1978 Oregana Vol. No. 64 Oregana M-lll, EMU . f OregonUniversIty 0 Eugene, Oregon 97403 Prince Lucien CampbeII lowers over campus. 2 CINDI NEY Editor LISA POLLARD Associate Editor RICK TAYLOR Copy Editor MIKE WHITTEN Layout Editor CAROL SCOTT MARK STEVENSON Photography Editors 13th and University, cornerstone of campus. ACADEMICS ACTIVITIES ATHLETICS CULTURE FEATURES HOUSING SENIORS 17 65 161 129 97 225 305 Deady Hall - oldest building on campus. 3 4 Sun shines on art museum's courtyard. 1977-1978. Another school year. U of 0 continues to thrive. More than 16,000 students-all individuals with conflicting ideas and opinions -search for an education. University of Oregon-an institute for higher learning. Red tape and bureaucracy at Oregon Hall. Long lines at registration and the bookstore. It's all frustrating, but the system doesn't change. Fall leaves cover Straub Hall. ~ <: n­ <1> ::> <; i" <1> '" Il> n ­ < Il> a ()Q '" <1> s;., <: '" ::> ::> ' < n - Il> '< !" 'T 1 Il> ~ <1> Il> sc­ ~ ~ Il> '" ~ '" e­ n- a <1> '" 0 <: §. n­ !" University of Oregon-room to learn and room to grow. Room for everyone and everyone's tastes. From disco to country. From wheat germ to Big Mac's. From doubleknit to denim. U of O. It's meeting people. It's learning, experiencing and creating. And it's getting caught in a downpour without an umbrella. Cemetary is used for studying and shortcuts. Mac Court's ivy brightens the cemetary. 7 U of 0 marching band performs at halftime. Autzen crowd comes alive. Eugene, Oregon. Home of enthusiastic basketball and track fans. Home of a plan: the Dawning of a New Day. Autzen never sells out and a new day doesn't dawn. But U of o wins the Civil War on an icy day and the fans are high. Renewed faith in football's future. Ducks line up against California. 9 10 Ice storm freezes Weather determines class attendance, , ",~!..~ '-':I' _, 'Russian - 449 i't 1J X; B 1977-78 yQe6HOM ro~y pyccKMll H3HK M ~MTepaTYPY ~X> .-b M3yqa~O QeT~~eCTa capOK ~eBHTD (449) cTy~eHToB. Ir 1 b ~ ~ / '> 1: it It 1~? -:tt/f /..{' -­ Scandinavian - 265 1t* Under skolaret 1977/1978 studerade 265 man och kvinnor skandinaviska sprak ock skandinavisk litteratur. JZt %,t 'f Greek - 150 ToD npO"tEPOU E"tOU~ ~"taL EJiO."tOv JiO.L TIEVrnxovra E:v"tu.fP-a. ~v • •yp:x.lJ.l,n"ta "tE JiO.L "to. "tWv OoxaLUN YEYp:x.lJ,ll£va auv CE<";:.~~ .. '; ;-<. Craft Center The EMU Craft Center had more than 1600 paid memberships in 1977-78. An additional 1300 people paid the daily use fee to work in wood, ceramics, photography, jewelry, silkscreening, lapidary, and textiles. The rock saw and the stone polisher were new to the lapidary section. Fifteen instructors produced between 25-30 classes and workshops each term. The Craft Center also sponsored a popular photography lecture series featuring guest speakers from professional sources around the University and the state. One workshop brought in a University of Wisconsin woodworking expert. The annual Christmas Fair drew 120 applicants for the 35 booth openings and was particularly successful. In spite of all the interest there always seemed to be space to work in the craft center. Woodworking and photo sometimes backed up but patrons still produced hundreds of photos, ceramic pots, lots of jewelry, furniture and silkscreened tee shirts. One person even built two clavichords. Top Left: Woodworking facilities is one of the many things the Craft Center provides. Top right: Students weld in the metalworking area. Bottom right: Many students find the silkscreening facilities more than adequate. Bottom left: "Big wheel keep on turnin' ... " 74 Tl/i KWAX-FM KWAX remained THE alternative radio station on an FM band full of "different" radio stations. 85 percent of their programming was produced and originated on campus with the majority of the rest coming through a feed from National Public Radio. Their music programming covered the complete range of the world's music just as their features seemed to cover the complete range of social and political issues concerning Eugene and the world. In the spring they introduced KID-WAX, a radio alternative to the Saturday morning cartoons with dramas, interviews, calandars and other programming aimed at, and often performed by, kids. 1978 was the last year that Dr. John Sheperd served as General Manager of KWAX. After more than a decade Dr. Sheperd decided to return to full time teaching in the DO Speech department. He is leaving behind a full time staff of 5 and 25 student announcers. Below: WARNING! Bottom left: David Primuth, Director of Operations and Development, and Lael Hartley, secretary, clown around in the KWAX record library. Top left: Katie Sloan, ProgramMusic Director, mans the KWAX controls. KWAX-FM-75 Health Center In 1977-78 the University of Oregon Health Center had the distinction of treating three times as many patients as the University has students. More than 45,000 people staggered through their doors for out-patient treatment alone. Another 345 students spent one or more nights curled up in the facility's 40 beds. Though almost all the surgical work was referred to other Eugene hospitals (the Health Center has no operating room) many of the 45,000 spent time in front of the X-ray machines, at the pharmacy, putting things in bottles for the lab to look at, or receiving physical therapy. The massive case load was handled by 10 full time doctors (including the director) and 4 part-time people, including an internist, a consulting gynecologist and 2 consulting psychiatrists. Assisting them were 15 full time and 5 part time nurses and a host of technicians and administrative personnel. In addition to curing the ill the Health Center spent a lot of time working with preventive medicine. Said one staff member, "We promote well-ness." Their programs include one nurse who works full time in the Women's Clinic doing contraceptive counselling (for both partners) and routine gynecological services. • Above: front row left to right-Jemeattea Wallace, Stephanie Kohl. Margaret Murray, Edna Eklof RN, Hazel Lund, Snell Prince, Ruby Grady, Mary Hubbell RN, Florence Burkhart, William R. McCluskey MD, and P.H. Pierson MD; middle row left to right­ Kenneth W. Scoopmire, Alberta Walker, Margaret Wilson, Jacqueline Gilmore, Julie Dunihoo, Evelyn Autenrieth RN, Sandra Buss, and Helen Patterson RN; back row left to right-W.A. Brooksby MD, Murdock E. McIntyre MD, Erma Upshaw RN, Yvonne Stinnett, A.c. Long MD, Ruth Atland RN, Sherryl McArthur, Margaret Bailey RN, Lynn Williams, Frances J. Colwell MD, and Herbert C. Lemon MD. 76-Health Center Switchboard Switchboard is an information referral service, specializing in a ride exchange program and offering housing and lost and found information for the local area. While the staff at Switchboard liked to think of themselves as a community-based program, the figures showed that va students made up 55% of their contacts this year. The program proved itself so popular that referrals almost doubled, from approximately 48,000 in 1976-77 to over 81,000 in 1977-78. The program suffered a setback in July, 1978 when their office was .~ .... burglarized and $3000 worth of equipment was taken. The equipment had been borrowed and money earmarked for establishing a youth hostel had to be used to replace the stolen equipment. Despite the loss, Switchboard continued its operations. Switchboard advertised three times daily on local radio sations KZEL and KLCC and wrote its own column for the Register-Guard in the Saturday and Sunday editions. The Switchboard office can be reached at 686-8453 during the hours of 10 a.m. thru 12 p.m. Crisis Center The Crisis Center program serviced the students and community in need of crisis intervention counseling during those hours when normal sources on campus were not available. Primarily a telephone service, it operated between 5 p.m. and 8 a.m. Falling under clinical supervision by the Counseling Center, the Crisis Center was headed by graduate students in Clinical or Counseling Psychology, with undergraduate volunteers making up the rest of the staff. These volunteers, being from varied academic fields, were trained by the graduate staff prior their handling of actual cases. Started in 1968, the Crisis Center has provided services to the University and the local community, operating on a break-even budget on funds from the ASUO, Health Services, and the "'. Counseling Center. 150 UOFO CRISIS CB,nER "" DlAl 4488 - ,.-­ a(: bJd~!;.i+ ' ;.:l:i' ;:t'''1' JJ 1;9 CAREER PLANNING 6­ PLACEMEN1 SER\lICE UPSTAIRS 78-Crisis Center YWCA In 1893 a number of young ladies from the University of Oregon met to organize the first Young Women's Christian Association on Campus. They wanted to achieve social and economic justice and a more humane environment. While the early group focused on Bible study and cooperative housing as they worked toward their goals, their 1978 descendents went more into the community with their work. They ran the Exceptional Friendship program for mentally retarded and otherwise handicapped persons of all ages, sponsored a handicapped swimming program and ran the Big Brother/Big Sister program jointly with the YMCA. They also had a hand in the Dove's Eye Card Shop and were active in women's issues around the state. YMCA In 1977-78 the UO Young Men's Christian Association celebrated its 91st year. It was a year of rebuilding and reorganization. Recognizing that there was a tremendous leadership resource on campus and realizing the personal and educational value of volunteer experiences, the YMCA decided to provide those types of experiences for the student body. The first year's efforts drew more than 300 students who were involved in programs such as the Big Brother/Big Sister program, Youth Basketball Program, High School Youth and Government Program, Saturday Morning Youth Program and camping programs. The results included a lot of good experiences for the UO student volunteers as well as for the more than 1,000 youngsters they worked with. 79 Action-Now Action-Now is concerned with enhancing the community and University ability to improve its constructed environment. They operate a tool library and a materials exchange center. They worked on a totally self sufficient house capable of providing its own heat, power, food and waste systems. They have also been involved in student and community building projects exchanging materials for labor and labor for materials to help improve the quality of life and education in Eugene. ALERT ALERT is dedicated to convincing the University and the community that the physically and mentally disabled need consideration, not caretakers. They strongly affirm the axiom "help the handicapped help themselves." They are active in programs to make buildings and facilities more accessible to handicapped people. They also stress educating the public about the stigmas and barriers they unconsciously, and erroneously, erect between themselves and handicapped people. 80-Action-Now, ALERT Gerontology The Gerontology Association is primarily interested in educating the public about how to deal with various facets of aging in general and teaching individuals how to adjust to the fact that their own body is getting older. In addition to the annual Elderly Appreciation Week featuring all manner of films, speakers, and exhibits, they also sponsor workshops, forums and trips to help individuals adjust to aging. There is also an emphasis on involving youth with the elderly as the interaction will be beneficial to both. GerontologY-B! 82-Survival Center, Outdoor Program Outdoor Program The Outdoor Program offers the student a low-cost, self-initiated opportunity to enjoy outdoor activities. The program has equipment and instruction available to small groups interested in activities like hiking, camping, climbing, wilderness exploration, cross country skiing, and various types of boating. The program also sponsors a nature photo lab. Participation is not limited to students and all participants share the costs of the outing. Administrative costs of the program are subsidized by student incidental fees. The spirit of the program is embodied in the idea that all activities are non-competitive and non-motorized. Outdoor Prograrn-83 Women's Referral and Resource Service The Women's Referral and Resource Service is dedicated to helping women overcome a sexist society. Whether the world is maliciously sexist or not is not the question-the question is where can a woman find the information, skills and tools to be independently happy in her job, housing, education and politics. The answer is the WRRS research files and library. In addition they sponsor an annual film festival, communications workshops and monthly meetings. 84-Women's Referral And Resource Service ~Tro~hlS$e - _('o..lfJ""t: 'Yaff.H> if'"'''. f ........ ·""rf .... ri\o.r -;,-,;\; +"". wE D\P Gay People's Alliance Though the "gay rights amendment" was rejected at the Eugene polls, the Gay People's Alliance still works to strive to educate the community to legally and socially accept gay men and women as human beings. To that end they have sponsored conferences, speakers, SEARCH classes, educational and social activities. In additon they provide support to members of the gay community who have problems that might not be dealt seriously with elsewhere. Gay People's Alliance-8S 86-BSU, NASU NASU The Native American Student Union seeks to take advantage of the University's role as a multi­ dimensional educational facility to present the Native American perspective on world and American values. They also provide on campus access to state and national American Indian organizations. They are involved in a number of projects each year including cultural classes, recreational activities, and sponsoring work in the Eugene public schools. In addition they provide social, educational and employment functions for their members. i MECHA MECHA-Movimiento Estudiantil Chicano de Aztlan or the Chicano Student Movement from Aztlan­ provides Chicano and Latin American students at UO with a central point for meeting others of a similar ethnic background. The organization promotes sensitivity and awareness to the cultural distinctions of the Chicano-Latin student population and encourages individuals to adapt to the educational and social conditions they find in this primarily anglo community. They also help members with educational and employment needs and sponsor several activities throughout the year to help create understanding of various facets of Chicano-Latin culture. NASU, MECHA-87 AASU The Asian American Student Union is dedicated to expanding awareness and appreciation of the Asian experience and contribution in America. They work closesly with the Ethnic Studies program primarily to encourage classes and programs that will enhance their goals. In addition they sponsor guest speakers, artisans and other prominent members of the Asian community. On the social side they serve their members as a common starting point for dances, dinners and other activities. 88-AASU, FSO FSO The Foreign Student Organization serves more than 600 foreign students representing more than 6S different countries on the DO campus. The FSO serves two functions: it tries to buffer some of the cultural shock many foreign students experience and provides an outlet for foreign students to show off some of the cultural attributes of their country. The FSO sponsors films, discussion panels and cultural events in cooperation within interested foreign students. Chinese Student Union The Chinese Student Organization is working to promote better appreciation of traditional Chinese culture among DO students. Activities include the annual China Night and Chinese Cultural Week as well as occasional speakers, a small library, demonstrations of folk music, folk dances, and Chinese art. They have also offered classes and tutoring on Chinese subj~cts. As a service to Chinese students they offer academic counseling and help with employment problems when the need arises. :~"'i ._,' I Ii II" \ " ~ FSO, Chinese Student Union-89 90-Hawaii Club REl RUITER itoi, .. o. '="....,. .- - .35 'REAM .• ".~iNJ G4P{ .15 (ORN . ; 'NUTS .3~ ~TIITO (1I1fS ,tl (ORN .41 GlAMT (()()QES 98-September October UO, Sigma Nu, and Phi Psi signed contracts with Universal Studios to cooperate in the filming of "National Lampoon's Animal House." Hollywood moved to Eugene as casting began. A thirteen-year controversy was ended by a court decision which allowed the concrete cross on Skinner's Butte to remain. Israeli Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan and President Jimmy Carter met to discuss plans to get the Israeli's and Arab's to the negotiating table. At the end of the conference, Dayan felt sure that, "We are going to Geneva." Because of poor health, 68-year­ old Al Capp decided to discontinue his "L'il Abner" comic strip. The strip entertained millions for 43 years. Homosexuals were overjoyed when the Eugene City Council voted to insert the words "sexual preference" into the city's human rights ordinance. The new wording will prevent landlords, employers, etc. from discriminating against people for their sexual preference. The New York Yankees beat the Los Angeles Dodgers in the fourth game of the World Series, 4-2, to win the World Series. The saddest and most heartbreaking news of the month, the death of 73-year-old Bing Crosby, brought tears to the eyes of many. He had a heart attack as he was leaving the 18th hole of a golf course in Madrid, Spain. The last words of the lovable singer-dancer­ actor were, "It was a great game." October-99 NoveIllber John Belushi and the Universal Studios crew brought trailers, semis, and cameras to begin filming "Animal House." Economics Professor Margaret Simeral was denied tenure by the economics department on the grounds that she did not publish the required amount of work. The denial brought loud protests by many of the students and other faculty members. Students lauded Simeral for her dedication and devotion to teaching her students. The "Publish or Perish?" question was left unanswered. The King of Comedy, himself, Bob Hope, appeared in Mac Court. And the Prince of Comedy, - or shall we say the President's brother? - Billy Carter, put his name on a beer can. Billy Beer made its debut in seven states. Evel Kneival was sentenced to a six-month jail term, and a three-year probationary period for beating his former press agent with a baseball bat. A light snow fell in Eugene causing slippery streets and a quiet whiteness, but the snow disappeared within hours. Several hours later, Eugene was hit with a severe ice storm. Although the ice caused many trees to bend and break, it also gave the city a sort of quiet beauty. More sad news came wi th the death of Guy Lombardo, 75. Lombardo, who died of heart disease, used to joke, "When I die, I'm taking New Year's with me." Good news came with the annual Civil War game as the Ducks beat the Beavers once again. The State Board of Higher Education, in a meeting at UO voted to sell stock in US corporations which conduct business in Southern Africa. loo-November DeceIllber Violence in sports again erupted, but this time it was on the basketball court instead of on the football field. LA Laker Kermit Washington punched Houston Rocket's Rudy Tomjanovich in the face. Tomjanovich ended up in intensive care with a double fracture of the jaw, a broken nose, and a concussion. NBA Commissioner Larry O'Brien gave Washington a $10,000 fine and a 60-day suspension. Parole was granted to Watergate conspirator John Ehrlichman. He will be released from prison in April, after one and a half years in prison. Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menahem Begin met on Christmas day to discuss Middle East peace propo~als. Noth~ng was decided. Also on Christmas Day came some sad news. Charlie Chaplain, 88, "the Little Tramp," died in his sleep. December-IOI January It turned out that Lombardo didn't take New Year's with him, although Arthur Burns may have wished he did. President Carter relieved Burns, 73, of his duties as chairman of the Financial Reserve Board. Carter appointed G. William Miller, 52, to replace Burns. In a suit settled out of court, George and Cornelia Wallace were divorced on their seventh wedding anniversary. Soviet gymnast Olga Korbut married Russian pop singer Leonid Bortkevich. Korbut wore the white gown and veil that she bought for $235.13 from a J. c. Penney store when she visited the u.s. in 1976. Although the Denver crowd was sick with Broncomania, the Callas Cowboys had little trouble crushing the Orange, 27-10, in Super Bowl action. Sadness again filled the hearts of many as Hubert Humphrey, 66, died of cancer. In a memorial service at the Capitol Rotunda, Vice President Walter Mondale commented, "He taught us all how to hope and how to love, how to win and how to lose. He taught us how to live and, finally, he taught us how to die." l02-January February It was a wet, but mellow winter in Eugene compared to the Midwest. More than 70 people died when heavy snows and 80 mph winds invaded the Midwest. All state highways in Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, and western Kentucky were closed, some of them impassable for stretches up to 300 miles. Chicago's O'Hare Airport, the world's busiest, shut down completely for only the third time in history. Superstar quarterback Joe Willie Namath, 34, retired from football after 12 seasons with the New York Jets and one with the LA Rams. Pat Haden was the first string quarterback over Namath. Namath admitted, "When I wasn't number one anymore, there wasn't very much for me to do." Despite Jimmy Carter's promise to reduce us. export of arms, his administration began the process of a massive arms sale to the Middle East. Ironically, in another visit to the White House, Egyptian President Anwar Sadat told President Carter that he wanted the US. to playa more forceful role in establishing peace in the Middle East. CBS celebrated its 50th anniversay with a weeklong broadcast of festivities which included over 113 past and present CBS stars paying tribute to the network. February-103 l04-March March Terrorism haunted this month as Christian Democratic leader Aldo Moro, 61, was kidnapped on his was to Parliament in Italy. Terrorist group, The Red Brigades, released a picture of their hostage and announced that he would be tried by "a people's tribunal." And in the Middle East, 12 Palestinain gunman hijacked an Israeli tour bus loaded with 63 Israeli's. The Palestinians exchanged gunfire with the Israeli troops and an explosion caused the bus to catch fire. In the end, at least 30 Israeli's had died and 70 more were injured. Heavy rains caused more than $1 billion worth in property damage in the Los Angeles area. 50,000 were left homeless and at least 38 people died as mud slides brought houses down the moutains and covered stretches of the Pacific Coast Highway. Several LA streets were covered with up to 12 feet of water. Publisher Larry Flynt (Hustler) was shot in Lawrenceville, Ga., as he and his lawyer were walking to court where Flynt was on trial from another obscenity charge. Flynt survived, but was paralyzed from his waist down. Evangelist Ruth Carter Stapleton (Pres. Carter's sister) rushed to Flynt's bedside. "I believe in miracles," said the woman who converted Flynt last year. "I just thank God he's alive." The Duck basketball team fianlly beat OSU in the last game of the season giving them an overall record of 16-11 and a Pac-8 record of 6-8. "'";..... ." ?> .;", :,.."" .......... - \'.' ... ~"'.. .. ... -. -::....,It'tor .,­ .... ,;1' April Former First Lady Betty Ford admitted that she had become dependent on the drugs she had been taking for pain relief and she committed herself to the Alcohol and Drug Rehabilitation Unit at the Long Beach, Ca., naval hospital. Said Betty, "Over a period of time I got to the point where I was overmedicating myself. It's an insidious thing and I mean to rid myself of its damaging effect." In Puerto Rico, Karl Wallenda, 73, greatest of the Great Wallenda's plunged to his death while attempting a 750 foot walk on a three-quarter inch cable suspended 120 feet off the ground between two beachfront hotels. Japan's new Tokyo International Airport had to postpone its opening as demonstrators managed to battle 15,000 riot police and damage the control tower. The battle which began 12 years ago concerns the 2,500 acres of rich farmland on which the airport was built. Veteran actor Will Geer (Grandpa Walton), 76, died of respiratory failure. His Grandpa Walton role was part of his own folkloric past, he said, and "brings out the real human values in life." Academy Award winners included: Woody Allen's Annie Hall, best picture: Diane Keaton in Annie Hall, best actress; and Richard Dreyfuss in The Goodbye Girl, best actor. Woody Allen, himself chose not to attend the ceremony. The US Air Force decided to deactivate its ROTC detachment at UO. The deactivation will go into effect June 30, 1979. Former Assistant Basketball Coach Jim Haney was named UO head coach after Dick Harter resigned to take a job at Penn State. Originally, the five freshmen basketball players talked Harter into staying at UO. But a few days later, he reneged on his decision and flew back east. Haney has planned to do away with the "kamikaze" image that Harter helped to build. April-lOS May In the Democratic primary race, Governor Bob Straub beat out Emily Ashworth, a candidate from Coos Bay. Republican candidate Vic Atiyeh beat out former Governor Tom McCall in the Republican race. Eugene residents also voted to repeal the City Council's October decision to add the words "sexual preference to the city's human rights ordinance. It was a major disappointment to the city's gay community, but they hung together and were ready to go out and try again. The ASUO ballot included an amendment to change the UO mascot from Donald Duck to Mallard Drake, a character created by Emerald cartoonist Steve Sandstrom. Emerald workers campaigned for Mallard, but most UO students thought that Mallard was just a snobby Daffy Duck look­ alike. Donald won with a 2-1 margin over Mallard. The World Champion Portland Trailblazers lost their chance to be the champions two years in a row when they lost in the semi-final playoff to the Seattle SuperSonics. The Senate approved Carter's plan to sell $4.8 billion worth of war planes to Israel, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia. After 54 days of anguish and humiliation, Aldo Moro's ordeal was over. The Red Brigade killed Moro and left his bullet-ridden body in a car in the heart of Rome. Britain's Princess Margaret, 47, was divorced from Anthony Armstrong-Jones, the Earl of Snowdon, after 18 years of marriage and two children, aged 17 and 14. Princess Margaret had been receiving negative publicity all spring because of her friendship (and alleged romance) with 31-year­ old Roddy Llewellyn, the brewing heir and would-be pop singer. David Berkowitz, the accused "Son of Sam" killer of six young people in New York City, pleaded guilty to murder in all six cases. "I wanted to kill them," explained Berkowitz. The 8th Annual Willamette Valley Folk Festival was held for three days on the grassy are by the EMU. Rain only threatened one day, and it never fell. l06-May June The Washington Bullets,with the aid of former DO basketball star Greg Ballard, beat the Seattle SuperSonics to become the 1978 NBA World Champions. Atlantic City, N.]., opened up casinos for legalized gambling. The first weekend brought huge crowds of novice gambler from near and far. In California, Proposition 13, the ]arvis-Gann amendment, garnered 65% of the votes. It was too early to tell what the effects would be, but tax revolt opposers feared the closures of libraries and schools and a lack of fire and police protection. Voters in other states - including Oregon - began to circulate petitions to get similar tax reform bills on their November ballots. Twenty-one-year-old Princess Caroline Louise Marguerite Grimaldi of Monaco married Phillippe ]unot, 38, an international investment banker. After several attempts by Princess Grace to find a more suitable mate, the Grimaldi's gave in to Caroline's will. DO, with its newly resurfaced track, enlarged infield area, and new Osaga-donated scoreboard, hosted the NCAA track meet. The Ducks were very much in contention during the three sunny days of competition, and they ended up placing fourth in the nation. )une-107 The sun has become a popular object for singers to sing about: George Harrison, "Here Comes the Sun"; Gordon Lightfoot, "Sundown"; John Denver, "Sunshine on my Shoulder"; Stevie Wonder, "You are the Sunshine of my Life"; Pablo Cruz, "A Place in the Sun"; and many, many more. The sun has also become a popular object for alternative energy lOB-Solar Energy advocates to talk about. The sun rises and sets every day bringing enormous amounts of energy to the earth. And when the sun isn't shining, its energy is at work making the wind blow, clouds form, rain fall, and trees and crops grow. Sunlight becomes hot water through solar panels and electricity through solar cells. Wind becomes a waterpump through windmills. Rainfall becomes electricity through small hydroelectric dams. Wood becomes warmth through wood stoves. As long as there is sun, we will never have an energy crisis. Solar energy works without power lines, pipes and hoses. The sun doesn't foul the air, land or water, so solar energy is non-polluting. Bottom right: Solar energy fans participate in "Here Comes the Sun" parade to celebrate Sun Day and solar energy. •Out In Oregon's Outside PG. 130-Top: Pre's Trail. Right: On Collier Glacier looking at Mt. Washington, Three Finger Jack and Mt. Jefferson. Bottom left: French Pete Wilderness Area. PG. 131-Top left: Hoodoo Ski Bowl. Top right: Willamette Greenway bike path. Center right: McKenzie River. Bottom: Near Big Lake, view of Three Finger Jack. 110 -, j" I; The skiing is not as good as Colorado's; the ocean is not as nice as Hawaii's; the rivers are not as wild as Arizona's; the redwoods are not as big as California's; the fishing is not as good as Alaska's; the mountains are not as spectacular as Washington's; but then Oregon has it all, and is taking care of it today to make sure it is still here tomorrow. Deady & Villard become national historic landmark October 1, 1876. It was, without question, the most important day for Eugene residents. Deady Hall, the University's first building, opened to accept the school's first class of students. On opening day, Deady Hall stood alone on a treeless knoll. One century later, it is one among many buildings, surrounded by towering trees. And on May 19, 1978, Deady Hall again made Eugene residents proud. On this special day in 1978, Deadyand Villard halls were designated officially as national historic landmarks. (Villard Hall was completed in 1886.) Scheduled to speak was the Honorable Harry S. Villard, retired United States Ambassador and grandson of the man for whom Villard Hall was named. When Harry Villard became ill, the youngest grandson of the elder Villard offered to speak. The day was bright and sunny for the happy occasion which took place in the Old Campus Quadrangle, immediately east of the two buildings. Old and young alike were impressed enough to attend the ceremony. The crowd was attired in anything from jeans, bare feet and cutoffs to three-piece suits, dresses, nylons, and pearls. The memory of the determination and dedication of those Eugene residents from 1876 will rest forever in these two national landmarks. And so will the memories of Matthew P. Deady, a founder of the university, and Henry Villard, the university's first major benefactor. These two men helped make a dream come true. 112-Deady & Villard Ceremony If it was anything important, a tee shirt said it Tee shirts seemed to say it all. They announced our loyalties, our travels, our causes, our pet loves and hates, our favorite products, our artistic tastes, our affiliations, our heroes, our accomplishments, our outlook on life and our sense of humor. They were to bodies what bumper stickers were to cars. t~ rein In ~mekes "'~h/"9so lreen•.••. ····'~cleikj· Ihelson 00k. :~~ 'If~~ ..~" I WEmRUMlnG on F¥1 ()IlE«)Il }l BIKE PATH..... !I I Tee Shirts-113 Demonstrations: Every sign tells a story 114-Dernonstrations If) . . . . . ";' '"c: .~ ~ '"c: o S Q) Cl Construction By the time painters finish painting the Golden Gate Bridge, it's time to start painting the bridge all over again. So it goes with the University of Oregon. By the time one building is built or remodeled or added on to, it is time to build another or remodel another or add on to another. This year a new building was added to the Music School buildings and Gerlinger was remodeled. In the past five years, additions and remodeling have occurred in the EMU, Esslinger, Fenton, Mac Court and Condon to name a few. It's almost ironic that while UO enrollment continues to decline, UO continues to grow. a never ending process 116-Construction '78 films sell more than seats in cool theaters Buster Crabbe's Flash Gordon would have recognized Mark Hamill's Luke skywalker. Both were pure, impetuous, brave, half-bright, and all that stood between the civilized world(s) and certain enslavement. STAR WARS completed the circle from the potboiler science fiction of the 1930's, through the cerebral 2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY and SILENT RUNNING. The return of the potboiler was timed just right. The country was ready for a genuine "escape" film; light hearted entertainment without messages, sex or gore. SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER, JULIA and TURNING POINT all drew large audiences and had great talents saying great things but more than ninety million of us paid between $1.75 and $4.00 to see Artoo Deetoo, See Threepio, Luke, Princess Leia, Darth Vader, Han Solo, Chewbacca the Wookie and Obi Wan Kenobi struggle for the Universe. Most of us paid the price more than once. Tee Shirts, bumper stickers, halloween costumes, laser swords, dolls, models, board games and comic books suddenly appeared like mushrooms to cash in on STAR WARS. We bought it all. It was sort of a national return to innocence. ROCKY inspired the same kind of naive euphoria. ANNIE HALL, though more diverse in its approach, and THE GOODBYE GIRL were ultimately happy films, too. ANNIE HALL, THE GOODBYE GIRL and STAR WARS virtually swept the Academy Awards. May the Force still be with you. lIB-Movies I Animal House' brings Hollywood to Eugerte. .of" .../~ n.'~ ~J~ .' J • • If· \ ~ rji-.J-l-.J. ]f' J \ I -..~ -r_~ . R RESTRICTED ",-..~ h .....:.~•. )':....... 0·,,) Comina this summer. ... ..­ -', .... ::.. -./"" ••• r •• ~ I r. I.. ,:. ~ . ~ ,.. . .1"' ,,.4 These guys are flunking out of college and loving every minute of it. You will too. 120 · .. vans, cameras, wires, lights, costumes, and stars It started off as just a rumor. Universal Studios liked UO's "incredible beauty" and felt they could pass off the campus as a 1962 east coast college. Negotiations began. Contracts were signed, Sigma Nu's national headquarters calmed down and UO students got their first taste of "tinsel town". Several hundred students and non-students vied for the 200 "major extra" parts. Winning a part was a pyrrhic victory. The hours were long and tedious, studies suffered and those chosen must have felt a pang when casting director Michael Chinch said he had been looking for "weird" characters. Ultimately 800 extras were paid $60,000 for their work in Eugene and Cottage Grove. For the average student the impact of Animal House was visual: Universal Studios' vans parked along 13th and 11th Streets, portable dressing rooms, classrooms surrendered to the film crew, busses re-rounted, cables running all over Fenton Hall, the EMU filled with lights and closed for lunch, the headless statue of Emil Faber, the "aging" of the interior of the Sigma Nu house, windows blacked out, and kids dressed and groomed 20 years behind the times. John Belushi and the other "big name" actors were more evident in the Emerald than in person but everyone seemed to get at least a glimpse of someone. After six weeks it was over ... just in time for finals week. .-. - 122-Anirnal House .., "Quiet, please! Take your number one position! This is 94-b! Rollit! · .. marker cut, cut, cut! This isn't working Back to your number one positions ... That light's too hot ... Golf ball lady? Where's the golf ball lady? Is this better for you, Charlie? Yep · .. Ahright! Herewego. Rollitplease · .. marker ... background action, let's go ... soup girl ... lemme see that cheeseburger ... Where's the girl in the red dress? ... cut, cut! · . . Golf ball girl I need your hands, lemme see your hands ... I gotta change film ... Can all you kids move back? I've gotta run some cable through here and it would really help. You're all sooo cooperative, really! . allrightherewego! rollit You wanna marker on this one? . background action? One . . . Two · .. Three . . . quiet please! ... bring up that cheeseburger, good, good Cut! OK, gimme a stand- in here I'm working on it ... John? OK, Quietpleaseherewegorollit! Marker · .. good, good, ... Cut! Print it! " Animal House Mm-mm good In an era of health food nuts, concern over too much sugar, salt and fats in the diet, and in a community that is very environmentally concerned, fast food chains are abundant. Students and citizens alike gorge themselves on triple scoops, two patties and three buns, circles of dough with cheese, Canadian bacon, peperoni, anchovies, etc., and other fast food delicacies. Are the junkfood junkies worried about their health? Not really. After all fast foods are American and mm-mm-good. 124-Junk Food 126-Night Life CULTURE VO Culture ­ No matter what your entertainment taste buds were in the mood to savor, there was always something good to sample from the University's cultural menu. A variety of plays, concerts, dances, displays, guest speakers and exhibits offered patrons a welcome respite from a steady diet of dry text books and lectures. A menu of delicious variety The bulk of this entertainment smorgasbord was served up by the EMU Program Board. The Incidental Fee Committee meted out a major portion of its budget to finance the Board's two divisions, the Program Committee and the Cultural Forum. The Program Committee sponsored such free events as Noon Gigs, Wednesday-night Jazz Sessions and the Fishbowl Follies. The Cultural Forum, however, was responsible for the major portion of the programming. A good measure of planning, and a dash of know-how mixed with a pinch of luck made at least one thing certain-there were no half­ baked productions this year. Cultural Forum - "We've got it all II Films, exhibits, authors, poets, speakers, politicians, jazz, rock and country gigs-name it and the chances are the EMU Cultural Forum had something to do with making it happen on campus. Getting all that together and having it turn out right is a "humongous" job requiring a lot of work and planning, a touch of luck, a little advice and a shoulder to cry on when things don't go as expected. But, they'll be the first to tell you that it was the student volunteers who made all the programming and production decisions. The five divisions of the Cultural Forum and their student heads for this year were: Contemporary Issues - Laura Paulson; Heritage Music and Jazz - Rick Paul, John Kane; Film and Literature - Linda Carmichael; Popular Music - Shane Tappendorf; Performing Arts - Martha Boersch, Mary Moffitt. Grateful Deadheads await Jerry Garcia's group in Mac Court. Doobie Brothers - "Listen to the Music." 130~Culture Jerry Jeff Walker-Down home country. John Prine-A trulyC1iversified artist selling and singing to the pop, country and folk audiences. Stanley Turrentine-His gutsy, funky sax attracted jazz and pop fans alike. Ralph Stanley and the Clinch Mountain Boys-The last of the Stanley Brothers singing southwest Dan Kamin-Pantomime so real you could Virginia hill music with roots going back to the colonists. hear the dishes clatter and the soprano screeching. Red Clay Ramblers-Not an imitation but a revival of the bawdy, bright and original dance and "hillbilly" music of the 1920's and 30's. .. Randy Newman-Does he really hate short people? 1321-Culture Jean Luc Ponty-His unique style has brought the electric violin to its place in the jazz-rock fussion. Grateful Dead-Still alive and "truckin" since the sixties. B. B. King-A powerful evening of blues. Culture-133 The Boys of the Lough-Designed for a connoisseur's taste in Gaelic music. Gary Ogan-Talent from the Northwest working his way up the commercial ladder. Taj Mahal-Black country blues, Caribbean reggae and calypso, West African: Organic grass roots music without the>-implied cliche. "Always at the bottom of whatever I do is at least a little bit of humor." You could hear Taj smile. Tim Weisberg-An electric flute with sounds too good to be true. 134-Culture Tom Scott-A Grammy award winning jazz composer and arranger who dabbles in popular TV and Film scores (Starsky and Hutch, Baretla, Conquest of the Apes). It is a woodwind that blows so good. Kenny Rankin - "When I say I play 'New York Traditional' I'm taking into account Woodie Guthrie, Joao Gilberto and Laura Nyro." Jimmy Buffet - Resident of 'Margaritaville'; occupation listed as 'professional misfit'; an artist with a feeling of humor and the absurd, a romantic taste for exotic climes and a grin for the audience. Candidates campaign on campus Republican Gubernatorial candidates came out swinging on April 28 in one of three debates. Candidates Tom McCall, Roger Martin, and Victor Atiyeh debated on tough issues like abortion, herbicides, and energy and nuclear power. No one candidate won the match, but each expressed clear opinions on what should be done about Oregon's controversial problems. While Republican candidates were busy debating, Democratic candidate Emily Ashworth was busy promoting her own ideas and stands. Ashworth visited Eugene on several occasions including national Sun Day to help celebrate solar energy. In the end it was Victor Atiyeh winning the Republican primary and Governor Robert Straub winning the Democratic primary. Below: Former governor Tom McCall takes his turn at the podium. Right center and bottom: Emily Ashworth addresses a group of Oregonians at Eugene Mall. Upper right: Debating Republican candidates are (left to right) Victor Atiyeh, Roger Martin and Tom McCall. 136-Candidates Bob Hope--King Of Comedy "Oregon is a beautiful place. There are so many trees here this must be Lassie's summer home ... This is the home of the Kamikaze Kids, you people have done more for ducks than Walt Disney ever dreamed of ... Seriously, though ... I saw that the UO football team beat OSU in the race for the basement. Edsel picked the offensive and defensive players of the game for a $10 scholarship." Bob Hope-137 Matty Simmons (top) - "Satire is the hardest, most tedious form of writing. Even after you write it you don't know if people will laugh at it." Julian Bond (right middle) - The Bakke reverse discrimination case seeks to support "a legal system that after 200 years has not produced a single woman and just one black on top of the United States ... Minorities are still waiting for their declaration of independence." Ray Browne (right bottom) - "The media has the power to create and destroy our heroes ... No heroes can be created today without the media's help." 13B-Culture Frank Herbert, Kate Wilhelm of Fiction writing workshop panel: "The most important thing in creating a new culture or world, such as Dune, is to show how the people survive ... I refuse to be put in the position of telling my grandchildren: 'Sorry, there's no more world for you. We used it all up.' " Herbert Robert Kaiser (left) - Foreign Correspondent for the Washington Post-"Contemporary life in the Soviet Union." Mandy Carter (above) - pacifist and feminist- "Women: The Recruiters' Last Resort." Eugene Ioneso (above)-Describe Ionesco in a sentence? Two sentences? Absurd! Rita Mae Brown (left)-feminist lesbian author-"A lot of you out there are white and middle class and embarrassed as hell about it ... If you don't tell us your struggle, how can we ever know your struggle?" Culture-139 Miriam Schapiro (right): "It just never occurs to me to ask myself, 'Is this art?' or 'Isn't this art?' Art is such an individual thing that it is hard to convince me there are concrete guide lines or structured methods that works of art must follow." Wilfred Burchett (bottom right): First western correspondent at Hiroshima, now known for leftist reporting from Indochina, making a few capitalist bucks. Dr. John Gofman (bottom left); Emeritus professor, medical physics, UC Berkeley-The real danger of nuclear energy is in the leaks that occur when the materials and wastes are packaged and transported. 140-Culture Thami Mhlambiso (top left): UN representative from African National Congress-"Comrades ... Our men had to go abroad to learn the art of killing, which is the philosophy of civilized regimes. The Vorster regime no longer has a monopoly on violence." 17 Nov. 77. (His appeal to the State Board of Higher Education 20 Nov. 77 was noticably different, being based on reason-C0py Ed.) Alex Poinsett (bottom left): Senior Staff Editor-EBONY-1968-1978 was the "decade of los t opportunity" when the nation failed to effectively cope with the problems of American Blacks. Although not pictured, the following people were visitors to the UO campus and were equally as important and influential as those pictured: Tom Hayden: Political activist­ "This generation starts with a heavier burden because it is less naive and more sophisticated than the students of the sixties. Trina Robbins: Cartoonist and illustrator who made the transition from the underground comix to international acceptance. Simone Forti and Peter Van Ripe: Music and dance based on ethnic instruments and animal locomotion. A workshop that began in performance: partly planned, partly improvised. Culture-141 Beergardens, and Fishbowl Follies Above: Fill'er up at the EMU Beergarden. Left: Music fills the fishbowl Tuesday nights. Top: Students relax and get loose at Friday Beergardens. Fishbowl Follies, Noon Gigs, Beergardens-143 ESTee r .... TOM STOPPARD'S 1976 TONY AWARD WINNING COMEDY Travesties-A comical look at novelist James Joyce, poet and dadaist co-founder Tristan Tzara, and Russian revolutionary Vladimir Lenin. Most of the play takes place in the memory of Henry Carr, a minor British Consulate official. Travesties "seems to me to be a statement of concern for the human condition reflecting in its manipulation of time, space, and action and in its use of many forms, styles and moods, the multiplicity of experiences with which we must cope today," says director Jean Cutler. Cast includes: James Lundstrom, Arastoo Sepehr, Jerry Lambert, Dave Smith, Steven Scher, Jillayne Sorenson, Katie Kleinsasser, Debbii Roberts, William Cooper, Howard Farling, and Allen K. Jones. 144 JACK HEIFNER'S Twelve ye;;us of searching for the Great American Dream.vaniies directed by Melina Neal Chris Boyd as Mary Beth S. Gilles as Kathy Sheri Fisher as Joanne Vanities-145 Above: Mother, daughters, and townspeople mourn the death of Bartley. Right: Nora is confronted by her "dead" husband. r, 146-Riders/Shadow •• A new comedy by a Eugene playwright ... OO@(uD~D do i know you? by RUTH KEEFHAVER DULL Robin is an "earnest, strong­ willed young woman" trying to adj ust to the "one to one" relationship in marriage, matching intelligence and love against tradition and system. Below: Karen Springer as Robin. Below lett, left to right: J. Thibeau, G. Beaumont Kennedy and Karen Springer. Center: Vanessa Delap and Karen Springer. Top: G. Beaumont Kennedy. Robin, Do I Know You?-147 Cast from left to right: Bill Burger, Larry Lee, Gerry Birnbach, Matthew Broderick, and Corson, Estella Loera, and Robin Wall. Lisa Albaum, Sarah Klevitt, Becky Stone, Andy Zavada. Cast not pictured: Glen 148-Story Theatre UNIVERSITY THEATRE Jesse And The Bandit Queen-149 "Jesse James and Belle Starr in their own adult western fantasy." Above and below: Randi Ravitts as Belle Starr. presents ~ ... ~ Cast: Grant Cummings, Kathy Neal, Rick Williams. Directed by Marya Bednerik. Harris, Rod Davidson, Debi Farr, and Jerry Musical direction by Dale Hearth. ISO-Candide Commedia dell'arte, blending humor with serious statement, Stories to be Told consists of three vignettes: "The Story of the Abscessed Tooth," "The Story of Our Friend Panchito Gonzalez (Who Felt Responsible for the Outbreak of Bubonic Plague in South Africa)," and "The Story of the Man Who Turned into a Dog." By Osvaldo Dragun. °C~ Directed by Lowell Fiet Cast includes: Estela Loera Jon Irwin Susan V. Mason Darrell Gray Lee Heuermann Randy Packer Stories To Be Told-lSI Eguus, Peter Shaffer's psychological thriller, returned to the University Theatre after a sell­ out summer. Eguus represented the University at the regional competition of the American College Theatre Festival. Cast: Dennis Dolan Matthew Broderick Kate Denning Richard Scheeland directed by Faber B. DeChaine Equus-153 An evening of enjoyment and variety for Eugene's dance audience. 154-Dance 78 " l'A~{~,~~ ~ <.'."."" ':r:' I ~ ~ "A celebration of life's happy refusal to conform to cranky plans and theories," By Moliere Directed by Rinda Lundstrom Cast includes: Bill Reid Cindy Bishop Larry Lee Peter Struble Sally Lund Tim Rarick Doug Crawford Rob Prevost Dan Barto School For Wives-ISS Above: Jugglers practice at the festival. Top left: People of all ages enjoyed enjoyed the festival. Top right: Crowd patiently awaits the festival's first performance. Bottom right: Dancing with baloons was common at the festival. 156-Willamette Valley Folk Festival a little something for everybody! Right: Statue by Proctor, The Indian Maid With Fawn, stands at the entrance to the art museum. Top right: Part of the museum's sculpture collection is this American contemporary done in pumice. Top left: The museum exhibits many foreign treasures. Above: Ivy climbs the windows of the museum. PC. 158 - Bottom: The museum building is in itself, a piece of art. Top: Paintings and photographs are common exhibits. Museum Of Art-159 A tribute to unfamiliar names and faces and plenty of talent The past 32 pages have been dedicated more or less to the professional practitioners of our culture. By paying for tickets or otherwise patronizing their arts we have, by definition, maintained them and their arts as part of our culture. This page is dedicated to those millions of us who practice the various aspects of our culture purely for our own pleasure. 160-Amateu rs ATHLETICS The All-American Sports Fan is a Duck in disguise! One of the All-Americans in the following pages is the University of Oregon Sports Fan. The Fan endures much to reach his All-American status and he does it without benefit of scholarships, trainers, sympathetic professors or even coaches. He does it all on instinct. He is worth 10 points in Mac Court for the basketball team and can make a gymnast's 9.1 routine feel like a 10.0 at the Olympics. He will hearten a defense that is still fighting hard in the fourth quarter in spite of a 30 point deficit. He will cheer any man that give his best effort on Hayward Field. For him, javelin throwers and second place runners take victory laps. University of Oregon Fans are are at once the most sophisticated and most boisterous. They know when they have seen real quality efforts and let the athlete know with their cheers. They know when the infraction was unwarranted and let the offender know in his ears. They will wait all night for a good seat in the Pit, and will sit in the cold Autzen rain through four quarters of losing effort just because. If the football fan is sometimes inattentive to the cheerleaders, it is probably because he has a better grasp of what is happening on the field, or else has fortified himself with alcoholic spirits while developing his school spirits. But the most amazing feat of the All American UO Fan was when 14,000 of them jammed Hayward Field fur the NCAA track meet. Not only did they cheer all the athletes on to 10 new records, but they managed to hold still while someone else practiced Eugene's favorite sport. 164 Farewell To The Pac-8 On 1 July 1978 the Pacific-8 Athletic Conference died. Actually it committed suicide on the promise of a resurrection as the Pacific-10 Athletic Conference. As Arizona State and Arizona took their place in the new conference (along with California, UCLA, USC, Oregon, Oregon State, Stanford, Washington and Washington State) Conference Executive Director Wiles Hallock praised the new additions for their academic and athletic stature, and was proud to point out that the 10 schools in the new conference had won at least 5 NCAA team championships in each of the past 9 years. He called the new conference the "Conference of Champions." But the champions had some difficulty getting together. Although the Pac-10 will play in all the major sports, it was football that caused the change. USC felt they could make more money if they played fewer football games in the small stadiums of the northwest (Washington's excepted). They wanted either a change in the 50-50 gate split or more home games where they could average more paid attendance. They threatened to leave the Pac-8 and become independent. They talked about perhaps dropping two or three of the northwest schools. They wanted to play in the 70,000 seat ASU stadium or even the 57,000 seat Arizona stadium, rather than at WSU, OSU or Oregon where attendance averaged under 28,200. The smaller northwest schools could hardly afford to say no to the Pac-10. They needed the revenues from playing in the big California stadiums and liked the recruiting prestige of being in a major football conference. They did not like the idea of flying to Arizona once or twice a season, they did not relish recruiting against two more Pac-10 schools, and they did not want to have to divide Rose Bowl revenues two more ways. But they did not want to be left out in the cold. UO President William Boyd seemed somewhat blackmailed as he said the Pac-8 was not serving all its members so Oregon would vote for expansion. Only Washington was adamant against the Pac-10. They could afford to be. They averaged 40,000 fans per game and had just won the Pac-8 title. They worried about the new 7 game conference football season (instead of the traditional round-robin), they griped about travel and recruiting. But they changed their minds. On 1 July, 1978, the Pacific-8 Athletic conference died. Farewell, old friend. Who am I to say no to the big guys? Farewell To The Pac-8-165 "You May fool the world down the pathway of years, and get pats on the back as you pass, But your only reward will be heartache and tears if you've cheated the man in the glass." Rich Brooks quoting Kipling October, 1977-prior to the OSU game. Rich Brooks' "new day" dawned on rainy skies. Everybody liked what the new coach was doing with the Ducks. The fourth down gambles and complicated trick plays showed a confidence in the team and an attitude about football that was generally encouraging. Only the scores went against them. The year started off with lots of promise. Facing the reigning southeast conference champions, Georgia, in Athens, the Ducks Brooks forecasts new dawn earned a lot of respect. Quarterback Jack Henderson had his best day of the year with 17 pass completions good for 224 yards. Ken Page tucked in one of those completions for 70 yards and 6 points and the longest pass of the year. The Duck defense was a little shaky against the 'dogs, however and the final score showed nothing but promise: 27-16 for Georgia. The promise was barely kept the next week against Texas Christian University. The offense looked good scoring 29 points but the defense was still having trouble. 15 Duck penalties were indicative of the youth and inexperience on the team. TCU showed their inexperience, too. Ken Bryant broke loose on a punt return and was obviously on his way to a 70 yard touchdown when he was tackled by a player off the TCU bench. Grant got the TO and Oregon won 29-24. Half time fireworks and a big play defense thrilled 20,000 fans at the home opener against highly touted Wisconsin. Reggie Grant's fumble recovery and David Hayne's interception frustrated Badger drives deep into Duck territory. Henderson connected with Page for another 60 yard bomb and Roy Geiger punted one for 66 yards. The effort paid off with 6:25 to play Oregon was only down by 8 with fourth and 6 on the Wisconsin 12. Geiger kicked the field goal and everybody looked for one more defensive miracle. It didn't happen. Wisconsin 22, Oregon 10: respectable but not satisfying. 166 gets rain with nice sunset The Pac-8 opener at Stanford was nationally televised and the Ducks put on a good performance. Favored Stanford had to overcome a 7-3 deficit to lead 13-10 at the half. Unfortunately two Cardinal interceptions and a couple costly penalties including one for 12 men on the field killed major Duck drives. Mel Cook was outstanding on defense and won the television player of the game honors with 11 unassisted tackles including four sacks of quarterback Guy Banjamin. Bruce Beekley gathered a record 15 unassisted tackles. Improvement is not always as satisfying as victory, however, and a frustrated Duck team came home losers 20-10. The Washington Huskies came to Autzen Stadium with an anemi 1-3 record. They later credited the game as a turning point on their drive for a Rose Bowl bid. The Ducks didn't need the credit. It was 33-0 before the Ducks got a first down. Beekley had 21 tackles but nobody had a good day. Final score: Washington 54, Oregon O. After the Washington debacle some people expected the Ducks to be turkeys at Usc. To make matters worse, Fred Quinlen and Mel Cook were hurt in practice and would not play for four more weeks. The Ducks showed exceptional spirit, however, and outscored the Trojans 15-7 in the second half, gaining 230 yards in the process. Henderson got great pass protection and Jeff Woods rambled 25 yards for a touchdown that set the offensive Football contined line coaches buzzing. Brooks was never satisfied with a loss "But we played aggressive football and 1 was proud of the way we carne back and battled." Oregon 15-USC 33. Next the Ducks carried their pride and mementum out of the conference to LSU. The defense played tough in the first quarter. Kenny Bryant intercepted an LSU pass on the Duck four that the offense methodically marched 96 yards for the first score of the game. Late in the first quarter, however, LSU broke for the first of three first half touchdowns and the beginning of 503 rushing yards. Geiger kicked a 51 yard field goal and Daly hit Page for a 10 yard TO in the second half but the glory was all for LSU's Charlie Alexander. He gained 237 yards and scored four touchdowns, including one with 6 seconds left to set a new LSU record. LSU had to call time out for Alexander to get his last TO and nobody was very happy about it. "I hope we have a chance to reciprocate," said Brooks. LSU 56-Oregon 17. The Ducks showed spirit aga.in against Washington State in Pullman. Henderson hit Bill Vincent for a 48 yard TO and Rick Schwartz blocked a punt that Rich Clough ran three yards for another touchdown. Roy Geiger kicked a 56 yard (Brooks thinks it was 57) field goal that equalled (or broke) a school record. WSU carne back, however, and lead 28-20 at the half. They added injury to insult late in the third period when Jack Henderson limped from the field with a knee injury that kept him 168 Football from the next two games. It also ended the Ducks significant offense. WSU's "throwin' Samoan", Jack Thompson, felt fine throwing for 202 of the Cougars' 603 total yards. WSU 56-UO 20. The promise of the early games returned against UCLA. Playing at home in the rain, the Ducks gambled successfully on defense and held the Bruins scoreless until the last minute of the first half. Down 700 with a minute left in the half the Ducks came back throwing. Unfortunately, Daly's shot to Vincent was intercepted for a TO and it was 14-0 at the half. The defense stayed tough in the second half, but sophomore quarterback, Durando could only sustain one drive, an 85 yard effort to the Bruin 1, that just couldn't get in. With 3:16 left in the game Geiger kicked a 39 yard Brooks ordered field goal. "They play too well to get shut out," Brooks said. UCLA 21-0regon 3. The Duck defense and offense faltered against California and were down 24-0 after the Bears' first five possessions. Passing better than UCLA, the Bears led 33-3 at the half. Oregon's passing attack was consistently over thrown and it was the running game that finally netted TDs by Kim Nutting and Dennis Bullock. Calif Football-169 Football ornia 48-0regon 16. Nobody said the Pac-8 was an easy conference but owning the cellar was still no honor. As if that enough pressure the last game of the season was against equally dismal Oregon State who was bringing a two year loosing grudge into the game. The Ducks didn't act pressured. The offensive line, lead by Bill Hoffman, broke the Duck runners loose for 298 yards. Henderson came off the injury list and threw for 103 yards. Nutting ran for 94 yards and two touch downs while Gary Beck ran for 131 yards and threw a 65 yard half back pass to Ken Page. Beck's pass was indicative of Brooks style for the game; Beck ran two fake punts (one for 27 yards) and a Tom Caffety fake field goal set up another score. The Ducks played with "damn good authority" said Brooks. Rick Brooks' new day had a pretty sunset. ~ " 170 X-country team and coach take national honors Officials had to use films of the competition as they changed the scores twice, but when the dust had settled after the finish the University of Oregon had defeated the foreign legions of WSU and Texas-El Paso to be the 1977 NGAA Cross Country Champions. The victory capped an undefeated (4-0) season where first place was often elusive but consistently high placings by the whole team led to win after win. The first meet, the Gary Franklin Memorial, boiled down to the Ducks versus former national champion Craig Virgin. Alberto Salazar took first in 29:22 and three more Webfoots followed in the top five. Bill McChesney grabbed third and Rudy Chapa and Don Clary tied for fourth. The rest of the season found Oregon facing WSU's world class Kenyans, Samson Kimombwa and Henry Rono. In their first encounter at the Northern Division Championships Rono won but Salazar was only 10 yards short of taking second. Clary took fourth, chapa took fifth, McChesney took sixth and Art Boileau came in tenth to secure a team victory. The Pacific 8 Championships was almost an instant replay with 5 Ducks in the top ten including Salazar Third, McChesney fifth, Clary sixth, Chapa seventh and Matt Centrowitz, just returned from student teaching in New York, tenth. In the NCAA Nationals five was again the magic number. First place again went to Africa but five men scored for Oregon: Salazar 9th, Clary 12th, Chapa 27th, McChesney 28th and Centrowitz 63rd. At first the officials thought UTEP had won but a correction of runners' numbers proved that Oregon owned the crown. In addition to the team crown, head coach Bill Dellinger was named Cross Coountry Coach of the Year by the National Coaches Association. Dellinger also won that honor in 1973 and 1974. While head coach for the Ducks, they have captured 4 NCA A titles. 172-Men's Cross Country Women harriers duplicate '76 finish In spite of only three returning letterpersons, the Women's Cross Country team duplicated their successful 1976 season in 1977 capturing the Northwest College Women's Sports Association (NCSWA) title and placing 7th in the national association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW). Sophomore Ellen Schmidt generally led the team across the finish line placing first or second in all the NCWSA meets but one including taking second place at the regional NCWSA championships. The team finished the NCWSA regular season undefeated, however, because of good team strength. They expected to be challenged by Washington and Seattle Pacific for the title but Schmidt, Debbie Richie and Robin Baker finished 1-2-3 ... gainst UW and the Ducks took places 2-3-5-6-7 against SPU as they loped into undisputed first place. The NCWSA regional championship meet was much the same story with Schmidt second, freshman Helen Tolford 5th, and Richie, Kim Spir and Char Marino also in the top 12. The 7th place finish at the AIAW was identical to the 1976 national standing. The team had expected to do better but the pack was so tight that the girls had trouble breaking free to run their own pace. In addition Schmidt was bothered with stomach pains and finished 72nd, well behind her 1976 finish of 33rd. Holford finished 31st to lead the Ducks and was followed by Richie 47, Schmidt 72, Spir 74, Molly Morton 88, Katy Mountain 135 and Marino 161. Women's Cross Country-I73 Women miss volleyball nationals for 1st time in 8 years A little bad luck and a surprising Washington State team Ruined an otherwise good year for the Women's Volleyball team. The year started off pretty much as expected with Portland State, defending league champions for 3 years, and Oregon tending to dominate Northwest Collegiate Women's Sports Association (NCWSA) match play. After match playa year-end tournament would send the two top finishers to the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW) national competition. The Ducks had gone to the national tournament for the previous 7 years. The regular season ended with Oregon's overall record at 21-12 but their league record was 9-2 tieing them for second place with Washington and Washington State, behind undefeated PSU. UW and PSU beat the cleanly and WSU pushed them hard before being defeated. Senior Lynette Zuercher was one of the mainstays of the team with her accurate sets to juniors Sue Stadler and Shawna Baxter. They were supported by Ann Thompson, Lisa Ford and a crew of freshmen including Kim Jessup, Christie McFarland and six foot Mary O'Brien. The NCWSA-AIAW qualifying tournament promised to be a dog fight between UO, UW and WSU for the second place spot. The day before the tournament, however, Zuercher broke a finger in practice and the Ducks were crippled. In spite of that they won their first two matches easily and came closer to beating PSU than they had all year. While the Ducks eliminated Washington, and avenged their early season loss, surprising Washington State broke PSU's undefeated streak and sent the Vikings back for one more match with Oregon to determine second place. After a close first set, PSU found the range and the season nended for Oregon, their final season record 24-14. 174-Women's Volleyball . \ . , I // \ \ \ \I .­ "Kamikaze" deserts the Ducks . . . and so does Harter The 1977-78 Basketball Season might logically be divided into three distinct phases: the Pre-Pac-8 phase, which went pretty well, the Pac-8 phase, which went to hell, and the Harter's--leaving-town phase, when you couldn't tell. The season opened with only one Senior on the team, Mike "Bulldog" Drummond, and a noticable lack of high scoring players. John Murray, Rob Closs, Kelvin Small, Gary Nelson and Danny Mack had all seen plenty of action the previous year but none had come close to the 629 points of graduated Greg Ballard. Shooting was to be a headache all year. The Pre-Pac-8 season looked good on the record books. The Ducks went 10-3 in non-conference action but the losses, except a "non­ counting" drubbing by Athletes In Action, all came in Invitational play. Against Sacramento State and UC Irvine the defense looked good, but poor defense and 18 turnovers lost the first game of the Dayton Classic against Georgia Tech, 64-57. UO barely withstood San Diego State 91-89 to place third. The Far West Classic was another erratic performance. They allowed Colorado State to come from behind to win, lost to Illinois in a better game and almost lost to lowly Rice 77-74 in a race for last place. Though they shot 70% in the second half against Georgia Tech, they could only manage an ominous 35% against Rice. One last pre-conference game, 76­ 57 over Vermont, found the Oregon's shooting back up to 47% and their defense sound. Fans hoped the erratic pre-season play was over. The two little-big men of the Pac­ 8, Mike Drummond and Cal's Gene Ransom, squared off in the first conference game. Drummond and Oregon came out on top 49-47. Kelvin Small led the scoring and controlled the boards as the Ducks surged from behind in the second half. Phil Barner, John Murray and Dan Hartshorne had to lead another second half surge against Stanford to win the next one 74-64. UCLA quickly squelched any Oregon dreams of winning four in a row from the annual Pac-8 champs. They did everything right and the Ducks were never in the game. It would have been a lot closer than the final 90-72, however, if UO had shot better than a dismal 36%. They shot 43% against USC the next night in a real dogfight that included a collision with a USC cheerleader. Mike Clark led the Duck scoring and rebounds but the Trojans led at the end 63-62. OSU clubbed them next, 62-48, avenging the earlier pre-conference­ loss, 78-51, in Portland. The game had been close at the half but UO's team play was, again, erratic. The televised affair was Oregon's first loss at home all year and was marred by a fight between Rickey Lee and a frustrated Mike Clark. Fans and columnists were frustrated too. Where was the fanatical drive of the old Kamikaze Kids? Gary Nelson had quit the team to devote time to his studies. Joe Moreck missed a practice and was thrown off the team. The flu was going around and nobody was satisfied with how they were playing. Harter scheduled a practice for 2 pm, didn't like how they were responding, and sent them home at 2:20 with orders to be back at 4 pm. The sign on his wall echoed in their heads, "Practice does not make perfect. Perfect practice makes perfect." During a 10 day break from Pac-8 action they practiced hard and looked good in a 69-58 win over UC Davis. They carried their momentum to Washington and were leading the Huskies with 10 minutes left to play. The Webfeet Basketball-177 --- - -- - -:. '" - JJ J \, ~ ~ , 1, Women's basketball team takes 2nd place in new league 1977-78 was a good season with some tough edges for the Oregon Women's basketball team. They swept to easy wins in their first six games, including a four game sweep through Alaska, but discovered eligibility problems and had to forfeit five games. U of Alaska at Anchorage also had elegibility problems, however, causing two of those games to drop completely out of the record books. Undaunted the UO team plunged in the first year of competition in the Northwest Women's Basketball League (NWBL). Julie Cushing tended to dominate the statistics leading the team with 412 points and a .478 field goal percentage. Debbie Adams led the team with almost 10 rebounds a game followed by Shannon Kelly with 9 rebounds and 14 points per game. Becky Paschke and Tara Smith also played consistently good ball, with good support coming from Ann Doherty, Sally Blickle and Vicky Hunt. At the end of the regular season their league record was 8-4 (13-7 overall) and they entered the Northwest College Women's Sports Association Large College Championship Tournament. Reasonably free of the injuries that had hurt them near mid-season, the Ducks whipped Western Washington 71-57, and then Washington State, who had beaten them once in regular season easily, 68-54. In the finals agains Washington the ladies came closer to victory over the Huskies than they had all year but it was not enough and Oregon was awarded second place. 182-Women's Basketball Flying Ducks take regional and Pac-8 crowns The Flying Ducks did some precision gymnastics flying in 1978 as they chalked up an 11-1 dual meet record and captured the Pacific Northwest Championship, the UCLA Invitational Championship, the Pacific-8 Conference Championship and 4th place in the NCAA National Championship. Only Arizona State was able to beat the Ducks in dual competition (and they only won by 1.05. points). UO's 11 wins included victories over top ranked BYU and UC-Berkeley, and netted a number one national ranking during part of the season. Both individually and as a team the Ducks were outstanding. New UO team scoring highs were set in every event; Tom Truedson set a school individual high on the pommel horse (9.7S), Scott McEldowney on the Still rings (9.70) and Jim Kelch in the Combined All Around (108.70). In the NCAA Championships McEldowney won the national title on the still rings; Truedson took fourth on the pommel horse and was also given All American status; Jerry Bush took 9th on the still rings; Mark Knupp was 13th in floor exercise and Kelch grabbed 12th on the parallel bars and 13th All Around to tound out the UO scoring at nationals. In addition to an excessive number of individual victories in dual competition, the Flying Ducks took 12 top spots in open and championship competition. In the UCLA Invitational they captured five firsts including two by Knupp, in floor exercise and vaults, and one each by Kelch, McEldowney and Gene Christensen. Seven other Ducks scored 9.0 or better in events in 1978 adding considerable depth to the Oregon scoring potential. Fortunately none of them were seniors for 1978 graduated Bush, McEldowney and Truedson in addition to the departure of outstanding freshman Jim Kelch for personal reasons. The team looked forward to the return of injured Israeli champion Miki Moyal in 1979. 184 Halberg leads small women's gymnastics team The UO Women's Gymnastics team finished the year with an 11-5 dual meet record and 4th place at the Northwest Regional competition. That's pretty good for a team that never mustered more than 10 gymnasts and went to the regionals with only 7 girls. Team size not withstanding they were able to beat everyone in the Northwest but OSU and Washington until the regionals. Junior Wendy Halberg generally led the Flying Duck scorers in all events. In a three way meet against Seattle Pacific and Pacific University she scored three 1st's and a 2nd in the four individual events and took first in the All Around. She came close to repeating that performance several times and set an Oregon record for All Around score wi th a 34.70. Freshman Cindi Gleason fought sickness during the season but also scored well for the Ducks, as did Sue Wilson, in the All Around. Lorene Gamble scored well on the bars while Patti Thompson, Sue Baxter, Carole Hennessy and Ann Gaddis also found high spots in the season. Halberg and Gleason also went to the Western Hemisphere Games where they placed 6th and 16th respectively. Against 16 teams in the NCWSA regionals the gymnasts came in 4th behind OSU and Washington (tied for 1st) and Eastern Washington. Halberg took first in the uneven parallel bars and 6th in the balance beam and All Around to lead Oregon in the controversial meet. The judges generally scored so low that even after being adjusted upward only two individuals and no teams from the Northwest were elegible to compete in the AIAW national competition. 188-Women's Gymnastics Wrestlers finish strong 1977-78 was billed as a rebuilding year for the Oregon Wrestling Team. At the season's beginning Coach Ron Finley had only six returning lettermen to balance 13 freshman. The 28 meet schedule included at least 8 nationally ranked teams and looked a bit scary. No one was intimidated, however, and the year opened with a close win over Japan's Hosei University thanks to a last match win by Scott Bliss over the 1977 Japanese national champion. The rest of December was not so successful, however, as the Ducks dropped 7 of 8 matches including getting crunched by number 1 ranked Iowa State. Some of the meets were close, however, like the 24-22 loss to PSU and the Ducks were getting the experience they had lacked at the start. January saw a big turn around as the Ducks bet 15th ranked Missouri 24-18 at the Colorado Invitational. Bliss was named outstanding wrestler in that tournament and Don "no-neck" Brown, wrestling at 190 pounds, won the "most pins" trophy. A week later UO thrashed 11th ranked Clarion State 33-10 and headed east where they upset 5th ranked Brigham Young, 24-18, and Utah 29-14. Bliss picked up two pins that weekend, but Brown's lone pin made it obvious that he had a good chance to set a new UO season pin record. Jeff Steubing, Dan Hollembaek and Dan Thorsness also won against BYU. The Ducks lost some momentum against 6th ranked OSU first in a 36-9 dual loss and then as they placed 2nd behind the Beavers in the PSU Invitational. Bliss won his division in the tournament while Randy Besaw, Steubing, Hollembaek and Brown took seconds. As a team they scored 9 pins including number 14 for Brown that tied the UO school record held by Greg Gibson. It took awhile for Brown to break that record as the Ducks were shut out in their next outing by 9th ranked Cal-Poly. They came back against Washington winning 29-12, but Brown could not get the record breaking pin until they beat Southern Oregon State 19-18. He ended the season with 18 pins including 2 at the Pac-8 Championships and one at the NCAA Championships. The team ended the regular season with a lot more names appearing on the winners column. Steve Starzenski, and Larry Gleason finished strong and Norm Knight showed he had recovered from his mid season injury. At the Pacific-8 Championships nobody placed lower than 4th but the team only placed 4th overall behind OSU, Washington and UCLA. Bliss and Besaw took second in their weights and were joined by Brown and Hollembaek at the NCAA competition. Bliss was the high Oregon finisher with 6th place and All American status at 150 pounds but everybody scored and the Ducks came in 16th in the nation. Not bad for a team that was only 14-14 on the season. 190-Wrestling 194-Baseball Rain ruins softball season The generous spring rains were generally welcomed throughout the northwest in 1978 but they only contributed to a drought for the DO Women's Softball team. Five regular season games and the NCWSA­ AIAW Qualifying Tournament were either cancelled or postponed but, more important to the Ducks performance, many pratices were cancelled or moved into the inadequate spaces of Gerlinger Annex. A little more practice might have made a big difference in their 4-13 season. Five of their losses were by only one run and all 4 of their victories came in their last 7 games. Sophomore Kim Knox carried a heavy portion of the team's strength with an earned run average of 1.66 and a batting average of ,321. Both statistics were team highs. First baseman Julie Cushing and pitcher/outfielder Shawna Baxter hit .286 and .293 respectively while Allyson Smith led the team in extra base hits cracking 4 doubles, 2 triples and 11 runs batted in. Senior Hanna Munson stole the most bases,S, and crossed the plate 8 times, Vicki Lesh won two games as a pitcher and had the uncertain distinctions of leading the team in sacrifices and walks as a batter. Becky Paschke had a decent season batting .243 and Jodi Salter played errorless in her 9 appearances, 198-Women's Softball Strong Ducks host NCAA and claim 4th place The 1977 NCAA Cross Country Champions provided a strong base for the 1978 Oregon Track Team to build on. Alberto Salazar, Rudy Chapa, Matt Centrowitz, and Don Clary were already well known on the distance circuits and, with Bruce Nelson, Bill and Steve McChesney, Mike Friton, and Art Boileau, they tended to dominate the dual meet competition in the 800 meter and longer races. Oregon also had established strength in the weight competition where Dave Voorhees, John' McArdle, Arnie Swan, Vince Goldsmith and Jeff Stover amassed points in the shot, discus and hammer on a regular basis. With the distance and weight men guarantying a decent point output each meet the difference between a decent season and an outstanding one would rest with the sprinters, hurdlers and other field events. They came through. .. ':./.,...:.. ...~-;.';A~ y_~_ ­ Track-201 Track At the Oregon Invitational Coach Bill Dellinger seemed particularly pleased with the performance of the sophomores on the team, including Don Coleman in the 100 meter and James Bell in the 400 intermediate hurdles who both established personal bests in the meet. In addition, Jeff Stover in the shot and Ron Perkins in the javelin looked particularly strong and Chapa broke the four minute mile with a 3:59.9. The whole team looked strong as they overwhelmed Long Beach 100­ 58. The Ducks won 13 of the 18 events including Coleman in the 200, Bell in the 400 hurdles, Clary leading a sweep in the steeple chase and Chapa in the 1500. They were even stronger against Washington as they won 110-53. Andrew Banks and Coleman were 1­ 2 in the 100 and 200, Chapa tore 15 seconds off his personal record in the 5000 with a 13:35 and Stover added nearly a foot to his personal best in the shot with a winning throw of 63-l. UCLA provided the team's first real test. In what was billed as the battle for second place in the Pacific-8 dual competition, the Oregon distance men swept the 5000 (B. McChesney, S. McChesney, Salazar) and the 800 (Chapa, Nelson, Centrowitz), took 1-2 in the 1500 (Chapa, Centrowitz), and 1-3 in the steeple (Clary, Boileau). Voorhees and Swan threw a 1-2 finish in the discus but Stover and Voorhees had to settle for 2-3 in the shot. Jon Ogard won the high jump (Jan From took 3rd for UO) and set a personal and season best mark with his second place effort in the long jump, leading the Duck field competitors. Tim Hintnaus and Charlie Brown took 2-3 in the pole vault, and Anthony Berry took 2nd in the triple jump. To win the meet the Ducks had to beat the UCLA sprinters. Chris Goodrich managed 3rd in the high hurdles, Greg Walton took 2nd in the 400, and Bell came from behind to win the 400 meter intermediate hurdles. But the win belonged to Coleman and Banks who grabbed 2-3 in the 200 and 1-3 in the 100 as the Ducks won 81-73. Against WSU the Ducks lost their edge in the distance events. The 202-Track Cougars' famed Kenyan Corps led by Henry Rono and Joel Cheruiyot had been beaten in the cross country season and wanted revenge. Rono took the steeple chase with Clary 2nd but Salazar, duelling Cheruiyot all the way, won the 5000 with a personal record of 13:37. Chapa remained unbeaten in the 800 and 1500 as Centrowitz took 2nd in the 1500. Coleman and Banks went 1-2 in the 100 and 1-3 in the 200 and teamed up with Goodrich and Ogard to win the 440 relay. Stover and Voorhees were 1-2 in the shot and McArdle won the hammer but even From and Ogard finishing 1-2 in the high jump was not enough to upset Washington State and the Ducks lost 85-78. San Jose said they would not event meet Oregon unless the steeple chase was eliminated. The Ducks complied and lived to regret it. Coleman missed the meet with muscle spasms, Walton and Berry were still recovering from injuries after the UCLA meet and San Jose won 90-64. Stover, Voorhees and McArdle won the weights with Stover setting personal records in both shot and hammer and Chapa continued his unbeaten streak in the 1500 and 800 (followed by Salazar and Centrowitz in the 1500). Other winners included Banks (100), Bell (400 hurdles) and Clary (5000). ... ~i'i(; =" -- ..:..... ,.. ,.~ Track The Ducks came back against OSU winning 94-69. They swept the hammer (McArdle, Perkins, Goldsmith), the shot (Stover, Vorhees, Goldsmith) the steeple (Clary, Frinton, Boileau) and the 5000 (Centrowitz, Salazar, S. McChesney). Banks took the 200 and 100 (Goodrich 2nd), Chapa took the 1500, Walton the 800, Vorhees the discus, Bell the 400 hurdles, and the 440 relay team won. They also captured 2-3 in the pole vault, triple jump, and javelin. The Ducks charged into the Pacific-8 Championship meet. Voorhees won the discus, Chapa won the 1500 (Nelson, Centrowitz 3­ 4), while Coleman and Banks showed the Pac-8 that the Duck sprinters had arrived with a 2-3 finish in the 100. Banks also took 5th in the 200 while Walton scored an impressive 2nd in the 800. With the meet nearly over, the Ducks were a solid second and needed 12 points to win the meet. Looking ahead, Coach Dellinger realized Oregon had no chance against meet leaders USC in the 440 relay but had a slim chance to get the 12 points in the 5000. Consequently he stacked the 5000 with Chapa and Centrowitz, who had run in the 1500 along with Clary, Salazar and Boileau. All the Ducks finished in the top 10 but only Chapa and Clary scored (4th, 6th) and Oregon was second to USC 126-119. It was Oregon's highest Pac-8 championship point total since 1967. The NCAA meet had highlights before the meet even started. The OSAGA Shoe Company donated an $80,000 scoreboard to Hayward Field that was capable of listing eight compeitors at a time, storing the scores of 25 teams and timing everyone with Accutrack phototimer while displaying a message. In addition, the field was remodeled to bring all the competition, even javelin, inside the stadium and the track was resurfaced using money raised through two years of jog-a­ thons. Only Dwight Stones, one­ time world class high jumper, could find fault with the field. 14,135 of the world's best track fans attended the competition. They cheered every outstanding performance prompting a field judge to ask the javelin winners to take a victory lap. WSU's Joel Cheruiyot, who had been a pain in Oregon's side all year, receive a particularly strong ovation when he gamely tried to continue in the 10,000 after being dazed in a multirunner pile­ up. They stood and cheered Chapa's last four laps as he won the 5000 meters handily. The athletes responded by breaking 10 records including 2 each by Rono and Clancy Edwards. Oregon was in the thick of it. In addition to Chapa's win, Tim Hintnaus took second in the pole vault with a school record of 17-4. Though expected to do better in the discus, Voorhees took thirds in both the discus and shot put. Clary took 10 seconds off his personal record and placed 5th in the steeple chase while Centrowitz took 6th in the 1500 with his best effort of the year. At the finish it was USC 59, UCLA and Texas-EI Paso 50 and Oregon 4th with 40. 204-Track Women's track team runs away with 1st regional title- It was a good year for the DO Women's Track Team as they ran away with the regional title for the first time, qualified 12 women to compete in the AIAW National Championships, and came within a lane change of having a perfect dual season. As a team they broke 12 school records and had people who could score against regional competition in every event. The highlight of their 3-1 dual season was the near victory over Seattle Pacific. The Ducks had beaten Washington the previous week and were ready to take on the traditional powerhouse of the northwest. DO took 1st in 6 events, placed someone in every event and placed 2 people in 6 events keeping the score close as they entered the final race-the mile relay. Leading up to that last event Patty Kearney broke the DO javelin record, Mary Stevenson broke the UO discus mark and Debbie Richie set a new school 3000 meter mark as part of the team's outstanding effort. The Webfoot mile relay team thought they had sewed up a 64-63 win for Oregon when they won that last race, but the judges ruled there was a DO lane change violation and the meet was given to Seattle Pacific 68­ 59. The Ducks remained strong throughout the season, however, and succeeded in beating Seattle Pacific 142-126 to win the Regional title. Debbie Adams led the Oregon effort at the regionals as she sailed to first place in the long jump and 100 meters and ran on the winning 440 relay team with Melanie Batiste, Georgene Rose and Dawna Rose. In the 200 meters Batiste took first and Adams took second. Dawna Rose placed third in the 400 meters and Georgene Rose ran second in the 400 meter hurdles. In the 5000 meters DO scored 3 206-Women's Track It vvas a very good year . .. runners including Heather Tolford second, Richie third and Molly Morton fourth. The Ducks scored three more in the 1500 meters as Ellen Schmidt took second, Katy Mountain took third and Sandy Trowbridge nailed sixth. Mountain was a repeat scorer when she took fifth in the 800 meters. In discus Stevenson and Kathy Picknell threw to fourth and fifth places respectively, while Kearney threw the javelin well enough to capture fourth place. Rounding out the DO scoring was Pentathelete Kori Hasselblad who placed fifth overall in her five events. At the AIAW Nationals the girls continued to break school and personal records. The Mile Relay team of Batiste, Adams, Rose and Rose set a DO mile relay record and Mountain tied another one in the 3000 meters. Tolford tied the DO mark and Richie set a personal mark in the 5000 meters. In spite of their fine performances the stiff competition among the 150 schools participating kept them from placing in the top six scoring positions. Women's Track-207 • • • Swimmers unchallenged 2nd in NW 'I: ,;/ LNE ,6 Men's Swimming coach Rich Schleicher said, "It was a disappointing year for the men's swimming team due to sickness and ineligibility problems, but, on the bright side, the year restored pride and dedication into the swimming program. There is a renewed enthusiasm and the swimmers have an internal pride in the team." The enthusiasm and pride came from several sources. The DO swimmers made the best showing against powerful Washington in five years both in their dual meet and in the Norther Pacific Conference Championships where the Ducks swam a solid second. Senior Captain Steve Hamilton led the Ducks most of the year and broke the school 100 meter backstroke and 200 meter Individual Medley records. He was also the lone DO representative at the NCAA Championships in Long Beach. In a year when the flu slowed many of the speed events the DO Divers, Jim Voll, Sam Nixon, and Jim Skoglund were sometimes the turning point in the close meets. At one point in the season Voll had 7 consecutive wins on both the one and three meter boards. Paul Buvick was strong most of the year and won the 50 freestyle at the NORPAC. Junior Tack Goodall swam well in the butterfly events. Jay Evans, John Seaton and freshman Jerry Andrus also looked particularly good as the Ducks built a 6-5 dual season record. Andrus set a freshman record in the 1000 meter freestyle. Mike Dole and Chris Ramey ably handled the team's breaststroke chores. While the season total won-lost record was not overly impressive the team's losses came mostly from nationally ranked teams like Indiana, Hawaii, Chico State and Washington. The team maintained its poise and concentration against even these powerful opponents thanks partly to Coach Schleicher's psychological as well as physical training program. With his doctoral degree in psycho-physiology, he has made the DO swim team the only one in the nation to include concentrated mental training, often aided by hypnosis, an integral part of their conditioning. 210 Lady Webfoots swim to 18th in nation The VO Women's Swimming team went undefeated in dual competition in 1977-78 including a 61-42 victory over Washington breaking the Huskies' 6 year winning streak. The season started auspicously at the Huskie Invitational where the VO representatives broke six school records. Before the year was gone the Webfoot swimmers would break 19 of 22 school records and qualify eight girls to swim in 22 slots at the national competition. During the year freshman Kathy Hemmer set 8 individual school records and participated on 4 record setting relay teams. At the NCWSA regional competition she won 5 individual events, set school and meet records in all 5, qualified to swim in 5 AIAW National events and swam with 2 VO relay teams that also won, set records and went to nationals. The last person to do that was Oregon's Michelle Menkens, who also swam on the two relay teams and won three individual firsts at the 1978 regionals. Earlier in the year Menkens edged out Hemmer for top honors in the All Around Championships. Tama Cuddeback and Robin Wheeler each took two golds at the regionals helping Oregon win 15 of the 24 events. Washington's consistent depth won the day, however, 1228V2 to Oregon's 1133. Menkens, Wheeler, Hemmer, Cuddeback and Kelly Peyton represented Oregon against 100 other schools at the AlAW National competition in Durham, N.C. Kathy O'Neel, Judy Bowen and Molly Sheffer were also eligible to go but sickness and "alternate" status left them behind. Hemmer scored in 3 individual events, including 7th in the 400 meter individual medley, and teamed up with the others to help score 14th in the 400 freestyle relay and 11th in the 400 medley relay. Menkens stroked to 11th in the 50 freestyle while Wheeler and Cuddeback placed 14th in their individual event helping place Oregon 18th in the nation. When Menkens climbed out of the pool in Durham she had scored 14 times in national competition in her four years at Oregon. Women's Swimming-211 Men's tennis team struggles through tough season The Men's Tennis Team absorbed a rough start but achieved personal and team respectability by the season's end. Playing without Conrad Lopez, one of their two best men, they lost their first four matches during a swing through Northern California. They ended the trip with a 7-2 victory over Shasta and there was hope they would gel for the Northern Division competition to corne. Number 1 and 2 singles James Wilson and Russ Childers had corne close during the road trip but had only won one match each. Fortunately the Ducks showed some depth as Torn Goldman and Steve Bolstad, playing back in the pack each picked up three wins while Torn Greider and Eric Lehto took two each. In the doubles competition Greider and Childers proved the only consistent bright spot winning 3 of 5 matches. Lopez returned to help win an exciting return match with U of San Francisco 5-4. The rest of the season the Ducks struggles to reach a .500 won-lost percentage. One week the doubles teams swept WSU and won the match 5-4. The next week they only won one doubles match and UO lost to Portland 6-3. Almost everybody won, including some non-regulars, against Seattle Pacific, Lewis and Clark and aCE as the netters improved their record to 6-7. The Husky Invitational proved to be a near disaster as the Ducks carne in dead last. Lehto was the only real bright spot knocking off 2nd ranked Tim Highnight of Idaho for one of his two singles wins. Wilson and Goldman also collected a singles win each and combined for two doubles wins. Having evened their season record to 7-7 with a 9-0 victory over Southern Oregon the Ducks looked forward to doing well in the Northern Division Championships. In that tournament WSU won its first Pac-8 tennis victory in 11 years 7-2, at Oregon's expense, and Washington continued their regional dominance shutting out the Ducks 9-0. A last day 6-3 win over Seattle U simultaneously gave the Ducks third, kept them out of last, and ended a tough season. '---­ 212-Men's Tennis W()men's tennis team strong in regionals Women's Tennis Coach, Marti Schey, opened the 1978 campaign by saying, "This is possibly the best team we've ever had, at least since 1973 when we won the NCWSA team title." It's hard to tell if she was right. When the team looked good they looked very good posting several 9-0 victories around the northwest and placing third in the Berkeley Invitational. The Washington Huskies, 1977 champions, beat them easily twice in dual competition, however, helping give the Webfoots a 9-5 overall dual meet record-worse than 1977's 13-3. Debbi Borchers and Helen Vozenilek led the team with 0-4 singles and doubles records. Patti Layton was right behind with 9-5 showings in both categories. Illness, injury and other problems hurt the team and individual records of Maureen Hennig, Patricia Marihart and Tina Mickles on. Sheryl Anderson, Sue Thomson, and Kim Jessup were among several players who filled in for incapacitated varsity players and performed well. The Northwest College Women's Sports Association Regional Tournament is where the Ducks really showed their improved strength. While Vozenilek was not able to repeat her 1977 #1 singles win, she did take second and then teamed up with Layton to take the #1 doubles crown. Layton also placed fourth in #2 singles. Borchers grabbed second in #3 singles; Marihart third in #4 singles and together they scored third in #2 doubles. Anderson and Thomson, called up late in the season, surprised some with their 4th place finish in #3 doubles to round out the UO scoring. The massive team effort had bettered the Ducks 1977 record and given them second place behind Washington. "\" Women's Tennis-213 Men's golf charges early, then fades The Men's Golf team opened their season with a charge. In the fall they continued their almost traditional dominance of the Northwest winning the Pacific Northwest Intercollegiate Tournament by 60 strokes and the Washington Invitational by 14. Jeff Sanders showed he was back from a 1977 injury by winning the Washington Invitational. Freshman Walt Porterfield was close behind in third place. Seeking stiffer competition the team played for 10 days in Hawaii netting a 6th place finish against an international field. The exposure gave them confidence that was reinforced at the Fresno State Golf Classic. The whole team played well but Brent Murray's outstanding three round total of 210, capped by a clutch three foot putt on the last hole, won the team title for UO and the individual title for Murray. The win was particularly satisfying as they beat USC, BYU and San Diego State who were all rated in the top ten. Though the rest of the season usually found them placing behind BYU and USC, the Ducks played well and found their own name in the top ten. They placed 4th in the Western Intercollegiate and 5th in the Phoenix Sun Devil Classic. In Phoenix they were only 5 strokes off 1st place and the team shot the best round of the tournament in a last day charge for the title. Scott Tuttle and Murray tied for 5th place in the individual honors. The Pac-B Championships turned into an endurance contest with each team playing 36 holes a day. Murray played the last 9 holes at 3 under par to tie for the individual title and Jon Heselwood took Bth but the team could do no better than 3rd behind host USC and Stanford. Oregon hosted the NCAA Championship and had revenge on USC and Stanford but still could only place a disappointing 11th. Oklahoma State took the title. Murray placed Bth in the abbreviated individual competition and was later named 2nd team All­ American and 1st team Pac-B. Tuttle received All American honorable mention and 1st team Pac-B. 214-Men's Golf •Lady golfers mISS the cut Considered top challengers in 1977, the UO Women's Golf team wrap·ped up their 1978 season with a resounding show of no interest. The fall season opened with three quick losses to Cal State-Sacramento, OSU and the University of British Columbia. With only Liz Cooper and Karen Henry shooting somewhat respectably in the high 80's, the team carried their clubs to the Standord Invitational where they tied for 21st. It was a long way to the spring season and the University's Women's Intercollegiate Athletics Advisory Council called a meeting to determine the future of Women's golf at Uo. The meeting had no spectators, no team members, no coach and no choice. Women's intercollegiate golf was discontinued at Oregon. Golf-21S Field Hockey team dominates play in Northwest The Oregon Field Hockey Team dominated play in the northwest compiling a 16-2-2 record against collegiate foes and a 17-6-4 record overall. Blessed with 11 returning letter-persons, including 6 Willamette Valley All-Stars, they shut out their first three opponents before finding some serious non­ collegiate competition in the Pacific Northwest Invitational where they dropped one game to a Los Angeles Club, beat the Portland Goalseekers and tied the Portland Roadrunners. By the end of the regular season the Ducks had won the Oregon Invitational Tournament, and six players had been named to the Willamette Valley All-Stars: Sue Furguson, Katie Frevert, Anne Hassert, Caryn Howarth McComas, Katy Moore, and Susanna Randall. Their only collegiate losses had been to Idaho and Southern Oregon, both by only one goal. Seeded second behind Idaho in the USFHA-AIAW Region IX qualifying tournament the Ducks came out shooting. They fired 11 shots on goal against Western Washington while Jean Dunham sealed the goal for a 1-0 shut out. Against undefeated Idaho in the finals they put 15 shots on goal and captured the region IX spot in the nationals with a 2-1 victory. They maintained their momentum before going to the national tournament in the NCWSA regional tournament playing four games in two days. Hassert and Randall each scored four goals as they won 2 and tied 2 against Canadian and American teams. The National competition was disappointing, however. They couldn't buy a goal in a 6-0 loss to West Chester State who ultimately played in the finals. They had equally bad luck agains Madison College losing 5-0. In their last chance to stay alive in the tounament they pushed Arizona State into overtime before losing 2­ 1. While the coach and players all credited their season's success to good team play, several girls posted remarkable performances. Randall scored 28 goals and Hassert hit 21 to account for almost 75 percent of Oregon's scoring. Dunham, aided by a stiff defense, posted 10 shut outs. 216-Field Hockey " . I I i • I i ! j, J ; ~- -.--. ~ .. ~ -- Club sports The Table Tennis Team was led by John Kretchmer who won Divison C and D singles titles in Portland area tournaments. Axel Kalb and Tom Mocica won the D Doubles title in the Pacific Northwest Open competition. The Table Tennis Team played well in several area tournaments including the Pancho's Restaurant Open and the Benihana Open. The Men's Volleyball team campaigned in the 5 team Pacific Northwest Volleyball Conference. Washington State tended to dominate the league but the Ducks played hard and went into the .' .... league championship tournament. The team was led by player-coach Jan Kastner and is a member of the US Volleyball Association. The Waterpolo team was a coed team that played in the Northwest Intercollegiate Waterpolo League and was also involved with some AAU competition. They challenged for the League crown and played well in non-league tournaments against several California teams. They finished the season with an overall won-lost record of 8-8. The Weightlifting Team had a successful, though abbreviated .... ... season. In the Pacific Northwest Bench Press Championships Ben Tured took first place in his class while George Harris nailed a third and Steve Plowman and Win Coleman took fourths. With more talent recruited from the intermural weightlifting competition Uointly sponsored by the Weightlifting Team) they surged into spring. George Pissel won his class at the Idaho State Championships and the team finished second at the Bench and Squat meet in Bend, Oregon. In that meet Plowman, Coleman and Rich Smith all won their weights. 222-Club Sports 9NIsnOH Greeks .. ~- ..... This year, as every year, has been a busy one for the women of Alpha Chi Omega. Alpha Chi's many philanthropic activities have kept the house very active. During March of Dimes Week the Alpha Kappa Chapter of Alpha Chi Omega went door to door collecting money and with thE collective effort of the women in the chapter, collected more money in our area than ever before. We also participated in the Easter Seals Disco Dance-a-thon where we served fpod during the dancers' breaks. This particular dance-a-thon raised more than $10,000 and we were proud to have participated in it. Alpha Kappa chapter also had its share of fun activities, such as our annual Christmas party where our alums, their children, and the big brother Court were present to share in the festivities including a surprise visit by Santa Claus. On Halloween we had a pumpkin carving with the men of Phi Kappa Psi and later sang "pumpkin carols." This year was a very productive year for Alpha Chi Omega, and we're happy to say that it is a year we will always remember as very special because of our sisters at Alpha Chi. 226-Alpha Chi Omega 1) Carol Fordham 2) Kellie Moran 3) Marsha Callahan 4) Margaret Flynn 5) Robin Meinhardt 6) Julie Hulvey 7) Cindy West 8) Brigitte Pasquet 9) Kim Holcomb 10) Kathy McNary 11) Sherri Burkhart 12) Cindy Ficek 13) Nancy Merryman 14) Terry Bolstad 15) Jan Terjeson 16) Julie Pahl 17) Ann French 18) Boni Birkenfield 19) Barb Brock 20) Lorill Schmidt 21) Leslie Byrne 22) Karen Hecker 12) Jenny Marsh 24) Colleen Burgh 25) Barb Riechers 26) Lynda Greer 27) Jane Shepard 28) Cheryl Pierson 29) Janice Shildmeyerr 30) Taffy Spear 31) Lyn White 32) Linda Wojniak 33) Felicia Lanosga 34) Ann O'Leary 35) Lynn Guernsey 36) Madonna Suever 37) Karla Albright 38) Susan Gustafson 39) Tammy Spencer Alpha Delta Pi Alpha Delta Pi spent the year engaged in many philanthropic events. At Halloween, money was collected for UNICEF in a door to door canvas. In January, the Pi's again went door to door, but this time it was for the March of Dimes. Throughout the entire year blood was donated by various members to the Lane Memorial Blood Bank. House spirit was at a high when the volleyball team won first place in intramurals second division. Spirit stayed in motion with a weekend r~treat held in the house before spring rush. Winter term held a surprise for the house when plans for redecorating were revealed. The living room, dining room, and television room were all included in the plans. Alpha Delta Pi sponsored State Day spring term, celebrating the founding of the sorority in 1851 with other Oregon chapters. Kerry McDermott was president; Debbie Woodruff, efficiency chairman; Kate Harlan, treasurer; Cindy French, pledge trainer; and Megan Stangier, rush chairman. Alpha Delta Pi-227 The Tau chapter of Alpha Phi prides itself on the many campus and extra-curricular activities we have been involved in over the past year. Starting out the year with over 90 actives enabled the house to participate in a wide variety of activities within the house and throughout the school and community. A scholarship to a foreign student, a poinsetta drive for our philanthropy, food and cheer to underprivileged during the holidays, and participation in the millrace clean-up include a few of the many activities accomplished throughout the year. Greek Week also demonstrated our ability to work together and utilize our wide variety of talents to capture first place in the talent show and earn a high number of points in the other activities throughout the week. As a reward for our high membership and beneficial services, we have been nominated for the highly coveted award the Presidents Cup. Alpha Phis from all over the country will meet in Palm Beach, Florida in June to determine the winner of this much sought after award which we hope to bring home. 1) Denise Leahy 2) Hatsy Hogan 3) Sally Thorbeck 4) Mary Gulluzo 5) Val Earp 6) Jane Filner 7) Lori Thompson 8) Sandy Mathison 9) Sandy Hagan 10) Jill Crandall 11) Tina Mickelson 12) Sue Stark 13) Cathy Davis 14) Helen Hunter 15) Carolyn Jones 16) Cathy Fischer 17) Cathy Styles 18) Chris Car/born 19) Terri Rubenstein 20) Cindy Scott 21) Melony Closs 22) Karen Knauss 23) Carol Steeves 24) Marty Munson 25) Jennifer Thompson 26) Tami Potter 27) Mary Jo Wallo 28) Mary Elsasser 29) Debbie Hall 30) Kathy Steeves 31) Carol Pitcher 32) Nancy Estes 33) Sunny Rubenstein 34) Sue White 35) Lisa Hawkins 36) Mary Lou Ernaga 37) Missy Egan 38) Laura Rendahl 39) Alice Watkins 40) Nathalie Euwer 41) Sheree Clelen 42) Shelley Town 43) Kim Chellini 44) Brenda Hawes 45) Maureen Casey 46) Molly Leahy 47) Molly Brophy 48) Debbie Pelligreen 49) Janet Ditz 50) Shelley Socolosky 51) Celia Silver 52) Linda Jennings 53) Cindy Baunach 54) Liz Shirley 55) Sue Rubenstein 56) Janet Olson 57) Pam Rieter 58) Carolyn Brustad 59) Cindy Hall 60) Kerry Leslie 61) Karen Miller 62) Janet Steeves 63) Lisa Ford 64) Suann Swenson 65) Sally Jo Felker 66) Helena Vranizan 67) Tami Wilson 68) Debbie Brown 69) Caroline Jensen 70) Tana Vik 71) Janie Kileen 72) Susie Brickner 73) Nicolette Hoogewerff 74) Amy Biederman 75) Cathy Cook 76) Joan Chamberlin 77) Alison Rogers 78) Sabrino Rico 79) Erin Elkins Not Pictured: Cathy Maeda Jan Leach Lynn Atwood Lisa Becharas Kristen Vik Leslie Knutson Kate Brophy Mary McClaran Marion Sasaki Ann Zeigler Patsy Morton Eileen McNutt 228-Alpha Phi Alplla Tau Omega ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ 1~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ m ~ m ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ m ~ ~ ~ m ~ ~ ~ ~ 1) Velma Talbot 2) Stacy Campos 3) Jean Morrison 4) Maggie Lague 5) Kate Gordon 6) Margie Zink 7) Lisa Wilson 8) Katie Keller 9) Patty Lane 10) Nancy Webb 11) Lyn Ivie 12) Connie Brunell 13) Pam Martin 14) Denise Davis 15) Diane Gonthier 16) Mary Monsenbroten 17) Lynn Olson 18) Marsha Bowles 19) Kristin Nasburg 20) Ann Snedecor 21) Linda Leff 22) Cathy Rasmussen 23) Carol Woodson 24) Mary Waller 25) Kristi Johnson 26) Debbie Taylor 27) Janis West 28) Heather Black 29) Lisa Johnson 30) Teresa Sullivan 31) Jody Romania 32) Kim Lundell 33) Kathy Corcoran 34) Sue Tanquist 35) Kathy Espinosa 36) Teri Mortola 37) Ann Abel 38) Kate Matney 39) Brenda Mcintosh 40) Shannon Robertson 41) Dawn Calvert 42) Jodi Jackson 43) Jeannie Johnson 44) Vicki Carlson NOT PICTURED: Peggy Blind Christy Bode Sherril Fagg Becky Hart Diane Marsh Teri McDougall Lisa Pike Evelyn Smith Janet Abernethy Margaret Babnick Mindy Bradley Julie Brown Sue Burnett Bobbie Delany Jeannie Zimmerman Margaret Vitus 230-Alpha Omicron Pi Alpha Sigma chapter of AOPi kept busy this year with many worthwhile activities. Fall term got off to a good start with a successful Rush week. Other fall activities included a 40's style house dance, a Halloween date function, participation in the Greek Week of Giving, with the team of AOPi and Theta Chi winning the food eating contest, and celebration of Founder's Day. Winter term saw the AOPi's marching door-to-door in the March of Dimes Mother's March. Our winter house dance in February was a ski weekend in Bend. We also participated in the sorority swap and our many joggers ran in the Jog-a-Thon sponsored by the Athletic Department in order to raise money for our national philanthropy, arthritis. AOPi freshmen started spring term with a "first day of classes" wake-up breakfast. Spring informal rush highlighted the month of April. The Red Rose formal was held on May 17th at the Finesse Bridge Center. AOPi's participated in the sorority serenade, bunion derby, and the push-cart races as part of Greek Week. Parent's Weekend activities included a picnic at Skinner's Butte, a cocktail party, talent show, and a Sunday morning brunch at the house. Rounding off spring term was "Senior Day," a day to honor AOPi's graduating seniors. A picnic dinner was held at Triangle Lake. AOPi's then prepared for our Regional Convention which we co-hosted with the Oregon State AOPi's in Corvallis on June 10th and 11th. ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ n ~ ~ ~ m ~ ~ 1~ 1~ ~ rn ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ m rr 232-Beta Theta Pi Chi Omega ~ ~ ~ ~ o ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ 1~ 1~ 1~ 1~ ~ ~ rn ~ ~ ~ m ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ m ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ m ~ ~ ~ 4~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ m ~ r'I@'{)~ ~.t'" ('./JOY- - ~. --) ~AAf\P\ 1) Ben Gilliam 2) John Malarkey 3) Pat Hudson 4) Jed Schlanger 5) Vern Reynolds 6) Bill Lasseter 7) Kevin Moffit 8) Rob Wallace 9) Jay Hog Wallace 10) John Knauss 11) Dave Coleman 12) Donald Herbst 13) Jeff Haagenson 14) Mike Smith 15) Tom Turnell 16) John Reiter 17) Brian Nelson 18) John Cimmiyotti 19) Dave Gratke 20) Don Brockman 21) Tony Evans 22) Rob Fraser 23) Doug Styner 24) Corey Henkelman 25) Erik Reichers 26) Douglas Schmitt 27) Kipp Hammon NOT PICTURED, 28) Mike Clay 29) Tom Connolly John Iammatteo 30) Elton Sandstrom Peter Stearns 31) John May Matt Massar 32) Ed Conn Rob Minty 33) Robert Burns Steve Jacobsen 34) Dick Caldwell Mark Robison 35) Steve Sims 234-Chi Psi Delta Gamma ."' 'I ...... 238-Delta Tau Delta Delta Upsilon 1) John Lorenz 5) Gerald McMichael 9) Randy Schwindt 13) Louis Sandoz 2) Tom Shaw 6) Don Pope 10) Jeff Taylor 14) Ben Hilton 3) Rob Lubliner 7) Mike Hansen 11) Don Parker 15) Kevin Vorheis 4) Jim Brenner 8) Dale Mills 12) Bill Helwig 15) Jesse Wallemeye Delta Upsilon-239 1977-1978 was a busy year for Gamma Phi Beta. Sponsoring a Halloween party for underpriviledged children, collecting for March of Dimes, as well as taking part in the annual Greek Week Blood Drive and Telefund, were just a few of the many philanthropic and service activities that made this year a busy if not rewarding one for all. 1) Claire Coleman 2) Pam Dorr 3) Nancy Hintz 4) Maureen McFadden 5) Lori Shiozaki 6) Debbie Jacobson 7) Linda Snelling 8) Cathy Lewis 9) Debbie McKeown 10) Sharon Bender 11) Vickie Retchless 12) Katie Whitty 13) Barb Townsley 14) Kathy Peters 15) Catherine Coleman 16) Robin Kephart 17) Mardi Schnitzer 18) Linda Hollenbeck 19) Sue Sauer 20) Jan Cunningham 21) Linda Hopkins 22) Jan Bernando 23) Annie Gassman 24) Joanie Adams 25) Judy Diebel 26) Joline Painter 27) Jori Walker 28) Karen Brown 29) Rosemary Lashbrook 30) Linda Becker 31) Lori Thelin 32) Vanessa Kokesh 33) Lissa Garside 34) Lori Peters 35) Ronni Leise 36) Christine Rhoads 37) Susan Tucker 38) Steve Jones 39) Marty 40) Ed Conn 41) Kerry Milne 42) Tony Evans 43) Claudia Johnson 44) Maggie Bonduran 45) Susan Johnston 46) Lynn Pederson 47) Pete Demos 48) Shellie King 49) Sandy Richardson 50) Rachelle Beauchemin 240-Gamma Phi Beta Kappa Alpha Theta 1) Susan Hochfeld 2) Kathy Janz 3) Jan'l Thomas 4) Connie Alberts 5) Susie Tanaka 6) Janet Corcoran 7) Barb Ivey 8) Kathleen Sheehan 9) Nora Mains 10) Becky Olsen 11) Sharon Carlson 12) Bea Ballard 13) Barb Smiley 14) Susan Hart 15) Beth Traphagen 16) Kelly Marcus 17) Tammy Lloyd 18) Anne Richmond 19) Ginger Lehto 20) Laurie Maletis 21) Amy Crandal 22) Gretchen Schwiebinger 23) Shannon Kelly 24) Carla Kickbusch 25) Megan Morton 26) Molly Morton 27) Dru Carson 28) Dawn Weeks 29) Cindy Frasier 30) Connie Mathias 31) Betsy Spangler 32) Beth Harding 33) Nancy Redmond 34) Aileen Martin 35) Joy Everage 36) Rhonda Meadows 37) Ann Smith 38) Brenda Conwell 39) Carey Settecase 40) Susie Reeves 41) Sunny Thompson What is Kappa Kappa Gamma? It's the white house with the blue shutters on the corner of 15th and Alder. It's learning to live harmoniously with dozens of "sisters." It's a 6:30 a.m. firedrill after an all-night study session. It's wearing headphones to listen to your classical music because your roomate listens to nothing but hard rock. It's having pride in belonging to a national organization that's over a century old. It's a picnic at Hendrix Park. It's gingham shirts and white pants for open house. It's 42) Terri Mathison 43) Debbie Johnson 44) Kristi Raivio 45) Linnsi Thomson 46) Ann Schwiebing 47) Jane Gassaway 48) Mary Madson 49) Jessica Eland SO) Lisa Bush 51) Nancy Farmer 52) Cheri Barker 53) Debbie Woods 54) Becca Specht 55) Jenny Guide 56) Terri Dalquist 57) Betsy Smith 58) Candi Burrows 59) Terri Carlson 60) Lisa Leake 61) Jeanette Chilcote 62) Andrea Edelson 63) Beth Dampier forgetting your cardkey and having to wake Mrs. Wyatt at 3:00 a.m. to let you in. It's barbecues and barn dances. It's being an "official hugger" at the handicapped persons' Special Olympics. It's blue and blue, a fleur-de-Ieis, and a golden key. It's a late-night talk and an early­ morning jog. It's being the first person to hit the sunporch in the spring. It's taking up residency in the library the last two weeks of the term. It's going to "Friday at Four" for "just an hour" and staying until ten. It's intramural basketball and softball. It's Monday night dinners and Sunday night treats. It's serenades and wakeup breakfasts. It's a weekend housedance at the beach. It's developing a self-identity by interacting with others. It's learning to accept people not for their similarities, but for their individuality. It's really whatever you think it is, for each person's mind perceives things a bit differently. But most important, it's the bond of sisterhood that lasts a lifetime. 242-Kappa Kappa Gamma 244-Phi Gamma Delta 1) Cheryl Williams 2) Pam Twogood 3) Julie Mike 4) Kathy Fitch 5) Tina Goritsan 6) Dana Goritsan 7) Denise Shoemaker 8) Darby Gjersvold 9) Evy Duffy 10) Myrna Slaughter 11) Cathie Running 12) Jill Breyer 13) Judy Harlan 14) Cristy Enfield 15) Debbie Amato 16) Debbie Lawrence 17) Liz Farnam 18) Leslie Smith s-, ""' 19) Barb Sandvig 20) Kathy Kamman 21) Sue Gintx 22) Nanette Newman 23) Dana Valley 24) Mary Lung 25) Ruthie Brownhill 26) Mary Terry Dimick 27) Wendy Downing 28) Laurie Beaman 29) Kelly Colleary 30) Karen Sanders 31) Claudia McWilliams 32) Julie Willson 33) Kathy Tiniokos 34) Sue Reynolds 35) Sue Jernstedt 36) Karen Berry 37) Pam Peterson 38) Jennifer Ciampa 39) Bettina Barinaga 40) unidentified 41) Claudia Keith 42) Denise Harsey 43) Tina Jensen 44) Pam Stout 45) Julie Rodway 46) unidentified 47) Ann McCormick 48) Claral Hollin 49) Cindy Conover 50) Lisa Conte 51) Linda Drips 52) Dana Hildebrand 53) Jamie McMurdie 54) Carole Luthy 55) Diane Tennent 56) Lisa McMath 57) Jenny Hollin 58) Holly Morse 59) Heather Donnelly 60) Shannon McGovern 61) Mary Lou Psihogios 62) unidentified 63) Dana McDonald 64) unidentified 65) Mary Paterson 66) Laurie Guerna 246-Pi Beta Phi (3' ;:>:­ "0 "0 '" '" ;J> ~ ::r­ ':' tv '.:J "'" , . iK ap pa 1 \lp l1a G AM M A PI ' 77 '7 B ¥ 1! ttt iu l'r ait y o f Ql )rl' got t Sigma Kappa holds a special mean­ ing for all her members. As a group, we are closely bound by our love. Our goal, though, is not to keep our love, but to give it away. When we give it away, it comes back to us even stron­ ger. On April 28, 1978, Alpha Phi of Sig­ ma Kappa reached her 50th Anniver­ sary on the University of Oregon campus. Sigma Kappa herself is 103­ years old. Sisters of Alpha Phi cele­ brated the occasion by hosting a ban­ quet and reception on April 30. The banquet, attended by 200 Sigmas from Alpha Phi Chapter, honored 18 50­ year members in attendance, as well as those who couldn't come. Our Na­ tional President was our special guest speaker. We listened to some of the activities in which earlier sisters par­ ticipated and realized that we aren't so different now. We're all sisters and that is what is important. Love abounded that day and has continued through this year. It will flourish for at least the next 50 years. 1) Nancy Danner 2) Karen Ward 3) Diana Oliver 4) Rhonda Wolf 5) Laura Young 6) Sue Ouderkirk 7) Jo Nugent 8) Amanda Frantz 9) Laurie Saul 10) Janet Werner 11) Jewely Friedman 12) Frances Johnson 13) Carroll Cecil 14) Amy McNeese 15) Natalie Poole 16) Leslie Hackelman 17) Gail Rapp 18) Jacqui Green 19) Debbie Schultz 20) Mary Ellen Johnson 21) Miriam Mann 250-Sigma Kappa Signla Phi Epsilon 1) Steve Terjeson 2) Tracy Simpson 3) Jeff Schilling 4) Lyn Frates 5) Paul De Priest 6) Tony Clifford 6A) Wolfy 7) Arnold Mortzheim 8) Dave Cassidy 9) Mike McGregor 10) Dan Murphy 11) Bill Buffetta 12) Dave Reimann 13) Mano Scott 14) Mark Perry 15) Carl Gatzke 16) Sam Miller 17) Tony Green 18) Mike Genoff 19) Brad Evert 20) Mike McGregor 21) Bob Berger 22) Steve Shelby 23) Scott Bruce 24) Bob Bailey 25) Ted Johnson 26) Mack Selberg 27) Dave Camp 28) Jens Rostock-Jensen 29) Dave Hebert 30) Jim Allen 31) Dave Lakey 32) Don Wooley 33) Steve Norquist 34) Fred Maurer 35) Steve Keller 36) Ken De Priest 37) Tim Lyon 38) Bob Stack 39) Harold Wachs 40) Jim Rodriguez 41) Doug Benson 42) William Little 252-Sigma Nu Theta Chi L!J 1) Bill Swindells 2) Jeff Auxier 3) Tyler Felton 4) Steve Eberhard 5) John Daily 6) Lance Baughman 7) Mike Clark 8) Jeff Lyons 9) Matt Kane 10) Kevin Clark 11) Pete Lukich 12) Eric Gerretsen 13) Harve Menkens 14) Steve Millett 15) Mike Holgang 16) Randy Bettencourt 17) Ralph Haman 18) Brad Castonquan 19) Ray Chesley 20) Tom Ruddy 21) Bob Awe 22) Mike Ryan 23) Al Moffatt 24) Pete Nickerson 25) Mark Stachon 26) Patrick Daily 27) Brad Johnston 28) Glen Jacobs 29) Brian Boe 30) Bruce Campbell 31) Pat Juilfs 32) Lauchlin Bethure 33) Bob Kelly 34) Dave Lee 35) Chuck Chamberlain 36) Mike Adams 37) Michael Lindquist 38) Jeff Williams 39) John Boettcher NOT PICTURED: Ric Hudnell Steve Tarlow Terry Williams Tim Durando Jim Hoyt John Kilkenm Mark Cramer Mike Reeves Steve Gregg Rick Kuhn Skip Tarr Pat O'Conner Brad Johnson Pete Cobb Brian Larsson Dave Parr Pio Infante Pete Anderson Greg Knecht Brian Gaunt Bob Jackson Jim Bennett Whitney Boice Daryl Bank Ross Crook Dan Hollemback Jim Wilson Bill Fi tzhenry Ed Kawasaki Greg Auzland John Fabian Mark Lyman Dan Glascow Ross Ellicott Bruce Anderson Greg Jacobson Jeff Hopkins John Seton Don Clark Pete Norman Jim Bruce Kevin Simmons Tom Ruddy Theta Chi-253 254-Campbell Club Parr Tower 1) Marsha Loeffel 2) Marilee Downing 3) Cheryl Huskey 4) Allison Stumbo 5) Terra Nelson 6) Diane Gurgurich 7) Laura Engholm 8) Gayle Geisler 9) Sue Gordon 10) Jennifer Portis 11) Tammy Brennan 12) Chris Hopper­ RA 13) Susan Maza 14) Leslie Templeton 15) Theresa Knight 16) Tina Groenendahl 17) Marcie Eggleston 18) Theresa Jarner 19) Luanne Herbert 20) Cathie Poling Parr Tower-255 University House Yes, it's been an eventful year at "Uni" House with: Darrel drinking a quart of beer while standing on his head; Moshofsky and his mind­ blowing act of winning every game of chess while being blind-folded; Katey not doing "Jabberwocky" in the talent show, for the first time ever; Jerry's purchase of three "lemons", and his two "grapes"; the waiting to hear Daniel's "Big" initials every morning; Louise's green and red pancake assembly line; Anne, the chicken and goldfish pro; Gail's turtle image; Donna's life-like lizard; Marcia, the all star basketball player; Kerry's revealing of his big goal in life-to be a nurse, instead of a doctor; Paul, and his shit load of speakers; the makings of the future's "Total Woman", by Mary; the Crump & Duff Super Uni Cook bake-off; George's "intense" vocabulary; Jean Pierre Rampal's future assistant flutist, Carol; Frank's famous line, "Where's my canoe?" being heard by Eugenians; Dave, the graveyard keeper; Joyce, and her famous sermons; Larry complaining about walking on the wet bathroom floor in his stocking feet; the new popular hangout in front of the yellow board-compliments of Kathy; Debbie, singing the "blues" with 01' Oscar accompanying her; Nancy, and her beginnings of a folk dancing career; Dave's famous jazz buddies; Larry's and Carl's instrumental factory; Esther, singing her chimes; Laura winning the Dance Marathon Queen title, sponsored by the Eagles; Gary's fast moves on court; Rich, the fai thful Grapenuts eater; Rikk.i, and his sweet smelling metallic blue '66 VW; "It's high time for another game of chess," by Pete; Moon· Milli; Ski Bum Lenny; Linda, having a better"asset" than Frank; Fred, and his All Nighter Chemistry Club; Robin, having his last name changed from Tait, to Taylor's; and the Great Backgammon tournament, sponsored by Lan and Phil. HOW DID WE EVER SURVIVE? 1) Gary Lewis 2) Paul Kaptur 3) David Marchant 4) Donna Adcox 5) Catherine Hayden 6) Kathy Mitchell 7) Frank Giannino 8) Esther Butt 9) Jerry Nelson 10) Kerry Bittler 11) Debbie McDuffie 12) Cris Crump 13) Jolene Reiger 14) Sharon Brown 15) Laura Rothauge 16) Marcia Wright 256-University House Dormitories . .. The OREGANA staff would like to apologize for it's incomplete coverage of the dormitory section. Due to lack of cooperation of many dorms, it was impossible to take photographs of all the dorms before school let out for summer. The following dorms are not pictured: Bean East, Bean West, Caswell, DeBusk, Ganoe, Henderson, Parsons and McAlister. Identification also became a problem for those dorms which are pictured. We have supplied as much of the identification as we were able to acquire. Space has been left for you to fill in the names of those people you know. Again, we apologize for our incomplete coverage, but we would also like to take this opportunity to thank those dorms that cooperated with us in both picture taking and identifying. (Ed.'s note)-Burgess dorm pictured above Dormitories-257 ~N-;;}-;;-lf)~RCO~O~Nr;)~ t"""l ~ ~ ~ t"""l 1) John Boy Meiburger 2) Jim I. L. Bloomer 3) Rudy Borboa 4) Rick McCabe 5) Mike Harting 6) Chief Maurice Wabuge 7) Scott Stafford 8) Micheal Swede Allvin 9) Ken Leese 10) Jay Friday 11) Jeff Jansen 12) Dan Marmo 13) Russ Winston Reynolds 14) Big Bruce Hasek 15) Per Lundberg 16) Richard Whitehead 17) Jeff Irvin 18) Tony Eckert 19) Frank Oscar Culbertson 20) Scott Dinghy Johnson 21) Dana Roosevelt 22) Gary Bishop-RA 23) Rick Fletcher 24) Neal Kalez 25) Jeffery Pipeline Parker 26) Byron Caloz 27) James Koll 28) Chris Bunting 29) Gary Williams 30) Mark Moriarty 31) Chris Jones 32) Gilbert Schramm 33) Dave Peniston 34) Rex Price 35) Mark Bunnell 36) Jason Coetze Not Pictured: Bob Hadad Dennis Teulin Kent McKenzie Kent Laverty Mark Hallquist Edward Pak Dave Hascell Keith Jensen Bart Decamp Ric Chanin Kevin Kline Rod Struck Lars Larson Bob Seymour George Sabin Dave Dorward Charles Barnett Bob Cartwright Mickey Geruasi Barry Brown Kevin Super Paul Ginader Tim Whitley Pat Lowe Derek Wilson Mikio Urano Yoshi Kamada Kiyozumi Tanaka Harley Ottinger Ruben Reyes Felix Vargas Ernie Yourgulez Jeff Parish Pat Phelps 260-Willcox 1) Robert Canfield 2) 3) Rick Erickson 4) 5) Harold Tilden II 6) David Price 7) 8) Mark Finlayson 9) 10) 11) Mark Todd 12) 13) 14) 15) 16) Michael Zia Carson Complex 262-Carson 2 Carson 3 1) 2) 3) 4) 5) Nancy Pine 6) Nancy Thorpe 7) 8) 9) 10) Karen Asbury 11) Karen Sampson 12) 13) Sherry Lewis 14) 15) 16) Judy Salter 17) 18) 19) Tracy McElhinney Carson 3-263 Carson 4 1) 6) 16) Joy Sparks 2) 7) 17) Gene Westerland 3) Charles Richards 8) Janice Donohue 18) 4) Ian Thompson 9) 19) Robert Myers 5) Wayne Matsuda 10) Libby Lavan 20) 11) 21) 12) 22) 13) Margaret Roukema 23) Katerine Rose 14) Rupert Legge 24) 15) 25) 264-Carson 4 Carson 5 ,...--_.­ 1) 2) 3) 4) 5) 6) Kathy Clark 7) Kathlyn Bohn 8) 9) 10) 11) 12) Ronna Rollins 13) 14) 15) Boynton D ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ID l~ l~ ~ l~ ~ m l~ ~ ~ m ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Hamilton Complex 268-Boynton Burgess 1) Ross McKee 2) Hidemi Kameda 3) Ron Evans 4) Doug Norgaard 5) Narumi Hasegawa 6) Mike Davis 7) Steve Ingham 8) Scott Thalhamer 9) Edd Casto 10) Mark Moriarty 11) Rick Smithrud 12) Dan Gassoway 13) Woody Rea 14) Mike Burke 15) Charles Hibner 16) Grant Cummings 17) Roger Florchinger 18) Jeff Goldberg 8fa ..s .... u, 270-Cloran 2,7 1) Steve Geiger 2) Trudy Flanery 3) Lori Baker 4) Monty Matthews 5) Frank Gonzales 6) Gary Shinn 7) Leonard Grijalua 8) Scott Lorenzen 9) Kathy Pierce 10) Michael Frank 11) Brad Needham 12) Katie McIntosh Collier 13) Pam Ho 14) Amy Sarver 15) Ester Hamermesz 16) Lee Logsdon 17) Toshi Horikoshi 18) Mike Parsons 19) Mike Triem 20) Joshua Robinson 21) Rick Jones 22) Renee Dallas 23) John Evans 24) Mohammed Abedi 25) Anne Martin 26) Gary Bradski 27) Roger Brown 28) Hiro Abe 29) Johanna Tellerid 30) Jane Till 31) Karen Brown 32) Mark Stevenson 33) Jon Hoskins 34) Heather Hersee 35) Kehli Nicholson Collier-271 Deutsches Haus (Dunn) 1) Betsy Davidson 2) Charlene Gest 3) Caroline Dewson 4) Dave McKenzie 5) Jim Keasby 6) Dave Tomber 7) Greg Gibbs 8) Gary Frazier 9) John Flanagan 10) Ginger Ludlam 11) Wayne Burke 12) Todd Wooley 13) Tammi Olsen 14) Eric Frazier 15) Henry Lui 16) Kathy Olney 17) Barbara Fischer 18) Doreen Simonsen 19) Cathy Barnsley 20) Kristi Beckley 272-Deutsches Haus (Dunn) 1) Pat Eriksen 2) Marcia Hara 3) Kim Hughes 4) Ava Manning 5) Diane Gibbons 6) Anne York 7) Jean Berning 8) Ann Carpenter 9) Maree Johannessen 10) Mary Lou Wallace 11) Kim Shaffer 12) Connie Dodge 13) Sydney Budge 14) Terri Cogan 15) Mary Paterson 16) Rita Radostitz 17) Lauren Lindeman 18) Susan Bales 19) Kim Colbath 20) Sara Yancey 21) Michelle Mikesell 22) Laura Kale 23) Linda Wah 24) Vicki Awe 25) Peggy Shekell 26) Laurie Kehrli 27) Beth McAllister 28) Darnell Bernhardt 29) Jayne Green 30) Carol Hershey 31) jill Grienger 32) Mollie Scheeler 33) Dana Morris 34) Dru Carson 35) Kelly Green 36) Jenny Holtz 37) Mary Monsebroten 38) Mimi Howard 39) LoAnne Davis 40) Cindy Bowers 41) Sue Klatt 42) Kelly King 43) Tori Triplett 44) Cyndy Shipley 45) Stephanie Elliott 46) Tina Sono 274-Robbins Spiller ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ l~ ~ l~ ~ l~ ~ rn ~ ~ ~ m ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ 3~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ m ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Walton complex 278-Adams Clark D ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ID ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ m ~ ~ ~ m ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ m ~ ~ ~ 3D 2BO-DeCou 282-Dyment 284-Schafer Smith 286-Sweetser 'If) ~ ~ 4.J ill ~~ I.:::~l(j ~ ~§t;V) lJ.J ~ .~ ~ lJj~ liJ~,,:::t: ~ ~ , University Inn 288-University Inn-l & 2 3rd and 5th floors 1) 2) 3) Sally Bayless 4) 5) 6) 7) Chris Pontrelli 8) Mike lemal 9) 10) 11) Dan Sherman 12) 13) 14) 15) 16) 17) Cindy Richardson 18) Terri 19) 20) 21) Brian 22) Rhonda 23) 290-University Inn-4 & 7 6th floor 1) 2) Suzanne Singer 3) 4) Kathy Cann 5) Sherry Dean 6) Margo Manners 7) 8) Greg Hogenson 9) Grace Phang 10) Kambiz Shokufu University Inn-6-291 When a dorm becomes a home Dorms. Well, they're not exactly home, but they aren't that bad. The rooms are small, but with some minor changes (tapestries on the ceilings, bunk beds, extra shelves from home, plants, hammocks, posters) it's almost like home. And wow . .. the parties! 292-Dorms Dorms. They could be a lot worse. The people are mostly great. Since they're all in it together, they all work to make the best of it. And it's never lonely in the dorms; there's always someone to talk to. And wow . .. the parties! Dorms-293 Dorms. There's all sort of people living in dorms: dumb, smart, sad, happy, homesick, stuck up, friendly, silly, funny, immature, mature, big, small, foreign, strange. Quite a conglomeration! And the parties ... they're not just keggars. There's elaborate casinos and Halloween costume parties and authentic barn dances. Quite a conglomeration! 294-Dorms Dorms. They're great in the spring. Everyone flocks to the green grass. And they practice throwing frisbees through open dorm windows. And wow ... the spring parties! 296-Dorms Dorms. By the end of spring, the dorm has become horne. It lacks Morn's cooking. It lacks roomy bedroom space. It lacks younger siblings. But still, it's horne. The food, the room's coziness, the people-they all add up to horne. And wow ... the parties! Dorms-297 Dorms. They're a place to sleep in, to study and relax in, to talk and meditate in, to learn and grow in. They're a place to cook hot plate meals in. They're a place to play soccer and football in. They're a place to live in, a place called home. And of course, they're a great place to party in. 298 Dorms. When it's finally time to move out, you're ready but you know you'll miss the freedom and independence you found in your dorm home. And oh ... you'll miss those dorm parties! Dorms-299 30o-Greek Living 302-Greek Living 304-Greek Living SENIORS I worked for this. I fought for this. I sweat, I cried, I stayed up all night sometimes and did a lot of things a normal person doesn't do to reach this point. NANCY REAGAN ALGRIM, BFA­ Weaving, Gold Hill, OR. BARBARA LEE ALLAN, BA-Journalism, Palo Alto, CA. FRANK MAURICE AMBROSINI, B5­ Speech, Oak Harbor, WA. HAYDER A. AMIR, BARCH.­ Architecture, Eugene, OR. DOUGLAS S. ANDERSON, BA­ Journalism, Ashland, OR. JEFFERY L. ANDERSON, B5-History, Tigard, OR. MICHAEL LAVERN ANGST, B5-Finance, Eugene, OR. MARY LOU ARMSTRONG, B5-Physical Education and Recreation, 5pringfielcl, OR. MARCELYN ATWOOD, B5-Music, Salem, OR. 306-5eniors ASAD AWAN, BS-Psychology, Eugene, OR. MICHAEL HOWARD BAER, BS-Political Science, Menlo Park, CA. PABLO MAMUAD BADUA, BA-History, Honolulu, HI. ELIZABETH JANE BARDOSSI, BA-Fine Arts, Huntington Station, NY. BARBARA A. BARKER, BA-Romance Languages, Lake Oswego, OR. DAVID RUSSELL BECKWITH, BS­ Journalism, Bellevue, NB. PAULA FLORENCE BENDER, BS­ Community Service and Public Affairs, Portland, OR. BONI JEAN BIRKENFIELD, BS­ Accounting, Myrtle Creek, OR. DEBRA A. WILLIAMS BLAGG, BS­ Recreation, Sacromento, CA. TERRY ANN BOLSTAD, BS-Geography, Lake Oswego, OR. PETER ELBERG BOYSEN, BS-Biology, Pittsburg, CA. FREDERICK LEWIS BRAY, BS-Physical Education and Health Education, Ketchikan, AK. I occasionally catch myself wondering why ... Seniors-307 DEBORAH ANN BROWN, BS­ Elementary Education, Eugene, OR. ROGER OWEN BROWN, BS­ Mathematics and Economics, Eugene, OR. KATERINE MARY BUHLER, BS­ Community Service and Public Affairs, Portland, OR. SHERYLL ANN BURGESS, BS­ Community Service and Public Affairs Spokane, WA. VIRGINIA SCHMID BURR, BS­ Mathematics, Eugene, OR. ROBERT WILLIAM CANFIELD, Eugene, OR. Am I a cliche? A stereotype? A bone fide product of 16 plus years of the American educational system, at the peak of my youth, at the height of my intellectual awareness: a free spirit ready to be launched into the real world like a jet from an aircraft carrier? 30B-Seniors Or am I an educated idiot blinded by 16 years in an ivory tower? No wonder I am a bit hesitant NANCY CARKIN, BINTARCH-Interior Architecture, Salem, OR. CHARLES T. CHAMBERLAIN, BS­ Political Science, Salem, OR. MAY CHUN MEl CHAN, BS-Finance and Computer Science, Hong Kong JOHN G. CHAPMAN, BS-Business Management, Eugene, OR. CHINDA PHANICHKUL CHINOTHAI, BINTARCH-Interior Architecture, Bangkok, Thailand DORA PUI FONG CHOW, BA­ Journalism, Hong Kong DANIEL JAMES CHRIST, BS-Accounting and Economics, Portland, OR. RUTH GAIL CILA, BS-Health Science, Lake Hiawatha, NJ MICHAEL CLARK, BS-Political Science, Gresham, OR. Seniors-309 DONALD FRANCIS CLAWSON, BS­ Chemistry, Longview, WA. JANNA SUE CLINTON, BA-Italian, Lakeview, OR. JAMES PAUL CONNER, BM-Music, Corvallis, OR. WILLIAM LLOYD COOPER, BS-Military History Labor Relations, Buffalo, NY. RICHARD EDWARD CORNISH, BS­ Accounting, Monmouth, OR. CARLOS MANUEL DE LA CRUZ, BA­ Fine Arts, Eugene, OR. MICHAEL ROY DEMONG, BS­ Psychology, Eugene, OR. JOHN STEVEN DENSON, BS­ Anthropology, Eugene, OR. MOLLY KATHLEEN DEVLIN, BS­ Finance and Economics, McMinnville, OR. What did I really learn here? I learned to cope. I can handle frustration, rejection, depression, rage, pressure and failure. I also learned to handle success, acceptance, enthusiasm, freedom and unrestrained joy. I came face to face with tragedy and survived. 310-Seniors I discovered real friendship: what it gives and what it demands. I learned something about how men and women try to get along. I learned I was responsible. THERESA ELIZABETH DIXON, BA­ English, Milwaukie, OR. KARLA KAY DOERING, BS-Political Science, Roseburg, OR. DEBRA ANNE DOHERTY, BA­ Journalism, Pendleton, OR. KENNETH DWIGHT DOUGLAS, BS­ Business Management, Pendleton, OR. JOSEPH HOUSTON DUNCAN, BA­ Journalism, Creswell, OR. CYNTHIA ANN EDER, BA-Journalism, McMinnville, OR. ROSS ELLICOTT, BS-Business Management, Eugene, OR. FAWN MARIE ERICKSON, BA-English, Creswell, OR. JOAN LOUISE ERWIN, BS-Recreation and Park Management, Eugene, OR. Seniors-311 TOR KRISTIAN ESKElAND, BS­ Business Administration International, Stavenger, Norway JANET L. FARRINGTON, BS-Journalism and Political Science, The Dalles, OR. MARY ELLEN FAVORS, BA-General Literature, Lafayette, CA. LOIS ELLEN FEAREY, BINTARCH­ Interior Architecture, Astoria, OR. DAVID L. FISCHMAN, BS-Speech, Telecommunication, Portland, OR. LORI GAYLE FLAGG, BS-Journalism, Portland, OR. ELIZABETH JEANNE FLETCHER, BS­ Journalism, Brookings, OR. RICHARD JOSEPH FOLEY, BS-Finance, Portland OR. JOHN GUNNAR FORSBERG, BA­ Journalism, Bolinas, Sweden I spent a lot of time in classes and with my nose buried in books. I probably wrote one hundred papers and passed 400 tests. I studied under some great teachers and in spite of some miserable ones. I hated the required courses but once I got into my subject area I really handled the material. 312-Seniors ALAN JAY FORTIER, BS-Business Management and Psychology, Albany, OR. MICHAEL JAMES FRANK, BS­ journalism, Portland, OR. PETER COLLINS FREEMAN, BA­ Biology, Santa Ana, CA. ANN MARIE FRENCH, BS-Psychology, Beaverton, OR. MARTY j. FROESCHER, BS-journalism, West Linn, OR. JAMES MICHAEL FROST, BS-Business Management, San Diego, CA. RONALD DAVID FUCHS, BS­ Journalism, Eugene, OR. SARA ELLEN FULTON, BS-History, Astoria, OR. PETER HOLT GAY, BS-Journalism, The Dalles, OR. CAROL ANNE GIFFEN,BS-Biology, Washington D.C. SUSAN ROSE GILLETT, BS-Health Education, Eugene, OR. MARY LEOLA GILMORE, BS­ Psychology, Portland, OR. MARSHA LYN GILPIN, BS-Biology, Califon, N] CURTIS ROLAND GIROD, BA-Biology and French, Salem, OR. STEVEN R. GOODMAN, BS-]ournalism, Cedarhurst, NY But so many specifics have faded already. So many classes and lessons have melted into a pool of vague impressions. Only the extremes stand out now: The unbelievable chemistry tests; the fantastic literature class. 314 Did I really forget 25 percent of everything I heard within the first three days? Will I recall what I need when I need it? JACQUELINE S. GREEN, BS-Graphic Design, Anchorage, AK. LAURA KAY GUSTAFSON, BS-General Science, Medford, OR. SANDRA ANN HAGEN, BS-Journalsim, Lake Oswego, OR. JOHN G. HALLSTROM, BA-Architecture, Eugene, OR. JACQUELINE KAY HARLEY, BS­ Journalism, Springfield, OR. STEPHEN WALTER HARRIS, BS­ Finance, Port'land, OR. Seniors-31S ROGER RICHARD HARRISON, BM­ Music Education, Sandy, OR. ANNE HASSERT, BS-Health Education, Wilmington, DE. MARIANNE HAUKALI, BS-Business Administration International, MadIa, Norway TERRY L. HECK, BA-Georgraphy, Astoria, OR. JEANETTE ELIZABETH HERZ, BS­ Recreation and Park Management, Eugene, OR. DOROTHEA ANNE HEWITT, BA­ English, Portland. OR. MARILEE HINKLE, BS-Geography, Portland, OR. ELIZABETH A HINTZ, BS-Marketing, Coos Bay, OR. MICHAEL STEPHEN HITTNER, BS­ Business Management, Eugene, OR. I remember a lot of unimportant things: an evening ... a movie ... a couple ball games a memorable drunk the time we cut class and went skiing a hysterical waiter some faces ... the first time I ... 316-Seniors How much have I forgotten? PATRICIA JEAN HOLMES, BS-General Science, Wilsonville, OR. KAREN A HOPPE, BS-General Science, Eugene, OR. WESLEY ALBERT HUTCHISON, BA­ Journalism, Ridgefield, WA. MICHAEL SCOTT IMUS, BS-Business Transportation, Eugene, OR. ESTELLE COWAN INGRAM, BS­ Community Service and Public Affairs, Springfield, OR. ARCHIBONG ITUH, BS-Geology, Itu, Nigeria KATHY SIMMONS JANZ, BA-Romance Languages, Portland, OR. PATRICIA A. JEREMIA, BS-Journalism, Elmont, NY SUSAN KAY JERNSTEDT, BS-Physical Education, Carlton, OR. JOHN ANDREW JOHNS, BS-Journalism, Bakersfield, CA. BRADLEY WALLACE JOHNSON, BS­ Finance, Springfield, OR. JOHN THOMAS JONES, BARCH­ Architecture, Eugene, OR. Seniors-317 DEBRA JO ANN JUUL, BS-Psychology, Salem, OR. TADEUSZ H. KASZYCKI, Eugene, OR. KIMBERLY KAY KELLUM, BA-History, Klamath Falls, OR. CYNTHIA ANNE KENDRICK, BA­ History, Forest Grove, OR. WILLIAM CHARLES KERNS, Eugene, OR. SUSAN JANE KESSLER, BS-Community Service and Public Affairs, Elkins Park, PA. DAVID CHARLES KINNEY, BS-Finance, Annandale, VA. PAUL DERRALL KLEIN, BARCH­ Architecture, Eugene, OR. CAROL MARJORIE KOCH, BA-Interior Architecture, Portland, OR. Sometimes I was really ready to leave this place. Everything went flat. The courses were bad, the food was tedious, the rain never stopped, the apartment closed in on me, there wasn't a decent movie in town, TV was worse than ever and my roommate was suddenly revealed as a flaming ass. 3IB-Seniors None of it is that way now but I sure don't remember when it changed back. DAVID EDWARD KORANDA, BS­ Journalism, Chappaqua, NY ROSALIND KOTZ, BS-Psychology, Glen Rock, Nj SUANNE SUDE KUMABE, BS­ Quantitative Methods, Kaheohe, HI BARRY EDWARD LAMB, BS-History, Santa Barbara, CA. MARTHA LANE, BS-Recreation and Park Management, Eugene, OR. PAULA ANN LARSON, BA-History, Eugene, OR. SANDRA KATHERINE LARSON, BA­ Dance, Springfield, OR. JOSEPH PATRICK LAWRENCE, BARCH-Architecture, Medford, OR. DAVID N. LEAN, BS-Business Transportation, Nome, AK. GUNNAR LILJEGREN, BBA-Market­ ing, Stockholm, Sweden GREGORY SCOTT LIND, BARCH­ Architecture, West Linn, OR. LAURA KAY LITTLEJOHN, BA­ Linguistics, Astoria, OR. Seniors-319 JANET LEE LITTON, BS-Business Management, Oregon City, OR. KERRY RAE MCDERMOTT, BS­ Elementary Education, Longview, WA. TRACY MCELHINNEY, BA-English, Boise,ID. PEGGY SUE MCHUGH, BS-Physical Education, Salem, OR. CAROL A. PARK MCINTYRE, BS-Dance and Elementary Education, Eugene, OR. NORA nORENE MAINS, BA-English, Portland, OR. I'm going to miss the fall. The valley cooled off so deliciously and the trees began their colorful metamorphis into hibernation. The kids were all full of stories from the summer and the football team always showed a lot of promise. I didn't mind walking home in the twilight under glowing amber windows, the rust and golden leaves whispering while the red and yellow skies died brilliantly over the black silhouettes of the buildings. 320-Seniors I would like to do that again. MOHAMMAD REZA MALJAI, BS-Fine Arts, Tehran, Iran JEFFREY CRAIG MALOS, BS-Elementary Education, Eugene, OR. PAMELA JO MARTIN, BS- Physical Education, Grants Pass, OR. EUGENE FRANCIS MICHAELS, BS­ Political Science, Chicago, IL. DON SEYMOUR MILLER, BS-General Science, Havre, MT. DALE DAVID MILLS, BS-General Humanities and Economics, Eugene, OR. FAY LYDIA MORGAN, BS-Biology, Berkeley, CA. ROBERT MORRIS, BS-Finance, Eugene, OR. MARY KATHLEEN MULCAIRE, BS­ Health Education, Saratoga, CA. ROBERT ALLAN MULVEY, BS­ Economics, Ashland, OR. JEFFREY NEAL, BBA-Business Transportation, Eugene, OR. ANDREW NEBERGALL, BS-Community Service and Public Affairs, Clatskanie, OR. Seniors-321 Winter was a study in contrasts: A pocket full of Kleenex and a drowsy head full of antihistamines in front of a dancing whistling fireplace; a campus full of silent strangers huddled under umbrellas and hoods suddenly joined together as a single body roaring their unity at Mac Court; the tedious grey of the valley's weather forgotten in the brilliant whites and blues of the upper level ski slopes ­ except for '76-'77 when the valley was bright and sunny while the slopes were brown and drab. CYNTHIA NEWSON, BS-Elementary Education, Beaverton, OR. LESLAW Z. NIEDZIELA, BA-Finance, Eugene, OR. KRISTIN DIANE NIELSEN, BA­ Psychology, Glenview, IL. LIANE NGIT MUI NIP, BS-Economics, Honolulu, HI. GARY GLEN NORRIS, BS-Journalism, Eugene, OR. DAVID B. NORTON, BS-Business Management, Eugene, OR. 322 It was ironic that the shortest quarter of the ye~i always seemed the longest. 10 NUGENT BA-1ournalism, Arbuckle, CA. KIM M. NUTTING, BA-Psychology, Eugene, OR. TERRY M. O'DAY, BS-Journalism, Springfield, OR. RANDALL HALVOR OHLENDORF, BS­ Business Management, Beaverton, OR. RANDY PHILIP OLSEN, BS-Finance, Springfield, OR. MARTHA ANN ONASCH, BS-Biology, Salem, OR. ERIC CHARLES PESTALOZZI, BS­ Sociology, Albany, OR. WILLIAM THOMAS PICKFORD, BS­ Geography, San Francisco, CA. VALERIE ROCHELLE POND, BS­ Chemistry, West Linn, OR. MARK EDISON POWELL, BS-Physics, Grants Pass, OR. PETER WENDALL POWELL, BS-Physics, Grants Pass, OR. BRIAN ROBERT RADEMACHER, BS­ Sociology, Woodland Hills, CA. Seniors-323 You could follow the progress of the Spring by the strip tease of the student body. First scarves disappeared, then the coats were unbuttoned, boots were set aside and pants gave way to dresses, skirts and shorts Fewer buttons were buttoned and both sexes slowly slipped into sandals. Occasionally a flurry from a lurking winter would set us all back but we eventually matched nature in both color and sensuality. DAVID ALAN RICHENSTEIN, BBA­ Finance, Portland, OR. MARSHA JEAN RICHESON, BS­ Recreation and Park Management, Eugene, OR. RICK NILES RIER, BS-Physical Education, Portland, OR. LAUREN WHIPPLE ROBERTS, BA­ Biology, Portland, OR. 324-Seniors DANA PAUL ROBINSON, BS­ Accounting, Palos Verdes Estates, CA. JOSHUA ROBINSON, BS-Geography, Sarasota, FL. GARRET HAROLD ROMAINE, BS­ Geology, Portland, OR. LYNN RUTH ROSENFELD, BS-Business Management, Portland, OR. BARBARA JANE ROSSI, BA-Speech Pathology and Audiology, Medford, OR. DOUGLAS JAY RUSCH, BBA­ Accounting, Los Angeles, CA. MICHAEL DOUGLAS RUSSELL, BS­ Biology, City View, OR. ROBERT STEVEN SCARBROUGH, BS­ Speech Rhetoric and Communication, Chicago, IL. TIMOTHY JOHN SCHELL, BA­ Journalism, Portland, OR. ROBIN A. SCHMIDT, BS-Journalism, Anchorage, AK. BARBARA ANN SELBY, BS-General Science, Lakeview, OR. DENNIS MARTIN SEMLER, BS-Political Scinece, Portland, OR. I wonder how I passed a course in the Spring. Seniors-325 ROGER SCOTT SENDERS, BS­ Psychology, Mercer Island, WA. MIRIAM BETH SHAFER, BA-Romance Languages, Los Angeles, CA. ROSEMARY SKEBONG, BA-Journalism, Koror, Palau Caroli PATRICK HAROLD SLIGER, BS­ Psychology and Sociology, Eugene, OR. DIANE ARLENE SMITH, BS-Political Science, Reedsport, OR. LINDA DIANE SNIVELY, BA-Finance, Portland, OR. THOMAS FREDERICK SOMMERS, BS­ Recreation and Park Management, Stroudsburg, PA. TERESA DAWN SPARKMAN, BA­ Elementary Education, Portland, OR. BARBARA STEVENS, BS-Journalism, San Marino, CA. I wonder how I earned a degree. I guess I know what I am doing but the pages I did not read and the classes I never made it to must have said something important. Even the times I got A's I knew there were gaps in my knowledge that I had cleverly hidden from the grading system. 326-Seniors Surely, I cannot be expected to know it all, but can I ever know too much? PATRICIA M. STONE, BS-Physical Education, West Linn, OR. WILLIAM SUMMER STONE, BS­ Sociology, Indianapolis, IN. DAVID G. SULLIVAN, BS-Political Science, Ashland, OR. SUSAN JANE SULLIVAN, BA-French, Chatsworth, CA. TERESA JOY SULLIVAN, BA-General Humanities, Eugene, OR. KRISTINE SUTHERLAND, BA-Sociology, Eugene, OR. KIYOZUMI TANAKA, MA-Community Service and Public Affairs, Imaichi-Shi, Japan YOPIE TANGKILISAN, BARCH­ Architecture, Jakarta Selatan, Indonesia NOLEN KYLE TANNER, BS-Biology, Portland, OR. ;TEFAN DAVID TARLOW, BS-Biology, Beaverton, OR. DEBRA DIANE TAYLOR, BS-Business Management, Salem, OR. JEFF ROY TAYLOR, BS-Marketing and Political Science, Portland, OR. Seniors-327 I never got any credit for the other important things I learned. VO gave me the opportunity to get involved in important issues; ecology, government and the attitudes of my fellow men, in a way no commuter college could. TABOR WILLIAM TEACHOUT, BS­ Business Management, Pasadena, CA. JAN MARIE TERjESON, BS-Physical Education, Helix, OR. EARL j. TESTY, BS-Sociology and General Science, Eugene, ·OR. GILL THOMAS, BS-Political Science, Albany, OR. jAN'L JOAN THOMAS, BA-English, Canby, OR. JANET CAROL THOMPSON, BS­ Recreation and Park Management, Jakarta, Indonesia RICHARD THOMAS THOMPSON, BS­ Geology, Downington, PA. SUSAN RUTH THOMPSON, BA­ journalism, Portlal)d, OR. DIRK STEVEN TRASK, BBA-Marketing, Portland, OR. 328-Seniors I am conversant! I am relevant! I am knowledgable! I am ... a cliche? SHARON R. TRIMBLE, BS-Psychology, LaGrande, OR. JANET ELIZABETH TRYGSTAD, BS­ Elementary Education, Portland, OR. SUSAN KAY URBACK, BS-Journalism, Portland, OR. SCOTT Y. WAKASUGI, BS-Finance, Weiser,ID. VICKI LYNN WALKER, BS-Political Science, Reedsport, OR. SHANE DOMINIC WALLS, BS­ Recreation and Park Management, Seattle, WA. SHERYL DIANE WALLS, BA-Marketing, Eugene, OR. CLARK TODD WALWORTH, BA­ Journalism, Milwaukie, OR. HUEY WEN WANG, BS-Mathematics, Missouri City, TX. Seniors-329 No, Damn it! I am not a cliche! PHILIP JOHN WAX, BS-Economics, Portland, OR. STEVE EDWIN WENZEL, BS-Political Science, Eugene, OR. CURTIS JOE WHITCOMB, BS-Speech Pathology and Audiology, Boise, 10. JEFFREY ROBERT WHITE, BARCH­ Architecture, Bellevue, WA. CHARLES WESLEY WICKS JR., BS­ General Science, Grants Pass, OR. JANET LYNN WILEY, BS-Political Science, Milwaukie, OR. CALVIN ROBERT WILHELM III, BBA­ Business Transportation, Toms River, N) MICHAEL KEVIN WILKINS, BA­ English, LaGrande, OR. FREDERICK ST. JOHN WILSON III, BS­ Finance, Orinda, CA. NEAL BRIAN WILSON, CA. SUSAN EMILIE WILSON, BS-Physical Education, McNabb, ILL LYNN DEBRA WIMP, BS-Community Service and Public Affairs, Salem, OR. 330-Seniors I worked for this. I fought for this. I sweat, I cried, I stayed up all night sometimes and spent a good deal of my youth to reach this point. I'm proud of it! I may not be a big success when I hit the streets, but I will be a factor in the development of my world; and it will be a better world, if for no other reason than I am really going to try. MARK C. WOLF, BBA-Finance and Real Estate, Lake Oswego, OR. CAROL CHEUK-YAN WONG, BA­ Finance, Hong Kong DALE WESLEY WORKMAN, BM-Music, Torrance, CA. KAREN YUKI YAMATE, BS-Finance, Los Gatos, CA. NORMAN G. YATES, BA-Community Service and Public Affairs, Eugene, OR. LAURA KAY ZAHN, BS-Community Service and Public Affairs, Milwaukie, OR. WILLIAM HARVEY ZIEBER, BS-Biology, Eugene, OR. BRYAN J. COHEN, BS-Finance, Eugene, OR. Seniors-331 " ~/ 332-Closing "' ...., ,'. l..... 'OT ~1. -. A reflection from the past can never be as good- or as bad- as the real thing. But still, a reflection, a memory, an image or a shadow from yesterday, it's nice to have. 334-Closing Today it's Deady, Villard, Allen, the Erb, Gerlinger, Esslinger,­ all names I'm familiar with. Faces, too. Tomorrow it's strangers, foreigners ... or will it be me who is the stranger? My memories will keep today alive. Closing-335 A Reflection It's time to leave, my friend. Let us go peacefully, following separate paths. We must move from here, leaving this security and comfort. Perhaps we'll meet again one day. If not, well, these few years have treated us kindly, my friend. We both have our memories to rely on. And tomorrow, so many years from now, today will be just a reflection from the past. 336-C1osing 1978 Oregana Editor: Cindi Ney Associate Editor: Lisa Pollard Copy Editor: Rick Taylor Layout Editor: Mike Whitten Photography Editor: Mark Stevenson Photography Editor: Carol Scott Business Manager: Jim Hunt VO Advisor: Mary Hartman Company Representative: Steve Harrington The following people contributed writing, layouts, or office time for one or more terms: * Jodi Anderson Barbara Alan Wally Barnes * Vickie Brunengo Caroline Connolly Anne Gaddis Jackie Harley Pat Jeremia John Koford *Gina Meins Terry O'Day Carnie Shaar Mark Shea Evon Smith Janet Smith * Barb Stevens Matt Stringer * indicates those brave souls who put in extra time and effort. 338-0regana Below: Mike Whitten; Bottom right: Rick Taylor; Bottom left: Jodi Anderson; Top left: Cindi Ney. PC. 338-Top right: Mark Stevenson; Bottom right: Lisa Pollard; Bottom left: (left to right) Mike, Carol Scott, Steve Harrington, Lisa, Cindi . ...~ -:0":111 -==­ 'S Oregana-339 1978 Oregana \ Photography Staff: Susan Bluestone * Kathryn Collins * Jeff Conner Sue Dewerf * Steve Geiger Anna Hoyt Charles Riggs Chris Staats Rick Taylor * Del Turner * Michael Zia * indicates those that put in extra time and effort. Contributing Photographers: Paul Adamson Ann Altenhofen Jon Gottshall Mike Grigsby Steve King John McConnaughey Ross McKee John Rimel Betsy Rosenbluth Mike Whi tten Warren Winitzky Tom Woods A very special thanks to the summer staff who pitched in to get this book off the printers: Karen DuPriest Carla Luebkeman Janice McKinley Marian J. Owen Thorn Strunk Patti Taylor Annick Todd Right: Jeff Conner during and after taking photos; Top: Mark Stevenson. 340-0regana ~1~f~;(:";T-7:;,.tw4 JV rrf..lrnlJ-;rnm..i#"·111!~ {1 M tyrr"'j ~..~ ,;yJ;. d v 1toll r~,;;yfi.ili ~,.-.,..::;:T~""{1 01~~ll.P-~ ~1~~;lh'; hrJ.'1 bnr:!] ~:.~t,~ IX"-' Irol/ (/rJlfq :,. "?",'" -~ •'... .,#~ -;-'.>1 J'~ "" I'c (/rY";,/:": !/yJ.lhhl9 11 r...u!,,>ll1 ,.",/0 1"0"'"OJh,'ii\l',or"on~ l, .. ,-t''I"I 1'\1tJ'LI"~·· /f:u;;t~J, C,.lrl ..... J • / ' .••• ·r It l.- .... , ,.~., ./rI.- ""- Il-':('~ .•.. .';1 : \ ., I.. - '; 1""'" 1r. ·",f.. " ... r1TflYl {~1r:.~0'J:1!t' ~J.-~(b(J':; f"JjlIffh It%· ~lJlnrY ....t~ f---,,,-,Yl