Daytonian 1983

Page 1





Table of Contents Campus Life

12

Organizations

128

Sports

160

Graduates

200

Faculty

234

Advertising

258

1983 Daytonlan University of Dayton 300 College Park Dayton, Ohio 45488 Volume 80



College may only be four short years In a lifetime. But, It Is during this time that one establishes who he will be, what he will do, and why he Is. This Is the beginning of a neverending search for Individuality.

Opening/3



Part of becoming an individual is learning to interact with others. Searching for and finding a social group consistent with one's lifestyle is especially important during the college years. Friends are no longer mere companions, but rather comprise a supportive family.

Opening/5



College not only affords the chance for social Interactions but also academic pursuits. Every Individual searches for the one academic niche which best complements his Interests.

Opening 17


8/0pening


Accompanying almost every academic discipline is a great deal of pressure. This creates a strong need for some type of support and guidance. In searching for this support and guidance, many students turn in varying degrees to the different religious classes, activities, and services offered at the University of Dayton.

Opening/9


O/Opirdl.g


Throughout the college years, one's search for Individual, social, academic, and religious security develops Into a sense of shelter at the University of Dayton. During one's senior year, though, this sense of shelter once felt begins to fade away, and the harsh reality of life beyond UD causes one to search for ways to extend his lifestyle to real world situations.

Opening! 11


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14/Feature


Learning, Living, And Loving At UD This article is directed toward students, but it is not for students alone. It is for anyone who is or has been in college, especially UD. It is for anyone who has left home or experienced the anxiety of that first break from family and high school friends but has found a replacement for them in the people at UD. It is for anyone who ,has asked themselves where they are going, or why they are where they are, and has found the answers simply by looking around them. It is for people who have been lonely, frightened, and confused but have also been excited, encour路 aged, and embraced in a special world, a world much like the "real" world, but in many ways so much better. The college world of UD is better because it is a world where friendships, ideas, and values exist in a cooperative environment. In short, to experience a cooperative triangle that often does not exist in the "real" world; a triangle that incorporates the social, the intellectual, and the religious. Beginning the triangle, social life at UD speaks for itself. It shouts wIth excitement at a ghetto block party. It sings joyfully in Monk's Inn. It dances to the rhythms of a hundred different nationalities at Campus Carnival, Oktoberfest, and the International Tea. It delights in the comaraderie and green beer at Flanagan's on St . Pat's. It cheers its enthusiasm over football, basketball, soccer, and hockey. It is everywhere at UD - on the plaza, in the snackbar, in the classrooms, and in the dorms. It is what makes us a famil,y and what makes UD our home. The intellectual aspects of UD are what brought many of us here in the first place. People at UD do not forget the dedication to learning and ideas that the University system is based on. Rather, they use the cooperation between social life and education to their best advantage; they use it to go beyond the textbooks and learn about life. The teachers at UD are an important part of the lives of the students, and their teaching goes beyond the classroom. They are one of the main reasons that UD students are not just numbers. Teachers at LID become advisors, sympathetic listeners, encouragers, and friends. At the same time, they uphold the standard of intellectual achievement that makes UD the excellent school it it. The religious life at UD is perhaps the most important part of the cooperative triangle. The University was founded on the dedication to the Blessed Virgin of the Marianist Society, and that dedication is evident both physically and spiritually at

;

UD. The Chapel and the statue of Mary on the library lawn are just two physical examples of devotion to the religious life at UD. More important are the spiritual examples of that devotion. More important are the students gathered for Mass every week. More important are the service clubs that meet every week to devote time and energy to those less fortunate than themselves. More important are the classes that teach and sustain devotion to Christ and to Mary. More important are the priests, brothers, and sisters who set an example of religious devotion and whose lives speak the Catholic tradition in ways no textbook ever COUld. Perhaps most important of all is the spirit of openness and friendship at the University; a spirit that does not exclude those of dif-

ferent religious beliefs and traditions, but rather welcomes them as a valuable part of the cooperative triangle. This is UD, baby. A place where a wide variety of people can come together to learn, to love, and to live. UD is a microcosm of the "real" world; it is a place where people live, work, and play, but it is a utopian microcosm because the social, intellectual, and moral aspects of life at UD combine to form an atmosphere of cooperation and friendship where all who participate can grow in love of God, love of each other, and love of self. It is up to the people who will be a part of UD's future to keep that UD spirit alive. But as anyone who has ever met someone from UD knows, that spirit will never die. Molly Barker

(John Carcutt)

Feature/15


SA: The Largest Organization At UD If you are a three-fourths or fUll-time student at the University of Dayton, then YOU are a member of the Student Association. Though most of the administrative responsibilities are carried out by elected student officers, all students are in SA. Students involve themselves in SA by voting in elections, volunteering in the SA office, participating in SA-sponsored activities, and attending SA functions. Many people are not aware of the vast activities and programs sponsored by SA. Some events SA is responsible for are the l abor Day Picnic, tailgates, Clean Sweeps in the ghetto, the Oktoberfest, the Springfest, and the Book Co-op. SA also publishes the off-campus directory. This year, SA put together a UD student discount card which offers savings of 5 percent to 23 percent at 23 local establishments. Many students decide to donate their time and effort to SA by running for an elected office. Their signs, sheets, and buttons dot the campus during the three campaigns. Students are often approached by one of the many candidates and asked that famous question, "Have you voted yet?" This year the elections for select persons took place Sept. 30 and Oct. 1. Voting machines were used for the first time in this year's elections. Donated by the Montgomery County Board of Elections, the machines made the vote tallying easier. Phil Ciufo, President of the Student Association, said that the machines will likely be used in all future SA elections. This year, the on-campus selectpersons elected were Heather Bersch, Robert Buzdon, Barb Breski, Clare Carr, Marianne Mcinerney, Marilyn Slavin, Mark Smucker, Kelly O'Rourke, and Annette Uhl. Off-campus select persons elected were Jim Collins, Marie Cusak, Veronica DeNardo, John Eddingfield, Jim Gabel, Kitty McGlone, Tim Shark, Ann Slater, and Rob Winterman . Voter turn-out was slightly lower than last year. Ciufo felt the decline was not significant because "there were seven less candidates this year and there are less students to vote." This year some questions were raised concerning select person elections. Many feel the elections are just a popularity contest and that SA should use more volunteers instead. Karen Duncan, VicePresident of Student Association believes select persons are necessary. "We always welcome volunteers but we have no control over them . With the elected select persons we can make sure that jobs get done."

16/Feature

"What does a selectperson do?" is a question that is often heard around election time. After being elected, a selectperson is required to spend five hours a week working in the SA office. Each one is assigned to work under one of the directos on a committee. Each director has at least two selectpersons working under him. Says Ciufo, "Select persons aid in the functions and responsibi'lities of the director they are assigned to." You will find select persons running around posting signs, delivering things to the ghetto, answering phones in the SA office, among other things. Ciufo and Duncan were elected president and vice-president of SA last February. Ciufo, a senior majoring in Communication Management, believes his job is to "oversee the directors." Ciufo has been involved in SA all four of his years at UD. " I was elected a select person for two

years and then I was Director of Finance." Why is he so interested in working for SA? " I like working for the benefit of others," said Ciufo. Vice-President Duncan is a senior double-majoring in Accounting and Management. She works closely with Ciufo in establishing office policy, supervising SA functions, and keeping track of records and files. Duncan stresses the fact that all students are members of SA. "Our weekly meetings held every Monday at 4:30 p.m. are open to the public. And we can always use volunteers." The elected body of SA "represents the students to the administration, " Duncan said . Duncan has always been interested in SA. "Phil and I had talked about running since our sophomore year." The SA consists of seven directors who are elected in March. Each director is required to work in the SA office at least

(John Carcutt)


two hours a day. In addition, they must attend the directors' meeting held every week before the general Monday meeting of SA. Each director has specific duties and functions to carry out which are spelled out in the Student Association Constitution . Julie Ebner, a Junior majoring in Elementary and Special Education, is Director of Academic Affairs. "I work on student academic problems like grade appeals," says Ebner. "I also work on career days and I put together 'beginnings,' which is the freshman orientation yearbook." Ebner was a select person last year. She chose to run for Director of Academics becuase it is related to her chosen field of education. Director of Entertainment is junior Greg Gehlmann. Gehlmann, a Political Science major with a concentration in Pre-Law, brings two years of SA experience to his position, "I was also a select person my freshman year and I was Director of Academic Affairs last year," said Gehlmann .

Among his responsibilities are planning lems," said MacDonald, " I also run the the tailgates, booking the bands for SA Book Co-Ops and the Clean Sweeps." events, and organizing the Dayton to Junior Joe Gallagher, a Communication Daytona trip made in the spring. Gehl- Arts major, is Director of Publicity. "My mann became interested in SA because mob is to promote SA activities through of his past experience in student govern- flyers, sheets, and posters." Gallagher ment. "You meet interesting people in felt that SA was a good way to get inthis job," said Gehlmann. volved in the UD community. Junior Kathy Ryan is the current DirecDirector of Public Relations is junior tor of Finance. Double-majoring in Fi- Maureen O' Rourke. Majoring in Communance and Accounting, Ryan felt SA was nication Arts with a concentration in Puba good way to gain experience in her field . lic Relations, O' Rourke is responsible for Ryan is responsible for managing the SA press releases, publishing the monthly SA budget and bookkeeping, among other newsletter, and all other communication things. "We always strive for a zero bal- with the UD and the Dayton communities. ance," said Ryan. "I put out the off-campus directory this The SA Ombudsman this year is Pat semester and I will be working on the MacDonald . Previously a selectperson, United Way Basketball Marathon in the MacDonald wanted to get more involved spring," said O'Rourke. O' Rourke prein student government. A junior double- viously worked for SA as a select person. majoring in Communication Arts and PoSophomore Paul Treder is the Director litical Science, MacDonald is responsible of Student Organizations. Majoring in for handling non-academic problems for Marketing, Treder is responsible for medistudents. "I handle things like tenant- ation between UD administration and the landlord problems and referral prob- various student organizations. "I chaired Springfest and Oktoberfest, and I cochaired the Labor Day picnic with Greg Gehlmann." Involvement in SA was just a natural evolvement from high school, where Treder was president of his senior class. Though not a director, junior Cindy Grygier works as a secretary for SA. Grygier says her duties as a secretary are diverse. "I handle a lot of SA correspondence, I'm in charge of minutes, and I work at SA events." Grygier, who is marketing major, became acquainted with SA through the work-study program . Though not an elected body, the Student Judiciary operates withing the Student Association . The Student Judiciary works in conjunction with the Office of the Dean of Students in disciplinary cases. Members of the Student Judiciary are nominated by the President of SA and approved by the Directorate. The Student Court Justices for this year are Angela Donovan , Anthony Himes, Lisa Jennings, Tim Prinz, Mike Ruffalo, and Guy Turner. The Student Court Chief Justice is Maggie O'Donnell . The Student Association is an active and productive organization. Records of the previous year's events are available to all the directors. When planning an activity, SA studies the successes and failures of the prior year and makes improvements. Duncan said, "This year's administration is very professional. Everything we've done has gone well ."

Michelle Lewis

Feature/17


'N o Work B,ut All Play This Day Funny thing about Labor Day - no one seems to do much laboring . UD's students were no exception September 6, 1982, the day of UD's seventh annual Labor Day Picnic. According to Greg Gehlmann, Student Association Director of Entertainment, who chaired the event, over 4,000 new and "old" students gathered on Founders' Field to make new friends and to greet old ones. "The weather," he said, "was absolutely perfect!" The usually barren Founders' Field came alive as students played volleyball and tossed frisbees to the melodies of the three local bands that graced the field. Paul Treder, Student Association Director of Student Organizations, said that each of the bands, The Lovers, The Outlets and Quickfoot, played for free at the picnic with some setup assistance provided. Since most organizations on campus are not usually underway so early in the academic year , just a handful of clubs were on hand to whet the appetites and quench the thirsts of those students revelling in summer's final glory. Two beer trucks and, according to an informed source, 47 kegs no doubt added to the

festivities. Treder also mentioned a big thanks to both Flanagan's and Hot Lips for donating tee-shirts and hats for the occasion . Gehlmann and Treder both agreed that the games played at the picnic were a great success as well. Miller Beer sponsored the traditional Tug-of-War. In the Bat Race, participants ran a relay to a point at which their heads were turned downward (on imaginary baseball bats) to be spun around and around, to make the return trip less than a clear journey. Treder said that the funny thing was that four dizzy team leaders all claimed to have won, and no one really knew for sure! The Egg Toss was also quite popular. A gross number of teams (144 to be exact) tried their hands at the soft touch needed to toss the eggs at an ever increasing distance - without breaking them. While the general atmosphere was more rough-and-tumble than what the Egg Toss should have been, both Gehlmann and Treder agreed that 1982's Labor Day Picnic was one of the best.

._ " . -,

....

Bred Geuder

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18/Student Event

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Student Event / 19


Rain Dampens Carnival

,

(Jill Coder)

20/Student Event

Campus Carnival, a long-standing tradition at the University of Dayton, was held on September 24 this year. The main purpose of the carnival is to raise money for individual organizations. This event is one of their major fund raisers during the year. In order for a particular organization to obtain a booth they must submit their ideas and a fee of $25 to the carnival committee. The registration fee is used to pay for tables, signs, chairs and various articles to furnish the booth. A potpourri of booths is not only available to UD students but also Dayton area residents. This past year pizza was sold by the faculty wives. Also included on the menu was Lebanese food and shishkebabs. The booths that did not feature food entertained the participants with games. Some of the most popular booths were the horse race and the toilet paper toss. The highlight of the carnival, as it has been for two years, was the "car smash." This event entailed smashing an old car with a sledge hammer. Some of the students felt that this was an opportune way to relieve some of their frustrations. The most original booth was sponsored by the Zeta Zeta Zeta fraternity which was a jailhouse. During the course of the night Margaret Holland, Dean of Students, was one of the many people who found themselves imprisoned . A fun run was also scheduled but unfortunately the inclement weather forced the race to be postponed until a later date. Another featured event at the carnival was a rock band called "The Outlets." Even though they had to stop playing early because of rain, they kept the crowd dancing a good part of the night. The student participation was excellent and the carnival was an overall success. It was a record breaking year with over fiftyfive booths. The Miller Brewing Company supplied an alternate form of refreshment for the crowd. Their booth helped to attract many students. Responsible for the good outcome were chairpersons Charlene Stewart and Les Crooks. Both of them worked diligently on the carnival for three weeks. Charlene and Les did not know they would be chosen to be chairpersons. Charlene commented, "I was very honored to be asked. It was a lot of fun . I found out a great deal about the different organizations and met a variety of peopie." Les feels, "The carnival was a learning experience that should help in the future. I had a great time and would do it again if asked." Marcia Baumbarger of the University Activities Office was the coordinator of the whole event.

Betsy Wallace


(Jill Coder)

(Jill Coder)

Student Event / 21


Alumni Return Home To Cele,brate Times Gone By "Antolini on Ice - That's Nice" was the winning slogan for the 1982 University of Dayton Homecoming Queen, Michelle Antolini. Being elected UD's queen is not all glory and glamour; it is hard work mixed with some fun and confusion. Michele and her campaign manager, Mark Donowick, kept busy with the queen campaign activities. Getting sponsors, developing a theme, making posters and sheets, and preparing for Homecoming week's events were just a few of their tasks. The University had several affairs planned for the big week. It started Sunday, October 10, with the International Tea. The tea was in the Ken-

nedy Union Ballroom from 2 to 5 p.m. This was open to the student body, as were all of the events. "As Time Goes By" was the theme for this year's Homecoming. The movie "Casblanca" in which "As Time Goes By" is played was shown October 12, at 6:30 and 8:30 p.m. in O'Leary. Also on Tuesday evening the Kennedy Union Veranda was decorated for Rick's Cafe American. This cafe, although called American, had a French atmosphere with refreshments and live entertainment. So, from 8 to 11 p.m. KU Veranda was transformed to the delight and enjoyment of those who attended. One of the highlights of the week's

events was the night of the queen skits. Wednesday, October 13 at 8 p.m. , the queen candidates were encouraged to display their theatrical talents in the Fieldhouse. Large numbers were in attendance. Queen candidates literally got to "cruise the UD ghetto" on Thursday, October 14, in antique cars. Kennedy Union Ballroom was impressively decorated Thursday evening for the festive Casino Casablanca. A seventeen piece orchestra entertained the many who came to gamble, drink, eat, or just listen . The Ballroom was a Morrocan style casino with fountains, statues, plants and furniture all contributing to the mood. Courthouse Square in downtown Dayton was the site for UD's official Homecoming Proclamation Ceremony. This event was on Friday, October 15, just one day before the dance. Also on Friday was the Casablanca Express Float Parade, a Pep Rally, and TGIF party. Queen candidates made floats for the parade which toured the scenic UD ghetto that afternoon. The UD cheerleaders and the "Pride of Dayton" band were both at the Pep Rally to get everyone "fired up." On Saturday, October 16, the UD football team showed their power when they beat Maryville, 62-0. Michele-Antolini was crowned queen at the halftime of the game, and thus all were ready for the night ahead. Wamplers Ballarena held the 1982 Homecoming Dance. Two live bands entertained the crowd that came to the UD classy fall formal affair. The 1982 Homecoming queen candidates were: Michele Antolini, Donna Fournier, Celeste Wolff, Nancy Minardi, Sophie Hegedus, Ann Glaser, Cathy Cushing, Dawn Grob, Margaret O'Connor, Marjorie Klee, Lisa Merrits, and Nahla Abdeinour . . 'Whether you win or lose, you learn a lot about yourself under pressure. You make a lot of new friends. You have a lot of fun . It all goes together to make you feel good," said Michele Antolini. Mark Donowick said the hardest part of his job was to keep Michele's spirits up . "You have so much to do and you have to keep up with things." According to Donowick, "At times it gets to be a lonely campaign. You don't know who to turn to." Donowick took the job because he thought it would be fun. He did a lot of work but he said it all paid off. "You feel as much a winner as she does, even though your name is not called out."

Cathy Brophy

22/ Student Event


Student Eventl23


Homecoming -

A Week

Of Fun And Festivities

(John Carcult)

24/Student Event

(Cnris Cunningham)


(Chris Cunningham)

(Chris Cunningham)

Student Eventl25


A Weekend Of Spooks And "Spirits" There weren't too many ghosts and goblins running around campus Halloween weekend, but there were a few strange and unusual happenings as University of Dayton students celebrated the spook season in a variety of ways. "I had so much fun," exclaimed Mary Trott as she described her experience working at the UAO Haunted House Friday night. Located in the rifle range in O'Reilly Hall, the scary scenario was divided into ten rooms - one for each participating organization . "I didn't think people would be scared, but some girls were freaking out," said Trott . "Some of the little kids walked through with their faces buried in their

26/Student Event

dads' coats." For Trott, a victim in WDCR's "burning hell," being in a Haunted House was a new experience. "I had never even gone to one before," she said . Trott, who was adorned in a white robe splattered with "blood," enjoyed watching people as they walked through the house. "People came through in couples and in groups," she said. "First the little kids came through. Then it was people on their way out to parties. But the funniest were the people who came late at night ... after the parties. One person went so far as to carry one of the girl workers out of the house," she said .

And what is the worst thing about being "a victim in burning hell?" "The next morning my knees were so bruised from crawling around on a cement floor all night," Trott answered. Trott even had an interesting experience on the way home. "I still had my make-up on as I was walking up the stairs in Marycrest. Some girl saw me and started screaming. It was pretty funny." Residents of Marycrest probably also noticed a couple of unusually short doctors running around the halls Saturday evening . The miniature medical practitioners and their costumed friends were trick-or-treaters from Westwood Center.


"It's an annual thing," said Lisa Mer" Everybody was dressed up," Booger ritts, a member of Alpha Angels. The An- said. "We had some M&M's, Pullman in a gels, along with Delta Sigma Theta, bikini, devils, angels, roller derby girls, Sitraipsed up and down the halls of Mary- amese twins, and four girls dressed up crest with the youngsters in search of Hal- like a tooth, a toothbrush, toothpaste, loween goodies. and dental floss." "First we held a party in the AfroAccording to Booger, the floor of the American Center Lounge, " Merritts said . Alpha Nu house "withstood the party. "After they finished playing games and The beams in the floor broke at the last eating popcorn and candy, we took them party we had, but this time the window sill up to the dorm and split the group in half. broke from people dancing on it." Some went on the North wing and some The Halloween spirit carried over to the went on the South . They were tired by the next weekend when the University of Daytime we got to the fourth floor." ton Band and the Flyerettes performed in While the majority of students were costume during the half-time show of the floating from party to party, some mem- UD-Salisbury State football game. bers of the UD community had to work. "The theme was 'Almost Anthing One was Sarah Leeder, the GA on duty at Goes," said Flyerette Lisa Handy. "It was Marycrest Saturday night. "It was so quiet," Leeder said, referring to the dorm. " The parties were all in the ghetto and a lot of students went home because of the three-day weekend. " "I scheduled a costume contest for 8 p.m. in the Main Lobby," said Leeder. " We had prizes lined up and plenty of donuts and cider. Three people showed up and we had to grab them as they were walking out the door." In keeping with the season, the Great Pumpkin won the contest. Leeder had to call upon her unique sense of humor to deal with one demanding situation . "I didn't have any candy to give to the little kids who were going door to door in Marycrest, so I gave them ghost holes." Ghost holes? "A friend of mine went as a Charlie Brown ghost, you know, with the holes cut out all over him . Since I didn't have any candy, I had to give them the pieces cut from the sheet ." The ghetto nights were filled with Halloween celebration after Halloween celebration . According to Ward Peterson, the DGO house had never been as crowded as it was at Sunday night's party. " It was incredible how many people came out," Peterson said . "There were about 350 people and they really seemed to be enjoying themselves. " To commemorate the holiday, the DGOs required a costume to get into the party. " People were pretty original," said Peterson, "We had an ET flasher." The Alpha Nus and their party guests were visited by the police Sunday night. "About an hour into the party the police came and had everbody get out of the house," said Bobby Booger. "The police waited out front for a while so we just had people coming back in through the side window. The party lasted until 2:30 a.m."

so bizarre. There was such a mixture of costumes. There were punk rockers, old ladies, members of the mafia, people in long johns, and there was an ET. Somebody even dressed like 'Joe Engineer' with a calculator and about twenty pens in his pocket. " "The trombone section dressed up like Flyerettes," said Handy. And what did the real Flyerettes wear? " We all went athletic with sweats and headbands." According to Handy, the crowd response to the show was good. "The band did their usual antics. People were dying laughing.' ,

Michelle Lewis

Student Event / 27


"The Pride Of Dayton" In Tune With UD

(Sylvia Rittweger)

As you walk into Reichard Hall you can't help but notice the large collage of pictures of a special group of people here at UD. They are aptly called "The Pride of Dayton." On th is collage you see them racing into a McDonald's, sleeping on chartered buses, and marching in precision. Yes, the University of Dayton Band does all of these things and more. Beginning some 77 years ago as a 35member military band sponsored by ROTC, The Pride of Dayton has blossomed into a marching and dancing troupe 230 strong. Included as members of the Pride of Dayton are the band, many specialty music groups and also the Flyerettes. According to Timothy Swinehart, Band Director Since 1980, The Pride is "a very intelligent bunch of people who deserve a pat on the back ." Sandy Kielpinski, a junior business major who plays flute and piccolo, sees The Pride as a big family . "You work hard but you can relax with them, too," she said. Swinehart agrees, relating the family feeling to the band's recent history. As late as 1972, the band had a membership (Chris Cunningham)

28/ Feature


(Chris Cunningham )

of only 35. Gradually, the band grew to about 100 musicians five years ago. At that time, the band staff began to emphasize the "family" aspect of membership in The Pride. Since that time, Swinehart explained, much active recruiting has taken place in Dayton area high schools. This has resulted in what he calls "an explosion of interest" in The Pride. Swinehart and Kielpinski both agreed that it is difficult to get to know 230 people. Despite The Pride's size, Kielpinski said, "I can see myself opening up to other people." This she attributes to that family feeling. But it's not all fun with friends. Band members spend years perfecting their musical talents. When they seek membership in The Pride, it is through audition only. Those who make it through auditions become part of the Marching Band. The Marching Band performs throughout the football season with a few special appearances. They practice three afternoons each week and on Saturdays before football games. During the Spring semester, the name changes to Concert Band, which according to Kielpinski, presents an average of four concerts during the semester. Kielpinski emphasized the importance of the role played by the Band Managers. For all the finishing touches they add to The Pride's performances, and for the work such as loading music and equipment for road trips, they don't get much recognition, she said. Swinehart and his fellow Pride of Dayton staff members Larry Blocher and Gary Ciepluch decide the basis for the

content of the shows. For example, The Pride plays an opening number at halftimes that Blocher wrote and Swinehart arranged called, appropriately, "Fanfare for the Pride." The middle section of the show includes a Flyerette feature and a Band "boogie" number. The closing segment is oriented to involve everyone in The Pride. Swinehart explained that while Blocher, Ciepluch and he choose a "pool" of music from which final polished production numbers emerge, other input is welcomed and in many cases needed. The Flyerettes, for example, need to have the band playing music to which they can do a routine. The band members likewise have input concerning the boogie tunes to which they dance. From the basic Marching and Concert Bands come several specialty groups such as jazz bands, pep bands for basketball games, the Wind Ensemble, and Brass Choir, to name a few. Infamous among these is a troupe of nine or ten known as the "Groaning Groins." According to literature posted in Reichard Hall, The "Groaning Groins" is a group "of males, by males, and for males, " to display their musical and physical prowess. Kielpinski said that she understood that the "Groaning Groins" originated as the male version of the Flyerettes. The Flyerettes, too, are an important part of The Pride of Dayton. With a membership of about 32, the group consists of largely loca'i girls. According to freshman Flyerette Becky Bistrum, college drill team is "so much better than (in) high school because everyone wants to do it."

Potential Flyerettes must attend clinics to prepare for the auditions held at the beginning of the school year. Band Camp follows with three long days of practice with the band over the Labor Day Weekend . Bistrum explained that the Flyerettes practice three times weekly and also mornings preceding football games. On Tuesdays and Thursdays, she continued, the drill team officers give "help sessions" to those girls having trouble learning routines. Asked if she plans to tryout again next year, Bistrum exclaimed, "I'd die without it!" She went on to explain that after over six years as a member of various drill teams, it has become more than a little part of her. It seems as if beilng a member of the Pride of Dayton would be quite time consuming. To this, both Bistrum and Kielpin ski say "no." Flyerettes is seen as a means as getting away from academic pressures. Kielpinski stated that practicing and performing is not time consuming to most band students, as they are very adept at learning music and routines quickly. Reflecting on his large "family," Swinehart called membership in The Pride of Dayton a nice social diversion . He seems to disdain the military regimentation that characterizes many bands, in favor of a more personable approach. Summing up the present Situation, Swinehart replied, "We have a very good two-way street going. I like that very much."

Brad Gauder

Feature/29


Christ'mas Spirit Kindled By Special Celebration The eighth day of December. It may be just an ordinary day in the lives of many people, but here at the University of Dayton it is much more. It is a time of giving and sharing; a time for creating smiles and laughter. The spirit of the holiday season is brought to the University through the annual celebration of Christmas on Campus. University Activities formed Christmas on Campus nineteen years ago with its main purpose being a Christmas party for the UD students as a UD family. It is in the Christmas sp irit that we share our party with the Dayton community. This past year the theme was "Christmas Through the Years: A Family Celebration ." The cochairpersons were Tim Johnson and Julie Borchers. It takes a great amount of planning and organizing, beginning early in September, but the final result is always something of which to be proud. Approximately one hundred students are involved in the planning. They choose to be members of one or more of seven committees which consist of publicity, adoptions, decorations, transportation, tree lighting, entertainment, and mass. The organ ~zation of each one is important to the overall outcome of the celebration . The adoption committee contacts recreation centers in underprivileged areas of the city and publicizes Christmas on Campus. Six hundred children and senior citizens from these areas partioipate in the adoption process through this committee. Some organizations on campus have their own adoption programs, and families in the community also join in the festivities. For three hours on the evening, of December 8th, university students and their adopted child or senior citizen enjoy a variety of events that the entertainment committee provides. Some of the entertainment includes Santa Claus, the re-enactment of the nativity, movies, music, dancing, games, and displays. The beauty of Christmas on Campus can be sensed in the people at the celebration. The young and old alike show their appreciation in their own special way. When the evening first begins you might see a frightened , quiet child unsure

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of what to expect from the people and things around him. But when the same child leaves, you may now see a glow that wasn't there before, a smile, a hug, a kiss goodbye and a thank-you that makes the student feel that it was all worthwhile. The University of Dayton students truly capture the spirit of Christmas on this special occasion . In the student you might see something that doesn't show too often: a little tenderness and caring, a little giving of himself to someone who needs the af-

fection. After the special guests leave, students are invited to attend a Christmas mass in the fieldhouse. Iliuminaries brighten a path from the chapel to the fieldhouse, where inside, the altar and aisle are decorated with hundreds of poinsettias donated by campus organizations, which are later donated to county rest homes. Over 4,000 people attend the service, which closes the actual ce'lebration of Christmas on Campus. But in essence, it is just the beginning of the Christmas season; for the entire night brings out the Christmas spirit in all.

Lori Moll


Student Event / 31


A "Guten Tag" Kickoff For Parents' Weekend Some traditions always remain unchanged , but then some others do change now and then . Such was the case with UD's seventh annual Oktoberfest celebration . According to Student Association Director of Student Organizations, Paul Treder, Oktoberfest has traditionally been held on a Saturday afternoon in (of course) October. This year, however, Oktoberfest served as the kickoff for Parents' Weekend, Friday, October 22, 1982. Held on the Kennedy Union Plaza from 4 to 9 p.m., Oktoberfest and its participants basked in sunny 50-degree weather until sundown cooled the atmosphere a bit. Regarding the attendance of an estimated 1,500, Treder said, " .. . the flow was constant ... always new faces walking around the plaza." Some 45 campus organizations lined the plaza, offering food, drinks, games, and other miscellaneous attractions for the celebration . A beer truck was emblazoned with the message "Guten Tag! " which , in German, means "Good Day!"

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Treder mentioned that dark beer was sold two for a dollar, and that the celebrants consumed eleven kegs of Stroh's Dark beer, or course keeping with the evening's German flavor. As one might expect, music at the Oktoberfest celebration was of the "Oompah-pah" strain . The Michael Nagel Band, a German band from Cincinnati, played on the steps of Kennedy Union during the evening. As an added highlight, the Miami Valley Folk Dancers, under the direction of Bruce Gantrel , performed on the plaza in front of the band. Many visitors were probably surprised to find themselves involved in the middle of various polkas and other German dances. Much thanks goes to Paul Treder, who organized the event. He in turn expressed his thanks to select persons Marianne Mcinerney, Jim Collins, Annette Uhl, and Rob Winterman, all who served as cochairpersons for 1982's "Va gut!" Oktoberfest festival.

Brad Gauder


(Doug Rechs leiner)

Student Eventl33


A New Breed Of Roadies There are only two words to describe the rationale of 15 students piling into a van at 4:00 a.m. to drive five hours to go to a football game for which they don't even have tickets. Those two words, if you haven't already guessed, are "road trip" . Whether it's two hours to get some of Mom's home cooking or eight hours to visit a friend at another campus, road trips have become "core" requirements of virtually every collegian's curriculum. Ask any veteran road tripper what comprises the necessities of a successful excursion and the answers will run the gamut from an emphatic "BEER!" to "my favorite cowboy hat". Without a doubt, though, "books" is one word which is never mentioned. Topping most people's lists are things such as a reliable set of directions, a compete listing of all the McDonald's along the way, a twelve-pack per person (usually finished before you even get to the interstate), enough munchies to soak up the beer, and, of course, a souvenir to bring back to your home, sweet, ghetto home. A "borrowed" street

sign or a glass that somehow made it into your pocket when you left a local bar usually serves this purpose and also fits nicely into an already diminishing budget. Besides furnishing a list of the essentials, any veteran road tripper is bound to do one more thing - persuade you to listen to the most outrageous, and maybe even slightly exaggerated, stories of past adventures. Jim Ziemba, a senior from Iselin, New Jersey, likes to refer to himself as the road trip king, having spent nearly half of the fall semester weekends on one sort of excursion or another. One of the most memorable ones, according to Jim, was a trip to the history-making Notre Dame versus Michigan nighttime football game in late September. "When we arrived and found tickets to the game like gold and the stadium like Fort Knox, we concluded that the only way we would enjoy the game was by tailgating through it." Jim goes on to tell of meeting a UD alumnus who, upon hearing of the group's game plans, donated $20 to help buy another keg. The group's van was

(Sally McCaffrey)

341 Feature

parked near the stadium and it was there that they shred their beer and hotdogs (150 total) with anyone who stopped by in response to the invitation (via sheet hanging by the keg): "UD, ND, and SLU: We want to party with you!" From the amount of people who stopped by that knew someone or were somehow associated with UD, it's clear that the old road trip cliche is really true. It's a small world after all. Jim also remembers (with somewhat of a chuckle) the time he and a couple friends were sitting in one of the area pubs, rating the fine local restaurants and in particular the hamburger joints. One of his friends argued that a place at which he stopped in Louisville, KY, while there for the Derby, had the best cheeseburgers in the world. According to Jim, when they asked his friend if he knew how to get there, "he said yes. That's all we needed to know. We left Dayton at 1:30 a.m. and headed to Louisville." Three and a half hours and a few wrong turns later, the group arrived at JoJo's Hamburger Stand to taste-test the famous cheeseburgers for themselves. After spending an hour devouring what everyone decided actually were the best cheeseburgers in the world (but then, at 5:00 a.m. what wouldn't be?), the group headed back to Dayton, another road trip successfully completed by the road trip king. Road trips aren't always easy kegs and juicy hamburgers, however. Once in a while there are a few drawbacks.


•

(Sally M

ffrey)

Kevin Riley, a junior from Cleveland, Ohio, also remembers an awkward situation which has probably happened to more people than care to admit it. Kevin, as president of UD's chapter of Tau Kappa Epsilon, was on his way with some other TKE brothers to a TKE District Conference at Purdue University in Lafayette, Indiana. Everyone was packed,' directions were clear, and so, unlike many road trips, departure was on time. What these men failed to keep in mind, however, was that little devil called central time. Arriving an hour earlier than they were supposed to, Kevin said they all felt awkward and a bit embarrassed, but were still able to joke about it all weekend. In another tale of a quite memorable road trip, Dee Nazzaro, a senior from Wheeling, West Virginia, recalls the time when the Delta Omega Tau sorority went canoeing on the Mad River, complete with a keg , hot dogs, and euchre (the official road trip card game). Afterward, as dusk drew near and the party dispersed it was discovered there was still some beer left in the keg . Dee, never one to waste such an opportunity, led a group of six Dots to the Wittenberg campus in Springfield, Ohio, where they knocked on the door of one of her friends, set up the keg on the front porch, and threw what was, in reality, a "surprise party." It may have been only a short way from Dayton, but all the essentials of a good road trip were there: good friends, good beer, good times, and yes, even that good 01' cowboy hat! Kathie Coates

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(Gordon Smith)

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"There's a ghost in Liberty Hall." "No way!" "Who is it?" "Well, it's supposed to be a brother." "A Marianist?" "Yeah ." "How'd he die?" "They say he killed himself." " Yeah? " "That's what they say." "Now why would a brother want to kill himself? Those guys have it made." "They say he had a lover." "No kidding? " "You think it might be true?" "Naw. Sounds like a bunch of baloney to me. I mean, be serious. Who believes in ghosts?" "We could always go over there and find out." "Now?" "Sure. Why not?" "Maybe he's afraid of the dark. Things that go bump in the night, all that sort of thing." "I'll go. I just think it's pretty stupid to go ghost-chasing in the middle of the night. " "In the dead of night." "Oooooooooh!' , "Yeah, I'm shakin' turkeys." Now, I don't believe in ghosts. Really, I don 't. But when my so-called friends get something on their minds, they generally don't let it go. I knew I'd never live it down if I didn't join them on this little escapade, so I did. But I can't say I was thrilled with the idea. And after what happened that night in Liberty Hall, I have to admit my opinion of ghosts did change. And yours WOUld, too. But, you'll hear about that soon enough. From the outside, Liberty looks innocent enough. Of course it's old and there's ivy all over the walls, but (at least on the outside) there's nothing too scary about it. One thing that makes Liberty a little creepy is that it's almost always open. Probably because it houses the commuter lounge, which means a lot of different people come and go at odd hours. I remember that strange guy who used to hang around up there. Something about Kent State murders ... The inside of the building is really creepy. It's definitely a building of noises. Creaks and groans and noisy staircases that tilt treacherously at crazy angles. "Well, where's this so-called ghost?" "It's supposed to be up on the third floor." "Of course. That's where all those things hang out. But the Monk's Inn might be a good bet, too. Probably a mummy's tomb down there."


"Wouldn't be surprised." "Has anybody seen it?" "The mummy's tomb?" "No stupid, the ghost." "No, but they've heard it." On the third floor, there's a door, and like most doors where ghosts are supposed to be, it has a keyhole. A big keyhole. Just like in the movies. "See anything?" "Of course not." "And of course it's locked." "Who are you, Sherlock Holmes?" "Well, no key, no see, no ghost, let's go." "Wait a minute. You hear that?" "Hear what?" "Ssh! Listen!" "You guys are puttin' me on." "Was there anyone down . , . " Then I heard it. It was soft and muffled,

True UD Spirit but it was a definite sound. Footsteps. And maybe something heavy being dragged across a hard wood floor. Sudddenly a cool breeze swept up the stairs and ruffled my hair. All three of us stood there like dummies. I hate to say it -like we had seen a ghost. "Somebody must have opened the front door." "Hey! Anybody down there?" No answer Then we heard the footsteps on the stairs. I've studied in Liberty plenty of times, and I'd know that creak anywhere. Someone was coming. up those old rotten steps. When you hear people talk about being

(Sally McCaffrey)

"scared stiff," don't believe them. You've never seen three people move faster. Though we've never really talked about it since, there are now three people on this campus who are pretty close to being sure there is a ghost in Liberty Hall. We didn't actually see it, but do you have to see everything you believe in? Of course, you'll have to decide that for yourself.

NOTE: This story is purely fiction . It's based on rumors about a ghost in Liberty Hall, and is basically the same story that I've heard from several people about the "ghost." Molly Barker

(Sally McCaffrey)

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The Changing Scene On Campus Always dreaming . . . of bigger and better things. Yes, this is Dr. M. Daniel Henry, assistant to the president and chief planning officer, who coordinates many of the physical changes that occur on the UD campus. You may have noticed this year that St. Joseph's Hall is sporting new fireproofed staircases. This constitutes a part of Phase 1"11 in a four-phase renovation of the building. According to Henry, Phase IV will include new windows, heating and air conditioning, and some interior design changes, all with a price tag of $2 million. Worrying about where the money will come from is only one of Henry's concerns. In his position as assistant to the president, Henry works as a coordinator concerned with long-range planning. His areas of expertise include program planning and enrollment projections, as well as overseeing the physical enhancement of the university. Henry explained that funding for new structures and other projects such as renovations comes from private donations. "If the money isn't there, we can't do it,"

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he said . Of course soliciting the donations is no easy task, but this does not stop U. D. faculty and administrators from keeping alive the university's hopes and ideas for the future. Aside from the renovation of St. Joseph's Hall, several other projects are being looked into. One of these concerns the formation of an academic quadrangle in the heart of the Dreams ... This project is essentially a three-fold. Consideration is being given to converting Founders Hall into an academic facility with offices and classes to alleviate some of the claustrophobic conditions of Miriam Hall. Henry pointed out that the current residentce hall rooms are ideal for offices, and classrooms can be easily constructed by blocking off several rooms in corners of the building. The displaced residents would then be housed in a new residence hall to be built about midway between the Health Center and Stuart Hall. Also involved with this concept is the construction of another cafeteria close to Stuart Hall.

The third facet of the quadrangle project involves converting the Mechanical Engineering Building to a classroom facility to complete the quadrangle. Plans cali for moving the Physical Plant vehicles and other university-owned equipment from the Mechanical Engineering Building to a yet-to-be-built Physical Plant close to the Physical Plant offices in Benisek Hall. Henry is quick to point out that these plans are quite simply "possibilities," and at this time, there are no firm commitments. Henry stated that the university administration's underlying goal is to "really enhance the quality of the whole university." He added that the plans on the drawing board are based on the assumption that UD's enrollment will remain fairly constant in the decades to come. Plans for new student housing reflect this assumption. Henry feels that UD offers the students a nice variety of housing options from which to choose, and there are no current plans to change the situation in any way. He mentioned that someday another type of living arrangement,


such as suites, may be introduced, but that the University wants to wait to examine future housing innovations before making any moves in that direction. Two projects on the drawing board have been at least partially completed. One of these concerns creating formal entrance, to say, as Henry puts it, "This is UD, baby' " The concrete entrance sign that faces the corner of Stewart and Zehler Streets is a short-range way of meeting this goal. According to Henry, the proposed formal entry will be located at or near the newly-sodded lot where an Exxon station previously stood at the corner of Stewart Street and Brown Street. The other project involves the purchasing of property westward to the east side of Brown Street and southward to Caldwell Street in an effort to sOlidify UD's presence in the area bounded by Caldwell, Brown, and Stewart Streets and Woodland Cemetery. Henry noted that the purchase of the old NCR Credit Union building was a step in this direction. Renamed the Jesse Phillips Center, it houses a part of the Research Institute. There are also so-called "long, longrange" building projects being considered. Consolidating the Research Institute into one facility is one of these possibilities. The new building would most likely be next to the Kettering Labs on what is now a Ilarge part of Parking Lot C. It is felt that the proximity to the Kettering Labs will be beneficial for all of the Research Institute's work. The displaced parking would be located underneath the new structure, according to Henry. A new Law Library facility is another distant future possibility. Henry said that it would probably be located behind Albert Emanuel Ha'il, which currently houses the Law School. This, it is felt, will give the Roesch Library more room to expand in the years to come without any new construction. Decisions about what facilities are needed are not made solely by Henry and his colleagues. He oversees several committees comprised of students, faculty, and administrators who submit their proposals for further consideration. In the end, according to Henry, the Board of Trustees and the President of the University make the final decisions about major projects. Many years from now, as we look back at these pages, it will be interesting to see which of these dreams became realities. - Brad Gauder

(Tom Frenz)

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Too Close For Comfort Dorm life is a unique, often exciting, experience. It means adjusting your lifestyle in order to get along with others. It means making new friends and sharing a big part of your college year with your roommate(s) . If you're a freshman, it means going to school in an atmosphere that is totally different from anything you have ever experienced. In essence, living in a dorm is a challenge. CHALLENGE #1: No longer is good old Mom around to do your laundry. Alas! Can a red sweater be washed with your Calvin Kleins? Frustration is experienced as you "slip into" your brand new sweatshirt that would now fit your baby sister. Eventually, you do learn from your mistakes and come out of the year an expert clothes washer. CHALLENGE #2: Keeping a room clean can also be a challenge. When your once red carpet darkens the floor instead of brightening it, you conclude, with your newly acquired college know-how, that it is time to search out a vacuum cleaner. CHALLENGE #3: How do roommates produce a room that screams their personalities? This is usually a simple process. Garfield posters that just seem to capture your own sarcasm at times may dot your walls. Then there's the philosophical posters telling you such things as "Live Life One Day at a Time" or "Obstacles Are What You See When You Take Your Eyes Off the Goal". If you're an ocean and ship admirer, mobiles and posters probably show it. CHALLENGE #4: Learning to live with noise is another obstacle to be faced soon after the big move into the dorms. Sophomores Gary DeVilbiss and Curt Schrier both agreed that Founders Hall is "very noisy" . As one soon learns, quiet hours are just a fantasy in the minds of the Graduate Assistants. You soon find where you study best, however, and the noise seems less distracting. CHALL ENGE #5: Living with bad roommates. No more needs to be said. Anyone that has had this problem knows what troubles it entails. CHALLENGE #6: Once again, good old Mom is not there to feed you and see that you eat from each of the four food groups (no, they are not beer, chocolate, pizza, and popcorn). However, the pizza business in Dayton must be very grateful for the existence of dorms. At 11 p.m., you and your roommate are starving. A light flicks on in your head and you're ordering a pizza. Stuart Hall men must learn to motivate themselves in the midst

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of winter to fight the bitter cold and get to the cafeteria. Or is it that their stomachs motivate them??? CHALLENGE #7: Learning to live within 10 feet of another person is quite a change from most peoples' homes. This is especially true for guys. That room is your home for eight months, despite the fact that you can reach everything in it by standing in the middle of the room! Of course, dorm life is not always a series of neverending challenges. It has wild and crazy times too. Pillow fights. 2 a.m. phone calls. GH vs. GL arguments. and parties are all a regular occurence. But most importantly the close quarters of the dorms help new students make friends. For many this is the first time a friend is always there to make you laugh when you feel that you've forgotten how. Dorm life is something one never forgets . The friends and the experiences will stay with you long after you're out of college.

Sandy Aido


(Cindy Cardinal)

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A Ja,c kpot Of Memories In Ohio, those who win the state lottery can pocket up to $1 million. But at the University of Dayton, students who play the housing lottery and win collect eight months of apartment life and a jackpot of memories. From September to April, lifestyles inside one of the UD owned apartments (Campus South or Garden Apartments) become a series of contrasting change. Few will disagree that September is the epitome of college life. Checkbooks are now above poverty level, most are anxious to break out of their summer time routines, and dustless apartments await the first strewn copy of the Dayton Daily. And apartment mates are talkative as deeds of the summer past are spewed out in exaggerated fashion . As October and November sweep in with the placid temperatures, schedules for classes and mea'i times become regimented . While the workload continues to pile, the level of tolerance between roommates begins to weaken. Matters once laughable are now sources for repetitive arguments. Silverware sits anonymously in three day old water and two weeks of the Wall Street lay abandoned on the living room floor. No longer are taco suppers greeted with gurgling stomachs but with frowning faces. Quantity and brevity in the kitchen replace quality on the dining room table. And many students begin to realize that the celebration of Thanksgiving dinner will simply comprise of a card and phone call from home. Socially, apartments are now nightspots for elbow

to elbow keg parties as students seek a needed change from the local watering holes. The sound of sleigh bells means December is upon us, accompanied by a two-week Christmas vacation. This is a month of apprehension because of finals, yet a time to reflect on the celebration and gift giving which is just around the corner. Flyer basketball begins another promiSing season while the student body figures their own strategy to make this year of round ball a more successful one than in the past. Apartment-mates seem in harmony as late night studying brings out a slew of funny stories and the less serious side of education. And for the first time in a long time the apartment is in agreement on one thing: it will be great to get home. Although somewhat recharged, students dread January and February. These months represent a seemingly endless road to their freedom in April. At the University of Dayton, February means the annual swoon of Dayton basketball . Flyer Fever turns to Flyer Futility as a bid to the NCAA Tournament disintegrates in the span of one road trip. Student attendance begins to dwindle and the familiar sound of "Donoher Must Go" increases in volume though remains unheard. Apartment-mates retreat to their televisions for the Flyer telecasts only to see things haven't changed. Thank goodness for M * A * S * H reruns; after watching Donohers' boys, we all need some comic relief.

By the time the drudgery of February has lett and the month of March saunters in, I find it safe to say that Krogering will not become a favorite pastime for the majority of apartment dwellers. Having to restock the refrigerator every week is like going to the bathroom in the middle of the night; it's something you hate doing, but you know it has to get done. Seniors are now collecting rejection notices in anticipation of visiting Flanagans, and juniors are reflecting on another year somehow lost in the shuffle. And some students are paying phone bills which amount to them becoming Ohio Bell stockholders. Students who haven't spoken to their parents in weeks dial home. And the financial drought is alleviated. What are parents for? It's been a quick eight months, but April finally arrives. Phone bills are finally paid up. Apartment managers begin surveying the wreckage in each apartment. Frisbee mania is in full swing, while going to class is not. For those out-of-town students it's time to pack those boxes and send em' home. Seniors begin to realize what they will miss about this town they have constantly complained about for four years. I'll miss Don Wayne and the second floor of the library, the mailman who once in awhile treated us to an early delivery, dirty bathtubs, and somehow Mr. Domino and his cardboard pizza. All in all apartment life has been a pleasant experience. In a period of eight months, close friends became even closer while we all found out a little bit more about ourselves. So thanks to those who made this past year a very special one. Gregg Mazzola

(Scott Moll)

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(Tom Frenz)

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Home, Sweet Ghetto Home! This is the first year I have spent outside the dorms, and so far off-campus living has proven a very good experience. Let the unwary be warned though: there are disadvantages even to such a sublime mode of existence as residency in the

ghetto. The difficulties in adjusting to differing personalities increases as the square of the number of housemates, but decreases in direct proportion to the number of bedrooms.

(Cathy Brophy)

(Doug Rechsteiner)

441 Feature

The only regular sources of mail are Ohio Bell and Dayton Power and Light. All mail other than bills will be addressed to former residents. Should mail actually arrive for current residents, it will never be as interesting as the mail sent to former residents. (James Gregory, beware! The collection agency just sent another notice.) Three housemates plus one topic of interest equal four hours of conversation and zero hours of study. The probability of finding a housemate at home varies inversely wit.h the extent of his extracurricular activities and his involvement with members of the opposite sex. The four housemates who do make their beds will never be convinced of the futility of the matter by the one housemate who does not. The number of luxury goods owned exists in a perverse ratio to the number of necessary goods. For example, my house began the year with four television sets, three toasters, and two stereos, but only one really good frying pan. The number of ideas at the beginning of the year about what should be done to the house will far exceed the time, energy, and money required to do them. "M * A *S * H" and "Monday Night Football" bring housemates together. Arlo Guthrie records do not. Declaring that dinner will in all cases be served at 5 p.m. guarantees that dinner will be served no Ilater than 8 p.m. The persons at the party across the street will invariably decide that the roof of your car is the very best place to set down their half-empty beer cups. Other persons at the same party will inevitably conclude that the hood of your car is the best place to pass out. On the following morning, you will conclude that Oakwood is the best place to park your car. No matter what you do to Kraft macaroni and cheese, it's still Kraft macaroni and cheese. No doubt those of you who hunger for a taste of ghetto life are still determined to leave the dorms a.s.a.p. Just remember, "I told you so" when you, ready for sleep, return to your ghetto house some night in the distant future, only to discover that your housemates are throwing a block party. Paul Reia


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Students Talk Up Organizations College life is usually quite a change from high school for most people. There is more freedom, but more responsibility. There is more to do socially, and more to do academically. College is a time to find yourself as an individual, but also to become a member of some type of group or organization. Here at the University of Dayton, over one hundred and fifty organizations exist for those students who wish to join. These groups range from honorary societies to sororities and fraternities, from service clubs to student publications. In order for students to join an organi-

zation, though, it is necessary that they first know about it. For this very reason, every September the University Activities Organization sponsors an Up The Organizations Day. From 11 :00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m., the KU plaza is buzzing with more than the usual excitement as numerous organizations set up booths to convey what they are all about. Posters are hung, displays are brought in, literature is given away - all in the hopes of recruiting prospective members for the newly begun school year. Tim Mueller, a junior from Cleveland, Ohio, remembers Up The Organizations

Day his freshman year as the time he first became acquainted with the many different organizations at the University of Dayton . And it was because of this awareness that Tim is now an active member of Tau Kappa Epsilon, the Public Relations Student Society of America, Big Brothers and Big Sisters of Dayton, and the Flyer News. "It's an excellent chance for new students at the University as well as returning ones to get a good taste of what UD is made of: involvement in organizations," commented Tim. Kathie Coates

(Sally McCaffrey)

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II

(Sally McCaffrey)

Student Event /47


UD Guys And Dolls Switch Roles

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Every winter, traditional sex roles switch as Turnabout activities take place at UD. Senior Christy O'Rourke describes Turnabout as a good-humored and less competitive counterpart to the traditional Homecoming celebration. As co-chairperson , O'Rourke had a lot to say about this year's Turnabout festivities. "Turnabout ," 0' Rourke explained, "is more of a campus-wide affair than some activities." The financial purpose of the celebration is to raise money for the R. K. Whetro Scholarship Fund, which is something most people do not know. Couples and singles alike are encouraged to participate in this entertainment event. Marcia Baumbarger of UAO reported that almost 1300 tickets were sold , for an estimated attendance at the dance of 2500. Planning for Turnabout activities begins in November. O' Rourke and co-chairperson Maureen Carr worked with at least a dozen campus organizations to ensure a successful affair. 0' Rourke had special praise for UAO, especially Ellie Kurtz, Marcia Baumbarger, and Ann Steiner, whom she said were " . .. a pleasure to work with." She also made special mention of the King's Committee chairperson

Tracy Howard for her work in recruiting the candidates, and to the candidates's campaign managers, who often go unrecognized. With all the extensive planning done, Turnabout 1983 was ready to roll. The theme this year was "Guys and Dolls." Wednesday and Thursday evenings during the last week of January, the candidates and their friends presented the king skits in Boll Theatre. The following Monday featured a showing of the musical film "Guys and Dolls." Tuesday night, the king candidates participated in a sporting event entitled "Duel with the Kings ." Thursday night, the KU snack bar was the scene for the Cuban Getaway, a local nightspot complete with Cuban dancers, a reggae band, nachos, and pina coladas. The climax to the previous events was the traditional dance, which took place Friday, February 4, at Wampler's Ballarena. O'Rourke said that the favors for the dance, red and black garter belts and water pistols, were tremendously popular, noting the number of squirtgun fights she witnessed that evening. Women in Communications, Inc., and the Pride of Day-

ton Club provided dance decorations. A new add ~tion this year was a photographic backdrop that was set up to enable the celebrants to take their own pictures. The king candidates were the highlight of the dance. When it came time to reveal the 1983 Turnabout King, the young men lined up next to each other, each one handcuffed, in keeping with the gangster theme of "Guys and Dolls." One by one a key was used to try to unlock the handcuffs of the men: Paul Curtin, Mike Saunders, John Scully, Cary Ford, Joe Keough, Chip Mardis, Mike Sewell, Jim Ziemba, John Hummer, Vince Zarcaro, Gary Collopy, Jim Gabel, and Nathan Grundy with John Kendall; (the last two ran together as the "New Odd Couple." ) Only Turnabout King John Hummer's could be unlocked, and at that point he was ceremoniously crowned. O'Rourke said that the candidates all had a lot of fun together. She also said that all of the guys kept the light-hearted spirit of Turnabout, making it an enjoyable event for everyone. Brad Gauder

Student Event / 49


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(Sally McCaffrey)

(Sally McCaffrey)

Student Event 151


WDCR/WVUD

WDCR (Sally McCaffrey)

WDCR (Bob Balz)

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The University of Dayton has an unusual quality that most other universities can't claim. It not only has one radio station, but two. WDCR-AM 64 is student run, and WVUD-FM 100 is operated by a professional staff. General manager for WDCR, Scott Rolle, the first junior to be chosen to fill this position, said WDCR is bigger than it ever was. The station 's roots go back six to eight years. WDCR is a carrier current station; it is heard only in campus buildings with special transmitters. In 1981-82 the station operated from 2 p.m. until 11 p.m. five days a week. In 1982-83, broadcast time was increased to 12 hours per day, seven days a week. The station is now heard in Kennedy Union, whereas in previous years 路 it was not. WDCR airs advertisements for food service facilities in exchange for broadcasting WDCR during mealtimes. The station has eight departments. Department heads during 1982-83 included Ron Alexander, promotions and sales (two departments); Steve Geers, engineering; Joe Hammill, production; Tracy Hurd, programming; Mark Kraus, sports; Kevin Power, news; and Mike Savino, music. The largest department in WDCR is programming . It is responsible for everything that goes on the air. All university students are welcome to work at WDCR. "The people who work at WDCR are some of the best people UD has. Their enthusiasm is fantastic," says Rolle. Rolle's job as general manager entails various roles. He guides everyone at the station, handles monetary matters, and implements new projects. "Without a doubt it's the most experience I've had. To manage 100 people at this stage of


Live At UD my life is very challenging and rewardin9'. " WDCR is funded by a budget from the university. The station also has various fundraisers throughout the year. Some of these include the haunted house, PIIgrams, Paddy-o-grams, and plant and carpet sales. WVUD-FM 100 has been in existence since 1962. One significant difference between WDCR and WVUD is that the latter is a 50,000 watt radio station and is operated by a professional staff. Mike McMurray, program director for WVUD, has been there since September 1982. He was previously employed by WHIO. Most university radio stations are non-profit. It is extremely rare for a university to own a radio station that is run by a professional staff, according to McMurray. When McMurray came to WVUD in September, it was the lowest rated radio station in the Miami Valley. By the following Spring, it was the second most popular station for the demographic area it is targeted on: the 18-34 year olds. McMurray feels that two of the reasons WVUD has improved in the ratings are consistency and a professional attitude by the staff. WVUD currently employs 20 University of Dayton students. It is hard for a student to become an employee at the station since few positions are available. However, some of the jobs they held are disc jockey, public service director, continuity writer, engineer, and positions in the sales and production departments. The two radio stations at the University of Dayton are things to be proud of because they are expertly run by dedicated staff, exemplifying the uniqueness of our UD community.

ri-' :::.

J

WVUD (Bob Batz)

WVUD (Bob Batz)

Feature/53


Ne,w Event Benefits The, Ronald McDonald House Many traditional events clutter the cal- Miller High Life Rock Series supported the endars and empty the pocketbooks of UD event by not only sponsoring another students each year. No fall would be com- band, Jump, but by donating free hats, plete without Campus Carnival or Okto- cups, and t-shirts. berfest ; Christmas on Campus always Over $350 was raised for the Ronald warms a cold, wintery December; and McDonald House which is totally depenspring without Springfest just isn't t~e dent on community contributions to sursame. This year, a new event was held In vive. The House, located across from the the hopes that it, too, will become a tradi- Children'S Medical Center, offers accomtion at UD. On the evening of March 25, a modations to the out-of-town families of usually quiet field house came alive with children who are hospitalized at the centhe activities of Winterfest '83. What ter. The money is used for food, house makes this event a little non-traditional, upkeep, and payment of non-volunteer but definitely worth noting, is that the en- personnel. Most of the organizations that tire affair was a benefit for the Ronald participated in Winterfest '83 donated McDonald House of Dayton . anywhere from half to all of their profits Sponsored by Delta Omega Tau, a lo- which, along with the beer proceeds, cal socia ~ service sorority, Winterfest '83 made up the $350 donation to the Ronald drew the participation of twenty-two cam- McDonald House. pus organizations. In add ition, After In order to raise their donation, the varHours, a band composed of UD students, ious organizations set up booths inside offered their services for free while the the field house and offered a full range of

54/Feature

games and goodies to UD students. Everything from traditional cotton candy to the maybe not-so-traditional macho nachos was served to satisfy the appetites of the fest-goers. And for those in a bit of the competitive mood, ring tosses, basketball throws, raffles, and the like were offered to tempt each passer-by. The event ran from 7:00 p.m. to midnight and was, many people felt, a surprising success. Marjorie Klee , a senior DOT from Fort Mitchell, KY, commented that there was already a long line when she started selling beer tickets at the beginning of the night. And anyone who worked the beer truck could tell you that they were so busy serving they hardly had a chance to have a beer themselves. Marie Gallo, Vice President of Services for Delta Omega Tau, and the chairwoman and brain behind the whole event, was very happy with Winterfest '83. She felt it was an "overwhelming success. I' m very pleased, since it was the first year we've ever sponsored this and hopefully it will continue into a DOT tradition ." Not only a DOT tradition, but if this year's success is any indication, Winterfest will more than likely become a traditional event on every UD student's calendar. Kathie Coates


Founders Holl (p.JnCJI

+Cfese~'

WIN MUGS .., if of j on (Sally MeCa!路! rey)

/

Feature/55


Reality Sets In As Seniors Graduate College has often been referred to as being separate from the "real world", a four year existence oblivious to the rest of society. In this separate world are papers to be written, classes to be attended, parties to go to, but rarely do students involve themselves beyond these collegiate experiences. Sometime during senior year, though, an awareness of the "real world" sets in, and seniors rush to buy interview suits, print resumes, and research potential employers. It used to be that a college graduate was viewed as having a secure future, with probably five or six job offers from which to choose. Those days are over, however, and today's college graduate is faced with even more insecurity and uncertainty than ever before.

Lori Coder, a senior nutrition and business administration major from Avon Lake, Ohio, admitted during a six-hour trip to a job interview that she is very concerned about her future and that the employment opportunities in her field are vague, at best. "The very thought about going out in the real world," Lori says, "is ominous." Echoing her sentiments were Mary-Ellen Luken and Maureen Johnson as they sat idly in the snack bar one day. They cited their mounting bills and continuing dependence on their parents as the core of their frustrations concerning the uncertain employment opportunities of the future. One of their housemates, accounting major Ann Lowry from Syracuse, New

(Sally McCaffrey)

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York, is fortunate that she doesn't need to worry about the things her friends are concerned about, however. Unlike most college graduates, Ann landed a job with the first firm w,ith which she interviewed, a Big 8 accounting firm at that. After only two interviews with them, one in Dayton and one in Syracuse, Ann received an offer of employment on Chr,istmas Eve. She admits that was the best Christmas present she got that year! In addition, "It's made this last semester a lot easier," says Ann with a sense of relief. When asked how she felt about the job prospects of others not as fortunate as herself, Ann felt that as soon as people are able to devote all their time to looking for a job, they should have no problem. She felt that it is often hard to go to school and look for a job at the same time. In addition to devoting the time needed to get a good job, Rick Morsches, a civil engineering major from Toledo, Ohio, cited other factors which he felt were helpful in getting a job. He said that he believed good credentials are necessary today, not only high grades, but also work experience and extra-curricular activities. He said that a civil engineering degree is certainly not as marketable as it used to be and that it was definitely his credentials that gave him the extra edge needed to land his job. The extra edge is needed not only to get a job but also to be accepted at a graduate or professional school, the choice of many of today's graduates. With jobs becoming so hard to find, many students are turning to more schooling as either a way in which to gain the level of education they need to get the job they desire, or as a means of passing jobless time. Marie Gallo, a senior from Stubenville, Ohio, is one graduate who has made the choice to continue her education . Marie is a religious studies major and will be attending UD to receive a Master of theological studies degree. To help finance her graduate studies, Marie will be working as a graduate assistant in the University's religious studies department. Marie feels that the choice to continue her education was an easy one, that there is a definite need for higher education with both the job market and today's economy the way they are. "I feel higher education will be an asset," commented Marie. Although people kid her about just postponing the inevitable by going to school, she feels that with the proper education,


she should have no trouble at all getting a job in her field. One person who doesn't need to worry about getting a job quite yet is Keith Fitzgerald , a senior from Matawan, New Jersey. Although this is Keith's fourth year at UD, he is not graduating . He will be what is known as a fifth year senior next year, something which is becoming more and more common all over the country. For Keith , a physical education major, it was soccer and hockey practices that made completing all of his degree requirements in four years difficult . Keith said he does get a little depressed at times, knowing that all of his friends are graduating and he is not . As for his future plans, Keith doesn 't feel he'll have any advantage over anyone else by waiting a year to graduate. All it will buy him, he says, is a little extra time. It is in that little extra time, though. that the economy may pick up, to make getting hired for that certain job or into that certain graduate school just a bit easier. Kathie Coates

Feature/57


The Name Of The Game For the second year in a row, U.D. captured top honors at the prestigious Emory Intercollegiate Business Games, at Emory University in Atlanta, March 4 and 5. Sponsored by the Graduate Business Association at Emory, and now in its 18th year, the competition is designed tor business majors who wish to test their business and industry decision-making skills against other students. Associate professor of finance Thomas Wright, who served as the U.D. team's advisor, explained that each year the competition consists of a simulation of an important industrial sector. This year, the games were focused on the hand-held calculator industry for the years 1972 to 1974. Wright termed the simulation "richly complex." Equally complex is the preparation that participating schools must undertake for this annual event. Professor Wright discussed this process in detail. In October of each academic year, an invitation is extended to all students enrolled in the School of Business Administration with a G.P.A. of at least 3.0. Last autumn, 30 students expressed an interest in the Emory games. From then until the Christmas break, Wright spent his Friday afternoons in-

58/Feature

structing students on the complexities of the competition. When the announcement came just before Christmas that the simulation would focus on the calculator industry, 14 eligible students remained as potential team members. Through a careful selection process that included peer evaluations, Wright whittled the number of team members down to ten. They included seniors Carol Tuffy, Chris Schweitzer, Ken Corby, Dave Menker, Becky Berens, Bob Buckman, Tom Blackford, and Cyndi Niquette, and juniors Kathy Ryan and Dave Bornhorst. Tuffy, Blackford, and Niquette were returnees from 1982' s equally successful team. Juniors Bornhorst and Ryan were chosen to add continuity to next year's team. Wright's official duty was that of advisor only; he was not ethically permitted to participate in the competition with the students. He added with a smile that even without any "advising," many of the team members began doing. much of the required research over the Christmas ho'lidays. Beginning early in January, the team commenced work on the part of the competition that occurs before the trip to At-

lanta. This consisted of submitting ten quarterly statements of bUSiness plans via computer to Emory University, each Monday and Thursday prior to the March competition. Wright mentioned that this preliminary work constituted 40 percent of the overall scoring. During these weeks, Wright said that each team member spent an average of at least 20 hours each week "grappling with the competitive environment ," and they they had "multitudes of questions to ponder." The remaining 60 percent of the scoring took place at the finals. While at Emory University the first weekend in March, each team had to make formal presentations of not more than 25 minutes to a panel of judges. Each team selected four of its ten members to conduct the presentation. U. D.'s were Blackford, who served as the company president, and Corby, Menker and Berens, who handled the areas of marketing, production, and finance. A total of 28 teams from all over the nation, including two teams from Canada and one from the Netherlands, participated this year. They were divided into four industry groups, so throughout most of the competition, each school competed against six others. U.D.'s opponents were Oklahoma Christian College, Harding University, Hendrix College, and Pacific University from the U.S. Simon Fraser University, from Canada; and I.H.B.O. De Maere, from Enchede, Netherlands. While an industry and presentation


champion was selected in each of the four groups, an overalll winner was chosen as well. Wright explained that this decision was determined by a set of 30 equations that indicated how the students p'lanned to operate their industry. Wright expressed disappointment with the final criteria, which he said emphasized the quantitative more than the qualitative, but that even though U. D. did not win, he was very pleased with their performance, adding, "They couldn't have done a better job given the situation." The final awards were made known March 5. The overall winner was Wake Forest University, which also won in their industry group. The other industry winners included College of William and Mary, Millsaps College, and of course, the University of Dayton. U.D., however, had the additional distinction of winning the best presentation award for its industry group. Wright said that it was these same two awards that U.D. won last year, and that the team members "played to win, and they did." Following the awards presentation was a celebration, U.D. style. Wright claimed that he did not get much sleep that night, but that all the effort was more than worth the final outcome, so he didn't mind. Next year will be U.D.'s seventh appearance at the Emory Intercollegiate Business Games. The team will have high expectations to live up to. - Brad Gauder

IS E' mory

(Sally McCaffrey)

(Sally McCaffrey)

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(University Communications)

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UD Services Minister To Campus Needs When people think of the word "team ," they think of unity and unselfishness between the players. At the University of Dayton, the Campus Ministry Team has never kicked a field goal nor shot a free throw, yet every year they came up with a winning season. Led by the Director of Campus Ministry Father Joseph Lackner and nine other members, the team shares various responsibilities and duties. The mission of Campus Ministry is to lead the university in fostering a faith community among its members. In order to achieve this mission, the ministry is involved in a number of services. One of the more popular areas which the team devotes time is through the 17 service organizations coordinated by

Brother Don Smith. He estimates that between 700 and 750 students are active participants in these organizations. Although a majority of these club members are undergraduate students, graduates do take part in the fun . These clubs are designed to reach out to the community and provide a service which is normally unavailable to the citizens in the city of Dayton and surrounding areas. Anne Wilke, a senior and the President of KIDS Club, a group which serves the Dayton Area Boy's Club sums up her reasons for joining, "It was a good opportunity to give service to the people as a community and to those less fortunate." She also mentioned that these organizations gave her a chance to become involved when she was a freshman and

helped her make new friends immediately. Some of the other services these organizations provide include: reading to the blind , the aiding of children with Cystic Fibrosis, and becoming a Big Brother or Big Sister. In addition to working as a coordinator for these activities, Bro. Don Smith helps recruit members for the clubs, provides transportation, and maintains the vehicles. He also works closely with the clubs' officers to help them plan special events or to just sit and listen to members from various clubs talk about their previous activities or anything that interests the organizations. With these services, Campus Ministry provides opportunities for prayer, the celebration of the sacraments, retreat ex(Con!.)

(Kara Masters)

(Sally McCaffrey)

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(Sally McCa ffrey)

periences, and pastoral counseling. Fr. Lackner is responsible for organizing sacramental services. Lacker tries to reach out and spiritually touch the university community. He says the best way is through weekend masses which more than 2,300 students usually attend. He estimates that approximately 70 students are involved as lectors (readers at the mass), and the same number of students become ministers of communion. And to make the mass complete, 125 musicians add their lyrical touch to weekend celebrations at the university. These students obviously enjoy sharing their special talents with U. D. "It is the positive attitude of these young people," said Fr. Lackner, "that makes this ministry such a suc-

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cess." There are often times during a student's four-year stay at the university when problems develop and there is no one to talk to. The Ministry provides pastoral counseling in which a student can sit with a member of the staff and discuss their problem. And students can also participate in retreats, Bible study groups or prayer groups if they enjoy listening to others and sharing their own thoughts. Campus Ministry also plays the role of educator by providing seminars and the Lecture Series in which speakers from the Ministry staff as well as community leaders share their insight and knowledge on a particular subject. According to Fr. Lackner, for the Campus Ministry to be a

(University Communications)

success, it must be a visible source for students who want to participate and for those who enjoy the special services they provide. Because student activity in Campus Ministry has increased and the number of service organizations has also risen in the past couple of years, describing the Ministry as a success would certainly be an understatement. So, although they will never have a 50-game winning streak, nor will they be the topic of conversation for sports buffs around the country, the University of Dayton's Campus Ministry Team has earned a winning reputation.

-

Gregg Mazzola


Feature/63


Taking A Gamble

/

64/Student Event

Once a year, gambling becomes legal on the UD campus when Friendly Floyd makes his visit to the Kennedy Union Ballroom for an evening of Blackjack and other casino delights. Under the coordination of Accounting Club President Mike Collier, Friendly Floyd popped into town Friday evening, February 11. Collier explained that this year's Monte Carlo was a more cooperative effort than in years past. Whereas responsibilities for Friendly Floyd's had always been divided between the Accounting Club and UAO, Collier emphasized that this year, those responsibilties were shared. He credited Mike Wagner from UAO for his part in fostering the cooperative spirit. Essentially, Friendly Floyd's is the Accounting Club's baby. Approximately 65 club members participated in the preparation and presentation of the event. Senior Renee Hammer and junior Jack Baglieri chaired the activities. Collier said that a conscious effort is made to have junior Accounting Club members involved. "That way," he continued, "Friendly Floyd's has a sense of continuity from year to year." An estimated 400 students attended the 1983 Floyd's celebration. For three hours that February evening, they played with chance on tables of Blackjack, OverUnder, Chuck-a-Luck, Showdown, and Beat the Dealer. The last half hour featured unlimited betting so that "unlucky" gamblers could recoup some of their fake if they were finally paper earnings lucky, of course. Toward the end of the evening, the "money" was exchanged for money vouchers. Accumulated earnings were then used by participants in the auction. Collier mentioned that a good deal of time and effort went into securing the items for the auction block. These included prize packages from beer distributors, gift certificates provided by food and retail establishments, and short-term free use of rental automobiles. Although no admission was charged, Friendly Floyd's netted the Accounting Club $650, which Collier said goes into a scholarship fund established for Accounting Club members. He gave praise to a good publicity team and the cooperative spirit as being reasons for the continued success of Friendly Floyd's. Maybe gambling just once a year is a good thing for the UD community. At any rate, it is an important tradition for the University of Dayton. Brad Gauder


Student Event / 65


The Greek Way Of Life Rushing: At last, the first week of a new semester. Arrive on Monday, classes start on Wednesday, and no real work for at least another week. What will I do all week? PARTY! What's my condition at the end of the week? BROKE. How will I party next weekend? RUSHES . To many UD students, for one reason or another, the second weekend of the semester is very important. Fraternity rushing begins then, and sororities start soon after that. UD fraternity "rushing" is different from that of almost any other university. There are no name tags, themes, or rituals. Instead, UD frats "do it up" with a few kegs, no girls, and an active foosball table. Why go to a fraternity rush? Some rushers will testify to the low price of admittance. As most of us know, rushes usually serve free refreshments with the admittance fee being a signature on an attendance sheet which, more often than not, gets lost the next day's cleanup. One must question why the fraternities spend three weeks trying to spoon feed the male population at UD their favorite brew. The answer lies in the few who listen to what each fraternity has to say. The big message - JOIN US. Rushing, for the Greek system, is a form of active recruitment, a recruitment hopefully leading to the pledging of the rest of one's college career to brotherhood.

Concerning sorority rushing, tradition is more prevalent; theme rushes exist and bids are used. Whether it's a "formal rush" attended only by invitation, or an M & M Rush drawing a crowd of girls from the entire campus, the purpose of sorority rushing doesn't change. The message is still there: JOIN US. Just as the fraternities do, the sororities make their pitch, serve their brew, and hope that the final recruitment is a success. The biggest difference between UD rushing and rushing on other campuses is that at UD, rushers are a method of invitation to join, not a selection process for the right to join. Rushing itself, however, is only the first step to brotherhood or sisterhood . Once the prospect is recruited , a whole new process starts. The rushes were fun, the recruiting is over, the kegs are spent, and, finally, what every active Greek member has been waiting for comes: Pledging. Pledging ranks as one of the least understood activities by most of the student body, but to a select few, it is a way of life. Lasting from four to ten weeks, it can tear apart or bring together the individual fraternity or sorority involved. It can be mind-boggling, silly to look at, and ridiculous in meaning, yet the most important activity to the Greek minority here at UD. From the outside, the badges, pins, books, and bows are all that can be seen.

What is heard is "mister," "sir," and "miss," or sometimes nothing at all; the whisper is too quiet. If one is lucky enough to live next door to a Greek house, late night sleep has a tendency to be interrupted by late night activities that can't, won't, and probably never will be, explained . It's all a secret. Pledging can also be looked at from the inside. From the pledge's point of view, it is life. Whether the goal be brotherhood or sisterhood, the methods and means of attaining that goal are religion during the pledge period . Like any other common or decent goal, in order for it to be reached, it must be earned, even if earning it means carrying a bowling ball around campus for a day. As for the active member's viewpoint, it is a time to check stamina, the abilities and intentions of each pledge, even if that means having a dishwasher or delivery service for six weeks. But most importantly, for both the pledges and members, pledging serves a special purpose and creates a common bond that is hard to describe. From the outside, the feeling is intangible and unreachable, but from the inside, all involved are aware of it. What happens in pledging to create this feeling? Well, that is a secret only known to each individual fraternity or sorority. Weeks of work, leading to "Hell Week" and finally to "Hell Night" creates this feeling and is what the "secret" is all about.

Michael Gallagher

(Sally McCaffrey)

661 Feature


(Sally McCaffrey)

(Sally McCaffrey)

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Where Is The Black Box? "Hey, I'd like to audition for Twelfth Night tomorrow. It's a comedy by Shakespeare. It's says here auditions will be in the . . . Studio Theater. Where the heck is the Studio Theater?" "Beats me buddy. I've been here for three years and I've never heard of it, Bob. Let's go to the snackbar and grab a brew and some fries." "Joe, look. This could be my big chance. How can I aUdition if I don't know where this place is?" "Bob, who cares? Uh ... yeah, I'll take a Bud and some fries .. . " However, Joe could see that Bob did ,indeed care. "Okay, Bob, if it means that much to you we will find out, okay? Grab a brew, down it, and we'll go up to Boll and ask if they know where this mysterious theater is. They oughta know - those theater people always hang together anyway." Bob did as Joe recommended . He grabbed a brew, downed it and went up to Boll. Bob asked the first person he saw

Twelfth Night, but the auditions are tomorrow, if that's what you want to know." "In this place? I mean like, the auditions are right here? But the show, the actual show, I mean that's in Boll right?" Bob was pretty curious as to how they could possibly put on a full scale Shake-

spearean production in such a small "theater. " "No," Shelly said. "The show will be in here too. I know it's small, but I believe the size won't really be a problem. We've got everything worked out." "Do they usually do a lot of plays in

"The studio? Oh, you mean the Black Box? Well, it's over in the Music and Theater building." "Is that by the Post Office?" asked Joe. "No, it's between the Engineering, Building and Baujan Field." "Oh, yeah, that little square box! I know where it is now. Hey, thanks a lot." The two boys were both ready to tackle the unknown building. "Let's go check it out now Joe, so I get used to the place. I'll be less nervous tomorrow if I get used to it." "All right Bob, let's cruise over." A few minutes later Bob and Joe walked through the sliding glass doors and down the hallway to the Studio Theater. They walked through the double doors and past the theater office, straight into the Studio Theater. "Now I know why they call it the black box. The doors, the curtains, and even the walls are black. Joe, what do you think of this place?" "Well for starters, it's kinda small. Where do they fit the audience? It looks like a square room to me, except for the rows of lights and curtains." "Hello, can I help you with something? You looking for someone?" a small girl asked while walking, ,into the studio. "Who are you?" asked Joe. "My name's Shelley. I'm directing (Sally McCaffrey)

68/Feature


here? I mean, I've never been in this building before." "Well, the studio is a subdivision of PYA. A lot of things go on in here. Directing class assignments are performed in here. This place gives people who have never acted, directed, or done technical work a chance to experiment. It's a good place to get practical theater experience, meet new friends, and have a good time too. It's a great learning place," Shelley explHined. "That sounds excellent. I wanted to be involved with this for awhile now, but I

never knew where to go. I'll be here tomorrow for auditions," Bob said . "Even if you don't get a part, there are so many things to be involved with. You could work on the scenery, or props, maybe even assist directing. Be sure and come back," Shelley said. "Thanks for telling us everything. I appreciate it," Bob spouted. "See you later." "Yeah, later on," Joe threw in. "Hey, you know Bob, " Joe continued, "this place really isn't that bad." "Who said it was bad, Joe."

"Well, Bob, I was just making a point. Hey, uh , you mind if I come with you tomorrow night? Just for some moral support say?" "Joe ... you want to audit'i on?" "Well, I may give it a try." "I 'll meet you here tomorrow. Who knows Joe, you could be the best Shakespearean actor UD has ever seen. When you're famous be sure to tell the mUltitudes that you got your 'break' in the black box at UD - the place no one's ever heard of."

Cathy Brophy

Feature/59


Flying Ahead To Capture The News

(Craig Welch)

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What once started out as a one-typewriter operation has blossomed into a conglomeration of closet-like offices and computer-age machinery. Known as the UD News in the mid 1900's, the Flyer News is now one of the better-known organizations on the UD campus. Categorized under Student Development, the Flyer News itself works in a chain of command, from news and sports reporters to department editors to the editor-in-chief. Included among these are six columnists, three of whom write for the Tuesday editions and three who write for the Friday editions. Tom Biedenharn, 1982-83 editor-inchief, explained that while everyone on the staff is responsible to someone, it is he who is "ultimately responsible for everything that the paper does." Serving as a liaison between the Flyer News and the University, Biedenharn said that his 35 to 40 hours on the job each week are spent mostly overseeing the daily running of the paper. Managing editor Ken Weatherford sees his job as an assistant editor of sorts. While he does not have a staff per se under himself, Weatherford is involved in planning many events for the Flyer News, including workshops and the UD bloodbank. Working an average of 30 hours each week for the newspaper, Weatherford, like all the other editors, receives partial tuition remission as compensation for his efforts. The editorial board of the Flyer News has several responsibilities. These include deciding editorial opinions, Flyer News policies, and grievance handling. It is composed of 15 members, including the editor-in~chief, the managing editor, news and assistant news editors, sports and assistant sports editors, copy editors, feature editor, business manager, and advertising manager. Editorial board meetings are held regularly, particularly to vote on the editorial for the upcoming edition. Throughout its history, the University newspaper's basic purpose has not c'hanged. According to Biedenharn, "The Flyer News serves as a voice to the students, to inform them, and so they can voice their own opinions. It educates students on what's going on and tells them how they can get involved." In the 1920's UD's student news publication was known as the UD News. A major revamping of the staff and its internal policies during the 1954-55 school year resulted in a slightly different publication called the Dayton Flyer. The final name change occurred in late 1959 when under another revamping , the name was changed to the Flyer New •. At the present, the Flyer News occu-


(Craig Welch)

(Cra ig Welch)

pies small offices on the second floor of Kennedy Union. Up there, one can experience the journalistic atmosphere, what with various metal machinery guarding the paper scraps on the floor, while pressured staff writers and editors frantically rush to meet their deadlines. Since the Flyer News comes out on Tuesday and Friday each week , the staff has two "deadline nights" - Sundays and Wednesdays. These are the livelier nights in the Flyer News office, when Biedenharn says he often doesn't close up shop until 1 or 2 a.m. Staff writers are given assignments by their respective editors, who review the finished assignments. Both copy editors then read and reread absolutely everything that is to be printed.

The stories are typed on Mini Disc Terminals (MOTs) and then everything which will be reproduced on newsprint (except photographs) is typeset by what is called a Trendsetter machine. All of these pieces are then carefully pasted on layout sheets. The layout sheets are then taken to the Beavercreek Daily News, in suburban Beavercreek, for the final printing of all copy and photographs. 5000 copies are printed for each edition and are distributed around the university. Biedenharn pointed out that as recently as two years ago, the Beavercreek Daily News did all of the work such as the paste-ups of layouts and the MDT work, in addition to printing the semi-weekly publication. He feels that the Flyer News

(Craig Welch)

staff is qUite fortunate to have these improvements. That, coupled with a maze of offices and a photography darkroom, makes for a fairly pleasant facility for a small college newspaper. Biedenharn proudly stated, " People can get great experience here." One advantage that Biedenharn feels that the Flyer News staff has over a professional newspaper staff is the absence of competition. "People (here) accept the fact that we're here for experience. We're not here to compete with each other." This sounds like a good sign, because working for the Flyer News involves a lot of elbow-rubbing in an all out effort to keep the UD community informed. - Brad Gauder

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New Disease Infects UD And Nation An empty beer can lies in the gutter, before things such as the need for better rusting into nothingness, and no one facilities, budget restrictions, poor relatakes the time to pick it up and throw it tions between students and administrainto the trash can two feet away. A soror- tion, weakening academic programs, and ity with over fifty active members holds a alcohol abuse. In fact, none of these meeting and only fourteen show up, not problems ranked even close to that of even enough for the quorum needed to student apathy, and it has been like this vote. The widespread blue seen in the for four straight years. "'A lot of activities student section at basketball games is are hindered because the student will not not fans sporting their team's colors, but receive something tangible, so he does rather the empty seats of absent stu- not get involved,'" according to a student dents. These are just a few examples of a leader quoted in the Report. "What's in it "disease" afflicting college campuses to- for me?" is a common question at many day, one ranked as the number one cam- campus activities. Unless the student pus problem in a national survey of stu- foresees some direct benefit of participadent government leaders and student tion, many students won't get involved in newspaper editors by the National On- organizations, activities, or movements. Part of the problem of student apathy Campus Report. This disease has no fancy name which is impossible to spell, stems from a new attitude which prevails no miracle drug to cure it, and probably on campuses today. Gone are the days of doesn't even concern a lot of students. sit-in demonstrations and antiwar moveThis is precisely the problem - student ments. Concern over worldly political issues has lessened as securing one's perapathy. In the survey mentioned above, a total sonal future becomes a priority. In the January 31, 1983, issue of U.S. of 23 % of the student government leaders and student newspaper editors ques- News and World Report, an article entitioned cited student apathy as the num- tled "Why It's All Quiet On the Campus ber one campus problem today, placing it Front" cites "the determined pursuit of

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diplomas on college campuses contrasts sharply with the student marches, sit-ins, and clashes with police of the tumultuous 1960's and early 1970's." At the core of it all is economics, whereby "inflation and recession have turned students' attention from world politics to personal finance," according to U.S. News. Once again, unless a personal benefit is wrought, many students remain uninterested. This is not to say that students today are cold, callous, and uncaring. but rather. it is often out of necessity that students are apathetic. In a separate article in the same magazine. David Riesman. a Harvard sociologist and education expert. stated that students are less active because they are worried about their futures. It is often economically necessary for students today to channel their time and energy into part- or full-time jobs to finance their education, leaving little time or energy for anything else. Unlike many diseases of epidemic proportions, student apathy does not strike only a certain region of the country or type of environment. Student apathy is a nation-wide problem.


Kent State University will always remember May 4, 1970 - the day the National Guard killed four antiwar demonstrators. "Candlelight vigils still attract large crowds to mark the anniversary of the slayings on the Commons ... But political demonstrations generally hold little appeal for the nearly 20,000 students enrolled now," reports U.S. News. What does appeal to this once radical campus is the pursuit of both academic excellence and physical fitness. In the 1960' sand 70' s, "Is it relevant?" was the common classroom question, while today "Will it be on the next exam?" is the big concern. U.S. News quoted one freshman coed who stated that she favors a nuclear freeze but is too busy with class work to attend rallies. It is this kind of attitude which has students "standing in line Sunday mornings to get into the library and swarming into the long wings of the Student Center to study qUietly," according to U.S. News. And it is because of students' concern for future security that this attitude prevails. On the west coast, this shift in attitude is highly evident at the University of California at Berkeley, the birthplace of the 1960's campus rebellion. The days of the tense student-police confrontations which were common a decade ago are gone, with twice as many students now identifying themselves as conservative, as opposed to the leftist participants of ten years ago. According to U.S. News, "To taunts that they are not concerned enough with the ills of the wor'ld, students respond that the affluence of the '60s meant jobs would be available after graduation - a form of security no longer existing. " The fact that society doesn't welcome graduates with open arms anymore has changed the atmosphere of the University of Wisconsin at Madison, also. On a campus where job recruiters were once leery of coming for fear of protests against big business, students' reactions have now taken on a "the more, the better" attitude. Gene Weil, a former student government president and December graduate, stated in U.S. News "'I don't think there's much soul-searching about jobs. If it pays money, they're going to take it. '" Robert Taylor, a journalism professor who headed the university public relations office during the chaotic days of the 1960s, summed up the atmosphere of UW's campus today in U.S. News by stating that, above all, '''students are trying to achieve, trying to make something of their lives, not enmasse but personally.'" The instances cited above may not ap-

(Sally McCaffrey)

pear to be apathy but rather just a shifting of students' concerns. In some cases this may be so. Unless it is kept in proper perspective, though, this attitude of the future-oriented "Me" generation all too often becomes so prevalent that a great deal of student apathy does result. Organizations are still joined, but only because it looks good on the resume. Creativity abounds - in the form of finding original excuses for getting out of tests. And campus newspapers are still anxiously awaited, especially those issues with pizza coupons inside. It is this kind of apathy that is the fatal disease concerning so many student government leaders and student newspaper editors across the nation. It is also this kind of apathy which is beginning to plague the University of Dayton. UD, the quiet midsized midwest Catholic university, has become so quiet that one sometimes wonders if its students are caring, feeling human beings at all. One organization on campus recently held a food drive for the needy for which four of its fifty members showed up to participate. Two days earlier, however, over half attended a social event at which they

were able to drink for free. Many other organizations don't pretend anymore that they'll have people willing to participate in the annual clean sweeps, so they don't even sign up for them. It is also becoming quite common for only one person to run for a student government office for which, in years past, several students used to vie. To make matters worse, only about a third of the student body even takes the time to vote for the people who will be running campus activities, monitoring academic programs, and handling student issues. The list of instances of student apathy at UD is probably unending. More tales could be told of the empty seats at free sporting events or the unanswered questionnaires and teacher evaluations. Continued examples, however, will do nothing to cure this disease which has become so prevalent at colleges everywhere, including UD. And unless a cure is found, and found soon, the medical journals of the future win be forced to report on the biggest outbreak of a fatal disease ever known to mankind.

Kathie Coates

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UD Dancers Help To Fight MD Go! Fight! Win! These words, echoed sheet they signed had read, "We fought on football fields and basketball courts the fight, we danced all night." Prizes, everywhere, are also quite appropriate such as stereos and two trips from "Daywhen describing a dance, a very special ton to Daytona" donated by Student Asdance, held for some very special people. sociation, were awarded to the couples. The event: the sixth annual dance mara- Marybeth Uveges and Chris Wittman lead thon, the date: March 25-26, 1983, the the way as the first place couple, and the home team: The University of Dayton Cir- Association for Computing Machinery cle K Club, the opponent: Muscular Dys- and Aid To Special People placed first and second respectively in the organizatrophy. From the word "Go" last October, the tional contest. 105 member Circle K Club dedicated over 1700 hours of hard work and enthusiasm to this annual rivaling battle against Muscular Dystrophy. Under the "coaching" staff of John Dougherty, Dance Marathon Chairman, and Rob Sills, Assistant Chairman, Circle K members joined a team of 13 committees, from programming to clean up, to complete the line-up and to make the dance successful. In the weeks that followed their start in October, Circle K'ers could be found sitting at tables in KU to recruit dancers, knocking on businesses' doors in hopes thay they would donate food or prizes, shouting out of microphones in the KU plaza behind the theme song from "Rocky," blowing up balloons, decorating the bookstore window, and mailing out letter after letter after letter. In return, Circle K received a very special letter and $100 donation from UD alumnus Erma Bombeck. When the dance, with the theme "Fight MD," began at 8:00 p.m. on March 25, over 132 couples had joined the fight. The stage was decorated like a boxing ring, and the only person missing was Sylvester Stallone. but UD's own Michael Bisson, Master of Ceremonies, was there to take his place. Also in attendance at ringside were Dayton Mayor Paul Leonard, City Commissioner Richard Zimmer, UD President Brother Raymond Fitz, Honorary Chairman D.L. Stewart, and most importantly, the MD poster child Brad Adkins. He is what the fight was all about. Throughout the 12 hours, the couples danced to Scripto Productions, squaredanced, limboed, participated in hula contests and hairy leg contests, and danced and danced and danced. While many of the couples fought to keep their eyes open, their feet moving, or for a couch to lay on when their break rolled around, the enthusiasm in the ballroom remained. As each tote board was posted to the cheers of the dancers, the dollars Signaled yet another strike against MD. At 8:00 a.m. on March 26, the dancers, moving to the song, "Last Dance," had completed their 12 round battle. As the

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But the dancers weren't the only winners. When the final total was counted, over $10,800 had been raised for MDA. This amount, added to Circle K's previous donations, totals over $60,000 that Oircle K has raised for MDA in six years. More importantly, though, it is raised in hopes that the MD children's fight will also be won, or that it will be made easier. Because for many, the fight has just begun.

Theresa Reynolds


(Sally McCaffrey)

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Blood, Sweat, And Tears You walk in and, half confidently, half nervously, survey the competition. Assuming an air of nonchalance, you complete your form - previous experience, eye color, hair color - "Oh no! He wants to know my weight! Suppose I'm too fat or too thin or too young or too old or too pretty or too ugly or . . . suppose I'm just not good enough?" Theatre. Auditioning is only the first step; it's long, tedious, and sometimes nerve-tearing, but essential. Then callbacks. The field is narrowed, the competition tougher, the losing out just a little harder to bear. And finally a cast list. Long-held breath is exhaled and now the real, work begins. During the day, Boll Theatre is alive with the sounds of hammers and electric saws; during the night, with the sounds of what will be the life of the production. Students as well as construction materials are being shaped and joined together to form a cohesive, workable unit. What you see when you attend a UD theatre production is only the ecstatic culmination of weeks of strenuous work on the part of many students and faculty members. What you see when you attend a UD theatre production is a labor of love.

UD's 1982-83 theatre season indeed held many exciting moments for all concerned - especially the audience. In November, audiences witnessed one of the first incidents of civil disobedience in this country, as carried out by philosopher and writer Henry David Thoreau in The Night Thoreau Spent in Jail. But far from being the droning, moraiistic story one might expect, the story began and ended on a cheerful, optimistic note. The richness and depth of the individual performances was added to by imaginative staging and slide projections during a Mexican War scene, where even the audience got shot. The staging of jail cell scenes juxtaposed with scenes leading up to Thoreau's arrest kept suspense building. The audience left the theatre happily marching to the beat of its own drummer. February brought the chill of winter indoors with Euripides' Medea, a classic tale of Greek tragedy. The production of such a stylized play was a tremendous undertaking for both the technical and acting staffs, who rose splendidly to the challenge. The product was a bloody tale of horror as Medea, a bride forsaken in a strange land, wreaks revenge on her disloyal husband, his new bride, and the king

who ordered her banished from the land. With March came another murder which , if not as bloodcurdling as its precedent, was just as entertaining . Agatha Christie's Verdict, a whodunit where everyone knew who had done it except the police, was the last mainstage play of the year. A story of misguided passion and unshakable love - this is Verdict. The plot centers around a professor who unwaveringly stands on firm principle - at his own expense and at the expense of those who love him . Although there are in fact "no fields of amaranth this side of the grave," the characters in Verdict were intent on finding them . Thus ended another successful UD theatre season, in a flurry of good luck kisses, congratulatory flowers, and tears. The theatre department said good-bye to a large number of graduating seniors who will be dearly missed . Those who remain take on another season's challenges. The lights come down ; the applause dies; the stage is cleared and swept. But, to quote a line from Verdict: "In the light I shall remember; in the darkness I shall not forget." Beth Bevenour

(Sally McCaffrey)

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(University Communications)

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(Jonathan Nakles, Gretchen Saller)

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(Sally McCaffrey


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(Harry Sirinakis)

(Chris Cunningham)

(Chris Cunningham)

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Hotdogs + Beer Saturday morning, ringing alarm clocks are generally not a welcome sound on the UD campus. However, during the Flyer football season, forty-two students rub the sleep from their eyes, throw their tail-

POST-TA

+ Fun

gate jerseys on, and arrive to an empty arena parking lot by 10:30 a. m. Effort is pooled and the transformation begins. The parking lot is turned into the grounds for UD's traditional tailgater -

~~

PARTY

(Chris Cunningham.

A Tailgate

l

held prior to each football game. Approximately 16 kegs of beer, 2000 hotdogs, and gallons of soda each Saturday are set up to feed the hungry and thirsty students that indulge in their quasi-breakfasts, all for $2.50 ~ such a deal! The forty-two tailgaters, with Director of Entertainment Greg Gehlmann and chairpeople Sheila Nolan and Dan Coley are forever running about placing hotdogs on the grills and pumping Hudepohl beer into seemingly bottomless cups. Buns are pulled out by the platter and music is blared into the crowds of milling students and guests - discussing the game, the festive activities of the weekend, or unavoidable Monday morning classes. The atmosphere is somewhat chaotic, as people elbow their way to the hotdogs and prizes are given out - courtesy of Hudepohl - to unsuspecting winners of the draw. If the number on their cup corresponds to the random number announced by Coley, they may have to chug a beer, show their school spirit by a cheer, or simply announce their name in order to receive one of the various Hudepohl prizes. The music, hotdogs, socializing, and beer all help to make this event always a success. Even when the weather has the audacity to dampen the area (but never the spirits), the hotdogs have gone innocently unordered, or the coals on the grills refuse to get fired up, the students still have a great time. As kick-off time approaches, students with full bellies and many with blurred vision wander toward the stadium. By 1:30 p.m . the grills are soaked and the taps are pulled, although some persistent people hang around in hopes of gobbling up the last remnants of hotdogs and the last drops of beer. Eventually all that remains are forty-two tired tailgaters, many having fashionable smudges of catsup and mustard on their shirts, the scent of coal smoke permeated into their hair and pants soaked with beer. The envied job as a tailgater may not be as prestigious as it appears; besides never being able to see the kick off, tailgaters have the responsibility of cleaning tables, putting away the condiments, repacking unused hotdogs and buns, and dismantling the music system, as well as picking up flattened hotdogs that have somehow missed mouths and ended up underfoot. For all the mishaps, elbow pushing, and confusion things run smoothly. UD tailgates are fun events to be involved in regardless of what side of the grill you are on. Maureen Meeraman

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Hungering For Faith By the time mid-November rolls around, most UD students can almost taste the roast turkey and other holiday culinary delights that show all of the blessings of life, but what about those people, near and far, for whom the cornucopia will be empty? Many of us don't like to think about the sad tale of millions of malnourished persons around the world, especially when we're gathering for the sumptuous feasts that we associate with Thanksgiving. Joan Myers, a member of UD's Campus Ministry team, is for the seventh consecutive year heading up the University's Hunger Awareness Week program. Regarding the program and the whole concept of world hunger, Myers stated, " We should be critics of society," and should focus on "addressing the question of human needs." As its name implies, Hunger Awareness Week is a time set aside to encourage people to become more aware of perhaps the greatest problem facing humankind. The origins of the modern hunger movement go back to a group of socially concerned persons in England, who in 1942 formed an organization known as Oxfam. Its influence has spread internationally and interdenominationally in recent years. Oxfam America, which has its headquarters in Boston, was officially organized in 1970. The International World Day of Fast began in 1974 and is celebrated on the third Thursday of November each year. According to Myers, UD's Hunger Awareness Week is scheduled to end on this day. In 1976, Myers took the leadership of the Hunger Awareness Program, overseeing a three-day program that included the meal sign-away that still takes place. The following year, Hunger Awareness Week became a reality. Myers cites her personal commitment to social justice as the motivation for her involvement. During the six weeks prior to the observance of Hunger Awareness Week, Myers coteaches a mini-course about world hunger with faculty members from Strategies for Responsible Development. The fifteen or so students who take the course plan the hunger activities to broaden the students' awareness of the magnitude of the world hunger crisis. Myers said that student involvement in the program concerns educating them with facts and figures and then encouraging them to participate.

This year's activities began with a hunger banquet on November 11. According to senior Denis Roarty, about twenty students participated in what he termed "a very interesting experience." By random drawing, participants were treated to first, second, and third world meals, the respective dinners dependent 路upon the actual percentage of the world population who eats such food . Roarty said that the two students who ate first world dinners had different reactions to feasting on fried chicken, while their dining partners nibbled on macaroni or rice. One barely picked at her meal under the watchful eyes of the "hungrier" students and the other offered some of his dinner to the others. Sophomore Noel Moran was one of the second world diners. She said afterward, "I can go home and eat as usual, but now I realize that the others really affected can't." Moran's involvement in Hunger Awareness Week included working at the meal sign-away table in Kennedy Union . She also helped to make bread and soup for the breakfast which followed the mass at the end of the week's observance on November 18. Melinda Mayer, another participant, reported that a total of 1900 meals were "signed away." Under this program, Food Services at UD donates the cost of each forfeited meal to the Hunger Awareness Program. Mayer and Moran pointed out that the monies collected will go to help hungry people in Dayton, as well as in places such as India. A mixture of curiosity and concern drew Roarty to the Hunger Awareness Program. His interest prompted him to fast during the last four days of Hunger Awareness week. Though it was "not as difficult as expected ," Roarty admitted that he felt "really uncomfortable and miserable." The mini-course taught by Myers caught the attention of Moran, who "wanted to become aware of hunger outside the USA." She credited guest speakers with promoting student action which included submitting food waste proposals to members of Congress. Myers said that she sees it as the action part of faith, using our gifts and talents in whatever way we can. At Thanksgiving, we can count among our blessings the thought that one more person may have the chance to taste from our horn of plenty. Brad Gaudsr

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U'D's General Store 235 Lowes is considered by some a second home. Whose house is it, you ask? Well, actually it's not a house; it is the infamous "Deli." The Deli, situated amidst the UD ghetto mansions and sprawling estates, is like UD's own little general store. But those who are frequent patrons of the De'li know that it isn't exactly like Mr. Drucker's store on Petticoat Junction. The Deli does offer a variety of munchies, beer and wine, quick dish dinners, and the necessary can of pop (soda!) for those Saturday and Sunday morning hangovers. However, the DeH also is a meeting place for most UD ghetto dwellers. You're bound to run into friends any time you make a Deli run, whether it's for a pack of cigarettes, a bag of chips, a liter of pop (soda!), or a cold six-pack. You may even make new friends as you wait in line on a warm Friday evening. After a few visits, you become familiarized with the friendly employees and usu-

ally strike up an informal conversation with them. Often spur-of-the-moment parties start as friends congregate outside the Deli to b.s., as they crack open a can of their just-bought twelve-pack. Not to mention the convenience of the Deli after a party. If you're home by 1:00 a.m., it's a welcome pleasure to drop in and buy something to munch on. During those long hours of studying, when you're staring at your notes and you need a break to catch a few breaths of fresh air, you can always run into the Deli to buy something to keep you going. So besides the Deli being a store, it is many other things; a meeting ground for friends, a place to stop in for some chitchat, a welcome sight for those red-eyed, cotton-mouthed mornings . . . afternoons ... and evenings! Yet unnoticed by the administration, it is an institution unique to UD!

MPM

(Cathy Brophy)

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2 I. I.. S

-~-~ HOUllE. fl. IfE' AU IIIE --~~---~

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Hey, What's Up Doc? "Excuse me Doctor . .. I was wondering if you could help me with a problem? You see I'm a senior at UD and I seem to be suffering some sort of illness." "Well, when did the symptoms begin?" "You see I've had some of them for four years; they started intensifying in my junior year but this past semester they have gotten reaUy bad! It's like I start toward campus and when I approach my classroom I find myself turning around and not going to class. Othertimes, I only get as far as my bedroom door and I just laugh and forget about class. And, to be honest, I really hate classes and I complain if I have to attend them!" "Are you carrying a lot of hours?" "Oh, uh, .. . well, I'm carrying 10 hours. I've always been a procrastinator, but now I find I just don't do the work and I don't have a guilty conscience! I mean, God, I intentionally don't do the work." "Maybe this is a case of ambivalence, lack of motivation and irresponsibility!" "Well yeah - but there's more. See, besides being lazy and not being too concerned about it, I get depressed for no reason and start reminiscing abou the past four years and all the memories and people I've met - I realize I' ve taken so many for granted. "Peopl'e are beginning to always refer

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activities and parties as, 'the last . . . ' Then I realize the little things about Dayton . You Iknow, I've never been to the Art Institute or bought anything at the 'C.C. Boutique' or even been inside the Engineering Building on campus. I really start to worry when I sometimes think I'll actually miss Dayton, Ohio! " "Aha! A definite mixture of the blues and sentimentals. Are there any more noticeable symptoms? " "More symptoms! Doc, I could go on forever! The symptoms change from day to day! For instance, it was enough when my friends started interviewing for jobs real occupations. The real shocker is that some of my friends are actually getting jobs. These same people who I have partied, studied, laughed, and cried with, my peers, are getting full-time jobs! And others are going on to grad schools. And everyone seems to be going all over the country. I begin to realize that all the times we've been able to blow things off, jump in a car, and take a road trip just for the hell of it or even hit 'Denny's' at 4 a.m. - we aren't ever going to be able to do! It's scary'" "We're now dealing with a classic case of shock attributed to having to face the real world." "You could be right - I guess - It's

strange, I also find myself totally broke and nearly everyone seems to be in the same predicament. And yet, I am going out three times more than ever before; it doesn't seem to matter in the least if I have a midterm the next day. "You Iknow - every senior seems to be dOing the same thing. Everyone seems to be making the most of the time that we have left. And no one seems to want to stop -" "How do you rationalize t,his seemingly 'irrational' behavior?" "To be honest, I always say, 'I'm a Senior and I deserve it!' Hey Doc, do you have a clue as to what is happening to me?" "Hmm - let me see - lack of motivation, ambivalence, the blues, becoming overly sentimental, the hard realization of having to leave the UD community and enter the real world, having no money, and excessive partying .. . "Well, it's not in any of my medical journals, but I've seen these symptoms many times before!" "Well, don't keep me in suspense! What is it?" "Senioritis" "What's the cure Doc, huh?" "Graduation" " ... Thanks Doc. I gotta go now and meet my friends for a beer. Uh - I seem to have something in my eye - you got a tissue?" Maureen Meeraman


(Scott Moll)

D

(Scott Moll)

(Tom Frenz)

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Is This Really Puppy Love?

They're all over campus, the funnylooking students who interrupt classes in Miriam and wander through the plaza and into the snack bar at will. They dress in the latest style and are often seen traveling in packs. They have names like Tonic, Mindy, Duke, Satch, and Wimpy, and they call the ghetto their home. No, they're not freshmen, but ghetto animals, those furry, four-legged creatures who attend classes and parties side-by-side with their human counterparts. These "students" raised by students are at once both humouous and pathetic. They are loved and fawned over as puppies and ignored and cast off as adults. 'It's commonp'lace for students to move into the ghetto, adopt a puppy and take care of it until they leave for the summer or graduate. Then the animals are

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shipped off to another house or abandoned altogether. It's not unusual to see these animals sipping beer at block parties or chasing and barking at patrol cars. Most of them have been trained to do these things by their student owners. Others learn to do them for the attention it gets them. Some become campus celebrities, like Joe the AKPsi dog who is trying to earn a degree in marketing. He can be seen attending Dr. Yates' marketing class. Others are known by virtue of the fact that they beg at every door for food or beer. Ghetto animals do add a certain something to the University atmosphere, whether that certain something is a sense of homeiness or just another negative representation of the students. They are cute and fun to have around , but even the most well-intentioned stu-

dent could end up contributing to the vicious circle which these animals are in . They are abused from the minute they are taken by a student who cannot be a permanent owner or who can't afford to pay for veterinary bills and the cost of spaying. Most of the animals end up on the streets, starving for food and affection, and suffering from disease or malnutrition which eventually will lead to death. But before they die, they proliferate and the cycle continues. Not all ghetto animals suffer this fate, but enough of them do to make a difference. It's a sad fact and a difficult problem to solve, but if petowners take on their full responsibilities, maybe Joe will live to see graduation. Cathy Cushing (Flyer News)


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Snow In Springtime? If you don't like the weather in Dayton, wait a minute - it will change. This fond saying is starting to ring, truer and truer as I alternately pullout my shorts and put away my sweaters, plug in the fan and turn off the electric blanket because of the weather'S erratic tendencies. It's getting ridiculous. About the only way I can tell what to wear anymore (besides the ever~unreliable weather service) is to look out my window in the morning to see what everyone else is wearing . Even this doesn't work too well, because everyone else is usually winging it, too. 1"11 start out in the morning when it's 30 degrees Farenheit bundled up in a turtleneck, sweater, jeans, wool socks, and gloves, and a coat and snicker at the "fools" shivering in their shorts and tshirts. But in a few short hours the tables are turned as these same fools laugh at me, as I peel off my layers of wool in the hot-enough-to-be-summer heat. If the inconvenience of switching seasonal wardrobes hourly isn't bad enough, the new trend in colds is. Depending on what the temperature is at any given moment, someone you know has or is in the process of developing a summer or winter cold, also known as the Dayton cold.

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The fluctuating weather has also wreaked havoc among the plant, insect, and bird kingdoms. The trees aren't sure whether to shed their leaves or not, all the yellowjackets have not retired to their nests, and the birds keep halting their southern flights in mid-air amid the confusion. So, how do we solve the temperature dilemma? Actually, we can't, but I have discovered some ways to approximate what the weather will be like, for a little while anyway. If DP & L stock rises, it's cold out. If a lot of people are arrested on weekends, it's warm. If the plastic on the windows of ghetto houses frosts over, it's cold. If it melts, it's warm. If the Plaza is empty, it's probably cold. If the snackbar is empty, it's probably warm. If classes are empty, it could be either cold or warm. Let's face it , no matter what, we just can't be sure if we're going to be facing a blizzard or a heat wave, so just enjoy the snow or sun while we can. We might not see it again until June - or until tom orrow. Cathy Cushing (Flyer News)

l --~,..


(Cathy Brophy)

(Bob Batz)

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A Little Hocus-Pocus The Kennedy Union Ballroom became a Garden of Eden for nine people on January 24. These same people directed imaginary traffic, received electric shocks through their seats, and became Tarzan and carried an unsuspecting Jane out of the audience and onto the stage. No, these people were not hallucinating - they were hypnotized by Gil Eagles, a nationally known hypnotist , psychic, mentalist, and entertainer. Eagles' appearance was sponsored by Student Association. "I don't claim to be 100 percent correct all of the time," Eagles said , but throughout his performance he was never incorrect in guessing such things as the amount of loose change in someone's pocket in the audience, a word on a sign while he was blindfolded with four layers of tape, and the serial number of a dollar bill from the audience while wearing the same blindfold. Eagles went from demonstrating his extra sensory perception abilities to the hypnosis segment, which required 12 audience participants. He eliminated three, mostly because of their resistance to being hypnotized. "You will obey my every wish and command," Eagles said, after placing them in a hypnotic state. He made them spin their arms, and they could not stop until he ordered them to stop. All nine also experienced a lush tropical paradise - a "Garden of Eden ." The highlight of the evening was when Eagles assigned each person on stage a character to portray while hypnotized. He gave the audience a cue to use, such as humming the theme from "Bridge on the River Kwai," wh ich would cause them then to jump up and become a drill sergeant ("You're all gonna hate my ass when I'm through with you ... "); a traffic cop, who later said he "actually saw cars and people" ; a dancer, who, on cue, got up and did a soft-shoe number after being told by Eagles that she was a world-famous dancer; and one participant who almost had people believing he was Tarzan as he came bellowing into the audience and proceeded to carry a female student to the stage, since he was told by Eagles to find "Jane." He was, however, quite selective about which " Jane" he chose. " Any normal person can be hypnotized," Eagles said, adding that certain personalities, such as psychopaths and schizophrenics, cannot be hypnotized because of the way their minds function.

941 Feature

When asked about the possibility of being hypnotized against one's will , such as by the person sitting next to you on a bus or plane, Eagles said, "Impossible. Nobody can hypnotize you unless you so desire .. . You can't be hypnotized against your will. " Hypnosis, according to Eagles, is nothing more than the power of suggestion. "It's a pretending game with the mind, and the suggestion in the mind becomes a reality," Eagles said . This was confirmed by several participants after the show. They agreed they were in front of an audience, but in their minds, they were wherever Eagles took them - Hawaii, the Kentucky Derby, or an ice cream-eating contest. "It felt really weird, " Jennifer Merrill, one of the participants, said . " In the beginning, I really had to concentrate, and then when he had us clasp our hands together, my hands really felt glued to-

gether," she said . Although the hypnotized person is fully aware of what is going on around him, Eagles, through his voice and the power of suggestion, makes his subjects rela x and become totally limp so they appear to be sleeping. Eagles dispelled some common misconceptions about hypnosis, for instance, that the hypnotized subject is under a spell. "This is entirely false ," Eagles said . "In fact , they can hear more than they regularly can (when hypnotized)." People believe the hypnotist possesses some kind of special power, when, in reality, the hypnotist has no power at all. "The power is in the subject's head," Eagles said. "People can be taught to do self-hypnosis.' , Some of the things he mentioned that can be combatted through self-hypnosis include smoking and obesity. " When you came to see me, you were thinking about doing it - that itself is self-hypnosis," Eagles said. Dave Zukowski (Flyer News)


Feature/95


Super Sports A Super Time With only two minutes to go, it seemed like there was no hope for the eight young men and women. Muscles were pulled and voices lost. Their efforts seemed useless. The end of the road seemed near, but then the massive structure tumbled down upon the helpless eight. They gathered their composure and started their struggle anew. Such was the case (no pun intended) as the Tooters Two stacked 15 empty beer cases to capture the laurels in their division of the case stacking contest. Pat Shea, a Tooters Two member, said, "The case stacking was the most grueling event." Shea revealed that the key to his team's success was that "we practiced at home a lot. We drank the beer, then stacked the cases." In addition to stacking beer cases, Super Sports participants played volleyball, ran a one-mile relay, tossed beer cans, answered questions on sports trivia, tackled a rigorous obstacle course, and passed a frisbee. The major emphasis was on having a

good time. Tom Ramunda of the Unorganized reflected the theme when he said, "The mood here is definitely laid-back. People want to win , but losing here is not the end of the world."

Tl1e Super Sports can be an awesome sight for someone who is there for the first time. Jim Pulie, a transfer student from Connecticut, said. "I was really impressed

(Sharon Cantillon)

96/Feature


with the way that they (the intramural staff) kept everybody moving and interested ." Kevin Buchanan of The Scoping Scoopers said, "I thought it was great. It was a nice idea for a change to not have to go to a bar to have a good time. It kept students and the Dayton Police happy." Credit for the fifth edition of the Budweiser Super Sports program, sponsored locally through Heidelberg Distributors, goes to Steve Kintigh, intramural sports director. Kintigh said much of the credit should go to his staff of Norma Jean Clark and Dave Zimmer, and to the campus representative for Budweiser, Tom Haner. The 122 teams and 925 students this year was the top number in the country. When the last case of beer was stacked , there was a two-way tie for the first place between the teams of Two More Points, captained by Phil Ratermann, and The USS, led by Jim Allgeir . Third place was captured by Nine Minus One. The first place teams received clocks or mirrors while the third place team was awarded coolers. Jim Kilfoyle (Flyer News)

(Sharon Cantillon)

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98/Feature


Despite The System, DXO Survives Delta Chi Omega, the nonexistent coed fraternity ... wait a minute ... how can 路1 talk about a nonexistent group, or better yet, how can a group of 40 students, joined together in activities, be called nonexistent? If this is confusing to you, the reader, think how confusing it all seems to the supposed members of DXO. Two years ago DXO received organizational status from the University Activities Advisory Committee (AAC). But, when the organization reapplied one year later, it was rejected on the grounds that the fraternity did not f01l0w the proper procedures. According to the AAC, it has the power to recommend a group be given organizational status, but in order to be recognized as a fraternity or sorority, a club must first apply to the Interfraternity Council, the Pan Hellenic Councilor the Black Greek Coordinating Council. The guidelines of the AAC had not changed between the two application submissions. Yet, DXO was granted organizational status once and denied organizational status once. Confusing? Not really - a mistake was made. According to the rules which govern the AAC, DXO should not have been recog-

nized as a coed fraternity because the rules were not followed . But, how can an organization such as DXO follow the rules when the rules are not even written? The University has no set policy for coed fraternities. In order for DXO to be recognized as a coed fraternity, a change would have to be made, policy would have to be set. Simple solution, right? Not really - the University has given no example of concrete action in this direction . At the end of the 1982 school year the Student Life Council held presentations on the subject of coed fraternity existence. A vote was taken at the beginning of the 1983 school year on the proposal to recognize coed fraternities at the University; 12 to one with one abstention against the proposal was the result. Yet, no policies have been made with refer-

ence to the vote. The policy suggestion made was to refrain from making any policy changes and to retain the present policy, which is no policy. Confusing? Not really - After interviewing Margaret Holland, vice president for student development and dean of students, it is obvious that the University is in no hurry to set rules specifically dealing with the coed fraternity question. She said that the Student Life Council had made a decision; no further discussions were being held on the issue. So, at present, 40 men and women at UD proudly don the Greek letters DXO; participate in service activities; hold social events; and actively recruit new members. At the same time, University officials comment that there is no issue because DXO does not exist. Confusing? Susan Shallenberger

Feature/99


(Sally McCaffrey)

100/ Student Event


Catching The Spirit

"Catch the UD Spirit" was the name and intent of the first Siblings Weekend. The event was sponsored by the Student Association and drew hundreds of siblings from around the country to Dayton for a taste of that UD spirit. Siblings Weekend began Friday, April 8, with a special dinner in the EI Granada Cafeteria and the KU Snackbar complete with live entertainment. Following this, there was a free showing of Raiders of the Lost Ark in the Boll Theater. Inclement weather on Saturday caused a slight change in plans for the remainder of Siblings Weekend. The traditional allcampus Springfest celebration had to be moved indoors, and as a result, over 1,000 people crowded into the snack bar, leading to unexpected overcrowding problems for the Student Association. According to Charles Quackenbush, director of KU Snack bar, six tables and six chairs were broken because students stood on them while trying to get a better view of the bands that were entertaining the Springfest crowd. Wrapping up the Siblings Weekend festivities was a concert in the Fieldhouse Saturday night featuring a Detroit band, the Rockets. The concert cost UD students $2.00 each, but was free of charge for their siblings. Despite some of the unexpected problems that plagued the first Siblings Weekend, on the whole it was a great success, for both UD students and siblings alike. Kathie Coat••

Student Event / 101


Sigma Nu: A New Frat At UD The Sigma Nu fraternity is a national fraternity based on a Legion of Honor. It was founded in 1869 at the Virginia Military Institute in Lexington, Virginia by three undergraduates in an attempt to decrease the undignified actions of the male students. Sigma Nu now has over two hundred chapters around the country and

is still loyal to this tradition of honor. The Sigma Nu colony was founded here at the University of Dayton in the Spring of 1982. Fifteen young men became the founding fathers in November 1982 at the Colony Committment Ceremony. In December 1982, elections of new officers were held.

(Sally McCaffrey)

1021 Feature

In January 1983, Sigma Nu colony held its first open rush in order to increase membership and to promote its relationship with the University. In February 1983, the fifteen founding fathers travelled to Wittenberg University's Iota Phi chapter of Sigma Nu to participate in the national pledging ritual. Two weeks later, Sigma Nu's first pledge class, at the University of Dayton, travelled to Wittenberg to complete the pledge ritual. On February 7, 1983 Sigma Nu took part in the Housing Lottery for special organizations and obtained residency at 1309 Alberta Street. By the end of the 1983 Winter term, the Sigma Nu colony plans to become a full member of the Interfraternity Council. The colony's goals for the 1983-84 academic year include receiving its charter membership from Sigma Nu Fraternity along with promoting and upgrading university and community relations. Sigma Nu's main objective is not to pull away from the other fraternities, but to establish a better relationship with the university while working with other fraternities and sororities to make the University of Dayton a university that can appeal to all types of students. Chris Hamm


Feature/103


:egistration Creates StirICouncii Deni SEPTEMBER

NOVEMBER

DECEMBER

• Students and Dayton police clashed at a Lowes Street block party resulting in 38 arrests as police patrolled the gnetto in riot gear to control students.

• WDCR, the campus run radio station, expanded its broadcasts to include Kennedy Union. Prior to this the station could only be received in the dorms and Campus South.

• Sports tops the list of December news, with the men's basketball team going 7-2 and the Lady Flyer basketball team recording 5-4.

• The University announced the purchase of the Center for Alternative Learning on the corner of Lowes and Alberta streets for use as a student center in the ghetto.

• Humorist Erma Bombeck keynoted the Writer's Workshop. Bombeck is one of UD's most celebrated alumni.

• The Flyer football squad dropped its first three games of the season for the first time since 1969. The losses killed any hopes of the Flyers making the NCAA Division III playoffs.

• Controversy surrounded the University's policy of early registration for athletes. Abuses of the policy by both athletes and nonathletes alike caused the University to review the policy.

• Timothy's Bar on Brown Street was cited by the Ohio Department of Liquor Control for allegedly serving underage people.

• The football team ended the season as the basketball season began. The football team finished with a record of 6-4; the men's basketball team opened its season by beating Otterbein 112-77. The women's basketball season opened with a loss to Purdue 71-69.

• Dayton Mayor Paul Leonard accepted and then turned down an offer to teach at UD. Controversy over where his salary would come from was cited as the reason.

JANUARY • Alexander's II was given a seven-day suspension of its liquor license by the Ohio Department of Liquor Control. • Hot Lips, a Mexican restaurant at Brown Street and Irving Avenue, was denied a liquor license. Controversy surrounding the denial was evident. According to the owners, political pressure from neighboring Brown Street businesses was the cause for the denial. • Gene Kiernan, a professor in the communication arts department since 1967, died of cancer at age 58.

• Delta Delta Tau fraternity lost its recognition with the University after complications between the group and the Delta Upsilon National Fraternity. The DDT's had formerl,y been a local chapter of the national fraternity, returning to local status last year.

OCTOBER • Delta Chi Omega, a coed fraternity, was again denied University recognition as a social fraternity. DXO has been trying unsuccessfully for two years to become a fraternity. The Student Life Council has refused to change the University policy concerning coed fraternities and sororities. • Michelle Antolini was elected 1982 Homecoming Queen and the football team went 4-1 to even its record at 4-4. Two victories were a 71-0 win over Jersey City and a 62-0 win over Maryville.

(Cindy Cardinal)

~ccusations 104/Feature

Of Violations/Trustees AI1


~s

DXO Coed Status/Ryan, McDonald MARCH • Four UD students were shot at a party in the Medford apartments. One student was hospitalized. • No winner was declared in the SA presidential contest as neither candidate captured the necessary 51 % of the vote in the runoff. Campaign violations were charged by both sides, and current President of SA, Phil Cuifo, characterized the elections as a sad indication of the concerned parties. • Associate Provost George Noland was appointed to head the Research Institute. Outgoing director John Westerheide has been in charge since 1956. • The basketball team ended its season with a record of 18-10, with a victory over the DePaul Blue Demons. However, the team did not receive a National Invitational Tournament bid as expected. The women's team advanced to the NCAA Division II quarterfinals. The women were ranked in the top 20 all season and ended as one of the top 8 teams in the country, with a 20-10 record.

APRIL (Cindy Cardinal)

• Gil Eagles, a nationally known hypnotist, psychic, mentalist, and entertainer appeared in the Kennedy Union Ballroom on January 24. His show was sponsored by Student Association. • The University Board of Trustees announced a 10% increase for undergraduate tuition for the 1983-84 school year. Room charges were raised 12 % and meal tickets 6 % . • The Interfraternity Council cancelled the 1983 Greek Ball, the highlight of the annual Greek Week, after IFC was unable to obtain a hall for the dance. • The basketball team only won 2 of the 7 games played. The women's team had a record of the opposite type; 5 of the 7 games played were won.

FEBRUARY • Delta Delta Tau fraternity was re-established as a University organization. The DDT's had lost their recognition in 1982. • John 0' Donnell, chairman of the educational administration department, died at the age of 57. • The men's basketball team had a much improved record over the previous month. They won 6 of their 8 games. The women were just as accomplished with 7 of the 8 games they played ending in victory. • Roosevelt Chapman was benched for a game against Temple because he reportedly missed a pre-game training session.

• The Accounting Club, Celebration, Cystic Fibrosis, Founders Hall Council, PRSSA, and WDCR were selected as top organizations of the year. Controversy over a decision placing the TKE fraternity on the list ensued due to the fact that the TKE fraternity was on probation when it applied for the award. • SA directorate election winners were Clare Carr, public relations; Marie Gallo, ombudsman: Robert Lieske, finance; Marianne Mcinerney, student organizations; Lori Pinter, entertainment; Mark Smucker, academic affairs; and Paul Von Mohr, publicity. • The Student Judiciary announced that the Kathy Ryan / Bob Schaffer and Pat McDonald / Ronnie DeNardo tickets were still eligible to run for the presidential election. The elections were scheduled to be done by mail in the summer.

,ounce Fee Increase/ Students, Police Feature/ 105


Entertainment Galore At Monks' Inn

(Doug Rechsteiner)

106/ Feature


In the basement of the oldest building on campus, where there is no plumbing , little heat, and the ghosts are rumored to come out in the pre-dawn hours, something very special happens every Friday and Saturday night. On these nights between 9:30 p.m. and 1:00 a.m., the Monks' li nn Coffeehouse, located in the basement of Liberty Hall, presents live musical entertainment for the University of Dayton campus. Pianists, guitarists, and comed ians all find a place to perform at the Monks' Inn. For some, an hour "set" at the Monks' Inn is their first chance at a public performance. For the more experiened, the Monks' Inn provides a relaxing , rustic atmosphere in which they can showcase their talents. For the staff of the Monks' Inn, the Friday and Saturday sessions are occasions for meeting again with old friends and making new ones. For all involved , the Monks' Inn is something special. Founded by a group of UD students in the mid-1960's, the Monks' Inn was originally known as "The Establishment" and later as "Pleasant Street. " The Inn

has changed locations as well as names, think the encouragement is really neat . having occupied the basement of Frisch's No matter how badly you mess up the and the building which currently houses words, your friends are supportive and the Shed before moving into the Liberty will help you out ... Where else can you Hall basement and adopting its present find a little Christmas tree stuck in a bowl name in 1974. full of pennies with blinking lights?" Says The Monks' Inn staff of 1974 had quite another member, "It's a good place to a job in preparing the basement for use. mellow out, to get your mind off of studThey had to scrape 50 years of silt from ies, to just let things go." the stone floors, knock out a wall, and Although the Monks' Inn menu is still build a stage. The various old farm tools typically coffeehouse (a dozen coffees ~ sickles, sledge hammers, scythes, and and pop are featured), the Monks' Inn saws - that adorn the Monks' Inn's wall musical fare is ever-changing . This year were procured that year and have been a the Inn hosted a Monday night jazz propart of the Inn ever since. gram and featured comedians; rock musiAlso part of the Inn ever since has been cians; and classical, popular, and jazz the music and the caring. Says one mem- pianists as well as guitarists on Friday and ber about the relationships that exist Saturday nights. among members, "It 's close knit but Doing anything this weekend? Why not open ... if you come down (to the stop by the Monks' Inn? The entertainMonks' Inn), you're accepted ." Says an- ment is good, the coffee is hot, and we other member in explaining what makes promise to close up before the ghosts the Monks' Inn special, "It (the Monks' come out. Inn) was part of the reason I came down Besides, where else can you find a little here (decided to attend UD), because I Christmas tree stuck in a bowl full of penreally liked it and the people were nice. It nies? was the kind of place I was looking for Paul Reia because I really like guitar music ... I

(Chris Cunningham)

Feature/107


What Is A Ghetto Party? Here is the scoop from those who know best: " an empty toilet paper roll." " . .. beer, lines, and sweat." " . .. asking the guy next to you, 'Hey do you know whose party this is anyhow?' and he says, 'Yeah! Mine!!'" " . . . culmination of the week." " ... good friends, good drink and a potential good 'snake' at the end of the evening." " student riot." " . .. Dayton Police Convention." " . . . marathon drinking session, twelve hours long." " . . . craaazzzzzy." " . . . a time to get as drunk as you want because no one else will notice because they are as drunk as you are." " .. . catch up with old friends and meet knew ones." " . . . cheap beer never tastes so good. " " . . . wall to wall people." " .. . You know it was a good party if when you're coming home, others are going to classes." " . .. watching your house getting trashed and not really caring until the next morning."

(Sally McCaffrey)

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I

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I

(Marjorie Klee)

Feature / 109


(Sally McCaffrey)

110/Feature

(Scott Moll)


(Sally McCaffrey)

Feature/111


So Much More Than Just A Diploma

112/ Student Event

~..al\


"How does to feel to be a college graduate?" This question was probably heard by every member of the class of 1983 at least a dozen times. And, depending upon the time of day it was posed, the question received a myriad of replies. To the student questioned upon receiving his diploma, the commonplace answer was "hungover." To the student questioned immediately after reaching the top of the step after the ceremony, the reply was usually " Relieved - the diploma actually has my name on it! I think they made a mistake!" However, these brief answers were not the ones given by most students as the day wore into the night. Graduates began to realize that commencement was not simply the finale of four years of study;

rather, it entailed much more. Memories began to take precedence over the present. A typical student's thoughts follow: "UD is no longer our school. We will never again eat in Marycrest, go to classes in Sherman Hall, or spend endless hours in the plaza. We won't ever again be able to complain about lines, whether they be the bookstore's or the bursar's. Those privileges are ours no more; they belong to future classes. "Our roommates are no longer our roommates. We will never again pull an all-nighter together, throw a party together, or come home to eat dinner together. We won't ever be able to complain about the roommate who isn't there. Our home will have different owners now; they will share in it the laughs and the tears. "The ghetto is no longer our home

away from home. We will never again ignite a Lowes Street riot, sunbathe and drink beer on our front lawn or walk the path to the Deli. We won't ever again be able to complain about the mud fields in our backyards. Our ghetto will have new residents, and our leaving probably won 't be noticed. "Dayton is no longer our town. We will never again be able to complain about DP & L. the police, or the weather. These complaints will be voiced by others." The question cannot be answered simply. It is more complicated than a tough exam. The answer for its complexity lies in the fact that it involves feelings. Feelings that have developed for four years and culminated in one day.

Sue Shallenberger

Student Event / 113


114/Student Event


.--_ _ _---------------~-.:..; (S:...usie McCaffrey)

(Susie McCaffrey)

Student Eventl115


Sunny Skies And Teary Goodbyes Classes came to an end, finals were taken, graduation was held, and for many UD students it was once again time to say goodbye, whether it be for the summer vacation or a lifetime. For over 600 students, though, the typical good byes were postponed as they headed to Daytona Beach, Florida, for a week of sand, surf and suds. Four SA-sponsored busses, two First

Stop busses, a few campers, and numerous vans and cars crowded 1-75 and twenty-some hours later delivered the tired-from-finals students to Daytona for seven days of rest and relaxation. The people were all the same ones that left Dayton a day earlier, the same ones that partied together, that studied together and that more than likely often got on each-other's nerves throughout the

school year. But once in Daytona, these same people seemed to have changed as everyone took on an unpressured, "kick back and relax" type of attitude. Unlike previous weeks, the days were cloud-free and hot, the perfect weather for sun-tanning, swimming, riding the waves, frisbee on the beach, and euchre games by the pool. SA sponsored many afternoon events such as volleyball, belly flop contests, dive contests, and kegs by the pool, as well as side trips to Wet 'n Wild, EPCOT, and other Florida attractions. Not surprisingly, the hotel's suntan lotion and aloe supply began to dwindle as UD students turned from winter-white to varying shades of red or brown. Along the beach, students enjoyed building sand castles and burying each other in the sand. The boardwalk, half a mile from UD headquarters at the Plaza Hotel, featued junk and t-shirt shops which attracted sun-weary students. Done with classes, students shed college sophistication and enjoyed childish amusements such as cotton candy and carnival rides. The evenings were just as nice as the days, clear and usually warm enough for a midnight dip in the pool. The numerous local restaurants and bars provided more than enough entertainment as people tried everything from whole lobsters at the Beachcomber to the all-you-can-drinkwhile-you-eat special at Brewmaster's, from disco dancing at Flanagan's Big Daddy's to rock-and-rolling at the famous Hole. And after bar-time, there were often the traditional barefoot walks on the moonlit beach and gatherings on the pool deck, where anyone in street clothes was sure to be tossed in the pool for a latenight swim. Looking back on the days and nights spent in Daytona Beach, it seemed like one was there forever, yet it all passed so quickly. Time was spent in the same manner all week: swimming, sunning, eating, drinking, playing; yet each moment brought its own little chuckle or special memory. New friends were made, old friendships were enjoyed, and when it was Tuesday and finally time to say those postponed good byes, the saltwater by the pool wasn't from the nearby ocean but rather from the tears of those leaving each other until the next school year, or even moreso, kissing each other goodbye forever.

Kathie Coates

116/Feature


(Sally McCaffrey)

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Feature/117


(Sally McCaffrey)

(Sally McCaffrey)

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(Sally McCaffrey)

Feature/119


Mideast Peace Plans/Tylenol Poisonings/Wall Street SEPTEMBER • Actor Henry Fonda died at age 77 in Los Angeles. Fonda had been a staple in American films and theater since the 1940s. He had won the 1982 Academy Award for his performance in On Golden Pond. • Real Men Don't Eat Quiche, a whimsical book by Bruce Feirstein, was redefining America's standards of masculinity. • Mexico announced that, due to a severe economic crisis, it might be unable to meet payments on its foreign debt. Bankers around the world were stunned, as the country's total foreign debt was near $80 billion. • Eller Turk was sentenced to three years' probation and 250 hours of community service. His crime: the 20-year-old had refused to register for the draft. His trial and those of a handful of other non-registrants raised cries of selective prosecution.

OCTOBER • Princess Grace. Philadelphia-born ruler of Monaco, died as a result of injuries received in an automobile accident. • Ingrid Bergman, famed film actress, died of cancer. • President Reagan proposed a new peace plan for the Mideast, including a halt to new Israeli settlements in the West Bank and Gaza. Reagan also called for Palestinian self-government and asked that Israel be recognized by the Arabs as an independent nation with the right to exist. • Tylenol adulterated with poison killed several people in the Chicago area. All Tylenol products were removed from store counters across the country. Few leads and fewer suspects frustrated officials investigating the case. • Wall Street, fueled by rumors of lowering interest rates, became a hotbed of trading. The Dow Jones Industrial Average c'losed above 1000 for the first time in more than a year. • Professional football players were on strike, leaving a paucity of Sunday afternoon and Monday night entertainment. Canadian and college football games were not a suitable substitute for most of

the fans. • Americans were more concerned about unemployment than about continued inflation, according to a poll taken by Yankelovich, Skelly & White for Time magazine. • After 437 years in a watery grave, the remains of a Tudor man-o' -war, the Mary R08e, were raised above sea level. The ship had sunk in 1545, under the anguished gaze of Henry VIII, as it rebuffed a French attack off the southern coast of England. • The St. Louis Cardinals won the World's Series over the Milwaukee Brewers.

Lake City. The heart worked well for approximately four months, but Clark's other overwhelming medical problems caused his death in April.

NOVEMBER • Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev died in Moscow. The fallen leader was accorded a state funeral and burial in Red Square. Yuri Andropov was soon afterward acknowledged as the new head of the Soviet Communist Party. • Entrepreneur John De Lorean was arrested for and charged with conspiracy to possess and distribute cocaine. The automobile magnate had allegedly taken part in the conspiracy in order to get funds for the collapsing De Lorean Motor Co. • The National Conference of Catholic Bishops drafted and debated a pastoral letter calling for a freeze on nuclear weapon production and challenging many assumptions about current defense policies. • Lech Walesa, former head of the Polish union Solidarity, was released after eleven months of arrest . • Space shuttle Columbia took its first business flight. The ship successfully launched two communications satellites, earning $18 million in the process. • The Vietnam Veterans Memorial was dedicated in Washington, D.C.

DECEMBER • Senator Edward M. Kennedy declared his non-candidacy in the 1984 presidential campaign. The 50-year-old Massachusetts democrat cited family responsibilities as his reason for bowing out. • Barney Clark became the first human to permanently depend upon an artificial heart to circulate his blood. The retired dentist received the plastic heart in Salt

WSU Photo Nan Davis stands under her own power with computer assistance in Wright State's biomedical engineering laboratories.

Bishops Write On Nuclear Issue/IUnemployment Vs. 120/Feature


Rebounds/Football Stri'ke/Brezhnev Dies/Delorean • Nan Davis, a senior at Dayton's Wright State University, walked for the first time in five years. The victim of a spinal cord injury suffered in a car accident, Nan benefited from research done by Dr. Jerrold Petrofsky in using electrical stimulation of muscles coordinated by a computer. • Rat genes were implanted in mouse embryos, resulting in mice that grew almost twice as large as normal mice.

JANUARY • The Washington Redskins won the Superbowl over the Miami Dolphins. • Deregulation of the banking industry brought a baffling array of accounts and interest rates to consumers. • Time magazine raised eyebrows when, instead of designating a Man of the Year, it named the computer Machine of the Year. Runners-up included Israel's Prime Minister Menachem Begin, British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, Federal Reserve Board Chairman Paul Volcker, and E. T., the extra special terrestrial.

• Reagan's State of the Union Message emphasized cooperation among governmental units and a freeze on government spending increases. • Winter storms raged on the West Coast, destroying millions of dollars in California real estate and leaving thousands of people homeless.

FEBRUARY • Millions of Americans watched Pug Henry's family dramatize the events leading to World War II in The Winds of War. The 18-hour mini-series, which cost ABC $40 million to film, was shown over eight days. • Bjorn Borg, five-time winner at Wimbledon, announced his retirement as a professional tennis player. • Klaus Barbie, infamous Nazi war criminal, was extradicted from Bolivia to France to be tried for 40-year-old crimes. • Shergar, the celebrated Thoroughbred worth $16 million, was horsenaped from a stud farm in Ireland. • Independent truckers protested increased fuel taxes by going on strike.

Within days, hundreds of violent incidents made highways unsafe. • Dr. John Darsee, a research fellow at Harvard, was found to have faked data. His punishment: no federal funding or contracts for 10 years.

MARCH • Heisman trophy winner Herschel Walker was lured away from his senior year at Georgia to the newly launched U.S. Football League. Walker reportedly received $5 million for three years with the New Jersey Generals. • Queen Elizabeth II visited California, bringing Britain's rain and fog with her. • The federal government offered to spend up to $33 million to purchase dioxin-poisoned property in Times Beach, Missouri. • Defense spending took the spotlight as Pentagon employee Franklin Spinney briefed Senate committees on military spending excesses. • Pilgrim Pope John Paul II visited Central America, bringing greetings of peace, hope, and reconciliation to that strifetorn area. • Anne Burford stepped down as head of the controversy-riddled U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

APRIL • Congressman Harold Washington was elected the first black mayor of Chicago after a long and mucky campaign. • Reagan and the Kremlin exchanged proposals on nuclear weapon cutbacks. • Academy Award winners included Ben Kingsley, Best Actor, for Gandhi; Meryl Streep, Best Actress, for Sophie's Choice; Louis Gossett Junior, Best Supporting Actor, for An Officer and a Gentleman; and Jessica Lange, Best Supporting Actress, for Tootsie. Gandhi was accorded Best Picture honors. • A car containing a bomb drove onto the grounds of the America Embassy in Beiruit, Lebanon. As the car exploded, more than 50 people were killed and the embassy was damaged beyond repair. Compiled from reports in Time magazine. (Kara Masters) Dr. Helen Caldicott spoke on nuclear madness, March 9. 1983.

Inflation/Borg Retires/Queen Visits/Embassy Bombed Feature/121


Photographs And Memories ...

..

. , ETlS." Of 'r

r--.

(Sally McCaffrey)

122/ Feature


(Cindy Cardinal) ,

Feature/123


路 . . All That I Have Are These . . .

(Julie Ryan)

1241 Feature


\Sally McCallrey)

Feature/125


To Remember You (Jim Croce)

126/Feature


....

• /

MUnn,u (Kara Masters)

(Sally McCaffrey)

Feature/127


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Delta Sigma Theta Psychology Club Gamma Gamma Kappa Founders Hall Council Women In Communications

.,.... 81g.... Theta Sorority: T. Hixson, W. Gee (VP), T Howard (Pres), T. Griggs, C. Ames, B. Mattrex

,choIGg,

The ... Club: Row 1: K. Hinkle, J. Fosli. C. Sanlho, D. White. Row 2: K. Slammon, R. Plichta, 8. French, R. Williams. Row 3: M Windholtz, P. Mastine, B. Slannon, P. Crippen.

130/ Organizations

Delta Sigma Theta, Inc. Delta Sigma Theta, Inc. is a public service sorority. The Epsilon Rho Chapter at UD was chartered on July 19, 1965. Epsilon Rho's service projects have included visiting patients in Gosiger Health Center, donating canned goods to Children's Services Bureau, and participating in the Big Brother/Big Sister program. The annual Icebreaker dance, open house, and Interest Group step show, are some of the social events Epsilon Rho sponsored. Psychology Club The Psychology Club is a newly developed social service organization that serves to unify the psychology majors and those non-majors interested in the field. It offers the student a chance to get involved in community volunteer work and to expand knowledge of psychology through guest speakers and community service. Committee members are: Cathy Stalters, Bill Siammon, and Cindy Santho . Gamma Gamma Kappa Gamma Gamma Kappa is a social so-

Gem.... Gamm8 K8", Sororl.,: Row 1: J. Brady, A Foltz (Pres.) Row 2: M. Wilis, C. Murphy, L. Stevenson, S. Hoff, K. Lesch. Row 3: M. Laghenry, B. Blumer (Treas. ), R. Schenkel (VP), J. Eure (Sec.), L. Richmond. K. Dobremsyi.


rority and participates in social functions with other organizations, Greek or nonGreek. Gammas have three or four dances a year and sponsor a senior farewell cookout in the spring. Gammas also perform services to the Dayton and UD communities (collect for Heart Fund, Save the Children, election work, Dance Marathon). In '82-83, Gamma Gamma Kappa celebrated their 20th anniversary with an alumni cocktail party dance and banquet. Founders Hall Council The Founders Hall Council is the programming body of Founders Residence Hall, with the primary objectives of building unity among Founders residents and adding dimension to resident life through meetings, varied activities, and programs. An additional objective is to realize the role of Founders Hall as an integral member of the UD community by cooperating in and co-sponsoring activities with other campus organizations. Women In Communications, Inc. Women In Communications, Inc., is one

of the oldest, largest and most rapidly growing professional communication or~ ganizations. This group unites women and men from all fields of communication: newspapers, magazines, television, radio, public relations, advertising, communication education, film and technical writing, publishing, and photojournalism. The national organization has more than 9,000 members in 67 professional and campus chapters. The UD chapter has 45 members and has developed a strong rapport with the Dayton professional chapter. The club members and area professionals arranged a "Pro-Am Day" in which students spent a day with professionals on a one-to-one basis. Members also attended dinner meetings, seminars, regional conferences, and the national convention. On the campus level, WICI provides services to the university community such as the course description booklet for the Communication Arts Department and participation in events such as Springfest.

Fou"" H8I1 Council: J. Kohl (Pres.). R. Putman (Sec. Treas.). J. SteD. S McDonald. F. Weyler. J. Gruneisen.

Wo....n In Comnaun........... Inc.: Row 1: P. SUlrNan Row 2: S Burke. G. Peterson. Row I: J Dalpiaz, C. VanHouten. J Kaasman Row 4: M. Tron. M. Edge.

Organizations/ 131


Cre. K Commuter Club Zeta Phi Beta Circle K Circle K is a service organization that promotes fellowship and leadership among its members. The UD club is sponsored by the Downtown Dayton Kiwanis Club and is part of Circle K Internat,ional. The club's two weekly projects are a recreation night at the Dayton Mental Health Center every Thursday and a recreation night with children at the Children's Services Board every Wednesday. The annual dance marathon for the Muscular Dystrophy Association is the highlight of the school year. Circle K has something for almost everyone. The promotion of social activities and leadership opportunities among club members help the members to unite as a club. Commuter Club Commuter Club assists commuters on

Clrele K

132/ Organizations

the campus in educational , informational, and social capacities. Zeta Phi Beta Zeta Phi Beta was organized at Howard University on January 16, 1920, as the result of the encouragement given the five founders by two members of Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity, Inc. The objectives of finer womanhood, sisterly love, and scholarship have brought together women from all parts of the country. Zeta Phi Beta was the first Greek letter college sorority organized in Africa. Zetas have spread to Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Nigeria. The goals of Iota Epsilon Chapter, UD, are to promote community projects during holiday seasons, increase membership of the chapter, and promote good will and fellowship among fellow students,


(Sally McCaffrey)

Commu..r Club: Row 1: P. Crisler. J. Plankenhorn. J DeMare. Row 2: K. Row 3: A. Deardorf.

Hinkle. C. Kawecka.

Zeta Phi ....

8ororHr: M

Boyles. S. Lovett. K. Taylor. T. Anderson. P.

Cooper.

Organizations/133


Phi Beta Sigma Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity, Inc. , an international organization of college , business and professional men , was founded in 1914 at Howard University. As one of eight national social, predominantly black Greek-lettered organizations, Phi Beta Sigma boasts a membership of over 70,000, with chapters throughout the continental United States, Switzerland and Africa. As both a social and service organization, Phi Beta Sigma sponsors many programs in education, social action, and business, e.g . Project SAD. (Sigma Attacks Defects) . In order to implement these and other programs, the fraternity works with organizations such as the National Pan-Hellenic Council, NAACP, Urban League, National Boys Club of America, and March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation. Marycrest Complex Council Marycrest Complex Council is a dorm council composed of Marycrest Hall resi-

dents and members from both Marycrest North and South Councils. Marycrest Complex Council participates in Christmas on Campus and sponsors doughnut drives, dorm ice cream socials, and movies. The Council concentrates its energies on social, cultural, religious, academic, and athletic activities. Marycrest Complex Council provides its residents with the chance to work towards better relationships between the staff and the residents. Marycrest Complex Council is the dorm council that unites North and South Councils into a whole and plans joint activities with other residence hall councils. Alpha Angels Alpha Angels, a social/serv~ ce organization, exists to stimulate the ambitions of its members, encourage the highest form of womanhood, and aid society in its efforts to achieve higher social, economic and intellectual status. In serving the community, the Angels have entertained children from an area

PIlI .... "...,.... Row 1: D. WI1IIam8. 0 Bosley (Pres.). M. Burke (VP). T. ~ Row 2: K. Massey. N. Lampley. D. Walker I. A. Patterson In

(Sec.). G Reeves.

134/0rganizations


Phi Beta Sigma Maryere.t Complex Alpha Angel. Alpha Nu Omega recreation center with Halloween and Easter parties and with Christmas on Campus. Socially, Angels participate in many University activities and sponsor dances and fund raisers.

Alpha Nu Omega Alpha Nu Omega was established in 1969 with the motto "Service for Brothers," and the fraternity still lives up to that ideal. Their letters, Alpha, the first letter of the Greek alphabet, Nu, the middle letter, and Omega, the last letter, indicate that they strive to provide something for everyone interested in becoming Greek. The Alpha Nu Omega family consists of UD standouts in sports, academics, and social involvement. Their red and gold colors are always seen around campus and have helped establish a reputation for unity among brothers and the ability to work together. Each year they point their goals toward excellence, improvement, and most of all, brotherhood .

Alpha Nu Omega Fratem lty: D. Prendergast (Pres.). B. Burger (VP). B. Hassler. F. Urwin. J. Urwin (Treas.). S. Litmer. R. Stormer. P. Belanger. M. Gallagher. D. Bitner. J. Buckley. P. Egan. D. Roarty, T. Fitzgerald. M. Mehl (Sec.). T. Hoyt. J. Kelly. J. Weisent, D. Fetcko, J. King, M. Simpson, P Kelly, E. Bitner, B. Staples. J. Spencer. B. Karalus. R. Seibert. G. Powelson. J. Jeffries. D. Butters. T Bannon. D. Cole. J. Duffy. B. Fetsko, R. Heider. P. Kase. R. Hawkins. D. Morrison. T. Merkel. K Millspaugh. J.

;:;i::b 9 ~Y:;. Thawton. J. JeffrieS. K..:R

;:::::=:;::::;::::;;:::;::;;:;;;::=:;===:;:::======-_..:==;::;-

Marycr..' Comple. Council: Row 1: D. Brinson. T. Balog. D. Mulligan. Row 2: L. Morin (VP). K. McCarthy (Pres.). P. Kammer (Sec.). L. Blert.

Alpha Angela: Row 1: S. Paige (Sec.). C. Fleming. J. Mulligan. Row 2: L. Dees (Pres.), B. Shells. M. Gurley.

Organizations/135


PRSSA Math Club ~~K Little Sisters Women's Rugby

PASSA: Row 1: M. Walker. M. Igel. A. Brendle. S. Burke. L. Varo. Row 2: J. Hailer. M. Helt (Sec.). T. Reynolds (Pres.). S. Elias (VP). M. Matthews. Row 3: D. Buddendeck. A. Niedermeyer. K. Tucker. R. Alexander.

The Mathematl~ Club: Row 1: P. Kaplan (Sec.). Mandy. C. Schockling. J. Gabel (VP). Row 2: S. Donahue, C. Gibson (Pres.). S. Back (Faculty Advisor).

136/ Organizations

PRSSA The Public Relations Student Society of America (PRSSA) is a professional student organization. Chapter members represent the fields of public relations, journalism, broadcasting, and speech as well as the fields of art, photography, and business management. PRSSA attempts to give its members the opportunity for first-hand experience and knowledge about public relations. It also seeks to instill in students a professional attitude about public relations themselves. PRSSA provides students with an excellent opportunity to become acquainted with fellow students. Several social events are held each year for members and their guests. Math Club The Math Club is fundamentally a social organization. Its primary purpose is to bring the math faculty and students together in an informal atmosphere. Specifically, they sponsor weekend parties (at which students and faculty mingle as peers), student versus faculty intramuraltype athletic events, an annual fall picnic, and a spring wine and cheese party. They also occasionally volunteer time in assisting a fellow student with a mathematics class. This tutoring program also assists non-university students in mathematics for an hourly fee. The Math Club participates in university events such as Campus Carnival, Oktoberfest, and Springfest.

Phi Sigma Kappa lillie Sia'e,.: Row 1: A. Reid. M. Graeber. A. Pugh. A. Power. Row 2: B. Mayer, A. Jaramillo. D. Silagyi. S. Lochner. Row 3: A. Schmin. D. Hayes. M. Brady. M. Roloff. S. Barjan. Row 4: T. Wood. L. Hann. T. Tainler. J. Miles, G. Garland.


Phi Sigma Kappa Little Sisters Phi Sigma Kappa Little Sisters is the female counterpart to the brotherhood of Phi Sigma Kappa Fraternity. The role of the Little Sisters is to add to the good name of Phi Sigma Kappa through participation in service, social, and fund-raising activities. Making friends with the brothers and promoting Phi Sigma Kappa are the joint purposes of the organization. Membership is open to any female student interested in promoting the principles of Phi Sigma Kappa.

Women's Rugby Women's Rugby is a young team started in the Fall of 1982, with less than 20 members and has now grown to over 50. The girls followed in the traditional themes such as rugby shirts, kegs, and various road trips. The first road trip was taken to Indiana. There are two seasons for women 's rugby: spring and fall. The season line-up includes teams such as the Dayton City Team, Purdue, Iowa, Kent State, Denison, and Indiana University.

Women'. R....., ROW 1: N. Wilson. C. Dwyer. S. Dunn. M. Held. M. Bell. A. Power. M. Jeanine. N. DeGraff. T. McNicholas. S. Bonhamrne. K. Fox. ROW I: A. Limburg. S. Landry. M. McEvoy. D. Kelm. P. Caveilier. K. )(jerman, S. Reed, M. Thorton, C. Stublng, P. Collins. M. Gron. ROW a: J. Smiley, L WlHlamson. J. Zlilner, M. O'Donnen, J. Dikeman. T.

Fussenegger, M. Davfaon. L Milazzo. T. Mullee. K. Mulshlne. C. Hatertepe. K. Heatlihy. ROW 4; S. Nugent. S. Baujan. S. CanllUon. J. Ramus. T. Lynch. M. Reed. S. Gemsn, K. Gallagher. C. Westmark, J. Slavik. C. Kelly.

Organizations/137


ACCXlQ

ling Club

pha Phi Alpha t hi Accounting Club The Accounting Club is a service organization open to all students but primarily made up of accounting majors. The club seeks to facilitate good relations between accounting students, to give students a chance to interact with faculty, and to provide students with an opportunity to meet accounting professionals. The Accounting Club sponsors a tutoring program during both semesters, which is held every two weeks. A speaker from a different field of accounting is featured at each meeting. Other events include a "meet the faculty social," two or three pizza parties, and a banquet at the end of the year. A monthly club paper is published with a calendar of events and applicable articles. Friendly Floyd's Monte Carlo, co-sponsored with UAO, is the Club's major fundraiser. Alpha Phi Alpha Gamma Theta chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha was chartered on May 3, 1947 and prides itself on being the first Greek-letter fraternity established at UD. The chapter's objectives have been to support the aims and programs of the national organization. Such programs include: Million

Accounting Club

138/ Organizations

Dollar Fund Drive - proceeds have been donated to the NAACP and United Negro College Fund . An annual voter registration drive is also held in the surrounding community in order to encourage those in the Dayton area to become active in the p olitical process. Currently, the UD chapter is trying to raise monies for the Alpha Phi Alpha "Tomar A. Johnson Memorial Scholarship" which will be donated to the university scholarship fund. Psi Chi The Psi Chi Club is the national honor society for the field of psychology. It encourages its members to maintain high scholarship in all academic areas, but particularly in psychology. The Club also provides a setting in which the students and faculty may develop a fellowship of common interest, mutual assistance and high endeavor. Through the club, the members may attend national and regjonal conventions or compete in research competitions. Other opportunities also exist to further professional growth and gain experience. Membership is limited to those students with 9 hours of psychology classes, an overall G.P.A. of 3.0, and a psychology G.P.A. of 3.3.


AI",. Phi Alphe: R. Williamson (Sec.). J. Kendall (Treas.). A. Peoples (Sgt. of Arms). E. Beckles (Pres.).

....-Cht: Row 1: J. Forti. C. Santho. B French (Sec.). R. Plichta (Pres. ). Row 2: P. Masllne. B. Siammon. R. WiHlams (VP). L. Rockwell (Tress.).

Organizations/139


Kappa Chi Kappa Chi sorority was founded by a group of women sharing the new experiences of college life. Their friendship soon developed into a structure through which they could project themselves as individuals. Kappa Chi was founded on January 14, 1969, predominantly as a social organization. As such, it boasts three dances a year, parties open to the campus, and involvement in intramural sports. Service prjects include: Hike for the Handicapped, work with Big Brother / Big Sister, Clean Sweep, and food drives for the underprivileged. Kappa Chis fulfill their purpose of friendship, action and unity by getting involved on campus through interaction withother organizations. Student Council for Exceptional Children The Student Council for Exceptional

Children is a professional organization on campus that works toward the development of professionalism in working with and educating exceptional children. Activities the club has been involved with include presenting "kids on the block" handicapped puppet show; developing two simulation kits which were presented to various high school students and education classes; sponsoring a relief care provider program, and volunteering at the United Cerebral Palsy Telethon. The club also sponsored speakers from the Montgomery County Board of Mental Retardation. Association for Computing Machinery The Association for Computing Machinery is a professional student organization whose purpose is to promote an academic interest in the science, design development. construction. languages,

Kappa Chi Sorority

140/ Organizations

and application of modern computing machinery. The club also attempts to promote a greater interest in computing machinery, techniques, and their applications as well as providing a means of communication among persons with an interest in computing machinery. These goals are fulfilled through discussions, lectures, tours, affiliation with professionals in the field, and association with a professional organization. Any full or parttime student with an interest in computer science may become a member. Helping Older 'P eople Helping Older People (HOP), one of the newest clubs on campus, is an organization which attempts to satisfy the needs of the elderly in the Dayton area. The club provides spiritual support over the phone and through personal visitation. The friendship and trust which result from their efforts is more than a reward; it is a learn-

Student Council For Exceptional Children


Kappa Chi SEC

ACM Helping Older People Campus South Cou~cll

ing experience. All expenses are paid through fundraising activities. In the future, the club plans to expand services to provide more benefits to the elderly, such as visiting nursing homes. Campus South Apartment Council The Council has as its purpose the enrichment of student life in the Campus South. They help to bring the residents closer together through social and cultural activities, such as coffee houses, picnics, and holiday parties. Through the efforts of the council, a system of providing transportation was established to home football and basketball games for the residents. They have also produced a Campus South Cookbook and hold election forums for the benefit of the residents.

Anociation for Computing Machinery: Row 1: P. James (Treas.), N. Segro, A. Zajacz. Row 2: D. Corsmeier, B. Rieman. E. St. George (VP).

Campu8 South Council: ROW 1: C. Furnare, L. Obergefell, M. Popken (Sec.), L. Halm, J. Hemes. ROW 2: E. Pienta (Treas.), D. McGlynn (V. Pres.), R. Roseman (Pres.). D. Lohueier, P. Caron.

Helping Older People: ROW 1: S. Burke, L. Mitchell, P. Salupo. L. Stevenson (Pres). ROW 2: A. Wade. M. Madden (Treas). L. Fangmen (V. Pres), K. Wendorf.

Organizations/141


Delta Omega Tau UAO Big Brothers/Big Sisters SA Selectpeople

Delle Om. ._ T... Sorority S. McCaffrey (VP) ROW 1: M Mcgovern J Smiley. T Gonzalez. M McCann. K. Donahue. J. lambe. ROW 2: C. Brophy. C Weber. K Harpst. A lyman G Shurty K. Clarke. A. Schupp. ROW 3: M. McPartland. C. TIerney. 0 Bal. 0 Nazzaro (Pres). M Gallo (V Pres of ServICeS). J. Culkowskl. M. KIee, C. Carr. J Coder ROW 4: l Tomollo B Doorley. J Ramus. J Baird. C. Benninghoff. V. Pohlman (Sec). S. Rose. K. Coates. S. Robinson.

UAO: Row 1: M. Haverland, T. Johnson (Co-Pres. ). J. King. E. Murin Row 2: A. Flynn. D. Edwin. F. Stamatiades. M. Saunders C. Cauley. Row 3: S. Roseman. P. Cualey. J. Boechers. M. Maher. P. Notoras. E. BeUln. Row 4: R. Curry. P. Haverland. T. Gutman. T. Franchlna. C. WaUs.

142/ Organizations

Delta Omega Tau Delta Omega Tau, the youngest sorority on campus, was founded in 1979 and was officially recognized as a sorority in April of 1980. Distinguishing them from the others is their dual nature as a social Greek organization that emphasizes service to the community. Suspected Child Abuse and Neglect, Womanline, Catholic Social Services, and the Ronald McDonald House are the service organizations that each sister participates in. In addition, the group does group service projects throughout the year, i.e. clean sweep, food drives for the needy, and various charity fundraisers. Socially, Delta Omega Tau is also very active at UD. This year, they sponsored several all-campus parties ranging in theme from a Madhatter to Christmas in the Bahamas. Delta Omega Tau also entertained the Sigma Nu Fraternity from Wittenberg University, with the help of the Dayton Sigma Nus, and hosted a football game/party with a group of UD law students.

81, 8rothen/Blg .....n: Row 1: K. Stack man. V. Neldort (Pres.), J Eure (Sec.). Row 2: D. Corsmaier, B. Rieman, E. St. George (VP)


Union Activities Organization The Union Activities Organization, created when the Kennedy Union opened in 1964, plans and puts on the various programs of the University Activities Office. They provide weekly programs that contribute to the overall develpment of life at UD. These programs have included weekly forums, tournament nights, Book-nBabble, free movies, the KU Art Gallery, and the Mystery Photo Contest. In addition, they sponsor special events like Christmas on Campus, Friendly Floyd's Monte Carlo, and the Halloween Ball. We're a group that never stops planning, so we need you and your ideas. You'll be surprised at what we can do for you! Big Brothers/Big Sisters Big Brothers/ Big Sisters is an organiza-

tion which provides friends and role models for children from one-parent families. A member is matched with a child by a caseworker through the local chapter of the National Big Brothers/ Big Sisters of America . Volunteers are asked to make a one-year commitment to spend approximately three hours a week with a child, engaging in fun and growth-oriented activities. The club holds mee,t ings once every two weeks and sponsors monthly group activities. Student Association Selectpeople The Student Association Select people form a group of student-elected workers who serve under the Student Association Directors. Each selectperson is required to attend all of the Student Association meetings, keep hours in the Student Association Office, and aid their respective directors in any way possible.

Student Association Selectpeople

Organizations/143


Lambda Lambda Lambda Lambda Lambda Lambda sorority recently ce'lebrated its 20th reunion to which sisters who pledged as far back as 1962 came to reminisce with 63 present active sisters. The reunion proved tradition has kept the sorority strong and full of loyal, caring girls. Pledge-Sister, Christmas, Fix-Up, and Senior Farewell have been dances this social organization has enjoyed annually as well as participating in service projects for the community and intra-sorority sports. Lambda Lambda Lambda has the closeness that every sorority strives for, and every member will always have a special spot in her heart for this sorority. Student Dietetic Association The Student Dietetic Association, an affiliate of the American Dietetic Association, is a professional student organiza-

tion providing a framework for meaningful student involvement and stimulating interest in the profession of dietetics. Objectives include broadening the scope of educational experiences through varied nutrition information to both the lay and student communities, providing opportunities for members to become acquainted with A.D.A., and stimulating sound nutrition practices among peers. Any University of Dayton student interested in the area of nutrition is eligible for student membership for the academic year subject to approval by the Association. Cystic Fibrosis The Cystic Fibrosis Volunteers are a group of college students of varied interests joined in an effort to aid children with cystic fibrosis. The organization is unique, being the only group of its kind in the nation . Volunteers are trained in Chest Physical Therapy by certified trainers .

Uatbda Lam.............. Bororttr ROW 1: P McErlane M Stoffel (V Pres). J Alnge (SeC). J Dingens (Pres.). C. Dougan. ROW 2: J.RocIriguez. J Fogarty. K Magoto. O. AntoUni. C Karman. C. Quickery. ROW I: S. Bordner. O. Muhr. S McC8M. J. King. C Bradfield S. FoIIsI.

After receiving certification from Children's Medical Center, students are able to go out to children's homes to perform therapy once weekly. The club provides transportation for members without cars. Volunteers work with the children who have C. F. on a one-to-one basis. Members also enjoy group activities such as parties, picnics, and outings to ibasketball games. Marycrest South Council The Marycrest South Council represents the residents of Marycrest complex by planning events that serve their needs. Representatives are elected from each floor section that falls under the jurisdiction of the council, and then serve on various activities committees for the purpose of planning for the social and cultural well-being of the residents. All residents of Marycrest Complex are encouraged to be active in the operations

........ D....... AaocI8Uon: .... • M Gromackl. E. Kemme. M fAcLaughlin (Sec.). I: J Moran K. Conner. L Uokieed B. MatkOYllch (Ptes). A. Dar¡ dInger (Tf88$.).

144/0rganizations


Lambda Lambda Lambda Student Dietetic A88n. Cystic Fibrosis Maryerest South Council AIChE

of the council. as a better council will mean a better dorm life. American Institute of Chemical Engineers The University of Dayton Student Chapter of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers was established to promote the professional development of its members by its programs and to contribute to the development of the Chemical Engineering student through social and academic activities that involve both faculty and members. Any student enrolled in Chemical Engineering at the University is eligible for membership. The members of AIChE are given the opportunity to learn more about their field of study through professional speakers. films. and plant trips. Other activities include money-making projects. participation in Engineer's Week. and an annual banquet/faculty roast.

C,allc PI........ VolunlHn: Row 1: M Madden, L Sheppard. Row 2: M Rocci. S Fem. J. Sam-

The AlMJIc8n Inalltute of ChemlCIII Elllln. .n: ROW 1: K. Doyle (Sec.). J Belich. S ChampIOn. J. Klecan. P Kaplan. K Logue. D. Marnell. M. Gurley, ROW 2: D. Back, M. Gardlll, F Siamatiades. J Memerlng, K Chmura M. Oeardorf J Munlgan ROW 3: D. Ledonne. T Kueterman, T. Connell. L Lanningsn (Pres ). C. PhilUps, M LIeberman. D. Setzler. 0 Mosko

Maryer••t South Council

mons.

Organlzations/145


Sigma Nu Black Action Through Unit, SAM Lambda Nu

Sigma Nu

..... ActIon Through UnllJ: Row1z T. HllCSOIl L Payne S Lovett Row 2: K Taylor. S. Austin, L Tutuler L Oees, (V P). C. Stewart (Pres.)

146/ Organizations

Sigma Nu The Sigma Nu fraternity is a national fraternity based on a Legion of Honor. It was founded in 1869 at the Virginia Military Institute in Lexington, Virginia, and now has over two hundred chapters around the country still loyal to this tradition of honor. The Sigma Nu colony was founded at the University of Dayton in the Spring of 1982 by twenty-two students. Sigma Nu's main objective is to establish a better relationship with the Dayton community, to offer the University of Dayton men another choice in fraternities wh ile working with the present fraternities and sororities to make the University of Dayton a university that can appeal to all types of students. Black Action Through Unity Black Action Through Unity (BATU) is the Black student government on the University of Dayton campus. BA TU is designed to promote unity among the Black students as well as to provide cultural events .

lAM: Row 1: P DrCicco J Carr, B. Bevens. Row 2: J. Bagllerl. C Collier, M. Au... C. Sipple. 0. Heitmeyer


BA TU designs, coordinates, and implements political, community, and academic events, including the Labor Day picnic. the Martin Luther King Day march. and the Black talent extravaganza. All programs are open to those interested in learning more about the Black experience. SAM The Society for Advancement of Management is a professional student organization which attempts to promote within its membership and foster within the university community an increased understanding of professional management . The club works toward preparing the student members for the transition from college to the business world through the development of management skills and relations with their peers. These goals are met tnrough holding monthly meetings and sponsoring workshops, social activi-

ties and guest speakers in the management field. Membership is open to any student at the University interested in management. Lambda Nu Lambda Nu was founded by B sisters in 1972 and has progressively grown to take an active place on campus. Lambda Nu provides service functions every year such as the American Heart Association collection and participation in the basketball marathon lor muscular dystrophy. On the social side, Lambda Nu has been involved with many different events. Besides having parties with various fraternities, the sorority has several annual events, including the Homecoming Party. Thanksgiving Dinner, New Year's Eve Party, Founders Day Dance, Senior Farewell, and an original Ugly Man on Campus contest.

Lambda Nu

Organizations/ 147


Phi Alpha Theta The Phi Alpha Theta International History Honorary Society exists to encourage the study of history and to recognize outstanding efforts made by individuals in this discipline. Undergraduate members must have completed at least 12 semester hours in history while maintaining better than a 3.0 average and occupying a position in the top 35 % of their class. Throughout the academic year, Phi AI路 pha Theta brings in speakers to discuss historical or topical issues and sponsors a historical Dayton tour. For the dedicated student of history, membership in Phi Alpha Theta is a landmark achievement. Rho Rho Rho Since its foundation and recognition in 1966, the brotherhood of Rho Rho Rho has attained the reputation as one of the most illustrious Greek fraternities on the University campus.

There are currently twenty-two active brothers on campus who believe that the significance of the Greek PPP shall be interpreted as "Reason, Respect, and Responsibility" within the framework of our society. We are respected by our peers for having the best social events, as well as a high degree of competitiveness in all athletic activities. Raising funds to help the needy has become the latest concern of this fraternity. Anyone possessing unique qualities and high standards should take the time to inquire further about this fraternity and what it stands for. Sigma Sweethearts The Sigma Sweethearts consists of young ladies functioning as an auxiliary body to Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity, Inc., Iota Theta Chapter. The Sigma Sweethearts' main purpose is to aid the fraterni-

Phi Alpha Theta

148/0rganizations

ty in chapter projects, community services, and university activities. Some examples of our activities are our hunger walk for CROP, which is affiliated with the March of Dimes, our annual dance for the United Way in conjunction with our annual toy drive, and our participation in the Run, Walk, Jogathon for Big Brother I Big Sister. The ladies of the Sigma Sweetheart Club stress academics, sisterhood and dignity of womanhood. Our motto is: Ladies of distinction striving to make life better through the men of Phi Beta Sigma. Student Association Directors The core of the Student Association consists of the president and vice president and seven directors. Assigned to each director are at least two selectpersons. Each director is involved in one aspect of campus life: academic affairs, entertainment, finance, ombudsman, pub-

Rho Rho Rho


!icity, public relations, and student organizations. Zeta Zeta Zeta Zeta Zeta Zeta was founded in 1973, and is one of the youngest fraternities on campus. As a small group, it has many high hopes and aspirations and offers a unique alternative to the other fraternities on campus. Zeta Zeta Zeta offers services to both UD and the surrounding community. The services to the University include participation in the Clean Sweep and the Greek Games and sponsoring a Beer Blast before home basketball games. These activities promote not only the Zetas, but Greeks in general. Service to the community is accomplished by participation in the Aluminum Can Drive, the basketball marathon for United Way, and an annual service project for Children 's Medical Center.

Zeta Zet. Zeta FrIIIernItr. Row 1: B HafneI' P SmIth. B. carr R Meyers. Row 2: M. Bucy.k R. Popeon, M. Gfeany. L Crooke. F FistI8f: T. PrInz. Row II: 0 Myat'S; J. Scully. S V.,. Forsthoefe~ B. Martam. D. Hustmyer.

..... .........,.. Row 1: C. Charity. K. Taylor. S. Cross. Row 2: L Hicks, SA DlrNIort: Row 1: ~ T" , .I:JlmCan. P. Quito. P McDonald Raw 2: T. warren. .... Johnson. J. Gallagher, M. O'Roarke; J. Ebner. K. Ryan. G. Geblmann.

Organizations/149


American Chemical Society Campus Bible Fellowship Pan-Hellenic Council SNEA

American Chemical Society

C....pua Bible FeilD_hip: Row 1: M. Feustel, S. Mar1in, P Boichalk. Row 2: J Hart, G. Holts. J. Feustel, J Street.

150/ Organizations

American Chemical Society The American Chemical Society promotes a better understanding in the science of chemistry and keeps abreast of current development along theoretical and experimental lines. They also plan tours of plants and labs working in the field of chemistry. Campus Bible Fellowship Campus Bible Fellowship is an international fellowship open to all students, faculty and staff. It is coordinated by the local Campus Bible Fellowship staff personnel to encourage the understanding of the historic Christian faith throug,h group and individual Bible studies, social activities, retreats, and other ministries. Campus Bible Fellowship is open to all regardless of religiOUS group affiliation. Campus Bible Fellowship is designed to help college students st~dy and apply the Bible in their daily lives. Weekly group Bible studies are held on campus. Individual Bible studies and counseling are also available.

........... CouIlClI: ROW 1: R. Kronbach, S. Woomer D Larroce, (V Pres.). I<. DobtemayI (Pres.). D. AntOlini (Sec) ROW 2: M Maselko B. Trambore (Treas.) L Dell M McCann (V Pres.). C Brophy ROW u.. Stoffel. K. Falough. J. Kasaman. C Dougan. M McGovern.


Pan-Hellenic Council Pan-Hel is the governing council for the six local sororities at UD. Pan-Hel promotes unity and a sense of sisterhood among the six sororities and maintains open lines of communication between all Greeks. We help provide an opportunity for Greeks to unite and work together towards improving Greek life. Annually, we recognize the "Greek Woman of the Year," a UD sister who has contributed the most to Greek life and to the University. Each sorority has three representatives on the Pan-Hellenic Council. We sponsor two Joint Rushes a year, one each semester. We participate in inter-sorority sports, usually in tournament form. Pan-Hel works with Interfraternity Council (IFC) on Greek Week and Greek Ball. Pan-Hel sponsored a Women's Day on September 22, 1982.

Student National Education Association The Student National Education Association (S.N.E.A.) is the only education professional club on campus. It strives to upgrade the quality of teacher education by conducting various workshops to inform educators about developments in the field of education. The club is also afrfiliated with the National Education Association (N.E.A.) and the Ohio Education Association (O.E.A.). Therefore, the local chapter is chartered as a professional club. Brief business meetings are held once a month and are followed by a speaker, film, or workshop presentation. Club members are encouraged to attend since new educational ideas are presented that many benefit them now as teacher aides, student teachers, and future educators. All education majors are welcome to join.

Student National Edocation Association ROW 1: C. Carney, D. Edelbrock, J. Culkowski, D. James. ROW 2: P. Sheetz, J. Burt (Treas.). J. Kammer, M. Schaut, G. Mazzola (Pres.). A. Segna

Organizations/151


Orpheus Orpheus is the University of Dayton literary publication featuring original photography, art work, and manuscripts by UD students. Orpheus also promotes the arts on campus by sponsoring poetry readings, films, and shows of artwork or talent. Membership is open to any student with a desire to support such cultural endeavors. The club also sponsors a cash awards contest in which they choose a winning entry for each of the following categories: Brother Leonard Mann Poetry Award, Art, Photography, and Fiction. Central Service Club The Central Service Club is a unifying

organization of all service clubs on campus. It attempts to encourage the spirit of the service clubs and to aid, in recruitment of members. To coordinate all the activities of the different service clubs, a weekly meeting of representatives from all service clubs is held. The club encourages and sponsors activities that promote student involvement in service organizations, such as Service Club Awareness Week. The club also provides social outlets to members of other service clubs by planning picnics and parties. Membership is limited to appointed representatives of the other service organizations with a cumulative average of 2.5.

Orpheua: C. Kawecka. K. Hinkle. J DeMare (EdItor). F Bogner (Asst EdHor). C. Cousineau (Arts Editor).

152/ Organizations


Orpheu Central Service Club Black Greek Council Phi Sigma Kappa

Black Greek Council The Black Greek Council's purpose is to aid in studying, solving, and fostering high moral, social, and intellectual life. Phi Sigma Kappa Phi Sigma Kappa is a national men's fraternity . It was founded March 15, 1873, by six students attending Massachusetts Agricultural College (now the University of Massachusetts). Phi Sigma Kappa has grown to include over one hundred chapters that are located throughout the entire United States. The Signet, the official publication of Phi Sigma Kappa since 1879, is a means of quarterly communication among the numerous Phi Sigs. Phi Sigma Kappa chartered its Eta Hexaton chapter at the University of Dayton on November 18, 1972. Since 1972, the Phi Sigs at UD have tripled in membership and have established themselves as leaders of service, social, and sports events in the UD community.

Cenlr" Service Club ROW 1: A. Nowak. M. Madden. D. Helm. ROW 2: M.

Phi Sigma Kappa

Bleck Greek Council K. Taylor, T. Howard. S. Lovell, T. Hixson.

Kenney CCo-Pres.), A. Wade. S. Nelson (Co-Pres.). T. Hoy, P. Reis

Organizations/153


College Republicans Delta Sigma PI Cheerleaders Kappa Omicron Phi

College Republican. ROW 1: P. Veneziano, P. Harris (V. Pres.). S. McGlynn (V. Pres.), T. Frantz. M. Scheetz. ROW 2: R. Ait (Treas.), M. Shanabrook, T. Hoy (Sec.), M. McDea. K. Palecek, S. Donahue, M. CUsack (V. Pres.).

Delta Sigma Pi: Row 1: J. Sprauer. D. Stutz. S. Schumacher, S. Bado, S. Koch. Row 2: A. Leonard, S. MuHen. B. Blumer, L. Walker. Row 3: D. Fournier, K. Riddell. A. Byrne, C. Kowal.

154/ Organizations

College Republicans The purpose of College Republicans is to increase awareness and involvement in political affairs. Sponsored speakers give students the opportunity to meet those involved in the political process. The club is involved in political campaigns on all levels from community to the national perspective. Delta Sigma Pi Delta Sigma Pi is a business fraternity that was instituted at UD in the fall of 1980 as the Pi Epsilon Tau Chapter. It has grown rapidfy over the past four semesters to a total membership of 710, including four honorary faculty members. Delta Sigma Pi sponsors professional activities such as debates, guest speakers and tours. The Delta Sigs are also proud of the community service projects in which they have been involved. Delta Sigma Pi also engages in a wide variety of social events planned throughout the semester.

Ch. .rleade,.: Row 1: M. Dolan, S. Pavlak, P. Harris. Row 2: L. Rueber, L Adams. J. Graft. Row 3: K. Doggett, G. Townes, A. Pugh, J. Taranto, N. Mathias, C. Ruhe.


Cheerleaders The cheerleaders are dedicated to promoting UD as well as representing the school mainly through athletic events. The club's purpose is to generate enthusiasm among the students and community, to support the Flyer teams, and to entertain the fans. Captains are elected every year prior to tryouts. The squad consists of 6 male cheerleaders, 6 female cheerleaders, and a mascot. Kappa Omicron Phi Kappa Omicron Phi, the Home Economics National Honor Society, promotes scholarship, leadership, and professionalism among those studying general home

economics, dietetics, or food and nutrition business administration. Members qualify by achieving a 3.2 average in at least 12 credit hours of home economics, and a 3.0 overall. KO Phi sells submarine sandwiches at the Fall Festival, coordinates a "Dinner for Two" raffle at Turnabout time, and offers a Home Economics Career Night to the University community annually. Members contribute regularly to the Crossnore School for underprivileged children in the Appalachian Mountains. KO Phi members attend regional and national meetings with members from other universities.

Kappa Omicron Phi

Organizations/ 155


Celebration Lambda Alpha Ep lion

Da" Ian Daytonian Staff The Daytonian staff produces the UD yearbook. The staff attempts to recapture all of the special moments of the year in pictures. The staff members of the Daytonian are prepared for this assignment by several workshops covering photography, graphics, and other mechanical skills. The editor in chief oversees the work of ten section editors and their student staffs. Any student may join the Daytonian staff. Editorial positions are appointed and require previous yearbook experience. Lambda Alpha Epsilon Lambda Alpha Epsilon is an association devoted to the furtherance of pro-

fessionalism in all areas of criminal justice. It strives to encourage greater cooperation among criminal justice agencies and to promote greater understanding between the community and the profession. Under the aegis of membership, .jt fosters more responsive training and education to fulfill the needs of the profession through sponsorship of seminars, technical materials, and personal contacts. The association serves as a unified national voice on key issues of the profession.

Celebration Celebration , UD's contemporary swing chorus, has been in existence since 1976. This organization is not an official performance group of the Music Department. It

Celebration

156/ Organizations

is comprised of 20 volunteer members of various majors who enjoy singing and dancing to all types of popular music. Celebration rehearses four hours each week; performances are scheduled on the average of every two weeks and are given to various UD organizations, local civic groups, area high schools and churches, and state conventions. We are under the leadership of a 3member Coordinating Committee, choreographed by a member of the Dayton Contemporary Dance Company, and directed by Brother Bruce Griffin, S.M. Often thought of as the University's goodwill ambassadors, Celebration always puts smiles on the faces of those who see us.


(Doug Rechstelner)

umbela Alph. !pelion ROW 1: J. Fry. K. Farrell (V Pres. / Treas.). M. Mashia (Pres.). D.,toni.n Sta" ROW ROW 1: K. Coates (Editor). S. Shallenberger (Co-Editor). ROW o Blttnen ROW 2: L. Moll. A. Sievers. J. Melocchl. J. Lambe. T. Lange S. Bolton. 2: M. EllwOOd. L. Moll. M. K1ee. ROW 3: H. Zschuppe. B. Gauder. B. Mayhan. G Konkoly. T. Montefero. A Ascherl.

Organizations/157


Omega Omega Sorority, founded in 1938, is the oldest sorority at UD. We are proud of our long history and maintain strong ties with many of our alumnae sisters. Our motto, "Sisterhood, Unity, and Love, " means a lot to us and is the basis of all we do. Omega actively participates in campus events, such as Campus Carnival, Oktoberfest, Springfest, Greek Week, and clean sweeps. We are a social sorority with cultural and philanthropic activities as well. Regular social functions include formal induction dances, fix-up parties, an annual hayride, open parties, and a Big Sister / Little Sister picnic. We are a group of unique individuals with sisterhood as a common bond. As one of the smaller sororities, we offer a closeness not found in many of the larger organizations on campus. Gamma Gamma Kappa Gamma Gamma Kappa is a social sorority and participates in social functions with other organizations, Greek or non-

0 ...... SorOrity ROW 1: L Kellen (Pres.) K. Faloughl (Sec.) A Rochen (V Pres.). J. Kassman. ROW 2: F Stamatlades, J Halleran. L Clingman. C. Sherman, 0 McFarland. ROW 0 Foumler. K. Saxton. L Green. K Murphy

a:

158/ Organizations

Greek. Gammas nave three or four dances a year and sponsor a senior farewell cookout in the spring. Gammas perform services to the Dayton and UD communities through activities dealing with the Heart Fund, Save the Children, election work, and the dance marathon. In '82-83, Gamma Gamma Kappa celebrated their 20th anniversary with an alumni cocktail party / dance and banquet. Catalina The Catalina Synchronized Swim Club is a sports organization which develops the art of synchronized swimming through a fitness and fun orientation. The members give performances for Christmas on Campus each year and occasionally for other Dayton area groups. Racquetball Club The Racquetball Club is organized to promote among its members the principles associated with friendship and sportsmanship. The organization is designed to foster within the university community the healthy spirit of competition .

Gamma Gamma Kappa


Omega Gamma Gamma Kappa Catalina Racquetball Alpha Phi Sigma The club attempts to instruct its members on ways in which to improve their game with the underlying emphasis on sportsmanship. Any student with a strong interest in playing racquetball or in learning about the game may join.

Alpha Phi Sigma Alpha Phi Sigma, a National Criminal Justice Honor Society, is represented on the campus by Zeta Chapter. This chapter prides itself on being very active and hard working, and was recently recognized as the Outstanding New Chapter in the nation. The society has attended conventions on both the national and regional levels, and will be traveling to the 1983 National Convention in San Antonio, Texas. The Zeta Chapter has participated in the Sheriff's Ride-Along Program, United Way Marathon, prison tours, Oktoberfest, Ghetto Clean Sweep, Book Raffles, a Mock Trial for Gifted Children, and a security tour of Wright Patterson Air Force Base.

Alpha Phi Sigma. tallonal Criminal Ju.llce Honor Society ROW 1: L. Moll, B. Reno. A. Smith (Pres.). J. Collier (Sec.). K. Murray, ROW 2: L. Tornes, T. McLean. D. DeGrain (Advisor). T. Ferrari. A. Sievers. M. Meersman.

The Catallne .,nchronlzed Swim Club ROW 1: M. Walter (Sec.). S. Racey. M. Gardill. S. Wible ROW 2: J. Kammer (V. Pres.). J. Klecan (Pres.). J. Reitz. S.

The Racquetball Club ROW 1: P. Bowker. G. Poneman. J. Bayer. ROW 2: M. Vanclerembrose. R. Sturgeon. B. Davis. K. Lennox.

Sutor. S. Maloney.

Organizations/159


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No Pain, No Gain In This Game

(John Moreau)

(Chris Cunningham)

162/ Football

(Chris Cunningham)

(Chris Cunningham)


(Chris Cunningham)

The University of Dayton Flyers Football team, under the guidance of second year coach Mike Kelly, finished the season 6-4 by winning five of their last six games. U.D.'s first win came against Jersey City State with the score reading 71-0. The Flyers had 105 players see action with nine different Flyers scoring touchdowns. This season was one of rebuilding for the Flyers with only a few starters returning. This year's squad did a fine job of filling in the blanks and the Flyers will be looking forward to a good season next year.

UD 17 14 14 71 (Chris Cunningham)

24 62

38 13

28 42

Bucknell Butler Baldwin-Wallace Jersey City State Kenyon Maryville Canisius Wabash Salisbury State Wisconsin-Superior

opp 19 20

28

o 7 o

14 14

o o

(Chris Cunningham)

Football/163


(Chris Cunningham)

(Chris Cunningham)

(Chris Cunningham)

164/ Foot ball

(Cindy Cardinal)


(Chris Cunningham)

AWARDS White-Allen Most Valuable Player - Greg Bazany Stan Kurdziel Outstanding Lineman - Joe Beck Flyer of the Year - Joe Beck John L. MacBeth Memorial Scholar-Athlete - Mike Fitz Chief Toscani Hitter Award - Paul Vollman Emil Karas Memorial - Doug Conley Sheriff "Beno" Keiter Trophy Jon Vorpe Lt. Andy Ziulli Award Rick Haynes UD also placed three players on the District Four College Division AIIAcademic team - kicker Mike Pignatiello, defensive backs Dennis Koper and Kerry Coombs.

(Cindy Cardinal)

(Cindy Cardinal)

(Chris Cunningham)

Football/165


Women Love To Raise A Racquet

First row (L-R): Dianne Harvey, Stacy Dowiatt, Michelle Fallahee, Colleen Field, Anne Wenstup, Renee Rusnack . Second row : Barb Moritz, Stacie Clark , Kathy Braasch, Sara Billingsley, Laura Miller, Tami Butz. (Peggy Sampey)

(Peggy Sampey)


The Lady Flyers had a rough time this year, finishing the season 2-9. The top three players: Colleen Field, Ann Wenstrup and Sara Billingsley, returned for second year coach Teresa Condit but were not able to pull off a winning season. Seniors Colleen Field, Tami Butz, and Kathy Braasch were the co-captains for the '82 season. (Peggy Sampey)

Sept. 14 Sept. 16 Sept. 17 Sept. 20 Sept. 23 Sept. 27 Sept. 30 Oct. 4 Oct. 7 Oct. 9 Oct. 11 Oct. 12

Northern Kentucky University Xavier University Wilmington College Sinclair Community College Earlham College University of Cincinnati Xavier University Wilmington College Butler University Northern Kentucky Universfty Centre College Rained Out Sinclair Community College University of Cincinnati

L L W L L L L W L

L L

(Peggy Sampey)

Women's Tennis/ 167


UD Soccer

Just For Kicks

Moreau) Sitting L-R: Ball Boy R. Scheidler, R. Massoud, J. Welch, J. Kennedy, M. Sendelbach, J. Moore, M. Scheurmann. Kneeling: P. Szendrey, R. Fosheim, M. Patterson, J. Mullings, D. Conway, P. Beaudet, J. Scheidler. Standing: Coach Jerry Butcher, team physician Dr. Earl Scheidler, S. Callahan, M. Johnson, B. Lensing, D. Burgess, Dean Burgess, M. Rinaldi, Ass!. Coach Andy Krahling, Student Trainer Keith Fitzgerald. . ham (Chris Cunningham) (Chris Cunningham)

168/


(Chris Cunningham)

Third year coach Jerry Butcher and assistent coach Andy Krahling helped lead the Flyers to a 10-7 record. The 1982 Soccer team was a young one, with three seniors, six juniors, five sophomores, and eight freshmen making up the squad. This year the Flyers had a "new look," they played all their home games at Welcome Stadium and had a Booster Association providing support throughout the season. With the Flyers only losing three players to graduation, and with the help of such players as Joe Mullings, John Kennedy, Joe Scheidler, Romeo Massoud and Rob Forsheim the Flyers should have a great '83 season.

Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept.

(ChriS Cunningham)

Sept. Sept. Sept. Oct. OCt. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Nov.

8 11 15 17 18 23 27 30 1

5 10 13 18 20 23 27

5

L University of Akron W University of Kentucky W Xavier University W,L Cedarville College Invitational W Wittenberg University W University of Louisville W DePaul University L University of Notre Dame L Bowling Green State U. L Wright State University L Cleveland State University W University of Cincinnati W Earlham College W Xavier University W Ohio State University L Indiana University

(ChriS Cunningham)

Soccer/169


Women Outstanding In Their Field

(John Moreau) Front rON: C. Davis, K. Pelin, L. Kelly, L. Creech, J. Ogburn, J. Gilbert. Middle row: B. Rismiller , A. Farren, T. Ada ms, B. Maguire, K. Graeser, A. Britt. Back row: Head Coach Karen Emery, A. Parker, K. Reed. M. McCune. T. Hessert . A. Flynn. Assl. Coach Janet Ma nskl.

(Tom Frenz)

(Chris Cunningham)


(Tom Frenz)

(Chris Cunningham)

(Tom Frenz)

The Lady Flyers, under coach Karen Emery, finished the season with a record of 4-10-1, but t he style and intensity of play is not indicated by that record. The team's first win was against Wittenberg where the Flyers dominated the game in every sense as they out shot the Tigers 53-3. The Lady Flyers did end their season on a positive note by defeating Ohio Wesleyan 3-0.

Sept. 9 Sept. 14 Sept. 16 Sept. 28 Sept. 22 Sept. 5 Oct. 6 Oct 8 Oct. 9 Oct. 12 Oct. 15 OCt. 20 Oct. 24 Oct. 27

Indiana State University Ball State University Miami University Wittenberg University University of Toledo Ashland College Franklin College Kent State University Eastern Illinois University Earlham College Eastern Kentucky University Ohio University Davis & Elkins College Ohio State University Ohio Wesleyan University

L L L W L W tie L L W L L L L W

(Chris Cunningham)

Field Hockey /171


UD Men Swing Into Action

(Paul Langehenry) Front row: Jeff Reims, Mike Giudling, Paul Langehenry. Back row: Alex (team driver), Dave Dankelson, Pete Bowker, Darren Feteko.

(Paul Langehenry)

172/Golf

(Paul Langehenry)


(Paul Langehenry)

Coach Jim Larkin and the U.D. golfers hoped to have a winning season. That's just what they did, finishing the season 35-31. Competing at the Division I level without giving scholarships means the Flyers usually face a tough schedule. On tap for the 1982 season were tournaments with Indiana Central, Franklin College, Tiffin, Bluffton, Marquette, and Notre Dame. The highlight of the year was when U.D. defeated Notre Dame' and Marquette in a trimatch at Notre Dame. The golfers were led by Co-captains Dave Dankelson and last year's MVP Pete Bowker. This year's MVP was Paul Langehenry and Pete Bowker received the Gene Schill Award, which is given to the golfer who shows the most dedication and determination.

(Paul Langehenry)

Golf/173


Spikers Record Net Losses

(John Moreau) Front row: Bernadette Hotze, Diane Smiley, Monica Berlllo, Karen Slack, Jill Abrink, Ann Frericks, Colleen Cassell. Back row: Coach Ann Meyers, Tina Jasinowski, Liz Van Thorre, Sandy Bergman, Jane Meyers, Cathy Hill, Ass!. Coach Kathy Marshall, Manager Ingel Groce.

(Tom Frenz)

(Tom Frenz)


The UD Spikers had hoped to pick up where they left off last season, but were unable to do so, losing many games in close decisions. Coach Ann Meyers welcomed back four starters from last year's squad and welcomed many newcomers to UD's program. Seniors Jane Meyers, Liz Van Thorre, and Sandy Bergman all made strong contributions to the Flyer effort.

(Tom Frenz)

Sept. 10 Eastern Kentucky University Sept. 14 Ball State University Sept. 17-18 Wright State Univ. Invitational 2 losses 2 wins Sept. 21 Indiana University Sept. 24-25 Xavier Univ. Invitational Sept. 29 Mount St. Joseph College Oct. 2 University of Louisville Oct. 5 Northern Kentucky University Oct. 8 Tennessee Tech University University of Cincinnati Oct. 12 Oct. 16 Ohio Northern University and Bowling Green State Univ. Oct. 18 Miami University and Xavier University Oct. 22-23 Midwest Catholic University Invitational Oct. 26 Wright State University Oct. 30 College of Wooster and Asland College Nov. 3 Franklin College and Butler University Nov. 8 Wright State University Nov. 12 Northern Kentucky University Nov. 17 Xavier University

L L L 4-2 L L W L

L L L L L 2-4 L W W W W L L W

(Tom Frenz)

Volleyball/ 175


Flyer Hoop-erstars

(John Moreau) Silting (L-R) Manager John Courtney, Grad. Asst. Mark Knue, Larry Schellenberg, Paul Hawkins, Mike Byrd, Mike Reichert. Kevin Conrad, Roosevelt Chapman, Ted Harris, Asst. Coach Jim Ehler, and Asst. Coach Jim Larkin. Standing (L-R) Head Coach Don Donoher, Asst. Coach Jack Butler, Damon Goodwin. Rory Dahlinghaus, Jeff Zern, Jeff Tressler, Jim Shields, Ed Young, Asst. Coach Dan Hipsher, Director of Athletics Tom Frericks. I (Bern

176/M


Seven returning letterwinners and six newcomers were on hand when University of Dayton basketball Coach Don Danaher opened practice for the 82-83 season. U.D.'s newcomers were: Rory Dahlinghaus. Damon Goodwin. Jim Shields. Jeff Tressler. Ed Young and Jeff Zern. Young. Zern. and Goodwin saw the majority of the action of the freshmen. while Tressler was redshlrted in order to put on more weight. The Flyers got off to a great start by beating Otterbein. 112-77. The Flyers started fast. thanks to balanced scoring and sharp shooting from the field. In addition. during U.D.'s match-up at Miami. Roosevelt Chapman scored his 1000th career point. U.D.'s season started off with a bang. with the Flyers winning 8 of the first 10 games. The second third was not as successful though. with U. D. losing 6 of the next 8 games. The final third proved to be very rewarding. with the Flyers winning 8 of 10; beating Marquette. which was later in the NCAA tournament. and DePaul. which went to the finals of the NIT tournament. The Flyers finished the season 1810. just falling short of an NIT bid. Head Coach Don Donoher was selected as an assistant coach for the US 1984 Olympic basketball team. while Roosevelt Chapman was named to the United States Basketball Writers Association All-District 4 Team. The Flyers will be lOSing three players to graduation. Mike Byrd. Kevin Conrad. and Mike Reichert.

(Bern Connelly)

Men's Basketball/177


(John Moreau)

(Bern Connelly)

(Bern Connelly)

1781


UD OPP OTTERBEI N 112 77 Eastern Kentucky 78 57 IONA 84 58 Miami 69 66 XAVIER 63 53 MINNESOTA 65 71 TOLEDO 67 63 WESTERN KENTUCKY 58 68 ,.,.,.,.,. MERRILL LYNCH CLASSIC""" Rice 68 55 Army 73 52 ********. * * * * * * * **************

54 63 49 64 75 52 82 55 65 61 75 79 58 53 65 97 41 80

MIAMI Providence Cincinnati Missouri RIDER DePaul DREXEL DUQUESNE Loyola / Chicago TEMPLE BUTLER LaSalle Detroit (OT) Old Dominion MARQUETTE LONG ISLAND Notre Dame DePAUL

57 66 50 78 57 56 60 58 58 53 57 73 54 61 63 85 53 71

(John Moreau)

Men's Basketball/179


(John Moreau)

(Bern Connelly)

(Bern Connelly)

180/Men's Basketball


Annual Fly.r Awards White Allen Valuable Player Trophy Roosevelt Chapman Flyer of the Year (given to the best supporting athlete) Kevin Conrad Shorty Sharpenter Rebounding Award Roosevelt Chapman (9. 6 rebounds per game) Alex Schoen Memorial Free Throw Trophy Roosevelt Chapman (82 % ) John L. MacBeth Scholar Athlete Award Mike Reichert Thomas M. Luppe Outstanding Freshman Award Ed Young Dr. George Rau Spirit Award Ted Harris and Mike Reichert

(John Moreau)

Men's Basketball/181


Ladies Grab Regional Crown

(John Moreau) Sitting (L-R) Leah Abla, Sue Youngpeter, Pam Palmer, Mary Byers, Rhonda Klette, Lori Cahill. Standing (L-R) Head Coach Linda Makowski, Ass\' Coach Teresa Condit, Sharon Curd, Julie Schaefer, Theresa Yingling, Donna Burks, Laurie Plank, Manager Mary Carol Gleason, Trainer Pat Jayson. (Bern Connelly) (Bern Connelly)

182/Women's Basketball


The University of Dayton Lady Flyers had a tremendous 82-83 season. finishing with a record of 20-10 and a regional championship. Going into the season Coach linda Makowski had two primary goals: first. to get her young Flyers established in their roles and then to have them jell. Secondly. she wanted to win enough games to get an invitation to the NCAA Division II tournament. Both of those goals were achieved. with the Lady Flyers taking the regional crown, beating Oakland. and making It to the quarterfinals where they were defeated by Cal Poly-Pomona. The Lady Flyers had a number of outstanding players during the season. with freshmen Teresa Yingling and Rhonda Klette helping to lead the way. The strongest performance was by junior forward Donna Burks. who on February 19th scored her 1000th career point, becoming only the sixth Lady Flyer to do so. She set records in total number of points for a single game and for number of field goals In a game. She was also nationally ranked in rebounding. scoring, and field goal percentage in NCAA Division II. Coach Makowski is very optimistic for next season, as she will only be losing one player, Sue Youngpeter, to graduation.

(Bern Connelly)

Women's Basketball/183


(Bern Connelly)

(Bern Connelly) (Bern Connelly)

184

(Bern Connelly)

(Bern Connelly)


OPP 71 Purdue 67 BALL STATE 90 Ohio State 71 Miami 77 66 BOWLING GREEN 72 69 TOLEDO 68 75 102 MICHIGAN • • 1O "DIAL CLASSIC, MIAMI, FLORIDA"·" Monmouth 76 65 73 Cleveland State 60 61 71 Pittsburgh UD

69 74 57

** ••• _.************** •••• ****** ***

(Bern Connelly)

81 66 50 61 75 53 90 80 81 77

65 83 65 72 65 78 64 * * * *"

71 73 66

OHIO UNIVERSITY Northern Kentucky Cincinnati Marshall Eastern Kentucky WESTERN KENTUCKY CHARLESTON (WV) XAVIER MARQUETTE Illinois-Chicago Loyola I Chicago Detroit INDIANA STATE Wright State EASTERN ILLINOIS BUTLER Notre Dame (OT) .. * * • *" • * * .... NCAA*"" * *. • 'lit *. * .. * Butler (Oakland, MI) Oakland Cal Poly-Pomona

76 58 70 53 52 60 62 46 47 64 63 66 57 57 72 67 68 .. • *

69 72 90

(Bern Connelly)

Women's Basketball I 185


Wrestlers Wrap Up Winners

(Jill Coder)

(Jill Coder) (Jill Coder)

186/Wrestling


(Jill Coder)

(Jill Coder)

The University of Dayton wrestling team finished its most successful season in U. D. 's history this year. The grapplers ended their season with a record of 10-8. It is the first time a U. D. wrestling team has ever won 10 matches in a year and also the first time a team has had backto-back winning seasons. In every season there are always good and bad things. Some of the bad were that injuries plagued the team, but in most situations the team was able to counteract that. Another problem the grapplers had to contend with was that U. D. was weak in its upper middle weights. In many cases U.D. was able to pull itself out of the holes, but not always. Still, the good outweighed the bad, the major strength being the great number of freshmen on the team. For a young team, the grapplers were quite successful. Three members of the team were singled out as having exceptional seasons: Shane Vandemark, Mike Hall, and John Schnecker. The grapplers will only be saying goodbye to Tom Coffman, and with so many members returning U.D. will be looking forward to a great season. Thanks to Nancy Meckstroth for supplYing Information used In this article

(Jill Coder)

Wrestling 11 87


Sticking It To Their Opponents

,

,

(John Moreau) Sitting (L-R) Chris Baker, Matt Tullio, Kevin Quinn, Jack Reagan, Keith Johnson, Mike Felton, John Fitzgerald, Pat Kallamyer, John Erwin, Dave Fossier. Standing (L-R) Ass!. Coach George Van Horn, Frank Purgar, Ron Centa, Andy Cupuano, Tom Van Tiem, Bob Karalas, Tom Baglio, Tom Spuzzillio, Malt Hartman, Ward Peterson, Jim Bradburn, Marty Walsh, John Rohan, Doug Willse, Trainer Keith Van Dyne, Head Coach Walt DeAnna. (Bern Connelly) (Bern Connelly)

188/Hockey


(Bern Connelly)

(Bern Connelly)

In summarizing the 1982-83 season for the University of Dayton Hockey team, it could be said that the team played two seasons in one. After getting off to a slow start, the Flyers finished strong by winning 8 of their last 10 games. Led this year by senior captains John Fitzgerald and Tom Baglio and junior captain Mike Felton, the hockey team sported a young team consisting mostly of sophomores and freshmen. Eight seniors were lost from last year's team. However, the Flyers finished the regular season with a 9-5-2 record, good enough for third place in the Midwest Collegiate Hockey League. The MCHL playoffs were held this year in Dayton, with 6 of the 7 teams qualifying for the tournament. After opening up with a first round win against Dennison University, the Flyers suffered a tough loss to Ohio University in the semi-finals. They then lost to Purdue In the consolation game, to finish the season in fourth place. It was not a disappointing season, though, as the Flyers placed Kevin Quinn, John Fitzgerald, Mike Felton, and Keith Johnson in the top ten scoring in the league. Likewise Fitzgerald, Johnson, Quinn, John Rohan, and goalie Chris Parker received all MCHL honors. The Flyers will be losing only three players to graduation this year and are looking forward to a very successful 1983-84 season.

MIKE FELTON

(Bern Connelly)

Hockey/189


A Team With Net Worth

(Doug Rechsteiner) Kneeling (L-R) Karl Russ, Ken Lutke. Standing (L-R) Coach Jim Larkin. Chris Joseph, George Giulvezan, Peter Rogus. Mark Schuller.

(Doug Rechs teiner)

190/Men's Tennis


Coach Jim Larkin and his netters finished the '83 season with an overall record of 7-9. Two Most Valuable Players were named: first team captain and lone senior, Chris Joseph, and Junior George Giulver-

zan.

(Doug Rechsteiner)

(Doug Rechsteiner)

The Flyers got off to a good start defeating their first two opponents, Sinclair and Northern Kentucky University. The netters hit a snag in mid-season, though. On April 10th, they faced Xavier in the morning and Akron in the afternoon. with the Xavier match away. The Flyers were defeated in both contests. The netters have a tough schedule because they have to have all of their matches played by the time school lets out. This is most difficult when players are In a slump because they don't have time to practice, and just have to go right into their next match. With the Flyers losing only Joseph to graduation, they should do well in the •84 season.

(Doug Rechsteiner)

Men's Tennis/191


A New Team Staying Afloat

(Julie Ryan) (Julie Ryan)

1921


(Julie Ryan)

The list of men's intercollegiate athletic teams at the University of Dayton grew over the winter with the addition of waterpolo. During the fall waterpolo was a club, but when the spring season approached they were the newest men's varsity sport. This elevated status is good for the team. It helps them out financially: they get better pool time for practice, and better equipment and they are able to letter in Waterpolo. The water men play at two pOints during the year, in the fall and in the spring. The fall season may have not provided the greatest overall record, 310, but it gave the members of the team some good experience especially since only a handful of the swimmers even knew how to play waterpolo. For the spring season, 15 of the 28 players returned along with five new swimmers. The watermen's first game played at home was against the University of Cincinnati. Unfortunately, the Flyers were unable to defeat the Bearcats. On April 22nd, the Flyers left Dayton for a 12-day tour playing such teams such as Bucknell, Slippery Rock, U.S. Naval Academy, and University of North Carolina. Next year the watermen will be back in full force, only losing Dan Kennedy, the team's best all-around player.

(Julie Ryan)

Waterpolo/193


Soggy Season For Softball Team

(Sally McCaffrey) (Sally McCaffrey)

194/8

(Sally McCaffrey) (Sally McCaffrey)


(Sally McCaffrey)

The University of Dayton women's softball team struggled to a 211 finish in the soggy spring. The Lady Flyers lost more games to weather than they were able to play (14 cancelled to 13 played). Senior co-captain Eileen Sales was named the team's Most Valuable Player, leading the team in hits, total bases, and stolen bases. Sales batted .333 for the season. Freshman Mary Sweizer led the team in hitting, with a .375 average. Senior Beth Maguire was honored with the Coach's Award. Maguire came back from shoulder surgery the season before to see action in 12 games.

opp

UD

o 1 o 4 o 1 1 1

2 8 2

o 14

Miami Miami Sinclair Sinclair Akron Akron Wright State Wright State Sinclair Sinclair Wright State Wright State Heidelberg

2 12 1

1 3 9 3 2 4 10 6 12 3

(Sally McCaffrey)

Soft ball / 195


Making A Pitch For The Flyers

(Sally McCaffrey)

196/

(Sally McCaffrey) (Sally McCaffrey)


1983 University of Dayton Baseball Roster

(Sally McCaffrey)

(Sally McCaffrey)

Allen Bailey Brian Bauman Tod Brindlinger Doug Buschor Scott Candee John Eddingfield Tom Fletcher Rob Florilli Chip Galaska Rick Hawkins Joe Hamilla Dan Hunt Mark lacofano Tim Josten Jay Letiza Scott Utmer Mark Macaluso John Mason John McKearney Bill Monroe Phil Nussman Ed Raymond Mike Reichert Mark Rykoskey John Schmitz Steve Schiller John Trychon Shane Vandemark Milt Vazquez Bob Young Tony Caruso, Head Coach AWARDS Most Valuable Player: Chip Galaska Rookie of the Year: Rick Hawkins Most Improved: Mark lacotano Most Valuable Pitcher: Steve Schiller Leading Hitter: Tom Fletcher, .366 Season Highlights Beating Notre Dame Splitting the series with Wright State Ranking third in Akron Tournament

(Sally McCaffrey)

Baseball /197


(Sally McCaffrey)

(Sally McCaffrey)

(Sally McCaffrey) (Sally McCaffrey)

198/


(Sally McCaffrey)

Opponent UD/OPP Maryland 0-7 Eastern Connecticut (DH) 2-8 Game 2 4-14 Southeastern Massachusetts 10-8 Seton Hall (DH) 4-9 Game 2 1-3 Kentucky 4-6 1-5 Miami (DH) Game 2 1-9 Kent State (DH) 2-9 0-9 Game 2 Notre Dame 6-5 Indiana (DH) 2-8 Game 2 ~8 Wittenberg 6-9 Wright State (DH) 4-0 Game 2 16-6 Kent State (DH) 2-9 Game 2 2-3 Akron (DH) 6-14 Game 2 2-7 ************* Wright State Tournament·** *** Louis College 0-9 Wright State 0- 11 Louis College 5-6 University of Cincinnati 4-6 Wright State 5-3 ****************** **** *****************

(Sally McCaffrey)

4-3 Rio Grande (DH) 2-1 1 Game 2 1-8 Xavier (DH ) 3-7 Game 2 4-6 Bowling Green (DH) 5-18 Game 2 6-7 Cincinnati (DH) 5-6 Game 2 4-6 Wright State (DH) 4-7 Game 2 'O'O",,'O'O ,,'O . Unlversity of Akron Invitational" .. • .... " Akron ~1 Wright State 7-6 Ashland 6-6 Youngstown 3-2 Wright State 1-4 5-7 Akron **** ******.*.**************************

(Sally McCaffrey)

Baseball I 199


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Education Elizabeth Bradner Toledo, Ohio Tami L. Butz Kettering, Ohio Teresa Cantoni Cuyhoga Falls, Ohio Ruth Cellar Fairfield, Connecticut Deann Dillon Dayton, Ohio Patricia L. Ditzel Kettering, Ohio Una D'lima Nairobi, Kenya Loraine Darn Dayton, Ohio Joseph Drusch Dayton, Ohio Kitty Dumm Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Debra Lynn Eley Kettering, Ohio Amy Farren Kettering, Ohio Tammie Fessler Dayton, Ohio David Florkey Lewisburg, Ohio Theresa Gallagher Lenox, Maryland Janet Geiger Dayton, Ohio Jennifer Giessler Englewood, Ohio William Gilligan Penfield, New York Mary Carol Gleason Golden, Colorado Kathleen Golick Euclid, Ohio Joanne C, Grillmeier Dayton, Ohio Debra Grove Springfield, Ohio Malcolm L. Hardy Dayton, Ohio Laura Harnetty Westerville, Ohio Kathryn Harshbarger Kettering, Ohio Amy Hellmann Canton, Ohio Mary Hilliard Bedford, Ohio Judith Hucke Bellbrook, Ohio Heather Hughes Centerville, Ohio Cindy Jenkins Englewood, Ohio

202/ Graduates


Herb Kavanagh Kettering. Ohio Elizabeth Keelan DuBois. Pennsylvania Julie King Rochester. New York Sandra A. Koroknay Mansfield. Ohio Deniae Lafontaine Findlay. Ohio Molly Lamb Wooster. Ohio Dorothy C. Loritta Dayton. Ohio Mary Ann Matejka Maple Heights. Ohio Gary Francia Mazzola Franklin. Massachusetts Janice McDaniel Dayton. Ohio Margaret Miller Germantown. Ohio Margaret Muick Dayton. Ohio Rene Mye,. Lewisburg. Ohio Anne M. Nikolai Dayton. Ohio Sheila M. Nolan Dayton. Ohio Liaa O'Donnell Kettering. Ohio Lealie Palmert Dayton. Ohio Regina Pike Xenia. Ohio Dean Pinciotti Toledo. Ohio Melinda Poor Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania

-,

.

t ·l

(Jim Ziemba)

Graduates/203


Norbert Reynolds Dayton, Ohio Molly Scanlon Columbus, Ohio Mary Schaut Shaker Heights, Ohio Cathy Schmidt Reading, Ohio

Kristina Shisler Dayton, Ohio Denise Shumay Medina, Ohio Florence L. Smith Washington Court House, Ohio Rosanne Souhrada Maple Heights, Ohio

Nancy Storey Westlake, Ohio William Taylor Richwood, Ohio Bret Thomas West Chester, Ohio Rebecca Uhl Dayton, Ohio

Susan Wible Painseville, Ohio Anne Wilke Cincinnati, Ohio Debra Wilson LaValle, Maryland Tina Wood Ravenna, Ohio

(Sally McCaffrey)

204/Graduates

(Sally McCaffrey)


Engineering Neill Alexandre Dayton, Ohio Nafith AI-Han bali Design Sec .. Kuwait Muatafa AI-Saffar Kettering, Ohio Abdulla AI-Salem Safat , Kuwait Victor M. Alyarez Torreon Coah, Mexico Elizabeth Ammentorp Centerville, Ohio Steye Antoaz Naperville, Illinois Tarabay Antoun Kfifan-Batroun. Lebanon Edward Arango Kent, Ohio Allan L. Barbadora Beavercreek, Ohio Steyen L. Bardua Columbus, Ohio Richard Bauer Jr. Rochester, New York Jay Bayer Hamilton, Ohio Gregory Bazany Deephaven, Minnesota Dale A. Beal Richmond, Indiana Philip L. Beekman Cincinnati, Ohio Daye Bennett Dayton, Ohio Leonard J. Bohmann Cincinnati, Ohio Peter Bowker Cotuit, Massachusetts Mary Lou Bradley Dayton, Ohio Ted Brandewie Celina, Ohio Eric Brown Chicago, Illinois Joanne Bruna Kettering, Ohio Brian Buchheit Saint Louis, Missouri Bridget Buzdon Highland Heights, Ohio Mark Byrne Dayton, Ohio John Carbone Rochester, New York Keyin Carr Naples, Florida Adel Chemaly Daroun Kesserwan , Lebanon IYan Colon Bayamon, Puerto Rico

Graduates/205


Walter Como North Lindenhurst , New York Thoma8 R, Connell Brilliant, Ohio Allen Corneliu8 Vandalia, Ohio J08eph Cramer Cheswick, Pennsylvania Miriam Cygnarowicz Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Thomas Dailey New Rochelle, New York Mark Dapore Versailles, Ohio Stephen Deak Troy, Ohio Frank Demonte Dover, Ohio Jeffrey P. Devine Chardon, Ohio Beth Dirke8 Dayton, Ohio June Donka Aurora , Illinois Stephen Dowling Clifton Park, New York Paul Drake Stow, Ohio Stephen Drehobl Bedford, Indiana J08eph Drobnich Cleveland, Ohio Thoma8 Dzurko Parma, Ohio Gha8san EI-Ghoul Nabay EI-Metn, Lebanon Otman Elkon Dayton, Ohio Andrew K, Ever80le Fort Jennings, Ohio Deborah Fair Severn, Maryland Colleen Field Indianapolis, Indiana Chri8topher Finnegan Dayton, Ohio James Fortkamp Dayton, Ohio Edward Frank Elkhart, Indiana Timothy French Pittsford, New York Brenda Fullenkamp Russia, Ohio Matthew J. Fullenkamp Russia, Ohio Christopher H. Gallin Larchmont, New York Phil Glaeser Cleveland, Ohio Shaun Glenn Cincinnati, Ohio There8e Grammel Cincinnati, Ohio Theresa Groch Frenchtown, New Jersey Ghassan Hadaya Dayton, Ohio Robert Harrison Cincinnati, Ohio

2061 Graduates


Sandra Hartmann Huber Heights. Ohio Ted Hecht Centerville. Ohio Timothy Hecht Centerville. Ohio Sophie Hegedus Cleveland. Ohio IM ichael Helton Englewood. Ohio Robert Hentz Madison. Indiana Robert Hernandez Fajardo. Puerto Rico Sharon Hoke Versailles. Ohio Edwina Hoo Honolulu. Hawaii Margaret Huelskamp Dayton. Ohio George Hufnagel Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania Federico Iglesias Dayton. Ohio John Imbus Batavia. Ohio Esam Ismail Dayton. Ohio David Jay West Milton . Ohio Paul S. Jeanmougin Cincinnati. Ohio Eric Jenson Dayton. Ohio Keith James Johanns Paulding. Ohio Jeffrey Johnson Miamisburg. Ohio Arnold Jones Sidney. Ohio Randi Kahl Winston路Salem. North Carolina Thomas Kendall Canton. Ohio Timothy Kennedy Marlton. New Jersey Edward Knoth Fairborn. Ohio Ray Kobermann Columbus. Ohio Joseph K. Kopesky Kettering. Ohio James Krupar Centerville. Ohio Thomas P. Kueterman Russia. Ohio Jeff Kulik Maple Heights. Ohio Lois Lannigan Dayton. Ohio Eric Larsun Kettering. Ohio Dave A. LeDonne Newport. Kentucky Kenneth Lennox Jackson Heights. New York Barbara Lieser Rocky River. Ohio Jane Loedding Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania

Graduates/207


Christy Logan Kettering, Ohio Mark Magalski Lancaster, Pennsylvania Samuel L. Mathias Tiffin, Ohio Mark Maurice Dayton, Ohio Virginia McMillan Kettering, Ohio Bruce Menapace Stow, Ohio William P. Metzinger Strongsville, Ohio Vincent E. Michalak Johnson City, New York James Michalski Crestwood, Missouri Wendy L. Mitchell Carlisle, Ohio Richard J. Morsches Toledo, Ohio Anita Motz CinCinnati, Ohio Thomas Munson Louisville, Kentucky Matthew Murphy Cincinnati, Ohio Beth Neudorfer Chardon, Ohio Michael A. Nickles Loudonville, Ohio David Nies Dayton, Ohio Michelle Novak Northfield, Ohio Louise Obergefell Mentor, Ohio Daniel P. O'Donnell Dayton, Ohio Greg, Oehler Cincinnati, Ohio Ross Osborn Swedesboro, New Jersey John Pauls Tarentum, Pennsylvania Robert Patterson Oceansport, New Jersey Jeff Peelman Upper Sandusky, Ohio Christopher Phillips Dayton, Ohio Paul J. Phillips Blakeslee, Ohio Andrew Piatnicia Dayton, Ohio Robert Pickert Pleasant Ridge, Missouri John Pineau Vestal, New York Joseph Podsadly Geneva, Ohio Elizabeth J. Poe Morrisville, Pennsylvania Lourdes Quintana Dayton, Ohio Souheil Ragheb Dayton, Ohio Philip A. Ratermann Fort Loramie, Ohio

2G8/Graduates


Douglas Rechsteiner Springfield, Ohio Robert C. Remler Cincinnati, Ohio Anthony Riccardi Secaucus, New Jersey David Roalef Dayton, Ohio Denis Roarty Grosse Pointe, Michigan Beverly Rogers Dayton, Ohio Jacqueline Rooths Washington, D.C. Robert Roseman Bedford, Ohio Andrew Runyan Covington, Ohio Edward Scannapieco Wayne, Pennsylvania Mark Scherger Toledo, Ohio Lynne Schoen Dayton, Ohio Edward J. Shoemaker Vandalia, Ohio Deborah Silagyi Natroni Heights, Pennsylvania Gayle Simmons Dayton, Ohio Steven Slaton Corbin, Kentucky Mark Smalley Kettering, Ohio Arthur D. Smith Greenville, Ohio Michael Soehner Kettering, Ohio Daniel Sovinski Franklin, Ohio Richard Spangenberger Dayton, Ohio Harold Spicer Dayton, Ohio Robert Stanford Kettering, Ohio Rosemary Stecker Columbus, Ohio Keith Steeber Cleveland, Ohio Ken Stephenson Springfield, Ohio Robert Stroud Dayton, Ohio Robert Sturgeon Fairport, New York Brad Thinnes Dayton, Ohio Barry Thomas Cincinnati, Ohio Steven J. Thompson Moraine, Ohio Matthew Tracy Murray Hill, New Jersey Pete Trick Dayton, Ohio John Paul Urwin Dayton , Ohio Jeff Van Atta Dayton, Ohio

Graduates/209


Elizabeth Vanthorre Oak Park, Illinois Thomaa Varga Freehold, New Jersey Joyce Venker Saint Louis, Missouri Gregory Veverka Tampa, Florida Michael A. Wade Newark. Ohio Fred Walker Dayton, Ohio Michael T. Walker Fairport. New York Lloyd F. Walton Dayton. Ohio Donald Wamaley Dayton. Ohio Scott Weiaa Kettering. Ohio Guy We at Dayton. Ohio John Weaterheide Sidney. Ohio Katherine Westrick Dayton. Ohio James Wolfe Dayton. Ohio Ted Wright Louisville. Kentucky

Adel A. Zerai Safat. Kuwait eli" Zimmer Cincinnati. Ohio David Zimmer Rochester. New York

(Sally McCaffrey)

210/Graduates

(Sally McCaffrey)


Business Administration Cecilia Andary Dayton, Ohio Michael Anderkin Miamisburg, Ohio David Arlen Allentown, Pennsylvania Jay Asher West Carrollton, Ohio Elaine Ayers Euclid, Ohio Susan E. Badinghaus Cincinnati, Ohio Thomas Baglio Webster, New York Paul R. Balcerzak Richmond Heights, Ohio David Banks Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Christopher Barlow Dayton, Ohio Karen A. Barry East Aurora , New York Patricia Bartley New York, New York Terry Bath Cincinnati, Ohio William Baumann Iselin, New Jersey Robert Beck Saint Louis, Missouri Gregory Bennett Fairview Park, Ohio Paul Benyo Horseheads, New York Rebecca Berens Kettering, Ohio Mark Berger Dayton, Ohio Sandra Bergman Minster, Ohio Clara H. Berkemeier West Carrollton, Ohio Terri Bertel8man Fort Thomas, Kentucky Michael J, Bi8son Naugatuck, Connecticut Michael Bogan TrotwOOd, Ohio Dean Borkow8ki Hempstead, New York Kathleen Braa8ch LaGrange Park, Illinois Gary Brackman Saint Henry, Ohio Jerome Brun Dayton, Ohio Gerald B. Budde Cincinnati, Ohio Sarah A, Burke Arlington Heights, Illinois

Graduates/211


Robert Bu •• e Ludlow Falls, Ohio Ted Butler Miamisburg , Ohio Michael, Byrd South Lebanon, Ohio Maria Caballero Union City, New Jersey Paul Callahan Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Scott Candee Easton, Connecticut Michael Cardwell Beavercreek, Ohio Jame. Carr Mount Laurel, New Jersey Michael Carroll Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania Jane L, Caspar Dayton, Ohio Marti ChaUk LaPorte, Indiana Stephen Chando Findlay, Ohio Carolr Chato Dayton, Ohio Mary Cleary Columbus, Ohio Kathryn Coates Brookfield, Wisconsin Michael Collier Kinnelon, New Jersey Kevin Collins Sandusky, Ohio Patricia Collins Dayton, Ohio Kevin Conrad Glen Ellyn, Illinois Jon Conversino Massillon, Ohio Kenneth Corby Dayton, Ohio Patricia Corcoran North Olmstead, Ohio Lori Cox Kettering, Ohio Katherine Cutting Rockville, Maryland Michael R, Daley Rochester, New York Joe Desmarteau Seven Hills, Ohio Paul DiCicco Mount Prospect , Illinois Randy Doellman Fort Mitchell, Kentucky Mark Donowick Orchard Park. New York Thomas Dougherty Stamford, Connecticut Kathleen Driscoll Bay Village , Ohio Karen J. Duncan Tipp City, Ohio Nick Edwards Ridgefield, Connect icut Michael Eley Kettering, Ohio Gary Evers Saint Henry, Ohio

212/Graduates


Douglas Fiessinger Middletown, Ohio Ken J. Fisher Fremont, Ohio John Fitzgerald Lakeview, New York Elizabeth Flynn Troy, Michigan Donna Fournier Bettendorf, Iowa Larry Frantz Massillon, Ohio Thomas Frenz Rochester, New York Teresa Fullenkamp Saint Henry, Ohio Maribeth Galamb Dayton, Ohio Cathy Galbraith Bellbrook, Ohio Gretchen Garland Dayton, Ohio John Gaskin Rochester , New York Lori Geyer Bahama, North Carolina Greg Glasgow North Olmstead, Ohio Christopher Gonda Beachwood, Ohio Stephen Goodfellow Manlius, New York Kathleen Graham Columbus, Ohio Paul Gregory Stow, Ohio Theodore Grieshop Yorkshire, Ohio Daneen Griffin Bethlehem, Pennsylvania Tami Grove Springfield, Ohio Michael Grubar Euclid, Ohio Anthony Guida Jr. Steubenville, Ohio Mary Ellen Haggerty Euclid, Ohio Janet Halleran Pittsford, New York John W. Hallisy Cleveland Heights, Ohio Joseph Hammell Louisville, Kentucky Patrick Hammer Wadsworth, Ohio Renee Hammer East Cleveland, Ohio Gerald Harmon Columbus, Ohio Michael Harp Maple Heights, Ohio Dawn R. Harrell Kettering, Ohio John Harris Trenton, Ohio Tracy Hart Beavercreek, Ohio Donna Hayes Yonkers, New York

Graduates/213


Peggy Hayes New Brunswick, New Jersey Mary Lynn Heinold Cincinnati, Ohio Jeffrey Heinrichs Bridgewater, New Jersey Daniel Heitmeyer Sidney, Ohio Patrick Hennessy Chambersburg, Pennsylvania Joaquin Hidalgo Dayton, Ohio James Hider Akron, Ohio Denise Hinkel Fort Mitchell, Kentucky Jeff Hoelker Cincinnati, Ohio Dennis Hofmaier Downers Grove, Illinois Jeanne HoUer Sharon, Pennsylvania Mary Holmes West Babylon, New York Timothy Hoy Niagara Falls, New York John Hummer Euclid, Ohio Michael Sean Hurley Palos Heights, Illinois Susan laquinta Fresno, Ohio Harvey Jackson Dayton, Ohio Jane Jefferies West Chester, Ohio William Jennewein Cincinnati, Ohio Andrew Johnson Upper Montclair, Jersey

(Sally McCaffrey)

214/Graduates

(John Carcut!)


Maureen Johnson Massapequa, New York Phyllis Jones Huber Heights, Ohio Darcy Kehrt Dayton, Ohio Mike Kelly Xenia, Ohio Patricia Kelly Xenia, Ohio David Kerner Solon, Ohio Timothy Kimerling Englewood, Ohio Lori Klus Youngstown, Ohio JeHrey Kunkel Chicago, Illinois James Lane South Glens Falls, New York Alice Leonard Dayton, Ohio Welling G. Litka Rochester, New York Mike Lindner Kettering, Ohio Cindy Litmer Dayton, Ohio Barbara Loscher Stony Point, New York Ann Lowry Liverpool, New York Michael Lucaa Cleveland, Ohio Paul Machowaky Dayton, Ohio Lori Magazzine Youngstown, Ohio Frank Maher Timonium, Maryland

(

(Sally McCaffrey)

(University Communications)

Graduates/215


Marian Marano Narberth, Pennsylvania Darla Mars Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Robert Martini Middletown, New Jersey Stephen Maselko Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Douglas Mayer Park Ridge, New Jersey Ann McClain Lima, Ohio Brian McDaniel Dayton, Ohio Brian McDonald Kalamazoo, Michigan Mary McGuirk East Hampton, New York Bill McVicar Waldwick, New Jersey Donald Mead Hamburg, New York Mark Mejia Woodville, Ohio David Menker Dayton, Ohio Maria Meomartino North Attleboro, Maryland Susan Meyer Dayton, Ohio Kevin Mierzejewski Cleveland, Ohio William Molchan Parma, Ohio David p, Morrison Crystal Lake, Illinois Carolyn J. Mullaly Hudson, Michigan Philip Murray Piscataway, New Jersey Salem Nawal Dayton, Ohio Roger Niese Leipsic, Ohio Joseph Nolan Erie, Pennsylvania Daniel O'Boyle Lakewood, Ohio Carrie O'Connell Dayton, Ohio Phillip Oliveri Cleveland Heights, Ohio Maria Pavlic Allison Park, Pennsylvania Sarah l. Penny Orchard Park, New York James Pepa Port Clinton, Ohio Frank Perman Glenshaw, Pennsylvania Lloyd Pernell Silver Springs, Maryland Robert Placke Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania John Podczerwinski Chicago, illinois Joseph Poelking Centerville, Ohio Maureen Pryor Bridgewater, New Jersey

216/Graduates


Bob Puccio Westlake, California Brian Quinn Fairfield, Connecticut Ken Rabatin Solon, Ohio Michael Reichert Montezuma, Ohio Susan Reineke Kettering, Ohio Robert Reitz Parma, Ohio Kimberly Riddell Dayton, Ohio Mark Riley Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Liam Riordan Rumson, New Jersey Timothy Robbe Fairfield, Ohio Jamie Robinson Columbus, Ohio Cora Robison Espyville, Pennsylvania Kevin Rodenbeck Rochester, New York Chris Rogge Centerville, Ohio Paul Rogozinski Mount Prospect, Illinois 'M ichael Ruffolo Kettering, Ohio John Rosso Willard , Ohio Ken J, Ryan Cincinnati, Ohio Todd Ryne Kettering, Ohio Scott Saccany Bay Village, Ohio Sara Sacksteder Cincinnati, Ohio Peggy Sampey Louisville, Kentucky Jamie Sandlin Spring field, Ohio Ritahelena San Miguel Guaynabo, Puerto Ric o Jean M. Schacht Dayton, Ohio John Scheible North Olmstead, Ohio James H. Schlater Sidney, Ohio Caryn Schockling North Braddock, Pennsylvania Jeffrey J, Schoen Toledo, Ohio Chris A. Schweitzer Fairfield , Connecticut Natalie Segro Richmond Heights, Ohio T,i mothy Shark Massillon, Ohio Lori Shaw Xenia, Ohio Lawrence Sherrill Vandalia, Ohio George l. Shipley Jr. Dayton, Ohio

Graduates/217


David Simko Bedford Heights, Ohio Scott Simmerly Fairview Park, Ohio Ariltidil H. Sirinakil Westminster, Maryland Connie Smith Dayton, Ohio Jeftrey Spagnola Willowick , Ohio Julie A, Stablein Fairfield, Connecticut Sandy Steigelman Hartwell, Georgia lila Stella Pepper Pike, Ohio Charlene Stewart Cincinnati, Ohio Stephen J, Stockum Dayton, Ohio Tom Stricker South Euclid, Ohio Thomal SukYI Cleveland, Ohio John Sullivan Tequesta, Florida Bruce Swidarlki Maple Heights, Ohio George Talbot Saginaw, Michigan Lawrence Tieman Dayton, Ohio Kimberly Todd Kettering , Ohio Timothy Toma Maple Heights, Ohio Carol Tufty Park Ridge, New Jersey Kriltine Ubinger Lakewood, Ohio

(Sally McCaffrey)

218/Graduates

(Sally McCaffrey:


James Venker Jr. Saint Louis. Missouri Jay Vernau Newark. Ohio Lisa Wagner Casstown. Ohio Geraldine L. Walker Dayton. Ohio Lynette Weis Chicago, Illinois Kathy R. Weisenbach Dayton, Ohio John Wermert Celina, Ohio Lisa Whitney Dayton, Ohio Noreen Wilkus Kettering, Ohio Robert Willkomm South Euclid, Ohio Lynn Wittmer Louisville, Kentucky John Woeste 'Kettering, Ohio Carole Wolf Dayton, Ohio Connie Wo'll Miamisburg, Ohio Celeste M. Wolff Dayton, Ohio Donald Woods Dayton, Ohio Jodie Wooliver Hamburg, New York William Worzala Elm Grove, Wisconsin Alan M. Zang Cleveland. Ohio James J. Ziemba Iselin. New Jersey

Jennifer Zimmer Goleta, California Mary Zimmer Rockford, Illinois Anne Zimmerman Rockville, Maryland Mary Zimmerman Rockville, Maryland

(Sylvia Rittweger)

Graduates/219


Arts & Sciences Barbara Acra Middletown, Ohio Rachel Alejandrino Centerville, Ohi o John Allen Garfield Heights, Ohio Mary Allen Waterford, Pennsylvania Fahed AI-Mekrad Kettering, Ohio Robert Anderson Jeannette, Pennsylvania Michele Antolini Beavercreek, Ohio Dennis Arko Euclid, Ohio Rita Bagnoli Poland, Ohio Andrea Baldwin Vauxhall, New Jersey William Ballway Rocky River, Ohio Thomas Bannon lake Ronkonkoma, New York Molly Barker Saint Louis, Missouri Andrea Barone Centerville, Ohio Suzanne Baujan Dayton, Ohio Deborah Baumann Kenmore, New York Diana Baumann Hamilton, Ohio Thomas Bensman Sidney, Ohio Kevin Berger Lebanon, Ohio Lisa M, Beyer Farmington, Connecticut Ram8ey Billup8 Buffalo, New York Patricia Bird80ng New Ken., Pennsylvania Sharon Blohm Wappmier Falls, New York Chri8tine Boczek Shadyside, Ohio Philip J. Boehnlein Parma, Ohio Mark 'Bohac Centerville, Ohio SU8an Bolton Dayton, Ohio Gaetan Bonanni Bridgeport . Connecticut Tere8a Marie Borr08 Lakewood, Ohio Mary Lou B08hin8ki Englewood. Ohio

220/ Graduates


Louise Annette Bowling Fairborn , Ohio Steve Bowman Dayton, Ohio Diane Bradicich Yorktown, New York Adele Brendle Morris Plains, New Jersey Janet Bricmont Mount Lebanon, Pennsylvania Bruce Bridges Laura, Ohio Mary Anne Britt Kettering, Ohio Lisa Broderick Ind ianapolis, Indiana Robert Brooks Kettering, Ohio Laura Brown Kettering, Ohio Mary Brucken Dayton, Ohio Susan Bruns Westerville, Ohio David Buddendeck Bellbrook, Ohio Mary Jo Buenger Newport, Kentucky Cathy Buffington Cincinnati, Ohio Catherine Burger Smithtown, New York Maureen Carr East Lansdowne. Pennsylvania Michael Carroll Laura, Ohio Michael Castleman Lima, Ohio Becky Charvat Purchase, New York Laura Chiudioni Woodbridge, Virginia Phillip Ciufo Jr. Pittsford, New York Cathleen Clark Norwich, New York Kevin Cleary Rocky River, Ohio Julia Collier Mount Vernon, Ohio Anthony Conard Dayton, Ohio Timothy Conway Cleveland , Ohio Thomas Cooke Plainfield, New Jersey Jeffrey Glenn Cooper Beavercreek , Ohio Douglas Cox Cincinnati, Ohio Debra Coyne Westlake, Ohio MaryJean Crabb Birmingham, Michigan Mary Catherine Craine Barrington, Illinois David Cranmer Levittown, Pennsylvania Eileen Crone Memphis, Tennessee

Graduates/221


Kerry Allen Croaaland Indianapolis, Indiana Patricia Cumbie Marion, Ohio Mark Cunningham Rockaway, New Jersey Thomas Cusack Tuckahoe, New York Catherine Cushing Somers , New York Ann Dardinger Col umbus, Ohio Erin Davis Miramar, Florida Kathleen A. Deinhart Manlius, New York Marilyn Deininger Rocky River, Ohio Joseph Demeter Dayton, Ohio Susan Dierkers Da yto n, Ohio Becky Dilley Mou nt Vernon. Ohio Cynthia Dishman Louisville, Kentucky Laura Doherty Cincinnati, Ohio Patricia Dolezal Sco tia , New York Dawn Dombrowski New York , New York Tim Donahue Monson. Maryland Christine Donohue Manh asset . New York Michael Dorrian Columbus, Ohio Kathryn DowseU Dry Plains, Michigan Melissa Driver Maumee, Ohio Bruce Dropkin Smitht own, New York John Michael Duchak III Centerville, Ohio Tracy Ann Duncan Tipp City, Ohio Tim Dunn At lant a, Georgia Diane Durkin Youngstown, Ohio Cindy Dvorak Ga tes Mills. Ohio Joan Dye Louisville, Kentu cky Maureen Edge New Windsor , New Yo rk Robert Egan Will ow ick, Ohio Elizabeth Eicher Greensburg, Pennsylvania Elizabeth Eilerman Fort Loramie. Ohio Michael Eilerman Kett ering, Ohio Kathleen Ellwood Allen town, Pennsylvania Susan Elias Cin ci nnati, Ohio

222/ Graduat es


Julie Emmert Springfield, Ohio Theresa Engle Marion, Ohio Robert W. Esselstein Kettering, Ohio Suzanne Estelle Brightwaters, New York Gail Evans West Chester, Ohio Frances Fahey Naperville, Illinois Ellen Fain Bay Village, Ohio Kristin A. Farrell Columbus, Ohio Nicholas Fasano Brooklyn, New York Megan M. Felling Oak Ridge, Tennessee Tom Filloon Fort Dodge, Iowa Kenneth Fisher Port smouth, Ohio Mary Fisher Dayton, Ohio Susan Flynn Arlington, Illinois John Fox Shaker Heights, Ohio Anna Frank Louisville, Kentucky Susan Frantzen Aurora, Illinois Paul Fraunholtz Miami, Florida Betsy Freedman Endicott , New York Susan Fremgen Kettering, Ohio

(Chris Cunningham)

(Kara Masters)

Graduates/223


Betsy French Pittsford, New York Linda French Louisville, Kentucky Margaret Frericks Kettering, Ohio Margaret Friel Lancaster, Ohio Lucy Friend University Heights, Ohio James Gabel Fr~mont, Ohio John Gallagher Parma, Ohio Michael Gallis Warminster, Pennsylvania Marie Gallo Steubenvill e, Ohio Lynn Galvin Hendersonville, Tennessee Maripat Galvin Gten Ellyn, Illinois Judi L. Gambill Moscow, Ohio Maria Garcia Dayton, Ohio Kenneth Gazda Metuchen , New Jersey Denise Gee Havertown, Pennsylvania Wanda Gee Akron , Ohio Tina Gentile Cincinnati, Ohio Paul Gerace Cleveland, Ohio Christopher Germak Matawan, New Jersey Alan Gibson Dayton, Ohio Cheryl Gibson North Olmstead, Ohio David A. Givens Dayton , Ohio Ann Glaser Columbus, Ohio Elizabeth Glick West Carrollton, Ohio Lynda Gordon Fra nklin, Massachusett s Frank T. Guerriero Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Kevin Hall Montclair, New Jersey Margaret Hammer Louisvi lle, Kentucky Philip C. Handorf Xenia, Ohio Susan P. Harrington Toledo, Ohio Paul E. Harris Dayton , Ohio Stephanie Joy Harris Washington, D.C. Donald Hart Allison Park, Pennsylvania Francesca Laura Hary Dayt on, Ohio Barry D. Hauler Mohnton, Pennsy lvania

224/ Graduates


William H.nd.r.on Hillsdale, New Jersey Virginia H.nn •••• y Rumford, Rhode Island Dian. Hok. Berkeley Heights, New Jersey Kat. Hold.r New Cumberland, Pennsylvania Jan.lI. Holling.r West Carrollton, Ohio Matth.w Holli. Gates Mills, Ohio Sta.ia Holtman Louisville, Kentucky William Horst Dayton, Ohio Sandra Huff West Carrollton, Ohio Edward Hunt Falls Church, Virginia Elizab.th A. Hurl.y Dayton, Ohio Patricia Jam•• Rockville, Maryland Bruc. Jami.on Harrisville, Pennsylvania Dougla. Janning Dayton, Ohio Judi J.ff.ri •• West Chester, Ohio Nancy J.tt. Dayton, Ohio M. Judith John.on Willoughby, Ohio Patricia John.on Lima, Ohio Sandy John.on Rochester, New York Willa Jon•• Dayton, Ohio Patricia Junk.r Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania John Jurcak Cleveland, Ohio Gr.gory S. Jutt. Middletown, Ohio L•• li. Kaalund Bronx, New York Li.a Kanda Greenville, Massachusetts Jayn. Ka •• man Kettering, Ohio William Kaufhold Dayton, Ohio Chri.toph.r Kau.ch Rochester, 'New York Kathy K.b. Euclid, Ohio Tri.h K•• gan Dayton, Ohio Chri.toph.r K.lly Hempstead, New York Dani.1 J. K.nn.dy Erlanger, Kentucky Micha.1 J. K.nn.y Silver Spring, Maryland Ann. K•••• nich Hastings, Michigan Micha.1 K.rby Las Vegas, Nevada

Graduates/225


(Doug Rechsteiner)

Doreen Keyes Kettering, Ohio Lessley M. Kidd Kettering, Ohio Jill Kirchner Mentor, Ohio Marjorie Carol Klee Fort Mitchell, Kentucky Dorene Kopesky Kettering, Ohio Robert Kosinski Jersey City, New Jersey Patricia Kotyuk Solon, Ohio Jill Kramer Cincinnati, Ohio Timothy Kroger Fairfield, Ohio Saad Ksheer Tripoli, Libya Suzanne Ksycewski Dayton, Ohio Keith Kuenning New Bremen, Ohio Shelley Kurtz Dayton, Ohio Mary Kay Laird Erie, Pennsylvania Vicki Lankswert Louisville, Kentucky Robert Lantz Buffalo, New York Lisa Larkin Dayton, Ohio Laura Larsson Denville, New Jersey Stephanie LaRuffa Blanchester, Ohio Laura Lavanche Kettering, Ohio

226/ Graduates

(Sally McCaffrey)


Dawn Layer Kettering. Ohio David Leary Centerville. Ohio Diane Levo Cincinnati. Ohio Laura J. Libertore Louisville. Ohio Cynthia Liddell Newfane. New York Mary Kay Limburg Kenmore. New York Susan Lipscomb Elm Grove. Wisconsin Steve Liptak Garfield Heights. Ohio Thomas Liptock New Philadelphia. Pennsylvania Joanne Lisa Rockville Centre. New York Mary Jaye Liset Fairfield. Ohio Martina Lombardi Columbus. Ohio Richard S. Long Dayton. Ohio Mary-Ellen Luken Rochester. New York James Joseph Luton Jr. Syracuse. New York Thomas Lyons Cincinnati. Ohio Susan MacArthur Belleville. New Jersey Elizabeth Maguire Dayton. Ohio Erin Maguire Riverdale. Georgia James Mahony Washington King Crossing. Pennsylvania Larry J. Maiers Dayton. Ohio Anne Maloney Caldwell. New Jersey Anthony O. Mancuso Springfield. Ohio Maura Mannix Beaver Falls. Pennsylvania Richard Mardis Export. Pennsylvania Barbara Markovitch Vermilion. Ohio Michelle Marrone Lyndhurst. Ohio Shari Martin Kettering. Ohio Colleen Ann Matthews South Bend. Indiana Gregg Mazzola Amherst. New Hampshire Sally McCaffrey Media. Pennsylvania Daniel McCormick North Canton. Ohio Patricia E. McErlane Cincinnati. Ohio Patricia McLean Schererville. Indiana Diana McKnight Trotwood. Ohio

Graduates/227


Maureen Meer8man Mount Prospect, Illinois Van E. Meyer Findlay, Ohio Jane L. Meyer8 Dayton, Ohio Anna-Maria Micko Cleveland, Ohio William Miller West Milton , Ohio Stephen M. Minick Altoona , Pennsylvania Frank Miozzi South Euclid, Ohio Abdullah Mojalli Dayton, Ohio Lori Moll Amity, Pennsylvania Lucy Mollo Rochester, New York Eileen D. Monnin Springfield, Ohio Penny Jo Monteith East Hartford, Connecticut Ed Mulholland Fanwood, New Jersey Jane P. Murphy Rochester, New York Jean Murphy East Cleveland, Ohio Jacqulyn Murray Latrobe, Pennsylvania Kathryn Murray Elyria, Ohio Karen A. Murphy North Babylon, New York Abdulla Naama Tripoli, Libya Dolore8 Nazzaro Wheeling, West Virginia Peggy Ne8bit South Amherst, Ohio Kathleen Newton Dayton, Ohio Annette Ney Toledo, Ohio J08eph F, Nichola8 Jr. Willoughby , Ohio Alfon8e Niedermeyer Bayside, New York Julie Nieman Van Wert, Ohio Peggy Nolan CinCinnati, Ohio Ann O'Connor Erie, Pennsylvania Katherine E. O'Connor Louisville, Kentucky Margi O'Connor Dayton, Ohio Mark O'Connor Springfield, Ohio Anne O'Donnell South Euclid, Ohio Jame8 S. O'Donnell Cleveland, Ohio Lynn O'Leary Oak Ridge, New Jersey Eileen 08tr08ki Hackettstown. New Jersey

2281 Graduates


Christine Ann O'Rourke Ridgewood, New Jersey Olivia Pacheco Dayton, Ohio Lori S.R. Palmer Englewood, Ohio Kathrine Parrish Loudonville, Ohio Sher L. Patrick Centerville, Ohio Ana Perez Centerville, Ohio Daniel A. 'Phillips Harrison, New York Michael Frank Pignatiello Centerville, Ohio Mark D. Pippin Dayton, Ohio Carol A. Pitzer Indianapolis, Indiana Robin Plichta Kettering, Ohio Gregory Poniewaz Saint Louis, Missouri Theodore Popiel Sheffield Lake, Ohio Toni Previte South Euclid, Ohio Alicia Putnam Princeton Junction, New Jersey Caren Rankin Mountain Lakes, New Jersey Jeff Raum Cockeysville, Maryland Teresa Reeves Chillicothe, Ohio Nancy Reichert Rensselear, Indiana Terri Reinheimer Kettering, Ohio

(Sally McCaffrey)

Graduates/229


Paul J. Rei. Addison, Illinois 'Barbara Reno West Bloomfield, Michigan Robert Reynold. Saint Louis, Missouri There .. G. Reynold. Edgewood, Kentucky Wayne D. Riley Newburgh, New York Thoma. L. Rinehart Sidney, Ohio Pamela Rinker Urbana, Ohio Judith Rodeghero Pleasanton, California Mar.ha Rodriguez Santa Maria, California Ronald Rohrer Cincinnati, Ohio Renee Roper. Birmingham, Michigan Natalie Russo Erie, Pennsylvania Julie Ryan Marion, Ohio Stephen Ryan Oak Brook, Illinois Eileen Sale. Roselle, New Jersey Dorothea Saliba Dayton, Ohio Julia Sammon. Kettering, Ohio Greg Sauer Greenville, Ohio Carlton M. Saunders Freeport, Bahamas Michael Savino West Islip, New York

(Cathy Brophy)

230/ Graduates


(Greg Maurer)

(Mitch Novak)

John Scarpelli Dayton, Ohio Lee Schierloh Homewood, Illinois Beth Schmidt Hamilton, Ohio Richard Schmidt Lakewood, Ohio Lisa Schoenthal Avon, New York Ellen Schroeder Ottawa, Ohio John Scully Pennsauken, New Jersey Daniel Seitz Kettering, Ohio Joan Serwicz Northbrook, Illinois Sandra ShaHer Tipp City, Ohio Susan Shallenberger River Forest, Illinois Susan C. Shaw Peoria, Illinois Rebecca Sheehan Dayton, Ohio Lowell R. Sherman Fairborn, Ohio Linda L. Sherrill Randallstown, Maryland Kimberly Shoe Lima, Ohio Kathleen Sills Tipp City, Ohio Margaret A. Simpson Rocky River, Ohio Lisa Simones Singer Kettering , Ohio Lisa Sirelt Brooklyn, New York

Graduates / 231


Mary C. Slonaker Dayton, Ohio Alice Smith Baden, Pennsylvania Catherine Smith Rockville Center, New York James Striebel Dayton, Ohio Janet Sullivan Paducah, Kentucky John Sweeny Lakewood, Ohio Patrick Smith Albany, New York Andrew Smyth West Babylon, New York Rod Sommer Brookville, Ohio Joan Stanley Canton, Ohio Jennifer Stewart Cincinnati, Ohio Melissa Strickle Dayton, Ohio Nancy Sullivan Wickliffe, Ohio Shirley Szczesniak Arlington, Texas James labeling Cincinnati, Ohio

(Aristidis Sirinakis)

232/ Graduates


Karen Tarallo Northport, New York Lisa Taubler Kettering, Ohio Ronald Testa Dayton, Ohio Jon Eric Tosino Toledo, Ohio Kent D. Trimble Miamisburg, Ohio Danae Turner Dayton, Ohio Marybeth Uveges Trenton, New Jersey Karen M. Van Ness Wysox, Pennsylvania Julie Vecchione Bethesda, Maryland Julie Vecho Monogahela, Pennsylvania Bonnie l. Vessey Dayton, Ohio Christopher Vogel Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania John Vogt Saint Charles, Missouri Gregg Volk Dayton, Ohio Peter Vujanovich Jr. West Seneca, New York Mary Sue Wayt Shadyside, Ohio Susan Wegener Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Carol Weiss Basking Ridge, New York Mary Whalen Park Ridge, Illinois Carla Whitaker Cincinnati, Ohio Anne Whitney Corning, New York Maureen Whitsett Indianapolis, Indiana Toni Williams Wheeling, West Virginia Christopher Wittmann Dayton, Ohio Katherine Wolfarth Pittsford, New York Michael Wolfe Richmond Heights, Ohio Michael J. Woomer Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Laura Yaro Cleveland, Ohio Thomas A. Yenney Huntsville, Ohio Susan Young peter Delphos, Ohio Anne Zajacz Curtice, Ohio Linda Zengel Dayton, Ohio Max Zimmerman Fairborn, Ohio Margaret Zippert Cleveland, Ohio M'a rgaret Zotkiewicz Dayton, Ohio

Graduates / 233


HSSNTVKPNMLKAESQRPOTESEN LVPCKBBCRLAVEOTVSTKVMAZT GPEBZPNMVTMSPMULKJKAWNPP FMCKRSEDOQKPWMDXKJRWEOAT TQIAGNVPEDCQBMENTOVESXTE MRACDPSTSPNEMGNXNEBEQUNT VKLBEAOQVJ FEATURESLPQRT DIEKJANEOK JLMEKWLVAZKOF UPVFZRMAEQ NOIVHJFBODIZG LGENKLSMDP VNPEQRSLBTSBL DONUTSRJKZ DWCNMENFLEDSM AOTPFNTZWO ERPTAEJTHSMPQ EASQLVNDPT AKNSVQDPFRVOR RRORGANIZA IONSKPJ ITKDRU QECWLJKVOE SPRNMRJTKMSTE PI LNSTWZKL MYBAOWCCMTRSP YVJRBGFLYU ZUFLYDPEIKDLI MWOKRSPCEA RQJCZAHUIAVET KSECPJFIMN CPGWJHBBRWUWA ZRQZYWAFTO GCTDSM



TOP: Bro. Raymond L. Fitz, S.M., President, MIDDLE LEFT: Thomas T. Montiegel, Vice President for Development and Alumni Relations, MIDDLE RIGHT: Thomas J. Frericks, Vice President for University Relations, BOTTOM LEFT: Bro. Joseph Stander, S.M ., Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost, BOTTOM RIGHT: Gerald W. VonderBrink, Vice President for Financial Affairs and Treasurer, NOT PICTURED: Margaret M. Holland, Vice President for Student Development and Dean of Students.

236/ Administration


TOP LEFT: Clyde Wisch, Associate Dean of Students: Student Services. TOP RIGHT: Eugene Colarusso, Assistant Dean of Students: Residence Life. MIDDLE LEFT: Rev. Frank J. Kenney, S.M. , Assistant to the Vice President for Student Development. MIDDLE RIGHT: Rosemary O'Boyle, Administrative Assistant to the Vice President for Student Development. BOTTOM : Eleanor Kurtz, Director of University Centers and Activities; Mary Sue Hufnagle, Assistant Dean of Students: Discipline and Judiciaries; Dr. Walter Gilliard, Associate Dean of Students: Student Life.

Administration Administration/237


TOP: Health Services: Ethel Clark, Administrative Assistant, Mary Harmeson, R.N., Director of Nursing . BOTTOM LEFT: Gary Scheckel hoff, Director of Campus Security, BOTTOM RIGHT: Jack Riley, Director of Psychological Services.

2381 Administration


()FF-

C/\I'vIPlJS

.

TOP LEFT: Joseph Belle, Director of Off Campus Housing. TOP RIGHT: Edwin H. Melhuish, Director, Off Campus Housing. MIDDLE LEFT: Marie Milord, International Student Advisor. MIDDLE RIGHT: Anne Malone, Coordinator of Student Publications. BOTTOM LEFT: Jean Harper, Assistant Director of Housing. BOTTOM CENTER: Barry Morris, Assistant Director of Housing. BOTTOM RIGHT: Julia Wingard, Assistant Director of Housing.

Administration Administration / 239


_._.- ... ---

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THIS PAGE: TOP LEFT: Dean Francis Lazarus. TOP 'RIGHT: Assistant Deans: R. E. Peterson, E. Murphy, O.P., T. Wong, S.M. BOTTOM: Theatre: L. Selka, P. Gilvary, D. Anderson, R. Bouffier, S. M. OPPOSITE PAGE: Fine Arts: (seated) - J. Fiehler, P. Gilvary, L. Weber, B. Plogman. (standing) - T. Strohmaier, G. Richardson, L. Bassman, T. Hitt, Bro. J . Barrish.

College Of 240/ Faculty


PRSSA Team Enters Competition U.D.' s chapter of the Public relations Student Society of America participated in the 1983 Bateman P.R.S.S.A. Case Study Competition. A four-member team was sponsored to compete against teams from other schools. The competition was designed to test the ability of teams of P.R.S.S.A. members to develop sound, professional programs to resolve practical public relations problems. The case study team was given a situation with certain problems and background information. The situation also contained hints for solving the problem. One of the problems in this year's case dealt with a lack of professional involvement between a hypothetical P.R. S.S.A. chapter and its sponsoring P.R.S.A. chapter. Another problem was a lack of membership and a lack of involvement of current

members in the chapter's activities. The entry consisted of a 30-minute videotaped presentation and a 30-page formal written report. The team stated specific objectives, identified target groups of people an their apparent attitudes, developed action plans, and established practical ways of doing research and evaluation. U.D.'s case study team consisted of Adele Brendle, Cathy Brophy, Tim Mueller and Laura Yaro. They were advised and directed by P.R. professor Mr. Bob Bernard. weeks of intensive work went into the preparation of the video tape and report. Although the team did not win the regional competition, they produced a quality presentation that was praised.

Arts And Sciences Faculty / 241


TOP: Criminal Justice: D. DeGraw, J. Ingram, J. Adamitis. MIDDLE: Military Science: (1st Row) 8sg . Brenneman, 8gm . Chappell, P. Erbaugh, Msg. Baptiste. (2nd Row) Maj . Kosolapoff, Cpt. Barrett, Ltc. Menser, Cpt. Gibson, Maj. Tucker. BOTTOM: Psychology: (sitting) J. Allik, E. Butter, 8 . Nau , K. Kuntz, R. Katsuyama, (standing) B. Berg, J. Korte, C. Kimble, 8 . Bower, T. Wrobel.

College Of 242/ Faculty


TOP: Political Science: (seated) M. Karns, G. Kerns, A. E. Lapitan, (standing) P. Nelson, D. Ahern, P. Hentrick, I. Warren-Steinbach, R. Blough, R. D' Alimonte, J. Mancos. BOTTOM: History: (seated) B. Perkins, A. Vines, F. Mathias, R. Maras, L. Eid, D. Critchlow, R. Alexander. (standing) P. Palermo, E. Beauregard, T.C. Rhee, B. Taylor.

Arts And Sciences Faculty / 243


TOP: Geology: G. Springer, K. Gray, C. Ritter. MIDDLE: Biology: (1 st Row) R. Ventullo, J. Rowe, A. Burky, M.J. Vesper, Bro. D. Geiger, (2nd Row) J. Laufersweiler, C.J. Chantell, F. Schwelitz, K. McDougall, J. Ramsey, (3rd Row) O.C. Jaffee, Bro. B. Zalewski, S.M ., G. Shay, R. Celesk. BOTTOM: Physics: (1st Row) B. Craver, J. Schneider, Bro. J. Streiff, (2nd Row) P. Yaney, Bro. L. Mann, M. O'Hare, J. Kepes, G. Miner, T.Graham, M. Crivello (3rd Row) R. Berney, J. Lang.

College Of 244/Faculty


TOP: Computer Science: (seated) J. Kester, Bro. T. Schoen, (standing) L. Jehn, Bro. E. Neuendorf. MIDDLE: Math: H.G. Mushenheim, G. Shaugnessy, R. Steinlage, J. Kauflin, P. Eloe, R. Gorton, S.J. Back, J.W. Friel, T. Gantner, J.W. McCloskey. BOTTOM: Chemistry: (kneeling) Bro. J. Lucier, B.L. Fox, H. Knachel, (standing) C. Michaelis, D. Stanislawski, S.S. Singer, S. L. Eveslage, R. G. Keil.

Arts And Sciences Faculty / 245


TOP: Music: E.

Vandevander, C. Baxter, C. Minton, M. Sandness, P. Magnuson, V. Zech, R. Benedum. MIDDLE: Languages: (1 st Row) A. Chiodo, E. Romaguera, G. McKenzie, S. M. (2nd Row) E. Hatch, J. M. Greely, M. Castello-Lamas, R. Conard, E.R. Lowry, C. Galeano.

College Of 246/ Faculty


TOP: Philosophy: (seated) W. Richards, W. Valiicelia , P. Johnson, R. Baker, H.J. Nersoyan. (standing) R. Herbenick, P. Tibbetts, M. Payne, J. Thompson, J. Zembaty, X. Monasterio, L. Ulrich. BOTTOM : Religion: (1 st Row) Sr. J. Martin, Rev. M. Kohmescher, Rev. N. Burns, Sr. A. Zukowski. (2nd Row) M. Barnes, W. Anderson, C. L'Heureux, M. Selvidge, Rev. W. Cole, Rev. R. Hater. (3rd Row) J. Heft, S.M., W. Roberts, V. Branick, R. Bowen .

Arts And Sciences Faculty / 247


THIS PAGE: TOP LEFT: Dean William Hoben. TOP RIGHT: Assistant Dean William Fry. BOTTOM : Marketing: H. Murphy, J.P. Merenski, J. Moffatt, W. Lewis, R. Comer. OPPOSITE PAGE: Economics/Finance: (seated) R. Frasca, R.C. Chen, T. Wright, J. 'Rapp. (standing) P. Louis, L. Hadley, D. Pattillo, B. Winger, J. Weiler.

School Of 248/ Faculty


Playing Games In Business Industry Champion and Best Presentation for Special Problem awards were won by the University of Dayton team in the 18th Annual Emory Intercollegiate Business Games. U.D. was one of 28 schools participating in the games. Months of preparation culminated in the competition at Emory University in Atlanta on March 3rd-6th, 1983. The schools were broken down into four divisions of seven schools each which competed among themselves. The University of Dayton team took both awards available in their division. The competition consisted of a simulation of an interactive business environment. The market dealt with in U.D.'s division was the calculator industry for the historical period from 1972-1974. Selection of the team began in October and beginning in December, the team put in 20 + hours a week in research. Starting January 10, the team made decisions every Monday and Thursday. The decisions were sent to Emory University

by computer and the team would receive feedback information about the status of the market before making their next set of decisions. Sixty percent of the scoring for Best in Industry was based on criteria such as Market Share, Profitability, and Stock Price. Also considered were a complete Market Plan, Revised Market Plan, Corporate Strategy, and Revised Corporate Strategy which every team submitted. The other forty percent was based on the team's presentation of the solution to a "Special Problem" which was unknown to the team until they arrived at the competition on March 3. Participating on U.D.'s team this year were: Becky Berens, Tom Blackford, Dave Bornhorst, Bob Buckman, Ken Corby. Dave Menker, Cyndi Niquette, Kathy Ryan, Chris Schweitzer, and Carol Tuffy. Berens, Blackford, Corby, and Menker presented the solution to the Special Problem, although they were assisted by the whole team in its formulation .

Business Administration Faculty / 249


\:I\ilVWVV\:IV\:IVV

00008080e80 .0090 013 (:11:

TOP: Secretarial Studies: J. Webster, P. Murry, N. Forthofer BOTTOM : Accounting: (seated) W. Clark, M. Eley, M. Herdlick, R. Yerkes. (standing) R. Giacoletti, K.M. Geary, A. Fioriti, P. Root, R. Burrows, K. Rosenzweig, P. Vorherr.

School Of 250/Facuity


Management: (1st Row) J. Balloun, R. McClaine, C. Scheidler, (2nd Row) D. Lee, Bro. J. Flynn, S.M., G. Vlahos, R. Amsden, R. Miller, (3rd Row) J. Pearson, E. Dunne, S. Stough, J. Schenk, B. Konstantinovich, R. Berger.

Business Administration Faculty /251


THIS PAGE: TOP LEFT: Dean Ellis Joseph. TOP RIGHT: Assistant Deans Joseph White, Jerrold Hopfengardner. MIDDLE: Teacher Education: (seated) J. Britt, (standing) P. Lutz, R. Klosterman, E. Carey, BOTTOM: Physical Education: (1st Row) W. Lent, M. Stoll, K. Saylor, K. Smith (2nd Row) K. Emery, L. Laubach, D. Morefield, S. Neff, C. Buck, J. Schleppi, (3rd Row) J. LaVanche, K. Bills, D. Drees, M. Leonard, OPPOSITE PAGE: Teacher Education: (Front) Sr. C. Rudolph, O.S .F., E. Joseph, R. Weaver, (Back) J. Watras, J.E. Gay, Bro. G. O'Neil, R. Carlsen, J. Geiger, \J . Crabtree, H. Frye.

School Of 252/ Faculty


Teachers Learn At Glen Helen Education majors at U. D. can choose an alternative to the usual student teaching experience. If they want. education majors can do five weeks of their student teaching at the Glen Helen Outdoor Education Center in Yellow Springs, Ohio. The Glen is a 1,000 acre tract of land that is in its primeval state. The Outdoor Education Center hosts groups of students, usually in the sixth grade, from local schools. The students come (with their homeroom teachers) for a week to study things such as biotic communities and geologic formations in a natural setting. Student teachers who work at the Glen stay there during the week in staff housing or in a wing of the dorms. On

Monday of each week they participate in inservice training with the permanent staff. The sixth graders arrive on Tuesday morning and stay until noon Friday. Students and student teachers participate in activities from 8:00 a.m. until 9:00 p.m. They study geology, ecology, botany, and stream life. If the school wants, it can hold a "pioneer day" and participate in activities such as spinning wool. making candles, weaving, and cooking out. A night hike and kickball games are among the other activities available. For U.D. students teachers. spending five weeks at Glen Helen is a good way to teach and learn at the same time in a setting that is different from the ordinary classroom.

Education Faculty/253


THIS PAGE: TOP LEFT: Dean Russel Primrose. TOP RIGHT: Assistant Dean Carol Shaw. BOTTOM: Civil Engineering: (seated) R. Thomson, E. Payne, S.J. Ryckman , (standing) N. Phillips, G. Shaw, J. Saliba, T. Anessi. OPPOSITE PAGE: Electrical Engineering: A . Evers, T. Williamson, K. Bkulack, O. Wagner, B. Schmidt.

School Of 254/ Faculty


Robotic Arm Takes First A working robotic arm won Microprocessor Systems Development Group first place in the student project competition part of this year' s Engineer's Week which was held Saturday, February 26, 1983. MSDG competed with five other engineering student groups for the honors. The exhibits were judged by a panel of six representatives from local industries. In addition to the student competition, Engineer's Week featured exhibits from various engineering departments which were, for the most part, done by students. These included a Computer Graphics demonstration, a Computer Games display done by the Electrical Engineering Techno logy department, and a hybird solar-wind energy facility

display presented by the Mechanical Engineering department. Local industries, including Texas Instruments, Mead Digital Systems, Hewlett-Packard, and Bendix also provided 12 displays. Four additional displays were presented by ROTC. This year's Engineer's Week was very successful with over 200 students (and parents) in attendance. The event was coordinated by the Joint Council of Engineers. The American Society of Mechanical Engineers set up the industry exhibits and Tau Alpha Pi, the technical honor society, ran tours throughout the day.

Engineering Faculty /255


TOP: Chemical Technology: D. Gross, R. Anduze. MIDDLE:

Aerospace Engineering: F. Eastep, D. Quam . BOTTOM : Chemical Engineering: C. Sandy, E. Rolinski, S. Sandhu, R. Servais, C. Lu .

School Of 256/ Faculty


TOP:

I

Mechanical and Industrial Technology: J. Wilder, R. Puckett, B. Smilg, R. Mott, R. Wolff, F. Kretzler, BOTTOM:

Electrical Technology: D. Hanneman, J. Farren, R. Hazen, v. Rooney, A. Ismail.

Engineering Faculty / 257


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THE UNIVERSITY OF DAYTON BOOKSTORE

EXTENDS ITS Congratulations to the Class of 1983

260/ Advertisements


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Especially Our '83 WVUD Graduates

Advertisements / 261


University of Dayton In all 50 states and throughout the world, you will find UD alumni . Through their professions competently practiced, their talents generously shared, and their religious beliefs readily witnessed, UD graduates make a difference. The National Alumni Association of the University of Dayton encourages graduates to continue to be a part of the UD community through participation in activities both on the campus and in many cities throughout the country. To find out about the activities of the Alumni Association in your area or for other information about services available, Services, call or write Alumni University of Dayton Dayton, Ohio 45469 (513-229-2911) .

262/ Advertisements


Downtow'n IDa yton 404 1st Street~­ Dayton , Ohio '-"-~ ,,8., __ 45402 ':'::;~'~'I~ • l :l i\~f.'!

STUDENT ASSOCIATION

Kennedy Union Room 236 Ph. 229-4444

We Exist For You

A 250 Room Highrise Hotel Featuring Piper's Restaurant (Specialty Prime Rib), Cocktail Lounge And Gameroom With Professional Dart Boards, Outdoor Swimming Pool, Gift Shop And Meeting Facilities.

MILANO'S PIZZERIA Homemade Hand Rolled Pizza PIZZA -

HOT SUBS -

ITALIAN SANDWICHES

Atlantic City Cold Cut Submarines on Homemade Italian Bread We Deliver To *The Ghetto*

222·7072 1820 BROWN

NEAR CAMPUS

Advertisements/263


AR~~m'~!'~ I

I

Dayton's Largest Selection Of Chilled Wines ~ Champagnes Beer - Ale Imported & American Mixers Snacks -

Known For Fine Steaks, Chops, Sea Food, Expertly Mixed Drinks.

flVf MINUTfS '10M DOWNTOWNI

Fancy Foods

Store Locations: Breitenstrater Shopping Center 253-5181 2950 Far Hills Ave. Centerville - Rt. 725 298-1456 at McEwen 433-6778

1018 Irving Ave. 294-9141

Congratu,l ations To The Class Of

1983! UD's Oldest Bar Established 11935 2641 Advertisements

A FAMOUS SUPPER CLUB

TltePine Cluh 1926 BROWN STREET -

226-906-4

Chop Suey Carry Out 1465 E. Dorothy Lane (Next To Fox Kettering Theater) Kettering 294-7111

lJAYTON C~QP

SUEY

CHINA HUT 108 Byers Road (1-75 & st. Rt. 725) Miamisburg 859-6011


Ciufo

Duncan "Students Working For Students" Phil Ciufo And Karen Duncan Thank Everyone Who Supported Them This Past Year And Extend

Best Wishes To The Class Of 1983

Jerry Says, "See You, ,Please" Concord City Thanks The Grad'uates, Students, and Faculty Of UD For Patronizing Concord City_

I

Domino's Pizza Delivers. ™ At Domino's Pizza we

promise a hot, nutritious meal delivered in 30 minutes or less. Your pizza is made with 100% real dairy cheese, our own special sauce, and your choice ot items. Then we deliver it tastat no extra charge. Give us a call... we deliver I "

VISA

""\

-c..... -

Checks Accepted Our drivers carry less than $20,00. Limited delivery area ÂŽ

C> 1983 Domino's Pizza, Inc.

Advertisements / 265


WAYNE AVENU'E IGA MARKET I G A

Complete Grocery Fresh Fruit Beer & Wine

I G A

2044 Wayne Ave. l

Dayton 254-9362

This Space Is Dedicated To ...

THE THURSDAY NIGHT CLUB Congratulations And Best Wishes To All Who Made It A "Worthwhile Cause" And' A Whole Lot Of Fun!

The DAYTONIAN Yearbook Would Like To Extend Its Congratul'a tions To The Class Of 1983 And Wish It The Best Of Luck In The Future

266/ Advertisements

I


~~ s~ INC.

225 PARK AVENUE SOUTH NEW YORK , N. Y. 10003

Advertisements / 267


Four years of college living bring to each graduate a degree, the culmination of his academic pursuits. Yet this single piece of paper is little evidence of the degree of searching each student has undergone, not only academically, but also socially, religiously, and most importantly, . individually.

268/Closing


Closing/269


A t the end of every search there exists a destination. But what one begins to realize in the final months of his college career is that these destinations are not ends in themselves. Rather, they are the beginnings of neverending searches throughout one's lifetime.

270/ Closing



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Editor-in-Chief: Kathie Coales Assistant Editor: Sue Shallenberger Photography Editor: Sally McCaffrey Business Manager: Joann Lisa Student Events Editor: Cathy Brophy Sports Editor: Mel Ellwood Organizations Editor: Heidi Zschuppe Senior Editor: Marjorie Klee Feature Editor: Lori Moll Faculty Editor: Chris Weber Photography Staff:

272 / Closing

Jill Coder Rose Marie Ascherl Cindy Cardinal Tom Frenz Harry Sirinakis Doug Rechsteiner Peggy Sampey Liz Bradner Sylvia Rittweger Chris Cunningham Meg Hammer Sandy Robinson Bob Batz Gordon Smith Kara Masters (FN) Bern Connelly (FN ) Julie Ryan (FN) University Communications

General Staff: Maureen Meersman Brad Gauder Cathy Cushing Mary Kay Brucken Paul Reis Gregg Mazzola Betsy Wallace Theresa Reynolds Molly Barker Michael Gallagher Jim Kilfoyle Dave Zukowski Chris Hamm Mona Stauber Joe Yokajty Judi Gambill Gina Konkoly Tony Montefiori Beth Vincent Brenda Mayhall Sue Scheg Doug Leu Lisa Palumbo Special Thank. to Wright University Communications Department. Anne Malone. the Coordinator of Student Publications, and Charlie Miller. our Josten's American Yearbook Company representative.






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