project, Kappa Sigma co-sponsored a weightlifting and bench press contest with the IU weightlifting club. The proceeds went to the Cystic Fibrosis Association. Kappa Sigma alumni include IU president John Ryan, Ralph Lloyd and composer Hogie Carmichael. Kappa Sigma sponsored a riverboat dance where they invited one fraternity and four sororities to participate. John Daily served as president for Kappa Sigma in 1980 and Steve Strong was elected in 1981. -, 404

1. Craig Richards 2. Brian Livingston 3. Mike Doland 4. Pat Roemer 5. Todd Wagner 6, Greg Mayfield 7. Tim Hammond 8. Dave Johnston 9. Tony Conrad 10. Dave Springer 11. Bob Gibson 12. Tim Springer 13. George Borza 14. John Norris

15. Scott Bassett 16. Kevin Liston 17. Jeff Vieck 18. Eric Robinson 19. Phil Burkart 20. Mike Guinan 21. Scott Oleksv 22. Tony Zaccaria 23. Dan Lattner 24. Steve Glander 25. John Warner 26. Rich Schneider 27. Steve Strong 28. Roger West

29. Lester Mullins 30. Tom Chomyn 31. Neil Perron 32. Keith Beall 33. Tom Harmas 34. Scott Bryant 35. Mike Morrow 36. Jack Montgomery 37. Chris Langhammer 38. Brad Gooch 39. Eric Miller 40. Lorne Aubin 41. Tim Olinger 42. Mark Olinger

43. Pat Hanlon 44. John Ganyard 45. Dave McCauley 46. Bryan Oliver 47. Jell Conklin 48. Mike Hiddemymeat 49. Steve Pfeifer 50. Brandon Lewis 51. Jon Gaston 52. Jim Kennedy 53. Greg Muncy


PHI DELTA THETA

1. Kevin Andrews 2. Dave Chase 3. Ron Johnson 4. Jerry Sweeney 5. Chris Pluta 6. Tim Noone 7. Chip Bergman 8. Brad Davis 9. John Wray 10. Jim Campbell 11. Mark Mahaffey 12. Doug Smith 13. Tom Gurbach 14. Mark Kemper

15. Ron Walters 16. Mom Garner 17. Jesse Villalpando 18. Ken Brown 19. Tom Johnson 20. Greg McCabe 21. Jim Hizer 22. Mike Brown 23. Jim Barlow 24. Tom Fleming 25. Gary Kohn 26. Greg Kuisel 27. Brent Farver 28. Mike Fromuth

29. Walker Kemper 30. Chuck Cartensen 31. Jeff Rowland 32. Mike Stiles 33. Hank Stephan 34. Frank Haig 35. Steve Furr 36. Billiflooker 37. Jim Mahaffey 38. Greg Franceschi 39. Mark Gillenwater 40. Bob Martindale 41. John Koehler 42. Brian Detty

43. Dave Harris 44. Kevin Rillo 45. Tom O'Connell 46. Pete Babilla 47. Jamie Kiely 48. John Stubblefield 49. Scott Plain 50. Jerry Hunt 51. Bill Richards 52. Sam Knight 53. Mark Williamson

hi Delta Theta was founded in 1848 at the University of Miami in Oxp ford, Ohio. The Phi Delts came to IU in 1849, making it the oldest chapter in the country. The colors are azure and argent. Phi Delta Theta was awarded the Gold Star by their national, signifying an outstanding chapter. The Phi Delts also received first place in the Greek Classic and in intramural swimming. The fraternity roller skated to raise money for the Big Brother/Big Sister program. The major dances the Phi Delts have are Beachcombers in the fall and a senior roast in the spring. Jerry Sweeny was the 1980 president and Chris Pluta was elected the 1981 house president.

405


PHI GAMMA DELTA

hi Gamma Delta was founded in 1848 at Jefferson College. The IU p chapter was formed in 1871. Fiji's mascot is a snowy white owl and their colors are purple and white. The Fiji s ran a football to Purdue in cooperation with the Bloomington Jaycees. The proceeds went to help build a new YMCA recreational center. Phi Gamma Delta holds two major dances. Fiji Isle is in the fall. The theme for the dance is Polynesian as everyone dressed in luau outfits and feast on lobster. Purple Garter is in the spring at poolside at the Bloomington Ramada Inn. Torn Backoff was the Phi Gamma Delta president in 1980. Don McMahon was elected to serve in 1981 as house president.

406

1. Kevin Eagle 2. Bill Campbell 3. Pat King 4. Ron Wilson 5. Joe Bill Wiley 6. Pat Lindley 7. Jim Holland 8. Doug Elmore 9. Howie Bergdoll 10. Ken Stevens 11. Tracy Newhouse 12. Tim Michel 13. Randy Gunst 14. Chip Lewis 15. Dan Peterson 15. Tim Wiley

17. Steve Khan 18. Craig Burton 19. Tim Barrett 20. Jay McGarvey 21. Chuck Shrake 22. Pete Turk 23. Brian Smith 24. Pete Delone 25. Sherman McMurray 26. John Rapp 27. Scott Gudeman 28. Kurt VanWinkle 29. Greg Moheban 30. Dean Almas 31. John Effrein 32. Chris Care y

33. Andy Weissert 34. Polet Senesac 35. Dave Malson 36. Bob Hicks 37. Jeff Andress 38. Brian Heges 39. Mike Turner 40. Barry Smith 41. Andy Williams 42. Jeff Shuman 43. Andy Fila 44. Don Morley 45. Tom Backoff 46. Brain Metallic 47. Matt Millikan 48. Doug McCoy

49. Ted Dickman 50. Dave Emery 51. Mark Massa 52. Pat O'Connor 53. John Morris 54. Greg Nicholson 55. Jeff Moheban 56. Paul Scudder 57. Dave Paulev 58. Don McMahon 59. Terry Miller 60. Greg Reifel 61. Geff French 62. Chris Hottinger 63. Don Tyte 64. Brian S. Smith


PHI KAPPA

1. Doug Mohr 2. John Coleman 3. Jay Sutherland 4. Barry Brisben 5. Bryan Knotts 6. Tom Och 7. Al Colquitt 8. Kent Billingsley 9. Jeff Egle 10. Jeff Ruddell 11. Eddie Meyer 12. Dave Rowland 13. Jeff Meunier 14. Jeff Brisben 15. Keith Micklow

16. Jeff Echelberger 17. Shelly Zeiger 18. Rob Wickersham 19. Doug Prange 20. Steve Zirkelbach 21. Kris Norton 22. Phil Oehrle 23. Mark Richards 24. Andy Barker 25. Brian Wetzel 26. Brian Egnatz 27. Steve Smith 28. Derek Anastasia 29. Mark Gaston 30. Dave Taylor

31. Rob Oyler 32. Greg Gillis 33. Dave Bowker 34. Brad Beeman 35. Dean Lehmkuhler 36. Keith Watanabe 37. Paul Berg 38. Gary Ross 39. David Hoover 40. Steve Trick 41. John Karich 42. Mark Siebert 43. Jim Gray 44. John Thompson 45. john Moos

46. John Tuerf 47. Todd Rhoda 48. Mark Oates 49. Rick Kent 50. Tom McKaig 51. Chris Smith 52. Mark Albertson 53. Doug Bergman 54. Eric Knoll 55. John Karp 56. Jim Matsey 57. Jim Shook 58. Jeff Hemmeger 59. Craig Ford

Psi

n 1852 at Jefferson College in Canonsberg, Pennsylvania, Phi Kappa Psi I fraternity was founded. The Indiana chapter was formed in 1869. Phi Psi's colors are cardinal red and hunters green. In October, the Phi Psi's present "scaranades," a Halloween-type serenade. The fraternity raised $450 for the children of UNICEF. In 1980, the Phi Psi's captured the all crimson "A" team championship in football. Bi-annually, the Phi Psi's hold a fall dance called Arabian Nights. Phi Psi's also hold a fly-away to Florida dance in the spring. The Phi Kappa Psi president for 1980 was Greg Cozad and the 1981 president is Chris Smith.

407


PHI MU

hi Mu, Ill's newest sorority on campus was re-established on March 13, p 1980. Founded at Wesleyan College in 1852, Phi Mu's symbol is the lion and their colors are rose and white. Until a house is built for them, they are living on the 7th floor of the Poplars Convention Center on Seventh street. Phi Mus have been quick to get involved on campus - they came in first in the 1980 Greek Classic and a second place in the all-campus track intramurals. Their philanthropic project was "Project Hope," which helps establish schools and medical supplies overseas. Bridget Farren was the 1980 house president and Marcy Figel was elected president for 1981.

408

1. Christie Schroeder 2. Kelsey Chipman 3. Ann Groomer 4. Kim Buchanon 5. Sue Bronco 6. Barb Rosinsky 7. Sue Spiwak 8. Marty Brown 9. Peg Miller 10. Lynn Sargent 11. Mary Jane Pfister 12. Heidi Siemers 13. Marcy Figel 14. Ellen Share 15. Lori Lafferty 16. Jodi Rosen 17. Diane Tingle 18. Tracy Heaton 19. Susan Robertson 20. Georgia Fromm 21. Erin Adamson 22. Dara Galic 23. Kay Luebbers 24. Pattie Forester

25. Ellyn Heckaman 26. Amy Stephenson 27. LeighAnn Carlson 28. Kay Kerslake 29. Sue Sams 30. Janet Earley 31. Sue Weidenbener 32. Lee Wittenborn 33. Debbie Burack 34. Jenny Cripe 35. Reyne Rus 36. Mary Rippey 37. Betty Jefvert 38. Jill Duncan 39. Monica Shields 40. Susie Kessler 41. Barb Rasmussen 42. Kelly Lasecki 43. Amy Gilbreath 44. Patrice Badger 45. Marikaye Gallagher 46. Ann Woods 47. Cathy Edmonds 48. Monica Gaal

49. Annabelle Fernandez 50. Debbie Cooper 51. Debbie Ellis 52. Pam Barban 53. Lisa Cavalier 54. Gina D'Ascenzo 55. Monica Kiley 56. Robin Tate 57. Susan Staley 58. Wendy Grahn 59. Suzanne Hand 60. Rhonda Fasching 61. Lisa Westerhoff 62. Julie Burke 63. Lynette Allen 64. Tisa Peredo 65. Pam Rohm 66. Libby Bates 67. Debbie Payne 68. Carin Christensen 69. Bridget Farren 70. Chris Miller 71. Pego Wright 72. Yazmin Ortiz

73. Karen Cooper 74. Julie Beauvais 75. Tammy Keeler 76. Nancy Forcier 77. Sally Poling 78. Mary Method 79. Erin Norton 80. Sarah Brown 81. Liz Laker 82. Michelle Yates 83. Kim Butcher 84. Jane Gillespie 85. Karen Reuss 86. Jenny Meyer 87. Barb Hamman 88. Beckie Hibner 89. Tammy Rudicel 90. Jane Peterson 91. Pam Morris 92. Beth Snyder 93. Susie Hinkle


PT

ETA PHI

OEM.

MIN117Lisa Calusen Beth Coleman Cheryl Ring Lori Orescanin Kathy Kerezman Suzanne Boyd Diane Viterisi Maria Widermann Janet Baker Lynn Wadden Debbie Pedigo Kiki Wiley Susan Shuman Carla Jones Maria Zintsmaster Julie Nunn

17. Ellen Eastman 18. Janie Genovese 19. Nancy Johnson 20. Gail French 21. Carolyn Martin 22. Julie lemmolo 23. Jenny Thanner 24. Martha Hayes 25. Jennifer Morrow 26. Ann Nesbit 27. Julie Helms 28. Nancy Pierce 29. Amy Lynch 30. Julie Campbell 31. Laura Summerlin

32. Debbie Bernasco 33. Julie Degitz 34. Wendy Chiogioji 35. Sarah King 36. Carolyn Hinsey 37. Joan Mulvihill 38. Nancy Hopkins 39. Lauren Smith 40. Susan Hedrick 41. Karen Hopkins 42. Chris Bayley 43. Ktistal Fischer 44. Andi Cawein 45. Jackie Kong 46. Ona Zilenas

47. Ann Nolan 48. Colleen Blake 49. Shary Anderson 50. Sally Keck 51. Lisa Pierce 52. Julie Eastman 53. Barb Borman 54. Diana Fulper 55. Merilee Schmink 56. Kristi Corts 57. Lynn Stebbins 58. Torev Barnes 59. Synthia Person 60. Christi Heuser 61. Beth Nicholson

ounded in 1867 at Monmouth College in Monmouth, Illinois, Pi Beta F Phi has been at IU since 1893. Their symbol is the arrow, and colors are wine and silver. Pi Phi has been involved in a philanthropic project called "Arrow and the Artie," which helps establish libraries in underprivileged areas. They also support Arrowmont, a craft school in Tennessee. The Pi Phi's have a Barn Dance in the fall, a formal Christmas Dance and in the spring a Riverboat Dance in Louisville on the Ohio River. Nancy Hopkins served as the 1980 chapter president, and Kiki Wiley was elected president for 1981.

409


PI KAPPA ALPHA ..41.11.11/111111/101111.11.1.ellIMINgia

he University of Virginia is the founding spot for Pi Kappa Alpha T in 1868. The fraternity has been at IU since 1950. Pi Kappa Alpha colors are garnet and old gold. The Pikes originated an escort service for women on campus in the spring. They also sponsored a canned food drive for the needy in Bloomington. The fraternity won the Intra-Fraternity Council Basketball Tournament and also captured the Cream Division title in track and cross country. The Pike's major dance is their Dream Girl dance held on Valentine's Day. The fraternity also sponsors a Riverboat dance in Louisville each year. Mike Kelley was 1980 president and Jeff Bell was president for 1981. 1J

410

1. Mike Smith 2. Jeff Bell 3. John Crilly 4. Phil Elins 5. Randy Warman 6. Steve Harvey 7. Arnie Brown 8. Stuart Latta 9. Andy Thomas 10. Steve Fenzer 11. Pete Hogan 12. Jay Sabol 13. Joe Bretz 14. Tom Burton 15. Mitch Krieg 16. Mike Sullivan

17. Mark Horn 18. Jon Gurney 19. Scott Clippinger 20. Ken Rogers 21. George Klauke 22. Keith Becher 23. Mark Caldemeyer 24. Steve Witting 25. Scott Martin 26. Mike Lents 27. John White 28. Steve Corrigan 29. Jim Keefer 30. Greg Ryan 31. Todd Gordon 32. Mike Walz

33. Frank Rodriguez 34. Joe Pierce 35. Marty Shaw 36. Bill Probst 37. Matt Huffine 38. Bill Popper 39. Rob Neal 40. Jeff Ansell 41. John Hagle 42. Lance Pierce 43. Brian Calvert 44. Bart Darrell 45. Chris Dueringer. 46. Rich Lind 47. Steve Karn 48. Mike Rudicle

49. Dave Yount 50. Doug Friemouth 51. Joe Pellettieri 52. Dave Douglas 53. Jay Thomas 54. Jeff Cunningham 55. Mike Elliott 56. Dave Gordon 57. Bill Freeman 58. Joel Parris 59. Jim Shuster 60. Brad Booze 61. David Thomas 62. Mark Barelski 63. Steve Just


PI KAPPA PHI

1. Jay Hargis 2. Jeff Mauck 3. Marty Fender 4. Kent Wierks Dan Holt Mark Kusatzky

7. Steve Boone 8. Mike Howard 9. Jim Halsey 10. Dave Kays 11. Mitt Denny

12. Gary Ashton 13. Mike DeVito 14. Fred Lahr 15. Tom Filipczak 16. Mice Shannon

17. Bob Williams 18. Duane Heise 19. Ron Kreutzberger 20. Dave Brown 21. Tom Lahr

i Kappa Phi was founded in 1904 at the College of Charleston in Charp leston, South Carolina. The fraternity's colors are gold and white with the auxiliary color of royal blue. Their current house on Tenth Street is used as a Lodge House in which only 12 of the fraternity's 52 members actually live. In December, the Pi Kappa Phi's held their annual Rose Ball, a formal dance. They also sponsor a Riverboat dance in Louisville in the spring. In sports, the fraternity won the Cream Division intramural football championship. Pi Kappa Phi holds a fundraising drive each year to raise money for its national philanthropy project, "Play Units for the Severely Handicapped." This year's presidents were Jay Hargis in 1980 and Kent Wierks in 1981.

411


SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON

he University of Alabama was the founding place for Sigma Alpha T Epsilon in 1856. The IU chapter was formed in 1907. The symbols for the chapter are Minerva and the lion, the colors are purple and gold. Sigma Alpha Epsilon co-sponsored a Greek Night at the Reg with Alpha Gamma Delta. The fraternity members donated the proceeds to Muscular Dystrophy. Ernie Pyle, Harry Gonzo, Lloyd and Beau Bridges are some of Sigma Alpha Epsilon's more well-known alumni. Sigma Alpha Epsilon held an Irish processional wake dance, called Patty Murphy, during the spring. Joe Scimia served as president in 1980 and was elected president again in 1981.

412

1. Scott Nichols 2. Rock Edwards 3. Kent Liffick 4. Randy Metzger 5. John Pupillo 6. Steve Dreyer 7. Tom Armbrust 8. Pat Archer 9. Mike Webster 10. Dean Allen 11. Dave Zilkowski 12. Joe Bill 13. Dave Bruggeman 14. Doug Smith 15. Ron Repka 16. Mike Sartain

17. Jim Merritt 18. Kurt Mathewson 19. Randy Garrett 20. Bob Ogburn 21. Bob Bour 22. Fernando Montoya 23. Arturo Florcruz 24. Tom Hamilton 25. Jeff Nickols 26. Bret Henriks 27. Terry Bohl 28. Jim Strauser 29. Dave Burelli 30. Jim Stebbins 31. Chris Laughlin 32. Stu Cartner

33. Joe Scimia 34. Bill Vissing 35. Jon Stephens 36. Steve Riorden 37. Bones Thompson 38. Ken Reese 39. Matt Libpke 40. Steve Haramaras 41. Tim Laughlin 42. Brad Evans 43. John Nichols 44. Steve Pohlman 45. Jeff Jelison 46. Kelly Beech 47. Greg Muntean 48. Dennis McCall

49. Brad Cooper 50. Scott Knutson 51. Tom Wood 52. Jim Garrett 53. Ed Sharkey 54. Dan Wozneiak 55. Chris Ray 56. John Pullium 57. Elvin Bishop 58. Chaz Hepler 59. Tom Prather 60. Brian Tobin 61. Mike Wurtzhaugh 62. Doug Hopkins 63. Steve Mitchell 64. Greg Ortman


DELTA CHI GO OUT LIKE GANGSTERS

-N4

achine Gun Kelly lives and dies once a year at Delta Chi fraternity. Delta Chi has a dance once a A. year called "Kelly's Wake Dance" where the shoot-out between Machine Gun Kelly and law enforcement agents in a pool room is re-enacted. The dance has been a tradition of the fraternity for fifteen to twenty years. At the beginning of the dance, fraternity members and their dates played pool at the Indiana Memorial Union s pool hall while waiting for the arrival of "law enforcement agents ' to arrest Machine Gun Kelly. The shoot-out between Kelly, portrayed by senior member Jeff Sturgis, and the "law" is re-enacted and Kelly "dies." He was then put in a coffin and carried to the Spotlight Dinner Theatre by the law enforcement agents, played by Mike Shane, Rich Kapp, and Jim Piskura. At the Spotlight Dinner Theatre, the

coffin was opened, then the dance began. Kelly's Wake is properly justified. Rich Kapp, junior Delta Chi member, said that the guys and dates dress as gangsters and flappers to relive the era of the 20's while dancing to the music of the present. "The dance is always a success," said Kappa. "Everyone gets into it and participates. Lynn Vagnone

Delta Chi gangsters "kill" Machine Gun Kelly at the IMU pool hall in a violent exchange of (cap) gun fire. The gangsters proceeded to carry the body away in a casket in a festive wake to the Spotlight Dinner Theatre to start the Kelly Wake Dance.

413


SIGMA ALPHA MU

igma Alpha Mu, founded in 1909 at City College in New York City, has S been on IU's campus since 1922. Its colors are purple and white. After recolonizing in 1974 with only 10 men, Sigma Alpha Mu now has 50 men. As a service project, Sigma Alpha Mu sponsored "Bounce for Beats," a 50-hour nonstop basketball bounce, and a "Funniest Face" contest on campus. Proceeds for both events went to the Heart Fund. The fraternity's biggest dance of the year is Sammy Seven Seas, a spring dance with a pirate theme. Craig Marshall was 1980 president and Chuck Dushman was elected as president for 1981.

414

1. Brian Shapiro 2. Dave Resnick 3. Mike Harkavy 4. Steve Sonnenfeld 5. Howard Hammersley 6. Jeff Sapinsley 7. Paul Margulis 8. Barry Rothschild 9. Gregg Cohan 10. Brandon Palmer 11. Dave Pine 12. Larry Barr 13. Stuart Kurlander

14. Brad Kaplan 15. Miles Ginsburg 16. Chuck Dushman 17. Craig Marshall 18. Bill Doner 19. Larry Ratner 20. Bill Berke 21. Ronnie Singer 22. Martin Tamler 23. Dave Sinykin 24. Larry Kraus 25. Rob Miller 26. Bill Lederer

27. Dave Silver 28. Brian Doner 29. Alan Golden 30. Gil Saunders 31. Ron Tyroler 32. Mark Zuckerberg 33. Greg Hawes 34. Brian Cohen 35. Ed Grossman 36. Rob Saffrin 37. Art Fogel 38. Mark Sirkin 39. Eric Goldsmith

40. Lenny Mandel 41. Bruce Bernstein 42. Dale Cohen 43. Evan Rossio 44. Mark Rosman 45. Mitch Rosenglick 46. Alan Friedman 47. Scott Meit 48. David Rubin 49. Bill Gabovich 50. Randy Schuster


SIGMA CHI

9‘66""°* _

1. Jeff Corey 2. Chris Fay 3. Mike Regder 4. Mike Johnson 5. Tom Dietz 6. Roger Bannon 7. Pup E. Dogg 8. Barney Barnes 9. Chris Teeter 10. Bill Baker 11. Tom Reynolds 12. Dr. "Mingo" Paozex 13. Lance Cook 14. Jay Stinebaugh 15. Dere E. Izz 16. Brent Reasoner 17. Scott Yancey

18. Jim Curtis 19. Joe Caito 20. T.H.E. Bag 21. Jeff Lopez 22. Dan Boeglin 23. Mike Lollypop 24. Dave Corso 25. Jeff Simmermaker 26. Deuce Lukzmeyer 27. Rick Laughner 28. Harry Davis 29. Adolph Krueger 30. Fatty Brown 31. Jeffy Brown 32. Tim Farney 33. Jim Dugdale 34. Dave Beasley

35. Mike Darling 36. Nedro Tonner 37. Kevin Potter 38. Pooh Bear 39. Mike Chopper 40. Brad Davis 41. Ronald Reagan 42. Paul Eber 43. Chris Coppinger 44. Beau Kimball 45. Doug Maley 46. Steve Doerr 47. Mark Wojo 48. Mike Coppinger 49. Buffalo Barrix 50. Bob Rock 51. Clyde Backstroke

52. Randy Baker 53. Jeff Beattey 54. John Weeds 55. Leon Schlongmar 56. Dave Rose 57. John Cremer 58. Tim Slink 59. Mike Vea 60. Mike Gilbert 61. Timmy Palma 62. Jeff Busch 63. Wally Sheridan 64. Eric Hersmann 65. Doctor Zin 66. Joe Kubley 67. Mort 68. Mickey Salerno

igma Chi was founded in 1855 at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio. S IU's chapter, established in 1858, is the oldest continuing chapter in Sigma Chi history. The fraternity's symbol is the cross and its colors are blue and old gold. Sigma Chi's major service project is Sigma Chi Derby Days, a week-long affair in which sororities compete against one another. Proceeds from this event go to the Bloomington Hospital. The fraternity's major dances are the Sweetheart Dance on Valentine's Day and a Hawaiian Luau each spring. Mike Vea was chapter president in 1980 and Brad Davis was elected president for 1981.

415


SIGMA DELTA TAU

igma Delta Tau was founded at Cornell University in 1917. The SDT's came to IU in 1940 and have been living in their present house since 1962. The sorority's colors are cafe aulait and old blue, their symbol is the torch. For the last three semesters, Sigma Delta Tau members have donated more blood for the Red Cross Blood Drive than any other house. The sorority also sponsored the American Cancer Society Smokeout. Sigma Delta Tau won the all-campus ping-pong championship and the IU chapter was voted having the best rush skits of all Sigma Delta Tau chapters. Opening Night is the sorority's formal dance which was held in the winter. Sharon Sobol was the chapter president for 1980 and Diane Cibull will take over in 1981.

416

Janey Rosinsky Laurie Newman Felice Furst Lisa McCoy Susan Teitlebaum Mindy Wohlfeld Stacey Hill Meryl Wolfson Robin Goldman Stacy Weitsman 11, Susan Frisch Shelly Cohen Karen Geiser Loren Schor Laura Provow Jackie Miller Debbie Izenstark Linda Mandel Amy Lipp Beth Feldstein Marsha Cihell Rona Behm Dori Yanow

24. Lisa Lipman 25. Behe Schachter 26. Jamie Toizer 27. Adena Siegel 28. Kathy Siegel 29. Robyn Moscow 30. Sheri Berkson 31. Michele Bosberg 32. Rachel Greenwald 33. Susan Mason 34. Tracy Morris 35. Julie November 36. Beth Rothenberg 37. Judy Dock 38. Marla Torch 39. Jodi Patsiner 40. Lisa Rudich 41. Lynne Sered 42. Michele Field 43. Missy Gootrad 44. Cyndee Graff 45. Sonya Polasky

46. Lori Segal 47. Lisa Mandell 48. Tami Weisfeld 49. Melinda Bordy 50. Stephanie Loter 51. Tracie Freudenthal 52. Susan Fishman 53. Carol Salk 54. Lisa Silverman 55. Claudia Braun 56. Alison Shapiro 57. Ilene Senoff 58. Wendy Arbuckle 59. Diane Morris 60. Michelle Wachs 61. Jan Mermelstein 62. Suzy Levine 63. Rozann Moss 64. Lauren Bauer 65. Mara Fishman 66. Shari Statman 67. Sharon Sobol

68. Caryn Glickson 69. Erica Rosenblatt 70. Susan Schneider 71. Jane Kolker 72. Allyn Stern 73. Susan Sandler 74. Cathy Buell 75. Diane Cibull 76. Luanne Kaminsky 77. Gina Frigge 78. Barb Beskin 79. Cindy Bohn 80. Bobbi Greenberg 81. Sue Shafron 82. Cindy Lander 83. Ester Cohen 84. Lisa Seelig 85. Robine Lehrfeld 86. Anne Newman 87. Audree Epstein 88. Nancy Burnstine 89. Diane Friedman


SIGMA KAPPA

1. Holly Wamsley 2. Barb Bell 3. Christy Zearbaugh 4. Peggy Sweeney 5. Susan Shafer 6. Julia Price 7. Shelley McGuire 8. Christina Jones 9. Marie Hayden 10. Glennalee Owens 11. Nancy Arter 12. Lori Rogers 13. Cindy Garrett 14. Connie Jacobs Kris Miller Laura Haynes

17. Elaine Taylor 18. Kim Tuxhorn 19. Estelle Walters 20. Leslie Haynes 21. Jeanne McAuliffe 22. Laurel Sanford 23. Jill Bradshaw 24. Gail Rosen 25. Anne Francis 26. Diane Day 27. Alisa Maultra 28. Barb Witt 29. Diane 01liver 30. Karen Pentz 31. Karen Hodel

32. Debby Anderson 33. Karen Southworth 34. Terri Young 35. Linda Marchione 36. Tammy Perine 37. Barb Pfarrer 38. Linda Lacey 39. Kim Underhill 40. Blithe Brown 41. Amy Atwood 42. Sally Dillon 43. Betsy Hall 44. Cindy Rush 45. Diana Buchanan 46. Sonia Childress

47. Mary Crouch 48. Lisa Buchanan 49. Sue Grathwohl 50. Laura Fenn 51. Linda Gedert 52. Melissa Apple 53. Patti Youmans 54. Kay Kirkpatrick 55. Geanine Klein 56. Julia Tanke 57. Jan Swanson 58. Rebecca Cord 59. Sara Levato 60. Claudia Lieb 6i. Chris Smalley

olby College in Waterville, Maine is the birthplace of Sigma Kappa. C Originally founded in 1874, Sigma Kappa came to IU in 1927. Their symbols are the snake and the dove. The sorority's colors are maroon and lavender. Sigma Kappas sponsored the Sigma Circle around Showalter fountain this year and donated the change collected to the United Way. The sorority also helps support the Maine Seacost Mission by sending clothes to the underprivileged. In 1980, Sigma Kappa won the national award for the chapter with the most improved rush, and on campus won the allsorority bowling championship. The chapter president for 1980 was Marcia Flentje and Marie Haydon was elected for 1981. SE

417


SIGMA

igma Nu was founded at the Virginia Military Institute in 1869. Coming S to the IU campus in 1892, Sigma Nu is the oldest fraternity on campus. Sigma Nu's colors are black, white and gold; the serpent is their symbol. Sigma Nu won the all campus intramurals last year and captured the all-campus football title this year. In the fall, Sigma Nu uses a jungle theme for their VooDoo dance. In the spring Sigma Nu has its formal dance, the White Rose. In 1980 the fraternity conducted its seventh annual February Follies, pitting sorority against sorority in fun-filled Olympics. Keith Milling was Sigma Nu president in 1980 and Bob Chapman was elected president of Sigma Nu for 1981. qP

418

1. Keith Milling 2. Greg Lucchese 3. Jeff Dugdale 4. Tim Scott 5. Kirk Ripley 6. Gino Lucchese 7. Bo 8. Jay Gehl 9. Joe Powell 10. George Thomas 11. Andy Brown 12. Bret Ronk 13. Dave Lucchese 14. Alan Werner 15. Roch Tall 15. Jeff Chessman

Nu

17. Bill Hargett 18. Dick Peters 19. Todd McLaren 20. Ron Muensterman 21. Mike Gossman 22. Greg Poore 23. Bill Ehret 24. Jeff Hitchcock 25. Jeff Blackwell 26. Jeff Helfrich 27. Tom Cassady 28. Drew Skalkos 29. Bob Chapman 30. Mike Pratt 31. Eric Overhardt 32. Bob Beaudr y

33. Bernie Lacy 34. Jeff Hughes 35. Tom Powell 36. Jeff Kerekes 37. Matt Harris 38. Kan Rieder 39. Jay Reese 40. Tim Clifford 41. Josh Brown 42. Jeff Wiebell 43. Bryan Barnes 44. Scott Wolf 45. Mickey Terrell 46. Dave Thomas 47. Jeff Weisanauer 48. Louis Penny

49. Dave Dubin 50. Jamie Marr 51. Doug Schenkel 52. Jackie Mitchell 53. Mike Indiano 54. John Bitove 55. Spike Valente 56. Neil Kitchie 57. Phil Freihofer 58. Chris Alsip 59. Ken Stoffel 60. Scott Thomas 61. Tim Heffernan 62. Tony Hall


SIX IS NOT ENOUGH AS DELTA GAMMAS TAKES 7TH TITLE

photos/Phil Sears

4s,

,asomwassa.

Above — Pi Phi, Alpha Phi and Chi Omega teams hop for the best times in the Sigma No Follies. Right — Alphi Chi members Terri Hughes, Lisa Kirkwood and Stephanie Blaire relax during events on the old fieldhouse floor.

upping, tugging, running and cheering their way to the top — Delta Gamma sorority won the Sigma Nu Follies for the seventh year in a row. Seventeen sororities participated in the Sunday afternoon of fun-filled events: pyramid building, tug-of-war, sack races and sprints. The Sigma Nu's contributed $3,300, which was raised through community sponsors and donations from the participating sororities, to Big Brothers/Big Sisters of Monroe County. John Bitove, Sigma Nu member said that this year they changed the format. "The Follies ran a lot smoother and quicker this year," he said. "Next year we hope to raise $5,000. But as long as the sororities like it, that's all that matters." 8,9 Lynn Vagnone H

41111111111911"--


SIGMA PHI EPSILON

ichmond College in Virginia was the founding spot for Sigma Phi R Epsilon in 1901. Sigma Phi Epsilon has been at IU since 1931. Purple and red are Sigma Phi Epsilon's colors and their symbol is the heart. In 1981, the fraternity won an award for outstanding manpower and scholarship at its national convention. The Sig Eps sponsored a Christmas Benefit kidnap in which sorority presidents were kidnapped for a ransom of canned goods which were donated to the needy. Sig Ep's major dances are Shipwreck in the fall and Queen of Hearts in the spring. John McKay was president for 1980 and Kenneth Pollard was elected house president for 1981. I,

420

1. Drew Kanyer 2. Jim Kurzawa 3. Kevin Albright 4. Greg Lentz 5. Jay Beatty 6. Darryl Ridgeley 7. Paul Abrahms 8. Greg Laker 9. Mark Allenspach 10. Joel Kirsh 11. Chris Fread 12. Jeff Morgan 13. Steve Manns 14. John McKay 15. Fritz French 16. John Cook 17. Bob Jennings 18. Ken Grindlay Sean Cantwell Greg Schipper

21. Greg Bushey 22. Jeff Coons 23. Dennis Johnson 24. Ken Pollard 25. Jeff Blair 26. Mark Budig 27. Pat O'Shaughnessy 28. Doug Zale 29. John Eck 30. Rick Johns 31. Mike Luker 32. Dave O'Brien 33. Mom Zerkle 34. Steve Comm 35. Mark McKinley 36. Rod Grey 37. Pete Korellis 38. Tom Epple 39. Mark Sutor

40. Kelly Johnson 41. Stu Gassman 42. Brad Mishler 43. Scott Leslie 44. John Smith 45. Matt Kutch 46. Greg Pugh 47. Jeff Kolb 48. Mark Reecer 49. John Marsh 50. Ken Sparks 51. Scott Hesler 52. Bruce Laconi 53. Paul Robinson 54. Jeff Dodson 55. Ron Caras 56. John Ulrey 57. Jim Alexander 58. Mike Suppinger

59. Bernie Funck 60. Dan Thomas 61. Terry Tiernon 62. Don Klassen 63. Gene Solmos 64. Jim Mannfeld 65. Kevin Johnson 66. Phil Tofaute 67. Dave Lorenz 68. Paul Duwel 69. Rick Reynolds 70. Greg Moe 71. Greg Bliss 72. Mark Kesmodel 73. Chris Foster 74. Chris Byrde 75. Mark Stroinski 76. Marshall Welton 77. Chad Burch


SIGMA PI

1. Jim Schwark 2. Tim Meier 3. Marty Hawkins 4. Chuck DeShryver 5. Brad Jones 6. Carl Aranilla 7. Douglas Drummond 8. Bob Taylor 9. Greg Buchholz 10. Bill Dennis 11. Bill Boring 12. John Knoop 13. Doug Bateman 14. John Nierzwicki 15. Jose Sanchez 16. Jeff Wertenberger

17. Mike Sams 18. Gary Carle 19. Quinn Sparks 20. Greg Romy 21. Tim Doyle 22. Greg Exhale 23. Paul Rancher 24. Don Malloy 25. Scott Bender 26. Chris Cadaver 27. Tim Tahara 28. Bart Pierce 29. Steve Crawford 30. Eric Rabbit 31. Mike Space 32. Mike Conyer

33. Scott Hopkins 34. Dennis Malin 35. Fred Klotter 36. Mark Boulden 37. John Mott 38. Mark Rust 39. Mike Smith 40. John Herman 41. Chris Hansen 42. Rob Benson 43. Bill Faegin 44. Mike Chopper 45. Brian McCormick 46. Alan Massengill 47. Bruce Darcy 48. David Shaw

49. Dave Burks 50. Brad Partington 51. Fred Torrence 52. Doug Hendricks 53. Rob Oolitic 54. Ralph Cartilege 55. Mark Swill 56. Cary Lannin 57. Eric Getzin 58. Barney Fife 59. Dave Webb 60. Bruce Baldey 61. Chuck Henry 62. Dave Melevin

igma Pi was founded at Vincennes University in 1897 and came to IU in S 1924. Sigma Pi's colors are lavender and gold and their symbol is the Greek Cross. In 1980, the fraternity won a National Pledge Recruitment award, an honor bestowed by the Sigma Pi national. Sigma Pi sponsored the first annual IU Sing Kickoff at the Reg with the Delta Zetas. The proceeds went to Big Brothers. Sigma Pi also sponsors a haunted house with the Jaycees. The fraternity holds an Annual Orchid Ball formal in the spring and also an Emerald Isle dance, using a south seas theme. Greg Bucholz was president for 1980 and Douglas Drummond was elected for 1981. 88

421


TAU KAPPA EPSILON

au Kappa Epsilon was founded at Illinois Wesleyan College in 1899. T The fraternity was established at IU in 1951. Its colors are cherry and gray. Tau Kappa Epsilon's major service proect for 1980 was successfull y rolling a beer k eg from Bloomington to Indianapolis to raise money for the St. Jude's Children's Hospital. On campus, the fraternity took home the Cream Division championship for intramural volleyball. The Teke's hold two major dances: an informal Halloween Dance at which the men and their guests come in costumes and a formal Christmas Dance. Kirk Walter was 1980 house president and Kevin Phipps was elected as president for 1981.

422

1. Marc Hibnick 2. Jeff Disney 3. Steve Edwards 4. Bruce Beles 5. Buckwheat Jr. 6. Kirk Weller 7. Jay Brasel 8. Bruce Boggess 9. Brad Catt

10. Paul Serletti 11. Mike Alexander 12. Dave Malone 13. Dave Lentz 14. Mark Smith 15. Carlin Conrad 16. Mike Capps 17. Dave Garrison 18. Chuck Petry

19. Erick Dirkhans 20. Bill Borgeson 21. Dale Bauer 22. Harry Chance 23. Garry Hartman 24. Bill Gritt 25. Craig Fenimore 26. Mike Anthony 27. Dave Jaeger

28. Kevin Gibson 29. Randy Hill 30. Ed Frutig 31. George Reed 32. Chuck Disney 33. Mike Burns


SINGING AND DANCING ARE ALL PART OF GREEK LIFE

Sigma Chi men listen intently to an enthusiastic Zeta Tau Alpha chorus line. The Zeta's lead off a night of song and dance on September 24 as part of the Sigma Chi Derby Days activities. The men served as judges for the continuous parade of sororities. Zeta Tau Alpha captured first place in the serenado competition. The Zeta's used a beach theme for their show.

hink of your favorite song, substitute your own words and add a few T dance steps: presto. You have a serenade. Singing, dancing and comedy skits are all part of Greek serenades. Mainly, themes are directly related to homecoming, IU Sing, and Little 500. Words of popular songs are changed and sung to fit the themes of the show. Greeks sing and dance more often than any organization on campus in order to pair for homecoming, IU Sing, and Little 500. On the average, sorority and fraternity members present three serenades annually. "We do serenades preceeding pairings for major events on campus," said Acacia member Mark Cappuccilli. "There are 32 fraternities and 18 sororities. We have to serenade in order to be recognized." Delta Tau Delta fraternity presents sere-

nabs for reasons beyond pairings. They like to establish public relations with sororities. At the beginning of the year, we serenade to fire up sororities and to show them we are interested in planning social events together," said Delta Tau Delta member Bert Harrison. "We try to establish friendships and to have a good time." Delta Gamma presented a serenade including a parody of "King Tut," by Steve Martin and "Carnak the Magnificent" from the "Tonight Show," said Carol Lee Malovany, a Delta Gamma member. Alpha Gamma Delta also adds their own chapter fire-up songs, said member Debbie Phillips. Basically, the shows center around either homecoming, IU Sing or Little 500. The themes are directed at how much fun the chapters can have together, what good voices they have, and the things that can be

accomplished if the respective chapters pair together. Harrison said that for Little 500, Delta Tau Delta sang "We Are The Champions." He added that for IU Sing, Delta Tau Delta is mostly interested in showing sororities that they can sing well. 8E) Lynn Vagnone

423


THETA CHI

heta Chi was founded in 1856 at Norwick University in Norwich, T Vermont. The chapter has been at IU since 1921. The Theta Chi house, built in 1969, is one of the newest houses on campus. The colors are red and white and their mascot is wild samoyan. Theta Chi was awarded the Red Boot Award, for those taking the most military classes. The fraternity members helped with the Jaycee's Easter egg hunt in Bryan Park. Theta Chi went all out for their barn dance decor. Turkeys, chickens, goats, rabbits, a horse, a cow, plus 180 hails of hay were scattered in the courtyard. Theta Chi also held a luau in the spring. Tom Cooler was Theta Chi president in 1980 and Jerry Gordon was elected president for 1981. '

424

I. Bob Kotrba 2. Sena Gordon 3. Mark Chester 4. Tim Deneen 5. Jeff Ammerman 6. Frank Gambino 7. Mike McGovern 8. Russ Kornblut 9. Jim Komminsky 10. Sean O'Connor 11. Tony Hughes 12. Chris Radseck 13. Jerry Gordon 14. Steve Walker 15. Russell Johnson

16. Jim Richardson 17. Dave Heath 18. Craig Brown 19. Mike Lux 20. John Clark 21. Randy Swoboda 22. Brian Smith 23. Dave Orman 24. Jeff Delks 25. Nick Brown 26. Kevin Grelle 27. Kurt Mast 28. Joel Frank 29. Mike Marks 30. Steve Guggenheim

31. Drew Lindblad 32. Mike Hughes 33. Chris Deckard 34. Chris Breach 35. Kevin Rak 36. Dave Kowich 37. Greg Faith 38. Brian Husselman 39. Ed Hopwood 40. Bill Davisson 41. James Lyon 42. Phil McIntosh 43. Bart Book 44. John Haines 45. Tom Cooler

46. Ken Cernak 47. Erich Smythe 48. Steve Green 49. Mark Nahas 50. Butch McBride 51. Mike Fox 52. Jerry Lacey 53. Bernie Pratt 54. Dave Makowsky 55. Big Al Procter 56. Mike Frische 57. Joe Riedel 58. Greg Harper 59. Ed McDonald 60. Rick Coryell


ZETA BETA TAU

1. Eric Rollman 2. Gary Krugal 3. Steve Rabin 4. Neil Schneider 5. Richard Wolk 6. Jeff Klein 7. Jim Rolland 8. Jeff Smith 9. Steve Stamler 10. Gregg Schneider 11. Dave Greenwald 12. Todd Natter

13. Peter Englander 14. Scott Alten 15. Doug flops 16. Sam Goldsmith 17. Howard Stolberg 18. Darrell Selig 19. Scott Losky 20. Scott Rabin 21. Jess Bloomenbrontz 22. Jay Fishman 23. Steve Rothchild 24. Steve Mendelson

25. Hugh Jamison 26. Danny Kaplan 27. Steve Schermburon 28. Larry Sharfsteem 29. Jon Simon 30. Mike Newman 31. Avery Cohen 32. Mike Brown 33. Mike Shartiag 34. Jeff Safran 35. Dave Cabin 36. Danny Smith

37. Dave Wolf 38. Ron Weber 39. Jeff Greene 40. Mitch Goldman 41. Scott Stolberg 42. Joey Koehler 43. Mike Scheinkop

ounded at City College in New York in 1898, Zeta Beta Tau has been on F IU's campus since 1947. The fraternity's colors are blue and white. As a philanthropic project, ZBT is planning to sponsor a dance marathon as a fundraiser for the World Hunger Organization. They have also sponsored a film series with proceeds going to Muscular Dystrophy. ZBT was the first Jewish fraternity, originally formed because Jewish men were not allowed in other fraternities. Today the fraternity is nonsectarian. The ZBT's hold a Halloween Costume Dance, Christmas Dance and Spring Pledge Dance each year. Gary Krugel was 1980 president and Steven Rothchild was elected president for 1981.88

425


ZETA. TAU ALPHA

yr

eta Tau Alpha was founded in 1898 4 at Longwood College in Farmville, Virginia. The chapter has been at IU since 1922. The symbol for the sorority is the crown, their colors are turquoise and silver and their mascot is the bunny. Zeta Tau Alpha received first runner-up to National Grand Chapter at their national convention in Louisville. Zeta Tau Alpha received second place in the Greek Classic, second in Delta Gamma's Anchor Splash and second in the Sigma Chi Derby Days. In the spring, the Zetas sold bunnygram cookies with the proceeds going to the National Association for Retarded Citizens. Debbie Kruszewski was president for 1980 and Michelle Eisele was elected president for 1981.

426

Lori Benninghoff Susan Leib Carmen Norris Kathy Stewart Judy Cohn Jennifer Dehaven Margaret Kocon Sally Seiger Vicki Brakulas Sandy Schrader Sheryl Troy Sherri Klockman 13. Lynn Vagnone

14. Lori Rosenthal 15. Sally Jacobson 16. Lori Sharp 17. Joyce Wade 18. Cindy Bussing 19. Donna Mershon 20. Marie Startek 21. Rena Cotsoviles 22. Julie Breslin 23. Michelle Stromatt 24. Mary Burgess 25. Nancy Brentlinger 26. Lisa Marcantonio

27. Nancy Surratt 28. Betsy Beggs 29. Vicki Cotsoviles 30. Sherri Bopp 31. Kerri Reitdorf 32. Kim Page 33. Bobbi Tankel 34. Ellen Dye 35. Nicki Stamos 36. Nancy Steigerwalt 37. Susan Wittenberg 38. Laura Vann 39. Diane Mattingly

Kelly Schendal Terri Haire Debbie Ludwig Kitty Boso Debbie Wineke Becki Sage Jenny Strange Debbie Mattingly Debbie Sparks Leslie Venderly Carol Pennington Michelle Eisele 52. Sherri Kunkel


LAMBDA CHI ALPHA

1. Paul Stawick 2. Kevin McGauley 3. Mike Walker 4. Bob Shaner 5. Scott 6. Ted Prange 7. Greg Brady 8. James Reynolds 9. Charlie Feldman 10. Tom Snapp 11. Jason Gatewood 12. Ken Helfers 13. Doug Hannoy 14. Bob Arnold 15. R. Bohnsack 16. Dave Skirvin 17. Brent Wolff 18. Jeb Conrad 19. Greg Reed 20. Gary Stratton 21. Bill Hines 22. Scott Arendahl

23. John Smith 24. Sid Weinstein 25. John Sturgis 26. Mark Martindale 27. Dave Stutson 28. Dave Miller 29. Chuck Kinard 30. Bob Curtis 31. Ray Lamm 32. Jamie Hunter 33. Mike Lunn 34. Charlie Hiltunen 35. Tim Kellems 36. John Draga 37. Steve Wilson 38. Joel Wilmoth 39. Chris Hazlitt 40. Kevin Russel 41. Shawn McClarnon 42. John Edgewreth 43. Morris Kay 44. Mike Haskitt

45. Mike Shaler 46. Mick Costello 47. Greg Cooper 48. Kurt Paben 49, Chris Hedeen 50. Dan Hawkins 51. Jay Bade 52. Tim Hyerdahl 53. Greg Beall 54. Dale Joyce 55. Dave Greer 56. Dan Farrel 57. Hohn Rousch 58. Jeff Green 59. John Marren 60. Perry Tobin 61. Kevin Sommers 62. Kel Preston 63. Brian Corum 64. Doug Ralston 65. Paul Polak 66. Mike Tischleder

67. Mark Perrotta 68. Dave Dubois 69. Gary Mort 70. Dave Gozdecki 71. Dave Henn 72. Pete Bosco 73. Dave Scholz 74. Tom Manly 75. Kurt Schulteez 76. Bob Rosseau 77. Bill Pappas 78. Chip Embry 79. Joel Trusty 80. Steve Esterson 81. Dave Hierydyn 82. Scott Babbit 83. Craig Coshaw 84. Mark Lively 85. Eric Hayes 86. Randy Michaels 87. Steve Miller

he IU Lambda Chi Alpha chapter was founded in 1917. Its colors are purple, green and gold. The Lam da Chis held the annual AllCampus Lawn Dance the Friday before classes started. Over 5000 people attended this year. The fraternity along with Alpha Chi Omega had a Halloween Haunted House for Bloomington Kids. Also, the Lambda Chis and Gamma Phi Betas raised money for Multiple Sclerosis. The Lambda Chis have three major dances. A tropical theme dance in the fall called, Kula, a Christmas Dance and a White Rose Spring Dance. The 1980 house president was Shawn McClarnon and the president elected for 1981 is Jamie Hunter. sE

427


F3 Of

Seniors Underclass That's life at IU

430 p. 470 p. 471

p.



Abdul-Samad, Shamin Microbiology Alm-Ras, Muhammad S. Instruct Tech. Abrahms, Paul Journalism Abrams, Jodi Business Adams, Glenn Law Adams, Steven History/Poli. Sci.

Adasi, Dan W. Business Economics Aders, Katherine English Adler, Mark G. History Aebersold, Tammi Marketing Aebersold, Theresa L. Marketing

Aerne, Laureen Business

A hting, Gerhard Management Akers, David Psychology Akiboh, Olujimi Graphic Design Akin, Claudia Marketing Alherghene, Stephan Music Education

Albrecht, Daniel F. Marketing

Alder, Lyn Physical Education Aldridge, Janice Music Alexander, Joseph Business Ali, Anita Finance Allan, Dawson David French Allen, Debra Lynn Elementary Edw.

Allen. Kimberly M. Enviro. Science Allen, Ruth Ann Physical Education Alm, Kay

Speech C Hearing Anderson, Mary PIPER Anderson, Michael Business Anderson, Thomas D. Geology

Andert, Joseph C. Business Andonov, Dimitre Health & Safety Andrew, Lorri Recreation Andrews, Virginia English Andruskiwec, Marianne Therapeutic Rec.

Angermeier, Kenneth Biology/Chemistry

430

Ansell, Jeffrey P. Marketing Apsley, Raymond Kent Political Science Arbuckle, Marsaille SPEA Ariffin, Aminuddin Finance Arlen, Mark D. Finance/Mngt.

Armstrong, Trina G. Business


Members of a jazz ensamble perform in the south lounge of the Indiana Memorial Union. The lounge provided a place to sleep, study and read a hometown newspaper.

Ast, Connie Olene Marketing

Atkinson, Andrew D. Computer Science

Aufmann, Carole Geology Avril, Delores Fine Arts Avril, Dennie

Babbitt, Scott Journalism Baca, Robert J. Music Education Bacon, Alan Keith Administration

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Baker, Sharon Education

Baker, Sharon E.

Speech & Hearing

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Ball, Dominic P. Physical Education Ball, Marionette SPEA Bandele, Ramla

Barker, Jane Journalism

Barnes, Charissa

. Business

Barnes, Christine A. Marketing

Public Admin.

Fine Arts

Axthelm, David Management

431


Barrett, William S. History/Religion Barry, Dianne Physical Education

Bastianelli, Jean Labor Relations

Bates, Robert W. Economics

Political Science

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Beatty, James F. Business

Beauvais, Julie

Bauer, Barbara

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Speech

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432

Beadles, James H.

Beehler, Karen Education

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French/Business

Biology

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Folklore

Beckman, Gina

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Business

Bishop, Mary Black, Joetta Human Development

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0-

Block, Mark Accounting

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Bowles, Ra ona Journalis Bowman, Bruce Chemistry

Bowman, Kent Operations

Boyer, Cynthia Journalism

Boyle, Susan Finance

Bracht, Robert Accounting

Bradford, Felita Business

Bradshaw, Benita Forensics

Brady, Linda Psychology

Brailor, Neal

Bramlette, James Business

Brandis, Jennifer

Telecommunication

Branigin, Beth Insurance

Brantner, Laura Ann Education

Brattian, Mark Journalism

Braunlin, Barbara Chemistry

Braunlin, Kathryn

Biology/Chemistry

Bridges, Sandra Sociology

Brink, Kerri

Bravos, Margaret Ma rketing/Advertising Brennan, Kate

Marketing/Advertising

Brent, Jane

SpeechlHearing

Business

Forensics

Bretland, Sara Jean Special Education

Brissman, William Marketing

Brobeck, Teresa Brochin, Mary Early Childhood Bronsweig, David Management

Finance

433


Brook, Hillary Speech/Hearing Brooks, Ann Marketing Brothers, Renee Forensics Broumand, Stafford Chemistry Brown, Andrew Business Brown, Arnold Finance

434

Brown, David Finance Brown, Dennis Accounting Brown, Karen Fine Arts Brown, Kimberly Linguistics Brown, Marc Accounting Brown, Michael Finance

Brown, Michael B. MarketinglAdvertis. Brown, Michael S. Finance Brown, Susan Accounting Bruggemann, William Management Brunsell, Diane Home Economics Buchanan, Anita Home Economics

Ruche, Karen Marketing Bucholz, Anna Spanish Budd, Alexene Speech/Hearing Budig, Mark Finance Buts, Jonathan Political Science Burgess, Mary Sociology

Burkett, Peggy Business Burks, David Forensics Burnett, Robert Arts BUMS, Maureen Public Affairs Boron, Joseph Business Burton, Thomas Marketing/Advertis.

Busch, Debbie Law Busche, Amy Public Affairs Bush, Kriss Accounting Bussing, Cindy Education Butler, Mary Ann Physical Education Butler, Tammy Telecommunications

Buxbaum, Andrea Consumer Studies Cahill, Donald Management Cameron, Justine Education Campbell, Megan Psychology Campbell, Steve Business Canalas, Laura Business


MEE

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rom Wright Quad Dodds House pose for a picture after playing in the mud and rain.

Church, Daniel

Chilow, Denise

Chao, Willia

Carboneau, Charles Accounting Carlson, Marcy

Cartwright, Don

Finance

Chase, David Dean

Economics

Christensen, Dianna

Marketing

Accounting

Chaplin, Janic

Management

Chomski, Eri

Physical Education

Cicero, Nancy

Mathematics

Castellanos, Peter

Marketing

Cheesman, Jeff

Economics

Christian, Diana

Business

Mathematics

Christensen, Carin

Marketing

Cinatl, Robert

Chez, Michael

Business

Christos, Patricia

Microbiology

Carney, Bobbi

Finance

Management

Chalko, Charlene

Carp, Karen

Telecommunications

Telecommunications

Chambers, Bernadette

Carpenter, William

Business

Business

Chan, Paul Wing-On

Carter, Pamela

Sociology/Psychology

Business

Chaney, Philip

Chappuis, Je IIPER

Microbiology

Marketing

Music

435


Clark, Brian Business

Clark, Julie Business

Clark, Kimberly Education

Clark, Sandra Education

Clarke, Brian Chemistry Clarke, Janice Business

436

Clarke, Kathleen Merchandising

Clarke, Robert Telecommunications Clawson, Carol Advertising Clawson, Melinda Psychology Clymin, Gail Marketing

Cochran, Carolyn Marketing

Cody, Brian Accounting Cole, Douglas Business

Cole, Kevin Business

Coleman, Beth JournalismIHistory Coleman, Randall Business Collier, Lelia Psychology

Collins, Regina Physical Education Corner, Gregg Transportation Conlisk, Burton Management Conway, Patricia English

Conwell, Mary Spanish Cook, Jeffrey Economics

cook, Maureen Business

Cook, Michele Marketing Cooler, Thomas Marketing Cooper, Camille Political Science Cooper, Debra Accounting Cooper, Scott Microbiology

Cortese, Judith Business

Cotsoviles, Vicki Forensics Cottingham, Sandra Biology Cox, Bret History Cox, Carol Microbiology Cox, Fannie Journalism

Cox, Mary Microbiology Cox, Kenneth Marketing

Coy, Susan Business

Cradick, Timothy Geology Crain, Carmen Finance Craven, Jean Home Economics


04,

WIUS radio membe prepare to leave for New York to protest the David Letterman Show cancellation. They hitchhiked to N .Y . o the weekend and appeared at the studio Monday morning.

Cravin, Jo Ann Spanish Creed, Lisa Accounting Creighton, Kathleen Business Cromer, Mike Finance Cron, Cynthia Marketing Cross, Cathleen Business

Crowe, Maureen Special Education Crowley, Charles Accounting Cruz, Christopher Spanish Cunningham, Anthony Psychology Curtis, Nancy Education Custer, Karyn Psychology

Cutler, Kimberly Recreation Czarneck, John Accounting Czechanski, James Physics

Dahling, Mary Recreation Dailey, Kimberly Sociology Daily, Jo Ellen Journalism

Dalle Ave, Mark Chemistry Dalton, Chris Biology Damer, Ann Accounting

Dann, Wendy Forensics Darcy, Donnamarie Biology/Chemistry Darnell, Sarah Marketing

Davis, C. Richard Finance Davis, Fleice Telecommunications Davis, John W. History Davis, Michael see page 469

437


Diaz-Marti, Edgardo

Psychology

Derheimer, Nancy

Finance

Recreation

Dickerson, Nan lone

Biology

Derico, Mona

Home Economics

Donnelly, Lisa Business Donovan, Patricia

Delisle, Lisa

Business

Dickinson, Anna Marie

Business

Accounting

Devan, Janamitra

Business

Dorenfest, Laura

Social Work

Demeter, Linda

Business

Dillon, Mary

Retailing

Finance

Devine, Kevin

Speech/Hearing

Doss, Becky

Dent, David

Finance

Dithey, Mary

Recreation

Devoe, George

Speech/Hearing

Doss, Tod

Business

Dizon, Rodl

Geology

Dragoo, Mary Anne Speech/Hearing Draper, Mary Ann Math/Spanish Duckworth, Virginia Physical Education

Music

Dehart, James

Psychology

Davisson, Layne Education Day, Becky

Computer Science

Deitch, S. Douglas

Optometry

Deckard, Roger Marketing Decostanzo, Stephen Music

Deel, Deborah

Accounting

Journalism

Dereamer, '.blarney Business

438

Derengoski, Sally A.

Derengoski, Sally

Davis, Michael W.

Marketing

Dougherty, Frances Biology

Doughty, David History/English Douglas, Debbie

Dudley, Christine Political Science Dueringer, Christopher Finance

Duff, Timothy Chemistry Duffy, Cheryl Education Dugdale, Jeffrey Biology

Duke, Karey Home Economics


Dunaway, Renee Optometry Dunbar, Kim Theatre Duncan, Brian Biology/Chemistry Dugan, Cheryla Music

Dunlop, Matthew Operations Dunn, Karen Marketing

Dupree, Sharon Administration Dupree, Sharon L. SPEA Dutczak, Lenora Slavic Language Dvorak, John Marketing Dyer, Pamela Marketing Dyerly, Linda Adapted Physical

Dlytssvl, Krsmr■ vt Political Science Earnhart, Mandy Lm Operations Eastes, Jeffrey Operations Ebel, Susan English Echt, Gregory Biology/Chemist Eckman, Catheri e Anthropology

Economos, Emmanuel Health Safety Edwards, Karie Education Edwards, Steven Management Eggleston, Bette Theatre Ehret, William Psychology Ehrlich, Michael Music/Theatre

Eisele, Cheryl Music/Theater Elder, Cynthia French/English Elliott, Barbara Business Ellis, Elizabeth Journalism Emery, Karen HealA Safety Emmett, Mark Telecommunications

Emslie, Douglas Chemistry Enghauser, Michael Economics Engle, Lynne Forensic Epstein, Stacy Telecommunications Ergas, Marilyn Music Education Ericson, Catherine Marketing

Ermenk, Joseph Anthropology Espinsoa, Eugene Political Science Esque, Debris Marketing Evanoff, Philip Marketing Evans, Anne Accounting Evans, Dave Biology

439


Evans, Marilyn Sue Nursing Fyre, Robert Public Affairs Farber, Richard Telecommunications Farekas, Jo Ann Arts and Science Fashing, Rhonda MarketinglAdvertis. Faulkner, Debra Public Affairs

440

Feasel, James Marketing Feld, Laurence Marketing Felton, Barbara English Fender, Jennifer Psychology Fentress, Kelly Telecommunications Ferguson, Gene Psychology

Fernandez, Anabell Speech/Hearing Ferree, James Marketing Ferreri, Janet Psychology Ferris, Linda Management' Fiess, Stephen Music Filippini, Elizabeth Geography

Fine, Marc Finance Fine, Nancy Telecommunications Fisher, Dawn Personnel Fishman, Susan History Fleming, Julie Journalism Flint, Patricia Personnel

Flowers, Patty Personnel Folmer, William Conservation Ford, Daniel Public Affairs Forgey, Michael Business Fountain, Julie Education Fox, Carol Psychology

Fox, Kim Marketing Fox, Laura Industrial Relations Fox, Lon Accounting Fox, Melody Telecommunications Frank, Phillip Real Estate Frankovitz, Ron Management

Fread, Chris Business Frederickson, Kim Biology Freed, Cynthia Education Freed, Judith Business Fridenmaker, Amy Computer Science Friedenberg, Scott Mathematics


Jonathan Snow, a 'unior, sits in his room after a February party in his room at Aley Hall, Ashton Center.

Friedman, Gail Business Friedman, Vicki Journalism Fries, Donald Journalism Friman, Paul Telecommunications Frowick, Lesley French Frydman, Charlotte Telecommunications

Funk, Susan Public Affairs Furfaro, Sheri Social Work Gabouitch, David Business Gahimer, James Chemistry Galands, Milton G. Criminal Justice Gallagher, Terri Marketing

Ganger, Brynne Personnel Gannon, Erin French Gans, Susan Computer Science

Gardner, Ellen English Gardner, Sylvia Ballet Garmon, Joel Biology

Garon, Susan Marketing Garrett, Greg Business Gaston, Anne Education

Gatson, Lavarrel Marketing Gaydos, Gayle Psychology Gebel, Jenny Economics

Geehring, Kristen Fine Arts Gellers, Barry Journalism Genest, Sue Anne History

441


Genits, Karen Marketing/Advertis. George, David

Sociology

Glass, George

Microbiology

Goldman, Robin

Biology

Law

Gilchrist, Beth

Political Science

Gohlke, Marcia

SPEA

Graham, Janet

Outdoor Recreation

Glickman, Inez

History

Domes, Martha

Journalism

Gillian, Kurtis

Personnel

Gold, Claudia

Spanish/Home Ec.

Graham, Karen

Forensics

Gibson, Todd Accounting Giesecke, Dan

SPEA

Theatre

Goodman, Rita

Journalism

George, Linda

Political Science

Gilmore, Michael

Gold, Cynthia

Therapeutic Rec .

Grambsch, Mary

Speech/History

Gostola, Shari

Religion

Goldberg, Marilyn

Arts & Science

Gramelspaceher, Lisa

Recreation

George, Gregory Journalism

Giesel, Lisa

Marketing

Goble, William Continuing Studies Goddy, Karen

Gergora, Claire SPEA Gerstle, Diane

Marketing

Ginsburg, Cindy

History

Giesler, Mark

Telecommunications

Goebel, Cecilia

Speech/Hearing

Covert, Amy

Business

Biology

Girod, Randall

Chemistry/Biology

Goldman, Leah

Marketing

Gramling, jatk

Education

Gilbert, Bruce

Accounting

Goelzer, Gregory

Accounting

Graff, Cyndee

Journalism

English

442

Graffeo, Glen

Goffinet, Denise

Gilbert, Tony Gerstle, Mark

Telecommunications

General Studies


Steve Merz, a sophomore, and Christy Schroeder, a freshman stopped t the Penguin on Dunn and Kirkwood for some ice cream. The Penguin is one of the most po ular places for a treat called a 'blizzard' .

Greiner, Geri Lynn

Greenberg, Andrew

Grant, Anthony

Gullion, Kath y

Marketing

Gray, Patricia

Telecommunications

Gregory, Janice

Marketing

Grinell, Stuart

Education

Gray, Carol J.

English Lit.

Greenspan, James R.

Forensic Study

Greist, Julie

History

Marketing

Greenbaum, Steven

Biology/Chem.

Gregory, Jo Ellen

Elementary Educ.

Gunn, Debora

Groome, Ginnette

SPEA

Biology

Grifbelbaver, Richard

Recreation

Management/Adm.

Gustafson, Anne

Gross, Lynn

Telecommunications

Grimm, Tammy

Graphic Design

Hackman, Stephen

English

Grossman, Tami

Management

Grindlay, Catherine

Business

Accounting

Grott, John

Marketing

Grindstaff, Catherine

Graphics

Psychology

Haffner, Carol German Hakes, Jodi

Gudkese, David

Music Education

Mathematics

443


Hall, Denise Marketing Hall, Susan Home Economics Hallagan, Maureen French Haller, Carol Journalism Hamid, Zulkifli Finance Hamilton, David Finance

444

Hamilton, Pamela Journalism Hammon, Michael Finance Hanes, Steven Telecommunications Hanson, Gregg Business Hansson, Elizabeth Business Hanzel, Karen Management

Harding, Nina Journalism Harlan, Jeff Journalism Harman, Dennis Business Harper, Kate Art Therapy Harper, Paula Personnel Harper, Raetta Telecommunications

Harris, Ben Liberal Arts Harris, Donna Business Harris, Keith Afro American Study Harris, Lee Telecommunications Harris, Michael Business Harris, Terry Business

Harrison, Debby Psychology Harsh, Susan Education Harten, Dorothy General Studies Hartmen, Bruce Accounting Hartman, Carry Marketing/Advertis. Hartman, William Accounting

Harvey, Valerie Afro American Study Haskins, Caryl Journalism Hasler, Jeffrey History Hauge, Bill Accounting Havens, Pete Business Hayden, John Finance

Hayes, Davita Therapeutic Recreat. Hayes, Michael Business Hayes, Richard Public Affairs Hayford, Collen Telecommunications Hays, Martha Education Hazlitt, Christopher Finance


Hearn, Vickie Recreation

Helm, Alicia

Heath, Robert Accounting Hebenstriet, Jill

Helmsing, Debra

Heiman, Alice

Entrepreneurship

Heiser, Charles East Asian Studies Helfrich, Kim

Accounting

Music Education

Special Education

French

Music/German Recreation

Henn, Dave

Hennessy, John

Herron, Sandra Business

Hicks, Susie Marketing

Higdon, Kevin Accounting

Higgins, Thomas Journalism

Computer Science

Mathematics

Hines, on

Telecommunications

Finance

Hodel, Karen

Hilnbrand, Arlene

Chemistry

Hill, Robert

Herrmann, Julia

Fine Arts

Home Economics

Business Education

Political Science

Therapeutic Recreat.

Marketing

Hislip, Brian

Hillsamer, Peter

Hill, Larry

Herrera, Gerardo

Computer Science

Hill, Sue

Hirami, Sandra Hirschfeld, Jon Management

Hodor, Janice

Hohman, Jeff Accounting

Holbert, Matt Real Estate

Hollander, Sandra

Hoffman, Daniel

Physical Education

Hoffman, Jane

Telecommunications

Hoge, Steven

Ballet

Accounting History

English/German

Hollender, Ruth

Holmes, Patricia Holtberg, Susan

Holthaus, Mark

Telecommunications

Holwadel, David Accounting

Holz, Sandra

Music Education

Holzer, Margaret

Biology/Chemistry

Holzinger, Lawrel Business

Homme, Barb Marketing

Accounting

445


Honein, Antoine Marketing Hooey, Darrell

Physical Education

Hopkins, Barbara Business

Horn, Suzanne Psychology

Hoster, Julie English

Houchins, Dennis Business

Houlihan, Erin Management

Housden, Andy History

Hovde, Debra Finance

Howard, Jeffrey Business

Howard, John Chemistry

Howell, Sally

Physical Education

446

Howey, Timothy Business

Howland, Phil

Telecommunications

Hoyt, Katherine Journalism

Hrisomalos, Karen Biology

Hudock, John Accounting

Hudock, Michael

Computer Science

Hudson, David Marketing

Hughes, Anthony Marketing

Hughes, Dennis Political Science

Hultgren, Scott Microbiology

Hunsucker, Karen Social Work

Hunt, Diane Accounting

Huntley, Tod Chemistry

Hupfer, Janet

Biology/Chemistry

Hurley, Mary Biology

Janeway, Mary bnahe, Christopher Management

Imamura, James Astronomy

Itin, Diane

Hurrle, Bette Sue Crimina/ Justice Hyatt, Geoffrey

Jaajar, Abd. Rani

lacearino, Louis

Fine Arts/French

French

Marketing/Advertis.

Personnel

Marketing

Jackson, Linda James, Steven

Chemistry/Biology

Recreation

Jansen, Sheila Biology

Jarosz, Ellen Marketing

Jarrett, Dennis Marketing

Jarrett, Rosa Sociology Jefferson, Sally Marketing


In March, approximately 100 people gathere in People's Park to rally against the U .S . aid and involvement in El Salvador. The march was sponsored by Bloomington Against the Draft BAD).

JAI, Marie Languages Jennings, Sally

Physical Education

Jimenez, Rosa

Business

Telecommunications Biology

Joffe, Diana

Johnson, Debris

Johnson, Mark Accounting

Johnson, Mark

Johnson, Gregory

Political Science

Johnson, Julie

Journalism

Fine Arts

Johnson, Nancy

Johnson, Patti Marketing

Johnston, Jane Education

Jones, Kathy Education

Jones, Pamela Music

Jova, Paul Jopwood, Edward

Jones, Stephen

Marketing/Advertis.

Jongkind, Debbie

Real Estate

History

Linguistics

Jordan, Cedric Jose, Otto

Physics

Joyce, Geraldine Fine Arts

Jubirt, Carol Psychology

Recreation

Speech Communications

Johannsen, Mary Business

Johnson, Daniel Chemistry

447


Jubirt, Carol Psychology

Kadas, Michael Management Kahlenbeck, Kathy Physical Education

Kang, Young-Chan Accounting

Forensic Studies

Karey, Lynne

Finance

Finance Biology

Karns, James Biology

Kasich, Gojko

Kankam, Kwabena

Forensic Studies

Kansakar, Dev Ratna

Accounting

Accounting Economics

448

Kautzman, John

Kanyer, Drew

Kast, Carole Kaufman, Christine Marketing

Kay, Morris Keane, Kevin Accounting

Kearney, Thomas Psychology

Kellum, Lynn English

Kellum, Margaret Business

Kelsey, Jo Commercial Art Kemper, Mark Marketing

Kemperle, Heidi Accounting

Kennedy, John arketing

Kennedy, John Finance

Kennedy, Katie Fine Arts

Kennedy, Mike Sociology

Keough, Cheryl Education

Kern, Lisa Fine Arts

Kesim, Susan Personnel

Kessler, Mike Music

Ketot, Noraine Marketing

Keyes, Gerald Marketing

Kidd, Annette

Merchandising

Kiefer, Douglas Biology

Kilander, Kim Public Affairs Kile, Sally Management

'Kilgore, Stephen Biology/Chemistry

Kim, Gennie Computer Science Kim, Sun Marketing

Kimbriel, Elizabeth Education

King, Allan

Transportation

King, Melissa Business

King, Robin Arts and Science


11% I

Two women who participated in the Long Mountain Bikini Ski Race, near Nashville, in February dropped their blankets to the snow at the bottom of the race slopes. They did this following the race to shiver for spectators who wanted a better look.

Kinman, Mary Beth Biology

Klein, Steven

Kirsh, Joel

Political Science

Kissel, Richard

English

Business Finance

Kiszla, William Environmental Sci. Klecka, Margaret

Kleinmuntz, Ira Klekamp, Amy

Marketing/ Advertis.

Kline, Linda English

Klinestiver, David Economics

Klingaman, Beth Marketing

Koehler, Michael Business

Kohlberg, Lisa Business

Kolb, Mary Business

Komanski, Michael Chemistry

Kong, Jacqueline Business

Korb, Debra Education

Kosewicz, Ann

Telecommunications

Koslovich, Diana Linguistics Kraft, Marcie

Kramer, Jo Ellen German

Krel, Rossya Marketing

Krempp, Karen Education

Education

Marketing/Advertis.

Klein, Jeffrey Biology

449


Kreutzberger, Ron Finance

Kristek, John Psychology

Krupp, Patricia Marketing

Kunkel, Margaret Journalism

Kurland, Marcy Theatre

Kurzawa, James Criminal Justice

Kuykendall, Linda Business

Kuykendall, Patricia Marketing

Kvale, Leslie Biology

Kwiatek, Alan Optometry

Laakman, Gina Education

Labouliere, Peter Transportation

450

Lafakis, John Marketing

Lagrotto, Anthony Comparative Lit.

Lahr, Sandra

Physical Education

Lahrman, Don Biology

Lakin, Barbara Biology

Lamb, Carl Russian

Lambert, Jean Music

Lampert, Teresa Therapeutic

Landis, Karla

Arts and Sciences

Landon, Donna HYPER

Lane, Paula Accounting

Lanham, Lisa

English/History

Larko, Russell Marketing

Laskey, James Accounting

Laughlin, Stuart Marketing

Lauterbach, Stewart Folklore

Lavengood, Michael Business

Law, Darlene History

Lawler, Christine Public Affairs

Lawrence, Michael Business

Leboeuf, Bradley Psychology

Ledger, Stephanie German Lee, Betsy

Lawson, Justine Sociology Lawyer, James

Computer Science

Laycock, Katherine

Political Science

LeaveII, Lili

English

Business

Forensics

Chemistry

Recreation

Lee, Pik-Chu Leff, Roberta Leger, Ann


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Mabry, Lechelle American Studies MaCarthur, Elizabeth Environ. Affairs Mack, Woody Business

Macnair, Melissa

Physical Education

Madden, Cynthia Marketing

Magallon, Florence History

Magallon, Mary Biology

Mahon, Mary Chemistry

Maley, Timothy Marketing

Malone, Bruce Business

Malone, Debra Business

Malott, Leroy Finance

452

Mandel, Mark Journalism

Mandell, Lisa Marketing

Telecommunications

Manos, Susan

Psychology

Accounting

Malief, Kenneth

Home Economics

Mann, Donna

Political Science

Forensics

Marketing

Manubay, James Marcantonio, Lisa

Mann, Eric

Telecommunications

Manning, Steve

History

Finance

Telecommunications

Marsh, Shane

Manns, Steven

Marchino, Mark Marples, Janis Sociology

Marshall, Pamela Marsl, Shane

Telecommunications

Martin, Craig Afarketing/Advertis. Martin, Loren Business

Martino, Christine Marketing

Maxey, Paulette Martus, Carrie Accounting

Master, Jack Marketing

Mathes, Debbie Business

Matheson, Robert Marketing

Matterson, Robert Biology

Matz, Luanne Education

Forensics

May, Carolyn Accounting

Mayer, Kelley Sociology

Mayerson, Richard Business

Mazan, Anne Music

Mbonu, Gilbert Counseling


_piI!

Sue Stone, a freshman, and David Roos, a senior, enjoy a sunny afternoon before spring break on the Wright Quad sun deck.

Meier, Stephen

McMurray, Scott

McKay, John

McAloon, Greg Business

McDonald, Barbara

English

McKee, Cindy

Computer Science

Meek, Donna

Biology

McCann, Thomas

Economics

Business

Meade, Donald

Speech/ Hearing

Meine, Helen

McLachlan, Ruth

Psychology

Mehlenbacher, Mark

Economics

Speech/Hearing

Medler, Michael

Finance

Melander, Julie

McLaren, George

Business

Mehlinger, Barbara Operations

Finance

Physics

McGauhey, Michael

McChesney, Eileen

Accounting

McKeand, Janet Marketing McKee, Cheryl

Economics

McGaw, Deborah

Music

McClarnon, Shawn Marketing McDermott, Daniel Accounting McDermott, Eileen

Business

Business

Journalism

McCaw, Linda Economics

McGovern, Tom Business

McIntosh, Linda Sociology

453


Melnik, Janice

Home Economics

Method, Michelle

Med, Paula

Fashion Merchandise

Merar, Sally

History

Microbiology Business

Mercer, Lou MS Reading

Merenbloom, Bruce Arts and Science

Merker, Lee

Chemistry/Biology

Michale, Haider Mielke, Lynne Biology

Micholland, Douglas Marketing

Miller, Douglas Biology

Miller, Julayne Psychology

454

Miller, Karen

Policy Administration

Miller, Kim Marketing

Miller, Laurie Music

Miller, Rodney Accounting

Miller, Teresa Marketing

Miller, Thomas

Speech Communication

Mills, Martha French

Milner, Ernest Theatre

Mintz, Robert Accounting

Mintzer, Max Marketing

Mitan, Kenneth Marketing

Mitchell, Anita Accounting

Mitchell, J. Thomas Music Education

Mittiga, Jamie

Ma rketing/Advertis. kien, Victoria Accounting

M iiichowski,

Chris

Accounting

Mogekwu, Cladys Health & Safety

Mold, Karen Sec. Science

Monroe, Mary History

Montgomery, Chris Accounting

Moore, Barbara Business

Moore, E. Douglas Labor Relations

Moore, Jeff Marketing

Moore, Thomas Accounting

More, Ramona Geology

Morgan, Jeff Finance

Morning, Donald Transportation

Morris, Douglas Accounting

Morrison, Carole German Morrison, Sharon

Physical Education


Ken Sommers, a 1980 raduate, and Jan Marples, a senior, were married in Beck Chapel on May 2. The chapel is non-denominational, having symbols of Christain, Jewish and Buddhist faiths. Besides weddings, the' chapel hosts, fraternity and sorority initiations, christenings and other religious services.

Morrone, Pam Education

Morrow, Jennifer Psychology

Morrow, Mindy Journalism

Mortenson, Lara

Moss, Cynthia SPEA

Moss, Parker Psychology

Moss, Rozann Psychology

Moye, Barbara Journalism

Mulcahey, Edison

Moyers, Tammie

Physical Education

Mriscin, Don

Business

Accounting Recreation

Mulholland, Joyce Mullen, Daphne

Operations Systems

Mullin, Matthew English

Mumley, Tamara English

M unchalc,

Stephen

Chemistry

Murnahan, William Anthropology

Murphy, Laura Education

Murphy, Mark

Murphy, Susan Forensics

Murray, Katherine Literature

Myers, Christie Sue Marketing

Biology

Telecommunications

Moser, Greg Education

Mosher, Lisa Journalism

455


Ngai, Kitt,

Nagy, Martin Business

Neal, Albert

Orlicki, Joan Physical Education Ortiz, Yazmin

Finance

Diane

Nicewander, Doug

Noelle, Tracy Psychology

Accounting

Noerzer, David

)da, Cynthia Labor Relations

Olson, Jeanne

Marketing

Nicholas, Theodore

TheatrelDrama

Ogden, Kevin

Psychology

Ortman, Gregory

Biology

Nolan, Carol

Business

Oltnau, Greg

Chemistry

Nichols, William

English

Ohnenius, Catherine Marketing

Managethent

Ortosky, Ron

Music/Theatre

Business

Neaville, Karen

Neustadt, Michael

Telecommunications

History

Neiderhiser, Patricia Arts and Sciences Neiger, John

Newcorn, Wendy Mathematics

Newkirk

Accounting

Education

Nelson, James Graphic Design

Newkirk, Gena Marketing

Newsom, David Marketing

456

h, Thomas Biology

Neuenschwander,

Forensics

Norris, Mary

Nicholson, Diane

Political Science

Business

Nyborn, Scott

Nill, Thomas

Spanish

Chemistry

Oca, David Telecommunications

Oldfather, Lucinda Marketing

Omar, Zawiyah

Business

O'Ke efe, Timothy History

Management

O'Shea, Michael

Orem, Jon

Business

Oladipupo, Isola Computer Science

Education

Othman, Radziah

Orich, Scott

Microbiology

Business


Marketing

Paczolt, Susan

Owens, Aimee Management Owens, Stephen

Education

Economics

Paba, Betty SPEA

Pachovas, Marina Psychology

Pfister, Catherine

Pease, Katrina

Pappas, Anthem

Overshiner, Ken Accounting Overton, Todd

Packard, Richard

Business

Pastorello, Joanne

Telecommunications

Peters, Rotimi

Biology

Marketing

Pappas, Kim

Business

Pencek, Kathy

Management

Pfister, Mary Jane

Business

Patrick, Brad

Real Estate

Peterson, Dean

Telecommunications

Pardue, Milton Public Affairs Paris, Peter

Finance

Perr, Maria

Economics

Pienknog, Ura

Patrowics, Jan

Biology

Peterson, Ellen

Business

Business

Perrin, James

Forensics

Pierce, Mark

Journalists

Patterson, Carolee

Business

Peterson, Michael

Finance

Parr, Dean

Music

Perry, Patricia

Music Education

Pioch, David

Forensics

Patterson, Lisa

Journalism

Peterson, Penny

Finance

Parr, Ran ll Law

Marketing

Perugini, Francesca

Marketing

Pitts, Douglas

Pauli, Rodney

Chemistry

Peterson, Stuart

Marketing

Paeratakul, Umnarj Microbiology

Palmer, Sarah Spanish Palvas, Brian Computer Science Paparazzo, Candee Reading Education

Transportation

Finance

457


wt

Plawlus, Edward Business

Potter, Kelly

Plautz, Douglas

Operations Systems

Plonski, Jeannine SPEA Polakoff, Susan

Accounting

Chemistry

Journalism

Poole, Anthony Forensics

Popplewell, Karen History

Potter, Scott Powell, Jan

Accounting

Powers, Nancy Education

Powers, Robert Economics

Prato, Vicki

Special Education

458

Price, Gary Marketing

Prout, Koral Education

Rademaker, Carol Social Work

Railsback, Anne

Puddicombe, Diane

Telecommunications

Purdue, Melvin

Music

Biology

Political Science

Quarles, George Psychology

Radakovich, George Finance

Ramlet, James Rasmussen, Stephen Chemistry

Ratcliffe, Byron

Criminal Justice

Rauch, Linda

Physical Education

Ray, Jeffrey History

Rayne, Terri Finance

Reeves, Clay Accounting

Reisch, Debbie

Razumich, James Accounting Redington, Doug

Therapeutic Rec .

Reed. Jacqueline

Telecommunications

Reed, Jo Anne

Business

Economics

Accounting Spanish

Reising, Julie Marketing

Render, Renee

Reuter, Rebecca Reynolds, Jeffrey Business

Rice, Stephen Marketing

Richards, Julie Marketing Richey, Cassandra Art History Riecke, Rene

Public Administrat.

Rigg, Alan Finance

Riley, Paula Business


Celebrating the NCAA Championship, March 30, Sigma Chi members Bob Uecker, front, and Mike Vea squirt a passing car with a fire extinguisher.

\

11

Rimroth, Mary Marketing

Hissler, Gail

Ringger, Von

Environmental Aff.

Rippey, Mary

Management

Finance

Accounting

Risch, Paul Fine Arts Risley, Steve

Roberts, Sadie Robinson, Lisa Special Education

Robinson, Merrvn Ann Biology Rogers, Daniel Business

Rogers, Lori Political Sciee itl

Rogers, Sheila Business

Bohan, Matthew Physical Therapy

Rohleder, Kathleen Biology

Roller, Jane Marketing

Roop, Michael Finance

Roper, Parer Management

1, -__-.T

i

V-

norn, Marcy Rosenberg, Anthony Accounting

Ross, Anthony Music

Roth, Bill

Marketing

Rothenberg, Beth Marketing

Rover, Diane Sociology

Business

Business

Hissing, Debbie English

459


Rowe, Betty Ann Forensics

Rowe, Diane SPEA Rowe, Janet Marketing/Advertis. Roy, Richard Accounting

Rubin, Felice

Political Science

Rueff, Elaine Accounting

Hugh, Robert SPEA

Ruman, David Personnel

Rus, Reyne

General Studies

Rush, Cynthia Business

Russell, Julie Fine Arts

Russell, Kevin Marketing

460

Russell, Scott

Telecommunications

Rust, Ruth

Portuguese

Rutigliano, Robert Finance

Physical Education

Ryker, Robb Lewis

Telecommunications

Music

Journalism

Sabul, Wendy

Ryan, Christine Environ. Policy Ryan, Janet

Special Education

Ryan, Julie

Music

Forensics

Psychology

Said ivar, Michael

Ryan, Leah Anne

Safron, Jeff Finance

Sager, Shelly Said, Gregory Psychology

Sands, Cecile

Sale, Mary

Anthropology

Samlaska, Vicki

Journalism

Business

Sams, Michael

MarketinglAdvertis.

Sanders, Melanie Education

Satidoval, Jose Chemistry

Sandy, John Sansome, Christina Music

Sasko, Kimberly Computer Science Saurbaugh, Nancy Accounting

Scarpelli, Harriett

Telecommunications

Schaeffer, Brian Marketing

Schaerer, Katherine Business

Schaler, Michael

Telecommunications

Scha11, Charles Accounting

Scheiber, Audrey Biology/E nglish Schereffer, Kellie Business


00t1 Ryan congratulates one of the several faculty members recognized at the Founders Day celebration. III President Joh honor students were also recognized at the IU Auditorium for academic excellence, on April 15. More than 2,

Schertz, Bruce

Schroer, Candace

Business

Schwartz, Albert

Finance

Business

Schorr, Linda

journalism

Accountin

Schub, Kathryn

HPER

Schwartz, Bonnie

Music

Schutz, Lynn

Sociology

Schwegman, Dave Marketing Scott, Sheri

Schultz, Maichael

Business

Schwartz, Paul

Schneider, Gregg

Scheuer, Michele

Finance

Theatre

Schneider, Joseph

Schindler, Daryl

Accounting

Schroeder, Diana Accounting

Business

Forensics

Schneider, Susan Education Schoenfeldt, Laura Computer Science Schoening, Nancy

Schmutzler, Lisa

Telecommunications

Business

Selloff, Dennis

Schlachter, Dennis Finance

Schlimmer, Sandra

Schwarz, Beverly

Schumacher, Bruce

Schonfeld, 14ine Marketin Schroder, V ki

Physical Education

Accounting

Music

Accounting

Business

461


rib 0411 4t4c It

Scrivner, Regina Accounting

Scudder, Paul Journalism

Seay 11, Robert Biology

Sebacher, Sandra SpanishIllistory

Segovia, John Marketing

Seidel, Marcie

Fashion Merchandising

Sharp, Lori

Shirley, Bryan

Sevier, Lisa

Communications

Sexton, Sainra

Sharpless, Cynda Spanish Shashurg, Colleen

Shepp, Daniel

Telecommunications S hobe, Kim Speech

Sherman, Gail

Telecommunications

Shearer, Steven

Speech/Hea ring

Short, Sheri Physical Education

Shorter, Stephen

Accounting

Education

Recreation

Seyfried, John Marketing

Shafer, Joe

Accounting

Shapiro, Diane

Telecommunications

Sharp, Janet Education

462

4

Marketing

Accounting

Shedrow, Kimberly Economics

Sheets, Katherine Special Education

Shepard, Gary Marketing Finance

Shike, Paul Marketing

Education

Sickle, Ellen Fine Arts Sides, Nancy

Siegel, David Silverman, Sue

Shimp, Audrey

Shoo, Roger Mathematics

MarketinglAdvertis.

Shirey, David

Shvinkus, Lisa

Business

Special Education

Telecotnutunications Religion

Simes, Steven Simmerman, Derrell Optometry

Simmie, Donna Personnel

Simmons, Craig Business

Simmons, Gregory Journalism

Simoit, Daniel Chemistry

Simon, Lynn Biology

Simon, Roger Advertising


Sims, Renaye Psychology

Sinker, Randy Marketing Skinner, Cynthia

MarketingtAdvertis.

Skinner, Joel Biology

Skoronski, Stephen Accounting

Slacian, Joseph Journalism

Slaton, Mark Biology

Sleeth, Cindy Journalism

Smith, Barbara Recreation

Smith, Carolyn Education

Smith, Celesta Accounting

Smith, Charles Economics

Smith, C

Music

Smith, Dc ise Recreation

Smith, Jon

Psychology

Smith, Kathryn

Special Edueation

Smith, Kevin Histo

Smith, Li da Education

Smith, Mark Business

Smith, Renee Public Health

Smith, Sharon Psychology

Smith, Stuart Biology

Smock, Susan Economics

Snyder, Donald Computer Science

Sobol, Sharon SPEA

Sommer, Katherine Music

Songer, Christine

Telecommunications

Sourwine, Jim Business

Spaulding, Rachel SPEA

Speer, Mary Ann Criminal Justice

Spence, Amy Psychology

Spence, Shawn Journalism

Spencer, Patricia Chemistry Sprenger, Steven Marketing

Springer, Timothy Marketing

St. George, Linda

Stamos, Mary Beth Marketing Stanforth, Carolyn Finance

Stanley, Lisa Education

Stanley, Mark Marketing

Stanner, Terri Education

Stapleton, Mary

Telecommunications

Eastern Studies

463


tak

Swanson, Steven

Stoffel, Kenneth

Tardy, Sallie Jo

Startek, Marie Marketing Starykowicz, Janine

Stevenson, Pamela

Biology

Strunk, Patty

Telecommunications

Swynenberg, Laura

Speech/Hearing

Finance

Stone, Matthew

Marketing

Swartz, Erika

Medical Records

Tarrh, Lynda

Journalism

Stewart, Bill

Accounting

Stuebe, Miki

Telecommunications

Szczepanski, Helen

Business

Steel, Kathryn

Marketing

Stone, Pamela

Biology

Sweeney, Jerome

Special Education

Tate, Douglas

Marketing

Stickl, Gary

Business

Stuehsh, Thomas

Marketing/ Advertis

Taggart, Deborah

Telecommunications

Steelmiller, Matthew

Marketing

Strange, Mark

Marketing

Sweeney, Judith

Education

Tatum, Serita

Biology

Stillabower, Mark

Business

Sturgeon, Marilyn

Speech/Hearing

Tamir, Abdul

Steffey, Kathy

Marketing

Stmmatt, Michele Marketing/Advertis. Strong, Joyce

Home Economics

Sweeney, Margaret

Finance

Operations Management

Ternme, Janice

Psychology

Sullivan, Jon Accounting

464

Political Science

Stilletti, Dominic

Steiner, Judy

Telecommunications

Policy Administrat.

Stinson, Peter Criminal Justice

Sturgis, Jeff

journalism

Tannenbaum, Eric

Accounting

SWift,

Sarah

Telecommunications

Education

Tapley, Patricia

Teneyck, Chris

Political Science

Biology

Economics


Graduate student Ray Reitz, right with harmonica, and Tony Cox, a business graduate student jam together in the men's restroom of Eigenmann Hall. Eigennuznn has a 24 hour quiet policy and the restroom was the only place where the two could phi!, loudly.

Tupman, John

French

Marketing

Tyler, Timothy

Troup, Dennis

Business

Turk, Peter

Telecommunications

Astrophysics

Tsevat, David

Biology

Underhill, Kimberly

Trout, Amy

Telecommunications

Turk, Sally

Marketing

Thompson, Leslie

Educatio

Tranchina, Mark

Thayer, Julian

Accounting

Todd, Kei n

Finance

Psychology

Thornburgh, Gail Nursing Tiede, Karen

Educatio

Tracy, Patrick

Psychology

Thomas, John Music

Thompson, Anita Afro-American Study Thompson, Jack

Physical Education

Marketing

Tinker, Brenda

Psycholo

Tuxhorn, Kimberly

Troutman, Debbie Arts and Sciences True, Jeff

Tobias, Gail

Tevis, Edwina

Journalism

Marketing

Tilbury, Sharon Music

Thompson, Kristen

Marketing

Education

Titus, Randy Journalism

465


_

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111

.

Business

Uptain, Cynthia SPEA Uzelac, Theodore Marketing

Vagnone, Lynn Journalism

Vail, Morgan Marketing

Van Luik, Nancy Telecommunications

It

L/C

wrivh-rol-rer Business

Psychology

Vourds, Andrew

Viti, Debra Art History

Voyles, Harry

Management

Wallenstein, Karin

Vance, Gregory

Education

Biology

Behslage, David

Vance, Karen

Finance

Vessey, Sean Management Vetroczky, Michael

Fine Arts

Venditti, Leslie

Telecommunications

Vogel, Donald

Arts and Science

Vargas, Carl

Biology/Chemistry

Accounting

Wade, Clare

Education

Physical Education

Wallingford, Brian

Villalpando, Jesse

Wafa, K.J.

Marketing

Labor Relations

Vernon, Kathleen

Political Science

Vonderschmitt, Carol Accounting Vondran, Beth

journalism

Vaubel, Karin

Vernasco, Kathleen Biology

Vice, Mark Education

Audio Visual

Walsh, Martha

Vaughan, Sandra

Telecommunications

Vincent, Craddock

Education

Wagoner, Susan

Marketing

Music/Business

Vessey, Kathleen

Arts and Science

Voris, Judith

Accounting

Walsh, Nora

Vaught, Pamela

Finance

Viskanta, Renata

Walker, Jeffrey Accounting

Sociology

Journalism

466

_

Veclotch, Beth

Unger, Kevin

Business

Marketing

Accounting

Walker, Steven


!Ar Preacher Max Lynch lectures to students about their evil ways. Lynch visits IU periodically throughout the year to preach about god. Also, he visits other campuses throughout the mid-west to preach.

Walton, Garry Accounting Wark, William Business Warmack, Janet Biology Warner, John journalism Warren, Christopher Marketing Warren, Frederick Recreation

Warth, Jeanne Special Education Warton, Bonnie Music Watanabe, Colin Recreation/French Wathen, Mark Marketing Watkins, Karen Marketing Watson, Lisa Journalism

Webber, Ellen journalism Weber, Colette Telecommunications Weber, Susan Journalism

Webster, Julie Forensics Weidemann, Cynthia Education Weidenbener, Anne Biology

Weigel, Jay Marketing Weigold, Brian Political Science Weir Jr., Robert Geology

Weise, Susan Accounting

Weiser, Jeff Finance Weisman, Randy Computer Science

Weiss, Julie Telecommunications Wendling, Michael Finance Wertgeberger, Jeff Accounting

467


Westbrook, Howard Business

Westerkamp, Katherine Recreation

Wexler, William History

Wheeler, Mary Jane Business

Whitaker, Cathy Accounting

Whitehead, Teresa Journalism

468

White, Amy

Merchandise

White, Brian Mathematics

White, Donna

Biology/Chemistry

Whitehead, Teresa Journalism

Whitelaw, Patricia Microbiology

Whiteman, Thomas Chemistry

Whittaker, Karen Marketing

Wickens, Robert

Journalism/Econ.

Widermann, Maria Business

Wieneke, Doug Economics

Clernenteen Afro-American Study Wilhite, Jeffrey Psychology

Wilkerson, John Political Science

Wilkes, Bradley Journalism

Wilkicki, Audrey Political Science

Wilkins, Nannette Real Estate

Willhite, Randy Business

Williams, Alan Telecommunications

Williams, Mark Geology

Williams, Sylvester Marketing

illiams, Terri

Interior Design

Williamson, Terry Business

Wills, Barbara Biology

Elizabeth English

Wilmoth, Joel Finance

Wilson, Amy Psychology

Wilson, Deborah Education

Wilson, Jodi Education

Wilson, Randall Administration

Wilson, Steven Business

Wilson, Wendi Education

Winay, Edna Personnel

Winkler, Michelle Geology

Winter, Jeffrey Business

Wirts, Sarah Forensics

Wirtshafter, John Marketing


Zubulake, Laura

Wurz, Kristin

Wolf, Paul Psychology

Wood, Jamie

Education

Young, Michael

Finance

Wolf, Scott

Marketing/Advertis.

Yaacob, Zalimah

Biology

Marketing

Woi)drick, Kenneth

Business

Wolf, Sharon

Marketing

Yang, Helen

Zamula, Annelise Spanish Zarick, Steve

Zurcher, Carla Consumer Studies Zveige, Gloria Fashion Merchandise

Marketing

Baurley, Suzanne

Business

Wray, John

Marketing

Wolin, Michael

Political Science

Accounting

Wright, Ken Accounting Wright, Lydia

Yesberger, Mar Arts and Scienc Yochum, Theres

Zeheralis, Gail

Marketing

History

Strack, Jeanette

Wonisch, Julie Physical Education

Wood, Robert Marketing

Mathematics

Ziker, Debra

Political Science

Marketing/Advertis.

Yonks, Michael

Marketing

Wunderlin, Gail

Economics

Ziska, Michelle

Davis, Michael Public Affairs

Marketing/Advertis.

Operations Systems

469


Ali, Suhaimy junior Anderson, Anita junior Enneking, Jim junior Fortna, Monique junior Langdon, Terry junior Miller, Marsha junior

470

Minich, Tanna junior nonweiler, Lisa junior North, Marguerite junior Othman, Saied Farhh junior Ridgley, Joseph junior Sirko, Robert junior

Stanton, Jeff junior Steager, Susan junior Tapros, Thomas junior Boerner, Christopher sophomore Carr, Cathy sophomore Dobson, Hugh sophomore

Hembree, Amy sophomore Jackson, Russell sophomore Janowski, Mary Jo sophomore Leask, Judith sophomore Lentz, David sophomore Lynch, Cheryl sophomore

Martin, Sandy sophomore Moore, Kenneth sophomore Mullins, Leslie sophomore Nuth, Timothy sophomore Oglesby, Sandra sophomore Rosenbaum, Scott sophomore

St/11a, Donna sophomore Brown, Carl freshman Chapel, E. Mark freshman Everett, Dean freshman Hilnbrand, David freshman Miles, Stuart freshman


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by Mark Ryan

Mark Ryan's cartoons have appeared in the IDS for the last three years. He is a political science major from Fort Wayne, Indiana. Ryan was the graphic arts editor in 1980 and 1981; for the summer of 1981 he was editor-in-chief at the IDS. His cartoons appear in 68 newspapers across the country. They are syndicated by Copely News Service and College Press Service. His cartoons have earned several national and state aVvards. 471


Index Atlanta Aaron, Jacqueline 397 Abdul-Samad, Shamin 430 Able, Susan 399 Aboras, Muhammad 430 Abrahms, Paul 420, 430 Abramow, Nancy 351 Abrams, Jody 430 Acheson, Kathryn 383 Achleman, Nancy 400 Acton, Amy 343 Adamovich, Dan 344 Adams, Glenn 430 Adams, Keri 343 Adams, Paul 346 Adams, Steven 350, 430 Adamson, Erin 408 Adasi, Waribon 430 Aders, Katherine 349, 400, 430 Adlam, Edwin 374 Adler, Mark 430 Aebersold, Tamera 397, 430 Aebersold, Theresa 397, 430 Aerne, Laureen 430 Affeldt, Jonnamarie 360, 397 Agee, Lisa 379 Ahlbrand, Lisa 400 Ahting, Gerhard 430 Akers, David 430 Akers, Michael 374 Akiboh, Olujimi 430 Akin, Dlaudia 430 Akin, Michael 386 Alber, Rebecca 382 Alberghene, Stephan 430 Albers, Charles 394 Albers, Don 386 Albers, Sandra 375 Albertson, Mark 407 Albrecht, Daniel 430 Albright, Kevin 420 Alder, Lyn 430 Aldridge, Janice 430 Alexander, James 420 Alexander, John 394 Alexander, Joseph 430 Alexander, Michael 366, 422 Alexander, Robin 360 Alexander, Shirley 383 Alfred, Julie 343 Ali, Anita 430 Allan, Dawson 430 Allbee, Lynne 375 Allen, Dale 384 Allen, Dean 412 Allen, James 394 Allen, Kimberly 413 Allen, Lynette 408 Allen, Ruth 430 Allenspach, Mark 420 Alli, Suhnmy 470 Alm, Karen 188, 430 Almas, Dean 406

Alsip, Chris 418 Alt, Kathelyn 379 Ammerman, Jeffrey 424 Anastasia, Francis 407 Anderson, Anita 470 Anderson, Debra 417 Anderson, Jeffrey 384 Anderson, Mary D. 392 Anderson, Mary E. 430 Anderson, Michael 430 Anderson, Sherry 409 Anderson, Thomas 430 Andert, Joseph 430 Andonov, Dimitre 430 Andree, Scott 341 Andress, Jeffrey 406 Andrew, Lorri 430 Andrews, Kevin 405 Andrews, Virginia 430 Andruskiwec, Marianne 430 Angermeier, Danette 342, 430 Anse11, Jeffrey 410, 430 Anthony, Michael 422 Appelsies, Audrey 376 Apple, Melissa 417 Apsley, Raymond 350, 430 Aranilla, Carl 421 Arbuckle, Marsialle 430 Archer, Patrick 412 Arendall, Scott 427 Ariffin, Aminuddin 430 Arlen, Mark 430 Armbrust, Thomas 412 Armey, Donald 384 Armstrong, Trina 430 Arndt, Alice 383 Arnold, Lorraine 383 Arnold, Quinlan 390, 427 Arter, Nancy 417 Asbell, Jeffrey 389 Ashton, Gary 411 Ast, Connie 431 Atkins, Janet 391 Atkinson, Andrew 431 Atwood, Amy 417 Auberry, Ann 360, 399 Aubin, Lorne 404 Aufmann, Carole 431 Austin, Gregory 344 Austin, Karen 347 Avril, Delores 391, 431 Avril, Denise 391, 431 Axtell, Catherine 400 Axthelm, David 431

Baseball strike Babbitt, Scott 427, 431 Babilla, Peter 405 Baca, Lawrence 431 Baca, Robert 351 Backoff, Thomas 406

Bacon, Alan 431 Bacon, Mary 431 Bade, Douglas 374 Bade, Jay 427 Bade, Joy 402 Badger, Daniel 344 Badger, Patrice 408 Baer, Linda 383 Baggott, Lynn 400 Bailey, Deborah 140, 349, 431 Bailey, Karen 431 Bailey, Mark 366 Baines, John 389 Baker, Damon 340 Baker, Jacqueline 379 Baker, Janet 409 Baker, Jennifer 375 Baker, Katharyne 431 Baker, Randy 415 Baker, Sharon E. 431 Baker, Sharon L. 431 Baker, William 415 Baldridge, Ted 431 Ball, Dominic 431 Ball, Marionette 431 Baltus, Linda 400 Balwerdt, Larry 341 Bandele, Ramia 431 Banghart, Victoria 400 Banks, Marcia 204, 403 Banschbach, R.B. 365 Barban, Pamela 408 Barelski, Mark 410 Barker, Andy 407 Barker, Jane 431 Barlow, James 405 Barlow, Mary 403 Barnes, Bryan 418 Barnes, Charissa 431 Barnes, Christine 431 Barnes, Michelle 342, 397 Barnes, Torey 364 Barr, Lawrence 414 Barrett, Kelly 379 Barrett, Kim 347 Barrett, Tim 406 Barrett, William 432 Barrix, Scott 415 Barry, Debora 343 Barry, Dianne 432 Bartek, Steven :396 Bartels, Rebecca 382 Barth, Steven 186 Bartley, Holly 388 Baruch, Scott 378 Bassett, Scott 404 Bassett, Steven 351 Bast, Nancy 391 Bastianelli, Jean 432 Bateman, Douglas 421 Bates, Deanna 380, 381 Bates, Elizabeth 408 Bates, Grace 393 Bates, Robert 432 Bauer, Barbara 432 Bauer, Dale 422 Bauer, Lauren 416 Baurley, Suzanne 469

Bax, Constance 432 Bayley, Christine 409 Beadles, James 432 Beal, Gregory 427 Beall, Keith 404 Beamer, Lyndall 432 Beasley, David 415 Beasley, Ann 383 Beattey, Jeffery 415 Beatty, James 420, 432 Beauchamp, John 396 Beaudry, Robert 418 Beaumont, William 396 Beauvais, Julie 408, 432 Beaver, Cathy 402 Becher, Keith 410 Beck, Bill 340 Becker, Lorraine 382, 351 Becker, Stephanie 366 Beckman, Gina 432 Beckman, Teresa 432 Beehler, Karen 432 Beehler, Lance 386 Beer, Angela 392 Beggs, Elizabeth 426 Begley, Diann 388 Behm, Rona 416 Behm, Ronald 378 Behr, Mark 378, 432 Beile, Wendi 376, 432 Beiser, Debbie 376 Beisswenger, Donald 432 Beiter, Mary 432 Beja, Amy 391 Bell, Barbara 217 Bell, Jeffrey 410 Bell, Richard 432 Bell, Susan 432 Bell, Tony 341 Bellamy, John 342 Bellefuil, Steven 374 Benbrook, Kimberly 432 Bender, Pamela 432 Bender, Scott 421 Benecki, Stanley 432 Benifiel, Bruce 398 Benjamin, Susan 343 Benmour, Cynthia 432 Bennett, Anne 400 Bennett, Deborah 349, 383 Bennett, John 384, 432 Bennett, Jon 432 Bennett, Laura 375 Bennett, Randal 346 Benninghoff, Lori 426 Benson, Louise 356 Benson, Rob 421 Bentley, Mary 380 Bercovitz, Alan 351 Bercovitz, Fran 432 Beren, Debbie 432 Berg, Paul 407 Bergdoll, Howard 406 Berger, Ruanne 402 Bergeron, Michael 432 Bergman, Elizabeth 388 Bergman, Douglas 407 Bergman, Jodi 376


Jeff Morehead

Red Skelton pauses to sign autographs after

Bergman, John 405 Bergmann, Debra 379 Berk, Jeffrey 378 Berkson, Matthew 384 Berkson, Sheri 416 Bernard, Craig 432 Berner, Robert 432 Bernstein, Bruce 414 Berry, Thomas 432 Bertolino, Alicia 345 Bery, Cheryl 432 Beskin, Barbara 416 Besse, Rick 432 Beuke, Sandra 345 Beutter, Elizabeth 345 Biagioni, Peter 390 Biel, Cathleen 432 Bill, Joseph 412 Billingsley, Kent 407 Birkhold, Richard 386 Bishop, Janet 383 Bishop, Mary 351, 432 Bitove, John 418 Black, Jane 400 Black, Joetta 432 Black, Rebecca 399, 432 Black, Wendy 432 Blackwell, Jeffrey 418 Blackwood, Margaret 400 Blair, Jeffrey 420 Blair, Stephanie 375, 419 Blaising, Stephen 432 Blake, Colleen 409 Blake, Scott 386 Blanchard, Edward 396 Blanco, Matthew 396 Blaney, James 432 Blankenberger, Maria 343 Blatt, Lawrence 378 Bleeker, Sarah 345 Blessinger, Lisa 432 Bliss, Gregory 420 Block, David 432 Block, Janis 376 Block, Mark 433 Block, Steven 378 Bloom, Kemery 391 Bloomstrom, Beth 400

ading off the homecoming parade and prior to the pep rally on October 10th.

Bobowski, Bradford 398 Bode, David 433 Bodish, Julia 433 Boeglin, Daniel 415 Boehm, Laura 399 Boerner, Christopher 470 Boggess, Bruce 422 Bohn, Cynthia 416 Bohnsack, Richard 427 Bokern, Janet 433 Boler, Susan 388 Boman, Betsy 347 Bond, David 390 Bond, Jeffrey 384 Boney, Todd 394 Bonser, Catherine 433 Booe, Sara 379 Book, James 424 Boomer, Laurie 375 Boone, Clarence 433 Boone, Stephen 411 Booze, James 410 Bopp, Sherri 426 Bord, Kevin 433 Bordy, Melinda 416 Borgeson, William 422 Boring, William 421 Borneman, Robert 433 Borror, Randy 396 Borsini, Sandra 433 Borza, George 404 Bosco, Peter 427 Bosetti, Theresa 343 Boso, Kitty 426 Botka, Denise 433 Bott, Kristen 343 Botthof, Mary 360 Boulden, Mark 421 Bour, Robert 412, 433 Bowe, Ann 433 Bowen, Kelly 351 Bowen, Michael 433 Bowers, Debrah 433 Bowers, Jeffrey 384 Bowker, David 407 Bowles, Ramona 433 Bowman, Bruce 433 Bowman, Kent 386, 433

Boyd, Suzanne 409 Boyer, Cynthia 433 Boyer, Elizabeth 403 Boyle, Susan 433 Bracht, Robert 433 Bracker, Connie 376 Bradford, Felita 433 Bradley, Alan 396 Bradshaw, Benita 433 Bradshaw, Jill 417 Brady, Gregory 427 Brady, Linda 433 Brailov, Neal 433 Brakulis, Victoria 426 Bralski, Michael 340 Bramlette, James 433 Branco, Jennifer 399 Brandeis, Jennifer 433 Brandt, Carolyn 383 Branigin, Beth 433 Brannon, Susan 403 Brant, Linda 379 Brantner, Laura 402, 433 Brasel, Jay 422 Brattain, Mark 433 Braucht, Marcy 341 Braun, Claudia 416 Braunlin, Barbara 433 Braunlin, Kathryn 433 Bravos, Margaret 433 Breach, Christopher 424 Breidster, Susan 202 Brennan, Kate 400, 433 Brent, Jane 433 Brentlinger, Nancy 360, 426 Breslin, Julia 426, 433 Bretland, Sally 433 Bretz, Joseph 410 Brickman, Gretchen 347 Bridges, Sandra 433 Drimer, Joan 376 Brinegar, Curtis 384 Brinegar, Mark 374 Brink, Kern 383, 433 Brisben, Barry 407 Brissman, William 185, 390, 433 Britt, Suzanne 345 Brizzolara, Edward 398

Brobeck, Teresa 433 Brochin, Mary 433 Brodsky, Kimberly 347 Brogan, Daniel 398 Broglin, Alicia 347 Bronson, Meryl 379 Bronsweig, David 433 Brook, Hillary 434 Brooks, Ann 434 Broshears, Joan 375 Brothers, Renee 434 Broumand, Stafford 434 Brown, Andrew 418, 434 Brown, Arnold 410, 434 Brown, Barry 386 Brown, Christopher 341 Brown, Craig 424 Brown, David 411, 434 Brown, Dennis 434 Brown, Jeffrey 415 Brown, Joshua 418 Brown, Julia 375 Brown, Karen 434 Brown, Kenneth 405 Brown, Kimberly 350, 434 Brown, Kimberly 388 Brown, Lisa 379 Brown, Lorelle 380 Brown, Marc 434 Brown, Martin 398, 408 Brown, Michael A. 341 Brown, Michael B. 405, 434 Brown, Michael G. 425 Brown, Michael Steven 434 Brown, Michael Stewart 434 Brown, Nicholas 424 Brown, Ruth 417 Brown, Sarah 408 Brown, Susan 434 Brown, Traci 379 Bruggemann, David 412 Bruggemann, William 434 Bruner, Rhonda 391 Brunsell, Diane 383, 434 Bryant, Scott 404 Buchanan, Anita 434 Buchanan, Diana 417 Buchanan, Kimberly 408 473


Buchanan, Lisa 417 Buchanan, Pamela 383 Buche, Karen 434 Buchholz, Gregory 421 Buckholz, Anna 434 Budd, Alexene 434 Budig, Mark 420, 434 Buell, Catherine 416 Bulen, Gordon 386 Buls, Jonathan 434 Burch, Chad 420 Burck, Deborah 408 Burelli, David 412 Burgart, Kristine 382 Burge, Anita 380 Brugess, Mary 426, 434 Burk, Karen 341 Burke, Alan 341 Burkart, James 404 Burkart, Philip 205 Burke, Brian 344 Burke, Kevin D. 390 Burke, Kevin M. 398 Burkett, Peggy 434 Burks, David 421, 434 Burnett, Robert 434 Burnham, Rhonda 375 Burns, Don 366 Burns, Maureen 434 Burns, Michael 422 Burns, Teutonya 343 Burnstine, Nancy 416 Buron, Joseph 434 Burress, Yvonne 345 Burton, Craig 406 Burton, Thomas 410, 434 Busch, Debra 434 Busch, Jeffrey 415 Busche, Amy 434 Bush, Kriss 434 Bush, Stacy 341 Bush, Willie 342 Bushey, Gregory 420 Bushrod, Aundi 393 Busse, Alan 386 Bussing, Cindy 426, 434 Bustamante, Anne 341 Butcher, Kimberly 408 Butler, Tammy 434 Butzko, Stephen 386 Buxbaum, Andrea 434 Byers, Robert 384 Bymaster, Julie 375 Byrdsong, Nikeita 390 Byrne, Chris 420 Byrne, Megan 399

Cronkite Cabin, David 425 Cage, Mark 340 Cahill, Donald 434 Cain, Mary 400 Caito, Frank 387 Caito, Joseph 415 Caldemeyer, Beth 375 Caldemeyer, Mark 410 Caldwell, Ginny 391 Callahan, Jane 399 Callender, Kelley 382 Cameron, Jay 434 Campbell, Clare 343 Campbell, Corey 389 Campbell, James 405 Campbell, Julie 409 Campbell, Megan 434 Campbell, Steven 434 Campbell, William 407 Canalas, Laura 434 Cannon, Kevin 374 Cantwell, Sean 420 Capps, Micheal 422 Caras, Ronald 420 Carboneau, Charles 435 Carey, Christopher 406 Carle, Gary 421 Carlson, Christopher 396 Carlson, Kristen 343 Carlson, Leigh 408 Carlson, Marcy 400, 435 Carney, Bobbi 435 474

Carow, Janelle 345 Carp, Karen 435 Carpenter, William 435 Carr, Barbara 345 Carr, Cathy 351 Carr, Joy 204, 379 Carr, Kathleen 470 Carson, John 341 Carstensen, Charles 405 Carter, Gary 394 Carter, Pamela 435 Carter, Patrick 394 Cartwright, Donald 435 Caruso, Gregory 344 Case, Bradley 344 Casey, Kathleen 388 Cassidy, Deborah 343 Cassidy, Thomas 418 Castellanos, Peter 435 Castetter, Laura 382 Catt, Bradley 422 Cavalier, Jonna 342 Cavalier, Lisa 408 Cawein, Andrea 409 Cayot, Patricia 388 Cecere, John 390 Cedarbaum, Jayne 402 Cengel, Leslie 351 Cernak, Kenneth 424 Chalko, Charlene 435 Challman, Thomas 387 Chambers, Bernadette 435 Chambers, Stephen 346 Chambers, Teresa 343 Chan, Paul 435 Chance, Harry 422 Chandler, Michele 351 Chaney, Philip 435 Chao, William 435 Chaplin, Janice 399, 435 Chapman, Robert 418 Chappuis, Jean 435 Charlton, Eleanor 346 Chase, David 405, 435 Cheesman, Jeffrey 418, 435 Cheng, Chi-Hong 404 Chester, Mark 424 Chestnut, Beth 383 Chez, Michael 435 Chilow, Denise 435 Chintis, Susan 351 Chiogioji, Wendy 205, 351, 409 Chomski, Eri 435 Chomyn, Thomas 404 Christensen, Carin 408, 435 Christensen, Dianna 435 Christian, Diana 397, 435 Christie, Robin 356 Christoff, Alexander 344 Christos, Patricia 435 Church, Daniel 396, 435 Cibull, Diane 416 Cibull, Marsha 416 Cicero, Nancy 435 Cinatl, Robert 435 Ciochina, Terri 204 Cisowski, Danette 351, 402 Citti, Craig 386 Clapper, Mark 344 Clark, Brian 394, 436 Clark, David 365 Clark, Duane 394 Clark, John 424 Clark, Julie 436 Clark, Kimberly 436 Clark, Sandra 436 Clark, Susan 403 Clark, Victoria 380 Clarke, Brian 436 Clarke, Janice 436 Clarke, Kathleen 436 Clarke, Robert 436 Clausen, Lisa 360, 409 Clawson, Carol 436 Clawson, Melinda 349, 356, 436 Clem, Sandra 361 Clements, Linda 347 Clements, Linda 347 Clements, Margaret 342 Clifford, Tim 418 Cline, Elizabeth 388 Cline, Linda 403 Clippinger, Scott 410 Clough, Patrick 342 Clymin, Gail 436 Cobb, Judith 399

Cochran, Carolyn 382, 436 Cody, Brian 436 Cofer, Anita 397 Cohan, Greg 414 Cohen, Andrew 344 Cohen, Avery 425 Cohen, Brian 414 Cohen; Dale 414 Cohen, Esther 416 Cohen, Shelley 416 Cohn, Judith 426 Cohn, Sharon 376 Colbert, Laura 347 Cole, Douglas 436 Cole, Kevin 436 Coleman, Beth 349, 367, 409, 436 Coleman, Lisa 379, 407 Coleman, Randall 436 Collier, Lelia 436 Collins, Bryan 394 Collins, Darryl 394 Collins, Regina 436 Collins, Thomas 387 Colquitt, Shawn 391 Colter, Robert 344 Comer, Gregg 436 Conklin, Candace 404 Conlisk, Burton 436 Conrad, Amy 403 Conrad, Darlin 122 Conrad, Jeb 427 Conrad, Allan 384 Conrad, Tony 404 Conrady, Deborah 402 Conway, Michael 344 Conway, Patricia 436 Conwell, Mary 436 Conyer, Michael 421 Cook, Catherine 351 Cook, Jeff D. 340 Cook, Jeffrey L. 436 Cook, Jonathon 420 Cook, Lance 415 Cook, Maureen 436 Cook, Michele 436 Cooke, Caren 388 Cooler, Thomas 424, 436 Cooney, Lori 383 Coons, Jeffrey 420 Cooper, Belinda 380 Cooper, Bradley 412 Cooper, Lamille 436 Cooper, Debra 408, 436 Cooper, James 427 Cooper, Karen 408 Cooper, Scott 436 Cooper, Sharon 388 Copley, William 386 Coppinger, Chris 415 Coppinger, Michael 415 Coram, Steven 420 Corbett, Kim 402 Cord, Rebecca 417 Corey, Jeffrey 415 Coridan, Jenifer 391 Corso, David 415 Corson, Madden 402 Cortese, Judith 436 Corts, Kristine 409 Corum, Brian 427 Coryell, Richard 424 Coshow, Craig 427 Costello, Thomas 427 Costo, Robert 344 Cotsoviles, Rena 426 Cotsoviles, Victoria 426, 436 Cottingham, Sandra 436 Couper, David 386 Cowen, David 351 Cox, Bret 436 Cox, Bruce 387 Cox, Carolyn 436 Cox, Fannie 436 Cox, Marsha 375 Cox, Mary 436 Coy, Jay 390 Coy, Kenneth 436 Coy, Susan 436 Cozad, Gregory 350 Cradick, Timothy 436 Craig, Catherine 382 Crain, Carmen 436 Cramer, Edward 394 Crane, Mary 388 Craven, Jean 436 Craven, Jo Ann 437

Creed, Lisa 437 Creighton, Kathleen 437 Cremer, John 415 Crilly, John 411 Cromer, Michael 437 Cron, Cynthia 437 Cross, Cathleen 437 Crouch, Larry 398 Crouch, Mary 419 Crouse, Therese 351, 382 Crowe, Maureen 388, 431 Crowley, Charles 437 Cruz, Christopher 437 Cullar, Ann 399 Cunningham, Anthony 431 Cunningham, Jeffrey 410 Cunningham, Kerry 386 Curry, Jon 389 Curtis, Bob 427 Curtis, Christy 341 Curtis, Donald 384 Curtis, James 415 Curtis, Nancy 437 Curtis, Rebecca 341 Curtis, Bobbin 346 Cushing, Brian 389 Cushingberry, Michael 342 Cusick, Kacia 391 Custer, Karyn 383, 437 Custer, Kevin 389 Cutler, Kimberly 439 Czaja, Claude 398 Czarnecki, John 437 Czechanski, James 437 Czerny, David 366 Czeschin, Frank 386

Disco sucks D Ascenzo, Gina 408 Dahling, Mary 437 Dailey, Kemberly 437 Daily, Jo 700, 737 Dalle-Ave, Mark 437 Dalton, Christopher 437 Darner, Ann 437 Daniel, Martha 391 Daniels, Robert 384 Dann, Wendy 376, 437 Darby, Debra 342 Darcy, Bruce 421 Darcy, Donnamarie 437 Darling, Mike 415 Darnell, Sarah 437 Darrell, Barton 410 Davidson, Sandra 342 Davis, Bradley C. 415, 437 Davis, Brad 405 Davis, Brian 364 Davis, Felice 437 Davis, Gerard 394 Davis, Harry 415 Davis, John 349, 437 Davis, Kristin 388 Davis, Michael K. 349, 437 Davis, Michael W. 438 Davis, Steve 344 Davis, Steven 390 Davisson 438 Davisson, William 424 Day, Becky 438 Day, Diane 417 Day, Kimberly 383 Defourneaux, Giselle 345 De Haven, Jennifer 426 De Lone, Peter 406 De Schryver 421 De Vito, Michael 411 Deatrick, Sharon 345 Deckard, Christopher 424 Deckard, Roger 438 Decker, Julie 376 Decraene, Suzanne 403 Deeg, Russell 341 Deel, Deborah 438 Degitz, Julia 409 Dehart, Terence 438 Deighton, Elizabeth 347 Deist, James 386 Deister, Melinda 392 Deitch, Steven 438 Del, Priore 346


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411.A IPA 40171‘ 41°A IPA 4110A 4110A 411.1 Delisle, Lisa 438 Demeter, Linda 438 Deneen, Timothey 424 Dennis, Darrell 398 Dennis, Holli 391 Dennis, William 421 Dent, David 438 Derdak, Victor 396 Dereamer, Marney 438 Derengoski, Sally 438 Derheimer, Nancy 438 Derico, Deborah 393 Derico, Mona 393, 438 Detherage, Cindy 391 Detty, Brian 405 Devan, Janamitra 438 Devine, Kevin 438 Devoe, George 438 Dewsnap, Chris 389 Diaz-Marti, Edgardo 438 Dick, Brian 384 Dickerson, John 374 Dickerson, Nan 438 Dickey, Jennifer 383 Dickinson, Anna 438 Dickinson, Jeni 364, 366 Dickinson, Margaret 341 Dickman, Frederick 398 Dickman, Theodore 406 Dickmann, Douglas 396 Dietz, Thomas 415 Dillingham, Barbara 346 Dillon, Donna 351, 400 Dillon, Francis 389 Dillon, Mary 438 Dillon, Sally 417 Dilthey, Mary 438 Dircksen, Eric 422 Dishler, Cheryl 351 Disney, Charles 422 Dizon, Maria 364 Dizon, Roel 438 Dobson, Hugh 470 Dock, Judith 416 Dodson, Jeff 420 Doerr, Steve 415, 438 Doland, Michael 404 Dommer, Dennis 361, 389 Doner, Brian 414

Doner, William 414 Donnelly, Jessica 392 Donnelly, Lisa 392, 438 Donovan, Patricia 438 Dooley, Patricia 392 Dorenfest, Laura 379, 438 Doss, Becky 438 Doss, Tod 438 Dougherty, Francis 438 Doughty, David 410, 438 Douglas, Debra 438 Douglas, Jodi 402 Downey, Connie 402 Doyle, Carolyn 397 Doyle, Timothy 241 Draga, John 427 Dragoo, Mary 349, 400, 438 Drake, Michael 366 Draper, Mary 438 Drechsler, Lori 376 Dreyer, Steven 412 Drummond, Douglas 421 Du Bois, David 427 Du Bois, Warren 387 Duarte, Alexander 386 Dubin, Dave 418 Duchton, Margaret 391 Duckworth, Virginia 438 Dudley, Christine 438 Dueringer, Christopher 410, 438 Duff, Timothy 438 Duffy, Cheryl 399, 438 Dugan, Mark 394 Dugdale, James 415 Dugdale, Jeffrey 418, 438 Duke, Karey 438 Duke, Michael 346 Dukes, Elizabeth 388 Dull, Scott 389 Dummich, Julie 392 Dunaway, Renee 439 Dunbar, Kim 439 Dunbar, Teddy 340 Duncan, Barbara 341 Duncan, Brian 439 Duncan, Jill 408 Duncan, Jody 380 Dungan, Cheryl 439 Dunlop, Matthew 439

Dunn, Karen 382, 439 Dupler, Diane 375 Dupree, Sharon 393, 439 Durcanin, Cynthia 396 Dushman, Charles 414 Dutcak, Lenora 439 Duwel, Paul 420 Dvorak, John 439 Dye, Ellen 426 Dye, Leigh 382 Dyerly, Linda 399, 439 Dygert, Ann 388

ERA Eade, Julie 392 Eagle, Kevin 406 Earley, Janet 408 Earls, Deborah 342 Earnest, Mark 204 Earnhart, Elizabeth 400, 439 Eastes, Jeffrey 439 Eastman, Ellen 409 Eastman, Julie 409 Ebbinghouse, Patricia 400 Ebel, Susan 439 Eber, Paul 415 Echelberger, Jeffrey 407 Echt, Gregory 439 Eck, Andrea 343 Eck, John 420 Eck, William 389 Echert, Karen 382 Eckman, Catherine 439 Economos, Emmanuel 439 Eddings, Patricia 343 Edgeworth, John 427 Edmonds, Catherine 408 Edwards, Katie 439 Edwards, Kenneth 386 Edwards, Michael 394 Edwards, Randy 374

Edwards, Steven 422, 439 Effrein, John 406 Egenolf, Pat 394 Eggebrecht, Kirk 374 Eggleston, Bette 439 Egle, Jeffery 407 Egnatz, Brian 409 Ehret, William 418, 439 Ehrlich, Michael 439 Eisele, Cheryl 402, 439 Eisele, Mark 351 Eisele, Michelle 351, 426 Eissler, Lisa 375 Elder, Cynthia 439 Eldridge, Dwayne 346 Eleftheri, Bessie 379 Elins, Philip 410 Elliott, Barbara 439 Elliott, Laura 382 Elliott, Linda 203 Elliott, Michael 410 Elliott, William 384 Ellis, Debbie 408 Ellis, Elizabeth 439 Ellis, Melinda 383 Ellsworth, Julie 382 Ellsworth, Timothy 398 Elmore, Douglas 406 Elsner, Gregory 394 Elsner, Margaret 400 Embry, Chip 427 Emery, David 406 Emery, Karen 439 Emery, Sharon 380 Emmert, Mark 439 Emoff, Mitchell 378 Emoff, Thomas 378 Emslie, Douglas 439 Enders, Karen 388 Engelmann, Anne 400 Enghauser, Michael 439 Englander, Peter 425 Engle, Lynne 439 Enneking, James 470 Enright, Thomas 398 Epple, Thomas 420 Epstein, Audree 416 Epstein, Stacy 376, 439 Ergas, Marilyn 351, 439 475


Ericson, Catherine 439 Ermenc, Joseph 439 Ernstes, Kenneth 386 Ernsting, Kristen 382 Espinosa, Higinio 439 Esque, Deloris 400, 439 Essary, Brian 374 Esterson, Steven 427 Ethridge, Jeffrey 386 Evanoff, Philip 439 Evans, Anne 439 Evans, Bradley 412 Evans, Cheryl 382 Evans, David 203, 344, 367, 439 Evans, Donna 347 Evans, Elizabeth 345 Evans, Greg 394 Evans, Kristina 400 Evans, Marilyn 440 Evans, Michael 386 Ewell, Ralph 188 Ewing, David 340 Eyre, Robert 440

Financial aid Fabrizio, Robert 386 Fagan, William 421 Faith, Gregory 424 Fall, Ted 366 Fallon, Timothy 340 Farber, Richard 440 Farekas, Jo 440 Farmer, Robert 356 Farnan, Joseph 398 Farney, Timothy 415 Farrell, Daniel 427 Farren, Bridget 408 Farson, Julia 403 Farver, Brent 405 Fasching, Rhonda 408, 440 Faulkner, Debra 446 Fay, Anne 184 Fay, Christopher 415 Feasel, James 440 Feicke, Jon 344 Fekkes, Andrea 400 Feld, Cynthia 382 Feld, Laurence 440 Feldman, Charlie 427 Feldman, William 378 Feldstein, Beth 416 Felton, Barbara 440 Fender, Jennifer 440 Fender, Martin 411 Fenimore, Craig 422 Fenn, Laura 417 Fentress, Kelly 440 Ferguson, Eugene 440 Ferguson, John 341 Ferguson, Susanna 397 Fernandez, Anabelle 408, 440 Ferrare, Michell 346 Ferraro, Jeffrey 394 Ferree, James 193, 440 Ferreri, Janet 440 Ferrie, Richard 340 Ferris, Linda 397, 440 Ferris, Tracy 399 Fesler, Kimberly 392 Fesler, Kris 392 Ficken, James 374 Field, Michelle 416 Fiess, Stephen 440 Figel, Marcy 408 Figel, Mark 341 Figueroa, Rebecca 391 Fila, Andrew 406 Filippini, Elizabeth 440 Fine, Marc 440 Fine, Nancy 440 Fingert, Nadine 376 Fischer, Kristal 409 Fisher, Dawn 440 Fishman, Howard 378 Fishman, Jay 425 Fishman, Mara 416 Fishman, Susan 416, 440 Fivel, David 378 Five!, Sharon 376 Fivel, Steven 378 Flavin, Michael 203 Fleener, Elizabeth 397 476

Fleener, James 390 Fleming, David 386 Fleming, Julia 400, 440 Fleming, Thomas 400 Fletcher, Jon 396 Flint, Patricia 440 Florcruz, Arturo 412 Flowers, Gregory 366 Flowers, Patricia 440 Fogel, Arthur 414 Fogle, Jack 374 Fogleman, Martha 376 Foley, Julie 403 Folmer, William 440 Forcier, Nancy 408 Ford, Craig 407 Ford, Daniel 440 Ford, Leila 393 Ford, Liam 398 Ford, Nancy 379 Ford, Sandra 347 Foreste, Eric 366 Forester, Patricia 408 Foret, Joan 397 Forgey, Michael 440 Fortna, Monique 470 Foster, Chris 420 Foster, Kevin 384 Foster, Mary 366 Foulke, Julie 403 Foulkes, Dion 365 Fountain, Julie 397 Fountain, Julie 397 Fountain, June 440 Fowler, Shawn 375 Fox, Carol 440 Fox, Kim 440 Fox, Laura 376, 440 Fox, Lon 440 Fox, Melody 383, 440 Fox, Michael 424 Foy, William 387 Franceschi, Greg 405 Francis, Anne 417 Frank, Joel 424 Frank, Julie 376 Frank, Philip 378 Frank, Philip 440 Frank, Susan 379 Franke, Tammi 351 Fread, Chris 420, 440 Frederickson, Kim 440 Free, Charlotte 365 Freed, Cynthia 440 Freed, Judith 440 Freehill, Kate 347 Freeman, William 410 Freihofer, Philip 418 French, Frank 420 French, Gail 409 French, Geffry 406 Freudenthal, Tracie 416 Frey, Catherine 403 Fricke, Michael 384 Fried, Wendy 367, 392 Friedberg, Rebecca 324 Friedenberg, Scott 440 Friedman, Alan 414 Friedman, Diane 416 Friedman, Gail 441 Friedman, Richard 378 Friedman, Ronna 376 Friedman, Vicki 441 Fries, Donald 441 Frigge, Regina 416 Friman, Paul 441 Frisch, Susan 416 Frische, Michael 424 Fritz, Mark 344 Fromm, Georgia 408 Fromuth, Michael 405 Frowick, Lesley 441 Frushour, Mark 394 Frutig, Richard 422 Frydman, Charlotte 376, 441 Frydman, Brad 384 Fuchs, Cynthia 397 Fuchs, Richard 340 Fulper, Diana 409 Fulton, Mark 386 Funck, Bernard 420 Fung, John 346 Funk, Scott 386 Funk, Susan 441 Funk, William 341 Funkhouser, Neal 351

Furfaro, Sheryl 441 Furr, Steven 405 Furst, Felicia 416 Fyffe, Paula 388

Gay Gaal, Monica 408 Gabel, Amy 376 Gabovitch, David 441 Gabovitch, William 414 Gaeth, Lori 383 Gahimer, James 441 Galanos, Milton 441 Galic, Dara 408 Gall, John 394 Gallagher, Martin 398 Gallagher, Mary 408 Gallagher, Terri 382, 441 Gallant, Robert 387 Galoozis, Theofilos 340 Gambino, Francis 424 Ganger, Brynne 441 Gannon, Erin 403, 441 Gans, Susan 441 Ganyard, John 404 Gardner, Elizabeth 380 Gardner, Ellen 441 Gardner, Laura 403 Gardner, Sylvia 441 Garman, Glen 378 Garmon, Joel 441 Garon, Susan 397, 441 Garrett, Cynthia 417 Garrett, Gregory 441 Garrett, James 412 Garrett, Randall 361, 412 Garrison, David 422 Garrison, Jeff 387 Garrison, Terri 360 Garrow, Robert 374 Garvey, Elizabeth 403 Gasaway, Richard 387 Gaskill, Kent 387 Gasper, Sharon 342 Gaston, Anne 441 Gaston, Mark 407 Gates, Mark 407 Gates, Mary 400 Gatewood, Jason 427 Gatson, Lavarrel 441 Gaunt, Elizabeth 403 Gaydos, Gayle 360, 402, 441 Gebel, Jenny 441 Gedert, Linda 417 Gee, Susan 399 Geehring, Kristen 441 Gehl, Jay 418 Geiser, Karen 416 Geiss, Tony 344 Gelarden, Kelly 389 Gellers, Barry 441 Genest, Sue 441 Genits, Karen 442 Genovese, Jane 409 Gentry, Dennis 396 Gentuseo, Dean 398 Genung, Stuart 384 George, David 442 George, David 442 George, Gregory 442 • George, Linda 383, 442 Geralde, Jeffrey 342 Gerberding, Greta 382 Gergora, Claire 442 Gerstle, Diane 442 Gerstle, Mark 442 Getzin, Eric 421 Gherardi, Anne 387 Gibbons, Jodi 376 Gibbons, Mary 347 Gibbs, Linda 399 Gibson, Kevin 422 Gibson, Robert 404 Gibson, Todd 442 Giesecke, Daniel 442 Giesel, Lisa 442 Giesler, Mark 442 Gilbert, Bruce 442 Gilbert, Michael 415 Gilbert, Tony 442 Gilbreath, Amy 408 Gilchrist, Lisabeth 442

Giles, Adam 390 Gill, Douglas 374 Gill, John 344 Gillen, Jennifer 343 Gillenwater, Mark 405 Gillespie, Jane 408 Gillian, Kurtis 442 Gillis, Barbara 342 Gillis, Brian 407 Gilmore, Michael 442 Ginsburg, Cindy 442 Ginsburg, Miles 414 Ginsburg, Terry 318 Girod, Randall 390, 442 Girod, Susan 364 Givan, Douglas 389 Gjerswald, Robert 344 Gladish, Scott 387 Glander, Steven 404 Glass, Brian 387 Glass, George 442 Glassman, Stuart 420 Gleason, Tim 342 Glickman, Inez 442 Glickson, Caryn 416 Gobert, Terry 389 Goble, William 442 Goddy, Karen 442 Goebel, Cecilia 442 Goeller, Michael 394 Goelzer, Gregorey 442 Goering, Diane 402 Goffinet, Denise 442 Goffinet, William 366 Gohlke, Marcia 442 Gold, Claudia 442 Gold, Cynthia 442 Goldberg, Marilyn 376, 442 Goldberg, Robin 376 Golden, Alan 414 Golden, Jacqueline 393 Goldfarb, Michael 340 Goldman, Leah 442 Goldman, Mitchell 425 Goldman, Robin 416, 442 Goldsmith, Carrie 388 Goldsmith, Eric 414 Goldsmith, Samuel 425 Goldstein, Robert 378 Gooch, Brad 404 Goode, Thomas 344 Goodman, Linda 383 Goodman, Rita 442 Gooldy, Teresa 383 Goonewardene 384 Gootrad, Melissa 416 Gorby, Drew 351 Gordon, Craig 378 Gordon, David 410 Gordon, Greg 386 Gordon, Sean 424 Gordon, Terry 424 Gordon, Todd 410 Gorski, Lynn 391 Gossman, Michael 367, 418 Gostola, Sharon 442 Gottlieb, Melissa 376 Gottschalk, Lynn 383 Covert, Amy 442 Gozdecki, David 427 Graf, Brian 351 Graff, Cyndee 349, 416, 442 Graffeo, Glen 442 Graham, Janet 442 Graham, Karen 442 Graham, Paul 342 Graham, Timothy 384 Grahn, Wendy 408 Grambsch, Mary 442 Gramelspacher, Lisa 442 Gramling, Jack 442 Gramman, Cindy 375 Grant, Anthony 443 Grathwohl, Susan 417 Graves, Paul 366 Graves, Paula 402 Gray, Carol 349, 350, 448 Gray, Darren 386 Gray, James 407 Gray, Jeff 349, 361 Gray, Scott 378 Gray, Teresa 383 Green, Carolyn 347 Green, Howard 378 Green, Jeffrey 427 Green, Stephen 424


Andree Peyrot

A student helps decorate south Washington street during the fourth of July weekend. Green, Tracy 379 Green, Vicky 376 Greenbaum, Steven 443 Greenberg, Bobbi 416 Greene, Jeffrey 366 Greene, Jeffrey W. 425 Greene, Lisa 391 Greenspon, James 443 Greenwald, David 425 Greenwald, Rachel 416 Greenwalt, Chris 346 Greer, David 427 Greer, Douglas 398 Greeson, Wayne 192 Gregory, Janice 375, 443 Gregory, Jo Ellyn 443 Greiner, Geri 443 Grelle, Kevin 424 Grey, Roderick 420

Griest, Julia 443 Griffis, Sarah 382 Griffith, Dawn 189 Griggs, Martha 400 Grimm, Tamara 443 Grindlay, Cathy 443 Grindlay, Kenneth 420 Grindstaff, Catherine 443 Grinele, Stuart 443 Gritt, William 422 Grondziak, Sandra 347 Groome, Ginnetto 443 Grommer, Ann 408 Gross, Lynn 443 Grossman, Edward 414 Grossman, Jamie 376 Grossman, Tami 443 Grott, John 443 Grwinslci, Bruce 344

Guastella, Brian 394 Gudeman, Scott 406 Gudkese, David 443 Guerrettaz, John 344 Guggenheim, Steve 424 Gutmann, Craig 378 Gutowsky, Christopher 390

Hoosiers Hackett, Scott 374 Hackman, Stephen 443 Haerle, Amy 392 Haerle, Anne 392 Haffner, Carol 351, 443

Haffner, John 394 Hager, Susan 383 Haggerty, Kevin 398 Haines, John 424 Haire, Terri 426 Hakes, Jodi 443 Hale, James 344 Hall, Anthony 418 Hall, Betsy 417 Hall, Craig 389 Hall, Denise 444 Hall, Edwin 398 Hall, Gwendolyn 380 Hall, Susan 444 Hallagan, Maureen 383, 444 Hallanan, Marian 345 Halle, Michele 392 Haller, Carol 444 Haller, Matthew 389 Hallowell, Andrew 344 Hallows, Cindie 345 Halsey, James 411 Halsey, Sallie 379 Hamid, Abdul 444 Hamilton, David 444 Hamilton, Jeffrey 387 Hamilton, Pamela 403, 444 Hamilton, Tamara 347 Hamilton, Thomas 412 Hamman, Barbara 408 Hammersley, Howard 414 Hammerstrom, Phillip 386 Hammes, Gloria 351 Hammes, Patricia 399 Hammon, Michael 444 Hammond, James 386 Hammond, Jon 389 Hammond, Timothy 404 Hand, Suzanne 408 Hanes, Stegen 444 Haney, Frank 186 Hanlon, Catherine 347 Hanlon, Patrick 404 Hanna, Julie 360, 402 Hannoy, Douglas 427 Hansen, Christopher 421 Hansen, Clarissa 382 Hanson, Gregg 444 Hansson, Elizabeth 444 Hanusin, Mark 389 Hanzel, Karen 444 Happel, David 384 Haramaras, Steve 412 Harazin, Margaret 343 Harding, Nina 444 Hardy, Barbara 379 Hargett, William 418 Hargis, Jay 411 Hargitt, Macy 347 Harkavy, Michael 414 Harlan, Jeff 444 Harman, Dennis 444 Harmas, Thomas 404 Harper, Christine 345 Harper, Cynthia 345 Harper, Gregg 424 Harper, Kathy 444 Harper, Paula 444 Harper, Raetta 444 Harris, Cynthia 351 Harris, David 405 Harris, Donna 393, 444 Harris, Lee 444 Harris, Matthew 418 Harris, Michael 444 Harris, Terry 393, 444 Harrison, Bert 394 Harrison, Michael 387 Hart, Melvin 344 Harten, Dorthy 444 Hartman, Bruce 444 Hartman, Garry 422, 444 Hartman, William 444 Harvey, Steve 410 Harvey, Valerie 444 Haskell, Melissa 347 Haskett, Michael 427 Haskins, Caree 444 Hasler, Jeffrey 444 Hatch, Melanie 402 Hatfield, David 346 Hatfield, Jeffrey 387 Hauch, Linda 383 Hauge, William 444 Haussecker, John 384 Havens, Peter 444 Hawes, Gregory 414 477


Hawkins, Chris 427 Hawkins, Daniel 427 Hawkins, Laura 342 Hawkins, Martin 421 Hawkins, Michael 387 Hawkins, Patrick 398 Hayden, John 444 Hayden, Marie 417 Hayes, Da Vita 444 Hayes, Eric 427 Hayes, James 344 Hayes, Michael 444 Hayes, Richard 444 Hayford, Colleen 444 Haynes, Laura 417 Haynes, Leslie 417 Hays, Kent 366 Hays, Martha 409, 444 Hazel, Randall 396 Hazlitt, Christopher 427, 444 Hearn, Vickie 347, 445 Heath, David 424 Heath, Robert 445 Heaton, Tracy 408 Hebenstriet, Jill 445 Heck, Cindy 345 Heckaman, Ellyn 408 Heckman, Carl 342 Hedges, Brian 406 Hedges, Jeff 390 Hedrick, Susan 409 Heffernan, Timothy 418 Hefter, Judith 376 Heidler, Elizabeth 403 Heiman, Alice 445 Heiman, Greg 384 Heimann, John 421 Heise, Duane 411 Heiser, Charles 445 Helfers, Kenneth 427 Helfrich, Jeffrey 418 Helfrich, Kimberly 445 Heller, Jeff 386 Helm, Alicia 380, 445 Helminiak, Jeffry 344 Helms, Julie 409 Helmsing, Debra 445 Helphinstine, Dawn 376 Hembree, Amy 402, 470 Hemlich, Alan 364 Hemmeger, Jeffrey 407 Henck, Carrie 391 Henderson, Holly 400 Henderson, Janet 365 Henderson, Patricia 388 Hendricks, Douglas 421 Hendrix, Alisa 400 Hendrix, Felicia 346 Hendrvx, Linda 402 Henke, Tammy 347 Henn, David 427, 445 Hennelly, Thomas 374, 386 Hennessy, John 445 Henny, Claudia 403 Henry, Charles 421 Hepler, John 412 Herendeen, Daniel 386 Herendeen, Nancy 392 Hernicz, Peggy 382 Herrera, Gerardo 445 Herrmann, Julia 445 Herron, Sandra 400, 445 Heseman, John 374 Hesler, Scott 420 Hess, Frederick 374 Hessong, Jennifer 382 Hetland, James 387 Heusinkveld, Ann 391 Heyse, Patricia 376 Hiatt, Cindy 379 Hiatt, Julie 400 Hibner, Rebecca 408 Hibnick, Marc 422 Hicks, Robert 406 Hicks, Susan 360, 375, 445 Hidalgo, Sharon 380, 381 Hidde, Michael 404 Hierydyn, Dave 427 Higdon, Kevin 445 Higgins, Thomas 445 Hi and, Scott 387 Hildebranski, James 396 Hill, Christine 341 Hill, Holly 380 Hill, Lee 445 Hill, Randall 422 478

Hill, Robert 445 Hill, Stacey 416 Hill, Susan 397, 445 Hillenbrand, Dave 389 Hillenburg, Karen 379 Hillenburg, Lynn 388 Hilligoss, Alice 397 Hillis, Bridget 375 Hillsamer, John 445 Hilnbrand, Arlene 445 Hiltunen, Charles 427 Himelick, Linda 382 Hines, Cynthia 383 Hines, James 394 Hines, Jon 445 Hines, William 427 Hinkle, Susan 408 Hinkley, Anne 399 Hinsey, Carolyn 409 Hinton, Brian 389 Hipskind, Philip 396 Hirami, Sandra 445 Hirschfeld, Jon 445 Hirschfield, Carol 376 Hislip, Brian 445 Hitchcock, Jeffrey 418 Hittinger, Joseph 384 Hizer, James 405 Hoagburg, Steven 387 Hochman, Debra 376 Hodel, Karen 417, 445 Hodor, Janice 445 Hoelscher, Cynthia 383 Hoyer, Sarah 347 Hoffman, Betsy 399 Hoffman, Daniel 445 Hoffman, Jane 445 Hoffman, Sharyn 342 Hoffman, Timothy 394 Hogan, Peter 410 Hoge, Steven 445 Hohman, Jeff 445 Holbert, Matt 445 Holland, James 406 Holland, Nathaniel 365 Holland, William 387 Hollander, Sandra 445 Hollander, Sandra 445 Hollender, Ruth 445 Hollingsworth, Jon 386 Holm, Jacquelyn 347 Holmes, Christopher 387 Holmes, Patricia 445 Holt, Bridgett 393 Holt, Daniel 411 Holt, Mary 343 Holtberg, Susan 445 Holthaus, Mark 445 Holtz, Larry 183 Holwadel, David 445 Holz, Sandra 445 Holzer, Margaret 445 Holzinger, Laurel 445 Homme, Barbara 445 Honein, Antoine 446 Hooey, Darell 446 Hooker, Jennifer 392 Hooker, Richard 374 Hooker, William 405 Hooper, Steven 390 Hoover, David 407 Hoover, Tim 342 Hopkins, Barbara 446 Hopkins, Douglas 412 Hopkins, Karen 409 Hopkins, Nancy 409 Hopkins, Scott 421 Hopwood, Edward 424 Horn, Mark 410 Horn, Suzanne 392, 447 Hornak, Kathryn 388 Horton, Craig 374 Horvat, Marcella 347 Horvat, Mary 347 Horwitz, Stephen 378 Hoster, Julie 349, 400, 440 Hottinger, Chris 406 Houchins, Dennis 446 Houlihan, Erin 446 Housden, Andrew 447 Houston, Marsha 343 Houston, Scott 374 Hovde, Debra 403, 446 Howard, Jeffrey 446 Howard, Jeffrey 394 Howard, John 446

Howard, Michael 411 Howard, Michael 341 Howard, Ralph 387 Howden, Michelle 403 Howell, Dan 191 Howell, Sally 446 Howey, Timothy 446 Howkinson, Steven 374 Howland, Philip 446 Hoyer, Amy 399 Hoyt, Katherine 446 Hrisomalos, Athena 446 Hrisomalos, Elaine 400 Hrisomalos, Daren 400 Huber, David 340 Huckabone, Kevin 344 Hudock, John 446 Hudock, Michael 446 Hudson, David 446 Huelskamp, Susan 379 Huffer, Kenneth 366 Huffine, Matt 410 Huffman, Cynthia 388 Hughes, Anthony 424, 446 Hughes, Bridget 347 Hughes, Deborah 379 Hughes, Dennis 446 Hughes, Jeffrey 418 Hughes, Michael 424 Hughes, Teresa 325, 419 Hughey, Karen 379 Hultgren, Scott 446 Hunsucker, Karen 446 Hunt, Diane 446 Hunt, Jerry 405 Hunt, Lisa 379 Hunter, David 344 Hunter, Keith 427 Hunter, Tammy 486 Hunter, Thomas 386 Huntley, Tod 350, 446 Huot, Cynthia 203 Hupfer, Janet 402, 446 Hurley, Mary 446 Hurrle, Bette 446 Hurst, Bonnie 345 Husselman, Brian 424 Hyatt, Geoffrey 446 Hyatt, Hollyce 392

Iran Iaccarino, Louis 446 Idris, Walaa 380 Iemmolo, Julie 409 Igney, Mark 346 Illin, Diane 347 Imamura, James 446 Indiano, Michael 418 Irvin, Michelle 388 Irvine, Mary 367. 392 Irwin, Shelley 351, 402 Isaacs, Gregory 366 Itin, Diane 446 Ivanyo, Katherine 343 Iwata, Junko 366 Izenstark, Debra 416

Jelly beans Jackson, Catherine 397 Jackson, Kathryn 343 Jackson, Kevin 366 Jackson, Linda 446 Jackson, Natalie 345 Jackson, Russell 470 Jacobs, Connie 417 Jacobs, Keith 378 Jacobs, Michael 351 Jacobs, Steven 342 Jacobsen, Sally 426 Jacobson, Melisa 392 Jacobus, Julie 391 Jaeger, David 422 James, Steven 446 Jamieson, Hugh 425 Janeway, Mary 446 Janowski, Mary 470 Jansen, Dave 489 Jansen, Sheila 446

Jarosz, Ellen 446 Jarrett, Dennis 446 Jarrett, Rosa 446 Jarvis, Stephanie 403 Jefferson, Sally 446 Jefvert, Betty 408 Jehl, Marie 447 Jellison, Jeffrey 412 Jenkins, Dawn 403 Jennings, Robert 420 Jennings, Sally 447 Jensen, Karen 402 Jessee, Lynne 392 Jimenez, Rosa 447 oels, Julie 376 offe, Diana 447 Johannsen, Mary 447 Johns, Richard 420 Johnson, Daniel 447 ohnson, Deloris 447 ohnson, Greg 447 ohnson, Jeffrey D. 374 ohnson, Jeffrey S. 387 Johnson, Jill 391 Johnson, Joni 403 ohnson, Julie 375, 447 ohnson, Kelli 420 Johnson, Kevin 389, 420 ohnson, Lonnie 342 ohnson, Mark A. 447 ohnson, Mark E. 364, 447 ohnson, Michael 415 ohnson, Michele 397 Johnson, Nancy 409, 447 Johnson, Patricia 400, 447 Johnson, Rob 344 Johnson, Russ 424 ohnson, Shelley 399 Johnson, Siyona 480 ohnson, Stacy 347 Johnson, Steve 386 Johnson, Thomas 378 Johnson, Tom 405 ohnston, David 409 ohnston, Jane 447 Jones, Beth 379 ones, Brad 421 Jones, Carla 409 Jones, Christina 417 Jones, Frederick 341 Jones, Greg 387 ones, Kathleen 391, 403 ones, Kathy 447 ones, Lannie 393 Jones, Pamela 380, 447 Jones, Rose 202, 364 Jones, Scott 351 Jones, Stephen 447 Jongkind, Debora 447 Jopwood, Edward 447 ordan, Dedric 447 ose, Herbert 447 ouriles, Ernest 374 Jova, Paul 447 Joy, William 351 Joyce, Dale 427 Joyce, Geraldine 447 Joyner, Dennis 342 Jubirt, Carol 447 Judge, Matthew 390 ulian, Bennett 342 Jurgonski, Thomas 340 Just, Steven 410

Kryptonite Kabelin, Diana 403 Kadas, Michael 448 Kahlenbeck, Kathy 448 Kahn, Daniel 378 Kahn, Eliah 390 Kaiser, Suzanne 400 Kalb, Michael 396 Kalinowski, Tamm y 342 Kallick, Hollis 391' Kamen, Melissa 347 Kaminsky, Luanne 416 Kamman, Bradley 394 Kane, Mary 399 Kang, Young 366, 448 Kankam, Kwabena 448 Kansakar, Dey 448 Kantor, Ellen 376


Just take note of all the possibilities

Mini 500 Day At The Forum Internal Relations Tennis IU Sing

Little 500

Special Projects Golf

Style Show Variety Show

Public Relations Visitors Center Red Carpet Days

And that's not all. The Indiana University Student Foundation sponsors a chorus of programs which benefit IU. Stop by the IU Foundation building, located on the 45/46 By-pass, and tune in to the many ways the IU students serve their university.

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Kanyer, Drew 420, 448 Kapell, Lesli 356 Kaplan, Arden 376 Kaplan, Bradley 414 Kaplan, Brian 378 Kaplan, Daniel 425 Kapp, Richard 390 Karch, Bradley 396 Karch, Garry 396 Karey, Lynne 448 Karich, John 407 Kam, Steven 410 Karns, James 448 Karp, Dave 411 Karp, John 407 Kaser, Elizabeth 382 Kasich, Gojko 448 Kast, Carole 448 Katz, Linda 375 Katzman, Gregory 396 Kauchak, Marcia 397 Kauffman, Frederick 394 Kaufman, Christine 448 Kaufman, Marc 378 Kautzman, John 448 Kay, Morris 427, 448 Kayman, Frances 402 Kays, Suzanne 383 Keane, Kevin 448 Kearney, Tom 448 Keck, Sally 204, 409 Kedik, Lynne 343 Keefer, James 410 Keeler, Tambra 408 Kellams, Timothy 427 Kelley, Brian 396 Kellogg, Randy 386 Kellum, Lynn 448 Kellum, Margaret 448 Kelly, Dorice 382 Kelly, Teri 382 Kelner, Andrew 340 Kelsey, Jo 448 Kemker, Bernard 351 Kemper, Mark 405, 448 Kemper, Walker 405 Kemperle, Heidi 448 Kennedy, Debra 402 Kennedy, James 404 Kennedy, John 448 Kennedy, John 448 Kennedy, Katharine 448 Kennedy, Michael 448 Kenny, Frank 344 Kent, Richard 407 Keough, Cheryl 448 Kerekes, Jeffrey 418 Kerezman, Kathleen 409 Kern, James 448 Kerns, Mary 379 Kerslake, Kay 408 Kesim, Suzan 448 Kesmodel, Mark 420 Kesonovich, Pam 343 Kessler, Michael 448 Kessler, Susan 408 Ketot, Noraine 448 Keyes, Gerald 448 Khan, Steve 400 Kidd, Annette 448 Kiefer, Douglas 448 Kiely, James 405 Kil, Lucinda 388 Kilander, Kim 391, 448 Kile, Sally 448 Kiley, Monica 408 Kilgore, Stephen 448 Killeen, Brendan 398 Killila, Maureen 379 Killinger, Kathryn 202, 392 Kim, Gennie 448 Kim, Sun 448 Kim, Thomas 374 Kimball, Brian 415 Kimball, Elizabeth 403 Kimbriel, Elizabeth 448 Kinard, Chuck 427 Kimura, Jeffery 396 Kincaid, Sarah 360, 382 King, Allan 448 King, John 374 King, Melissa 375, 448 King, Patrick 406 King, Timothy 351, 356 Kinman, Mary 449 Kinnaman, Brian 390 480

Kinnett, Susan 392 Kinney, David 364 Kirby, Michael 386 Kirkpatrick, Kay 417 Kirkwood, Lisa 419 Kirsh, Joel 420, 449 Kirshner, Janet 391 Kissel, Richard 449 Kissinger, Cindy 379 Kiszla, William 384, 449 Kitchie, Neil 418 Kitter, Hal 341 Klarich, Theresa 397 Klassen, Donald 420 Klauke, George 410 Klayman, Steven 387 Klecka, Margaret 449 Klein, Jeanine 417 Klein, Jeffrey 449, 425 Klein, Sheri 202 Klein, Steven 449 Kleinmuntz, Ira 449 Klekamp, Amy 449 Klepper, Kris 394 Kleptz, Thomas 351, 356 Kline, Linda 449 Klinestiver, David 449 Klingaman, Elizabeth 360, 392, 449 Klockmann, Sherri 426 Klotter, Frederick 421 Kniess, Miriam 403 Knight, Samuel 405 Knoll, Eric 407 Knoll, Leslie 397 Knoop, John 421 Knotts, Bryan 407 Knowles, Bridget 375 Knutson, Scott 412 Koch, Christopher 384 Kochi, Ariel 400 Kochi, Cheryl 345 Kocon, Margaret 426 Koehler, John 405 Koehler, Michael 449 Koehn, John 386 Kohlberg, Lisa 449 Kohn, Garry 405 Kolb, Jeffrey 420 Kolb, Mary 449 Kolias, Vickie 379 Kolker, Jane 416 Kollman, Jonathan 340 Kolman, Richard 378 Komasinski, Michael 449 Kong, Jacqueline 409, 449 Koontz, Kenyatta 364 Korb, Debra 449 Korellis, Pete 420 Korman, Harlan 378 Kornblut, Russell 424 Korros, Bryan 378 Kosenka, Mary 345 Kosewicz, Ann 449 Kotrba, Robert 424 Kovacik, Karen 347 Kowich, David 424 Kozlovich, Diana 449 Krafr, Leslie 376 Kraft, Marcie 449 Kraft, Paul 378 Kramer, Gerald 374, 386 Kramer, Kevin 374 Kramer, Jo 382, 449 Krassick, Lisa 375 Kraus, Lawrence 414 Krel, Rossya 449 Krempp, Karen 449 Kreutzberger, Ronald 450 Krieg, Mitchell 410 Kristek, _John 450 Krueckeberg, Judy 397 Krueger, Adolph 416 Krupp, Patricia 450 Kubley, Jacque 415 Kucharski, Corinne 388 Kucharski, Linda 343 Kucharski, Steve 384 Kudra, Craig 344 Kuhns, Dawn 341 Kuisel, Gregory 405 Kunkel, Margaret 450 Kunkel, Sheryl 426 Kuper, Nancy 399 Kurland, Marcy 450 Kurlander, Stuart 414 Kurzawa, James 420, 450

Kusatzky, Mark 411 Kushen, Anne 376 Kutch, Matthew 420 Kuykendall, Linda 450 Kuydendall, Patricia 450 Kvale, Leslie 450 Kwiatek, Alan 450

Lennon LaBouliere, Peter 450 LaBracke, Cathy 400 LaBrash, Daniel 346 LaGrotto, Anthony 450 LaMontagne, 398 LaRosh, Laura 382 LaRue, Brian 384 LaSalle, Fred 387 Laakman, Gina 450 Lacey, Jerry 424 Lacey, Linda 417 Lacke, Barbara 360 Laconi, Bruce 420 Lacy, Bernard 418 Ladendorf, Daniel 396 Lafakis, John 450 Lafferty, Lori 408 Lahr, Frederick 411 Lahr, Sandra 450 Lahr, Thomas 411 Lahrman, Don 450 Laker, Gregory 420 Laker, Lizabeth 408 Lakin, Barbara 450 Lalioff, Chris 375 Lamb, Carl 367, 450 Lamb, David 351 Lambert, Denice 383 Lambert, Jean 450 Lamm, Raymond 427 Lampert, Teresa 450 Lancaster, Jeffrey 344 Lande, Paul 378 Lander, Cindy 416 Landis, Karla 450 Landon, Debra 399 Landon, Donna 399, 450 Lane, Jeff 340 Lane, Paula 450 Lang, Chriss 340 Langdon, Teresa 388, 470 Lange, Linda 388 Langhammer, Christopher 404 Lanham, Michael 356 Lanham, Lisa 403, 450 Lankenau, Timothy 346 Lannin, Cary 421 Larco, Russell 396, 450 Larsen, Guy 398 Lasecki, Kelly 408 Lash, Kara 400 Laskey, James 450 Latta, Stuart 410 Lattner, Daniel 404 Lau, Nelia 345 Laughlin, Christopher 412 Laughlin, Kathleen 345 Laughlin, Stuart 450 Laughlin, Timothy 412 Laughner, Richard 415 Lauter, Ronald 387 Lauterbach, Stewart 450 Lavengood, Michael 450 Law, Darlene 450 Lawler, Christine 450 Lawrence, Michael 450 Lawson, Justine 450 Lawyer, James 450 Laycock, Katherine 450 Leask, Judith 470 Leave11, Lili 450 Lebendiger, Jonathan 378 Lebenson, Susan 346 Leboef, Brad 450 Lederer, William 414 Ledger, Stephanie 450 Lee, Betsy 450 Lee, Chung-Jer 366

Lee, David 346 Lee, Lyneice 380 Lee, Pik 450 Lee, Shau-Shi 366 Leene, Elizabeth 392 Leer, Kelly 400 Leff, Roberta 450 Leger, Ann 450 Lehman, Susan 375 Lehmkuhler, Dean 407 Lehrfeld, Robin 416 Leib, Susan 426 Leidecker, William 451 Lembke, Jeffery 387 Lenburg, Cynthia 397 Lenn, Tracy 451 Lents, Michael 410 Lentz, David 422, 470 Lentz, George 420 Lentz, Jayne 392, 451 Leonard, Michele 388 Leseur, Kathleen 451 Leslie, Scott 340, 420 Leslie, Terri 451 Levato, Christopher 396 Levato, Sara 417 Le' Jennifer 341 Le* Larry 451, 495 Le to 376 ,.my 451 Levine, Susan 416 Levinsohn, John 387 Levy, Carla 397 Levy, Carolyn 376 Levy, Lisa 376 Levy, Stuart 378 Lewis, Brandon 404 Lewis, Debra 202 Lewis, Elliot 378 Lewis, Gregory 451 Lewis, John 451 Lewis, Lon 342 Lewis, Steven 390 Lewis, Wendy 451 Leyda, Deborah 400 Lebke, Mathew 412 Lebke, Melissa 403 Lecata, Joseph 451 Lieb, Claudia 419 Lieber, Frederic 365 Lieberman, Diane 451 Liffick, Kent 412 Lillon, Vincent 385 Limbach, Julie 451 Linicome, Cynthia 451 Lind, Richard 410 Lindblad, Andrew 424 Linderman, Jeffrey 451 Lindley, Pat 406 Lindsay, John 451 Lindsey, Leslie 451 Link, Michael 451 Linnane, James 398 Linskey, Diane 399 Lipman, Lisa 416 Lipp, Amy 416 Lisle, Liane 375, 451 Liston, Kevin 404 Litherland, Kathryn 388 Lively, Mark 427 Livingston, Brian 404 Locey, Scott 344 Lockett, Julie 380 Lockhart, Michael 396 Loftus, William 356 Logan, Kevin 385, 389 Logan, Mary 392 Logan, Nancy 397 Lolla, Terry 356, 365 Loncar, Jill 451 Long, Leah-Sharon 451 Long, Scott 387 Long, Thomas 386 Lopez, Jeffrey 415 Lopez, Pedro 451 Lorentz, David 420 Loter, Stephanie 416 Loudenback, Jana 349, 451 Loudermilk, Robert 349, 350, 364, 451 Louis, Evelyn 393 Love, Tracy 383 Lowery, Alison 451 Lowery, Chris 374 Lawless, Don 451 Lowry, Lisa 397 Lozow, Charles 387


Jeff Greene

Senior Mark Dunivan hangs laundry on a beautiful March day.

Lucas, Karen 341 Lucas, Maeellen 451 Lucchese, David 418 Lucchese, Gino 418 Lucchese, Gregory 418 Luddy, Laura 451 Luddy, Thomas 451 Ludke, Stephen 451 Ludkiewicz, David 451 Ludwig, David 451 Ludwig, Deborah 426 Ludwig, Robert 451 Luebbe, Elaine 382 Luebber, Katherine 408 Luker, Michael 351, 420 Lundgren, Paula 451 Lunn, Michael 427 Lurvey, Paula 451 Lusson, Karen 451 Luther, Susan 451 Lux, Michael 424 Lyford, Scott 451 Lynch, Amy 409 Lynch, Cheryl 470 Lynn, Jodi 342 Lynn, Kathleen 451 Lynn, Lecia 451 Lynn, Sarah 403 Lynn, Sarah 451 Lyon, James 424 Lyons, Carol 400 Lyons, Kellie 203

Moral Majority Mabry, LaChelle 380, 452 MacArthur, Elizabeth 452 MacKay, Janet 347 MacNair, Andrea 452 Mack, Woody 452 Madden, Cynthia 380, 452 Madden, Janet 376 Madden, Robert 384 Maddox, Julie 402

Marr, James 418 Magallon, Mary 452 Marren, John 427 Ma rini, Leo 386 Marsh, Don 394 Mahaffey, James 405 Marsh, John 420 Mahaffey, Mark 405 Marsh, Scott 366 Mahon, Mary 382, 452 Maish, Laura 351, 364 Marsh, Shane 452 Marshall, Clinton 384 Maisischky, Micki 351 Marshall, Craig 414 Maley, Douglas 415 Marshall, Edward 396 Maley, Timothy 452 Marshall, Lisa 347 Malin, Dennis 421 Marshall, Pamela 452 Malloy, Donald 421 Marshall, Tori 380 Malone, Bruce 452 Marsi, Shane 452 Malone, David 422 Martell, Ann 402 Malone, Debra 393, 452 Martell, Michael 386 Malott, Leroy 452 Martin, Andra 379 Malovany, Karol 392 Martin, Carolyn 409 Malson, David 406 Martin, Craig 452 Mamalakis, Anna 392 Martin, Duane 367 Mamaril, Bias 390 Mandel, Linda 416 Martin, Jane 375 Mandel, Mark 452 Martin, Julie 399 Mandell, Lisa 416, 412 Mason, Brad 387 Manella, Christopher 394 Mason, Julia 392 Manella, Daniel 394 Mason, Kara 345 Mangas, Jacqueline 379 Mason, Beth 379 Manhart, Jeffrey 374 Mason, Susan 416 Manley, Thomas 427 Massa, Mark 406 Manlief, Kenneth 452 Massengale, Tom 390 Mann, Donna 452 Massengill, Alan 421 Mann, Eric 452 Mast, Kurt 424 Mannfeld, James 420 Matheson, Lisa 388 Manning, Steve 452 Mathewson, Kurtis 412 Manns, Steven 420, 452 Mathias, Angela 366 Manos, Susan 375, 452 Matsey, James 407 Manous, Laura 341 Mattingly, Deborah 426 Manubay, James 452 Mattingly, Diane 360, 426 Marcantonio, Lisa 426, 452 Mattingly, Mary 342 Marchino, Mark 452 Mauck, Jeffrey 411 Marchione, Linda 417 Maultra, Alisa 417 Marcotte, Ann 204 Maxey, Paulette 452 Margulis, Paul 414 Maxwell, Mary 342 Mark, Jim 390 May, Carolyn 452 Marks, Michael 424 Mayer, Kelley 452 Marple, Paula 403 Mayfield, Gregory 404 Marples, Janis 452 Maylath, Nancy 364 Marquez, Rudi 344 Mazius, Scott 389 11

Mazurek, Patricia 347 McAdam, Rebecca 397 McAloon, Greg 453 McAnly, Todd 340 McAuliffe, Jeanne 417 McBride, Richard 424 McCabe, Gregory 405 McCall, Dennis 412 McCammon, Kerry 389 McCann, Thomas 453 McCaulay, David 404 McChesney, Eileen 453 McClarnon, Keith 427 McClary, Charles 384 McCleary, Patrick 374 McClure, Amy 391 McCool, Delores 347 McCorkle, Beth 347 McCormack, Brian 421 McCormick, Brendan 398 McCoy, Douglas 406 McCoy, Lisa 416 McDermott, Daniel 453 McDermott, Eileen 453 McDonald, Barbara 453 McDonald, Barbara 379 McDonald, Edward 424 McDonald, Pat 384 McDonlugh, James 387 McFarland, Kendra 365 McGarry, Susan 383 McGarvey, Jay 406 McGauhey, Michael 453 McGauley, Kevin 427 McGaw, Deborah 453 McGaw, Linda 453 McGee, Donna 356 McGeney, Anne 345 McGinn, Denise 399 McGovern, Michael 424 McGovern, Thomas 453 McGrain, Daniel 386 McGrew, Ted 395 McGuan, Melissa 399 McGuire, Devin 340 McGuire, Michele 417 481


McHugh, Megan 347 McIntosh, Phillip 424 McKaig, Tom 407 McKay, John 350, 420, 453 McKeand, Janet 453 McKee, Cheryl 453 McKee, Cindy 453 McKee, Kathryn 400 McKeever, Eric 340 McKenna, Elaine 397 McKinley, Mark 420 McKnight, Scott 340, 389 McLachlan, Ruth 382, 453 McLaren, George 453 McLaren, Todd 418 McLay, Cameron 366 McMahon, Don 406 McMurray, Scott 453 McMurray, Sherman 406 McNeely, Donna 392 McNicholas, John 398 McNichols, Megan 397 McNulty, Holly 399 McNulty, Thomas 356 McQuigg, Susan 392 Mead, Virginia 397 Meade, Donald 453 Medenwald, Tim 386 Medler, Michael 453 Meek, Donna 375, 453 Mehlenbacher, Mark 453 Mehlinger, Barbara 453 Meier, Stephen 453 Meier, Timothy 421 Meine, Helen 453 Meit, Scott 414 Melander, Julie 375, 453 Melbye, Lise 347 Melendez, Miriam 343 Mellinger, Tamara 203 Melnik, Janice 454 Mendelson, Steve 367, 425 Meo, Paula 454 Merar, Sally 386, 454 Mercer, Minnie 454 Meredith, Lee 384 Meredith, Susan 388 Merenbloom, Bruce 454 Merker, Leon 454 Mermelstein, Jan 416 Merritt, James 412 Mershon, Donna 426 Mervar, Lenora 392 Mervar, Lorisa 392 Messick, Janice 383 Metallic, Brian 406 Method, Mary 408 Method, Michelle 454 Metzger, Randy 412 Meunier, Jeffrey 407 Meyer, Cindy 379 Meyer, Edward 406 Meyer, Jennifer 408 Michael, Joyce 400 Michael, Randall 427 Micklow, Keith 407 Mielke, Lynne 454 Miles, Stuart 454 Milholland, Douglas 454 Miller, Chris 408 Miller, Christopher 342, 384 Miller, Cynthia 375 Miller, David 427 Miller, Donald 387 Miller, Douglas 454 Miller, Eric 404 Miller, Jacqueline 360, 416 Miller, James 340 Miller, Julayne 454 Miller, Karen 454 Miller, Kathy 403 Miller, Kimberleigh 392, 454 Miller, Kristen 347, 417 Miller, Laura 454 Miller, Marsha 470 Miller, Mark 366 Miller, Marsha 356 Miller, Matthew 398 Miller, Melissa-Ann 376 Miller, Michael 387 Miller, Peggy 408 Miller, Robert 414 Miller, Rodney 454 Miller, Shelley 383 Miller, Steve 427 Miller, Teresa 454 482

Miller, Terry 406 Miller, Thomas 454 Milligan, Nancy 400 Millikan, Matthew 406 Milliken, Gary 374 Milling, Keith 418 Mills, Martha 454 Mills, Sherri 345 Milner, Ernest 454 Miner, Matt 387 Mines, Wilena 346 Minich, Tanna 470 Mintz, Michael 378 Mintz, Robert 378, 454 Mintzer, Max 454 Mirolla, Karin 347 Minuck, Ellen 345 Mishler, Brad 420 Mitan, Kenneth 454 Mitchell, Anita 454 Mitchell, Elizabeth 382 Mitchell, Jackie 418 Mitchell, Jeffrey 384 Mitchell, Kent 396 Mitchell, Randall 390 Mitchell, Steven 412 Mittiga, Jamie 454 Mittiga, Julie 382 Mix, Shelley 341 Mizell, Steven 378 Minichowski, Christopher 454 Moe, Greg 420 Mogekwu, Gladys 454 Moheban, Greg 406 Moheban, Jeffrey 406 Mohr, Doug 407 Mokhsin, Umi 454 Molitor, Kathleen 351 Molnor, Nancy 364 Monroe, Mary 454 Montemayor, Veronica 343 Montgomery, Brenda 347 Montgomery, Christopher 454 Montoya, Fernando 412 Moore, Barbara 397, 454 Moore, Brad 342 Moore, Earl 454 Moore, Helene 400 Moore, Jeffrey 454 Moore, Kenneth 470 Moore, Mark 342 Moore, Sarah 397 Moore, Thomas 454 Moores, Melinda 403 Moorman, Barbara 351 Moos, John 407 Moran, James 398 Morario, Susanne 347 More, Ramona 454 Morgan, Janet 365 Morgan, Jeff 420, 454 Morgan, Jonson 374 Morgan, Mary 351 Morin, Douglas 384 Morley, Don 406 Morning, Donald 454 Morrical, David 387 Morris, Bev 391 Morris, Brent 387 Morris, Dianne 416 Morris, Douglas 454 Morris, James 390 Morris, John 406 Morris, Joseph 389 Morris, Kevin 344 Morris, Pamela 408 Morris, Tracy 416 Morrison, Carole 454 Morrison, Sharon 454 Morrone, Patricia 455 Morrow, Jennifer 409, 455 Morrow, Melvnda 455 Morrow, Michael 404 Mort, Gary 427 Mortenson, Lara 454 Moser, Gregory 455 Moser, James 367 Mosher, Lisa 455 Moss, Cynthia 455 Moss, Parker 387, 455 Moss, Rozann 416, 455 Moss, Scott 386 Mossman, Merrick 387 Mott, John 421 Mott, Michael 344 Moye, Barbara 455

I i

1-ki,

The L\DIANA UNIYEQ6ITY ALUM \J AMOCIATIO\ welcomes its newest, members--

THE CLAM OF 1981

lit Moyer, Kevin 394 Moyers, Kathy 397 Moyers, Tammie 455 Mriscin, Donald 455 Muchnick, Shed 376 Mueller, Gregory 387 Muensterman, Ronald 418 Mulbarger, Laura 402 Mulcahey, Edison 386, 455 Mulholland, Joyce 349, 375, 455 Mulholland, Wendy 375 Mull, Harvey 366 Mullen, Daphne 455 Mullin, Matthew 384, 455 Mullins, Leslie 470 Mullins, Richard 404 Mulvihill, Joan 409 Mumley, Tamara 455 Munchak, Stephen 455 Muncy, Gregory 404 Murin, Melissa 347 Murnahan, William 455 Murphy, Cynthia 347 Murphy, Laura 455 Murphy, Mark 344, 455 Murphy, Susan 455 Murray, Katherine 455 Myatt, Portis 402 Myers, Christie 393, 400, 455 Myers, Mary 397

N CAA N Guema, Dong 366 Nagel, Hal 378 Nagy, Mary 456 Nahas, Mark 424 Nahmias, Shelley 376 Nannini, Richard 366 Nasser, Teresa 392

tt Natter, Todd 425 Naulty, Margaret 400 Naum, Karen 342 Neal, Albert 456 Neal, David 386 Neal, Robert 410 Neaville, Karen 456 Needham, Nancy 388 Neiderhiser, Patricia 456 Neiger, John 456 Neil, James 456 Nelson, Brett 374 Nelson, Carol 403 Nelson, James 356 Nelson, Jeffrey 384 Nelson, Lisa 376 Neuenschwander, Diane 382, 456 Neumann, David 349, 350, 356 Neumann, Dick 344 Neustadt, Michael 456 Newcorn, Wendy 456 Newhouse, Lisa 392 Newhouse, Tracy 406 Newkirk, Gena 456 Newman, Laurie 416 Newman, Michael 425 Newnham, Michael 344 Newsom, William 456 Newton, Lori 360, 379 Ngai, Kitty 454 Nianick, Jeff 378 Nicewander, Douglas 456 Nicholas, Theodore 456 Nichols, Camille 379 Nichols, Jeff 412 Nichols, John 412 Nichols, Scott 412 Nichols, William 456 Nicholson, Bethanne 409 Nicholson, Diane 400, 456 Nicholson, Gregory 406 Nicodemus, James 386 Niepokoj, Linda 388 Nierzwicki, John 421 Nill, Thomas 456


We're still behind Dunn Meadow! Indiana Memorial Union Nimnicht, Kitrina 205 Nisenbaum, Lisa 375 Noelle, Tracy 456 Nolan, Ann 404 Nolan, Carol 456 Nonweiler, Lisa 376, 470 Noone, Timothy 405 Norman, Kathlene 402 Norris, Carmen 426 Norris, John 404 Norris, Mary 382, 456 North, Meg 470 Norton, Kristopher 407 Norton, Erin 408 November, Julie 416 Novit, David 378 Nugard, Dean 341 Nugent, Peter 344 Nunn, Julie 205, 409 Nuth, Timothy 470 Nutter, Marguerite 343 Nyborn, Scott 456

Ordinary People O'Bannon, Polly 388 O'Brien, David 420 O'Brien, Gerard 346 O'Brien, Kathleen 342 O'Connell, Thomas 405 O'Connor, John 398 O'Connor, Patrick 406 O'Connor, Sean 424 O'Keefe, Timothy 456 O'Malley, Thomas 398 O'Mara, Melanie 391 O'Meara, Daniel 387 O'Neal, Karen 388 O'Shea, Michael 456 O'Sullivan, Denise 382 Oakley, Teresa 399 Oates, Mark 349, 350 Obendorf, Sunda 345 Oca, David 456 Och, Thomas 408, 456

Oda, Cynthia 365, 456 Odier, Marc 396 Oehrle, Philip 407 Oexmann, Andrew 394 Ogburn, Robert 412 Ogden, Kevin 456 Oglesby, Sandra 470 Ohiogioju, Wendy 349 Ohnemus, Catherine 382, 456 Oldfather, Lucinda 456 Olds, Dan 341 Oleksy, Richard 404 Olin, John 386 Olinger, Mark 404 Olinger 404 Oliver, Bryan 404 011iver, Diane 417 Olsen, Elizabeth 378 Olson, Cynthia 400 Olson, Jean 456 Olson, Jeanne 383 Oltman, Gregory 361 Omar, Zawiyah 456 Oolitic, Rob 421 Orem, Jon 456 Orescanin, Lori 409 Orich, Scott 456 Orlebeke, Susan 391 Orlicki, Joan 456 Orman, Alice 205 Orman, David 424 Orr, Barron 344 Orsborn, Philip 384 Ortiz, Yazmin 408, 456 Ortman, Greg 412, 456 Ortosky, Ronald 450 OSter, Christine 38$ Ostrowski, Michael 398 Othman, Radziah 456 Othman, Saied 470 Oury, Tom 398 Overby, Latanya 365 Overgaard, Tracy 397 Overhardt, Erich 48 Overshiner, Ken 457 Overton, Todd 457 Owen, Shari 351 Owens, Aimee 457 Owens, Glennalee 417 Owens, Jeffrey 3981 Owens, Lonna 380 381 Owens, Stephen 3 , 457 Oxford, Julie 392 Oyler, Robert 407'

Preppie Paben, Kurt 427 Pachovas, Marina 457 Paczolt, Susan 457 Paeratakul, Umnarj 457 Page, Kimberly 426 Pahlke, Christopher 389 Painchaud, Suzanne 397 Palma, Timothy 415 Palmer, Brandon 414 Palmer, Christina 351 Palmer, Patricia 399 Palmer, Sarah 457 Palvas, Brian 457 Pankow, John 346 Pappas, Anthony 457 Pappas, Kimberly 457 Pappas, William 427 Paradise, Nancy 379 Pardue, Milton 457 Paridy, Robert 386 Paris, Peter Parr, Dean 457 Parris, Joel 410 Partington, Bradford 421 Paskin, Steven 378 Paslaski, Paul Past, Theresa 343 Pastorello, Joanne 399, 457 Patrick, Brado 457 Patrick, Linda 347 Patrowicz, Jan 457 Patsiner, Jodi 416 Patterson, Carol 459 Patterson, Lisa 402, 457 Pauley, David 203, 367, 406 Pauli, Rodney 457 Pauly, Michael 344 Pavlofsky, Gary 378 Payne, Deborah 408 Payne, Gregory 351 Peacock, Susan 345 Pearson, Jack 386 Pearson, Joan 182 Pearson, Scott 344 Pease, Katrina 457 Peck, James 396 Pedavoli, Thomas 346 Pedigo, Deborah 407 Pegg, Bonnie 343 Pehlke, Dale 383

Pellettieri, Joseph 410 Pelz, Marie 388 Pencek, Kathy 454 Pennington, Carol 426 Penny, Kathleen 418 Pentz, Karen 417 Pepin, Susan 342 Peredo, Leticia 408 Perkins, Janice 345 Perkins, Leann 383 Perkov, Ronald 396 Perine, Tammy 417 Perlman, Debra 388 Perrin, James 457 Perron, Neil 404 Perrotta, Mark 427 Perry, Bruce 387 Perry, Patricia 457 Person, Cynthia 409 Perugini, Francesca 457 Peskin, Brenda 341 Peter, Cindy 391 Peter, Victoria 382 Peters, Brian 390 Peters, Norris 365 Peters, Richard 418 Peters, Rotimi 457 Peterson, Daniel 406 Peterson, Dean 457 Peterson, Ellen 457 Peterson, Jane 360, 408 Peterson, Lindley 403 Peterson, Michael 457 Peterson, Penny 392, 457 Petrucce, Elizabeth 397 Petry, Chuck 422 Pewell, Julie 347 Pfarrer, Barbara 417 Pfeifer, Stephen 404 Pfister, Mary 408, 457 Phillips, Debra 379 Piccolomini, Nancy 397 Pienknagura, Jose 457 Pierce, Joseph 410 Pierce, Lisa 409 Pierce, Mark 421, 457 Pierce, Nancy 409 Pierce, Kelly 397 Piety, Daniel 396 Pilat, David 398 Pine, David 414 Pinkus, Stephanie 376 Pioch, Roberta 454 Piotrowski, Michael 344 Pipp, Patrick 344 Piskura, James 390 Pitts, Douglas 459 Pizzato, Thomas 398 Plain, Ray 405 Plant, Polly 399 Platt, Harold 390 Plautz, Douglas 458 Plonski, Jeannine 458 Plunkett, Karen 397 Pinta, Christopher 405 Poer, Holly 399 Pohlmann, Stephen 412 Poindexter, Kim 380 Polak, Paul 427 Polakoff, Susan 458 Polasky, Sonya 416 Poling, Sally 408 Pollard, Kenneth 420 Pollert, Cathy 403 Polonchek, Jeanna 341 Ponader, Erick 351 Poole, Anthony 458 Poole, Sandee 347 Poore, Gregory 418 Popper, William 410 Popplewell, Karen 458 Portolese, Michael 340 Potter, Kelly 458 Potter, Kevin 415 Potter, Mike 374 Potter, Scott 458 Potts, Timothy 384 Powell, Jan 458 Powell, Joseph 418 Powell, Thomas 418 Powers, Dianna 343 Powers, Nancy 458 Powers, Robert 458 Powers, Timothy 374 Powrie, Kelly 367 Prange, James 407 483


Prange, Theodore 427 Prather, Tom 412 Prato, Vicki 458 Pratt, Michael 418 Pratt, Nelson 424 Prentice, Kay 399 Prentice, Susan 397 Presnal, Bryan 384 Preston, Jeanette 380 Preston, Kel 427 Pribilski, Deborah 346 Price, Gary 458 Price, Julia 417 Pritikin, Ronna 391 Probst, Joseph 410 Proctor, Alan 424 Proffitt, Chris 386 Proffitt, Melissa 375 Prout, Koral 458 Provow, Laura 416 Prusiecki, Drew 398 Przbylinski, Joan 347 Puddicombe, Diane 458 Pugh, Gregory 420 Pugh, Robert 387 Pugliese, Nancy 349, 375 Pulford, David 346 Pulliam, John 412 Pulliam, Susan 400 Pupillo, Jon 412 Purdue, Melvin 458

Quarries Quarles, George 458 Quarles, Nina 393 Quillen, June 379 Quince, Kristine 402

Registration Rabin, Scott 425 Rabin, Steven 425 Rabbit, Eric 423 Rachman, Lisa 376 Radakovich, George 458 Rademaker, Carol 458 Rader, Theresa 351 Radseck, Christopher 424 Rafanello, Frederick 340 Railsback, Anne 458 Raines, Jean 343 Rak, Kevin 424 Ralston, John 427 Ramberger, Tim 344 Ramlet, James 458 Ramsbey, Brian 366 Rancha, Paul 421 Rand, Dawn 388 Randall, Kristin 351, 375 Randle, Cynthia 345 Raney, Shannon 388 Rankin, Roberta 343 Ranowski, Curly 351 Ransdell, Christine 345 Raper, Michael 386 Rapp, John 406 Rappaport, Bret 341 Rappe, Mary 392 Rappin, Steven 344, 378 Rasmussen, Barbara 408 Rasmussen, Stephen 458 Ratajczak, Judith 399 Ratcliffe, Byron 458 Ratner, Laurence 414 Rauch, Linda 458 Ray, Christopher 412 Ray, Jeffery 458 Ray, Bill 346 Raymond, Donna 399 Rayne, Terri 458 484

Razumich, James 458 Reardon, Peter 202, 345 Reasner, Brent 415 Reecer, Mark 420 Reed, Bill 342 Reed, George 422 Reed, Gregory 427 Reed, Jacqueline 393, 458 Reed, Jo 458 Reed, Matthew 386 Reene, David 386 Reese, Joe 412 Reese, Kenneth 412 Reeves, Clay 458 Regan, Cheryl 351, 382 Regan, Michael 386 Reifel, Gregory 406 Reiman, Catherine 403 Reiman, Leslie 403 Reinhold, Mary 394 Reisch, Debra 458 Reising, Julie 458 Reising, Steve 386 Render, Renee 458 Repka, Ronald 412 Resnick, David 414 Reszel, Debora 375 Reuss, Karen 408 Reutebuch, Christine 375 Reuter, Cynthia 382 Reuter, Rebecca 458 Reynolds, Belinda 343 Reynolds, Carol 347 Reynolds, James 427 Reynolds, Jeffrey 458 Reynolds, Jennifer 375 Reynolds, Patricia 341 Reynolds, Richard 420 Reynolds, Thomas 415 Rice, Stephen 458 Rice, Robert 386 Rich, Yvonne 351 Richards, Craig 404 Richards, Jeffrey 340 Richards, Julie 375, 458 Richards, Mark 407 Richards, Teresa 375 Richards, William 405 Richardson, Christopher 374 Richardson, Thomas 424 Richey, Cassandra 458 Ridgley, Joseph 420, 470 Riecke, Rene 458 Riedel, Joseph 424 Rieder, Daniel 418 Rigg, Alan 458 Riley, Paula 458 Rimroth, Mary 459 Rinaldi, James 389 Rinefort, Anne 366, 402 Ring, Cheryl 409 Ringger, Von 459 Rinne, Gretchen 402 Riordan, Stephen 412 Ripley, Kirk 418 Rippe, Julie 383 Rippey, Mary 408, 459 Risch, Paul 459 Risley, Stephan 459 Rissing, Deborah 459 Rissler, Gail 349, 459 Roach, Bruce 387 Robbins, Laura 402 Roberson, Ron 346 Roberts, Bart 396 Roberts, Kathy 399 Roberts, Sadie 380, 459 Roberts, Susan 397 Robertson, Susan 408 Robinson, Cynequa 380 Robinson, Eric 404 Robinson, Lisa 459 Robinson, Merryn 459 Robinson, Paul 420 Roche, Kelly 366 Rock, Robert 415 Rodriguez, Frank 410 Roemer, Patrick 404 Rogers, Jane 403 Rogers, John 374 Rogers, Julie 391 Rogers, Katherine 345 Rogers, Kenneth 410 Rogers, Lori 417, 459 Rogers, Mark 346 Rogers, Sheila 459

Rohan, Matthew 459 Rohan, William 398 Rohleder, Kathleen 392, 459 Rohm, Pamela 408 Roknich, Nick 394 Rolland, Jim 425 Roller, Jane 459 Rollison, Kristen 399 Rollman, Eric 425 Romy, Gregory 421 Ronk, Bret 418 Roop, Michael 459 Roper, Paree 459 Rops, Dove 425 Rosado, Maria 388 Rose, David 415 Rose, Greg 407 Rose, Kathryn 399 Rosen, Gail 417 Rosen, Jodi 408 Rosenbaum, Scott 470 Rosenberg, Anthony 459 Rosenblatt, Erica 416 Rosenfeld, Susannah 345 Rosenglick, Mitchel 414 Rodenthal, Lori 426 Rosenthal, Lori 400 RosinsIcy, Barbara 408 RosinsIcy, Janey 416 Rosman, Mark 414 Ross, Amy 376 Ross, Anthony 459 Ross, Betty 393 Ross, Mary 383 Ross, Michael 365 Ross, Rosalyn 393 Rosseau, Bob 427 Rossio, Evan 414 Rossok, Eric 389 Rosswurm, Craig 390 Roth, Marcy 376, 460 Roth, William 459 Rothenberg, Beth 416, 459 Rothschild, Barry 414 Rothschild, Steven 455 Rougraff, Bruce 374 Rousch, John 427 Rover, Diane 454 Rowe, Bettyann 460 Rowe, Diane 460 Rowe, Janet 460 Rowland, David 407 Rowland, Jeffrey 405 Roy, Richard 460 Rozhon, Robbin 346 Rozzo, Cynthia 343 Rubin, David 414 Rubin, Felice 460 Ruckelshaus, John 361 Ruddell, James 407 Rudicel, Tammy 408 Rudich, Lisa 416 Rudicle, Michael 410 Rueff, Elaine 460 Ruf, Jennifer 342 Ruf, Mary 342 Rugh, Robert 460 Ruman, David 460 Rupenthal, Steve :344 Rupprecht, Karla 402 Rus, Reyne 408, 460 Rush, Cynthia 417, 460 Russell, Cassandra 380 Russell, Julie 460 Russell, Karen 399 Russell, Kevin 427, 460 Russell, Laura 351, 383 Russell, Robert 341 Russell, Scott 460 Russo, Mark 342 Rust, Leah 375 Rust, Mark 421 Rust, Ruth 460 Rutigliano, Robert 460 Rutzen, Gregory 389 Ryan, Christine 460 Ryan, Greg 410 Ryan, Janet 460 Ryan, Jennifer 392 Ryan, Julie 187, 360, 460 Ryan, Leah 351, 460 Ryan, Todd 346 Ryan, Tracy 346 Ryan, Tracy 375 Ryker, Robt. Lewis 365, 460, 492 Rytel, Elizabeth 341

Space shuttle Sayan, James 386 Sablich, Scott 378 Sabol, Stuart 410 Sabul, Wendy 397, 460 Saffrin, Robert 414 Safran, Jonathan 425 Safron, Jeff 460 Sage, Rebecca 426 Sager, Shelly 460 Said, Gregory 460 Sainopulos, Joanna 402 Saint, Sarah 392 Salazar, Hugo 398 Sale, Mary 392, 460 Salerno, Michael 415 Salin, Sherri 360, 392 Salk, Carol 416 Salzwedel, Scott 386 Samlaska, Vicki 460 Sammons, Sharon 403 Sampson, Suzanne 360 Sams, Michael 421, 460 Sams, Susan 408 Sanchez, Jose 421 Sanders, Linda 347 Sanders, Melanie 460 Sanders, Melva 393 Sandler, Susan 416 Sandoval, Jose 460 Sandrick, Robert 460 Sandy, John 460 Sanford, Laura 360 Sanford, Laurel 417 Sansome, Christina 460 Sapinsley, Jeffrey 414 Sargent, Judith 408 Saro, Maria 345 Sartain, John 412 Sasko, Kimberly 360, 460 Saunders, Gilbert 414 Saywitz, Ann 379 Scarpelli, Harriett 383, 460 Schaber, Kay 397 Schachter, Bebe 416 Schaefer, Bryan 460 Schaekel, Annette 347 Schaerer, Katherine 460 Schafer, Donald 386 Schaler, Michael 460 Schall, Charles 460 Schankerman, Ilene 376 Scharringhausen, Kent 394 Scheele, Lisa 347 Scheerer, John 394 Scheid, Kathryn 403 Schell, Garre 374 Schendel, Kelly 426 Schenkel, Douglas 418 Schepers, Debra 345 Schertz, Bruce 461 Scheuer, Michele 461 Schindler, Daryl 461 Schipper, Gregory 420 Schlachter, Dennis 461 Schlimmer, Sandra 461 Schmidt, Anne 343 Schmidt, Cristina 347 Schmink, Merilee 409 Schmude, Lee 202, 364 Schmutzler, Lisa 461 Schnaufer, Annette 345 Schneider, Danielle 376, 397 Schneider, Gregg 425, 461 Schneider, Joseph 461 Schneider, Neal 425 Schneider, Richard 404 Schneider, Susan G. 416 Schneider, Susan L. 461 Schoenfeldt, Laura 461 Schoening, Nancy 461 Schoff, Dennis 461 Scholz, David 427 Schonfeld, Diane 461 Schor, Lauren 416 Schrader, Maureen 345 Schrader, Sandra 426 Schroeder, Christine 458 Schroeder, Diana 402, 461 Schroeder, Sheila 375 Schroer, Candace 461 Schuh, Kathryn 461 Schulman, Caroline 376


Joe Kus

Holding crutches in one hand, guiding a bicycle in the other, and books slung over his shoulder, freshman Tim Baker is off to class. Baker, a biology-chemistry major, lives on the ninth floor of ilkie South. A broken foot is not enough to keep him away from daily classes. Schultes, Kurt 427 Schultz, Michael 396, 461 Schumacher, Bruce 341, 461 Schurr, Linda 464 Schuster, Randy 414 Schutte, Scott 396 Schutz, Lynn 461 Schwark, James 421 Schwartz, Erika 360 Schwartz, Paul 461 Schwartz, Steven 378 Schwarz, Beverly 461 Schwegman, David 461 Schwem, Julie 400 Schwieder, Ginger 392 Scimia, Joseph 412 Scissors, Carla 402

Scott, Priscilla 403 Scott, Sheri 461 Scott, Timothy 418 Scott, Trudie 347 Scrivner, Regina 462 Scudder, Paul 406, 462 Seay, Robert 462 Sebacher, Sandra 462 Seelig, Lisa 416 Segal, Donna 351 Segal, Lori 416 Segovia, John 462 Seidel, Marcie 462 Seidmon, Bruce 378 Sekula, Anthony 398 Selig, Darrell 425 Sellers, Shannon 403

Senesac, Polet 406 Senoff, Ilene 416 Sered, Lynne 416 Serletti, Paul 422 Severson, Renee 375 Sevier, Lisa 392, 462 Sewell, Diane 380 Sexton, Samra 462 Seyfried, John 462 Shafer, Joe 462 Shafer, Susan 417 Shaffer, Catherine 343 Shafron, Susan 416 Shaler, Mike 427 Shamis, Neal 378 Shanahan Jack 394 Shane, Michael 390

Shaner, Robert 427 Shankle, Bonnie 343 Shanks, Tracey 388 Shannon, Michael 411 Shapiro, Alison 416 Shapiro, Brian 414 Shapiro, Diane 462 Share, Ellen 408 Sharfstein, Larry 425 Sharkey, Edgar 412 Sharkey, Pat 398 Sharp, Janet 462 Sharp, Lori 426, 462 Sharpe, Mark 389 Sharpless, Cynda 462 Shartiag, Michael 425 Shashura, Colleen 462 Shattuck, George 384 Shaw, David 421 Shaw, Gayle 403 Shaw, Leslie 403 Shaw, Martin 410 Shearer, Steven 462 Shedrow, Kimberly 462 Sheeler, Gail 399 Sheets, Katherine 462 Shelton, Monica 399 Shenefield, Michelle 379 Shepard, Gary 462 Shepp, William 462 Sheridan, Walter 415 Sherman, Gail 462 Shields, Monica 408 Shike, Paul 462 Shimp, Audrey 383, 462 Shirey, David 349, 384, 462 Shirley, Bryan 462 Shirley, Sarah 400 Shissler, Jill 392 Shobe, Kimberly 402, 462 Shoemaker, Joe 356 Shonfield, Julia 382 Shook, James 407 Short, Sheri 367, 462 Short, Suzanne 345 Shorter, Stephen 386, 462 Shou, Michael 462 Shoup, David 394 Shoup, Judith 376 Shrake, Charles 406 Shrote, Jennifer 382 Shuey, Jane 382 Shuman, Jeffry 406 Shuman, Susan 404 Shuster, James 410 Shymkus, Lisa 462 Siar, Steven 384 Sibal, Thomas 342 Sickinger, Lisa 376 Sickle, Ellen 462 Sicklesmith, Sandra 397 Siderits, Anthony 340 Sides, Nancy 462 Siebert, Mark 401 Siegel, Adena 416 Siegel, David 378, 462 Siegel, Kathy 416 Sieger, Sally 426 Siemers, Heidi 408 Silver, David 414 Silver, Sue 462 Silverman, Lisa 416 Simes, Steven 462 Simkins, Ted 344 Simmermaker, Jeffrey 415 Simmerman, Jerell 462 Simmie, Donna 399, 462 Simmons, Craig 462 Simmons, Gregory 462 Simon, Andrew 384 Simon, Daniel 462 Simon, Jonathan 425 Simon, Lynn 462 Simon, Roger 462 Simpson, David 344 Sims, Renaye 393, 463 Singer, Ronnie 414 Sinker, Randy 463 Sinykin, David 414 Sirkin, Marc 414 Sirko, Robert 410 Sisinger, Kathleen 397 Skalkos, Andrew 418 Skinner, Cynthia 463 Skinner, Joel 463 Skirvin, David 427 485


Skirvin, Theodore 398 Skoronski, Stephen 463 Slacian, Joseph 463 Slade, Barbara 392 Slaton, Mark 463 Slaughter, Anthony 365 Sleeth, Cindy 463 Slifka, Ellen 402 Slivovsky, Thomas 396 Sloan, Tony 384 Slusser, Rocky 390 Small, Jennifer 347 Small, Laurie 399 Small, Robert 342 Smalley, Chris 345 Smalley, Christina 417 Smart, Samuel 374 Smith, Andy 390 Smith, Barbara 463 Smith, Barry 406 Smith, Brian 424 Smith, Brian 406 Smith, Brian S. 406 Smith, Candyce 366 Smith, Carolyn 463 Smith, Celesta 463 Smith, Charles 463 Smith, Christopher 407 Smith, Cynthia K. 463 Smith, Cynthia L. 391 Smith, Dann y 425 Smith, David. 340 Smith, Denise 463 Smith, Douglas A. 405 Smith, Douglas C. 412 Smith, Jacqueline 346 Smith, James 390 Smith, Jeffrey 425 Smith, Jerry 420 Smith, John 427 Smith, Jon E. 463 Smith, Kathryn 463 Smith, Keven 463 Smith, Lauren 409 Smith, Linda 463 Smith, Lisa 4(X) Smith, Marcey 400 Smith, Mark 463 Smith, Mark A. 422 Smith, Mike 340 Smith, Michael James 410 Smith, Michael Joe 421 Smith, Sharon 463 Smith, Steve 407 Smith, Steven 341 Smith, Stuart 463 Smith, Susan 382 Smith, Terri 399 Smith, Terry M. 340 Smith, Vickie 343 Smock, Douglas 394 Smock, Randy 394 Smock, Susan 463 Smolar, Joseph 394 Smyrniotis, Toula 391 Smythe, Erich 424 Snapp, Thomas 427 Snowberger, Rebecca 400 Snyder, Donald 463 Snyder, Elizabeth 408 Snyder, Sheryl 397 Snyder, Tim 346 Soho', Sharon 416, 463 Sobosan, Linda 342 Solbrig, Keith 344 Solmos, Gene 420 Solmos, Jacqueline 388 Sommer, Katherine 463 Sommers, Kevin 427 Songer, Christine 463 Sonnefeld, Stephen 414 Sorgen, Cynthia 397 Sourwine, James 463 Southworth, Karen 417 Space, Mike 421 Sparks, Deborah 426 Sparks, Kenneth 420 Sparks, Steve 421 Spartz, Matthew 398 Spaulding, Rachel 463 Spears, Timothy 386 Speed, Kenneth 396 Speer, Mary 463 Spence, 400, 463 Spence, Shawn 463 Spencer; La Verne 347 486

Spencer, Patricia 463 Spicer, Alan 351 Spiegel, Rebecca 379 Spitz, Anita 383 Spottiswood, Philip 340 Sprenger, Steven 463 Springer, David 404 Springer, Timothy 404, 463 Springman, Anne 347 St. George, Linda 463 St. Leger, Mark 398 Staaf, Monica 364 Stack, William 342 Stafford, Kelly 345 Staley, Susan 408 Stamler, Stephen 425 Stamos, Mary 376, 463 Stamos, Nicola 426 Stanforth, Carolyn 364, 463 Stanley, Lissa 463 Stanley, Mark 387, 463 Stanley, Susan 360, 400 Stanner, Terri 463 Stanton, Jeffrey 182, 340, 470 Stapleton, Mary 463 Stark, Karen 383 Stark, Todd 346 Startek, Marie 426, 464 Starykowicz, Janine 464 Staser, Janet 379 Statman, Sharon 416 Stawick, Paul 427 Steager, Susan 402, 470 Stebbins, Lynn 409 Stebbins, Richard 412 Steckbeck, Lisa 403 Steel, Kathryn 464 Steffey, Kathy 464 Stegemiller, Henry 464 Steigerwalt, Nancy 426 Stein, Lisa 342 Steele, Kathi 345 Steinback, Brad 378 Steinberg, Lisa 376 Steiner, Judy 464 Stephan, Henry 405 Stephens, Laura 366 Stephenson, Amy 408 Stern, Allyn 416 Stern, Laurence 378 Stevens, Jody 388 Stevens, Kenneth 406 Stevens, Laura 402 Stevenson, Pamela 464 Stevenson, Richard 344 Stewart, Julie 403 Stewart, Kathryn 426 Stewart, William 464 Stickl, Gary 464 Stickna, Gary 342 Stierwalt, Vonda 397 Stiles, Michael 405 Stillabower, Mark 464 Stilletti, Dominic 464 Stinebaugh, James 415 Stinson, Peter 464 Stitz, Marianne 345 Stoecklein, Mark 384 Stoffel, Kenneth 418, 464 Stolberg, Howard 425 Stoll, Eric 384 Stone, Alex 342 Stone, Matthew 464 Stone, Pamela 464 Stortz, Nancy 345 Stouder, Dave 387 Strange, Jennifer 426 Strange, Mark 464 Stratten, Gary 427 Strauser, Jimmie 412 Strauss, Lesli 392 Strawser, Robert 340 Streater, Angela 351 Syreiff, Alison 391 Strenk, Mary 392 Stricker, Leslie 403 Stroinski, Mark 420 Stromatt, Michele 426, 464 Strong, Joyce 464 Strong, Randy 390 Strong, Stephen 404 Strongin, Susan 345 Struble, Joni 464 Stuehsh, Thomas 464 Struhs, David 384 Struhs, Michael 384

Strunk, Patty 464 Strycker, Michael 346 Stubblefield, John 405 Sturgeion, Marilyn 464 Sturgis, Jeff 464 Sturgis, John 427 Sturm, Kimberly 383 Stutler, Jeff 374 Stutsman, Becky 345 Stutson, David 427 Succo, John 387 Sullivan, Jon 464 Sullivan, Kimberly 347, 366 Sullivan, Michael 410 Summerlin, Laura 409 Suppinger, Michael 420 Surratt, Nancy 426 Susdorf, Glen 390 Sutherland, Jay 407 Sutherland, Mark 389 Sutor, Mark 420 Swanson, Janice 417 Swanson, Steven 387, 464 Swarbrick, Helen 402 Swartz, Erika 464 Swarup, Nishi 351 Sweeney, Jerome 404, 464 Sweeney, Judith 464 Sweeney, Margaret 417, 464 Swift, Sarah 464 Swill, Mark 421 Sykes, Mary 402 Szabo, Derek 203 Szczepanski, Helen 464

Towne Cinema Taber, Kerry 399 Tahara, Timothy 421 Talbott, Chester 344 Talley, John 344 Tamir, Abdul 464 Tamler, Martin 419 Tanke, Julia 417 Tankel, Roberta 426 Tannenbaum, Eric 464 Tanner, James 350 Tanner, Sheila 397 Tapley, Patricia 464 Tardy, Karen 403 Tardy, Sarah 403, 464 Tarrh, Lynda 464 Tate, Douglas 464 Tate, Robin 408 Tatooles, Paula 376 Tatum, Serita 380, 464 Taylor, David 409 Taylor, Elaine 417 Taylor, Marietta 399 Taylor, Robert 421 Teer, Billy 384 Teeter, Christopher 349, 351, 415 Teghtmeyer, Amy 399 Teitelbaum, Susan 416 Temme, Janice 399, 464 Teneyck, Chris 464 Terrell, Michael 418 Terrell, Pat 346 Terschluse, Mary 340 Terschluse, Valerie 346 Teskey, Luke 349 Tevis, Edwina 464 Tew, Kipper 390 Thanner, Jennifer 409 Tharp, Todd 374 Thayer, Julian 465 Thiel, Kurt 344 Thomas, Andrew 351 Thomas, Andrew 410 Thomas, Cynthia 397 Thomas, Daniel 364, 420 Thomas, David 418 Thomas, David 410 Thomas, George 418 Thomas, Isiah 202 Thomas, Jason 410 Thomas, Jeanine 351 Thomas, Jeffrey 366 Thomas, John 407, 465

Thomas, John 412 Thomas, Karen 397 Thomas, Scott 418 Thomas, Timothy 344, 386 Thomas, Toni 383 Thommen, Tammi 392 Thompson, Anita 465 Thompson, Cynthia 366 Thompson, Eric 384 Thompson, Jack 465 Thompson, Kristen 465 Thompson, Leslie 465 Thompson, Robert 396 Thompson, Suzann 402 Thornburgh, Gail 465 Thrall, Wade 346 Tiede, Karen 465 Tierney, Kathleen 347 Tierney, Mary 403 Tiernon, Terry 420 Tilbury, Sharon 465 Timmerman, Martha 392 Tingle, Dianne 408 Tinker, Brenda 465 Tischleder, Michael 427 Titus, Randolph 465 Tobias, Gail 465 Tobin, Perry 427 Tobin, Thomas 412 Todd, Kevin 465 Todd, Kimberly 375, 407 Tofaute, Annette 402 Tofaute, Phillip 420 Tofil, Roch 418 Toizer, Jamie 416 Tolan, Robert 349 Tombaugh, Peggy 205 Tomich, Stegen 387 Tomkiewicz, Michael 384 Toner, Kevin 415 Torch, Marla 416 Torretto, Lisa 391 Totton, James 384 Towers, George 344 Tracy, Patrick Trainer, Renee 209, 360, 383 Tranchina, Mark 465 Traub, Martha 345 Traub, Mary 343 Tredway, Rebecca 360, 403 Trick, Steven 407 Tritle, James 342 Troeger, Troy 391 Troup, Dennis 465 Troup, Jeffrey 344 Trout, Amy 465 Troy, David 387 Troy, Sharyl 426 True, Jeff 465 Truman, Thomas 342 Trunk, Teresa 342 Trusty, Joel 427 Tsevat, David 465 Tubbs, Angela 393 Tucker, Dale 364 Tuerff, John 407 Tuerk, Conrad 386 Tully, Ami 388 Turk, Kimberly 375 Turk, Peter 406, 465 Turk, Sally 465 Turner, Carolyn 402 Turner, Michael 406 Turner, Tracy 376 Tuxhorn, Kimberly 417, 465 Tyler, Timothy 465 Tyroler, Ronald 414 Tyte, Donald 406

nAmerican Ulrey, John 420 Umiker, Susanne 399 Underhill, Kimberly 417, 465 Unger, Carolyn 360, 376 Unger, Kevin 466 Uptain, Cynthia 466 Urch, Vanessa 376 Uzelac, Theodore 466


ids selected as the best daily

college newspaper in the nation in two separate contests.

We're honored.

Excellence. It is a goal that we, as journalists, are constantly striving to achieve. The Indiana Daily Student was the only college daily to win the Pacemaker award in 1980 and the Mark of Excellence award in 1979. That's twice in less than 10 years that the ids has been judged the best college daily in both contests. The Pacemaker is awarded annually by the American Newspaper Publishers Association. The Society of Professional Journalists, Sigma Delta Chi, bestows the Mark of Excellence award to one college daily each year.

In competition wit h ''real world'' news ipers, the ids won five awards in the 1980 Hoosier State Press Association conte t, including best sports page and second-best editorial page. Two Daily Student photographers, David Schreiber and Michel duCille, were finalists in the Hearst Foundation's national photography contest. Schreiber won the second-place award and had the "Best of Show" picture. DuCille placed fourth.

The ids has won hundreds of awards since' 1969, when the Daily Student switched from a laboratory newspaper published under the supervision of faculty members of the then Department of Journalism to an editorially independent, auxiliary enterprise of Indiana University. The Daily Student won 31 awards in this year's Indiana Collegiate Press Association competition, and was judged the Newspaper of the Year in both news and advertising categories for college dailies.

The National Scholastic Press Association, which critiques the ids and other college newspapers, said the Daily Student "must rank as one of the premier student newspapers in America. Indeed, it compares favorably to the progressive, dynamic commercial newspapers in the nation.— So what does all this back-slapping mean? Well, it proves to us that journalistic professionals who judge our contest entries feel that we are on the right track in

ids

providing the best possible product to the readers we serve, the Indiana University community. It proves that each day we are providing a timely, accurate and concise account of events, issues and personalities that affect the lives of our readers. It proves that we are providing a forum for comment from diverse selections of the community, and that the comment we direct to our readers is relevant and well reasoned. To the students who report, write, edit. make pictures and manage the Daily Student, it proves they are on the road to promising journalistic careers. We are proud of the contributions ids staff members have made over the years to continuing the editorial excellence of the newspaper. We are proud of the work done by Mike Davis, fall 1980 semester editor. and Andy Hall, spring 1981 semester editor, who provided the leadership necessary to continue the ids' tradition as an awardwinning college newspaper.

indiana daily student

487


Vivarin Vagnone, Lynn 360, 426, 466 Vail, Morgan 466 Vainrib, Byron 396 Valente, Michael 418 Valentine, Diane 375 Van Deering, Patti 341 Van Duyn, Lori 383 Van Luik Nancy 397, 466 Van Renterghem, James 396 Van Stone, Ellen 397 Van Winkle, Kurt 406 Vanarsdall, Dawn 388 Vance, Gregory 466 Vance, Karen 466 Vann, Laura 426 Vargas, Carl 466 Vaubel, Karin 466 Vaughan, Sandra 466 Vaughan, Terry 397 Vaught, Pamela 466 Vause, Dirk 384 Vea, Michael 415 Veclotch, Beth 466 Vehslage, David 460 Venderly, Leslie 426 Venditti, Lesli 466 Verkamp, Eileen 399 Vermillion, Tony 394 Vernasco, Kathleen 466 Vernon, Kathleen 383 Vessey, Kathy 466 Vessey, Sean 466 Vetroczky, Michael 466 Vial, Victoria 388 Viar, Bobette 382 Vice, Mark 466 Victor, Nan 382 Vieck, Jeffery 404 Vignolo, David 394 Villa, Michael 367 Villalpando, Jesse 405, 466 Voitlein, William 386 Vonderschmitt, Carol 466 Vondran, Beth 466 Vondran, Mary 383 Voris, Judith 466 Vos, Pam 345 Vouros, Andrew 466 Voyles, Harmon 466 Voyles, Harry 390

Who shot J.R.? Wachs, Michelle 416 Wadden, Lynn 409 Wade, Clare 383, 466 Wade, Cynthia 403 Wade, Joyce 426 Wade, Timothy 386 Wagener, Gwendolynn 383 Waggoner, Susan 466 Wagner, James 394 Wagner, Lisa 366 Wagner, Michael 342 Wagner, Susan 382 Wagner, Tammy 346 Wagner, Todd 404 Wahl, Gretchen 383 Walker, Daon 344 Walker, Jeffrey 466 Walker, Karen 400 Walker, Mark 387 Walker, Michael 427 Walker, Patricia 393 Walker, Steven 424, 466 Wallace, Andrew 394 Wallenstein, Karin 466 Waller, Gordon 387 Wallingford, Brian 466 Walsh, Martha 467 Walsh, Nora 467 Walters, David 386 Walters, Estelle 417 Walters, Kristin 392 Walters, Pamela 392 Walters, Ron 405 Walton, Gary 467 Walz, Michael 410 488

Wamsley, Holly 417 Waples, Gregory 387 Ward, Bruce 356 Ward, Eric 396 Ward, Faye 380 Wark, William 467 Warmack, Janet 467 Warman, Randolph 410 Warner, John 389, 404 Warren, Christopher 467 Warren, Frederick 396, 467 Warrick, Mont 394 Warrick, Michelle 383 Warshauer, Bruce 378 Warth, Jeanne 467 Warton, Bonnie 467 Wasmuth, Wendy 388 Watanabe, Colin 384 Watanabe, Keith 407, 467 Wathen, Mark 467 Watkins, Heidi 379 Watkins, Karen 467 Watson, Lisa 467 Watzman, Lori 376 Weaver, Lisa 341 Weaver, Tena 383 Weaver, Wayne 346 Webb, David 421 Webber, Ellen 467 Webber, Janice 349 Webber, Paula 383 Weber, Colette 467 Weber, Ronald 425 Weber, Susan 467 Webster, Julie 467 Webster, Matthew 394 Webster, Michael 412 Weckel, Gabrielle 403 Weeds, John 415 Weekly, Brenda 397 Wehrenberg, Ted 346 Weidemann, Cynthia 467 Weidenbener, Anne 467 Weidenbener, Sue 408 Weigel, Jay 467 Weigold, Brian 467 Weihe, John 349 Weiner, Allan 366 Weinstein, Elizabeth 376 Weinstein, Sidney 427 Weir, Robert 467 Weis, Craig 347 Weisenauer, Jeffrey 418 Weisfeld, Tamara 416 Weiss, Julie 376, 467 Weissert, Andrew 406 Weitsman, Stacy 416 Weitzman, Leslie 376 Welch, Laura 392 Welch, Peter 398 Weller, Kirk 422 Weller, Sara 346 Wellman, Kathleen 343 Welsand, Susan 345 Welsh, Margaret 343 Welton, Marshall 420 Wendling, Michael 467 Werner, Alan 418 Wertenberger, Jeffrey 421, 467 Wesling, Jean 383 West, Roger 404 Westbrook, Howard 468 Westcott, Henry 356 Westerhaus, David 344 Westerhoff, Lisa 409 Westerkamp, Katherine 383, 468 Wetzel, Brian 407 Wexler, William 468 Wheatley, Kathryn 383 Wheeler, Mary 468 Wheeler, Teresa 380 Whipp, Richard 386 Whitaker, Cathy 468 Whitaker, Pamela 345 White, Amy 468 White, Brian 468 White, Donna 468 White, Douglas 394 White, John 410 White, Suzanne 392 White, Warren 341 Whitehead, Ellen 391 Whitehead, Teresa 468 Whitelaw, Patricia 468 Whiteman, Thomas 468 Whitman, Karen 399

Whitney, Molly 403 Whittaker, Karen 468 Wible, Craig 390 Wickens, Bob 468 Wickersham, Robert 407 Widermann, Maria 409, 468 Widmer, Teresa 366 Widner, Christianne 399 Wiebell, Jeff 418 Wieneke, Deborah 426 Wieneke, Douglas 468 Wierks, Kenton 411 Wilbon, Clementeen 468 Wilczynski, Michael 389 Wildman, Lora 383 Wilensky, Jay 378 Wiley, Joe 406 Wiley, Kimberley 409 Wiley, Timothy 406 Wilhite, Jeffrey 349, 468 Wilkerson, John 468 Wilkes, Brad 468 Wilkicki, Audrey 468 Wilkins, Jamie 400 Wilkins, Nanette 400, 468 Wilks, Bradley 356 Willhite, James 468 Williams, Alan 468 Williams, Donna 351 Williams, Robert 411 Williams, Jeffrey 342 Williams, Judith 383 Williams, Richard 396 Williams, Sylvester 468 Williams, Terri 468 Williamson, Marc 405 Williamson, Muhelle 366 Williamson, Terry 468 Wills, Barbara 468 Wills, Norvetta 393 Willsey, Rebecca 388 Willson, Elizabeth 468 Wilmoth, Joel 361, 427, 468 Wilson, Amy 468 Wildon, David 351 Wilson, Deborah 468 Wilson, Jodi 468 Wilson, Julie 392 Wilson, Randall 468 Wilson, Rhonda 345 Wilson, Ronald 406 Wilson, Ronald R. 341 Wilson, Steven 427, 468 Wilson, Wendi 468 Wiltberger, Anthony 344 Wilzbacher, Susie 366 Wimmer, Greta 342 Winay, Edna 468 Windnagel, Sally 341 Winkeljohn, Ann 382 Winkler, Michelle 468 Winter, Jeffrey 468 Wirts, Sarah 399, 468 Wirtshafter, John 468 Wise, Patrick 374 Wiseman, Paul 342 Witt, Barbara 417 Witte, Lisa 391 Witten, Lou 391 Wittenberg, Susan 426 Wittenborn, Lee 408 Witting, Stephen 410 Wittman, Scott 394 Wittman, Frederick 394 Wohlfeld, Melinda 360, 416 Wojda, Mark 415 Wolf, David 425 Wolf, Lisa 382 Wolf, Paul 469 Wolf, Scott 418, 469 Wolf, Sharon 469 Wolff, Brent 427 Wolfson, Meryl 416 Wolin, Michael 469 Wolinslcy, Michael 378 Wolk, Richard 425 Wolljung, Greg 394 Wonisch, Julie 469 Wood, Bradley 364 Wood, Jamie 469 Wood, Robert 469 Wood, Thomas 412 Woodman, Cynthia 383 Woodrick, Kenneth 469 Woods, Ann 408 Woodward, Lee 341

Wools, Rebecca 402 Wozniak, Daniel 412 Wray, John 405, 469 Wright, Alexis 343 Wright, Kenneth 469 Wright, Lydia 469 Wright, Mark 387 Wright, Pego 408 Wright, Robert 387 Wright, Rose 393 Wruble, Michele 392 Wudell, Jeanne 397 Wuenker, Karen 403 Wulf, Ann 403 Wunderlin, Gail 469 Wurtsbaugh, Michael 412 Wurz, Kristin 469 Wyant, Gregory 387 Wyss, Pamela 397

Xanthippe Xavier, Jose — the only IU student, out of 32,000, that has a last name beginning with X.

Yellow ribbons Yaacob, Zalimah 469 Yale, Richard 378 Yancy, Scott 415 Yang, Helen 469 Yanow, Dori 416 Yao, Tom 346 Yarbor, Mary 379 Yates, Michelle 408 Yesberger, Marc 386, 469 Yochum, Theresa 469 Yonks, Michael 469 Yonts, Michael 346 Youmans, Patricia 417 Young, Deanna 402 Young, Jennifer 403 Young, Katherine 360, 400 Young, Shelley 403 Young, Terri 417 Young, Wendy 403 Yount, David 410 Yount, Steven 366

zits Zaccaria, Anthony 205, 404 Zale, Douglas 364, 420 Zamula, Annelise 469 Zaremba, Susan 403 Zavartkay, Susan 347 Zearbaugh, Christy 417 Zee, Louis 384 Zeheralis, Gail 469 Zeiger, Sheldon 407 Zengler, Jill 351, 356 Zerkle, Mom 420 Ziker, Debra 376, 469 Zilenas, Ona 205, 409 Zilkowski, David 412 Zimlich, Cathleen 351 Zintsmaster, Maria 409 Zirkelbach, Steve 407 Ziska, Michelle 469 Zook, Craig 396 Zubulake, Laura 469 Zuccarelli, Lynn 345 Zuckerberg, Mark 414 Zuelly, Bruce 351 Zupec, Michael 398 Zurcher, Carla 469 Zveige, Gloria 469 Zwettler, Lolita 347


Winter scene from the top of the Indiana Memorial Union after the first snowfall of the 1980 winter in mid December. photos Alan Dorow

The remains of limestone quarries serve as swimming holes and natural recreational spots for many IU students and Bloomington residents.

489


The Arbutus staff, 1981

Jeff Greene Photographer

Jeff Morehead Photographer

Bob Wickens Managing Editor

490

Joe Kus Photographer

• Bruce Martin Sports Editor


Kathy Hoyt Copy Editor

77

Rick Davis Business Manager v 100!-

16.10/.

Julie Gibbs, Carla Miller Office Managers

Lynn Vagnone Writer & Miracle Worker 491


Lewis Ryker Associate Editor/Art Director Megan Byrne Academics Editor

Joe Myers Graphic staff & Savior

492

Ellen Webber Arts Editor


Julie Fleming, Renata Viskanta Greeks/Seniors Editor, Organizations Editor

Janet Witek Graphic Staff

Rob Mintz Business Manager

Rick DelVecchio Writer 493


St

There are in these United States three kinds of people: those that are born crazy, those that achieve craziness and those that — edit yearbooks. _Joe Gamier 1926 Arbutus Editor

r. Gamier was so right. I wish that you, the reader, could have seen the amount of blood, sweat and tears, that went into this hook. There were countless hours spent motivating, organizing, designing, writing, promoting, photographing and editing. It seemed when things started to function properly, everyone disappeared to take a test. Then for the next few days, the staff was upset about the grade they received because they did not have enough time to study. But the work went on. The past 15 months have been a great experience. As editor, I learned to do so much, test my skills in journalism and business. I learned to work through and inspite of the beaucratic university system. I discovered who my friends really are. I learned how great IU really is; I met so many interesting people and experienced great campus events. I feel very much a part of IU. On May 4, 1981, after 88 years of administrative juggling, an Arbutus Charter was signed, officially recognizing the Arbutus as a part of IU. Also, we now have a permanent advisor position. All we need now is a remodelled office! But it should not end there. My goals for this book are: (1) That it brings back some of your college memories. (2) It be a historical recording of life in Bloomington and IU community. However, no matter how big this book is we still could not write about and photograph everything. (3) Provide a learning experience beyond any college courses could provide. I know I reached the third goal. It is up to you to experience the others. Thank your go out to: Pat Siddons and M. B. O'Conner for hours of advice and help, Richard Tobin, for advertising expertise, Milly Mitchell, for assistance with the IU Auditorium programs, Marty Allen and Ray Kavey, two yearbook reps who helped me through this mess, Paul Peck who got me in this insanity, countless others who helped, and of course my folks who sponsored and supported me. Last but not least, Marvin Hamlisch for posing with me in his dressing room. Okey Dokey folks . . . 1U has its 88th Arbutus Yearbook.

\-7=z r)644(41 494


Mrs. James R. Paden, Raleigh, NC Texasgulf Inc., Hugh Ridge Park, CT Mr. Ray Kavey, Jr. Yearbook Associates, Miller Falls, MA John R. Ax, Linton, IN Verling W. Pierson, Portland, OR Roger & Norma Ericson, Carmel, IN Jack L. Owen, Edinburgh, IN Ann H. Partridge, Evansville, IN Barbara & Clarence Campbell, Terre Haute, IN Jack Thompson, Indianapolis, IN Harry & Marjorie Blewett, Bloomington, IN Edgar & Betty Howard, Indianapolis, IN William L. & Carol Smock, Indianapolis, IN Charles E. & Rosemary Lanham, Indianapolis, IN Mr. & Mrs. Arthur L. Fridenmaker, Fortville, IN Dr. & Mrs. Warren Breniman, Elkhart, IN Candice & John Wendling, Ft. Wayne, IN Carl B. Finch, Indianapolis, IN Richard & Jacklin Griebelbauer, Wanamaker, IN laccarino Insurance Agency Inc., Evansville, IN Martin Rowe, Bethpage, NY Roy & Diane A. Schoenbeck, Oak Forest, IL Mr. & Mrs. Arthur King, Indianapolis, IN Ralph Matire, Stratford, CT Mrs. Doris E. Ergas, Setauket, NY Barb Balbirer, Lincolnwood, IL Robert D. & Mary C. Cutkosky, Gaithersburg, MD Mr. & Mrs. George R. Grindstaff, Bloomington, IN Eric L. Simmons, Chicago, IL John L. & Gloria Smith, Bloomington, IN Virgil & Joan Nicholas, Indianapolis, IN Mr. & Mrs. Everett C. Manns, Rensselaer, IN Ernest Oberbilling, Boise, Idaho Marjorie Pratt Gohlke, Hudson, OH John J. Fox, Old Greenwich, CT Lewis E. & Ellen L. Powell, South Bend, IN Harley Sargent, South Bend, IN Mr. & Mrs. Norman Hooey, Manchester, CT Mildred Buck, North Vernon, IN Mr. & Mrs. Theodore W. Batterman, Janesville, WI Linda Jackson, Merrillville, IN Mr. & Mrs. Richard Alm, Rolling Prarie, IN Mr. & Mrs. Feldman, New York, NY Leroy & Lotus Malott, Jeffersonville, IN 495


he 1980-81 Arbutus, Volume 88, is a publication of the 1981 Arbutus staff. Four thousand-eight hundred copies were printed by Hunter Publishing Co., Winston-Salem, North Carolina, in September 1981. The hook is printed on 80 pound dull enamel paper stock using black-black ink. Body copy is set in 10 and 12 point Caledonia. Picture captions are set in 8 point Caledonia Italic. Headlines are set in 18 point Helvetica and 24, 30, 36, and 42 point Baskerville. Initial letters are set in 30 and 42 point Baskerville, although headlines and initial letters vary throughout the Feature section. The cover was designed by Lewis Ryker and illustrated by Robert B. Burnett, Jr. Cover production was through a three-color silk screen process. All Greek group and organization photographs are by Proper Perspective, Bloomington, Indiana. Senior portraits are by Yearbook Associates, Miller Falls, Massachusetts (Bill Edwards and Mary Dawson photographers). Robert B. Burnett, Jr. illustrated the Fiction section. Though the Arbutus is the officially recognized annual of Indiana University, words and images contained within are not official statements of the university or its administration. Address inquiries to: Arbutus Yearbook 801 E. Seventh St. Bloomington, Indiana 47405 (812) 335-9736 Copyright 1981 Larry Levin and the 1981 Arbutus Staff.


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